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Show ; WOMAN SUFFERED TEN YEARS From Nervousness Caused by Female Ills Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound. I suffered from Auburn, N. Y. nervousness for ten years, and had such organic pains that sometimes I would lie in bed four days at a time, could not eat or sleep and did not want anyone to talk to me or bother at me all. Some times I would suffer for seven hours at a time. Different doc tors did the best they xould for me until foUr months ago I began giving Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Com pound a trial and now I am in good health. Mrs. William H. Gill, 15 Pleasant Street, Auburn, New York. Doctors Daughter Took It. St. Cloud, Minn. I was so run down by overwork and worry that I could not stand it to have my children talk aloud or walk heavy on the floor. One of my friends said, Try Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound, for I know a doctors daughter here in town who takes it and she would not take it if it were cot good. I sent for the Compound at once and kept on taking it until I was all right" Mrs Bertha M. Quickstadt, 727 Eth Avenue, S., Cloud, Minn. E. Pinkhams Lydia Vegetable Compound rrfay be relied upon as the most efficient remedy for female Ills. Why dont you try it? St THEY SIDESTEP FOR MOTORS Filipinos Heed the Signal and Give the Devil Machine Plenty of Road. Manila may now be said to be in things metropolitan. The latest adjunct to its activities calling attention to progress in this direction was the recent appearance upon the stieets of a motor car washed in mud and powdered with the fine dust of various grades of colors produced between here and Bagujo. It had made a new tecord between the summer capital and Manila. .The machine was stripped to a condition almost immodest, fenders and top were superfluous to requirements and no windshield protected the driver's face against the hot' winds that blow at midday across tho plain. The friendliest feeling exists for the The barrios become a motor car chorus of children with the ready hello, even the dogs and chickens get the Inspiration. It tnay be due to the machines be- ing a stranger in this new section, but it is a fact that pedestrians and people in vehicles do respect the warning signal and give plenty of road. Manila Bulletin. May Have Cure for Neuralgia. One never gets much sympathy for neuralgia nor seasickness, presumably because they do not kill. But people have died from the results of seasickness and the list of those who have been driven to suicide by neuralgia would be a startling one. Now comes Dr. Rudolph Matas of New Orleans with a statement that neuralgia may be cured by injections of alcohol into the nerve ganglions at the base of the skull. This gratilying dlscov- ery justifies the hope that the triumphant progress of medical science will presently enable our physicians to alleviate headaches and colds. suffragette Is a female who is willing to stand for her rights anywhere, even in a crowded car. A 4 4 No man Is born as free and equal as a hired girl. 1 I Helping Woman Q .me0 helping in efitirt family. Her back' aches so she can hardly drag around. Her nerves are on edge end she is needy wild. Headache and Sleeplessness unfit her for tho care of her family. Rheumatic Paine and Lumbago tack her body. But, let her take Generslly i Foley 'and all these , admerits wdl disappear. She wdl aoen recover bei strength and healthy activity for Foley KMoey Pills are healing, curative, strengthening and tonic, a medicine for ad Kidney, Bladder and Urinary Diseases that always cores. rvoonamiM as ftfid DEPILATORY isf IK from ? (tffUtRKttOVAI. OF IIA e( nifttMi ! the (ir. DMMtov ft itus ft4 wher pniMD tiMhs ifhr hodr. H rPHtom tit iapsrflm owiu fur Msnrpto br remit. ml fttirflT. 4. ft. liUiAl, 114 nm yer MMift AfclAftU, OUPUftlli htr k i A value Cor Ite. ftample of Llftt of other good rflcDs. ST 4 N. lat RKUNHARII SPECIALTY CON CAL. ftOhft, 6U two household I AYK ? Mrm. 4 9 f 1 - Fl'R'tfKH rOHMtLAMtneUoni if ns. inform Hub on teftith. any mformaucm ' ft j It would, in any event, be wholesome, now the colonies were likely to grow lusty as kingdoms In their roomy c ntinent, to assert a mothers power to use and restrain a power by no means lost because too long and neglected. It was with such wisdom the first step was taken. In March, 1764, parliament voted It "Just and necessary that revenue be raised In America, passed an act meant to secure dutlea on wlnes and Busar. and took meas-thures t0 Increase the efficiency of revenue service in America. George Grenville vaa prime minister. He lacked neither official capacity nor acquaintance with affairs. He thought it just the colonists should pay their quota into the national treasury, seeing they were so served by the national power; and he declared that in the next session of parliament he should certain direct taxes in addition to the indirect already in force. He saw no sufficl n reason, to doubt that the colonies would acquiesce, if not without protest, at least without tumult or dangerous resistance. A Serious Blunder. It was a sad blunder. Virginia resented threat and execution alike In s ch a matter as deeply as did litigious Massachusetts. A long generation ago, in the quiet year 1732, when bluff Sir Robert was prime minister, there had been an incident which Governor Keith, maybe, had forgotten. The minis ry had demanded of Massachusetts that she should establish a fixed salary for her governors by a standing grant; but she had refused, and the ministers had receded. The affair had not been lost upon the other colonies. That sturdy onetime royal governor, Alexander Spots-woo'in Virginia, had noted it very particularly, and spoken of it very bluntly, diligent servant of the crown as he was, to Col, William Byrd, when he came his way on bis progress to the mines. He declared that If the assembly in New England would stand bluff, be did not see how they could be forced to raise money against their will, for If they should direct It to be done b;- - act of parliament, which they have threatened to do (though It be against the right of Englishmen to be taxed but by their representatives), yet they would find It no easy matter to put such an act in execution. No observing man could so much as travel in Virginia without finding very promptly what it was that gave point and poignancy to such an opinion. A Parson. That quiet gentleman. Rev. Andrew Burnaby, vicar of Greenwich, waa in Virginia in 1759, and saw plainly The pubenough how matters stood. lic or political character of the Virginians, he said, corresponds with their private one; they are haughty and Jealous of the liberties, Impatient of restraint, and can scarcely bear the thought bf being controlled by any superior power. Many of them consider the colonies as independent states, not connected with Great Britain otherwise than by having the same common king and being bound to her with natural affection. Not pnly so, but they think it a hard ship not to have dp unlimited trade to every part of the world. All this, and more, Grenville might have learned by the simple pains of Inquiry. One bad but to open his eyes and look to see hov Imperious a race had been bred In the almost feudal south; and, for all they had never heard revolutionary talk thence, ministers ought to have dreaded the leisure men had there to think, the provocation to be proud, the necessity to be masterful and Individual, quite as much as they had ever dreaded the stubborn temper and the quick capacity for united action they bad once and again seen excited In New England. Law a Dead Letter. It wa" not necessary to try new la- -i to see what the colonies would do if provoked. The difficulty already encountered In enforcing the laws of trade was object-lessoenough; and the trouble in that matter had grown acute but yesterday. For long. Indeed, no 'one In the colonies questioned the right c parliament to regulate their trade; hut It was notorious that the laws actually "enacted initial matter had gone smoothly off In America only because they were not seriously enforced. The trade hither Is engrossed by the Saints of New England laughed Colons Byrd, who carry tf a great d of tcbacco without troubling themselves with paying that Impertinent dqty of a penny a pound. The acts of trade practically forbade direct commerce with foreign for their . dependencies, countries specially in foreign bottoms; but ships from Prance, Spain, and the Canary Isles came and went .vefy In colonial freely, notwithstanding. e Level-Heade- fKrrlss, worn mmj ft 1; r pec Bo v oft KrftfteUcft kittltAkM. A lOITiiOD and 4. wanted to prepare for faret ranper rxamtnetto; ftfttftry f! 194 to start, fiat ftfctiffttios. C, ft. Rftcaa, WilUaoM. Arts. fletf fltttft Cwtatalt iNoVaaftaf tat ifoettr. AbtFuS . U. Cargoes without number were sent to the Dutch and Spanish West Indies every year, and as many brought-thence- , which were undoubtedly forfeit under the navigation laws parliament had been at such pains to elabor' ate and enforce; and privateering well as smuggling had for long afforded the doughty seanjen of Boston, Salem. Charleston, alTd New York a genteel career of profit. Indulge In Illegal Trade. Things had come to such a pass that where business went briskly the people of the colonial ports demanded as of right a full freedom of Illegal trade, and broke sometimes Into riot when It was denied them. The Boston News Letter had been known very courteously to mourn the death of a worthy collector of his majestys customs because, "with much humanity," he had been used to take "pleasure in directing masters of vessels how they ought to avoid the breach of th. acts of trade. Sea captains grew accustomed to very confidential relations with owners and consignees, and knew very well, without official counsel, how to take the advice not to declare at the and things went very customhouse; easily and cordially with all parties to the understanding. In 1761 that understanding was of a sudden rudely broken and the trou-- ' ble began, which Grenville had the folly to add to. The board of trade determined to collect the duties on sugar, molasses and rum, so long and sc systematically evaded in the trade between New England and the West ltdies, at whatever cost of suit and scrutiny, and directed their agents In Boston te demand writs of assistance from the courts, giving them lerve to enter what premises they would in search of smuggled goods. Colonists Resist Search Warrants. Thare were instant exasperation and resistance. General search warrants, opening every mans door to the officers of the law, with or without Just and explicit ground of suspicion against him, no' English subject any- - d n Kidney Pilk rM Installment 8 i where would submit to; and yet these writs authorized nothing leas. Issued under a questionable extension to America -- of an exceptional power of the court of exchequer, they violated every precedent of the common law, no leas than every principle of prudent administration; and the excitement whi'-- they provoked waa at once deep and ominous. Sharp resistance was made In the courts, and no officer ever venturi d to serve one of the obnoxious writs. Such challenge of the rocess was uttered by colonial counsel upon trial of the righ' moreover, that ministers would be without excuse should they Ignore the warning, so expcit and to eloquent of revolutionary purpose. It was James Otla who utterd It. He had but the other day carried the royal commission In his pocket as, advocate general In hit majestys court of admiralty; but he would not have airupled, even as bla majestys servant, he said, to oppose the exercise of a power which hid already cost one king his head anu another hla throne. To oppose In such a case was to defend the very constitution under which the king wore his crown. That constitution secured to Englishmen everywhere the rights of freemen; the colonists had, besides, the plan guarantees of their own charter r" tf ' constitution and - charters failed, or were gainsaid, the principles of natural reason sufficed for defenae against measures so arrogant and so futile. No lawyer could justify these extraordinary writs; no king with an army at ala back could ever force them to execution. Protest not only, but defiance, rang very clear in these fearless words; and ministers raustavow themselves very ignorant, rbould . they pretend they did not know how Mr. Otis had kindled firs fron.one end of the colonies to the other. But Grenville was resolute to take all risks and pusl this policy. h . TtwOtmoaloua 6iavnp-Ac- t- enjoy a comfortable peace and the Ha did aot flinch 'rom the enforce esteem of their, neighbor, nod very ment of the measures of 1764, and in genially winked at sueb traasgres- - tha asealon of 1765, calmly fulfilled hla " sfoaiT promise of farther UxaUon.7He p co tocracy of the colony. Good Scots I blood ran in his veins, quickened by $29,000,000 the lively strain of an old Welsh stock, j His father came of a race of scholars, j Thit amount of diamouds wu Imported tnlo thu count rr during the past year. and, good churchman though he was, TLe figure prove (he popularity ol aet knew his Uvy and his Horace better stone. Our colluvium U varied and than ills Bible. His mother came of large, and arranged lor those with small purses a well ms for the millionaire, a vivacious line of easygoing wits tone fc'5 upwards. and talkers, which had a touch more of stt adiness and energy might any . day have made famous His father had served his county of Hanover very capably and acceptably as surveyor, colonel, magistrate, and salt la st are. utah Ins uucle lad been beloved aa the faithful pastor of quiet parishes. But they had been no long lime tu the col No woman can be very ony; they lived back from the tidefriendly water counties where the real aristoc- with any other woman whom her bu racy had its strength and supremacy; hand waa ever engaged to. they were of that middle class of who love liberty, but do not affect rank A vigorous aristocracy favors the growth of personal eminence even In Is healthful Good Tea will those who are not of it, but only uear It." and these plain men of the midstrengthen you for a better dle counties were the more excellent days work but drink Good and individual In the cultivation of Tea, Poor Tea is dear at any their powers by reason of the contact. But there was a touch of rusticity, a price, neglect of polish, a rough candor of about which them set them speech apart and distinguished them sharply Are Always Good enough when they came into the presence of the courtly and formal gentleCoupon for Roger' Fine Silvtrwa men who practiced the manners of Every Package. London in the river counties. A Rustic Figure In the Heme. The chap who keep hammering Patrick Henry, at any rate, must away isn't necessarily a knocker. have seemed a very rustic figure to the Burgesses when he first came to take his Beat amongst them on a May Milk sed that the colonists thouid be retired to use revenue stamps upon all leir commercial paper, legal documents, pamphlets, and newspapers, d that, at once aa a general meas-rpf convenience and a salutary of authority, his majesty's loops stationed In the plantations kould be billeted on Lie people it Pirllament readily iss thus Grenville trposed tMray-ttthe expenses of defending, protec-Ing- , and securing the colonies; but a cam near losing them instead Tve' act waa passed in March, It as not to go litr effect until November; but the colonists did not keep him waiting until November for their grotests. It waa the voice of a verita Hie tempest that presently came over of the startled faer.to the ear It waa not the general urt of turbulent Maesachusetts, but e house of burgesses of loyal Virginia that first spoke the general indignation. A Pollts Protest, j Already In the autumn tf 1764, up-(the mere threat of what was to come, that house had spoken very urgently against the measures proposed, il a memorial to king and parliament, which, amidst every proper phrase of loyalty and affection, had plainly declared Jt the opinion of his majestys subjects in Virginia that such acts would be In flat violation of their undoubted rights and liberties; and tho committee by which that memorial was drawn up had contained almost every man of chief consequence in the counsels of the colony, the general himself not ex kings attorney cepted. But It waa one thing to protest against measures to come and quite another to oppose their execution yhen enacted into laws. The one was constitutional agitation; the other, flat rebellion little less. It was very ominous to read the words of the extraordinary resolutions passed by the burgesses on the 30th ot May. 1765, after the stamp act bad become law, and note the tone of restrained passion that ran through them. Plain Speech From tha Burgesses. They declared that from the first settlsya of "hla .majeetyaeotony 'and 'domain of Virginia had possessed and enjoyed all the privileges, franchises, and Immunities at any time enjoyed by the Teop1n of Great Britain itself; and that this their fre dom, had been explicitly secured to them by their charters, to all Intents and purposes as If they had been abiding and born within the realm of EngWhat the taxation of the peoland; ple by themselves or by persons chosen by themselves to represent them was "a distinguishing characteristic of British freedom without which the ancient constitution the realm Itself could not subsist; "and that his majesty's liege people of this most ancient colony had uninterruptedly enjoyed the right of being thus governed by their assemblies In the article of their taxes and Internal police," had never forfeited or relinquished It, and had seen It constantly recognized by the kings and people of Great Britain." An Uncompromising Conclusion. 8poken as it was In protest against actual legislation alriady adopted by parliament In direct despite of all such privileges and immunities, this declaration of rights seemed to lack Its conclusion. The constitutional rights of Virginians had been Invaded. What then? Resolved, therefore, that his majesty's liege people, the inhabitants of this colony, are not hound to yield obedience to any law or ordinance whatever designed to impose any taxation whatsoever upon tl em, other than the laws or ordinances of the general assembly afore-saW,- " and "that any person who shall, by speaking or writing, assert or maintain shall be contrary deemed an enemyof his majesty's cole -- g 1 min-An- ony. Such had been the uncompromising conclusion drawn by the mover of the resolutions. What other conclusion could any man draw if he deemed the colonists raft, and proud men at that? The Burgessea feared to speak treason; they were content to r - an- d- let rights, the Issue, bring conclusions to light. It had been hot fighting to get even that much said. The men hitherto sepepteff .always as leaders ia the bouse bad wished to hold it back from rash and heated action, and there had been bitter debates before even those significant premises for a revolutionary conclusion had been forced to adoption. Old leaders and new, young men and old alike, had wlHingiy united in the memorial of 1764 ; but now that the Stamp Act waa law, conservative members shrank from doing what must look tq like a flat defiance of pro-thei- parliament Only young men would have bad the audacity to urga such action; oply very extraordinary young men would have had the capacity to induce the to taka it-- . Bnf snch young men were at hand, their leader aa veritable a Democrat as' had ever takes tha oor I that assembly. trick Henry waz not of tke aria-- i is ..I - GOOD TEA- - Hewlett's Teas day In 17G3 He was known, indeed, to many. Tliia was Hie man, they must have known, who had won so strange a ver- - Can Bank Gone Pmvn Horsld Henry Meyer, whose faith In a milk ran a a repository lor money baa been shattered, told the polloe that he regrets that he did not leave as, 000, the aooumulstlon ol twenty rein of work and denial, la a aav-Ings hank instead ol transferring it to a can. lor the savings bank is Mill dolnf business at tha ammo old piste, while thr milk ran hat disappeared, and with it the tsjXW. years means putSaving fR.000 in ting sable an average ol S1.M) a week. If Meyer had deposited this weekly In asavings account, the 4 per cent eons-poun- d Interest would have brought b't'C the total amount and it would be ahenluteiytale, where be could get It when he wanted It. SI will open a savlhfi account. Too can bank here by mail. Thia bank hat been in business M ye .: ' TiW- -' , I Y.'f - -- J v. . te I - Walker Brothers Bankers Bah Lake City SVT essLj -- -- Carpenters Halt. diet from a Jury two years ago in the celebrated parsons' case at Hanover court house, against the law and the evidence. But hla careleaa dress and manner, his loose, ungainly figure, hla lisUcs8, absent bearing, must have set many a courtly member staring. For such men aa Washington, in deed, there can have been nothing either strange or unattractive in the rough exterior and unstudied ways of the new member. Punctilious though be was himself in every point of dress and bearing, Washingtons life had moat of it been apent with men who looked. thus, and yet were stuff of true courage and rich capacity within. Tha manner of a man could count as no test of quality with him. HU experience had covered the whole variety of Virginian life. Ha was an aristocrat by taste, not by principle. And Patrick Henry had. In fact, come to the same growth as he in essential quality and principle, though by another way. Henry life had been wilful, capricious, a bit haphazard, Washingtons all the while subject to discipline; but both men had touched and seen the whole energy of the commonwealth, knew Its hope, could divine its destiny. There was but one Virginia, and they were her children. It could not take long to bring them to an under standing and comradeship In affairs. A Winner In Debate. of the new It wa characteristic member that he should step at once and unhesitatingly to n place of leadership when debate of the 8tamp Act stirred the house, and that be should instantly sweep the majority Into hla following with a charm and daah of eloquence that came like a revelation upon the quiet assembly. A woman judges a letter by length ot the postscript MONEY Bf Btrlsl Tts - -- ,. Mssswsts tram Our stock oomprise only the finest cut Ueslzua They are all a0-tuie- d ta a fine Tfcis booklet. booklet la youiv lot the otkluf. Wbits for it and loo. our Mantle booklet Tosav, Elias Harris ft Sans Co. W. Jl-- n fo. Tsawb IL. Itk Lota Koouosoole Tile Work CUT DUrble Work llaoUoe A POSITIVE aod MAKDfT CUM f El. F0I liqoor and Crvz Addictions Ttatsb os sttvMAs taUr,a b Soar m . inrun au m liau uu.de IU Mm M. KODAK FINISHING Mad onion first prompt ettootloe. Complete Mock ol PkoU ttappUea, oil Lake Pfcete opoly ( 1M Ms Write lor c stale rues. During courtship a maa easily makes a dollar look like thirty cents. After marriage he tries to make thirty cents look like a dollar. Thia la less easy. Cautious. Lady (to custom bouse official)! have nothing to declare. What shall (TO BE CONTINUED.) I say. Official Say, madam, that you have Old Documents Problem. What to destroy and what to have nothing to declare. Lady Yes; hut suppose they Ind In the way of old documents, newspPunch. haa something? given other and publications aper, rise to the organization of committees A Distinction. of congress bearing these peculiar The maa who runs that store ha titles: Disposition of Useless Papers the right Idea, all right got and in the Executive Department!" "How so?" "Examination and Disposition of Docuand lie advertise: . Bagpipe ments. The names of the committee musical instrument. indicate the dutlea devolving upon their member. Moreover, not only Slow Mail. public officer, hut the directors of What ia that chirping sound la the libraries and museum, to say nothing closet? are often puzzled, of private collectors, "Young chickens, gasped the husissuby the accumulation of matter band . guiltily. A ing from modern printing-pressesI IL Yon forgot to aaall that know in introduced bill wa not long ago I gave you three weeks dozen egg of trustees parliament to enable the 7 ago. or distribute to museum British the In matter Before end After. destroy "valueless printed Immediately a Alice Isnt going to marry . Jack. . Shakespearean scholar of prominence after all? one no objected. He argued that "Afraid not She says ah hates to could discriminate between what may up the 11.50 shows for tho give valueless for what and be valuable moving pictures. futhe historical Investigator of the ture: "WhoRknowa," he asked', "but Horse Lau0h. that the tradV circular, the country said Willie, when a horse Papa, newspaper, or the street song may does he kick np hla heels? . laughs several most a light Important throw "I guea ao. Why? hence upon some hundred year Cause old Whitney just laughed at mooted question of our present life? brother Tommie, and yoaTl have ta Harper1 Weekly. come out and carry him In." Such la Fame. Artistic. Wlaeman What, to your mind, - "I cant do for you," said anything most clearly represent the ha- - the beauty doctor. "Youre as pretty of the and fame vanity of yalJtT as a picture sow,. man wishes? "But I am so thin. letter Cynlcua Blazing electric Oh, I see. Yon want mo to touch of name the the proprietor spelling up your lrame, r v. over tha portal to a bar Judge. thelL-possessio- n. 10-ce- nt . , I ' .i ' |