THE SEMI-WEEKLY ROBEbONIAN THOS. R. Democratic Candidate Was Born In Manchester, Ind.f In 1854, ; Was Graduated From an Indiana College and Has Practiced Law Since 1875. THOMAS RILEY MARSHALL was boru Ui Manchester. Ind.. March 14, 1S54. lie was grud iiated from Wahnsh college anil was admitted to the bar In 1875. He began the practice of law in Columbia 3ty, Ind.. and that city is still his borne, though of course while he is governor of the state his official resi dence Is in Indianapolis. Governor Marshall is an alert, spare man, with smooth, Iron gray hair, a gray mustache and a pair of large bright eyes, which look keenly through Sold rimmed spectacles. He Ms a Jaw which overhangs his collar on either side and reveals a disposition of ag gressiveness. He is a man who speaks his mind like the brisk Hoosier law yer that he Is. Tom Marshall (as they cal! him In his home town) lives in an Indiana THOMAS RILEY home, the kind which makes tears well up in the eyes und lumps adhere to the throat of such a Hoosier gentle man as James Whltcomb Riley. From rooms full of real chairs made to sit in and bookshelves full of real books to read one looks out of wide windows on a turfy lawn with growlug shrubs and real trees down the Columbia City main street, whicu has branches inter laced for the three squares between Tom Marshall's house and Tom Mar shall's office. As Judge Marshall he went Whit tier's unhappy jurist one better. He married the girl he met on the sum mer's day. She was Miss Lois Klm sey, who was taking innes of the trial over which Judge Marshall was pre siding at Steuben in 1895. er father was clerk of the court, and during the trial it was frequently noted that the Judge came off the bench and visited the desk of the clerk. Not so long after Miss Klmsey became Mrs. Thom as Riley Marshall of Columbia City. Conflict With Machine. Governor Marshall was elected to his present office In 1908. One remarkable feature of his administration lies La the fact that he has twice been In open conflict with the Democratic state ma chine under the leadership of Thomas Taggart, has twice defeated It and yet has In each Instance brought his party with a united front to the polls at the succeeding election. In 1910 he forced the state convention to nominate John W. Kern as the party candidate for the United States senate to succeed Albert J. Beverldge. A campaign on this issue was waged throughout the state, and the governor won by a ma jority of only thirty In a convention of 1,750 delegates. The Democrats car ried the state after a fight which won countrywide recogiJtton for its inten sity, and Mr. Kern was sleeted. The fil MARSHALL For Vice President other conflict occurred when he was first elected, because as governor he in sisted on making hi own appointments to office. While some of the old ma chine politicians questioned the politi cal value of the appointees, neither Republican or Democrat ever ques tioned their fitness for the office for which they were chosen. Another Scholar In Politics. Although possessing more practical knowledge of politics, because of his experience in Indiana affairs. tha Governor Wilson of New Jersey, (Gov ernor Marshall Is. like his distinguish ed running mate, something of the scholar In politics. Education is one of his hobbles, and his public docu ments have won him something" ef literary fame. He is a trustee of Wa bash college, Indiana, and has the de gree of doctor of laws from Wabash. MARSHALL. Notre Dame university, the University of Alabama and the University of Pennsylvania. He is not a "mixer'1 in the political sense of that term, but be is an amiable, genial, generous and kind gentleman, who has no difficulty In attracting friendships of the most loyal and self sacrificing character. His friends point to the doings of the legislature of 1911, whicli was Democratic in both houses, as repre senting pretty fairly his views on pub lic questions. This record in Its im portant details was as follows: It ratified the Income tax amend ment to the federal constitution; it pe titioned congress to submit to the states a constitutional amendment pro viding for the direct election of United States senators; it passed a corrupt practices and campaign publicity law. An employers liability bill was enacted on liberal Hues; t lie workiuinan may sue and does not contribute and the law abolishes the workingiuan's waiver and the fellow servant rule. The railroad commission was em powered to fix rates, and the tax board was given enlarged power in such di rection as the valuation of express companies. Child labor laws were strengthened; a cold storage limitation was imposed; a standard of weights and measures was established; sanitary schoolhouses with medical Inspection of pupils were required; the block slg Lal was rendered obligatory on all steam and electric railroads; a bureau of inspection for factories, mines and boilers was established; a commission to advance agricultural and Industrial education was formed; building and loan associations were brought uudei state control; a system of uniform pub lie accounting for all offices, large or small, throughout the state was per fected. Governor Marshall believe In a tariff MARSHALL'S THEORIES ABOUT GOVERNMENT. As an old style Democrat I'm opposed to toe government go lag into Dlmss eaospt as a, last resort. I betters that some wis dom en the part at lbs railroads will make such action unneces sary. Government ownership of railroads and telegraph and tele phone lines is the last thing I want to see. Governments wevs not institut ed to do business. Governments were instituted to see that yon. if you are a corporation, can't skin me, and that I can't skin you. -They were not instituted to confiscate railroads. If govern ment is to be plain business It's time that the American people knew it The crying need of this hour and of this people Is an im mediate divorce of government and business. I am an income taxer. Person ally I would much prefer to have the income tax for the ben efit of the state. However, I am in favor of giving this power to the national government, so that those who have incomes may take some of the burdens from those who have none. I do not approve of a ship sub sidy. Payment of $100,000,000 per annum will not equal the At lantic traffic alone. The way to build up our merchant marine is to change our navigation and traffic laws. If you're going to have ship subsidy, why not have Illinois put a duty on oranges, so that Illinois owners of hot houses can go into the orange badness? Or close up all the windows of this statehouse that the electric light company can make money, or kill the horses so as to force the use of automobiles? for revenue only. "Whenever con gress," he says, "under the guise of raising money, makes an enactment that in reality raises no money, but simply makes you and me dig into our pockets and hand over our small coin to the protected manufacturers, it has ceased to be a government of equal rights and fair play. Any sys tem of tariff legislation now or here after enacted, which is so devised as to enable a larger or smaller portion of the American people to take tribute of the residue of the American people. is not conducive to the common good." Initiative, Referendum and Recall. Governor Marshall has decided views with respect to the initiative, refer endum and recall. He would employ the initiative and referendum only as a last resort in remedying the known evils of representative government, placing his reliance first in an improve ment of the standard of nubile service. To the proposed recall of irtdges be Is unalterably opposed. In discussing the question of the in sular possessions Governor Marshall said: "I never made but one speech on im perialistic doctrine, and that time my friends acted as though I had given them a dose of hasheesh. The people care as much about the yellow brother as about Rameses III." Broke Low Weight Record. Until a dozen years ago Governor Marshall was 50 per cent up and 50 per cent down physically, but he prac ticed law continuously and bad a large business for "a country lawyer," as he calls himself. He had sciatica, dyspepsia and malaria intermittently, and his weight during a period of fif teen years was 101 pounds, some ounces less and some ounces more at times. "Once after a lively run of typhoid fever," he said. "I broke fr the adult records in the neighborhood by bal ancing the beam at eight-eight pounds scant I doctored for years with regu lars, specialists, old women and quacks and then bought a fifty cent bottle of medicine and was cured." GOVERNOR MARSHALL AS 8EEN BY HIMSELF. I don't shoot I wouldn't step on a worm if I could help it. Seven years ago I established a reputation as a fisherman. We were on the lake at Petosky. Mrs. Marshall caught a fine string of perch and pike. I caught nve dogfish. I have never fished since. I shall never fish again. It is well that I didn't run for governor at the age of forty-five. Instead of nearly ten years later. In all probability I would have ruined myself. Deficient In phi losophy and in balance, I would have spent all my accumulations in a headlong struggle to win. As it was, the state committee asked me for $1300. My stump ing tour cost me SL70O railroad fare, hotel bills and a few cigars for the boys. So Thomas R. Marshall was elected governor of Indiana in 1908 at a personal out lay of only $3,500. I am a fatalist In lawsuits and everything else I do all that I can while I am in the fight but I never worry about the out come. I am not responsible for results. If my client is accused of murder and the Jury Is out I go to bed and to sleep and get the news after breakfast In the morning. What is to be will be, and staying awake will not change it SILK MADE FROM WOOD PULP Material Is Brought From Norway and Manufacture Is Carried On In Unites; States. In the manufacture cf artificial Ilk, wood pulp from Norway Is util ized, being shipped here In. bales, ac cording to the Textile Manufacturers Journal. This pulp la cut into thta beets, each Individual sheet is care fully weighed and a certain quantity placed in a metal tank for chemical treatment The various chemical solutions used are mixed in huge iron tanks, from which they are pumped under ground through a series of lead pipes to the departments requiring the various compounds. This pulp having been macerated and digested, is submitted to stin further chemical action under certain fixed temperatures which are not allowed to vary even one-half of a degree. When it is ready for final trans formation into silk the solution close ly resembles molasses in color and consistency. At this stage it ia pump ed from the tanks to the spinning frames. Here specially constructed pumps are attached to each spindle, which carefully measures out the re quired quantity of the solution. This la forced through tubes with an outlet containing Just as many perforations as, there are to be fila ments in the thread. Through these it is passed to a tank running the length of the frame and containing a chem ical mixture which fixes the solution instantaneously into a thread. This strand ia carried oysr a wheel down through a tube to a rapidly re volving spindle; the rate ef speed is about 5,000 revolutions a minute. From this the strands are afterward unwound on reels lrfto ikelns. The air In the spinning room Is complete ly changed every three minutes, being pumped off through hoods placed over each of the spinning frames. This is done to remove any possible fumes and to provide thorough ventilation for the operatives. One of the interesting features hi connection with the entire operation is the fact that the yarn la handled as little as possible. The specialty constructed stoves and bleaching ar rangements are ideaL and when the skeins are finally carried to the large drying room on the fifth floor one marvels at the change which has so rapidly taken place. From here they are taken to the sorting room, wherr each individual skein is oarefully ex amined by skilled operators. Offfoe Holding In China. In some respects the Chinese ap pear to have distinct advantages ovet us. For instance, when a Chinese pub lic office holder has failed to give satisfaction in his officeholdlng when he has shown that be is the wrong man in the right place he la invited to commit suicide, so that a better servant of the people may suc ceed him. The request Is not a mere formality. When it Is made in the proper way and backed by a proper expression of public opinion It has all the force of a decision of the supreme court. The man who is condemned has no escape save flight, and if he runs away his family is forever dis graced and degraded. If we could import this Chinese cus tom there would undoubtedly be a great Improvement in the general business of office holding. It would make muckraking almost unneces sary, and senatorial investigations would become obsolete. Moreover, it would give the office a neal chance to seek the man. The task of the voter would he simplified, because there would cease to be a multiplicity of candidates for each office. If the Chi nese system could be adopted with out the accompaniment of the pigtail It might be worth trying. The Public Shakespeare Wrote For. Literary fame as a dramatist trou bled Shapespeare not; but present ne cessities could not be forgotten; chief among them the necessity of pleasing ills public. His average public, the one he had chiefly in view, whose av erage heart and mind he had to touch and delight, was that of the Globe, a large, much-frequented house which drew popular audiences, and where accidentally some ambassador might appear; but the fate of the play would, depend not upon ths ambassador's ap plause or some learned critic's blame. Trot on the Impression of the crowd ; a, boisterous csowd, warm-hearted, full flooded, of unbounded patriotism, a lover of extremes, now relishing the eight of tortures, now moved at the death of a fly, S lover of the Improb able, of unexpected changes, of coarse buffooneries, quibbles, common witti cisms easy to understand, of loud noises of any sort, bells, trumpets, cannon; men, all of them, of an en- cyclopaedic ignorance. From a Lec ture, ."What to Expect of Shakes' peare-" by J. J. Jusserand, The Pig Tall Not Chinese. Tf fha Chinese revolution triumphs and the "pig-tall" goes at last, that will be an outward and visible sign, both of reform and of emancipation from Manchu rule. For It must be! remembered that what all the modern world rejrards as the chief distm gdshlng mark of the Chinaman hi not Chinese at all, but a badge oi submission to the Manchus not three centuries old. when Liao-Yang was captured by ths Manchus in 1618, ths inhabitants shaved the front part of their heads in token of allegiance, and all China followed, though ths people of Amoy and Swatow districts long concealed the mark of conquest under cotton turbans. COON HUNTING ON DECLINE Conservation la Proving Very Un popular to These Who Delight In This Sport. Coon hunting Is on the decline over la southern Illinois, according to s report from Owensville, because the farmers and land owners hare be come timber conservationists and re fuse to allow their trees to be cut It used to be that a coon hunt wag not a success unless the coon was treed In a monarch of the forest, the tree ssbsequently being cut down by the ready axes of the hunters to effect the capture of the game. In daya when timber waa plentiful the land owners were not so particular, and tt was not uncommon for a hunting party to chop down half a dozen fine trees In a single night. The hunting party that would commit such a tres pass nowadays probably would find it self in serious trouble with the courts. For trees sitch as the coon hunters used to cut now have a big market value. They are growing scarcer all the time, and the wise land owner ia realizing the necessity of husbanding bis resources in the timber line. "In the good old days" an incalcul able amount of good timber was de stroyed In this way. It was not missed at the tfane, for trees grew almost everywhere, and lumber was not so much of an item as it Is at present The forests had to go in order to blaze the way for agricul tural development There was no es pecial demand for timber, and vast areas of It were cut down and burned that the land owner might prepare for growing corn or tobacco. Much of this timber might have been saved If the farmer had cleared his land on any systematic plan, and would have made him independent in his later years. He did not realize the Importance of conservation, so he cut and slashed indiscriminately, and the coon hunters helped him, along with the hickory nut hunters, the chestnut hunters, the grape gatherers, the seek ers after slippery elm bark and a great variety of hunters engaged in denuding the wooded lands of their products. It Is well that the farmers of south ern Indiana and the farmers else where are beginning to take notice of the conservation movement. If the coon hunter must needs chase coons let him catch them on the level oi climb the tree for his booty. Thrifty 8qulrrel. Alfred McHenry has a park of sev eral acres, in which a score or more oi gray squirrels have taken up their abode. The other day Mr. McHenry bought two bushels of walnuts to be fed to the squirrels daring the winter. He left the bag with the nuts In the back part of his buggy, which was pushed into the carriage shed. Two days later when the occasion required the use of the buggy again he went to remove the two bushel bag of walnuts, when, lo and behold! there wasn't half a peck of the walnuts there. But there was a hole In the bag and an excited squirrel that chattered on a beam overhead seemed to have more than the ordinary amount of In terest in McHenry's movements. The latter watched the squirrel and when he discovered that It had its home be hind one of the rafters he climbed up a ladder and investigated. He not only found the squirt el's nest but all the stolen walnuts as well. The squirrel had transferred the nuts from the bug gy up under the rafters all within 14 hours of daylight. Williamsport Cor respondence Philadelphia North Amer lean. Prize 8nake Yarn. fThe Prevaricators' Society of Bella- rat and Woolloomocloo was proceeding in peace and harmony till the snake story man spoke. "Some pevMe," he said, "consider the snake hasn't got any sense ; but they're wrong. For in. stance, once when I was In India, I saw a Hindu mother place her year, old baby outside the but to sun him self, and to keep his spirits up she gave the little chap a big feeding bot tle of milk. Well, as I watched, I saw a snake insinuate itself close up to that child. My heart was In my mouth. I feared for the baby. - But bless you, the snake was only after the milk! He just slipped the teat out of the child's mouth and Into hia own, and then the thoughtful and kind ly reptile put the end of his tail Into the child's mouth by way of a com forter!" With a great sob the president of the society arose and handed, the lau rel which encircled his brow to the snake-story man. And then they passed silently lntc the night Tit-Bits. Penalty of Initials. "It has been my observation," said the pretty girl, "that the greatest dif ficulty a girl experiences at a co-educational college is disposing of the quantities of shaving soap sent her by manufacturers who copied the names of the entire student body from lists where boys and girls alike are regis tered by their initials and distributed the samples of soap Impartially with the request that the recipient write a testimonial to the effect that It is the best shaving soap she ever used." Philosophical. A German and his wife came into a nice little fortune through ths death of the wife's father, who was sick a long time and suffered a good deal. A neighbor .tried to express his sympathy, but was interrupted. "He suffered much." said KarL "He's better eff und so are we." I GENERAL NEWS ITEMS. Alleged sugar frauds at Phil, delphia, under investigation by Secretary of the Treasury Mc Veagh and Attorney General Wickersham for the last year have been settled by the payment of nearly a quarter of a million dollars to the United States gov ernment by sugar refining cora panes involved. This announce ment was made by the Treasury Department Monday. While being initiated into the order of Woodmen of the World at Honeapatb, S. C, last ,, yt mght Furman Bag well became excited at the dlSDlaV Of firearm a so a of the ceremnnv and fiLt ! ' upon those who were taking part in the initiation, inflicting fatal wounds upon a close friend, Mil ton Taylor, who died of his WminHo Mnnm, To.,lyx-i r-i. uo;, j aj i ui J ttHlcr says that he does not desire to nrnaamifn Dn 1 1 Monument Unveiling. White "Pond Camp No. 222, Woodmen of the World, will on Sunday, August 11, at 4 p. m. Unveil the monument erector! t the momory of W. Monroe Miller VI til. 4. Tl- S-l u wc ucmeiery at riney urove Baptist church, Dillon county S. a The public is invited. F. R. Home, C. C. The name Doan's inspires confidence Doan's Kidney Pills for kidney ilia. Donn ' Ointmant fn alrlx i .!.: Doan's Regulets for a mild laxative. SoJd at all drug stores. Farmers, mechanics, railroaders, laborers, rely on Dr. Thomas' Eclectic Oil. Fine for cuts, burns, bruises. Should be keftt in -ever? home. 25 and 50 cents. Testimony of W. H. McKinnon While on His Death-Bed After 8 Months on a Languishing Bed of Consumption. Born December 25, 1884; died May 20, 1912. Mav 16th, he called all his friends around him and told them that he was saved, did not have to die to be saved. I am already saved. All of you that have religion, work it; and all of you that have not got religion, get it I want you all to come to heaven If you go to nell you will not see me. I am already saved. May 17th, he called his father. mother and wife to his bed and told them how he wanted them to raise his children. "I want you to raise them in the fear of God and educate them if you can. Mamie, l want you to stay here and pa and mama help you raise these children, because you can't raise them yourself. I don't want none of you to grieve after me. You can shout at my bury ing in the spirit, but don't grieve be cause 1 am gone, for I will be in heaven. Papa, I want you to tell W. T. Currie to send and get Rev. ,W. C. Wiilumson to preach my funeral. 1 want him to tell all ef the people that I am in heaven. I did not have to die to be paved; I am only waiting on the Lord. Cousin Mingo, I want.you to talk at my burying, and tell all the people that I am saved. Harp on it and don't be afraid to tell the people that I am in heaven, for I will be there. Come on to heaven where I am, for I will be there. "Papa, you and mama have done all you can for me. You have spent yeur money and and done all you could for me. l am out of your hands now, you can't do any more for me now, I am in the hands of the Lord. You can only stand around me, and look at me until the Lord takes me home. I have con quered both death and hell by faith. I have the keys of both death and hell, i am not afraid to die. The judge passed sentence on me last night. I know hen I am coiner. If I had not been ready when the sentence was passed I could not have got ready. I now would have been doomed to helL Awiui would have been my condition." He called hiB wife to his bedside and said: "Mamie, vou have done all you could for me. I am out of your hands now. Mamie meet me in heaven. "Cousin Miniro. Christ savs to repent. believe and be Daptised and you shall be saved. This is the sure way. this is the way that I have chosen. "I don t want a nreacher to preach my funeral that don't believe the whole Bible. Death is sweet I have tasted it twice. It is sweeter than the honey in the honey comb. I asked the Lord to give me a dying testimony and tie gave it to me. J. M. Robinson. Cornelia Whitehead. Rachel King, Polly Humphry, Witnesses. Scotland County FARM I offer for sale my farm in Laurel Hill township. Scotland county, consisting of about 100 acres about 50 under cultivation. Situated on fine sand-clay public road, adjoining the Seaboard Railroad, one and one-half miles from town of Laurinburg. Very valuable and desirable. One of Scotland county's first-class farms. For particulars write J. B. MAXWELL, 8-l-2mo Laurinburflr. N. C. riK ORIGINAL LAXATIVE CwbCK SYRUP KENNEDY'S LAXATIVE H0NEYTAB Eel Cbvav BImm m4 BWt I m www UuU.