Newspaper Page Text
e t seb and alas 4o. b It cares r d. qob sad preents Pneumonia. Muyono 53rd and Jeersono Pm. for medical advice ab. "Cured Neuralgia Pain" "I take pleas ure in writing to you "I had a neuralgia pain in 1 S. for five years, and I c -ni your Liniment for one s and was completely I recommend your very highly."-Mas. w, 1216 Mandeville ew Orleans, La. Quincy Sore Throat i. ll H r L. CAULK, of Wilson St., Wilmington, writes:-"I bought a bot Shea's Liniment for the sore throat and it cured I shall always keep a . l the house." All'S NT trelief from rheu lumba neu croup, ton hoarse tad chest I I assa, s Pills er. sr. ates pm . 840 the Mudels, eer a.e 0 a0 0swmr . s.as. assaurasg the Boys. eba presents an idea that pat him on the back and im, and he will develop a grpCulture and become the r heart in your declining WllB love the homes and that you have worked so tyl for. has not paid in your case *ems give the boy a chance lwithout your handicap lia good enough for me is for the boy," Is a maxim ct a New England farmer. . ,b a chance at an agricul and he will help you ileaks nd turn the past into a brighter future. SSe Die From Grief. is striking attachment to his Ib rcorded from Vllleneuve While attending the ci a municipal councillor's Sdtantiln, a resident of that tracted congestion of the which he died suddenly. Sdog0. a small fox terrier, ilit him. Since the death Sthe poor animal re i4 passed lhole days at moaning on the tomb of .hister. Yesterday the ter Mud dead.--Le Figaro. S hort Trip. started to read Dr. Eliot's ae did he get before stop h the bookcase." A PCOD STORY Wnmn of 70 "One in 10,000." tlMW of one of Ohio's most newspaper editors and hader in politics in his day, i 71 years old and a "stron than you will find in ten o aud she credits her fine ditlo. to the use of Grape lers ago I had a terrible permanently injured my Ir years I lived on a of corn starch and milk. [ so repugnant to me that I gSte It up. Then I tried, one ae,a dosen different kinds but the process of diges Ine at pain. act until I began to use ad three years ago that It has proved, with the blel , a -reat boon to aht me health and vigor I erpm eeted to again ena Sgratitude I never tall to Il plses." Name glven by eattle Creek. MIch. t " the ittle book "IThe "to boe afnd itphgs. helese Imeart A usm temr. a em aS toma ama se es amm IN b NEW MINISTER TO PORTUGAL I Henry Sherman Boutell, who has represented the Ninth district of II linois in the national congress for the past 13 years, but who failed of re nomination last year, has been nom inated by President Taft as minister plenipotentiary to the new republic of Portugal, at an annual salary of $10.000. He succeeds Henry T. Gage of Los Angeles, Cal., who recently re signed the mission because of Ill health and to look after his private interests in southern California. Mr. Gage was appointed minister I to Portugal in December, 1909, and was in charge of the legation at LAs bon when the monarchy of King Man uel was overthrown and the republic of Portugal proclaimed in May, 1910. He returned to the United States soon after that event, and never has ' been personally accredited to Dr. Braga, provisional president of Portu gal. Since then the affairs of the A erican legation at Lisbon have been conducted by Mr. Lorillard, secretary 6f the legation. At the state department it is declared that the appointment of Mr. Boutell to the Portuguese mission involves no change in the status of the dip lomatic representative of this government at Lisbon, and makes no change in the diplomatic relations between the United States and the new republic. Ac cording to this statement, Mr. Boutell will continue in the same relationship to the provisiobal government of Portugal as the charge d'affaires whom he succeeds. Several members of the diplomatic corps maintain that the appointment of the new minister to Portugal is, to all intents and purposes, an official recognition by the United States of the new republic of Portugal, regardless of the view of the state department officials on that point. SILENT MAN OF THE SENATE The silent man of the United I States senate is Winthrop Murray Crane of Massachusetts. Mr. Keaen, Mr. Penrose and Mr. Wetmore could not be called babblera, but they are noisy and disorderly compared to Crane, and their economy of speech ,, becomes wasteful prodigality meas-a ured by his standard of conservation. Crane would prefer to talk with his hands if he could make himself under stood that way. The Massachusetts senator hates any kind of a racket. One could not imagine him banging a door, wearing squeaky shoes or sum moning a page by clapping his hands. No sound heralds his approach as he comes down the senate corridor. He does not walk, he glides about. When / nor gliding he is sliding, and when not sliding he is flitting. The only thing disturbed when Crane comes into the senate or goes out is- the atmosphere-he makes a slight draft, that is all. It is not seriously believed that Mr. Crane can walk through a door without 6pening it, and yet the faculty he has of appearing suddenly, noiselessly and unexpectedly in places where there has been no sign of him an instant before, almost Invites the conviction that he is more an apparition than a man and a senator. When the clerk of the senate starts to call the roll, Mr. Crane is not in the chamber, and yet when his name is reached-and it is only a short way down the list-his voice answers "Here." Senators turn to look, sad he is gone! Perhaps the swinging door 1eaeing to the cloakroom is still gently oscillating, if so it is the only sign that Mr. Crane's corporeal body had been there a moment before and thai his voice did not come through the skylight. MAYOR IS OUSTED BY WOMEN The women of Seattle, Wash., exer cising their political power for the t first time, recently ousted from ofce Mayor Hiram L. Gill and elected as his successor George W. Dilling. While e the women did not accomplish this work alone, they were in a large , measure instrumental in briniag It Sabout, so much so that the reslt Swould have been different had they not voted. Gill was elected mayor of Seattle a year ago by a majority of ,,/ 3,300. Women were then denied the right of suffrage, but in November . were clothed with that power. Almost from the start Gill's administration / came in for sharp criticism. S' As soon as the woman sufrage t amendment to the constitution was adopted last November the move ment to "recall" Gill under a provi sion of the city charter and elect a successor to serve the unexpired term took form and the women entered into the campaign with enthusiasm. s The campaign was a bitter one. Half the women of Seattle who were en - t franchised in November qualified as voters by enrolling their names and to e them is due e he fact that in the recent election the majority of 3,300 given to Gill a year before was reversed and his opponent, George W. Gilling, was elected by a plurality of 6,231. The number of women registered exceeded S30,000. I NEGRO NAMED FOR HIGH POST One of the leading negroes of the country is William Henry Lewis of Boston, who was sominated by Pres Ident Taft to be assistant attorney general of the United States. From obscurity and from the lowly oondl, tions of a slave he has thus risen to his present position of trust and responsit bility. He wpa born of slave parents in Berkeley, Va., in 1863, while the Civil war was raging in all its fierce ] intensity. At the age of 2$ he weant t / to New England and entered Am Sherst college, wherem he made rapid S progress in his studies and became - aesptain of the footbeall team. He was Sthe class orator at commenment, Sand won two of the main prises of / the college. He then entered BHar vard, where he upheld his o of proficiency in his atudies and develop y ed into an athlete. For two years he a played denter in the football team S/ and was later one of the coaches. On I bebtng admitted to the bar he began e the practice of his profession in Washington and during the adm·nstratlon of s President Roosevelt was appointed assistant district attorney. m- Last summer it was announced that Mr. Lewis would be appointed as sistant attorney general, but the nomination was held in abeyance until re * cently. Among the men of his race in the United States Mr. Alwisis sdd to it be surpassed only by Booker T. Washingtoa, and their respectve abilities lie Salong somewhat different lines. o ---------'------ Y His Ways "My busband," sobbed Mrs. Privo. r "is the most oontrary kind of a man." "How so?" asked her sympatheticte friend. "Why, every time," responded the aggrieved wife. "that I begi drrese g u np he e sre to g me a udrsasla Bro F uceab -p ak MIIIgl WIS a aUght aocat." sai the yuag woman. "Wel,"replsid Mr. Cu.MEs. '4 b L But ftsem to make a it .ad of differee whther u rram6 tii from asuthern=ars r I b a at te Miragi.' proecription Known for CwOlts Rather than Large Qumalty. Go to your druggist and get '"Two ounces of Glycerine and half an ounce of Concentrated Pine compound. Mix these with half a pint of good whisky. iSake well. Take one to two teaspoon fuls alter each meal and at bed time. naller doses to children according to age." Any one can Pi this at homei Th s ld to be the ulceest cough and cold cure known to the medical profession. Be sure to get only the genuine (Globe) Concentrated Pine. Each half ounce bottle oomes mi a tin screw-top sealed case. If the drunetdt is out of stock he will quickly ge-it from his wholesale house. Dont fool h wtth uncertain mixtures. It ist risky. AT THE TELEPHONE. th hto * I oi ci to fo sip He-lIs that aev She-Yes; who Is thatt to EYES WOULD BURN AND STING . "It is Just a year ago that my sis- f ter came over here to us. She had been here only a ferreks when her a eyes began to be red, and to burn and sting as if she bad sand in them. Then we used all of the home reme dies. She washed her eyes with salt iD water, used hot tea to bathe them t with, and bandaged them over night with tea leaves, but all to no purpose. She went to the drug store and got some salve, but she grew constantly worse. She was scarcely able to look in the light. At last she decided to w go to a doctor, because she could * hardly work say more. The doctor di said It was a very severe 4isease and If she did not follow his orders close. w ly she might lose her eyesight He w made her eyes burn and applied elde. tricity to them, and gave her various s olatments. In the two and a half or . three months that she went to the doctor, we could see very little is- e provement. "Then we had read so much how people had been helped by Cuticursa that we thought we would try it, sad we cannot be thankful enough that we t used it. My sister used the Cuticara Pills for purifying the blood, bathed only with Cuticura Soap, and at night ti after washing, she anointed her eyes p very gently on the outside with the P' Cuticurs OintmentL n one week, the a swelling was entirely gone from the tr eyes, and after a month there was no hi longer any mucus or watering of the t eyes. She could already see better, and in six weeks she was cared." (Signed) Mrs. Julia Cseplcka, 3006 Utah St., St. Louis,, Mo. Aug. 5, 1910. Doubting Hisb Word. Two Irishmen occupied beds in the same room. By and by one of them woke up. "Mike," said he, "did you put out the cat?' "I did," said Mike. . An hour later Patrick woke up again. "Mike," said he, "Mike, did you put out the cat?" "Sure I did," said Mike, sleepily. * "On me word of honor." Some time later Patrick again s waked up. "Mike," said he, "Mike, ye diyvle; ye did not put out the cat." "Well," said Mike angrily, "if ye a will not iLke the word of honor of a gintleman get up and put her out yerself." ti Make Good. L S"Wake up, Cull," says the burglar, - t shaking the man by the shoulder. SThe man wakes up, and Jumps up, tooe S"I went troo dis house las' week an' s got $100 an' a bum gold watch," ex blained the burglar; "an' de papers Ssaid dat you said your loss was $100 r an' joolry to the amount o' lve or six D hundred." S"Ye-yes?" "Well, make good, sport. Me pard ' -er dat was watchin' on de outside p made me cough up de difference be P tween what I got and what you said s I got. Now, you got to make good. i You can't beat me dat way."-Judge's Library. BamadMe in South Australia. South Auatralla is sufaernlag from a barmaid famine. Two years ago bau maids were abolished in that state by act of parliament. No more eold be I Slegally engaged, but those already e Sployed could remain on conditom that Sthey registered themselves. There are now only 400 of them itt, and the competition for their serv SIces is such that their wages havre jumped from 25 shillings to £$ a Sweek. The botels that have bad to employ barmea report a comsalderable Schanage for the worse in their rseeipt. Patrliotle Determilnatio "Your wife tndsists on being allowed to vote." S"Yes," replied Mr. Meeli. "She's Snot content with bhaving the last word r- n politieal argument. She wats to 1 go to thepolls sad put in a post ta rowm * CL@oTame ii t Use Red Cres Batl Blue and sake them white gin. Lag. S er. pacags, S ens. S You can oftmn tell what a woman really meaus by what she doesa't ay. TO Wn3 A 0enw IN @U DA Nothing madur the sunea has de I more to help the fool killerl ~ur is a-lr than t a elf eafmest. J t.1 ,'i~··j ') , - 4, .E, k· 1IJD GOING Bet r. Pary of R1ba, &A Up Her 8emed Now Sy By Ta#I ChI. P. Relita, Tenn.-"I sSerusd with sick beadeche for three years," says Mrs. Liszie Perry, in a letter from this place. "I was so nervous at tlmss, PC could hardly bear it. ti I had the blues, and everybody the thought I was losing my mind. My 13 memory was bad. I had pains In my to side, and I was hardly able to go. he I would have been In my grave if I ti had not taken Cardul. Now I am stronger than I ever was before, and I feel like a new person. I am thankful for what Cardui has done for me. I wish all women who suffer would take Cardul, and be hap. py and healthy." Cardut's success in benestlne and curing sick and ailing women, is due to the fact that it is a building tonic for the nerves, as well as for the phy sical system. Being composed exclusively of vege table Ingredients, which act gently and sympathetically n a natural way,' it does its work saely, reliably, and iwithout bad after erects. Fifty years of sucsess prove these fhets. s In't it reasonable to believe that SCardal will help you? Ask your drug It is certainly worth trying. X.. --Wuree te, Laeee' Advser SDept., Ckattemasea mete.e ce., Ceat Staeem., 35%., Ser seapeses aermea.5s, t ad so pai b.ek, "umoaNe aTnmet Os ee Wress," me t Im plti. w:sp"e, em wo tmee. r* Railroading and Denasa"g. r Stuart C. Leake, who has a let to do D with managing f big railroad in Rich I mond, Va. is noted uas one at the best r dancers in the south. I On night something went wrong with the branch of the road ever I which Leake has supervisloe. "Where in thunder was Leake" 5 asked the president of the road neat r morning. a "Leading a german," said the gea eral manager. "Which," commented the pre4ieat, r "was a dirty Irish trick."-Popular Magazine. F ree Cure for Rheeumatism and 8oae Panls. Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) cures t the worst ases of rheumatism, boss 5 a swollen mumeles asd otby p urify= the blood and destinn the ark in the blood. fl of eases cured byB. B. B. after all other Streatments fled. Price $1.00 per larup b* botl at drg ,tore, with d~es t tions. sLerg sample free by lag Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, s.. Dlpartmt 5. Useful in its Way. Maud-What a long batp! Surely you don't ever use It! bthel--Oly when I go btrgem rushngl. rig ato D"IVo L r it aa p as fee ai '.s lnbo 4re. sa sum. b It When He Was Slow. "Swift is the swiftest proposition I r. ever saw." "Is be? Did he ever owe you any n money ?" ASK FOA ALZN'r IOOT-3A5U the AaUpse padr ao s a lato yarou ses. fl. Seves Dams, DenimIWlwlna Nhals. Swofdee nat 'e aamg ree, amse sea da (es sesm. seW 81Lfght exaerations do more harm than reckless violations of it.-Ches terOeld. i 'stt I- eiem nLo OErC~ERIV YOU~, ftX ' m i auI I DD - a-~ 3., C EZIS tr3 am a 1W -h srV ia c ,us se toe ii +- Y<& rUil L·~tt ~I~ Ate Sping B od qise and AIhmsnt Possesses medicinal merit Peculiar to Itolf and has an unequaled record ct care. Take it this Apring, in usual liquid form or tablets known as Sarsatabs. Spr.ig Nomers aren d to the ta. oe.d'o Pra.rit has equal pre, ipoveished, detaud oast fdl r s r lan the IhIula4 I p,ul ties of the blood briat absot by the humr that ramsda htt the ubneshful mmew at Itvi~ dur- the wter. It tsegs wuthdrtul las the winter, too elose coanssmest, crs becase It uomtass the tmost too ttle outdoor air and aesrese, too ws.dial values of , .tL twenty heavy diet. Hood's Sarsaparla cures diferest tnlegd4Is. eas having them sad builds up the whole systea. Hood's. ItL has ub uaso COT D FOR THE DRINK HAlT The ess e Iw mS, d -4.l ao-.. as .sedt sU_ ee wom a~. EARN 4@ ON YOUR MOiNY DEPOrT BY I&jL W'lT Mr le Thr Cs., 121.123 V. l2d $ ., LI[ s A ASSeS ONE MWR.LLN O 8L -afew~ ss alIe.mes 1., wo Lua se, Ma. s ...s Words of Comfort. "My doctor esas t must sleep ant of doors," sqd the man who is not "Well," replied the fread who makes painful eSorts to cheer up; "It's all right so leao as your landlord doesn't say It." Those days ae lost. i which we do P aSiI no gqst; thds were than lost it for catal which we do ovL-Creowell. gL Some ag., lIke some roosters, are always creowl-but whats the asts? W. N. U. Luile ate Na 1-iSIt. qWht Als Yo? i -Lr - tilt, se eh "eew er bs, It n- - -i I1 mssesI , " . fs e'eas deis Iw, ahmlos eig s g sAM O. I damee . .. .. - " , . s .ite s t es r arsHOe " JotCe d d"1060 MV,* B r tt a. K .-:,.-