Frame New Rules THIS CERTAINLY HEEDED CLEANING UP l. .9-1 -J mm WASHINGTON, Chief Justice. White of the United States Supreme :ourt has appointed a commit tee to revise the rules of equity prac tice in the United Stat&IcourS. -The committee is composed of himself. Jusy tices Lurton and Van Deventer. the only members of the Supreme court who have had experience on the bench ot the United States circuit court. Jus tice Lurton since 1893 and Justice Van Deventer since 1903. ' This move is the initial step in a great reform In federal court pro cedure, which has long teen advocated by-Justice White, who has often criti cised the antiquated practice on -the chancery side of these courts. The present rules were promulgated. In" 1842. They are adapted in their en tirety from the ancient rule3 of the high court of chancery of England, arid are cumbersome and complicated In the highest degree, lending them selves to delays and embarrassing liti gation rather than expediting causes. It is significant thpt the rules from' Nation Has a . Great THE fate of the battleship Texas, once the pride of the United States nary, recently sent to the bottom of Tangier sound, in Chesapeake bay, by the guns of her sister ships, as an ex periment "in naval science, has called public attention to the prodigious size of the nation's naval scrap heap. Not only Is the government spending more than $66,000,000 on its . new. Oreadnaughts now under construction, but it is throwing away annually mil lions of dollars' worth of battleship construction of the older type, now considered out of date. On the naval junk pile In the last ten years 36 vessels have been dumped. . They cost the government to build, or to buy ready built, $9,803. 195.50. From the sale of the refuse Darely three per cent., or $289,029.41. oas teen received. The ships which have been destroy ed outright are but the smaller part of the numler of abandoned naval ves sels which total 36 In the past ten years. The greater part are those which, while , still technically counted as a public asset, would be of no value In war and would never again be used for that'purpose. They are in use as training vessels for the naval re serves of various states. The monitor Prosecution a Check to Mail Frauds THE bleuths of the postofllce de partment are growing stiff ,fn the joints from lack of exercise, the offi cials of the attorney-general's office are dozing at their desks, find the ma chinery that used to be" grinding out fraud orders so merrily is rusting from disuse. . The world seems to be growing bet ter, or at least that part of it which formerly Indulged in so many get-rich-quick schemes seems-to be less active than in days gone by, and the postofflce officials declare that it vis all due to the vigorous measures taken by the present administration to stamp out public fraud and protect the unwary. "Months have passed since we have Issued a domestic fraud order," said Jesse Suter, the authorized publicity agent of the postofflce department, "whereas in former times scarcely a Maine Uncovering ARMY engineer officers at Havana have estimated that It would be at least two months after work be gan on pumping out the water in the coffer dam about the battleship Maine In Havana harbor before an expert opinion could .be formed as to wheth er it was an inside or outside ex plosion that sank the vessel. With the water over the wreck lowered four feet, the top and sides of the wreck's afterdeck are in view. It has been expected that when the water was lowered enough to expose the top deck this would probably loom up as a bank of mud as the wa ter in the harbor Is very muddy and the vessel has been "collecting" de posits for 13 years. When work on the upper deck is completed there will be more pumping and more mud until the water Is lowered to the deck below. Inspection of this deck will then be undertaken without un v due haste. It is believed that the lower down the water goes the more difficult will fce the work of clearing 'fl"R'JTr5f for Federal Courts which the United States court rules of equity practice were adapted have long since been displaced in the Eng lish practice, and in almost every minor jurisdiction in the United Statea where they were in force in the last century have been abandoned for code procedure or amended in accord with modem ideas and practice. Members of the bar in commenting oil the proposed reform without excep tion commend it. They say that the rule3 as they now staa-1, if rigidly en forced, would involve litigation in an endless snarl, and that the presen rules have been tolerable only by rea son of the disregard of many of them which have been found impractical of enforcement in modern procedure. But in such cases they say that special or t'ers and short cuts in suits are made to fit the individual case and thus the whole procedure is "up in the air" or in the "discretion" of the court," which is in many cases just as bad. No intimation wa3 given by Chief Justice White or either member of the committee just what form the revision will take, but It is agreed that it will look to the expediting of causes, and the relief of litigants from the almost prohibitive expense of the present equity procedure. The committee is expected to repor its recommendations to the Supreme court early in the fall term. Naval Scrap Heap Anmhitrite. destined for use at St Louis, is a type of these ships which are useful only in providing possible future recruits for the service. The Texas was the first modern bat tlshin constructed for the navy. It wa3 surpassed in s'peed by the Iowa the Oregon, and other vessels in the battle off Santiago, but its name was written as large as any on the page which records that day's fighting. And it will now be but a few years according to the inexorable rules of the navy department, before the Ore gon, Massachusetts, Indiana and Iowa follow the Texas as targets for the projectiles of newer vessels or are relegated to the ignominy of the 'junk heap. The Oregon, most costly of the old type of sea fighters, cost the govern ment less than $6,000,000. The New York, biggest of the Dreadnaughts now building at eastern shipyards, will cost nearly $13,000,000. day passed without the issuance -of one or more against Individuals or firms who were fleecing the people As a matter of fact, the get-rich- qulck schemers are coming to the conclusion that the postofllce admin istration will not 'stand for' them and that in consequence it will be healthier for them to keep within the bounds of the law. "They know that if they conduct shady enterprises nowadays they face. not only the penalties of a fraud or der, depriving them of the use of the mails, but also stand a very good chance of getting into the peniten tiary. The victory of the government in the 'Harrison case in Cincinnati had a very salutary effect, and the prosecution now being pushed against the officials of the United Wireless in New York is another object lesson, showing that the government Is very much in earnest in its determination to send moneyed crooks to jail, just as readily as though they were men of no means at all. "The only cases that we are called on to handle nowadays eem to be the mail for lotteries in foreign couu tries." I Has Been Gradual the mud away. The problem of In spection also will be made more diffi cult as the successive stages of pumping out progress as daylight will not penetrate into the hull af the ves sel and work will have to be done with artificial light. What can be saved of the Maine and what it is most expedient to do with the vesel can only be well de termined when she is exposed to view. Many engineer officers fear she can never be floated and will have to be taken apart in sections If it is decided to save her at all. Oth er officers believe she will break and fall to pieces when the unwaterlng of the cofferday gets well under way. 301HKT POULTRY ON AVERAGE FARM Vlakes No Great Demands on Strength and Any Person of Intelligence May Make Success. In this country poultry includeft chickens, turkeys, geese, ducks, gui nea fowls, pigeons and occasionally pea fowls, pheasants, quail and swans chickens, of course, being the most important. Something like a quarter of a billion chickens and other poultry are consumed in the United States every year. The consumption of eggs is about eighteen dozen per capita. The last census gave the value of chickens raised on American farms in 1899 as $136,891,877 of eggs as $144,2S6,15S. Today the American people consume about half a billion dollars' worth of poultry and eggs per annum. xport3 are Increasing and one may enter on the raising of poultry and eggs with little fear of not realizing good prices on all pro duce. , Probably 90 per cent, of tne farms in the United States raise poultry as a side line; feeding Is more econom ical where general farming Is pur sued. Still there are manifest ad vantages in' specializing greater at tention, knowledge and skill achieve better results. Poultry raising makes no great de mands on strength, and any person of intelligence may hope to make a success of it. But some have made the mistake of supposing thai the business can be taken up on a con siderable scale without any experi ence. Hens lay all the way from none to 250 eggs a yeaff and it takes some experience to tell with what kind of hens andunder what condi tions, the ..urfer limit can be reached. - Probably the best course for the intending Poultry raiser would be to work for a year or more on one of the large chicken ranches in order to learn the important points of breeds, feeding, fattening, housing, brooding, incubating, etc. The raising of broil ers, roastera and capons for the market may be a paying occupation on an egg farm, If orfo secures the right kind of stock and gives the work the proper attention and management. No kind ' of poultry is mure profitable than turkeys. FOUNTAIN BUILT FOR DUCKS Uttle Ones Must Be Kept Dry Until Their Feathers Have Formed Useful One Described. Since ducklings slop water around considerably when they drink, and since they should be kept dry until after their feathers have formed, the drinking fountain illustrated herewith will be found particularly useful, says the American Agriculturist. A square of quarter-Inch mesh galvanized wire cloth, say 18 inches to the side, 13 tacked to a wooden frame and placed Fountain for Ducklings. over a bed of gravel so the water may easily drain away. If the soil is not gravelly, a hole should be dug about two feet dep . and filled with small stones. The drinking fountain of any convenient shape should be anchored in the center of the wire screen. For little ducks the .weight of a fountain holding one gallon or more will be more than sufficient to prevent top pling over. PIIMIC It is better not to keep ducks and chicks together. The young chicks should be look ed over carefully for lice. The farmer above everyone is the party to succeed with poultry. Have charcoal, sand and water al ways on hand, and feed small grain. Clean and disinfect the brooders at least once a week, and better every day. Potato peelings fed raw in not too large quantities are good for the laying hens. Now that the chicks are hatched the main point is to cee that they are are kept growing. Collect eggs every day shortly be fore noon, or preferably twice daily, at noon and at. dusk. A chick, like a baby, will get good or bad habits according to tjje way It is started in this world. To keep chicks growing and thriv ing they must be fed well and often, and their crors kept clean. Separate the chicks as soon as sex can ue distinguished, because one will retard the growth of the other. Move the outside brooders every eek. If possible sow the yards at least once a year to rye, barley or eets. Whitewashing the Interior of the poultry houso will not rid it of lice un less a little carbolic acid is added to he wash. The Universal Creed By Dr. Frank Crane m - In the one universal church to which all good men belong, composed ol those of all faiths who honestly live up to the best they know, whethei Christian or Pagan, Jew or Gentile Catholic or Protestant, there is a cer tain fundamental creed. This, the greatest common divisor of all creeds may' be thus stated: 1. The good man sees, acknowl edges, and believes in, first of all, th difference between right and wrong When the word ought disappears frorr one's vocabulary he may be s-ura ol moral decay. The one man abomina ble to any decent society is the mar who thinks nothing matters. We car tolerate one, even, who doubts there h a God; but if one believes there is nc line between right and wrong, then as Dr. Johnson said, "let us count oui spoons when he leaves." 2. The good man believes that hap piness v.ill come to him, permanently and as a law, only as he practices do ing right. Joy, peace, and bliss ar not to be cozened nor juggled iron God or nature, but are the sure por tion of them that persistently do wha' they think right. Doing right, o! course, does not always bring monej or fame or other external desirec things, but-it brings peace and poist to the soul, as surely as Uiree timet five makes fifteen. There are no more exception to this ruie than to a law o: physics or of gsonietry. The cosmi( accuracy run3 in spiritual as well as in material thing3. 1 3. The good man's duty (in which he find happiness) is first of all .to de velop his personality. God made hiii for a purpose; his joy will consist ir finding and fulfilling that purpose. H is not to be some one else, not tc copy; but, using all masters, .to be come more and more himself. 4. It is his duty to be strong. Ht can be of use to others only as he has force in himself. He therefore shuns all things that tend to weaken his arm his brain, or his heart. 5. His duty is to be clean. Thit item of the creed is oldest and new est; oldest, in that cleansings were a part of every early religion, the com mands of Moses, for instance, abound ing in many lustral rites; newest, in that the one lesson of modern science is the power and safety of the anti septic life. The devil's name as far as bodily health and mental clearness and spiritual vigor is concerned, is dirt. Dirt is the one enemy to be hated with all one's soul and to be fought unto one's last breath. 6. His duty is to be brave. The basic sin of all sins is cowardice. The high er the realm of life in which we move the more dangerous is any kind . oi fear. And the most deadly of all fears is the fear of the truth, or the fear foi the truth. Any man or institution that fights to preserve himself or itself, foi the sake of "expediency," that Is tc say, for fear the truth might do harm., any man or institution, in the words oi Zangwill, that proposes to live and die in "an autocasm without' facts," is doomed. 7. His duty is to love. Although, ac cording to the foregoing points in the creed, he is to develop self und be clean, brave, and strong, yet he is to find his motive for all this and the end for which he does all this, outside and not inside of himself. "It is at this point that he rises, like an aeroplane leaving the runway on the ground and scaring aloft; here the man leaves the company and simili tude of all other creatures. In his power, to be actuated by unselfish mo tives he becomes as a god compared to the beasts. He lives for his wile, his children, his friends, his country, his race; so, in widening waves his radio-dynamic flows. The good man therefore hates no living creature. He despises no human being. In him is a cen,tqf,i2al power out flowing to inundate the universe. 8. From this love arise all graces and virtues as naturally as peaches grow from peach trees. Lcving all he cannot soil a soul, nor wrong a fellow being, nor hurt wantonly, nor usurp, nor push for precedence, nor be un kind, nor in any way drift into the low, poison life of egoism. 9. His one aim, last of all, is to serve. Strong in himself, fearless and loving, he arises at length to the plat form where stands he who was called "the first born among many brethren." He is the master's companion and also can put away all cheap success, all luxuries of greed and dominance, and repeat his master's words: "Let him who would be greatest among you be servant of all. I, too, come cot to be ministered untc, but to minister." The Supreme Message. Christ , shall bo first or not at all. Ir the lives of rr.e:i let us live nobler, try to be better and trur to ourselves and give our testimony whenever the opportune time comes. Rei". C. K. Carpenter, Methodist Episcopal, Ga'.es burg, 111. No Substitute. Interest in art, letters and architee. ture, success in business politics and social life, loyalty to clubs, creeds and rituals will not satisfy the soul's na tive thirst for God. There are no sub stitutes for God. Rev. A. Petty, Con gregationalist, Springfield, Mass. THE REASON. , De Quiz Are yen in favor of a safe and sane Fourth of July? De Whiz No; let the boys have all the giant firecrackers they want. De Quiz But such things are dan gerous. Do Whiz I know it. I haven't any boys. HIRAM CARPENTER'S WONDER FUL CURE OF PSORIASIS. "I have been afflicted for twenty years with an obstinate skin disease, called by seme M. D.'s. psoriasis, and others leprosy, commencing on my scalp; and in spite of all I could do, with the help of the most skilful doc tors, it slowly but surely extended un til a year ago this winter it covered my entire person in the form of dry scales. For the last three years I have been unable to do any labor, and suffering intensely all the time. Every morning there would be nearly a dust panful of scales taken from the sheet on my bed, some of them half as large athe envelope containing this letter. In the latter part of winter my skin commenced cracking open. I tried everything, -almost, ' that could be. thought of, without any relief. The 12th of June I. started West, in hopes I could reach the Hot Springs. . I reached Detroit and was so low I thought I should have to go to the hospital, but finally got as ,far as Lan sing, Mich., where I had a sister liv ing. One Dr. treated me about two weeks, but did me no good. All thought I had but a short time to live. earnestly prayed to die. Cracked through the skin all over my back, icross my ribs, arms, hands, limbs; !eet badly swollen; toe-nails came off; finger-nails dead and hard as a bone; aair dead, dry and lifeless as old itraw. O my God! how I did suffer. "My sister wouldn't give up; said. We will try Cuticura.' Some was ap jlled to one hand and arm. Eureka! iiere was relief; stopped the terrible Durning sensation from the word go. They immediately got Cuticura Re solvent, Ointment and Soap. I com menced by taking Cuticura Resolvent three times a day after meals; had a bath once a day, water about blood heat; used Cuticura Soap freely; ap plied Cuticura Ointment morning and evening. Itesult: returned to my aome in just six weeks from the time ! left, and my skin as smooth as this sheet of paper. Hiram E. Carpenter, hlcuderson, N. Y." The above remarkable testimonial was written January 19, 18S0, and is epublished because of the perman rcy of the cure. Under date of April !2, 1910, Mr. Carpenter wrote from his present home, G10 Walnut ' St. So., Jansing, Mich.: "I have never suf ered a return of the psoriasis and al hough many years have passed I have lot forgotten the terrible suffering I indured before using the Cuticura lemedies." Awful! Mr3. Willis Isn't It awful the way eople paw over goods in a store? Mrs. GilHs Shocking. I went over o the waist counter this morning and )icked up every single garment and liere wasn't one that didn't have the narks where somebody had been han lling it. A half truth always seems more irn jregnable than a many-sided view; a iberal is always at a disadvantage in .ontention with a dogmatist. Irs. Wlnslow's 0ooth!npr Syrnp for Children eethWifr, softens the punis, reduces intiamma lou, allays pain. cures wind colic, 21c u bottle. A lot of the money people marry or is counterfeit. Remedies are Needed Were we perfect, which we are not, not often Lo needed. But since our come weakened, impaired and broken down through indiscretions which have gone on from the early ages, through countless generations, remedies are needed to oid Nature in correcting our inherited and otherwise acquired weaknesses. To reach the scat of stomach weakness and consequent digestive troubles, there is nothing so good as Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discov ery, a glyceric compound, extracted from native medic inal roots sold for over forty years with great satisfaction to mil users. For Weak Stomach, Biliousness, Liver Complaint, Pain in the Stomach after eating, Heartburn, Bad Breath, Belching of food, Chronic Diarrhea and other Intestinal Derangements, the "Discovery" i3 a time-proven and most efScient remedy. The genuine has on lis ) r. You can't afford to accept a secret nostrum as a substitute for this non-alcoholic, medicine op known composition, not even though the urgent dealer may thereby make a little bigger profit. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver sod bowels. Stijtar-coated, tiny granules, easy to take as candy. jts Li' v" iW m This paper is printed from ink made in Savannah, Ga. by the SOUTHERN OIL & INK CO., Savannah. Ga. Price 6 cents per pound, F. O. B. Savannah. Your patronage solicited. One Satisfaction. . me cuutw bUD ants 10 f, J,us vu leave," said Mrs. Crosslots mournful ly. "Are you sure she's In earnest?" recT'nr'od ter husband. "Yes." "isottiirg will change her mind?' ."Nothing." "All right. Then I'll go down to the kitchen and discharge her." Life is for the most part but the union of our individual selves. Oow per. , ' When mi you want the best there is, ask your grocer for S and Olives iW Libby, mU"TmiiJ '-rim usfe's School jCollegiate, Normal, Industrial, ' under the Episcopal Church. , For catalogue, address . ( .. REV. A. B. HUNTER, Rafcigh, K G VTT?'M' Eldney trouble prqys upon the mind, cllscour- ANfD ases and lessens ambl- tion; beauty, vigor and V'OIVTF'N' cheerfulness soon disap t iTjLj.L pear when kidneya are out of order or diseased. For Rood re sults use Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root tha great kidney remedy. At drug-grists. Sara pie bottle by mall freo, also pamphlet. Address. Dr. Kilmer & Co., Biofhamtoa, N. Y. trmet ma4 kii rk tli. Neat. cIcaa, ornamental, conven i rut, cheap. Lstal iwoa. Caa't sp.l) or . tip overywill not o4 or njur4 mythinp. Guaranteed eftecW iv. OI all 4ea)era as sent prepaid or 20c 1UKOLU BOM ERA Ui ! Kaltf ir PREVENTION" - better than cure. Tutt's PU!s if taken la t!m not only cure, but will prevent SICK HEADACHE, biliousness, constipation and kindred rf!-oses KZ3 wnSi Pmra mi Restores Gray Hair to Natural Color ntilOVKS D4XKRIFK kSO bl lU.V . Invigoratesand prevents thebairfrom fallingolf ur Sale hj DrgglU, or Sent Dirtct hj XANTHINE CO., Richmond, Virginia Price CI IVr BolUc; Basylr llatUe Sic. Ba4 fur cirealuw Immediate Substantial Income Kesponsiblo lady representative)) wanted In everr locality. HanUsome.st line of Fall and Spring Drees UiitMis, Hosiery, (Jluvus, Hundkercliiei'guii Uie mar ket. WKAVKR ti HKAlilCB plan Insures success. References required. h n$ Booklet. CONSUMERS IMPORTING & MAIL ORDER CO. Department 8, Baltimore, Md. J If you have two hands Prof. G. Oi X Branninfr will teach you. Only rollene in U. S. with shops con nected ; $30 f or cuu rae, tools and position at pood wageH. Commission paid for bringing students. Atlanta Barber CoCefie. 10 I. Mitchell St.. AUinia, Gx. KODAKS and Ilijrh Grad t'uiinlmitf. Mail orders criven Bne- clal Attention. Prices reasonable. Service prompt. Bend for Price List. ' U.S SkACS ACT til'OUK. CiLUUIXSTOS, !. c BEFI&KCE STimOH-1 16 ounces to the packags -other stsrclws only 12 ounces name price and "DEFIANCE" 13 SUPERIOR QUALITY. STOP YOUR CHILLS Our mutranteed two-dollar treatment lor chills at hlf price, for thirty days. Irt-e tt-10 prepaid. WHSiiiSK MANUFACTURING COMl'.ANY, betlaiia, Missouri. lanfel mpn anl women t- preach and teach. IiaillWU Our Mission affords the opportunity. T months Mudy by mall, secures ordinaMon and llcetise. Booklet free. Herniary Sateba, Atlanta, Urn, W. N. UH CHARLOTTE, NO. 26-1911. n I medicines would, Sv systems have be- LABBV mm iiMimi i I n -n - rim mmi ftiii. DAISY FLOJl ' ER ill j f i I i ii miii iliiM mi i Hifi i HT i! M III I -