0 THE SCRANTOX TRIBUNE-SATURDAY, JANUARY 6, 1900. 11 "i K:CKHKKnUUKKnK:XMKUKKKKKKKM! Finding the &:20&?xkxxxk;uxuxxxxxxux;q IT WAS HER system that made Mrs. Robinson what she was. If a Ho Rot loose anywhere near she was up ami after It with anything she could lay her hands on. She showed you that lying didn't pay when she was con cerned. A llo turned Into a serpent as soon as It got out of your mouth, and you were ul.nl to got behind another. Not to say that her system hadn't Its drawbacks. Kvcry system has. And the naked truth Is sometimes an awful thing ten times mora nwful than any llo you can think of at the time. When Susan Jones came, however, Mrs. Robinson had her work' cut out. The girl lied like an eel there was no catching hold of her. At llrst she Just chirped out lies a light-hearted as a bird. "Pleas'm It were the cat," or anything that came uppermost. Hut the cat had a way of proving nn alibi that astonished Susan. So Susan got as cautious as charity, and It would have done your heart good to see the two at It. For Mrs. Robinson had no sooner got the ferret of truth Into one hole than Susan was out and In at another. Anyone else would have got sick and disgusted, but Mrs. lloblnson didn't. "For," said she, "the girl has her good points, and I'll make a woman of her. And she succeeded, for Susan got worn out by the sheer usolossncss of the thing, and at last shut down In disgust. After that the girl did not depart from the truth for six months, and then she let off the awfulest lie Mrs. lloblnson had ever heard In her born days. At least Mrs. lloblnson thought it was. It happened like this. One morning when Susan was in the coal ccllnr she found a lady's ring that dazzled your eyes and took your breath away. "It's one of them 6-cent things as you can buy In any tinker's shop," she said to herself. "Just a lot o' rubbishy glass. I don't believe It's worth both ering abcut." She took it to her mistress, however. Mrs. lloblnson gave a cry when she saw the ring and started up with her mouth open. "It looks like one of the rings mentioned in my grandmother'. Inventory," she said. "I shouldn't wonder If It belongs to the lost set of diamonds." Mrs. Robinson was a widow and lived with her brother John. Few men could look wiser than Mr. John when he tried It. His spectacles made him look like Solomon. When he came home ha put them on and raked out the inven tory and placed his linger on an exnet description of the ring. It was valued at $200. After they had all wondered awhile they put on last year's clothes, got candles and went into the cellar, but though they shifted the coal about for hours they got nothing but their faces blacked. Mr. John's was the blackest. When she had got herself washed and dusted Mrs. Robinson put the rln'j on and wore It till night, but before re tiring to rest she put it on her toilet tables in case It got lost in bed. In the morning the ring was gone. Susan took a red face as soon as her mistress came downstairs. Mrs. Rob inson Just stood till and looked at he." for a moment, and then said: "Susan, what have you done with the ring?" "I never touched It, ma'am," was Susan's reply, and the girl sat right down on her chest and burst Into tears, "Then what are you crying for?" In quired her mistress. Hut Susan sobbed on and said noth ing. "I'll give you nn hour to make up your mind about It." said .Mrs. Robin son. "You're not to do nny work for that time." Susan snt on the chest the whole sixty minutes and cried herself out. Mrs. lloblnson cumo down at the end of that time and found her still glued to the lid. "Now, Susan, I want the solemn truth." "Yes'm." "Where's the ring?" "Mr. John took It, ma'am." "My brother?" "Yes'm." Wise as he was. Mr. John was struck In a heap when his sister mentioned the matter. "What wha what?" hi- gasp ed. 'The girl Is stone mad. I never heard such a thing In my life. I never flld." e DBS SP2 El Tli Tnai is Happy, Fruitful KSarriag Everyman who would know the grand truth, plain facts, the new discoveries of medical science as applied to married life; who would atone for past errors and avoid future pitfalls, should secure the wonderful little book called "Complete Manhood and How to Attain It." No Monty InAdvanci. Trutment n Trial and Approval. We send one full month's Remedies of wonderful power, nnd a marvelous Appliance to strengthen and develop, on trial and approval, without pay, deposit or obligation. No exposure, no " collect on delivery " scheme no decep tion of any kind. A despairing man who had npplied to us, soon after wrote : "Well, I tell you that first day is one I'll never forget. I just bubbled with joy. I wanted to hug everybody and tell them that tny old self had died jesterday and my new self was born today, why duln' t you tell me when I first wrote that I would find it this way? " And another wrote thus: "If you dumped a cartload of gold at my feet it would not bring such gladness into my life as your method Ins done." In answering be Mire and mention this paper, and the company promises to send Ihe book in scaled envelope without any marks, nnd entirely free oi charge. Write to the ERIE MEDICAL COMPANY, iSusTe.lo, ij. Y and ask lor the little book called "COMPLETE MANHOOD." Diamonds "I guessed ns much," replied his sis ter. "She Is sitting on her chest, look ing as guilty as a red herring." "What Is to be done?" "Wo shan't tall In the police. The girl has been making progress, nml the prison would put nn end to all that. I believe she will clve us the ring yet. Rut It would lie wrong to keep her hero. She shall pack up today and leave tomorrow morning." And Susan got notice accordingly. "I know you wouldn't believe me," said the girl, gulping down a sob. "Then why did you tell mo such a thing?" "Because It's true." "Don't say any more. I don't want to hear It. I don't suppose you will ex pect any wages." Susan turned ghastly white. "I must have them," she gasped. "My mother needs the money to pay her rent. If she doesn't get It they will turn her out Into the street, and she's not strong." "She doesn't intend to try to sell the ring at lenst not yet," thought Mrs. Robinson. 'If I give her her wages she won't need to do It, and she'll send It back." As the old lady lay awake In the mid dle of the nlgfit, the door was cautious ly pushed open and Susan came In silently. "Mrs. lloblnson, are you awake?" The question came In a terrified whis per. Susan's eyes were starting out of her head, and her teeth were chatter ing. "What Is the matter, Susan?" "Master has gone up to the garret with a candle. 1 think there Is some thing wrong." Mrs. Robinson came hastily over her bed and followed Susan noiselessly along the passage. A glimmer of light shone through the banister above. Mrs. lloblnson saw that her brother was coming downstairs, staring straight ahead with his eyes dilated. lie approached as stately as a wax figure, and almost brushed against them. The light of the candle fell full on their white, upturned faces as he passed, but he took no notice of them. Down the next flight of stnirs he went, his sister and Susan following, for they wanted to see what ho was going to do. They lost sight of him at the foot of the stairs, but soon heard the door of the coal cellar creaking on Its binges. Stealing toward It they peered through. He was Inside work ing a stone In the wall, which In a few moments he dislodged and set down on the lloor. He next took nn Iron box olit of the hole he had made, applied a key to It, raised the lid and took some small ar ticle out. Then lie replaced everything as It had been before, .and, carefully oblit erating nll traces of his operations, left the cellar. As he passed his sister and Susan they saw that he carried the lost ring between the forefinger and thumb of his left hand. He then made his way toward his sister's room, Into which he disap peared for a few seconds. Coming out again ho mounted the stairs In the direction of the garret. "It's no use following him." said Mrs. Robinson. "I know the key ho used and can get It In the morning." Mr. John was coming down the gar ret stairs again, and they both held their breath in anxiety. Ho caire ail right till he got about half way down, and then, whether osvs of his heels Interviewed a tack or some thing, no one will ever know, but all at once his legs shot out In front of him and he went sailing down the stairs, missing one step more at every bump. With the supernatural dexterity which characterizes the sonntnbullst, ho managed to keep the candle In all the time, and now set it down in the lobby with a clank right end up. Mr. John rose with his face quite serious, and without tubbing himself or anything, went along the passage and disappeared Into his own bed room. It I:l evidently not the first time he 1ms walked in his sleep." said the old lady. "He must have visited the box before. That Is how the ring came to be found. It must have dropped on the lloor. To think that I never had the slightest suspicion. Susan, can you ever forglvo me?" "Yes'm." "There, you see the ring on the toilet table. Just where I left It the night It went nmlssln?." remarked Mrs. Rob. Inson, as they entered her bedroom. upl f Lit i " Here at last is information from a high medical source thatmustWORKWONDKRSwiththisKenerationofmen." The book fully describes a method by which to attain full vigor and manly power. A method to end all unnatural drains on the system. To cure nervousness, lack of self-control, despondency.etc To exchange a jaded and worn nature 'or one of bright ness, buoyancy and power. To give full strength, development and tone to every portion and organ of the body. Age no barrier. Failure impossible. The book, is PURELY MEDICAL AND SCIENTIFIC, useless to curiosity seekers, invaluable TO MEN ONLY WHO NEED IT. Free Trial Treatment "Tho lost diamonds are In the box which Is hidden In tho wall. I saw them. Get to bed, nnd we'll see them In tho tnornlnp." And they did see them, and a won derful sot of diamonds they were. A beautiful, dazzling, shimmering neck lace, and bracelets, nnd rings, alt us set forth In the Inventory. "It was really you who found them," said Mrs. lloblnson to Stuan, "and I'll hne them valued, nnd you'll get your legal reward and more I'll pay your mother's rent ns long ns she lives." London Weekly Telegram. A HUMAN SLEUTH. Extraordinary Skill of an Indian Scout In Trailing a Fugitive. From St. Nicholas. Arklchltn, a typical Indian, was chief scout at Fort Slsscton, Dakota, in 1SS2. Although ho knew English well, ho held the old Indian hatred of Its use, nnd would never speak It except under extraordinary circumstances. Ho stood about five feet, nine Inches In height, was slender, but wiry, nnd was about St years of nse. Ordinarily he was slow nnd sedate In his actions very dignified, but when the necessity arose ho could bo ns quick ns a Hash, and had, like every Indian on the north western plains, a pair of eyes that could equal uny Held glass. Ills set vices for ho had been cm- ployed ns a scout for some years had been very valuable to the government, and, In recognition of this fact, tho olllcer In command had secured author ity from the war department to pro mote hlin to the rank of sergeant; consequently ho went around In a neat uniform with chevrons and stripes, very much linpiesscd with his own importance, which he considered seo oml only to that of the commanding ofllcer! and he took enre that every one else nlso should respect his irank and dignity. As his native name Is tho Sioux for "soldier." It Is easily seen why he was so named: but ho had still another name, which the Indians had given hi in before his entering military cir cles, and that, translated Into English, was tho "grass-walker," or "trailer," for bis absolutely marvelous ability to llnd the trail of anything that left oven the slightest trace on the ground ns It passed over It. A desperate soldier named Urlc.i broke Jail one night, and was pursued the following morning. The trail led to tho west for a trifle over n mile; then It turned north for a quarter of a mile, and we followed until wo eamo to a tree nt the edgeof a, slough to tho northwest of tho fcrt, called the "gar den bar slough." Here Arklchita pointed under the tree nnd said rtrlC'j had lain down there to rest. The trail herp led Into the slough. A Dakota "slough" is a shallow lak?, the water of which is from six Inches to three feet deep, with a soft, muddy bottom, but not generally miry. Tho center of the slough Ir. uiunlly frco from grasses or weeds, but along the edges, from twenty to sixty yards out, long tule-gi'asp grows. This particular slough was n mile long, nnd varied from un eighth to a quarter1 of a mile In width, nnd there was a foot of water covering ns much soft mud. Dining tho night tin wind had rolled the water up considerably. It seemed hardly possible to track any thing through it. except where the tule had been broken down. Where that was the case even I could follow the trail; on reaching open water, how ever, tho case wai dlffeient. Tho eastern end of the slough reached to a point near the fort not more than a hundred nnd fifty yards from n brick yard, on which was a kiln that had I been built during the summer. The ' kiln was now ready for firing. Once I thought Arklchita was bullied, after all; be had come to n dead stand still near the tule. Then nn Insplra I tlon struck me. Perhups by a circle I , could llnd the trail. Happy thought! I put It Into Immediate execution, and found one. Rather elated at my suc cess, I called: "Come quick: heap trail!" He came over nnd took one I look; Just the suggestion of a smile played on his face as he said "Cow." I did no more trailing, but under 1 htood what was bothotlng him. The post herd also had waded through here since Brlce's escape, and It took nil tho 1 scout's endless patience nnd wonderful i eyesight to keep tho Hull where the i cattle had passed through It. The I grass rt"iii ' is of no i's here. We had passed over half the slough In this circuitous route, when suddenly Arklchita started straight as the crows , lly for the edge of the slough near tho brick kiln. Was he following the tiall? j On he went until he came to the I shore nearest the kiln; here ho stopped, ! evidently bothered again. There was a ' scarcely dlscerrlble footprint In tho I mud nnd water right at the edge of tho slough, apparently tho last step the de serter hud takeu before reaching hard ground. This footpilnt showed the toes, as the deserter was now bare footed. Another thing about this print , was Its direction: It stood at right I angles to the line pievlouly followed. Either the man had taken u sideward I spring for the land from his right foot, or he had turned around and started back over his own trail. Arklchita went down on ills knees and Inspected the grass, blade by blade. I kept n respectful distance lit one tide, astonished nt the turn the affair hud takeu. Now, Inch by inch, on his knees, he wienched the secret from the ap parently unwilling surface of tho earth. Eighty yards from the kiln, he looked up nnd glanced at It. The same Idea evidently Instantly occurred to both of us. The trail was leading to tho kiln! Then ho arose, and, bending over, slowly advanced to tho edge or the brickyard. After reaching the yard Arklchita walked slowly around tho outer edge of it, examining the ground with the utmost care until he came to the point from which he started, when he said: "Trail come In no ko out; man In there," pointing to the kiln. And circumstances proved him to bo light, though It was thirty-six hours before tho fugitive wus located In the kiln and captured. He Io Tamed Now. About two years ago a fairly well known young man of this town who, in tho days of his bachelorhood, was ad dicted to tho habit of conversing through his head-covering, wa3 deliv ering himself oracularly on the sub ject of the duties of paternity. "A man who'll wheel a baby car riage," ho perorated, loftily, "is a triple-plated, quadruplo-expanslon nss. On Sunday afternoon last ho was ob servedall of tho customary earmarks of sartorial economy distinguishing his muke-up placidly trundling a peram bulator through Lafayette park. A huge, fat baby goo-gooed in tho per ambulator, and n little lady with a bulgy, home-made bonnet walked at his side. Silence Is ready money, nnd there's a lot of pathos In the spectacle of a I tamed sssust. NEED OP A HIGHbR ETHICALjSTANDARD THE SOVEREIGN REMEDY FOR PUBLIC ILLS. Read This Striking Address by President Hndley, of Yale, Deliv ered on Tuesday Before tho Con vocation of tho University of Chi cago. "An unusually well Informed foreign critic, Mr. Mulrhend, has recently pub lished tho opinion that the standard of personal morality In America Is de cidedly higher than In England, that of commercial morality probably a llttlj lower, nnd that of political morality quite distinctly lower. There Is reason to think that In this view ho represent!! tho consensus of opinion of well In formed observers on both sides of the Atlantic. "The causes for this condition of things demand serious attention. A failure to carry Into politics the same kind of ethical standard which Is np plled In matters of personal morals im plies, as a rule, that there Is something In n people's political oondltlon to whose understanding It has not fully grown up. Such a failure implies n de fect In public Judgment rather lliun In Individual character. It Indicates thnt wo do not know what virtues must be exercised for tho maintenance of or ganized society as well as we know what virtues are necessary to tho har monious living of individuals among their neighbors. STANDARDS OP POLITICAL MOR ALITY. "The difference between standards of political morality and of personal mor ality attracted attention as long ago as the days of the Oreek philosophers. From that time onward every moralist who has really studied the subject has realized that there wero certain dis tinctive political virtues, lemeiiN imperial Ivoly necessary In the conduct of a good ruler or member of the rul ing class, which might bo relatively less Important In matters outside of politics. What is to bo regarded as par excellence the virtue of tho ruler and tho freeman Is a question which Is answered differently in different stages of society. "In the earliest developments of civil ization, stress Is chiefly laid on cour age to maintain nuthorlty; in a later stage greater Importance Is attached to the virtue of self-restraint, to submit In person to the nuthorlty Imposed on others; while In n still later develop ment at least equal prominence must bo given to public spirit, to use for a collective or unselfish end the meas ure of authority bestowed on each in dividual. American society lias wit nessed tho parsage from tho llrst stage to the second; much must be done be fore we have attained to the third. VIRTUE OK COURAGE REQUIRED. "In the beginning of civilization tho virtue of courage Is a necessary pre requisite for any and all governments. When people to far emerge from super stition that they begin to distrust the authority of tho priest, a strong and fearless hand is needed to create an organized police authority which can repress license and disorder. Whoever has this courage will have authority, for without It there Is no nuthorlty at all. If It Is possessed but by few we shall have an oligarchy: tho more widely Is It diffused tho more nearly shall bo approach democracy. We can have no social order, oligarchic or dem ocratic, without the personal courage and physical force to maintain It. So fundamental arc these things thnt there Is n disposition In certain stages of society to condone In the possessors of courage and lighting efficiency tho want of many other virtues; to let them vindicate the majesty of the law by hanging tho wrong man If tho right man Is not to be found; to let them assert their authority to make laws by an assumption of nn author ity In their own person to break tho laws which they have made: to despise and suppress the 'base mechanical' who would protest against this arbi trary Infraction of legal principle. "Hut the 'base mechanicals, ' how ever unjustly despised In n nation's beginning, prove n necessity for It progress beyond those beginnings. The state, ns Aristotle says, having begun as a means of making life possible, continues as a means of making life prosperous. When once tho necessary basis of authority Is established that authoiity becomes, with eacli genera tion, the more Impartial and more ab solute, protecting the laborer ns well as the soldier or politician. Tho bravo citizen cnn in these latter gsnerations best serve the cause of his country not by nn excess of persona! zeal In behalf of his nation, but by a readi ness to submit his rluhsis to the arbi trament of tribunals which have been established for the dt termination of Justice. FROM ONE VIRTUE TO ANOTHER. "The change from tho virtue of fo--tltude to that of temp' initio is mani fest In every department of liuni'in rc tlvlty. aH soon ns It advancs be.mrt a certain indltrentniy Ftnge. Fighting ceases to be n matter of personal cour age and becoir,' s a matter of discip line. S' that tho Meal soldier Is no longer tho lender of a cavalry charge, but the organizer of victory, who can give nnd take orders ns part of a larger whole. Succors In business Is i ers. to his v orklngmen. and to the con no longer the perquisite of the ven- suniers that purchase his goods or his turesome trader who stnrts on a voy- J fv-rvlces. In the absence of such an ago of exploration, but tho palnstnk- Ing merchant who understands the laws of supply nml demand and can regulate his conduct by Hump laws. In short, the whole feudal organlzi tlon of society, where authority rests on courage and services given in iv. turn for peisonal protection, gives place to a newer and larger order, where tho authority of personal prin ciples is recognized as superior to that of any person, nnd whose that man serves tho world best who can best take his share both In v leldlng and In recognizing tills authority. "Through these two steges.whlch j has taken Europe centuries to accom pllsh. America has been passing In comparatively brief period. First w. hnvo the lawless frontier community, where snen have such sights ns they can defend with their own revolvers; where In enso of emergency tho vigi lante who takes the law Into his own hands Is tho most necessary of citi zens; wheto the necessity for the pres ence of Judge Lynch W so sharply rcc. ognlzed that his occasional tnlstiikis nre condoned; assd whero absence of power to Insist on on's own rights Is almost as bad tis having no lights at all. With tho necessity for nihre reg ular Investment nnd employment of capital and tho eiitabllrliiiicnt of police authority, which is CO' Incident with that employment, the virtues and vices of tho frontlersmnn pnss out of politi cal prominence, nnd we reach th stags where the standard of social success Is found In plaving with keoness the games of commerce nnd of politics where every man Is expected to submit to the law, of which ho heroines a part, but where, ns long as he keeps within tho rulrf? set by that law. nil things are condoned which do not pass tho line of meanness or violent Immor ality which disqualifies a tnnn from associating petsonally with his fellow men. SUDDEN SOCIAL CHANOE. "Tho suddenness of the change has been attended with nil the exagger ation to which sudden social move ments are liable. In Europe tho men who exercised nuthorlty In virtue of their courngo were only gradually dis placed by those who did so In virtue: of their astuteness. Tho earlier stand ard of military virtue ns a qualifica tion for social distinction persisted long after It had ceased to bo the main requisite for success In business and In politics, or even In war Itself. Tradi tions ns to the us? of wenlth which had survived from earlier times exer cised a potent liultience even upon thosfs who hnd amassed that wenlth by tho methods peculiar to later ones. A man who would have that standing In tho community which for most men Is the chief object of ambition was compelled to pay his respects to the past no less than to tho future. "In America the case was different. Tho flood of Industrial settlement swept so rapidly Into the districts which but a short time before had boon tho habi tat of tho miner or tho ranchman that It obliterated, as with a sponge, the traces of the social order of a ruder time. Unhampered by precedent, each set out to make his fortune In a world where all were from one standpoint peaceful citizens und from another ab solute adventurers. Life In the half settled communities of the United States became a game In a sense which It porhnps never had been before; a game played by a series of accepted rules, and where no tradition or code of etiquette not Incorporated In the rules counted for anything at all. Tho result has been n:i exaltation of the principles peculiar to one stage of the world's history to an eminence of un questioned supremacy which they have elsewhere sought in vain. "As long ns the conditions remained which gave birth to this state of things free land, nbundance of opportuni ties, a body of men possessed of phy sical and mental soundness, and start ing to play the game with approxi mately equal chances so long did the moral and political standards which were based upon these conditions prove themselves tolerably adequate for the purpose In hand. They might be ob jected to by outside observers as In complete, wanting In background, crude, repulsive If you like: but they nt least enabled a vast social machine to bo run with a great deal of aggre gate happiness and with less glaring violation of Justice than had been ex emplified In nny other machine ;o which tho critics could point. Rut with a change In conditions this de gree of success was less fully assured. And this change has already coma ubout. "Organization In business, In local politics and In national politics has brought with It an Inequality of op portunity and an unfairness of condi tions In which the game of life Is played. Competitive business Is giving place to trusts. The town meeting has been supplanted by the organized mu nicipality. The old federation of states with strong traditions of home rule has become n centralized nation reaching out beyond Its old borders to rule over nations less civilized than Itself. ONCE A GAME; NOW A TRUST. "Under these circumstances it be comes Impossible for the community to rest complacently In that egoistic morality which seemed sulllcient for the needs of a generation earlier. We can no longer rely upon competition to protect the consumers against abuse when Industry has become so highly organized that all production Is centralized in the control jf a single body. It Is no longer true, In the sense that It was fifty years ago, that each man may he left free to manage his own business and that the eommunlt will find Its work best done as a conse quence of such freedom. Commerce and Industry are no longer to be re garded as games where we have noth ing to but to applaud the most skill ful player when ho wins and rest In the assurance that his triumph Is In line with the best Interests of the com munity as a whole. "What once was regaided as n gamo has now become a trust, not merely in the ruperfliinl and accidental sense In which the name 'trust' is now applied to all largo combinations ,,f capital, but In a profound-jr sense, as a trust exercised on behalf of the public, which It is in the power of those who control this capita' to use well or in at their pleasure, without ndequato re straint from nny quarter. Whore lompitltion Is thus become a remote coin 'ngeuey, nnd where law Is almost necessarily inadequate unless It be made co strli t as to foibld the good no less than the evil in private busi ness ontorprNe. a new system of eth ics is a mntter of Vila! necessity fur the Ani'Tlcan people a system which Flmll treat the tllroeto" no longer ns an Individual pursuing piivate busi ness of his own and wl'ii tho right to resent the suggestion that In should conduct It unselfishly, but as having moral responsibilities to his stockhold ethical advance, no political or legal solution of the so-called trust problem Is likely to bo eoffctlvi. PRUH1RITIONS DO NOT PROHIBIT "Deinngn.tues will continue to meet It with prohibitions which fin not pro hlblt. Visionaries will attempt to limit Its abuses by seml-sorlnllstln nuns-tires that are readily evivled. Rut each of these classes will tend to per petuate tho evils which It Is trying to check. They are nltempttng to reform by Improved legal machinery matters for 'hlch there can be no real remedy without Improved commercial moral ity. Nor ns-o wo better protected against tho abuse of public trusts than against those of private ones. Our old fashioned methods of representative government have not proved, adtquato to guard us against the evils Incident to the working of administrative ma ehlnery In our cities and our states. "To govern properly In old times I; was chielly necessury to see that a sound publlo opinion should be forme 1 by debate between tho champions nf the different Interests. A representa tive assembly, whoao members eamo from different districts, was adinlr nbly adapted to secure this end. Tho presence of members from every lo cality Involved was u sufllclent pro tection against tho adoption of mens ures through Ignorance of the needs IT IS TRUE THE,BEAC0NLIGHT Wonder is the best bread flour in America. ' . -1 iov .ws-y- vNv tf c . -Mt- - - kjh J. L. 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It does not require a long treatment a few applications will show a great improvement, and a few weeks carao you tsormanonily Face Bleach is not a cosmetic, but a perfect skin tonic. It docs not show on the face after application, and its tise docs not in any way interfere with vour daily duties. It is applied twice daily, slight and morning. Thousands who read this may have made up their minds to investigate! what Face Bleach is, but have as yet sicglccted to do so. It will (3&t Yw M&iMng ' but the mailing of your letter to Mine. A. Ruppcrt, 6 East 14th Street, New York, nnd vour every inquiry will be cordially replied to. Mme. Ruppert's book "Now to ho Bozuttlu!," will be masled to any address on receipt of 6c. postage. This book is the result of Mme. Ruppert's life study, and is invaluable to any woman who prizes perfection of the face and figure. Address all communications, to. A. RUPPERT, 6 E, Wi Street, New York. lADIItS IN TOWN CAN STSCT7RB MY 1' ACB BLBACH OR ANY OF MY TOILET PREPARATIONS FROM MY I.OCA1V AGENT, Jonas Longfs Sons of the several sections. Rut with tho substitution of the work of actual gov ernment for that of diseusMon, the representative assembly no longer proves equally well adapted for our purposes. It becomes nn arena for contests between conflicting claims, rather than for the Interchange and reconcllation of differing views. It be comes a field whero p.uty organiza tion can exercise its fullest sway, an 1 where the self-interest of the several pasts Instead of becoming a means for the promotion of tho welfare of the whole becomes too often a means tow ard Its spoliation. POWER IS .MORE CENTRALIZED. "With tho Increasing scale on whlcii public business Is conducted, It has un dergone a change analogous to that which we see In private business, It has become a trust In a deeper sense than It was a generation or two ago. A wider discretionary power for good or HI Is placed In the hands of those by whom the publlo affairs of the city or state are conducted. Thcso affairs will not bo safe when politics Is re garded as a game. Nor can they be made so by any constitutional machin ery. "A moderate degree of reform Is In deed possible by fixing the responsi bility In the hands of a single person Instead of dividing It among so snuny as to neutralize at once the power for good und the accountability for evil. Hut this change, however salutary and even neccssasy In tho conduct of muni cipal or state business, is far from meeting the whnlo evil, Until there Is u fundamental reform In the code of political ethics, which tho commu nity isnposes upon Its members, publls trusts will be no snore adequately con trolled than private ones. Nay, they are likely to bo even less adequately controlled, because a public ofllclai, holding his power as a tool of a ring, und acknowledging no allegiance to standards higher than those whlc.i have made his organization successful, Is as a rulo more firmly entrenched In authority than the representative .if any private corporation, however ex tensive or powerful. Until such change Is made the socialistic. Ideal ot reforming the abuse of private trust by tho substitution of publlo trust will be but the substitution of one set Jf masters for another. "If this difficulty is felt in Internal affairs, where those who suffer are at ZL Wonder is the kind that always. suits. &: 'V fc . "'P A 3- fci CASE OF Pimples &SISS', (2h U'3 M tQSt an" rate citizens and men of action, with th'i power to make their protests heaul, even whore they cannot make their resistance successful, much worse will it b3 In dealing with colonies nnd dependencies. The history of our In dian affairs has proved how much real immoinlity may characterize tho pub llo dealings of a peaplo who In their pilvato dealings with one another are characterized by honesty nnd straight forwardness. Whenever we govern a sace so inferior that It is not, and In tho nature of things ennnot be, ade quately represented In our councils, 0112 of two things must happen either It will be left a victim of the most un scrupulous officeholders, us In tho case alluded to, or It will be championed by disinterested men. not a means for their own political success, but as a duty which they owe to their own moral natures. "Under nsi imperialistic policy our government cannot remain what It was. It must grow cither worse or bptter. It cannot lemnln u game In which the struggle for success is as far as pos sible disassociated from tho moral sense of the participants. It will in volve elthef a direct breach of trust pr a direct acceptance of trust. "Our owsi experience with problems other than these, and the experience of England with this particular problem, both warrant us In the belief that wo shall move toward a bottler solution rather than toward n worse. Eng land's first political dealing? lis India wero characterized by methods totally indefensible. The career of Wurren Hustings Is an example of how n really great in. in may be Infected by a dis ordered public morality. Rut the very powerles-sness of Englsnd to protect Itself against o'llclal abuse brought home to tho English ivlnd, ns the con ditions In England or In America hud failed to Jo, the fact that public un 11101 nMt.v meant public Immorality. Without going ro far as to aFBf.rt that the i-cform of tho English civil servica and tho purification of English poll tic weie tho results of experiences In India nnd the colonics for this Is a disputed point we can at any rale see that th very weakness of England's dependencies has compelled tho young men of England, as they go out Into ollleial duties In these lassds. to adopt tho position of proteetnis, quickened by the rerponslblllty which attaches .Continued on rase 12. 1- V. woi fsemaove