Show 9 Congress Has a Heart I IJ J J to is b a z house of ol business as a arul arule rule rul and iad sentiment there is usually tak taken n ni i IB th a gr grain in of salt Dollars and cents and OIes les seem Kern to be the guiding spirits to a lalor who sits and watches the house in w. w for a t day But sometimes stirring Ul is b enacted in the cradle of our laws it sl was the other day when Mrs John J. J J I o of or Massachusetts halted baited a fiery debate th a few soft words The house had been cn into the bitterest kind of fa factional S iCe Je Ik re were angry words and pro- pro were a accusing one another Q to jimmy Uncle Sams Sam's strong box lift It iC i billion bOHon dollars and there were from rom all U sides It was a fill fiti- and harbors end and there is no lour long these th things may last 7 was stilled the fire C ft ibe he house changed hanged from a mad mad- if howling men to a silent and respect- respect b Vy Mrs Rogers Rogers' plea It was a boy gallery for or whom she pleaded Charles C Dr Bronner of Cincinnati who had hd gone wa wart wars and aDd come back without eyes or who had hId beaten down the enemy of and aad ill in health and was about to du led In hi law des irles Bronner cannot see sec us Mrs Mes 1 began n because ause he lost both of his hisHa Ha fla not only rave cave his eyes for us but As if that were not enough Yeu yer he had sleeping sickness for three Ia Jn spite of all that he graduates this Ih Ut from the University of Maryland AS a aI I do not believe any boy has acco 1 more for us than this boy When he discharged from our service he bc had tn nn ile education I told him the otherl other other- f l r Io he e he be had had hadi a hard time J l ha h aid the government has done donea a aIt It t deal for me in helping me to read and t uries barles Bronner bas has done more for the I nt than the government ever could for bini He lie has fought and won a battle which hundreds hundred of our boys have fallen Ringed raged at the terrible odds aga against them 1 Is I s achieved another victory for his pity try He stood in the gallery aUery at his moth- moth tide aide lc There was nothing more that con con- could do for him be because ause he had bad fought lf ht himself To a man they rose 1 representatives sent from every core corf cor cor- ot f fc th Ue de e union to guide the destinies of the eStes States For a moment as they stood WS Iras the silence that comes only with moments of emotion Then broke a aIfer Ifer er of applause To the boy and his hiser cr er tip Up there how hou sweet it must have that that tribute of a nation to one of own V We Vt know congress can quarrel c accuse can bicker and filibuster splitS split S and aDd waste time But we know now U t It Jt is good all of us to know that know that ress Tess has bas a h heart rt t S |