Newspaper Page Text
LOCALS.
I yj rs . H. F. Sanders has been sick
Ibis week.
Mrs. J. W. Stroud is very unwell
Biis week. She has been threatened
Litu pneumonia.
I The cold snap give Fort Valley a
[lack I eye. W”. Jack
Abe. J. has been quite
|; c lt, but is now convalescent.
It is thought by some people, who
L experience are supposed to know,
liat at least one half of the peach
•rop escaped the freeze of last
yVe are sorry to note the fact that
Ida Grubb is a victim of La
}rippe. But hope to see her up
(irain J? in a few days.
5 £each Sub-Alliance in the county'
reporting to me in Knoxville on
first Thursday in April next,
Sill be required to pay 15 cents for
member instead of 10 cents as
been required here-to-fore. The
tra 5 cents will be paid to the Na-
jnal Alliance.
S. B. Causey,
Co. Secretary.
Teachers County Institute will be
rid in Knoxville on the second Sat-
iday in April next, it being the
3th day of the month. AIL teach¬
es in the county both white and
hlored are required to attend,
[xercises will begin promptly at
o'clock a. m,
II. F. Sanders, c- s. c.
Miss Minnie Moore, of Macon, is
S.siting relatives in Knoxville.
i w
Only a few new cases were enter-
i upon the criminal docket this
rm of court.
Mr. James Taylor says that he
Scmld have bad some english peas
3r dinner last Sunday had it not
for the freeze last week.
■ Last Friday evening the south
[Hmnd freight train on the A. A F.
was wrecked about 3 miles
of Culloden. While going
■ouml a sharp curve the cab and
box ears jumped the track. The
Hx cars were slightly demolished,
3 cab was not injured at all. Sev-
Bd passengers were on the train,
Bt fortunately no one was hurt.
mail train was delayed until
(^■Aivday morning.
!-■ T. Aultman, formerly* of
a wfor(i county, now a resident of
county, visited old friends
week in Knoxville.
HAMMOCK’S.
H e had the pleasure of witness-
k a briliant wedding one day last
oek. E. F. Harris Jr. and Miss
izzie Avera were united in the
ply bonds of wediock at the resi-
pee of the bride’s father. W. C.
Develand officiating. After the
pemony the many friends of the
rwly married couple enjoy’ed a
rely entertainment given at the
l>me of the groom’s father, and a
ble that groaned under the weihgt
tl dainties that the hungry appetite
oHces to feast upon had been set and
present enjoyed a splendid re-
The newly married couple
"j3 v <‘ the most sincere congratula-
' ns of the community.
returned
3 A -J- Johnson and wife are visit-
Natives and friends in Houston
Hunty.
■ ^hss Avera, a charming young
By of Clarks mills, was in our
last week.
-Minnie Martin, of Hammock,
‘J* T been here is visiting Miss Lizzie Webb.
a couple in this comraun-
that are going west in a short
never to relurn. They ’wish
printed in the IIesald so their
letu ^ s may bid them farewell.
I Felts
°berLn i says Judge w r ent to
last week and got some of
good tobacco. He home
dark.
L. J.
COURT NOTES.
Crawford Superior Court conven¬
ed Monday, March 21st. 1892.
Judge J. H. Martin presiding. The
Grand Jurors were organized and
after which retired and elected lion.
A. F. Williams as foreman of their
body. The foreman having chosen
the Jurors took the usual oath
which was delivered by Sol. Gen.,
B . H. Felton. Then the Judge
delivered his charge to the Jury in
very forcible and explicit language
bringing to bear all points cf law
touching upon such cases as come
up for the consideration of Grand
Juries.
After receiving the Judge’s
charge the Jury retired to thir room
and proceeded to business. This
Jury is composed of honest, up¬
right and intelligent citizens, and
no doubt they will accomplish much
toward the advancement of peace
and justice.
The visiting lawyers in attend¬
ance upon court this week are: Cols.
J. II. Ilall, C. A. Turner, M. G.
Bayne, of Macon; II. A. Mathews,
of Fort Valley; W. S. Wallace, of
Butler; W. D. Stone, of Forsyth;
J. R. Terrell, of Greenville.
A 8AD DEATH.
Mrs. Margaretl Kendrick died at
her home last Thursday night at 10
o’clock. Mrs. Kendrick was a very r
old lady, being at the time of her
death 74 years of age. She had been
very feeble for some time past
though at bed time Thursday night
she did not appear any more feeble
than she had for several days, and
retired for the night as usual. It was
not long before it was llisoovered
*
that she was rapidly’ sinking, and , at '<
the hour above mentioned she pass- |
ed away. J She had been a consistent
member of the Primitive _ Baptist
church for a number of years. She ,
was a noble and good woman, and
will be greatlj r missed by all w ho
knew her.
At ,. r hereas, . 1 Alliance . ... in Nation- ..
lie .
at convention assembled at Ocala,
Fla. did issue a call for a National
conference of all the labor orgaili-
zations to bo held on Of about the
22nd of Feb., 1892, and
AVheroas, pursuant to said call
the conference did formulate and
adopt a platform and atuliess, ancl ■
did request the various sub alliauces
to discuss and ratify said action,
Therefore be it
ltesolved, by this Kuoiville sub-
alliance in convention assembled do
ratify and adopt the action of said
J
and _ hereby , , assert ,
conference, we
our determination not to vote for
any J candidate for State or National
Legislation positions who does not
' *
stand , fully „ committed ... j to . said „ . , plat- i ,
form regardless of party caucusses
Are.
Resolved, Further that these de¬
liberations be sent to the State Or¬
gan, the Peoples’ Party Paper, and
to the Crawford County Herald with
the request that they’ publish the
same.
J. B. Sandifur,
President.
E. B. Trammell,
Secretary.
ILLEGAL APPORTIONMENT.
The Supreme Court of Wisconsin De¬
clares the Bill Unconstitutional.
A dispatch of Tuesday from Madison,
Wis.. says: The supreme court has de¬
cided the apportionment and redistrict¬
ing bill passed by the last legislature of the as
unconstitutional. The decision
court was unanimous. It held that the
constitution ordains that an assembly dis¬
trict shall be bounded by county, pre¬
cinct, tow r n or ward lines, Since no as-
sembly district can lawfully be formed
which includes territory in two or more
counties, unless the whole of such coun¬
ties are included therein, so that the dis¬
trict is bounded entirely by county lines,
a constitutional assembly district cannot
be formed which includes within ita lim¬
its fractions of two or more counties, or
one county and a fraction of another
county, for in either case the integrity of
county lines would be violated if a coun¬
ty ia dismembered.
REV. DR. TALMAGE.
THIS. BROOKLYN DIVINE’S SUN.
DAY SERMON.
Subject: "Divinity Jn the Stars.®
Text: "Seek Him that maketh the Seven
Stars and Orion .’’—Amos v., 8.
A country fanner wrote this text—Amos
of Tekoa. He plowed the earth and thrashed
the grain by a new thrashing machine just
invented, as formerly the cattle trod out the
grain. He gathered the fruit of the syca¬
more tree and scarified it with an iron comb
just before it was getting ripe, as it was
necessary and customary in that way to take
irom it the bitterness. He was the son of a
stammering poor shepherd and stuttered, but before the
rustic the Philistines and Syr¬
ians and Phoenicians and Moabites and Am¬
monites and Edomites and Israelites trem¬
bled.
Moses was a law giver, Daniel was a
prince, Isaian a courtier and David a king;
but Amos, the author of my text, was a
peasant, and. as might be supposed, nearly
all his parallelisms are pastoral, bis proph¬
ecy lull of the odor of new mown hay, and
the rattle of locusts, and the rumble of carts
with sheaves, and the roar of wild beasts
devouring the flock while the shepherd came
out in their defense. He watched the herds
by day, and by night inhabited a booth
made out of bushes, so that through these he
could see the stars all night long, and was
more familiar with them than we who have
tight roofs to our houses and hardly ever sea
the stars, except among the tall brick
chimneys of the great towns. But at sea¬
sons of the years when the herds were in
special danger, he would stay out in the open
field all through the darkness, his only
shelter the curtai* of the night heaven, with
the stellar embroideries and silver tassels of
luuar light.
W hat a life of solitude, all alone with his
herds! Poor Amos! And at 12 o’clock at night
hark to the wolf’s bark, and the lion’s roar,
and the bear’s growl, and the owl’s ts-whit-
te-who, and the serpent’s his-:, as he unwit¬
tingly thickets! steps too near while moving through
the So Amos, like other herdsmen,
got the habit of studying the map of the
heavens, spread because before it was so much He noticed of the time
out him. some
associated stars advancing their and others receding. He
dawn and setting with cer¬
tain seasons of the year. H had a poetic
nature, and he read night by night, and
month by month, and year by year, the
poem of the constellations, divinely
rhythmic. But two rosettes of stars espe¬
cially the ground attracted his attention whiie under seated the on
scroll or of lying midnight on his back
open the heavens—the
Pleiades, or Seven Stars, and Orion. associated The
former group this rustic prophet
with the spring, as it rises about the first of
May. The latter he associated with the
winter, as it comes to the meridian in Janu¬
ary. The Pleiades, or Seven Stars, con-
nected with all sweetness and The joy; Orion,
the herald of the tempest. ancients
were the more apt to study the physiognomy bodies,
and juxtaposition of the heavenly
If the moon every few hours
lifts and lets down the tides of the Atlantic
ocean, and the electric storms the earth, SUE, why by
all scientific admission, affect the
not the stars have proportionate effect?
And there are some things which make ms
think that it may not have been all super¬
stition which connected the movements and
appearance of the heavenly bodies with
great moral events on earth. Did not a me¬
teor run on evangelistic errand on the first
Christmas night and designate the rough
cradle of our Lord? Did not the stars in
their courses fight against Hiseca? Was it
twelve consecutive nights! Did it merely
etellation happen so that a new star then appeared disappeared in con-
Cassiopeia, and
,
massacre, died? Was it without significance J
that in the days of the lt#nan emperor us-
tinian war and famine were preceded nearly by the
dimness of the sun, which for a year
gave no more light than the moon, although
Astrology, after all, may have been some-
these two anthems of the stars, put down
the stout rough staff of the herdsman and
took into his brown hand and cut and
£ SSS W m that
T? Orion.”
This command, which Amos gave 785 years
B. C., is just «ss appropriate for us, 1892
A p,
In the first place, Amos saw, as we must
see, that the God who made the Pleiades
and Orion must be the God of order. It
was not so much a star her© and a star
there that impressed the inspired herdsman,
but seven in one group and seven in the
other group. He saw that night after after night
and season after season and decade de¬
cade they had kept step of light, each one in
its own place, and sisterhood never From clashing
and never contesting precedence. the
tima Hesiod called the Pleiades the “seven
daughters of Atlas,” and Virgil wrote in his
ASneid of “Stormy Orion” until now, they
have observed the order established for their
coming and going; order writen not in man¬
uscript that may be pigeonholed, but with
the hand of the Almighty on the dome of tba
sky, so that all nations may read it. Order.
Persistent order. Sublime order. Omnipo¬
tent order.
What a sedative to you and me, to whom
communities and nations sometimes seem
going pellmel), and world ruled by some
fiend at haphazard and in Ml directions
maladministration ! The God who keeps
seven worlds in right circuit for six thous¬
and years can certainly keep all the affairs
of individuals and nations and continents in
adjustment. We had not better fret much,
for the peasant’s argument of the text was
right. If God can take care of the seven
worlds of the Pleiades and the four chief
worlds of Orion, He can probably take care
of the one world we inhabit. felt
So I feel very much as my father one
day when we were going to the country null
to get a grist ground, and I. a boy of seyen
years, sat in the back part of the wagon, and
our yoke of oxen ran away with us and along
a labyrinthine road through the woods, so
that I thought every moment we should be
dashed to pieces, and I made a terrible out¬
cry of fright, and my father turned to me
with a face perfectly calm, and said: Do
Witt, what are you crying about? 1 guess
we can ride as fast as the oxen can run.
And, my hearers, why should we.be affrighted
and lo.e our equilibrium in the swift move¬
ment or woriaiy events, especially when «e
are assured that it is not a yoke of unbroken
steel’s that are drawing us on, but that or-
der and wise government are in the yoKer
In your occupation, your mission, your
sphere, do the best you can and then trust
to God; and if ah things are all mixed and
disquieting, and your brain is hot
heart sick, get some one to go out with you
fSSr’SE t-SSKoS
—namely, two hundred stars in the Pleiades,
and that in what is called the sword of Orion
there is a nebula commited to be two trillion,
tn-o hundred thousand billious times large:
than the sun. Oh, beat peace with the Go:
who made all that and controls all that— ths
wheel of the constellations turning in the
wheel of galaxies for thousands of years
without the breaking of a cog or the slipping
of a band or the snap of an axle. For your
5 lacidity and comfort through the Lord
esus Christ I charge you, “Seek Him that
maketh the Se|pi Stars and Orion.”
Again, Amos saw, as we must see, that the
God who made these two groups of the text
was the God of light. Amos saw that God
was not satisfied with making one star or
three stars, but He makes seven; and having
finished that group of worlds makes another
group—group after group. To the Pleiades
He adds Orion. It seems that Got! likes light
so well that He keeps making it. Onlvone
being in the universe knows the statistics of
solar, lunar, stellar, meteoric creations, and
that is the Creator Himself. And thev have
all been lovinglv christened, each one a name
as distinct as the names of your children.
“He telletb the number of the stars; He
calleth them all by their names/’ The
seven Pleiades had names given to them, and
they are Alcyone, Merooe, Celrono, Electro,
Sterope, Tavgete and Maia.
But think of the billions and trillions ot
daughters they of starry light that God calls by
name as sweep by Him writh beaming
brow and lustrous robe! So fond is God of
light. light—natural light, moral light light, spiritual
Again and again is harnessed
for symbolization — Christ, the bright
morning star; evangelization,the day-break;
the redemption of nations, Sun of
Righteousnes rising with healing in His
wings. O men and women, with so many
sorrows and sins and perplexities, if you
want light of comfort, light of pardon, light
of goodness, in earnest prayer through
Christ, “Seek Him that maketh the Seven
Stars and Orion.”
Again, Amos saw. as we must see, that
the God who made these two archipelagoes
of stars must be an unchanging God. There
had been no change in the stellar appear¬
ance in this herdsman’s lifetime, and his
lather, a shepherd, reported to him that
there had been no change in his lifetime.
And these two clusters hang over the celes¬
tial arbor now just as they were the first
night that thev shone on the Edenie bowers;
the same as when the Egyptians built the
pyramids, from the top of which Chaldeans to watch
them; the same as when the cal-
cu’ated the eclipses; the same as when
Elihu, according to the book of Job, wont
out to study the aurora borealis; the same
under Ptelemaic system and Copernican Pythag¬ sys¬
tem; the same from Calistueues to
oras. and from Pythagoras to Herschel.
Surely, a changeless God must have fash¬
ioned the Pleiades and Orion! Oh, what an
anodyne amid the ups aud downs of life, and
the flux and reflux of the tides of prosperity, God,
to know that we have a changeless forever!” the
same Xerxes “yesterday, garlanded to-day knighted and the steers¬
ana
man of his boat in the morning and banged
him in the evening of the same day. The
world sits in its chariot and drives tandem,
and t he horse ahead is Huzza and the horse
behind is Anathema. Lord Cobhara, in
King James’s time, was applauded, and had
thirty-five thousand dollars a year, but was
afterward execrated and lived on scraps
stolen from the royal kitchen. Alexander
the Great after death remained unburied for
thirty days, because no one would do the
honor Wellington of shoveling him uuder. have bis The Duke fence of
refused to iron
mended because it bad been broken by an
excitement, infuriated populace and he left in some it in hour ruins of that political
men
might learn what a fickle thing is human
favor. “But the mercy of tho Lord is from
everlasting to everlasting to them that fear
Him, aud His righteousness unto the chil¬
dren’s children of such as keep His covenant,
and to those who remember His command¬
ments to do them.” This moment “Seek
Him that maketh the Seven Stars and
Orion.”
Again, 5od Who Amos saw, as we must see, that
the made these two beacons of the
oriental night sky must be a God of love and
kindly warning. The Pleiades rising in
midsky said to all the herdsmen and sneo*
herds and husbandmen. "Come out and en-
joy the mild weather and cultivate your
gardens and fields.” Orion, coming iu win-
ter, warned them to prepare for tempest.
constellations. All navigation was The regulated said by shipmaster these two
one to
merchandise and crew, “Hoist sail for the sea and gather
from other lands.” But Orion
was the storm signal, and said, “Reef sail,
make things snug or put into harbor, for the
hurricanes are getting their wings out.” As
the Pleiades were the sweet evangels of the
”* pr ° ph6t
| Oh, no. Jan'tlo^Jr-tKL'’L"J”ai“tl I gat flu bat via. of God I evar
God so kind, so indulgent, so lenient, so im-
becile that men may do what they will
against the Him and their fracture His every law and and
put pry of impertinence re-
oellion under His throne, and while they are
spitting in His face and stabbing at His
heart, He takes them up in His arms and
kiss -s their infuriated brow and cheek, say*
ing, “Of such is the kingdom of heaven.”
The other kind of sermon I never want to
preach is the one that represents God as all
lire and torture and thundercloud, and with
red hot pitchfork of tossing infinite the human The race
into paroxysms agony. ser-
rpon that 1 atn now preaching believes in a
God of loving, kindly warning, the God of
spring and winter, the God of Pleiades and
Orion.
You must remember that the winter is just
as important as the spring. Let one winter
pass without frost to kill vegetation and ice
to bind the rivers and snow to enrich our
fields, and then you will have to enlarge "A
your hospitals and makes your cemeteries. fat graveyard,”
green Christmas a
was the old proverb. Storms to purify the
air. Thermometer at ten degrees above zsro
to tone up the system. December and Jan*
nary just as important as May and June. 1
tell you we need the storms of life just as
much as we do the sunshine. There are more
men ruined by prosperity than by adversity.
If we had our own way in life before this we
would have been impersonations of selfish,
ness and worldliness and disgusting sin, and
puffed up until we would have been like
Julias Caesar, who was made by sycophants the
to believe that he was divine, and that
freckles on his face were as stars of the firm¬
ament.
One of the swiftest transatlantic voyages
made last summer by our swiftest steamer
was because she bad a stormy wind abaft,
chasing her from New York to Liverpool.
But to those going in the opposite direction
the storm was a buffeting and a hindrance.
It is a bad thing to have a storm chilrirsa ahead,
pushing ns hack; but if we be God’s
and aiming toward heaven the storms of
life will only chase us the sooner into the
harbor. I am so glad to believe that the
monsoons and typhoons and mistrals and
droccos of the land and sea are not un¬
chained maniacs let loose upon the earth,
but are under divine supervision 1 I am so
giad that the God of the Seven Stars is also
tne God of Orion! It was ont of Dante's
niff?ring came the sublime “Divina Corn-
media,” and out of John Milton’s blindn—
»me “Paradise Lost,” end oat of miserable
infidel attack came the “Bridgewater and out
Treatise” in favor of Christianity,
of David’s exile came the songs of consola-
tion, and out of the sufferings of Christ
some the possibility of of the bereavement, world’s redemp-
tion, and out your your
persecution, your poverties, your mistor-
nines may yet come an eternal heaven,
Oh, what a mercy it is that in the text and
all up and down the Bible God induce* us to
look out toward other worlds' Bible astron-
amy in Genesis, in Joshua, in Job, in the
Psalms, in the prophets, major and minor,
in St. John’s Apocalypse, practically saying:
“World’s! worlds! worlds! Get ready for
them!” We have a nice little world here
that we stick to, as though losing that we
lose all. We are afraid of failing off this
little raft of a world. We are at raid that
some meteoric iconoclast will some night
smasU it, and we want everything to revolve
around it, and are disappo iute-l when we
find that it revolves around the sun instead'
of the sun revolving around it. What a
fuss we make about this little bit of a world,
its existence only a short which time between hurled two
spasms, the paroxysm by it was
from ei.aos into order, and the paroxysm of
its demolition.
And I am glad that so many texts call us
to look off to other worlds, many of them
larger and grander and more resplendent.
“Look there,” says Job, “at Mazaroth an4
Arcturus and his sous 1” "Look there,” sayC
St. John, “at the moon under Christ’s feet I”
“Look there," says Joshua, "at the sun
standing still above Uibeon 1” “Look there,”
says Moses, “at the sparkling firma¬
ment!” “Look there,” the says Amos,
the herdsman, “at Seven Stars
aud Orion I” Don’t let us be so world sad
fcbout those who shove off from this
under Christlv pilotage. Don’t let us be so
agitated about our going off this little barge
or sloop or canal boat of a world to get on
some Great Eastern of the heavens. Don’t
let us persist in wanting to stay in this barn,
this shed, this out-house of a world when all
the King’s palaces already occupied wide by many
of our best friends are swinging open
thei eir gates to let us in.
When I read, “In My Father’s houso are
many mansions,” I do not know but thatSi
each world is a room, and as many rooms as,
there are worlds, stellar stairs, stellar gal¬
leries, stellar hallways, stellar windows,
stellar domes. How our departed friends
must pity us, shut up in these cramped
apartments, tired if we walk fifteen miles,
when they some morning, by one stroke of
wing, can make circuit of the whole stellar
system and be back in time for matins?
Perhaps yonder twinkling constellation is
the residence of the martyrs; that group of
twelve luminaries is the celestial home of;
the apostles. Perhaps that steep of light is
the dwelling place of angels cherubic, sera-
phic, arebangelie. A mansion with as many
rooms as worlds, and all their windows illu¬
minated for fesuivitv.
Oh, how this widens and lifts and stimu¬
lates our expectations! How little it makes!
the present and how stupendous it makes!
the future! How it consoles us about ouri
pious dead, who, instead of being boxed upj
and under the ground, have the range of a*
many rooms as there are worlds, and wel¬
come everywhere, for it is the Father’s
house, in which there are many mansions?
Oh, Lord God of the Seven Stars and Orion,
how can I endure the transport, the ecstasy
of such a vision! I must obey my text and
seek Him. I will seek Him. I seek Him now,
for I call to mind that it is not the material
universe that is most valuable, but the spir¬
itual, and that each of us bas a soul worth:
more than all the worlds which the inspire*! mils
herdsman saw from his booth on the
of Tekoa, the . Cathedral m
I had studied it before, but
of Cologne, Germany, never impressed It is ad¬ raw
as it did the last time I saw it.
mitted the graudest gothic structure in tin*
world, its foundation laid in 1248, only than eight
or nine years ago completed. More six
hundred years in building. All Europe
taxed for its construction. Its chapel of toe
Magi with precious stones enough to pur¬
chase a kingdom. Its chapel of St. Agnes
with master-pieces hundred of painting. and eleven feet Its spire into
springing five of
the heavens. Its stained glass the chorus
all “ d rich encircling colors, all. ^tatues: Statues encircling; above statues.un- the' P^ 1 **”*
til sculpture can do no more, but faints and
falls back against carved stalls and down on
pavements over which the kings and queens
ot } he e * nh
? nd ®If ® 8 sunrise Interlaced,
> n £ f p
1 ,*** InH l double S ranze
°f ni nna-
cles, higher an i «nd higher 8 until I
alm°Jt reeled from (hz > exclaimed'
"Great doxology in stone 1 Frozen prayer D raverof ot
? ut w *? Ue f tw* T aaw a noor man
SfcJdWI, *S n ! th« P hard floo'' of that
tear, o( d,.p amotion cum
m.’SfaTror*
'»»»'“»«■• ' rl “* “*» llva “ tor th ' ‘” 6
pinnacle has fallen, and not one stone of all
that cathedral glory shall remain uncrum-
bled. He is now a Lazaras in rags
and poverty and weariness, but immor-
tal and a son of the Lord God
Almighty, and the prayer he now offers,
though amid many superstitions, 1
believe God will hear, and among the apos-
ties whose sculptured forms stand in the sur-
rounding niches he will at last be lifted, and
into the presence of that Christ whose suf-l
ferings are represented by the crucifix ba¬
fore which he bows, and be raised in due
time out of all his poverties into the glorious
home built foP him and built for us by‘Hms
*who maketh the Seven Stars and Orion,
APPEALING FOR RUSSIA.
The Committee of Americana in That
Country Asking More Aid.
A cablegram of Thursday from St.
Petersburg contains the following appeal
from the committee of American citizens
sent to Russia to aid in alleviating the of
distress of the famine-stricken people
that country:
“If the American people knew the ex¬
tent of the suftering m the famine dis¬
tricts of Russia they would everywhere
come to the rescue. Twenty millions
of people are effected and in danger of
death from starvation. Typhua fever ia
raging in many places. Horses and cat¬
tle are perishing ofhunger. appeal the hesrts of
“Does this not to
those able to help ? Russia is deeply
grateful to the American people for wh*t
they have done. The distribution of
supplies is under the direction of the
American Nothing minister will and be an wasted. excellentjjoin- x.»ery
mittee. properly dis¬
particle of food will be
tributed. Help U9. Blankerburq,
Rudolph
A. J. Drkxel,
Committee of American Citizens Sent t«
Russia. _
Cahadixh Patrons of Industry are form¬
ing a stock company te furnish aalt to dm mr
Urs at low rates.
♦