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This woman says that after i months of suffering Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound made her as well as ever. Maude E. Forgie, of Leesburg,Va., . writes to Mrs. Pinkham: " 1 want other suffering women to know what Lj'dia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has done for me. For months I suffered from feminine ilia V) that I thought I could not live. 1 wrote you, and after taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and using the treatment you prescribed I felt like a new woman. I am now ! strong, and well as ever, and thank you for the good you have done me." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN, j For thirty years Lydia E. Pink-1 ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the I standard remedy for female ills, j and has positively cured thousands of i women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera- ! tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear- J ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges fcion, dizziness or nervous prostration i Why don't you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick ' women to write ber for advice. , She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. The Mystery or It. 1 Publican?"And how do you like | being married, John?" j John?"Don't like it at all." , Dnhiioan?"Whv what's the mat 4. " -- > " I , ter wi' she, John?" John?"Well, first thing In the morning It's money; when I goes j 'ome In to my dinner it's money 1 again; and at supper it's the same j Nothing but money, money, money!' Publican?"Well, I never! Wha1 j do she do wi' all that money?" I John?"I dunno. I ain't given hex I any yet."?London Punch. When Coon's Good Eating. A few of those who know how pal- . atable a well cooked coon is wheD J first frozen, then cooked and sea- , soned, have enjoyed a couple sucb i suppers- recently. Plenty ot sweet I riAnnnm O f\1 I puicuues, VIS l CU yci/yci o, a buuvu v> ^ onion and old fashioned cornbread muffins on the side cause your plate to be passed and repassed to the mas- J ter server, who dishes out the tendei ; meat with fork and ladle.?Mexico J Intelligencer. , Poisoning Arrow Heads. An old Cherokee Indian recentb gave away this secret of how the In- ' dians of olden times used to poison ' their arrow heads for war purposes ! or for killing bears. They took a j fresh deer liver, fastened it to a long pole, and then went to certain places where they knew they would find rattlesnakes in abundance. About midday the rattlers are all out o! I their dens, coiled up in the cooking sun. The bucks would poke the first | rattler they found with the liver oc the long pole. A rattler, unlike common snakes, always shows fight in preference to escaping. The snake would thus repeatedly strike at the liver with its fangs until its poison was all used up, whereupon it would quit striking and try slowly to move on. The bucks would then hunt up j another rattler and repeat the performance, keeping up the work until j Che liver was well soaked with snake poison. Then the pole was carried home and fastened somewhere in an ' upright position until the liver be came as urj as a uuue. ine liver was then pounded to a fine powder and placed in a buckskin bag, to be used as needed for their arrows. Thh powvjer W"uld stick like glue to any moistened surface and was death tc any creature which it entered on arrows.?Dundee Advertiser. The linen industry is the greatest manufacturing industry Ireland possesses. There is invested in it something like ?15,500,000, and it gives employment to 70,000 people. BUILT RIGHT Brain and Nerves Restored by Grape* j Nuts Food. The number of uersons whnsp ail. ments were such that no other food could be retained at all, is large and reports are on the increase. "For twelve years i suffered from dyspepsia, finding no food that did not distress me," writes a Wisconsin lady. "1 was reduced from 145 to 90 lbs., gradually growing weaker until I could leave my bed only a short while at a time, and became unable to speak aloud. "Three years ago I was attracted by an article on Grape-Nuts and de ciaeu 10 try it. "My stomach was so weak I could j not take cream, but I used Grape- ; Nuts with milk and lime water. It i helped me from the first, building ur i my system in a manner most aston- ! ishing to the friends who had thought ' my recovery impossible. "Soon 1 was able to take Grape- ! Nuts and cream for breakfast, and 1 lunch at night, with au egg and j U rape-Nuts for dinner. "I am now able to eat fruit, meat ! and nearly all vegetables for dinner, i but fondly continue Grape-Nuts for | breakfast and supper. "At the time of beginning Grape- ! Nuts i could scarcely speak a sentence j without changing words around or j tnik-ine crooked' In some way, but my j brain and nerves have become so 6trengtbeiievl that 1 no longer have that trouble." "There's a Reason." Nnme given by Dostum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Wellvllle." In pkgs. XT F W S i P ROOSEVELT PLANS BIG G AME HU Washington, D. C.?Preside to have a big game hunt in South circumstances prevent. He has t ject with visitors recently. His port, but. to make his stay in Ei Roosevelt will not make a world of Europe. He will not, as re] Zealand. His one plan is for Sout will take a radical reason to kee; re-election, for instance. Cleveland Kin Jailed. Toledo.?William N. Cleveland, aephew of the ex-President, convicted i year ago as an agent of the socalled Bridge Trust, was fined $500 ind sent to jail for five days. Senator Lodge May Preside. Washington, D. C.?That Senator Lodge, of Massachusetts, will be temporary chairman of -the Republican National Convention is regarded here is almost assured. Mercury a Tuberculosis CureWashington, D. C.?That mercury :an be used as an effective weapon igainst tuberculosis is asserted by tfaval Surgeon Barton Lisle Wright !n the latest issue of the United States tfaval Bulletin. Ninety Cent Gas in Washington. Washington, D. C.?A bill providing ninety cent gas for Washington svas reported to the House. It came /rom the Committee on the District 3f Columbia. Commission Rules Chelsea. . Boston.?A bill providing lor ine government of the burned city of Chelsea for the next five years by a commission with powers the same as ;iven the commission at Galveston, Texas, after the disaster in that city, vas agreed upon at a meeting of representative citizens of the city and reported in the Massachusetts House >f Representatives under suspension if the rules. Captain Cowles Promoted. Washington, D. C.?The President nominated Captain William Sheffield Cowles to be a Rear-Admiral. Captain Cowles, who is the President's brother-in-law, is at present Chief of the Bureau of Equipment. Mystery at Stanford University. Stanford University, Cal.?Considerable mystery surrounds the exhuming by unknown persons of a steel coffin containing the body of a woman buried apparently for many years in i little graveyard on the Stanford campus. The reason for the desecration of the grave and the identity oi the dead woman remain a mystery. McKinley Home a Hospital. Cleveland, Ohio.?The McKinles home In Canton has been given tc Bishop Ignatius F. Horstman, of the Cleveland Catholic Diocese, to be used as a non-sectarian hospital, open to every one. It will be known as Mercy Hospital. Straw Hat Causes Broken Nose. Philadelphia.?Because he wore the first straw of the season, Charles Damarat has a broken nose. A crowd Df boys began to throw missiles. One Df the missiles struck him on the aose. rhaw Family Not Aiding Him. Pittsburg, Pa.?It is reiterated here by friends of the Thaw familj that there is no disposition on the part of the immediate family of Harry K. Thaw to assist him in getting out 3f Matteawan. NE-WS R EXPATRIATED ASTOR BOUGHT London.?The flag of the Am was taken by H. M. S. Shannon, . cently sold by auction in this cit; United Service Museum by Willia intimation that Mr. Astor was tt nounced at the auction that the . acting on behalf of an American, mous Balaclava charge was soun als auctioned at the same time al have been presented by him to t Rebellion in India. Simla, India.?A serious native reL-ni? * 4 TnHio eillOU UitS SLO.1 LCU III iiuiiu iuuiu The Mohmand tribe, the best nativa fighters. 10,000 strong, is already ir the field. Many Afghans are joining them. Risings of other tribes are imminent. Chemist Dies of Flague. Guayaquil, Ecuador.?Flores On taneda, a noted European chemist died in this city from bubonic plague which he contracted at the Municipa Laboratory while preparing Haffkine'i prophylactic. Dr. Earth Quits Radicals. Frankfort, Germany. ? Dr. Theo dore Barth and his followers publicl: withdraw from the Moderate Radica party during the National Conventioi which was held here. Cholera Feared in St. Petersburg. St. Petersburg, Russia.?The Pre r\ V DaI lrta Viae? nlonarHftrl t h Q /nH 1UUL Ul JL Vltug uuo ptuvut ?<"v V4v, with stringent regulations, warnin.< the residents of an expected epidemic of cholera. Luzon Men Pygmy Race. Manila.?Frederick Starr, Professo of Anthropology in Chicago Univer sity, says the Negritos of Central Lu zon belong to the same race as th Pygmies of Central Africa. Boycott of Japanese Spreads. Sydney, New South Wales. ? Th< boycott by Chinese of Japanese goods which originated in China as an out come of the Tatsu Maru incident o last February, has reached Sydne; and is practically complete here. n : x ur>ui:i jju^uuu^ i^c^ui^u. St. Petersburg, Russia.?News wa received here that the Persian bri gands who advanced to attack th Russian forces in Persian territor were driven back with heavy losse and retired to the mountains. Dubuque Off to Venezuela. Port-Au-Prince, Haiti.?The Un; ted States gunboat Dubuque saile from here for Venezuela. She wi be employed in carrying dispatche for Mr. Russell, American Minister t Venezuela, to the cable station a Willemstad, Curacoa. General Linevitch Dies. St. Petersburg. Russia. ? Generc Nikolai Petrovitch Linevitch, wh succeeded General Kuropatkin a Commander-in-Chief of the Czar forces in Manchuria in the war wit Japan, died of heart failure followin pneumonia. r????bpo?o?? i?????i >1 WIRENT IN AFRICA. nt Rcosevelt has made up his mind Africa next year unless unforeseen alkecl enthusiastically on the subplan is to sail from an English lgland brief and informal. Mr. tour, nor will he visit the capitals jorted, visit Australia and New h African biggameshooting, and it p him away from that, such as a Lynching at Skidoo. Rhyolite, Nev.?A small band of citizens at Skidoo, fifty-five miles south of here, overpowered the Sheriff's guard in charge of Joseph Simpson, a gambler, who shot and killed James Arnold. They hanged Simpson to a telegraph pole. *r * cm values ms nue ai .jiu. Columbia, Tenn.?W. J. Riggins, a i white man, replevined his wife, formerly Ada Templeton, from her parents. Esquire Farris required a bond of twice the value of the property in question, and Riggins placed a value of $10 on his wife, giving bond in the sum of $20. J Ohio Fears Bloodhounds. Columbus, Ohio. ? The House, shocked at the brutality of the proposition, indefinitely postponed the . Kinsman Senate bill to authorize Sheriffs to keep bloodhounds to trace I criminals. Mildred Brewster Released. Montpelier, Vt.?Mildred Brewster, who shot and killed Anna Wheeler i in this city in 1898, but who was found not guilty of murder because of insanity, was released from the ; insane asylum at Waterbury. Local Option Constitutional. Springfield, 111. ? The Supreme Court decidec the John Bride appeal ! case, holding that the local option law which was passed by the Legislature last year is constitutional in every respect. The court was unanimous in its decision. Bryan Gets Illinois. Springfield, 111.?The Illinois Democracy adopted the unit rule and ' instructed its delegates to the national convention at Denver to vote for William J. Bryan and to "use all honorable means" to secure his nom. ination. Sulzer Bill For Raising Maine. Washington, D. C.?A bill for raising the Maine and the burial of the bodies there entombed was intro duced by Representative Sulzer, ol ! New York. Fall River Mills Reduce Output. Fall River, Mass.?Practically all ' of the cotton mills in rail Kiver navt > decided to adopt a drastic policy oi > curtailing production. , Victim Thrown Under Train. i Manhattan, Kan.?W. W. Hutton principal of the high school, was way laid by three men, beaten into insen' sibility, robbed and thrown under th< i wheels of a train. One of his leg: 11 was cut off. , Eurlington Discharges 5000. i Omaha, Neb.?The Burlingtor Railroad closed all shops in the West discharging 5000 workmen tempor arily. I r Indian Family Drowns. t Shawnee, Okla.?As the result 01 r a cloudburst here an entirp family o ; Kickapoo Indians, consisting of fiv< members, were drowned. \/ A D T C I ? rtULL CHESAPEAKE FLAG. erican frigate, Chesapeake, which June 1, 1813, and which was res', has been presented to the Royal .m Waldorf Astor. This is the first le purchaser of the flag. It was anagent who secured the trophy was The bugle upon which the faded as well as some Crimean medso were bought by Mr, Astor, and he same museum. Fleet to Call Only For Coal. London.?The American fleet o . battleships will not call at any Euro i pean port on its way home, with thi i exception of points in the Mediterra ; nean where it is necessary to stop fo - coal. Pretender Asks Kccogmuon. Casablanca, Morocco.?The Britisl " steamer Penhurst bearing Mulai Ha > fid's mission to the Powers left hen j for Gibraltar. The mission will gi 1 to London and then to Berlin to asl 3 recognition, or intervention wit] France, on behalf of Mulai Hafid, th< so-called Sultan of the South. " Starving Peasants Sec Pope. I Rome, Italy.?The Pope gave a; audience in the Ducal Hall of th Vatican to 1500 fever stricken, hal starved peasants from the Romai Campagna. His Holiness made speech to them, expressing affectioi " for the poor and lowly and promisin; I them financial help to relieve thei > miseries. The peasants cheered am c wept. The Pope was so moved b; their gratitude that he wept while h was blessing them. r Russia Orders Five Warships. London.?The RussianGovernmen - has ordered five warships, each on e to be larger than the Dreadnought from a firm of Clyde shipbuilders. Banker a Suicide. e Paris.?Fritz Perrugia, a'brother i. in-law of Leopold de Rothschild, whi - is prominently identified with the An f glo-Jewish Association of London y committed suicide in his apartment at the Grand Hotel here. Demand Free Trading. s London. ? The conditions unde i- which Great Britain is willing to rec e ognize the anne<ation of the Cong Y Independent State tc Belgium includ s the establishment of free trading an< the abolition of forced labor. To Prosecute "Johanites." i- St. Petersburg. ? The authoritie d of St. Petersburg have decided t 11 prosecute the leaders of the "Johan is ite" sect, whose practices hav o brought the name of Father John, o it Kronstadt, into evil repute. Dozen of men and women who surround th supposed saint have such titles as th Holy Ghost, the Virgin, Archangf il Michael, Mary Magdalene and Joh o the Baptist. ,s s Annamese in Revolt. h Saigon, Indo-China.?The native e in Central Annam have rebelle aeaiDst their (lOTf.rnnr, I "COME AWAY, THEY'LL BE 01 \\ m ft I ?Cartoon b SEX fS DECIDED BY THE WEAKEI i Dr. Romme Supports His Law With Statistics Prove His ) 100 BOYS ARE BORN 1 i Proportion Found Identical After a Gr ' London.?Dr. Romme, the eminent I [ physiologist, has compiled statistics v which prove, he maintains, that a boy n is born when the father is the weaker a of the two parents and a girl when t the mother is the weaker partner. o Dr. Romme has been investigating v the question of sex for many years, y ' and his announcement of the law as b ' he has discovered it and his statistics ti [ have caused widespread interest and e discussion. He declares it to be a n universal law of nature that the child tl resembles the weaker and not the I stronger of its parents. 5 In all countries the proportion is f found to be almost identical, namely, ^ 105 or 106 girls to 100 boys. The ^ nniv ovrpntirm is fonnd after a ereat war. This Is because the best and , strongest men are sent to the front, ^ - while the weakest remain behind, q - The physiologist declares that nat} ure's purpose is to replace the weaker 3 individual with another of the same M sex before he or she disappears. More Boys When War Rages. f( Among barbarous nations, contin- s 1 ually at war, there is always a pre- t< ponderance of boys over girls. When c " an old man marries a young wife it is s a proved fact that more boys than s girls are born, the opposite being the a case when the wife is much older ti 1 than the husband. S 1 To every 1000 girls born, Dr. a a TYPESETTING NEXT B' Wireless Photography Demi setting Soon to Be?To Op< r j in Paris by Wireless W I London.?That he has already per- Q I fected an invention by which he can tl ; set type in an ordinary linotype ma- o chine in Paris by wireless waves p thrown from London was the surprising statement made at the Hotel Cecil r by Hans Knudsen, the Danish inven- p tor, famous for his achievements with o liquid air, after giving the first public demonstration of long-distance wire- o i less photography. r j "I shall publicly demonstrate my f; f new wireless typesetting invention u - within a few weeks," said Mr. Knud- tl a sen. "I have already had the first c - machine constructed, and it has t! r proved successful, setting 3000 words tl ! an hour, at a distance, just as if the a : operator were working the machine. ii "The time is not far distant when, i with my invention, the London corre- t< ! spondents of the New York newspa- p " pers will be able to send their news ? straight to the printing press through e the Marconi operator." si In the course of his demonstration ti * of wireless photography Mr. Knudsen c e sent photographs of the Klug, la BIG TALKERS AR a e f Londoner Says Garrulity C; 1 Nervous D a a | London.?That excessive talking is j 1< g the cause 01 many nervuus uiacaaco i, r and for the increasing amount of in- d i sanity affecting modern society is the c y interesting theory elaborated before g e the Psycho-Therapeutic Society by the Rev. B. S. Lombard, a London vi- v car. who has studied the subject. r "An enormous amount of vital en- d t orgy is wasted in talking," said the e vicar. "An excessive talker is a hu- p man vampire who saps the vital en- p orgy of those about him. People si-1 a Women Will Farm It in V an Adanilcss Eden. 0 Chicago.?Twenty self-supporting women formed an organization to be p jj J known as the Art Craft Colony, their A " objcct being to take up and settle p upon Government irrigation lands in n the West. ' t The funds were subscribed suffi- e t ciently to make entry upon 1G0 acres c each. The membership includes rep- n o resentatives of the dressmaking, mile linery and metal working crafts and s i several who have devoted tneinseives n to farming and poultry raising. li Women in the Day's News. 3 A visiting Japanese says American d girls are the best in the world. tl l" Mary McGhee Snell Hall, a widely ? known lecturer and evangelist, died c 1 at Talufarrias, Texas. s e Mrs. Charles Lever (nee Hawley) tl e was astounded to learn in Paris that I her brothers in Now York have sued o I fnr ?"!i nnn fnr breach of con- y n ivi y i w | v w v --tract. a A Vienna dispatch says that Count n Gizyckl, who married the only daugh>9 ter of Robert W. Patterson, publisher c (ji of the Chicago Tribune, has sued for r a aenaration. ti JT OF STYLE NEXT YEAR." 'tl irr .. r*> y De Mar, in the Philadelphia Record. H PARENT, A SCIENTIST SAYS Discovery of Nature's > That Seemingly Theory. 'O EVERY 105 GIRLS In All Countries Except eat War. f lomme says, there are 865 boys rhen the father is younger than the lother; 948 boys when both parents re of the same age; 1037 boys when he father is from one to six years lder than the mother; 1267 boys .'hen the father is from sit to eleven ears older than the mother; 1474 oys when the father is from eleven d sixteen years older than the mothr, and 1632 boys when the father is lore than sixteen years older than he mother. Worry May Turn the Scale. Dr. Romme asserts that there are Tactically no instances where the trength of both parents is equal. Vorry, illness, any slight trouble, is ufflcient to turn the scale. Kaiser Wilhelm, he points out, had ive sons in succession, while the Izarina had four daughters in succesion. Dr. Romme avers that he is nable to find a single instance in rhich his rule has been transgressed. It is, in fact, a repetition in another arm of Professor Schenck's famous ex theory under which he proposed 3 increase the stamina and the red orpuscles in a parent when the deire was to beget a child of the oppoite sex. Thus the Czarina, wanting male successor to the Russian I hrone, was subjected to Professor I chenck's nourishing treatment, with j n ultimately sucessful result. I / WIRELESS WAVES onstrated, Wireless Typecrate Linotype Machines aves From London. iueen and Kaiser from one room in j tie hotel through the wall Into an- ! ther, without wires, the pictures I roving recognizablei He had constructed in the first j oom a transmitter with a needle I oint passing over a picture prepared ( n a glass plate from a photograph. The needle continually vibrated ver the plate, according to the oughness or smoothness of the surice. A succession of electric waves fas accurately recorded by a plate on tie wall. These waves were in turn augnt oy anoiaer receiving piaw m i he adjoining room after passing tirough the wall, the picture being ! ccurately recorded by the receiving | istrument on a smoked glass plate. From this plate recognizable phojgraphs were printed on sensitized aper. "I claim I can send pictures wHerver Marconi can send messages," aid Mr. Knudsen. "Within a short ime I shall be sending pictures of riminals and finger prints from Engnd to New York." E DANGEROUS. suscs Insanity and Other diseases. jnt by nature are seldom ill. A large ercentage of the victims of nervous isease are great talkers, who disuss imaginary ailments until they of thorn " Dr. Stenson Hooker supported the icar in a recommendation that one oom be set aside in each of the Lonon hospitals for silent treatment. Neither of the gallant speakers articularly . mentioned the talking roclivities of women in his argument gainst garrulity. Vonmu Wants to Start a Lion Farm in California. San Jose. Cal.?Provided the Suervisors of this county are willing, Itne. Emma Schnell, of circus fame, lans to found a lion breeding farm ear here, with the view o.f supplying lie demands of circuses and menag ries. The County Clerk Is in reeipt of protests from farmers in the eighborhood. "Why, there is no real danger," aid the famous lamer. "This valley as the right climate, and I know my ions would enjoy it and thrive." The Field of Sports. Roseben on his first appt-arance his season ran fourth. Harvard defeated Annapolis at !arosse by a score of 7 to 1. Automobilists favor the holding of tie tsriurcuu uupuy race anu ia.ii?. | London's coaching season was pened by the wealthy Argentinian enor Don Martinez de Hoz, the inuguration of whose service was witessed by Mr. A. G. Vanderbilt. Lewis Strang, in an Italian Isotta ar, won the Brlarcliff automobile ace. Cedrinowas second and Vaughn hird. I i 325 NEWLY IDE GRAVES " in 111 i/F- nr Tnniunnrfl IN WAKt Ut" lUKNAUUtS! Relief Funds Started Throughout South to Succor Homeless. rORTY-SIX TOWNS SHATTERED Death List Pnt at 350?Twelve Hundred Persons Were Hurt, While Thousands Are Homeless?Hundreds of Houses Blown to Pieecs. New Orleans. ? With about 325 newly made graves in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama, the dead in the tornadoes in these States is not believed to exceed 350. About 1200 were Injured. Cities on all sides of the tornado belt prepared to ship supplies and money to the homeless. New Orleans sent food to Amite, La., where the supply was practically exhausted. Amite, Purvis and several other I stricken towns were given bad scares by heavy winds, but . the only fatali- 1 ties reported were four negroes killed. The storm was peculiar in that it traveled in circles. It struck Georgia with terrific force for a second time. Floods have followed, and in some cities mills and street car service have suspended. The financial loss will aggregate several million dollars in Mississippi, Louisiana', Alabama and Georgia. 'me totals or aeatns, misery ana ruin caused in four Southern States by the tornado have now come to hand in approximately correct form. Briefly stated they.are: Killed?About 350. Injured, painfully or seriously? 1200. Homeless?Several thousand. Towns reporting serious wreckage ?46. Habitations and business houses practically ruins in these towns? About 2500. The above figures do not include the wreckage on plantations and farms, scores of which were struck and damaged. The number of dead will never be known accurately, for the reason that about 300 of them were negroes and they were buried In many communities without careful records being made of their numbers. By following the wreckage of towns the general direction' of the tornadoes can be traced closely. Apparently the storm struck in three ( separate currents, each describing the arc of a circle and traveling toward the northeast. Why the fatalities were so unusually large is apparent from a glance at the photographs which have arrived here from many portions of the tornado belt. They all tell the same story. Whole blocks cf what were formerly little residences and cabins lie spread over the ground in separate boards. If a huze lumber pile had been scattered over these areas the number of boards unattached to anything else could scarcely hare been greater. Many of these planks show very few breaks where they were separated from the other construction. Under this mass of wreckage many hundred persons were buried, uot one in a hundred escaping without some injury. The houses which were thus scattered about were mostly negro habitations. Thfs week has been one of relief measures throughout the wrecked district. The ruined towns have been visited by thousands of spectators, many of whom went with a few dollars in their pockets to distribute among the needy. Sheds made from the wreckage have become the homes of hundreds. Small parties of men nn hnrsphark havft zona throueh country districts, taking inventories of the assistance needed and rendering aid where it was most necessary. At least a dozen relief funds have been started in as many cities and towns. Following i:; a list by States of forty-six towns reporting more or less damage: Louisiana?Lucerne, Kenmore, Lamourie, Richland, Amite, Essie, Pine, Angie, Franklinton, Sheridan, Avard, Eunice. Mississippi ? Gilles Bend, Purvis, Churchill, Lorman, Tillman, Melton, Baxterville, Braxton, Sunflower, Wahalak, Wingate, Columbus, Walls, Fairchilds Creek, Quitmans Landing, McLaurin, McCailum, Winchester, Pine Ridge. Georgia?Columbus, Chipley, La Grange, Harris, Griffin, McDough. Locust Grove, Cedartown, Cave Springs. Alabama?Albertville, Highmound, Patton, Leesburg, Settlement, Blountsville. Nineteen Mississippi towns were hit hard by the tbrnadoes, while a dozen were badly damaged in Louisiana. Georgia reports nine towns Vilf wlillii ilahama hari eiv tnwn? hit Arkansas reports one. President Roosevelt telegraphed Govenor Noel, of Mississippi, offering ; aid, which, was acknowledged by the Governor. Governor Noel was advised that there were 140 people in Purvis whose condition was desperate, and he has ordered all the available tents in Jackson hurried to the scene. The relief work in Purvis is progressing satisfactorily under volunteer committees. In Amite City, La., .t^nts have been supplied and the distribu- ( tion of rations is carried out with system. ENGLAND BURIED IN SNOW. Drifts Eight Feet Deep in Jinny Parts of Kingdom. ( London. ? A remarkable snowstorm, the wor3t the south of Eng- ; land has known since 1S81, contin- | ;'ed practically all over the United Kingdom for two days and nights, accompanied by a violent northerly gale and low temperature. In many + Vv /-? + o n r*r\ ftiorhf H PPTV ' piCL'JCO II1C UllUO u.i c ? tr Many of the outlying districts are isolated and some deaths from exposure are reported. Enormous damage has baen done Personal Effects of Late President McKinli'y Divided Among His Heirs. Canton, Ohio.?The home of President Mckinley was formally transferred to Mrs. Rose C. Klorer, of Canton, the price being $21,000. The sale was effected through Miss Helen McKinley electing to take the property under appraisement of $20,000. . Personal eff^rs of the late Presi- ( dent, including many presents re- j ceived by him during the famous 1906 front porch campaign and later J while in the White House, are being < Idivided among the five heirs of the President, and will be scattered. ] % -1 > One of the Essentials of the happy homes of to-day is a vast fund of information as to the best methods of promoting health and happiness and * right living and knowledge of the world's best products. Products of actual excellence and reasonable claims truthfully presented and which have attained to world-wide acceptance through the approval of the "* Well-Infonned of the World; not of iqjlividuals only, but of the many who have the happy faculty of selecting and obtaining the best the world affords. ? One of the products of that class, of known component parts, an Ethical remedy, approved by physicians and commended by the Well-informed of the World as a valuable and wholesome family laxative is the well-known Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine, manu- > factured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading druggists. A GENTS WANTED?Either Rex-earn from 823 to 830 per week, selling our new style* exquisitely embroidered ponxee silk shirt walscpatterns. dress patterns, etc. NATIONAL IMPORTING COMPANY, C95-9 Broadway. New York. H^Thompson'sEyeWater WIDO WS'un<3er N EW LAW Obtained toy JOHN W. MORRIS, PENSIONS Washington, D. 0. I A Statesman's Reply. Wisdom and wit are about evenly balanced in an utterance of the Chancellor of the Exchequer, which lately went the rounds in England. Mr. Asquith was recently speaking in a Welsh town, when he was somewhat rudely interrupted by a voice in the audience, which demanded ttr know his position as to woman's suffrage. "That," Mr. Asquith , replied, blandly, "is a subject.I prefer to discuss when ladies are not present"? Youth's Companion. m / Railways of Siam. The railways of Slam have a total length of about 485 miles, Including 125 miles of line just built. Of this total 390 miles have standard gauge, while ninety-flve miles have metre gauge (three feet three and threeeighths Inches). The operation i* quite profitable. Passenger receipt* constitute about two-thirda of the total receipts, and ninety-eight pei cent, of the passenger traffic is thirdclass.?Philadelphia Record. During the year of 1907 the total " number of vessels ariving in New York from foreign ports was 4749. of which only 726 were American, while 2039 were British and 710 German. v BABY'S AWFUL ITCHING HUMOR. Nothing Would Help Him?Mother Almost in Despair-?Owes Quick Cure to Cuticura. "Several months ago, ray little boy began to break out with itching sores. I doctored him, but as soon as 1 got them healed up in one place they would break out in another. I was almost in despair. I could not get anything that would help him. Then I began to use Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment, and after using them three times the sores commenced to heal. He is now well, and not a scar is left on his body. They have never returned nor left him with bad blood, as one would think. Cuticura Remedies are the best I have ever tried, and I shall highly recommend them to any one who is suffering likewise. Mrs. William Geeding, 102 Washington St., Attica. Ind., July 22, 1907." The Vatican coutains a thousand rooms . and covers* thirteen acres of ground. FITS, St. Vitus' Dance, Nervous Diseases permanently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise (ree. Dr.H.R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St.,Phila..Pa. The Burning Rag is the name given to a small sloop just built at Bluffton, S. C. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens thegums.reducesintiamma- B tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle I For every ton of gold in circulation there are fifteen^tons of silver. I Do Yoar Feet Ache and Burn?\ S Shake into your shoes Allen's Foot-Ease,E powder for the feet. It makes tight or new shoes feel easy. Cures Corns, Bunions, jfi Swollen, Hot, Smart ing and Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nails, bold by all druggists I and shoe stores, 25 cts. Sample sent Fhee. h Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy. N. Y. I ,The electric tramways of the City B of Mexico have been chartered by a I company with $4,000,000 capital. B Electric light plants are being con- Q structed at Juchitan and Oaxaca, and ? light and power plants on the Isth- I mus of Tehauntepec. I $100 Reward, $100. 3 The readers of this paper will bepleased to I thorn is at one dreaded di?- B) icaiu i>uav vuv4u .w %.? ease that science had been able to cure in all ita stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure noxv known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. HaU'sCatarrhCureis taken internally, acting directly upou the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in do!ag ita work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0. ? ?i n in* Sold nJ ail J-?ru|{(jiaio, (v/t. Take Hall's Family ['ills for constipation. Immigration into Canada last year numbered 277,376 persons, an increase of 61,43 4 over the previous year. The number from the United States was 56,551, a decrease of 7231. WOMEN'S KIDNEYS. Are the Source of .Most of Women's Sickness. Mrs. Rebecca Mock, 1795 E. Rich Street, Columbus, Ohio, writes: "1 believe 1 would still jaWwch be a victim of kidML _ ?l ney troubles but for W Doan's Kidney Pills, 3 for when I started ^?. using them I was In constant pain with my ?i?7Jpl 'Uf back, and no other "y V V remedy had been of iny use. The kidney secretions were Irregular, and 1 was nervous and lacked energy. But Doan's Kidney Pills gave me prompt relief and continued use cured me." Sold b'y all dealers. 50 cents a box. iWaf.Mfihiipn P,n_. Buffalo. N. Y.