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I CALL FOR HELP , Men More Important tban Resources, Says President ilarrett WANTS BETTER SCHOOLS Government Should S|>end from Fifty to One Hundred Millions Bach Year to Check the Trend From the Farm to the City by Providing Good Country Schools. I At Atlanta, Ga., In sober, business phrases nearly four score delegates, appointed by sixteen Southern Governors, Friday foretold an amazing growth in wealth and population for the South within the next ten years. Representing the agriculture an J business interests of every section of Dixie, these delegates gathered to assist the executive committee of the Southern Commercial Congress work out a non-polltlcal and disinterested plan for promoting development of the South's millions of unoccupied acres and its vast unused watpr powers, the enlargement of its by*1? ? ?.J Ks-i+Vi V\i' Ue nnfll luess auu luuunuj, uuiu Lrv. 1W inhabitants and through judicious advertising of its resources throughout America and Europe. As the representative of more than two million farmers. Charles S. Barrett, president of the Farmers Union, stressed the necessity of conserving men first, rather than the resources of the soil. "If you conserve the nation's raw resources and neglect the nation's men, you will meet disaster and ultimate defeat in your ! undertaking," he said. "The nation has not been conserving the farmer, the man who is a greater asset than all your powers, coal lands forests or gold mines." "A corterie of really patriotic Americans is trying to head off the efTorts of the Morgan-Gubbenheim . interests to bottle up, or 'hog' the coal and gold of Alaska. They have jsuoceeded in rousing a nation to | their assistance. We have had the menace of Ballingerism placarded from one end of America to the other. We have been warned in trumpet tones, of the encroaching ?rtnn.nr intoroate arhl^h mnv in IWtllCl pu**ci 1UWV1 VDVO f? MkVM U> t ... the long run, absorb all the water power of the country and in the end become the king of all the other trusts. We have been told of the penalty of giving over our forests to greedy timber interests. We have been shown what will happen if we do not checkmate the money lust of the coal, the gold and the timber I barons. "This is all worthy, this is all admirable. But while we battle against these foes of the Republic, we leave to his own devices the man whose vital function it is to feed and largely to clothe this nation, the man whose combined product yield a greater annual value than our mines or forests or water powers, the man whose problems will be more than ever the nation's problems when the earth shall have been S stripped of its coal and gold." He said the Government should spend fifty to one hundred million dollars annually to check the trend from the farm to the city by improving common school and scientific agricultural educational facilities in every country, in easy reach of the rarmers cuuureu. ne ?uuiu i>ivvld? against "the contamination of the corrupt alien strains that sowseeds of unrest and disreputation that may ripen unto a ruinous harvest." | Mr. Barrett stressed the necessity of keeping a perpetual watch upon our national and State Legislators. "The battle for conservation is not here in this auditorium. It conies in the elections of November. It comes after that in the halls of Congress. It comes two years hence, in the selection of a president and a Congress that are committed to the public and not the private welfare. And then it comes year af*er year, for conservation is so big a war that it probably will not be endod until your children and mine stand in outplaces." 'Mr. Barrett paid a warm tribute to Gifford Pinchot to whoes "unselfish public spirit, patience under humiliation and untiring zeal." he attributed the present advanrelent to the sause of nonservation. " I am confident," he eaid, "that when the verdict of history is; written his name will stand high among the names of the men who have wrougnt for the salvation of our common country." v Postal Saving Hanks Postal savings banks opened Oct. let. Whatever may have been the conflict of views as to their desirability they are now an accomplished fact and doubtless will be a boon to a large number of people who from timidity have hidden their money in clocks, under trees, below the kitchen floor and in other places rather than deposit it in banks. The saving instinct does not seem to be so pronounced in America as it is in many other countries and if the postal banks develop that instict it will he a euod thine. In Great Brit ain 10,00ft,000 depositors have over $700,000,000 to their credit, an average of $70 each. France comes next, i with 4,000,000 depositors and is fol- j lowed by Russia, Germany, Japan j and many other countries. All this < indicates industry, thrift aud confi- i dence. ; The Unwritten Law. i IMenlo Moore, a theatrcal man of Vincennes, Ind., shot and killed Edward Gibson, a millionaire. Moor; I charged Gibson with undue Intimacy t with his wife. , * l A TREASURE SHIP. How the Centurion Captured a G Laden Spanish Vessel. Of the many incidents of Ans< great voyage round I he world in middle of the eighteenth century, n has made a j-nater impression on popular nr'nl ihaa the capture of great tro.isir.e ship N'ucsira Scnon Cabadong-.'.. cu April 20, 1743. I.i the first plai e, the value of the r was enoiruo:is- in the second, fir t between i Centurion an i t.em oVi!^ wne o flna ainplp-shtfl 30ti and in the third plsce. the vici came at a time when Anson's forM seemed to be at a low ebb, when disaster after another had reduced squadron to one ship, and when s nes? had rrduced his gun's crew; two men each. The Nucstra Scnora de Cabadoi or as it is also called, de Covadoi was a treasure ship from Manila, c manded by Don Geronimo Mont and laden with specie and mercl disc She was sighted at sunriFe f ?he masthead of the Centurion, Master Richard Walter, Anson's cl lain and historian, tells us that general joy spr?ad through the w ship.'' Galleons nearly always cru in couples, and it was supposed other must be near. The Centurio or.ee stood toward the Spaniard. before 8 o'clock her officers could the enemy from the deck. The fl of a gun by thp galleon was takei Anson's men to be a consort to n haste and rejoin, and "to amuse Dons" the Centurion herself fire gun to leeward. But Don Geroc Montero had no consort, nor did underrate the prowess of his oppor The Spaniards knew tbey were fac face with Anson and he Centui and ;n?v were keen to fi^ht. Throi out I he forenoon the two ships c closer and closer together, till by j day only a league separated tl Then the Nuestra Senora de C donga brought to under topsails, ' her head to the northward, and at top-p?llant masthead the standari Spain was flying. Anson was not slow to accept challenge, and he laid his plans 1 great foresight. Into the tops he 30 picked men. the best small s marksmen in the ship. His broad guns were manned only with men eacrt, and to them he gave structlons to do nothing but load t Tun. The rest of the men were dlv into gangs of 12. with orders to n up and down the battery for the )urpose of running out and firing ?uns as they were loaded. It wai unconventional way of fighting, .inuous independent fire was the thing the Spaniards expected, an threw them into as much conin h did tne disaster which ovenot them within a few minutes of opeuing of the fight. A mass of i and hammocks in the netting of galleon caught fire, burning tie) and blazing up nearly as high as uizzeu top. The two ships were r tically within pistol shot, and it :ouaoiv *>,.,> gi.iuvads trom .it* < '.urion which started the blare. r<*o Hipmselves from the danger no light task, and it took the Spa .v.ui? '.iiU'' to rut the n?tt away and tumble tne naming r verboard. and ?u tin- mcunA*?:.le son's marksmen in the tops wore jecting the gallron's upper decks t( incessant fusilade. Walter descr the effect as "prodigious havoc," adds that the marksmen succeed# "killing or wounding every officer one that appeared on the quarter d and wounding in particular the era] of the galleon himself." The fight raged in for two he Anson changing from round shou 4fapn in the second part of the .jagement with deadly effect, hips w^rc so near that Mime of Spanish officers were seen run ^hout with much assiduity to pre the desertion of their men from t quartprs. hut all their endeavors y in vain. After having as a last e fired five or six guns "with t judgment than usual," thnv vieldei the contest; and the galloon's cc being burned off the ensign staf the beginning of the engagement, struck the standard at her main gallant masthead. The Centurion not escape undamaged; at the mon the galleon struck Anson was infor quietly that his ship was on fire i the powder room. He received news with apparent emotion, and ing care not to alarm his people, i the necessary orders for extinguis the fire. The specie in the Nuestra Scnor Oabadonga included 1.313.843 piece eight, and 35.682 ounces of virgin ver. and the total value of the p was assessed at? ?313.000. And in connection it is interesting to 'hat two other Spanish iroapurr. s captured by English commanders names similar to that of Anson's p There was the Nuestra Senora Rosarian. which Drake took, "am it great booty," from that most hai ty of Spanish seamen. Don Pedrn Remedios. which was tak^n very ri laden by the Royal Family priva off rape St. Mary's throe y?ars a Anson's great capture.?London G1 Tho man without a purpose is Virtues of the Dog. Thn dog is a noble animal, corap; with man. becausp he never borr .our mon?T ro spend oil midnight pert for chorus girls, and becaus he did he would pay you back, ins of black-guarding you to your frif for a skinflint.- -Now York Press i/ove Feast Ends Fight. Differences existing between ( onel W. Bennett and Jasper W; ing, which created such a sensal at Waycross, Ga., Friday, were a cably settled at a love feast of members of the First Baptist chu and the Central Baptist tabcrna Apoligies were extended and ace sd and hand-sbaking followed The one who is constantly do little acts of kindness and love ilways be depended upon to do gi hings when the emergency arises. ATTENTION FARMERS rOld. THE SOUTH ATLANTIC CORN EXoil's I he POSITION WILL BE ' ion. c the * * tfu> Hcl<l In Columbia, at Which Eight ! i dp 1 ibe Thousand Dollars in Prizes Will < r*fc > ( l?a| Be Offered. ( sure Eight thousand dollars will be of- * lon' fered In prizes for the best corn at . tory 1 lnPS the South Atlantic Corn Exoosition < one held in Columbia December 5?S. i hjs The South Carolina Corn Breeders* I I j. Association, who have been promot. to ing the exposition met in the State I Home Thursday and completed ; n?a plans for the exposition. The organ- i nga" ization was perfected and prominent | 0 ' farmers will act as superintenents I ero iu the various deportments and pro- i ian.' mote the exhibition of corn from the rotn in var^0U8 districts of North Caroii- < and na. South Carolina and Georgia. iap. Prizes were arranged for each i county In South Carolina, for the i ^0je congressional districts in South Car- I ised olinii and for the three zones of . an_ each North Carolina and Georgia. < Q al Sweep-Stakes will be offered for the < and best 10 ears of yellow corn, prolific see white corn, single ear variety white i ririp, corn, single ear and bushel lots, I j by from all the States. All these ex- < iake hlbits will come together in Grand < the Sweep-Stake and Grand Champion 1 ^ a Sweep-Stake classes. (jrao The largest prize has been offered I I jjg for the best 10 ears of corn grown icn( In any of the three States. The win,e to ner of the Grand Champion Sweep.j0T1 Stake prize for 10 ears of corn will jgh- rece*ve as ^is reward prizes approxTRpt imatlng $400. This is intened to i bring out the best corn that can be lem Pr?duced in the South Atlantic aj)a.' States and $400 for the best 10 ea-.-s with cause the farmers to put for<h their very best efforts in making this j gj exhibit the finest that can be secured. It is said this exhibit will carry . ' great honor with it for an exhioit W1 of 10 ears of corn that are the beat se that can be grown by any one exir 8 hibitor in any of the three otates of s South Carolina, North Carolina and *0 Georgia, will within itself be a prize worthy of the highest consideration. A separate department will be set ^ apart for the Boys' Club and the lOVC nrklhlta Thfica will havp snA> UV'O CAU4W1HJ. * Iivwv " '? w T" SOIe cial prizes and will be under the direct supervision of the officers of the 5 an Farm Demonstration Work in South con" Carolina. 'asl An important feature of the e.\^ " position will bo the individual dission plays, there being prizes offered for JK" the best individual display in each of the three states and also for the nats Qrand Champion individual display. The one who wins the individual dlsplay in either of these States will l*ie receive prizes to the value of $22d ,rar" and the one making the best display was at the exposition will receive an ad1 * ditional prize of $c'0 in cash, thus, Tc rewarding the exhibitor who mak?s wa!* the best display. In order to maKO n's this premium list as large as it is 'HR-- the South Carolina Legislature, last liasB w|nter, enacted a bill providing {? *" $1000 in cash to be offered as prized sub- tn tha pvhihitnrH nf Smith Carolina 5 aD alone. At the same time $500 was ibes appropriated for the use of the Co>n and Breeders' Association in furthering d ',l its cause. Various machinery houses, hut fertilizer concerns, newspapers, and e('k- business enterprises have contribut- I ?en* ed large prises. The International i Harvester Co , alone has contributed I mra. approximately $600 and the John i t to Deere Plow Co., has made liberal Jo- I pn' nations. 1 The The South Carolina Cotton Seed < 'rtr Crushers' Association has also appro- < n'n8 priated $300 in cash to be used for I vont the best corn exhibits made from l)?ir South Carolina. In the beginning it r vers was intended to raise only $4,000 in a ffrv''t prizes, together with the $1,000, ap- t uore propriated by the State Legislature [ i up would make $5,000, but the enthus>lors iasm in the exposition ha6 been ho j f at widespread, the interest in corn t she growing in the South Atlantic States v top- so great and the liberality of the s did varied interests of the South Atlan- c uent tic States so marked that larger c nied prizes have been secured un'il the i near total with aggregate $8,000 in ma'he chinery, fertilizer cash, etc. Work ^ i?k- on the premium list has been com- e save pleted, and it will come from the c hing press in a few days and be ready for s distribution. . t a At a meeting of the Corn Breed- a s ?' eiB Association Thursday the foliov- I rfiI* ing organization was completed: I >rizH /President and General Manager? N ,hi5i A. D. Hudson, Newberry, S. C. I note Secretary and Treasurer?R. K. t hip" Hayes, Pages uMill, S. C. n bor? Superintendent of Entries?Mai- t I,ze colm Miller, Columbia, S. C. o dp1 Superintendent of Judges?A. G. 1' ^ Smith Columbia, S. C. u Superintendent of Exhibits?A. D. 1(,:; Hudson. Newberry, S. C. t rh'T Superintendenl of Boys' Exhibits? a L. L. Baker, Bishopville. S. C. t lf!er Superintendent of Exhibits?first C ?^)e district. James fleeves, Turbeville; a Second District W. T. Walker, Blaekville; Third District, W. C. Brown, o Newberry; Fourth District, P. ii A ared Bailey, Laurens; Fifth District,. E. T owe A. Brown, Camden; Sixth District, 0 sup- R. K. Hayes, Pages' Mill: Seventh ii e if District, W. McD. Green, Oswego. b teac Superintendent of North Carolina ii >n^f exhibits?W. J. McKinnon, Lykes- a land, S. C. P Superintendent of Georgia exhi- tl bits?W. F. Cleveland, Hidgeland, S. h :oi- c. a v'ld- Superintendent of Machinery?L. u :ion c. Chappeil, Lykesland, S. C. r< mi- Mr. Hambv, Secretary of the A the Chamber of Commerce, was also rr*h ~ * 4U-. 1: * - ? " pieaeiii ai me meeting IU di i aii&u IUI n 0le- the work of the Columbia Chamber ti L't'1- of Commerce in connection with the li v exposition. Craven Hall has bePD a secured and the Chamber of Com- w ling merce, through Mr. Hamby will look p' can after the securing of the railroad o: ejt rates, the decoration of the hall, the ir conducting of the Information Bu- tl AGAIN THE FIRELESS COOKER. The tireless cook stove, the old 'hay box" of northern Europe, has (Ptablished Itself as one of the regu- 1 ar supplies of the house furnismng lepartments. It is a very different hlng, however, from its ancient prootvpe. In Its latest manifestation ^ t looks like a shirtwaist box or book :ase, and is an ornament rather than , jtherwise to au apartment. In the ornier cac.e it is a low chest and in he latter a tailor rase, with two deep Jrawers. which, upon drawing out, irovr to l?^ padded and fitted with Mishions and utensils which exclude by lie air and retain the heat. Such tin jo\e? cost from to $25. They are ai :so?i bv modern women, as they iave al.cays been by European peasuis, w.io for one reason or another find it ncccsiJTj' to reduce the pre- 'ni para lion of the .family meal to the w east possible pxpenditure of time and acl abor. P.'isiiie.ss women, farmers wa vives and others who do their own ^ oo king. ?8' To cook beans in the hay box pre* ',a p^re them as for baking and pack so iliem away while they arc boiling. 'n( Leave them for eight hours or more co: and iItmi, if thrv are wanted with a m< irust over the top, brown them in the t0 -vtt /mi an u/T tU. For a pot roast, select a four or live-pound piece of rump steak and cr< brown It in a frying pan In suet or drippings. Then put into the pot, cover with boiling water and boil for arl half an hour. At the end of that time pack the kettle away in the box Ca for six hours. Just before serving ac remove the meat and thicken and ex season the gravy. an Old-fashioned rice pudding can be w' made in the hay box. Wash a third bu of a cupful of rice, and put it into I>1< a pan with a quart of milk, a third co of a cupful of sugar, a saltspoonful tu of salt, two teaspoonfuls of butter ta' and a bit of grated lemon rind. Bring m< the milk to scalding point over hot as water and cook there for 15 minutes Ini Then pack away in the hay box for th five hours. The idea in cooking the ha food for some time over the stove is to< to heat it thoroughly. There can, of aB course, be no more heat after It is th packed away than it takes into the box, and all the heat possible is Cs wanted. ri< ch Helpn in the Sewing Room. Ac One of the nicest darning ball? w] you could us? is an clectric light th bulb which has had the sharp point lo knocked off. It is light in color ana ty one can see the work more easily, su and it is light In weight. er Remember the truth of the old ar saying, "a stitch !n time saves nine." In aud mend any worn places or torn it parts in all garments before sending w< them to tTie laujdry, and the time br added to the life ol the garments will kr more than repay you. What is odIj qi a small hole in a garment before it m is sent to the laundry oftentimes ye will be a fair sized rent when it re- ac turns. 0( It is essential that all linens fo? wearing apparel should be shrunker la before being cut It is well to send fr It to the firm from which it was pur- of chased, for the work will be thor- ac xmghly done and the expense will be ar Fmall. The new look will remain, as Bi it will not If shrunken by an aina- hi teur. ta ~ ' re G?t Rid of Mold. Get a magnifying glass and look ai the mold of one day's growth on & ^ piece of bread and you will see a 6 plant bearing leaves, flowers and nc seeds, increasing with incredible rapidity; for in a few hours the seeds " spring up, arrive at maturity, and bring forth seeds themselves, so that 0 many generations are produced in as jne day, necessitating immediate re iltention to prevent, mold on food in en an pantries, closets, etc. ^ gli eau for the benefit of the visitors ev ind will look after the printing of he tickets and the caring of the \\r ;ate receipts. "j In connection with the exposition de here will bo a corn judging con- da est and an institute program upon wa vhich there will be some of the best so; ipeakers in the country upon agri- tei :ultural subjects. These will be un- tal ier the direction of the Extension he department of Clemson College. on So enthusiastic and so confident 25 vere the members of the Corn Breed- no >rs Association and the exposition tfficials of the sucecss of the expo- ha ition, plans are already set on foot as; o make the exposition a permanent pe iffair. Messrs. A. D. Hudson, R. K. sts layes, L. L. Baker, E. J. Watson, gri ). N. Barrow, W. H. Perkins, Ira W. thi Villiams, A. G. Smith and J. N. Har- coi ier were appointed as a committee be o draw up plans for forming a per- th< uanent organization. This commit- ing ee will report at. the next meeting Mr f the Corn Breeders' Association and sec rovide for holding an exposition an- bui mally. The committeo was also instructed o confer with representatives from ( 11 the bouthern States looking to wJ) he organization of an Interstate gta lorn Exposition that would 6crve as climax for the various expositions. ]ie Plans were also made for carrying a f n of the work of the Corn Breeders f)r( issociation this fall and next year. 'lie Columbia State ha6 offered $1,- nr 00 in prizes for the best corn breed- pja ig aone in soutn uarouna; $ouu 10 ecome available in 1911, and $f?0l) i 1912. It was arranged so that nyone wishing to compete for this rize could secure the assistance of * be Farm Demonstration Agent iu ' e is county or the adjoining county, nd then next year carry on the work M ? nder the direction of the Specia) spresentative of the Corn Breeders' ssociation.. Every member was very enthusias- lcI c over the outlook of the exposion, and judging from the ptemium st. the co-opcration of the farmers ' nd interest manifested Thursday, it last ill not only be the first corn ex- rot osition ever held in the South, but ne of the greatest educational meet- Eff( lgs ever held for the benefit of ie Southern farmers. aSc HUGE CORN CROP C St JSED BY CAPT. J. W. BUNCH AT THE ASYLUM FARM. __ t Fi 11 Gather an Average of One Hundred Bushels Per Acre on One __ F( Hundred Acres. The Columbia Record of Thursday Is of a wonderful corn crop made Cap't. J. W. Bunch on the farm of ~~ \V 3 State Asylum in Columbia. Here j the facts as given by the Record: Capt. J. W. Bunch has grown on 2 farm of the State Hospital for the sane a 100-acre crop of corn that ? 11 easily run 100 bushels to the ^ re?and this within ten minutes ilk of the State capltol. No fancy uring is required to arrive at this :imate of the yield. So many te3ts ve been made and these have been _ distributed over the fields as to j, iicate on their face a production QBlderably in excess of the amount ?ntioned; but Capt. Bunch prefers err on the side of conservatism d says: "Let it stand 100 bushels; that, it is probably the best corn 3p in South Carolina." * 11 And the value and interest of Capt. " inch's exemplification of the gentle t of corn culture is the greater for e reason that it is on a large scale, pt. Bunch has not taken a selected re, of special fertility, spent money travagantly upon artificial manures ~ d endeavored to force a prize yield ^ thout reference to the cost per shel of the product. Such examjs have little practical value as ntributlons to the sum of agriculral knowledge. Capt. Bunch has ken a problem such as every far- "" >r faces; he has had in mind, ju6t ^ the private planter has, the showg of a balance on the right side of e ledger at harvest time, and he s worked it out with Just labor, ols, machinery, seed and fertilizer the average farmer planting on *" is scale has. ^ It may be urged that the lands ipt. Bunch used as In fine tiltii. :h, well drained and in good meanical condition. This may be sufiently answered by sawing that ben Capt. Bunch took charge of e6e lands they were considered of w valuo for agricultural purposes? pical Richland sand, with a clay bsoil, their fertility low and consid ahln frontn ewamnv Tf nnw th^v e among the most productive lands the South, rich and well drained, " Is simply because they have been 1 ill used. Capt. Bunch has mixed ains with his fertilizer?and his lowledge of farming was not aclired in college either. He is no ere dabbler in agriculture. Last ar he made this fa\m, with its 250 " res under cultivation, yield $20,>0. "Capt. Bunch, you do not let your nd rest even at night," visitors have equently said, after an inspectiou the farm. It is true that every :re is required to yield Its maximum id that constantly, but then Capt ~ anch for his part plays fair with ' s soil. Crop-making constituents ken from it this year are faithfully turned to It the next. Stable manure produced on the ace goes back into the soil. The scessity of humus is never forgotn The variety of crops grown is >t sufficient to permit of a four- " op rotation, but two exhausting ops are never required of the same act in succession. The swampy Tlin yy 511/uiiuo oiu mc uiaiucu. 1 uu ylum farms gets a square deal and sponds with bumper crops. It has joyed Capt. Bunch's equal gived-take policy for 20 years and the suit is that it is a farm which addens the heart of any man wuo ~ er loved the soil. Capt. Bunch does not follow the illiamson method of corn-growing, would not be understood as conmning It, though," he said Thursy "For the lands on which it is originated, level, sandy, Pee Dec lis, it is. I believe, the best sysn; but to use it would be a misite on lands of such tilth as these re. We tried It and found that ~ our farm It caused a decrease of ^ to 35 bushels per acre below the rmal yield." It is figured that the ear corn rvested from corn tracts on the ylum farm Is clear profit, the exnse being met by the fodder, and ilks and the ensilage yielded by *ss and the peas broadcasted "ough the crop. The bulk of the rn crop this season is of the Marlrough stock. Experiments wilh i Batts corn have been disappoint- ~ This is the seed with which ? PnHc nf Hjiloifrh {r cntH fn hat'P I ured a prize-acre yield of 2*6 J sliels per acrc last year. Haskell Snulra Teddy. Govenor Haskell, whose ciuarrel ih Theodore Roosevelt is of long nding. hag beaten the' president to m for once. In a sarcastic letter, fl declined an invitation to deliver ;ppech at the Arkansas state fair, tober 10. giving as his reason that osevelt will be there. He declarthat he would not sit on the same tform with Roosevelt. * Offers Rig Howard. More than a quarter of a million lars in reward will be offered for arrest of the dynamiters of The A lies building, when more than a re were killed. Merchants of Los trnloc ?rill nnct o roii'nrH r*f t A - Oil hvico "in puui a ?v;"uiu vi . \ according to plans under way, 01 ile $1S,500 already has been of- ab ed. * Damage to Crop. floods caused by the rains of the f twn days have damaged UK ton to the extent of nearlv $1.- m< ),000 in the Mississippi Valley. ne rts are being made to drain the fri ntations and prevent further dsau! t * Ne LASSIFIED COLUMN tip your calves, hogs, ineep, lamb* etc., to The Parlor Market, Augutta, Ga., 1018 Broad Street irms for Sale in North and South Carolina and Virginia. Ask for large list. State your wants. R. E. Prince, Raleigh, N. C. >r Sale.?One GO-horse and one 10horse boiler, almost new; also all kinds of laundry machinery, C. C. 'Laundry, Columbia, S. C. anted?Men to take fifteen dajn practical cotton course, accept good positions during the foil. Charlotte Cotton Company, Charlotte, N. C. atest Fiction?Our little booklet, "Books of the Month" containa a nrier synopsis 01 an me laiesi books. It. is free. Write for it. Sims Book Store, Orangeburg, S. C. or Sale?Up-to-date Georgia Pea^h Farm; thirty thousand crates this year. Also improved Georgia farms and farm lands. Write for particulads. H. F. Stroheckor, Mueou. Ga. 'anted?to buy your hides. sklna, tallow, wool, beeswax, etc., at highest market prices and settlement sent promptly. Telephone 1820. Wllee W. Martin, Columbia. S. C. ut this out?It may not appear again. How gamblers win. at slot I machines, cards, dice, etc., by ee-1 cret systems. Get wise. Circular free. Ham. B. Co., Box 1617. Hammond, Ind. 'anted?Men and ladles to take ? months Practical course. Exper; management. High salaried por tions guaranteed. Write for cata logue now. Charlotte Telegrapl School, Charlotte, N. C. k'anted.?Men to take thirty days practical course in our machim shops and learn automobile busl ness. Positions secured graduatet $25.00 per week and up. Char lotte Auto School, Charlotte, N. C or Sale.?Pure breed, Barred Plymouth Rocks, Rhode Island Reds, and White Shcrwoods, price for females $1.00 and malc6 $ 1.!?0. each. Mrs. J. J. Littlejohn, Jonesville, S. C. lale Teachers Wanted for good village and rural schools. If open t< offer write for special enrollmeo' offer. Can place you at once Southern Teachers' Agency, Col umbla, S. C. Wanted Salesmen?A few more hus tiers on our new Standard Atlas New census soon available. Splen did opportunities for money mab ing. Excellent line for ex-teach ers. Write The Scarborough Com pany, Charlotte, N. C. lisaissippi Delta Lands.?Why toil your life away on the poor farm? your grandfather wore out? Com' to Mississippi Delta where one cai grow more than ten can gather I have what you want at the righ' price and terms. Come or wrlt? W. T. Pitts, Indianola, Mias. 'or sale? Milch cowi, Jerseyt, an? grade? of good breeding, register ed jersey male calves. White Col lie dogs, (registered). Also s?r vice from a registered, beautiful white Collie Ten ($10) dollar? guaranteed, Bronze turkeys, and Tammouth hogs. Add'ess M. R Sams, Jonesville. S. C. ;e<l Poll Cattle.? A hornless, dual purpose breed, adopted to conditions of the average farmer. They will eat what grows on your own farm. Hull calves for sale, out of Tuberculin tested danes. Ail stock registered. Write for facts and figures: W. B. Meares. Breeder. Dclvldcre Farm, Linwood, N. C. /anted?Every man, woman and child in South Carolina to know that the "Alco" brand of Sash, Doors and Blinds are the beit and are made only by the Auguita Lumber Company, who manufacture everything in Lumber and Mill work and whose watchword ii "Quality." Write AuguNta I<nm? ber Company, Augusta, Georgia, for prices on acy order, large or small. iiirnnrn I i (PRICI tfild and Gent No N< )leati32J ths Systen Liver Regu s a regulator no remedy ha? ever 1 ico Liver Powder. A careful stu le of this, then in addition the NU sufferers benefitted further assu overstatement. Read this one jus }s8rs. Btirwrll & Dunn Co., Manuu CHARLOTTE. N C.t [ p.tr Sire ?Ple.*8? find en<Mr s four rans Burduco Lirer Powder, ver found anything that is as go< end. Please Bend at once. w Cedford. Mass., Sf.pt. 1, 1010. In Order to Introduce my high grade Succession Flat Dutch and Wakefield Cabbage Plants to those who have not used them before I will give with each first order for a thousand plants at a $1.25. a dollars worth of vegetable and flower seed absolutely free. W. R. Hart, Plant Grower, Enterprise, P. O., S. C. Georgia Farms For Sale at Bargain Prices.?South West Georgia Farms are veritable Gold mines and every man that has the inotf ey or the energy can own one. Decatur county offers more to the progressive farmer, merchant or ^ manufacturer than any other southern county. Decatur coimty has more fine roads than any counly in Georgia. We have some of the finest and most productive land in America. We will sell you any size farm you want at terms to euit any kind of pocket book. A profitable crop of some kind can be grown in Decatur County every month in the year. Just think of a 600 acre tract of fine level land with cliy subsoil lying on one of our fine roads within seven miies of one of the most progressive towns in Georgia with 200 acres under cultivation and 400 in fine Pine Timber with excellent improvements, artesian well, etc., at $20.00 per acre on terms that will almost pay for itself. Get bu3y and own a Decatur tarm ana you will soon be rich. We will pay . all expenses to and from Bain* bridge to any one purchasing a farm from us. References, First National Bank or Bainbridse State Bank. T. A. Ausley, Bainbridge, Ga. Rheumatism! Not one case in ten requires internal treatment. i Where there is no swelling ! or fever Noah's Liniment will ; accomplish more than any in- j ternal remedy. 1 One trial will convince you/ Noah's Liniment penetrates; requires but little rubbing. Here's the Proof Mr. W. R. Taylor, a resident of Richnond, Va., writes: "For the past four vcars I have been traveling Eastern Vorth Carolina, where I contracted maaria and rheumatism. Recently I have ised Noah's Liniment with beneficial results, and take pleasure In recommendng same to anyone suffering with rheunatism." "I caught cold and had a severe at- ack of rheumatism in my left shoulder^ ind could not raise my arm without nuch pain. I was persuaded to try s'oah's Liniment, and in less than a veek was entirely free from pain. I eel justified in speaking of it in the lighest terms. A. Crooker, Dorchester, lass." Noah'a Liniment Is the best remedy or Rheumatism, Sciatica, Lame Back, stiff Joints and Muscles, Sore Throat, :olds. Strains, Sprains. Cuts. Bruises. :olic, Cramps, f - niUtiv. 1 Neuralgia, Tooth- f* I iche and all * %ZI Jerve, Bone and UiT 'onlf^J, TmI luscle Aches and 'ains. The genilnA has Noah'a 'f^^Tuuim irk on every g?H ackage. 25 cts. fTV^PPVW| old by dealers In I f |y.l ledlclne. Sam- I k IV /Ml Bfc 1 le by mail tree. |AJmAUUmI oah Remedy Co., |II^||U|S/|I ichmond. Va, UJiAUill . TYPHOON' SWEEPS ISLANDS. Thousands of People Are Homeless And the Crojw Much Damaged. At Manila, P. I., a typhoon of unusual severity swept over the valley of the Cayagan river In the provinces of Cayagan and Isabella, northern Luzon, on September 24. Four towns, including Ilagan, the capl'ai of Isabella province, were practically demolished. A thousand persons are still homeless and destituie, but the dispatches so far received indicate that there were no casualties. The tobacco crop was seriously damaged. The government is making reMpf plans. D ] ver rowuer 125c.) s: Ie--No Griping, lusea. i and Teaches the lar Habits. :>een discovered that equals Burdy of its formula will convince any \4QCD ^11. IVXUUIX U1 ICUUO 111 VIII UICO lulling res us of the correctness of the it received. facturers, sed 11.00 for which please send I use (wo cans a year and hav? id. Am ordering two cans for a Yours truly, H. H. Barr, 143 North SL