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m o >4 - Inin il Ik tnnil knnU, III i dm M Finiaf I SHORT SESSION HELD Boom Adjourned After Meeting One Hour, But the Senate Wm In )/*& x ;. •■*•>"- • f.. ^ . / - '* SUMlott Some laonger and Trans* r~ lated Ooneiderable Business Before _ It Adjourned for the Da/. The General Assembly mot Tues day at moon in regular session, and was soon doum to routine wora. The aesaion of the House wan cut short On account of the coldness of the Bis*?hall. For some unknown reason the gave very little heat. It was uncomfortably cold, and, after being In aesaion about an hour and ft:It p. m a half, the hot adjourned until Before adjourning, the representa- tivei made provision for holding 5 elections to fill four vacancies on the circuit bench, for electing a fourth , associate justice of the supreme conn, referred tha governors an i nufal message to committees and heard three special messages read making them a special order ror noon tomorrow. M. L. Smith, speaker of the house. " was delayed by a late train and did not arrive in the hail until 12:15 p. m. when James A. Hoyt, clerk of the house, called the house to order ; Tha roll of the members was called by counties. . Two or three of the county delegations had not arrived Rtv. R. N. Pratt, chaplain, opened the proceedings with prayer. « .A concurrent resolution was Intro- 'duced by D. H. Magill providing that < the Joint assembly meet Thursday January 11, at noon to elect a judge for the second circuit to fill the un expired term of the late Robert Al drich , a judge for the eighth circuit ** tc fill the unexptrod term or the late 4 J. C. Klugh, a judge to All the ex pired term of J, W. DeVore of the ; eleventh circuit, a judge to HU the l expired term of f. W. G. Shipp of the twelfth circuit, the expired term of C. A. Woods, associate Justice, and the unexptred term of Ira 11. Jones, Chief Justice of the supreme court. The governor vetoed the bill ap pointing rural pelidb in Cherokee eonnty. A similar bill appointing rural police in Spartanburg county was also the subject of a veto me* •age. Among other ground* for ve toing, the governor’* nieMage said that the bill allowed the proposed rural police force too much freedom, eepeclaUy In the matterof making j arrests. In a special message, the governor •aid that he had decided to allow the act to prevent the eatablisnment Of Ht-formed counties to become a law without his signature, and the jOOurta were open if the question of ->ta constitutionality were raised. After the adjournment of tne Joint imbly Tuesday night, the nouse n short message from tne gov- •xplllning tha: the coldness of the hall had been caused by the fall- vre of the electric power plant which wss put out of commission by tbe’| sleet and ice Monday What the Senate Did. The senate convened at noon and in the brief apace of one hour ac- complished much. This hour was Consumed In the reception of the va rious messages from the governor, the postponement of several bills pending on the calendar, the disposi tion of the annual message and the Introduction of a MU providing for the establishment of Jasper county that was vpt®d on last summer. Practically all of the memners of the aenate were present wnen the body was called to order by C. A. Smith of TlmmonsviUe, the president of the aenate and lieutenant gover nor. The rending of the journal was d'apensed with, following prayer by the chaplain. The appointments for sjN t Ive n.41 * were announced by Presl- ' dent Smith. , A vetoed measure providing for ? rural police for Newberry county was ; passed Tuesday by the senate over the veto of the governor by a vote of » 35 to 2. The measure will be sent to the house for a vote. The meas ure provided that rural policemen be appointed by the sheriff of Newberry ^ county and not by the governor, ir The senate on motion of Senator Carlisle of Spartanburg decided to vote on -the question of the vetoed measure providing for a legislative commission to investigate the old dis pensary commlss'^n, the attorney general, the governor and ottiers in | > ccnnectlon with the State dispensary. | V The senate decided to take the bill V ^IP for a vote at noon Wednesday r V and the real strength of the gover nor as compared with the senate will t* decided, as the resolution is the most important vetoed. In his message vetoing the above ' n ensure the governor stated that he ; believed an investigation by the com- lasion would be one-alded. He said that he had Instructed the members the new dispensary commission to he the desired li vestigatIon, and it he would lend his personal and Ml power to see tha* a tbor- ihvestlgation waa made. The was. passed at the last ses- of the general assembly and sent te governor for*-his signature, measure wai passed upon the solicitation of the governor, the measure waa sent in for the end of the Session indicated that he nae the members commission .Senator i i DISCUSS ^CAMPAIGN . * ■ t , V . v. * rRBSIDENTIAL POSSIBILITIES ARE TALKED ADOPT. — -» Wilson’s Letter About Bryan i« Brought Up, Bat it Will Biot Cre ate a Breach. The Washington correspondent of The State says Presidential politics completely overshadowed every ., oth er topjp among the arriving mem bers of the national committee to day. The foremost theme of dlscus- nion was tha latter which wa* writ- tea by Woodrow Wilson to Adrian H. Jollne of New York city in 1905, and which was given out today. In thla Wilson said: "Can not we devise some dignified way of get ting Mr. Bryan ou: of th-j Demo cratic party and getting rid of him for all time.” The question on ev ery tongue was how this letter would affect the Wilson boors, and whether 11 Wou\A turn Bryan against Wilson. The WMlson men belittled It and said Bryan had long known of the existence of such a letter. They de clared he was disposed to take it no more seriously than he has the ut terances of thousands of other Dem ocrats against him at gome time or other in their careers. Wilson boomers said they had found out the Joline letter was in the hands of President Taft and Wil liam R. Hearat. Learning this, they had given out the information them selves, that the letter was coming out and had outlined what it would contain. It was pointed out that re gardless of the Jollhe letter, Bryan would make a great fight for presi dential primaries and that this was exactly what the Wilson men want ed. Nothing contained in the Jollne letter can prevent that. One of the important disclosures of the day Is that Speaker Champ Cl&rk has the fight of hU life ahead of him In Missouri. The State com mittee will meet this week and de cide on a convention February 15 in other words, on an extremely early convention. If the Clark men carry it, then Clark will get the delega tion from Missouri. If be does not, th*n his chances for the presidency are killed. Former Gov. Folk will attend the banquet tomorrow night, and will speak In spite of the early complications that It was thought would shut him out Judson Harmon was In New York last night, and there was some gos sip that the effect after all he might show up here, but Ohio men said he would not come. Ills cause Is hurt to some extent by the Illness of Sen ator Pomerene, who Is laid up In bed and unabje to mix with the arriving committeemen. Narrowed down, the situation may be expressed in two words: "Watch Bryan." FEARFUL RECORD the wages of sw classified column NM A* lily lUaicides Lut Year is Tfecre Wts the Year Before DEATH SENTENCE PARSED UPON REV. C. V. T. RIC1IESON. Sad and Awful Ending of the Career SUCIDES ON DECREASE of a Young Man Who Had a Bright Future. JEFF DAVIS AND ABE LINCOLN. Kentucky May Put Them in the Na tional Hall of Fame. Dispatches from Washington and from Kentucky's state capital— Frankfort—say the state legislature scon will have under formal consid eration a bill providing that the Blue Grass commonwealth place in the Hall of Fame at Washington statues of Lincoln and Jefferson Davis. Kentucky, with Its long list of notable men, has no representative figure In statuary hall. It is pointed out that Inasmuch as the Blue Grass state was the birthplace of the two great leaders of the civil war. It could with propriety place statues of both Lincoln and Davis in the Hall of Fame. Another thing that authors of the idea have in mind is a test of na tional sentiment. They say It Is de clared on all sides that bitterness and rancor growing out of the inter state struggle has disappeared. If this is so, the statue promoters point out there will be no opposition to the possibility of Kentucky's placing statues of its two great dissenting sons side by side In the Hall of Fame. This would symbolize more than cny other thing, It is declares, the disappearance of the old "war spir it." The Kentucky legislature Is now- in session and may act upon the statue proposal within a month. to the house for a vote. Elects Associate Justice, By a vote of S9 to 55 the Joint as sembly, composed of the two houses of the legislature, elected Richard C. Watts of Chesterfield. Judge of the fourth circuit, fourth associate Jus tice of the South Carolina supreme court over Thomas B. Fraser of Sum- Ur, the .only other nominee, Tui^sday night. Judge Memminger, who was a candidate at the last session, with drew from the race. Sixty-One Persons W r ere Lynched During the Fatfct Fifty-Nine of Whom Were Ncgioee, and Most of Those Lynched Attacked Women or Young Girls. Deaths in the United States by ev ery form of violence show a decrease lu 1911 as compared with 1910. The total number of homicides In the country last year reached 8,272 as compared with 8,975 In the year previous. During the year there were 164 cases of murder and sui cide; 18 cases of double murders; 11 of triple murders, one quadruple, one case where five, two where six and one where seven were murdered by one pe'rfion and 51 persons murdered by the “Black Hand." The record of suicides for 1911 varies little from that of 1910, the number being 12,242, as compared with 12,608 in 1910. The propor tion of suicides as between men and women remains about the same year after year, being 8,13 0 males and 4 112 females. Physicians again head the list among professional men, and clergymen come next, 11 having taken their own lives. Among business men, 19 bankers and brok ers have committed suicide during the year. The most startling feature of this record Is the constantly increasing number of those who commit sui cide because of 111 health. Of the total number, 4,151 shot themselves, 3,450 took poison, 2,054 hanged themselves, 984 drowned themselves, 694 cut their throats, 646 aspnyx- iated themselves, 55 threw them selves In front of railroad trains and 165 'from roofs or windows, 22 burned themselves, 14 stabbed them selves, five blew themselves up with dynamite and two starved them selves. Sixty-one unfortunates left the world by suicide pacts. The number of legal executions In 1911 has fallen off considerably as compared with the last few years, being 74, as compared with 104 In 1910. 107 In 1 909 and 92 In 1 909. Classified by states, the record Is as follows: Arizona, 1; Alabama, 4; Arkansas, 4; California, 1; Delaware, 1; Flori da, 1; Georgia. 12; Illinois, 1; Ken tucky, 4; Louisiana. 2; Mississippi, 4, New York, 14; New Jersey, 4; North Carolina, 4; Nebraska, 1; Ohio, 3; Oklahoma, 1; Pennsylvania. 3; South Carolina, 3; Tennessee, 3; Virginia, 2, and West Virginia, 1. The death toll of sport was large, 428 killed and 3.4 82 Injured. There were 150 hunters killed, of whom 14 were mistaken for deer and one for a rabbit. Ten automobile racers were killed during the year The fol lowing table gives the loss of life resulting from disasters of various kinds In this country during 1911: Drownlngs 5,020 Fires 1,151 Mines 931 Cyclones and other storms... 184 Explosions 233 Electricity. 155 In the city of Boston with the ap pearance of a man who had aban doned aTT hope of life, the Rev. Clar ence V. T. Rlcheaon stood Tuesday at the bar of Justice, declared his guilt of the predemltated murder of fcls former sweetheart, Avis Llnnell, and without a tremor heard Judge Sanderson sentence him to death In the electric chair during the week be ginning May 10. While displaying remarkable stoic ism the young Virginian appeared Lo those who crowded the little court room, as If he were conducting his own funeral. To the half dozen questions which Judge Sanderson put to Rlcheson he answered without the slightest emo tion, always In the affirmative. Richeson’s counsel declared after the proceedings (hat an appeal for executive clemency would follow soon and that every effon would be made to obtain life Imprisonment as the punishment. As Rlcheson was called to the Par Clerk Manning said: "Clarence V. T. Rlcheson, this Indictment charges you with murder In first degree. On November 13 you pleaded not guilty. Do you desire to retract that plead ing?" "Yes, sir," replied Rlcheson. "What say you to the Indictment?" asked the clerk. “Guilty," was the reply, without a change In tone. “The only penalty provided by law,” said Judge Sanderson, "for murder In the first degree is death Have you pleaded guilty of murder In the first degree, after consideration and with the full knowledge and understanding of the nature and ef fect of such a plea?” “Yes, sir.” "Is the plea made by you free and voluntary?" continued the Judge. "Yes, sir." "Did you consult counsel with ref erence to the nature of the offense and the plea " Again came the simple, "Yes. sir.” After the district attorney had read Richeson’s confession, which was made a part of the record, Judge Sanderson asked: "Clarenre V. T Rlcheson, have you anything to say why sentence of death should not be passed upon you *" The young man apparently awal- lowed a hard luma In his tnroat, hut •without even a shadow across his face, he replied: ’’No, sir, nothing further than 1 have stated,'* Rising In his seat, Judge Sander son pronounced the death penalty, ending with the impressive words "and may God in his infinite good ness have mercy upon your soul." Wanted—To parohi b and yal- low poplar lo«s. ar/sr-MeMD- lan Lumbsr Oom, ay, Savannah, Ga. Good Farm for Sale—n*ar town, and and graded school. Write for par ticular*. W. H. Parrlsk, Coats N. C. Contract with parties to make ten million cypress shingles, and one hundred thousand cypress ties. Box 152, BranchvJlle, S C. Bookkeeping or Shorthand $35. Combined Course, $65. Subjects taught by Specialists. Address the Greensboro Commercial School, Greensboro N. C. for literature. Southwest Georgia Farm, and pecan lands. Any sized tracts. Best coun try In the world. Write for Illus trated booklet today. Flowers- Parksr Rsalty Co.. Thomaarllle, Ga. 5,00 Brown Leghorn Laying Pullets and Cockerels, bred for quality and egg production. In large or small numbers. Prices reasonable. American Poultry Plant, Cleve land, O. frt iwerfol Permanent Bs bSMtaat jtubbora . saass Good waka ars MS ass mostly yield lo F. P. F. laatteg—it saw# MtOWPCtfaUr whas othsr rnedU yo« toatayeufsd Sims are u—la— P. P. P. Hates rich; red, pure blood—cleanses the entire *7*tem—clears the brain—strengthens digestion and nervea. A positive specific for Blood Poison and skin diseases. - Drives out Rhswmotlsm and Stops the Pain; ends AMorfa; !• a wonderful tonic and body-builder. Thousands endorse it. F. V. UPPMAN, NAH, GA. WE CARRY THE LARGEST BELTS IN-STOCK IN SOUTH CARLODfA. We have the 14 in 6-ply aad the 16 and 18-ln 8-ply Gandy Bolt. It id the Original Red Stitched Canvas Bolt. There are a great many lmttatis|MI ou the market, but you can always tell the Gandy, for it is stamped *W* ery 10 feet (Gandy). W T e also have the 14-lnch 5-ply Giant Stitched.. This belt has a aatlonal reputation. K is the Original Seamiest and BtR. cbed belt. Write for prices.. COLUMBIA SUPPLY COMPANY. «• In South. Graduates getting $15 NEARLY STARVED WHEN FOUND, to $40 weekly. Write for partic- For Sale—Pure Breed Pekin Ducks. Whit# Sherwood Chickens, Rhode Island Reds. Plymoutn Rocks (Barred) at $4.00 for trio of eith er. Address Mrs Mary K. Little john, Jonesvllle, S. C. ulars. Automobile School, 108- 110 Liberty St., Savannah, Ga. LOSES EYE BY BOY’S PRANK. Air Rifle in Hand of Greenwood Lad Leads to Accident. Out in Northwesters for Twenty-on* Days With Little Food. Half starved and half frozen, ths crew of the Mediterranean steamsi | Julia Trubbe came Into New York aboard their craft in the tow of the Wanted—Men to take thirty day’s practical course In our machine ahopa and learn automobile bual- neaa. Poaltlona secured graduates $25 per week and up. Charlotte Auto School, Charlotte, N. C. Pillows Free—Mall us $10.00 for 36- pound Feather Bed and receive 6- pound pair Pillows, freight pre paid. New feathers, best ticking, satisfaction guaranteed. Agent* wanted. Turner A Cornwell, Feather Dealers, Charlotte, N. C. Frost-Proof Cabbage and Lettuce Plants, tied In bunches, selected. Delivered In South Carolina and Georgia. One thirty-five per thou sand. The largest earliest heads, are grown from our plants. Sea Island Plaat and Seed Company, Meggetta, 8. C. Complete Course In Automobile con struction driving, repairing. Grad uates assisted in getting employ ment Best equipped auto school Thursday afternoon at Grendel Mill, No. 2, at Greenwood, a little boy named Weathers pointed an air rifle at the little five-year-old son of; Mr. A. C. Crawford, one of the bosses In the mill, and pulled the trigger, the shot from the air rifle striking the little Crawford boy in the eye. The physician found it necessary to remove the ball and the little fellow will lose an eye as the result of the affair. The little Weathers boy is tug Hercules. For twenty-one days they had subsisted on food that wss intended to last them a week, aaA the biting cold of the nortbwest#»s they have encountered since lea vise Brunswick, Ga., on December has left them with but little feellsf in their limbs. Had the steamer Po£» hattan not reached them on Sundsjr and given them food and drlali standing by until the wireless sMk nailed that help was at hand, tk* Julia Trubbe would be now a wates* eight years old He is too small to i 0 gg e d craft with seven dead have taken deliberate aim at the other boy's eye, but as the result of having an air rifle and playing with it a little boy will be deprived of one eye for life. Ye«r Slipping Away. The days, weeks and years slip away like water In a running stream. Time’s great clock never loses a mo ment. Relentlessly, surely the mo ments pass, and our eager hands are tiot able to detain them. We cannot keep back the flying years, but we can and should keep the blessings they bring. Hold fast to the lessons aboard. Bhlp'a Crew of Ten Parish. The Norwegian ship Askou, beusri from Salavsrry, Peru, to Sydney, U • total wrack upon Ellsabstk rssf amA her saptaln and sin* members si koi ersw ars missing. Wireless mJUs hav* bees sent ts warn pasalAfl steamers te wsttk for survivors, though It la fesrod that all hav* lah*4. Rev. William Ruasell Owen practically every man who ho4 | helped build Atlanta once knew how they have taught. Keep the memory J to plow. The few exceptions wsr# of their Joys. Enrich every day of mostly business men who had been life with the garnered wealth of the • attracted there from Northern cities, days behind. This year of grace la and done (heir full part too In work- going like the others Ing out Atlanta's destiny. MAYORS ARE ASKED TO HELP. 176 177 65 792 Drowned in Swollen Stream. After hanging to a limb in the swollen stream of the WIthlacoochle River for threb hours, waiting for help to rescue them, James Higgins and his son. John, were drowned late Monday at Rockford, Ga. Higgins was moving with members of his family from Lowndes County to Mad ison County, Florida. Has Fortune in One Coin. A half dollar ol the year 1843, which Bryce Halwood, a prisoner at the penitentiary at Columbus, O., has carried as a pocket-piece for many years, may net the man a fprtune. Recently, a Los Angeles collector re fused $25,000 for pne of the mates of the coin oirned by Halwood. X Eleven Rebels Killed. Federal troops under Capt. Cat^ tillona, Mexico, dishSdged at Ectax ing. a band of Zapatiataa after a bat tik iq which tt rebels, one rural and two real dent a of the town were killed. The rebels retired in th* <U- Of Hueyapaa Lightning Asphyxiation Elevators Automobiles The Lynching Record. The lynching record for 1911 shows a distinct though slight Im provement over the records of previ ous years. The number of persons lynched since Jan. 1—61 — Is slightly less than that of any other recent year. All but two of the 61 persons lynched were negroes. Of the 59 negroes, one was a woman. The crimes charged against these victims range all the way from Insult to criminal assault and murder. Georgia leads with the most lynch- Ings, 17. Lynchings occurred In 13 states. All of these were .Southern or border states, excepting Pennsyl vania, which furnished the only in stance of the year w here the victim was burned at the stake. Contrary to the record of previous years, the majority of the victims were not accused of crimes against women. The victims accused of at tacks on women numbered 19, while 32 were accused of murder. Two negroes were lynched for insulting white women, four for attempted murder, one for threatening to mur der, one for highway robbery and one for persistent stealing. Two were charged with plain assault and one was being held in jail as a sus picious character. In several instances race riots were reported, In which both whites and blacks were killed. These are not Included in the record of the year. In the following record the word "lynching” has been held to apply only to the summary punish ment Inflicted by a mob or by any number of citizens on a person al leged to have committed a crime for which in the ordinary course that person would have been tried by law. The detailed record for 1911 Is as follows: Alabama, 3 negroes; Arkansa*, 3 negroes, 1 white man; Georgia. 17 negroes; Kentucky, 3 negroes; Louisiana, 4 negroes; Mis sissippi, 6 negroes; Missouri, 2 ne groes; Oklahoma. 7 negroes, 1 a woman t/ Pennsylvania, 1 negro; South Carolina, 1 negro; Tennessee, 3 negfoes; Texas, 2 negroes, 1 white mqa. Zj Start Fire to Kill Tarantula. ^ Two men set fire to a noodle fac tory in Pottsville, Pa., this week, to kill a tarantula that had crawled into * crack in tha building. The afclder came from a bunch of fruit and waa greatly feared. The damage amount ed to $400, Originator of th i Rock Hill Plan Asks Thetr Assistance. The following letter has been ad dressed to all the mayors an 1 Intend- ants of South Carolina towns and cities "Dear Sir: Having been appoint ed State superintendent for South Carolina ifllder the "Rock Hill plan" for the reduction of cotton agreage, I vn writing to ask your prompt co operation to organize your county under the plan. "I know I can safely appeal to your patriotism to help us to make South Carolina an example to other States in getting the cotton acreage nduced. It Is hardly necessary to argue to a man of Intelligence the great Importance to us all to do oomethlng practical toward securing this reduction. "As a first step i iward organizing jour county I want to ask you to recommend a committee of three of your llvest citizens—preferably a banker, a merchant and a planter— to take charge of the work in your count) %f appointing canvasaers, one to each two townships and raising sufficient funds among your mer chants and others to pay these can vassers. A fund of $150 to $200 ought to be amply sufficient for put- t’ng the work through In your coun ty. "Send me the names cf these three, the first nimed by you to act as chairman, and I will send them full instructions as to how to pro ceed under the plan. "Please let me hear from you right away, as no time Is to be lost if efficient work Is to be accom plished. "Yours very truly, "J. G. Anderson, "State Superintendent for South Carolina under the ’Rock Hill Plan.’ ” Noah’s Liniment Cured This Man of Rheumatism After 10 Years of Suffering BRYAN’S NAME ADVANCED. His Brother Will Have it Withdrawn From Ticket. William J. Bryan's name has been advanced for a position on the Dem ocratic primary ballot as a preferen tial candidate for the Presidency by a petition filed with Secretary of State Walt at Lincoln, Neb., Friday. The petition is signed by twenty-six voters, headed by A. A. Arter, of Omaha. Charles W. Bryan, brothsr cf William J. Bryan, said Friday: "This filing was done against Mr. Bryan’s wishes and without his knowledge. Both Secretary Walt and Mr. Artpr will be asked to have the petition withdrawn. There will be no legal proceedings unless they should become necessary.” This illustration is a good like ness of Mr. Dalr, who is 68 ye/us old, s Confederate veteran, and a gentleman well known in Ckorlso- ton, 8. C., where he ha* reoidod fee many ysars. Mr. Daly was un able to raios his right am for tea year*. Rheumatism is th* most distreaa- fng aad disoonrafing of oil trou ble*. Nine eases ont of ten can be eared by nshif NOAH’S LINI MENT. Where there is no srwelling or fever a few applications will re lieve you. It panstraUs—does not eraperate like other remedies; re quires very fcttl* rubbing. NOAH'S LINIMENT is the best Pain Remedy, and the fiew letters below from sufferers of rheumati* troubles who have bean cured by using NOAH’S LINI MENT onght to convinee you ol its merit. Rheumatic Sufferers, Read What John P. Daly, of Charleston, S. C., Writes “I had been suffering with rheumatism in my right arm and shoul der, complicated with a partial paralysis of the nerves. 1 had tried numerous preparations and regular physicians’ treatment with only par tial relief, suffering intense pain all the time, loss of appetite, insomnia and was reduced to a mere skeleton. “Fortunately I learned of NOAH’S LINIMENT, and began its use. Although I could not raise my arm, it is a source of gratification to me to inform you that after using a little more than a large size bottle I feel that I am completely cured and my old self again. Cannot too strongly recommend NOAH’S LINIMENT. JOHN P. DALY, Charleston, S. C” Cured of Bone Rheumatism. “I had b««n suffsring with bon« rheumatism for about thrss ysars. I have been using Noah's Llatmant and will say that it s«r*4 ms •amplstsly. flan walk PSltMT th»a I hav* its two Noah’s tinlasoat will So *11 you ' r/'Y uai 3 ars. No* sins. •> Cured of Rheumatism in Lef. “I sufftrod an” attack of rhoumatlsra la my rlskt log, and It waa hard for bio to sot about. I saw Noah’s Llnt- ment advertised and thought I would try it, and I found that It did me a whole lot of good: In fact. It.took all th* pain and aoroneas away. Edward fcyaa, Sv onsboro, Vo.’’ Cured of Bciatle ‘T^vory wlntar for th* past frw th sotaMo with s««*«* *••- •d noaitr *arr 1-w* .W 3 I have boon troubled wl matism, and had as llnimont and rtmody used on* bottlo of Noah’s havsn’t boon troubled wi I ohserfully raoemnoaS meat to Cured of Rheumatism la Heck. "I received the bottle of Noah’s Uai- ment, and think it nos helped m* greatly. I have rheumatism in my neck and It relieved it right much. I believe it Is th* host I aver used. Mrs. Martha A. Lambert. Bearst Xkum-Fa. M NflAtf) ilNiiMtiil w