ROOSEVELT IS ROMflNESLECTURE Former President of United States at Oxford LORD CURZON IN THE CHAIR Sheldonian Theater Crowded With Distinguished People When Amer ican Talks on "Biological An alogies In History." Oxford. Kngiand. The Romanes lecture by Theodore Roosevelt, which was to have been delivered on May 18. but which was postponed on account of the death of King Edward, was given on June 7 by the distinguished American. The Sheldonian theater was filled to its capacity' by notable persons and Oxford students and the lecture, which was on "Biological Analogies in History." was well re- eived. Lord Curzon. chancellor of the unhersity. presided. In eoliinK to penptrate the causes of tin mysteries that surround not only mankind but all life, both In the present ami the past, said Mr. Roose Ht. we iee strange analogies in the phenomena of life and death, of birth r.rowth and cliaiiRe. between those physical groups of animal life which we designate as speeici.. forms, race and the highly complex and composite entities which rise before our minds when we speak of nations and rlvi li.ations It is this study he assert ed, lhat has ?;ieii science Its present day prominence, and the historian of mankind must work in the scientific spirit and use the Measure-ho uses of M'ienee To illustrate, the lerturer look sev eral instance: of the development of new species and the extinction of spe cies in the history of mammalian life, showing that in some caes the causes ran be traced with considerable accu racy, and in other cases we cannot so much as hazard a guess as to why a given change occurred. Analogies in Human History. Coiitiimini;. Mr. Roosevelt said In part: Now as to all of tln-"-- n!icnnmini In tlie e-Kilutte.n of ( i.-. the re- :u If not IioiiioIok'os. at lf.-ist certain '" 'Iki". In Hie Msteiiy f limiinii l-ti -. in tl-e iisleir of tlie rNi- to jireniiiiie.ii. of tli rteveii'ptiK nt nml lians-'. of I .. i. n ix.r.iry ejeuiilii.ini . imel eli-itii or ti foriiu-tloii. of I lie kiouii .if Hying Kin! wliifli fonn ran", or n.itlons As In liliiloRV. so in ! iiinan tilstorv. n.-u form m.i r. suit fiom t !- s.--i.iliz.i-tlim or a losis -:sUn ail J itlierto vry kIiiuU --li.itiKlK geinT.tIi7'l fir non HifUi!ir 1 fotm us. for lii".inre. when 11 liarlt.ir.i- r.ne fro'ii a ariet of raii-"s Mi.l.'.uU liclots n more eomplt oultl v.Ulon anil cliil.zation That 1 wliat oe--iirr'l. for lnstan In western Kiirne duiiiiK the ri-tit ur.es of tlin Teutonic ami LiIit tli- Se:inilinal ill tlililr eerfliv" Irosn tlie nortli All tpe inolei n eiuntries of ue-sleni Kt.reifie iir- I";-i'tiiI"I from tin stales t-n.ited tiv tlu-;" northern invaders W'u-ii tirvi f reatetl tn v eoiiM l called ""lieu" 01 "yoiiiiK" stales In the M'tlie that iait nr all of the jvople compoinij them were ee.,oe'iiile..l from raec that Jiitlicrto hail not heen el illzil at all. and tliat therefore for the rttt tune entered on the i.iieer or Hvill7.'el eoniiniinltles In the f iiithern pirt of western lCurope the new state thus formed consisted In liulk of the Inhahitarits already in the land under the Human emp le. and it was here that the eew Kingdoms tlrst took fhnpe TlmuiRl. :t r fle ai-tlon their lnlllienee tlien extended I irk Into the eold forest fiom ul.h h tlie ini.ule-rs had come, hiid Germany and K-in!in:i i.t witnessed the rise of coviniunitles wlt'i essenti illv he same eiv IlirHion as their southern neighbors, though n those communities, unlike the Miuthern (O'limtitiltles. there was no infusion of ti w hlond. and In eac li iim' the new civilized n-tlloii winch cradu nllv 5eloped was r imposed entir Iv of tnemhers of the same tace whh h 'n the Mime r plou hail for aes lived the life of a slo-.l hanxitic harhaiism The Fame was true of the SI.iah and the Slavonlzed Finns of eastern Kurope. when an Infil tration tif S andlnavlan leaders from the north and infiltration of livzantlna . ulttiro from the s-outh joined to produce the changes uhich hae crailiiallv. out of the lit lit Slav communities of the forest nni tS e Mepp. formed the mighty Uussian empire of today "New" and "Young" Nations. Acnln. the new form may represent merelj a spllttinc off from a lons-cstah-llshrd. hljjhlv le eloped and specialized nation In this case the nation is nsuallv f-pnken of as a "voiin:r." and is correctly poken of nB a "new." nation. lent the trim should always !- used with a clear en-e of the difference between what Is described In such ca.se. and what is de--eribeel liv the same tetm In spe-aklnc of a. ciili7's nation just develop, d from a liarbarism. i'arthase nml Svi.u'iisu were new cities compared w.th Tvre and Cor inth: but the Greek or l'lioenician race was In everv sense of the rd as old In the new eil as m the old citv So. nowadays. Victoria or Manitoba Is a new community compared with I"ni;!anil or S otland. but the :h estr.it fvpe of civilization and cul ture Is as old in one c-vse as In the other. I of coi.is-e tin not me in for a moment ttiat creat elianses are not produced by the mere fact that the old civilized race is sMf'denU placed in Mirroundlmjs where it has aqain to en throuRli the work of tanilns the wilderness, a work finished many ceeturies In tore In the original I ome of the rice. I nierelv mean thut tiie aii'estra history Is the same In each .ir.e. We can riuhtlv use the phrase "a in w people" in v-fviKins of Canadians ot Australians. Ameruans or Afrikanders. Ui.t we use It in an entnelv different vense from that In which we use it when f-peakini: of such communities as thot! founded by t'.ie northin. n and their ile !. en l.ints ilurin that perlo 1 of a-tonlsli-trsi Ki-vth wi Ich fiivv the ilescendants of T.HE BEST THAT MORGAN GOT Imperious Financier May Keep In Memory One Man He Could Not Browbeat. The yarn ot the other day abotit Mayor Gaynoi and n bell-boy recalls another one Ganor. ou know, slept :it the Hotel Astor one night, having lieen detained there very late. In the lLormns he couldn't lind his way to the elevator. aDd met one of the pert -.uiiths tvho browbeat the hotel guest. "Aw. foller yer nose," said the kid. "1 ain't got no time to bother wit jouse." Mr. Gaynor's nose ultimately led him to the office and shortly after ward a clerk's nose led him to the seventeenth floor and the boy's nose led him to Broadway, with instruc tions to stay out of the Astor torever after. It recalled to a reporter the time that J Pierpont Morgan got tan gled up with a menial Mr Morgan, jou may know. Jo imperious and dtctatoual. He speaks in grunts. When iLi grunt is not readily inter the Norse sea-thieves conquer and trans form Normandy. Sicily, and the Hritlsh Islands: we use It In an entirely different s iiic from that in which we use It when fspeaklns of the new states that grew up around Warsaw. Kief. Novgorod, and Moscow, as the wild savages of the steppes and the marshy forests strusgled haltingly and stumbling!)' upward to become builders of cities and to form stable governments. The kingdoms of Charlemagne and Alfred were "new." compared with the empire on the Itos phortis. they were also in every way dif ferent, their lines of ancestral descent had nothing in common with those of the polyglot realm which paid tribute to the Caesars of Byzantium, their social prob lems and aftertime history were totally different. This Is not true of those "new" nations which nr'ng direct from old na tions. Krazil, t-e rgenti:ie. the United Sta'ei. are all "lew" nations, compared with the nations of Europe; but with whatever chanses 'n detail, their civiliza tion Is nevertheless of the genera! Euro pean type, as shown In Tortugal. Spain, and England. Thn differen-ea between these "new" American and theso "old" European nations are not as great as those which separate the "new" nations one from another and the "old" nations one from another. There are In each case very real differences between the new anil the old nation differences both for good and for evil, but in e.u h case there is the name ancestral history to reckon with, the same type of eiviliratlon. with its at tendant benefits and shortcomings, and. after the pioneer stages are passed, the problems to be solved, in spite of superfi cial diflerences. are III their essem e the same, they are those that confront nil civilized peoples, not those that confront peoples struggling from barbarism Into civtli&aiion. So. when we speak of the "death" of a tribe, a nation or a civilization, the term mav he used fur either one or two totally different proi esses, the analogy with what occurs In biological histoiy being complete Certain tribes of savages, the Tismanians for instance, and various lit tle clans ot Ameiican Indians, have within the last century or two completely died out. ail of the Individuals have perished, leaving no descendants, and the blood has disappeared. Certain other tribes of Indians have as tribes dlsapneared or are now disappearing, but their blood remains, being absorbed Into the veins of the white Intruders, or of the Id ick men introduced by these white intruders, so that in rcilitv thee are nierelv being tr-iusformei Into something absolutely tlilftrent from what they were. A like wide diversity in fact may b covtnd In the ht'itemeut that a civiliza tion h..s "died out." Phenomena That Puzzle. In dealing, not with groups of human iHlngi in simple and primitive relations, but with highly compl. . highly special ized, civlhzid. or scinl-civilir'-d societies, there is need of great caution in drawing anilogi. s with what has otmried in the dev lopnif nt of the animal world. Vet ksi In these cases It Is curious to sef how some of the nlicnnmt na In the growth and disappearance of tlv eom-pl-. aitificlal groups of h'uiian beings reenihle what has happened in mviiads of instances In the history of life on this planet. Whv do great artificial empires, whose citizeps are knit bv a bond of speech and culture much more than by a bond of blood. how periods of extraordinary growth, and again of sudden or lingering dei :iv In Bonin ca-es we tan answer readilv enough, in other cases we can not as yet even gues v ' .t the proper :iswer should be If In anv such case the centrifugal forces overcome the cen-tnpet-il. the n-ition will of course tly to pief es. and the re.'son for Its failure to In ome .1 dot iluant fer e Is patent to everv one TI n'nute that the spirit which fli.ds it.. '.m'iIv development In lnc.il self-govet nm 'it a-nl in the antidote to the dangers of m .-Mreme centraliza tion, develops Into m i.i particularism. Into Inability to combine effectively for achievement of a common end. tl en it Is hnpelcs to expect great results I'olind nnd certain republics of the western hemisphere' are the standard earu '. f failure of this kind, and the Cnited Si.cn woul 1 have ranked w.ih them, an-' us name would have become a bvwotii of derision. If the forces of union had not triumphed In the civil war. So the growth of soft hiMiry after it has reached a certain point become--, a national d inger intent to all Again, it nee ils but little of the vision of a seer to foretell what must happen In anv community If the average wem.an ce'ass to becume tlie mother of a family of hcallhv children. If tlie average man loses the will and the power to work up to old age and to fight whenever the need a rise's. If the homejv, coinmnnplaie virtues the out. If stre-ngth of "'laracter vanishes In graceful self-indulgence. If the virile finalities atrophy, then tlie nation has lost what no material prosperity can offset. But there are plentv of other phenom ena wholly or partially lneplii able It Is easv to see why Itome trended downward when great slave-tilled farms sprea-' o er w hat had once been a countryside of peasant proprietors, when greed and lu nrv and sensuality ate like acids Into the tiberof the upper classes, while the mass of the citizens grew to depend, not upin their own eertion.s. but upon the state, for their pleasures and their very liveli hood But this docs not explain why the forward movement stopped nt different times, so far as different matters were concerned: at one time as regards litera ture, at another time as regards architec ture at another tlmo as regards city building We cannot even guess whv the springs of one kind of energy dried up while there wa- yet no cessation of an other kind Holland as an Example. Take another and smaller instancr. that of Holland. Kcir a period covering a little more than the seventeenth century. Holland. like some of the Italian city states at an earlier period, stood on the dangerous heights of greatness beside na tions so vastlv her superior in te rritory and population as to make It Inevitable tliat sooner or later she must fall from tlie glorious and perilous eminence to which she had been raised by her own Indomita ble soul Her fall came, it could not have been Indefinitely postponed but It ! came far quicker than it needed to come. bee ause of shortcomings on her part to which both Great Britain and the fnlted States would he wise to pay hied Her government was singularly Ineffective, the decentralization being such as often to permit the- semt-atKt. the particularism rpirit of the provinces to rob the central authority of all efficiency This was bad j enough. But th fatal weakness was that so c ninmon in ncn. peice-ioving societies, where men hate to think of vvai as possi ble, and try to justify their ovv n reltie tance to fae it either by high-sounding moral platitudes or else bv a philosophy of short-sighted materialism The Dutch were vejv wealthy Thev grew to le lleve that the could hire others to do preted by his unfortunate opposite, he roars. On this occasion Mr. Morgan had gone to one ot the big uptown hotels to attend a banquet. He asked a large perton at the entrance where he could find the banqi.eting hall. The large person sent him along, and Mr Morgan next met a hall porter who 1-....1 ...cf limm elirh:irTPd and Was ! looking for a chance to get even. Mr I Morgan grunted inquiringly. The por ter grunted sullenly. "Wuh-wuh-wuh." grunted Mr. Mor gan. I ..n-l. -V. n..ti rrrr.tvlo1 the Tinr. ter "How dare you?" asked Morgan. "Say." said the porter, belligerently. "1 don't know who you are. jou old skeezicks. but if you unpin that lip uh yourn again I'll hang a brace on it." "My name is Morgan," said the banker, indignantly. "Well." said the porter, after look ing him' over carefully, "you look it." And that's the best that Morgan ! uou Boston Traveler. their fighting Tor them on land; and on sea. where they did their own fighting, and fought very well, they refused In time of peace to make ready fleets so ef ficient as either to insure the Dutch against the peace being broken or else to give them the victor) when war came. To be opulent and unarmed Is to secure ease In the present at the almost certain cost of disaster In the future. It Is therefore easy to tee why Holland lost when she did her position among the powers; but It Is far more difficult to ex plain why at the same time there should have come at ItMst a partial loss of posi tion In the world of art and letters. Some spark of divine fire burned Itself out In the national soul. As the line of great statesmen, of great warriors, by land and sea. came to an end. so the line of the great Dutch painters ended. The loss of pre-eminence lu the schools followed the loss of pre-eminence In camp and In council chamber. In the little republic of Holland, as In the great empire of Rome. It was not death which came, but transformation. Both Holland and Italy teach us that races that fall may rise again. Danger of Race Suicide. There are questions which we of the gi eat civilized nations are ever tempted to ask of the future. Is our time of growth drawing to an end? Are we as nations foou to come under the rule of that great law of death, which Is itself but part of the rreat law of life? None can tell. Forces that we can see and other forces that are hidden or that can but dimly be appre-henii'-d are at work all around us. both for sod and for evil. The growth in lux ury, in love of ease. In taste for vapid anil frivolous excitement. Is both evident and unhealthy. The most ominous sign Is the diminution In the birth-rate, in the rate of natural Increase, now to a larger or lesser degree shared by most of the civilized nations of central and western Europe, of America and Australia: a dim inution so great that If it continues for the next century at the rate which has ob tained for the last 2T years, all the more highly civilized people will lie stationary oi ele have begun to go backward in population, while nianv of them will have already gone very far backward. Theie is much that should give us con cern for the future But there Is much also tv hlch should giv e us hope No man Is more apt to he mistaken than the prophet of evil I believe with nil mv heart that a great fntuie remains for us: but whether it does or does not. our dutv is not altered However the bat tle may go. the soldi, r worthv of the name will vlth utmost vigor do his al-lote-d task, ai.d bear himself as v.ilisnt lv in defeat as in victory. Come what will. We belong to peoples who have not v leldeel to the craven far of being great. In the ages that have gone bv. thes great nations, the nations tliat have e pi'tidid and that have plaj.il a mighty part In tlie world, have In the eml giovvn old and weakened and vanished, hvit so have the nat'oiis whose only thought was to avoid all danger, all ef fort, who would risk nothing, and who therefore gained nothing. In the end the same fate may overwhelm all alike, but the ti:emirv of the one type perishes with it while the other le: .es Its n.ark deep en the history of all the future of man kind. In the first part of this lecture I drew certain analogies between what had oc curred to forms of rnimal life through the ptoossion of the ages on this planet, and what has occurred and is occurring to the .eat nrtifii ial civilizations which have gradually spread over the world's srrfaec duiing the thousands of years that have elapsed since cltie-e of temple-. and palaces tirsl rose- Im-sIiIc the Nile nnel the Euphrates, and the harltors of Minnan Crete bristled with the masts of the Aegean craft. But of course the parallel is true only In the roughest and most general wav. Moreover, even letwecn the f iv'llzutions of today and the eivllizatlons of ancient times there are differences so profound that we must lie cautious In drawing any conclusions fir the present based on what has hap pened in tlie past While freelv admit ting all of our follies atnl weaknesses of today. It Is yet mere pervcrsitv to refuse to realize the Incredible advance that h is tteen made in ethical standards I do not l.-li-ve that there is the slightest nec essatv connection between anv weaken ing of viule fore'e and this advance lit the moi.il standard, this giowth of the sense of obligation to tine's n- ighbor and of reh'ct'inte to do that neighbor wrong We ne-ed have scant ptlenie with that siliy cynicism which insist-, that kindli ness of character only accotnpa tiles weakness of ebnracter On the contrary. jns :,s in private life manv of the men of strotige-st cliarac ter are the verv men of loftiest and most exalted morality, so I believe that in national life as the ages go by we- shall find that the permanent national t ! will more and more tend towards those in which, while the Intel lest stands high, character stands higher: in w tilth ruggeil strength and coinage', rugged capacity to resist wrongful ag gression by others, will go baud in hand with a lofty scorn of doing wrong to oth ers This is the type of Timoleon. of Hampden, of Washington and Lincoln. Problems of Modern Nations. Every modern civilized nation has manv and terrible problems to solve within Its own bordets. problems that arise not merely from JutaosJtlon of poverty am! riches, but especially from the self-consciousness of both poverty and riches. Each nation must deal with these mat ters In its own fashion. anl yet the spirit In which the problem Is upproactied must ever be fundamentally th same. It must be a spirit of broad humanity: of brotherlv kindness; of acceptance of re- sponsiblllty. one for each anel -ach for all. and at the same time a spirit us re mote as the poles from ever) form nf vv-akness and sentimentality. As in war to pardon the cowaid Is to elo cruel e rong to the brave man whose life his cowardice jeopardizes, so In civil nffalrs it Is revolting to every principle of justice to give to the lazy, the vicious, or even the feeble and dull-wilted, a rewatd which Is really the robbery of what braver, wiser, abler men have earnerel. The only effective way to help any man Is to help him to help himself, and the worst lesson to teach him I- that he can be permanently helped at the epense of some one else. True liberty shows lts.-lf to lecst advantage In pr.-tecting the rights of ot Iters, and especially of minorities. Privilege should not be tolerated t.e-cause it is to the advantage of a minority, nor vet because it Is to the advantage of a majority No doctrinaire theories of vested rights or freedom of contract can Ftand In the way of our cutting out ?il.i;s. s from the hodv nolitlc .lus! n lit. ' tie can we afford to follow the doctrin aires of an impossible md in Mentally of -i highly undesirable -tenia! revolution ' which. In elesiroying Individual rights i (inc'udl'ig piop-rt) rights, and the fam ily, wt.'ild destroy the two chief agents in ' the aelvance of mankind, and the two chief reasons why either tlie advance or i the preservation of mankind Is worth Mummified Heads Scarce. Mummified heads of South Amer ican Indians belonging to a tribe liv ing on the slopes of the Andes near Quito, in Ecuador, once so easily pur chased, are becoming extremely scarce. The head Is shrunk by some ! secret process known only to the na I tives. being thus reduced from life -tee. nine or ten inchrs from tip of chin to top of head, to five inches. The curious thing is that the head can be reduced in this fashion without destroying the features These heads, some of which are of great antiquity, are now almost Impossible to procure. Their sale Is forbidden by law. , Wide World Magazine. Satirical Voltaire. One day some mice said to one an other: "How charming is this world! What an empire Is ours! This palace so superb was built for us; from all eternity God made for us these large holes. Do you see those fat hams un der that dim ceiling? They were cre ated there for us by Nature's hands; ' those mountains of lard. Inexhausti . ble ailment, will be ours till the end while. It la n evil and a c.-eadfu! thing to be callous to sorrow and suffering and blind to our duty to do all things possible for the betterment of social conditions. But it Is an unspeakably foolish thing to strive for this betterment fcy means so destructive that they would leave no so cial conditions to better. In dealing with all these social problems, with th inti mate relations of tlie family, with wealth in private use and business use. with la bor, with poverty, the one prime neces sity is to remember that, though hard ness of heart Is a great evil, it is no treater an evil than softness of head. But In addition to these problems ths most Intimate and Important of all which-to a larger or less degree affect all the modern nations somewhat alike, wa of the great nations tliat have expanded, that are now In complicated relations with one another nnd with alien races, have special problems ar.d spec la! duties of our own. Vou belong to a nation which pos sesses the greatest empire upon which ths sun has ever shone. I belong to a nation which Is trying, on a scale hitherto unex ampled, to work out the problems of gov ernment for. of. and by the people, will! at the same time doing the international duty of a great power. But there are certain problems which both of us have to solve, and as to which our standards should be the same. The Englishman the man o the British Isles. In his various homes across the seu3. and the Ameri can, both at home and abroad, are brought Into contact with utterly alien peoples, some with a civilization more an cient than our own. others still In. or having but re-centlv arisen from, the bar barism which our people left behind ages ago The problems that arise nre of well nigh Inconceivable difliculty. They cannot Ik- solved by the foolish sentimentality of rtr.v-at-li.ime people, with little patent rc-ipes. an,j those fiit-and-dried theories of the political nurs.TV whii li have such limited applicability am'd the crash of el"niental forces Neither can they b solved bv the raw brutality of the men who. whether at home or on the rough frontier of civilization, adopt might ns the onlv standard of right In dealing with other men. anel treat alien races only as stibjee ts for eploitation. No hard and fast rule can lie drawn as applying to all alien races, ix-cnuse they difTt-r from one another far inure wide lv than some of them differ from us But there are oiie or two rules v. hich must not be f.irgotten. In the long run. tln-r- can ! no Justllcation for one nice man aging or controlling ancthe r unle'ss the manage ment and control are een-is, 4 in the Interest and for the hem-tit of that other rate. This Is what euir peoples have In the main done, and must con tinue in the future in even greater eh gre-e to do. In India. Egvpr. and the Phll-Ipiin-s alike In the net place, vr re gards everv race, everywhere, at home or abroad, we cannot afford to eleviate fr m the gre'.at rule of righteousness wh'ih bids us treat e-ach man on his worth as a man lie- must not be senti mentally favor.-d because he belongs to a given race: he must not b given Ini initiiliv In wrotig-iloing. or peiiuitteei to cumin r the ground, or given other pilvl- leges w hit h would be d.-nled to the) v!.ou and unlit among th.-mselve.s. On the- other hand, win re he- acts In a way which we.uld entitle him to rcspi-c! and reward If he w-re of our own stock, he Is just as much entitled to that respect and revvanl if lie comes of another stock, evrn though that ether stcn-1; pro duces a nun h smaller proorlion of n.cn of h's tvpe ti.nn does our own. This has nothing to do with social intermingling. Willi what is c-.l!Ieel s..e;al i-epiality. It has to do me-ie!v with the itu.-stlon of ehv Ing to each man :n! each woman that elementary Justice which will permit hi:t or l.er to gain fr.iui life the reward which should alvvivs atcompanv thrift, sobriety self-control, nspe-ct for the rights of other-" anel hard and intelli gent work to a ulve-n end Tei more than such Just treatment no man is entitled, am! 1-ss than such Just ticatment no man sh mid receive Duty of Nation to Nation. The other tvpe of duty is the Interna tional ilutv. the; duty owe, by one na tion to another I hold that the laws of morallt) which should govern Individu als In their dealings one with the either are hist as binding concerning nations in their dealings fine with the other. The application of the iiiiiral law- must let liffeient in the two eases, because in one cas. It has. ami In the other It has rot. the sanction of a civil law with force b.-hind It. The individual can depend for hi rights upon the courts, which them selves ile-rive their force Irom the pollen power of the state The nation can de pend upem nothing of the kind, and therefore, as things ar. ne.vv. It is the highest dutv nf the most advance el ami freest peoples to k.-ep thenis.-les In su--h a state of readiness its tr. foibld to any bTbarlsm or despotism the hope of ar resting tlie progre-ss of the weirlel by stri king elnwn the na ileitis that lead III that progress. It would h foolish Indeed to pay l-.-ed to the unwise persons who ele sire disarmament to be I gun by th very peoples who. of all others, should not le left helpless lie fore any iosslble fen. But we must reprobate quite as sttongly lioth the lead. -is anil the peoples who prae-t!se. or iicoui.";e er condone, aggre'ssjon and Iniquity by the strong at the evpense of tlie weak. We should tol erate lawlessness and wickedness neither by tlie weak nor by the strong: and both weak ami strong we should in return treat with si rupuloiis fairness. The for eign policy of a great and self-reupee tins country should be conducted oil exactly the same plane of honor, of insistence upon one's own rights nnd of rfsjM-ct for the tights of others, as when a btave and honeirable man Is dealing with his fel lows Permit me to support this state ment out of my own experience. For ne.irlv eight vears I was tie h. ad of a great nation anel charged especially with the conduit eef Its foreign polle V .ei"l luring those vears I took no action with rcferenc" to unv other pe-ople on tie- face fif the e-arth that I would not have felt Justified in taking as an individual in dealing with other Individuals I believe that we of the great civilized nations of today have right to feel tliat long careers of achievement lie before our jsevcral countr'es. To each of us is voiie hsafe-d the honorable privileg.. of fin ing Ms part, however small, in that work. I.et us strive hardily for sucee.ss. ev.n if by so lining we ris': failure, spurning the poorer souls of small endetvor who know neither failure nor success. l.t us hope that our own blood shall continue in the land, that our children and chil dren's children to endless .generations shall arise to take our places and play a miglitv and dominant pirt in the world. But whether this be eli-nl.-d or granted bv the vears we shall not s . let at le-at the satisfaction be ours that we- have carried onward the li-htcd torch In our own day and general: u. If vve do t'us. then, as our ey.-s close, and we go out into the darkness, and other hands grasp the torch, at least we can say that our part has been borne well and valiantly. of time. Yes. we are. great God. if our sages tell us the truth, the mas terpiece, the aim. of all Thy work! Cats are dangerous and prompt :o de vour, but it is to Instruct and correct us!" Voltaire. Common Law. The common law of England Is an ancient collection of unwritten max ims and customs of British. Saxon and Danish origin, which, by long use and approval, have become fundamental in English jurisprudence. Many of the principles of the English common law hold in this country and throughout the English speaking world as well. Romance. "It seems she did something rather odd wedded her first love or some such silly thing." "No. It was far more remarkable loved her first wed ded." Smart Set. Another View of It. There is a quality of possible re venge in having stuck like a porous plaster to an unworthy friend. It hurt uim all right when you do pull away finally. Puck. WOMEN'S ILLS. Many women who suffer with back ache, bearing-down pain, headaches and nervousness do not know that these ailments are usually due to trouble with the kidneys. D o a n ' 8 Kidney Pills re move the cause. Mrs. Joseph Cross, Church St, Morrilton, Ark., says: "For weeks I was bent double by pain in my back and the kiduey se cretions were pro fuse. My feet and ankles were badly swollen and I bad headaches and dizzy spells. Six doc tors treated me without relief and I finally began taking Doan's Kidney Pills. They cured me." Remember the name Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N.Y. Diplomacy. Here is a story about a diplomatic negro waiter; also about two well known Kansas men, who can go by the names of Smith and Jones, just to tell the yarn. Smith and Jones look much alike and are frequently taken for each other. One day Smith was in a cer tain big hotel not a thousand miles from Kansas City and went into tho dining room for dinner. The negro waiter busily brushed off the crumbs and said: "Why, how is you. Mr. Jones, how is you? l's glad to see you. 1 hasu't teen you since I waited on your table when you ail used to have a little game upstaihs." 'Tin fraid you are mistaken." said Smith, very quickly. ".My name isn't Junes. You liae the wrong man." "Ntiff said: nuff said." smiled the ne gro, with much bowing and scraping. "All knows all right when to keep inah motif slut; Ah knows all right, Mr. Jones." Kansas City Journal. Her Laugh Broke. She was a little fairy of seven, with eyes like diamonds and hair like spun gold, and she w: r;::!ping with a half dozen plrvtunte.- Touching a fine looking youngster on the shoulder, t-he challenged him with, "You can't catch me." Off they started, she twist ing and dodging with the dexterity of a half-back on a football team, and he following her every movement in close pursuit. The excitement of tho chase made her scream with laughter. Thu littl: fugitive finally brough tip against a fence, breathless and pant ing, and her pursuer, throwing his arms about her, s-hontetl: "There. I've caught ou!" "Oh. yes." gasped tho little faiiy. "but it was 'cause my L'ttigh bruke and ! couldn't run any more." $100 Reward, $100. Tbe reiKler nf th! paper will be eitairel tn lem thai the-re fci at Irast one arraitrel elm-u- that wie-nce has bre-n alr to itirc la a'l Its t.-n-. and that ts Catarrh. Hairs t'atirrh lure- is - oily puntivc exje now Kiot:i to lis me-fUra! t-i'ernity. t rlarra txlcg a e-j.ititutoa.U eloei-r. rr-.;-irrj a roi.titu thinki trrai'ne-at. It ill's catarrh jr. b taki-n ln- trmallv. artlaz e'.lreTtiy ujica th- I1.0M ami muroits furfit-.-s er tr ijMrn. thr: t) elestmvinc the foundation ot the elo-s-'e. ar.il nlvt ic U ro'Wnt. 1 trrncth by bulMlng up the priltutten ami asit- I Jut nature In elnirg Its work. The proprlflf.r hare j niurh futh tn Its curative pors that tfcey otter One lluidmt Hollars fe.r ntir cue that It tails to cure. tnil for lut of tr-ttraoniai) AiMrrsS 1". J. c'W M:V k CO- Toledo. O. Hold bj- all Iiniszfct. T.V. Talc liaUa FoinUy I'll! tor eonstlssUoa. Perspiring Vegetation. The eyes of a little Washington miss were attracted by the sparkle of dew at early morning. ".Mamma," she exclaimed: "It's hotter'n 1 thought it was M , "What do ou mean?" "Look hero, the grass is all covered ftith perspiration." Uaptist Common wealth. AM Tired Out. Do you fe-fl dull, occasionally out of irt? Headaches anel Pizzlnei-s? The fault is c-Ithe-r with your stomach or your liver. The safe, sure and eay way to j;rt ri.l of e-ithiT truiil.le ! to take- XATl'RK'S UK.MKHY. Take an XII T.ihlet to nlcht ' It will swe-c-ten the stomach and n-sulate the llvi-r. kldnevn anil bowels. Easy-sure to act. 0-t u 2.e Box. The A. II. Lwis Medicine Co.. St. 1-ouls. Mo. Net in the Agreement. Daniel had been cast into the lions Jen. "My main objection." he said, as he playfully tweaked a lion's mane, "is that I zret no nun ing-pict tire royalties."- -Puck. Important to Mothers Examine, carefully every bottle of CASTOKIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, nnd see that it ! io 4 tin Signature of Ubx&tt4rtcUM In "Use For Over JIO Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought Such a Difference! "Your daughter plays very sucetly on the piano.' "That's my wife playing." "I know it." i'irmingham Age Il.'rahL Itrit. V.'rak, Weary. Watery Rjrea. l-li. e.l liv Murine Kyi U-n.til. Trv Mu. if.. I'.ir Your Kvr- Troubles. Yu Will Like Miinni'. It Sonth. UW at Your PruKsis-ts Wr.te For Kye H.h.k-. Free. Mutltie Kye itcmeIy Co.. Chicago. Hearsay Evidence. Mrs. I"ru-t How's your husband? Mrs. Snow Tho members of his club sny he is looking splendid. Life. No man ran love evil lor evil's safc as he can loves good for goodness' sake. Schiller Tin Fitt-fiinj; fin, -lit v m I.iwt-" Sin lo l.ineler. found in no e.tlirr jc cigar. Thoe who are untrue to themselves r.r lalse to others. When You Think Of the pain which many women experience with every month it makes t.ie gcntlcncs. and kindness nlrrays associ ated with womanhood seem to be almost a miracle. While in general no woman rebels against what she re gards as natural necessity there is no woman who would cot gladly be free from this recurring period of pain. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription makes veaJr women strong and sick womem well, and tives them freedom from pain. It establishes reHolarity, aabdaes laflam matlom, heals mlceratlom and cares to male weakness Sick women are invited to consult Dr. Pierce by letter, frte. All correspondence strictlr orivate and sacredlv confidential. Write without fear and without fee to World's Dispensary Med seal Association, R. V. Pierce, M. D., President, Bufalo, N. Y. If you want a book that tells all about woman's diseases, and bow to ear them at home, send 21 one-cent stamps to Dr. Pierce to pay cost of nailiaf enly, and be will seed you a free copy of his great thousand-page illustrated Common Sense Medical Adviser revised, up-to-date editioa, ia paper coven la handsome cloth-biading, 31 stamps. The original and Syrup of Figs Senna, known world as the best for men, women and children, always has the full name cf Cirmn C 'n nf'ntorl g every package. It leading druggists size only, regular per bottle. The times offered are and do not therefore, . 4 lino il .. . -w VtlV.llt.lV4. ir Why Have an Overheated Kitchen in Summer? When the sultry days come and the coal range makes the kitchen almost unbearable and cooking a dreaded task, put out tlie range fire and try the newest method of cooking in hot weather use a New PerAction. Oil Cook-stove What a contrast! The kitchen no longer is stifling hot, the work is now done with comfort, and the housewife is not worn out with the heat. M CMtloMrylMeBesnrey Standard (tacerporatcd ) liHiHHiiHiBBHB i i Glorious No one can say he has seen the world until he has seen "Colorado." Write for the books that picture and describe it Electric block signals dining car meals and service "Best in the World" via the Union Pacific "The Safe Road Ask abotit ow persoaaHy conducted tours to Yellowstone National Park For full information, tickets, etc., address E. L. LOMAX, G. P. A. Union Pacific R. R. Co. Omaha, Nebraska rr4 Understood the Sex. Ills Daughter Daddy, you were twenty-five when this was taken, weren't you? Why, you might have sat for it yesterday. Her Father M'yes; your mother's own daughter. Well. well, you'll find it on tho table. I think. I Hi. Daughter Find what, daddy, darling? Hor Father The checkbook, my own Iamb. aaaaaV aa 'ijfift lJB&7 i -t Wi thlbUl) vi&rtz mm ! mm Baawafcaa S"iA Ji Jr wM genuine and Elixir of throughout the cf family laxatives, the California Fig wi tl-n frnnf nf is fcr sale by all everywhere, one price 50 cents imitations some of inferior quality give satisfaction; should be She saves her strength, keeps her health and is better able to enjoy the summer. Ths New Perfection does everything that any other stove can do all the fam ily cooking, baking, washing and iron ing. No smoke, no dust, no odor. Kcat 13 applied directly and not wasted. A turn, and the flame is out. The New Perfection stove has Cabinet Top with shelf for keeping plates and food hot drop shelves fcr the coffee pot or saucepans, and nickeled towel racks. It has long turqaoise-blue enamel chimneys. Ths nickel finish, with the bright blue of the chitnney3, makes th stove wry attractive and invites clean liness. Made with 1, 2 and 3 burners; the 2 and 3-bumer stoves can be cad with or without Cabinet. KTrrTi!ea!ereTrrj7Wtie'r: If net atyttn.rtferci Icriilive CircnUr to tlie liuucM Sjc Oil Company Colorado ffil WESTERN CANADA What Cavarnor Deneen, of ..fools. ays ADout it: fIoren:orlkai-e.n.orH!inol. own a - 'ion ot ir-iei ia MJ.J.U .(etai. .in. In. ll't Jloj u J in un iatcrvi.: "A nn Arar!r n I rra Cfl"ht1 to. Fi-e? t!o re mnr?.il..o ..-ocrrn.t ejf lSih:crn t'.n .i .. e)nr pee jl'jitirfli-):iii nra t"'!- . iiirr in .hem re.nile. nn 1 1 hive- rrr. jit Cat eic.j win) e'-3ittfl Ihcy nre hit ;. . . 1 re-re ih re ire vri-n-uniiy in . i' ,.,..-,,r Va..fa en hi ... 1 f nt h rprt i v j'i f imvtu S.i?l'alcliiR aa or AJtVutw 125 MiiricB Sachcls of Whsst in 1309 XTaa r-.n i- ar i m J- aV. i.j.j. . r- AiAft. -! w r Mit !. ...fu..r -.... nnel pre..-riipU.)ii4 vt ir.Ot.rr- ."" .in ucre. itAHTjy nml IJxr.il i,..ii!e. I.are !.! f.r .,; n.trtn.-onat.Ii.,rire-v Al in rnu cr li.e.t. paid for tholr 1 id; nut ot the nriiiU of eine ntt. Milonellel f-llmute. coexl M'liuot. Jiie-ll.it rnllwi.y fof-i'tt'e.iotv fse-iciit nte-. M.toet, nater owl Illlltlwr e-a.llr ohtnlneet. nr pamphlet "Lam U.-t tV-" Purucularn w to .aitatile) locution 20,,..,0". Ttt'V.,V nt' PPl to B3pt of Immicrmtiou. Ottawa. Ccn., or to Canxtiaa Gov't AcuiU W. V. BENNETT irifr. ftBa.hk. ti eartitynneartyon) (Of H WmVA Wmiwr.Pii.fMii.WMk. PI I EH I 4 Incton.D U. Buok-eire 1 1 1., w w w - n. usi Ktatacea Btu nauluv W. N. U.f OMAHA, NO. 23-1910. r is! aaaVtaHHl i 4 i Em