f REVERENCE FOR JUSTICE WOMAN'S BEAUTY Hon. T. W. Bickett delivered an ad dress at the recent commencement at Queen's College, Charlotte, from whuh we quote the following beauti ful language: "Woman's beauty is a crown of glory when it is found in the way of righteousness. Ker own loveliness is the lever by which woman may lift the world up to the things th::t are lovely and of good report. Beau ty is a master key that opens every door. The world has never denied jified the Greek conception of compos a beautiful woman a fair chance. At i ed majestic, unrelenting force. He the outset the world never rates a ! erected on the heights of the Acropo- (James A. Garfield before the Su preme Court of the United States in 1SS6.) When Pericles had made Greece im mortal in arts and arms, he invoked the genius of Phidias to devise monument which should symbolize the beauty and glory of Athens. That artist f elected for his theme the tutelar divinity of Athens, the Jove born goddess, protectress of arts and arms, of industry and k;w, who typ- WIRELESS TELEPHONES SOON THE ENORMOUS COSTS OF WAR woman above her face value." Mr. Bickett pointed out a way to be beautiful. Here it is: "A sensible diet should be the first course prescribed and not only pre scribed, but taught in every school for girls. It is hard to get a sweet, fluffy young thing to understand that the simplest fare is the best. Young ladies, there are more roses for your cheeks in poached eggs and turnip salad than there are in those delicious promoters of indigestion that sell for lis a colossal statute of Minerva, arm ed with spear and helmet, which tow ered in awful majesty above the sur rounding temples of the gods. Sail ors on far ships beheld the crest and spear of the goddess, and bowed with reverent awe. To every Greek she was the symbol of power and glory, But the Acropolis, with its temples and statues, is now a heap of ruins, The visible gods have vanished in the clearer light of modern civilization. We cannot restore the deenjed em A fleet of war vessels goinr into Let no man or set of men try to action with the admiral transmitting hurry us into war with any other na- orders to his captain by word of tion. mouth is the latest wonder promised There was war in these United bv wireless communication. Marconi i States a little over fifty years ago. has boon quietly working on a wire- j We are paying for it yet. lelss telephone for some tune, and an- j The amount spent upon pensions nouncement has just been made that resulting from the War Between the the Italian mivy has adopted the in- 1 States aggregates over 4,500 million strument and the British admiralty ; dollars. Even now, pensions cost 165 has been conducting tests r.board Eng lish vessels. Onp instrument has ar rived in this country and communica tion has been established between New York and Philad' 'phia. How- millions a year. This non-military nation spends 147 millions a year upon its navy. 125 millions upon its army, and 165 millions upon pensions; total, 437 great distances can be spanned has I millions, not yet been stated, but Marconi Stop and consider that more men thinks the po er of the present appa- j have been killed in six months on the 80 cents a pound. There are moreiblems of ancient Greece; but it is in sparkles for your eyes in a glass of buttermilk than in the whole bub bling, sizzling aggregation of soda fountain concoctions. Young ladies should be taught how to cook these products so as to make them palata ble as well as digestible. The things that come from the kitchen tend eith er to kill us or make us live, and here, young ladies, you are in a very real sense your brother's keeper. The God of Nature has enacted one im mutable law that the penalty for disuse is death. Every bone and nerve and sinew in our mechanism cries out, 'Lean on vni, use me, let me labor that I may live,' and so begin your day with at least 15 min utes of exercise prescribed by some authority and when you are thru with your lessons make for the great out-doors. And walk and walk out-of-doors. Put on a sensible pair of shoes, not a pair that makes you look like you were looking over a preci pice all the time. Walk across plowed ground, jump ditches, climb barbed wire fences, scale a hickory nut tree, then come home and be sure you are asleep by ten o'clock at night. Take a 10-hour beauty sleep and when you come down in the morning the very sight of you will make every j son of Adam feel like he has been! hit by a bolt of sweet lightning. "My second prescription is, be natural. The great actresses are eas ily numbered. Few people enn play a part without making thcmsel'rs ridiculous. AHcction spoil faces than smallpox. You your power, O judges, to erect in this citadel of our liberties a monument more lasting than brass; invisible, in deed, to the eye of flesh, but visible to the eye of the spirit as the awful form and figure of justice crowning and adorning the republic; rising above the storms of political strife, above the din of battle, above the earthquake schock of rebellion, seen from afar and hailed us protector by the oppressed of all nations; dispen sing equal blessings, and covering with the protecting shield of the law the weakest, the humblest, the mean est and, until declared by solemn law unworthy of protection, the guiltiest of all its citizens." Constipation Cured Overnight A small close of Po-Do-Lax tonight and you enjoy a full, free, easy bowel movement in the morning. No grip ing, for Po-Do-Lax is Podophyllin (May Apple) with the gripe. Pc-Do- Lax corrects the cause of Constipa tion by arousing the liver, increasing the now of bile. Bile is Nature s an tiseptic in the bowels. With proper amount of bile, digestion in bowels is perfect. No gas, no lermentation, no Constipation. Don't be sick, r.ervous. iritable. Get a bottle of Po-Do-Lax from your druggist now and cure your Constipation overnight. . ratus can be multiplied so as to talk ncross the Atlantic, though it is hard ly thought this feat will be accom plished until foreign conditions are again normal. The short distance wireless telephone will not wait for the end of the war, however. It is expected to become available for com mercial use in a few months, and will have a guaranteed range of at least "0 miles between ships at sea car rying aerials 100 feet high and with 200-foot span between masts, DEATH OF MRS. LINEBERRY THE SCHOOL HOUSE AN INDEX TO CIVILIZATION The schoolhouso is the temple which we erect to the God of childhood. The schoolroom is the home of the child more j during- the mo.;t important hours of simply the most important years of its life. cannot develop grace and charm in a se'f-eonsciour personality. Be gen erous. In- open-minded, ho sincere. This i.- an af of ve'wr. So many thin-.s have been naintcd over, pow dered over ars.l pla-verod over, lias lif finv ecu. vc!v( t has 1 velveteen, butter has become 1 ine, beer has lnv;me Iwiin". 'eenr.' n- i'l the sidi The school room, the sihoo'house, and the school grounds constitute the best index to the degree of civilisation and ti tii-"' ideal of the community. ii:r ill). mt the school shouh ill. clean and wholesome. Kvoryt Satin Up beaut en,- T,., ,; ;:; wl Mrs. Louisa Lineberry, wife of Jefferson Lineberry, died at her home on Randleman Route 2, June 28, after an illness of only a few weeks, at the age of 58. The funeral services were conducted Tuesday evening from the Methodist church at Rehobeth by Rev, T. E. White and the remains were laid to rest in the cemetery at that place. She was a loving mother, a kind friend and neighbor, always ready and willing to lend a helping hand. As a mother she was tender and faithful in all the duties and cares for her children. On her death bed she ex pressed her willingness to die and ask ed that her childlren meet her in Heaven. Among many sorrowing relatives and friends she leaves a husband, three sons, four daughters and thir teen grandchildren to mourn their loss. Correspondent. DEATH OF MRS. HENLEY uid g;v ... The 1 fi-'. become r-, place "fe childr. a I gain strei d not he a In 1 perfect. The o to pre pare th for its di; pirlccns ? PUwe d-in't. He a fir'. Find the iA o in the I'l.anteon that you were designated to occupy and f;!l it, for the gods see everywhere. Know what you pretend to know. Don't be smatter-brained. Be accurate, In accuracy lives next door to wrong, and slovenliness in dress or manner is half-sister to immorality. I want to see the day come when the women of America will refuse to bow to Paris ian shop keepers, and when they will refuse to hop because some spring of royalty goes lame." The third prescription was, be holy. "You must he if you would enter into the full kingdom of woman's beauty. The King's daughters are, and of necessity must be all beauti ful w ithin. The face is an etching of the soul." Mr. Bickett voicing a beautiful tribute to John Charles McNeill, sketched a vivid picture of the poet, as he conceived him standing perpet-l nally gazing toward the Golden West, wrapt in the contemplation from which was born the surpassingly! beautiful poem, "Holy, Holy, Holy." ; "The most pathetic figure in the world is that of the man who, having done his day's work rhen he starts to his home goes down grade when the woman with whom he lives, his wife, his mother or his sister, lives on a lower plane and has more sor did views of men and things than he. God pity such a man. He lives in a cellar. But fortunate the man who climhs to his home, who amid the temptations of the day can look up and see his home shining like a star. Be careful of your thought. Read only the best literature. Let nothing low or little and lodgement in your mind. Set an angel with a flaming sword at every gateway of your soul, that no creeping, crawling things may enter there." Beauty More Than Skin Deep. A beautiful woman always has good . digestion. If your digestion is faulty, Chamberlain's Tablets will do you food. Obtainable everywhere. tbc'i lor rornis of direa--e and death. That the time in srh.inl may he used to best ad vantage, li e child should be under the most favorable conditions. No one does his hot work otherwise. Since idea's formed in childhood from its environment and daily associations go with us through life, the cleanliness and beauty of schoolhouses and grounds are more powerful than all other agencies in determining the cleanliness and beauty of private homes and public buildings in the com munities, where the children live as grown-up men anil women. The re pulsive impressions of ugliness, dirt and disease accumulating from clay to day drive children from school The attractiveness of beauty, clean liness, sweetness, and comfort increas ing from day "to day, is more power ful in bringing the child and all its interests to school, and keeping it there, than any attendance laws can ever be. As are the school and schoolhouse, so will be the home, the city, the State and the nation. For every cummunUy the motto should be: "For our Schools Health, Comfort and Beauty." P. P. Claxon, United States Commis sioner of Education. CALOMEL DYNAMITES A SLUGGISH LIVER Crashes Into Sour Bile. Making You Sick and You Lose a Day's Work. Calomel salivates! It's mercury. Calomel acts like dynamite on a slug gish liver. When calomel comes into contact with your bile it crashes into it, causing cramping and nausea. If you feel bilious, headachy, consti pated and all knocked out, just go , your druggist and get a 50 cent bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone, which Is t harmless vegetable substitute for dan gerous calomel. Take a spoonful anu if it doesn't start your liver and straighten you up better and quicker than nasty calomel and without malt ing you sick, you just go back and get your money. If you take calomel today you'll be sick and nauseated tomorrow; besides, it may salivate you, while if you take Dodson's Liver Tone you will wake up feeling great, full of ambition and ready for work or play. It's harm less, pleasant and safe to give to chil dren; they like it. -v, Mrs. Charlotte Henley died at her home, Guilford College, Sunday June 27, aged 78 years. The body was tak en to Burlington for interment Mon day. The funeral was conducted at the residence of the deceased by Rev. Mary C. Woody, who paid a beautiful tribute to the Christian life of the deceased. Mrs. Henley was a daughter of Mr. Benjamin Swaim, who formerly lived in Asheboro and published the South ern Citizen dunnar the 40 s. Mr. Swnim was the author of several hooks, including S'vnirn's "Man of Business." and ''The North Carolina K:ect'tor." Tie died years ago while serving in the Legi.-kiturf. The deceased was born in Asheboro, her early childhood home being on old Main street, in the house now the res idence of Mr. B. F. Newby. Her hus band, Mr. Jesse Henley, died years ago and she has for a long time made her home at Guilford College. Four children and eighten grandchildren survive. Mrs. Henley has visited the family of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Walker in Ashe boro not many years ago. She was a cousin of Mr. Walker, having been a Miss Dicks, a sister of Mrs. J. M. Worth and also of Mrs. Walker's mother. battlefields of Europe than were kill ed on both Confederate and Federal sides of our great war. If the countries of Europe shall adopt the pension system, how stag' gering will be the burden and taxation upon the people of those warring countries! By keeping out of war our country will be the great, prosperous, leading nation of the world. But we can keep out of war only by determining that we shall pursue the paths of peace. We must not think war or advocate war. The one best way to stop war is to do so before it begins. YOUR GREAT BIG GIRL SHOT THAT CAUSED THE GREAT WAR Your great V.g girl, who used .to he Just tall enough to reach your knee; Your litt'.fl prl who wss. that now Seems such a wondrous woman grown So changed and passed away .somehow With all her fairy childhood flown, And all her heart and soul and mind So different a woman kind In all her tender thought and zeal For home and love; and heart and feel Your great big girl! Why, there she stands, , Up to your shoulders, while her hands Are strong and broad, her lips; her eyes, A woman's with that sweet surprise Of dawning grace of womanly will In all her manners dreaming still Of what she was in days gone by, You look, and laugh, and heave a sigh, And wonder where she'll leave you here As life rolls on from year to year. It cannot be this tall young thing With all her verve and grace and swing Was once the little girl you had, Who came to you when you were sad, And made you smile and helped you lift The shadows that through all lives drift Till childhood comes to put them by And help us see the bright blue sky And freshening holies bevond us run Through all the silver of the sun. Your great big girl! You look again, You can't believe it true and then The Hooding thought of life retakes Your soul and then you realize How surely time so shapes and makes These little ones, until they rise. Before us like a sudden gleam, And girls are women holy dream, Of life and love and joyjs that beat Around us, guard and keep them sweet ! The Bentztown Bard. DIRE DISTRESS One year ago Monday of last week, the Austrian Archduke Francis Ferdi nand and his wife were shot and killed in the little Bosnian town of Saraja vo, by Gravio Prinzip, a poor student. This act ultimately resulted in eleven nations going to war. These nations are, on one hand, Great Britain, France, Belgium, Rus sia, Serbia, Japan, Italy and Monte negro, and on the other. Germany Austria and Turkey. The war to date, Kidney Pills never fail to relieve me according to conservative estimates ' of,Pain jn the, b,ack ?,d reSlate te .... ., , . ., , , action of my kidneys, compiled from the best available re- ' at a deaerS- Dont ports, has caused a loss to the various lsimpy ask for a kidney remedy get belligerents of more than 6,000,000 , Doan's Kidney Pills the same that men, dead, wounded and prisoners, 1 Mr. Herndon had. Foster-Milburn and more than 500 ships. Of these i Co- Props- Buffalo, N. Y. about 120 were war vessels. ,c,..t n v iMiimve wwwat It Is Near at Hand to Hundreds of Asheboro Readers. Don't neglect an aching back. Backache is often the kidney's cry for help. Neglect hurrying to kidneys' aid Means that urinary troubles ma follow. Or danger of worse kidney trouble. Here's High Point testimony. W. C. Herndon, 207 Willowbrook Ave., High Point, N. C, says: "I was bothered a great deal by my back. Often at night it ached and in morning I could hardly get out of bed. Sharp pains darted through my kid neys. I also had bladder trouble and the kidney secretions were too fre quent in passage, causing me annoy ance. I found Doan's Kidney Pills just the thing for the trouble. I gd irood results from the first. Doan. THE MAN WHO ADVERTISES IN THE HOME PAPER Salisbury Watchman. The man who advertises in the home paper does much to build up his community. First, he helps him self, he becomes a live wire in the community, he is able to keep his doors open and does the business if there is any doing. He is liberal minded and willing to help custom ers; second, he helps his customers he tells them what he has without the necessity of their losing time going about hunting for things, he makes prices low in order that they might be compared and thus induce the reader to buy of him; thirdly, he helps to pay the subscription price to his customer's newspaper, . for with out this advertising the price of the paper would necessarily be much more; fourthly, he helps the editor and those who help produce the pa per and they in turn help the commu nity and the merchant. The man who does not advertise will never amount to anything in the commer cial world. He is destined to failure, sooner or later, one way or another, as certain as water seeks its level. Of course, advertising is not every. thing, but properly used, it will do more to sell goods than any other known agency. LIBERTY BOOK CLUB MEETS Liberty, July 2. The Liberty Book Club met with Miss Etta Trogdon on Fayetteville street yesterday after noon. The guests were met by Miss Etta and ushered into the reception hall where Miss Bland Trogdon serv ed punch, then into the south parlor. Mrs. Wade Hardin gracefully presid ed over the business meeting, after which the club was entertained with reading by Miss Bland Trogdon. Place cards, an Irish potato, paper napkin and pencil were passed and the guests were given 30 minutes to make a doll and gown. Mesdaihes Mann and Roy Reitzel won first prize, while Mrs. Rom Smith and Miss Elizabeth Cam eron received consolation. The guests of honor were Mrs. Guire, of Lenoir, and Miss Mary Griffin. During the afternoon delicious cream and cake were served. HEALTH NOTES Vaccination a Good Investment. A movement is now on foot to have all Federal employees vaccinated against typhoid fever. This will be an army of 400,000 men. Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo has designat ed 164 stations in the United States where any Federal employee may be iven the treatment free of all cost. Basing the calculations on what has already been accomplished, the Secre tary sees where the compliance with this offer will save .100 lives and at st tf,(H0 people from periods of nvalulism. 1 lie records show that six cdcral employees die each month rom typhoid fever. So valuable has he use of anti-typhoid vaccine provei not only as a life saver but as a time aver as well, that Federal authori- es and big corporations are now con sidering it a wise investment to have 11 their employees inoculated against typhoid. WILSON His voice has voiced for us our will Our thoughts, our wish. We're with him still. We're with him in this hour of right,. We're with him as our pulses thrill With joy that lifts us to the light Of justice and of reason when The night called deep across the night For a man like Lincoln was again! His word has spoken our thougt for us His will our wish has wrought for us, His soul has seen with purpose wise His land's soul with those burning eyes, That read with prophecy and light The people's will and wish aright Or whether under shadowing skies Or in the glow of sunbeams bright! His act has been our act, his deed Fulfills for us the moment's need Of strength and resolute calm to press Forward for living righteousness, And in this hour to strike, strike free, That our world-wide humanity May feel one soul,high-willed and true Has hurled, hurled far across the sea, To ring till wars and hate have end The message God would have him send! We're with him, with him in this hour Of waiting and of watching keen; The sharp delights of kindly power,. The glory of a throne's bright sheen. May tremble in their guilt and shake No heart in all our land doth quake. No soul lurk back in coward fear His voice has voiced our voice here! "Bentztown Bard." A TRUE FIGHT It may be that our lives are the most obscure and powerless for good this earth ever bore on her breast; I tell you if we are trying to be what we can be, then the life of every one of us casts its speck of grateful shad ow somewhere, holds itself somehow up to the sun and rain, fights its way with some poor success against storm and fire and foe and parasite; or it. stands sternly, in these great days, shoulder to shoulder with its comrades a strong tower of defense, to guard what we have won in our war for humanity, resolute not to fall into that trap the devil always sets for generous people, of giving up in the treaty what they won in the fight. Robert Collyer. ANTI-HOG CHOLERA SERUM The State Veterinarian is receiving many letters from farmers stating the splendid results obtained from the use. of anti-hog cholera serum. The anti-hog cholera serum is a preventa tive rather than a curative agent, and people are advised not to delay until their hogs are affected before using the serum. G. B. D, Parker, of Chin quapin, N. C, had 125 hogs, at least 5 of which showed advanced cholera. He used the serum on the entire lot and only lost five out of the lot. SOUTH CAROLINA EDITORS MEET The South Carolina Press Associa tion met a Chick Springs, S. C, last week, adjourning on Wednesday. Chick Springs was "selected as the meeting place for next year. Many of the editors went over to Montreat on Thursday and met with the North Carolina Press Association. William Banks, of the Columbia Record, is the new President of the Association. Traveling Man's Experience. "In the summer of 1888 I had a ver; The U. S. Agricultural Department ! estimates that the Hessian fly will KciaKo?LSetcfm E " " f d?lla a. m. to 6 p. m. without giving me any wheat. The worst damage is being relief and then told me they did not done in Oklahoma, Arkansas, Kansas, expect me to live; that I had best Missouri, Nebraska, Iowa, Illinois, telegraph for my family. Instead of Indiana 0hio 'and Pennsylvania. doing so, I gave the hotel porter fifty ' ' cents and told him to buy me a bottle . xivr a era ij'iti wt a of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and MANY CASES OF PELEGRA Diarrhoea Remedy and take no substi- TREATED tute. I took a double lose according. There are now 199 cases of pellagra to the directions and went to sleep der observation in Arkansas.accord after the second dose. At five o cIock . , . ... ' . . the next morning I was called by my lnS to Dr- c- w- Garrison, State order and took a train for my stop- Health Officer. He believes that the ping point, a well man but feeling cases not under observation, in the rather skaky from tte severity of the te districts 11 hring the total attack," writes H. W. Ireland, Louis- , , ' . ,, ' . ville, Ky. Obtainable everywhere. .number of cases in the State to 400. ITEMS FROM CARAWAY No. 2 (Delayed from last week.) Noah McDowell, Ivey and his two sons, of High Point, are visiting rel atives in this community. The communion meeting will be held at Pierces' Chapel next Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ridge, of High Point, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Pierce, and others this week. Conrad Garner and John Ridge went to the ice cream supper at A. P. Sexton's last Saturday night. Benefitted by Chamberlain's Liniment "Last winter I used Chamberlain o Liniment for rheumatic pains, stiff ness and soreness of the knees, anu can conscientiously say that I nevei used anything that did me so much good." Edward Craft, Elba, N. Y. Obtainable everywhere. Diarrhoea Quickly Cured. "About two years ago I had a se vere attack of diarrhoea which lasteci for over a week," writes W. C. Jones, Buford, N. D. "I became so weak that I could not stand upright, a druggist recommended Chamberlain-a Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. The first close relieved me and within two days I was as well as ever." Ob tainable everywhere. How You Can See The Wind It is said that any one may actually see the wind by means of a common hand saw. The experiment is simple enough to be worth trying, at least. According to those who have made . the experiment, all that is necessary is a hand-saw and a good breeze. On any blowy day hold the saw against the wind. That is, if the wind is in the north hold the saw with one end pointing east and the other west. Hold the saw with the teeth upper most and tip it slowly toward the hori zon until it is at an angle of about 45 degrees. By glancing along the edge of the teeth you can "see the wind;" it will be pouring over the edge of the saw much after the manner that water pours over a waterfall. This is doubt' less due to the fact that there are al ways fine particles of dust in the air, and in a strong breeze the wind forces against the slanting sides of the saw, slides up the surface and suddenly "pours over" when it reaches the top. It is doubtless the tiny particles that make the air dust laden that can be seen falling over the edge of the saw as the wind currnt drops, but it is about as near as any one can get to seeing the wind under normal con ditions. WILLISTON, N. C, MAN RESTORED TO HEALTH Mr. Wade Thankful He Read About Wonderful Remedy. E. T. Wade of Williston, N. C, was the victim of stomach disorders. He tried many remedies and took a great, deal of medicine and treatments, be lief seemed a long time coming. Then he found Mayr's Wonderful Remedy, took a dose and found re lief at once. He told his opinion or the remedy in a letter in which he said: "Your medicine has worked won ders. I feel so much better. I am thankful to you, indeed, for adverts ine your wonderful remedy in the pa pers, as otherwise I might never have known of it." Mayr's Wonderful Remedy gives permanent results for stomach, liver and intestinal ailments. Eat as mucn and whatever you like. No more dis tress after eating, pressure of gas in the stomach and around the heart. Get one bottle of your druggist now and try it on an absolute guarantee if not satisfactory money will be returned.