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FAR AND SHERMAN I BY THE OLO WINGOI WITH 344 DELEGATES NOT VOTIf A MAJORITY OVER ROOSE CUMMINS OF THE DEMONSTRATIONS WE Colonel's Followers Old Not Walk Out Might Do, But Instead Were Silent This Rather Than B? Charged Wit ?-Taft Makes a Statement. Chicago.?With nearly 350 of the Roosevelt delegates declining to vote and hustling away at adjournment time to tender to' Col. Theodore Roosevelt the nomination of a new party the fifteenth Republican nation al convention at the end of a long and tumultous session Saturday night renominated William Howard Taft of WILLIAM M. TAFT. Ohio for President, and James School craft Sherlman of New York, for Vice President President Taft receied 581 of the 1,078 votes in the convention, or 21 more than a majority. The decision of the Roosevelt peo ple, under direction of their leader, to refrain from voting, left ho other candidate. The announcement of the Taft victory was greeted wjth cheer ing from his adherents and groans and hisser from the opposition. When it became absolutely certain early Saturday that Mr. Taft would be nominated without great difficulty the leaders in control of the convention decided to give turn as a running mate his companion on the ticket in 1908. All others dropped from the race and Mr. Sherman was the only can didate regularly placed before the convention. A motion from New Hampshire to make the nomination by acclamation was declared out of order. There were many scattering votes on the roll call that ensued. The convention amid much confu sion adjourned sine die. At no time was there an indication of a walk-out of the Roosevelt dele gated They expressed their revolt by silence. In the confusion just before the ad journment, a resolution was adopted giving the national committee power to declare vacant the seat of any man on the committee refusing to support th? nominees of the regular conven tion of 1912. Sherman's vote was 597. President Taft made the following statement: "The national convention of one of the great parties is ordinarily im portant only as a preliminary to a national campaign for the election of a President. The Chicago convention just ended is much more than this and is in itself the end of a pre-con vention campaign presenting a crisis more threatening and issues more Utica Will Celebrate. Utica, N. Y.?Utica will celebrate Vice President Sherman's renomina tion. Mr. Sherman sent the following telegram to President Taft: "My very sincere congratulations. With the passing of the storm will come a clear atmosphere and we may expect with a calm judgment a just verdict." The Vice President received the reply: "Your kind telegram received. We'll pull together again and with the same result I hope. It will be a pleasure to rwork with you. One great victory has been won." Happy Over Taft's Victory. Cincinnati, O.?The news of the vie tory or Jfresiaeni ian m me Republican national, convention creat ed no little excitement in this his home city. Early in the evening the crowds began to gather in front of the newspaper offices, scanning the bul letins closely. When the nomination was announced, bedlam broke loose in the business section of the town. Those of the relatives of President Taft, who were in town, were eager listeners to the bulletins as they came over the wires. President Taft is Happy. Washington.?President Taft went to church Sunday and spent the re mainder of the dey reading and reply ing to the deluge of messages receiv ed at the White House congratulating him on his nomination. They came from everywhere from political lead ers great and small, plain citizens, and folk in most all walks of life, who had kind things to say. On July 3, the home circle at the Wtlite Mouse win ue urunen auu iuc President will take his family to Beverly. HE RENOMINATED : REPUBLICAN PARTY <JG, THE PRESIDENT RECEIVES iVELT, LaFOLLETTE AND ' ONLY 21. RE NOT OVER EXCITING of Convention as Was Expected They in Their Seats, Preferring to Do h Bolting?Sherman's Vote Wac 597 important than those of the election campaign which is to follow between the two great national parties. The question here as stake was whether the Republican party was to change its attitude as the chief conservator in the national of constitutional rep resentative government and was to weaken the constitutional guarantee of life, liberty and property and all other rights declared sacred in the Bill of Rights, by abandoning the prin ciple of the absolute independence of the judiciary, essential to the mainte nance of those rights. The campaign carried on to seize the Republican party and make it the instrument of reckless ambition and the unsettling nf thA fundamental principles of our government was so sudden and unex pected that time was not given close ly to show to the people and the party the dangers which confronted them. It was sought to break the wise and valuable tradition against giving more than two terms to any one man in the presidency and the danger from its breach could not be measured. The importance of the great victory which has been achieved can not be over-es timated. All over this country patri otic people tonight are breathing more freely that a most serious men ace to our Republican institutions has been averted. "It is not necessary tonight to speak of the result in November and of ?.ie issues which may arise be tween the Republican and Democratic parties during the presidential cam paign. "It will be time enough to do that after the action of the convention at Baltimore. It is enough now to say that whatever may happen in Novem JAMES S. SHERMAN. ber, great victory for the Republican party and the United States has been won. The party remains as a great powerful organization for carrying out its patriotic principles as an urgency of real progress in the development of the nation along the constitutional lines upon which it was constructed and has even been baintained; end its future opportunity for usefulness is as great as its achievements in the past." Talk of Adjournment. Chicago.?The rapid progress madt by the convention after the contests were disposed of in the adoption of reports of all of the committees up to that of the committee on resolu tions materially altered the prospects as to final adjournment. It was be lieved by the leaders that it might be possible to conclude the nominations j and adjourn by midnight or earlier. Sherman Appreciates Honor. Utica, N. Y.?Expressing apprecia tion of the honor conferred by the Re publican national convention in select ing him for a second time as nominee for Vice President, James S. Sherman declared that although it was his pref erence to retire from public life, he had been honored too greatly by the party to decline a renomination. "Tc appreciate its full significance," he said, "one must remember that not for three-quarters of a century, has a renomination been accorded to any one for this office." Hilles May Lead Taft's Campaign. Chicago.?Charles D. Hilles, secre tary to President Taft, probably will be chosen chairman of the Republi can national committee. No definite announcement that his selection was certain was obtainable at present, but it was known that he had been endors ed by President Taft and was gener ally acceptable. Congressman Wil liam B. McKinley of Illinois, who has managed the President's campaign ond TL-oe montionpd for the chairman ship refused to have his name consid ered. Headquarters Deserted. Chicago.?The majority of the polit ical headquarters were deserted Sun day. LaFollette and Cummins sup porters left soon after the convention closed. The Taft headquarters were filled with boxes trunks and suitcases, , preparatory to leaving. Mr. McKinley left for Washington. He was in an optimistic mood. When the nomina tion of Roosevelt was mentioned, he smiled and said: "A man will do some peculiar things when he is de feated. The Orchestra hall meeting did not excite men." ROOSEVELT NAMED Bf PROGRESSIVES COLONEL'S DELEGATES FROM ALL STATES HOLD INDEPEND ENT CONVENTION. NAME VICE PRESIDENT LATER Much Enthusiasm Prevails In Orches tra Hall, Birthplace of New Party Sufficient to Carry Conviction That Organization Means Business. Chicago?Former President 1 Theo dore Roosevelt was nominated for President on an independent ticket Saturday night in the dying hours, of the Republican national convention in which he had met defeat. The followers of Colonel Roosevelt gathered in Orchestra Hall, less than a mile from the Coliseum and pledged their support to the former President. Colonel Roosevelt said: Gentlemen: I thank you for your nomination and in you I recognize the lawfully elected delegates to the Re publican convention who represent the overwhelming majority of the voters who took part in the Republican pri maries prior to the convention and who represent the wish of the major ity of the lawfully elected members of the convention. I accepted the nomination subject to but one condi tion. This has now become a contest which cannot be settled merely along tne Old pany imes. xue pnw,ii>im that are at stake are as broad and as deep as the foundations ' our dem ocracy itself. They are in no sense sectional. They should appeal to all. honesi citizens, East and West, North and South. They should appeal to all right thinking men whether Republi cans or Democrats without regard to their previous party affiliations. I feel that the time has come when not on ly all men who believe in progressive principles but all men who believe in those elementary maxims of public and private morality which must un derlle every form of successfull free government should join in one move ment. Therefore I ask you to go to THEODORE R008EVELT. your several homes to find out the sentiment of the people at home and then again come together, I suggest by mass convention to nominate for the presidency a progressive candi date on a Progressive platform, a candidate and a platform tnat win en able us to appeal to Northerner and Southerner, Easterner and Western er, Republican and Democrat alike, in the name of our common American citizenship. Wherever in any state the Republi can party is true to the principles of its founders and is genuinely the par ty of justice and "progress, I expect to see it come bodily into the new move ment for the convention has just sat in this city is in no proper sense of the word a Republican convention at all. It does not represent the masses of the Republican party. It was or ganized in cynical defiance of their wishes and it has served the purpose only of a group of sinister political bosses who have not one shadow of sympathy with the spirit and purpose of the Republican party of fifty years ; ago and many of whom have used the : party merely as an adjunct to money | making, either for themselves or for the great crooked financial interests which they serve. But we are more fortunate in one respect than our predecessors, for we who now stand for the Progressive cause, the Progressive movement, have done forever with all sectional ism, and we make our appeal equally to the sons of the men who fought i under Grant and to the sons of the men who fought under Lee for the cause we champion is as emphatically the cause of the South as it is the cause of the North. I am in this fight for certain princi ples and the first and most important of these goes back to Sinai and is I ernuuuieu m uib cumiiicuiuuimiL iuuu Shalt Not Steal." Progressive Party Dedicated. Chicago.?The "progressive party, born Saturday night, was dedicated Sunday. In the presence of perhops 500 men, some of them recognized leaders of the movement, others mere ly onlookers, the first formal step was taken. Govenor Johnson of California was empowered to appoint a commit tee of seven members to confer with Colonel Roosevelt and formulate a plan of action. "The movement is going steadily ahead," said James R. Garfield of Ohio. FAMINE IN RUSSIA GROWS ALARMING TALES OF SUFFERING ARE SO SE. VERE THEY ARE BEYOND BELIEF. IT OVERTAXES THE RELIEF The Area of Some of The Affected Districts Are Fully as Large as Eng land, Scotland, Wales and Ireland?' Call For Aid. New York.?A special cable from London says: Harrowing tales of the famine in Russia are being published. by the Russia Famine Relief Committee, which is doing its utmost to gather enough funds together to meet the need of the thousands of sufferers who as soil tillers will continue to suffer until after the gathering of the July crops. Mrs. C. P. Sangster of No. 55 Oak ley St., Chelsea, London, secretary of the English Famine Relief Fund, states that considerable, though far from adequate, contributions of mon ey are being forwarded to the Free Economic Society of St. Petersburg, an old organization dating back some thing like a hundred years, that has the sanction of the Russian govern ment "Twenty provinces/' Mrs. Sangster said, "are in a deplorable condition, and it must be remembered that a Russian province is in size something between a half and the whole of Eng land "In the province of Samara, the peasants are selling off everything? cattle, horses, land and even wearing apparel. All these bring trifling sums, only to get a stone of flour, which is never, however, eaten unadulterated. Schools in famishing districts of* gradually emptying. Some of the chil dren are joining their parents and taking part in public works instituted by the government; others go beggfng for bread. Those that still attend school are in rags and present a dole sight. "The Free Economic Society of Russia, up to now, in spite of diffi culties, has succeeded In establishing 150 relief centers In twelve provinces where close upon 25,000 adults and children have received daily rations." BOATS TO SOUTH AMERICA New Steamship Line to Open Fine Market for Southern Products. Washington, D. C.?President Fin ley of the Southern Railway Company, announced that he had been ad vised of the purpose of the Munson Steamship Line to inaugurate regular service between Mobile, Alabama, and South American ports. The new ser vice is to begin on September 11th, on which date a steamer will leave Mo bile for Montevideo, Uruguay, and Buenos Ayres and Rosario,, Argentina, all of which ports wjll be regular ports of call for the new line. Sailings will be made every fourth week. In making this announcement President Finley said: "The inauguration of this new ser vice will be of great benefit to the merchants and manufacturers of the Southeastern States and of the entire Mississippi Valley. The markets of South America are rapidly Increasing in importance with a growing demand for commodities which can profitably be produced in our Southeastern Sec tion. Many of our enterprising manu facturers and merchants are giving special consideration to the possibili ties of these markets. Our South At lantic and Gulf ports are advantage ously located with reference to the South American trade and I am con vinced that direct and regular steam ship service such as is now assured from Mobile will result in the building up of a profitable business. The peo ple of other Southern seaport cities are moving in the matter and I hope that additional lines may be inaugurat ed in the near future." To Study Farming in Europe. Washington.?Acceptances to mem bership on the commission of the Southern Commercial Congress, which will go abroad next May to study Eu ropean systems of agricultural finance were received by Dr. J. C. Owens, man aging director of the Southern Com mercial Congress from the following representative business men: Ray mond A. Pearson, Albany, N. Y.; J. C. Caldwell, Lakefield, Minn.; T. Harvey Ferris, Utica, N. Y.; William B. Hatch, Ypsilanti, Mich., and Edwin Chamberlain, San Antonio, Texas. To Reclaim Valuable Lakebed. Mexico City.?One of the plans in volved by the government through its Department of Public Welfare, Coloni zations and Industry, to provide ara ble lands for division among the peo ple?one of the chief planks of Made ro's revolutionary platform?is under way. It contemplates the drainage and filling in of the great bed of Lake Texocco, some two and a half miles east of the capital. The work will require five years, it is estimated, and -- j:? a nnn nrtfi mcno 10 . ail wpenuauic ui i,wu,uuv v-> 000,000 gold.) Swiss Guides To Rocky Mountains. Paris. ? The allurement of better wages and all-the-year-round employ ment is causing the emigration of many of the best Swiss mountain guides to the Rocky Mountains, ac cording to dispatches from the Swiss mountain resorts. In Switzerland the majority of the guides have a preca rious existence, as during the winter months they have practically nothing to do and earn no money. Agents of the Canadian Pacific Railroad have I oilered many of them employmen* welve months in the year. I uimnii 11III I .11 ,tjn u. u mi hi .i.i -ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. A\?getaMe PrepanatlonlbrAs slmllating tteflxrfanflteula: ting tlie Siomacbs andBowus qf Infants rCmiDRKN Promotes DigestlonflraM ncss and RestContalns neUter Opiuni-Morphins norHocRl Not Narcotic. Jbsfrt/OHI&nMMfflZSl jlxjtaa* JbcMtUfr f Snd Hon, Sour Stomfch.Dlarrtai Worms ?oirralsiaiu Jfeveris* hess and loss OF SLEEP. JteSimk Signanire tf NEW YORK. raoHSnHsESI , l^inraitteedun<krtfaebtwj Exact Copy of Wrapper. If there was a tax on stupidity the wise guys would all be tax dodgers. Years ago Garfield Tea was introduced and since its appearance has won hearty ap proval because it does what is claimed for it. A girl may laugh at love, but later she may realize that there is nothing better to cry on than a man's shoul der. TO DRIVE OCT MALARIA AND BUILD UP Taka the Old Standard GROV CHILL TONIC. Ton know what you are taking. The formula la plainly printed on every bottle, showing It is simply Quinine and J:on In a tasteless form, and the most effectual form. For grown people and children, BO cents. A Changed Man. Mrs. Knagg?You were a different man when I married you. Mr. Knagg?I sincerely hope so, for then I was a fool. Didn't Know What It Was. Senator Duncan U. Fletcher was ' condemning at a dinner in Jackson- 1 vllle an orange grower who had failed. 1 "The man failed," be said, "through ' ignorance. He lays the blame on other things, but his ignorance alone is at ! fault He Is as ignorant of orange : farming as the tramp was of industry. ; "You've heard of that tramp, per haps? He wore on his face a sneer of ! derision and scorn. " 'VTork?' he said. "Work? What is It?an herb?"* LIFE 8AVERS. V </' First Shark?There's a man falling overboard. Second Shark?We'll have to eat him or he'll drown. DOCTOR'S SHIFT. Now Gets Along Without It. A physician Bays: "Until last fall I ased to eat meat for my breakfast and suffered with Indigestion until the meat had passed from the stomach. "La6t fall I began the use of Grape Nuts for breakfast and very soon found I could do without meat, for my j body got all the nourishment neces sary from the Grape-Nuts and since i then I have not had any indigestion \ and am feeling better and have in creased in weight. "Since finding the benefit I derived ] from Grape-Nuts I have prescribed the ] food for all my patients suffering from I indigestion or over-feeding and tlso ' for those recovering from disease where I want a food easy to take and certain to digest and which will not overtax the stomach. "I always find the results I look for 1 when I prescribe Grape-Nuts. For ethical reasons please omit my name." Name given by mail by Postum Co., ? Battle Creek, Mich. 5 The reason for the wonderful ? amount of nutriment, and the easy digestion of Grape-Nuts Is not hard to find. 1 In the first place, the Btarchy part of the wheat and barley goes through various processes of cooking, to per fectly change the starch into dextrose or grape-sugar, in which state it is ^ ready to be easily absorbed by the - blood. The parts in the wheat and barley which Nature can make use of for re building brain and nerve centers are retained in this remarkable food, and thus the human body is supplied with the powerful strength producers, so easily noticed after one has eaten Grape-Nuts each day'for a week or ten days. "There's a reason," and it is ex plained in the little book, "The Road | to Wellville," in pkgs. Ever ren4 the nhove letter? A new ; one appenr* from time to time. They . are genuine, true, and full of human Interest. Children Cry fo The Kind Ton Have Always Bo In use ior over 80 years, hat ana naa i sonal su; Allow no All Counterfeits, Imitations an Experiments that trifle "With ai Infants and Children?Experit What is 0/ Castoria is a harmless substlti goric, I>rops and Soothing' Sy contains neither Opium, Morp substance. Its age is Its guars and allays Feverishness. It ( Colic. It relieves Teething Tn and Flatulency* It assimilate Stomach and Bowels, giving h The Children's Panacea?The j GENUINE CAST* Bears the Si The Kind You Hav* In Use For Ov< THI GINTAUR COM PAN The First Consideration. ( At St Andrews some years ago an * aid farmer and his plowman were I Darting sand from the seashore. They were behind the target on the rifle- J range, but hidden by a bank of sand \ from a party of volunteers, who were | then on foot, at practice. A strtfy bul let struck the plowman on the leg, l ind he Immediately dropped, exclaim- ( Ing: "I'm shot!" ] Without more ado the farmer j scrambled up the bank and, waving^ tils hand to the volunteers, shouted: "Hey, lads, stop that, will ye? J You've shot a man, and It mlcht hae f been the horse!"?London Tit-Bits. Clothe* and the Man j A colporteur In South Carolina, walking many miles through mud, ac- , costed a passerby and suggested the I purchase of the Bible. He was re- I fused. The next day, says the Record of Christian Work, after a night's rest f and cleanup, be eet up his stand in - town and had the pleasure of selling 1 a Bible to the very man who had re- I fused to purchase the day before. "I met a muddy man yesterday with * LJlDIes," eaia ne, who iuuacu iu? a a Methodist tramp. When I buys a Bi- J ble I buys It from a Baptist gentle- a man.** I Easy to Cut the Price. A man went Into a butcher's shop md asked how much sausages were i pound. "Ah," said the butcher, "der brlce pas gone ups. I shall haf to sharge pou twenty-five cents." "Nonsense!" exclaimed the custom 3r, "that is outrageous. I can get ' :hem at Schmidt's for twenty cents." "Veil", vy-didn't you?" "Because he was out of them." "Oh, veil," replied the butcher, "If [ vas oudt of 'em, I'd sell 'em for tven :y cents, too." Cutting Repartee. "How," said a lawyer to a witness, 'how can you possibly bear such tes- - ;imony against this man who you say I s your friend?" I "Sir," said the man, "he Is my J 'riend, and I love him, but I love Truth nore." ! "You should be ashamed," replied :he lawyer, "to turn your back on a ) 'riend for one who is a perfect Strang- * jr to you." ~ A Confession. , Startled by convincing evidence that they were the victims of serious Md- \ ney and bladder trouble, numbers of prominent people confess they have li found relief by using KURIN Kidney in*? Pio^or T>nio TT'nr salp. bv all medicine dealers at 25c. Burwell & Dunn Co., Mfrs., Charlotte, N. C. A Prediction. "Do you think Blffels will ever each a green old age?" "He Eurely will, If he lives long ?nough and doesn't know more then :han he does now." The Paxton Toilet Co. of Boston, Mass., will send a large trial box of Paxtlne Antiseptic, a delightful cleans ing and germicidal toilet preparation, to any woman, free, upon request His Choice. "This enterprise Is a promising one." "Is it? But what I'm lookink for Is t paying proposition." DOES YOUR HEAD ACHE ? Try Hicks' CAPUDINE. It's liquid?pleas mt to take?effects Immediate?(rood to prevent Sick Headaches and Nervous Headaches also, four money back If not satisfied. 10c., 25c. and iOc. at medicine stores. If you would discover a woman's veakness, keep quiet and listen. Garfield Tea, the Natural Laxative is made ntlrely of carefully selected pure herbs. One -way to avoid spending money = oolisbly is to not have any. V f^Ship Us 1 We pay the highest market value exchange value in woolen blanki Send good size sample ai advise you the highest to Spray, Nor THE THREAD M] SPRAY WOOLEN M ir Fletcher's Tight, and which has been i borne the signature of been made nnder his per* ervision since its infancy* one to deceive yon in this, d " Jnst-as-good" are hot id endanger the health of snce against Experiment*; I ^TAni A o i uhih it? for Castor Oil, Pare* raps* It Is Pleasant. It hlne nor other Narcotic mtee. It destroys Worms sores Diarrhoea and Wind rabies, cores Constipation 8 the Food, regulates the ealthy and natural sleepo mother's Friend* DR1A ALWAYS gnature of s Always Bought 5P 30 Years V, NKW YORK onrv, 5CH0FIELD of Return Tubular ENGINES Boilers and Engines, mH Tanks and Towers. IRO " " " They are particularly SA|| CDC adaptedforSaw Mills, BVILCna011 Mills>Cotton QIn. -> "T. -I 1 J1_ Qn-rrr ILTUIa and ling. VYO tUBU uauuio uan - 3asollne Engines. If 70a are contem plating the purchase of new power* plant either steam or gasoline, it will jay you to write us. 1.8. SCHOFIELD'S SOUS CO., Mien, 8l. Iranch offlw: 307 W. Trails St, Clmlottt, I. C. Kodak Finishing Cheapest prices oa earth by photographic specialists. De veloping Brownie films 5c, 3 J and 3A zoc. Prints 2c and 4c. Mail your films to KODAK WISHING COMPANY, Dept F, Greenville, 8. C. rhe Oldest Southern College College of William tad Mary. Foanded In 1699 lealthful situation and historic associations. )n C. A O. Railway, half-way between Fort lonroe and Richmond; 8 mL tram Jamestown) 2 mi. from Yorktown. Degrees of A. B., B. 8., t a HrwiHui Teachers' Courses. Excellent tthletic field. Total coat per aesalon of nine aonths (board and fees) 1238. Write for annnal atalogue. H. L BUDGES, Rt^lrtrar, Wflliaaxturi, Tlrjiala DAISY FLY KILLER ?? SPSS S flits. Heat, clean or namental, oonrenient cheap. Liiti all litios. 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STATE AND CO., ARKADELPHIA, ARKANSAS OR SALiIS?85S A. liN UtUKur. lun.i C.; 40 a. cult.; 5 r. h., barn, orch.. stock. ,ach.; well located.Mathews.Bx.319.Chicago. /. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 26-1912. four Wool s in cash, or will give you fun ;ts, white, gray, tan or plaid id we will immediately cash value delivered th Carolina. [LIS COMPANY ILL, Spray, N. C. . m