12 THE OMAHA T)A1T.jV BEE: SUNDAY", EB1UTAEY 2o, 1000. NEW SPRING GOODS NOW G WITH A RUSH Moat of our buyera have returned from tho East ho tomorrow wo bIiow and placo on sale for tho ttrat timo in Omaha a mot magnificent lino of Ladies' Suits, Skirts, Waists and Spring Novelties in Silks, Dress Goods, Wash Goods, Linens, Draperies, Etc. not only greatest in quality, but in variety finest in value most beautiful in color newest in design, of any solivtio'i ever soon in the town and what is equally as important The Prices are Very tfinh Below the Actual Value of the Goods Especially Tomorrow $1.00 SILK MOUSSELINE tie SQIE for 29c Yd. 1 This is the grandest lot of goods we have ever placed on, i mi , . . our cuumurs. xuuy come in mo very noweai designs ana mo imwi ncuuuiui puuerns anil siyics ovrr shown. Tocy Include plain colors, ns well us hsindsomo corded, printed nml laco htrlpc effecti In every color nnit tint A I though they enrao In len gths from 2 to 10 yards, there ire- enough of each pattern to matoh to make a complete dress or waist. The nrc goods that would sell In tho regular way ut 75c mid M-00 yJ. Tomorrow only thoy go on sale, for tho first time, on front bargain square at color nnd tint Al- 29c 75c NEW FANCY and PLAIN SILKS al 25c A big lot of all kinds of plain and fancy silks, blnck bro cades, 2-1-inch barege grenadines, L'4-inch figu red ff&iB black grenadines, printed foulards and 22-inch M i-ftP striped talfota, worth up to 7fc, all go in one lot at Wm&h $K00NEW IMPORTED SILKSTaT 39c Over 2.C00 yards black nnd colored silks, satins and Foulards, nil new und stylish niiKH, lunsisuuK 01 ,winrn piain anu pruned i-omarus and Japanese Kllk, ItustllnR Taffeta for llnlngH and waists, now corded Wash Sllka with wttln stripes, fancy two-toned Taffetas und a hlg lot of very fine, black brocades and satins, worth $1.00. All In ono lot At JLBRANDEISaSONS. $1.00 Dress Goods for 25c and 35e Yd. In Monday's offering wo Include 200 pieces new Sprlns IAibrlcs, Silk nnd Wool Nov elty Suitings, all wool l'rcnch do Helge, two-toned Kngllsh Granite clothe, Silk nnd Wool Homan Plaids, extra heavy Scotch inlxturct), whipcords, serges, henrlettas; iiIfo a lino of fit-Inch Twilled Homespuns, the most popular fabric for sklrtn and Jackets, In stylish gray and brown, nnd muny other now weaves that havo been bIkiivu u;i to $1.00 yd. will go In two lots on bargain square, 25c nnd 35c. two an )$fiP Bargain lots feiWo llVb Squares 200 pieces Bilk shot Hengnllno Novelty Suitings, extra wide skirting plaids, new Oxfords and Cambridge cheviots, all wool EJEW habit cloth, new Tartun plaids, Mnrm nDCCC serges, l'ngllsh coverts, Mohair brllllnn UlXfcClS tines, rierinnii Henriettas nnd French fierce. CJOODS n" ,low co'ors, new styles. (!o on special aionuay, at salo 49c $1.50 Bress Goods for 75c Yd. $1.50 IMPORTED SILKS and SATINS at 69c Yd. Over 3,000 yards hlgli grodo Imported bilk and satins, nil silk rich, two-toned I biocuuos, all silk zz-incn ljuchesse, IM-Itich Petticoat TafTeta, very heavy quality In fancy stripes, 3(!-lnch blnck China 611k, Mack and colored Ilciigallncs, new Poplins nnd bclf-corded Taffetas, In all tho latest shades. Worth up to $1.&0 (iO lit A special purchase of new Spring Weaves. Including 45-Inch coatunio 18-Inch Trench pebble granites, 18-Inch Imported Armurea, GO-lnch Herrlngbono cheviots. fiO-lnrh extra heavy sntln Berbers, CO-lnch l'ngllsh Vigoreaux nnd a complete lino of new plnld back golf cloth. Thoso goods are nil tho new 1000 weaves nnd colors, and nro being sold elsewhero at $1.50 yd. Monday they go on special sale at cloth, 75c $2.00 Slack Dress Goods at 93c 3UU $1.50 DRESS and WAIST SILKS at 93c roiorcii dress anu waist siiks lor street una evening wear, cx trrmo novelties In the very latest styles, fancy I'IIhio Taffetas and Satins, satin stripe I'orslan effects, satin Moussellno, poult do sole, crepo finish and satin finish, crepe de chine, Including black and white. Worth $1.50. On sale at j.,' $2.00 Hi 'PORTED BLACK DRESS SILKS at SI 00 Slxty-llvo pieces all Imported black drew silks po on special sale Monday at about half-price. Tbcy Includo 27-Inch Satin Solid, 34-Inch all silk Satin de Lyon, 24-lnch Cyarlno Satin, 24-Inch blnck Peau do Sole, 27-Inch Faille Krancalse, 21-lnch Poult Mervelllo, 22-lnch Sole do Doull, 22-Inch blnck Drocho Taffetas. Those sllka aro positively all from Itonnit & Co., Lyons, Prance, nnd every yard guaranteed. Not a yard worth less than $1.50 nnd $2.00. All nt ono price Monday, yd 100 pieces Imported black Dress Goods, newest woavcn, exclusive designs In Mo hair, cropons. silk and wool Ottoman fancy Mohairs, Jacquards, extra wide sponged I cheviots, French prunella cloth, Kngllsh cravanettu, broadcloth, double-warp Ma- IMF milr Sicilians. Tin ho goods are usu- 1 CB Xrf"! ally 60,11 'or J2-0 yi1' As a" e!ttril apo , dL.CEY clal bargain tho cntlro lot will bo placed JDP'Si on special salo In Black Dress Goods 555, rt-O department UU"U?LSd At Grand Special Linen Sale Never before hold linen. have we offered such bargains in houst Tho regular f0e grade of line oil color turkey red table damask, M 25c yd The 50c grade all linen, linish, half bleached table damask, G2-in. wide, Monday, yd. . Extra Sp3cial in Silk Departmsnt 125 ploces new Poulards, all 24 Inches wide, In the now blues, heliotropes, grays nnd pastel Khades. Wo aro Bhowlng the Uncut collection of hlgh-grado printed satin Foulards, Liberty Foulards, Twilled Foulards, Plain Foulards. Cheney Bros, high m. grauu I'ouiaiMS. 1 no enure 101 go on special saio .Monuay at WWc 75c 85c 98c $l25 SI3S G5c all pure linen cream half bleached table ffr damask, OS inches lff wide, go at ;55o yd . . . w' $1.00 grade 2-yard wide, ; linen, silver bleached If" table damask, j 50o yd tf 2. iO satin damask, bleached, all linen napkins', 09c dozen 50 doy.en 25c knotted fringe towels, go at 10c each All the balance of the lunch cloths from the Detroit wholesale stock go at -PJc each. 81.00 hemmed table cloths, S-S size, on salo at 75c Grand Special Sale Spring Draperies 500 pairs line Derby satin por tieres, lull size and $ new assortment of col ors, worth $3.75 pair,atl in ;ui' 198 !150 pairs,- a mixed lot of high grade, full size portieres, very handsome goods, SfftQQ none worth less JkUO than $5, all go at. , . . ' yi.oo, 49 400 pairs very lino Kep por tieres in all the very latest do- signs and colors, some ot them worth $S. 50 $j nair. all in omt mo ld at SH.08 nair V 198 575 very line tains. Those Irish point would be a cur-bai- $1.25 grade satin damask, full bleached, line Irish goods, for this sale only S5c yd 9 I I 5,000 yds. plaid art i toweling worth 10c, at 2 Ac yd 75 I mm I A I . fca2 I gain at $! pair. Your choice tomorrow at $1.30 , 39 $1.00 grade silver bleached all linen, full size napkins, 75c dozen 75 One lot of turkish and buck towels, 2ic each 1,000 yards 15c buck toweling, SAc yd if 750 very elegant Nottingham ace curtains. J hose are the biggest bargain we havo ever shown, they includo Sffl CQ goods wort h 3. 50, 1 W O all go at $1.98 ES 4 25 in one grand lot, includ ing the finest lish net, notting- ham and imitation brussels I curtains, actual ! value up to $, all , go at $2.98 pair. . . Ill IIRSU1U 298 SPECIAL OPENING SALE OF NEW WASH FABRICS MOST COMPLETE LINE OF WASH COODS IN OMAHA.. Full lino of tho now fonlnrdines, look just llko silk, In tho now bluo and whlto oolorlnps, ut, yd, I5c Coinploto lino of domestic una import ed dimltict", rnnifliitf in iirlco from lOo to 2jo yd. till now rnd dainty pattorna. l)auplilnlo cords In tho now f Fronoli otTcot:), mostdninty wash ISjf: fabric of tho season yard W Full lino of corded piques, i I? all tho now nhndos, I51C yard, at ww All tlm now plain colored IA organdies Ro at IMC yard iww A full lino of llnon HutUto, AP worth up to'oOo and UOc for f Si I thls opoulnK: sulo, yard, at Black dotted Batiste, 32, 30 and 48 inches wide, from, yard, ISc to 59c .Whlto Batiste, a full lino, ranging in prico from, yard, 25c to 60s Black dotted mulls, at, yard. 25c Whlto chitTons, tho only complete asHortmont In Omaha, from, yd. 40c to 70c Black organdy, our own importation, (IS inches wide, yard, at 50c and 75c PoValnn' lawns, a comploto rango of prices from, yard, I9c to 50c Moubsolinos, our own importation, from, yard, I9c to 60c A full lino of India llnon, manufac tured especially for us,go at, yard, IOc,J2ic, 15c, 19c, 25c, 35c Our own brands of long cloth at, 85c, $1.00, $1.35 and $1.80 for a bolt of 12 yards. Th now fabric, whlto foulardino, at 25c, 35c and 50c Yard Whlto dotted swiss. yard, ut 19c, 25c, 29c, 35c and 40c 15c to 50c 50c to $1.50 Plain whlto swlss yard, at I'uro whlto liand-Kori-lilof llnon Iroin.yaril Grand Special Bargains for Monday Only 10,000 yards of short lengths of shirting prints at, yd 18,000 yards dress prints in long mill rem- Q m nants, yd w2u 36-inch fancy drapery swiss, worth 40c, go at, yd 5c 10,000 yds. plaid toweling, worth 10c, go at f) n yd Z2U 1,000 yds. best plain black lawns and percales, worth 20c, go at, yd grade -a 10,000 yds. fancy inch wide percales worth 20c, on bulo at, yd 30- Ono big lot drapery den ims, tickings, etc. f worth up to GOo, go at n P yard Ll3 Great Sale Lace and Embroideries Lnrgo bargnln squnre with many thousand yards of Vnlcncli'iinrs Lice nnd In scrtlon to match, nlco Rood quality, worth up lo Ihc, go In this nalo at Ic, 2c 3c All tho Torchon Lai-o and MiFurtloii, from tho Detroit stck. in nil widths, especi ally lino quality, to be closed out on barKiilu square ut Ic, 3c, 5c All the skirt binding from the Detroit stock, including velveteen and brush binding, regular price 10c, go a I, yd.. All tho medium nnd ldo widths of embroid ery nnd Insertion In Swiss, nainsook und cambric, worth up to r.Oc, ko In lots at 81fi, I2SC, 185 3 5c Iinmcnio bargain In -liMnch plain India linen and lawns at yd 7k 10c, I2ic anil 15c Handkerchiefs 1,000 dozen extra line handkerchiefs, nlain white hemstitched, fancy bor der hemstitch'-d, imported swlss and laco and J Q "l embtoidory edged handkerchiefs, regular prico If JtH 2?H1 JjK upto2.K'. all goonMiloat. ;ach ,w5 MIBli WW Whlto dltnltius, 11 ODin nhitu nssortiiiciit riinR liu; In prico front, yard Ue to 25s; 1 And liuiidrcils uf otlur hurgains in the Itasoiucnt for Mmul.iy only One large bargain stpiaro with ladies' and men's lut.iiory In fast black and tan, made full siuinli'!N i 1 1 1 'ilotib'e ioks and spilcotl hcols, oxtra lino gauge, regular prico up to 2(Jc)alr, at 7k $1.60 Your Choice Tomorrow of 6,000 Pairs Ladies' Fine Shoes on Bargain Sauares All tho shoes made to retail for up to Three Dollars a Pair go at $1.69 All the shoes made to retail for up to Six Dollars a Pair go at SI, 98 wmmm RULING SPIRIT OF THE AGE Progrcst iu Years Past and What tho Future Yet Promises. FIFTY YEARS OF WORK FOR WOMEN StiMiin II. Anthony ltivlt' Prourcnx uf lliv Mm emciit (or Ill-tier-iuit Hie t'timllllnii uf Her hex. "I do not lllto to look backward," writes Susan II,- Anthony in tho New York Inde pendent. "I am only SO and havo not yet reached tho nK where ono should dwell In tho past. 1 lovo the present with Its splen did opportunities for worA, nnd when I havo a moment for reverlo I prefer to dream of tho future with its glorious posslhlllMes. All tho advancement mad a lu tho century Jutit rlosliiK Is but Infinitesimal compared to that which cut i not fall to bo ntado In the. ono now opening out before us. I'roKress Is tho rul ing spirit uf tho iiKC, and lmpelle.l by Its own momentum, It will Inevitably carry us for ward to achievements which, with our pres ent limited vision, we cannot even Imagine. "Hut tho Independent has asked for rent lnlscencc, und I appreciate, that by compar ing tho present with tho past wo get most accurately tho proportions of tho advance, which has been made. At tho beginning of my public work, llfty years ago. llko other women, I wns Interested In a variety of ro forms which I confidently believed we Should soon be nblo to accomplish. With tlio sreat cst zeal I planned Into tlio temperanco move ment. At tnat time tho only organizations of womon tor any purpose wero n few of what wero called Moral, Iteform societies, nnd, in Now York, Ilostou, Philadelphia and jicrhups a few othor cities, anti-slavery so cieties, a sort of auucx to the men's associa tion. Tho temperanco work was nlmost whojly lue llun,,s of men, but women wero beginning to org-nnlzo small bands culled "Daughters' unions." Theso wero violently antagonized by tho masses ot women them selves, who considered them wholly outsldo woman's sphere. They wero actively sup ported In this belief by men, who Insisted that It would take women out of tho homo and disrupt 'jostle "fo. This wns espe cially truo of iho clergy, who. In addition, declared It to he In direct violation of the will of Hod nnd tlio commands of St Paul. "Hut n fow women believed that this work for tho protection of tho liumo was strictly within their proper sphere, and that they had a perfect right to organize and break tho sllenco so" long Imposed upon them. Hut what was their amazement, "when, hav luj? accepted nn invitation to tho men's ti'inpcrance conventions they wero told thnt they 'wore Invited there to listen and learn, not to speak.' Although armed with eiodeutials fruit their own roulettes, they wero refused recognition as delegates, shut out from nil committees nnd, when they tried to plead their own cause, literally howled down with cries of 'Shame, shame!' This happened not only once, hut many times, tho men engaged In It occupying tho highest positions In tho church nnd state. 1 N'o adranced step takm by women has been 'so bitterly contested ns that of speaking j In public. For nuthlng which they havo ' attempted, not oven to securo tho suffrngo, havo they been so abused, condemned and antagonized. In this they wero defying not , only tho prejudice of tho ages, but also , what tho world had been taught was a 'Ulvlno command. This was not becauso they advocated unpopulnr doctrines, but It extended even to conventions of school teachers and to prayer meetings themselves. 'I suffer not a woman to speak In public' This was tho law and tho gospel enforced by man. SiieitUlntC in I'ulilie. ' "Tho battle of woman for this right lias long slnco been won. tihn Is welcomed on J eva-y platform tho length nud breadth of tho land, nnd thero Is not a question which sho Is barred from discussing. Indeed, tho assertion may nlmost bo Justified that tho neoplo find moro enjoyment lu listening to a woman than to a man. Tho temperance question has been virtually handed over to woman. Tho emancipation of tho slave, for which sho pleaded so eloquently nnd sacrificed so much, was accomplished nearly forty years ago. Tho number of women la organizations approximates tlio number of mm ami they nro working with Just as much frith, courage nml m orgy to accomplish their various ob jects. Hut-they are strMng with ono anu In a sling. They nro working without tools, they nro lighting without, weapons, and, as tho Inevitable consequence, the results must lie Inferior to those accomplished by men, full armored nnd equipped. "When I began reform work,, llko nil women who undcrtako It, I expected Im mediate and complete success. I had not tho least realization of tho disadvantages under which women worked. My first lesson was tho denial of my right to speak. Tho second came when I wont beforo tho New York legislature with a petition signed by 2S.O00 women asking for a 'Malno law,' Klght --months of weary tramping up and down tho stato had been spent to secure theso names 1 nnd when It wns under discussion In tho I nssembly ono of tho members hald, con temptuously, 'Who nro the signers of this 'petition? Nobody but women and children!' lit theu camo upon mo with great forco that If women's votes had contributed to his elec tion, nnd If they could defeat him when again a candidate, he would not hnvo treated their I signatures with sneering disrespect. I saw , In a Hash tho secret of woman's powerless- ness, and I resolved then and thorn that my work heucefortb should bo to mnko her nanio worth ns much ns a man's on a peti tion to a legislative body. "With thl one object In view ) cave la bored for nearly llfty years, nlmost without giving tho weight of my name my voice or my ien for any other purpose. I never have wavered for ono Instant In my belief that In tho ballot lies tho supremo source of power. Its possession brings self-respect to tho Individual nnd commands the reaped of others. Hev. O. II. Frotbiughnm said: " 'Tho' a man mny ponaep all the world deems most doslrahlc, and havo not the bal lot, ho Is nuro of nothing, becauso ho lias not tho power to protect that which ho has. On tho other hand, If a man havo nothing and yet possess tho ballot, he has nil things, for he holds tho key with which he may un lock every door.' "It was often said by tho founders of our Kcvcrnment, 'Tho right to vote Ih tho right protective of nil rights.' Can wo over for get that speech of Sumner's on equal rights to nil, In which he declared: " 'To him who lina the ballot all other things Hhall bo given. Tho ballot Is llko tho horn of abundance, out uf which (low rights of every kind. Or, hotter still, It Is llko tho hand ot tho body, without which man, who Is now only a little lower than the angels, must havo continued only a lit tlo nbovo tho brutes. As tho hand lu civil ization, so Is tho ballol In government, (ilvo mo tho ballot and I can rule tho world. "Quotations might bo mado Indefinitely from tho master minds of tho past and tho present on tho value of tho franchise. Although theso magnificent declarations all havo been made In behalf of man, thoy npply with equal force lo 'woman. This knowledge took possession of me, It became tho very fiber of my being, nnd my wlulo soul was absorbed In tho question, 'How can women bo aroused to demand this right of HtitTrago for themselvoB; how can men bo persuaded to the Justlco of granting It to them?' Hut where wns I to nuke a beginning? My llfo had been spent In tho school room. I had almost no acquain tance among prominent persons, and I did not know a dozen men and women In tho wholo stato of New York who shnred my views on this subject. This much, how over, I realized, that somehow this gospel must bo carried to tho people. "So, with my Quaker father to map out tho route, nnd with $."0 which Wendell Phil lips lent mo mitt never allowed me to ro pay, I Btartetl out nlono on Christmas clay, 185!, to canvass the stato of Now York, county by county. I carried with mo two potltUns, ono for tho franchise, and onn asking for women the right to their wages nnd equal guardianship of their children. I tool: nlso u little pamphlet containing speeches of Phllllrs. Hlgglnsim, Theodore Pnrkcr, Clarlnda Howard Nichols anil Mrs. John Stuurt Mill, on woman's rights, which sold for a 'York shilling.' 12'i cents. With tho salo of tin so and collections I hoped to pay my expenses. I opened In tho court hoiiho st Mayville. N. Y., purchasing HO cents worth of candles to light It. 1 lin Islad tho eimvass at Hlverhead, 1ong Is land. Mny 1, having1 spoken In fifty-four of tho sixty counties, stopping tnly long enough to carry tho petitions to tho legis lature. It wns ono of tho coldest and snowiest ot winters ami clinch of tho' Jour ney was inudo In a sleigh. My first effort In each placo was to get tho court houso. If this was refuted I tried for a church. When this wns not possible I look n siiool house, und If all wero denied 1 spoke In tho dining room of the hotel. My placards wero put up lu tho postoltlro, und people came out of curiosity, ns thoy never had heard a woman speak. The audiences wero respectful, although wry told, with a half supprissed sneer, nnd sn ulr of expecting something lo call out tlulr ildlculo or dis approval, but, at tho close, a few would como up, sign tho petitions nnd speak a friendly word of sympathy. I nonictlmis formed a little society and nl ways secured tho names of a fow pet,plo who stood (inn through all tho stress and storm whU:i followed. "I continued this canvass for six years, assisted at Intervals by I'rncstliio 1,. Itn'o, Antoinette Drown lllack well, Matilda Jus lyu Ciugo and a few otlurs whoso uamts aro not so well known. I had also the iou.i sel nud help of llcv. Samuel J. May, Judge William Hay und Hev William II Chnn nlng. And tbcu, of course, I always could depend upui Hllznbeih f'ady Stanton for a grand argument bifore the legiahituro, nml j for those petitions, leullotti, memorials and I other stnto documents which only her gifted pen could write. In 1SCU tho New York I legislature patted tho married woman's j properly act, maiding the wife lo collect I her wages, have equal guardianship of ehil- dren, nnd ut the death of tho husband without a will to have entire control of tho property nnd tho children. ( ."nr Untie, "The women felt amply repaid for ull their tlmo nnd labor, their hardships and social ostracism, which were fur beyond what I , shall attempt to describe. The great civil wnr breaking' out soon afterward, thoy eon .secrated their efforts to tho duties which ill brought. In Im;:. while they were on guai (I, the IcklHl.itiiro repealed practically all of theso dearly bought laws! Until Ihrt closo of tlio war I put asldo till else and gavo my servL-es, freely and willingly, to help secure the emancipation of the klave. When this was accomplished nnd tho war wa ended, we tunic 1 our attention oni-e moro to tho obtaining of freedom for our selves. "In the reconstruction of the government tho futirlceiilli nud fifteenth amend' new, .protecting the negro In his right to vote, I overshadowed nil olso In public Interest. The I proposition to count out the negroes from 'tlio basin of lepresoutatlon tf a state unless 'tlio men were pe. milted to vote, uioiuod the Indignation uf tho Kttlfrngo advocates, be eniiio for tho first time li mado tlio federal cnnmltiillon n-ngul7 tho right of a stale In 'disfranchise Its women. We demanded that the word 'male' should bo utrurk out of the fourteenth amendment before It was sub mitted to tho states. We demanded also thnt the woul 'sex' bo added i 'race, color or previous condition of set vltude.' In the fif teenth. This battle was waged for five I year1, ami. nt the end of th! time, Mrs. Stanton and myself were left almost ulonc In our persistent demand wilt li we never abated, that when tho door lo enfranchise ment win opened to negroes It also should ' admit women. j I'ollllviil I M in 1 1 lit Ion. I "Wo were defeated, and In 1S70 had tho bitter humiliation of seeing every class of I men In tho United States, native-born or 1 naturalized, created our political superiors, while we were relegated to tho piano of Idljtfl. lunatics nml criminals, li was only a short time until Hie plantation negroes .vere looking us lu the fine and telling us thai women did not know enough to vote; Just ns the Huns and I'olis, tho Itullnu I Mages' nud the miiunillzed nuns of Russlu havo been doing ever since. , '"very iin tiding decade has beheld a I larger nnd larger ratio of women Joining tlio ! ranks of the educated, tho Wealthy jind lh lolstire classes, and has seen them utllUIng I till" education, tills wealth, this lelHtire, nil I their plrtulid powers, in the Improvement I of social conditions anil the uplifting of hu i inanity. During every one of these years ! the women of every state haw petitioned tin lr legislatures to confer upon them tho franchise, which would Infinitely facilitate i their wcrk. And all these slate have peti tioned every emigre!,, during this time, to ladd a sixteenth amemlmoiit to the federal constitution, which shall enable women to excrclso their right to vote. Within llieso j three decades tho full surfrnge litis been 'granted In four states, but in thirteen differ ent elections li has bean voted down. In nine of theso campaigns I personally can vassed tho states and gave from two to ten : months of the most exacting labor, i "In looking back over tho last llfty years 1 sco many gains which havo como to women (-Indeed, a complete revolution lu tlirlr mutus and condition. Hut in looking for ward I nsk myself this question: 'How long must tho grontfrit bruins, tho most com- mamllng ability of the women of this couu r continue to bo ubsorbed In this strugglo it- st -nro their own freedom, tho power to do their work which tho nation needs and , which walls for them.' "