University of South Carolina Libraries
OL. 72. EDGEFIELD, S. C., WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1907. NO. 34 fr BY BANDIT: ?? Mexican is Captrre I end Hc!d Fer Rar sam (GLAND FEELS OUTRAGE Will Hold Him Prisoner Ul ie Sultan Grants His Demanc Those for the General's Pa: -Action of British Authorise rited With Much Anxiety ; May Entail Gravest Consi tees. per, By Cablo^Caid Gen. Si Maclean, commander of tb f's body guard and next to th thc most influential man i ?CO, has been captured by Ra; thc bandit chief.- Raisuli ha ;ed that he will hold the ge:: ?risoner until the Sultan grant which he, Raisuli, demand own pardon and Maclean's-rc ?ral Maclean is now at El kmc; heart of a wild mountain dis [three days' march from Tan He is being well treated an< ?n allowed to write to the Brit lister and send, for ' his ha^ capture of the. general . wai carefully. He went out ti ?ndezvous with Raisuli a gains ?vice of his companions, incidenf is being discusser lecp interest in diplomatic cir [ere, and the action of thc Brit ithoriiies awaited with consid anxiety, as it is recognized [he affair may ential the graves! menees. some time past General Mac (acting in behalf of the Sultan ?en trying to persuade Raisuli sume j a peaceful mode of life, ie bandit leader apparent^ had [ed symptoms of willingness tn the wishes of thc Moroccan au Ities, with the result that Gen Maclean was entrusted with the I of-taking some presents from thc m to Raisuli, in the hope o? ry persuading him to come tc These gifts consisted of hors ld tents, and to escort them to stronghold Raisuli sent 15 of iib litti to thc general to act as a -guard. Accompanied by these General Maclean journeyed to 1s Rou in a, where he was to meet suli. But on arriving there the lierai was informed that he was a >ner. ( ?aisuli says he will hold General Icean until he is granted the foi ling terms for his surrender: ?First-the reconstruction of his se at Zinat. scand-the payment of an indem r of 100,000 douros, (about $200, jhird-his reappointment as Gov jr of Tangier and of Fahs and iii Ointment as commandant of po Trolly Oars Meet Head-On. Washington, Special.-A mistake (signals resulted in a' head-on col on in Alexandria county (Virgin court house three and one hail les from Washington on the single ck line of the Washington, Ar Igten & Falls Church Trolley Rad jry between a passenger car crowd with government employes and ta flat cars loaded with steel rails fd pushed by a motor, G. T. War ?gton, a Ballston, Va., storekeeper. io was a passenger, died at a hos ?tak here and 32 other persons wem jared, many of them seriously, ano ie of the Motormen, William Mock. !tay die. Snit. Against City of Frisco. San Francisco, Special. - Suil inst the city and county of San rancisco was filed in the Superioi Court for the recovery of $2,575 foi damages said to have been sustained by the proprietor of the Horse Shoe Restaurant and ' a Japanses bath house at Eight and Folsom streets on May 23, when a row caused by an at tack by labor union men on two non union men who were eating in the restaurant, -resulting in the fronts ol the two places, being smashed bj stones' and clubs. The suit was I brought in the the name of J. Timoi orj I proprietor of tbe bath house. Government Report:; Condemned. ? - Augusta, Ga., Special.-A resolu tion condemning the cotton report* issned by the government was passed by ./the Augusta cotton exchange. A CApy will be forwarded to Washing ton and the various cotton exchanges of the South. The resolution de clares that information received" bs the government should not be with held from the public and that all facts should be given out as soon a* they , are received in order tr prevent panics in the cotton market. Conover College to Be Disposed Of Chicago, Special.-The English Lu theran Synod in session at Milwau kee, Wis., appointed a ways" and means committee to plan to secure A centrally located college. The com mettee will, dispose of colleges at Win field^ [Kansas, ^and Conover, N. ? The new college will probably be lo-, cated at Chicago. Troops Go On War Path. Norfolk,- Va., Special-Five hun dred soldiers, members of the Second South Carolina and First Kcntuck\ regiments in camp at thc Jamestown Exposition grounds, became riotous threw off ajl discipline, imitated con cessionaries and took charge o' shows on the war path, and wher the Powhatan Guards interfered, c riot followed, several bring injured Young Wife Burns Her Hus band to Death WANTED TO MARRY OLD LOVER An 18-Year-Old Scranton Woman in County Jail Charged With Inhu man Crime-Police Say the Wo man Has Confessed-The Lover Also in Jail Charged With Having Been Accessory to the Crime. Scranton, Pa., Special.-Mrs. Kan dra Howrsto, aged 18 years, of Dun more, is in the county jail, charged with having burned her husband to death that she might be free to mar ry her former lover, Ignaz Hutro, who is also in jail, charged with be ing an acessory. The police say that Mrs. Howrsto bas confessed. All the parties ara Lithuniaus. Ac cording tc the story told" the poliee by Mi's. Howrsto she and Hutro were lovers before she married Howrsto in the old. country two yars ago. Hu tro proceeded them to this country. When they came here they settled near where Hutro was living in the Nay Aug section of Dunmore bor ough. Hutro renewed his attentions to Mrs. Howrsto and frequently was at'their home. According to her con fession Hutro came to the Howrsto home on Monday and suggested that she do away with her husband so that they could be married. Following Hutro's suggestion thc woman ??t her husband drank and when he was stupified in bed she went to the room with the kerosene lamp. -She poured the oil from the lamp on the bed and then she says the lamp drop ped cn the bed, setting it afire. At the sight of her husband roasting and squirming in the flaming bed she became horror-stricken and rush ed from the house crying "fire." Neighbors extinguished the flames, and had Howrsto sent to a hospital, where he died without regaining con sciousness. Hutro denied all knowl edge of the crime. Both are being held, pending an investigation of thc woman's story. Where is Rockefeller? New York, Special.-While Mar shal Henkel and his "deputies are seeking everywhere for John D. Rockefeller they were equally zeal ous in their efforts to serve William Rockefeler, a brother of John " D. Rockefeller, with a subpeonea, re quiring be presence -before. tTudge Landis in Chicago Jtdy, 6. Marshal Henkel relates that William Rocke feller is as difficult to serve as his brother. A report has it that Wil liam Rockefeller is in Rome; and re port has . him sojourning in the south of France, while another states he is in the Adirondacks. Marshal Hen kel says he is convinced" that John D. Rockefeller is not in the jurisdic tion of the district but he is not so certain about William Rockefeller. One Killed; One Wounded. Newbern, N. C., Special. A fierce thunderstorm occurred two miles from here Tuesday. Four men who were working in a field sought shelt er from the storm in a house. Light ning strack thc house and killed one of the number, James Averett, and severely wounded his son. LeRoy Dixon and a son were stunned by the shock and were unconscious for more than an hour. Their horse was kill ed. The house was burned. Tele phone and telegraph wires have been wrecked. South Carolina Farmer Hills Negro Tenant. Columbia, S. C., Special.-E. T. Chappell, a farmer residing near Edgefield, shot and killed an old ne gro named George Griffin, a tenant, on his place about 9 o'clock Tuesday morning. At 9 o'clock Tuesday night counsel for Chappell appeared here before Judge Dantzler and secured bail for bis client in the sum of $1,00G\ It is said the killing grew out of a dispute over a labor contract, the negro making an effort to hit Chappell with a rock. Governor Hughes Calls an Extra Ses sion. Albany, N. Y., Special.-Governor Hughes has called an extraordinary session of the Legislature for Mon day night, July 8 at 8:30. The Gov ernor in his cali doe's not mention any subject to be taken up at thc extra session. His plan is to have the Legislature meet and then send in a special message as to what sub ject or subjects it should consider probably includeing the oppointmenta of Senatorial districts of the State. Manchuria Open to Foreign Trade. Shanghai, By Cable.^-Ghina has notified the powers of the opening of Manchuria to foreign trade. Tho >pening of Limao Yang, Fing Huan Shang, Ninguta., San Sing, Hun 2hun, Aigunmand Railar, together vith those previously ; anonnced nakeS; a total of 21 towns in Manch il ia now open to foreign commerce. The Earthquake Not Located. London, By Cable.-No news has jeen received in London that would ocate the earthquake recorded Tues lay by the observatory at Laibach, InstAa, says the oscillations began it 2:22 Tuesday afternoon and lasf ?d for 2 hours and 18 minutes. The !;?t*nce of the disturbance is esti navod at 6:300 milos from Laibach. Sunday Pleasure Seekers Get Into Serious Wreck 2 DEAD; 10 HURL 1 FATALLY Car Heavily Loaded With Passengers Leaves Bails Ju it Outside Clarks . burg, W. Va., Going Over Embank ment Officials Cannot Explain Cause of Accident. Clarksburg, Special.-Heavily laden with passengers who were enjoying an outing, an open trolfey car on the Fairmont & Clarkesburg Traction Company's system jumped thc track on the Grasseli division, just outside the city limits Sunday and crashed over an embankment instantly killing two, fatally, injuring one and seriously injuring nine others. The dead: Miss Grace Markeri, Clarksburg, skull crushed. W. T. Gray, -engineer, Washington Carbon Works, Clarksburg, head crushed. The injured : Miss Maggie M. Rob inson, Fairmont, skull crushed, dying at St. Mary's Hospital; Jack Fuller ton, Clarksburg, leg broken and bruis ed; Superintendent Eakin of Grasseli Chemical Works, Clarksburg, back strained; Mrs. Eakin leg crushed and severely bruised; Mrs. Merchant, In diana, shoulder and arm crushed; J. A. Robinson, Fairmont, right arm mangled; Floyd P. Martin, Clarksburg cut and bruised; Mrs. Floyd B. Mar tin, leg crushed, injured interally; Clayton Powell, Clarksburg, severely bruised; George Jackson, colored, scalp wound. How the car left the track is n nystciy the traction company officials lannot explain. It was running up lill around a curve and going at" a noderate speed. After bounding dong the ties for a short distance he car went over thc embankment md landed on its side, pinning the lead and injured underneath. Mo orman James and Conductor Fitzpat ick escaped with slight injuries. Jost of the injured were taken to ity hospitals ahd some to then tomes. Several passengers besides hose whose names arc given were lightly hurt. Crushed Under Car. Raleigh, N. C., Special. - In a freck Sunday afternoon on the Sca oard Air Line, 2 1-2 miles this side f Kittrell, Mrs. C. E. Harris, of iberdcen, was instantly killed, by eing crushed between the rear Pull: ian car and. the side of a low cut on curve. The train was 41, south ound, and its speed was about 4-5 liles ari hour. In the rear one of thc vo Pullmans were Mrs. Harris, her osband and 8-year-old daughter, uddenly Mr. ^Harris heard a sort of tipping ?oise under_the car and in fantry the rear trucks left the rails nd thc car turned over. Mrs. Harris as thrown out of an open window, lie had grasped the hand of her lit c girl when the shock came. Conduc ir Cain and thc train crew and pas tngers smashed windows in order to ;t some of the passengers out. Mis. !ams',head and body were mangled i a horrible manner. Fatal Street Car Accident. Schenectady, N. Y., Special.-One >y was killed, another was fatally irt and two others seriously injured ; thc result of a street car accident re Sunday. The victims were mcm ;rs of a baseball team which played *ie in the afternoon. Drowns With Niece. Glastorbur}', Conn., Special.-In on tempt.to rescue his ueicc, Mi? innie Baxter, of Hartford, from owning in the Connecticut river irl Kunck went down to' death with x off Crows Point, Wrights Island. )th Kid come ?! wn the river in a iwer boat with 10 others in the arning. Miss Baxter was 18 years i and her uncle 30 years of age. Negotiating Deal For Navy. Mexico City, Special.-President ibrera, of Guatemala, is negotiating r the purchase of a navy to meet e anticipated attack of President laya, of Nicaragua. It was learn from a high source here that" Ca er? had recently secured $300,000 ld on a forced loan and that with is sum he will purchase gunboat*. ie Nicaraguan fleet in the Pacific iters consists of three gunboats; e also has three gunboats on thc At ltic. R. W. Builard Bound Over. Fayetteville, Special. - R. "W. Bul .d, a well-to-do farmer who was reigned here before United Slates immissioner Sutton charged with onage in the case of a negro named illiams, wa, boi\.d over to the Fed il Court in $.500 bail. Williams led to furnish $500 bond to ap ar as a witness and was sent to 1. Billiard gave the required bond. Sure of Amicable Adjustment. 3aris, By Cable.-President Roose t's decision to dispatch a fleet of rships to the Pacific has lcd th'; re sensational newspapers in ance to jump at the conclusion that i situation is more delicate than pears on the surface. This view, ?vever, is absolutely rcpuliated in ponsible circles where the utmost ifidence is expressed that existing future differences between the ited States and Japan will be tinn ily adjusted. : ? Independence Day is Fittingly and Generally Observed ? - - SOME NOTABLE UTTERANCES -? New York Governor and Princeton , ? President Address Thousands al Joint Independence Day Celebra tion and First Annual Reunion of Lineal Descendants of Singers o? Declaration of Independence. Norfolk, Va., Special- Govcrnot Hughes, of New York, and Woodrow Wilson, president of Princeton Uni versity, were the orators of the day at the joint Independence Day eeles oration and first annual reunion of the lineal descendants of thc signers of the Declaration of Independence July 4th. -Thc reunion was held un der the auspices of thc Thomas Jef ferson Memorial Association, of which former Secretary of the Navy Hilary A. Herbert, is thc acting pres ident. "One really responsible man in jail," he said, "one real originator of thc schemes and transactions which are contrary to thc public lu tcrst legally lodged in thc pen, would be worth more than a thousand cor porations mulcted in fines, if the. te** fora is to be genuine." What this country needs, Mr. Wil son set forth, is not government own ership of railroads, etc., but laws that will attack and punish presi dents and general managers of rail roads, for evasions and violations of the statutes. Stock manulipators he calls "sheer thefts" and says they should be punished as such. Failure to do so, in his mind, is "like .over looking highway robberies.' "Every corporation," thc educa tor stated, " is personally directed either by some one dominant person or by some group of persons. Some body in particular is responsible for ordering or sanctioning every illegal act committed by its agents or of ficers; but neither our law of per sonal damage nor our criminal law has sought to seek the responsible persons out and hold them individu ally accountable for the acts com plained of. We have never attempt ed such statutes. We indict corpora tions themselves, fiud them guilty "of illegal practices, fine them and leave the individuals who devise and exe cute the illegal acts free to discover new evasions." Such acts could be passed and should be if we are to better onr in>j dustrial ' condition?, Mr. Wilson be lieves; _ Unless ; something of this ture is done "and donV qtiicly, he "leurs Socialism will result. It is just as absurd, he said, to^xtv diet or dissolve colorations for of fenses against the public as it would be to arrest and confiscate autom> bilcs because their owners killed pe destrians. Former Governor Roberts, of Con necticut, vice president of the Jeff erson Memorial Association from that State, presided following cn opening invocation by Rev. W. H. Vines, of Norfolk, and an introduc tion by Lieutenant Governor Ellison, of Virginia. A brief address by ex Governor Roberts was followed by the reading by Wm. Shields McKean, of New Jersey, founder and secretary of the memorial association, of the list of vice president", representing thc 13 original States and named by the respective Governors of these States. Georgia Aiding the Negro. :dftith' thepu EGod sw'u vbgjjoj Montclair, N. J., Special.-Former jovernor W. J. Northen, of Georgia, vas the orator at thc Fourth of July celebration here, speaking to a large uidience on the relation of the races n thc South. "It is a great mistake." he said, 'to believe that there is no kind of uirmony between the better elements >f thc races in Georgia and at the South. Quite thc contrary is true." "The good class of negroes is iu elligent, progressive and rcsorceful. ts religion is not a sham. Its educa ion has not spoiled it and its devo ion to duty is not inspired by the loaves and fishes.' Its ideals arc good, "It will be best for all parties ii! rholcsome and elevating. If all Lmcrican negroes were of this class, here would bc no 'negro problem.' "It will be best for all prties if he white man, strong and dominant, nil look seriously and sympatheii ally at thc weaker and thc depon ent race, and seeing him, just as e is, intelligently set about aiding im." "This is just what we have bcgu.i 5 do in Georgia upon a plan based ntircly upon our local conditions, s, in my judgement, all other people mst be allowed to do. rice President Speaks on Country's Growth in Hopeful Vein. Fergus, Falls, Minn., Special.-In fourth of July address herc Thura ay Vice President Fairbanks spojee ? the growth of the country's usiness interests and the need of ireful legislation to assure fair lay for both wealth and labor. Mr. airbanks spoke optimistically of ic future and decared his belief in ie justice of the people ian Accidentally Choots His Aunt and Then Kills Himself. New York, Special.-In celebra 3n of the Fourth with a revolver, ?bert Cairaro killed his aunt, Mrs. Ifancino Fucarino. Horrified at o sight of the corpse he then tur.n the gun on himself and blew out s brains. The man intended to c into the air, but his hand sUp d as he pulled the trigger and the ?llet struck 4he woman in tho fore* ad, GONE TO -Cartoon JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER'S WORKERS NEE Thc Only Medicine Thai pi Rest the Found in Hie ?uie? P CITIES TOO BUSY AND TOO CROWDED Fl New York City. - The Rev. Dr. Charles F. Aked, the high salaried pastor brought from England by John D. Rockefeller, preached his last sermon for the summer at the Fifth Avenue Baptist Church, and advised the members of his congre gation to get out of town, rest, for get troubles, debts, newspapers, tele phones and business. City life of to day, especially In such cities as New York, ls almost enough to drive men crazy, said Dr. Aked, and thc only medicine that will rest the body and clear the brain is to be found in the quiet places of the country. "There has-been no day in the his tory of the wbrld when such counsel was more, needed than to-day," he said. "There are no people on the face' of the T^IIAIO-???ti. - u_ e cause tc we. "Ou: >? crowded..; "Man, like; meant for th? fields," for the the" sunshine, box down ove. midst of a h stone boxes stretching a squares and parallelograms, shutting out God's air and light, until he is ready to* faint on a warm day and freeze on a cold one, and .die of pneu monia-or terror-if the east "wiud blows upon him. "This crowded, rushing, pushing, crushing city life gets on our nerves. We live too fast. We live faster than men ever lived before.. We live more than twenty-four hours in the day and more than seven days in the week. We burn thc caudle at both snds, and then, for fear that our neighbor will get ahead of us, we light it in the middle, too. We are :onsumed by the fever of living. "We 3xb.aust our vital energies in uneud ng stress and strain. "We have no time to think. It is is much as we can be expected to do f we earn bread and cheese and lay jy a pound or two against a rainy lay. The great majority of us are ust as capable of Aying as we are of hinking. Leisure** for quiet contem dation of the world which we live in s denied us. There is no grass be ?eat.h our feet, no blue sky over our lead. The woiM of trees and flow irs and singing birds is not for us. Vrt and poetry and gentle culture ex st only in a world of dreams. While f we once gave ourselves pause to neditate upon the deep things of iod and the soul, on time and its ueaning, life and its mysteries, heav n and the glories which we thrust .way,.why-we might miss the next ar! "The injunction which insults me very time I travel in the subway is: 3tep lively, now! Hurry up, there!' lurry by all means, for we could not Ive if we did not kill ourselves to et somewhere else." Dr. Aked repeated LQW?S Morris' Evensong," and said: "There is one onsideration which we cannot es ape. What of the myriads of our retbren peut up in mean streets, risoners of the counting house and he shops, slaves of the mill and the line, of the poor and heavy laden of very nameless class, to whom these Hurricane Killed 200. A hurricane, accompanied by im lensa waves, swept the Caroline roup. At least 200 perished. Mexican Republic Centennial. President Diaz has issued a proc imation, proposing a great celebra on in 1910 to commemorate the mtennial of the republic's independ ace. White Man Lynched. Dock Posey, a middle-aged white ian, who had confessed to assaulting ls nine-year-old step-daughter, was iken from the Whitfield County jail, ; Dalton, Ga., aud hanged to a rail >ad viaduct in the middle of the city. Tn the Hives of Industry. San Francisco retail grocery clerks 3t recently and formed a union. A new Sheet Metal Workers' Union ganized recently . in Red Wing, un. The labor council of Stirling, 111., s started a fund to be used in erect ; a city hospital. The Kansas City (Mo.) Labor Tem ! Association has decided to com inee work on its building. All the drug stores of Butte, Mont., re closed on June 1 by a strike of > clerks for an increase in pay from 50 to 1186. sci de; Ha Do fal cl;; ch; Ho > by pei din rHE GAME. i by Brewer ton, in tho Atlanta Journal. ! PASTOR SAYS 0 A SUMMER VACATION Body and Clear the Brain is io Bc laces o? the lojnlry. * 3R RIGHT LIVING AND RIGHT THINKING words are bitter mockery, for whom no changing seasons bring cessation from toil and weariness. "What of them in these days of summer sun shine audjoy? "There should be none such, ex cept the vicious. And Christianity cannot rest while such mortals live, disfranchised of their right to rest and happiness. The unaccomplished mission ofour faith is the redress of every economic inequality. There ls no gospel which is not a gospel of so cial service. We live to bring all mankind iuto the family of God. But meanwhile, while such poverty re mains, while stich evil conditions sad- - den and appall us, what right have we td our holidays, to our happiness? Can we sit at our feast blindfold, or dare we open out* eyes? What right have we to any feast while our broth ers starve in the midst of plenty? None, if our lives are wrong. If we should say to you, go where you can lave no letters, no newspapers, no elegrams, where the ring of the tele )hone bell is never heard, and where .ven the Marconi cannot come. But it least do your best to forget. For jet your business. Forget your lebts. Forget your debtors. Forget hat in this world there is suffering, ickness or sin. Only remember that be sun sbines for you, the moonlight md the starbeams are for you, the ides ebb and flow-for you, the gorse ipon the hillside, the purple heather .nd the fields dressed in living green ,re for you." Dr. Akerl said he had no patience ;ith the attitude which makes a sad nd doleful thing out of the practice nd forms of Christian worship. "Let us have done with these sol mn hypocrisies of conventional wor hip," he sa;d. "Let us frankly laim our heiitage of happiness in a .orld whose maker and builder is (od. One day Paxton Hood had to reach in a Yorkshire church. It 'as a glorious summer morning. A ood brotln . cave out: \ly thoughts on awful subjects roll, Damnation and the dead-' "But Paxton Hood leaped to his jet and said, 'Oh, no, they don't! [y thoughts do not roll on anything 3 dreadful. Let us sing: 2ome let us join our cheerful songs, ' ,Vith angels round the throne.' "We pray God to forgive our sins, e ought to pray to be forgiven our idness. There is no virtue in mis- ' ry. The melancholy person is not ecessarily a superior person; and if e were the superior person is gener lly detestable. A face as long as a ddle and a voice like a crow's will ot be imputed to us for righteous- / ess. We shall not go to heaven for ur tears or to hell for our smiles, umor is a gift of God as well as pa 10S." The best way to spend Sunday or ay other holiday, said Dr. Akcd, was ( follow Christ's advice to His dici- J !es: "Come ye yourselves apart into desert place and rest awhile." resscl and Crew Lost Near Iceland. The French schooner Violette, Ith nine hands, has sunk off the iast of Iceland. Statue For Bayard. \ Tributes to the memory of Thomas , Bayard were paid by Grover Cleve nd, Judge George Gray and others the unveiling of the Bayard statuo Wilmington, Del. Gave Life For Snapshot. Seymour Spalding, twenty years d and wealthy, was drowned in Lo :st Creek, at Brookfield, Mo., while n'mming in a dangerous spot in der that a young woman might ke a snapshot of him. Thc Field of Sport. Emperor William sailed his ?ooner Meteor at Kiel, and again teated the schooner Hamburg. Matthews, thc colored athlete of rvard, will be athletic coach at the rchester, Mass., High School next 1. Arnaud Massey, the French golf impion, won the British open irapionship with a score of 312 at ylake. rho French cup at Kiel was won the challenger, Ar Men; the Im ial Yacht Club gave ita annual ner for Emperor wullara. A Remittance. A Southern lawyer tells of a judge in Arkansas who had several "tiffs" with a lawyer retained by a woman who had instituted a breach of prom ise suit in the court presided over by the judge in question. After each exchange of repartee be tween his Honor and the imprudent counsel, the judge would say: "Clerk, just enter another fine of $10 against Mr. Mitchell for contempt of court" - When this sort of thing had pro ceeded further than counsel wished, he addressed his Honor in this wise: "If your Honor please, I am a good citizen, and, as such, intend to obey the orders of the honorable Court in this, as fn all other ino tances. Now, your Honor, lt so happens that I have not about me the sum of $30 for which I have been mulcted for contempt Therefore, I shall be com pelled to borrow such sum from some friend; and I see no one present whose friendship I enjoy so much as your honor's, gk) I make no hesita tion in approaching your Honor for a loan to square the fines assessed against me." With just the faintest smile about his Hps, his Honor looked first at counsel and then at the clerk. "Clerk," said he at last, "remit Mr. Mitchell's fines. The State is better able than I to .'oso $30."-Harper's Weekly. OLDER THAN ROMULUS. He is a poor, puny king, thinks the Dh'caco Record-Herald, who can't dis turb the equilibrium of Europe every lime he goes away from home over Sunday. Traces of a Great City on the 8Ite of Rome Before Roman Days. Information has been received from Rome of new archaeological discov eries on tie Palatine Hill which tend to confirm by new evidence the hypo thesis advanced some years ago by Giacomo Boni, director of the Forum excavations, that a people much more ancient than the earliest Romans so far recognized once occupied the site of Rome. .:? '->? Signor Boni, who has successively ancovered vestiges of the empire, .re public and kingdom, has found along the Via Sacra tombs in the form of wells, with pottery, jewelry/, amulets and skeletons, which he believes are of a people who lived mueh anterior to the: Romans properly so called. The^pfecpveries havo^caused many controversies. The utmost admitted was ^i^^afe people had occupied the termor^-prior to the time that Romulustffind Remus are reputed to have founded the Eternal City. Re ently ex,CTtzations of the Palatine Hill have br?tt^?t "ior light sepulchres of great antiquity, apparen?y sustaining Signer Boni'g^pntentlons. There are tombs in t'he form of'welis like thewo of the Forum, and seemingly they be longed to the most primitive iuhabr tants of 'the Palatine acropolis. A Manila newspaper says that any Japanese officer detected sketching the fortifications In thc Philippines ought to te compelled to reveal whero he found the fortifications to sketch. Your FOR MEN'S AND BOY S' CLOTHES, HATS, SHOES AND FURNISHINGS, FOR LADIES' TAILOR-MADE SUITS ODD SKIRTS, AND SHIRT WAISTS When in Augusta make our store your head quarters. The J. 866 BROAD STREET, AUGUSTA, GA. ulm m? uuici icu ny mg. i>ut to trie contrary, I want to SOOTHE YOUR NERVES and make you feel as though life is still worth living-. 'fe ' Get a . i - .j. -. for yourself and best girl and al m STUDEBAKER* WAGON for the farm and you are fixed for many years of Solid Comfort. Harness, Saddlery, Belting, Etc ay 729 BROAD STREET, AUGUSTA, GA. _ll_? For FIRE BNSUR4NCE Go to see W.H. HAULING Before insuring elsewhere. We represent the Best Old Line Companies, W. H. HAULING, A GT. A.t The Farmers Bank of Edgefield, SC. vVagons Buggies FURNITURE. Large Shipments of the best makes of wagons and buggies just received. Our stock of furniture and house furnishings is complete. ? Large 6tock. COFFINS and CASKETS. always on hand. All calls for our Hearse prompt ly responded to. All goods sold on a small mar gin of profit. Call to see me, I will save yon money. GEO, IJ. COBB, ?huston, South, Carolina.