1.00 a Year, in Advance.
FOR COUNTRY, FOR GOD, AND EOR TRUTH."
Single Copy, 5 Cents.
vol. xr.
PLYMOUTH, N. C, FRIDAY, JUNE 29, 1900.
NO. 27.
KILL A HP'S I.ETTElt.
Fret not thyself bccauso of evil doers.
Fret not thyself against him who
deviseth iniquity.
Trust in the Lord and do good. Wait
on the Lord.
Those are good sermons and then are
others like them in David and Solomon.
A man can shorten his life and wear
himself out by borrowing trouble, and
fretting and worrying about the iniquity
of other people. There is a sight of
devilment going on more than ever
before, I reckon more war, famine,
pes tile nee, urest and discontent all
.nrver the world, and here in our own
blessed land crime is on the increase in
our cities, and what with the negro and
the corruption of politics and the strikes
as sideshows there is enough to run a
-.worrying man crazy. Of course we
should feel concerned about crime and
do what we can to prevent it, but worry
ing dees not accomplish anything. Let
us preach and practice and be happy
still. "Carpe diem," enjoy the day,
saith the poet Horace. Why can't
everylo 'v in this country be ae con
tented and law-abiding as our people
here in north Georgia. There are no
murders, no outrages, nolynchinga, no
fights here in Bartow county. There
are no divorce nor burglaries, and no
stealing of any consequence. A good
old ante-bellum darky did come to see
aie the other day to get me to sign his
jpem's bond and get him out of jail.
"Well, boss you see de man's corn
was missin' and he find de basket , at
Jim's house, but he dident fine nocorn
But Jim aint 'cuscd of stealin' de
basket. "The basket is to be the wit
ness, I reckon," said I. "Jes' so, boss
dat's all and de basket can't talk
and tell how it got dar."
I was ruminating how easy it is for
any well man to make a fair living in
this region. During harvest a good
worker, white or black, gets one dollar
a day, and at other times to cents a
nay, and there is a demand for labor
Uncle Sam is very old, but he gets to
cents every day for working around in
the gardenB. His four girls cook and
wash and each makes about two dollars
a week. There ia about $12 a week
earned by that family and they are
always happy and don't give themselyes
any concern about politics or social
equality or Bishop Turner or Booker
Washington. It is the high-strung,
lazy negroes who are making all the
fuss. Now, just contrast the condition
of laborers here and in other countries.
In India they are starving by the mil
lion. In the Philippines and South
Africa they are fighting and dying in
battle or from disease and pestilence.
In Germany a peasant is rich if he has
two or three acres of land, and his wife
and daughters carry heavy loads of
vegetables on their backs to market,
while the sons are serving in the army.
In Italy the poor work in malarial
ewamps or beg in Naples. In Mexico
the peons get 37 cents a day in Mexi
can silver, which is worth about half as
much as ours. In England the poor
are kept alive by charity and in Ireland
the pea 'an try lose a crop about every
third year and the little children go
hungry and in rags? What is the mat
ter with our people? Why don't they
quit fussing quit envying the rich?
Why not lift up their voices and thank
the Lord for His mercy and goodness
unto ua? A diligent man or woman
can live for five or six months from a
good garden and besides the garden
the country abounds in fruit. Peaches,
apples, grapes, blackberries, dewberries
and huckleberries, I never saw the like.
From our own garden we can have eight
different vegetables every day besides
berries for a desert. It makes me proud
to gather them and show them round
to the family before breakfast, for - it is
my erarden. I dressed it like old Father
Adam did Eden. I'm still the boy.
am the man with the hoe and I .don't
esteem it any hardship, either. Mr
Markbam needent preach his foolishness
to me, nor do I like the tone of that
picture a pitiful man leaning on his
hoe and bemoaning his hard lot. Work,
labor, toil, sweat, is the common lot
and they are the happiest who do it
Solomon said the sleep of the laboring
man is Bweet. I love to work with the
hoe. I love to get all over in a sweat
of perspiration. It open3 thepoers and
eaves medicine. I love the smiles of
approval when I find a new blown rose
and bring it to Mrs. Arp and hear her
Bay "Isn't it beautiful? She reproached
me gently yesterday for cutting down
her poke stock down by the garden
fence. She said she liked to look at it
when the berries were ripe, for it re
minded her of the home of her happy
childhood, when she and her little
brotheia used to pick the berries and
make red paint from them and paint
doga and cats and monkeys on the
. smokehouse and dairy. Well, there is
another one coming and I will let that
grow for her sake. I want to see her
painting dogs on our smokehouse.
They remind me of the time when Polk
ran against Clay for president and every
farmer Democrat who came to town
brought a poke stock with berries on it
sticking up in his wagon or dangling
between his horse's ears. It used to
make the Henry Clay wbigs mighty
mad. I remember that Dr. Jim Alex
ander and Gib Wright got so mad they
liked to hav used bad words. They
turned red in the face and then their
hair turned red and Dr. Jim's is red yet.
An old line whig never recovered from
Clay's defeat and to this day they
slorate every poke berry bush on their
plantations.
Tomorrow is my birthday and I know
from the signs that my wife and the
girls are fixing up a surprise tor me
some little thing. I suspect it is a table
for me to write upon, for the old one is
rickety, but I'm attached to it. It is
the second one that I have worn out
with my ruminations of forty years.
These birthdays keep on coming, espe
cially in this leafy month of June for
my mother, my wife, myself, my
daughter, my grandson and grand
daughter were all born m June. Not
long ago I gave a problem to the young
people about my wife's age and scores
of answers have come back from them
most of them from schoolgirls about
twelve years of age. Their solutions
are in algebra and are neatly and ac
curately done. When my wife was two
weeks old I was six years. You see I
took her so young bo as to train her up
to my notion but you can t always tell,
First thing I knew she was training me
I haye long observed that girlB are
smarter in figures than boys of their
age. I know that it always strained
my mind to keep up with my girl class
mates. After all of the modern meth
ods and improved conditions I do not
see any difference in the intelligence or
quickness of school children now and
those of sixty vears ago. I believe that
young people were happier intellectually
then than now, for they had Icsb trash
to read and no harrowing things in
newspapers. Then we read Shakespeare,
Milton, Gray, Cowper, Scott, Byron,
Goldsmith, Cooper, etc. Now it is Bome
foolishness by some sensational writer
whose works are read and then for
gotten. I noted the other day a mor
alizing writer's recipe for keeping the
spirits up without pouring the spirits
down. He says: 'Head a fine poem
every day. Look every day upon a fine
painting. Hear every day Bome fine
music. Forget every day your enemies
and remember eyery day your friends
and the man or woman who follows
this rule is bound to be a Christian."
That's good and Dr. Johnson said that
' to look upon and love a fair and virtu
ous woman is a liberal education.'
That's better. Bill A hp.
Remarkable Letter Signed ly 150 Men
AVlio Accept Work In St. Lonl.
St. Louis, June 20.' A meeting to
consider the advisability of dismissing
the posse comitatus was held to-day,
Governor Stephens, members of the
police board and Chief of Police
Campbell being present. A letter
signed by 150 men now in the employ
of the Transit Company has been sent
to the strikers whose places they now
fill. The letter sets forth that the
men lost their places by reason of
strikes in other cities inaugurated by
the labor leaders, Mahon, Harry
Bryan, Sam Lee and others, and says
in part:
"The organization of every union
by them has been followed by strikes,
lawlessness anl disorder. New men
were employed and a great number
of union men who became strikers
under their guidance had to seek
other employment because the com
panies had filled their places with
other men. We were of the union
men in former strikes conducted by
Mahon and . Bryan and were left
stranded. Hunger and want came
to us. We waited long and patiently
for Avork. This strike in St. Louis
was planned and inaugurated by the
same men.
"It was our first chance for work at
our chosen pursuit and we accepted it.
"As union men in the former
strikes, we gave the same treatment
to those who came to supply our
places which you have given us.
Again 'and again limited numbers
were invited back, again and again
under the advice of our leaders we re
fused, until it was too late for us to
be reinstated.
"The union man of the strike be
comes the 'scab' of the next succeed
ing strike."
Democrats Arc Determined Not to Be
Outwitted.
Raleigh, N. C, June 15. Speaker
Connor was interviewed today regard
ing the work done by the special legis
lative session, which ended last night.
It met the objections of the franchise
amendments to the constitution, so far
as its standing or fallintf as a whole,
very completely indeed. Many bills
were introduced, but very few passed.
Total of bills and resolutions ratified
was only twenty-eight. The amend
ment and election law are well protected.
The legislature meets again July 21th to
keep an eye on the Republican judges
of the supreme and superior courts up
to the last moment before the August
election on the question of the franchise
amendment. Republicans say they in
tend to appeal the amendment matter
to the United States district court; that
the latter has organal jurisdiction in
such cases under the revised statutes.
Chairman Pruitt ha8 called the Mis
sippi Populist State convention te meet
in Jackson on August 15th to nominate
a Populist electoral ticket. He an
nounces a complete divorce from the
Butler-Weaver-Allen fusion ticket.
Mrs. Gladstone, widow of Win. E.
Gladstone, the English statesman, died
at London on the 14th. Mrs. Glad
stone, who had been unconscionB for
about 72 hours, died without recovering
consciousness.
two opposing views of otah-
Ellen Thornevcroft Fowler, who baa
written Beveral novels of English man
ners, has just published through the
Appletons a story called "The Farring
dons." The author is clever at makine
epigrams, and her society people are
much quicker at saying bright things
man the society people one usually
meets.
The present story concerns itself with
the history and development of Eliza
beth Farringdon, an attractive young
woman, enthusiastic, artistic and ego
ietic. The narrative of Elizabeth's deyel
opment, her flirtation and her love ia
relieved by the gossip of two women
who lived m Elizabeth a native town,
and who loved her family. Elizabeth
sometimes went to take tea with Mra.
Bateson, the cherry wife of one of the
foremen in the Farringdon iron worka.
Mra. Bateaon usually called in her
neighbor, Mrs. Hankey. These two
women were excellent foils to each
other. Mrs. Bateson cherry and opti
inistic, Mra. Hankey Bour and a de
cided pessimist. Their characters are
clearly drawn, and are worth spending
a little time with. Here is a bit from a
tea party conversation, with Elizabeth
and Christopher aa audience :
"'How ia your sister herself?' in
quired Mrs. Bateson. 'I expect she's a
bit upset now that the fuss is all over,
and she hasn't a daughter left to bless
herself with.
"Mrs. Hankey sighed cheerfully
'Well, she did seem rather low-spirited
when all the mesa was cleared up, and
Susan had gone off to her own home;
but I says to her, "Never mind, Sarah,
and don't you worry yourself; now that
the weddings are oyer the funerals will
soon begin." You see, you must cheer
folks up a bit, Mrs. Bateson, when
they're feehn' out of sorts.
" 'You must, indeed, agreed the lady
of the bouse, feeling that her guest had
hit upon a happy vein of consolation.
'It is dull without daughters when
you've once got accustomed to 'em ;
daughters being a sight more comfort
able and convenient than eons, to my
mind.'
" 'Well, you see, daughters you can
teach to know theirselves and sous you
can't. Though even daughters can
never rest till they ve got marnea,
more's the pity. If they knowed as
much about men as I do, they'd be
thanking the Lord that he'd created
them single inBtead of fidgeting to
change the Btate to which they were
born."
"'Well, I holds with folks getting
married,' argued Mrs. Bateson; 'it givea
'em something to think abouc between
Sunday's Bermona apd Thursday's bak
ing, and if folks have nothing to think
about, they think about mischief.
" 'That's true, especially if they hap
pen to be men. They've no senBe,
men haven't; that's what is the matter
with them.'
'"You never epoke a truer word.
Mrs. Hankey,' agreed her hostess; 'the
very best of them don't properly know
the difference between their souls and
their stomachs; and they fancy that
they are a-wrestling with the doubts,
when really It is their dinners that are
a-wresthng with them. Now, take Bate
son hi88elf, and a kinder husband never
lived, yet bo sure aa he touches a bit of
pirk he begins to worry hiseelf about
the doctrine of election till there's no
living with him.'
"That's a mau all over, to the very
life,' eaid Mrs. Hankey sympathetically;
'and he never has the sense to see
what's wrong with him, I'll be bound.'
" 'Not he he wouldn't be a man if
he had. And then he'll sit in the front
parlor and engage in prayer for hours
at a time, till I sayB to him, "Bateson,"
says I, "I'd be ashamed to go troub
ling the Lord with a prayer when a
pinch o' carbonate o' soda would wet
things straight again." '
" 'And quite right, Mra. Bateson; it's
often a wonder to me that the Lord has
patience with men, seeing that their
own wives haven't.' "
Years later the two women were dis
cussing Elizabeth's chances of marriage.
Mr8. Bateson hoped she would marry
Christopher, the nephew of the man
ager of the works, and the companion
of Elizabeth's childhood.
" 'Maybe the manager's nephew ain't
altogether the aort of husband you'd ex
pect for Farringdon,' eaid Mra. Bate
son, thoughtfully; 'I don't deny that.
But he's wonderfully fond of her, Mr.
Chist Christopher is, and there's noth
ing like, love for smoothing things over
when the oven ain't properly heated,
and the meat is done to a cinder on one
side and all raw on the other. You
find that out when you are married.'
" 'I'd never have adopted a child
mvself.' sid Mrs. Batceon. 'I should
always hve been expecting see its par
ents faults coming out in it bo umer
ent from the peace you have with your
own flesh and blood.'
'Mrs. Hankev eroaned : 'Your own
t
flesh and blood may take after their
father; you never can tell.'
" 'So thev mav. Mrs. Hankey- so
they may, but, as the scripture says, it
is our duty to whip the old man out of
them.'
' It's dull work for the women who
have nobody to order 'em about and
find fault with 'em. Why, where's the
good of taking the Trouble to do a thing
well, if there's no man to blame you
for it afterwards ?' eaid Mrs. Bateson in
defense of the married state.
Mra. Hankey remarked with an om
inous shake of the head: 'Mr. Tre-
maine is one that has religious doubts.'
" 'Ah ! that liver,' said Mra. BateBon,
her voice softening with pity, that
comes from eating French kickshaws,
and having no mother to Bee that he
takes a doBe of soda and nitre now and
then to keep his system cool. Poor
young man !'
" 'r bear the young man goes eo far
aa to deny the existence of a God,' con
tinued Mra. Hankey.
" 'All liver !' repeated Mra. Bateson;
'it often takes men like that; when they
begin to doubt the inspiration of the
scripturea you know they will be all the
better for a dose of dandelion-tea; but
when they go on to deny the existence
of a God, there's nothing for it but
chamomile. And I don't believe as the
Lord takes their doubts any more seri
ously than their wivcB take 'em. He
knows as well aa we do that the poor
things need pity more than blame, and
dosing more than converting; for he
gave 'em their livers, and we only have
to bear with them and return thanks to
Him for haying made ours of a differ
ent pattern.'
" 'And what do the women aa have
doubts need, I should like to know ?'
"A husband and children is the
best cure for them. Why, when a wo
man has a husband and children to
look after, and washes at home, she has
no time, bless you, to be teaching the
Lord his business; she has enough to do
minding her own.
CARELESSNESS WITH MONEY.
The Secretary of tbe Treasury has j
very large directory of careless people
of people who have money to hum o
otherwise destroy, and who appeal to
nim ior reimoursement. Uncle Sam is
kind enough to restore lost monevwhen
he is satisfied that it is actually out of
existence, and the Treasury Department
has to look after this branch of his
financial aflairs. Hardly a day passes
that the Secretary is not appealed to to
make good money destroyed, and he
often receives remnants of bills, more
or less recognizable, with queer tales of
how the work of destruction was wrought.
Oae of the latest applications was
from a Vermont farmer, who sent a
mass of remnants of bills that approach
ed the condition of pulp, and asked for
1280 in return, which, after some delay,
he received. He said he had very care
fully hidden the money under the raft
ers of his barn, and somehow it had
gotten into the hay and bran fed to one
of his cows. The cow was chewing the
green feed when its nature was discov
ered. Another farmer, from Kansaa, has
sent a lot of chopped bills that he says
represent $40. According to his story
they were in the pocket of a vest that
was hung on a feed cutter, and when it
was being operated the corner of the
vest that held the money got between
its knives, and, with the money, was
torn in shreds. The claim is now in
process of adjustment.
A Boston man took from his pocket
what he says he thought was a piece of
paper, and burned half of it in lighting
the gas. The gas light revealed the
fact that he had used a 20 bill for a
lighter.
A Washington man, a couple of weeks
ago, went in person to the Secretary to
get $35 for some badly mutilated bills
that his playful pup had been exercis
ing with for an hour.
. A Wisconsin woman sent a lot of tin
der that she says was once $90. Several
months ago she hid it in a etove pipe
hole, into which a pipe from a laundry
fire was recently placed. As the pipe
rested on the bills tinder was the result.
Another woman, this time in India
napolis, got $10 in greenbacks mixed
with greens she was preparing for din
ner, and boiled them into an almost
unrecognizable mass.
A loving Philadelphia papa has asked
$20 for a few stripB of greenish paper
and a score of pellets of the same ma
terial. He says they once constituted
a $20 bill, which his pet boy had torn
to pieces, rolled into balls and blown
through a glass tube at the cat, canary
bird and nursemaid.
An Ohio man wante to sell the Treas
ury Department a mouse nest for $100.
He Bays he had that amount in bills in
a bureau drawer, and that the mice ap
propriated it in bits to build a home in
which to rear their family.
This list is continually growing, and
the communications eiviner the remark
able details are so frequent as to cause
no smile or comment in the de
ment. Eich one is simply a ne'
that follows along a line of redt
til it is adjusted. f
Rryau'M iVomliiatloii Vei
Chicago, June 11.-
the Democratic St
California, Missouri,
gia and Vermont tod
Brviin is assnrpd nf t
President on the DeV
TLe instructiona given;
those live State8 carry Mr.V
it is believed, considerablyX,,,
two-third necessary to nominate
The Democratic National Con
which meets in Kansas Citv on
niyersary of American freedom,
two weeks distant.
f
m
f
1
OUR WASHINGTON L13TTKII.
Special Correspondence.
The political situation todav ia re
markably similar to that in 1872, when
Grant was renominated for the second
time. In the last year of his first ad
ministration, a succession of Bcandals
burst upon the country, just as the
Cuban scandals have done now. No
body will have forgotten the great Credit
Mobilier fraud, and the subsequent
'Whiskey King" disclosures, which
were directly traceable to General
Grant's palpable inexperience in civil
administration just as those of today are
traceable to McKinley 8 weakness and
yielding to personal favorites. After
Grant had been nominated, a large
segment of the Republican party belted
outright, as the German and anti-im
perialist Republicans are bolting today.
True, the bolt did not avail to defeat
Grant because the Democrats had the
aouth counted against them by the car
pet bag governments, and because they
did not believe in their candidate.
Many thousands of Democrats in doubt
ful States sullenly declined to Bupport
Greeley, and other thousands voted
directly for the Republican candidate
and elected him. Here lies the differ
ence this year. The Democrats do
believe in their candidate; tbey are
united; tbey are aided bv a large sec
tion of men who once belonged to the
Republican party and who either bolted
four years ago on account of silver or
will bolt on account of imperialism, and
the south is solidly for them instead of
being solidly against them as it waB in
1872. In other words, the causes which
should have defeated Grant exist today,
while those that saved him do not exist,
making Bryan's election almost certain.
The Democratic Congressional Com
mittee h88 giyen out a statement show
ing to what extent the various trusts
have increased the prices of their pro
ducts. The list is tco long to print, but
the following articles, all of which are
made by trusts, will give some idea of
the burden laid upon the consumer by
these institutions, which have been so
foetered by four year8 of Republican
tariff and Republican refusal to prose
cute even in cases of the plainest viola
tion of statute Jaw. All the increases
below are from January 7, 1890 to De
cember 30, 1899: Linseed oil, from 41
to 50 cents; petroleum, $7.50 to $9 90;
sugar 4.91 to 5.12; ipecac, $2.50 to
$3.G5; camphor, 38 cents to 51 cents;
quinine, 21 cents to 30 cents; sal sodo,
02 cents to 70 cents; leather 20 cents
to 25 cents; calico, 2 cents to 3 cents;
jute hemp, 2J cents to 3 cents; pig
lead $3.95 to $1 G5; tin-plate, $3. to
$5.25; Portland cement, $1.95 to $2.25;
nails, $1.10 to $2.50; wire nails, $1.35
to $3 20; anthracite coal, $3. 75 to $1.20;
glass, $2 57 to $2.89; rubber 94 cents to
$1.45. .The only prices to fall were
those of farm products. The Year Book
of the Department of Agriculture for
1S99, recently issued, shows that the
farm products and farm animals in
1899, although vastly increased in
quantity since 1890, had fallen off in
value to the extent of $706,909,901.
This only counts as farm products corn,
wheat, oats, barley, rye, buckwheat,
potatoes, bay and cotton. If the farm
products of 1899 had brought the same
prices as did the same products in 1890,
they would haye brought more than
they did by the sum of $2,009,437,584.
The farmers raised 1,013,000,000 more
bushels of produce in 1999 than they
did in 1890, and yet this produce was
worth $205,000,000 less than was the
smaller crop of 1890. This only calcu
lates the cereals.
Flit- Scholarship Offered at Trinity
College.
On recommendation of President Kil
go the board of trustees of Trinity Col
lege decided at its late meeting to offer
50 scholarships to that institution.
These scholarships vary in value from
$50 to $75. Forty are for entering the
freshman class and five are for mem
bers of the sophomore class. The
latter two must be candidates for the
degree, and the scholarships will be
available to them by which to take the
junior year.
All8holarships must be won by test
of satisfactory examination in course of
study and proof of character.
The college reserves the right to with
draw the benefits at any time the stu
dent shall forfeit character.
The Strujile of a Texu Editor.
Farmers' Courier.
I will be in the field as census enu
merator during the month of Juno.
Our cli:':w.ii iwiYjwuLl. tonr-hintr the
CHINA BEGINS WAR.
OPENS PIRK ON THE FLEET-AN
8-IlOUKS' BOMBAHDMKNT
ENSUES.
Two of the Fort It low n up and 400
CliIiicMC Killed One Ilrttlwli, 3 Ger
mans, 16 UiiMKtan and 1 French
man Killed.
London, June 19. China declared
war against the world when the Taku
fortifications opened fire upon the in
ternational fleet. The accounts of what
took place are still unsatisfactory, the
best semi-official information being the
dispatch received at Berlin from Che
Fu. The unofficial narratives, coming
by way of Shanghai, vary widely and
bear internal evidence of supplementing
me main iacis wun guess wors. une
dispatch says that Yorktown partici
pated in the bombardment. Another
asserts that American marines formed
part of the storming force of 2,000. An
Asspciated Press dispatch from Che Fu,
dated yesterday afternoon says:
"The Forts on both 6idea of the Taku
are now occupied. The Chinese opened
fire unexpectedly. The casualties to
the mixed forces were aa follows: Killed,
British 1; German 3; Russian 1G, and
French 1. Wounded, British 1; Ger
man 7; Russian 45; French 1. The
Chinese torpedo boats were seized."
"Four hundred Chinese are reported
to have been killed. The Chinese,
when retreating, fell into the henda of
the Russian force." "
The Daily Mail haa the following from
Che Fu: "Two of the forts were blown
up. The 32 warships at Taku aggre
gated 200,000 tons and carried more
than 300 guns."
The powers are taking prompt action.
Four thousand troops have been
ordered to China; 10,000 French troopa
are waiting to embark at Saigon, capital
of French Cochin China, and 3,000 to
5,000 more Russians have been ordered
from Port Arthur to Taku.
The Brussels correspondent of The
Standard in a dispatch dated yesterday,
says: "Russia has massed 40,000 men,
with ceven batteries at Kiachta, with
orders to proceed to Maimatichin, a
Chinese town contiguous to Kiachita,
and thence to advance along the tele
graph route to the Mongol town of
Urga, 200 miles south of Kiachta, and
750 miles northwest of Pekin."
The morning papers consider that a
state of war practically exists and that
the issue is between Western and Eas
tern civilization. The Times says that
the latest news infinitely increases a sit
uation already eulriciently serious.
The Imperial Falare Rurned The
ICmprenN Commit Suicide.
London, June 21. The latest story
Bent out by the Shanghai gossipB is
that Prince Tuan, president of the
Tsung Li Yamen, has burned the im
perial palace at Pekin and murdered
the Emperor, and that the Empress
Dowager has committed suicide.
The effect of the bombardment of
the Taku forts, as described by the
Shanghai correspondents, was gory in
the extreme, nothing Ie'fes than "rivera
of blood" and "mutilated corpses piled
up inside the fo.ts."
The, area of Cuba is about 42,000
square miles, exclusive of the Isle of
Pines, due south of Havana province.
Negro census enumerators in the
South did not hnd their jobs either
pleasant or easy.
The shaft to the'ruemory of the la
mented Vance will be unveiled Wed
nesday, August 22nd.
Yh Tims Coissqq
to every elderly woman when An lm.
?rtant functional change takes place,
his la called "The Change of Life."
l neentiresystem undergoes achange.
Dreadful diseases such aa caneer anA
consumption axe often contracted at
uus ume.