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Show . ' - :. . r. . 1 ' 1 ' : ' : ; :: r I ; ; : i ' . . ' ' l . . . i ; til. : t ' jf-;:!v..):.. t. . . : r-- :.;:.-;.tl3i liic " ; v:;'.' ' t 1. 5 1 : ' t t ; I r - : tl.' .... . : : it : i I. Vo v. cT. :. 1- ( " ii I 1 1 3 a 1. turn to f.:t j r!-;:; I.'.-, l-t via 1L2 nu;: .:,!(: i cf , 1 .r.lij ilzi Zzl ILcir way into ti3 cou;t3 1? cc-:'I:rc J, it nz:.t I2 f.:.-:tted that ::od method;; or rux-i;::n::a rux-i;::n::a cucn offenders are not adequate ade-quate TO TUTA STOP TOTHEHVIL. And there ere thousand of cases that never get Into the courts. The fear cf corporal punishment, however, would have a deterrent clTect. . . ;,. IT IS BETTER TO WHIP THE BRUTE HUSBANDS HUS-BANDS THAN TO ALLOY THEM T6 BEAT WO MEN. . v . How to Deal With Brates. In his message to Congress President Roosevelt touched upon a number of subjects that have ifayer found place in such a document. Some of them were hardly of sufficient importance to deserve notice, no-tice, but many of them are of genuine public interest. inter-est. - ,"' . The stand taken in favor of punishment for wife beaters that will. really-be punishment is virtually cn'argument for the establishment of the whipping post. The President was quite outspoken about it In the message. He said: , "There are certain offenders, whose criminality takes the shape of brutality and cruelty toward the weak, who need a special type of punishment. The wife-beater, for example, is inadequately punished by imprisonment; for .imprisonment may often mean nCthing to him, while it may cause hunger and want-tcLtbe want-tcLtbe wife and children wtu have been the victims of liis brutality. Probably some form of corporal pimishruent would be the most adequate way of meeting this kind of crime. The man who is brute enough to beat his wife is net going to care anything about serving a sentence irr jail. It means food and shelter without working fuX a certain length of time. The only drawback is tllat it deprives him of drink.' So far as -disgrace is concerned, he is incapable of feeling it because of a prison sentence. In fact, he is rather inclined to be proud of it. , . : BUT riLLORY HIM IN PUBLIC AND LASH IliM VIGOROUSLY ON niS BARE BACK AND HE WILL SEE THINGS IN A DIFFERENT LIGHT. TnE FIRST BLOW WILL CAUSE HIM TO REVISE HIS OPINIONS AND COME TO TOE CONCLUSION TOAT BEATING A DEFENSE- |