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WILMINGTON 9! XHrt 10 r SAFE IN HY Reasons or Discharge of No- n i 11 . m mm. 51 SHIELD Hb MURDERER 5. Men in the Companies, Who Are Criminals of the Worst Sort. Acting Secretary of War Oliver Tells Why the President Took the Action lie did In Regard to the Fort Brownsville Soldiers Government Had no Mans of Punishing th Crime Committed Except by Dis charging all Uie Men Dbbandment of the Infantry lias Begun. Washington, November 19. "The three companies of the twenty-filth infantry were ordered discharged be cause it is not safe to have them in the army. They cannot be trusted and for the protection of the public and the preservation of the discipline of the army their discharge is neces sary." Acting Secretary Oliver of the war department said today, "The idea seems to prevail that the men were by Wergand and the priests will chant the Litanies mlseulded perpetrator oi tne aeea. Soon after this announcement was made to him the pope went to tne throne room, where he admitted to private audience, Mr. Kennedy, rec tor of the American College, who pre sented to his holiness, Mr. and Mrs. Louise J. McCloskey, of Philadelphia, and Paul S. King, of New York, who noticed that the pope was pale and labored under some emotion. After this reception the pope proceeded to the hall of the consistory wnere ne received about 200 persons, including 25 students of a South American col leee. to whom he delivered a short address. None of these persons Knew anything of the explosion. PRODUCED NO ALARM The explosion produced no alarm outside the basilica the sound being taken by everybody for the noonday gun, but by afternoon the, news was known all over the city and a stream of people went througn the church to view the result of the' explosion. There is a certain nervousness in the city, and people are apt to mag nify small events. This was exempli fied this afternoon when the explosion of a fire cracker in the new tunnel, above which stands the quirinal, caused considerable excitement and alarm, people fearing another bomb outrage. It was soon discovered, however, that the cracker had beem set off by a boy as a joke. DESCRIPTION OF BOMB. Every piece of the bomb that could be found was gathered up by the po lice and carefully examined. The bomb evidently consisted of a . large tin box bound tightly together with wire of two sizes. It must have con tained two pounds of gun powder and three pounds of nails. The nails were of three sizes, t,ome seven inches long and so heavy that the force of the ex plosion threw them but a short dis tance. The nails were enveloped in newspapers dated November 16th and 17th, proving that the bomb was pre pared either yesterday or today. Cardinal Merry del Val, the papal secretary of state, was in the Borgia THE CHIPSET CASE. Declson of the Lower Court Affirmed THE OUTLOOK. MAN'S IDEAL AND WOMAN'S DEAL APPEAL IS POSSIBLE. Today's Epoch-Making Election. (London Daily Mail, November 6th.) The election for the governorship of New York, which is held In the United States today, is, by the judgment of all Americans of discernment, of epoch making importance. The candidate are Mr. W. R. Hearst, standing as democrat, and Mr. Hughes, standing as republican. We have already dealt fully with the candidates. Mr. Hearst is the greatest newspaper proprietor in the United States, while Mr. Hughes is a well known and distinguished lawyer. ' Special importance has been given to the election of Mr. Roosevelt's in tervention on behalf of Mr. Hughes. Seldom or never in political history has a more terrific diatribe been hurl ed against one man by another than that which, by the mouth of Mr. Root, his minister, Mr. Roosevelt di rected against Mr. Hearst. He de nounced Mr. Hearst as "an Insincere, self-seeking demogogue who is trying to deceive the working men of New York by false statements and. false . promises." He declared that Mr Dr Craosey in His Sermons and Writ- Hearst sought not the "calm and law vr. ijrapbej fui redress of wrongs, but turmoil of ings Questioned the Virgin Birth or inflamed passions and the terrorism of Jesus and Contended That There revengeful force." Mr. Hearst was vi.u "guided by the selfish motives of tne Were Other Fallacies in Doctrines revolutionist, and he would plunge our , the EpUP Omrch-He thurmoa ad d,s- Tried for His Heretical Teachings he denounced Mr. Hearst as directly . . , , c-..,i ' guilty of incitements to iurder. and and Oie Decision was That he Should ; gd hl9 dQOr the Cf Author "The Digression of Pally,- Highest Court Decided in Favor of His Suspension. be Suspended An App al was Taken to the Ecclesiastical Court of Review, Which Sustained the Deci sion of the Trial Court. ordered discharged because they re fused to tell on their companion, and apartments busily at work with his because they were black. Nothing private secretary at noon and did not could be further from the trutn. near the explosion. 'The soldiers shot up a town. All 1 The rumor having spread abroad of them refuse to tell anything about tnat te pope intended to visit St. the disgraceful affair at Brownsville, Peter's today to pray before the which resulted in murder. The com- tomb where the outrage was commit- panies are shielding murderers. There te($f drew an exceptionally large are men in the companies wno are crowd to the bascilica. 1 his rumor criminals of the worst sort. Every was unfounded, for only Cardinal effort possible has been made by the Rampolla entered with the proces war department to find the guilty sion men, but without avail. If these three days' service of prayer will companies were permitted to remain J De celebrated in all the churches in In the service, and were to shcot up expiation of this offense to religion. President McKinley. Since the great speech which Cicero alleges that he de livered against Catiline, but which is suspected to have been written for his own glorification after the Catilinarian conspiracy, nothing has teen heard like this invective. At a stroke it has made ! the issue one between Mr Roosevelt Buffalo, N. Y., November 19. The j and Mr. Hearst. For if Mr. Hearst be Rev. Dr. Algernon S. Crapsey, of St. ! elected today, it will be the gravest re- . , . . i buff which the people of the United Andrews Protestant Episcopal church, ; states have ver administered to a Rochester, N. Y., is condemned to president. . . , , , , The invective was probably much suspension from the church as a re- overdont go and moderate an suit of the decision of the ecclesiasti- American observer as Mr. Maurice Low nrTiloh ia mjjdp state? in me current numoer or int another town and again endanger the lives of citizens, the war department would be in an indefensible position. It is Impossible to court martial each of the men in these companies, for a rhnrcrp cannot be nreierred against every one of the members of the companies. "The government has no means of nnniKhinir the crime committed ex cept by discharging all the men." Fort Reno, Okla., November 19.- The first discharges of the colored troops at Fort Reno were made today, when twenty-five solders were paid off and given transportation to their homes. Twenty-five or thirty men will bo discharged each day as the rolls are completed, until all of the three com panies of the 25th infantry have been dism?s-ed. McIVER MEMORIAL. MEETING. Large NuihIht of Prominent Educa tors in Greensboro to Attend Snh- scriptions to the Statue Fund. (Special to The Messenger.) Greensboro, 'N. C, November 19. There Is alreadv a laree number of prominent men and women from North Carolina, and many leading educators from other states, in the city to be in attendance on the mem orial exercises to be held at the State Normal and Industrial College tomor row over its late President Chas. D. Mclver. The midnight and early morning trains will bring many more. The board of directors of the college Is in session tonight and may select a successor to Dr. Mclver before it ad journs. The local movement commit tee made a partial canvass of the city this afternoon for subscriptions to the Mclver" statue, raising over $1500 in four hours. Subsequent contributions will swell the Greensboro fund to $2, 500. The Normal college directors have postponed election of a president to succeed Dr. Mclver, until Monday af ternoon. Death of Mrs. Frank R. Stockton. Washington, November 19. Mrs. Frank R. Stockton, widow of the nov elist died at her home In this city at 10:30 o'clock tonight. Mrs. Stockton was born in Georgetown, S. C, in 1841. Her maiden name was Marian E. Tut tle, and she was the daughter of an old and distinguished South Carolina family. PEOPLE DEEPLY INCENSED. This bomb explosion makes the third anarchist outrage In Italy in four days, the other two being the murder of Professor Rossi, in Na bles yesterday, and the explosion of a bomb in front of the Cafe Aragno in this city on November 14th. The at tempt of today has caused deep-seated and universal horror and indigna tion on account of the locality select ed by the miscreants, and the resent ment of the people is very great. St. Peter's is the greatest bascilica in Christendom. It took 350 years in the building and stands today a result of the efforts of 43 popes, and the genius of Michael Angeio, Bramante and Rafael. The commission of such an outrage in such a place has called forth unlimited condemnation and is characterized as proving that the per petrators of the crime were actuated by feelings worse than those which moved the vandals and the sarcene3 The theory is held that this attempt was not directed against the papacy, but rather a challenge to society in general by attacking religion, the most sacred institution of the people cal court of review, public today. The court of review sustains the decision of the lower court, which was that Dr. Crapsey ! should be suspended for heretical teachings. It is stated by Bishop Walker today, that contrary to the general belief, there could be no appeal taken from the decision of the court of review. The decision! of the trial court which is affirmed by the highest court of the church was follows- "That the respondent, as Dr. Crap- be suspended from exercising the functions of a minister of the church, until such time as he shall satisfy the ecclesiastical authority of the diocese that his belief and teaching conform to the doctrine of the apostles creed, and the Nicene creed, as the church deliberate fraud. It is, perhaps, for w -rooivwi tho samp However. ; tnis reason tnat ne nas oDtainea so we exnress the earnest hope and de- I mi,ch support, not only among the we express tne edjuet.i uupe mu uc i,, rrky Hnt nkn nmono- tnat tne respondent may be m. thou;htful profession; TILEIR SILVER WEDDLNG. "National Review" that "many people who believe in Mr. Roosevelt as they never believed before in any man can not differentiate between the remedies proposed by Mr. Roosevelt and those proposed by Mr. Hearst. If Mr. Roosevelt has done good and made re form possible, then why, they ask, may not Mr. Hearst equally be the means by which good is to be accomplished?" Mr. Hearst's candidature has been pro duced by Trust abuses in the United States. He stands as the avowed and pledged advocate of limitation of the trusts; and to call him a hair-brained socialist is to abuse words. Some of his supporters, beyond any doubt, have delivered foolish and incendiary speeches, but he himself makes war not on capital, but on capital illegitimate ly gained. And in this struggle he has on his side a real grievance There can be little doubt that last year he was nllx r r rl "Flfoif a 4 "NT aiit1 Vnrb fi Y rl that he was deprived of this office by and self-respecting and "Honeymoon Conversations' etc "Who "is the ideal woman?" fcsked the widow pensively, laying down her embroidery hoop and clasping her hands around her head. The bachelor blew a emoke ring re Sectively and squinted through it at rthe window. You.ve got powder on your nose!' he remarked disapprovingly. The widow snatched up a diapha nous lace handkerchief and began rubbing her nose. Have I got too much onT she asked anxiously. "Any," replied the bachelor, with dignified scorn, "is too much in a man's eyes." The widow laughed and stopped rub bing her nose. "But it isn't in his eyes," she pro tested, "if it is put on so artistically that he doesn't see it Getting it on straight is such an art!" and the wid ow sighed. "Black art, you mean," exclaimed the bachelor, disgustedly. "A made up woman is like a paste jewelry and imitation bric-a-brac She looks cheap and unsubstantial and as though she wouldn't wear well. Even granting that you aren't half good, enough for us" "What!" "And you don't come up to our stan dards" The widow dropped her embroidery hoop and sat up with blazing eyes. "You flatter yourself, Mr. Travers!" "No, I don't," retorted the bachelor. "It's you who flatter us, when you think it neccessarv to plaster over your defects and put additions to your figures and rouge on your cheeks and frills on vour manners. As a matter of fact" he added decisively, a man s deal is a natural woman with a nat ural complexion and natural hair and natural ways and natural self-respect. The widow sighed and took up her embroider hoop again "I used to think so too." she said sadly. The bachelor lifted his eyebrows in quiringly. "Before I discovered," she exclaimed, that it was just as often a woman with butter-colored hair and tailor- made figure and a 'paste' and a manu factured 'bloom of health.' The truth is," she concluded, stabbing her nee dle very carefully into the center of i an nnhealthv looking green ro.e. "that ' alive into believing her a nun. It isn t. what she says but how she says It that counts. There are some women who could read your death warrant, or repeat the multiplication table la such a confiding voice and with such, a tender glance that you would take them in jour arms and thank them for it. It isn't what a woman wears but haw she wears it; it's not her beauty nor her talents nor ser frocks that make her fascinating, but her ways, the little earmarks or femininity that God put on every creature born to wear petticoats; and if she's got those she may be a Lucretia Borgia or a moody Mary at heart; she may be brown or vellow or pale or green; she may be old or young, big or little, stupid or clever, and still wear a beautiful halo. The trouble. he added, flicking the end of his cigar thoughtfully, "is not with a man's ideal but with a woman a deal. She holds all the cards but she plays them badly. When a two-spot of flattery would win tier point, she deals a chap the queen of arguments; when the five of smiles would tale the trick for her, she plays the deuce of a pout. When the ace of sympathy or the ten of tact would put the whole game of love into her hands, she thinks it is time to be funny and flings a man the joker." The widow laid her work on the ta ble beside her, folded her hands tn her lap and smiled at the bachelor T t I said." she re- sweetly. "That's just what marked gently. "What you said?" The widow nodded and rubbed her nose reminiscently with the end of her handkerchief. "Yes," she replied, "it Isn't putting powder on your nose or rogue on your cheeks or perfume on your petti coats or a broad 'A' on your accent that shocks a man, but putting them on inartistically. It Isn't the things you do. but the things you overdo that offend the musculine taste. It's the 'overdone' woman that a man hates the woman who Is over-dressed or overly made-up, or overly cordial, or overly flattering, or overly clever, or overly good, or overly anything. He doesn't want to see how the wheels go around at the toilet table or in a wo man's head or her heart; and it's the subtle, elusive little thing that he doesn't notice until he steps on her and finds ber rooking up adoringly at him under his nose that he idealizes." "And marries," added the bachelor no men admire the same woman, and conclusively. nnp n admlrpa the. same thine ' "And then forgets." sigh-d the wid- in two women. Now, there s Miss Gunning, who wears a sweater and says 'damn' and is perfectly natural I . . aft sire way clear, during the thirty days which under the canon of the church must intervene before sen tence can be pronounced to fully sat isfy the ecclesiastical authority of such conformity of his part." The decision of the court of review wTas delivered to Bishop Walker to day by the Rev. Henry Anstice, clerk of the court of review. Accompany iag it was the following letter from the Right Rev. John Scarborough Bishop of New Jersey, of the court of reviews. "New York, November 16. 1906. among men and tradesmen in New York. A mere vul gar Catiline, as his enemies represent him might sway the masses, but could never make an effective appeal to the classes who think and know. It is the long series of Trust scandals in the United States that have made Mr. Hearst so formidable and the American people so restive. Little or nothing has yet been done to bring the meat packers to book. They are still free to can garbage, and to make enormous . profits in the process. The ana president i piracy on a sigSLntic scaie. a hundred other huge and powerful trusts are at ! work manipulating prices, crushing Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Llnder Will Cele brate Happy Event on the 21st of This Month. Handsomely engraved invitations in letters of silver hnv been received to the silver weaaing or Mr. and Mra. G. W. Linder. The invitations read as follows: Mr. amd Mrs. G. W. Linder- request the honor of your presence at the celebration of the twenty-fifth anniversary of their marriage on Wednesday, November twenty-first one thousand nine hundred and six at eight p. m. at their residence, No. 115 South Seventh street. Wilmington, North Carolina. SIIONTS IN SUPREME CHARGE. Radical Changes in Organization for Government of the Canal Zone Made by the President. Trial of Thaw May Begin Soon. New York .November 19. District Attorney Jerome today served notice upon counsel for Harry K. Thaw that the prosecutor would appear in court tomorow and ask for a special jury be fore Recorder Goff on December 3rd to try Thaw for the murder of Stan ford White the architect. A panel of 150 names will be requested. Mr. Jerome adds that the case is one that required attention and dispatch. Thaw is charged with murder in the first de gree. Devotion of Forty Honrs Closes Today. The devotions of forty hours will , close at St. Thomas' church this even- ing at 8 o'clock. Last erecQing Rev. Father Joseph, of Charlotte, preached a rrapig Iseirinon "on dpsiting tiiQ churches daily. The speaker impress ed upon all that the church was God's t house. This evening the closing ser mon, will be by Bishop Haid. At the 10 o'clock mass today the bishop will administer the sacrament of confirma tion to a class of 29 children and 4 adults. At the evening' devotion the choir will, sing pealm Dixit Dominus Washington, November 1 An order signed on the Isthmus of Panama by President Roosevelt, making radical changes in the organization of affairs of government for the canal zone, was made public today at the offices of the commission. The order gives to Chairman Shonts supreme authority over all depart ments. It reorganizes the entire work ings of the commission in accordance with the president's view of controll ing the situation upder his plsn to press the excavation as rapidly as pos sible. The executive committee of three members, each, the head of a de partment, has been abolished, and in its stead seven departments are created and the chief of each will report and receive instructions from the chairman of the commission. These departments will be under the direction of John F. Stevens, chief engineer; Richard B. Rodgers, General counsel; William C. Borgas, chief sanitary officer; D. W. Ross, chief purchasing officer; E. S. Benson, general auditor; J. Williams, disbursing officer, and Jackson Smith, manager of labor and quarters. The president will take up tike ques tion of the appointment of a new com mission upon his return to Washington. "Pursuant to the canon, you are hereby notified that the court of re view of the second judicial depart ment has determined the appeal in the matter of the presentment of the Rev. Dr. Algernon S. Crapsey' by unanimously affirming the judgment of the ecclesiastical court of Western New York, (Signed) "JOHN SCARBOROUGH." The full context of the decision covers forty typewritten pages. This document will be delivered to Dr. Crapsey at Rochester. Bishop Walker said that out of per sonal regard for Dr. Crapsey he would not make the document public at this time. In announcing the decision Bishop Walker gave out the following state ment: "The court having taken the matter under advisement, and impressed with a profound sense of its responsi bility in discharging the serious duty cast upon it, met from time to time to consider the appesj. After full consideration of the questions pres ented it determined with the unani mous concurrence of its members, that the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed. "The conferences of the court were j held October 20, November 2, and J November 16, and the decision j finally formulated on the last named date. In compliance with the canon which requires the decision of a court of review shall be in writing, signed by the members uniting therein, and that it shall distinctly specify the grounds of the decision, the court formulated these grounds at consider able length, signed the decision in duplicate and instructed the clerk to deliver the same personally to the bishop of Western New York and the Rev. Dr. Crapsey." Dr. Crapsey in his sermons and writings questioned the Virgin birth of Jesus. He also contended that there were fallacies in other beliefs and doctrines forming the foundation of the Protestant Epscopal church. Rochester, N. Y., November 19. The probability that Dr. Crapsey will recant any of the opinions which led to his ecclesiastical condemnation or that he will in any way recede from the position he has taken are so very slight as not to be worth considera tion. When he was seen by an As sociated Press representative today and told of the verdict of the court, Dr. Crapsey had not been officially in formed. He ' would not then oiscuss the matter. Later after he has had time to consult with his counsel, he will issue a full statement which "will plainly set forth his position in the controversy. - in gets ecsuiuo uei unu i ----- of himself!" epostulated the I ideal woman." competition, plundering the consumer, ruining the little trader, accumulating immense fortunes. Congress appears impotent, and even Mr. Roosevelt has not achieved any large measure of suc cess in his efforts to control the trust magnates, men who hate him as bitter ly as they hate Mr. Hearst, who are immensely powerful, and who are ab solutely and entirely without' scruple. All the strength of the Trusts wil be used against Mr. Hearst today, but the election will really be decided by the moderate men. If they believe that Mr. Roosevelt can overcome obstruc tive influences and take affective steps against the trxists, they -.v ill vote for Mr liughes. They know Mr. Roosevelt, admire his character, and believe him to be honest and fearless. If, how ever, they think that he is likely to be overborne and thwarted by the force of the republican machine, which is to some extent dominated by the trusts they will vote for Mr. Hearst. In either case the vote will be one against the trusts, which njay well tremble at the prospects of choosing between the devil and the deep sea. But that Mr. Hearst's success will mean, as his op ponents allege, a general catacylsm, no one closely acquainted with Ameri can affairs for one moment believe. The legislation which he would intro duce would seem mild to Englishmen, and at the very worst could not do to American interests half the mischief that the present British government has caused in the United Kingdom. This is Worth Remembering. As no one is Immune, every person should remember that Foley's K:dn(y Cure will cure any case of kidney and bladder trouble that is not brv-ond the reach of medicine. Jos C. Shepard, At this season the average editor cal leth upon his deliquent wood subscrib ers with chills in his voice; but the de linquent wood subscriber hath many calls for his ware Raleigh Enterprise. A Year of Blood. The year 1903 will long be remem bered In the home of F. N. Tacket, of Alliance, Ky., as a year of blood; ehich flowed so copiously from Mr. Tacket's lungs that death seemed very near. He writes: "Severe bleeding from the lungs and a frightful cough had brought me at death's door, when I began taking Dr. King's New Dis covery for Consumption, with the as tonishing result that after taking four bottles I was completely restored and as time has proven permanently cured." Guaranteed for Sore Lungs, Coughs and Colds, at R. R. Bellamy! drug store. Price 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free- No man gets ecstatic over a bad mitation bachelor. ! "Then whv," said the widow, lay ing down her needle and fixing the bachelor with a glittering eye, "do you spend so much time on the golf links, and out driving and hunting and walk ing with her?" Because," explained the bachelor meekly, "she sometimes hits the ball, and she can sit in her saddle without being tied there, and she doesn't grab the rein3 nor call a 'hoof a 'paw.' But," he added fervently, "I d take my hat and run if she asked me to spend my life with her." Oh, well." the widow tossed her head independently. "She won't. Miss Gunning can take care of herself." "That's just it!" pursued the bach elor. "The very fact she can take care of herself and get across gutters alone and pick up things for herself and handle her own horse and beat me at golf and tennis, takes away that grati fying sense of protection " "And superiority," interposed the widow, softly. That a man likes to reel toward a woman," concluded the bachelor, ig noring. her "Muscle and biceps and a 32-inch waist," he added, "are re freshing,' but in time they get on your nerves. It may not be immoral for a dear little thing to say 'damn', but it affects a man just as it would to hear a canary bird squawlng like a parrot. When a chap is going for a walk cross country he may pick cut the girl with the stride and the strong back, who can leap a lence and help herself over puddles, to accompany him, but when he is ready for a walk to the altar he naturally prefers some body who understands the art of lean ing gently on the musculine arm and who hasn't any rough edges or " "Sharp points of view," suggested the widow. "Or opinions on the equality of the sexes," added the bachelor. "Or on politics." "Or on the higher lite." "Or on anything but the latest way to curl her hair and make over a hat," finished the widow. 'Tsn't it funny," she added thoughtfully twist ing a French knot into the centre of the sickly green rose "how many men Idealize a fool?" The bachelor started. "I I beg pardon," he stammered. "All a woman has got to know In order to wear a halo," went on the widow, calmly fastenvig the French knot with a jerk of her needle, "Is how to keep it on straight. All a man demands of her is the negative virtues and the knowledge of 'how not to do things; how not think, how not to argue, how not to be athletic, how not to spend money, how not to take care of herself, how not 7 "You've got your ideas into a French ow, "while he goes off to amuse him 6elf with the obvious person with pe roxide hair and a straight-front fig ure. I don't know," she added tenta tively, "tnat it s mucn run being an Who said you were?" demanded the bachelor suddenly. The widow started and turned pink to her chin. Oh nobody that is, several peo ple, Mr. Travers." "Had you refued them?" asked the bachelor thoughtfully. The widow blushed a deeper plnkV and bent over her pale green rose sor low that the bachelor could not see her eyes. "Why that is I don't see what that has to do with it," "It has everything got to do with it" replied the bachelor positively. "And you haven't told me yet," con tinued the widow, suddenly changing the subject, "who j'ou consider the ideal woman." "Don't you know,"aaked the bachelor insinuatingly. The widow shook her head without lifting her eyes. "Well, then, she is nut so many of them have told you." "You haven't," persisted the widow. - The bachelor sighed and rose to go, "The Ideal woman" he said as he slipped on his gloves, "is the womaa you can't get. Is that the firelight playing on your pompadour?" he added looking down upon the wfdow through half-crossed eyes. "Do you know fcr a moment I thought it was a halo." MME CALVE GIVES UI STAGE. NotctJ Actress Bclleveil to be Botroth ed to U Rich American. Pari.. November 19. The vague ru mora which have been circulating hero for several days to the effect that Mma Calve was betrothed to a rich Ameri can and would never again appar on thr stage, are apparently confirmed. LaM night, having quietly let her apartment, the singer left Paris for a long porlod after confiding the new? to a few intimate friends, but demand ing a pledge of frocrecy Hoarding th name of her future husband. Mmo Calve's servants said sho went away with her affianced, but they wero un ab!.' to give either their destination or his name. It is believed that the couple are now on board a yacht In the Mediterranean. Rev. Lrn Rroughton Returned the Tickets. Atlanta Is happy once more. The press agent of Mr. Thomas Dixon, Jr., has arrived there and his first demon stration concerned the presentation of six complimentary eats to the Rev. Len Broughton. Brother Len side stepped, the tickets were returned, and the incident filled six or eight columns In the newspapers. The press agent, however. Is more anxious to fill the theatre. Raleigh Times. The business world looks with hor ror 'upon Hearst and his methods. Without the Harrimans the Hearsts knot!" broke in the bachelor, des- as factors in the political lif of the perately. "You're all tangled up in country would be impossible. With the thread of your argument. It isn't Harriman and his kind growing in how not to do things, but how to do power, the danger of Hearst move- them that Is important In a woman, ments is likely to increase. Chicago It isn't what she does but how she News. does them that matters. She may com- ,,. , mit a highway murder or a low-down piles quickly and positively cured burglary and If she does it in a ruf- with Dr. Shoop's Magic Ointment. It's fled skirt and a picture hat any man made for Pilea alone and It doea the will forgive her. Her morals may be l-? BurciT, , , . . ... ,ma f .A , Itching, painful, protruding or bllndVW as crooked and dark as a lane at mid- mil w.. it. . De Witt's Sidney and Bladder Pills j act on Dotn moneys ana uver, ana am a as crweu suu ua u ox mm- .m disappear like magic bv Its use. result afford tne qaidtc3t relief froca night; but if her manners are smooth Large, Nickel Capped glassjara. 10 excess of nrim d 0oia by Rst R. and gentle and guileless and tender cents. Sold and - recommended by she can deceive the cleverest man Robert il mnrry .'