Newspapers / The Progressive Farmer (Raleigh, … / April 3, 1900, edition 1 / Page 2
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troa C3 JV-rl. . li R3 L L. POLK, - Pxop eur. ioua note in iavor ui mo iuuno uiuu'w " Tto.D ....oj.o jj i OLARENOEH POE, - Elitor. schools. It wants a plank in the Demo- mer told of the formation cf the Car- BENJAMIN IRBY. Corresp.ndmg .ratir n at form declaring for a four negie Sreel Company with a c&Dital FRANK E EMERY. C Editor J. W. DENMAbK, Business Man'g'r. Raixigh, N. O. 8UB30BlPriON iie subscription one Ye&r.... H-oo Three Months " " W w w w -m -w - - - - 25 " I The above paragraph we clip from J2. wSS'Obarlw add Omidren. Acd in it Paramount to all other i onsidera sionsof Stats Policy,' ia the motto of The Progressive Farmer, and upon this n'atform it shall rise or Oa all matters relating specially t j the great interests it represents, it will spak with no uncertain voice, bus will fearlessly the right defend and imparrialiv the wrong conde mn. ?erv ing no martcr, ruled by no faction, cir c inscribed by no selfish or Diro Doiicv its aim will ba to foster and promote the best interests of th A people or the w'ate. "f rom uoi. rout Silutatory, Feb 10, 1886 EDITORIAL, NOTES. T. B. Packer, Secretary of the 8rate Farmeis' Alliance, wi lppeak atB?thei Oburb, near White Croc. O ar ge county, Saturday, April 14'b, at 1 o'clock p. m. The public invited. The dea'h of Q n. Joubert, the trusted and well beloved leader of the Boers, is a severe blow to their cause. Joubert was a poldier of unusual abil ity and. the idcl of his men. With Cronji captured and Jcubertdead the outloofc for the Bosra is darker than ever. Farm ard Home brings the gratify ing information that the Grrg3 is prospering wen" erfully witt 1( 9 ew Granges orsr&n;eel from Oot. 1, 99, to April 1. and 89 old Granges re organ ized Last year only about half tht number were organiz d in the eame length of time. Mak arrangements at once to attend your County Alliance meeticg. The true blue members of the Order must work harder than ever to keep the or ganization in gDod trim and the weaker brethren encouraged during the cam paign now opening. If we can tide over the nexsfcur months without loss, victory is curs. The prices of paper, type, and ether printing materials are steadily advanc ing. as a natural reeuic, many puo lishers are laieicg subscription rates. while others are now feeding cut state ments to eubs?ribfrs. While we do not wHh to pre8 readers at this season of the year, we will eay, in the language of a brother editor, that "these of our subscnbeis who have not paid us any thin on subscription this season ar? hereby remiLdei that if they ehsuid decile to 6enl a littlo cash along by registered letter cr money crder we will njt think hard of tiem for ic." THIS WEEK'S PROGRAM. O ir tobacco growing reader?, in ad -diticn to one or two other articl-crelat icg to the Tobacco Association, will find in the articb by Mr. W. J Grjome, of G-riiford county, a ccm plete explanation, of evry phaso and feature cf the Jordan plan. Interested per 8 3ns should preserve Mr. G:oomt's paper. Fccm Prof. G raid McCarthy's rx haustive article on rice culture printed on page 6 North Carolina rice growers can Sfcuro about, all the information needed on th?s subj 'ct Tne S ate D 2 pirtment of Agriculture h&s re cently distributed a large number of sample packages of a prcmiaing new variety of Japanese rice, from which good results are corfiidently exprcted We cemtaebd to our young men readers the selections from Mr. B fc's book published on page i The ycung man seeking succees v,Ui fiad in them many bust portions lhatcau be practiced with prcfit SWEET POTATO D1S2ASE. Editors Progressive Farmer: I would like fir eoms friend to explaia through the columns cf The Farmer what caus'8 sweet potatoes to have a dry scb on ttem (or dry ro?), and what can be done to remedy the dis ease. Very truly, J J. W. (Answer by Corresponding Eiitcr Irby, M. 8 ) The dry ret, or black scab, mentioned above U a fucgue growth caused ueu ally by the use of manure on sweet potatjes. Of course there is no nme dy for th-i potatoes already inf-ctcd but precaution can, and should, ba ta ken to prtvant future trouble 3. Ucc oily healthy potatce j to pu in tho bep, tnd taen only the b a; plants ehculi be drawn fcrplantirg Uie no manure whatever f 3r fertiliz in? tb p tato. If at y is used in toe hot bed then do not alio it to ccme in contact with the potato. Bom l-ieh and s tet potatoes ebcu d! be f ertil zd with a commercial manure and not with a barz-yard marurp. B I. THE ATJBNDBJBNr AND SCHOOLS "The New a and Observer haa Bounded i mnth school. Tnat ia all right, but wa must have something better than planks in a platform. We have a! - ready a constitutional requirement for tnat very thing, but the Constitution haa teen disregarded" Editor Johnson has hit the bull's eye I rnat is all right, but we muet have ' thi b9tter thaa Dianksin a plat f.irm " That ia the tentiment and the sentence that all friends of education iotheS'ateof Norti Carolina should echoaod reecho uotil they do bring, about "t-omething better than planks ia a platform." Oar Constitution de- clarea it the dutv of the State to main - tain a four months school in every school district in the Scats. With the Constitution itself ds regarded, do politicians expect us to put our faith in ana be Batisaol with a plans m a party platform? If so, they are merely decpivinz themselves The watchword of the friends of education ia "some thing better than planks in a party platform" and something better than a null and ueeles3 section of our Con stitution. TV. mnrA w fitnflxr thfl mftttpp th mer becomes our conviction thai the Constitutional amendment should be amended by the adoption of a pro- viiioc something like this, as an aadi tion. ssy, to section 5: Provided further, That no person becotLiog twenty -one years oc age after January 1. 1908 and residing in a school district in whicl the State fails to maintain free public schools for an average of four months or more rer year for six years preceding his twenty first birthday, shall be denied the right to register or vots at any elec tion in this Stiate by reason of hi failure to pos3a the educational quali flcation prescribed in Section 4 of this article. Tho politicians, as well as the pecple. real za that it is the essence cf ir j as tne for the 8tate to r quire an educa tional qualification for voting without providing for the poor children of the State all the odvuntazea needed to en able them to meat the stern demands of the Constitution. The politicit npt we sy, recognize thi?, and they are attempting to mill the clamor for bet ter educational advantages bv makinc promises-which may be given in good faith, but are certainly entitled to no mre respect than the Constitution of our State. Lnt it be understood that ia advocating this amendment to the amendment, we are doing so neither ae an advocate nor as on opponent of the amendment ai it no- stands, tut as an unbiased acd unmizzled editor. Bit it is well encuch to face condi tions S3 they are and lock be'oreyou leap. Tncro isctainlya rrobabtlity of tbe tdoation of the amendment at tha August election. Wea?k tha voter to s3 that ha docs not require of his child certain things, withcu: msktcg provi-ion for that caild to cutet thoe requirements'. Only by the addmoo f an amendment euch as tha pro po?ed by us can he b3 sure that in re quiring an educatiora! qualification he is net making an ur jus and unreason able demand cf bis son or cf other men's Eons. Pernspa you hadn'fi thought cf it, but it is nevertheless a fact that the- adoption of tbe amendment; (if it be adoptee) will make public education unpopular with some who do not now antagon Z3it. Toe amendment ai opted, the opponent of free schools will argU" this way : "A-3 negroes must get their share of the money the more money fjr public education, the more and better echools for negrcee; anl the more ecbools lor negroes, the more educated cegroe?; and the mere edu cated negroes, the more negro voters. Therefore, as I don't want the negro to vote, let the white man educate bis ovn children. I am opposed to longer free school terms." 8ucl a sentiment may become powerful enough to pre I vent the proper ex tent icn of the pub I lie school term. If you do not heed I this warning now, you may recall it I wucuiuiawwiaio. mo vutera Boouia run no tiess in this matter. They I should demand thi3: that wherever the I C nstuutional req iirment for four I menms public ecxiools is disregarded I inerernau tne uondbicuttonal require I meat for an educational test for voters ba held of no tffijt. reasonable. it tne people want such an amend- ment to the amendment, let them epekout in no uncertain voice. L9t them say to their lawmakers: We want something better than planks in a platform I m We learn from good authority that tbe meeting of the State Dairymen's Assoeiat oa has bsen indefinitely postponed. . M . . The Progressive Parmer, April 3, 1900. FOCD FOR THOUGHT. A dispatch In the General News col stock of $160 000,000. It may be inter es tins to review the events that led up 1 to the formation cf this gigantic or- J ganizition. A few weeks ago Mr. Andrew Car negie, who held most oi tte stock in I the old Carnegie Steel Company and I Sir. H O Ftck, who bE9 managed the concern for many years, became I involved in a dispute. The dispute came about this way. Fr;ck wts re I moved as chairman of the board cf I directors of the company, aLd Car negie attempted to mate him surren- der hi stock at about its par value, 16 000 0(0 Whereupon Mr. Fick brouga? euit in the Court of Common 1 Pleas at Pittsburg for the d.ff erence be tween the $6 0C0 000 offered bj Carne gia ad tbe real vaiue of the stock- cms value being estimated by Frick at $16 0(0,000 And in the courso of tbe sun Mr. Frick blurted cut 83me busi I ness secrets that startled the coufctrz and eet many men to thinking on the trust problem that bad before been in different. Among other things Mr. Fnck said : "The business from 1892 to 1900 wa9 enormously profitable, prowug by I leaps and rvUDds, from yeartovear, I until in 1 QQQ : H r m nnrliaUtr m aA rn I ow.nrlOBI1 coctra3ta in EJet nrf fitfl I ,MPr navinar all exo neee of nil trinda. $2l 000,000. In Nu vtmter, 1899, 'r- u- Hnmed tne netprcfits io 19U0 t $10 000 000 nnd Fr c taen e uiuia ed ci, em tu 12 500,000. UaroeziA v l :d rhe entire proyerty at over $250,- 0( 0 000 and avowtd bis ability iu or dumnlv prceperous times to sell the 'npor'y oa tnp Lit'oo market for 100 000, 000, or 5'JO'000 000 " And all ihi3, it mm' bn remembsred, on a capital of but $25 000,000. Such prcficS are ecluall beyond the com orthaLB'on of the average man. As the Oaicago Evening Post weilsaye: "In order to realize their full import most men would have to take a few cays tiff to think is over. If the plant and nu-inpss wer purchased as that prica $500 0C0 000) and were paid for in Uuiita ditius gld coin ( i preposter ous suppoti ion, of course), it would tike more than half of all the gold com in this country and more than tnree fourths of tne total amount in circulation. U may interest silverites to know that if all the silver dollars in be country were gathered together it would not q lal the price set, and that ibe total i3?ue of rational bank-notes would be Ices than half of is." s In fact, by Mr. Frick's revelations the public began to get ta fair idea o the methods of tbemodem truit ard of taQ modern millionaire phdanthro o:s6. as Mr. Carnegie is called. So much eo, that Mr. Carneie ruared ia before Frick could c ncluds his disclosures and made a compromise by aekno wledtng all that Frick claimed and giving him all that he demmaed. And in connection with these diclos ures mada by Frick there are some other matters that deserve the atten tion of f arcoera and ail votere. First This great truss was unoubt ed y paying tbxes cn but 135.000,(00. Dj you prefer to continue paying tribute to taene over-grown combina tians of capital and in addition pay far more than ycur share of taxss, rher than study for yourself the proolem cf t q laliziog thete taxes! Sacond That whtlo the prcfi s wore growing, 63 Mr. iriCK says, by leaps at d bounds, tbi eteel trust wg stead- advancing ibo prico of its goods If you are a farmer you real'z tbis. The Secretary of the American Farm Im plement Asscciation recently pointed cut these advances and said : Th costo? raw material during the year 1899 made advances unpreceden d iu ine iadustrial history of the Untfd Stato-. For exam oie, bolts aud nuts ha vh advanced 135 percent; narror di;?Ct, 115( per cent: cora plant- tratid otbr wire, eighty per ctnt; rafeetfP'h, 110 percent; bar iroa ana titeel, 126 percent: cast iron, 100 per cei:t; lIj steel, seventy five per cant; pipe, round and tquare, 250 per cent; ateel wheels. p'X v-fie per cent: tar row teeth. 125 pQr cent; sreel aprinae. 250 per cent; mall Kble iron, eighty five u-r cent; plow and cultivator Deams. per p er cent." Toie prompts the inq liry: Will you, as a voter and a freeman, continue pay ing euch tribute, or wiil you commence the study of the tiU3t problem snd vote and act s vcur iudzment ditatpn regardless of politicians or parties? mire ims gigiouc roooer cor poration, which heid up tha American people and took from them tbe mag- nificant sum of mira tHan 12.) 0 )ft non last year did eo, undsr th9 protection of our benevolent Uccle Sam. This weak, "infant (1) industry" mark Itprtaid frnm rnmntitirjn with tho one - - - . w mr - " - - U W side world by a heavy protective tariff. Such action is indefensible. N) party will attempt to de'end it before the people. Q lery: Is it not time for the people to demand that no trust be given the benefit of a protective tariff? Mu3t the Uuited States government continue a partner in such iniquity and fraud by shielding such robbers of tha people! MUST STAND OR FALL AS A WHOLB. A correspondent asks: "Are you still of the opinion expressed by you last year that if the courts should de clare Section 5 of tbe grandfather clause of the proposed Constitutional amendment unconstitutional that the whole amendment wculd be unvali dated in other words, that all the see tions stand or fall together? ' In rrply, will say that we still hold that opinion. In facs, we are more firmly convinced of its correctness than at the time cur editorial announc ing this view wts written. As every one knows, if the grandfather clause of the proposed emeodment is unenn sfituiionsl, it ia so bemuse of coifl'ct with tha Fifteenth mndrr:ent to the Oonstitatian of the United States. That amendment reads aa follows: Tne right of citizens of the United 8i"ates to votq shall not be denied cr abridged by tho United States, cr by any 8tate, on account of race, color, or previous condition of eervituie." Tne important question 13, there fore, "Does Section 5 of the amend ment, which contains the grandfather clause, deny or abridge tbe right of citizens to vote on account of 'race. color, cr previous condition of 8e??i tudef" An examination will show conclusively that it does nothing of tho kind On the contrary, thie sec tion is for the purpose, not of denying, but of granting, to a certain cuo of persons, the right of suffrage denied them by Section 4 Hence, it does not of itself coLfltct with the Fifteenth amendment. Nor is Section 4 it iteelf unconstitutional. A moment's thought wiil convince any right thk king man that it is only by considering the amendment as a whole that it can pos sibly be considered in conflict with the Fifteenth amendment to our National Constution. Lnt us repeat for the s ke, of emphasis: No one will for a moment attempt to maintain that Section 5 or the grandfather clause of itself "denies or abridges" the right cf any citizen to vote on account of race, color, previ ous condition of servitude, or for any other cause. Therefore, it, taken alone. cannot obstruct the operation of the Fifteenth amendment Tnis being eo. the court in considering the conetitu tionality of the grandfather clause, ecus; consider it in its relation to Sec tion 4 in connection with that clause; tha; is, as one link of a chain, which, being broken, all falls. In other words, it mi 85 consider the amendment a? a whole, and if Section 5 be uccotstuu tional, d( clare ii, as a whole, uncoosti tutional and void. "isat," aebs some one, "have ycu read tho arguments of those who hold that theeections would notfall together? And haven't Senators Allen, Elmunds and Pel tigrew declared that the grand father clause may fall without invalt dating tho other sections? And doesn't the principle laid down by the re nowoed jurist, Jadgo Cooley, in hie show that such would be the casrJ" Yes, wo have read tha speeches re f erred to and the views of all -the Senators that have given out opinion" regarding tha amendment. We have also carefuly studied Judge CooleyV views on the subject in haod Except ing cximoha givn to illustrate his points, the principal part of the opin ion cf Judge Cooley is given in full herewith: , "It will sometimes be found that an act of the legislature is opposed in some of its provisions to the Constitution, while others, standing by themselves, would be unobi ctionable. So the forms cbaerved in parsing it may be sufficient for some of the purposes sought to be accomplished by it, but insufficient for others. In any such case the portion which c:.i:fl cts with the Constitution, or in regard to which the necessary conditions have not been observed mujt be treatel as a nullity. Whether the other parts of the statute must also be ao jidged void because of the association must depend upon a consideration of the ot j ct of the law, and in what manner and to whatcx tent the unconstitutional portion affects the remainder. "A statute, it has bzen said, is judi cially held to be unconstitutional be cause n is not within the Ecope o! legis lative authority. It may either pro pose to accomplish something prohib ited by the Constitution or to accomp li&h tome lawful and even laudable ob jset by means repugnant to the Con stitution of the Uuittd States or of tbe State. A statute may contain some such provisions, and yet the same act, having received the same sanction of all branches of the legislature, and be ing in the form of law, may contain oicer useiui ana salutary provisions not obnoxious to any just constitu tional exception. It would ba incon eiatent with all juss principles of con stitutional law to adjudge these enact ments void becausa they are associated m the eame act. bub nos csnneo.tpd with or dependent on others which are unconstitutional. -BaMMta purpose ia to accomplish a single object only ana soma w void, the whole mustl . 1 .ffl .ignt wmmna to f fleet ia'l uuitt3a bujjj. ' - the oH ct without the aid of them valid portion. Ana 11 ney are ftiitr nnnnected with and dependent wuujr on each other, aa conditions, considers tions. or compensations for each other, oa fcn warrant the belief that the legis -w - , lature intended them as a whole, and, the legislature would not pass the resi; -ln fnf,nonPntlv tbll if 801216 PSrt3 rinol oil the nrnvi-?inne are uuuuiji3ii'u.uui, r . . whtch are thus dependent, conaiuooai, fall with them." Tho sum And fillbSfianC9 Of thlS argU mont: ca tho rApr will readUV S6. this: A eection of a statute cannot declared unconstitutional without an nulling tbe remaining sections, unless that section is independent of, or cot connected in eubiect matter with, other sections. As, Judge Cooley, aa a conclusion of the whole matter, after ntnfmr ifc a a a ncnaval villa that: fin II n - constitutional section may fall leaving constitutional sections standing, gives these notable exceptions: cases where it is eviaeat that, frcm a contemplation of the statute and the purpose to be accomplished bj it, that it wruld not have been pes3ea at an excent as an entirety, and that the general purpose of the legislature will oe defeated if it shall ba held va'id -as to some cases and void aa to others." A man with half an eye, it occurs to us, can see that this exception amply covers the case of the proposed amendment.. If it be passed by the popular vote, it will be passed as - - entirety, ana with it es a matter of common knowledge that it could not have been passed without a pro vision exempting illiterate whites how of age, and that to hold it void and Section 4 valid would "defeat the gen erbl purpose" of tha people. So that were Section 5 unconstitution al all the sections being to quote Judge Cooley, "connected in euoiecc mat ter, dependent on each etier, operat ing together for the same purpose" would stand or fall together. The arguments to the contrary by Senators Eimuad3, Allen and Petti grew are based upon the mistaken its sumption that the sole purpose of the people, should they adopt the amend ment, would be the establishment of an educational q lalifica ion, whereas, their purpose would be to res rict tbe right of suffrage to the educated and to such illiterates as they consider by long training, etc., qualified to vote mtelurently. To make the amend ment r quire a simple educational qu&lifi iation and exclude these Utter, ates wculd "deteat their general pur The view of the cape which we have maintained in this article finds confir matkn in numerous court retorts and legal arguments. From tha mass 0f testimony that might bo cited to bus tain our contention, we select but one, that of a very recent cafe Darallei with that we are considering. Ouiy eb ut two months ago cn January 28 ;h, 1900. to be exact. Judge Kohlsaat of tne United States Circuit Court, in considering the Illinois anti trust law, the ninth section of which exempted certain class from the provieion? of the remaining sections, (just as 8ec tion 5 of the amendment exempts data of voters, white, from the Dro visions of Sections 4) handed down this opinion: It is urged that, granting the un constitutionality of said ninth clause yet it may be declared void without effecting the validity of the remaining clauses of said act;. . If this 'were eo, then by declaring said clause void, the uuuub wuuiu uia&e iue ace ninamg upoQ those class's of persons within the State which the legislature hai epecially exempted from its provisions. Tois would be jidicial legislation of tho most fljgrauc charaettr. In my opinion the said clause 9 taints the wnoie act and renders it all void." This case, as anvoce can eee. in volves the same identical principle as tnat mas tne cours wculd have before ic in considering the mterdependncy f onntinn. W 1 J Ul -vowi. wDupU3eaauieflam?nt. And tbe courts would be compelled to declare, as in the case jaet cited, that by declaring the grandfather clause void, "the courts would make the act muuiu(5 upuu luuao uiasses ot persons within the i tate which the legislature has epecially exempted from its pro visions." And this, in the language of the court itself, would bs "iidieial legislation of the most fli grant charac terl" In view of this strong and un- mietakabie language of the courts and tbe Views Of JUdrA I ;rolov wo rcnnnt: dnilht thnt if thn crnnH fatham nlaneA the proposed amendment is unconsti tutional, the whole amsndment will be declared void and of no effect. Kep in mind that the members the Alliance are your brothers and aiotA.o .vyA jt j Mb40 iu s uur icgaru anu cu- operation in every good work. 1 3UCCES3 O VU88T I tn tt" in .- . D" Tfili 1 gray U y iu uunuu Ja me jjj - very valuable and well ri tPn 1 jd the Apnl Uentury. The utiTo I Mr W. 8. Harwood and in 1 - - " .u njlir fa h con(ieE8ea the story of ownerahiD 0f the teleeranh rq ..3 in Rntain for thirt.v I -j jcara 1 rhig refoimj it will te eeen, icn ' AVflrvwhere recoenszd nn I ff.nm U TZamnnA .. B I . t .1 I Cicie we eiiruu mtBJ iwo par6gfBr,i "Since tte British GoveiLmect 11 -io- . 6' H I ..i,,.,, 00.jma tha hn,.r . 13 I . .mnn- tVta 1 . do i haa gr0WE to enormous P'oporticin, The ot j ct of assuming this control bitant telegraph toils'ot priva e ccrj nanies tolls so high aa virtu&liv l pronibitive for many kiLds of busicea andj 83C0naiy to safeguard the puh'il against any return to former charge, lc matters not wnat one may tbinfe n to the desirability of tte intrcductioj of such a 83 etem into the United btatei the fact is patent that in Great Britait it has proved a signal tucce68. Tb twX)oia object was long eince attain tern will be overthrown. "The report of the Postcffice Depart ment lor 1899 gives the laiesi avails figures. Tntd report shows that tin people so far appreciate and ufii!23 eastern that they eeit in 1899 ud to I the date of the closing of tLt report, I in crdinarv teleerams. uhirh an exclusive of press telegramf , cable my. . " ' ui I sages, Government, frank d. and n. duccd rate despatches, over three mil lion mpssagfS more than duncg 1833, In 1869, the year be'ore the govtra ment assumption, s ven million mes a3ge3 were i eat; it 1899 neaily tinety million messages. In 1869 the average charge for telegrams was a little ova fifty cents, while the charge for the I same message to day, inclusive of I drees, is about fifteen cents. Io all I there were under three hundred em ployeea, while there are at present c?at three the usand in the London cfiict alone. L ss year, after allowing fen deficit of at least a million dollars ii the department devoted to thedailj newspapers, the system cleared boots ail coat of maintenance over one hut dred and eixty-five thousand pound in round numbers, eight hundred an fifty thousand dollars " LITERARY NOTES. In an article entitled "The ConBtitn ticn and the Territories," in tne Ameri can Monthly Raview of Review fot jAPri'. Prof- Harry Pratt Jjdscn.o! powers of Congress in relat on toou uew possessions, exposing eumeoi uu I . .L. fallacies that have crept into tbe I cueaion or the budj-cc. Doth wr.mnw . ... . . . . . j - without the halls cf Congre s I "Every happy home cenraica chil- I dren." and vet with children com I anxieties that for yeera fill motten (hands and hearts. Rjccga.zicg ihi i universal need cf such a eeriea of Ijec s, Tne Delineator has been publish I ing articles from the pen of Dr Grt a I Peckham Murray dealing with Ibf I dick Uniid. The April article re rersw ITne Fevers ct Childhood. AH M a I Murray's work is character zed fJ I careful thoroughness, and beracvu I is of the practical kind needed by am iou mothers. Tne April Century is rich in pictorial illustration, its special art feature in cluding a frontispiece engraved I I Qole, a full-page plate of H 0 Ten ner'a painting, "The AncutiCieit Lovers of travel and adventure i turn to Miss S iidm ore's account "The Greatest Wonder in the Chic688 World," the bore of Ha'g Caafl, tidal wave that sweeps up tbe Teieu- tanc RiVPr thrinn urtrv uflar: to I Talbot Kelly's "Out-of -the -W Places in Eypt." with lllustratiocsbl the anther and tn thA firfit installed' - 1 nf Rinmin Wnn'o fmo Riof I Hardships of a R ptiler" engaged turth-hunting, for profit, ontheUan7 I bean coast of Central America. I FintHn then Anxaix .icm2& of ce w Coaraote-B to its 8tor, dr rrom thft animftl wnrM w have W TTiniiW nanni Thomos iM 0;oia ' nar nnW now some ioresc creaturea who nave hearts and instincts of men and w5'j win us as no other human zd bew- ever have. Mr. Roberts dinar hia fn11n7 Otlthna in cri irin Cf 113 S C ! in8tflfl(i nf rtfitttf.hA1 fftlefl and V MMWUV.a .u b.. noa.s A W LnnAn.i .i 1 1 :i TpW Ui 1 fii nrrktt." ia fha ffitlaar onri PlOCe'13. work devoted to this fascinating . ! His chief character is Old Krooi, v B3ar, who becomes part c a cyf woods household aad protects mother and daughter who pe1.! ofremota cabin. There U love, P8, a I ancient wood pervades all. TMIL 1 i. . Ll. i i .V.n art.F.Tt " . ! finfl trncono hut tha crrftndPU" t- ,j I www ycL louto ... - . i iB uneuesgable and the character" - ( real people, even the beasts.
The Progressive Farmer (Raleigh, N.C.)
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April 3, 1900, edition 1
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