DEMOCRACY IS PROGSESS1VE SAYS PRES. WILSON FOUR THOUSAND SPRING TO WHAT THEY CONSIDER FORECAST OF HIS BEING CANDI DATE NEXT YEAR: HE TELLS THE INDEPENDENT VOTER THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY IS ONLY CONGENIAL COMPANY HE CAN FltfD. REMARKABLE RECORD ACHIEVEMENT OF TWO YEARS RECOUNTED: WHEN GOVERNMENT LOSES ITS ARDOK FOR MANKIND. PEOPLE ALWAYS WARNS DEMOCRATS TO PLAY ON THE TEAM, OF WHICH IS CAPTAIN; FIRST JANUARY IN HISTORY WHEN MONEY CEN TERS WERE NOT CONTRACTED President Wilsoa delivered the fol lowing address at Indiancpolis last r rtday. The occasion was tne Aanuai Jackson Day exercises. More than 4,000 people heard the President: "Givernor Ralston, Ladies and Gen tlemen: "You have given me a most royal welcome for which I thank you from the bottom of my heart. It is rather lonely living in Washington. I have been confined for two years at hard labor and even now I feel that I am simDiv out on parole. You notice that one of the most distinguished mem bers of the United States Senate is here to see that I go back. And yet with sincere apologies to the Senate and House of Representatives, I want to say that I draw more inspiration from you than I do from, them. 'They, like myself, are only serv ants of the people of the United States. O'.ir sinews consist in your sympathy r.nd support, and our re newal comes from contact with yo:. ,l with the stronc movement 01 public opinion in this country. That is the reason why I for one would prefer that our thoughts should not too often cross the ocean, but shmihi rtmenlvM unmi the nolic'e- .--,1 rlutioa nf the United States. If we think of the United States when the time comes we shall know ho--this country can serve the world. 1 will borrow a very interesting phrase from a distinguished gentleman of mv acquaintance and beg that you will kec-i vour moral powder dry. Believes in Fighter i.r.,t t hoi-o come here on Jack- son Pav. If there are Republicans present 'I hope they will foe the com pelling influence o Mun. . was nothing Jackson; that is the reason I i jpoke of the 'compelling influences of pth ' da. Am,rew P Jackson torthr.. man wno oe',evii ... -.- , beloved in fighting in earnest. And reallv. ladies and gentlemen, in put lie life that is the only sort of mar. worth thinking about for a momont 'If T was not ready to fight f everything I believe in. I woul.l thiiw it mv duty to go back, and take a back "seat. T like, therefore to breathe the air of Jackson Pay. I like to be reminded of the old militant hosts of piracy which I believe have come to live in our time. Democracy for Mankind "The United States had almost for gotten that it must keep its fighting $or in behalf of mankind who,, Andrew Jackson became President and vou.will notice that whenever the Un tod States forgets its ardor for mankind a Pemocrat is elected Fres hen The trouble with the Republi can partv is that it has not had a 21 idea for thirty years. I am not leaking as a politician. I am speak ing as an historian. I have looked for 1 ideas in the records and I have not found any proceeding from the Republican ranks. "The President said it was only natural then that when the country wanted things done it elected a Demo crat President. "Spoke" Kindly of the Dead "I would not speak with disrespect of the Republican party. I always speak with great respect of the past. The past was necessary to the pres ent; and was a sure prediction of the future. The Republican party is still a covert and refuge for those who are afraid for those who want to consult their grandfathers about everything. "You will see. therefore, that 1 have romn to you in the spirit of Jackson Hay. I got tired of staying in Washington and saying sweet things. I wanted to come out and get in contort- v-ith vo'i once more and say what I real'y thought. Admits Democrats Are Right 'Mr friends. V ;;t I particularly is this, that poll does nnt depend rr cnilnr mt mhers re ;s not onoui'h n l Ms country t., wr.nt you to 0 ..-I power; ami I i-l :. : enn-.i- !.-! th. re ?.ts in this Thi, it rternvn- 1 .- th it voter; IT.vc onie to as;-- you now v.e can no.-., rrivn to tn independent voter thT . the inrtrnmnnt he needs is the Demo cratic part.- and that it would lie Tior'o'e;i for him to attempt to use the Repih'iean party. T do not lave to. prove it; I admit it." Get in Good Company. The President went on to say that there are more progressives in the Democratic party than there are in the Republican party and that.there fore, the independent voter finds a great deal more company in the Democratic ranks than in the Repub lican ranks. "I say a great deal more," he added, "because there are Democrats who are sitting on the breeching-strap; there are Democrats who are holding back; there are Dem ocrats who are nervous. "I dare say they were born with that temperament. And I respect the conservative temper. I claim to be an animated conservative myself." "All the forces of America are forces in action or else they are forces c? inertia." Democracy is Progressive "What I want to point out to yoi', and I believe that is what the wholt ' country is beginning to perceive is this, that there is a larger body . of men in the regular rar.ks of the Dem- FEET AND CHEER WILDLY AT TURN TO THE DEMOCRATS. ocratic party who believe in the progressive policies of our day and mean to see them carried forward and perpetuated than there is in the ranks of the Republican party. How ra you be otherwise, gentlemen? The Democratic party and only the Demo cratic party, has carried out the pol- cies which the progressive people or this country have desired. These is not a single great act of this present Congress which has not been carrier out in obedience to the public opin ion of America. Credits Have Been Freed "Let me instance a single things "1 want to ask the business men here present if this is not the first January in their recollection that i'o not bring a money stringency for the time being, because of the necessity of paying out gnat sums of money by v ay of dividends and the other settlements which come at the first of the year? I have asked the Ik:iik- ers u that happened tais year an,, they say, 'No, it did not happen; it could not happen under the Federal reserve act.' We have emancipated the credits of this country. ' "I have taken a long time, ladies and gentlemen, to select the Federal trade commission, because I wanted to choose men and be sure that I hao chosen men who would be really ser viceable to the business men of this country, great as well as small, tnr rank and file. These things have beoT, done and wil! never be undone. They were talked about and talked about with futility, until a Democratic Con gross attempted and achieved then. Party Must Keep Working "But the Pemocratic party is not to suppose that it is done with the busi ness. The Democratic party is still on trial. This country is not going to use any party that cannot do con tinuous anil consistent team-work. It any group of men should dare to break the solidarity of the Pomocratie team for any purpose or from any motive, theirs will be a most unen viable notoriety and a responsibility which will bring deep bitterness to them. The only party that is service able to a nation is a party that can hold absolutely together and march with the discipline and with the zest of a conqueroring host. "I am not saying these things Tk--eause I doubt that the Pemocratic narty will be able to do these things, but because I believe that as leader for the time being of that party, I can promise the country that it will do these things. Team Work Counts Here the President paused to pay tribute to the two Pemocratic Sena tors from Indiana, saying he never had to lie awake nights wondering what they were going to do. He ad ded that the country is not going to trouble itself to Jie awake nights and wonder what these men are going to do; that if the country has to do that it will choose other men. In this con nection he said that " team-work all the time is what they are going to demand of us, and that is our individ ual as well as our collective respon sibility. That is what Jackson Da stands for. If a man will not play lu the team, then he does not belong to the team." "Now, what is their duty? You say, 'hasn't this Congress carried out a great program ?' Yes it has car ried out a great program. It has had the most remarkable record that any Congress since the Civil War has had. But we are living at an extra ordinary moment. The world has nev- r been in the condition that it is n now, my friends. Half the world is on fire. Only America among the great powers of the world is free to govern her own life; and all the world is looking to America to serve its econ omic needs and whiie this is happen ing what is going on? Stand By Shipping Bill "Dj you know, gentlemen, that the ocean Height rates have gone ir.i i i seine instances to ten times their or dinary figure? And that the farmers of the United States, those who raise grain a.,d those who rsise iolto:, ' " ciumot get any profit out of th? great prices th:;t they are willing to pay fir these thhirs on the other side of the sea, because the whole profit is eaten up by th? extort ioe.r.tr irc s for oeosn carriage? In i'.t rnidst of this the Democrats pro a temporary measure of relief in r shipping bill. "The mercants and the farmers of this country must have ships to carr their roods, and just at the present moment there is no other way of get ting them than through the instru mentality that is suggested in the shipping bill; and I hear it said in Washington on all hands that the Re publicans in the United States Senate mean to talk enough to make the passage of that bi.l impossible. No Right To Hinder "These self-styled friends of busi ness, these men who say the Demo cratic party does not know what to do for business, are saying that tnt Democrats shall do nothing for busi ness. I challenge them to show their rights to stand in the way of the re lease of American products to the rest of the world. Who commissioned them, a minority, a lessening minor ity? Their credentials as friends of business and friends of business of America will be badly dis credited if they succeed. "If I were speaking from a selfish, partisan point of view I could wish nothing better than that they could shnw their trus colors as partisans and succeed. . But I am not quite so malevolent as that. I would ocrats either have done or are lmme rather pray for them than abuse them, diately proposing to do. If that is But the great voice of America ougiu not our bill of particulars to satisfy to make them understand, what thev the independent voters of the countr are said to be attempting now. I would like to have one produced. This country is bursting its jacket and There are things that the progressive they are seeing to it that the jacket program contained which we, being is not only tight, but is riveted with constitutional lawyers, happened to know cannot be done by the Congress Freedom Must B used i of the United States. But so far ' as they can be done by State legisla "The Democratic party knows how tures, I for one, speaking for one to serve business in this country and Democrat, am heartily in favor of its future program is a program of their being done. service, We have laid the lines now unon which business that was to do the country harm shall be stopped and an oconomic control which was intniomhl. .hll h broken un. We have emancipated America, but Amer- figures from the last election and ica must do something with her free- that, while these figures are as yet m don,. complete, they show that the Demo- There are great bill pending in the United States Senate just now that hmro been nassed bv the House nf Rpnrpspntntives. which are intended as constructive measures in behalf of business one great measure whicn will make available the enormous water powers of this country for tie industry of it; another bill which will unlock the reasources of the public domain which the Republicans destrt to have locked up so that nobody could use them. Use The Great Resources "What we are trying to do in the .,t ,.......,; l.m ,-o fm- tho livat timrt in the hlstnrir nf tvi- United State m by which the great resources of this country can ,,.,t ,1, i u.,ii atch with a great deal of interest what tho solf-stvled friends of busi- -s try to do to those bills. -Po not misunderstand me. There ave some men on that side ot tao 'hambor who understand the value f these things an 1 are standing aliantlv by them, but they are a small minority. The majority that is tanding bv them is on our side of the hambor, and th y are the friends of America. Guide Labor to Opportunity J "Rut there are other things which we have to do Sometimes when look abroad, my friends, and see the V"" ,. ' .r- great mass of struggling humanity on tins continent, it goes very much to my heart to see how many men are at a disadvantage and are without guides and helpers. Pon't you think t would be a pretty good idea for the Democratic party to undertake a sys tematic method of helping the work- ng men of America ? There is a very imple way in which they can heln he working men. If you were simply tablish a great l ederal employ ment bureau it would do a vast deal: bvthe Federal agencies which spread over this country men could be direct- ed to those parts of tlic country, to those undertakings, to those tasks here they could find profitable em- plovment. The labor of this country needs to be guided from opportunity o opportunity. We proved it the other dav. I Helped Wheat Farmers . . . ' two States f the Union, thirty thousand men were needed to gather the crops. We suggested in a Cabinet meeting that ness and it is none of yours how they the Department of Labor should hav'g0 about the business. The country piimeu liuormaiioii aoout mis in sucn js theirs. The liberty, if they can get I iatai Bright s disease. Here's Asne form that it could be posted tip in the jti an(i God speed them in getting it,1 boro proof. Investigate it. postoffices all over the United State, js theirs. And so far as my influence) Mrs. E. E. Burns, Fayetteville, St., and that the Department of Labor (goes while I am President nobody 1 Asheboro, says: "I suffered intense should get in touch with the labor de- Rhnn interfere with them. I ly from kidney trouble, It began with partments of States, so that notice" could go out from them. What was, the result ? Those thirty thousand ' men were found and were sent to the ' ?re tney got profitable " It will not cost a , of money and it will do a pioyment. creat. Hpn1 tr..nf riooi t urai it TT-.-fj stotoa u tn nrnWoU f ,iv i, things systematically and all the year round, and 1 for my part hope that it will do that. Make Justice Easier i , . . "And there is another thine that neeus very mucn to De done. 1 am not one of those who doubt either tr.e I am proud to belong to a strong na industry or the learning or the Jn- tion that says: "This country whicn-Th tegrity of the courts of the United we could crush, shall have just as States, but I do know that they hav,, a very antiquated way of doing busi- ness, and I say that it is an immediate and an imperative call upon us to rectify that, because the spee.liness of justice, the inexpensivonrss of justice, u.e rcauy access oi justice is tne uan-i in jusuce use,,. - The Science of Trade "An ! then there is sorm th ng else, .'ho Periiori'ats have heard the Re- publicans talKing about the ..cientuic h to handie a tarm though the Republicans h.-.xe never en any esa.b.tion of a i owiedge noiv to handle it sciomii. rally. ! t is sciciit.iic to put addilioii..! profits nto the hands of those v.h.n are a!- idy getting the greater part of the profits, then they have been exceed- ingly -cientitic. It has been the science of so.lisrniess; it has been tha science of privilege. That kind of science I do not care to know anything about except enough to stop it. Mut if by si'.entific treatment of the tariff they mean adjustment to the ac 'icl tra-v conditions of America, and the world, Hn. 7t t- "fw th 1 $rr ?ttent,on t0flhe fact4tht the bill which creates the new trade commission does that very thing. We were at pains to see that it waa put m there, xhat commission is author- ized and empowered to enquire into and report to Congress not only npoi. all the conditions of trade in this country, but upon the conditions of trade, the cost of manufacture the cost of transportation ail the "It is, by the way a very comfort things that enter into the question ot jng thought that the next Congress of ,i M , n, 11 , . well as in the United States, and into all those questions of foreign combi- nations, which affect international trade between Europe and the United States. Jt has the full powers whfen will guide Congress in the scientific wui guide congress in the scientific aies estions of interT,ation-1 Bill of Particulars "At every turn the things that the progressive Republicans have pro- The Democrats Won . . The President said that just before he left Washington he went over tne crats, reckoning .state Dy fttaie, wouir. if it had been a presidential year, nave had a snajority of eighty in the elec- toral college. I "Fortunately or unfortunately, this is not a presidential year; but the thing is significant to me for this rea- son." Independent Voter the Boss . . A great many people have been speaking of the Democratic party a a minority party. Well, if it, it is r.ot so much ot a minority party as the Republican and as between the d'T Ltrjjl ' . , , , ... " Y.t Z :rtv; ; nZZ, , -".. ...v..... . ship has a majority. I do not van- " ' . . ..... .. v -v.. (lent voter too proul of himself, but I have jrot to :'dm'.f tnat he is our boss; and I am bound to admit that the things th:-. j he wants are. so far, as I have seen mentioned, things that I want. "I am not an independent voter, but I hone I can claim to be an indopend-' ent President and I want to sav this distinctly, I do not love any party any , onger than it continues to serve th pressing needs of ftmeru u. Come In And Get Warm "I want to make everv indenendent voter in this country a Democrat. It is a little cold and lonely out where ' he is, because, though he holds the r.e is, because, though he hoh baIanre of power he is not th nm T wapt him to v,hPre jt js warm the ma- ome in Mexico Its Own Boss "Now there is one thing I have got a great enthsiasm about, I might al most say ii reckless enthusiasm and that is human liberty. The governor has just now spoken about watchful waiting in Mexico. I want to sav worl about Mexico, or not so much about Mexico as our attitude towards VXIV; 1 h,ol(1 ll, as a lu!ameiital i""'V' " ,.u juu, uut cveij people has the right to determine its .xn u,nn 01 povernment, and until tn,s 1WMt revolution in Mexico, until the pr(l of the Daz reign, eighty pe. cent r tlle people of Mexico-never na(' a lookin in determining who should be their governors or what their government should be. Now 1 am for the eighty per cent. It is none nf mw hucinocc anA if io r,r,n r.t rm 1 hnainosa linu- inner thv tato in ,io. tminm if n i f m ho..lthe kidnev remedv used in American . America Not a Bully . . . . . . . .. A ? nathf d7vou sunZr that the 1 Doan's Kidney Pills and they cured Pal"y; uo ou suppose tnat ineme i h0De lhe DUbiiCation of mv Pple are endeav or.ng to :-temIenhtPveillthbee count a small amount of material benefit and advantage to people doine business in Mexico against the libet- unaiKiu, imppines.s 01 tne Mexican people .' Have not n,uroDean nations taken as lone as they wanted and spilt as much blood s they pleased in settling their af- fairs, nA chnii An thi f ht ico because she is weak? No. I sav much freedom in her own affairs as! We have.' If I am strong I am ; ashamed to bully the weak. In pro-! rmrtion to mv strene-th is mv nH,!f in ' withholding that strength from the oppression of another people "And I know when I speak these! tninp;s (not mo,.eiy f,-0m the gener- j ?ast response with which they have I just met from you but from my long time knowledge of the American peo-; pie), that that is the sentiment of the American people. . ! .... ....... ' ,lWIlro Just -mu:Kioa nvith t to n-,-.if rn,an,. I uv tn n- , l ,Lm !,. i i..i. :',.,-.. r Am--:., i n,:- ,i:f-;'i a 'i',i . ,. V, I ri!liiips A vppv f' frnm ...hprBtj nm I temporarily residing thundered with ! t rigi scorn t watchful siting!1 iv,Pm. ot in hi w- on- chuckiC(1 knowing that he laughs best who , h , kn(winjr gh what were fl t princi ,eg' of the American people. If I did not tkink j knew j fd emigrate cause I would "ot be satisfied to stay ere I am. There may come a time wh the American pe e wi haVfc t0 jud whether j what j am talking about or not But t , for two s more , am free t m fc tnat j d with a t comfort . munity for the tfme being. b Feels Very Confident tne United Mates is going to be very safcy Democratic, and therefore, we Pan altogether feel as much confi- dence as Jackson did that we know what we are about. "So I feel, my friends, in a very con fl, f fj V"i .' r 5 VS & the SfcrffK rLiuuricaii people, uiat we do know the program of betterment which it Will be nerOSKnrV for lis to Hurler, take, that we do have a very reson - able confidence in the support of the DWINDLING APPOMATTOX Village In Ruins and Fast Disap- pearing Philadelphia Record. The village of Appomattox,' th place of Lee's surrender 49 years agu on April 9, ha fallen into ruin and has nearly disappeared. Three houses have survived fire, storm and neglect.' but even these are warped and sa; ging, and the promise is that the too, will soon rot, and that weed? followed by scrub pine, will overrun their site. Two of these houses havi been long abandoned, but that on is now occupied by the large famib of a small farmer, stranger to that part of Virginia and unfamiliar wit! and indifferent to, the great memorie; that cluster around that tragu ground. At the time of the surrender the village was the seat of Appomattox countv. It was then, after four year of war, a seedy, ramshackle eros roads hamlet. A cluster of dwellin. mostly of wood, a few lawyers' of- i flees, a couple of doctors' offices, a tavern, a-smithy, a hiring stable r- i a store or two leaned around thr sleeov court house souare. The cour building was burned down 20 yc: ag0, and today the desolate co- house square is cumbered with ashes. (-harred plaster, shattered briclt3 an. bit.8 of heat-distorted glass in a pal iicuiai iv uum uiaii in ,"'' oiiriiu n iiki the visitor va. uKu ! ar"""a umini. i ne int-t i i;tiuu wu hub iiumiu- ment, which gives glorious praise ' tho snl.Ws of 'n-th Carnlina. 'caused tense and bitter controversy ule so,,, eis ol ivuriii viiroiiiia, imi in the South. The inscription follows "At this place the North Carol m. brigade of Brigadier General W. Cox, of Grims' division, fired the las volley April i), 1865. Major General Bryan Grimes, of North Carolina, planned the last l; tie fought by the Army of North" Virginia and commanded the infantry engaged therein, the greater part of whom were Isorth Carolinians, "This stone is erected by the p thority of the General Assembly o: North Carolina in grateful and pc petual memory the valor, em'u ance and patriotism of her sons, v ' fillowed with unshaken fidelity t'1 fortunes of the Confederacy to thi closing scene, iaiinnn to me end. 1 "Erected April 9, 1905. j "North Carolina Appomattox Com mission: it. A. London, chairman; iv J. Holt. W. T. Jenkins, Cyrus B. Wat son, A. P. McGill." On the opposite side of the mohu ment is this inscription: "North Carolina. First at Bethel, farthest to the front at Gettysburg and Chicamauga . Last at Appomat tox." NO DIFFERENCE The Proof is Here the Same as Every where For those who seek relief from kid ney backache, weak kidneys, bladder ills, Doan's Kidney Pills offer hope of relief and the proof is here in Ashe boro. the same as everywhere. Ashe- boro neonle have used Doan's and i Asheboro ueouie recommend Doan's. I for fifty years. Why suffer? Why run the risk of dangerous kidney ills 'pains across the. small of my back, j then headaches and dizzy spells both- ered me and the kidnev . Becretions became annoying. I finally used ing other kidney sufferers." Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the same that Mrs. Burns had. Poster-Milburn Co.. , Props., Buffalo, N Y. THE HOUSE BY THE SIDE OF THE ROAD ere are hermit souls, that live with drawn In the place of their self-content; There are souls like stars, that dwell apart In a fellowless firmament; j There are pioneer souls that blaze their paths Where highways never ran, But let me live bv the side of the road An! be a friend to imi.i. Let nu live in a house by the side of the road, Where the race of men go by, The men who are good ami the men who are bad, As good an-1 as bad as I, I would not sit in the scorner's scat. Or hurl the cynic's ban, Let me live in a house by the side of the road, And be a friend to man. see from my house by the side of the road, . By the side of the highway of life. The men who press with the ardor of hope, , The men who are faint with- the strife, But I turn not away from their smiles nor their tears, Both part of an infinite plan, Let me live in my house by the side of the road, And be a friend to man. Anoymous. SICK TWO YEARS WITH INDIGES TION. "Two years ago I was greatly bene fitted through using two or three bot tles of Chamberlain's Tablets," writes Mrs. S. A. Keller, Elida, Ohio. "Before taking them I was sick for two years with indigestion." For sale by all dealers. American people. Business Is All Right "I have been talking with business men, recently about the present state nf mind nf Amorinan kiieinaiia Thoro , is nothing the matter with American business except a state of mind. SUNDAYISMS Some Extracts From Noted Evaagei- ist's Remarks at Philadelphia. (From The Philadelphia Evening Ledger.) Here are some Sundayisms from to day's sermon: Deccollctte means the collar around the waist. I've heard sermons in which you couldn't find Christ with a searcli wa rant. God says, "Forgive your dehUrs." Man says, "Sue 'em for their dowgh. God says, "Turn the other cheek." Man says, "Call a cop," If there's anything makes me sick it's to see a fool woman huggiag and kissing a brindle nosed pup. The world is going to hell s fast it's breaking the speed limit. You sit in your pews so easy that you become mildewed. I will cram it down their threats in this town for the miserable lies they hurl against me up and down the streets of this city. Don't you forget it. You can bet your life on that. The Church of God is asleea; tt ) turned into a dormitory and has taken the devil's opiates. Sometimes people don't seem to mind while their boys and girls walk f,he streets and know more evil than gray- haired men. That s where they need a revival. When the Church of God stops vot ing for the saloon, the saloon wiU go to hell. I despise a touchy man or woman. You are a devil. Confess your sins. You business men don't treat Gd square. You allow a thousand thiags to come in and take the place that God Almighty had. ou never think of going out lato the street without dressing. Y would be pinched befors you wet a block. Then why not dress un w;tt the Bible and some prayers before you go to church. Make up your mind, sissy, that Q& had given himself up for you. You turn your old gatling gui tongue loose. Just like the lady wfco came to me and said: "I know I have a bad temper but it is over in a min ute." So is the shot gun, but it Wvs everything to pieces. You growl at your children until they have to go to the neighbors to remember what a smile looks hke. No wonder so many of them go to the devil vuck. PLEASE STOP MY Times are Hard and Economy Nece- sary Where to Effect Great Saving Literary World. "Please stop My " what? "Times are hard, money is scarce, business is dull, entrenchment is a duty. "Please stop my " Whiskey? "Oh. no; times are not bad enough for that yet. But there is something- else that is cost- ins: me a large amount of money ev ery year, which I wish to save. "Please stop my " Tobacco cigars, sff? No, no, not these, but I must retrench somewhere. "Please stop my " Rib bons, jewels, ornaments and trinkets ? Not at all. Pride must be rostered, if times are so very hard; but i be lieve I can see a way to effect quite a saving in another direction. "Please stop my " Tea, coffee and needless and unhealthy luxuries? No, no, no; not these; I cannot think of such a sacrifice. I must think of sometMnfc else. Ah, I have it now; my paper costs me two cents a week. I mst save that. Flease stop my paper; that will carry me through easr- J believe in retrenchment and ecoBoasf,' --pI V. S. GOVERNMENT TO 1SSB A NEWSPAPER In order to promote the foreign commerce of the United State tne Government has gone into the aews paper business. The first issue of the Daily Commercial Report was turner out by the Department of Commerce January 2. It is to publish aN im portant cable messages received from the attaches at the various embassies abroad and from consuls throuefaout the world. It will also contain nn stracts from the findings of iavefiti gators of the department in mr.' lines of American enterprises. TO THE NORTH CAROLINA TRUCK GROWERS Tha VA.-fh r.arnVxna Ttennrtmmt. at "Agriculture will furnish inoculating material lor r.ngnsn or uarnen peas, beans, etc. this spring, at fifty cents nn nnr T.pt lis hnve vour order at once as the time is getting short. Ad- .h-noa -W A fVohnm Commisfiioaer of Agriculture, Raleigh, N. C. J L. BLKVir.&S", Agronomist & Botanist. THICK, GLOSSY HAIR FREE FROM DANDRUEF Girls! Try it! Hair Gets Soft, Fluffy and Luxuriant at once No More Falling Hair. If you care for heavy hair, that glistens with beauty and is radiant with life; has an incompanble soft ness and is fluffy and lus;roua, try Danderine. Just one application diubles tne beauty of your hair, besites it imme diately dissolves every particle of dandruff ; you cannot havs nice, heavy, healthy hair if you here dandruff. This destructive scurf robs the hair of its luster, its strengh and its v life, and if not overctfne it produces a fieverishness and itcling of the scalp the hair roots famish loosen and die: then the hair falls ot fast. If your hair has fcen neglected and is thin, faded, dr scraggy or too oily, get a 25 cent Jsttle of Knowlton'a Danderine et any trug store or toi'e counter; apply a ttle as directed and ten minutes aftf you will say. this was the best iifestment you ever made. We sincerelybelieve, regardless of everything els advertised, that if you desire soft, ustrous hair and lots of it no da'druff no itching scalp and no mor falling haiir you musw use Knowlti's Danderine. If even tually why not now? 1

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