The Cedarville Herald, Volume 46, Numbers 27-52
.ffe§ * * ll|®WWPW1Je »iHB3pl«w|' w|E#Nl ^ffnt *■ : iinetap )Nlt Wtih|p| $0 fty * «iiW « ^ !iyi I N «#M4NM>f of the fm tew4»&k m Jterald. a mw&j&m imvowm to LOCA& AMD GENERAL N*W» AMP THEINTERESTS OF CEDAE- VJLLS AND VICINITY, ssm I9 § FO RTY -S IXTH Y EA R NO. 35 , CEDARV ILLE , OHIO, FR ID A Y , AUGUST 17, 1923 PR IC E , $1 ,50 A Y EA R vKflMlNfcJi' "tk m BE w S ftPOBt The College Fou r new profcwnrs enter the fac- p ity o f Cedarville College In Septem ber Annie 34. Tinker, A. B ., A, 34., will be a t the bend o f the English and French Department, Miss Tinker j* «k graduate of drove City. College, P *„ and has been .has been the chief assistant in English in that institution during the past two years. She has also: taught in the public.schools of Pennsylvania. . ■- Mis* Hasel Wuhani* will be Miss Tinker7* assistant In Rhetoric, Miss Suzanne Koebler will have charge, of the Normal Department‘fo r Elementary teachers. Miss Koehler is a graduate of Ohio State Univer sity with the degrees of A . B ., B-.S* and is pursuing her A , M. course. She has taught in the public schools and has been a t the head of Normal work in Clermont county the past two years. She also wilt assist in the En glish Department, which . will have an unusually large' attendance, Miss Lois Elder, a graduate of Eftrlhaxn College with the degree of A. B . Will teach. Spanish', Miqs Elder majored in Spanish taking four years in th a t subject under a native of Spain. Miss Elder is especially fitted to teach both Spanish and English. Mer*work will give ». wonderful op portunity to any who desite, to take Up the study of this beautiful tongue, Tt is also very practical- to study Spanish, because the knowledge of the language wilt give,, one a particular advantage 'in .our Spanish provinces and in the republics of Mexico and South a n 8 .Central America,, With which our American citizens, are an nually being brought into closer con ta ct, - , Misa Nancy E . Finney, M, P ., will teach Anatomy in. the college-, Miss Finney' is a graduate o f Cedaivlle College with the degree of A. B. and of the O, S. XT. with the degfee of A. B . and of Ohio State Med.ical College. Miss Finney was one of the most suc cessful teacher! ever sent out by Ce- darviile College.- Her course in anat omy will give a special opportunity to any Who wish to pursue a predental o r a premedical course in the college, and a. letter from Mr. Stradley, the o f this course. Several students are -registering fo r the < 500 * 30 .. . Mr. J , A , Talcott, recently of' Dish- op College, now o f Cleveland, a grad-, pate o f Western Reserve "University, a graduate o f Rochester, N. htus- ic Conservatory, and who-completed his course in the Royal College of Music, London, Eng., and also und$r the Organist of St. Paul's Cathedral, is to ho a t the head of our music de partment, Mr, Talcott will offer piano, voice, and pipe-organ. He also will be opr Director o f Physical Education. First Ladyof Land and H er Boys BIG AGRICULTURE SHOW FEATURED IN CINCINNATI’S GREAT FAIL EXPOSITION One of the chief attraction* of the Cincinnati Fall Festival and Industrial Exposition, which opens August 25, and continues for 19 days, 1 * a gigantic agricultural exhibit covering three city squares and containing five acres, Within the area will be a model noun* try village and It will he thoroughly equipped with a newspaper plant, electric light plant, a miniature rail" road encircling the entire grounds 'and many other features. This agriculture exhibit will Include every conceivable model of farming machinery'from the huge motor driven machinery used,in the western farm lands to the smaller pieces used by the farmer on moderate farms, An- *othef display -will,Show the progress oi agriculture from pre-hlstoric days, when a sharpened stick was used to plough with—to the present day of modern farming machinery, In the agriculture exhibit can be found articles which appeal not only to the men but to the women, lnclud. Ing electrical driven or motor driven churns and other Implements which Hie farmer’s wife Is called upon to use. Anticipating the Arrival of thou- ■sands e f persons Interested In farming the Cincinnati Free-Tourista’ Camp is being enlarged and special arrange ments made to permit the visitors to camp in Cincinnati during their visit , to the Big Festival which covers more than 20 acres and includes a $50,000 Electrical Spectacle; 400 Indu-Tlal ex- hlbits; a continuous style show, sL fng Ahe -latest models of all kinds; the “Electrical Palace,” and “Frolic Avenue,’’ where- the best attractions and entertainments In the country have been gathered. Special concerts will he given hy”l 5 bands on the Fes tival grounds. . Railroads ate armonne. ing special rates .and the entire. City Of >Cincinnati is being decorated for the big event \\ V Mrs, Uftlvlit Cboitdg* ttiftftfl , t £BW ______ m two Soyfc Uik» #Mi* to Washington, however, fr* wm b* m mt _ *»•***«, t o p i a r m im tfNgR tAWn S tm Met*. • 'T> 1 Joflrj Robinson, Director of Amuse ments, Cincinnati Fall Festival .lohn Robinson, veteran circus man, whose name Is known to hun dreds of thousands of Americans, is in charge of the entire amuse ment program for the Cincinnati Fall Festival and. Industrial Expo-' .sition and. assures the Festival that the finest and most thrilling fea-, tures in- the world would bo on the grounds between August 25 and September 8, when the'exposition is held,- “Frolic Avenue”, covering five acres and the entire Music Hall will be given over to exciting fea tures. ■ . The Million Dollar Exposition in cludes four acres of agricultural ex hibits ; ten acres of Industrial exhib its ; Style Shows during the fifteen . days of the Festival; a $50,000 elec trical spectacle known as the “Tow er of Jewels” ; “Electrical Palace" and hundreds of other attractions. Railroads . are offering special rates; the, Cincinnati Free Tourist Camp is open to motorists; hotels and other accommodations are be ing prepared to welcome the thous ands of people who will visit the'big exposition. ; His ' record in this work is enviable. He brought the teams in Bishop from nothing until they 'became the cham pions of the Southwestern Conferende and during the. past season scored 177 to their opponents' scores o f only ■'v / > . ft Never was Cedarville College in AUTO CAME NEAR CAUSING TERR IBLE ACCIDENT SUNDAY What bright have been a very ser ious accident Was averted Sabbath when a small tree not over srix^inches in diameter saved an automobile con taining deven colored men from, Col- ence Half, with its large added equipment id Science, With its build ings entirely overhauled,' with the largest enrollment by fa r already se cured, with- its eighteen professors and instructors, the young people of Greene county have a wonderful op portunity. The College will have* four teachers and lecturers in Missions thi$ year, namely Dr. and, Mrs, J , P , White, -ana Prof, and Mrs. Robison. Cedarville College offers one of the bent and soundest and safest courses < in Bible and-missions to be had any- j where. BROWN GOES TO THE PEN FOR FORGING CHECKS Roy Brown, Who was Indicted for forgery, plead guilty and was Senten ced to the pen by .Judge Gowdy on a sentence of one to fifteen years. He entered upon his term Monday when Sheriff Morris Sharp took him to Col umbus. Brown forged M, W. Collin's name to a number checks that were cashed about town by merchants and totaled more than $200. The Herald recently received a let te r from Brown, Who claimed to have reformed and was willing to return and make good the loss to Mr. Collins. He is a slick individual and had one 01 more women, one a preacher’s wife, believing th a t he had reformed and this good woman was using her influence to get the forger his liberty and trying to get people here interest ed in Brown's liberty. Brown is now where he belongs as a leSson to other willful'wrongdoers, Sabbath - The party w as touring to Wilming ton and reached the danger point dur ing the storm. They Were enveloped in 3 cloud .of 'dust and cpuld not see the tfim in the street. Their machine headed for the bank of the quarry and dropped down until it caught on ine small tree and hung there. Had i t not been for the tree they would have dropped about twenty feet and may have been crushed under the weight of their machine. The automobile was damaged some but the only personal injury was to a boy that had the tip Of ids finger cut off by the glass from the wind shield. SAYS CORN LOOKS F INE OVER THE COUNTRY STORM DOES MUCH DAMAGE OVER THE COUNTY ■ An eleeric&l Storm with high wind did nfach damage over the bounty on Sabbath, There was some hail hut not enough to damage crops,, The roof-of the Methodist church a t Qldtown was lifted and the rain did much damage to the interior of the building, Thete were ho. services a t the time, - The lightning struck a cow bam on the McClellan farm oecupqd by Joe Johnson but no live stock was,, lost. Trees everywhere suffered from the wind/ many being uprooted. The Com in many sections w as badly tangled and krone farmer* report that much of it was broken off in certan locali ties. . Jam es A. McMillan* returned home Inst Saturday from Kansas where he looked after the harvesting of his wheat crop near Minneapolis. Mr. McMillan states that hundred* and hundreds of acres pf wheat were'nev er cu t this year due to high water that backed up and flooded'the wheat just a short time before it would have been cut. Mr. McMillan had out 272 acres of wheat that averaged 17 bushels to the acre. He says the general average would not be over 10 to 12 bushels. As to price wheat in Kansas is only bringing from 80 to 82 cents a bushel. . A feature of the trip home was thousands of acres o f wheat not yet threshed in the states traversed. He reports the corn extra good all along the line. Weather of late has been good fo r corn. CONDENSED OHIO NEWS New* Item* Picked a t Random and Boiled Dow* for the Busy Reader Governor Donahey may appoint a common pleas judge lor Luca* coun ty under the provisions of the iau jiving that county an additions judge, according to a ruling given thi governor by Attorney General qrahbi! The law became effective July 2G, bit under Its provision* no judge is to b ejected ufttlti 1924, All increase,Jn wages of 1*800 Cl*, cinnatl Traction company conductor inbtormen and otbCr workers wa itwarded by the arbitrators, Wb granted motormen and Conductors 5-eent- per hour increase 'from i cents to 53, cents An, hour. ,- Entering a haliway; to arrest a n<: grp Who had made/a thveat agairo Mm, Patrolman Lawrence M. Klumj i)9, was shot six time* and killed Ji ptantly at -Cincinnati. The allege* murderer, John Lawson Hunter, 2>, waa arrested. William Roscoe Diamond, 15, it dead at Columbus, |he result of har ing been struck by |tn automobile. George McGuigan, 67,. who conduct ad a, column widely; known as “Th Evening Olio” in the Youngstowi. Vindicator, is dead. George B. Christian, secretary I the lata President Harding, subml^te his resignation a t .Marion to Pres, dent Qoolidge. Kenneth Little,* prosecuting attor ney of Miami, county, was fined $30" and costs after being fouud guilty 0 , possessing intoxicating liquor. The prosecutor’s residence vf as raided hj state prohibititon agents two weeke ago and a quantity of wine war found, it was claimed. He will appeal. Mrs. Theodore J , Adelman was found Unconscious, gagged and tieo to her kitchen range In her home at Norwalk. The house had' beeu ran sacked by., robber#,.* Harry Ibbotson, t, was killed at Fremont when striick and run ovei by a Nickel. Plate freight train, , All entry, re c o rd wore broken at the Champaign county fair. Miners', union entered a protest against the proposed plan of the city pt Nelsonviile' to use Oil burners un der the -boiler# of ib# city- light plant: ■ L , H, Rockhill, 27, of Lebanon, has been elected coach at athletics at Athens high school. Muskingum oounlg^ptmnfssidner-'. hay* passed * b»tw|i|8j^ tonbtddink D ' J. Wallace, 69, Canton, was kill? ed when struck by an auto while walking near hftf . hopie, Jasper Van Fleet, 6l, a patient In the Ohio hospital for epileptics af Gaiilpolis, fell from a bridge over the railroad tracks near the Institution and was killed. Van Fleet’s home was a t Marietta. , Judge Harvey F , Ake announced that ho would quit .the common plea* court bunch at Ganton Sept. I. William,H. Jaherg, 3, was killed by an automobile driven by Edward Top-, milter, 50. The machine mounted" the sidewalk and crashed through the front of a store a t CIovelMM. Pollce< rescued Topmiller from aTfiob., A passenger train at Orrville struck and . killed Mr*.' A. Clarkson, a circus performer, who was standing amid flowers strewn on the tracks by children for . the Harding funeral train. . Robert Boner,, 21, of near Chester, Delaware county, stepped in front of a traction car near Delaware, and was Jellied almost Instantly, * Tira Duff, 34, shot and killed Ora Van Horn, .37, his neighbor,, near Lakeview, Logan county, according to the police. Duff Is being held at Boilefontaine. The shoptlng followed an argument over a woman, police said. William Whitten has assumed the office of Madison county clerk cjf courts, succeeding F . M, Stickley. Whitten's election was contested by* the Democrats when it was charged that he served as an election official in hi3 precinct, while the regular offi cial ministered to a sick cow. The case was taken to the court and Whit ten vindicated, « Riqhard Vonderhqide, 32, Cincin nati former patrolman, drank pojsdn and died less than an hour later. The widow was unable to explain the act. Sandusky county farmers expect to realize $75 an acre ffom sugar beets/ which are said to be showing excel lent tests this season, John Leonard Whitfield w a s, sep, tenced &f Cleveland to the Ohjo-peiii- tentiary for life by Judge FrarSc -C^ Phillips for the murder of Patrolman. Dennis Griffin,.on May 11. The. jury found him guilty,' but recommended fnercy, - „ ’ * John°W. Hoops, £7, miner, died c t Injuries received when he ws» caught These two women are mighty proud 'of their farmer hasbands. Both know That they played an im portant part in the successes which next winter will take them to Wash ington, D. S., as their husbands sit in the United States Senate. , Below, is Mrs. S. W„ Brookhart, o f Iowa, ; whose husband, Senator Brookhart, when .free from official duty, gives his attention to-raising . prize Iholgs, Above. Mrs. Johnson, of Minnesota, whose husband/ Senator-, elect Magnus Johnson, leaves few farm to go to Washington. MEDALLIONS OF HARDING TO GO ON RALE SF,t*T t , The government will coin medal lions of former president W arrtn G, Harding a t the "Philadelphia mint. . (W * t» « side will be a likeness iff the Hate president and on the other side the dates of hi# birth, inauguration : and death., They will sell fo r ’$1.82 each which Includes $1 fo r the niedai* Ron, 35 cents fo r the eaea and 17 4r AJ m dKihaMiwIluksislisAmadis cfiiw isfiLfuiu JOHN PITSTCCK I.EAVES FARMERS’ GRAIN CO. Monday morning-brought forth the now's that John Pltstick had resigned and «evercd his connection as mana ger of the Farm ers' Grain Co. The announcement was quite a surprise to citizen* in gehernl. We are unable tc announce the successor officially, yet street, gossip has it that Harry Lewis will sobtt take' over the mana gement of the company. In te r:* At a meeting of the board of directors Harry Lewis was chosen as manager. Mr. Lewis came hare last January from Indianapolis, Ihqving been a salesman fo r an implement company. His promotion to the: mana gership is in recognition of hi# past Service and his ability to care foT the company's 'business. STEVENSON PICNIC The annual Stevenson reunion will be held this year a t the home of W. B, Stevenson, Cedarville, on "Wed nesday, Aug, 22nd. Any friend# of the families will be welcome to come and bring wall filled fcaaket*. Dinner at; noon. v.. ....... . .fijrd! — partis# staged along the highway* al- joioBt every njght,. * Robert Topic, 24, Who broke jail at .Delaware^,nearly- three y.fears ago and Was rpturapd a^ter his arrest at Cin- cJUnati last week, #ab Sentenced to Dne to 10 ye*rs in the penitentiary, Sam' Dowell, 14-year-old Beitefoh- taine boy, i* the amateur junior, bi- (feytle ,chai“»,l9P pt Ohlp^ HO won,the title at Toledo. Postal receipts a t the Marion post- office show au increase of 16.04 per cent over last year's report, Business has became so heavy that a $20,000 addition will be started soon, Mr*, Ebble Converse has been'nam ed chairman of the state executive committee of the auxiliary of the American Legion, Mis# Mary Geiser, the first woman elected to a county office in Fairfield couhty, assumed her duties as clerk of courts at Lancaster, She has served 13 years as assistant. G. Lease Glauner of Mt. Gilead has accepted the position of professor of political science and history at West Virginia Wesleyan university. Mrs, Eva Murphy, 33, shot and kill ed her husband, Edward J. Murphy, near Cincinnati. She say* she fired in self-defense, Pike County Improvement compsny has been organized to develop thel natural resources of the county. The company plans to drill for oil on the; Jacob Sherer farm, near Plketon. ‘ JeBse and Raymond Meade of Ma rion, who pleaded guilty to having in toxicating liquor In their possession, were each assessed $100 and costs' by Judge Cameron at Marysville. W. P . Amrine, superintendent of the London prison farm, reports that the 270 acres of wheat on the farm have yielded 30 bushels to the acre. William N, Martin, 27, former dry agent, was killed, and Constable J, A. Stewart wounded, as the result of a gun battle at East Liverpool. Martin is alleged to have threatened his wife and to have resisted arrest. William D< Brickell, 70, capitalist and former publisher of the Columbus Dispatch, died At his home in Colum bus after a long Illness. His widow survives, W, R. Helstand, former county school superintendent of Marion coun ty, has been designated director of child accounting by Education Direc tor Rlegel. William Stowe, 58, of Lebanon, an employe of the Peters Cartridge com pany, WAS instantly killed while mix ing explosives in one of the mixing houses on the grounds of the com pany at Kings Mills, George Goodwell, 40, was shot a t his home at Elba, east of Marietta, When a shotgun in the hand* of Dan iel Newell, 35, was accidentally die charged. Goodwell’s injuries are be lieved to be fatal. Mrs, A. L, Whitaker, £«, president of the Cincinnati .Y , W. C. A. .for the last five years and g member of the national board of the Y. W. C. A., died at her home in Cincinnati, t Farmers and prospectors at Bain bridge, Ross county, ate panning and 1 digging for the gold they believe can be found in the vicinity. Nuggets are repottli to. hetot ftotok **• I M a tt* ihgton, - Professor E. D. Bates, superinten dent of tjxe public schools at Crooks-, villa for 13 years, has resigned to a <0 cept a similar position at Akron. - L. L. Bennett," 25, of BellSfentaine, was killed near Sidney when he was struck by a train a t a crossing. Proposed consolidation of tha prop erties of the Northwestern Ohio Light company of Springfield and ' the Marysville Light and Water company* Marysville, With the Springfield Light, Heat and Power company, under th# name of the Ohio Edison company, has been announced. . Macadam road between Utica and Mt, Vernon Will' be completed next year at an outlay of $55,oOO, FOlix Alexander, 22, died at Belle- fontaine from injuries received when he attempted to board a traction car and felt under the wheels. Mrs. Dorothy L- Dowler, wife of Rev. 'L. W, Dowler of Zanesville, in jured in au auto accident, haB aueu her father, Christopher Munnlch Of Mt. Vernon, N. Y,, for $25,000 alleged damages, She charged her father was driving the car when it skidded oft the road near SL Clairsvliie. Policeman James Baker, single- handed, arrested two yeggs after they had blown the safe of Homer John son’s filling station In Newark, and secured $600, according to Baker's re-, port, Charles Shearer, 66', ws* klllea And two others hurt when-their auto collided with another machine at Findlay, Harry A, Wyatt, 32f bled to death when his jugular vein was severed as he plunged through the windshield of his auto in a collision with another car at Cleveland, Paul H. Rusks, 14, of Youngstown, was .killed and three hurt when their auto* collided with a train at Warren Clarence Jones was killed and sev en other persons injured a t Cincin nati when their Auto plunged into the rear of a truck returning from a picnic, Michael Gravarece, 44, was Shot through the heart by s fellow boarder at Youngstown, the tragedy being the result of prolonged enmity between the men. H is slayer is being Sought by police, H. C. Smith, auditor, employed by the Allied Coal company bf Canton, has fallen heir to property valued at $100,000 In old Mexico. ‘ A large es tate in Mexico was bequeathed Smith by his father, who died in the west. Miss Helen Baker of Mt. Gilead has been chosen assistant mdslc su pervisar of the Baltimore public schools. Byron M. Clefidenlag, 64, who died of heart disease, was a former DemO' Cratic legislator from Mercer county, and in 1918 was appointed to the li quor license commission, serving un til Us abolition. Secretary of State Thad H. Brown announced the appointment of Fran cis H. Dickson of Ashtabula as as sistant cashier, to succeed Howard H, Martin, Th* latter leaves to ac cept a business position in F t, Worth, Texas. „ . Chester Deda, 3, wa* burned M death In a fir* which destroyed th| hum* at hi* »ateau near Ftoikin* The D. A. DeWIne home neap Old Town has been subject to mysterious fire* this week, twelve in all. The' first was when clothing found in 3 closet was found blazing. The clothing , wns not damaged much and washed .and dried and brought back into the house when it took fire again in the kitchens Following a blqze a neighbor pulled down the portiers and threw them across the table when they burst-into flames. A' blanket which had been wet and used to smother blaze* as they broke out also took fire, Dr. Austin Patterson, Xenia,, scientist a fte r ex amining the clothing advanced the theory that there was some oxidizing agent, whidh might come from bleaeh- mg powder in the washing, ■Nothing of this nature was ever before a t tributed to washing powder, OIL BUBBLE MAY BURST; LOW THEN HIGH PRICES The announcement of a reduction in' the price o f gasoline o f automobile tire* now-a-days causes more Comment and creates more interest that if coal or shoes were to suffer a cut in price. There has been a gasoline war in the South between the various com panies and we hear that Monday it Sold as low as five cents k gallon in ca r lots. This fight ‘has extended to S&irieJof the Northern states, particu larly, North Dakota. Gov, F ra se r took 4 hand and the price slipped some more; selling about, 16 cents a gallon. Tuesday morning the Standard Gil Company of Indiana announced a re duction of 6.6 Cents covering eleven states but Ohio was not one of them. The Dayton. Chairiber of Commerce on Monday appealed to Gov, Doitahey io take some action towards using hi# power to bring a lower price, and automobile clubs are also urging official action. Lome think that -tills gas war will only serve to give the public lower prices for a short time And force OUt thousands of independant dealers. A fter that the price will climb back to where it has been. HAV i S a u t o h it c h e d , ON COLUMBUS BIKE KlanHolds FirstMeeting The first meeting of toe Ku jK3ur‘ Klsn fou, tills section was held In the opera house Wednesday when Rev. Cox o f Dayton spoke on “American- ism." ■ ,1 C. C, Woodard of Dayton, who -has charge of the organizations in this county presided a t the meeting. The purpose qf the meeting ww explained as one fo r the formation of a local organization. The Klan was repre sented aa not being a church, 4 lodge nr order but a movement— a move ment, fo r better government, better men in office, better enforcement of all laws and the promotion and pro tection-Of the rights of all free horn American citizens with certain elim inations, Rev. Gox in his address reviewed the -work ho was engaged in and toe obstacles that had 'been - encountered in throwing some protection about the, flag of our country, our schools. He.held that no citizen was to be de prived of his right to worship, God as granted under the constitution yet there must be, no Connection between church and state. He pictpretL that *84 per cent of the press pf the country wa# under, the control of one religious body. Jt was a matter of public record that most of our crimes, 98 per cent, were c-ommitted by foreign born. He urged that every man th a t calls himself a" Erotestant should attend some church regularly-'.and that any member ;o f the Klan that did not was pot a 100 per cent Klansman. ' One of to e laws the Klan would force through the legislature would compel every publication in this country to be published in toe % t-, glish language. ■ - Mi’. Woodard a t the conclusion, of Rev. Cox's address stated that <a ei.-remoni'ai would be . hold ' oh the Jamestown and Cedarville pike, about five miles - south, Thursday nighjfc when a class wquld be initafed. Mr. Woodard stated that things were coming to passvifl Xenia.-That the Klan had promised a Bible and-a flag in every school room - in th a t dty and that one o f each would be found there soon. He also stated tout other conditions would be changed an toati.prty: sstifchah whgp,^state profaihL make raids they would have the sup? port of all the police force. A s a t present only part of toe force could be trusted with the news that- thep* officers were coming. TURNBULL PICNIC AUG.* 22. f The Turnbull picnic will be held this year a t the Greene County F a ir Grounds, Xenia,; August-22; All those interested in. this family gathering should not forget the.place and date.- Senu Hiram Johnson. Home from Europe A Fotd touring car belonging to Harry Davis was badly damaged when hit on the Columbus pike by A Wilber force taxi, According to reports. The Ford was brought io town and was damaged Almost to the limit. From reports no one was seriously injured. RA C E HOUSE STO LEN Someone stole A five year old traitor from a barn on the Greene County F a ir grounds, Monday night. There was no trAce of the theft no has th e re . been Any found since. Th* Animal be-1 longed to Georg* Hamilton of this I ■ 1 Sen. Hte&m John *** horn* after r four mouth* in Europe, eeid, *1 am thinking not of politic*, titfctt Of myself or in ? individual,, Ther*. was no domestic politic* tit my talk In New York last week, tt I ami able in the ensuing mouths, I Abell' talk generally taT n te tta ite ta l rete- Hone » * i th* Attitede WhWk mart ceun|r?, IA my verylmNdttoottistesw
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