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WHY DO WOMEN NOT TAKE THIS UP Men's Convention in New York Decides That Immoral Wom en Should Wear Badges There are one or two subjects which organized women seem to feel are par ticularly theirs to agitate and hardly a day passes that we do not read of some action taken by them in regard to the movements which are near their hearts. Recently women have been sharply divided in regard to the re placing of the canteen in the army, for one body of women in Washington is pleading for its re-establishment, "while a very old and well known or ganization of women is fighting it with every resource at its command. Then again, the subject of woman suffrage has commanded the best efforts of many able women, and yet there have been women who not only did not want to vote, but were willing to fight the others who agitate the subject, and a few years ago we saw two rival fac tions of women haranguing the legis lature at Albany, N. V., one urging suffrage and the other opposing it. So it is difficult to find a subject, or a want, that women can really unite upon as a common grievance. And yet not so very long ago, in New York, a suggestion was made which, had women resented it as they should, would have welded all women in this country into one harmonious whole, and properly so. In some meeting of men, some convention of an organiza tion, the name of which escapes me, but which of course was for the betterment of mankind and probably had Chris tian in its title somewhere, there arose a sanctimonious man who gave voice to a remarkable suggestion, which, if I remember right, was adopted. Mt. was that each woman of immoral life should wear a badge! I doubt not that after voicing that suggestion the man sat down with the feeling that he had made a name for himself. And un doubtedly he has. Now for sheer in justice to women, for v crass stupidity, immorality and absolute idiocy this suggestion ranks No. 1. The women who cannot get together on the.sub jects of temperance, or suffrage, will find no difficulty in becoming a unit on this ' preposterous proposition. Badges" on women? And, pray ; tell, what kind of a badge is to be put on a bad man? If the W. C. T. U. had met, resoluted and adopted that every im moral man should wear a blue hat, It would not have exceeded in absurdity the suggestion mentioned above. - Then If some woman had gone out and cor nered the blue hat market she would have made her everlasting fortune.: • £ The brilliant masculine mind which evolved this original, highly civilized and Christian idea, .probably had not thought out how this great thing was to be done, or by whom, or, indeed, thought at all. Who was to be : the judge ? For whose protection was this branding to be done?v The ■ righteous body of men who thought this out for the betterment of mankind surely need no protection. Their guilelessness 'is their safety, but they should avoid the open country where cows congregate. Oftentimes women seem to . fight shadows and make mountains out of molehills. But when a body of men in the twentieth century meets and de cides to put signs on women to distin guish evil from good it is about time women rose up in their might and laughed them to scorn. Why an im moral woman should wear a sign and an immoral man should not was not explained by the erudite person who made the suggestion. But if women should take up this matter, which it seems strange they have not, they might make a suggestion or two more needed than the safeguarding of love ly, innocent man. For instance, when a woman marries, she changes her ti tle so that at once when her name is heard one can tell whether or not she is married. Also the married woman wears a ring on the third finger of her left hand .which makes it plain even to a stranger that she is married. But What of a man? There is no change in his title when he marries; he does not wear a ring which tells a tale \ He goes on just as before and precipitates many a tragedy. because it is not known he is a married man. This is all an injustice to women. Let some or the organizations meet and resolve that every married man shall wear a cross on his left shoulder or a red tie to signify, his wedded condition: That Christian organization can't do all the suggesting. This affair convinces one that the Christian convention of self-righteous men which met in New York and adopted tha,t resolution had not much business to occupy its time. "lul-u —— ——— —~—-na I Mainly About People T ° -■--«■ ..-• , " ■ ■"..-. — a Miss Muriel Foster, . the English con tralto, who sings at the Park < Congre gational church this evening under the auspices of the Schubert club, arrived a"k S V Paul T yesterday and is .at the Aberdeen. Just before leaving- for the S "^/ss, Foster gave a song recital in Portland. Me. One of the papers voS- had the following to say of her Mu'rie^VoS^ve^a^nS^thf^^ 83 sion that here was a concert sferof the first quality, V donna among con altos. : : Miss Poster revealed a voice of the purest contralto quality, rich, -vibrant if .rasa £&« St «£3 -aasag saws^ a marked dramatic quality and a delteac ' of expression that are manifest with jrreat refinement and - judgment. She r> eoeflar beyond the average concert singer inma «cal Interpretation and emotional cotor qua .tie* that at once win the sympathies 01 the audience, and she '. sings with a distinction and authority that Ire is de lightful as they are convincing. Into Gftr- Ins: Thomas' fine song-, "My - Heart Is «ary," Miss Foster threw an intensity of feeling: that stirred the heart with its bur den of sorrow. Equally fine were her ren ditions- of Schumann and Schubert the forceful Schubert song. "Die Allmach." beingr^ung with, notable verve and power" Ihe French songs were given with . ex quisite effect of delicate shading and art- i S"?• Ae res, RA on> and ln •* Tosti'a Chanson v - ♦«<♦u ,Mls*, Foster demonstrated her versatility in a lighter vein. ; ; Her singing ~^=^^^a^^^^^^^Ml FOR THE-FAIR SiP 1 .v 1111 OP lb IT lm v Uu l&_W_ FASHIONS FROM VOGUE Prepared Specialty for THE QLGBE The lavish use of beautiful laces, such as real Bruges, Venetian point, the lovely Irish baby cEOchet, Limerick and Carrick-ma-cross applique, is a feature of the season. Lace velvet and sable are the height of elegance, as the combination has been ever, and the purse must be long to afford a gown of this kind. The one illustrated by today's sketch shows a charming prin cess model from one of the best known Parisian modistes that is of a Pom peiian red velvet, the lace is ecru Venetian point, that formerly adorned an altar cloth, and which now blends exquisitely with the sable bands that trim the yoke shaped collar. The back of this collar finishes in wide tabs that cross and are seemingly fastened by two brilliant cut steel buttons similar to those on shoulders at front. Stiff little bows of tulle in the deep glow ing shade of the gown catch the scarf arrangement at throat and half length. The sleeves show the absolute change from those of last season in placing the fullness high with shirring along inside seam, the deep cuff finishing with ruffle flaring upward, and deep est at outer part, into which the full ness of sleeve fits almost as in a cap. Three bands of velvet cross the cuff throughout highly pleased her audience, which warmly applauded her in all her renditions, recalling her repeatedly to the stage to bow her acknowledgements. Herr Grunow and his wife, Frau Grunow La Combe, will receive formally on Friday, from 11 to 2, at their home, 719 Portland avenue, in honor of birthday of the kaiser. The Woman's Alliance of Unity Church will meet Tuesday, Jan. 24, at 2:30 p. m., with Mrs. Charles W. Ames, 501 Grand avenue. Garfield W. R. C. will serve a natural food supper with demonstration of chafing dish cookery Friday from 4 30 to 6:30. Mrs. Brand, of Western avenue gave a small card party Friday night. ' Miss Lux. of Charles street, gave a sleighing party Saturday night. Mrs. I. C. Ruff, of the Metropolitan, has gone to the Bahama islands. Inga Appeals to King Oscar CHICAGO, Jan. 23.—King Oscar IL, of Sweden, is to be appealed to to assist Inga Hanson to clear herself of the charges of perjury brought against her as a result of her suit for 550,000 dam ages against the Chicago City Railway company. The plea will allege that the young woman, being poor and without influential friends, is unable to get jus tice and is now in danger of being sent to the penitentiary for a crime which she did not commit. It will declare that the young woman waa severely injured and still suffers from the effects of her injuries, and unless the government of Sweden interferes she may have to suffer imprisonment as well. The case has been replete with sen sational features, involving a civil trial, in which the young woman, apparently blind, deaf, dumb and paralyzed, was carried ihto the .court: room on a cot daily, while she sought to obtain a ver dict against the railway company, and then a criminal trial, in which she, after what she" clarmed a miraculous cure, was able to appear in court to de fend herself against the charges of per jury. The second case is still pending. American Countess Dies NICE, France, Jan.,23. —The Countess Buxoeweden, nee MeKnight, of Borden town, N. J., died here today. -She was the daughter of the late John L. and Jane E. McKnight. She was married at Bordentown to Count. Constantine Buxhoewdsn, of Russia, in IS4». , , Society Woman Dies Poor LOS ANGELES, Cal,, Jan, .23.—Mrs. Margaret Jac"bt>y, once a wealthy so ciety leader In Milwaukee, has died suddenly in Santa Monica. She was poor. GOSSIP FROM GOTHAM As the exhibition of draperies at the Flatiron corner necessarily is a day time show, the men who make up the crowd there would be unhappy at night were it not for "the little Flatiron" fur ther up town. That is, the Broadway sidewalk at the entrance to the Met ropolitan opera house. Gales have nothing to do with the display there; its foundation is slush or rain. Under I the broad awning must pass all those persons who sit in the orchestra or orchestra circle. On rainy or snowy • THE ST. PAUL GLOBE. TUESDAY, JANUARY 24 1905 and a ruffle falls over hand, one of chiffon with a tiny ruche on edge be neath it. The fun- turban is also of Russian sable, as is the large, fiat muff, and the only trimming on the hat is a white aigrette caught by a lace .knot with two ends that are held at both sides of knot by cut steel buckles. To duplicate this model at less expense dark Gastern mink could replace the Russian sable, and broad cloth or a heavy camel's hair serge the velvet. Ecru Bruges lace would be al most as effective as the Venetian, and if hard to obtain in the exact shade desired, white may be bought and either dyed with coffee at home or taken to a reliable shop where such orders are attended to, as the home tinted la"ces never come out with the edg* in the proper condition. Returning to the subject of fur, now is the time to procure great bargains, as all the high class pieces are greatly reduced. One of the loveliest and most desirable furs ia Hudson bay sable, which cl<ssely resembles the Russian skins, and still another is the pale blended baum marten, probably the most difficult of all to find, although in price corresponding to the Hudson bay. A set of either would last for many years. nights a group of stocking students stand on either side of the entrance, their attention riveted on the car riages as they drive up to the curb. In spite of the awning, the sidewalk Is bound to be wet with rain or covered with a thin coating of slush. From the' depths of her carriage a woman surveys the walk with dismay. The students are alert, their eyes on the step be low the open door. The passing of a fire' engine could not make their eyes turn one inch away from that fixed point, so faithful are they to actual demonstrations of their favorite study. Then she picks up her skirts and ven tures one foot out on the carriage step. It is shod in the daintiest and thin nest of slippers, above which is the sheerest of silk hosiery. She lifts her colored skirts a. a if she were about to ford a mountain brook. Then, while the frequenters of "the little Flatiron" stand in rapt admiration of the pattern, web and curves, she tiptoes across to the swinging doors that conceal her from view. Few fashions of recent decades have had more of piquancy than the pres ent season's jaunty wearing of the flat stole. There is something about the studied negligence with which the right end is thrown over the left shoul der that suggests the coquette, no mat ter how prim the wearer may be. In that backward flip of the fur lies a world of seeming invitation. She who wears her stoje that way—and who in the fashionable world does not?—may not be aware of it, but the flapping end waves defiance to all mankind, and as a drawer of hearts it is incomparable^ Of course, society's matrons do not dream of any such interpretation of the mode. To them it is simply the mode and nothing more, precisely as a primrose on the river's bank would be an orchid if they had their way For example—and an excellent one- Mrs. "Jimmy" Lanier. Her husband, when he returned from Europe in the Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse in Octo ber, brought a set of Imperial sables from Russia that delighted her more than all the diamonds he purchased for her in Paris and London. She wore them with the air of a queen when she stepped out of her carriage in front of the Breslin a couple of days ago, and it was noticeable that she went to the extreme of the fashion, for the end of the stole which passed forward over "fa a Minute" That* a short time In which to expect returns from an advertisement, but the fact Is that peo ple frequently respond to Globe, want ads before the Ink is dry on tho paper. There is no better me dlum anywhere, and more and more people are finding out that It payE to use these famous cent a word. "Popular Wants" her left shoulder was so short it was al most lost to sight in the lugubrious fold of the other end that crossed it and hung three feet down her back. Equally striking was\a full-length sealskin coat which Mrs. Moses Taylor —who, like Mrs. Lanier, also was born a Bishop—wore on her way to a lunch eon in the St. Regis. As she tripped across the sidewalk in front of her handsome Seventy-second street town house to enter her carriage one of the first facts-that caught the eye about her sumptuous outer garment was that It cleared the pave and no more. Mrs. Taylor is one of those women who can wear anything, yet her friends think her unusually courageous in swathing herself in fur from throat to hem, when fashion rules so strongly in favor of the three-quarter. Nevertheless, none who caught that glimpse of her could have wished her in aught else than the coat of regal sweep that only half hid her grace of figure. It is possible before the season ends Mrs. Taylor and Mrs. "Jadk" Astor will restore to the full length sealskin the popularity that belongs to it of right Elaborate gold handles are used again on the umbrellas of the youngest wom en, even buds of a week's blooming car rying them. Ruth Twombly held under her arm, with the point at the proper angle, a Paris affair surmounted by a shepherd's crook of Etruscan metal, when she hurried out of the ancestrai No. 684 on her way down The Avenue Monday afternoon. It was an umbrella that appeared to be to»-gorgeous to be of much practical use, for the handle's gold was studded with rubies and be tween them were set diamonds and em eralds of smaller size. The three kinds of stones shot forth rays that crossed confuslngiy as the subway signals. It was a beautiful toy, and evidently Miss Twombly regarded it as such, for she carried it when the sky held no portent of rain. Perhaps she would have used a simpler one had she been going out for a showery jaunt There is a good deal of thrift behind some of society's extravagance, after all. HOI IDA V TurnJ«gcoid UVLWAI r% Turkey and LEFTOVERS Chi(*en Into LEFTOVERS Tempting —— ——— ;.;<;v : ■ Dishes BMMEDIATELY after a holiday there is always a goodly supply of tur key and chicken left over, which becomes unappetizing served more than once as cold sliced meat. Here are some nice recipes for turning these leftovers into tempting dishes: Mince of Turkey A mince of turkey served on dainty squares of toast is good for one meal. This is one housewife's way of prepar ing it: To one cupful of minced meat add half a cupful of milk, two table spoonfuls of butter or drippings, one sllce»of a small onion, minced fine, salt and pepper to taste, with a trifle of powdered mace. Stir well while it is stewing, and serve on squares of toast, with a garnish of parsley. Cold chick en can be prepared in this way, leaving out the onion. A mince of chicken is nice served with green peas in a cream sauce. Make a generous quantity of cream sauce, using glenty of good but ter. Cut the chicken in small bits, or hash it, adding about a cupful of chick en to every cupful and a half or two cupfuls of cream sauce. Add also a cupful of canned peas at the last mo ment. When it comes again to the boil ing point, pour it over thin, delicate slices of toast. Cold turkey can be pre pared in the same way, A cold boiled chicken left over after making bouillon or chicken soup can be utilized in a number of ways. Re member that all the goodness was not taken out when the fowl was used for making stock. It is still nutritious, and should not be scorned. The cold chick en may be breaded and fried. It can also be used as a potpie. Of course, the meat will not have to simmer a long time, as raw chicken would, but should boil only ten or fifteen minutes under the biscuit dough. Jellied Chicken A cold chicken in the form of jellied chicken makes a good supper dish. Put an ounce of gelatine in a pint of warm water on the back of the stove, and occasionally stir until it is dissolv ed. Then add a pint of chicken broth or bouillon to it, and a high season- Ing of salt and pepper. While the gel atine is being dissolved cut all the chicken off the bones. Place the meat in an earthen mold. Pour over the chicken the broth and gelatine, strain ing first. Press the meat down, and let the broth cover it completely. Place a weight over it, and when the chicken is thoroughly jellied turn out of the mold and serve in thin slices. Scalloped Chicken To scallop chicken take equal tities of chopped cold chicken and soft bread crumbs, with enough white sauce or any good gravy to moisten the dish. Put chicken and crumbs in lay ers in a pretty earthen baking dish that will look well on the table, or if you prefer in individual scallop shells. Season highly and cover scantily with a nice sauce or gravy of some kind. Cover the top with sifted crumbs and dot the crumbs with bits of butter. Bake fifteen minutes in a hot oven and serve hot. Mrs. Henderson's cook book gives the following way of preparing cold leftover chicken for supper: Pick all the meat possible 1 from the bones. Chop it rather fine and season with pepper• and salt. Put into the bottom of a mold some slices of hard boiled eggs, next a layer of chopped chicken, then more slices of eggs and layers of chicken until the mold is nearly full. Boil down the water in which the chicken was boiled, or if it is roast chicken the gravy it was served with, until there is about a cupful left. Sea son it well and pour it over the chick en. It should be rich enough to form a jelly around the meat. If not, add a little gelatine. Let the mold of meat stand over night or all day on Ice. Slice it for luncheon or supper, place it on a pretty platter and garnish with light colored celery leaves or with fringed celery. Turkey Fritters To make chicken fritters, cut up cold roasted or boiled chicken in small pieces. Season with salt, pepper and a piece of fresh lemon. Let the meat stand one hour; then make a fritter batter and stir the pieces into it. Drop it by spoonfuls into boiling fat and fry until a light brown. Drain and serve immediately. Any kind of cold tender meat can be utilized in this way. One good cook's rule for chicken croquettes is as follows: Take one solid pfnt of finely chopped cooked chicken, one tablespdonful of salt, half a teaspoonful of pepper, one cup of cream or chicken stock, one table spoonful of flour, four eggs and one teaspoonful of onion juice, one table spoonful of lemon juice, one pint of crumbs and three tablespoonfuls of butter. Put the cream or stock on to boil. Mix flour and butter together and stir into the boiling cneam; then add chicken and season. Boil two min utes and add two of the eggs well beaten. Take from the fire Immediately and set away to cool. When cold, shape and fry, adding, if you wish, a bit of parsley. Turkey croquettes can be made In the same way. Cold roast chicken or turkey is better than boiled meat for croquettes. FALL OF THE RUSSIAN AUTOCRACY IS SEEN London Papers Interpret Movement Which Awes the French LONDON, Jan. 23.—Such phrases as these, extracted from editorial articles In the London morning newspapers, suffici ently indicate the opinion held here of yesterday's events In St. Petersburg: "Revolt has been quelled but revolution begun." "The bureaucracy has declared its pol icy; it is the policy of Blagovestchenk— massacre." "The inevitable reaction has begun and With it a new chapter in Russia's history and probably also in the history of Europe and Asia." "The revolutionary movement in Russia has received its baptism of blood, its crown of martyrdom." "Is there,a Mirabeau or even a Danton in Russia today?" "A very grave responsibility lies today at the door of the czar, who has failed to grasp his unique opportunity." "The 'Little Father' has become the murderer of his people, and it remains with him to save the country from dis aster. Even at the eleventh hour he may do so, but only by recognizing that autoc racy has gone forever." It is pointed out that the fate of Rus sia does not depend upon the people of St. Petersburg alone, but on the masses throughout the country; and it is con sidered that the events of recent months connected -with the agitation for constitu tional reform sufficiently attest the peo ple's temper. Some of the special dispatches from St. Petersburg this morning comment upon the unexpectedly determined attitude dis played by the Russian workmen yesterday as reveaKng a new phase in the character of the patient masses. Many special correspondents give vary ing reports. For instance, the correspond ent of the Daily Mail says that 20.-000 people from Kolpino were met at the Moscow arch, on the confines of St. Pe tersburg, with six volleys and that 1,000 fell dead and 1,500 wounded. Other correspondents state that the workmen have proclaimed their intention to attack private property, and that Minister of the Interior Sviatopolk-Mirsky has consented to receive a deputation of workmen today. Whilst many estimate the casualties at anywhere near 2,000 killed and 5,000 wounded, there is everywhere conclusive evidence of the impossibility of yet esti mating with any degree of exactitude. PARIS, Jan, 22.—The news of the bloody events in St. Petersburg has caus ed a profound sensation here. The news papers issued special editions throughout the evening giving dramatic details of the street fighting, and these were eagerly read and discussed in the boulevards, at the theaters and in other public places, the tragedy being the universal subject of comment. The newspaper offices were surrounded by crowds awaiting bulletins. Officials here have received advices prac tically the same as those made public. The general view, including that of of ficials, is one of the deepest apprehension that events of today may precipitate in Russia a period of revolution such as France has witnessed. Lie Temps' St. Petersburg correspondent tonight makes a graphic comparison be tween the position of Emperor Nicholas 11. and King Louis XVI. qn the eve of the reign of terror. After a careful analy sis of the situation the correspondent concludes that most of the military forces of Russia will remain loyal to the em peror, although he foresees prospects of some of the artillery regiments playing the same ri>le that the French guards took on the fall of the Bastile at the outbreak of the French revolution. The correspond ent also points out that Emperor Nicho las' withdrawal to Tsarskoe Selo places twenty-one kilometers between htm and the excited populace. The prevailing tone here is one of awe at the magnitude of the horror. The so r cialist journals do not disguise a strong sentiment of denunciation of the indigni ties imposed by the government. Haggard Has American Mission LONDON, Jan. 23.—Colonial Secre tary Lyttelton has appointed H. Rider Haggard, the novelist, a commissioner to inquire into the conditions and char acter of agricultural and industrial land settlements organized in America by the Salvation Army. The trustees of the estate of Cecil Rhodes are paying the expenses of the inquiry with a view of applying the scheme to South Africa. RAILROAD NOTICES Two Through Tourist Cars to California The Chicago Great Western Railway offers choice of- two through tourist cars every week to California, one leaving Minneapolis and St. Paul Tuesdays via Omaha and the Rock Island Route, ar riving San Francisco 5:20 p. m. Saturday, the other leaving on Thursdays via Kan sas City and the Santa Fe Route, arriv ing at Los Angeles 8:25 a. m. Monday. For further information apply to J. N. Storr, Gen'l Agt., Cor. sth & Robert Sts., St. Paul. Fast Tourist Car Service to California The Chicago Great Western Railway, in connection with the C. R. I. & P- Railway, will run a through tourist sleeping car every week to San Francisco. Leaving Minneapolis at 8:00 p. m., St. Paul 8:30 p. m., Tuesdays via Omaha, Colorado Springs and Ogden. Arrive San Francisco Saturday, 5:20 p. m. For further infor mation apply to J. N. Storr, Gen'l Agt., Cor. sth & Robert Sts., St. Paul. Settlers' Rates to Points In the Southeast On the first and third Tuesdays of each month, January to April inclusive, the Chicago Great Western Railway will sell one way tickets to points in Alabama, Florida, Geocgia, Kentucky, Louisiana. Mississippi, North and South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia at very low rates. For further information apply to J. N. Storr, Gen'l Agt., Cor. sth & Robert Sts., St. Paul. Homeseekers' Excursions The Chicago Great Western Railway will on the first and third Tuesdays of each month sell tickets at one fare plus $2.00 for the round trip to points in Ala bama. Florida. Georgia, lowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississip pi. Missouri, North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia and Wisconsin. For further in formation apply to J. N. Storr, Gen'l Act Cor. sth & Robert Sts., St. Paul. Two Throuoh Tourist Cars to California The Chicago Great Western railway offers choice of two through tourist cars every week to California, one leaving Minneapolis and St. Paul Tuesdays via Omaha and the Rock Island route; the other leaving on Thursdays via Kansas City and the Santa Fe route. For further Information apply to J. N. Storr, Gen'l Agt., corner Fifth and Robert streets. St. PauL TRY THE GLOBE PAYING WANTS. .'-"31 V'vV^ 'I ■ '■■^Jf-'-'^M ' fflE|jMfim'"B^^ra^fe!jjlili?^^^^°' :'■ • fill* """■-'■ iff' .' ""-^ 9 '—<*S X H If if H All for A - $1.80 A Great Msxge^zine Offer *pt!E METROPOLITAN MAGAZINE is glad to * announce &. truly remarkable magazine offer, -whereby. all citizens of the United States may re ceive a popular, leading illustrated magazine, for 12 months, and a copy of a vital and unique book, entitled Ihe Roosevelt Doctrine for $I.Bo—the price of the Magazine alone. This is a copy righted book. It is edited by E. Garrison, is bound in doth, is handsomely printed, contains 190 pages, and sells through the book trade for $ 1.00. The METROPOLITAN pays ail postage on the book and on the 12 magazines. $1.80 includes every thing. This offer should appeal strongly to every man and woman In the land. • WHAT THE BOOK IS: Is a book that should b3 read carefully by every American, no matter what his N party affiliations may be. Nowhere else can ba found expounded the faith •and tenets which our fellow countrymen have decided to regard as American, pure and simple, and nowhere else can be found so convincing an exposition of our duties and rights as American citizens. Leslie's Weekly says: "It Is worthy of a place In the libraty of every household. [The book is published by Robert G. Cooks, New York.] As Theodore Roosevelt, is to rule us for the next, four years, IT IS OUR DUTY to know what, he thinks of the great, issues of our times, such as; Anarchy —Immigration— Citizenship—Trusts—Capital — Labor—Corporations- The Panama Caaal—Cuba—The Philippines—Lynching—The Tariff—The Navy— The Army— Civil War Veterans—Foreign Policy—Monroe Doctrine—War-» Consular Service—Forestry—Currency—-Money—Banking! The Great February Number ;:.'.; ■■ ■ NOW ON SALE l , ';; > . Contains 20 Features, among them the following: Courting Death in a Motor Car .. Tho Greatest Story of Automobile Racing ever written. • By .:-.,;.-' Barney Oldfield . The World's Champion Track Racer ALSO Sec. Morton on .".;!" "Making Business Fighters : . r For Uncle Spin's New Navy"«;;;;; The Issue Contains OVER 100 ILLUSTRATIONS) : '"' ; ' M .;|.,'v Begin your subscription with ...... - '^ ::"^;,^ The GREAT FEBRUARY NUMBER Cut. out* this coupon and send it* to us with $1.80 •«•-■. 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