About forty years old. Married. Came from the country. Rented a house on the Colony and worked as a section-hand on the railroad.
FOOTNOTES:
[57] "The Poor and the Land." Introduction, p. VI.
[58] "Report of Departmental Committee," pp. 8, 9, 10.
[59] "William Booth," p. 83.
[60] "The S. A. in the U. S.," p. 15.
[61] See Giddings' "Principles of Sociology," p. 291.
[62] "The Poor and the Land," p. 75.
[63] See example No. 8 at the end of the chapter, [p. 115].
[64] About this time, Mr. Curtis, describing the colony in the Chicago Record, said "There is no neater group of houses in Colorado, and no more contented community in the world. Nearly every one has written to friends urging them to join the next colony that comes out, and thus I judge they are enthusiastic over their success and the pleasures they enjoy."