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Show THE PAINTING SEASON, Bar Anarchy IN THE PUBLIC EYE America’s Doors Closed to Followers of Red Flag haan ed. MAY STIR UP CIVIL WAR 4 igretion, B HErecent instructions of Sec! ry of commerce and labor indicate Augustus Everett Willson, governor of Ken tucky, will engender the enmity of thousands in his state if he puts into execution his threat to veto the McChordbill forbidding any trust to carry on operations within the state, or to em If this bill becomes law the ploy agents therein. Straus of the departme nt the rigor with which it is in- tended to carry out the spirit as well as the letter of the exclusion features of the immigration laws. Congress has done much in the past ten years strengthen the immigration laws, and there is a strong movement directed to obtaining even more effective provisions exclusion. The time of the assassination of William sident’s murderer, McKinley, but the found, was born in America tobacco trust will be placed at the mercy of the tobacco growers, for it will have to buy its tobacco through middlemen, and its immense factories in Kentucky will have to be closed down. The governor is said to have a feeling of sympathy for the trust whose legal representative he has been in the past. Shold he veto thebill it is declared that it will result in civil war, the planters declaring that the first law of nature, the law of self-preservation, is to be obeyed laws took cognizance of anarchists at it was t is not surprising that some anarchists manage t » get into this count: s into every other. unity from which he departs, this certificate to be a guarantee of his law-abiding character. It is gensrally understood, |} 1owever, that this systen would not work with com- plete satisfaction, because the authorities n ght be anxious to rid themsuggestion has hree been ma year ars aft The immigration bureau years ago services of physic lans Of the that aliens be 3 In many a d the plan of enlisting the marine nh certain countries to pass ntending immigrant. This ending the prevention of cases If the duty and authority of the s could be extended so that they would investigate the character of sity, in view of the rence of crimes of anarchistic, if not insane recur- After ten years of leadership of the United Mine Workers of America, John Mitchell has retired from the head of the great labor organization and has been succeeded by Vice-President Thomas L, Lewis of Ohio Mr. Mitchell will devote his time to regaining his health, which has given way under the strain of office. He has been called to Washington by President Roosevelt, who wants to send him to Panama as an investigator of conditions, but it is understood that he does not favor accepting the position It is said that in future he will devote his attention to a labor paper which he will establish in Indianapolis The object of the paper will be the securing of industrial. peace between the miners and operat ors of the country. countries, that the closest observation be exercised to exclude the morbid in mind as well as the morbid in body. Nobody but a madman would commit some of the atrocious crimes | that are reported from time to time, and it seems reasonable to suppose | disposition and environ- | | ment, and of the politic al a nd affiliations intending of would exclude ΠΠΊΠΙΣΤ rous pe more dange than the laws now can rea Isn’t it about time forward in He 9 In one res way that someone came se of the bargain-hunter? and another a lot of fun ‘is made at her expense, and seldom jt is that to the she gets her deserts. Men are the greatest offenders, for most women are natural if not* systematic bargain hunters. Men speak from a sense of superiority, for who ever heard of a man going on a still hunt for bargains? A mere man when he wants an article goes Bargain Hunter By GWEN E. BYRON. to the nearest store, sees what he wants, says “I'll take it,” then asks the price. One man I knowused to buy things by the wholesale. His last offense was buying little Willie, who was 7 years old and growing like a weed, half a dozen pairs of shoes of the same size. Since then his wife has done all the buying. Yet men are in a great manycases the gainers, for a good bargain hunter is a money saver. When Mrs. B, H. picks up the papers and reads the advertisements of the city merchants, she notes the things she needs. As weall do, indeed; but we are not all of us systematic bargain hunters, and so manyof us are short of funds at that particular time. Mrs. B. H. saves for just such occasions. She keeps mental stocks of the things that are lacking or need replenishing in her house or in the wardrobes of herself and family. When she sees advertisements that fit in with her needs she is prepared to take advantage of them, and she goes at it in a businesslike way. The superior woman who “never goes to a bargain sale” misses many an opportunity, and, what is more, that exhilarating sense of having gotten the best of a bargain; for, after all, there s a delicious sense of achievement in having the credit on your side. I here is the joy of the hunt, which to the true bargain-hunter is as great a genuine hunt το a sportsman; there is the wledge gained of the differ: nt stores, which cannot be gotten in any other way; and last, but n no ways least, there is the great saving of money. Of course, buying an ar ‘ticle simply beeause it is cheap, when one ha s no immediate or future use for it, is not good bargain-hunting. It is the systematic bargain unter for whom I wish to put in a good word the woman who knows what she wants, and knows when, where and howto get what she wants. The best place to find out the status of a people with regard to athletics is the hospital, In the many years which I have been connected with hospitals rarely have Young and Old I run across a patient whose body showed Need the benefit Exercise cise such as athletics in various forms af- result from fords. of development which would regular and systematie exer- One might of course go to the other extreme and say that people who are By PROF A. HOFFA. fond of athletics never are sick and conse- quently never come to hospitals. This, however, espe- would be false cially in view of the large τι asoning, number of pa- tients from all classes who come under my consideration. The truth is that we have too little athletics. gre not yet aware of the The people at large wonderful influence which exercise, regular and systematic, has upon the constitution. Athletics in the general sense of the word is the best remedy for a harmonious developmen and should be recommended and encouraged everywhere. of the body The field of ath- letics has been so widened as to make possible all kinds and forms of exer- cises for men and women, young and old One of the most erroneous views of athletics entertain is tl older people to people and even partisans athletics must be begun by the young: that should let it should be encouraged which Nothing is more illogical. Older people go their systems as much if not m gh certain exercises which wil] benefit ha yung peopl metallic lead will appear, and with patience the White Lead can be com- A man whose boy comes home from school and wants help on his lesson realizes that a little learning is a dangerous thing. pletely reduced to one globule of metal- lic lead. This is because pure White Lead is made from metallic lead. You may test dozens of other socalled White Leads and not be able to reduce one of them to lead. If they will not change wholly to lead but The Poet's Error. “Of course,” said the poet's friend, “he has his faults, but he’s a true poet. He gives his life to the service of the muses—” “Yes,” put in the critic, “but seems to make the mistake of supposing that leave a residue, it is clear that some | Bacchus is one of the muses.” adulterant is present. If you should have your painting done with such materials, no matter tation Was Put in MINERS’ CHIEF RETIRES violence in this and other that even closer investigation of the character, Place a pea-sized bit of White Lead on a piece of charcoal or piece of wood. Blow the flame against it and see what it will do. If it is pure White Lead, little drops of bright, pure | ms to me, would be a great It is certainly of the part THECOMEANDSEESIGN | Youngster “Made Good” Before Temp- ng immigrants, as well as the physical health of such persons, { advantage. if their arrival in this country. apon the p al and mental health of« plan has worked well, the physicians immigration deported, liquid Those best in- how cheap they might seem, it would be costly in the end. | National Lead Company, Woodon the jury. The detective left the important part of his story untold, and before he left town by the earliest train he made a speech to the farmers ad- bridge Building, New York City, are | vising them in their own interest to stand by one another and fight the trust. sending on request a blowpipe free to | The tobacco trust has apparently very little hope of the governor killing | any one about to have painting done, the bill, for it has made an offer to purchase 15,000 hogsheads of tobacco from | so that the White Lead maybetestthe association at 12 cents a pound—the very same tobacco which before the | ed. With it will be sent a handsomely printed booklet having as its frontisformation of the organization was selling for four cents. The farmers refused | piece the “Dutch Boy Painter,” rethe offer and stated their terms, which were that the price should be 15 cents produced from the original painting and that the buyers should take the crop of 1905first, then the crop of 1906 This little painter has become noted and then they would be allowed to buy the crop of 1907. The is said to have refused this offer, and there may be a recrudescence of night riding as the guaranty of pure White Lead. any moment. The militia is in full sympathy with the farmers will not HE COULD BE TRUSTED. interferé with them if it can be avoided or evaded. Meanwhile the governor's position is a critical one selves of dangerous persons. the The Before the m:zing the test is made. The difficulties encountered by the governor in his endeavor to stamp out lawlessness will be appreciated, when it is stated that a detective whom he sent to Russellville appeared before the grand jury with a list of persons guilty of night riding, and discovered that four or five of those accused were cate from the police authorities of the Recently Lead. formed on painting always buy these ingredients separately and have their painter mix them fresh for each job. rather than the man-made lawof the land. rant should produce a certifi- It has been suggested that each imn ronvicted of felony, within The solid part or pigment should | White should be Linseed Oil. of CONCERNING THE OLD M*#& Good resuits ip painting at the least cost depend largely upon the mater ial chosen. Paint is a simple comp ound | and the i ngredients can be easily testbe By HON. GEO. B. BILLINGS, Cc | His Way. This sign is permanently attached to the front of the main building of An the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine A train from the north pulled into the station at Charlottesville, Va, elderly man thrust his head out of a windowof a day coach and summoned a little colored boy. The following col| loguy ensued: “Little boy, have you a mother?” | | “Yassuh.” “Are you faithful to your studies?” “Yassuh.” “Do you go to Sunday school?” “Yassuh.” “Do you say your prayers every pight?” “Yassuh.” “Can I trust you to do an errand | for me?” Company, Lynn, Mass. What Does This Sign Mean ? It means that public inspection of the Laboratory and methods of doing businessis honestly desired. Itmeans that there is nothing about the business which is not “open and above- board.” It means that a permanent invitation is extended to anyone to come and verify any and all statements made in the advertisements of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, Is it a purely vegetable compound made from roots and herbs — without drugs ? | “Yassuh.” Come and See, | “Well, here’s five cents to get me Do the women of America continuMr. Mitchell's work for the miners has been detailed at length many times | a couple of apples.”"—Success Magaally use as much of it as we are told ? When he became the head of the organization about ten years ago there were rine. Come and See. nly 43,000 members in the organization; to-day there are 350,000; wages have Verger Knew His Business. Was there ever such a person as been advanced almost 100 per cent.; living conditions in the mining camps After being conducted through an Lydia E. Pinkham, andis there an have improved several hundred per cent.; the company store has been driven old church by the verger, a visitor was Mrs. Pinkham now to whom sick ut of the mining settlements and m@n are now paid in money, not brass so pleased with the officer’s courtesy womanare asked to write ? checks redeemable only in trade at the “pluck-me” store run by the employer. and information that he insisted on Come andSee. Children of tender age have been taken out of the mines and put into school, giving him half a crown. The man Is the vast private correspondence and in most states in which the organization is now established boys under shook his head sadly. “Thank you, with sick women conducted by 14 or 16 years of ag® crn_cot enter the mines. The miners have received sir,” he said, “but it’s quite against women only, and are the letters Kept avorable standing before the people of the country because of their advocacy strictly confidential ? the rules.” of peace in preference to strike, and their adopted policy of keeping inviolable “I am sorry for that,” said the visi- Come and See. contracts when made with the operators. Have they really got letters from tor, about to return the half crown to over one his pocket. SOUTH CAROLINA SENATOR not be against the rules for me to pick Frank B. Gary, who has been elected United States senator from South Carolina to fill an unexpired term, claims among his ancestors, Robert Bruce, king of Scotland; John Knox, founder of the Presbyterian church; John Witherspoon and 1 other Scotch worthies. He is a nephew of the late Gen. Mark Gary, a picturesque character of the secession and reconstruction periods, who was a major-general of cavalry in Wade Hampton's legion, a brilliant soldier, a reckless leader and a hard fighter. He was famous for his profanity and his ungovernable temper. There wag no flercer fire-eater in all the south, and he was mixed up in a dozen duels. After the overthrow of the Republican government in South Carolina and the establishment of what is known as the Hampton oligarchy, Gen Gary quarreled with his former commander because he did not receive the political recognition that he thought he was entitled to, and, although the family belonged to the old slave-holding aristocracy, Gen. Gary and all his latives joined the Tillman and the “wool hats” in the overthrow of Hampton Under Gen. Hampton's “oligarchy” none but the aristocracy of the state and hose who had distinguished themselves in the confederate army were recog nized by appointments to office. The ordinary farmers were ignored although hey were in a very large majority. Tillman organized them througb the Farmers’ jampton, the Gary that they alliance; he aroused them to a sense of their rights, and he swept Butler and al] the rest of the aristocrats out of power Since then family have enjoyed unusual political prosperity , and it is declared have held more offices than any other family in the state Frank Gary has pledged himself not to be a candidate for election next year, but it is expected that he will do what he can to secure the election of his cousin, former Gov. John Gary Evans. WILL WELCOME FLEET Alfred Deakin, premier of the commonwealth of Australia, was probably quite sincere in his delight when his invitation for the American fleet to visit Australian ports was accepted, for Mr. Deakin is a warm admirer of the United States and its people. He has been in America several times studying the irrigation question in the western states. Australia has a problem that is exactly similar, the interior of the continent being absolutely waterless for the greater part of the year. With a good systemof irrigation Deakin hopes to make the interior as habitable as the seacoast. Premier Deakin is a warm sympathizer with the United States and Canada in their attitude towards the Asiatic. From its geographical position off the coast of Asia, and its remoteness rom any people of cognate race, the Asiatic problem is a very serious one to Australia. The northern part of the island continent would be an ideal country for Chinese and Japanese, but the Australian government will not allow them to land, preferring to retain the northern part of the island in a state of nature rather than allowit to get into the hands of any but a white race aamir Premier Deakin is also an aamire of the American system of govern ment, and in the confederation of Australia he followed the American rather Thus the co ony is a commonwealth rather than a than the Canadian ideal jominion, and is composed of states instead of provinces. The powers of the central government are not nearly so wide as those of the Canadian government and resemble more those of the United States government. This sys tem he urges for adoption in the confederation of the British empire, each million, one hundred “But,” added the verger, “if I were thousand women correspondents ? able to find a coin on the floor it would Come and See. {t up.”—Tit-Bits. Sermons in Ships. “I think it's a shame that Have they proof that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compoundhas cured thousands of these women ? Come and See. wine should be used at launchings. We temperance women aregoing to try to stop it.” “After all, instead of kicking about it, why not use the custom to point 8 moral?” “How do you mean?” “Why, simply by drawing attention to the fact that after her first taste of wine the ship immediately takes to water and sticks to it ever after,”— Boston Transcript. COFFEE EYES. This advertisement is only for doubters. The great army of women who knowfrom their own personal experience that no medicine in the world equals Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compoundfor femaleills will still go on using and being ben- efited by it; but the poor doubting, suffering woman must, for her own sake,be taught confidence,forshe also might justas well regain her health, SIGK HEADACHE Positively cured by these Little Pills. It Acts Slowly But Frequently Produces Blindness. The curious effect of slow daily poisoning and the gradual building in of disease as a result, is shown in numbers of cases where the eyes are affected by coffee. A case in point will illustrate: A lady in Oswego, Mont., experienced a slow but sure disease settling upon her eyes in the form of increasing weakness and shooting pains with wavy, dancing lines of light, so vivid that nothing else could be seen for minutes at a time. She_says: “This gradual failure of sight alarmed me and I naturally began a very earnest quest for the cause. About this time I was told that coffee poisoning sometimes took that form, and while I didn’t believe that coffee was the cause of mytrouble, I concluded to quit it and see. “I took up Postum Food Coffee in spite of the jokes of Husband whose experience with one cup at a neighbor’s was unsatisfactory. Well, I made Postum strictly according to directions, boiling it a little longer, because of our high altitude. The result was charming. I have now used Postum in place of coffee for about 3 months and my eyes are well, never paining me or showing any weakness. I know to a certainty that the cause of the trouble was coffee and the cure was in quitting it and building up the nervous system on Postum, for that was absolutely the only change I made in diet and I took no medicine. “Mynursing baby has been kept in a perfectiy healthy state since I have used Postum. “Mr , a friend, discarded cof » see if he fee and took on Postum could be rfd of his dyspe and frege pro- | quent headaches The colony to be represented in the feder al council, and to have a say with the | duced a most remarkable improvemother country in questions of inter-imperial or international nat e I* his | ment quickly.” plan is adopted the British empire will become another United States, i There’s a Reason.” Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. They also relieve Dim tress from Dyspepsia, Im digestion and Too rlearty Eating. A perfect rem edy for Dizziness, Naue sea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coat ed Tongue, Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER, They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable, SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALLPRICE, Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature 67», | REFUSE SUBSTITUTES, TOILET ANTISEPTIC Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean and free from unhealthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. A germicidal, disinfecting and deodorizing toilet requisite of exceptional excellence and economy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh, At drug and toilet stores, 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Large Trial Sample WITH “HEALTH AND BEAUTY” BOOK SENT FREE THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mass, AGENTS ©: wantec inal #1.00 be Patent Office has recently decided a trade mark cancellation case in my favor, cancelling @ registered trade-mark on “Native H which was issued to my competitors, o ground that they were not en ed to trade-mark For κα > and terms and ti Patent Office's de ci write Pp. E. MELROSE, Columbus, Ohio, |