Newspaper Page Text
C_Dal I hifij Oryan •!
| Franklin Coonty.
TO KEEP DOWNlNSECT PESTS
Bird Houses in Field and Garden Are
a Profitable Investment in
Many Ways.
Before erecting bird houses to at-
tract the feathered songsters without
whose presence successful gardening
is impossible, one should first deter-
mine the kind of birds to which his
premises are adapted. The question
usually next arising is as to the nuin-
her of birds that can be
dated. Unless grounds are large, it
is generally useless to expect as ten¬
ants more than a pair of each species,
except martins. However, the singu-
lar intolerance shown by most birds
during the breeding season to others
of their kind does not operate be¬
tween those of different species. A
dozen different kinds of birds will
pursue their several inodes oi hunting
and raise their families on the same
lot, but rarely two of the same sort.
Of all our house birds, martins alone
are social. The fact that there is a
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Food Shelter—No. 10, Side View of
Food Shelter. No. 11, Food Shelter
Set on Top of Post. No. 12, Food
Shelter Interior, Showing Suet Bas¬
kets.
0
limit to the possible bird population
on any given tract must be taken
into consideration. When the prob¬
able tenants have been decided upon,
the selection cf sites is in order, for
the site often decides the style of
house that is to occupy it. In the
final placing of bird houses, care should
ba taken to have them face away from
the winds prevailing in stormy weath¬
er. The strongly developed homing
instincts of birds can be relied on to
attach them to the neighborhood
where they first saw the light, and
the identical pairs which nest in the
houses provided for them one year
will often return the next season to
enjoy the same bounty and protection.
The illustration shows one of the
best ideas for building bird shelters.
PUT DAN ON STREET SIGNS
Four Stales Have Enacted Laws That
Will Do Away With Blemishes
on the Highways.
Laws designed to preserve the
beauty of the highways by preventing,
as far as possible, the placing of adver-
tising signs on buildings, trees and
stones along the highways, are now in
effect in Connecticut, Pennsylvania,
Massachusetts and New York. The
New York law, which went into effect
recently, makes it a misdemeanor to
place a sign on any tree, stone or
structure within the limits of a high-
way, or on any private property with-
out the consent of the owner. It is
also provided that any sign placed in
violation of this law may be removed
and destroyed by anyone, without re¬
sort to legal formalities.—Modern Me¬
chanics.
Living Landscape a Dominant Art.
Warren H. Manning, president of the
American Society of Landscape Archi¬
tects, in extending a greeting to the
American Civic association, at its an¬
nual convention in Washington, said:
“I wish to state my belief that the
making of living landscape will be the
dominant fine art of the future, be-
cause it is one in which all the people
and all the homes may have a place. I
believe the time will come, if it is not
already here, when men of means will
seek out the finest landscape outlooks,
will purchase them as they now pur¬
chase artists’ pictures, and will take
their friends to their galleries of liv¬
ing pictures with an even greater pride
than they now take them to their gal¬
leries of painters’ pictures."
All Alike Interested.
The man working on a salary io as
m ™°**rt*' 'm H -V only
tTOpfiiv- Utffi Uiiit we m
Tft \W. tij
' ■
A
rh_ ir% m V a y one ♦
PUBLISHED IN THE INTEREST OF FRANKLIN COUNTY AND ITS READERS.
CAM Tn F.SVI \ AA<) (* A. FW M > A V . Al A lU ’l I 11*. l«.) i •
NATURE DELIGHTS IM CURVES
Builders of Human Habitations Do
Well to Avoid Too Many
Straight Lines.
Nature makes no straight lines, for
whether it be the canopy above, the
horizon about us, the shore of occ? i
or pond, the course of streams, (be
lines of horse, bird, or even of the
human figure, benifiirul curves and
1 variety and multiplicity of curves
everywhere abound. Without guid¬
ance such as a taut cord, a straight
edge, or ruler, man cannot make a
j straight line. Even with the assist-
: aa ce of a crack or continuous joint
' in a sidewalk the homeward-bound in
I the “wee sma’ hours anent tiro twal”
cannot maintain their physical dig-
j nit y and equilibrium, however assidu-
0U3l J' their foct wo ° “the straight
and narrow path of rectitude.” It
. then that nature
I must bc apparent
1 rever intended man to make straight
! lines > alul the present writer loves
! them not - oven in a dwelling-house.
The clay cottage with thatched roof
is the very acme of beauty in shel-
ters for mankind, and often the sim¬
ple, old-fashioned garden round about
holds more of natural charm than the
most favored part of the grandest es¬
tate.
Those who have tramped over fresh¬
ly-fallen snow, though intent upon go¬
ing in a straight fine from cne specific
point to another, looking back upon
their course, may easily descry what
beautiful and smoothly-flowing curves
they have traced upon earth’s win¬
try shroud. Even the paths of do¬
mestic animals through their pastures
are of most artistic and gentle de¬
parture from the monotonous straight
line. Still, we would not advise fol¬
lowing these in the economic disposi¬
tion of traffic, as did the Bostonians
with Sam Foss’ calf trail. Likewise,
we should avoid violation of the dic¬
tates of common sense by trying to
institute curves in a front walk from
street to door when the distance is
but a few' paces. Curves must not be
made to appear ridiculous. Sometimes
restricted scope precludes their use
and straight lines must prevail. Still,
the straight line is not, as Ruskin is
reputed to have said,’ “the line of
beauty.”
SAVING NEW YORK'S TREES
Planting Association of ihs Great
Metropolis Finds Itself Facing
a Hard Problem.
Manhattan presents a hard problem
for those who want to beautify the
metropolis with shade trees. It seems
that certain streets are not altogether
hopeless, according to the report of
the Tree Planting association of New
York, just out.
Such are Seventh avenue and Lenox
from One Hundred and Tenth street
up; Broadway north from Fifty-ninth
street, also West End avenue, West
One Hundred and Thirty-eighth, West
Seventy-ninth street, etc.
On all cf these there are plantations
at present. In spite of the fact that
some people have tlio idea that New
York has few shade trees there are
dozens of varieties of all shades and
styles and patterns, from aristocratic
shade trees to scraggy slum dwarfs,
Tree doctors and surgeons are very
necessary, and tree surgery has be-
come quite a definite science. Many a
fine old tree is saved Oy “filling its
tooth,” as it were—that is, filling its
hollow cavity with cement to prevent
further decay.
The committee of the association
has divided up Naw York into dis-
tricts for special examination, and the
report on the different geographical
\ locations is exhaustive,
3 fit
L’ -iac- ; il* a j .a
utati •>'*
.j <ir; u -j
H (
C \ ' r.
J make a man’s business more prosper-
t ous at the same time tend to giv.. more
j stable value to a man’s home and
: i guarantee him steady employ¬
more
ment. You can’t get away from it; we
. are all in the same boat, and must sink
or swim together.
! Righteously Indigr.arit,
■ Head of the firm (discovering
his apprentice and his young daughter
.-.re corresponding}—Well, well, t’s
love letters the rascal is writing to
my daugh :r, and on my
too!—Munich Fliegende Blaetter.
n-r.<j*v fn'l rUn-
rpn-.i-
Srim'Se" tKvcmllJ. ^?S-
\ u cr8
MAKING WAR ON BILLBOARD
American Civic Association Regards
It as Objectionable Form
of Advertising. j
From its very institution, the Amer-
ican Civic association has devoted it-
self to the protection of the public
ngainst three great nuisances—smoke,
poles and wires, and billboards. At
tlie annual convention of the associa-
tion in Washington one of the import-
ant subjects discussed was billboards,
wlth a principal address, entitled
“The Passing of the Signboard,” by
Jesse Lee Bennett of Baltimore in
which lie recounted the steps that had
been taken for the legal control of
tlm billboard in all parts of the United
States.
Concerning the sentiment again .t
the billboard, Mr. Bennett said: ••The
feeling against the signboard has he-
come nation-wide and in the past few
years the agitation of civic organiza-
tions Iia3 been so successful as to
awaken resentment against it so wide*
spread that, from coast to coast and
in almost every state and city, there
arc now, cr have been, vigorous move¬
ments seeking the abolition or regula-
tion of these unnecessary and disfig-
wring objects.
fjicre has been much agitation,
and from it there has been distilled
one thing the recognition of the fact
that wlnit is called the signboard
problem is a question more complex
than the mere removal of the signs.
Tlio signboard has been found to be
inextricably intertwined with two
questions of even greater importance
—awakening of civic sentiment
and the recognition by legislators
and judges of the validity of argu¬
ments based upon esthetic considera¬
tions.”
Commenting on what ought to be
the attitude of the law and Iho courts
toward the billboard, he added:
‘ it w'ouid take our psychologist but.
a few minutes Jto show that it is not
a question of ear, or nose, or eye, but
a question of the brain and of the
very consciousness that is life itself.
No law should permit any man to
intrude or force himself or his busi¬
ness into another man’s consciousness
to the extent that outdoor advertis¬
ing has come to permit, an intrusion
immeasurably increased by the fact
that it is impossible to avoid seeing
signboards.”
SERVED A DOUBLE PURPOSE
Scheme of New York Man improved
Appearance of Garden and Pro¬
tected Birds.
Bird lovers Often find it a most dif¬
ficult problem to devise means to pre-
vent neighbor¬
hood cats from
4m frt frightening away
their feathered
pets and robbing I
/ the nests of their i
J A New i j
young.
York man who I
Vi S' makes his gar- 1
m den an aviary,
miM and who at the
same time is not I
a hater of cats,
planted climbing-
ii: rose the poles base vines supporting of about the
- k w ■’ his bird houses.
; - k, While these
added greatly to
the appearance of ,
the garden, they
also served very
efficiently in keeping cats from crawl¬
ing up the posts. The birds, under¬
standing their security, were no longer
. frightened from their nests.—Popular
Mechanics.
i
ComblsTstion of Property Owners. 1
A ge:icra> maintenance tax of two t
mills per square foot, which amounts
to $4 per year on a lot 20 by 100 feet,
besides the regular city tax, must be
paid by lot owners in a section of
Philadelphia. This special assessment
is for the upkeep of the property, and
is applied towards the cost, of gar¬
bage collection, snow cleaning, light- ,
ing, maintaining the park and sew¬
erage system, replanting trees and
shrubbery, cleaning vacant lots, and
repairing streets and sidewalks. The
fund is administered by a company
and assures the lot owner that all
,
repairs in streets and sidewalks will
be promptly made when needed, and
' vlU not be f ub J' ect to tb ? ^iosyn-
crahies . 0< „ pnvate ownership or the
8 ow methods of municnal
ments.
Road of Success.
Author—It’ll be a fine feather in
your oap if you produce this play. !
1
tU * U fl0 ' n * 1 Ut ' k ‘
City-Planning Association.
For a number of years the city of
New York has contemplated the crea¬
tion of a city-planning commission for
regulating the various civic improve¬
ment undertakings of the municlpal-
ity, as well as those of private indtvid-
uals The work which we id como
under the supervision of such a city-
planning commission would include,
among other things, housing, indus-
trial structures, the conveyances of
supplies and materials of manufacture
and manufactured products, the dis-
posal of waste material, the arrange-
nient of the various sections of the
O' in accessible manner, rapid and
convenient means of transportation,
the prevision of facilities lor educa-
tion and public recreation.
These are the fundamental objects
of city planning, but many other c.ty
activities would come vnder the super*
vision of the city-i inning commie
sion, such as regulating the height of
buildings, dividing the city into dis-
t”icts and zones, traffic regulations,
etc.
Good Judgment Needed
Good judgment—not a matter of
opinion, but a matter of principle,
training and experience—is necessary
to the s« .eclion of a proper location
for a civic cento, in order to avoid
the criticism and condemnation c” fu-
t U re generations to which we lay c.ir
selves ope K if wo do not exercise
proper jud U raent a t the crucial mo-
men f
One Sc! icl Benefit.
“I tell you, sir, the great benefit of
a college education lies in th< friends
you make,” “"’hat’s so. No mark -
how old you ur if you have been
tin >vgh college you can always find
some ci-c to play pol 3 r bet on the
races or go on c spn ith ’’—Life
More Imp-i 1 hin<
The latest esi'm. placus t...<■ -- t ,e
o the ear.; at lOO.OOt. years. T b ,*•
ever, the age. of the ca; ’.h sn’i r
as important io some men • t’ e
t. the liquor 'be; con on
Paint Your Residence,
if your residence needs painting or
repairing now is the tir to have the
work done. lu the iirit ..iace yen will
get tho labor much cheaper ai l in the
ntxt place you will aid those who need
V orlc. If it is true that, we are border¬
ing on prosperous times it will not be
many months until labor will
much more than now, so there is
double saving—the ’ ouse will be s
injury and the owner dollars. V
pay you to look into this
lene(Tex.) Reporter.
Tc Clean Copper.
Coppei articles that have b
discolored can be made to lock new
again by rubbing them with lemon
dipped in salt and aftcnvarc rinsing
in clear hot water and polishing with
a soft cioth.
Miniature Cattle.
The smallest cows in the world are
found in the Samoar islands, The
average weight doe. not exceed 150
pounds, while the bulls weigh about
200 pounds. They are about' the size
oi a Merino sheep.
ONE OF LIFE’S GREAT TASKS
Showing Boys and Girls Their Work
May Be Properly Described as
the Divine Profession.
“There are no men nor women alive,
of too deep visioning nor of too lus¬
trous a humanity, for the task of show¬
ing boys and girls their work. No other
art answers so beautifully. This is the
intense cultivation ot the human spirit.
This is world-parenthood, the divine
“I would have my country call upon
every man who shows vision and fine¬
ness in any work, to serve fer an hour
or two each day, ffmeng the schoois
of his neighborhood, telling the chil¬
dren the mysteries o<‘ nis daily task—
and watching for his own among
them.”
“There was an old priest who served
men in Siberia Around tfi .1, i., 'ho 1
bleak winter land, cere the best an:
worst of the Russian empire He t r n:i
ed the sick, and prayed ;vnh them:
brought food, cut wood, procured
medicines, watched with the dym
prepared the dead. A certain young
Red came out to fm colony and bb
served the priest’s mier of life
‘“Father, he said u, lly, ‘I should
thinK you would ion pour soul in the
midst of such mis .ry and evil and
darkness—as our life here is made of.'
“The old man leaned back and
looked at the ceiling, shutting his eyes
“‘Well, now, that’s queer,' he said,
presently. ‘I had almost forgotten that
i had 9. soul,”’—Will i/evmgtgn Com
fort.
h (J j t) Ki b Li i . u s.> V 'I t. ilUOLS.
.tf*. s AsLIrej.* fti Sou. Tin':., u. Uuifft.
Let it ho remeirboroiu that hi Gei. .•
i • gten: . bulk m’ hr- line:,
v... on 1 -.PL, tiitj and uu< '
">ny of ijs pioy.ctefora resile ec 1 '
■-'us, but tile prup.niy ilcelf
1 ■> nniiitiy, wlievo Jt may be
ibjeet. to Hi u vi.
«, * to-every in ■! i. ! I. I,
*l,y COl',1 y.
C;i the dr?* i • it m
car unjust to !'"< iU'it
. let-mi wb ■ v ' i
mm try distr- u ;
■f tuo sets of ii
ountry mu i tiie oth '
Put ihai w, .«h > V
lit- value and i
in eui.t. y
lar esj u o. * of g
si. I.e-.ls '.■■■ u • a» i
fejivi’’ ( i * i. i
mu to a \ !• V l!
) A li'vd it;;; e-V .
... la U*' « ;
i
hei .it ,
power to «... ail'i
great in hin ), : I.JJl indii..o'i s
craving f -r t. • I'mg •> An e«l 1
cate 1 1. • - e to labu
until it f.K O’ • ut home ami
Sttrai. uve bacoui
Every coninumitv of eduoafed p o-
pie must have a si tu* academy; 1:)
crude, pi ii is jcca c-
inoii.-ideil a 3 a iiMdwii /■ i me, tit./
L;.ii*ki ir eoiiuoit a ■’ ilegance.
.decs in 3 pla- e; it isi bare a
churc.ii in v.bii ii the 1 >le may at
ii'iiihi - for wv. ship whi'.ii't sliaric
and r -.Wbleak, r i' n. h a o go.
bigb' iys foi ,>♦• stlu i > ,iv ..deiici
■uni v .orny; it v. ’ sun uuul it. ei:
••‘th an att ios.nl u ■ pure , r. ■
... 1. • .hup that : e crluiiaaJ'p
in t b»c.-:the It in 1 r **. h t r.
un ..it foe! .. w oii/ulae, ,n.
iu.lividual, out. nberiiig tit
old it Ions now giving way to
•.leiv, will roa 1 vs tin >et'si sc $ • t.l •
1 Ti. a any the rm eteppb .-stones >f
..aeir dead sellv« tu higher tiling.
Such a commu.ilty is an anclior.1.
•o tv- y on, roar d within it, aa • f.
in.-ti a to v ii. h.unc* st. ’ o to
in Ins i t there, '.‘'ha* I'i-.u.
sppri-cj!ii..j m value, population rd bilo, * j
comes more i 3, vt an !
more conk', 1, ai t the
nf lnlci fimnnimioation are
lipliod. c Good schools, therefore, pc.
mote material pro-: parity anil nor, l._
resident propt ictors have no cause to
anticijiale Lie tiopreciai um of th ir
property by tlio impost..ion of a school
tax The tax siloviki bo high enough
1.0 secure a teacher of first-class
i an bfiliation3 for each grade, and to
furnish to every child of school age
Wiest anil earnest schooling.
An adequate school system for the
country would arrest the tendency of
so many people to remove from their
country homes to the towns.
i 1.ding c;.m 1 hioH 3 people can not
ecji.-tii/cd for seeking the supaiior so-
rtsil aiid educational advantages of the
■towns. From this movement, how
the country schools suffer in
d( .able loss. Their most trust
"•■.by support ia gradually drained
1 W MV.
, it.t '• ,, •(<-<;t a 1 so upon the t material 1-
•.©rests i f 1 no po< i io is pemaps n-
tess iilsawtrous. i no grand old , home
„ •du—the crowu ttml glory of a "*■
iiiiiloucd c (i ; civmzatir by tin ' Tik'iuoiTos '*} 1 ’ TU, of "~ “"
o'’
m< ih«. and a”oun J
winch cluMer m p - iu 1tio,,s
d our. h'lillmo.l, are fail ■■ ■ • - 1 1 '' h - 1
u -cay • .'..enwil.-i fa.I off m ; mi ran 'ia
or bccomo : .-.Uru.k chu: to.es ice
their meiuborMiip, tt» iv i and art.}-
,-.aiis sink into iitkoosi, ,«• go-ik cm
ployme.’i else. ET «, a no itie general
, ()U0 , ; f the do- •' Cl. O' 111 1 nity lapser
nto liejirossi' u ami apm l.y.
Tbosc who remove to tho towns . re
gen ei ally of the Mirlt y cl; :a v!;<- 0
iresetme an inili; 'V,, ci .ue
ry are tuc most 1 l'K;,
iii». v eopie iviio a-e f. in .- t m !•>«''
0, erprisea loo!-.in 1 to th 1 atm- en:
. f iiiur comm.miti e, and y->nng poo
a’o who aspire to fin prove 'neir con-
lit, as and who, if 1 . lu in th country,
vuidcl become its n. ,.-,t .-cfi/e *«r I in
'ei ige-.t agent;} in working out its
:tfinmal.’on. Tuo )<* s of those eniv
,<. • sing spirii-.i -most val 'able hoc: -tee
icy do aspire to a beU<.j ’uture.
a use tliey are ho- - fill ami optimist’c
•is more serious than wo are ap.. t'
,t, >pose. a*
Ala.mg the < ■ -I ants
mm ry are t : -fifty :
.. Hr tlm =• f<- uic ...-d -veaUli pi
’d ' ;■ f; i ' a r.'lllrol ' ‘b<* iv
;
:i fi amt ii it t p,r ••
IM ' 1 ft 01 ii
\
c,
J uT.r«y a 'O
t Hi * li.'-iOnS r
«. .
cm e or
i
A
icme to The Rote! iiest wees and pay
v * ’ in 3 n fiie Advtiuu,
CiBcm O rgffji «rf
’*
Franklin Count>.
ly the i.azte •—'.<! deterioration is ff
me cosily t-uin u moderate tax for
eir rt.
Ags- u, re exiling io system «*• corn-
on . .cola, owi.-.g the meur e ar¬
ooru. um for its support and
i. i of Ve school term, io mer
x\ ■ t ,n, a 1 '. therefore fails
.. feu .unin,.; iuteiest and end
'It iO t a* t of its benefleia, ,e,»
i .• • well known to ba inade ; iau
n t in -4 tltafc it is impose!I I s
'■> ■■•■o'v en f iastic in its su >P
Mu-. .t aud you v. ..
it once, f ii,; ill, r itnmis a revolut.ea
i r. sen .a out nr 1 » tion. The t oo , 1 «
i Ml! i ?r espouse it I -cause it pcs-
■< ,s< • iolicieut element) of success.
iiit ir piiile. their, api 'hlon, their
■> m-rt, w u j U.o in its surport
\ l i- oithy and because
i t u 'tiling. Their zeal
‘i u vi:i burst into flame and
\ i i-e Ki'.-v il that they wore
!ijqu( toward a. duty so ini-
’<• \(\ sac-".'. * CoH'',uou»
-V ici- hi
veil*
1 v u sciiools, aud ti.us the fire
vi :i spiead. They will seek capable
and con enlior.s teaclie'H—not th.130
i im ympcti ills wlio f<»llow the profes¬
sion hoc.-, use they think it aa easy
job, of beta use tliey can fine nothing
to do —H* teachers of Btion...
M ii'iy, and rouusv cliaracter, b.vor.d,
<-nd honorable man and cr
men, thoroughly qualiSed to train iho
mind aud mould 1 bn character, and to
make an Impress ou mind ard hear*.;
r.d conduct with enduring force,
a public r un it thus •'ngci dered ▼
irk miracles. U will fce-urae an f.
leg • par, of a!! occupations, all as
ptra : Jons, and all ideals.' it k essen
. i.aii. a now birth.
The pr >icty «. f local taxath-n n--®'
e argue i ..Iso rom t.-o uccess'l’
( • e r ase. A long trial of U.-.c cxi». "•
~ i ««.,tures us that if eduent
■
£a> to bee .rue universal, it ■il
. fuug people me to be qualified »
smuo t’.-i r»-sp(mibilities of c’ti.-
chip, if illiteracy is to be driven £■ '
our borders, an improvement of ti
ii- imperative. People of mo*
omu -mes can patronize the b. a.
xt o< . or secure far their eon
nuu h ugii.evs a scientific i rd clasf.
w- education at u. nuivers-tios, l -t
these schools aie not accessible to
v?- 3 t nun.net's 0? the laboring poor. ’*
the means o? euucaUcn are / >t
brc ight to their doer" tinV can -
»drive any uiiect benefit uom the- .
And yet the State owca tL0 same c /
to them that it owes to the provide.- *
rad ft«4jtiiiest of its ci'izens.
Every child born within the lurid*
fiction of tlie State is en-itlod 1 .*
out diRcrlminattbn to like privtlee ’
and Immunities. Each one should at
le ist bo taught to read its constitution
ana its laws, else how can the tu va
be justifi 'i in demanding obedience to
them fro.n ■ ? Childien, whose pxr-
r-nts are ur te to furnish them with
a ptimary educa-'’on, are in a measure
the wards of the nation, * and the
money expended in their education is
<r wasted, for tlio ranu of its most
illustrious aud most useful men arj
recruited from the nurseries of b.u:
bio country ; ome 3 .
Good •mhoois are the instrumerts
i jy v uich we discover talent- 3 , tiny
ire the dinner's rod, aud if tfity ar(
pj an t ef j j B (fie remote country dis
ti-icts we have reason to expect U-
(hey will enrich tho nation by rov«
j D g nidden talc-ms now perishing
, [;i i
g ( . y rti . j jj avt . said nothing correr:.
- itm effect of education on agrh
tur9 which must, for many years ui
com co. 1 Unue to bo the principal u*
I uipation „f o t country people,
tilts employuit it very educated
j a a radical tfatie of osc-fulness :.a<*
j j.>s( ruction to his neighbors. Towaic 1
H.i’h oicipation nature is most pro- -
j tion-; anil helpful, and theio is none an"
, a -h-cli ‘he aarclse of talc “
fi-H ■ lit ii. ! .he lute’V.i.'mit r. 3
ici,-i 1 ui tie principlea of 2.
. ieiij net' r ic’urns la?
Vv'i.c does not envy the happy
him who stands la the midst o»
■latnre’i laborato-v where he cay
laity vl ness tlm in. -ption oi LI > and
the fashioniiij according to definite
0 a ,\ unchang • ole laws of its 1. uiti-
,
form end marvelous organisms? He
who "tin,Until the clouds hir -rio s“
bestows i pou tlio bumble tiller of ‘ha
| ground an exw ::a of delight as 31 a
1 1 >c’ s? u* upon ’!..•? b- ut. of Ji • earth
and tho ,-Y 3 ) of Lie heaven A uu
i’lffo is "o ficctipfl 1 ion t! at yir a
larger omo t<- r.i u of moderate re-
: \ wees, ar ;1 none, of course. upoi.
1 hirh tho wor*d .j more depone' a
or cotnfm t i ! irishman'.C.
Why is it the "Lit '.a. int-.filit- r?®
-vnt'? os' ‘ .lOC
r a u
^ anc a ?
r. 1 i
,. ■) lU!'* ae -hy
.v vliy.” Let us t
... j;;y :« f it »t I’..":
i" ' a vlng t;S!
IWH itS aiitiui
;.«■/>r.ivlnc.