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TRIO TO HANG Od One Gallows (or the Murder of a Florence County Citizen. KILLED MR. EUHU MOYE Five Negroes Were Arrested at First Charged With the Crime, Which Was Committed in the Homo of the Victim, but Two of Thecn Were discharged. Fw the murder of Ellhu Moye, Willie Burroughs, Ellie Weldon and Olarance Ham were convicted at Florence Monday and sentenced to he hanged on Friday, December 16. The asual motion for a new trial was overruled. five negroes were under arrest charged with the killing of Elihu Mojro several weeks ago. Of the fl?e the solicitor held three and had no hill returned in the case of Henry Joues and Senior Asking. The ne trroea on trial were Clarence Ham, long a trusted employe and friend or Mr. lloye; Willie Borroughs and El lie Weldon. The court house and court yard were crowded long before tne hour for trial by people from all over the county, who came to hear the case and see the negroes who had com mitted a crime that shocked the en tire community. Jsige Brown's charge to the jury was brief, covering, as usual, the degrees In homicide cases, and on their duty to the country. The so licitor wished to use Clarence Ham as a witness, so did not put him on trial with the other two. W. F. Glayton, E. S. Oliver and Claude Gas^ue were appointed by tlie court to represent the accused. Clarence Ham was ,*put on the stand first. He testified that he had Met the other two negroes and tney told mm air. aioye nua gone to Timmonsville and that there was money in the house and they must hare it. He consented to watch in th? road while they went to get it. He was to whistle in case any one approached and he did so when Mr. Moyo drore up later. Mr. Move went into the house and struck; a match, the other negroes forced him to go to the house. He heard one shot, then another, th?n saw some one stagger out of the door. He grabbed up the gun for his protection, but they led him away and . offered him a drink, gave him $3.00^ ami told> him t*o say nothing about the affair. They offered him $25 and to pay his way to Florence If he <w?uld say nothing about the affair. Tkero was practically no testi mo?y for the defense and though the counsel for the accused earnestly worked to prevent injustice or prej udice affecting the case, the jury, without difficulty, found both Wel don and Burroughs guilty. The trial of Clarence Ham was then entered into. He acknowledged bis gnilt and in response to the usu al qneatlon by the solicitor said that any method of trial would suit him. He was.promptly convicted. Before the close of court shortly after seven o'clock all three negroes were sentenced to hang on Friady, December 16. Mr. Clayton, on be half of his clients, moved for a new trial on the ground that the evidence J f J AArBAKorofft fVia /?on focclnn am JUUU UUllUUUiaiO WUU \yVUl.VWM'VU of Clarence Ham and that the crowd and pressure of public opinion In the matter wa3 an obstacle to unbiased opinion. Solicitor Wells replied that the Jury was competent to judge the facts as presented and that there had not been the slightest success attendant on the efforts of the defense to dis prove any of. the statements and that the verdict ought to stand. Judge Brown eompHmented the crowd tor tts order and refused to gran*, the new trial. Safe Found Intack. The Iron safe containing $16,000 stolen from the substation of the Wells-Fargo Express company at Muskcgee, Okla., last Saturday nigat was found Tuesday night and all the ?oney recovered. The safe, which was found under the porch of an abondoned house, had not been open ed. Several suspects are being held. Must Pay $300 Damages. Because the Western Union Tele graph Co., failed to transmit u mes sage from Detroit, M!ch., to Kausas City, Mo., after accepting .it, the United Slates supreme court held the telegraph company for more than $300 damages. The company receiv ed forty cents to send the message. Many Die iu Misie. At Durant, Okla., thirteen miners T.ere killed In an explosion at the J am do aspnau mims jioimy uuu lhi? Of the 14 men in the workings ar Jhe mine was brought out. tiive but unconscious. Five men were blown from the mouth of the shaft by the force of the eX"lo?ion and the othnr ? were entombed. tttinko IJite Whs Fnt.il. Mr. Samuel Kinch, of Butier, *" ... died at the hospital at Ocala, Fla.. Saturday from the effects of a rattle snake bite received while out hunt ing. In trying to capture a raobit which he had chased into a hole, Sir. Kinch put.his hand la the hole and was bitten three times by the snak*. Mine Victims Found. The bodies of ten miners, who were entombed in mine No. 3 of the Providence Mining company at Prov idence, Ky., Friday afternoon, were breught to the surface, one by one by the government mine corps station ed at Linton. ?nd.. Saturday. ALL RAIL TRAVEL FROM THH SOUTH TO THE CIT1 OF NEW YORK A REALTIY. "United States Fast Mail," of the Souths-a Railway, First Train to Enter the Magnificent New Station Rail transportation from the Sohtbeast direct to the heart of New York city became a ract sunaay morning, whfva the Southern Ratl day'a "United States Fast Mail," handlloj sleepers from New Orleam and Birmingham ria Atlanta, rolled into the magnificent New York pas senger station of the Pennsylvania Railroad, through the tunnels under the Hudson River, which were open ed for traffic at midnight. Travel from New York direct to the South began when the South bound "United States Fast Mail" le't ten minutes after midnight, being | the first through train to leave the ! station. During the day the other five trains of the Southern to and from the South, the "New York, At lanta and Orleans Limited," the "Birmingham Special," operated be tween Birmingham aijd New York via Atlanta, the Southern's "South eastern Limited," between Jackson ville and New York and Aiken and Augusta: the "Memphis Special," be tween Memphis and New York via Chattanooga. Bristol and Lynch burg; the "New York, Chattanooga and New Orleans Limited" made their first arrivals at and departuss from the new station. This mammoth passenger station, i which covers twenty-eight acres and is the largest building in the world, ever put up at one time, was put In to operation under the handling of a force so well trained that everything was working as smoothly when the first train came In as if the terminal had been in use for months. The location of the station, at the space i enclosed by 7th and 8th avenues j and 31st and 33nd streets, enables passengers to alight from trains only a few blocks from their hotel and. by its use, the ferry trip from Jer sey city, which has been a part of travel to, and from New York sln?e the trains were run from the eSouth, goes into history. Passengers, who wish to go dircet to the down-town financial district, can leave trains at Harrison, New Jersey, and take cars through the Hudson Tubes, which will put them to lower Broadway in a few minutes. With the use of the new station of the Pennsylvania Railroad of only electric lighted sleeping cars on the Southern between che Southeast and New York. These sleepers, which supply every convenience which modern ingeniuty can supply, now take passengers from their homees, in all important points throughout the Southftaat to this e-reat station. In the heart of the hotel, theatrical and shopping district of New York, with the corresponding scrvice in the opposite direction. The magnitude of the great im provement which the opening of this new station and the tunnel system puts into use, and the extreme care [ which is being exercised for the pro tection of passengers, is the fact that a private fire department of thirty men has been organized and placed in charge cf a fire protecting plant, installed at great expense after the most careful study, despite the fact that the station building and the material used in the tunnels are what would generally be considered adsolutely fireproof. On the day of the opening, besides the number run in and out, thous ands of interested sightseers, enjoy ed their first opportunity to inspect the architectual beauties as well as the ample and excellent facilities of this great passenger terminal. SWEPT INTO THE SEA. Landing Sledge Dragged In Caspian Carrying 300. A dispatch from Astrakahn, Rus sia, says during a sudden tempest In the Caspian Sea Tuesday a landing sledge ou wbich were three hundred i Persian dock workers was dragged from its moorings and swept out to sea. The storm waa so violent that attempts at rescue were futile and all hope that any of the men will be saved has .been abandoned. Scores of ships, several with their crews oa board, were sunk at their moorings at different Caspian coast towns. Seven towns along the coast were flooded, the inhabitants In hundreds being forced to 6eek safety. First Tliis Year. The lynching of the negro at Lit tle Mountain was the only record of mob violence in South Carolina dur ing tho present year. It was the second lynching to occur in the state j wlthiu the past four years. There have bften several negroes convicted ';iri hanged for the same crime that i the Little Mountain negro w;;s lynch ed. From Fating Oysters. Five persons in the family of F. W. Gibson, residing in Mobile, Ala., including his no ro cook, worn no's cued from ea 'ousters S.V.i.-la night and had a narrow escape fr^n death. They nte turkey stuffed with oysters left over from the Thanks giving dinner and aoon aft !i wards ! suffered excruciating agony for sev eral hours. Unusual Display of Nerve. Cutting off his hand with a razor, i after it had been crushed in a corn ilshredder. J. Bruce Vaughn, of Eu j reka " Mills, Charlotte County, Vir i. ginia, carefully bandaged the stump 'and awaited the arrival of a Burgeon to put the finishing touches to the operation. AWFUL TIMES On the Circus Train on Which Youg Williams Was Murdered. TRUE BILL IN THE CASE George Nichols, John Wilson, Elijah Clark and Garland Brown Are Charged With the Brutal Murder of the Young Man From Colum bia While on the Train. At a epeclal term of court ordered by Governor Ansel, the general ses sions court for Lexington County on Monday entered upon the trial of several defendants for the murder and robbery of young Paul Williams of Columbia, which occurred October 2 last, on a special train over the Southern railway, carrying the Hag cnlieok & Wallace circus to Augusta from Columbia. Judge George W. Gage of CUester is presiding. The evidence Monday gave some idea of the wholesale pillase of the first section of the Ilagenbeck-Wal lace circus train by bands of riotous circus employes, white men and ne groes, which took place in the early morning of October 2, between Col umbia and Augusta, and during which Paul Williams was shot and robbed. The circus men were paid off in Columbia on October 1. In the "privilege" car on the first section of the train going to Augusta there was an abundance of whiskey. The roughs and toughs of the circus gang , proceeded to get tanked and robbed ; or "red lighted" their fellow em | ployes. In circus parlance, "red I lighting" is throwing a man off the j train and letting him see if he Is able, the red signal lamps oil the caboose. Felton Gilbert, a negro, who testified against Dave Woods j and Ed. White, was among those "red lighted" during the riot. Masked bands of negroes and white men, armed with pistols, roam ed the train on the night of October iJ, robbing and "red li?hting" prom iscuously. Members of one of thest gangs shot Paul Williams and threw his body overboard. George Nich ols, Elijah Clark, Garland Brown and John Wilson are charged with being the guilty men. In their stories each excepts himself, but declares that the other three did the bloody work. The first indictment handed the grand jury by George Bell Timmer man, solicitor, was that charging George Nichols, Elijah Clark, John Wilson and Garland Brown with the murder of Paul A. Williams and with carrying concealed weapons. The grand jury returned a true bill. The four men charged with the | murder are very low types. George] Nicholi, the white man, about thirty years old, has a weak, vicious face. On his chin is a heavy growth of beard. Elijah Clark is a coal-black ] negro, with the features, arms and, torso of a gorilla. He was named ' in two of the true bills returned by i the grand jury, besides the one' charging that he murdered Paul Wil-. liams. John Wilson and Garland Brown are both mul?ttoes. John ( Wilson, the younger of the two is not over twenty years old. He claims, that he was born in London, Eng-ji land. He has a letter from his i sister, written from Springfield, O., { In which she advises him to "com-,; mend himself to God." Garland! Brown is a thick-set mulatto, with a low, receding forehead. In the case, the court appointed as counsel for the dtfense Messrs. J. B. Wingard of Lexington, and Bir-ji rett Jones of Batesburg. Solicitor,1 Timmerman has secured several im-1 portant statements, practically con- j fesaionB, from various ones of the j' defendants and witnesses. The sub-ji etance of Borne of these statements is I as follows : Garland Brown, colored: I was In; it, me, Elijah Clarke, John Wilson j and George Nichols. (Nichols is ai1 white man). Nichols said: Come' on, I know exactly where he 1>. ' Made two fellows Jump off. Paul (Williams R:iid- "nnn't kill me. don't ; kill me." John Wilson said: "G? , d? you, I am going to kill you. You are too damned hard on negroea I down here In the South." And then ! ht shot him In the head and Made Caba (J. O. Cabe, white, a witneBa) jump, and shot again. I had a pistol. Nichols had a sack, making a? If it was a pistol. After that he goes to < another wagon, where I work. E. Clark hit another fellow called "Shine" over the head with a pistol. Geogre Nichols was saving: "Give iue the gun." George Nichol? had on a black shirt with sleeves rolled up and a big black slouch hat. John Wilson, colored: Me. Clark, i Garland Brown and George Nichols i I were together. At the flr?t stop we! S went to the flats. We got to wagon : 3 7 S. I saw "Chickens" iinrl Frank I i Clark in It. Garland Brcwu and j j George Nichols had this strangf fe1 low in the corner of the wagon when ' 1 got up. Garland said: "Give me! that pistol," and lie said: "I haven't j j rot any." Me t<a.id: "I.et me see,"' land searched him. Garland had a| I pistol, lie then reached down and j j started to take off one of the boy's j shoes. I said: "Oh, come on back." I had a piBtol too. The train gave a jerk and a shot was fired: "Come on, throw him off." He looked orer and said with an oath: "He la still on there," and got down and threw him ofT. I had a .38; Garland had a .32; E. Clark had a .44. Georw> Nichols, white: John Cur ley, Wilson, Elijah Clark, and Gar land Brown, all together, shot into the wagons?two shots. Don't know i who did shooting. Clark said: "Throw him ofT, Brown." Brown; i said: "The got me all over with blood." Saw all three with pistols. ' IS FOUND GUILTY COMMITTED DARING CRIME ON CIRCUS TRAIN. Young Columbian Met l)?ath on the Train the Same Night.?Conflict ing Testimony Expected. Th# trial of Roy Rich, one of the circus employees on the Hagenbeck Wallace circus train, on the night In which Paul Williams, of Columbia, ?? ?* WU wKIaK ?r?a Kq rim It* UltM uia UCttlu, nuivu n h u^^uu iu the ipecial term of General Sessions Court Monday afternoon at Lexing ton and was concluded Tuesday af ternoon with a verdict of guilty. Rich waa charged with aasault and battery with intent to kill, and rob bery, the direct charge being that he, together with several other men, as saulted Barlie Hightower, an 18 year-old boy of Knoxvllle, Tenn., on the circus train. The only feature of the trial waa the powerful argu ment of Solicitor GSorje Bell Tim merman, which was the subject of much comment throughout the af ternoon. 'N. H. Bullock, special agent for the Southern Raliway, with head quarters at Washington, stated that ho had been in many Court rooms throughout the country, but that he had never heard an argument the equal of that made by the solicitor in this case. Rich was defended b/ Attorney E. F. Asbill, who made a strong and able fight in his behalf. The testi mony in the case was practically the same as that adduced at the trial of the Degroes convicted Monday, and showed beyond doubt that in the circus crew there must have been a number of thieves and robbers. Rich was charged with having relieved Hightower of forty-five cents in mon ey, which he had tied up In his Ehirt. The young man said that Rich covered him with a pistol, while others took the money. "Trix" Baker, a nerro, who was captured by SherifT Corley in Owens boro, Ky., a few days ago, testified that he saw Rich on one of the wa gons, on a flat car, and that there were six or eight with him. Ricu had a pistol in his hand swingin? by his side, but didn't see him as sault anyone or use the weapon at all. Clarence Lamberson, white, who had only been with the circus about a month, swore that he wa3 In the baggage wagon; saw a man with a white rag tied over hla face and with a pistol in his hand. Didn't recognize Rich, however, aa being the man. Special A*ent Ehney, of the South ern, testified as to his being on the train on the night in question, and that he ?aw a number of people on the flat car, when the train stopped at Lexington to get water. There was shooting and general rodylsm oa the cars; did not recognize the de fendant. Deputy Sheriff Miller wa3 the lasi witness for the State. He testlfijd as to having been shown the torn shirt by Marlie Higktower. Frank Anderson, another circus hand and a negro, was the first wit ness for the defense. He swore that he saw Roy Rich In bed on the car, that Rich had been sick and had left the show before it was over In Col umbia. Elijah Clarke testified t'i the same. Clark said that he him self filpnt nn a flat par while* Rlr.h waB in the sleeping car. J. S. Rowell, the Southern's agent j at Lexington, saw four men on the flat cars, when the circus train pass ed the depot, one of whom he thought was special Agent Ehney. The defendant then took the stand. Rich said that he was sick Id bed on a property car; joined the circus In May or June and received $30 per month from the circus hands, for furnishing them ice, soap, towels and $10 per week from the Bhow. He denied being drunk on the night of the crime: denied that he had ever been drunk in his life; denied that he ever gambled in his life; said it vrould have been Impos sible to have gone from the car n? was In without going through the boss's car, and this car was always kept locked. He Must Pick Up. A member of the Spartanburg fir# department of this Spartanburg fir? pounds of flesh within the next two weeks or resljn his position, accord ing to a ruling handed dowu by city council Monday afternoon. The minimum weight of a fireman In Spartanburg is 150 pounds and this man weigns out 14s. Richards Appointed. Governor Ansel Friday appointed John G. Kichards. Jr., of Kershaw county, railroad commissioner to succeed the late J. M. Sullivan. The term 16 for 26 months. Capt. Rich ards ran for governor last su.viriv. lie was 12 years in the General as sembly >!i?n Weds in Hurry. While poln.- to Savannah from Picaufort by boat Monday Mr. I. Kersrrling, of Dale, S. C.. proposed marriage to .Miss Cecilia Levitt, ol New York and upon tho arrival of the boat In Savannah they sought a rabbi and were married. Destructive Iiomb Explosion. A bomb explosion early Tuesday morning shook up one of tho most populated blocks in New York. It did extensive damage and created a panic in the neighborhood. The bomb exploded in the doorway of the Bella Triniaria saloon. Killed the Bandit. At San Francisco, Cal.. with one well directed shot, Augustus Warm bold, a saloon keeper, killed one bandit and caused another to raaUw a hasty escape from his saloon. SHE MOD BIG To in the Rprth and a Clyde Line Steward Gives Up When HE SEES THE FAT LADY Where to Stow 090 Pound Woman Still an Unsolved Problem.?TV Stairways on the Liner too Nir row for the Use of the Corpulent Passenger. "What shall we do with Big An nie?" was *ht question which puz zled Steward Dixon, of the Clyde Line Steamer Comanche, which wat in port Tuesday, bound from JacK sonville to New York, says the Newt and Courier. Mrs. Ouellette, better known as Big Annie, who tips the scales at 690 pounds and is said to be the world's fattest fat womaa has been Bhowing for a week Id Charleston. Tuesday she took passage on the Comanche for New York. When she boarded the ship the steward was at his wits end to know where to stow the big passen ger. It would never do to assign her to a berth such as ordinary pa? sengers occupy, bo the officer took the matter under serious considera tion. Some one suggested that ihe be given one of the big bertha on the upper deck, but the problem of getting the fat lady up the stairway leading to the upper deck killed the suggestion on the spot. What dis position the courteous and obliging young steward of the Comanche made of his passenger is not known Mrs. Ouellette and her daughter a very pretty girl of 18, named Flos sie. were seated on the comfortable lounges of the forward saloon of the Comanche when a reporter dropped In to pay his repsects to the world'a fattest woman. Mrs. Ouellette can not speak English very well, being a French Canadian. Her pretty daugh ter, however, "knows United State* from A. to Z," and through the fair Interpreter the reporter plied the large lady with a number of ques tions. Big Annie says that she come* ;honestly by her tremendous alz?. Her mother weighed 245 pounds and her father 260 potnds. When ask?d how long she had been exhibiting herself, she said for the past flftesn years. Luckily, she has never been forced to travel with the side shows of the circus, but has exhibited her generous proportions on her own responsibility. Big Annie says she Ms the mother of six children. It was a rather em barrassing question to ask of a fair rniinc Hrl hut th? rennrt^r asVftrl Miss Flossie if she expected to be fat like her mother. She refused to answer the question, adding, how ever, that she was the youngen child and that the two older slster? were women of rather generou? build. At present the golden-haired blue-eyed lassie does not give prom ise of ever tipping the scales at more than 130 pounds. Big Annie says she does not mind travelling around and showing her self. However, she remarked that there was no money for a fat woman in Charleston, probably, as her daughter expressed it, because of the fact that Charleston people all feel bigger than the strangers within their gates. Mrs. Ouellette and her daughter are now on their way to their home in Billerica, Mass. STRANGELY WARNED. Dream Causes Men to Flee from Mine to Safety. A dream has resulted in the severe curtailment of the output of the Frederick coal mine of the Colorado Fuel and Iron Company, at Trini dad, Col., the output showing a de cline of several hundred tons the last tnree dayB. Juan Mestas, a Mexican miner, dreamed a few nights ago that the mine blew up. He told the story to his fellow workers and and in less than an hour 150 men had quit' Some have returned, bul many of the more superstitious have thus far refused to take up their picks. Senator Tillman Better. Senator Tillman will attend the .TEPions of conn, c-s durln* :'iff ptes ent winter. This announcement made Friday by Dr. J. W. Babcock, who returned to Columbia fra.n Trenton, where he spent Thanksgiv ing day with Stnator Tillman. Dr. Babcock said that he found Senator Tillman in very much improved health Arrest Alleged I?obber. R F. Rutz, wanted at F.iuie Pa an, T/*\aK. for b:ink robbery 11>st Jims, wns arrested in N'mssmu county, Kla , Sunday afternoon. Usgnist'd as a farm h:*tid. According to Detect! vs Chfathwin, Rutz b:i? been heard from ;it many pin res in Mr-.tico and #J,o w ,1 | rtljuiu Uit i n.rt Piuvv ? v ? v.. _ committed. Tlir?><. Drown in liny. A pleasure s-:iil on .Jatnlra bay re fultcd in the drowning Friday of three men. whllv i fourth was rearn ed in a serious ror.ditiou. The dead men were, all residents of Brooklyn, j They were drowned when their j launch o;i!?Fized off Rockaway point.4 j Fell in a Pit. Pierre Faulk, a well known young, man of Abbeville, was drowned in fifteen inches of water Friday n.qh*. He is supposed to have been seta "*3. with a f:t of epilepsy near t.he s!i. 1 i low pool In which 1x1 s bodv was ' found A Househo WhichlWorb CHEJ (Chett O Will Relieve Quickly Croup. Cougt (ectioQs of Cb? Its efflclascy bat bee a therosihl by the large number ef unsolicited t have used this remedy. Use Freely andJ3 Now sold by all medicine dealei 25c Evei CLASSIFIED COLUMN Ship your calves, hogs, sheep, lambs, etc., to the Parlor Market, Augus ta, Ga., 1018 Broad Street. $10 For a Name. Send stamp for particulars and coupons. Address P. O. Box 98, Flushing, N. Y. Xmas Post Curds?Send $1.00 for 100 and sell to your friends at 2 for 5 cents. Sims Booh Store, Orangeburg, S. C. Wanted?Men to take fifteen das* practical cotton course, accept good positions during the fall. Charlotte Cotton Company, Char lotte, N. C. Crushed Oyster Shells for Poultry.? One hundred pounds, sixty cen'a; five hundred pounds, $2.50. Bros lauer, Lochicotte & Co., Waverly Mills, S. C. Agents to handle a propersition that sells: two to six, most evtry home. Particulars rree. ivenuauu Novelty Co,, Box 24, Still Pond, Maryland. Rice Flour, 100 tons fresh. Rice Flour, Hay, Grain, Bran, Chops. C. S. Meal and etc., Albert Bis choff and Co., 31 Elizabeth Street. Charleston, S. C. $10,000 Yearly.?No agency. Legit imate. Small capital. We start you for 25c. Honest company. This Is your chance. Summerlin Co., Nevada, Texas. Engraved Visiting Cards.?Neatest and best. Made on ideal Xmas gift. 100 engraved in scrip, $1.50. All orders filled promptly. Sims Boole Store, Orangeburg, S. C. Women, sell guaranteed hose. 70 per cent, profit. Make $20 dally. Full or part time. Beginners in vestigate. Strong Hosiery. Box 4029, West Philadelphia, Pa. You can mtke 2 bales per acre by planting my Bunch system. Price $2 to land owners. $1 to renters. Write for particulars. Geo. M. Snodgrass, Box 94, Houston, Tex. Wanted.?Names young people inter ested in- Business Colleges. Send list to Southern Commercial School, Charleston, and receive as many visiting cards written by their expert penman. Cow Peaa Wanted. ?- All types, Amounts, Premiums given. All straight, unmixed. Get our new Cotton planting seed catalogue. Wlllet Seed Co., Augusta, Ga. The HJj?h Point Detective Agency of Columbia does a general detectlvs business. White and colored de tectives at your convenience Write us. W. S. Taylor, Manager Columbia, S. .C. Dobbs' Single Comb Knoae lsianc Reds and "Crystal" White Orping tons win and lay when other? fall, stock and eggs for Bale, send for mating list. G. A. Dobbs, Box B. 24., Gainesville, Ga. Carolina Detective Agency, Kendall Building, Columbia, S. C., will furnish reliable detectives any where; rates reasonable. Collect ing evidence for civil suits a specialty. Geo. S. Ogg, Chief. I\\*jaleil?AJen and lad;ea 10 tak? 1 S njcntbs- Practical course. Exptri , wsnii^eni^nt. HI?Ui salarleJ fiot? ^u.irsn'Ked. V/rto for caf* lci/.uc; ui?w. C?i:'rU?t?.? TeltgfAjM Churlortfc, X. C. t? ?Mtn ti.i '.c.Ve thirty da?i jiratiioa! course la our machln* ami l^arr. automobile t>u*> no-* P uiMcan pfc rnred gradu???. f_'r> f>() (or week anr! up. CL*' j ioi(*? a}}ir. School. Chnrlotte. N. C t Siiif?* f/if? hwtirsinre Co., Kinston, N. C., operates only fa th" two Carollnas and ha* mor? Carolina lives insured than an" other Carolina company. Agen^ wanted where the company il n1^ now repreaented. I-'or Sole?4.165 acres splendid lev-' el, <?iyt-over land at station on Southern railway. Appling coun-' ty, Ga., at $5 per acre; 5.500 acres splendid land on railroad in Dougherty county, Ga., 24 tenant houses and over 10,000,000 feet, hardwood timber at $6 per acre; I ) 1 UL iatment) is, Colds, Pneumonia and all a4- ,T il and Throat y established and positively pnrM estlmonlals riven by these vfc* :UB! RUB! RUB! ps. Should be in every Home. 'ywhere. 200 to 1,000 acre farms In Hoa? ton county, Ga. Geo. W. Duncan, Macon, Ga. ' beautiful Christinas Novelty?Orien tal Perfumed Handkerchief*. L*l est fad. Everybody wants one. 30c cauu. o lur u* f i pci 'Beautiful present with each &e?> en, get one for your friends, that cash or money order. No stings. Address Alford Joyner, Reek? j Mount, N. C. In Order to Introduce my high grate Succession Flat Dutch and Wsk?> field Cabbage Plants to those whe hare not used them before I wtll give with each flrst order for a thousand plants at a $1.26, a del* lars worth of vegetable and flown eed absolutely free. W. R. Hart, Plant Grower, Enterprise, P. S. C. Anyone can honorably earn frea $10 to $25 weekly mailing ?hb mission curculars for mall order ihouses. Work done during spare time in privacy of home; wlthont canvassing. Full Instructions, sample circulars, and list of lrma sent upon receipt of 10c to eerar Bame, W. K. Gardiner, CaldweB. N. J. nu- ^ /-n~ 1 Villainy V/iaiA. ui juoduuh mm Frederick C. lalbot of Maryland will be the only members of the Sixty second congress who served In tlfe louse when that body laet had Democratic majority. FOR SALE 1000 acres, 4 miles Thomas ton, Ga., Splendid land and good improvements. 1 Good renting property; $25.00 per acre. Easy terms. 507 acres, 4 miles Cuthber? Ga.; 6 tenant houses, I resi dence; high grade land. Rents 15 bales, capable of doing muck better. Our price to Decem ber 1 st, 1910, is $6500.00. Several fine, profit making farms in Sumter County,|Ga. Write for list Southern Land Co., i ft '"m , JHIIKIBH mmmm Manager FranV J. Shaugb- / nessy, of the Virginia League Champions, found Noah's Liniment best for Sore Muscles bruises, scratches, stiffness. One trial will convince yon. Noah's Liniment jvnotrates. Requires but little rubbing. Here's the Proof "I have had occasion 10 use Nnah's Liniment on two ot my players' arms and the result was w it gratifying; Iiot?i were immediately it ieved of sore ness and able to resume lrowing with i'leir former speed. Have also used it > vself, and consider it the best Unl i.ient I ever tried. It Is fine for bruises^ scratches, stiffness, et Frank J* Sh a ugh nessy, Manager, Roanoke Cham pions, Roanoke, Va." T Inlmnn^ ?a *>a*m for Rheumatism, Sciatica, Lame Back! Stiff Joints and Muscles, Sore Throat, Colds, Strains, Sprains, Cuts, Bruises, Colic, Cramps, ^ Neuralgia, Tooth ache and all Nerve, Bone and Muscle Aches and Pains. The gen uine has Noah's Ark on every package. 25 cts. Sold by dealers in medicine. Sam ple by mail tree. Noah Remedy Co, Richmond. Va,