THE A-UUNINO ASTOKMN AS'lOHJA, OUEGutf UPHOLD LYNCH LAW V Negro Baptists Refuse to Cor.' demn Burning of Williams. THE EFFECT IS BENEFICIAL SUNDAY, AUGUST tj, ijoj. AD law-abiding Negroes, Say Pastors, Favor Lynch Law In Such Cases Negroes Awlit Whltei In tbt Capturt and Burning of Tim Wllliama. ChUgo,, Aug. 20, A tlipstch to the JterordHcrahl from Pallas, TV,. y: Tba burning at stake of Tint Willinnm, a negro, for attacking a white woman, was commended at the t o t convention of negro lUitini hire yenterday. Rev. Mr. .Ini'kium .of Pulls iIhIhCkI tlmt if liny Nctlort were taken by the conven Him In reference to the lynching, a tta lutlon should he passed pommi'iiding the whites. Otlr ptVr averted ttji negroes aided the white In thr rapture of Williams. Every law-abiding negro was wll to be In favor of lynch law In case of the kind. The convention re fused to pa resolution condemning the liu'rnlng. SENSATIONAL TESTIMONY. Board Invntigating Attain at Windaor Prlioa Unsarth Startling Facta. ' Bellow Fall, Vt, Aug. 2(l--8na-tlonal testimony concerning affair at tin statu prlwm at Wlmlxir wn given nt yesterday's hearing of public insti tution now Is-lng held by the state. Horace Boyd, a prlm ofllwr testified regarding the alleged conduit of Mr. Mary N. Rogers, the I-nnington woman, who was convicted, of the murder of her Pears Don't simply "get a cake of soap." Get good soap. Ask for Pears' and you have pure soap. Then bathing will mean more than mere cleanliness; it will be luxury at trifling cost. Sales Increasing since 17 DfVHSp ! 1 vO SPICES, o COFFEEJEA tiMUm POWDER. TW1QMIQ EXTRACTS AMuh Purify. nntsfFlivor. CrarjlSfrt!h,CcasofibkrYicti CL055ET&DEYERS e PORTLAND, OHIO ON. IF YOU WICAN CURIYOU Di Tw1i P)iono-Kirrt Initltut nd School foi summonr. of IMtti-olt, MwhiirM. Iuul.ll.lil ! VnrM't rir, Al. Uwl". IW Menmnwiwl.d by iyo I. . ,luntl. ln(r "'" Bd SHmIimIoh OT.rywIi.i TUU IniUluUon hM . Wwt.ru Br.m.h . rnHUM with .r Lr. flM of ouull. In ll.minr-n..n d .nun tfrl.ndboyill,tnlo.ly. JUnyhM MWvVBou,r cum Juabawtmid. Hiitoni'il"rirtlculrtiidUriiw. 1( you wntl II, ". n.ir nd .ixHo.no In mym, to tow !;. 1 iri.nd you our elolh b.UMl.l mp book.-fh. Orkt mm! Tlnn ot UrtuMrHuy'' frM ololuun WMMrn Kpr'IT AhocKU NaoipU i, W. Cr 1 tth ?llirh JUMte " 9UBTLAND, OHlJoM fot-K purOt M0tt4 fortUsd fttUf P. 111. MEN AND WOMEN. tM Bit J for unanlurM riuimni or alflorniloM at in neon m.mornBH. PnlnlMt, nn1 not mUId fpnt or ooLnnouf. r 5 m4 hr oraaa-M. of tml U fl.lH wrnoow, raw. oropnia. w A Ml tmttlfa i2.r&. a ra SINOIMMATI.O V r. c a. tlrcditr tout rUt. himband, Maroii Rojfi'r in AujjiiKt, 11X12. hut not hnngi-d. Hoyd dwluml tinit Vernon Rogir, a convirt, who I ner ving a "ontencti of 10 yearn, hail told him tlmt ho (Ropr)thut he (Romero) had awceft lant (iilnj to Mm. Roger cell by mean of a key which he had made in th ihoe nhnn of the Inntitution.' The convlet la not a relative of Mr. Roper, Onicer Royd fuifther ; ntnti-U jthat Roger and theeondemned murdereK lmdi not conducted themnelvm proprly. After Boyd hud been dimied from the witncK etand the state made public certain evidence which had Wen taken in executive esnfon by tlie pecial committee appointed by the legilnture to Investigate public institution. F. VV. Oaken, former anperintendent of the prinon, tcatifled at that gesnion that Roger had informed him that lut March Fred Morne, another prisoner, had given him, (Roger) a key which fitted Mr. Mary Roger cell, Oakes nlo said feSi l to ' I C F II flit Roger had told him that the hitter's key opened the outtiide door of the cell, but would not unlock the inside door. The WH'ond door the superintendent ttxtiflcd was opened according to the "tory by Mr. Roger hentelf, who re moved the screws in the lock by means of a pair of scissor. Oakes further tes tified, that during the time of the al leged occurrence ha was ill and that the prison was in charg of a warden. When the superintendent heard of these irreg ularities, he said, he discharged the war den. At yesterday' hearing the state otTl clals also made publio a statement mode by Mrs. Rogers in writing to Matron Durkee of the prison. Mrs. Rogers stated that she had seen Vernon Rogers fre quently ' in- the corridor. The woman's tatement then told of frequent meet ings which she and Rogers had in her cell. The' statement coroborated other testimony given concerning Rogers at the hearing, as to the means employed to oHn the cell doors. Fiendish Suffering. . if often caused by sores, ulcers and can cers, that eat away your skin. Wm. Be dell, of Flat Rock, Mich., says: "I have used Bucklen'a Arnica Salve, for ulcers, sores and cancers. It is the best healing dressing I ever found." Soothes and heals cuts burns and scalds. 25 o at Charles Roger' drug store. SCHOONER FOUNDERS AT SEA. Wreckage of Schooner John F. Miller Found Near Caton Island. San Francisco, Aug. 2(1. Evidence of the foundering of the schooner Tearl has at last been discovered. The schooner John F, Miller, which has arrived here from the North, brings the ncwa of the finding of vreckage of the ill-fated schooner on the northeast ivef of Caton island, which is near $anak. (Since last March, when it is supposed that the Pearl sank, vessels plying in these waters have kept a sharp lookout for wreck age, but up to a month ago nothing was seen. The schooner Pearl left this port for the cod fishing grounds in Alaska last March. She carried a full crew and a number of fishermen, the total number on board being 35. The Pearl was com manded by Captain Siderholm. NEW POST OFFICE IS NOW OCCUPIED. San Francisco Now Baa a (3,000,000 ' Building. San Francisco, Aug. 26. Actual oc cupancy of the new post office and court housa, took place yesterday, when the several courts located la the old ap praisers building for the past thirty years Vft their old quarters on Wash ington and Sansome streets for the new federal building on Seventh and Mission streets. Th'e building represent an out lay of nearly $:!00,000. Public Is Aroused. The public is aroused to a knowledge of the curative merits 'of that great med icinal tonic, Electric Bitters, for sick stomach, liver and kidneys. Mary L. WAlters, of 546 St. Clair Ave., Columbia, 0., writes 1 "For several months, I was given up to die. I had fever and ague, my nerves were wrecked; I could not sleep, and my stomach was to weak, from useless doctors' drugs, that I could not eat. Soon after beginning to Uks Electric Bitters, I obtained relief, and in a short time I was entirely cured." Guaranteed at Chas. Rogers' drug store. Price 50c.