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Hafcys ■ n ^4 f :'# W«rU Tkiak. 5 .-vjan KOVIU, BO0UI UVOKKXI l ^ K i'i Cooditlona tbat UIt« One H«n4r«4 Mid Twenty-dTO Tbou- ■Md Peopl* Half tbe Na* , tlon'a Wealth. T.ihe g voice crying in the wilder dm of wealth and luxury, Robert Banter, the young aocfal reformer, ha> attend an appeal for the ten mil lion people of the United States who an steeped in proverty. To give t ffect to the appeal, Mr. Bunter, with bis young and beautiful wife, formerly Min Caroline Phelps Stokes, daughter of Millionaire Anson Phelps Stokes, has abandoned a mansion of wealth and itnury in fashionable Madison avenue and established- - in Grove street, where sloth and proverty abide on all sides, a home from which he and Mrs. Hunter will be able to devote tbelr efforts toward the alleviation of the suffering. Hot with any flare of trumpets has Mr. Hunter taken this radical step. Ba and bis pretty wife, whom be met a year ago while they were sepaiately ministering to the poor of the slums, had been In their quarters a week be- fore the newspapers found them out. They modestly disclaim any purpose to do anything but bear their Just Share of any responsibilities tbat tbe perilous situation may Impose upon all lovers of mankind. But already they are actively engaged In a score if practical charitable movement*" ms B OK OK "POIKKTV." Co-Incident with tbelr remove! t* Ho. 88 Grove street, Mr. Hunter's hook on “Poverty" was published by the Macmiliane. It is the result of Mr. Bunter’s fifteen years of labor among the poor of the nation, and It Is a ter rible aralgnment ot the State, the corporations " and the tmHrtduai em ployers of labor, whom he charges with Joint responsibility for the con ditions that prevail. Startling as is hts statement that there are 10,000,000 people In the United States- ou-'-elghtb of our pop elation—suff ring from proverty to day; tbat tbe scourage of mankind— oonaumptlon—Is epldrm'c, and- that Mm poor are p**. r than tver; he dO'.s not stop there, but predicts, unless re medial measures are adopted, an even worae condition, ending in an ec n omic feudalism worse than tbe h<tr i. lal feudalism of the Middle Agrs. > Mr. Hubter |do«8 not especially charge tbe Trusts with responsibility ~for tbe conditions, but tbe Inference which be draws is plain. “Poverty” is a txx k which Is bound to create a sensation among thinking people. At the lx ginning of his took, Mr. Buoter, In a chapter on gmeral pev •rty, defines the geographical limlu of the state of misery with which hr/ proposes to deal. AfUr referrlr g te the alum districts of forJgn cities, be mytr— CONGLOMERATIC POVERTY. “In our American cities negroes whites, Chinese, Mexicans, half breeds, Americans, Irish and others are indiscriminately housed together in tbe same tenements and even in tbe same rooms. Tue blind, the crip pled, tbe consumptive, the aged, Lhi ragged ends of life, the babUs, the Children, the half-starved, underclad beginnings in life, all huddled to gether, waiting, drifting. This Is pau- C rism. There Is no mental agony re; they do not work soft-; there h no dread; they live miserably, but they do not care.” Continuing, tbe author says: “How many people in tbls country are In poverty? Is the number year ly growing larger? Are there each year more and more of the unskilled class pursuing hopelessly the elusive phantom of self-support and Indepen dence v *****! have , not the slightest doubt that there are In the United States 10,0o0,000 persons la precisely tt.ee conditions of pover ty, but I am largely guessing, and there may be as many as tflet □ or twanty millions. But ought we not to know? * * * * “The number of evictions In any? community Is & fairly g 1 od measure ot the minimum of draire-s. In the year IMS 60,463 famUtea in the Borough of Manhattan were evicted from their homes. This Is about 14 per cent, of the total number of the families In the borough. “As another Indication the number of pauper burials shou d be cited. Every one familiar with tbe poor knows bow despi r&tely they sturggle to give a decent burial to tbelr dead, • * * and yet one in every ten per- sons who die In New York is burled at public expense In Potter’s Field.” Summ&r'zlng some of the facts which he then gives Mr. Huuter pre sents this table: STATISTICS OF DISTRESS. HM)3—Twenty per cent of the peo pie of Boston In distress. 1897—Nineteen percent of the peo- ple of New Yor In distress. 1899—Eighteen percent of the peo pie of New York In distress. ^03 —Fourteen per cent of the lawUeeof Manhattan evicted. Every year 10 per cent of tboae who dii in Manhattan have pauper hartals* “On the basis of these figures,” be continues, “it would seem fair to to estimate that certainly not fewer than 14 per cent of the people lo prosperous times (1903) and probably not fewer than 20 per cent in bad i (1897) are In distress.” Considering the causes of non em- into which the author ily diverts, ha makes this observation: . m reorganization of industry i, causing many thousands tf reenter lose temporarily their em- tbe introduction of new hating the sama effect; op of the machines, and dlaiaacaa work- •t an early age; excessive hours and a too plentiful record in years, showing many thousands were reduced to absolute want because of the death or permanent injury of the bead of tbe family. And he points out tbat the majority of these aooi dents could bate been avoided had the railroads Installed the necessary safe ty appliances. CONCENTRATION OK WEALTH. In a very significant tabls it is shown that of tba IBS,000.000,000— which is the estimated wealth ot tbe country—133,000,000 000 Is possessed by 126,000 Of the 80,000,000 Of our population. Summing up tbe situation, Mr. Hunter embraces in a single paragraph his message to the nation: ' “There are, probably,” he says, “In fairly prosperous years do fawer than 10,000,000 perrons in poverty—that lr to my underfed, uoderclothed and poorly houa.d. Of these, ah ut 4,000 000 penooa are public paupers. Over 2 000,000 working mrn are un employed. from four to six mouths in the year. About 600,000 male Imml grants arrive yearly and seek work in very districts where work i» scarcest. ,* . ' ■ ~- Nearly half the famlllra in th's country are propertyless. Over 1,700, 000 little children, are 1 forced to be- c jme wage earmrs when they should still be school. 3,000,000 women find It necessary to work and about 2 000,000 are employed In factories mills, etc. Probably no fewer than 1 000,000 workersare Injured or killed each year while doing tbelr work, and 10,000,000 of the persons now living •V Sill JURIIDI0TI0Y It “W.1 In tba hands of 8. X>. GHUon and that U. D. Gllloa, M. B. Mtiw and J. Mid Moffett were accessories to the kill* lag,” This was the vardict of the coro ner's Jury at Saluda empaneled to in- quire into the cause Of the negro, Culbreath’a, death and which was reached late Wednesday evening after quite a prolonged session. 8. D. GUI ion, the principal, has been quite a part Ivan fOr tbe Morses and against W. L. Henderson and young Free since M. M. Morse’s death a few weeks ago. U. D Gi Hon is a son ofi D. Gilliou and M. B. Morse is a brother of M. M. Morse, Will Cul breath waa tbe negro who was driving the one horse wagon the night M. M. Morse was killed, and for whose arrest the governor. was Induced to offer . a All of CoaatUwtioaal Amend ment* Ws*a^ Adopted. Total Vote for State Office re and Congressmen. •• , . ^ - , ' l/'" - / )" •, t - ■ The State board of canvasse s cm eluded its labors Wednesday by de claring the results of tba recent elec tlons. There w -re two contests from Republican oaudldatee defeated for congress, but these w re overruled by the board and the Democratic nomi ness for all offloea voted for were de dared elected. Tbe following were declared elected p* State officers for the next two years there having been no opposition ticket: D. 0. Heyward, governor ..... 61,907 J. T. Sloan, Lieut. Gov. v ... .. 52,043 J. T. Gantt, secretary of*atatg 61,b22 TT. X. Gunter, Jr., attorney sTELii treisarer..:- m'm! I» reward drawn. will. If the present ratio Is kept Upi.Jn congress for the next two years, die of this preventable disease—tuber ouloslh!” What Is to be done? Mr. Hunter mentions a few remedle-: “The, factories, the mines, the workhhope and tbe railroads must be ley ot York, E. E lerbe of Marlon, forced to cease killing the father, or the boy, or tba girl, whose wages alone sufflje to ke* p the family from poverty; or if the workers must be Injured or kilted, then the family must at least te fairly compensated,- in so far as that be possible. Tene ments may be made fairly sanitary by tbe action of tbe community and thereby much of the breeding of wretched soils and diseased bodies stopped.—New York Ameslcan. TH1 RURAL CARRIERS Held a Very Interesting Meeting In Columbia Thursday. •*> K ^— The S’ate Rural Delivery Carrier association held a sieUal meeting in the United Stxtcs oou t roc m in Co- lumba Thursday. Toe pur;ose of tbe meeting was to hear two address es, whlo 1 ! were made by Congr s mar A. F. Lever and P st master J. F Ensdroftbat city, and ..for tbe dis cushion of matters relating to the im provement Of the free mail del.very service. The membership of tbe association numbers something over 600, but t ere are many of the careers wb< ha ’« not yet bioome members. This m etlng being a called one and occur rl ig on Thank givirg dav, the alien dance was smalb Tue following aro- tbe officers for the present year: Pr s dent, D C. Hayden Orangeburg; vice president, R A. Sllgh, Slight,; secreta r y II. E B <1 n, Neeses; treas urer, J is. Hartman, Prosperity. The morning session opened at 1130 o’clock. Dr. Eusor was ttn first speaker, followed by Mr. Lever. They were listened to with closest at- tentir n. After these speeches then was a disci ssion by the members of tbe association suggesting Improve ments of boxes for mall, style of wagons, etc. A rec- ss for dinner wa* taken at 1 30 0,’olock. Business was resumed at 3 o’clock. It was agreed that The R F. D. News, the official organ of the Na tional Rural Letter Carriers’ associa- U n, should be sent to every member of tbe State organization. It was also decided that at tbe annual meet ing, wblcb Is to be held In Columbia out July, tbe session should be held for two days instead of one as hereto fore. The dates agreed upm are July 3 and 4, 1906 A committee ot ihree, consisting i f Messrs. Samuel C. Tlndale of N<ss < ’s, P. M. Huff d Pierunr l and N. O. Pvlf* of Colum bia. was appointed to present to the State legislature at It Its next ses »ton a memorial urging the passage o? laws leading to the improvement of public and private roads traveled by by the free dell very" routes. A resolution was offered by Mr. Pyles and unanimously adopted thank- Irg Dr. Ensor and Congressman Le ver for their excellent addresses, and MaJ. Mlcah Jenkins, collector of In ti real revenue for the use of the court room, and to the press for courtesies t x’ended. The fallowing members of tbe asso- clatiqn Were present: D. C. Hayden, O angeburg; John G~4(fc>ore, Chester; John T. McCrorev, Richburg; P. M. Huff, Piedmont; B j. Martin, D nalds; Maxcy H Ly- brand, New Brookland; J. E. B. Mi Garths, Leesvllle; John C. Drafts, Leesvllh; Horace D. Crosson, Lees vllle; Samuel C. Ttndal r Neeses; W. A. Sharp, N >rth; W. G. Pete s m, Newborn; B M. Wolff. Alma; W. B Clark, Laurens, Joseph W. Little, Simpson vllle; Hugh E. Bolin, Ne*s s; L. D. Evans, BUney;0.in F Nunaa- maker, Irmo; E L Wlngard, Lexlng ’on; J sse E. Gardner, Bethun''; D. R Fletcher, Kershaw; M C. Rogers, Antioch; N. O. Pyles, Columbia. Fonr Were Drowned. Tba rowboat of William Briggs, ferryman between Port Huron, Mich., add Sarnia, Out, o\erturned Thursday In a heavy sea wbila'Briggs, with six passengers, was rowing across tba St. Clair river and the following were drowned: Alfred Green, engineer, St Thomu, Out; John 8. Chreeman, fireman, St. Thomas; John Deck, braksman, Bt. Thomas, all of the Pare Marquette railroad, sod James Con nell, barkeeper, Sarins, Ont. Ferry- mao Briggs, John Dobson, an engi neer of St. Thomae, and Daniel Fisher, a conductor of Bidgetown, Oat,, rend tbemee vre by banging to UMOvertonred beat. . A. W. Jones, comp'roller..... 61,833 O. B. Martin, State superin tendent of educatiop 51,832 J. D. Frost, adj itc.nt general. 51,835 J. H. Earle, railroad commis sioner 61,803 For tbe presidential electors, tin nine Demo:r its rec 1 el 52 863; Re publicans 2,271; T. W. Vaughn^ tbe Socialist, randldat'? from R chland, re cemd 22, and Thomas Watson re Ocived one in Spartanburg. DEMOCRATIC CONGRESSMEN. The following will serve the State each Demxsritlccandidate h ivlng had a decisive majodty: Giv. S. Legare ol Charieitoa, J. Q. Patterson of Barn well, Wyatt Aiken of Abbeville, J T. Johnson of Spartanburg, D. E Fin- and A. F Lever of L-xington Tbe vote cast in tbe several dis tricts is. as follows: First District- Legare, 8.068; Prio- leau, 234; No'and, 346; total, 6 648. "BrcOM—Patfersn, 7,426; Myers 419; total, 7,842 Third—Alktn, 7,659; Samps Pope,! 1; Scott, 142; total, 7,8 )2 Fourth—John ton, 8 516; Adams, 219; H U), 8,735. Fifth—Finley, 7,928; White, 171; total, 8,099. Sixth—Killer be, 8 353; Doas, 376: total, h 72 7. Seventh—Lever, 8,726; Jacobs, 563; scattering, 6; total 9 305. Tae vote for s illcltor was as follows —thdfe being no Opposition to the Dimocratlo canldat s: First circuit. P. T. Hildebrand, 5,- 523; secon 1, J E. DavH, « 590; third, J. 8 Wll-wn, 6 619; fourth, J. M lohoson, 5 514; fifth, G. B. Timmer man, 6,048; sixth, J. K. Henry, 5,691, s^ventn^T. S S-ase, 8,239; eighth,^ E. Boggs, 7 192. - ' CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS. All of the proposed constitutional amendments were carried: First In Interost is the propo ition to have th legislature meet every two .yt’ar* In. stead of e ary ye- -r. The vote oa. was: Yts, 25 635; no, 14,491; toUl nuuiber cast, 39,856. A mere majori ty Is requmd, a two t ilrds majority being un.iecev-ary. A great deal of interest has’ been taken In the effort to amend the con ic Itu ion so that local or special Jaws may be enacted in reference to the building of roads, the age at-which persons aresutj et to road duty, and on the question of drainage. This of 160, but which was with It la but Just to say very few, to do with M. M. M irse’s death and tbe theory is that the negro was Im plicated to as to discredit his testl mony at the trial of W. L. Hender son, should hts testimony be in favor of H> nderson and against tbe State’s case. There Is not one ioU of te. tl mony connecting tbe negro with tbe killing of .Morse. Several days ago Cul breath wiu brought back from Pns- perity—whither he went after Morse ^as killed—by Mr. W. L Henderson’s friends and since that time has been U work fbr W.* W. Henderson, a brotber.of W. L. Henderson. On Mon day, It Is underatood, a warrant wat Issued f ir tbe Culbreath negro on tbe part of tbe State and S. D. Gillion was made a ep.clal constable to exe- cu e It. • A synopsis of the testimony at tbe trquwt telte story. — *■ Elgar Hendenon, a 14 year old son of W. W. Henderson, was at work in tbe field with tbe Culbreath negro. The darkey was plowing and young Henderson was cutting corn stalks. His 12 year old sister happened to be the field with her brother when GlUlon and his party came up. The Cttntoa to Tbe ra at six o'clock.' Tbusday afternoon tbe Thorn well orphanage seminar* bunding caught lire In tbe roof from a defective floe and was burned to tbe gronnd. Workmen bad Just finished tasting a new furnace and the bunding had been ohsed fir tie day. Tba lire waa dfcoovered early bat as the town has not yet put In It* waterworks tbe efforts to put out the flames were of no avail. Tbe fire spia reached an 86 foot tower and besame a huge pillar of flames. Efforts wen then diverted to tbe protection of the McCormick, a dormitory building on the orphanage Campus and the r e ta lion ball of the Presbyterian college both of which were threatened. B th buildings ware adequately protected The “Thornaell Seminary for Or phans,” which was tbe name of the burned building, was dedicated In 1883 by Gov. Hugh- S. Thomson, wbo*>a death the people are how ,1a menting. The building was In process of con ’ Htructlon for 18 months, during which period the labor fnd other bills wen promptly met afrtbe et d of each week though at no time were tbe funds io hand sufficient to pay them a wee k lb advance. This was the main education al btructure of tbe institution and con tained In addition to a large chapel some six class r oms. The loss is 18, 000, with only $1,000 of insurance. 1' falls therefore as a heavy blow upoi an In titutlon which only a few days ago had a similar loss, from which it had partially recovered by donations In tbe dining ball of tbe orphanage help Is net ded as never before. The flues from which it caught have beet In almost daily use since 1883. Ttu president of the orphanage has made It a practice to walk around the grounds each night after tbe retiring’ hour to see that all was safe. The Thornwetr orphanage Has many friends. The helped everyone of them will be seeded now. J. F. Jacobs. Jump, d Ov«rbo*rd. “Good-bye, Gol will take care o: me,” wrote a yourg woman wbos< berth aboard the Old Dominion line) Prinoeas Annie was discovertd to have pas- ' The Guinard Brick Works, coi^LnvmiJV, ©. o. " Building and Re-Pres ed Brick. Special Shapes to order. Fire Proof _ Terra Cotta Flue Linings. Prepared to fill orders tor thousands or for millions. AH Drug and Tobaooo Hi ffiu, 6 ' 1^®'“ I .1 ... B»blU^ Ciired by ICeeley iUrertitute, off C. 1329 Lady St. (or P. O. Box 76) Columbia, 8. O. Confidential oorreapond- n :e solicited. will permit tt e legls alive delegatt ns to make tbe road and drainage laws conform to tbe wishes of the people, for the amenlment was adopted by a vote of 26 452 to 11,242 The propo sltion to repeal subdivisions 2 and 9 of section 34 of tbe constitution was adopted by a vote of 20,016 to 12 024. Fne subdivision referred to would prevent local legislation on road and drainage and this merely supple ments the other amendments voted upor. - V Tbe constitutional amendment to permit Greenville to Increase <4>ei tended Tndibtednefs to an amount not to exceed 15 per cent, of the vaT ue of the property in the county, was passed b/ a votfeol 21 682 to If,-’ 018. THE CONTEST HEARD. When tbe clerks reported tbat they bad completed tbe tabulati m, the State board entered into the matter of contest*. Toe first of these came from the flr>t district w hi re Mr. Le gare had two opponents, both of whom are of the Republican pirty. Aaron P. Prioleau, colored, charged with a number of crimes, and J. A. Noland, white. eac^Lclaims that be c mid have been ek-ctea. Noland was represented by a negro lawyer named Elwards, whose contention Is that certain boxen should .have been counted over. The State board showed tbat bad this been done and all the votes given to Noland the latter could not possibly have been elected. "Noland’s negro attorney abo claimed that tbe votes should not have been counted with,a representative of thecindtdate being there. The b ard -umled tbat It bas no Jurisdiction in tils case. Pr oleau's extravagant c alm Is that he wou|d have received 11 800 votss bad n t bis supporters been denied the right to v< te He also claimed that some boxes where he would have had a majority were out opened. Prioleau represented himself. Tbe State tx ard declared that It bas no right to act in this case also, there being n > charge of fraud. Jac >b Mx>ror, a negro lawyer from Orangeburg, repre-ented Jacobs, the Sumter negro who Is contesting Mr. Lever's seat. Moorer attacked the oonstitutlonility of the election laws This matter is also beyond tbe Juris diction of the board of canvassers, as was pointed out by Mr. B. Hurt Miss of Orangeburg, representing Mr. Lever. The State board of oxnvaners there fore declared Mr. Legare and Mr. Lever duly elected. boy says Mr. GUii n rode up to and said: “Hello, Will! I have a war rant for you. If you run 1 11 kill you.” Will ran and waa running as hard ss he o mld and fe 1 while running. The girl corrobonud E’ger Hender son’s testimony and in answer to a question as to what Will was doing when strata aaya, “He was running, trying to get bst of it.” Both state! that S. D. Gillion went to where tbe negro was laying after he was shot and said, “Boys, cqjne look at him. He ain’t hurt.” The girl wpa frighten 1 d nod brg«> v to scream'Hind she says Mr. Gllikn came to her and said, “Daughter don’t be afraid. It ain’t nothing. . Mr. J. D. Davis, ex &udi;or of Edgefield county, was sworn and said he was on his way home from school and met S. D. Gillion and Mid Mof fett. Asking them them tbe news, Gllitcn replied “nnthirg” .Ad'ft thin evening akout 5 o’clock said: “Ye*, Fha^e some news and bad news. I have kilkd Will Cul breath.” Gdlion then r ques ed that witnesses go to where the n g o was laying and search for a knife or pistol. When witness pent to th! negro he found no knife or pis ol. In answer to a question Mr. Duvls said Gillion “told oie he went to tbe fi Id where the negro was plowing and told him he had a warrant for him. The negro ran off. He got off of his horse and ran after him, and was gaining on him when the negro turnrd and put blshand In his pocket. -Suppos ing tbe negro meant to tight him he shot him.” Other parties testifiel to sedng the other men handicapped nearby with gum . ■rei Got Two Omtlawa. One outlaw is dead and Another Is in Jail mortally wound, as the result of a desperate bAttis between cattle theivu and officers of tbe law Death, Nevada, on Monday. ‘ - - ~ — — - • - Will I been unocrupled after she took sage from New York for Norfolk Wed nesday and who has nevnr been—seei since. Ou the paper In which she ap parently bade fan well to ber fall e- and to Hf<*, was also written a rrqttTt- Coat ber father, F. J. Henkel, be do tided at 43 Creicent stre t, Wakefield. Muss. Seucb was instituted for th girl and in her statero>m was found her pathetic note. Tue m ssfng young woman, who is det-cribtd as a youn. girl budding into womanhood, toot- passage at New Yor* I >r Norfolk, giv log, her name as M'ss E izabetl HAnk.-l. That tbls was her true namt appears to be indicated by ber note to her father. ^ —p Accidentally Killed. A sad and fatal aeddent occurred about ten miles east of Swansea in Lexington O unty on Wednesday n r r. V'wody Say lor, white, and Weltm Gl-iver, c-dor- • d, were out bunting an 1 by sune ac eldest young Saylor’s gun wa$' dis charged at short range, kb" entirt load taking effect in Welton GlqverV busk In the regi >n of the r ghrkline> and Just t> tne right of the spi r a Cilumn. The^wouud was two and a half or three Inches across. Welto’ died in 18 hours after accldi ot. Ii inte-moB$em statem-m Gljver salo ihat It was an accident. negro was some 30 yards from Gillion when shot and was running for life. The bullet entered the back of tbe bead and going through was cut out under tbe skin In or near the center of tbe forehead. S. D. GliBon came down Thursday evening And surrendered to tbe sher iff. His son was hereralso-but ..it la said he went borne. Warrants have been Issued for M. B. Morse and J. Mid Moffett. It is also stated t hat warrants will be Issued for Dock Mc Kay and two other parties, whose names y< ur correspondent could not lears, as, tt is said, they were woods when Culbreath was killed and were with GHUon and his party, - Mc Kay Is a brotntr In-law of the dead man Morse. S. 1». Gillion was tried here Just after tbe county was formed for kill- irg a Mr. Cogburn in the northwest ern part Of the county. Blind Tiger Hhot. A dispatch from Charleston to Tbe State siys King street was a scene of exdtemept'Thursday night as a re suit of tbe dispensary ocnstablis searching Schladeressi's establish ment. The constables ee'zol a sma 1 q’ian* tty-of liquor there Thursday at- ternoon and ttfiy^-feffirned to tte place Thursday night: when the two Scbladeressi’s opened fire, wbica was returned, about 15 1*20 shots being discharged, but the pnly casualty was a slight wound In the hand of one of tbe Schladeressi’s. He was arrested but later was b&i’ed at tbe station bouse. Constables Bateman, Wil liams, Patterson and Wright partlcl pi ted In tte raid and returned the lire of tbe ownen of the place,. The raid netted 70 quarts of whiskey brandy and wine. Shot by Her Step eon. A special from Wayoross, Ga., says: Mrs. Julia Williams, wife of Henry T. Williams, a well known citizen, dkd Thursday morning At 4 o’clock at her borne near tbat city from the effects of a pistol shot wound iofllc&ed by ber stepaoo, Kinch Williams, a young man 18 years old. The shooting occurred on Nov. 14 because she refused to give him some whiskey Hs thought she . had hidden li. Williams shot bis step mother with a 32 calibre pistol, the bell entering her right leg near the knee, passing through the bone. It.is said that the young man drank whan he fired the shot. KILFYRE! KUFYBE11 KILFYREII! That is exactly what it Is, a Fire Killer. Demonstration every day at the State Fair showing iu fire fighting qualities. Every Farmer, Oil Mill, Saw Mill, Ginnery and any one owning property should have them. For sale by , COLOMBIA SUPPLY 00.. CPlximF>ia-, & C> The niochmery Supply Itonse of the State Southeastern Lime & Cement C V CHARLESTON^;8; C. Building Material of all kinds. High Grade Roofing “RUBEROID.’* * Write for prices. o A WAR ROMAICS That Wee Beiiun in Ncwbern Home Forty Ycara Ago. A war tlnje romance which was be gun m Niwbern in >862 1 ai a happy e. ding in New Yorkafew days ago. An aevount of it U given in the New York World: - Goff Ulmer —In this el’y, October 6-? 1994, D.'. C evdaud While Goff, ol New York city, to Mrs. Jane Lawson Ulm r, of Savannah, Ga , by the Rev. WlTTam B ' T .wer, p st -r of tlw Wa hingt n Square Methodist church. By the foreg ting announcement, published in the Herald, many friends of a physician well known In bis forty years’ practlcj In this city, will b surprised that an elderly man, long igo given up as a hopeless bachelor, has taken unto himself & wife. Few will know that it also marks the good story book ending of a war time ro mance. beginning in Newhern, N. C., iu 1862. It does rot lose its lot rest' because Mrs. Goff, ber-elf white haired, told it laet-nmht. . ^ Dr. G- ff, whi.se office is at No. 11 Eist S.xt 'euth stie. t, was a young physician in Rochester wh n the call tu arms came in 1661. He enlistei in the Third New York cavalry known a^Vao Allen c. vriry, serving first as quartermaster then r'sirg to tbe i&nk of captain, aul.laUr do Qg M ,c^ty as's surgeon. ~ ^ ^ Dr. Goff was with tbe army that occupied Newoern. N. C , In 1862. Lueie he. met Mis* Jane -LxwFon; daug iter of a local mtrehaut, and, neetiess to say, a very ardent sympa tblzer of tue S u hem cause. Tae young surgeon fell m live with her. “1 am sure that my treatment of kiudl!m,”S*rd bis wi’e Jan nigt t. “Iu thone days, o f co -r-.e, we could see nothing gool 11 the Yankees. But he was' perms tnt.” Blew Hiin Up. At -Omaha, Neb^-tbe residence- o' Elmer E. "Thomas, attorn-y for the Civil Federation', was dynamited Tuesday morning. Tbe federation has The e jldeece ebowed U.»t i"' 1 ”.!!! eotgrcjM W» mldoigl.l loon*. Thomas was awakened by tbe I'ght of a burning fuse on the front po*ch, and started to extinguish the supposed fire, when the bomb explod ed, tearing away the whole front ol the bouse, covering Thomas with de- b'is, but not seriously^injuring him. No ar-est has been made. — T” “ Goee Down With Cr» w. A spefcial from Laurel, Del., sayr the four masted schooner Judge Boyce, built for Laurel capitalkts, bad turned turtle off the Capes during tbe storm of Nov 13 end ta. master, Capt. Manlqve Eskidge and crew of 10 men were lost! The Boyce was built at Batb, Me., at a cost of $50,000 and was en-route to Savannah, Ga., on her maiden trip. She was only three days out when the storm over took her. * — Killed-* Couple. Near Philadelphia, Pa., on Wednes day Frank Saylor, a negro farm hand shot and killed Henry Henderson, aged 23 years, and when he was overtaken by George Henderson, Henry’s uncle, fatally^bot him also. In adjllt on be fired two shots at Ella Scott, wbrse refusal to aocept bis ittentlonA aroused his Jealousy. Saylor escaped Into a dense woods and bas since evaded oaofcore ~ Fourteen Minora Killed. ! A Fernle, B. C. f dispatch to The Pioneer Press says 14 miners were killed, at the Carbonado mines near Morrissey Fridayafternor-n as a result of a terrific explosion of coal gas. Tbe disaster occurred in No. 1 mine, ten miles west of Fernle. Tbe work of rescue was kept.up all afternoon ard all the bodies have been recovered.. Huliro Crew Loet, The Swedish steamer Bur, from Grimsby, Sag., with a cargo, founder ed Thursday at tbe entrance of Arko sound. Tbe entire crew, numbering 17 men, perished. Ifrjs'believed the' vee- grounded and tbat her boilers ex ploded. ^ Tax Spartanburg Jourusl says: “The dispensary bas been established eleven yean in South Carolina and no other state ha$ adopted it If it were a good thjngi' wouldn’t it bdve spread?” How about South Can 11- oa’a anti-dlvoroe law? Tbe fact that It baa not spread 1$ no evidence what* ever that tt it not a good law. Vital Weakness, Blood Poison and All Discharges. WRITE HIM AND HE WILL GIVE YOU THE MEANS TO CURE.YOURSELF AT HOME PRIVATELY. An? gvntlween r««n<lerot thlt seuer baring • private diaoiuw*, such as Nt-rvou* I l.'lvility, Var- le^crle, Strlctnrp, Specific ..Plnnd Potenn or any Urethal.Diaciuii'g^a should write Dr. Recognized as the oldest established and JMost Reliable Special. Newton Hathaway of Atlanta for particulars of hhfoew system of curing these diaeeaaa in half of the time required by the old method. You apply it youneif at home, under the Do» tor's directions, and no one but you and he know anything about it. In Sjhort time yoe find yours.-If well Hud healthy and not a pain or sign of disease anywhere. _ Jk-Ottrai ImpuD ucy in ojd men, atope die* chargee in a few days, diasolvee Stricture without pain, and In (he same short time ef fects a marvelous change f >r tbe belter le all private disease* of men. Uy an original ere- tem of anKwera, he ran tell exactly what is the matter with fen, and compound tbe treatment Tacrc wus a young Co ifed rate of ficer iu tne ta-e at tuat time. 11c a a- Junes Uia e ' and Le was also in l ive witn M:>s LaAtOir. Tnat mace Dr. Goff shu t imp< siole and- be was to.d SO plainiy. What he said Wll. n „ r . j. Newton JD hawav. 88 Inman Bldg. w* fie learned tills wa» nut revealed last S. Broad St Allahta, Ua. Write for the one to cure. He aen<L. it d'rwtly t-> your home in a plate package without mtrka to indicate the ooo- ten's ' Let him wud vouhia new books cover ing the d'W.ue-a of man,—He has four of them —Ilia, aaee of the Organa, Blood Poison ing, Stricture, Va-ioor# e. II a full eddmae le *'■- you want. It i* l.ee. also a-detailed letter covering your cane. It ia a good way to find ouljLf you can he cured and at no coat to you; an write without delay, and as the doctor baa been prominent in the South fur ' weutj-flve yea a, y u can rely on what he Raya. 3\:&: sen night, but he couliDued to urge Its suit, tvvQ after the war closed. That •vas all en-’ed wt en, a ftw years af^er the war, Mis* Lawson became Mrs. Ulm r aui qpovel “to Savatnah, a here her hustuincl weal lot j bust- ut.s Dr. Guff returned to New York and ! began Die p actlce of mtd<cine. Hejm —— had many, paticots, amass©. a c m | J PIANOS AND ORGANS, fort able fortune, travel eJ-rxteusively • ; -And Lots oTThtm- and id the opinion of his friends wus ™ a a au whose Leirt had never been af fected by any worn in. It is 1 kjly tbat the story would have ended here had nut Mrs. Ulmer pilcT a visit to New Y. rk in Oc ober. Mr. U1 ner had died .three years be- tore. There were no children. Sbe wi s c mfurtably well off and liked to travel. She did hot know exactly how if happened, but one day at her hotel she thi ug u of. Dr. Goff and wonder- - d irhe. were -ettH—ItT:ng. A~ dlrec- iQfy gave hb> arid.eas ana she called there. - ^ . | 8 S WE Sa THE BEST MAKES. Our prices are about ten per cent under Northern prices. E ery f’lann or Orcau we sell Ir fully warranted by the maker*, and backed up by ua. Write ue at once for catalogue, prioea and term*. : MALONE’S MUSIC HOUSE, COLUMBIA. S. C. Mrs. Goff laughed last night when she came to this part of the story. ‘ It wa-i the d ctor,”. shfe said. kf Ot course Jfie had fchauged. Fur that matter, both of us were, well, a little older, but we were soon chatting about old times during tbe war. Then," Mrs. Goff hesitated and a chuckle came from her husband.—New York Her- arid. —j Killed atOloiueon. At ClemNon College James Sizemore, co'ond, did Weloesday night from the effects of a blow on the head with a stick in the han-!s 6P Bill Greenleaf, colored. The trouble b twe-n tbs two took place on Friday, the 19th of Novtmber. “James,” the heal wai ter at the Citmsoo club hotel, bad sold “Bill,” a band at Ulink.-.cales’ 11 v- < ry stable, a pair of shoes on which “Bill’’ stilled owed a dollar. This causel bad feeling. Bill cursed James -because tie kept asking to# The money anH ’ dared” him to come duwn to s able. James went ard Bill CHARLES C. LESLIE ■ WHOI.MAl.fi OEALBRB tM — FISH AND OYSTERS, 8 and 20 Market Street, Charleeton, 8. G. ry Produce are Re* Conaignmenta of Country icnE qwctlally Solicited. Poultry, Kg ga, Ao. id&xi- Piah pecked in berrela and i trade a apeoialty. nee for country and the knocked him in the head. Greenleaf has d.sippeared. James was a hard working, honest, barmles negro, and was well thought of, especially by tbe white people who knew him. * Uve Perished In Fire. -- Five UxMans perished in a fire that late Thursday night destroyed the old. Noble Grain warehouse at Northbend, between Christiana and Ateiglen, Ffc. One of them was washing a pair of overalls lo a pail of gasolene when a spark from his pi;e fall into the pail, causing an explosion that scattered the burning oil. Instantly there wu rpanic among the Italians, most of whom bad been asleep. They fought madly to escape from the bunring room, and the five men killed are thought to bave been trampled io T. S. HOLLEYMAN, M. D. t i Tbe Specialist. Cures all diseasrs of men. List manhood, syphilis (bicod poise n), gonorh< ea, gleet, stricture, varlootele, ■ hydrocele and all .priyate diseases of 1 men Catarrh infill forms cured quickly. Piles cured without opera- f tion or detention from business. Uider guarantee. Bjorns 421 and 422 L onard building, Augusta, Gi. Write for home treatment. Offlje < hours: 9 a. m. to 7 p. m. Stmdays, 10 a. m. to 2 p. m. Mullst! Mullet! Mullet! . and all kinds of Fresh and Salt Water fish and ovsters. If you are dealing In Fresh Fish or intenu to deal in them write for prices and send your ordrs to Charleston. 8. O' or COLUMBIA FISH A ids OO Columbia S. C. We ship only fresh caught fish and our prices are as lev they can be sold at. Write ua. us and be convinced. \ BANK DEPOSIT G. W. Blackwkll tged 66, open- tire at the Maple cotton mill at DU* too, mss killed bj a train on that LIds whils isleep on theH frf. ItowMi