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ROSEVLT A OF LNCOLNIDEN Should ‘Apply to Issues of To- ‘Day, He Says on Spot Where Martyr President Stood. . HE~ LAUDS VETERANS. Delivers Two Addresses, but Makes No Direct Political Ap- peal—Talks Square Deal. rt GETTYSBURG, Pa, May 80.—De- claring that “we should consecrate ourselves anew toward trying practice ally to apply the issues of to-day to the spirit of lofty idealism and homely common sense in which Abraham Lin- com worked,” Col. Roosevelt spoke in the national cemetery here this after- noon and again before the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers. There was no direct reference to politics in elther epeech. Roosevelt arrived here from New York by way of Baltimore, and was met at the station by Warren 8. Stone, Grand Chtet of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, who accom- panied him over the battlefelt, Later he attended a iuncheon given by t engineers in a great tert and made a epeech on the spot where Lincoln made his famous address nearly fifty years ago. ‘The town was packed with more than 20,000 visitors to-day, brought by of excursion trains. WAR VETERANS TAUGHT US USEFUL LESSONS. At the cemetery Col, Roosevelt said “phe veterans of the civil war not only left us a reunited country, united forever, and not only left us the price- less heritage of the memories of valor- ‘ous self-sacrifice shown in the civil war, but also by their careers ani whole attitude in the war and after the war, have tdught ue lessons which we should y to ourselves in civic life."* ‘During the war they sbowed that mixture of intense and lofty idealten ‘with eound, practical common sénse,! which is essential to a nations success in peace as in war. The war could only have been fought by a people imbued | with a capacity for the highest ideai- fam, and yet it could only have been) fought by a people which only possessed | sound common sense. PEOPLE SHOULD INSIST ON) RULE OF JUSTICE. “@o In civil life at this moment the prime necessities of this nation are that| our people shall show both a lofty ideal- | fam in instating on the rule of justice and hant-headed practical common sense én recognizing that we must secure ma- terial prosperity, and that so far fram | there being any necessary antagonism | etwean justice and material prosperity, neither can be given {ts full development uunless the development of both goes hand in hand. “The (rue test of a man’s worth and of | the respect in which he should be held by his fellows !s not position which [move forward # s ' THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, MAY 30, 1912. 7 and coldly scientific eugenics. win ‘but they do not keep a husband. ‘The most important thing for # young man or woman to discover before committing life and happi- s to another human being is whether or not that persom pos- sesses that rarest, subtiest, most elusive aud most satisfying of hu- man qualities, plain ordinary sense... Senee is not a common atiribute. We all think we possess {t, out no home 1s unhappy where even one of the part- ners has it, For the word sense In- cludes many things—a sense of humor, for instance, which Is really nothing but @ sense of proportion; f{ another a sense of direction in life, the faculty which enables a man or woman to (ematically to @ give: purpose or goal, IT 1S ESSENTIAL THAT THEY he holds, but the way in which he does| tis duty tn that position. “Bvery man in the army,” he contin: | ued, “would have recognized as every man in civil life ought to recognize, that equality of reward where there ds an ut-| ter inequality of service, Is Itself a very | gross form of injustice, But no soldier bore patiently the sight of reward com- | ing to a general, not because of ser-| vice but because of polit\eal or) financial intrigue, and no soldier 3 pa- Went with the giving of reward where) Aa service had not been rendered. In Just the same way in civil life no good eltizen should withhold his hearty praio | from those who succeed business ©: any other career as the result of hon- est exercise af superior ability. LINCOLN’S IDEALS AND HOMELY COMMON 8EN! “Success which comes as the result of service rendered to the community with exceptional ability should ttself mee: with, excepttonal reward. Our pro- test must be merely againet utter 4 quality of reward, against reward that HAVE. SAME GOAL. To bg happi married it 1s essential that hus. wite have the sa goal. Ifa young man of quiet, studious tastes, whose ambition is to epend the later years of life In a place of his own in the country, marries a noisy, super- ficial girl, whose idea! is embodied in a picturo of herself alighting from her own motor at the Metropolitan Opera *, unhappiness and strife will surely arise from thelr differences of taste and habit, One idea! will certainly have to be sacrificed to the other. And the average marriage is uahappy be- cause the two persons concerned do not reaily travel In double harness at nd c comes to prfvilege instead of and, of cqurse, especially against all re- ward that comes to any man because of conduct that amounts to nadoing that !s in violation of the eternal laws that eunder nigit from wrong, “Moreover, im civil fe must practically ly comradeship taught us by the veteran ‘the lesson that all of must in good faith think not only each of his own Fights but each of his own duties and the rights of others. And, above cll, there at Gettysburg, made immorte) not only by the blood of thi ores of thousands of gallant men who fought here, but by the words of never dying wisdom pron here by Abraban Linoolm, we should snew consecrate Spray to the inouen of to-day the opirit 10 spirit of lofty idealism homely common eemse in which Abraham Lincoln worked. “It we refune to face the fact that there are great existing evils, and we must Work with all our heart and soul ‘and mind to solve them, then we shall prepare disaster to ourselves in tne fu- ture and We shall no less prepara dis- aster for ourselves if we fall to work with Lincoln's broad kindliness of spirit toward all our fellow citizens, ‘wi malice toward none, with charity to all,’ striving absolutely to accomplish our ends but frowning on all vindlotiveness and doing everything in our power to prevent rankling hatred, whether shown in form of envy or of arrogance, and the ‘leregand for the rights of others 40 often in the past turned for the uplift and bet! nikind ‘at which they aimed, and have incalcul- ably marred what would otherwise have ‘peen, achievements of the most reaching good to all humanity. @peaking to the rail (REGULAR PRICE $5.00) Honeymoon Horoscopes %& Bohn Syphon Leadig hotels and railroads buy White Enamel Refrigerator Co. “W YORK HAS BEEN ARRANGED FOR TO-MORROW (FRIDA RANE RMR AR Doubtless, a young man’s fancy turns first of all to the saucy light in @ young girl's eyes or to the piquant tilt of her nose, or the wave in her bright hair. But all philosophers are agreed that these attractions may A girl, too, feels her heart fluttered by the breadth of a young man’s shoulders or the curl of his mustache, for women still live who admire landecape gardening on the human face. But the qualities which inspire love are seldom those which keep it. ail, but as @ tandem, one pari ead of the other, whose opposing sense of direction nevertheless causes! or far him or her to try to turn around and go the other way. ‘The leader in the tandem matri- monial team, in this country at any rate, is more often a woman than a man, the woman doing the leading and the high stepping, the man practically dragging all the weight. Now, the real purpose of double har- ness 1s that of pulling side by side to the same goal, ang to achieve this these es of sense are essential sense of humor, sense of balance, sense of direction, and however weak the appeal of intellectual qualities may according to Herbert Spencer's theory, the woman who has these three varie- ties of sense need not fear competition with all the sirens of the world. Dr, Cus pid is distinctly a homoeopathist. When he applies the fundamental principle of “Mike cures like" he has found the pana- cea of passion, the simple formula which will enable him to keep all his patients | tn perfect health and charge them for it, as Chinese physicians do. LIKE MATES WITH LIKE 18 SIM.) PLE FORMULA, Now the homoeopathic principle of courtship makes ‘all things easy and! plain, Under it, the man of millions should marry more millions, the artist Refrigerators old saying i cheanest” is proved true in the BOHN Refrigerators. H ns use and recom- tur their sanjtar THe features them because of thelr econom) as well : ou can sive ice and doctors’ bill:] at your home by, using one OF NSW YO B. Altman & Co. ANOTHER SALE OF WOMEN'S SHOES . CONSISTING OF COLONIAL TIES AND PUMPS, IN BLACK RUSSIA CALFSKIN, AT THE EXTREMELY LOW PRICE OF $3.50 PER PAIR FiOh Avenne, 34th awh. 35th Rtrerie, New York, By Nixola Greeley-Smith RRR ARAM RRR AGUN ARR BAAR ARIMA RR ARR AAR A RRA Et | | ySBURG TELLS Sense Most Important Attribute in Selection of a Mate,and Sympathy Greater Than Intéllectual Equality as Happiness Maker. Copyright, 1912, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World.) our fate In some one novbler and breezier than yourself, and live happily ever after. I may as well say that Dr, Sateeby, father of Kugentes, does not hold this view that identity of ideals means unity of Interest. Perhaps you ery on this phase | Woman and Woman- “Thus it is @ matter of common ex- perience that whilst one woman meets one=part of a man's needs, another meets another, and this, of course, with Brave prejudice to monogamy. Some of the modern writers to whom allusion has been made suggest that these differ- ent needs want sorting out; that one woman ts tu be the intellectual com- panion of @ man, and another the mother of his children, But though men and women are multiple and eom- ex, they are in the last resort unities, These absolute distinctions between one | need and another do not work out in practice. Anything which tends toward splitting up the human personality must be a disservice to it. SYMPATHY IS REAL NEED, NOT INTELLECTUAL EQUALITY. “What @ man wants Is sympathy, not | intellectual companionship as such. Capacity to share the same tntellectual work may be a very pleasant addition to marriage, but it is no essential, What @ man wants is that his wife shall be on his side in his pursuits, A doy | does not require that his mother shall) »@ able to play football with him, but THE MATRIMONIAL “TANDEM = WITH ‘THE MAN AS LEADER. Fifth of the Series. “Out of the many clements uniting in various pro- portions, to produce in a man's breast the compler emotion we call love, the strongest are those produced by physical attractions; the next in order of atrength | are those produced by moral attractions; the weakest are those produced by intellectual attractions; and even these are dependent les# on acquired knowledge that on natural faculty, quickness, wit, insight.” These are the words of one of the greatest philoso- Phers the world has ever known, Herbert Spencer. But they apply more to the unconscious processes of the old instinctive choice of a mate than to the new THE TANDEM with THE WIFE LEADING | should marry the artist unto himself a there will be but on the snob take For then! nse of direction and wife will 1 no one will! nd adore graven his partner belleves | ce in the family, worship the same God have to bow in order to keep ur name! |! | that, onable| April ind May, the April dis Plain! he effective in June and they ‘8! the deal The world ix! twenty cents a ton more than they | ould make! would have had to pay had there bees less), kills moths. event don’t marry business man who to commute from Jersey. full of masculine fluffs who And you, young man, whose a discount in April. The F Instant Postum tastes much like those rich old Java Coffees that came from the Dutch plantations of the far East—so rare nowadays. ; And it is absolutely free from ‘‘caffeine,’’ the drug in coffee which has proven harm- ful to many coffee drinkers. Instant Postum requires no boiling. Stira teaspoonful in a cup of hot water; add cream and sugar to taste and instantly you have a rich food drink that is palatable and healthful. Many coffee drinkers find this new beverage a healthful and delightful variation from their usual cup. cost 50 cents, at grocers. he does require that she shall care whether his side wins or loses, The]! \wite who 1s n true mother to her hus band, in this sense, need not be con- cerned because she cannot, let us says | follow his working out of a geometrical propgsition. Let her be on his side | whether he fails or succeeds, thus pla ‘ing the mother; and for the rest, if ‘asks him what those funny marks mean, she can play the daughter too, and hold his heart with both hands at once.” ‘All of which may be very true If ap- plied merely to the intellectual man. How would domestic servants find hus bands or admirers if Strindberg, Goethe and similar geniuses did not show a& subtle affinity for them? But the man who has just shaken hands with J. Plerpont Morgan and 1s trying to find a method of preserving his honored [limb for posterity has to have a wife who shares his Ideals and triumphs. What constitutes the ideal husband is another story. | a |COAL ADVANCE ALREADY ON. ‘ometally, 25 Cents a Ton Ri Effective June 1. the advance is to be effective June 1 ‘The advance in coal prices of twentys five cents a ton ts already In effect, it was yesterday stated, although officially The discount of thirty cents a ton will personality has given rine to the two| moat loathsome adjectives in the English language, you nobby, breeay person, please find 5 ATROOSEVELTIN He Says Lives of Thousands in Civil War Were Given to Maintain Constitution, ARLINGTON NATIONAL CEME- TERY, Va, May 9. President Taft In bis Memorial Day address here this Afternoon alimed a blow, by Inference, Jore Roosevelt, and pleaded at Col. for continuance of “religious regard for the principle of liberty regulated by law.” The Chief Executive spoke at the Memorial Day exerctaes, and after paying glowing eulogy to the dead of the civil war, launched Into a solemn warning and a plea for consecration of principles handed down through the aes. “It {a the solemn contemplation of what the civil war and (ts consequences really meant in the history of our cmn- try that makes his day's celebration moat valiriile,” anid the President, “It fs religious regard for the pillars of popular «0 1. for the princtple liberty regulated by law, for the vation of popular sepreseniative institutions, which this day's ceremo- Hiies should consecrate and strengthen the p to the limitations of Ite Conatl which have m ful to the peop! stern and flintlike front, gestions of change tn th fered in Ju | coal will be ) cents a ton. no, discount having be for being compel! will decide twoimportant points Satisfaction and Economy No boiling---Made in the cup be effective in June only on coal deliv. . The discount for July | j A number of large coal dealers stated | — maven WaT woe? 0 980 Peterma: the pow: ful dest of end their orce, Asure pthc. Ant Foed—Kills Peterman’s Meth Food (Odor- irst Cup of the New Food Drink . INSTANT PosTUM| 22323 INSTANT, POSTUM Theis rhe regular Pootum Jn 0 consonteled ‘rm sctbing soaea:” doe érceetion® ‘ter preparing en ether wise Postum Cereal Co., Limited Rettic Crock, Mich. U. A- Battle Creat, Mies Us BA ‘tomniismem ese It saves time, money and worry to the busy housewife; and its delicous flavor makes it popular in the household, Tins containing sufficient quantity for about 100 cups of Instant Postum Smaller tins at 30 cents make about 50 cups. Coffee averages about double that cost. MADE BY POSTUM CEREAL CO,, LTD., PURE FOOD FACTORIES, BATTLE CREEK, MICH, On this day dt is the higa duty of all Je to revitalize thelr love of their country and renew thelr devotion with 1 wht eum principles: which it ht cost centuries of struggle mbs of lives to secure and ary Ange | WHY HIRES IS SO Saxon times down to the war of inde- | pendence, | “Ia tt not the fact,” he summed up, | “thateall that effort and all that coat which we celebrate on the Fourth of July Increases in our minds the import. ance of the principles of the Declaration ef Independence and the Constitution which followed it? “Are not the Imitations of the Con-| stitution, Its declarations, {te divisions into separate branches of popular gov- Jernment, all of th made sacred and |Inviolate by the revotutiona are they not sealed in the lof {ta heroes? “And then when we come to the great: oat catactyem to which our mation hae ever been aubjected—indeed, the great. eet to which any nation has ever been subjected—when we think how the whole nation led by Abraham Lincoln went down the Valley of the a of Death, the hundreds and thousands of jilves and the thousands of mf treasure, can we forget the case thereby was maintained, the pri * that thereby were vindicated, and the jkovernment structure thereby Jand made more solid and more jand mage en fold and more ¥ “We fought to preserve the Union, Intain the Constitution, We wl again representative government by the people. We consecrated again the rights of the individual citizen, and we have given them c - we hes eanctity and sta Rostron and Carpathian: Box Party at Winte With several of his \ Rostron commander of the Carpathia, the rescue ship of the Titan’ will attend the performance at tho Winter Garden to-night, a box which han been handsomely decorated hay been reserved fo rthe heroic skipper and his party, " GOOD FOR YOU epreeau tay et aod tre in oD Givetw Debwes” Properties / 1 a much the carefa) 8 00 of Hires, as it ie the jelightful combination of mature} Gavore, that makes this the lead: fog American drink —that makes it eo much superior to and differ ent from the ordinary rootbeer Ito excellence begine with the tel ection of roots, herbs and flowers. Roote that gathered in sum- mer have little strength and flavor, as the sap 1s above ground The root are carefully selected at the time when they contain strength — that , when cold weather has set in Similarly, we gather the flowers and bi at the exact ume of fullest flavor. ectua) vi ble imgredi- ente are used—highest grade Honduras Sarsaparilia, Jamaica Ginger Hops. Mexican Vanilla, Juniper Berries, Spikenard, Birch © Bark, ete Cane granulated sugar only ie used in the syrup, und through: out the most ecrupulone care de exercised to ensure purity ever tasted fe) Mc TA | Dr. ntadeeet Buupeg’ id doctors are advo- q Medical men know that the most serious diseases are caused | by germs which breed in um cleanly places. q Ask any of them and you be told that Sleoaiiness home is one of the safeguards of § That is why you need CN. Ii is fatal to every form of erm life, and is a perfect agent fr removing grease, dirt It is non-poisonous, non-caustic, non-infammable—- powerful, but perfectly safe. it—ask for Yellow Package with the Gable DISINFECTANT .» 2 East 42ed SL "|\CARPET J. 00, W. WILLIAMS 266 Columbus, Kat, NING 353 ‘OU can’t beat Nature. Finer flavors than those she puts into sap of forest trees, that she stores in roots and herbs and barks and flowers —just aren’t pos- All of these are in Hires —the first and best of fountain drinks. A natural tonic—but not e trace of drugs Try it right now at the fountain—se At yous home, carbonated, io OFFICES Our Patent Suction Teeth S1" ¥2% (tice | Brooklyn Office: | Nena Cor, Broadway & 500 Fulton st., or ‘rte Ov i ii) UNDER THREE FLAGS 30,880 World Ads. Last Week— 11,508 More than the Herald. 7 Every morning and Sunday The World has a circulation in New York City greater than the Herald, Times, Sun and Tribune COMBINED. What more conclusive evidence could be submitted that World than the facts stated above?