Show salim THE OGDEN STAN DARD-E- 22 X AM1NER SUNDAY MORNING DECEMBER 23 1934 ( Thrill Found n Panama - - Digging Of All Spots Beautiful Girl Refuses Pirate Map of Treasure Found : In Cook Books Kitchen Hobby Popular One With Royalty Famous Men one likely finds such enjoy nient In reading — of all things! a cook book as this goofy bibliophile I can wallow through the pages of one with the same sense of drama —as reading a Sherlock Holmes Anc no autobiography fascinates me more thanTthat of a chef especially one who lias catered to royalty or sundry big wigs Cooking should be more honorec as one of the arts and every man should know something about the - actual mixing and serving of food - I don’t but I’m beginning to take a 'lively interest And I may be a cook before you know it KING EVEN COOKED Fooling around the kitchen is —supposed to be sissified yet among men of the world who have made cooking their hobby are Alexander Dumas Whistler Clemenceau King Edward VII the Right Honourable "Arthur J Balfour Ramsay MacLuther Burbank Ceci Donald Rhodes Charles G Steinmetz George ' Eastman Babe Ruth anc Enrico Caruso The last book tha Dumas wrote was a cook book of more than 2000 pages Last night I read almost into dawn about men and women who have been cooks One ofmy most interesting evenings was listening to Rosa Lewis the famous Loudon cook In her Jermyn street hotel telh of 'the- queer -- quirks of palates of the -- notables The Duke for instance who liked meat gravey on strawberries George Rector in a reminis cent mood can spill fascinating yarns about such appetites as Dia mond Jim Brady’s and others Among the notes jotted down while pasturing through the cook book I find: Baked finnan-haddi- e baked bacon and bananas chippec beef and pineapple liver loaf anc bacon pot a feu — how those ole shawled Frenchwoman can cook it! Potato pancakes chocolate cream and butterscotch pie cinnamon 'crumb cake cold salmon patty quick onion soup Scotch collops - and why "But hearts? on and break your go ‘ - ' New York had a sickening spectacle of the abuse of power of private subway policemen recently also a heartening example of how the casual stranger will go to the defense of down-trod den It was In the Times Square station that a man suspected of using a spurious slug in lieu of a nickel was dragged away held by two private guards and beaten by a third if stories are correct The crowd Instead of standing by helplessly to lynch the offending - bullies and might have done so had notr a police riot call gone In But eye witnesses did not stop at that — they followed to the police station to press charges and give theic names as witnesses The victim went to the hospital tom bleeding and with a possible fracture No private policeman any where has a right to lay his hand on a citizen It is his job to call a regu larly Ordained officer And putting a few in jail and taking away their uniforms will do much to lessen a -- The priests had had plenty of time to hide the church valuables before Morgan began his work of destruction But one of the first things the pirate did was to shoot all the priests he could find Jn Panama So nobody ever learned about the hiding of the sacred vessels and the Spaniards supposed that Morgan had stolen them It was not until five years ago that the secret of the old cathedral was discovered The cathedral has been a ruin ever since the pirates’ raid and a new city was built some distance from the one destroyed by the buccaneers returned from a trip that took me 1HAVE just Panama twice I saw the canal but it didn’t hold me — There is digging going on It however Swarthy men are digging for the treasure that is believed to be buried all the way across the Isthmus 1 heard many stories old to the tellers but new to me in spite of some twenty years of delving for treasure ales It seems that Henry Morgan isn’t the only one who buried treasure or caused it to be buried in Panama In fact some strange force seems to have been at work influencing almost everybody to put gold and silver under ground there CAPTIVES TAKEN Many of the families that had fled from the city were caught by Morgan’s men who were sent out to scour the jungle for them Most of these captives died without disclosing the hiding places of their treasures Modern treasure-hunte- rs face the task of locating and recovering most of these caches that were made in and near Panama by the victims of Morgan’s raid The fires set by the pirates eventually consumed Panama leaving nothing but ruins where the houses of the Inhabitants had been Some few buildings that escaped the flames were occupied by the pirates as RUMORS OF GOLD The diggers are mostly natives today although there are many American adventurers who take a fling at the job now and again The town of Cristobal is full of rumors about pots of gold And there are Americans who are said to be fugitives from justice wandering always up and down the Central American coasts and rivers These men are steeped in treasure lore Many of them entertain vague hopes of digging up a few millions of pieces of eight and going back to America to pay off their depositors The old trail known as the Cruces Trail across the Isthmus was the route over which went many millions of ounces of gold and silver in the old days The Spaniards developed a system of handling the treasure that came out of the mines of Peru The mines were worked by Indians under Spanish The gold and silver after smelting was concentrated at Lima During the dry season the pack trains were started north to Panama and then across the Isthmus along the trail -- headquarters TORTURED TO DEATH Scouting parties sent out by Morgan brought into the city a thousand or more of the refugees most of whom were tortured to death Among the captives was a young woman who is nameless in the histories written by those who were with Morgan and set out to record his exploits She was not yet twenty and is described as a remarkable beauty fair of skin and distinguished by deep dark eyes She was badly frightened when brought before the chief of the pirates and begged to be permitted to die in prayer She seemed to take for granted that she would be killed and she wanted the killing done imme- task-maste- rs diately Morgan however directed that the young woman who had quite bowled him over by her beauty and ' supplications be lodged in an apartment by herself and treated with especial courtesy He called upon her after she had had food and sleep and began to make love as a humble suitor without show of force The young woman didn’t like him however and the courtship did not prosper Morgan behaved himself- in imitation of a gentleman for several days and then burst out in rage against the object of his affections He had her thrown into a dungeon and fed upon foul food He cursed her and reviled her But he couldn’t win her that way either PACK TRAINS MOVE This stream of gold had long ceased to flow from coast to coast and the old trail had been partly swallowed up by jungle growth when the California gold rush became the world’s sensation in 1849 The pack trains began moving again toward Panama with supplies for the new- Californians and toward the Atlantic coast with heavy loads of gold More than forty million dollars in gold passed over the Cruces trail on pack animals during the years of the California excitement Robbing a pack train was not a difficult feat in the days of the Forty-nineMany an ambuscade was carried out successfully by the desperate highwaymen who made headquarters in Panama Sometimes there was a battle in which lives were lost on both sides but generally the ambuscade was such a sudden and complete surprise that the guardians of the gold surrendered without a struggle There are many tales of burial of gold after these holdups The robbers anxious to make a quick escape would bury the loot make a map of the terrain and return for their heavy burden later if they had good luck Sometimes their luck was bad - - -- - rs On February 1 1671 Morgan started back over the trail toward the Atlantic One hundred and seventy-five mules oxen and donkeys carried the loot Six hundred men and women were taken along as TREASURE FOUND Recently treasure has been uncovered beside the Cruces trail The details of the operations are to some extent mysterious Some searchers have worked with a treasure locating device - After listening for some time and making several moves on a slightly raised spot in the jungle growth beside the old trail an old treasure-hunt- er started his men to working with spades and picks and machetes He was sure he had a find The tangled growth was cleared and digging uncovered the tiled floor of an old Spanish house In the center of the floor was a tile design of the arms of Castile and Leon This portion of the floor was :arefully removed and beneath it was found a box containing thirty-tw- o silver gold coins and seventy-tw- o ones The dates on these coins were all prior to 1804 There were doubloons and pieces of eight and a few scattering coins of other denominations Further excavation uncovered valuable gold and silver utensils and investigation Is still going on in the' hope of finding records that may the owner of the old Spanish house and giveidentify some clue to the part he must have played in the drama of the Cruces trail UNDER TILE FLOOR Since one of the coins found under the tile floor was dated 1803 it is certain that this particular cache was made neither in the days of Morgan the buccaneer nor at the time of the California gold rush It is possible that at a later date we may be able to get the story of that old house and the people who lived in it t Ten terrible days and nights Captain Henry Morgan and his company of pirates marched across the Isthmus following approximately the course of the Cruces trail to sack the golden city of Panama The men nearly starved on the way being forced to eat shoe leather and bark from the trees Morgan captured Panama after much fighting The Spaniards tried to put the pirates to rout with their cavalry but the horses sunk in the boggy plain and that maneuver was a failure The defenders of the city then turned two thousand cattle loose on the pirates hoping to disorganize them The cattle went to pasture and Morgan went on into Panama FLEE INTO JUNGLE Morgan was not very successful in collecting loot ! - in Panama during the next few days Most of the inhabitants fled into the jungle before the pirates entered the city They took their coin and portable valuables along with them Many fled along the trail toward the Atlantic hoping to meet Spanish soldiers coming to the relief of the city Thousands Of families buried their valuable possessions along the trail with the intention of returning after the pirates should have retired Morgan set fire to several of the in the town including the cathedral a treasure hunter dug up a large fortune in gold plate and sacred vessels that were hidden lunder the floor of the cathedral He also recovered gold statuary from a tunnel that led from the cathedral to some other part of the city New York dog lovers are going ls with plans' to have dog under a more careful super vision It is the belief of the spon Swift bom in England famous sors of a bill for the legislature that F’ROM Jonathan of St Patrick’s the young most of them are not only in the may learn "how to write the (Protestant) common old learn may hands of incompetents but are un- - sense all may take warning clean and do more to retard than Generations of have read Swift’s aid recovery of a sick or injured "Gulliver’s Travels” young people of that lived in telling giants canine Brobdingnag so huge that Gulliver the Englishman stand comfortably in the queen’s hand of the - The Gloria Vanderbilt decision could people of Ulliput among whom Gulliver was a giant -taking the child from her mother of the strange people of Laputa and the Land of save for two days a week was Houyhnhnms in which noble horses were rulers and handed down long enough ago to vile men called Yahoos were the horses’ unworthy regard dispassionately To the gen- slaves y eral public and newspapers it These Voyages have been read by generations a rank mockery of justice of’ children and even by adults who did not know - seemed Many merry widow mothers may that Gulliver and his travels represented bitter satire" not be up to par morally but their holding up to ridicule European governments the children are not tom from them ambitions and follies of kings courts and And most children would rather live and particularly Swift’s hatred of lawyers politicians collectivewith rich aunts who give them ly and individually everything than to be under usual Swift’s life well told in 200 pages by Leslie home discipline Mrs Whitney is a Stephen in the "English Men ofsmall Letters” series is as wealthy headstrong woman used to interesting a chapter as was ever written between having her own way and got it But cradle and grave the biggest resentment is over the Swift despised mankind “The bulk of mankind justice who threw up such barriers is as well qualified for flying as thinking” of secr-rabout the proceedings He said freedom of thought would lead to "anThe whole mess deserves an airing archy atheism and immorality as to fly if the press verdict is to be relied would lead to a breaking of necks” Heliberty little upon that men actually would fly and break theirthought necks hos-pita- The unshiekiest looking screen shlek away from the camera is the g Francis exquisite Lederer In‘ mufties he might be one of those overgrown office boys — down in the financial marts — the sort who look almost exactly alike But before the camera or on the stage he "becomes a dashing Don — Juan a silken-voicmoony-eye- d feminine' heart pumper with few equals It is quite baffling : hand-kissin- ed Walker’s newspaper Jimmy umns in a London newspaper have resulted in a little cheering by commentators Jimmy’s flashing wit Is almost entirely oral the sparkling Jdnd of the curb wise cracker On 'paper Walker becomes very bromi-di- al As Westbrook Pegler observed: "You can’t Jiggle an eyebrow in col- print” I know who at 52 lost not his fortune but his job tells only me that after going through all the agonies of failure he turned to the Bible like a drowning man grasping the straw for consolation He claims to have found it in chapter A man 12 of Luke the 22d to 31st verses inclusive He says he reads them twice daily on arising and retiring and has been able lo have all he wanted to eat and wear Copyright 1934 McNaught Syn Inc prisoners The young woman who had the hardihood and good taste to repulse the amorous advances of Captain Morgan was placed between wo pirates and made to walk in the sad procession of prisoners After two days of marching Morgan suddenly lost interest in this persistent young beauty and ordered her released NEVER KEPT FAITII a is There story about Morgan’s disposal of the richest part of the treasure It has been told in several forms and it is difficult to say whether there is truth in it Morgan was notoriously treacherous He never kept faith with anyone if he could make money or gain some advantage by breaking faith So this story has the ring 'of probability Morgan is said to have separated from the rest of the loot all of the pure gold he could pack into a half dozen heavy chests These chests were loaded upon strong mules that were tended by prisoners andwere kept close to the commander’s person during the first day of the march That night Morgan compelled his prisoners to drive the mules carrying the six chests of gold off the trail to a point near a conspicuous rock Here the prisoners were made to dig a pit and deposit the treasure Then the pirate chief calmly killed all the prisoners who knew of the location of Will Suggests Yule Thought i To Help Blind Talk rarely Samuel Johnson thought that Swift’s style reached its highest point in his early work of intense satire the "Tale of a Tub” is of this book that Swift said in his old age his intellect grown feeble: "Good God what a genius I had when I wrote that book!” If In the tale with its three characters — Peter Martin and Jack representing the Catholic Anglican and Puritanical branches of Christianity — Swift upheld the established British church although feebly and perfunctorily The government paid him as dean to represent that church His enemies accused him of believing in no church at all except as a convenient way for a brilliant man to make a living He once wrote an argument proving that "the abol-shiof Christianity in England may as things now stand be attended with some inconveniences” and his attitude toward the British "Low Church” was In his statement: "If they once get rid of Christianity may aim at setting up Presbyter-anis- m ” He they concludes that a nominal religion "is of some use for if men cannot be allowed a God to revile or renounce they will speak evil of dignities and may even come to ‘reflect upon the ministry’ ” Voltaire called Swift a Rabelais "a rfected Rabelais” meaning that perfectionne Swift excelled Rabelais in satirical writing and that his Brodingna-gian- s were better than Rabelais’ Voltaire avowed sceptic would approve Gargantua Swift a sceptic in clerical clothing of the Church of England all his that will be re r for centuries Swift says writings he never got a penny that truly exceptonce by Pope’s prudent management” His riend Pope the poet with whom he quarreled as he did with nearly all his ultimately friends helped Swift to get two hundred pounds for his Gulliver book from which printers and sellers of books have taken in millions ng ex-jres- sed dis-guis- ed Among much nonsense written by Swift one sort most pitiful is the "little language” invented by himself in which he wrote to young ladies much younger than himself most fearful twaddle The world justly gives him credit for innocence in intentions and in actions He is supposed to have married one of these girls Stella when he was old although that is not proved and would be a violation of the rules laid down for himself "when I am grown old” Not to marry a young woman was one of the resolutions Not to talk about himself was another Like many pthers "grown old” he talked and thought of little1 else except himself and the world’s ingratitude Unpleasant experiences in childhood may account for some of Swift’s bitterness- - The first year of his infancy was spent in Ireland where an English nurse obliged to return home and passionately devoted to the child kidnaped him and kept him for three years ftaking such care of his education that he could read any chapter in the Bible before he was three years i old ” Swift was devoted to his mother although' she left him at the age of six after he entered Kilkenny school and did not see him again for several years At Kilkenny school called the "Eton of Ireland” Swift became acquainted with two other men of The three genius Congreve and George Berkeley are called by Swift’s biographer “the greatest satirist (Swift) the most brilliant writer of comedies (Congreve) and the subtlest metaphysician in the English language” (Berkeley) Swift says: “When I was a little boy I felt a great fish at the end of my line which I drew up almost on the ground but It dropped in and the disappointment vexes me to this very day and I believe it was the type of all my future disappointments” ' Made bitter by disappointing experience Swift as shown in his story of the Houyhnhnms thought little of his fellow creatures except as individuals “I heartily hate and detest that animal called man although I heartily love John Peter Thomas and so forth” In a letter to Sheridan he wrote: "Expect no more from man than such an animal is capable of and you will every day find my description of Yahoos' more resembling You should think and deal with every man as a villain without calling him so or flying from him or valuing him less” His “Yahoos” were hideously base human creatures that lived as servants of the Houyhnhnms They were horses noble masters of the debased human Yahoos i t Swift with all his genius and brilliant success and in spite of the admiration and envy of his age lived unhappily His sad unfortunate unwise life was redeemed first by his genius and second by the purpose to which he devoted at the last with Infinite attention to detail his small fortune of twelve thousand pounds All that he had was used for St Patrick’s hospital opened for fifteen patients In the year 1757 His last few years f mental weakness He was were darkened by buried Ixk St Patrick’s cathedral with a bitter epitaph upon his grave his own words He got little from life expected little love dr regret to accompany him to the grave the effect that his death would produce he wrote: "Poor Pope will grieve a month anid Gay A week and Arbuthnot a day St John himself will scarce forbear To bite his pen and drop a tear The rest will give a shrug and cry ’Tis pity but we all must die ” He expected that women many of whom had expressed great admiration for him would "Receive the news in doleful dumps The dean is dead (pray what Is trumps?) Then Lord Ijave mercy on his soul! (Ladies I’ll venture for the vole)” -- I Actors authors others that resent criticism might quote Swift’s lines so well known describing critics "The vermin only tease and pinch ' ’ Their foes superior by an inch So naturalists observe a flea Has smaller fleas that on him prey And these have smaller still to bite ’em And so proceed ad infinitum” Swift merciless critic and satirist was of great value to his own and following generations Hazlitt as might thought Swift’s View of human nature-"suc- h be taken by a being of a higher He never sphere” knew indifference for everybody from highest to lowest coming in contact with him admired hated or feared him1 He expressed well the value of money speaking of Gay who was poor: "Wealth Is liberty and liberty is a blessing fittest for a philosopher— aiid Gay is a slave just by two thousand pounds too little” Swift scorned money for itself although careful to provide for a respectable living and against want in old age J "He scorned to receive money for his writings he abandoned the profit to his printers in compensation for the risk they ran or gave it to his friends” When you read Swift’s life you will be Interested in the beautiful and wealthy Varina her real name was Miss Waring who wasted years on her affection for him while he lectured and rebuked her suggesting that she "submit to be educated so as to be capable of entertaining him: to accept all his likes and dislikes to soothe his and live cheerfully wherever he pleases” And you win be interested In his young friend Esther Johnson renamed by him Stella whom Swift Is supposed to have married although there is no proof of the marriage Another in his collection of adoring young women called Vanessa ventured to ask If he had married Stella although she feared what she called "something awful in his looks” When he learned that she had inquired concern- ill-hu- j ing-Boo- Produced k On Machine Adds To Pleasures i By WILL ROGERS Well all I know is Just what I read in the papers-o- r what I am fortunate enough to get in the mail Well this week we are doubly fortunate for I dont believe I am any breach xf etiquet When I reprint a letter that I just received from the worlds most remarkable woman Miss Helen Keller We I often exchange some word come Will: Here "Dear I (This time all I want Is the loan of your voice The American Foundation for the Blind has produced and perfected what is called the talking book These books are reproduced on a machine which is a combination radio and phonograph A book of about ninety thousand words can be recorded on a dozen discs1 thus bringing to the blind the pleasure and satisfaction of reading by ear any time they choose Instead of having to use the tedious method of finger reading or wait upon the convenience of others to read aloud to them In addition to the talking book they have a radio SOLD TO SIGHTLESS "These machines are sold to the sightless at actual cost The Library of Congress is having a number of records made which it will loan through its various branch libraries for the blind but unfortunately the vast majority of the blind can’t ’afford the machines During the last few years the British Broadcasting company has on Christmas afternoon each year made an appeal for funds to purchase radios for the blind of Great Britain and over the period more than twenty thousand radios have been furnished It has been suggested that a similar appeal in this country around Christmas time be made and might secure equally as good results for talking-boomachines “The Columbia Broadcasting company has been approached in this matter and will be glad to and give us time over their system My job is to get some radio ' to make the appeal Rest assured that no precedent will be established in regard to doing something outside your contractual radio obligations- since the blind are recognized as- a class apart from all other handicapped groups Be it said to the' credit of humanity that no one would begrudge the - 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiniiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiK x 1 s i o ! t o k’ co-oper- ate - - blind a special service “I am writing this letter from the Doctors hospital where I am staying near my dear teacher 'who is ill She who has for almost fifty years been my eyes and ears is now quite in the dark herself but her physician is heneful of being able to give her back a little sight “I am making a similar ‘request to Edwin C Hill Alexander Woll-co- tt a!?d yourself Day and time win be arranged if my three jfrfends the pit or even one will grant jthe request CAREFUL MAP KEPT With good wishes yours sincerely Morgan is said to have made a very careful map Helen Keller” of the region with landmarks and distances ’preciseFINE TIME TO ACT Now aint that a wonderful tetter ly noted This map or a copy of it has bobbed up in re- and what a wonderful thing that is cent years and I believe there are now two expedi- for the blind and in a telegram I tions guided by it" endeavoring’ to find the treasure just today received the date has that Morgan buried beside the Cruces trail for his been set for January 16th to ten (I imagine she means own enrichment! Eastern 1934 Time) and John! McCorCharles (Copyright 3 Driscoll) mack is to sing I have such fine and sponsors in my radio work the Gulf Oil company that I dont even ask them permission in a case like this They wouldent even expect it Now what I am trying to do is to get this letter to you before Christmas' (in most places it will be printed on the Sunhis marriage “he entered her room silent with day before Christmas so that will rage threw down hef letter on the table and rode off still give you a day to act) Your He had struck Vanessa’s death blow She died soon radio stores will know about it The after but lived long enough to revoke a will made in most I know of it is from this let' ter and its called a ‘Talking Book” favor of Swift” You feel rather glad of that a combination radio and phonoSwift’s work as dean of St Patrick’s in Ireland graph So you still have time to do was not burdensome and his salary from the British a good deed one of the most gratgovernment was paid presumably with taxes from ifying I know of Isn’t that an odd thing about that the Irish people He said of his congregation that it amounted to about fifteen persons "most of them marvelous ' teacher of hers being She is a remarkable gentle and all simple” Having given notice that he sightless? would read prayers every Wednesday and Friday he woman the combination of those found on the first Wednesday a congre' ation con- two women the tedious work and sisting of himself and his clerk Roger Swift began devotion on both sides I doubt if the service: "Dearly beloved Roger the Scripture Its paralell is in history j If any of you younger folks or moveth you and me” etc kids are not familiar with the case d His neighbors pear the deanery of this wonderful woman Helen Kelconsidered him he related that Itis ler and her remarkable teacher' an announced eclipse of the moon and was annoyed when crowds gathered near his study window Swift make your folks tell you about her thereupon sent out the bellman to give notice that make your teacher give you & whole the eclipse had been postponed by the Dean’s orders class hour’s lecture on her 'get one ’ of her own books “The Story of My and the crowd dispersed” Leslie Stephen maintains that Swift was not en Life” that describes her almost mir- -' legtirely synical and unbelieving as regards religion and acle life It 'will be one of the " did not agree with the historian Gibbon “that all ends of our country CAN STILL SEE HEAR' religions were equally false and equally useful” People by the million are out of work and millions of more are out In spite of hex neglect In his childhood caused in of they are used to but when part by her poverty— her fortune was only twenty youthings think you can still see you pounds a year— Swift worshipped his mother a can hear you can Yet this strange being who amused herself "by persuading the wonderful letter wastalk written - by woman with whom she lodged that Jonathan was was these someone who denied all not her son but her lover” She died in 1710 and yet she was trying to use her Swift wrote: "I have now lost the last barrier be and to help ones whom she felt' talents tween me and death God grant I may be as well more unfortunate than her were prepared for it as I confidently believe her to have Remember get the radio for Christbeen! If the way to heaven be through piety truth mas for some blind one and then-tun- e Justice and charity she is there” in on her program on January After studying Swift’s life many will read again sixteenth Thank you Gulliver’s Travels a favorite book of childhood and 1934 by the McNaught (Copyright find new interest in studying Its real purpose exSyndicate Inc) posure of human weakness insincerity and triviality Swift made his own and subsequent generations think —a great service Of all his writings the most pow- Oil-FeGets d erfully and dreadfully satiricalis his suggestion offered quite solemnly that Ireland’s food be Thrive Cold solved by allowing Irish people to eat problem own their babies He adds: £an lQcur no danger of disobliging England AKRON O— (UP) —An object For this kind of commodity will not bear exportation lesson in what Is supposed to hapthe flesh being of too tender a consistence to admit who wont pen to bad little a long continuance in salt” their take and their spinach And bitterly denouncing England’s treatment of eat oil has been going1 Slightliver cod the Irish he writes: awry at Akron university' “I confess myself to be touched with a very sen- ly The white rat that sible pleasure when I hear of a mortality in any ate hisgood little and carrots and spinach (Irish) country parish or village where the wrenches his cod liver oil like a good are forced to pay for a filthy "cabin and two ridges drank little soldier has a cold And the of potatoes treble the worth brought up to steal and had little white rats Jthat lived On beg for want of work to whom death would be the meat and and bread and best thing to be wished for on account both of them- butter are potatoes stronger than growing ' selves and the public” ever thriving on the sympathy of Swift English born disliked Ireland lived there the home economic classes only because his church provided him with a living Meanwhile girls of the two opyet he told the truth to the English Do you wonder posite beliefs have no ill feelings that for seven hundred years the Irish hated them? toward the lowly rodents but hope ARTHUR BRISBANE for final victory for their own sides j I nine-thir- ty ed ing ‘ - simple-hearte- all-power- ful ! j Rodent Others co-e- ds - t -- v-- v be-troy- ing broad-mind- growing abuse -- — ahead Dris coll by is already dug By O O M’lNTYRE -- -- r £ J i |