MEN WHO ARE BROW-BEQTBN. The men who are thgmoatv ef- fectually browvbeaten are general- ly those who have the léast suspi- .cion that web 3 the ma. : ‘moStu frequently imposed upon. . It is not that they fear others; but ,‘ that ghey fear the reproachaa oi { their own conscience. Sheridm Road Publishing Co. (mammaAtln ) i [13.1w ‘6':me I an land Part. 111.. by the '. < w iiéwm tH map ascend-3mm“. “. u _ "t All correspondence and com- munioaï¬onsfor mtbh'ealion in this paper must be addressed direct to this ofll'ce. or no attention willbepaidtothem. 31 Lane: 1cm Am. eva- KW d A. E- mm! “varnish. mutant.“ They cannot justify their own misdoing by telling wh‘at “others did,†to provoke them to wrath or to hinder their usefulness. Having their own standards of conduct they try to live up to themselves at their best; hence a woman 's weakness or falsity, or in- accessible enchantment, can never provoke such men to prove that they are cowards or villains. Mrs. Stowe touched, the outer- edge of this subject in her “Pink vand White Tyranny" and many writvrs haw ri’eljï¬ï¬‚li'lled that. a good man may be brow-beaten by a very 'shallow woman. George Elliot’s Rosamond in “Middlemarch†was a pink and white tyrant with a high minded husband whose subtile sufferings were 98 keen as his wife 8 devices to enslave him were subtle. »‘In his perplexityâ€"when ruin M him in the faco,~ohe hold They do not fancy that a woman’s unworthiness justiï¬es them in being unworthy. A mwuwmn-W. SATURDAY. DEC. mum I“! mum TERM! 8:... PI! VBAI $1.50 IF PAID IN ADVANCE Telephone No. a. Eli-hind Put- By Agnes Leon-rd Hill. (uoouvonumJ â€ENS†RIGHTS. 0" ICES 2 luggi- , In an empukd moment at tngic franknen thb Maud hul- hand of Emlmphd ï¬eld he: that can like I certain ‘pllnt of which he had read that lonmhqd fby feeding on n mnn'I brain. Lndislaw being a “mm in a book," oonaiderntely died and Rosamond, in martying a love: nature felt that, in her second :huabénd,she“hnd her reward." him 083% chill ‘nlo'otnqo and naked, “Whnt can I do?" ' These timely death. in novels may enable the brow-beaten to re- tire from the scene of action with dignity and go down to poweri- ty as honorary members of the noble company of martyrs. But in real life, though “men have died and worms have eaten them,"â€"this solution of marital diï¬cnlï¬ee. does not commend itself to “I0 normal individual. Many imagine that the remedy lies 1n the divome court. This In run.†It might pg 3, My EH num’ 5 sale obpotinï¬hm w: flee from discomfort and shirt re» sponsxblht y at any price. Evén' Hh‘en the remedy is not infnltjble. There is an_ uncertainty about the “Undiscovered Chantry" that induces most people to ï¬ght shy of it, ‘and seek a remedy in the re- sources of this present time‘. About one who is divorced clings always the disquieting “wonder which was to blame.†If the marriage-vow in the ï¬st instance can be set aside,and “till death do us part†was merely a' phrase meaning nothing what guarantee is there that marriage- \ows in the second instance could mean anything? A leading actress has her record in a‘book of notorieties, as "mar: tied ï¬ve times and divorced every time.†The civil law may allow these things; but the higher law de mands ï¬ne character and individâ€" ual excellence, irrespective of “what the law allows." Heroes are.» not merely self sat- isï¬ed men. They are men who’ can “endure hardness as good soldiers." - can face difï¬culty and “meet it like a man,†can be mar- ried ton fool and neitlier brow- bea}. her not allow her to brow- beat them. A man can resist imposition with gentleness as well no ï¬rm. nus. He on: mine to" mum 1‘ with of ambit: dem- without taking ihat you end breaking his wife's held with it He can draw theIine between be? ing he: defender, her potato! and even bet lover. vithout MI‘ herahve.to doe whathis conn- cienoe disapprovea, merely be~ cause she demands of him this foolish oonoeuion to her whims. His ï¬rst lesson is to msster' himself, so that his conscience is his mentor and not even “the wife of his bosom 3' can make him nnjnst, unkind or nnmsnly. This sort of sis: isnot seeking “a fairer face†or s softer berth" or sn 6-7 cuss for being “nobody." He recognizes duty as his guardian angel, who may lend him at times, through steep and thorny psths, bnt who will certainly “make s m of him," sothst in his clear eyes of, honest purpose, in his hrs-vs smile of noble oonrsge, and in his} blameless life of heroic eï¬ort all the world may read in his presenos s pesn of victory 1 A insn who silows hinise'lt to be bromhesï¬sn my he ‘s. mbnf’he Vis.‘ s mistaken one. Monday evsning Mr. Raymond delivered the last of his series of hectares at the high school. In discuasiag his subject, Londoa, he spoke 6f the cosmopolitan character of the city and of the two faction who uphold imperial- ism and progressivism. ' Foi' years the wealth/y property owners were unwilling to furnish decent abodes for the poor. Fi. many the city Common Council tore down the old shanties and erected sanitary houses 3which they rented at cheaper rates than the old ones. The churches, muswma,’ then 1r3‘0\and palacesare nmï¬â€˜lig the ï¬nestin Nthe world. 0 This council has doubled the park areas, widbned streets, and otherwise beautiï¬ed the city. Mr. Raymond has given» the pupils of the high school a‘ndroe‘i- dents of the Park an iptellectual treat which they will not be ,abie to duplicate very. soon, if gver. Sub-ctibe for m Ram-Lanna ammo LECTURES END. one-1 um monk. ' ‘ antrhomu wxuww‘ A? EHGIILAND PAM! : . muons : : PROFESSIONAL Md DI. E. H. PQMEIOY COIIUIJA‘HOI Bonn; 8109‘. I. 110". It. Phone» maul“)! Tunnel! 1'; on MILTON ,H. mm mMAnm-e. ~ 11:301.:Lto 1:08 r. 3. 0th: «11258. Ro'enPuh. (Toll-“hm ' omoo Fletcher 3101:): ‘ min Magnetic and among Hm: , Treu ta all chronic diseases in the ‘ ‘ 088115? HIGHLAND PARK 1 - Tint: an $1:ch aim ï¬n: m Inuit; wlenflï¬c manner ' Ml Will. I.“ 1m. AND mun mm 00mm“ 3 Au“! will mums you 0! tin great. beneï¬totthh Wt- Wanna Ava; - Highwood. Iii. 'Oï¬ioeo Miamtoy'ISFns. " Womï¬mquutowuï¬.ï¬um d: {in} min: atria and depart u fellaâ€: . Souxh Bound. ' North Bound ‘ Rec'danfl- dhpatcï¬ed $9994 and dispatched 9:04 i. m. ‘ 7 :46 a. m. :2: 55 um - 9:33 9-19 3:17 p. in. 3:40 P m. :chéd at 5:43 p. m. H mails close 30 minutes befom (bl. de- parture ‘1 DR. ALBERT I. SHELDON Sunday mail it received at 731‘: lejfltd §fï¬nxéi°aam a; ‘ ,0» km before 1911:. DR. ILLINOIS MEMO PARK WSTflï¬lEE. ' :55 p; m. F. E. HARTMAN. of r flousohomï¬fumt’u at annual“ Him DR. E. C. KAYE ll BANK BUILDIIG Received 5' 36 P m. Opp. Dbpot. ILLINOIS *L‘ the Hi ‘hool clo the holida} being giv‘e a remgml children in It is no‘ em! publh M by hiâ€!!! iï¬ï¬om 1 1:90 M‘ 4/ ,gj'l‘ho e m from it) g! #0 than! dle. I public 10f. Wt" given Mrs. S entitle no ré( bec’aum in thei hWOVI or not 1.031.101 tho 31‘ mind: I bull D thl No 0‘