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SHIPPING ANARCHISTS BACK HOME.
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—F. Bowers, in the Indianapolis News.
DEALING WITH ANARCHY BEGUN
Washingtcn Officials Admit Difficultics— Not Optimistic as to Qutcome of the
Latest Mcasures—Effective Mcasures Tooe Drastic to Receive Popular Sup
port-—-Restrictions on Immigration Inadequate to Keep Qut Anarchists.
Washington, D. C.—lt may not be
reassuring information, butihe Wash
ingtgn officials are none too optimis
tic about the outcome of the attempt
to drive all the anarchists from the
United States. Those officials whose
duty it is to deal directly with the an
archists cannot talk for publication.
The officials who c¢an issue orders to
immigration inspectors telling them
to be alive to their duty have talked
for publication, but the talk, like
much of the work done, is impotent.
Some one here has said that anar
chists are made, not born. This is
largely true, and anarchists will be
made as long as there are anarchist
teachers who get within touch of re
ceptive pupils. This means that as
long as there are anarchists in the
country their ranks will grow daily.
Since the shooting of the priest at
theé altar in Denver and the attempted
killing of the chief of police, Shippy,
in Chicago, the Senators and Repre
sentatives have been Dbusy talking
about immigration measures,but they
have confined their talkinz largely to
the corridors and cloak rooms. Most
of them are just as afraid to-day to
pass a restriction bill that means re
striction as they were before the
shootings gave them sharp excuse for
the passing of an absolutely drastic
measure.
One member, who is not more than
one generation removed from being a
foreigner himsélf, told your corre
spondent that it wouldn't do to draw
a line part way up the continent of
Eurobe and to say that no one from
below the line should come to this
country. ““What we ought to do,” he
said, “‘is to draw a line down the mid
dle of the Atlantic Ocean and another
one down the middle of the Pacific
Ocean, and to say no one shall cross.”
Restriction Problem Difficult.
When a New York Representative,
on the floor of the House, spoke in
advecacy o: a really restrictive immi
gration measure, several Representa
tives whose constituents are largely
Southern Europeans, at once began
missionary work. They told the other
members what a wrong it would be to
punish the many because of the fail
ings of the few; and they did not neg
lect to touch on the matter of power,
the balance of power,of course, which
the men coming from some of the
European countries hold at the polls
in America.
One member, an Illinois man, told
a colleague who was urging no action,
that it would be far better for him
and for his people in the future to
have all immigration stopped from
their native countries for a series cf
Years, until the United States had op
portunity to assimilate those that
were here to that point of assimila
tion which means the dropping of hy
phens and writing of themselves as
PANAMA CANAL MUST FAIL, SAYS STEVENS.
Former Chief Engineer of Isthmian Waterway Gives Reasons
‘ ¥Fo:r Prophecy.
New Haven, Conn.—John F. Stev
ens, a vice-president of the New
York, New Haven and Hartford Rail
road, and a former chief engineer of
the Panama Canal, has issued a state
ment regarding the latter enterprise,
in which he prophesies a failure of
the undertaking.
In this statement Mr. Stevens says
that the canal will not help the Uni
ted States in its {rade with South
America, as practically all of the in
habitants of the Southern Continent
are on the east of the Andes, so that
it would be of no advantage to make
use of the canal to reach there. Mr.
Stevens also says that in our commer
cial relations with the islands of the
Pacific and the Far East the canal
will be of little value. Our coal and
wheat centres are inland. Their pro
ducts have to be started on their way
by rail.. When loaded on cars it would
not be cheaper to ship to the At
lantic and then ship to the East by
the way of the canal than it would be
to send directly to the ports on our
Plficlfic coast and then get on board
ship,
Furthermore, Mr. Stevens believes
that our coal supply is fast diminish
ing and that China will be the coal
country for the future. Siberia, he
says, will be the wheat country of the
future, with India a close second.
Mr. Stevens maintains that the
Swift Interests Buy 300,000
Acres and 20,000 Cattle in Texas.
‘Austin, Texas.—Major George W.
Littlefield, of Austin, closed a deal
for the sale of his 200,000 acre ranch,
which comprises nearly all the land
in Lamb and Hockley counties in the
Panhandle of Texas, to a syndicate of
Chicago men closely identified with
the interests of Swift & Co., packers,
prominent membersof the Beef Trust.
He disposed of 20,000 cattle and
500 saddle horses with the land. The
total consideration was approximate
ly $3,000,000.
Americans, not only to the full letter
of the law, but to the full of the
American spirit.
The men who have given the sub
ject of immigration the closest study
seem to feel that the work connected
with the keeping out of the criminal
and the anarchistic classes should be
done on the other side of the water.
They believe that a means can be
found by which every intending em
igrant from a foreign country can be
made to ‘“‘prove his record” before he
shall be allowed to step on shipboard.
The immigration inspection laws
were useful last year to the extent of
keeping out something fewer than
1000 undesirable citizens. The rec
ord was 300 better than for the pre
ceding year, and yet the man who at
tempted to kill Chief Shippy came in
as a “‘desirable,” and it took him only
a few months to do something more
than prove his undesirability.
Educational Test Inadequate,
The reading and writing clause
which it was proposed to put in the
last immigration bill would not have
kept out Lazarus Averbach, neither
would it have kept cut the Denver as
sassin; and, in fact, it wouldn’t have
kept out one in a hundred of the real
anarchists who seek America. Some
other means must be found, if the
desirg be to debar from the country
the men whose ‘‘thinking drives them
mad.” )
. There is recognition in Washington
of the fact that in the heat and pas
sion following the recent Denver mur
der, and the attempted assassination
in Chicago, there is a disposition on
the part of the police officials to con
fuse anarchism with socialism and
with other forms of thinking and
practice which take no cognizance of
violence in any shape. The difficulty
is that in the heat and passion the of
ficials are apt to do things which they
ought not to do, and which tend to
‘increase, rather than to diminish, the
plague which they are seeking to
eradicate. Another difficulty is that
when the heat and the passion have
passed, there comes forgetfulness and
the oflicials lapse into the old state
of apathy, to stay in it until some
new violénee rouses them.
All that has been said within the
last week was said immediately fol
lowing the assassination of President
McKinley. Then anarchism was to
be killed, and anarchism kept on liv
ing, and, from all appearances, it is
pretty much alive to-day. The Wash
ington preaching is for systematic
and continued pursuit of the anar
chists, but the preaching, if one may
judge by the past, will not be fol
lowed by the practice, Congress can
do much with a proper form of immi
gration bill, but there is no present
prospect that Congress cares to un
dertake the work.
Panama Canal cannot hope to become
anything more than an expense. It
will not meet expenses and it will cost
more than is expected. It will be an
advantage, yes, but an advantage to
European countries and not to us.
The idea of the canal being of
great value to us in times of warfare,
since our naval forces can be quickly
sent from one coast to the other, he
says, is utterly absurd. 1t would take
days for the ships to get around, and
during that time hostile shells could
have done their work. Mr. Stevens
believes that it would be a far wiser
plan of defense to put the money that
the canal will cost intc a greater
navy.
Mr. Stevens is not unique, however,
as a prophet of evil for ship canals.
Forty-odd years ago many British and
other mercantile economists were
cocksure that the Suez Canal could
never pay expenges. Yet for years
the directors of that work have had
periodically to reduce their tolls on
shipping in order to keep their net
vearly profits from exceeding the
twenty-five per cent. permitted by the
charter, and the $20,000,000 worth
of shares which the British Govern
ment purchased in 1875 are now es
timated to be worth fully $155,000,-
000. There is no objection to Mr.
Stevens keeping company with those
who went so wide of the Suez mark.
Trustees of Northampton Academy
| of Musie Report Gain of S2OOO,
- Northampton, Mass.—The trustees
of the Academy of Music have made
public their annual report showing
' for the financial year, which corre
‘sponds with the calendar year, a
profit of $2000." This showing is the
more satisfactory when it is consid
ered that it covers a part of the pres
ent season of hard timeg. The last
two annual reports have shown a
profit of SSOOO, and have done much
to justify Northampton's experiment
of maintaining a municipal theatre,
DO YOU KNOW
; WHAT WHITE LEAD IS?
Its Chief Use and a Method of Deter
mining Good from Bad Explained.
White Lead is the standard paint
material all over the world. It is
made by corroding metallic lead into
a white powder, through exposing it
to the fumes of weak acetic acid and
carbonic acid gas; this powder is then
ground and mixed with linseed oil,
making a thick paste, in which form
it is packed and sold for painting
purposes. The painter thins it down
to the proper consistency for applica
tion by the addition of more linseed
oil.
The above refers, of course, to
pure, genuine White Lead only. Adul
terated and fake “White Lead,” of
which there are many brands on the
market, is generally some sort of
composition containing only a per
centage of white lead—sometimes no
White Lead at all; in such stuff,
barytes or ground rock, chalk, and
similar cheap substances are used to
make bulk and imitate the appear
ance of pure White Lead.
There is, however, a positive test
by which the purity or impurity of
White Lead may be proved or ex
posed, befere painting with it.
The blow-pipe flame will reduce
pure White Lead to metallic lead. If
a supposed White Lead be thus tested
and it only partially reduces to lead,
ieaving a residue, it is proof that
gsometning else was there besides
White Lead.
The National Lead Company guar
antee all White Lead sold in pack
ages bearing its “Dutch Boy Painter”
trade-mark to prove absolutely pure
under this blow-pipe test, and that
You may make the test yourself in
your own home, they will send free
upon request a blow-pipe and every
thing else necessary to make the
test, togetber with a valuable booklet
on paint. Address, National Lead
Gompany, Weodbridge Building, New
York.
Success seldom comes to a man who
isn’t expecting it.
Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days.
Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any
caseof Itching, Blinfi,]}]eedi’ng or Protruding
Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 80¢.
A woman’s tears and a man’s grins
home makes a hasty gateway. ;
1
ECZEMA CURED.
J. R. Maxwell, Atlanta, Ga., says:
puffered agonv with a severe ceg> of ecze
ma. Tried six different remedies and was
in despair, when a neighbor told me to try
b‘huptri?\e‘s TETTERINE., After using £3
worth of your tETTERINE and soap I am
completely cured. 1 cannot sy too much in
its praise.”” I'ErTERINE at druggists or by
mail 50c. Soap 25¢. J. T. SHUPTRINE,
Dept. A, Savannah, Ga.
Sooner or later the chronic' kicker
gets his foot in it. ;
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething,softens thegums, reducesinflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25ca bottla
You never have to dun a man who
owes you a grudge, - .
There is need for Garfield Tea when the
skin is sallow, the tongue coated, and when
headaches are frequent.
The average woman is vain enough
to believe that she isn’t.
What Causes Headache.
From October to May, Colds are the most;
frequent cause of Headache, Laxative
Bromo Quinine removes cduse. E. W,
Grove on box. 25c.
In looking out for No. 2 a widow
looks out for No. 1.
SOFT CORNS BETWEEN THE TOES
Are often more painful than the hard ones
on top. ABBOTT’S EAST INDIAN CORN PAINT
will cure either kind,as weil as bunions,sore,
callous spots and indurations of the skin,
“Tt cures to stay cured.”” 20c. at druggists
or by mail. THE ABBoTT Co., Savannah, Ga.
A round steak is good for a square
meal,
Uolor more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dye. One 10c. package colors all fibers. They dye In cold water better than any other dye. Youn
= Ave anv garment without r'nping apart. Write for free booklet—How to Lye, Bleace and Mix Colors. MONROE DR UG CO., Quincy, Jilinois,
eyt Tl
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manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great N erve
Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise frea,
Ur. H. R. Kline, Ld.,081 Arch St., Phila. Pa.
It is so much easier to forget a favor
than it is to forgive an injury.
DEEP CRACKS FROM ECZEMA.
Could Lay Slate-Pencil in One—
Hands in Dreadful State—Disease
Defied Treatment for 7 Years
~=Cared by Cuticura.
“I had eczema on my hands for about
seven years and during that time 1 had
used several so-called remedies, together
with physicians’ and druggists’ prescrip
tions, The disease was so bad on my
hands that I could lay u slate-pencil in one
of the cracks and a rule placed across the
hand would not touch the pencil. 1 kept
using remedy after remedy, and while some
gave partial relief, none relieved as much
as did the first box of Cuticura Qintment,
I made a purchase of Cuticura Soap and
Ointment and my hands were perfectly
cured after two boxes of Cuticura Qinte
ment and one cake of Soap were used. W,
H. Dean, Newark, Del., Mar. 28, 1907.”
You can't always judge & man's
worth by his his bank balance.
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How many American women in
lonely homes to-day long for this
blessing to come into their lives, and
to be able to utter these words, but
because of some organic derange
ment this happiness is denied them,
Every woman interested in this
subject should know that prepara
tion for healthy maternity is
accomplished by the wuse of
LYDIA E.PINKHAM’S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
Mrs. Maggie Gilmer, of West
Union, 8. C,writes to Mrs. Pinkham:
“I was greatly run-down in health
from a wealness peculiar to my sex,
when Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound was recommended to me. It
not only restored me to perfect health,
but to my delight I am a mother,”
Mrs. Josephine Hall,of Bardstown,
Ky., writes :
“I was a very great sufferer from
female troubles, and my physician failed
& help me. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound not oanly restored me
to perfect health, but I am now a proud
mother.”
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
sta@ard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bear
ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges
tion,dizziness or nervous prostration,
Why don’t you try it ?
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick
women to write her for advice.
She has guided thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
A l Neglect Your (
When you ignore torpid liver, it can endanger your life in more ways than
any other organ of the body. It can reach you through the stomach by indi
gestion and racking dyspepsia. It can turn your blood into venom, through
the kidneys. It can afflict you with all these, and more, at one time, bringing
on biliousness, constipation, insomnia, nervousness, headache, aching bones,
and misery too great to bear.
Many medicines, such as oil, and salts and calomel, simply force the stom
ach and bowels to be rid of the cause of the trouble just at the time, but medi
cines of this nature do not give permanent help and often leave the system in
a more depleted condition. '
NUBIAN TEA MAKES THE LIVER WELL.. :
: £
Restores healthy action to the KIDNEYS,
‘Purifies the BLOOD and ‘‘KEEPS YOU WELL.”
All druggists sell it. Try a bottle.
Lame, Sore = Sleepless, | Was Cured
9 o j §
By Minard’s Liniment
My right arm and hand were so lame and pained me so with
rheumatism that I could not raise it to my head to comb my hair,
so I had to bend over most double to comb it on the top of m
head; they pained me at night se that I could not sieep very good}i
I used a number of remedies for rheumatism, but none did me any
good until I tried Minard’s Liniment; then I got help and now I
won't be without it in the house. It will do all you claim for it,
and I find it good for headaches and sore throat, too. I can't
thank you enough for what it has done for me and my brother,
who has used it on his back and limbs and got great help from it.
He's seventy-one years old, I %avc one of my neighbors some,
and she says the same as I do. Yours t.uly,
MRS. EMMA M. WOODS
Enfield, Mass,
A special bottle sent free on request. Minard’s Liniment Mfg. Co., Bouth
\ Framingham, Mass.
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W. L. Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At Any Price Faehinsong
o CAUTYON. W, L Dougias name and priee is stamped on bottom, Make No Substitute.
Sold hz‘ the best shoe dealers everywhere, sShoes mailed from factory to any part of the world. Iluss
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