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Argus-Leader du lieu suivant : Sioux Falls, South Dakota • Page 4

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Argus-Leaderi
Lieu:
Sioux Falls, South Dakota
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4
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Saturday, July 13, 1912, THE DAILY ARGUS-LEADER, SIOUX FALLS. SOUTH DAKOTA. FOUR is ering, was held in Cleveland a rational A WEEKLY MEDITATION. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION The felly Argus-leader Vsntk Dakota's Irwtnt gcOTyptt. CSAs.X.E' M.

SIT, BUITOS. Fatly, except Sunday, at the Ar-run- t-'sd-r 109-111 North Main Sioux alls, S. D. Business office una editorial roua; both telephones, ai. Thing in Stoves For a nndnigKt supper, as for any other meal at any ri i latest uung ui stoves- me oesff Mew PerjctiQii ni' rifi -vi yti mim Oil Cook-stove other time, tne very that stove-artists can do-is a It Burns Oil No Ashes It Concentrates Keat No Waste Itls Handy tt'Js Ready No Delay Eajj It concentrate and where you (teacfier and electricity.

(The New tueqil-ia-bfae ia aickel, wit" neb, etc Made All sealed carry Free Cook-Book the heat when you want it want it It a as quick as gat, handier than coal, cheaper than Prrf-ctioa Store an loaf, enameled. chimneye. It aefaoinely Bantied cabinet lop, drop fheivei, towel with I. 2 of 3 banter, the New Perfection Stooe. with ererjr Hate.

Cook-Boo It Uo grres to mayoae Bauiiog 5 cents to corer Bulling cxmL STANDARD OIL COMPANY (An Indiana Corporation) It was evident that his nervous system was shattered. 'What was the dream?" asked his wife. "I I dreamed the trustees reciuired that that I should that I should pass the freshman examination for admission!" sighed the president. THEY ARE STILL SILENT. Mitchell Republican: There can be no denial of the fact that Is politically immoral for any candidate to appropriate a party name and seek to use It against the party's nominee for the chief office In the country.

Those who have advocated such action would jus tify It by arguing that one theft requires another. The best that can be said for it is that the party In this state does not want to become an accessory to the act of political immorality committed in Chicago. Since it was necessary to compound one or another political felony, the state convention naturally decided to choose the course most nearly in line with the expressed will of South Dakota republicans. Yet if the anti-Taft republican voters of the state hav any doubt about the course of the electors named at Huron, can these electors be sure of their support in November? The voters are entitled to know for what they are voting. That Is fundamental.

It is as essential as It Is to surround general elections with legal safeguards. It may be expected that the electors named at Huron will fully realize long before the campaign that they should declare what they would do if elected. The Republican has no doubt they will do so, fully and frankly, THE "THIRD TICKET" IN ILLINOIS Chicago Record -Herald: The revival of "third state talk" Illinois argue a strange lack of common sense and elementary political consistency in certain "progressives." When It was first Indulged in, the aftermath of the Chicago convention warranted some slight allowance for excitement, anger, personal chagrin and natural confusion. But the progressives In the several states have had ample time for sober second thought, and to insist now on 'ifull state and county tickets" in connection with the national third party movement is to sin against the Those who sincerely believe that nothing good can come out now from to the cornjn JjRoosevelt convention which seems to be the dominant note In the whoftt In the article on "The Democratic howtver, is found, a sketch of Woodrow Wilson, which-! contains the folI6wISg words: "His attitude (Wilson's) toward gov ernmental uoWers. the authority of the executive.

Se relations of the courts to the people, the direct primary, and the like, has been ex Dressed in terms -simi lar to by President Taft; other words. Tiis "Progressivism" Is of the cautious sort." This is eviilently meant to be a dis guised sneer at Governor Wilson, and a covert fling. at President Taft But it Is the highest praise that could be given to either of them. i The president, as well aa Governor Wilsoiv.arft true practical jwogreaslves. men who went fo work to do things in a quiet," deliberate, dignified and thor-ought manner.

There never was any wild-Hill or. slambang method about what they would do: they simply went and did It. It is that kind of common-sense and progressivlsrn that is needed in the presidential chair. The other kind is good only for the grand-stand play style ef popular excitement which aims at inflaming passions and winning applause In the tfarmoil of political agitation for personal aims only. And now Colonel Roosevelt Is put with the charge that Taft two delegates from Massachusetts.

It takes nerve to make such a change; but the colonel has an ample supply of it, enough, It is believed, to last him through the campaign. The facts are that Taft carried the popular vote in Massachusetts; that 17,000 Taft votes were thrown out because that many Taft men voted for nine delegates when they should have voted only for eight; that as the result of this eight Roosevelt electors were chosen 'tinder Taft Instructions; that Roosevelt; himself declared in an interview that these eight men were In honor bound to vote for Taft and that he did not' expect nor want their votes; that Roosevelt, was heartily applauded for his brave words; that when the vote was ta-ken Six of these elght'dele-gates ref used to vote for Taft while two did So; and these two, who voted for Taft, are now the delegates whom the colonel says were Can you beat It? Only a few short weeks ago the colonel declared before the whole country that he was not entitled to one of these eight Votes. Having improperly rtaken all but twov he now accuses Taft, of "stealing" because he didn't improperly get the other two! The colonel's campaign seems to be based on the assumption that the people do not know anything. The Watertown Public Opinion wants to know "who owns the republican partyr'6f South To any one who attended the Huron convention, the answer is The party today Is owned by two men Boss Basford and Boss Sutherland, W'ho absolutely dictated every step taken by the state convention. This is one reason why the state ticket is today In such acute and increasing danger-a danger that can be relieved only by the announcement of the five Huron electors that they will vote for Taft, if elected, or by their resignation from the ticket The third party can not steal the party label In South Dakota without bringing its whole ticket into hazard.

Taft carried the popular vote In Massachusetts but eight Roosevelt men were chosen as delegates at large, though pledged to Taft So unquestioned was the pledge that even the colonel said these eight men should vote for Taft Two of them did, and now the colonel says these two were Some time It will probably come out why It was that Timothy Woodruff, the New York bosslet, came out for Roosevelt and became one of his active lieutenants; and when it does, the boosters for the colonel will be just a little bit dazed. NO REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE. Dead wood Pioneer-Times: There is no republican candidate for congress over In the first district comprising the southern naif of the state east of the river. An old calamity howler by the name of Dillon received a majority of the republican votes of the district at the June primaries, but at the republican convention held at Huron on the second of the month he announced hie opposition to the nominees of the republican national convention, which means that he Is a bolter and not entitled to republican support Robert E. Dowdell, the nominee, would make the more creditable repre sentative of the district, and inasmuch as the republicans have no.

candidate they should support the best To Look and feel Bright in Hot Weather (From the Woman Beautiful.) -This is fh' season when she who would have a rose-leaf complexion, lily-white necR and hands, should turn her thoughts to mercolized wax, the firm friend of the summer girl. Nothing so effectually' Overcomes the soiling effects of wind, dust and The wax literally absorbs the scorched. discolored, withered or coarsened cuticle, bringing forth a brand new skin, clear, soft and girlishly beautiful. It also unclogs the pores, removing blackheads and increasing the skin's breathing capacity. An ounce of raercolized wax, obtainable at any dru store, applied nightly like cold cream, and washed off morn ngs, will gradually improve the worst complexion.

When depressed by the heat and you want to freshen up for tV- evenini. bathe the face in a lotion made ny dissolving an ounce of powdered saxolite in a half, pint witch 1. You'll find this more refreshing than an hour's rest. It also smootns out tine Tnes, affecting even the Cteper wrinkle convention of some twenty bodies of social which "were dis cussed the more real live issues of the day; the problems of every-day life human welfare, child labor, prison re-. form, the cure of dis eases, both phys-ftal and moral and the like.

That was a greater convention than the one in Chicago, or the one in Baltimore. Those are the men and the women who do the real work of building the nation on the right foundation. And our schools, our colleges end universities, our churches and Sunday with their allied organizations, they are the true nation-builders, regardless of political hysteria or disturbances of any kind. As one said: "The great fore it work perpetuating the fair name of America is the silent work of the common people." Far ahead of his time, Robert Burns re-echoed the teaching of tin) Master and of His disciples in the immortal words: "A man's a man for a' that." Special forces are at work, coming together, often in the most unexpectel mar.ner, to promote fellowship, brotherhood, to "show honor to every to life up degraded manhood and womanhood, till they meet those morally higher up, to be welcomed by them as members of the same family. Men are drawn together more that ever.

The worth of the individual is being understood as the Master taught it. To the ends of the earth, American Christianity is sending its heralds of the glad tidings, and the leaven of freedom, the desire for better things in China, Turkey and other countries were born of missionary efforts and heroism. The watchword of the day is peace, not war, at home and abroad; let lis not forget it. With this comes a greater regard for human life, a greater respect for self, for the rights of others. The passing disturbances of the hour are mere bubbles on the sea of our national life.

At heart, the people are sound, and well-meaning. We can trust them eventually to do the right, and to perpetuate the qualities that have made American citizenship mean as much as, even more than. It did in the days of the Roman commonwealth, when the words, "I am a Roman citizen," were a magic passport in all parts of the ancient world. Thus, America becomes, as one said, "half-brother to the "THE OUTLOOK" INTERESTED. This week's issue of The Outlook might just as well be called a democratic number, owing to the large amount of space devoted to the democratic convention at Baltimore and its results.

On the cover, preceding the only other announcement of leading articles Inside are found the words in big letters, "Woodrow Wilson and the Democratic party An Outlook editorial." In the table of contents are found the titles of the following arti cles: "The Nomination of Woodrow "The Factors in the "Posses Under Moral The Democratic "The Democratic and "The Democratic besides the one al ready mentioned, which Is set down as "An Outlook while the other on "Thou Shalt Not Steal" is described as "an editorial by Theodore The space thus given to democratic affairs shows that the Outlook considers the nomination of Woodrow Wilson as having some mist important bearing upon the present presidential campaign. Furthermore, whatever may be the distinctions made in the announcements as to what is written by Mr. Roosevelt, and what is not, there is no doubt that the editor and the contributing editor are in full sympathy and reflect more or less each other's views. In fact, with all due respect to Dr. Lyman Abbott, In the general sentiment ofthe public regarding The Outlook, It is another case of the dog's tail wagging its head.

A large share of the various articles just enumerated is historical, some bearing upon the previous democratic nominations during the past fifty years or so, an account of the Baltimore conventions, and the turning down of the bosses represented by what Is called In the articles the "Murphy Sullivan Taggart with due recognition- of Mr. Bryan's share in the work of the convention. The leading article starts with the idea that the publication of Bryee's "American Commonwealth' was the inaugural of a political campaign against corruption In publie life, leading to the Cleveland administrations, and to Mr. Bryan's wonderful hold "upon the people. The article might better bo called an introduction to Mr.

Roosevelt's campaign than anything else; for It seeks to show that the feelings that led to the nomination of Governor Wilson are Identical with those that are. or were, back of the Roosevelt boom, though it says that "in Baltimore the issues were more confused." The issues of the campaign are thus summed up: "The Issue In the approaching campaign is not between Mr. Taft, Mr. Wilson, and Mr. Roosevelt; it is between the constituencies which put them In nomination and which of necessity they will represent.

For it can not be affirmed too emphatically that the president ie not a a dictator. He is the instrument of the people, chosen to carry out their will, and can succeed only as. he understands and executes the will of those who elected him." The rest of the article is given up (Editorial 'te'J'his Is the second arul last installment of an address given in one of the local churches on June SO by the writer in charge of this department. The h-Wf-F-ss is printed in full at tin' request of iriany who heard it. this hcu spaptr jut being responsible for any of trie "Jfjeus expressed then-in "Show.

hoimr to i-vefy one. hove the brotherhood, revere Hod, honor the emperor." I Peter. 1: 1 7. (Concluded.) "Now." the t.ioher will say, "No. I is one ef the most duetiiigeislwrt men of the and on.

one of the scholars, probably an inius'tive boy, t.ill say: "Teacher, do yon know what No. 2 thinks of No. I heard 1 Miter speak about it." Ann til" hoy ill gie a li.st of the epithets applied to No. 1 by No. 2.

Later, the teacher will come to No. 2. He. too, is a remarkable American, and the teacher will devote some time to his record in recent years. Put, a young huly, perhaps, this time, will fay: "If No.

2 Is such a distinguished American, how is it that No. 1 called him such bad names?" And, as Mr. Dooley says, "There ye are." I'o not think I am romancing'. For I find these Hues in one of the best New Kngland papers that took no special part in the "late bearing upon the wealth of names and undesirable characterizations used recently: "The newspapers carry them into the household where the children read them. No doubt there are men and women of foreign birth, who are adding these words to their vocabulary, and the manner of their use to their habits, in the slow work of learning the English tongue.

It is an object-lesson, as we have said, in the use of words which no man ought to apply to others without an orderly process of law to justify them. These words come out of the gutter in their everyday use; and the longer they are put abroad, and the more they are read, the greater will be their power to put the young and the impressionable into the gutter with them. They are a bail by-product for American manners, and destructive of common decency, aa between man and man." The strangest feature of the whole proceedings is that, so far, there has been no great issue connected with that oratorical debauch. The liquor problem, which is our greatest Issue, is always ignored. And that other vital issue, the cost of living and the tarilT, has been passed by.

III. We notice again a fatal ten dency that Is as old as human nature: self-seeking. A man running for office told me before our own state pri maries: "I don't care who goes in, or what the issues are, provided I go In, too." Many men who hear it said that American issues should lie settled on what has been called "the high ground of principle" think it a joke. To them principles mean to get and hold a job. Their favorite motto is the title of a well-known novel of the past decade: To Have and to When Artemus Ward, on one of his mythical lecturing trips, was asked as to his principles, he replied: "I have no principles, I am In the show There are some today who can say the same: "I have no principles: I am in politics, or I am IV.

"Show honor to every one." Respect for authority extends to the ordinary relations of life. It la very tiresome to hear so much about unruly Young America. My sympathy Is with Young America. For, back of nearly every case of unruly or way ward Young America, you are sure to find some Older America. A school teacher was having considerable trouble with a five-year-old girl.

Finally, she asked her why she acted iso. "Well," the child replied, "my father says you are no good." Some people think that there should be no restraint to their conversation at home. A boy was asked what the word "home" meant, and he said: "It's where Pa growls and 51a roasts the whole creation." If you want to destroy the efficiency of teachers, clergymen and other public persons, keep on finding fault with them before your children. And, later, you will complain of the failure of those people to tnilu-ence your own children. I met a 16-year-old boy who was a cynic.

He believed In nothing: he branded his teachers, and the clergy, and the city and state officials, and the federal government as dead heads, grafters, hypocrites and the like. He had heard his father say this for years, and as the result, he faced a life that left him nothing worth while but the coarsest materialism. A cold-hearted, sneering, bloodless and heartless cynic at 16! What could he not be later on? And all this, because of the failure of his father to respect self and others, to give honor to whom honor is due, "to show honor to every to respect authority, and to. deal with men in a fair, manly way. It is a timely American sentiment that a Jewish rabbi uttered Id a prayer at the Baltimore convention: "Keep before our eyes the lofty ideals of our republic, that all government must be moral In its aim and end, and that nothing morally wrong caa be politically right." But, last of all.

those undesirable manifestations of the so-called "pent-up feelings" are but surface emotions. They do not represent the real senti ments of the American people as a whole. The Chicago -convention cost five million, and. after ail, it is not of great Importance, except to the office-seekers, who shall be our next president The country does not depend, for its safety and perpetuation, upon Mr. Taft, Mr.

Roosevelt, Mr. Clark, Mr. Underwood, Mr. Harmon. Mr.

Wilson, Mr. Bryan, or any one else. The week before the Chicago gath COMMENT, CRITICISM, CUTION. Edito-J by SAMUEL WEIR, PH. O.

'Address tm taa adltor at Mtt-ss-aO all eommunlcatlaai lataadaa' this dapartatBMt Dr. Harlan Vpdegraff of the tTnited Slates Jbureau of Education has been appointed professor of education and bead of the department at Northwestern university. i Dr. Walter F. Dearborn of the University of Chicago accepts an assistant professorship of education in Harvard university.

At the eighty-third convocation of the University of Chicago, President Jud-son announced the plans for new buildings to cost in all approximately Among the proposed new buildings is a gymnasium for women, Which will cost about 1300.000.; The University of Pennsylvania has began the formation of an endowment fund for the increase of the salaries of professors. Yet some people are pessimistic enough to say the world is growing worse. The Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University has received a bequest amounting to some 1500,000 the Income from which will be applied to increase of the salaries of professors. It is reported that Miss Inez Kelso has resigned the superintendence of the schools at Alexandria on account of factional differences in the town. Cases like this are too numerous.

During the past year Texas built an average of two schoolhouses a day. The south is evidently working up, it may yet overtake the seif-satished nuith. It seems that the National Council of Education took a rather pessimistic view of rural education at the Chicago meeting. There surely is room for Im provement and it is to be feared that patching the old garment will not stlf- iice. There is a wide difference between stinginess and extravagance.

"Would it not be wise to teach the children how to take the middle course, to be economical and yet liberal? Many a man has made shipwreck of life by narrow ing his soul with stmeiness and many another has missed peace and fortune by the practice of extravagance. Open air sleeping is good for the health, but the night of a tnunder storm, accompanied by hail is not a good time to begin. We tried it ana it was discouraging, but still we believe In the wholesome effect of free air and in the simple life. The National Education association has had a hot time in Chicago. The conflict between progressives and stalwarts threatened serious consequences.

Some very ugly charges were made regarding the election of two years ago. Chicago is a bad place for national con ventions in the heated season. However in this case the threatened rupture was averted and there will not be a new association. The American athletes are making a good record in the Olympian games at Stockholm. Sweden.

The old Greek training in athletics, which has been the boast of ages, was probably much inferior' to modern athletic training. There Is a yet better time coming when physical culture will become universal. The training of a few for special per formance is not the ideal but rather the healthful training of the many. The conservation of health is a problem in these hot days as much as in the cold of winter. Moderate exer cise and moderate eating are beneficial.

We feel a hearty concern for the babies during July and August. What a splendid work a national fmreau of public health might accomplish. But the idealists and the faddists have aided the vendors of patent medicines In retarding the Owen's bill for the establishment of a health bureau. Professor Florlan Cajorl of Colorado college has received the degree of Doc tor of Laws from the university of Colorado. Professor Cajori is an au thority in "the history of mathematics upon which he has written a book and several leading magazine articles.

It would be a good plan for some of th critics of mathematics. In the schools to study the history jof the science. Shadworth H. Hodgson, a noted British philosopher died on June 13 at the age of seventy-nine. He was an original thinker and contributor to philosophical discussions.

Science is still devoting much snace to the question of university control and administration. There is general agreement that there are serious defects In the present system of colleze and university administration in Amer ica, but opinions differ decidedly as to the best remedy. How to harmonize the professional and administrative functions of the university and secure efficiency of teaching, and breadth of aim, without hampering the financial interests on the one hand, or to secure efficiency or financial and executive or administrative interests without hampering freedom of teaching and research on the other hand, is a problem not yet solved. Out of the same mouth proceed blessing and cursing. This principle applies to the motion picture show.

It may be a means of instruction of great value or it may become a means of demoralization. The nature of the representations and the suggestions, the mo-, tive and the method make the difference. There is a difference also in the associations. We have recently talked, with two pastors who have used motion pictures for purposes of culture and religious instruction. There was some opposition in one case.

But why should not the moving picture be utilized for such purpose? Why should not motion pictures form an adjunct to the school for purposes of illustration in history, indulstry. moral training. Better; rescue a promising auxiliary before It becomes -monopolised for mere amusement or dissipation, It Is needless to say that the following story was manufactured as a Joke, but it stiggests that in some cases college presidents are chosen without much regard to their breadth or depth of scholarship or their educational experience. Surely the administration of a college or university requires the professional insight of an educator as much as the superintendency of a city school system, unless the administration is willing to leave the educational questions largely to the faculties. The president should have a fair record for general scholarship and expert knowledge in some branch of learning if he is to have sympathy for these who teach and those, who investigate: Here is the story as given in the Youth's Companion The president of the university had dark circles under his eyes.

His cheek was pallit': h's lips were trembling; he wore a hunted expression. "You lo! ill." said his wife. "What is wrr-tvg. eV-ar?" "Nothing much." he replied. I I had a fearful dream last nicht.

ant I feai this morning as I as if rSSfJ-Anm-KENTTNOB CO, Citcjrera Forelgro Advertisirr. CticasO 1218 Feoplea Gas 21Jtf. Tork Erunawic- Social and Ccmr.ty Pases. eaxes cp BtrsscsrpTioaf. r3ci-7 Toy Cirwi.

month f9.48 er yar, ps.j3 In advance 803 fsx n.oachj, paid adr.r.ee lbn-e months, paid In advancv. lJi rally by Kail. Ono year, coah in ad ante I.00 TO BTrSSCItlEas The yellow lahal i.i at titn-e b. ow to what time your uliiripSioa p.iio. In changing give iii.me of ppstoiflc from the is mnJe aa well ris'tjipci- to paper ia to be aent in tile luturp.

leaving tho city temporal -or ihouij have the Argus-Leader to thern. Addresses will a often ma rauiiu4 Judge Archhald must sorry now hv wan such a prolific letter writer. If Ciovernor Wilson can have a cigar Turned aftiT him, his crown of fame Will ho complete. "The rrar.y belt has says the Oiotoii independent, in its comment on the freak action of the Huron convention. A Michigan woman, acquitted of a murder charge on her sf cond trial, kissed ten of the The other two escaped through a window.

A New Jersey man has cut his third pet of teeth at the ape of 8i). Woodrow "Wilson is only f.S, hut he has all the a isdom teeth a man needs, though they do not appear in the carbons. The charge was made during the discussion of the Lorimi case that less than one-half of the senators had read the evidence, and no one denied the charge. Pr. Frank K.

Crane asks the cucs-tioit: "Have you ever thought of the great silences?" Lots of times and lately, with reference to the prolonged, copper-bottom and riveted silence of Oyster Bay concerning those primary election expenses. Perhaps it has not occurred to floss Tiasford that it is easier to start a voter at the head of the democratic ticket than it is to stop him at the proper place down the line. The boss may know more about it after it Is all oviir. Most of the supporters of Roosevelt who are "denouncing" the Chicago platform have never even read it. Hut this is easy for men who talk glibly about "the Roosevelt policies" when they can not tell what those policies are.

The latest about Frank B. Kellogg, of St. Paul, the federal "trust Is that he refuses to state his position with regard to the third party. While he was an enthusiastic Hoosevelt worker at Chicago, he seems to have cooled off considerably, and lie is expected to, remain in the republican party. The Argus-Leader expressed the opinion that five men could not be found in the state who would run for electors on the republican ticket and after election, vote for the candidate of another party.

This newspaper seems to have placed a higher estimate on the honor of these men than they do themselves. Never before in the history of the electoral college has such a thing been done before. William Watson, the English poet, has written a poem to praise the colonel, and the. last line reads thus: "Thou art America, dauntless Theodore." This is a pure Rooseveltian sentiment. Mr.

Watson is the inventor of the "serpent's tongue" line about the wife of Premier Asquith. He evidently never does things half-heartedly. Poetically speaking, Watson's hat Is always in the literary ring. That was very lovely in the Iowa state convention to leave the voter "free to choose" what he would do in the presidential election. In South Dakota no such option waa left.

The republican voter so far has the choice of voting for Roosevelt or for "Wilson, "but can not vote for Taft; and if the situation comes up to the election in this form, there are many candidates on the republican ticket who will later be sorry for it. A nice Job of party wrecking has been done in our sister state of Iowa. The repubiican state convention has repudiated the action of the republican rational convention, and a Des Moines dispatch, sent out later, declared that "scarcely a republican could be found who did not believe the republican state ticket of Iowa was in for a good It is believed that Senator Kenyon will be caught in the wreck age. It would be quite proper that men who repudiate their party because they can not have their own way should also find other men to imitate their example on the state ticket. Fewer republicans will be elected to office next November than perhaps in any election in a generation.

Gener ally speaking, the prospect is that the party will be turped out to pasture for four years during which the leaders and members will have plenty of chance to think things over. either of the great national parties and that the time for a realignment has really come are entitled to their opinion Tn aef 1 1 inn that nntininn tn ha national sphere, at any rate, is not to play into the hands of reactionaries and spoilsmen. But what have national issues like the trusts, the tariff, the cost of living, currency and finance, presidential primaries to do with state, county and local issues of good administration, merit service, efficient government, fair taxation, independence and integrity in the courts? We have had our direct primaries and our bar primary in this etate and county. Hard work has been done. Governor Deneen's victory was generally accepted as a great victory for decency and honesty.

Lorimerism, it is true, was the paramount issue in the state, and tens of thousands of pro. gressive citizens deliberately voted for Governor Deneen in order to repudiate and crush Lorimerism in the lnont effective way possible. But to contend that the elimination of Lorimerism justifies the nomination of a full state and county ticket is to forget wholly state and county conditions, state and. county issues, and to do what every genuine or thoughtful progressive is bound to fight most resolutely the wanton mixing of wholly dwtinct Issues and the subordination of vital state interests to national politics. Why Thorson Ducked.

Huronite: One will understand that Mr. Thorson was an exceedingly embarrassing position last Tuesday evening when called upon to vote yes or no upon the proposition to endorse the republican presidential nominee. It was well enough understood that the state convention would take steps to have him bounced from the national committee should he vote yes and ha understood very well that the national committee would cut him off if ha voted no. Mr. Thorson ducked.

He was not within ear shot when his name called for his vote. There seemed to be no other couree left open to Vessey Should Resign. Huronite: Governor Veseey, erstwhile La Follette delegate to the Chi-rt -ii'V-oriventlot-i, has completed the be trayal of his trust by attaching his signature to a national call for a new because the Chicago convention did not nominate not La Follette, but Roosevelt. That this has been done by the governor of South Dakota will be flouted against the name of the commonwealth, adding another to the already excellent reasons why he should resign. Departments of Art, Kormal Art, Dramatic Expression, Household Economics.

Strong faculty of specialists; splendidly equipped laboratories and gymnasiora; moderate prices; students from thirteen -states; normal department for students preparing; to teach. Direct lines of railway from Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul, St. Louis. Only earnest, espable students who town a purpose in study are solicited.

AND DEPARTMENT BULLETINS 2E -ALL SAINTS SCHOOL- Sioux IfaSEs? So. Bali. Since 1884 this Excellent Home School for girls has been educating the daughters of many leading South Dakota citizens, who endorse it unreservedly It affords all the advantages of a modern up-to-date school, surrounding the girls intrusted to its care with influences that will make cultured and refined women of them. For information address Miss Helen S. Peabody, Principal Ail Saints School Formerly Winona SaminarTI -1110118-, iHtnttttfOta COM)UCTED BY THE SISTERS OF SAINT FRANCIS YEAR BEGINS FIRST WEDNESDAY IN SEPTEMBER Collcie confers degrees of B.

B. Litt Miu. B. Saint Clare Seminary School and College Preparatory. Secretarial Course.

Saint Ailnes Grammar School For little gtrta, CrtnsenratroTjr of Saint Cecilia Piano, Violin, Voice, Orean, Haro. Harmony, Composition, Normal Musk. WRITE FOR CATALOGUES.

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