THE DAILY STAR-MIRROR Published every evening except Sunday, Moscow, Idaho. YOST & ORCUTT P. L. ORCUTT and J. F. YOST.... Editors J. F. YOST Proprietors Business Manager SUBSCRIPTION RATES: (Delivered by carrier to any part of the city.) Per Month.50c (Payment in advance to a date or more from the date of payment.) month Three Months Six Months... One Year.... By mail (Outside of city and on rural routes): Per Month.. Three Months Six Months.. One Year.... $1.40 2.75 : 35c $ 1.00 1.75 3.00 Application for entry at Post Office at Moscow, Idaho, for transmission through the mails second class matter, pending. The Evening Star-Mirror is delivered every evening (except Sunday) by earner in Mos cow, between the hours of 3:30 and 5:00.1 All complaints of whatsoever nature,should made at the office at once. All copy for advertisements must be in the office at 10:00 a. m. of day on which they are to appear. Classified Ad. Rates: One cent a word each insertion, minimum charge 25c. All classified ads. payable in advance. The Daily Star-Mirror carries the United Press Association Service. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1911. AN ENGLISHMAN DISCUSSES THE GREAT AMERICAN PAIN. "We are living In a period of revolu tion. There is danger in the spirit of discontented men who would rebel against the law. Our institutions at this day are In the balance. Within a decade we shall see whether the grlevances of today—the problems which confront us—will be settled by the law or by the manner that has -the been in existence for 2000 years revolutlon of violence and terror to the bloodshed—Senator Cummins graduating class of a Washington law School." Taking as his text Senator Cummins'I speech, Mr. Low, the Washington cor respondent of the London National Re view, inquires and considers, for the information of his English readers, what justifies such an utterance as the foregoing. Of course he points out that we have such incitements as those given by Senator Cummins and other insur gents and as those given by Mr. Bryan and his echoes. And then, he says, we have the constant clamor about the "wrongs" of the people which pro duces upon a foreign observer this "A stranger unacquainted with the facts would be justified in believing that the Americans were crushed un der the extortions of the tax-gatherer; effect: that their lands and goods were at the mercy of their overlords; that they eked out a miserable and precarious existence; that they were hungry and cold and ragged." Again we have such direct asser tions of falsehood as that which Mr. Low quotes from a speech by Repre-1 sentative Copley, the Aurora gas magnate, before another graduating class. After asserting that the con trol of the railroad, telegraph, tele phone and iron and steel industries rests in the hands of "five men," who also control "70 per cent of the bank ing interests of New York,' Mr. Cop ley stated the "paramount issue" of the day in these terms: "We are face to face with the great est problem of our extistenee. Shall five men who dominate the United States Steel Corporation rule the country by an oligarchy of wealth, or shall the people govern for the ben efit of all the people, and give every man a square deal?" "This," as Mr. Low truthfully says, is one of those reckless statements for which there is no warrant. This power is not centered in the hands of five men. But the average audience and the goes on its cannot determine the facts, fable of the five men travels, arousing hatred." Then there is the constant assault upon the integrity of the courts by Mr. Bryan, Mr. Roosevelt and their echoes. Not only has the state judiciary been discredited by these demagogues but they are now endeavoring to bring the federal judiciary, and even the national supreme court, under suspicion. Mr. Low instances the demagogic reception j I ORPHEUM FRIDAY OCTOBER 6 Range Pals A true story of Arizona in the early '80s. The Aid of Stonewall Jackson The thrilling adventures of the girl spy. SAT., 7— Matinee and Evening THE VISITING NURSE Showing the work of the Nurses Association in the large cities. IN NORTHERN FORESTS Another of those strong Victa graph Dramas of Canadian woods. THE WOES OP A WEALTHY WIDOW Something to make you smile. GROW WITH A GROWING BANK We want the small account and have the facility for handling the large one. Open that account today. We Pay Interest on Time Deposits and Savings Ac counts. FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF MOSCOW given the recent Sherman act decis 10IIS. I exactly What the law said With the The court said the law meant meaning given to its words by Its Yet, as Mr. Low remarks: 1 framers, j "Immediately Mr. Bryan says that the chief justice has been waiting for fifteen years to throw his protecting arm around the trusts and to tell them Thousands how to escape the law! lieve that the trusts were able to buy the supreme court!" How this constant dropping wears the stone we have the sharpest kind of illustration in the Roosevelt panic of 1907. We were in the height of prosperity, and we went to smash; mainly because of the constant yelling from the highest place in the nation about how "oppressed" and how "cor rupt" we were and how we must "sus pect" as "malefactors" all our neigh bors who had acquired any considera ble share of this worlds goods. We mention this case merely be I cause it; illustrates in operation a rev- option produced by the methods to which we are subjected and which, and|wiih their effects, are thus accurately described by Mr. Low; "Keep on telling a man who has less of this world's goods than his neigh hors that this inequality is the result of his neighbors' knavery; tell him that, though his wages are higher today than ever, he is paid less than he is entitled to, and that while he is growing poorer, his neighbors are I times a day that if he were to seek Justice it would be denied him, as there is one kind of justice for him and another for his more prosperous neighbors; let him hear these things day after day. In the course of time fattening off him; say to him a dozen he is in a frame of mind to believe all I he has heard; he becomes sullen and revengeful and longs for an oppor I tunity to redress the wrongs un der which he imagines he is suffering, Out of such teaching revolution born and the torch and pistol do their | work." But I there any justification for these in j citements to revolution except in the That is the hard truth. desire of the agitators for notoriety and power? According to this British writer—this foreign observer merely stationed in our country to observe anc j report—there is not. Here is his | judgment: "Democratle institutions were not at fault. Democracy has not proven itself a failure. The American people have not been eaten up by corruption or be come debauched by luxury. * * * We hear much of the "wrongs" under which the people are "groaning," but only the finely attuned ear of the dem agogue is able to hear these cries. The mass of the people are not in want, they have not abandoned hope, they are engaged in no desperate struggle for existence, they are still in the enjoyment of their liberty." Then why this hospitality to the evil ? Why what Mr. Low well terms the incomprehensible spectacle of a nation so bountifully blessed as the American sunk in the depths of Welt schmerz, filling the air with their lam entations and bemoaning that the glory of Israel has departed?" We don't know. Nobody has come forward with any rational explanation why the American people, blessed as they are, should so revile each other as they do. If other nations were to judge us by the accounts given of us by those whom we lift to some of our highest places of trust and honor, their necessary and logical conclusion would be that America deserves the fate of the Cities of the Plain. Never in recorded human history has any people gone into such a frenzy of self-condemnation as the Ameri can people have been indulging. We don't know why they should do so. We can understand why demagogues should seek profit by inciting the frenzy to greater heights. But we don't know why apparently sane men and women should so besmirch them selves and so befoul their own na tional household. But we agree with Mr. Low that: "It is time that the American people got a grip on themselves and realized their folly. Life and health are in them, but they must throw off their moral hypochondria if they would escape from the ills their imagination pictures." Something is probably needed to move the people to shake off the mor habit of public self-reproach to ® which so many of the better educated Americans are victims. But of one thing the demagogues may be certain: Either, as Mr. Low says, "there wlil be the revolution that Senator Cummins predicts, or the men who Inflame the passions of the masses so as to make them ready for violence and terror and will be driven out and spat upon by their dupes." bloodshed CLUB WOMEN ARE AT COEUR D'ALENE COEUR D'ALENE. Idaho, Oct. 5.— The convention of the Third District Federation of Women's clubs, which met here last night, is being attend ed by a large delegation. Many en tertainments are being prepared In honor of the delegates pduring the convention. After the routine presentation of re ports Mrs. Warren Truitt, member of the Pleiades club of Moscow and president of the federation, delivered her annual address yesterday. This morning the federation lis tened to an address by Mrs. Guy Bowerman of St. Anthony, president of the state federation, and the vari ous standing committees made their reports through their chairmen. These included: Civics, by Mrs. J. Russel of St. Maries; civil service, by Mrs. H. C. Shaver of Coeur d'Alene: his torical, by Mrs. R. V. Cozier, Moscow; educational, by Mrs. R. V. Cozier, Moscow; household economics, by Mrs. F. W. Tinkle, Coeur d'Alene. Dr. J. T. Wood, mayor of Coeur d'Alene, al so delivered an address on "Medical Inspection in the Public Schools" at this session. Important matters considered at other sessions will be: "A Sane and Safe Fourth of July," "Uniform Di vorce Laws," "Art in the Home," "Health and Hygiene," and "Child Study." This evening a musical program will be rendered in the Methodist Episcopal church, which will be participated in by local talent. THINGS ALL OUGHT TO KNOW As Christian Bible Students—The Sat isfactory Proof of "Why God Per mits Evil." One of the questions «which comes to nearly every thinking mind today Is, "Why does God permit evil?" As we look about us in the world wo observe that It Is filled with sorrow and trouble, sickness and pain and every trial we could enumerate, and we cannot help wondering WHY GOD ALLOWS IT. We realize that He Is almighty and that He could prevent It if lie wished We read in Ills Word that He Is more willing to do for His children than are earthly parents for theirs, and we I now how much that means; yet of tentimes, it seems that those who try to do and live right have the most trouble. This question is made very clear In a book entitled, "The Divine Plan of the Ages." Every statement Is backed by Scripture, and shows that while God does not sanction evil HE HAS ALLOWED SIN AND DEATH TO REIGN FOR THESE LONG SIX THOUSAND YEARS. This and many other subjects of deep Interest to all of God's people are discussed fully and In language easy of comprehension. In English, German, Swedish, Dano Norwegfan, Italian, French, Greek, Hungarian, Spanish, Polish, Hollaud Ish. [Syriac and Turko-Armenian In preparation.] 355 pages, cloth bound, 35 cents post paid. Address Bible and Tract Socie ty, 17 Hicks Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Sick headache is caused by a dis ordered stomach. Take Chamberlain's Tablets and correct that and the head aches will disappear. For sale by the Owl Drug Store. O soo MS •n Jr' SPOKANE ROUTE SPECIAL RATES EAST DATES OF SALE September 25 October 2=5=16=17=18 St. Paul $60 Chicago $72.50 St. Louis $70 to Other Proportionate Rates Destinations. Y ou should take in the route via the Arrow Lakes and the Canadian Rockies. Write for circulars and descriptive literature. GEO. A. WALTON Gen. Agent. M. E. MALONE, Trav. Pass. Agt. 14 Wall St., Spokane. 17-18 DEFEAT OF RECIPRO CITY WILL HELP WEST especially the northwest will secure these high class farmers who would Regarding the trip of the "Cover nors' Special," he said; "The train BOISE, Idaho, Oct. 5.—That the re cent defeat of reciprocity by the peo ple of Canada will result in a bene fit to the people of the west, is the belief of ex-Governor James H. Brady, who has just returned from the east where he had gone in the Interest of the tour of the exhibition train known as the "Governors' Special." When interviewed regarding the plans made by him for the tour of the train, the former governor took oc casion to express himself on the ques tion of reciprocity. He said: "I be lieve that the rejection of reciprocity and the election of Bordon at the head of a conservative administration in Canada will work to the benefit of our people. I believe that a large portion of the splendid emigration that has been going over Into Canada in the last few will now return to Its old channels and move directly west. The result will be that the west and otherwise cross the borders into Can ada." will assemble at St. Paul on Novem ber 20 and will start for the east De cember 1. It will be on the move for three weeks and in which time will vis it every important point possible. "People in the east seem more in terested In the coming of the ' 'Gov ernors' Special' than I have ever known them tq be in. any other western development proposition. I am dally receiving letters and telegrams from eastern cities, commercial bodies and executives, asking that they be put on our itinerary." | A Dollar's Day. One morn a silver dollar woke Inside Sam Snyder's clothes And softly to itself It spoke, "Oh, where do you suppose I'll sleep tonight? Perhaps away From here in alien lands— For, if Sam goes to town today, I surely will change hands." At six Sam started for the town, At eight the coin was spent; In Parson's store Sam laid it down, Then over the hills he went To see the barn of Walter Chase, A model of its kind. (For some such barn for his own place Sam Snyder had In mind.) Not long in Parson's busy till The dollar had a rest, For Sam was hardly up the hill Before the coin was pressed In Humphrey's hand to fix a horse That day had cast, a shoe; And so the dollar kept its course To other people, too, Until it came to Henry Black. Now, meanwhile, Sam that day Had seen the barn and started back Along his homeward way. His good wife met him with a kiss STATE LAND SALE. Description. NE# SE# NW# SE# SW# SE# SE# SE# NE# NE# NW# NE# SW# NE# SE# NE# NE# NW# Lot 1 (46.22) Lot 2 (45.30A) SE# NW# NE# SW# Lot 3 (44.38) Lot 4 (43.46A) SE# SW# NE# SE# NW# SE# SW# SE# SE# SE# NW# NW# SW# NW# NW# SW# SW# SW# NE# NE# NW# NE# SW# NE# SE# NE# "" SE# SE# SW# SE# SÈ# SE# NE# NE# NW# NE# SW# NE# SE# NE# NE# NW# NW# NW# SW# NW# SE# NW# NE# SW# NW# SW# SW# SW# SE# SW# NE# SE# W# SE# SW# SE# SE# SE# NW# NW# SW# NW# NW# SW# SW# SW# NE# NE# NW# NE# SW# NE# SE# NE# NE# NW# NW# NW# SW# NW# SE# NW# NE# SW# NW# SW# SW# SW# SE# SW# NE# SE# NW# SÉ# SW# SE# SE# SE# NE# NE# NW# NE# SW# NE# SE# NE# NE# SE# NW# SE# SW# SE# SE# SE# NE# NE# W# NE# SW# NE# SE# NE# NE# NW# Lot 1 (40.19A) Lot 2 (40.13A) SE# NW# NE# SW# Lot 3 (40.07A) Lot 4 (40.01A) SE# SW# NE# SE# NW# SE# SW# SE# SE# SE# NE# NÉ# NW# NE# SW# NE# SE# NE# NE# NW# W# NW# SW# NW# Sec. T. S. 19. Ex. '22 17 Twp, Rge, 38N. 1E. Price. $10.00 Notice is hereby given that on Monday, October 16, 1911, the following described tracts of land belonging to the State of Idaho and situated in Latah County, will be offered for sale at public auction at the Court House at Moscow, Latah County, Idaho at 10 A. M. of said day, to-wit: Description. Lot 4 (60.61 A) SW# NW# NW# SW# SW# SW# Lot 1 (59.92) Lot 2 (58,88) SW# NE# SE# NE# Lot 3 (57.84) Lot 4 (56.80) SW# NW# SE# NW# SW# SW# SE# SW# NE# SE# NW# SE# SW# SE# SE# SE# Lot 1 (55.63) Lot 2 (54.29) SW# NE# SE# NE# Lot 3 (52.95) Lot 4 (51.61) SW# NW# SE# NW# NE# SW# NW# SW# SW# SW# SE# SW# NE# NW# SW# SE# SE# SE# Lot 1 (49.63A) Lot 2 (46.96A) SW# NE# SE# NE# Lot 3 (44.29A) Lot 4 (51.79A) Lot 5 (49.68A) SE# NW# NE# SW# Lot 6 (49.50A) Lot 7 (49.32A) SE# SW# NE# SE# NW# SE# SW# SE# SE# SE# NE# NE# W # NE# SW# NE# SE# NE#, NE# NW# Lot 1 (48.97A) Lot 2 (48.27A) SE# NW# NE# SW# an L ot 3 (47.63A) Lot 4 (46.99A) SE# SW# NE# SE# W# SE# SW# SE# SE# SE# NE# NE# NW# NE# SW# NE# SE# NE# NE# NW# NW# NW# SW# NW# SE# NW# NE# SW# NW# SW# SW# SW# NW# SE# NE# NE# NW# NE# SW# NE# SE# NE# NE# NW# NW# NW# SW# NW# SE# NW# NE# SW#, NW# SW# SE# SW# NE#, " NW# Sec. Twj). Il K r ■ Price. $10.00 T. S. 19. Ex. '22 3 38 4 N T. S. 15. Ex. '22 15 39N. IE. 00 S NE# W# N SE# SE# 6 N 7 4 N > N 12.00 8 N 10.00 12.00 10.00 9 N 5W /4 SE# rvwy 4 SE# SW# SE# N<& SW#' NW# NW# SW# SW# SW#, NW# NW# SW# NW# NW# SW# SW# SW# E# NE# W # NE# SW# NE# SE# NE# cun/ XT w 1/ SE# NW# NE# NE# NW# NE# SE# NW# % 10 SW# NE# SE# NE# NE# NW# W# NW# SW# NW# SE# NW# Terms of sale are as follows: On all lands selling for $25.00 per acre or less, one-tenth of the purchase price and first year's in terest on deferred payments, cash on day of sale; the balance in eighteen annual installments at six per cent interest. On all lands selling for more than $25.00 per acre, two-tenths of the purchase price and the first year s interest on deferred payments, cash on day ot sale, the balance in sixteen annual installments at six per cent interest. Land sold subject to the Timber Sale Certiffcate. By order of the State Board of Land Commissiôners. First Pub. Sept. 7, Last Pub. Oet. 12. I N IS 17 NE N SW# NW# SE# NW# NE# SW# NW# SW# SW# SW# SE# SW# I GEO. A. DAY, State Land Commissioner. And said to him, "See here— While you were gone a man left this He owed io you, my dear. "He said of corn a while ago You let him have a sack; His name (of course, you know). His name was Henry Black." Sam looked upon the dollar bright And what do you suppose?— The self-same dollar that same night Still slept in Snyder's clothes! —Douglas Malloch. want to Neuralgia of the face, shoulder, hands, or feet requires a powerful remedy that will penetrate the flesh. Ballard's Snow Liniment possesses that power. Rubbed in where the pain is felt is all that is necessary to re- lieve suffering and restore normal con- ditions. Price 25c, 50c and fl per bot- tle Sold by the Owl Drug Store, S. L. Willis, Prop. O Order to Show Cause Why Order of Sale of Real Estate Should Not Be Made. In the Probate Court In and for the County of Latah, State of Idaho. In the matter of the estate of Andrew P. Hankinson, deceased. George R. Knowles, the administra tor of the estate of Andrew P. Hankln ; sou, deceased, having died his petition j herein -praying for an order of sale of I a portion of the real estate of said decedent, for the purposes therein set forth. It la Therefore Ordered by the Judge of said Court, that all persons Inter ested In the estate of the said de ceased, be and appear before the said Probate Court, on Monday, the 6th day of November, 1911, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said day, at the Court ; Room of said Probate Court, in the Court House, in said Latah County, to show cause why an order should not be granted to the said administrator to sell so much of the real estate of the said deceased, Andrew P. Hankln son, as shall be necessary. It Is Further Ordered, That a copy of this order be published at least four successive weeks before the said 6th day of November, 1911, in the Star-Mirror, a newspaper printed and published in the said Latah County, State of Idaho. WILL F. MORGAREIDGE, Probate Judge. Dated this 27th day of September, A. D. 1911. Sept28-Oct26 Notice of Sale of Bonds. Notice is hereby given by the Board of Trustees of the Moscow Independent School District No. 6, Moscow, Idaho. That It Is the intention of said Independent School District No. 6 to issue and negotiate sixty-five coupon bonds, of the par value of one thou sand dollars each, which will be dated January 1, 1912, and due In twenty years and redeemable at any time after ten years at the option of the District, with Interest at the rate of five per cent per annum. Interest pay able semi-annually on the first day of January and July of each year, at the office of the Treasurer of the Dis trict, Moscow, Idaho. Bids wll be received for such bonds up to and including the 13th day of November, 1911, the bidder to specify if he will or will not furnish the bonds to be issued. If the bonds should not be Issued until after the 1st day of January, 1912, all accrued Interest after that date to time of issue to be refunded to the District. The bonds hereby proposed to be issued are for the purpose of provid ing a site for, building, and furnishing high school building for the use of said District. Bids will be received for such bonds the clerk of the Board of Trustees and to be accompanied with certified check for one per cent of the par value of the bonds bid for. The Board of Trustees reserve the right to reject any and all bids. H. E. ESTES, Chairman. W. S. MORLBY, Clerk. « Sept21-Octl2