my brother's keeper u t - the 'l' + j - library of...

1
0 CO SWot e at ~Missoula, ad-4ass mail matter. 31 CRPTION RATE& n(ti Advance) I.2* temonth _.......................$5 moniths ......................... 2.0025 t 'R the .............................. 4.00 io~ae' added for foreign countries. rLE# HONE NUMBERS 13t 41 - Independent 510 SMIOULA OFFICE 0 94an'4i131 West Main Street. r 4amilton Office 1s'Main Street, Hamilton, Mont. TO ADVERTISERS. While The Missoulian takes every rweasnable precaution to guard against itjpegraphioal errors in its advertising weolu n, printers are but human and we ill not be responsible for errors which may inadvertently occur. •Missoulian Publishinn Company SUBSCRIBERS' PAPERS. *Te Missoulian is anxious to give thle ibet carrier service; therefore, sub- acrliters are requested to report faulty deliVery at once. In ordering paper ehanged td new address, please give old address also. Money orders and checks should be made payable to The, Missoulian Publishing Company, •(i~ . SUNDAY, MARCH 29, 1914. the common growth of Mother Earth Suffices me-her tears, her mirth, Her humblest mirth and tears. -Wordsworth. OOKING UP "It's alsways morning somewhere." There is everything in springtime to waken the best there is in a man. Even the' uncertainty of the weather-pro- voking at times-cannot stifle the springtime feeling. The earth's waken- ing stirs the human heart as well as the heart of nature and thereis to be found a spur to endeavor in the con- ditions which surround us. Some men would laugh if they were told that they fe6e the influence of spring-such sentiment seems silly to them. Yet in their hearts the spirit of springtime is at work. It is not poslsble to resist the influence. But these cynics are becoming, all the while, a more and more inconsiderable body. They count for less and less, every year. The love of outdoors is inherent in every man. He may smother that af- fection all that he can because he thinks it unmanly, but he cannot de- atroy it entirely. It is there and it stays there. The call of the woods and the hills and the streams, the sum- mons of the blue sky, the fresh breeze, the trees and the birds-this is a cry which finds responsive echo in every breast. Nor is it unmanly to acknowl- edg it. There's an uplift in outdoors that, consciously or unconsciously to our- selves, gets in its work upon us, even if we are unwilling. The man who finds his recreation and his rest in being out in the open, that man does himself more good ant. does his com- munity more good than the man who seeks those things between walls. No man can be out of doors with his eyes open and not be better for it. His thoughts are cleaner, his blood courses more freely, his courage is greater. It is the natural place for a man to be-out in the open, just as often and as long as he can get there and stay there. And the benefit is not only mental and moral. It is physical, as well. Ap- Petit; and digestion are bettered; the eye" clears and the sluggish pulse 9l4ckens. The step becomes more elastic. It is easier to smile than it was, shut up indoors. Outdoors is the best medicine there is. It is the cheapest, too. And the appreciation of the value of outdoors is increasing; there are more people ail the while who find their beet enjoyment in getting out into the op . TM The automobile and the saddle borse "have contributed much to this enlarged e* ment, but neither one of then) is necessary to that enjoyment. There is a lot of comfort and a great dedl of benefit in going afoot. It is a great thing for the race that thti love for outdoors as becoming strbnger. With fathers and mothers getting health and happiness in toe open, there is a betttr prospect for the hUC ren" of today and of tomorrow. With the children romping in the hills, ther- is apeurance of a sturdy gener- *tio•p uset ahead. .A.d, bhee in western Montana, this ,outdoor influence is so unusually •Wt o so unspeakably beautiful that we ae fortunate above all con- t 1o0mprri Ijn t he advantage which bth p~ e ours. Get out of doors and eapportEitty which is yours. t ei asst of it. S -THE OPTIMIST. MY BROTHER'S KEEPER "Am I my brother's keeper?" It is a question :whlch J been asked ever since the birth of man. Always it is asked by somebody who is seeking to evade responsibility. AWay it is the alibi offered by those who would dodge the iss~e. I It is the cowardly defense of the guilty. The man who asks this question may be classified at once as not right. i A day or two ago, The Missoulian printed an official letter from the commissioner of Indian affairs. It was addressed personally to each of the six thousand employes of the bu- reau over which Mr. Sells presides iti Washington. It was; devoted to the consideration of the problem of suppressing the sale of liquor to Indians. Its tone was lofty and its plane was high. The letter should be read by every man and wo- man, by every boy and girl. For its scope is wider than the mere relation between booze and the red man. It takes in the whole question of personal responsibility; it is an able presentation of the whiskey problem. "I believe," says the letter, "that the greatest present men- ace to the American Indian is whiskey.. It does more to de- stroy his constitution and invite the ravages of disease than anything else. It does more to demoralize him as a man and, frequently, as a woman. It does more to make him an easy prey to the unscrupulous than everything else combined., If I say nothing more to you tonight that leaves an impression, let it be this one thought: Let us save the American Indian from the curse of whiskey." Commissioner Sells does not ignore the question of re- sponsibility, either. In the course of his letter, he says: "There is nothing that could induce me, since I have taken the oath of office as commissioner of Indian affairs, to touch a single drop of any sort of intoxicating liquor, and this re- gardless of my attitude on the prohibition question." There is the whole proposition. The primary purpose of the letter was, of course, to discuss with the employes of the Indian service the question of suppressing the sale of liquor to the Indians. And it carries out that purpose admirably. But with that phase of the letter we have no concern this morning. We might comment upon what we' know, here in Missoula, of the failure of the attempts at suppression and we might present the reasons, as they appear to us, for this failure. We might quote Judge Bourquin in connection with the use of stool-pigeons by the men who are Working, ostensibly, toward bringing about this suppression. But the paragraphs of the Sells letter which we have quoted stand out so conspicuously from all the rest, that they seem to us to have a broad bearing upon the general ques- tion of personal responsibility. And this is a great question in itself. Commissioner Sells might, with propriety, have omitted the word, Indian, from the first quoted paragraph. All that he alleges in connection with the mixture of whiskey and Indian might have been said with equal truth regarding the results of the consumption of whiskey by any man, no mat- ter what the color of his skin. And his plea to save the In- dian from the curse of whiskey might, with equal propriety, have been made as to the saving of every man and woman, of every race and creed, from this very evil. Commissioner Sells declares that, with the responsibility of his official oath upon him, he would not touch a drop of any intoxicating liquor. This is a responsibility whch should be realized by every person in authority, no matter who he is or where he is. The father cannot reasonably preach to his son against the use of liquor, if he himself drinks it. The employer cannot in fairness forbid his. employe the drink of whiskey which he himself takes. Each man is his brother's keeper-each man knows in his heart that he is. He may haltingly ask the question, but he knows the answer before he speaks the words. He knows that he is the Big Brother to every weaker one than he. This principle was established when Cain was driven into the wil- derness, banished for his crime-but more for his cowardly evasion. Recognition of this principle is a belief in every man's heart, no matter how zealously he may strive to dis- avow it. The whole country is better for this letter of Commission- er Sells. It contains much excellent advice for the people in the Indian department, but-more than that-it carries a sermon to every man in every station. It is another answer, specially well put, to the ancient question, "Am I my broth- er's keeper?" Conversations With "Con" By The Invader. Butte, March 28. I, Mr. Editer, The Daily Meloussian, c Who hav never been rekwire to trade at Compny Store Because he am chumps with Johnny R. Tool: r "Con," I inftinerate to Honroble Cor- neliu$ F. Kelley, as I drop into Holy of Holies in Big Ship Sixt Floor last week at noon, "wen aml Johnny Mitch- ell going to Barberdoughs in his new yat?" Capt. Damn Gay Stlvers, chief of Amalgamutts Secretly Service, am in Holy of Holies, translately cody des- pitch from Honroble John d. Rine, who am in New York as personal repsent- ativ Mr. Roy S. Alley. Capt. Damn am not in hystericks of joy at my entrants and scowl frightful, like he do at score boy on rangely Rocky Rifle club, wen bully-eye white flag fail to come up. One of the gang. "Go right on translately, Damn," Con dib to martial warrior. "Feeled Marshal Goto am recommend to me by SSlandered Oil Compny in Japan, as man to be trustfulness. Wat am this feebly poke at Honroble John Mitchell, Feeled Marshal?" Here Con cross legs and shove pack- idge of Sweet Caporal across myhog- any bored. "I see by Honroble Butte Daily I Pose," I attributate, "that ideel condi- tions eggsist fn Butte, wich Mitchell 1 onct investligately wile changing trains at Short Line deepot." "Amn't conditions not ideel in Butte?" demand Corneliu$, with un- conaskunkable igaspression of counten- ance on face. "Am compny store die- allowed to flourish in Butte?" Not that you could notice. "Outside Ca. ltin's, wich do 90' per oeat of mnlere' blznues, there ain't not no compny store," I augustublate, crafty. "Am Butte miner rekwlred to deel in compny store in Butte?" ask Hon- roble Con, bristle. "Excep that if his check don't come back through Claflin's he'll get fired, he ain't not," I refinerate, with grinly. "Do shify boss holdup bohunk in Butte?" discontinue Boy Orator of Sliver Bow. "Ask Dicky Kilroy. He am awthor- ty on graft by shifty bosses." "Am Butte miner herded in fowl) dens at xhorbitunt rents?"orate Cor- nellh$. "Call up Leip," I revise. "IHe rote it all up in late unlamented Butte Evening News." "Do shifty bosses own nearlyby sloons and can miners wot don't pat- ternize 'em?" scream Big Boss. "You will find it all in Evening News file," I repetulate. "Or Dicky doubtless can't remember wat he wrote at that time." Wiges and prices. "Ain't living here only twict wot in am were wages am nearly same?" shout Con, dancing on myhogany bored. "And rents only four times?" I chitY- ly in. "Ain't best Wyomink cole sold here I for twict wot in bring in Chicago-" "With 1,200 poundly in every ton?" "I see we are agreedly," collapse Corneliu$. "Then wy poke fun at Johnny Mitchell's Ulogie., Can't Johnny pick up a dollar or two on the sidely without all the rat-faced Japs on earth buttingly in?" Further inquries. r It developly, MIr. Editor, that for t profound oboervationa on Buttet Jonny w "York U me mban r orf a Inus tcabti a td prt ae on oa udtei n nttes have boed- lifoty ew Yot and a is thbcoeut fldu' 4 "times; solemn. i'Put him in charge a f state depart- ment.". "That's ounny, Capt H don't nbet know nothing of. rugs." "Maybe It's drug departig e bak" clip in kWilt-wittedj Chief of secretly serv- "Thast~t JA. He an awthort• wdrugs. He's full tlf 'em mOst of the Utme, all wardsh I gatherly, M Mr. diter, means vhatisomn body at going tobe give a opu oblf .some kind, as-nbos of some- thing wlch somebody else gef. sticked to do. That primayy. Bowmanitls haody hwit town hard, in disregard topresunt same to CoMary and ame am dsgusted bump Whisngpers, oniy- ly. It am Sir-mizedn.that •evered 'Mare Looey iunkcy, am to be depost for "Thalure toet t vt, and Hon't n roble H. Hell Mawry, or some other good 'socialist on fSixt Floor payrole, made bossie. Wan returns amhiresulted, hoserety ser, Mr. Editer, socialists proahble will he toundly doing biznuss at same old plutand Honrobe kiJondnny Micky Guinof some- this' addleministraton as democratic tore am too familius in minds intel- ligunt voter to p return to Old Gang rule. Well and happy Mr. Editer, decept that disregy sx to resu a tpe Mawndry and I find night air from Hghlands per-ed finent to feet, but knowing yoU have Wften been the same,sulted, howver, MASHIHUIRA :GOTO. CAPITAL'S FIRST WOMAN BAILIFF MISS SADYE ATLAS Miss Sadye Atlas is the newly ap- pointed bailiff of the District of Co- lumbia's juvenile court and is the first one of her sex to hold such a position in Washington. She is to be an active probation worker among the Hebrew children who come un- der the care of the court and will act as secretary of the judge, Besides these duties she will also act as in- terpreter when one is necessar:' THE WORST IS YET TO COME A/T /la l 111 0pry t - the " 'l' + university by Bruce. e hhore4 Servtice of the Hopper is a memberof the ` ) 1017, a freshman. Htd orat and its, delivery wonl for hihfra tie 'T *t or in e Buckl award, iven by br, John .' Buckley " of Meoula each year. It is an oration w has won' for Mr. Hopper the appreitiob of the newSpaper workers, as well that of the judges; " " Througtout the 'aes w•e filnd re ords of faithful service, -'f be~.olt, and of sacrifice. M' ldty anre the~" liv that have been oi'ed t "iL.the it of devoted patriotism, manycy are tias unrewarded accomplisimeits, tny:. are the unhonored deeds of; ineptle genius, But never; was there amtther profession demanding so much and returning so little 4tn' the way of thanks as the piactice of every-day journalism. Physicians give up part of their sleep; clergymen sacrifice physi- cal comforts; but newspaper'men are called upon to sacrifice health, com- fort and their very life blood In serv- ice to you. "Some are born to rule, and some are born to serve." This is the ee- sence of an- old proverb which loses it s significance when applied to this giant moulder of puiic opinion. Not )nly does the daily newspaper serve the public humblyiand faithfully, but it rules as the greatest power within our nation save Christianity. The in- fluencd of journalism overshadows that of our educational institutions, our political machinery and our in- ternal democracy. The newspaper is a stronger agent of assimilation than the school. It is the educator of the common people for whom compulsory education is impossible, and has done and is doing for the many what art and travel have done for the few. We find the newspaper today to be the national storehouse of useful and sct- entific knowledge. It is to the Amer- ican reader what the Grecian oracle at Delphi was to the ancient Greek. Six billion copies furnish the religion, the politics and the creed of the busy American populace. In other words, the American newspaper is a power, since power is merely a knowledge of events. We are interested mostly in the principles of this public service and the spirit of their profession. We could call them heroes, but heroism seems to be surrounded with military glamour in times of terror; we codid call them geniuses, but genius is never recognized until the following gener- ation. They are just plain toilers of the press with a high order of mental equipment, an uncommon versatility, and an exceptional initiative. The spirit of the press is to stick-eternally stick! From editor to newsboy they are links of a great machine, links of an ever-revolving chain. Theirs is the only great profession in which the reward is not commercial. To see life in all its phases, to obtain fas- cinating glimpses behind the scenes where big things are. being done, to participate in the world's work, to champion the cause of the oppressed, and to voice the sentiment of- a na- tion-these are the rewards of journ- alism. Trained in the school of ac- curacy, instilled with the necessity of keen observation, and unconsciouly imbued with love of impersonal serv- ice, these men are the well prepared for public life. Go back to the French revolution. Who controlldd the people, who swayed the masses? The journalists- with their denunciatory pamphlets. and every Frenchman eminent now in civil life began his career by writing for the press. Most of our great men have been connected with the press in some way. William Jennings Bryan is still editor of the Commoner, de- spite his national office. Whitelaw Reid's work ,as a newspaper man ex- celled his achievements as ambas- sador. William Cullen Bryant was a greater journalist than a poet. There were many in the past decade-Joseph BRUiCE HOPPER., Ptilter,', who "founded the school of journaisimm at CeSfumbia, Charles. Dana who wrote "If you see it in the Sun, it's true,!' besides Horace Greely, Wat- terson, Howells and many others. The biographies of our senators show what a great percentage of our lawmakers were pplmarily newspaper men. Does this not suggest the press as a foun- dation for greatness? Is greatness founded on sacrifice of honor? Then turn to newspaper ranks for high degree, Go back eight years to the San Francisco disaster. At the first shock of the fatal earth- quake that April nmorning, 1906, the news centers in the lusiness district collapsed and commnunication with the outside world was destroyed. Wires were down, cables were severed and the city seemed doomed to ,perish within itself without a single call of distress. It was then that Robert C. Johnson, a mere Associatei Press re- porter, came to the front. What did he do? He set up a teipporary office outside the stricken portions of the city, tapped the wires, and sent out the first bulletins of the terrible dis- aster. Meantime on the heels of the quake came the sweeping fire. Con- fusion and chaos reigped supreme, buildings, were tumbling about him, and the fire surged over his frame protedtion, but he stayed by the tele- graph key. His one thought was to send out the news, and we, the out- side world, had the most complete story of a disaster ever given in so short a time. Not a single dispatch was signed. No one knew Johnson. The world hung breathless on his messages off the burning wires, but for him there was no glory, no honor, no'tribute. Similar incidents are true of the Baltimore fire, the Galveston flood, the civil war, or of late the Scott tragedy at the south pole. Can you imagine the fascinating thrill experienced by night editors when the wires sounded the cry for help from the sinking Titanic? See the confusion of the night. Local copy is abandoned. Reporters are as- signed to the White Star office, the pictures of passengers, obituaries and loss of life. The tension is at white heat: enthusiasm surges high; yet ac- curacy, accuracy, is in the cry of the editor, in the dash of the copyreader's blue pencil and in the fe' erish click of the linotype machines. We laud great authors, men who spend a lifetime on a book, yet when the big news broke-the Titanic sink- ing with 1,600 souls-we had a story within a few hours. There were pic- tures of the ship and commander, list of passengers, the career of Captain Smith, a historical sketch of marine catastrophes-everything of vital in- terest to the rushing American read- er. For these authors ther•n m ,.. 4e big news stories in news- - S , view theam in the o . light &f' l1terary merit, and you wilt be cd5tted'to rank those graphic i Rditates with the classics as iliterature. As animated prd- ue oo a reled 6, they at . ,ed throughout the world: the an- uno thetivuality be- glost in the g t ceiitrifugai mill u read about Roanvelt's edashing heard noir read of the correspn t- whlo brdave4 the fever-laden amap- ran the gauntlet of •panish sha shootenrs, and swam the brt•ets acerors the inleti to send in a repost to `hins paper. lAt the destrtbtio n of Messina, Sic- wy, by darthquake and tidal wave' in December, 1908, Cotteli of rthe Associ ated Press rose from a sick bed, or- ganized an emergency corps and start- ed for the tuithed city. Under shim were Howard Thoipsion of the Cuban and Reuseo aprnesr we are, oal Kellogg urlaned of the Turkish ward, For two eekps these news seekers worked- d a the ruins until 'exhausted by hungir. sending out to the world grim stofes 6of destruction and death. They *ere unknown even to the newspapers ith whicor te 'r stories were printed. All we know is that the disaster was covered by the Associated Press. Years ago when the wooden ship was still the pride of the American navy, John P. Dunning an Associated Press reporter, went to Samoa, A hprricane swept the islands, and "hun- dreds of American sailors Went down with thpir ships, but in the midst of the storm was the correspondent, his news sense alert and his pencil furi- ously recording the details of that terrible catastrophe. His name was onheralded. Associated Press articles are never signed, regardless of the heroism displayed in procuring the news. The reporter or correspondent loves his work and rarely thinks of himself while on an assignment, but of his paper. It is enthusiasm that bears him up. This is shown cleaily in the experiences of that brilliant recorder of the Civil war battles-Henry Vil- lard. It was enthusiasm that sent Vl- lard into the battle 'of Charleston on board the New Ironsides. History records how the captain and crew faced the Confederate batteries,' and fought their way to glory through Rebel shells, but never a word about the civilian clad newswriter on the shot-riddled deck.\ He. who endured the same hardships and' the same dan- ger, made famous the heroism of the crew, but his own daring was un- fnown, his aown bravery unsung. Such are the daily hazards of the reporters, such is the service they render, and such are the thanks meted out to them. What do they ask of you? Merely a fair appreciation of their honest effort to give' you the best they have-their very life. The journalist endures the icy winds of winter, the scorching suns of burning summer, raging stqrms and smoking guns, with a purpose. That purpose, like a river flowing to the sea, back- ing up persistently to flow over boul- ders in its course, is to serve you ef- ficiently and eternally. He is in de- mand everywhere, out climbing the ice-covered rope ladder of an incoming Atlantic liner, visiting a plauge ship, trailing a murderer, or perhaps raiding gambling dens with the police, or even searching the wilderness for lost mis- sionaries as Henry W. Stanley, of the New York Herald, was sent in quest of David Livingston. Go far nortn to the land of the Midnight Sun, among the Arctic blizzards and barren tundras-there you find the news- paper correspondent seeking inforhia- tion for you. Plunge into the heart of Darkest Africa, the haunts of the lion and 'the hippopotamus and you will find him there with his camera snapping pictures of wild beasts for your pleasure in the Sunday morning edition. But what is the cost of this ! nrvirn9 , Did you ever stop to consider what it means to publish every edition that comes to your door? Do you realize that every line of type in world's news is written in blood and unstrung nerves? Are you aware that the word "rush" is written all over the enticing headlines as you languidly read them at the breakfast table? Think of the strain, the wasted strength, and The overwork sustained to produce that paper for you'. Yet from the tired editor to the half-clad newsboy struggling through the snow, they are underpaid and unrewarded. What is left? Only that reward that you can give--our appreciation. After honor and tribute have been heaped upon the head of the politician, after you have crowned the fearless soldier with the laurel wreath, after you have sung the praises- of the explorer and the aviator, can you not then turn with the same spirit to that newspaper servant upon whose discretion, the fame of others rests, and honor him? Surely he is worthy of your-beet trib- t:tes, and responsive to your accla- mation. Surely careful thought on yours part would reveal the unlimited debt you owe the press for its serv- ice to you, the city, the state, and the nation. THE WIG. Now, why did I buy it, I wonder? I must have been + crasy, I know; But the' papers are ftll of the fashion. And the saleswoman flattered me so! I dread for my husband to see it... He's certain to grumble and iAold He used, in the days of our courtship, To liken my tresses to gold. How Madge and Loulsa and Glady" And the rest of the women would . starer If I should appear in the tango, Oh, earamelst out of my hair! But rIll bet they would go in convul- salons e ' Of Jealousy over my rig, And I guess, after all, that I'll-wear it To spite them, my new purple wig. -Miauia + ,Irwi Aalfred utro has written a new play ' . for George'4 deu e,; salled 'f T Virtues,"

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Page 1: MY BROTHER'S KEEPER U t - the 'l' + J - Library of Congresschroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83025316/1914-03-29/ed...people ail the while who find their beet enjoyment in getting

0 CO

SWot e at ~Missoula,ad-4ass mail matter.

31 CRPTION RATE&n(ti Advance)

I.2* temonth _.......................$5moniths ......................... 2.0025

t 'R the .............................. 4.00

io~ae' added for foreign countries.

rLE# HONE NUMBERS13t 41 - Independent 510

SMIOULA OFFICE0 94an'4i131 West Main Street.

r 4amilton Office1s'Main Street, Hamilton, Mont.

TO ADVERTISERS.While The Missoulian takes everyrweasnable precaution to guard against

itjpegraphioal errors in its advertisingweolu n, printers are but human andwe ill not be responsible for errorswhich may inadvertently occur.

•Missoulian Publishinn Company

SUBSCRIBERS' PAPERS.*Te Missoulian is anxious to give

thle ibet carrier service; therefore, sub-acrliters are requested to report faultydeliVery at once. In ordering paperehanged td new address, please giveold address also. Money orders andchecks should be made payable toThe, Missoulian Publishing Company,

•(i~ .

SUNDAY, MARCH 29, 1914.

the common growth of MotherEarth

Suffices me-her tears, her mirth,Her humblest mirth and tears.

-Wordsworth.

OOKING UP"It's alsways morning

somewhere."

There is everything in springtime towaken the best there is in a man. Eventhe' uncertainty of the weather-pro-voking at times-cannot stifle thespringtime feeling. The earth's waken-ing stirs the human heart as well asthe heart of nature and there is to befound a spur to endeavor in the con-ditions which surround us.

Some men would laugh if they weretold that they fe6e the influence of

spring-such sentiment seems silly tothem. Yet in their hearts the spiritof springtime is at work. It is notposlsble to resist the influence. Butthese cynics are becoming, all thewhile, a more and more inconsiderablebody. They count for less and less,every year.The love of outdoors is inherent in

every man. He may smother that af-fection all that he can because hethinks it unmanly, but he cannot de-atroy it entirely. It is there and itstays there. The call of the woods andthe hills and the streams, the sum-mons of the blue sky, the fresh breeze,the trees and the birds-this is a crywhich finds responsive echo in everybreast. Nor is it unmanly to acknowl-edg it.

There's an uplift in outdoors that,consciously or unconsciously to our-selves, gets in its work upon us, evenif we are unwilling. The man whofinds his recreation and his rest inbeing out in the open, that man doeshimself more good ant. does his com-munity more good than the man whoseeks those things between walls.

No man can be out of doors withhis eyes open and not be better forit. His thoughts are cleaner, his bloodcourses more freely, his courage isgreater. It is the natural place for aman to be-out in the open, just asoften and as long as he can get thereand stay there.

And the benefit is not only mental

and moral. It is physical, as well. Ap-Petit; and digestion are bettered; theeye" clears and the sluggish pulse9l4ckens. The step becomes moreelastic. It is easier to smile than itwas, shut up indoors. Outdoors isthe best medicine there is. It is thecheapest, too.

And the appreciation of the value ofoutdoors is increasing; there are morepeople ail the while who find theirbeet enjoyment in getting out into theop .TM The automobile and the saddleborse "have contributed much to thisenlarged e* ment, but neither one ofthen) is necessary to that enjoyment.There is a lot of comfort and a greatdedl of benefit in going afoot.It is a great thing for the race that

thti love for outdoors as becomingstrbnger. With fathers and mothersgetting health and happiness in toeopen, there is a betttr prospect for thehUC ren" of today and of tomorrow.

With the children romping in the hills,ther- is apeurance of a sturdy gener-*tio•p uset ahead..A.d, bhee in western Montana, this

,outdoor influence is so unusually•Wt o so unspeakably beautifulthat we ae fortunate above all con-t 1o0mprri Ijn t he advantage which

bth p~e ours. Get out of doors andeapportEitty which is yours.t ei asst of it.

S -THE OPTIMIST.

MY BROTHER'S KEEPER

"Am I my brother's keeper?" It is a question :whlch Jbeen asked ever since the birth of man. Always it is askedby somebody who is seeking to evade responsibility. AWayit is the alibi offered by those who would dodge the iss~e.

I It is the cowardly defense of the guilty. The man who asksthis question may be classified at once as not right. i

A day or two ago, The Missoulian printed an official letterfrom the commissioner of Indian affairs. It was addressedpersonally to each of the six thousand employes of the bu-reau over which Mr. Sells presides iti Washington. It was;devoted to the consideration of the problem of suppressingthe sale of liquor to Indians. Its tone was lofty and its planewas high. The letter should be read by every man and wo-man, by every boy and girl. For its scope is wider than themere relation between booze and the red man. It takes inthe whole question of personal responsibility; it is an ablepresentation of the whiskey problem.

"I believe," says the letter, "that the greatest present men-ace to the American Indian is whiskey.. It does more to de-stroy his constitution and invite the ravages of disease thananything else. It does more to demoralize him as a man and,frequently, as a woman. It does more to make him an easyprey to the unscrupulous than everything else combined., IfI say nothing more to you tonight that leaves an impression,let it be this one thought: Let us save the American Indianfrom the curse of whiskey."

Commissioner Sells does not ignore the question of re-sponsibility, either. In the course of his letter, he says:"There is nothing that could induce me, since I have takenthe oath of office as commissioner of Indian affairs, to toucha single drop of any sort of intoxicating liquor, and this re-gardless of my attitude on the prohibition question."

There is the whole proposition. The primary purpose ofthe letter was, of course, to discuss with the employes of theIndian service the question of suppressing the sale of liquorto the Indians. And it carries out that purpose admirably.But with that phase of the letter we have no concern thismorning. We might comment upon what we' know, here inMissoula, of the failure of the attempts at suppression andwe might present the reasons, as they appear to us, for thisfailure. We might quote Judge Bourquin in connectionwith the use of stool-pigeons by the men who are Working,ostensibly, toward bringing about this suppression.

But the paragraphs of the Sells letter which we havequoted stand out so conspicuously from all the rest, that theyseem to us to have a broad bearing upon the general ques-tion of personal responsibility. And this is a great questionin itself.

Commissioner Sells might, with propriety, have omittedthe word, Indian, from the first quoted paragraph. All thathe alleges in connection with the mixture of whiskey andIndian might have been said with equal truth regarding theresults of the consumption of whiskey by any man, no mat-ter what the color of his skin. And his plea to save the In-dian from the curse of whiskey might, with equal propriety,have been made as to the saving of every man and woman,of every race and creed, from this very evil.

Commissioner Sells declares that, with the responsibilityof his official oath upon him, he would not touch a drop ofany intoxicating liquor. This is a responsibility whch shouldbe realized by every person in authority, no matter who heis or where he is. The father cannot reasonably preach tohis son against the use of liquor, if he himself drinks it. Theemployer cannot in fairness forbid his. employe the drink ofwhiskey which he himself takes.

Each man is his brother's keeper-each man knows in hisheart that he is. He may haltingly ask the question, but heknows the answer before he speaks the words. He knowsthat he is the Big Brother to every weaker one than he. Thisprinciple was established when Cain was driven into the wil-derness, banished for his crime-but more for his cowardlyevasion. Recognition of this principle is a belief in everyman's heart, no matter how zealously he may strive to dis-avow it.

The whole country is better for this letter of Commission-er Sells. It contains much excellent advice for the people inthe Indian department, but-more than that-it carries asermon to every man in every station. It is another answer,specially well put, to the ancient question, "Am I my broth-er's keeper?"

Conversations With "Con"By The Invader.

Butte, March 28. I,Mr. Editer, The Daily Meloussian, cWho hav never been rekwire to

trade at Compny Store Because he amchumps with Johnny R. Tool: r

"Con," I inftinerate to Honroble Cor-neliu$ F. Kelley, as I drop into Holyof Holies in Big Ship Sixt Floor lastweek at noon, "wen aml Johnny Mitch-ell going to Barberdoughs in his newyat?"

Capt. Damn Gay Stlvers, chief ofAmalgamutts Secretly Service, am inHoly of Holies, translately cody des-pitch from Honroble John d. Rine, whoam in New York as personal repsent-ativ Mr. Roy S. Alley. Capt. Damn amnot in hystericks of joy at my entrantsand scowl frightful, like he do atscore boy on rangely Rocky Rifle club,wen bully-eye white flag fail to comeup.

One of the gang."Go right on translately, Damn,"

Con dib to martial warrior. "FeeledMarshal Goto am recommend to me bySSlandered Oil Compny in Japan, asman to be trustfulness. Wat am thisfeebly poke at Honroble John Mitchell,Feeled Marshal?"

Here Con cross legs and shove pack-idge of Sweet Caporal across myhog-any bored.

"I see by Honroble Butte Daily IPose," I attributate, "that ideel condi-tions eggsist fn Butte, wich Mitchell 1onct investligately wile changing trainsat Short Line deepot."

"Amn't conditions not ideel inButte?" demand Corneliu$, with un-conaskunkable igaspression of counten-ance on face. "Am compny store die-allowed to flourish in Butte?"

Not that you could notice."Outside Ca. ltin's, wich do 90' per

oeat of mnlere' blznues, there ain't not

no compny store," I augustublate,crafty."Am Butte miner rekwlred to deel

in compny store in Butte?" ask Hon-roble Con, bristle.

"Excep that if his check don't comeback through Claflin's he'll get fired,he ain't not," I refinerate, with grinly."Do shify boss holdup bohunk in

Butte?" discontinue Boy Orator ofSliver Bow.

"Ask Dicky Kilroy. He am awthor-ty on graft by shifty bosses."

"Am Butte miner herded in fowl)dens at xhorbitunt rents?" orate Cor-nellh$.

"Call up Leip," I revise. "IHe roteit all up in late unlamented ButteEvening News."

"Do shifty bosses own nearlybysloons and can miners wot don't pat-ternize 'em?" scream Big Boss.

"You will find it all in EveningNews file," I repetulate. "Or Dickydoubtless can't remember wat he wroteat that time."

Wiges and prices."Ain't living here only twict wot in

am were wages am nearly same?"shout Con, dancing on myhoganybored.

"And rents only four times?" I chitY-ly in.

"Ain't best Wyomink cole sold hereI for twict wot in bring in Chicago-"

"With 1,200 poundly in every ton?""I see we are agreedly," collapse

Corneliu$. "Then wy poke fun atJohnny Mitchell's Ulogie., Can'tJohnny pick up a dollar or two onthe sidely without all the rat-facedJaps on earth buttingly in?"

Further inquries.r It developly, MIr. Editor, that for

t profound oboervationa on Buttet

Jonny w "YorkU

me mban r orf a Inus

tcabti a td prt ae on oa

udtei n nttes have boed-

lifoty ew Yot and a is thbcoeut

fldu' 4 "times; solemn.i'Put him in charge a f state depart-

ment."."That's ounny, Capt H don't nbet

know nothing of. rugs.""Maybe It's drug departig e bak" clip

in kWilt-wittedj Chief of secretly serv-

"Thast~t JA. He an awthort• wdrugs.He's full tlf 'em mOst of the Utme, allwardsh I gatherly, M Mr. diter, means

vhatisomn body at going tobe give aopu oblf .some kind, as-nbos of some-

thing wlch somebody else gef. sticked

to do.That primayy.Bowmanitls haody hwit town hard, in

disregard topresunt same to CoMary andame am dsgusted bump Whisngpers, oniy-

ly. It am Sir-mizedn.that •evered'Mare Looey iunkcy, am to be depost

for "Thalure toet t vt, and Hon't n

roble H. Hell Mawry, or some othergood 'socialist on fSixt Floor payrole,

made bossie.Wan returns amhiresulted, hoserety ser,Mr. Editer, socialists proahble will hetoundly doing biznuss at same oldplutand Honrobe kiJondnny Micky Guinof some-this' addleministraton as democratictore am too familius in minds intel-ligunt voter to p return to Old

Gang rule.Well and happy Mr. Editer, deceptthat disregy sx to resu a tpe Mawndry andI find night air from Hghlands per-edfinent to feet, but knowing yoU have

Wften been the same,sulted, howver,

MASHIHUIRA :GOTO.

CAPITAL'S FIRSTWOMAN BAILIFF

MISS SADYE ATLAS

Miss Sadye Atlas is the newly ap-pointed bailiff of the District of Co-lumbia's juvenile court and is thefirst one of her sex to hold such aposition in Washington. She is to bean active probation worker amongthe Hebrew children who come un-der the care of the court and will actas secretary of the judge, Besidesthese duties she will also act as in-terpreter when one is necessar:'

THE WORST IS YET TO COME

A/T

/la l

1110pry

t - the " 'l' +university by Bruce. e

hhore4 Servtice of theHopper is a memberof the ̀ )1017, a freshman. Htd orat and its,delivery wonl for hihfra tie 'T *t

or in e Buckl award, ivenby br, John .' Buckley " of Meoulaeach year. It is an oration w haswon' for Mr. Hopper the appreitiobof the newSpaper workers, as wellthat of the judges; " "

Througtout the 'aes w•e filnd reords of faithful service, -'f be~.olt,and of sacrifice. M' ldty anre the~" livthat have been oi'ed t "iL.the itof devoted patriotism, manycy are tiasunrewarded accomplisimeits, tny:.are the unhonored deeds of; ineptlegenius, But never; was there amtther

profession demanding so much andreturning so little 4tn' the way of

thanks as the piactice of every-dayjournalism. Physicians give up part oftheir sleep; clergymen sacrifice physi-cal comforts; but newspaper'men arecalled upon to sacrifice health, com-fort and their very life blood In serv-ice to you.

"Some are born to rule, and someare born to serve." This is the ee-sence of an- old proverb which losesits significance when applied to thisgiant moulder of puiic opinion. Not

)nly does the daily newspaper servethe public humblyiand faithfully, butit rules as the greatest power withinour nation save Christianity. The in-fluencd of journalism overshadows

that of our educational institutions,our political machinery and our in-ternal democracy. The newspaper isa stronger agent of assimilation thanthe school. It is the educator of thecommon people for whom compulsoryeducation is impossible, and has doneand is doing for the many what artand travel have done for the few. Wefind the newspaper today to be the

national storehouse of useful and sct-entific knowledge. It is to the Amer-ican reader what the Grecian oracleat Delphi was to the ancient Greek.

Six billion copies furnish the religion,the politics and the creed of the busyAmerican populace. In other words,the American newspaper is a power,since power is merely a knowledgeof events.

We are interested mostly in theprinciples of this public service andthe spirit of their profession. Wecould call them heroes, but heroismseems to be surrounded with militaryglamour in times of terror; we codidcall them geniuses, but genius is neverrecognized until the following gener-ation. They are just plain toilers ofthe press with a high order of mental

equipment, an uncommon versatility,and an exceptional initiative. Thespirit of the press is to stick-eternallystick! From editor to newsboy theyare links of a great machine, linksof an ever-revolving chain. Theirs isthe only great profession in which

the reward is not commercial. To seelife in all its phases, to obtain fas-cinating glimpses behind the sceneswhere big things are. being done, toparticipate in the world's work, tochampion the cause of the oppressed,and to voice the sentiment of- a na-tion-these are the rewards of journ-alism. Trained in the school of ac-curacy, instilled with the necessity ofkeen observation, and unconscioulyimbued with love of impersonal serv-ice, these men are the well preparedfor public life.

Go back to the French revolution.Who controlldd the people, whoswayed the masses? The journalists-with their denunciatory pamphlets.and every Frenchman eminent now incivil life began his career by writingfor the press. Most of our great menhave been connected with the pressin some way. William Jennings Bryanis still editor of the Commoner, de-spite his national office. WhitelawReid's work ,as a newspaper man ex-celled his achievements as ambas-sador. William Cullen Bryant was agreater journalist than a poet. Therewere many in the past decade-Joseph

BRUiCE HOPPER.,

Ptilter,', who "founded the school ofjournaisimm at CeSfumbia, Charles. Danawho wrote "If you see it in the Sun,it's true,!' besides Horace Greely, Wat-terson, Howells and many others. Thebiographies of our senators show whata great percentage of our lawmakerswere pplmarily newspaper men. Doesthis not suggest the press as a foun-dation for greatness?

Is greatness founded on sacrificeof honor? Then turn to newspaperranks for high degree, Go back eightyears to the San Francisco disaster.At the first shock of the fatal earth-quake that April nmorning, 1906, thenews centers in the lusiness districtcollapsed and commnunication with theoutside world was destroyed. Wireswere down, cables were severed andthe city seemed doomed to ,perishwithin itself without a single call ofdistress. It was then that Robert C.Johnson, a mere Associatei Press re-porter, came to the front. What didhe do? He set up a teipporary officeoutside the stricken portions of thecity, tapped the wires, and sent outthe first bulletins of the terrible dis-aster. Meantime on the heels of thequake came the sweeping fire. Con-fusion and chaos reigped supreme,buildings, were tumbling about him,and the fire surged over his frameprotedtion, but he stayed by the tele-graph key. His one thought was tosend out the news, and we, the out-side world, had the most completestory of a disaster ever given in soshort a time. Not a single dispatchwas signed. No one knew Johnson.The world hung breathless on hismessages off the burning wires, butfor him there was no glory, no honor,no'tribute. Similar incidents are trueof the Baltimore fire, the Galvestonflood, the civil war, or of late theScott tragedy at the south pole.

Can you imagine the fascinatingthrill experienced by night editorswhen the wires sounded the cry forhelp from the sinking Titanic? Seethe confusion of the night. Localcopy is abandoned. Reporters are as-signed to the White Star office, thepictures of passengers, obituaries andloss of life. The tension is at whiteheat: enthusiasm surges high; yet ac-curacy, accuracy, is in the cry of theeditor, in the dash of the copyreader'sblue pencil and in the fe' erish clickof the linotype machines.

We laud great authors, men whospend a lifetime on a book, yet whenthe big news broke-the Titanic sink-ing with 1,600 souls-we had a storywithin a few hours. There were pic-tures of the ship and commander, listof passengers, the career of CaptainSmith, a historical sketch of marinecatastrophes-everything of vital in-terest to the rushing American read-er. For these authors ther•n m ,..

4e big news stories in news- -S , view theam in the o .

light &f' l1terary merit, and you wiltbe cd5tted'to rank those graphici Rditates with the classics as

iliterature. As animated prd-ue oo a reled 6, they at .

,ed throughout the world: the an-uno thetivuality be-

glost in the g t ceiitrifugai mill

u read about Roanvelt's edashing

heard noir read of the correspn t-whlo brdave4 the fever-laden amap-ran the gauntlet of •panish shashootenrs, and swam the brt•etsacerors the inleti to send in a repostto `hins paper.lAt the destrtbtio n of Messina, Sic-wy, by darthquake and tidal wave' inDecember, 1908, Cotteli of rthe Associated Press rose from a sick bed, or-ganized an emergency corps and start-ed for the tuithed city. Under shimwere Howard Thoipsion of the Cubanand Reuseo aprnesr we are, oal Kelloggurlaned of the Turkish ward, For twoeekps these news seekers worked- d a

the ruins until 'exhausted by hungir.sending out to the world grim stofes6of destruction and death. They *ereunknown even to the newspapers ithwhicor te 'r stories were printed. Allwe know is that the disaster wascovered by the Associated Press.

Years ago when the wooden shipwas still the pride of the Americannavy, John P. Dunning an AssociatedPress reporter, went to Samoa, Ahprricane swept the islands, and "hun-dreds of American sailors Went downwith thpir ships, but in the midst ofthe storm was the correspondent, hisnews sense alert and his pencil furi-ously recording the details of thatterrible catastrophe. His name wasonheralded. Associated Press articlesare never signed, regardless of theheroism displayed in procuring thenews.

The reporter or correspondent loveshis work and rarely thinks of himselfwhile on an assignment, but of hispaper. It is enthusiasm that bearshim up. This is shown cleaily in theexperiences of that brilliant recorderof the Civil war battles-Henry Vil-lard. It was enthusiasm that sent Vl-lard into the battle 'of Charleston onboard the New Ironsides. Historyrecords how the captain and crewfaced the Confederate batteries,' andfought their way to glory throughRebel shells, but never a word aboutthe civilian clad newswriter on theshot-riddled deck.\ He. who enduredthe same hardships and' the same dan-ger, made famous the heroism of thecrew, but his own daring was un-fnown, his aown bravery unsung.

Such are the daily hazards of thereporters, such is the service theyrender, and such are the thanks metedout to them. What do they ask ofyou? Merely a fair appreciation oftheir honest effort to give' you thebest they have-their very life. Thejournalist endures the icy winds ofwinter, the scorching suns of burningsummer, raging stqrms and smokingguns, with a purpose. That purpose,like a river flowing to the sea, back-ing up persistently to flow over boul-ders in its course, is to serve you ef-ficiently and eternally. He is in de-mand everywhere, out climbing theice-covered rope ladder of an incomingAtlantic liner, visiting a plauge ship,trailing a murderer, or perhaps raidinggambling dens with the police, or evensearching the wilderness for lost mis-sionaries as Henry W. Stanley, of theNew York Herald, was sent in questof David Livingston. Go far nortnto the land of the Midnight Sun,among the Arctic blizzards and barrentundras-there you find the news-paper correspondent seeking inforhia-tion for you. Plunge into the heartof Darkest Africa, the haunts of thelion and 'the hippopotamus and youwill find him there with his camerasnapping pictures of wild beasts foryour pleasure in the Sunday morningedition. But what is the cost of this

! nrvirn9 ,

Did you ever stop to consider whatit means to publish every edition thatcomes to your door? Do you realizethat every line of type in world's newsis written in blood and unstrungnerves? Are you aware that theword "rush" is written all over theenticing headlines as you languidlyread them at the breakfast table?Think of the strain, the wastedstrength, and The overwork sustainedto produce that paper for you'. Yetfrom the tired editor to the half-cladnewsboy struggling through the snow,they are underpaid and unrewarded.What is left? Only that reward thatyou can give--our appreciation. Afterhonor and tribute have been heapedupon the head of the politician, afteryou have crowned the fearless soldierwith the laurel wreath, after you havesung the praises- of the explorer andthe aviator, can you not then turnwith the same spirit to that newspaperservant upon whose discretion, thefame of others rests, and honor him?Surely he is worthy of your-beet trib-t:tes, and responsive to your accla-mation. Surely careful thought onyours part would reveal the unlimiteddebt you owe the press for its serv-ice to you, the city, the state, andthe nation.

THE WIG.

Now, why did I buy it, I wonder?I must have been

+ crasy, I know;

But the' papers are ftll of the fashion.And the saleswoman flattered me so!

I dread for my husband to see it...He's certain to grumble and iAold

He used, in the days of our courtship,To liken my tresses to gold.

How Madge and Loulsa and Glady"And the rest of the women would

. starerIf I should appear in the tango,

Oh, earamelst out of my hair!But rIll bet they would go in convul-

salons e 'Of Jealousy over my rig,

And I guess, after all, that I'll-wear itTo spite them, my new purple wig.

-Miauia + ,Irwi

Aalfred utro has written a new play ' .for George'4 deu e,; salled 'f TVirtues,"