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V'*; 11 Hk ! ADVICE. , Mia Taman to Karkot Thoir Cottoa Slowly win o«t Good mreinoiALiroiT. ion Oon- bjt We on wUllof to oooord Joafetee to otbor, and we Intend to demand )na> tloe for ouradvee. Will Mr. North please explain why ha haa not compiled with hla Inetrue* ttona from the ooogreas of the United Stataa? Very truly, R. M. Mixbon. ( The following letter which we take from the Magnate Ohronlole will be mod with Intermt: Bear Sir: Tim contention of the Southern Cotton ▲aacolatlon, held In AaherlUe, N. a, on the eth, haa ad- journad, and paaaea down Into hlatory •a a meet Important meeting. While 1 waaln bopea tint thla meeting would -ftx twelve eenta aa the minimum price ter cotton during thla aaaaoo, which price, when the atie of the crop la taken Into oonalderatlon, la cheap, they thoughtdlfferently—eleven oeota minimum waa agreed upon aa the oor mat figure, and ao, from now on eleven oeota la the minimum price to be demanded by all loyal farmerafor their cotton during thla aeaaoo. When ten oonta per pound was fixad last February by the convention In New Orleans and demanded by the farmers, all manner of fun was made of the far men,and their aaeodatlon,by the Wall Street gang.but not ao now;tbey know by experience what the fanners mean and bow well they will carry out their . agreements. If the farmers will prove loyal, and I believe they will, you will eee cotton selling from eleven oenta per pohnd inside of two weeks. Don't rush your cotton on the market too rapidly, fellow farmers. Market It ■lowly. I~ believe we have the short est crop we have had In years. And, If sufficient labor can be gotten, the crop In Georgia and Sqpth Carolina will be gathered by October fir «t, and, .from the best information I can get, the remainder of the cotton belt la in the same fix. As soon as It dswna on the spinners and speculators bow short this crop is you wiU see a rush for the for the staple, and up will go prices. Keep your oottoo, draw enough money on It to pay your debts so as not to block th* <rheeis of odmmerce and trade, pay your merchants, that they may In turn pay the wholesale mer chants from whom they bought the goods add you. When you do this no one has a right to quastion your right to bold your cotton and demand a fair lurloe for It. The rapid marketing of cotton during the last ten days is re •ponatble for the decline in price*; be patient; market slowly and you will make money by It. I ^xp ot to see cotton eeli lor fifteen oentsby JUT uary 15th; therefore In my Judgment to rash ootton on the market means a lorn of money to you; but as before advised, while demanding justloe for yourselves accord Justloe to others; draw suffletent money on your ootton and pay your debts so that the man you owe can pay bis debts and busl- nssa will go along smoothly. 1 no tice that the census bureau Is out with a report of ootton ginned up to September Itt.showing that 469,500 balsa of the present crop was ginned up to said date. This Is a bad show log tor the crop and demonstrates be yond question that the crop la in poorer condition than recognlsxl and claimed by experts. No such an amount of ootton would have been opened In August If the crop was In a healthy condition. More than half of the cotton opened In August was forced open by the dry, bet winds we bed. Lots of the bolls were unma tured. Opened because the plant bad 1 ft all of lie vitality. Suob oondl it ms foreshadow a short season and i ^ w torterop. I expected to see a fall report from Mr. North at this time. I expected to aee a report giving Information on both eldee of this question, but I am- dlsappolnted. Mr. North, It seems, Ignores the instructions of congress arid continues to give all the Informa Mon he can give from the fanners aide of the question, but remains mum as to Information from the spin ners side. He gives us only a partial report. If yon will refer, Jb- EUtor, to the records of congress of date January 16th. 1905,700 will find the following - vts; .“Fifty-eighth congress, third ■eeelop, Home Joint resolution No. 186, In the eenate of the United States, January nth, 1905. “Bead twloe and referred to the committee on the census. Jourr RnsoLUTioN Authorizing and directing the ^ director of the census to collect and publish additional statistics relating ¥0 ootton. t**Baoolved, by the eenate and bouse of representatives of the United _ States of America In congress aasem bled: That the director of the census be, aad he la hereby autborlxod and directed to collect and publish on the same date and at the same time he makea^publication of glunera' report for ootton production provided for In section nine of “An act of congress entitled an act to provide for a per manent census office.^ Approved March 6th, 1902 ” statistics of’ the oonaumpClon of ootton, the surplus of ootton held by the Manufacturer! and tbequanttyof ootton exported, the etaUstios to be tummarized as of Sep ^tssaber 1st, each year, so aa to show xbe cotton production and oonsump Mon of the proceeding year. > Passed the house of representatives January 16tb, 1906. Atteat: A. McDowsll. ^ From the above we see that Mr. North k not only “authorised” but UTJjn BOOM ITA1TI. Thirty-fire AmCHeens Reported Lost onToffo* Ship. A dispatch from New Orleans to the Atlanta Constitution says from nformation received here It la bellev ed that a number of American gun nan went down In the explosion which sank Admiral Togo’s flagship, the Mlkaaa, and at the nme time threw light upon the cause for the remarkable marksmanship which de vested the Russian Baltic fleet la the battle of the See of Japan. Joseph Morgan, of tbls city, brother of Oharles Morgan, formerly gunner on Admiral Sampson’s flagship, New York, states that the American gun ner JMned the Japanese navy and was a member of the crew of the Mlkaaa. Gunner Oharles Morgan Is said to be one of the thirty-five American man- o'-warmen who deserted at Manila and Joined the Japanese navy. It was ha who fired the first shot at San Juan. Porto Ktoo, and subsequent ly obtained notoriety through Admir al Sampson’s opposition to his receiv ing the rank of commissioned officer in the United States navy. Morgan's skill as-a gunnar was cele brated In the navy, and his brother states that Captain Merrill, formerly stationed at the United States navy yard at New Orleans, told,him his brother deserted at Manila, and, with thirty-five comrades, Joined the Jsp anese forces, receiving a salary of 86 00 a month, with a promise of a bonus at the end of the year. , Heretofore It'has been claimed that the Japanese have employed no for eign flighters, and the fact that Joseph Morgan has heard nothing from his brother for over a year, after a fomer Bat the Great Democratic La Pcellasc Um Boaor. "I want to soaks my position per fectly o'.aar, I want to my to you that not only aa I not anuouuctag a can dldacy bat I am not permitting a candidacy.'' - In theaa words William Jennings Bryan administered K cheek to the eathuelaem which, at olob banquet, given In Mr. Bryan’s honor at Chicago, greeted the speech es advocating hla Domination for the third time for prerident. "1 am notnow” said Bryan, "a can didate for any office. I have never said that I would never again be e candidate for office but I went to say now that talk of candidacy for office does not affect me aa it once did. believe that my place in history will be determined not by what the peo ple are able to do for me but by what I am able to do fer the people (ap plause and eheen.) 1 think It now too soon to choosey candidate for president to make tor race three years from now; It Is too early to pledge ourselves to any one man. tiust that before the time comes to name a man fat the next presidential race light may be thrown upon our pathway and that a man may be ehoeen who will be able to do for the party more than I have been able to do. At the banquet alluded to above Mayor Dunne, of Chicago, was cor dially greeted as he arose to speak oa “Tbs Progress of Municipal Owner ship. ” He eulogized Bryan and pre dicted the ultimate triumph of the principal of municipal ownership ! Ollls M. Jamca, of Kentucky, regular correspondence, bears out tbs belief tbat American gunners were secured under bond of secrecy— —- A BOLD ROBBER. A I /one Highwaymen Held-Up and Robbed a Coach* A dlspath from Lounder, Wyoming, says a typical WCatera stage robbery by a lone highwaymen took place be tween Myerevllle and Rengls, on the Rooky Mountain Stage Company's run, last week. Toe highwayman took all the valuables from the ex press box, ’ robbed the mall sacks, and took tbe cash from the three passengers and the driver down the trail, with Instructions to keep going without looking back on pain of be lug ■hnt The stage with its three passengers was bowling along aa a good rate whan suddenly the command to halt rang out and a masked man arove from behind a boulder, two guns In hie hands, oovarlng the driver. With a curt remark that “the first man who attempts to resist will be shot, ” tbe highwayman forced tbe | gen and driver to alight and range themselves with tbelr backs to him and their hands above their heads “If any man looks round I’ll kill him,” said the robber. After busying himself a few minu tes with tbe mail and axpreae, the robber forced each man to step back of tbe lined-up people and took tbelr pocket-books one-at a time. He re fused watches, but took all the pis tola in sight. All were ordered Into tbe stage and went on their way. T Reveals Awful Heorets, A dispatch from Klnat, N. D., says the dead body of Oharlea Hersig, who left a written confession that he guilty of a murder oommittod near Youngstown, Ohio, over thirty yean ago, has been found by a posse of searchers. The body was hanging to a tree In a secluded ravine. In the county of Wallace. Pinned breast was a piece of wnpplng paper, on which waa written e confession of hie crime. Around hie neck was s shred of thin 'green stuff such as wo men use for face veils. It Is recalled by a former Youngstown man there that Llu e Grombacher wore such a veil when murdered and that pert of it was used to strangle her. The piece found about Herilg's neck Is supposed to be tbe remainder of the veil, sa he showed such a piece to a fellow ranch man to whom he told the story of his orlm*, declaring that he had kept It all these yean to use in ending his own life some day. brought out round after round of ap plause by tbe eulogy of Bryan and the pies tor Democratic harmony with which ho closed a speech In which he declared that Bryan had long ago declared in favor of crushing the traits, reforming the tariff and bringing to arbitration all Internation al disputes. □In a brief address Judge J. B. Tar- via, of Oovlngton, Ky., declared tor Mr. Bryan as the standard bearer at Democracy In 1908. Mr. Bryan then rose to greeted with an enthusiastic demonstration and It was some min utes before the applause subsided sufficiently to allow him to proceed. He spoke on “Demoorsoy vs Centrali zation.’, ' 1 r7> Boy Go** to tbe Peattenthury for Elghteea Fean.' Tbe GreenvlIle News lays though bis attorneys pleaded long and earnest ly for acq iltt&lon the ground that Mrs. Brothers bad failed tp Identify i, It took tbe Jury In the {federal semloos 6oart Wednesday lea than an hour to declare Rufus Jack- son, colored, guilty of attempted crim inal assault. -v . The crime was committed In a oot too field near Grove Station a year ego. Mrs. Brothers was picking cot ton at tbe time, and though she suc ceeded in shaking the negro off, he made good hla escape and for several daye tbe boy’s whereabouts, for be was only eighteen yean old, were a mystery.,. It was not long before one piece of circumstantial evldenoa after another led to Jackson's arrest, end when tbe deputy sheriff brought him before Mrs. Brothers she Identified him most positively, and be was brought to Jail. A month or two later the negro was admitted to ball by some magistrate, and It was only a short time ago that he lost one eye aid came near losing his life In an attempt to enter tbe room of e negro woman In the night time. It Is also said on reliable au thority that this same Rufhs Jackson, while out of Jail under bond wrote an Insulting nqte-'to * white woman in Laurens county, and also actually as saulted a half-witted negro girl at the polet of a pistol. These latter facts were not allowed to oome into the case for they bad no connection with It, bat th#y are ho secrets and go a long way toward mak log up Jackson's character. The ste rn ust be gratifying to those good peo ple who are disturbed nowadays by statistics showing that even New York cannot be called a Christian city, and many other things equally alarming. Thejbev. Jones presided at Enoree, where 47 persons, both men and women', were placed under the waters of the stream. At Reedy river. In the Union Bleaching company’s reservoir, the Rev. Seago and an as sistant were also engaged In the good work, and no less than 42 young men and women confessed tbe faith there Sunday morning and were gently dip ped beneath the dear, cool waters of the stream. At both places hundreds of people had gathered from miles around and they must have been 1m pressed with wbat they saw. Such de monstrations for the sake of religion are not so frequent as they onoe were Two such as those of Sunday can hard ly fall to stir up religious enthusiasm and bring About great and lasting re sults. . - Many Parsons Baptised. Tbe Greeuyllle news says eighty- nine persons were baptized In Green- . _ viile county Sunday and by only two 6,140 the Naval Academy from Ala ministers. ' The number of converted t* 110 * ln Jan ®' 1870 > received his tute fixes the punishment for attempt ed criminal assault at not more than 30 years in the penitentiary, and Judge Dantzler gave him the full limit DiamlMed. As a result of the court martial prbosiedlngB against Commander Ber nard O. Scott, who several weeks ago ran the ornlser Detroit aground at Pueta Plata, Santo Domingo, that officer has been dismissed from the service, the President having approv findings and sen tence of the court Among the spool- Sections against Commander Scott was that of drunkeneas, and It was also alleged that he was guilty of a number of Indiscretions at Guatana- mo, Cuba. The Detroit, although disabled by the loss of one of her pro peller blades, was not seriously dam aged. Commander Soott was appoint- present commission of commander in August, 1903. is formation, •dieaaon falls to glye this additional In bathe, for some unexplain alls to do sa Bis duties are aoada vary plain: No discretion is left Rial. Be is “authorlzsd and directed’’ topnblieh this additional information, pot Re does not do it. We do not ob- Jest to feRe publication of Information k " I of the question provided It find provided further that Ivan the Information which 1o axjwot from Rbr. ji tew to Re given at Bat we do object to In- le being WRiiS inder the Into -•i. Pound Fortune. An iron pot containing 850,000 In gold coin, tbe newest of which was 115 yean old, was found on the farm of James Rivers, near Chesterfield, 8 0., by Tyler Teal, a white laborer, and Will Edwards, a negro, while en gaged recently in digging a ditch. Tbe pot was carried to a point 2 miles away and burled near a creek bank. When, two days later the finders went after the pot It had mys teriously disappeared. The negro chargee the white man with having appropriated the money and hidden it from him, while Teal declares the story la all a joke and no pot was un earthed. Edward sticks to his story and has produced proof of Its genuine ness. Detective J. D. Evans, who has associated with him one of the beet detectives In the south, who were employed by the negro, and who have since been working on the ease, have secured evidence confirming the discovery of the hidden, wAlth, but thus far no trace of the gold has been found. - Frost at the North. Reports from New England state that that section was vlslteffgby frost Wednesday night. Much damage was done to crops. la New York stale; frost was reported In several Motions. At Lane, Pa., and In northern Ver mont enow fell. The freezing point atOonoord, H. H., aad Ine. A high wind mved crop in Mm Capa Cod ' % •* Slitj Id) lured. Sixty passengers were Icjured. nine seriously, by the overturning of trailer attached to a traction car on the Homestead division of the Pitts burg, Pa., Railway company near the Glen wood bridge early Wed ner day The accident was caused by the failure of the brakes to work. Tbe oar am trailer were orowded to tbelr fullest capacity. There is a steep grade from the Glenwood bridge to Hays June tlou, where cars branch off for sut points, and great oantlon used by motormeo. The brakes refus ed to sot properly Wednesday, how ever, and the oars descended the grade with unusual speed. At Hays June lion there Is a sharp oar managed to round the curve, but the trailer, carrying 50 passengers, was Jthrow^ from the track. A scene of. almdte indescribable confusion fol lowed as tbe upeet trailer was dragged along a considerable distance before the mntnr car could be stopped. Every one of tbe passengers was bruised and Injured. £t is expected tbat all of the Injured will ultimately recover. Denounce* Society, “Modern society Is as corrupt as hell.” Time were the words of Bishop Bowman, the Venerable member of the Evangelical Association, who aroM like a patriarch at tbe meeting of the Ohio conference In Columbus, Oolo, Wed nesday, In the midst of a heated dis cussion of the temperance question and the hold that the saloon and Cox element has on the Republican party of the State. “Modern society Isas cor rupt aa hell.’ Yee, I said It; I will say it again,” declared the Bishop after ward. “1 mean by that card playing, beer drinking, gambling, dancing, horse racing. These things are the teachings of the devil, and what else, then, than the corruption of hell. I don’t mean exactly that all classes of society are corrupt, but what Is popu larly termed u society where the wealthy and the moderately wealthy follow the glare of amusements and spend their time In riotous living when not engaged In making money to dis sipate. • Killed by Blind ftffen. A dispatch from Jackson, Miss, says Governor Vardaman received a letter from District Attorney Brewer of the eleventh district notifying him that a negro named James Wills, llv- tng lit tbe interior of Tallahassee county was taken to tbe woods by three white men and shot to death, be was burned. Tbe negro, It seems, bad bought some whiskey from one of MM white men and afterwards In- formed on him. Tbe district attar nay asked tbe governor to taka action iRttaS OMR . Good Hohool System. A development of the school sys tem In New York unheard of and un thought of until about sixteen years ago Is tbe system of free lectures to adults. ' Tbeee free lectures were be gun in six school houses In the winter of 1889. At the present time they are given in 140 centres In New York, the majority of which are In school buildings. Last year 4.665 lectures were attended by the astounding total of 1,134,000 persona. Lectures on travel, history sociology, literature and krt are Illustrated by stereoptioon views. Leotunaln electricity, phy sios, metallurgy, etc, are Illustrated by experiments and lectures In music by vocal and Instrumental selections. Murder And Suloidn. ’ it Special from Tarpon Springs says at 6 o’clock Wednesday evening G. E Paul, a well known contractor, walk ed Into tbe boarding house of Hiram Pent of that place, and as his wife cams to meet him at the dining room Paul shot her down with a double- barreled shotgun and then ran into the back yard, shooting himself with the contents of the othertnrrtt ^ was Instantly killed but hla wife lived 10 minutes. Paul had been drinking heavily, It Is said, for several weeks. No statements were made by either party as to the cause of the shooting. Muat ba Numbered, The postefflee department has Is sued an order which will go into ef fect on September 30th requiring all rural houses to be numbered the same as the houses in tbe city. The te tbat all of the boxes must bear the number Instead of tbe names at occupants of the bouses to better facilitate the rural delivery work. The carriers have a certain route to go every day, and he goes the same way dally, and the order states that he will have to number the fiat box on his route “No. 1,” and so on to the end of his route. The Washington Port says it Is a rather remarkable feck that, although the Democracy, as a national org'nli at ion, has always been oppwe | to '‘sumptuary lawt,” such as statu .or j prohibition of the liquor trafflj, the most and tbe beet kind of prohibition Is now found In the few states that are solidly planted In the Democratic columns. The Boston Globe notes with Interest tbat while Maine le growing more and more uneasy about the sys tem of prohibition, and getting ready, for a campaign of rcsubmission to the people of the whole question, Geurgf and South Carolina an earnestly log prohibition. The Globe statesihat already In Georgia 103 counties have no license, 28 have dispensaries, aad 6 have high license. The effort no w le, says the Globe, to have the legislature provide a system of “State option” under which the six counties enjoy would'be wiped out. Our Boston eun temporary adds that: “In South Carolina there le a re markable movement to close np tbe dispensaries, and Senator Tillman pro pbtea to leave the question to the Democratic primary. The prohibition Ists in South Carolina, aa will as In Gecrgla, are confident that tbelr cause will win If presented tebthe people. “At the same time It ls eurlous that the opponents of prohibition In Maine and Kansas, where the system has been tried, are as confident that tbe people are ready to vote against a oon tlnuanoe of tbe present regime as tbe Georgia and South Oarollnan prohibi tionists are tbat their case needs only tabe presented to find acceptance at tbe hands of the people. ” -The Poet is In receipt of a very long and Intensely earnest communication from a South Carolina Democrat who, after applying to the liquor trade In his State all the epithets that used to be burled at the rumsellers and tbelr places of busings in Maine sixty years ago,-closes by quoting this etanaa from a song that was sung at temperance meetings In New England by, tbe grandparents of the present genera tion: “Tell me 1 hate the bowl? -Jl&fce te a feeble worfc I loathe, abhor, my very son 1 , With strong disgust Is stilled When I see, or hear, or tell ; Of the dark beverage of belli” Shot by m Burglar. Burglars that have aroused the vicinity of Greenwich, Conn., for the past few weeks reached e climax Wednesday morning, when Mtsl A. C. Morrill, daughter of E. 0. Convene,' chairman of the finance committee of the United States Steel corporation, was hit by a bullet fired by a burglar and seriously If .not fatally jnjured. About 3 o’clock Wednesday morning Mrs. MorriU’s nurse was awakened by tbe flub of e burglar’s lantern In her face. She screamed aad her cries at tracted Mrs Morrill aid as site en tered the rocm the burglar fired, tbe bullet striking ber In^tbe chin, glano ing down, landing In the shoulder. The burglar also beat the nurse over tbe bead and shoulders with his re volver. After the shooting he made his escape. The police found tbat an entrance was effected by foreing the front door. A man claiming New York aa bis home was arrested. Tbe police believe be is the bnrglar. He gave his name as John Brown ind said that he came to Greenwich to call on amend employed at the home of Mre. Morrill. Divides Hie Fee. W. J. Bryan hM divided all of the fee allowed him for services aa exeou tor of tbe will of Philo S. Bennett, according to a letter by him to a friend at Hardford among interest* not personal. He was allowed 82,500 out of which be had expended about 8800 to meet tbe Inheritance tax 8800 for ibUit of Mr. Bennett to be placed in tbe Salem, 111., Public Li brary and about 8400 will be sent to Rev. Alexander E. Irvine for the edu cation of bis two sons. The remaind er went for lawyers’ fees. Mr. Irvine conducted the funeral services of Mr. Bennett and was bis friend In life. all snot nr His wire. At New York George Williamson, a compositor 29 years old, while on his way to work Wednesday morning, wu met by his wife, with whom he Is not living. An argument followed over the payment to her of money ordered by tbe court. He wu about to enter tbe place of employment at 140 Center street, when she palled a revolver from the folds of hex dress and shot aim in the side. He was removed to the hospital and Is not expected to live. Tbe woman was arrested. Jeal ouay was apparently tbe cause. An Old Bridegroom. A dispatch from Richmond, Va., says ninety years old, six times mar ried, and the father of forty-four children, Is the record of Jacob Kin ney, better known m “Major,” who applied for and secured a license at the Henrico County Clerk’s Office Tuesday morning to wed one Ann Green, who Is also no novice on the matrimonial sea and Is sixty years of sge. In recent yean tbe old man has been getting feeble, and haa been sup ported by his sons. When asked what is meant by getting married again ha eald: “I need a help meet.” Blown Up. A dispatch from Clarksburg, W. Va.. njsT>avtd McKay and wife, tbelr bones and wsgon wen blown out of existence Wednesday morning by tbe explosion of nltrogljoerine which they wen taking to shoot .a wall in the Saian oil flak*. She only thing found after the ‘aaploaioa waa tbejtelaof M» wsgon. Having Fun After Deatb. A humorist Id Japan who jested hla life told his friends when he dying that his body was not to be washed after death, but was to be taken at onoe to the family temple to be cremated. When he died bis Instructions wen followed. As soon as it was set on fire the mourners were astonlshr d by several loud ex plosions. At flnt they were Inclined to take to tbelr heels, but curiosity got the better of fear, and oarefull in spection showed that the humorist had stowed Away nA,. firecrackers about hte death. his person before Paid A Just Penultv Henry W. Mansaer, the Oswego county farmer band, who murdered pretty 12-year-old Cora Sweet, was executed in Audubon, N. Y., prison at 6:15 o’clock Tuesday morning. Mansers crime was the most brutal nauseating in the criminal history of Os%ego county. His victim was i child of s well-to do farmer In the town of Scrlba, a few miles from the city of Oswego. On May 28 Manseer met the girl on her way to Sunday sobool, lured her Into the woods and then killed her by pounding bar side into a shapeless mass wltn a stone. Killed by Ootton. A very sad accident ooonred near Vances on Monday week ego, which re sulted In the death of Arthur, the five-yepr old son of Mr. Julius A. Mur ray. Mr. Murray’s children were play ing in hte ootton on about two bales of newly gathered eeed oottoo. They had dug a bole In the midst of the pile bf ootton, down to the floor, when Ar thur got down Into It, probably to make the hole larger, when tbe ootton fell on him, suffocating him. Me waa gotten out m speedily as possible, end everything possible done to nve him. unavailing. jLuoue'rjil, oa. lish bran chef muni a .*' - . Write. graduates days. Full SKcit- i lv"de- ■achteery Supply Honse for the Stab WE SELL EVERYBODY. Headquarters for EVERYTHING in MACHINERY SUPPLIES. All kinds of Injectors, Lubricators, Pipe, Valves, Fitting*. Supplies for Saw Mills, Oil Mills and any one in Machinery business Large stock of Well Pumps and Cylinder*. Get oar prloe. COLUMBIA SUPPLY 00.. Columbia, 0. 0. - The machinery Supply house of the 'i .tr ■ The Guinard Brick Wore COLUMBIA, O. Manufacturers Brick. Fire Proof Terra Ootta Bonding Block o r Flue linings and Drain Tile. Prepared to fill orders for thou an -li or millions. ~ ' i —wnwwa iiensa>Bntia»»t ¥ ■\f/t ARE.LOOK ING : -FDR YOUR ORDERS ' Cf! UKBIA LUMBER & MFC CO i' r T T COLUMBIA sc * *; Wbleke i Morphine I Glgaret i AllDrug&na i'uuuu. Habit,* 1 Habit I Habit 1 mbits. Ourt d by HLeeley Institute, of C 1829 Lady St. (or P. O. Box 751 olumbia. S. 0. Confidential oor se citd. — — A FATAL FALL Through the Dome of the State Capitol ut Col unit) I*. At the State Honse in Colnmbia on Tuesday of teat week while eeribbilDg his name on one of the Iron glrdere between the bases of the toner and outer sheila of the capltol dome, Wat ran H. Stuu/gs, Jr., the fifteen year old son of a well known traveling clothing salesman, stepped Into one of the two foot tquares of the o IL'ng protected only by tin, and' fell forty feet head foremoat on -to the marble floor of the outer lobby between tbe two bouses of the legislature, dashing out hla brains and killing himself In ■ ... ___ _ With him was s companion, PJW. Bull, who had just finished writing hie name In the._adjoiuiog panel. These two names and that of C S. Beats are serf hied In large white let ters all over tbat section of the dome. When be fell through Scruggs ..was Just reaching tbe first “g” In bis name, a long white mark extending down the girder In the direction of toe punctured squire. This la e dangerous oetling, but It seems Impossible to prevent a mlt oel lane 0 us amort meat of people from streaming Into tbe dome, though thla accident will likely result in some an tion being taken along this line- On tbe da* of tbe adj urnment of the last legislature the little, daughter of W. H. Monckton, a Columbia mer ohant, fell ah rough one of these squares, but was saved t by that bzl cony, and though she fell 25 feet she uninjured. ~ W. W. Price, now a wfill known Washington newspaper oor respondent Honest Treatment for / - -v . ■ * , 1 —- ■. - X.— Weak Discouraged gen. Do Not Throw Your Money A v.:vy on Worthless Treatments, But Write to Dr. Hathaway, the Sou It’s Hast Expert Special! t, Who Can Be Depended Upon to Cure You.— 25 Yearr Experience. — MEDICAL BOOKS FREE. Wlrte for Them. If yon are a man aifferinf'from unn-tural dbcbargM, amkaiuiM, premature diac n-j*,or' from * complete loaa of your mnohox:, Jo not throw your money away on the many worth- leaa treatment* from fake medical 01.. ini**‘ ‘‘inaUtutea,” etc., bfft eit right down ar t urr.t* to Dr. J. Newton Hathaway, Be Inm.. Atlanta Oa. Thu physician haa per' ^teJ a severs! years suo while wrrklng on si Columbia newspaper fell partially through one of these squares while spying on a political convention session In tbe hall of the House Representatives, In of i Hello Girl* to O* ~ A dispatch from Allentown. Pa., says deciding to spend S200 OOO in in stalling glrleas telephone plants here and in H*z!etoa, the manairemeut o f the Codsolidsted Telephone oomoany deprived m tre than 100 telephone girts of their Jobe. They will be out as soon as the new plants are December 1. The 60 girls got so cross about it that many left instant ly and the service is greatly tmparad. Tea directors of the lyndtoate say they are sorry for the girls, but they Himself. Frederick Mercer, a negro 47 years old, hanged himself to a door knob In Brooklyn, N. Y., on Monday. When found hte body waa in^MI ehnest izoatal post ton with hte Reed fool from the Moor. calculate on running each girlless ex change at a saving of 823,000 a year. If the trial plants are as eueoeesful as i,t is believed they will be, the glrleas system will be Installed In the entire Oomolldated territory, which Includes Scranton, Wilkesbarre and the ten other largest cities of Penn slyvanlseast of tbe Susquehanna rlv er. More than 400 girls are employed In the exchangee. Kleetroeateo. “At Waterbary, Oonn., on Tuesday of last week one man was electrocuted and one te dying at a hospital and a third te seriously burned aa a result of coming into contact with a live wire at the Sohcvllle manufacturing plant. Death from coming In contact with live electric wires are becoming almost an every day occurrence. ■ » No Ne*roe* Wanted. In the great council of the Impro* ed Order of Red Men In session at Nashville, Term , a resolution wu of feted on Tuesday by tbe West Vir ginia delegation against the organ! zatlon of negro tribes of Red Men, and requesting tbat the ritual be copyrighted. la Wm Fair. Special Referee Boggs hu made hte report to the supreme court In re gard to the Pickens dispensary eleo- tlon, In which he shows that more than one-fourth of tbe voters signed the petition and that the election was fOlr. n perienoe that will positively restore ai y w». A, wornout, discouraged man to a type oi <awfaat manhood, whether tho patient is youu. . old or middle-agec. iteady made medium* c-mmat poasib y cure this condition, but wt-m MV” •vary case require* specially pr*p*r»i Uaat- mant administered by an axpert phjsici.ie who is competent to understand just wb-t your oa e requires. -The vast experience of Dr. Hathaway haa given him a knowledge of this condition in men not poseeeeed by any other physi ian; and every man in this co iditioa should write him without delay. Hwrything is kept atritcly oonfldhntial, and all medi cines. which are prepared in his own labora tory, are sent in plain peokagaa Jhirlug th# years and yean he has been established in At lanta he naa oondu tad hit business in aa honest, straightforward’ manner, and bir repu- 4 tktfon Is known t<> sIL He will s-nd to each sufferer his book for men, entitled *'M*nli- neea. Vigor and Health.” He Mao cures all other disevaa^opnen such as Striata<e. Va ricocele, Gleet, etm, and if you are ttiioled write him for a book on your rfimnna. He has a number of them. Have no heei.. ncy in writinr him. The addre» is J. NKWTOX enMse fF BANK DEPOSli HATHAWAY, M. D, 88 Inman Bldg, Atlan ta. Oa. -- • A Proposition of Interest To all readers of this paper, who call or write for treatment wit ilrt the next 30 davs. I will cure them of tlie following diseases for ONE-HaLF my — v — MANHOOD, ‘ GONO- OOKjiLE "1&PTURE, "CATARRH and all CHRONIC DISEASES, of both sexes. Diseases of women cured without operation. PILES cured under guarantee without the knife er iv tying or burning operation Consultations, Examination, Ad* 1 - Free. T. S. HOI LEYMAN, M. D, THI SPECIALIST. Rooma'421 and 422 Leonard Building. Augusta, Ga. N. B. Catarrh of worst.form cured quickly at home. Piano Removal Sate. an: We move about September ifiih, tc No. 1432 Main Street, almost opposite Masonic Temple. We want to close out PIANO and ORGAN and have marked down priced an Induoement. Write or call quickly If sirea big bargain eit PIANO or ORGAN. - _For oauioguee, prices i addram: „ —- X