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8TBAMEK WRECKED. '' VkimMitda w then IwkniTow r. teas to Holp Orow. tbM OOTTOV IT ooxnmM. What thePaMla Otaaot So«th Oaro MinnoaoU ot WbOM PvtfOt l» Wrrak B toratb* fttovat Abat- cd and Help Reach Them. A dUpatch from Du uth Mjs twen- tf ti> »«*» wo belli tod to |»ve fn sod to death aboard the Uoiled Statr r corporation'• ore steamtr Mat yfe which broke in half in tbe eight of the a mods In the haibir Thursday fee btliht of the woiet storm that hM swept the western end < t Lake Superior in twenty floe years. The MiVr*-**! which left her barge Irtpiwd half a mile out ot the harbur attempted to run the canal looks She teas oaugbt in the wanes and Sashed against the pier heads. Io aStt '"ntipg to go abc ut to S' t back Into the lake, the great era lifted her bodily, poised tbe ship like a toy and then daahed It with rruablng force upon the lock of concrete met- oimry. ;• > / Thousands looked on from tbe d-. okt beipiees e 1 ^ the men on deck in their fllitress appealed for aid threug! asegaphonM. Their TJloee wen drowned In tbe roer of the eea, but although tboee on shore understood they could not help- Not etene tug eculd besent toald tbe unfortuhate Tt " The ship finally broke In half and tbe ore was washed out by the angry eta. For hours the men dung to CLs wreck untlll after dark. Then all Bgns of lift ranlabrd. It Is believed all have fr< sen to deatb. Tha steamer E.wood of tbe Steel Corporation fleet, ootUded with tbe Berth pier and stove e bole below her water line. Sae wee towed to shallow water where sbe settled. It Is repot - tad the S e 1 Corporation steamer Mariposa Is ashore north of Two liar bars. Tbe steamer E. 0. Pope turn cd bush and made the harbor, comlnf’ through tha ship canal under full heao of steam. , . The proteo Ion piers st Superior were swept away for tbe second time this nn* nn The main street of Du lath are filled with wreksge of the Hons. Two Steel Corporation boats ait wrecked and another is sunk in tbs harbor. The steamer B. W Bogland of the England Tram port a Hop Company Is ashore on ” Point. - The stegfper Oreeoent City Steel Corporation went ashore in tha blinding snow driven by a 65 mile SB heur gale. She is In bad shape snd the sea Is pounding ber to ‘'VtoMS on toe rooks. -The crew of twenty-two men escaped on life rafts In the lee of the stranded ship. The OSMSsnlClty Is valued at a quarter of a million dollars. A dispatch from Milwaukee says the OoTsrnment lighthouse at the wd of tbe Milwaukee breakwater pier was battered by the high sees •nd the assistant light boose keeper, WUUam Footer, wee rescued difficulty by toe life savers. In ell my experience on toe fifteen years—I nevar saw the like tefoie. About 5 o'clock tbe eee be lie brooking over tbe house. About 1-tO I sew e per Ocular large wave eoaslng. Involuntary 1 grabbed •tanehion. That eat saved my The wave broke In tbs sntire sest wall earring away with It all tbe windows and doom. carried aleng, end it wee only toe beam 1 clung to that stayed my program end t^as sawd me from being swept Theblf steamer A ppnmattox, ooal ; ..]ggcB which went ashore several week* ago, was battered to pieces, fflte sttii—** D. C. Whltnep, coal laden, ran ashore during the gale at Port Washington. The life severs sasened the crew. LAST NEWS. The steamer Matata which went •■bore at Superior, Win, and whose Mtw wasforoed to remain on board, went to plccae Wednesday morning and nine of orew wara drowned. LUO-aa vers seeds desperate but futile aflorts to get a line to toe boat Tues day nlgbt, In tbe prynoe of thous- •nds of speetston a Une was fired toer toe ship from the oannon three tjm— Once It was oaugbt and those on tbe forward end of the boat, where It lanced, began to banl In but tbe rooks on the bottom of tbe canal out toe rope In two. When tbe storm died out somewhat this morning the llfe-mvtng orew were able to begin tbe work of bringing the crew ashore. In toe forward add of toe boat all were safe but In the stern It wss found tost all bad junoumbed to cMil und were drowned. Fifteen were rescued. Bwlt Against Olemson. Three Oconee farmers—two Lowry brothers and a Mr. Hopkins—havs ‘ brought suit against Clemson college for damages aggregating MAOOO, al leged to have been done to toe plain- ^Ws farming lands by toe dyke whioh the ooQege autboritlrs erected ten yeeie ego for toe protection of tbe eolkge farms sgalnet the overflows of the lensea river. The three suits were filed in Ooonee, and are due for trial at the Maroh term of court, though ttie not thought they will be lugehod by that tone. In the mean tone it M thought that the matter will be brought up In some shape be tel the approaching session of toe Tbe main defense of the Is that tha college uoperty being state property the vol tage cannot be sued without toe etote’s •awsent, on the principle tost toe state say not be eaed by a resident with oat its consent. It is a new point In whito toe friends of ell other state equally intersetad with Una stave ♦ \ ’ - The census bureau bas lust Issued its first statament by eountlrs showing exactly how many bake of cotton have been ginned In each to Bovem-_ bar 14, 1105. This Is tbe flret time this has «ver been done end will pnm exceedingly Interestiog to growers In stvta snd others interested in tbe the i ootton Industry. Tbe following figures ■how whet has been ginned Id the year 1904 and 1906, to November 14: 1905. 1904 Abbeville 27,733 26 717 Aikeo 30 131 30,224 Andersou..... .. .... 45 841 49 486 Bamberg 20 089 20 996 Barnwell.. ; . .37 687 38 116 Beaufort 6 811 4 728 Berkeley 13 068 13 616 Charleston 6,292 7 344 Oberokee 11 ««9 11 988 Civ S' er ...29 891 18 982 Chesterfield 12 069 12,168 Clarendon 24 370 26 232 Colleton 12 787 11 980 Darlington 24 266 27 688 Dorohe t*r 7 684 8 8^8 Edgefield 24 092 23 167 Fairfield 21,986 20.512 Florence 23 906 22 952 Georgetown 2 004 1 493 Greenville 28 439 31 860 Greenwood 26,923 22,787 Hampton 26,923 22 787 Horry 16 080 16 280 Kershaw 6 526 6 737 Lancaster ,...16 066 15,806 Laurens../ ...17,419 16,817 Lee .23 329 29,693 Lexington............16, 284 16 296 Marion 38 952 36 201 Marlboro ......38 606 33 852 NeBbsny...... x 31,722 31,125 Ooonee.....'. ...(. ’...10 924 11 807 Orangeburg. 61.674 71 991 Pickens 10 949 11 050 Rlobtand...777. 10 636 14 077 Saluda ....7 ....17 730. 16 931 Spartanburg 46 355 46 896 Sumter............. 26 736 30,717 U'lon 14 367 14 314 Williamsburg 20 936 19 632 York 29 806 28 271 TAB9ED MIDICINF. A the .Bequest of Interested Far ties . the date ef "MAKES WELL OVER.” Enforcing -tbe Law Postponed RHEUMACIDE right to tho seat of tho ditMso, sWMP* to JannffEry and April 1 for Hnkern i- for How tu Treat yowr Town. Praise It, ; ' ■■ Improve It. Talk about it. . Write about It. * - Trade at home. Tell of Its business resources. Tell of Its natural advatages. . of the -Trade and Induce otoen CO trade here. When straugers come to town use them well. - D-dA't call your beet itlend frauds -Cuban Glngerief-D» W4fct j s 6 toaseeb Heller*. _ The oommlslooer of Icuernal reve- ous, J ihn W. Yerkes, tome time ego began an Investigation concerning al coholic compounds labeled as medl dne« &rd held out to the publie as rsmer les for disfaset and tbe result of the examination was given yesterda' in a circular to oolUotore. It fol lows: p “Oq September 12. Circular No 673 was issued from this <18*, oon oernlng Aloobollo compounds adver Ised and sold as medicines under various names, some of which were ormprsed chiefly of distill-d spirits or vlx’ures thereof, without the add - Mod of d'ugs or medicinal Ingredients <d scffUlent quantity to obanse vat 'rially the ebarseter of the alcoholic liquor. ’ In that circular it wss stated that because these preparations were held out to the public ss medicines would uot afford ground for relieving their manufacture from special taxes as rrollfl rs and wholesale llq tor dealers and would not relieve the retail d^al ere therein from special tax as retai liquor dealers under the provisions of the Federal statute!. “It was further stated that this ' (Bos would, by analyses made In the obemioa! laboratory ber*"’, of these varfouaoompounds determine whether those manufacturing and handling them would be liable to the speolel tax named. “Further that until. such anil;ses •rare made sod conclusions reached by this ( fflae druggists and merchants selllrg these compuur ds In good faith as medicines only would not be i IIac ted by tbe new ruling until Deoem ber l. Before that date it was tbe purpose of the cfBcs to make public annoucc ment of the various prepar atlons found try anaytets to be within the terms of the ruling of September 12. “By reason of the care_ given in making analyses of these compounds the (tBm has been unable to a mplete the examination of all such com pounds how upon the market, How ever It has made the following prep arations, and finds that they are within the terms of ru’ing of Septem ber 12: Atwoods La Grippe Spec tic >E Moos . m^ _ _ •H th« garma and poisons out of tho blood, cleans up all tho plaguo* spots in the body and sots afl tho organs to work again in Nature’s Way. Purely vegetable, non-alcoholic. It Is yet the most powerful of cleansing medicines, and at the same at omach and builds remedy time regulates the liver.tones up the stomach an up the entire system. RHEtU|XCIPE Is the^only that cures rheurealism to stay cured. MOST POWERFUL BLOOD PURIFIER WORLD. \ CLTSAT THE JQ/urs rROM JHFIH^ lD A CURES DISEASE Bf REMOVING THE CRUSE. RHEUMACIDE has cured thousands of cases after all other remedies and famous doctors had failed. Austin Percelle, of Salem, Va., spent $200 In medicines and hun dreds of dollars for physicians* foes, and atlast he was cured by half a dozen bottles of Rheumaclde. O. Dietrich, of 2120 Ramsay street, Baltimore, says It has “made him a new man.** Mrs. S. A. Combes. 114 S. Ciimor street, Baltimore, says it cleansecMier blood, took away her pains, and made her “feel like a new woman.” Your druggist and recommends Rheumaclde. wti sells ' After Noted Doctor* F«n#d. Here ts a case cured bv RHRtJMA- CIDK after noted New York special ists had failed. Mr. W. K. Hughes writes from / tkins. Va.: •Four bottles of RHEUMACIDE have entirely cured 'me of a Ronc^ standing cs«e of tlieumaiism and J really i i mi>rovrd my treneral health. ..Wts a total wxecit. bavin* had rheu- matism for twenty years. Ispentsev- eral weeks and much money tryin* specialists in New York, but RHEU MACIDE is the only cure I have found When I began to usfe it I weighed 140 pounds. Now I weigh 180 ■>N CURES AFTER ALL OTHERS FAIL. Sample bdttl. and booklet free Rf-you Mnd five eeirts for postage to Bobbitt Chemical Company, »**»*■ »**# START TO GET WELLTODAY CURES Rheum attain. Sciatica, Rheumatic Cont. Lumbago, Catarrh, Indlgasfion. 1 Constipation, Kidney Trouble, Liver Dlaoaaca, La Grippe. Contagious Blood Polaoo, All Blood Dlaaaaas,' THE BOOL W11VIL. WORTH BILLI3IS. O R S B O R N El ' & with and Imposters. Support tbe total inftltuttoug tint benefit yoor town. LO'jk Aheed of yourself when »ll the town Is to be considered. Don’t forget you live ofi the people here, and you should help others an they help jox Diu’t advertise In tbe loosl paper “to help the proprietor,” but to help yourself. Let's get together end keep things moving, hustling ell the time; obe»r fully keeping e stiff upper lip csiting for the good time coming for the o.’d town. L-t’strylt, Do It now. Oom Up Head. At tbe annual meeting ot the stock holders of the Aligntlo Coast Line Bsllroxd st R oh mood, V*., Isst week T. M. Emerson, of Wilmington,N. C., wss elec.ed president; vioe R T. Er vin, resigned. Mr, Em ;rson wss for merly fou to vice president snd treffio manager. He succeeded Mr. Erwin on tbe bosrd of directors. All th< other officers snd directors were re elected Alex Hsmilton, formertsec- ond vioe president, wss promoted to be first viee president. C. S. Gads den wss promoted from third to sec ond vice president. J. R. Kenly was made third vioe president. A dlvl- fdruggist dead of 3 per cent, wss declared on tbe stock, placing It in s 6 instead of s 6 psr cent, basis. The annual re port showed an 1 ore m lo mllleige, gross snd net reoe its President Emerson started with tbe rusd ss a clerk In tbe freight (Bees In Wil mington, N. O., it' Bitters, Dr. Bouvlers Buohu Gin, Dr. Fowlers Meat and Malt, Duffy’s Malt Whiskey, G loerts R juvenatlng Iron and Herb J uice. Hostetlers Stomach Bitten, Kudros, Peruna, Rocsandy Cough Cure. “Since the ruling van made, man ufactures of preparations referred to In that ruling and wholesale drug gists ind retail druggists handling them have demonstrated that large looms would occur to them If the ruling was made »II sotlveion Dec ember 1. They have stated that lif good faith and under rules heretofore controlling they have purchased these oompounds In large ^quantities, have them In stick and that it would be Impossible to dispose ot them by the date originally detarmioed: POSTPONKS ENKOKCEMENT OK LAW “After careful consideration of this phase of the (use and to prowct those who In good faith JMCISL engaged In the sale of these preparations, this jcffice has deterpilaed to make the or der effectlvj as aualnst manure'urea on Janurary 1, 1906. instead of Djc ember 1, 1905, said date, Jknurary, 1 1906, being the beginning ot the third quarter of tbe (Leal year. “With regard to all handling theae preparations as retail dealers both and other onrohants, the Myaterloo* Shooting. A dladatoh from Sumter to The State says S. Yeadon Delgar, former division chief State cor stable, and a prominent citizen, was shot d wu in tragedy, ta which two ndghbeta. both of ss tod their lives Bally Hitt In Maury The deed men are end Star? Ofitoern, the first —id»i»d his Hiiofl hi—ir*: Both to bNORRO preeeb- i knows to ■ariy eaed nek. the street In front of toe court house at 8 45 o’clock tonight by a regro. David Jenkins of Meohanicsvllle bas been arrested on suspicion. He wss Caught picking up she pistol’that the man dropped who did the shooting. The man who did tbe shooting ran around the sonth side of the court bouse and disappeared In the crowd. Mr. Delgar. was sect to the Sum ter hospital. Tbe ball penetrated the right leg somewhere above the knee joint. The surgeons have not made examination at this hour. Oae ot them says that it may bs very ser ious, owing to the extreme heavy weight of Mr. Dalgar. Serious complications may set In. KIllMl by Cancer. Attar living over ninety years with out any serious IHusm, Mrs. Matilda Soott, of Belleville, Mlflln county, Pa., five months ago pricked ber fore head with a pin. Cancer resulted and she dipd last week. She was the mother of twelve children and gave seven eons to toeTTntoa army in toe civil war. She was the second oldest women In central Pennslyvanta and would have reached 100 next Febru ■Wed by a Train, • While crossing the tracks of tbe Obesapeak and Ohio railway at Cul* paper, Ye., Wednesday Prof, H. S. Alexander, a noted Presbyterian min later, was struck by /a train and In atantly killed. He wac a native of Pednilvanla and a well known educa tor. Damaged Cetton to an Ertent of $AO- 0^0.000 lit a Year. The extent to which the crops of tbe United States are ravaged by In- ■e-'ts is scarcely retrz"d by tbe pub ic. Tbe e u^jeot la thus referred to by C. Arthur Williams In the Success Mag* z toe: ^’ToeTmsBWffrfrom the vtoeTSterop,' the average annual farm value of whioh may be roughly put at 8400,- 000.300," have in morq'than one year been cut down as much as 51 per cent as a result of the obinoh bug and toe hessian fly. King cotton alone was demsg** to tbe extant of nearly 150,- 000,000 by the sc called Mexican boll weevil In the single state of Texas In 1903, according to a carefully com piled report issued by tbe census bu reau. The apple crop baa been re duced as much as 25 per esnt In many instances through the operations of the codling moth and other Insects. So cne might go through the entire list. The burden Is distressingly heavy, but It is safe to assert that farmers themselves—who, obviously, ought to know as much of this phase of the matter as anybody—will sgree that tbiir lossei, In practically every Instance, would be far grra’er were the scientific knowledge of the depart ment of agriculture's staff rot put to account. A careful survey of tbe fpets leads to tbe conclusion that tbe total damage each year would bn from two to f ur times as large were it not for the department of agricul ture’s unremlttlrg warfare against the pe*ts, and that ajualmum der- tructlon of 12,000.000 000, or nearly one-h; If tbe whole yearly- value of the ountry’s crops, at preaent, would be possible.’*—-re. “ Trie Kducateo Woman Tbe time bas come when the edu cated wi m\n can no longer regarded as a freak. If according to dredlct- ipns, domeetto bepplneas Is to fall a vlrtlrn to tbe monster, “higher edu cation,” It is time to prepaae for tbe funeral: Toe old fallacy that girls are not abld to mentally cope with b >ys in tbe qursult OT clastic studies * ..w w i has received ItAdeath blow. Of hon- artlclrs than those set forth herein f>r credentials Issued ton ugh the year provided that the C' mpounds are aulaj larger number has been received by. girls and more wcmjn are seeking admission to the o lieges than the colleges have room for. The old oty that women have no use for the high: er branches, because she will get married does not disprove the fact that her trained intellect renders her all the more capable of carrying on to a satisfactory teimlhus toe manifold duties allotted ber in her capacity of wife mother and housekeeper. For the information of open who are con: sldersng the talking of lllerate women, as wives for the sole purpose of insur; log domestic peace, we call attention, to the fact that the divoroe courts do not seem to be crowded with educated woman. Wolford Boy Disappear*. A dispatch from SpMtanburg to The News and Courier says. ‘'Hugh Creighton, a student of Wofford Col lege, disappeared from the city Satur day. The young man’s father, toe Rev. C. W. Creighton, of G editor of the Christian Appeal, was here Sunday making Inquiries, but has found nothing to Indicate where order will be made <tf ctad April 1, ] 906 tbe beginning of the last quarter of the current (Leal year. This < (Bee wlH eontirus to make analyses of other preparations similar to those already examined, and will announce from time to time tbe oon oluslons reached. “Until public notice Is given as to other preparations than those Above laued, manufacturers, d-uggtsts, and others handling these prepsra Mods will not be held liable for other Etwvew ItiaalBg The steamer Ikuta, bound for Llae tong peninsula, collided with tbe steamer Fukara, near Mutaure, not far from Shlmoooeekl Tueeday night The Ikuta, which was struck amid ships, sank immediately. Most of tooaeoo board were saved. Sieven aremlmlog. . I In good faith as medicine*.” The Uood Old Sort. The womluirthat rode hone back to c u'ch with a black sHk reticule aengTBir' toTihAtroTD bt her aaddls; Tbe man that would always mike a cross mark and spit In It when he bad to turn back after starting. Tbe soap maker who would never touch a pot of soap until the moon was right. Tbe woman that could spool, warp and put In a web of doth In oue day. -Mr The spinner that could oaird, spin and reel six outs in a day. The old gentleman whose coat pocj kets were crammed full of biscuits by his wife when be started iff se* eral miles to ohuroh Sunday The saving old fellow who could wear his Sunday shoes ten years with out ha’f soling. Toe man who poured his steaming coffee into his saucer and after blow ing on It sipped loud enough to be heard by his.nearest neighbor*' • The thrifty wife who c uld knit two pairs of wool socks In a week, wo k ng only at night by the light of pine knots or in toe dark. The well dremed man who had a blue broadcloth spike tailed coat made about 1830 and when going to meeting always put his ooat Into bis breeches pocket to keep from getting soiled on his horse. OaroHna Spartan. Some Flgar^a To Thi Valv<* Of t>o; meatic A ilmal*. Sjoetafy Wilson with his usual loy alty to all that prataloj to the fa'm and farmer, calls attention in bin an-, nual report to the valu j of dim ratio an'mils and diary and poultry pro ducts. He drclares that the faithful horse A.UOUSTTJV, OA. Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Type-writing, Etgiish branches, Full guaranteed course 20 week*. Single course of either Business or Short- EU U ell. (or gm l a .U, in^2u d^. Can't aupfd, tk- ^ Ficiura. Thomas M Henry, a noted British marine painter, lias finished a picture of the naval battle of O-jpenhagcn, April 2 1801, which covers an area of (MUquare feet and has on It 66 p< unds of paint. The Industrious artist wore out 60 brushes on It. - then by the subu'-ban trolley and the sutom ibtle, but none of then? things have been able to diminish hl» ,num hers cr decrease his value^Tnere were the fecetary says, 17,006 000 horses and mules at work upon Amer ican fatm* at the close if the crop year and their value was 11,2000 000- 000 nearly as much as the corn of tbe year. The prloee of the animals hive steadily risen. —^ Milch cower re likewise sdvsncirg in numbers and value, there beirg 17,5 0,000, valued at I482,0qp 000. Otner cattle, bowever have declined In number and value, last winter numbering 43 669 000, and being worth 866 000,000. Sheep ers among toe losers but hogs are holding their poeltions in numbers and value. And there’s the faithful old hen if the farmer and the suburbanite. Seoetary Wilson does not fail to band berabouqiet in passing. - Ha says toe Is a worthy companion to the cow In the favors she showqrs up > i tbe American people. Tne aonia' p o duotlon of eggs is not a toore of b H- lons and the .products are valu d at half a billion dollars. E ;gs are doing EubBtUu v * duty for high priced meats toe seoetary says. . Trtlcpaifij This case of telepathy is reported from Union lo a dispatch to -the Scat*. A remarkable instance of preelntment of danger to h's little child F.lday caused 0 F. MacGreg or, who was tuhly at work in the spinning room of the Union cotton mill No. 2, suddenly to stop work and rush home, where be arrived just In time to see ~Htir little 10- mouths-old child a mass of flimes. The mother had stepped out to a neighbors for a fow moments, and but for tbe timely arrival of tbe father, the child would have been burned to death. As it is, the child may yet die. Tne father’s hands were terribly burned lo the flames. Dtamlaaedi. 0 The secretary of the navy has or dered tbe dismissal of Midshipman Joseph Ralph Williams, cf Patterson, N. J., a member of tbe first class, for uosatlsfaotorihess In studies and con duct. It is seldom that a midship man of toe first class is dismissed for anything but specific misoouduct. Williams« testified before the court martial whioh M trying Midshipman Minor Meriwether, Jr., raPtold (f an incident where Commander Hugo Osterhaus reported a midshipman for not resenting an Insult, another mid- toi pman having called him a ‘‘cheer ful liar,’’ which was afterwards ex plained to have been a j jke. Does Much Good. Miss Helen Gculd, with the inte'li gent awlstanoe of Mist L zzie Altman, annual? disburses 1500,000 in charity. supports directly and indin c ly more charities than any person living. While it docs not mean that she give) a vay such sums mand. Write. COTftN O^NER SAND MACHINERY t^NERS. Babbit Coup ings Guages Lubricators ■/* Belt, Gandy Drills Guage Cocks Oil Cups Belt, Kublter Drill Press Hack Saws OH Cans Belt, leath. r Ej-xstors, Hammers Fittings Injectors Pip£ Files Pulleys Lace Leather, Packing all kinds,’Shafting, Collars for Shafting and anything ' - r else in machinery supplies. ^ ^ ColMBbia Supply Co.. .... Cnlumb a. S. C. We honestly believe tbit $287 spent with ns bays more Instint Piano satisfaction than $400 spent elsVwbere. There’s a reason. Write as „ about it Full particulars _by return mail. WEAK Mm I CAN RESTORE YQU TO PERFECT MXNHOOD. Fig ft Grade Organs, $47 60 to $65 Ludden & Bates, S. M. H., Dept. “E’ favannah, Ga. Have Beon euccre.rally Treatla* Dla'-aaea of M^n lor 2A Years and M» Method of Treatment Aa- iures Yon a Poaltlve, P^- •i’* * . - . -- maaeat Uuro. t ^ S I (-.in positively reator we<ik mnn their lost viuilil^ and all I wiuit ia an opportuui'y to convim-e you that 1 caIf you aro In a~ werk, dejected dOffiiBlio*, ^discouraged and. I broken iabenllhfsit right and writ* me a letter and let me tell jo*^40 ipy answer why my treatment will 'poKHirely and penua- uv restore to ^you vitality you. once possessed. the young man is likely to Iisvj gone.' as ere ncorded of tbe Rockefeller end The boy is 17, bes light heir, delicate feetures, is tell, slightly stooped, and wes last seen weering e grey suit The police ere requested to look out for him, end if found to notify his father et Greenwqpd. Tbe_ Jpqng tails man understandsttpR-tettleg. _ ^ them * Contro'a the Trade. Albert F/edericci, et one time e famous ope re Lie baritone, now prsetk oallv ojntros the roest chestnut trede In New Yprk city, having in his em- plov en average of 100 attendants on his roasters. He lost his voice through brynohlel trouble years ego. He be gen in a Sixths avenue basement. Now ne is e men of subBtanoe end every summer visits Italy. ’ "-/u--- * T * Carnegie oherities, on the best author Ity her douetions ennuely retch 500 or more beneficiaries. Miss Altman is a Yasser graduate end first met her present employer some serin years ego, when Miss Gould wes visiting toe college. Siuoe then toe bes been an active agent In giving away nearly 84,• 000,000. Ship and Grew Loar. It is believed that toe steel steam er Iris H.Ouen has been wrecked and that Us oTew of 19 men are drowned The ship wee last seen on Tueeday 40 miles'from Outer Island in Lake Su perl or. The Chicago owners have cd F. R. .Boa* e’le, undertaker, Am given up aU hope of the vessel. The Owen’s captain woe Jot. Mulligan of Buffalo. Woman Kills Woman. A dispatch from Ciester to The News and Courier says lu a fight that occurred at the county farm Tnunday between two colored women Amy Osborne end- Margaret Allies, Inmates of tbe home, tbe former re eeived injuries from which she died Saturdiy evenirg. The two old women occupied the same cabin end hod al ways gotten along pleasantly, but Thursday there was a quarrel result ing la the tragedy. The Attles wo man struck her antagonist with- a heavy stick on tbe front pert of tbe i-kull, the iffteta of which produced death. Coroner L^ckfe held an in- qu rat end committed Margaret Attles 11 j ill on tbe charge c£. murder. A peculiar foot In connection with tbe hom’clde Is tbe great sge if the weuaen. Margaret Attles is said to be 75 years old, while the dead women Is reported by reliable persons to have been 97. ii. 1 twenty-five y«>jtrs ani arvrrvt ifl I knbw l e vim and iMf» fivan study for over roven by the larre number of people whom I eve cured, that I am capable of thorough!? urderiitnudiiil every poesihle treatment *o- cordingTy. M4 wide experience has taught ma that there areRjardly. two c ase of thia i-atwha exactly alike, and hence each must be treadg differently if a ct'te ie ever brought about|a prepare the proper treittment in my o ui laboratory , to ni'-et the demanda of .every Individual case, after I have given a thorough examination. My method of treaememt is the -result of all thOeeyean of ^oetrsiudy and it ik to-day recognised by the medical profeaeion as the most thorough and scientific treatment for men. f have had great success in curing f he nfflieded at a distance. • Hy the aid of a com plete system of self-examination blanks [ pan diagnose a case at a distance and if you are in this condition, or if you suffer from any other disease of a chronic nature, write me. D<not look fora cure in the many widely advertised “reedy-made’ medicines, free treatments from fake medical companies etc., etc., for will not only never be cured but yjm will become worse, in addition to losing the money you have spent. My chargessre very reasonable, and no man should- hesitate writing me on this ac count. 1 have been established in .Atlanta for many years «nd my reput alion aa a skillful speotalist is kno«n to sll/ Re sure to write tne-for my book for mea, entitled “Manli ness, Vigor and Hehlth”dt is absolutely fra* for the asking. Address J. Newton Hathaway, M. D., , 88 torasn Bldg. ^ nlanta, Gar Kept Corpse for Yewrr. Following toe death of Mix. Llore Thompson, an aged and eooentrio wo man a search of her eottage on Boyle Heights at San Francisco, (ML, AD- c’osed In a storeroom oovered with dust ^ a hermetically sealed box cotaining the corpse- of her daughter, who dtad T t- for catalogues and twenty-seven years ago. The body of tbe young woman had boep dis membered. Wfi«D the box was open ed a dislntarment oertifioats, rign- up ; i hearst, Mass., Novemb r 7, 1881, wu found. The body hod bun shipped from the Eat. ORGANS of the beht puality $45 >. Upright Pianos From $225 up. ‘Write Us tdrmt. [ Malone’s Music House, 1432 Main Street Almost opposite Mwymin Temple. Columbia, S. 0. SiHteMMBUMUHmMi