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/ BRILLIA Orient, fx; with ne\ ment, is the n have secured e will print in The C from E is probably the fascinating st< thus far come of Harold Mat plot, starting \ of a rare and b A American auv its Moslem ow to an America MacGrath's i stroke of origi You will enjoy fortunes of th< of American: dangers amid surroundings East, and wh< only to be invc QTll complications. The Carpet from Bagdad A swiftly moving tale of adventure BY The Carpet from Bagdad Watch for the Opening Installment! You Ought to Read The Carpet from Bagdad Reveal Their Own Shame. It has been the unpleasant task of the Record for the lust thirty years to bring to the attention of the voters of the country tho systematic u& baucheries practiced by Republican campaigners In the use of vast sumi of moeey for carrying elections. To gather together the proofs of corrup tion from unwilling witnesses and to cite last year misdoing as a warning against this-year and next-year repeti tions has been a labor of difficulty now happily no longer necessary. The NT tale of the ill of color and rer a dull mo iew serial we md which we installments. arpet agdad best and most Dry that has from the pen ;Grath. The vith the theft oly rug by an enturer from /rter anrl sold n collector, is most salient nality. following the e little group s who maet the strange of the Near 3 come home r )lved in more i remarkable heOpenina ! Wll1! \ y?\ui % 1 1 The Carpet from Bagdad 1 1 ?? I y4n absorbing tale of adven ture in the Moslem country ll Is g> 1 0 k? ByHAKULU BlALUKAin Smugglers, card-sharks, an ancient rug and a caravan in the desert are some of the in gredients out of which the author has com pounded this story of love and exciting adventure we are about to print as our next serial. You will thoroughly enjoy every tnttallfhcnl. Be sure you get the issue with the first chapter Record can find better employment for Its employes. The Taft and Roose velt shouters and statisticians are busy In uncovering mutual default and oriminality. They are diving into the I records of past campaigning income and outgo and publishing the scandal ous truth. There never waa, nor ever will be, a more shameless exhibit since Sodom and Gomorrah.?Fhiladel* phia Record. The man who marries for itoaey sells his liberty.?Proverb. A female optimist la a woman wht marries a poet. A preat majority of summer ills are due to Malaria in suppressed form. Las situde and headaches are but two symp toms. OXIDINE eradicates the Malaria germ and tones up the entire system. Adv. Those love truth best who to them selves a*e true, and what they dare to dream of, dare to do.?James Rus sell Lowell. For SUMMER HEADACHES Hicks' CAPUDINE is the best remedy no matter what causes them?whether from the heat, sitting in draughts, fever ish condition, etc. 10c., 25c and 50c per bottle at medicine stores. Adv. Rural Fat. "Sims never made a big hit He ]ust piougnea ma way aiong. "What a harrowing life!" TO DBITTE OUT MALARIA AND BUILD UP THE 8T9TBM Take the Old 8iandard 0BOVM8 TA8TKLB89 HILL TONIC. Tod know what yon aro taking, be formula Is plainly printed on erery bottle, showing Ills simply Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form, and the must efo'-tnal form, for grown people and children, 60 cents. Adv. Complimentary. "What would you call it in a man to steal all my ideas?" "Petty larceny." * As a summer tonic there is no medicine that quite compares with OXIDINE. It not only builds up the system, but taken reg ularly, prevents Malaria- Regular Or Taste less formula at Druggists. Adv. Wrong Guess. Nan?I've seen your new young man, and I should call him a diamond in the j rough. Fan?Well, he's susceptible of some polish, I'll admit, but you haven't classified him correctly; he's a Jasper. CXATMS BABEK SAVED HIS LIKE. | Mr. Chas. W. Miller, of Washington, D. C., writes of Elixir Bubekt "I can heartily testify to the virtue of | your preparation known as Babek. as I | consider that it was the means of my recovery from a bad case of Intermit tent fever and the saving of my life." What it did for him it can do for you, if you suffer from any form of malaria. Elixir Bnhek, 50 cents, all druggists, or Kloczewski & Co., Washington, D.C. Adv. Youthful Woman Pastor. Rev. Miss Ina L. Morgan of the Methodist church of Georgetown and Arrowsic, Me., is the youngest woman i pastor in New England. She is in her ; early twenties and has been engaged ; in church work for nearly four years, i having received a license in 1908 from j Bishop John W. Hamilton of Worces ter. New Stage In Inebriety. Mr. Borden has been telling an an ecdote concerning two "brither j Scots" who used to / foregather in a "dry" district, each bringing with him i a portable spring of comfort in the shape of a bottle of whisky. One of them was asked one day by a "third party" whether the other, j Jock Anderson, did not get a little i drunk sometimes. "Drunk," was the reply. "Man, the i last time I was wi' him Jock was that drunk I couldna see him."?Lon don Mail. Getting Along Fine at School. Now that school has been "goin" . several weeks parents are beginning to inquire of their young hopefuls as to their progress. The other day a ; mother out on Harrison boulevard, while eating luncheon with her 6-year- j old, asked: "And how are you getting along in ; school, Dorothy?" "Oh," replied Dorothy between mouthfuls of bread and milk, "just j fine! I and Frances Smith are the j smartest and best dressed girls in j the school."?Kansas City Star. HAD ALREADY LEARNED. " 1 I'll 1 -- v L?JS-J. "I hear your son's at college learn In' to be a author. Do you expect he'll soon learn to write for money?" j "Humph! He don't do nothln* else I now." IT'S THE FOOD. Thev True Way to Correct Nervous Troubles. Nervous troubles are more often 1 caused by Improper rood ana maiges- j tlon than most people imagine. Even j doctors sometimes overlook this fact i A man says: | "Until two years ago waffles and butter with meat and gravy were the main features of my breakfast. Finally ' dyspepBia came on and I found myself j in a bad condition, worse in the morn- j lng than any other time. I would have a full, sick feeling in my stomach, I with pains in my heart, sides and head. "At times I would have no appetite, j for days, then I would feel ravenous, ! never satisfied when I did eat and so ! nervous I felt like shrieking at the j top of my voice. I loBt flesh badly and j hardly knew which way to turn until : one day I bought a box of Grape-Nuts food to see if I could eat that. I tried It without telling the doctor, and liked j it fine; made me feel as if I had some- , thing to eat that was satisfying and ! still I didn't have that heavinesi that j I had felt after eating any other food. ! "I hadn't drank any coffee then in ; five weeks. I kept on with the Grape- ! Nuts and in a month and a half I had gained 15 pounds, could eat almost anything I wanted, didn't feel badly after eating and my nervousness was all gone. It's a pleasure to be well again." Name given by Postunc Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read the book, "The Road to Wellville,'* in pkgs. "There's a reason." Ever rend the above letter? A nrrv one appenr* from time to time. They nre prrnulne, true, and fall of human Interest. Adv. PARALLEL n STORIES r sf FAMOUS E e CRIMES 1 F r j By HENRY C. TERRY I. M (Copyright br THE LAST OF THE RED PEPPER THIEVES. T has been but a few months since New York city rang with the story of two bank piessengers held up in a taxicab, beaten and robbed of $25,000 right un der the shadow of Trinity spire. It brought instantly to my mind another sensa tional robbery that took place exactly at the same spot more than twenty-five years ago. The details, strange to relate, were almost exact'y similar except that the former thieves did not, of course, at tack a taxicab. But they more than doubled the taxicab robbers' haul, get ting $53,000. They were widely known as the last of the famous "Red Pepper Gang." Their capture follow ed as swiftly as did that of the re cent robbers. , It was my privilege to talk both with Phil Heinrich, one of the gang, and with Detective Dalton, who was instrumental in their capture. Their stories form a unique chapter in the annals of crime, and prove that crime, like the Paris fashions, moves in circles. PHIL HEINRICH'S STORY. "It is my firm belief," said Phil Helnrlch, "that there is more philos ophy among crooks than In any other class of people. They take- what comes In their way In a moral sense as well as In a physical sense, with out complaint. I have seen the work of years go in a second without a murmur. I know a gang of crooks who spent four years laying an outfit k for a bank and then got dumped in the end, and I never heard a whimper from any of them. "I had a bit of this sort of luck my self and know how It feels. I found that I took disappointment as well as the best of them and did not want anybody's sympathy. I was at that time running a counterfeiting layout in partnership with Sam Ellis. We had put up some very fine work in Philadelphia. "We ran out an edition of twos, fives and tens In government notes which were beauties In every way. I. tell you the work was so good that we could have passed the bills on ourselves without knowing it "Instead of turning out our work 1n two years, it was nearly four be fore we got the plates Just right, and got a good imitation paper to use for printing. We ran off a big wad of money, and put it in circulation as rapidly as possible. Just when we got things running beautifully, and it looked like a million a year, a bloom ing Are hit our house, and all the plates, paper and presses were de stroyed as well as the mute servant. "We did not carry any insurance, and we had to write up a total loss. We managed to get most of the plates out of the ruins in order to put them out of the way to avoid arousing sus picion, dui everyuung wan uui vietm ed up, and the secret service men began to get suspicious. Some of the money that we had put out got to Washington, and it made a terrific muss, hut they did not get near to us, although there was a lot of talk about the game being worked in Philadel phia. "It was useless, for a time, to think about putting another counterfeiting layout to work in this country, so Sam and I went up to Buffalo and got a few samples of Canada money to experiment with. The best bill that^ I saw for our purpose was the $10 Canadian bank note. It was a pretty bill, not nearly as cleverly put up as one of Uncle Sam's $10 notes, and we decided to give It a test. We got a new set of toolB, and laid out for a two years' job. We worked with the greatest care so as to avoid injuring a. plate If possible, and we had mag nificent luck. I never did such good work in my life, and I never saw Sam in quite such fine trim. "In Just eighteen months we turned out a plate which, I'll bet, would have been accepted by the government of ficials of Canada as the genuine arti cle. There appeared to be a great wad of dust in this layout for us, but before a single bill was laid down the pair of us got the collar. It all came through an Inquisitive and gabby plumber, who was sent to our house to repair a broken pipe. He saw a lot of things during our absence which he did not know anything ^ about, and got to firing off his mouth in bar rooms in Buffalo. "His talk in some way reached the ears of the Treasury agents, and Sam and I were caught red-handed. It was the greatest throw-down I ever got, but when we got a chance Sam and I shook handa^and smiled at our bad luck. He had not a word of com plaint to make, nor had I. I'll bet that there never were two men who lost a fortune so easily and kept more even tempers. "It looked a good deal like working for the state for about twenty years, but I did not lose heart. When I got Into the Erie county jail I studied the situation of affairs very carefully, and I saw that I had more than an even chance of getting a peep of sunshine again. I set up communication with a friend of mine. When I was taken to the court to plead jny friend shook me heartily by the hand. Incidentally he slipped up my sleeve In front o! the bright-eyed coppers some very small tools which would be of great service to me. I took the precaution of putting them away in case I should be searched on entering the jail. I got through all right, and divided my < toolB with Sam, who had a cell on the same tier with me, about twenty-flve : feet away. My tools consisted of a set of the finest steel band saws and a little box of acid to soften the iron rHE CRIMINAL Tells How He Planned the )eed and Sought to Close )very Avenue of Knowl dge Leading to His Guilt, 'he Detective Shows How utile These Efforts Were and [ow the Old Adage, Murder Vill Out, "Always Holds Good." F. L. Nelson and muffle the buzz of the saws when at work. "It took three nights to get through with everything except the automatic bolt which locks all the cells. After learning that Sam had made as good progress as I had, we arranged It to go through the last bolt before mid night and be ready to make a break as soon as possible after the mid night change in the watch. I got to work on the automatic bolt when the lights were put out early in the eve ning, and by 1 o'clock in the morn ing I could shift my bolt in good shape. I tried the door and found that it opened easily. After the guard made the rounds I slipped into the corridor. A moment later Sam ap peared. "We had our plans all laid.^ I en tered . his cell. We waited for the guard to come round again, and as he passed the door we seized him from behind, dragged him into the cell and put him to sleep with a crack on the skufl with an iron bar. I put on his official coat and hat, took his kevs. unlocked the door to a store room and sent in the half-hour signal to the main office. Sam used the saws as quickly as possible to go through the bars on the' window, while I made the regular tour of the guards' corridor. "I had to go within twenty feet of another guard, but covered my face with my handkerchief during an as sumed fit of coughing, and ran the gauntlet in good shape J When Sam got through the bars I brought two sheets to him, which he made into a rope, while I made my last tour. "When I got back to the room ev erything was in readiness. We slid down the rope to the top of the prison wall. It was an easy drop from there to the ground and we got away. It was a very cold night and/ we forced an entrance into a clothing store and got a new outfit. We decided that it was best for us to go it alone and ! make a line for New York. "We were flat brdke and had to get money somewhere. We fixed up a bit and tumbled onto a darling scheme the very first day out.. Two young fellows, as we were passing the First National bank shortly after 3 o'clock, came out carrying a bag. They showed by their manner that they were on an important mission. We laid for them for two days, and found that they carne out regularly each day with the bag. Then we fixed our play. "We waited for them to appear on the third day In Trinity church yard, and when they started up Broadway we got them before they had gone a block Stepping quickly up behind, each picked out a man and gave him a handful of red pepper in his eyes. They dropped the bag like a shot, and before they had time to yell I picked It up and we got lost In the crowd. It was a safe play to make a break for the Liberty street ferry with the bag as if we were going to take a train on the Central. I unloaded the bag in the lavatory and got Just $53, 000 for the day's work." DETECTIVE DALTON'S STORY. "I had the very great pleasure," said Detective Dalton, "of running down about the last of the Important red-pepper sneaks. "I saw the two messengers about three hours after the robbery. They were In a terrible condition. Their minds 'were In such shape that they gave me half a dozen different ver sions of the way the robbery hap pened, and as many descriptions of the thieves. I could sympathize with them, and knew that It would be hours, perhaps days; before rthey would have sufficient control of their senses to tell an Intelligent story. ] About the only thing which they agreed upon in their delirious ravings was that there were two thieves. "Knowing that it is customary for thieves before carrying out a robbery of this kind to study the situation carefully and lay plans for the at-' ( tack and escape, I hunted all over J the neighborhood of the bank to find some one, if possible, who had seen ' any suspicious-looking persons. I only 1 learned enough to confuse me, as so 1 many people had seen men who might have been the thieves. If all their stories were accepted there ( probably were one hundred crooks In lower Broadway several days before 1 the robbery. It Is remarkable how 1 little evidence can be picked up about an occurrence which, In the natural 1 order of things, ought to have been 1 seen by at least fifty men. The rob- i bery occurred in broad daylight at an < hour when the street is most crowd- ) ed. Yet after a long search I only 1 found one person, who had seen any- ?' thing which might be of value. I ran ? across a street vender who must have been within twenty-five feet of the J messengers when thty were attacked. < "He did not see the assault, but a t second later, and before he under stood what had happened, he saw two men, very well dressed, hurry across Broadway and turn down Ce- t dar street toward tne Nortn river. That was the natural course which c thieves who knew their business I would have taken. The vender had a a pretty fair idea of the appearance of the two men and their clothing. 1^ W'th that as a guide I went through r Cedar street. I traced the men to c West street by witnesses who had t noticed them moving quickly as if c they were in a hurry to catch a train, t but lost track of them in West street a until I reached the Liberty street r ferry. Then I picked up the very clue I was after. "The ticket agent had seen the men, and his attention was attracted t to them particularly because in buy- d ing a lioket for Scranton one of them took some money out of a bag. This f vaa red-hot stuff. A moment later i itruck something better. While learching for information from the erry hands I ran across a porter who lad found a valise in the lavatory and lad taker, it to the lost and found de )artment. It did not take me iong to jet there and see that bag. It was a nedium-sized affair, and had been ound unlocked and empty. There was 10 mark on it to indicate where it lad come from. ,1 sent it to the bank md in a few moments received word :hat it was the bag which had been ised by the'messengers. "That point being cleared 1 up, I lext started the telegraph lines work ng, and kept them hot until the train lispatcher held up the Scranton train it a station, and got the conductor on the wire. He had noticed every one on the train, simply as a matter of business, soon after leaving Jersey City. He was positive that no person answering the descriptions of either 3f the men who had brought the bog to the ferry house had been on board liis train. This settled beyond reason- ' able doubt that the thieves had not left the city, at least by that route. "The porter who had found the bag had got a very good look at the two men. He remembered them even more ' accurately because he had associat ed them with the loat bag. His de scription tallied with that given by the street vender, except that he gave more complete detaile. In thinking it pver it suddenly struck me that I had read a similar description somewhere. [ could not place It until the next day. Then it came over me like a flash. . What I had seen was the alarm which had been sent out at the request of the Erie county police giving the de scriptions of Sam Elliis and Phil Hein rich, fugitives from Justice. "The case then appeared perfectly plain to me. Ellis and Heinrich, after leaving Buffalo, had come to New York instead of going to Canada, as U.J t- . 11 V-11^ -J rn^ATf uuu ueeu seuerany lkjimjvw. luejr probably had adopted the red-pepper Bcheme of robbery In order to raise money at once, since their scheme had been frustrated to flood Canada with counterfeit money. The job waB not exactly In the line of either of the men, but they were, I knew, fully competent to undertake anything In any.branch of thievery. "Unfortunately the newspapers got hold of the story ol' the finding of the bag and the description of the men. This was, of course, sufficient warn ing to the team of worthies to, dive deeper into their hole, and made my work so much harder. How was I to get to Ellis and Helnrlch? I did not know. They were a cunning lot, and I knew I had a stiff game. "I knew all the haunts of both men. and after pitting on some togs to suit the occasion I spenjt my days andi nights bumming around booking tips.' It was slow work, but It was jail that could be done. I got in with la lot of people and heard all the gossip that was going on among crooks, but It was over a month before I heard any thing of importance. I had to go very quietly In order not to excite suspicion. I did not dare to ask lead ing questions of anybody or I might have eot a tiD sooner. "One evening, while I was having some oysters in Billy the Bite's in Wooster street. Jack Griffin came in. A few moments later in came his old friend, Reddy 'the Blacksmith. They were both friends of Ellis and Hein rich. To my utter amazement Griffln began telling in my presence about the arrest of both Ellis and Heinrich In Pittsburgh for fighting and clean ing out a joint. Griffln was with them, but had got away safely. Both men were sent to the county prison for thirty days under fictitious names. I ate my oysters without any show of hurry, but I need not tell you that I did not lose any time when I reached the street. "I notified headquarters and took the first train for Pittsburgh. I got , there jnst In time to learn that the two men had been discharged upon ball after appealing their case. I knew that they were going to skip the town, and Just fey a flyer I hur- ! rled to their lawyer's office. Luck 1 waB with me, and I met Ellis and J Helnrlch coming out with a satchel.' ! I followed them until I met a police- | man and then closed In with them. I ' covered them with a gun while the ! policeman put on the handcuffs, and | then we locked them up. It took a , three months' fight In court to land j them here, but finally they were tried j and sent away for twenty years." The Cltpsydra of Canton. 1 One of the most extraordinary , clocks in the world is the clepsydra, j or water clock, of Canton, in China, j , rhis time-teller is housed in a temple j i on the city walls and is a sight no ! traveler to the Chinese city ever j 1 fails to' take in. In a hall called the "Temple of j < rime" are four big earthen jars plac- I ed upon shelves. The fourth and low- j i p>8t ona has a wooden cover. This, | together with the others, constitutes I the whole clepsydra. The water descends by slow drops j j 'rom one jar to another, the brass | scale on a float In the last crock tell- I ing the hours as It rises. It Is said j ' :hat during every afternoon since the rear 1321 A. D. the lowest jar has been emptied, the upper one filled, j md the clock thus "wound up" for | mother day. Boards with the number of the hour i I ire displayed on the outside wall, in ! jrder that all passers-by may know i 1 Jie time. Antidote for Toilet Water? "What is an antidote for toilet wa er?" This question was asked in an ex ited feminine voice over the tele ihone at the board of health recently, md cold water was recommended. The young woman explained that ler brother had attended a "club" neeting and had inbibed too freely if the brimming stein. In order that lis mother might not detect the odor if liquor on his breath, she had given dm toilet water. He started to choke nd she resorted to the health depart nent.?Columbus (O.) State Journal. The Senator. "Judging from the way he keeps on alklng, Senator X must be a can lidate for something!" "Yes. but his modesty prevents him rom mentioning what it Is."?Satlr*. ALREADY ACCOMPANIED, A He?I wouldn't mind having a wife like yon. She?But your wife does like me. / THE RIGHT SOAP FOR BABY'S.: i SKIN In the care of baby's skin and hair, Cutlcura Soap is the mother's fa vorite. Not only Is It unrivaled in purity and refreshing fragrance, but its gentle emollient properties ar* - usually sufficient to allay mlnqr irri tations, remove redness, roughness and chafing, soothe sensitive, condl-' tlons, and promote skin and hair health generally. Assisted by Cutl cura Ointment, it is most valuable in the treatment of eczemas, rashes and other itching, burning Infantile erup tions. Cutlcura Soap wears to a wafer, often outlasting several cakes of ordi nary soap and making its- use most '-' economical. Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each V. free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Addresa post-card "Cutlcura, Dept. L, Boston.1* Adv. Woman Police Officer. Miss Mary Steele Harvey Is the first < woman to be appointed a police officer in Baltimore. The last legislature ere ated five police matrons with full po- > lice powers. Miss Harvey Is the first, of the five to be appointed. Burduco Liver Powder. Wufnrft'H ramedv for billonsneaa. constipation. Indigestion and all atom* ach diseases. A vegetable prepare tion, better than calomel and will not salivate. In screw top cans at 25c each. Burwell & Dunn Co., Mfrfc, Charlotte, N. C. Adv. Mixed Metaphors. "You didn't really show that yon' were bored?" "No; I hope I am too well drilled." Regular practicing physicians recommend ?nd prescribe OXTDIltfE for Malaria, be-' cauee it is a proven remedy by years of ex perience. Keep a bottle in the medicine chest And administer at first, sign of Chilla and Fever, .Adv. What ou. may make us appreciate what we have. , Eye-Sigh Restored After Being Given (? by Specialists <" A wonderful cure by MILA Mr. W. E. Griggs, Secretary aiu Treasurer Westbrooks Elevat Co. and formerly Caehler Bank Danville, eaya: "About ten years ago 017 eyesight began tail to such an extent that it became necessar ?? ?- *- -v-.nH ruwtiall.# Mv tmllhl* ll lur 1UC IU WiMUil ?&. _ creased untiJ I found it necessary to consults, eral others. My case was diagnosed as Atrophy < the Optic Nerve, caused by impoverished blo< supply. The progress of my trouble was slo but steady, with never any relief, until finaL my physician advised me that nothing furthe could be done. About this time, about two yeai ago, I could not see to read, and my range < vision was so short that I could not see anythlc at a greater distance than fifty or seventy-fi feet. I often found it difficult to recognize i auaintxftces when I met them, distinguis"' lem more by their voices than their feat [n May, 1900, a friend advised me that 'if 1 physician's diagnosis was correct, MILAM1 cure you, because it will purify ^nd enrich 1 blood, increase the flow, and build up the r tem; but it will take a longtime and the provement will be slow.' "I did not believe one word of this, and < sented to talcs MILAM because I did not think could hurt roe. and there might be a bare pos bility that it might help me. After six weeL use I began to notice a slight improvement: my sight, which has been slow but steady i with no setback. Now I can read newspap with ordinary glasses, can distinguish large ol lects two miles away, and have no difficult now, as far as my sight is concerned. In attenl ingto my duties as the executive officer of I corporation. "I am still careful not to tax my eyes ur lonably, because I realise that I am not en but hope, and am more and more encouraged | ime passes, to believe that the continued i !ILAM will cure me. "I think it proper to state that my gene health and strength have also improved in tame ratio as my eyesight, and I attribute thii ie use of Milam. [Signed] W. E. GRIGGS. 1 a., March! Danville, Va.. March 23,1910. i? NOT an medicine and ui:?j MILAM sxcept that arising from impoverished j impure blood or depleted cyatem. Ask Your Druggist Kodak Finishing Cheapest prices on earth photographic specialists, veloping any roll film 5c. 1 12c and 4c. Mail your filt Dept. K, PARSONS OPTICAL 244 KING ST., CHARLESTON, SO. CAROL! PARKER'S HAIR BALSAI ClouMf tad beaat'Cc* PramoU* 1 luxuriant f Navsr Tolls to Eertoro Hair to Its Youthful Ci Prevents hair falling-. 50c. ?ml Sl.OQ at Pnicglsts. Quickly Weak, Sot FOR SALE?456 ^ A. IN SAMPSON CO.. 2.; 125 a. cult.; ti r. house, outbids*., ter louse. W. B. F. Johnson, Magnolia, N. Bent Cough Syrup. Tute* Good. Um In time. Sold by Druggltti. HEBHHEEB3!S