Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, September 12, 1912, Page 6, Image 6

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THE BEE: OMAHA, .THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1912.
... A
l'HF. OMAHA ' DAILY BEE
FOUNDED BT EDWARD ROSE WATER
VICTOR ROSEWATER. EDITOR
BE3 BUILDING, FARNAM AND 17TH.
Entered at Omaha Postoffice, as second
class matter.
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I Address all complaints or Irregularities
,in delivery to City Circulation Dept.
f REMITTANCES.
' Remit by draft, express or postal order,
payable to The Bee Publishing company.
Only 2-cer.t stamps received in payment
of small accounts. Personal checks, ex
cept on Omaha and eastern exchange, not
' accepted. .
jH OFFICES.
f Omaha The Bee building.
S South Omaha-2318 N 8t
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Uncom-M Little building.
I Chicago 1041 Marquette building. .
I Kansas City-Reliance building.
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f" CORRESPONDENCE.
I Communications relating to news and
editorial matter should be addressee
fcOmaha Bee. Editorial Department.
AUGUST CIRCULATION.
50,229
Btate of Nebraska. County of Douglas, ss;
k Dwight Williams, circulation manager
fof The Be Publishing company, being
2duly sworn, says that the average daily
circulation for the month of August, 1912,
Was 50.23. DWIOHT WILLIAMS,
fc ' Circulation Manager.
S Subscribed In my presence and sworn
ho before me this 2d day of Wwlwr,
KlfflZ ROBERT HUNTER.
Hseai) Ndtary Puhlia.
, - -
SnhscrllM-rs leaving the "itr
y temporarily should have The
I Be mailed to them. Address
tefll be changed as He requested.
g , At that vt must give the weather
man credit for trying to wipe out
Hhe deficiency in rainfall.' t .;'
S Maybe Madera will be able to han
Cdle the Mexican situation alone, now
ethat he has seemingly waked Up
w it.
; For some unexplained reason re-
turn from Maine, didn't inspire the
1 bull moose even to the ejaculation
'of "Bully, by Georget"
Now that the "all-year-round"
j coach has arrived, Omaha's High
T school seems to be equipped with
' sjbout everything except an instruc
tor In aviation. V
' ; Some days maybe even the farm-
ers of Missouri will learn not to bite
'when a well dressed stranger offers
: to let them la on a horse race bet
'that It sure to win, '
. Still, it is possible to favor build
j lag a sew state house, and at the
' same time leave it open as to
whether it shall be built la Lincoln
jbr in some other town. ;
t '. All the later primaries' In the dif
ferent states represent very light
y votes. people had a surfeit of
1 p'dmarlea in the spring, and have
evidently tired of them. -
Denver's grand Jury has Just re
turned indictments against forty-lx
i city and county officials in connec
tion ' with a ? "red .," light" inquiry,
which will really put that city in the
"metropolitan" class.
The recall is among the constitu
tional amendments defeated In
Arkansas, which only goes .to show
how "progressive" the democrats
are in the south' where they have
things all their own way. y '
,, , Governor Wilson is very solicitous
concerning the inland waterways of
!itta United States, but the late demo
,.ratlc congress , could only see
JZot)l" In the proposition for Im
provement of the rivers of the coun
try. " V '. ' :
Nearly 17,000 children already en
rolled in the Omaha public schools,
being an increase of 5 per cent over
last year. a The population of school
age cannot well increase without
.tome increase in the population of
the city as well. 1 ' ,-; " ' ...
i , The death in London of Ne-
: braska's most noted prima donna Is
s to be regretted, for the silence of
such a voice is always a loss. But
, the state still has its sweet singers.
I whose vocal charms are part of the
; Joy of living in the corn belt.
No one hereabouts except W. J.
, Broateh and George W. Norris have
, sufficiently acute moral sensibilities
to defend the flagrant hishonesty of
:-Rocevelt electors in Nebraska steal
ing the republican label to prevent
; anyone from having a chance to cast
la vote for Taft. - '
Dishonesty Heeds Excuses." '
Men knowingly engaged in dis
honest practices are always hunting
for excuses.'
When a candidate seeking votes
for a responsible position of honor
and trust as the nominee of a party
in the same breath disloyally re
pudiates the national standard bear
ers of his party, he naturally feels
that . explanations ' are due and
grasps at any flimsy pretext within
reach. The repetition of the charge
that President Taft is not the duly
chosen nominee of the republican
party and that no republican is
under any moral obligation to sup
port him, may ease a' person's con
science, but it does not change the
record nor give a shadow pf sub
stance to any claim that Roosevelt
had, or should have had, a majority
of the rightful delegates In the con
vention. . The patriotism of the
country is not all in the keeping of
one person, and his followers, nor
will any intelligent person believe
that all the delegates at Chicago fa
voring the colonel were pure
minded, self-sacrificing philanthro
pists, and all those favoring Taft
were black-bearteQ rascals and
knaves.
Everybody's Magazine will hardly
be accused of being biased toward
the president or prejudiced against
the colonel, it being well known as
one of the vehicles of the muck-rake
brigade that stirred up the ground
of so-called reform. Yet in its re
view of the conventions it refrains
from crying "fraud" or denouncing
folks as "thieves." On the contrary
It says: .
Speaking of this year, we rest on the
assurance of a man who has seen a good
many conventions In the past and three
this summer. There were sordid poli
ticians, shady influences, and insincere
attitudes .in all the conventions. There
were trades . and compromises, . selfish,
men voicing lofty sentiments, and adroit
men thinking morel of the effect plat
form utterances Would have than of the
underlying truth in them. :
With all this dilution of human weak
ness the conventions-all of thenvwere
made up mostly of good American citi
zens, who want fair play for themselves
and every one else, who love their coun
try and want to see it honest, prosperous
and peaceful. They may be fooled softie-
times. But In the mass they are not to
be distrusted, even In national politics.
Uot the Eight Season. '
Few - women - voted,, many explaining
that the ballot was too complicated.
Press report of the Colorado primary.
Now, without entering into tne
merits or demerits of suffrage, we
protest in the name of the women
against this preposterous reflection
upon the sex. ,
It is not as if this were the first
trial,' or an experiment in Colorado,
for the women have teen voting
there for years, and are as adept as
the men at manipulating naiiots, no
matter how long or how confusing.
' How, then, could a ballot witb
which the men have successfully
grappled be too complicated for the
women?' ''. ' ' '
. No; no! There must be some other
reason,
Rigid Quarantine for the Scourge.
Undue excitement will not allay
the malady raging among horses In
southwestern Nebraska and adjoin
lnn states, but the' utmost diligence
and scientific treatment will. ' The
federal and state authorities are both
at work iu earnest to discover the
nature, cause and cure' of the epi
demic. In this there should be ab
solute harmony and co-pperatlon.
If the disease has killed 6,000 horses
in a month in Kansas, that is all the
warning necessary. The governor
of Kansas has offered $l,00d for a
cure. Veterinarians and live stock
men are searching for it, but in the
meantime the dispatching by the fed
eral authorities of , experts to Ne
braska and Kansas' to lead in ' the
fight for relief is timely, i
In this, as in the case of other con
tagious epidemics,, rigid quarantine'
should be adhered to. , Where so
little is still known of a disease as
to prevent ; satisfactory diagnosis,
quarantine is. regarded as the first
requisite in order to cut off commu
nication between affected and un
affected subjects. Strangely enough,
this malady among horses seems to
be spinal, resembling infantile par
alysis. It would be a great thing it
the afflicted horses should give us
the preventive or cure for the human
ailment, v. v
' Regulation of street signs will not
bet objected to, but why stop there,
jwhea the bill boards are" growing
'more rapidly than any other feature
'of the landscape. If we are to have
ta city beautiful, why not get rid of
Uhe most generally condemned cause
Df disfigurement?
The redoubtable "Bill". Dech
breaks into print again to declare
tLat "a majority of our statesmen
for the past fifty years have been
the greatest, criminals that the na
tions holds." Well, we certainly
must have been In a bad way to
have showered eminence and honor
upon "criminals" in the belief that
they were "statesmen. Be a little
more specific, "Bill,' and give us
the names of the "statesmen" who
are not criminals so we may erect
suitable monuments to them.
Building a New, State House..
The action of the executive com
mlttee of the Omaha Commercial
club in declaring for a new capltol
building at Lincoln Is but the re
statement of a need that h&s beeQ
apparent for a long time. The pres
ent structure is open to about all the
objections tnat mignt oe loaged
against a public building. It is an
tiquated and unsafe as the storehouse
of the state's archives. It does not
contain sufficient room to properly
house the officials of the state. Each
day it continues is one of danger to
the lives of its occupants and to the
priceless records of the state.
r The limitation placed by the con
stitution on the indebtedness of the
state will preclude.the issue of bonds,
but some other y satisfactory and
feasible plan for meeting the cost of
a new capitol building ought to be
worked out by the next legislature.
The state of Nebraska Is sufficiently
wealthy to be able to afford adequate
charters for Its government '
sept. ia
Thirty Years Ago
The opening meeting of the American
Suffrage nasoctaUdn at the Baptist
church was called to order by Hon. E.
M. Correll. The add res 'of welcome was
delivered by Rev. W. S. Copeland of the
Unitarian churcn.
The second day 6t, the State talr was
blessed with pleasant weather and the
races are the chief amusement feature.
County Clerk John Baumer has a bill
for S1.1S2 which the state asks from Doug
las ctounty for raring for thirty -even In
sane patients in the state asylum.
Klectrie light has been ?ut In at , the
Paxton.
John Dillon hi playing "State's At
torney" at Boyd's. ' v
Mr. Everett Buckingham has "been ap
pointed car accountant for the Union
Pacific vice F, A. Nash, resigned. Mr
Buckingham came to Omaha from St.
Joseph and was chief clerk "under Mr,.
Nash.
The contract for furnishing all the milk
on the fair grounds was let to Louis
Littlefield of Saratoga -precinct
Miss Mary Wlllmaser, daughter of Mrs.
Clara Wlllmaster, the well known music
teacher, left for the female seminary at
Rockford, 111. ' -
Hoyt Sherman, "Jr., general traveling
passenger agent of the Union Pacific, is
in town. ;
Susan B. Anthony is at tha Millard. j
Mrs. 3. A. Wakefield has gone to St
Joseph on a visit of several weeks.
A. Cruiokshank returned from New
lork and Boston where h brought
enormous stock of dry Coods and no
tions. ,., , ,
New officers of the Concordia society
are Georg F. Stratman, president; Julius
Meyer, vice president; 3. P. Lund, core
tary; George Frttcbw, treasurer; W.
Boehl, librarian; J. C. 'ft'ldmers, standard
bearer; T. H. Slnhdld and H. BJchter,
assistant standard bearer.
Twenty Years Ago
Judge A. M. Post f the supreme court
was in the city, ni said from wht he
gathered In the Slate, the republ cans wr
much Bctronger than they had been. ;
Hon. X ,1V, love, former Consul to San
Salvador, spent the day JB Omaha.
Dwight and tA Swob, Burt Raymond
and Master Hurst left for their school
at Faribault, Minn.
Thomas Kihmtrtck and fa
from Europe, "where" they bad teen for
hre . months They visited England,
Scotland and nearly all parts df the con-
tment. ' . .'.
Mayor Bemis approved the ordinance for
paving Twenty-second street from Lea v.
enworth to lb gbvsmmetft jfreUfht dt
with Colorado sandstone. '
Ten Years Ago
John Kelkinny received a telegram
from Denver announdn th death there
of "W. W. Thompson, an old-time
Orhnhan.
Motdecai Brown, riftchm fof fh
held Kansas City to four lifts and one
run, while Omaha w&llbPbed Gibson and
Cable for nineteen hits, piling up twehty-
iwo Tims, ,
A scene of Bloodless earnags, Ifut many
deafening detonations, was enacted by
"The Jamea Boys in Missouri; at the
Boyd to the delectation of the "la
audience that has aestfmbled In the the
ater this season-
Charles G. Dawes, who
comptroller of the currency to make a
fight for senator from Illinois, spent th
day In (ha olfy. ehrout to his old home
In Lincoln for a visit
Eighteen Of the twenfy-two director. r
the Auditorium company held a anirtrd
meeting. They were dissatisfied with the
progress in tne sale of the com
mon stock or the combany. Job Reran
Rj-an, a local newsp&rKr man. atraie(f
some definite Ideas on how iis enter
prise should be conducted so pungently
as to land the Job as manaaer of tha
enterprise, .with Instructions to put his
ideas into effect at once. Mr. Nettle-
ton of Kansaa City. Who naA Wii
brought hera to run the thing, tendered
nis resignation, whloh Was not accepted.
i no u, E. Ford residence at asth anH
Farnam streets, was sold to Edward Up
dike, president of the Updike Grain com
pany and also of the Harvard State
bank at Harvard, Neb., for $36000.
People Talked About
Chauncey M, Depew is on the way home
from Europ to testify fh the oil can
Investigation and plunge into the cam
paign. - r -
Uncle Jod Cannon'svWshfriton llmou-
Mne. which originally cot $6,500 was auc
tioned off for $680 the other day, Tha
Danville na prefers the simple life
when a campaign Is en.
Out Of S.000,000,006 telephone calls In
all the world In 1m, U5o0,0oo,ooo were in
tne united States. The, figures showing
the number of billions of stena saved.
or the billions of , nervous Units expended
in enjoying this convenience would be
Interesting. ; .
Acoordjng to the surgeons who cut inte
the collection, the Chicago man's ape
Ute for pocketknlves. old screw, silver
coins, ancteht stories and similar dessert,
stopped short at the 1913 model platforms,
there appears to be a limit to the human
swallow. '
Any rat that tries to carry the bubonic
plague from a ship to shore by running
In on the hawser now finds a polished
disc of steel about half way along the
lane of rope. He slips every time he
tries to get over it. Science has called
Into play the farmer's Idea, shown, in
turning a pan over the foundation posts
of a corn crib and the Chinaman's scheme
by placln? the legs of his bed In bowls of
kerosene. ; ,,..;
Municipal ownership as4 conducted in
some branches of Now York City's gov
ernment te a 1uicy peftflh. During the
last seven years the municipal ferries
touched the taxpayers for a total deficit
of J7.0M.00. A boat In privately owned
ferries doing similar work costs SI.S30 a
month. A city beat costs S,iS0
months The first is operated by a crew
of twenty-four men, the tatter by sixty
three parsons.
Olg Constantlnova. grand duchess of
Russia .and Queen of Greece, is without
doubt the most queenly woman in Europe,
both physically and otherwise. Straight
and tall as a lance, her shapely head
crowned by a mass of hair fine aa silk,
she possesses a forceful charm not often
to be met with. Her figure, broad
shouldered and , slender-watsted, is per
fect, and her magnificent, deep-set eyes
have only one faulth that of being too
sad '.'..
THE M0EAL ISSUE
By Hon. Albert J. Coraish, .
Cedge of the Dlstriot Court, Lincoln, Van.
15 THREE PAETS PAET TO. .
In his Columbus speech, Mr. Roosevelt
announced his advocacy of the initiative,
referendum and recall. This was the
basks plank of the populist party, in
none of his previous campaigns had he
uttered a word In Its favor. It has been
popularised , by La Follette and Bryan.
It has been adopted in many western
states by the vote of members of all parr
ties, and was growing in favor. Mr.
Roosevelt's tardy conversion Is, there
fore, subject to suspicion. - A strong sen
timent developed in the east among busi
ness men who feared thaty the recall of
Judges would destroy' the Independence
and integrity of the courts. The Union
League club of New fork, of which Mr,
Roosevelt was a member, was one of the
many organizations that denounced It.
His defeat in the New York primaries
was largely due to this Influence.
Thereupon, Mr. Roosevelt's campaign
committee In New York sent out a cir
cular letter stating that the recall of
judges applied solely to states, and had
no application to the federal courts.
In. other words, Mr. Roosevelt favored
the recall of judges in the states like
Nebraska, Where Judges are elected for
four year terms, and permitted his cam
paign committee to pledge him not to ap
ply it to the federal judges appointed for
life.
This further JusUfies the suspicion that
.political expediency rather than deeb- i
seated conviction brought about his con- !
version. j
WeH t BMlatons.
Mr. Roosesvelfs original amendment to
the "recall of judges," is a "recall of de
cisions"' means of reversing the Judg
ment of courts without ealllng into ques
tion the integrity of the judge. : It re
mind, one of Sheridan's words, "Stea'7
To e sura they will, and serve your best
thoughts as gypsies do stolen chlldreh
dlsfigwe them to make them pass for
their own." No leading advocate of the
"recall" baa adopted the amendment.
The strength of democracy consists ft
the fact that the people, whatever may
be their fitness to discuss abstract ques
tions of law, are the best Judges of the
Integrity, sympathy and temperament of
the itaen ehoneri as their servants. Even
a child Intuitive distinguishes between
those who Wve him nd those who don't.
The amendment by Roosevelt Would per
mit eortstituflohal provisions to be
amended piecemeal under the Influence of
passion, prejudice and personal Interest
to meet the exigencies of some particular
case, instead of being uniform, broad and
general In thetr application. The aniend
iWMit which Mr. Roosevelt has engrafted
On the Inltlattve, referendum and recall
weakens those democratic measures in
ever? State Where they have not already
been adopted and must be considered At
designed for that purpose or else illus
tratrve of aft egotism that will approve
of adfhmg that he cannot brand as his
eWh erewtron.
Ballot for Women.
Mr. Roosevelt's IhOBt enthusiastic sup
porters today are Women. They seem to
rorget tnat th ballot had been extended
to women In si states whose eleotoral
vote was much needed before, Mr. Roose
velt extended to them any encouragement
He bid made himself conspicuous by r.
peating the advice of Napoleon that the
woman was most useful to the state who
Woutff fear the rhdst ; chfldreir for his
armies, ' $ - ft . , -4
When, preparatory fa the present Cam
paign, he put out a bait for. the support
of women In the states where they' could
vote, he doubled his tracks 'so that he
could appear to toe. moving In efther di
rection. He said, In substance, that th
good which sortie promised and the evfl
which some feared from the enfranchise,
ment of women had not taken place. On
the whole, he considered an Improve
ment. He believed that U should be
left to a ballot of women themselves, In
Which every women who did not vote
Should be counted as votfng "No." As a
practical' politician, he knew well that It
Js almost impossible to get more than
per Cent to 70 per cent of the voters
to the polls on an Issue of this kind. His
scheme, therefore, would permit a Small
percentage of the women to defeat the
measure. He pointed out to the op
ponents of woman suffrage in states
where they had not the ballot an easy,
plausible, deceptive, tricky way of de
featlng it under , the appearance of
chivalry and nonconcern. . '
As one who actively I favored woman
suffrage when the amendment to the con
stlrot'on Was presented to the people of
Nebraska, I think I am In a position to
Counsel the advocates of woman suffrage
that their success Jn six states will very
speedily bHng the ballot in all the
States, and that they cannot afford to
BTrtagonia their friends in all parties by
selecting One party for their support.
Their enthusiasm for Mr. Roosevelt
cripples tholr cause by Justifying the
charge that women fere by nature
emotional and excitable rather than rea
scnin. , I believe the state needs the
greater refinement f feeling, the higher
rnoral purposes, and more delicate, sense
of honor which Characterise women, and
that these virtue" should find expression
5n the ballot, but for that very reason
the Women in this campaign should have
pois. They should recognise that that
1" not the issue In this election. They
should manifest their peculiar fitness for'
the ballot by rebuking time-servmg. politi
cs aeception and demogogery. They
should show their opposition to' animal
killing, man killing and border ruffian
htm In manners and speech. By so doing
only In this campaign can they advance
their cause with thinking men.
Roosevelt mnd Lincoln. ....
It is said that Lincoln Is the only
president beside himself of whom Roose
velt has spoken praise. He frequently
quotes from Lincoln, and especially the
phrase that this shall be a "Govern
ment of the people, by the people and for
the people." In his Guildhall speech in
London he egotistically and imprudently
rebuked the English government for its
attempt V establish local self-govern-ment
in Egypt As an expreeident and
most honored tlvitig exponent of this
"government of the people, by the
people arid for the people," he said that
all people were not fit for self-government,
: and the Egyptians should he
ruled with s stronger haad. . Considering
who was spesAfbg, and where he spoke,
he blasphemed the highest Ideals of the
American people. ''
HesMvelt aad the Negro,
It is not surprising, therefore, that he
should tell the black population of the
south that they could have no voice in
his convention, and that white suprem
acy In the south must be recognised, it
the northern negro has progressed, as
Mr. Roosevelt stated In flattering
SMILING KEMASKS.
phrase, and the southern negro has not
progressed, an honest follower of LlncOttti
should Inquire what the. difference has
been in the environment that has re
sulted in such unequal growth. If the
only difference has been the recognition
of a negro's rights in one place and the
denial of them . In another, a fearless
champion of right should strenuously
undertake to remedy the ' wrong, Or
cease to pose as a second Lincoln.
The problem In the south is not sim
ply a race question. It is also a labor
question. Should the negroes be counted
in fixing representation given to the
southern states in congress, if they are
not permitted to vote? ft so happens
that the laboring population in the -south
is the, colored population In the south.
When 'these men are disfranchised by
reason of their color, the great major
ity at ssjuthern laborers are made unable
to express their choice for congressmen,
senators and presidential electors. It
amounts to a discrimination against the
laboring population, not ' Ohly1 "In the
south but In the north. They have" not
equal representation m the making of
laws. If Mr. Roosevelt was incef In
believing that ft was best for the col
ored people to be deprived of the ballot
In' the southern states, he should follow
It up by advocating the enforcement of
that provision in the constitution of the
United States, adopted to meet just this
condition, providing that the representa
tion In the southern states in ongress
be reduoed in like manner. .: Otherwise,
he not only condemns a helpless race and
nullifies the results of a disastrous war,
but also betrays the laborers every
where who look to hlra for leadership.
"Oh," his admirers say, "he Is only rec
ognizing existing facts and making con
cessions that concede nothing, as a
means cf disrupting the democratic
party." A cunning politician, indeed!
As a matter of fact, be is conceding the
principle that animated Lincoln and tb
soldiers of the civil war for personal,
partisan gain.
For the purpose of his own campaign
for a third term, he is conceding the one
thing which is the great fault of the
democratic party, . and makes a large
number of republican distrust any per
manent reform eomlnf through that
pifrty while it Is dominated by a section
that refuses the ha'ilot to a "majority of
-Its laborers stnd deprives the people of
a race of equality before the law. It 1s
because of this lacK of eonfldece In the
dominating majority of the democratic
party that many 'republicans today are
seeking to protect their organization as
the party that stands fdr freedbm and
for labor against the ungrateful end
shameless betrayal of Mr. Rooservelt.
Roosevelt and War. . ' r:
Mr. Rotfseve'lt Claims to be the world's
greatest promoter of peace amongst na
tions, illustrated by his part In promot
ing peace between Russia and Japan. HIS
method of securing peace amongst ha
tlohs Is to have a larger navy and army.
He points with pride to the trip of out
navy around the "World,, and Imbues an
imaginative public, hot yet far enough
advanced from the militant state ,of so
ciety of the middle ages, with' a desire
for a Still larger navy and army. It Is a
strange fact that there never was a war
waged except as" claimed -by the parties)
to preserve peace. There never wasi a
large military organisation that tended
to prevent War except Indirectly by Im
poverishing the people. '
His Influence secured the defeat of the
peace treaties, the greatest step thus far
proposed toward the Intelligent arbitra
tion of controversies between ,' nations.
HIS statement that a nation ' or a man
could not arbitrate a question of honor,
implying that a question of morals and
right action could be settled more justly
by an appeal to brue force than to hu
man reason, fe a return to a militant
state of society and will assist to pro
long the period of barbaric man-killing
called "war." If it be true, as some
times stated, that his objection to the
peace treaties is based upon his unwill
ingness to submit to arbitration the al
leged grievances of the government of
Colombia, his motives are most blame
worthy.' Tf there is any government With
whom we should be willing to arbitrate
controversies, it should be the little,
helpless governments. Otherwise we be
have like a bully amongst nations. We
hope thatyilr. Roosevelt did ' not usurp
any power or commit any wrong in the
acquisition of the Panama territory, but
if in a hearing before an intelligent and
Just tribunal it should develop that he
did, the American people would rather
pay for the canal tone again, and again,
and again than to be ourselves a po
sition where when good people all over
the world are praynig for arbitration
as a means of preventing the Inhumani
ties of war, we cannot say "Amenll
As an Example to the Young.
Mr. Roosevelfs animal killing expedi
tions; prise fight language; flippant talk
about bloody Incidents; glorification ' of
war; swaggering bravado; all tend to
develop the cruel barbaric and , warlike
passions In every boy of our land. "I
feel like a bull moose-the expression
that has given the. name to his party
"Hello, you old wolf," "My hat Is in th
ring," are recent, expressions of thU
Harvard graduate and man of letters,
evidently a stage play, indicating a belief
that the people of the west prefer coarse
ness to refinement. Indirectly, they ap
peal to .every boy from 12 to 15, to eradi
cate Which will cost his mother many a
weary hour. The story of Washington
and the cherry tree may be a myth, but
It has served to Impress a noble lesson
upon many a boy. the character : ot
Washington stands out greater as time
goes by. His example has been an in
spiration to all peopie. His memory Is
one of the greatest wsets of the Ameri
can people. .. .'. ' " ' .- "
Mr. Roosevelt's unbounded egotism; his
habitual, adoption of tha rule that thej
end Justifies the means; h's political
duplicity and demagoguery; hts failure to
sustain himself with evidence' In the
numerous questions of vehwlty that, K
has raised; his greed for glory; his desire
to be, the first third-term president, re
gardless of the useful precedent he there
by destroys; all mark him as an un
fortunate example to the 'young, unless
there is a moral uprising of the people
that will make him an object lesson to be
avoided. This Is the moral Issue today.
Jack, having accomplished his mission,
was about to descend the beanstalk.
"Isn't that. Tather a flimsy ladder?''
they asked him.
"Suits me," said ' lack, "clear down to
the ground. ""Chicago Tribune.
"How harmonious are some coinci
dences!" . .. ' ,
"Such as what?"
"Didn't you notice that with the de
crease of the lobster supply came a
chorus girl famine?" Baltimore Amer
ican. f ,. . y , . '., : t ;
She It must be a hard blow to a than
to be rejected by a woman.
He 'Indeed, it must.
She Do you know, I don't thmfc t
could ever have the heart to do It Hart
ford Times.
"How Were the young men at the sea
aide, Elsie?" -
"The tamest bunch you ever saw. Hon
est, this Is the first year I haven't let
somebody teach me to swlm'-Olevelahd
Plain Dealer. ; ,
"Are you going home to mend your
fences?" -. . . -
"Not this year." replied the statesman.
"I'm going home this time to get on the
Inside before the hated npposition suc
ceeds in surrounding my . district With
barbed wire." Washington Star.
"Pretty women campaign in England."
"As to how?" - .
"Giving kisses for votes." . v -"Um.
I must admit England is ahead
of us in some things." Chicago Post. .
"Our host hasn't yet said a thing
which had a punch in it."
"Oh, ys he has. He said a while ago
that the bowl was In the -next room and
to go help eureelves." Boston Trans-'
crlpt- ' , '..v , ..:
"A doctor can't make 'his money hon
estly." ,
"Why can't he?" ' r. ':'.,
"If it is made off 'sickness then Isn't
It Ill-gotten gain?" Baltimore American
"Do Vou remember how as children we
used to sing 'I Want to Be an Angel? "
.O-... M
"Yes." replied Dustin to, "but after
they had persuaded me to be 'angel' for
several theatrical ventures and a po
litical candidate. I selected . another
hymn." Washington Star.
"She has every confidence in her hus
band." ,' . .
"That so?"
"Yes, oven When she is riding with him
in their auto and he Is diving she doesn't
think it necessary to warn him to be
careful." Detroit Free Press.
CEEEPEfS OT THE SIAIES.
Author Unknown.
In the softly fading twilight ;
Of a weary, weary day, .
With a quiet step 1 entered
Where the children were at play;
I Was brooding 'O'er some trouble ,
Which had met me unawares, ...
When a littlo voice came ringin, '
"M is creeping up the stair.: .!
Ah, it touched the tenderest heart-strings
With a breath and force divine,
And Such melodies awakened
As no wording can define.
And I turned to see our darling.
All forgetful of my cares,
When I saw. the little creature
Slowly creeping up the Stairs.
Step by step she bravely clambered .
On her little hands and kneesA .
Keeping up a constant chattering,
Like a magpie in the trees, '
Till at lat she reached the topmost ,
IWhen o'er all her world's affairs '
She delightfully stood a victor
After creeping up the stairs. '
Fainting heart, behold an Image
Of -man's brief and struggling life,
Whose best prizes must be captured
With a noble, earnest strife;
Onward, upward reaching ever,
Bending to the weight of eares,
Hoping, fearing, still expecting,
.We go creeping up the stairs.
On their steps may be no carpet, 1
By their side may be no rail; '-,
Hands and knees may often pain us.
And the heart may almost fall;
Still above there is the glory, - ' .
Which no sinfulness impairs, ' .
With Its joy and Test forever.
After creeping tip the stairs.
T
8 FULTON ST., NEW YORK ;
July 17, lea.
, RediwlChm,., Co Baltfrn v' ;
ftEV?' "at at my age I would hatonkS
lATscarr.. g.s.a. J
After wasting $1,000 on his ec
zema a jar of Resinol cured it
WHEN a man like lb. Burt, late a Captain in the United States
Army, writes that after ha had suffered for many years with
itching, burning eczema aad had spent $1,000 on treatments,
one jar of Resinol Ointment (costing BOc) tared him, every word of : --
his letter is of vital interest to other skin sufferers. Read it Then
try Resinol and see if it does not stop your itching instantly, and
quickly remove all trace df your skin-trouble, too.
f wJ a 1 . taol OhVtttwnt (Me and ana Resinol Soap 25e) are
I JTlcll 1 iCC I loaal houwhold remedies lor kin nd scalp trouble!, pimples,.
. - dsndroff, boras, wwmdt, sores, boil, and pile, Yourdmgwisf
sells sw. hat for free Sample. f each, wrrte Dept. J-S. Resinol Chera. Co Baltimore, Md,
Reeinol Shaving Stick (26c) es irrtwrte the tendereat f ac. -
i
I. Ml
0
1
in
1
Tr. ;r"
h?IK 1 til if7
4
4
One Reform Overlooked.
Chicago Record-Herald. '
Why Is it that no -political party has
adopted a plank favoring a readjustment
of the school year so that it will open
In October and- close In July? The old
Idea that September Is a fall month ought
by this time to be thoroughly worn out
wril.
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