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Witti it ilirwiturrm- m f - ■ ^jM^-ifcwanOT Ki*t. *.. r - York to SIXTY PEOPLE. he b How Overdue Several Day* «ad b Supposed to Have Fouad- «Mi M Sea Off the Coart of North Carolina Lart Saturday—She Was An Old Vessel. ¥•> ■r New York, Feb. 2.—The Mattory- ateamahip San Marcos, which bTlTSre~on WSdneaday for Galvca- Texaa. with ten passengers and a crew of SO was reported today to ~ha mining and there arc grave feara that she Is'the-’vvasid which went down off Jwilzabeth CKy, N. G., an Saturday. The San Marcos was due to ph»s Band Key, near Keywest on Suuday Bight, but up to today she had not been cited off that point. The At lantic and Gulf of Mexico have been scoured with wireless messages to the Ban Marcos, but up to today there has been no reply from the ves- nri. The Ifallory line officials here to te? declared that they had no unx- ety as to the saiety of- U»e Ben WjM eeppletely engulfed. Not a single spar, not B boat nor even a piece of drift wood has been found. Her stern was spouting smoke and flames When she was last seen and she seemed as if to plunge downward nose first. There was a tremendous sea run ning when the unknown vessel went to tbs bottota. This prevented the Savannah approaching the vessel. But the Savannah was herself en gaged In keeping her head on to the storm and could not have ren dered assistance If her officers had wanted to. Tfie Savannah sighted the ,tnt* known vessel hours before she sank. But both vessels were engaged In fighting their way through the ter- riffle gale with the thermometer at the time at nearly zero. -Both vflsela kept plunging on to the southward, but no signs over cargo from the stranger. The un known vessel seemed to he weather ing the storm well enough until the flames broke out at hfiX^Sterh' arid she went down In a few minutes.i The San Marcos was In cotnmgnd of Captain Davidson. She ts of't,- 188 tons, .117 feet long, 39 feet beam and draws 21 feet of water. She had a single funnel and two mas’s. HISTORY BEGINS FIGHT - HITS THEM HARD Southern OF A BEAtTIFUL FRENCH OIRL A • Chicago-OoaBVJHbMa Her HKVKNTKKN minkrn killed. Marcos, but the? were forced to ad mlt that they have heard nothing Deadly Ex plosion in Coal Mine Near Itirniingham. Birmingham, Ala., Feb. 2.—Sev enteen men are dead as the result .aI. an..^xpIo6ian lxi tkc ^’o. 2 Short Is Convicted and Prison. Sentenced - TILLMAN THE LEADER Creek Mines of the,Birmingham Coal and Iron Company this morning. 7 from the If earner since she left here FI v e of the dead are white and last Wednesday. She is due In Gal- vestion tomorrow, but should have been spoken by other vessels long before this. A message from Key West today Mated that anxiety over the San Marcos had reached that city and wireless messages had been sent out for a radius of 160 miles from Sand Key, calling for the San Marcos. She has not replied. None of the vessels passing Sand Key have reach ed the missing boat. The San Mareos is nearly 20 years Old, and Is one of the more old fashioned kind of iron vessels. She was at one time a Ward llncfifthen was sold to the government for an army transport for service during the Spanlsh-American war and since heen lri the Mai lory i . oarvle? between here and Galveston, Texaa. The vessel that went down near the Diamond Shoals lightship, off Elisabeth City, N. C., so far as can - • be learned, was nnt unUka the-San Marcos in appearance. She had a passenger deck like the San Marcos, Was plainly a coaster and flow the United States ensign. ^ The vessel that went down on - Diamond Shoals was afire at the etern. She was soon by the observ er at Cape Hatteras, by the man aboard the Diamond Shoala llght- Tlblp and also by those on the Suvan- aah line steamship. Savannah, which was nomruff at the time. The strange feature of the vessel foundering is that not a trace of her tea been on the sea since. She twelve are negroes. The explosion occurred between 11 and 12 o'clock,,, and is thought to have been caused by a windy shot. The mines are about ten miles wes* of Ensley, on'the Birmingham, Sou thern Railroad, apd are difficult of access. The seventeen bodies were taken from the mines this morning, and the rooms and passages are clear tonight. The mine itself is prac tically uninjured. Alex Bonneyman, general manag or of the company, was the first to leave Birmingham for the scene of the disaster, although Mine Inspec tors Millhous and Flynn hurried to the fcemt- to-render what aid they could and to make mr inspection. Officials of the company did not know the exact number of men in the mine at the time of the accident, but they state tonight that 17 fa talities will be the total. Chicago, Feb. 1.—A pitiful story of a beautiful girl snatched from the streets of Paris and lured to the United States today resulted In the conviction of Heary Lair, charged by the government with promotfhg the “white slave” traffic In this country. •. ; ^ Lair was sentenced by Judge Lan dis to serve two years In the govern ment prison at Leavenworth, Kan., and to pay $2,600 fine. The next case tcT be tried 1r that of Luclle D’Arvallle, Lair’s supposed wife, who was Indicated with him on charge of importing French grils to this country In violation of the immigra tion laws. Marie Peuroy, 19 years old, was the chief witness for the govern ment. When 14 years old, she said, she met in the streets of Pari? Jules Dufour, who later Introduced her to Louis Paynt, now in the government prison at Atlanta, Ga. Paynt induc ed her to come to America and brought her to Chicago, where she fell Into the hands of Lair, who came from San Francisco. The girl informed immigration officers of her plight and she was finally rescued Julies Dnfour, who met the girl In Paris, is a brother of Alphonse Du four, forfeited $25,000 cash bail, following indictment for white slav ing in Chicago, and fled to France, where they were recently convict ed in a French court. Against tlw Confirmation Crum at Port Colicctcr. of TRUSTS CANNOT COLLECT DEBTS Through courts. Mi Two ilrakcmen Perish. _ Waxahachln, Tex., Feb. l.-^L. _B Smith and T. L. Galloway, brake- men on the Trinity and Brazos Vai ley Railroad, were crushed to death under a locomotive near here today. Galloway’s head was severed from his body. The engine was derailed. GOOD JOB FOB TEDDY. Some Connecticut Yankees Want to Show Him About. Washington, Feb. I.—An offer oi $1^000 a week, engagement for thirty weeks, with an organization to be known as “Roosevelt’s Con gress of Rough Riders,” has been formally made to President Roose velt by a former circus man, acting for a Bridgeport, Conn., syndicate In his letter the circus man asked for an appointment. He considers $10,000 going some. The syndicate is ready to furnish a private car or two, Alt the preaiednt is asked to do is to make one appearance in the show. His part will be to lead a charge of San Juan Hill, followed by a Buffalo Bill outfit. Costly Banquet. New Orleans, Fob. 1^—It will cost $25 to attend the Taft banquet here on Saturday night, February 13. This was decided upon today by the executive committee In charge J No arrests have been made, thougb of the details of Taft’s reception warrants for the Comers have been on his approaching visit here. issured. Attacked by Ruffians. Montgomery, Ala., Feb. 2.— Fletcher and Donald Comer,’sons of Governor Comer, a few days ago knocked down Frank P. Glass, ed itor of the Montgomery Advertiser when they met him on the street And He Hopes to Prevent the Con firmation of Crum by the Kejiate and Force President-Elect aft to Select Some One Else in Hit> Stead. — Washington, Feb. 2 —The Senate spent all of this afternoon in ex excutlve session, and if-the account* that have leaked out are correct, Senator Tillman will probably give tie Republlcaff •ffiembers of that body much trouble over the confir mation of W. D. Crum, as collector for the port of Charleston, before the present session ends. According to what is said, the ses sion was devoted not alone to the question of negroes, but also to Chinese and Japanese. Senators Bacon and McLaurin as sisted Senator Tillman by discussing at length the present day question of the treatment of Japanese in Cali fornia, and this led into a still fur ther discussion of the Chinese, all of which was brought out to help in the “fllllbuster’’ that Senator Till man has inaugurated against Crum. With the help of the two Senators named he was able t6 at least keep the matter down today, and it is understood that from this time on he will be assisted by practically all the Democrats In the Senate.^ Al though he was called down by the application of the Senate rules, he was able to beat off Senator Frye and others who are clamoring for Crum’s confirmation. The pitchfork was brandished considerably, it is <aid, and after several hours spent in an unsuccessful attempt to put Crum through, the executive ses sion came to an end with Senator Tillman so far the victor. There Is not the least doubt now that a first class ‘“fillibuster” is on, and that if Senator Tilman does not overdo himself in the attempt to hold off Crum's nomination, he will eventually be usccessful. Today's developments have given hope to those who have been fo! lowing the case that the matter will go over, and that the efforts now be ing made to force Crum on the peo ple of Charleston for another terb, will come to and end with the Roose velt administration. Executive sessions are secret, and those Senators who take part in the deliberations generally decline to tell what takes place, but those who were on the outside today are firmly con vinced that. Senator TILlman means, business', and that if he continues to like the negro, the Japanese and the Chinese question together in or der to kill time he will eventually win out in the effort to defeat Crum. BUY FROM US chlnery r ^>up] Sup] lea United States Supreme Court Up holds Jobber's Contention Against Continental Wall Paper Company. Washington, Feb. 1.—The case of the Continental Wall Paper Com pany vs. Lewis Voight & Sons of Cincinnati was today decided by the supreme cqurt of the United States In Volght s favor. The suit was brought by the company on a debt of $57,060, the payment of which was resisted on the ground that the paper company is a trust. In effect the decision holds that an admitted trust, organized contrary to the Sherman anti-trust law, can not; use the court to collect debts. ft was represented that Voight had bought over $200,000 worth of paper, on which he had paid 50 per cent more than he would have had to pay if there had been com petition. It was also set out that the Continental Company had been organized to conduct the business of the various wall paper factories of the United States and that Voight as a jobber in its products, had been compelled to sign a strict agreement on the threat that if he did not do so no paper would be sold to him and that it would be made impos sible for him to continue in busi ness. in a demurrer the company admit ted that it was a trust and still con tended that it could properly collect debts duo it. On this showing the company's petition was dismissed by the trial court and Its decision was affirmed by the United States circuit court of appeals for the Sixth circuit. Today’s opinion was by Justice Har lan, and sustained the decision of of the lower courts. Justice Brewer, White, Beckham and Holmes dis sented. Justice Harlan’s opinion was of r-onsiderable length and dealt in de tail with the various phases of the case. ’ It was f>ased on the third defense of Voight, that the company is part of a trust. Ho started out with the proposition that the Con tinental Company is within the pro hibition of the Sherman ant, which, he said, is clear from the facts set forth iJT its defense. He then went on to show that this corporation is the representative of combination which would have the effect not on ly of restraining, but of monopo lizing the sale and manufacture of paper. 31 * 1 9 1 QQLUMBIA, 8 0. IF ITS GIBBS IT IS GOOD SIT IIP AND TAKE NOTICE! For» UmlUd time we ere offering thin Mgh-vmde * outfit et a special price. For $277.50 road etwtton thin • ■. V ALAMO VICTOR Gasoline Knrlne and H-ln. FARM! PLANTATION FRKSCWBUHUSTONECurtMUlwlth_ tt ft dally t-t>tv twit, att ready to rtm. Caparll AbiL AnelAblv gcr ^«*r_ wlthorder. hal, e*»hu-auiet B. I. OTBDESM/ “G bbre'Ouwunteed Machinery,” Boa OM. 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We want good, honest representatives everywhere, in every local ity, city or country, in fact, in every country throughout the world, both men and women, young or old, who will not sell or pawn. The Ha matte* Simulation Diamonds under the pretense that tl»ey are Genuine (Jems, as such action with simulation diamonds sometime* leads to trouble or embarrassment. If you want a simulation diamond—a substitute for the genuine— DON’T WAIT—ACT TODAY, as this ad. may not appear again. Fill out Coupon below nnd mail at once—First Come—First Served. ****** * * • #««*.*• *, v « » » » ... < # o * * Write her name of paper in wUAc)J. you saw this ad.. *.I • * The Barnatto Diamond Co., Girard, Bldg.. Chicago. * • * Sirs: IMcase send Free Narapir Offer, King, Earring, Stud • * or Scarf (Stick) I’in Catalog. * . • * Name . . . . . R. F. D. R. No • * No ...... st. P. O. Box 1 ' • * Town or City State • GRAVES BOAT FOUND. A BEAUTIFUL HEIRESS, He Is Supposed Drowned. TAFT TO BECOME A MASON. BYtay rent? i M 77:1- . . $1,000 $2,000 We Will Buy You a uooo HOME. $4,000 $5,000 You pay only $7.50 per month on each thousand with five per cent, interest per annum, payable monthly. 10 1-2 years to pay up loan. - : THE STANDARD HOME COMPANY AUTHORIZED CAPITAL $500,000. Will Be Made One on Sight in the State of Ohio. Cincinnati, Feb. 2.—The Grand Master of Ohio Masons has tender ed to William Howard Taft the rare and high honor of being made a Ma son at sight. . - Jaiilge Taft baa auxcjitcd aiul. will. return to Cincinnati on February 18, when the Grand Master will con vene a distinguished company of Ma sons and exercise the high prorojj alive which belongs only to th** Grand Master of Masons. This honor is so rarely conferr ed that there is but a single Instance of it on record in the hundred years of the history of Masonry in Ohio. "rniNCIPAL OFFICE SOI Til: FIRST NATIONAL BANK BUILDING, BIRMINGHAM, ALA, Loans Can Be Repaid at Any Time. Investigate Our Plan. MOSELEY & CHARE, DISTRICT MANAGERS/' ' No. 7 Bartefl B’Id’g* FILL OUT COUPON AND MAIL TO US. • * / * •• 4* •• •• • » «« .»• 1 « «. • • Savannah, Ga., Feb. 2.^-Thq.find ing of the half wrecked and watc filled naphtha launch, Daisy, .of Beaufort, on the sand of Bay Point Beach leads the friends of her own or, William C. Graves, a prosperous planter of Barry's Landing, South Carolina, to believe that he met his death in th^s Atlantic ocean some where between the mouth of the Savannah river and his home, or reached land safely in his half swamped boat only to freeze to death afterwards. Graves left Sayapnah Friday af ternoon for his home and put out towards the sea, regardless of the storm signals that w r ere flying here, -li-o—was-last seen going down the Savannah river. The steamer Clif ton, from Savannah to Beaufort, found the smashed launch on the Bay Point Beach, but no trace of her owner. His famiiy had sent friends to Savannah and the lin'> of coast from here to where his boat was found will be searched, though the searchers state that they believe Graves met death in the sea. to Have Been Scorning Life of Ease, Marries » Sal vation Army Worker. Burlington. N. J.+ Feb. 3.--Re- iuxury HORSES KNOCKED DOWN BRYAN VISITS THE SOUTH. And a Bridal Party Shocked by a Live Wire. New York, Feb. 1.—-A live wire almost caused a wedding party to end in a tragedy last Evening. A broken trolley wire writhing in tht street at Third avenue and 161st street became entangled under the coach in which were seated Richard Engle and his. bride. The horses were knocked down by the current, the driver thrown from his seat to the pavement and injured, and the coash burst into flames. Both the bride and bridegroom were slightly shocked and the bride fainted. Engle seized her in his. arms, and springing from the blaz ing vehicle, ran to a place of safe ty. STEAMER TURNS TURTLE. Will Attend the Exposition Banquet at Tampa, Florida. Tampa, Fla., Feb. 1.— Besides William J. Bryan, the last Democrat ic candidate for president, and the foremost orator of Anlerica, (her will be at the Tampa banquet next Thursday, “Private” John Allen, whose flashes of wdt were so long the delight of congress; Hilary Her bert, of Alabama, who was one of the most able members of Clove land's cabinet; Henry Watterson. the only survivor of the galaxy of distinguished American editors of the last generation and one who pre serves the traditions of the times when editors and orators swayed v ■. the emotions , of the people; Gover nor Gilchrist, head of the State gov ernment; J. Laud Browfn, president of the Ffrlr^-hygociation, the mayor of the city and the State senator Ituia..Hillsborough, With such an assemblage the intelectual feast will be cne such as Florida has not of ten been favored wjjh. Captain and Forty-Six of the Crew — - Att- Prowiirdr Melbourne, Keb. 1.—The British steamer Clan Ranald is a total wreck near Edithburg and her captain.and forty-six of the crew, most of whom were Asiatics, were drowned. The vessel was seen drifting off shore last night, but sank before boats coui<f reach trer. ' Erghteeit oU the members ‘^of the crew, including Paul railway, which, since Friday Train Lost* Chicago, Feb. 1.—Advices from Milwaukee say that train No. 23 of the Southern Minnesota disvlsion 4he Ghieagor Milwaukee uml St* tw-elve Coolies, were picked up. The Clan Ranald was struck by a heavy ae'a yesterday and rendered unman ageable. Then, being^driven ashore, she turned turtle. has been missing in the blizzard, has not been heard from. There are 100 persons on the train. Many Lives Lost Canton, China, Feb. 1.—At least 200 Uvea were lost in a fire which occurred in a fleet of flower boats. The charred bodies of 170 victims have already been recovered, bet Committed Suicide. Macon, Ga., Feb. 2.—Ben L. Jones, one of the wealthiest and best known citizens of Macon, committed suicide this morning at his home. He was in his room and shot him self in the head with a revolver. He died Immediately. He was worth half milUon dollars. jeeiing a life of ease and and refusing to enter the 'field of social prominence her family had planned for her. Miss Marion Fer gus Woolmah, rich, good looking and brilliantly educated, and a daughter of one of the city’s proud est families, last night became the bride of Capt. Alexander Samuel Hewitt, an officer of the American Salvation Army. Next week on their return from a brief wedding trip, the pair will take up slumming work in Plainfield, where the bridegroom has been assigned to the command of the local corps. Miss Woolman is heiress to a fortune estimated at from $150,000 (o $250,000, and she will give a greater portion of the money, it is said, to Salvation Army work. VASTIXE CRAMS CAUGHT. He Is accused of Stealing a Mule in Augusta. Aiken, Fob. 3.—On last Friday morning Vastine Chavis was cap tured on Mr. Britt Hutto’s place in the sand hills of Lexington county, by the chief detective for the State of Georgia, C. E. Hall, with the as sistance of Sheriff Corley, of Lex'ng- ton. and his deputy. Chavis is wanted for horse steal ing. It is alleged he stole a horse from Mr. C. D. Carr, the well known merchant of Augusta. Chavis rode the mule to near Langley and traded him to Nat Hamlet for a bay horse and $20 to boot. Chavis had his gun when arrested and raised it to shoot, but was grab bed by Sheriff Corley and soon over powered and handcuffed, and carried •back to Augusta. He is charged with other depredations in Aiken county. Banker Suicides. i - Madison, Ga., Fob. 2.—S. B. Cohen, cx president of Jefferson Street Bank, killed himself in the bank this morning with a pistol. Mr. Cohen was about 50 years old and in many respects was a fine business Inan and accountant. He had many-friends, being very gener ally and gejiefotis. He left a fam- ily. - CLASSIFIED COLUMN For Salt>—Indian games, brown Leg horns, buff Orphingtons and Bea- . Sle fiounds. Poultry. $1 and up, according to quality. John L. Jol ly, Anderson, S. C., Route No. 3. Cabbage Plants—Garden plants, grown in the open air, will stand/ '‘ 1 the coldest weather. Prices, oixs to four thousand, $1.50; four $o nine thousand, $1.25; nine thoufr--^ and, $1 per thousand. We 1 have ' special express rates. Write us for our agent's outfit and propo sition. N. IL BUtch Co., Meg- getts, S. C., the largest truck farm in the world. Killed Six Italians. New York, Feb. 4.—^Slx men w-ere killed and several injured today when a construction train on the New York Central railroad ran down a party of track repairers near University Heights in Bronx borough. A gang of laborers, all (talians, were working near a curve when the train swept around the bendj plunged lb to tiro "group and hurled the men in every direction. Write, at .once for * was'kiiled, two almost smothered to death and two obhers ’ silgimy -“and Terms, jured today by a cave-in of an ex cavation for a vault in the local cemetery. Killed by Caverln. Akron, Ohio, - Feb_ -2.rT^Qne man -eet--i>riers-ooagi?$ant quality The Kewanee System of water supply meets every requirement of do mestic service and affords fire pre lect ion to country residences. Thousands In use. For informa tion and prices address S. S. ingman, Columbia, S. C. We ail' buying Cow Peas—Advise us the number of bushels you hare for sale and send us samples) we will make you our best price delivered Charleston. I. M. Pearl- stine & Sons, 201-203 East Bay St., Charleston. S. C. ORIENTAL RUG COMPANY, . 1101 Cathedral KL, Baltimore, Md. We make you handsome and dur- ble Riigs from your old, wornout carpet, any size to fit a room or hall. Let us send you a price list; Just write for one | — 1 ■ ■ Shop by Mail—Send for our Catalog of bargains, it’s free. E. Dowda 4k Co., Mail-order Merchants. Box 302.—Atlanta, Ga., WHAT IS HOME WITHOUT MUSIC? Don’t say, “can’t afford an Organ or Piano. , AVe wilJ make you able, grawtSng from one to three yeaffa to pay for one. •••’ \* j Wc supply the Sweet Toned, Dur- ahle Organs and Pianos, at the low- or Catalogqe, the Old Es- tahlisbed • . .7 WALONF MUSIC HOtSE, Hi s. r/ :r~ ^ 1 “Keystone” ReveRlbleRatchets.. You‘11 make ao mi COMKNsKTlON Taper and buying tkia tlfo tea* amt on(y Three Ratchets in oaM, taking Shank Drills—Long dbd Short Fee? ' cwArnu —^—