anaheim-gazette 1911-07-13
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OPPOSE EQUAL SUFFRAGE
"Men for the State, Women for the Home"
Editor Gazette.—The attention of the public has several times been called to the fact that for the past thirty years the first and most definitively announced of the principles declared in all Socialistic platforms has been that of woman suffrage, or "universal suffrage without distinction of color or sex." It should be fully understood why this principle is so much account to socialism, and what are the distinctions between the settled orderly form of this American Republic, everywhere conceded to be the most stable and successful form of popular government the world has ever seen, and that wholly untried system advocated by socialists. And while the republic has more than a century of success at its back, it should be remembered that socialism represents a social theory such as has never yet been embodied as a whole in any, even a tentative form of government. It advocates, as if new, certain principles which underlie all Christian governments, with theories of making them practical, which in one form or another have been tried and found wanting in almost every century since Christianity existed. Chief among these newly resurrected, but really old and untenable theories is the doctrine of the so-called enfranchisement of women, that is, the identity of woman with man as a political unit, and in making this assertion we come at once upon 'he reason why a well-known socialist admits plainly that socialism is not based upon the natural law of evolution, which has hitherto reigned supreme through allness in the business world. But at what a cost. The nation is moribund today, for the want of well-reared women and men. Her morals are the world's byeword, and her population is decreasing till a very important part of the work of her dignified body of deputies consists in the comparison of nursing bottles, and the attempt to devise some statutory means of increasing the number of her babies and lengthening their lives.
Similar will be the result in every country which insists upon ignoring the value of woman's natural work and lays upon her shoulders burdens which properly belong to men. Nature will teach them by the most unsparing methods that child-bearing is not a joke, nor an antiquated, and therefore outgrown idea, but an incontrovertible fact upon which the whole social polity is founded.
It is the family which gives to woman the true recognition of her equality with man, the indisputable importance of her work to the whole world. Miss Ellen Key, who advocates "the enfranchisement of women" is one of many European writers who has recently proclaimed to the world by her writings, variously translated, the right of the unmarried women to all the mental and moral rewards consequent upon child-bearing, but she fails to carry out her reasoning to its natural conclusion.
If she may have one child by an unmarried father, that is but the beginning of her career. Must the next, and the next, for her appetite will no doubt grow by what it feeds upon, have the same father. But if so, is not this practically marriage, against which she is protesting, or shall there be a different father for each child. In that case how does the woman's position differ from what has to do with her boy, Jerry Moore, last fall harvested corn from one acclimating a record made him the chiefer of the world.
"This is a record that will do more than any other on similar nature dur. But how did this mous yield? Sims swamps near his 200 wagonloads on dirt, which he scrape the first winter. Winter merely assists his land. He made up his corn raising record prize had been over 300 wagonloads on second winter and tire field. Follow spring, he put manure on the field ed the field to a inches. All that was for the corn and mark a new production.
"The simple man young Moore makes the crop growing swamps' soils and important, the results of our swamp calities. There' swamp areas for homes, as recial somewhat like irrigation able of such produce acreage is sufficient home. We estimation of this nation people by 1950, althat it will be me
been tried and found wanting in almost every century since Christianity existed. Chief among these newly resurrected, but really old and untenable theories is the doctrine of the so-called enfranchisement of women, that is, the identity of woman with man as a political unit, and in making this assertion we come at once upon 'he reason why a well-known socialist admits plainly that socialism is not based upon the natural law of evolution, which has hitherto reigned supreme through all the increasing changes which have marked the progress of the race, but demands a "new law of development"
In the old order, from the beginning down to the present day, the duality o the race has been an accepted fact; the work of man pertaining always to the material or intellectual world, especially the world of government, that of the woman making ever for the continuance of the race, and especially in later times through her educating influence in its early years, to laying the foundation of its moral and spiritual career. In these two spheres of action, the work of natural and social selection has had free play, and the progress of the social side of life as expressed in the political world has testified to a way of evolution prescribed by nature, and carrying the race forward from the patriarchal through the monarchical, to the latest, or democratic form of government.
But socialism proposes to change all this. The family has hitherto been regarded as the unit of the state. It has ever been the social form from which all progress, all uplift have been evolved. But socialism makes the individual, whether male or female, the unit of society. It refuses to recognize the natural work of woman as of equal value with that of man, and as between fatherhood and motherhood, puts the highest value upon material and political labor of which it gives to woman an equal share, making the continuance of the race of slight importance, and the building up of its social and moral welfare a matter to be left wholly to chance. Marriage and the home are left out of the account, indeed they are abolished altogether, as we shall see later, and the enfranchisement of women, as it is persuasively called, is to prevail to its fullest extent. That is, woman is to be free and irresponsible in her sexual choice as the men of socialism are, and the voice of passion is to override the voice both natural and divine which makes in sexual, as in but she falls to carry out her reasoning to its natural conclusion.
If she may have one child by an unmarried father, that is but the beginning of her career. Must the next, and the next, for her appetite will no doubt grow by what it feeds upon, have the same father. But if so, is not this practically marriage, against which she is protesting, or shall there be a different father for each child. In that case how does the woman's position differ from promiscuity, which is indeed about what socialism demands for all its followers. But the whole tendency of the race for ages has been towards the abolition of promiscuity, and the establishment of the continence and sobriety of passion, inculcated by true marriage, as the highest form and that most advantageous to the world, of race continuance.
Man, on the other hand, belittles himself foully when he imposes upon women the duties which belong wholly to himself. From the woman who "enfranchises" her degenerate husband from the support of his family by her own labor over the wash tub, to the middle class wife who makes money-getting of greatest consequence in her life, or the daughter of the capitalist who expends the millions which she has inherited upon a man who lives at her expense a life of idleness or dissipation, the result is the same. The woman becomes the worker, the slave, the man declines to a position which deprives him of the larger half of his manliness, his courage, his ambition.
This is the condition which woman suffrage everywhere confronts and with some curious results. In the new government which is to abolish classes and establish a true democracy we are told in a published interview from Mrs. Harriet Stanton Blatch, that the children will be borne by the poor and uneducated women, to be reared by the more cultivated. Why may not the world claim to have the children of educated and refined women as its heritage, instead of only those borne under less favorable circumstances. Dr. Anna Shaw, president of the national woman suffrage association, in a similar interview says that the rearing of children will be solely an affair of the state. How unfortunate that the state cannot bear the children which it thus conveniently takes the responsibility of rearing. Jack London in his War of the Classes, (Pages 260-64) faces the difficulty boldly, like a man Acknowledging with lengthy particularity that she falls to carry out her reasoning to its natural conclusion.
If she may have one child by an unmarried father, that is but the beginning of her career. Must the next, and the next, for her appetite will no doubt grow by what it feeds upon, have the same father. But if so, is not this practically marriage, against which she is protesting, or shall there be a different father for each child. In that case how does the woman's position differ from promiscuity, which is indeed about what socialism demands for all its followers. But the whole tendency of the race for ages has been towards the abolition of promiscuity, and the establishment of the continence and sobriety of passion, inculcated by true marriage, as the highest form and that most advantageous to the world, of race continuance.
Man, on the other hand, belittles himself foully when he imposes upon women the duties which belong wholly to himself. From the woman who "enfranchises" her degenerate husband from the support of his family by her own labor over the wash tub, to the middle class wife who makes money-getting of greatest consequence in her life, or the daughter of the capitalist who expends the millions which she has inherited upon a man who lives at her expense a life of idleness or dissipation, the result is the same. The woman becomes the worker, the slave, the man declines to a position which deprives him of the larger half of his manliness, his courage, his ambition.
This is the condition which woman suffrage everywhere confronts and with some curious results. In the new government which is to abolish classes and establish a true democracy we are told in a published interview from Mrs. Harriet Stanton Blatch, that the children will be borne by the poor and uneducated women, to be reared by the more cultivated. Why may not the world claim to have the children of educated and refined women as its heritage, instead of only those borne under less favorable circumstances. Dr. Anna Shaw, president of the national woman suffrage association, in a similar interview says that the rearing of children will be solely an affair of the state. How unfortunate that the state cannot bear the children which it thus conveniently takes the responsibility of rearing. Jack London in his War ofthe Classes,(Pages 260-64) faces the difficulty boldly like a man Acknowledging with lengthy particularity that she falls to carry out her reasoning to its natural conclusion.
If she may have one child by an unmarried father, that is but the beginning of her career. Must the next, and the next, for her appetite will no doubt grow by what it feeds upon, have the same father. But if so, is not this practically marriage, against which she is protesting, or shall there be a different father for each child. In that case how does the woman's position differ from promiscuity, which is indeed about what socialism demands for all its followers. But the whole tendency of the race for ages has been towards the abolition of promiscuity, and the establishment of the continence and sobriety of passion, inculcated by true marriage, as the highest form and that most advantageous to the world, of race continuance.
Man, on the other hand, belittles himself foully when he imposes upon women the duties which belong wholly to himself. From the woman who "enfranchises" her degenerate husband from the support of his family by her own labor over the wash tub, to the middle class wife who makes money-getting of greatest consequence in her life, or the daughter ofthe capitalist who expendsthe millionswhichshehasinheritedupamwholeynatureordissipation,theresultisthesame.Thewomanbecomestheworker,theslave,themandeclinestoapositionwhichdepriveshimofthelargerhalfofhismanliness,hiscourage,hiscouragewithlengthyparticularitythatbutshefallstocarryoutherreasoningtoitsnaturalconclusion.
If she may have one child by an unmarried father, that is 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and the building up of its social and moral welfare a matter to be left wholly to chance. Marriage and the home are left out of the account, indeed they are abolished altogether, as we shall see later, and the enfranchisement of women, as it is persuasively called, is to prevail to its fullest extent. That is, woman is to be free and irresponsible in her sexual choice as the men of socialism are, and the voice of passion is to override the voice both natural and divine which makes in sexual, as in all other relations of life, self-sacrifice, self-discipline and spiritual aspiration the price of all true and lasting success.
It is the tempting lure of "equality" which the socialist holds out to the men and women whom it seeks to inviggle into its wholly unwarranted scheme of progress, and to this so-called "equality" between the sexes, political equality, or "woman suffrage," is imperatively necessary. It is an integral part of socialism, which simply cannot exist without it. It is wholly opposed to that natural law which has lifted the race up from unredeemed nature to the civilization of the present time, and promises through the active benevolence, the intelligent seeking for higher things which mark the present century, to bring the race still farther forward upon its upward way.
The business world, no less than the political, has a share in this promise, *it holds to natural law*, and we have before us a prominent example of the result of obliterating the sphere of women, and leaving her necessary work to be altogether neglected, or to be done by hirelings. France has boasted for years that her married women were the natural business partners of their husbands and has gained a wide repute by means of their system and cleverer less favorable circumstances. Dr. Anna Shaw, president of the national woman suffrage association, in a similar interview says that the rearing of children will be solely an affair of the state. How unfortunate that the state cannot bear the children which it thus conveniently takes the responsibility of rearing. Jack London in his War of the Classes, (Pages 260-64) faces the difficulty boldly, like a man Acknowledging with lengthy particularity that the principle of continuance and progress under which the world has hitherto evolved itself is wholly contrary to the new principles announced, he calls for soome good socialist to "devise and put into execution" some "new law of development" which shall prevent equality and the abolition of classes from resulting in race deterioration and decay.
We await this attempt to put the Almighty out of commission, and supersede His plan of the evolution of a race, by a better and man-made one, with curiosity, and indeed with interest,
A Reader.
CHAMPION CORN GROWER
South Carolina Boy, 13 Years of age, Beets Record
CHICAGO, Ill., July 11.—W. L.Park, vice-president of the Illinois Central Railway Company, and a member of the board of control of the 19th National Irrigation Congress, which meets here this year, is directing the attention of men interested in the congress to what he declares is the best concrete example he has found of the agricultural value of the soil deposits in the areas of swamp and overflowed lands, of which there are 80,000,000 acres capable of reclamation.
The railway official's case in point
ANAHEIM GAZETTE
has to do with the South Carolina boy, Jerry Moore, 13 years old, who last fall harvested 228 bushels of corn from one acre of ground, establishing a record for the year that made him the champion corn grower of the world.
“This is a record,” Mr. Park said, “that will do more for agriculture than any other one accomplishment of similar nature during the last decade. But how did this boy obtain his enormous yield? Simply by going into swamps near his farm and taking 200 wagonloads of the rich swamp dirt, which he scattered over his field the first winter. This he did that winter merely as a means of fertilizing his land. The second winter he made up his mind to go after the corn raising record, for which a good prize had been offered, so he took 300 wagonloads of swamp dirt. The second winter and put it on his entire field. Following that, in the spring, he put 45 wagonloads of manure on the field, then double-plowed the field to a depth of fourteen inches. All that remained after that was for the corn to grow up, ripen and mark a new record for acre production.
“The simple method followed by young Moore makes easily apparent the crop growing possibilities of our swamps’ soils and what it far more important, the reclamation possibilities of our swamp and overflowed localities. There is room in these swamp areas for thousands of farm homes, as reclaimed swamp land, somewhat like irrigated land, is capable of such production that a small acreage is sufficient for one farm home. We estimate that the population of this nation will be 150,000,000 people by 1950, and I believe myself that it will be more than that. For this reason we can see the necessity their country. Ignorance and prejudice have to be overcome before ever we can attain our end.” Such a presentation of the principles of the suffrage movement is applicable quite as much in California as in any part of the world. But there is much less of that ignorance and prejudice to be overcome before the amendment is voted upon on October 10th.
The park commissioners of Los Angeles are asking the women to help them bring about a realization of their many elaborate plans for beautifying the city. At the opening of Central park on July 1st, a member of the park commission declared that without the aid of women they were helpless in their endeavors. Such pleas confirm the claims of the suffragists that the women of a city, plus their vote, are an incalculable assistance in all municipal matters.
Dean MacCormack of the Pro Cathedral of Los Angeles, unhappily made several remarks in an anti-suffrage address before the ministerial union which have rebounded with disturbing force. He first declared that he had it upon good authority that the women of Colorado drink more whiskey than the men do.Hon. Alma Lafferty, visiting in Los Angeles from Colorado where she is a legislator, rebelled at the statement then and there as an untruth, and an inexcusable aspersion. Later, the Dean further stated that the only woman who had interested him by her logical suffrage arguments was a woman who was only a suffragist because she was offered a larger compensation for her eloquence by the suffragists than she had been offered by the anti-suffragists. The description of the person referred to answered that of a Mrs. Elizabeth Strong who, though speaking often
OLD NEWSPAPERS.
Their Usefulness Is Not Gone Just Because You Have Read Them.
The mere fact that moths cannot read is no reason why they should test newspapers, but they do nevertheless. It isn't exactly the newspaper or its editorial policy that moths dislike. It's the ink used in printing the types that makes the moths stay away. That is why, in the absence of mothproof bags and cedar chests, some housewives pack their furs and woolens away wrapped in newspapers at the end of the winter season and find that is a satisfactory way of preserving them against the ravages of moths. There is nothing better than old newspapers for use under the carpets for the same reason.
Old newspapers have many other uses as well. Wet in water they serve to clean out the stove splendidly. Crushed newspapers are excellent to clean lamp chimneys. They can even be used for an iron holder for an emergency.
Newspapers dipped in lamp oil are useful for cleaning windows. Irons not much soiled can be rubbed on old newspapers and thus made fit for use. Dipped in lamp oil they are splendid to rub the outside of the dishpan. They keep it bright and shining. Torn in shreds, slightly dampened and scattered over the carpet, they keep down dust when sweeping. They clean the sink of its grease and sediment. Nothing is better, for the greasy paper can be at once burned after use.
Many times folded newspapers will serve as a mat to stand hot and blackened pots or kettles on and save soling the kitchen table. The kitchen stove is kept bright after the cooking of each meal with old papers, and this saves many polishings.
LIFE BUOY AND OAR.
Putting on the One and Supporting
swamps' soils and what it far more important, the reclamation possibilities of our swamp and overflowed localities. There is room in these swamp areas for thousands of farm homes, as reclaimed swamp land, somewhat like irrigated land, capable of such production that a small acreage is sufficient for one farm home. We estimate that the population of this nation will be 150,000,000 people by 1950, and I believe myself that it will be more than that. For this reason we can see the necessity of furthering swamp land reclamation, as well as all other methods of peopling the localities where fertile lands are non-producing, for these homes will all be needed in years to come. The national irrigation congress, long of great influence in the west, now has launched a far-reaching movement by its resolutions passed at recent sessions looking toward definite help for the states containing large areas of swamp lands and by so doing it further establishes itself as a body of national importance, it already having won the place through the efforts and results for the west."
Young Moore, who was sent to Washington where he met President Taft and other government dignitaries after he had been awarded the corn growing prize, has prepared what government experts who visited his farm declared was the best seed bed they had ever seen for his next year's crop. On this field he is to attempt a greater harvest next year than the prize winner of 1910.
WOMAN SUFFRAGE NOTES
Items from Suffragette Publicity Bureau
A "get-together" meeting has been held by the suffragists of the southern part of the state. The meeting was held in the large quarters of the California political equality league and representatives from the large number of suffrage organizations talked over a segregation of the campaign work and discussed new plans and modes of attack upon the unwary voter. There are about twenty organizations in and about Los Angeles, and all are working along individual lines, and it is a notable fact that each organization works in splendid harmony with the many other associations. There promised to be nothing of the "house-divided-against-itself" nature during the last three months of the suffrage campaign.
Suffrage is adding to the general interest of affairs of state in Mexico, and it is not improbable that the ment then and there as an untruth, and an inexcusable aspersion. Later, the Dean further stated that the only woman who had interested him by her logical suffrage arguments was a woman who was only a suffragist because she was offered a larger compensation for her eloquence by the suffragists than she had been offered by the anti-suffragists. The description of the person referred to answered that of a Mrs. Elizabeth Strong who, though speaking often for the suffragists, had neither been paid or been offered by the suffragists any monetary compensation.
SUES HEAD MOOSE
Supreme Deputy Organizer Says Contract With Him has been Broken
When James J. Davis, supreme organizer of the Loyal Order of the Moose of the World, alighted from the train in Los Angeles Saturday he was met with a summons to answer to a complaint field which demands judgment against him in the sum of $84,900. Coupled with this, is a suit for an injunction to restrain Davis from meddling with the affairs and business of the Loyal Order of Moose of the World, in the State of California.
Complaints in both cases were filed by Bert Bloom, formerly confidential adviser and personal man of Davis.
Bloom alleges that on April 11th, 1910, before the order of Moose had branched out and extended its lodges into all parts of the state and the country, Davis appointed him a supreme deputy organizer, entering into the contract in Pittsburg, Pa., and giving him exclusive control of the territory west of the Mississippi river. This contract Bloom asserts has not been kept, and he accuses Davis of responsibility for the invasion of his territory by independent deputy organizers who he alleges have all made much money from his ranges. He further charges that these organizers appointed by authority of Davis have secured nearly 20,000 members in his territory and that there is due to him on these members under the terms of his agreement with the supreme organizer the sum for which he has entered suit.
Complainant further alleges that Davis is coming to Los Angeles to interfere with his plans and organization arrangements in said exclusive territory and for this reason he asks that an injunction be issued against him.
LIFE BUOY AND OAR.
Putting on the One and Supporting Yourself With the Other.
Very few persons know how to get into a life buoy, and, as in this uncertain world one never knows when one may need to make use of a buoy in real earnest, a little practice might prove of great value in an emergency.
Now, when the buoy is thrown into the water the temptation is to try to lift it over one's head and shoulders or to dive through it. This, however, is impossible. The correct thing is to grasp the two sides of the buoy with fingers of the hands uppermost, lower yourself under the buoy and come up through the center, then rest your arms upon the sides, and you will be comfortably supported as long as it is necessary.
More often than otherwise, in case of accident, a life buoy is not at hand. In such an event an oar may be used as a substitute. Now, there is some little art in saving oneself by this means, for an average sized scull is not buoyant enough to support a person if grasped as the first impulse would direct.
There is only one way in which the oar will support a human being. It must be ridden like a hobbyhorse. The haft is put between the legs and the blade allowed to project above the surface of the water in front of one. By this means the head is kept well above the water.—Pearson's Magazine.
Feeling For Death.
For a week the self appointed guide to the blind on their daily walks had noticed that the two men who were her special charges felt carefully of the wall on either side of the door of the asylum when passing in and out. Since she was there to lead them, that precaution seemed not at all necessary, and she finally asked their reason for it.
"I am looking for crape on the door," one old man told her. "They don't like to let us know here in the asylum when any one dies for fear of making us feel bad, but they put crape on the door, and by feeling for it when we pass in and out we can find out for ourselves when one of us has gone."—New York Press.
How Fielding Spelled His Name.
The Fieldings are an ancient race, and the Denbigh earldom dates from 1622. By the way, there is a funny
and modes of attack upon the unwary voter. There are about twenty organizations in and about Los Angeles, and all are working along individual lines, and it is a notable fact that each organization works in splendid harmony with the many other associations. There promised to be nothing of the "house-divided-against-itself" nature during the last three months of the suffrage campaign.
Suffrage is adding to the general interest of affairs of state in Mexico, and it is not improbable that the women of the southern republic will enjoy the franchise before many of the more inelastic states of the New England district of the United States will bestow the ballot on their women.
Maxine Elliott, the American actress, has added to her popularity among American women by giving the English women aid through her gracious interviews with David Lloyd George and Winston Churchill, who promised, after a conversation with Miss Elliott, to consider the demand of the English suffragists. For when it comes to the suffrage cause, a woman is a woman whether she be fighting for the ballot in the republic of America or in the British Isles, and the diversified talents of all women are being lent for the success of the movement the world over. A letter of appreciation has been sent to Miss Elliott from the Los Angeles suffragists.
From Stockholm, where the international alliance is meeting, come pamphlets and letters and posters, sent by the American representatives to the women who are working for suffrage in California. One of the pamphlets states that "It is an inspiring task to teach women that the right sort of patriotism includes some knowledge of the urgent questions at issue, and an intelligent governing of vis have secured nearly 20,000 members in his territory and that there is due to him on these members under the terms of his agreement with the supreme organizer the sum for which he has entered suit.
Complainant further alleges that Davis is coming to Los Angeles to interfere with his plans and organization arrangements in said exclusive territory and for this reason he asks that an injunction be issued against him.
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"I am looking for crape on the door," one old man told her. "They don't like to let us know here in the asylum when any one dies for fear of making us feel bad, but they put crape on the door, and by feeling for it when we pass in and out we can find out for ourselves when one of us has gone."—New York Press.
How Fielding Spelled His Name.
The Fieldings are an ancient race, and the Denbigh earldom dates from 1622. By the way, there is a funny story as regards the family name and its spelling. The author of "Tom Jones" was one of the race, and the then Lord Denbigh said to his relative: "Why don't you spell your name 'Felding,' as the rest of us do and not 'Fielding'?"
The writer made answer, "Because I am the first of the family who learned to spell."—London Gentlewoman.
African Giants.
There are many giants in Africa nine feet high. Some of them weigh 300 pounds and are strong enough to kill a panther at one blow. Perhaps you think such big fellows must be clumsy, but they are not. They can run faster than any horse, springing twelve to fourteen feet at a leap. This all sounds like a fairy story, but not so when you hear that these African giants are—ostriches.
In New York.
"The woman across the hall from us is dead."
"How did you find that out?"
"Why, I happened to see it in the paper."—Life.
Beginning Young.
Parent—Is my boy precocious, do you think? School Principal—Very. He told the teacher he had been sitting up with a sick friend.—Puck.
Sincerity is the basis of all true friendship. Without sincerity it is like a ship without ballast.
NEWSPAPERS.
Is Not Gone Just Have Read Them.
that moths cannot
why they should debut they do nevertheactly the newspaper or
cy that moths dislike.
in printing the type
moths stay away. That
absence of mothproof
chests, some housefurs and woolens
newspapers at the
water season and find
factory way of preservthe ravages of moths.
better than old newsunder the carpets for
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