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Show 4 = BY Copyright, 1907, "Any law which part of any tends organism rt WHERELEPR PLLA at the apie: : . WILCOX, of ION Monopoly 2 . eet re | two two }up. . oe oe « . at the expense of any P dangerous law. Society 1 whi vhich must progress as 5 s, the law, to criminate in the several be a fav It begins of one and just masses in ple asked me to state Been light and gion The Nee long ware ‘7 or and not carried some distance CAPTIVE. eee eee BY Republican Special Who ean doubt F side \ | some the| At Mr of them | more air, and|@oW. When had the ace storm curtain after ‘ WielDeceta DnnGacdihe todd het struck over a the the win-J storm tnd she Real It men what _ had| is not to be Englisit owing to the trust Journey he noticed € f Humor. pete A Fae ¢€ IOK rie| s For instance, two earnest single tax-|cjjtver watch. dangled it ayn fro a ers of New York are salaried editors|few times and winked jovially at an in-| on periodicals owned by capitalists who oe who stood at the door of a shop are natural enemies of any movement eee do you do that?" the American | the); ®5K°o of destruction threatens which pipe | yh "ide ee ed ele fe monopolies. trusts and T) a } re ft ‘lies t a lese men have am es to while they could not be and t ; from i mouth, support,|*'as between hired to|friends. You ee a us see, i bel Ss his futher we was ‘ joKe Wwe} are old| ‘anged | Done, "T well recall that Mr. George was the first public man that brought the attention of the people to the merits of the Australian form of ballot. After that the question was taken up all over the country, so that now practically every state in the union has adopted that ballot. Among the single-taxers who secured this reform in various states are Joseph Dana Miller, i editor Single Tax Review, and Abarbanel, in New Jersey: ee Cus ter, in Indiana; Judge Levi McGhee, South Dakota; Hon A. Stockwell and Clive T. Erickson, Minnesota. "The initiative and referendum has been adopted in a number of states - through the efforts of singleAmong others, you will find oe: "William T. Hill of Missouri; Rev. Herbert S. Bigelow of Ohio, and the late Thomas Shearman of BrookG. lyn. When ichool only but by » the national gov- every state nearly had "You know which rate States. member what has Tom been Johnson adopted heard being su board of oe York City 15 The shot the picture at the top is a of the famous bandit, terror of Morocco, and snap- aera eerie pit assessed. thi woone tax rate arhiadeee he Bra anc than but @ partial list of express of emi: fax followers of philosophy the Henry Louls are alive | ™°st well|PUt. as y women, work. at men, are interested in the work, only on the Woman's Single Tax club of |4nce New York is active and alert. They There is every reason why women should be interested in this topic, beCause it bears‘directly on marriage. And marriage ought to be woman's | most important consideration in Mfe. or political, which Post of gerous homes, is condition a and for the race, Wor dan- | Yo and all! "the land for the| The Public, says: privileges are a further id information Single and Tax literature send club, will to be tion BY the| for- an act : JONES. good as rule, may, not nature Indeed, of of quite be that. aware of] man heart that the] gate listen civiliza-| said the and Hel-| the| humans, time with her| "hesterfi ae zion applauded' Marquis the After a is the well : hquse, him, 1 ly, an English ze tife a ance Le oar ae St Ti ack, + "nit Rade icorm raticultectHUe exverleices add Gong. aren henit sterling work in the Interest of : eee £ Cesare ap 1 atthi eeu or Borgia is Q nterest the a 16s hu.| o most ua "John!" "Well, you know I was neyer a at go race! thing eee add possible great. et eile unnat-|to Chetry t every € word iife te life ait nee y of trae to the various the shadow, ae ic his.a teresting background. The delegates of 8 o oe epresentec eisachiatly Geneva ey In- c berless engines of destruction, is the set-| oft to the ideal gociuess and moral beauty of the Red Cross For the first time the various Red| tee aa Pentea "BE M Ador. ee d'un certain Ere, crisp, el ae hat sui it, of positiveness so characteristic of his countrymen, he spoke straight to Proms nosle the mattiveiten: I dreamed I don there,|at en cane thecal = powers ae in and such a conference ofr out) point, classifying facts like recruits iternedonal | and interpreting them' inthe dry light ae oe ey or it. 4 . ene atiderae Gnlnia, siSne sa : so vast In aworkmind poone 1 SE ron ; as Shared 16 Rec ross, a guiding like oe that of M. Ador is an indispensable and Englishmen a ene folks, and I guess I won't have a jolly| Mary, that's what makes the drear ne met, of course, most frequently the|,-. "24 the first opportunity of heartime! What a gay dog I was when I| Strange. Gee, it was exciting, though!| chairman of the committee of the inter-| ("8 ‘le famous Russian Jurist and dipwas a bachelor. The way those horses ran was a won-| national conference, Mr. Danvers Power.|}0™@Ust, His Excellency Professor de "A roof garden would be the real|der, and every one was yelling ‘Petcr| Tall, with a serene expression, he was| M@ttens. who presided, among other thing on a night like this." Fryingpan -wins!- Peter Fryingpan| everywhere, saw. everything and ar-|8'°2¢ cases of international importance, Binks went to the roof garden. In| Wins!' and just at the end another one|ranged everything. With characteristic) %t the tribunal of arbitration deciding front &00-g00 of him a couple were casting|T4n eyes at each other at every op-| portunity. "Ugh," said Binks, and he remembered how he used to then k at| ‘Star past, Dog "I think Smith. and wins! it's a the Star crowd Do silly dream," yelled out,| modesty he affects none of the » things : he a 1k.'""| effects said Mrs The great surgeon, Sir Frederick Treves looking at 5 less hari 42 fresh, vigorous In favor question ish in of Great between Guiana, clear-eyt, Britain the Venezuela His addresses, well-pronounced boundary and Brit- delivered French, Maggie when they were engaged. "More than five years ago," said Magele Binks| to himself. "I wonder where "Well, I can see {t as clear as day,"| piercingly Intelligent and full of calm re.|2%4 @bout them an atmosphere of law sald Smith, chasing to Brown the Subway. serve, lent invaluable help ‘to.He all:hasdiscus-|7/P© 4nd forreal, théanimated by a warmth inof "Hello, Smith!" sald a minutelsions of the great subject. seen |£eeling great humanitarian is now. She must old farm by this" later in the express. "Hello!" responded The peta be getting near the] Smith; then: show iain the how the term, war In individuals and in masses of mon.| (o™ests. that evoked "By|He knows the campaign carcied on with|!"2™ the assembled repeated hearers applause or which was a is the | ployer, you haa} dread, a looking over host of young wa days that are to come. As fire reveals you | the. presence of the silver and separates had been proThe success- the test gave you you, confidence ‘that j tries out the | t® remember ana pet- were wrapped up within you: | If test of the hard condition, and seg wou re veale obedience andthereunto, strength prowess that. | adop your your has many hard conditions that. upon: men; who' are desirou young It is when you are | rounded by exacting | are in the process of it the of} W a good thing working sur- conditions that the try-out cosy and the flat seemed and penapp of the The ho life had no longer|ny name-Star gone out "Hang tt." said Bin oe third day aaa me a week's vaand are for the farm to ation bring Maggie a heohelerat™. ‘he repeated to himself on the way. In Real Life. The same, "By Jinks!" In the said ee at breakfast, I had last nigh "What was te?" Story. Smith to Was great a languidly his wife dream inquired "Star "He'll Dog's be § Dog it a to dead 1; was." Tae one," nea: Fryingpan in twenty "I dreamed it," sald ye Smith said beat you you meer all the conditions you ara to rise to the place that Is awaiting Gladstona Mr. &% of age the At ted as one of the mottoes of his life old Greek should quotation remember from that Thucydides man differs work were repre-| rectors Londonderry, positively| amiably positive; the Montrose, suave and kind,| the distinetion, and ill attached™to| soothing the] sincerely ound and scores An Innoc a | BY | When ent = we woke __| - to 7= - we found the to the Consider one out building. Under it fs built a} tifully is ts approved. is the !5€ the condition strength One or y obeyed that You amount Ing abroad to such his flooring greatly Genoa, every a We down both into faces. close It the leaped ran the to the yard. toward us, was so window. window Large, almost hot We and red are wondering today, young our we had to] to the door| - Agi ran ouenad: tf and swer. < Mary knelt ‘L te she will not think of shouted down jumped burn that to for and to her the are some old are always aur not De acon bor te© be nel so feet No to and to death. I cannot terrible suffering.' anpray cried bear thoughts new, ras good all Smith, was than window,|eyery help. began with money. The lay- wHG Liz Jones myself." day why good ad I could you seeds how-; they ours¢ r.". You} at once, as old| my How can anyone be happy perhaps million dollars bratuec cannot etter $ fare eG ang "pinies" 2 ae one like. to pretend, every imagine don't you?) Americans ts are now extraordinary. aoa a eee Wlore nee a Rome, tourist well-known Here's spendI. was London," Paris and, in fact in city, with the your cigagr,"' sald the loser Jo. too, and not put it oe ie other carry out of bet ee someone not come neigh-|up in the Pee cent te dowrtt and tt feather who has e candied day? pretend (1 that each] Nac at ni ways FI anos white ene ae he hes ae was tabls he did rolled only "suit. of othag os 1g thethrown winhenna cold poor, to a be sur-|need not allgold do is that. do| tend that i might the w ay, and help each a. wijije Gre By a arated tle Lea and like Oliver Goldanilety who shttulwas andso ae ' like pathetic that one mor mleng whe failed to ap e . Oh gold is he eh "he Medien" apron Baan.) You ut you can pre- iron and save ae aa aac, for atten arr Taaie: ae and several bob and other eees LoD nae anyone can a rer fons I don't see of poor, real old pe lacks into; the eyes She went ove to the bed, nicked up thel put flower sopeesenting' Sonne ued] Sicko sme," Me rich, old people nature by the lonely patient on his bed| The representatives of Japan, more revolver and handed it to me. I under-|qeed you have ones tiie thes a Without crying, aoe of illness, and also that of man against) especially Garon Ariga, made one feel stood. I pressed its cold muzzle against| rifices made, for others, the sweet ways people had. wo-li -< a8 the of helping old people, the uncharitable See a the 9 tittle 4h work with; they man in the grim game of war z that one's knowledge cf the human jher heart and pulled the trigger, and she] ‘Tenderly|things you have refused to listen' to thoughtCulness LotR, unselfishness and Of the foreign delegates he was struck!|Species is most incomplete. To look | fell back into my arms, dying. J placed her on the floor, pressed the re-!@bout others, the loving kindness in| case nelghbors" Ga er. In one first by the Marquis de Vogue of the, at them from the outside, according to volver against my temple and. pressed the home, Mother,too, has a new dress armind to. borro ak from all Academie Francaise, a veteran as a|the ordinary standards of Burepean trigger once more. No report came. ny manne no matter who goes with-| grease their bread nay Recon rind to holar, as a statesman, as a humani-| Valuation of the physique and morale llthe Again 1 tried, again ‘and malar Ehas ou i oe have custard pie if he|number be ‘ing riche with-one in a Jenks.|tarian. Tall, of strong build, he looks on|®f men, one would arrive at a false likes it; taking the sick out for a race}a bacon rind enough to possess empty Suddenly elt something hard]for health; taking beautiful flowers Somieh ind Peter| life as if from a detached tower. Mild/jJudgment. Small, over-retiring, pale obstinate- o down to the track and ee your mon ey on him, then," sald Jen At the track handed his $100 to a bookie. thousand to a hundred, Star Dog," said the latter, up hey're off!" yelled the crowd. 1." he favorite cops'" Then came a ush. Star ae erled the mob. "Star Dog! Smith as he pocketed his $10,Sa id 000, "TW, ish I Aten iint: oftener." to ® love her bet-| his re-|dow all would would you banker, who has the continent. "The his friend, "and you ean smoke another, on me if you tell me how you guessed it." "It's dead easy," the other replied ‘Girls with blue eyes always wear blue on their hats. It shows off the blue in their orbs to advantage, You'll seldom lose a bet on it AUNT which because "If says from indness °° broad that we never learn them] thoroughly, they are soso in-| noo eeor because ' 1ey are in-| tense ly pra tical that their inte rest always h. e is that "we should| and tried Nealon to burst it open, but it did not|S2¥e, toat try, Gnton prised the Then with on the other side of the street: "There goes a girl with blue eyes.' The other man looked, but he could not even see the whites of her eyes, much less the blue. "I'll eall you," he said s cigar says they are not blue" The bet was made and they hastened to overtake her, which they succeeded in doing on the next block. Her eyes wer blue . man, | BY "There looked love flames|need reaching that ran. crowded number of traveling Ame rieans encountered. Hotel accommodations are a premium -_--_-_*- > o-__-_ The Blue-Byed Girl Two men were king down the street when one of them remarked, was w ho woman young to a pointing ovin other|/ever the aid, and that wé are to: dle took on our wed-| ae Is there no ding Sintrip," rab sobbed Mary: way out of this terrible place' At q : supplied | The reveals the weakness of the floor Imagine a manufac turer | to submit unwilling running." mysel "Oh, are "!merican tourist acts as if he would never again hay & chance to make lavish expenditures, and as if he were determined this time to go the limit She quickly walked to the door ana| Why your life conditions are so hard-| tried to open it. It was locked Where| Why your employer surrounds you with is the key? It is not in the, keyhole." such exacting rules and conditions. Rest Ve started to look for. the " key. 1 assured your employer sees In you poss!-| turned all my pockets inside out It | bilities of greater things, or he wouldn't | was not. there \ knelt down and] Waste time in "trying you out em.) | looked under the bed, looked through] Ployers, as a rule in this Gain: employ | the trunk, the closets and the bureau] Young men, not old men, as superintend- | drawers, but no key. My revolver dropped from one of my jy nd fell on the floor. Mary [ e picked it up and threw it on the bed. The smoke grew ever denser. I went fo the washstand and turned the water on, took two towels and soaked them in the water Se oe a -_ it before steamers under a Ioad of pig iron,} ‘T#vagance," | Aim returned The foot. the square } cou ula scarcely breathe and began to] test, even while he was making the most | cough extravagant claims for it. His unwiling- | Mary," I cried, and caught my wife] ness to obey the conditions is the proof | | by the arm you must get up, there {s| of his lack of confidence In his flooring ia fire in th neighborhood." Men are tested in this world by means | Where do you think the fire is," she | of many tests. Rarely Is there, if ever, a | ke "feetly calm, pressing the|man who rises high in the estimation of posi-| | to exalted or comes his employers, with] even but button. light turned on it wa hard to|tion in the confidence of the public, but | It tests, crucial through passes What | smoke-filled ) distinguish anything in the room the test that reveals the inherent char ac- | "A fine thing to happen to one on|ter of the man one's wedding trip," I growled, begin"Can you fulfill the conditions-in- other | ning to pack our trunk, which stood | Words, can you meet the test?" th in «a corner of the room. question that is asked of all asplrants for } ‘Hurry, dear," cried my wife, "it is] better position If the affirmative an-| very unpleasant in this room. I won-|Sswer is given, then the testing begins; | der If the other people in the hotel are} the ‘"try-out" reveals the worth or the} awake I will go out to see if the| Worthlessness of the affirmative answer | elevator it Se ae Money Spent Abroad, Outgoing water is turned on the whole, and after| the floor has cooled a weight of 60) tons | to the square foot is placed upon tt. If it stands this tremendous strain the floor| It I] them manufac- ishness of thelr expenditure astonisnes the conservative European, and even Americans sometimes wonder at the exsuch saw before never ‘T P&® system in| my | again. them close Among and flerce fire, averaging 1,700 degrees TFah-| Tenheif, sometimes reaching 2,000 This | is kept up for four hours, while delic ate | instruments measure the heat of the floor} room poured rubbed purposes. inventors and its Sagging to 150 pounds A. WYNEKEN. up smoke, lich ae n window. I had but roof Murderer PRIEDERICH of turers of fireproof flooring material. The Americ; ans who propose to make: the ™anner in which this alleged pre tour of Europe Their numbers this flooring material is tested is unique LSet ere said to be such as to break Material.is built inte this bullding as at all records, and they seem to be plen- of| -___-~»--+___ for specific claims didn't seem amusing. And| Jinks! there's one of them," as he} pall other man he met|stared at the paper be gayly hurrying along| " ‘Peter a aenaD. Baer it says,""| with am Wits by his side. said Smith. "I dreamed last night I} "Dash it," said Binks, "I'll go home."|Was at a race, eon, Peter Fryingpan| There was no one there to greet him] was aes by another one with a fun-| cheorily, em- the Hence the men who apply for positions, sees in this, that: or thi other one the faint promise of | possibility The young man may be the oung man who will become It in the ; successfully, it your life: when. in work. and place the teacher call out your name as the dross from the precious metal, so the among those who, through obedi| testing, the obedience to the conditions, Life ---"|‘places represent-| great phy-| de Byhain| JAYNE The hardest thing in the world to a thoroughly prepared man for a you | Specific hard of | ter things jis | it was the Ralsiall a ‘bandit: to arrange tite gone ideal Lady ind of English | es the do de Vorue. " itt tention was Baron ay representative of Gena | sembling manity.lif-poriadstof As track-" "Why, a It vaatin ‘Hyitisle wien: warded WEX have are, complicated New|did turned joyously from the sta-| Mrs. Smith. She'll they the | wildest ti Ic mself, ay. BY PROF. EMIL REICH When people say that Europe contains, gates, apoke ; the most civilteed nations on the world | spirit of ‘tne oy I "and this will be the hefirst to] saidtime| years married," it ee Maggie's ‘everbeen awny even for Binks OASIS OF PEACE IN THE DESERT OF WAR ae eee and counteraction of} taffael, so modern war, with {ts num- F n AN tion. [ in | filled with through the |#Part from land, which they associate|1 hasten to add that it was mi ie. oe : sentative Y these Oe anaes |9D)1¥ with a team ras horses, cows, pigs,| rope that did:At, for: even the a Sai | power: now . tn greatest , miltary |994 chickens, They never think of| onies of ancient Greece did \ ry little. fi | | the contine a gance,: certainly: on business sites which In the heart of a|the toning down of the atroditt | given re 4 oot aon ie |&teat city are veritable gold mines to] campaign. And among a "a ri . merous ‘t ee a Sana eee has a ten-| false : valua able uses to.which land ‘is| europe has seen more. and more terri-|%# British officer, Baron Yon Kneseback an i sympathetl most: a On|had other continent. any than ble, wars think] who those are there Yet of farm acres when the import-| the other hand, it was condreed \f r Et | won hi had a rs Soa ch of the land question is broached. | rope to introduce into t he grewso . : French or Eng I eee ees talk of coal mines as something] tice of war the divme ele ient see atte. ac' ae etlhy fan i ait Ore ee ce men hesitate about es-|"‘Manhattan tablishing hg ir garb Harry or a girl in|ents. "examination | find Done is more interesting than the erected for the purpose of "trying eli }- howb taleh vibra- currents doctrine: condition of a country, whether | their owners," religious g Conditi ANDERSON | sented by amiable | al | de- freely, for magnat of house the | of And, as such charitable work would| be quite Incomplete without the delieate influence of women, the ladies| with ‘Railroad, street car, telegraph, tele-| Europeans, like their forebears, |Phone, city Mghting and city water|lenes, are at once the mildest = Any themselves and in all respects eligible leaving the low level of mediocrity and little from man, except he turns coming out at last on the high plateaus out best who is trained in the sharpest 0f an achieved success. The obedience to | School. its with today, of school sharp } Your the conditions tests ability to receive and Tightly use the coveted promotion iandicapping conu.tions, may in the days In Columbia university there are many that are to come reveal you to the world interesting buildings set apart by the di aoe the best trained."' other ladie iing the peenatnbal the supplying the they ae This Se ant be, for such mineral resources belong in a peculiar de-| gree to the whole people." This is the| many prove industrial system President Roosevelt recently said: "The mineral fuels of the Eastern United States have already passed into the hands of large private owners, and those of the West are rapidly follow- |P°° that the Meee aa the cause igo strong thought and done by the single-taxers, things but a prelude to what they are working to accomplish, But even the few] items given above must conclusively George of diy 1ey ats give tions pealed the tax, ant the result Seiad the price has dr = . Working for the Masses. is favor They fell 4 . whom ‘there is no brainier or wittier man, fought for years to have congress remove the tax on alcohol iret in the arts, and the last congress re- This in write not ‘at ail od the mubyects rane ne di ful meeting of those who knew } Mik . reviving consolation; Georgliana| |} Lad Dudley, impressing charm and] ij rule in one movement; Mrs. Cornwal-| lis-West, uniting American animation| Raisuli, some of be The result js that peters' largely ee ssaanUcns and franitancutes "Our ae diaents in behalf of the sultan -- --__. -_ | write talented to ence to the hard conditions, moted to the higher grade Scotch the military Morocco, is'| kk ture general, lad pap hetive'or op Dutchess bill that in New | tunity °/8° they are deprived of the opporto write in favor of the one they and in rita oorish | helping tax land + a the is of | della Somaglia. Hungary is } ed by Count Csekonke © | Siclan, Dr. Farkis and Baron ae the oy MacLean of fortune who of the sultan, oOo whom me von 1 assessments, one must not forget Hon Lawson Purdy, now the president of and had passed Harry aoe ru Some 15 years ago, while a] of congress, he introduced] oer ‘ soldier adviser and brought to a successful issue a bill} the lieutenants. At the bottom is a reproduction of a fac-simile of a note providing for the separate assessment of land and buildings in the District in the (Arabic) handwriting of Raisull of Columbia treating of a ransom, and a portrait "While on the subject of = arate|of one of the robber's lieutenants. the persist| JOHN little ms oe worked passed its conditions & proud moment in has by they. standing in the ed to come, "examination day" possible danger and ag But when jit was all:o government. What is not so well known Is the fact that he is the father of home rule in taxation in New York tate. will you were a. boy how you did dread It day!" Anti-Pass Legislation, not Why BY "Of course, you know ex-Congressman Robert Baker and what he has ne, His stand against legislators accepting passes from railroads at first met with derision, but now has been adopted friends? Obedi "The Torrens system of land titles, doing away with the present cumbersome and expensive method, has been advocated more largely by single-taxers than by any other class. It has been adopted in Massachusetts, where James R. Carret was its foremost advocate. He lately wrote an article in Moody's Magazine on the subject. this state it is being advocated Register A. J. Boulton and Deputy Register Gustav Thompson of Brooklyn, both of whom are single-taxers. ernment, LOGAN. the use of aleohol, drugs and to-| any position. : win the hearts of all who know They when} forms various thelr in baceo hand and heart the frequently poisons] them, are they positively know they and attractive brilliant, most the their } or UNC ir lives and that are wrecking acquaintance their of women taeir| lovable in not as there fortunes-Iif These wives their them make land the seeds of ‘total depravity natures wife of place tne fulfilled have are | may how dogma true a If it is not we to explain the conduet of youths) and mother of their children admirall into entered have may they indul-| ably, but nothing known have who plans with enthusiasm, had} toieir husbands' have who and luxury, and gence affection and solicitude lavished upon)and may haye contributed Jargely to tnem all their lives, and whose par-| their success "or a time the husents have been examples of pé rfect| band may have been wortay of the rectitude; yet their children are so ob-| de votion of his lovely wife; but step stinate in their evil tendencies that] by step Iris indulgence in vicious habits they cannot be won from them'? Their} does its fatal work, and finally the dissolute conduct they know is hireaic« | brutality and depravity of his nature ing the hearts of all who love them | get supreme control, and he never and still they cannot be induced to re-| stops until he has wree ked his own form They go from one extreme of) life and that of his faithful, loving protligac to anotner until they reae | wife-heaping the deepest numiliation the lowest rung on the Indder of their | upon his children and friends downward course | In some cases, not satisfied with the low many times one sees bei autiful | anguish he has caused by wilful negwomen who have been delicately | leet and perfect abandon in the gratireared and seemingly have all the veric ae of his evil appetites, he throws noble qualities that could be desired y ambition arid position, squanders in & woman, married well, thelr huge | Hird income and seeks the companionbands loyally deyoted to them, for]|saip of dissolute men and women and whom for some physical indisposition | lavishes upon the women of that class physicians sometimes prescribe some} his enth ubstance; ignoring the exdrug or aleoholic remedy in the use; istence of his legitimate wife, he apof which they not infrequently become | pears in public showering attentions perfectly reckless? In their abandon|upon his temporary inamorata. to the frivolities of society they may} Do not such causes prove, beyond all have also lost all control of themselves, | possible contradiction, that there is ind become quite ndifferent to the|such a thing as total depravity in the tppeal of their husbands, children and!|inuman species? New York Chic eee nicago Journal An American on ase justice of|visit to London took ‘bus to the elty every morning, where he had business to} possible for such do aes in Anglo-American firm He al-} workers, however, ay on behind the dri er ; On the first always active A. friends, No power sir seema a eG oe > . sense oO t Seana aN a ale bringing reheart-broken their and them to lief < in lied in a bowThis seems In- | ; 4 attempt| | will not | -_---"'So- 7 JOHN seen every day of its! friends ith such s who shall say to tendencies né rt inborn are can we account lthere how truth? Otherwise ne 2 : debasement | tz 11 depravity ‘ wilful perversity, the for oS weakness all their in women permany so and de Bini hery in which innate ¢ vil propensities | yietims to such sons indulge themselves? numbers of men, of the countless what in-| to addicted individiale will Why old the betray careers their in many | who and habit drug the temperance, man s that is said to be in every deaf) Ac lam turn propensities, yleious other. be to seem they lif early tneir of! In prayers and pleadings the to ears be may they men; proud Ip ambitious, childre nusbands, mothers, wives where the tence stood.| were ad carried into Seer a field | away and stretched out | = Immediately MRS. Sery lee, Copyright 197? the soundness of the eviwhen depravity, total doctrine of dences are in a twothe posts of ‘but left AND em t ‘ong wn wrong injured, but waspulledbadlyup damaged. the posts it fence privileges | wire oriyiiee eee Many well-known men in Many w are devout believers in e the single tax movement Leubuscher,| Cyrus rederick Mr. to Single Tax] of the Manhattan president lub for statistics c s c Mr. Leubuscher was one of the men] who stood with Henry George in his first campaign in 1886 and subsequently wrote the history of that campaign Here is what Mr. Leubuscher says in reply to my queries: Has more stoi. ever been accomplished by any Single Taxer outside of much talk. In order that I might give only facts] which ig tie be corroborated, I wrote] What » Cie coursre to m ery and re ir fam found this lace curtain pos a fences knot around : a ee all ilies, , surely women should lend], comprehenaible "ehenaible : and we an ear and a voice, in this discus-|to explain it "The laws as they are today make} ' v7 = . anarchists, They should be so modified "Th <SroKe cannot exist,'-Prom haveo tyeemo le OF of them cepting. the | Modutae' = t de the "The P A number of people Knowing my in-| terest in the Single Tax Philosophy and] my belief that it could and would solve all the industrial problems of the] day, . +o of intelligent, Industrious peo-!curtalns she house more of prospect a land the om, and be- moment "that eorothice,, against bad comes 1 £ ds law. ee ‘ i 5 to|in the eed ground to women af thousands eauses gees ; The two saree wires is suggested marriage when hesitate a 5 sai ja long distance to dis-| interest cf home me on 14, 1907. JULY to ‘ her on the |straight andSo, maternity if there iscontemplates any ‘possible profect]One of the most ground peculiarclose ever yyjger discussion that can=give the|with reference to Mrs. Wells's ee in-| good the preserve must Thelaw, moment balance. vary of other part is a is au ceganian a whole or perin the struggle iole, and whole, ishae es as = hich. oes = between wholesome ‘ or social organism , a and fences the whole ia‘a pernicious Jaw;.and any| 2< 9"4.sunlight ‘to be controlled by & | binder law which tends to enlaree otenintnt: a few people compels thousands of men| Wells's part of a community 1. fences nce ae ee ie Bi eer ne to together work . eee Storm. are some of the tornado in Day}! large number of | Oklahoma An Here Progress: Grand freak incidents of the county, near Grand. A chickens were killed and had all feathers puiled o should good women Oe ne to builddupa | EMEN V MO AX E SING | T T I HE | CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, SALT LAKE iNTER-MOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN, THE It was the key.| where they have none; being as happy | ing Oven aekeie who had a good bakmaturity of judgment is in every one of|Treticent-what a strange force is in in my inside vest, poc ie the door and "ran through the]in a etty gingham gown and eute] ally ainds: bauise G stay at home occasionthese apparent children that has raised !I opened his noble addresses, and to the younger corridor, shouting for help. sun-bonnet as in as to never let when they ad 7 bread for the Others them to the height of deeds herole and lleng mind he recalls Nestor at Pylos, surreached. a window. facing the - street, thought of evil lmger to mar the beauty|such a kindly spiv t oe" _ It showed wonderful? We gaze at them and wonrounded by generations of children He ape : ai aefor help : soul; to to make return others good for evil, that the ty So each s opened it and eried once a more"loroatsthe way regret lo hisindly art -spirit. ji aking th person der. Perhaps one of these days we has seen the beginnings of the great |The firemen below shouted to me to jump] they did {l::tocbe binacin = aa ps ul, and the basket or Bi world shall know it. Nothing could be more work; and of the country which has these polite than thelr manners, more. ob800 years been the country of humanity jinto the safety net they held out below. "|animals and know that they have feelers that nev hen become eterns Tate I jumped into space and was saved. ings iE, they do not ery like poor aEtvte tte ver will die servant than their looks, nor more par excellence he is one of those deeply I have grown old, but the memory of] ‘"Tige''; to pretend sometimes that gold] Or eidriens each day-a dee than their whole being. sympathetie figures of whom Lord Ches- enigmatic Round these central figures one met terfield used to say that they represent a moment, Oh, had I only followed her, | had all money made from iron, and the human brotie ponds a great number of interesting delegates the acme of what is best in man. Bulgaria, serv ‘la, Sweden, from PortuWhen ie ee a few well-chosen to have anything to do with the innocent wraie happier and better. y So much, and] We all may deed do yhile here , Lo wordsof pra d and Lady Burgal; while [taly sent, among others, cone every Makes £00d it, might be more generous with You murderer of his bride. Count ton's inert hospitality to the dele- of her irresistible simpaticos, that terrible hour has never left me for) is Jron-lilce 2 good king of Greece, who link in closer ooo" Sobcan Wondenine mie, out nobody: wanes] tect, as for good tne Desple did not| On, thus the ieereeheed |