University of South Carolina Libraries
A GREAT SPEEC Capt Pitzhugh Opens for S in Cooper Trial. HE SCORES COOPI And Sharp and Charges Them Entering a Conspiracy ? Speech Was a Hitter Arraigni of the Defendants, Coupled Wi Masterly Presentation of Argni Nashville, March S.?The gre; crush of people since the trial I) were in attendance this inornin hoar the opening argument in case of Col. Duncan B. Cooper son Robin Cooper and John D. SI whose trial oil the charge of mu: Jng former Senator Edwin W. mack, has entered upon its ei and probably final week. Bac the table reserved for the pro: tion's attorneys, who begin th< gnment of their casa today, the c Ras unusually heavy. Large nun.bers or ladies wei the crowd, which began to g; as early as 6:30 o'clock. B; o'clock every bit cf available f in the court room had been t and many scores of people had turned away. It was 9:20 o'clock whoa Car T. Fitzhugh, the eloquent Men attorney and long friend of Set Carmack, opened the State's i ment to the jury. The court Bi mis lime ?<ia tiunucu i-w focation, eve:*y sea': being taken all the open placesi were filled standing spectators. Captain Fitzhugh began by p* the customary tribute to the thanking them for their untirim tience a?d their uniform cou and attentiveness. He then lauded the citizensh the dead man. He dwelt at If jupon the distinguished servic his country of this son of Tei soe. Captain Fitzhugh then dc "malice" to the jury and sa could arise s iddenly, in law and or could be the result of bro< ' as it has been in this case," added. He told how the defeu Colonel Cooper, had been heard lug and threatening Carmack said that this showed the cc bore malice deep in his heart ag Carmack. Captain Fitzhugh declared Colonel Cooper did not kill Se Carmack because of wounded tation, but "'he killed him bei of his fear of the truth and his of vengeance." The speaker asked how it that this man's name could n< mentioned, "this man who had ed the destinies of a State, this who had made politicians, this who had pulled the wires. Jol Rockefeller, J. P. Morgan aud ] Harriman are not ofiice-holders they are not going around k men wbo dare to mention names in the paper. "This man who has injure* he has ever touched, this lobl this defaulter, this professional tician," exclaimed Captain Fitz with intense emphasis, "puts hii on a pedestal so high that his 1 may not be mentioned even jocular manner." Capt. Fitzhugh took up the ec rial in order. The first was Ocl 24. In this one Colonel Cooper complained because his name been linked with those of ce saloon men and gamblers." "The only difference," dec! Captain Fitzhugh, "lay in the that Colonel Cooper, a gamble his life, had^played for larger st and had ne\er pa d his debts his killing "winnings. "The editorial of No. 3," Captain Fitzhugh, "did not even tion his name, vel lie took off at it because the machine was tacked. His attitule, 'I am the chine; I am the St.ite and when strike the machine you strike me "Where was thf offense in tha 1 n. - * ii-ao vuiuutM uuoper was looKin? it with jaundiced and inali* eye?" Captain Fitzh gh then took the editorial of Sunday mori November 9, "Across the Mi Chasm," and di?se:ted that for jury. "You gentlemen rememl said Captain Fitzh ^h, "that I a Colonel Cooper to take the edit' sentence by sentence and point the parts that were offensive that he refused to do so, sayin was offensive as a whole. Yet morning he wrote the threat, note. And .here is some mys about the not ?s. "Where are the ( inals? only copies here and a < of a copy; then he saw Ed. C that night and alter he sent message, 'you or I must die,' hatched up a preter.t to arm hin against Carmack. He tells gentlemen of the jury, that Ed. C reported to him that Carmack in an ugly, vicious mood. "Ed. Craig says he brought such information about Carmack could not ha^'e been true." TRAGADY IN CHESTER. Negro Kills W ife and Fatally Won tier *atner. Chester, March 3.?John Sto son, colored, killed his wife and ally wounded his father-in-law. 1 man Gaston, this afternoon at home in the Mount Prospect tion, five mi es southeast of R burg. This afternoon Stevenson his wife quarreled, and when Gas endeavored to pacify them Stei son shot with the results aire given. ;h town hit hard \EARLY WIPED OUT BY tate BIBLE CYCLONE. The Business Section and One dred Dwellings Demolish Cuthbert, (in.?Seven Lives kV'tli Cuthbert, Ga., March 9.?j rilic cyclone struck Cuthbert ti The at S:.*50 o'clock, killing six n< and one white man, demolishii nent entjre business section, razin ith a hundred or more residences a juring many, entailing a loss meiit is estimated at $100,000. The town is in total darknes ing to the damage to the e cgan |jRht system and it is excee g to difficult to estimate the loss i the with accuracy and the damage , his business and residential sectio iarp. The loss of life would hav< rder- much greater had it not been 1 Car- fact that several hundred of tl ghth zens were in attendance upon k of vival meeting when the storm secu- the place. ? ar- Shortly after 8 o'clock a :rush black cloud appeared in the west and bore down upon th< *e in city. Few people were on the ither and few were in the stores. f 9 a great roaring accompanied b; space flashes of lightning the < aken struck the business blocks been wrecked every building. Me dise, bricks and debris was sc; >t. O. along the streets. lphis It passed on the resident!: lator tion, blowing down nearly on irgu; dred houses, raising chimneys room ps, barns, and doing much d suf- otherwise. Few people were a i and at the time when the storm i with All of the wires ef the Ci lighting plant are down and t lying is in complete darkness, which jury, the situation very serious and 1 g pa- the work of rescue and atten rtesy the injured. The telephone service of tl ip of is crippled, by falling polos anc mgth en wires. It is impossible t( o to the damage in the outlying d nnes- Thirty loaded box cars on t fined ing at the flepot were blown id it track, and completely demol fact, Cuthbert is a town of aboul jding Inhabitants, situated in Ra he county, on th Central of Georg dant, road, about 200 miles south\ curs- Augusta, near the Alabama 11 and ilonel ins MIND WAS OFF ;ainst Boston Policeman Kills His W that natoi Himself. repu- ? Rnstnn. Marob S.?Danipl ( love 'ane> a policeman, was found early today in his home ii Boston from the effects of a was )t be woun<*' believed to have bee aha inflicted, while the body of h P lay in the floor beside him. S man lied later at the hospital. m^' said that Shillane, who had in D. ,. , ^ ^ policeman 22 years, was de from two years' brooding ov '.'?e death of a 19-year-old dai 1 111-8 The Shillane family occupie< 1011 third floor of a tenement Conditions indicated that the ( _.a edy occurred while break fa: being prepared. Other fami i rii l101lS(? liear(i two quick r< ug shots from the kitcheji of th n.so lane apartment. They forcet oanu lj10 ^oor an(j found Mrs. S 111 a lead and Shillane still breathi insensible. In his hand wa r" nistol. tPlling the story of wh tober happened, had had BAKED CHILD OX STOA rtain lared '*ut Said She Did Not AVant to fact tin* Boy. r all akes New York, March 8.?M: with Miles, the housekeeper of Wm. son, a cabinet maker, of Wil said burg, was hold without bail to men- the action of the grand jury bj ens': istrate Uigginbotham in Brook > at- 'lay, on a charge of having < ma- the death of Johnson's 3-ye you hoy, Arthur, by holding him on stove. Tho accused woman- s t un- court that the child was unrul ; for she had threatened to set h L-ious the sfove, but had not intent injuro him. up ling, TIIE HEADY PISTOL. uddv tl,( Tragedy Enacted on tho Strc )cr, sked Vidulia, (la. oria-1 out Vidalia, Ga., March S.? and Moore, a prominent lumbermai iff it shot to death on the street tot] that W. L. Darby, another well 1 the business man. The men quai itery over a business matter. >rig- slapped the face of Darby. The copy irew his pistol and shot Moore raig Darby fled, but was captured the in a swamp, two miles frorr ' he place hidden beneath a pile of iself He was placed in Toombs' c you. jail. raig * was NEGRO MURDERER CAVG n" Man Who Slew Two With One ' and in Custody. New Orleans, March 8.? Clark, a negro, who with one inds sl?w 'wo m^n at Am#sv.ille, La across the river from Ntew Or two years ago, has been arresl Jennings. La. Clark's victims J 0 a white man named Richardson was the object of the nogroe fill- tack, and a negro youth wh( his standing near Richardson, anc sec- whom the rifle bullet went after ich- ing through Richardson's bod and >ton Many a man has paid a 1< ;en- $"> and $10 for poorer ad/vice ady his wife would willingly have him for nothing. MANY KILLED " TEIiAnd Many More Injured by Cyclone in Arkansas Hun < HUNDREDS HOMELESS Lost. ________ \ tpr? . , The Town of Brinkley Almost Wiponight egroes cd Off the Map?Fourteen White lg the nn<1 Civtoftn Pulnrpil Ppniilp Knnuii g one ?" * "- * nd in- to j,e j)cn(j?Many Killed at Otliwhich er Places. >s, owLittle Rock, Ark., March 8.?Many lectric _ , , . ? . persons are reported dead, and a dingly , . . J . of life nuni'jer inj"''cd as the result of a to the v'?'eut storln which swept through ng western, eastern and southern^Ar' kansas late this afternoon and to; been . , , 'or the le citi Three are reported to have been killed at Brinkley and dispatches at a re- ., . , . .. , . . , midnight on the only wire in opera8 rU- tion between that place and Little , Rock, a railroad wire, were to the efsouth fect tliat tlie town Was 'n flames> an(i its complete destruction seemed in; little .. ,, evitable. S W^th Brinkley is a town of 3,000 per. sons and the junction point of sevv v l v I d ' eral important railroad systems, syc one A dispatch from Forest City says ' a late advices from Brinkley indicate >rchan- tha(. practjca]iy the entire town is 1 cre now a mass of ruins and that eight persons have ben killed and the inal sec- jured wjjj jjC numbered by scores, e hun- The fire a(. 2 o'clock this morning is , fenc- gt|]j |Uirnjng an(j the reflection can lamage seen from here, a distance of 1 hoi"e twenty miles. Every physician of fhh t Place as We^ as many Burses ?r were dispatched to Brinkley at mid>10 citv J night and other towns are rushing !jna 68 aid to the storm-swept town. in ers ^ Cotton Belt passenger train due 10n 0 in Little Rock at 6:30 o'clock tohe citv 's 'os*' 'n vicinity Bau1 brok cum' where a tornado struck, and is , reported to have been swept off the ) learn istrict trac^- Another report is to the . effect that the train was struck by he sid- ^ off the ,1?nin,n?>* xvanroaa oinces m ijilliu . . , Rock have been endeavoring to lo1S_ * cate the train for hours, but have '. , been unable to do so. ia rail rf'he tornado struck at Fourchdema f at five o'clock this afternoon within ine ? ^ve m'les kittle Rock, killing a negro boy and injuring other negroes. Two houses were demolished by fire after it had been blown to bits. Several negroes are reported ifc and to be fatally hurt. The tornado crossed the Arkansas river at Fourchdema and raised a 3. Shil- spout of water about 200 feet high. dying It traveled toward the northeast and n East swept a clean path about sixty yards bullet wide. It was impossible to get any n self- definite reports from that vicinity is wife tonight. The tornado was followed hillanr by a violent hail and rain storm, It is which kept up throughout the night, been a The same tornado passed into Bauranged cum, where the extent of the darner the age is also unknown and from there lighter, to Kerns, in Lonke county where sevi the ?ral home were demolished and E. house. B. Adams, a farmer, was serously if > trag- not fatally injured. > it was He, with his wife, son and three lies in others were in the house at the time; jvolver of the storm. They were hurled e Shil- in the debris, hut all escaped alive. 1 open The home of Dan Wlagner, a sawj hillane mill operator, near there, was also ng but destroyed, but he and his wife ess' his caped with a few bruises. A gin at had and several negro cabins were de-; molished. All the windows of a train between j TE. Gurdon and Rester were blown out., At Balvern the Methodist church Injure was entircly destroyed at a loss of $6,000. The Baptist church was J damaged, portion of the court house was unroofe'd and other extensive \ irjorie damage was done. n0 loss of life Jonn- ,vas rep0rted, although the extent of lliams- |jjq damage in the surrounding counawail try was not i<nowni r Mag lyn to- OVIOH THIRTY DEAD. caused ar ^'1 Property Worth One Million Dollars i a hot aid in Destroyed. y, and im on Brinkley, Ark., March 9.?Thirty led to ore more lives were snuffed out, sixty people were injured and property estimated to be worth one million dollars was destroyed as a result of the tornado which wrecked , this little city last night. Fourteen ots of whites and sixteen colored persons are known to have been killed. Every business house is in ruins, O. G. and there is hardly a home that has i, was not at least suffered 'he loss of a lay by roof or kinStnown Hundreds of people are homeless relied an<* are wandering about seeking a Moore temporary abode. latter ?? down. ^ix Killed Near Little Rock. later Little Rock, March 9.?Six dead i this and eight injured are reported today ' logs, in the vicinity of Little Rock as the :ounty result of the tornado which pass<?.i close to Little oRck Monday night. The dead: HT. Mrs. Elrod, aged 75, Benton, Ark. Rullet ^Trs" ^am Kestrrson, Salem. Unknown child at Piney Woods, near Carlis.e. Edgar, Roy and Lena, aged 17, -Jesse 12 and 8 years respectively, children bullet of Mrs. Isabel Mason, at Zion. just Mrs. Mason and six other children leans, were seriously hurt. Mrs. Cruce, Iivted at inS near Benton were also injured. were One of her arms was broken. i, who The Methodist church and school 's at- bouse at Mount Carmel were demol) was ished and eight houses at Hurri1 into cane Creek were destroyed. pass y. Negro Brained. Cowpens, S. C., March 8.?At a awver railroad camp a few miles from here than one negro man brained another with given an axe. They were drunk and quarrelled about a woman. SOME GOOD ADVICE H FROM DR. ELLIOT OX RACIAL . Ar INTERMARRIAGES. He Says That Different Races of People Have Never Profited by ^ Doing So. Montgomery,. Ala., March 8? Cfi "There should be no admixture of racial stock," declared retiring President Eliot, of Harvard University, tonight in an interview. "I believe, for example, that Irish should not intermarry with the Americans of English descent; that the Germans should not marry the Italians; that the Jews should not marry the Each race should muiatain its own 11 Individuality. The experience of civ- n ilization shows that racial stocks are l never mixed with profit, and that ^ such unions do not bring forth the best and strongest children. There is no reason, however, why the races y cannot live together, side by side, r in perfect peace and amity. t) "In the case of the negroes and the whites, the races should be kept apart in every respect. The Sottth n has a wise policty. I believe that r Booker T. Washington has the right j. Ideals, and that Dubois is injuring a the progress of his race with his views." j President Eliot emphatically de- c nies that he ever said that there r was a suffrage problem in the North, -j owing to the predominance of Cath- j olics. j "In the North we are affiliated ] in our civic life by having masses j of voters who know nothing of liber- j ty. Take the Irish?they say them- , selves, that at home they had no < experience at self-government. Our , problem is to ?how the newer arrivals . that it is to their interest to have , efficient government and not lavish . expenditure." ( BRIDGES TO BE REPLACED \ 1 With Better Ones by the Atlantic , Coast Line. ; Wilmington, N. C., March 8.?It is announced from the executive offices of the Atlantic Coast Line here that i from the proceeds or the recent sale ' of the road's consolidated 4 per cent < bonds in New York the company has i provided, in addition to the cancellation of its short term, that the per i cent notes due March 1, 1910, and all the cash necessary to retire i on June 1, 1910, one million six hundred thousand underlying 6 per cent bonds, the funds required for replacing five and one-quarter miles : of wooden trestle with concrete piers and steel girders across the Pee-Dee river, near Florence, S. C.; over Santee river, between Lanes and Charleston, S. C., and over the Savannah, river, between Hardeeville, S. C., and Savannah. By the negotiations for i the sale of the bonds interest charges will be reduced $119,000 per an- i num. i MEETS HORRIBLE DEATH. I Negro Gin Hand Given Lye in His , Coffee. ( Florence, March 8.?News reach- ( ed the city late today -of a terrible 1 affair, which resulted in the death of James Allison, a negro, at Allison's ? Postoflice, which resulted in Allison's 1 death Saturday night. From what can be learned Allison i was employed by Makers. A. Poston & < Son as a fireman at their ginnery and ? saw mill plant. After eating his t breakfast at the mill Friday morning S he was taken suddenly ill and never t regained consciousness, death result- I ing on Saturday. s Tlr 'RarMv n nhvsipinn in that ce>r- C tion was called in and pronounced I the case one of poisoning. The mag- r istrate in that township held an in- s quest and It was found that the ne- f gro had been poisoned by being giv- o en a dose of consentrated lye, which it is now thought was administered a through the sugar that was used in e sweetening his coffee. t o ANOTHER FLIM FLAM ARTIST e e 'Works a Skin Game on the Negroes I1 r< of Prosperity. d Prosperity, March 8.?A negro | claiming to be from Washington, D. n C., has been in this community for C the past ten days organizing a new "skin game." He said he had au- w thority from President Roosevelt to ai organize the negroes into lodges, and N when they paid ten dollars they tc 'could get anything they wanted, and tl their membership was a guarantiee a: that they would get it. tl He got too familiar wi'.h one of 01 the sisters and she resented it. This li led to trouble with the husband and ri the usual fight ensued, and the result m was the Rooseveltian agent was tied si hog fashion and brought to Judge tn Kibler's office. The agent was charg- in ed with vagrancy and carrying concealed weapons, and was sent up for dutv for the country for sixty davs. A charge for assault and battery with attempt to kill awaits him when 0f he has finished the sixty days. ^ he POWDER MILLS EXPLODE. ed ha Only One Man Was Killed in the P? di: Accident. 1,0 Wilmington, Del., March 8.?One man was killed and several others slightly injured early today in an explosion which destroyed two mills hn in the Hagley yard of the Dupont Sa Powder Company, near here. The of dead man is George Whitman, aged P<? 50 years, an employe. The accident rei was caused by the explosion of an experimental barrel. The country was shaken for miles around. fla IGH DEATH RATI nong the Junior S ienatjFrom South Carolii ia HE SENIOR SEN ATO " " flin tr.il HIS Aiwrnuuu w MttiKT Eulogizing Senator L: itimer E cently in tho Senate Chambt Senator Tillman lias Had Pi Colleagues in Fourte en Years. Charleston, March. g. ? T harleston Post says the Bena ic other day eul' jgies were pi ounced on tho ^te Senator A. atimer, who di^j a year ago, aft ve years in service as a member iat body, leaving previously for t ears been 'a member of the house epreeentatives. As the senior sei ar from the State represented by t eparted senator, Mr. Tillman pi ounified the first expression of s< ow iat t'ne death of his late colleagi le remarked an interesting recc s follows: "It is a little more than fourte ^ars since I was sent by the peo] if South Carolina to be one of thi epresentatives in this chamber, tings now are that is about oi hird of the average lifetime of nan, and while during the time th< lave transpired many events of n onal importance, it seems but a br period after all. Yet during t. comparatively short span I ha served here with five United Sta senators from South Carolina, a ifter the fourth of March my sii colleague will have taken the o? it the desk. It is a strange coin Jence that all of these men who he come and gone save one were youi jr in years than I. Three of th< have answered .the roll call on I i>thor side of the river. First service, John Lowndes Manni trby, bright, brave, witty and geni next the knightly and courtly , seph Haynesworth Earle, forcef logical, chivalrous and in every v> well equipped for work in the fori or on the bench; last, Asbt Churchwell Latimer, who, while i nied in youth those advantages education possessed by the other ti was in some respects the superior either of them." By designating none but those his colleagues who have passed fr life, Senator Tillman avoided 1 necessity of naming and of char terizing the one with whom his sociation was most strenuous, Jo Lowndes McLaurin. It would h? been interesting to have had his timate of McLaurin pronounced this calm mood and upon this solei Dccasion. When Tillman took his seat In 1 senate in 1895, succeeding M. Butler, who had had three ter in the chamber, he found J. L. [rby as his colleague in the represi Nation of South Carolina in that bo< a nine more man a year afterwai Joseph H. Earle was elected to si leed Irby, who did not offer for : ?lection in the primary which nor lated Judge Earle. In Decemb 1907, Senator Earle was sworn is a member of the chamber, a vithin three months he was dead. Governor Ellerbe, who also di n office before completing his s< >nd term as chief executive of t State, appointed John L. McLaui ;o fill the vacancy, and the Dem :rats of South Carolina confirm he appointment by nominating M jaurin at the primary held in t lummer of 1898. At the complete ?f this term, a service of five yeai klcLaurin retired from the senal lot offering for re-election, and h ince been a negligible and almost orgotten figure in the political li if South Carolina. lie was succeeded by the late Se tor Latimer, who, as we have nc d, lived to serve but five years he full term to which he was elec d. A year ago the general assemb lected Frank G. Gary to fill the u xpired term, and he is now cor leting that brief service, and wi etire to private life at noon on tl ay after tomorrow. The gener ssembly which has just adjourn* lected E. D. Smith to succeed hir atifying the nomination made in tl emocratic primary last summer. As Senator Tillman says, Mr. Smit ill be his sixth colleague in the sei te during a period of fourteen year ot one of these has served a fu 5rm in company with Tillman, an ie average length of their servic 3 his associates is but a little moi lan two years. It is a striking re< rd of mortality?physical and pc tical?and is well calculated to giv se to melancholy reflection in th ind of the survivor of so many an ich brief asociations in the consti itional representation of his Stat the United States senate. Pounds of Rones. Savannah, March 8.?Just abou finish a contract for 20,000 pound bones, most of which he stated hi id obtained from a negro graveyari re, Joe Marks, colored, was arrest yesterday by a patrolman. H< d some plates from coffins in hi: ckets. He will not be allowed tc sinter any more bodies, but wil tried on the lunacy charge. Avalanche Kills Twenty-Seven. Vienna, March 9.?An avalanohr s destroyed a workman's shelter al nkta Johan, in the Pongau distric! Salzburg, killing twenty-sever rsons. Fifteen bodies have beer covered. A thin purse makes a person fee' _ ? flLr't J.i <2 ?? Experiments Show Often Improved Sek rs CVER C< Have a choice lot of selectei $1.50 bu., Cooks $1.00, Kings Big Boll $1.00, Texas Bun 85 O pher 90c, Peterkin 85c. Writ Selected Seed Corn $1.75 bu. R.D. TATUM e- DAT! X AiJl II ft S Gibbes a Gibbes' swing 8 Drop Supporters ?' Bmixjth running _ . Accurate cutting 01 |4_ 7 _ Thoroughly braced IT C Cast iron and glcnl gjj Aw kJ Finent babbitting Wrlto for prices and Of GIBBES MACHINE?,' GOOU "Ulbbw Qnariiu'-^ he I -a roSouthern Statj ?e,? As Plumbln 3re COLUf atief 1FREE ci- Ladies or Gentlemen's E $5 BARNATTO Bin Brilliancy equals genuine? quirement exacting?pleases tl tlie cost of real diamond. n.f A:1 a means of intraductal "J ' lating gem, and secure as many , ? are making a special Inducenu We want you to wear thi a>r Man's handicraft, this simulal 11111 and flashes with all the Are of iry * A Genuir vn. ~f We want you to show it 1 as it sells itself?sells at sight 100 Per C the ac_ for you, absolutely without effo ag_ We want good, honest rep jjn ?ty, eity or country, in fact, in i ive men an(* wornen' young o eg_ Diirnatto Simulation Diamonds i Gems, as such action with sir trouble or embarrassment. mn Fill out Coupon below and :he ****** * q * Write her name of paper In \ ms * The Barnatto Diamond Co., { * Sirs: Please send Free ?n- * or Scarf (Stick) Pin Catalog, * Name ds * No JC_ * Town or City re_ * ? * * * * tiler, Twenty-Seventh. in The home of Morris Conner, of nd toona, Pa., was visited by the st ed for the twenty-seventh time a ;c_ days ago. The blessing this time 1 he a girl. Conner has now had '*n children by.his second wife. 10 ed "I am down In the mouth," s IC. the pancake, as Johnny took a ne . ... bite. on [ g , ' Common sense always brings f ' cy prices. as ~ ~ * CLASSIFIED COLUMI (t. Easter Post Cards?10 for 10 c; 1 0f for 90c. Beauties. Address I !t. 307, Gallitzin, Pa. ly n_ Cow Peas?Send sample, quote pi n. es, giving varieties. J. Lindi 111 Wells Co., Memphis, Tenn. ie al For Sale?One Am. 15-horsepov steam engine; practically good n, new; ean be seen running. I ie dress J. E. Johnson, Supt. Ne< Mfg. Co., Yorkville, S. C. h i- For Sal<??BufY Plymouth Rock, B s. Leghorn, and Rhode Island R 11 egss,, $1.00 for 15. Register d, Jersey cow. Thos. R. Goldsmi: :e R. F. D. No. 3, Fountain Inn, S. e > Cotton Seed?300 bushels Bros )- well's double-jointed cotton se e for sale; seed pure, extra eai e and yield big lint. Price $1 bus d el. P. J. Johnson, Greer, S. < I- R. F. D. No. 4. e Moneymaker cotton, improved by J. Kirven, makes one-third mo than any other variety, with sac t expense. Seed 50 cents per bus s el; if sacked and shipped 55 cen e bushel. T. J. Kirven, Providenc i S. C. 5 OK I FATAL RUG COMPANY, s Mi)] ( Htlicnrai Nt., Kammore, n > We make you handsome and du 1 ible Rugs from your old, wornoi carpet, any sizo to fit a room or hal Let. ns send you a price list; ju write for one E COLUMBIA SUPPL Your Engine I What a man of experience has several governors, of various m the Gunther-Wright. This gov ever tried." We carry all sizes in COLUMBIA SUI a Difference of $25.00 per Acre of ;cted Cotton Seed DMMON SEED 1 seed at following prices: Broadwells; $1.0 0, Mortgage Lifter 90c, Tatum's. >c, Schley 85c, Culpepper 85c, Christo- / .? for prices on large lots. Fine lot , Fair View Farm klETTO, GA. SAW ^ Watch O J ? comblnod. j ? g partioutar*. I j ?? 7 rnMi><,wv jK.1 M i" Jkl3=? 21 Snapp Mwhln<!ry,"?All klndu ? Cor.rNrn v. . f. ! :s Supply Company sA B I A, S. O. SAMPLE OFFER 15 DAYS ONLY Beautiful, Bright, Sparkling, Famous Diamond Ring -deto ction baffles experts?fills every rele most fastidious, at only one thirtieth ?r % this marvelous and wonderful sclntilnew friends as quickly as possible,' w* jnt f or the New Year. s beautiful Ring, this master-piece of tion that sparkles with all the beauty, ie Diamond to your friends and take orders for us, >?and makes :ent. PROFIT rt on your part. resentatives everywhere, in every local ever y country throughout the world, r ?id, who will not sell or pawn. The inde r the pretense that they are Genuine aula tion diamonds sometimes leads to mai 1 at once?First Come?First Served* ******** *** *?** vhlc h you saw this ad 3ira rd, Bldg., Chicago. i Sa mple Offer, King, Earring, Stud R. F. D. R. No * ... St. P. O. Bo* State ' ******** ********* RATTLE SNAKE OIL. Al- Guaranteed treatment for deafQj-k ness, guoiter, asthma, catarrh and f rheumatism. We will send one package of White Eagle "New Blood Puriw&s fler" and one bottle of Rattle Snake ten oil for $1.50. Blood Purifier is a cure for constipation, kidneys, lirer and stomach trouble, which will iaj^ make two months treatment. Send v,j_ ?c for free sample. White Eagle Indian Medicine Co., St. Louis. WHAT IS HOME WITHOUT MUSIC? j Don't say, "can't afford an Organ or 1 Piano. ~ We will make you ablie, gramting LOO fro one tbiree years to pay for iox oneWe supply the Sweet Toned, Dup ible Organs and Pianos, at the low.jc. prices consistent with quality. Write at once for Catalogue, Prices and Terms, to the Old Established MALOVF MUSIC HOUSE, ' r Columbia, S. C. as . idnil/ TTT 1 * Tn-lT-1 w-^ WAJN'l'ED uff ed ____________ ed ??? th, 1 q Customers for Seed Sweet Potatoes, Amber and Orange id- Cane Seed, Beardless Barley and e(* Seed Corn. Largest stock in the ?]y , ders and inquiries given prompt ill^ attention. We offer in 5-case lots and upwards 3-lb. tomatoes, 75c ? per doz.; 3-lb. pie peaches, 85c doz.; pink salmon, 85c doz.; re 2-lb. Winor brand "hulled" ne jj. cum, nuiuiug 11 lici iui me Lituit), ts $1.50 doz. e, ' Lorick & Lowrance [] (Inc.) s COLUMBIA, S. C. ? COMPANY. COLUMBIA. 8. 0^1 Meeds a Good Governor. 3 to say after using (he leading makes.?"I have tried I 4 akes, but failed to get proper regulation until I used I ernor gives better regulation than any other I have 1 1 stock,flanged orscrewed bottom with screwed tide. M PPLY COMPANY, COLUMBIA. S. C.