Washington Herald. (Washington, DC) 1909-10-28 [p...

1
THE WASHINGTON HESA1D THURSDAY OCTOBER 28 1959 6 J y m I w THE WASHINGTON HERALD PttbHibed Every Mornint in the Year by TilE WASHINGTON HERALD COMPANY 784 FIFTEENTH STREET NORTHWEST EateKd u McmdcltM tatt r Uctokw 5 IMC at UM at Y al to teD D C uad r set oi COBC H ot March 1 U79 SCOTT C BONE Editor Teleohonj Main 3800 Private Brands Eichanje Suburiptlon Rita by Carrier or Mill Daft and BwMkf 59 ct ta per swath Uaijy and Snaday Jt per DsJly without U coMa p r rooath Daily trJtlMCt Sunday JIJO LkiiKk without cklly 200 per year No attention wtil be paid to anonymous contributions and no communications to the editor will 60 printed except ovor tho noms of writer aruMMcHBt offered for publication will- e refvmed wnauaWabJa but stamps should 00 with lisa manuscript for that purpose AH oom m cfiHon3 intended for this newspaper whether for the dotty or the Sunday ieeue should Ie addressed to THE WASHINGTON HERALD Nw York RepmwUUTC J C V1LU13KDINO EPECIAL AGKNCY Bntw kk B U ae ChJafO HepreMBldUN BARNARD BRAN HAM Boyo BaOdtas THURSDAY OCTOBER 23 1S09 44 THE PLUNDERERS OF WASHINGTON A magazine articlo bearing tho caption quoted above a frenzied dissertation on Washington affairs with muckracking ombeUtohment gatorfr has caused more or leM comment the past few days Pearsoas Uie pttblkatten In question has undoubtedly suoeosdod in stttlnff it- self talked about but has not added to its presttf or done itself any permanent good by disseminating such an artIcle There ie truth in itpalpable truth in sections but it is as overdrawn and far- fetched as a whole as it is Iniquitous and unwarranted in detail And it is the cue but mildly to that gross Jihel is at least trenched upon ia the use that made of certain honored names ia- coinuctkM With such a caption The rirderrs of Washington Washington is not betas plundered has not been plundered The muckraking article Itaett repudiates the assertion It brings fttlte clearly enough Unit tJw one greet offender ol the a weukl- b i now on Its hotter behavioiv the ges monopoly has met resistance both in and out of Congress and successful resistance too Ia the and it voluntarily makes concession In rates to the con- sumer abandons its legal stops to water its stock and betrays a tardy and yet re- luctant but nevertheless aotnmendabte desire aad disposition to get upon good terms with the paWic a policy whoso wisdom should have impreeeed itself upoa the company long years ago A story of how the Washington Gas- light Compejjy has perststeatly attempted to plunder Washington along with its oppressive extortions as to rates and how it has just as persistently encounter ed obstacles Impossible to overcome would have beea equally graphic and none the less truthful Doubtless the government ha paid too much in many laetaaoes for ground it la its it is told that high fflcleis theaiseivos have not hesitated to turn a thrifty penny in such transactions but there is another side to this story sine Take the recent con demnatkm of the squares south of the Avenue for example So fair a doal did Uncle Sam receive in those proceedings by way of appraisements that business men affected see In the outcome or honestly think they see a situation that means Plunder of Property for Govern mont And it is pertinent to remark that one of the appraisers is a gentleman whose name figures in the sensational magazine category above sot out Now a word touching a complimentary and at the same time uncomplimentary mention of The Washington Herald In the said arUcle to wit The HosU a wr BMTB j p r rromcHUy- c amploM a good cum aid radd sy boo al- fiondy sU tM This newspaper is never ominously silent baa never suddenly become oml nously sliest It dares and always has dared to stand for the right and speak the truth and proposes over to keep Itself in position so to do It has won some notable fights and oxpocta to win more But The Washington Herald Is not a muckrackor not a pessimist and not a common nor doom It intend to be- come any of those things Its hand Is not raised for Instance against ovary other corporation because tho gas mo- nopoly happens to have an odious record ncr dose it jump to the conclusion whan grasping and greed develop In certain quarters that grasping and greed exist in nil quarters Not being a muckraking newspaper but a fairdealing newspaper it able to see things aright and thus prevent false reasoning from entering Into Its philosophy Moreover The Washington Herald imows does not merely think that Wash IriRton Is well governed almost wholly free from graft and corruption and by all odds tho most wholesome city In the land Knowing thIs us all Washing tonlans know It In spite of things wo may not like thla newspaper challenges the statement that Washington Is being plundered or ever will be plundered It is not true Pearsons in tolling some ugly truths has simultaneously peVpotratsd a libel upon the Capital a wholesale libel Did Mr Dooloy wrlto Shakespeare inquires a oontemporary Ho did not but his insight Into human nature und 7 poet fur per Tear tAt it sent 4 sensat- ional y Is out plunder needed mIn Us H cold 1 J c t tubikiion Qmce day put- ting paste < ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > of It It v tt quality of his philosophy indicate that Mr Dooloy may have road Shako to good purpose A Chromatic Question A wife in Milwaukee seeks dlvorco bo of a lack of harmony with her hus band upon a question of color The lateue is not of race but of ties not of tho tie that binds but of the necktie The lady wishes the husband to go shopping with her That would seem in itself a reason why ho might seek legal separation on the ground of cruelty But she goes ovon further in requiring that upon those harassing excursions ho shall don a cravat of chromatic aooord with the shade of her gown Her com- plaint recites that ho has committed the artistic atrocities or donning a fourin hand of green when escorting her attired in plum silk and of marching with a tlfc sky blue next to her dross of vornal green It would appear that this lady Is some- what unreasonable If her husband Is so selfsacrificing as to endure the ordeal of her career through tho emporiums of dry goods that hayo not made their city famous she ought to concede to him the privilege of encircling his nook wltih such gear as be fancies so long as it does not shock the public sense of propriety Surely she would not go so far as to require that he should make his afternoon plug hat conform to tin rectfnt amazing variations in tho mlll- lners adornment of her crowning glory Not would she require his stockings but were better not to become more spa elk As to neckties masculine patience hat proverbially Its annual trials in the gentle surprises of Christmas tide This question of cravats may be a knot If so the husband may cut It going on strike that Is by refusing shopping or to supply the where withal therefor But the issue may well require a Daniel for its judgment Evading the Customs False declarations by tourists and larg- er swindling by underweighing have loins oil at the New York customhouse In the opinion oC Collector Loeb for about fifty years There has been much criticism more or toss irritated of the seal of this reviews official in the examl nation of the luggage and other belong- ings of passengers but it Ss to hia credit that he does not hesitate to at- tack the greeter frauds It Is true of that the cheating of the customs by underwetghtog could not have MeA pursued without the connivance of reve- nue employee The scandal Is not light oned by the long and inferentially willful blindness of officiate in the past In tact seems to hive become almost an es- tablished rule that these public employ should assist in defrauding the Treasury What been lacking hitherto has been either the ability or the desire to do tb disagreeable duty of probing tho evil Yet the methods employed seem ia the retrospect to have beeR fls raatly open ad ea y of detection Had the subordl or the customs service been acting for their own protection instead of for a public employer they could not have failed to run against the impudent frauds No one may know the amount of those frauds in the put It would be Idle to goes at the possibilities of their repe- tition when vigilance shall be relaxed In themselves the personal aspect of these evasions reflects individual greed rather than any sincere protest against the customs laws whether they be oem stdered as protective of domestic indus tries or only for purposes of revenue They are offensive not merely because of losses to the National Treasury hut be caus of their oridonce of dulled re Bpect for the law and of blunted eon science Parent and Child Mrs Ellen Spencer Museey In No Good Housekeeping calls attea- tlon to many curious lid seemingly un- just phases of the legal relations parent and child In this country The contribution is not argumentative so much as It ie a series of statements of fOOt from which conclusions may be drawn The writer concerns her self only to the extent of pointing out some of the inequalities and injustices existing these including numerous spa cine statutory disadvantages and disa- bilities Imposed upon woman and her child in favor of the husband and father The purpose of the writer however Is plainly Indicated hi a subhead to the title of tho article reading LAWS which impel people to work for equal suffrage Taking a broad view of the question of equal suffrage It will be acknowledged that tho women come to tho bar of opinion powerfully equipped and quite likely to attract attention when they make the child tho basis of their Ing Tho ancient fallacy that the father alone or oven to any preponderating ex- tent 1 responsible for the child and on titled solely to the direction of its dos tin and tho fruits of its labor Is no longer accepted without question primarily is righteously charged with the support of tho child but the mothers responsibility for Its training and moral and Intellectual development is so unmietakably Indicated that denial her positive right to participate In tho framing of laws affecting her off- spring Is ono that It will be extremely difficult lightly to brush asld4 The subject manifestly opens a wide area of discussion It Invites onalyBls at the hands of thinkers open to convic- tion and reasonably attentive to any plea apparently worthy cf grave consldera Uon And when woman comes forward holding her child in her arms or leading it by the hand and by that token asks of man a hoaxing on her legal rights and status sho Is moro than apt to get It promptly and ungrudgingly Although Air Taft professea to think mighty well of the Roosevelt policies he has a few of his own sharply differ- entiated therefrom ana in no wiso to be therewith H10 theory that thc President Is tmoroly a figurehead knows no place In the philosophy Presidential visits to Grand Old Texas aro few and far between Hence the governor or that Interesting Common wealth felt able to appear In frock coat i 1 r t tom Gor lan b to- go been court ha oat the be- tween read- Ily pub- lic c nnocted I A ipe f ort ube I o plea d T he- ather t ho- of Roosevelt Ian ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ of aft to up to te T and plug hat for tho moment devoid a haunting fear that the incident might looomo a campaign Issue If as has been broadly Intimated the Interesting Mr BanIll did got 5000 for Issuing that famous antiCook It must be evident even now the persons who put up the coin that he was grossly overpaid If those statesmen who are chanting Dig her deep through Dixie can frame a plan to dig her deep via New tho may have some chance materialize Republicans room to be learning to disagree among themselves almost as en- thusiastically ag If they were Democrats Of course Mr Poary may consider his failure to nail Dr Cook due entirely to tho toughness of that gentlemans hldo Others will incline to think however that it Is duo to tho poor quality of nails the commander hag thus far employed We fear the South Carolina papers do not believe unreservedly that Senator Tlllmans absence from the Columbia banquet to Mr Taft will produce any- thing like an aching void somewhere about the table A Chicago school maam claims to have discovered a simple and quick method of teaching children all about Chi- cago Wise parents will see that their children carefully avoid that teacher Why should Mr AldrIch bother with Mr Fowler Mr Fowler has not any Taft indorsements yet has A physician says that no woman who wishes te remain beautiful will over speak crossly to her husband Is the doe tor married And what does she look lUte If H is too much to pay for a a banquet in honor of the President what would be a fIr price to pay for a CbautaoaMa ticket to hens a pitchfork United States Senator talk through W Ten minutes Is not long to bo sure But oven in that time Columbus Ga might manage to give the President a pleasant look If It tried real hard Lleut Shacklotons south polo experi- ences make most entertaining reading Especially is it pleasant not to have his every other assertion disputed There Is nothing sure in this life says the Milwaukee Sentinel True true Even Washington may yet win the pennant And the next thing we know tho poll will e toiling the truth soys the Deltas News Evidently you do not to know anything more until after the millennium has arrived Jeffries soys he will fight in April It not April 1 he in mind it is to be hoped The recent meeting between First Termar Taft and SixthTermer Diaz was Interesting from more political points of view than one Why should a few revolting truths about Twnmaay shock or surprise New York New York has beard them be- fore atony time The question is Will New York over heed them An Alabama college professor was ar- rested in Anaiston for calling a policeman aa encyclopedia It seems that one may be arrested for almost any old thing in Alabama nowadays Horrors The Brownsville COM has broken out again How can we over hope to get to the end ef the north pole row CHAT OF THE FORUM Mr Altlrlcli Is Cautions Pnm UM Mea Herald M b M weir taMcBl ia iwniiWa sad Semtor Akhfck win toe wile to the MATB of UM Fowler Mr Recent Rations FTM the New York Saa crates said stoke iuads ta a spirit of true autyr 4 a and eateR unknown qotntnfcs of timek TILe PrcBhlcnt and Bondt From the PMtwWpbk Public Ix gsr Talk isuKOfeaMnt bond cut mst lei but tie MOM wasteful sad rinini iMihi strag- gW a lMt whIch PraUMt will vntett ta- Mr Cannons Party Proa Uw Lnahrflte Co ti vJoBf U Mr CAMMII t that U Mr IA PtOtU k a R- IMMican thin W ia MMUiteg else la the epMec of the bidotoiMd droctt of tartar MBsmpMUKr there caD be but one kIM ef Rpublfea- Mr Gaynor Dlsqnnliflcd From tko New York Evening If jttrr of Itatatcrwied aDd ooeawt cntaens were to hoDcetlr upon the MkyorHr- oindldctei their rcnUci would bo that Mr Gtyaor- b d UKVousMr dbqwlWed bMueU for the tICks Pot Henson Identified From tho SprfagaeW UwJoa Prof Bensoa fat bdkoMaws la Prof- Ilefuoe taqniras a Southern aev paptr T- doot you know Prof Heiam is the aUtnA R Ue n wh neetmfurML that naa 1eary to till north pole Gen Grccly on Pole From UM Chicago ReconMIarrid Gun Oreoir has written a uwsailn artlelo in wkkh h praisw Dr Cook aad expreesM the b that the doctor reached the north pole It Is to be hoped that this trill not came a war botvresn tha army and the nary Mr Tillnmns Economy Frcm the S I Aeld nepnbMcaa Furious with Indignation booaae tho boniest In cost 10 a plate Senator TiUman hat reftued to at tend His mind works strangely Somebody mat pay for the dinner Mr Pcnroac and Philadelphia Tr Copcfca Capital fin ia k to proro its gratitude for tariff laTot r oontlanlng oonapt goTtnaaeat of Itself Iff whteL fraochfawi worth miUiom are freely cut aDd gang poitUdans are zina all the COIl tracts for public work It wouW pay to be a lap lBC stock even though it tost exoMfhe tariff bounties from Senator FALIE LEAVES Red oer the forest peon the setting sau The line of yellow light dies Seat away That crowned the eastern copec and chill and dun Pails on tho moor the brief Korember day Now tho tired hunter winds a partlag And echo bida goodnight from every glade Yet wait awhilff and see the calm hews float Each to his TeSt beneath their pareat Soon oer their heads blithe April hours shall sin A thousand wild Sewers round them sball untold TIc green buds glisten in tho dews ot spring Abd all bo vernal rapture as of old DncoMcionfl they in waste obllrion In nil tho world of Vasy life around No thought of them in nil the bounteous tky No drop for thorn of kindly found Alans portion is to die and rise again Yet ho complain while thwo part With their sweet Una as pure from sin and As his when Eden held his virgin heart Kcblc to K Eng- land scheme exp accu- mulated het t- At bat TeIIIt fan iMo Taft Mr ttberrd with the wooIy about Ute Poet a pus Who the lNmor c the President ILt Columbia S a tU the Mad tie davit laus bus sun a I lose iI his Taft in Vei It net k lL twelve itt is let i banled Ihihdelp lila Penn note lie Influence stat C ¬ ¬ ¬ < A Of A LITTLE NONSENSE RETUIIMXG TUB COMPLIMENT This Peerage is the finest guide A girl could get We find a list or dukes Inside With prices net statement of their debts is found Which make it handy all around heiresses wo might in turn Compile a list State age amount of coin to burn That la the gist Our foreign friends use printers Ink We might do likewise dont you think Why Thou explorers are handicapped As to how Cant be in but ono place at a time Couldnt they sand around grapho phones to lecture in the smaller towns Way It Goes Politeness pays Whilst thrift explains that it left Its money at home Slow Fire Repartee Hully Tie my To exude Sdylngs shrowd Bout an hour too late Naught But Abuse They all said I would make a splendid eandldate WoJir I became a candidate Again weilt And now look what they say about Tho Proportion I see you have the regulation five feel or books Yes I believe in having the aluMs Have you road any of em Welt about two inches Itcoiioiiingr With lien Papa I want a duke Now sugar plum Wont you be if I buy you an aoreplane and a chimpanzee and a hawser of A FEW WORDS ON VANITY Pw Ateua4 r Swttks Dnua Ilarp Each man is the most important thing la the world to himself but why is he to himself so Important Simply because lie ie a personality with capacities of of pain who can be hurt who can be pleased who can be disappointed who labors and expects his hire in whose con sctoueness in fact for the time being the whole universe lives He is and everything else Ie relative Confined to his own personality making it his tower of outlook from which only he cafrsMrvey the outer world naturally enough a rather high estimate of its value of its dignity of its Intrinsic worth TIll high estimate is useful in so far as it A aXe his condition pleasant and rather oar pronenees to form are accus- tomed to call vanity Vanity which really to keep the race alive has been treated harshly by the monUtats and satirists It does ROt quite deserve the bard names it hoe been called It Interpenetratee everything a man says or does but it Interpenetrates for a useful purpose If it la always an alloy in the pure gold of virtue It at least does the service of an alloy makms the precious workable Nature gave man hIS appetiiea aapiradoas and along with these pea of taeanat which fumes from tho built of conscious aes to i decease makU the best part of life rapture and the worst part sudan We But for vanity the race would have ted out are There are some men whose lives seem to us as undesirable as the lives of toads or serpents yet these met breathe in tolerable content and satisfaction A man receives the shocks of life on the buffer of his vanity Vanity acts as his second and bottle holder In the worlds priae ring and It fights him well bringing him smilingly up to time after the fiercest knockdown blows Vanity is to a man what the oily secretion is to a bird with which it sleeks and adjusts the plumage ruffled by whatever causes Vanity is not only in strumontal in keeping a man alive and in heart but in its lighter manifestations it hi the great sweetener of social ex It is the creator of drees and fashion it is the inventor of and ceremonies to it we are indebted for all our traditions of civility For vanity in its idler moments is benevolent Is as willing to give pleasure as to take it and accepts as sufficient reward for Its services a kind word or an approving smile It delights to bask in the sunshine of appro- batlon As each man is to himself tho most thing in the world each man is an egotist in his thinking in his desires in his fears It does not however follow that each man must be an egotist as the word is popularly understood in his speech But even although this wore the the world would be divided Into egotists likable and unlikable There are two kinds of egotism a trifling vain- glorious kind a mere burning of personal incense in which the man is at once altar priest censer and divinity a kind which deals with the accidents and wrap pages of tho speaker his equipages his riches his family his servants his fur niturc and array The other kind has no taint of selfaggrandlzoment but is root- ed in the faculties of love and humor and this latter kind Is never offensive because It Includes others and knows no scorn of exclusiveness The one is the offspring of a narrow and unimaginative personality tho other of a large and genial one Advertising From the Buffalo Keau Without exceptions or Qualifications we wish to go on record as favoring adver- tising under any and all circumstances There Is nothing in the world like It for pulling business whether that is In tho Lords vineyard or In the marts of trade Hence It is with special pleas that wo notice the decision of tho churches to advertise and bring their wares before the people Wo aro prepared for the shook we will doubtless receive in the downcar some morning at seeing this MUi Phoebe Snow iDdwoi co to church a spell And there the Light Put them arijkt Upoo tho Reed of Pure DelIght Or for the sako of economy why not collaborate with some or our leading business houses and spread this on tho car roofs church and manu- facturer to share alike on expense Here you slay absorb the creed On rich upholstered pews Then go bane and richly reed On Campbeil4 Condensed Stews Gross jliKBtatement From tho Chicago Tribune Irate Caller your paper accused mo this morning of running over a man with my motorcycle It Isnt true It was an automobile whats the difference Irate Caller Tho difference About 8501 Not Much From the Baltimore American What did Mr Skinflint send to tho donation party for the minister Ills regrets Of dismal late So mer pearls pleas- ure h Itor Itwe metal S Im- portant cue About liar bo- ar EditorWell i d fle In t Not goal untie- d sores S I I C S helps power a C S C S long tones torn S S S businI lee ire ago broad- cast ¬ ¬ ¬ for lot m he St a x PEOPLE AND THINGS Tho Debt of Zealand The not public debt of New Zealand per head of population is JU against 91 Great Britain But much of this debt represents productive investments An Investigation observes that governmental ownership of railway anti other enter rises has created a now and wasteful of corruption It refers to the loca- tion of roads bridges and other as a result of looal or personal This country knows slraethlng of that kind of favor in its river and har hot bills in New Zealand such favors are described as the current coin of political corruption upoleou on Soldiers One of Ferrers utterances was The soldiers uniform conceals crimes against hUmanity and the misery of his own ex That Is severe and should be untrue Yet It Ie recalled that Napoleon at St Helena praised the profession of and added The soldier in is a cutthroat and a robber He not only produces nothing himself but consumes the products of others and nlays the producers Which was the po litical economist speaking not one of the Teat captains of military history The Trees of New Hampshire New Hampshire has reorganized Its forestry commission and amended some of Its laws relating to trees There Is a society for protection of its for- est The State forester has delivered many public addresses and material for essays on forestry and allied subjects hag been supplied to all the subordinate granges in the State and to the pupils of twentytwo high schools In all respects i is an excellent showing that is made by this report which is not inaptly named Year Book of Forestry and it should appeal to all who value the White Moun tains and their woodlands as a part of oar national heritage and desire that such shall be preserved in YiolaAe The society includes in its mem bership many residents of other States A Poor Inscription Fort Mercer at Red Bank N J and Fort Xlffiln both on the Delaware held the British fleet below Philadelphia toe two mouths after Gen Howe occupied the city Fort Militia survives in a fort flcation erected about the time of the sec- ond war with England Fort Mercer has disappeared but Its site was recently marked by a monument on which was placed a tablet with this inscription MttOMMBt ta OMNOCBMcmto the tattle ot MCMW or Bak fought B this gnxnid Oo- toter 3 ITTT Kmt d ky wrthorttf of M f- UM ItieteUtar ot UM State ef X r J BMT pMd MMton of 1MB tatradaotd ia UM UOOM of As tt rd kgr It will be observed that an the im- portant facts are given there and only the trivial details omitted It is not re- corded between what troops the battle was fought or how It resulted The name of Cot Christopher Greens of Rhode Island who held the fort with splendid courage and skill is omitted but that Is immaterial so long as the name of John Boyd Avis is there The name of Count von Donop who was killed leading his Hessians to the assault does not on the monument but the name of GoY Stokes hi there for posterity to reed with emotion The 4M Rhode Island sol- diers who held that fort against the attack of 2000 Hessians are not men- tioned but the New Jersey legists ture of UK Is there A Button and a Name The Lone Star name of Texas has an interesting origin A half century ago mens overcoats were ornamented with large brass buttons It happened that the buttons on the overcoat of Gov Smith of Texas had the impress of a star For wont of a seat one of these buttons was cut off and used The own- er of this overcoat and of the button Henry Smith was chief executive of the provisional government of Texas which in MS preceded the declaration of in- dependence by Texas against Mexico aad the winning of that independence in the battle of San Jadnto on April H IMS A Postman of Leisure A lazy postmen is fortunately a rarity One has been found in a little town aear- I4lle in France and many strange de- lays and disappearances of letters have been explained A chance visit to the house of a carrier revealed in his par- lor a quantity of correspondence which when weighed turned the scales at LIN pounds When asked what this mass of undelivered mall was he said Just r years He had long oome to the con- clusion that his dully round was too long and for years he had eat them short These may as well wait till to- morrow said the procastinatlng post- man hence the great weight of corre- spondence had accumulated during flve years or so in his parlor His explana- tion was perfectly genuine He had not tampered with a single letter Nevorthe lese he has been permitted to make the acquaintance of hard labor during ten months in prison A Truly Model Husband A coterie of women in Chicago hold overy yoar a Husband Show at the home of ono of their number There are prizes for the competition The captor of the first prize this year has wonderful qualities He is described as good tured before breakfast intrusts his with the family pockotbook says her cooking is better than his mothers was is prompt at meals an adept with the n good judge of feminine beauty generous and kindhearted en jeys home more than the club and Is happiest when among friends The who is credited with all these virtues and accomplishments Is flvo years old and has been married nine years Bearing his blushing honors thick upon him he won a second prize after gaining the bluo ribbon at tho show by demonstrating his ability to sew on a button and then to cap the climax his wife came forward with one more dis- tinction that she had Inadvertently ovor looked and proved that he is a good entertainer A gentleman of rare qual Wes indeed Perhaps it is not strange that he Is happiest away from the club t m y fOrm con- struction favor H an- alysts th poI ftMio 8 Rod act at the alII 1w John BoJd ion Mr IX ap- pear chafing lsh gen- tleman New ence ate s Yes i wsed Stokes 515suac d s rIfe thin ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ c TWO YEARS AFTER Tile Financial Upheaval of 1007 and the Good Outloolc of Today From tile Hartford These Just two years ago tho country was experiencing a financial whirlwind The panic was in full blast On October H1- KK7 the Knickerbocker Trust Company of New York went Into the hands of a receiver and public confidence was shaken On October S3 Secretary of the Treasury Cortelyou aeoklnsr to allay the tonalon announced that 2Sffi0flet of government money would be deposited in New York banks and on that date the Weetinghoute concerns railed and the run on the Trust Company of America as- sumed prodigious proportions On Octo- ber 34 call money rose to 100 per cent but J Pierpont Morgan organized a bank- ers pool to loon J25WOOOO at 10 per cent events of the following days grated on the nerves It was a time that tried mens souls Values crumbled financial and Industrial concerns went into hands of receivers mill wheels stopped turning was strained anxiety and distrust and uncertainty prevailed Then months of industrial paralysis produc- tion was reduced to Its lowest terms The change which has been wrought since the upheaval of two years ago Is remarkable The from the dis- aster has been striking On the bedrock bared by the crisis and depression has been erected steadily and not spasmodi- cally a great structure of prosperity Activity has taken the place of dullness Two Jobs now grow where only ODe grew before A general spirit of confidence obtains The financial outlook ie not wholly satisfactory but conditions gen- erally are altogether encouraging The revolution which has been accom- plished in two years is characteristic of the American people No country has such a capacity for recuperation as the United States ME FAIRBANKS IN CHINA Viilt Looked on am JSmplianlzlnif- PxionilllneMM of America Fra the flbrasbai Thws The pretence in Shanghai of the Hon C W Fairbanks exYtee President of the United states serves a a reminder of the Increasing Interest being token m the affairs of China by Ajnerice Tin distinguished career of JCr Vatrteaks in the Senate and lain later election to the high office of vice president furnished the best poevtble guaranty of his betas able to properly represent the opinions and aims of his countrymen his visit is in no way official he htaaeif not b tng an officer at the present of his government yet be ha been ac- corded by Japan end China the highest honors In Pekin be was received by the prince rent and all the leading ministers of state called to preeent that respects to him The time of his visit to the capital had been planned long before the arrange meats for the Americas participation to the railway loans hind been mooted but coming as it did immediately after the final negotiations it did much to empha abe the fact that Americas action m this matter had only been taken in most friendly spirit The influence ex erted has been indirect but none the leas beneficial aa evidencing in an unofficial way the real bond of sympathy between the two notions The large body of Chinese students studying in America baa for more than a quarter of a cen- tury turned the attention of American people toward China and that interest was greatly deepened by the nit of his highness Prince Pu Im to fc St Louis exposition and the later vteit of the traveling of which Viceroy Tnan Fang was a member The visit of Mr Fairbanks to China at the present time has ellcted more to terM in Chinese offld 4 circles thaa that of any other American since the visjU more than thirty years ago of exPreel dent Grant to Canton Mr Fairbanks 1 leaving China will carry wtth him the regard and appreciation of cans in China for his dignified and ap propriate representation of their country The Broadway Knocker FWBI the NMT Yock Tgnjk Women wottkhtt be halt as laterestfog If they were men A chaperon is merely a fender for Rep ing a girl from colliding with the wrong manWhen some people get busy it is al- ways in connection with something that is nODe of their business Many man imagines he Is wielding big stck when in reality he ic only ustag a small hammer As a matter of fact your neighbors think just as disagreeable things about you as you think about them Lots of people delight in doing a charitable stunt after concluding r rangements with the limelight man Its well to have song in your heart If you havent the right kind of a voice its also well to keep it there One idea of a paddedcell candidate is a woman who fondles a dog for the pur- pose of trying to arose a mans Jealousy The average man is a willing worker when he meets another rain who is will ing to be worked If you had to live your life over again the chances aro you would make a diffar ent kind of a tool of yourself An Unlucky Man the KJJWW Cky Star Thomas Patton of Lwray Russell County Kans Is the owner of the real prlzc hardluck story of Kansas Here are some of the things that have to him in tho last five or six months Wife died house burned to ground furniture three ribs and nose broken In fight with neighbor thrown into jail for fighting compelled to pay his own and other fellows fines thrown into jail for letting hogs runs at large after paying neighbor for taking up and keeping hogs thrown into jail for not sending children three and onehalf mlle to school when his own district school had been discontinued While in jail the Probate Court took five of his children away and scattered them over the State a Th came recovery time the loa 1 11 From hap- pened In- cluding c While a a a ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ AUTUMN WINDS The winds of autumn now are sighing and wailing through the dusty town the garden sass and flowers are dying the world is turning gray and brown It is a time of death and sorrow the plants that used to bloom and blow will all be broken down to morrow and buried under mounds of snow The elms look sad their leaves are falling and drifting on the windswept lawn ana icy blasts will soon be calling their triumph that the summers gone But let us at the fireside gather nor heed the tempest wild and chill and harken to his words while father explains again the tariff bill In olden times it was the custom to tell the children fairy tales but now the tariff bust em what they get when daylight fails The Giant Killers awful vigor no longer fills the night with gore and Ridinghood will never figure about the fireside any more and Robin Hood wont dodge the sheriff or answer him with taunt and scoff for dad is talking of tire tariff and theres no way to head him off 1 WAX T MAsoN GoprrfgBt by George Matthew AdumsJ f ratesdad 1are e ¬ + AT THE HOTELS With the expiration on October is of he period in which American and foreign manufacturers may apply for apace in the exposition to be held Buenos Ayres next year It Is evident the exhibitions from America and Europe will surpass expectations said Enrique Roorignec of Buenos Ayres at the New Winrd lost night America wilt be well represented sold Mr Rodriguez but the manufacturers of Great Britain Germany and France are more appreciative of the opportunity and win have more msposteg displays than the United States Not many busi- ness men of the great North American republic are familiar with conditions in Argentine and many consider the people as swaieavage and ttaprogresefre To it will come as a shock to learn Buenos Ayres ie the fourth largest city in the new world and by all odds the most beautiful and the best governed and that Argentine is rapidly coming to the front m live stick and agricultural products European countries especially Great Britain and Germany are spend- ing millions of dollars to develop the Argentine trade Next years exposition win commem- orate the centennial of Argentine Inde- pendence added Senor Rodriguez who is visiting the United States to connec- tion with the fair and will be devoted argely to Illustrating the progress made in railways apicUlture and industry As a matter of fact there will be sepa- rate fairs Including the International Railway and Transportation Exposition International Agriculture and Live- Stock Exposition and smaller exhibitions of other Industries and the arts The death of Gov Johnson is deeply felt ta Minnesota said John M Pratt of Dulttth MlniL at the Arlington where everybody entertained the highest esteem for him Republicans as well as Demo- crats always hoped that Johnson some would occupy the Presidents chair the White House and if Johnson had been candidate for the Presidency the loot time Instead of Bryan I honestly believe the Democrats would today be in charge of tie national administration New Tort potttlos being Ms favorite stfhjeet Michael G Donovan ot New city Who fc at the Raleigh said last night that Tosanaay would elect its tndUates BO mutter what claims Heat and Bonnord may make at this time At every election in New York mean local tights of course there have always beset a haunch of soreheads who backed the tegular ticket Why do you ak Thats easy because they want it They wont just the whole pie see that game work Everybody toold New Teat Is e to their curm and ym cant foot eat muck over there Hearst PU tIeD you sonny Hearst is at right in his newspaper office thats vbere he belongs and where he can do a tat of damage or good if be wants to But for mayor of New York not on roar sCe What No sir not this evening Say what do you think about Tammesjr You bet Ifs a fine organization S4d It helps the poor too and thats a lot more than the other guys Is dsst Murphy is a shrewd potttldan and bows the game and they cant beat him 5 6 he dont do any shooting oft his mouth like the other fellows does When be gets good anl ready be win tip the whole world by how many will win and you can Just becjronr last doUr on it that dayaor wteoy Murphy aft Dick zones cf Brogue has the distinction of ealfcing the white footed feec hi Ofchftoma ssld prank J Young of Tulsa UtUu at the Kaleigti last night WUtaput recently be jumped a red in the MId He fired a shot out of e shotgun sad Fox went hood Joaes walked ove and pieced up his same continued Mc voung need to his great surprise round It to be a white footed red fox The sttmal is very rare and there have probafy not Mea more than half a dosen IA It killed hi this eouotry The whlte oted fox Is as scarce as white quail oa white sojdrreJ a specimen of each of ftfah harmg front feet are marked white The right foot has a white stocking to the knee while the l ft whft nearly to the shoulder The has been mounted Business fe good our y added Mr Young but it didnt coat that way on account of Mr Taft beta to the White House It come because iiwaa the nat ural sequence If Rooeeveltbad been re elected and were ht the Howe to day busiaesfi would be Pol Woo has little to oo with b foow oond- ltast night Beejamm M Newman o Pittsbury who was seen at Coe discussing female labor Jewish and American girJftra ia the garment factories of Pittsfirg while Irish and German women tb iiitdwell jag wives of the miners hold svbordi nate place in the trade In in the Polish women them married and others immigrant iris have the Inferior and uapleaeoat wc The least desirable occupation for stogy faotories k tobacco tripping pulling the stems out of the leaves and weighing and tying them for the rollers In tenement may find the strippers in a eel backs against a damp wohg br the light of a flaring gas jet factory oae will see then all their low stolte row behind and weighing and throwing the JUt to one side They would work all foreman said if I would the chance We never have any treble with them we cant give them emigh work to do They were married w in this case but the rule holds good d there Is seldom trouble with the hands in a stogy factory They are too much on sufferance for grievances worth their while Rights Rem UM K r YOlk Philadelphia Telegraph has smarted a campaign for mans rights the planks are the right to missile any where in the house built or rent with the money we ourselves have oarnlfi the right to ooeflfth space in kR dptts and bureau drawers the abeT spindleshanked glided furniture look at and net to sit en and tekeol- ltion of the rule that we must 1 the parlor nlco to those of our i ies callers for whom we cherish a rtsi antipathy May we add The right to throw newspapers the floor The right to have ones aeek or hie as untidy as one tarnation please The right a to wear a beard oc incise b to abstain wn Sunday slgr- Ing I TIM right to to try to exp w political situation And others I They TionlHnt Dare It is barely possibie that the Theodore Roosevelt will conic balk the tale of having discovered seraMhW- or other But would any one dare t apply to him a short and ugly word I at that these that I J tIN Ilea YOlk J- J CItyI see t t Yen 1 ole TOt Ge71I Iqs Old bunting J x r been killed In Eastern this fall Its t fOX i juetis good tIoAc the J t I- d1l try In s one their wall arse I In rO m- Ing giv n Peth i Mans laT- he t or to be h r Froia tM aal I din Il to- e rat h over Oklaba iith W T aa14 oe men snoI t- one u- be ma o go and s 0 den many lreetc 4 ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬

Transcript of Washington Herald. (Washington, DC) 1909-10-28 [p...

Page 1: Washington Herald. (Washington, DC) 1909-10-28 [p 6].chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045433/1909-10... · 6 THE WASHINGTON HESA1D THURSDAY OCTOBER 28 1959 J y m I w THE WASHINGTON

THE WASHINGTON HESA1D THURSDAY OCTOBER 28 19596J

y mI w

THE WASHINGTON HERALD

PttbHibed Every Mornint in the Year by

TilE WASHINGTON HERALD COMPANY

784 FIFTEENTH STREET NORTHWEST

EateKd u McmdcltM tatt r Uctokw 5 IMC atUM at Y al to teD D C uad r set oiCOBC H ot March 1 U79

SCOTT C BONE Editor

Teleohonj Main 3800 Private Brands Eichanje

Suburiptlon Rita by Carrier or Mill

Daft and BwMkf 59 ct ta per swathUaijy and Snaday Jt perDsJly without U coMa p r rooathDaily trJtlMCt Sunday JIJOLkiiKk without cklly 200 per year

No attention wtil be paid to anonymouscontributions and no communications tothe editor will 60 printed except ovor thonoms of writer

aruMMcHBt offered for publication will-e refvmed wnauaWabJa but stamps

should 00 with lisa manuscript forthat purpose

AH oom m cfiHon3 intended for thisnewspaper whether for the dotty or theSunday ieeue should Ie addressed toTHE WASHINGTON HERALD

Nw York RepmwUUTC J C V1LU13KDINOEPECIAL AGKNCY Bntw kk B U ae

ChJafO HepreMBldUN BARNARD BRANHAM Boyo BaOdtas

THURSDAY OCTOBER 23 1S09

44 THE PLUNDERERS OF WASHINGTON

A magazine articlo bearing thocaption quoted above a frenzied

dissertation on Washington affairs withmuckracking ombeUtohment gatorfr hascaused more or leM comment the pastfew days

Pearsoas Uie pttblkatten In question

has undoubtedly suoeosdod in stttlnff it-

self talked about but has not added toits presttf or done itself any permanentgood by disseminating such an artIcle

There ie truth in itpalpable truth insections but it is as overdrawn and far-

fetched as a whole as it is Iniquitousand unwarranted in detail And it is

the cue but mildly to that grossJihel is at least trenched upon ia the usethat made of certain honored names ia-

coinuctkM With such a caption The

rirderrs of Washington

Washington is not betas plundered hasnot been plundered The muckrakingarticle Itaett repudiates the assertion Itbrings fttlte clearly enough Unit tJw

one greet offender ol the a weukl-

b i now on Its hotter behavioivthe ges monopoly has met resistance bothin and out of Congress and successfulresistance too Ia the and it voluntarilymakes concession In rates to the con-

sumer abandons its legal stops to waterits stock and betrays a tardy and yet re-

luctant but nevertheless aotnmendabtedesire aad disposition to get upon goodterms with the paWic a policy whosowisdom should have impreeeed itself upoathe company long years ago

A story of how the Washington Gas-

light Compejjy has perststeatly attemptedto plunder Washington along with itsoppressive extortions as to rates andhow it has just as persistently encountered obstacles Impossible to overcome wouldhave beea equally graphic and none theless truthful

Doubtless the government ha paid toomuch in many laetaaoes for ground it

la its it is toldthat high fflcleis theaiseivos have nothesitated to turn a thrifty penny in suchtransactions but there is another side tothis story sine Take the recent condemnatkm of the squares south of theAvenue for example So fair a doal didUncle Sam receive in those proceedingsby way of appraisements that businessmen affected see In the outcome orhonestly think they see a situation thatmeans Plunder of Property for Governmont And it is pertinent to remarkthat one of the appraisers is a gentlemanwhose name figures in the sensationalmagazine category above sot out

Now a word touching a complimentaryand at the same time uncomplimentarymention of The Washington Herald Inthe said arUcle to wit

The HosU a wr BMTB j p r rromcHUy-c amploM a good cum aid radd sy boo al-

fiondy sU tM

This newspaper is never ominouslysilent baa never suddenly become omlnously sliest It dares and always hasdared to stand for the right and speakthe truth and proposes over to keep Itselfin position so to do It has won somenotable fights and oxpocta to win moreBut The Washington Herald Is not amuckrackor not a pessimist and not acommon nor doom It intend to be-

come any of those things Its hand Isnot raised for Instance against ovaryother corporation because tho gas mo-

nopoly happens to have an odious recordncr dose it jump to the conclusion whangrasping and greed develop In certainquarters that grasping and greed existin nil quarters Not being a muckrakingnewspaper but a fairdealing newspaperit able to see things aright and thusprevent false reasoning from enteringInto Its philosophy

Moreover The Washington Heraldimows does not merely think that WashIriRton Is well governed almost whollyfree from graft and corruption and byall odds tho most wholesome city In theland Knowing thIs us all Washingtonlans know It In spite of things womay not like thla newspaper challengesthe statement that Washington Is beingplundered or ever will be plundered

It is not truePearsons in tolling some ugly truths

has simultaneously peVpotratsd a libelupon the Capital a wholesale libel

Did Mr Dooloy wrlto Shakespeareinquires a oontemporary Ho did notbut his insight Into human nature und

7

poet

furper Tear

tAt

itsent

4

sensat-

ional

y

Is

out

plunder

needed mIn

Us

H

cold

1

J c t

tubikiion Qmce

day

put-

ting

paste

<

¬

¬

¬

¬

>

of

It

It

v

tt quality of his philosophy indicatethat Mr Dooloy may have road Shako

to good purpose

A Chromatic Question

A wife in Milwaukee seeks dlvorco bo

of a lack of harmony with her husband upon a question of color Thelateue is not of race but of ties not oftho tie that binds but of the necktieThe lady wishes the husband to goshopping with her That would seem initself a reason why ho might seek legalseparation on the ground of crueltyBut she goes ovon further in requiringthat upon those harassing excursions hoshall don a cravat of chromatic aooordwith the shade of her gown Her com-

plaint recites that ho has committed theartistic atrocities or donning a fourinhand of green when escorting her attiredin plum silk and of marching with a tlfc

sky blue next to her dross of vornalgreen

It would appear that this lady Is some-

what unreasonable If her husband Is soselfsacrificing as to endure the ordealof her career through tho emporiums ofdry goods that hayo not made their

city famous she ought to concedeto him the privilege of encircling hisnook wltih such gear as be fancies solong as it does not shock the public senseof propriety Surely she would not goso far as to require that he should makehis afternoon plug hat conform to tinrectfnt amazing variations in tho mlll-lners adornment of her crowning gloryNot would she require his stockings but

were better not to become more spa

elk As to neckties masculine patiencehat proverbially Its annual trials in thegentle surprises of Christmas tide Thisquestion of cravats may be aknot If so the husband may cut Itgoing on strike that Is by refusing

shopping or to supply the wherewithal therefor But the issue may wellrequire a Daniel for its judgment

Evading the Customs

False declarations by tourists and larg-

er swindling by underweighing haveloins oil at the New York customhouseIn the opinion oC Collector Loeb forabout fifty years There has been muchcriticism more or toss irritated of theseal of this reviews official in the examlnation of the luggage and other belong-ings of passengers but it Ss to hiacredit that he does not hesitate to at-

tack the greeter frauds It Is true ofthat the cheating of the customs

by underwetghtog could not have MeApursued without the connivance of reve-nue employee The scandal Is not lightoned by the long and inferentially willfulblindness of officiate in the past In tact

seems to hive become almost an es-

tablished rule that these public employshould assist in defrauding the TreasuryWhat been lacking hitherto has beeneither the ability or the desire to dotb disagreeable duty of probing thoevil

Yet the methods employed seem ia theretrospect to have beeR flsraatly openad ea y of detection Had the subordl

or the customs service been actingfor their own protection instead of fora public employer they could not havefailed to run against the impudent fraudsNo one may know the amount of thosefrauds in the put It would be Idleto goes at the possibilities of their repe-tition when vigilance shall be relaxedIn themselves the personal aspect ofthese evasions reflects individual greedrather than any sincere protest againstthe customs laws whether they be oemstdered as protective of domestic industries or only for purposes of revenueThey are offensive not merely because oflosses to the National Treasury hut becaus of their oridonce of dulled reBpect for the law and of blunted eonscience

Parent and Child

Mrs Ellen Spencer Museey In NoGood Housekeeping calls attea-

tlon to many curious lid seemingly un-just phases of the legal relations

parent and child In this countryThe contribution is not argumentativeso much as It ie a series of statementsof fOOt from which conclusions may

be drawn The writer concerns herself only to the extent of pointing outsome of the inequalities and injusticesexisting these including numerous spacine statutory disadvantages and disa-bilities Imposed upon woman and herchild in favor of the husband and fatherThe purpose of the writer however Isplainly Indicated hi a subhead to thetitle of tho article reading LAWS whichimpel people to work for equal suffrage

Taking a broad view of the question ofequal suffrage It will be acknowledgedthat tho women come to tho bar of

opinion powerfully equipped and quitelikely to attract attention when theymake the child tho basis of theirIng Tho ancient fallacy that the fatheralone or oven to any preponderating ex-

tent 1 responsible for the child and ontitled solely to the direction of its dostin and tho fruits of its labor Is nolonger accepted without question

primarily is righteously chargedwith the support of tho child but themothers responsibility for Its trainingand moral and Intellectual developmentis so unmietakably Indicated thatdenial her positive right to participateIn tho framing of laws affecting her off-

spring Is ono that It will be extremelydifficult lightly to brush asld4

The subject manifestly opens a widearea of discussion It Invites onalyBlsat the hands of thinkers open to convic-tion and reasonably attentive to any pleaapparently worthy cf grave conslderaUon And when woman comes forwardholding her child in her arms or leadingit by the hand and by that token asksof man a hoaxing on her legal rights andstatus sho Is moro than apt to get Itpromptly and ungrudgingly

Although Air Taft professea to thinkmighty well of the Roosevelt policieshe has a few of his own sharply differ-entiated therefrom ana in no wiso to be

therewith H10 theory thatthc President Is tmoroly a figureheadknows no place In thephilosophy

Presidential visits to Grand Old Texasaro few and far between Hence thegovernor or that Interesting Commonwealth felt able to appear In frock coat

i

1

rt

tom

Gorlanbto-

go

been

court

ha

oat

the

be-tween

read-Ily

pub-lic

c nnocted

I

A

ipe

f

ort

ube

I

o

plea d

T he-

ather

tho-

of

Roosevelt Ian

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

of

aftto

up

to

te

T

and plug hat for tho moment devoida haunting fear that the incident

might looomo a campaign Issue

If as has been broadly Intimatedthe Interesting Mr BanIll did got5000 for Issuing that famous antiCook

It must be evident even nowthe persons who put up the coin that

he was grossly overpaid

If those statesmen who are chantingDig her deep through Dixie can frame

a plan to dig her deep via Newtho may have some chance

materialize

Republicans room to be learning todisagree among themselves almost as en-thusiastically ag If they were Democrats

Of course Mr Poary may consider hisfailure to nail Dr Cook due entirely totho toughness of that gentlemans hldoOthers will incline to think howeverthat it Is duo to tho poor quality of nailsthe commander hag thus far employed

We fear the South Carolina papersdo not believe unreservedly that SenatorTlllmans absence from the Columbiabanquet to Mr Taft will produce any-thing like an aching void somewhereabout the table

A Chicago school maam claims to havediscovered a simple and quick methodof teaching children all about Chi-cago Wise parents will see that theirchildren carefully avoid that teacher

Why should Mr AldrIch bother withMr Fowler Mr Fowler has not

any Taft indorsements yet has

A physician says that no woman whowishes te remain beautiful will overspeak crossly to her husband Is the doetor married And what does she looklUte

If H is too much to pay for aa banquet in honor of the President

what would be a fIr price to pay fora CbautaoaMa ticket to hens a pitchforkUnited States Senator talk through W

Ten minutes Is not long to bo sureBut oven in that time Columbus Gamight manage to give the President apleasant look If It tried real hard

Lleut Shacklotons south polo experi-ences make most entertaining readingEspecially is it pleasant not to have hisevery other assertion disputed

There Is nothing sure in this lifesays the Milwaukee Sentinel Truetrue Even Washington may yet win thepennant

And the next thing we know tho pollwill e toiling the truth soys

the Deltas News Evidently you do notto know anything more until

after the millennium has arrived

Jeffries soys he will fight in April Itnot April 1 he in mind it is to be

hoped

The recent meeting between FirstTermar Taft and SixthTermer Diaz wasInteresting from more political pointsof view than one

Why should a few revolting truthsabout Twnmaay shock or surprise NewYork New York has beard them be-fore atony time The question is WillNew York over heed them

An Alabama college professor was ar-rested in Anaiston for calling apoliceman aa encyclopedia It seemsthat one may be arrested for almostany old thing in Alabama nowadays

Horrors The Brownsville COM hasbroken out again How can we overhope to get to the end ef the north polerow

CHAT OF THE FORUM

Mr Altlrlcli Is CautionsPnm UM Mea Herald

M b M weir taMcBl ia iwniiWasad Semtor Akhfck win toe wile tothe MATB of UM Fowler

Mr Recent RationsFTM the New York Saa

crates said stoke iuads ta a spirit of true autyr4 a and eateR unknown qotntnfcs of timek

TILe PrcBhlcnt and BondtFrom the PMtwWpbk Public Ix gsr

Talk isuKOfeaMnt bond cut mstlei but tie MOM wasteful sad rinini iMihi strag-gW a lMt whIch PraUMt will vntett ta-

Mr Cannons PartyProa Uw Lnahrflte Co ti vJoBf U

Mr CAMMII t that U Mr IA PtOtU k a R-

IMMican thin W ia MMUiteg else la the epMecof the bidotoiMd droctt of tartar MBsmpMUKrthere caD be but one kIM ef Rpublfea-

Mr Gaynor DlsqnnliflcdFrom tko New York Evening

If jttrr of Itatatcrwied aDd ooeawtcntaens were to hoDcetlr upon the MkyorHr-oindldctei their rcnUci would bo that Mr Gtyaor-b d UKVousMr dbqwlWed bMueU for the tICks

Pot Henson IdentifiedFrom tho SprfagaeW UwJoa

Prof Bensoa fat bdkoMaws la Prof-Ilefuoe taqniras a Southern aev paptr T-

doot you know Prof Heiam is the aUtnA RUe n wh neetmfurML that naa 1eary to tillnorth pole

Gen Grccly on PoleFrom UM Chicago ReconMIarrid

Gun Oreoir has written a uwsailn artlelo inwkkh h praisw Dr Cook aad expreesM the bthat the doctor reached the north pole It Is to behoped that this trill not came a war botvresn thaarmy and the nary

Mr Tillnmns EconomyFrcm the S I Aeld nepnbMcaa

Furious with Indignation booaae tho boniest In

cost 10 a plate Senator TiUman hat reftued to attend His mind works strangely Somebody matpay for the dinner

Mr Pcnroac and PhiladelphiaTr Copcfca Capital

fin ia k to proro its gratitude for tarifflaTot r oontlanlng oonapt goTtnaaeat of Itself IffwhteL fraochfawi worth miUiom are freelycut aDd gang poitUdans are zina all the COIl

tracts for public work It wouW payto be a lap lBC stock even though ittost exoMfhe tariff bounties from Senator

FALIE LEAVES

Red oer the forest peon the setting sauThe line of yellow light dies Seat away

That crowned the eastern copec and chill and dunPails on tho moor the brief Korember day

Now tho tired hunter winds a partlagAnd echo bida goodnight from every glade

Yet wait awhilff and see the calm hews floatEach to his TeSt beneath their pareat

Soon oer their heads blithe April hours shall sinA thousand wild Sewers round them sball untold

TIc green buds glisten in tho dews ot springAbd all bo vernal rapture as of old

DncoMcionfl they in waste obllrionIn nil tho world of Vasy life around

No thought of them in nil the bounteous tkyNo drop for thorn of kindly found

Alans portion is to die and rise againYet ho complain while thwo part

With their sweet Una as pure from sin andAs his when Eden held his virgin heart

Kcblc

to

K

Eng-land scheme

exp

accu-mulatedhet

t-

At

bat

TeIIIt

fan iMo

Taft

Mr ttberrd with the wooIy

about

Ute

Poeta

pus

Who

the

lNmor c the President ILt Columbia S a tU

the

Mad

tie

davit

laus

bus

sun

a

I

lose iI

his

Taft in Vei It

netk

lL

twelve itt

is

let

i

banled

Ihihdelp lila

Penn

note

lie

Influence

stat C

¬

¬

¬

<

A

Of

A LITTLE NONSENSERETUIIMXG TUB COMPLIMENT

This Peerage is the finest guideA girl could get

We find a list or dukes InsideWith prices netstatement of their debts is found

Which make it handy all around

heiresses wo might in turnCompile a list

State age amount of coin to burnThat la the gist

Our foreign friends use printers InkWe might do likewise dont you think

WhyThou explorers are handicappedAs to howCant be in but ono place at a timeCouldnt they sand around grapho

phones to lecture in the smaller towns

Way It GoesPoliteness paysWhilst thrift explains that it left Its

money at home

Slow FireReparteeHully

Tie myTo exudeSdylngs shrowd

Bout an hour too late

Naught But AbuseThey all said I would make a splendid

eandldateWoJir

I became a candidateAgain weiltAnd now look what they say about

Tho ProportionI see you have the regulation five feel

or booksYes I believe in having the aluMsHave you road any of emWelt about two inches

Itcoiioiiingr With lienPapa I want a dukeNow sugar plum Wont you be

if I buy you an aoreplane and achimpanzee and a hawser of

A FEW WORDS ON VANITY

Pw Ateua4 r Swttks Dnua IlarpEach man is the most important thing

la the world to himself but why is he tohimself so Important Simply because lieie a personality with capacities of

of pain who can be hurt who can bepleased who can be disappointed wholabors and expects his hire in whose consctoueness in fact for the time beingthe whole universe lives He is andeverything else Ie relative Confined tohis own personality making it his towerof outlook from which only he cafrsMrveythe outer world naturally enougha rather high estimate of its value of itsdignity of its Intrinsic worth TIll highestimate is useful in so far as it A aXehis condition pleasant and ratheroar pronenees to form are accus-tomed to call vanity

Vanity which really to keep therace alive has been treated harshly bythe monUtats and satirists It does ROtquite deserve the bard names it hoe beencalled It Interpenetratee everything aman says or does but it Interpenetratesfor a useful purpose If it la always analloy in the pure gold of virtue It at leastdoes the service of an alloy makms theprecious workable Nature gaveman hIS appetiiea aapiradoasand along with these pea of taeanatwhich fumes from tho built of consciousaes to i decease makU the best partof life rapture and the worst part sudan

We

But for vanity the race would haveted out are There are some menwhose lives seem to us as undesirableas the lives of toads or serpents yetthese met breathe in tolerable contentand satisfaction A man receives theshocks of life on the buffer of his vanityVanity acts as his second and bottleholder In the worlds priae ring and Itfights him well bringing him smilinglyup to time after the fiercest knockdownblows Vanity is to a man what the oilysecretion is to a bird with which itsleeks and adjusts the plumage ruffled bywhatever causes Vanity is not only instrumontal in keeping a man alive and inheart but in its lighter manifestationsit hi the great sweetener of social ex

It is the creator of dreesand fashion it is the inventor ofand ceremonies to it we are indebted forall our traditions of civility For vanityin its idler moments is benevolent Is aswilling to give pleasure as to take it andaccepts as sufficient reward for Its servicesa kind word or an approving smile Itdelights to bask in the sunshine of appro-batlon

As each man is to himself tho mostthing in the world each man is

an egotist in his thinking in his desiresin his fears It does not however followthat each man must be an egotist as theword is popularly understood in hisspeech But even although this wore the

the world would be divided Intoegotists likable and unlikable There aretwo kinds of egotism a trifling vain-glorious kind a mere burning of personalincense in which the man is at oncealtar priest censer and divinity a kindwhich deals with the accidents and wrappages of tho speaker his equipages hisriches his family his servants his furniturc and array The other kind has notaint of selfaggrandlzoment but is root-ed in the faculties of love and humorand this latter kind Is never offensivebecause It Includes others and knows noscorn of exclusiveness The one is theoffspring of a narrow and unimaginativepersonality tho other of a large andgenial one

AdvertisingFrom the Buffalo Keau

Without exceptions or Qualifications wewish to go on record as favoring adver-tising under any and all circumstancesThere Is nothing in the world like It forpulling business whether thatis In tho Lords vineyard or In the martsof trade Hence It is with special pleas

that wo notice the decision of thochurches to advertise and bring theirwares before the people Wo aro preparedfor the shook we will doubtless receivein the downcar some morning at seeingthis

MUi Phoebe SnowiDdwoi

co to church a spellAnd there the LightPut them arijktUpoo tho Reed of Pure DelIght

Or for the sako of economy why notcollaborate with some or our leadingbusiness houses and spread this

on tho car roofs church and manu-facturer to share alike on expense

Here you slay absorb the creedOn rich upholstered pews

Then go bane and richly reedOn Campbeil4 Condensed Stews

Gross jliKBtatementFrom tho Chicago Tribune

Irate Caller your paper accused mo thismorning of running over a man with mymotorcycle It Isnt true It was anautomobile

whats the differenceIrate Caller Tho difference About

8501

Not MuchFrom the Baltimore American

What did Mr Skinflint send to thodonation party for the minister

Ills regrets

Of

dismal late

So

mer

pearls

pleas-ure

h

ItorItwe

metal

S

Im-portant

cue

About

liar bo-ar

EditorWell

i

d

fle

In

t

Not

goal

untie-d

sores S

I

I C S

helps

powera

C S C S

long

tonestorn

S S S

businI lee

ire

ago

broad-cast

¬

¬

¬

for

lot

m

he

St

a

x

PEOPLE AND THINGSTho Debt of Zealand

The not public debt of New Zealandper head of population is JU against 91

Great Britain But much of this debtrepresents productive investments AnInvestigation observes that governmentalownership of railway anti other enter

rises has created a now and wastefulof corruption It refers to the loca-

tion of roads bridges and otheras a result of looal or personal

This country knows slraethlng ofthat kind of favor in its river and harhot bills in New Zealand such favorsare described as the current coin ofpolitical corruption

upoleou on SoldiersOne of Ferrers utterances was The

soldiers uniform conceals crimes againsthUmanity and the misery of his own ex

That Is severe and should beuntrue Yet It Ie recalled that Napoleonat St Helena praised the profession of

and added The soldier inis a cutthroat and a robber He

not only produces nothing himself butconsumes the products of others and

nlays the producers Which was the political economist speaking not one of theTeat captains of military history

The Trees of New HampshireNew Hampshire has reorganized Its

forestry commission and amendedsome of Its laws relating to trees ThereIs a society for protection of its for-est The State forester has deliveredmany public addresses and material foressays on forestry and allied subjectshag been supplied to all the subordinategranges in the State and to the pupils oftwentytwo high schools In all respects

i is an excellent showing that is madeby this report which is not inaptly named

Year Book of Forestry and it shouldappeal to all who value the White Mountains and their woodlands as a part ofoar national heritage and desire thatsuch shall be preserved inYiolaAe The society includes in its membership many residents of other StatesA Poor Inscription

Fort Mercer at Red Bank N J andFort Xlffiln both on the Delaware heldthe British fleet below Philadelphia toetwo mouths after Gen Howe occupiedthe city Fort Militia survives in a fortflcation erected about the time of the sec-ond war with England Fort Mercer hasdisappeared but Its site was recentlymarked by a monument on which wasplaced a tablet with this inscription

MttOMMBt ta OMNOCBMcmto the tattle otMCMW or Bak fought B this gnxnid Oo-toter 3 ITTT Kmt d ky wrthorttf of M f-UM ItieteUtar ot UM State ef X r J BMT pMd

MMton of 1MB tatradaotd ia UM UOOM of Ast t rd kgr

It will be observed that an the im-portant facts are given there and onlythe trivial details omitted It is not re-corded between what troops the battlewas fought or how It resulted The nameof Cot Christopher Greens of RhodeIsland who held the fort with splendidcourage and skill is omitted but thatIs immaterial so long as the name ofJohn Boyd Avis is there The name ofCount von Donop who was killed leadinghis Hessians to the assault does not

on the monument but the name ofGoY Stokes hi there for posterity to reedwith emotion The 4M Rhode Island sol-diers who held that fort against theattack of 2000 Hessians are not men-tioned but the New Jersey legists ture ofUK Is there

A Button and a NameThe Lone Star name of Texas has an

interesting origin A half century agomens overcoats were ornamented withlarge brass buttons It happened that thebuttons on the overcoat of Gov Smith ofTexas had the impress of astar For wont of a seat one of thesebuttons was cut off and used The own-er of this overcoat and of the buttonHenry Smith was chief executive of theprovisional government of Texas whichin MS preceded the declaration of in-dependence by Texas against Mexico aadthe winning of that independence in thebattle of San Jadnto on April H IMS

A Postman of LeisureA lazy postmen is fortunately a rarity

One has been found in a little town aear-I4lle in France and many strange de-lays and disappearances of letters havebeen explained A chance visit to thehouse of a carrier revealed in his par-lor a quantity of correspondence whichwhen weighed turned the scales at LINpounds When asked what this mass ofundelivered mall was he said Just ryears He had long oome to the con-clusion that his dully round was toolong and for years he had eat themshort These may as well wait till to-morrow said the procastinatlng post-man hence the great weight of corre-spondence had accumulated during flveyears or so in his parlor His explana-tion was perfectly genuine He had nottampered with a single letter Nevorthelese he has been permitted to make theacquaintance of hard labor during tenmonths in prison

A Truly Model HusbandA coterie of women in Chicago hold

overy yoar a Husband Show at thehome of ono of their number There areprizes for the competition The captor ofthe first prize this year has wonderfulqualities He is described as goodtured before breakfast intrusts hiswith the family pockotbook says hercooking is better than his mothers wasis prompt at meals an adept with the

n good judge of femininebeauty generous and kindhearted enjeys home more than the club and Ishappiest when among friends The

who is credited with all thesevirtues and accomplishments Isflvo years old and has been married nineyears Bearing his blushing honors thickupon him he won a second prize aftergaining the bluo ribbon at tho show bydemonstrating his ability to sew on abutton and then to cap the climax hiswife came forward with one more dis-tinction that she had Inadvertently ovorlooked and proved that he is a goodentertainer A gentleman of rare qualWes indeed Perhaps it is not strangethat he Is happiest away from the club

t

m

y

fOrmcon-

structionfavor

H

an-alysts

th

poI ftMio8

Rodact

at thealII 1w John BoJd ion MrIX

ap-pear

chafing lsh

gen-tleman

New

ence

ate

s

Yes

i

wsed Stokes 515suac

d

s

rIfe

thin

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

>

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

c

TWO YEARS AFTER

Tile Financial Upheaval of 1007 andthe Good Outloolc of Today

From tile Hartford TheseJust two years ago tho country was

experiencing a financial whirlwind Thepanic was in full blast On October H1-

KK7 the Knickerbocker Trust Companyof New York went Into the hands of areceiver and public confidence wasshaken On October S3 Secretary of theTreasury Cortelyou aeoklnsr to allay thetonalon announced that 2Sffi0flet ofgovernment money would be deposited inNew York banks and on that date theWeetinghoute concerns railed and the runon the Trust Company of America as-

sumed prodigious proportions On Octo-ber 34 call money rose to 100 per centbut J Pierpont Morgan organized a bank-ers pool to loon J25WOOOO at 10 per cent

events of the following days gratedon the nerves It was a time that triedmens souls Values crumbled financialand Industrial concerns went into handsof receivers mill wheels stopped turning

was strained anxiety and distrustand uncertainty prevailed Thenmonths of industrial paralysis produc-tion was reduced to Its lowest terms

The change which has been wroughtsince the upheaval of two years ago Isremarkable The from the dis-aster has been striking On the bedrockbared by the crisis and depression hasbeen erected steadily and not spasmodi-cally a great structure of prosperityActivity has taken the place of dullnessTwo Jobs now grow where only ODe grewbefore A general spirit of confidenceobtains The financial outlook ie notwholly satisfactory but conditions gen-

erally are altogether encouragingThe revolution which has been accom-

plished in two years is characteristic ofthe American people No country hassuch a capacity for recuperation as theUnited States

ME FAIRBANKS IN CHINA

Viilt Looked on am JSmplianlzlnif-PxionilllneMM of America

Fra the flbrasbai ThwsThe pretence in Shanghai of the Hon

C W Fairbanks exYtee President ofthe United states serves a a reminderof the Increasing Interest being token mthe affairs of China by Ajnerice Tindistinguished career of JCr Vatrteaks inthe Senate and lain later election to thehigh office of vice president furnishedthe best poevtble guaranty of his betasable to properly represent the opinionsand aims of his countrymen hisvisit is in no way official he htaaeif notb tng an officer at the present ofhis government yet be ha been ac-corded by Japan end China the highesthonors In Pekin be was received bythe prince rent and all the leadingministers of state called to preeent thatrespects to him

The time of his visit to the capital hadbeen planned long before the arrangemeats for the Americas participation tothe railway loans hind been mooted butcoming as it did immediately after thefinal negotiations it did much to emphaabe the fact that Americas action mthis matter had only been taken inmost friendly spirit The influence exerted has been indirect but none the leasbeneficial aa evidencing in an unofficialway the real bond of sympathy betweenthe two notions The large body ofChinese students studying in Americabaa for more than a quarter of a cen-tury turned the attention of Americanpeople toward China and that interestwas greatly deepened by the nit ofhis highness Prince Pu Im to fc StLouis exposition and the later vteit ofthe traveling of whichViceroy Tnan Fang was a member

The visit of Mr Fairbanks to China atthe present time has ellcted more toterM in Chinese offld 4 circles thaa thatof any other American since the visjUmore than thirty years ago of exPreeldent Grant to Canton Mr Fairbanks1 leaving China will carry wtth himthe regard and appreciation ofcans in China for his dignified and appropriate representation of their country

The Broadway KnockerFWBI the NMT Yock Tgnjk

Women wottkhtt be halt as laterestfogIf they were men

A chaperon is merely a fender for Reping a girl from colliding with the wrongmanWhen

some people get busy it is al-ways in connection with something thatis nODe of their business

Many man imagines he Is wieldingbig stck when in reality he ic only ustaga small hammer

As a matter of fact your neighborsthink just as disagreeable things aboutyou as you think about them

Lots of people delight in doing acharitable stunt after concluding rrangements with the limelight man

Its well to have song in your heartIf you havent the right kind of a voiceits also well to keep it there

One idea of a paddedcell candidate isa woman who fondles a dog for the pur-pose of trying to arose a mans Jealousy

The average man is a willing workerwhen he meets another rain who is willing to be worked

If you had to live your life over againthe chances aro you would make a diffarent kind of a tool of yourself

An Unlucky Manthe KJJWW Cky Star

Thomas Patton of Lwray RussellCounty Kans Is the owner of the realprlzc hardluck story of Kansas Hereare some of the things that have

to him in tho last five or sixmonths

Wife died house burned to groundfurniture three ribs and nose

broken In fight with neighbor throwninto jail for fighting compelled to payhis own and other fellows fines throwninto jail for letting hogs runs at largeafter paying neighbor for taking up andkeeping hogs thrown into jail for notsending children three and onehalf mlleto school when his own district schoolhad been discontinued While in jail theProbate Court took five of his childrenaway and scattered them over the State

a

Th

came

recovery

time

the

loa

1

11

From

hap-pened

In-

cluding

c

While

a

a

a

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

AUTUMN WINDS

The winds of autumn now are sighing and wailing throughthe dusty town the garden sass and flowers are dying the worldis turning gray and brown It is a time of death and sorrow theplants that used to bloom and blow will all be broken down tomorrow and buried under mounds of snow The elms look sadtheir leaves are falling and drifting on the windswept lawn anaicy blasts will soon be calling their triumph that the summersgone But let us at the fireside gather nor heed the tempest wildand chill and harken to his words while father explains again thetariff bill In olden times it was the custom to tell the childrenfairy tales but now the tariff bust em what theyget when daylight fails The Giant Killers awful vigor no longerfills the night with gore and Ridinghood will never figure aboutthe fireside any more and Robin Hood wont dodge the sheriffor answer him with taunt and scoff for dad is talking of tiretariff and theres no way to head him off 1 WAX T MAsoN

GoprrfgBt by George Matthew AdumsJ

f

ratesdad 1are

e

¬

+

AT THE HOTELSWith the expiration on October is of

he period in which American and foreignmanufacturers may apply for apace inthe exposition to be held

Buenos Ayres next year It Is evidentthe exhibitions from America and

Europe will surpass expectations saidEnrique Roorignec of Buenos Ayres atthe New Winrd lost night

America wilt be well represented soldMr Rodriguez but the manufacturersof Great Britain Germany and Franceare more appreciative of the opportunityand win have more msposteg displaysthan the United States Not many busi-ness men of the great North Americanrepublic are familiar with conditions inArgentine and many consider the peopleas swaieavage and ttaprogresefre To

it will come as a shock to learnBuenos Ayres ie the fourth largest

city in the new world and by all oddsthe most beautiful and the best governedand that Argentine is rapidly coming tothe front m live stick and agriculturalproducts European countries especiallyGreat Britain and Germany are spend-ing millions of dollars to develop theArgentine trade

Next years exposition win commem-orate the centennial of Argentine Inde-pendence added Senor Rodriguez whois visiting the United States to connec-tion with the fair and will be devotedargely to Illustrating the progress madein railways apicUlture and industryAs a matter of fact there will be sepa-rate fairs Including the InternationalRailway and Transportation Exposition

International Agriculture and Live-Stock Exposition and smaller exhibitionsof other Industries and the arts

The death of Gov Johnson is deeplyfelt ta Minnesota said John M Pratt ofDulttth MlniL at the Arlington whereeverybody entertained the highest esteemfor him Republicans as well as Demo-crats always hoped that Johnson some

would occupy the Presidents chairthe White House and if Johnson had

been candidate for the Presidency theloot time Instead of Bryan I honestlybelieve the Democrats would today be incharge of tie national administration

New Tort potttlos being Ms favoritestfhjeet Michael G Donovanot New city Who fc at the Raleighsaid last night that Tosanaay wouldelect its tndUates BO mutter whatclaims Heat and Bonnord may makeat this time

At every election in New Yorkmean local tights of course there havealways beset a haunch of soreheads whobacked the tegular ticket Why do youa k Thats easy because they want

it They wont just the wholepie see that game workEverybody toold New Teat Is e to theircurm and ym cant foot eat muck overthere

Hearst PU tIeD you sonnyHearst is at right in his newspaperoffice thats vbere he belongs and wherehe can do a tat of damage or good if bewants to But for mayor of New Yorknot on roar sCe What No sir notthis evening Say what do you thinkabout Tammesjr You bet Ifs a fineorganization S4d It helps the poor tooand thats a lot more than theother guys Is dsst Murphy is a shrewdpotttldan and bows the game and theycant beat him 5 6 he dont do anyshooting oft his mouth like the otherfellows does When be gets good anlready be win tip the whole world byhow many will win andyou can Just becjronr last doUr on itthat dayaor wteoy Murphy aft

Dick zones cf Brogue has thedistinction of ealfcing the whitefooted feec hi Ofchftoma ssld prank JYoung of Tulsa UtUu at the Kaleigtilast night WUtaput recentlybe jumped a red in the MId Hefired a shot out of e shotgun sadFox went hood

Joaes walked ove and pieced up hissame continued Mc voung need to hisgreat surprise round It to be a whitefooted red fox The sttmal is very rareand there have probafy not Mea morethan half a dosen IA It killed hi thiseouotry The whlte oted fox Is asscarce as white quail oa white sojdrreJa specimen of each of ftfah harmg

front feet are marked white Theright foot has a white stocking to theknee while the l ft whft nearlyto the shoulder The has beenmountedBusiness fe good our y added MrYoung but it didnt coat that way onaccount of Mr Taft beta to the WhiteHouse It come because iiwaa the natural sequence If Rooeeveltbad been reelected and were ht the Howe today busiaesfi would be PolWoo has little to oo with b foow oond-

ltast nightBeejamm M Newman o Pittsbury

who was seen at Coediscussing female labor

Jewish and American girJftra ia thegarment factories of Pittsfirg whileIrish and German women tb iiitdwelljag wives of the miners hold svbordinate place in the trade In in

the Polish women themmarried and others immigrant iris havethe Inferior and uapleaeoat wc Theleast desirable occupation forstogy faotories k tobacco trippingpulling the stems out of the leavesand weighing and tying themfor the rollers In tenementmay find the strippers in a eelbacks against a damp wohg brthe light of a flaring gas jetfactory oae will see then alltheir low stolte row behind

and weighing and throwing the JUtto one side They would work allforeman said if I would

the chance We never have any treblewith them we cant give them emighwork to do They were married win this case but the rule holds good dthere Is seldom trouble with thehands in a stogy factory They aretoo much on sufferance for grievances

worth their while

RightsRem UM K r YOlk

Philadelphia Telegraph has smarteda campaign for mans rightsthe planks are the right to missile anywhere in the house built or rent withthe money we ourselves have oarnlfithe right to ooeflfth space in kR dptts

and bureau drawers the abeTspindleshanked glided furniturelook at and net to sit en and tekeol-ltion of the rule that we must 1 theparlor nlco to those of our i iescallers for whom we cherish a rtsiantipathy May we add

The right to throw newspapers thefloor

The right to have ones aeek or hieas untidy as one tarnation please

The right a to wear a beard ocincise b to abstain wn Sunday slgr-

Ing ITIM right to to try to exp w

political situationAnd others I

They TionlHnt Dare

It is barely possibie that theTheodore Roosevelt will conic balkthe tale of having discovered seraMhW-or other But would any one dare tapply to him a short and ugly word

I

atthat

thesethat

I

J

tIN

IleaYOlk

J-J

CItyI

seet t

Yen

1

ole

TOt Ge71I

IqsOld

bunting J

xr

beenkilled In Eastern this fall Its

tfOXi

juetis goodtIoAc

the

J

tI-

d1l try

In

sonetheir

wallarse I

InrO m-

Ing

giv

n

Peth

i

ManslaT-

he

t

orto

be

hr

Froia tM aal

I

din

Il

to-e

rat

hover

Oklabaiith

W

T

aa14

oe

men

snoI

t-

one

u-

be

ma o

goand

s

0

den

many

lreetc4

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬