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fhom girlhood Mothers Should Watch the Deve Interesting Experiences of Every mother possesses information ; which Is of vital interest to her young -daughter. Too often this is never imparted or is withheld until serious harm has result ecL to the growing girl through her ignorance of nature's mysterious and wonderful laws and penalties. Girls' over-sensitiveness and modesty , often puzzle their mothers and baffle physicians, as they so often withhold their confidence from their mothers i and conceal the symptoms which ought to be told to their physician at this critical period. When a girl's thoughts become slugfish, with headache, dizziness or a disposition to sleep, pains in back or lower , limbs, eyes dim, desire for solitude; ] when she is a mystery to herself and , friends, her mother should come to her aid, and remember that Lydia E. Pink- i ham's Vegetable Compound will at 1 Pthis time prepare the system for the i coming change, and start the menstrual J period in a young girl's life without pain or irregularities. Hundreds of letters from young girls : and from mothers, expressing their gratitude for what Lydia E. Pinkham's , Vegetable Compound has accomplished j , for them, have been received by the ! Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., at , Lynn, Mass. Miss Mills has written the two folx lowing letters to Mrs. Pinkham, which will be read with interest; Lear Mrs. Pinkham:? (First Letter.) "I am but fifteen years of age, am depressed, have dizzy spells, chills, headache and backLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Con I : BW?UHI MJW ~ M * riygffsfl Vlv W L JH Bhflfifepf * ! ?iT!! Jbsy^UAH\ f?E$T DEALERS I j I A. J. TOWER CO. ESTABtUffi# 1836 I i m. SO&TON NEW YORK CHICAOO 9 1 TOWIK CAIUMAM CO.batid.TOtOITO. CAN. J ? W. L. Douclas *3= & *3= SHOESMu ; W. L. Douglas $4.00 cut Edge Line 1 cannot^be equalled at any price. MORE MEM'S S3. SO SHOES THAN AMY OTHER MANUFACTURER. j C1H nnn REWARD to anyone who can qflUjUUU disprove this statement. W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes have by their excellent style, easy fitting, and superior wearing ' qualities, achieved the largest sale of any $3.50 ! shoe in the world. Thev are Just as good as i those that cost you $5.0<) to $7.00 ?the only difference is the price. If I could take you into : ay factory at Brockton, Mass.. the largest in | the world under one roof making men's fine i shoes, and snow you the care with which every pair of Deugias shoes Is made; you would realize.i why W. L. Doutias $3.50 shoes are the best ! * shoes produced in the world. , If 1 could show you the difference between the . hoes made in my factory and those of other ;aiakes, you would understand why Douglas \ $3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hold ! their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater Intrinsic value than any other $3.50 ' hoe on the market to-day. W. L bougtaa Strong Mado Shooa for \ Mao, S3. SO, $2.00. Boy*' School A I Droam Shooa,$2.SO, $2, $1.76,$1.SO . CAUTION.?Insist upon having W.L.Doug- I fee shces. Take no substitute. None genuine ' )ritkout his name and price stamped on bottom. J WANTED. A shoe dealer ineverv town where L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. "Full line of Samples sent free for inspection upon request. /insf Color Eyelets used; i/'.ey will not wear brassy. ^Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Styles. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. then sex, used as a douche is marvelouiiy scc coufol. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs, tops discharges, heals inflammation and local soreness,, cores leucorrhcea and nasal catarrh. t Paxtine id in powder form to be dissolved in pure ; srater, and. is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal ! and economical than liquid antiseptic* for all TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES t'or sale at druggists, 50 cents a bo*. Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free. Yrft r. Raxton Company Boston, Mass. | TO WOMANHOOD ilopment of Their DaughtersMisses Borman and Mills. ache, and as I have heard that you can rive helpful advice to girls in my condition, I am writing you."?Myrtle Mills, Oquawka, 111. Dear Mrs. Pinkham:? (Second Letter.) 44 It is with the feeling of utmost gratitude that I write to you to tell you what your valuable medicine has done for me. When I wrote you in regard to my condition I had consulted several doctors, but they failed to understand wr case and I did hot receive t _ J a A. T any oenen^ irom meir irettirmemr. a iuuuhcu vour advice, and took Lydia E. Pinkham's vegetable Compound and am now healthy ana well, and all the distressing symptoms which I had at that time have disappeared."? Myrtle Mills, Oquawka, 111. "Miss Matilda Borman writes Mrs. Pinkham as follows: Dear Mrs. Pinkham ' Before taking Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound my monthlies were irregular and painful, and I always had such dreadful headaches. 44 But since taking the Compound my headaches have entirely left me, my monthlies are regular, and I am getting strong and well. I am telling all my girl friends what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has done for me."?Matilda Borman, Farmington, Iowa. If you know of apy young girl who ( is tiick and needs motherly advice, ask her to address Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn. Mass., and tell her every detail of her symptoms, and to keep nothing back. She will receive advice absolutely free, from a source that has no rival in the experience of woman's ills, and it will, if followed, put her on the right road to a strong, healthy and happy womanhood. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound holds the record for the greatest number of cures of female ills of any medicine that the world has ever known. Why don t you try it ? lpouod Hakes Sick Women Well. (At46-'05) HIS PROGENITOR. "Well," said Dumley, -self-complacertly. after his first after-dinner speech, "you didn't think I could j sreak. did you?" "I corfess," replied Knox, "that I i can't think of anything so marvelous *j that las haopcnsd for years. Not since Balaam's time, in fact."?Phila'i?l?h:a Press. Taylor's Cherokee Kennedy of Sweet Gum ?t,/1 \r,,iian fe ereat remedv?Cures Coughs, Colds, Croup and Consumption, and all throat and lung troubles. At druggists, 25c., 50c. and $1.00 per bottle. The old local costumes are still worn in many parts of Russia. .captTgraham's cure Sor?? on Face and Back?Tried Many Jipctor* Without Surcata?Gives Thank* to Cntlcnra. Captain W. S. Graham, 1321 Eoff St., Wheeling, W. Va., writing under date of June 14, '04. aays: "I am so grateful 1 want to thank God that a friend recommended Cuticura Soap and Ointment to me. 1 suffered for a long time with sores on my face and back. Some doctors said 1 had blood poison, and others that 1 had barbers' itch. None of them did me any good, but they all took my money, ily friends tell me my skin now looks as clear as a baby's, and 1 tell them all that Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment did it." Bishop Potter favors twenty-minute sermons. Cure* Rheumatism and Catarrh?Medicine Sent Free. These two diseases are the result, of an awful poisoned condition of the blood. If you have aching joints aud back, shoulder blades, bone pains, crippled hands, legs or feet, swollen muscles, shifting, sharp, biting pains, and that tired, discouraged feeling of rheumatism, or the hawking, spitting, blurred eyesight, deafness, sick stomach, headache,*noises in the head, mucous throat discharges, decaying teeth, bad breath, belching gas of catarrh, take Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) It kills the poison in the blood wbich.causes these awful symptoms, giving a pure, healthy blood supply to the joints and mucous membranes, and makes a perfect cure of the. worst rheumatism or foulest catarrh. Cure9 where all else fails. Blood Balm (B. B. B.) is composed of pure Botanic ingredients, good for weak kidneys. Improves the digestion, cures dyspepsia. A perfect tonic for old folks .by giving them new, rich, pure blood. Thoroughly tested for thirty years. Druggists, $1 per large bottle, with complete directions for home cure. Sample free and prepaid by writing Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga. Describe J ??A/li?l funa nno/H/>0 1 oH ITlVfl uuuuiu auu apctiai HOC sent in sealed letter. The word "banquet" formerly meant dessert. Beware oT Oint-n?it? For C*t*rrU Tliit Contain .Mercury. ssmercurv will surely destroy the sense o! smell and completely derange the whole system when ent'erinj'it through the mucous surfaces. Sucnarticlesshould never be used except on nrescriptioas from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to the good you cau possibly derive from tneoi. .rlall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cneney ? Co., Toledo, 0., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucoussurfaces ofthesystem. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally, and made in Toledo, Obio, by F. J. Cheney 4 Co. Testimonials free. Sold by Druggists; price, 75c. per bottle. Take HallVFamily Pills for constipation. The word "measles" formerly meant leprosy. '-v The- acme of. goodness It ta k>ve. the public. to study universal good, and to promote.the interests of the whole' world, asv{ar as lies in our power, declares Woman's life. FITSpermanentlycured. No fits or nervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nervellestorer.f Atrial bottleand treatise free Dr.K. ri. Eijki, Ltd., fcSl Arch St.. PhiIa.,Pa 11 ? - - ?-U - - - I.* ..a a VI .\ttimmar1nn X'dl'IS Will suun nave a .uv/uitui>uv.u?. mosque. Mrs. Wina.ow's Soothing Syrup lor Children teething, softens thegums.reducesinflammatlon,a!la>s pain,cures wind colic,25c. a bottle Electricity ia fatal to the discernment of certain colore. Piso'b Cure lor Consumption is aninfalllble medicine for coughs and colds.?N. W, Samcki., OceanGrove, N. J.. Feb. 17, 190b. There are plenty of lions in southern Rhodesia. BOX OF WAFERS FREE-NO DRUCS -CURES BY ABSORPTION. Cnr*? Bslrhlnr o* Gas ?Bad Byaath and Had Stomnrh ? Short Breath? lJlnatlas:? Ernctatlons ?lrrerular Heert, Etc. T;'k<? n MuTs Wafer any time of the dav' I f>r night*. and note the immediate good ef! f?"' on voir* stomach. It ahsorbs the gas,-' disinfects the. stomach, kills the poison perms and cures the disease. Catarrh of he head and throat, unwholesome food and overeating make had stomachs. Scarcely any stomach is entirely free from tninf nf cnm<? kind. Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers will make your stomach healthy l-.v absorbing foul jj*s?3 which arise from the >'n digested food ami by re-enforcing the lining- of the stomach. enabling, it to thoroughTv mix the food with the gastric juices. This cures stomach trouble, promotes digestion, sweetens the breath, stops belching and fermentation. Heart action becomes strong and regular through this process. Discard drugs, as you know from experience they do not cure stomach trouble. Try a common-sense (Nature's) method that does cure. A soothing healing sensation results instantly. We know Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers will do this, and we want vou to know it. Special Offer.?The regular oriee of Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers is 50c. a box, but to introduce it to thousands of sufferers we will send two (2) boxes upon receipt of 7.3c. and this advertisement, or we will send you a sample free for this coupon. 111183 FREE COUPON 129 J Send this couoon with your name I and address and name of a druggist ! who does not sell it for a free sample ! box of Mull's Anti-Belch Wafers to ! Mut.t/s Geapf. Tonic Co., 328 Third Ave., Rock Island, 111. | Give FulL Address and Write Plainly, j Sold by all druggists, 50c. per box, or sent by mail. A Trite Reply. A girl in Gaylord, Kan., was told by one of her admirers that, if she didn't marry him, hg'd get a rope and hang himself right in front of her house. "Oli, please don't do it, dear," she said, "you know' father doesn't want you banging arouna nere. There is a fine opportunity in this vicinity to take orders for the celebrated White Bronze monuments, headstones, grave I rovers, etc., made by The Monumental 1 Bronze Company, 392 Howard Ave., BridgeI port, Conn. It ia a good, legitimate busi| ness, aud they offer very liberal inducements, j Someone should write them for the agency. A Big Sounder. One invention sometimes makes another necessary. A gramophone which can be heard a distance of three miles is the latest. Now, what is needed is a sound deadener with a three-mile. range, to smother the noise of the gramophone. They Met a Bear. Ernest Orsborn and Bud Arnold, ot Comptche, report one of the closest calls of the season in a bear fight. For some time a large bear has been bothering their stock, and they had made several ineffectual attempts to find Bruin, but could not locate him. This week they started out and got the track on Big River, near the Horse opening. While they were waiting for the hounds and sitting comfortably on a log, something appeared behind them and knocked Orsborn's gun . out of \ his hand. Before he had recovered J from his surprise he was engaged in j a hand-to-hand encounter with the j bear, which had doubled on the dogs and come back on me uumeia. | One blow of the bears paw broke | the gun in two and bent the barrel. I The fight was so fierce that Arnold i had to wait several minutes before he | dared to risk a shot, for fear of klllj ing his companion. Orsborn finally I begged him to shoot anyway, as he I said he would rather be shot than I killed by a bear. Fortunately Arnold was able to hit the bear, the bullet just glazing Orsborn's arm, and- the combatants rolled over on the ground. The bear was one of the biggest ever killed in that section?San Francisco Chronicle. ; The Kaiser's Tip. I The Kaiser is popularly supposed I to be economical. It Is not generally j known that he pushes his principles j of economy to absolute niggardliness. I It will be remembered that he visited | Constantinople some time back and was received with unexampled mag- ' ! nificence and inundated with handJ some presents. During hLs stay in j the Ottoman capital the Emperor's ! j aide-de-camp was instruoted by his j imperial master to distribute such j gifts as were usual among tne serj vants attached to his person. He ! offered a dollar to the head coach man. The latter without a moment's ! hesitation returned it.?The Tatler. | EXACTLY SO. "Pa." said Ifttla WilMe. who had been reading a cigar store advertisement. "what's 'imported and domestic?' " "A servant girl." replied Pa, promptly.?Philadelphia Press. ? - ' \ . GRANTS AUTHORITY | j j Southern States Want Uncle Sam to Control Fever. I ' ' | germane; resolutions | All White Men Invited to Come South - ? -r CU4aa ana Become ciu^cni ui guns* Represented in Text of Immigration Resolutions. | At Chattanooga, Tenn., Friday, fourteen southern states, through their governors, senators, congressmen and other representative citizens, madp ' their wishes known as to the relations of state to the federal government in the matters of quarantine and of immigration. Throughout the conference spirited-, debate was almost uninterrupted as | to the constitutionality of federal con trol of interstate healtn matters, uovernor Vardaman of Mississippi was a firm advocate of the construction of state rights, which should prevent the interference of federal authority in state affairs. Governor Blanchard of Louisiana declared that the doctrine of state's rights could have no place in the argument. He insisted that the federal constitution plainly j makes it the duty of federal govern- , ment to exercise such functions. Many leaders had many followers. Congressman John Sharp Williams presented a report which was adopt j ed with but one dissenting voice, that j of Senator Mallory of Florida. The ! resolutions follow; "Resolved. That we, the delegates from Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia and West Virginia, hereby respectfully request the senate and house of representatives in congress assembled to enact a law thereby coast maritime and national frontier quarantine shall be placed exclusively under the control and jurisdiction of the United States government, and that matters of interstate quarantine shall be placed under the control and jurisdiction of the United States gov ernment, acting in cooperation with the several state boards of health. ' Resolved, second, That we urge j upon the legislatures of the several ' southern states that they enact quar i antine regulations as nearly as pos[ sible in accord and conformity as ! hereafter enacted. We furthermore^ urge the governors of the said several states, with this object specifi- | cully in view, to call the attention of j the legislatures of their respective states to the wisdom and the policy of this course." j Congressman E. J. Powers of Mississippi, chairman of the immigration committee, presented the report of that committee, which was adopted by the unanimous vote of the convention. The resolutions were as follows: "Whereas the states represented in this conference and the whole soutti are possessed of limitless resources, agricultural^ mineral and timber lands; "Whereas, desirable immigration is needed In order to develop these resources, and, "Whereas, we desire to settle with us all white persons who are willing j to subscribe to our laws and who ap' Iawa 4-V* /-v o*onfito ryf mil* | pi CUlClLC aUU 1V/TC lUU vi . vu? i institutions, now therefore be it "Resolved, That it is the sense of this conference that it does hereby greet and welcome to our midst all i industrious and upright white persons ! from any of the European countries, j and from all sections of the United States who wish to make their homes with us to assist in the development j of our resources and the advancement' I and multiplication of our varied en I terprises and industries. Be it furi ther "Resolved, That we repudiate and denounce as untrue any and all ruI mors and slanders that may have [ been circulated to the effect that the south is unfavorable to honest and industrious w.hite immigrants. "Whereas, the president of the United States has recommended to congress the passage of certain changes in the present Immigration laws of this country with a view of making it more difficult for the pauper and criminal classes to enter our country. "Resolved, by this conference of representative men of the south, Tha?t j we hereby endorse and approve these ! recommendations and request all of i the senators and representatives of the southern states to aid in securing the passing of such amendments to existing immigration laws as will tend to obtain the objects sought. | AMENDMENT BADLY DEFEATED. I Effort to Disfranchise Negroes in Maryland a Great Fiasco. Late returns dissipate much of the doubt as to the result of Tuesday's election in Maryland. With a few precincts of one of the usually democratic county to hear from the de feat of the proposed suffrage restriction amendment by 28.000 to 29.000 is indicated. i ' - ' VETERANS OF GEORGIA Hold Record-Breaking and Enthusiastic State Reunion in Macon. ! Wiley Elected Commander. Thursday at Macon was the greatest day in the history of reunions of Georgia veterans. There has never been such a gathering of these men oi me civil war 01 ueurgia m au? one city. Officers and prominent members state that not less than 000 men who wore the gray were in Macon. Early Thursday morning camp after camp came out from their quarters and prepared for the day's exercises. By 10 ?o'clock they had gathered at the city auditorium for the business meetings. Many important matters were briefly disposed of, ana the meeting was adjourned. The race for commander terminated in the choice of General C. M. Wiley of Macon. There was no opposition. General West of Atlanta and his friends declining when the nominations were made. There was no other name presented than that of General Wiley, and with one voice he was placed in the highest office in the Georgia division. He succeeds Gen eral P. A. H. McGlashan of Savannah. Division commanders as chosen are: For the eastern brigade, General Jno. M. Clark of Augusta; the western General Cobb of Americus; southern brigade, General Sweat of Waycross, and for t?e northern, General A. J. West of Atlanta. There was little difficulty in choosing a meeting place .for the year 1906. Griffin asked for the reunion, but upon the invitation from the Confederate Veterans' Association and the McLaws camp of Savannah the next meeting place fell to that city. Governor Terrell and members of his staff arrived in Macon Wednesday night and were the guests of the veterans Thursday, as well as of the city. Soon afcer the opening of the business meeting at the auditorium, he was introduced to the large gathering and made a stirring address. He was enthusiastically received and his tribute to the men of the south in the civil war won the old soldiers in great style. He spoke for only a brief period.-. ' *v At noon the grand parade of all the veterans, the local military, the govnr?/1 V? 1 ct o + P An rtno 1 ciuui auu nio oiaii aiiu ucuciai Glashan and his staff began, and was an imposing spectacle. SHERIFF SAVES PRISONER. Atlanta Mob Sought to Lynch Negro Assailant of White Woman. After being identified by Mrs. Geo. W. Moore of Atlanta as the negro who had assaulted her, Jim Walker, brouglit as a prisoner from Fairburn, Ga., Thursday morning, came near being lynched by a crowd of angry citizens. For more than an hour there was a scene of the most intense excitement on the Peachtree road, between the Moore home at Brookwood, and the spot where preparations were made to hang the negro. The rude gallows had been erected, the knot had been tied, the noose placed on the negro's neck and the other end of the rope thrown over the cross-beam of the gallows when Sheriff Nelms appeared on the scene witn a deputy and three county policemen. Amid a crowd that seemed bent on taking the law into their own hands, while pistol shots were fired and cries of "Kill him," "Shoot him," "Lynch him." rent the air, the sheriff and his small posse rescued the prisoner, threw him into an automobile and made all speed to the city and to the Atlanta tower, where the negro was placed in a cell. George Moore, the husband of the negro's victim, counselled forbearance on the part of the citizens, and his sons later made the same plea for the law to take its course, as they had previously promised the sheriff that the prisoner would not be harmed, WILL BENEFIT WHOLE SOUTH. Manufacturers' Record on Great At lanta Exposition in 1910. The Manufacturers' Record congratulates the south that Atlanta, with that remarkable intutition which throughout its whole history has enabled it to do the right thing at the right time, plans to hold a southern exposition in 1910, The very suggestion of such a plan should stimulate not only the people of Atlanta, but the people of the entire south, to an apprecirtion of the magnificent op nfLi/tVt fimVl 0*1 AVnAclflA*! pui tuilllt VY UR U QUV&J. au VA^UOIVIUU will present. GRAY VETERANS GATHER. j Host of Old Georgia Warriors Assemble in Macon for Reunion. / Wednesday at Macon, Ga., marked the beginning of possibly one of the greatest reunions ever witnessed by ! the confederate veterans comprising the state division. More than 3,000 people were in the city to attend the exercises of the r:vo days ol the' reunion. ' ; ~ V._ ;; -i ;x-'vX: S SHAME ON WILSON * V | Cheatham Scoris Head of the Agricultural Department. ' ' COTTON REPORT A FRAUD 1 O - H No Necessity Existed for Statistics Is sued the Past Week, When "Condition" of Crop is Beyond Any Possibility of Calculation. ' y ' *&??& : . - Richard Cheatam. of Atlanta, Ga^ secretary of the Southern Cotton As- - *1 \ sociation, and who uncovered the disclosures being made in the govern? meat cotton crop reports, whereby officials and speculators were using advane information to bull or bear the cotton market, is quoted by the New York Herald, as having severely crit- r Icized the report of the cotton-crop issued Friday from Washington, in which the condition of the crop on ?. ' November 2 was stated to be 68.8. "The most absurd piece of ^pite . ||g work ever attempted was the issuing: of the crop report Friday by- ^V; Wilson, the secretary of agriculture. cIn this report he announced the conr>;> dition at 6818. Now, there Is no sane >, man who ever saw a cotton stalk wno I cces not know that on November i and November 10 it is not only far be- > ^ jond the fruiting or bearing stage, but in nearly every case is entirely void of foliage of every kind. > "It has passed far beyond the increasing stige. Its condition, so far as conditions are recognized in re- v'hj|i ports, is the same as on October I . previously. For Secretary Wilson to make a report on 'condition' of No- ' vember l is to assist in the operation ^ of the bear speculators to hammer -*&|J the price of cotton down. *)ji "I say to Mr. Wilson: 'Shame, !?:S|?Sj shame, shame!' on him and the men v;^ who assisted him in this attempt at ^Jjj| spite work against the cotton producers of the south. It is a final'effort to 'get even,' and the attempt will re- $^f|| suit in sure discomfiture for the de- "fllll partment of agriculture before the session of the next congress is far ad- \-$||| vanced. That there will be an investigation of this department by congress and an uncovering of matters. now concealed, by which all previous disclosures will pale into insignia cance, I do not for an instant donbt. V The Southern Cotton Association In its bulletin of the crop issued on tober 31 estimated the crop for 1005 at 9,446,341 bales, a smaller prodtfction than Friday's estimate of would promise. - > . SIX YEARS FOR CUNLIFFE. Adams Express Robber Receives Sentence in Pittsburg Court. Edward G. Cunliffe, the express. money clerk, who, on October 9, stole * V^ $101,000 from the Adams Express,com-"" pany agency in Pittsburg, Pa., and y whose flight and capture ten days later attracted attention of the entire country, was sentenced by Judge Jas. . Sgg K. McFarlane in criminal court Satur- S day to two terms of three years in . ' ' & the western penitentiary and two , 'y fines of $100 each and all costs of -Mh the prosecution on two charges ot larceny, making a total term of six years' imprisonment. When tho prisoner was asked if he had anything to say Cunliffe replied: ^ "All I can ask is a little clemency for the sake of my poor family and folks. 1 was never before In any trouble and have always been honest . and upright, with a good disposition and used my best efforts in the interests of the company. I don't know \ what impelled me to take the money* Five minutes after It was in my possession I would gladly have put .it .I'- J back. I have always lived an upright life and do not know what possessed L^'yi me to take the money." When asked by the judge as to the whereabouts of the rest of the money he said: "I know ro more about ft than any other man in this court" i. . YELLOW JACK IN HAVANA* CUBA. : * >' fc-V j?JI Three Cases Under Treatment In the Hospital?Dr. Gulteras in Charge. ; An examination at Havana Saturday ?''Vi of a Spaniard who is ill in one* of the > 5 city hospitals, developed the fact that \ he had yellow fever. This makes - ' -^3 three cases so far under treatment. '-'i Dr. Guiteras, who is in charge of the* j yellow fever hospital, is very hopeful / that the spread of the fever will be '% checked. The health authorities say they are ," $ certain that the disease entered Ha- . y*j vana in a mild form from the United ~ . States and Mexico. ^ BIG BLAZE IN PENSACOLA. Flames Sweep Business Block* Entail* S. g ! ? U.IWw I AM*e ' a >"? / ? Fire, Tuesday night, in Pensacola, Fla., entailed a loss of over $100,000. ' " The fire broke out at 12:45 a, .m^ m the principal block of the city, on >*^"> Palafox street In the se=ction burned the largest stores in the city are located, along )'i-< with the Osceola Club ' . ... M