4 TSB cnEEABIiOTTE inSWS, JULY 23. 1911 The Charlotte News Pvbltabad dally «na Sunday by THJn KK.*W» PITBCIiHINO CO. W. Cl D«w«, rr—idtmt TW«9hoaMi C*fy RdJtCA Jrtfc OIBm ITT 116 liSO J C PATTON • • • • A. W. City *dlt«r A- W. BOnCH Adr*rtHtlnK Mjr. mnificmiFTfoif nATB* j%m cmmwtmf W*w». IXily aad Surday. OD* ^19 months rjo TbrM MontM *rj( On* KOttta jj sondAT omy. On« :r«i» FI* Bostbc **rr TftfM moots# PmU>* • On* r**» 8U raoctiaa •* 7*bre« fr«atb« *• A»aKMaj««icat. Tbe tvtMitloo oT puMtc m re- «r-*ctfu!lv invU^'j to ta» foUotrlns; Is tV'tw, Obituary Notice*. In M«- mer^Min Cards '»f Tntnlca. coBirnwrlcattoTjr «fiponsin» tta of • rrt>*te artt*rpr:se or a pol'ticai c*^di£«te acS uicft matte*-. '^lU oe rharived for *t tti« rat* of ftr» c«nts * tin*. There vlll p« no deviation from th** rcl*. SUNDAY MORNING. JULY 23, 1911. RECIPROCITY TREATY PASSES After week(» of wrangling and Bpe«ch making th# proposed Cana dian reciprocity bill passed the sen ate yesterii.'^y by a large majority vote * On next Wednesday it will receive th* prestdenfs s^ignature. go through the last formalities in the bouse and become formally sanction ed and Fettled. It is the one great issue in which the president has taken an interested part. His interest in the tariff seem ed ipathetlcr in the flght for Cana dian reciprocity he came boldly into the arena, meeting by such action, the disproval of many leaders of his own party. If his pet measure has resulted in an unqualified succe&s. he has the democratic contingent of both branches to thank. It was distinctly A democratic victory. Thirty-five dem ocratic senators, aided by twenty re publicans and three Insurgents, ac complished the dream of the presi dent. In the democratic house the meas ure earned with a sweeping vie tory. Three democratic senators oniv voted against the measure, they be ing Simmons. Bailey and Clark. These gentlemen were too well versed in the trend of things to hope for defeat of the treaty. Their de termined stand on the unpopular, ind, we may say undemocratic side, calls for admiration. Certainly they aef.ed the disfavor which their ac tion has called forth. At the last moment an effort was made to hobble the measure by the addition of amendment. An effort wag made to break the solidarity of the Southern representation, by the proposal offered regarding certain Southern products, but Southern sen ators. almost in a body, stood firm. The News believes that this vic tory will cause satisfaction among The great majority of American citi zens. The United States does a large business with Canada and vice versa. It stands to reason that the removal of the hight tariff barrier, which has ever bepn maintained between these two countries, will eventually work :>enefits to the ultimate consumers of both countries. DEVELOPMENT IN THE MOUN TAINS. We have had considerable to say during recent months anent the un paralleled development now going on in Western North Carolina. To the true Tar Heel this evidence of an Industrial reinaissance is gratifying In the extreme. Recent dispatches from Canton, the home of the three million dollar pulp plant of the Champion Fibre company are to the effect that the Champion Lumber Company, a new concern with five million dollars capi tal, is now advertising for one thou- *and workmen. This company al ready employs upward of four hundred men, but they have need of fifteen hundred. They are planning to build thirty-eight miles of rail way into Canton; to extend the line to Sunburst, and to erect large band saw mills. In short, they are lay ing grigantic plans for conducting lumbering operations on a big scale. J)uring the present year many val uable timber tracts in Western North Carolina have gone into the hands of men and companies amply able to finance development on a large scale. This means that many millions of dollars will be brought to that sec tlon. Keep your eye on Western North Carolina. Its resources are al most boundless, and they are to be Qtlllzed. The motto of the Washington Post Is: "Never put off until tomorrow wbAt you c*n get somebody else to do for yon today.” FANCY DOQ FLESH. Everything comes high in this day of high prices—even dogs. The Bal timore Sun pens a very readable editorial, taking as its theme the recent purchase of a basketful of pups for $10,000 and the subsequent ef fort of customs officials to tax the little dears. "When he hears about dogs that are valued at $10,000 a pound and one American woman brings home from Europe thirty pounds of them, divided among six dogs, the average citizen will look down upon his own hound and whistle in amazement. If the ordinary dog is worth intrinsi cally 87 cents less than nothing, how man.v common dogs would be reqxiir- ed for an even swap for Mrs. Al fred Dupont's six Sealyham ter riers? That's a problem that the dog- ologists can figure out. But in all likelihood the princely pups that are valued at a king’s ransom are worth no more intrinsically than the poor negro’s flap-eared rabbit hound, and if it came to a genuine uninterrupt ed scrap, one little $1.4.S bulldog could chew up about $500,000 worth of Sealyhams. "Since Senator Aldrich gave him recognition in the tariff and Collec tor Ix>eb classed him among the val uables. the dog has been strutting around with a supercilious air, wag ging his tail like a creature of con sequence. He has found himself the subject of extended debates in con gress, of treasury department rul ings. and has even attracted the at tention of the war department. Re cent dispatches from Washington in dicate that the famous dog of Col. Deem«», once stationed at Fort How ard, near Baltimore, has decided to retire from the army. The criticism of his table manners was more than a sensitive nature could bear, and thtis his military career is brought to an end. His seal at the table at Fort Howard is occupied by a strang er and his former mess-mates do not sigh for his return. But he has the satisfaction of knowing that he was instrumental in having one of his enemies, a captain, court-martialed, and wherever he has resided he will not be forgotten. His master is an able officer, has seen long service, and appreciated the loyalty of his pet. He held firmly to the doctrine "Love me, love my dog,” and stuck by him through all the storm and stress of barrack controversy. "The dog-lover will admire the stand of Congressman Fitzgerald, of New York, who denounced as an in sult to returning natives the section of the tariff taxing American-born pups which had been carried abroad by owners on tour. He insists that every dog should have his day, and protests against the unholy hand of the customs collector being laid upon the pet Pomeranian pup when he returns to his native heath. With biting sarcasm he denounces the re publicans who put a high tariff on his beloved canines, and in ringing tones demands that the American dog be as free to come and go as the American citizen. You may muzzle the dog, but there is no law to muzzle a congressman any more than there is to prevent anvone who has buckets of money paving $10,000 a pound for a wag on load of pups. But the dog da.vs do not last forever, and even the silly season comes to an end.” WHERE WE BUTT IN. The Raleigh News and Observer insists upon referring to the "In dustrial News,” and in speaking of the Greensboro paper as a republi can sheet. Every journalist in the state know the Industrial News has been defunct for a long while, and every journalist knows that under the management of Hildebrand the Greensboro News is ‘‘independent. The wilful misstatement of the case seems the more ironic when it is re membered that Hildebrand’s edito rials, when he was editing the inde pendent Asheville Gazette-News, were of such nature as to call for the open and often acknowledgement of the Raleigh paper, many of them being copied and commented upon at length. A fight which cannot be a straight fight is worthy only of defeat. The Greenscoro News may develop into the rankest sort of a republi can paper, but common justice will spare the verdict until such evidence is offered. Does the mere fact that Hildebrand defends Simmons, and that Daniels is fighting him, give the latter gentleman the^ right to consistently misrepresent the for mer? That kind of newspaper war fare becomes more unpopular as journalism progresses. Both gen tlemen are entirely too broad of calibre to stoop to such tactics. This, of course, is none of our business. Georgia's peach crop, which was killed in the spring, is said to be a record smasher. The senate practiced reciprocity with the house. Governor Kitchin "comes back.” THE SEAL OF VIRGINIA. any Virginians being here will be interested in the following in regard to the Seal of Virginia which appeared in the Tlmes-Dispatch; Sir,—Recently I read your editorial on “A Rumored Proposition to Change the Present Seal of This Common wealth by the Next T^egislature.’ Y'our adverse criticism, also a tendency on the part of several correspondents to agree with you, leads one to doubt your knowledge of the that the pres ent seal of Virginia is not the original seal. In use prior to and during the War Between the States. I learned this from an interesting and instructive address by General T. T. Munford, at the Confederate re-un ion in Norfolk last October. General Munford’s father was the custodian of the great seal of Virginia, and from his address I learned that the present seal was adopted by the Pierpont ad ministration while Virginia was Mili tary District No. 1. PHIL r. BROWN. Blue Ridge Springs. Va. Governor Kitchin Continued from Page One. “Untrue” Again. His statement that I said that Mr. Reid was defeated on account of his anti-trust record is not true. I never thought his trust record had anything to do with Senator Reid’s defeat but always knew that his defeat was on account of a local issue, involving the location of the court house. And his splendid anti-trust record was not suf ficient to save him from the disas trous effect of the purely local issue, and I am positive I never made a statement about it which I knew to be untrue. I have no idea that I made any statement that I was nominated on my personality as I am not apt to have made a statement which I did not believe nor did I state that the people of North Carolina w'anted nothing done. This, too. Is contrary to my message and my Interview and the objects of the conference. In considering the chances of get ting anti-trust legislation enacted we discussed the apparent opposition from various tobacco centers in former legislative contests, but whatever was said along this line was in illustration of the argument to be encountered and which had already apparently put a majority of the senate against the Lockhart bill. We agreed that the sur est way to accomplish something was to insist tipon the declaration of the democratic platform embodying the vital principle of the famous sub sec tion A. I will add that I never had a secret opinion about this subject at any time. “Untrue” Still Again. The statement that any man in the legislature was authorized to speak for me (outside of my message) is untrue and it was never reported to me that any one claimed or exercised such authority. Senator Lockhart has simply been dreaming. If it should be presumed that any one was authorized to' represent my views the natural presumption would be that my brother was. and he favored and as chairman reported as a substitute for the bill that passed the senate the entire Tex as anti-trust law introduced by Rep resentative Koonce. Functions of a Governor. The constitution in fixing my 'du ties in respect to legislation and the enactment of laws says that I shall recommend to the legislature such’ laws as I think should be enacted. I have done that In respect to trusts. Ivet the record speak as to whether I have modified my views on trusts since I was elected. Goes After Daniels. If you had published the report of my speech at Spray which was sent to you by a newspaper man who heard it, your readers would already know the injustice of your charge. I went into the question of legislative action on trusts fully in that speech and I used that speech at Kinston, Nashville and many other places, and if either you or your readers care to know the detail of that matter, I shall be glad even now to give my remarks as made at Nashville. Quotes from Inaugural Address. (Here the governor quotes from his inaugural address where he took the ground that the corporate monopoly that by foul means will fully and needlessly destroy its rival by wrong doing for the purpose of exacting un just profits from the public should forfeit its existence and that all the power of the state in all its depart ments should be exerted to destroy ev ery unnatural monopoly, every indus trial trust that commits wrong upon the people and their industries. He quotes an interview with the governor in the Raleigh morning paper Febru ary 2 in which he expressed his con viction that the democratic platform was a direct endorsement of sub sec tion A, and that the legislature ought to add the substance and affect the purpose of that section. He quotes also extensively from his special mes sage to the legislature following the Lockhart-Nimock conference. He quotes Editor Daniels as saying edi torially thereafter that the governor’s message stood for the platform and recommended compliance with its pro visions. Ahd later he declared edito rially that the message advocated sub section A, with effective machinery for its enforcement.) Recommendations to Legislature. “When the legislature of 1911 met I made to it the most comprehen sive and drastic recommendations against trusts. These were so clear and strong in their effect that some time afterwards when a gentleman in troduced a bill embodying all my re commendations except the two most vital and sweeping ones, your paper with enormous headlines pronounced it a bill against trusts with teeth.” (Here the governor quotes at length from the message to the 1911 legislature fresh in the memory of readers.) Then the governor con cludes as follows: Record vs. Memory. "With these records well known you assume to predit the contradictory recollection of one who is seeking my defeat. You have claimed to be neu tral In state contests within the dem ocratic party. You took no part in for mer senatorial contests either in 1901 or 1903. Don’t Daniels Need Help. Since then you have probably grown more confident and have determined to defeat two candidates for the sen ate, whether you have determined to elect one or not. You can constantly bombard me, but I shall leave my cause with the people hoping that as they nominated me once without your help they can nominatae me again against your opposition. I am not afraid of the truth and I do not be lieve you can mislead the people either as to my ]>ersonal, political or official, clmracter. "When I was a candidate before there was an effort to injure me by charging that I was unsafe and dan gerous. Y^ou now take the other talk and try to make the people think I have no moral courage, am truckling, am a hypocrite, and have made pledges to break them. I have persued the even tenor of my way, discharging the duties of my high office under my oath, taking advise from all but not con trolled by you or anyone. Attitude Unchanged. "My attitude toward trusts has nev er changed. I am as anxious to aid in the destruction of private monopolies and the punishment of offenders as I ever claimed to be. I rever said I could destroy the American Tobacco company or any other trust operating throughout the United States, if elect ed governor. And yet you have tried to make your readers believe that. I never promised the people to usurp the powers of the legislature or of the judiciary. 1 have always regarded the great trusts as pillaging plunderers of our progress, and I shall do ^hat I can to relieve the people from their oppression under the constitution of this state and the United States. These commercial pirates I have fought from my youth up to this day. I have always thought and still think that rich and great offenders should be punished as well as others. The charge that you make upon the re collection of a conversation two and a half years ago, in substance is that after my nomination and election I changed my attitude toward trusts. Fortunately for me the record quoted above disproves every syllable with out having to resort to recollection or conversations. To that record the pub lic will resort rather than to the pro duct of the intemperate zeal of an other advocate. In this state the three departments, the executive, judicial and legislative are separate and apart. The governor of North Carolina is the only governor in the United States that has no veto power and the governor is without power to veto legislation can have little power be yond the reason of his messages in securing legislation. You have con stantly opposed giving the governor the veto power. A striking compari son of the powers of governors is found between the governor of this state and the governor of New Jersey who has the veto power; wh ohas the power of appointing the secretary of state, the judges of the supreme court, the clerk of the supreme court, the district .ludges, the attorney general and the district atorneys. A governor with this power, disposed to use the "big stick” can be very effective in legislation, and yet the governor of New .Jersey has not driven the Amerl can Tobacco company, one of its char tered institutions—from its borders You may think that the governor of North Carolina without such powers should try to browbeat a legislature Into compliance with his wishes. I have no such conception of either my moral or constitutional duties in re spect to the acts of a co-ordinate branch of the government which the people of North Carolina have cre ated. W. KITCHIN. Raleigh. C.. July 22, 1911. I Gentle Raps at The News | Cupid's Wounds. The Charlotte News declares that Cupid’s wounds may be healed gen erally by court plaster. Doubtless true, but it cannot be denied that the little fellow receives some of his most grievous w'ounds in Court.— Charleston News and Courier. In Doubt. Our old friend P. P. (Parson Pat ton) of The Charlotte News, is tell ing about love-making in parks. W^hether it is an irresistible outburst showing the trend of his mind, or w^hether he is trying to work a bluff we have been unable - to determine. —Wilmington Dispatch. Taking 'Em Off. W’illis, Moore, director of the weather bureau, said last month that July this year would be hotter than June. We take off our hats to Willis also our collar and coat and vest.— Boston Globe. Some people down this way took off even more than that. In fact, it is said that The Charlotte News took ’em off.—Raleigh Times. What Bow Legs Indicate. "Bow legs are a sign of great moral courage,” observes the Mem- phis-Dispatch, whose editor, no doubt, has ’em—Denver Republican. We suggest that Phillips and Pat ton have that long proposed meet ing and decide this question. They are both probably bow legged and they must have courage to stay where they are.—Raleigh Times. More Devllsh Impertinence. Professor Patton writes thus; ‘‘We propose to make a special trip to Greensboro to settle up a few old scores with Col. Robert Rastus Phillips, the champion appetite of North Carolina journalism.” Rastus say the use of his name in that con- necytion is entirely without his au thorization; but, professor, if you want to settle those old scores any time soon, you’d better come quick, before you get so busy, you can’t come.—Greensboro News. Vile Slanderer. This gem of thought is from The Greensboro Daily News: "Says The Winston-Salem Journal: ‘Yes, we’re glad that Winston-Salem is close to Greensboro; it is good that the Lord’s people shall see how the other half lives.’ We have ob served some of the ‘other half’ even at a greater distance 'that Winston- Salem—in Charlotte, for instance. We don’t know, of course, but we have a sneaking hunch that The News is talking about Patton, of The Charlotte News.—Winston Journal. ♦ THE ANANIAS CLUB COL- ♦ ^ UMN. ♦ (From Hendersonville Herald.) The genial proprietor of the justly celebrated Stradley-Black emporium has a cat yarn which is stirring up something of a sensation. He says he had one cat more that he needed in his business and tried in various ways to slay the animal. After try ing all the methods know'n to medi cal and other science, he finally de vised a scheme which he felt sure would work. He filled a barrel with water, hitched a heavy brick to the animal’s neck by means of a short chain, and deposited the animal and brick in the barrel. Then he went home, feeling serenely confident that, on his return to the shop in the morning, he would find the cat good and dead. What he did actu ally find was this: The cat had drunk up all the water in the barrel and was sitting on the brick, singing high-class vaudeville music in a pure soprano voice. A Iwo to One ’»no 9Svd toojj penunttoo When icicles hang by thew all, And Dick the shepherd blows his nail. And Tom bears logs into the hall. And milk comes frozen home in pail. ^-Shakespeare. ment were all bruised aw'ay and the great race for the Canadian-American derby was at last at hand. A Two to One Victory. At 1:86 the Canadian pact had run the red gauntlet of all opposition and won by 53 to 27—a two to one majori ty. Never was the finale of a great struggle so quietly enacted. There w4s not a stir or a thrill from the begin- ing to the end of the ballot. There was not a surprise in the roll call. The event predestined, predetermined and foreknown, was accomplished at last. Every man voted as he was ex pected and schedulee to vote. Bailey, Clark and Simmons were the demo* crats who left the ranks of party. Brown, Poindexter and W^orks saved the consistency of the insurgent group by voting all through for reclprocl* ty. The Line-Up. Including pairs, 36 democrats, 20 re publicans and 3 insurgents had voted for the bill. Three democrats, ten in surgent republicans and 16 regulars had voted against it. , So that in the senate as in the house, reciprocity is a democratc measure, was passed by democratic votess. w'ould have been impossible without democratic votes. Giving all credit the persistent interest of the president, one has only to examine the roll call in every state, to see that the demo cratic party gave to the measure the indispensable thing of votes and that the republican vote was half hearted all the way through, and given to sustain the president and not the rep resent the party. Administration in Distress. Whatever victory the passage of fte- iprocity may bring to the presldeilt comes at a time of need. Tbe adminis-' tration is in eore distress, A fog of scandal covers it from th« attorc^y general’s office, to the whit© house Wickersham, of the cabinet, Ic In tlon, the Wiley persecution Is bringing curses home to roost; the demoGra-tie investigation committees are digging deep into republican records that smell to heaven, and that Alaskan scandal deeper and more menacing than all of them is even now pulling VvUh probable developments that may strike tlie re publican administration to Its vitals. Never this day of reciprocity tri umph could come more timely to the president than now', Mr. Taft will sign the agreement next Wednesday, after the reassembl ing of the house and the signature of Speaker Clark is added to that of Vice President Sherman. Then the American part is done. The people have been vindicated. The lum ber trust and the paper trust have fail ed to becloud the popular vision. The allies of the selfish have been rout ed. The handful of honest senators who protested the purely imaginary damage which seemed to them to threaten a few sections of the north west will speedily discover their mis taken judgment in the matter. And now it is all up to Canada. The d!anadian government under Premier Laurler is pledged to the agreement just as the American government was pldged to it through President Taft. The Canadian parliament is now in session. Mr. Lauricr has a majority of sixty government members behind him. They are sure to vote with him in this government emergency. There may b delays and wrangles and fili busters, just as we have in congress. But there can be no appeal to the country within five years even if the opposition were fierce enough to de mand it. The Canadian parliament will pass the reciprocity pact before the summer is over. President Taft and Premier Laurier will each issue proclamma- tlons putting it into Immediate execu tion. And then we shall begin to real ize its beneficial effects, political, mor al and material. There is neither time nor space to enumerate all thes. But to th housekeeper and to the bill-pay- er of the costs of living, the little table among a thousand may bring some pleasureable anticipations of the results of lowered duties: Reciprocity and Feed: Present rate: New rate: Butter 6c pound Free Eggs 4c dozen Free Potatoes 25c barrel Free Fresh haliuut Ic pound Free Apples 25c bu. Free Tomatoes 26 P. C. Free Onions 40c bu Free Cabbages 2c each Free Peaches 25c bu. Free Poultry (dressed( 5c pound Free Poultry (live) 3c pound Free Mackerel Ic pound Free Bacon, ham, beef and pork 4c 1 l-3c pound Salt, dried and smoked 25 per cent Free The senators who were absent were: Dupont, Delaware; Frye, Maine; Gallinger, New Hampshire; Lea, Ten nessee; Percy, Mississippi; Rayner, Maryland; Tillman, South Carolina. The senators who w'ere present but did not vote because of being paired with absent senators w'ere: Dillingham, Vermont; Sutherland, Utah; Thornton, Louisiana. There are two senate vacancies— from Georgia (due to the resignation of Senator Terrell) and Colorado. ^ CARDINALS SURE TO WIN ♦ ♦ ♦ Rebel Oakes thinks the Cardinals will be in at the killing. Just like all the other Climbers, Rebel has so much confidence that it bqrders on conceit. "Believe Tne,” said Rebel today, "the other clubs fear ug more than we fear them, They were surprised at our showing, and they’re all scheming how to beat'' us. They figure that we’re liable to bust up a game any old time and because we have been coming at a killing pace they fear us. ‘‘But we don’t fear them. I figure we’ve got 25 per cent the best of these clubs the minute w'e take the field. We are sure of winning every game. If the other fellows win, we figure ft is luck. That’s how w'e view the situation. But these other gaza boes are scarijd wo’ll keep up cur winning streak, and they don’t play with the confidence they should. "I don’t figure there’s a club in the league that has a right to beat us ft w^e get an even break in the pitching, and, believe' me, if we ever get on top, they won’t be able to stop us with a Chinese wall.”—Atlanta Journal LEADERS OF N EW YORK'S “4QC' New York tocial leaders In war for supremacy, Mrs. John R. Drexe! on the left, and Mrs. Ogden Mills. The other day at Newport ?t was nt. ticed that at one end of the piazza at Bailey's Beach (the fashionable bathing place) Mrs. Ogden Mills eat surrounded by her cloae*t friendi At the other end of the piazza sat Mr*. John R. Drexel, similarly at. tended. Mrs. Mills and Mrs. Drexel are rivals for the highest social position In America—the leadership of the New Yorw set. Each "as. pires to the position which was Indisputably held by the late Mrg. As. tor—‘queen of American society. ” And their sitting apart, each with her followers, meant the opening eklrmish of a battle for supremacy that will be waged throughout the Newport season, and no doubt will be continued throughout the fall and winter In New York. It is now ad- mitted that the place left vacan t by the death of Mrs. Astor belongs either to Mrs. Mills or Mrs. Drexel. ORIGIN OF A CUSTOM. ♦ ♦ ♦ CHINA’S NEW WOMAN. ♦ England is the only monarchy in which the ancient Jewish rite of anoin ting with oil and chrism is still pre served, and it is said to have been copied by Edward the Confessor after the coronation of Jehoash as described in II Kings, 11. The king of England is wedded to both recognized and encouraged by her his people by a ring. The story goes imperial government? Asks a writer that when Edward the Confessor was Times Dispatch. She is Dr. walking n«ar his palace at -Westmin- What stronger evidence of awakening of China could there b« than the living presence of a hiehly educated Chinese w'oman doctor, whose pioneer work in sanitation is ster one day he was accosted for alms by a pilgrim bound for Jerusalem, and, having no money on his person, gave the beggar a ring. When the pilgrim reached Jerusalem he reported the in cident to the patriarch at the Holy Se pulchre, who blessed the ring and told the pilgrim to take it back to London and restore it to the king. This was done and the same ring was used at the coronation until the reformation, when a new one was made, engraved with the cross of St. George. The annointing of the king is from an ampulla, or vial of holy oil which, according to tradition, was given to Thomas Becket by the Holy Virgin in person w'hile he was praying at the cathedral at Canterbury one night. The ampulla is in the shape of an eagle, seven inches high. It is made of pure gold and the holy oil pours through the beak of the bird. At a certain point in the ceremony before bestowing the crown the archbishop of Canterbury anoints the king by mak ing a cross upon the crown of^is head and the palms of both hands, saying: "Be thou anointed ^ith holly oil as kings, priests and projjhtes were anoin ted. And as Solomon was anointed, and Nathan the Prophet, so be you an ointed, blessed and consecrated peo ple over all these people whom the Lord your God has chosen you to rule.” The large square stone, which is fas tened in the seat of the ancient and rudely constructed coronation chair which may be seen at Westminister Abbey, is believed to be that upon which Jacob slept the night that he saw the vision of the angels ascending and descending tbe ladder. This stone, according to' the legend, was taken to Egypt, thence to Spain, and finally to Ireland, where it was used as the throne of the Irish kings for cen turies. It is known as the “stone of destiny.” HIS MOTHER’S PORTRAIT. The late King Edward VII. of Eng land was driving along a country road in Scotland one day, when he overtook an old market-woman struggling un der a load which was more than she could well manage. "You might take part of this in your carriage,” she cried to the king, whom she did not recognize. "Alas! my good woman,” replied his majesty with royal courtesy. "I’m very sorry, but I’m not going the same way. However, let nae give you a por trait of my mother. “A lot of good that will do me,” said the old woman testily. "Take it all the same,” said the king smiling, and he put a sovereign, bear ing Queen Victoria’s effigj’ in the palm of the astonished old peasant.—Ex change. Fearful Responeiblliiy. Says The Charlotte News: ‘‘About the most charitable thinf we can say of Fire-Eater Heyburn is "God made him, therefore let him pass as a man.’ ’• Do you think it charitable to charge up such a terrible re sponsibility to the Creator?—Greens boro News. men’s Medical School and Hospital at Peiyang, and founder of the first tralc- ing school for nurses in China, as well as of a hospital for babies and of sev eral dispensaries, all flourishing. Her mission in the L’nited States is the ac quisition of the latest ideas in sanita tion and hygiene, which she hopes to adapt to conditions in her own land. Left an orphan when a mere baby, she was brought to this country bj* an American missionary. Here she re ceived her medical education in the Woman’s Medical School of the New York Infirmary, and returned to take up her work in her native land. This year her school graduated its first class of nine native women, who tasU it will be to instruct Chinese mothers in simple hygiene and the care of their children, tlius gradually reducing the terrible mortality among the little yel low babies. In appearance Dr. Yamel Kin is typically Chinese, with a deli cate oval face, almond-shaped eyes and straight black hair worn in a lo® pompadour. Through her feet have never been dwarfted, they are tiny even when encased in quilted boots of heavy satin. Shee wears her national dress, a sevely plain, unembroidered robe like a modified mandarin-ccat, and on the street a plain and distinctly Western toque. There are no^’ sever al Chinese woman doctors, educa.ed in America, at the heads of hospital* in different cities of the empire, and Dri Yamel Kin believes that the future of Chinese medicine is largely in the hands of her sex. ♦ ♦ ♦ WHAT MAKES NILE GREEN? ♦ The "green water” of the Nile is quite a different thing from the green water of the ocean. Notes the scenti- fic American. About April 15 the Nile begins its annual rise and a month later tne effect is felt at Khartoum. A ver>^ curious phenomenon accompanies thu increase in the appearance of tne "green water.” For a long time it was believed tna the color came from the swamps of upper Nile lying isolated and under the tropical sun and J!' the waters wnth decaying matter.' W’^ith the spring rise this feii water was supposed to be swept m the streams to make its appearan in Egypt. . W’^ithin recent times, however, tni theory has been abandoned. No^’- are advised, the green water is by the presence of innumerable nu ' bers of microscopic algae, offei^iy® ■ the taste and smell. They origina away up in the tributaries and are ca*- ried to the Nile, where under sun and in the clear water the> i crease with amazing rapidity, columns from 250 to 500 miles length. .. The weeds continues to grow, a and decay until the turbid flood put them to the end, for they cann exist except in clear water. Offensive as in some green water is, it is hailed wnth dellgn by the Egyptians, since its is a sign of the real flood time and tn '*.l0BC of the water famine.