w EVENrWO T.TgTiaWnlHTLAPBLPH-IAt THUHSIAYJtTGtTST 121J2i - -- a .... .. - PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY crnuB k. cuntia. rmitr Cfirlt n LtKllntf0n.Vlctrrtltfnt; JfltinC Martin. Cnrrtirr and Trranirer. rhlllp 8 Celllnt, Jehl U. ffllllam BlrgCT, EDiiioniAtnOAnDt Cttii II. K. Ctunt, Chairman. T, It. XV A tET . Bwntlo fcdltW JOHN C. MAItTltt Ganml rtu.lnt.a lianatVf ' n i I il i il i ii i m . . .j . i rubltuhf il dullf at Ptratic LtMta BullJInf, Indtptndenea Square, Philadelphia. 1N1 OtHWAL .. . . ..Rroat n4 ChMr"lt BltfCti ATUimo Cirr !. nfaa Dtitldln -. iunki.i iivai Mcl.Trreniian jnirer Pmt Fort rtulldfrt' . . . . 40 Orel Vemtreral IlulMlnr 1202 rrfbu-t UulMIn S Watetloo rne. Tall Malt. S W. - nkws nunnAUSi JV'mlTot rtrnrjic Th HulMIn Ni ton nmui Tha Tfmn tlullrtlnj HnUK lltiMB no FrlHrleh.traFM j-oxnex iirnEAo ...z rat: Man Kat. . w. iMt Bv0 82 Hua Louis I Grind flUnscniPTioN TKn.Ms Br carrier. IJiilt 0.ni.t, lit erata Ily mall pnatpnld HUM rf Philadelphia, cept where fnrelan ptta I required, Dut.r Ostt, one month. twentr-flr rental Dint OMT. one year. three ilollara All mall tub--rlptlns para,ble In ihanre Kenre Ruberrihera wl.hlnir aiidrtaa chanted mint lira eld at well aa nw atMre... 6t Loci Cmoo. . Lokpon. . 000,000 pound of Weight If truncated Into J2cent(melr shells would permit the bom bardment of Dunkirk to continue, evdry nvo mlnule, for about 1000 yen. An for America, tlmt bllllon-dollar (rop could furnish nn nrmy nnd navy which would make even a militarist's notion of ''ade quale" seem a timorous understatement; while the fact tlmt If divided among tho people of tlie cquntry It would give each mint, woman and child only a ten-dollar bill makes real preparedness seem an easy matter, tint let people who Would cmb'nrlt too hastily on bllllon-dollar expenditures realize that tho vnlUc of the wheat crop nuuiu cyi viviii. in u yvt vviim t ? i capital of 120,000,000,000. The fact that that figure Is more than half the tola! valuation of all the farms of the United States sug gests thnt the wheat farmer gotH a better rate on his capital than the banker does on his. A PROFESSOR FOR MEXICAN PRESIDENT? Taglo, Who Openly Defied Diaz nnd Hucrta, Stuck to the Practice and Teaching of Law In Mexico City WHATEVER HE NEEDS, THIS ISN'T IT $$&& to-.- .& qmmgmmibii&& ii2SKl-w -'' 'iV ntU tm VAL.YUT XESTO.R, HAtX 1001 O" Xtirrtt all pmni(ra(laat f Krrrlng ttaqtr, Initftnitnet Stuart, rMloWMn, TitMto at Tn rmurri.rniA rororr)ci i irroxo cm i MtiiiMiTTia. THE AVEnAUE NBT PAID DAILT CIltCWLA- TION OF THE EVENING J.KDOEtt fon JULY WAS PI.IH. rniLADELrniA, niunsDAV, august ii. iis. Co ar as Malory trill faH-e account o , tt'c are mojt of ua mere ilcmi In tho census list, noticlthslandlnp the efforts of a certain kind of flamboyant mcdl ocritv to make Itself conspicu ous bu press agent publtcltv- Our Fiat Law North of the Isthmus THERE Is every evidence that the Admin istration ha a deflnlto Mexican program In mind and Is prepared to put It Into opera tion. Vera Crua, If seized again, will not be so readily abandoned as before. Not tho promise of peace, but pcaco Itself, Is tho objectlvo of our policy, and we are resolved to havo It, no matter -'hat the cost, Tho purity of our motives has been vindicated time and time again. Our sincerity cannot bo questioned. "Wo havo. as a matter of fact. endured more at the hands of tho exasper ating Mexicans than wo would over havo tolerated from uny nation of the first rank. Our faith In democracy has caused us to he deluded by the promises of a group of ban dits masquerading as patriotic proletarians. A traffic In .murder and plunder has been going- on. One of the richest territories In the world has been dovastuted. the Inhab itants despoiled, tho churches ravaged. Anarchy has reigned unchecked.- Our pa tience has never been a virtue: It has been an error, n 'mlstdkc. That at last Is clear tb Washington and clear to nil Latin America. But peace Is now definitely In sight. The flat of the United States Is law north of the Isthmus. What Our Merchant Marine Needs THE United States has never given Its ocean-bearing trade a fair chance either to establish Itself or to compete on even terms with the rest of the world. For moro than 80 years It has been the pUythlng of politics, grossly neglected or restricted by turns. Whereas our foreign commerce ought to be leading tho world, we aro lagging; and wo shall continue to lag until our navigation laws aro determined, not by political expe diency, but by our best brains and In th,c In terest of the. whole country. Had tho problem been approached with wisdom and courage at tho start nnr rni. tlon might now be all that EdmUnd Burke, England's great statesman-phljosopher, pre dicted for It when In his speech on Concilia tlon with America ho said: There la America, which at this day isrves for little more than to amuse you with stories of savage men and uncouth manners, yet shall, before you taste death, show Itself the equal to the whole of that commerce which now attracts tho envy of the world. It la no one's fnult but our own that Burke's prophetic vision has not benn moro than realized. Out for the Coin PHILADELPHIA wnnts no "hnrmony" Mayor; sho will endure no Mayor who Is "neutral." A "harmony" Mayor means a Mayor who will agree to split n. hundred million of con tracts between McNIchol nnd the Varcs. A "neutral" Mayor means "a dead one," who would sit with eyes closed nnd llmbn tight bound while slippery hands reached Into the treasury tind emptied It of gold The people want no "nuutral." They de mand Instead n militant personality, a man of Ideas nnd of Ideals, one who will "nation alize," not pauperize, Philadelphia. To "na tionalize" the city Is to give It a reputation for good government, to make It tho prophet of a new order of things In tho conduct of municipal affairs, to murk It with n pro gressive leadership among the great Ameri can cities. These things a "neutral" would not, could not, do. A mollycoddlo endowed with the power of a Samson, a Lilliputian In a Brobdlngnaglan's seat, a sheep for a lion's whelp? Never! The mantle of power In Philadelphia must fall on the shoulders of a man able to bear It worthily, a far-vlsloncd person; a maker of opportunities; a doer, not a dreamer: a person experienced In the methods of men, keen of brain, Bharp In analysis, nnd, moro than all else, ro honest that, he his mistakes what they may, no question of his motive or the Integrity of hlB purposo can arise. The contractoru are hungry. They hive been compelled for four years to maintain their organizations, to ncccpt contracts at a fair profit, in contrnst with the exorbitant profit which they formerly exacted. They want to moke up for lost time. Their mouths aro watering. Their palms itch. They can hardly wait for tho retirement of the old War Horse of Reform, who has been a. bar rier of granite to wlthstraln them. They are lavish of promise. They take their followcrri to the high mountain and tempt them with the promise of spoils. They gloat over the prospect. They are bo greedy that they uro willing to fight one another. The wolves have not yet got together. November ' Is their Alps, beyond which lies the Italy they Intend to plunder, But they'll never tunnel through, and a "neutral" candidate will en counter a chilly reception In attempting to lead them over. Who tho candidates are to be the public will soon know. The brand of "neutral" or "harmony" will be enough to ruin the chances of any one of them. Saloon talk Is that "the Gang can win with n cur dog this year." But the voters, wo surmise, would not heBl- By ELLIS RANDALL TO PERHAPS the majority of the look ers' on It's woreo thart hunting for a nee dle In n hnystnek this search for a Mexican or group of Mexicans capable or worthy of national leadership. Name after name has been discarded from the list of "possibili ties" until out of tho turmoil In Mexico, mil itary and political, whatever the differ ence Is, n new name has arisen to com mand serious atten tion. In many quar tern MnnucI Vnsqucz Tngle Is looked upon ns tho logical choice for provisional Presi dent of tho republic, to hold office until by tf-ittuf Hut Innnl trnpn dure a successor to Madero tan bo elected As It is utterly wasteful of tlmo nnd energy to prognosticate concerning Mexican nffalts. tho part which Tagle may play In coming events muy ns well be left to mere guess work or rise to coming events themselves. Ho still remains a "dark horse" all the darker because his name lino been adver tised by n well-known gentleman named Pnnchn Vllln llnuni-r. n mini uMin lini btaved all dlctatoitr since Poiflrlo Diaz nnd is still nllvo and has waxed In Inflnpnen In that turbulent period Is hardly likely to bo at nil subservient to Villa or anybody else. At least ho meets one requirement, and thnt Is thnt ho manifestly docs not icprcsent tho Clentirico party, which the American Gov ernment declines to recognize. K - f !mzwzrvss?. ""xo,;, 'NWMrjryr.jj Mtum usitjy Yr.ei:2 &ffl8mww&& 'An. 2'Vv"&Zvi.&1. . iUbi.t(I aTJ'ftVHr P.'Ji H MANfi:! VArtrll l! TAOL.U tate to tie a tin can to his tall. Pubirdty as a Debt Collector UNCLE SAM has a. little bill-collecting to do, and In casting about for the most ef fective method to realize on his bad debts he has selected publicity. Last summer, when the sudden outbreak of the war left thousands of American tour lots stranded in Europe, the Government went to their relief. Uncle Sam generously paid hotel -bills and landed the needy tour Isto safe and sound on American soil. This Old was furnished wjth the distinct under- j. earliest opportunity. The trouble-raakers were those who appar ently think it perfectly legitimate to beat the Government. They are the type who feel that they have done no wrong when they vado paying their fare on the street car or train But .wait unt Uncle Sam gets after them with his weapon of publicity, On Oc tober I all t.hdBe debtors who Investigation has proved are able to pay will find their names and the circumstances of their In debtedness published broadcast. There ought to be no double standard of honesty It Is just as dtahonut tnVhui i. Customs House collector, the Government or the alleged soulless corporations aa it is to defraud a fellow citizen, What Whtt Would Do THIS year of all years brings bumper crops. With war eating away the wealth of Europe and the warriors gone from the harvest fields, the terrible utraln that this might be expected ip put urt tlie American wheat market has been bountifully met. There will be a bJMon bushehj of wheat, where only 896.000.000 grew In 1914 and where no previous year's rop had ever ex?, ewded 763.000.090. The added, demands of Swrope-iready shown I9 the increase, of tw fooa export um mmm to jsoj,- e,WSwill kwp the r p and bring the farmer- Wilton WUr from wheat alone. StawU wonder pagma worshiped Nature' tot wat part could thU gicmstie yield ply t ibe Oreat War if th lttUe Powwi, rttirt m it alone? The fclHjdiHkir pro. M4a ftwu Aatertean wha would kep Wwl sB bwit two ramHi, yftas lf 11 tb twelve nation at war attempted to ftnee their campaigns with t the conflict mM be only a ouster of a wJi or two. On the otiiw tuud. a pby4cal quantity ifcu btf mft t.Q. fewed la Wnd U,g. tiy wmm make && M tti)irJK m iytjr c M Fn m utmm MMMuia it ,,. A Fair Trial Fairly Won CUSTOMARY prison methods have been In vogue In ono form or another for cen turies. If they have been of any great value In reforming criminals, the fact Is not writ ten down In the records. The new plan with which Thomas Mott Osborne has been ex perimenting at Sing Sing has been In vogue a few months. There are records to prove that In some Instances, at any rate. It has been successful. "It has been my purpose from the start," says Governor Whitman, "to lot the Osborne plan havo a fair trial." That Is nil Mr. Osborne has over asked, and It Is nil that the friends of Improved prison management havo ever expected. They are content to let results tell the story. The refusal of the Governor to oust Osborne means, of course, that some hungry politician will have to do without a Job. But the pub lic as a whole, we suspect, will be content to havo a warden whose object to to reform and benefit the convicts, rather than a warden who would be satisfied to follow ancient methods, provided his pay check arrived with regularity. The Kaiser at Home in Tammany Hall WHAT about our own Kaisers? What about our Prussians of politics? Is there no trace. In the Institutions and men which guide our cities' lives, of thnt nth.. form of spiritual and material bosslsm against which Europe is arrayed? If ever the Kaiser la turned out pf Pots dam he should find comfort In Tammany Hall In all the Tammnny nala ot Ameri can city government. There he should meet an efficiency to warm his heart. There ho should encounter a despotism built as firmly as his own on the terrorism of armed force, fused most miraculously with the self-ln tjrest of subject peoples, And there he jeuld ultimately find a parallel of his own detrutlon-yie benevolent d?spot struck down by aq organized democraoy that sees the ultlnjaje and basic interests of hu mamy. " ' .1 " i i, .., , - The seldltw of no nation are so brave that they can win without guns. i" ' atjr tta Yri tb.ontraets and they care not who may be Mayor, The nm thji; Mr. Oarrapza knows he'll be arrested for disturbing the peace. There la one thing eertaln about the Itr. terstau Ownmeree Cowmtwign-nobody ctt teli from paju decisions what lt flWi 1 going to be. tjm ? Pld lute T Jew m 4n Mat 10 .1. u mTT-Trr. r I M.. m, Hoir to the Headship Taglc was Minister of JuBtlro In the Cab inet of Francisco Madero nnd did not resign his position on the assumption of power by Hucrta. He Is therefore proposed ns the Jcgltlmnto successor to tho vacancy at tho head of tho constitutional government cro ntoil by tho death of Madero. The claim Is mado by the Currunzistus that Tnglo has no legnl title lo the offlco of President because, they argue, when Mn tlcro resigned Just before his death all the r.iembern of his Cabinet Ipso facto became private citizens. Article Rl of the Mexican Constitution piovldes that In the event of a default of the President or Vice President tlie otder of succession shall run through the Cabinet, beginning with the Minister of Foreign Affairs. It Is urged by Tngle's friends that his cre dentials, aside from his ability and personal prestige, consist of the following facts: Tho uprising against tho usurpation of Hueta was founded on tho purposes of restoring constitutional order In Mexico. Tho Gov ernment of which Hucrta pretended to bo the Chief Executive was denounced as ille gitimate and was without lawful sanction. Madero resigned at the urgent suggestion of his friends nnd relatives nnd hntuin.i Ma resignation to Pedro Lnscurnln, Minister of Foreign Relations, who, In turn, caused tho same to bo presented to the Congress, which accepted It. Thereupon Lascurnln himself, by operation of law, succeeded automatical ly to the Presidency, and Rafael Hernandez, Minister of Interior, and Ernesto Madero', Minister of Finance, having resigned, ho thereupon, under duress, appointed Huorta ns Minister of tho Interior and followed It with his own resignation ns President. Ma dero, Lascuraln, Hernandez and Ernesto Ma dero having rotlrcd from office, tho Cabinet officer next In succession under the law was Vasquez Tugle, Minister of Justice, who had not resigned, nnd had not Lnacuraln ap pointed Huerta as Minister of the Interior under duress, then Vasquez Taglo ns Minis ter of Justice became entitled in rvnurv.. ., presidential chair under tho terms of Article 81 of tho Constitution. On the Outs With Diaz Manuel Vasquez Tagle. who is mnrried and has one dnughter. was born in Mexico City September 14,1854. His family had long been prominent in Mexican affairs, nnd Taglo himself hold office in tho Diaz Government. Following a disagreement with tho Presi dent, however, he retired from public llfo and devoted his tlmo to tho practice of law, which ho has found very lucrative It was said of him that ho was ono of the fow successful men of Intellect In Mexico City In tho prolonged reign of Diaz who was not contaminated by tho atmosphere of corrupt politics, Diaz and Tagle, Indeed, were sworn cuvi meg. That Huerta feared Taglo for his qulot force of character Is evident. Huerta never molested him. Taglo never feared Huerta, but stayed In Mexico City after tho usurpa tion and continued to practice law. Huerta had many good reasons for hating this man to whom his threats meant nothing Ono day in the National Palace, when Madero was nominally President but virtually the prisoner of Huerta, Huerta announced his Infamous plan "to serve tho country." In the room were Madero and several members of his Cabinet. Huerta tendered his hand to Lascuraln. who took It, Hernandez, it Is said, likewise went through the ceremonv. hut when the turn enme for Madero, the man who was soon tojdle exclaimed; "I will not shake hands with a dirty traitor!" With a ahrug of his shoulders Huerta turned to Tagle. who simply folded his arms and answered: "No." Huerta's Unfulfilled Threat "Well. God help you!" exclaimed Huerta white with the insult. Tagle made no com-' ment, went out and returned to the practice of his profession. He addejl to Jt then a pro. fessorshlp n the law schoql, the ohaIr of Civil law- Since that time neither Huertlstas, nor Carranzlstas. nor Vllilstaa. nor Zapatistas nor any of the factional leaders or foHowwa who have come and gone In Mexico City have disturbed the lawyer-professor. He has attended strictly to business and bowed neither to right nor left, Tho moba haya never loqteU hlo home nor' stopped his a,uto moblfe on the streets. Most certainly he is n mnn nut of the ordtoaFV. vsr wawfrWS..-1 .r- ,,.i" mmMmmmmWMmmimmmmmim.mimiwmm ...-.'wfe v Jm$ 4,dAJ'lW "WWAWiW,. wnx&n WHOM THE GODS LOVE BBAVE MEN A Modern Instance Recalls the Heroic Courage. With" Which a Great- Romancer and a Great Humorist Met the Test of Financial Failure. a. man out of the orditutry. PeNhance th future ik furnish new proof q(. his (B4cpidene and couraet. It' la already vWfn.t thai h Is not a re.volu. tionist of the type wMct, has eroutiht the name Into disgrace. If his BOfipanppaUan to the civil strife at the last fow yotug ihim that he knew its futility and foil, ho n.... be credited with powesslng Um aapfage of coautttin sense. rTIHK nIHrr ATnrrrnw mnntur nf flnnn-n ll.qpri to Insist that character Is the very best kind of security. Though probably a good many honest men have encountered greater or less difficulties In tho effort to obtain loans of money, nevertheless business pays homage to character and character pays dividends in business, as elsewhere. A good Illustration of tho respect In which downright manli ness Is held In the money markets Is con tained In an editorial in tho Wall Street Journal: "A preacher In Brooklyn, the Rev. Dr. Newell ,Dvight Hlllls, the successor ot Henry Ward Beecher and Lvmnn Abtintt nt tho 1 ugly old 'Plymouth' Church, which is almost a national shrine, gavo letters of recommen dation to two nephews nlno years ago. Ho became a stockholder In a lumber company they floated, and his liability wna, of course, limited to tho amount of his stock. The en terprise was a failure. No ono knows exnetly how much was Involved, but Doctor Hlllls, over a period of four years, paid off tho stockholders to tho extent of $55,000 and two notes, tho amount of which Is not specified, "Sir Walter Scott nnd Mark Twain did like wise, and Doctor Hlllls, with a publicity ho probably does not desire, Joins the company of two very brave and honorable gentlemen. "Hero Is n preacher who practices what ho preaches. Wall Street lends on character. If Doctor Hlllls wants to borrow a million dol lars down here any old time his word Is good enough, without collateral." ( Tho Stuff of Heroes The highest merit that wo ascribo to Hlllin nnd Grant nnd Lincoln and Mark Twain and Walter Scott is not that they showed them selves honest under heavy burdens of debt, but that when trouble and crisis came, a conception of honesty which knew no moral limitations nnd accepted no legal compromise was found Joined with an unhesitating and Invincible courago In tho struggle against adversity. When plain honesty Is deemed worthy of admiration nnd praise It will be a sad day for mankind. The honest man, merely as such, Is not yet a fit subject for hero worship. In the fight against heavy odds to pay off the creditors of John Ballantyne & Co. It was not only sturdy Integrity that Sir Wal ter revealed, but Indomitable will. Instead of crushing him, misfortune only called forth his strength. To find his means swept away In a single moment and a colossal debt thrown upon him was a torrlflo blow, suffi cient tp crush an ordinary mnn, but at no time In his career did Scott so clearly ex hibit his heroic character. It Is for thU that we honor him his heroic courage. He well nigh accomplished the mighty task to which ho set himself, but at last both body and mind gave way under the tremendous Btraln. Scott had himself established the publish ing Arm of Ballantvne .?- rv. ar,A it principally the success of the Waverley nov els and the author's toll In producing them that had saved the firm from foundering on the rocks before the financial wreck of 1825. The disaster followed from the failure "of Hurst, Robinson & Co. and the consequent failure of Constoble, On the 16th of Janu, ary. 1826, Scott learned, after a. period of hope, that the wreck was complete. The great romancer dined that evening with hla friend Bkene. "I never," wrote Skene In his remlnU. cenees, "had seen Sir Walter In better spirits or more agreeable. WMt morning early I was surprised by a verbal message to come to him aa soon as J had got up Holding out his hand to me as I en- ... e a, -BKene. this is the hand of a begger. Constable has falWd, and I am Wlned 'de fond e somble.' It's a hard blow, tra I must bear up. The only thin balrVsV''n U Pflr CnaHot a the Gave Kla Life for Jib Owdjtorp "If the gods." as Professor Hudson has re. arkd. "tov to see a brv n iJ siwt adversity, then In tro 8ottW7? 1 ; -nTKuVSIES By LUKE GUARDIAN of all his engagements, even to the uttermost farthing. And the effort did not occupy the rest of his life, for he lost his life In the battle. In his Journal he wrnte. mrlv in mifl. "Something In my breast' tells me my evil genius will not overwhelm me If I stand by myself." Again: "I feel neither dishonored nor broken down by the bad now really bad news I have received. I will not yield without a fight for it. It is odd, when I set myself to work doggedly I oih exactly tho same man that I ever was, neither low splrlted nor distrait. Adversity Is at least to mo a tonic and a bracer. I will in volve no friend, either rich or poor. My own right hand shall do It." Thus ho conversed with himself In the wonderful Journal. He had mado himself personally responsible for the enormous debt of one hundred and thirty thousand pounds. His pen wna his only resource. Ho finished "Woodstock" and then work after work followed one another In rapid successlon-tho Llfo of Napoleon Bonaparte. Chronlcjcs of the Cnnnongate. Tales of a Grandfather, Tho Fair Maid of Perth, Anne of Gelersteln. and so on. His "v"'1" "Bun 10 DreaK down. In 1820 ho suffered a stroke of paralysis. Though he recovered from it. his faculties never re gained their former clearness and strength Against the advice of friends and physicians ho continued to toll on. "Count Robert of Paris" and "Castle Dangerous" were pub lished In 1831. They showed a decline In mental vlgor-tho magic wand had broken Scott knew It and wroto In his diary: "The blow is a stunning one, I suppose, for I scarcely feel it. It la singular, but it comes ...... ua uio surprise as if 1 had a remedy ready; yet God knows I am at sea in the dark, and thn vpoom ii. ...,. . . bargain VCS3Cl 1Caky' th"' int0 tho unborn tTT'"'8 cnc0l,nte- with a debt of rfl ' , "LriS.UU. '" 8Uch consequences ... b4cai romancer, but In tho IS tnohfh iarTeA much andnesa Into the llf0 of the humorist from other causes. In 1894 the publishing firm of Charlea L Webster & Co.. l whteh Twain was a partner, executed assignment papers and closed s doors. I the legal proceedings that followed Clemens was represented by his friend, H. H. RoirPrn . ... .... y the matter a few years ago. said: "It was hnT.that.Clemen8 Sh0um 60 cents ro thedollar. when the assets wereflnallyreallzed sUePundeaeIadreTethetR C'ens C self declared that sooner or later he would pay the other 60 cents, dollar for dohar though I believe there wa no one besides himself and his wife and me who beSevS he would ever be able to do It, Clemens hm aelf got discouraged sometimes, and ww ?? t0 fi'Ve U "Pl " ,le was get! ting on In years-nearly 60and he was in Poor health. But he ptuck to U He was at my house a good deal at first w gave him a room there. ad he came aS ZZ h ch8?; ?he- told , ,,.-.. ,, nnr ng those weM ,1 moat ethereal, yet It was Grange Tow 'hS llant he was, how cheerful," Mark Twain Pays His Debts Clemens received many offers of flnan,, aid. but declined them all, Eerv cent D the money that paid off the heavy indent J ness was earned by his own . ,"aebted' fpellng In the early pan o77h. .H,s reflected ,n a lette?toh,a 5"0 Stn ten In New York: uvia, writ. "Now & then a atn .. .,- ell or Susy WarnendoTea TwUh , . ' think of you, dear hart.h- , n x blithe; fA.! J to'u Uvw ashamed. & deeding to lZ ? t. Vr in th. thick f St ui. ,! efceer. vu you ar. t ., ". "BRl l the drum or , b-w You only Z 7? . Uns squadrons, omotm colors raggnK a, th dJrt . "T pornry defeat but no dishonor & woiS march again. Charley Warner said toal? 'Sho, LIvy Isn't worrying. So long as aSff got you ana the children she doesn't; 37 what happens. She knows It isn't horf fair.' Which didn't convlnco mo" and ''5? was underlined. Tom Sawyer' had just been wrltfs Clemens completed tho story of "Joinl Arc" which ho himself regarded aa theS of all his books. "Puddnhead Wllsffl after finishing Its course ns n magaS serial, was published in book form, The: came the lecture trip around the world, 'Si the book of travel, "Followlnr tho Eanitor Profits In lecture fees nnd book royaraei ! amounted, by this time, to a large sum, Sjf ' Clemens wrote to Mr. Rourers In thp. faira ! 1897: Tft "Let us begin on thoso debts. I canne? bear the weight any longer. It totally unJa me for work." A month later ho wropjjj "Land. WO are clad to sea thnsft riphta rtlmSS Ishlng. For tho; first time In my life I'mi getting more pleasure from paying mohl out than pulling It In." Tho struggle hai brought close economics to the C!emgn! household. Nobody complained. In thrtfl years it was nil over. Every crcdltorJSI tho publishing house had been paid dolEy for dollar. '.jH Mark Twain's biographer, Albert BIgelojr Paine, writes: "Clemens had kept his ntw cial progress away from tho press, buCS nnvmpnt nf thn flnnl Mnlmq wnfl rllstlnei!! a matter of nows, nnd the papers made-tha most of it. Head-lines shouted It, theju wero loner editorials in which Mark TwaSl was heralded as a second Walter Sci though It was hardly necessary thatfcj should be compared with anybody; he J been in thnt as in those peculiarities wW had invited his disaster just himself." NATIONAL POINT OF VIEW Thrn In nn rlnliht thn mnvlft" education very effective, and In sanitary training ought to be especially useful and convlncin Boston Post. Now, as n year ago, it Is Europe that la inoia vitally Interested in our ncrlcultur.il good (Offl tune. Munitions aro not the chief product thaC Wfi nrft nrfnnrlnir tn annri thurn. nnr nrfl tiJO combatants our first concern. New York E' nlng Post. T.fiVint- vnnn ..111 tn tn .lea. tr Inllf-h nt explosive nonsense of Frank Buchanan. T3 want first of all prosperity In tho United StatWj ana inoy see sucn prosperity pretty wen tia llshcd In spite of all the malcontents wlwmjl Buchanan seeks to unite for mischief. BrPjKjl lyn Eagle. Upon every side there are found most favodj Tlll.ln.DB nf .!. Ttnll.J ...... ... A,,, mllllll facturers, our merchants, our transportation! lines nave tne brightest prospects lor immeuj ate large and profitable transactions. Cincinnati -.III.UIIVI. Thanks to a protective tariff, domestic) '3 dustrles were protected from competition wm cheap labor, But vessels engaged In forI would Improve the hard lot of eeamen soft body must pay the extra cost In the cpait wise trade It Is paid by shippers. In the m c11.11 ijwio ii wm nave to ue paia oy mo ua ernment, If paid at all. St. Loula Olobe-Deraj MILADY NICOTINE At last the world may start to hope. In aplte of all Its battle scare: A Davldeas has ventured forth To fight the great Goliath Mars. And now upon the battlefield, Whene'er a soldier halts or pwerves. Her gentle, soothing, magic touch Will quiet down hla Jumping nerves. The headlines herald her approach With all the brevity of yore. "Four thouaand million cigarettes Are ordered fpr the men at war." A force whose power never wanes. An ancient and beloved queen. She comforts men In times of stress; Her name Milady Nicotine 'ZIP.' AMUSEMENTS B, F. KEITH'S THEATR1 UllUOmUT AND TWm.CTH KWtJEHTH VVSBY XQT fiRNW Wnrf2K-TWS & MIjT.TT. nWRTnTHRR GhftiHl YTawovj! L - . itS". nKai-rlAftf i AuairtU iw, o4 n" All-Star 8 py tub DIX.4 -i BIT I THE MAhkht bt ar istH nti 1 11 A. M. 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