Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 46, Number 31, Jasper, Dubois County, 15 April 1904 — Page 3

W eeklu Courier.

o. do n

JASPER, ill

rul.ll.hr r.

i INDIANA

Had lh I' hfV IWMBl Wan It a passing delusion, a momentary ul rralion or a wrioas sy in ; turn of InrurBble insanity? Hurriedly drawing down the curtain and la lag 'he child niy arms. 1

"Anil ou, iwnora o i have Know tb AIM from infamy?" " She wan born In Paris. In this very house, and I was like a Sa4 mother to her until sb was tak n by 1. r parents, at the age of flv years, to live

':.; t h r i. ti the mfa. covered her with in Madrid."

PUSH AHEAD. It Uta ..'! with sh .ao iHtii? I'ur-U ah' Sd Ac tkvera .um. Mttes grtsal Pit uIkiiiI Halt not l r tb Mndi nice metj Hall not f.,r SOMM vhIii regret; All t (Mutt, toinls. . forg, I -Pu-u Uli' 1 Al th.:. f.- within without? Push i 1 1 : I - Do tajr rrtsoda th wisdom oovMf Path ahead. Pa It r sol for anything; Mi nut thy hope on ' t wlngj Upward. forward go and slnKl'UMi uh id.

I

B, i mud

I

Room i nouch ; ttu n B I Pui h aJu ad J. ..-ti.. not thy f IL w-iri' Hi Is th. fall n rise a fc j tk a hertng wi.ril, -u h ahead.

B l. io know sad And I Push sbs i fa) thy guardian aa faith and Mops and C Bver cheer and string Push ahead, -Mr- P. A Brech, In

.Id

in travilin:; wrap ami ecat-.'. myself at h-r Dilti', without takln my fWg from her face. She was as white aa ttt, and ef stating, glassy eye 1 led M wiili alarm. They gradually cloned, and she fell asleep; hut lier breathing wa heavyami her slumber disturbed. After a while she awoke and. rubbing h r eyes as ii trying 1 overeonie a nightmare sat up, looked around and said to mo. You oanttOt imagine the fright that the bonfire gave nie." The bonfire! " 1 replied, ' what wai thete frightful about tha' " Ami who wi re tbi people thai wer in. around It?" The people? Only the poor workmen, who in spite of the eoM weather, nr.- hurrying to clear th.- track so that ve may go on. Thev are suffering with ooM and perhaps with hunger Whlle we, after a sumptuous dinner, can keep ourselves comfortable by

"Hid you notice anything extraordi

nary about her while he waa with rout "Yes; vividness Ol imagination and fineness nf sensibility. She had a per Cd ptMttM lor th marvellous, but. aa thi M so common in children, I at ta- tied n-. importance lo it." " And you.' s-aid h, addressing him self to im-. haw- yo i o'.M-rwd during her stay in .Madrid any unnatural xCttemettt, delaittW. monomania, ot anything else strange in her conduct?" None whatever; btit she Las shown a thought M end serious tendency unnatural to one of her years." And what does she most cn'oy?" Reading, in th" first place. Sh knows the history of France, especially at the time of Charles VIL She alsc knows to the smallest detail the life ol Joan of Are." -When sh- was a m r hal.y." add-V. Benora d' Alvarez. "Joan oi" An- wa.-

SUNDAY SCHOOL.

jn ;n the I r.t-t i.a'.or.a. at .es n

April 17, lbOi Jesus Transfigured.

(Star I Ar.d Itter sta t Rial Pet f j n

eth tr.ru up tare an r.:ah mountain apart L tf.. miihta, and ii. vs itaaefiaurd tvior UM rr 1 An! Ilia ralnrnt heeaaM hlnir.. erve JIns wt.lte as v m . eo u no lu let oa ant can white th-ru

tth ha, aad ti j sua I Anil r. tr aru Uut w It I rood fc

MONOPOLY CIRCUS GREATEST SHOW

EARTH !

these beaters, What com passion and her favorite heroine; she ofiei

JOAN OF ARC. -

(3

ri. . ...... . t n I ittl..

II1C run CI oi u . 1 1 ,1tiirl's Imagination. .

FOVRTEEN years of age, aad Calf as a !::; . With silky, Ol h D iiair. expreeslra blue eyet had ü charmlag ia . kind an i geatle in dMpoattioa. ad with a reOned rinptletty f mauners ihal Indicated the tuperior cbarectei of hei (radaihg anil enrlronaMsit Bn. h was the description of niv conain Dolores, Her parents, wishing to ei m tote her education, had Intrust . d hsi to m cars to i- takt i to a iCbOOl In Paris. v. left Madrid Ly the Southern Expres, sad early in the afternoon of the tmd da;-. Which was in January, It began to snow heavily. iMlores an.J 1 wer st aK-d at one of ttu- small tables to the dtalni ar. ami ware lust bsgtanlna dinner, waea the train atoppel end we leani the call, "Oriesas, five minutes stop."

"Orleans!" esclslmed she. mvenngi

1 r ! ice with her hands. "Yes, Orb ana, tha birthplace at Joan of An . ' said I. "No, SOickly repli.d iKiiorea. uneoTerlai her pretty faee, Joan of Art was BOl bora here. Bbs was a native 0l Domretny, and if sin- is known by the name of Maid f Orleans, it Is because of her efforts to present thi3 place from tslllng into Hie hands of the BBgtlh.M "It seeaM that you rstaessber perfectty the history of that remarkahie woman.'" "Rememhef tt! Kven to the slightest particulars." T!:e train proceeded on its way and we were toon going at full speed, in

-..n Multitude you should f--l for these disinherited ones of fortune!" That is true! They do jnaeed move mo to flOBipassloa and awal.ep my sympathy ; hut si ing them in the fireHgBl confused me and disturbed my mini!. Ah. you little know the aeeae,

the terrible aeeaa that they evoked in my memory!" A terrible erene? I have known you

lace your birth: your lif- has glided

juietly and pleasantly along in th"

otnianionshit of lOTlne nan ti'-. No

sad or tragic -ent has disturUd your happy existence." "If you only knew! Thit no. I go not wish to tell you; I have revealed it to UO "n: I do not know why. but I aro ashamed " "Ashamed? Of what have you to aectis-' yourself?" "Of nothing; Hie fault is not mine, but that of my destiny." "Your destiny! It la with tbll word

to justify all our

me to re'.at" that story ' u r.

n this prediIfald of Op

dventun-s at the

i retend

tnnaltted

do you acctise your

that w(

faults." i meas that none." Of what, thn

destiny ?"

"Very well, I will tall you. 1 am po

int: to make a confession to you to

you alone. I have always loved you

as If you were my brother, and 1 know that you win appreciate the sincerity

of niv words without making them the

Sllhji i t of jest." "Go on."

You Banst know that I suspe. t why do I say "suspect?' I believe firmly

i that I have exist. d before in this world

nnd that my soul once IrftlfrnglHl to an i h r woman." " What madness!"

"Madness? No, it is a profound con-

v . Hon." Hut to lielleve this Is a sin!

"If it he a sin. I cannot help com

mitting it. for. in spite of nn and

against my will. I preserve indelibly

the ri-memhrance of my previous ex-

itrn Wild delusion!"

' Not at all! On arrlvine at Orleans

the remembrance of my former life

cams vividly back to my mind. I rememberad my good parents, sad. alone and abandoned in their miserable

home; while I. a weak woman. guide;

by divine inspiration and encountering

Lessor, .n the l;.t-t national series ici m

me if: t y . ?r -s- X

r tl. , ' VBbmt4iH V " f f y

! tr- .. .ii j. s..y:na. T...- la n. I ... v 1 Sun; I

"Can you reraem lection for ti" i ti Pans began V "No, senor." "Did sh.' fii' hi

theater?"

She was nrver at the theater while

In l'.iris."

The doctor remained hurled in

thought for a moment, and then, nvchanically hxing his ta'1 on a picture hanging on the wail of the salon, said-

Did yo-i not say that Dolores lived

in this house during ner nrsi nv years ?"

"Yi r "Did you own that picture at thu tinn f "Yea, and in fact it hung opposite

her bed."

Here, then." exclaimed the doc'or. "we have the orpus delicti," and with this he rose to look more closely at the picture. If was a colored lithograph a copy of the painting by Kugenio Devria in

the Antwerp museum- representing the ; and John " The three who were m-ar-

". ution of Joan of Arc. The heroine ; est tj Him :n heart and purpose. "A

rilK SCRIPTURE gSCTlOM. Atsus- Tr..!.nirura:.un Matt 1T:1-1J Jesus' Trar.Ktigurat.on Murk t:Ml jrus Tt.;- t Utas : M TIMK - A week :a"r than the lait ieon I-ate iwni.r. A f :-. Part of the Jat vt-ar 1 JSSMS' .'.!, ll.t "Year of OpBO r r. " I I..M K A wi J ;,r 1 leeely apjt Jar up tha sde sf Mount Hrrmon. KOTKg AND CCQflOeKYg; "After s.x days." Luke says "about eicht days." He perhaps counts free-

Prof. Uppaginstitt in His Stupendous Sensatior. The Camel-Back Loop! A Danger-Defying Demonstration of Daring. Desperate and Delirious Disaster. N. Y. Amencan.

WHAT'S THE RUSH ABOUT? TAFT AS A MOUTHPIECE.

The President Is in a Big Hurry to Get Congress Off His Hauds.

Roosevelt's Method of Checking Any Demonstration Favoring Philippine Independence. The Sf Louis Republic conjectures, no doubt accurately, that Mr Koose-

Presldeat Roosevelt has ordered son-

t - of a day; in any case the mean- i cress to disband Congress does not

ing is plain about a week after the usually adjourn the long ansSkW until velt spoke when Secretary Taft de-

plain talk Jesus had with bis disciples about f.is death. "Peter, and James.

I. .1 ,1 1 , : .v. L.oninn

IS uej li ll'i as .Maimillfc oil iur uuniui. pile, the fire of which is being fed by the executioners, while a priest holds before her a cruclftx "Corpus delicti." repeated the doctor, lookin attentively at he picture. "Bessys." "aid he to my aunt, "you may now awaken Dolores and prepare her to be seep at once." And my aunt lef us alone together.

high mountain:" Some eminence In the fo.. !. ; of Mt Hermon. "He wstraasflgared beiore them:" Changed In apprarance. What the change was we can gather only from the Impression made upon th ttlSSbjSes Matthew speaks of the marvelous radiance of

oft-r T,,i,u,imn.r hut the reuub'.ii an dared that it would be many years

leaders declare that May 1 at the latest j before the Filipino would be fit for will be the date this year. President ; self-government. It thinks, savs the

Roosevelt probably feels more than any other former president that he has "CongTess on his hands." and wants to get rid of it This dislike and fear of congress has always been the talk of the best business interests" in Wall street and thereabout.-, It is not difficult to ate that this feverish haste to get rid of congress can be traced

Jesm face p Is something which

cannot be explained. NVe may think of . through the administration to Wall it as the imin- nature shining out street. If there were no democrats in

"How do you explain the origin ol through the human body at one of the j coEgress the trusts, combines and corthls hallin ination. doctor?' arises of the Savoiur's life. "Elijah with j poratior.s would not object to its con"Verv easily; the child was a pe- I Moses:" The latter representing the ! tinuame forever, but the minority lead-

culiar subject: he frequently saw this law and the former the prophets.

picture and finished by identifying herself with the principal figure Y have here a case of auto-suggestion." Scnora de Alvarez soon announced that Dolores was ready to receive us. We entered her room, ami the doctcw

spite tu tue mio ,,... .a..... r8 withoul number, combated th. leap from their socket, ln those

me irach. iian- niim o. , . ; n. ..n.rv

with much kindness and tenderness ; praying, the fashion of His countenavoiding all allusion to the- aesM on i ance was altered." We shall not do the the train and to her peculiar halluci- situation Justice unless we realize what nation, submitted to her a series ol the last few weeks had meant to Jeus. ouestions He felt her pulse, examined ' He was in a sense an exile; He had

her, and concluded by saying that sht had only a slight indisosition. "I will write a prescription." he added, going toward the dir; and then, turning STOoad ruddenly an:

fastening his eyes, which appeared tc

ers are making too good a record and calling the attention of the country to the great need of reform, so they must bt got rid of. President Kooscvelt has also another reason for wishing to get congress off his hands. He knows that nine-tenths of the republican senators and representatives secretly dislike him and would be quite willing to see him commit political hari-kari On the surface thev are favorahie to his renominatlon.

given up hope of being able to win men but they fear he will be defeated and in any numbers by the "good tidings " ' that the loaves and fishes will be lack-

They were talking with Jesus." Luke says they were talking "of hi, deosnss which he was about to accomplish at Jerusalem. Luke tells us that He went up into the mountain to amy. "And SI He was

tears in the child's eyes, nnd supposing that lb nights of her parents were causing her sadness. I requested her. In order to divert her mind, to tell me the Itory f Joan of Arc sqv began th re Its) and showed a

irity with the story extraordin one of lor y.-ars. Sin- see med i feel an Incomprehensible atlas sh" related the snfferings of Haid of Orleans. When sh? d the point Where .loan of Arc

"And later, when in sieht of the boni dt-A sassSBi in.noinitioii -itt a 11 1 u 1 ihn trir. '

ill-, n ij iiuaiiiai umi i ' 1 t- . of Roastt, the memory of which freezes my blood and sets my hair on i end.

fam r.arj also lat-.i t! e

W IS At wbla

th.

t. i i nvel c illie to s;-al . that moment the locomottv t ,i is erai times and the train I to reduce speed, soon stopping

ly. Wij.in: off with a lostv window of the ca

lapkln i mv

of the younc girl, he looked at her until the rieidity of her limbs, the expression of her face and the immovability of her eyes, which stiMxl still as if under a mysterious charm. Indicated that she was hypnotized. I was alarmed and my aum was terrorized by the impressive BCeae, "You believ that you were ont

Joan of Arc is it not so? the doctor, without takinf from her faie. "Yes, sir." replied lo

weak and submissive voice. "Then, in order to convince you that you are In error. I command pit tc presBfTS in your mind the cause of that error Upon vakinc from this hypnotic sleep, yon will go into Ihe

i- iired his eyes

a

signalling with red

d an

There track, bl now. " Dolore, r.nd the

P

I i . t an

1 lowed

to our own co m part -

me said I. '.v hi' -

end to this scene; and sh

me mechanics

nn nt.

We installed ourselves there, and got Wishing to add to her grief by reproof 1 sat down to look out of Ihe window. An tmmettM bonfire hail h en built, by the light of which workmen w . n gaged in clearing the mad. and which projected their figures in grotosmin. roovlgg shadows upon the ;fc.-on' winding sheet that covered the earth. AJter !".. Ing n while at the fantastic ptetnre befcre me, I cslbsO sy cousin, who. rising to her feet and approaching the window, remained bort time sib nt snd absorbed, looking at the llaim-.s with Bsed arid staring ryes. Then, as if bshSS itll I smld. n BttSt k of Insanity, she I ' IMS Look! then are my . . -it toners they lad me again to torture! And what torture! Oh, my Ood, to .11. by fire! The smoke suffocates me; the gates letse upon m? gsuments; th heal barns me; i grind nu tetth and bit- my lips; my limbs writhe and twist, say bony trembles, shrinks, and ninlv struggles to be It!" I was asionished and alarmed at hcaiia; these words, l'oor Dolores!

pound to the dreadful stake. th butt of the jeering, scoffing multitude i hat filled the place of execution. I saw St B f i the sinister light of th" fire; i heard the anapping an-i crackling of tbs wood as it mounted the pile; I saw the in. reasing flames stirred up with nesdtsh eagerness by my cruel executioners: th. y reached me. they envelop. .1 me, in i i felt the sQpn bm sajony Of the moment, when, my torture having been (iiiiipleted. my soul was freed from my suffering body.

"Kever ran I forget the frightful salon, where you will find a certain ni'niory of my former Hfsl There is picture by which a memory of your inBO doubt of it I was Joan of Arc." fancy will le recalled to mind, and you We arrived t Paris at one o'clock will realise the exact truth in the case.

the following morning, four hours late. I - raSsand you. with all my COOr sndnllds on IM ()ir aint s-nra. de Alvarez, who had j trolling power, to dete-t. abominate will soon M j i)t ,))(nr,... s!r,.,. sil0 ipft that i ity i and ex.-crate the false doctrine of the 0 gangs at work: ap, of v, :irs wai anxiously transmigration of soul.-: and to conwaiting for us at the station, vince yo-.irseif that ihe illusions of

She offered us the hospitality of her your brain re.-ar.ing a previous exhouse, which I giadly accepted, as. istence are the results of Impression since the scene on the train, the -on- j PSCSh sd by yon in the first dawning dttlOB of the child had caused me the of your faint mind " greatest alerrr. anu f."jiiired the care of The din tor then ordered my cousin some mem bet of the family. to preserve permanently the r. memln spite of the natural weariness brance of her state .,f , -ons. io-isnes , .i ... -i i ... .: waj travel, during this Induced sleep, after which I arose .arly and gave my aunt an ac-j he awakened l er. count Of the strange mental disturb 1 Dolores rubbed her eyes and lookeu ance from which Dolores was suffer- nil around the r.xini. s.-an ely noticing an, i nt which the good woman was ; those who were present. Suddenly sh

- "... . .

In no mall degree surprised. 1 reraem- ros

He had come to bring He saw that unless He pave up the work and kept iway from His people, rhey would not res- U'l th;yiiaJ.aAl;eiLUJLUfe. It was a time of mental struggle for Jesus, and of the deepest perplexity for the disciples Rabbi, it Is goo., for ns to be here: and let as." etc ; It was a most wonderful experi.n.-e was It to last? Were the heavenly visitors to stay? At any ra'e here it was. night upon the mountainside, with no shelter.

ing with his political obliteration. They would feel saicr with some other candidate, but see no way out of their .dilemma. Why should congress adjourn without passing upon the many maeers that the voters deem of great Importance to them? Infortunately what the people want Is not what the trusts desire. The pSOpiC want reform The combines are willing to stand pat

and the republican president and lawgttrera stand with the eorpora'ions ;

sealnst the people. To have a record

lition of Iit mind was was unconscious of hav- : h attention Of th other

Without stopping to think. Peter sug vote on those important reform meas

ures the demo rats favor would show too plainly to the voters how their representatives stand and it would be awkward for many republican congressmen to decide between their friends Ihe corporations and their constituents. Caucuses and convenkns ar belog he!d about this time and the or.l.r.arv r.puU'.i.an voter, who Is opposed to the trusts, might make trouble now. and nmre thOttl election time. If it could be proved to him that he was

i repres, n'cd by a trust lover. Instead of I a trust buster. Thrre is another reason for the ar.xi iety of the republicans to adjourn conpress a" this arly date The democrats

are (lernandinu that the post office d part meal be investigated, as they have evidence that but a small part of the rottenness with which that department has bffn prosed to be boaeycombod has been rtlsrlossd It is very ani.oylnr to the republican lead, rs to be thus beirded In what they consider to be their own drji by the minority and have the country constantly remindi d that only a partial tXpOMrs of the grafting has been uncovered.

and. pa-sing with a firm, rieter-

l,( red that one of my friends, a Spanish mined step Into the adjoining salon, physician, was at that time in Paris, j she Stopped before the picture of Joan and I went to find him at the hospital , of An and said: where he was perfecting bl studies on J "Ah. this picture used to hang opdlsease Of the nerve centres, for the' posite my bed when I was a little v'.rl Cure, of Whlcb be was a specialist. , here in Paris' How plainly I rememI had the coed fortune to find Mm her It! How mistaken I was. fttf 1 and to s. nie hi, immediate attendance Imsgftned that I wa .loan f An- beupon mv cou.-in. She was still sslespj fore I was born. I had b.rgotten the when the d. tor and I arrived at the' pP-mre. but Identified myself with the k character and tie vague and conhouse. 1 ' , "o you wish me to wake her up?" I fud remrmhrancM Inrktag 10 my laejulred my aunt of the doctor, while mind led me to believe in a rrevlous

inviting us to seats in me saiou. ' No. senora." said the doctor. ' Permit me first 10 ntSh some lnquir:' I of you. This L nth man has told nie ot ihe occurrence on the train, end 1 now desire to know other facts necessary to UM dt:ur..:s. HOW Old Is Adores?" Fourteen years, replied my nur.'. "Has any other person In the family suffered from nervous disorders?" No one." said L

parted 'he booths. "For he knew not what to answer:" This Is Mark's apology for or explanation of Peter's ill considered words. "A voice This is my beleoved Son: hear ye Him:" The whole scene, ending with this voice gave the faith of the poor trusting yet psrplesed disciples the confirmation It needed. One of their great puzles was that Jesus said one thing atout the Messiah and the prophetreeased to say another. From this time on there was to them but one authority -Jesus himself. The voice said. "Hear ye Him." "Should tell no man:" Till after the resurrection when it would not be misunderstood. Je-us was constantly on his guard again-t popular nilsun der stsn ling. "Is It written of the Son of Man " Jesus reminded the disciples that not all the prophets bad thought of the ;oming Deliverer as the sort of Messiah popularly expected.; some of them ha 1 safg "that He should suffer manythings and be set at naught " Read the fifty-third chapter of Isaiah. ' Even as it Is written of him tlZHJah:" K t prediction but history (L Kings IP), Jesus' interpretation of the Kll'ah pro phecy was not the same as that, of the disciples, who thought it was fulfilled in the vision they had just seen. He wanted to show them that suffering and persecution had leen the lot of the world's prophet, s joints out likenesses bet wen the treatment of Elijah. John and himself. Figs and Thistles. The blggsst Interest come. fr. ni wha we g.v. away.

I dev

i .it'.!:1

1th th

stand It. Include only the pn - Bl n Ihn future state. Perdoname. Dios mm! I I was Insane. Hut the picture s-ernf :

to me now much smaller." It is becs.se you have p-own. whll It has remained the sm" said ths doctor; "thing appear n::. h smaller with the lapse of years - From th Spanish of Nilo Maria Pabta la N. Y 9m

aft tn.iuv kinds of Chiistians, ne I'hnst,

rhere can be no living Chris. ianity W.'lbOUt a Irsing Christ. 'i he m m who Is winking at inlquKy to-day will be working with it to-morrow Geni works is no' the pries of a tleket to Heaven, but the ptuof of tLs ifcht J tater Ihe.-e BaSSs Horn.

A talk with political lead, rs In Washington makes one thing plain the Cleveland wave Is coming along with an Irresis'ible wm p "He is the only man that the !mocrats .an win with." is what one ht arson all sides The Chronicle's observations In recent days lead it to believe that Cleveland's nomination will lie Inevitable. Charlotte tN. C.) Chrom The republicans are now looking for three or four men to fill the place of the late Mr. Hanna as a campaign manager Chicago Chronicle. Teddy stems to be sort of a crrun between Oliver Cromwell and President Castro, with tinhorn Nap. Iconic proclivities - -A' lan :n Corst it ut ion. New York Will send to the democratic sationaJ tonteatloa a body pledged to the support of Parker and It seems safe to predict that this nuleus vt; y rve as the rallying pOttM f gslegStSI from the east, south sr.d west sum. lent to effect his nomination. L.ui;;i oaittta

Albany ArgntS, that Taft was selected, because he used to be governor-general of the Philippines, and on the theory that what he said would carry more weight than any other cabinet mouthpiece Of the utterance itself the Republic says "It is called out by the forrrution of the Philippine ln.! iH-n J.-r. e committ- e 8om Of the btt-known men In the country, reKardltna cf politics, rompi the comir.lt:e !t - k- hat th.- dmocratlc national ptattorm of lour eara ao ouptht. An ! r '. hoae on the committee are: ..'t.arie Ptaaeia Adams, of Besten: Juds .rue '.r t. of Delaware, W. L Howi 11. ihe noelist; David Htarr fordaa, pr. ..!-n: of the Lelaad Stanford unlverett ; Bishop Potter, of New York : Bishop upildins. of I'.ilnols;Oeorae Fo;er Pealwdy, the phi.artbropist; Andrew Oarneaie. Va)r.e McVsasja, Üsarj Vaa Dyks aad Bono smith. In the opinion of our St. Louis contemporary, it is small wonder that when these men and others equally prominent In philanthropy, religion, literature, the sciences, the arts and politics move for the independence of the Filipino. Mr Roosevelt hurries one

of his numerous mouthpieces to the fore with a carefully prepared and censored speech calculated to counteract the inlluet.ee of such men But can he succeed? it WOttdcTS It may be remembered that President Schtirman, of Cornell, one of the first McKinley Philippine ommission. takes an altogether different view from Se.retary Taft's. ROOSEVELT CETS A PROD. Republicans Are Only Shamming in Their Opposition to ths Trusts. Congressman John Sharp Williams, thi minority leader in The house, hae just offered two resolutions of inquiry whi. h. while directed at Attorney Gen- . r Knox, are really a prod to the whole Rooseveltian administration for Its rifWSll to prosecute the trusts. One of th.se r. solutions virtually asks why the criminal clause of the gbermaa anti-trust law is not being applied to the rich offh 11 of the Northen feseurlüm company, who, by the supreme court decision, are shown 10 be , riminals Why are those found guilty not being indicted?

The other i Ton asks suostantiaily why th nnorncy general has no: made use of the evldenc pal in his possession a year and a half ago showing . iear'.y that the SBtbradtS coal trust Is an Illegal enmbl nation The attorney general Is the only ier...n who can bring suit against a trust. Why does he not follow up the nominal victory won against the Northern S. ctiritles company'' Why does he hasten to assure the trusts that he will not "run amu. k" In snforclBg the law against trusts? Is It not clearly because the republican party does not dare to itttagOtttni the trusts at a-iy time, and especially on the eve of a presidential election Where would they get campaign funds If they were to make fu ml' s of the trust maunnts Make no mistake; th repUbtlcSSsI are only shamming opposition to th trusts.

The Republican prs I still worried over ludgs Parkar! silence. Tb v v HI have 00 ca le for worry over ftoosmrelt on that com Many republicans wish that Roosi veil was Messed with some ot Ihe Mew Vork judge's letkenee. A Lewi Ri public Since the i mull -ion charred by the bout of represeatntlTm with the lavestlgatbsn Ul the postal scimln' Is . v. rj bt r. known as the "whi'ewph commission." il is not to be wondt red that IM gggstoni are secret, "far from the aiaddstttng ernwd. Wbltewsihhsfj jobs of that character will not besr the sunlibht of pUhUslty, -Albany Argue-

t