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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 14

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I THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE. NEW YORK. SUNDAY. JANUARY 21. 1912.

A yet. in his iliiy anil generation, nuking liny In Roosevelt mid I.a I'nl-liini. and rescinds his abdication when (claims that tli(. war correspondents in BUSINESS NOTICES. BUSINESS NOTICES.

the capital city imagine cannot be was a pretty good coniriillzn- letie Xm-l hwcsiern Slates, while let go. lie must lie veritable 'tlonisl. II. Tafi is hlandlv hamstringing I past master of what passes as polities ill Latin Aineriean republics. (Trade Mrk "Eafla" P.etialerA.

LPCMOW 'Postmaster (lenernl Ilifcln-ock. witli lie expert aid and senile approbation and promises itm-i-v New as Cuba says -Tin sorry." SUNDAY MOHXIXU. AXL'ARY 21, overlooked. Meanwhile we are still engaged in subduing Moros, pacifying Porto Kicaus, and keeping a "nigger squat on the safety valve" In restless Panama. Slnuy Americans doubt the wisdom of these "worid-power" activities.

They ic i.euuve. rue spanking is postponed: A Consul and Some Missionaries. We do not know the name of the Reg. U. s.

Pat. Off. The great world swings forever Down the ringing grooves of change. The Sunday Morning Edition of The Eagle perhaps very unwisely. British consul at I cluing, in China, but hi Large and Crowing Circulation througli-, out the United States and Europe, ll is the i Hereafter "I.et (Jeorge Do It will be Adverting Medium for those who de- A Notable Celebration.

A leeord of Hl'ly years in tile serviie of the State is one that ire to reach all claues of Newspaper Readers JPl are not all of the Fenian type of mind which holds that any rebellion anywhere is a good rebellion and every government deserves to be rebelled against. They are largely' conservative popularity is not wiilxuit its penalties. he tseenis to be a stubliorn. honest and somewhat abrupt individual without, a spark of idealism in his whole makeup. When his neighborhood was recently invaded by busy revolutionists, careless nhout the lives and property, particularly the lives, of foreigner, the in New York and on Long Island entitles Hie Twenty-third Iteglnient to itlie honorable regard of all good citi The only Paper in Brooklyn hiving Associated Press Service.

i No new issues of beef and blankets citizens, who would apply to a rebellion iu China, or Cuba, or Ecuador, the zens. The eelebrailoli of the regiment's to Taiiiiuuny Indians is in the nilnd closing last night, liau 1 consul ordered two lady missionaries r.nfprpcl at if: rnKroffioe at lirooklvtl. November as eiU" n.iiiof Uuvernor lux. To that extent Slate or Wanh i economy Is assured. aroused the interest not alone of those Matter under tlttj A The Standard of RYE Whiskey Guaranteed Pure RVB Whiskey Under rVa-ttonal Pure Food Law Serial Number 2163 NOT BLENDED NOT ADULTERATED SOLD 0N1.V IN.

OUR SEALED BOTTLES EVERYWHERE NEVER SOLD IN BULK same logic which we expected Great Britain to apply to our own case when we had a stupendous rebellion to suppress. The formula of their thought Is a recognition that "the divine right of revolution" underlies human liberty everywhere. They do not assert that rebels in China or In Cuba or in Ecua now actively engaged in National Guard work, but also that of many thousands of veterans and of others whose relation to the regiment has been merely that of sympathetic observers. The letter of congratulation sent by the present Colonel, Frank II. Not ton.

to the first of his predecessors. tCorriht Name. The Brooklyn Dally Katie.) WILLIAM HtfTER, rrci'triH and Oenral Manager. WILLIAM V. HKSTER.

riLTiary-Triaiiurer. HERUERT F. GUNNISON. Bugint-Kii Manager. Address Katie Kujjla nil's cotton strike Is ended.

A coal miner's strike is to begin. Which Is the worse of the two will be determined, perhaps, by popular vote after the second is over. to quit Icliang and go to a place of safety. They demurred, explaining that as they had not received divine peiv-mission to leave their post they could not obey the orders of an earthly authority. The consul used force, saying, as he removed them beyond the danger zone as a preliminary to their deportation from China: I cannot recognize your individual right to die.

as your deaths would involve other foreigners and have far- dor are right or ought to succeed. They only hold that we have no proper func Wh ARE THE LARGEST BOTTLERS OF OLD-FASHIONED HAND-MADE Colonel William Kverdell, beautifully SOUR MASH STRAIGHT PURE RYE WHISKEY IN THE WORLD H. B. KIRK COT New York, N. Y.

tion in lands where rebellions are going on, save to hold the recognized illustrales the linking of the present with the past, which is today foremost government to responsibility for pro reaching consequences. etirence, recurrence and repetition of Bernard Shaw, an Irishman, lit tempts to Identify the American Gaels wilh Hie Lost Tribes of Israel, lie's mistaken, of course. Any Thespian can testify that the American gales are plain ordinary cyclones. WILSON PLANS ANOTHER TRIP. what we had encountered before and In the minds of all old enough to remember the history of the Twenty-third.

Circumstances have given to a few i -i i t- MAIN OFFICE. Kagle Bi.ilding. corner of AVasliInfton ar.i Johnson sli-eem, fctrouklyli. Tplephono calls ifor main ofllce nr.d ull Urooklyn branchwo, No. tL Main: Jamaica branch, 23 Jamaica; lialh Beach branch, Path Beach; cireeu-Puint '77 Ureenpolnt, BRANCH OFFICES.

A list of The Eagle's Branch Offlcd in Brooklyn, Manhattan and Queens will be found a the first Classified Advertising page. KCREAL'S. Taris Rue cambon. London Rogni afreet, H. W.

Washington tifS s.teet. Ejgie reader, when vjsiiing Hies i-nies, are cordially Invited to msLa their eadour.rtc. in iheaa bureaus. liiftirniatiin elsewhere. Were he lo construct other worlds than those already in existence we have every reason to believe they I ouii-i icginicius larger opporiuiiu it's I for held service thau the Twentv-thlrd i tecting all American interests.

A government, they think, which cannot do this is a government that ought not to be recognized any longer. Perhaps it may be suid that this Jeftersoniau school of thought is obsolete. Perhaps It Is obsolete. But the administration which needlessly intervenes In a foreign land is assuming; a fearful risk of doing injustice. On that proposition nine-tenths of all Americans would agree.

would be framed upon the same model as lay in his mind and was followed In the creation of those already existing. Whatever innovations' might be Introduced In the matter of details we Judge from what we know of Ills working hitherto that in fundamental features he would adhere to the structural linen upon which his previous productions have been laid down. ever obtained. But it should not be forgotten that the Twenty-third -has always been ready for every duty the State called it to perform, and that iu the performance of duty it has never failed to vindicate the confidence reposed iu it. The Kagle wishes to its officers and men, from Colonel Norton down to the newest, recruit, a long flit nre of honorable service to the State of New York nud to the Nation, in any and iu every emergency.

Will Speak in Chicago, Des Moines and Other Cities. Chicago, January 20 Governor Wood-row Wilson will make a three days Western invasion from February 2 to Man ll 2. It is possible that the time mp.y be extended to March 4. This will not mean the cancellation of his trip to Chicago, February 12, at which time he will make no speeches other than the one here. This announcement was niada from the Wilson headquarters here today.

Tentative plans are for the Governor lo make two speeches here on February 29, one each in Sprlntleld and East St. LouIb, March 1. and at DcsMoines and Milwaukee on the later dates. Jn case arrangements can be made for him to extend his visit until March 4 he will return hore from Des Moines on Marcii 2, remain over Sunday, and speak Ju Milwaukee the following night. According to report, the consul has adviced that the missionaries be' refused permission to return to China, which sutllclenlly indicates how dangerous, in his opinion, their zeal is likely to biH-ome.

There Is something admirable In the courage that Inspires delicate wonieu to risk death rather than abundou their duty to native converts. For this reason there will doubtless be many to condemn the action of the consul as hasty and Ill-advised, possibly as heartless am irreverent. There are thousands who would Oh? and applaud others dying to exemplify in these modern days the value of the venerable principle that the blood of the martyrs is, tile seed of the Church. But when the martyring of one of two Individuals te spread into a gCuei'al innssaeie. Involving international complications, with war as a liability, forcible interference with the' MASTER OFMEDIEVALTHOUGHT bureau Koom Eagle Building, Brook lyn.

Branch- East Twenty-third street, -danhattau. SLBBcniPTIO.V Eagle sent mall (outside of Brooklyn I. postage included. 1 month, Jl.WJ; a months, I.JS: 6 months. 1 year, $5.00.

Sunday Kagle, vaar, 11.50. Minduv tingle (Sermons), year. Eagle Library, Jl.W par year, Almanac, cenoi. The dailv eultion of The Eagle Is delivered on day of publication at all I-ong Island ''ostottlces. FORKIGN BVHSCfttl'TION JIATKS.

Daily and Sunday. 1 vcar, Ually and Sunday, tj 7.1H; Daily and Sunday. 1 month. Sunday or Monday Eagle, $3.10 per year. aDVEIVrifllNG RATES.

For cot nf ad -ertising. apply or send for rste card, or niaks inquiry by telephune. No. iii0 Main. Roosevelt and Wilson.

The Woodrow Wilson matter and the Theodore Iloosevelt matter are nearly equal In their power to attract attention from day to day. Though contemporaneous, they are not similar. Sir. Koosevelt has put himself on solemn record never to seek and never to accept another nomination for President. Sir.

Wilson has been put on record, by Sir. Harvey and Mr. Watterson. as having hurt their feelings by truthfully responding to a question, they adjured him frankly to answer. The Republicans who have been urging Sir.

Iloosevelt to break his word are former Federal officeholders whom Sir. Tart has ejaculated into rivate life and the Governors of a few minor Invaluable and Indispensable. Knowledge of the city we live iu is acquired in various ways, but in no other way can so much information Professor Turner Prest-nts Life of "The Christian Stoic." "if we 'cannot have that which we desire, we should desire that Which we can have," was the moud of Gerbert, afterward Pope Sylvester Jl, called "the Christian Stole," by Professor AVilliam More Surface Cars for Brooklyn. Commissioner SlcCarroll of the Public Service Commission will Be-gratefully remembered in his retirement because, iu the closing months of ids service, ho elicited the testimony on SCHOOLS AND SOCIAL DESIRE. Vuaniuiily is what China seems to be getting.

It's the next thing to the unanimity she needed. i sacrificial spirit is an obligation no concerning the city he obtained so easily as by a careful study of The Eagle Alumnae. Some eouspicuous features of this newly issued publication were noted on this page yesterday. If you want to find your way about: your own oily or out on Long Island yon will discover the peculiar value of the series of maps of all the five boroughs iiiid of Suffolk and Nassau counties which have been especially prepared for the 1012 Almanac by competent cartographers. They are inclosed in a pocket inside the cover of the book and afford facilities for reference which should make them invaluable and well-bnlunced official wllh power to which tile coiinnlssion has seen tit to order the purchase oT 10(1 new street cars by the Brooklyn Heights and its allied companies and to get them into Turner, M.A..

S.T.D., of the Catholic University of America, Friday afternoon in this third Brooklyn Institute lecture on "Masters of Medieval Thought," which was devoted to this scholar. In addition to the direct Information about Gerbert, Professor Turner told the legends which have grown up about his name and gave Interesting pictures of the times the latter part of the tenth century. It was a period of jousting and of tournnments. and in the "winter of 980 the Emperor Otho 11 arranged a joust In logic between Gerbert, then of Khelnia, and a great logician of the school of Magde- Swedish women are to vote, tor the Swede by ami by ull sorls of reforms are confidently prophesied. Professor Sanies Advocates Turning Latter to Former's Advantage.

'The Social Impulses, or Family Frieuda and Humanity," were taken up by Professor Earl Barnes, Ph.D., Friday evening, in the third of his Brooklyn Institute course on "Qur Human Hungers." Among the questions were these: whether such intensive training as that given by Professor Boris Sidls to his son, if continued for another generation perhaps, or States, the re-election of whom Sir. Tnft's administrative policy has put in jeopardy. The few who resent being removed from Federal places and yearn to. get back Into them have joined with those who apprehend being voted down and out in their own Stales and yearn to be kept In. Revenge, Return.

Retention, are their hope and Roosevelt their recourse. They tire few. but -infuriate. They are noisy, but intelligible. They are sibilant, because sore.

They have no need of a national Issue, for each man regards himself as a national issue and Roosevelt not only the desire of the make his decisions respected will hesitate to assume. We believe that the Intelligent organizers of missionary effort respect this view. It Is the only sensible view. It" Is, In fact, the view that all civilized governments take of ihe duty resting upon their representatives In countries where savagery Is liable at any time to break loose and overwhelm incautious foreigners. We think that the British Foreign Office is likely hereafter to regard with special favor his majesty's consul at Icliang.

ibui-R: This was held at Itavenna. lasting Coco has been convicted of 1'ooh-bahisni iu Queens. Tbey can't avoid mixing up even the "Mikado" In Ixmg Island "It v. i a whole day. in the presence of the Era- prror, the court and many noted scholars even not, would be likely to have a deleterious effect In the third Spnprnlinn atwl i lie xiniw mis nceii re- and theoloeties Gerbert followed the whether religious training should be service next lull.

The need of such additions to the existing service is keenly felt by straphangers in every section of the city, but the testimony taken by Commissioner SlcCarroll must have been convincing because the company announces its readiness to comply with the order without waiting for the lime allowed to it by the commission. The testimony showed that it is possible to operate nol merely the 100 cars ordered, but as ninny more. The transit business of Brooklyn grows steadily, and the crowding on many of the lines in the morning and afternoon hours leased, but Governor JJix Is not to Aristotelian rule of logic. "In all propo blame. The Washington Weather I-lu- sit ions the predicate should have wider extension than the subject, and won the renu Is under black Kepublican cim-dav.

HlB way of the logical ll'ol. method of which was followed When the police have thoroughly learned wrestling, their struggles with (ruth In the trial room will a lot less disheartening. by Ahelard, afterward became known as The Scholastic Method," lo whoBe use nation but: the desire of nations and as the one anil (he only one who can keep them afloat. given in tne puDllc schools? Both were answered In the affirmative. In regard to the second question Professor Barnes Bald that he thought both religious and Bocial training should be given in the.

public schools, even though at present, it Is not considered advisable tt)'Blvo the ilrst. Professor Barnes had much to say about the schools and the social Instincts. A scientific friend told him that social distinctions were apprehended by the baby of three days. He proved It in this way. A crib and a laD mav be A Good Enough Morgan.

In a carefully prepared contribution to tlie National Speaker Clark files his objections- to the establishment of a Reserve Association, which Hamilton, Mill and Carlylc, others, trace much of the virility of form of language in Western Europe. Gerbert was born at Auvergne, educated at Barcelona, whose school offered a mure thorough, all-around education The I'nion Mine Workers who turned down Socialism are not afraid rif explosives, l-'nniillaiity breeds contempt, and their familiarity with explosives is strictly professional. Aeroplanes might well be classed as "contraband of peace." perhaps the next Hague Conference will lake the subject up in earnest. has again reached the point of suffocation. Six months is not an unreasonably short time to give the company to procure the cars required, and than any other of the period, went to Rome, obtained the favor of Emperor I equally comfortable in every respect, yel three-days old child will cry if DUt in Otho 1.

was offered preferment, but chose The Persian Lamb's wool will henceforth come in cargoes from Odessa. This Hear niuiouiiceiiieiil will iiilerest. nil customs authorities. "Carthago Delentlu Kst." was good early Rome doclrine: but modern Home's diplomacy regrets the. seizure of Carthage a French steamer.

All may he fair iu war, but all is not discreetly wise. when they come travel should be, for a time at least, more comfortable than It lias been this winter. Further Increases of rolling stock will soon be needed, for nothing Is more wonderful Iu the growth of the city than the rush of people to swarm over every new convenience offered them to get about. No investment can be more certain of reaping a return than those made in increasing the transit facilities of this city. to go to the Cathedral School at Rhelms.

to study logic. He became a successful teaohor, wilh talent for clearness of ex-, pression, and a lecturer on logic and argumentation. Afterward he went to the abbey in the Apennines, where St. Columbia and other noted Irishmen of his time studied, returned to Rhelms as Archbishop, was transferred to the See of Ravenna, and was thereafter made As. Pope, hie chief care was to restore peace and order in Christendom.

He was a man with a talent for friendship and an Idealist who Is credited with having given form to that idea which Anally emerged in the crusades. The causes of profanity multiply in "this town. A hundred more B. It. T.

utrface cars have been ordered by the I'll bile. Service Commission. And where does Wilson come in Ouy where, anil because, these solicitors of Sir. Roosevelt to violate his word declare that tlioy said to him. and that he assented to the declaration.

Hint "if he did not run, Sir. Tnft would, and that If Sir. Taft did. Woodrow Wilson would easily and surely beat 'him In the election." Notice The Kagle is not saying this. It.

is only reporting Pint-hot, Garfield, Fort. Osborn and a few others as saying this and Sir. Roosevelt, as not rebelling, but as conceding and encoring their estimate of him as the only man who could beat Woodrow Wilson in the vote. Sir. Roosevelt, is throwlug 'no stones at Sir.

Taft. He ont- carries and labels iu his bib the stones his intimate friends, former servitors and present idolators are throwing at Sir. Taft's picture in the Library at Saints' Retreat in Oyster Bay. And Sir. Wood-row Wilson is there portrayed as the Dread Alternative.

It is at least suggestive, and it may become significant, that with this The German who goes to Siberia live years for spying on Kussia is a true patriot. "True patriots we, for, he It understood, we leave our country for our country's good." Melng an alumnus as well as an ex-president of Princeton. Dr. Wilson might to know more than he does about football on very muddy Held. a crib and will not if put In a lap.

Said the scientific friend. "The Jap is social the crib isn't." Emergencies of the social Instinct were traced until, at the age of bout 12 or 14 years, the boy or the girl joins the fraternity or the sorority, which the boards of education have been desirous of breaking up. "Why not turn thiB BOdal desire to the advantage of the school?" asked Professor Barnes, saying that he knew of cases where this had been done and the pupils gave to their school the same sort of loyal Interest which had been given to the secret society. "So why let go to waste one of the strongest emotioag of the social life?" he asked. The great work which women of standing in society who are In the third twenty-five years of their life could do In directing the social life of the school was suggested.

The young people have confidence In the womun's knowledge of social life and they need just the training which they would therefore accept Irom the women, and Professor Barnes said that as the boys and girls at school are very soon to grow out of the school and to marry, they cannot get the correct social training too soon, meaning ot course, not merely social form, but the deeper elements of the social training. This would also keep In use for the good of society the knowledge which the elderly women have gained In their "NATIONAL MONUMENTS." tt-'rom the (Chicago Evening Ptmt.l What are the "national monuments' of the United StatcsT The mind goes to Gettysburg, to Arlington, to Washington. Officially, how Italians in Tripoli linve excellent facilities for studying the "Turkey with Hie dance; let joy be tnicon-llued," is their niotlo. ever, the answer is not there. Site for the Brooklyn Library.

Plans have been filed for the south wing of the proposed Central Library for Brooklyn, on the plot, between Flal-biish avenue and the Eastern Parkway. When legislation was procured to permit (lie use of that site the step represented a great advance for Brooklyn. Brooklyn needed, as it still needs, a central library building, and the chances of its getting one were remote. The demand for subways was so ur he opposes because it. practically creates a central bank, concerning which there will be a great difference of opinion.

'between, the two political parties, and, With the concentration of the money power of the country now existing, such central hunk would full under such control of such power, thus continuing the perversion of the proper function of banking from that of advancing exchange to that of promotion and speculation. The first point is well taken. It Is a statement of fact lo say that the proposition is to create what will practically be a central bank. Nor is the Speaker shooting far wide of Ihe mark when he adds that on this subject there will be a great difference of opinion between the two political parties. That is the irony of the country's financial fate.

Through a political microscope the measure will he scrutinized, to find favor with Republicans and to be denounced by Democrats, who will invoke the shade of Jackson iu support of their condemnation. It will not be the first repetition of that sort of history. Of course, there was not the slightest possibility that the Speaker would do anything else. The commission, being Republican, could have formulated nothing he would approve. No matter what the plan, hostility to It was a foregone conclusion, but It was hardly lo be expected that the Speaker would include among his objections the allegation that Hit; association would continue the perversion of the proper fund ion of bonking, and that it would perpetuate promotion" and speculation.

Either this nfllrinatioti should have been omitted or some warrant for making it should have been forthcoming. Nothing of the kind Is Included in Hie calculations of those who would Turkey's effort, to get along In war limes without a Parliament may be justified. If one lias to take a licking, the less said about it in public the better. temptation of Mr. Roosevelt, as a nymph-solicited St.

Anthony, with yet unrecorded results, should simultaneously come out the serious accusation that this same Woodrow Wilson had mortally hurt the young feelings of Sir. George Harvey and the old reel PANAMA CANAL TOLLS. Calder Wants View of Chamber of Commerce and Associations. Eagle Bureau, COS Fourteenth Street. Washington, January 20 Hearings thus far held before the Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee of the Houso on the subject of Panama Canal tolls Indicate strong opposition, particularly among the Democrats, to the proposal to give American vessels either free passage or a lower rate than will be accorded to the ships of other nations.

This idea was advanced for the encouragement of American shipbuilding, but the Democrats are against anything which savors of ship subsidy. The committee has not yet taken up the question of the amount of tolls to be charged. Representative ('aider of Brooklyn, a member of the committee, has Invited representatives ot the Mercantile Marine, the Merchants Association and the Chamber of Commerce of New York lo appeal-In Washington and give their views on the subject of cannl rates. gent that an appropriation for another site was out of the question. This site These are our "national monuments' The Devil's Tower and Shoshone Cavern, In the Stato of Wyoming: Montezuma Castle, Tumcacacorl, Navajo and the Petrified Forest, in Arizona; El Morro.

Chaoo Canyon and Gran Qttivera, in New Mexico; Muir Woods and the Pinnacles, in California; Mukuntuweap, the Natural and Rainbow brldees. in Utah; the Lewis and Clark Cavern, In ''on-tana, and the old City of Skka, in Alaska. Secretary Walter h. Fisher lists these "monuments" as those over whic his department has control. There are ethers.

In the Agricultural Department there are listed the Cinder Cone. Lassen Peak and the Devil's Postplle, In California; the Gila Cliff Dwellings, In New Mexico; the Tonto and Grand Canyon, In Arizona; the Jewel Cave, In South Da One thing brings on another. The laundry strike stopped the shirt wreckers. Now the shirt makers will quit. A falling demand often leads to industrial disturbances.

was available, and the library officials secured it as the best practicable outcome of an unfavorable situation. Because il represented progress mid opened the gate for a library where otherwise there would have been none The Eiigle supported that slep. But a great many things have happened since then. The most Important thing for the future of Brooklyn since consolidation is the organization of the Brooklyn Planning Committee. kota; Mount Olympus, In Washington, and An open convention is expected by Democrats.

Baltimore is far from Kilkenny, but is in the same category. And. after all. a cataclysm may be a blessing in disguise. FIRST DICK WHITTINGTONS.

IFrom the London Dally Chronicle. For the origins of Dick Whlttlngton who was never "Sir" Richard, and never "Lord" Mayor (for the title did not then exist) though, on the other hand, he was more than "thrice" Mayor of London we must go far hack. The legend wbb in Persia In the thirteenth contury, and Ralston and Houston claim a Buddhistic origin tor it. In England a play was licensed on February 8, 1804 or 5 called "The History of Richard Whlttlngton, of his lowe byrth, his great fortune, as yt was paid by the prynces servants," and on July 10. 1605, was licensed "The vertuous Lyfe.

and memorable Death of sir Richard Whittington. mercer, somelymu Lord Maiour." Thomas Heywood alludes to fabulous escapades of Dick in his play "If You Know Not. Me You Know Nobody." ItiUO. and in Beiiumont and Fletcher's "Knight of the Burning Pestle," 1611, there is a further reference. I'PIiiiI mvrnnciitiim innkes tf cm-tnill the Oregon Caves.

And the ar Department guards the Big Hole Battlefield in Montana. These "national monuments" are all In the West, because the act permitting their establishment n-as not passed by Congress until six years ago, when the government owned no public lands all in the East. How splendid it would have been had the national monument act been put upon the statute books In time to save "historic landmarks, prehistoric ings of Sir. Watterson, who had been rated jilt-proof or emotionally invulnerable, but under whose ashes of love and loss still burn the wonted fires of perpetual youth. But so it.

Is, and pity 'tis 'tis true. Sir. Wallcrsoii lias the sentimental resilience of a college widow, with whom the experienced Sir. Woodrow Wilson is accused of having cruelly toyed. The Involution or effulgence of Sir.

Roosevelt must be left to time. But very regretfully and very frankly it must be confessed that Sir. Woodrow Wilson did not. do anything he was not asked to do and should not be destroyed for doing It by those who asked hlni to do It. Mr.

Wilson came to the Sliiuliattan Club at Sir. Watter-son's request, and as his guest. Sir. Harvey came Ihere at the snine time at Sir. Wntterson's Invitation.

Pliunply to Sir. Wilsor. was put the question: "Is Ilarjier's Weekly's advocacy liurt- Picked Up in Passing A man who wanted to change his Inline twice within two years has been properly rebuked by a Manhattan court, only a woman can do that, and she has to be a widow or a divorcee. I structures snd objecta of scientific inter- est." situated tiucn government binds In like to see a Reserve Association os-: tlio original thirteen States. Crawford that plan will be adopted which will put our public buildings In the best relation to each other and will make access to them from Brooklyn and from the easiest practical.

Discussion of the sites for the new Sliiulcl-pal Building and the new Courthouse Is being held up until that plan is matured. In view of that fact it would be well to wait a few weeks before awarding contracts for the library foundations. Then It can be seeu whether a library on that site would harmonize with Ihe general plans for Pastor I was so sorry for your wife during the sermon this morning, doctor. She hud such a dreadful of coughing that the eyes of the whole congregation were fixed upon her. Doctor Don't be unduly alarmed.

She was wearing her new hnt for the first lime Flit-gende Itlaettcr. "Did you put up many preserves last fall?" "No. I intended to, but there were bo Vaudeville In politics is growing monotonous. Even the melodrama of a quarter century ago was much to be preferred. If it lacked taste it still had a semblance of sinceritv.

Notch, for instance, would have been saved from the recent attacks of lumbermen, Niagara Falls, the Palisades and a half hundred natural wonders would have been kept Inviolate for the people. Lacking this government supervision, the Eastern States must save their own natural glories. They must make -'o monuments" where "national monuments" cannot be. ing you?" "Do you wish a frank an swer?" "We both do." "Well, It Is!" new novels to read 1 hav. the building up of the borough.

If that In substance that was all. In se- "Mv dear, take my advice: You will qnence that was not all. In first order stin tlu 'ht' 1110 QUEEHLY NAMED INNS. rii'mni llin -rnirlnn nllv Phrrniioio 1 The new President of Princeton will be Inaugurated in Slay, when the weather is good. Ten months later Dr.

Wilson may have to stand the exposure of Slarch Fourth in Washington. MAKE BILL BOARDS PAY. Nuisance! The billboard nuisance mint pay for its privilege, says Leslie's. The enterprising little town of Rensselaer, iu New York, Is just providing for a billposter's license that will cost him $1,000. tt compels him to reimburse property owners for any damage he may cause by disfiguring the town with posters: are to be linittcd to four feet In height and five feet in length, and the posting of bills on sidewalks, lamp-posts or fire hydr ants is to be forbidden.

Loch I met 'nny distribute circulars for their own business without a license. Other cities are 'making the bill posters pay for the valuable privileges they have enjoyed; many more aro forbidding the nuisance entirely, on the ground that It defaces public streets and scenic beauty. get along better with your husband if you tahlishcil. Their purposes have been described over and over again. They know what central institutions accomplish in ami for other countries, and they have learned the lessons of some experiences here.

They know what would have happened, for Instance. In Germany when it was on the brink of war with France, a panic being averted only because there was power there to do the right thing at the right time and in tlie right way. Here calamity would have come. However, reiteration is useless. For tills year, v.t least, political progra mines will have the right of way.

For this year all capital will he "I'redalory" and the money (rust a sort of Kit Klux Clan. There must be a Morgan Until after election, and the Reserve Asso-ci-ition is good enough. One need not go to rural England for! Rive less attention to current flojtlon and more lo currant Jelly." Boston Tran- queerly named Inns. In the old Kent-road you will nnd "The World Turned Upside Down," while a street near C'hariag-cross I script. "Competition is the life of trade," said general borough plan is completed, the delay will represent a postponement of a few months in the opening of the library, if a better sile should become available, so I hat It became clear that the library ought to stand somewhere else, the work done on foundations iu the interval would be wasted.

The ap- Station possesses a tavern wilh the so- the busjnoss man. I "Of course it If), replied Mr. Dustili ductlve title ot "The Mr. Fred- La wc want t0 gnt trade so reg-erlck W. Hackwood, in "The Inns, Alua uuted the.t.

folks will competing for a and Drinking Customs of Old England," chance to buy instead of a chance to h.is a list of out-of-the-way iun signs. soil." Washington Star. Samuel .1. Tllden was his own malinger In practical politics, and a good me. The faculty is different from statesmanship, and some statesmen have it not.

This reflection is very publicly appeared George's Farewell Address to His Once Harperlzed Wil-sonlau Army." Then subsequently publicly appeared "Henry's Martial and Amplified Excoriation of Woodrow," for doing just what George and Henry had asked him to do. And iu reserve are held Henry's request to Woodrow iu October that Woodrow in December tell George Just what he then did. and the letteis between George and Wood-row, two from George ami one from Woodrow, before George issued his Farewell Address. The Letters are threatened but withheld. They cannot lie long withheld.

Versions of thein will be Invenl-ed. if the originals are too long with "What could you do to support your Here are a few: Bleeding Heart, "c.it and Shoulder of Mutton," "Come The Turkey Kicks I proprnition now available is only i enough for a beginning at best, and it would be foolish to make a beginning which might have to be abandoned, In view of the recent awakening of I Brooklyn this has become one of the self If your father lost his fortune? You 'society butterflies know nothing about learning money." "Dogs Head in tne "i'list mil Last," "Hit and MiBS." "Honest Lawyr." "Labor in Vain," "Now Thus," "Old Pick I "There where you do us an injustice. y. I earn 3I) selling Red Cross stamps viari nnpna f'ltv Innrnal Wh Vil Unve Thnillrht If" A Mr! laimoo Martin W. Littleton announces his prospective retirement, from the political stage.

We hope he will change his mind. Good newsmakers are already too rare iu public life, and poor ones are overdone. In" and ases which fall under the old proverb, "the limn- hurry, the less speed." It's wrong to assume that the wel- Our Responsibility in Ecuador. There seems to be an impression among the war correspondents in Washington. I.

that, the I'nited States will indulge in intervention in Kcuador. The news from South America indicates that something like a thousand men were killed or wounded In a great battle between the rebels and the administration: and Great Hritain, in view of the fact that our gunboat Yorktown is iu the harbor of Guayaquil. ntM the giumoat she meant to send broke down at Acapuloo, has held. The great American public in-! come to Farley was a mere Church tif-vents what It is denied, when what Is' fair; in fact, it is what might be cordoned is important or Interesting, and redly called a cardinal error, it can unhesitatingly regard the true' t. The story that New York anarchists or any other anarchists want to kill Governor I-'oss of is "phony." Any fellow who can anai-ch-ie Bay Slate politics is fully appreciated by the cull.

and related originals as rank lorg- Isaacs (who has been hit. with a golf IjhIUI yill have you in the law courts for dis. 1 vill sue you for five pounds damages! Golfer But surely you heard me shout Isaacs Right! 1 vill it! London Opinion. "Three months." said tlie "Your honor," bets led tlie lawyir. "can't you mitigate the scv.rliy of thai sentence? Would you s'-nd t-euutiiul actress to Jail for tiire "Three months is very Ugnt shooting a man." "But.

judge, you don understand. In three months the case will have been forgotten, and tlicn my client will be a frost In vaudeville." Kansas City Journal. Patience He promised to take me out I libcrnatiou is respectfully to llcybnrn. An indiscreet con-servalivc does more harm than a in the railed States Senate. A roast I do not mind, though hot; But, here, lny name's abused Who called that dance the And why am 1 accused? Perhaps my gracefulness Is not Conspicuous, at times; Cut libel's in the "Turkey-Trot" Along with other slimes.

Its awkwardness a child could spot, Somo tenfold worse than mine; I cini't forgive the "Turkey-Trot" In many a black-type line. I thought of luck 1 had a lot, When holidays were past; Now, worse than death, the "Turkey. Trot" Disgrace ou me haB cast. Cold storage space should quick be got To pack the fad away; v.rl none will mourn the "Turkey-Trot" 'r l-'. in decay! J.

A. the Inn with the shortest sign in England Is the which is to be found at Stalybrldge. An inn on the road from Tarbca ti Bagneres is inscribed "0 20 100 0," and this sign (roubles most strangers at tti-sc sight. When they pronounce the imci'in-tion, however, tbey find that the "An vin suns can," and that the has hit on an ingenious method of proclaiming the fact that his wine is not watered. THE ONE ETERNAL PLAN.

The laws tha- control the fall of an apple determine the moving of the stars. Bays the Rev. Dr. Charles H. Parkhurst, In The Christian Herald.

The material that makes out the structure of the heavenly bodies so far removed that were they to become extinct the last, ray oi light which they shed would still be on Its way toward us for centuries afiC they had become darkened, is the same material as that upon which you tread in your own garden and obedient to the same chemical ordinances. Wherever wc touch Cod's handiwork we And the oc- cry if they are too long reserved. "We pause for a reply" by George mid io the charge of Woodinw's manager that. George and Woodrow exchanged letters that neither George nor Henry dare publish now! The letters must out If thny do not come out, they will be dragged out. 4i- I asked the l'i-iied States to look out for Nobodv can properly Investigate the MiUh ll'rts Iii.U.r.

Steamship Trust' Octopus without go- responsibilities as a world i Kin-one. where he Is hidltrenous. power seem to lie growing. Fresh from Tlml York's Public Service Commission is secretly dictating England's do-iiolhiiig foreign policy is Indignantly denied by iiiitons. Parallelism, it is noted.

Is quite a different thing from causality or Identity. for an automobile ride and he came I around today to say ho could not. Patrice Did he seem emharrnssed? Patience Yes, I guess thtif.waa the! Meanwhile Theodore Is balancing be- wln, midwinter a Junket expenditure of few trifling mill-tween duly and temptation. George is 1 wm ,0 pulaiable in July? lions to mobilize a great army on the making Hie Weekly almost us Inter-! border 'turbulent Mexico. I'm-le Sam esting as himself.

Henry is "remain-j lb' tangled up in a campaign in China, bering Tilden." who did not remember I'resiilenl Itojas of Paraguay abili-innd is threatening to intervene again him even in his will, and Woodrow is cat-js while the rebels have a rip ou in Cuba. Now comes Ecuador with The simile of John hid its Jiiiiinislied bead when the Supreme Uoui'l's went by wireless to ValUalm. pr- trouble. 4ie secineu ii ii a ii 1 1 1 tinker's Statesman. rassed..

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
1,426,564
Years Available:
1841-1963