Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 January 1903 — Page 6
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t^ ps^mtita *»£•- ^ ^<i1rt■^ll^ lii('¥fB[g tiH^ *>‘T (tf Uw f«t:r commit' „ 'apoU^'n^tdOon of tne 'M‘.i^'Vi#ocf]EiM'-iaL. ' ?sr iss«r*ii SB Sit- ^ M that fOir* to tm that It iH04i*/*t. WB^nat4>e pftfty. Party .,,,^:jP*‘";SSi^ ti» eo«t!OT,4t* *overalmetitkCrtti^ hsncf 'jprtAlwirjr {hat ’ com# to he fcuntulri foVerniSMiit. ’Rje rOtor^ Kieveai^l tileaM to e<cm:e to eyetr citizen .lJ^ 1:0 wm ia aU that per-th-he affllaArwsate^Che o^-en priIteealc .4o#ft' parti€f3 by li^ ^ '^.|jMlp:..«iEy,i^ oTltin:S ■:00iiiifl^'iK0. mi^amtpa. ®ie- cioeeti prijIHW taUnc tiitt place of the plevail and a i^aa that lit ««e ^ In another, .'fn^: J0filfj^4#0:^-- the thfn«s' eeeeitta!
itw w.
4o ))4ild w0t the mpi^, ^ib recular bearda. anMet to^paety eooBnttteea but to .WmMfM vtimMST ^tuson pn* . aftak 4- mailsmn and mlnimom
Tflaea*.
facm ot regtetratibn.
tt^j^Hation of yptiof to mem*
hoUhng the primaryayatim of rottog.
$0mkfm fkv all po«ibia violationa pf ol flsg ballot, bht so p»al> tie* id t&at juite will refnse to
cwmefe:-- '. „ • — : ■ mmmi dND SHERIFF.
We tmat that tJovemor I>urbln does not .ii^^ to ailo^ IDtKider. the former aheriif d€ 0Mvgn ooanty, to tmilify the law, Itt* ^ 1^* itat*. thia man, bweis^ al groaa naglect of duty, for-
of aherlfr. He faimBelf
9i^#t law, and admitted that he, $00^ when ha aeked the Gov-
him. The Governor,
of the case, re-
td refhtft^ Dtt^ey. Then Dudley
“Would ceettnue In of-
'3^. ,#e .^ bflin re<»)«nl»d by
who have ap-
and has had recogof the other of!lo«r»: of \«^d the people are *aid Sif the dUMtion now 1« ^ifjfa|.th^ P^ley ought to be M ^ eherlif. And that :)^Uch'Dudley and the other oflMal* 9^ not be al-^^9^'-49ife4fril;. :pron«r la,
Max-
IlM^lsctjh^ trom the recognition he h^it w^th rebuff from all the ^nernm.',.‘Whtti ia the bettir legal a eaae aa thta la sot t^ut it doea hot aema reas' oeroner to make a fhosfh the State It Ig not MaxTiti0tilpt0Mim poaaeaaten of the ofn ia.ihe itata'a hwtth ^«n who lata, 11 the law dtapiake ta aonstHt^iohi^^ tntn^ed tU hue the oiRce. The OontroverBy 'az^ .t^''Stata^Elm’S
040
w^;-tjpwoT^i ' th# ^%p ibat our ppi^ tsdMcrtbabte dewaiapad wJNw' 'mas and bo^ tthdar thb control of t are freaii is i^d. These w«fi bfStMrbt to Pshhc atten.909 jbr the Society. Aa a feaUlh Q0t0tm Balur m^mated a (snamlttaw to ylatt the pitmit and Idam the facta Jk vdpgrt Wgg fiaade to him, 10 t00t 0k4& the tragtatatare to make ^urthwMWti^rr. The iWESlt of all thie wus «h* awahoolot of poldte tentlmeBt until tka daoumd tor the removal of women SfOWi the State prGiOB wma heeded and the law paaied for the wtamiahmeat of ti» ''SMM laa«t««<m. ifH^HSt^dllklsg''a separata prtaon for i^ma, SaAsm nmde a great advance. has been fottowed by other .Stataili^^ taa sat afford to take a back' —The praaent buUdlnge here (9iri^ec;;:fi^y W«U for the wmnen's .^i^rCrai Sot a4«p9^ to the needa *|iitf4^.#ndiiatflal .SehooL We a 9t^ldlzi|9 toe it in accordbeat reoag»|ud standard. •cMoia ol (hia <^aaa are loeatao aaA are built on the cottage in Haaaachuaetta, Oonnectlasd hth^dgan are of this type. l|i,.j|xpeot nothing lem ci*edltabl« ^thaa these. Foealbly Qov. t famlUar with this history 9^^ h^^Opame^ad the removal of tho 9(9909*111^^ to Miohlgan City.
/mm.
O resolutten for to the. constitution to at the SvgHrame and Ctraasria (after the expiration of the al taasaUMiKta) M»psistiva by the wtth ilka adyida and o«iaw^ ^^‘■^aaiata: to aarv* ^during good be-| Is a hapeful sign, and dewo^e^^ ; pquridaratiim. lbs purpcna Is a rfl^^^aaabiyw tsglva our aoutts a path at hoosa aad abroad that ■ ^919 paver axma imdae the present 0, may strike the people •take are have no idea, for it is htrt ft in e(«xDanik«9 for it shows ,,^^^j^JiiiHiahi' are avnJta to the ^ gtvinit. i» tba best od | ibtlM^ tnta 9i«t ;t«w gkpfa hv lh* ayaa 9f, the, ihaVwti^. tanwr af^ ggiiiaPi9rtiwtiala .ibah-
s’aaald g(va.
:9ij[^l9a9. at tha, 199
ill
at Jnshka littsi. faaataf: |9wi;9f hot
rei^rcHve candidacisa, and aid to sueeess hi that dehcate but effective way In which wtaaaa is supreme. Both were trtumphaiktly ^eeted.^ The fair women of Kansas are now iocking to theBelncorrigibic bachelors to redeem their pre-election promisasi To their unbridled disgust, these horrid crid things are crawfbshtng. "Bailey is now claiming that IHs promise to marry
was R bit of tsmriaign plea^ntrj'- He was >1-1^. irtetrviews of Knox Taylor, supermaking a speech at Hutchinson, and vising architect fer the Government, are while he paused for the audience to ap- evidently not so freely iHlnted In Wash plaud a good point, wjme one shouted, > Ingtor. as they are here, or Senator Falr"Tou're all right, Bailey, as far as you go, j banks wuoldn t have found it necessary
! to ask th.at offleions ofBcial for; a statement of his views concerning the north
proWems that confront eeieoee, and anyone who can contribute to the desired end, either by h»3 means or his knowledge, must li counted one of the great public benefactors. The Michigan beet sugar men evIdenGy think that on the fence is a good plates to rest at the present stage of the proceedings.
H(^e.
but you ought to get married- We dldn'tr build a 175,000 executive mansion for a bach-, elor." W'ban the laugh subsided, Mr, Bailey r<»pOHfl«d: "Well, If I am elected. I’ll get married; that te. If the girl does not jilt me.” With a nerve that Is astounding, in view of the odds against him, be is now claiming that thia solemnly reglsteved campaign vow w'aa simply e bit of repartee. Hepartee, Indeed: that Kansas man's Idea of humor la grotesque. We are not informed of tiit. clrct.-mstan-ccs under which ihe Lieutenant-Governor made a similar pledge. The Slate of Kansas regards it as equally binding, and that If snSleient, Blvery county In that State Is l&tanftiiig itaisif, to mftke sure that the Govtsmor and Lieutenant-Governor are. fittingly mated. Every mall brings Its confrlbutlon, ajod Mr. Bailey has received 106 proposals from the fair women of Kansas, each and every one of whom is willing to take chances as the mistress of the new 176,000 mansion. These proposals come from eighty teachers, fortyv'ght music teachers, twenty-cne artists, fifty-two stenographers, thirty-two dressmakers, six doctors and one preacher, with scores of other# unattached as to vocation, but not unasslgned as to Intention. Adding to the gravity of the situation, causing a crista, as it were, it haa gone out that Bailey has said he Is unable to find a suitable wife In all that great State. BJghtfully enough, he Is In hot water of the most pronounced tem-
perature.
Indiana must not bo drawn Into any such embarrassing controversy. We take It that It will not. Some days ago there was an editorial pWagraph In these columns, that no bachelor had ever been elected Governor of Indiana, nor was there likely to be because of the opposition of the fair sex, who have no sympathy with that unexplainable quality which leads a good man to live alone. It bad in mind "Billy” Taylor, who rwantly retired from tbs attomey-gen-e»lshlp of the State, and W'ho has Intimated that he desires the Republican nomination for Ghwemor of Indiana. Mr. Taylor realhied the significance of
When all our dresm* sad alma have come to naught And darknlag clooda ot fear and dembt aa-
sali;
When ail In vain some comfort we have
sought.
And ail osr friends aad conautatioBa fafl; When lad-eyed, heavy-Udd^ sorrow waits Cpoo ear eouis, by pqtguaBt grief oppressed, ISeemmg onrrelvee accursed of the Fates, Whs grant iw netther baiqrtness nor rest, Thou edmesp heaven-stem. with beamlug eye. To nstae. us frma the depths of our despair; Thou bld'st U8 lift our giaat'Se i:> the sfe.v, M'hen dark'rdng gi-*’fn straightway hecora-
eth fair;
The morbid" mists wbioh wrapped. our soala
amand ' , Are Quickly by tby nftu'nce dispeiled; Anticipated pfeastires then abound
And all our fears snd doubts are haply
quelled;
^ ARI C0WI6HT.
A Sage OB ItevolotioBS
front of the Indianapolts Federal build- j ing, Mr. Taylor’s vlem»» are generally j known and dfeappreved in this city. I : The weary read that o«re appeared so icaig
Employes of ttic Western roads are to | Each momr at shorter to ua seems to grow. xet an advance In nav and nothinv will t '''hllRt all our ^:igbB ere turned Into song get an aavance in pat, ana notnrng p-arvU, in New Orleans Tlmes-
ioow interfere with the running of trains j Demf«rrat.
i but the snow'. j
Bcapesoat.
Clevsland is bringing natural gas two j
hundred miles, from West Virginia, and j q "earth empty
Uai so much of it that an exhibition of a [ Be thou the seapeitoat of my misspent day, huge flambeau, such as we used to have | *» i done, for good let by. tweit'c or fifteen years ago, has been 1 put my hsad* upon the buoyant air.
To thee transfer my guilt, commit my care.
given. All of which is respectfully referred to certain corporation# which contemplate going out of the gas business la
this city.
The temperature this morning was nahght to us, or mighty near it, according to the thermometer. The delay in the baseball peace conference Is probably not due to any objection on the part of any one to having peace, but to conflicting- Ideas as to which side shall have the larger piece.
The laws are not strict enough for the prevention and punishment of combinations to rob the people by the establishment of artificial prices for the necessities of life, like coal. The Jove of money is the root of the evil, and It should be struck at with vindictive energy. — Journal. * Vindictive? We are afraid this is bad counsel, and we are surprisc4 to see It emanate from such a conservative source. It is not revenge that is wanted, but justice, and justice, properly, evenly and unsparingly metefi out will be a-plenty, we suspect. When we read that the House yesterday passed lU pension bills we can’t help but feel that the action was a gross one. Berlin wants it distinctly understood that Ambassador von Holleben has not been -recalled, but withdraws of his own initiative. Germany has rather effective methods of letting her representatives know when to put up an initiative, and what kind it shall be.
One of Chicago's beef packing firms 9111 sell coal In bushel lots at cost, according to-its own announcement, but it doesn't say anything about tempering the price this of beef to the hungry people.
paragraph and volunteered the Information tbgi this objection should not Ue fifklnst him. Mr. JTaylor may as well und^tand that something more spedfio is necessary- Having in mind the experience of Kansas, and the way the maidens of the Sunflower State were thrown down aiter Bailey and Hanna bad realized thefr ami^tton, Indiana will taka no chances ol a similar dlsappolntir.ent If Mr. Taylor is reasonablar prudent, h« will delay hts canvassing until he can assure his constltueate by actual verity that a fair bsldo if r0<lr U> 4o honors as mistress of iha mansloii whieh Governor DaiWn has ,'aMiemmended to be built. If he is politic, he will choose his bride north of the Ohio.: aowevwr, whether north or south, let It be understood — no bride, no
oBlce.
EMUIPPINE DkSTINY.
In Haemiltoa's magailne for December Hugh aifford disraiMes at length our Bhntppine iwoblem. He characterises as ‘‘copperhoada” — the "Antis” among us — thoao wboas sympathy for the weaker slda leads them to espouse the cause ot their country’s enemiw: end he thinks we have treated thmna with greater forbearanoe even than Hbtgland treated the pro-Boer sympathizers. Ho scores our “Antis" tremendously; says that to their encouragement of Independence given to the FHlijlnos Is due our great trouble, and warns us all- against anything like It. Ha says our illusion is that the Flllplno has qualities that can be develt^ed Into those that make a citizen of the UT.ite4 States, and he charaoterlzea this as/’magnlflemit, but not war”; that we are shutting our eyes to the innate ilmlta* tlons In the Malay that doom him to inferiority, as compared with the whites.
He sums up the situation thus: The truth Is that the government of a
brown race Is a task which does not easily fit into place amid the theories, princli^es, practices and Institutions of a republlcaa community. Government, we ta|te it, has for its sole object the greater good af the greater number of those who are submitted to it; and if this be adnUntsd, self-government by Asiatics is at on<« declarod to be an Unpoeslbitity. The grwtt ledger wherein Is written the history ot tha Buropaan Invasion of the Bait holds many things. The first is that the rule of brown men by brown men means anarchy. oppression, misery, bloodshed and a MdetHia tale of wrung; the second, that pMSje, pro^jority and happiness can be secured to such a people only when a strong, just and Impartial government has been Imposed upon them by a white race, which, acting unselfishly and with a paternal care for the w-dfare of alt classes of the community, seta the balance true between contending factions and interests, and orders the destiny of ail more wisely than the natives are |
capable of ddfng <m their own account. '! practice at the Prseldlo was unex-
In the Malay peninsula the race Is slmi-1 lar to the flllpinos. There, until within
We are unable to see an advantage In making all of the State Institution boards consist of the same number of members. For some of the Institutions a large board that will bring variety and wide representation may be desirable. For others a compact board may be preferable. But at any rate we feel that the Governor makes a mistake in urging equality of pay for all board members. They should receive no pay at all. The State wants the advice of men on its boards big and broad etiough to Serve for the State’s sake. No one who wants a hoard position because Tthere Is $300 a year at ealary attached is desirable for the office. The Pxirdue University board, the members of the Board of State Chartties, and perhaps other boards, already serve without pay, and there has been no difficulty In getting high-grade men for
vacancies.
It cost a Topeka preacher BOO to criticise a judge for fining Mrs. Carrie Nation. The surprising part about this is that anyone who knows Carrie's aggressive ab Ity to take care of herself should
dare to mix In.
Surely In Issuing Ws restraining order to prevent the striking molders from congregating. Judge Anderson Included winking In the proscription. Precedents concerning these offenses may bo found on record in the archives of the late
board of public safsty.
Word comes from Wllkesbarre that the anthracite operators have opened war on the coal speculators, which recalls q saying something about when some kinds bf people fall out other people get something — let’s see, what was that, anyhow? An obstreperous passenger op the Union Traction line terrorized the other passengers and crew and stopped the car until it pleased him to allow it to proceed by drawing a pistol, because of a dispute about his fare. There have been murders recently here and in other towns because of the practice of carrying concealed weapons. The law on this subject la a dead letter. A citizen of Terre Haute has asked the ’Vigo county delegation in the Legislature to introduce a more stringent measure on the subject. The Governor, In his message, asks the same thing, and he goes to the root of the matter by suggesting legislation that can accomplish aotfSetking; It is a license taw designating moa^to whom a license to carry concealed weapons shall be issued, and prohibiting them to ail other persons. A similar law exists In other States; carefully drawn to encourage enforcement it ought to be beneficial with us. Certainly something ought to be )
done to corfect the evil.
And bid thee to the desert fly.
eand or
Seek thou some waste bespread
snow,
"Where men dwell not, nor Wrds; nor nowere
grow;
Where winds themselvee to silence die. Or And some deaf-waned, slghtlese cave. Molded of ancient Are or hewn by wave. And there my past transgressions cry. So shall I rise, when next the Great High Shall light the day's burnt offering In tbs
East,
To strive again—facing the sky. —John FlrUey, In Centxiry.
Not Our Weak Hand.
How small Is this that has been asked of u»’Hs but to try; Not our wsBk band has boen required jo set With stars the sky. Or swing the great gold moon above the clouds. Nor yet have we Commanded been, to place the singing shell Beneath the sea; But Just to try, with but our humble might, With our whole heart; , Not waste our strength by doubting that suc-
cess
Will be our part. —Cora Lapbam HazarA
SC^S.
Tuberculosis causes some 32,000 deaths annually in Paris. CJholera Is officially declared to have dl.iappeared from Egj'pt. The proposed monument to Dante In Bomb will cost 12^,000. Paris supplied with electricity by seven different companies One hundred and forty-four Cardinals have died since Leo XIIL became Pope. By m votes to 81 the Italian Chamber has passed the bill for the munlcipallgatlon of the public services. Wireless telegraphy apparatus haa now been installed on board each of the nine Dover-Ostend mall steamers. There are 1,576 Toung Hen’s Christian Associations in America, with 11^,224 members and $28,000,000 worth of property. Ik>l«copal laymen, including J. pierpont i Morgah and Senator Hanna, are raising a million dollars for missionary work among the phllip^noe. An effort will be made to acquire the Walt Whitman collection left by the late Dr, BiMk, of London, Canada, for the Boston .p(^id library. v ‘Pmti of Xjondon's old Roman wall have beenuiUd bstra by the housebreakers now engaged in the demolition of Christ's HospJtaJ, Newgate street. Ihieltng is made a safe pagtlme by Dr. Devlllera, of Paris, who has provided a kind of chalk bullet that leaves only a harmless mark where It hits. There is to be a Buddhist conference in Osaki. Japan, in April next The n^aiouarles say It will be useful la stirring up the entire question of religion! The Catholic Woman’* Union of Prance, is appealing to capable young women of that country to obtain eertlficatw and take the plac«» of the nuns recently ex-!
pelled.
According to Dr. Plnard, of Parts, many careless persons catch contagious disease* by taking off their dusty shoes and then sitting down to a meal without washing their hanuH. . , Professor Lawrence Bruner, State ethnologist at the University of Nebraska, has a collectlMi of 60,000 grasshoppers, among which are to be found 20,000 dis-
tinct species.
A new process for concentrating ore by the use of petroleum, known as the Elmore, has been succ^sful In England and is being itroduoed in the British Columbia
oopr>er mines.
Owing to opposition in the congregation the Baptist Temple of Philadelphia, has abandoned It# project to erect a tablet as a memorial to Miss Winnie Davis, daugh-
ter of Jefferson Davie.
One of the most successful evangelists In England is a gypsy—“Gypsy Smith.” .lie is self-educated, but a London newspaper credits him. with using the best Anglo-Saxon speech since John Bright. It Is now settled that the Chinese children of California will not be permitted to
ubl - ■ - •
attend the regular ^
Diogmxes, our oM of the iantem, is qu^ ah ^lyhig 19 wi^ed to be buried on hks face; SSad v^i9a aMeed why.
ho ; “Beoaoso la whl^: ev^ytfih^pto’' .;h«:
tBErne.A
. ' down.” We ^agltnow
that Diogeuse was a cynic —the mbnt irreeOTcSafoie of the ifeut can bife strange re'qyest, and the expianatlen thererif, be cited as proof Of hlacyhfe^smt i Possibly, but they are something b^#. i He may have meant one of twd thln^r— ! either that the stn and wickedness in;the I world were operating to turn thlnm ) side down, or that the woaiA was «o far : gone wrong that only a upside j down could right it. In either; case he 1 felt that things were in a state of unj stable equilibrium, and that life aad the ! things of life were transitory. Many I years before Diogenes, a greater man than ! he wrote': the Lord maketh thw
and maketh it waste, and
turneth tt upside down, and scattereih abroad the Inhabitants thwceof.” So the saints and sages are always losklng for a revolution— turning — of tme kind or another. One can imagine the sleek and optimistic citizens sneering at DlogenaB, and asking him whether be ffld know tha* he was living in the best poiiMs world at the beet possible thaei. And It may have been to such a one that he made the speech quoted above. "In a little while everything will be tamed upside down” — yet even after that haid been done the self-satisfied people would still have thought it the best poarible world, even though it were in every way different from that which had formerly pleased them. We do not always rem^ber that this upsetting process is gc^ng forward all the while. The world has been turnip upside down many times since Diogenes walked the earth. Several hundred years after ho died, a small band of men. fired by a great misslcm, were charged by the TheasaJonlca mob, in which were "certain lewd fellows of the baser sort,” with being "these that haVe turned the world upside down”—and the charge was trua Old idols are continually being overthrown,. and old Ideals are changing. Great and powerful civilizations that seemed to be immortal, have disappeared from even the memory of mankind. The very gods of Diogenes—-or if he had none, then those of hi# people — are dead. Yet the people to whom he talked no doubt thought that their religion, civilization and nation were to endure forever. The old cynic knew better. It is well for us all, in seeking for p9manence and stability, tb put our trust in things and Institutions that have a real foundation under them. Thus, when the old temple is thrown down, without one stone being left on another, we shall have a spiritual temple that can not be shaken. Truth can not be turned upside down, or righteousness, or love, or Justice. But all the shows and pomps and glories of the world miwt of necessity fade a^gsay. They are smitten with the taint of mortality. The upsetting of things could not ba.ve made the tub of Dlogemes a hies useful habitation, for a tub is easily righted. But It would have played havoc with the temples and palaces— Inde^. . It has played havoc with them. Perhaps It will be thought that these are rather solemn eonclitaiona to draw from What many will regard aa the cynical and sneering Jest of the j^nce of esrocs* But remly tffls is not the case. And, wlmtever may have been the spirit that prompted his remark, whether he was In j«»t or earnest, Diogenes uttered a gr<^ truth — a truth which has been vindicated by the whole course of history. Perhapit too, an occasional touch or cynicism will do us no harm in theaw days which we still think are the beat possible. Seif-satfsfaction and absolute contentment witbklkiiid ss they are, are dangerous quafitiss. If they characterized every one. IMogress would be impossible. Sora^ow tae apariers and growlers have contributed their mite to
making things go forward.
9
There is a good deal being said and written just now of a great awakening of religious interest, and it must be admitted that some things Tlie Reliffioits point In that direc-
In an epoch of
AwaKCning expan^ea there is
sure to bs a develop-
ment of the adventurous spirit, and the larger life' is likely to affect the world in many ways. And this is an epoch of expansion—both mental and physical expansion. More and more, men are looking out of and beyond themselves, and they seem to be less and less sure that there are any natural bounds to the activity of tlm human spirit. Men’s interest In their neighbors Is keener than It ever was, and the neighborhood is less contracted than ever before in the world’s history. Territorial expansion, has undoubtedly had its Influence, but it is not wholly of this that men are thinking. For our relations with the rest of the world
. ... 0m 1^*0 ' ■■ •&ap«rise» ticr^ . The weather '
P> Utt^esUnO. in ths atat*
the drift of the ree^it
iqbzm. They are sriii iuaating ■' iisr;'
bliSiway with to
While Senator ' Joh^ott is putring. . through his t^l to r^uiatS the us*-^1 auttnnobtlss, it weald he a * seethe to {SSt^e for a Jegai gsosoiM^itloa ot "chaatffma*.” T^ part of th* iSffi would no doubt gs M a iMiss..
Ths pride of aMdevotniee fk ast
great sonutiiaes 0 flttSliiainsm tar iMtei *9
did'^shSk da!
Mr. Bryan !s dot tAfh^ a ammlsf ^ Meideo iLgiLlast the adoption of a goH standard, hut It ts feared that the admiont^ tloQ won’t take any bett« thaA H did’ hers. The gold standard seeasa ^ iw so Ceaerally epidemic, that It xr%ht he w^ for Mr. Bryan to abandon his eSorbi iu stomp It out and turn hhi att«iU<m to
the foot and mouth disease
The Information thi^ the subjugation of the Indiana has test $£^.000,000 and their education fZ40.O0(h000 Bee4aen tp suggest that we are wilHng to pear Eftsm to get them down than ^ Bft rintfit up. Of i | course, it is pr*tty har4 to e<keM» an Indlan, but then we also pret^li difficult and dangerous to We^l succeeded in on*, though, and w« a^y L succeed In th* other In tlffiie, tt the ia- *
dlans last long enough.
SvMT time th* unnpected happens Hm, T« toid-you-so p«mn Is on the spot, M. Michel Levy, In an address before the automobile eongres at Paris prisdlcted that alcohol would eventually take the place ot coal. (Great applause, and .cribs of "All right; any old thing?”) The Arapahoe Indians in 'Wyoming are SO destitute that they are threatening to klU and eat the settlers’ stock, and when we think of our butcher Mils under the regime of the beef trust, we don’t Marne them. It is probably a good thing for our reputation that the settlers on our reservation don’t keep any live stock. What shall we do next aMut the coliseum? An echo. iWerring to fgospective subscribers, says: "See 'em!” Sane peopt* are so «xpwrt from tang pnwtle* tbtx th«7 pu find fault without locddag tor it Tl^^^y^^noyBi ' (Vsk) man who JolnM ! church on the ministerial assurance that there will be no recognition in heaven and that certain undeelrable acqualntani^ wlU pass by unidentified, must have a much higher opinion of his acqugkltances' of that sort than most of us have, even to think Umt they have a chance of get-
ting there.
It 1« not Ooubt very •mtmrrawln* to th« T^iw lootetime* to decide just how it should treat
Enterprlsa
THROUGH THE TELESCOPE. A Wimt WOMAN. "Tlwr say h*r huSbead graUfia* hw MBallest
wlah."
"Very liksiy. IRi* know* bettar than to have aay. big wlehea”—Ctov«land Plain Dealer. TUB DaSiaKING FEIEND. BUks-W* bad a great tlm* at tha olub last alSht. Sorry not t* sm you tber* Cbarlay. Mr*. Itort*r <alt«r :HlCka baa goiM>—wqiy. Cbarie*. you told ms you spent ttte whole ot last evmhtg at th* oiab' Mr, Porter (with gnat preieixia of mind)— So I did. dear. Tb* teaaon Rick* didn't see ni*
ie eohools, but
must be educate In the Institution especlully provided for their race where such
schools exist.
Alfred Austin, whose new play Is soon 10 be produced at His Majecty’s theater by
Beerbohm Tree, has written a number of; would have grown Increasingly Intimate dramas in verse, but none of these have ■ ^ven had we not acquired a single foot been used for stage purposes. The laureate territory. The
is now in his 67th year.
Reports from the Berlin postofflee say that the stamping machine Invented by Hay and Dolphin, under a normal electric current, stamps 60.000 letters an hour, a figure hitherto unattalned. The stamping
is clear and accurate
W. H. McGown, of Urbana, O., has one of the most unique collection.^ of autographs in the country. It contains the names of over 12,wO actors and actresses, besides 1,706 picture* and over 60,000 pro-
grams, posters and the like. Rev. Edward Abbott. D. D.,
new territory. The telegraph and steam.4hlp and trader have been the chief factors in the spread of civilization throughout the world. And this expansion has had much to do with inspiring men’s minds. The mind Itself'has expanded. We take larger and broader views of great questions. Our Interests have a wider sweep. In spite of the crimes of which the nations of the world } have been guilty, they have brought the
bridge, Ma^., has resigned his position a.<i |
jf tne
on *a.s I world within the realm of our He will j thought. Intellectual freedom, which Is
edlto^r of tfie "Literary World
shortly start on a trip to Cuba and Mexico} sometimes thought to be fatal to religion, and will pey special atten^n to mission- j |j^g ^ matter of fact been one of its aw agenda, la th»^ | moat powortui alUaa Tha troth aamaa to Iii^dltlra'w‘thl8'’ntimbS thfro ar?2,irajho that wjth the Eeoeral atlrrta, ot all watchdogs, 221 dogs belonging to blind and' the faculties of the mind, the religious
faculty also has received a stimulus which
was beea^riki:^' to dessfv* btir
Mrs. Pt
rob m* ,
way* did
Uka—Bosum ■ ' gemethififf teid Iilii> tts torntgkk vm It tor: tt hdd 0t aright.!
MvoMsdt”^
"O isdwariit ist is t«*ted; With #r«tty )|Istsc«miov ”B«t 1 csft not 11^ ifeith irefiP'
petoDusiy. '
"Ttwy s» ^y
rogolshly. "■ ' , gj^glMr forward, M :ifiiOdir’hi||S'
and sgaln.
"Ot cmtnw, X ihsn p«y sB >0i)is^^ Bloax Fafi*,*’ h* said.!' ' ■ She was sllaat, And sfiawa'ljfc^'e#' ' "I do not aassrvS'M b* p*r*d,- a Itaej-'PiK^.,.
Bvxnr^si
The vots* lett«V ttnetiy oMsids.lka tnki.Ed^ •.rm„ .»|BrLto hixneelf. ... ■ "Dcd-dlBg tb*** BlykiaiNpft',1#:. ■"Theflr won’t gut-'eS^w'MttaF#
wap*:
fassfiy eb;fak'l^»^/ •Tbara-what thili <
said Mr.
TR«
The rndianjHj^ y^ an ■ average diw, (57.000, eoptes., Thtwe" this country" where shadows oil eompetlt^l does in Indianapolis. ’
,■^1
There still seems to be enough of the Venesuelan revolution left to go ’round.
a quarter ot * c-entury, most of the natlv* states, independent and pracUcalljr untouched hy outxids influences, had been left to work out their devstfipmssL Th* history of the experiment is that might was the only law. The Malay is oemi^teiy indifferent to the mjtiatto* and sufferings of others as long as hts own ttoenfbvt £s attained, the one fact stan^hW out from a background of miaery baUM tbsd th* teown man has pavgp h«*a abifr to ml* bis fellows. Mr. coneluritm is that th* PtUplnos iRiiat be ruled by a patervat gov<mm*Bt. t&t th^ own good, find that w* are botmd to accept this fUct in the face of an or our repuldicMi predllectioas If we Minit e«r enterprise in the Philippines to s soeeessdvd Imsoe,
Pm^P* OraiHliPa Baer won’t be so hard ifM- akmg with as ppeatdeot Baer was. Keary Shipps, of New York, who dia^:,^trihe>ted IMhffifi to the satabUsh.A 3s««pBa4
has
a ff»$ ottibtfvfi 0000 Iff* are ua tamiltar thfl
: liitsm';
0:00i00i0t'0glifi0 'aMfisr '..ggMPPi*
which was bring towed three miles at sea, was demoUsbed by the second shot fired. Critics of the Monroe doctrine might do well to make a memorandum of
this.
mmmk coliseum.
With a coliseum as contemplated. IndianapoUs would be in a gocMl way to secur* the geest national conventions of the polltleal and any other "biggs*t on earth.”—Niabi^viile Ledger.
Tb* suggesthw that Lbo eetxm tn InddanaiK^ woul "Indiana (Sdimina” is a. ready the llht ei |hnA have «nxb«:rih*d moat
Is driving it forward to great things. For
Ideaf people, 2,ffi2 dugs used for drawing ! small carts and 118 belonging to the Kaiser
or to members of foreign embassies.
The Pioneer, of India, reports the death the mind is one. and no part of It can at Moulmein, tn his ninety-fifth year, of; be affected without all the parts being Mtrm Nazim Shah, who was taken to; influenced. Thus there is aa inspiration Moulmein after the mutiny, and has rince. aia«o. -uk been detained there. He was a brother of | the \ery air w« breathe. Along with Bahador Shah, the last king of Delhi. I this has come an increasing sense of reDr. Leuriraux, a Brussels physician, an-1 sponsiblUty. The thought, at least from ttounc« the succ^ of hteMrura for the j religious point of view, has been that cure of whooping coug^h, Tne serum is in-1 IZ * - *. x ix*. jectt;d under the Bktn. on the abdomen, the very cloaencBs of our contact with and a cure Is perform^ in 10 days, where-1 inferior races and peoples imposes on us as the disease ordinarily runs six to eight j tjjg obligation to make them brirs with A Vienna dispatch to the London Ex-^! °f great privily, ^d biasings press says: An Austrian engineer of note,! which we ourselves enjoy. It Is becaus* Herr Wetkovlc. has invented a naw type i m«i have always felt this that even the of ship which he cl^s will be capable 01 j ^orst of them-the robbe» and pirates
.U unwttunis,. It I. t™., !«.»
enable a journey around the world to be the heralds of the dawning of a higher .made In a week. The ship does not dis- nad nobler life. So, ev«i If we hav*
Fthplnos-a# BMwy ^ple
—* *1^ * auces are constructed to minimize frletlOB 1 with good reason think —it may b« that ^n who Ipressure. | outtoi^ contact srtth our Christian and stains 1 The Russian Government has set aiaeutj progressive ctyilfcBatlptt,. th*^ Will derive
the n*m** rf Trim* itving oot^fi^the r^TUlating thd age at which girls shatll fco^iC ben<^ On tb« whale, therefor*. H caMial effv A^ saida. rim S^to at? marry in ^urkestan. It has been custom-) does seem as thoui^ vfi were on the eve WilTI^ 1g orWw ways, hgr at- > ary for Mohammedan girls to marry be- of a great spiritual asN^fittk^j^A^ yet —
tei^lattce, ete., fn nisklfig the eel&eum project a stieeess.—ICdktnao N*wn« At a toanqwet at tl^.f^dwtnbfa Chm.to start the afttatlon. was subecrihed In a half Sftef’ t0 cigar* had come to sos^M- digeslinn. ’The important thi» wwt th* aimoess of the banqimt t* ]^. Waya* 1* on* of the largest aigi resdicSt'^gQhiKxtban to the fund was Geosge F. who has secured control of the Ft. Wsywe Tvactloh (^mpany. and who Is a Itbrifsl glvar to mevem«its whirii build up citlee.—
FL Wayne ;n*vp». -- At one aBeriim|^«tf
and When loitaiw gav* fi«a gbh»t finokfi c . - tsiwdlibA-JIkmfiCMible torin hall (eg a '"Indtanapolls may do from other sections does tor hwnrilf ttnoof 'ayawiSchtlari. ■'
iween the ages of 10 and 12 years, but orders have been issued now that no MoWimtmedaii crhall marry under lA Tb
Tartar and Turcoman chiefs e^sed. aa all seek to
are much in-
obtain brides as
such is the perven^ ri( — at this very tiia* fiffi s hi a falling.off in riuu that men in particuiat 1 sary to go to chturch-
nature
)hfi.t there
and
tt nece»-
y statistics
■orthy.
not be wholly srithottt fodhdatkm — that there haa been a Jh ^ ttwmber of churchgoers., Yric ws 1* in no way strange. For It may hfi, that the laek of mterest of men m thW'd^pBh hs* hwm
ysungja* possible. Russian officials report | on 'thw 'subject are uxitnfistworehy. but thatm pee cent, of the girts who marrj't stiff there is the asswa^dtea'—which can uadw If ^ before they are 30. ' ‘ ' ""
Aiwericsui touristH abroad often com-
ment upem the Utera! translation int>< EM^iah of notices in foreign languages. The wril-meant efforts of landlord* anil
to convey, la the language of the the meanixqp of the native, often lausdmbte restffts. A "Washingtoa
rittssn, found thta fiotlce posted in Ms ^fooin tn an Atptn* botri: "Misters, the venarabtf voyager* are earnestly rrqtteriAd hot to tries rik)th^ of the bed to
■e* tlm sun rise ;Saw ri|aiOoi<^ changes.”
The nursery rilr«lii^\ he;' . Hear* CotuiW;^BfihndW. - saw sutuwee ^ Sif ' is
due to thrir ness and slneefi inffusnead wBl
theory.
vigor, th*, ‘
power ot i durMtlfih
idMfftlea^ ««*»/ ^msion thal "
hr the
giffttt giivmhl ith* rscdfwmt wwtil<-^ tty mast *we*p.:
000
There is as much difference betwee&iW|^ em Office Furniture and that of years ago, as there is between ^he of to-day and the other of yesteni^ made an office desk of his tall hat.
We show ft lot of now idofts InOAco Dmlls, Files, Cfthintlh, BoolU. cftsoStOIKooChftlfs,otc. BEAVT^" The man who keeps up to date in bis off; fice fiimitufe, is the man Who has * the nece^ty of perfect he has saved for his business a sneeWsyou are a slave to
Ask«t%|il0fi 0»1
w 'I
4(
ns a
>4' -
