-it' 7fv ,;:T") ; V ! ?'?'v-t.A: V 77j7V7; 7 r' ... 'IK;: '" ' V SUCCESSOR 10 JHE ROCKINGHAM ROCKET, Old series v-Vol? "XVir, No. New Striea, Vol I, No. ,4. 1 20, . v : ROCKINQHAMi"N; CV THURSDAY, JUNE 8, 1899. NOTH CAROLINA. .Interesting Items Gathered From Our ' ' " State Exchanges. .Winston sold 1,833,574 lbs of leaf tobacco in May. - Sheriff H.Jr. Jones, of Wake, is short $5,iS m his account and un able to settle. Mecklenburg is the best county in the State for the automobile to' try its wheels. It will roll in pretty soon. -Charlotte Observer. Attorney E. J. Justice has re turned from Porto Rico, where he went to defend a McDowell coun ty private for killing a native offi cer. He says hii client , will be acquitted , Durham is making an earnest ef fort to have the. First Regiment Band locate there, offering its mem bers employment andgiving $i,-ob a year' bounty. Raleigh and Greensboro also desire-this vefy fine baqd. VhiIe on her way to Mt. Airy to visit relatives Aliss "Lucmda Ellis, of Virginia was run .over by "a shifting engine at Mt. Airy. Both legs were amputated above the knyees which resulted in her death.' ' ' . l 7 1 Durijpg tbe storm .at , Morganton last Thursday 34, of the patients' sought shelter under, the bowling alley. The building was blown down, one was' killed instantly and twelve others seriously injured some-of whom will probably die. Near Brunsyillc while Mr. - William-Drench Was laying off' corn land and his wife dropping corn, a very sad accident occurred.- Mrs. Branch in passing the horse, was bitten iu the Drest by him. The , wound is of such -a serious natured that death seems Tery imminent. The Raleigh Post isgetting very gay. Listen : "A ringlet .is a little ring; a brooklet a little brouk, -aud of Course a hamlet must b a little Jiam. Therefore, the discussion of ?jarah Bernhardt's Hamlet is inde- corous, and very properly caused a.lformer- Spanish minister about af- light in Paris. The music made by the string band at Rocky River Springs can be distinctly heard cTver the tele phone line .from this place to the springs. Quite a "number have been enjoying the music for the past two or three nights at the phone iu the office of the National Hotel. Wadesboro Messenger. Thomas Turner, a young man, met with ati accident yesterday. While riding his bicycle the chain broke, throwing him off with con ''" siderable force. In falling ti lead pencil, in his vest pocket, ran into his left side to a deptii of .about' two inches. WhiLithe injury is quite pitrriftil, it is not considered serious. Thomas was abje to be up to-day. U inston Sentinel. m Few instances in history have shown the broad symDathy and love of justice of the human -race as has the famous ' Dreyfus case. One man, an officer in the French army, unknown to the' outside world, was placed in solitary con tiiwment on Devil's' island, where he was denied the sound of a human voice, or any communication what ever withthe outsideworld. Yes, only one man but the entire civ ilized world revolted at the thought of even one man being subjected to such a penalty upon - what seemed insufficient evidence, and few issues of daily papers have since been made which did not contain some, reference to this case. Gradually the conspiracy of French army of ficers, and the perjury by which it was carried out in Dreyfus' con viction, have come to light. The' outraged- public seritiment;of Uhe world forced revision of. the case. In the loneliness of his little barren island home he has already received the glad news, that be is to have, a new trial, which . means r an entire 1 acquittal. And with the news has gone a thrill of gladness th'roiigh out the ; bounds bf civil izationy One man but . give him justice, The man who never ""makes any - mistakes r misie" many 1 splendid ; chances to learn something;. - J -NEWS EPITOME. The Week's News 'TolL in Condensed Parafrapbs. ' Yellow fever has broken: out New Orleans, but health auth tiesjdeclare there is rio cause. alarm. Several hundred men employed in the ship building wor.ks,of Bal timore went' on. fi str,i,ke last Thurs day. 0 RiclKncnd, Va., has adopted "an ordinance imposing a fine' 'for "spit- r in public ting" on the sidewalks or buildings. The International Peace confer ence has devoted its attention large ly to the adoption-of more humane rules ot wartare. . . Two hundred thousand dollars was recently paid to representa- tivM of Acrumalfio bv a German . 0 J 1 . bank, he having had that amoi vt on deposit there. Many of tjje delegates to the Ohio State Republican" Convention last weelgAvore knife-shaped buti tons, half the blade of which was smeared with red and labled 4,Han- na's blood." Our new possessions seem to be ware of Uncle Sam bearing gifts. Th Winsfnn Sentinel sufrjresth , , ., . ... I that while we are shooting liberty! nuts iiic a nuiuuiiiuo ti v- mil t jw f -rr . VUuans. Qiieen ctona s both birthday was ceieoratea vea.nesaay may 2Ath. There was a ereneral cele bration throughout her dominions and in other countries. Four gen erations of the royal fanity were present at the Windsor celebration. At a celebration at Port. Tampa, Fla., arpdrtrait of the Queen was unvei led Yy tlie touching of a but ton by. Governor Rcose'velt at Al bany, N. Y. TJie new Spanish minister at AVashinton will have a fine time of "getting even" with Uncle Sam who was always plodding the tairs in Cuba. Now Uncle Sam ,:s tne respousiDie pariy ana me Spanish minister will . no doubt j iave a fine time ajt grumblmg. The new minister and his wife (a j Washington City belle) arrived uv Washington lastThursday. One of those little affairs which excite the interest and appeal to the sympathies ot sx whole country was happily brought to a close in New York last. Thursday. Little Marion Clark, aged-21 months, had been kidnapped, and in the distress pf her parents they had sent, out-over ero.ooo circulars and halftone oortnrit in search of the little"girl with blue eyes and pink complexion A detective tound the little crirl last Thursday at a 0 w house in a little country town where she" was being conceaiea by tier captors and restored ner to-tne . j anxious parents. , Tm. nfAalra o rrf tYto an I tinr 1 tlPC ,. ' .ij- WAshuicrton - were . hourly .ex- . - . - ..t. pecting to hear of the uncondition al surrender of Aguinaldo's forces. Now dispatches tells us that on ac count of theTainy" season bur army will be"unable to renew act rve ope rations for over six months;, that Luzon will be an island of mud for chat length of time ; that more of our soldiers will die- of disease m their tents, during this season'triaii have died from disease, and .battle pfeviotrsly.; thatthe PhilUppihos. j are again on their Indian the joffensive 'Twith methods - of " warfare.' 1 and that, more troops will - haye to tion. 7. JA The SB miner. Season. MOHia DC aKea Wlin k. - aCratn of Salt. 7 -- , - - . V' . - . - -x 1 ;The way o the seaside, is bytne. &ea-1 fioard AirLirte. ' Saturdays and Sunday ' ' ' . - i . .ed iate pot ijt ; ' - 7 J . . t uc bciu ltc iuic iu uuMjiiiwa ; - VOlf, Canni quamy iinuacii uhuci -. iaxgtt-pari:ui -ii.a; wuio ? pupuiiiyii . iaimju iyiyo w m;u .cu tu. ' ' Tl. - Sp . --' 77 be whipped into a stata .of freedom. (18 amend m en t by sho wjffg llat Jie are foreigners who." h?ve moved iii ratification an;lh"e ,hi3tory .A4Msds That a gloomy -picture vsurely. nble lbTtead ';h'd .'rjj'ceriaiijr.. tjial-ftalirnje '7argror- oestioirot 'fefiy ou&fftheftfonSv There are; also. saidj :.to; be rnany ao oneill conieiiV Arf A ; momen 'tSaOto complicatiotisjn the Cuban situa. t4t7thV. amedmentinre terlyijinoranj and ofteV!eprayedi surortitsjosiitaUon f u - f.; nfomhoii I wruing) ne -cannot quaiwy ; unubeu New. lone wouia sarinai. sucn un nans old Point : comfort, round trip $350 vfa the;aroert(fmenttgwrtrt of the law-makev the beaboard. Air LineiTicketjsili be presumed understanding from jjong the nlg1esHghtovbte aihered from tire l.r. on 'sale SatHrdays and Sundays, Tood to pdrttcjpitiolniin gofertt t! return'foUowing Monday from Raleigh, . f - - intimate . (isocmtion I AltitcarAm ,W n.- . ' CHAIRMAN SIMAS pNMiE AMENDMENT. Am3ndmen.t. NoV, The Fifteenth Amendment nowhere uses the word discriminate": it SlmplyiprOvideS in wuoluu7'w -uicuumcui lMaV"" lilmselt udeUie teBt f would ori-. nales ASAuisl the negro and is tbere- The MaHer said that :the; Lord w oi notthe court and ey?ry; intelligent fnr ,ore ' violative ot N tiie ilteenln the Vineyard did no wrbnc to those Derson sav that the amendment was that no state sfTallmeny orbridge" the eleventh hoiTrV,lik'ewise a pen-! same way, as the foreigners tbs soff the right .of, a citizen 'to yoX& 'onvac- ny.'. Take thatwhichla thine and: raee of neither was denied or abridge count of race color, or previous con- dilion of- 8ervilude.', Subject to thie lioiitatioh; it ms ; welfs setteledj aud admitted by every. one thaj; the State cn; prescribe any;,c6tiditioti oy uaiiuvui., ..ijf.fv.. ve. ....... tive, to the 6uffrnge4tir?iy see tit impose. . - The Canstitullonal Anjendment upon which the people are to vole does not in any legal sense, either "deny or abridge'-7 the right of . the D,ack man to vote; it simpty esiab- I ... .,. iiSDes a quanncauon ci sunruge This qualification is that -the voter shall have a due understanding of the'nature of his act and the effect thereof upon himself and his fellow man, and it perscribed.two ways in which the voter may show that he possesses this required degree of un- derstanding. - - First, If he can read and write it is conclusively presumed from- that fact that he possesses the required degree oi understanding' " i . . , , rr " pan to exercise the naht of suffrage I prior to 1891, it is conclusively pre- i , , ,1..! .. . u. Huuieu iiuu. iuui inii iuiu-hd ud- I sesses the required degree, of under - standing. , The reasonina in the latter case J being -that the yoter having been thus long accustomed to exercise the function of the suffrage, and to participate in the yffairs- of gov ernlnent, or liavin beerrtn paren tal relationship and association with those who hve thus participated, has come both to understand' and appreciate the lull significance and import of the suffrage, and that it is safe to presume the possession : by the voter 61 the required degree., ol understanding from the knowledge and training thus required, as itUI to pieeiiiue it irom a Kuowieage by him of tlie art of reading " and writing. Of course, all qualification" predicated oti the intelligence of the voter must necessarily be based upon presumption, there being Ito scale in which you may weigh mind nd understanding. ia quHliflcnlion. and the manner ot proymg ine possession of it by the voter, and every negro who can show either in the one or the other ol these two ways that he possesses il, is entitled to vole under the amendif.eiit. ; Certainly there can be no success ful denialof the right -of the Stale to base tlx? right ol suQrage upon the voter's ability to understand th nature and effect of the exercises- of the Suffrage. This right of the State ie tle right -of suffrage upon iter's ability to understand th- Is eouallv as clear as is its right to imjK)se wlial is commonly known ag hQ educational qualification by r,uirinT thejroter . to be able to i -- . - read and write, for this is itself in effect nothing but an understand ng qualification. The obiect of requir . . ' - inir the Voter to show that lie can read and write is-aolely to prove hie capacity. to". Understand, and cer- ti'ifnly'lhis tnay te? proved just as a t : r. ..:i .?:., xil.. I wen mm just as H:iiisinuj.urj wm er ways. j The- .Mississippi Constitution, j which has recently been. upheld by . Ihe-Supreme Courtr Or- the United StH. not onfy j m noises an uhder 8tana jng quHiificatio.n, but even - , the extent oil nermitttns the f re(y;8trar ,,f eiectious to decide, arbi- irarily wneiner uio voici eumvicunj '-ruA n'Xas i'X " v :: --r-f 5.'; r Ojhenefo wlierr 1ie ins wu lot Jor.tiPi( reaso, eiiuer,; ue- i niea'or flbridWeV-his: rishtbl - iuffvlOW sufth voters in that State Today, " ..tiki,, ,:m-nin(r J nT-fhA ,--::jt------rf n 1 upon 1 iv a m pnn m fn 1 . 1 1 , iiuiiu i rn A i,7i t h?a loaf reridinSand I - -'"7 nrillilliACa U'lll ll'IHA.lwlm tnnrt or. t u,v vvvH ivMjj v i l undfirthe MberleBt tierscttDea?.49vl thnt the int customed to spTparticIp a ttbn .wrong is done himi noihis right 1 to vote denied ; or, abridged ;, beauej whe began, to labor -at the th;rdvafid the gixtb aiid ninth liowr: whence va'( t'hnsfi Who. nnlv; lipWn n 'Vy- Lelf us msike atnrnettcalnnnHpa- on dl tKe-amendmen -Tak-iour citizens' of 4th Staeith; of whom can read-ltuctlvVite, let two inp oe wwb meav one - a naiiye Nenfc i Carolinian, who "lias lived; here -rrll his liferone t a Pole of Ger- J naP WUo has only beeii V2Q yenrft iqj thjs country; let the other wo, ne- gf6esrbfie.of whom has lived in J the atate all his life, and the other one wuo. uns recently moved Id the t . - - - . . state .let lis say, from Massacuu- 8ettg) wbere he voted before 1867j or whose ancestors were free negroes and could vft'e before 1867. Now! under the '. constitutional s Amend-t ment one of iheee. white men can vote, anu one oi tuese negroes tea K0te, while the other Svfrite mart (the foreigner), and, the other nei lhe white man and the negro, who are permitted to yoterare both allowed to vote, for thesame reason, because they or their ancestors could vote betore 1867. The white maii and the negro, who are excluded iTom voiHier.-ior iue same reason, De-M . cauge they could neither read and write, nor did they or their - ances - tors vote in this country before 1867. I suppose no one will con- tend that the oreigner, who is" ex- eluded from the suffrage under this amendment.is denied the right to vote "by reason of; race, color, or previous condition of servitude." Then upon what principle of law or comrhon sense will lhe courts hold lhat the nero who is excluded with birwis denied his right to vote 4oii account of race, color or previ- ms condition of servitude?" i But it is sUseested that the courts wm not corfsirue ths amendmeut bysts terms, but that- it will look tieyond and outside of the amend uaent, ar,d consider any historical , . connected with ! its initiation and adoption, and inquire into the motive and intent f the measure. Well, for the sake lof tlie argil- ment, let us admit it, although il must be confessed that this would be a novel melliod , ofimerpreting a,wrilten Constitution. It is con- tended that the court has only to t6 Wjj known facta concerning QUr I)0puiation and the facts con- nPrtii uiilv the efnancinalioa of the negro to ee that only a very few ocs conld qualify themselves for quality ine.mseives ior gage.u, fal,er cl sage un(Jer the so-called l,grand- falher" clause, while, white people, eXce(,t :l fv foreigners could qual-' ifyr untT it JUV 'therefore' the U, fac(8 d6 hcYs Ul& amendmenl.J ,VOuld hold, that the ohiect of tlii clause was to deny and abridff!," the suffrage of the- negro,- "on ao-f count of race, color or previous con-j ditibivol iervitude-'But North Car olina is not the whole of the United StatesV ' ' t Let uffT3up pose 'that an -amehd'c ment identical with ours shouldb ... .' . ... rr --rvr I jsuom.iueano ine peopiemiew i:uri arra raiiueu-Dy tnein, ana ine tp est its constitutionajity hould be i taken to the Supreme i court -and tlmt court should . apply v the jrule f;bf onstruCtioi uclion contended j for as above stated: what would be the resuh? 7 ; New YorkTas an enormous pop- ;herejare8pme)&hegrpe uiaiiou; jucio bic.i nVfta lt pniV;fi2 proablyUweniy inerare pTooaoiymore iuan "'- riAQ WnA ;cnr.r,oQoV Ihflt MhA - ; - : -v. ganr mnitnor n t m npsn wph iKnuwin,w hfa riirnvh; ihtrnisiS'n& 7 f " " , f . - -. 1 .1 j-.4t. iiiiry- nuutu jiuc . iijp. cuuii, for every; ignorant negro affected by the amendnie;H in any way there would aimed at the igndrant foreig.n vote of that State dnd that.r though the nporn wh tHoi-Ahv ; in" lh ed "on account 9 race," color, : or nrfitfinn rnridition : -of Wvltntr" bu I on accoun t of presu med un fi t ness and "mental ' and moral de ofTlinquWclegas well 'as because of ueieeiive irainim? aim -niauequute educate keiplesfself-government, and -would I ' nbic!''.lBp court hold tliat such amendment to New.Yerk's , constU tution was not only constitutional, but just? -'Thef.varestnany States "f the great West which have to a large I ...-V.- . . . extent been eettled since the close j of the civil war, which while having J a few negroes, are largeltpopulated I by foreigners. S In all of these J States, if the SUpreme Court in con- struing an ' a-mndment similar to ours should look to the conditions of populations, they would say that the, object of "such an amendment' was to reach that- element of the j population which had Moo necently j settled there to have divested hem Teel ves of the nionarchial theories j and practices which" they brought with them from the old world, or to tmoioe tne qenocraiic principles oi self-government upon which our re I public is founded, and it is ' absurd to suppose the court would say j such an amendment was ' unconsti tulional, because1 foisuoth the few negroes who happen to be living J there along with the great mass ot uneducated foreigners might not be able to qualify themselves under the clause limiting ; the- franchise jto j those who were entitled to Yote (be; tore a time antedating his emancl- f pation. If such a law would iie - cons litu- i . . I tionarin New Yorl, orin any of the I States of the great West having L large uneducated why. would foreign J population, it not be Constitutional -in North Caro: lina? if there is anything that is absolutely certain it is that the Su j preme Court of the United States rcanno hold that a law which would jte constitulioualjn one State would be unconstitutional in another. I The Federal Constitution applies to l jeyery inch of territory in the Union, l and if there be one State jn which I such constitutional provision' would "be ccnslitilional it would b consti- tutional in all. If it were corapeteiil for the court to look to uolitical COn- dilions in construing a constituTTonal I provision it "would have to consider i provision it wouia nave to consiu the conditions in. one nook or cor- ner of the country or In oneState or a division of Stales, 'felsfe it might firfd itself by the:applicAlipn ofihis law coristitutional in one '. part-of ! the-comitrv was unconstitutional in another part. . The analysis "shows no such rule of cfenstructiorr can be safely adopted by the court of Jast resort of forty-five States. - If is true we have not 7 in North Carolina tod ay a very large eign population, ;but jwho kmows ' when the tide of foregrt emigration " may . . ' ' it. .1 tit 1 nam loour jtnute? u - quipiiijf uu r up waste piacea ua ik . ua ..uutio. ;i theWesl inttlier JasLjUireeTdecades The day Vnav come, and in the near future, when there may be, more un- educated. toreigners in orin uaroti n a than ignorant negroes. When that cannot kno,w ueither-can: tUe Su- construing- this measure will ilook TnW 1 HWwriifpn infr.trrtPnf rtM,l 1 1 rrriL ? JiKr.n.uH - -1 11 -i i,-- - h.ii v irif i- Iwliirh tts Inn tup p tojisciose.? 1 1 is a ruie r.i c. i r rt from the context otllie law itself. The bourls are.frequenlly;:andpT6p.- erly moved in reaching - their con- j. elusions by considerations of urgen t public policy and there ; are ..many i nstari ces in our ; j udical., hist qry where, the oourts have seemed .to Kstrain a point" to 'accomplish , a great public ptirpo&e and it Is rbe lieved if it werv necessary the court .would '8lrain point", in this laehalf to.accompiish the purpsaf-suff- raJgUrificatJten "whicirthisj for it is manifest tha t both, the best thought had enlightened oonscierice of the nation.:1ongs to see the South relieved of the unsufferable evils - of un restricted n eg roYu fffage a n d that whelmingly convinced ths nation i u i riy y ears ex pe r ten ce nas -.over that the Fifteenth Amendment.i8 the greatest politicai blunder of the century. That the court will not in quire into the motives, of the legisla tioh would seem to b Jc'onchisively settled byitir decision sustaining th e Chinese naturalization act. ' It was desirablMo "withhold the suffrage from' the Chinaman because he had become a troublesome , and d a tiger ous political factor on the Pacific coast,, just as the negro has become a source of political Jrritation and trouble in the. South. -With "the avowed and notorious purpose ol I denying him the franchise, Con gress passed an act i5y the provision of which the Chinaman was exclud. ed from citizenship and the Supreme Court held this : legislation - which was intended and in fact did disfran chise him by indirection, constitu tional and to-day tH? Chinajpan the descendant ofa 'nation which has procuced some of the greatest merr-and foremost thinkers of the world, and which represents the oldest ciyilizatioa in history cannot vote in this country . as the result of legislation which, thbugh it does not itself disfrhchiee him, is recognized eyery where as a shrewd device- by which his disfranchisement was ac complished. If the court had fol lowed the rul of intefpfetation which it is contend by some- ap plies to our amendment in this case it would have looked behind the act Lof Congress and said though it ap- peal's to be valid upon its face, it is void andunconstiltiouai because its purpose and object is to: deprive tho-.Ch inn m a n of I h is rih t to" v6lei by a legishtti ve device." v ? Any rule of interpretation wh ich involves supervision by the. court of the motives Or policy of the Leg- islaturewottId. be rank unsurpalion of the functions' of ' a: co-ordinate iranch of the government.- . ' HardL on Sampsoa. -. . Denver Post, ; -v f-, .i'r;j-. ' A Vrginia .man has named his new born triplets Dewey, Samp son and Schley. 0ue ofthem has our sincere sympathy. v...--" y- r ' : . ,,tt-- -r" j :-' Here..''iiad .-Tkere:::;;" .sT-'-' The boy will soon be .standing on "the burning deck.' and if the t summer f orecasts f ai I not. he's like- y tb be in blazing company .--At-- anta Constitution. . : ' ' -. ; Sam T. Jack; a theatrical mana j ger-who died in New v lOrk a tew days' ago, hact th fplfowing sti pu atlbn in his will ; - i v -z,s "It is rriy wish, first and- foreV most, that. my' brother, James and my wife, Emma shall become hus- hanH, anrt rlF - --. --."--..;'n--v .':. Can I insure yo-ur life??'; asked he persuasive man. I dunno,.? ? repnea . r.armer . orarossei. dortt7want rib;li fe insurauceIy ve got -allT.- kin carry 'an' mywife wahtsjxne to StodmeiCthafrpIJ nope-you can t , but rnj a truthtui maanI ain t7g5ini to express no -f wriCri-L;;7:;7: V 1 ?77f i-iT1' t the dobr of h is sancti: r rnorh i ng' ?i tj 1 n !7 stop payen ct:t ' i 1 Baking i?ovd3r Made frcin.:pure a - cream of tartarr . ' Saf tiairds jtiic; Iddd Alam'batxn powders are tlie greatest , menacers to health of the, present day. - moval flmiiNa powdeh oo., new voah. ' EveryUiiiig fonnd in a.first-class Tin .S'to're ia carried In stock. Al . ' J . "good are new andurchased with . C a view to the heeds of thirsectiQn Stoves and Rangesqf different sizes and makes at the ve bwest tices." nice line of LampsV Crockery and Hardware jil: frtr Household -use AN YTIIIN ' ,in-Tin. If we havent . got it sj will ma ie it for ou 'and gnsn.i-: r tee satisfactian.-'ESTlMATE.. u - tin work of all klhds-rooflng, ; tering, etc., glad lji.jfurnished. work r.'cf ! alt .klnd done .'Jay 1. - class workmen at fair prices. f ;Give.me'aVair.C " i '. '.. T1ISNER. .Rear of Court; House, near'Ppstoffic T. CUGUTHUIE. - A'. 8. TVOQK K ATTORNEYS AT.XAW, ; " ' Dfficje tfpStairsV net buiding s- j 7ii CAM2EON MOBEJSON, '-1 PA0L C.'.WIJXTLOCI , ; MOIIIUSDN f& mmwcKy -A-ttornev-at-Xjaw, 'v ' KockinohamK, 0. , - Uptobate - - . 80 Sice over-Co & Cooper's slbre. r - JNO. P. CAMERON 3 v KogiaNmrAM c. 1 7-LIFEifiW-' 7iS;!SU:2;i; : 7, y Why not see wliat Vpr A -;77i:,-can;:offer'before'giving''jrt)u 'SrjFOlt.THE BEpTTERMS IN MX THE BEST CCOIPANYON- VtJWQMEN IH TROUBLE Tte Approachof Motherhood is the V'O.ccasioit of ZItich, Axudetyto AIL-. Every - svoman r dreads i the' ' ordeal through which she must pass in becom ing a mother. -The paiii and sufferinf' whioli is iq atoro for her Ja'a source ci constant -nniiety,; fear and dread, to say nothing of the danger which tho coming incident entails. . .The joyor anticipations with which she looks To ward to baby's coming gives way to an indescribable dread of the ordeal when she fully realizes the critical and trying event which will soon approach "and have to be endured. -7 7 Women shouldhail with .dejlaht a -remedy - which insures to them im- fca "noin ylcnffAriTiff 'fort A danger incidental to child-bearin Such a'iTetnedy, is now ; offered, women need not fearionger 1 the hour childbirth. "Mother's -Friend i scientific" linimentand if used 1 confinement, gently md sure 1 y the body for the great r and ehanges it is vr 1 safety to both takes her thro parative' d?rful ' " Vr