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Show THE MORNING EXAMINER: OGDEN, SUNDAY, UTAH. AUGUST 18, 1M7. FAMOUS PRELATE, A HUSTLER, GOING TO VISIT THE LAND . OF RUSH WORKS HARDER THAN ANY OTHER MAN IN THE ENGLISH CHURCH AND IS TOO INGIIAM, BISHOP OP LONDON, WHO WILL ARRIVE IN AMERICA NEXT MONTH, -LOOK LIKE A BISHOP AND DOESNT ACT LIKE ONE, BUT CARRIES OUT HIS MOTTO, DONT BE AFRAID TO BE HUMAN GETS A BUSY TO BOTHER ABOUT DIGNITY DOESNT BECAUSE THE TO HIM CHURCH ON IT COMPEL CANT REGULATIONS BUT LIVE OCCUPY A PALACE AND OF THE UNITED STATES, SALARY EQUAL TO THAT OP THE PRESIDENT ' - v A FLAT MUCH MODEST ' PREFER WOULD UP ANOTHER BIG ESTABLISHMENT, THOUGH HE 1IL WIXNINGTON - KEEP I the day. If one thought of tha problems jf London aa a whole If one could nee all tha misery and hunger and wickedness and evil la one single flash of the eye why, one would go wad. The thing to to take each duty separately, to believe that every word counts and to leave tha rest; in tha hands of our Father." was Six years ago Dr. Inghram mad a bishop with the whole see of London to rule over and a seat la the glided chamber aa one of the Lords Spiritual, it waa a great change for tha frugal bachelor. la lieu of a plain dwelling la tha midst of the slums his residence waa now Fulham Palace, a gnat big place with no leas than forty-fou- r bedrooms sad set la spaeious and beautiful grounds. Another mansion in St Jamas' square which would rant for fi.OOC a year was added to hto Episcopal domain. Hla salary was raised to ISO, 000 a year which to the highest salary paid to any bishop. H didnt want tba palace and ha didnt want tha mansion, but they went with the Job and he had to taka them, although ha protested that ha would much prefer living In n simple flat and dividing hto income among the poorer clergy. That ha could act have hto way affords aa Illustration of tha many anomalies that discredit tha Church of England and render Its disestablishment some day Inevitable. Aa a matter of fact, with such needlessly costly establishments to maintain, Ms Mg salary does not suffice to pay hto espenseo. Some years ago, with characteristic courage and frankness, ha published a balance sheet showing Just how tho money goes. It shows that since ha toft tha alums for a palace he hag bean growing poorer at tha rata sometimes of considerably over 11,000 a year. How ha contrives to keep out of tha bankruptcy eourt to a secret known perhaps to a few of hto wealthy friend a Thera have beeu many bishops la tho Church of England who hsvo managed to lay up considerable treasures on earth aa wall, presumably, as In heaven, hut the Bishop of London to not on of them. An Bishop of London ho hustles harder now than aver before. He rises at aa hour whaa moat servants are still abed, and seldom retires before midnight The head at Innumerable societies, and with tha most populous diocese In the world In hto charge, the demands oa hto time are laoeeaaat d th aieHT r, loud Copjrifekt la the United Staten and Great Britain hr Curtis Brawn. .. ' (All Bight Strictly Reserved.) london, Aug. ft. A a clau Engliah blibop an neither atreauvaa nor popular with the maaaea, but there are eoue eieeptknu to thla rulu, and the moat notable at them la a the Right Rev. Arthur Kola Ingram, Biabop at London. He la bjr loag adds the moet popular and tho harden! working htitop la Bar land. A a win generally bo haowa In America bctnro thla la printed, he la trneelag the Atlantic rimrtlr, and will attend the General Episcopal convention which opens at Richmond, Va, en October X. Ha baa tha moat personality at any of tba dignitaries of the Established Church, and In view of hla approaching visit noma aerount of him may be of interest to American readers. The popular notion of a bishop la a man wtth a pompous manner, a portly frame and aptndle-ehanVelegs rlad In gaiters. Barring the palters. Dr. Ingram does not look a bit like this type, which irreverent English cartoonists have made aa familiar. Ha Is alight, apart sad lean. Ha la always on tba morn, which keeps him trained down fine, Uke aa athlete. Ha is toe nuked to bother about dignity. For tbs name reason ha la Indifferent to hla personal appearance. Hla hat always looks aa If It would extinguish him. Hla collars dont lit. Enthusiastic maiden ladles describe hla fact aa that at h mediaeval salat If tha typical fact for a mediaeval aalnt la tala and brown and sgpraasea a mingled keenness, kindness and humor, than tha bishop haa one. in all probability ha never bee thought about it himself. Ha haa tha reputation of heaping busier than any other man In London. Certainly no cabinet minto-te- r or member of parliament works so hard far bis country as Dr. Ingram dots lor hla church. But hard work never troubled Mm. Ha la used to it Ha la oaa of tha few men who own their poeltiens on the Episcopal bench entirely to hard work. Ha worked hard at Oxford, takhtg both aa excellent degree la the schools and on tha river, for ha was a floe earamaa. Ha worked hard aa a clergyman la tha west of England, whars ha allowed that ha was a man to ha reckoned with. Ha worked harder still whan at tha aga of thirty ha became the head at Oxford House, one of the pioneer college eettlement In 'the East End the alum end of London. It was there he developed hla organizing capacity. It was there ha learned how to use men to npUtt their less fortunate fellow creatures. It wan he who Induced many of tha public schools to take u hand lu "settlement work." Be that they each undertook, l, la part at least, to support a dub. not vicarious, work unas hla method of getting bold of people la the Beat End, and they are a particularly difficult lot to gat hold of. Tne "footend-doo- r trick." as he called It, waa one that he then learned to perform with considerable suooeua, and. ha ones declared, "every clergyman who understands not only his own business, hut what to mors Important, hto Master's business, must learn to practice." It to aa example of getting aa Inch In order to taka aa ell. When tha clergyman calls, aa Dr. Ingram once explained, "after soma time a little girl opens tha door, and you hear a votes from the wash tub at the hack ask, Who to that, dally? Bally shouts hack, Please, a phrase mother. Its Religion which tha bishop believes needs all a man's presence of mind to combat. With tha door opened the clergyman gently Insinuates hto foot between It and the doorpost, so that It cannot be shut easily, and thus he geta a cbanco of speaking for a few minutes, at all events, though It to ruination to the boots and sometimes hurts the toe." Moet bishops preach temperance. win-nlagto- d well-merit- Per-aona- SERVANTS HAVE A MIL-LION-DOLLA- R GARDEN Of all the appalling waste of wealth st Newport, ihere to none more Inexplicable to the outside world than the leaving Idle of enormous establish- - 1 bishop or um. but dont procure total abstinence. Dr. Ingram does both. 11a believes lu teetntallsm for Itself and regards It as an Indispensable qualification In any one who wishes to advene tha eauaa nf temperance among tha intemperate. At a meeting of workmen, one day, ha waa dtoeaselng tha Mraual quest lua when one of the men shouted, "Are yuu e tut? "Uf course, I am," waa the response. "All right, than," said tha workman; "Are away. If you a sent, I wouldnt listen to you." Dr. Ingram won the real affection of the poor people "down Boat" by Ms genuine kindness, hla free aad easy manners with them and by acting always up to hto motto, "Dont ho afraid u to be human." Hn often salute Irreclaimable old ruffian with a genial "Hellot old boy!" On one occasion he lent n seedy individual hto great coat and it never returned. He haa ben censured by a parochial relief committee for giving away half crowns too freely aad Indiscriminately. Instead of treating lufldela with sacerdotal aoora and contempt and heap-laanathemas upon them, he haa debates frequently engaged In open-ai- r with them to the parks en Sundays. And If they did not always find his logic convincing, they learned to esteem and respect the man. As Illustrating Mg relations with them n friend of hto tell nn anecdote. On one occasion he wan with Dr. Ingram at a hustling railway station when the bishop waa accosted by a somewhat Imposing dignitary of tha chnrch who entered tote grave talk vffth Mm. Suddenly Dr. Ingram said, "Pardon me," and hastening after a man who waa pnaalag, hulled him heartily, and the creating waa aa heartily returned. "Whoever waa thntr naked the elder dignitary, somewhat pompously when Dr. Ingram had rejoined Mm. "Oh, wan the reply, "that's ona of tha cleverest of my infidel opponents In Victoria Park. We always have a chat when wa meat." "Tou don't moan that ha to aa atheist, surely?" was tha horrified response. "T as." maid Dr. Ingram, "I do, or at all events, be fanclea he's ona; bat ha to such a. pleasant follow and there to a lot that to good In him. And then, with n grave pause, he added. "And goodness can have only one aouree." Dr. Ingram worked harder than aver when In 1HB7 be waa made Suffragan Bishop of Stepney, one of the most tn a uit hard-heade- ' d peraoni-fleatio- n eonva-ttonalto- clean-shave- n thief-make- r, -- and-the- n V owner-shi- . well-bein- g .... , Ataaka-YukooFadf- le stagaa-tlon- - g SStZSL.' W.LS.SVSS; ttmnAt of -- li, uri.ni t ou. but did his rushing about oa street care . par-ttdpat- o relig-Sous- g rough-lookin- visiting Quebec, Montreal. -- Toronto tha laying of tha earner spu of tha lions for the Individual and the aa and perhaps soma other cit great cathedral to bo built there, and nutty through a sane admlnlatratiZ ies. when he leaves Canada ha will will deliver an ad drees. From Wash- Of industry by the workers will hrt ho to make Ms way trill go to Richmond. He the only measure of temperance Washington, stopping ington loru at various cities aa route. At Wash- to expected to return to londua about working for. Xfi. ho will tha middle of October. ing of tha multitudinous life of hto ington. on September New York City In to a daeldedlv vast diocese that he to equally a favIn tha ceremonies attending E. LISLE 8XEL2 orite la Buckingham Palace aad la unenviable but not unique ta regard to the safety of women . the slums at Whitechapel. He wins children on her streets. Whet by sympathy, he conquers by his great confronted by the acta of thugs, humanity. Ha to In do sense a great and Hands wa are aran scholar; he haa been lar too busy for and cry for tha apprehension and pin that, and for hairnpllitlng theology he cares not a Jot. hut ho understands tohment of the criminals. vaunt our etvUtontloa and the m human nature and its needs, and ha lor protection It affords woman wt knows how to get a hearing fur hto are upholding aa eooaomlo system A remarkable instance of thfe was that m;kea women Inferior to m witnessed at the grant workingmen's economically speaking, and iImmu soundest millions of the birthright to meeting held at the Church Congress a satisfactory and uaoful Ufa a few year ago. There was a vast hall crowded from aad to and with Coming m noon after (he nett keen, artisans, and conTha produntion of wealth. In tha literature, wo Sad that no solution strike at New York'a garbage cofronting thorn la uaaerried ranks were llectors It la to order to row aad rows of galtored btohopa, evolution of Industry, from being aa other than tho ballot to offered. Tha writer also claims that the whether the present epidemicqosttlos tha daans and archdeacon of s. Individual act a half a century ago "averagf woman must hava the Social-to-t suits upon women to not directly or of tho stiff, starchy haa beoome s act. Tha tool social from lanclothed different to the filth which la thought of tho Anglican chnrch. Tha indirectly traceable fores at contrast eould hardly further being an Individual tool, haa become guage than that ta which it to pre- was allowed to accumulate la tht to sented tho average man. Clothed, streets while the city or tta contras go. Suddenly a toll, alight, keea-- f ne- a social Instrument Bo that tha tool so It may bo understood by children." ton fought tha strikers. la tbs man with n bright haa bean auclsllnod and ed, production n What shir to coat at the lntelllguneo of telegraphic service das to smile and nn Irresistible magnetism Women are Individuals, the present commercial telegraphers' about Mm sprang to hla feat, aad la ban also ban soicallsed. But tha evo- of women. tha twinkling of an sye a great roar lution to yet to complete its work This belonging to and being a part of 'tha strike the criminal element must still of applause rattled up to the very social tool, mads socially and need human race. There to. no such aaam-ol- y bn looked after. Capitalism to fint as a female liver, why assume a then n thief taker rafters. The Bishop of London "was socially must ha socially ownedv there to n female brain?" says Chara humanitarian. about to address ton Northampton Eugene V.Deba. lotte Oilman. Why these "articles writshoemakers. Ha began quite anally by recalling some at hto early ex- "THE LIGHT OF TRUTH" AND THE ten especially for women? Or why REFORM AND SOCIAL AVERAGE WOMAN. ape the capitalist papers In having a perience la tho Beat End. REVOLUTION. Too woman's I hare deportment? long nMwa "I remember, he aald. "my .first women been relegated to a different Sunday in Bethnal Green. I addressed ns It would bs of Interest to many of to Private ownership to tha InstruBoetaJtaU to to touch It If tha author of "Tho Light of sphere. up n meeting of WO men. and at tha end Truth." aa article which appeared in them that their sphere to any place la ment of production, once the m of the lervlcoB I aald to them: " Wall, now,' what shall wa talk tha Intermountain Socialist depart- tha world whore they may choose to of Insuring to the producer the of Ms product, haa today besom ment at tha 11th Inst, would explain go, and Socialism offer them the about next Sunday P "And immediately KOO volees yelled to what class of ooclety tha "average meant by which they may go freely tha mean of expropriating the formwoman at whom she writes, belong. and ba thslr own protectors, ft may er, tho artisan, tha small trader, and out: Eternal punishment! capital-to- t "Eternal punishment!" cried the Where she to to be found, and when not hava been the average woman who of planing the bar aggressiveness, and landlords la pnareailm of Bishop, with a light tons of laughter found, of what nse sho will he to tbs has, through (u hto pleasant voloe, "that wan n nice Socialist movement if the light of forced open tha doors of learning to tha products of labor. Only by colittle subject to huri at a young man truth must be "tilted" toward her, or women, but the average woman nverting tot collective ownership th who waa out oa Ms own for tha first If she most have Socialist philosophy should ba taught that It ta through tho Instruments of production the land, time in hto Ufa - Aad then, of course, administered to her in "palatable result of toher sisters combaUreneea mines, raw materials, tools, machinal, enjoying tha fruits of tho and the menu of oommnnicaUoa sod to that aha they wanted to know who waa Cain's doses" nn a tonic to administeredmust struggle and that it was not by any transportation (all of which are today wife they always do," ha addad with children? And tho sought burr attractiveness that the fight hold onpttaltot private property) a smile. "Walk wa settled that ques- bs removed from the nut no sho may feminine goal of So- and by converting the production of tion satisfactorily, and wa buried tho have tha kernel without nay trouble wae won. Neither will theeoft cialism be reached commodities into Socialist production, finery by poor lady la Bethnal Green once and to herself. If all thla be true of the methods. It will he by sturdy knocks carried on for and by society. Only "average woman" and aha la such a for alL" work, nod women must gird by these means can production oa s stupid," it would be infer to leave and hard How hla audience screamed with armor fer tha battle. Victories large acals and tha ever on tha Half ring a her la her present obscurity. shocked bow aad pained delight and In the post hava been won by tha man productivity of social labor eeaae to were the faces of hto brother dignltar-too-l truth to worse than a lie." Tha truth women standing shoulder to ba a aounfeof misery aad oppnsstos of Socialism cannot ha understood If and Bo only, will the victory of for tha exploited classes, and bacons But the twentieth century BUhoy It to presented at on angle. Socialist shoulder. oa of aad harmanknu d economic Socialism come. philosophy to essentially veto parent tor nlL and cannot ha gives successfully if COLLECTED GARBAGE. , it to sugar coated with ethical, What to Meant by the "Social fisv. or artistic phrases. It ceases to lutlon." and Hie SoOccupatlen Changed Lawyer ba a living Issue. It ceases to be The aonveralon of the nwMsery of Became Rich, cialism and becomes a mongrel philproduction, together with tha mesas osophy worth little or nothing. of communication and transportation, to Standard.) (Special The Socialist though, that to perprivate into public property, to Seattle, Aug. 12. Pride and profes- from revolution meating tha "minds of tha rich men, the revolution, that to tha scholars aad the women," had tta sional ethics have prevented many Irreslotlble and aInevitable. The pro when birth In rough meeting places of the men from making fortunes, but ductlve forces that have devtlupsd to tha Exposition, from cams cut clean and these It past of capitalist society have bs the clear and It to the duty of the revolu- which will ba bald In Seattle to 19M, oometop lrreooneitable with the vary ire forof tha bow demonstrates many and to It Socialist clear tionary keep tom of property upon which It to haft not to cloud tha Issue. Tha work of tune! of Alaska and Yukon have been The endeavor to uphold this syrton aes will the the that into made, public Socialist the republic bringing of propert to tantamount to render Southland the are for rules that good not Socialism In lie talking being does tog MidImpossible all further social deat to tha land tha enhardly apply at parlor meetings, nor in giving condemning society to a, velopment, Sun. Sonight tertainments for the Benefit of the to stagnation, a standstill and to n not now For. there Instance cialist party. Women who belong to however, that to aoeompaatoi clubs can always dolve any question hundred miles from Seattle an Amerwith the moot painful convulsions. that arises from an economic stand- ican lawyer who made seventy-fir- e Every further perfection in ths poin tha point. lhta work ta very well as fer thousand dollars to Dawson wers of production increases the mas It goes, but It has no real value. aarly days by means that wore unpro- tmdlction that exist between these The woman who are tho force In the fessional Indeed. Ho waa a good lawand the present system of proper. Socialist movement are those upon yer, but ba did not seem to get uny AU attempts to remove tills contradiwhom the struggle In the economic practice, and It noon cams to a matter witworld presses modi heavily, tha wo- of gueaalag from where the next meal ction, or even to noften it down, to me. I'm off fe fill aa engagement down there myself." It to a singular proof of hto power to adapt himself to the varying sections of humanity that go to the mak- i J owe Trim BISHOPS iwskthkart. Sfes Tkn Vh. Wnt t far Nn Wait at Dm Male Waa Bn4wa OC. aad lull flat, Sla Bat ttaa UiaUav arard Baiia. rf Lart BmlUfca, i I rings to get s round London Instead of traveling in the lumbering 'bus or or "trams," as they are called here street car. lie does moet of his readand by means of tho democratic uning and composes his sermons end derground." la tha Uttar case, more- addresses while driving through the over, ha patronised tha third-clas- s streets of the metropolis to or from compartments. Just as hla bumble Ms numerous engagements. Hla carparishioners did. Instead of going riage ahd motor ear are fitted with first," and more often than not carried an electric lamp so that he enn redd hto frugal luncheon with him and dim night while on the go.- But he patched it between stations. In feet, by bother himself aa Uttle sa ever about n Punch poet once made him say: dignity. . The humble folk in the East End For luncheon I swallow n sandwich of see much more of him than the opuham. As I rush up the stairs of n White- lent Went Endere. Some time ago he epent several hoars In one of the chapel tram; slumdom. Hearing (hat Or, with excellent appetite, 1 win dis- Infirmaries ofInmates was an old woamong the cuss A halfpenny bun on a Waterloo Traa. man who boasted of having danced with him when he waa running the House Settlement, he insisted on table Is snowy with damask for i fleeing her. Clasping the hands episme; My cloth to the apron that covers my copal, aha reminded him that he could not at first get the young Indies to knee. and added, admirNo serve, no kitchen-maid- s give him e turn; ingly: "Lor Mr. Ingram, aint you dish np Tha frnral repasts of this Suffrsgan got oni Whn'd a thought it!" And the bishop toughed heartily, recogBishop. I nising a kindred spirit who wae not "How do ynn manage to get through afraid to be human. It all?" somebody one asked him. Leaving Fulham ralaca in hto mot"Bt taking esch little duty trivial or car the other day be encountered who had Just finished enough In Itself, perhaps as the n cabinet-make- r great and insistent concern of the a Fb at tba episcopal residence. work-hou"Which wny are you going?" askday," he answered. "If I go to a service and the dear old in- ed the Bishop. mates honor me with a sevenfold To Poplar, where I live," answered 'Amen I am content to regard that the workman. service as ona of the eoatral duties of "Then Jump in and come along with menu that eoet millions to build, and would each own a spacious park of millions more to keep up. Some of many hundred acres. Tha Newport these palaces have surrounding lawns villa a bnilL however, not for comand gardens covering as much as ten fort. not to rhyme or reason, but pureacres; but most of them lie dose to- ly for show, it is n stage setting, gorgether In bewildering succession. In geous surely, but suggesting neither Europe such magnificent structures solidity nor permanency. - mu-servant- o se . lu ha VauT Mai tU SSSawa n. are Xka BUtap A.tib.ra . J of London knew Ms ' audience, and they knew and appreciated him. Under the circumstances It was tar mors to tha purpose than nil tha scholarship and theology of the schoolmen and the early fathers. It was human, and that to what the bishop to so preeminently himself. The bishop in verging oa SO. He to regarded now aa a confirmed bachelor. He has had hto romance. When he waa Bishop of Stepney, Lady Ulrica Duncombe, a beautiful girl aad the youngest daughter of Lbrd and Lady Feversham, was going through n course of slumming. She had fitted herself for the work by qualifying la n hospital ns n felly trained nurse. She and the bishop were thrown 'much together. In the course of time their engagement was formally announced, hut for some reason that wan never explained it was broken off. It haa been suggested that the good Bishop came to the conclusion that the life of arduous labor he had mapped out for himself allowed scant room for domestic bliss, and if called on to sacrifice one or the other the church had the superior claim on him. As regards Lady Ulrica, It haa been hinted that, d devout and though the undoubtedly Is. she discovered that sho yearned for something different from the life of a mlntatering angel of the alums. A few years ago she married Colonel Bvernrd Baring, n brother of Lord Revelstok. At this writing the date of the Bishops departure has not yet been determined. He win go first to Canada. men of the working class, whether or they be the wives at the workers those who are a part of the industrial world. They must have' Socialist truth straight R must ha mads clear to them that only through the unity of the workers and taetr recognition of thla truth, that "An Injury to ona ta an injury to ell." can tho Socialist republic, for which wa are working ever become a living reality. When Socialists teach that tha ballot will bring Socialism, they tilt the light and tell half tha truth, and aft the women do not poetess the ballot It means nothing to them as a class, or If It does have any meaning and they are logical In their thought, they will ask it tha ballot means so much why are not economic conditions better In the four states where they have equal suffrage. It waa claimed by tho advocates of woman auffraga that when women had uffgage tha liquor (raffle would receive tta death blow. In (ha four states where equal suffrage obtains tha liquor traffic goes merrily on, and there to no semblance of a prohibition party in any of them. The .logical reason for this Ilea in the fact that tha workers are divided politically and Industrially, and that they atlll believe in the profit system. A political victory for tho Socialist party would he It death blow, without tha nutted strength of all the workers, to enforce tta mandates. Scanning closely the Socialist party should eome. So he decided to go north. Thinking he might ljeve to do things of which he would not care to be reminded afterwards, ha changed hto nams oa going north. On ranching Dawson he looked around and located a crying need. At that time Dawson had no garbage system. The town wu growing by leapt and bounds, aad garbage was a matter that had to ba attended to at once. On credit ha hired a couple of teams and driven, and started dally collection of refute, garbage, eta. In n few weeka ha had every house, afore and building la town on hto list of patrons and to a oouplt of mouths more Ms tooome had crept up to princely sum. For two year he continued this work, and than ho sold ent and left for tho United State. At Seattle ha again changed back to hto own name and starting, to prgctlos, achieved a big success. - CURRENT COMMENT, Now that sugar to announced aa aa antidote to or substitute for aloohoL may wa not expect Institutes a la Keeley to feed Inebriates oa sweets? It to quite possible that many total abstainers conduct Illicit stills within their respective anatomise aa a suit of oveHndulgenc to sweets. No legislation nor moral snssiou will Hygienic eondk bring temperanoa. interfering with property. proved vain, and must continue ao hout to prove themselves a often aa attempted. For the lent hundred years thlnhen and ptatonmen among the poaaaaalng claaaea have been cutting and trying to prevent the threatened downfall ef the ay stem of private property tototheto lustre nrent of production, that nay, to prevent the Revolution. Br tt dal Reform to the name they give thntr perpetual tinkering with the to dnntrinl mechanism for the puposa ef removing thla or that 111 effect pr-ef ivate property to the toatrameato produotion, at least of softening Jte prb edges, without, however, touching to rate property Itself. During tha hundred yuan, manifold "oarer haw been huckstered aid even triad; It to now hardly pomible to Imagtaf new recipe to this line. AU tha called "newest" panaceas heal Da w dal quacke which are towithout pe aodal aliment quickly, and without expense, ire, npoaeW" toapootton, discovered to be id hashes of old noetruma, all of have been tried before to other pto1 and found worthiest. Let not the podtlon of (be fieetow He prone" he misunderstood. three aodal reform taopemtiva tar aa they pretend te raun growing contradictions, whienj" course of eoonomte devriopaw bring out Into ever atroagar UPL M tween the powers of prediction the existing system at property. dJJ! name time that they etrtveta up and to confirm the totter. Battha daliat does not thereby mere Social Revolution toe aboUtloa private property to the lnatrumw oompltohoa be proJ action-- will taetnare ltalf; that the Irresistible, courts of evolution will do thevwj without afetotance from man; warar that all aodal reforms are those w aad that nothing to left to auffer from the contradictions" tween tire modem pownre djnwr tion and tho ay stem of prop"?, idly to croaa their arm ly te watt for better day. " kind-hearte- to surrounded by a wall, which cost over one hundred thousand dollars. It to empty; the owner to sway In Europe. That while marble palace, a Vanderbilt residence la also unoccupied. There's "The Breakers," also owned by the Vander- On d at (Ma Bt rnxin rtuca. InIiw, rw Nwilt hilts, the maintenance of which costs n a dollars a season, says the Broadway Magazine. And the Berwlud villa, the garden of which cost hundreds of thousands and yet to displeased It mistress that she turned it over to bar servants and 111 not half-millio- Mr-lH- turn i Xr. WANT ADS BRING BIG enter It. , J Bishop C. A. Hiekentooper Morgan eouniy ndrt FrldV?" heat purpose of aelectlng the an mens of cabbage, potatoreeahWt flower to he need at tha a tog tha Irrigation Congrere meato. ta also idle. Yon note bplendid - fifteen teama of hornea, trees ta some of tons earth dinging to He the yards. They have been trans- removal cost nearly a planted, most of them, from many lari. But that to a eu urilea Injatol. That beautiful tree turn total of Newport with the great trunk and .spreading branches hauled thirty miles by WANT ADS BRING BIG . th merett,. 1 w, s |