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Show THE SPANISH FORK PRESS SHAKE ROMANES LECTURE GIVEN BY THEODORE ROOSEVELT U Elliha Warner, Publisher SPANISH TORK . . . UTAH WHOLE SOUTHERN PORTION Of PENINSULA 8UFFER3 FROM SEVERE SHOCK. THE UTAH BUDGET . e cant!. There was a frost In Cache Valley, June 4, severe enough to badly nip the tender garden truck and to do Mime Injury to the wheat crop on the west side of tbe valley. Logan fared much better than a great many of the other towns. Nephl Anderson, a civil engineer whose home Is In Brlgham City, was drowned In Logan river, Logan canyon, on the night of May 4. There were no witnesses to the tragedy, but It la supposed that In the darkness be walked off the dugway into tbe river. 1 U took a huge steam shovel four hours to recover the body of Joe Don-ton- . 48 years of age, who was instantly killed under hundreds of tons of earth, which raved on him while he was engaged at bis work In the new cut of the Utah Copper company at Bingham. Jonathan C. Royle, lawyer, Jurist and eminent citizen of Salt Lake, died Monday morning. Judge Royle came to Salt Lake City In 1871 and went Into partnership with the late Thomas Marshall. The firm continued active until the death of Mr. Marshall four years ago. Tbe r.licit liquor dealers of Spanish Fork, who have had considerable trou ble with the city since the prohibition ordinance went Into effect, have decided to promise to quit the business If the city will drop the prosecution of a large number of cases It has against them. Mrs. Joe Begdar of Bingham, while making a bed, accidentally discharged Colt's revolver wnich a bad been left there by one of the lodgers, the bullet entering her left breast and parsing out through her shoulders, making a painful but not dangerous wound. daughter of Edna, tbe Mr. and Mrs. George Klrby of Hyde Tark, died June 6 of strychnine poissixtieoning after having eaten twenty th-grain tablets. Tbe tablets had been left on the table and the little one got hold of them while her mother waa out of the room. . Frank Murrell, aged 40 years, a miner employed at Eureka, committed suicide Saturday night by shooting himself In the left breast with a Murrell had quarrevolver. reled with his wife, and when she left the house, Tie picked up the revolver and shot himself. Leo L. Engheart, a traveling scissorswho was last seen at S I -grinder, ver City. Is missing. His little cart In which he carried his tools and supplies has been found In the sage-brusnear Silver City, but no trace of him can be found, and It Is feared be baa been murdered. A loan of $50,000 from the state land board has been applied for by the Irrigation companies and others who own the lakes at the bead of Provo river. The loan will be secured as soon as certain preliminaries are arranged. The work of reservolrlng the " lakes will then be pushed. Salt Lakers A party of twenty-seveInspected the Price River IrrlgaMon company's project on Saturday and the members were favorably Impressed with this new district, which promises to become one of the great sections In the state. est State Statistician Haines has com piled a stateemnt of tbe cement products of the state for 1909, There was a total of 501,500 barrels of ce ment, of the value of $647,030, manu factured In Utah In the year. The cement plants paid out In wages 1c the year $251,111. h . n , fruit-raisin- g 1 f anu can-I- n0iand. as I In and Fifty Llvei Lost and Many Injured, While the Property Damage Will be Enormous. Twenty-fiv- e earthquake, Italy. An characterised by one severe and several minor shocks, which occurred shortly after 4 o'clock Tuesday morning, wrought great havoc throughout the province of Avelllno In Campania. The entire region, extending for a radius of fifty miles, was thrown Into a panic. While the clrty of Avelllno practically escaped damage, the town of Calltrl, some thirty-fivmiles distant, suffered severely. Reports received here Indicate that balf the buildings In Calltrl have been wrecked. The number of killed In that place Is estimated from twenty-fiv- e to fifty, while scores have been seriously Injured. From many other towns arid fallen villages come stories of homes, death and suffering. At San Sole in the province of Potenza, six persons were killed and five Injured. The convicts In the prison at Benve-netbecame panic stricken and tried to force their way past the guards, but were overpowered by troops. This region has suffered much In the past from earthquake shocks, and In 1851, 800 persons were killed. e o PERIL8 OF THE FARM. Some of .the Incidents of Every day Rural Life. Pittsburg. Some of the perils of farm life are reported in news dispatches received from rural communities in this and neighboring states. F. W. Dubbs, a farmer near Lisbon, O., had a battle with an Infuriated bull, and with one arm broken managed to climb into a tree. He was found some time later with the bull pawiug the ground beneath, and snorting with rage. After the animal was driven off It was found that Dubbs had died the tree. Warren Wrai, a farmer near waa Instantly killed by a young colt that kicked him In the stomach, At Greenville, Pa., a pet horse bit off the index finger of Mrs. Jacob Uhler's right band while she was feeding tbe animal. In Til-de- Mrs. John W, Johnson of Willow Bend, in Munroe county, W. Va., waa trying to separate two fighting turkeys when a cow charged and knocked her down. She was trampled and cut by the animal's hoofs before rescued by farm hands. Notorioua Wolf Killed. Upton, Wyo. "One Toe," tbe most famous wolf in the west, waa laid low last Friday by William Jenkins, a ranchman, who shot the animal which has been hunted by stock growers In th!s part of the ate for years. "One Toe," so named from tbe fact that his trail showed him to have but one toe on his right forepaw, has been the despair of stock growers for many years, raiding their herds and being held responsible for losses that aggregate thousands of dollars. He was too wary to be led into a trap, could never be deceived into eating poisoned meat, and until Friday had never been caught within rlflo range. Expulsion of Jews. Kiev, Russia. Authentic figures on the expulsion of the Jews show that 1,421 individuals have been expelled from Kiev up to June 6. Of these, 517 came under the ruling allowing them a short time in which to prepare for their departure without restriction, while 904 received passports good only over the route to their specified destinations. Two hundred and eighty-eigh- t persons who originally were ordered expelled, succeeded In proving their right to residence. Oxford, England. Before an audience of distinguished men and students of Oxford university, Theodore Roosevelt on June 7 delivered the Romanes lecture, his subject being "Biological Analogies in History." The lecture had been scheduled for delivery on May 18, but of course was postponed on account of King Edward's demse. It was given in the Sheldon-Ia- n theater and Lord Curzon, as chancellor of the university, presided and Introduced the lecturer. In seeking to penetrate the causes of tbe mysteries that surround not only mankind but all life, both In the present and the past, said Mr. Roosevelt, we see strange analogies In the phenomena of life and death, of birth growth and change, between those physical groups of animal life which designate as species, forms, races and the highly complex and composite entities which rise before our minds when we speak of nations and civilizations. , It Is this study, be asserted, that has given science Its present-da- y prominence, and the historian of mankind must work in the scientific of spirit and use the treasure-house- s Hut It U an ar. which Is Itself but part of Spain. type, as shown In Portugal. be tween England. a The Mffence. oia marioan and thfS as thoss European nations are not as great "'""-frowhich separate tne new one another and the "old" nations case from another. There are In each new ana very real differences between the for both good ces the old -...ii. k..t i aai-t- i ease there is j the same ancestral history to reckon with, the same type of civilization, wim ana. tendant benefits and shortcomings; after the pioneer stages are passed, tne problems to be solved. In spite of "Pr"; cial differences, are In their essence the same; they are those that confront an thnu that confront into peoples struggling from barbarism civilization. nf the "death" of a tribe, a nation or a civilization, the term may be used for either one or two different processes; the analogy with h. .nn In tilnlnrlcst history Del tig complete. Certain tribes of savages, the Tasmanlans. for instance, ana various m-tclans of American Indians, have within the last century or two completely died out; all of the Individuals have perished, leaving no descendants, and the blood has fartoln nther trltieS Of illianiuawl or Indians have as tribes disappeared .I A LI are now disappearing; out meir ow of veins the Into absorbed remains, being the white Intruders, or of the black men Introduced by these white Intruders; so that In reality they are merely being transformed Into something absolutely different from what they were. A like wide diversity In fact may be covered In the statement that a civilization haa "died out" Phenomena That Puzzle. In dealing, not with groups of human beings in simple and primitive relations, but with highly complex, highly specialsocieties, ised, civilized, or there Is need of great caution In drawing In the occurred haa with what analogies development of the animal world. Yet even In these cases It Is curious to set In the how some of the phenomena growth and disappearance of these complex, artificial groups of human beings resemble what has happened In myriads of Instances In the history of life on this m nation-differen- m .iin..j nni.. ie ... science. To Illustrate, the lecturer took several Instances of the development of new species and the extinction of species In the history of mammalian life, showing that in some cases the causes can be traced with considerable accuracy, and In other cases we cannot so much as hazard a guess as to why a . given change occurred. Analogies In Human History. Continuing, Mr. Roosevelt said In J semt-civlliz- part: Now, as to all of these phenomena In the volution of species, there are, If not homologies, at leant certain analogies. In the history of human societies. In the the history of the rise to prominence, oftemand change, of the development transor and death porary dominance, formation, of the groups of varying kind which form racca or nations. Aa In biology, so In human history, a new form may result from the specializag and hitherto very tion of a or generalized form; as, for instance, when causes of a barbaric race from a variety suddenly develops a more complex cultivation and civilization. That Is what occurred, for Instance, In western Europe during the centurlea of the Teutonic and later the Scandinavian ethnic overflows from the north. All the modern countries of western Europe are descended from the states created by these northern Invaders. When first created they could be called "new" or "young" states in the sense that part or all of the people composing them were descended from races that hitherto hod not been civilized at all. and that therefore for the first time entered on the career of civilized communities. In the southern part of western Europe the new state thus formed consisted In bulk of the Inhabitants already In the land under the Roman empire; and it was here that the new kingdoms first took Through a reflex action their shape. Influence then extended back Into the cold forests from which the Invaders had come, and Germany and Scandinavia witnessed the rise of communities with essentially the same civilization as their southern neighbors; though In those communities, unlike the southern communities, there waa no Infusion of n"w blood, and in each case the new civilized nation which gradually developed was composed entirely of members of the same rare which In the same reglonjiad for ages lived the life of a slowly changing barbarism. The same wn true of the Slavs and the Slavonlzed Finns of eastern Europe, when an Infiltration of Scandinavian leaders from the of Byzantine north and Infiltration culture from the south Joined to produce the changes which have gradually, out of the little Slav communities of the forest and the steppe, formed the mighty Russian empire of today. slowly-changi- "New" and "Young" Nations. the new form may represent merely a splitting off from a highly developed and specialized nation. In this case the nation Is usually spoken of aa a "young," and Is correctly spoken of as a "new," -- atlnn; but the term should always be used with a clear sense of the difference between what la described In such case, and what is described by the aame term in speaking of civilized nation Just developed from a Plnchot Gets Into Game. ( barbarism. Carthage and Syracuse were new cities compared with Tyre and CorWashington. Former Forester inth; but the Greek or Phoenician race' was Plnchot arrived here on Tuesday In every sense of the word as old In the for tb.e avowed purposo of exerting new city as In the old city. So. nowadaya, his Influence against the passage by Victoria or Manitoba Is a new community with England or Scotland; but the senate of the administrative con- compared the ancestral type of civilization and culbill. servation It is expected that ture la as old In one case as In the other. Senator Doll Ivor, to whom Mr. Pln- I of course do not mean for a moment great changes are not produced by chot addressed the letter that .result- that the mere fact that the old civilised race ed In bis dismissal from the govern- la suddenly placed In surroundings where ment service, will be the forester's It has again to go through the work of the wilderness, a work finished champion In the move to compel the taming many centuries before In the original an of bill. amendment to the adoption home of the race; I merely mean that the ancestral history Is the same In each Commodore Slma Ready for Fight. case. We can rightly use the phrase "a new people" In speaking of Canadians Blueflelds, Nicaragua. "At the flat or Australians, Americans or Afrikanders. shot fired against the American flag Hut we use It In an entirely different of an American vessel, I will level sense from that In which we use It when of such communities aa those the bluff." This Is the reply made on speaking founded by the northmen and tholr deTuesday by Commodore Harold K. scendants during that period of astonishof Sims, commanding the American gun- ing growth which saw the descend.-iniNorse conquer an I transboat Dubuque to a threat made by the form Normandy. Sicily, and the British General Itlvlns of the Madrla forces Islunils: ws use it In an entirely different holding BlueOelds bluff, to etop any sense from that In which we use It when speaking of the new states that grew up vessel entering the harbor. around Warsaw, Kief, Novgorod, and Moscow, as the wild savage of the Stock Broker Suicides. steppea and the marshy forests struggled San Francisco. Despondent over haltingly and stumblingly upward to recent domestic trouble and chronic become builders of cities and to form stable governments. The kingdoms of 111 health, Charles Pnxton, a woll Charlemagne and Alfred were "new," known member of the San Francisco compared with the empire on the stock exchange board, shot and killed they were also in every way diflines of ancestral rieacent had himself on Tuesday In his office la ferent; their In Common with those ot the nothing this city. A number of brokers from polyglot realm which paid tribute to the nearby offices, attracted by the sound Caesars of Byzantium; their social probhistory were totally of the shot, hastened to the office, but lems and aftertlme different. This Is not true of those "new" Paxton was dead before medical aid nations which spring direct from old naA short time tions. Drazll, the Argentine, the United cnuld be summoned. Rtate. are all "new" nations, compared ",'o I'axton's wife secured a divorce vlth ihe nations of Europe; hut nl "i lit ho had not sustained any scrlnti: tt t changes In detail, their clvllizj-i.- 0 . anc'al loss. Is nevertheless of Ihe gum-r.i- l luuru- Again, Gif-for- d is; planet Why do great artificial empires, whose citizens are knit by a bond of speech and culture much more than by a bond of ahow periods of extraordinary blood, growth, and again of sudden or lingering decay?, In some cases we can answer readily enough; In other cases we cannot aa yet even guess what the proper answer should be. If In any such case the centrifugal forces overcome the centripetal, the nation will of course fly to pieces, and the reason for Its failure to become a dominant force is patent to every one. The minute that the spirit which finds Its healthy development In local and In the antidote to the dangers of an extreme centralization, develops into mere particularism. Into Inability to combine effectively for achievement of a common end, then It la hopeless to expect great results. Poland and certain republics of the western hemisphere are the standard examples of failure of this kind; and the United States would have ranked will) them, and ita name would have become a byword of derision. If the forces of union had not So the triumphed In the civil war. growth of soft luxury after It has reached a certain point becomes a national danger patent to all. Again, It needs but little of tne vision of a seer, to foretell what must happen in any community It 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 vanlshea In graceful If the virile qualities atrophy, then the nation has lost what no material prosperity can onset But there are plenty of other phenom ena wnouy or partially Inexplicable. It Is easy tO see Whv Home trenriuit Ana... .,... when great slave-tille- d farms what had once been a countryside of wnen peasant proprietors, greed and luxury and sensuality ate like acids Into the fiber of the unner dnsse. whiu of the citizens grew to depend, not upon mcir own exertions, out upon the state for their Pleasures and their hood. But this does not explain why the iorwara movement stopped at different times, so far as different matters were concernea; at one time as regards liters ture. at another time aa rr.nnia u,..i,i... ture, at another time as regards city building. We cannot even guess why the springs of one kind of energy dried up nunc mt-rwu jrei no cessation of an other kind. n,. . -- 1 th. out tr .... o.. ir ' uiv often to permit the separatist the particuUirlst spirit of the province, to rob ,1 e i vziiicirnry, 'J nil Wan hnrt But the fatal weakness was enough. that ..in.in fi.inu . societies Where men hate " V. ble. and try to lustifv th.i, -' to face It either by' h.gh-mplatitudes or else by a phUos,, L J d "h mnterlallsm. were very wealthy. They The , L? lleve that they could hire oVhers their fighting for them on land; to do and on sea. where they did their own lighting and fought very well, they refU8ea time of peace to make ready fleets either to Insure the Dut'h the against peace to give them the being broken or wa? when came. To be opulent victory and Uto secure ease In the present unarmed at certain cost oT disaster In the f'tSre It Is therefore easy to see why Hnlln lait when she did her powers: but It I. far more dlffl'uU g the plain why at the same time there to have come at least a loss of tlon In the world of artpartial and of divine fire burned UseTot .park the national soul. A. the line of statesmen, of great warriors, by land great and sea. came to an end. so the line of th. great Dutch painter, ended. l the .chool. foMoweTth. rlanati t rn 1 H,. I i ",1,n n. sZ. "in mi vii thsn aauiiion rthe great that are now western rivinsed nattan. of central and a America and Australia: for th. great that If it cunt next century at tne "" talned for the last will b highly civilized people In to go or else have begun i..inn m.hiiemanv of them will nave backward. already gone very far There I. much that snouia mv. """- -- - cern for tne tuiuro. bu. No man also which should give us hope. more apt to be misiaaen u. witn an my prophet of evil. I believeremains for us. heart that a great future our but whether It does or doe. not. bat-ti- e the However altered. not Is duty may go. th. soldier worthy of the name will with utmost vigor do hi. task, and bear himself a. valiantwhat ly In defeat as in victory. Com. not will, we belong to people, who have great yielded to the craven fear of being , In the age. that nave son- exgreat nations, the nation, that ahave mighty panded and that have played have In the end part In the world, grown old and weakened and vanished; but so have the nation, whose only efthought wa. to avoid all danger, allwho fort, who would risk nothing, and ihmtnra ruined nothing. In the end the same fate may overwhelm all alike; but the memory of the one type pensne. wim It while the other lessee Its mark deep on the history of all the future of man kind. A nation that seemingly die. may be born again; and even though in the physical sense It die utterly. It may yet hand down a history of heroic achievement, and for all time to come may profoundly Influence the nation, that arise In It. place by the Impress of what It has done. Bext of all I. It to do our part well, andattho same time to Me our blood 11 v. young and vital In men and women fit to take up the task as we lay It down; for so shall our seed Inherit the earth. But if this, which I. best I. denied us. then at least It Is our. to remember that If w. ., a. our choose we can be father, were before us. The torch ha. been handed on from nation to nation, from civilization to civilization throughout all recorded time, from the dim years before history dawned, down to the blazing splendor of this teeming century of our.. It I. dropped from the hand of th. coward and the sluggard, of the man wrapped In luxury or love of ease, th. man whose soul waa eaten away by It has been kept alight only by those who were mighty of heart and cunning of hand. What they worked providing it wa. worth doing at all, wa. of no less matter than how they worked, whether In the realm of the mind or the realm of the body. If their work wa. good. If what they achieved waa of substance, then high success wa. really theirs. In the first part of this lecture I drew certain analogies between what had oc curred to form, of animal life through the procession of the age. on this planet and what ha. occurred and I. occurring to the great artificial civilization, which have gradually spread over the world', surface during the thousands of year, that have elapsed since cities of temple, and palaces first rose beside the Nile and the Euphrates, and the harbors of Minoan Crete bristled with the masts of the Aegean craft But of course the parallel Is true oniy In the roughest and most general way. Moreover, even between the civilization, of today and the civilizations of ancient times there are difference. .0 profound'that we must be cautious In drawing any conclusion, for the present based on what haa happened In the past. While freely admitting all of our follies and weaknesses of today, It is yet mere perversity to refuse to realize the Incredible advance that has been made In ethical standards; I do not believe that there is the slightest necessary connection between any weakening of virile force and this advance In the moral standard, this growth of the sense of obligation to one's neighbor and of reluctance to do that neighbor wrong. We need have scant patience with that silly cynicism which insists that klndll-nes- s of character only accompanies weakness of character. On the Just as In private life many of contrary. the men of strongest character are the very men of loftiest and most exalted .0 I believe that in national life morality. as the age. go by we shall find that the permanent national types will more and more tend towards those In which, while the Intel-estands high, character stands higher; in which rugged strength and courage, rugged capacity to resist wrongful aggression by others, will go hand In hand " a lofty .corn of doing wrong to oth-erThis Is the type of Tlmoleon. of Hampden, of Washington and Lincoln. These were as good men, as disinterested Ann ll nasi :Iflah Mat, ' "":" eyer served a state; and they were also as strong men .um.uen or saved a state. Surely fn. ,?.Xample! prov ,hRt "'ere Is notb- - iue. ri. "uoEiS bar4 torch-bearer- at ct a. .i . Every modern civilized t. within Its' Pr1b."m' iiuuiems mat arise nnt merely from Juxtaposition of poverty .n riches, but especially fron, sclousness of both n,,v.,.-' Each nation .' ""u r" i ; !! 'S' thelf .... it, .;7 , - sponsibllltr. one for each all: and at the same time a splrl? h re' a. mote as the poles from every form of weakness and As war to pardon the sentimentality coward Is in ,1 wrong to the br ve "J'" short-sighte- n'" . I mui. In on. another andcompile,,"! with .7 B ,, b!" most intimate w'Men to a larger w fc, the modern nation, 1Z. "N - -.i- to which "domlta k ......i iV mil came; own it could not have been Indefinitely postponed; but It v... Mu,.n,-- r man it needed to come ' """"comings on her part to "main and the United wumu ue wise to pay heed Her Dlulc Cn hV, Z'' Holland as an Example. . . - 1. unuuier ana smaller lnstano that a period covering a oi noiiana. ... little more than the r ""5-iu- ii hi win rutin 10 cnmmiiA century, . like some Holland, of the Italian city The on penoa, stood on i.n the really high civilizations them-a- e . dangerous height,- nf .,..).... t..., K-oa ve. .upply the antidote to must urmue na- th. theV tlons so vastly her auperlor In territory 0V' 0t and population as to make It Inevitable 'JSL that sooner or later she must fall from the Problems of Modern Ntinn. glorious and perilous eminence W- Vl unsP.;kl, strive for thl. destructive that the Z., condition. t0 thee, .ocial utt., mate relations of th, In private use and bu bor, with poverty, tuT1. sity Is to remember (hi? nes. of heart la which we ever tempted to future. 1. our Urn. of growth ,...inns Snd TV for the betterment mTuM. ns of the '" Avelllno, til . face, that fall Danger or . "Tonne ... chief reason. u,i... th. preservation while. It I. wff but transformation, came 7w of ath. force, None can tell, a Attracts Death ..iawof King's Event Postponed by that we can skland other force, that arettS5 that can but dimly be appreI Vr. at work all around u.. uoin Curzon Lord Oxford ?ood and orfor evil. The growthfor Invap((j Large Audience at ury, in love - vi..nt American. . ,nd Wyohiua ean;- K, " Distinguished the Introduces , Fire totally destroyed the Ice plant charged to incendlailos. A number of former Alpine resl-lennow living In Provo, have decided to visit, tbe old boine on July 25, and are arranging a "homecoming day" for Aplne on that date. Charge! of having wilfully crowded two pedestrians off tbe public road In Ogden canyon and forcing thorn to Jump for their Uvea over the river embankment are made against the driver of an automobile,'- William Brlngburst, aged 24, on Monday pleaded guilty to the charge of robbing a gambling houHe In Salt ke City, as well aa robbing the Lay-to- a bank, and was sentenced to twelve years' Imprisonment. The work of the 8evler County Fair association for 1910 has been started, and It looks as though the fair will be a more Important and valuable event than ever before. It will be held September 14, 15, 16 and 17. Members of the Central Christian Church of 8alt Lake City bad a jubilee meeting on Sunday, when the mortgage which bad stood against tht edl-firfor seventeen years was cancelled, aud the papers were burnrjl. Burglaries are of dally and nightly eccurrence In Salt Lake City, the police and city detectives seemingly being powerless to prevent a continuance of the work of tbe boldest gang that has ever Infested the capital city. Albert Griffiths, aged 45. was found sitting with his back against a building In Salt Lake City, apparently asleep, but In reality dead, having been dead several hours when discovered. Death was due to excessive use of Intoxi- in mim ;ri,i, h d in Ogden belonging to D. O. Griffith, rRUHlng a loss of $20,000. The Are li Between - pre- cnamo-- r. loss Of council In th ,h JustTce . iv7,o the """" " un has ever ' atmtTk! hlchi. trying ZV ,a $ l" mpled. to work out rnment for, of. t the same time dm- -. V duty of a great pow certain problem, 'J?' to .olve. and a. to whkt'i'i should be th. same.n7E man of the Brltl.h homes across the ui. ' teu, ,! ' ... uu si pome brought nto mm. ",a. N people., some with s dwi Lf' ... dent then having but recently, fr' barlsm which Th" prohl"" that i ' T: beolvedbyth.f"' peopw WM?7 stay-at-hom- e elemental forces. Neither !' olved by the raw brutllt,!i who, whether at home or L i frontier of civilisation. t the only .tandard of rl(ht k other men. and treat ,un j luujcriB ior exploitation. No hard and fast . ipplylng to all all differ from one annth.. ly than some of them dlir UNO 0r IW0 n liiciw not be forgotten. !n th. l... can be no Justification for,, r cunircnnng tnotktf management and control irt for ih th. Interest and , other race. Thl. Is hn ave In the main itnn tlnue In the futnr. i . gree to do. In I la. Egypt, ui ippines anxe. in th, nit gard. every race. everrw!!. or abroad, we cannot Jort from the great rule el which bid. u. treat etch H worth as a man. II. miiu favored mentally becauM a given race; ne must munlly In wrong-doing- , i kt not f r or leges which would be d vicious and unfit smong thw the other hand, where he which would entitle him to m reward if he were of our or Is Just as much entitled to h and reward If he eomw stock, even though that otlwi duces much .mailer proper of his type than doe, our on) nothing to do with social ts:i witn wnat 1. called socUl m ha. to do merely with thuawa Ing to each man and eart n elementary Justice whlcn alts; or her to gain from life tV which should we- always sobriety, lights of other., pup. self-contr- and hart gent work to a riven end. Tt f ucn just treatment no nil ana less man sucn juit trei should receive Duty of Nation to N The other type of duty a a tlonal duty, the duty omt H tlon to another. I hold that i morality which should gow als In their dealings one are lust as binding concenilK their dealings one with tM application of the moral ' different In the two cava. one case It has, and In tlwd not. the sanction of s civil behind It. The Individual ea his lights upon the eourM. t selves derive their force nw power of the state. The upon nothing of t therefore, a. things are so highest duly of the nv froenl nentile. tn keen tbftti' a stale of readiness as t M barbarism or despotism the ' resting the progress of Ihe'1 king down the nations that progress. It would ne too nav heed tn the unwUe P"' sire disarmament M to be " verv Denotes who. of not be left helpless bff" ' foe. But we must rep"' strongly both the lea"" " whii nra,.llA AP enrOOtf? tfW aggression and Iniquity the expense of the wean.-- erate lawlessness ana " by the weak nor by thesW""" weak and strong ws treat with scrupulous falrw clgn policy of a cotintrv-shoul- great sin be conduct the same plane of honor. inn nnaa & nwn rlalltS SIM others. """J of the right, ' 1. vinline 1 7. nonoraiMfl ninn Inwi Permit me to UTr MP' ment out. . of my own . I M'lll t V nearly cignt great nation the conduct during those yews 1 and charges of Its forel years I to I of the earth that I would Justified In taking as M dealing with other IndM" I believe that we of tw H nations of toduy have s long career, of schleven our several countries. 10f vouchsafed the honorable Ing his part, however fo' Let us strive hardily v.. ma tlillllH .... rink njr nf tnn'i ' .it. know neither follure nr blo hope thnt our ownour In the land, that dren's clill.lren to o'.it " P' shall arloe to take P mighty nnd dominantdeal But whether this be nui "J., the yeurs we shall ". the satisfaction be ,"f. cnrrledi onward the own duy and gonernii"nthen, as our eyes and 01 ( Into the darkness, J. the torch, at least borne part has been 1 sw; ,( , l. ,,y.'..tlm. f Vicious, or even the feehi. . which 1. re. l, ' of reward what braver m" have earned. The rr,n KJ,e,.i any is to hein him the worst lesson to . u, 1,6 be Permanently . p some one else. True Ilhert of to best , K hnm itu" of others, Privilege should not Z 1 because It Is to the advantage yet because it u to th. ml1my "or f a No majority. tnorlc of vested right, or freedom f con,ract can stand In the abuses from ,hrdy0fp ,t:0CUt,n tie can we l,,,Ju"J'"'trln- imno.ihiL- - . sires hlghlynTleal?.h. ""Mentally which, In destroying r7""l"n rlahu including Propeny rfKh ,h y. would destroy th. two .r:: ; special problems ana uK..""' hZ c" "",'' ftLrlT anrjirw J ?' n',,:' e'i sgonts la - , we, snd PnJ Charity . .ii.ilinl n,u m ine conunuH.""-An observant man H .najllng Uiai l.UR WHS Jliu-- I. he.fiJ reH - drlnlrlnir fnnntaln WDlCB fllctlng inscriptions. l"9 Dno he nrlelnttl tno fountnin. was from whosoever will, w -- ... "1 . j .... Above this hung do not waste tbe Companion. P1 1 |