Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 233, 5 August 1912 — Page 4

AUE FOUK.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN TELEGRAM, MONDAY, AUGUST 5, 1912.

The Richmond Palladium and Son-Telegram Published vm by the PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. Issued Every Evening- Bxc.pt Bunday. Office Corner North 8tn ana A atreete. Palladium and Sun-Telearam Phone Business Office, 2lt; Mtwi Department, xm. RICHMOND. INDIANA

Helph G. Lee Mile SUBSCRIPTION TfilUU) In Richmond $(.09 par year t vanoe) or 10o per week. JT' m advance J fix month. In advance !! a month. In advance ill.jR . dre changed a often a ?vjnnW and old addresses mut 'df;, which should be BIT", Peclfled term; name will not tr u until payjaeat le received. MAIL, SUBSCRIPTION One year, In advance But months. In advance une month. In advance . Entered at Richmond. Indiana, post offica aa aecond class mall matter. New York Representative Payne Toune, 30-34 Weat SSd atrast, aud86 Weat 82nd street. New Tork, S. T. dlcago Representatives Payne & , Young-. 747-748 Marquette Building, Chicago, 111. The Association of Ameri lean Advertisers baa mined end certified te the eircalatioa ef this pblicaUea. The figures of circeJatiea contained in the Association's report only ere guaranteed. Association of Americas Advertisers No. .WbJtthall lld. R. T. City This Js My 64th Birthday JAME8 M. TAYLOR. Dr. James M. Taylor, for more than pa quarter of a century president of Vassar College, the famous Institution ifor the education of women at Poughjkeepsie, N. Y., was born in Brooklyn, i N. Y., August 6, 1848, and was educated at the University of Rochester and Rochester Theological Seminary. For ! nearly ten years following his ordination to the Baptist ministry in 1871 he was setuea as a pastor in south Norwalk, Conn., where he made a reputation not' merely by his preaching, but also by his public spirit manifested in fthe successful promotion of enterprises of a charitable or educational character. Prom South Norwalk he was called to Providence to take charge of a church there, and he left Providence ;in 1886 to become president of Vassar jand professor of mental and moral philosophy in that college. Dr. Taylor is the author of a number of workB on philosophical and religious subjects. Congratulations to: Henry B. Irving, oldest son of the late Sir Henry Irving and himself a well known actor, 42 years old today. J. C. W. Beckham, former governor of Kentucky, 43 years old today. Dr. Frank Strong, chancellor of the University of Kansas, 53 years old today. Joseph R. Knowland, representative in Congress of the Third California district, 39 years old today. HOW TO USE STRAWBERRIES. Delicious Recipes That May Be Easily Made. Strawberry Custard. Make a custard of one and one-half cupfuls of milk, three-fourths cupful of sugar, one or two eggs, two level tablespoonfuls of .cornstarch and one-half teaspoonful of ranllla. Heat milk in double boiler, then add cornstarch dissolved in a little cold milk; let come to a boil, then add eggs and sugar beaten together very light. Remove from stove and add vanilla. Hare ready as many sherbet cups as you wish to serve. Take five strawberries for each cup cut in halves, lengthwise. In the bottom of each cup place a half nut meat and arrange five pieces of your berries around It to look like petals of a flower. Now pour in the warm custard, leaving room enough to repeat the flower design on top. This may be made early in the day. as it is best served cold. A dainty and easily prepared dessert and especially economically when strawberries are not too plentiful. Strawberry Ice Cream. Two quarts of pure cream, fourteen ounces of white sugar. Mix well. Mash one pint ef fresh ripe strawberries, sprinkle them with half a pound of fine sugar, let it stand about an hour, strain through a fine sieve or a cloth. If the sugar is not dissolved stir it well. Add a little water. Stir this Juice into the cream and freer. e. Do not get the idea that the ordinary housekeeper cannot make these delightful desserts, such as ice cream and water ices. They are easy and when homemade are superior to those purchased at the confectioner's. Use only the best materials pure cream, ripe natural fruits or good extracts of the same and sugar the purest. These make a perfect Ice cream. To freeze the cream pound up ice two parts, mix with one part coarse salt Have your ice and salt ns high around the outside of the freezing can as the cream reaches on the iuslde. Begin to stir the cream at once. Stir rapidly and constantly. This is essential to make smooth cream. If the cream is allowed to freeze to the sides of the can without being quickly removed there will surely be lumps of tee through It. Expeeted the Usual Results. At provincial theaters in France wben opera is given it is not uncommon for untried tenors to submit themselves to the public judgment, which is usually hostile. One of these obscure songsters presented himself and sung the first act. He did not make a "hit. He retired to his dressing room, took off bis makeup and was preparing to go home when the manager appeared. "Whatr he cried. "You are not dressed for the second act, and the curtain Is just going up! Thousand thunders!" "The second act?" said the tenor placidly. "I cannot sing the second act. I don't know the second act Whenever I sing I am always kicked out after the first.

A Modern Crusade.

There arrived in Chicago today a stocky-built lighting man from Oyster Bay to play the leading role In the final scene incident to the organization of a national political party, which work required less than sixty days to perform, and which stands out boldly as the most remarkable achievement in the wonderful and intensely interesting history of American politics. ( Col. Theodore Roosevelt, who will be nominated for president at the National Progressive convention this week without a dissenting voice, has done more than any one man in accomplishing this almost miraculous political achievement, but he does not deserve, nor claim, all the credit. He shares it with those statesmen and journalists who have for years fought for and pleaded for a "square deal" in government a government by all the people and not by a privileged few but mostly he 6hares it with the people in the ordinary walks of life. There have been many political parties organised in the past fifty years parties formed in protest against the dominating political organizations but for the most part they have been merely flashes in the pan, because they have stood for no great principles which would arouse the average American voter to an enthusiastic advocacy of the cause they represented. The movement which has culminated in the organization of the Progressive party has sprung from the people themselves. The movement is not a sectional one, either, for it has spread and thrived from coast to coast and from the Canadian border to the gulf. The Progressive party is the result of a crusade by the people to restore to themselves the right of participating in the government of their country. Does any one doubt such a political organization as the Progressive party could have been organized and placed in the field In sixty days, incidentally completely wrecking the ruling party of half a century in the progress of its organization, unless it was the handiwork of the people the weapon they themselves had constructed to give battle to the bosses and Big Business? Theodore Roosevelt, remarkable man as he is, could not command such a following as he has if his mission was a selfish one. The people are slow to act, but when they do they act promptly, thoroughly and skilfully and they do not chose leaders who will betray them. In this crusade they have chosen such leaders as Roosevelt, Johnson, Hadley, Bass, Beveridge, Heney, Garfield, Glasscock and Pinchot. Can the opposing parties point to such an array of leaders?

Sneeze Season Here.

Pity the unfortunate hay fever victims! Already the season of sorrow has arrived for many of them and is shortly due for the remainder, and the army of sneeze sufferers is numbered by the hundreds in Richmond and Wayne county. One Richmond victim was heard to remark yesterday, between sneezes, that hay fever was not a fatal disease and that was the reason he felt so disconsolate. Dr. W. A. Evans, the famous Chicago medical expert, writes: "For a long time people scoffed at hay fever; said the sufferers were hysterics, neurasthenics, and faddists; that everybody had summer colds; that the poor man called his sickness a cold and staid at home, while the rich man called his hay fever and took a long vacation. There are still people who scoff but they are not so aggressive as they were." Richmond for years was the bane of the hay fever victims existence because of its dusty streets and weed-filled vacant lots. The dust nuisance has been remedied considerably by the oiling of macadam's streets and more frequent sprinkling of paved streets, but the weeds still thrive, distributing their pollen into the nostrils of the hay feverists and causing great sneezing choruses to disturb the peace and quiet of August days. Richmond has an anti-weed ordinance. Every hay fever victim might write to the city health officer calling his attention to its provisions. Enforcement of this ordinance might to some extent relieve the suffering of the hay feverites and at the same time improve the general appearance of the city.

OUR WORLD AS A MOON. Pine Display a Full Earth Would Give to the Selenites. Were we transported to the planot Venus a peculiar set of views could be obtained of our earth, enabling us to see ourselves, to some extent at least, as others see us. Venus is about the same size as the earth, is somewhat closer to the sun and has more atmosphere than the earth. When the earth and Venus are nearest together they are. of course, on the same side of the sun, and in consequence of this the earth does not see more than a very small part of Venus illuminated, but Venus, on the other hand, sees all of one side of the earth illuminated and is therefore able to claim she has something that takes the place of a moon, for the earth to Venus at this time looks very large and bright, almost as much so as our moon does to us. If we could see all the illuminated surface of Venus on these occasions we should have quite a distinct second moon. When we do see all of her Illuminated surface she is on the opposite side of the sun from us and consequently at an enormous distance, yet she is so brilliant as to prevent us from seeing her surface distinctly. But to our own moon we appear in the best light as a moon. A full earth as seen from the moon, according to Todd afld other astronomers, is a very Inspiring Bight. It can at once be seen why this Is necessarily true. The earth Is several times larger than the moon and would appear in the heavens as a disk about fourteen times the size of the moon. It would probably shine with a variable light, due to the shifting clouds of the earth, though the light is. of course, reflected from the sun, and the reflection is due in part to the upper surfaces of the clouds. The outlines of the continents of the earth appear very clearly to the moon as if they were formed in papier mache on n globe. Cities of comparatively large size could be made out with ease in case observers were there to make them out. The intensity of the reflected earth light would be as much as fourteen moons and would enable the Selenites. If such there were, to read or work in comparative daylight. Harper's Weekly. ' THIS DATt

AUGUST 5TH. 1792 Lafayette accused of treason before the National Assembly of France. 1S02 Edward K. Collins, who established the first line of steamships between England and the United States, born at Truro, Mass., died in New York, Jan. 22, 1878. 1S29 First locomotive regularly used in the United" States on the Carbondale and Honesdale railroad in Pennsylvania. 1S64. Admiral Farragnt attacked Forts Morgan and Gaines, guarding the entrance to Mobile Bay. 1S84 Frances Hill, the American woman who established successful schools in Greece, died in Athens. Born in New York city in 1S07. 1892 Train with $20,000,000 of Government gold left San Francisco for New York. 1903 Andrew Carnegie gave $2,500,000 to his native town of Dunfermline, Scotland. 1911 President Taft invited Japan to join in an arbitration treaty.

DEWEY SAW THE POINT.

He Paid Up After His Dog Had Been Kicked Around. Admiral Dewey had an English bulldog of which he was very proud. So marked was his affection for the dog that an atmosphere of "love me, lova my dog" had sprung up around the admiral and the canine. It is further reported that the animal came near causing trouble between the head of the navy and the late "Fighting Bob" Evans. Admiral Dewey while on a tour of Inspection when be was In command of the Pacific squadron took the dog along with him. He lost sight of his pet on Evans' ship, but in a few minutes saw him hurled skyward from the companionway as if shot from a catapult. With blood in his eye Admiral Dewey rushed over to see the reason for the sudden ascent, surmising correctly that some one had kicked the dog. He saw "Fighting Bob" at the foot of the steps. "Sir." roared the admiral, "what do you mean by kicking my dog?" "Sir." roared Evans in return, "I'd have kicked that dog If he had been the property of the president of the United States! He chewed the legs off two pairs of fifteen dollar trousers and destroyed an edition de luxe of the navy regulations." Dewey saw the point and paid for new uniform trousers. New York World. Staining Wood Dark Hues. The appearance of walnut may be given to white woods by painting or Bponging them with a concentrated warm solution of permanganate of potassa. The effect is different on different kinds of timber, some becoming j stained very rapidly, others requiring more time for this result. The permanganate is decomposed by the woody fiber. Brown peroxide of manganese is precipitated, which is afterward removed by washing with water. The wood, when dry, may be varnished and will be found to resemble very closely the naturally dark woods. Harper's Magazine. Berlin has a remarkably large number of cigar stores. They are used as betting places and for the sale of lottery tickets at a trifling profit. JN HISTORY

Heart to Heart Talks. Ay EDWIN A. NYE.

FACE YOUR FEARF'ear is your deadliest foe. It is at the bottom of most of your troubles. You are afraid a panic may come and hurt your business, or that you may get sick, or that you may los your job, or that it will rain and be too wet or will not rain and be too dry. or that the shoes you bought may pinch your feet, or You fear one of a thousand things. And as a matter of fact there is not the slightest reason for a lot of them You "flee when no man pursueth." You run from troubles that are largely imaginary. If you will permit me to say so in the trenchant language of the streetBrace up! Courage, facing things, is a specific cure for fear. Do you remember, you older ones, the story in McGuffy's third reader about Harry and the "tall white guide post?" Harry met the post in the road, and his fear told him it was a ghost with outstretching arms. His first Impulse was to run; but, secretly trembling, he screwed up bis courage and marched straight up to the thing, which, of course, turned out to be a friendly guide post. Many of your ghosts of trouble are mere guide posts, by the way. March up to them! The thing that most of all you need to be afraid of Is to be afraid. Be is a poison. Yes, a real poison. It is a toxin in the blood as dangerous as any other. For Instance: You say you have a fit of the "blues." The doctors call It "neurasthenia." It Is "a disease caused by nervous worry, a disease as real as measles or typhoid fever. If it should develop into continual brooding it may end in Insanity. And more than half your "blues" In caused by worry over things that may never happen. Face your fears! That's half the battle. Meet them squarely. March up to them and pull the mask off their mystery. Drag them out into the light. Y'onr fear is a bogie man, a bugbear, a fancy. Show him up to yourself and then laugh him out of court. If your fear persists In riding on your shoulders, as the Old Man of the Sea on the shoulders of Sinbad the sailor, and you can't shake him off. pretend that you can. and the first thing you know he will get off himself and sneak away. THE WALK TO THE WINDOW. If your world needs you It will find you. It will hunt you up and come to your doorway and knock. Or if you do business at -a window, as does A. H. Clark of Mount Sterling, 111., it will find Its way to your window. It is a much frequented walk, that walk to Mr. Clark's window. He has a front door to his house with a cement walk leading thereto. And be ha9 another walk, but narrower, that runs diagonally to the corner of bis house and thence to a window. Right under this window the narrow walk gets larger. It affords standing room for two or three men. And Mr. Clark's world comes to his window.' Almost there Is a procession, and when you stand near the window you can see that Mr. Clark is reclining on his bed. This is why: Twenty-five years ago the lower half of his body was paralyzed. To all appearance that was the knockout blow for Mr. Clark, for he was a farmer and stockman. Nevertheless Instead of this affliction ending his career It was rather the beginning of greater activity and prosperity and usefulness. He used the window and the walk to the window. Usally Mr. Clark feeds about 500 cattle every winter. He never sees one of them, but be sees and knows the men who do. Lying on his bed and using his brains and other men he has been unusually successful. Moreover He Is acutely interested in the world's affairs and in the affairs of his neighborhood. He is a devoted member and supporter of his church. On Sunday a telephone catches for bis eaget ear every word of sermon and of song that enters Into the worship of the day. But, best of all He is mentor and confidant of the men and women and children who at all hours of the day come over the walk to his window for counsel and encouragement Seldom do they go away un helped. There is the picture: With hearty, smiling face Inside his window, where the walk enlarges and ends, lies the patient man who gives hope and cheer, His world needs and finds him. A letter opener, mail scale and six inch rule have been combined in a handy desk implement.

Get the Original and Genuine HOEUICK'S MALTED MILK The Food-drink for All Ages. For Infants, Invalid, and Crowing children. Pure Nutrition, up building the whole body. Invigorates the nurskig mother and the aged. Rich milk, malted gram, in powder form. A quick lunch prepared in a inmate. Take no substitute. Aikfor HORUCX'S. of in Any r.lllh Trust

BEVERIDGE

(National News Association) CHICAGO, Aug. 5. Albert J. Beveridge. the gubernatorial nominee of the Indiana Progressive Darty. sounded the kev note of the National Progres-!

sive party at the national convention ' Invisible government behind our visi- of building our tariffs. The tariff must today. His address in part follows: j ble government. Democratic and Re-, be taken out of politics and treated as "Like other free people, most of us ;rublican bosses alike are brother offi-;a business question instead of as a Americans are progressive or reaction-' cers of this hidden power. No matter political question. Heretofore, we have ary, liberal or conservative. The neu- jhow fiercely they pretend to fight one' just done the other thing. That is why trals do not count. Yet today neither another before election, they work to-! American business! upset every few of the old parties are either wholly gether after election. And. acting so, j years by unnecessary tariff upheavals progressive or wholly reactionary, this political conspiracy is able to de-'and is weakened by uncertainty in the Democratic politicians and office seek- lay. mutilate or defeat sound and need- periods between. The greatest n-ed ers say to reactionary Democratic vot- d laws for the people's welfare and of business is certainty; but the only ers that the Democratic party is reac-1 the prosperity of honest business and thing certain about the tariff is unccrtionary enough to express reactionary j even to enact bad laws, hurtful to the j tainty. views; and they say to progressive ; people's welfare and oppressive to j "What. then, shall we do to make Democrats that the Democratic party honest business. jour tariff changes strengthen business is progressive enough to express pro-! "It is this invisible government j instead of weakening business? Rival gressive views. At the same time. Re-' which is the real danger to American protective tariff nations have answerpublican politicians and office seekers ; institutions. Its crude work at Chi-led that qut stion. Common sense has say the same thing about the Repub-;ago in June, which the people were j answered it. Next to our need to make llcan party to progressive and reac- abl to see, was no more wicked than: the Sherman law modern, understand-

tlonary Republican voters. ' s skilful work everywnere and al"Sometimes in both Democratc and ways which the people are not able to Republican States the progressives see. get control of the party locally and "But an even more serious condition then the reactionaries recapture the results from the unnatural alignment same party in the same state; or this of the old parties. Today we Ameriprocess is reversed. So there is no j cans are politically shattered by sec-nation-wide unity of principle in either tionalism. Through the two old parparty, no stability of purpose, no ties the tragedy of our history is con-clear-cut and sincere program of oneitinued; and one great geographical party at frank and open war with an part of the Republic is separated from equally clear-cut and sincere program other parts of the Republic by an ilof an opposing party. logical partisan solidarity. "This unintelligent tangle is seen in ! "The South has men and women as Congress. Republican and Democratic ( genuinely progressive and others as Senators and Representatives, believ-; genuinely reactionary as those in othing alike on broad measures affecting j er parts of our country. Yet, for wellthe whole Republic, find it hard to : known reasons, these sincere and hon-

vote together because of the nominal

difference of their party membership. ; aries vote together in a single party, When, sometimes, under resistless con- i which is neither progressive nor reac-1 victfon, they do vote together, weitionary. They vote a dead tradition t have this foolish spectacle: Legisla-1 and a local fear, not a living convletorrs calling themselves Republicans j tion and a national faith. They vote i and Democrats support the same poli- not for the Democratic party, but!

cy, the Democratic legislators declaring that that policy is Democratic and Republican legislators declaring that it is Republican; and at the very same time other Democratic and Republican legislators oppose that very same policy, each of them declaring that it is not Democratic or not Republican. "This condition makes it impossible most of the time, and hard at any time for the people's legislators who be - lieve In the same broad policies to enact them into logical, comprehensive

laws. It confuses the public mind. It ; American business men what they can breeds suspicion and distrust. It ena-; do and what they can not do. We mean bles such special interests as seek un-jto make our business laws clear Injust gain at the public expense to get ' stead of foggy to make them plainly what they want. It creates and foBters state just what things are criminal the degrading boss system in Ameri-iand what are lawful. And we mean

can politics through which these spe -

clal Interests work. j shall be prison sentences that actually "This boss system is unknown and punish the real offender, instead of impossible under any other free gov- j money fines that hurt nobody but the ernment in the world. In its very na-1 people, who must pay them In the end. ture it is hostile to the general wel-1 "And then we mean to send the menfare. Yet it has grown until it now sage forth to hundreds of thousands

is a controlling Influence In American

public affairs. At the present mo-1 gaged in honest business, that they ment notorious bosses are in the sad-are not criminals but honorable men die of both old parties In various im- in their work to make good business portant states which must be carried in this Republic. Sure of victory, we to elect a president. This Black Horse ' even now say, "Go forward. American Cavalry is the most important force in business men, and know that behind the practical work of the Democratic you, supporting you, encouraging you, and Republican parties in the present : is the power and approval of the greatcampaign. Neither of the old parties' j est people under the sun. Go forward, nominees for president can escape ob- American business men, and feed full ligation to these old party bosses nor j the fires beneath American furnaces; shake their practical hold on many and and give employment to every Ameri-

powerful members Legislature. of the National "Under this boss system, no matter which party wins, the people seldom win; but the bosses almost always win. And they never work for the peopie. They do not even work for the party to which they belong. They work only for those anti-public interests whose political employes they are. It Honors at College. "What was your son's social standing in college?" "Oh, very fair. Why, he almost got Into the Gibber and Squeak society I" "Indeed! How was that?" "Why, you know they always hit them on the back as a sign they have been selected, and George was hit on the back with such force that It knocked him down." "Mercy!" "Yes. Indeed. He thought of course he had been chosen, but he found out afterward It was the class bully who hit him because he didn't like the set of his collar. But even that's a great honor." Cleveland Plain Dealer. The American Collector. "You can assure me that this old master Is genuine?" "Oh, yes, my very dear sir. The proof Is perfect- Why. I can point out to you the very street In which tho poor old master lived." "And you are sure he was an old master? "Sure! Why, my very dear sir. he was more than ninety when be died." "I'll take lt"-Cleveland Plain Dealer. Hemlock, foxglove, monkshood, the seeds of laburnum, common laurel and yew are all poisonous to human beings. .Dr. Wineinger. Dr. Wisson. Indianapolis Dentists EVERY THURSDAY. Rooms 6 & 7, Comstock Building. Main Street Between 10th A 11th. No one can undersell us, no one does undersell us. Buy your Watch here. 0. E. Dickinson The Diamond and Watch House.

SOUNDS KEY NOTE TODAY

is these interests that are the real rounded Peter's Dome, "he builded betvictors in the end. Iter than he kne'." "The special Interests which suck "The next great business reform we the people's substance are bl-rartisan. ! must have to steadily increase Amri-

They use both parties. They are the . est southern progressives and reaction ! against the Republican party. They: want to be free from this condition; they can be free from It through the National Progressive party. "For the problems which America faces today are economic and national. They have to do with a more just dlsi tribution of prosperity. They concern the living of the people; and therefore the more direct government of the 1 people by themselves. "We mean to put new business laws on our statute books which will tell that the penalty for things criminal of brilliant minds and brave heart s en- ( can laborer who asks for work. Go I forward, American business men, and j capture the markets of the world for ! American trade; and know that on j the wings of your commerce you carry j liberty throughout the world and to every inhabitant thereof. Go forward, American business men, and realize J that in the tme to come it shall be said of you, as It is said of the hand that Sunshine. little srold amid the gray; That's sunshine, little brightness on the way; That'a aunshlne. little glimpsing; of the blue, little widening of the view, little heaven breaking through; That'a aunshlne. A little looking; for the light; That'a aunshlne. A little patience through the night; That'a sunshine. A little bowing of the will. A little resting on the hill. A little standing very still; That' sunshine. A little smiling through the tears; That'a aunshlne. A little faith behind the fears; That's sunshine. A little folding of the hand. A little yielding of demand. A little grae to understand; ThaK's sunshine. Stuart Maclean.

STAMP SpociiailLs

itksagj AUGUST 5TH TO 10TH.

Extra Stamps with Tea and Coif ee

en STAMPS -TCt, ' 25 STAMPS with one can Bak- Dolt with one bott,e Ing Powder .-50c Extract 25c in STAMPS -AMB0SA 0 STAMPS 1 with 2 cans Lunch . ith " TalJl 15 STAMPS 2 10 STAMPS 10 TAMPS 1 with one can Soap 0T ne 8'"! f polish 10c . Je,, 10c Two Checks ioSTAMP - -in STAMPS . 10 STAMPS 10. ,?HTArr, wiih each lb. Starch 5c C

The Great Atlantic 727 Main St.

' can prosperity is to change the method

able and just, our greatest iscal ned is a genuine, permanent, non-partisan tariff commission. "Modern industrialism has changed the status of women. Women now are wage-earners In factories, stores and other places of toil. In hours of labor and all the physical conditions of industrial effort they must compete with men. And they must do it at lower wages than men receive wages which in most cases, are not enough for these women workers to live on. "This is inhuman and Indecent. It Is unsocial and uneconomic. It la immoral and unpatriotic. Toward women the Progressive party proclaims the chivalry of the State. We propose to protect women wage-earners by suitable laws, an example of which Is the minimum wage for women workers a wage which shall be high enotagh to at least buy clothing, food and shelter for the woman toller, "The care of the aged is one of the most perplexing problems of modern j life. How is the workingman with less than five hundred dollars a year, and with earning power waning as hie own years advance, to provide for aged parents or other relatives In addition to furnishing food, shelter and clothing for his wife and children? What is to become of the family of the laboring man whose strength has been sapped by excessive toil and who has been thrown upon the industrial scrap heap? It is questions like these we must answer If we are to Justify free Institutions. They are questions to which the masses of people are chained as to a body of death. And they are questions which other and poorer nations are answering. "We progressives mean that America shall answer them. The Progressive party is the helping hand to those whom a vicious Industrialism hat maimed and crippled. We ar for the conservation of our natural resources; but even more we are for the conservation of human life. Our forests, water power and minerals are valuable and must be saved from the spoilers; but men. women and children are more valuable and they, too, must be saved from the spoilers. "Because women, as much at men. are a part of our economic and social life, women, at much as men, should have the voting power to solve aU economic and social problems. Votes for women are theirs as a matter of natural right alone; votet for women should be theirs as a matter of poltlcal wisdom. As wage-earners, they should help to solve the labor problem; as property owners they should help to solve the tax problem; ss wives and mothers they should help to solve all the problems that concern the home. And that means all national problems; for the Nation abides at the fireside." Tneueand Milee Long. Mrs. Exe (with a newspaper) Here's an Interesting list of things a penny will do. It's nearly half a column long. Mr. Exe Humph! Ton ongbt to see a list of the things a peany won't dow Boston Transcript. Highest Church Spire. The spire of Ulm cathedral. Wtnttemberg. the highest In the world, rises C30 feet from the ground. BUY YOUR Sewer Tile and Brick Of THE MILLER KEMPER CO, Phone 324? & Paciiic Tea Co. Phone 12115.

mm mm IS

I