OCR Text |
Show r tr v iV'. - 7?' X POLITICS IIIS FIELD. U WAIF OF WOUNOED KNEE. u- Tkr Little Hebe loontf on the Untile YOUTHFUL A POLITICIAN NEW YORK. v OF Theodore Co, President or the Nutlniml College League, Hu Ju.t Become of Age. but It Skilled lu the Art of IoliUes. HEnJinDE COX lias Just passed his st birthday eind E3 will ast his lirst presidential vote In 1 1S96, he has het n active hi New York and hague pohtks fin three jtais His first recot.iiizd Work was during 1 hi whin- 1.1s l.it prtsid.ri- tial campaign in n various ."'tid.-- on s iam-I'd'-- f tel us arul the day well-- published In the Annyiran J urhdl of I'oditi . t'ie Social lit nnomisl. tl e Tmil.fr w statesman and other polniial niid ix.it. .1 much fatm.ihle oig oeirim nt among the UunkinB polltl- i'l ?.ir c.t v is hunt tn 1ort RU-- tuord, Ptat. n Junuarv 1, 1V74. and is the ml, -- m.lMug child id Alljn Cox tie . ,rit ui itsur, t of the New Yum, 1st Louis (Ni Kc Platfall-to- nl nie; i . ... home lias hi n for molin' quei-tn-ns-o- 1 I ttfltl Lour lean Ago, Tho?M wh romvmbtr the teruble battle that tt 4i pia t sortie four ear ag i betwrtn the Indiana of the Pine KUltfe agency ami the I miej states regular troojjs at thelaet 4$ntw n an Wtmndtl Kufe tiicty h(e forgotten that a gtil baby was fuuti'l on the Imk1 of hi'j aft- -r Uu fight That mother fuur Indian bab is alne and wtll and is tiuw the adujitfd daughter of Gtneral Colby, who tok hf i under bta can. as sorn as wrt-found and I rougl t s het to hixiwi&u K.ic cUtf of th Sioux, lad abuut tvum lmU' gall. ei d about him when the imitiiiaH bigau, but aft r a terrible tight n. the WiiU-rnt cf the 12i WArticfr wa left to tell tlu t.tle aid wimi tho st I diers went over the siov m t rt d fn M da s aftei wards tGy fj.vuul tht dea body of an Indian aouaw and held to hep biea'-- t vVe- - a I u il e aTiouT 7 mublhs olu Z.iitk i l.tnTuii sin- - Is calk d, dues nut s. i m to he l' . H'rt that her p n pill, at'? Her i .il'i d at the hum. for wh. n the I (f Alls t'ulhv in W as'diigtoii a f. w dav' ago si e came ruuniiig lu unit hi g in ta vp.Vk in ec llent English and show Mime quo. i hall? that she had gather, d In her lan'ld.s she is laipo her n to lo a child f tine age ;.m1 in c calling h.r adopt, d father and lie thei "luitPf ' ar,d father," and evident!) u.r r nigti mg that w s.-.- fr . nt ) i ,vea . It. Y "ikiTS-on-tlK-l- li a in ui u of J thi i, an also of Chits pre-ad, m t the Canada I1! o 1 1 de He 1) Cox of Cox, u m l.iil-- o-- i Midi tl . 'X Ci 3 C?r s lUilLE, N a b d t. atmeustreJ ami paksaSrf Uiot UbhsV'fhe Amor-i.u- a - 1 r t , i e p Nuid . 1. load) I osnion fixed I'OI U tain ' dtii th w Ol It s n . tie). (l!i , SltA, , t ! t. .1 vv S t f o) l.d IO al- - h 'neon in ti 'i iv o,nb ag i till? ai son i trine past hn a i ' r ion of . er-- ( lie ! d lu il ho d 11,1 t pltres n.d 1 1, of Woir.n has (lanli, al-- c, . i ' id. , nan olv t! . n tie mm f Un .Natl ami 1 ' , u niv i n an w in-- Il.f vv con- - t iio as It Is at present. The Inter nallonaj Migration Society that Is reported to have chartered a steamer to take a company of negroes from Savannah, Ga , to Liberia has no connection with this Boclety, From the start we dl.1 not deem the plan feasible and declined to endorse It. or allow them to use our name In connection with the enterr a rate Constgn-E- 3 carrjlng at the States paid to the Enlted F.xpress company. The profits Is in in handling very large sum Theone ' shipment. largest haul ever made by the company was $15,000,-00- 0, taken from Washington to New York in 18S9. It was in bills of very large denomination, which were contained in two wooden boxes. Though a special guard went with this shipment, the expense of tiie haul was not much greater than If the boxes bad held $1,000 each. And for this work the express company received $2,250. This was a very firoflt-alrl- e shipment. The express company would have liked to have the contract for carrying the $20,000,000 shipped from San rrancisco to New York a few years ago. The United States Express company does not handle any currency or coin west of the Missouri river. If the shipment had been in territory east of the Missouri the company could have insisted on carrying It under Its contract. But as It was outside the contract territory It was optional with ths government to make its own arrangement for Jhe hauhThe secretary of the treasury asked for bids for the hauling of this vast sum, and the best rate he could obtain was $60,000, from the Wells-Farg- o company. Figuring the haul at 3,266 miles, the regular rate for hauling the money would have been $69,30 but on so large a Bum such a rate would have been absurd. The secretary of the treasury got ahead 5u0of the express com-of wooden boxes panies by having special design made, and shipping the gold across the continent by registered mall. - The entire cost of the shipment was about $2,500. Fltt-Oeral- - THEODORE COX. venllnn nt Denver, last July. Each club In the league was allowed one' vote In the national league, and as there were at that time ninety-on- e clubs In the college lc.qgue, this rule made the college league of equal standing with the state lepgus and gave them great power in ail dose questioner- - TI r. Cox if, as la warm partisan of President Tracy's, anJ tlupvv the fnfluonce of the college league In his support. Attempts were made to remove all privtuges from the college Jpague and --restrict- their --vote to the actual delegates present at the eon ve title n. These motions were over- -' ruled and a violent controversy took plaoe, in which the college league came out triumphant. Their rank Is now that of a state k ague, on a par w 1th the state league of Ohio. The college league Is fully recognized as an Important factor( and has men on all national league committees and a national league Mr. Cox is row servlrg his second term as ptesklent of the Young Men's Political club of Yonkers, a thriving whose members Include alt the pdltlrlanx and cf the city urdtr 40 jears of age. office-holde- ) New Spanish Minister, The appointment of Senor Dupuy de as Spanish minister to the United .ates meets with approval in Wash- - T,ome rs A street Car Ambnlanee The cn:.'f lishment of an "ambulance street car service In St. Louis Is the putting Into effect of an Idea long contended for by the health commissioner of that city. Dr. George Homan. Efforts to secure legislation having failed. Dr. Usman succeeded In Interesting the officials of a street car company, who have Ipilt an ambulance car after a pish made by the doctor. This vehicle In itself fg onlya "modified street car, constructed for easy and especially -TFvtwh"ut rtmtrlng along trolley lines, and fitted up with suvh apparatus be needed by. Invalids who tempo. aiily occupy it while en route to a hospUt-1- . But the plan on which the -ambulance car Is to operate Is believed to be altogether unique. It will pass over regular routes,- - presumably, all trolley fines of the city, for the ex- clus'tv c purl oe of conv eying sick or Injured p. ns ns to and from hospitals. As It runs according to schedule, patients mry be ready at arty given locality at the time when the car is due there. It is expected that hospitals not on a ticllcy line will build terminals connecting them with the nearest railway, that patients may be brought by the nrrfbulance car to their very doors. ..Harp' f a Weekly. ight The Congregational 1st have employ, ed a general missionary In Cincinnati to study fi.e field, snd pro vide for churches In neglected spots -- ELIZABETH CADY STANTON ton have been associated Miss Frances Willard and Lady Henry Somerset, Mrs. Mary Livermore, the Rev. Olympia Hanaford, Sarah A. Underwood, Frances Ellen Burr, Helen Gardner, and Mis Frances Lord of London, Perhaps the clearest narrative of the work and alms of the revisionists Is best told In the words of Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton. She said recently. Yes, I will cheerfully tell you whatever I can as ta the method of work on the Womans Bible and Its Inception. YVhere did the Idea originate? Years ago in my own head. I have always been a careful student of the Bible since I went Into woman's work and found that the worst foe we had was the mistranslation of ct the Bible, which took away the of woman and made her q slave to man. As the years went by I saw clearly that this must be combated. Women are politic by nature. They prefer to temporize, and so that course was followed. Men have never touched questions concerning women. With all the learned professors and scholastics who have been engaged in revising the Bible none has touched women. They have argued over man and the inanimate, but they have left woman Just where she was In the beginning of the tranrlations. There were hopes that In the last revision of the New Testament Justice might at last be done woman and her equality with man clearly brought out, but they did nothing and still kept woman in a position that has taken away from her her If man will not correct errors in translation which reflect on woman then women must do it. Six years ago I saw plainly that It must be the final blow to be struck before woman could Stand on the plane onquality with man. At that time Miss FraTIC63 Lord came from England and remained two months with me at my country home those ,In in Tenafiy, we wqnt through the entire Bible to find out wJbat proportion of It woman constituted. YVe found we appeared in th King James Version in only part. This proportion wAs somewhat of a surprise to me. I had always hesitated because It seerr.ed such a herculean task to attempt to rexlse the entire Bible. But when we found women filled but such a s trial) part of the Bible, 1 decided that the I did not Intend work could to attack any doctrines, creeds, pr belief, simply the false position women In the Bible had been left through man's neglect. Miss Lord and I then took up the- Pentateuch and commenced upon IL To carry out the plan' of revision a committee of English and American women was then formed. Among them self-respe- -- NL-J- SENOR BE LOME. Ington and he will be received with the same ceremony accorded the dignitaries of other European monarchies who send represents fives to Washington.' Lome succeeds Muruaga, who resigned as a result of our reev nt trouble w ith Spain. The latter could not get along with Secretary Gresham and committed the unpardonable offense of saying so to the representative of sn American newspaper. Had he not resigned, be would in all probability have received his passports. Whltelaw Reid recently gave ' mission work In EgypL $300 ' for two-mont- th be-do- sify of it never left me. When I read of the ferocious attack of the Baptist clergymen on woman during the convention in Atlanta lbaeemed to me the time Jiad come. Yes, I know well that men will say And it has come- to thte at last! Not even the Bible is to be left free from woman's Influence! The assumption of $. revision committee alone Is enough to be called presumption on ous part. Yet at the time six years- ago- that we formed the original committee many newspapers treated the subject with respect and liberality, and some even stated that they could not see any reason why women should be debarred from revising the Bible any more than men. I have never yet been able to see why. I may look much further ahead than other women do, but I beliex-- firmly that before women can en, which Is to acquire equality with-mbe the next relative position of the sexes, the falsa translations of the Bible concerning women must be corrected. After the attack of the Baptist clergymen In Atlanta In January I decided it was time to move. If others cannot stand the possible controversy and stigma that may lie the result of the woman's Bible I can. I am now 80 years old. My people live to the age of 85 or longer. I figure that In the natural course of events, I may expect to live to the same age. I am out of all official connection with women's organizations. I want nothing. I have no sails to 'trim to catch the favor of men or women. I hate no offices to aspire to. I am beyond all that now, and regard it as Jhe culminating work of my life. I am not going to say things to shock people. I am only going to bring out 5121 what Is on the surface, Mrs. Stanton expects that at the brlef- est it witt require two years for the completion Bnd publication of the Woman's Bible. Although this appears a very short time, in comparison wtththe ;ww, Test anient, it is easily explained by comparison of the Tamount of work to be done. There Is no intention of tampering with anything which, does not concern woman directly. It ts not the women of the Bible but woman in the Bible. And In some cases men who married them have been brought tn. e The modern 10 and 15 cent monthlies are said to be creating their own fields and not to be Interfering as yt, in spite of their enormous sales, with the' prosperity of the older and more costly onrs. - Manchester, England, has voted through Its town council ll.OCQ.OfiO for technical school. 3 -- Fitt-Oeral- self-respe- as-m- THE DUCHESS OF LEINSTER. sensation in fashionable circles. She was naturally the belle of the season, and being a young woman of exceeding charm ef manner, as well as of exceptional beauty, her heart and hand were sought by many of the unmarried young noblemen and the prize carried off by General Fitzgerald, fifth duke of Leinster, v the premier duke, marquis, and earl of Ireland, who led her to ths 4892. In it he wrote a prefatory note: altar In January, 1894, when she was The outlook for the youth of Liberia 20 and he S3 years of age. The duke Is at preaenta hopeless one. There is died after a long attack of typhotd fever-o- n Dee. 1, 1893, since which time his neither opportunity nor Incentive to study or other improvement. Emlgra- - widow has not been seen In society, and she went to the south of France early last winter In hopes of recovering her shattered health, which had never recovered from the strain of nursing her Of the Importance of ths husband. that being the Dukaot Leinster's family name some Idea may be had by those who are Initiated In., oA - sMtun 4t to mM Uut v "Burke's Peerage" devotes almost four pages to the history of the dukedom. The beginning of the record shows that the family dates In the history of England from the year 1057, when one Domlnus Otho came from Normandy and became a great favorite of Edward the Confessor, through whoso acts of kindness his possessions became enormous. The Irish creations of ths tarn- lly titles are: Baron of Offaly, by tenure; Earl, 1316; Marquis, 1761; Duke, 1766. English honors: Viscount, 1717. Honors of the United Kingdom: Baron, 1870. From tills It will be seen what a tremendous swell from an English point of view 4 tho- - little boy Maurice who now bears PROF. O. F. COOK. Hon to Liberia has gone on under ths the title of the sixth Duke 'of Leinster. expectation that education and ImHE IS AFTER DANA. provement were to be nade possible. The responsibility of meeting this exLibel on Par pectation Is not obviated because certain theories have not worked success"Sun." fully: The negro must develop himFrank B. Noyes, treasurer of the self' sounds well; but to let the welfare Washington Evening Star, and one of of thousands suffer because certain Inthe board of directors, and of ths exedividuals have not seemed sufficiently cutive committee of the Associated, developed to meet unwarrantable exPress, is making a big fight for vine an Is and cruel unfair shift pectations dlcatlon against the imputations puben of responsibility," - fished in the New Tork Sun, reflecting There are no horses to aid In transupon his character as a Journalist. no and knowledge concerning Charles A. Dana and William M. Luf-fa- n, portation alcare and of the breeding horses, editor and publisher of the Sun, though it Is known that horses and have been Indicted for libel. After cattle can be acclimatized there. There elected to the directorate the Fun, are navigable rivers, but freight is carths Injunction, If you,-snotwithstanding ried along their hanks on the backs of Sun It's so, took occauion. in the it men. There is native Iron ore so rich to say that he la notoriously dishonest. that it polishes under the feet of the A wag now and! has come to carriers, and In the "college the students are not taught geology, or metallurgy, but Study text books on useless subjects, and even those text books wercabandoned In this country seventy-fiv- e years sgo,j The country has resources to make IL rich and great, but of Its resources has never received the attention of Its own government, or of any other Government or society which has sought to assist In the republic. The New developing York State Colonization Society Is not aiding emigration- - from thla country to LiberiaIt Is now devoting all Its resources to acquiring for Itself and to giving t'U'the Liberian Government a scientific knowledge of its resources and possibilities. If the result of this U negro emigration from knowledge this country to Liberia, the society will be pleased, but it will not aid that unless It Acquires otlierimurces of revc nue than It now has, and before telling the story of Ir.of. Cook's observations In Liberia It may as well be FRANK B. NOTES, explained thab the parent society of tho -New York Sotjfty, the Amerb an Coloneiys. TE you see it to th Sun Rization. Society of YVashlrgton, has crow." practically ceased - aiding- - negroes to emigrate to Liberia. y Aq Intesosling Process of Etching, Examinations have been made la Iari!aa Fully, drawing designs on glass with slumln-luTb latest thing out In Farls Is th pencils. After this the glius Is "Mode Magasln" for dogs, recently escoated by an acid, which dissolves ths tablished by an Inventive dressmaker. aluminium and cubes the design In exA pretty furnished room awaits the tremely delicate and perfect line on d customers, and Is prtHhled the glass surface. This proves that a with a refreshment table, whence bis- true chemical union occurs between ths cuits and other canlpe dainties are lav- - glass and the aluminium. In the course Ishly bestowed on the favored animals. of experiments it was noted that alThe dogs, or rather their owner, can most all pretious stones can be etch-- d purchase In the shop everything In the by the same means. The diamond way of dog requirements. And even atone, of all atone tried, resist th acmore. It la said, there Is fashion Jourtion. It 1 suggested that If these trials nal for dogs, snd patterns of stuff for prove at accurate as Is supposed, it will i dogs attire are another test sjg l' ths euu!ns it desire seat mt tp furnish J ness ef the diamond I pro) al. r' ' prise. The American Society assisted only six negroes to Liberia (n 1894. This is explained here, as there is an erroneous 1 lief that these Societies have been aiding the recent unfortunate attempts at emigration of nc grocs to Liberia. The State society has Just published Irof. Cook's second report. Hi first report was published in October, SHIPPING MONEY. Is Profitable Only Vt lien the mroti Are Big. Of course there Is no profit In single shipment of $1,000 Her-nioln- , dtc-sse- a It H.-kn- . 1. ZINTKA COLBY she Is alwajs regarded with curious In the ejes by all visitors She same gowns as the little Ameitcan girls wear and one would nev cf notice her were It not for th Indian cast of the dark features, and the black, straight hair that Is combed hack from the low brow. Mrs Colby, who has no children, Is as fond of the little waif as If It wete her ow n child, and she will be trained and educated aSwcll as any girl Id Anietica. - of high social standing in England whose features are more familiar to American newspaper readers than the beautiful Duchess of Leinster. For years her portrait has been published in the newspapers as one of the most perfect tpes of feminine loveliness known in modern times, arfd her photo graph, 'both alone and with her almost equally lovely sisters, the Ladles , Mabel, and Ulrica Duncombe or with her children, have been sold in the United States. The Duches of Leinster was, before her o marriage In 1SS4, known as Lady Dunoontbe, her full name being llerni.'lne WHliehiilna, and she was the third and el.h--t daughter of Wit 1mm Hi nest Buncombe, first Earl of Uivershitn, Y isoount Helmsley and, Huron Kevcrshatn, of Puneombe Park,' In the county of Yorkshire, his tUits of carl and viscount having been creat-- i .1 In 1568 and the barony tn 1826. Lady Hormolne was bom in 1564 and grew up to he one of the most beautiful women In Ungileh history, her presentation at court tn lng by a veritable lmVe-MKl- v - Mr CVx was very active In the Muter . la--- self-supp- l) r ll. u,. .- , is tilt I genially at wotk .hang for Liberia that vvhhb be believes must ho the done U for. I Hack Reputdie'c an make an) great yprugress mate rlai-sod, illv orlntel-Jeotualyouag BOW , V The 1 111.) SCIENTIFIC Armrlian i , I .i mined was an., r. al basis in fu pi.gitsstd . s lti tie 11 wlit',1 tin i. tin Hi!,'. !ui the a ssi Ion i.i t ilia n was the niitstop qi., vvolk ol the now lu, w aie nranv iipi i .slate 1 Would fait iy stud, nt d I - tile 11 in , dialt with bv m iln 'Ui 'hnii d.s, ' ,n a . 1 pm ti, iid show i) . l 'IV n a ii i WaHlFil. tpli it d It. 'Tl e of wsm . an u li t l nr. i n tl ri w is s n. v I ripr l.ovitl-- I l. h'iM' VJaiitMgrs Ho Is at 1. a nv ork gat in ling Si. eh lug tna- " Tat ifu".T n a vv 01 k Mrt.il vvhl h will enable 1.11 na to know sici y to gain u In tm 11 -- to know hor natural resume. denonilnatloiis f This wotk is being (lone hv Ibof O F. . wot of U L. "forrutuilv c.mntKt.d with the petion t a, ks ased 01 t bsiaiUM- - l'nlv.isltv uml l the ini'l'l-P.- x . in mnav av.mns wouj.l Jnterfc ,,r the N, w Yo.k Flat. Iol .1 Ixat.oq p, j, she mi,J t th n op. ning Couk. as the I. .suite of Si.i ) . u cm her In ,p ti , i,i) Tun v IsltM to ' Libel la, fiankl) Mat. s g r ,. ) .Msli-tuiHat th.i. is Riave d mg. r of that r. -v.Ht s since I w, t m t of Now th. IIP1'.' pul at- - r. tiogradlng In t lv il'z.ition If n I h.n n h it t no gi 0,11 si of such I. tiogtt sslon has not aheady bem i tiotOihxvvas C I. In , d th, n gun unless the Lilierians d ,1 si Iv os eui that Ho v aie ii. mine knowledge of tin It own coun-U- v at will intelligently dlrut the ck the oiigin of so (I),i 1) mittinllv is a mndltioit f 'I n . rv tf tht V muld vriepnient of It resource and (he of Its youth so that the ma) aid of only be brouv f 1 s, that In 11s material development There are that they wete t nted m the g at the c r. ,ti th it woman wa. parts of Liberia us little known as the Ninth Dole, says Irof. Uoe.k Vt tih an of the moih.i-hoomoated In tin 11 then thi v n ight n fuii tholrisolf-Icspee- t almost limitless count! y, t upable ef the finest eoflec In th- - w.uld. This it si.,ni. to 1110, could only be aocomplisi.i d b a imision of time aie no roads along which planbile the w oj k pio-- t tations might he opened up and no the liible. Arid ceded only slowlv the ultimate tig. os- - sehools to teach the youth even sueh kneiwledge e.f engine, ting as itould enable the'ni "Irof Co.ik'n report contains the Impel tant views of a seien title and Intelligent in v estigatlotf, and is not in the nature of transient news, it will be as valuable for some time in the future . - i 1,' Iv . i h- 'mu. v -- 'rof. o. r. Cook, Collectliic I n tor Illation With a Ylew of lteiiiumtnctlug tlie Kisouri iS of the lacud - Aaturol la im ilaugli-- i I v o . - ! . , Eiighsl. other inenibc of J ant . .'miiilli e be eonfi W t.l.ii l. moot must with mi, the is work I ; rious n.iif yet that w "n, un h i sk. n v toe Deling the . j to bear f !' i s lights ment. I w as '1 he Hist Puffrage m ga 1,0, ',A of the old t, on arcaded tin e t IL a a. ... cm ugh to show liptuus do not pio.laim the v It nupVi hit .if man The rn minis of the Uov son c. mmitloe tin.l on cv.iy hand a hum lap t t id. m o of th. absolute oquallt) of tin- sexes The Venerable lead, r of this lommlit.o is Mis Elizabeth Cady Stanton of N.w Yolk, who is now Ml viais of ago With Mis Stan- - i t . ' ,, lnle in ter. Alts Rbt. ' same five b. as of the most ip u w 1 the Darken of IV bo Bled the Other Day, " The Duchess of Leinster died at Mentone recently. Aside from the queen, the princess of Wales, and Lady Randolph Churchill there was probably no woman PROGRESS. tne A NOTED BEAUTY. tVa EFFORTS TO FURTHER LIBERIA'S ter, who ha'. F.niw woiii.ii Committee of NlaMo t omvn Now fanioua Fran' s nii.u Huir n..w slstcd, vf the L at ork nie o hijj lu the Hartford Tlin' , i ip h n Hidn. t, n i v cut an l.tuaitiy of the hrtr tv an I.iirrpre-Utut- ii were others 1 VP m o and ne v t v . vr of the Holt liHk through the ad) that l -- road Hu fduiatnni hasSnjt'in Inin thklie under i m ,u .utors at hnmn a i hough he spi nt I'.o eais at the I ight school in .Nt Ti i If, tlic having hull a foinnr tutor pincpal lie Is not (ollige g..duati. hut In toe fal . of ISoj he paeM d th- - j udiminai j c.pnliiutloti and oiiti ii 1 the H.v school of the th Cltj of XTV'y..!k,-tho,huait is v - then in tie old hutldlngs on Was ,i t'tnn square Air Cox was lmnudl ! l elected president of his al! r a cl iso conit st and despite tlie fact t at ho was one of the Youngest niemhi i v f a class of ov.r cine hundred Mud. nts. In April, 1591, the third a n ii u il c mention cf the Aineiiean Iolnu.il dirge league repteber.tmg otu- 'uro-ocolleges of the Lnited State? was held w t Stacuse, and Mr Cox diitrn.ineil to enter the presidential o.nj st. His opponent was Mr Shlthj H J ihnson of Harvard. one of the found. s and a high oliicial of the his election, Mr. Cox 1ms league fipartd no pains to make his teim of eifin p a one anil to advance the lnttiesis of the league In nil possible dittUp ns He has put the organization en a ting basis thioi'gh a mall annual tax, has fotmed depaitm. nt leagues all over the eoun-tr- v SAY. -- ' l.iixt THU IILACK IlElTillLlC 'f.X. rndpr'"- - w) w Open CoUr. h. editor of the Iiui, v MAN 13 NOT THE MASTER THEY A - fJIt 1 11 15LK. were IJvpnnore. ticc- -j.c ) the Rev. lho. MYOMA Y.8 3 d, he-wa-s ee th-fr.- e - eml-gratl- on .. m four-foote- -- ' ) , i 1 I" i |