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A SAD PICTURE. toll Arp Oftl'i Attention to tbo Boon* donoo of tho jPARKERS OF EXW ENQLvND. He Write* About » Hook. Whieli •Itouhl 1 trail. f>|»ecl«lly «»ur Yoiiiik Men. A (Jowl conviction. Evorjr youth In tbe tend should buy a copy and ateorb irt'^ob- tente, for It la u readable aa a 10- tnance. I regard it aa the beat con tribution to Southernhlatorfcall!tera- lure that baa yet appeared. Send 11.23 to Mr. Oglesby, So.. 8 South Broad street, Atlanta, Oa. It seems to me that this book would non vert a Northern fanatic and If it converted only one it would save a soul frorp d^ath and hide a multitude of sins. And there has recently come to me CAPTURED THE TOWf. iTir-j iiTsHsi m w..' i, m ■ ■rMyi Mf.-an,■ n,mm* •HOWrSOTHKS tMTH ^ VVOltieh Of tut. ^ . v • •. * Trouble WUb the Laadronee on the ielend or Mindanao^, The Alind Tiger* la Charleeton Olawe the Chief of Police. I” A dispatch fr<>m Manila saya the town of Surlgao, In the northeastern part of the Island of Mindanao, which was captured Sunday by lad rones, was relieved Wednesday. The American oltlcialsand forelgoers were found to . . „ . . . . . f bc safe. Secretary Boot received have been made by means of plac- A dispatch from Charleston to the Augusta Herald says war against'the blind tigers of Charleston has develop ed quite a, sensation in which some startling assertions against the character of Charleston's chief of pol I CAN r U v I^ast night I read to my family por tions of a long article by_ a preacher describing the sad*eondit1<ir? of a peo ple he has recently visited. Hut of the March riumher.of The Alkahest, a first-class. Southern maga/ine, and I , cablegram from Governor Taft giving find In It a very remarkable article, the following account of the attack “The Stages of Civilization,’* by Mr: i °f Surigsto: Frank Orroe, of Atlanta. 1 did wti “Affair at Suriga . turns out to tx? think that the Frank Orme l ustgl ^pe of 10 prisoners sentenced know was old enough to have written V* ' ,J,| g terms for ladronism, Who. an article so scientific, so oliihwoplil- "Hdi (10 or hi) of .their fellows returned f cal, so Iluxle'y I Ike on the races of man-1 l " s orlgao, succeeded surprising kind.. M>at of the article is an analv lP im1 mshiyg the. constahttlary inspec- tical history of the piincipal races and tor, Lewis M. Clarko, and thus taking one hundred and sixty-eight towas in the State he visited seventy of them that are oil from the railroads, and all of these have decreased in' population since 18«0, None of these towns have settled pastors or preachers and the churches are abandoned or have preaching at irregular intervals and the attendance hardly ever exceeds twenty-five persons. The Sabbath schools are equally deserted^ The once busy plants of small industries are dead and the people farm <«dy for the bare necessities of life. Houses, barns, and fences are going to decay and the little mills that were on the creeks have tumbled down and the dams have washed away. Here and there you will sec a stately mansion sheltering some'degenerate family In the back w<M>ds while the vacant front greets you with the silence of the tomb. Sometimes you will find an old man and woman alon ; in an old ances tral home. I found a mother and her two sons and two old maids hi or 1 ' house not one of whom could reat The Intermarriage of near relative or not marrying at all Is common and'’ bachelor and divorced men and widow ers have housekeepers and they un- blushlngly cohabit with them and young girls become grass widows by the time they are sixteen. “Where Is all this?" said my wife. “I don’t believe a. word It Is some newspaper He— a fake made up by some reporter." I read on. In one town 1 found the usual Saturday night dance going on inan old vacated tavern and they danced and develled and drank until Sunday morning. Sunday is no more observed than It is in Chicago, for they hoe and dig and gather hay all the same as on week days. Illiteracy, insanity and Imbe cility are ver^ markedly I found one family in which both parents were idiots and had raised up a family of Idols. In another home or house 1 found a poor father taking care of threermotherless children, all idiots. “i don’t believe a word of It," said my wife. “There is no such people In this country. What paper are you readlmr from-''’ —-One eon hardly ctuu’eive of the JilUi and vice reigning In these country places called homes—a barbarism dif fering from the city slums only B) Its stagnant Inertia and touched HfPlUUe by church Influences as If In t he heart of Africa. The conntry pg9ple“aIT over the State are generally without ambition, improvident, ignorant, not “Able to read ut-write, louse.their family relations, socially corrupt, giv en to drink, and some to the opium habit. And these are the towns- where half a century ago, lived the best fam ilies of the State. Among them the Fields' (Cyrus and his brother), the - Abbottr, :the Barnes and Donald < Mitchell and others. And now let me tell you, my dear wife, I am reading from The Hartford Times and this is only a short portion _of the report read in New Haven re cently by Rev. Mr. Hutching, a Bible colporteur, of Connecticut This report is fully accredited to true amFthe editor of The Times tries to tone it down by saying, “The same D+e causes th.it contributed to .their adyancament or their decay: 'IMie latter part deals gently and fairly with,, the negro and our efforts ■ to elevate and refine him by education. From Mr. Orme's viewpoint and the laws of ethnology and biology this cannot be done and'the effort will Ik* In vain, hut I have not time or space to re view his admirable treatise. Let our thoughtful men, our wise men., our learned professors in the college read it and they will find abundant food for thought and serious retteetton. Mr. Drme seeifts as familiar with en- thuology, biology, anthropology, so ciology and all the other ologies as Huxley or Humboldt or Darwin. We old veterans are pleased to see our young men 'taking hold of these things. Ever since the war our peo ple have seemed almost paralyzed for fear of making their condition more Intolerable by talking Jmt of tete there is a renewal of independence and younger men are syoming to the front. The sale of Henry it. .faeksonls great speech on “The Wanderer" Iras ex reeded my expectations audit was a young man who projected that not for money but for the diffusion of knowledge. And here is a long article* in a Monines paper from a woman who has been recently traveling thniugl^Tcjas, hunting for something she wahted'to find and she found it. It was some* very high weeds in the front yard of one home—and at another house was a woman sitting on a lo^ dipping snuff aiPtenhe had lost all her front teeth Another discovery was that Texas wo men don't do anything. They won’t work the garden or raise cnlckens or churn the butter and if One. was caught at It she would be taken up and put In a glass case and sent to the St. Louis fair as a curiosity. What a mailghant slandetef She IS:—Stnr winds up by saying that the people there hate the negro so bad that if the whole race had hut one neck«they won Id chop tt off. t know Texas from east to west and north to south .and the people will average .well will) the better elas^in the older States. When ~ March r of The Review of for Connecticut are common to all the older States.” Rev. George Harr, of of Massachusetts. Is also a Bible col porteur for that State and he said lu Boston the other day, T have driven all over New England with my own horses and my conviction is there is no immortality in any western mining town that will compare with what you find a few miles from any New En gland town. Mr. Hutchins' observa tion corresponds exactly with my own." Good friends, kind' friends, what is to be done about this. But the editor of The Times is mistaken when he says the same condition* are common to all the older. States. We have oo4 such people of in Georgia. Jn some our mountain counties the people are Illiterate, but tney are honest and moral and attend church and observe the marriage relation and ol»ey the laws of the land and make the best soldiers the world ever saw. They have courts twice a year and it takes only a half a week to clear the crimi nal dt>ckets. Now, I was thinklng'that as Bos ton and Hartford and New Haven had stent a Gig lot of money down here to educate and reform our negrtfcs it would be nothing but fairfor / usto send a lot of the graduates up therp to do missionary work in Connecticut and Massachusetts. These negro graduates couldn't'teach them the lost art of making wixxlen nutmegs, but they could teach school and preach and the New England people could pay them for it and keep their money at borne. Something must he done and done quick, or the old Puritan race will become extinct. 1 reckon these colored graduates would make good missionaries. They have never tried anything else. When my good friend Mr. T. K. Oglesby Sent me his book, "Some TratitMiitf History—i cated,’’ I was too sick to peruse It carefully. Since I have gotten better I have reread it—every page—and am free to say it is the most comforting found. It is masterly and as true and solid ss a stone wall. He has certainly vindicated the South and nailed the lies and slanders to the MMthbeadr 1 feeUike I have .a de fender in mine own household, and I >ps command of thp town. - NInc. Ameri cans. inctiidTiig Twii women, retreated to Uu* provincial building, where, un der I he direction of Lhlhor S. Kelly, provincial treasurer, formerly captain of volunteers and still earlier an In dian scout, known aS^Yellow Stone Kelly,’ barricaded the building against the attacking party. The Americans, armed with only, a few shotguns and short of ammunition fnaintSlned thetw-defens'e against the ladrones, re fusing t<V yield to an ultimatum de manding gun* by the reply of Kejly that they would not give up a singlte gun and vyould kill on sight any la drone wit bin "Yange. Assistant Chief TayJ,or.arrived at Surigao with con stabulary furbe, about 1H hoqrs after tlie attack. (Vii his approach Lhp la domes disappeared and columns are now following. them.. Surig.io, ex treme northeast- Mindanao; is so faV removed that 1 have concluded to upon George W. Davis to put military iii command with-lrope that a large force of ladrones and their guns may lie captured-swi they may lie prosecu ted for murder and ladronism. So far as advised Oapt. Clarke orrfy American killed. The-cable from Surigao land ed near provincial building in which Americans took refuge and they were* thus able^o communicate ^vith mili- ‘tafy Commander at'ITigW and with eohstabuigry headquarters at Cebu. Two constabulary-inspectors were ab sent from Surigao in Gebu,- where they were passing their examinations for promotion. Sqrigao had been re garded as arqulet province since the capture and sentence of ladrones, Irtit their escape led tb the difficulty. If deemed necessary by the military commander Die commission will sus pend the writ of habeas corpus for Surigao, hut it is to he hoped that this'measure can he avoided.” Vfaost excellent editorial on the South and her people. Itds kind and con siderate until it gets to Roosevelt and It gives him the most falsome praise and declares that he Is our friend. But 1 wapt Mr. Shaw to cell me if he can about when will Roosevelt retract his published slanders - of JiiiJprson Davis and make an apology to his. widow.. That’s what I want tojuiow and until he does that «o -jvords of praise wBI prove him to A*ft <dther a voung lady gentleman or a friend —Bill Arp in A tl a n taConstituilon. NEGRO BLOOD IN THEIR VAINS Henry Watlerwou Takes Sutler ut a , — * .. ' -.— _ . i •- Itecrnr New Ytirk Tinfeapatle. llenry Watterson finally has Lak-ete note of the entertainment on the part of New York's 400 of a negro woman, Aida Overton Walker. The Cou ing placards In the window of mm of the placet* recently closed -up. Sltice the first of his administration Gover nor: Heyward has beeh keeping the- constahulary moving actively against the blind tigers, of,Charleston. • The developments in the Chiccoaffair were spread broadcast and read with con siderable Interest in a great many newspapers,, hut the latest “affair" Is the first of a really sensational type so far. Several days ago a blind run by R. M. McManus was raided by urderof Mayor Smytheand ever since there have been placards placed dpi in the window knocking on the character of the chief of the' police^ department to'starfe pedestrians in the face. The day following the raid this one appeared: . “This business was dosed by orders of a drunken, ir.c mpetsnt Chief of Police." . No notice was taken- of the plicaid by the officials*, but it was. reap by e#- erylxxiy that passed the place. The following daV an even more sensation al placard was exhibited ip the win dow, reading as follbWs: “Why don't this drunken Chid of Police l>e as active in closing other places as he hatvlhis. The' Governor could then call In the constabulary.” 'The affair did not stop with this placard, nor was it allowed to remain longdn its place. Apparently not satisned with the effect a single pla card was having, the advertisement was.-changed this riiorning, and in stead of one card, the show window was decorated with an array of cards that was calculated to stop anyone* who might he ptfssihg, and eojild hht. help but have shine resting place in the minds of the readers. The signs displayed are.as follows: MUST BE CRAZY. Mad Art ufa Morinan Elder in WII- - M liamtdmrK County. — A-dispatch to The StaUr says there av:i^ . nn^iderahle excitement at Lake -City in Willi;uTi>lnirg Cmnily on last Thursday'caust*d by two ,Mo rm,, n eld ers. About lO-lo'CloCk that morning one of the Mormon elders entered the home of .Mr. A. C. Stewart, a farmer livinu a few miles l>elow Lake City. riie men folks were out in tlie field at work, no one being in the house hut Mrs. Stewart and her daughterr He talked—iuMtlUngly-to Mrs. Stewart and her daughter, causing them to run out of the house with fright, the ■ The •p*aUti*f,U now lndl*p*n»*W«. a *11 w»lk«p)f life-there U * Jem*nd (or the m*i» who c*n do one particular thins bettor than aay one el»e, and such a man 11 one who ha* confine,1 bl» endeavor to, and centered *11 of-Ji-i»-en#r>?y knd ability on the r-eciilt)- he h*-t chosen for bis ; -r‘. Htrly“in wy p-ofeeel^i 1 career I reellied th*t Chronlr- T'tr-'-xe i vrero not bclm ylven the * tention which their laportanee warranted. I *a^r tint threed^teatct require,1 a^ordal fit- _ nets whleh the bury praetltloner Could never acquire. For more fian twenly years I have dew-*.. voted mytelf exclusively to the at.kidp.and treatment <>( those diseases, had the fact thatphyai- dans recommend me to tbdr patients Is aa evidence of my shill a ad ability in my special line. 1 five special counsel to physicians with .tobatlfiate and obscure cases. lhave devoted-particular attention lo chronic diseases of men>aad women, and no other dass of disease require* more IhtalllBent and expert treatment. It 1) U fact.that a majority of then owe the seriousness of their cpodiUdn to improper treatment,'and a failure to realise the Importance of placing their case In the hand* of a skilled and expert specialist Overlndulfrenee, indiscretions and excesses are nptihe only - causes of an impairment of sexual strenirtli. Such aderamre- ment frequently comes from worry, overwork, menial strain, which gradually weakens and Injures the system before the unfortunate victim readies Nervous Debility DR. HATHAWAY. Recognised as the Leading and Moat Succesaful Specialist in Hia line in the United States. the true nature of his trouble. Nervousness, weak-back, diislness, loss of memory, spots before the eyes, despondency, etc., often are the first symptoms of an innialrmenlofjnajily vipor and if neyfected aerlOus reeul+s ore oure to follow. * I ~ symptoms of weakening of his manly hood. ready-made medicines, ,rt?o samp,v„,, ,.. , the body are involved, and only an expert should be entrusted wltly your case booklet, •• Nervous Debility and Its Family pf Ills.” , .— — toilow. 1 want to talk to every man w^o has any of these functions, lean promptly correct nll trretrnlarttles, and have restored'all of the strenptli and glory of yoyr man- your health by experimenting with m the most delicate orcansof Send forfree hether you consult me or not, do not ,— • iclnes, free samples, so-called quick cures, etc , as .the most delicate organs of Stricture My cure for thia disease Is Rentle and painless, and _ _ often causes no detention from business or other duller; It Involves no cuTtlnsr'or danrerons sunrieal operation, improper treatment Will result In serious injury. 1 Rive each case individ ual attention, and treat its every requirement. Every obatructlAn is removed, and all discharge soon ceases, Inttamma- Hon and coreness is allayed and the canal heals up promptly and.permanehUy. Send for free book on Stricture. ■ a • 1^ This disease is the enlargemen&ot. veins of the scrotum, which flli wlth stacnanj blood, causing a eonstant drain upop VarirnnA A the vitality. It weakens the entire system and saps aWay all sexual strenRth. 1 cure' this diseaae with the same uni < W Ol Il/Uwwlw ( l)rm certainty just as quick as consistent with medical science.. .Probably more men are afflicted wiih Vancooe* v, any other disease, and their strength Is belhg drained away without their knowing th#feause. thjjjre to me at otic-e lf you think you are afflict ed, and learn the cause of your trouble. Send for free booklet on Varicocele. t — - 'This horrible disease is no longer Incurable, and when 1 say that I can cure the most severe ca-ie I do <0 ,teC8t1»e I know just what my treatment has accomplished. If you have sores, pimples, blote.hes, sore throat, palnr-tn the bones. falllnK hair, or any symptoms whidryou do notundersund.lt Is important that you consult rue at once arid i will tell you frankly whether orn.it you are an unfortunate victim. 1 will guarantee tocure you without the use of strong and Injurious drum In as quicks If not quicker, time than any known treatment. My cure Is a permanent one, and is not mere patchwork,and the disease will be eradicated from the system forever. Send for my free booklet, “The Poison JClng.” . - ‘ Blood Poison What the community wishes to know Is why this Chief of FoHco -disgraces the uniform that'the taxpayers put on his back. Who pays the rent of No. 37 Coming street? Who runs that den? . Let him answer that, too.’’ “Closed byAordcr of that De- baucher. Imposter upon the tax payers as the Chief of Police. Had he been sober instead of a state of beastly intoxication ou the night of the murder of Young Pinckney the perpetrators of that foul deed might have been apprehended." “Who but this ronton- Chief of Poli<;« is ftsponsiblfe for the rob- bery.tTr~TTre"bHl Velmiis dining »>the reunion in* the year 1898? A^ -- privilege wasgT&hted kill Till pi >r tell gambler and ex-convict, at the cost of $.'>,000 to do the work. Why was sucha privilege granted? Not for the love of this convict. Who got . the privilege money? “Let him answer that."—— oowiitVona desftsUeed- by,Mr,TURckU)i*, oOttOT-does m'ft-'-rrpfYear Tt\& fl v .w« r i/eil $ fl * *11 t/k fill 1 M A'i . •*‘- - 'v ^^n^ii^t^uu-mennor ij^ Bu _iaiurmed tlial_U)e trouble was not to have aud'. "iMe laUer had to, kno,' says some of these swells need not gb far back to find negro blood in their veins. ; Says Mto-Watte rson : “The -itews- paptefrtre making an ado over the in cident which capie to pasatak iJelruu- nlco's live other evenhrg. where at’n -as he fqnckiou-djy set a -some members of the colored tarty tx'tvime t he a gfriiTe (low and runuiiig across the 'field to Mr. S. Ed. Ffuyd's screaming for help with the Mormon elder chasing her, It seem thb Vither elder tried to stop him. -Mr. Floyd and other!, got him and tied Id in and after he was tied he went into Ul<rhou&e of a Mr. McKen zie and used insniHtn^ -hutguage to a young lady there. He fought to,a iiiiisIt -ftnd-wuH knocked down into a clav hole of wat<*r by .'Ir. Floyd with a large paddle used in boiling clothes, lie begged Mr. Floyd to puli him out, “This drunken Chief of Police occupied the tinje of the special detectives in hounding down those that are distasteful to himl ^whilR the thieves have their own way and the taxpayers pay the-^ costs.’ 1 — — it is The chief of police, W. A. Boyle, who Is refered to in the signs .or cards that appear in “the window, “A. J. Speckert, on trial there for murder, is an astrologer,.and is using his knowledge of the subject as a guide in the selection of a jury. T ^absolutely refuse to let any man serve,' said Npeckerir ' who was oorn between June 21 and July 22, because a man born at such time will pay no alten- tion to argument. " Neither is .a man born between October.,21 arid Novem ber 22 eligible. He will be'unsym- patlTCtic and unfeeling. Il will toe and everyIjody iu Charleston expects that some serious trouble-will t>e the result .of what many of the best peo ple here are referring to as “a dirty piece of work” on the part tiger keeper" > meaning McManus. While “Chief Boyle has taken no action in the matter, treating ITappa- rently with contempt, it is plainly galftr Rev. W. W, Waddell, a Presbytertm Brazil7a rr i v ©<i *» New 12th, havidg made a of a "tolln<rt journey of 60dl) miles td be treated, as he believed, for a cancer growth in the jawbone7 The patient was exa- hlm down several times liefore he coh- quered him. \ ll__ Mr. ffstewart was informed that two men were attempting- a crime upon his daughter, anddt look hard -work to get bte-grrh awdy i#rom h la it. It U gracefully done and would bring conviction to any mind, North or South, that w*a open to smart piece of resistance, as we Irish say. “It is due to the truth.ttoftt history observe tbattbe colored lady.was uot among theoriaRiilly .invited guests. In point of factrshe belonged ; te a company of show people exhibiting at Broadway “theatre, and that^alw tfrinstruct' the swells into Die mysteries of the cakewalk. They took such a liking to her, however, that the line of distinction was quick ly obliterated, the host leading the Queen of Midnight through the giddy mazes of the dance,-and the lily white lielles of the court circle, making her at home and inviting her to other en tertainments, pledged her in flagons of foaming champagne. “The Courier-Journal lias been asked by several esteemed contempo raries for an expression as to this new departure. It Is not, we*.t^e leave to remark, an altogether new” depar ture. Several swells named as of thosa present are known tb have acted within the If rights. IT-questioned, these might trace their own origin, hack to the rich, ted blood of the other having gotten away. A courier went lnlo Lake City with the report, saj iTlg they had one bring cau-to tb7^ other. Suoii after Uicy wan "ijieyliad bap- duted-tied :md bloody, wet and cold,* and shiveriug”like he had an ague.' -An exe+tod otowd soon ~asseni bled, rasli was attempted, die with him in the work he is doing, on the other hand McManus has the-f very little standing here at ail. The fair-minded element of the city are referring to his action in using the placards the way he has as “a stab in the dark.” in in , Woman. A plain woman takes prid© friends, a beautiful tvoman enemies. ^^ A woman will often say no she meaps yeft: but never yes she means »h> T ‘ < Tlje normal woman is capable Ethiopian, in some oases not so very far hack, either. They did but honor their race in honoring the duskyTep- rcsentatives of the vaudeville stage. “The Courier-Journal—hi not en gaged in the work of sensational sgecFI fication. If It was so engaged, it might reduce the great question to the dimensions of a vulgar scandal."— Washington Rost. An exchange says’ That ft has been offered four dollars for twenty-two dollarsjtnd fifty cents worth of adver tising Sad will “note with interest this munificent offer.*’ One of the hardships and actual losses of a news papers in doing a great deal of work for nothing,.and there is no way of estimating the cost to a newspaper of the absolutely free advertising It does not a malignant expres- in the course of a year, But the sur prising thing is that it is often expect- ©d-bjipeople who are liberal in other matters. did not ask to have his wounds dress- ed. but begged for smjie one tyt-do something to get him warm. His wounds were dressed by Dr. Courtney. He was having a preliminary trial for attempted rape when your correspon dent's train arrived. YViur correspon dent had a talk with the prisoner and believes lie is nbt in his right mind. her her when when of orte love and nny atbilra, -A woman's charity sometimes begi ns away jroni home, and then remains there. A young girl is the nearest approach to an trngfl that we have—and Jtlje riiost exasperating. • ' It has not been decided whetTrer a woman is happier when happy or whert-mtserable. —When a woman is throughly tired the finds nothing so refreshing as a tVper is'not at all appreciated by him. The chief of police is pretty well liked by the best elenient of Charleston’s neonle and the' 1 comffitmTtT~t9 'SlUtim —A Case of Torture. The public has been aroused by the case of a private in th Richter who was bound, gagged and Lieutenant linurrmrrraaAii Hie Fat her’* Friend. Thomas McNeal, Esq., speaking at assoeiatiourtold of a lawyer who col lected $30 for a client and took, out $35 for his fee. He said as he hand ed over the $15, “I am your friend, and I can’t charge you a full fee. 1 knew your father for a years.". And the client in the full ness of bis heart could only say, “Thank God, you didn’t know grandfather."—Law Notes. my tortured by his company Sinclair in the dier died. His mother appealed to the. president to have the lieutenant retired and punished, but so far her request has been disregarded. The war office publishes statements that Richter was a hopeless case of drunken insolence and that his death while being punished resulted from drink. A public meeting in Faneuil Hall. BosLson, that historic hot bed of all agitations lias been held, where the president has been roundly denounced for withholding from the pablic the records of the court-martial that tried Sinclair. This matter may yet be made art issue against Roosevelt in politics. The claim is made that in the far awair Phtlipptnes roany deeds of horror and cruelty Irf the army and among the natives are perpetrated and that only inkling of the facts ever reaches the public. Dove {Slaughter. During the big Kansas City shoot 18,000 defenceless doves fieetness of whig had been dulled by coop life, were, to the disgrace of that city, thrown from traps and shot at “just Jor fun.” As Longfellow says: “A slaughter to be told In groans,-not- words." Manj~ crippled birds escaped, to die a^llngerlng death, pith broken legs, beaks shot away or bodies ripped open. For In stance, I found.near the gun club dove with bqth legs shot of Muttering helplessly about hunting food. Surely this dove was paying dearly for'somebody’s “fun.” It causes pain, hardens the public con- and aixive all cultivates cruel ty in the hearts of the young, than which there is nothing more danger ous to the future happiness of our own race. v——' Diseases of Women to health thousand* oj suffering women. Women who suffer from the-allments peculiar to their nex nre method of treatment, which avoids all necessity for eurjftcTEt operation* rtih ‘ ‘ cured 1>v my gentle and painless If v “ * down pains, backache, irreeu Mend for my free booklet on Women’s Diseases you suffer from bearing lari ties, leuchorrhea, etc., write me about yojrrcase. 1 have restored Chronic Diseases f ■ My specialty also Includes all other chronic disease*, such as Rheumatism, Catarrh, Dialietes, Bright s Disease, Stomach, Liver and Kidney Diseases, Flies, Fl-tula/Ruptorff, Farafy*'*, Locomotor -Ataxia, 8t. - Vitus Dance, etc., and all who want skillful, expert treatment should write me at-rorThetr ease. My offlee Is equipped with the most approved X Ray and electrical apparatua.sa that my patient* get the Ix-nei^t of the latest discoveries of science._ Home Treatment countries. Correspondence confidential. 4* TTnvTfe everydne~fo edrisUTt tne Withwirreharge, and «IH refund railroad fan- one way to all who take treatment. If you cannot see me In person write for symptom blank- and full Information about niy suc cessful plan of home'treatment by which 1 hove cured pattenu m every .-state In the Cnion and in foreign NEWTON HATHAWAY, M. Inman Ruilding, Brnd An unusual criminal case was re cently tried in the court at Green wood, Norman Hodges and Hargrove, two whlTe“mer), arid Three negroes. Jim East, Kicking Bell and Robert^ Coleman,“were arraigned ou the seri ous charge of highway robbery, it Is said that they “held up" Gus Ar nold, a white man. near Ware’s Shoals, some time last fall and relieved him of $86 in money. Gus Am id is also lo be tried for kilHog a-negro on iast Thanksgiving day. The three negroes pleaded guilty, but asserted that Arnold only had $53. They claim that he lost $13 gambling with them and' with two white men, Hodges and Hargrove. Head the 8t«m. r \ tlispatch from Seattle, report,;-:'' The Great Rheumatic Cure ^ANTF Spring Blood Purifier Positively cures a!! Jbcasrvarislng train Iriipufifies in the blood, Includ ing Catarrh, Indigestion, Chronic Constipation, ’Kidney anil Liver Trouble*, etc..”’ Every person in the land needs a powerful blood purifier every Spring. You need it. You want the he>i —the standar.J^ Thai Is. "ti m a iTVT' wm v BEWARE OK HAVGEHOl'S ST’BSTITtTTES. RHEUMA’CIDE benefits instea-l of, injuring the digestive organs as many so-called medicine* do. lUlEUMACIDE is a powerful alterative, but old peopteor chiklren can take it wiflniSatliite ^TehT' » Price $1.00 at Druggists, or express prepaid on rerripLof price. Bobbitt Chemical Co., —-• • i Baltimore, Hd., difficult to render him sensitive to any appeal. With those Ixirn between "FAYLQHa Cherokee Remedy pi.’ February 19andMarch2l argument Cur«8 Cough)*, Cold f, Whooping (Joil^Ii, LnUi ipi>e_ and all will also be useless.’” Tiirjbat and Luiig Troubles Dud* Sweet (Turn,-Mfrl- Asingniar Incident. and Honey. Yo«r DruKKist telTs it25.and r»G missionary^TT Yx>rk on the Flit* > l>le C'ompam v TTpERS OF l mined by an eminent cancer specialist, and to his astonishment and relief watt. i—s d. _li _X .. A. — V f si ♦'to*' vs, M *• r\r\ /-i r4 i r* cr r\t to a dentist confirmed the diagnosis of the r specialtist, and the missionary was speedily relieved-of-pafoi ■So"the man—had not only gone a vast distance but had spent thesavlnxsof a, little salry for years simply to have a tooth pulled. Between joy at know ing he was not attacked bv a deadly disease, and chagrin at the expendu tureof so much travel, time and money merely to have a decoyed tooth ex tracted the state of mind (if Rev. Mrr Waddell may be imagined. -What’bthe Uee. 1 The Chattanoogli Times says: ba ve-acotmiiunicaXK>ft fcoia-a' •New 'em me 400 for entertaining a negro actress at an evening function and skinning ! alive the young dude who led a dance i with her. What’s the use?. Don't i THE LAi>/ 1ST High (Jrale Pianos and Organs liN 'tllic WOWI^I>. I louse, TV St. (. ’ iffi’stoir. S..<• S< 11-Hti Easy Tcvrius '*2.01 >07000 J Tl THE A U II M, t fnuL 1 (ii y-i*tg biactiiry prices, n.af’?. - "VrtmU M u ical -Dust ruTiTeiiUy in slock 1. V. WALLACE, Manager— COiYlPAIMVr- >n. s. cr southern gentlemen” know that ftois same seientertained a monkey with a lunchet n at Newport last summer? What are we going“to do with a “set” (whose fathers were thieves) and that has nothing to do but kill?" u ...a,.... t-4 H h © « a) P H X X X p O- . U to -&r cr C o § c> - •o a> » tm —I — y oo 03 ^ 2 O M l i - 'SOJSS pp ▼ - Shot Hie Two Sons. vA^rankland Ind., as a result of a famtiy-ftud David Galnoo Thursday ntgtitrfihott.two of his sons. Lfoyd years old, was shot in the aide and the older soh-wbo interferred was shot through the left hand. The youpger boy will die. Gaines left home and is being hunted by two other sons. Who are armed and swear they will shoot him on sight. Officers are also looking for him.\ ■ ■ ^ ' v - xr ■ COLUMBIA LUMBER Sc MFG. GO* «AeH, POOBB, BLIMP^, INTBUIOH FINISH. MOULD* UNO AND LUMDClI. ANY QUANTITY. Columbia, G. The Guignaud Brick Works, ' £ roU'MlllA. s. Building and Re-Pressed Brick. Special shapes to order. Fire Proof Ter ra (iotta Flue Linings. Prepared to filForders for thousands ur for millions. Cypress Nhingles. (If you will haul them, we, wii slell at the rouowing low prieck as Idng as they-last. 6 x 2b $3.75 per thousand. 4 x 18 Hand Drawn Heart Cy press at $3.25 per thousand.. Now If you want a good roof, come right along. _ ii SH Boiers 615 Plain St., Columbia, S. C. Cement Co., S A h R S Gager’s Bricks, T& The Washington Post says some of the southern delegates to Republican conventions have had the palms of their hands liberally *greased with i^soap.” The “flow of soap" is older than the “door of hope.” llUBEROIl) Easy to keep in repair. 1 Light atuLvery durable. Warerprot f and-nrdtirlcss.— Not affected by change of tem perature. — Elastic. AEid anil A lkali-proof.. ' Fire-resisting and oil-proof. Vernrmf wTTT not attack it. All rifeady-to lay. ' Needs no painting or coating. -Will nut deteriorate with age. SOUTHEASTERN # COMPANY. All classes tiulldlng material, CHARLESTON, S. C. iV 4 * vj ’iSjjjk