Workings of Lie Detector. When your husband comes rather late and tells you he had an important business engagement all you have to do is to try it on the sphygomanometer, The sphygoman- ometer Is an Invention by William H. Marston of Harvard, by which he as serts a lie can be detected. Profes- sor Marston says that when a person tells a lie, especially If he Is under oath, there is an emotional reaction, affecting the breathing and the blood pressure, The breathing of married men is seldom affected by a mechanical lie, Herald. 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Beady for use—two sizes Be and $1.6. U. 8. Government buys it, NowFeelsFine Eatonic Ended His Troubles “Eatonic is the only thing I have found to stop my heartburn and I think it has been a great help in nervous spells,” writes G. C. Johnson. * An upset stomach may cause lots of suffering all over the body. Eatonie helps in such cases by removing the cause of the misery, because it takes up and carries out the excess acid and gases and keeps the digestive or- gans in natural working order. A tablet after meals is all you need. Big box costs only a trifle with druggist’s guarantee, You Need HANCOCK. SULPHUR COMPOUND Physicians agree that sul is one of the most effective blood purifiers known. For pimples, black-heads, freckles, and tan. as well a s for more serious face, scalp and body eruptions, hives, eczema, elc., use this scientific compound of sulphur. As a lo- tion, it soothes and heals; taken internally it gets atthe root of the trouble. For over 25 years Hancock Sulphur Com- pound has given satisfaction. + 60¢ and 31.20 the bottle. your druggist’s. If he can't supply you send his name and the price In stamps and and we will send you a bottle direct. HANCOCK LIQUID SULPHUR COMPANY Baltimore, M4, Hancock Sulphur Compound Oins. mane 25% and SOe=for use with the Ligebd Compound, The next time wou buy calomel ask for (Leck The purified and refined calomel tablets that are nausealess, safe and sure. Medicinal virtues retain- Nu - ed ed, Sold sea p es. Price 35¢ Hots Tailored Clothes, Be our represente. Show beautiful sampies, measures cus sommers for stylish tallored sults, overeco Peraish everything, For a , Biehl - de Con, § Title Guar, Wide. Otictnnatl, hy pel il Ey —— DCHIYS 17 TFC LARATION OF By JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN. HEN in 178 the president of the Second Continental Congress put his “John Hancock” to “A Declan by the Representatives of the States of ration United General i wrote America In gress Assembled” he and so plain that he gave to the American 1 Ae Massachu to read noes, if re-the-Revolution ciear that the enough to last uses leading up the Declaration it. ell what half of i bad business in itself and it's { to have ww kind of Fourth sbration in the States of Amer “ourth has quit being the day of fire ’ i» 3 1.1 asunities, new Kind of ly celebration the laration of In- will come to its own as the crowning American Rev- public observance, The 8 the greatest stepping-stone in the march centuries toward freedom and the Declara- Independence is its symbol, Though the come back to its own, the new Fourth y when the American Eagle screams and the orator bawlis because Uncle Sam handed John There are is to will not Declaration of Independence be the Bull a K O a century and a half ago reasons for this, World war. John Bull and now stand shoulder to shoulder two Uncle in defense of : i Une is the Sam all that our common race holds dear of persona freedom and litical The other Is the fact that the quarrel British people and the American people. It was, in its earlier stages at least, a strife between two diff- erent political and ex It was no unrelated event, but formed a part of the history of the race on both continents, There was a Brit- ish revolution at the same time there was an American Revolution. The British revolution was to regain liberty. The American Revolution was 10 preserve liberty. On both sides of the Atlan tie the king's prerogatives were the alm of rev- olutionary attack. Now, as to the many things that may be read between the lines of what Hancock and Frank lin said, here's just a hint: Hancock was a rich merchant, It was part of the purpose of the British troops at Lexington and Concord to cap- ture Hancock. At that time Hancock was re. spondent in the Admiralty court in suits of the crown to recover nearly half a million dollars as penalties alleged to have been Incurred for viola: tion of the laws of navigation and trade. Han- cock had inherited his fortune from his uncle, Thomas Hancock, who had become wealthy smug. gling tea. So it was no more than right that John Hancock should sign hig name large and plain to the document which, if made good, would save him from financial ruin and give him free com: merce with all the world, Benjamin Franklin, publisher, printer, philos- opher and statesman, sevenly-one years of age, the oldest member of CONgress, was more con. cerned with the political than with the commer. cial aspects of the situation. He made a clever jest, but no man there knew better that there is many a true word spoken in jest, So the truth ig that on our side of the ocean the fundamental causes leading up to the Revo lution were both political and economic—-and pos. gibly quite ns mush economic as political. To ar rive at the main features of the situation, the fol- lowing chronology is helpful: 1760-—~Accession of George III. Conquest of Can. ada by British, 1761—Revival of navigation and trade laws of 1060 and 1603. Issues of “Writs of Assistance.” 1764—Parliament demands that colonies pay poli ideals, Revolution was between not na two peoples—the onomic systems, ona vr W rrawyrin G Rea” S— aor CG Ls nals nomi gnc mn gd pen 4 TA AE TPATE TT ALT EIS wre LHC TILE OF 22s 2 inxX «¥% representat Parliament passes Britis! ep TNtamg 1. putting tax on ing colonies to if defer supply wepnpers, and legal! do Stamp Act y gress jssnes “declaration of rights” G0-—Repeal of “Stamp Act - “Declaratory Act” maintains right to tax 1767 ~Tow nsend, British chaneellor of exchequer brings in LI for taxes on tes. glass, wine. oil paper, lead, ete 17068 Boston and Non-importation agreement ado spreads to other colonies chusetts legislature dissolved hy George ish soldiers quartered in Boston 1760-—Lord North repeals all t retained for sake of principle "Committees of Correspond keep In touch formed colonies to Tea Party.” 1774 Port Bil" closing Boston to shipping and removing seat of government to Salem “Boston ‘Boston General Gage, commander of joston, made ee “Regulating Act,” remode “Quartering Act.” “Quebec Act,” First Philadelphia, Mnaxss- etts Provinelal Congress meets and calls for “Minute Men.” 1770—Parliament declares Massachusetts to be in a state of rebellion. Arged clash at Lexington and Concord begins hostilities, Capture of Ticon- deroga and Crown Point. Battle of Bunker Hill Boston, Canadian expedition under Second Continental Congress at Philadelphia army of 20000 and George Washington commander.in-chief. Evacuation of Boston by British, accom- panied by 1.000 loyalists, Repulse of British fleet and army at Charleston, 8. C. Battle of Long Isiand and occupation of New York by British. Battle of Trenton, Continental Congress pro. vides for the establishment of state governments and state conventions adopt constitutions. gress adopts Declaration of Independence. The most casual glance at this skeleton chro nology shows it to be literally loaded to the musz- zle with the eighteenth century equivalent of pe- litical and economic TNT. The American Revo lution was inevitable, sooner or later. The mar- vel Ig not that it eame, but that out of the condi. tions grew a nation. What a chaos It was! The title to the colonies was not in the people of England or in the state, but in the crown. The crown could make and re- peal laws; could appoint rulers and remove them. The colonists were not citizens of the realm. but subjects of the crown, having only such rights as granted them in their charters. The crown claimed and exercised the right to amend or revoke these charters, Such rights and no more did the American colonists have, according to the view of the party in England which stood for legal and constitutional prerogatives of the crown. These claims of the crown were resisted by every col ony as incompatible with its essential rights and by the anti-prerogative party In England, Of the thirteen colonles seven were royal eol- onles, three charter and three proprietary col. onles. Each colony wag related to the others only through the crown. All the conditions tended rather to Intercolonial hate than love. Find the causes that drove the colonies together and there are the causes of the Revolution, George III was a stickler for the kiag's pre rogatives, One of his first acts In relation to the colonies was to revive the navigation and trade laws which had been only nominally enforced for a century. As a matter of fact all the colonies were technically smugglers, in that their evasion of these laws gave them practically free trade. diers ir governor of Massachusetts ling charter of Massa- itinental Congress at Siege of Montgomery. voles to raise chooses 1776 Con- i ! Fai is genera als to end promise Boston have ne trouble not 3 5 po iy + ly took measures yoRton chusetts, The closing of the port of a ° i removal of the seat of government to n Mas- appointment of General Gage as governor of » ™ +1 1 rye ¥ 3 . 4 gsachusetts and the remodeling of the charter of constituted an warning to all the free everywhere On top of Massachusetts ies that government was in danger this act providing that charged with murder or other capital erime should be tried In some other colony or in British officers or magistrates England ; the failed volun act billéting soldiers on peo tarily to provide quarters d the act extend 8 ng Ohio river and the boundaries of Quebec to in establishing an arbitrary form of government. This cumulation of activities on the part of the crown seems to have convinced the colonies that their only salvation lay in getting together for united action. So the First Continental Congress met. This congress was merely deliberative and advisory: It issued a declaration of rights; it importation agreement; it forwarded a petition to the king and set out an address to the onles: it provided for another congress to meet in 1775. Still there was no open discussion of independence. col powder barrel. General Gage summoned the pro vincial congress to meet in Salem, but put off the date of assembling. The delegates met without him and his counsellors, appointment of a committee of safety and issued a call for 12,000 “Minute Men,” Parliament then declared Massachusetts to be In a state of re pellion. Next was the expedition out of Boston to seize powder and to arrest the two chief “trait. ors’. Then came the “shots heard ‘round the world” and bloodshed, The fight was on. And still there wns no open movement for independence until after u year of bloody fighting. It was net until June 7, 1776, In the Second Continental Congreéss, that Virginia's instructed delegate, Richard Hen- ry Lee, introduced the resolution beginning, “That these united colonies are, and of right ought to pe, free and independent states" The Declaration of Independence, as drafted by Thomas Jefferson with the aid of John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Roger Sherman and Robert I. Livingston and amended by congress, consists of two principal parts: A statement of American and a list of abuses by King George III that had operated to absolve the united colonies from all allegiance to the British crown, The facts here in set forth make clear most of the abuses as out. lined In the Declaration. Cigarette To seal in the delicious Burley tobacco flavor. It’s Toasted ep Ld | Ploce 3 a 5 TOO LATE Death only a matter of short time. Don’t wait until pains and aches become incurable diseases. 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