The evening world. Newspaper, November 20, 1918, Page 16

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ee ee ene me re ce ee ree % NY No aN ‘Ne Ca “WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1918 Failures’ Who Made 4 Themselves ‘Successes’ Husbands and Wives We Know—No. IV. , ° = le | WO. 1-FROM BomER Room To cur BNGI-/ Joseph F. Smith, the Last of the Mormon Prophets — THE T. B. M. AND BIS WIFE i : NEER’S OFFICE. Had Six Wi GURDRI a By Nixola Greeley-Smith Le By Dr. Katherine M. H. Blackford lad ves Learn Sek lala 2) 7,05 Nephew of Founder Covytaht, 1018, by Tho Press Publishing Co, (The New York Brening Worl.) = ey i ° . One Divorced Him i i HAT makes the Tired Business Man tired? It cannot be Author of ¢ Job, the Man, the Bo ‘Analyzing Character,” dc.) 2 ‘ of Mormon Church Tired Business Man, for whatever the sources of weariness Copyright, 1918, by the Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World). | Five Still Living Became Its Head may be he is always fairly well pleased with himself. The “Blessed is the man who has found Ms work." Such a man doce H 2 Chi T. B. M, believes, of course, that he is worn out by the inet merely extet—he tives, and Nvee grandly. Hie work gives nim | Had 4 Idren Controlled All Funds hurry and bustle ot New York lite. | Ask say man L fow, doth in ite doing and in its results. It calla owt and develops his | from Chicago about the New York hurry and bustle, + fi “Maghest and dest talents. He therefore rows in power, in wisdom, Forgot Their Ages Ruled 400,000 | acid bo, Wil Seen in Yuu Peeks NG. We. Saks, Huts i im health, ti efficiency and in success, j here. It's my .persona] opinion that furious haste, the Ta ie cs Had Six Houses Head of Sugar Trust | running around in circles that many persons mistake _ of the lure of machinery } for efficiency, is really a sign of incompetence. for him. While yot in his cradio he would play contentedly tor| One for Each Wife A Bank President | To hold any job successfully you havo to be detter hours with a little pulley or other mechanical trifle. Before he was 2 ‘ msi than that job; that is to say, you must possess the equi, d ite to walk, bo could drive nails with a hammer OP for Himself Director of Banke caaal 163 aoke deat Wer ae EEN GOL ce 1 sturdily and with more precision than many aduits.| Choge to Defy Law A Railroad Director ‘This deing 80, you know absolutely that you ean | 1 This also was one of hie favorite amusements, and it manage easily the work in hand, and when you see some one else rush. t H be sit Mrrcituieetaie hal ea dbs Rather Than Abandon Had Big Interests | iug trantically hither and thither, shouting, tearing off his ooat, folling 7 vee coe up his shirt sleeves, &c., you wish that less steam might be wasted in i ain eiealiens une jer snp itl dt Wives and Children in Other Enterprises preparation and more put into performance. Which is the more comfort- x 4 able, the possessor of a 100 per cent. brain that he works 60 per cen! ; | ¥ to pleces the family clock and put it together again.| Lived to Be 80 Boss of Mormon Vole} tx." swner ot « 60 per cont, brag that be watke 166 per watt foal a ‘ i aaiied fonpente RIWGGN bok IU siuuther tae aaa esk which has the more money, motor oars, notoriety or other elmilar ‘ nn 2 ¥ hings. ‘The question relates exclusively to comfort, mental and ‘sical ‘ ; usually ran better after he had finished his work. He aise \ f sic j built water wheels, windmills and other mechanical eaten a orca addi haw Gkaie Vie. Paik ion d —————$__—___—_. ta euthto wot To If our business man belongs in this | tore. When he was about fourteen / ~ Sis 'scad OBR RV ETT f . aime oa: ei aa 100 per cent, class he is not tired, ox-|be the only answor they elicit. And ’ ee ee eS aT ‘ 4 Pt ? copt of things outside his work, 1} for this reason they sometimes do- |. Beed & bicyole pump for the cylinder honey due. i} Z have been In many of the sanctums cf] cide that their husbands have no im : pnd péeces of an old sewing machino,| “Twenty-five cents purchased three he most tired business men in Amor-| tellectual interests. + BAD daiscarded wringer, some brass wires | quarts of strained honey from @ beo- Lae see na ah indes' whe have wes | Hoetl And tiple: Hownt > WE gad other odds and onds for the rest | keoper friend of mine, The dollar 1 Lesa dipesaiibis Pacey tiated inetd " Intellect ' ; 42 the parts, 0 perfect was this| invested in hominy. Every mornin; right to be tired—and, compared with} It Is ore no sign if pa o F ‘ = LJ . " | to go about rattling the small ghange + — HR proauce that when steam was turned | when I first got wp and built the fre the nbwapapee Dmoe Thad just Uhh! ot other minds, Rather 1 inbieqiss ; a it ran smoothly and with very|I put on a double boller with as mush Ene En ne aang ome {@ certain ollowness. For things ; Hittle noise at the rate of three thou-| hominy as would cook in it. While it hectic energy of an old man's home don't rattle unless they have lots of ‘ lean revotutions a minute. was cooking I eat down dnd studied | ¥ ~~ 8 am Of course, if you are the Tired Hus-| oom to rattle 1a, All my sympathy After G —— began earning money for | 4rd on my calculus. By the time I 13 ‘Ay t i Ce bake Gene Mab'a wits you have (6 bp vos foes out to the Tired Business Man himecit. by mechanical and eloctrical| bad got a pretty good hold of the ma i that be is el? worn out, poor, oe eal to whom home is the only place ! ‘work, he would go without luxuries, | Pothooks and the bird tracks in the : nee? | That is one of the things he marr | where he ia likely to bear what Pro- ' food end clothing, tramping to the| Calculus lesson the hominy would bo _! ve vou for, And it will never do for you) et es and Scott Nearing have i shop almost barefoot one entire win.|Teady to eat. ‘Tho month finally to wonder why the Tired Business) +. ay about peace or the downtrod- : paseee.” \ Voman is nevor so tired htt ay rd) den munition workers with only one After this our young friend hired a sort of predigested brain food has to} vt. cay and two talking machines Uttle larger room, laid in a few cheap © prepared for her. | between them and starvation! Gehes and cooking utensils and took The Tired Business Man is not The Tired Buinsess Man overlooks two or three of his fellow students to early so dull as he likes to pretend.) ,ooagionally 1s of price by hi d y pearls of price by his board. He did the marketing and the | ywever. He has a little hoard of] stunborn resistance to supposedly p inggrens hogy canghamseydgeny him wash, ady-made thoughts and hand-me-| sew iqeas, but he gets rid of even © dishes. Our young engineer fur-' own opinions that he prefers to USC) mors junk. nished table board at $1.25 a week, ecause they gave thinking, But if i % hat . , 8 ay as well confess publicly t per out of the $3.75 a week paid him nybody makes him think it will be jon any one aske whether I want y his boarders was able to buy all of | vund that he can do it beautifully. to go to a musical comedy or @ play | It was while he was engaged in this | 5/8 own food as well as theirs, and H. L. Mencken in a recent book ae-/1 choose the musical entertainment . kind of work that the guggestion | P*Y D!s room rent, jared that the idea that men want to/ every time, ‘That is becatse our ma- ' After many troubles of thi stimulated intellectually when they medion are Qeunlly Very’ mead made to him that he ought not js kind, ” jelcdl comedies are u iy ' to try to go through life with only G— finished his engineering course ‘o home is erroneous. “The dull peace} whije our plays ag a rule smack too | the rudiments of an education. It was| #24 secured @ position in one of the fa hog in a sty” is the common! strongly of the Montessori method to 1 pointed out that, while he had un-| !@rsest corporations in the United leal of domestic bliss, according tj interest " i" Goubted mechanical and inventive | States at a salary of $50 a month Mr. Mencken's inelegant formula. have sat through @ 4 ability, he would have small oppor-| At the time when he went to work for 1 aim not pessimistic enough to ac-| without the pleasant anaes- Yunity to use it unless ho also had] the big corporation there were prob- ept this, though I do believe a of music, pretty ’ the necessary technical and seclentifi;| ly three or four hundred other nan seldom finds his ideal wife be-| jokes which are old trust knowledge to go with it, graduate engineers added to tye staff, e : fauso she is really two wives—one to|T have felt just as if somebody ha@ ‘At first his interest in mechanics was | 4!most as soon as he took up work ho! wn JA eee Once SS: BOG a es as RY Vi ve proud of and the other to make him| given me a row of buttons and an- | ‘yo intense and his interest in school | °¢#4n making improvements in meth- ~ OSEAN aD i comfortable. Jother row . buttonholes, with tho ] ds, inventing machinery and other , ? 11| information that when I have learned 4n general so comparatively slight that | ° 6 y other i Since the laws of mora’s as well] inform Moa eee each tavor| devices, and thinking out ways and JOSEPH F. SMITH, WIVES AND CHILDREN WHO SURVIVE HIM, AND THEIR RESIDENCES Vlas ur ceonomies forbid this partition-| how to button them together without gpon the suggestion, However, as|™eans for saving labor and. making} Copyright, 1018, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World,) |self believed to have innumorable, the Salt Trust. H ie te ~ of wifely responsibility every man| Making a single mistake I will be 4 * . . , | ¢ . He is President or di- | ing of wifely resp Hap pe aa H aime went on and he saw more and sgl Ach Apes a few weeks after ITH the death in Salt Lake City yesterday of Joseph F. Smith, children, But these children cannot rector of banks, insurance ccrnaaleas | must elect sooner or later which ha H| abl . 5 -_ udés ea te pee , i ore of the results of such action as|” AN ing the ane he had tnvented head of the Mormon Church, or, to give him his exact title, Presi- | become immortal until they have beon| newspapers and a@ railroad, He has|of bis ideal he will domesticate and| Breat he P ee mammi ~ yf bys ~ : | ke was contemplating, he became | & mn i daeiay which could be, dent of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, the last ¢mbodied in men, It 4s, therefore, (he a monopoly of money and of industry, | \y thereafter proud or comfortable ac- | i J - ee oahtay lan féels mi ; | more and more interested in complet. | carried in the coat pocket and which | of the Mormon prophets entered into the rest prescribed by the faith of duty of every woman to give immur-|and consequently 1s the political as | cording to his choice, Ve e9708 S57) o dng bis education. He therefore on-| took tho place of a clumsy contri-!tne Mormons for all good polygamists tality to as many of theso celestial! well as the spiritual boss of the M Fak ihe: Mikad iihaione. Man 60| a thnhe ore re MORUnE SITEMOR ee SP tered a good preparatory schoof and| vance which required a horse and! ' re ? children as possible, A man having) ; anne b oe oe | aoe ee eo pamnfortable does| Tied Business Man. No matter how With some little assistance from rela-| wagon to carry it. In this way ne] One wife—the first of slx—preceded this elghty-year-old husband of | oniy one wife Is limited in the pr Monucn Yon Peete ce eared Revgeerans ‘ Peould not like also| "ard he works the frutts of his toll " w " : © Pro-| Mormot ‘revelatio: e e e als pi I + fives worked his way through by do-| saved tho company the price of) /¥¢ living women and father of forty-two children into the unknown. | gyction of these immortal spirits, so, | of the wil of Gods He has reduced | not ae Gat Meraimply. cannot | #2, (0. cular S00 hela. Mee ott I foe slectrical und mechanical work | horses, wagons, drivers, &c, on {But as the pioneer, Mra, Smith—Levina A.—divorced her husband in 1867, 95 an irreverent critic once put it, the | elections in Utah to a farce. And his [OO ey ee géapations avout the| even pioacen him $0 eapply the mogay ‘about the little college town, In this| great many operations, President Smith will enter tnto the Mormon heaven a temporary bachelor.) Mormon motto is, “the more, the) Power is ealy slightly less in Tdaho | manne pe which permits his wife to discover the : ; i all Fi ie ‘ x fia OF AD | ' d and Wyoming. | same woman, “great chasm" there is between his . Rind of work he soon became ube _Frém th very first the young man It fe the Mormon belief, however, that all marriages are eternal and | marryer, | From his home in Salt Lake City, | Not a few cynical ma: ad women | intalnat and hers, It is he who pays ] -Raown and was in constant requisl-/ rose very much more rapidly than!ihat eventually husbands and their | — | Former Senator Cannon, by birth a| known as the Bee Hive, and housing | i eo with Mr. Mencken's notion! for the dinners whereat the institt ton. any of the others who had entered yiural wives will dwell happily and | Germ famnily hes Adonis) anether tt- Mormon, has been called the Peter the | his oicial ov Aims wife. Joseph, Smith ree esis (aan ig merely. that tion 3 arene ty dercuneed' an tha ; ory| the employ of the company at tl le | He: F . ,| reigned over | uman beings, | tha |t arria e Having finished his preparatory |‘ 18) eternally together. tle girl named Marjorie. Hermit of polygamy. For years he| ‘me death of the C ears | joreine peace, They know that! jast bulwar ; x course, he begun 4 course in mechani-| time he did. Boon he was oceupyinss | The Dots Concerning polyg-| Al! the wives of Smith have on d has been going up and down the cation of the Alera taht tice ne weak Riles Ay home from a feoture! gpa! Pr vial cet on cea, i setrical engineering in one|4n executive position and directing | ferent occasions irkuas licly| United States preaching a flery cru-jabsolute ruler alive. i™ . A i) dopspaared ' { y cal and electri s amy was rocelved by Joseph Smith expressed publicly r lon Bergsor’s philosophy, or even) the revolt of woman, & ] Doe the best known of our universities, | the activities of scores of mon, To. (mY Wis their happiness as plural wiy sade against the Latter Day Saints. The disposition of Joseph F. Smith's | ais fe aataal BGs Om bof ; i . v! wives and : “ . bel hen they describe in minute detail © philosophy with which he ‘ wt this time practically all assist. | 0°¥. only rine years after his leay-' Jr., the original Mormgn prophet and | ti61- potiet in polygamy: | “£ nave nothing ia my heart against pronerty will form an interesting | when Aon thipd ‘vice preale |: auues ar a Abo . . ing sehvol, he occupies one of th >i .s A m ve 9 as ave | sequel to his strange life. U. r the| what the second ¢ rd vice ae *ps on excavating dollars for these © ance from relatives hud t with. | neat important positions dmithe anai, worl’ cf Jonoph Fe Gmith, A son Of) jo. si. est wife divorced him, | the Mormon people,” he has said re-| law, only the first wife may inherit. | gent had on at the biennial meeting| frothy manifestations proyes him ta He @rawn owing to changed circum-| neering department of this great cor-| Joseph Smith Jr, also mamed Jo-) yocooy yiciding Smith turned his at,|Pested’”: “The Mormons are as gen-| But it will surely be found that in| o> the state Federation of Women's | pos: intelligence of the highest ration wre wh! ne does not Ave i secede ° 7 o ate), a1 and 5 » | de f 9] - he i : Semepiares. and be wasiett almost entire: | poration and, while he does not haverseph, seceded from the Mormon! tention to the good-looking Lampson | 12 8 the Quakers and staunch as the |death, aa in life, this militant polys-| Cups, a series of preoccupied grunts| order. Some day perhaps his wite mur sty dependent upon his own effor tlos of chief engineer : fe beige ; and ie psc sisters, and Gentiles in Salt Lake City saws, :. Folens rg nd e revolt | fea families “ATS OF BIS CXtrae | ed by an occasional mumble will| will discover it. | + Oftentimes be was almost entirely he point of all this story ts that|church of his own, He several | always declared that he cour jagainst the Mormon Church because ee ee i _ eee : frithout food. There was one Month tLe eae ee te tend a enty (years ago, also aged eighty. This | sisters bares rhe ay ie fate ihe was a participant in the pledges made| zs meen re . = Guring which he wax unable to col-|°f Mechaplcul ablilty and enjoyed’ yosonn smith always denounced po-| however, was the firac to bo marciai| "Nem Utah was admitted to state- P | lect money due him for work done.|motive fireman te Gadeniey . ne | lygamy | the sigh i i sls “d'nood, Under this covenant polygamy u rr 1 1 S i e Yr m a n Y 1 S O n e Yr Because ho was a poor university firer 1, in addition to hist yo i given in ahi? the tt Yie®| and polygamous living was forever ay , i | I student ho had no credit, So he lived Mechanical sens and reat skill in the | ia y Dar as arent wife admitted that st an i drat {prohibited, ‘The Mormons promised Evening World Reporter, Soldier in U nf damy in renee, “ taenes Un ihe Captive, ; the entire month on $1 Wit ital coaes anebeatin’ asnbitinic "nhaneinn | ee ee oO Oe J 4 2 ind efied/tnat there should be no union be “ . ” FB “} Writes Describing the Episod / explains how it was done feteneiieat Ravipeent Ke n aid now! the essentials of salvation, and de-| When Arst informed by her husband tween church and state d t the a“ Deserter” From the German Army, Ysis i rend ene five an, ‘i iy room I had paid for Avance |fnd 8 uate use in his work ag Clared on several occasions that he | Wak he intended to trke another wife.| church would keep out of politics HB first prisoner we took was| outfit told us he was @ Ganert ! Hines to build up a declining morale, .. eae etidace of work tt map aces ce or fireman. Nor could he| was “happier than any Gentile on|.V8e® ® Gentile wife finds she Is) j:very one of these pledges has been like a newborn babe, not as| He was terribly jaunty, tho’faker.) ‘To go back to the General and our HB) by doing a plece of work for my land~ dyer have found exproaon for It un: | Mt, | Hot the only one sho is tragically uns! proken, I favor an amendment to the | meek nor as bright. He was a| Me swung his arms and did a sort of/first live Boch, ‘The General care- } —~ Vee gdlarey et, We OF RPMI eet OF waa ecuReal oRa cata Testifying. Senate tne| DAPPY.” Mra, Smith told her inter-| Constitution prohibiting polygamy in| Brandenburger and jaunty and glad} goosestep. It was ait swank, After I) fully surveyed him and then the Otet 4 Beesees wood, which I had sawed und ir nimsclf the necommry education | SE atone ae cl aoot | Viewer: “Bho stays unhappy or she! ino United States and forbidding the| to become @ prisoner, although he| put him tp the prisoner # chet and} of Staff, and the ope ma | He eplit and piled in the hallway under and training. With all his ingenuity, | Wuty inte the case « Reed Smoot, 4| rehely and breaks her ties, Mormon| neaurion in the Ualted Btates maiie | 4ldn't say so, Our proof showed, |had left I took a post near him where down the line, It greatly amused thy 4 the stairs. I bad a little sheet tron he would always have been mor Mormon elected to that body, Presi-| wives may cry a little over the w circulation | o nited States mails) Ver, that he was a deserter,| he couldn't see me. I had a good look| British officers. They called him eur ol ed for bot - le to the mac! , de Smith state at he prefe 1 . bve ne situa-| o¢ polygamous Mormon literature by » vam no 6we od a on a . i meeve which I used for both heating | Oot fee eats agers ro t ne . ' ee are n, but they know it is right, so al Leet solaate: pe gg sO When I said newborn babe I meant] at him and got plenty of once overs.|"baby Boche.” The parade was and cooking. I sat down and care. hers Bio tie eee ne ty the hw tan ‘r! we soon Ko on quite happily together."| chareh have openly resumed the prac. {0 explain that he was received like, His jauntiness disappeared and he ‘tiled, of course, for Unteroffizier , y figured out how I could make thousands of machines and of men, theo abandon his fre wives and Ss | Tho flve wives of Smith have always| tice of relent Joseph F PrKe | ohe. ‘The Military Police brought | told one of our American boys of Ger-| will appear in the history of this a Bosive ae ee eee ee a dren. ‘e also admitted that hejcould ays|tice of polygamy josep! & 1 i > e ction tt vas f p| divisio: f y ve ses Hot remember the ages 09 all jenjoyed separate establishments, 1! transported his harcm openly from| him, into battle headquarters and| man extra Hen thas ba vas (00. Hp alyiai ‘i to no inconspicuous place, tia H Ow S avi Gc venty* and twenty-one "2# been stated that the prophet| + co coast, @ grose violation of the|every one there, staff officers andjon the war, He considers el picture was taken, and some of a ngs row ey eoggreedingd a : ‘abe ie vat | AHowed each of his houscholds $5,000| Mann White Blave Act, and mi sta, [all, Iined up to seo him, It reminded} great prize because hi had paraded|his cigarettes turned out to be cork i EN dollars @ month saved and put out at 4 per cent, compouna | (2ushters. saying that he did Holla ons, a provision he could wy | rorety eavapdd prosecution, Seven ot | one of the Iinc-up at Police Head.| himself before our’ General, | tps from Dresden, ‘They looked well, ‘ interest will show an accumulation of $1,475 in ten years; $7.50 | with, him h certifeates around) make since his salary as hoad of the|the twelve Mormon Apostles have | quarters. 4s hoon a8 we got through with him | lke ail made-in-Germany goods, bat f & month will show $1,106; $6 a month will show $885; $5 a. | ‘The five wives who survive Josoph| L8tter Day Saints was $50,000 a year|taken plural wives ia defiance of the| ‘The first thing wo did. was disarm} the tenre! tote for nibs, When Del Miey talked bad ‘They: were made of month will show $737; $4.50 a month will show $663; $4 a month will |F. Smith are: Mrs, Alice Kimbo [4 be was sald to receive an adai-|compuact with the United States,|hlm, It was a Dis hadiig ay oe anctiee rer MP REE Se tye vane bas apne leaves. If the Gor- 5 3 2 h 01 come of $25,000 ye. : he a disturb any one were|and he de a very sna | re 20d at synthe! show $589; $3 a month will show $442 and $2.50 a month will show | Smith, Mrs, Mary Schwartz Smith, U0Hal ipeome of §2 Yearly from| polygamy flourishes among the young | had that are (enn Fheid from his| salute, He tried to hide his quivers,| missed out on on when oe $368, says the Thrift Magazine Mrs, Sarah E. Richards Smith and| Private business enterprises jmen and women of the Mormon|#X Tockcis. Me lll eels i an-(but his taut hands, dropped at hisland apple toaves arc not eee! | Any sum saved and invested at 4 per cent, compound interest will {Juliana and Edna Lampson Smith | an bonsidering Rely Earious marriage, | Church ie “ep re a AS Pees some distance into our back| sides in tray military fashion,| tea ts u _ more than double itself in twenty years, Bave $10, At the end of tho | sister and both welded to the snine| Ne ny Aten a tay Bene Led of the ower wielded by | reas, Ha said he was on patrol | trembled. He explained that he bad! In passing it 1s worthy of note that ‘ : ; hase . B atter aint. Mrs, Kdna t a po! eligious tene » prophe: > died yesterday was he he eH as us! othe ches had be: . first year you will have $10.40; in five years you will have $12.70, At or Dey Le atria Pr trys Ses pete ek who died yesterday was) A" yt he Mbbed. He had deeldad| been told. as ul other Boches had been|UnteroMaler ~— had planned to wal overcome the Instinctive reluctance ot every woman to @ co-operative bus-| Mr. Cannon, has always been reputed to be the When Presi- told by their officers, that the Amer- A for America about two months before fe | war broke out. Anyway, he's nearer the end of the tenth year your interest will have grown to $6.20, and at the end of the twentieth year your interest will be $10.70, or more to met ovt of the mud and put an prophet’s favorite wife. Jena to his part In any winter cam- joans took no prisoners, id the : dent Roosevelt visited Salt Lake City} band. Frank J, Cannon, a son of one| “The Mormon prophet,” he said, " 1 nRy Hid gene the rounds of G i than double your original sum. Carried along on the same basis $100 | guring his term of office It wae the) ot the great heroes of th a $f.00 ee ee a eee oni t cil paign, He dia not want to admit story tua gone the sunds of German}to ew York than he might have will become $207 and $1,000 will grow to $2,070, Seale sl eyed Id Guneshvandiwlmuals dh arEmOR | Ry ean SaAMARtAACL ty that he had left his own lines to| tro that Am ani ral-| been if he hadn't come over the top comely, brown-eyed Kdna Smith who c nse he frst Unites} the trust func spbices Y the] sive himself up. He said he was|ians took no prisoners, He had even| when he did. He was goin, Hove 1) conta’a'Gay and in ten years your dally savings will be {was chosen to be the official wife and| States Benator' from Utah ‘after the| United States, but returned to the looking for our men and was going| beard of a story we bad laughed at}ay a bartender ‘with a fri ne $865, in addition to $80.30 compound interest, making a total of $445.30, | mect the President.” Howe Mormon tommunity was admitted to| Mormon people when Utah became alto gro the Very lights, which were| to the ¢ that in reports of ¢ passed ks over 4 bar oe ee § ; , h assed drinks over a bar on Thi If you save 15 cents a day for ten years with interest compounded | the Voust of her sist Statehood, in a series of magazine} State, Yo this fund has been added | of variegated hues, if he saw any-| gagements made by Australians there| Avenue, near 64th Street, New Tork at 4 per cent, you will have $668.18; 20 cents a day will net $890.99; 59 | 8k¢ has had more cluidron than any |Articles once explained what this be-| yearly tributes in tithes of millions | ching to report to his own forces, He| was always this statement: “One| which is not tar from where newly. of the other wives, Mrs. Jullana|ief t% Though difficult to state ex-|of dollars. was @ poor liar, prisoner taken for identification pur- a day will mean $2,227.78, and $1 a day will give you a total of ? Smith is the mother of seven girls) actly in f family newspaper, it nay the head of the Sugar Trust | with which to discharge the lights. | pose 200 killed.” That story is aot He had no pistol Se or Loman ncn sea ipcanaentaii be eald that the Mormon God is hits-'in Utah and of the decal branch of! & day later more prisoners <iom Malarue and is had ile origin ia Uaghe made 7th Regiment non coms, were wont to celebrate their rise out of the if A sie “ : [reve ct 2 ec a Winhioniy ae onto : a " tern

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