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Show Magazine Section In the Marne of God, Amen Meaning of the Mayflower By LEVI 'EDGAR YOUNG , Head of 'the Department of Western History, University of Utah. 0 N September 6, 162 the Pilgrim left the little town of Plymouth In England lor tlie new world. After nine weeks on" the Father ocean, they reached America, and landed on the bleak lew England coast, where they built the little town of Plymouth, a few mile south of Boston.' The numbered 102 people, besides eighty tarty seamen who manned the little vessel. 'I he pilgrim Fathers were of the common folk ef England, and aoctally were very Insignificant. Thay cared little for conventionality In their worship; they disliked ritual and ceremonies, and cultivated a love for the Bible and tta teachno other people had up to their ings as time. - They had a great regard tor the family life, and parenthood was looked upon as very sacred They gave strange names to their children, such as Love, Hope, Wrestling, Confidence and Faith. Tlibtr object In coming to the new world was to find land and build their homes, w here they might be free to worship God as they pleased, And bring up their children In the paths of virtue, rectitude and the fear of God." The Ptlgrlnt Fathers represented that class ot peopis which the world has always had In tlie midst of the masses the class 'that thinks high thoughts and develops spirituality, but lives plainly, with no desire Humble they were, for wealth. says one historian, but destined to exert an influence upon the world's history out of all proportion to their number apd rank. America looks back to them, not as the only founders of the nation, but as the men whose Ideals and moral standards have been proved the fittest to survive, and are dominant still In the common law, and in the constitution, and in the general conscience of the people. , after a generation before by the noted scholar, Erasmus. .. Bo we think of those little towns parot ticularly Berooby, as battlegrounds freedom. Those little congregations ot Pilgrims were looking to greater tntngs In the future; they were developing larger hopes for tlie realization of the to worship God; and the power to right establish the state and the Bchooi, which should be the chief factors to dispel darkness gd bring forth a greater age of faith In Almighty God. In the organization of each free church, and this was the ideal organization of the Pilgrim Fathers, the principle was that of brotherhood. They covenanted together in their little congregation at Scrooby To walk in all His wavs, made known or to be made known unto them, according to their best endeavors, whatever it should cost them, the Lord assisting them. Massasoit if i ' ny JE. 'v A , , x ? & y weak, especially women, and, as there was need, called out maids and young women to watch and do them other helps, as their necessity did require; and If they were poor, they did gather relief to them of those that were able, or acquaint the ' deacons; and she was obeyed as a moth- er In Israel and an officer of Christ. Miles Standish was the soldier of thd Pilgrims, and when th Mayflower lay off the cdsst of Cape Cod it w arf he who first took a small company of meh and explored the shore for a suitable place Standish kept his little for settlement. army of men ready --to ward off any attack of the red men, and he exerted a for great Influence among the IndiansMasthe celebrated peace, treaty with sasoit, which wsa never broken during the lifetime of Bradford by either the Pilgrims or the red men. Voyage of This statu tht the Pilgrim stands at ths city hall I In Philadelphia, it! the Mayflower.' The poet Browning Pippa Passes: tatmie of blessing of God the gain w!l give conw tent to all. In the meantime, have gotten we have sent by tins' ship; will It and though It be not much, yet witness for us that we have not been Idle, considering the smallness of our number We hope the merall this summer. chants Will accept of It, and be encouraged to furnish us with things need ful for further employment, which wttl also encourage us to put forth ourselves to ths uttermost. By the spring the men had Built house, with the sides rudely squared log ami the roofs thatched with dry swamp grass. Into these the families were moved from the Mayflower. lots were given to eac.s family In proportion- - to Ihe number ot member. Every man agreed to build hla own house, but frost and foul weather hindered them much. However, the unusually mild winter passed, and th ltttlw town of Plymouth became a group of llttl homes, "where prayer to God was made both night and day. has sung in his Treaty of Peace With Indians. "O, young Mariner, Down to the haven . To defend the fort against the attaclc-oCall your companions. Indians, the Pilgrims organized their Launch your vessel H V'-A- ' men Into military companies, And crowd your ctmai who took turns In guarding the settleAnd, ere It vanishes ment Over the margin against attack by the red men. Just before the Pilgrims landed In DeAfter It, follow It !. cember, Miles Btandlsb, while on an exFollow the gleam. Over an uncharted sea the, .Pilgrims ploring expedition, met five or six Insorrowdians, who, taking fright, ran Into the went forth on a dangerous and The Pilgrims Turn to America. woods. Htandlsh followed, yet did not ful voyage. Their little boat, the Mayovertake them. Nightfall terminated- - the It was Sir Walter Scott who wrote; flower. received its name in honor of the had "Breathes there a man with soul so dead. hunt, but not until the explorers beautiful white flower of the hawdiscovered some ancient corn field of Who never to himself hath said. thorn bush, which grows so profusely old which some mats Notthe and This Is my own my native land! In the counties of Uncolnshlr and savages, covered an Indian grave. Continuing Whose heart hath ne'er within him The hawthorn breaks tinghamshire. their Journey toward their ship, they burned Into glory In the spring time, and the A found other fields v which had recently home hi footstep he hath turned. flower Is the emblem of hope. "The From wandering on a foreign strand? thorns of the bush are all hidden under yielded a harvest, and secured a few smell baskets full of rrsin. This waa gleaming masses of snowy white blosluring the yearsfl07 and 1608, the Pilfollowed bv a number-b- f AmIn went to soms." his William the Dutch cities of forage expeBradford, grims History ditions. which yielded them corn sterdam and Iyden, where they lived of Plymouth Plantation, has told us It wa for twelve years. Holland gave them welThe tittle knowledge of th country. something of the voyage. In March, however, before the llttl vt- come and in that little country still world hoat was loaded with furniture, and prerenowned for-It- s free schools and Ideals lags wa surprised one day by an Indtan sumably there were poultry, swine and of liberty, the English exile learned demThe passen goats penned up forward coming Into the town, whose first word , to them wa ocratic principles of government. Welcome. Thl Indian Yet gers slept In little bunks, which was Famoset. He described the various . made one above the other, and the they yearned for the green fields and the 'sttrfvyb In was In the surrounding country. - and huddled the forward part of the tribes snowy whips blossoms of the hawthorn i for after a stay of a few days he received ship. There was no opportunity hedges of their native land Their heart were In England, for had not their counpresent consisting of a knife, bracelet-anbathing .or washing, and little cooked a ring when he departed, promising, food could be had Rations consisting try developed the deeper principles of A n of bacon, hard tack, salt beef, smoked freedom that are so dear to the however, to bring, some of th Massasolta I or Wampanoags In a few dav, who herring, cheese and beer were given peoples? The Magna Charta ages Out dally with due regard that all food before had expressed certain fundamentals would bilng furs to trade with the colon- of government must be carefully conserved. The little which the English had Ista. Bamoset returned a number of ever held sacred. And in the day of the boat weathered many storms and during times, once with a companion named amid-ahi- p one of main beams sea the a come a In to firm the a few days the great Pilgrims, high people had itf Bquanto, but belief in the representative form of gov- was broken, which put them In of th Indian came, and he sonfe fear that the ship would not be ernment; the right of trial by Jury, and entered Into a treaty of peace , (Massasoit) Their Old Home in England. the sacred principle that taxes should be able to perform the voyage." Fear overwith the Pilgrim, which was kept sacred This statu I by Cyrus E. Dallln of Utah came some of the crew, and the faith by both parties for over fifty years. The In the sixteenth century the fathers of levied by the people through their repreand b erected will at was test. to "But Plymouth, Mas., of the passengers put True, religious liberty was treaty reads: the men and women who sailed on the sentatives. In 1921. In the master all to be learned and but opinions, yet examining That neither he nor any of hla should Max flower were quietly living In the appreciated; was the n affirmed that the others was and ship and do goal e placed, of and any hurt to any of our people, counties Lincolnshire committed so firm under water to t the time when every were recorded in. the Book of Life: If they And If any of hla did hurt to any of ' in eastern England, when there peoples looked rewill God of and the to God child of themselves should be to free ours, he should send the offender that develop came into their little secluded villages vCere not accompanied by a solved to proceed." One passenger died the best within him. Christian democ- their steps w might punish him. the most Important of these was Scrooby racy, minof train of splendid menials, was one legions habv and the education and voyage; the evangelisation istering angels had during "That If any of our tool were taken lllllllfl iw. Itinerant teachers who talked about a of the world" were the over them. 20 the Mayflower charge On November born. main Ideals of away, when our people were at work, nev translation of the holy scriptures these outcasts. In all the history of larger movements reached the northern shore of tape Cod, to do work their But, he should cause them to be restored, and became The John people Wycliffe. which are to higher and nobier but it was not until a month later that ly Copyright by Underwood and Underwood. they must be still the children of conditions conducive if ours did any harm to any ot his, wa Interested, and a few copies of the well, men, great personaliamong and landed the that building began Pilgrims their great government do the like to him. England, would ties stand out In relief to lead and direct Wycliffe Bible were purchased. The art our better ordering and preservation, aqd who came over on the Mayflower only "If any did unjustly war against him, of printing had been invented in the lit- mother country and their glorious land. their followers, of the PUgutm fathers their homes. Holland them True, Govbut gave of the ends aforesaid; and four were living when May came. we would aid him; if any did war against welcome, tle town of Mentz, in Germany, and the their were William Brewster, John RobIn the Name of God, Amen. - furtherance trials and sorrows were btttier. Says there by vertue hereof to enact, costitute, and ernor Carver died In Aprtl, 1(21. and hts us. he should aid us. first printing press had Issued many William inson, William Bradford, Miles Blandish historian1: their Bradford, ''Piland ordiframe was covered He should send to hla neighbor con- - 1 such with Lawes. of and the In new the translation hla of grave, others, the Holmes Oliver equal! Wendell just copies They "Old age began to steal on many of and John and Edward Winslow. ot nances, acts, const It u I tons, offices fronr planted with corn. In order that the federates to certtfle them of this, that us These simple folk also read told Vision" has were something scriptures. all men. we are and grim's told young by them, and their great And continual labors time to time, as shall be thought most might not know of the ravages ot they might not wrong us. but should that Wycliffe had aid: that only two of the whole the sufferings of the landing. hastened it befocs the time. And many one historian meet and convenient for thdsgnerall disease which had struck th little colony. likewise be comprised in the condition "The sacred scriptures ars the prop- of were over 60. William Bradscatour In aw forest company naked the I children-whwere their of the best Their sufferings were one good of the Colony; vnto which we promyet of peace! erty of the people, and one which nothem. ford was the governor of New Plymouth tered remnant cast dispositions and gracious Inclinations, for and obedience. In when the Mayflower sailed for England '"That when their men came to us, should be allowed to wrest from almost forty years, and hir History of A screen of shivering branches between ise all due submission learned to bear tlie yoke in their In the spring, not one of the little band they should leave their bowes and- we subwitness haue whereof herevnder Christ and his apostles converted the having and Is In New a classic Plantation and Plymouth them the blast; to bear of youth, their 11. Noto wllllhg Winslow desired with Edward her. our names. Cap Cod part of behind them, a we Should do with go world by making known the scriptures historical literature. It was The snow was falling round them, the scribed vember. in the yeare of the ralgne Of our tells about the struggles of the little col- our peeces when we came to them. to men In a form familiar to them, and parents' burdens, were oftentimes so op- England John Robinson, prophet and leader," with heavy labors that their who dying fell as fast; In writthe first a Lord letter of ony James, year during that doing thus. King James I pray with all my heart that through pressed England. King Lastly, soveraigne directed the little congregation of I looked to see them perish, when lo! bodies became decrepit in their early should esteem of him his friend and France, and Ireland IX. and of Bcotland ten to a friend In England. doing the things contained In this book, the Pilgrims In Leyden, and sent the the vision passed." the of nature youth, evervigor and Old 54. w 162U. Domini Friend: come being to Anno the alls." "Loving may altogether first company Into the unknown with his in th very bud. as it were. Before leaving the cabin of the The sacred thoughts of this Immortal "Although 1 received no letter from Massasoit Is then described by tha lasting life. blessing. Robjnson was a true man of v But that which was ot all sorrows the Pilgrim Fathers came to- document were written in the constitu- you by this ship, yet forasmuch as I document. fort's "Relation. which says: During this sixteenth century a new most heavle was one of and God; the of greatest to be born many of their of which tion of the United Btalea when it was know iou expect the performance of my In a the felt Itself was spirit MasKS9oi ls a very lustte man. in hla meeting, of reform gether making spirit ; 'Children by these occasions and the great the makers of America. InHe was pure, wa democratic and good will. The In- drafted bv our forefathers in 17?. Amer- promise, which was to 'write unto you best yeares an able body, grave of coun- - , all over England. It was called Puritan In the country, and the honest, generous, catholic licentiousness spirit, helpreGod been must we of have trulv and of I fluence Is re all have a the land ica of Christian was present tenance and spare of speech; In hia faithfully jatlll tem and things, faith; greatly changing As th manifold temptations of the place, were ful. tender and therefore at this time sent unto you acto fill the hearts of those faithful souls. continue to enjoy our "civil! body people drawn llttl or nothing differing from th ligious ideals of thousands of teachwere about to leave Holland he Pilgrims Into danaway and wa It drew extravagant Then w ho came to oppose not only the that they up the and we enact, constitute, and cordingly referring you for further satis- rest of his 'followers, only in a of gerous courses, tending to dissoluteness said to them, so Edward Winslow re- Mayflower compact, which contain the frame such just and equal laiws, ordi- faction to our more large Relations chain of whit bone beads aboutgreat hia ings of the Catholic ghurch, but those old ports: and the danger of their soul. free and of elements government, "Rebtg1on,' a considerable neck, and at it behind hia necke, hangs nances, the Church of England as well. The the aots, constitutions, office from (Winslow's larger And If God should reveal anything to which we hold sacred as the first written Bo those Pilgrims thought of America, time to time, as shall be thought most volume). a little bagg of tobacco, which he University of Cambridge encouraged us by any other instrument of his, to be constitution In all the where they might live up to their Ideals as "You shall understand that In this lit- smoked and history. They began meet and convenient for the general good free reading of the Bible, and whentowns gave us to smoke. and develop home and free government ready to receive It as ever we were This celebrated document tle time one with than the few that word: of a (less the Borne bad skins on them, and some wer year) Colony." young men of Scrooby and other became to receive any truth by Ails ministry, for for their and still u children, remain ot have of Engwe name been Amen." And seven th have built God, here, went up to matriculate, they they Steps were taken to insure orderly govnaked, all strong men in appearance. Bo was veo confident the "In of the lishmen. Ho to America they turned for he (Robinson) over all their ernment after landing: and at ,a little dwelling house and four forthe une of after this was done, the governour consscptiral of the religious teachings Lord had more truth and light yet to wrote that name large to God and home. the plantation, and have made prepara- ducted him (Massasoit) to the brooks, , In the the cabin of doings. time, and finally urged their fathers and Mayflower, meeting break forth out of hi Holy Word. withdraw from all the denomination John Carver was chosen governor, but tion for divers other. We set the last and there they embraced each other, and We have a picture, too, of what the he lived but a few short months to lead spring- aome twenty acres of Indian corn, they departed. to set up little congregations of people The Pilgrim Leaders. Mayflower Compact. women of those for Governor did, days read his people, when 'William Bradford was and sowed some six acre of barley and Henceforth the Wampanoag thought where the "word of God might be Lord Macaulays eulogy on th PuriW e in writing about a dear old name Bradford, Amen. the of "In God, Such congregaIt was under hts pease; and according to the manner of well of the Pilgrim, but the powerful made his successor. and Interpreted freely." tans likewise tell of tli was In who of deaconess a character the church names lady whose are vnderevltUn, tha loyal) care the counties the we manured our Indians, with little direction the and that tions sprung up in the eastern ground colony Narragansetts, who dwelt beyond MasPilgrim Father. at Plymouth, says of her: or rather shads, which we have sachusetts Subjects of our dread soveraigne Lord of England, and It was not long before bay. felt differently, and aent "If they were unacquainted with th did them service many years, King lames, by the grace of God ot at Plymouth got tta start in free gov- herrings, She In the of on the and take with part abundance, great tiiev faced opposition great a threat to th Pilgrims by a messenworks of philosopher and poets, they though she was 0 years when she was Great Brltaine. France, and Ireland King, ernment. ease our at doors. corn Our did older school of thought, and this opposicarried th Plymouth governor who prove were deeply read In the oracles of ger, If chosen. She honored her place and was Defender of the Faith Ac. well; and. God he praised, we had tion finally grew Into persecution. How- their names were not found In theGod; good a bundle of arrows In a snake skin. BradWinter. an ornament to the congregation. of The regisfor the vndertaken Increase the of sixteenth glory of Indian Having our close corn, and toward the ford stuffed the skin with powder and ever, It whs a terrible winter for the little Indifferent good, but our pease not barley of peoplg gathered ter of heralds, they felt assured they She did frequently visit the sick and J3od, and advancement of the Christian worth bullets and sent It back to Uanonlcus, century, little flocks Faith, and honour of our King and Coun-tre- hand of Pilgrims who landed in Decem- tha gathering, for we feared they were th chief of the Narraginsetts, homes In Scroobv and When quietly into private"word a Voyage to plant the first Colonv ber, 1620, and established the town of too lute sown. They came up of God as It was the listened very well, the sachem received the bundle and saw In the Northerns parts of Virginia doe Plymouth. Their food was gone, and the and blossomed : but the sun parched them was was to he in touch what read from the Holy Bible." "afraid It, e by these presents solmnly and mutually Indians brought them corn, which was In the blossom. it or to have It about, and bad it taken anGod one In of and of to "When out the little it presence God. God we sparingly given From Bo Bible are pleaselh treatsettled Ills from land. The the Pilgrims for the fishing business and ed th Indians with diplomacy other) covenant, and combine our selues band. Half of them died during the find and fitted and , The Bible to the good people of I doubt not but together Into a rtvlll body poltttke, tor season, and out of the eighteen women th by a was direct, and Nottingham comIntelligible, and most authoritative was merely a few Vote shy of the Unanimunication from God." To it readers TOM BOWLIN(, comnor no needed explanation the book mous., He was expecting that some on 300 (One of Charles Dtbdln's It was Songs, mentators, and In a short time .) would got up and Move to make him City new greatest factor In giving them Bowlsheer a lie Tom Here, bulk, poor GEORGE Clerk ADE. Acclamation. ideas of religious and political freedom. by By ing. The Ballots were counted and the GarThey were an earnest andtosincere people, ; our crew The . of , darling the worship, and when tiiev sat down den Heed Man carried one precinct In th No more he'll lienr the tempest howling, ' , gave them to know and of a Great Party King-Pin- s The Committeemen spirit of God" For had worked death has broached him the lo. Second Ward and twq In tho Seventh. understand "th noble subject pertainwaa of the manliest beauty, that the City Ticket could little Ball In and out of the English WalAt eleven oclock on Election Night he HisHtsform ing to this life and the life of the hereheart was kind and eoft; that be elected, so they decided to nut before shifting to Politic, and they after." These congregations held made sat below at Faithful he did hla duty, whence all but Headquarters, hint the will anil spirit of God might be the Better Element. If could sit down beside a trusting, Unsohad ducked, and tried to figure out that But now hes gone aloft. manifest to them, and that not only In It t, Nomiwould th It had been k phisticated Unitarian with an require the official Count to religious affairs, but In civic and political decide. They had to lead him Home- - He Tom never from bis word departed, matters as well, were the people to rule nation would have gone to the Boy who Mind and convince him that Red was did not want to face hi Wile. Th Other His virtues wer so rare. become Buch a .themselves. people always do the Rough Stuff. Tellow. Man wa l I.iMjs ahead and ntitl Running. Ills friends were many and a dynamic element In society, and stand Ilia Poll was kind and fair; Instead In of a It Residence which a had a a Street Joae. aamo the taking worn-ocustoms and out boldly against By the time they were through Pumpas other leoplo did. he got Bore on Hu- And then he'd ting so blithe and jail) . ' Deer In nearly every Front ing it into him, he was sure theories. Following the Bible of Wycliffe Cast-Iro- n If In he that Ah, and General many's tho time and oftl manity joined a Third But came that- of William Tyndale, who Tard, as a slight Concession to Art, did not I arty, that waa Opposed mirth is turned lo melancholy to everything. accept the Nomination, the Lights translatel th 8rrlptures from the orig there lived a Nice Man who was in th 9 . For Tom la gone aloft. Moial: Draw your Salary before Bp.nd-bi- g wrould burn low all over tlie Inal Greek and tAtin. While Tjndale nd Jt. was at the University of Cambridge Garden Seed Business. He said Whom," th Little Children would moair City In their Tet shall poor Tom find pleasant weather scholar of and wore Nose Glasses. He never had Trundle Erasmus, th most celebrated When He who all commands Beds So he put on the Corru(Cop) right, 192(1, by tho Bel S; ndkale, hla day. eame because of exile from his dallied with the Buxz-SaalShall give to call life's crew together. x political , Inc.) gated Brow and tried to look like Caesar native Holland to the English univert The word to pip all hands. though he had Convictions on the Na- at the Lupercal. He said he would have sity, and gave that Inspiration to the stuThus Death, who kings and tar dir THE REGNANT FUTURE. new love for tional Issue and had written one or two to dents which resulted In Knock Under to patches. Dethe Universal nd a great desire to read the classic China Krnlshes a (pe of civilization In vain Tom' life has doffed. , the greatest .of all the classics the Holy Open Letter on Municipal Ownership, mand. The Committeemen said they that hue touud its atiength in reverence For. though hi bodys under hatches. Bible The Greek Testament of Erasmus signed, "Justltfs. of tho past. Chinese pni.oeophy .has would need a little Money right away to HI soul ha aloft. gone long fe'l Into ths hands of Tyndale, and It maintained that man waa originally treChance, the Bosses sthgled get out some Printing. They did not ay By eom was read and reread. Exciting the opated good and tliul safely lay In lollow-In- g - RELIC OF STAGE COACH a Sets! DAYS. Man what the out Victim kind Garden of th the some of authorities the of of but Printing, relieved tne was of the tathere. China g they position On th old slat road between Pittsdid him of enough to Issue a Public Library. university, he fled to Hamburg, and confor the Off Tear Sacrifice. has heeir a form ef ancestor They book the from the tinued translating holy woislilp and Its education has been large- burg and Mansfield. Ohio, stands th ol Hla Wife and her Sister and the Man Boms months not nke to see one of their own Gang Greek and Latin texts. ly based tin repetition and memory. Tills Shull tavern, a relic of the stage ooac later Tyndale went to Worms, where he put out In front to get the Gaff right in whp took care of the Furnace and his worship of the past has done much to ..finished his manuscript, consisting of th6 the If any one had to be other Friends heard day. The early ancestor of tlug pre ho was up to. when preserve China, other sank nations New and parts of the Old Testaments, into oblivion. Rut preservation ha been ent Shull family cam originally from tl tried to get a firm Hand-Hol- d on and ths re had It jyrlnted. The Tyndale Speared, they preferred that It should be TheyCoat-Tawon at the coat of progress. Black forest In Germany, In 1752, becaut j il wore his some who Dead Card and Dan-gewas In him t, It was out Congress of written da pull called, In great, degree the retrospective habit Ittble, of the war which agitated Europe , rtaln and simple English, and for beauty Gaiters and Throat Warmer. Th NIc but ha knew better. He said the dominates every people. Question of of style It cannot be surpassed hv scho- ijsn who dealt In Leek emigrated to Amertc. right and wrong hav long been decided that lime; nd Early Peas Populace w Calling for him. No one This was the Blhls that lars of todav. by precedent derived from the past. The From thl family came Henry 8hull, wh mad It wav Into the home of tha Puri- seemed to meet all the Requirements. H els heard the call. It must have come legalistic mind dominate vie. bulwarking moved to Ohio In 180(, and took z tan and. the Separatists," who later was du to Double Cross on over a Prtvate Wire. th Itself In treaties, constitution, legitims-ci- e tlon of land on th old state road, whei became the pllgrlme. , General Principles. and charters. It revere precedent In speaking of him It was surprising how the Voters rallied and is essentially concerned about y foD he built the old U him. building whit-- t called him The Stiff. was swamped with Pledges II they in HoIIaud. Refuge lowing the ways of th father. Manstill known Bhull tavern. Tl th . When they talked it oxer In a Speak of Support., h When was ners. Nominated, customs, habit of speech and tra- old home I Elisabeth, the queen of England during atilt In excellent condltioi dition have don much to make th octhe rise end growth of the Puritan anU Easy, It was reported that the Oarden h thought he had a Chance. A Week Henry Shull built hi own sawmill I cidental a backward-lookin- g creature. a took movement, very Seed Man was suspected of being a Lily later he began to make a list of the "Separatist" cut the for the building, and burn' Vigs But more rd more the future claim stern stand against little congregations Whits, who seldom stood by th Straight Plum to be distributed. attention. If the present I a period of the brick he used. The house conUlt , Three Daj which assembled secretly to worship God. and haa a large verand rooms, and Indecision, It I o partly large uncertainty If you ever visit Boston. England, you Ticket, that' he carried a little Sack of before Election, It had all the above and below, which extend the ei her use the forward look i becoming will go to the old Jail and see th cells Wlntergreen Lozenges and That h never of a Landslide. It was only a Question tire length of tlie bouse. Two Committeemen went up te th Oarden Bead Office and told th nlc man recnant. If things wer where some of the Pilgrim were incar- - had been known to caU Anybody by hi of formerly reOn of the most striking feature Majesties.' IH had th Job nailed th( newt. garded largely from th crated. Then in Bcroohy, a part of the viewpoint of the house proper I th Th on eauee. today they are approached with door I built of a anl Id front ofdoor. four Side and then clinched old prison stands where the chief men First Nam. So they took a Vote and down oak. an piece their probe hie consequent. the outside I of th Pilgrim wer kept In dark cell All Over except a port and working for him stronger than rubbed his Shdukler Blade for him and reference I tonow In v old greed that he should be Butchered to underneath.' It w the rotonk paneled seen to be the overriding Morality for week at a time. Among thr wer mak a Municipal Holiday. are al window few faint Cries of Frauds and then being an Ox. fashion. The aid and assured him of Immediate and personal considerations gave him the lloop-tre- e , William Brewater, who o boldly atood lo quaint, and th I latch, with a heavy RF something to be attained In the fuwho carried an Bworn In, Two Committeemen The Campaign Committee gave It to It was all right. for th right and declared that God of a style seldom sm t on the Inside, ture. Issue of conservation, economic now. Detroit them the freedom to overweight of Jowl and wore Cameo lie was out every Night with would yet glv As he saw his Italsiice rnelt, he was lot him Blood Raw two or three times a New. child welfare nd educapolity, training, worship HltR In spirit and In truth." The llttl smaller than th went of who showed him how to Week. ' They would get him Into a Back cheered by the Knowledge (hat he would tion. war and peace look to th future, ' NEVER AGAIN. people were very poor, but very noble . Ready Money Into Popu- Room at Headquarters and pull down get It hack aeierai times oven In Bulary and because they do they form some of in their Uvea, and at last having found up to th Garden Seed Office and told convert hi th An early morning customer In an opt most Important problems that face e over larity, He would come Home Carbonated th Blind and plug Cotton In tha an l probably be able to turn a modern experience, that they rould llv no th Nlc Mn that th People and Fce-sclan's shop was a young woman with aoclety. longer happily In their mother country, Tow-wer lck with Anxiety to know worse than a Soda Fountain and with hi , few Trick on the Bide, and Talk to him In Stage WhisBut th future contains the eventful determined air. bhe addressed the C.r unlee they violated conscience and would h be their Next City Clerk. Pocket-,fug of for dangerous-lookinall of tit. It Ilea before u salesman eh saw, rale, per. What .they had (o say could have denied the supremacy of Jeius," they deJut before Election ever) body run thing "I want to look t a pair of eyeglassr If he had' stopped to Count ,l'p ho Cigar that hi. Wlft had to remove from been talked through a Megaphone at th around In a Clrcl and, kick up so much plastic piece of clay. It contains th termined to o to Holland. The story of of extrn magnifying power." poesll llltlee of social realisation and acI heir migration to th continental coun- would havo known that not moro than hi Clothe with a Pair of Tweezer. one no Btreet Dust a but Corner, that can Childhood Oalrvnyaht catches Its "Ye, madam," replied tha Mleamai complishment. try ls th real epic In the history of the 14 Person had avr heard of him. But h wondered If th Other Sometime Once or twice, be Burked a little n) Is up th Situation. Even the Garden whisper, youth is controlled by It great acmethlng .very strong?" ranted and driven on every Pilgrims Itwer "Yes. sir. While In the country I mad and old eg hears In It the promside, they compelled to go across you can alwaja convince a Nice- Man Fellow would get any Vote at' all. agtd that Inasmuch as 95 per cent of the Feed Man. who had Kept hi Finger On note, ise of a better world. a very painful blunder which I never war, stands Humanity th channel In small parties, and then that he la Prominent, and If th Goo Is The whole Bodx of Registered Voter Voters hsd Declared for him, he did not the Public Pulse, could not accurately today a ever facing the coming time l repeat. '' only after many of thetrf had been Im- properly robbed In so a to get all through "Indeed! Mistook a stronger for an a( eemsd to' b filling over on another In see th Necessity for Coughing o fre- esttmai bis Majorities, but he had a lit- And In thl attitude Ilea much hop ef prisoned for seeking relief In th llttl I good. Tho vole from before epeaks' to- qualntance?" real their Mad Rush lo set Into Lin for him. quently. The) said It was for morn Printhe will think he the he had tle Table FounSystem, all mad a freedom with that that that gave people It never did., saving: This la th nsllqn hum "No, not exactly that; I mistook ' which had bsen sought Popular, too. of cbnsUenc Intlre Families wer flopping to hi Sup- - ing. He never saw the Printing, but xjcy tain Ten and a Ruler. It ahowed that he day bleb for at blackberry." Houstouf Foe way, walk y In It. Minneapolis Joto-nal- V able-bodi- 1 and-som- ! Anglo-Saxo- ' y sir-he- Anglo-Saxo- Nottuig-hamshlr- - As . o heart-rendin- g, es aon-sum- May-Rowe- d, at-ty- poll-tike- "; " , -- , First y. The Fable of the Peoples Choice Who Answered the Call of Duty and Took Seltzer Other-trading- 1 THE air-tigh- Open-Wor- true-heart- ut 6 -- Wish-Bon- e. thr gt two-tor- 1 Ear-Mar- k ' !Iom-Plat- e, 11 y Key-Hol- , ll 1 . |