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A WORDERFUL DISCOVERY. htU.Mitt nMick 1.4 upvtlMBt. ill 1111.1. toauwackad by the ecte?ll?c fort be comfort, nil bapMaeeeof mi. Science bus Indeed made flani ?irtdee fa Ik. peat eeaturT. and among the-by do mean. Wait Important?dltetTcrles La medicine la that of Pwi.ytoawhichhuBeen uwtf with great ancoeaa In ri?l Roe pita la and that It la worthy tbe attention W am who .afar from kidnsy. bladder, Derrooa Maaaaea.ehroaie waakaaaaea. u leers, akin ereptioae. Uaa,km..tharala ao dou bl. la taet It seem, evident Mia.Mt.Ur created amongst specialists. that TKChAhON la <aatla.il to oaat Into oblivion all M anest! enable raa.dlea that wara formerly the fbjn nana?a of medical me a. It la of eoorae Itopoe Mata lot) aaforota all wo .boo id Uko to tall them STwh ah ait article, hat thoaa who would ilka to thaw aaaaa aboat thia remedy that baa efected .0 jaay W. might alaaoat aay, mi ram loo. curat, #wMfa<.ftiwia< en re lope for mi book to Kim Clara Med. Oo.. Havers lock Bond. Hampstsed. yMfk Hag^eed decide fpr ihama.lvaa n be; her the aw/wauhTlam.?r,'trflWAflON" Bo. 1. Sol pa Be. I la what they require sad have bean seeking m rata taring a Ufa af misery, suffering, Ill health Till Oldest Southern College Cldtll d WIMam aad Mary. Founded la 1693 MeaUhfal attaaUoa and hlatorie aanoclationa. O. C. a O. Railway, half-way between Fort Bum and Richmond; ml. from Jamestown; ttal. from York town Dearreee of A. B . B. 8., K. A., Imtl.l Teachers' Courses Rscellent adhlatla laid. Total coat par aaaalon of nine asemthe (heard aad feaa) ItSS. Write for ana ttal aataligaa. ltlimm?lnr,mawtat,'lTi?li KODAKS 1 rw^w e?ml Attention. Pnree reasonable. Pftstnlei prompt. Bead for Prior Lint. PO uimtt ai mu, ciuiumi, s. c. 4IIIAIIUIIEI BUCKS ff'ufts ijlpplHlir fccltry 1ton. ?? ??/. T??. On* way to !o?* a friend Is to en* ft|? tn a political arfument. IfN. WUriow*! Soothing Syrop for Children Jeethlng, ?ftpi? thr gnmi. reduoea InflammoM, attape pais, eurea vied oolio. Mo ? bottle. 4 " * Th* kind of reform most needed la kind that will not go a thousand fall** away from home to begin work. POSB TOPS HKAD ACHR T $ Try wiaka* OAPUDIN a. It's liquid?plaaa.Ml* takt-tffwtt Immediate?food to prcrral fkk H?dnrkra and Kerroua Httdtcbn alao. .lotr mmt bark If not aatlafled. 10c., ate. and He* at medio lae etwee. Where'* One? "Pa, what's an anomaly ?" "A summer resort that doesn't guarantee it* attractions." how Devotion to Queen. Queen Alexandra was very much touched by the devotion of the women of every station of life who sold flowers on Alexandra day for one of her pet charities, the hospitals of London. More than $150,000 was collected, and next year It Is said that all of England will celebrate the <|uoon mother's day In the same way. Ceet of Living Reduoed. The King Fruit Preserving Powder -JM * *1- ?-?t. .11 nf Will in; pvnecu/ nvmu an biuud .. fruit, apple*, peaches, peari, berries, plums, tomatoes, corn, okra, cider, wine, etc. No alr-tlght Jars needed. TJsed more than 25 rears from New York to Florida. A small package puts up 60 pounds of fruit and taste Is Just as when gathered. Saves money, time and labor. What He Bought. A Syracuse business man living la one of the suburbs decided to give up his spacious back yards to the ralslug of currants as a profitable side issue. So, wishing to absorb all the Information he could acquire on the aubject of the currant Industry, he went down town one 8aturdav afternoon recently and returned with his arms full of books. "Well. Teddy," Inquired his enthusiastic spouse, as he dumped the vol? ? ? M VAU atlAPfioH UUWI ua lug wvio, uiu ,wu "? In getting what you wanted?" "Bure, I did!" he replied, proudly pointing to the books. "1 bought a whole year's edition of a standard work on current literature."?Ex change. That One Thing Lacking. Lady Augusta Gregory, the able and ardent apostle of the modern Irish movement, is fond of telling the following real Irish story: "It was the wedding day of Pat and Bridget, and they were having a church wedding. It was a grand affair. Pat was dressed with patent leather shoes, white vest and flaming tie. Bridget shone attractively In many colors. The ceremony was over, and the happy pair walked down the aisle, out into the street, where a great crowd greeted them with delight. Once seated within the cab, Bridget leaned over to Pat and said, ina loud whisper, 'Och, Pat, if we could only have stood on the sidewalk and watched oui selves pass, wouldn't it have been hlvln?'" NATURALLY. Hlx?Wlgaon looks go sheepish lately. Dlx?No wonder. He'i raising muttonchop whiskers. A Triumph Of Cookery? j Post Toasties Many delicious dishes hare keen made from Indian Com by the skill and ingenuity of the expert cook. But none of these creations excels Post TOasties in tempting the palate. "Toasties" are a luxury that make a delightful hot-weather economy. The Erst package tells its own story. "The Memory Lingers" ?eld by Gracm. teas to. rs4 . # EM SIHfl GOVERNOR WOOD FABRIC OF BIS LARGE CROWD OF DEMOCRATS WITNESS EXERCISES AT GOVERNOR'S HOME. HAS OUTLINED HIS POLICIES OlUe James, on Behalf of Committee, Officially Informs New Jersey Governor of His Selection to Lead Democracy to Success in November. Sea Girt, N. J.?Gov. Woodrow Wilson of New Jersey was officially notified Wednesday that he had been chosen by the Baltimore convention as the nominee for the presidency on the Democratic ticket. Briefly and simply the Governor was notified of his nomination by Senator-elect Ollie James of Kentucky, why emphasized, as he said, that the Governor had obtained the honor untrammelled by obligations and unembarrassed by affiliations of any kind. Mr. James praised the candidate tuzd his achievements and bespoke a harmonious party with "no disgruntled Democrats sulking in their tents." He attacked both President Taft and former President Roosevelt,, and held up the Republican party as "disheartened, discouraged and disorganized." The Republican conduct of trust prosecutions was condemned. He declared. the Democrats were pledged to "felon's stripes," for great malefactors. "Big business" was promised support if legitimate, and the Democratic party was pledged to take the taric out of politics when the "trust fed barons take their larcenous hands out of the pockets of the American people." The motto, "Thou shalt not steal" was a piagriarism from Democratic faith Mr. James said, and he expressed belief in the charges both President Taft and former President Roosevelt have made against each other. On th? ipft of Mr. James was Gov ernor Marshall, the vice presidential nominee, and on his right Governor Wilson. Governors Dix of New York, Foss of Massachusetts, Baldwin of Connecticut, Donaghey of Arkansas, Plaisted of Maine, O'Neal of Alabama and Mann of Virginia, sat nearby. Though the Governor spoke in accepi tance, theoreflcally to the 52 members ! of the committee, representing every state and territory in the Union, the speech, sounding the depth of his political philosophy was heard by a great throng. Prominent Democrats, Governors of many states, their families, members of the Woman's National Democratic ; League and a multitude of seashore i folk came from up and down the i Jersey coast to attend tho exercises. From the broad veranda of the J White House, where the Governors of ; New Jersey are wont to spend their 1 summers, the nominee delivered his ! speech. The Governor read frcm his manuscript. The platform, he said, was not a pragram but a practical document ' intended to show "that we know what the nation is thinking about and what it is most concerned about." The people, he added, were about to be asked not particularly to adopt a platform, but to entrust the Democratic party with "office and power and guidance of their afrairs," and their desire ! now was to know what "translation of 1 action and policy he intends to give to ! the general terms of the platform, should he be elected." The task ahead, the Governor explained, was to set up the rule of Justice of the trusts and the prevention of monopoly the adaptation of the banking and currency laws to meet i present day conditions; the treatment | of those who labor in factories and twines throughout all the great industrial and commercial undertakings and the political life of the people of tlje Philippines, for "whom we hold 1 governmental power in trust for their service, not our own." On the tariff the nominee declared emphatically "There should be an immediate revision, and it should be downward, unhesitatingly and steadily downward." This revision, he c-xplained, should begin with schedules "which have been most obviously used to kill competition and extend to every item in every schedule that afford any monopoly," and the system of taxation so adjusted tllat they will fall where they will create the least burdens. "The means and methods by which trusts have eotablished monopolies," said the candidate, "now have become known. It will be necessary to supplement the present law with 6ueh laws both civil and criminal as will effectually punish and prevent those methods." In closing, the Governor declared that a presidential campaign might 'easily degenerate into a mere personal contest and so lose its real dignity and significance. "There is no indispensable man" remnrifwi the Governor, "the govern ? . ment will not collapse and go to pieces Will Try and Save Stev.art. Quebec, Ont?Senator Hitchcock traveled to Quebec to make what promises to be a vain attempt to save from deportation Stanley Stuart, an English boy who arrived here from England, en route to Omaha, Neb., to join his father. The boy was stopped on account of feeble-mindedness. In fluence was brought to bear to have the boy passed on a plea that he was only backward. The case was referr ea to the medical board, but the board decided that the boy must be deported FAIR TRIAL W During the Days of Witchcraft Unfortunates Were Brought Into Court to Be Condemned. I When the witchcraft delusion of , 1692 seized the province the people would not" wait for the workings of the established tribunal of justice It was too slow to suit them. No doubt they feared that It would be "reactionI ary' or Inclined to be too respectful WILSON UNFOLDS i POLITICAL BELIEFS if any one of the gentlemen who are seeking to be entrusted with its guidance should be left at home. "We represent the desire to Bet up an unentangled government," he concluded, "a government that cannot be used for private purposes, either in the field of politics, a government that will not tolerate the use of the organization of a great party to serve the personal alms and ambitions of any individual and that will not permit legislation to be employed to further any private interest." Among the visitors who arrived early for the exercises were a number of professors from Princeton University. Colonel William Libbey, Princeton '77, a member of the Governor's staff, was an early arrival. It was Colonel Libbey who gave the orange and black color scheme to Princeton. Wilson's Speech. After thanking the committee of notification and express ng hie profound sense of responsibility in ac oepting the nomination, Ihe Governor said he realized that he was expected to speak plainly, to talk politics and open the campaign, "in words whose meaning no one need doubt." And he was expected to speak, he added, to the country as well as to the committee. "We must speak," he continued, by way of preface, "not to catch votes, but to satisfy the thought and conscience of a people deeply stirred by the conviction that they have come to a critical turning point in their moral and political development. "Plainly it is a new age," he went on. "It requires self-restraint not to attempt too much, and yet it would be cowardly to attempt too little. In the broad light of this new day we stand face to face?with what? Plainly, not with questions of party, not with a contest for office, not with a petty struggle for advantage. With j great questions of right and of justice, rather?questions of national development of character and of standards of action no less than of a better business system. The forceB of the nation are asserting themselves against every form of special privilege and private control, and are seeking bigger things than they have ever heretofore achieved. Two Things to Do. "There are two great things to do. One is to set up the rule of justice and of right in such matters as the tariff, the regulation of the trusts and the prevention of monopoly, the adaptation of our banking and currency laws to the very uses to which our people must put them, the treatment of those whp do the daily labor in our factories and mines and throughout our great industrial and political life of the people of the Philip pines, for whom we hold -governmental power in trust, for their service not our own. The other, the additional duty is the great task of protecting our people and our resources and of keeping open to the whole people the doors of opportunity through which they must, generation by generation, pass, if they are to make conquest of their fortunes in health, in freedom. in peace, and in contentment. In the performance of this second great duty we are face to face with questions of conservation and of development, questions of forests and waterpowers and mines and waterways, of the building of an adequate merchant marine. "We have got into trouble in recent years chiefly because these large things, which ought to have been handled by taking counsel with as large a number of persons as possible, because they touch ever}- interest and the life of every class and region, have in fact been too often handled in private conference. They have been settled by very small, and often deliberately exclusive groups of men, who undertook to speak for the I whole nation, or, rather, for them selves In the terms or the wnoie nation?very honestly It may be, but very ignorantly sometimes, and very shortsightedly, too, a poor substitute for genuine common counsel. No group of directors, economic or political, can speak for a people. They have neither the point of view nor the knowledge. Our difficulty Is not that wicked and designing men have plotted against us, but that our common affairs have been determined upon too narrow a view, and by too private an Initiative. Our task now is to effect a great readjustment and get the force of the whole people once more Into play. We need no revolution; we need no excited change; we need only a new point of view and a new method and spirit of counsel. The Tariff Question. "The tariff question, as dealt with in our time at any rate, has not been business. It has been politics. Tar1 schedules have been made up for the purppose of keeping as large a number as possible of the rich and influential manufacturers of the country in a good humor with the Republican party, which desired their constant financial support. The tariff has become a system of favors which the phraseology of the schedule was often deliberately contrived to conceal. Who, when you come down to the hard facts of the matDefiant Answer To England's Protest. Washington.?By a vote of 44 to 11 the Senate refused to strike from the Panama canal bill the provision exempting American ships from payment of tolls for passage through the Panama canal. Debate on the question i had continued for many hours. Th > Senate the/i adjourned for the day without voting on the bill itself. The defeat of the Burton amendment to i strike out the discrimination in favor of American ships was the Senate's deI flant answer to the protest of the . British government. AS IMPOSSIBLE * | to the letter of the law. So they : cried out for a special court to hustle along the trial of the witches, and Governor Phipps meekly yielded to the clamor and named seven judges ; to conduct the trials. It was distinctly a popular court. I and was controlled absolutely by the popular will. Not a one of the seven Judges was & lawyer. Two of the Judges were clergymen, two were pby a< , \ WOODROW WILSON. ' ter, have been repersented in recent years when our tariff schedules were i being discussed and determined, not ^ thfil is ; on the noor 01 toiiBicoo, ?..~v not where they have been defennin- , ed, but in the committee rooms and ] conferences? That is the heart of the whole afTair. Will you, can , you, bring the whole people into the partnership or not? j "We do not ignore the fact that 1 the business of a country like ours is exceedingly sensitive to changes in i legislation of this kind. It has been built up, however ill-advisedly, upon tarilT schedules written in the way I have indivated, and its foundations , must not be too radically or too suddenly disturbed. When we act we , should act with caution and pru- , dence, like men who know what they . are about, and not like those in love with a theory. It is obvious that the changeB we make should be made only at such rate and in such a way as will least interfere with the normal and healthful course of commerce and manufacture. But we shail not on that account act with timidity, as if we did not know our own minds, for we are certain of our ground and of our object. There should be an immediate revision ,and it should be downward unhesitatingly and steadily downward. High Cost of Living. "The nation as a nation has grown i immensely rich. She is justly proud of her industries and of the genius of her men of affairs. They can master anything they set their minds to and we have been greatly stimulated under their leadership and command. Their laurels are many and very green. We must accord them the great honors that are their due and we must preserve what they have built up for us. But what of the other side of the picture? Is it not as easy for us to live as it used 1 " * w.Jll K111, aa lO De: v.?ur IIIUUCJ nm iiui uu; -w much. High wargcs, even when we can get them, yield us no great comfort. We used to be better off with less, because a dollar could buy so much more. The majority of us have been disturbed to find ourselves growing poorer, even though our earnings were slowly increasing. Prices climb faster than we can push our earnings up. We know that they are not fixed by the competitors of the market, or by the ancient law of supply and demand which is to be found stated in all the primers of economics, but by private arrangements with regard to what the supply should be and agreements among the producers themselves. Those who buy are not even represented by counsel. The high cost of living is arranged by private understanding. "We naturally ask ourselves, how did these gentlemen get control of these things? Who handed our economic laws over to them for legislative and contractual alteration? We have in these disclosures still another view of the tariff, still another proof that not the people of the United States but only a very small number of them have been partners in that legislation. The Labor Question. "The so-called labor question is a question only because we have not yet found the rule of right in adjusting the interests of labor and capital. Huro ni?nin the sense of universal partnership must come into play if Wo arc to act like statesmen, as those who serve, not a class, but a nation. "The working people of America? if they must be distinguished from the minority that constitutes th" rest of it?are, of course, the backbone of tho nation. The law that safe- . guards their life, tnat improves the physical and moral conditions under which they live, that makes their nours of labor rational and tolerable, that gives them freedom to act in their own interest, and that protects them where they cannot protect themselves cannot properly be regarded as class legislation or as anything but as a measure taken in the Interest of the whole people, whose partnership in right action we are trying to establish and make real and practical. It is in this spirit that we shall act if we are genuine spokesmen of the whole country. "In dealing with the complicated and difficult question of the reform of our banking and currency laws, u Ko* it-r* Antrhf f r?rm?n1t It IZ9 I'K&lii tilCit WU6U?, w \ Have Elected Democratic Officials. Pueblo, Col.?The state democratic assembly ?which convened here to nominate a state ticket and two Unit! ed States senators and adopt a plat| form, adjourned after naming Alva ' Adams had Gov. John F. Shafroth for the long term in United States j i senate. Charles Thomas was chosen , to fill the vacancy caused by the death cf Senator Hughes. The candi- ! . dates named must go before the people at primary th-rtjJoseph Maupln, I | S. R Ff'zec.ald U. M. Anions were Inomin:..:d as Candida:'for governor. | slcians and three were merchants. I The common law was thrown aside, rules of evidence were ignored, and the judges and juries were left un, trammeled by any "quibbles of the law" to follow their own feelings and the popular will. Says Washburn in his "Judicial History of Massachusetts": "The trials were but a form of executing popular vengeance. Juries were Intimidated by the frowns and persuasions of the court and by the outbreaking^ of the I multitude that crowded the place of cry many persons besides the bankers, not because we distrust the jankers, but because they do not lecessarily comprehend the busiiess of the country, notwithstanding hey are indispensable servants of it ind may do a vast deal to make It lard or easy. No mere bankers' plan vill meet the requirements, no matter low honestly conceived. It should ie a merchants' and farmers' plan as veil, elastic in the hands of those vho use it as an indispensable part . >f their daily business. "In dealing with the Philippines, ve should not allow ourselves to stand upon any mere point of pride. We are not the owners of the Philppins Islands. We hold them in rust for the people who live in :hem. It is our duty, as trustees, to nake whatever arrangement of government will be most serviceable to :heir freedom and development. Here, again, we are to set up the Complete Parcels Post. "I do not know any greater question than one of conservation. 1 Wo have been a spendthrift nation ind must now husband what we (lave left. We must do more than that. We must develop, as well must add great waterways to the transportation facilities of the nation, | :o supplement the railways within our | borders as well as upon the Islands. We must revive our merchant, too, j and fill the seas again with our own ! fleets. We must add to our present J postofllce service a parcels post as complete as that of any other nation. We must look to the health of our people upon every hand, as well as hearten them with Justice and opportunity. This Is the constructive work I jf government. This Is the policy that has a vision and a hope and that looks to serve mankind. "With regard to the development , of greater and more numerous waterways and the building up of a merchant marine, we must follow great | constructive lines and not fall back and subsidies. In the case of the Mis- , sissippi river, that great central artery of our trade, it is plain that the Federal government must build and maintain the levees and keep the great waters in harness for the general use. It is plain, too, that vast trade will be most served and transportation most readily cheapened by them. Such expenditures are no longer a part of the government; ; they are national investments. "The very fact that we have at last taken the Panama Canal seriously in hand and are vigorously pushing it towards completion is elo tiuent of our reawakened interest in international trade. We are not building the canal and pouring out millions upon millions of money , upon its construction merely to establish a water connection between the two coasts of the continent, important and desirable as that may,be particularly from the point of view of natural defense. It is meant to be ' a great international highway. It ' J 1 ? 11 A1 ** wi/fimilntia if U'fl WOU1U ue a nine- i lunuiuua ? i>. should build it and then have no ships to send through it. These have been years when not a single ton of freight passed through the great Suez Canal in an American bottom, so empty are the seas of our 'ships and seamen. We must mean to put j an end to that kind of thing or we would not be cutting a new canal at our very doors merely for the use of our men-of-war. We shall not manage the revival by the mere paltry device of tolls. We must build and buy ships in competition with tne world. We can do It if we will but give ourselves leave. Vocational Education. ' There is another duty which the Democratic party has shown itself great enough and close enough to the people to perceive, the duty of government to shaie In promoting agricultural, industrial vocational ; education in every way possible within its constitutional powers. So oth- j er platform has given this intimate vision of a party's duty. The nation cannot enjoy its deserved supremacy in the markets and enterprises of the world unless its people are given the ease, and effectiveness that com# only with knowledge and training. Education is part of the great task of conservatism, part of the task of renewal and of perfected power. a r,r^aihontinl eamDaien may easily degenerate into a mere personal contest and so lose its real dignity and significance. There is no indispensable man. The government will not collapse and go to pieces if any one of the gentlemen who are seeking to be entrusted with its guidance should be left at home. Hut men are instruments. We are as important as the cause we represent, and in order to be important must really represent a cause. What is 01 r cause? the people's cause? That is easy to say, but what does it mean? The common as against any particular interest whatever? Yea, but :hat. too, needs translation into acts and policies. We represent the desire to set up an unentangled government, a government that cannot be used for private purposes, either in the field of business or in the field of politics; a government that will not tolerate the use of the organiza tion of a great party to nerve the individual, and that will not permit legislation to be employed to further any private interest. I heed with deep thankfulness the message you bring me from the country. I feel that I am surrounded by men whose principles and ambitions are those of Cod, and take courage." Whitman Now After High Officials. New York.?District Attorney Whitman has information in his possession upon which he will spek ?he indictment of two high police officials and a civilian employe attached to police headquarters on the charge of levying blackmail on gamblers and proprietors j of other illegal resorts. The men in question were all mentioned in the confession of "Jack" Rose, the selfconfessed graft collector of Police Lieutenant Decker, wno is under indictment for the murder of Herman Rosenthal the gambler. trial to render verdicts against their own consciences and Judgment." He cities one case, that of Rebecca Nurse, in which the Jury actually had the courage to bring in a verdict of not guilty. Whereupon "the accusers raised a great outcry and the Judges were overcome by the clamor." The Jury was sent back, returned with a verdict of guilty, and the woman waa accordingly executed. Thus promptly and effectively did the popular will , succeed in bringing about the Judicial decision It wanted? Boston Herald. That's the kind ? Libby's ? There isn't another sliced dried beef like it Good ? It's the inside cat of the finest beef sliced to wafer thinness. <^j^sLd <7*^ Dried Beef stands supreme. The tasty dishes one can make with it are almost numberless. Let's see ! There's creamed dried beef, and?but just try it. Then you'll know ! Always Insist on Libby's Don't accept "a just as good." From relish to roast, from condiment to conserve, the quality of Libby's Ready-to-Serve Foods is alv/ays superior. And they don't cost one whit more than the ordinary kinds. Pat up In sterilized glass or tin containers At Every Grocer* Libby, M?Neill & Libby Chicago Money saves pome men a lot of worry?by their not having It. For HrMMER nFADACITKS Hicks' CAPL'DINE Ik the best remedy?no matter what ctuifi them?whether from the heat, Hitting In dninghtn, feverish condition, etc. 10c., 25c. and 50c. per bottle at medicine stores. Tell it not In Gath, but there are church members who look too happy at a horse rare and too solemn In prayer meeting. TO DRIVE OCT MALARIA AND BUILD IP TTIE RTSTEM Take the Old Standard UttOVNS TASTICLKK CHILI. TUNIC. Yon knuw what run arn taking The formula I* plalnly^prlnted on every bottle, showing It Is simply yulnlne and Iron In a tastelot form, and the most effectual furui. Kor grown peoplo and children, 50 cents. Speed the Parting Guest. Father Knickerbocker?Can't you stay a little longer? Departing Visitor?No. Haven't a red cent left. Father Knickerbocker?Oh! Well, good-by Wanted Minute Evidence. Orfla, the celebrated doctor, being examined an an "expert" on a capital trial, was asked by the president whether he could tell what quantity of arsenic was requisite to kill a fly. The doctor replied: "Certainly, M. le President. But I must know beforehand the age of the fly, its sex. its temperament, itB condition and habit of body, whether married or single, widow or spinster, widower or bachelor. When satisfied on these points I can answer your question." LEGAL ADVICE, I ir-mm, i Lawyer?If you wish to get off wltl the minimum punishment, I'd ndvis< you to confess everything and throv yourself on the mercy of the court. Accused?Hut If I don't confess? Lawyer?Oh! In that case you wll very likely' be acquitted for want o evidence. HOW MANY OF US Fail to Select Food Nature Demand to Ward Off Ailments? A Ky. lady, speaking about food ! says: "I was accustomed to eatinj all kinds of ordinary food until, fo : some reason, Indigestion and nervou prostration set in. "After I had run down seriousl my attention was called to the necet sity of some change in my diet, am I discontinued my ordinary breakfa6 nrrt heean uslne Grape-Nuts with good quantity of rich cream, j, "In a few days my conditio changed in a remarkable way, and began to have a strength that I ha : never been possessed of before, vigor of body and a poise of mind tha amazed me. It was entirely new i my experience. "My former attacks of indigestio had been accompanied by heat flashe and many times m7 condition was di: tressing with blind spells of dizzines: rush of blood to the head and neura gle pains in the chest. "Since UBing Grape-Nuts alone fc I breakfast I have been free from thes I troubles, except at tlmeB when I hav J Indulged in rich, greasy foods in quai tity, then I would be warned by pain under the left shoulder blade, an unless I heeded the warning the ol trouble would come back, but when finally got to know where these tro bles originated I returned to my Grap Nuts and cream and the pain and di turbance left very quickly. "I am now in prime health as result of my use of Grape-Nuts." Nan given by Postum Co., Battle Cree Mich. "There's a reason," and it is e plained in the little book, "Tho Roj to Wellville," in pkgs. Ever rend the above letter? A n* oae appenrn from time to time. Th< i nre renufar, true, and fu.'l of bumi I Uitereet. PUNISHMENT. | | ' ^ ^ Summer Girl?What do you think I you deserve for kissing me like that? Youth?Well, say you might marry me! ECZEMA BEGAN BY ITCHING ? Goldsboro, N. C.?"My daughter suffered from eczema. The trouble began In the ears by Itching and running water, and later It formed pus and became very offensive. She began to scratch It and It went into sores. When the scabs came off there / was a yellowish watery discharge. The outside of the ear was one solid sore. She tried several different remedies but received no relief. She had been troubled with It between one and two years when she finally began using Cutlcura Soap aqd Cutlcura Ointment. "8he had not made but two treatrrmrtfa trhon nil thft Rfftbs ram? off and the flesh Just looked very red and dry. She kept up the treatment four or Ave weeks and she was entirely cured. It also cured other sores on the children, especially chapped feet on one of the little boys." (Signed) Mrs. W. H. Edgerton. Jan. 24, 1912. Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32-p. Skin Hook. Address post-card "Cutlcura, Dept. L, Boston." Expect Big Sale of Red Cross Seals. The campaign for selling Red Cross seals this year will be carried on In practically every state and territory In the T'ntted States, and even In Porto Rico, the Canal Zone, Hawaii and Philippine Islands. No less that 100,000 volunteer agents, including department, drug and other kinds of stores, motion picture theaters, Individuals, and others, will be engaged in the work. Before the sale Is completed, It 1b expected that at least 100,000,000 seals will have been printed and distributed, besides several million posters, display cards and other forms of advertising literature. Badly Frightened Fish. "It was never so known before," says Rankin Dunfre, a local angler, ; who wasn't angling on the occasion in point. "I was crossing the bridge near home swinging my lantern, for the night was dark. I heard a great splash, got down on the bank with I ?*? or*** V>onnon nnH In Ill J' iiuiieiu IU ore IUB ? and behold a lCdnch fish lay floundering In the weeds. The lantern must have scared him out of the water? don't you think?"?Philadelphia KecI ord. Solemn Warning to Parents. The season for bowel trouble is fast approaching and you should at once provide your home with King's Diarrhoea Cordial. A guaranteed remedy for Dysentery. Cholera Morbus, Flux. Cholera Infantum and all kindred diseases. Numerous testimonials on our flies telling of marvelous cures can be had by request. Burwell & Dunn Co., Mfrs., Charlotte, N. C. Lacks Originality. "Bilkins tells me that he has lately subscribed for a new thought magazine." "I hope Its perusal will inspire him with some new thoughts. Nobody talks about the weather more than Bilkins does." To be sweet and clean, every woman should use Paxtine in sponge bathing. It eradicates perspiration and all other body odors. At druggists, 25c a box or sent postpaid on receipt of price by The Paxton Toilet Co., Boston, Mass. Not So Bad. "I don't see how you can find life worth living In such a small town." "Oh. It's not so bad. We probably have Just as many scandals here as there are In your neighborhood." College and Aratlemj of St. fiencrleve foi Young I.HilIrn, .'.ahevillc, Located In the "l-md of the .sky ' :>0"i feet uImivp sea lesol. Unsurpassed clluiailc condition* with milt winter*. Meal l?oine-lif? Instructors he d degree! j from Hnrupean and American I'nirertl'te*. Th< language* are taught br French and Oermat 2 Profcsnora. St. (?encTlern kalao has a I'repnraton department for young children. For catalogue am f particulars apply to tne Mother Superior. A wife is supposed to be a man's 1 better half, but ^sometimes she turni ? out to ho his hitter half. i I.I r . i N XVegefable Preparation for Asa ifcit similaling the Food and Regulat<?j ringrh?5,omachsand Bowels of jj;| jgMMW it j n Promotes Digestion,Cheerful?: nessandRest Contains neither n Opium.Morphine nor Mineral s- j;,* Not Narc otic ft i flmpt SOU Dr SAMUEL P/TlMR ill | PunpLni StiJ ' ;|>, | Mix Sfim - \ , ' ffmhtlU W6 ) )P I Mn/tSfJ Ol ! /Ipftrm,*/ - V ^ ii*i I C"ri?ialtS*tU\ ( e K; r'r/'ji I Q* I 1*5 Wimltryrten Flavor ' j} ?c a perfect Remedy for Constipa>n lion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, I'I Worms .Convulsions .Fever i shu ncss and LOSS OF SLECP e- ??? s 'v FacSimite Signature of a ?' le O The Ce stair Com paw, k Mi NEW VORK. fo Bm.iAF.ui.ufc.irBB x- % m \[Guaranteed under the Foodar iJ Exact Copy of Wrappar. Consumption Chocked and In Early Stages, Cured by MILAM the great Reconstructive tonic and blood renovater We do not set forth MILAM as a cart for consumption, but it has proven so beneficial to such patients that we believe, and are supported in our belief by a practicing physician, that MILANJ. will arrest incipient tuberculosis or consumption in its early stages. We know that it greatly benefit# even those In the advanced stages. Read the following Scrofulitic Consumption City of Danville, State of Virginia?To-witi I, Edmund B. Meade, Notary Public in and for the City of Danville, State of Virginia, do hereby certify that Abram Word, ' of Danville, Va., to me well known, did appear before me, and being duly 6worn, deposeth and says as follows: "For ten years prior to August, 1909, I was under the care of a regular physician. Last spring this doctor told me he could do me no good, and I tried another for four months without receiving any benefit front him. In August, 1909, I began taking Milam, j and am now able to do my work without difficulty, my appetite is good, and I can eat and digest any food. My trouble was said to be Scrofulitic Consumption, and I was wasted away to a shadow. I was so weak that I could hardly walk when 1 commenced on MILAM. I regard MILAM as a truly valuable remedy in all cases of blood trouble, whether eruptive, or proceeding from a lack of full, free circulation. I I have recommended MILAM to ab*ut twenty of my friends, and so far as I have seen or heard from them, they all speak in the highest terms of it, and are recommending it to their friends. It was particularly beneficial tome in aiding digestion and building up an appetite.'* (Signed) ABKAM WORD. In witness to the above, I have hereunto set my hand and the seal of my office, this 23rd day Of March. A. D.. 1010. EDMUND P. MEADS. . (SEAL) Notary Public. My commission expires Jan. 14.19U. I Ask your druggist or writ* for booklet Milam Medicine Co., Inc. D&nviiie,v&: I The Wretchedness of Constipation Can quickly be overcome by CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. l\ Purely vegetable ---y> ?act surely and iWfiSjBPADTFD^ gently on the mitti r ,iver- Cure \ i vFB Biliousness, or n L:..^ Headness, and Indigestion. They do their duty. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature ^ovoVrkiirDoIliirs L/U T V X V/Mi v/^ Buy your Shoes direct from factory at wholesale factory price of $2.SO, like retail at $5 00. Solid Leather Goodyear Welts and guaranteed with a new pair, if they don't wear, or money will be refunded. ; Write for free catalog of stvlos and cuts. *f.50 SHOE FACTORY. BAL I (MORE. MD. L. ROSE & CO. Est! 1868 (THE OLD RELIABLE) We are In tho market nt all timet for SCRAP Rl liltKlt. RACK, MKTAI.S, IJONLS, IKON ANI> SECOND-HAND MACIIINKKY. We par highest prices. Otir large list of .hippers?cur i best aUverli.teujenu Write for price list, I,. KOSK JSc COMPANY 410-484 llrook Ave.. l<udiu.uuJ, Virginia THE AGRICULTURAL AND MECHANICAL COLLEGE FOR THE COLORED RACE Open all the year. For males only. Board, Lodging and Tuition S7.00 per month. Write today for catalogue or Free Tuition. JAS. B. DUDLEY. President. A. & M.COLLEGE GREENSBORO NORTH CAROLINA !4KaratGo!dFilled I ^r\ J Enameled Emblem Buttons \Wc.V7 Sii! For Any Society 18 CENTS SIX FOR SI.00 The KENNEY COMPANY, ' 1314 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Po. The Chamberlayne School 1 A Conntry Srh< ol fur Hoy* at Richmond, Va. Hoard* ; Ing Department limited. Individual Ins'ruction. , Seoul I session begins >* pt. HM2 * .lUlisbfrlijae, I, A., I'b. D . llratfMil.r, 331 I Prme Aveiltte, Klrhtnund. r? I dS*% nfifiP^Y THEATBD. (ilvotjnlck rw K *4 unurj 1 lief, usually remuvo ???! ' V jj ling and short breath In a few days and entire relief In 15-45days, trial treatment KpSFRJ FULL. B?.CBItKSSS?.>S B?iA,AUisU.?a. " & A KODAKS IliPtN* tiinn and Anso fllm*. uiallrd p<>*trmj'lJr ',a"' Mall xrd.-ni ifivcn prompt attention. I (j)MiCt.AU' SUI' roll thru developed fur IDcrcU 1 rAKM)\S01'TI< AI- <i?. c 241 KIiik Street, Charleston, 8. C. CASH HHC NAM K.S AND A DDI; KSSRrf uK piano play.ru, Cinderella. lat.st musical bit, 5 and plan. lie. Vt. ?1.1. IS, t.ifTnrd. Ark. ' W. N. U., CHARLOTTE. NO. 33-1912. "" " ? Hi 1 i For Infants ana unnaren. I The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the l j Signature i Xj) w * (\.y "se IJ For Over Thirty Years