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, 1SI0NISHII6 CIS f . lyictoiis Persons Who Were Helpless k From Disease Rise Dp A.1m most as if by a Mi racle P After Using Strange ' : New Liquid A Many Southern People Among Those Who Beport the Most Astonishing ^ Results. P A news message from Port Wayne, ft Ind., says that citj is now in a torft moil over many astonishing cures that r * are being effected by the strange new Uqoid, Boot Juice, which has been r creating a sensation in Atlanta for the past few weeks. Mrs. J. Schondell, who lives at 610 I Madison St, Fort Wayne, had suffered f for years with rheumatism which hecame so bad that she was helpless. She had tried doctors and patent medicines without results and had about given up hope when the wonderful power qf the famous Boot Juice treatv ment became known. The startling story of her recovery is best told in her own words, taken from a signed statement which she > recently gave out. Regarding her case ^ Mrs. Scbondell saj9: "I was unable 1 to move and had to be carried from * one place.to another. After trying doctors and medicines without success (I began nsing the Roog Juice and can 'say t^at when I had taken two bottles Xwas able to walk without assistance and am now once more taking care of my honsehold duties.. The medicine saved my life." Atlanta Still Excited. {Atlanta people continue to report many strange and wonderful benefits that are following the use of the new Root Juice medicine in that city. ? Persons who suffered from indigestion, loss of appetite, pains, bloating and distress after eating, constipation biDionsness and headaches say that a few doses correct the trouble. The appetite increases and the stomach |8eem8 able to digest anytmng. Mrs. Andrew Barney, residing at 624 ^Decatur St., who has been a sufferer from stomach, liver and kidney trouble for over two years, in a statement I issued for publication said: "I sufferf ed dreadfully from indigestion, belching, headaches and painsiri the small of my back. At times I had no appetite and at other times I could not sleep, I was nervous, irritable and worrysome and felt all ran down. I used the new Boot Juice medicine ons ly two weeks but already fee) a great deal better. My indigestion is nearly gohe, I can eat almost anything and for the first time in two years 1 sleep fine. Before taking this Boot Juice treatment I tried six different medicines and four doctors." I The medicine seems to possess strange ^Rpower in relieving disorders of the stomach, liver and kidneys and many sufferers from theee maladies have r^ Jported complete cures. ft In view of th wonderful benefits beP ing derived from its use by persons in other places it would seem advisable for all home people who seek health to at least give it a thorough test. B Shot Off Hall Bis Head. A thirteen-year-old colored boy by ^Rthe name of .Perry Dantzler, on the ^Bplace of Mrs. A. M. Jennings, in Cal boon county, met with a horrible * ?11 t-;i- Tmrt cmollor S3 WU11C JiUUUUgt JL tt \j giuiwv<. were wirh him. Coroner Spigeof Calhoun County, held an inb and all the signs tended tp show when he stumbled the hammer of pain struck a pine log and bl?w off t half of his head, His brains scattered over the log and leaves by. '' ESTATE NOTICE. i Creditors of'the estate of Eman? j. Frey, deceased, are hereby ed to render to the undersigned, her attorneys, Thomas & Lumpit Room No. 9, No. 1233 Washu street, Colombia, S. C., an ac; of their demands, duly attested. 11 persons indebted to said estate )tified to make payment likewise. MAHAtA F. FREY, Qualified Executrix, ington, S. C., ch 1st, 1912?!w22 itice of School Election. ice is hereby given that an eleciil be held at Center School i \Tn 7 on Saturday. I JtlOUftt;, IU j ? , the 30th day of March, 1012, for the purpose of repealing the special 2-mill tax levy for school purposes voted therein Polls will open at 2 p. m., a d close at 4 p. m. J. A. Keisler, Chairman. S. L. Robertson, H. S. Sease, ^ Mcli. 12 20-2\v Board Trustees. t Outlaws Kill Officials in Court Room. HiUsville, Ya.., March 14.?A troop ' of mountain outlaws rode down out of the Blue Ridge today 'to the Carroll couuty court In use here and assassinated the judge upon the bench, the prosecutor before the bar, and the sheriff at the door, while sentence was. being pronounced upon Floyd Allen, one of their number. When the crack of the rifles died away only one member of t e human fabric of the court?Dezter Goad, clerk of court?was alive and he had been wounded. One of the jurors received wounds from which he died a short while afterwards, while other members of ihe panel were more or Ie9s seriously injured, and a l?-yearold girl, a witness, was killed by one of the outlaws' bullets. Gov. Mann has offered a $3,000 reward for tne capture of the assassins and holds State troops under arms for orders at Lynchburg and Roanoke. The shooting terrorized Hillsville to the point of paralysis. There was not a man to give an order or organize a pursuit. Citizens fled to places of safety and mothers gathered up their children while the assassins rode out of town. Judge Thornton L. Mas9ie had risen from his chair a9 the bullets struck him and fell dead across his\ desk. William Fostei, commonwealth's attorney, with half a dozen bullets in his brain, crumpled down to the floor. Sheriff Lewis Webb was shot and killed as he reached for his revolver and sprang forward. Bullets grazed Goad and in the confusion he was reported killed. Jurors who had been slightly wounded were reported dead and by that indefinable method of communication which prevails in the woodland country reports of a wholesale slaughter were spread to the countryside. Floyd Allen was before the bar this morning, convicted of taking a prisoner from a deputy sheriff. Allen had struck the sheriff over the head "with the butt of a rifle and the prisoner escaped. Sheriff Webb had gone up into the mountains and taken Allen, despite dire warnings of what such a venture might mean. Attorney Fos- j ter hafi prosecuted fearlessly and a mountaineer jury gathered from the inland section, for no man in Carroll county cared to sit on the trial of an AUen, had convicted him. This morning the sentence of Allen attracted an unusually large gathering to the quaint old red brick court house, which stands cn a green square well in the centre of the village. Those who could not get iiito the small tfciompeerel through the windows, opened to the first days of spring. Just as Allen was about to be called up for sentence his two brothers, Sid ney and Jack, at the head of a troop of about 20 mountaineers, road up to the court house. The brothers and their companions, ome carrying rifles and others armed with revolvers, crowded into the small court room ani stood behind the rail f and about the doors. Floyd Allen, aged 50, tall and gaunt, much the familiar type of mountaineer, was in the dock. Judge Massie mounted the bench and Prosecutor Foster ^uoved sentence upon Allen, who stood up. There was a shuffling of feet ana a general movement among the mouutaineers in tlio back o? the room, but no sign to' foretell tlie terrible tragedy then in the minds of every oue of them. The rsual legal formalities over, Judge Massie began pronouncing sentence. The last words that fell from his lips precipitated the tragedy. "One year at hard labor?" "Rofnrp thw l?<af, wnrd was cold, the fusilade began. Allen, mattering an oath that he would never go to prison, sprang out of the prisoner's dock as Judge Mas? e collapsed upon the bench. Ant fiher roar of shots and Prosecdtor Foster was on the floor in a heap. Sheriff Webb was springing forward for his prisoner when the lead found him. Then, holding the panic-stricken jurors and onlookers at bay, although that probably was not necessary, the assassins slowly backed out of the court house and across the green to their troop of ponies. In a second they were galloping like mad men ! through the aroused village and off to the hills. Hillsville, Va., March 19.?The chase of the Allen outlaws, who shot up the Carroll county court house last Thursday and now have five deaths to their credit for that scrties, bus settled down to a siege. All that the pos9es ;known is that the gang probabl> isujjTin the Chestnut ridge. Travelers 'coming down from Fancy Gap said the Aliens had decertvx. oiauu at otpiirrei spur and plunged into the thicker country over toward the Parrick countv line. That is more of a wilderness than their previous stand. At some places the boundary lines have never been located. It now looks like an attempt to starve out the assassins The posses have been spread over the roads, and the crossroads and byways have been well covertd. By this method they hope to cut off f^od supplies and probably medical attention. SYSTEMIC iCATARRH RELIEVED K PERUNA. My Husband Also Uses Peruncu badly o cold we at onco take Peruna." Stomach Trouble, Mrs. Wilson Robinson, 704 JNessie at., Toledo, Ohio, writec: "I feel like a new person. I have no more heavy feelings, no more pain, don't belch np gas, can eat most anything without it hurting me. I want to bo working all the time. I have gained twenty-four pounds. "People that see me now and saw me two months ago seem astonished. ! I tell them Peruna did it I will say it is the only remedy for spring and ail other ailments." i > i S A party of representative business and professional men of Charleston, to be known as the "booster party," will leave Charleston on April 22nd, for a tour of the state on a special train. There will be about 60 in the party. THE MOST COMPLETE LINE WE HAVE EVER SHOWN IN HARNESS, SADDLES, COLLARS, BRIDLES, ROBES, HORSE BLANKETS, ETC. We have a special home-made slip Harness for one-horse wagon at $5.00. A Set of Buggy Harness for $10.00. We buy Hides, Furs, Tallow, Beeswax and pay highest market prices. kbi? i _ iif u wise i*. martin, 1116-1118 Plain Street, COLUMBIA. - - - S. C, bills Hg^ggm AS WELL AS large ones are welcome here? you need not wait until your business has assumed great proportions before opening a Checking Account, DO SO TO-DAY. (Vr amount of business done, receive every courtesy in all matters of business entrusted to *s?and there is nothing in safe banking ! we cannot perform. Talk it over | with our cashier. i CAROLINA NATIONAL BANK, COLUMBIA, S. C. mi W I II It is so FRESH I YOU USE ONE I than with other 1 1 money. You get b S Ffir,! f*? IB Bags, is packed right when I . soda factory in the | you' in sealed, air-ti cartons?fresh and \ 16 Full Ounces And no higher ir SPE* Fai* a I .imite I Cut out the top fr packages and en< shown ) below and ? 1 expense, and we wil all charges prepaid Guaranteed Silver Plated Teaspoons. These spoons are beautiful :in design and bear no advertising. Ret?:l value $2.00 per dozen. All good grocers carry our soda See Our N Silks at . . 25c 42-inch Lawns, at . . 10c Laces and Embroideries 3 in. wide, at . . 5c Ribbons 6-in wide, at . 25c Don't forget our Tailor Made A STALLINCS i NEW BROOKLAND, I and PURE that" I -FOURTH L&S I >rands. * You save I ? etter results. I Thistle ,# n/ ?P, * || ] it; is made (^the only fl Sou/til), and comes to B glit, strength-keeping B s fa flie Pound, I l price fl CIAL :d Time Only. I om six Eagle-Thistle |H ;lose with coupon II 1 >8c to partially cover II 1 send you promptly,' II ; I, one set (6) Rogers' II * THE MATHIESON ALKALI TtfORKS, Saltville, Va. I enclose the tops cut from 6 Eagle-Thistle packages, also Money Order (or stamps) for 58c. Please send me, all charges prepaid, one set (6) j Rogers' Guaranteed Genuine Silver Plated Tea- J spoons. j I I ^ y _ \ State ? ew Line Of ? , I ' Men's Felt Hats for i Spring at . $1.50 and up. . Men's Suits $10.00 and up. Oxfords for everybody * cheap. v j;. ; Clothes for Men, order now. j k ARMSTRONG, i s? c?