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Show M y LIBERTY UNDER THE LAWS. H 1 1 r The difference between savage and civilized fl 1 Ih i man Is that the forjnQr ls determined to be a law B !f f til unt0 himself, the latter, recognizing that for the B l HI sake of both justice and the peace and protec- B iiUlIf tion oi socIety man must surxender some of his B i Bw primitive rights, disciplines his life accord- B I Bw ingly. To enforce this rule, to make liberty sub- B f'lilfll -ect riShteous laws is the most serious prob- B H sBl lem ia confronts our government today. Prog- BB HB ress rests upon two things. One, and the chiof- B WW cst is lnl)or' the otner is capital. Capital is help- HB 'fp less without labor to carry forward its enter- BB prises, labor is well-nigh helpless unless it can K ,i have the implements to labor with and a reward B ;f , fr tci1 HB ill But neither of these mutually inter-dependent H uf u forces are just Capital is perpetually seeking B jf$ to draw more and more interest upon its invest- jK ! ,4i uients, and is often unscrupulous as to the means B Irll? it employs to reach that result; labor is inces- BB Wi sant in Jts offorts to obtain better rewards for jB II w its efforts, and in those efforts, of late years has HB 'ffl nl not scrupled to strike at the inherent rights of B rfyJfUf -ne PeoPle- Then we have other classes. Some IK HBIi' who clam that there is a higher law of conscience BBi --IBf that controlls them and that consequently they B IBr should be exempted from obeying mere human B ThIIi laws lLB iPI There are others who claim that they have BBI ILIf looked deeper into nature's plans than their fel- flIB JUL 1 low men and tliat human laws ehould be modified lB imil t0 corresPnd with what they believe to be na- laB )"Bh ture's laws There aie others who through their siB liB' y vices ignore both nature's laws and the laws of jHI .jsHi raan IBBflliif i A tIie ark Passlon8 ftN thu undisciplined ap- iB 4lBI petites of men are fighting the rules which clv- BB'W" ilized men have prescribed for the government of BIBUBflffi human beings Even the marriage oareraony is SBbIBBP often invoked to give respectability to a direct B&BUBBri violation of both human and natural laws. How BlBl to correct aU tnis is the stuy of earnest men BHmliflllr everywhere, but there is no solution of the prob- mBhBI! lem Tnere never will be until the effort begins HflBBSlb in tDe homes of the people. The surrender to HHuHral law must first be brought there The impression HmWebiI must be fixed that until a law is abolished or re- nHipif pealed it must be obeyed and If increasing intel- BHyiSlisf ligence indicates that a revision is necessary, WKJBBggBmm that revision must be brought about in c legitl- MHBHBHlli'i mate way Another fact must be impressed that BsHlflli1 a wrong works its evil as well upon the perpetrator per-petrator as upon the victim. The dream of the individuals that make up our people is to obtain more wealth. This should make all the people read the more carefully the history of this nation A few families have managed man-aged to hold fortunes through two or three generations, gen-erations, but that is all. That the rich man's son ends where the father began is Mtill the rule. The thing we should, as Americans, be most proud of is our freedom; the thing wa should, with most emphasis, impress upon our children Is that liberty lib-erty in our country means liberty subject to enlightened en-lightened and righteous laws. ' |