ra i;: -at THE ASHEBORO COURIER Thursday, July 26, 1917 v l)K I i LIST vi: 1. I :;. i; . vi. :.. i , V ,!. 1 ... . A 1 . ' , .', A ' - . -I. I l,M;. 1 T ... . )!. n. Ui, i'-.-'. 1 !".!.': il !.(. . ix'Ui. 1;:. . i c;.. .tc i.rj.ij i-. ryj.' j.. j i d. Ji.. M. !!-.; v. ' .t. . !., .,! M. j,.,, !;! A f ( ; !. im . (, hi- . K.:. U'. t. ,( ' ". ' ' V.I ::). t i .id S -j..' I ' f'l I k MiiJ km... i;:: ' V. ...,-..r i', !, i.'..kr... : 1 1 11 1 11 111 ndim.i) I'-YC ! ! j-I Ivy is'.nn..., Kaii,:. iK. '.I '.. t!0 Kiflkl, SPiW!-V?. 4'.. iVv 11 I .im. !- . ,', A!i:I."r.. J-JIL lo.y (. ..;k, ila-.n-viif. !'' .'. L-'i-jr i- Jur;-1 L. KoD- ijUllV! Hi. 'V'n -jdi An'.ur I t-.vctt . A.'hv- ttTl'. JM1. !'.: ,.. !,!!, Uarri.-. n). U'C" Ji- A.Ltj-t Aljr. I, M:il!.T-. I'rti. 1. r,.rf.'i.), J'rmi'y. J'iri, i . TJi ; t iS lli.lf, Mi. lor. Artlt- Kry U, (:.,., HiWto, it. l. .un.i'il ttn.-moij ilvuKi. Asr.-! (v., IU. Uiw!jn:i i).;ui. J"r;u.k:in- 4.:t. I 'a v.- I.iay, 'Il Dity. . J'-'-n ',iiviu lit ilif, A-h. t'ro, v'v-. J;;nnr Ivy yjjit I'ulk-rs, Ku , 'vl. i.'iiVtr Rin, nvrovo. M' l. J-lili Vc;ir Muv.s, liuil.la hum. Jit 2 2:-.. MiHj. Cun t! mith. K;.i!t. Iii4, tufly A-t r llu!i, Jiui:i:i.. l:-il. Fj. -I J...-UP, i',!..(u,l.'(. W'-V J'iiiu V;:!ji. r, J,';ii!lt tnin. !"". t IJ-'it I' Sly f r, A.-hi t.ru. JT.7, Wii.-iiit-yt.-rj UuKv or.mh. A. ! : 1 Clau.Jv :. Lialy. lmti'.ife i UiJU, Al'-s. Gi.iv.., (.olcri.ii,' Jul. Jiarutf 1). Wnlk. J. A.-h. rM.r... m. Wiiii.'iKi c.ui I'm,., A.-iu-ijoio. 751. Jo-iph I'. ity Dwvn, ..riiiroi . it2!. J'J'Ikc T. Warn n. Stnl. v. '."'6. Ju.. t.'.j.wjrJ J'kkat, V;.nh. vilJo. t-ii. Uvbvrt mum Ui-x-fi, Ch. t k.. JUlii. L'hnrli..' Virkvu.- Hi.rnuti. Kud UJ( nidu. K.4&. V,I!;;jji, (',) , c.ri, ( llin.-n. U Jii. William Arthm Ofinfur-I, Dtii. ton. "V!. Cliurlit- Alfon Covpiv. Kuilfrs. Bt i. Ktlv.uiij K Ct;iHi, Knnakiiiii!!. 4:1,i. WJIiam l-'rankliii Ham.-!. .Sjn.ru. fls. Thfimu I.iruy Ijiil, ;fiiri.. ll'iu. fo.n Hi un. sv.jii vi-, Kt. 1. 654, Kob.rt li. KoyulF, Fullers, Ht. 1. 147. Muyh J!al.h Jt-imstui , A-lu-bunt. ;'. J. l n licnnott Can-it k. Trinin-. ltil. lio.j.,,. iidtiiiito;) C'ux, Hum tuui. Janus Franklin i'uKh, Mill- orr). 2J'il. Oeczr Vagv CKriiuiti, Stnlrv, Bt ). V'm. Curtis Maliry RiclismUon. Hau Utiian, IU. 3, 17;!8, Oliver Carl Fot-miro, Ramsour. V, Jain,t (jltim Uontbicks, Aihi ..boro, 1 -1 lyti7, Je?t;e Thomiw Haithcock, Lib. rty. Rt. i. 718, Troy AJTrrd Drilc, Carawoy, Kt. . 752, Jonah Busstll Terk, Scagrovc. 2 Oilmer Davi; Asheboro. 1869, Oro L. Anthony, Glenola. Jyo, Gorgo Kelly Nec.lhrun, Spo- 3in). L. Itoy tngrrnm. Trinity. 4L'2, Omn Manly stokee-. Colc- 1753, Wade Ice L. Hifks, stak-y. 9SI, John Lewis Keacns, Kanyy. 44S. Tomptun yicVbi-rim Wootkll, Archilale. 673. Samuel I oflln. Ratuicri-villr. 464, Ed Gray, Glenola. 730, Moda Lv Yow, Quinlix. Hi. James C. Hush, Aebcboro, Star Route. lObD, Corl Dut?rd Cox, Afhibor... Bt, 1. 1872, Maban Cicero Kouth, Jlillboro. llu, Joseph Tlioruaa Lewallon. Afla-bro- M2. John I ranklin Hughes, fc'per. 1SS0. Kd-.vard L'aii Hrj-pn, H t-h rojit, Rt. ;). J4. Ralph H. Rusivll, Rni).loni;in. 370, L'tfrett Engine Coltrano, High Point. 1124, Kutre.ne Occn. Scafirwvr, Rt. 1. Williuni Cicero R.t tui!fi;:(1;i. lV.ir.)c-mc.n Y. Ra:;!i Jl. Hut h:-:, Coi r f'a'.if. ';i, F-PiM- Aan;r. York. Rr.n-- -Aa . Roy at 50 Bubbling Over With Vitality- Do f.-r . N.i.r.i. ,1 Iro!. is greatest of all strength builders. OTt. ,1 n;. i-fi:tL (!m fr?ngth and endurance of delicate, ii--;r""i'.rt 10 ) per cent, in two weeks' time. J v. r 1 Th , 1 lift- ! a if . Now . a rtnr- i.:ntnK Aa i tim r j ill.- i . .. If: .',-t!--1 Iron. , - m - i . . "i nMt. ! (. ; 1: -h.'lir I . ! .t ! v.. ,, pi- ; , tHoj- ft of - f , C r1... . 4 ct.er -1 !!!. ',',. -1 I .tT; 1 . P " . f .1 : . .1 . ' : ma'- - f 1 ,1 ' 1 v .iir 'i ; A-ith.i;.i t i ', .11 M j ! t '"11 ;uii.- i i . . look- . t -i ",f sfa not ! ;i '. it w r urslf . ''F- '-(. ! bow1 't)' r :. .-i':i.- Hi tv. y ; ." ur. t r .., . . liani- tuoo. i'oint, I- 11 I' ll- I), f 'til Ji-. 1. I Wi. Uilti. i WiIm-i l.:i,;u r. I'inson. 1CI;!', J'. A V,'y:k"r 1 njl-. j . lian- ijit ni;iri. li'.)!, W.IUiM t:u.o i:,. Ctira- J. :, I H i I'aySj , Roy 1 ,irj!..i. i. i. t a? R' 1. !.. C;l L : I . i l-'lli'j A'.! iV..;. t oro. oteetl A.-1 al oro. :tar K...ito. JlT". Clan in.- ' '! tut ni Yati Ashe. I. oi... .t ii. i. Williajn Itrbiinj li'dla. lyantlle- tnan. Rt, 3. :.', Ciirviii -ifi?.;t r, Ti.iivty, Kt li;.l. iVurl tri:j'f.ji Andrew.', Pen- t'.fv l'.i.H, Uaevty II. C'raV.n, Climax. 3. K..lrt Lliian Ailifi, A---boro. Rt. ';. )o7, H'.ii'.i' i' Hatmuorj..!, I anner. 7H). U;.niori. i!;tle., FuIIiik, Rt. 1. HJ3, Ma i.w.itiy Furk;., llanmeur, Rt. 1. :'. Allen '.'r.iil Ktcmjj, Trinity. I V.L.VI VJIiiSJ IJ( NDRLI) lUx 1 n I W. ycrt.fr.-!,. A.-inboro. Ut, 1. 14 r.t. I , o II v. i, Afhd.nr... Rf t. l,v.)."i, ,N a I !-.;. n o,l llajvtll 1 ijio'A', So .liui 71.' 1. lie t'lfH.'.t O'JJ.IoD. Tullcj-.S Rt. J. Silo. Attl.nr I 'jvii.-ri.:k J'ar!.u, So rh.:. itio. J-':ejiU Cfiii'!! I Ui Riinille tnoii. Rt. 3. l:'4.i. Jiir-p t Mi I Amick. Liberty, i:t. i. 737. F ar Ltian.i Tuebtt. f;f ntjrove 2'Jn. 1-Miiii.rnl t'livfriKtoli, A'heboro. M'l, Will Thomas lwell. riugrove, Rt. 3ii4, ReuUn l.a?.fil AUred. Handle man. Rt. 2 1 1 .. John Hammond, Caraway, IU. S7rt. l,.,'vtiii AJrvmdcr Ppcm'ef, Itaiidlt'iiui'i 3, I'tWuis Ftnnklin, Hifh Point, nt. v 1 SS, C.', I.). Ttog,i,u, AsJulioro, 'J"'i. Hen Ilairl:nn iijinshuw. lUindle rcon 471, Krntr t Uoluit'it, Trinity, lif.'. In'i fclwoo'i Jhiiit. Caraway, Rt. 1, O'.is. Harris Hill, Fullers. Zfil. ljjiiik' Klva Cox, M"llitt. ini7, Jfbn Clitlord l'ugh, Rundlenian. 13;;i). clarence Edgar Ward, Cole ridge. 172, Luther Syketf, Aheboiv. 0ri5. Wiley A. Rush, Caruwny, Rt. 1. 1733, Henry Myrtflield Campbell, Hamscur. 1U18, Troy Frauklitt Pool, Edgar. 'JIM), Ernert A. Wiles, Jr., Asheboro. 376 Thomas 11. Elder. Trinity. 1V4. tiumey U. Tysinger, Asheboro 233, Pearl Holmet. ARhtboro. U77, Roy IaiiA, Randlemaa. D0. CoJvin Horrl&oo Beane, Sea grovoi. 1522, Jaitie Moody Alred, Frank ILnville. 578, Walter Harrison Parks. Pifgjah. 16C2, Pearson Nixon, Climax. 203, Artemu3 Wirmingham, Kandle man. 1870, Roy Vaughn Anthony, Glenola. 611, Kly8?ci?s E. Ucan, Cngle't Mill. 403, Claud Vestal Jones, Trinity, Kt. 1. l'.'G. Jnnie E. Underwood, boro. Aine- Constipation and Indigestion "I hove used Chamberlain's Tr.blets and must says that they are the best i nave tTvr usim.i lor constipation unti induces! ion. My wife also used them for mdigc-tioti and thev did her good," .vrius Eugene S. Knight. Wilmington. I a.amberlains Tablets are mild1 and gentle in their action. Give them, a trial. You are certain to he pleased with the agreeable laxative effect which they produce. Obtainable where. :vcry- Mis- l uty Lore of Concord died at the Charlotte Sanatorium Thursday af t. in. .on aft.'i a ti:ive wr tics' illness. Taking Iron Did It r how fur you eon IKlg T Nt t lt ..f ..r.Vrnry isu-tun.- Jir .lny fttr I-., 'i lin tt your I j.v. f,,r youm-lf how 1 titv nn b.' r- nihns Mil h wMl i.nibf th'Sr . ii:,i r..Virn.- an4 nt(rly r' if nil symptoms f iyipi, llvrr i ,.thr tr nilil"! In fnm in tn four r .iiv nil iiint'ly by tln Irn , .- !)r f..rni An this ftr thy i In . .ins r.u hirrj 0'ti..rtiif for :;!'.! witN'iit oMiUilr.g ry l."iflt. ! il -n't f:ils th 'M form . t rKlu'-' . ir :i rtj(" i-r ttntur o Iron i.i rnva k f rnt Vim must .- 'r in for-n it cun h mtilly r.-rt find n1iiillt.M likw Nuxl1 n If mi w.mt It t. An you any "o4. irv:s. !t may ir-'V worit thAO ui s V.iny An rlilt or prlflhtr wn 'b 1av !iin;.ly hn-iisfl hi w th . rt of erit trnth Anil htI Mll'.l hip M o4 with Iron ..r v w.Mit I'lti tti" nffrny. whll iv :hr fi rn iI'.wa to lnlorl- - 1-f'i viniply for th lark of Ir oil. . I'T. M ",: -r'urwl If rii'lM fclmf ? rr Si.-t -ni Ji at' ..riwc ir- mm . U. Va: .k ill jtU4 ktrlK U ; .i -nSiiM i i.lura tk - M ti 1 k Air ipl atuarl. rf. U. r4-i :t 1 n pwl rwlt, la . iVw t . at fw aarrja ran t f r-.ii T'ja X-'. tmfa haia aara t'i a .a Nuti'1 If it laa rr f rf!l 1. aiir .-llar!la'.a laaiitaUua If IAv 44iinM - !, .pin ar iaa aa4ar M ao larka irao r.i t';f urr. aar iaal a a l a-n' tiia jrwHail trr baTa an ar'oif i 'r a tlir a!aa w 'a rVaji4 rao a. ay ' 1 -i ! at :aaat 4""xii.t r tu Krnatk a4 aa ; . 'a ia ' tlaa tl $ i-vxmimi la UaU bi ail aal dructfiatj. DRY1NG AND CANNING (Hy Home Demonstration Agent.) i Quite a numlier or imiuines nave tiea-'comp to the onu'C askniR about the atl visability of usinR preserving powdt rs ion.'in fruits and vegetables. There aro n ! L'reat many of the so-railed powders n 'the market. These are sold not only I under advertised trade names but by drupirists and petldlers. In the diree- itiniis for use the housewife is told to (ill the jar with the fruit or vegetable to be canned, to cover with water, and to add a tcaspoonful of the powtler. It is true that these powders may prevent the tleray of the fruit or vegetable, but they also encourage uncleanly, rare less work ami while with small dosei the infUit-ncp may not be apparent in an adult in normal health, with a child or an invalid the effect may be of a serious nature. The best way of pre serving fruits and vegetables is by sterilization by means of heat. This can be done very easily and the use of the powders is not to be recommended Salicylic acid, the most common pre serving powder, is also used in em balming a dead body. Common sense teaches us that a powder strong enough to preserve a dead body is not verv good for our digestive system Many fruits and vegetable, whieh often go to waste may be saved by the simple process of drying. If properly dried, they retain their natural flavor and food value and can be made into wholesome and attractive dishes. Tb - ' may bo dried in aa oven, in traya . racks over the kitchen stove, in a sp.41 cially constructed drier or spread in the sun. Directions for a home-made drier will be furnished upon request. The quality of the dried product de pends upon having the vegetable ab solutely fresh, young, tender Bnd per feetly clean. Vegetables should be blanched to remove the strong odor and flavor from certain vegetables and to soften and loosen the fiber. This allows the moisture to evaporate more quickly and helps to hold the natural flavor lilanching consists of plung ing the Tcgetablcs into boiling water for a short time. Use a flour sack for this. After blanching, drain well and remove surface moisture by placing vegetables between two towels or by exposing them to the sun or air for a short time. Recipes String Deans Wash and string the beans carefully. The young and ten der beans may be dried whole. Those that are full (frown should he rut in one-fourth to one inch lengths with a sharp knife. Blanch in boiling water from six to ten minutes, depending on tne age or me bean. one-half tea spoonful of oda may be added to each gallon of boiling water to help set the color. Remove surface moisture and spreatl to dry. Lima Beans Lima beans can be shelled from the pod and dried. Gather while young and tender, wash and blanch from 5 to ten minutes and dry as the siring beans are dried. Pumpkin and Summer Squash Pare and cut in about one-half inch strips and blanch three minutes, re move surface moisture anil dry slowly Children dry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA Religious Services in Court Hrtuse Sunday Evening for Company K uev. aiirnnardt. Presiding Elder of Greensboro District, to I'rtch Ser mon. There will be a union service next Svinday morning at 8 o'clock at the COUTt house for Co. K. Presiilinir Klrler uarnnanit or tne M. K. church Will preach. Co. K will attend in a body. I'UDiic invited. WHAT CATARRH IS - . t . ,, . .u'.J I " ha.s ben it every third person has catarrh in some form, Science has shown that nasal catarrh often indites a geni WCaknes a. . . . . , .f the T' arLd eatments lilt lUIIU VI BlllUtS SI1U TrtJIUrS UU MlUC, if any good. To correct catarrh you should trat its Caue by enriching yonr Wood with the oif-looi In Scott's Emulsion which is a tne hcuml food and a bail. ling-tonic, Itve from alcohol or auy harmfultlrugs. Try it. i 6cott 4 Bownt, Bloomficlii, M. J. AMERICA'S LIFE RESTS ON FAMILY Without Soundness In tha Homa All Else Is Naught. WOMAN THERE PRE-EMINENT Br Rtv. Dr. NEWELL DWIOHT HILUS.Pi.to ot Plyanoutn Church. Brooklyn, H. V. (a "The AtnerV ran PamHy" Dr. Newell Dtght HUlls. pastoy of Plymoxiftj rhorch, Brooklyn, pays tribute to Aincr iean womunliood and Its woi-r In n 1 . 1 1 f 1 1 1I kt AUll inaliitiilninK the itooel in Atnerienn life. Ho chose as bU test f.T tills onn of tb serlos of sermons tie U prenehlnif Prov erbs xxxL Kt. IB. NIWCIX irvrioHY IlllJUa. By way of pre-enilneneo th Ameri can family U the flrt snl most lra portaut of Ameriean liistttutiona. No other Idea lies so close to tha heart of our eager nn1 romnuindtmt AmfirV cn s.elety. I'roin the family bare eoroo our schiiol. our rbureb aid all our civic Ideas. Tlte republic could Hjwrn all Its other forms of democracy more easily than it could the ha of th.. idea of the family. Tb( mere mention of eertnln names--the Field family Id eonuectlon wllh the Atlnutle eHble, the movement for Inter national law and the grrait names on tho lench. of the supreme eourt-4a flll d with sugKOMtlim. Witness also the family of Lyman Beeeher and the .idanis family of New England. Mul tiply these families and tlietr Influence Is the abadow rust acroas tha land In the form of tb Institutions they ore etnd. No other nation has exalted the family after the fashion of thin repub lic. In this republic nil things were and are and w ill be for the sake of the family. In tho Interest of the homo and the bnloved ones there all the wheTs turn wand, all tho sblps set sail, all the tool work by night and-day. To bring lurk treasure to the home men dare (lis rtHI under tlw fi-oaeo norta and 1wrn uader tho troptc sun. Take the ratntly out of Amerlrnn soetty and It to taktnv the lirtelleet from tis body. Mis hea-t from tha sunbeam, the cuV rure from the library, the sin from too aky, Msvlng only a black sad empty soekt. When flie sun diss all the arrests die with ft TVs Histsry f ths Family Is ths His tsry of Womik. Iu gmiersl the history of the family Is ths history of woman and her lav). It Is a singular faet that the lllirartes hold ths history of wars, arts, isw, ships, engine, stones, stars, bttt that n una bas srer wrltun a history of love An American scholar in one of Us "club essays" has commented wttli keen satire upon the oversight of fas historian s to that strange turn nit of the bsart that be tins wttb tie eX ebaiitfs of flowers, that Jonrueyn on to ward poetry and daily letters, that be gins to talk in Images of psradtes or hsll and before the Inflammation has subsided culminates lu a wedding or stiteide. Ttie history of Uteraturs 1 very tarfety the history of this beautiful and patbette attsrbmeiit taat estah Hshes the family ami bs enriched the Ihmiio through all ths centuries. In tto far off Hslirew days the old hook falls us about brave boy and a beau tiful trlrl who at night fell dowo and prayed to God tbat they might grow old together. That enthronement of the heart explains the Ideal of Re bekab aud Ixnae. Wsman'a Place In Litaraturs. Italian literature was boro wttb Beatrice, Just as I .aura made Petrarch aud Krancescu transfigured Paolo. It Is a woman also tbat walks through II the pages of Mallory's "iforte 4' - Arthur" and glorifies each Uyl of the ktokt. Shakespeare understood, for It U a man's blunder that previoitatca every crisis In th life of Hamlet, aialu by Indecision; of Othello, stupid, slain by bis own jealousy; of Henry IU. iid Wolsey, ruined through selosh- ness and blind ambition. Always wheu redemption eornes It is at the hand of some Imogens, Portia r Cor defla. Every novelist of the first order ef Intellect puts womsn in the, very heart of the scene. Jesnle Daans sheds luster uiion all who stand with In the circle of her life. Hawthorne's Hester glorifies the dark shadows of The Scarlet Letter." At the Monday Literary club In the Parker House Boston, about 1S70 Ralph Waldo Em orson made the statement that the iioel was In some respects the high est form of literature, hut was lmpos slble without a woman hul'IUij,' in tlu center. A Book Without a Woman. A youn-.' maa. "Adirmidat !;" Murray then and there atlirmed that be could write a novel that would sil. oecd with out mentioiiiu the name of woman. No woman's name Is mentioned lu the imsres. but unconsciously Murray reveiiled the failure of his book In tin title, 'The Story of a Man Who DiUu't Know Much." The central figure In Murray's tale Ls a youth who h.ul all the feminine qualities, through which jr array hoped to evoke the sympathaKke Interest of his readers. It cwld not he otherwise. .Society la a nntl npft Hpntinif the union of two tampera nieuts. flie masculine that bi tiled and tmalicralile. the femtnlun with which the woiimu is stained through :uh1 tlnoiili. like crimson In the flne-t wool th.it l itMiiot lie washed out. Uod never inteoiled that men Mtiouad t femliiizt-.l or women made virile. The patlieiio attachment that has suhtriBtsd httueeii L'lvnf s. iuU like Rotwkah aud Isaac, .spasla and I'orliJw, Eotieit Browniiiit and Klifalwth Barrett td) us plainly that the path of lnve la the only road that leads to paradise, that can turn a hut into a bouse, a tent Into a palace and, though the houne be only a frail tent set up in the denert, with no lamp save the llvtit of tho Urafty, yet lor Jacob home is where Hacbad ts and heaven Is that uuseen ctfy of amorhyrf behind whose walla of siTver Rachel bath disapjiearetl. Tha Breakdown of ths FsmUy. Now, all these considerations 1m crease the alarm of patriots who koe their country when we come to consid er the threatened lireakdown of the American family. There is a well known priuciiu In economic that a stromr domand will create the Instru ments for the supply. Tho mere fact that there are now 3,000 court to whl -li unhappy couples may repair for divorce ul.llshos the keen demand for Institutions that can sever a th that Is frail as a thread, but should be as strom; as a steel cable. It is a far cry from the :,0ti0 divorce courts, of tnday luck to the time a century and a half ago. when the mother of Alexander Hamilton, a beautiful HugUetkOt gtrl, Uvitiir In the West India btianda, want ed a divorce from the Dane, who bud become drunken, cruel aud depraved, who had tone back to Europe and from whom she never heard attain. There win not one court In tlw Brttjxh ook nics or in 'irest Britain the coukl give a decree of separation. Iileorce meant that the woman with bT wrongs must go to London, secure tn finence strong enesigti to carry a bill through the bouse of cotnuuua at an expense of about tfift). th Deo- duliiiu has swuiu( to ttiey other ea treme. Divorce 4n Asssrtoa. There are now 3,000 dlruios tnlQs giiiiillng all day lorn? In omr country. Sixteen tlioasand dtyorces have been granted within a slugle yesur, though the same year witnessed only 800 di vorces in England and about a sex In Canada. Indeed, ttra rcmerhj of oar country showed some flnta kjd ttnrss divorces In Canada aud over SOjOOO to our country. Mont (USQtrtrOnd ID spectacle of the tuluUtcr raitttng Jioupg men and women to rha rooming aud a judge separaflug ftteiu l;i ths aftsr noon. The blackest sart of tk trays dy concerns the ettfcV ihd a father's culillimr haul s irW wKh out a mother's love. Rsaaona JFr Mvorsaa, From the vlewpoW of t'ilHfWsi's "Dream of Fair Warasn nJa teeuth century and oar 4tfmn t Inn of noble woitmy la trhs tqbttsah woman's chief nxHlvs far aaatlsat -ar.itim Is her rerituAi Irwa) thja ina inoi'iillty of man. ttotna ptw watwatn ii)eal to the courts saxes a sf nov siipport aud tbe lii'ifleet sf a aMai t provide for bin ctilldrssi. M nm fV tervals a working vtosnan seeks rs dress from a judge bseaua fte ma Is a tyrant aud so brutal tu ivh) r0tMh tbat the little children m 1 ap proach of their father as ftts dM flees from the hawk and tta kush lEHa the coming of tbe wtf. Ittsa tM SaUsf motive lu the vsjt masOy ol saess Is woman's dislike of lepeaa, phwsttaVl and moral. Think ef wlutt Us bash of the fact tbat hi a Urlrf Internal s cently fifteen huudreQ batsja Don' tn the tenement regtuus of -XaW Vosk were committed to hotuea Ar assCla mlndcl children! Mvea hi W faNff times of Pliny, sixty yatvra aftax tb birth of Jesus, tbe Roruaa laWyn ex plains the dlvone eilt bf ths tmnMicaV Ity of men. How slgjiilcaai kt- tkkt passage: "Five tmadred ye4cs after tbe City of the Seven HlUs waa atomusV ed a divorce rase uMalued a ptac ka our legal record. I will not umlsctaka to assert that there were no dteorces for the first BOO years of tha Of of Rome, but certain It Is that there to no authentic recorded divorce during these first five centuries." Than what happened? During the era of luxury and manimoulsm men became faise, Immoral, sensual. 4'or aflSUue tha Bo- tnan matrous cheiistied secret anger J then tbelr indignation broks tuto fsieech. At last these Injured wotten took on tbe aspect of the tiurtlssatlni tigress whose wfae4M have bso in jured, aud within a single taoatli fifty Roman matrons potssued ttaetv boa bauds. What evil men did sow that they were made to reap. Wsman'a Revert. Either tbe workingmen of tuts coun try must give up whisky, setMoaJtem, drugs, and maintain a life of hsmlth and sobriety aud keei themselves aa clean within and without as they n during their twenties wheti tbey were lovers, or else tbe wotklug wotnha are gtjing to refuse to bear children tbat carry forward the sins of their fathers. These women understand the threat ened breakdown of the Amerlrnn phy sique. It Is not their fault tbat iu the tenement house region children are born with Imperfect vision, teeth with out enamel, feeble hearts and poor cir culation. Science, sound ethics, love of humanity, all unite In telling us that these w.trklni? women are right in the rebellion that they are organizing. One of the duties that lie in front of our legislators Is the duty of giving every mother. rl''h or poor, at least $1to a year for the support of every Initio she hears until tbe child is four teen years of ago. When the state plays fair with these mothers there will he a revolution in this country. Tfte overthrow of tint saloon will do rmichi to bring rn this new era. xrn ttiet la s Yii-iory aurvB.iy witnm sigtu. Ths New Woman. Whitt, then. Is the tntlnence ,,f (he so called "new woman" upon the Anier Icsn family? So farreadiiiu is that question that the answer must lie bused upon an analysis of what makes the twentieth century American womm; to lie spoken of as a "new woman." First of all, she la au educated woman. One hundred years have now paused sine the IVistoo High school was thrown open to girls with hungry minds. Dur ing this century yonng womsn have exhibits! an nfhii:a.n for the hltfher education quite undreamed of during other centuries. In ths average high seboril of th country two young wom en graduate to every young man. The hoy tu bis eemtpnmaj to onter business dropa nut of ths high school, while the girl carries) on her stodVs. In th stote university also, tittle by little, young Wjotuen are equaling in number the yonng mm who are arralylng for the professions. If this tendency ronflnuvs the time Is not far distant when the overwhelming majority of tbe studeritR receiving their diplomas In the depart meats of literature, language and th? sciences will be women. Ths New Women Has a Clear Vision snd s Warm Heert. To the education of tbe new woman we must now add her clear vision and her warm heart, (rf eld philosophers used to way that man bus au intellect firs and tixkleafnllv a heart, but that woman has a heart first and I nettle tKat ly a mind. The statement Is meaning less beeauee it Is untrue. When fully unfolded the Intellect mean th whole srml tn th art of k mowing, and the heart tneaus the whole men or wo mau tn the net of feeling; teat, giv en a great t orrow. woman is strange ly gifted wiili sympathy. From a woman's heart Is horn the movement of brave alary Ware in tbe tjioe of the plague in I-ondon; the struggle for soV dlers on the ItattleQekl by Florence Nightingale and I-ady Augusts Star ley. braving every form of death In the Crimea; the plans of the Chrlathin rommtssUm women In our ctril war, working with the amtmlne fnacs hi the very midst of battle; the lUsd On uxiveuieut at tlte liuftWt front of Eu rope. And tbtuk of Mary Sleseor, ''inntng a a missionary In Africa and tittle by little achieving an influence so oulqrts that the nvemtieTvi of the cab inet In England sought her ad rice. that the nutlve frile app'ed to her decision, tttat feuds laerwean states and warring honts might t settlsd! sf Win in Aia'iiaw So iwh Ko words can dsnenbs th fcelpesre of th modem woman hi Amertra so ciety. Who can tell th aiatwr assist of these womsn wlu kssr apsaifctai tb movsmsut ft th hagher s)statsn li Walmsisy, Vassaa, KasUk asai Jtryn atawr! Woinsn UK Tmotm WsUsrd aKd Jao a iMeiss and D A a Jtaw and a bona of others kartt rhwgBd th v7 atnaoahsr of the saad. Wdtnea wltheat fjisaetai aadUty? Barrlman and Kuessll lags and the UMa who founded tb Boa March tn Piukt al lsft Utatr rallUoos to tblr wives. When that laTACwoiMa Kt her h Ij rati sh caanuad th salt of th Bus Matwhe from OUXXi. of franc sp to KJOXlO.tXl) and MOtOfJO. 0U, bra-sas eh wite fa thanugh sSsfh t wtjra oH ksr trwa tdses. WbSD tats bees thsat ess Chat fstpaW werfears aud rRct all fh awesls In th brv have gwtt throorh with then- lorfl tbsy rtfag tb male to death, and th female spend the whi ter tythag tb honey that their own skill gaathrd. re-emhaeno sf Wesns Thessgei gkill and DskVescy. Aa ex cart demands a man's muscle; staavta looomotive depend mjaO a Ban's brut strength; the naxt age will be au ago uf flectrkity and cbsrnlstry. Aa electric aiai'hh) k best hsadlied by a tWIkate hutter. Once ths giant Ibrees are eontrolkad by lctrietty, a tronan's sensitive hand may handle rhecn bet ter than a man's. An era may come, therefore, In which women will have the same pre-eminence in society and tbe creation of wealth as the female workers have In the beehive. Moat of the charges brought against woman as to her Inferiority represent the verdict of a mule Jury and a mate Judga, who for purposes f self defense brought In a vdlet against womsn in general aad pronounosd her guilty of biferterfty. Th time may cosne when woinsn will ceustrtot th Jury and In dict the man for inferiority, and then BesA-et harp as an to tb hear f the lury e verdltt, for H remains for ss to eenfens that In no country har women tried so successfully to put ethics into Indastry, Jnstlr into tow, gentleness into govrskveut, sympathy Into rafojm aud purity and temtorneti aad tov into th bonsehokl Ko land can bsast a womanhood mora gknioaa. Orqst la tbe power of tratle and eotn rosrve. Wonderful tbe fatrength of man t till tha granary and tha storehouse. Marvelous the achievements of th sol dier snd tb sailor, hut man is not a body. Ills soul uses the body, and the chief Influences that shape character, create Institutions aud regenerate laws are the iutiuences of heart and con science and social sympathy, that are the pre-eminent gifts of women. Aa children we nil wake to conscious life lying uiou a woman's lap. In youth It was a woman's hand that pointed to the paths of prosperity and peace, and when the end comes, happy is the old man upon whose fevered brow In the last hour a woman's haiul fnlls, and tbe first face beyond Into which tbe weary and worn man shall look w ill be the face of a woman, his mother, who lingers about the gate of heaven until lier son conies home. gf J HA AH

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