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Show '.S&u2t Thompson's Eyt Water TALUWS SHAKEN UP ROOSEVELT GIVES assayer and S .nami RURTOI. BChARQ E. ' C , prte: suver, Too bul l, 6 envelopes and full prtca Hit arm on application. work solicited. I.eaiivUla. uunuvi en., umpire Col. Keljran . Csttxmai National Baus. opemmea PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM ClMBMf fluiuoU fwt eud baamulal Um halt a luiun.tit n.wth Tails to Hector Gray Oc.nd KNOWN NO HONING TMt WORLO IN YOLK OWN HOME e nothing Too Good d. That's why we want yoq to take CASCARETS for liver aud bowels. It's not advertising tal- kbut merit the great, wonderful. for you. e lasting merit of CAOSAlUiTS that we want you to know by trial. Then you'll have faith and join the mil lions who keep well by CASCA . .lETS alone. toe treatment, alt druffg-'sts- . la the world. bo Milium for wwkl Biggest seller oxc month. When a man dries op like a mummy he usually thinks be Is a saint. Dr. Pleree'x Pleaaast Pellet Unt pot up 40 years y Who has a favorite sin has a hard vaster. Casey at the Bat. This famous poem la contained Id the Coca Cola Baseball Record Book for 1910, together with records, ached-ulefor both leagues and other valu able baseball Information compiled by authorities. This Interesting book sent by the Coca Cola Co., of Atlanta, Ga., on receipt of 2c stamp for post Also copy of their booklet age. -The Truth About Coca Cola" which tells all about this delicious bever age and why it Is so pure, wholesome and refreshing. Are you ever hot-ti- red thirsty T Drink Coca Cola it relieves U cooling. fatigue and quenches the thirst. AC soda four tains and carbonated In bottles Cc everywhere. - n Still a Chance. His Excellence. - "I tell you," said one man to another as they emerged from the dimly lighted corridor of a concert ball, envy that fellow who was singing." "Envy him!" echoed the other. "Well, if I were going to envy a sing er I'd select somebody with a belter voice. Ills was about the poorest ever beard." "It's not his voice I envy, man,' waa the reply. "It's bis tremendous courage." Ladles' Home Journal . A Cynical Synonym. "Poor Myra Kelley," said a maga- sine editor at the Authors' club In New York, "was almost as distressed as Mr. Carnegie at the spirit of graft and crookedness rampant among us, "The young writer, at a dinner of magazine contributors, said that we worshiped wealth that was our trou ble. Then she crystallised her mean Ing In an anecdote. . "She aald that one man asked an ' other; "'What position doesUlank hold In the cornmunftyr "'A very honorable position. was the reply. . bo wealtbyf ."'Is " 'Wealth and honor said the other, . 'are synonymous terms In America today.' " . - -- Rural Life. aclence. To illustrate.' the lecturer took sev Pittsburg. Some of the perils of eral Instances of the development of farm life are reported In news dis new species and the extinction of spe from communi received rural patches of mammalian life. ties in this and neighboring states. F, cies In tbe history In some cases the causes W. Dubbs, a farmer near Lisbon, O., showing that considerable accuhad a battle with an Infuriated bull. can be traced with cases we cannot so In other and racy, and with one arm broken managed to much as hazard a guess aa to why a climb into a tree. He was found occurred. some time later with the bull pawing given chsnge In Humsn History. Analogies the ground beneath, and snorting with Continuing. Mr. Roosevelt said In rage. After the animal waa driven part: off it was found that Dubbs had died Now, as to alt of thaia pnenomana in tne volution of spaclea, there are. Ir not in the tree. at leaat certain analogic. In Warren Wrax, a farmer near Til homologies, in tha tha hlatorv of human was killed a den, young hlatory of the rise to prominence, of the by Instantly or tne tern colt that kicked him in the stomach. development- and change, or trans At Greenville, ra., a pet horse bit pcrary dominance, uit deatn or varying aino formation. f the off tbe Index finger of Mrs. Jacob which form rscei groupa or nations. In ao human hlatory. L'bler's right band while she was Aa In biology, new form may result from the specialisa feeding the animal. and hitherto very tion of a lons-eiltlMrs. John W. Johnson of Willow alowly-chsIng generalised or non- Bend, In Munroe county, W. Vs., waa apeclsllsed form: as, for Instance, when barbaric rare from a variety of causes trying to separate two fighting tur asuddenly develop a mors complex culti cow a and knock' when keys charged vation and clvlllsatlor. Thst Is what oc waa ed her down. She trampled and curred. forv instance. In western Europe anil cut by the animal's hoofs before res during tlte centuries of the Teutonic later the Bcandlnavtaa ethnic overflows cued by farm hands. from the north. All the modern countries of western Eurnps are descended from the Notorious Wolf Killed. eiates created by these northern lnvad'-rs- . Whsn first created they could he rslled "One most tt Toe," Upton, Wyo. "new" or "young ststes In the famous wolf In tbe west, was laid low that part or all of the people eomposlng them were descended from races thst Friday by William Jenkins. hitherto had not been civilised at all. end animal which the who shot ranchman, that therefore for the first time entered bas been hunted by stock growers la on the career of civilised communities. In the southern far of western Rumps this part of the ate for years. "One the new states thue formed consisted In fact so named from tbe bis that Toe," bulk of the Inhabitants already In the Und trail showed him to have but one toe under the Romsn empire: and It wss first to is on bis right forepaw, has bea tbe here thst the new klnsdnms a rr action their Through shspc. for of stork growers many Influence then extended back Into the colj despair years, raiding, tbelr herds and being forests from which the Invsders had come, aad Scandinavia wltneneed held responsible for losses that aggre- end Germanycommunities with evsentlslly tha rise of was He dollars. of gate thousands the same rlrtlltatlnn as their southern too wary to be led Into a trap, could neighbors; though In those communities, never be deceived Into eating pois- unlikeno the southernnewcom muni ilea,In th wss Infusion cf each blood, sod oned meat, and until Kr day bad never esse the new civilised nstlnn w.ilrh grsdu been caught within rifle range. elly developed wss composed entirely of mem hers of the same race which In the Expulsion of Jews. me region had lived ti e life of changing hAfherism. The same Kiev, Russia. Authentic figures on awsaslowly of the Blavs and the ftlavorttfd the 'expulsion of the Jews show tha Fionatrue of eastern Ktirope, when an InHI have been expelled Irstton f 1,421 Individuals lesders from the f Itycantlns from Kiev up to June. S. Of these, north and Infllirslton rutttirs from ths south Joined to produce 617 came under (he ruling allowing Tfe change which have gradually, out of them a short time In which to prepare ths llille ill rommunltle of the forest I and without sieppe. formed the mighty Russlsn rreiric for tbelr departure empire of today. 04 received tion, while pasxpori "New" and "Younj- - Nations. to over tbe their rouie spe good only Again, ths new form may represent clfled destinations. Two hundred and merely splitting fT from hlaMy developed and spelsliced elghiy-elgh- t persons who nr'ripallv nation. In this ran) the nation Is asuslly were ordered expelled, succeeded la f aa a "rmint," ao l is rorrevtly spoken proving their right to residence. "new, nstlnn: but it, spoken of as term should always be need with a clear Pinchot Gets Inte Came. sense of tVe dlherencs between whst described In such esse, and sihst Is de- Former Forester Gif-for- ecri'wd Washington. by the same term In spesklng of Ilnchol arrived here on Tueslay rlvitlred nation J.ist devrli.ped from for the avowed purpose of exerting bsrbsftem. fsrttisse avt "rrscuse were compered won Tyre and Oof' his Influence et,lnl tbe passage by new rtlles loth: MM the Oreek or Phnefiian race wss the senste of the administrative mn In sense of the worJ as old In the every setTfltion bill. It Is expected tba new city as In the old ly JM. nwlsrs. r Msc 'toha s a sew community Mr. to whom Pin Setstor Dolllvr. with r.nslaod or v otlsnd . bu chot addressed the ict'er that ranl! compered the ancestral type of elvfl;nn and cul ed In hi d;nilia! from the govern lure is ss old In one rase s In Ike ni her s moment ment service, will be tbe forgot er'i I or covrse do not mean thst eret rhsogi are n t produced by champion la the move to compel ib mere he fsct thst the old ci(i,rd rse s sixVn!y pts'ed In S'lrrowodtngs adoption of an amendment to the bill where It has arslsj to go Ihrourn the iml Commodore Sims Ready for FlgM, iorh fln'hd tsm'ng the wlWternes. eeot tries before In the crlrnal "At the Brit insny Moefiei'la. Mmraeun home of the tce: merely fnesn ths shot fired axalnst tbe American fia the arcTstral Metcs-the ssme In esrti of an American vessel, I li level esse, we can rtgM'v use the tt rsee new reorle" r spesslng of f'snsd-stbe liltiff. This Is the reply made m or AwstrstisMi. Americans or AfriVenders Tnetday by Commodore Hsrold K Hot we vse M In ss entirely orTerent Sims, commanding the American gnn aense from thst in which we see it when rcrnmunlties ss !), 'f tls.'chnvrthmen boat Dubuque to a threat made by epesfcleg fmjndMt and their rte. General Rivta of tbe Madris forces scendsotsbyduring Ihst of aetofitsh Ing g"itb whh-- saw the desreodants of holding Hluefield blnff, to stop an the Norse se. thieves mnier and trans veMtel entering tb harbor. form Nsrmendy. "iriir, frH, Rrlj!, tstsfwl; w nee It in en Stock BroVer Swiedes. tifrerei senae from thst In whhhentirely we wee It when over speumg ni tne sew state (hat grew up San Franc wo. around Warsaw. Ki-- r. recent dome' le tronble and chronf and rtovgorod. ow, as tne " 111 esvsges of the ill health, Charles pat'on, a we! M -l pes and the marehy forests strvsgled knos tnefnter of the San Frsnclseo haltingly u4 stombilna'y tipwsrd te bwiMers of ili stock exchsaee board, shot and killed ke-and ti form S'SMe The klng'toene of governments himself on Toeelav in bis ofTce In e and were Alfred rsrlemag-nthla City. A mitiW of brokers from ewerpf4 with the errors en the)"rte nearby offire. attracted by the sotind phor-- s they were aln lol evey way 6f linea sf anoe-radescent bad of the shot, batened to the oTk. but fsrent: teir to common wi'h ef r. Paxt'n vm dead before medical a'd eh'rg realm which paid tr1hie to the po'rr'ot A short tim could be summoned. f.'aesare of trrnh- their were totahy aeo Paiton s w.fe secured a divorce Urrt r and 'ertime hfetrry 1 1 is (a not trwe cf those "new t' but he had not sustained aay serlo'i w n sprang irect rwn o'd nafinancial loss I!- t 'he Argentine, the t'rttted ' nf "Have you ever loved and lost?" asked the sweet young thing. ."Not yet," replied the man who bad been divorced three times. ." THE CHAJR Avelllno. Italy. An earthquake. characterized by one severe and sev eral minor shocks, which occuVred ehortly after 4 o'clock Tuesday mornOxford. England. The Romanes ing, wrought great havoc throughout Roosevelt, which the province of Avelllno in Campania, lecture by Theodore on May 18, delivered was to been have The entire region, extending for a raon account was which but postponed dius of fifty miles, was thrown Into a of the death of King Edward, was panic. While the. ciity of Avelllno given on June 7 by the distinguished escaped damage, the town American. theater Tha Sheldonlan or fjaiitrl, some thlrty-flvmiles dis waa filled to Its capacity by notable tant, suffered severely. Reports re persons and Oxford students and tha ceived here indicate that half the lecture, which was on "Biological buildings in Calltrl have been wreck- Analogies In History," waa well ed. .The number of killed In that place Lord Curzon, chancellor of the la estimated from twenty-fivto fifty. inlverslty, presided. while scores have been seriously in In seeking to penetrate tbe causes Jured. From many other towns and of the' mysteries that surround not fallen only mankind but all life, both In the villages come stories of homes, death and suffering. At San present and the past, said Mr. Roose Sole in the province of Potenza, six velt, we see strange analogies in the persona were killed and five injured. phenomena of Ufa and death, of birth Tbe convicts In .the prison at Benve-net- o growth and change, between those became panic stricken and tried physical groups of animal life which to force their way past the guards, m e designate aa species, forms, races but were overpowered by troops. and tbe highly complex and composite This region has suffered much in entities which rise before our minds the past from earthquake shocks, and when we speak of natlcus and civi lizations. It Is this study, he assert la 1851, 800 persons were killed. ed, that bas given science Its present- PERILS OF THE FARM. day prominence, and tbe historian or mankind must work In the sclentino 8ome of the Incidents of E very-daof spirit and use tbe treasure-house- s OVSSJ In order to make oar borne st udy ouuni known In thUUnmilty we will tflvtj voti absolute! rroe.lttkMun furetUier Wano.OrKun, vtuUn. Uutttir, Uttujo, arw Coruet. It nmttani not wheilier yuu bHtfinnnr or on adranctHl inipll, the litsun will be ukule suitable tu four need. Tbt are iuamla of St. ouce tot our JTUUU almjpltcUy. Drop ouj. card tottnatleut lutlhirj of Butte, M nfthAv. D- 1U JltwYork City CASCARETS IN ORD CURZON unuea Sheldonlan Theater Crowded With Distinguished People Whan American Talks en "Biological Analogies In History.1 MUSIC LESSONS FREE . or Oxford President States at Between Twenty.flve and Fifty Lives Lost and Many Injured, While the Property Damage Will bo Enormous. Solid Sharing Comfort NO STROPPING Former " Dniggim t ROMANES LECTURE WHOLE SOUTHERN PORTION OF PENINSULA SUFFERS FROM SEVERE SHOCK. at r-- for-ag- -e --- d A Tasle A Smile And satisfaction to the Last mouthful Post Toasties ' There's pleasure in evrry A trial will show package. tbe fascinating flavour. Served fight from the package with cream or milk and sometimes fruit fresh or. stewed. fr y o1 h t- The Memory lAngcn" rVgk I0csn4 15c SoM fy Ccocert, prwtam Cereal lis i t.. Lid. Cftek, site b. me R. ' States, are a!l "naw nations, eomparsd with the nations of Europe: but with whatever changee In detail, their civilisation la nevertheless of the general European type, aa shown In Portugal, Spain, and England. The differences between these "naw" American and these "old" European natlona are not ae great aa thoae which separate the "new" natlona one from another and the "old" natlone one from another. There are In each case very real differences between the new and the old nation differences both for good and for evil: but tn each caae there la the same ancestral history to reckon with. the aame type of civilisation, with Ita attendant benefits and ehortcomlnge; and, after the pioneer stages are passed, the problema to be eolved. In eplte of auperfi cUl differences, are In their eaasnce the earns; they are tboss that confront all, civilised peoplea. not thoae that confront Into! peoplee atruggllng from barbarian) civilisation. Bo. when we speak of the "death" of a trtbs. a nation or a civilisation, tha tern may be uaed for either one or two totally wltll different processes; the analogy what occurs In biological hlatory belnJ complete. Certain tribes of aavagea. the Taamanlana. for Inatance, and varloua lit tle clana of American Indiana, have wlthlr the laat contury or two completely diet! out; all of the individuals have perished leaving no deecendanta, and tha blood hai Certain other trtbea oi dlaappeared. Indians have as tribes dlsappearsd or) are now disappearing: but their bloonj remalna, being abaorbed into tha veins oft the white Intruders, or of the black men! Introduced by these white Intruders; aol that In reality they are merely being! transformed Into something absolutely different from what they were. A like wide diversity tn fact may be covered In the etatement that a civilisa tion has "died out." Phenomena That Puzzle. In dealing, not with groupa of human belnga In almple and primitive relatione, but with highly complex, highly apeclal- Ised. civilised, or Socletlea, there le need of great caution In drawtnsH analogies with what has occurred tn thai development of the animal world. Ten even In these cases It Is curious to sen how soms of the phenomena tn thq growth and dlssppearance of theae com ntex, artificial groups of human belng4 resemble what has happened In myriad of Inetances In the history of life on thl nlanet. why do great artificial empires, whoaS citizens are knit by a bond of speech and culture much more than by a bond of' blood, ehow periods of extraordinary growth, and again of sudden or lingering T In some cases we can anawer decay readily enough: In other casea we can not as ret evsn guess what the proper anawer ahould be. If In any such caae the centrifugal forces overcome the cen tripetal, tha nation will of course fly to pieces, and the reason for Ita failure to become a dominant force le pstsnt to every one. The minute that the apltit In which finds Its healthy development local and In the antidote to the dangers of an extreme centralisation, develops Into mere particularism. Into Inability to combine effectively for achievement of a common end, then It te hopeleaa to expect great results. Poland and certain republics of the western hemisphere are tha standard examplea of failure of this kind; and the United States would have ranked with them, and Ite name would have become a byword of derision. If the forces of union had not triumphed In the elvll war. Bo the growth of soft luxury after It haa reached a certain point becomes a national danger patent to ail. Again. It needa but little of the vision of a seer to foretell whst must happen In any community If the average woman ceases to become the mother of a family of healthy children. If the average man loses the will and the power to work up to old age and to fight whenever the need arises. If the homely, commonplace virtues die out. If strength of character If the vanishes In grsceful virile qualities atrophy, then the nation haa lost what no material prosperity can moat Intimate and Important ef all which to a larger or leaa degree affect all the modern nations somewhat alike, ws of the great nations that have expanded, that are now In complicated relations with one another and with alien races, have special problems snd special duties of our own. You belong to a nation which the greateut empire upon which the sun haa ever shone. I belong to a nation which Is trying, on a scale hitherto unexampled, to work out the probloma of government for, of, and by the people, while at the aame time doing the International duty of a great power. But there are certain problema which both of ua have to aolve, and aa to which our standards ahould be the aame. The Englishman, tha man of the British talea. In hla varloua homea acroaa tha seas, and the American, both at home and abroad, are brought Into contact with utterly alien some with a clvlllxatlun more anpeoplea. cient than our own. othera atlll In, or having but recently arlaen from, the barbarian which our people left behind agee ago. The problema that srlss are of h Inconceivable difficulty. They cannot be eolved by tha foolish sentimentality of e people, with little patent theories reclpea. and thoae of the political nursery which have auch limited applicability amid tha crash of elemental forces. Neither can they be aolved by the raw brutality of the men who, whether at home or on the rough frontier of civilisation, adopt might as tha only atandard of right In dealing with other men, and treat alien races only aa suhjecta for exploitation. No hard and fast ruls can be drawn as applying to all alien racea. because they differ from one another far more widely than aome of them differ from ua Out there are one or two rulea which must not be forgotten. In the long run. there can be no Justification for one race managing or controlling another unleaa the management and control are exercised In the Interest and for the benefit of that other race. Thla Is what our peoplea have In the main dona, and muat continue tn the future In even greater degree to do, In India, Egypt, and the alike. In the next place, aa regarda every race, everywhere, at home or abroad, we cannot afford to deviate from ths great rule of righteousness which bids us treat each man on his worth aa a man. He must not be sentimentally favored berauaa he belongs to a given race: he muat not be given Impoa-aaaa- ea well-nig- stay-at-hom- semi-civilis- offset. tlut there are plenty of other phenomena wholly or partially Inespllrahle. It le easy to see why Home trended duwnwsrd when great slave-tille- d farms spread over hat had once been a count ryul tie of peasant proprietors, when greed snd luxury snd sensusllty ate tike actde Into the fiber of tbe upper classes, while the mass of the citizens grew to depend, not upon their own exertions, but upon the slste, for their pleasures and their very livelihood. Hut this does not explain why the forwsrd movement stopped at different times, so far aa different matters were concerned ; at one time as regarda literature, st another time as regards srchltec-lurat annthsi time aa regarda city building. We cannot even guess why the springs of one kind of energy dried up bile there wee yet no cessstlon of another kind. Holland as an Example. Take another and smaller Instance, that of Holland. Fr a period covering a little more than the seventeenth century, Holland, like soma of the Italian city states at an earlier period, stood on the nadangeroua heights of greatness tlona so vastly her superior In territory and population as to make If Inevitable lhat eonner or later she must fait from the glorious snd perilous eminence to which she bad been raised by her own Indomitable Soul, Iter fstl came; It could not have been Indefinitely postponed' but It came fsr quicker thsn It needed tn come, becswee of shortcomings on her part to which both Greet Britain and ths t'nlted would be wise to par heed. Iter flat government wss singularly Ineffective, the derentraltt atlon being such as often to petmlt the set.hstlst. the partlrularlst, fpint of the provinces ta roh the central sutlw.Hty of atl efficiency. This waa bad enoni ftut Ihe fatal weakness waa lhat so cmni.Mjn In rich, pesce-lovlnsocieties. here men hat to think of war ss possible, and try to Justify ihelr own reluctance to fc It either by mors! plaitto or else by a philosophy ,f e, g g d r.iaterlsMsm. The Inii.h were very wealthy. They grew to believe that they rouM hire othera to do tWir rich tins for them on land, and on sea, where they did ihelr own fighting, and foosht very well, they refused in time of peace to make o efrely the tutch ficient ae el'her to Insure sgsinst the pesce being broken or else to give them th when war came To be opulent victory and unarmed Is te secure ease In the present st the stmost certain cost of dlesster In the future II is therefore easy to see why Holland ket when she did her position smong the powers: but M Is fsf more difficult to why at the ssme time thers should short-sighte- tn have rome at a partial ! of post-Ho- n In the world of an and letters Rome are of divine burned ielf out In epsrk the net (ins I soul. Aa the line of grest of grest warriors, by Isnd and statesmen, -- . rsroe to sn end. so the Hoe of the great Imtr-painters ended The ms of in the schools followed the loss r,f In camp and In cceincfl chamber In the little reptihHc: of Holland, ae tn the great empire of Rome. It was not sth which rstte. but trsnfformstlon. rtoth llollsnd snd Italy tecn na tha! races that fall may rise sen's Danger of Race Suicide. There are whlrh we of the nstlomt are ever templed to grest civilised qetl'ns of the futire. Is our time of ak to an end? Are we aa nations oon to come tinker the ml of thai gret law of death, which l !te!f but port of the law of life? None ran lil Forces Ihst we ess -- e and other forces that era MH'i tft Ihst ran but dimly be srpre-herde- d ar at work a!! eroqrtd ss. both and for evil. The growth tn lus-rgf.d in ive of esse. In taste for vatrfd and frlvoV-oexcitement. Is Wh etklent ssl re-1- grt fr v. s Phil-Ippln- ea or permitted to munity In wrong-doincumber the ground, or given other priviwhich to the denied be would wrspped In luxury or lovs of eaae, the leges vicious and unfit among themselves. On man whoae soul waa eaten away by It has been kept alight only the other hand, where he actarexIn a way which would him to pec t and by those who were mighty of heart and tvward If he entitle were of our own atock, he cunning of hand. What they worked at. la aa to much Juat entitled that respect providing It waa worth doing at all, was and reward If he romee of another of no leaa matter than how they worked, even stock other prothat atock, though or the whether In the realm of the mind a much smaller proportion of men realm of the body. If their work wsa duce hla own. of our doee Thla than has. type good, tf what they achieved waa of subto oo witn social intermingling, stance, then high euccsss was really noining la called social with what It equality. theirs. has to do merely with the queatlon of do to man each and each woman that ing Strength With Morality. Justice which will permit htm In the first part of this lecture t drew elementary Ufa the reward or to from her a gain certain analog-tebetween what had octhrift. curred to forma of animal life through which should l. always accompany reapect for the the procession of the ages on this planet,' aobrlety, Intelli rights of othera, and hard and and what haa eoccurred and ta occurring gent to s given end. To mors than to the great artificial civilisations which such work treatment no man la entitled, Just have gradually spread over the world's and leaa than auch Juat treatment no maa aurface during the thouaanda of yeans ahould receive. that havs elapssd sines cities of temples X and palacea first rose beside the Nile and Duty of Nation to Nation. the Euphrates, and tha harbors of ta The other of the Interna type duty Mlnoan Crete bristled with the masts of tional duty, the duty owed by one nathe Aegean craft But of course the tion to another. I hold that the laws of parallel Is true only In the roughest morality which should govern Individand moat general way. Moreover, even ual In their dealings one with tha other between the clvlllxaliona of today and are Juat aa binding concerning natlona In the civilisations of ancient tlmea there their dealings one with the other. The are differences so profound that wa must application of the moral law muat be be cautious In drawing any conrluslona different tn the two case, because In for the present baaed on what haa hap one case It hsa. and In tha other It haa pened In the paat. While freely admitnot. the aanctlon of a civil law with fore ting all of our folllea and weakneaaea of behind It. The individual can depend for today. It la yet mere perversity to refuse his rtghta upon the courts, which themto the Incredible advance that selves their force from the police has been made In ethical atandarda. I do power derive of the etste. The nation ran dqs not believe that there Is the slightest nec upon prnd nothing of the kind; and essary connection between any weaken therefore, ae thlnga are now. It le the ing of virile force and thle advanca In highest duty of the most advanced and the moral atandard. thla growth of the peoples to keep themselves In such aense of obligation to one'a neighbor and freest a stste of readiness as to forbid to any of reluctance to do that neighbor wrong. or despotism the hops of arWe need have scant patience with that barbarism resting the progress of the world by strisilly cynicism which Insists that kindlidown the nstlons thst lead In that ness of chsrarter only accompanies king progress. It would be foolish indeed to weakneaa of character. On the contrary. heed to the unwise persona who depay Just ss In private life many of the men sire diaarmament to be the of strongest chsrscter are the very men very peoplea who. of all begun by ahould of loftiest and most exalted morality, so not be left helpless before others, any possible I believe that tn national life as the agea foe. nut wa must reprobate quits aa go by wa ahall find that the permanent strongly both the lesders and the peoples national type will mors and more tend who practise, or encourage or condone, towsrds thoae In which, while the Inteland Iniquity by the strong at aggression lect atanda high, character atanda higher; the expense of the weak. We ahould tolIn which rugged atrength and courage, erate lawlesaness and wlrkedneaa neither rugged capacity to resiat wrongful by the weak nor by the eirong: and botn by ethers, will go hand In hand eak and strong ws should In return with a lofty scorn of doing wrong to othtreat with fatrnesa. The forers. This le the tvpe of Tlmoleon. of eign policy scrupulous of a great and lf respecting llsmr-le-n. of Washington and Unroln. country ahould be conducted on exactly These were as good men. aa disinterested of honor, of Insistence the same and unselfish men. as ever served a upon one's plane own rights and of respect for state; and they were also ss strong men the rights of othera. aa when a bravs and as ever founded or saved a state. Surely honorable men le dealing with bis felsrh lows examples prove that there la nothpermit me to support this sts laing Ptoplan In our effort to combine ment out of my own experience. Fof Justice and strength In the same nation. nearly right years I was the head of a The really high civilisations must themgreat nstlon and rhsrged espedslly witn selves supply the antidote to the the conduct of Us policy: and and lovs of ease which they during those years I foreign took no action with tend to produce. reference to any other peopls on the fees of the earth that I would not have felt Problems of Modern Natlona. In ae an Individual la Every modern rivlHe-- d nation has many Justified with taking other Individuals. and terrible problems to solve within Its dealing I believe that we of the great civilised own borders, problems thst arise not natlona of today have a right to feel that merely from Juxtaposition of poverty and long careers of achievement lie before rH hcs. buf eapeclslly from the several countries). To each of na Is of both poverty and riches our vouchsafed honorsble privilege of dothe Kch nstlon must sl with the maihis part, however small. In that work. lers In Its own fsahlon, and yet the spirit ing I.et ua airiva hardily for success, even If In which the problem Is approached must so doing we risk failure, spurning ever be fundamentally the aame It by r souls of email endeavor who the muet he a eplrtt of broad humanity; of knowpoor-neither failure nor suecena !e ue l.rotherly klndoesa. of acceptance of re- hope thst our own blond shsll continue sponsibility, one for esch and each for In the land, that our children and chilII. and at the ssme time a spirit aa reendle children dren's generations mote as the polea from every form of shall arise tn taketo our places and play a weakness and sentlmenlsllty. As In war In world. snd dominant part mighty lo pardon the coward la to do crnel Rut whether this be denied or tha granted by rong to the brsv man whose life his the years ws ahall not see, let at cowardice Jeopard xn, so In civil affairs the satisfaction be oora that we least hava It Is revolting to every principle of carried onward the lighted torch la our Justice to give to the laity, the vicious, or own we do If this, day and generation. even the feeble and a reward as our eyes closa. and we go not which la really the rohhery of what then, darkn-s- s. hand Into and ether the grasp braver, wiser, shier men have earned. at least we csn ssy thai our The only effective way to help any man the torrh, baa been borne well and valiantly. la to help him to help himself; and tha part worst boson to teach him Is thst he ran Arms snd Legs. be permanently helped st the expense of soms on else. True liberty shows Itself lo the result of According In to host advantage protecting the rtghta measurements made at the msny An nd especially of minoritt-- a. of others. In London, Privilege should not be tolerated because laboratory thropologlcal It Is to the advantage of a mlnnrrlty, nor the rlgt.t arm In humsn beings Is, In yet berauss it la to the advantage of No doctrinaire theories of a majority of esses, longer thsn the metortty. vested rights or freedom of contract can left arm, while, on the cootrsry, the stand tn the way of our cutting out left leg Is longer than the right leg. abuses from, the body politic Just a UtSometimes, however, tbe relative proile can w afford to follow the doctrinaires of an Imposaihle stnd Incidentally portions are exactly reversed, but of a highly Hndeslrahle social revolution very seldom does perfect equality which. In Individual rights exist between the two sides. The ten Including property rights) and the fam of tbe right arm to eiceed the lly, would destroy the two chief a rents In dency the advance of mankind, and the two left arm In strength Is somewhet chief reasons why either the advance or grester In men thsn la women, while the preservation of mankind ta worth of strength In the two arms while. It la an evil and a dresdful thing equality to be ralloue te sorrow and suffering, and occurs almost twice as frequently blind to our duly to ?o all 1 hinge possible with women ss with men. for the betterment of sorisl rondlttnna Bnt tl Is an tinspeaksh'y foolish thing to A Test ef Strength. strive for this by means so "Itoctor, bsve you and tbe eonsnlt-In- g no sodestructive that tt-- y would cial conditions to better. In dialing with physician decided what Is tbe matall these social problema. with tha me?" with ter relations of the fsmlly. with wealth "Not yeC" In private use and business use. with la this "Hut I heard yew balloting bor, with poverty, the one prime neces" sity la to remember thst. though hard morning ness or nean is a great svIL it Is no "Oh, thst wss only a straw vote gresfer en evil than softness of head. Bat In addition to these Problems tbe Kansas City Journal. a-- d-- I dull-witte- lo'l-rr.a- te |