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THE INCORPORATION
' OF SPECIAL PRIVILEGES
A writer in the Atlantic has some
fresh and sensible ideas about core
wMition control,
We have come to think that cor
poration laws cannot be too liberal,
that the corporation as such is one
of the “inalienable rights.” We must
turn to the original conception of
& corporation, as a special privilege
that must be carefully limited and
made subservient to the common
good. If, and so far as, it proves dis
astrous to society, to the individual,
its existence or its powers, the cor-
Pgrate powers of the persons control
ling it, can and should be destroyed.
The true remedy lies in remedial and
penal laws; laws that are self oper
ating, limiting the formation and
powers of corporations and their of
ficers and majority stockholders;
®ws of corporate management that
can be enforced in the courts at the
suit of the Government or of indi
viduals; laws that clearly define and
adequately punish and remedy the
wrongs incident to corporate rela
fions, The remedy is less govern
megnt, and not government; restric
tion, and not extension of its abused
powers.
WISE WORDS.
"You ecan teach your child knowl
#dge; he can teach you wisdom.
Were only one baby in each year
Dorn into the world the whole world
v-ould flock to worship it.
School may develop your child's
brzin, but good manners can be
taught only at home.
The best way to keep your child's
heart tender and pure is to fill it with
love from your owrn.
Children are most apt to be naugh
ity when they have naught to occupy
themselves with.
The thought of “mother’” has with
:held many a man and woman from
crime, Be sure that your children
possess that safeguard.
A child does not know that steal
ing sugar is wrong; he does know
'that hatred of his brother is so. En
‘lighten him in the first case and com
fort him in the second.
The man who is heard to make
light of his friends’ troubles rarely
refrains from swearing at his own.
The most perplexing problem to a
gmall boy is bie big krother's admira
tion for a girl wno can’t throw a
curve to save her life.
One of the futilities of existence to
a small boy is the compulscry wash
ing of hands before dinner when they
don’t look dirty.
The angelic aspect of a girl in
church when she thinks the young
unmarried minister is looking at ‘her
is enough to rouse the envy es a
saint.
Odd how surprised a perfectly
truthful girl can look at a man’s sud
den appearance in the dimly lighted
parlor when she has recognized his
footsieps a block away. .
It is against the principles of some
people ever to borrow anything but
trouble.
Many a woman prides herself on
what she calls her nervous energy
and her friends desjgnate as her fid
gety ways. ;
There are generous people—and
there are people who can say. how
generous they would be if they had
money.
Many a child spanked by a mother
who professes to have been a youth
ful angel wonders how a disposition
could have changed so radically with
the flight of time.—New York Tele
grani, .
The Wise Eskimos. :
Everything in the Eskimo dress has
a reason for its existence, writes Cap
tain Roald Amundsen, in “The Narth
west Passage.” The members of
Captain Amundsen’s expedition had
become accustomed to the Eskimo
dress, and had adopted it, but many
of them thought it ridiculous for
grown-up men to go about wearing
fringe to their clothes, so they cut
it off. :
1 had my scruples about this, says
the author, as I had already learned
that most things in the Eskimo’s
clothing and other arrangements had
thelr distinct meaning and purpose,
so I kept my fringe and put up with
the yidicule.
Hle laugns best who laughs last.
One fine day the anovakg, a sort of
tnnic reaching below the knee, made
of deerskin, from which the fringes
had been cut off, commenced to curl
up, and if the fringe had not been
put on again quickly, they would soon
have looked like neckties.
b s ——————
No More Jack Pots For Him,
Mrs. Jinks— My husband doesn’t
play poker\ny more. He promised
me not to.” : . )
M Blinks—“ Doesn’t he play
anything at al?’’
Mrs, Jinks-—‘He says he only plays
Pharapi; muet be some Biblical
x:,?fir" \ H@‘ ald, . ""
| WHAT WIFE SAYS “GOES,”
’But It Sometimes is Bad For the
Painting,
When a property-owner knows
nothing about paint it is bad for the
property-owner, and bad for the
painter, It would not be so if the
property-owner would always hire a
skilled painter and then really leave
everything to him. But the house
owner so often fools himself on one
or the other of these things.
The skilled painter in every com
munity has some of the most incom
petent competitors that ever vexed a
conscientious workman or contractor,
and the incompetents get jobs gener
ally by working cheap. In the next
place, when the skilled painter is
hired, they do not leave everything
to him, as soo many property-owners
boast they do. ’
They interfere most ignorantly and
most fatally, They insist sometimes
on using paint materials without in
vestigating whether they are good or
not. Or perhaps they insist on the
painter’s hurrying the work.
“I'm not going to have this painter’s
mess around my house a month,” the
wife says, and what wife says goes—
at the cost of a lot of wasted painting
money.
If the painter stays away a few
days to allow the paint to thoroughly
dry the owner says: “That painter’s
neglecting this work—guess he’s side
tracking me for Jones’ work. I won’t
stand it.”
What chance does a painter have to
do good work for a man who is con
tinually nagging at him and othex
wise handicapping him (without
meaning it, of course)? A poor job
is the inevitable result of such inter
ference.
Poor painting costs tha houseowner
money—don’t forget that, It might
pay you to get the practical paint
book, painting specifications and in
strument for detecting paint adul
terants, which National Lead Co. are
offering under the title of House
Owner’s Painting Outfit No. 49. Ad
dress National Lead Co., 1902 Trinity
Bldg., New York City. This company
do not make paint (they leave that to
the painter to do) but they make
pure white lead (“Dutch Boy Painter”
trademark kind), and they can tell
you how to save mohney by securing
durable painting.
The preservation of religion is prac-]
tice,
A pessimist needs Garfield Tea, the Herb
laxative which regulates the liver, corrects
constipation and brirgs good health and
good spirits.
whnen .ic mWumwith a hooby finds
himself in the dark he should alight.
Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days.
i ranteed to cure any
5;?0{0]'&“;&‘: : ,tßiisns }ll!;leed ingor Protruding
Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. ‘
Great minds there are in any en
vironment, . |
For HEADACHE—Hicks’ CAPUDINE |
Whether from Colds. Heat, Stomach or
T o o ocks Tl J
Pteslyl. Ay it. 10c., 2c, and 50c. at drug |
atores.
If a barber ever accumulates money
it is by a close shave,
NEW STRENGTH FOR WOMEN'S
BAD BACKS.
Women who suffer with backache,
bearing down pain, dizziness and that
constant dull, tired
3l' A XA
as if broken. A friend urged me to
try Doan’s Kidney Pills, which I did,
and they helped me from the start.
It made me feel like a new woman,
and soon I was doing my work the
same as ever.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
A Baitimore grand jury has recom
mended that the Legislature take ac
tion to limit he loan shark abuse.
Last year, relates the Indianapolis
News, Massachusetts—prompt in good
works—dealt the business a hard blow
by a law making validity of an as
signment of wages depend, first, on
the written consent of the employer,
and, in the case of married men, on
the consent of the wife. The accept
ance must then be filed and record
ed. Aiding this law in its tendency
to reduce the practice, the general
policy of large corporations in the
State is against assignment of wages,
some of them making it cause for
digmissal. The Maszachusetts law,
while it does not cope with all of the
evils of the situation, does away with
some of the worst ones.
The United States has the greatest
variety of postage stamps.
W
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feeling, will find
comfort in the ad
vice of Mrs. James
e eielt, o6f DHID
Goldsborough St.,
Easton, Md., who
says: “My back was
in a very bad way,
and when not painful
was so weak it felt
T.| e e e s or s 0 A SES PRI OWINEIE TS Al
Because of those ugly, grizzly, gray {hln. Use ‘LA CREOLE" HAIR RESTORER.. Price, SI.OO, retail.
SR O N 0i P
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Tl e e
: telephone which enables you to sell ten bales of cotton at ¥ cent per
This Book Sent Free pound more than the traveling buyer offers you, has paid for its en
. tire cost. If you have some hay down all ready to go in, it is worth
something to have a tclephone with which to call on Neighbor Smith ““for a lift” before the storm breaks.
The Rural Telephone pays for itself each year and we have brought the initial cost within the
y . . -~ ’
reach of every farmer. Present prices are especially favorable and thousands of Farmers’ Mutual Come
. ) - . p - . . y . .
panies are now organizing so as to build their lines this Spring. Write us to-day.
e wm Ia N LEG II! Ic K)}‘ .A"."l}j;}“
[k} s\‘*“"‘#s‘%» D Soathera Offices C DAY Nortbern cod Western Offices ¥
I “‘1 ‘.lf/:; Atlanta Kansas City The world’s oldest and largest teles ggisct:no l’;;‘&’:::}g”‘ p
S-oe ‘%Y:él" Cincinnati Portsmouth phone manufacturer. There are over fienv:r Saint Paul o
"bl P Dallas Saint Louis 4,000,000 Western Electric Telephones Los Angeles Salt Lake City *\Q s‘,{/
R ""’fiy Q Indiavapolis Savaunah in use in the United States to-day, New York San Francisco &ty &
Iy Rural Telephones a specialty Omaha Seattle
Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dyve. One 10c. package colors all fibers. They dye In cold sater botter than any other dye. You
tan dye any garment without ripping aparv. Write for free booklet—How to Lye, Bleacu and AMix Colors. MONROE DR UG CO., Quincy, Illinois,
SEED QATS %=
Rl Per Salzer's oatalog, pago 129,
cargest growers of seed oats, wheat, barley
apeltz, corn, 'potatoes, grassesand clovers ams
farm seeds in the world. Big catalog free; or,
sond 10c in stamps and receive sampile of Bil
lion Dollar Grass, yielding 10 tens of haK
per acre, oats, speltz, barley, etc., easily wort,
%10 of any man's money to lgot o start with,
and catalog free. Or, send 14¢ and we add a
samplo farm sced ncvelty never seen bofore
by ygu.
SALZER SEED CO., Box A. C., La Crosse, Wis.
IW:IIiDLOUG"EASQZ'
S2OO :SHOES $350"
N NN ey You, g - )
Pk el “6‘\\_ 0, o ! ] b . : B
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‘\ £ 3
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¥ 4 el /8
W, 4:.‘\ " .:
LS \‘3"@ i*(fl’
SNA ‘ /
ik 4F TAI) T N
v e
all BOYS SHOES \\ 4
& SI.OO 70 $3.00 P
The Reason I Make and Sell More Men’s $3.00
& $3.50 Shoes Than Any Other Manufacturer
is because I give the wearer the beneflt of the most
complete organization of trainod experts and skilled
shoemakers in the country.
The selection of the leathers for each part of the shoe,
and evexx detail of the making in every department, is
looked after bg the best choemakers im the shoe industry.
If I could show you how carefully W, L. Douilu ghoes
are made, you would then understand why theK old their
ghape, fit Detter, and wear longer than any other make.
My Method of Tanningthe Soles makes them More
Flexible and Longer Wearing than any others.
Shoes for Every Member of the Family,
Men, Boys, Women, M isses and Children.
For sale hy shoe dealers ?verywhere.
BAU'HON | None genuine without W. L. Douglas
« nawme and price stamped on bottom,
Fast Color Eyelets Used Exclusively. Calalog mailed free,
V. L. DOUGLAS, 167 Spark St., Brockton, Mass.
THREE BROTHERS, starting
fora trip around the world, will dispose
of their two Five Passenger Automobites,
one Seven Passenger Car, and one 20 H.
P. Model 1908 Runabout, ata Big Bargain.
Threelittle used, one new, all first-class
condition. Address WALKER, 1605
Candler Building, Atlanta. Ga.
(4 .
A @, This Trade-mark
t ,@.@ 8 Fliminates All
> G 5 JiEEw .
”%&’ti Uncertainty
«“/\;,@_fi in the purchase of
Sl paint materials,
" :'\‘fiu';«‘f;rv,?'m-fi; It is an absolute
AL AT N
ataeeeriien guarantee of pur
! :‘z; 2 ?gfi? ity and quality.
Ret Eg—_-_-,_y For your own
N A protection, see
g A that it is on the
R side of every keg
{*;\ of white lead you
W\ buy.
NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY 1992 Trinity Bullding, New York
When the flame of love flickers it
does not require much of an effort
to snuff it. '
S 8 e
How’s This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward
for any case of Catarrh that cannot be
cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
F.J. CaENEY & Co., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe
him perfectly honorable 1n all business
transactions and financially able to carry
out any obligations made by his firm.
WALDING, KINNAN & MARVIN, Whole
gsale Druggists, Toledo, 0.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally,act
ingdirectly upon the blood and mucuoussur
faces of the system. T'estimonials sent free.
Price, Ts¢. per bottle. Soid by all Druggists.
Take Hafi’s Family Pills for constipation.
A Chicago judge says a stolen kiss
is worth $lO. It 'would have been
more gallant to have said “its weight
‘ in gold.”
If you do you can get it. If you are anxious to get into closer
touch with your friends, with the family docto#, with the store, with the
post ofiice, or with the cotton buyer, you can do it with a telephone
at hand. If you want to make the farm a more livable place, if you
want to protect your home, you can do it by installing a telephone,
If you will cut out this advertisement, write your name and
address on the margin and mail it to-day to our nearest house,
we will send you at once a copy of our Free Bulletin No. 102 on
“How to Build Rural Telephone Lines”
This Bulletin explains clearly how a rural telephone system is built
and opcrated, and it also contains full information as to costs,
In a Farmer’s Mutual Company a few day’s labor and a cash
investment of about $25. per subscriber, will purchase all material
and build an absolutely standard system.
- A Rural Telephone is an investment, nct an expense. The
t Forget!
BONT rOrgel:
As a gentle, non-intoxicating, tonic medicine,
every tired woman should take a spoonful of Cardui,
three times a day.
Cardui will help you to get back your strength,
by increasing your appetite, toning up your nerves,
regulating the proper working of your womanly
organs, and building up the natural, resisting power
Ve Caraut e AN o] S Srety weip
’ ’ & ¥ lp
you, as it has helped a million others, in the past 50
years.
TAKE ) fiéf%'la;;? e
The Woman’s Tonic
Mrs. Fannie Ellis, of Foster, Ark., writes: “I
was sick for seven (7) years, with female trouble.
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' A HEART-BREAKING COUGH \
is dreadful to suffer and despairing to hear. 'Why threaten the health of ‘
your lungs and the peace of your family when you can obtain immediate
relief from Piso’s Cure? Remarkable results follow the first dose. Taken
regularly it soothes and heals the lacerated tissues, loosens the clogging
phlegm and stops the cough. ~Pleasant to the taste and freeO?rum
opiates. Children enjoy taking it. For throat and lung discases, no
matter how far advanced,
PISO’S CURE IS INCOMPARABLE
\ £ L ,1& \
M
s e
Every month, I would very nearly die,
with my head and back. Half the
time, I could not stand on my feet,
without great pain. I took 12 bottles
of Cardui and was cured, fat, healthy
and stout. Cardui is a God-send to
suffering women,”” Try it. Sold
everywhere. ‘ R
FOR DISTEMPER . |
CATARRHAL FEVER |
AND ALL NOSE !
; AND THROAT DISEASES
Cures the sick and acts as a preventive for others. Liquid
iven on the tongue. Safe for brood mares and all others, %ess
E;dney remedy: 50 cents and $1 a bottle; 5 and $lO the dozen.
Sold by all druggists and horsse goods houses, or sent, express
paid, by the manufacturers. :
SPOHN MEDICAL CO., Chemists, GOSHEN, INDIANA