CiturJir. Au rt 17, 1312. (ID S7C ft Wiat's The, News?" T7 The Presidential Campaign. . '1TH : the nomination of Theodore . Roose velt and Governor Johnson, at California, for President and Vice President by the " Progressive-Party.lhe Presidential campaign may la regarded as lormaUy: begun. Really,, there lis not likely to beniuch ntore interest or .discus sion than for the last three. or four months. . : , The Progressive convention "was well attended Tinu very emnusiasuc. mx. ivooseven. wust ot course, the dominant figure; and his speech, out- lining; ms views, ;ueuessam, ueuaiuo mo, yiuiAuiu. - i tions, primaries" and the recall of - judicial decis ions, also his well-known . policies , in regard to , . labor laws, workingmen's compensatory acts, and Itrust control. On the tariff, hismitterances were characteristically. vague; his declaration in favor. -of a protective . tann: wmcn wouia protect xne ,.worJangmen mignt.mean anytnmg. tieaenouncea both, the oldjparties as tools of the corrupt inter ests. Woman suffrage is favored, a National". policies. The' Negro delegates from the South re- . disagreed with the men -who wished to make '-a white man's party," Both President TafVand Governor Wilson have been notified of their nominations. Much of Sen ator Koot s speech jot nouncauon consistea or as surances to ; the - President"; that the nomination ijeptance is generally regarded , n's . aligning him even more definitely with the conservative or tand:pat element of his party. - , . in. inis conueutron it may wo mmreauugi iu iuuw that Mr, Gilbert Roe has, made what is probably the most exhaustive and judicial investigation of . the contested cases before the Chicago convention., His 'conclusion is that Mr, Roosevelt was Justly , entiueu to. tnirty 01 tne aeiegaies awarueu mr; Tatt," but that the other -contests were fairly de cided in tavor of the President. - v Mr. Wilson's speech' of acceptance has been . tavorahly received. He devoted most of it to the " - tariff question. and the direct control of the Gov ernment by the people. We stand face to face, he says, "with great questions ot right and of jiis fr riTitpaf ntf tsf National development, of the action no less than of . a better ' business system, more free, more equitable, more open to ordinary men, or a better .fiscal system; whose taxes shall not come .out ol the pockets of the.many to go into K nnAlrafa n9 -h . ffiW- and within whosA intrica cies special privilege may not tsq easily find cov iert. -The forces of the Nation are asserting them- 1 sselves against every form of special privilege -and private control, and are seeking bigger things than .they have ever heretofore; achieved. They are sweeping away what is unrighteous in order to vindicate once more the "essential rights of iuman life." He favors a gradual reduction of ' the tariff so as not to disturb business, but a re- Auction beginning ''with, the schedules ."most, ob viously used to kill competition and to raise prices" and continuing until it reaches every Jnll mVI.I, HwmntAH mftnnnlv n fairnm ana. Xiial interests. , , '. Mr. Roosevelt'8 supporters won out in the Kan- . sas Republican primaries and unless, the Supreme A: Study of Rural Co-operation in Ireland By CLARENCE FOE nL THE TWOFOLD PROBLEM OFJJUSINESS ORGANIZATION. PERHAPS the most notable work that the De- In a large measure, the new interest in the 0So partment of Agriculture has done for Ireland ; ciety of United Irish" Women,' concerning which a paragraph by Editor G. W. Russell, of the Irish Homestead was published last week. It is inspir ing to read Mr. .Russell's book, ''Co-operation and Nationality," from which this quotation was taken, and in which he sets forth in his dream of the new Ireland. The ideals he has for Ireland are those we must develop in the South," if we are JL: has been In subsidizing Dremium DUre-bred horses, cattle, sheep and swine exhibited at the county fairs, and thereby enabling . the ' farmers to improve the quality .'of all lines of livestock. Mr. Billlnton, of the Department1 of Agriculture and Technical Instruction, told ma that the im provement in the stock sold in Ireland each year, as the result or the better Diooa introaucea, to Dring to our own section the, beauty which he would amount 0. 1,000,000 (nearly $5,000,000) covets for his. And in the main, his argument is a year, .the cattle exported to Great Britain being just this: that we must give our thoughts to local worth from $7 -to $10 per head more than in the days of scrub stock. .'-'7 : From all. this it. will be seen that-the progress the Irish farmer has" been making has been sym metrical, comprehensive, and well-rounded, Time was when it was thought that If the Irish farmer simply owned the land he tilled, the increase in thrift "and Industry that ownership would inspire betterment, neighborhood improvement; rather than , to efforts lor reforming the whole country.: He says: Howcan you speak of working for all Ireland,, which you have not seen, if you do not labor and dream for the Ireland before your eyes, which you see as you look out of your own door : in the morning, and on which you walk iip -and down through the day?" What the English poet would alone, make him prosperous, but Sir Horace said of England, Mr. Russell says with regard to Plunkett and his fellows recognized that more Ireland: than mere land ownership was needed. ; Ireland Becoming "a Land of Home-Owners. . - It is gratifying to find that of the total farming area of 18,739644 acres, the-tenants purchased .2,500,00.0 acres under Land Purchase Acts from 1870 to 1896, while under the vastly more liberal acts of 1908-1909 they have purchased outright, nearly , 4,000,000" acres ' and have - proceedings ' pending for the purchase of nearly 5,000,000 "I will not cease from mental fight, . , Nor shall my sword sleep in my hand V Till we have built Jerusalem In England's green and pleasant land." I cannot better conclude jthis article than by asking our Progressive Farmer readers to think of the South instead of Ireland, and the Southern county instead of the Irish county, in the follow ing quotation in which Mr.- Russell points .out more, the total purchased outright or for which what even a small local community may become purchase proceedings are pending, aggregating 11,421,448 acres as against only 7,318,196 re maining undisturbed in the hands of land-owners. In spite of ttfis vast increase in land-ownership, I repeat, the Irish farmer today, might be dis- .. couraged instead of buoyant and hopeful If . his , leaders had not realized that the land would not long remain in his possession unless he developed qualities of initiative, enterprise, and self-help. Even, as it Is, a considerable number of holdings purchased by the tenants have come into the pos--sessions of the village "gombeen men," or credit sharks. In fact, these "gombeen men" combi nation merchants and liquor . sellers with their crass commercialism : have threatened to become . : the new aristocracy in Ireland: men devoid of. the culture which , distinguished the old aristocracy and far more grasping and . covetous. , Editor Russell, of the Irish Homestead, is continually " crying out . . against these . vampires of rural strength, whose political power often appears to be greater than' that of. the farmers themselves. For one thing, the' merchants are novr trying with some prospects of 'success-r to prevent the ' co-operative agricultural banks from being given thepower to buy and sell farm products. We MustNCrawl Before" .We Can Walk. Before leaving Uhe: subject of these Irish co operative societies, one other thought comes Into mind that cannot be too strongly emphasized- by developing all men and women: that is best and finest in its "We must go on Imagining better than the ' 5 best we know. Even in their ruins now, , Greece and Italy seem 'noble and beautiful, with broken pillars and temples made ih the , day . of their glory. But before ever there was a white marble temple shining on a . hill, It shone with a more brilliant beauty in the mind, of some artist who designed it. Do many people know how that marvellous Greek civilization spread along the shores of the Mediterranean. Little nations owning no more land than would make up an Irish barony sent out colony after colony. The' seed of beautiful life they sowed grew and blossomed out into great . cities and half- , divine civilizations. Italy had a later bios- ; somlng of beauty in theMiddle Ages, and travellers today go. into, little -Italian towns and find them filled with 'masterpieces, of. ;." - painting and architecture and sculpture, wit- nesses of a time when nations no larger than an Irish county rolled their thoughts up to Heaven and mixed their imagination ' with ,; the angels." The smallest county in the South is not too small to develop a life and a civilization, dis tinctive, notable, far-reaching in its influence, if its people fired by a common idealism, should we must learn to crawl before we can walk. We have had'in the South too many big, high-sounding schemes for financing the South's billion-dollar cotton crop, and other such gigantic schemes, Court interferes, there will be no chance to vote and not enough attention has been given to local lor Mr.iTaft without having Taft electors placed business organizations wherein the principle of and that is, that In this matter, as in all others. Join hands in working out its highest expression. And this should be the supreme aim of the new movement for rural co-operation. Dublin, Ireland. on the ballot by petition. :..- ' - .' - ".' i v" ...in' , V ; i 1j . -. there Is plenty of time for great changes of public .sentiment to take place.,, , .If we might presume to offer a little, advice to our readers, it would be to etudy,the; claims and the records of ach party ; and each candidate carefully and with s much freedom trom partisan bias-as possible; to keep $6ol and good tempered, Temembering that in all parties the great mass ,of voters is- honest and - patriotic, and that all parties -are afflicted "with : ':. tinscrupulous men who have achieved positions of ".leadership; and then when election day comes, to vote with no other consideration than the welfare nf thts Nation. . ' ; For , ourselves, we shall never make The Pro- gressive armer tne organ oi, any man ur uy party, but shall continue to present what seems. to : us to be the truth; commending or condemning, aa, seems to us just, trying at, the same time to " realize that our views are Just as fallible as those of anyone else, and that those who . think differ ently -are' just as patriotic , and intelligent as co-operation might be tried out and h way pre pared for effective "co-operation in larger things. This-is a fact which Mr. E. E. Miller has fre quently urged , In The Progressive Farmer.. My observation In Ireland has convinced me more strongly than ever before of the correctness of his teaching; What we need in the South, what we need in our " Farmers- Union, Is a determine'd effort to organize local ;: co-operative creameries, : poultry societies, ' fruit growers' and truck grow-, ers' societies, co-operative credit societies, etc., and through these neighborhood organizations de velop the business qualities and experience which will enable us to grapple with the mightier prob-: lem of financing the South's great staple crop. , , .T An Ideal for the South. '.'". - Last of all, let us not forget the three phrases in ' Sir Horace Plunkett's brief motto "Better Farming; Better Business, Better Living.", - Better farming and better business must be simply the means for better, living. There Is a new.realiza: tlon of this fact in Ireland now, and this explains. T A Thought for the Week. HE forbearing use of power does not onlv form a touchstone, but' the manner in which an individual eniovs certain ad vantages over others is a test of a true eentleman. The power which the strong have over the weak. the magistrate over the citizen, the employer over the. employed, the, educated over the unlettered, ' the experienced over the confiding, even the clever over the silly the forbearlnc: or inoffensive use of all this power, or authority, or a total abstin-: . ence from It when the case admits It, will show the gentleman in a plain light. The gentleman . does not needlessly, and unnecessarily remind . an . offender of - a wrong he may have committed against him. He can not only forgive, he can for get; and he strives for that nobleness of self and mildness of character which impart sufficient strength to let the past be but the past. A true ' man of honor feels humbled himself when he can not heln humbllner others. Robert E. Io. ' ; Continued from last week. ' Next week Mr. Poe will tell about the beauty of English rural landscapes.