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! WHO IS 10 IN L WILSON'S CABINET wiOApr r\f ho Dliei dKClUMCb t't HU?iJCa Ui New President. BRYAN'S CAREER EPITOMIZED McAdoo a Famous Tunnel Builds*. McReynclds Skilled In "Trust Bust Ing," Garrison a Man of Unusual Executive Ability. Others Able. Washington. March 5.? President Wilson Teu;.> >t i t 'o tlit- st-iia.e the names of th- :'o'.l< wing as the members of his c.ibimt: * . Seer*'ar\ o: S William .Ten \ nines *"vin of Vehrt" kv B88K SSWWC . T ~ HA WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN, Secretary of State. HH^^^Secretary of the Treasury?William .McAdoo of New York. R^^^HSecretary of War?Lindley M. Gar HHHBon of New Jersey. BBE^Bvttorney General?Jame6 C. McReyHH|^Lds of Tennessee. ^BE^H^ostmaster General?Albert CurieRfl^^Ba of Texas. TOW Secretary of the Navy?Josepbus j^H^/aniels of North Carolina. Secretary of the Interior?Franklin |Bfc K. Lane of California. Secretary of Agriculture?David A ^j^t^ton of Missouri. Secretary of Commerce?William Hj^Pc. Redfleld of New York. Secretary of Labor?William B. WilRHL son of Pennsylvania. With one or two exceptions, these H^Hmen have attained considerable nam^^ional fame, and all of them are ad m^Bnittedly able. HHRk Mr. Bryan's Career. H William J. Bryan has been so much H He the public eve for a good many I^H*< YLJhi RMk Secretary of the Treasury years HI seems almost i>< rfluous. Born In HB Salenr. III.. 1" he was graduated MB nith highest honors from Illinois colHH lege at .lacksonville in 1881 and reBE c ins master's decree in 1^1. H 1883 he was given the degree of H B. by 1'nion College of Law. Ch: HBi. After practicing lav in JackHHBville and Linco'n Neb., he served BBHBt member of the 52nd and 53rd tlnv:re written ttm "si!. Im|rro^rr . v.. ^Rvplank" for the Democratic naH|t) convention of 1*96 and made U?nsat!onal speech, he was nom!^Ved for president, but was defeated William McKinley. Nominated %ain in 1900. he was again beaten by IcKinley, and then established the Commoner and made a tour of the world. Nominated a third time in 190S. he was defeated by W. H. Taft. Mr. Bryan married Mary Elizabeth Baird in 1884. He has done much leotnring and written several books. McAdoo the Tunnel Builder. William Gibbs McAdoo, though a lawyer by profession, 1b knovi. * < ! most people as the builder of tvgreat system of railway tunnels < ; New York city. I'o was born n-.ir Marietta. Ga.. in and was educate! ,.t tb< ;y of Tennessee In ISS" V va a ift d to the bat ll LINDLEY Vi. CARRISQM. Secretary of War. ar.d Fame year he married Sarah Houston Fleming < ; Chattanooga He entered the practice of law in New York in 1S?2. ar.d since 19"1 has been interested chiefy in tunnel construction there. He is president of the Hudson & Manhattan Railroad coin panv. Lindley M. Barriscn. The selection of Lindley M. Garri' son. vice-chancellor of New Jersey, to i cor.rotnrv u ur ic In linp U'lth | President Wilson's idea that the hold | er of that position should be a man ' of unusual executive ability. He is a close friend of Mr. Wilson. Mr. Gam. son was born in Camden. N. J.. November 28. 18 >4. He is a son of Rev Joseph F. Garrison, an Episcopal j: lijBMjHHR- V^fcfrffip j %^MK| * VHwi JAMES C. M'REYNOLDS. Attorney General. clergyman. He is a brother of .Justice Charles G Garrison of the Now Jersey I supreme court. He was appointed ?o the chancerv court In June, ipo-i. and j reappointed by Chancellor .M hlon 1'itney. now a justice of the I'nited >tates Supreme court. In it'll for a j term of seven years. James C. McReynolds. in picking James Clark .McHeynolds ; tor th" position of attorney general , Mr. Wilson selected a man who has had a lot of experience as a "trust buster." He is a native of K'.kron, K\\. where he was born in 1S62, and a grad nate of Vanderbilt university and the law school of the University of YirI ] ALBERT BURLESON, Postmaster oenerai. . I ginia. From 1903 to 19^7 he was assistant attorney general of the United States He then returned to privato practice, but has been retained a^spej cial assistant to the attorney general in matters relating to the enforcement of the anti-trust laws. Mr. MoReynolds is unmarried. Albert S. Burleson. Albert Sidney Burleson already has served seven consecutive terms as f congressman from tne Tenth district ! of Texas and was re elected to the Sixty-third congress. He was born in .?an Marcos, Tex., ir. 1SG3. was edu red a the Agricultural and Mo"V.ar.icnl College o: Texas. Hay lor unl-1 versify and 'h- Ie*-itv of Texas, i t.i' v.a. admitted u ill. bar in if?4. j I He was assistant citv attorney of Aus- ! j iin for several years before going to j j rrr.fsrc-ss. Mrs r:::!.o:> was .Miss, I Vd'*le of Austin I | JcEsphoe Darnels. .lospphus Daniels. secretary of the ' I navy, is the one newspaper man given place in the cabinet. He lias also been active in politics and is the member of the Democratic national committee for North Carolina. Mr Daniels was born In at Washington. N. C.. and began his newspaper ca reer at the age of eighteen as editor of the Wilson iN. C Advance. In he became editor of the Raleigh ! State Chronicle, w hich 'line y. ars later j he consolidated with the NVnh faro I iinian and 'he \"<>ws and Observer j Franklin K. Lane. I-'rankiin Knij:i:f I.r.ne has been a member of the interstate comm.* roe i I ^ Sr : xe \ B?8^:?;: jjBB JOSEPHUS DANIELS, Secretary of the Navy. commission since il?05, and this experience is believed to have fitted him > fcr the executive and judicial tasks in ' administering the public land laws of he country Horn in Prince Edward '-land in 1 >?-4. he received his education In the University of California :.:ne .. i.. > .? r in San Francisco. Prior to his designation to the I he w;?* a Democratic political leader in California. He was j Deinoctatic candidate for governor. oeing cl*fe:u#Ki by a narrow margin r DAVID A. HOUSTON, Secretary cf Agriculture. si'.bse'ju* i.tly he was the Democratic caucus candidate for United States sena:or David F. Houston. j Tn David Franklin Houston, chan- i1 cellor of Washington university, St. Incuts, Wilson lias a secretary of agriculture who is familiar with the pro- I ' cesses of advancing scientific farming ; md allied questions in this country. .Mr. j Houston was president of the Texas Vgricultural and Mechanical college foi a number of years, and has taught 1 I. i i i (*' '' $'/ ^ < ; V f/y// ' ''' "# "' \ Wpl W ;-i w(*\ FRANKLIN K. LANE. Secretary of Mie Interior. in several other educational institutions. He was born In Monroe, N. C., ;n 1866, was educated at South Caro ina college and Harvard, and received the degree of LL. D. from Tu lane and the University of Wisconsin. , He married Miss Helen llcr.ll of Austin, j Tex., in 1^95 William C. Red^e'd. William ("ox K?-dfield ins !ust com tleteci his f:rst term as a ' oiu.ressniaij but h?- has b- en prom:!. i:r i-; ; r':tics of N'cw York for a fc.ad ; I WILLIAM C. REDFIELD. Secretary of Commerce. ypars. In 1902 and 1903 he was com ( missioner of public works for the Borough of Brooklyn. In private life ! he i6 a manufacturer of ventilating and heating apparatus and engines. Mr. Redfield was born in 185$ in Albany, X. Y.. was educated in the schools of that city, and removed to New York in 1877 and to Brooklyn in 1883. William B. Wilson. Pennsylvania's representative in the i cabinet is William naucnop w uson 01 Secretary of Labor. Hlossburg, named for secretary of la- ! bor. He was boru in Rlantyre Scot- 1 land, in and came to this country in 1S70. The next year he began | working in the Pennsylvania coal mines, and from early manhood he has been actively interested in trade union affairs. For right years he was in- ! ternationa! secretary-treasurer of the I'nited .Mine W'orkt rs of America. He i is now engaged in farming. Mr. Wil- ! son has been a in mix r of the la>t 1 three congresses, representing the Fifteenth district of It's state. He is married and lias nin?> children. STORY LESSON ON ELEPHANT Animal Intelligence and Faithfulness Are Recounted for Study by Man. The plcjitinnt is said to be the most Intelligent of all animals; certainly few four-footed creatures have served man so ably and faithfully. How courageous and loyal they can be is strikingly shown by an incident related by H. Perry Robinson in his book "Of Distinguished Animals," says the Youth's Companion. "A native Mahratta prince was engasren in a fierce battle with his enemies. and the struggle raged furiously about the standard-hearing el* pliant. At the moment win n it was ordi vd Lo halt. its mahout was kiln d. i"lie Mahrnt!a f?v c#s v.borne ba'Mi. but stili lit' . .it stii'.l firm, and the " tan dan! < ? it t ::na d to tlv. "ten ial\ ike si.idirrs of the . n:;?- i!i fi; to b>- outdone in (/..rage by an ! pliant. rr?Ili? ! and in Mini dro\? iln in iny back til! the tide of ha.tie sv.tpt past tho rooted 1 lephant and b-'f it. towering colossal among the s!a.u. "Tlu tight was won, and then they would have had the elephant tnove from the battlefield, but it waited for ! [he dead man's voice. For three days and nights it remained where It had been told to remain, and neither bribe 11 jf Finnllv thev I Iiur 11 t" til wwum uivfw ?v. - J . sent to the home village on the N'erbudda. a hundred miles away, and fetched the mahout's little son. a round-eyed, lisping child. Then, at last, the hero of that victorious day, remembering that its master had sometimes. In a brief absence, delegated his authority to the child, confessed its allegiance and, with shattered battle harness clanging at each stately stride, swung slowly along the road behind the boy." I 1 n y i Have vou sec F OF FORD < and a ful FORD P always or Come and T SUMTER, S. C. D. C. Shi j The For* l-30-tf Potash Pays, especially in rotations with cotton. < heavier than with cotton alone. We sell Potash Writ' for Pries ami Prri GERMAN KALI WORKS, loc Empire Bldj., Atlanta Bank A Trait Bldf Whitney Central Bint Bide.. Mew o do you give your i doped medicines? ever think of tha Many animals di< meat wita aope< which are worse i all. An animal with a we; down condition cann drugged. When the t they usually die. You should take as doctoring your stock your family. Noah's Horse I are medicines?not do safe side by giving yoi te-.ted remedies. folio U-Tv iv N ro I m vr";?- Sf-siM'V, Colli' * !. Si:.::.;;- to .. iiiii: : -:ini Cfvioin prici? Jc <<" t iny <i. e ii<t. N :r>* 1-Vvor Homely i-: j i . ! t In.1i a:: i r;i*- r-v.l ::i? :it ? / ruilK f> <:i '.I- lonuno. Tivo >lzo-i. "O .N'o ili'.- Liniment lathe l? >t stable r -r:n* ly on the market hoi chloroform, ammonia. i t , hi- linil'i. 25c. 5iJe. Call.>n can-, at Srt.no. These remedies are sold by j cine. Made in Richmond by t "I have been using ./ 1} Noah's Liniment an<l tb ,J 'A Noah's Colic Remedy th J~*. on our stock with the es ^ C* of ) ) best results, and find fo: i-V^sS. them to be the best sh remedies of the kind I w. yc p have ever used and to ?l__ recommend them to dc Ran MPl P stock owners.? D. J. ed i' r Griffith, Sup't S. C. su Penitentiary, Colum- Si ?- Sold and guaranteed by Kings he Man with a Bank Account I an laugh to scorn the prospect of want nd starvation. Not only is a bank ac- fl cunt assurance against want?it is a r.oney maker, and a good one when the ccount is placed with us, for we pay he highest interest. Begin now. Put >r 1-11 - * ? A o r IUQU H UUiiai ur LWU awaj a mv " ? j : will increase will amaze you. Wee Nee Bank m the new ID? CARS 1 line of ARTS i hand. j ake a Look. PHONE 553. J aw Co. 1 d Man. ' ! cf <he Bolls You Harvest end cn How You Feed the Plants 'hatever the nature of your soil, its natural ^ ly cf available potash will not meet the demands cf a bl^ cotton crop. OTASH J r should contain at least 3 to 4 per cent, of actual icavy soils, a: J 5 to 7 percent, for light soils. 1 or 2 per cent, potash arc out of date. Provide ^ lur Kainit requirements for side dressing, and agatnst bltgkt and rust. :orn and peas, where th' potash demand is much ' OTP.rvnimfi ba? uo. I 10 any quanwiy iiuiu t Book on Cotton Culture 42 Broadway, New York 1 Sarmnih Monadnoek Block, Chios* v. ri'aaaa >an rranelaeo UWliSr yTfc&F sick animals i after treat-^ i medicines than none at ak heart or run ot stand being -eaction sets in i much care in as you would Remedies pe. Be on the ir animals these coTmi?sv!rt,l f'T that . :iti 1 : !i ftili-s.- in li-tor :n.-1 i;n 1 ho .i Ix'tri'.', tin 1 uortn i !::<? I. r lever, ^ !! i. Inn^: trout Vs, v r i-i rows, 'iiven , iUid all-round f.trsiily and Contains noakonaphth.i benzine, or and $1.00 a bottle. all dealers In medlho Noah Remedy Co. "My stable boss says e Noah Reme?lles are BEFIIIWTCT JNf e best he eve reused, Mg e have had so much 8jHB iiuble. lie also ea- Ir.t 11 r J BBsfi >rses your colic rem- i IIiImKi 9kI ly as belnefine ami a IH/miI W MjjC re cure.?T. J. Davis, flfwHwl KB ip't State Farm, II, lluli,ll fHB isslter, Va." HUtMH*" 4M; KalwoMiiST Egj pa rot iarMg jHY tree Drug Co. and M. L. Allen ;