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Show RNSNG Part Two 25 IV NO. VQL. OGDEN SUNDAY CITY, UTAH, EXAMINER MORNING, MAY 5, Pages 9 to 16 907. PRICE FIVE CENTS Countess Wants to Abolish Lords, Including Her Distinguished Husband EXTRAORDINARY CONFLICT OF POLITICAL VIEWS IN THE FAMILY OF THE EARL OF CARLISLE AT A RECENT ELECTION THE YOUNGER MEMBERS OF THE FAMILY FOUGHT ON SPELL-BISIDES LADY DOROTHY HOWARD DISTRIBUTED LIBERAL LEAFLETS IN FRONT OF TIIE VERY PLATFORM ON WHICH HER BROTHER, LORD MORPETH, WAS DING FOR THE CONSERVATIVES--YE- T THE CARLISLES GET ALONG FAMOUSLY TOGETHER. OP-XYLI- S&Sttstosi State and Myrlght hi the Uni ensst Britain by Curtin Brown. Reserved. Ill Sights Strictly 5.--At thn raomt Loadon. April In the Hex hrlbueitvT Cl division of Northumberland the spectacle was witnessed of Beinbers of n poor's family taking political sides In s red-ho- t JJT LadiM Dorothy and Aurelia Sirsid. daughters of the Bari of Car-dtheir best for the Liberal ZSldste, while their brother, Lord ugMch, the heir to the Earldom, supported the Conservative Lgdldatf. Bui ft. wee merely a fresh illustration of the divisions In the Mbit houe of Cnriisle, which gives it . uiqiis claim to distinction among aristocratic Starfish families, whose BBnbera usually follow their leaders ns flocks of sheep. si Os political and social questions the odd. f, miiy sre hopslesaly atchasms nop-sm-s controversial them. The Earl Is a Conservative tbs old fashioned typo- - A notable peniber of the House of Lord, he r aids It with veneration ns the chief pillar of the constitution. He believes In the superiority blue blood, cnato distinction end all ths rest of the aristo-entt- a creed. He Is opposed to woman suffrage and every other phase of the soosni rights movement Tbs Countess, who can boast n pedl-rs- s quite ths equal of her husbands, b sous strangs reversal of the law of bendity is s rampant radical. With hsr the claims of long descent count tor nothing. She aides with the peo-yl- e against the peers, She openly advocates the abolition of the House of Louis if It refuses to yield to the popular will. She is an ardent advocate of the political equality of the sexes, ghe b s regular Susan B. Anthony sort e of woman and gifted with quite as s flow of oratory as was that Momitable champion of the suffrage ovsmeat in America. Tbs children, of whom there are rirft (arriving, exhibit the same diversity of opinions combined with the coamge of their convictions. As genets! thing the man hold the game views as their father and the women (boas of their mother. But perhaps the oat striking thing about them lo that they sever quarrel. They represent n paradox. Theirs is n house divided sgslBst Itself and yet it still stands sad flourishes. They are a disunited (sally sad yet they live together la owseMt unity. They afford a liberal faestim to their friends, for at their VM one Is sure to hearjxrth sides of say question that conies up for discusa Lord Morpeth, Lady Dorothy distrl buted leaflets advocating Liberal principles among the very people for wboee benefit her brother was engaged In propounding. Conservative doctrines. While canvassing they frequently ran across each other and such meetings led to n lively exchange of ban- ; ter. 1 say, Dorothy," exclaimed Lord Morpethxm one oorarion, it is no use -In your going there Indicating a house which he had Just left "1 have secured that little lot." "I suppose you mean that you have kissed all the bnblee in the family," Was the retort. t "At that game 1 admit that 1 am no match for yon, but I can beat you all hollow when ft comes to talking over the men. When 1 leave that house 1 shall have captured that Tittle lot pf yours for the other side." only n remote chance of succeeding to the earldom. The mother of atx sons and five daughters, It was not until ths death of m uncle In 1889 made George Howard a peer and the possessor of two fine old castles and a large estate, that she was able to devote herself to carrying out her Ideas. She was then a comparatively old woman, but a remarkably vigorous one. As soon ns the new peer entered upon his Inheritance abe made It apparent that as ths chatelaine of Castle Howard and Nawortbl Castle, It wan she who would rule the roust thereafter. A rabid teetotaller, her first move was to proceed to the wine cellars, which contained some of the. finest vintages la the kingdom, and order their contents to be throws into the gutter. Champagne, port and delect- - - es. they espouse opposite rides In to the side on which the worn era found that generally wins. Thit was th esse at the Hexham elec-doThe liberal candidate was elect-s- i by a large majority. One of the to ms wsa the House of Lords. Lord Morpeth mads several speeches ip taror of maintaining uniwatrleted the' And legislative powers of the peers. his sister, Lady Dorothy Howard, who has Inherited her mother's gift of oratory, as often demolished them, demonstrating to the huge satisfaction of her audience that an unfetterad House of Lords constituted the greatest obstacle to legislative progress In the kingdom. But that did not disturb in the least the friendly feeling between the brother and the sister. At one f the meetings addressed by Whan pihUe it e. Sweat Trial Is Wklrh The, HsuieS. The Far! la Shews as tht foria Xfekaa atinOaaslaaa la tht SMlr Oi4 taaa ekh tta ins Mag. Mn LADY CAKUS1.B LE4TTWO THE I.AW tfe Dorothy Howard carried off high honors at Glrton College, n feminine Institution of learning which is supposed to be remarkably successful la transforming charming charming young women Into unattractive blue stockings. But there la nothing ef that type about Lady Dorothy. She ts persuasive without being aggressive. Her general appearance and demure demeanor are those of n twentieth century Puritan maiden. Even when she tramped through London lnfthe memorable march of the women suffragists, carrying n banner, she still contrived to look gentle and womanly. Her enthusiasm for the causes she ad vocal ns is temp rad by that saving grace of humor which la so conspicuously absent In most women reformers, it Is said that she can argua In seven languages. But It Is the Countess of Cnriisle who Is undoubtedly the strongest perfamily. sonality of this remarkable She was the youngest daughter of Lord Stanley iff Alderley, at one time a Liberal Cabinet Minister. She was brought up In an atmosphere of politico. Her husband was plain George Howard when she married him more than forty years ago, and then stood Lad eug-gestlv- o are dlag Keanus the fair not been 1 tally feuccrnful In the past. NTc suggest that for once the; eliminating driving and horse Ir the fair grounds and subs! ntional and harmless amusem If hand contest drll hu r .competitive tadqe teams, elateffoda declam ad oratorical bai contests, tamea, tug 0f war, etc., were i tar Place of thou attraction i alr attract a limited class of'jH tar fair might prove a success. Kvi-n- r on will look at a hone wjkere 1la nothing else to lot J?,,'1 not proving that a ri 2 most enjoys, taii! 01 frlr fir will cpTMft,l far many, cater 1 rather that h,v "ren the fan tot 15? f1 01'hey naturally the,r BO cent! i rlek!51,lder d ,f ' tail fcJ5ined m? ? to pay out SrVmt ftke a exhibit or horse r tV,ar5 atnota tatwarted, hralntif th"y have bee i xp,? o lett is rxpenai failing have ao. or nSJuy S" nuraj Tht 11 OTt lnCOn,a clther ij,. flnM fair that Will cn ia ,hPI"H giM-- d tnste, r It THE NICKEL THEATER.. towna and moral tute in Weber county, especially In the rural districts I proven by the fact that these horse racea with a toon and fruit exhibit attachments have not been a great tute uoceaa. If softie of these purse which are annually given to owners of hones were divided up and offered to competing lodge and hands, hundreds of men and women lodge members would be Interacted where only two or three horse owners sre now Interested. The Iotc of music la far more universal than the tore of races. There seems endless possibilities for the contest idea in athletics. Daaket-11base ball, hurdle racing, tennis and all outdoor sports have their votaries. Let us have a clean fair and take the Lord into partnership Instead of the evil one'. P. 8. Nearly every one who haa attended the fair must be tired of us that big brown bottle ad. . . leave that out too. 1, pole-vaultin- Lt I . Offer to Fair. of' the Mr. Glasmann, secretary fair association, when shown the above, raid he was elected secretary onlv a few weeks ago,- and has had nothing to do with the fairs In the to giving any put and wu sppoed fair thla year, hut. after reading the foregoing, he said he though It was a good teore to let the temperance peoThey can ple nm the fair thla year. have the ground free of charge. He aa secretary, will give all the helpan-Exempossible anl The Standard - 1 Chicago la becoming alarmed over the wonderful rapid lnccreaae In the number of fivecent "theaters, " and the consequent education off children and youths In vice and crime. From the downtown districts and cheaper business streets, there nuisances are Invading th better class residence portions of the city. The. profits are ao large that thou engaged in the business are already opening np fi recent theaters ia smaller cities and Them These amusement places are patron-lie-d largely by school children, and In fully ninety per cent off them, the ubjecta are described na "for from moral." Suggestive picture, sensational trial scenes, representations off robberies ud other crimes, make up the repertorie in pearly every cue. The dealers In films and moving picture machines state that pictures of thla class are moat to demand. At the clou of school, troops of young girls 'enter tbeu amusement places, followed later by the young girls employed In the stores. They often remain for some time, seeing the tame pictures again and again, and making undesirable . acquaintances. Later in thw evening, a greater proportion of boy a ia found In the audience often manv of them hoodlums upon whom the effect of pictures of holdups and burglaries may be euUy Imagined. The result off the pernicious exhibitions are not left fo the Imagination, however. Judge Cleland, In n letter to the Chicago Tribune, states that a very large proportion of the children brought before his court are there bemuse of the flvecent theater. The' residents of localities where they exist also declare the bad moral effect upon the children. The Chicago authorities, with the approval of the pres a are making investigations, with n view to patting a stop to the evil. It Is to be hoped that the movement will be successful, and that other places In which the nickel theiter haa not yet male its appearance will take warning by Chicagos experience nd not allow It to gain a foothold. The Union Signal. ' UD -- able liqueurs all went down the drain pipes. The Earl, whose Ideas on the total abstinence question are also opposed to those of his wife, looked wistfully on and saw his precious nectars the first destroyed. It Is ssM that time In their married life there came near, being a quarrel between husband and wlffl. But the masterful countess was Inflexible. And the Earl was made to resit se that the agreement to disagree, under which they had long managed to live together so harmoniously, necessitated, in order that that happy stats of affairs might ho continued; a supplementary agreement, whereby It was understood that whenever their disagreements Involved n conflict of authority it was the Earl who would have to give way. I have heard that the Earl did threaten to get drunk every night for lx months at the nearest "pub" By way of protest But If he did any anything of the sort the Countess must have known that It was a mere Idle threat for though all his wife's eloquence has' never been able to convert him to total abstinence, his habits nip exemplary. When the yearning for the Joys of oonvlvallty In moderation - By One of the Weber Fair Direct ors to Allow to Temperance Advocates to Conduct a County Fair Along W MlMl tea will boost the fair free of charge. Hurrah for the first temperance fnlr. Offer Made Lines Suggested By rorRTS. iner WILL RON THE FAIR of the u n! six-fo- TEMPERANCE PEOPLE Borne of the directors County Kelp association constituted a serious breach of fib rules, and conveyed it to the top off the stain. Then he started on a tom rifle descent at lighting speed to the bottom. He escaped, fortunately, with a few bad bruises, hut the bicycle wu smashed beyond all hope aff am pair. He adopted Journalism a a cm roer and it wu natural that each fearless spirit should sain the first chance that offered a war com poadeaL It was that mission that took him to Omdunuaa and death. The CWrilal earldom dates from ML The find pear had heea a cot-oof Life Guards under Cromwell and a member of the Msnhnos Parliament. Cutl Howard Is os ef -- vol-ibl- t runs the family estates wu strikingly that he would be made aa associate, Illustrated at 4ha recent trial of aa but he is the tost man to the world action brought against Lord Carlisle to push himself, sud the honor wu by some urban council to restrain him never conferred on him. from rutting n drain pipe over which laird Morpeth, who has for throe some dispute bed arisen. Sue said .year represented Birmingham In the that all plans for any work whatever House of Commons, mamed a lady on her husband's Yorkshire and who, like himself, to a Conservative, Northumberland routes had to be sub- lie acknowledges he owes much of mitted to her down to the smallest the early sharpening of his own wits daulL She decided what should he to the fact that his mother and fathdone and what should not be done. er are of opposite was of thinking Although the Earl wu the nominal on must subjects, but he did uol car defendant he wu not even planed in to continue that sort uf education by the witness box. It wu the Countess taking unto himself a wife who would who wu subjected to a losg examinadevote her brot effort la uying to tion by Sir Edward Canon. Sir Ed- run vino him that must id bis social ward is reputed to he about the most and poll lire 1 opinions were dead become too strong! for him he Is accustomed, It Is said. U betake himself to Paris and jlbere indulge in a mild and harmless Jittle fling. For destroying the slues ths Countess was somewhat harshly criticised in certain circles, lit wu suggested that she might at Wi have presented them to a hospital, where good use might have been riade of them. Bat he rose to the emergency and proved her consistency into the bargain. She was convinced, rfq uld, that alooboi In any form was injurious, even to Invalids, and quot id medical opinion for her authority, ts it was responsible for such n ergs share of the sorrows and troub ro at Ilfo, the wily good thing to be rims with it, she declared, wee to deetfoy It utterly, wherever pussibla. UnUff no circumstances would she permit jrlnes to be served at her table. Nfi even If royalty wars a guest undef her roof. Which perhaps is on reason why royalty never seeks her hospitality, for royalty is accustomed everywhere to die-tat-e how it shall ha ntortalned. Another of Lady Carlisle's convictions, with which she will allow no oompromlso in her own domain, is that no man Should be employed in labor of a domestic character which a woman to qualified to undertake. She believes that women a lose should do womens work and at the same time be allowed the utmost freedom la tackling work which men ordinarily perform. After getting rid of the wines, the next reform she Introduced at hsr two os sties was ths substitution of Amasons for ths solemn and ceremonious butlers and the liveried sad knlckerhockered footmen. But though she regards with approval the Wbmens Rational Dross association, she did not venture to attire her "footmalds" in bloomers. They wean bine gowns sad snowy rope and aprons of n pattern designed by herself. If not as statuesque, they are certainly more than typical liveried menials of the stately homes of Eb gland and ana they are for less frigid. The Countess to n first rats platform speaker, and her sincerity and enthusiasm in spin respect cron among those who differ with hsr. Gladstone ones aid of her that she was one at foe most valuable assets of the liberal party. Arthur Balfour, the former Conservative promlfr, uee observed that if woman were allowed' to run for, Parliament the Countses of Cap lisle would be among the first batoh to get In, and that she would prove a meet doughty foe. When her eldest son. Lord Morpeth, wu contesting a Birmingham division for parliament Chamberlain remarked : to him: "If women were allowed to stand for election 1 suppose we should have your mother down hero - running ngnlnet yon a n Liberal candidate?" 1 have not n doubt of It," replied the Vleeount; "and a poor figure I or any other men would cut beside her. Bhe la one of the beet of mothers, but for ths good of the country, as she sees It my detest, so long I was beaten by Radical would caws .her more asttofsetion than my election. And my sister Dorothy la the am way." That it to she and rot the Earl who A WELCOME. Two little girls, who were playing "keep house" ne day. fell out over the question of whether an article of Visa sail u le-- ri I A WE PREDICTED Aa exclusively predicted In this department, the criminal elements, the undesirable citizens of surrounding atm tea have begun to make thelf appearance In Utah. The word hu evidently gone out that Utah ud her larger cities are easy. No laws of any consequence Interfere with the baser element. Whet la n fine? AU the states around us except Nevada are getting rid of Its parasites. The troubles of Utah and Nevada have just begun. From now on our Jails will he crowded, our peace officer busy, and owners of taxable property will have to foot the bill!- For nil this give - thanks to Utahs legislator. OUR FRIENDS, THE ENEMY. A remarkable editorial from Bon-forWine and Spirit Circular, a liquor paper of N"w York, Is reprinted ts the literary Wrest for March. The editorial which mirrors In. part the In tor MMfear. rule eaq toifS His sister Dorothy's efforts Vanbrughs most splendid architecturthat direction suffice for him. And al creations, with its facade 109 fact therefore Tie ts glad to have a wits long, groat hall with columns, dome who helps hies win his political fights. sad painted ceiling, and richly de Instead of trying to help some ether orated private chapel. It drew forth th praise at that tenet exenUag otft-fc- , fellow whip him. It wu at the last general election Money Walpole, who, ft hu been Mid, would not have hesitated to find that Lady Morpeth won her spurs fault with the Archangel Gabriel K a political canvasur. Bhe took In the art On of ' thn being n woman occasion had arisen. ef lntultkm and discernment in an proofs of the Ctounteu of CsrUslato amazing short space of time had mas- strength at rhsnoter Is that while such n stately pile she abouM tered all Its tricks. Bhe to went to there to no better way of still be found urging the abolition at uy that human nature thus conduct- the House of Lords. Ihe cutis to studying rich In art treasures. Inelbding ths canvass. ing e houseto-bouss One of Lord Morpeths younger picture Of "Tbs Throo brothers, Hubert Howard, who gave Marys" It wu an Bari of Qsrilale the promise of becoming one of the most brilliant members of this brainy fam- fifth who bourne the guardlu of thn ily, lost his life fighting bravely at poet Byron,, whose first oousto he wan. Omdurmaa. He had a passion for Thn refusal of thn Bart to lutroduon doing daring things. While s student the poet when he took his nut In thn t Oxford somebody dared him to House of Lords led to th quarrel rMe down a long flight of stone steps made famous In that passage beginlending from one of the halls on his ning, "Their praise to hymned by bicycle. Immediately he brought his loftier harps thaa mis. E. UBLS SNELL machine Into college, which hi Itself general alarm of the liquor traffic to aa follows: f of the "With more than geographical limits of this great country under laws prohibiting the sale off alcoholic beverages; with Tennessee passing through bar legislature a bill that almost amounts to state pro. hlblllou; with the West Virginia legislature peaang a measure to submit the prohibition of the manufacture ud aalea of wines ud spirit to a vote of the people; with Texas providing that express, companies truapurting wines and spirits shall take out a 95,000 license; with the Illinois legislature considering a county unit local option measure and Indiana n $1,000 license for the few aaloona that the remonstrance law will leave in that state; with Kentucky almost a dry state ud facing probably a leg- -' 1 !ative session that will submit a prohibitory amendment; and wllb an orguintkm opposing aa ud aweyn to our destruction tbat seems to lack nothing In the way of money or brains, enthuslum or persistent, untiring work what, may we uk, to the w ine to arrest the ud spirit trade doing current of events or to niter In uy way the radical oonduakwa which are being forced upon the people In every state, county ud precinct? If (here is one thing that seems settled beyond question h la tbat the retail liquor trade of thla eounlry must either mend its ways materially or be prohibited in all places save the business or tenderloin precincts of our , larger cities. If the league can maintain its present organisation it look aa if It will certainly destroy the to gal lend saloon In all pf the Southern states, excepting perhaps Missouri, and it la certainly making strong headway in Indiana, Ohio. Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota and other Western and Northern states." Far from aneereg at the league, the Wine ud Spirit Circular pays its respects thus: la mt n "The league fanatics, na some n mob of of the writers and speakers connected with our; business have declared, but It la a' strongly centralised organ!-catioofficered by men of unusual Ability, financiered by capitalist with very lhng purses, subscribed to by hundreds of thousands of men. women ud children who are solicited by their various churches, advised by well paid attorneys of great ability and it U working with definite kltu to guide It In every state, n every oounty, in every city and to every precinct. n Tf tiie fongu Id defeated at uy point It Immediately props rea for another attack along new line end when It succeed it at one . begins work for a more telling u u fifes i skillful la England. But the sur'ybtly old dam- - was n match for him at every point Bhe proved herself a pact jnlstrpas In the art of repartee. And she got in all her explanations despite the lawyer's efforts to restrict her answers to a categorical "Yu" or "No." He might as well have attempted to dam the to stop her talking Mississippi river until she had answered his questions to her own satisfaction. His comment afterward wu that In the whole oourse of his professional career he had never met a more difficult witness to handle. comNowadays Lord Carlisle Is pletely overshadowed by his brilliut and masterful wife that he to known the hustymd of the Coungenerally tess. But ha Is a long way from being a mere nonentity. He to probably the most accomplished artist la the peerage. Long before It wu the fashion to dabble in art George Howard, as he then was, was a frequent exhibitor at the Royal Academy of exhibitions; At one time it was thought u furniture they had made should be a cupboard or a china ctoast. "Lea play thla wu our china closet," said one. "No, lea play it wu our cupboard," . aid number two. "Aw, I wont play with you," sail "Too never play things the first. right" Bo she bull! another piny houao on the. other aide of the fence and made foces at the other little girl, who pretended to Ignore her. Borne such misunderstanding na the above seemed to have happened lately mug the socialists, with the. result that we now have two axlaUatdepart menta, instead of one. The matter hu been elaborately explained by both sides and Is now as clear it can be. It la n delicate subject and itelghbora feel the ume delimutual cacy in speaking of It friends of n divorced couple might over peaking of the separation. But, really we feel that, having lived In this newspaper neighborhood for ume time md being still on good terms with our own family and the neighbors, we ought to weloomo the socialist department. If we really know which ia the new neighbor. One seemi to have the new furniture and the other the new hnuse. But really and truly, brothers and sisters, we regret to aee this division brought about apparently by the very light difference between tweedlede-duJUSTICE GxaiMita it (to Sir t Ms aag IsSr Amalia Mawai. u u and t weed - LADY IHMIOTSTY SOWABS. -- aa af Cferilala Ska k se tfea t NIIM a Caayato foto AeaSMSgR Mag laOiaal. asS W , ia-f, I, . I b Uiss is Msyatfe MORPETH, eross-eumln- -- m to Omtnrttl 1athr toe tfeaOthat SMa- By1Slalrri.to tNaSs nU one-hal- anti-saloo- n anti-saloo- n anti-saloo- ... long-haire- d n, wrong. In , u lea-so- uf world-famou- - uti-aaloo- vlo-tory- "Precinct focal option with the league, is but th floreniuaer of county local option ud this again n stepping-atonla merely intended to state prohibition. There ia no question tbat this ergaaisatUm haa well .prepared plus for controlling the legislative branch of the government nt Washington ud of paaaing n national prohibitory law at aom time in the future, but before ft ao gigantic enterprise ft la working to cripple the trade la every possible any. and while ore sleep It la suooeedlpg in tb moat substantial manner. anti-uioo- u EDITORIAL COMMENT. An Ogden Judge rules that the ordinance agalnrt gambling does not apply to slot machines. But It dor. And some day tbe case will be taken Into a higher court, and the principle which nil men recognise will be recorded. Republican. , Inter-Mountai- n PROHIBITION PROHIBITS Leavenworth county, Kansas, vrblch n been one ef the five counties of that stale, ia at last about to rid herself of alcohol. A governor who means It, backed by a state attorney wbo also means It, la enforcing the law right up te the notch. The breweries and distilleries of Leavenworth, which have been drying the laws ef Kansas all these years, are in the hands of receiver. Joint-ridde- A BOY WITH WHISKEY, A boy at Salt Lake broke up a baseball game by appearing ia intoxicated condition with two bottles of whiskey in hia pocket. "After distributing the whiskey among the boy," gay tbe In Republican, "Tie soon had a bunch of riotous, rooters who took possession of tbe baseball field. Tbe game was called off, ud Principal W. H. Bradford of the Lowell school took Beebe to the police station. The boy any he bought tbe liquor at the 'Wlllla-Horn- e drug store ud the Z. C. M. L drug store." Now this la the difference between a license elate ud a . prohlblitcn u J boy. Tbe sentiment stalest such a drug store would cause such a drug-gito leave town suddenly. Here, so tag Is sentiment, the affair will not even be n nine days' acandai, st n u hu tats. An Intoxicated boy in the lab ter la unknown. The drug store them would be very careful nut to sell to a , AN INTOXICATED JUDGE. Superior Judge J. C. B. Hebbnrd off Ban Franciaou took umorege at re- mark! made by Assistant District Attorney Francis J. Huey ud waving n pistol over tbe hud off District Attorney Imugdon, demanded that he to sue a warrant for Honey's arrest ea a charge off libeL Speaklnr of its afterward. Attorney Langdon said: "Judge Hebbard wu fo a beutlal state off Intoxication. Ho wu simply ao drunk he could not distinguish right from wrong." And yet Americana are taught that they should not criticise a Judge. Ibat he should be left free and sntramoael-e- d te interpret tbe law without tear or favor. Well, that la all right to certain extent But where la unblued Justice to come In with n drink befuddled Judge. ALCOHOLISM AS A DISEASE. Under the above title an article, which appear In the editorial ooiuma of lut Sundays Examiner, from the Catholic, say a, among other things: "That poverty, dlaeue ud menial Instability ere largely to be attributed to drunkenneac U n favorite text tot temperance sermons. Dr. Braithwalss ia of tbe opinion tbat heavy drinking la not ao much the ouuee off them their effect It U often bafo. but more frequently the latter. This, position ia in harmony with th ova-- , tention that draaluaaeu I Itself a disease." There la nothing in the above statement with which any temperance worker may quarrel except the impft-catio- n that temperance worker la- variably consider drink a came never an effect. Drink la certainly both a cause off "poverty, disease and mental In stabileffect of them. ity," and also The drinking cutema of our ancestors may have caused those result fo ua while our peverty, diseese or mat. tal instability may causa na fo turn to take to drink, but whether a came Me uu tele effect the result or Inter-Mounta- in oaa-dttio- os u u u u tOealinued on Page Thii .--J , |