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THEY MUST GO." Secretary Straus Issues Sweep ing Order About Anarchists. Says He "Wants Commissioners of Immigration Inspectors to Look After Deportation of Alien Criminals. Secretary of Commerce and Labor Straus Wednesday issued a sweeping order to all commissioners of immigration and immigrant inspectors in charge, directing them to confer with the police in their respective jurisdictions, with a view to "securing the co-operaton of police and detectives in an effort to rid the country of -is.*.* a criminal fall ttllvil Aiiaitui?jia - ? ing within the law relating to deportation. The order of Secretary Straus follows: "To all commisisoners of immigration and i mmigrant inspectors in charge: "It s hereby directed that, with r view to promptly obtain definite information with regard to alien Anarchists and criminals located in the United States, you shall confer fully with the chief of police or the chief of the secret service of the city r which you are located, furnishing such officials with detailed nform: tion with regard to the meaning or the term 'Anarchist,' as used in th Immigration Act of February 20 1907, and with regard to the inhil ? tion of the statute against aliens of the criminal classes, explaining the powers and limitations imposed by said statute upon the immigration officials with respect to such persons. "You should call to the attention of the chief of police or the chief of Becret service the definition of the term 'Anarchist* contained in Sections 2 and 3 contained in the Act of February 20, 1907, and provision of Section 2, placing within the excluded classes 'persons who have been convicted or admit having committed a felony or other crime' or misdemeanor involving moral turpitude, 'pointing out that if any such person is found within the United States within three years after landing or entry there he is amenable to deportation under the provisions of Section 21 of said Act. The cooperation of said chief of police should be requested, making it clear that in order that any particular . Anarchist or criminal may be deported evidence must be furnished showing (1) that the person in question is an alien subject to the Immigrant Acts, (2) that he is an Anarchists or criminal as defined in the Statute, (3) the date of his arrival in the United States, which must be within three years of the date of his arrest, (4) the name of the vessel or the transportation line by which he came if possible, and (5) the name of the country whence he came: the details with respect to the last three Items being kept at the various ports of entry in such a manner as to be available if information is furnished witk respect to the Anarchist's name, the date of his arrival and the port of entry. "It is desired that the above indicated steps shall be taken at once and that no proper effort shall be spared to secure and retain the cooperation of the local police and detective forces in an effort to rid the country of alien Anarchists and criminals falling within the provisions of the statute relating to deportation." THE USUAL CONTESTS. Filed By Dantzler, Meyers and Prioleau for the Fees. March 24 is the day fixe for hearing the contests filed for the seats of Mess. Legare, Patterson and Lever by the three negroes, who claim to have been elected to congress. Aaron P. Prioleau, who has been figuring some in the prints of late, and who once figured in jail for robbing the mails, is contesting the seat of Legare. Isaac Myers from somewhere about Aiken, is contesting the seat of Patterson, while A. D. Dantzler contests Lever's seat. All three of these negroes have contested before, and, finding it profitable, have done it again. They each get $2,000 allowed by congress to any one who files a contest. The wonder is that there are not a dozen negroes every time, instead of one in each district. All they have to do is to get up and run, then file a notice that they were rightfully elected and cheated out of s it. It is not necessary to get votes at all. The election committee of >. the house, which will hear the conS testants, will have some fun out of the negroes who appear before them and then vote unanimously to throw their cases away as being without any justification. * b CAN'T BE FOUND. Relatives of a Dead Man at Asheville . Can't Be Located. The body of .Tames Orlando Amirtnn U'hn rlierl in n hntnl at Ashovillp i . several days ago. still lies unclaimed in an undertaking establishment in that city. The body is embalmed and dressed ready for burial, and the lodge of Masons is using every effort to locate the relatives of the deceased. A badge found on thu lapel of the stranger's coat indicating that he was a member of that Order. The deceased is said to have a brother named G. Fred Amidon at Framingham, Mass., and a sister named Miss So Amidon at Midbury, N. H., but telegrams to both places failed to elicit any response. In the pockets of the dead man's clothing was found a postal card from the Hawkins Publishing Com^ pany 01 Waterville, N. Y., addressed L to the deceased at Miami, Fla. * B The pulpit would profit'by looking | at It from a pewpoint once in a while. | Even if you can not toot a horn f BENEATH GROUND. In a British Columbia Gold Mlno. When the manager or a gold mine at Rossland offered to take us down we accepted readily, and it was only when we were invited to "step in'' that we thought of the light summer suits which most of us were wearing. We had left the boat at ^obson and come on to tiossland to learn something of that vast mineral wealth upon which, with lumber and fisheries and fruit growing, the commercial and industrial future of British Columbia is to be built. At the Centre Star tho slant of the shaft is one of about 60 i *ofr!'PP5 and the body of the skip slopes back to the rails upon which It falls into the depths. Which means that when the eight of us are pacned tightly in the innocents who nave entered first find themselves tilted on their heels, their backs upon the cold, wet, rusty iron, and held fast uy the overlying strata of human avoirdupois which fills the skip. It was at the third floor window that the man stood who heard the Optimist, hurrying by on his long fall from the roof of the twenty story skyscraper, murmur to himself that it was "All rigi?t 60 far," It is at about that stage of his downward journey, probably, that the man who deacenus a mine for the first time begans to take the cheerful view. His earlier mind is complex, elusive and difficult of analysis, but at any rate it is not cheerful. Sudden blackest darkness; the feeling of falling out of one's hair; the whirling cabie that may snap; the engine man who may lose control; an upward glancing of the soul to all Defending Powers; and then oblivion ?an oblivion cloven as it were, in past the openings, one bidow the other, of the dimly lit galleries at deeper and deeper levels.. The skip slackens speed, hovers hesitatingly for a moment and then comes to a stand and we step out. "You'll want candles," say^ the manager, and on the threshold of this 14 11 * t V?rt?> * n??nni fi: f"Or? new worm we ugui iucm ?. lly, as upon an altar. It is a world ol gray. The walls before us and the roof above, upheld by huge timbering, are gray, relieved only at a nearer view by the shimmer of the imprisoned metals. The galleries that extend to right and left, the cars wnich pass us laden and the men who bend behind them are gray as the ore which they dump between the rails into a chamber below. The electric lamps which line the roofs of the galleries burn gray, as* it seems, and the very air is gray. On the mountain above the sun is shining, and thank Goa for the green world that one can look upon thence. "Ollabo'd!'' cries our guide. Obediently we clamber into the little sqiare trucks which have been brought up in a row to carry us through the mine. Each man lias his truck, rides alone upon his own plank and lights himself with his own particular candle. In a moment we are in the gallery. As we meet the sharp current of air the hot wax gutters over onto our fingers and we slant the candles back to the horizontal. At the end of a long gallery, where a second shaft descends, we ciimb out, penetrate a gloomy, narrow passage In which heaps of ore lie waiting to be trucked away, and croucmng enter from below a little chamber, Bome 8 by 8 feet, blasted in the rock. Here, where the air is still full of tho odor of gelignite, is a driller at work with his machine. We squeeze ourselves flat and bend low against the sloping walls and watch. The heavy Iron arm shoots out and In, striking the face of the rock full square perhaps fifty times a minute, every blow falling with the weight of 1.000 pounds, twisting as it'etrikee as if to bore through what it cannot break away. The man behind the drill turns on us an impaspive face. No one speaks or would be heard 'or the echoes of the thrust aDd thud and the vibration of the machine. We wonder that beneath such blows and amid such din the sleeping masters ot gray underworld should not awke and bring the foundations down upon ns. At the bottom of the shatt we wait while the men of the night shift flash by lis, skip after skip, to .ueir work in the lower depths, and then we are drawn out of the void as we came. ?London Daily News. Bread in Sixty Minutes. Reaping began on a flelu of wheat at Blocklev, in Worcestershire, at 8 o'clock in the morning and was served as bread just 60 minutes after. The 'coon hunters of Three Springs Huntington county this .state, recently treed a 'coon, shot it, ana then had a doe- fieht under the tree, and all the I fun and excitement belonging to a | genuine 'coon hunt, only to find later I that it was somebody's tabby cat. There are now in Germany 116 cities with special schools for backward children. The total number ot these schools is 203, and tue number of pupils is 13,100. Berlin has 31 of these accessory schools. If you are prosperous you will be envied and if poor despised; get in the middle of the road and turn on steam. ?Cuero Record. "How fast does your automobile go?" "I can't say," replied the motorist. "It all depends on how many sheriffs we meet on the route." Many a girl surrenders at the pianoforte. Looted a Bank. A telegram from Chihuahua, Mex ioo, late Wednesday afternoon sayi that the Banco de Minero, owned b; Ambassador Creel has been robbei ->f $295,000 in Mexican money. N< persons have been arrested. Frank H. Hitchcock has resigner as first assistant postmaster general He will be succeeded by Charles P Granfield of Missouri. Mr. Hitch cock will take charge of the Tafi boom, and see that the colored bro ther is kept in line for his man. DECLARE FOR BRYAN. Nebraska Populists Instructs Delegates to Vote for Him. With the largest number of delegates at any Nebraskan Populist meeting for four years, the Populist conventiou was called to order at Omaha Thursday afternoon. Resolutions reaffirming the Omaha platform enunciated in 1892 and declaring for the support of Bryan by all Populists were adopted. The convention afterwards listened to speeches of the true Populist brand made by different leaders, while the committee pre pared a platform fiery enough for the old-time Populists. After a debate lasting two hours the convention decided to respond to the call to the national committee and to send a full delegation to the Populist national convention at St. Louis. Thirty seven delegates were selected for that purpose and instructed to vote and work for the interests of W. J. Bryan. * TRYING TO FOOL THEM. Roosevelt and Taft Beg for the Ne* gro Vote. ; Jack McGhee in his letter to The : State from Washington says the negro tickling plant of the Ohio platform, upon which Taft is to run for the presidency, and which it is understood was drafted by one T. R., at the White House, is causing considerable comment in Washington. . This plank is to cut down representation in congress of the Southern States because of the dlsfranchisei ment of the negro. It has often been agreed by Southern statesmen that if the North will frankly admit that i the Southern State? have a right to ( disfranchise the negro then there -u Kn n<-i r?liior>Hnn to CllttinE ?. WUU1U UV5 lav ' down the representation accordingly. But there has been no disfranchise, ment of the negro bcaus^" he Is a negro, but'because he Is Ignorant or propertyles. * i GOT THEIR MONEY. Certain Whiskey Houses Paid by the 1 Dispensary Commission. i A dispatch from Asheville to The i State says Judge Pritchard In the i United States Court Thursday made an order in the Wilson case, other creditors intervening authorizing the South Carolina dispensary commlsi slon to pay certain creditors amounts agreed on between the commissioners and creditors. i The total amount ordered paid out i by Judge Pritchard, in accordance with the judgments rendered by the dispensary commission, is $148,724.89. The sworn claims filed with the commission in the 14 cases amounted to $174,079.56. The total amount ? of "graft" and overcharges recovered by the State in these cases is $25,354.67. * ' HIDDEN TREASURE FOUND. Many 5Iillion Dollars Discovered in Rains of Old Castle. Hidden treasure valued at eight i million dollars is reported to have been discovered in the ruins of an ancient castle at Kamenletz, near the Russlan-Galitzan frontier. The treasure consists of thirteen tons of pure , gold and of much jewelry and precious stones. It was concealed by i Prince Galitzln when he fled from Kamenletz, exactly 110 years ago. > Efforts to learn the details of the discovery are blocked by those who arc In Dosession of the facts. C. W. Morse, of New York, anothI er eminent "defender of the national honor" is now engaged in a tussel with the sheriff and a bunch of legal wits. The idols continue to fall. The three most popular and most thoroughly trusted men by the masses in the United States today are William Jennings Bryan, Theodore Roosevelt and Benjamin Ryan Tillman. ' Speaker Cannon's little presidential boomlet {has met with great ?n*st,i>.a,vom0nt hv beinar endorsed ClJLWUi ? w , by the republican committee of Guilford county, N. C, Mr. Cannon was bora in that county. Some papers are finding fault because too many candinates are com* ing out. This is a free county and every man who feels like it can run for office, and we don't think the gentlemen of the press should object. A white man was acquitted in Barnwell on the charge of murder but, The State says "now he is in i real trouble, being charged with attempting to steal from the treasury. Murderers and scientific grafters need not worry, but the white thief * i >> is irownea upon. In a speech made by Bryan at Jackson. Miss., Saturday, the Nebraskan declared that money is being . used by interests representing the trusts and the railroads to secure the election of delegates to the Denver conventions opposed to his nom ination for president. 5 . f A Washington lettet to the Aui gusta Herald says "there is no get3 ting around the fact that Senator Tillman is a very popular man j among the people at large, if one may believe one-half of what he hears concerning the South Carolina senator from men who are gathered i ^ in Washington from all parts of the i . country during the sessions of con- ] gress. j Ill f Sill. t Their Occupation Is Fraught ; With Perils and Hardships, j i OF LONG EXISTANCE J l c No Marine Industry in These Days Brings Such Hazards?Daily Dur- ( ing the Sealing Season Hundreds j of Men Risk the Dangerous Ice Flows. | There is a seal fishery which has , had a far longer existence than the fur-seal fishery of the Pacific, and enJoys greater vitality, and mat is tHe hair-seal fishery of Newfoundland and 1 Labrador. No marine industry in ( these days brings such hazards to | crews and ships as this one. Daily , during the sealing season hundreds of ' men risk their lives on the floes, and ' the vessels face arctic "nips" whicto < often crush them. When the hunt opens, stout steamers, built for this ( fishery and carrying 5,000 men, sail , from various ports in quest of mighty ' floes swept south from Greenland. ' Somewhere amid these the herds will be found, the mothers having mounted tne ice to drop their young, which are cradled there, the parents fishing in the adjacent waters for their subsistence. The seal-ships must venture amid the floes for their quarry, and the seal-men must hunt these "pinnipeds," as scientists call them across the frozen wastes, subjected to all the perils of such a pursuit, without tents or other shelter, fire, or the means of making any, and no chance of retreat to their ships if a blizzard besets them when they are j far from the vessels, and often they go six or eight miles across tne crystal wastes in the excitement of the hunt. 1 The crews always start off at day- ] break and remain out till night. They are clad in flannel underwear and canvas outer garb, but carry no overcoats, that they may travel tne easier, ' and take along only a little food, for ' the same reason. Hence, wnen bliz- i azrds assail, they are ill provided to < defy them, and if the storm is pro- ( longed, they cannot withstand the rigors of a night on the floe, with its benumbing cold and gnawing hunger. < Never a year passes but some seal- i ship will shelter ten or twelve hundred men for a night or two, the whole assemblage on the floes making for the nearest steamer when storm or fog threatens, lest they lose their way In trying to reach their own and ! fall victims to the perils with which they are engirt. One of the most serious tragedies in the annals of this industry befell the crew of tie steamer Greenland on March 29, 1898. Up off Labrador at this time winter has by no means spent its fury, and on this eventful day, while her two hundred men were scattered over the floes, a blinding snowstorm began, with a startling drop In the temperature, the vessel was driven helplessly seaward, and the hapless crew were lea to their fate, no other ship being near and they being far from land. When cue tempest ended, after two days an'1 nights, it was found that forty-seven had perished and sixty-three were severely frostbitten, some so severely as to be maimed for life. The story of the sufferings of the wretched party was appalling. A few years ag( the steamer Huntsman was pennec In o Ann rvfp flriH driven against a rocky islet, where she weni to pieces, forty-two men perishing within an hour amid the contending Ice, reefs, and fragments of the vessel. The rest of the crew cros?ed the floes to the land; but one man, named French, had been left behind, unconscious. As the ship struck, he was flung against the rocks, having his shoulder, two fingers and two ribs broken and his head badly gashed. But he was wedged in a crevice, ana when consciousness returned he crawled, with the aid of his uninjured hand, to the top of the rock, where he lay for forty-two hours drenchec' by the spray and batterea by chunk? of ice, lacking drink and food, an agonized from the pain of his wounds till the ice closed In solid and enablet him to make his way to the coast, which he did safely and ultimately recovered. That same man. aged 70. wsb seal-i.unting this year, it being ' his 54th consecutive season. Record For Good Cows. James Miller, of Schultzville, I^ickawanna county. Pa., has a herd of 16 i cows that yielded 15,631 pounds oi milk in one month, an average of almost 1,000 pounds a cow, or about lb quarts a day. The laws of Norway compel a man who chops down one tree to planl three saplings. By emigration Europe loses 960,000 ( natives every year, and in ^e same period 200,000 return. i Ma's motto for framing: Keep busy and you won't have to read books : on how to be happy. When a man gets away from home he can wear a blue shirt with a re.l necktie,?if he wants to. I Some weddings are little else than a dress suit case. It is a pity that the work of the ( disp ensary commission has been in- j terrupted by the United States I Court, and we hope that the matter ! can yet be amicably arranged so as 1 the good work beirg done by the commission can be continued. 1 1 With 88,000 men out of work in j Chicago and 90,000 in New York the full-dinner-pail argument is ' likely to be badly battered up before the next campaign opens. 1 Should Be Instructed. Herman Ridder, editor of a New fork paper, recently traveled ;hrough the South urging, so the ;he New Orleans Times-Democrat >ays. the Democrats of this section ;o tee to it that Mr. Bryan is not lominated at Denver. In an interview with the Times-Demccrat Mr. bidder says: "I am convinced that Mr. Bryan can not carry a northern ;tate, and I would like to suggest to >ur southern friends that they should not instruct their delegates "or Mr. Bryau, but that they should ?o to Denver uninstructed, so that ;he Democrats all over the country nay consult and advise together in -egard to the best man to put at the lead of the ticket. Perhaps by :hat time Mr. Bryan himself will ;ome to the conclusion that by his public utterances he has made himsolf iinnncciVild nnrl will n err ex* u.*irh :he other Democrats in nominating i winning ticket." But why should the rank and file )f democracy leave to their representatives the duty of dping what the rank and file should do? The nen whom Mr. Ridder represents tfould, according to the'Philadelphia Press, be satisfied with "anybody Dut Bryan." Why not'trust the rank and file to say what the party's :ourse shall be? So far as Mr. Bryin is concerned he has not asked md will not ask for the vote of any man or of any state. He does say, lowever, that it is the duty of DemDcrats in precinct, county and state invention to instruct their delegates as to the choice for the DemDcratid nominee. The New Orleans Times-Democrat puts it well when in referring to Mr. Ridder's "no instruction plan" it says: "We think that the will of the sonstituencies can not be made too plain. An uninstructed convention would present bouudless possibilities of chicane. No candidate should be considered, unless his record will stand the probe of popular scrutiny. Under our primary system, we have earned to judge candidates on their merits and have forever foregone the assistance of the middlemen who used to pack conventions and thwart the people's will. We once labored under the delusion that United States senators could not be choosen without days and weeks of wrangling in state legislatures. But, happily, all that has been changed and we can not see why the democracy's standard-bearer should not be selected in like fashion. Whatever is done, let it be done, in the open. The dark horses should be kept in the stable?and so should the jockeys who are so eager to mount." j Democratic Opportunity. r"We are not likely to have a walkover in 1908, and this is not the time for dissensions within the party ranks."?Leslie M. Shaw. The Washington Herald says this obvious truth, uttered by the recent secretary of the treasury, and refer 11 - j._ xi ui:. ring especially to uk repuuucem situation in Iowa, is equally applicable to the country at large, Party lines are broken everywyere. All wellfnformed republicans like Mr. Shaw keenly appreciare that no "walkover" is in prospect for 1908. Dissensions are the rule, not the exception. A great party is working at cross-purposes. It is at loggerheads as to men, wide apart as to measures; uncertain, undetermined. and afraid. It is as a house divided against itself. Six months before Harrison's ov erwhelming defeat in 1892, possibly Darty conditions were as bad as they are today, but certainly no worse. Rooseveltism is almost, if not quite as strong as ever it was, in spite of adverse material conditions; but Rooseveltism, as everybody knows, is not republicanism, and the only republican who, apparently can keep alive the whole of this Rooseveltian sentiment?Roosevel t himself?has eliminated himself from the presidential equation. Mr. Shaw puts it mildly enough when he says "we are not likely to have a walkover in 1908." Republicans of somewhat less prominence are saying, "We shall be lucky if we escape defeat." They are fast coming to believe, in fact, that but one of their number?Hughes, of New York?cen safely insure the party' salvation, and Hughes, of New York, strange to say, is not to be permitted to have the nomination, if the administration can prevent it. Hence the clouds now hovering over the g. o. p. If the democratic party is really lacking in optimism at this momentous juncture, as it seems to be, we can account for it only upon one of two theories?either it does not read the signs of the time aright, or made sick at heart by hope long deferred, its pessimism is become chronic. And the most hopeless type of pessimist, we may add, is that still too ubiquitous democrat who obstinately refuses to see in William Jennings Bryan the man of the hour?the democrat of all democrats to w hum iu 190S the presidential nomination will De least likely to prove a forlorn % A SPLENDID SELECTION. F. H. McMaster Is Elected State Insurance Commissioner. Mr. F. H. McMaster, of Columbia, was elected insurance commissioner Wednesday afternoon and will be the first to hold the new position, which carries a salary of $2,500 per year. The office was created at the present session of the General Assembly, and by Act the commissioner is charged with all duties pertaining to insurance companies which now devolve on the Comptroller General and other State officials and with new duties imposed by the Act. Mr. McMaster is one of the best known and most popular young men in the State. He is a native of Fairfield County, a graduate of South Carolina College and holds a diploma in law from that institution. He was at one time in partnership with Senator u Weston, at the Columbia Bar, and later entered the newspaper business in Columbia. As business manager of the Charleston-Evening Post he made an excellent record. Several years ago he became circulation manager of the State, in which position he has also done good work. He now holds this position. Mr. McMaster during his residence In Charleston represented that county in the House of Representatives and he has always taken an active interest in public matters. He has an intimate knowledge of insurance matters, having been private secretary to Mr. Edward L. Gernand, general agent for the Mutual Life in South Carolina at one time, and later Mr. McMaster was special agent for the Mutual Life. He is filly competent to fill the position, both by character and ability. hope. If Rooseve'tism passes, be prepared for Bryanism. I I???COOPS *airfield and Succeaaic LauUnO*S^^r Wee, and Urge type Caulift bc#t ^rower* 'n world. ' \ M stock (Of 20 years, and it a safe t fAMiitamable* Thry have successfully i I M drouth and are relied on by the mpst t I M Sooth. We guarantee full count and sa PRICES: Cabbage and Lettuce f. o. b. Y WM per thousand, 5 to 9,MO at $1.25 per tho Cauliflower. $3.00 per tbouaaod, quantilie mf Write 7our name and expra B W. It HART, I K References: Enterprise Bank, Chark p ; is IwHOG 9 As good as but Hi all kinds of cookin to frying crullers. ^ ton seed oil, super||! Wesson process. # fat of the South,HI ' III unapproached in e< jjj effectiveness. jf fl THE SOUTHED III pEVYORKSAVAMAHAT GIBBES Guar INCLUDES GASOLINE AND STEA ABLE AND STATIONARY BOII EDGERS, PLANERS, SHINGLE, I CORN MILLS, COTTON GINS, MAKING OUTFITS AND KINDRI Our stock is the most varied a Southern States, prompt shipment ty. A postal card will bring our GIBBES MACHINERY COMPANY, ? m ' have had several ye CE2535Ec/^F other kinds of vegetable m<"LYJtR"Y^ Collard plants, and Tornat I now have ready for i Early Jersey NVakefields, CI cessions. These being the Mfarmers. These plants an (''jhiV'" kHF ) w^' stan(' *?vcre cold wit Msand, 5,000 to 9.000 at J1.25 We have special low Exp mTc~nfin'oS^ orders will be shipped C. < I would advise sending a returning the C. O. D's. Other plants will be rei ?nd personal attention. W CVm I guarantee satisfaction. A /7 ' ' *. % ~ . \ - ''mi ?????????"Ppy?* How to Cure Rheumatism. The can ?; of Rheumatism and kindred d-si eases is an excess of uric acid] in the blood: To care U is terrible d seas tho acid muit be expelled and the system so regulated that no more <id will be formed in excessive quantities. Rheumatism is an internal disease and require an internal remedv. Rubbing with oil? nnd ll-.i-nents will not care, affords ouly tempora* y -olief at best causes you to del*r thd << ?r t'v.ttme f;anj ?iiows ihe mal| ady to gei ti firmer hold on you. Linimenta may ease l e pasin, bnt they will no more cure Rhematis .i than paint will change the fibre of rotten wi-.i !. Science its at last discovered a perfect nd complete cure, which is called Rbeumai de. Tes ? d in buEdreds'of cases, it ha* efected tl e m >st ma-velous "cures; we believe t will curs yoo, Rheumaoide "gets at the ointa from the inside," sweeps the poisons out of the system, tunes up the stomach, regulates the Hver and kidneys and makes yon well all ovr. Rheumaoide "strikes the root, of the diRpnae ond removes its cause " This splendid remedy is sold hy druggists and dealers generally at 50c, and 1 a bottle. In tablet for?" at 25c, and 50c, a package. Get a bottle tod iy; delays are dangerous. $15 DOLLARS SAVED TO ORGAN CUSTOMERS For Next 40 Days. We will sell our excellent $80 Organs at only $65. Oar $90 Organs for nly $75. Special Terms: Onethird now, one-third Nov. 1908, balance Nov. 1909. If Interested, clip this ad, and enclose It with your letter, asking for catalog and price list. If yon want the best orga* on earth, don't delay, but write us at once and save $16 and make no me harmonious. Address: MALONE'S MUSIO HOUSE, Colombia, S. 0. Pianos and Organs. Thirty-Two Cent Cotton FOR SAliD?Watson's oetebnUaftj improved "Summer Snow" upland Loofi tuple/ cotton seed. Makes bale a-rvd I more per acre ordinary land under Calrj ' conditions; sella for 17H to S3 cents peri pound. F-aally picked. Oinned irfi i on ordinary saw gts. staple* 1% to, 1% inches. Price: 1 busheL till; i. | bushel*. 14.00; S boabeis and orer a*. $1.00 per busbeL W. W. Watson, Pr?-1 grl^oe, gummerlaai JTajmx. rtsnatieig,j ttle Giant" Screw Plates issortments. Each assortment is put up eat wood case, as shown in cut Each asent has atyttlaMe U? wreoetes for holding all of taps contained in assortment Threads es rod from 7-64 in. up to 11-2 in. "BEST ,BESTPglCES."Cote?MsSap>lyCs.C?l?iMi.S f 1 Cabbage, Big Boston Let. awer. Grown Irom aeeda oI the '^^aVVAK?pj Ve bive werWed diligently on out BmT o aay that to-day they are the best ob> itooa tne moat severe teats or com too m ^ tromiaent grower* of every section of the I (e arrival of all good* tripped by express. \ J oung'a bland, 500 for $1.M; I to 5,W*?t $1.5# ! uaaod; 10,400 and over at llJt Qd thousand. i to proportion. VH i?-office plainly and maO orders to oH iKfTERPRISE. S. G Eg Mon.S. C.; Postmaster, Enterprise, S. C. MM SB LiESS w { VRDOJ* S :ter, and cheaper, for & g, from making bread j[| Absolutely pure cot- # refined by our original M The Standard cooking- ||| - unrivaled in purity, 0 :onomv. unmatched in HI J* N COTTON OEL CO. HI ?l [ANTANEW OELEANSCHKAGO j Jjl anteed Machinery. M ENGINES, PORTiERS, SAWMILLS, jATH, STAVE AND PRESSES, BRICK nd complete in the being our specialsalesman. : : Box 80, Colombia, S. C. in experience in growing Cabbage plants and *11 plants for the trade, viz: Beet plants, Onion plants, o plants. shipment Beet planM and Cabbage plants as follows: harleston Large Tyv s Wakefield*. and Henderson Suebest known reliab'o varieties to . J . v-or: -need *r::> grown out in the open air n.... w^u-r uau hout injury. < In InN *v 1 000 to 5.000 at 11.?i) imt thnu> per thousand. '.000 and over at $1.00 per thousand, iress rates on . retable plants from this point. All 5. D. unless . prefer sending money with orders, loney with o.Jers. You will save the charge* for idy In Febr _ry. Your orders will have my prompt hen in neec' of Vegetable plants give me a trial order; iddress all orders to