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r ' jl?i ' u.' r 2.'. " '' '''??? ? Camden Ch on tele 1S.JKJ Publish** W?#kl>r. ? 11 CAMOCN. 8. C. . r%m loafqr to not afraid of spring . ? ? ? IB hnki as If tlx* harem skirt were toto tolled. ?? ~ ' trouwr skirt U not popula* ontho ftrl? iU??. Th# viik bat Is threatened. but Ifcwtiaii hats live long. aatchlng a stseet car a harera a hobble skirt skinned ? TbeM ought to be no trouble In get little light on the to-called trust. Maw a sea are continually being tnead for radium. All that Is needed to aanae radium. Sometimes when you think that op fortMUjr |? knocking at your door It ?at to be a collector. Ito leanest man has been found In Texaa. Ha was arrested for stealing an orphan asylum. ,A hospital physician declares that srvarybedy Is crasy now and then. Mm U tan't always the other fellow. wnusual happening Is reported Connecticut. A woman found 1ft her ilead husband's pockets. Tk? teach the young Idea how to arwfcn Chicago educators think Is quite SMS luapojrtaut as teaching it to shoot. The harem skirt has been causing flits la lUo Janlero, but Uvienos Ay res appears to be making an effort to take to tranquilly. Now we are told that a woman's stlit la her crowding glory. All of which la our notion of no place to > skirt. In parts of Nova Bcotla automobll tog is allowed four days each weok. The rest of the time the roads are jartactly safe. Tou can send a day letter' by tele iph now, but old-fashioned people will cling to the "arrived safety" and "am well" formula New York physician promises to bad boys good by proper breath Ing. It la a for cry from a strap In fiha woodshed to a breathing exercise. A loot race has been arranged for ?as lagged men from Minneapolis to ft Louis. And thus the great work <aC tha twentieth century goes on. Jk New York office boy made $60. ?OP speculating In Wall street, but fhear got $20,000 of It away from him the next day?and be Is still fooling arauad la Wall street. la New York a woman la trying to 9rove thai ah? loved a man and ahe ?ffers In evidence letters In which she ?ailed him her "ugly monkey" and her "early bear." It muat be splendid to fee loved like that. By an astronomer It la alleged that 1<i?bw comets are composed merely ?f 4ut collisions with them need not be feared. Just tho aamo they give the solar system the appearance of meedlng ? vacuvuy cleaner. Winsted. Conn., has a flHhorman who claims to have caught a pickerel Because the latter mistook hl? nose *BW hail and Jumped at it. It strikes as that satd fisherman must havo con sumed a vast amount of bait to ac quire a nose bo brilliant that a pick would jump at It. Under the new law It costs $10 to sarry a pistol In New York Instead of enly $2.60. Hut those who expect to aee the difference reflected In a do wrease of shooting affrays will proba bly be disappointed. If the fee was a .sillllon, and It was not enforced more strictly than the $2.60 one. It Would It* }ust aa Ineffectual. Btr Hiram Majclm Is still singing the praises of that great American dish? jrk and beans. Some of these days bumble and much-abused pie will an authority abroad who will Bud eUxrvate It to the heights, and ua ashamed tnat familiarity and tlon haro made us bellttlo the hid 4en ?weetn??B and light we have with A Jilted Brooklyn man is suing th? icklo fair one for tho time lost In ttourtlng her. She pleads by way of defense a woman's inalienable right Ho the pursuit of happiness by chang ing her mind In faco of this consti tutional right the unlucky swain has io case. All the courts appealed to <mi this Issue havo hitherto upheld this bright, which. Indoed, antedates every thing but the creation. King Sodultch Choa Fa Maha Za Jfraradh, of Slam, cables thank* for sending an American representative to Bis late father'a cremation. That I* nothing. We are quite willing, on gen prluciples, to send representatives cremations of oriental poten considering that tho Orient has potentates to burn. Rut it Is to boped that Siamese court etiquette it require an American tongue twisted around His Majesty's t court in Pennsylvania has jftat a woman with beautiful , agree can use them la any way ahe pleases. There Is a large measure of la the gallantry, for no court Heaven could keep beautiful Kfaftvon Arkovy, a Hungarian was arrested la New T?rk tl# he had beard of the encounter and to be prepared when 1m broke ? --A GrttnrW*'?Baecomb McKelvey, * young farmer living near Fountain luu. committed suicide by drowning. Anderson?Judge of Probate N tab id ton is laying iu a supply of blanks for marriage licenses. Florence.-~Wbat came very year being a mighty serious Are occurred aboard train No. 64, the morning pas senger, from Columbia to Florence, shortly after it left Timmonsvllle. The top of the baggage coach caught fire and delayed the train. Florence.?Harry DeHerry, health officer, was arretted and gave bond for his appearance before Magistrate McClenghan on a charge of assault and battery of a high and aggravated nature. The warraut was sworn out by the chief on information and be lief. The complainant Is a lady of Umar. Anderson.-^-A large delegation, con sisting of influential citizens repre- I sentlng all the towns and cities be tween Knoxvillu and Charleston, will call on President Plnley and other officials of the Houthem railway at Washington, and will urge that the lilue Ridge railroad be extended over the mountains into Tennessee. Lexington.?Hherlff Corley Is mak ing a determined fight against the Il licit handling of whiskey and says that he is determined that the law shall be cofnplled with. He has sent out to all of the depot agents In the county a letter, together with a copy of the new national law concerning interstate shipments of liquors. Bamberg.?The largest lemon ever seen in this community was on exhi bition here. It weighs within a frac tion of two pounds, it measures In circumference 16 inches and measur ing around from top to bottom it Is 17 Inches. It looks more like u squash until one examines it and smells It. Charleston.?Moses Murks, aged about 72 years, head of Important dry goods and notion stores here and Iu Norfolk, under the name of M. Marks & Hons, died here, having been crit ically 111 for some time. Greenville.?A petition will be pre sented to the officials of the South ern railway to retain as special agent of the Southern railway, Charlotte division, H. M. Duncan, who was re cently transferred from this point to Relma, Ala., where he was Bhol by an unknown party while in the discharge of his duty. Anderson.?John Medlock, who lives on Harris street In the Orr cotton mill vllluge, has celebrated his iOlBt birthday. He looks to he somewhere In the sixties. Is hal? and hearty, and attends to light work Mr. Medloc* came to Anderson several years ago from Georgia. He has In his posses sion records to Bhow that his claim to be 101 years old Is correct. Edgefield.? Mr E. J. Mima, cash ier of the Bank of Edgefield, is la terested in tho establishment of a canning factory to do a commercial tfislness. The citizens of Edgefield have already raised $<5,000 for such a factory, but had Borne misunderstand ing with the machinery agent, and Mr. Minis is now looking for furthet Information on the subject of canning. Greenville.? According to the re port of President S. C. Ryrd of Chi cora college to the presbytery, a : movement Is being Inaugurated to raise $50,000 In the synod In South Carolina to pay tho coBt of extensive Improvements and an additional build ing at this temale college under the Presbyterian denomination of the state. | Greenville.? At a meeting of the j hoard of directors of the Greenville board of trade it has been decided I to raise the sum of $5,000 at once in order to broaden the scope of the work undertaken. The secretary's re port was most encouraging. The in dustries secured through the board of trade directly and Indirectly since tho i first of the year make a flattering | show inn and this has encouraged the directors to even greater efforts. Aiken.? Aiken is much disappointed i over the census returns The poople of the city were expecting the census i to show at least 5.000 population, j whereas It shows only 3,911. The in crease over 1900 was about 15 per I cent., but the increase from 1S90 to 1900 showed an icrease of nearly 40 per cent. However. most of the growth shown has been, in the last year or two, and it is believed that the city's population in 19120 will show at least 8.000 to lO.QOl) persons Anderson ?On April '-'s the Saluda Baptist association, embracing four : counties, will bold a Sunday school institute The institute will be at , tended by several hundred delegates, and will last three days I Spartanburg After remaining out for 11 minutes, the Jury in the case ? of the State vs. Gary (list, the negro ? tried for attempt to criminally as ! emu It a prominent white woman of j this city h'ehruarv lift, returned a ver ! diet of guilty and within a few min utes Judge John S Wilson, press ing, sentenced the defendant to be hanged Friday, .May Johnston Shiloah Day was observ i ed here by the Daughters of the Con | feoeracy, anniversary of the first bat tle between the sections. Washington, ('apt E M Adams, i of the engineering corps, I*. S. A., re ! porting on the proposiion to construct j and maintain a levee or dam for the Great Pee Doe River, at Gibson Dam. near Marlon, eliminating bends in the river, says that the work does uot properly fall within the scope of river and harbor Improvement in the Interest of navigation and Capt. Adams, therefore, recommended ad versely. Spartanburg?The Hettrick hosiery mills will locate In Cpartanburg This announcement was made deft mltely by John Wood, secretary of the chamber of commorce, aiter a confer ence with officials of the mill. This Is a large concern and has a branch in Walhalla. Among the brands of hosiery Is one of th<) best knoven hose on the market. Anderson.?Postmaster Cochran Is going to Washington to confer with the postal department officials con the postal savings bank to openod at the Anderson office on LABOR CHIEF HELD fECRETARY-TREASURER McNA* ARA OF INTERNATIONAL UNION OF IRON WORKERS CAUGHT. MUCH DYNAMITE FOUND Labor Leader* Aro Charged With Oy namitlng Lo? Ang?le? Tlmea* Plant. Indianapolis, Ind,?After month# o: kaveaUgutlon, directed by William J Hum*, a New York detective, J*A?l : i. McNamara, International seoretaj-., ot Ui? iirldgo and Structural hot 1 ! Worker* of America, the hwadqvuu imra of wlrtcti are in Indianapolis, was arretted here charged wnu oon. pll?ity iu the dynamiting of th* Lot Augeles Tlmee ou October 1, H>10, Mid the plant of the Llewullyu iron work* at Jxmi Angeiea, Twenty-one poisons were kllle. when the plant of the . Iajm Angele* lime* waa destroyed. Four hour* after McNiunara wa< I arrested detective* found two quant 9t nitroglycerin aud seventeen uttck? ?f dynamite in a barn three-quarter* of a mile weet of Indianapolis. The j barn, the detectives say, was renteu ; by McNamara from T. li. Jones, the i owner. | LaLer investigation of the interna tionul offices of the union dlsciooeu in a store room in the baaement ot the building sixty-four sticks (about plxty pound# of dynamite, 200 feet 01 -fuse, 600 dynamite caps, one dozen small alarm clocks and a leather case juado to cat ry a ten-pound can ot nitro-glycorln. Detective Burns took ; possession of all the explosives, j McNamara s arrest followed an In vestigation lasting several months, during which a force of detective* bave been in Indiunupolls. Burns himself made frequent trijis to Indian apolls, and was at all times lu touch , with the force of detectives bore. Requisition papers trom the gov ernor of California having been bign ed by Uoveinor Marshall beiore the arrest, McNamara was taken to po lice headquarters, where ho was ar raigned immediately before Judge Coll 1 nh In police court. Twenty mm utes after McNamara had been Kelzei. In the association headquarters in the American Central Life building, It; ? ?which a meeting of the executive ! board of the organization was Just ad Jcurnlng, he wa? taken from the cit> by four detectives in an ambulance. Responsibility for other destructive explosions in different parts of the country would bo placed o? the ro suit of an Investigation now In prog ress. Detective BurnH said. Indianapolis, Ind.?Four hundred pounds of dynamite were uncovered in the heart of the city of Tiffin. , Ohio, according to information here - by Detective William J. Burns, who left here secretly after having arrest ed John J. McNamara, secretary treasurer of the International Asso-' elation of Bridge and Structural Iron Workers, at the headquarters in this city. PEACE IS IN SIGHT. Five Days' Armistice Signed by Lead er Madero and Ayent of Diaz Kla I'aso, Texas.?An armistice ot live days affecting t-fiy district be tween Juarez and Chiuhuahua and of the latter city, was made ef fective in an exchange of identical letteis signed by Gen. Francisco 1 Madero for the rebels and (.Jen. Juan Navarro for the government. Tlie truce provides that there shall bo no movement of troops of either side during the iivo days and that provisions and medicines may bo brought to either camp from the American side without the payment of duty. Ojinaga, where a small Federal 1 lorce is besieged, is net covered in the armistice, tho lnsurrecto activi- | lies in that district being largly inde ; pendent However, the moral effoct ' of the cessation of hostilities in Chi ln'.alu.a is regarded as certain to ; make M'ltb'inent in other parts ot tilt country simple - -- Wilson Wants Nomination. i Washington ?<;.iv. Woodrow VVii-? 'on is to swing around the circle and ' lig::t tin* bonhrea fi r his liflii boom . for ; resident. Following the govern I nr's eminently successful experience I with the legislature just adjourned, and entiling close upon the formai ! ku.nthing of t'.'.e H;umon boom by ? i; o Democratic delegation from Ohio,! the report has set political tongues ! v agging'. The three men now most! favorably considered for the nomina- ! '.;cn are Harmon, Wilson and Clark , Taft Advises Unitarians. Washington ?a plea to all Unitari ans to stand forth and aid the iaitn I and to provide in Washington a i '?principal church" to correspond witn I the cathedrals of other denominations I v r.s made by President Taft at tlie j service in All Souls- Unitarian church < f which he is a regular attendant. In Ma addresg. made from the platform of the church In the Interest of a movement for a large Unitarian edi fice, he referred to the discussion of his religious faith during his presi dential campaign. Steel Trust Threatens Underwood. Washington.?Chairman Underwood of the waya and means committee has received numbers of telegrams^ of congratulations from his homo dis trict In regard to his attitude toward the steel trust when the threat was made that If barbed wire were placed on tho free list the construction of a new fJ.OOO steel plant In Ur.~Ua? der wood's own district would b? dis continued. It Is understood this mill was to be completed In August and mould employ 1,500 men. THE NEW MATINEE IDOL HARMON BOON LAUNCHED OHIO MEN MAKE DECLARATION OF THEIR CHOICE FOR PRESIDENT, Senator Pom?r?n? <? tH? Loader o 1 tho Oovornor Harmon Campaign. Washington.?Tho formal launch ing of the boom of Governor Judson Harmon of OLilo for the presidency cok place tn tho rooms of Henator I'onierene of Ohio In the senato ofAce building. Senator Pomerone sent out a caH tc nil the 16 Democratic congressmen HUDSON HARMON. Governor of Ohio. .wij vjitio lo attend tho meeting to tlfBcuRM the outlook and devise ways and means of promoting Mr. Har mon's chances. All members of the QJiio Democratic delegation were present and It was stated by those friendly that a unanimous declaration In his favor will be made, piobablv next week. The Harmon boomers were in con ference for several hours, all of the I congressmen participating In the dis jcussion. It was learned that the prin cipal matters considered were plans of properly launching the Harmon ! candidacy, anil aii-o the Democratic ! candidate who might dirn'th'p Ohio' j man's chances for the nomination. DIAZ WILL NOT RESIGN. Madera's Demand Is Treated With Derision. j Mexico City.?The excitement caus j fd in the I'nited States by the news that the reply of President Diaz to ' the demands of President Taft was o; I a defiant nature brought a quick j charge of attitude on the part of tiie I Mexican government. Dispatches telling, of President Taft s refusal to l-e stampeded into i an unfriendly act had much to do %\ith moderating sentiments of Preai* dent's Diaz' advisers. General Madero's demand that President Diaz rtsign to prevent an attack on Juarez was greeted wltn derision. Cannon Speaks Against Reciprocity. Washington.?Former Speaker .Jo seph 8. Cannon held the tloor of the house in opposition to the Canadian reciprocity agreement for Turee hours and in a vigorous attack ?>n Presi dent Taft's pet policy. ln?.>.u-d that the proposed legislation was inimical to the farmers The gentleman whom Henry Watterson of : i lc. Ky., referred to as "that macM :i ? nt old reprobate" displayed h.s proverbial vigor and powers of en! .r.ince un der tho strain of three 1: contin ous speaking Free List Before the Hojse. Washington?The maj. r.tv report of the ways and meai* < ir.mlttee on j the so-called (armcrs fr?-- hst hill, submitted to the house by Chuliman Underwood, Is a merger <f Democrat* j lc political argument am! an analysis of the proposed duty ex? mptionx. The report shows that tho bill would re duce the tariff revenue $i?.<95. based on tho importations for the last fiscal years, an amount described a? "inconsiderable in comparison with the great saving from tho additions to the fre<? ,,ct nr^vlded for." MColU< u?er a Crlm?. Munich, Germany.?Serving short .measure In beer and the deception of 'the public by filling glasses with a froth bo as to form what is popular ly known as a "collar,"' ha* )u*t been judged an offenie, punishable by im prisonment by Hie criminal court at Munich. The tenant of a beer house, who waa charged with defrauding the public In this wa/, waa sentenced lo its weeks In jail And a fine of 9710. and of his waiters to terms of from one to three weeks in jail. Pub lic Indignation led to the suit URGES SPLIT IN THE SOUTH Sacroiary of tha Treasury Makoa a Notebl* Addraaa Bafara South Carolina Bankora. Humrnarvillo, S, G.?Secretary Mac Veagh, Bpeaking before the South Carolina Bankers' AbHociation here, made a piea to the Southern Btutet. to break from one-party jrule and be come bi-partisan In theif politics for thel rown good.. He deduced It to im of fundamental importance thai uny party governed nation should nave two available parties that the political life of all the people Bhal. ue at its best. "Two parties with at least fairly equal chance* of governing are re quired iu the work of governing the country, botj locally and nationally, he uaid. "1 do not speak as a Hopublican.' fce Raid. "1 am a member of the lie publican party, and 1 am a meuibei ?jt It because 1 believe in it. 1 whh .i member of the Democratic party during Cleveland's time and I a member of it because 1 believed Secretary MacVeagh -discussed par ty conditions in both the North and South in a friendly ? spirit, and said In It. Hut my interest in bi-party politics is not the interest of j jar ty man, but is the interest of a cit izen?of an American. I want you to believe that my interest in seeing the South under a two-party Byslem is wholly independent of the ques tlon whether one party or the otner shall prevail. "The Important thing to me Is not that any one party should win. It lb that there shall be t\yo parties with the possibility that either may win; for this Is party government in Its real meaning, and with Its real equip ment. If the South were alone con cerned, bl-party everywhere would still be a matter of sincere aspiration to me. But the question Is a larger one?Its importance is national. "With the same partigs established everywhere, North and South; and everywhere marshalling and dividing the people on the same lines of thought and action, the last stone will have been added to. the Immovable foundation of our perfect union. Our d.earns can all then come .true and no single sacrifice of the great and terrible Civil war will remain with out its reward.-' Paiu... wcn.cJ Stripling. Atlanta.? 1 nomas Bdgar Stripling's ayipTi'cation tor parti on liaa betsu ac clitied by Governor llrown, Alter fourteen years of liberty, which he achieved by breaking jail, the man who slew \V. J. Cornett in the dead hours of the night in Har ris county, in li07, must don the btripes of the convict anil begin the service of the sentence demanded of him by the law for his crime, and which wl!l terminate only at the end of his life. From a life of respectability in Danville, Ya., where he had attained by industry and sobriety to the ofilce of chief of police, and <vhere, under the assumed name of 11. K. Morris, he had come to be looked upon as a man to be honored and trusted, ho must join the band of lost citizens, and nt the sacrifice of his liberty and the forfeiture of all his rights, make the atonement for his crime. Pre*. o Untrue. Albany;. N. Y ?Investigation of the charge mane recently ai the Method i?t conference at Saratoga by Rev. O. R. Miller of the New York iMvlc League, that a two hundred and Ilfty thousand d? liar fund had been raised to force a Sunday baseball bill through the New York legislature, | was concluded by the senate commit tee on" privileges and elections. R Is understood that the senate committer will report to the senate that no evl dence has been adduced to support the charge Gculd Controls Missouri Pacific. New York.?Although recently forc ed out of the position himself, George J. Gould, opposing the Rockefeller Kuhn-Lceb interests, brought about the election of R. F. Bush aa his suc cessor as president of the Milssourl Pacific railway, defeating David R Francis, former governor of Missouri. Mr. Rush 1b president of the Western Maryland railway. The victory of the Gould faction was followed by the an nouncement of Kuhn- Loeb & Co's withdrawal as bankers for tbe sys tem. Navy Reorganization Planned. Washington.?ffhe - house commit' tee on expenditures in tbe navy de partment, in ita Inquiry, decidedjJlfl request from Secretary Meyer infor mation as to the number of employeiu the expense of the department for the five-year period befinnli^l witfi i the Spanish-America* war and for tbe past jwur*. L*t+r the committee j proposes to take up consideration of j a havy reorganisation plan. Proris- j ion for increasing the offloers and de*, creaata* tewial expeneea of the staff; *."1 PASSED BY HOUSE DEMOCRATIC "STEAM ROLLER" AQAIN PROVED ITSELF EF? FECTIVE IN HOUSE. ' ? "? 1 " ?' 1 ? ? ? * NOT A SINGLE CHANGE The BUI It Practically Identical With That Sutmitted at tho La?t Session. Washington.?The Canadian reel' pioolty pact was passed by tbe bou?? by a vote of 8ti9 to all tbo Demo crata except 10 voting for tbe rneua uie. A majority of tbe Republic***" preaent and rotlng voted against It, tbe number of iepre?eutaUvee favor lug It being 87, wnlle 76 Republican" and Aiken of New York, a "blaek sheep," were against it , tu tbe effort to jusure tbe dehtal of tbe measure in the beuaie, Hepubi ItCMn ttppUUtfUl* bMUfclil UJ uiw free list bill un tbe Canadian reuii pioolty bill, fuBur-geni itepui)U?iKU* lined up with the Regulars, while Un ole Joe Cannou aad John OaUell ap plauded vigorously }be uueranee* of Insurgents MuiuuhU, l.wiiruot and Norrla, and the latUv returned the compliment, To leader Undefweed is due a (urge sharo of credit fer (he suueess fuul work. jit) displayed rare skill an Democratic floor leader and ongi-, neered the bill to Anal passage wltn consummate ability, A liberal allowance pf time was made to the opponents of the bill and it was put through without the aid ot a special rule. All Oeorglu members weie in favor of the bill, though sev eral hud opposed it most actively in the party caucus. They bowed to the will of the majority, however, and cast their votes for the measure the caucus had approved. "U was made a party measure and we were bound by the action of the caucus," said these opponents in ex planation of their votes. Ten Democrats, who said they had been pledged against the measure oy their constituents In the last cam paign, voted against it by special per mission of the caucus. It was amusing to hear men like Mann and Cannon rail against the Democratic majority, who were cham pioning President Taft s pet measure. Some Insurgent Republicans like Den root of Wisconsin wore really siucere In saying they wished meats and oth er articles put on the freo list. They were reminded by I^eader Underwood that they would have an opportunity shoi tly to vote lrt favor of admitting free of duty meat products from Can ada and all' the rest of the world. They seemed bent, however, on add ing this clause to the Canadian psct. The Democrats were charged witn bad faith in bringing in two separate "bills, the Republicans insisting that it was generally admitted the reciproc ity bill would pass, but there was considerable doubt as to whether the free list bill would get by the senate. One reason why Democrats oppos ed any Interference with the meas ure they had agreed upon in caucus, aside from an unwillingness to have their program disarranged, was the fear that any concessions granted to Canada outside of the specific sec tions in the reciprocal agreement, was that it would cause complications ! with other nations w ho were grant ed all conec8slon8 allowed "the most I favored nations." Ottawa, Out.?News of the heavy ; majority given reciprocity at Wash ington was received with much sat I isfaetion by' the government and 11b ; eral members who are supporting the 1 measure here. The Canadian oppon ents of the pact are now placing their faith in the hope that tho United States senate will long delay the bill or kill it. "The vote at Washington will be a great aid to the Canadian friends of reciprocity," said a member of the Dominion government. "I expect to see the opposition at Ottawa collapse i in the course of a few days and I be j lieve the measure will be finally pass ed by parliament as soon as it is finally den't um> ht Washington." Thre.. ms fcve at Judge. Vlterbo, Itajy.?Of all the methods nu^/tcu by the C~:ucrri?t to excite sympathy or Incite a riot, iione surpassed In ncvolty and effect* lvenesB that of Gaeteno Eaposlto, who, at the end of a mad harangue, tore a glnss eye from his head and, hurling It at the feet of the president. Btampedeed the court. Then he fell In a faint, and President Blanchl sus pended the sitting. According to the state. Esposlto, who la known as a uturer, Is a dangerous malefactor and leader of the Camorrlsts. Ogden Heads Educational Conference | Jacksonville, Fla.?All the old. offi cers of the Conference for Education In the South were re-elected by the delegates attending the annual con vntlon. The officers are: Robert C. Ogdep, New York, president; Wick llffe Rose, Washington, vice presi dent; William A. Blair, iNorth Caro lina, treasurer; P. P. Claxton, Ten' nessoe, executive socretary. Members of the executive committee chosen are: Josph Cook, Mississippi; 8, J. Brooks, Texas; J. Harwell, Louisiana, and A. A. Murphree. Florida. . Day neadi Equitable. New York.?Against the advice of Superintendent Hotchklaa of the elate department of insurance and of it* trustees, the EdulUblfiJUfa Aaaur> ance Society, by a vote of Ita board of directors elected William A. Day J. Plerpont Morgan's candidate, to succeed the lato Paul Morton aa the i president of the society, at a salary or $60,000 a year as against the |80,? 000 a year paid to Mr. Morton. No rice president was chosen to succeed Mr. Day. The board also west ou re lord In fator of mutuallsatlsB. - T-V^ri-tv"' > if#"--: , AFTER 7 YEARS SUFFERING I Wats Cured by LydJa E. Pink, ham's Vegetable Com pound Waurika, Okla.?"1 had female trou ble* tot ??vun years, was all run down. una bo nerToua L could not do uny ihipg. The doctors treated' me for dlf fiwt thluga but did me no good. I got ?o bad thut 1 could not Bleep day or night. While iu this condition I read of Lydla H. Mnfc bam'a Vegetable Compound, and began its us? and wrote to Mrs. Pinkham for Advice. In a short time I had gained my averag? weight aud am now strong and well.1* ?Mrs. Salli? Stevknb, B. F. J>., ifo, 8, JJox 81, Waurika, Okla. Another Grateful Woman. Huntington, Mass.?"I was in a ner vous, run down condition and for three years could And no help. " I owe my present good health to I,ydla K. Pinkham's vegetable Cora |)ouud aud lilopd I'uriUer which X be lieve saved my life. "My doctor knowsivhat helped mo and does not say one word against It." ? Mrs. Maui Janettjb Hatjcs. Box 134, Huntington* Mass. Because your case is a difficult one, doctors having d/)no you no good, do 1 not continue to suffer without giving' ' Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Com I pound a trial. It surely lias cured j many cases of female ills, such as tiw ! (lamination, ulceration,displacements, ' fibroid tumors, irregularities, pertodio pains, backache, that bearing-down reeling, and nervous prostration. DAISY FLY KILLER plar?4 IrActa A kliUtlili*# Nr?i,e *?u, ofu??nn? lll.COU V< UUtil,cJl*Ap? I'liU All H Mad* ot tUrUl^MMl ? pill or lip ever, will Ool toil or.iijvra a.i\j Miint* Ouaianimltl' ftciive. Ufilldfil#rf or uotpi t-f>aid torJOcu HAROLD &OHKIUI liO Dtk*lW Ato. Hrockl/n, In Y?r% ; anted Men to I.?M?rn t lio IlHi-lxirTrttflo. W? bnve position* nahliitf. In addition to good nalarr, ! coiiimlsslon und 11pt> liuiount to tuorn tliun iiiokI iiiou i rurn. Few cxiiiplntes. TooU glveu: Wauo* I irhilp U>a rnlriK. Writ? for /r-i? cutulogtm. MtM.Kit f/V II IlKIK OI.I.Kii K, ft.'i WKHTMIXtllKLL 1'KKKT, ATLANTA, (UCOKOIA. MAKES sore r/ca WELL OI'K 1 8 VEMiOW RKAHONH DKiKSTKI) In la uilnut<>? mivf>s you i;waj per cent on your ('lurid* L&nd InveetmtiUl. 1(ll? Hond * l.ulmato i'?.,Hanfwr4, VW. COOK OUTDID THE SCHOLAR Maybe Sign Was Not All Latin, but She Transiated IT Without Difficulty. Jack returned home from college, where he had won high honors an a student of ancient languages,' but ho pleaded Ignorance one day when his young sister asked him to translate a sign she had seen of an optician's i which read thus: "Con . sultu sabo j utyo urey es." | Jack struggled manfully with it for several minutes and gave it up. "There are some words in it that ' are Latin. The others aren't, anyhow. It doesn't make sense." "That la what I said," replied his sister. "Out cook translates it with-, out any trouble. She says It means 'Consult us about your eyes.' " OF COURSE. The Magistrate?You say you dfdn't know tho pistol was loaded, yet the dealer who Bold It to you says you did not pay for It. Prisoner?What's that got to do with It? The Magistrate?Well, If you didn't pay for it, then the dealer must haver charged It for you. DAME NATURE HINT8 When the Food Is Not 8uited. When Nature gives her signal that something is wrong It Is generally with the food; tho old Darao Is always faithful and one should act at onco. To put off the change is to risk that which may bo Irreparable. An Arl tona man 6ays: "For years I could not safely cat any breakfast.. I tried all kinds of breakfast foods, but they were all soft, starchy messes, which gave me distressing headaches. I drank strong coffee, too, which appeared to benefit me at the time, hut added to the head aches afterwards. Toast and code? wereno better, for 1 found the toast very constipating. "A friend persuaded me to quit cof fee and the starchy breakfast foods, and use Poatum and Grape-Nuts in stead. I shall never regret talcing his advice. "The change they have worked In me is wonderful. I now have no more of th^ distressing sensations In my stomach after eating, and I neverhave - any headaches. I have gained 11 pounds in weight and feel better ta every way. Grape-Nuts make a de licious Sf well ss a .nutritions dish, arid ! find" that Postum Is easily di gested and never produces dyspefSfw^ symptoms." Name given by Poetum Co., battle Creek, Mich. Get the tittle book, "The Road to Wellvflle," In pkgp. "There* Reason." w tlw afcevs A w - ?se*s*? fr?M tlm# ?? thn?-. f?n ?.r *