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Mr. Spat?Now, If you'll just ll3tei to me? Mrs. Spat?Oh. you can't convince me. Mr. Spat?Probably not, but IT we'r? going to spend the rest of th< night In argument I want my share oi. the time. BURNING ITCH WAS CURED "I deem It my daty to tell about I cure that the Cutlcura Soap and Olnt ment have made on myself. My trou ble began in splotches breaking ou1 right in the edge of my hair on th? forehead, and spread over the front part of the top of my head from ear tc ear, and over my ears which caused a most fearful burning Itch, or eczema "For three years I had this terrlbls breaking out on my forehesd and scalp. I tried our family doctor and lie failed to cure it Then I tried th? Cuticura Soap and Ointment and used them for two months with the resull of a complete cure. Cutlcura Soaj and Ointment should have the credit , * due, and I have advised a lot of peo ple to use them.** (Signed) C. D. Tharrlngton, Creek, N. C., Jan. 26,1911 Itching 8calp? Hair Fell Out. '1 will say that I have been suffer lng with an Itching on my scalp foi the past few years. My hair fell oul In spots all over my head. My scalp started to trouble me with sores, then the sores healed up, and crusts formed on the top. Then the hair fell out and left me three bald spots th? shape of a half dollar. I went to mor? than one doctor, but could not get any relief, so I started to use the Cutlcura Remedies. I tried one bar of Cutlcura Soap and some Cutlcura Ointment, and felt relieved right away. Now th? bald spots have disappeared, and my ? ? 1? iVA Pllfl. nair nas growu, uiauua iu ms v/uu cura Soap and Ointment I highly recommend the Cutlcura Remedies to all that are suffering with scalp trou ble." (Signed) Samuel Stern, 236 Floyd St., Brooklyn, N. Y., Feb. 7, 1911. Although Cutlcura Soap and Ointment are sold by druggists and dealers everywhere, a sample of each, with 32-page book, will be mailed free on application to "Cutlcura," I>ept. L, Boston. Makes a Difference. "What is this?" "As you see, it is a badge demanding votes for women." "You wearing such a badge?" "Yes, I." "But you always told me you could never see any reason for women's suf frage." "Yes; but I didn't know it was go ing to become a rather stylish fad." Just one cup of Garfield Tea taken befor* retiring will next day relieve your system gently and thoroughly of all impurities. Getting things without paying for them is some men's Idea of economy. }Irs. Wtnslow'3 Soothing Syrup for Children teething:, softens the gums, reduces Inflamma tion, allays pain, cures -wind colic, 26c a bottle. Nothing succeeds like the efforts ol some people to be disagreeable. IOWA WOMAN WELL AGAIN Freed From Shooting Pains, Spinal Weakness, Dizziness, by Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Ottumwa, Iowa.?"For years I waa almost a constant sufferer from female trouble in all iti dreadful forms; shooting pains all j over my body, sick i headache, spina]; weakness, dizziness, i depression, and everything that waa horrid. I tried many doctors in different parts of the United States, but Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta- i ble Compound has done more forme than all the doctors. I feel it my duty to tell you these facts. My heart is full ol gratitude to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound for my health."?Mrs. Harriet E. Wampler, 524 S. Ransom Street, Ottumwa, Iowa. Consider "Well This Advice. No woman suffering from any form ! of female troubles should lose hope un til she has given Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a fair trial. This famous remedy, the medicinal in gredients of which are derived from ' native roots and herbs, has for nearly ! forty years proved to be a most valua- ! ? . .1 9 * A_ _U -L_ J9 _ Die tonic ana mvigoraior 01 tne ie- | male organism. Women everywhere I bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound. If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkhain Medicine Co. (confi dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will 1 be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence* CAN CANCER BE CURED? IT CAN! Tberecordof the Keliaia Hospital Is without parallel in history, having cured to stay cured permanently, without the use of the knife or X-Ray over 9(J pel cent, of the many hundreds of sufferers from cance: which it has treated during tho past fifteen Tears We have been endorsed by the senate and Legis lature of Virginia. TV? Guarantee Our Cure*. Phyafclanm treated free. KELLAM HOSPITAL 1317 W. Main Street, Richmond, Ifa. JUSTICE ALTON B. P KEYNOTE SPEEC DRAWS A STRIKING PARALLEL E BALTIMORE WITH THE DISC NATIONAL % TARIFF WAS ONE OF HIS P He Opposes the Class Distinction ant Also Enactments to Restrain the ing Upon the Poor?Many People There Was Much Cheering Done Baltimore.?Former Justice Alton B. Parker of New York, who was elected temporary chairman of the convention, waa greeted with great applause as he stepped upon the platform to de liver the keynote speech. Judge Parker said in part: "We meet while the hills yet echo to wild cries of liar, thief, and trai tor, and furious wails of fraud, bri bery, treachery and corruption; and our ears are weary with the din of the articulate shrieking and passion ate villification of the most shameful brawl of our political history. Our candidates, however, are, without ex ception, men of such lofty mien that we meet immune from the distemper which seized the Chicago convention and privileged to discharge a solemn public duty calmly, deliberately, ser iously. "The cause of government by the people the world over has been ma toHniiv rhprkftd bv the disgrace'iil brawl which terminated in thle be J lam of Chicago. Every good citizen has been put to shame by the brutality and the abuse which characterized tbis wrangle between a President and ex President. Gratitude, friendship, party loyalty, patriotism and common de cency were forgotten in the tussle. "The assault upon the unwritten prohibition against a third term made in the wild scramble for the Repub lican nomination warns us of the vital necessity of incorporating in our con stitution a safeguard against repeated terms. "The man who split his party at Chicago, once reoognized the third term tradition and acknowledged its application to his situation. On the eve of his triumph in nineteen hun dred four he said: 'The wise custom which limits the President to two terms regards the substance and not the form, and under no circumstances will I be a candidate for or accept rtino + mn ' ctUULllCi uuuuuauuu. "Wrong in this year of grace, he was right in that. Peradventure he was honest with his soul and he may have confessed to it that even a President may be tempted to resort to sordid devices and shameless im portunities to gain his ambition. If so, he was in mental condition to real ize to the full the danger to the republic involved in setting aside a custom constituting the only bulwark against assaults of men whose ambi tion chokes their patriotism and whose selfish desire for personal vic tory and power throttles those moral scruples with which they may once have been endowed. "Would the man who threw his hat in the ring and sought to slug his opponent over the ropes in his fight for a third term rest satisfied with its achievements? "Clearly his lust of power would have brooked no such limitation. A third term would 'Dut have whetted his desire for more and as the terms slipped away each renewal would dis cover greater injury to our constitu tion, to the form of government estab lished under it and to every legal curb on his imperious will. This is the man who menaced us with an increase of Federal power by usurpation of states rights and without authority of constitutional amendment; the man who took the Isthmus of Panama, and let Congress debate about it after wards;' the man who having enough money to send the fleet on its famous cruise to the Pacific sent it without SOME OF THE PROBABL Baltimore.?They declare, among other things, for the following: A tariff for revenue only. The break ing of the control of big business over the affairs of the country. A regulation of the money trust so that it shall not be a menace to the country, and the destruction of its power to create panics. An income and, possibly, an inher itance tax. Effective regulation of the trusts, and a declaration in favor of the per First Money King at Convention. Baltimore.?For the first time one of the great money kings of America has appeared in person at the naitonal political convention to carry on the fight for the money interests. Mr. Thomas F. Ryan, multi-millionaire, of New York, one of the heads of the tobacco trust, head of the New York Traction interests, and a power in railroad and financial circles generally, came to Baltimore Tuesday in his pri vate car over the Pennsylvania rail road. WILLIAM J. BRYAN Dl Baltimore.?Substitute William Jen nings Bryan for Theodore Roosevelt and the situation which confronted the Democratic convention at its opening session Tuesday is but a repetition of the Republican situation at Chicago. Here, as there, is the Irreconcilable conflict between the radical and the conservative-progressive wings of the party. Here, as there, the national com mittee stands for the conservatives and la determined on the destruction HER MAKES IRE LFOR DEMOCRACY BETWEEN THE QUIET DIGNITY AT 5RACEFUL SCENES AT CHICAGO CONVENTION. PRINCIPAL TOPICS IN SPEECH i Demands Laws For the Masses and Combinations of Wealth From Impos Were Present to Hear the Speech.? f. \ sanction of Congress, leaving it to appropriate the money for the return when Congress deemed that necessary. This is the man who advocated Feder al incorporation for the increase of power at Washington and the lighten ing of legal burdens on the corpora tions; the man who authorized the absorption of the' Tennessee Coal & Iron Co. by the tSeel Trust; the man who, by many such drastic acts, and by unnumbered words has sought to batter down our statutory and consti tutional safegards. "He who runs may read the dan ger of the country ruled by such a man. "Unquestionably we have been wrong in assuming that a tradition against a third term constitutes a sufficient safeguard against unscrupu lous ambition for unlimited power We need a definite constitutional lim itation which shall prevent imperial istic souls from forcing personal con tinuation in office for long periods or iui nit; auu tiie pci^uiidi seieuuuu ui a successor in office. And the con stitutional provision should limit to a single term. "In this great country which boasts of a wealth of one hundred and thir ty billion as against eighty billion for Great Britain and Ireland; sixty five billion for France and sixty billion for Germany, all are conscious that too large a part of our wealth has been secured by a small percentage of our population and that the cost of living rises faster than the average income. "The principal cause of all this is to be found in the tariff statutes and in the combinations restraining trade and competition, created for the pur pose of wringing from the public every dollar which the tariff statutes make possible. "The average of duties under the tariff of 1789 was eight and one-half per cent. Now the average is 50 per cent. "Protected interests .benefitted by two increases during the war, the first to an average of 37 3-2 per cent, the second to 47 per cent. That high average, then excused only by the ex igencies of the war is exceeded now, as the average is nearly 50 per cent. , "The Republican party has thus geared the machinery of government i to enrich the few at the expense of , the many. "An aw.akening of the people led the Republican national convention ( of 1908 by its platform to promise a ( revision. N "In vain did the people demand of i Congress the fulfillment of the Repub lican pledge, for the masters of that , party?the protected Interests?InslBt- | ed upon the pound of flesh nominated in the bond. * i "Mr. Taft said in a speech in 1908 that during the preceding' ten years nine-tenths of the combinations to restrain trade had come into exis- i tence. During nearly all that due the Republican party was in control of every Northern, Eastern and Western state. "The reason for the encouraging in activity of the Republican officials 1b plain. The tariff beneficiaries were i and for many years had been con- : tributing to campaign funds of the i party which in turn protected the special privileges enjoyed by the do- : nors. But competition prevented in i some instances the collection from the people of the full sum stipulated i in the tariff. To secure it all, tempt- 1 ed the cupidity and stimulated the < ingenuity of the beneficiaries. But < one way could be found?combination i .E PLANKS OF THE NATIONAL Df sonal punishment of directors of such ! organizations as violate the law. Full publicity in all the affairs of i the government. The publication of the names of con tributors of campaign funds before election. The idea of having the platform short and crisp, with the pledges made in the fewest possible words, seems to be growing in favor. It is regarded as unwise to have it filled with denunciation of the Repub Hand Will Show Says Delegates. Baltimore.?In spite of the interest in the temporary chairmanship fight 1 and the speculation as to whether the Murphy-Mack-Sullivan-Taggart combi nation could put the "steam roller" over Mr. Bryan, there was consider able platform talk Tuesday among the delegates. Mr. Bryan probably will t be chairman of the committee on reso- i lutions. He will be the representative 1 of his state on that committee and his i oosition in the Dartv is such that the 1 place will be conceded to him by com- ] mon consent. < D AT BALTIMORE WHAT R00SE\ of the disturbing element. < By a curious coincidence, the figures are almost the same. In Chicago the 1 national committee stood 32 members i against Colonel Roosevelt. Last night 1 the national committee by 31 votes se- i lected Judge Alton Parker, of New i York, for the temporary chairman of I the convention. In Chicago Mr. Roose velt's hat was in the ring. Here Mr. Bryan has thrown his hat into the ring, and here, as tn Chicago, the ; national committee has welcomed the to control the price up to the point where the statute let In foreign com petition. The same party which shut, out foreign competition was found willing to permit the formation of combinations which effectually ban act were treated by Republican offi cials as repealed by implication. Need it be said that the protected interests for these larger privileges made larger contributions? "We are indebted to the President for the evidence that his predecessor having first enjoyed an interview, with George W. Perkins restrained his At torney General from bringing suit against the Harvester combination. "For the Steel oCrporation he went further, for he wrote his Attorney General in advance of its absorption of the Tennessee Coal & Iron Co., that he had decided 'to interpose no ob jection.' "Indeed he apparently stood ready to perform similar kindly offices for all corporations, for he advocated the passage of a statute permitting voluntary submission of all engaged in interstate commerce to Federal authority with the advantage to them of immunity from prosecution because of contracts made if stamped in ad vance with executive approval as reasonable. "Whatever excuse may be offered, the ugly truth is that the Republican national machine has received the moneys of the corporate and indivi dual beneficiaries of the tariffs and combinations and in return has com pelled Congress to continue high the tariff rates and their Attorney Gen erals to close their eyes to violations of law. "I submit that the Jury of the peo ple should find as a general verdict 'that the failure of the executive and legislative branches of government both federal and state, to protect the people from the special privilege hunters and graft seekers, is deeply rotted in a corrupt alliance between the latter and leaders of the Republi can party.' Upon that verdict but one" judgment can be entered?that of eviction." Judge Parker quoted the much discussed letter written by Colonel Roosevelt to the late E. H. Harriman J 1J *r? TT | K Mnr/iAn clllU HcLlLl 1*1I". naniuiau icau ucmccu I the lines of that letter, hurried to Washington, hurried back and prompt ly raised the quarter of a million de manded with $10,000 over for good measure. (? , "The time has come when the sal vation of the country demands the destruction of the leaders of a de bauched party, and the restoration to place and power of men of high ideals who will wage unceasing war against corruption in politics, who will enforce the law against both rich and poor and who will treat guilt as personal and punish it accordingly. "For their crimes against American citizenship the present leaders of the Republican party should be destroyed. "For making and keeping the-bar gain to take care of the tariff pro tected interests in consideration of rto m t*o {crrt ftinH a t Viov ah mi Iff Via Ha stroyed. "For encouraging the creation of combinations to restrain trade, and refusing to enforce the law, for a like consideration they should be destroy ed. "For the lavish waste of the public funds; for the fraudulent disposition of the people's domain and for their contribution toward the division of the people into classes, they should be destroyed. "For these efforts to seize for the executive department of the federal government powers rightfully belong ing to the states they should be de stroyed. "All destruction would be theirs, this year, if we but do our duty. "What is our duty?" To think alike as to men and measures? Impossible! Even for our great party! There is not a reactionary among us. All Democrats are progressives. But it is inevitably human that we shall | not all agree that in a single high way is found the only road to pro gress or each make the same man of all our worthy candidates his first choice.. "It is our duty to put aside all self ishness, to consent cheerfully that the majority shall speak for each of us and to agree that this convention 3hall stand shoulder to shoulder, in toning the praises of our chosen lead er?and that will be his due, which ever of the honorable and able men now claiming our attention be chosen." EMOCRATIC PLATFORM iican party for its misdeeds, because it is regarded as certain that the people are fully aware of this. Several Southern delegates added their voices to a protest against any plank in the platform calling for the free admission of raw materials. The industrial development of the South in recent years and the development of its productive capacity of raw mater ials as well, causes delegates from the 3tates most affected zc look with dis favor on radical free trade legislation. Platform Underwood Forces Want. Baltimore.?The Underwood forces want a platform which will conform to that adopted by the Democrats of Ala bama, as far as it is applicable. That platform declared for a tariff for rev snue only, and demanded that such taxes be limited to the necessity of he government when honestly and eco lomincally administered. It demanded the rigid regulation of trusts and mo nopolies, denounced the "profligate waste" of public money by recent Re publican congresses, and favored the election of senators by the people. (LET DID AT CHICAGO challenge. There is the same violent language. Mr. Bryan Tuesday night gave out a statement that recalled Colonel Roose velt at his best. The majority of the national committee, said Mr. Bryan, is under the control of the "predatory interests." "Talk about harmony," he aaid, '"is absurd." The Belmont-Ryan Murphy crowd, which dictated Mr. Taft's renomination, is as active here ds at Chicago, and the same corrupt ing influences are seeking control. PARKER WINS OVER BRYAN BRYAN LOSES FIRST FIGHT FOR PROGRESSIVE CONTROL OF CONVENTION. VOTE, PARKER 579; BRYAN 506 Chairman Mack Opened Convention at 12:16 P. M.?Debate Preceding Roll Call Threw the Convention Into Wild Disorder.?Plea For Harmony. Baltimore.?William J. Bryan lost his first fight for progressive control of the Democratic national convention Tuesday, when he was defeated for temporary chairman of the convention by Alton B. Parker. Mr. Bryan first nominated Senator Kern, but the lat ter declined the honor and named Mr.' Bryan to make the. fight. Mr. Bryan made an eloQuent plea for the "cause NORMAN MACK, Chairman of the Democratic National Committee. he had represented for sixteen years," but it was unavailing. ^ The debate preceding the roll call threw the convention Into wild disor der. The vote on a roll call was: Parker 579; Bryan 506. A last desperate effort to avert a bitter factional fight was made by the Bryan forces when the Democratic convention took up the problem of selecting a temporary chairman. .So sharp did the lines divide that Mr. Bryan himself became a candidate for the temporary chairmanship. After Bryan had made a speech nominating Senator Kern of Indiana, and attacking Alton B. Parker, Kern took the stand. He made a plea ror harmony, asked Parker to join him by withdrawing from the contest and substituting any one of a list of sev eral men. After waiting in vain for a reply from PaVker, Kern himself withdrew and nominated Bryan. Again Bryan took the platform. He accepted the nomination and the line up for the final struggle was com plete. Chairman Mack dropped his gavel at 12:16 p. m., with the announce ment: "The convention will be in order. The sergeant-at-arms will clear the aisles." Cardinal Gibbons in his brilliant scarlet robes, pronounced the open ing invocation, the entire assemblage - ?- Ji ?lit. standing wuu uuweu ucoud. The vote by which former Judge Al ton B. Parker of New York was elect ed temporary chairman over Mf. Bry an?579 to 510 ,was interrupted Tues day night in many ways. The Champ Clark adherents are openly claiming the nomination and there were many in the convention Tuesday who were inclined to agree that it wpuld either be Speaker Clark or a "dark horse." Real "Houn' Dawgs" in Clark Parade. Baltimore, Md.?Forty real "hound' dawgs" from Albemarle county, Vir ginia, are to be in the parade which the Clark supporters are planning to precede the opening of the convention. Other curiosities in the parade will be "Borax Bill" with his famous team of show white mules, the tallest, shortest and fattest delegates from Oklahoma and a group of aged members of the Jackson democratic club, the oldest democratic organization that is now in existence. Bryan's Speech Disappointing. Convention Hall, Baltimore.?Bry an's speech nominating Kern for tem poraiy chairman was a disappoint ment. It is believed that he didn't change a vote. The speech was more like a Chautauqua lecture than a mili tant, aggressive assault on the men who are leading for Parker. Instead of giving concrete facts about the in fluence of Ryan, Belmont, Calhoun and others he confined himself to a discus sion of his own record and the growth of the progressive movement. He was interrupted by cheers for Parker. Negroes Want Plank In Plaform. Baltimore.?A plank in the platform designed to win over the negroes to the democratic party is sought by the National Colored Democratic League. It reads as follows: '"We recognize the equality of all men before the law and hold that it is the duty of the government in its dealings with all */\ ?viAf a Aiit onnol onrl nT LUC? ptfVpiC IU 111CLC \J UU vvjuui uuu act justice to all, of whatever nativity, race, color, or persuasion, religious or political." A committee headed by Uishop Alexander Walters will pre sent the plank. Talk of Mr. Bryan has not ceased by any means. Some of his friends plaim that Tuesday's vote was no test; that many of hia most ardent supporters were compelled by circumstances to vote against him as temporary chair man. They claim, on the other hand, that the vote of 510 given to Mr. Bry an indicated that he held a "veto" power in convention, which put him in a position of dominance as to who should be the nominee. The conservative element, It may be stated, is practically prepared to accept a radical or progressive can didate. The turn of political affairs In the past few days is regarded here as having been decidedly favorable to Speaker Clark's' candidacy. The straight out Wilson delegates Tuesday threw their support solidly to Mr. Bryan in his fight against Judge Par ker. This, the leaders figured, would make the conservative element choose Clark in preference to the New Jersey Governor as the progressive candidate. A rapid fire, routine session Tues day night closed the first day of the Democratic convention w.hlch began with the defeat of William J. Bryan lux teiupuraay uuturuitm m tut? <uier noon. Scenes of disorder on the floor which made further proceedings im possible, forced the night's session and compelled Alton B. Parker to suspend his keynote speech. The delegates on the floor gave ear nest evidence oI their desire to do everything in a hury and get away from Baltimore. The leaders had planned to adjourn session Tuesday night until 2 o'clock Wednesday and to iiave the committees which were appointed Tuesday night to meet Wadnesday. But the delegates would not hear of this plan and disorderly protests from the floor forced an ad journment till noon and advanced-the committee meetings so that they wew prdered to meet immediately after the session. The delegates were very excited about hurrying things along. A voice from the floor during the session said: "We have no Perkins to pay our D1113." The completion of Judge Parker's speech and the naming of convention committees was the sum of the work of Tuesday night's session. William Jennings Bryan did not appear at the convention hall during the evening. His failure to be on hand caused an almost immediate adjournment of the resolutions committee which met after the session la response to the dele gates' demand for speed. It was prac tically certain that Bryan would be elected chairman of the committee. The other committees got together immediately for organization. But a scattering attendance appear ed m the galleries at the hour set for convening the convention. There JOHN W. KERN. U. 8. Senator From Indiana. were hundreds of vacant seats in the delegates' sections. The delegates who were in their seats, gathered in little groups, and a hum of conversa tion swept the hall. It seemed certain from the public action of the delegates and their pri vate expressed views that the Demo cratic convention will nominate a pro gressive candidate and adopt a pro gressive platform. Some of the lead ers f/ankly said they resenteJ Mr. Bryan's assumption to dictate the tem porary chairmanship and pointed to Tuesday's vote in justification of their views. Mr. Bryan, despite the effort to eliminate him, however, remalus a stalwart factor in the convention and may be given the authority to write the platform. Bryan Enters Hall Quietly. Convention Hall?Bryan slipped in to the convention hall by one of the side entrances and was on the plat form some minutes without being recognized by the waiting throngs. He shook hands with Cardinal Gibbons, who was waiting to pronounce the opening invocaiton. Chairman Mack of the national committee, tooK nia place at the presiding officer's deck a few minutes after noon. Bryan con tinued to screen himself from the crowd and few knew he was present. A Very Sharp Contrast. Baltimore.?There was one sharp contrast in the convention arrange ments here and those at Chicago. At the Republican convention the hall swarmed with blue-coated policement, here to find a "cop" was like search ing for the needle in the haystack. Bananas to New Jersey. Baltimore.?Delegate Piatt, of New Jersey, forced his way through the crowd, carrying a big bunch of ba nanas. He distributed the fruit among ilie jersey ueiegaica. Underwood Supporters Hold Meeting. Baltimore.?The supporters of Os car W. Underwood held an enthusias tic rally at the Underwood headquar ters in the St. James Hotel Tuesday night. Senator-elect James K. Varda man, Congressman W. G. Brantley, Governor Gilchrist, of Florida; Got. Emmett O'Neal, of Alabama; Gover nor Brewer, of Mississippi; Congress man Heflin, of Alabama, and Senator Bankhead, who is fathering the Under wood candidacy, all made addresses. "TASTY, temj5tin^ and n.i if appetizing. ^^CornedBecf Fine for a Eght luncheon or a hearty meaL Ready to serve?no cooking odof to permeate the house, and economical as \^a^e,exce^ P^S?a!r5R lent com beef hash, ^ EomryQrocmn Libby, McNeill & Libby Chicago KODAKS and High Graft Finishing. MaJ orders glVea 8p? cioi Attention. Prices reasonabU iSerrlce prompt. Send for Price List 'uuuninmn, oluujwto*, a, f Talk is so cheap that barbers an now giving it free with each' 8have. A postal card to Garfield Tea Co., Brook lyn, K. Y., uklag for sample will repay jou The man who sings his own praln seldom gets an encore. For SIIinCEB HEA&ACHB8 Hicks' OAPUDIHB Ur the beet remedy?n< matter what causes them?vhether from thi heat, sitting in draught*, feverish condition etc. lUo., 2Dc. ana wo. per iwme m Tneoirnni store*. Every time the wrong young mas calls on a girl she always says tfl. some other girl the next day. 1. thought ho never would go home." Burduco Liver Powder ' 7 j' Nature's Remedy: Is purely vegetable As a cathartic. Its action Is easy, mild and effectual. No griping, no nausea, makes a sweet breath and pretty com plexion. Teaches the liver to act Sold by all medicine dealers, 25c. . Natural Query. Gen. F. D. Grant, when dlscusslnf military n'eatness, used often to tell 8 story about his father. "My father was talking to General Sherman In his tent one day," h? would begin, "when a third general entered, a brigadier notorious for hit slovenliness. After the brigadier left my father blew forth a cloud of smoke and said: 'Sherman, I wonder whom that man gets to wear his shirts the first week?"' The 8horter Route. Lady Duff-Gordon, at a luncheon at Sherry's in New York, told an aneo dote apropos of the divorce evil. "Two girls," she said, "were chat ting over a cocktail and a cigarette. " 'Marriages are made in heaven,' said the first girl, and she blew a cloud of smoke Into the air and re garded it with dreamy eyes. "The second girl with a light laugb replied: "'Yes, that is true; but, thank goodness, to .unmake them we havf to go only as far as Reno.'" "MOBILE FEATURES." v Ever Notice A F BAxem. ke ] 110W r\f I JT& A AVIV* wa i Indian Corn in the glory of its growing? The best part of selected pearly white Indian Corn is used in making Post T oasties j This food is carefully cooked?in a factory that is clean and spodess?not ; a hand touching it at any stage of the making. Post Toasties with cream and a sprinkle of sugar are an ideal dish. Serve some times with fresh straw berries added. t<The Memory Lingers" Sold by Qrocera Poitnm Cereal Company, Ltd. Battle Creek, Micb.