The Western Sentinel, Mav PageS ' un:.. r- , 45.000 Reiidence. Mr. E. W. Ux or has let the contract for the erec tlon of a twostory,. nine-room resi deuce on Summit street, .to cost 1v 000. It will hare city water, electric )lieh:tH. sewer and Kaa. and will be a residence of modern design. 'r 1 VJ itienl not just for the rno- , either! repsi-v. oia is lasiffinhseHrt. SQuenches thirft steps !C cesn t ma yorfthirsty, cauf it is mads ofthirst-quer.thfig ingred ients and flavored with de lious ang rareitrus fruits. Jist enough surar to make ettrone ,flike itl and not a. r too fweet. I PEPSI- licasci - i ft tola refrestes nourishes. If can qfink it ana reel lea ee it s rtjre. iiilds up lodand ru;nd It's food it's eaure it's vacation4 for the manorwanai. YEU ought A 1: " . ' i : r epw-uia iiiviumg, WILL THE PUT HP STAJE TICKET? Charlotte, May 19. North Carolina Republicans may decide to put out a ticket this fall in the elections sched uled for November, and there is a strong chance that friends may put up Mr. Jake F. Xewell, a recognized leader for many j ears iu .uu..e..3 and the ninth district, eUner lor con man from, the ninth to oppose rnncrefisman E. Y. Webb, or that Mr. Jewell or other prominent leaders may be slated for other offices, -r',., rail that has been issued for c-ooTichnrn meeting is the first ,mi that has come officially from any of the republican leaders since the overwhelming landslide just IS months ago. Local members of the split party srpoke cautiously likewise of the possi bilities of a republican or prosrei or "fusion'' candidate but several inti mated with a far-off look that there was a strong likelihood that the repub licans will not allow the field to go unchallenged 'In the approaching elec tions in November, ana mat t.ena, candidates to oppose Democrats may be put in the field. At the present time, however, there is little sentiment openly expressive of confidence that a union of progres sive and old-time wings can be procur ed. The schism appears too wide and deep as yet to present much prom.se or hope of healing. $15,000,000 FUND FOR THE REIli ' TEACHERS and di ur blood o other flav t. Ir will cool ickertyour brain. asgSod. Aren't you thirsty now? la Bottle At rounc ,1 -emu,- Pepsi -Cola Battling Company MAtM STREET ' tnaslti Brown's Warehouse, Winstco-Salei Attorney lit . -! - ; . .. - rw- - . Wtaston-Saiem; N. CV Phinto Office number 532: residenckjLmber 1067. jPractice is all the court. Special at tention given to the settlement of es tates and collection , - M Springs od Remedy n i m i m !fitr one bottle i equal to four bittlesftrf any other olood rem edy ail Vill do fourtime as mach tooth Sold WELFAIIE MucnsiiDRE MAIN' NEAR SALEM IQUARE By parcel, post tolany address on receipt f 1.0S. On receipt of 12c in stamps we will mail anywhere one can of good Talcum Powdr. " EXPERIMENT IN FEEDING Tfl LOTS OF BEEF CATTLE Washington, May 19.---President Harrison, of the Southern Railway companv, has received from Messrs. R. S. Curtis and L. AV. Shook, animal husbandmen in charge of beef cattle and sheep investigations at the. North Carolina agricultural experiment sta tion, a report of an experiment in feeding two lots of beef cattle on the I farm or .Mr. K. a. terny in lucmuouu county, X. C, which will be of inter est to those who contemplate feeding beef cattle in the South and are de ferred by the assumption that a large initial investment is necessary in the way of barns and sheds. One lot of sixteen steers was fed in an open shed and given a run of a space sixteen feet by thirty feet. An other lot of sixteen steers was fed in a Ave acre field. The report shows that the cattle fed outside made 315 pounds more gain per head than those fed inside and their final mar ket condition was equally as good as those fed under cover. The feed for each lot of cattle con sisted of 1,140 pounds cottonseed, 250 pound's cottonseed bulls, 1,230 pound? of com, 12,915 pounds of corn stover, and 42,776 pounds of corn Bilage. , "DETECTIVE BURNS A TO l v-; - - ; Atlanta, Ga, May 19. Judge Ben jamin H. Hill, in charging the grand jury, laid particular stress on the perjury and bribery charges in con nection with the case of Leo M. Frank and the efforts made to secure a new trial of that case. With a burning de nunciation of Detective Burns and the methods employed by the Burns agency. Judge Hill charged that Burns "an alleged great detective," was "a menace to the peace of the community and, to the administration of justice." The court demanded a most thorough probe of every activity the agents for the defense and the prosecution engaged in during the investigation of the Frank case. Referring to private detective agencies, Judge Hill said; "They do not detect crime; they en courage it. We do not want them- in Georgia." -New York, May 19. The Carnesie tnr ty, Advancement of Teaching, founded by Andrew Carne gie with an endowment of $15,000,000 to provide retiring allowances for teachers and officers of high education, al institutions in the United States and Canada, has, during its eight years ot operation, distributed a total of 96,i7, according to the annual re po'r'rtesued by its president, Dr. Henry S. Pritchett. today. , The reiort, for the year ending Sep tember 30, 1913. shows that $579,440 were distributed in retiring allowances to professors and IS0.94 in pensions to their widows, during that year. - The number of allowances for the year was thirty-three, making the ;,runt total of allowances now in force 4)3. The average annual pay ment to an individual is $1,703.' In connection with the Foundation's w ork as a center of information .con cerning "pensions, the president dis cusses pension systems that are main tained bv half a dozen colleges, thei nVvelooment of new systems at Brown University, the Rockefeller Institute and the American Museum of Natural Historv, the new. ederated iension system of the English universities.and the proposed system- for the clergy of the Episcopal church. Among pensions for public school teachers the report rtisoiissen the misfortunes .ol tne .e York City systemv and commends plans of the new stale system in .uassacuu The study "of 'legal education has been begun by a first hanu inquiry into the bar examinations of every state a special study of legal teaching by Professor Josef Redlich, who came from Vienna for tne purpose, auu u a personal examination of each of the 160 law schools in tue country. Plana fnr the study of engineering education ase now being completed The earlier educational work of the foundation is continued by commen dation of the present tendency of col lege entrance requirements towara both elevation and flexibility. The need for further improvement is shown by the fact that only 55 per cent of the students now in our col leges are high scheol graduates, The decrease in the number of medical schools in the country from 162 in 1910 to 115 in 1913, and the rapid im provement of the better schools are commended upon with appreciation. general study of the problems of the state regulation of higher educa tion is illustrated by a detailed ac count of the reecnt crisis in education al affairs in Iowa. The report further presents a study of the financial status of college teach ers as compared wjth the situation presented in a similar study published five years ago. The ordinary salary of a full professor in the institutions associated wtih the foundation is now $1,000. During the last five years the salaries of instructors have risen by about $80; those of junior professors show a gain of from $120 to $225; those of full professors show an in crease from $125 to $350. The report concludes with a frank criticism of contemporary college cata logues. TO i Deputy Marshal! Mitohell Dead. "ftllmCngton, May 19. P. A. Mitchell, of Raleigh, deputy United States mar shal for 16 years, who was stricken in federal court last week, died in a local sanitarium last night at 8:30 o'clock following an operation for gall stones. He was about 60 years old. Remains were taken to Raleigh last night. International Harvester Oil and Gas Engines 111 td. Tk. I I Cm Drih a TiUY an Infe M gine, talt shoLld be caret mote from nov TOO. . I will save voubsd t . K laoor in pumping an I H C fc it a few of fee valves, accilra op f org id E-l Best mlt 1. IHI aiasiiet in r localld bl does Is know Vbo fk V i I cauuogBes, 1 cruo Tit I HC Line C1AIW AND HAT m - MACHWq Hmint, Umwmt Hr lnim , COM MACHIHtS Plutfm, tkkmn linim, CiUnfn iUn SMimt TILUCE r. lnM-TM4. tUUumi GUMAl un 01 mi Cm iavam un lnctr rnational Harvester en- care of it as any machine for and a dozen years or it will still be working for it hard runn Buv less tu Here large heavy rods, c best ecgi kon low Not evei The one w', do not write us lot International Hirvcst Oiarlolte your family endless boars of ;, sawing, grinding, spraying, ngine. They last longer, bum sr. and give yon most power, reasons: Offset cylinder beads. tely ground piston and rings, crank shafts and connecting srial and construction mean the c engines are built in all styles. ra 1 to 50-H. P. They operate J fuels. saler handles IRC engines, a good man to know. If yoa is, wS Mill tell yoa when yoa spanyol America SECRETARY DINIELS TO CHARLOTTE STUDENT rharlotte. Mav 19. Secretary of the Navy josephus Daniels was the sneaker at the Charlotte High , scnooi couimeffoement heM last night in the Auditorium. While incidentally men tioning1 affairs & state, the Mexican situation' amoiig-pther things, Mr. Dan iels devoted the, address, tp advice to the young" people'.about the regulating of their future lives, almost to the ex clusion of other wees. r He-jgave in youth', to 'whom he especially spoke recipe for success and ; happiness. for the attainment of the best for themselves and .their country. After a happy introduction by ir Camerion Morrison, Mr. Daniels said: Since I became a member of the cabinet, of the great patriot who sits In Washington, l, too, nave become an educator. In the navy Js a school of to.tiwi boys, we nave converted tne navy into '.. school," college, a uni versity, where every efllisted man may when he leaves it may -be trained not only for . war, . but for peace, also." ' ' 1 ' ' Mr. Daniels mentioned thai he is now advocating a Din in congress which would enable, ajppptntriient of 3 enlisted men annually to the Naval Academy, ,so that as eAcft-private in the French army was once said to carry a marshad's baton in, his knap sack, each sailor in the- united State? navy may carry an aamiral s cotnnns sion, if be is deserving It. Hopes .for Peace, In the midst of this mention of his plans for the navy's betterment, Mr. Daniels gave voice to the. hope that this country m&y avoid,,, .war w ith Mexico, or, as, h expressed it, "with that distressed country" Said he: "In this crisis in our his tory. it is gratifying to know we have a great man at, the nead.who loves peace and justice and honor." This reference to President Wilson was warmly applauded. , , No further mention was made by tiie speaker of the troubles, or affairs of any nature, of, the national govern inent. His speech from this point to the end dealt wtth, , an analysis of success and with admonition to the students. Hat Off To Youth. Mr. Daniels told the story of Gar field's custom of lifting his hat always to boys, while hardly, exer, to men, because the boys are coming leaders of the nation. Mr. Daniels said: 'If we shall change tha policy of this government, it will not b by men, but by boys and, girla who take our places." At this point the speaker broached the subject of the present worldwide ''feminist movement,1' as he named it He stated that he didn't think this movement of women to the front of affairs would change the-spirit of the home. He added humorously: Still I am glad that I was not born 25 years, later, for the first place a woman is going to want in the gov ernment Is to be secretary of the navy." . i" Favorable comment on educational advancement was , tinged -with the statement that we arenclined to esti mate too lightly the education of older men, . Older men learned, but tiiey dug it out with "dull tools," feaid the secretary. He emphasized the "ad IS T U. E. Baltimore, May 19. Baltimore has been selected for the final settlment of a long-disputed Question of Metho dist history. On June 12 there will gather here special commissions of the Methodist Episcopal Church, the Southern Methodist Church and Meth odist Protestant Church, to decide whether the Sams Creek church, in Carroll county, or John Street church, New York, is the oldest Methodist church in America. The Sams Creek church and the John Street church are both Methodist Episcopal Institu tions, and the issue is one between the Maryland Methodists and those of New York. The Southern Methodists and the Methodist Protestants are, however, anxious for the question of priority to be settled, for each claims to he the real Methodism of the type founded by. Wesley. . Efforts to dispose of the ouestinn in (he past have been unavailing. it Hams crees church wins out Methodists of Baltimore and Mary land will hold a big pilgrimage there next fall to celebrate the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the estab lishment of the church as the first Methodist church In this countrv. Members of John Street church. New Tprk, Insist that they made no mis take two years ago In celebratine the one- hundred and fiftieth anniversary oi ine institution or Methodism there. A. few days ago Rev. Dr. John P. GoucherKev. Dr. E. L. Watson and Rev. Dr. Charles W. Baldwin met In New YOrK. with Rev. George V, Eck man, editor of the Christian Advocate: Rev. DT..W..V. Kelly, editor of -the Methodist Review; Rev. Dr. J. S. Chadwick and Rev. W. F. Connor, of Pittsburgh. At this conference-the date and place for meeting the other commissioner was agreed upon. Republicans select Penrose AND DEMOCRAT8 PALMER Philadelphia, May 20. Pennsylva nia yesterday for the On time held primaries to choose candidates for United States senator, governor, jus- uceev oi tn supreme courts, ae well as for other state offices,' Congress Anil dflctaintum y ; Boise Penrose. woe.' i&r RepubKc&s nonnaiion nor senator and Martin O. Brumbaugh .was virtually unoppos ed, as. ens ;teputttcaa candidate for goveraor. ,. , Oa the Democratic HckatOoogyees man A, Mfcchell Palmer was selected as the party, candidate for enator, defeating Henry Bodd, of Philadel phia.,, . ,'Glfford PCochot was unopposed for the, Washtagtoo-Progreesire. comlaa tjcu jfor senator. , . i vantage of being; poor." TAR HEEL ITEMS There's ' a stimulus,' an Incentive, an impelling advantage behind tne boy who has to djg or .die," he said. Life's Recipe, i Secretary Daniels briefly gaye his young hearers a recipe Dy the use of which theymight hope to . best serve their country and, themselves. "First, be yourselves" he gave Emersonian : advice, . end enlarged upon the ideal by stating-that the world is too full of followers and ech oes, too free of leaders and voices. Men he stated, should have the cour age to beat down conventions ana tread new pathways to the best. Men and women who follow never -live af ter death, never upbuild during life, he stated. Don't be fearful of Inspiration, was another .point in his recipe. He aaid tliat Andrew Carnegie tells of the "flashes" received 1n' the night-time, which he followed. Mr. Daniels calls such flashes divine inspiration. Fol low sentiment and the building of castles in Spain, he advised, and stated that many lives are narrowed by failure to do so ' Choose your occupation durly in life, the earlier the better, and hew definitely to the plan, was another point. Don s see signals of discourage ment along the route. Clean living is essential to clear thinking,', a use of Connie- Mack's philosophy for Ms ball-players, was Mr. Daniels', closing bit of teaching in his plan for a successful life. Biick Goodwin, a Wayne county farmer, owns, a mare now mothering promising; colt twins, Robv Dancy. of North Wilkesboro, has a chicken with four legs, two for use and two as an ornament on its back. In . Hoke county Oscar Dorman, 1? years old, mad at his . father, John Dorman, waylaid the latter and shot and then left him lying seriously wounded. The father may recover. The unnatural son Is in jail. He con fessed that he wanted to "put the old man out of the way." The Yanceyville Sentinel hears much complaint of the scarcity of to bacco plants. In many instances the flies have almost completely destroy ed the beds. This will in all probabil ity seriously reduce the contemplat ed acreage in Caswell. At Haddocks' Cross-roads, near Greenville, two small children of W. Cox played with a revolver and tragedy ensued. The weapon in the hands of a six-year-old. was dis charged and the bullet entered the face of a three-year-old boy, killing him instantly. The parents were away from home. , Uncle John Laws,, the veteran reg ister of deeds of Orange county, wants it distinctly understood that he is in the race for re-election, Uncle Johni Is safe. He has defeated so many that there is not a Democrat or Republican in the county, who, has the nerve to run against him T. Y.. Chandler, in Caswell county, recently lost a tobacco plant bed by fire, something unusual. The bed was a new-ground, and the fire stray ed to a nearby pile of brush, and swept over the, canvas, badly scorching the young ana tender plants. William F. Hughes, of Ashboro. one or Randolph's most substantial citi sens,, was killed at Worthville Thurs day when the brake rope broke and the wagon ran up an embankment and threw him under the wheels, bpth or wnicn ran over mm about the neck killing him instantly. wuite an interesting case is now being tried in the Superior court at ewton. It Is to determine the- own ership of St. Peter's church In Cline township, It was at first owned, joint ly, by the Lutherans and Reformeds, but now there are three Dailies to the controversy. The Tennessee Luth erans, the Missouri Lutherans anil the Reformeds, Fire in the Black Mountains on the head of Cattail . creek, three miles from Pensacola. destroyed 700,000 feet of timber belonging- to the Carolina Spruce cpmpany of that Place. The timber was In the log and was lying along the railroad, track of. the, lum ber company. , Three small trestles of the railroad were burped. The . fire caught -fromi an engine, starting in the dry leaves. Five? tramps were found on a trair that pulled into Pembroke a few days ago. The mayor of Pembroke, who found these men broke.' being a man of tender heart, gave all five, of them joo for rorty Oays on the countv roads. From an altitude of 2,332 feet Boone town can afford , to look down , upon its aspiring and perspiring rivals this summer, and let the wide world wag as it will, S. D. Campbell, of Hickory, and Miss Claudia Morgan, of Durham, ere married at Stroup's park, on the rrepare AstrOndtnerJi To View Sun's tictipsd ROW OVER RURAL CREDITS IN HOUSE IS ADJUSTED Washington,' May 18. Failure' of the Democratic House caucus to in clude rural credits in the program of legislation for the rest of this session which for a.-lme stirred up ft row of ample proportions, has been adjusted The. temper of many members of the House was shown . when one of them was speaking on the question oi rural credits... Just about the time that the speaker was asserting that no legislation during this session exceeds in importance teat oi rural credits a colleague -wood riee and, assert that there would be' no basin ess conducted the rest of this session without a quor um unless rural credits was taken up and disposed of. 'henever-a point of no -quorum Js map it becomes the duty, of. the clerk to call the roll,. When the roll call is completed . and, no w quorum show n a call is made, members drift In, 'there is another .roll call and a quorum is announced; Befort tea miniUae have passed, however, the members are seen, slipplnjr, ; away v to , committee rooms or offices. Then some lynxeyed Congressman, who is a bit sore, will again. make the. point of no. quorum and. the .whole thing is te de over slain. f . " " - e Catawba river near Hickory, by Rev. C. M. Ervin. About 50 friends were present at this romantic place to wit ness the ceremony. Logs which have sunk in Lumber river near Maxton are being reclaim ed, as they, are as sound now as when they went to the bottom many years ago. This could be done at many other plaies most profitably, now that lumber has advanced in price. Constable Poythress, of. Granville, went to the house of ft negro named Fred Gooch, near Stovall, to arrest him for jumping his bond. Fred could not be found in the building at first. He was up the chimney. But the con stable got him, soot and all. Evidently murdered and the body rifled of all belongings, then placed across the rails of the Norfolk South ern railway in order that the crime might be covered- up, fate stepped in and the body of Frank Smith was discovered by the engineer- of the Norfolk Southern eastbound passen ger train In time to stop his engine. The Oxford Ledger tells us that Mrs. Z. W. Lyon has a. novel way of raising strawberries. . She. filled large barrel with , earth, and. then bored three sets of holes .around tha barrels, and stuck the plants, in these holes, and they are growing . and bearing nicely. It is a good ; way to keep them, out of the dirt, ,. A report from Snow Hill tells of an exciting encounter Thomas Moore had with a bull in West Snow Hill When the animal charged Moore had no time to escape and with quick wit seized : the , bull by, the horns, . The horns had been sawed off fortunately for Moore.-. The jnan clung . tenacious ly to the beast's' head .for some min utes,, and finally, worried , it down When the bull showed signs of weak ening Moore released hia hold, seiz ed -a piece of timber near by and neat it off. . .. . Catawba county ia producing some ireaks. A;, Q.. Isenhour, at. Newton shows a freak in nature as to rye. It has branching, from the first , Joint from the top. fpur, full, heads of rye nu one ot uiese. had three addition. ai smau heads, and at the top of the stalk of rye a large, well-developed head. J. ,A. Whitener exhibits a freak In "hen fruit" It is an. egg In the shape of a small cucumber. . Re cently Mr. Whitener broke open an egg that had a complete small egg m a weU-developed shell Inside the rs , . w Vato 'r-i. 7 p"erl. r ;.. , d Ject of Uie medic i nd l uatS CilV. V M lO m,l n a hit Mm. run .r . -? ' a pistol duel at a funeral , and each SrT"!0?1 "it-.hr!jMdJ! -peaead: with a bullet in his WR5V IT&plSZfit Washington, May 20. The eclipse of the sun' August 21 total in part of Kuronn and Asia and partial In northeastern . America is atfiractlng wideeDread attention of astronomers and scientists, various expeditions De ing arranged to witness this phenome non. In view of the public interest in the event, Professor C.G. Abbott; head of the astronomical branch of the Smithsonian Institution, and recog nized authority on solar phenomena, gives the following popular account of the eclipse and the scientific results sought from such events. On August 21, 1914, the moon will pass exactly between the earth and the sun, and there will be a total solar eclipse. It will not be observed in America,, except as a small partial eclipse at sunrise in the Northern States and Canada, but in Persia, Rus sia and Sandlnavla the full effect will be apen. Although the moon looks about the same size es the sun, it is very much smaller and nearer. The sun is 805, 000 miles in diameter and 93,000,000 miles away, while the moon is 2,163 miles in diameter and 239,000 miles away. On account of the moon's small hize compared with the sun the shadow oast by the moon is a, cone, and the point of this cone barely reaches the earth. In the August eclipse the diameter of the cone at the earth's surface only about 85 miles, so that the clipse is visible only in a belt about Sa miles wide stretching over the countries named above. The import ant oltiee of Bitlis, Trebizond, Kief, Minsk and luga lie near the center of this belt. It passes 100 miles north of Stockholm and Trondheim. - The clipBe will be seen as partial over a very wide area, including northeast era . America, Greenland, Europe, half of, Asia and half of Africa. Within this, region only a portion of the sun 8 disk will be hidden by the moon. Eclipses During Century. Wherever the solar eclipse is seen as total the "sky will become nearly as dark as full-moonlight,; and a few of the brighter stars and planets may be seen. . The duration of the . total ity is longest near Kief, in. Russia, where It is two minutes 13, seconds. Sometimes the moon and sun occupy such positions that, although the moon passes directly . between the earth and tha sua the shadow' does not quite reach the earth. Such solar eclipses are called "annular" and are nowhere near total eclipses. In the most favorable case a total eclipse may last over seven minutes at a station, but such occasions are very rare. The very long total ecllspses of this century are as follows: May 29, 1919 duration 6.9 minutes, visible in Peru, Brazil and Central Africa. June 8, 1937, duration, 7 minutes, visible, on the Pacific ocean and in Peu. - ' June 2Q..1955, duration. 7.2 minutes. visible- :1 -'Ceylon, Siam and the Philippines. JahefJcl 1973,' duration'5 13. minutes, visible in South America and Afri ca. There will be total eclipses visible in the United States on June 8, 1918; September 10, 1923, and January 24, 1925. . As the glare of -the sun in the sky is removed, and yet the moon hardly more than covers the sun, it is pos sible at times of . total solar eclipse to see alt the celestial objects near tl)e sun. these cannot be seen at other times because they are lost in the bright skylight, : It is this which makes astronomers so eager to ob serve total eclpises. The most strik ing, thing seen ,1s the solar corona, a beautiful pearly light stretching away from the sun. in all directions some thing . like,, the Aurora Boreulis seen In northern, countries, - The corona , extends from one to three solar distances away from the sun. Its form changes from year to year in connection with the number of sun spots which prevail. As the pres ent year will be one of comparatively few spnspotfl, the corona is expected to have- short but well-marked polar rays and long equatorial streamers. In 191S a, total eclipse will be visible in the United States, and as the sun spots will. then be numerous the co rona will probably extend nearly equal ly, In all. directions. 1. of rans Written for The Sentinels'.' Saturday, May 9, was the.'(i. aside hy the ladies comprtS-f L Clemmpne; , Civjo . and Benf,n, ' League" as ' Clean-up day nt movement was- meant' to be" cm?8 henslve of everythinc i ? 'om? ; I the intiftntt, & cleaning and the .intention was acLi& ly and actively, executed. The Iff ror wnicn , tne league has been Z ' Ized is the betm.n , !!a orf1- munlty. individuality and collect in 'whatsoever, wav anin-i. 'the health and hapipiaesa or u. zenship. . The league's activities svmhii,. truism unalloyed. The MtJJ- of Its efforts is an adornment i ' faceable. (For those in need it has ministered; to the call of V tressed it has responded; for thA...: at large a beautiful walk extend" the length of the., village ha made and the ipubKc school srnmZ are now. undergoing great changes uieMi-uii wur iraau OI aUHUld was collected and hauled awav . cane were collected . by the, youiu "American Patriots" and paid forw the rate of ten., cents . per hundred with the additional encouragement of monetary, prises for the thre h collected the greatest number. Trash barrels ,-were temporarily placed at Convenient intervals along the main street, Un lieu of garbage cans to b? purchased later, . iNothing was left undone. " " . , .The .next step .of the league is the j appointment of .May ?2nd as the day , on which will ibet offered, for sale the handiwork , of. the surrounding couq- ' tijes.... Fancy, work, of all kinds,, env, broidery, shuck Snats , and. chair bot toms, broins,rag rugs and -carpets and articles top divers to mention. In ; connection therewith' a hot Iunchi and dinner will be enred so on this day the inner man-, is not to be sacrificed for the weal ot the. outer, A most, cordial welcome, awaits ..all and the people, of Clemmons,,. noted for theijr: fine cooMng, and,-charming, hospital-: ijty, will- leave no st,one unturned t nnjake the day one to toe long, remetor" 'bered. . -. .r : . mmnmi couple Baltimore. May 19. A. Salvation Army romance was culminated last evening at the Hampden headquarters of the Army, when Capt. Llllie Salms, of Philadelphia, was married to Capt. George M. McAteer, commander of the Hampden corps. Col Richard B. Hoiz, of, Philadelphia,, a provincial com mander, performed the ceremony, as sisted, by Brigadier and Mrs. William Kscott, the local , commander of the Army. ,The two Army leaders are frotn North Carolina, where they were acquainted before entering upon the, Army, work, The. ' ceremony was a "hallelujah wedding," with the whole local Army participating. There .was singing and sermons of advice from the married officers.. About .300 persons attended. It was the biggest social event of the year, and wide interetin, the event ment has been announced for about a year, and wide interest , lnthe event had been aroused.. .Tne bride nore her regular , uniform,, with , only a white sash as special adornment (or the occasion. '-:,,, ; , , The gaiety: of the, local Salvation' Army circles' over the. wedding was dampened by the announcement from Washington that Major George Ivings, head of the Industrial home, there, Is dead. . Babies Vs. pattle. . Boston, May 1?. "Teach the politi cian, tht babies and women are worth quite as much as cattle .and toga," Dr. Jj White Ridge Williams, dean Of John Hopkins Medical School, suggest ed at a- meeting of the American As sociation for the; Study and Preven tion of Infant Mortality of which he is president. "We .must; Insist," t added,, "upon a .better training for doctors. , Women must . carry on campaign of education to inform lav makers on subjects relating to infant mortality." oil tieed i njr "d Qnarreled est a' re. thl -propulsive lt ot a joke. '1 Many Viwrt w.m.. ,2 v L V"""0"- May 19.-Oi bundred v"T Wngton's tomb at,Mount portotte Mount. XmLW nr.... mjij w IIVIIIVUV In Ovcrccslng plccd Trouble Do f Jot Cs Fco!s stMytuotaMVMW- . m tp fufirTt- Jlo permit i bc nipi a of. Is tmtlne an MnnA hi,.. "',01 met uiiHi iw TOfltrTIMI ta in ded eoc. all- of efjblood fcp-lth. 11 be similar nu n T.i 1 ... rlt -. a- s. la a punner. It la not a nor tha aowela and I) BH1D. TMISftt Miuul . . " not a aervj txWUnt to Mhlliraw fn null nj UDH a1HIrM ngt Whk-k net play to tha bloarhm ,or . the "f-ij Mood rcaitdy, a lnpUienr5wlikS tlrnlfita.Wsy gaata TMags Ara DacaaMTa srv tb- aetiv nurpoaa- of aronilnr c-Uul,par ot te, tliiM to. the blood the nutriment, or material", if quired tor rcaewal-f keattat .'' '.I. S. 8.. a la prepared Iron materials, not an ounce of drug. betoi JTf And yet it la mora potent, more P""1 more, eatchms and - more Pro8' reetoraUTa - naulta , tbn. from 'M-f i aetwa . of aH tba sunerala eiplo. " Its actios by ellralnaUoa of tb i-rtMiu potsont that lnfe taa blooi. Is very Important things to kaow. , Xoa caa gtt a. S. B. at Mr hot tak m other- so-called blood pw'n" R H. 8. a prenirad b? ?V.'r,ft 9pT r., 000 Blft Blila. Atlanta. 0 yoo bT mf oVep-aear-d W ohttln-te "J rooble. writ to their MedVnl IVt'JZ fre. adWca, , It wUl b wotU Jy" J" ta da so,