WHAT IS THE MATTER? Time for the Great Biil United States to Get Busy. Herbert X. Carson, in Associated Ad vertising. ... "What is the matter with the Liu ted States?" . As I have been resume n. i. ...... since the txpir.iiiiur oi the war, I nave been hearing this question as.:ed on aii U'es. 1 have never heard uii, satisfactory answer. No one seem.' to know. . , Whv are the American y iun running night and ii re til: rial roads not opening up new terri Why are mere not '!'' "'"V drummers in London right now to ne to sell $200,000,000 worth o American Roods in plac e of the poods that were bought last year from Ger many and Austria? Whv have advertisers become Quit ters, just at the time when their ad; Vertisements were most needed am, most effective in chtwnnR on the bus iness forces of the United states? From the European point of view , the United States is a heaven of ' jwacc and security and prosperity. It has no troubles that it dare mention to Belgium or Austria or r ranee or Ger many or Servia or Great Bnta.n or Russia. Kverv tenth Briton has enlisted. is at the i' . tonth Rele-ian is dead What does the United States know of 1 If 1 could afford it I would charter the Mauretarua anil msuamd, u-i" convev a party of 5,000 American I t vertis'ers to Europe for a trip of edu cation. I would give them a week in London, a week in Paris and a week VwouTd'let them look at the United States from the scene of 1 would giv them a look REAI TROUBLE. Iwould let them see trains, ten at a time, five minutes apart. packed with the maimed and the dying. . , I would let them near iron ' .o,- survivors, the incredible storv of battlefields 1M miles wk.c and "armies that are greater than t!ir entire population of Texas. i i.i ! tKrm see craves 1- lono- and full, and Relpium, the country that was, nothing now bu 12 000" square miles of wreckage. Then, when they bepan to un..c stand to some slipht extent, the map nitude and awfulness of this war. would say to them: . "Now po back and appreciate tc United States. Realise your oppor tunities. Don't start dipping trenches when nobody is firing at fall down when you have not been hit. Don't be blind to the most glo rious chance you have ever had in y"( bwk and advertise. Get rd for the most tremendous ., n boom that any nation ever had. BuiU your factories bipger. Train more salesmen. Borrow more money. Vio aheaT and thank God that you are alive in a land that to at wace, at a time when nearly the whole world if at war." BEEF CATTLE FROM THE SOUTH New York Sun. In the midst of much loose thrash ing around about the high cost of living one practical movement is dis cerned. The effort of the department of agriculture to stimulate cattle rais ing in the south has the note of com mon sense. , , . j As the plans are outlined, the de partment proposes to organize a 0u acre live stock farm in Louisiana on the border between the cotton and the cane fields. The land was once prai rie, it is understood, and grass grows luxuriantly on it if nature be only left to herself. The State has given the use of the land, now one of its convict camps, as soon as this year's crop of cane is cut, and then a fight will be made to exterminate insect life injurious to cattle. No effort will be made to cultivate diary cattle. Animals fit for beef are the special aim of the experiment. Among the stock tried will be Hon duras cattle, which are of suitable build and immune against the fever tick. Cattle from the west will be brought in when the tick is thorough ly eliminated. The ultimate results of the experiment, the department hopes, v. ill be the pron.icuon m couple of million steers fit for slaugh ter in the south every year. THANKS TO WILSON President Wilson has kept us out of a war with Mexico so far, and the result is there are hundreds of hus bands, sons and brothers who have been saved from the bloody fate of Mexican battlefields. There is none of this: .j i But bitter tears are gushing For the gallant and the gay, Who now in death are sleeping On the fields of Monterey. No, no; they are all alive yet. no homes broken up. No mothers, wives or sweathearts buried in grief- thanks to President Wilson and his policy of patience and peace. Ohio State Journal. The editor who wrote that editorial is a staunch Republican and he knows the awlfulness of war for he was one of the boys who left mother weeping when he answered the call of Abra ham Lincoln, instead of prating about "watchful waiting" as if that was re prehensible he thanks President Wil son for his policy of "patience and peace. While the residents were away from home one night last week the 1 ome of W. J. J lies, in Tyro township, David son county was ransacked by burglars and an attempt made to set it on fire. A feathe rbed smothreed out the fire and the house was saved. Mr. Giles' new feed barn with a large -amount of grain, farm machinery and -Other equipment, was set on fire and totally destroyed.' The house was occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Willis " Giles. tories and getting reaay cor "-'' Hons of immigrants who have ah made up their minds U leae Euicp- THE The man who r?Hs is the man who leads. Wath it where or when you will, and you v ill find this the rule, and with mighty few exceptions. Now and then you will find a non-reading nun who Inis made some money, bii he is usually such a failure as the " Farmer Grind described m last week's Propressive Farmer a man whose mind is not broad and who has missed the joy of livinp by working tor se'f alone. The man v,ho reads is the man v.N leads. It is natural that this should be so. '"The ancestors of every nation is a thoupht," says Emerson, and the richness or poverty of a man's rcad inp usually determines the richness or poverty of his thinkinp. The n who doesn't read pet his thouphts only from Tom, Dick, Harry, and others in a little narrow neiphborhood ripht around him. The man who reads pets the thouphts of the fore most minds in his country, state, na tion, and world. The photopraph on this pape is a remirder of one of the most inspiring movements ar.ywh.ere in the South to day -he "moonlight s; lool move ment, whose purpose is to teach every man and woman, no matVe now old. to read. These people were neplected in their youth, but for them the door of hope is now about to swing open at last, so that they need no lonper hang their heads and say, I can t read and write." Let everyone who can join in this blessed crusade, and let us at the same time carry on a crusade to pet all who can read to read more. A people are not educated if they only know how to read; they must actually read. If one goes to school weeks and months, year after year learning how to read, and then doesn't read, if he is then too 6hort-sighted to pay a few cents a week for good papers and books he is like a man who spends days and weeks breaking a piece of land, pettinp it in shape for planting and then is too foolish or stingy to buy enouph seed corn or cotton seed to piant it. Learninp how to read prepares the mind, cultivates it, makes it a fertile seed bed, but then a man must fill it with seed thoughts. Books and papers furnish the seed corn for the mind. When a man says he is too poor to pay two cents a week for a paper for inspira tion, help, intellectual food, seed thouphts for his whole family, ask him if he ought not to spend as much for brain-food as he spends for to bacco. Make your neighborhood a reail'' neighborhood and you will make it a leading neighborhood. Join the move ment to teach all grown-up illiterates to read next year if you can, but i; any case bestir yourself to pet all wh can read to read more. If they read papers that stand for progress they will eventually join with you in ail the propressive movements you are interested in. Progressive Farmer. LEARNING OURSELVES News and Courier. The war is teaching us to know our selves better than before Our course of instructions in self-knowledge has only just begun, but it has already produced some interesting revelations. For instance, we have learned that we have brains enough to make paint brushes after all. It required a world war to make this fact known to us. Heretofore we have been coretnt to buy from Ger many all the brushes used by our ar tists in water colors. These brushes were made either of camel's hair or rabbit's hair according to a secret pro cess known only in Germany. When the call to colors paralyzed Germany's industries and when the British fleet corked up Germany's ports, there seemed to be grave danger that Amer ican artists ir. water colors would have to stop work until the war was over and more brushes could be secured to take the place of those which had worn out. Now, however, a dispatch from Chicago announces that an in vestigation extending over several weeks had led to the discovery that brushes as good as those imported from Germany can be made from the hair on the inner surface of the cow's ear. Thus has the cow saved Ameri can art and thus has war taught us that in this matter of paint brushes the Germans have outdone us simply . ecuuse they tried harder thar. wc en. THE NEWSPAPER Some men boast that they have no time to read a newspaper. It is a foolish boast. Generally the men who only seekinp to cover up their mental aziness with a boast. will an , g 1 me ntr- paper is easily the most wonderful i lo not think so it is because you have, not studied it deeply from all angles.! To he out of touch with it is to be out of touch with life. If it does not touch your life it is because your life does not touch the world's life. The habit of reading has done more to increase the average length of life than any other thing, the boast of science to the contrary notwithstand ing. It keeps the mind young by keeping it active; it stimulates inter set in life and interest in life is what makes it worth living. The newspa per brings the world s panorama be fore the reader's eye. Every day it allows him to view life from a dif ferent angle. It is a mental stimulus that keeps him off the rocks of de spair. There is nothing finer than to be in touch with the world in its va ried activities. To criticise a newspaper is one of the easiest things in the world and one of the cheapest. Take it all in all the newspaper is the best exponent of modern civilization, h is closer to the lives of the people than the school or the church. We do not stop lone enough to confess it, perhaps, but it is, in the main, a great agent for good. Our complex civilization would be impossible without it It is the keynote that upholds th rch. Dur ham Sun. THE MAN WHO READS IS MAN WHO LEADS A STATE-WIDE LEGALIZED PRl MARY FOR ALL OFFICERS THE SAME DAY A Drimarv essential of rule by the people is a State-wide legalized pri mary for all parties and for all office; the same day, safeguarded by a ripi law against corrupt practices. Foi the latter purpose the Australian (.: secret ballot is a necessity. The com pulsory secret ballot robs the purchas able vote of half its power for evi Men are afraid to buy votes whet' they cannot po with their puchased men (it we do not slander the won "men"' by so using it) to see that the vote is delivered as promsiel. Here in North .Carolina the domi nant party pledged adsolutely to the primary for all State ottices, and must give it to every countv where the members of the Legislature favor it. If your members do not want to give your people the benefit of a primary for county offices find out why. We already have a good corrupt practices act for elections which only needs to be extended to primaries. Stand for the primary idea. "The critical moment in the choosing of officials," as President Wilson has well said, "is that of their nomination more often than that of their election." The rank and file of the voter have only the shadow of democracy if they elect candidates but do not select them. Progressive Farmer. ATTACKING LIQUOR TRAFFIC The London Times cabled the fol lowing temperance news to the Chi cago Tribune: Russia 1'he czar directs the min ister of finance to devise a plan to diminish the government revenues from the sale of liquor. Local option likely to be voted. France The parliament is to be urged to enact a law prohibiting the opening of new drinking places until the ratio of saolons to population is materially reduced. Germany A mandatory lav.' pro -hibiting the issuance of new license for saloons where the need for their establishment is not proved is to asked of the Reichstag. Italy Enforcement of the new laws against alcoholism to be supplemented Dy courses in hygiene in the public schools to teach the dangers of drink. Government asylums for cure of drundards proposed. From this it would seem that the so-called temperance wave is world wide. The curse of alcoholic intern perance as fostered by the traffic in intoxicating liquors is being attacker the world over. The attack of the.--four nations at the same time is very significant. CLEVELAND AND SMITH CASE IS SETTLED On Wednesday of last week Judge Boyd of the Federal Court sic-ned qn order commanding William Cleveland and Powell Smith to the custody of Sheriff Wallace, of Mecklenburg county in order that they might be PRES. HARRISON PREDICTS IM their sentences for forgery and frau dulent practices, im Dosed unon them by judges in the Mecklenburg Superi or court in November 1913. The pris oners allowed the time for appeal to pass and this is Drobablv the last in cident in this long drawn out case. Mnce they were first arrested in Ala bama in the late summer of 1913 the two men have taken out four habeas corpus writs. PRESIDENT HARRISON PRE DICTSIMPROVED CONDITIONS Fairfax Harrison. President, nf the Southern Railway, declared last Fri day that the European war's effect on business conditions in the South is only temporary, that demand for cot ton is growing and a general revival of business is at hand. ''The world must have cotton," he said, "and the demands both for ex ports and from the American manu- racturers are increasing and there has been a substantial advance in nr ecs ever since the lowest noint was reached." He declared that the bus iness men of the South are realizing the opportunities for export business ana mat tney are taking intelligei steps toward securing this trade. COUNTY FAIR Randolph must have a county fair pnn r.f.me corn-up week nfnt fail Live stock should be one of the prin cipal features of the fair. Poultrv fuits, vegetables and everything grown on the farm or in the earden. Preserves, cakes and everything else should be on exhibition, including a hrst class baby show end manv inno fent amusements, but no pamblinp or !.... ia"B ur' racing. l.ci me larmers nepin now with view to exhibition of live stncV. fam j,,tn , HALF MILLION DOLLARS TO BE INVESTED AT LEXINGTON The Erlanper Cotton Mills at Lex inpton, which is already a million dol lar enterprise, will soon double its capacity. When the extensions are made the mill will be 956 feet long 132 feet wide, half of it two stories high. 15,400 spindles will be added making 41,000 in all. 420 looms will be installed, making 1,100 looms in all The Contemplated expenditure will be about a million dollars, and will mean a total investment for Erlanger Bros, of about a million and a half dollars. the contract has been given to local Duilders. NORTH CAROLINA CROPS OF 1914 The Agricultural Outlook, the or gan of the Department of Agriculture just issued gives some , interesting North Carolina figures. The cotton crop of last year amounted to 950,000 bales at $31,248.' The apple crop was 9,OUO,00 bushels, which brought S4,. 320,000. North Carolina is the sec ond tobacco State, Kentucky being first Our crop last year was 172,- 250,000 pounds at 119,809,000. Th corn crop of 1914 is worth 845,OO0 more than that of 1913; and the wheat RELIGION IN CHINA Rev. Lacy L. Little, Nineteen Years a Missionary, Sheds Some Light on Conditions. Newspapers Co-Opera- tingin Evangelistic Campaign. Rev. Lacy L. Little, whospent 19 years in China as a Missionary writes as follows: t "The writer is happy to state that China has not established Confucian ism as a State religion. On the con trary., under the revised provisional Constitution, recently adopted, relip ious liberty is guaranteed to every citizen. After the overthrow of the Manchu dynasty and the establishment of a republican form of government, in 1912, the books of Confucius were practically abolished from the new Government schools all over the land. Yuan Shih-Kai, the President of China, is a foollwer of Confucius, but he is also very favorable in his atti tude toward Cristianity. Confucian ism is not, strictly speaking, a relig ion; it is a nne system or moral ten ets, but is lacking in the "power of an endless life." The President saw that the public schools of China were suffering for the moral ballast that the teachings of Confucius had supplied under the old regime, and gave orders for the restoration of the books of China's greatest sage to the curriculum of the schools that had been established un der the new system. Thsi has been done. Furthermore, Yuan-Kai at stated intervals conducts the worship of Confucius and the adoration of "Heaven," and thereby places the stamp of his approval upon the whole system. At the same time, the President is giving his warm endorsement and full support to a series of evangelistic ser vices that are being held for Govern ment students, in 14 leading cities in different parts of China. These meet ings are under the leadership of Dr. G. Sherwood Eddy and are beine re sponded to in a most remrakable way. At reKin, a site lor a pavilion, with in the "Forbidden City." was granted by the Minister of the Interior; the Minister or War made a loan of 200 army tents to cover the pavilion; the Minister of Education gave a half holiday so that all the Government students migth attend the Eddv meet ings. There was a daily attendance of several thousand students, besides large numbers of the gentry and offi cials. All told, there were 1.917 in quiries in Pekin, who expressed their determination to study the Bible. Similar meetings have been held at other centers with like results. One hundred newspapers in various parts of China are co-operating with this evanpelistic campaign. A recent letter from China contains the followinp: "It looks as if the soul harvest in China is so ripe that the reapers can not gather all v.ho might come in." LACY W. LITTLE. Greensboro, Dec 28. MORE POTASH COMING American crops and soils are still as hungry for Potash as before the outbreak of the European War, which curtailed the Potash shipments. borne or the fertilizer Companies are trying to induce farmers to buv the one sided low Potash or no Potash fertilizers of a generation ago. This means a fertilizer that is profitable to the manufacturer, but not the best for the farmer. When the .Syndicate 1910 started the direct sales of Potash to dealers and farmers at rea sonable prices, Potash sales increased 65 per cent m one year, a clear proof that farmers know that Potash pays. They know that Potash gives good ields, good quality and resistance to plant diseases. Many of the fertilizer Manufac turers are willing to meet the farmer's wishesand sell him what he thinks he needs. These manufacturers are now willing to furnish as much Potash as they can secure. They offer goods with 5 per cent and even in some cas es 10 per cent Potash, if tbe farmer insists on it Shipping conditions are morovinr. more Potash is coming forward al though the costs of 'production and transportation are higher. The high er price of fertilizers is not due whol ly to the slightly higher cost of Pot ash. Much of the Potash that will be used in next spring's fertilizer had reached America before the war start ed. n-re is no substitute for Potash. We can no more return to the fer tilizer of twenty years ago than we can return to the inefficient farm im plements or unprofitable livestock of that period. THE CREED OF HUMAN KIND NESS The man who says that he is down and out is either a coward or a liar for opportunity comes every day and knocks at his door. He is either afraid or is wilfully tryng to get out of its way. Politeness is an asset to any man even though for the moment adver?i ty may have him in her grasp. If he knows how to be polite and gentle, the world will soon find him out, then he will be able to build from the ashes of defeat a mighty structure which will stand the winds and storms of adversity and rise like a tower to show men the possibilities of being kind. Know thyself, that you may fit your self to love and serve in full measure. Be merciful, be generous, be kind, and so live that your every action will exalt men to do only those things which will make them readier to do their full duty towards their fellow men. Lula A. Stone, in Southern Woman's Magazine. Mrs. R. D. Neely, of Brevard, while kindling a fire last week poured gaso line in the stove, mistaking it for ker osene, and in the explosion which fol lowed she was very badly burned. Children Ory FOB FLETCHER'S CASTORIA MOONLIGHT SCHOOLS WILL II ELI Nothing is so important in North Carolina as to drive illiteracy from the state it is the noblest and most human undertaking in our history. With poor roads and isolated as much of the population of the state has been in the past there has been iii many sections little advantage with asociation wjth educated people while the people are of the purest Anglo Saxon blood, yet many of the adult population are illiterate. When we say illiterate we mean those who cannot read understanding ly and write their thoughts on pape intelligently enough to express their meaning. There are a great many people wlv have learned to sipn their names and spell and pro.iounce a few words, b' they are, nevertheless, illiterates not withstanding they are put down by the census takers as persons who can read and write. The state has suffered more from illiteracy in the waste of its resources, its opportunities, and its manhood and its womanhood than from any other source. Take the waste of money in work ing the roads. Enough has been ex pended on roads to build a system throughout the state. Enough money is wasted every year in wapons.mules. horses, men and time to build surfaced roads within a short distance of every man's farm. The travel over stones, through mud, water and ice is expensive any way you look at it. These conditions as to roads are due to lack of educa tion among the masses. Truly the cost of illiteracy is more than we can pay. The time is here for a state wide campaign to educate the older as well as the younger people. It is useles to explain theories and argue with those who cannot read and think for themselves. There are ex ceptions to this rule but they are few. The thing to do is to go to work with a will and drive out illiteracy and the rest will follow. The mission of the teacher, preach er and newspaper is to lead to h'pher ideals. The people will farm, buik roads, schools, churches and hour js as good as they want. Moonlight schools, as they are call ed, is the only way it can be done. Moonlight school is another name for night schools. They are taupht at nipht and are usually taught by the day teachers free for the benefit of the adult population. People of all apes attend them. They are usual I v taupht for a month in the summer time, and the older people learn more and better the second summer than the first. They are usually taupht for month or lonper. The length of term is usually a month or more. To teach our old people for their own sake is a great thing to do. The preatest good that will come from teaching adults in these night schools will be the impetus given to the edu cation of the children through the opening of the eyes and the minds of parents to see and know wnat tne friends of education are trying to do in their zealous efforts in this upliit campaign. The inmnerence ana in some instances outright opposition on the part of parents has greatly re tarded the progress of education. A few weeks in a night school will re move this indifference and opposition The trouble with the illiterate parent is that he is shut out from what he cannot understand. He distrusts that which he does not understand. Some one has put it this way to il lustrate the baneful influence of illit eracy: A good loving mother sings her child to sleep, and places it upon the bed and covers up up its head with a quilt. She had lots of work to do and had learned that the child would sleep longer with its head cov ered. But she had not learned that it was being poisoned, affected with scrofula, its lungs being destroyed. She did not know. Did you ever see a family of six or seven sit down to a supper of bread spotted and yellow with soda, with sorghum, bicon fried in grease, boiled turnips and strong coffee, and after a hearty meal go to bed in nne smal room with doors and windows closed to keep the "cold night air out"? The cause of all this and many other things which bring only one result disease and weakness of mind and body are lack of information and knowing how to do and how to live; in other words illiteracy is the cause The right schools for adult's will break down the prejudice and distrust. and in the place of indifenre will be hope and encouragement. Great im portance will be attached to "learnin." Enthusiasm for education and bet ter farming, better living, more ser vice for others will feel all with hope and inspiration. BARE WALLS ARE A MONOTONY The bare white walls of the modern sanitary hospital have a certain mon otony which forms a dull and dreary' aspect to the sick person who mu lie for the larger part of every da and find nothing else in his homon Some of the hospitals are now reliev ing this monotony by having pictures of various kinds painted on the walls In one hospital, in the children s din ing room is portrayed "a festival of toys." In one of the corridors of the children's wards is illustrated the sto ry of Cinderella. As Brayton says "These beautiful and peaceful decora tions may administer to a mind dis eased and pluck from memory a root ed sorrow. RHEUMATISM PAINS STOPPED The first anlication of Sloan's Lin iment goes right to the painful part it penetrates without rubbing it stops the Rheumatic Pains around the joints and gives relief and comfort Don't Buffer! Get a bottle today! It is a family medicine for all pains, hurts bruises, cuts sore throat, neuragia and chest sains. Prevents infection. Mr. Chas. H. Wentworth, California, writes: "It did wonders fer my Rheumatism, nain is rone as soon as I aply it I recommend it to all my friends as the best Liniment I ever used." Guaranteed. 25c at jour Druggist , SPOTS BEFORE TH$ EYES Almost every one at times sees fix ed or floating spots before the eyes, and many popular misconceptions ive arisen concerning them. This ondition is not an indicaton of mpair- 1 vision as is often thought. The most common form of these floating pots arc the tiny transperent chains or strings, which are seen especially on a bright field. A shake of the head may carry them away, but they at once float back apain. These spots are probably caused by the remains in the fluid part of the eye of certain cells which should have been com pletely absorbed in the development of the eye. Other floating spots are due to cobweb-like masses of inflammato ry material which are thrown out into the field of the eye by some inflamma tion. It is a prevalent idea that the earing of a dotted veil may leave permanent spots before the eyes. The veil may be a source of strain on the eye muscles in causing the wearer to avoid the obstruction on the field of vision, but it certainly is not the case that the dots or any other object seen can be permanently photograph ed on the nerve tissues or the eye. CHAMBERLAIN'S COUGH REME DY THE MOTHER'S FAVOR ITE. "I give Chamberlain's Cough Reme dy to my children when they have colds or coughs," writes Mrs. Verne Shaffer, Vandergrift, Pa. "It always helps them and is far superior to any other cough medicine I have used. I advise any one in need of such a med icine to give it a trial." For sale by all dealers. CONGRESS PASSES ANTI NARCO- TIC BILL. The Harrison bill for tbe suppres sion of illicit trade in habit-forming drugs passed the House December 10, after having been before Congress for over two years. The measure is to regulate the interstate sale of opium and cocaine preparations, the object, being to restrict the sale of habit- forming drugs to persons desiring them for legitimate purposes. The difficulty has been to so word the measure as to prevent illicit traffic in these drugs without interfering with their legitimate use by physicians. The bill as passed exempts the dis pensing or distribution by physicians of drugs contaning opium of cocoa leaves or any of ther derivatives, nro- vided the physician keeps a record of all such drugs dispensed or distribut ed, showing the amount dispensed, the date, the name and the address of the patient. If, however, the physician is in personal attendance, such record is unnecessary. YOUR COLD IS DANGEROUS BREAK IT UP NOW A cold is readily catching. A run down system is susceptable to Germs. You owe it to yourself and to others of your household to fight the Germs at ence. Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honep is fine for Colds and Coughs. It loosens the Mucous, stops the Cough and soothes the Lungs. It's guaranteed. Only 25c. at yeur Druggist. . Imagination to Be Controlled. Imagination Is a great faculty If properly controlled. Uncontrolled, let loose to ran Its course untrammeled, breeding Its kindred passions of preju dice, fear, hate, malice, it becomes a menace, haunting us with its fantasies and fallacies, unfitting us for high purpose. Yet It dwells latent or po tent In every human breast master or servant according to the treiurth or weakness of tba wUL "When my boy, Ray, was small, he was subject to croup, and I wa al ways alarmed at such times. Cham berlain's Remedy proved far better than any other for this tremble. I am never with without it is the house for know it is a positive core for croup. writes Mrs. W. R. McCain, Blairsville, Pa. . For sale by all dealers. THE PACIFIST (Ohio State Journal.) The effort of the big army and big navy people to bring discredit noon what they call the "false pacifists," centers upon this fact that we may have wnr and therefore it is Dest to be ready for it The pacifists wonld rule out the major proposition Dy re sorting to an international tribunal to settle all disputes between nations. The only answer to this is, that said. nations will violate weir cumraei. That is mere assumption. Get the agreement in definite shape and the tribunal in working order and there never will be any violent protest against it. This may be regarded as assumption, too, Dut u is worm trial. It is pointed out by the w people that nations will not keep their word that their contracts are mere "scrips of paper." That may be the case now, Put it win noi oe wnen there is a general understanding. A sensibly constituted arbitral tri bunal will abolish war. It is easy for such a reference to gam tne conn dence of humanity. The world would despise a nation that would attempt to overthrow the judgment of a tri bunal which it helped to set up. ims idea is sure to prevail. , CASTORIA for Infants and Children. Tli fkt Yea Hits Always Eszgbi Signature of Cleaning Piano Keys. Water should never be used to clean me keys of a piano, as It removes their polish. Rub them with a clota dampened In alcohol, which will re move all yellow stains aad mak ta keys perfectly white actio. crop l75;vw more. , -..