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A DEATH PLUNGE" W A Huge Tooring Car Cocs Into River, Drowning Several HEAR WOMEN SCREAM As the Huge Automobile Leaped ^ From the Bridge While Going at ''8 nc High Speed, and l)i? ;s iu the Mud ro Under the Water With Its Oc S0 en cupants. ha th Search for the bodies of the oc- fU cupants of the automobili which in plunged into the Chicago nve: Hi 1 the east approach of the Jackson ^ ar Boulevard bridge Sunday nigbf was in resumed Monday by members of the police force at the city fire boats. SI They were aided in their efforts by sb a diver in the employ of the city. The identity of the victims, and the n number of persons who lost their pl lives, however, are still unknown. V*1 It was at first thought that the Ul ai automobile belonged to James E. a) Cosgrlff, of Salt Lake City, Utah, fr who left the Congress hotel with a gj party of friends a short time before w the accident ocurred, on the way to p the Union station, but it was later tJ learned that the Cosgriff party was safe and that the machine belonged ii to J. W. Schreffler. It is said to be si one of two machines he has for hire gi and was in charge of Ernest Camp. r< Mr. Schreffler was unable to locate ir the car today, and feared that the t< machine belonged to him. fc The car, it is claimed, was hired from the saloon of William Krae- a: mer, on Van Buren street, but it j>< was impossible to learn who were the la occupants. The car was traced by J; Its number, 4250 Illinois?which was S discovered by a driver during the si night. y The most plausible theory regard- a, Ing the accident now is that Camp, whnea ctanH ivac at Vftn Rnrpii street and Michigan avenue, had been engaged by a party to make a sight- P seeing trip of the city and that while on the way to the west sidt of the city had driven the car intc the river. Camp's home was in tht e< south side and it was learned that w his mother was expected here next Q( week to livo with him. The accident is similar to two pre- w vious ones which have occurred here ^ within the last few years and which resulted in the loss of four lives. ^ On August 17, 1904, a car containing a woman and three men plunged over the south abutment of the Rush street bridge. All were rescued, but one of the victims subsequently died ^ The following year a car containing t{ five persons went into the river at ^ the same bridge from the north side. Three of the party were drowned. ^ The touring car plunged into tht n river at Jackson boulevard from th* ? east approach of the bridge shord} after 10 o'clock Sunday night whilt w the bridge was turned. A man and j a woman were seen to come to tin surface and float down-stream, tht {( man endeavoring to save the woman p by carrying her on his back. Aftei w drifting more than a block both sank w with last despairing cries for help. ^ That three others, perhaps foui tj went down with the automobile it j, the belief of the bridge tenders at a the bridge at Jackson and at Vanburen street and of other witnesses; of the tragedy. The other victims, it is believed, are under the machine at the bottom of the river. n It was speeding at 25 miles an hour and when it struck the water, dove into the mud on the river bed, ^ The screams most clearly distin- T guishable as the big car went over are declared by witnesses to have been those of women and the con- ^ viction was reached by them that more than two of the occupants of the automobile were women. The Limousine prevented the occupants being clearly discerned as the car dashed up. 01 Dr. Adolph E. Bertling, who had ^ stopped in his automobile at the 3( abutment of the bridge when he h heard the signal for the bridge to open, saw the accident. s' "When the bridge opened,' said Dr. Bertling, "I saw a big touring S( oar approaching, but could not tell how many occupants were in the car. The driver failed to slow up and I called frantically to him to stop. Either he did not hear me, or he could not stop the car, for a second ti later the machine toppled over the T edge of the abutment. Then I heard '?< screams. >1 "I am certain that I saw two men and a woman struggling in the wa- e< ter. I ran for policemen, but could find none. When I returned to the scene the bodies that had come to the surface had drifted down the tf river and people on the passing boat m had alarmed the bridge tenders, one v< of whom threw out life preservers, cj but it was too late." p< ? ? li< Election Ordered. w Governor Ans-el has ordered an h< election for December 14 for the tb prupuaetj new tuumj iv ut ivuuvu from the northern half of Marion county with Dillon as the county s?at. This will give the new county ns advocates, if they succeed at the elec- rc tion, opportunity to get their new cc county bill through the next legis- le lature. That the election will be ar vigorously contested is sure. b> ? sb Gained 20 Pounds in 60 Days. A collector for the Central of Georgia Railway Company was tired and worn out. Felt wretchedly M< and unfit for work. Two bottles of 7, Johnson's Tonic made bim gain 20 ba pounds in t>0 days. Are you under t'r< weight. Get Johnson's Tonic and be uge it. It does the work. ba BOY SHOOTS OLD MAN j ILLIAM M. IRBY SHOT DOWN BY YOVXG PARROT MILAM. ierr Seems to Have Be<'ii Trouble Between Mr. Irby and tlio Milam Family fur Some Time. At 6 o'clock Sunday afternoon on e public road ea->t of Laurens, Wllnn M. Irby, was seriously, though it necessarily fatally, shot by Part Milam, a young white man, the n of Jas. Milam of the county. The tire load of shot from a double irrel breech loader took effect in e face and bead of Mr. Irby, fearlly tearing the scalp and fracturg the skull slightly. It is not ought that any of the shot entered e head and the chances of recovery e good, although at this time It is lpossible to state the outcome. Young Milam was arrested by leriff Owens a short while after the looting; he wa^ met in the road ?ar his home. Milam is in jail vaiting the result of the wounds, is possible that bail will be apied for before judge Ship. It seems that there has been bad ood between Mr. Irby and the Miln family for some time. Sunday :ternoon, Mr. Irby was returning om Sunday school with his little xl in the buggy with him. As they ere passing the Milam home, young arrot Milam came walking out of le house with his shotgun in hand. dwwit mv " nairi Mr. by, bending slightly sideways to lield the child from the leveled un. Milam fired and the load was ;ceived in the face and head. Mr. by is receiving careful medical atmtion and there may be a chance >r recovery. Mr. Irby is familiarly known mong his friends as "Big Bill," he eing a powerful man and of unusual Lrge size. He is the son of the late as. Irby, and a nephew of the late enator John L. M. Irby. He is a :ibstantial farmer. Milam is a oung man, possibly 20 years of ge. KILLED BY THREE AUTOS. * romiuent Business Man of Atlanta J is the Victim. At Atlanta automobile week clairai its first victim Monday night, hen Harvey L. Anderson, a promient business man and president of le Anderson Hardware Company, as run over by three cars and killi. The man was not dead when icked up, but died shortly after eing -ushed to the St. Joseph's Inrmary. He never regained con-| ;i>ousness. I Mr. Anderson's wife was an ocupant of one of the cars which ran ver him. She had been at the aujmobile show as the guest of Mr. .'J. Seely, the publisher of the Atir>ta nonrcian and Mrs. Seplv. Mr. .uderson could not go, owing to a ressing business engagement which ept him late at the store. His work finished, Mr. Anderson ent home, and not finding his wife lere, concluded that she had gone orae with the Scmfwycmfwyfwypp > walk over to their house on eachtree street and, it seems, was alking in the middle of the street hen the accident occurred. Harvei [ill, a well known attorney, was le first person to Identify the injred man. It was in Mr. Hill's uto that he was carried to the iyrmary. Banker's Singular Request. The will of Walton Townsend.a Dtired baker of San Francisco, jntalns this request: "I direct hat my remains bo cremated iu je Fresh Pond crematory on Long sland and ask that my ashes be fed > the flowers." Mr. Townsend's ill divides his estate of about $250.Ort between two grandsons. living i New York. ? Sold Spoiled Fish. City Health Officer E. I. Reardon, f Sumter, has complained to State ealth Officer Williams, of a custom >me of the Charleston fish dealers ave been practicing as noticed by jnsignees of Sumter of mixing Dolled fish with good. The rascal lat does such a thing should be sverely punished. Train Wreck. Three trainmen are reported kill3 and thirty-five persons injured i a wreck at Kleinart's station, venty miles north of Knoxville, enn., early Tuesday. The northern! through Louisville and Xashille passenger to Cincinnati, which aves Knoxville at 11 p. m., collid1 with a southbound freight. Stole Two Million. It is reported from Cincinnati that le shortage in the financial departent of the Big Four railroad, deJloped through the alleged defalition of Charles L. Warriner, de>sed-treasurer, may reach two milDti dollars. Warriner has astound1 his superiors with the dotails of >w he spent the money. He says iat he has not one dollar left. Out on Large Bond. Charles L. Warriner, the Cinciniti treasurer of the Big Four railtad . whose alleged shortage In ac unts created a sensation, was rcased on $20,000 bail. Detectives e looking for the persons named Warriner in connection with the lortage. Cotton Ginned. The census bureau at Washington ondav issued a report showing that 012,317 bales, counting round les as half bales, had been ginned am the growth of 1009 to Novemr 1, as compared with S,191,557 lee for 1908. FOUND IN ALLEY" A K Young Woman's Desperate Fight for Her Life Did Not Save Her * w MURDERED BY BRUTES Bits of Torn Cloth Tell Pathetic P< Story of the Young Woman's Gal- in laiit Bat Unavailing Straggle to cr w Save Her Life and Her Honor in gi fc a Dark Alley. a( There is great excitement at Cairo, la Illnois, over the finding of the dead j< body of a young white woman in a dark alley of the city. Evidences tt that the young woman, whose name w was Annie Psl.cy, who worked in a e: dry goods s:o>e, fought terrifically ^ before succumbing to brutal assailants Tuesday n'ght was disovarea M Wednesday by the police in trying to ^ solve her murder. U By means of bits of torn clothing ^ strewn along an alley, children lounJ her disfigured body. These uule t< tvidences of the girl's love fo- life tl aud purity showed that she fought s< against murderers for a ctty block P or more. b Her fight was destined to be a si losing one. for the slayer had caro- ii fully prepared a gag and heavy loth t' bands with which her cries were sti- it fled and her strength overcome. Miss lj Pelley was a country girl of rather n unusual strength and the police be- ti lieve that more than one person at- d tacked her. 1: The victim of the crime was 24 years old. She went to Cairo a few m months ago from Anna, 111., and was f: living with a married sister. Be- t< cause of her frequent habit of spending the night with girl friends, no & fear was felt by her relatives when fl Miss Pelley failed to return home a the night before. 1 She was on her way to take a car a for hohie from work in a dry goods store when last seen by friends, and i: early in the evening, probably 12 il hours before the body was found, 1< Miss Pelley had with her 11 yards g of red cloth for a dress, and an al- h ligator hand bag, both of whLch t are missing. Her parasol was found b bent and the handle was missing, i" The band used by the assailant re- e 8embles a slip noose and may have b been thrown about the girls nock b like a laseo. The gag had been b carefully prepared from a towel. b Four negroes, one a woman, were arrested and placed in jail. Different t bloodhounds followed a trail to the p woman's home on eight successive t trails. b Mayor George Parsons offered a v reward of $1,000 for conviction of i the slayer, and a fund is subscrib- t ing by citizens. e The latest evidence indicates that t Miss Pelley was attacked in front of e her home and dragged nearly a block and a half to the alley. o ? ? J MEDICAL EXPERTS BAFFLED. d . f By the Strange Case of a Young Man j1 of Virginia. ' g A Richmond dispatch says medi- i cal experts are interested in the t case of nineteen-year-old Aubrey Wilson, of Nottoway county, Virginia, who is totally blind in the day but can see like a cat in the I dark. This young man can speed a bi cyme wnen tne nignt is so aarK mac ordinary people have to walk with t caution, but in the day he gropes e about, able only vaguely to dietin- ^ guish any object, and with no dis- j crimination as to colors. v Because of his peculiar Infirmity, e tho young man is notod as a "possum hunter." He can distinguish e the aniamls in the trees In the dark as readily as a dog can follow the a scent. a All his life Wilson has suffered ^ from this defect. He says it grows out of too much light entering the s eye. It is called the "albino eye," he says. A ? T Jumped Off the Battery. ^ A white woman attempted to com- tl mit suicide Monday off the Battery ti in Charleston, but she was rescued by a police officer. No arrest was made and the woman was permitted to take her departure without a > ^record of her name having been made. The police officer contented himself with simply taking her from the water. >; t< Colleton County Election. In the primary electDon for mera- h ber of the house of representatives, S( held in Coileton county Tuesday, si 23 out of 30 boxes gives: D. H. J Towles, 341; H. L. Smith, 349; W. u C. Brant, 221. The other seven box- tl es can not alter the result and tc Messrs. Towels and Smith will run tc over. vi ? * a Law Applies to Corporations. 0i That the law requiring dealers in u oleomargarine to make returns of ni their business also applies to corpo rations, was held by the United States supreme court at Washington, in deciding in favor of the govern- M ment in the case of the United States ec against the Union Supply Company c? of Camden, N. J. . la tt Night Watchman Murdered. sc Night Watchman Durham at the m Virginia Carolina Chomlcal Company works at Americus, Ga., was brutally murdered by unknown persons a few days ago. He was brain- ar ed by a club axe and his pockets if rifled of eight dollars. The body in was found in the office of the fac- er tory. N. AN OLD WAR RELIC LOADED BOMBSHELL POUND A LMBEDED IN A WALL Tilch Had Probably Been Shot Into Atlanta From Sherman's Batteries ] When He Bombarded That City. A loaded bombshell, weighing 10 >unds, with its brass-rimmed cap tact and its nose blunted by its ashing contact with hard masonry, as found a day or two ago, by ne o workmen, imbeded in the brick iundation wall of an old structure : No. 9 North Forsyth street, Atnta, which was being demolished > make way for the new Atlanta ? >urnal building. ^ The Journal says Tom Walker was ( le negro whose pick unearthed the j ar-like relic. It amused him until ? e turned it over and saw the brass 1 tploding cap, but then he precipl- < itely vacated the premises. i Later he told a carpenter about it, f [r. J. E. Gryder by name, and Mr. . ryder thought it would make a ice mantelpiece ornament for his 1 ttle home but after poking it over, , e decided be would "pass it up." j The contracting engineers refused . > let the thing lie around where ; ley were working, so it was pre?nted as a precious gift to Mr. J. '. Hunter, proprietor of a near-beer aloou, at No. 11 North Forsyth Lrcet. Mr. Hunter bravely kept it 1 an iron safe, behind the bar for R'o whole days, but the weight of s 10 pounds began to weigh heavi- , r upon his conscience, and he comlenced to feel that he owed a cerain duty to his wife and family, espite the fact that his life is heavif insured. So he tried to give it to a friend rho is a collector of curios. The riend looked it over, and begged a be excused. Then somebody from the saloon ent a message to The Journal of *- it IC AAmA iCC, IUU CU.L1 Liti V C 1L 11 juu wwc nd get it," he said, "and welcome, 'he derned old thing belongs to you, nyway." So a reporter was sent to take it a charge and write a "story" about t. When the reporter got there and aoked it over he wished he had been :iven some other assignment, but as ie hugged the 19 pounds of annihilation tightly, tenderly to his osom, with his finger nails dug into ts rusty metallic sides, and staggerd back toward The Journal office, ie could not help thinking how much etter a "story" it would make if ie should happen to. drop it on the lard brick pavement. The city editor didn't take kindly o the idea, however, the lady reiorter shivered, and the staff phoographer refused pointblank to snap lis camera at it. Even the jokeniter who had first offered to take t and use it for a sinker the next ime he went fishing for perch, *ackd out when he saw it and pleaded hat the piscatorial season had clos d-. Happily, however, The Journal has ne dyed-in-the-wool hero, a Spanishimerican war veteran who regards leath-dealing implements of warare as mere children's toys, and le saved the situation by aaceptng the bombshell to use as a paperweight on his desk. He even sug;ested wearing it on his watch fob, ut the office wouldn't stand for hat. PENNED ITALIANS PERISH. roil Bars Trap Eight of Them in a Deadly Conflagration. Iron barred windows prevented he escape from death by fire of ight workers in Robert Morrison b Sons' comb factory in Brooklyn londay and five other men probably . ere fatally injured in making their scape trorn i.no nunarng. William Morrison, son of t.ho o?nr of the plant, lost his life in the ames while trying to reach the safe nd close Its doors. His father was mong the injured. Luckily there ,'ere only 40 employes i nthe facory when the fire started, for the pread of the flames was rapid. Many men jumped from the third oor windows and were injured, 'hose who rushed to the rear found be windows barred and there met heir doom. Nearly all of the vlcIms were Italians. AID TUHERCILOSIS WAR. iorth Carolina Preachers Asked to Deliver Sermons. Every minister of tho State of [orth Carolina has been appealed ) by Dr. Chas. A. Julian, assistant peretary for tihe State board' of ealth, to preach a special health srmon on the subject of tuberculo- j is on Sunday, November 28. Dr. , ulian asks the niijijisters to stir ; p the people of North Carolina to ie dangers of the white plague and ' ) explain to them how this fatal lalady may be wiped out by pre- 1 entive measures. By riveting the ttention of all classes upon this ,ie subject on the same day he hopes ) introduce a new and ?effective lethod for fighting the disease. ? ? ? ( Perish in Flames. 5 I At Pittsburg. Fa., Mrs. William arlow and four children were burn1 to death Monday when a fire, tused by the upsetting of an oil mp. destroyed the Marlow home in ie outskirts. Mr. Marlow and two ?ns were at work in a noarby coal ine at the time. Seeded Reform. A reduction in the mileage allowice of members of congress from ) cents to 5 cents a mile is sought resolutions adopted by the Farms' National congress at Raleigh. C. * ppofswr , Hypnotist Fails to Awakea a Youth He 1 w Had Pat SoaaiOy Jo Step DOCTOR CAME TOO LATE , BO L Large Audience Witnesses the Tragedy?The Police Arrest the ^ Professor and Carry Him to HOS- ?2 pital Where He Works All Night Over the Youth. I At Sommerville, N. J., Robert ^ * * ? /V# attiflrlr* | nmpsun, a juuuu uiuu ui ( vas hypnotized before a large aadisnce in the theatre Tuesday night jy Prof. Arthur Everton, a p^-oleslional hypnotist, and Wednesday fee vas pronounced dead by thej stair ioctors of the Somerset HoBpUai. <\.fter being placed In a cat;llej>lie jtate the youth did not regain? consciousness. tai Prof. Everton was arrested,, "but ^ svas released in the custody ot two pe] police officers, who accompanied llm to the hospital where he remftlaed all night in an effort to restore life jQJ to his helpless subject, which *he pa] physicians said would he impoasible. kn Simpson had been employed by ^ the hypnotist as a professional sub- w ject for little more thap a week and ^ when the performance, which was the first at Sommerville, began he Beemed in normal health. Everton ^ passed his hands over Simpson's ^ face a number of times while th? ^ young man was lying on the flooc, ob * ? ^' ? KA,1i? KA/>O I i A i . ana soon ouupsuu a uvuj irev??? rigid. tei Everton then raised it and pfeioed wj it between the chairs so that the ^ neck rested on the back of one el< chair and the ankles on the back of the other. The hypnotist then stood jjE upon the rigid body of his s?bje<* and performed other feats to shov that Simpson was in a complete cab- ^ alepticoma. When Everton had bow?d his acknowledgement of the large audidience's applause he stood the rigid 31 body erect, leaning it against a back ah wall and then sought to bring around gw the subject. The audience soon rea-1 j. llzed that Everton had become high- ra ly excited when his first efforts faii- ^ e|. Simpson was carried behind the scenes and doctors called, but 1t ^ was useless, the doctors saying thut ^ Simpson had died while cataleptic. ^ POISON VALUABLE HORSES. * Hr/vwlr A# m notld A# VmT o/iauuuviu hvaa va mm vn?u^ v? *fv?* | York Blackmailers. In New York more than 250 valu- i able horses in East Side stables have j been poisoned to death in the last few months by a gang of blackmailers for' whom the police are eagerly searching. Detectives declare that fy owners of horses in that section of se the city have already paid at least sp $10,000 to the blackmailers and that fo their animals have so far enjoyed Sa immunity. m< Dr. H. Stark, chief inspector for T\ the Society for the Prevention of tic Cruelty to Aniamsl, declares that co while more than 250 and fewer than 500 horses have been killed by poisoning, more than 2,000 animals have . been given poison, but saved. The method of the blackmailers isi to demand, through a letter, severaP ? hundred dollars from the proposed victim on penalty of having his hors- \] es killed. After the second demand * has been ignored, one or more of tlie victim's horses die. It has been _ ?i3 found that many of the horses ha-\#B been given arsenic. p. WILL NOT REVOLT. ?, an Labor Will Accomplish Its Purpose wI no Through Evolution. "We are not going to be drawn into a revolution,' said President Gompers, responding to a welcome _ extended him at the labor meeting in Toronto, Ont., Monday. W "The American labor irtovement is a rational movement and we are l going to hold together. ' We realize " the wrongs of the past and the present. We do not under estimate ?P1 the power of our opponents, but we mc propose to work out our emancipa- 10 tion in our own way, not by a revo- ^ lution, but evolution, and if there m8 be a wrong done by any, class in society, the men of organized labor will be found defending themselves and not be the aggressor, whoever ? may be wrong. The labor movement ' must always be right." .Murder Mystery. An autopsy on the body of Dorothy Byrnes, a young girl of a well __ known Brooklyn family, who died ' 111 ? T~1 J m me Uiacuweil a ISIUUU iW3|;iiai j Tuesday, brought to light another murder mystery. The girl admit:ed before her death that she was in ? i motor car with strange men and I* tvas forced by their treatment to lump for her life. In jumping she I J fractured her skull. I * Any girl with ruby lips and gold- IS ;n hair ought to be a treasure worth 9? driving for. It was in this very cottage from Birmingham, Ala., th< died of Fever. They had be< son's Tonic cured them quit The two physicians here bad 3 very obstinate were Italians and lived on a creek 60 yards L months standing, their temperature ranging froi thing In vain. I persuaded them to let me try J ed matter and let the medicine go out In a plain (oct In all three case* was Immediate and permai was no recurrenoe of tbe Fever. ^Wrlt^oTHEJIO^ i i i < 4?1 - ' A Feather i H-e have many oth 5^_j "?f dress goods, an ^ ^nest fabrics. "moderate. A posta THE W. S. CO Socicty Street, Local ?nd Long Iouthern States " BUT Fl machine^ Piumblng| COLUMI mnp VfU' PrnTIT.T7.PT? JLllCi *1 AM ?* A' M d A JL M. M-t M. u ? A discovery of fax-reaching impor ice to the farnners of the South is i new fertilizer which has "beer rfected on oaie of the islands neai arleston, S. C. It has long beer own that Itae is an essential fooc plants of all kinds afld that thej anot live \s|hen it has "been exhaust from the soil. It has also beer own that old wore-out lands ar< tremely deficient la lime, and tha ar, badly-drained lands have theii ae Is a for mthat is not usable b: owing crops. Farmers' Bulletin No. 124, U. S spt. of Agriculture, says: "A1 e applications of lfcne increased th< ilds The best yields wen tained with the lime in the forn carbonate, the finely ground oys r shells standing first * * Llmi th fertilizer was more profitabli an depending upon fertilize )na" TWs new fertilizer which present ae in its most usable form is mad< b new process of burning oyste els and using a burner that cai flply potash. The result is a higl ? A/s^f (nor Pencil m taue ivi uin.ci Luotjlit, WUU..U. only $7.00 per ton. It reclaim: 3rn-out lands in a marvelous man ir If applied broadcast two month: ,ead of ammoniated goods: It': reeteGing effects on sour lands i: most magical. Charleston freigh tes apply on this new fertilizer le factory is located on Young': lanii, S. C., but all letters shoul< addressed to B. L. Commins, Sale: jet*, Meggetts, S. C. Free descrip re circulars will be sent to any om i request. LN TUBERCULOSIS BE CURED acording to Statement Issued b; the Michigaii Department o Health, It Can Be Cured and Pre vented. I, the undersigned, hereby certi that I have suffered slightly fo: veral years, and endured pains anc Ittlng of blood from tuberculosi: r the; past year. Having taken th< ,asta*noinen Remedy for thre< sntbs, I feel myself perfectly well vo doctors, after careful examina )qe, have pronounced me fully re vfred. (Signed) For testimonials and terms, writ( The Sanstaraoinen Remedy Co.,. . South Range, Mich. L. M. Power, M. D.. in charge. VRITE US If you are a ill Grain Sower ill Vetch Sower ill Peach Orchard Sprayer! Our "Weekly Curent Price List,' d our various Pamphlets on above II greatly help you. 'Twill cost thing. Do it today. N. L WILLET SEED CO. AUGUSTA, GA. V^HSTTIEID 6 young men and 4 young ladies to prepare for positions now awaiting them. Great portunity for young people of good >ral character who want to rise an honorable position. Lessons mail if desired. For full inforition, write Southern Commercial School, Winston-Salem, Rocky Mount, reensboro, Wilmington, X. C. Belrtfls, Paddntr, Lacing. LOMBARD COMPANY. AUGUSTA. GA. Vnd some people* seem to think aaughty to be nice. ? lena W1 W C0LUMBI^8UPPLY 1 . t/ W ! U . ETour engine ne Wb M a man of experience bas to s ereril governors, of various make the Gunther-Wrigbt. This govern ?vei tried." We carry all sues in sto COLUMBIA SUPP1 in Brookside, 15 miles it three Italians nearly ?nsick 3 months. Johnckly?read letter below: Brookside, Ala., May 4,1903. cases ot continued Malarial Fever. AH rom my store. These cases were of thrce? 3i 100 to 101. The doctors had tried every* ohneon'B Tonic. I removed all the printbottle as a regular prescription. The eficnu They recovered rapidly and there fc>. R. fiUIFLETT. VCR TONIC CO., Savannah, Ca. in Our Cap curling and dyeing feathers. But er feathers in our cap. We excel eing Gloves, Lace Curtains, all kinds d even Carpets. We never injure Our work is the best. Our price 1 will bring them. PLESTON CO. CHARLESTON, S. C. ; Distance 'Phone. Supply Company ROM Ul /-Supplies Ml SgpplleB BIA. S. C. ] CLASSIFIED COLUMN . 3 Red Polled Cattle?Berkshire Hogs i and Aurora Goats. Breeders. W. r R. Clifton, Waco, Texas, i . 1 Salesmen?Best commission offer on ' earth. New, all retailers, samples. Coat pocket. "Very Profltai able," Iowa City, Iowa. J . t Wanted to Buy?Hides, Furs, Wool, r beeswax, tallow, scrap iron, cow f peas. Write for prices. Crawford Co., 508-510 Reynold St., Augusta, Ga. 1 3 Don't Ship until you get a free list 3 of reliable produce dealers in 29 i leading markets from the National League of Commission Merchants. ? Dept. O, Buffalo, N. Y. r Salesmen Wanted?On commission or $75 and up per month with s expenses, as per contract. Expe0 rience unnecessary. Premier Clr gar Co., Cincinnati, Ohio. 1 , .. 3 Typewriters?Special low prices on rebuilt and second-hand machines, 5 all kinds, for fall trade. Write for price list. , General Supply 5 Company, Dept. O, Augusta, Ga. s _______________________________ s Lady or Girl Wanted each town, t good pay spare time, copy names for advertisers, cash weekly. 31 Stamp for particulars. Am. Adv. J Bureau, Sanbornville, N. H. O ' " Agents to sell practical electricity In e 12 lessons; branch method; complete course home study with consultation certificate; 50 cents a lesson. Branch Publishing Co., Chicago. p ?____ f When medicine fails you, I will take your case. Rheumatism, indigestion, liver, kidney and sexual disorders permanently eradicated by natural means. Write for literature, confidential, free and interr esting. C. Cullen Howerton, F. S., ' Durham, N. C. 3 __________________________ Young Ladies and girls over 14 ye^ra of age can secure steady and profitable employment and be taught to make cigars. Will be paid while learning, good, cheap board can be secured near the factory. Any girl can make from $6 to $12 per ? week (some much more) after learning. We need 500 young ladies immediately. Apply to Seldenburg & Co., Opposite Union Depot, Charleston, S. C. 200 Men Wanted?We want 200 laborers for track work on Carolina, Clinchfield & Ohio Ry., between Bostic, N. C., and Spartanburg, S. C. We pay $1.25 per day for 10 hours, furnish comfortable camp cars and have a commissary with the force. Apply to Meadows Company, A. W. Jones, Division Engineer, Spartanburg, S. C.; J. R. Honeycutt, Roadmaster, Marion, N. C.; L. H. Phetteplace, Superintendent, Erwin, Tenn. * ORGANS. * We have a few slightly used * $90 organs, will close out at a * big reduction. If you are want *ing an organ now is the time to * buy one of the best organs made * at a great bargain. Write at * once if you wish to secure one * of these organs, for such bar * gains don't last long. * Write for illustrations of * these organs and for terms. * MALONES MUSIC HOUSE * Columbia, S. C. *******?**? PECANTREES Budded and grafted from choicest varieties. Lowest prices. EAGLE PECAN COMPANY, Pittsvicw, Ala. C OI M P A *eds a Good Governor. \ ay after using the leading makes:?"! have tried I s. but failed to get proper regulation until I used I or gives better regulation than any other ( have I ck, flanged or sere wed bottom with screwed side. M Y COMPANY, COLUMBIA. S C. ^ 1