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ay. tecelves Small
A TEMPLE OF REFUBLICS
. On May 11 President Roosevelt, in
the city of Washington, iaid the cor
nerstone of the first International
Temple of Peace, Friendship and
Commerce, the tangible evidence of
the desire of the twenty-one American
republics that war shall be no more
in the Western world and that mate
rial prosperity promoted by interna
tional trade shall take its place. Dis
tinguished men were present at the
laying of the cornerstone and mess
ages were spoken or sent by represen
tatives from all of the twenty-one re
publics of America. The new build
ing is to be the joint property of all
'the republics. "The site provided by
‘the American Congress is within a
few hundred yards of the White
House and is adjacent to the State,
War and Navy buildings and the Cor
coran Art Gallery. Mr. Andrew Car
negie contributed three-fourths of a
million dollars to the erection of the
building, and each of the republics
‘has added an appropriation to the
fund. The building is to be the home
‘of the International Bureau, main
tained by the American republics,
and is to be made the centre of a
continuous campaign of education,
where one country may obtain accur
ate and up-to-date information of
any other. A library on all subjects
¥ / ok "'{s?‘{'*};?’ .
R ANt P o G O, )Y
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Be, ER TR R A b I A e i
THE NEW BUREAU OF AMERICAN REPUBLICS AS IT WILL AP
PEAR WHEN COMPLETED.
American i 3 to be secured, and by
every possible means the American
governments are to be brought to
gether with intimate aequaintance
ship. The imposing building will
stand on a five-acre reservation. It
will be 169 feet square, the main por
tion standing two stories above a
huge studded basement and being in
turn surmounted by dignified balus
trades. The rear portion, in order to
cover a capacious assembly hall, will
rise etill higher. The general archi
tecture will suggest Latin-American
treatment, out of respect to the fact
that twenty out of the twenty-one re
publies are of Latin origin. A large
reading room will be a feature, where
can be seen all the South as well as
North American publications, besides
important historical data. A beauti
ful assembly chamber that, for pres
ent purposges, may be called the “Hall
of the American Ambassadors,” will
provide the only room of its kind in
the United States especially designed
for international conventioms, recep
tions to distinguished foreigners and
for diplomatiec and social events of a
kindred nature. The bureau is strict
1y an international and independent
organization maintained by the joint
contributions, based on population, of
the twenty-one American govern
ments, We have not been without
our difficult problems cf solution in
the United States, but the republics
of South America have had a very
troublezome and disastrous time in
their national and international
EMINENT GERMAN BACTERIOLOGIST.
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ERSCRCNSRR Y BRN
DR. ROBE RT KOCH,
struggles and revolutions. The suc
cess of the United States Government
has been a splendid example and in
gpiration to the sister republics of the
Soath, and the foundation of this
Pan-American Palace of Peace,
Friendship and Commerce is an im
portant epoch.
| The Tortoise as a Popular Pet,
‘ To say from 30,000 to 40,000 tor
}tolses arrvive in England annually is
by no means an exaggeration, Ever
since Gilbert White immortalized his
pet tortoise these animals have been
kept by many people as ‘‘destroyers
of beetles and slugs and guardians of
the kitchen garden,” a false idea
that no amount of repudiation has
been able to eliminate; though they
will eat snails with much relish, they
greatly prefer their owner’s choicest
garden produce. Nevertheless, a tor
toise is the most popular of reptiles.
——London IMleld. .
iil O
Primly Put. ]
“Afn’t the Sox a great team?’” de- |
manded the Chicago girl. i
“Yes,” admitted the Boston dam- |
gel. “I must own that you have a |
very able aggregation of talent in the l
Half-hos 2.” — Louisville Courier=
Journal. o
- Poverty of the Rich,
The butler to the millionaire occu
pant of a Newport villa has sued one
of his host's guests to recover SSOO
money lonn?, After the notices by
Newport grécers that they will no
longer give milllonaires unlimited
credit this butler's suit is another to
ken of the comparative poverty of
some of the newly rich. In many
households the butler, the chef, the
footmen and the maids have more
real money at the end of the month
than the occupants of the villa. They
get their board and lodging besides
wages. The master has an uncertain
income, without regnlar salary or
food and shelter provided by some
one else.—New York World.
One Great Bore,
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Gontran has a neat way of opening
oysters without a knife-——he has only
to begin telling them a story and they
immediately yawn.—Le Rire.
Electricity as a motive power has
been in use for twenty-five years.
washions<\
New York City.—Much of the pop
ularity extended to the house coats
made on such a plan as this one is
due to the ease with which they can
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be made and to the comfort that they
provide.- In the illustration eider
down flannel is the material and the
trimming is ribbon banding, but the
various lighter weight flannels are
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exceedingly beautiful this year and
equally appropriate, while cashmere
and henrietta cloth and fabries of
similar weight are preferred by many
women, and the design suits them all
equally well. Again, if something
still less expensive is wanted the pret
ty flannelettes and cotton crepes may
well be suggested as being especially
well adapted to the purpose: If the
closing of buttons with loops is not
liked the fronts can be finished with
hems and the closing be made with
buttons and buttonholes while the
lower edge and the collar and the
sleeves are finished in any way that
may be liked.
The coat is made with fronts, backs
and under-arm gores and is finished
at the neck edge with a roll-over col
lar. The sleeves are in two portions
each. .
The quantity of material required
for the medium size is three and a
half yards twenty-four or twenty
seven, two yards forty-four or one
and three-quarter yards forty-four
inehes wide with four and a half
yards of ribbon,
Fashion for Pearl Earrings.
It is interesting-that the strle in
earrings has not changed. It is as
pronounced as ever. The large bha
roque pearls are worn against the
ear, and all manner of semi-preciouvs
stones are worn in pear-shaped drops
that fall half way down the neck, ‘
Blue Populaxr, o
in spite of its long continued reign
in popular favor the forecast of col
ors shows that blue is in the lead.
The greenish blues and the bluish
greens will be very fashionable, Pea
cock blues, some light shades and
some deep, are most attractive. And
then come the cloudy blues, the gray
ish blues and slaty blues, blues with
a suggestion of lavender and those of
the electric hue. The Gobelin blues
are liked and the old navy is uml
taken from the list.
Womandom is Rare Necked.
Practically, in spite of the vognue
for long sleeves, womandom is bare
necked and bare armed. Only an un
lined film es tulle or net covering
these parss makes an apology for
daytime decoMetage.
Tucked Elouse or Shirt Waist.
The plain,tailored shirt walist is the
one which #s sure to be in demand
just now. It suits the late summer
geason admirably well, and it always
is well liked for between secasons’
wear and the early fall. This one is
quite novel, the tucks béing arranged
to give an effect of wide box pleats In
combination with groups of narrow
tucks, and is adapted to all season
able waistings. It is just as appro
priate for silk and for wash flannel
and the like as it is for linen, madras
and many inexpensive wash fabrics.
It can be made with a collar to match
or worn with a separate one, and it is
altogether to be commended both for
the odd waist and for the shirt waist
gown,
The waist is made with a lining,
which can be used or omitted as
liked, and consists of fronts and back.
There is a wide box pleat at the cen
tre front, and the tucks are arranged
in groups that are turned some in
ward, some outward to give a box
pleat effect at tha centre back and at
each side of the front. The sleeves
are of the regulation sort finished
with straight cuffs.
The quantity of material required
for the medium size is three and a
half yards twenty-four, three snd a
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quarter yards thirty-two or two ana
a half yards forty-four inches wide.
Grapes on Hats,
.~ On some of the smartest new hats
grapes in silver and gold, vermilion
or frosted greens are much used. The
leaves are generally of the same tone
as the grapes.
A New Cellar Idea.
Quite a novelty in collars is shown
in cretonne and,linen. The straight
band which goes round the neck is
of a fine cretonne, while the rufle at
the top and bottom is of hemstitched
handkerchief linen.
f{' o ]
I Good Roads. i
‘-_-:__ ,4\ e fl%?: ‘-';‘:,‘h:‘_~‘~ -‘
. Important as Schools.
Osie of the most important move
ments which has been started in
Georgia in a long time is that in the
interest of gcod roads and it is
earnestly hoped that the efforts which
are now being made to that end will
bear abundant fruit.
The chamber of commerce will en
deavor to secure a good road con
gregs, and asks the co-operation of
the Governor and the city and county
authorities.
It is no exaggeration to say that
good roads are as important in many
respects as a public school system.
They contribute in a practical way
to the upbuilding of the whoila State.
They knit the State into neighber
hoods and bring every farm house
into closer proximity to the markets.
They stimulate and encourage social
and Dbusiness inter-communication.
Many times over they pay the cost of
their construction by increasing the
taxable value of the lands through
which they run and hence the tax
revenue of the various counties.
Mr. Walter G. Cooper, secretary of
the chamber of commerce, has made
a statement of the economic value of
good roads which is litile less than
startling to thosz who are not famil
iar with the facts. ¥e shows that a
system of goecd roads in Georgia
woulid mean a saving of ten millions
of dollars a year tp the people of the
State. The cost of hauling by rail
in the United States is about three
fourths of a cent per ton mile; haul
ing on the average country road costs
about twenty-five cents, while hauling
on sandy roads in dry weather costs
about sixty cents per ton mile.
It requires no very elaborate math
ematical calculation to see how great
a burden it is upon the people who
have te pay this heavy cost of road
transportation, when it would be an
easy matter to reduce that cost to
one-third or one-fourth the present
expense.
The cost on the average country
roads of Europe and the best roads
in this country, like the recad from
here to Roswell, for instance, is only
about eight cents per ton mile, as
comparad, we have seen, with twenty
five cents on the average road.
1t now costs about fifteen million
dollars a year to do the hauling on the
country roads of the State, and twen
ty-five millions to pay the freight bills
of the railways of Georgia, although
the wagons haul only ‘five million
tong, as against twenty million tons
hauled by the railroads.
It is evident at a glance that three
fourths of the burdens which the
people of Georgia now have to hear
for transportation could be abolished
by a system of good roads, and when
that saving was effected the benefits
would have only begun. The good
results weild be felt in every channel
of our social and business life.
This road building can be accom
plished at a comparatively small cost.
While it is true that a macadam road,
thirty sect wide, would cost five thou
sand dollars a mile, a sand-clay road,
such as may be buiit throughout the
greater part cos Georgia, could be
constructed for about one hundred
and fifty dollars a mile, and would
stand well in all weather with the
average traffic. This is a condition
which applies to at least half the area
of the State of Georgia.
Let the people of Georgia pause
and consider what it would mean to
be able to save ten million dollars a
year on transportation charges. The
number of things we could do with
that money fairly kindles the imag
ination. And yet, as we have said,
this saving in transportation is but
one of the many benefits to be de
rived from a good roads system.,—
Atlanta -Journal, : vl
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Autos Damage Roads.,
A large road huilding firm in St.
Joseph County complains of the dam
age done to the country roads, in this
fashion:
“The invasion of heavy, high-speed
automobiles in ever-increasing num
bers has played havoe with the high
ways. The cld gravel reads built up
by the township trustee with the aid
of farmeirs of the district will not
last a season. The material best suit
ed, according to experiments, is a
crushed stone with a binder, but so
far all binders are too expensive to
be practical. The ecrushed &tone i 3
irregular in shape and does not roll
but interlocks. Even brick will not
withstand the attecks of the auto
mobile.”
We do not see any better way out
of the difficulty than the one we sug
‘gested not long ago, to require the
~auto people to build their own roads
and keep them in repair, by 4 special
| tax on the machines. Let them have
a space of, say twelve feet on one
side or both of the roadway, to im
prove with whatever material may
be found best suited to the purpose,
and leave the remainder for the ex
clusive wuse of teams.—lndiana
Farmer. b
Hauling Crops,
Inquiries conducted in over 1000
‘counties of the United States by the
Department of Agriculture indicate
that the average length of haul of
crops over country roads is 12.1
miles, the average weight of the load
2002 pounds and the average cost
per mile 25.2 cents, or about $3 per
load, the figures being based on cost
of labor, feed, wear, ete. ¢
- e |
.
No Smoking Feor Children, - |
The Board ci Education has or
dered the prohibition of smoking by
young persons under seventeen years
of age.—The Shanghai Mercury, &y
UNITED STATES SENATOR
FROM SOUTH CAROLINA ;
~ PRAISES PE-RU-NA, |
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: Ex-Senator M. C. Butler,
Dyspepsia is Often Cavsed by Calarrh
of the Stomach—Priuna Relieves Catarrh
of the Siomach and is Therefore a Remedy
for Dyspepsia, ¢
0999009099000 0090000000000 00000000
Hon. M. C. Butler, U. S. Senator
}fron South Carclina for two terms, in%
a letter from Washington, D. C., writes
to the Peruna Medicine Co., as follows:
“I can recommend Peruna lor§
dyspepsia and stomach trouble. 1
have been uslni;your medicine for
a short period and I feel very
much vrelicved. It i 3 indeed «
wonderful medicine, besides a
good tonic.”’
”MWW“M
ATARRH of the stomach is the cor-
Crect name for iost cases of dyspepsia.
Onlfi an internal catarrh remedy, such
as Peruna, is available.
Peruna Tablets can now be procured.
Ask your Druggist for a Free Pe.
runa Almanac for 19¢9.
It is well to remember that eggs
do not get seft by long boiling.
o Drive Cut Malaria and Bafld Up
the System
Take the Old Standard Grove's TaAsre
Less CmrnL Toxic. You know what yon
are taking. The formula is plainly printed
on every gottlo, showing it is simpql; Qui
o S gl ol oD o
acdsdffld:rcan. aoe. _
Virtue is its own reward,
Capudine Cures Indigestion Pains,
Belching, Sour Stomach; and Heartburn,
from whatever cause, It’s Liquid. Effects
immediately. Doctors preseribe it. 10c
%c., and 5&., at drug stores. .'
He Tried Not To.
When 9-year-old Teddy displayel
the shining new quarter which Mr.
Ringloss had givez him down at the
corner store, mother very naturally
asked if her little boy had said
~ *“Thank you” to father’s friend.
No answer.
“Surely you thanked Mr. Ringloss?”
she persisted.
Still no answer. Trouble showed
on the little face.
“Teddy, listen. You ought to have
said ‘Thank you, sir. Did you?”’
No answer yet—and trouble threat:
ened to produce showers,
“Come here, dear little son. Tell
mamma, unow. Did you thank Mr.
Ringloss for the quarter?”
Then the storm broke, but betwee
the sobs and tears came the requirel
information: “I told him thank you,
an’ he said not to mention it, an’
I tried not to.”—Philadelphia Ledger.
Fighters from Babyhood,
An Indian boy begins to handle a
light bow as soon as he tocddles. His
bow is then taller than himself.
By the time he attains the age of
twelve he is permitted to us sharp
arrows. At the age of eighteen he
is strong encugh to use a man's bow.
A white man, when he takes an
Indian bow for the first time, finds he
can hardly bend it. But to shoot a
full sized Indian bow requires knack
as much as anything—Home Notes.
CAUSE AND EFFECT.
Goed Digestion Follows Right Food.
Indigestion and the attendant dis
comforts of mind and body are cer
tain to follow continued use of impro
per food.
Those who are still young and ro
bust are likely to overlook the fact
that, as dropping water will wear a
stone away at last, so will the use of
heavy, greasy, rich foed finally cause
loss of appetite and indigestion.
Fortunately many are thoughtful
enouzh to study themselves and note
the principle of Cause and Effect in
their daily food. A N. Y, young wom
an writes her experience thus:
‘‘Some time ago I had a lot of trou
ble from indigestion, caused by too
rich food. 1 got so I was unable to
digest scarcely anything, and medi
cines seemed useless,
“A friend advised me to try Grape-
Nuts food, praising it highly, and as
a last resort I tried it. lam thank
ful to say that Grape-Nuts not only
relieved me of my trouble, but built
me up and strengthened my digestive
organs so that I can now eat anything
I desire. But I stick to Grape-Nuts.”
‘“There's a Reason.”
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read *“The Road to
ville,” in pkgs.
Ever rcad the above letter? A
new onc appears from time to time.
They are genuine, true and full of hue
man interest.