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St. Louis Post-Dispatch from St. Louis, Missouri • Page 14

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St. Louis, Missouri
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14
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14 ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH, TUESDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 3, 1912. ANSWERS TO QUERIES GOVERNMENT AND BUSINESS. ST. LOUIS PQST-D1SPATCH Founded by JOSEPH PULITZER, Dec.

12. 1878. Published Vy the Pulitzer Publishing Co. 210-212 N. Broadway.

PXTBSCRIPTION RATES BT MAIL. IN ADVANCE! Dally and Sunday, on yar S.0 Dallv without Sunday, on rear is. 00 Sunday only. on rear 11 partner," Mr. Rob son, Mr.

Crane i gave superb productions of Shakspearian comedies. When producers of American plays were rare he gave the stage some of the best American successes. For years he has devoted his personal talent to American character and his energies and resources to the production of American comedies. The growing ranks of American dramatists owe him much. It is to Mr.

Crane's everlasting credit that he never debased his art by stooping to win passing favor and easy money from the morbid or the unclean. He has offered none but wholesome plays and types. As man, producer and actor the profession la honored by his career. Pardon us for admiring' the following exquisite example of literary erudition (or is it editorial humor?) In the, esteemed Republic of Tuesday morning: We may be assured that the next great poet, will follow more closely In the line of Francis of Assist and Thomas A. Kempts, than in that of Milton.

Who was this Thomas A. Kempts? Could he have been a German relative of Thomas a Kempis? si 17 ff- tlpfe 1 3 Jfl ffl jO 0 $1 C'fr wmm mm er shopping early, I wouldn't be so shop JUST A MINUTE. It Is true, as Judge Henry S. Priest remarked In his interview with the Sunday Post-Dispatch, that the Post-Dispatch would find ground for criticism of his views of the relation between government and business. We agree with him that the proper function of government besides maintaining itself "is to restrain persons from encroaching upon eaca other's rights providing for the redress of such wrongs, punishing offenders against private and public tights and providing a system of Judica ture to pass upon such matters." When he added that the mandate of government is "thou shalt use your natural rights so as not to injure another in the possession or enjoyment of his natural rights," he gives an excellent Demo cratic definition of the function of government But this very definition makes it the function and the uty of government to grant no special privileges or advantages to any man or set of men and to protect every citizen from every kind of wrong, Including conspiracies or com binations to control business, credits or markets or any industrial and dommerclal activities.

In this sense government should, contrary to Judge Priest's dictum, assure equal opportunities to every person equal opportunity under the law, Surely Judge Priest would not deny the func tion of government to prevent industrial and commercial monopoly as In Its esserce wrong ard oppressive. In so far as the anti-trust laws, which he condemns, are designed effectively to check monopoly and oppressive conspiracies and combination they are within the function of gov eminent It is true, as he says, that many of the evils i business are due to bad corporation laws. The states have been reckless in corporation legisla tion. They have provided for loose charter whichp permitted corporations to serve as their instruments of wrong, as cloaks for crime and bulwarks for Individual scoundrels. Whether the solution of the corporation prob lem is the substitution of partnerships for all except those engaged in the public service is a question we shall not attempt to discuss now.

But undoubtedly the corporation laws should be amended so as to prevent their misuse, to fix personal responsibility for corporate wrongdoing and to make guilt personal. That is one of the issues upon which a Democratic administration was elected in November. Beyond punishing wrongdoing the government snould keep its hands out of business. When Judge Priest said condemning the reg ulation of public service corporations that the oniy interest tne government can possmiy nave in the operation of a railway concerns the fair ness of charges and the adequacy of services, he conceded the whole question of government regulation. As quasi-public corporations enjoying natural monopolies granted for public service, railroads and other public utilities must be' controlled by the government In order to assure fair charges for services rendered, reasonably adequate and safe service, it Is necessaty to regulate them thor oughly.

It is necessary. to control their capitaliza tion, to see that the charges are based upon investments, not water, and that every person dealing with them not only gets good service at reasonable cost, but is charged and served on an equal basis with others who require like service. We need not recount abuses of unrestrained public service corporations. Rebates, discrimination, overcapitalization, oppression, the crushing of one to build up anotner all these proved conclusivelr the nececsity of regulation. It is no longer a debatable question.

The settled policy of the national and State government is public service regulation. The only problem now Is to perfect regulative laws and metn-ods so that tne public will be protected against all the devices of high finance and all the oppressions of greed and the investors assured a fair return on their investments. Speaker Clark broke two gavels yesterday. As a knocker he was never in such good form as now. Ml A NEGLECTED CHAUFFEUR.

The ingratitude of Republican Presidents Is reflected in Mr. Taft's message. He says the State Department was "an archaic and Inade quate machine" when he came into office, but that his administration has made It a new organization, with highly specialized bureaus and experts dealing with every phase of American trade and diplomacy. EHhu Root was the mechanician of the archaic machine Mr. Taft found when he took up his burden.

Mr. Root also drove the very 'adequate machine which nominated Taft at Chicago, and this is the thanks be gets. a The perpetuity of the reported agreement between the, Grand Trunk and New England roads Is seriously jeopardized by the decision on the Union and Southern Pacific combine. MR. CRANE'S FIFTY YEARS.

In the 60 years of his career as an actor William 1L Crane, who presents at the Century this week one of his delightful American characters in "The Senator Keeps House," has sees In the American stage a development of dramatic art and organization unparalleled in any other age. The American stage is far from perfection we shall never have perfection in that or any other art but it has advanced with seven-league boots. The few adequate playhouses In the principal cities of 60 years ago have multiplied into many palaces in many cities. Every town has a fairly adequate theater. Productions have become marvels of thoroughness, accuracy and beauty.

The uncertainties and adversities of the pioneer stage have been overcome by a great organization supported by vast capital. Perhaps the business side has overshadowed the art side, yet the latter has signal achievement to its credit To have been not only a valuable factor In this advance of the American theater, but a conspicuous figure on the stage to have advance) with It to the deanship of the histrionic faculty and the leadership of American comedy Is a rare experience. Mr. Crane has' earned his laurels. Although be has had unusual success and seems to have tripped down a pleasant path, bright with laughter and good will, ha has worked.

With, his DATES. J. X. B. Jan.

1. I94. Friday. Sat ar rays to that January. JO.

sin. zja. sotn. PIN1C Thanksgiving, ltll. Thurs day.

Nov. 10. was proclaimed President Taft. ETIQrETTB. IWVTnra-Tnii ma Writ bUSlR" note to teacher of harmony leasons.

In regard to such lessons. rt Toil mar yonr railing rarJs for your Invitations to ehowr. Writ brides nsme in me uppr corner, the words "Linen shower. o'clock." In the lower left corner a the date Just below year name. If the affair Is to be very laformal.

write notes similar to this: -near mtm. White: I am golnr to entertain at a linen shower for Miss Blank Thursday, July at I o'clock, and hope you can ne witn on mii Pleas Inrlos an original verse with your piece of linen." nr.i.Tt hut. PORT-DISPATCH READKR. The addresses have been publish re peatedly. Bee them at tnis omca.

i R. D. -Avoid handling anything that has been handled by persons with skin diseases and blood dis eases. A. P.

Persplrtns; feet: Bathe them thoroughly with soap and water morning and night, ani after drying them wet them well with grain alcohol. UNINFORMED. Ultra-violet rays are Invisible radiations of the ssm nature ae visible light rays, but qf shorter wave length. They ar praa-nt in th radiant energy received from the sun, but most of them are absorbed by the atmoapbere. One the earliest applications mad of th ultra-violet rays was In th treatment of redness and peeling of th skin.

Flnen. th Danish surgon, tiaed them In th treatment of lupus. Ninety-seven per cent of the cases thus trested yielded, although they had resisted all previous treatment. Flnsen used a lamp with Iron poles. Now the mercury lamp 4s used more, while the Kromayer lamp, which gives off a green light visible to the eye.

Is even more powerful. other diaeases that hav been sureeasfullr treated ar rose acne and sycosis. The most Important application of the rays Is In hyaiene. The fert that they destroy bacteria hae been long known, and now special establishments are devoted to their application In this direction. At a distance of two Inches from the mercury latrp the germs of staphylococcus, which commonly ratts bloi.rola"plhg.

ar destroyed In five mlnutea The germs of cholera are destroye-1 in 10 minutes, while those of tMwnna take 24 minutes. The city of Paris spends more than a year for distributing pure water to Its rltlsens. Ity plunalng quarts mercury vspor lamp Into, the Isrger water mains absolute freedom from active grme Is assured. law rmT. MRS.

C. J. Pee or phone Circuit Court Clerk In regard to your case. L. K.

W. BUI prohibiting- automobile noise does not specify electric horns. A. B. We advise Russlsn.born American cltlsen to keep out-of Russia.

Try writing- Secretary of State, Washington, D. If you have been known as his wife 20 years, an1 he an.l you have so given the pnblln to under stand, he must support you and your child. ILLINOIS. When a man leaves Ms wife, and she then sells the furniture and Ills clothes. It Is doubtful whether a court would listen to hie claim for either his bedstead his breeches.

Mi'miAWori BIRD. Billy Van Is white. PAUL. St. Louis Is In no county.

O. S. O. Birds st rotstleto berries. JAMES Pee addresses at this office.

VFRT IGNORANT. 6ee addresses at this office. BOISE. Try Technical Depsrtment. Publio Library.

10 Phone Salvation Army to take away your papers. ESTIIKR. Name of King of Wuerttemburg is William. LENA. Pee Answers Nov.

SI for Armsgeddon (at this office). MRH. M. A. C.

See Kul.t reasurr. fth and ollv. about the burnt money. H. P.

At one time toll was paid by pedestrians on Brooklyn BrMge. X. T. Z. Thre la a bill that proposes a municipal lodging house.

Apm ENTICE. Ther Is an El-trtcal Workers' Union; wages II eta. an hour. WESTON. hav no feet about any presidential summer bom to, Colorsdo.

ROWLAND. William F. Cody, -th original Buffalo Bill," lives In Cody, Bis Horn County. Wyo. EX-OFFICIO.

In legislative business In St. Louis an ex-orftclo member of a committee has a vote. OSCAR F. EVERTZ. We thank you for your copy of the poem.

Carcassonne. Any reader may now see It at thte office. INQUISITIVE. your father's flrat coualn you ar a first couala once removed. Father's first cousin's children ar your cousins twlc removed.

E. R. Write Agricultural Department. Washington, l. C.

for pamphlets on agriculture, horticulture. aim. no nnl la bnak ator.a OP teuhltd worn. advice. Just of the publio attempted libraries.

OOLDMAN. Estimated wealth Rockefeller a billion. Carnegie and Morgan eaoh IIS millions. la the Hen. ate In 1101 there war II multimillionaires and 11 millionaire.

Waaltb of Valted States 111 to 110 billion. M. There has been no legislation a to hew St, Louis should be pre-pounced; so yon may ssy Hi Louie 8t. Lewis. St.

Lou la an or St. Loulean. As to the pronunciation of rise, most recent dtetlonarles prefer Tis. Oood usage has at all times been divided. MIDDLE-AGED COUPLER Th O.

A. R. ha no dance hall her. Th vet-, whereas of the It Is Carne erans say nj uiu rars ago, but that ther don't seem need th eterelse now. Th ladu Of th Relief Corps sometimes alve dances to raise fund Write then addresses la City Directory.

F. P. 8. For painting sheep, kla with oil colors: Prepare oml-natlon of slue and dry slno wlitt with a little molassss a1ded to I' about two tablespoons nf glue pint make it fortune til water mna mat r. necessary te make paety after flu la thoroughly dissolved.

Then add tablespoon of molasses; stir well. TAJCPATER. At close of fiscal year April 10. llll. Auditor's repori showed amount received from Llrene Collector H.osi.to ts; ouector Water Kates, Heooroee of Deeds.

7l.42.0; Comptroller for currant Interest en city's deposits ta banks, IIIT.mi Collector of Hevoa nue. lt.tIMM.04. (W haven total of fin.) OSCEOLA. Ieogrphers Visually recoe-nlie ss continents Eurasia (comprising Europe and Africa, Australia, North America and Hout America; the two Americas, however, are sometimes grouped as a single continent, althoush such a elaa.lfl.--tlon Is hardly Justifiable unless Africa, be laeluded with the Eurasian continent. A ststh continent may be rep-reeented by tie land areas la the Antarctic region.

M. A. F. Th good wtf la Hollaed, whosehushand become a set and support, buvi a quart of wbuay er rhledani and soaks in It for a week er 10 days a smoked herring: then strain the liquor. iits It In a bottle and rr senta It to her lor.

I and rr.aatr. He Is Jellchtrd. He tklnke hlmerif fcr-Siven er'1 believes iimalf euc mor a man. Aftr three er four drink out et that bottle, the Very slant ef a glaae et liquor so nauseate hit that fouAJ rather die than tackle It. af-ruskard baa beam cured by a Jj let us for the Post-Dispatch by Clark McAdams.

St. Louis exchange. Tffl P08TDI8PA TCH PLATFORM. I know that my retirement will make no difference in cardinal principles, that it will always fight for progress and reform, nevef tolerate injustice or corruption, always fight demagogues of all parties, never belong to any party always oppose privileged classes and publio plunderers, never lack sympathy with the poor, always remain devoted to the public welfare, never be satisfied with merely printing news, always be drastically independent, never be afraid to attack wrong, whether by preda- tory plutocracy or predatory poverty. April 10, 1807.

JOSEPH PULITZER. SUNDAY CIRCULHTIOrt-AYERAGE FIRST 10 MONTHS. 1912, DAILY AVERAGE FIRST 10 MONTHS 1912, FIRST IN EVERYTHING WILL ST. LOUIS OFFEND SOUTHERNERS? If the Council has regard for the business welfare of St. Louis and the advantages of Southern trade to St.

Louis It will promptly forestall the damage its action has invited In refusing a site in Forest Park to the Confederate memorial. The intimate relation which St. Louis sustains to the South and Southwest in trade is of first Importance. More than any other city St. Louis caters to the good will of the Southern merchant and the great bulk of its business Is with the South and the territory of which it is called the gateway.

Does the City Council wish the Southern press to teem with comment and criticism upon the narrowness and mean spirit of a city which can-" not or will not tolerate a memorial of Southern cause? Which has no 'sympathy for Southern sufferings? Which, through containing thousands of people of Southern blood, shows no tenderness, bu only bitterness of memory, towards the vanquished? Does the City Council wish the boards of trades In Southern cities to pass resolutions against St. Louis? The South Is better able to get along without Ft. Louis than St. Louis is to get along without the South. Probably the Councllmen who voted against granting the Bite did not think of these considerations and consequences.

It Is not too late to prevent them, if the Council will act at the first opportunity to rescind its action. i The Greeks are delaying the armistice. The M. 1 1 i 1 1 1 A. BRITISH JUDICIAL COERCION.

A London woman, Joyce Locke, arrested for a suffragette offense, took off one shoe and burled it at the Judge and then took off the other and sent It to violent collision with the head of a clerk of the court The unexpected ferocity of the attack can be appreciated only by those familiar with the dimensions of the British female foot and the specific gravity of British female footgear. Even the necessities a revolutionary movement hardly justified the suffragettes in attacks on unarmed. Inoffensive cabinet officers. Their destruction of plate glass disregarded the inviolability of noncombatant property. Dismay to cigjjzatlon was caused by their interruption of the enemy's line of communication by pouring acid In the letter boxes.

No former instance of violence, bowever, has the seriousness of this latest act of belligerency. It must alienate sympathy if persisted In. Better a Judiciary intimidated by executive bayonets or the caprice of the popular recall than a cringing Judiciary reduced to servility by suffragette coercion under this new form of terrorism. Judging by the noise of the opening there Is plenty of ginger in Congress. TWILIGHT ZONE, ILLUMINATED.

The decision of the Federal Supreme Court on March 14, 1904, declaring the merger of the Great Northern and Northern Pacific railroads to be illegal was a 5-to-4 decision. The decision of Dec. 2, 1912. placing the same stkmp of illegality on the Harriman merger of the Union Pacific and Southern Pacific railroads was an 8-tc-0 decision. Progress In the.

means of destroying great criminal monopolies that fatten on Interstate trade is recorded in the two decisions. The four Justices who opposed in 1904 the application of the Federal power to plundering railroad combines Included some of the greatest legal authorities on the bench, among them the then Chief Justice and the present Chief In yesterday's opinion there was nothing about railroad combinations being an "Inevitable incident" of railroad development. There was nothing about "suppression of competition by a pool being one thing and suppression by a fusion another." Chief Justice White has forever abandoned the attitude assumed In his dissenting opinion eight years ago, declaring that "the ownership of stock lu a state corporation can not be said to be In any sense traffic between the states." So a good deal has been done since 1904 to illuminate the twilight cone. The amplitude of the Federal power to accomplish great tasks for which the states are powerless is established as fully as it can be in civil proceedings. May it not be said that In the near future effective criminal yrvceedlng will be applied with greater certainty of 45 i ENTICING SINNERS.

Churchmen on the etreets enticing erring women to sin and then turning them over to the police indicates the final abandonment of faith in the efficacy of divine love and grace to redeem the world. What becomes of the wretched women whom want or vanity, or weakness or vicious men drive to the streets? Are sin and flee and the conditions that cause them cured with the policeman's Club and the workhouse? What is the matter with the church? LETTERS FROMTHE PEOPLE Indecent Crowding of Street Cars. To th Editor of the Poet-Dispatch. Referring to the reply of the leg-al adviser of the United Railway which appeared in Sunday's Issue of the Post-Dispatch reg-arding- th Utilities Commission report it is very clear to every patron who has any Interest in the moral welfare 'and ordinary comfort of the public at heart, that they (the-people) have a right to some consideration as to the manner they should be Jammed Into a street car. If they are not accorded this consideration, then the public is concerned and not only have a right but the condition produces a duty that they should (through their Commissioners) make a thorough investigation into the affairs of a public service company before taking drastle action against it The crowded car evil should be eliminated and apparent defiance of the officials of the United Railways Co.

seems to have culminated into a condition which warrants concerted action of the Civic Spirited Citizens of St Louis. The public should have for service from the United Railway Co. or create competition that will Insure better transportation facilities. Perhaps it may become necessary to Inject the Initiative and Referendum as a remedial 'agency. C.

VT. LONG. The Annexation Problem. To th Editor of th Post-Dispatch. Praise to the Oakland citizens that they do not want to be annexed to Klrkwood to help th politicians only of that town.

We move to the country to be In the country and not to be bothered with tax on tax and tax for the air we breathe. The same as to Webster Groves six different special taxes in five years no wonder some people own only the foundation of the house in which they live. While attending a Council meeting some time ago there was an alderman that did not know if a plank or a cement walk should be put on an Improved street. This suggests that a small salary should be paid to aldermen of county towns. CONSTANT READER.

Animalism. To th Editor of th Poat-Dlapatch. Seldom agree with Catholic utterances. What Archbishop Olennon says of animalism I heartily approve. Let us get away from animalism.

It is the chain that has ever bound humanity. Let us train our thoughts to something better. Let us be masters of our minds, not mollycoddles and helpless non-resistants. Were men to realize how much they are animals they would surely seek to rise above the low, degrading an'mal plane. Above all things, let us be progressive.

G. C. D. No "Iron Hand" for Her. To th Editor of the Poat-Dlapatch.

In answer to Gustave Schlecht's ideas of married life. 1 am an East St. Louis woman who has been married one year longer than he has and I believe I am well experienced in marriage and caring- for my home. I can't aee why he thinks that woman Is not the equal of man. A man hasn't as much Judgment In one year of life as a woman has in a day.

Her mind Is clear. It Is a good thing that I never met Mr. Schlecht and got acquainted for might have fallen in love with him and we might have been married, but when I found out that he wanted to rule and boss there certainly would have been something I want to tell him I think let the man rnn the outside and the woman th home. My husband la a cabinet maker; he gets up. goes to work and I am sure he would think I was very jnuch out of my place to go to his works and qay, "Here, sir, you haven't got this thins; or that thins; where it should be." or.

"Tour tools reed cleaning up and sharpening." and all of thos things, Just because it wasn't my Idea of the way he had them if I sheuld do such, then he would hav a perfect right to us his "iron hand." So I would never allow him to boss me and mine. I certainly rule my house and if I had been your wife you would have been minus teeth and toe nails and you would have been bald headed and perhaps had a wooden leg or two. So you must understand" all women ar not alike. East St. Louis.

MRS. W. M. Obnoxious Ash-Can Law. th Editor of th Poat-Dlapatch.

Sift and cleanse your ashes, preserve them in a epectally designed receptacle and then place them In a new Tin Can with a lid on guaranteed to neither Injure or soli th negroes hands when he receives them; then say "please" to the negro overseer and you may have the ashes taken from your backyard gat. Shade of Jehosephat there Is a law for youl In the region bounded by Vandeventer and Sarah streets east and west by Easton avenu and Ollv street north and south the residents have bullded fine concrete ash receptacles costing In the neighborhood of 120, and placed them In their rear yards, from which ashes may be removed with less danger and less trouble than by the tin can route. Tet If placed therein, th publle servant paid from the taxes imposed upon th people is not allowed to remove them. Th law Is Invalid and unconstitutional; It is not only special, but fiduciary legislation. Th negro overseer who passed along the alley between Delmar and Washington avenues without taking the cigar from between his teeth, and said on being asked by a lady to remove the ashes, "Can't remove your ashes, lady, unless you get a New Can." sised up the How deplor able such a situation Is.

Trusts and monopolies are not th only things that ar seemingly run SOCRATES ON THE FUTILITY OF WEALTH. Ah, gentlemen! I was hoping to see you. On what score, Socrates? There Is a matter upon which I would like your Our advice! Certainly, my dear Polemarchus. Carnegius has pension, and I do not know If I ought to accept It. think you should, by all means.

So do I. Why not? Tou have devoted your life to Christmas Doll: If your mother had done IXACGl-RATION VS DECEMBER. From the New York World. For many years the postponement of the presidential Inaugurations from March to May has been urged, chiefly with reference to the convenience of sightseers and the profits of Washington hotel keepers and merchants. What Is needed In this, as in many other matters relating to government is not delay but expedition.

The President and the House of Representatives are elected In November. They should take office on the first Monday In December following. When Senators are looted by popular vote, such an ar rangement will present no difficulty. The necessary amendments to the Constitution ought to be easy. We now see an old Congress containing many defeated members and an executive department that has been repudiated by the people resuming work as if nothing had happened.

It Is -this lack of relation between popular and official action which causes much of our political discontent and violence. Defeated con gresses not only obstruct the will of the people, but they often become corrupt. Many a victory won by punuo opinion fered me a has been lost under the conditions. WHAT LOSS OP OXE VOTE DID. From th Richmond Virginian.

A correspondent of the Mrglnlan re good, and are lates In today's Issue an interesting story of how a squealing pig, caught In Socrates: a fence on a Rhode Island farm, brought to accumulate on the War of 1S12, elected Andrew Jack wealth, as I son President and destroyed th Bank offer, It will of th United States. Glaucon: Socrates: The pig delayed a Whig voter and prevented him from reaching the polls in time to vote. The result was th lection of a Democratlo Legislature by a majority of one vote, a Democratlo Senator from Rhode Island by one vote, a declaration of war with Oreat Britain admitted, I place it at the useful to hav Glaucon: Socrates: by one vote, the war resulting eventually In Jackson's election a President. Th moral of this story Is th unexpected value of one vote at times. gius either Only Feet II II ad.

from Jade. Henry Augustas was learning how to dress himself, he was not as bis as the name sounds. Mother, looking on. said: "Why, my son, you have your shoes on the wrong feet!" "Well." screamed Henry Augustus, "they're the only feet hav to put 'em onl" Ideatlfleatlom Carte, From tb Boaton Olob. and the doctors Any citizen of good repute In St.

Louis ran get at the polio station an identification card, which. It Is aald. may be of use to him in case he is arrested. But why should St. Louis eitlsens of good repute ever be arrested pull straws, to Ead Joatlfl Meaa.

From Ufa "Tea, your honor," said 'Rastua, la Polio Court. I'se guilty; stole thm pants. But. your honor, ther ain't no sin when th motive am good. I don i When good King And had bis baa Was there, think Written Socrates: Olaucon: Socrates: Polemarchus: Socrates: Glaucon: I Thrasymachus: Polemarchus: sea have think, possible for his good whatever.

Glaucon: Socrates: which would useless as well. Glaucon: Socrates: the handmaiden world, and that it would come Glaucon: Socrates: whether it shall Glaucon: Socrates: Polemarchus: quite as deserving as anyone else. It is true that I have nothing, nor have I ever money, as Carnegius has. Still, I might make out; it, is in itself futile, and unless I avail myself served no good purpose in Ufa at all. True.

Let us take the case of Carnegius, for Instance. that the best thing he has done with his money la to disposal of persons who are doing something entirely too any time to make money themselves. Certainly. That is, the various scientists and teachers whom employing now or will take care of in their old age, wealth to do good, whereas It would otherwise do so Of course. Just as the university which Rockefellerlus maintains, and surgeons whom he employs, make useful a otherwise not only be the largest In history, but th most Unquestionably.

Very well. Then we must conclude that It is only as of brains that wealth finds any practical use in th if brains denied it this one opportunity to Justify Itself, into contempt. Truly. That Is, It rests with us, who are too busy to make it, be of use or not. Precisely.

Therefore. I should accept the pension. Good! mat is very sweet or you, rolemarchua. Now sea who will bring In a bucket of coaL la Mtaeewrt. Jam O.

Harkloam, wke wm4 as epwUl rao la the Circuit Court at Iaapn4ac lb other da r. aurprlaal rn nwtmbvrs of Ui party by sarins. -0Mtmii. I fl as tf 1 would anjny a In fart 1 am B-Mnm mofe. Ton caa do th oam tf toxi Ilka." And tha struck a ma tea ana tit a rlaar la a momenta ta lawyvrs rovr4 mat-ndoaUr from ifcetr swprla for avorel of tam te follow hi xsmple Case County Henry ruled th land.

pud-ding. you. In ail Ms band A knight brave that he would stand Beneath the Barr Bulld-4ng7 Molly: What assurance have I that you don't make mor money than you ay you doT Coddle: Tou would prerhear blow, las- akou It. ttol them pants to get baptised la." Fatreae the Drai Burton Correspondence Clifton HIU Ofo.) Several of this neighborhood formed a box party to see the Uncle Tom's Cabin show at Salisbury Wednesday alghU AU th elite war under th 4nnroval of th lav. TIM LTNN.

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