cnry Wain Q. 8CHREINK*. letted by F. ^•«aaass •: rr-Ji&xr-JS^Tfe*. ipr-T; •- :.• j'iv- v aa&s _•*• FcHENRY, ILLINOIS. PAGE NAMED ENVOY HSW VORK EDITOR APPOINTED #ited states am bass a ^ DOR TO ENGLAND. •v&\ : M-.,- - - • • -- • , ' ; "fv|>'jNew Minister Will Start for London aa Soon as Upper House Confirm*' Nomination--Is Member of •* I " Doubleday, Page € . Co. - AWAIT CONFIRMATION r£*}P H&8 -rtj -W ^ ¥ asliingtob, April 2.--•'Walter H. l*age of Garden City, L I., editor of •rv•••-•'•.*•••*,•• World's Work, and a member of the ^U. firm of Doubelday, Page & Co., pub- Ushers, accepted President Wilson's W~ iA$\ offer to be ambassador to Great -|Y Britain Monday. &•' *§ i Mr. Page was born in Gary, a small town in North Carolina, in 1855. He educated at Randolph-Macon ' college, a Methodist institution at Ash- *1//? ^ l&nd. Va., and later was a fellow at rf*: iMK. Johns Hopkins university, following ..^t^Vinuch the same course there as that '|;v; • tnade famous by Woodrow Wilson. f i;,- Before graduating at Johns Hopkins .'• •' lie Entered journalism, In which he . 'has been conspinuouB for many years. His first important editorship was •1 that of the Forum, which lasted from pY -.1890 to 1895. Then he was literary £*•( -adviser to HOUghton Mifflin company for four years. Sf v During the three years prior to'the •founding of the publishing house of Doubleday, Page & Co., in 1899, he '\ «ras editor of the Atlantic Monthly. ^Slnce then he has edited his own mag azine, World's Work. Dr. Page, as he prefers to be called, ' • has been one of the leaders on the i ^vback-to-the-country" movement, and t;.ii8 firm was one of the first in this country to establish a garden City for yfts employes. , His home outside of New York city .' 'fcaq, been the rendezvous for distin guished literary men for a d'ecade or more, and he has been treated as one jof the most forceful publicists in the country. | Mr. Page said that If the senate • Confirmed his appointment he would leave immediately lor London. The ~ senate meets April 7 and the Page U.*ppointment will be one of the first to tome before it. Mr. Page did not show any apprehension that there inight be unfavorable action qn bis «ame. FEWER TIN 150 Work of Clearing City of Wreck age Is Beguft. HUNGRY 'ARE BEING FED MEXICAN GOVERNOR IS SLAIN . 'i' - , *5*^ 1 ' {:'t ' Abraham Gonzales, Constitutional E* ecutlve of Chihuahua, Mex., Thrown W^tr. Under Wheals of Train. , 19 Paso, Tex., April 2.--Abraham Oonsales, constitutional governor, of Chihuahua and former minister of in terior under President Madero, was thrown beneath the wheels of a train Monday at Mapnla, a small station •oath of Chihuahua by Diaz-Huei^a army officers in Charge of the escOrt M . -conducting him to Mexico City, ac- ft j £ » cording to an investigation made by ii ^ %"-* *riends ^ m Pa*0 ot ^ murdered tfhf' -man. . The governor's body was almost ICut is twain by the car wheels, but as this did not instantly kill him, one the officers drew a revolver aad shot him as he lay writhing in agony through the head. Shortly after the Diaz-Huerta coup de etat in Mexico City, Gonsales, , ,s , loyal to the constitutional goveiin- O' 'Jnent, was .arrested in Chihnahua by . , -General Antonio Rabago. He was fiV^l^eld prisoner for some time and then : ;•§• tcame an order tor his. removal to the . $5 jcity of Mexico. tX'tK'-A When the special train carrying, tbe • '^governor reached Torreon it baited S^-:)0jand on an order from a state court ; v'Vv ,f!in Chihuahua, started back towards Chihuahua. Lieutenant Colonel Ca- / v|l . %marena, commanding the Diai-Huerta ' ? escort, tra*- ini communication with vGeneral Huerta by wire during the < Btay at Torreon and It is thought that here he received direct orders from • . the general to "dispose" of Oonzalee. if "X ml %%%. : WILSON RECEIVES FIRST PAY pv-'te'; ^ • P-V )?,l& .Chief Executive Is Handed Treasury $»•§*'• !?f""'Warrant for $5,625, His Salary i It v.. , . for March. ' m %T *^4 ^ ^^ashington, April 2.--"Woodrow I ' 'qtC ^ Wilson received his first pay check as I') \ president of the United States Mon- |j'f day when Secretary McAdoo present- ' £>* '& ed him with a treasury warrant for 16,625, representing his salary firom 'March 4 to 31. The president is the r , ,.J only official whose salary is paid by 5^ i the treasury department* Vice-Presi- W/-': 'f, dent Marshall received from the sec- n'j ^l^retary of the senate the portion he *>Tt' ttf^ * has so far earned of Ilia |12,(KiO, an- Iff,1 $' nual compensation* giA, 'v. ; ;•* Ninety Bodies Have Bsen Taken From Kuins by Siaie Troops and i Volunteer Force--Sevteneen fw;r Looters Shot / LATEST ESTIMATE OF DEAD. The latest reports show tbe follow ing deaths: OHIO. , Dayton ,150 Harisoh • »eb »'e • Columbus .... 56 Troy ^ Hamilton .... 50 Valley Jci...• • 6 Miamlsburg .. 50 Zanesviile .....liO Tiffin 18 Massillon ..... R Chillicothe ... 18 N. Bethlehem ./J Middletown .. 14 Cleves 2 Fremont .,...14 rrr~ Piqua ........ IS Ohio tota$,.....$2S INDIANA. .J ' Peru ......... 20 Muncie J, 1 Brookville .... 16 Lafayette 1 Fort Wayne... ® New Castlew.. 1 Terre Haute.. 4 E. Mt. Carmel. 1 Wafehington .. 4 Shelburn 1 Frankfort .... 2 . Logansport ... 1 Indiana total. 59 Rushville 1 Grand total....488 Dayton, O.,. March 31.«--Dayton has begun the reconstruction of the city following the flood disaster. The wa ters of the four streams which over flowed the city have receded so far that it is possible to penetrate on foot all except a few of the sections of the The work of rescue is practically finished, the last of the refugees hav ing been taken to places Of safety. Most of the bodies In the limits of the city itself have been found and search for others is. being made farther d<^rn the river. Ninety Bodies Recovered. Ninety bodies have been recovered, aad it is estimated that the total num ber of deaths will not be more than 150. With the recovery of the bodies ended, removal of the wreckage of the flood was begun by the state troops, the local authorities, and the volun teers r,;£- ^ . Hungry Are Being Fed. - ' The relief measures are now so wftll in hand that the hungry in all quar ters are being fed, clothing and medi cal aid supplied. , and all. pressing wants being met. These conditions are'due to the generous response of the nearby towns and cities as well at distant points. ' r The identified dead So far number 60, with 40 unidentified. The dead are being removed to improvised morgues in different quarters of the city. Seventeen Looters 8hot. Seventeen men have been shot and killed in the streets of Dayton as ghouls and looters since the declara tion of martial law. Ten were killed between darkness Saturday night and delight Sunday morning. Nine were negroes and the tenth a white man, the only white man of the 17 whose crimes brought instant death as pun ishment. George F. Burba, secretary to Gov ernor Cox, who represents the gov ernor in relief work here, summed up the situation in Dayton as follows: Forty thousand persons must be'fed and cared for a week. 25,000 Are Destitute. Twenty thousand persons must be fed and cared for for an indefinite period. Except' for the clothes .on their backs they are absolutely destitute. They must eventually be financed so they can resume housekeping. Fifteen thousand houses must be cleaned and plastered. Two, thousand are1 wrecked or must be torn down and destroyed. Untold thousands of tons of debris, wreckage of all kinds, must be carted away. The bodies of 1,500 horses and other animals must be removed and incin erated. Rooover #2 at Columbus. Columbus, Ohio, March 31.--Twelve additional bodies were recovered here Sunday from the debris. Several of these, however, were later identified as citizens previously reported dead, hence the Columbus list of flood vio- tims still remains at 67. 7 Sixty-two bodies have now been re covered and taken to various morgues. Many are still reported missing. A large squad of men are working on the various railroads clearing away the debris and have Bucceded in patching up the big break in the levee which caused the disaster on the west aide. Piqua-Troy Deaths. Sidney, Ohio, March 31.--Flood wa ters that engulfed Troy and Piqua are receding, and the survivors in both cities are taking a more hopeful PS1FW Saloons Closed In Cairo. - „ r tSUro. m., April 2.--The city flood % II • committee issued an order Monday closing all saloons and retail stores, | v; *; with the exception of bakeries and |j drus ttoree. Many merchants are moving their stocks to second stories. *' Engineer Begs to Die. ^||3| QL' Paul, Minn., April 2.--Pinned J. agatast the hot boiler of bis engine, - George Murphy of St. Paul, a North- H| '/V ern Pacific engineer, for three-<jaar- ' tors «f an hour begged policemen and firemen to kill him Monday. view of the future, even though £P* phold epidemic prevails. It is believed that the number of drownings at Piqua will not exceed 20 and the deaths in Troy will number about the same. • Piqua has 2,500 homeless. Indiana's Dead Total# Indianapolis, Ind., March 31.--Sixty lives are known to have been lost in Indiana's flood which has almost dis appeared in central portions of the ville and smaller cities along the Ohio ville and smaller cities al6ng the Ohio river. Pern and Brookvllle's death lists are those of drownings only, but two deaths at Terre Haute, one at Fort Wayne, and the only verified fatality in Weit luuiaiwpolls, followed UfO* sure suffered by the refugees. Undoubtedly the list will be aug mented during the next few days, in dications being that tho river chan nels, still buried by high water, hold at least some bodies. The five bodies recovered at Peru were those of per sons already counted among the dead. Relief Funds for Stricken. • Governor R&lston is -obtaining bet ter organization of relief work and is sending relief funds into the stricken districts. Business conditions in Indi anapolis" already are normal and pub lic utilities will be completely re stored within a few days. Property losses throughout the state count many millions, aad Governs? Raleton says it will bo impossible to estimate this lose. Costly bridges have bean swept away, expensive railroad construction washed out and large public utilities badly crippled, all of which require enormous expenditures to replace. Death Toll at Peru Twenty. Peru, Ind., March 31.--Twenty bod ies of flood victims have been recov ered, and this number is believed to be the total. The flood is rapidly receding and Peru, Instead of being a city sub merged with water is coated with a layer of mud from one to three feet thick. The authorities are devoting their efforts to removing the bodies of dead animals from the street and disposing of the accumulations of filth left in the trail of the flood. Wood to GuidO Sanitation. Washington, March 81.--It was an nounced at the war department that MaJ. Gen. Leonard Wood, who drove yellow fever out of Cuba and put an end to cholera epidemic in the Phil ippines, will give his personal atten tion to the sanitation of the flood dis- tricjbs in Ohio and Indiana. General Wood and Secretary of War Garrison' made an inspection tour which included Hamilton, Ohio. Here Is the substance of the report made by Sppretgr^ Gc^j-ison to Presi dent Wilson: "The force of the water here was very great. The flood area was wide and the destruction of property very largo. Forty-five bodies of the drowned have been so far recovered. The debris has not all been searched as yet, but I think it safe to estimate that seventy to eighty will be the out side limit of the number of the dead. Commends Public Spirit. "The public spirit displayed here is of the highest and most commenda ble quality, and the citizens are enthusiastically co-operating with the National Guard officer in command of the situation. Our officers are working in concert, we having med ical offlcers. hoBpital corps men, non commissioned officers of the line, and engineer officers here. "There is an abundance of food, shelter, medical supplies, physicians and clothing. Nothing needed for the existing emergency is lacking. ,1 think it proper for you to announce If you desire to do so, that Hamilton as1 well as all other places seriously affected by the flood have found themselves and are tending toward normal conditions rapidly. • 'The pressure on the lines of tele graph and telephone .communication has prevented news from getting through, which have been cheering if it. could have been published. "I saw Miss Boardman and her aide and they will take care of the situa tion after the emergency has passed and vour. men are withdrawn." Death at ChMllcothO* "The report from Zanesville, Ohio, 1b that matters are well in hand there and such is also the case at Chilli cothe. At the latter the loss of life was twenty-five. "AB a preventative measure officers have been sent from here to Louis ville, Ky., and Evansville, Ind. One large boat la being stocked with provi sions and an officer and aid will be placed on it to go to Portsmouth, Ohio, and from thence to Point Pleas ant, Ky., visiting the places on both sides of the river and giving relief where needed." Secretary Garrison concluded his re port with the announcement that he would go to Columbus today to hold a conference with Governor Cox, after which he would go back to Cincinnati and return to Washington Tuesday. C. L. Magee, secretary of the Ameri can Red Cross Boclety said the fund collected for the flood sufferers had reached the sum of £362,810.64. THE LATE J,. PIERPQNT ""OHQAN AND HIS SON Sjr 'TO>¥>1 4 i&J&'i! mm t' ) ' v TV- King of Financiers Succumbs to Infirmities of Age. STOCK MARKET NOT AFFECTED In the Art Gallery. "He was showing that temperance orator some oil paintings of consider able spirit in their treatment" "Did she like them V "No;, asked him to take her to tbe water colors." • The Real Kind. "I have quite a .valuable collection of autographs." "Whose are thejr?" "They am those of my creditors on receipts." Quake Hits Behring Straits. >t. Louis April 2.--The seisaao- .t St. I *onJs recorded as earth quake i unusual violence at a point . estimate a 4,200 miles away I felt Justified in taking one. The Moral of It. "Twice did Smith refuse to take • m conscientious grounds." -- Then the third time he should have Monday. Thl was Alt in Behi hock, It is straits. thought. Six Mentha for Hayyraod. y^teruon, N. J.. April 2.---•wnn»t|y TV Haywood, organiser for the ictavstrlai Workers of the World, was sent%aced Monday to six months in the county lawfvl assemblages. "Why aoT- "Because three scruples make one dram." Its Period. "Was the architect of that cottage of yours a western man?" *T guess be was, for he said ho was Jail here an conviction of ^ausiac Heaping to tmlld ii in the Looey Kansas *rl« Drilling Them In. i Wright--I see that electrically-driv en drills have been invented for sur gical operations on the human skull. Penman--Do not despair, old man; they'll succeed in making people see your jokes yet. " _ : : ' O n e Phooo of Itr V;:j "Here is a theorist who sayv hens think like human beings." "I don't know about that, but I do know some human beings who like hens." Dearth of Amusement. "So the Gaboona are leaving?* --"Yes.v "Why don't they like this town?" "Well, the Gabsoos are a largo fam ily. you know, and they want to ilvs in a town where there are more pic ture shows than we have here In Quiu. tusviUe." End Had Been Expected, and Care. Taken That Shock to Money Cen» tare 8hould Be of Little Weight * --Career of Magnate a 8uc- ooaolon of Triumph**', - Rome, Italy.--John Pierpoftt Mor gan, the world's greatest financier, died at the Grand hotel March 31. At the bedside at the time of death were Mr. and Mrs. Herbert L. Satter- lee,* the financier's son-in-law and daughter, and throe attending physi cians. Tbe body, after appropriate religious ceremonies, was embalmed and trans ferred to Naples for shipment to America. It is needless to to say thai the firm, of J. Pierpont Morgan and Company is the greatest In the country, and that its branches in European centers are powers in the money markets , of those places. J. P. Morgan is a name that is . instantly associated by old and young alike with money-- great stacks of gold. And then the' feverish, superficial nature Of people busy with .their own affairs considers neither the name nor the man any further. Thib estimate, of the man never did him Justice. It often, causes adverse criticism, for his methods were often attacked. His organization of giant corporations has furnished the most strenuous example of bitter attack, both on political platform and in the public press. This is all a matter of opinion, and at this time is care fully excluded. Morgan d*d organise giant corpora tions. He extended railroads, he open ed new territories, he made possible commerce, which in all reason had to be enlarged by some man consistent *ith the growth of the country and population. Curious as it may seem, however, the more clamor there was against his methods the more he was held In esteem by writers of note and education, who had occasion to review his works. During President Cleveland's ad ministration it was decided that a bond issue of |20,000,000 was neces sary. Morgan undertook the task, and It was floated. He made money, of course. That was what he Was in business for. But at that time the whole world looked on with wonder at the ease with which he accomplish ed a task that no other hanking firm was willing to undertake. WOMEN ROSE TO OCCASION From photograph taken only a few months before the demise of the groat 'financier. In 19,01 Morgan floated the securi ties of the United States Steel corpor ation, which was capitalized at $1,100,000,000. The amount was al most beyond the ken or ordinary mor tals, but with the great financier it was merely a matter of calculation and accomplishment In the same year he secured the American sub scription to a 150,000,000 British war loan. . But It waB during the bankers' pan ic of 1907 that Morgan rose to su preme command of financial America. Like an absolute monarch, he sat in his marble library' in New York, surrounded by the money kings of a lesser empire, dictating to them, and sending them forth to carry out his will. At a time when banks and trust companies were toppling all about him, It was his steadying hand that was stretched forth to save, not all df them, but those which he ! decreed should survive. Practically speaking, the life of nearly every banking ^nd financial institution in New York was in his hands, he held the balances, passing out his sentences of financial life or death In quick staccato tones. Even the government at Washing ton looked upon him as the one man who was capable of throttling the dragon of panic and practically all the resources of- the United' States treas ury were turned over £o him to do' with as he saw fit and proper. An instance of this was the pouring OUt of $25,000,000 upon the floor of the stock exchange to 6ave that Insti tution from utter ruin on that memor able black Friday in 1907. This money was conjured from somewhere by J. P. Morgan. No one knew from where. Later it developed that the money had been taken out of the United States sub-treasury and turned over to Mr. Morgan. As a great lover of art, Mr. Mor gan spent much money in collecting, but he always played fair. After paying a fortune forthe famous Ascoll cope, he returned It to the Italian government as soon as he learned it had been stolen from ita place In an old church. He possessed a rare. copy of the Bible, the famous Luther Bible. He has spent a vaat fortune to pos sess it, bidding more than any of his rivals could afford to give. When he learned that Emperor William of Qer- many was one of those whom he had outbid for the precious volume, how ever, he promptly presented It to the kaiser. Because of the heavy duty on works of art coming into the United States, Mr. Morgan had kept the greater part of his collection on the other side. Congress, however, passed a law re moving this duty and in the spring of 1912 the great collections of the Amer ican financier, which were assembled at his two homeB in London and at Paris, and valued at more than $2,- 000,000, were packed up and shipped to New York. The greatest part of this collection Is now to be seen in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. to other villages and midnight re turns. Tbe cafe Is closed at 11 p. m., and nobody who has had a glass too muoh is allowed another drink. The "petticoat cafe," as it is nicknamed, is a distinct financial success, because tbe women give their services free, and buy the best in the cheapest mar ket and at the lowest possible price. Real Roaeona, "Why are you so opposed to Ion# lng money?" "Because It, ia asaally bocrowtng trouble.? . '.j Clgare Hla One Solaoo. - Borr Stark, the German miaogy- mlst, died in Berlin, proud to the last of his reputation as a devotee of "my Lady Nicotine." He was eighty years old. "During my long lifetime," he wrote shortly betore he smoked nis iast Ha vana, "I estimate that I have smoked more than a half million cigars, an average of more than 22 daily for 60 years. I have thus enjoyed 10,000 hours of such happiness as nothing else could ever have given me and which was well worth the £6,000 that purchased it. My cigars have been PRESIDENT WILSON READS HI8 - 'a, MESSAGE TO CONGRESS > TO CABINET. EMPHASIZE MONEY QUESTION Chief Executive, In 1,200 Word Docu ment, It la Stated, Will Confine His 8uggestlona to Dutlea--Wants Re vision Downward.. -..f Washington, March SI.--The foal draft of his first message to congress, which he will send at the opening of the special session April 7, was read Friday ( by President Wilson to hla cabinet. The message, it can be said author itatively, will confine itself to the tariff. In 1,200 words; it will give the president's views on this spbject, and will state it is the president's position that nothing shall be done by either house to take from the tariff its place in the center of the legislative stage. This does not mean that there is to be no other legislation during the session. It merely means that, the president intends to use all bta influ ence to see that nothing is allowed to interfere with first place for tariff re vision downward. The message Is expected to put this ®n so many words, but it also will declare that a number of other sub jects of vital importance to the Amer ican people are awaiting legislation-- principally the currency question. The president will specifically re frain from commenting upon these in this message, although reserving the; right to touch upon them in later spe cial messages should congress make sufficient headway with the tariff problem to leave room and time for other work at the special session. In this connection It became known. that Representative Carter Glass, chairman-to-be of the banking and currency committee of the new house,, has completed the draft of a monetary revision bill and that it is ready for introduction whenever the president desires tt Representative Glass, how-; ever, will not put It In until President' Wilson feels that Its Introduction will, not interfere with tariff legislation. Representative Glass and tbe presi dent are said to fear that to start tho money reform task and then to leave, it open until tho winter session will only add to the difficulties of the situ ation. As far as President Wilson's views on the tariff are concerned, it can bo stated that he will take the same ground he took In his Bpeech of ac ceptance last summer, that the tariff must be taken out of politics, and that its revision downward should begin by taking out of every schedule every rate that can be construed as a "fa vor" to any industry^ 'There should bo immediate ro-' vision," he said at that time, "and it' should be downward unhesitatingly and steadily downward. It should be gin with the schedules which have been used most obviously to kill coib- petltlon and to raise prices In the United States arbitrarily and without regard to the prices pertaining else where In the markets of the world, and it should, before it is finished or intermitted, be extended to .every item In every schedule which affords any opportunity for monopoly, for special advantages to limited groups of bene ficiaries or for subsidized control of any kind in the markets or the enter prises of the country, until special favors of every sort shall have been absolutely withdrawn and every part of our laws of taxation shall have been transformed from a system of governmental patronage into a system of just and reasonable charges which shall fall where they will create the least burden. "When we shall1 have done that wo can fix questions of revenues and of business adjustment In a new spirit. We shall be partners with the busi ness men of the country, and a day of freer, more stable prosperity shall have dawned." TWO ALLENS ARE EXECUTED Floyd and Claude Pay the Penalty for Murder In Electric Chair rif' ^ Richmond, Va. Richmond, Va.» March 29.--Floyd and Claude Allen were electrocuted In the penitentiary here Friday. The ex ecution of theae men is the direct outcome of a partial massacre of the IllllBvllle courthouse March 14, 1912, which was engineered by Claude Al len and several of his relatives. On that occasion five persons were killed and wounded. Those killed were Judge Thornton Massie, Commonwealth At torney William M. Foster, Sheriff Lee F. Webb, Juror Fowler and Miss Elizabeth Ayers. The cause of the tragic assault on the officers of the lawx In the little mountain courthouse with the sentencing of Floyd Allen by Judge Massie to three years'imprison- ment for asaaulting a deputy sheriff, who had arrested one or two of his nephews. Cafe In Italian Canton, Instituted for Good Realisona, Haa Bosomo I / ::^a Financial Suoceai. In the village of Plona, Canton of St. Gall, the men petitioned recently the local authorities to open a cafe where they could obtain drinks and pass a pleasant evening. The women folk, however, strongly objected and the affair was droppe|l. The men, in revenge, consequently visited the safes in tbe neighboring villages and made a point of returning home late at night. The W9men or Piona then petitioned for the establishment of a cafe under their management, giv ing ample financial and "moral" guar antees, and the petition was granted. The cafe was launched by the wom en of the village and kept under their control. Good drinks and food were sold at a little over ctost price, and the farmers' daughters took it in turn the one solace and sweetener of my to watt on the customers once a week, j'life and my only regret ls> leaving it and everybody is so well served that is that I oaaaot bring my record ap there have boon no more exeurafcps to a aalllioa." Amend Pea^e Terms. London, March 81.--Bulgaria ac cepted the offer of mediation made by the European powers Friday after noon, but with many provisos that practically negative the proposals ?f the powers. 4 Killed by Dynamite BlaOL Ottawa. Ont., March 31.--Four men, J. Carrier, R. Thebiault, M. St. Louis and J. Morin, were killed and other* Injured as a result of an explosion at Scototown. Q#e., Friday. Dynamite exploded. * i Anniversary Observed. Minn., March 21.--Tho twenty-fifth anniversary of this found ing of the agriculture college of the University of Minnesota was cele brated Thursday with Interesting ex ercises. Trtln From Omaha Wrecked. St Louis, March 29.--Wabash pao> senger train No. 1, carrying Omaha and Kansas City sleepers, was wrecked near Normandy, a few miles out-of St. Lottla, Thursday. The fireman was killed, • ~ jasso fata .aad aehaei irate weakness * bmt «*£!£**•*£ T5S; 4s the tins to restore health and retain beauty. MLHERCEfS Farorite Prescription Tsar Dsaggbt *91 Safyly Tea MttlNQI <JTnD<J ilisViiillii V B III M If you have eczema, ringworm, at other itching, burning, unsightly Bkijl or scalp eruption, try Resinoi Olnt* ment and Resinoi Soap, and see how quickly the itching steps and tbi trouble disappears, even in severe and stubborn cases. Pimpleo, blackheads, and red, sore, blotchy faces and handg speedily yield to Resinoi. Resinoi Ointment and Resinoi Scajp heal skin humors, sores, boils, burnit scalds, cold-sores, ch&flngs and pile*. Prescribed by physicians for eighteen, years. Ail druggists sell Resinoi Soaa' (25c) and Resinoi Ointment (50c anfl |1). Sent by parcel post on receipt of price. For sample of' each write t# Dept. 6-K, Resinoi Chem. Co., Baltic more, Md. ; , You Need NO "SPRING MEDICINE*9, H yea keep year llvelh adlv«, your bowels regular and year digestion geed Regulate th© Bowe Stimulate the Liver Improve uigestlon and Purify the Blood SAD PREDICAMENT. "I have come to ask your daagh> tor's wing." "Alas! Mr. Drake, I'm afraid yo| will have to wait until some new onei; grow in. The fanner clipped oar W1&0I . this morning." No Little Girl for Him. The alx-year-old son of a well-known Indianapolis family attendB a dancing school. He is a chubby little fellow who has not begun to stretch out yeL and he keenly' feels his "shortage. He demands that he be recognized aa a little "grownup." Several days ago, the teacher planned to instruct he§ pupils In dancing "the Butterfly." A. five-year-old girl who is small for bor age, and just a trifle stouter than our hero, but an adept at dancing, waa assigned as his partner. He gazed at her in silence. Then he took hold of her hand and, with his mouth seti4> firmly, walked straight over to tho teacher. "Don't you think you'd bettor give me a bigger girl?" ho aaked.--Indiaai* apolls News. Personality. Peraonality is Just one's centralised experience of the world, and there if. nO way of making it greater except by making that experience greater an«'. more centralised; In other words, b^- ^ lng a bigger, broader, better , man o# *. woman. Every intellectual achieve^ ^ ment, every moral victory, every bjtf of solid work, will leave personality richer, profounder, more delicate. liv? ' /> fact, to cultivate it, the plan is don't cultivate it. Let It alone and do you^- duty and it will grow.--E. B. Andrews, in the International Journal of Ethics. FLY TO PIECHSt ^ ! The Effect of Coffee on Highly Organ* laed People. vf "I have been a coffee umi" for years, and about two years a&o g5t into a very serious condition of dys- . pepsia and indigestion. It seemed to . me I would fly to pieces. I was sc*v •;* ; nervous that at the least noise I w^. . ^ distressed, and many times could nof?&C straighten myself up hocauao of tlw - P«in-" Tea Is just as injurious, because i*- contains caffeine,, the same drug found/ in coffee. "My physician told me I muBt noifcf i; .eat any heavy or strong food, and orf ;>- dered a diet, giving me some medl^X." cine. I followed directions carefully^' but kept on using coffee and did no^ : * ••t any better. "Last winter my husband, who waA^.;: < away on busineaa, had Postum served^pl to blm in the family where he hoardt'" ed. He liked it so well that when he came home he brought some with We began using it and I fOjind if most excellent. "While I drank It my stomach nove^.#; bothered mo in the least, and I go^^l over my nervous troubles. When tho. '.,v / Postum.was gone we returned to cof.'/;j';," fee, then my stomach began to huri£. me aa before, and the nervove ditions came on again. y:Ji "That showed me exactly what wai|->*. the cause of the whole trouble, ao I quit drinking coffee altogether and kept on using Postum. The old trou* Ides left again and have -never roft turned." ' "Thero'a a roaaon.'- and it la expiate* S ed in the little book, "The Road ta.£?« Wellvllle, In pkgs. fiver Ntd tkc abort iaMevt" A Me uppeam (nm ttot t» ttaa. TW* h» areitetMk taw* aad #aB mt fca >>; $ i f