Newspaper Page Text
JUNE t8, 1904
EDITORIAL PAGE
THE SUNNY SOUTH
Uhe SUNNY SOUTH
Published Weekly by
Sunny South Publifhing Co
Businefs Office
THE CONSTITUTION BUILDING
ATLANTA. GEORGIA
promises to merit serious consideration. A man s
body and mind differs little from a machine.
It fias a certain prescribed life, depending on its
id the manner in which he uses it. c
rrcen old age
©je WeeK in a. Busy
jf? World
texture and me maimei m
,nav preserve his natural forces to a
by living simply and naturally, or he may burn
less than three decades d lie lets
*t the better of his
Confederates Mingts
In Tender Reunion
Along the Highway
By Frank L Stanton.
A well-defined rumor is iu circulation j
to foe effect tli.it on Friday the .Japs i
will make another anil determined at- i
tack on Port Arthur from land and sea. ;
l here are also undetailed reports ot
searched vainly heavy lighting on the l.lao-lung pemn-
111 the rula, with terrific losses on both sales.
been sunk
Subfcription Terms:
To those who «ubscr»fc®
to 5V>e Sunny Sotith o;*ly
Six Months, 25c * One Year, SOc
LESS THAN A PENNY A
Bntrrr.1 nt the postofflre Atlanta, Gi*£*01**°°*
/ j f Lt r o *
The sunny South is the oldest pap.yf re .
Romance. «"« ««*•» in f,° ha Swished us for.
- '“ZZrZin.U
merly every weak Found*.. \ as an expert-
of ecllps‘
out his vitality in
greed, ambition or profligacy ge
self-control. Just as Ponce de Leon
for--lie fountain of youth, just as futilc-ly w
fools of this age think they can make a niocken ot ^ arc re])0rted to liav
natural, physical and spiritual laws by tlie usi 01 1 , n a oattie oft Port Arthur, no details of
fakir's potion composed of mysterious mgre-; the act jon have been received. Admiral
d by obscure, high-sounding ad-j Tog;l reports the shelling of a Russian
| troop train l>y Japanese gunboats off
in torturii g Kai-ciioiv.
;pan, the
man with a mania in this direction had best h'kow
the teachings of Cornaro, the Venetian centena
rian. whose cardinal principles
purity, moderation.
1
Unit- d
TIE annual reunion of the
Confederate Veterans, just concluded
in Nashville. will SO down into hls-
,„ rv is one of the most largely attend.-
and enthusiastic in a Jong and notable
took advantage of Me
nf Mabama. and pro- ;
f decrepit
> the ball
lips, four Russian ami two . j their friend
liberal railroad rates to be present at the
The city of Nashville recen.d
Thomas G. J.
foundly moved lie thousands <
Old men who had crowded int
5 e to the dead commander,
part of the noble qualities
uv; or Jones said:
“Gordon came up to the full statui e o.
military greatness. Nothing
.^.lririp-iv iq- possession of the fine
,f th sc trinals than his
5th of May, in the Wil-
to pay horr
Speaking i-
of Gordon,
fiber of many
conduct on Un
some
dients and booste
jeetives.
If there can he any great pleasur
out life beyond the commonly alloted
when, as a
ment It now returns to , n ,- n tion
weekly with renewed vigor and t le
,ng Its most promising period tn the pa .
Bringing me Old Jtge Germ
To Bay
HE dietary regimen, the strict absti
nence hat and the rigid hygienic
prescriptions given to those w 10
would prolong their temporal exis
tence, have found a drastic toe m
, n of Dr. Metchmkoff, ot
Pasteur institute. Some
long and
the
the
per so
1 ’arlis
it is reported that Russians moving to
th.* relief of Po t Arthur were decoyed
into a trap by the Japanese and anni-
niiuted. Michael Davltt. now in Russia,
were simplicity. I reports that the stories that tno war is
' I unpopular are false. He says the masses
‘an- confident that Russia will win. -v
i Chinese spy who lias escaped from f’.ut
I Arthur reports that provisions in the
j town will be exhausted in two months.
iTi.e beleaguered Russians are reported
to be gloomy. Outpost lighting has begun
| between the Russian and Japanese van
guards in north Manchuria all along tno
'"rental linos. The first general o.ngago-
ELIAT5LE authority is hack ot a re- m( . nt of th( , war is believed t
Significance of Japan s
Religious Edict
-nt.
Every Japanese
be now
ilumn is
P«« % CffCCt that > lK ' /SKSS'SSS, forward and I, «««.« <*»
nation will soon become Christian
by imperial edict. As at present
constituted, that country has no na
tional religion, the small percentage
of natives devoutly inclined do id
ing their allegiance between Shinto
ism. buddhism and others of the
Oriental creeds.
general rule the Japanese do not
take readily to religion, confining
themselves to the patronage of a ly
complete and admirable course ot bn
ethics framed to meet most of the ail
arts of the boat with the rapidity
, V r 0 1>1lt ,,f magic, in a panic the people rushed
demands of their national and individual me. i-m ^ the hurric ane deck, which, unable to
ilic mikado ever alert where progress and world- bl . ar th( , strain, collapsed, precipitating
•olved. is seriously meditating issuing struggling. si.ncK.ng. praying n«nar«s
status arc mv
lecree which will cause the compulsory adoption
form of Chirstianity, which one it is at liv
eager, but present impossible to designate
] le is said to ' death, and
time ago be went out on a
determined search for the microbe
of senility or old age. proceeding on
the theory that a vicious little _or
ganism is responsible for physical
and mental decay, and he now
claims to have cornered the tiny ot
under in the lower section of the ot some
alimentary tract. Details are naively me
it is not difficult to infer that, having
germ and learned its 11 ,
he or souk other expert druses an anti ■xtne ^ far toward increasing tile prestige
.vhicli will effectually choke oil. .W “tslenee Car- "» councils. ’ ‘ We have,” said
Ls logical hnahtv. substance, "adopted Occidental
as applies to warfare, industry and com
and experienced the greatest success.
Kuroki bus .it last determined upon
.1 decisive stroke.
By the burning of the side-wheel ex
cursion boat General Slocum in New York
harbor over five hundred persons have
lost their lives, though this estimate
mity be increased by later Investigation.
It ic v-lid that as a Over one thousand men, women and
It is s.LHl tlia - childreu from st. Mark German parish
had boarded the boat tor an outing on
l.t.ng Island sound. The boat had scarce
ly left the dock before fire suddenly
tut in the lunch room, spreading to
Into the roaring lurnace ot the hold
Many others
spairing ot saving tneir
preferred a watery to a hery
threw themselves over
isolated the have astonished
astute European diploma
list
the side of the boat into the whirlpool
ot Hell Gate. The boat
finally
iter that, ha\ g • , 1 3roac hing the matter deliberately to him, put-;beached and tugs and other srj.au craft
lature. It Will not be long t c . believed such a policy came to her aid, too late, .owever,
, an antitoxinc ting it on the ground that he beliex eel suen a po > prt . Vi . :d HI , ennrmou8 loss of life.
A SONG OF HOPE-
The storm will brighter leave the
skies:
Here’s hoping:
And suns and stars in splendor rise.
Here’s hoping! c trife f
Take heart in all the gnef ^Jsrite
We’U reach the realms with roses rite.
And drink from fountains sweet vi-
life:
Here's hoping!
II
Behold! —the light is breaking fa“
Here's homing!
The rest—the recompense at last.
Hero’s hoping!
For all the wild and thorny son—
The wrath that, wields the scourging
rod, .
There comes the great reward of God.
Here's hoping!
HARD TIMES PHILOSOPHY.
Sometimes a cyclone is in the na
ture of a blessing—because it spb"’ •
wood just the proper size for kindling
purposes.
If some people knew the world was
; turning round they’d spend a lifetime
making brakes to stop it.
Never give up when the earthquake
I com es—if there’s one hill left to jshout
halleliua on.
GENERAL S. D. LEE.
rving out this theory to its ..
be able to stave off death indefinitely and unit
x S hi s “race suicide” lucubrations method.'
Mr. Roosevelt ceases
lust
the world will speedily become too narrow to ac
commodate the teeming bi’lions who will accumu
late by reason of this valuable discovery,
think of the gentleman of seventy-five
■ • • v and volatile as the youth of twenty! lmag-
the reigning belles of the twentieth century
being
mi
me
ond and
vviiii with those of the twenty-first or sect ..
X ^ K t „ v suits brought by and mental readiness m
merce, — r -
Would not a similar happy result follow .our adop
tion of the religion which is embraced by all of die
world’s leading powers:
somewhat aback
the question, is said to have stammered out a reply
which did much to injure his reputation for acumen
,-ith the ruler of Dai Nippon.
The diplomatist, taken
the suddenness and oddity of
the glut in the courts ol dam ..
amdii'-t mothers in law for alienation of at-
a " to revise the crim- however, the germ
wive
lection. It would be necessary
jnal code and abolish the ninety-nine year sentence.
since it would he a mere bagatelle to the man V .
could provide himself with a liberal supply of fnti- follow the tenets of
senility serum. Why, with the passage oftwo^ :en
,, Jtbner McKinley
There is in the position taken by the mikado, did not waken his servant,
lucre is 1 f . ,, i-r, rp.-pivrd Kinley walked into his room at 8 o clc
of a truth which has receive anJ fouIul him sitting in a chair c
from modern thinkers. It IS the| and apparently dead. A physician was ;
, '1 ! crnnifinnrp ■'* fn,-t that lllOSC nations which summoned, who said deatli had prob-j
the man who signincanee
bner McKinley,
brother of the late
president, was found
dead in a chair in
tils home recently.
His death camo
without warning to
his family. His col-
>red servant, who
-A. i*. in his room,
was up with him at
2 o’clock and it is
not known at what | -dress was
time Mr. McKinley
got up again, as he
Mrs. Mc-
'eloek
cold
Unanimously Elected to Succeed General Gordon as
Commander in Chief.
THE DREAM.
Onre I dreamed this life would be
Sad with daisies over me, i
When they saw the grasses wjave,
Wind-swept, o’er my lonely grave.
But 1 died, and no man wept
O'er the cold couch where I slept.
Once I dreamed my love voujd be
Weary of the world for me;
When 1 said in dying light, j.
“Kiss mo, dear, and so goodnight.
But I died, and no love wept
O’er the cold couch where I plepL
Pray thy prayer and sing thy; song;
Life at best, dear, is not long!
So you feel my latest breath—-
Kiss me in the aisle of Death,
I shall die, but, dying, live
In the glory Love can give.
honor, showing them many tender atten-
, tions and devising many P le:, -f“
i prises to make their stay one filled witn ^ lug fin
! delightful memories.
! one of the most noteworthy of the re-
! union features were the memorial set- ■ ' • -
| vices held in honor of General John B.
| Gordon, the revert d commander of the
I veterans, who passed to his reward 'but
| a few months ago. The memorial ad-
delivered by ex-Governor
after
on
which h:td driven
men in
ilong th
tit, h<
med were
general line of th
ed unbroken on either
1 gave way <
of Gordon’s
iiy
• hattl'
an f us Vi.
small fr
found that his victorious men
ling on the same
which extend-
o. making re-
a whole
line of a
my,
CONTINUED ON FIFTH PAGE.
Southern Squab Farm;
,,, _ v-uminit hari- | fucianism
/A*; ^ the otllcrs ’ Such a comli-: branches
llon v, '°; l!(1 sou,ld sure death knell of hereditary
monarchy, since heir
little attention
jf the fact that those nations w
Christ now dominate the civil
ized world, as well as overshadow the portion^UOtf -wa.adx, con.-uimW ‘ , Mo x mo , t
Mohammedanism, Con-: p l lys,c,ans ;infl trave
Buddhism and their
ibly occurred two or three hours before. .
Vlr McKinley’s death w; 4 d»e to Bright’- i
r * -—-v— , J im i
A New and Profitable Industry
IN THREE PARTS—PART 111
HIS LITERARY METHOD.
The work of James Whitcomb Riley
is simple and flowing, and yet he is
quoted as saying-
“I have frequently spent
week in remodeling one
poem. And even then it seemed O
fall far short of what I '' lsn ' .
be.” The same thing is related of the
poet Longfellow.
TH E LITTLE COMFORTER.
I.
1 when that her little arms are curled-
About my neck they twine
She says she “loves me all the world
Hence, all the world is mine.
And sweetly do the heavens above _
j smile on that wondrous word ot love.
Lrahminism,
ate to another.
. . . apparent would grow weary
ol waiting indefinitely for a chance t
scepter. T he infinite possibility
count for little in the sharp potential
world problems of today ’ cntlal
It
arv It may he objected that geographical and racial
° sw,ntr the Bterences are responsible for th, „,„hi
" - sufficicnt’to i s C
: most! preciahle extent this is doubtless true, but’the'v
are n° t sufficient to explain the radical contrasts
u,l ch between the comnu
., . , ' ornnv 1S just as and individual status of the
wax mistaken or llta. “L ^ i h hri ? U “ "'c must look
ling from one ciim-
two weeks ago lie re-
. . Jam ivt, Fia., where lie had
’X th SIX WeekS ’ and himself
under the care of Dr. Henri I. Mars-
' !' n ' he sufferer was not confined to
hls h°d and the day before
a drive into the country
was held at Canton; Ohio.
fie died took
The funeral
strenuous imagination.
i’ W " aIas ; ' vIl - v f° rt ure ourselves with these tan
tauzing visions? The cable ton
likely to briiig the
new:
teen dissipated by some equally ingenious if
hard-hearted, ’ -
will find slende
of the
has for tlie psychology of the
reial, intellectual
non-Christian and the
more deeply
more very subtle
matter—for that it has a
sc,cnt,st ' I,uleed - his
posed this somewhat revolutionarv
f ,. r support among the more practical f-->c
Iv - LIT,? , P T:°" ° r ll,c !""**vity experts. mtU
' ,he >i"mfurme,l layman will be chary of -' m- 1
ceptmg any dogma which teaches that
play ducks and drakes
. a man may
n with his vitality, cut the
'•.mile two and burn all four ends.'and then
• lilt tlie encroachments ’ '
the employment of some magic serum. Ther
too much of the note of the eharlatr
ot decay and senility h
serum. There is
atan in these wild
Pro-
r i - ,. . , .• -tep for his
t hnstianity has ever been the all-pervad-
blbneant winch oiled the wavs for tile entrance
"rtrt™ 1 - rth wal and spiritual reforms
epochal nature. And there is the
ity that the Japanese nation
tue of imperial enactment.
R a. j. p. bert-
ICHY, :tn electrical
neineer of Illinois.
s ilestined, not only
° a. $2,000,000
■rize recently offered
or certain telephono
mprovements, hut
' ill, in ail probabil-
ty, achieve great
HE common pigeon is
rarely bred in captivity,
because it would not pa>-
to house and feed it. It
is not nearly so large as
its appearance would indi
cate. it i s more feathers
titan flesh, it breeds only
four or five times a year, ■
and the squabs sell for 1
only one dollar, or one and
a half a dozen, because
they are small and skin
ny. and often dark colored
epicure wants a fine, fat
squall, with well rounded breast
of fat and white flesh
feed the former than the latter, and they
raise twice as many squabs besides.
”* - ... florid,
at least, for the first year, be raised
for stock, rather than for the table. As
seen, the squabs remain,
tentedl.v in their nests until
or five weeks old
11
"ks the
in flesh. The
ame. Bertschy has and a half to thn
nvented an Instru
ct I an
ment tha t relates to.
the telephone just as
«u P ple B s e d'o C to V - the^t
stanch probabil- -- m other w„^
' e l" nK dlstancp telephony a,- far as
" !,ejs can ! " -stretched, his machine
feting parents
tofore. it is il)
tlenty j to transfer them
, . In the Homer house and vani
squab this is exactly what lie finds, and worry th,
ie is willing to pay from mvo .1.0 hotisr . tl
feed then
hat cliin
*““* *»'* U! IflH l:i r«rn oHf ..
the ....
grades,
con -
they are four
id that, by the wav,
>n why they grow and fatten
etw«< n the fourth and sixth
will be able to liy a little,
u they do not now hop out of th° nest
it their accord or get pushed out
their parents, you must vour-Gf in
vite them to step outsid
fully able by this time
selves, but. Iiko other
and i
Not royally my mansion towers ,
mat yon may Iitp it. j n the flu
That bloom ’neath tranquil sk
And yet. for all, I do opine.
The very world God made is m
III.
They are
to feed them-
,. , young birds, pre
fee to have tln-ir patient
1 And rich am I when poorest seeming
With wealth to match i.he worlds
above;
W hen, sweetly on my bosom dreaming
She bringeth me her world of love! *
There lies she, like a gem impearlea
Her love my life, my wealth, mv world:’
R-SUf-
and
'ay from two dollars
e dollars a dozen for
them. In the markets of the u.rge cities
Quabs are sorted into tliree
one. t w
her ones
these ai
and culls. Of
. once Christian !>v vir-
Christian principles A iojiecoL^,^ 7Z — n„„
howi
an of Nazareth actually
as externally.
the line
F'nd of
th
Worcester Spy,” Last of Revalu-
* lutionary Papers, Suspends *
ECEXT newp dispatches
fiont Boston and Worces
ter, Mass., conveyed the
information that the Wor
cester Spy—the last of the
rev. lutionary newspapers—
was dead, having suspend
ed publication
foreclosure of
paper adopted the
a week. In three months more The Spy missed fr
was changed to a weekly.
Mam.) 17, |77| th(
following motto*
Open to all parties, but influenced by
none.”
Although the editor apparently tried to
alter the live up to hls cnosen motto, he seems to
mortgages have found :t impossible to be neutral
aggregating $16,000. With «>»<! impartial in the political character of
the single exception of the his columns. Jt became evident to his
Boston Gazette, founded in readers lhnt Thomas was a whig, at
1719, Tile Spy was, per- with the People in their aspirations
'haps, the very oldest news- '° r Iihert > r and '.heartily voicing the pop-
paper in fids country. The paper was ,,lar sentiment of the hour. This became
established in 1770 in Boston by Isaiah -5'^- t0 .. h . iS tory P atron «. and they
Thomas, who, liecause of his fearless ut
terances in behalf
driven from that
was
J'***''» **■*. ti iJiillKrilpt
but disposed of it the following
Charles Nutt, of Xew Ror'aelle
"f the colonists
city by the English.
In 1898 William S. Walker, of Chicago,
acquired the paper at a bankruptcy sale,
_ year to
New Roc'helle, x y
Euitor Nutt did not make
the venture.
When The Spy first snfiv die light the
important events that precipitated the
revolution were culminating in this coun
try. All the popular leaders of the time
had become editors, pamphleteers,
agitators
ora tile office of justice of the
peace because be wrote for the paper. , vin hl
; eaHt three years before the light nt, entire
Concord Justice Greenleaf closed an a,-
tl* in thii, bold manner*
“Should the liberty of the press be oner
destrgye,! farewell the remainder of our
'* " able r 'f ht - s and privileges! We may
M expect padlocks on our lips fetters
on our legs and only our bands' left at
'"crty to slave for our worst than Egyp-
Uan taskmasters, or-or-to light our
"<•> to constitutional freedom "
-U this time The Boston Gazette was
organ Of the tories. Soon The Spy
whlM a U '" recognized organ of the
• n- ■ Some of the contributions in Tlie
»P.v were very powerful. ""CenUneI ”
JL*<*oniuas
course the num
'’ring the highest prices ant
almost always Homers’ or !
cross of Homers with tha r-i,.
" uu tne Dragoon pig
eon. I no pure Homer is 1
as the Dragoon cross, thou
, 1 giving larger squabs is li-iffli *
t olume as j mulatto fleshed bird, or dark JiT ° *
which are attractive i M apron r n
; v; b <i
.culls are generally the squabs f, wi
■experimental purposes. He is “pre- W( ' ^ flying about the
makP tWo more machines, to that ef it T U ° Wn ,ivi "“
««*.l m a set for „ flna , t ,, st before I ° f TI ' ! ' 0,r babIps "
•some ,ff the most influential telephone ,, Uomer among pigeons is as
men ,,, the country and some of the tho! OU£rhbrf ‘d among horses
wealthiest capitalists who are interested 7-T nn, .° nR ' thp
teIephone companies. This final tes* dlst,n "' llf!hed ' lt a
made over wires covering the. i ,,,Se ° n * U hM **>
um s - iU *- 1
der w
house
trough,
should
The ;
• t for them, as here-
best plan, therefore,
it once to a nursery
where they can not
Id birds. If left j n the sq U a|,
wiii nag their parents to
and interfere with the next
will then be well un-
my can not have a
‘msi'lves.
FROM AN AUTHOR’S NOTEBOOK.
At last I have been successful in lit
erature. My publisher invited me to
dine with him yesterday, and
a ride in his automobile.
gave nu
Tlie best
hirh
if tl
■asy ac«
'|Ua
‘Hia
m.xi.iar.v
he litti.
house
r**ed
»nes
me fo** a literary m; 1
IS to have his hair clipped short an
t'nis have the appearance of bein
strictly business.
a r«
: qu.j
it tli<‘ receiving
with just as muc
:;: y rj ,ran »*» i »«i a , s „ per .
. ’j. ° f ,w ” messages being transmitted
'■"■b way on the same wire and at the
ame time. Today he has one completed
which l;e roughly
when they hav,
of 6 months they , V;1(
begin housekeeping th i t
One way of mating pigeons
natural way, is to turn them
in equal
non
and
age
sible t,
ml-.
ui five months old
leached tlie malm
t'> pair and
’wn account.
• fid the most
the sexes
it
Lie literary fellows do a great deal
towards making the world bright- hut
sometimes they get scorched in the
blaze of it.
The:
literature;
umbers
fa
maeiiitn
f
instructed
will the
‘live ha
into the i
1 select ti
pc:
must be money in
lor we hear of an author who sells h •
autographs at a dollar apiece, and h ts
a private secretary to write
and h
iiv
faithful
When
>ach
m:t;i
old.
fail
became
terribly si
and ”.Muciu.s Scaevola” were
As
vere on the tories.
success of
withdrew their support from hi s news
paper. Divers mean attempts were made
to crush this publication by threats of
libel suits and personal violence and the
officers of the English government re- As ‘‘ arIy 1771 the Spy urged a
fused to allow Thomas the privileges of ' oun ' e to “Scaevola" denout
the custom house to obtain for his news .'7°™°*' Hu t'-hinson as a usurper who
columns the records of arrivals and de- , , d 1,0 P*'»ished as such,” and eou-
partures of vessels. This was a severe t0nded th,t Lieutenant Governor Oliver
though not a disastrous blow. * ’ Was " ;l Perjured traitor.”
In commenting upon the procedure Att0rnoy Goner :d
''.RAT, OKI’, who
momands the j a p-
n -.'sp army that is
"t vesting Port Ar-
iiur, is one of th”
uik.ido's noted miii-
’ >ry chiefs. His
roops captured Kin-
how on May 26.
rgest intelligence of tile entiri
md this- qualify ; s
■>v its name, which refer;
'•P'ous homing instinct.
devious
flying pen.
own mates,
after,'- for pig-
■ >eir mates and
,dl ’cf ail their
lard is from
h. in which case he
be retired from this life and nn-
mate given to his widow,
is desired to mate special birds, j
improvement in the '
. . . ‘A'' best and I
ia: s est birds, who are alwa
eats of the finest squabs
ami female should be
no j; ls . eo 0 .
him.
them
HIS HUMBLE WISHES^
Some of the old colored bleth
lanno-o cx ( q _ '
times
must
with
flock.
a view
by t V>
'ait-in
as the
the Jersey
>"-s- Tt can lie
lance from the com
bi rgest bf-ain and
- ., nf the entire ptg-
0,1 fam «y. rtn-l ’his o„o,u.. is , n!li „ a ' t ^
to it>= mar-
N-O matter how .qVs ' ,V'“i T' e'"’ ;,lways lh ' par-
may be carried away i,s ho,,-... a "J ■ ” the male
”• ' , :i ' Us way and this by no Z ‘ ‘ ' be a mat-
>r uncertain route, but in a' lin- tti'A- ,',, ° y ‘•JPmselves. In a few .lays
as st mis'it and true as (be flight of nn , " I ‘ l 1 n,lltl ' «« a rule, and may then
arrow. Many of the Homers are ra,4d * in amon * th “ If vou
for commercial purposes, as mess, ers U \P"^ birds for breeders rath-
a-id racers, and carefully trained r , tban for squabs for th,
Jiey may know what is expected nt malln S coop should
them. Training, however, is onlv none- ‘‘ 1S to Ruard
manage iu get a great deal df tt
Philosophy ;n (heir hvmns.
them goes to this tune:
One of
•''" high place in heaven'
Whar all de saints kin see - i
“ <*n t want no close inquiring
About my pedigree! I
A corner cool en cosv I
" ,!! be sood enough fer me!”!
the WAY TO VIEW IT
F m ? °, f tho P° e ts have left de va!
loys of gloom and are looking ri n th,
denounced
< ~ n r -iO
fortress. Oku first
Japanese rebellion of
ferso f ti
the British authorities
of
Jvilitor Thomas
Sevvall was dirocteq
cute Thomas for libel, but the
a nd
printed in The Spy the following card- b'Z* jUry refused to return .1 true bill
To the Public: A tyrant may justly be ™1, ® tbunder s of The Spy continued to
compared to a polypus, of which the aad m!;tter °ver the heads of the
iMroiod Nanshan
'1. and lie is now
directing his efforts
toward the reduc
tion of the czar’s
won fame in the
1877, when his de-
e erstie of Kumamoto was
master’:-. \- oxt hp f ] iRtin _
war .with China
far in the cam-
has maintained
heroically J ases where the birds are to be
?d for competition.
HOMER 10 DISTINCT.
A pure Homer, in n fio.-k
pie-eons, will lie easily
ncar.y related birds,
happens, a pigeon !.:
considered
guished himself in the
ill 1894-1895. and thus
paign a-ainst Russia he
h!s rv rrestige.
market, the
ways be used so
against the inbreeding of
ii, as sometimes
°! hCr bil ’ d of the same sex Tins t T
Placed in the matin- poop with th
v‘vor. This coop must ,T ' h ° SUr '
01 slatted partition, fitting
and the birds
olc ^ ^vision for .several ri-n-o <
acquaintance through th- mako
to-'vithout touching-eae h '"L and ta,k
throe ot f ol . r , ]lv ‘ " other - In
a pair, and tion and , ' ’ ,move the pr.rti-
° mUCh ' han th.it ask- will' be found ,! ' !njr ‘ the birdt
would-be squab Pt;,ti ° n * b ‘* * ’ h!!Ve Wad *
Aright side of life
this
one: theSe fIays ’ H P r
Talking of (he trouble— I
bJ i7°’ s .? nough for you; !
Rut i f you 11 only whistle i
Joy 11 say; “Howdy do!”’ I
placed
wire
dido.
the
vomm on
of the
ail others were readers and sma!Iest P°rtion. broken off, becomes ai- d ° 0lned authorities,
movers. The press was then more of a m " St ;,n rnedi:ite!y as big. as voracious , , 74 - more British troops having
and »» deformed a thing as file m-iginal ' , d , m Bos:on - that city became too
entangling and engulfing everything 7 ' rhorn ‘ ls - u ’ h "e the horses of
power, perhaps, than in any other period
of American history. It was in July,
1770, that Isaiah Thomas, in connection
with Zaehariah Fowle. Issued the first
number of The Spy. It -came „ut” in
Boston, it bore the name "The Massa
chusetts Spy,” after several of the ear
lier newspapers in England, which had
borne the title of Spye. Circulating side
by side with The Boston Gazette, The
Spy gave great aid and comfort to I he bf en laser ted in :t. The print.
everything ^ tllo
the viol. ! ., Chur ’ h m iuy "“-eats of personal
’<< -a. re uttered against Thomas
_ that ' r flenuticiation of the English out
’bey. to discourage this paper, as they . ,,e was ««L’Hnctly persona non
phrase it. have denied this press the ship *; iata 10 th ” red-coated soldiers of Kin-
list, notwithstanding. according to the , , His nanle was on the iist o1
title that pieces from ail sides have tw ® lve - ' vith Sam Adams and John Han-
within its reach and power. How appli,
!>!:• this may be to our petty lord--
custom house officers, everyone is’ left
judge, after being informed
~Ef)
w \i
1 Wf:
1
j
>f pominny}
. piokPd out bv ;i
nonce In pigeon lore. The chest is lire
or. the wings trim and shapely and the
Proud potse of its head and body mark
• t as an aristocrat, and far nbov
coinmon herd” of pigeons. The
pigeons sell for fifty
this price
ed for the Homer, is a temptation to the minds to -h-ke o' v their
he yield., keeping, together’ -"' T' Wt " p h °use-
saeke.oj!. and lives. But it an! ' res ‘ of their
v a v ““ “iiuu the old proverb f ot-
attorney * Penny wise and pound foolish ” Thi L
neral in the cabi- common birds cost just as much to - Fh <>thel
of President and to D. s much to , nous e and tak
Acc.T-.fin- G . ARDEN OF EDEN.;
"as in AJni.'ni-Tlli D -' st authorities, Jt
- dtn ” SP ° k - of in J ,V : tok^^t ne-
h-al. * The iPKi Ulis ._ theo r, y is topogfaph
r L A N D E R
-oosevelt. is the squabs briny.
"J chosen by the the Homer squabs. Do
'Publican leaders of
limsolf in no wise to hia
r conceives
cock.
tnie if the court
side are now at a loss for writers, it
popular sentiment in favor of freedom
from the yoke that England's colonial
policy had made hateful
in less than four months Thomas was
sole owner of the paper, which he car-
»w <1 ™ al ° ne ’ inCr “ aSins its ‘' izr; from st >' ld •‘the sedition foundry” bv the
two to four pages and publishing it twice royaiists, and Joseph Greenleaf was d.s!
being his province only to publish.
STYLED THE SEDITION FOUNDRY
Henceforth the office of The Spy was’
who were ,» be summarily exe
cuted when captured. To avoid this
unpleasantness" and. likewise, to do
more good with safety, Thomas sent his
type and press across the Charles
river
raiser. But
to it. he will repent in
ashes, and rail to mind
md pound foolish,
common birds cost just as much to ’
President and to feed, as the Homers, and’ th
half as much a
not make the mis
take of trying to raise figs from m
ennsylvania to fill or large, fat squabs from
,e seat nf Matthew by parents. It is thos
Quay in the sen-
Mr. Knox was ing. who char;
.;■» ! »>»««•
Mh; 4 ; l853 - lf on '' Jcsires a fin' flock of hens he
. 1 is a graduate of .does not go about hunting for cut "Vwl
1 ’ nt I nion coi- but seeks .-i .•eiiit.tr. u„.,i ..... *' “ h -
I>ays a
that has
ling.
it wi 1 give you ;l
was watered bv' •, s ' a . JS t,lat the gard'-u
a ;; tr LLou Giboa.nii°id^ranTi i T’-
l b „ V- r .'-:Js Iflti,^ diincuitv ah.-
small, serttb-
- who have tried
this cheap (?) method, and found it wnnt-
terize tuc squab l)usie
as a fraud so far as profit is cotv.
If one desires a fiim flock of
, T ” “‘ c docs n “t go about hunting f :
lege. Ohio. He "was T'nit , ' JT" C ° ! ‘ J”, 1 SeekS a l f>IlabIc d oaler and
trict attorney in the w t * ‘cm d *s- ; fair price for a good a rtf le
Pennsylvania. iWs-.pyy t0rn , dw * r e ‘ ° f " hy years •>( enrerm bre
and after re- A pair of Homers tn
.'-eparated l )v
th ret
the ‘ST”^^ x ;ngtCaTneilTcoTr::*- ! w,U
and tne
to fi
Vh “ U "’ y niUst b0 again
-ho Partition for , uv f
Iong-er nnn ti or
m0r e. if. after the t " tn '° d °nce
still disagree N' ond lri,: - they
h*’ introduced * to 't’V ’’'o VViU hav <’ to
q,,.
1 » not „„ •
V st ‘ x ot pigeons, tj... V, t,Tln: ne
deaotc L- «« in the efe 1 ^ not
;l rule, the bo„, « at tlu ,‘ ‘ f I”‘Ultry. As
care wider apart th T .I ° f tho f «’-
n, "l'- > - If the beak r.r ”, thoS « <>f the
•is the T ^ oinn referral
cradYe of t he U --F f '""' rivera ” * »
tnenia does n ‘ ‘ ,n 1 ho
■■ b ? pkt ° th “
-of fl «r Hais '
history is trji
the great-gri
Attorney G
CONTINUED ON FOURTH PAGE.
ir,1 egie Company, for fifty cents, is surely worth more th '
the president to accept th’ 1 ® ° y th<2 ,,air ° f plgeons "’hose five weeks’
to the senate Pt tha appoin tment : squabs bring only from ten to twenty
) cents a pair. Yet it costs no more to
in one hand
' t i*t t chin £
T , a pjsreon
md the feet in the
is held I'D
ly alw.
them out, the
'liter
Ri-h, A ® !SHOP ’S COMMENT.
vocatin^ , A ' 1 an i! '”’ W | s on e
purse string >re libcr; ‘ l of
several’ - "ts b- t0l , d h,!i •’*’"»<>»«•
.• y n ' . be sent an articl
' , " h■ n he said, “We dray
work too little ” Th
ad-
the
1 hat
• nl
sitor.
body, whi>
bpnd his tail ,i
consciously
th,> wil1 "t'hrow 0 hers ^'.too litti
nr- fl’.L ".’trated a little
rti—It
joki
'red it read
CONTINUED ON
LAST PAGE.
at that,”
I believe
I never ventured to
unconsciou 5I v,
for whon the
“Wp h’*:i> !rr*41
s-ii.t tv , : letg«
1 tde bishop. “The tact; is,
‘ 0 Pinter was risrlit, and 1
correct l>iuu”