University of South Carolina Libraries
i; .if -:*f ^rt ?w. $;C. THE WEEK OF THE WORLD TOLD. PHAIO WEST Fr?m Foreign Lands Through out th? Nation and Particularly the Qroat 900111. i ?; . ' . ?? \ ..Southern. 1lie general assembly of Tennessee bfcgian ltH fifty-seventh biennial h< h flcm Tin' seaslou promiaee to Iw a |oinentoua ona, inasmuch as a Unit States sciator will be elected, pro islon made for refunding the atate (some ten millions of dollars), alletrktluK the state for aaaerably n under tirfc new census, and re ling, modifying or strengthening election Inwa, The regular Demo control tho senate, with nine out of thirty-three members, ao will probably be In Fualdn forces. matters of importance e biennial session of the Carolina general uwniiily, convened at Kaleigi), are the fipotsltjonh to umond tho etato antl nHt law and to render inoro strln pent, if possible, tho prohibition law?, violations of which have become ho ^?Timrfaut ttH to demand legislative ac tion. Democrats control both branch en by large majorities. During tho past year 393 ne# bank* were organised and began . business n the Houth/^with aggregate capital '?it ?7,420,000. Kdltor Jaraee A: Cromarlle of Spar ta, ua., who disappeared mysteriously from a hotel at Hamlet, -N. C., No vember 9, was found wandering In -vyoigia near Kllenboro, Rutherford county, more 'tlian .jk^undred miles from the scene of the dijappearpnco*-1 by a farmer. Cromarlle, wtfiFfa over sixty years old, Is said to be deranged, and does not know his own name. Choice article# of food eaten by of liters and melt of the Alabama Na tional Guard while in camp ut Chlcka manga last summer, are the subject of *harp criticism In a report submit ted to Governor Comer by State Ex* iminer Brooke on an examination of tho state's military afTalrs for the past year. The examiner fouiid that the law Is not being complied with In the purcoase of rations and that paid bills showed numerous Iteme of food not legally authorized. A number of planters on the lower -coast of Louisiana this"year experi mented with sea Island cotton, with -the result that It has been found that % the product can be raiBed and next year will see the planting of that $ rude oi tfie staple. By combining thorough tillage, crop rotation and barnyard manure, Mr. W. sj, H.. Dubose of Urundidge, Ala., haB succeeded In producing Beven bales of cotton from a three-acre tract, us ing nothing but the ordinary cotton seed, the cost per acre being $38.60, as follows: Breaking the land, $3.50; rebtddlng, $2; hoeing, $1.50; cultiva .^tlon, |8; picking, $16; ginning, $4.50, hauling, $3. On the three-acre Mr. Dubose cleared over $450. Ant^iio Rodriguez, aupposed to have befen -Imrned at the^stake at Rock Springs, Texas,"Ifrln Uuadlajara,^ '^ Mexico, hale and hearty. Dispatches from Hock Springs at the time of tlit lynching made reasonably certain the Identity of tho man a? the resident ot ">-?4U1b city, and a?an aftermath to the ;V (tilling anti-American demon3tratlona in W>*lCO were Btarted. ;X General. . There will be no children in the Unltta States under live years of age SaCtbe year 2020. Babies, accordingly, i will Save disappeared from this coun Pf'try as early 2015. TblB is the mathe ifj matlcal conclusion of Prof. Walter F. i)j Wilcox of Cornell university, an nounced to the American Statistical association at this concluding session In St. Louis. Conductors and trainmen on fifty railroads running north, .south and west of Chicago received an increase ~ of wages of 10 per cent. Tiie in crease was granted after a month, of negotiation and affect* 75,000 mem bers of the Brotherhood of Kailwav Trainmen and Order of Railway Con ductors. The lives of sixteen workmen were snuffed out by tho explosion of a boil er at the plant of the Morewood Ice company at Morewood Lake, Mass Twelve men were killed instantly ; one died shortly after the accident, and three others died in the hospital. In addition twelve men were injured. | The solution of the servant prob lem is the unionizing of the wervants, t_ according to the paper of I. M. Hube El. now of the United States department S&of commerce and labor, which was & read beforo the American Home Kco . nomlrs association In St. Louis. Hube now &ald the ancient fiction that a servant is a member of the family at $3 a week ought to be established. Rene Simon, the French aviator, j-- broke the world's record for mono planes at New Orleans, when ho cir cled'the mile track in a 20-mlle-an ur wind in 67 seconds flat. ? . l|?l MM iWanta His Children. Go!quit, Ga.?Nineteen- days with a rifl^ and a rig on the tcail-of the man ? who he allagaa etole hla n;if> and chll u. to r<hetn, here PlAui an being nw>0 by the pro? moter* of the New York to-Atlanta National Automobll* Highway for aar* oplane flight* over the cour*? batwoea the two cltla*. The Idea I* to bay# night control*, dinner step*, etc., fOf the airmen, Ju*t aa I* the c**e for automobiHat*. John if. lioHwunt, the moat famou* of American aviator#, and heralded a* the rnoet daring hlrdman of tbe world, because of hi* feat In belug the flrat to cros* the Kngllsh channel with a passenger, waa killed whan hU Ijueroplane was dashed to the ground ?from a height of 300 feet at New Or* le,in* ? . v ? i Chief Interest in the sesslou of the #eventy*ninth Ohio general assembly rest* in the election of a United titate* senator to eucceed Chart?* Dick, who wan elected upon the death ->f Senator Marcus A Hanna, The aew senator will be a Democrat, I Indications are that the Minnesota legislature will reelect Moses Clapp to the United Htates senate. The contest among West Virginia Democrats for the seat now held In the United Htates senate by Nathan it. Scott (Rep.) of Wheeling, is now considered as five-cornered. The con test appear* chlefTly to he between Clarence W. Watson, a Fairmont coal operator, and John T. McCJraw ot iirafton. Arch Hoxaey, a Wright aeropjanlst, was killed at Ix>s Aneglea while re turning from Catallua iMlund In nls ttlght for the Mlchelln cup. lie fell loo feet and was Instantly killed. Mrs. Augusta E. Stetson, t,?e excom municated leader of the JPlrat Church of Christ, Scientist, lu New York, ?ald ihut the hour, had come when she mu*t stand before the whole world of Christian Science and proclaim her oeiief in tho Imminent resurrection in the semblance of human form of Mary ,laker Q. Eddy, the discoverer of Christian Science, who, as the world believes, dl'd at he?" home in Newton, Miss., on December 3. "Mrs. Eddy is not dead," said Mrs. Stetson. "Ah jesuB Christ revealed himself on the third day after hie crucifixion and la ier was seen of a company of B00, so Mrs. Eddy will be rained from the lomb and will manifest herself to all the world In proof of her teachings that there Is no death." A. passenger-carrying mopuplana, r^vith Avlato*- i.?ffon and/m. Paula, fell 250 foet shortly ..Iter leaving Issy on a round trip flight from Paris. Franco, to Brussels, and l>oth died shortly after tho accident, surviving only until they reached a hospital. The cotton situation of India 1b Lcausing Home dltjuiet. The receipts to date are 300,000 bales behind last ?eason. A total crop of only 2>D00, 000 bales Is expected against 3,200, 000 last year. In 83,000 attempts to spell words i given out In a recent spoiling match between the grammar school grades of the l>ee, Mass., public school, 14, 000 errors were made. "Spinach" was missed 8G times. Exports of the 11)10 cotton crop of Peru will amount to 55,000,000 pounds, according to an eatlmato of Uerardo Kllngo, director of the Lima Experi mental Stntion for. cotton. '1 no grow ing conditions were txceptloually fa vorable. What will be the only regularly es tablished school of aviation in this country will be established In Augus ta, Ua., within the next ten days by the Wright brothers. W ashitigloii. President Taft aiu.a. tlon of thv new const, i... meiit of Nicaragua. tv;iu ?eipt of dispatcher . clectiou of Gtu. j r ju an president. llhodj island lias 0OS.0 people to ihe square mile, thus, according to census bureau figure.;, leading the. list of states lu.the matter of density of population. Nevada, with only seven tenths of u person to the mile, flnda a place at the lower end of the table. The figures for the Southern fitatea include: Tennessee 62 4; South Caro* itna 49.7, North Carolina 45 3, Geor gia 44.4, Alabama 41.7, Mississippi JS.8, Louisiana 36.5, Arkansas 30, Tex aa 14.8, Florida 13.7. Judge Joseph Kucker Lamar of Georgia and Judge Willis Van Do Van ter of Wyoming were sworn In aa as sociate Judges of the Supremo court of the Supreme court of the United States. They subscribed to the oath before the new chief Justice, Kdward Douglas White, and upon an historic Hlble which has been In use by the court dally for 100 years. Prosecutions by the government de signed to accomplish the dissolution of Standard Oil and of the American Tobacco organizations, embodying the ^reatesf anti-trust light of the genera tion, will be taken up for the second time by the Supreme court of the United States. Continuing its consld .?union of affairs of government, the court will immediately afterwards .jive its attention to the constitution llity of the corporation tax provision of tho Payne-Aldrlch tariff act. William Howard Taft will be a candidate for the presidency before the Republican nut tonal convention of iU12 to succeed himself, according to unofficial information sent out The African hunting trip as organ tied and carried out by the Smithso nian institution via Roosevelt," Is the subject of We latest proposed con gressional investigation. Tlie sug gestion was received^ by Represent* .ive Rainey of lllinolAfroin a citizen jf Georgia, who refcfred to the ?Smithsonian" as a "traili hbap int>U ?titlou," Prsachtr Knew Wh?l to Oo. ^ Knoxvtlle, Tenn.?The moment ink when % Southern W wreojp occurred at Mtsoot, J. A. Bayler, pastor of Street M, B. ' tot. and formerly of CtfQSbcfc*. in atantly CONGRESS NAYCREAIE 7 J TMfF COMMISSION PRESIDENT TAFT WANTS IX P?RT BOARD TO STUDY TARIFF PROBLEM. FEATURES OF THE BILL Creation of Permanent Tariff Commls ?Ion of Flvo Member* Is Favored. / w Washington.Impetus to tbe move ment for a tariff commission was giv en by conferences at tbe white, house and at tbe capitol, tbe return of Rep resentative !x>ng worth of Oblo to Washington with a full draft of a bill creating a commission, and an nouncement of Chairman Payne 'of the bouae committee on ways and means, tb?t he expected such legisla tion before March 4 next Mr. bongwortb, who Is a member of the ways and means committee, baa drawn a bill which ho expects to In troduce, it creates a commission of five members, salaried at |7,600 each, not more than three of tbe name po litical party, with ofilces at Washing ton, but empowered to meet any where. ' It is given wide powers of collec tion and collation of facts without authority to make recommendations, and instead of making fixed reports, It can only report on special call of congress or of the president ' MOTHER JEDDY T0~RISE. Remarkable Interview Given Out by Christian Sclontist. New York.?Mrs. Augusta K. Stet son, the excommunicato leader of the First Church of Christ, Scientist, in New York, said that the hour had come when sho must etand before the whole world of Christian Science and proclaim her belief in the imminent resurrection in the semblance of hu man form of Mary linker <J. Eddy, tho discoverer of Christian Scienco, who, aa tho world bellpvcs, died at * her home in Netfton, Miss., on December 3. "Mrs. Eddy is not deud," said Mrs. Htetson. "Ae Jesus Christ revealed himself on the third day after his cru cifixion and later was seen of a com pany of 600, so Mrs. Eddy will bo ralaed from tho tomb aud will mani fest herself to all tho world in proof of her teachings that there Ib no death. With this demonstration of herself In a form that will bo vlBlble to all the world the end of the Gospel ago will be signalized. With Mrs. Eddy will come Christ, the Truth aud tb? Millennium, Been by John on Pat mos will be with us. Then with all of faith find that there is no death, and those who aeo and believe will never die.'' WRONG MAN BURNED, Rodriguez, Supposed to Have Been Cremated, Safe in Mexico. Ouudlfcjara, Mexico.?Antonio Ro? drlguez, supposed to have been burn ed at tho Btake nt Hock Springs, Tex* asl, is in Guadlajara, hale and hearty. Dispatches from Rock Springs at tho time of the lynching made reasonably certain the identity of the man as the resident of this city, and as an after math to the killing anti-American V monstrations in Mexico were start tj. Rodriguez worked in tho United ;::\t0B until recently as a railroad la^ :t. rer. Rock Springs, Texas.?Tho man lynched here on iNovember 5 the murder, of a cattleman's wif<\ Jwas known as Antonio Rodriguez, and it was Btated that he came to the Unit ed States from Ciuadlajara. Mexico. RECORD COTTON GROWTH. 8even Bales of Cotton on Three Acres, Record of Alabama Farmer. Washington.?By , combining thor ough tillage, crop rotation and barn yard manure, Mr. W. H. Dubose of Brundldgo, Ala., has succeeded In pro ducing eevon bales of cotton from a three-acre tract, using nothing but the ordinary cotton seed, the cost per acre being |38.B0, as follows: Break ing the land, |3.60 j rebeddlng, $2; hoeing, |1.50; cultivation, $8; picking, $16; ginning, 14.50, and hauling, |3. On tho three-acre tract Mr. Dubose cleared over |450. 5 Mississippi Negroes Shot. Clarkdale, Miss. ? Two negroes were killed and three others wound ed during an exchange of shots be tween a sheriff's posso searching for the three farm hands who shot and killed W. W. Kirk and L. D. Keseo and a bnnd of eleven negroes, believ ed to include the men sought. Addi tional posses are joining in the pur suit, and with racial lines closely drawn, further bloodehed is probable. Tho po^se fired on were headed by several officers from a convict farm, and were following bloodhounds. Augusta Has a Carrie Nation. Augusta, Ua.?Bessie Goodrich is wanted by the police on a charge of disorderly conduct, and on another al leging that she broke show cases, glass and other private property In a store. Behind this charge lurks a story of Augusta's first Carrie-Nation ing. The woman went into a saloon ontffroad street, pulled a hammer and prARmd to break up everything in alght The bartender started to rem onstrate with her, but a wave with the.hammer and he left the place in a hurry. Maxim Is Retwked. Washington.?Statement* relating t*r ttir HBfl ot smokeless powder uaad I by thlacountry made by 8tr Hiram | Maxim, who wrote President Taft, on October 25 last, that gun explosion*la and navy. were jrtftf due to to the?Ur< Tires Genuine Relief "For five years" writes Mrs. L Fulenchek, Houston, Texas, "I suffered with pains all over, especially in my back and side, and was so weak I could hardly do my housework. A friend told me of Cardui, Since taking itf I feel so much better I Now 1 can d# alt my housework, and am not bothered with pains at all. Cardui has been a wonderful help to me." Cardui, the woman's tonic, has proven especially beneficial, in cases of womanly ailments with pain as a principal symp tom, whether the pains come from too much walking, standing, stooping, or just as a symptom of general female weaknew. Cardui Is a strength-building medicine. You need it If your system Is out of order, or It you suffer from any of the pains, to which women are peculiarly liable, ? Women who need strength, should find it in Cardui. Fifty years of success have produced a con fidence in Cardui, that cannot be ignored. Dur ing this time, Cardui has benefited a million women. Why not you, now? All druggists keep Cardui in stock, all the time. Get a bottle and try it, to-day. Take CARDUI A Monnonlte Custom. When a young man reaches the marriageable ago and shows those well-known symptoms the elders of the ohurch hold a meeting. They decide If be Is honest and reliable to buy him a farm, usually an eighty. Into the farm he puts his savings, and then members . or the congregation raise the rest of the funds to pay for the land. This amount the young man must pay back with a small rate of inter est. Thus *y example and material assistance they bind him by the strongest bonds, that of debtor to the church. They know full well thnt nothing can be lost, for the land Is always worth what it will cost: After the young people are located on their, farm tne elders assist with advice and help. Do'you wonder that this thrifty people are gradually ? buying the best of nil Kansas land and the best part of the nicest little city within the borders of that great state??Seneca Tribune. When Publicity Is Desired. "X Y. Z, this office," was the way the woman usually wound up the nu merous lost article advertisements ne cessitated by her absent-mindedness. The other day sho tired of anonymity and returned In about ten minutes with the request that her name bo substi tuted for the initials. "I attended to that In tho first place, madkme," said the clerk. "You did?" sho exclalmod. "How did you know 1 wanted to use my own name?" He pointed to tho words "Metropoli tan opera house" in hor advertisement. "Decauso that Ih where you loBt your bracelet," he said. "I never yet met a person who wished to keep his Identi ty secret when advertising for any thing lost at tho opera house. People who lose things any place else In New York often resort to initials when ad vertising, but If It happened at" the opera houso tho nioro publicity they can get the better." An Awful Warning. To those students of English litera ture who like to write of le dernier crl when they mean the latest craze, and generally to pepper their pages with tags of Latin and French, the fol lowing authentic composition Is pre sented as an "awful warning,*' says the University Correspondent. It Is the letter of an Indian suBpostmaster who 1h anxious to be promoted: "Sir: I "have the honor to request you that I did not receive-any answer to my petition as yet. Though I am flagrante delicto, flat Justltla nut runt soelum. My younger Fra has gono artlcula mor tis. Ipso facto O! tempora O! mores. Does the life of a man go out like a candle? Slc'translt gloria mundt that veili, vldl, vlcl. It 1b a outrance af faire d'honneur which Is agenda for your pertinently consider." British Saints. December 1 appears from old calen dars to have been a notable anniver sary for Cambro-Brltlsh worthies about whom we know little beyond their names. It lit the Feast of Bt. IJelnlol, an Interesting personage to all Liberals because he la the "patron" of Hawarden and gave his name to the library which Mr. Gladstone estab lished there. This date Is alto the "memorial" of the 'salnte of the Isle of Bardsey, which was the Iona of Wales, and formerly a favorite place of pilgrimage. A farm on tbe opposite mainland -still remains tithe free be cause anciently charged with the ex pense of supplying rest and refresh ment to weary pilgrims bound , for Bardsey.?Westminster Gazette. A shamo to Spend the Money. "Pianissimo, pianissimo," said the vocal teacher to the student, "your voice is too loud- I^earn to shade your tones." And the student worked hard to carry out instructions. ? When she went to her next lesson the teacher Bald: "Better?but still too loud. Try again?you will get It after a while." Again the student returned to her room and tried for a softer tone. Again the teacher told her it was still too lond. Now William, the, colored butler, without whom the house would nevor have gone on properly, had heard and wondered at this gradual dlipiQlshing of lono. It did seem a shame to spend the money. Ho would interview the lady who occupied the room below that of the vocal pupil. "What does you think about de voice above?" he askod, pointing to the colling. "Hit strikes me hlt'a growln' weakah ev'y day." ?* Hypnotizing Lobsters,' Here Is a curious and little known experiment that can be made with live lobsters. It Is quite Impossible to stand a lobster up "on end" unless It Is first put to sleep. This Is" done by slowly stroking Its tall -downward with the hand two or three times, when the fish Is at once thrown Into a state of coma, or deep sleep, and remains In that position, without a movement of any kind, for about ten minutes. Even its eyes are fixed, and it ?has every appearance of being dead. Another curious thing Is that when one lobster wakes up the noise It makes In falling down rouses all the others; and the effect of one or more waking up Is very strange. Abolish Bdar Traps. Wllllamsport sportsmen Intend to circulate petitions to the legislature looking toward the abolition of bear traps. The only persons using trapa are 'thoso who hunt bears for mar ket, and sportsmerf aro anxious- that the bear bo more fully protected than under the present laws. It la pointed out by those baok of the movement that the catching of bears In traps not only tends to exterminate the species of game but la a cruel practice, as the animals _frequently free themselves by leaving parte of their legs in the trap.?Philadelphia Record. Flrat Owner* of Fura. "Women who expect to buy furB thin winter show a lively Interost In tho Zoo animals," eald a Philadelphia anl-. mal keeper. "They want to And out what the animal looked like that wore their fur coatH and muffs before the fura were made over for them. "The recent warnlngB agalnBt Imita tion furs have made them particular ly curloua. Somehow they Imagine that by comparing the fur of a live lynx with a cat or a rabbit they will be able to detect the difference In dyed fura. Of courso they won't, but any how this little excurnlon Into natural history will do them no harm. "Women with caracul coatH are tho most peralstent Investigators. Vory few people except furriers know what kind of an animal caracul grows on, and (ho specimens of the Russian sheep that produce real caracul and the Chinese sheep that' cheap wool that Is sold for caracul grows on have been trotted out for Inspection so often that they have become as blase as a New York allow girl." London's Standards of Length. Londoners have access to authori tative standards for comparison pur I poses. These are fixed on tho outside of the wall of Greenwich observatory, and the various lengths are decided by passing the measure to be tested be tween raised points inserted in metal plates. At the Royal observatory also is a pound balance, by which any pound weight may lie verified. Stand ards of 100 feet and one chain (00 feet), with subdivisions accurately en graved on them, marked on brass plates, are available for public pur poses in Trafalgar square, being let into the granite steps on tho north side of the square. Where rigid ac curacy is desired recourse must be had to the Standards offioo In Old Palace Yard, where the tests aro car ried out under tho Scientific conditions as regards temperature, etc., prescribed by act of parliament.?Dundee Adver tiser. 8t. Erkenwald. A church at Southend, England, has been dedicated to St. Erkenwald?the only one of Its kind In existence. Erk enwald* who was bishop of Ixmdon from 076 to 093 A. D., was at one time a very popular-saint in his country, it was he who built the first stone cathe dral of 8t. Paul's. He, too, it was who erected In the eastern portion of tho city the gate which gave the name to BlBhopsgate. This prelate Buffered from gout during the later years of his life, and had to be carried about on a litter. After his death this llher was careful ly preserved In Old St. Paul's, where be was burled, and In courso of time miraculous virtues were attributed to It. It was held' to be a sovereign cure for fever, and fever-stricken pilgrims from *11 parts of the country would flook to the shrine of St. Erkenwald. Mixed on Hit Melody. A well-known newspaper that boasts the authority and the excellence of >>ts dramatic and musloal criticism pub lished recently a criticism of a certain churmluK light opera. The dramaUo editor wan lavish In his praise of songs and singers, remarking, with a dlgnl* fled reminder to his readers that It was his business to pass judgment, not unmixed with censure, that the plot was slightly unconvincing. Of the muslo, however, be wrot? In terms of highest commendation. And ho closed his article with praise for the charming entr'actes. The typesetter got free with th? copy, however, or there was li mlstaka made by the printer's "devil." At any rate, this is what appeared aa the closing sentence of a really masterly piece of criticism; "I.ast night's music between the aot? waB unusually melodious." Her First Vote. It was the evening of election dajr?> and Hlggleby had Just returned home. "Well, my dear Jane," said ha, an he kissed his wife, "did you voto to day?" "Yes," replied the lady. "Straight ticket, I suppose?" smiled her husband. "Well, no," said Mrs. Hlggleby. "Aft er thinking it all over and reading th? platforms of both parties, } felt that one was about as good ae the othW, _ so I split my ticket;" "Split it?" roared Hlggleby. "Why* u how did you do it?" "Why, instead of putting an X oror tho name of one candidate," a&ld Mrs. Hlggleby, "I divided it in half and put a V over both."?Harper's Weekly. ? ". ft*' . Her Little Qame. Tho medium had Impressed hi* ~ landlady with her wonderful power* of vlBlon. Finally she offered to tell the worthy woman's own fortitfi?$,v "lluh!" Bhe exclaimed, as soon Ml she had gone into a trance, "t can see you finding a large sujffi ? of **" money!" . l>. "How and where?" cried the land-^ lady. "In this very house!" announced' the soeress. "While you are sweeping and cleaning some morning." ' ? ,i When the medium told us about this prediction of here, she confessed that she had never lived In a better , cared for home than the one she jcaa : occupying.?Cleveland Leader. . * "Expsrt" Testimony. . A Marseilles "medical expert" has Just distinguished himself by declar ing that a young woman found dying on the pavement of one of the streets had been assassinated. His expert ? knowledge enabled him to state that tho causes of death was a dagger stab in the back. It has been proved that death was really due to a fall from the fourth floor of a house on to tho par* ment below. The "dagger wound" was a bruise caused by the fall. Their Happy Time Caroline?Are Emily and band happy? Carl?Well, part of Carolina?Part of tl Carl?Yes, when he's at the office. ^ Now About Clean F Another Splendid Opportunity to Bring Out Facts When the "Weekly" which sued ub for-libel (becauao we publicly denounced them for an editorial attack on our claims) was searching: for lomo "weak spot," they thought beBt to send a N. Y. Atty. to Battle Creek, summoned 26 of our workmen and took their sworn state ments before a Commissioner. Did we object? No. On the contrary, we helped all wo could, for the opportunity was too good to be lost. Geo. Haines testified he Inspected the wheat and barley, aleo floors and evory pa ft of the factories to know things were kept clean. That every 80 mlnutee a sample of the pro ducts was taken and Inspected to keep the food up to standard and keep out any Impar ities, also that it Is the duty of every man In the factories to see that anything not right Is Immediately reported. Has been with the Co. 10 years. EM ward Young testified had been with Co. 15 years. Inspector, he and hla men exam ined every sack and car of wh<pt and barley to see they were up to standard and rejected many car#. H. E. Burt, Supt., testified has been with Co. over 18 years. Bought only the beet grain obtainable. That the Co. kept a corps of men who do nothing hot keep things clean, bright and polished. Testified that no Jhgredlent went intp Orape Nuts and Pestur II? testified the workmen were first-class, high-grade and inspected by the Co.'s physi cian to be sure they were all In prpper phys ical condition; also testified that state reports showed that Co. pays better wages than the average and he thought higher than any in the state. F. B. Martin. Asst. Supt., testified Grape Nuts made or wheat, barley, yeast and water. Anything else? "No, sir.* Postum made of Wheat, Wheat Bran and New Orleans Molasses. Statements made on his experi ence of about 10 yean with Co. 4 Testified bakers are required to wear fresh white suits; changed "every other day. Said had never known any of- the product* being sent out that were below the high standard of inspection. Asked 1f any one connected with the Postum Co. had Instructed him htiw to testify. Said, "No, air." Horaoe Brown testified has been with Co, 9 years. Worked in Grape-Nuts bake shop. Testified the whole of the floor 1s composed of Wheat and Barley. Attys. tried to oonfuae him, but he insisted thai any casual .visitor could aee that nothing else went into the flour. Said machinery and floors always kept dean. So these men were examined by the "Week ly" lawyers hoping to Aad at least one who would say that some undergrade grain was put In or some naclean condition was found soorawbtr* r* : But It ?m ?*? via . . u Bach and every man testified to the parity -'-anllnee*. ' s>1?lst lliu and cles iSs Q. Do you ubo rl e?1( at all? A. Yes, I use them a< Q. If from your knoa which, you hare galx the factory you hflH or impure in A. I do nol Asked if ar had asked manner. All th, exclude< they fd ; Thfl the p lor th court:, St All Of an PQ8?lbI? tO