mtttMcmtttiMMMnti S Saved Girl's Life 3 ® "I-want to tell you what wonderful benefit I have re- J I cflfved from the use of Thedford's Black-Draught," writes 2 ff Mrs. Sylvanla Woods, of Clifton Mills, Ky. "It certainly has no equal for la grippe, bad colds, J r liver and stomach troubles. 1 firmly believe Black-Draught J f saved thy little girl's life. When she had the measles, j J they went In on her, but one good dose of Thedford's J F Black-Draught made them break out, and she has had no J J more trouble. 1 shall never be without BUCK-KIGHT J in my home." For constipation, indigestion, headache, dizzi- J jp ness, malari n chills and fever, biliousness, and all similar JL ailments, Thedford's Black-Draught has proved itself a safe, qp reliable, gentle and valuable remedy. £l V If you suffer from any of these complaints, try Black- 01 | Draught It is a medicine of known merit Seventy-five ® ! yearafof si lendid success proves its value. Good for j k young and tld. For sale everywliere. Price 25 cents. w>i_ ri MI W HIIMI ••••••••••••••••••• SUNDAY SCHOOL. Lesson Xl.—Second Quarter, Foi June 11, ® THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES, Taxt of the Leeeon, Gal. vi. and I Cor. II —Memory V«rnes, I Cor. ii, 9, 10. Golden Text, f Cor. ii, 10—Commen tary Prepared by Rov. D. M. Btearne. As there Is n prominent ami all Im portant line of truth running through lioth the lessons for today, We will consider both, and the heart of both scorns to me to lie the Spirit controlled life for those who are truly redeemed. Wo were recently studying u lesson concerning a long Journey and a great council, all because of circumcision, and now we rend thnt*in Christ Je sua neither circumcision ovalleth any thing nor «nelrcumcl«lon, but a new creature" (Oal. vl, 15). The one es sential thing la to lie "In Christ Jesus," the Son of Ood, who loved taw 1 and gavo Himself for me; who hath re deemed me from the curse of the law, l>elng made a curse for me; who gar* Himself for my sins that lie might deliver mo from the present evil world (OaL U. 20; 111, 13; I, 1). Then tho words of Oal. vl, 14, should lie ours and tho dally life be a manifest stand Ing fast In the liberty wherewith Christ hath mado u* free, the "not I but Chrlat" life, the world crucified to us and we to the world (v, 1; 11. 'JO). Because of the flesh, or old sinful nature, that remains In every liellcver there Is a constant conflict, but the Holy Spirit who dwelled) hi the lie llever will keep him from doing the things which the flesh would prompt him to do (v, 17). As believers wo must earnestly desire to walk In the Spirit, lie led of the .Spirit, live In the Spirit, and thus mAnlfest the fruit of tho Spirit, to the glory of Ood (v, lit, 18, 22, 25). There 4* a sowing and ii reaping tn every life, and It Is either the old life or the now, the llesh or the Spirit, resulting In loss or gain (vl. Mi We will aurely reap what we sow. and the harvest may lie large for good or evil (Hoses vlll, 7; x, 12, 13; I'rov xiII, 8). May our aim always lie to gather fruit Into life eternal and nev er faint or grow weary, but go on In patient continuance, for the reaping time will aurely come (Oal. vl, 1); John Iv. 80-38; Rom. 11, 7; I Cor. xv, SHI. Turning to the lesson In Corinthians, the truths are Just the. same, 1 teller era arc bjr the grace of God annctlfled In Chrlat Jesus, called saints, and in Chrlat Jesus have wisdom, righteous neaa, aanctlflcation anil redemption, so that tbero la no one and no thing worth knowing compared with Jesus Chrlat and Illm cructticd (I Cor. I, 2-4. 20-31; It, 2). We have here, as lu the other Icaaon lu Oalatlnns, tho tlesh and the Spirit, or the wisdom of this world and Jesus Christ, who Is the jiower of Ood, and tho wisdom of God, and they are always contrary, the one to the other (I Cor. 1. 21, 24). l'aul knew much of the wisdom of this world, l>e- Ing brought up at the feet of Gamaliel, but he set aside all the wisdom of men that bo might know the wisdom fit God (I Cor. 11. We remember that Muses, bclug learned In all the wisdom of (he Egyp tlaus, had to keep sheep fur forty-jrear* In tlie ai-hool of Ood that he might know tho wisdom of Oral*. The wis doin of Rgypt coil ill not Interpret the dreams of Pharaoh, but the wisdom of Oot In Joeopli easily could and did ' All the wisdom of Itabylon could not tell the king what he had dreamed, nor tbe meaning of his dreams, nor inter jiret the hnudwrltiiig on tlm tvall. but the wledoin of God in Knnlel easily did all. The wisdom of this world qever has been able t» ami cannot now Interpret the things of tiod, for the things of God knowcth no man, but the Spirit of God (I for. 11. 11). Ilu man scholarship, however ureal, unless tinder the contrvi-of the Spirit of Gi«d, la wholly unable to understand the thing* of God. The greatest scholar that earth can produce, unless born again. Is simply a natural man. and to him the things of God are only foolishness (I Cor. 11. 14). bat the most unlearned and Ignorant In the things of this world's wisdom may by the Spirit of God know the things of God. The wise men In the time of our Lord spoke of Him as having never learned, and they called Peter and John unlearned and Ignorant men (John *ll, 16; Acta IT, 18), so lh>>se who nin.v be despised by the world's scholarship should find comfort In this. While we wait for the coming of our I.ord Jesus Christ we are culled Into fellowship Vlth Him (I Cor. I. 7. 01. and tills is put at the*fellowjililp—to l>c counted * nnscholarly and Ignorant because wc take the Bible literally, liellcvc it all, and that God means wliat Heaays. and If the plain, obvious sense makes gissl sense we need seek no other sense We have received the Spirit of Ood that we may know the thins* tli.it ore freely given ua of Ood, which neither - eye nor ear nor heart of man Initli ' *een or heard or imagined, and thus lie able in the power of au endless life to endnre patiently till He come (1 Cor 11, 0-12). Compare Isa. lxlv, 4. from which part of thla la quoted aud note th« revised version. In connection with ' the sowing and reaping of Onl. vt note ' building of I Q>r. ill, 0 15, and the. posslfTlllty "of jrrr.'it log* oven though the soul HI ay IM» KIIVCMI. Solvation ran only be obtained as a free tflft from Ood, apart from any work* or effort EN our part. But KIIVCM! ther# are KoOtl work* prepared f«»r n* lo walk In (Kpfi. 11. K-Wi. There are no degrees in salvation. but nnnli dif ference in servleo and reward*. Making the Little Farm Pay By C. C. BOWSFIELD Next to having a comfortable home and u contented family the real test of farm success Is lii securing a steady Increase of acreage profits. Many -(1 re gressive landowners, especially those occupying small places, have caught the vision of this kind of farming. The corn crop the countryfover aver ages about thirty-five bushels an acre giving a gross return not above and a net profit of about sls. A 1 grain farming IS otl the same level sometimes returning u little more prof It and often considerably less. Capable fariuers grapple wltli, till iroblem of raising ucreago profits 1 ooas nrrvßtm oooti aciceaoc morns. various ways. Naturally the first Idea Is to Improve the methods of cultiva tion—to rotate crops, build up soli fer llllty, use great cure with seed and put In a little extra work all along the line. Those who think of an Improved sys tem and are determined to get out of the rut will get -results In proportion to their skill and efforts. Expansive Idens will come with the disposition to do things. Kor Instance, M. I). Crow of Audu bon county, la., secured acreage profits of nearly sl7o by combining corn. rti|K' and hogs as a furui feature. He had formerly raised corn at sls to S2O au acre. Home difference! Just before he laid by his corn lu Juno two feurs ago he soweil I iwarf Essex ra|ie broad cast lu ten acres of it, using five pounds of seed per acre. The cultiva tor covered It, and about six weeks later 170 spring pigs were turned Into this ten acre field. They remained there until early winter, when the corn had been cleaned up and the rape kill ed by freezing. When winter came be found ho bad a numerous bunch of thrifty half grown hog* with nearly unapiK-asable appetites and a surpris ing capacity for further growth. He fill them corn, mill feed ami tankage until March, when they were sold at *7..'iO per 100 pound*, bringing I-. 1H0.75. t'p to the time they were Bold these hogs had consumed 2,100 bushels of corn, valued at 4i> cents |>er bushel, or SBtU; also mill feet) and tankage cost ing SSII..V). Thus their total feed bill was leaving a profit of ft.- C0U.20. As Mr. Crow figures It. tills |I,KKI.2O representa the returns from the ten a re field of rape and corn, since full allowance has !>cen made for all other feeds. Hence he reallxed $1 &).(£.' per acre from this field. The same kind of an experiment last year brought similar results, so that this fnrmer lias demonstrated a method of making bis com return an acreage profit far be yond what people ordinarily dream of. Eight exiicrimenta with rape and corn have been conducted nt the lowa station, •with results strikingly like those obtained by Sir. Craw. By aver aging the results of these experiments, using precisely the same values for pork aud corn as were given by Mr. Crow. It Is found that the average pro duction of pork |er acre was 3,84." pounds, worth at sT.r>o per 100 pomula f2HB; Hint the average cost of corn and other feeds required to produce this amount of pork was and that the average return i>er acre was SI(H net. Aerial Navigation. Researches Into the principles of aeri al navigation date back to the foor teenth century. BEST PAID MEN ARE NOW ASKING | FOR HIGHER PAY Goisrcneat Officials Fail Ti Fit' *1 Justice li Demands Of Trail Ser vice Employees. By Judton C. Welllver In The Waah ington Tlme». j Administrative and legislative au thorities in Washington are taking a | distinctly different views of the pres i ent effort of railway trainmen to compel an advancement lu their wages, from any that has been taken on former occaslona. It Is very apparent that the case for the employes seeking higher wages Is viewed with less amiability than ordinarily. In legislative cir cles there has recently been serious talk of legislation to prohibit strikes by employes of interstate carriers* and to provide a procedure for com pulsory arbitration. The Impression has gained a good deal of ground, that certain favored classes of employes have for a long time been systematically aggregating to themselves most of the increases in wages. Highest Paid Cla®» Of Men On behalf of the englnemen and trainmen who are making the de mand for a large wage Increase, It Is urged that the higher coat of living Justifies their demand. Ygt these men, the engineers, firemen, conduc tors and brakemen, are the highest paid classes of railroad labor. The question being asked why an engineer getting an average wage In 1913 of $5.20, should require an Increase, while trackmen, who were getting 91.58 per day, should be left out? Again, the average wage of conduc tors In 1913 Is shown by the statistics of the Interstate Commerce Commis sion to have been $4.39 per day. At the same time, telegraph operators anil dispatchers were getting an aver age wage of $2.52 per day. If the Increased cost of living for the $4.39 conductor necessitates a large Increase In his compensation, whore does the $2.52 dispatcher come lu? No demand Is being urged on be half of the operators and dispatchers, and some of the railroads have lately been Intimating vigorously that If a big additional burden must be laid on their labor funds they would like to give the benefit to the poorer paid classes of employes. The truth of the whole business Ib that, as a whole, the railroad em ployes of tho country are not very highly paid as compared to other peo ple. A few classes of railroad men are paid very hlffll wages. The moat fortunate of all these classes are the engineers, firemen, conductors and brakemen. Rate Riling Rapidly Not only are these four classes paid much more liberally than other em ployes, but tbo figures show that their rate of wages has been rising more rapidly than that of any other classes. In 1914 the Interstate Commerce Commission's report showed the num ber of railroad employes for the en tire country to be 1,710,290. Out of this number there were'* 62,021 en gineers, 04,959 firemen, 48,201 con ductors, and 138,809 other trainmen; a total of 311,990, or Just about one sixth of the entire number. At that same date, the number of trackmen, exclusive of foremen, was 337,461. That Is, the number of com mon laborers on the section was greater than the entire roll of en gineers, firemen, conductors, and brakemen. Yet this Jiuge army of trackmen was working for an aver age wage of $1.68 per day. while en gineers were getting $5.20, firemen: were getting $2.13, conductors were getting $4.39, and other trainmen were getting $3.04. These figures are tho commission's averages for the en tire country. Condition Bettered Largoly because they are the best organized classes or railway workers and have been unremitting in their demand* for better wages, these four classes have succeeded In bettering their condition replevy and regularly, at the expense of the other classes, which are not bo highly organized. The trainmen, whenever they Insist on a wage Increase, have, on their aide, the tremendously potent argu ment that If they (lon't get what they ask, they can walk out and tie up the whole railroad system. No other class of employes could do thla, be cause no other Is so Initantly Indis pensable. How effectively the four favored classes have used their power Is shown by the cold flgure*. In the ten years from 1803 to 1912, inclusive, the salaries of general officer* In creased an average of 1? per cent In that same ten-year period the salaries of engineers Increased 24 per ctnL During those same ten year* the wag'** of general office clerks Increas ed IS per cent, while the wages of Bremen Increased 32 per cent. During those same ten years the wages of telegraph operators and dis patchers Increased J 4 per cent, while those of trainmen other than conduc tors Increased 36 per cent WE HAVE THE EARLIEST, BlQ gent, high class Strawberry grown. Also the Best one or the ever bearing kinds; bears the beat * fla vored berries from Spring until the anow flics. Free Booklet. Wake field. Plant Farm, Charlotte, North Carolina. lifebot Considerable Oaubt. "I hear yon are going to gtve a big dinner dauee." chirped the society re porter. "I don't know whether I am or not." aald Mrs. Flubdub. "Nobody seems to want to come, the cook threatens to leave If I do, and my husband la mak ing bad talk about the expense."— Louisville Courier-Journal. lull Know What Vu« Are Taking When you take Grove's TaateieM Chill Tonic hccause the fortfiula la plainly printed on every bottle showing that it U Iron and Qul nine In • tasteless form. No cure, DO pay.—soc, ad*. ARTISTIC STAIRWAY DESIGN. DesUn 839, by Glenn L. Sixton, Architect, Minneapolis. Minn. ' v" r j . . • - -- -jHLL. t I'EBSPECTIVK VIEW lit. \ IHOTOdttAr II ■l| ntt INTERIOU VIEW—AN AUTISTIC BTAIUWAY. 0 A practical stairway Is one of the features of this little home. The art glass window could be omitted, and even without tbls the stairway would lie attractive. The size of this house Is 24 feet by 30 feet. Cost to build, exclu sive of heating and plumbing, $2,000. First story, 0 feet high; second story, 8 feet, and basement, 7 feet. Upon receipt of $1 the publisher of this paper will furnish a copy of Sax ton's book of plans, "American Dwellings," which contains over 300 designs costing from SI,OOO to $0,000; also a book of Interiors, $1 per copy. \ — \ . POOR ROADS COST TIME AND MONEY Horse Can Pull a Heavier Load on a Good Highway. BAD CONDITIONS SPELL LOSS On • Muddy Road the Amount of Weight Drawn la From Zaro to a Maximum of 800 Pounda —On ■ Smooth Earth Highway a Horaa Can Pull From 1,000 to 2,009 Pounda and Mora on Graval and Brick. [Prepared by office of good roads, depart ment of agriculture,J Every one knows Hint a horse can ptiil a heavier lonil on a good road than on one that Is bud. It U, bow ever, a rather difficult matter to cal culate Just how much he can pull on different kinds of surfaces. After care ful study engineers have accepted as fairly accurate the following weights: On n muddy earth road the amount varies from nothing at all, when the road Is in very bad slin|>e, to a maxi mum of 800 pounds. On a smooth, dry earth road a horse can pull from 1,000 to 2,000 pounds; ou a gravel road In bad condition, from 1,000 to 1,500 pounds; I ' • ' '' • "'X; . I• ' ; } BOA.D IK SULLIVAN OOL'STT, TX&t., B£- rous lur&oviuuLNr. on a gravel road in good condition, about 3,300 pounds; on a macadam road, from 2,000 to 5,000 pounds; and on a brick road, from 5,000 to 8,000 pounds. From these figures It appears that a horse on a good macadam road can do from three to Ave times as much work in a day as on a moderate ly muddy earth road. One or two Instances will show what this means In actual practice. Some years ago a farmer In Sullivan county, Tenn., had to haul bo rived wire a dls tance of twenty-three miles. The moet his two horse team could manage was a load of 600 pounds, and three days were necessary to make the round trip. The road bas since been improved, and the same team now draws a ton with out difficulty and makes the round trip in two days. Estimating the time of a man and team to be worth $3 a day, under the old conditions It cost S3O to haul a ton of the barbed wire. The same amount of wire can now be haul ed the same distance at a cost of Id. In estimating the cost of tsullng road engineers usually adopt as the unit tbo ton mile—that is to say, the coat of hauling one ton one mile. In the case described the cost per ton mile under the old conditions was $1.54 and under the new $0.20. Another significant Instance is re ported from Crosby, Tex. For a mile out of town there was an excellent road which terminated, however. In a stretch of unimproved highway. A | farmer Who lived four miles out of town drove a team of two mules to the railroad station to get two tons of wire fencing. Tills lie wns able to haul without difficulty to the end of the shell road. There, however, he had to throw off 8,000 pounds of wire and hitch up two more mules to his wagon in order to haul the remaining 1,000 pounds of wire over the unimproved road to his farm. In older to carry all the wire he bad to make three more trips. Altogether to transport this wire the four miles from the station to his house took him from 10 o'clock one morning until 11 o'clock the next morn ing. If the shell road had extended as far as his house he could have hauled with two mules instead of four the two tons.of wire In two and one-half hours. Because the fnrmer usually does his hauling himself and therefore does not have to pay cash wages for the time wasted on bad roads the expensive ness of the operation is not so obvious to him as It might be. There are times, however, when the loss thut results from poor means of communication cannot be ignored. Sullivan county. Tenn., affords another Instance of this. A farmer (here some years ago had 100 bushels of Irish potatoes, which he in tended to market in Bristol during the winter. On account of the condition of the roads, however, he put off going to town and stored the potatoes in the cellar. In the meantime the price of potatoes at Bristol rose as high as (1.40 a bushel. The roads, however, remained impassable and before the farmer could get his stock to. maket he found that it had all rotted in the cellar. While these potatoes were go ing to waste a few miles away, car loads of farm produce were being ship ped in by rail to feed Bristol and the Idjacent territory. I tWWWM%WWWMW%WWVM^ BE CHEERFUL. % We all ought to be a* cheerful a* we can. Every one must J { have felt that a cheerful friend ] ! ! i is like a sunny day, shedding ] | brightness on all around, and | • most of us can. If we choose, make of ths world a palace or a ] prison. 'To be bright snd cheer ] ful often requires sn effort, but the effort is well worth the mak- |j ing and will amply repay thoea , ! JI who succeed in makin] it a euc ceas.—Avebdry. Limbs come on trees and people They are seen on tree*, Ihycourtrooms. on the stage and attlio seashore. Thej may lie covered wltb bark, plasters ot silk, as the case may be. Limbs are useful in many ways Pelicans, who are very economical and therefore never get Into deep water use only one at a time. Soldiers use them for various purposes, sometimes standing upon them and sometimes running away. Limits are made of cork, wood oi bone. Cork limbs are useful as lift preservers. Wooden limbs can be Lak en off and used for purposes of de fense. Bone limbs often enable one tc get on one's feet—lJfe. A Scandal Spoiled. -Of course he and his wife seem de voted to each other now," said the Jealous Miss Oausslp, "but do you think she will always be so true and alltbatr ' "Well," replied Miss Kidder. "I have reason to know that only last nlgbt be had occasion to set a trap for her." "Ah! Do you know, I suspected something"— "They more than suspected; tbej knew there were mice In the house."- Phlladelphla Press. New Zealand's Graat Glacier. The Taaman, the greatest glacier In New Zealand, bas an average width of 0.270 feet, though si Its widest point it is somewhat more than two miles across. The Tasniau is eighteen miles in length. Impressive Statement Here U mil impresaive statement at fact about railway wage* that ought not to escape attention. There were a total of 37,873 employes classified as awltch tenders, crossing lenders, and watchmen. were receiv ing in 1912 an average of $1.70 per day, which waa actually 6 cents a day lesa than they had been receiv ing ten years earlier. At that time there were 48,201 con ductors with whom the statistics dealt. The conductors, therefore, were only a slightly more numer -1 ous claw than the tenders and watch men; yet, while the conductors had had their wages raised from $3.38 to $4.29 per day, the leas fortunate class of tenders and watchmen had to stand a reduction from $1.76- to $1.70 per day. If the cost of living baa been stead ily advancing for conductors, so aa to Justify an Increase of 27 per cent in their wages, it seems difficult to ex plain why that same cost of living should have fallen sufficiently to war rant a decrease of. 8 per cent In the wages of switch tenders, crossing tenders, and watchmen. Take, the single classification of general office clerka. There were 87,106 of theae according to the of ficial report A much larger number than of either engineers, firemen, or conductors. These general office clerka were paid an average of $2.21 iter day In 1903, and of S2.SO In 1912; an In crease of only 13 per cent In the ten year period. General office clerks, without ex ception, are compelled to live in cities, where cost of living la high. Engineers Better Off Engineers, on the other hand, are distributed between large towns and small towns; on the average, their living circumstances ought to make their expenses average considerably less than those of office clerka, yet the statistics show that engineers have received In the ten-year period an Increase of 24 per cent in their wages, making them average exactly $6 per day, while general office clerks have received an increase of only 13 per cent, making them aver age $2.50 per day. One of the worst underpaid classi fications of railway employes la that of the station agents. There are juat about 40,000 of these in the country, or nearly as many aa the number of conductors. In 1903 station agents averaged SI.BO a day, and In 1912 they had been raised to only $2.20 a day, while In that same time conductors had advanced from $3.38 to $4.20. That Is, the station agent in I*ll was getting just about half the wage* of the conductor, and in ten years he had had an average increase of 17 per cent, while the conductor's int. crease had been 27 per cent. Here are two of the most numer ous classes of railway employes: Trainmen, other than engineers, firemen, and conductors, numbered 136,809, while trackmen numbered 337,451. The statistics show that the trackmen were getting in 1903 an average of $1.31 per day, and to 1911 an average of $1.60 per day, an In crease of .14 per cent. What Other* Cot On the other hand, the classifica tion of other trainmen was getting in 1903 $2.17 per day, and in 1912, $2.96 per day, an Increase of 36 per cent. In percentage, this is the largest ad vance received by any single clasa of railway employes during this decade. A general survey of wage condi tions In the railway service and in other industries, it is believed, would show that in the last fifteen years the highly organized and favored classes of railway wag* earners have had their Incomes Increased more than almost any other ciaas of work ers in the country, while the much more numerous, but less effectively organized classes of railway workers have probably received rather less Increases than otlier industrial work ers in general. In view of the strong feeling these most fortunate classes of the railway employes are now making excessive and unreasonable demands, attention is now being called as never before to these general dis crepancies. There is a strong dis position to inaugurate a general and sweeping investigation of the whole question of railway wagea with a view to establishing some sort of pub lio regulation not unlike that already applied to railroad rates, in the In terest of employes and public alike. Meanwhile, there Is a marked indis position to extend further favors to those classes already most highly favored, at the expense of other classes of employes who appear to be getting very low wages. I,*, 1+ ♦ + ♦ ♦ ♦ Four national railroad union* * ♦ threaten to tie up every steam ♦ + road in the country. The num- * ♦ ber of employees Involved may + ♦ total 400,000. They seem to ♦ ♦ have It in their power to stop ♦ ♦ all freight and passenger traf- 4 ♦ lie on 260,(00 miles of track. ♦ ♦ We have never had* a strike + ♦ of such scope and magnitude. ♦ ♦ It would paralyse all American + ♦ Industry and oommerce and ex- + ♦ port trade. A nation oI 100,- + ♦ ' 000,000 people would stand ♦ 4 still, while its biggest industry ♦ ♦ fought out a question of wages ♦ + and hours. ▲ deadlock would + ♦ be Inconceivably destructive.— + ♦ Bangor (Me.) News. + ♦ ♦ Hydrofluoric acid la an acid com pound of hydrogen and fluorine. It may be prepared by the action of aul pburlc acid upon cryolite in an ap propriate apparatus made of lead or platinum, it may ttfua be readily ob tained in a liquid form and la color leaa. Ita vapora are exceedingly poi aonoua, and tbe liquid itaeif, even when mixed with more or leaa water, cause* severe swellings on th# akin. Great care moat therefore be taken in working with thia add. Hydrofluoric acid dlaaolvea glaaa, forming hydro flnoallicic add with Ita silica; hence ita use for making etchings on glass.— Exchange. H ' Wonderful Wisdom. "Tan seem to be rather busy." "Yea. I'm writing a love letter. Pve been working on It for more than an hoar." "Why take such pains 7" 1 want to feel sure that if thia letter la ever read in court it won't make me look ilka a foot"—Birmingham Age BmU Chlldrn Cry tor Ftotchw's The Kind Ton Hare Always Bought, and which has been In use for over 80 yean, has borne the signature of /n ' anil has been made under his per- SP . y/f/i v sonal supervision since its infancy. y-aZcJUMs Allow no one to deceive you in this. • All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Jnst-as-good " are hut Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health ot Infants and Children—experience against Experiment* . What is CASTORIA Castoria Is a harmless substitute lor Castor OH, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years tt has been In constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought Income Bearing Wealth a Grievous Burden on the Nation By MOKJUS HILLQUIT, Noted ' Socialist ■ AT extension of the income and inheritance taxes and a pro gressive property tax are im mediate steps that should be taken to limit private fortunes. II THAT IS NOT DONE >IORI RADICAL MEASURES WILI EVENTUALLY HAVE TO BE TAKEN. The extent of the national tribute paid to the, owners of large private fortunes is already crushing. The income of private fortunes is 8 charge Upon the industries of the country, _ a tax upon the working population to the extent of $75 pel capita, including men, women and children. "The average family 'consisting ol five per# ins is thus saddled with a tax of $375 a year for the right to work and live. Our so called "na tional wealth," so far as the people at large are, concerned, is not an as set, but a liability, a heavy mort gage hanging over the heads of all fenerations of Americans to come. ttoyai Nicknames. William I. of England was William tbe Conqueror. He conquered Harold and became king of the first Norman dynasty that gave England four rulers, father was Robert the Devil. Leopold I. of Germany was called the Little Man In Bed Stockings. Jaana, widow of Philip the Fair, was the Mad Queen. James 11. o{ Scotland was the Just James IV. of the same country was called King of the Iron Belt Charles tbe Oreat of France, son of Pepin tbe Short, extended tbe limits of the empire from the Baltic to the Med iterranean and from tbe bay of Biscay to the coast of Illyrla. His son was known as Lonls tbe Pious. Good Score. Mother was looking at Bobble's school report "Why, Bobble," she exclaimed,'"you have only 74 in deportment! I shall have to tell your father." "All right Go ahead and tell him," ■aid Bobble. "He was bragging all over town when be got 74 in golf."— Pittsburgh Press. Anelent Egyptians. The race or breed of the men who built the pyramids is aad will probably remain an ethnological mystery. They were not white nor black, nor has It been possible clearly to Identify them With the Turanian or Arab race. We •Imply do not know tbe kind of people they were. They were probably a mix ture of many breeds. ARE YOU UP r TO DATE " If yon are not the NEWS AN* OBEKYKR it. Subscribe for it at once and it will keep you abreast oi the times. Full Associated Press dispatch es. Ml the news—foreign, do mestic, national, state and local all the time. Daily News and Observer $7 per year, 3.50 for 6 mos. Weekly North Carolinian $\ per year, 50c for 6 mos. NEWS & OBSERVER PUB. CO. RALEIGH, N. C. The North Carolinian and THE ALAMANCE GLEANBK will be sen f for one year for Two Dollars. Cash in advance. Apply at THE GLBAKBB office. Graham, N. C. 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It la better than t. others, or it would not bo the fa vorite liver powder, with a larget sale thau all others combineo. BOiPPtTOWN n fee. Bind modal, rtetehM or photo* utfdc ■ ■ertptlon for FRKK SKARCH ndneort ■ on pttanUbMlj. Juk nlmnt FOMTUNSS " ■ you. Oar IT— book!— tell how, what to lui—l ■ udmtpiMMr. WHU today. 0, SWIFT & CO. I THE Charlotte Daily Observer Subscription JElates Dally - - - $6.00 Dally and Sunday 800 Sunday - - . 2.00 The., Semi-Weekly Observer Tnes. and Friday - 1.00 The Charlotte Daily Observer, Is sued dally end Sunday is the lead* ing newspaper between Washing ton, D. CL and AtUnta, Ga. it gives all the news of North Caro lina besides the complete Associat ed Preaa Service. The Beml-Weekly Observer, Is sued on Tuesday and Friday for (1 per year gives the render a full report of the week's news. Tbe leading aemt-fweekly of the State, i Address all orders to OBSERVER CO. CHARLOTTE, H. C. 1 HE;E?- DATB JOB PHININO i I DONB AT THIS OFFICR. r X OIVB TO A TWIST.