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THE MAN IN THE OVERALLS, j
By Thomas C. Walsh.
•
Purple and gold may deck the king,
Jewels most rare adorn him;
His armies trophies to him may bring,
The rights of others scorning;
But cloth of gold and jewels rare,
And the crown that the slave ap
palls—
These for the world’s weal we could
spare,
But not the Overalls.
“Long live the king!” Who is the
king?
Is it he by swords surrounded,
Whose cannons make the welkin ring
While nations stand astounded?
Or he who works on the lofty wall
Or ever where duty calls?
Ah! he’s the king, the king of them
all—
The Man in the Overalls.
Leading Features Os
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slaves the sceptre carries awe,
l;i But freemen love the hammer,
The tfowel, the pick, the axe, the saw
That make advancement’s clamor,
And still, withal, if danger comes
And war to our land befalls,
The first to answer the call of drums
Is the Man in the Overalls.
GRADING OF COTTON.
(The Texas Farmer.)
Hon. Albert Burleson of Texas has
introduced in congress an important
measure, which may become a law at
the next session. The measure pro
vides for the standardization or grad
ing of cotton under the direction of
the department of agriculture, assist
ed by three expert classifiers, who
shall first fix a standard of middling
cotton, and, using this as a basis, fix
four grades above it and four grades
below it. When these standards are
fixed, the secretary of agriculture will
declare them the official standards or
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gradings of cotton classification, and
he is directed to furnish such classi
fication to every farmers’ institute,
union or association; to every cotton
spinners’ association, to every agricul
tural school or college, and to every
cotton exchange. That a legal classi
fication of cotton by the federal gov
ernment would be a popular measure
with cotton planters Mr. Burleson has
no doubt, and he believes the cotton
manufacturing interests would be so
well served that their representatives
in congress would join in the advoca
cy of the measure.
NEW PROCESS BUTTER.
(Nashville Banner.)
The Churnless Process Butter Com
pany has a process by which butter
can be extracted from sweet cream in
one minute without churn, machinery
or chemicals. There is no apparatus,
no equipment, beyond what every
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housekeeper has In her own home.
It is not an invention, but a discovery.
The cream and milk are separated
without the use of any mechanical
device and the cream converted into
butter.
The process is astonishingly simple
and can be operated by any lady with
out drudgery. The process can also
be used to make an extra quality of
buttermilk, but the milk left after the
cream is extracted is still sweet and
palatable.
It is claimed that from a sanitary
standpoint the milk and butter are
both superior to that made by the
ordinary churning process, because
whatever germs the milk may contain
are destroyed.
Senator Allison says it will be Ted
dy the Third. And yet Senator Alli
son has lived long without being rated
as a joker.