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THE DELINEATOR EVERYBODY'S MAGAZINE and ADVENTURE want a local Representative. You can earn a salary every month. Write to-day to: Tlw BsCtridt PobEshiaf Ca.. BoOtrkk BUt. New York Qtj KODAKS Eastman and Ansco films, mailed post paid. Mall orders given prompt attention .Any sire roll Blm developed for 10 cents ? PAKSONS OPTICAL CO. 244 King Street. Charleston, S. C int! Ma Clraato applied to mosquito orotbei Mnil-mO-OKCeie insect bites givos Instant re lief Is a beautiful short celluloid covered pencil carried In vest pocket or purse. Send 10c or as) druggists. AlU-lo*Sk*?t? Bffc.C*., tOChmrth St., H?w T?rt A true friend is a person who listens to your troubles. That Irritable, nervous condition due to I bad liver calls for its natural antidote? Garfield Tea. Prnhnhiv thpr? is nothine more ex pensive than the things we get foi nothing. For HEADACHE?Hicks' CAPL'DIlfE Whether from Colds, Heat. Stomach o> Nervous Troubles, Capudlne will relieve you. It's liquid?pleasant to take?acts Immedi ately. Try It. 10c., 25c., and 50 cents at druj| stores. Some people lead such placid lives that nothing ever seems to happen to them, not even the unexpected. To be sweet and clean, every wom an should use Paxtine in sponge bath ing. It eradicates perspiration and all other body odors. At druggists, 25c a box or sent postpaid on receipt oi price by The Paxton Toilet Co., Bos ton, Mass. The Plain Truth. "Has that man a mania for oscu lation?" "No, he's a plain kissing bug." You may have noticed that about the time a shoe begins to feel com fortable it looks like a candidate for the refuse wagon. H18 Advantage. "A beauty doctor has one advantage over other men' in something of his Una " "What is that?" "He can lawfully conduct a skin game." Kind of Things to Buy. "I'm thinking of going on a tour on the Rhine this summer, and I should like your advice about the best things to buy there. You've been there, havent you?" "Yes, but it's a long time ago. I shall have to refresh my memory. Waiter, bring the wine card."? Fliegende Blaetter. Her Natural Protector. "O Clara, we had a dreadful scare this morning, a burglar scare!" said ? umi _ ?_.I?V Mrs. nnK. mere was a mguuui noise about two o'clock, and I got up. 1 turned on the light and looked down, to see a man's legs sticking out from under the bed." "Mercy, how dreadful! The burg lar's?" "No, my dear, my husband's. He had heard the noise, too."?Youth's Companion. His Veracity. . Jim Slocum of Montgomery county, avers the Kansas City Journal, was ealled as a witness to Impeach the tes timony of a man In that county. Jim was asked if he was acquainted with the reputation of the witness for truth and veracity. Jim said that he guessed maybe he was. "Is it good or bad?" "Well," said Jim, "I don't waat to do the man no Injustice, but I will say that If his neighbors were to see him looking as If he was dear *hey would want some corroboratln' evi dence before they would be willing to bury him." Jewels In a Flower-Bed. The recovery of a quantity of stolen Jewelry from a flower-bed was de scribed at Kingston-on-Thames police court the other day, when a general servant was charged with theft from her mistress, a resident of Ivydene. C/Mif /I QnrK!+nn T /in^An kJUUtuyui v/U5u i vnu, uutuuuu, The lady had missed a pearl pin and a pearl and diamond ring. Thinking she might have lost the jewels in the street, she Issued printed notices of fering a reward for their recovery. When she lost a number of other things she placed the matter In the hands of the police. The detective said that from what the prisouer d him he searched the garden, and in one of the flower-beds found some of the jewelry. The rest he found in the prisoner's bedroom. When the Appetite Lags A bowl of Post Toasties with cream hits the right spot "Toasties" are thin bits of corn; fully cooked, then toasted to a crisp, golden brown. This food makes a fine change for spring appe tites. Sold by Grocers, and ready to serve from pack age instantly with cream and sugar. "The Memory Lingers" Made by Poatam Cereal Company, Ltd. Pure Food Fa:tories Battle Creek. Mich. IHIf-Lfc.3 LlbM I A3 Min. During the warm weather desserts are more fitting that appeal to the eye and Rre bo light that they do not tax the digestion. Moit people, especially those of the masculine gender, feel that they have had no dinner If they are deprived of a dessert. It behooves the cook to see that a dessert appro priate to the meal Is served. Company Applet.?Pare and core _fA *%in o hfflrinf | eigui. ajjpico. nuaugo >. ?? dish, fill the cavitleB with apple Jelly and chopped raisins. Cook until ten der, basting with sugar water and lem on Juice. Ten minutes before remov ing from the oven decorate with quar ters of almonds blanched. Snow Puffs.?Cream a half cup of butter, add a cup of sugar, two and a half cups of flour, a half teaspoonful of salt, three teaspoonfuls of baking powder and a half cup of sweet milk. I Beat well and fold in four stiffly beat en whites. Steam forty-flve minutes In buttered cups. Serve with straw berry sauce. Italian Cream.?Soak two table spoonfuls of gelatine In a fourth of a cup of cold water, scald two cups of milk, cool and add the yolks of three eggs well beaten, a pinch of salt and a fourth of a cup of sugar; cook un til thick, add the gelatine, chill, and as the mixture thickens the whites of three eggs well beaten. Mold and serve. Any flavoring may be used, coffee, canton ginger, chocolate or fruit juices. Bavarian Cream-?Soak two table spoonfuls of granulated gelatine In a thiM nt a elm of cold water, dissolve In a fourth of a cup of hot cream; add a half cup of sugar and the whip from a pint of cream when the mix ture begins to thicken. Do not stir, but cut and fold in the cream. Flavor with vanilla and mold. Chocolate Junket.?Melt an ounce of chocolate (a square), adti three table spoonfpls of boiling water. Crush a Junket tablet and dissolve in a table spoonful of cold water. Warm a quart of milk until just lnke warm, add a fourth of a cup of sugar and a teaspoonful of vanilla and the melted chocolate and junket, and pour Into serving cups. LI F YOU have a friend and you love him well, Let my advice on your friendship glim mer? Print all his faults In nonpareil But publish his virtues In big long primer. ?Robt Burdette. MEMORY JOGS. Plain walls are beBt for a small room and a good background for pic tures. Dates stufTed with left-over Icing fla vored with lemon Juice, are a most ac ceptable sweetmeat Good for the lunch box. If you have a faded paper, with no n;d or runny colors, a coat of calci mine over it will make a fresh wall decoration. Plain white cheesecloth with a strip of some color to harmonize with the room makes most dainty curtains for 1 a bedroom. / Left-overs cannot be carelessly sear Boned and be at all palatable. They need more careful seasoning than do the fresh dishes. If you have an unsightly fence or building, cover It with the wild cu cumber vine. It will grow in sun or shade, and is a graceful vine, adding beauty to any place. Dont throw away a little left-over I boiled frosting, as it can be kept sort if set in hot water. A few nuts and raisins chopped added to it and drop on wafers, bake to a light brown, and you have a nice little cake to serve with a cup of tea. Did you ever notice that we usually do the things we want very much to do? We are bound to find time for them. Are you house-cleaning and the violets in bloom? Just keep in mind that dirt we always have with us, but violets come but once a year. foan on eTfl nut for the delicious mushroom, learn a few and have a j dainty dish served at least once a j week. Early In May the bonny little caps appear with their frills of pink and lavender, and they last until the freezing frosts of the autumn. Their Fate. I "What became of the two clerks you had here named Gunn and Ball?" "A similar and appropriate fate over i took them both." "What was it?" ! "Gunn was fired and Ball was bounced." The Ruling Passion. Did you ever know a man so pros perous ho wasn't figuring how he i coum iiiaKe a nine muucj un ? oiuu i line??Atchison Globe. Soon. Money talks, but the world soon gets a poor opinion of the man who lets his money do all the talking. Proved His Chivalry. Visitor?"You say that old repro bate over there used to be one of the politest men in town? I suppose he'd give up his seat in a street car to a woman." Native?"Polite? Say, stranger, that man gave up his seat in heaven for a woman."?Satire. Corrected. Murphy?"Nobody Lolked Casey, an* yit the paper says a large crowd fol lowed the hearse to his grave." Ma loney?"Tis a lol. They didn't follow It; they chased it. CASTLE OF ST. ANGELO NOTED Known as Tomb of Hadrian?Scene of Torture o' Beatrice CencJ. Rome.?Nearly everyone is familiar with the famous head called "Beatrice Cenci," said to be by Guido Renl, ant! with the story of that ill-fated family as it is presented in Shelley's play. The beauty and virtue of Beatrice have become a popular tradition: but we are now told by certain Iconoclasts that the famous painting is not or her, that it is not by Guido Renl, and that the lady was neither beautiful nor vir tuous. The poor tradition has not a leg tn ctonH rm Knt tho fart fines not Castle of St. Angelo. ley's drama, nor of sightseers In view ing the room in which the unfortunate Beatrice is said to have been tortured. That room is in the Castle of St. An gelo, otherwise known as the tomb of Hadrian, in Rome. This famous mausoleum, one of the oldest land marks of the Eternal City, has been greauy cnangea since jib eiecuuu more than seventeen centuries ago. Tfte original structure Is almost bid den by fortifications that bave been built around It; tbe cone of earth, which once crowned the top, planted with evergreens, haB given place to a gilt angel sheathing a sword; and the interior has been stripped not only or works of art tbat adorned it, but of much of tbe very material used In its construction, that material having been utilized for otber buildings. In 1500 the tomb was connected with the Vatican byia subterranean passage. A photogravure of the castle of St. Angelo, as it is now called, showing also the Tiber, tbe bridge that gives approach to the tomb, and the dome of St. Peter's In the back ground, illustrates tnis article, si. Peter's the largest Christian place or worship in the world, and the Mecca of pious pilgrims from all over the globe, has also undergone various transformations since the early days when it succeeded an old basilica lo cated on the same sjpot. It was built at first on the p)~n of a Greek cross, which was changed later to a Latin cross and shifted between these two forms twice more before being left in Its present form. It is not seen to full advantage at close range, on account of its great dimensions; but the pic ture accompanying this article gives an excellent effect of the stately and Impressive dome. SEEK NEW LIGHT ON PIGMIES Curious People Found to Be Indus trious and Intelligent?Expedl tion to Visit Them. London.?Fresh and Interesting In formation regarding the habits and conditions of lil'e of a curious pigmy race will be sought by the new expedi tion to Dutch New Gifinea, which Is qow being planned In London. This strange race of people were first seen by white men when the recent expedi tion under Capt. C. G. Kawllng pene trated Into the heart of the Island. Rawling'8 expedition comprised six Englishmen and was sent out by the British Ornithologists' union. Their ob jective was a long range of snowy mountains, called the Nassau range, but between them and it lay 60 miles of absolutely unexplored country and of the most difficult kind to negotiate. Dense forest covered most of It, Inter sected with rivers which for one half )f the year were torrents and the other half nonplv HHort nn Hv?r hfvis The pigmies were first discovered near the Kapare river, one of the im mense streams which, rising in the Nassau mountains, make their way down to the sea. The Japanese sol diers who accompanied Hawling as bearers spied a couple of the iittie pigmies one day in the hills. The pig mies bolted at once, and an exciting chase took place, which ended in their being captured, and two days la ter more were surprised and surround ed. They proved to be sturdy men, averaging about four feet, eight inches high, and much better developed than the tribes encountered in the plains. They were also industrious, and de cidedly more intelligent. They had neatly constructed huts, and after some time it was discovered that they had words in their language to denote uumerais up to ten, words entirely lacking from the language of the plainsmen. Although the most stren uous search was made, only solitary huts could be found. Strangely enough, no children and only one woman, who was being escorted to her new home from her wedding, were seen. Gets $1,0C0 for Dog's Bite. Mineola, L. I.?Mrs. May Miller, housekeeper for George Wintjen. taught his pet collie to jump and seize dainties on her shoulder. Last year the dog jumped on the shoulder of Miss Minnie Stockton, a laundress who lived across the Btreet, and, find ing no dainties there bit her on the shoulder, forearm and knee, so that she could not leave her bed for four months. She was awarded $1,000 dam ages from Wintjen. ASKS WHO MAKE A CLEAN BREAST PERKINS WANTS PUBLIC TO KNOW WHY WICKERSHAM SUIT WAS HELD UP. MAKES ANSWER TO HILLES The Trust Magnate Believes That Taft and His Managers Should Come Clean With the Whole Affair?The Statement is Given Below. New York.?Publication of all cor respondence relating to the prosecu tion of the International Harvester Company was suggested by George W. Perkins, the New York financier who, upon his return to New York, issued reply to the statement given out at the White House by Charles D. Hilles, secretary to the President. The state ment reads: "I have read Mr. Hilles* version of the Harvester matter and fail to find anything in it that in the remotest de gree answers my letter of April 29 last, to Chairman McKinley. If Mr. Taft and his managers had at any time meant to be fair and square and frank with the public in this matter, they would have complied with tho Senate's recent request and published In full all that has taken place in regard to the Harvester Company during the Taft administration, especially during the last twelve or eignteen mouma. v "The public is being deluded daily with the Taft version of how Mr. Roosevelt held up Mr. Bonaparte's suit against the Harvester Company and why; but great care is being takeq to keep from the public all knowledge as to whether or not Mr, Taft held up Mr. Wickersham's suit against the Harvester Company .and why. Full publicity regarding the whole affair would enable the public to form its own judgment and reach its own con clusion. It would also show what Mr. Hilles regards as proper favors for a private secretary to a President seek ing renomination, to ask from the offi cers of a corporation threatened with prosecution by the self-same Presi dent. Town of Melville Is Inundated. Baton Rouge, La.?The town of Mel rllle, threatened since the present flood began, was inundated when the levee on the west bank of the Atchafalaya river 16 miles north, broke. Captain Logun, in charge of the United States rescue corps dispatched the steamship Mlnnetonka with a barge to Melville to bring away those inhabitants who desired to leave together with their live stock and household goods. Lieu tenant Edwards was ordered to Ope lousas to assist Captain Bennett. Taft Denounces Roosevelt. Cincinnati.?In a most bitter and scathing denunctiation of Colonel Roosevelt, President Taft declared that, "the certainty or his dereat ror the Republican nomination must be a source of profound congratulation to all patriotic citizens," declared that his predecessor in the White House would wreck the Republican party, if he is not cho^n by the Republican national convention, and compared Mr. Roosevelt to Louis the Fourteenth of France, who said, "the State, I am it." Hour of Death Draws Near. Boston.?"I have made my peace with God; I am resigned to my fate. I wish now to go to my death as soon as possible, the quicker the better." The words spoken by Clarence C. V. T. Richeson to Rev. Herbert H. John son, his spiritual adviser, expressed the mental condition of the condemn ed man, whose tenure of life is now measured only by hours. Man Badly Beaten and Robbed. Baltimore.?Beaten into unconscious ness, robbed of his watch and money and probably escaping with his life nnlv through the mercy of one cf his two assailants, Dr. George B. Rey nolds, chief of police surgeon of this city, was the victim of an attack on the street while returning home from a professional call. Large Fire Does Much Damage. Houston, Tex.?Fire destroyed about $700,000 worth of property before it was brought under control. The losses are: Stores Furniture Store, destroyed; Mason building almost to tally destroyed; Goggans Music Store, | badly damaged; C. L. and Theodore Bearing building, damaged; Texas Company building, damaged; Levy building, damaged; Temple building, almost totally destroyed; Heyers drug store, destroyed; Dodge hotel, badly damaged; Capital hotel, slightly dam aged. No lives lost. Body of King Frederick Lies in State. Copenhagen.?The coffin containing the body of the late King Frederick VIII has been placed on a high cata falpue of gold and white in Christian borg chapel and here it will lie in state until the funeral May 24. The catafalque is surrounded by silver candelabra, the historical silver lions from Roseberg castle and the orders of the dead monarch. The royal stan dard covers the coffin, while on the floor and about the room have been arranged hundreds of wreaths sent in by every class. Cipriano Castro is Seriously III. Washington.?Cipriano Castro, ex President of Venezuela, the man who defiad all of the world powers and turned their ministers out of his cap ital, probably has come to the end of his activities. According to reports he is lying very ill at Teneriffe, where he had taken up his residence to be near his own country in the hope of some day leading a successful revolu tion. His illness is of such a character as to make it highly improbable that he will every again be able to plaj a part in world politics. t RIVER IS FALLING HI ALL POINTS THE SITUATION SOUTH OF ODEN. BURG CRITICAL ACCORDING TO REPORTS. THE RELIEF FUND GROWS Ten Towns Are Under Several Feet of Water From Last Break?Morgan City is Flooded?Rescuw Work is Still In Progress. New Orleans.?The Mississippi river continued to fall at all points from St. Louis south and reports received at the office of the United States engineers here concerning the levees were favorable. The situation along the Atchafalaya river south of Odenburg, the scene of crevasse, are critical according to reports and relief boats were dis patched to the newly inunudated sec tion to rescue the endangered people and livestock. Besides Odenburg and Woodside, which are already under water, the following towns will be inundated by the crevasse: Neita, Bayou Current, Elba, Rosa, Palmetto, Richard and Bodoc, Mel ville, the largest town in that section, already is covered by water from 1 to 3 feet.deep and will be flooded by the waters from the Odenburg break to a depth of from 4 to 8 feet. Most of the women and children had been taken out of that country. A decided surprise was occassioned when the back water from the Atchafalaya entered the outlying sec tion of Morgan City and reached a depth of three to five inches in some of the business streets. More than a hundred refugees from the country south of Odenburg have reached Opelousas. Many of them expressed fears that relief boats would not reach some of the maroon ed persons in time. A large number of gasoline boats were sent to this i.i.1 a A n secuou iruui uyciuusmi tuiu auuuiuu al rescue forces will be dispatched. Capt. C. 0. Sherrill, chief of the army engineers, who has 1,300 men at woric on the Hyraelia crevasse, 35 miles above New Orleans, reported that the work was progressing satis factorily. Lid on During Johnson-Flynn Fight j East Las Vegas, N. M.?No lifting of the liquor lid during the time the crowds are here for the Johnson-Flync fight will be allowed according to Mayor Robert J. Taupert. A greatly augumented police force is being or ganized to keep order and to see that the gambling laws are not broken. The mayor announced that he would revoke the license of any hotel or rooming house that attempts to rhnrce f?*hnrhitant rates. No fakirs will be allowed to use the streets. Senate Majority Upholds Lorimer.' WaBhinton. ? The case of Senator Lorimer, whose election was alleged to have been brought about through corruption, was placed before the senate for final action. The majority of the special investigating committee reported that all their rules of law, Judicial procedure and Justice requir ed that the senate's former judgement in Senator Lorlmer'a favor be held final and conclusive, and that there was absolutely no new substantial evi Honpn rtiannvereri his election beina "the logical result of existing polifc ical conditions." Nurse On Trial For Infanticide. New York.?Charged with poisoning nine babies by putting oxalic acid in their milk, Winifred Ankers, a nurse, was placed on trial before supreme court justice Scudder in Brooklyn. The nine children died several months ago In an infants' hospital in Brooklyn where the Ankers woman was employed as nurse. The defend ant has a baby of her own. Her coun sel claims that the nurse was made the victim by one who did the poison ing and is being railroaded to prison. Reign of Terror in Little Rock . Little Rock, Ark. ? Municipal po lice! sheriffs, deputies, constables and citizens who answered the mayor's proclamation to arm themselves j and make strenuous efforts to capture ; the mysterious prowler who for sev- j eral days reached the point of mur- ! der in this campaign of crime, are i efill cr?niirincr tho hl/wnvs nf thffl place. Scores of houses were scearcb place. Scores of houses were search to which it was believed possible for the murderer to have gone into hiding was searched. The British Titanic Inquiry. London ?When tho British Titanic Inquiry was resumed Sir Cosmo Duff Gordon was subjected to a bitterly hostile examination into his conduct at the sinking of the vessel. The at torney appearing on behalf of Irish third class passengers, asked Gordon ' .? >- n.i a. 1 j II ne nau suggesieu uieii me uuai go back and receiving a negative re ply asked: "You saved your lives and left the others to drown." Lord Mer- 1 zy: "The position of the witness is ' had enough. Do you think it fair ti? '< ask such questions?" I Five Persons Are Killed. Chicago. ? Tive persons, throe men And two women, were drowned when 1 the automobile in which they were i riding plunged into the Claumet river ' at the Ninty-Second street bridge. 1 None of the names of the victims so 1 far has been learned. One of the wo- 1 men jumped into the river as the embankment was reached, according ! to a watchman. Her body was re- 1 covered later. The woman apparent- ' y 24 years old, and the initials "A. 1 .1." were on her braclet. ROOSEVELT SEEMS TO HAVE MAJORITY SOME OHIO DISTRICTS STILL IN DOUBT AND MAY REQUIRE OFFICIAL COUNT. HARMON WINS OVER WILSON Senator Dixon, Colonel's Manager, Claims 44 Out of 48 Delegates' to Chicago Convention.?Result In Ohio Practically Ends Fight. \ * - " Columbus, O.?With little more than one-tblrd of the total vote In the state counted, Colonel Roosevelt's dele gates on the Republican ticket and Governor Harmon on the Democratic preference ballot led Ohio's first pres idential preference primary. The, fight on both tickets was so close, however, that complete returns may change final results. Complete returns from slightly less than two thousand precincts of 5,192 in the state showed that Colonel Roosevelt's delegates had a lead of more than 15,000 votes. Governor Harmon's lead over Woodrow Wilson* was considerably less than this. The closeness of his race with Wilson was indicated by late reports from Cin cinnati, Governor Harmon's home city. Here the Ohio Governor, who had been well in the lead in the early returns, was shown to have 1,954 votes and Wilson 1,904 in 120 precincts out of a total of 361. A peculiar situation developed in the compilation of the results. This showed that while Colonel Roosevelt had a lead of 15,000 in the total num ber of votes cast for delegates pledged to him, the vote by districts would be such that he probably would not have more than twenty-two of the forty two districts delegates to the national convention at Chicago. But while the Democratic presidential vote was so close, the result could not be foretold, the indications were that Governor TT OO OA naiiiiuii wuuiu uave at iccwji ui a of the delegates to the Baltimore con vention. The privilege of naming the six delegates-at-large of the state, however, is carried by the winner of the presidential preference vote. Of the congerssional districts, Col onel Roosevelt, apparently, has won delegates In the fourth, sixth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, fourteenth, fifteenth, seventeenth, eighteenth, nineteenth, twentieth and twenty-first districts. President Taft practically has been granted the first, second, third, probably the fifth, seventh, eighth and thirteenth districts. Rlcheson Pays For Crime With Life. Boston. ? The misshaped body ol Clarence V. T. Richeson, who was executed for th'e murder of a cast off sweatheart, claimed by a brother, Douglas, and taken to Amherst court house in Virginia for burial. Before the young murder's body was turn ed over to the brother, It was placed under the county physician's knife for the legal autopsy. That the brain of the electric chair's victim will be given to a medical college is denied, by officials. The execution of Richeson is declared to have been the most sucesful in the death house. To Pay $100,000 For His Freedom. nu-.u/, nr will Aliaiiui, vuarico *? . xuuioc Tf in pay $100,000 to the lawyers who were instrumental in securing his freedom, according to a story printed here. At torney Thomas B. Felder of the law firm of Anderson, Felder, Rountree & Wilson, who acted in the case in con junction with a Columbus, O., firm, said after reading the story that the arrangement his firm had with Mr. Morse was confidential and that he did not care to discuss it. Huerta Dislodges the Rebels. Mexico City.?The cavalry and van guard of General Huerta's division was on the heights of Asuncola, 5 miles north of Escalon fighting the ad vance guard of Orozco's army, accord ing to information obtained from Pres ident Mader?. The rebels, he said, were being dislodged. Status of Negro Uprising in Cuba. Havana. ? The Cuban government disclaimed any further knowledge regarding the uprising of the negroes, but the opinion is spreading that con ditions are rapiaiy growing more eer iou3. It is creditable reported that two armed parties are operating in the province of Mantanzas, which hitherto has been reported tranquil. Orders were issued for additional troops to be prepared to take the field. Despatches tell of an assault; on rural guards at Manguito, nea Guantanamo. Stores in Mellville Flooded. New Orleans. ? Reports from j Mellville state that every store in the town has water over the floors and the indications were that before j the water from the Alto crevasse, on '\e Atchalfaya, begins to recede on-; 1. a few residences will be dry. Re- ! maining families are moving into the 1 second stories of their dwellings. ' Many Melville storekeepers built elevated walks in front or tne places, i but the rising flood floated these ! away and the only means of travel is by boat. Governor Brown Quotes Bible. Atlanta. Ga.?Governor Brown turn ed to the Old Testament injunction to justify his action in refusing to stay xecution in the five murder cases ap pealed to him during his present term 3f office. "Moreover, ye shall take no satisfaction for the life of a murderer, which is guilty of death; but he shall surely be put to death. Whoso killeth any person, the murderer shall be put to death by the mouth of wit nesses"?verses 30 and 31, thirty-fifth 3hapter of Numbers WOMAN SICK TWELVE YEARS Wants Other Women to Know How She Was Finally Restored to Health* Louisiana, Mo.:?"I think s womas naturally dislikes to make her trouble! but complete restpr atjontobealthmeani ggpf 80 much to me that I cannot keep frons Plf L* mine for th? g|X sake of other suffer "I had been sld /"?/ about twelve years, f y * and had eleven doo ' / tors. I had drag ' ging down pfeins, pains at montMy periods, dhious speus, and was getting worse all the time. 1 would hardly get over one speil when ] would be sick again. No tongue can tell what I suffered from cramps, and al times I could hardly walk. The doctor* said I might die at one of those times, but I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound and got better right away. Tour valuable medicine is worth mor? than mountains of gold to suffering wo men."?Mrs. Bertha Muff, 508 N. 4th Straet, Louisiana, Mo. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, made from native roots and herbs, contains no narcotic or harmful drags, and to-day holds the record of being the most successful remedy for female ills ws know of, and thousands of voluntary testimonials on file in the Pinkham laboratory at Lynn, Msn , seem to prove this fact. If yon want special- advice write to Lydia Em Pinkham Jgedidne Co. (eoafl dential) Lynn, Mass. Tour letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held In strict conflteaMi ' u csatug ayuijjiuiua. ni ut& first sign of indigestion, toy H62 Bedford's Black-Draught' the old, reliable, vegetable liver powder, to quickly cleanse your system from these undesirable poisons. I Mrs. Rilev Laramore, of Goodwater, Mo., says: "I suffered for years from dyspep sia and heartburn. Thedfora's Dl?.l. I. Mn|1 piatN'L/iau^uif in oiuau uvow^ cured my heartburn in a few days, ana now 1 can eat without distress." Try it Insist on Thedford's TKCNEW FRENCH REMEDY. N0.I.N0.2.K0J. I'UCD A DIAM Usedln French ntnMrlUn Hospitals with GHEAT SUCCESS, CURBS KIDNEY. BLADDER DISEASES, PILES. CHRONIC ULCERS. SKIN ERUPTIONS?EITHER SEX Brad a4dre?? envelop# for "RBK booklet to DR. LE CLERO MXO. CO.. HAVMSTOCK HLD., HAMP8TBAD. LONDON. KSOL ORPHIN Opium.Whiskey and urua Habits treat SanitarTu at home or at; Turn. Book on subject Free. DR. B. M.WOOLLEY, aw VICTOE 8A5ITAHJU*. 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