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BODY OF POPE
PLACED IN CRYPT
Evening Shadows Cast a Sorrowing Gloom
Over Assembly As Body Is
Laid To Rest
ELECTION OF A NEW POPE
Now Confront Cardinals —War in Eu
rope May Cause Conclave to Be
Postponed Indefinitely
Rome.—-The entombment of the late
Pope Pius X took place at sunset. ।
The great basilica of St. Peter’s was |
in semi-darkness. A flickering light i
came from the perpetually burning ta- I
pers about the shrine of the Apostles
and the candies in the chancel where
the catafalque stood.
Those who witnessed the ceremony,
numbering about one thousand, came
by special invitation, and included
diplomatic representatives, accredit
ed to the Holy See, the prelates and
members of the Roman aristocracy.
The procession formed in the chapel
of the Blessed Sacrament, where, for
hours, the body of Pius X lay in state.
The catafalque was surmounted by the
triple crown and the body of the pope
was clad in the pontifical robes and
surrounded by the emblems of his sa
cred office. During the course of the
day many thousands passed by the
bier.
Tiie bier was removed and placed on
a low platform on wheels. At the
gates of the chapel the arch-priest of
the basilica, in violet robes and sur
rounded by the chapter, joined th^
procession.
Scene Was Impressive
First came a jeweled cross Held
aloft, then the cardinals and high pre
lates, each carrying a candle. In the
center of the procession was the bier,
the cortege passing amid the kneeling
crowd, while through the vast and
silent church was heard the Miserere,
sung by the Sistine choir.
The solemn charge marched into the
crypt, where the body of Pius X will
have its final resting place. Here the
roof is low and the Miserere had a pe
culiarly weird and melancholy effect.
The tomb of the late pontiff is on
the right at the entrance to the sub
terranean chapel, close to that of sev
eral other popes. At this point sev- |
era! ancient marble tablets were re- |
moved to make room for the tomb of I
Pius, which, while partly within the I
wall, also projects into the passage.
The body of the pontiff lies in a
cypress wood coffin on which rests a
gold cross. This is encased in zinc,
and finally in an oak casket. On the
casket is the inscription:
"Here lies the body of Pius X. Born
June 2, 1835. Died August 20, 1914."
The coffin was placed within the
tomb, while Cardinal Della Volpe re
cited prayers for the dead, accompa
nied by all present, kneeling. A monu
ment to Plus X will be erected in the
crypt.
Plans to Elect New Pope
The congregation of cardinals has
already met for the second time. Car
dinal Della Volpe presided. Among
other matters dealt with was the ques
tion of the holding of the conclave
for the election of the new pope.
Two opinions, diametrically opposed,
were offered. One was that, owing to
the perturbed condition of the world,
the election must be hastened and that
the conclave should begin its work
soon. The other advised delaying the
conclave that all the cardinals might
reach Rome.’
An imposing funeral mass was cele
brated at St. Peter’s, in the chapel fac
ing that in which the body of the late
pope lies in state. The mass was cele
brated by Monsignor Ceppetelli, pa
triarch of Constantinople. This was
the first of a series of masses to
be celebrated at St. Peter’s daily until
August 27.
Cardinal Merry Del Vai Grief Stricken
Cardinal Merry del Vai, papal sec
retary of state, is grief stricken over
the death of the pope and he scarcely
can attend to his official business. The
appreciative praise of him in the pope’s
testament has been a great consola
tion.
Cardinal Delia Volpe has Instructed
commanders of the papal and other
armed bodies to guard every corner of
the Vatican to prevent any incident
which might disturb the work of car
dinals, especially during the conclave.
Florida's Road Law Contested
Washington. —Whether making a
man work on the public roads is Im
* posing “involuntary servitude” in vi
olation of the federal constitution is
the novel issue raised by Jacob But
ler of Columbia county, Florida, in -a
case just docketed in the Supreme
court. Butler was arrested for fail
ure to comply with the provision of
the Florida statute requiring able
bodied citizens to work on the public
roads six days or pay $3 into the road
funds.
MOTHER OF
SCHOOL GIRL
Tells How Ly dia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound Re
stored Her Daugh
ter’s Health.
Plover, lowa. —“From a small child
my 18 year old daughter had female i
weakness. I spoke
to three doctors
about it and they did I
not help her any.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Com- I
pound had been of i
great benefit to me,
so I decided to have
her give it a trial. ।
She has taken five :
bottles of tiie Vege- j
table Compound ac-
cording to directions on the bottle and
she is cured of this trouble. She was
all run down when she started taking
the Compound and her periods did not |
come right. She was so poorly and
weak that I often had to help her dress
herself, but now she is regular and is
growing strong and healthy.” — Mrs.
Martin Helvig, Plover, lowa.
Hundreds of such letters expressing
gratitude for the good Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound has accom
plished are constantly being received,
proving the reliability of this grand old
remedy.
If you are ill do not drag along and
continue to suffer day injmd day out but I
at once take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound, a woman’s remedy for
woman’s ills.
If yon want special advice write to
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confi
dential) Lynu, Mass. Your letter will
be opened, read and answered by a
woman and held in strict confidence.
_JBJ !JL..BS!!-',!88 J.UILJAU
HAD HAZY IDEA OF AMERICA
Irishman Evidently Imagined the Back
Yards of New York and San
Francisco Ajoined.
“I was strolling along a street of
Killarney week before last," said a
New Yorker "As 1 passed a cobbler's
shop an old man looked up from a
bench near the door and smiled pleas
i antly.
" 'The top o' the marning to ye,
I sorr,' he said. I returned his saluta-
I tion In kind, and sat down to talk to
him.
" ‘lt’s from Ameriky ye'll be, I take
it, sorr,' he said. ‘And from what
part?’
“ 'From New York,’ I replied.
"He nodded. Just then his wife
came out and spoke to me.
“It’s a great country,’ went on the
cobbler. I have two b’hys over there
One’s in a place called Worcester. 1
forget the name o' the place where the
other Is, but it’s near by the other.’
” ‘ 'Tis San Francisco, Patrick,’ the
wife prompted.
“ ‘Sure, and it is,’ said the cobbler.
“I nivver could remember the name,
but I knew it was near by.’ ”
Entertaining Company.
“How was your tour of Egypt?”
"I enjoyed it immensely.”
“I guess you saw the pyramids, the
sphinx, and all the other sights?"
“Well, yes, but they didn't make
much of an impression on me. I fell
in with an old gentleman from Pine
Bluff, Ark., who could tell such funny
stories that I hardly knew whether I
was touring Egypt or Arkansas.” —
Birmingham Age-Herald.
She Had Advantages.
Mrs. Whittier— What delightful man
ners your daughter has!
Mrs. Bller (proudly)— Yes. You see
she has been away from home so
much. —Smart- Set.
Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days
Your druggist will refund money if PAZO
OINTMENT fails to eure any case of Itching,
Blind. Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days.
The first application gives Ease and Rost. 50c.
The Reason.
“You know that legislative bill
sounds funny to me.”
"I guess there's a joker in it.”
Whenever You Need a General lonic
Take Grove's
The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless i
chill Tonic is equally valuable as a
General Tonic because it contains the .
well known tonic properties of QUININE |
and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives j
out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and
Builds up the Whole System. 50 cents.
After some men start they are too
lazy to stop.
if Youra Is fluttering or weak, use RENOVINE." Made by Van Vleet-Manefleld Drug Co., Memphis, Tenn. Price 91.00
WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE, ALAMO, GEORGIA.
HE FOLLOWED THE CROWD
Uncle Billy’s Idea Was All Right, But
as It Turned Out It Spoiled His
Visit to Fair.
Uncle Billy walked Into the village
store about the middle of the after
noon, and the storekeeper, waking
from his nap,, said: “Thought you'd
gone to the state fair.”
"I did," was the brief reply, as Uncle
Billy helped himself to a chair.
“Didn't you like it?”
Uncle Billy looked round cautiously,
i The other village loafers were having
' a game of "horseshoe” in front of the
I blacksmith shop; so lowering bis
j voice, he said, confidentially, “i'll tell
' you how It happened. I hadn’t been
: to the state fair for 20 years, so 1
I wasn't on to it very well. I decided
I’d keep an eye on the crowds, and
foller where they seemed the thick
est. Well, it worked pretty well. I
I went around to a good many fine dis
| plays and shows and things. About
l noon. I saw a lot of fine-dressed folks
goin’ all in one direction, so I took
after ’em. They all, pushed and
jammed to get through an archway,
! and 1 pushed, too. Well, what d'you
guess it was?”
“Give it up,” the storekeeper said,
eager for the climax.
Well, they were all city folks, goin'
home to dinner, and there 1 stood on
the outside. I wasn't goin’ to pay no
50 cents to get back in, so I lit out
for home. I thought I'd stop in here
for a spell, to keep the fam’ly from
askin’ questions about my gettin’ home
so early.”—Youth s Companion.
No. SIX-SIXTY-SIX
This is a prescription prepared es
pecially for Malaria or Chills and
Fever. Five or six doses will break
any case, and if taken then as a tonic
the fever will not return. 25c. —Adv.
Lifelong Service.
Father-in-lxiw —Look here, young
man, don't you think it s about time
you were going to work, or do you ex
pect me to support you the rest of
your life?
Son-in-i^w—lt would be no more
than fair, just after what Ibave done
for you.
“I'd TRte to know what you’ve ever
done for me?"
“Why, dian’t I take your daughter
off your hands?"
PIMPLES ITCHED AND BURNED
Route No. 3, Dadeville, Ala.—“l was
troubled with a terrible breaking out
between my shoulders and down to
my hips. It came in pimples and my
back looked very red and raw. It
itched and burned so that sleep and
rest were impdfesible and I could not
sleep any hardly for weeks. My
clothes irritated my back till it got
so sore I had to have a soft cloth
pinned to my ghirt -
“As I heard of Cuticura Soap and
Ointment for years 1 bought a cake of
Cuticura Soap and box of Cuticura
Ointment and to my surprise and joy
my itching and burning had disap
peared. My back had been so raw
and inflamed I could not He on it and
the first, application brought relief. I
washed my back twice a day with a
strong lather of Cuticura Soap and
then applied the Cuticura Ointment.
In two weeks I was sound and well
and have never been troubled since.”
(Signed) J. D. Abernatty, Jan. 26,1914.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address posh
card “Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston.”—Adv.
Keeping Grandma Alive.
"Jimmy, yer missed it not seein’ de
game this afternoon.”
"The boss wouldn’t let me off"
“Why didn't yer work de old gag
on him?”
“ ’Cause I’m savin’ up me grand
mother for one of the decidin’ games
In the fall.”
Seizing Opportunity.
“Pa. a balloon’s just landed in the
apple orchard."
“Good! I’ll just run down there
and get them to pick the apples off
that high tree. I've been wondering
how I was going to get them.”
The World's Workers.
Little Girl —Please, Mr. Murphy,
muvver says, if its’ fine tomorrow,
j will you go beggin' with ’er? —Punch.
RUB-MY-TISM
| Will cure your Rheumatism and all
kinds of aches and pains—Neuralgia,
j Cramps, Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts,
j Old Sores, Burns, etc. Antiseptic
Anodyne. Price 25c. —Adv.
The people who are satisfied to take
things as they come are generally sat
isfied with very little.
• r :
oF r 0^
1 I
VY And feel your thirst slip 1
O i away. You'll finish refreshed, g
JHI M cooled, satisfied. g
vX Demand the genuine by full name— Jg?
Nickname* encourage eubatitutlon,
W*. THE COCA-COLA CO
mX ■ v Whenever
ATLANTA, GA you see a a
V'ft- 52 .Arrow think
of Cou-Cola.
■ -■ . I . ----- ,- — — —— - • • Jn « y
None “Just as Good!”
Nothing “Just the Same!”
Look for the name French Market Coffee and the picture of
the old market that is on every package of French Market Coffee,
roasted by the French Market Mills if you want the genuine.
If you can be satisfied with an imitation take the brand as
near like it as the law allows, for both in name and appearance
of package French Market Coffee has been imitated for over .a
century. But it won't be just as good, and it isn’t just the same!
There is only one FRENCH MARKET COFFEE.
Ask for FRENCH MARKET by name. See that you are
given FRENCH MARKET and not ordinary coffee or inferior
substitutes sold at the same price.
You’ll know—after you try it—why this rarely aencious old
French roast and blend has been famous for over a hundred years.
Why there can be no other like it.
Roasted by our unique hygienic process.
FRENCH MARKET MILLS
(New Orleans Coffee Co., Ltd., Proprietor!)
NEW ORLEANS
DIRECTIONS —We recommend
^at you make French Market Coflee in
ajjSaßS your usual way. If you find it too strong,
W/ reduce quantity until strength and flavor
are satisfactory. French Market makes
more cups of good coffee to the pound
than other brands, thereby reducing
your coffee bill.
HgntTra.vafc. imwni im ■mi
isww":’*** I "''-''' tin im iw——i in— be
His Bait.
“They told me to use a live frog for
bait," said the stranger, “but I’ve been
iiere all day and haven’t had a bite
yet."
“I reckon not, sub," said the old
Georgia darkey. “De frog hez
swimmed ter a log wld yo’ book an
line, an’ is settin’ cross-leg on de log a
lookin’ at you! ’’—-Atlanta Constitution.
Left Out.
Honest Agriculturist—We don’t need
you women to help us run things.
Didn’t we men pass the compensation
law, protecting everybody except farm
hands and domestic servants?
His Wife—Yes; and I’m both.—
Puck.
Important to Mothers
Examine' carefully every awno 3.
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Bears the . n
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
Paw Knows Everything.
Willie —Paw, what is an impossibil
ity?
Paw—Anything a woman can’t do
with a hairpin, my son.
Cures Old Sores, Other Remedies Won't Cure. ;
The worst cases, no matter how long standing, I
are cured by the wonderful, old reliable Dr.
Porter’* Antiseptic Healing OIL It relieves
Pain and Heals st the same time. Xsc, 50c, SI.OO.
Hypothesis.
Lady Is this a pedigreed dog?
Dealer—Pedigreed! Why, if that dog
could talk, he wouldn’t speak to either
of us! —Tit Bits.
How To Give Quinine To Children
FEBRIUNE is the trade-mark name given to an
improved Quinine. It is a Tasteless Syrup, pleas
ant to take and does not disturb the stomach.
Children take it and never know it is Quinine.
Also especially adapted to adults who cannot J
take ordinary Quinine. Does not nauseate nor
cause nervousness nor ringing in the head. Try
it the next time you need Quinine for any pur
pose. Ask for a-ounce original package. The
name FEB RI LI NR is blown in bottle- 25 cents-
Lots of people are thoroughly satis
fied with themselves because they
don’t know any better.
Stages of a Career.
Knicker —What luck has Smith had
since he graduated from college?
Bocker- He severed a connection,
resigned a position, and got fired.
Every man who has money’ knows
at least a hundred who haven't any
who are willing to give him pointers
on how to enjoy it.
! 11 ■» 'W ■' I^**— ***' "11-i
O smn. Granulated Eyelids,
O Eyes inflamed by expo-
T'Ar * sure to Sun, Dust and Wind!
W*T m r zx. J~x quicklyrelievedbyMurlM
» W Eyeßemedy. NoSmarting,
■—J ^^just Eye Comfort. At
Your Druggist’s 50c per Bottle. Murine Eye
ShlveinTubes2sc.ForßoolioltheEyeFreeask
Druggists or Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago
fjon _ «J
Vanishes Forever
Prompt Relief —Permanent Cure
CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PlLLSnever
fail. Purely vegeta- AMWwI
ble — act surely JhsblsS C a DTFDS
but gently on jdajwjawM r
the liver. W
Stop after g | ‘
dinner dis- B
tress—cure XX^, M—M
indigestion, '
I improve the complexion, brighten the eyes.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
MRJJMI rJUiULU a
HAIR BALSAM
<iSw A tolh-t preparation of merit.
jaKS®!/ vS Helps tc eradicate dandruff.
For Restoring Color and
Mlßeauty to Gray or Faded Hair.
- ~*Y3 ftn< * kruggista.
RUA ft I “ I ’ be Buropean War at a Glance” tells
so mlf ’ complete history of each power, cause of
■ btb ■ conflict., fighting strength and full statis
■■■■■■«■ tics. Everybody should know these facta
about the greatest war of the world. Agents wanted I
profit. Complete book and full particulars. Post*
paid 25c. ACT BOW. IM>. M. 0. HOIBK, rraaklia, T»mk
nnnDQVTREATED.usnany give« Quick
J UllUr u 1 relief,Hoon removes swell!n»
W , J a shortbreath, often gives entire relief
* n 16t02C days. Trial treatment sent Frat
JrrL Dr. THOMAS E. GREEN, Successor to
Dr. H. H. Greens Sons, Box 0, Atlanta, Ga.
W. N. U., ATLANTA, NO. 35-1914.