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SOME NEW ONES w,m « MIB i ‘'-. 11 *' f Nn Pewple Kn Fwiod ia ike far Of tram Narik by Exalarcrt. . t TKN THOUSAND HILLED IN 8HEN 81 DISTRICT. i- *tm saw wuirf folk ffxpeftltion Maklnc « T imtton for th« •tin »1 •Y I Claim I S . From borhood of j^rla island, from Stefa tbo nelgh- If unci Vlc- messages Bou, lead r - fa of the Arctic ovpedlUon, now mak- tour of exploration for the Bifeah Museum of ;<jitoral Hi«- j and the ofolotirai Sgrrey of the inadlan government. •v* have ^vered the last mile tphlcally that we set out ^o cov- have found what we set out Bug—a new people, more numer ous than any one thought porfslhle,” igys 4at. Stefansson in his reports forwarded, front Lhe expeditions headquarters on the barren grpumjs qf Upper Deaae Hivcr. The Stefanaaon-Anderson expedi tion has been thseut from N’ew > York for about three years, and las cov- red a region compaiatively unknown id hitherto unvisited by white men. ipes the members of this ind have‘fared starvation. Interesting perhaps of their incee-are the discoveries of several races of "new people" and mined villages formerly occupied by ! The Imperial Army Advancing, Has INished Its Way U Itldn Blxly Mll<*s of Sian Fu 1’roviuce. , The . reported m a5Bacre Manchus by rebels lu the Shei Si dis trict is conflrmtd. Tjle Kan Su im- perial*array,'after mucii flgtiting, has succeeded la pushing its way to wlth- liu.80 mUef et Sisja Fu. Th ■ entire i rovlnce of fflieH,Sl Is in a tufmoil. \1nnjr towns have been looted and de serted. Conditions In the interior of China are graphically described in an in terview w+th-Ad&iph Herman, who went to TaMftian Fy to rescue women and children 6f the China inland mis- sioAf ‘ TheImpressions secured from the rebels%as far from Bsrorablo. There was no responsible headf, and some ith tusa ifi varloos kinds of uniforms had possession of the railroad sta tion at Ching Hslng. On showing my passports ana papers from the United States legation written in Chinese I was escorted to the commander near by. This officer had several hundred soldiers with no two uniforms alike and various kinds of v rifles. “The city of Tul Yuan Fu showed row after row of empty stores in the best business quarters of the city. On reaching the oflictals’ quarters, we \vere inforfed that a party of 21 for eigners .mostly women, wera soon to £c there. We went to Suan Chan to meet them. “On the night of December 10 a train with 20 wounded passed COTTON Mill STRIKE CAUSES SERIOUS DISORDFU AND RIOTS TUESDAY. ikklmoa. and apparently abandoned trough to Tal Yuan Fu and during Lorn twenty-five to fifty-years ago. (the night BOO cavalrymen entrained Th* ifihahltgntp Of the*e vtli^ges en-1 without horses an 1 went out to the gaged in whaling, judging Jrom the bunea of whales xeattered about. At £ape Bexley last May the ex plorers cam* upon a village of about forty |now k houaee, which apparently lied recently been abandoned. Sled trails led north toward Victoria T>and which la visible across tho.sUaU ev erywhere east of Point Wlao. “A* the explorers of the last ceu- •ever found p* ople near here, | suppose and trail evidence visit of Tlftorla Land people, who Id opine across the stran lo gel riftwood," aays one of the expedi- n Later the expedition discovered an other vlllagq in the suo w> region of the north, ttid people ont sealing in the middle of Dolphin and Union B of the messengers of the ex- >n then approached th<> newly fered people and after a narrow scene of the lighting. .'‘Ot\ the next aflcrnoon a general retreat begart. The first train con tained fieri. Yao, commander at Nlan Tsu Kwan, who has with him about 400 men. The other trainloads con tained Oen. Yao, commander at Nlan Tsu Kwan, who hss with him about 400 fen. The other trainloads con tained In all about 2,000 troops passed In succession. ‘‘AH day long stragglers arrived at Ian Chang ami we app r ohend<-(l Double, but a train came from* Tal > nan Fu to meet them. Towards Tty in an acvouiR of the trip, [evening ^wo of the straaglers lined their rifles near tha station and the man in the cars supposing the impe rialists wvre advancing made- a gen eral scramble for the nearer,e hills Only afi.er discovering that their comrades had caused the firing did t'-ey return with great caution and get on board t-lie train which speedily of being knifed by out) tkwj departed formal V nax Fu. friendly negotiations were uu-j **On th« fourth we made our de em ^ Ipnrture for the ei-st and after the re were thirty-nine members of Nlan Fu Wang were sent through to up, a mm11 part of the A-ku- iKhaLar Chtii Cb*ang jI»molfi!-‘.< d The t-tag-mt>ut. A ©cording to the rebels complained th*t tXB range of ra nellker they nor their fore-[their guns was too short and so they had ^rer gwan a whi.o iman. jhud to flee before the tiaftriiilista. winter homo of these peoplejeome of their recruits did not evnn the mliSR* 9- th* trail • north | kmow how to handle rifles and Hexl*y, but In-the Banriuer oihetn vB'ere arnied with ‘ * . .. . The provinces of £hen S! and Shan Fi from which the reported massacre cf 10,000 Manchua by the rebels Is Wnd Dolj^iin .aid Uuio'i sUaUgiui ^, couin'tsed, lir.vu been hotbeaa Bore tha» Iwenty n»e« had’hvo'i* [of the revolution for some montiia. white man, thus repre»«ittUu«-iott.*DM*mber 8 news was received by ntxct with the white race than messenger from Sian Fu. the capital pie of any. BfikiB'r £>krt Of tholcf Hhan that B.OnO Man'-hua had ‘ ‘ “ [ix-en slain in the ptovlnce un to that fudt ofldate A'column of imperialist troopa had ben operating in the district to Ing of the Manehus b&a continued sat)press the rebellion, but the elay- sleadily. IHnscm I’cm-e Talk and Crowd aide Rises in Wrath When Speak ers Urge Against Violence. Eight companies of State militia, including one field battery, com manded by Col. E. Lorry £weetzer, placed the mill district of Lawrence, Muss., under martial law Tuesday night after a day cf iriotlng due to the strike of 16,000 operatives in the big cotton and woolen diflls. At least 16,>.00 othef hands were thrown out of work by the stopping o' machinery and -thp attacks on the mills by the strikers. In one instance, a company of militia had to charge a mob with fixed bryonets, one boy belpg probably fatally hurt. Thirty- five arrests of armed rioters were made during tjie day. Although the strike was originally instituted in protest against a re duction in pay because of the opera tion of the new 54 hour law making the working week two hours shorter, the strikers now declare that they w ill not return w ithout a 16 per cent increase and other concessions, In- cTiifTThgtloutlie pay for overtime work and the abolition of the premium or bonus system. This’ decision of the strikers was made known at a conference between strike leaders and members of the diity » government this afternoon. Throughout the day there were out breaks in rapid succession, the po lice finding the strikers and their svmpathizers paftlculafly hard to deal with because of the man nation- alith-s represented. No less than 45 tongues are spoken by employes of Lawrence mills. The opening of the mills at 7 o'clock was the signal for the first outbreak, when strikers stoned the gates of the Wood, Wa-ihington, Prospect and other mills They were repulsed by police and mill em- p’oyes w ith streams of water, but j their tactics resulted in the closing I down of nearly two-thirds of the plants. Later there were clashes between VERY FAST WORK ” Ai Acrt if Pirn Land Ptingked ii Fur and Obi Qoarttr Minutrs BY TRACTION ENGINE I,’rawing a Group of Five Ploughs in a Line—"I Am Glad to have Seen This Day," Kays President Stone of Perdue University After ward. CLASSIFIED COLUMN XVOCOOOOOCCOOOGCCCCCCCCCCX-. Cow Peas, Soys, Velvet Beans, Cotton Heeds—Get catalogue. Willet Seed Company, Augusta, Ga. W anted—To put chase ash and yel low''poplar logs. Tarver-McMil lan Lumber Company, Savannah, Ga. Good Farm for Rale—n^ar town, anc and graded school. Write for par ticulars. W. H. Parrish, Coats N. C. For Sale—A few good trained hounds at $12 and $16 each. Guaranteed. M. L. Crawford, Tiger, Ga. When three-oil-fed traction en gines can pull a plo'igh across a field, turning up a strip of earth sixty feet wide and ploughing an acre in four minutes and fiftem seconds, it must be confessed that the day of the Iloos- ier farmer, who was represented as continually chewing straw and say ing "by gum,” is forever past, says a letter from Lafayette, Indiana. The formal test of this sixty-foot p’ough, the biggest and most suc cessful ever put together, was made on the grounds of Purdue Univer sity. Several hundred farmers and teachers were tbene to witness the test, pnd when it succeeded. Presi dent Stone of the Ini versify, voiced 'he sentiment of th* others when lie remarked: “I am glad to have seen this day." The plough wa's built in units of five, that is, five ploughs were built abreast and attached to a single frame. They were so arranged that ’they could be drawn over the roads one behind the other,..thus making it easy to take them through any farm | gates. j When It was desired to assemble | them a movement resembling the mil- ; itary one of "squads on left into line" was executed. That is to say, the sec- ! ond unit moved up to the left of the > first one and was attached, the third moving to the second one in the same way, and so on until the entire ten sections formed In a line. This line was oblique to the gen eral direction in au angle of 45 de grees, so as to make it easy to turn j the corners. The engines were hook ed one at each end and one in the] * Bookkeeping or Shorthand $35. Combined Course, $65. Subjects taught by Specialists. Address the Greensboro Commercial. School, Greensboro N. C. for literature. For Sale—.-TfLie • Uio, single comb Black Minorcas, Northup strain. Also eggs for . setting, $1.50 per 13. J. T. W. f lint, Charleston, S. C. Poultry and Eggs Wanted Highest market prices paid for Turkeys, Geese, Ducks, Pens and fresh eggs. O. D. Sires <£ Co., Charles ton, S. C. For Sale—Planting: Seed. Long Sta ple Upland Gotten at $1.'0 pm bushel. Fop fnriher information apply J. It. Young & '’ornpany Box 413, Charleston, S. U. Southwest Georgia Farm, and pecat lands. Any sized tracts Beat coun try In the world. Write for Bin. traded booklet today. Flower Barker Realty Co. Thomaav!'' f?a dour Fortune Free and 3 q n ,.>q i >• < t.ii: \ i>• an• 1 y an wennl; m • r\. Ions results; s. nd birth d.m stamp, dime for surprisitur d.- ciosures. M. Sa-bn, N i:>-' St.. Omaha. Neb (Pricklj lata, Pok* Root and PoUailmn) Pro "owerfal Permanent Ita beneflem, .. stubborn casta Good result* are „ fecta art usually yiakl to P. P. P. lasting—it cures, ialt vsry quiukly when other medi. you to itay cured cuia* are meisss P. P. P . Makes rich, red, pure blood—cleanses the entire system—clears the brain — strengthens digestion anti nerves. A positive specific for Blood Poison and side diseases. Drives*out Rheumatism and Stops the Pain; ends Malaria; is a wonderful tonic and bpdy-builder. Thousands endorse it. F. V. UPPMAN, SAVANNAH, GA. 4 ■ I Ml I ■ — ' ■■■ . . I - " High Grade Field and Farm Seed Mlxson’s ^eejJtaGrow They are grown in the South for the South. M)VG AND SHOUT STAPLE l ULAN DUOTTON’. The best varieties. Write us for prices and informatior. (X)ItN, SORGHUM, MILLET, VELVET DEANS. ETC., Our corn is High-Bred South Carolina Corn. Get our Illustrated, lb- Cataloguo of till Vegetable and Farm Seeds. <„ W. H. MIXSON SEED COMPANY CHARLESTON, S. C. anted—Salesman for big a grade line Ciders and Vinegars. Ex- cltisive or ns side line. Utbere) ’ < omtnissions with .weekly settle-, ments. Kifte cpelThl?'-..for good man. Refcrenros required. ..t/Nt- 1 antic Vitii gar Companv, Rich- paOnd, Va. . str kersand the soldlera and mill of-, .... . , ,, . middle, adjustable chains an 1 pu fid a Is .about the i.ewer Bactflc, At-i . . , i making It so they eouii t) hunt Inland •outh df Va'pe. *** diteoveroH by memi>ei 1 s of ipeditlofl* that oY the 1,000 Es-’ on the two sides of Coronation ted Arctics C&pt. Reary region, gain* sixty years ago, is now game- lesa- *nd d***rt* 1, and <h* Coi'P«r- mln* reftoa hss not 10 p«r c*ht of tht* lumber of cailhou of Ulchard- sonjl time. It is esUuuted that in ten lj#ar» 1$ wlU b.< prauliosUjt 1m- |a T»4U* on the country while Ds these rouiote wilds. 1st H’xfxnnson crossed over torla I And, where he dlsoov- iStandlpAvlnnlik* peoole called -nu,-.rM[-ail-ut. They are de- North European people. One of the Alaskan Eskimo guides '•omnentlng upon their ap pearance: 7 not Eslrimo, nte tojp ale men. Two of them lad chin Lrds .fifiBortheU as ligtR and turp- to red and all had light eye- |W8.’*'!•» •• Ipeglmens of pkh Iron ore from Vldtorlh dhNBif horth of Cap# Bet- ls|, hsv— he—-imthered by she ex- pefltion, and copper is picked up fre- qufntly by the natives in.-the Coro nation Gulf district. Stefanns^ spent several ithl on thd lower Horton river about the b*me time on the Cop- pefmlne. He thinks that .tho 1 lorton rl^jr hi fully trt laffte a stteani as the Cojtpermine. A purvey has hijen made of Horton river from the place cegrest Langton Bay to vtlthin sev- en^r miles of Bear Lake. TXT- \»M is the present plan of the ex- pedltiq^ta.remain In the field an other feig \>ecau8e of the great op- pojfcunltles 15* *the pursuit’ cl th^tr That there is a possibility of in's, men juiving survived for m«. 1* the evidence arious places o( people bearing names of white men. moat e communities some of fbe na- *ro named “Ncrk,” which trans- 4HU1 Eskimo to Jlngllsh- is '< 1'^ * i * ■ less Town and Liquor. srnon,-* Sji$)frla,.of,LOs Aug*!**, nnd‘believe^ to be the only in- ^pomted city In the PnlteiV.States. I a slnilB'churis, voted tor *‘ma| ( " ( Run<lor* T«epdM* Ttoere Arab saloons. THIRD FIANCEE JS FOUND. I!ifhebon Was Engaged to a Girl In a Salt laike City. A dispatch from Boston rays the day after Avis Ydn’nrB met her death by poison, Clarence \. T. Richesou, the clergyman, who was then a guest at the Brookline home of his fiancee, Mtss Violet Ed m a mb. wrote a letter to another fiance", according to in formation given oiU by the pel tee.. This letter was written to Miss Pateey belts of Halt Lake UitA, who had loaned itichew n mOucy when In* v as a poor theological student, and Lt It he wrote that sobn. In that very month, ho would he on his way West, whofe lie would n ek a church that lie "might preach to thousands in- stegd oLhundreds:" When the letter was written Avis Lionel!, to whom the minister had been engaged, was dead, hia mar riage to Miss Edmunds was set for th* end of the month and in Salt I ake City the young woman who had befriended him in his hour of need, considered Sitself also IBs fiancee, according to the police Miss Felts, it is said, became engaged to Riche- sen in 1903 and the engagement was never broken. lantic ami Arlington and other mills Stints were exchanged and several persons were slightly injured The police fired into tnC air to frighten the rioters, but thy fire hose proved more effective. Unawed by the stiower of ice. how ever, the strikers pressed forward Unpt. Ranlett ordered his men to fix bayonets and charged. In the charge | several persona were injured, a Si- i !H«n boy, Dominic Rapasa, being so badly hurt that he probably will die. I'ollee from other cities arrived to night to aid the forces already here. Judge Mahoney of the local court held a session tonight when 27 rlot- i rs were placed on trial and found guilty Three were-sentenced to two years in the house of correction and the other 24 were- £lveu one year sntenres. * - Fourteen hnndrei strikers attend ed the mass meeting tonight In the dty hall and twice that number as sembled outside unable to gain ad mittance. The speakers urged the strikers to stand together, to avoid rioting and to do all In their power to ] pull abreas Behind the ploughs was u runnii t. 1 anted Men to take thirty day’? practical' course in our macbln shops and learn automobile bus ness Positions secured graduate* 125 per week and up rhar!ot*< Auto School. Charlotte, N C 'intcrnitv Sanitarium — Private, u ■ st-Proof Cabbage and' ’ L«ttiK» Plants, tied in bunrlres, ■'elivered in South Carolina apb, Georgia. One thirty-five per tho.uq- sand. The largest earliest heads, are grown from our plants tka i-lanil Plant aud Seed Cuinpauyq Megg'-tts, S. C. ' ' • Before Placing Your Orders for Cabbage Plaints Write Us for Price* CHARLESTON FRUIT CO. - 92-4-6 Market St., ■ CHARLESTON, S. C. • l -!> in n Uu- , r V • Soap Co., t,> 1 t 1 , Phil id*'!; IBa i n R u>t Soa:> t’.nt \. :M"7> ink 'and ail un- from riothing, magi'' 11 etTi’r’ aririn° House- NEt.KO ADMITS CRIME. <:< ■i i for Beer. i va' board. Each share xsas conneett-i r j] {> j h ()’’ 1 f 1 ’ i 1 ■ * mi I n■ r-1!"■ r V 1 r - r \ • ! 1 > e \ > i rcui.-h a 'vitli a system of b vers r<> it t >a. 1 p.Vb-n»s ( :ir< ! 0 - ho:: 1 s id 1 • i ^ 1 • : i Mi u < r\ f 1 ■- be taken out of the ground for ai for infants: inf:>" 1? f.xr -o'- *--k v : ! ' •- ' a * n ar r.ud : •.tum;j or any could te sunk oih*T oLst rur‘ Ion or de> , < r for a giBlv in , Mr? M T M ■ i- 1 ■ »' M 0 g \v , j, 1, I a *8 0 And Imjdieutes u White Mqn in the Terrible Murder. At Shelby, N. C., John Ross, one of a trio of negroes charged with the murder of Mr. and Mrs. John Dixon of Cleveland county on December 13, W'e.lm -day confessed to the crime, impi. ating Frank Giadden, a white ii in, who was employed on the Dixon farm. Ross declares Gladden gave him $1"" to kill Dixon, while Glad- luBy killed Mrs. Dixon, the motive. Boss was rsd ( > and the court at he cr. c e of Gladden. K >: !t ai \\ .’1 1 '1 is ; ap*T the field. The power reservt irs of the engine ! were filled with <v distillate of kero sene of low grade, costing about four cents a gallon. At the signal the en gineers started their machines simul- jteneously anil a man-moved along the j running board, -setting the points { And so the great device moved across Itho ground, ripping up the soil in a .wide swath. The four minutes and flftven sec- ! onds required to plough -an aeie-set a new world s record. (Jang ploughs drawn by traction engines ar** not new and for several^ears there have lx‘en multiple experiments in the West. .^MiCVV ious r.eonl was madff bj B (i,'!Tkk*r in a contest at Brandon, Kiln’, j^hoRofned over an acre in never! rtim rU* and 'hir's-fiv seconds w()h a 1 *p”^fnt plough in 1&09. linker used a Tf> hor^e po.v« r Noah’s Liniment Cured This Man of Rheumatism After 10 Years of Suffering nors. The largest mould-board built wa.-? on> Oil g with a 1 1 a ' 1 e \ p >' keep others from reporting tor duty I , . , < , .. , „ , 'engine which he rata wilhoiH go.er In the morning. The same speakers | - spoke outside at an overflow meeting and their suggesij(.n of peaceful methods were met with hisses. I ” , ruto () " point'ploughing base an * * * | frame fbr Ugh' soils. S:' all g:i- ploughs have been chained t l- M.* -. too, in’combination of thirty to for:\- six, hut nothin* so large as the on- tried out at Purdue. ! ALLEGED CONFESSION DI>MFD. D'“SS n oM, a .t PRETTY TOUGtl CAT tfTORY I pox bled Meat for Its Owner Catrhin^ Rabbits. are til «d. MU* of OsflQ ?ty'wfomen vot- A— 'SnAi 1 ' Great Faniine in Russia. Horrible conditions prevailing among peasantry of southeastern Russia are dajdcted in a telegram .from a doctor in Orenburg. The doc tor says the starving peasantry in the government of Orenburg, on the t'ver TTral, are selling their children to the Khirgei Nomqds 'In the gov ernment of Saratov Manv of the people in the vicinity have died from hunger and typhus. Man Frozen to Death. . Although the offic ! al mertury was 16 degrees above freezing, Peter MulY*r, aged St, was found frozen to death, Monday morning ! n an un- oeoupitai , Imhkm in N*w Orleans V/lth an acquaintance Mulvey sought ig* fram the coid tn the honse -t.nfgUt Upon H*akjnlng Mon4ay orffn^ the fri«itf>xAund M1il|ey frozen. « ^ • ,.L* , r f Joseph Ordway rxf Balsam Lake, Mich., has a cat ibat is in a class all by itselfr and is somewhat ahead of most rabbit hunting hounds. This pussy, whose voice a f night Is unlike that of its fellows, Is a sure money saver lor its own=»r. In replenishing the larder the cat p-tays an important part" In the Ordway-household. . Whenever fresh meat is desired Ord'way takes the cat outside, shows It a rnbbit skin and then returns to the house. Within an hour at the longest the. cat will return dragging gooil sized rabbit, which Is deposited at Its master’s feet. Ordway has owned the -eSt several years and cannot account (or its hunting propensities He remembers having at one time taken* a rabbit from the cat and patting pussy en couragingly for having captured bunny.. Since then the sight of tho rabbit skin is sufficient to send the cat out. Ordway has never been fortunate enough to he on hand when his hunt ing cat pounces on it® prey. ♦— TRIED TO TAKE HIS LIFE. The Bomb Rilled '1 wo Soldiers and Wounded Others. The bomb which was thrown at Premier Yuan Shi Kal’s carriage w hile he was on hm way to the. im perial court at Peking Tuesday morn ing killed two soldiers and injured seven other persons, both civilians and soldiers. . Eight or ten of those who were Struck-.by ) the splinters from the bt nib #r<^>xpectei to die. The men Who attempted to take Tuan Shi Kai’s fife hoped to -escape by mixing with crowds in the streets. They were, however, pursued and captured and Were taken into a rearby bouse. The public executioner was at once Lexington Negro F'>un<l \ >t Guil:> of Train Y*'looking. The January term of the Genera! Sessions Court for Lexington County came to a close Monday nUht at 9 o'clock, when tho Jury In the en?* of Lawrence Robertson, a m gro. charged with wrecking the Seaboard train at Swansea, or the curly morn- j ing of November C, last year, when j W. Edward Pritchard, of Augusta, j engineer in charge ol the train, mot , IBs death, returned a - verdict of not guilty. In sidle of the alleged con- | fcsslon of Robertson, im; !e in th" I r’tate Penitentiary before a numbt r of detectives and Chief Uuthcurt, of tie Columbia police department, the jury seemed to believe the dnial of j th negro on the witness sland. When Robertson went on the stand he de fied that he ever made the confes sion, saying that wnatever statement he had made was under fear; that while in the Penitentiary he had been given whiskey, and that it was while under its influence that h have made sojpe statements. might FOUR TOTS LEFT ALL ALONE. Found in Their Hume Without Fuel or Anything to Eat. Thos. Duggan, who went from Charleston to Aiken some weeks ago and opened -a-“house for wiijterjtour- ists, has apparently absconded/leav ing behind him four little children, the age of the oldest child being eight years. His wife died in Charleston on the 2 4th of December, and those who have been associated with Mr. Duggan say that gr'ef had probably cometime during the earlier portion sefetime during the earlier portion of last week, leaving no trace. When Ti s ilhMrntuin is a good liku- ss of Mr. ILily, who is 68 years nf' iIemUv.veteran, and a gcntb rnan u 11 known in Charles ton, fcj. C:, w here he lias resided for many years. Mr. Daly was un able to r<ut>o ius right arm for tea years. b ■». • r !< *■ Rheumatism is th<» most distress ing and discouraging of all trou-' bles. Nine cases out of ten can bs cured by usmg NUAH’d L4LNI* MENT. • Where there is no swell ing or fever a few apiilieatJons will re lieve y"U. It I'Mi'-trates -does not evap' rate like other n-niedicq; re- quin > v> rv l.ttie rubbing. t , •» -NOAH’S I IXIMENT Is the best 1’aln Remedy, and the few letters -.Irum suiTerera of rheumatic'{roubles who have been cured by using NO.AlVJS LINI- r x M-ENT ought to con-vinco you of its merit. Rheumatic Sufferers, Read What John P. Daly, of Charleston, S. C., Writes “I had been suffeu.og with rheumatism in my right arm and shoul der, complicated wih a partial paralysis of the nerves. I had tried numerous preparations and regular physicians’ treatment with only par tial relief, suffering inhmse pain-all the time, loss of appetite, insomnia and was reduced to a ncre skeleton. / “Fortunately I learned of NOAH’S LINIMENT, and began its use. Although I could not F$ise my arm, it is a source of gratification to me to inform you that al|*r 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 Sciatic Rheumatism. Cured of Bone Rheumatism. "I 'had been Buffering with bone rheumatism lor about three years. I have been using Noah’s Liniment and will say that It cured me completely. Can walk better than I have in two yeais. Noah'u Liniment will do all you claim. I rannoA recomjnend it C.'' •) called and with'hi sassiatants Is now the case was discovered Monday j standing sentinel In front of the| morning the four children were ini house where Yhan’i assailants are the house without food or fuel. The | QDnfined. „ He will remain on duty j city authorities at once took charge ere until he receives orders from of the little orphans and placed them * imperial .authorities,, who, it is | under the care of the sisters, at St. jected, Will comraand that th* men Angela’s academy. - The police desire 1 •'v - • - a,. ^NSMUwnMUr.; . // . 1.0 4od Mr. Dussw. 4 ^ IU4I ’I • J Cnreci of Rheumatism in Ltg. "I nifTcrcd an attack of .rheumatism In my right Kg. and R was hard tor dip to g. t about. 1 saw Noah’s Linl- wmt advertised r.r 1 thought T wouht try it, and l found th*.“ it did me a whole lot of gtioii, ir. IkcU U l>>ok nil I have been troubled wit^Tsclatlo rheu matism, and had u»ed nearly every liniment and remedy known. I have used one bottle of Noah's Liniment, and haven't been troubled with pain sine*. I cheerfully recommend Noah's Lini ment to any sufferer ot rheumatic troubles. J. E. Emerson, Drop. Globe Stamp Works. Boston, Maas’* Cured of Rheumatism La Week. "I received the bottle of Noah's Unl- ment, and think tt has helped me greatly. I hare rheumatism In m: neck and it relieved it rtffkt believe it la the best X ever Mar tbs A. Lambert. Bearsr NoaVtLInlmeatto tb* best remedy for Rheuma tism, Sciatica, Lame back S11 a Joints and MuacUk Sore Throat, Colds, Strain^ Sprains, Cuta, Bruise* C0U0, Cramps, Neuralgia, Toothache, and all Nerv* Bone and Muscls AoheS |and Paine. The genuine has Noah's Aik on every package and iooka like this ont, bat has BSD band ea asd