' TWvOT-' . The Commoner. ii ' "VJIJWW 'WJJJ!li!Jy-j(flww- ir-piw wn-jjr-r- tL & r. , Anti-Military Pedagogy. A League for the Suppression of Tin Soldiers has recently been founded in Prance. Its theory is that the savage instincts of the young are excited by the uso of such toys. The boy who sets up a gaily painted soldier and then bowls him over with a marble is thereby training himself some day to march away to the sound of fife and drum. Ho may even be awakening those gory instincts which will make of him a Hannibal or a Napoleon to drench whole continents in blood. The paper doll is harmless, tho toy fire engine only a nuisance, but death and destruction lurk in the tin soldier. It must be abolished. This is, on its face, a momentous and at the same time a practical re- form. It betokens Gallic finesse. The Czar attempted to eradicate war by calling a Peace Congress at The Hague. But the adult generation is hopelessly Imbued with tho martial spirit. The nations showed their unwillingness to beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks.- Eph riam is joined to his idols. He is to be let alone, but his eons are to be led arigh't. No youthful 'hearts are to be Btirred at the sight of a martial array of glaring-eyed tin soldiers standing in battle line or ready to be blown from tho mouth- of a toy cannon in which a rubber band does duty for power. Harmless . wholly sheep that t "ble,4t when the string is pulled are to :.i '&. h$ P.l.a9,9. . of the war-inspiring toys. '""tt must' tie a'dmi'it$a that the" League for the Suppression of Tin Soldiers is working along the lines of the new pedagogy. Good psychology demands . that the twig be bent aright. The only question is whether the society is go ing far enough. Why should the tin soldier be abol- " ished when nothing is said against the toy cannon? Ought not the fife and drum to be made to follow in the train of the departing military gim crack? The mimic battleship both the-one that trundles about On wheels and the other which navigates tho, mill pond cannot consistently be allowed to 'remain. Noah's ark filled with curious wooden animals whose legs break off at unexpected" moments would make safe substiti- 3s. A tor- - ough revision of the list of playthings should be made as soon as the league gets in running order. It must issue an index expurgatorius. Societies affiliated with the League for the Suppression of Tin Soldiers will be organized throughout Europe JSfe I.YCl HSHH&' Uf ir- ytJtiwvV Ytw . Monarch Grubber will pull a. stump 7 ' -feet acro-ssand is guaranteed to stand a strnin nf 'Avmnn n. For cntnlOffuo and discounts of first ma chine, nddrosa MON ARCH GRUBBEK MFG. Co., Lono Tree, Iowa. TO DEALERS WHO WArf PURE MAPLE SYJRUP which has tho finest flavor in . existence, for their fancy trade . ' and in tho finest package in. the United States writeto : : : : R.E.FRENCH, - - Medina, Ohio and America. The dawn of tho goldon age is at hand. When children grow to maturity without coming in con tact with tho horrid influence of the military toy, nation will not longer war against nation. With these vic ious martial figures removed from the nursery another generation may see the beginning of the thousand years of peace. The league is right. A has le tin soldier! Vive le Noah's ark! Kansas City Star. Real Trouble With British Army. Kipling, the poet of empire and the glorifler of the British army, says of his country's ofllcers that they "are as good as good can. be, because their training begins early, and God has ar ranged that a clean-run youth of the British middle classes shall, in tho matter of backbone, brains and bowels, surpass all other youths." From the exuberant fancy of the romancer turn to the sober testimony of facts. "It has been within the last five years constantly officially reported that at musketry inspection some 70 or 80 per cent of the men did not know the dis tances to which their rifles were sighted on back and dial sights, and that officers and non-commissioned of ficers could not give correct commands for opening fire." This is not the biased opinion ot a foreigner. It is a sentence from an English magazine ar ticle written by Lieutenant Colonel Pennington, formerly in command of the Second Battalion of the Northumb erland Fusiliers the term battalion in England corresponding with regi ment in the United States. Colonel Pennington's ' assertion seems almost incredible, yet it is not probable he has I maliciously and untruthfully held up his brother officers to the derision of military men the world over, or that a magazine so careful of its reputation as the Fortnightly Review would stand sponsor for such an amazing charge unless it had full confidence in the writer. After reading Colonel Penning ton's article it is easier to understand why disaster was reported from South Africa. Two sentences show the utter disorganization that prevails: "Com manding officers of battalions in Eng land are unanimous in stating In gen eral terms that they never see their battalions; and it follows that captains of companies rarely see their comman ders. Under such conditions, to ex pect war efficiency is to expect a mod ern miracle." And this explains in efficient marksmanship: "The cap tains rarely see their companies for in structional purposes except during the limited period of some three weeks when an" official curriculum of exer cises is carried out, and again for a hurried fortnight when musketry is rushed through. A Maurice Low, in Harper's Weekly. Our Claim Against China. The United States is going to make a claim on China for $25,000,000 on ac count of damage to the life and prop erty of citizens of the United States during the recent trbubles in northern .China. This amount, is. much smaller than the European nations will de mand, but it is at least ten times as great as anybody in this country would think of presenting any nation that wa3 not a helpless nation. Wo ven ture to say that for all the damage the United States or Its citizens have suf fered in China, the United States would not dare to demand of any other na tion than China more than $2,500,000 at any rate wo would not dare to en force such a demand. Tho total num ber of officers and enlisted men of our army, killed in China, last year, was thirty-two, and sixty-three other deaths resulted. Tho number of wounded was 177. Thus tho largest possible number on the casualty list is 272. If our government could collect from China $10,000 for each man killed and wounded, tho amount would bo $2,720,000, Tho losses of tho mission aries cannot at the outside bo expand ed into more than $500,000. It is said that tho cost of our expedition must be paid for by China. The truth must bo that $10,000,000 would be an enor mous sum for China to pay us for what happened last year. Fifty millions would bo an ample sum to reimburse all the nations, and yet the prospect is that the Chinese will be asked to pay $500,000,000. Hartford Times. The Income Tax. It is gratifying to know that public opinion is fast crystalizing In favor of an income tax, as one among the most equitable ways in which revonues for the support of the government can be secured. Its adaptation to the needs of local government, as well as to those of the general government, is also becoming generally recognized. Congressman Grosvenor has publicly announced that "there is no fairer or more equitable tax than that which is levied upon profits and the gains of business." That a man with an income of ten thousand dollars a year should go untaxed, while the man with an income of but one thousand should be taxed to the extent of twenty per cent of that income, Is an arrangement that cannot merit the approval of any hon est citizen; still that Is one of the re sults of our present system of taxa tion which we, meet with every day. The democratic party, as a whole, has been advocating the basing a good portion of our tax levy, upon Incomes, for some time back. "Now, with in fluential members of the republican party advocating the same thing, wo may reasonably hope to see it soon adopted in some form. Columbus Press-Post. Municipal Ownership. When Abraham Lincoln pleaded for a government by, of and for the peo ple, it is probable he had no thought of the direct ownership and operation of public utilities by the public; the term, "public utilities," had been lit tle quoted, if any, at that time, and was not so full of meaning as now. The leaven is growing, however, and the increasing popularity of the ques tion of the municipal ownership of street railways, water, light, power and heating plants a step in the di rection of government ownership, is but a following out of the intent of Lincoln's "by, of and for the people." After all, may it not be that Bellamy drew his inspiration from the great commoner, who, in turn, was in truth a desciple of Jefferson. It is with much pleasure that we note the growth of our hobby and the tendency of the democracy to make it a na tional issue. Our other pet measure the issue of all money direct by the government was made a part of the ilatform in the campaign of 1900, and with the growth of public sentiment in favor of both these reforms, we hope to see them the successful Issue of the future. St. Louis Labor Compendium. MAKE Monev nrllincr nur 1IawtIi Sanitary Cooker, latest and hcitcooklttfrtiteitiillivrtnt.i- ed. Sells at sight. One Agent oiu ovoruuoo in one town. Sample Cooker free to good agent. Advertising mutter fur. nlshed. 19 Hlznn mid Styles. American Mm. auua BOX 983. BaLTIMOBE.MD. OflGANIZEHS WANTED SLM?',?. fey, A'S Attn",",!. 8& Tfl I FT Furnished summer cottngo of tea ii . ' rooms with stable, threo minutes walk toocoan rind hotel. ForpartlculnrsaddrcM Mfli?.ym "'" AKi" No "arwIcu Capo Cod? n!"!'! ""led-For fuUlino of fruit nnd or nnmootal treos, rosos e c. New specialties. Best of terms tooithor exporionccd men or bctflnnors. Lawrence Nuraory Company, Lawrcnco, Kan. 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The Portraits of Our Presidents With Biographical Sketches By GEN. CHARLES H. GROSVJ3NOB. Title Page Designed by Tiffany. Till Inaugural yrar, when the public mind U arouafd ctr Preeideaeia' ijurtUom, Ij fllUn; time to lu Grnmi Unrritrtf Uk. In ultUiT rcid utuxadout, a4 will iki tioccd MMottitatttl Qnat'g 1'tnmtX ytttaAn. Eirjr patriotic AmntaAtim tot tAwht Ooml OrwtnKT hta la ofOcor YtlatU,Thvm-uJtt!mM,ADtlTrrJuktvu, Abraham LUeala, I'taMrat MeKlolf J d4 tl Vtt dJf ieutlf r of th oulcn. Ercntolr deilre to tttA LU Oram! Ototitnor, U iUaneti eld maltltaa XttAri lo Ctrnrlll iijof UiJt f Uiineb old donocnt, Anirrw Stektm, U ftthtr ot tU itmacnUt (Art. Gnra Grutrobr Lai tlmnra lata M ikeUii f JuluoaalltLDraod cwtjj cfldl niturt. TT Uojrphj cf Tbamu Jrffmaa U gtioi. Tie Mojnpl'T f LIcctJq li u Leacdfitl M fimrfj trier tl MISUj. UanJ Gmrtnor W ptncaxlW lumn ill UK rMld(iU f Inee lit iLd of J lew Jlucbutu. Tbc QevtnXt tk will tliertfart ccaUln Mitvry .Lltti Iaimtct U( tetn jauUkbeJ. wiluu frvra Ut va nrwiul bbimtloa fcf Um pnt own. Otuttti OioiTtaor hJ Mrrt I to Cagrai for mjjIj tvest? jean, and U Lm kttc4 til country In r Jd Jo Caijrwt for tuxAjtcrtj jttn. T)A UM coouinj twrbtjr-four Urje Itt6rarurc ZuUtt u d ajfc(l I1tu,prlnud Ij litod, on It ITT pUu pifrr uvi t yttUiiy to order. Tkes " Ixotonror Xtchlnx u in diSermt tioU, uA rt well worth tZ taeh. Thtt portnlt, r nud from lh Pslatinji endoned Vf tho Untij ni ua.t nUtlia ofU lrrldU. Two jtn time oda fortuo hiroUcB nfnde.l JnteevrlBX tleM nmAactiiat. The templet took U well wcrtb V), tot tb rl hit been ptwed to Ur tlot the rooit hniab .tmerlean eitben cm own It TL bloxikhleal ikeubet m prlate-l In hrfe open tn In two cclorr; tLe work ! o beautiful tlit wVen people M it t7 wtnt it. The idrane ult U nj Urje. I'retldeot MeElnler u the Unit ruUeilUr. Tter U ixjt eJltloo known M the fretldent Edition de flnnt Lore. iaIUi letter! hand p-UaltJ, 1'ortnlubtnd colored, title pp hand lllamiaahd, rrrirteitd and Bsmbrred rubeerlptlon prW. I-M. Orienr ami apjJIcitioai for lerrilerran muZnf inrpUl A bib claet mm or wonuncf jwlacrlil atandfn; can km mite a fmall fiTU.ce UkbuonVr la any eotaffiuaitj. Ben reference! and apply for (ernu quirk, i lU teirlUwy will all be aeiljurf aooa. Addio The Continental Press, Cutcou Koilmjo, Orroem Ujmu Stitm Taiticar Washington, D. C. i - A