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WOMAN AND BOMB. MANHOOD STILL ABOVE HONEY IN THE SOUTH, ill Eer Daughter* izt (till Taught the Practical Iitiea of Mak- io| A Fappy Home. Tbouaandi of young women now a daje, eepeclally In our oltle#, an taught that money ooveraerery defect In character. Ambitious mothen aeek for money. It mature njt how much wanting^ In manly attribute* the huaband may be. If be la Able to fnrnlah bonce and oarrlagea, noe at* tire and aplendid manalona and t 'N>* Tide the meana of triTel he Is pre ferred to the man of mental culture, moral weight and buelneae ability. Mre. Margaret A. Mather, in a recent addreea before the Illinois State Fed oration of Women’e Clubs, Iterate* the came sentiments when she says: “No longer la a young woman will log to marry a mao with a moderate Income. The lore ln-a-oottago idea haa been ruthlessly destroyed by the onrush towards social ambitions. Character, ability and Intellectuality : . no longer weigh much in the social scales, and when one mother asks an a other If her dai goiter married well, the usual answer is affirmative or negative, according to the alse of the check the happy bridegroom can sign. Our Ideals hAVd been powdered with gold dust. Woman’s measure la taken In diamonds and Jewe'a, Instead of worth, womanliness and culture. The oomplexity of modern life has re duced the joy of living to a minimum. There are disagreeable truths, but, says Col. J. B. Kuiebrewln tie South ern Faun Magailne, the South Is to be congratulated that with all Its prog ress It has not gone to fait that money stands higher than character, or wealth than happiness. Southern wo man hava not yet Descended so low as to make themselves simple racks to hang rloh .Jewels and flna fabrics upon; nor are they ready to be put up at auction to the highest bidder. There le eomethlng ■ j exceedingly debasing In the thought of woman proatltutlng all the awee+< grxoeo, affections and . generous Impulses of her heart, all her gentle rtfloement and courtealee and kindly deeds that should maks her character sacred, all the loftf Ideals of bar nature that have illuminated the moral sense of the world for thousands of years—them Is some* - — thing so debasing in the thought bf misusing all these charms and virtues to pom as a gilded butterfly. la me absence of experience no sane mind would believe these things to be pussl ble In the South and iu our da? and generation. The writer has a peculiar admire tion for Southaru-born women. They am the guardians of our homes, the mothen of our children, the living examples of the highest human vlr- tues. We am unwilling and loath to belltvo anything disparaging to them Tat.when wo see so many hundreds that have no other occupation but to ransack mercantile houses for new ap parol for their adornment, sites. # theatres almost every day or night In the week, spend their most precious moments at card parties and dlallke to discharge any hwahold duties , whatever, wo fear them Is, sspeMally in the eities, a class growing up that is destined to roduoe the high stand ard and suss total of womanly virtu* A woman my so live ss to become the cynosure of all eye*; she may please by bar graces and attract by her wli; her aeecmplishments In music, poetry and the line arte, and enn in solid learning, may be great and her beau ty unrivaled; her pathway may bo as brilliant as that of a meteor and also as useless, unless she n quires a knowl edge of those domestic arte and duties and pleasing ways that make husband and home and ohlldmn happy. This knowledge is or mom value In life than all other knowledge, tor without it their Uvea would be miserable (all ures. A true woman la the living _ soul of homo, and to be a true woman She moat acqilro th.so habits and - . practice thoae domestic virtues with out which there Is no home. . A little mom than, fifty yearn ago one of the wealthiest man In the Booth married a girl who had been trained in all the duties of housewife ry. Her home wss a modal of thrift and neatness. Five daughters warn " bom to this couple, and as soon as they reached an age In which they , could bo made osefql, their mother r l** taoght them all the duties incumbent nsr-BoumOTr—^^SS up the house, at to the dining-room, oook anil sweetmeats. , They were also taught to milk, chum and even to dainty dsssarta than tbs girls of this ramlly. It followrnaturally that a girl so taught In the formative ptlod of her life fs fitted to become the hon ored wife, mother and mistress of s family. ,'Sbe openeth her mouth.with wisdom, and In her tongue Is the law of kindness. She looketh well to the ways of her boutholl, and oaCetb not the bread of idlenecs. Her children arise up and call bar blessed; her bus- band also, and he prslseth her.” The oxi mpie of the prudent Southern mother here given la not mm In the oountry pieces. There am thousad* of such homes, greatl? totheemdltof Southern women. There la a ten dency, however, In the town to ppa the manners of tbs money-loving wo men of the eltles. True, home-lov ing wives, like the most solid busi ness men of the cities must In a Urge degree or me from the intelligent oountrv homes. They are the nur series of the substantial virtues that bear womankind on to a hlghar and brighter destiny. 1 - - • PR1PA&I10 TOR CAMPAIGN. TIMELY RESOLYEP, WHICH SHOULD BE READ AND d ACTED ON BY ALL. Gen. Will* Jone* Announce* Date* CD for Meeting of Olube The Columbia State says Gen. *Wllto Jones, chairmen of the atata demo cratic executive committee, stated yesterday that the campaign Incident to the party primaries will soon com mence. He expects to call the exeou committee together about the 4 h of April In order to take up any matters which may require the attention of the committee before the meeting of the demicratlo olube. The meeting of the dubs will be held on the last Saturday In April, the 28th, and tbs county oouvantlons, made up of delegates selected at the olub meetings, will assembls on the 7th of May to elect delegates to the stats convention, a o unty executive committee andA member from each county to the stats democratic ax ou- tlve committee. On account of the lack of factionalism in the last few years there has not been much Inter eet Id organ x'ng party machinery, but It L probable that there will be mom care observed than usual In se lecting offioers of the parly for tne next two .years. —— The state demooratto convention will be held on the 16 i of May, that >elng the third Tuesday. It Is not known what matters will oome before the convention this year. After the [meeting of thd convention the new state executive committee will make iw m wash and laundry the clothing. The theory of this practical mother was that though her daughters might never be eomy ailed to perform these duties, vet they would be the better Ada to Instruct their servants in the work If they knew how to perform It themselves. It will be interesting to our readers to know that all five of these daughters made model house wives. They married men not for their wealth, but for their ability, in telligence and worth. Not on# of these girls haa failed to meat all the demands of society, and their homm am among the moat hospitable and the heat kept In the Sooth. Their m- tertalnmenu am frequent, and It is considered quite a privilege to be In vited to one of them. The practi cal teachings of the mother made att her daughters model housekeep er*. There Is no slovenness, no wait of r satnsm or oomfort about the howee. Everything la well ordered and wall administered. thine quite as Impor- M M seldom any troule honae-servents. The trained Of snob homes being fpfly With and able to la never an- or uaottoff with hat • knows what they* ought to do ft. The aamaia Kerb one of the along lines decided upon In the oon ventlon. The itinerary will be map ped out by the exeou Jve committee. The party constitution says that them shall be one or more ylubs in each ward or township and that the clubs shall meet on the fourth Satur day In April In itats election years, tht county conventions the first Mon day In Ms? and tha state convention the third Wednesday Iq May. Tne qualifications for voting In ths state primaries am that the person who desires to vote must have bean a r sident of tha state 12 months and of tha oou ity 60 days, who must pledga htnuslf to sb'.de by the result of this primaries, and hi* name must be on the club Hits at laaat five days before the first primary. FLRETY Of BOCZL .■ ,■ Thay Will Bring Better and Hap- ; pier Times to Any Termer Who Observes Them. I will have a money crop, bat I will not go wild over any one staple. I will ss nearly as possible keep an accurate account of my meelpta and my expenoea. * I win study ths expertenoaiof other farmers and tha counsel of agricul tural scientists, and will profit by these labors. —I will give my eblldron the beat eda- oatlcnal advantage* I can afford, and I will try to make that education bear direct'y on their life work. I win try to get my neighbors to start a movement for better roads, and will see that our preeent laws are rigidly enforced. If possible, I will organise s r me kind of fanners’ club At my school- bouse, so that the farmers?and their famUlee may meet every two weeks for social and Intellectual Improve- ocCht? I will co-operate with my brother farmers as much ss possible In the purchase of supplies and In all other matters which reward united action., I will study the fertiliser problem, and see If 1 cannot expend my guano money mom economically. I will look Into the matter of 1m proving my breeds of borsss, cattle, hogs and poultry, and co operate with my neighbors to this end. I will try to get the beet mall ser vice possible for our rural district*. I will see If the town nearest me would rot purchase certain supplies which I can raise, and pay me a larger profit than I gat from staple crops. I will send for catalogues of farm advertisers, and make better tools and machinery do soma of the work that would otherwise require high-priced labor. Seeing that my health la my capi tal, I will look to Its preservation by living temperately and aooording to the common law* of health, and not by dosing with patent nostrums whose ingredients I know nothing of. I will encourage the Study of agri culture In the schools. Besides trying to have the beet farm I will try to have the happiest home in the neighborhood, and will try -to ^iSElgy? 01wl,e * ml cbll<1 "“ The Jag Trade Verv Lively la City ol Spartan burg. We dip the following from the Spartanburg Herald of last Sunday: “How to the jug trade holding out?” asked the Herald reporter of a mem ber of the derloal force of ths South ern Express company late Monday afternoon, as the latter was rubbing the perspiration from bis brow with a ladj’s sited handkerchief. "How? Id the anguage of the Bed Raven. ‘Ask the Men.’ He pointed to an enclosure on the right side of the big atom room where an employee sat bent over a book and heaps and aUoks of bills figuring away In the csml gloom ing of a premature spring day. A step acrost the room and to the railing was a matter of a few momenta and after a regular exchange of greet ing, the express man said; “The Jug trade Is holding Its own ajl right Ji would say, as Flafe estimate, that on an average seventy-five gallons of whiskey per d*y are shipped into Spartanburg. This doesn’t mean that every train coming into this town la heavily laden with boose; but It em phasizes that them Is a great deal of hard work hem. Tt HD’t A nags of rural trea delivery cither .Persons ordering whiskey are not »o modest or oboloe as to wait at home for their Jugs or bottles to be sent there. They oome hem for teem. They coma in boats 'tod droves, and after the arrivals of the trains, the evening trains especially, them Is something doing about this enclosure I have a time keeping them outside the rolling. If business picks up, I’m of the opinion that the local express effloe will remind the route agents tod the division superintendents of the hoc xe trt (Hoof some great oity whldnsuddenly and unexpectedly want x Burned to Deatb. Miss Maggie Swartz, whom home was In Columbia, was the victim of a horrible death by fire at Killians In Richland county Thursday. She was visiting near Killians st the time and was out watching a number of men burn off aright of way fora tram road. 8b* was caked to extinguish a firo In a turpentine box which caught fire near bar and in throwing an apron full of sand on It, the flames shot oat and enveloped her and set firo to her olothlng. She ran soroaming and be fore aha oould bo overtaken aha was dead. The body was found In undar- bush a short distance away, not even end* - I will improve and beautify tha home buildings and ground*. I will gat tee best books and papers for my family to read. 1 will take a short vacation with my wife after the crop* are laid by. I will try to lighten the housework, as wall aa the farm work, by Improved Implements and app! lances, and I will have the water supply as convenient ss petslbte. ~ T ' I will not let slick-tongued agents persuadeCme Into buying articles I do not need, or Into paying two prices for those I do need. I will not be humbugged into paying two prices for food for my stock mere ly tx cause It Is put op In gayly-oolor- ed packages and boosted with high- sounding testimonials. I will not waste money for finery, bat I will not help tee oomie cartoon lata by being boorish or careless in my dress. . 1 will visit my neighbor and try to make the community an attractive ■octal center. I will put my brain as well as my — Marla Brower, a negro woman, at tempted to commit suicide at Green- ▼Uls by pouring a gallon of keroeene oil over henelf and applying a match When found she was without clothing and her body a mus of bun*. Before tht oil method, the woman throw henelf in tiont of a train, bat wm driven away before the looono- uro reached her. She Isa oooalns must 1* Into everything that I do. Not only will I try to use the most progressive faming methods, but I will also endeavor to lute net my farm laborers in better methods by having them road good literature. 1 will raise ai many vegetables In the garden is tha family can use, end thus save the buying of hlgh-plfoid grooerl«. 1 will take an Interest In pell bios and will trv to get my party to sup port the beet men and tha beat poll- otes, and I will not abuse Jhoae who differ with me. —— f I will get as many of my neighbors as I can to road the farmer’s bulletins and farm papers so that they may co operate with me In bringing^ better farming methods. I will Investigate the profftl my wife makes on poultry, and see If the Industry oould not be profitably ex tended. I will try to keep plenty of fruit, milk and eggs, for family am and win enlarge my orchard. I will encourage the pltotlng of flowers about the bouse, and ti reasonable effort to make home beau tiful. As a farm’s bast crop, after all, Is Us crop of strong, sturdy men, and pure, sweat women, I will do all loan both by precept and example, to train my children for useful, happy livot. Ltstly, I will not worry. If any evil can be remedied, I will remedy It losing no time In worrying: If It can not ba remedied, I win not make It doubly evil by worrying about It. The above from tee Raleigh Prog ressive Farmer and. Gotten Plant Is foil of many good suggestions, white will be uaefvl to farmers If followed. Senator Tillman, The Washington correspondent of the Charleston Poet says: “Ben Till man’s Increasing prominence In the Senate, where for the next month or more be will be the strom center of railroad legislation; his growing popu larity In the oountry at large, deejte his rough and tumbel habits; the proe- peote that ha may be a big factor In the future poll ties of the United Statee, make the question of his ro- eleotloo a moat Interesting eoe. Prominent men of South ntrollnt, even many who dlallke TUlman and would like to aee him defeated, seri ously doubt whether any man can ba brought out who oan hope to prevent hie return to the body he now sits In.” Twelve Dead. A dlapatoh from Birmingham, AJa.» fosmngSTi arriving from points the Piper mlnaa, where a gas oeennsd lata yestardayflaf- roport that tweire mttmrs an mi, seven fatally hut and halt TAYORB A HHTH6. Till Dtepen- Thinks the > Shoald Get Together. Tillman, .who was In Go lumbla for a few hoars Thursday, thinks that the dispensary people should gel together and orgsr zt on the ttme basis as the anti-dispensary people are supposed to be organized on. Senator Tillman said that he hid given but little thought to t*e pro posed oonfererce. He favored It b - cause he tbo^g it that the dispensary people should orgtn'z >. ‘ “Tne other side was organised,” b* said, “and prohibitionists, high lloens* and lcc\l option people In the legislature v jted for the bill to do away with the State dispensary., I think teat It li noth log but fair that tne dtspeesary peo pie hold a conference. I would not suggest the time or place and I do not know who would call It, but I think the idea a good one. I have been too buay to think about it, how ever, end the coming fight on the railroad bill will oall for my entire time during the n x ten days. My testimony before toe Investigating committee shows ezaotly how I stand and there to nothing to add to teat ” Senator Tillman expeete to oall up the railroad rate bill as soon ss a vote has been taken In tbel senate on the statehood bill. JThls Is schedul 'd f r March 9bh and It is possible that he will call up his hill before them, n though not probable. The railroad rate bill la now on the .calendar. “The bill will probably pam,” said tee senator, "and the principal fight will be on the proposed amendment for court supervision of rates. This means that the courts would be given the power of Injunction to prevent the enforcement of rates before revised by teem. The supporters of the bill, bow eror< do not favor this, but wish t» give the railroad pomnlssion power to put rates Into effect after 30 days’ no ilea. The bill will pam tba senate without amendmente, I think. I ex pect to fight for it and expect tee support of all of the Democrats and a large number of the Republicans.” ^ The senator did not care to disoues State Issues on account of bla severe cold, but he paused long enough in his remarks on the railroad bill to say that he was opposed to biennial set- slons and that ba thought the legisla ture acted wisely in killing the pro posed amendment' providing for ses- * tion put are then more easily led Into error. ‘Eternal vigilance is the prloe of 11b erty’ and tee people In some of the New England States are so j :alous of these rights that they hold elections every year.” HIM WRBSTRR AT HOUR. A bloody bind. Nervous Debility—(Lost Vital- COLORADO'S ASSASSINS ABOUT the worst on record. put the people to sleep and they EMing of Lyte Gregory In West She Was Met In Spartan bare bv Her A Brother. Pauline Webster, tee young South Carolina woman who created a sens* tion out West by masquerading in male attire and who fall In love with a pretty young woman employed oaahler in a restaurant and married her, and who was arrested by officers when her eex wpe discovered, was in Spartanburg Tuesday night en route to her old horns at'Cowpens. Tba Spartanburg Journal says she was Joined In that city by her brother, W. E, Webster of Oowpeni. The brother and slater had not lean each other for thirteen yean. Mim Webster Is the only South Carolina women who ever married a woman. Her married career was very short, tor eoqn after she accepted the attractive Kansas City restaurant girl as her wife, her sex was dls- cloead. Complaint was made to the polio* authorities of Kansas Olty and - she was arrested though after a legal battle of several days Mim Webster secured bar release. The much written shout young wo man attracted a great deal of atten 11 n whan she alighted from the train from Asheville. A large crowd of cu rious people gathered In the waiting room and'oraned their necks to get a Wof the yehng woman. Tha ud-lftCle or no attention to the efowd. ^ —v Mim Webster has been away from her home for about thirteen yean It Is said teat she q isrrehd with her relatives after the death of her father and toft her home.. Her brother be lieved her to be dead, for after leav . log her home nothing was heard of UwleM her until her arrest in Kansas City. “ “ So confident were her brothen that aba was dead teat at fint they doubt ed If the young woman was in reality their sister. In order to determine the matter W. E. Webster made a trip to Kansas City for the purpose of Identifying the young woman. Mim Webster, it 1s said, will fall Into pomeaalon of valuable property at Geffrey. X He Raq .Away, Lieut. Arthur H. l'reewater, of the Twenty-ninth Infantry, who recently fled to Mexico from hla army post In Texas, where ha was confronted with charges of embezzlement of company funds and swindling of enlisted men, was dropped from the army roll as a dawrtar, having been absent without leave for threeCmontbs. The Depart ment of Justice and the State Depart ment will not relax In their afforts to aecuro the arrest and extradition of Lieut. Freshwater. Sailor* ItMcaed. After a night of horror on tee deck of their vessel with death almost star ing thorn In the face for hours, ths orew of the four-masted schooner George M. Grant from Bruniwick, Ga, to Perth Ambart, N. J., lumber laden, white went ashore at Gape Henry, ware rescued Wednesday ar m. by tea Norfolk with tho ship wracked men. The indications are that tha vssael will boa total lorn. - Many Dtowm*. Tha storm last weak did oposldeia, ble damage to shipping on tho ooast- ~ many people wen drowned. The Daniel WUllard tank on tho a oooet aad Ire men were drowned, and four warn lost on vtomI not Cm trims Philadelphia. OrganTed Labor Ret Responsible lor thefutrages In the West of la a Years. A dlspitoh from Denver, Oolorado says Jamts McParland, general mint ger of the western division of the PiL- kerton agency, upon where report t‘ • offioers of tha Western Federation ol Miners ware arrested, unarged with elog Implicated In the murder of ex- G •vernor 8u unenburg, makes the xost sweeping chargee against tee men under yresty ao;uelug them of tbir.y murders which have ocourrod In Western statee during the peat live yeara # "Y .u can rey for me that an at tempt to kill Justice Goddard of the state supreme c .urt was made last May. We dug up the bomb that was to have b en the ' Instrument of d- struct ion at tee gate if hie residence he declared In rop’y to the sensatloop' report from Idaho that Harry O - ohard, acting ’Or the Westsrr Federa tion of Miners had endeavored to put an end to the j .stloe. “I will not say who the man who was to d tee work or why tee plahs failed at this t m •, but tee at tempt'was made during the meeting of the Western Federation of Miners 1 executive committee at Salt L ka last May. “When Merritt B Walley was kil - ed by an explosion of dynamite in a vacant lot at the oorner if Emerson -and Colfax avenues last summer te revsd another j istlce of the o.urt. A bomb killed Wslley, but it was not intended for bim. Wno it was In tended for will all come out in du? time. “When I make tease statements d not think that I am theorizing, for 1 am not. 1 have absolute evidence to p ove every assertion that I make and I make no assertions until I have the evidence. “Beginning with the murder of Ar thur Collins, superintendent of the Smugglers Union In Tellurlde. tee as sassination of Martin Gleason of the Wild horse In Cripple Greek, the- kill log of Smith and Barn s In Tellurlde^ the heartless destruction of fourteen men at the Independence^ depot In Cripple Greek, the brutal 'assault of the Den ver two years ago, the death of W&l ley and the murder of other men In this state and Idaho, who bad Itou.- red their enmity—all of these, crimes can be, and will bn, If necessary, laid at doors of men we all know, hut they will never be punished for tbtm “Tueir last work, the assassination of the popular ax executive of Idaho, proved their undoing, and when they nave accounted for this deed It will be impoesible to punish them for what they bav3 done in Oolorado and for the reign of terror thet they have ere ated among the honest and lax-abld Ing people of this state. “Wnen the full history of tffifc* Colorado crlmaa will b* given to the world I cannot state, but it will be just as soon ss we poeslbly oan do It. I»will shook the people of this state, but thay must know about It F^r the present, only the story of the Stcnnenberg assassination can be made public and this will be divulged aa soon as the men we have already arrested and those that we ate about to arrest are placed on trial fer ttclr crimes. _________— “There are Just as good men In the Western Federation of Miners as ever lived, but they oould not help them selves after they found cut the kino of men that bad got c ntrol over them. Every member of the Western Federation of Miners who dared to oppose the wishes of three men stood in fear of his life, and there will be many sighs of reltof whan these men are removed and the sun finally seta on the day of dynamiters In the West and the strong arm of the law metes out justice. “1 say unqualifiedly that the crimes and operatloos of three men are the more horrible that I have ever beard ot* 3Rt I said before, tha Molly Me gulres were nothing compared with these men. “Organized labor Is not responsible for tea outrages in the West of late yean, but the clique of evil-minded men at the head of the Western Fed eration of Miners, who were deter mloed to run things la the. West to tactics whenever necessary “We have not made all of our ar rests, but I think we have done very well for the present. The man If yon suffer from Nerrous Debility, or nervout proetra ion, lost vitality etc, ait down and-writa a letier-to D-. Ha haway explaining just how you suffer. Hmbas restored many a weojf, w, m out, nervous and hr *ken down pan to perfect health end manhood by his method of treatment. Yon oan conanlt him with j"st as much confidence as you would your family d- ctor, so h ve no hesitancy ,wha ever in writhip. By doing ao you do not ob ligate yourself take treatment. wanted the most—Steve Adams, alias Steve Dickson—has just been oaplur ed in Baker Olty, Ore. “Harry Orchard, the man first ar rested for the murder of former Gov ernor Steunenberg, may have or may have not made a confession. I will not say whether or not ha did make sheba confession re attributed to him. I was compelled In working up my cue to use some of his statements aa Well as the ststemanta of others, but I did not oall upon him for a con fess oa implicating Moyer, Haywood and Pettlbjo*. Numerous efforts were made to intimidate the man Into say ing things against himself, but I re fused to allow this. “I certainly have not dropped this ease, even though the principal male factors are in custody. I have got nearly all of my case—yes, all of It— hut 1 am not going to stop here, I am going to get every detail of the opera tions of there men and they will fur nish some surprists, too.” Tnirty Drowned. Thirty men ware drowned Wednes day night by' ter wreck between Hangreund and Bergen, of the Nor wegian o tasting sohnooer Thor. ’Rib veerel’s cable broke during a hurricane and she was blown asbero and Only terse of the crew were roved. Harder ed Tbree. Two armed negroes entered ths store of Frank Botto, an agsd Ital ian,'at Gross Point, Near New Ore- leans, La, on Monday night and shot him daad. fatally wounded his two sons, aged 13 and 14, and than robbed tbestoro. ity.) Cured by an —i #1 If You Have Thi* Disease, Sit Down and Write Df. Hathaway of Atlanta, Qa —The South’s Most Expert and Reliable special ist. With His Method ol Treatment He Has Cured Hun dreds. Special Treatment for Each Ca«e. Small Cost. If yon have dull headache*, fell blue, have bad dream*, cant »leep, get ti-ed eaey, poor memory, impotent, have unnatural diaohargea, te., you ihould consult Dr. Hathaway at onoa. He ti. given this oondi ion ^wcial rudy for nearly a quarter century and U reoognixed ae en expert in iu treatment. He haa recently iaaueoa very in te re-ting booklet on thi* ■ob ject which he will send to every man wntting him im, free of charge. He Also Cores other private and chronic diseasee of men and women, *uch a* Kidney and Bladder Di* a*ee, Stricture, Varicocele, Hydrocele, Specific Blood Poison (Syphilis), Disease* of the Heart, Liver and Stomach, CaUriab, Rheumatism, Skin Diseases, Piles, Rupture, Ecxema, Di* eases pecul'ar t-> women, such as Leuc-orhoe, Womb end Ovarian Troubles, Kemale Weak ness, Nervousness, etc. If you are afflicted sit down and write him a letter, explaining just how yon suffer. He will give yon his expert •pinion of your case and a valuable book on -vour disease free of ohargC Remember, when you consult Dr. 'Hathaway you consult an upright and. reputable physi cian who has s reputation for honestly, integri ty and for superior medical service that is un equalled in his line of treatment. H»»e im> hesitancy whatever in consulting him. Die address is Dr. Hathaway A Co, 88 Inman bdlg. Atlanta, Ga. -X 1 | Early Cabbage Plants Guaranteed to Satisfy Purchaser j laaiVJIRSZT CHARLESTON succession aUOUtTA SHORT stemhzd WAKEFIELD LARGE TYRB „ TRUCKER FLAT DUTCH TheKarliest WAKEFIELD Tfc« Karllest Flat A little Uur Largest aad Latest Cabbage Grown Second Earliest Head Variety * than Sncoeaalon Cabbage PRICE: In lets efl tn4 «. at tl-N per *C, • te f m. at U-2S per 10 ■. **d ever, atll.OC per m. r. O. B. YOUMC-a isi_and, a. C. My Special Express Rats *■ Plants la Very Lew. * f* - I guarantee Plants to give purchaser satisfaction,VrwillrefMMl the purehaae Guarantee prloe to any customer who is dlssstistted st sod of sessOu. These plants are grown la the open *614700 Brae oast of South Carolina, In a climate that la fust salted to growing the hardiest plants that can be grown In ths united States. These plants can be - 0 f guottiera states daring tha months of January, February, and reset In tbe March. The; Two to Interior yjrin st > Three \ stead severe wlthont being Injured, i ol I will yoa grew year own plants Iramea My Largest Customers are the Market Gardeners Bear the Interior towns and cities of the Sonth. Their pro lit depends upon them having Early Cabbage; for that reason they pur- chess sty pleats for their orops. _ _ . w a full line of otheitPlauts and Fruit Trees, euch as Strawberry, . — ad — TemetoljAnr Plant end Pepper Plants; Apple, Peech,'Peer, Flam, Cherry Trees, frig Bushes, and Grape Vines. Special terms ts persons whs erdsn. Wins t« Sweet Potato, aad Aprioot 1LS--WM. C GERATY.JE™, YOUNG'S ISLAHD. A C effineffiewiMW MiiFWfWMMafifM wtfi CABBAGE PUNTS FOR SALE. X ] -1 have had aeveral years experience ia growing Cabbage Plants for the trade * aad have reedy for auipmeat Barly Jersey Wakefields, Char eaton Largs Type 1 Wakefields, Henderson S oceos whl jh ar* the best known varieties to eiperieno- J 100. Lot* of 5,000 at 11.25 per 1.00Q. Special pricer on large orders. The ex- 4 C ress company is giving us cheap rates for plant* this season. All plants will j e shipped C. O. D, unless you prefer to send the money with the orders. Your 4 —orders will have my prompt and personal attention. Give me a trial order. Address all orders to B. J. DONALDSON, MEGGETTS, S. C. Tpewewe—pepew—mmmii—hihihimimm mmm " 1 _ — 1 ■ ..'i 1 COTTON QINNERS AND MACHINERY OWNERS Write for Prices on the Pollowtax Babbit Couplings Guages Lubricators Balt^Gaadv Drills Guage Cocks Oil Cups Belt, Rubber Drill^Press Hack Saws Oil Cans Belt, leather Ejectors Hammers * Fittings Injectors Pipe Files Pulleys Lace Leather, Packing all kinds, Shafting, Collars for Shifting ani anything else In machinery supplies. Cdreteta Sapply Ce„ • • • • Colnabia, S. C. f The Guinard Brick Works, \ Manufacturers Briok. Fire Proof Terra Jjtta 3illiii{'3t nt o' Flue linings and Drain Tile. Prepared to fill orders for thou ands " or millions. - ■■■■—■•Eiiriiiiri————»p>i — i •1r TO SPOT COTTON N0LDRR8. They Are Advised to Hold for Fifteen iuk i GJ AJLJUID GROANING. It te Yowr Own Femlt If Yon Oontla- Conte. Mr. Hervle Jordan, president of tee Soutltern Cotton Aiaoelatioj, to confident that cotton will go up a little later, and in oonsequenoe be ad vices all spot holders of potton to bold on. Here to what he says: About tee middle of last N vember tba Southern Cotton Association advised all spot holders to demand fifteen cente per pound, basis middling, tor ths balance of tbe unsold portion of the present crop and pledge* were aaked for nine ty days. Tbe Mammouth Gotten Con vention held at New Orleans, Lv, January 11th—13th, 1906 paased a resolution unanimously endorsing the holding movement for fifteen cents, and advocated, the continued holding of the unsold portion of the.oiop for that prloe Independent of the 90 day pledging. The Eiecltlve Committee of the Association subsequently en dorsed the action of the Goa ventlon and all spot holders ware earnestly asked te stand firm until a maximum prlee of fifteen oenta was offered. Re member one year ago cotton sold at ■even cents per pound In February and advanced te over tan oenta early in July In the face of a 14,000 000 bale crop. This year the crop to 3^500,000 bales lore. Consumption to far greater this year than last, and priore of all lines of cotton goods abnormally high. If tee small balance of the cotton now held be sold for fifteen oenta, the whole cropjiill not average over Hi oenta par pound. Reoalpta will, soon drop eff heavily and a stronger mar ket will be bad. Do not rush your cotton on tha market, but hold It and win out In the groat struggle that to on between the spot holders on tee one side and •peculators, spinners and buyan on the other. Piiitoo or Organ 7 rami __n F*or You. T# the head af every family who is ambi tion* for tW future aad education of his ohil- dran, w# have * Special Proposition to make. No article ia the home shows tha ovidanoa of culture that doaa * Piano or Organ. No ao- oomplishment giva* aa much pleasure or is of a* great value ia after life a* tho knowledge of music and tbs ability to play well. Our Small Payment Plat ■ makea ewaer- ahip of a high grade Piano or Orgmi easy. Twrxw taw iirares/ svr vresiAiugumm maw iai Proposition of Easy Payment*. Addrre' Helens ■ Untie Go., Columbia, 8. 0. ‘bdtifciwi'S $5,000““o*" *• t4» 8nff w ' ■ Wby do you go around the house complaining, making yourself and everybody else miserable? It Is your Own fault If you suffer from Rheuma- jr^' tism, Sciatica, Gout or other painfc* ' troubles that oome from bad bl Science has at last found a complef an palatable cure for all these disei — After years of careful study of t_. cause and cure of auch diseases. RHEUMACIDE was discovered. Rheumacide has been used in thous ands of cases that were deemed incur able and has performed complete cures. Rheumacide has cured Affertamous specialist have failed, and has cured a number of sufferers who spent months at the noted Johns Hopkins Hospital in vain. __ The reason RHEUMACIDE cures When liniments, oils and all other remedies have failed is that it goes right to the seat of the disease, sweeps the poisonous germs and acids out of the blood, and removes the cause. It “jrete ftUhe Jolnta from, the Inside.’ 1 "kHEUMACIDE builds up the en tire system, and “makes you well all over.” • Mrs. Laura D. Gardner, of 1301 James street, Baltimore, was cured ar er she had suffered the most terri ble torture for sixteen ye^rs. She writes: , t u Peop !f * j my neighborhood, where I have lived for more than twenty years, will testify as to my condition cured by RHEUMA- cide. At times my suffering was so great I .oould not bear to be toubhed, and mjrclothing had to be torn from roc. 1 write you this letter because I feel so grateful for the benefit I 1 have received, and am daily recom mending the medicine te my friends ” V Blood. It hi^ ray ,l5 Ir °fl Mjfture is a genuine blood making, blood purifying tonic, a remedy that brings the color to pale cheeks, stimulates digestion and gives an appetite, keen In every meal, and strength and energy for the day’s work. MURRAY S IRON 'MIxfURE** to the best “Spring Tonic” when used to prevent diseases and to fortify tbe system against the lassltode, debility, and the tired, exhausted, “run dowQ’ , condition so common at. this season f An excellent tonic for use in ha.iepA ing coovaleecence from any Illness.'Il ' to not a temporary stimulant, but'- ,gly« lasting beoefit-tbe good in every oose ■ticks. Prepared from a formula “■f* 1 J*** Practice of many success ful physicians. Price 6<tota. Guaranteed sattofactory to every purchaser. UGJ8TORE8? IMLFarafralA Nstasl •oo nu< Board at Cow.’ Murray Drag Co., * Columbia, & Q,