!trvtfi- 12 The Commoner. VOLUME 8, NUMBER fc "f rrW-jp Pifif NoFr until allowed. Frqft Books, ASTHMA OUItK ncnt by express to you on Frco Trial. 11 II cures send Hi If mil iimt'i ntvit firnrosH ofllCO. National Cliemlcnl'co.,7ft Ohio Avo., Sldnoy, O. Allen's rolltloul 15 MHyn." Pupor, onn dol lar. Lorai I agent wniitul. John ! Allon, Walla WallH, WaBhliiKton. CE355; aDavExliy Made Sellin GLASSES I-AtrontJ wanted. Scndfor catalog Coulter Optical Co. Chloage TOBACCO SALESMEN FJkCTCRY ViAHTS Good ray. stendy v otk and promotion. Experience unnecmary nse win iiive compieio insinicuonx. Danville Tobacco Co., Box T fib. Danville, wa. AGENTS ezNINE IN ONE fc $75 monthly. ComblnntlonM. Jr Kol ling Tin. Nino nriioleflcomlilnori. LlKUtnlng Seller. &mpl re. PORSUEE MFO. CO,, Box 368 Daytoo, O. V W WP TVWGt SECURED Oil FEE JT J. J. Mil IV JL & itKTUltNKD. Froo report ns to Patentability. Illustratod fluldo Hook, and Ll.Mt of InvcnUona Wanted. sont free. Vioron J. Evans ds Co., Washington, D. 0. WA.lT,irA.V DTAIIj CTjISUHS 1VA.NVXW ' Oominonconiont sa'nry 8600. Ilapid advance ment to $1200 or $1400. Short hours. Steady work. Annual vacation with full snl ry. Examinations ovory whoro soon. Common education eufilclont. Proparatlou Ireo, Wrlt! Imiiit'dlntoly for Sched ule. FKANKMN INSTITUTE. Urpl. h. 00, llothiter,N. Y, 5 FINE POST CARDS FREE Send only 2-cont stamp and recolvo flvo colored Gold and Embossed Cards lItIIS to Introduce1 post card olTor. JAIITAJL CAItD CO., JOopt. A5, Topclcn, KauHHfl. 12 POST ?AIin& FREE Wo will f-ond you 12 of tlio prottlost post cards you over paw If you will cut this ndvortisomont out and sond to us with 4c to pay postage and mailing and Bay that you will show thorn to 6 of your frlonds I-07 N411V 11KAH CAM CO., taa South 5th fit,, Philadelphia. JPa, ECZEMA CAN BE Critr.D. My mild, ioothlnp, pinranlaed cum does it nd FRL . IMPLK prote It. STOPS TUfi ITCHING and cures to tar. WHITE MOYf-TOIWC. DRCAHNADAYtt74-PARK SQUARE. SEDAUA, M0 F R, E E MaryT. Goldman's I Gray Hair Restorer! rnarnrAU niiiniMni mi4a m mild, healthful manner In from 7 to 14 days. En tlrply difforont from any thing olso. IU effect la pormanout. Does not , r it nuou uit nor jo(ik unnut- HSr "? no sodlmont, bo It's nolthor tioky nor groaty-lt'B as puro and oloar aa water. . ,nfoxPorinionJn.what thonBanda ol others 5ui!&V'nfo nndBfltlBfaotory. Snmple and comb SiSiSS?' f.roo. Ko sure to mention orlnnl color MN3 Tnd MtV Bf trtmd MEN WANTE D 2254 men 7 & profit Soiling "WEAR-EVER" Aluminum Specialties during July & Aug. '09 Halt ol these men hail no previous ex perience. Work made pleasant by our 175'pajre Instruction Dook. No door-to-door cnnvasslnj. Let us shotv you what . ,, , . " nave tionc. Aaaress Th Alaiulnum CooVInr UtemU Co Utik B5, ntUburr, Vt. Opportunity knocks butdon'teipect the door to be kicked In. A fduCJtrxI Tferve Tablets docs it. Write for Proof. Advice Free. Dr. OHAflli, 324 North iota Bt, Philadelphia, JPa. V. 01 3ftTl " 1 II PI W rfJEJF iff ir3 in Hi VIOLIN FREE This Is a flnohandsomo, clear tonod. good size Vio lin or highly polished, besiutltul wood, obony ""j.8 Poga. finger board SR.u.toH.?,CC0 ono silver ftrlng, throogtit strings. & b,ow ofwhlto hoio h;VJriVA5,nnd Semi us your namo and address for 24 packates pf Quaker Sheot Bluing to sell at 10 cents each. Whon sold, roturn our 12 40 and wo will send yon this beautiful vioUn and outfit Just oxactly as r presented. Address FRIEND SOAP CO., JJejit. a-13, -Mtoston, Muss. powerful to prevent thorn from be ing successful In any case. And they charge Mr. Taft with supporting that combination. Another fact makes their situation peculiarly bitter. Mr. Taft declared himself again and again for the "Roosevelt policies." These people aro for the Roosevelt policies also. They agreed with Mr. Taft in all those declarations. But Mr. Taft wont a little further and set Up a policy of his own tariff revision. That was something Mr. Roosevelt had never tackled. It was distinc tively a Taft issue, and these men say it was his only issue. For that reason they expected to see him fight for it. And whon they found him not only not fighting for what they so strongly believed was his only per sonal policy, but actually working with the men who, they were con vinced, were seeking to break down and destroy that policy, their disap pointment was poignantly keen. Now, that was the situation with the republican insurgents at the close of the tariff session. And it should be remembered that in all the states of this middle west section the in surgents out-number the regulars In the republican party. That is an in teresting thing to remember from the point of view of these unhappy re publicans, because Mr. Taft has given as his reason for working with Sen ator Aldrich and Speaker Gannon in congress the fact that they represent the majority of the party there, and that he can not be expected to work with an irresponsible minority. Rebels Acclaimed at Homo The representatives of these in surgents, in both senate and house, came home from the. special session and found enthusiasm and acclaim. Here in Kansas the one senator and two representatives who voted against the bill were met by crowds and brass bands, and cheered to the echo. Ih other states of this RonHnn similar demonstrations were made. Senator Bristow was flooded with invitations to speak to meetings of farmers and others of his cnnRHf.n- ents. He accepted as many as he couia, ana wnerever he went he spoke, by request, on the tariff and the making of the new. law. Bvery- wuure ue was tumuituously applaud ed. Kansas is with him and has lost no opportunity to tell him so. Nothing could show the temper of these people better than their recep tion of Judge Madison of the Seventh district upon his return to Dodge City. h Madison had voted for the bill on the final roll call. But that was only after the attempt to recommit it had been defeated, and on that test he voted with the insurgents to recom mit. His district understood the sit uation as well as he did and cheered him as much for that vote to recom mit as if he had cast the last vote in the negative also. Growth of Anti-Taffc Feeling There was great disappointment with Mr. Taft among the insurgents when the sneclal aoRalon nnmn frt end, but still there was a disposition among them to withhold final conclu sions about the president until the events of the regular session next winter should cpnflrm or disprove their disappointment. But events havo already occurred which have made it practically impossible for these ardent politicians to suspend judgment any longer. They think they have evidence that Mr. Taft will continue to work with Aldrich and Cannon, not only next winter but throughout his tern in the White House. Strange as it may seem to some persons, there are insurgents in Kan sas and elsewhere in the middle west who concede both sincerity and in tegrity to Senator Aldrich. They test his point of view, however, and utterly reject his conclusions. There is. less readiness to make the same concession to Speaker Cannon, but there are, novertheles, men promi nent among the insurgents who do credit him with disinterestedness of motive. But these men are none the less of one a,ccord with their more radical fellows in opposition to both Aldrich and Cannon and their methods. They might forgive Mr. Taft for accepting a tariff bill that did not meet his own promises, but they will not forgive him for working with Aldrich and Cannon to get such a bill. And when they find him preparing to go on working with Aldrich and Cannon en his legislative program for next win ter, that fact alone instantly and completely discredits both the presi dent and his program with them. They say flat-footedly that there io no more faith to be put in his prom ises, and that is all there is to it. Boston Speech Mado Enemies Several things havo made these men believe that Mr. Taft intends to go on working with Aldrich and Cannon. To begin with, nothing has occurred to change the situation that existed at the time of the organiza tion of the house for the special ses sion. Mr. Taft then said that he was obliged to work with the majority of his party. These men point out that he could have readjusted that majority if he would have done so, and eliminated the highly objection able Cannon, keeping a majority still solidly republican and yet in entire sympathy and accord with him in stead of covertly opposed to them. But since Mr. Taft took that, to them indefensible position, then they expect him to go on with it. Also they have evidence of his intention to do so. As a first specification, they cite the Boston speech at the outset of the swing around the west, in which the president praised Aid rich. To these men that Boston speech was a gratuitous rasp- of a raw sore. It is doubtful if the presi dent could have done or said any thing that would have produced a more decided effect on this part of the country. When he followed it with his speech at Winona defending the new tariff law, praising Representative Tawney and lambasting the insur gents, the disappointment of these men turned to ill-concealed rage. They speak of him now in terms that range from plain bunco-steerer to the limits of vituperative abuse. One would think, to hear some of these men talk, that he was listening to a bunch of Wall Street .men discus sing Theodore Roosevelt. Every few minutes one or another of them will leap up, shake his fist, and cry out, "And we were the suck ers who stood for him." No Patronage for Insurgents It Ib not only speeches, however, that convince these men that the president is going right ahead to work with Aldrich and Cannon. Some singular things about patronage have occurred. There may be a perfectly rational and natural explanation for these things. It Is even possible that nothing at all has occurred, and that these men only suffer from hallu cinations. But some of them are telling queer stories. For instance, the Wisconsin rep resentatives, Cooper, Gary, Nelson and Lenroot, voted against Cannon for speaker and against the adoption of the organization rules. Cooper voted for the tariff bill and the other three voted against it. All four were asked to submit recommendations for census supervisor in their districts Coopor's man was, appointed and the other three were turned clown The Kansas senators, Bristow and CurtlH.v. insurgent and r6m,in u an. agreement with tho president that 'no man should have a census ap pointment who was opposed to either senator. It was a hands-off sort of deal, and, according to the Kansas version of it, the president signed a letter agreeing to it. Now thero are eight congressmen from this state. Two of them are insurgents and six are regulars, although the In. surgent, Bristow, carried the state in the senate primary of last year over whelmingly against the regular Long. Despite the reported agree ment with the president it turned out that the appointment of census supervisors was left entirely to tho congressmen, or at least that is the A .Sallow, Pimply or "Muddy" Complexion Is Easily Gotten Rid of When Consti tutional, Instead of Local, Treat ment is Taken Every woman strives to acquire and preserve a clear, faultless, rose-and-lily complexion. This is appar ently the height of the feminine am bition. No more fallacious epigram wag ever penned than the one which says that "beauty is only skin deep;" and no greater mistake can possibly be made in endeavoring to gain a clear, pratty complexion, entirely free from pimples, blackheads and other skin blemishes, than the use of cosmetics, powders, lemon juice, cold cream, electric massage, and va rious other treatments, which aim at the complexion alone, and havo no effect whatever on the blood, or on tho general system. Whenever you see a. person with a clear, flawless . complexion, you may be assured that its perfection de pends, not on the local application of the many fad treatments on the mar ket, but exclusively upon a puro, wholesome condition of the blood, and upon its active, vigorous circu lation through the skin. It is the blood which gives the skin its rosy color, and although electric massage, and other local treatments may draw the blood tem porarily to the surface of the skin, it can not keep it there. Only a strong circulation can do that. When the" blood becomes impoverished and the circulation sluggish, the com plexion, as a natural sequence, be comes sallow or "muddy," and pimples, blackheads, "liver spots," and other skin troubles put in their appearance. One box of STUART'S CALCIUM WAFERS, which are taken inter nally, will do the complexion more good than all tho cosmetics, beauty powders, cold creams, electric or manual massage, will do in a life time. These powerful little wafers cure because they strike at the root of the trouble. They purify and renovate the blood so completely that the complexion can not do otherwise than become clear, flawless and free from all skin blemishes. Besides relieving tho system or every particle of impurity, and there by cutting off the source of the skin diseases, they also build up the blood, greatly increasing the number of red corpuscles in Its current, aud invigorating, strengthening and im proving the circulation so decidedly that in a wonderfully brief period the cheeks become rosy, the com plexion clear, the eyes bright, ana the whole system glows with re newed life and vigor. Securo a package of this blood cleaning, complexion-clearing and system-renovating remedy from your druggist for 50 cents, and begin the treatment at once. Also send us your name and address and free sample package will be sent you. Ad dress F. A. Stuart" Co., 175 Stuart Bldg,, Marshall, Mich, (i I n "I t - TlMSm .H. ifu. , IW 1 litdtoinf..