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JEANNE WEBER, Like a Terrible Monster of the Mediaeval Jjgen&t 7 WHOSE TOUCH SLAYS. itwir! Child, No* Arretted for a The Case Recalls the Most Fantastic legends of Ogresses, Who Dwelt in Caves in the Woods and Feasted on the Blood of Children. The case of "The Ogress of Montmarte" is again causing the deepest emotion and rage among the population of Paris. The ogress whose actual name is Jeanne Weber, is held responsible by the inhabitants of Montmarte and of Paris generally for causing the * death of at least five children, and ; yet there is no reasonable explanation how she killed any of them. One child after another, who 1 came in contact with the otrress of Montmarte died suddenly and mys- ! teriously, as if some invisible force had stopped its life. There was never any sign of violence on the body and the doctors called in were unable to state the cause of ^eath with any certainty. Ail that* was known positively was that Madame Jeanne Weber had touched them upon the breast. The case recalls the most fantastic medieval legends of ogresses, who dwelt in caves in the woods and feasted on the blood of children, and of the historical Marshal de Retz, of the fifteenth century who destroyed hundreds of children in order to minister to a perverted appetite for blood. The parents of the dead children are convinced that Jeanne Weber took their lives and the common peo: i 'iL |ji*: nave ucw?iic bu nnpit'bbeu wilii i the idea, that the woman would be ' in danger of lynching if she were 1 not safely lodged in jail. On the 1 other hand, all the Judges, doctors and educated men, who have in- < vestigated the cases, are satisfied ( there was no legal evidence against : her. i Mme, Weber is a heavily built 1 stolid looking woman, who excites 1 repulsion in all who come inTcontact i with her on account of her sickly smile, her long yellow teeth and her j sallow complexion, She expresses i Ian overwhelming fondness for all 1 children and loves to fondle them, i While she dose so, she gurgles with | delight and utters loud expressions < of endearment. i The first child whose death is attributed to Mme. Weber was Cecile ! Pereyborne, a girl of three years. She was the child of neighbors of I the Webers, living in the quarter of < Montmarte. Mme. Weber lived at < that time at No. 53 Rue des Trois < Freres, Montmarte, and the Perey- ] bornes lived at No. 57 in the same i street. She offered to come in and i take care of the child whenever M me. s Pereyborne wished to go anywhere, aud the busy mother was glad to ' accept the offer. I "I am happy to spend all day playing with the dear little thing.'*' said Mme. Weber. "I love her so." The girl was frightened when the ogress first smiled at her, but the woman quickly overcame the little ones fears witn presents of candy. One after noon the mother went away on a long shopping errand, i Li?n caving uei uaugunT in me care 01 i Madame Weber. When she return- ' ed the child was lying motionless ' on her back, while the ogress was < pressing her hand on her chest. "What are you doing?" cried the < mother. i "I was feeling her heart to see if it was still beating," said Madame 1 Weber, "I am afraid she is very ill." < The terrified mother ran to her s child and found that she was dead. 1 The doctor who was called could not 1 decide positively what was the cause . of death. The little girl had been i perfectly healthy up to the time the mother left her. Her face 1 wore and expression as if she had < died in great agony or terror. 1 This case did not attract grave suspicion to Madame Weber, hut a year later three children whom she < nad been fondling died mysteriously 1 within two months and one one nar- 1 rowly escaped. Then the outcry be- i gan and the ogress was arrested. She passed four months in prison 1 while the authorites were gathering evidence concercing the strange fa- : talities. Then her case was sent to i the Court of Assizes. The first < judge, President Favre, to whom i the case was presented, refused to 1 hear it on the ground that there was i no legal evidence against Mme. Weber, bat another judge, President < L Bertulus, took it up. I L She first child to perish among J this new batch of victims was her * nephew, Maurice Weber, aged < three, the child of her husband's ' oldest brother. Mme. Weber al- 1 Tsneuto take care of the I child, and it was said that on the ^^^Bday of his death she persuaded the < ^^^^Hbother to go away on a long visit to < country. The child was found ' ^ ^^1 from no known disease. His ) bore the same marks of agony i previous case, and a neigh ^^^^^^^kclared that she had seen Mme. her hand over his heart. ^^^^^B^^BMme Weber's own baby son 1 same sudden and mystor. She had had five child fl^H^^^^Bis was the last of them. do hesitate to say away with them by B^^^B^^^HBLmethods another by a when the but the mothhad happen ,-vv v,- 5*,, :t'"~ ed to her other child, snatched this one away from her sister-in-law. "The boy looked as if he were half dead, said the mother, "but he revived as soon as I took him in my arms." The next victim was Alice Weber, aged three, the child of another brother of her husband. This was one of the most peculiar cases of all, and largely helped to ensure the release of Madame Weber. The little girl had been strong and healthy nearly all her life, but just before her death she had had an attack of gastroenteritis. She recovered from this completely, and on the morning of her death she was playing on the street in a very lively manner. She partook of a very hearty lunch, consisting of soupe aux legumes, pork chops, salad, wine and in the afternoon she was taken suddenly ill. Her mother wished to give her ipecac, the drug which the doctor had reccomended in such emergencies and asked Madame Weber if she would go to the druggist, but she insisted that the mother should go out while she stayed and looked after the child. i ne motner was absent about 10 minutes, and when she returned she found her daughter dying in great agony, with the ogress bending over her. Then a terrible scene .occurred. The mother, recalling all the other deaths of her children accused Madame Weber of being a murderess. The latter replied that it was a wicked, cruel lie, that she loved the children better than their awn mothers and that they died because their parents did not take proper care of them. Meanwhile little Alice Weber was dying in ?reat pain and in two hours passed away. That night Madame Weber was arrested. The body of Alice Weber was retained bv the public authorities and the bodies of the three ?ther dead children were exhumed. Nothing was found on any of them to show how they had met death. An examination of Alice Webersbody indicated that she had recovered Li v/hi iici IIU^, UUIM11I SI1L* was liable to an attack of accute indigestion. The police and prosecuting oflicers searched for every scrap 3f evidence that would make a case against the ogress, because they wished to satisfy the public clamor, hut they accomplised little in their four months of work. There were plenty of witnesses convinced that she had murdered the children and anxious to testify against her. The belief that she was really an ogress who spent her life destroying children had spread through Montmartre and caused immense popular excitement. The fact that Madame Weber was frequently seen placing her hand upon the breast of the dead children was mentioned by several witnesses. 3ne of them declared that "She pinched the heart" (pincait le coeur) af the children to kill them, and this belief gained general credence among the neighbors, although the act is apparently an impossible one. /\noiner witness declared that she had seen Madame Weber leaning 3ver Maurice Weber's face, as if she were sucking his breath. This seemed a more feasible act than that of pinching the heart, but in every case a doctor had examined the dead body and found no indication of death by suffocation. At the trial Drs. Brouardel and rhoinon, two of the most eminent physicians in Frtmce, who appeared Dn behalf ot the state, declared that there was not a shadow of medical evidence against Madame Weber. Dr. Brouardel spent several hours explaining that the death of a little is child frequently due to some slight cause, and that it was not neccesary to look for a grave disease, such jus was to be expected in the case of an adult. He suggested that the deaths were due to the habits of life pre vailing among these familes. He dwelt strongly upon the meal of vegetable soup, pork chops, salad, coffee, wine, etc., as responsible for the loss of little Alice Weber. The nublie nrrwerntnr M Soli<r. mann, declared that there was no case against Madame Weber. Counsel for the defence made a very brief address, in which he spoke of the accusation as ridiculous, and the jury returned a fverdict of "Not guilty" in three minutes. This verdict was greeted with bitter disapproval among the people in court and outside and there were loud cries of : "A bas l'ogresse!" The woman needed the protection of the police when she went away from the court. She was forced to leave Montmartre and went to another quarter of Paris, concealing her address as well as possible from her former neighbors. XT inow aiier an interval of two /ears Mme. Jeanne Weber has been wrested dti suspicion of causing the death of a neighbor's child, who perished exactly the same manner as all the other children. The last victim is littie Alphonse I'oirier. living at 14 rue des Boulets, in the quarter of Charonne. It does not seem credible that six occurrences of this character, with Mme. Weber taking the ?me part in all of them, are all accidental and disconnected. This is lot in accord with the calculus of probabilities as I'oe would have expressed it. The people are more than ever convinced that Mme. Weber is a Ireadful ogress, and the scientific Tien arebeinc convprlml thn relief. It is pointed out that there s a hideous form oi mental perverlicn, in which a person takes delight n watching the dying agonies of ihildren, and that several cases of .his characterTiave occurred in re?nt and in earlier times. FATAL UXPLOSION. V (irocn Hand Drops Sparks Into Powder Keg.. A green hand dropped a spark ino a keg of powder In a slag pit at 3essemer late Thursday and the explosion probably fatally injured sev?ral others. Houses for several docks wers shaken by the explosion. China shaken By a Terrible Earthquake, Which Kills Four Thousand. MANY HOUSES DOWN And Thousands of People Die of Exposure.?The Empress Dowager Has Instructed the Governors of Neighboring Provinces to Send Relief at Once to the Distressed People, Who I/ost Their Homes. Four thousand people were killed in an earthquake in the province of Hslng Klang, China, recently. The first news of the catasrophe was brought to America last week by the steamer Shawmut on its arrival at Victoria, B. 0. The officers report that a telegram announcing the disaster was received at Tokio, Japan, from Pekin, just before the vessel set sail. It reported that many inhabitants of the province were left without homes and food by the -.saster and that suffering was intense. The province of Using Kiang lies in the tibet region, and comprises nearly the whole df Central Asia. It is thickly populated, but beyond all telegraphic communication. The news of the disaster was carried for many miles by runners before it could be telegraphed to the empress dowager at Pekin. Urgent instructions were issued to the governors of nelghtboring provinces to take measures to relieve the distress. It is now reported that thousands of injured lost their lives through exposure and hunger and on account of lack of proper care. The entire city of Hsing Kiang, capital of the province of the same name, is in ruins, it is located in the northern part of the province in a deep valley surrounded on all sides by towering mountains of volcanic origin. It is one of the most remote of Chinese cities and the home of the most progressive architects of the era pire. Many of its buildings are construct ed from stone and brick, manufactured by crude devices. The city itself is surrounded by a wall. Most of the buildings were thrown down, crushing their occupants to death in their crowded quarters. The town wall is also in ruins. Hsing is the capital of a province which has nd area of 585,500 square miles. Its valleys are fertile beyond description. Its inhabitants are numbered by millions, though the exact number has never been ascertained. Under ordinary conditions food could he supplied from the province, but ] all supplies that could be spared have been disposed of for the relief of famine stricken regions. A MOltAli yUKSTIOX. Milwaukee May Have Public Trysting Places for Young People. Milwaukee is facing a perplexirtg problem of morals, which effects the lives of its young girls and boys. The common council has decided t hat something must he done to save them from lives of ruination and shame. "What can be done?" in the question that has called forth many suggestions. One man has suggested that the city should provide public trysting places where young girls and boys may meet and have a jolly good time In a clean atmosphere and under the supervision of proper chaperons. Their they do their courting, if they are at the courting age. If they are not old enough to do courting, they could have a merry time without the danger of immoral practices. It is probable that something along tne lino or puniic cuius or trysting places will ho providod by the city. Just what its character will he, has not boon (leeidod. It may be that the schoolhouses will he used as meeting places. One prominent schoolteacher condemns clubs and says children should he taught to stay at home. WHOLE TOWN AT ODDS. Difference of Opinion Concerning .lie Whipping of Hoy by Teacher. The arrest and lining of Miss Carolyn Schultz, teacher in the Harlan i school, at Oolwein, la., for whipping Williard Cook, a pupil, has caused the principal of the school and Miss Schultz's fellow teachers to go on a strike. As tne whipping occurred outside of the teacher's classroom, the judge held that she overstepped her jurisdiction. The case will be appealed to the District court. The hoy in the case exhibited black and blue marks over much of his entire body. Miss Schultz said she whipped the children with a piece of rubber hose, following out the instructions of a former principal, and that she had never been told to cease this form of punishment. The children are having a holiday and the population of the town is divided on the question. l'l'THlAX KD1TOKS NAMED. Members of the Journal's Publication J Hoard Chosen. Grand Chhncelor Mendel L. Smith iiiursuay announced tne board to ' publish the proposed Pythian journal, provided for by the Grand Lodge last week, at Anderson. The board consists of Elbert "If, Anil, of New berry, chairman; Past (.rand Cnan* cellors D. C. Heyward, of Columbia, and M. Rutlego Rivers, of Charleston: .7. Thos. Arnold, of Greenville and J. E. Williams, of Columbia. K1 lil.EI) 11V HIGHWAY .>1A X. Auftust Mycr, Brooklyn Shoe Dculrr Iteoteii to lTciith. August Myer, a well-to-do Shoe dealer, of Brooklyn, New York was so severely beaten by highwayme.i Thursday that he died a few hours later. One of the alleged assailants. Nicholas Fenuimore, a youth of 20 years, is under arrest. Two others escaped. Myer fought hard, but the assailants were too much for him and he was terribly beaten be- c fore his cries for help brought a po- ^ Hccman to his assistance. ? S I and *' s< threa fcelinj Bobbin Dear ! Rlicuma four bot since. I under tv suit, unt say. it h medic in Every bo same rei OUR NOBLE LEADER. An Enduring Monument Unveiled g to President Jeff Davis. Tim Fitting Climax of the (front I ' timbering of the Veterans in Iticli- ! iiiond, Their Old Capital. Under a perfect sky. with bands | playing crashing music in which i * '"Dixie" and "Maryland" were preeminent, the remnants of the ar;..ies of the grey passed through the streets of Richmond and out on splendid Mountain avenue, and unveiled an enduring memorial to Jefferson Davis, the first and only president of the Confederate States of America. The event came as tlie climax of the reunion of the United Confederate Veterans, and every e member of the body of old men who 0 was able to walk at all took part. . The day and the event is one that s' live forever in the memory of those who were present, and the expres- . sions of beautiful sentiment which . were uttered by the speakers are des- i .' i;i -* * * - w ucuuuic u |*41 rl ui me msiory " of the south. Second only to the tribute given ? to the memory of Dixie Land's grent ' cnieftain were those offered on every 0 hand to the southern women, whose ? gift the monument is. The ceremony ^ was one of the south. No other sectlou had any part in it. The Voter- " ans who fought for the "lost cause" * were gathered together to pay their s tribute to the man whose memory is revered above all others. Their de- ' cendants were assembled because it '' Is bred in them to cherish that mem- ? ory and because they wished to im- *" bibe new lessons. The speeches n counselled the teaching of loyalty to h the cause for which the southern E states struggled: but there was noth- J", ing in the teachings but what ex- ' cited the sympathy of visitors from " other sections. * One of the most touching incidents 11 or ine day was the presentation of ? the decendants of Mr. Davis to the n great throng. h This occurred at the conclusion of the program. Mrs. J. Addison Hayes of Colorado Springs, Col., was led U forward first and Introduced as the * daughter of President Davis, and then followed Miss Alice Hayes, Jefferson Hayes Davis, whose name was 8I transposed by an act of the legisla- ti ture to perpetuate the name of the Confederate chieftain;' Wm. Davis ni Hayes and Mrs. Webb, all children of T Mr. and Mrs. Hayes. h Last of all, Davis Ilayes Webb, the u great-grandson of Mr. Davis, was introduced. The great crowd cheer- <1 ed each one enthusiastically and kept tt Mrs. Hayes to the front of the stand hi many minutes bowing acknowledgements to their plaudits. H The event was a fitting close to it what is universally recognized as m probably the las "great" gatnering pi of the Confederate Veterans. It was ki the feature that drew many thou.-s- m ands from all sections of the sou'h O who otherwise would not have coin-!. n< That scene of loyalty to their leader ni of nearly half a century ago, which virtue is so broad that it takes nt norning from their unstinted alio- O glance to the flag of a reunited peo- ly pie, was even a greater magnet than n< the old camp fire. T1 The unveiling of the monument ai was the fruition of eighteen years of w patient and loving effort, and every man who wore the southern uniform <U had in his heart a desire to he pre- kt ?ent. Beautiful sentiment was heard la >n every side and the thanks of the l>i ntire south were offered by the oranrs of Ihn ooonston fr> Iho lTnlto.1 . .1 Daughters of the Confederacy, whose gr .vork it was that made fho Jefferson er Davis Monument association a sue- to ess. Of these expressions, a quota- m ion from tho writings of Jefferson la Davis himself, which was given in m he principal speech by Cen. Clement mi V. Evans of Atlanta, Ga.. evoked the ta nost applause. The sentiment oc urs in the dedication of "The Rise ? ind Kail of the Confederacy," by Mr. in Davis, and is addressed to tho "Wo- ?>u nen of the South of Yesterday", as di ollows: vi "To the Women of the Confeder- ui; icy, whose pious ministrations to our th vounded soldiers soothed the last trl lours of those who died far from the ibjects of their tenderest love; whose lomestlc labors contributed much to ' t?j lupply the wants of our defenders' de ' \ **** -JMi k 3r 6nly remedy %eumatism tc Makes i You Well All Over." Th tern* th e entire eystem. Heatlac S indie ate that you need Onlnry. Mass.. July 18. 1005. Chcmlc al Co.. Haltimorc. Md. sirs: 1 was Jaid up last November with tism In my feet and ankles, but after taking ties of I llicuinacide I have not been bothered tried rvery old kind of liniment and was i-o doct nrs. and all I tried bad the same roil I trot Rheumacide. Now. I am pleased to as not been necessary for me to take any e for Rheumatism since February laM. dv tha t I recommended it to lias had the iults. Yours very truly. P. KANACiAN. Manarri. Quint :y Industrial Co-operative Socieiy. DIEATH PLUNGE. 1 Walloon Struck by Lightning While High in the Air. feLl to the earth I >1 ^roiii a Distance of Thirteen Handled Foot.?It Ocourrod at the i FK'stival of tlio Italian t'oast it at ion I At Koine, an<l IOO.OOO People (ia/.ed in Horror as the Basket Fell to ' The (Ground. While King Emmanuel, Queen Hel11a and 100,000 spectators looked u .m uunur, mi iiuuan military bal- 1 t>qn, manned by Capt. Olivelll, was trxick by a ligthning bolt during the j estlval of the Italian constitution at ; lame, early last week, and the colapsing airship, carrying with it it? and of human freight, plunged to ' he parade ground, almost at the feet i f the royal pair, mortally wounding he occupant, and causing the big , elebration to come to a sudden i lose. What promised to be one of > he most glorious pageants ever at . empted in connection with this pop lar festival, was thus halted. King h Emmanuel issuing the decree hint elf. The accident happened about noon he royal couple had spent the tnorn ng reviewing the troops of all arm; ( f the garrison of Home, numbering 5,000 men. inaugunrnting the inter- v ational rille match, which takes | lace every five years, and were en , aged in reviewing a parade by cy lists when the accident happened \ he sky was the color of dull lead, ; threatening a severe tempest over the r hooting ground. In the air. at the , eight of 1,300 feet, was a hallooi f the military engineer corps, mailed by Olivelli. a well known and tighly esteemed cantain of enertneerB . Unexpectedly a holt of lightning artod from Ihc clouds and struck ( le balloon, setting fire to it. A cry it once arose from the crowd on the N footing ground, which numbered illy 100,000 persons. The gazing ectators saw the silk bag burn, and le framework and the basket fall ;( >ward the earth with a whirling lotion until it struck the ground. he volunteer cyclists ran In all aste to tlie spot and found Olivelle |( nconscious, with his legs entangled N t tlie ropes of tlie basket. A physian, who ran to the spot, examined f. ic unconscious man and said that r Is spinal column had been broken. H King Victor Kmmanuel and Queen o elena witnessed the accident, and ic king at once sent his own autooldie in which the dying man was aced and taken to the hospital. The , lug followed him in another autoobile and went to the bedside of livelll, who had regained consclou- ^ ^ss, and the fast sinking man recog- ( ized his soverign. The king spoke to him affectionely. Two hours after the accident, . livelll died and the king immediate- ' ' announced that he would attend s i more of the exercises of the day. lie festival was at once suspended ? id Iho 111 limlnnMnn nt M... orlrun/lnla " ",v " * as countermanded. Olivelli's sister witnessed the accimt, but she fainted before the baa- ] >t struck the ground. The sister ' ter attempted to see her brother, it this wa?t not allowed. The victim of the accident was 33 nrs old and leaves a widow whoso ief is indescribable. The king lataent an- aide-de-camp to her house Z. express ills condolence. The re- >> ains of the unfortunate man were v. ter laid to rest with an impressive ** i 1 itary funeral, of which King Emanuel and Queen lleleua were spec- M tors. to - i the field; whose zealous faith in ir cause shone a guiding star, un- , nimed by the darkest clouds of ir; whose fortitude sustained them tder all the privations to which ey were subjected, whose annual ^ Ibute expresses their enduring' ,, ief, love and reverence for our p cred dead, whose patriotism will ach their children to emulate the) eds of our Revolutionaiy sires." ' C THAT CURES ^ w'.cup^ ease and req the Inside," and that after all other remedies h sweeps all the poisonous germs cr os? pains are danger signals, warn hes, Piius, Bad Taste in the Mo CAUSE OF T Cured 80-year-old Mrs. Mary Welborn had suhered 20 years. Cured Rev. J. R. V Methodist minister, of Relsterstown, Md. more, after Johns Hopkins Hospital had C Wilkes, of Dillon. 5. C.. after he had been were drawn up against his back. Better , at once. Sample bottle and booklet FREE BOBBITT CHEMICAL C There's Dange TERRIBLE ACCIDENT a si.? ? ? h navai Launcn losi with All on Board. Twelve Members of tin* llattleship .Minnesota's Crew Drowned in Hampton Heads. A telegram received at the Navy Yard at Washington Tuesday front I near Admiral Evans at Norfolk says: j "Minnesota's steam launch, after i going to the exposition is still ntissIng and grave fears are entertained ; that she was run down and sunk. She had a crew of Ave men and as ! passengers Midshipmen Field, Ste- > reason, llolden, Ulrich, Murfln and Second Lieutenant Randall. Search lias been made but without success." Tuesday night Admiral Evans telegraphed tlu^^J live missing seamen lire: R. T^Dodson, seaman; H. L. Vandorn, ordinary seaman; F. R. Plumber ordinary seaman; (}. W. ?- " <rri|jiiui, ureiuan, nrst class; Jesse 3onn, coal i>asser. The loss of five bright young midshipmen fresii from the academy at \nnnpoIis, a young marine officer ,'ery recently appointed, and a coxswain and four other enlisted men ittachcd to the big battleship Minnesota? 11 men altogether?as reported briefly to the navy department, \us one of the most severe blows hat has fallen upon the personnel of he navy since the Spanish war in he estimation of the officials Midshipman Henry C. Murfin, Jr., vas a native of the Ohio and a memler of the second class at c.e naval icadeiuy. Like the others, he had ?een sent aboard the battleship iffnneaota for a summer course of nsiructlon. to afford the practical ducat ion necessary to supplement he theoretical work at the naval cademy. Philip U. Field was a midshipman roni Colorado, who belonged to the list cl:is3 of the academy. Mdshipmun Walter C. Ulrlch of lie second class was from Wisconsin. Midshipman W. II. Stevenson, iorth Carolina, member ol' second lass, and Henry C. Holden of Wisonsin, member of same class Midshipmen E. P. --olcomh, Delware, second class. David M. Randall, cesond lieutennt of marines, was born in New 'ork and appointed from Kansas, enBring after a competive examination, larch lb. 10 (>."?. Naval ollicers at the department ecalled many perilous passages beween ship and shore in these little team launches. But the general pinion was that, with careful mangement, the launches coma weather Imost any kind of a storm. The [inclusion was reached at the navy epartment that either on account f the lateness of the hour of the rejrn trip the Minnesota's launch In er haste had been driven hard into le heavy sea that prevailed in lampton Roads Tuesday night or lat the little Isiat bad been run own by some of the giant tramp [earners that made use of the Roads * a refuge in time of storm. FRECKLES, As well us Sunburn, Tan. Moth, Pimples and Chans, are I cured with Wilson's Freckle Cure. Sold and guaranteed by druggists. r>Oc. 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All-about-Sulphur booklet free, if you write llaucock Liquid Sulphur Co., Hallimore. The economy of special treament HY Wilt ii "? a an or woman, who is wise, enters : lo al controversy involvli g a arg .1111 Hint f money, do I hey Co k to ec >i nii/e in t! e matter cf t oiup< treat co n ?1? Wou u it he economy to engage nn attorn at $75 who I st the gate, when the o e who wanted $ 1(H) cou'd have won it? With ihe man or woman suffering from a hronio or deep seated ailment there is much mo e at. atake 'han with the part; who Books tbo law5 nr. Til's ' ry day there aret omaudsnf men and women "ho are taking treatment for the wrong trouble! ? They h ire gone to the home physician?a < nrthy man, y? t whose ? *perience in deep-mated trmhl'H ia compar lively limited, <rren af eryearn of pract'ce. (>h, h w* sad it is to roe patients wait until four or five d ctors h-ive given tt-em iii> nd then come to us when it is too late! Thisli ppens torn times. But mora often tv- hive been nhle to effect n coinple'o cure, even undersuch adverse circum t ncos. In nearly all of such cases it has been 01 r experience that the root, of the trouli e has rover been discovered, and that b t very little treatment would have been necessary had wo had the rase a the h ginni"g If you. reader, are not enjoying the hea'th licit Nature Kt aimed v< 11 sh old write to rs. In the majority of rases it v ill lie che....<.r i.. iV-? ?a ' ? - ... um i?r you 10 oven make n special trip t<> call upon us for u FKKK KXAM1 NATION and cons Itation. After wo havo ecu and liad a good lo^g talk with yon, wo often can handle your ca e at your own home. Send f r our journal. "Health." Mailed free in unprinted wrapper. I)r Hat away A (Jo., 'J'Jj S. Hroad St., Atlanta, Oa. Pleas send me in imprinted envelope, your book for n en, for which there is no charge and which iloea outplace nieundorauy obligations to ycu. Name Addroas. Name of paper WANTKI* OM> J[ PIANOS & ORGANS !; for which we will ullow the ! | highest prices toward new in- < struments. No Club ltntes to'' offer, hilt we pledge lietter in- j [ struments for the same or less i ( money than those at cluh rate ; * offers. Write Mnlones Music , > tlouse. (Jolumliiii. v- t\. for spe- ( | cial ju ices and l i e ' no I^ree. and to any iu the machinery, any machinery owners. A 4 00 luuble in every way. Writ* us for D., Columbia ?.