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Jffs . T ^ O ’t 1 W R i- 1> Nc 4 liken BeMiiet Arthur P. Ford. Editor and Proprietor. AlKKN. THURSDAY MORMING. JULY 2T. 1905. EstamisW 1881. Prise $1.50 a loar. w Adra cr. QUARANTINE IS ON I BILL AGAIN BUTTING IN. Fever in New Orler ns Causes Health Boards to Act. OFFICIALS ARE CAUTIOUS Belief is That Disease Can Be Con fined to Italian Quarter of City. Detention Camps Are Estab lished at VarTcus Points. A New Orleans dispatch says: Tho official autopsy on a patient, an Ital ian, who died of wh'at has been called suspicious fever, has disclosed that tho diseare was yellow fever. President Souchon or the state board of health has notified Governor Blanchard and the health officers of Mississippi, Tex as and Alabama. Arrangements have been made for a detention hospital to treat the remaining cases. Applica tion of the s-ame methods which were pursued at Havana is to be made, and the authorities are hopefull that the disease ran be stamped out. Presi dent Souchon said: "No cases of the fever aie known to exist outs'de of this area, save two or three which are directly trace able to it and the infected area, a few squares in extent, is under vig orous d'sinfection. "It is expec ed that the measures adopted and operated will be sueeess- -In eradicating the infect on, the nature of which is suspected to be yellow fever, though the irtopsic find ings in one case only determined this as a conclusion." The quarantine situaMon affecting New Orleans is not serious in that H. applies on y to persons and baggage, and th<s will be relieved by the ’ru- mediate establishment of detention ramps on the lines of all the railroads, where travelers who desire to go to the quarantine territory may remain five days and secure a certificate of non-infection from the marine hospital service. Surgeon J. H. White of the United Sttves marine hospital serv ice Sunday arranged for the estab lishment of camps at the following points: Slidell, on the Queen and Crescent; Avondale, on the Southern Pacific and Texas and Pacific; Ken ner, on the Mississippi Valley and Illinois Central, and Waveland, on the Louisville and Nashville. Alabama quarantined on the basis of opinions expressed by her health officer. Mississippi and Texas quar antined on the basis of Infornfiatlon -!7*fr*e>Ttphed theT?,. The state health and city boards of health of Florida, Saturday, order ed a quarantine against New Orleans. Freight will be permitted to pass af ter fumigation, but Inspectors are sta tioned at Floroa'on with instructions to allow no persons from New Orleans to pass. Sunday the city of Montgomery, Ala., through Acting Mayor C. P. Mc Intyre, issued an official proclamation of quarantine against, the city of New Orleans. The board of health of Selma, Ala, Sunday afternoon sent back to New Orleans a thirteen-year-old girl of that city, who arrived Saturday to visit relatives. The girl’s parents reside in the Italian settlement of New Or leans, where the yellow fever is said to have been d scovered. Havana Quarantines. A Havana dispatch says: On ac count of the ex stence of yellow fever at New Orleans, ouarantine has been declared against tha f port. Mexico Won’t Quarantine. The health authorities of Mexico City say there will he no quarantine against New’ Orleans. The sanitary inspection cf arriving passengers from inferted ports is strict and suspee’ed cases are Isolated. Merchandise from ports where yellow fever exists is not de’ained. The theory on which the Mexican sanitary authorities deal wMth yellow fever is that it is only com- munica ed by a species of mosquitoes, thus the unreasonableness of quaran tine precautions. Washington is Aiding. The officials of the public health and marine hospital service at Whsh- ington are working in harmony with those in Louisiana In the effort to prevent anv spread of the fever. Dr. A. H. Glennin, acting surgeon gen eral in the absence of Dr. Wyman, who Is now in Honolulu, has dis patched Surgeons G. M. Gulteras from Cairo, 111., T. H. Richard from Savan nah and T. H. White from Mobile to proceed to New Orleans and assist the marine hospital officials stationed [ there. A thorough outgoing passenger med ical train inspection service will bo organized so as to prevent the depart ure of any persons who have been ex- posed in any way to the disease. German Emperor and Czar Nicholaa In Conference—Meeting Comes as a " Sensation—Much Speculation. A special from St. Petersburg says: On the eve of the peace conference and with a suddenness already discon certing diplomatic and court circles, the emperor left Peterhof Sunday on board the imperial yacht Polar Star for a conference with Emperor Wil liam, who is cruising on the Hohen- zollern in Finnish waters. The czar is accompanied by h!s brother, Grand Duke Michael Alexan drovich, and a considerable suite, in cluding Count Benckendorff, marshal of the court; Count Heyden, chief af the imperial chancellory; Admiral Bir- ioff, minister of marine; Captain Von Essen, who commanded the battleship Sevastopol during the siege of Port Arthur; Captain Chagin, who com manded the Almaz, the only cruiser Admiral Rojestvensky’s fleet to reach Vladivtsok, after the battle of the sea of Japan; Captain Hin’ze, naval at tache of the German embassy and also a party of courtiers and the em peror s escort of sailors and marines with a guard commanded by Admiral Nuloff. It is noticeable that there is no rep resentative of the Russian; foreigfi office among the emperor’s entourage nor is the German ambassador on board the Polar Star. This gives col or to a report that the meeting was arranged between the tw r o emperors directly without recourse to the usual diplomatic channels, Emperor William suggesting the rendezvous by tele graph from Hernoehand, Sweden. The idea, the report says, met with the czar’s favor, but the final arrange ments were only completed Sunday and some members of the imperial family were hastily commanded to accompany his majesty. Many diplomats were taken com pletely by surprise by the news. The action of Emperor William in seeking a conference at this mo ment is generally interpreted as au assurance of his moral support of Russia in the coming pour parlers at Washington and Portsmouth and to show that German participation in the recent Japanese loan was not a mark of the alienation of German sympathies from Russia. Emperor William, whose keen in'erest in the lessons of the Russo-Jap w'ar is well known, has a’so taken advantage of the occasion to discuss the details with eyewitnesses and the presence of the naval officers who distinguish ed themselves in the far east is due to his special request. A special d'spatch UYouT PaPlS iSaytTr F-mperor 'Nicholas’ erflise in the Gulf of Finland to meet Emperor Wil liam is the subject of much comment in the press. Certain newspapers ex press the fear that the German em peror will influence the carrying out of the peace program, while others are of the opinion that Emperor Wil liam will seek to estrange Russia from France. The London newspapers of Sunday morning noted with inquietude the sudden resolve of Emperor Nicholas to visit Emperor William, and all kinds of speculation are indulged in as to the possible motives for, and the results of such a momentous in terview a* a time when so many dif ficult problems are facing European diplomacy. The Moroccan and Scan dinavlan ques ions are regarded as possible subjects for discussion, and it is also supposed that the reaction ary party in Russia may have suc ceeded in persuading the emperor of the impolicy of permitting M. Wife to conclude peace on a basis accepta ble to France and Great Britain. All the correspondents agree that the interview wus of Emneror Wil liam’s seeking, and the result is await ed w ! th the greatest anxiety. No new’s of Emperor Willafni’s whereabouts has reached London since he left Gafie, Sweden, and was cruisine northward. There is no har bor at Borgo, and the imperial yachts must he in the open sea. Telegrams from Berlin indicate that the meeting hetween the emperors is as great a surprise there as else- where. ROOT TAKES OFF CIAL OATrr. STRIKERS LOSE OUT Great Contest at Chicago Finally Comes to an End. TEAMSTERS SURRENDER Men Will Seek Old Places Without Agreement of Any Kind—Strike Lasted Nine Months and Cost Thirty Lives. The end of the teamsters’ strike that be so greatly disturbed conditions in Chicago for the last three months Is at hand. The strikers have made a complete surrender and will seek their old positions without an agreement of any kind with the employers. The first break in the ranks of the strikers came Thursday afternoon when the lumber teamsters voted to return to w’ork regardless of what ac tion might be taken by any other union. Thursday the department store drivers and the railway express driv ers voted to call off the strike and seek their old positions in the morn ing. It is expected that about 60 per cent of the department store drivers will be reinstated, and the express drivers declared that they believed that about one hundred of their num ber would be taken back by the ex press companies. The express compa nies have declared all through the strike, however, that not one of the men, who struck would ever be rein stated. Tho tru?k drivers and one or two smaller unions will vote on the ques tion of calling off the strike, but there is no doubt that they will decide to seek their old places again. The offi cials of the teamsters’ union declare that they expect such action to be taken. The only concession that the men have gained by going back to work is in the case of the lumber drivers— the right to wear the union button. In the case of all other unions, the men by seeking their old places tacit ly agree to the terms of the employ ers, which were that only such men w’ould be taken back as were needed after the non-union men had been provided for, and that the question of wearing the union button should be left to the decision of the Individual employer. The strike has been one of the mosrf annoying, bitterly fought and expen —a. McDonalds implicated? Kinsmen of Sheriff Passmore Alleged to Have Taken a Hand m Murder of the Carter Children. It was with a rush aniT'remarkable energy the Rawlings’ murder trial moved at Valdosta, Ga., Wednesday, notwithstanding the intense stifling heat. The negro Moore was brought back to the witness cha'lr when tbs court convened. He could not begin where he left off Tuesday, but had to reci e the same story over again. Moore told several conflicting sto ries about the killing, and admitted that he had told several lies in order to save himself. He was positive, however, that Milton, Jesse and Leon ard Rawlings w’ere at the Carter home, and that Milton and Jesse did the shooting. He said that he went ’o the Carter home to help do the kill ing on the agreement that he be paid ? ! 00; but, when he got there, his nerve failed him, and he could do nothing. He also made the startling statement that the Rawlings boys bad told him Carter had SI,500 in the house, which they could get if he would go in and kill the rest of the family. The sensational feature of the da> was the pronounced determination of the defendants' attorneys To trans- jdant the crimes of June 13 from the RawTngs family to the McDon- al’s, kinsmen of Sheriff Passamore of Lowndes county. It was shown conclusively by the testimony or Mrs. Carter, mother of the dead children, and by Miss Dora Car er, the eldest daughter, that Tim McDonald, brother-in-law’ of the sher- I’ r , and Jim 1VP Dorald, a bgy of 15 years, were in the Carter yard the night of the killing, and that one of them was armed. It was establish ed that there had been a long-time fe-d between *he Carters and the Mc- roualcs, but when the younger Mc Donald was put on the stand he de nied emphatically that he had been near the Carter home on the night of the tragedy. Miss Carier was probably the star witness of tho day. She swore point ed!;, and positively that she looked through a hole in the hearth and en countered Milton Rawlings’ face just on the outside of the chimney, trying to look In. She was positive in rec- ogni ion of him; she had known him for years, and could not be mistaken. It wms Miss Carter, too, who was ab solutely sure that she saw the Mc- Donakls that night in the yard, and ^bhat one of them had a gun. THIRTY-NINE DEAD;' — < Disaster Wrought by Burst- ? ing of Boiler on Gunboat. SOUTH CAROLINA STATE NEWS ITEMS. 1 LAGRESi STOVE HOUSE IN AUGUSTA EIGHTY OTHERS INJURED The Bennington Was Torn Almost to Pieces in San Diego Harbor and Many Sailors Mangled, Hor rible Scenes Witnessed. Fj^ort to Divide County. Then? is an effort being made to divide the present county of Beaufort and create a new one. Farmers to Hold Meetings. The tarmers of Spartanburg county under the auspices of the Cotton Grow ers' Association will begin a series of meetings to be held at different points in the county, and It is ex pected that if the weather is good the When you buy a Stove, buy the best, 7Tie Great Ex celsior. Parts always kept in stock. Write lor catalogue. We have a few very preny calendars left. Write for one. The largest and lowest price Stove and Bicycle house in Augusta. We invite you to make our place your headquarters while in our city. Successors to C. B. Allen’s Stove lious3, $40 Broad Street, Augusta. Ga. has ever known. It originated last winter over the demand of the Gar ment Workers’ Association fhat the firm of Montgomery Ward & Co. re frain from sending out any work to non-union men, although there wa# in the contract between Ward & Co. and the un'ons no clause prohibiting such action. The garment workers employed by Ward & Co. went on strike, and their places were filled by non-union men. Four months after the strike of the garment workers the teamsters’ union called on Ward & Co. to arbitrate the strike. The re fusal of Ward & Co. was followed by a strike of all the teamsters in their employ, and the strike rapidly spread to such other business houses as attempted to make deliveries to Ward & Co. About thirty lives have been lost during the strike, and there have been hundreds of cases of assault, in many of which the victims were seriously injured. PUGILIST AS PICKPOCKET. ‘Jim’ Hall Nabbed by Chicago Polict: on Charge of Robbery. "Jim” Hall, formerly a well known pugilist, at one time champion of Australia, and who fought with Rob ert Fitzsimmons for the largest purse ever offered in a prize ring, was ar rested In Chicago Thursday on a charge of robbery. It was claimed by the police that Hall was one of the three men who attempted to pick the pockets of a passenger on a street car. HAYES GIVEN HARD JOB. CRAZED CLERK DEALS DEATH. Shoots Employer Dead and Mortally Wounds Fellow Clerks. Cna ed with < rink and the thought that he was to be discharged, William F. Will ams, a salesman in the cloth ing s:d:o of J-i n White, at Pensaoo 1«, Fl 1., walked up to the office where Mr Wi I e was sitting reading anu shot him iload. He turned bis revolv er upon another salesman, Ed Dansby, an 1 Inflicted a mortal wound in the L'ae’>, then fired upon James While, t e manager and son of the propr.e t r, the bullet passing through the 1 ngs .and carsing a would from which i is e tpected that he will die. Another e’e k was fuel upon, but the bullet vent wi d of he mark. Tie only statement .made by VVil- ia s wa that some one in the store v as endeavoring to do him an injury ?nd that if White bad attended to his own business he would never have killed him. White was one of the most prominent business men in the city, having engaged in I he haberdasn ery business thirty years ago. Lightning Bolt Kills Two. Gillum Horton, one of the most prominent and influential farmers of Kershaw county, a negro man who ac companied him, anj a mule were in stantly killed by lightning near tho town of Kershaw. They took shelter BOY LYCHED IN CELL. Mob Members Thrust Guns Through Grating and Riddle Prisoner. Wednesday night a mob battered down the doors of the county jail at New Braunfels, Texas, and lynched Pam Green, a 16 year old negro boy, who at’empted a criminal assault on a four-year-cld white girl. Tbe mob could not break into the col!, so the leaders thrust their guns through the opening of the steel walls and shot the hoy to dea’h. DANIEL LAMONT CROSSES RIVER. Secretary of War Under Cleveland Passes Away After Brief Illness. Colonel Daniel Lamont, secretary of war tinder Pres'dent Cleveland, died Sainday evening ,at his country resi dence at Milbrcok, Duchess county, rt. Y., af er a brief illness. Nothing except the bare announce ment of Colonel Lament’s death was made public by the family. It was understood, however, that the death was unexpected. SCHWAB PAID FIFTEEN HUNDRED Another Victim of "Fads and Fancies’’ in the Lime Light. On account of a statement that Charles M. Schwab has been Induced lo give $25,000 for a copy of Fads and Fancies, Assistant District Attorney Krotel called on Mr. Schwab, who de clared that the statement was obso- lutely untrue and that the only money he had given was $1,600 as the price of one subscription. New Secretary of t» ia t e Formally in stalls ai Washington. Elihu Foot Oi N nv York was sworn in as s° ret ry of ;tate at Wiashing- t n Wednesd :. The oath • as rdministered by Wil liam M Neiassistant librarian of the stite t eranment. The cerea'.oay, which was veiy sim ple. tcok plice in the - office of As- s stent Secretary Lcom s, the office of the teciPtary :-tiil bearing the eni- 1.'ems of mourning for the Lite Sec.e- tary Hay. Placed at Head of Statistical Depart ment with Strict Orders. Assistant Secietary of Agriculture Wilton Hayes has taken hold of the affairs of the bureau of statistics, with instructions from Secretary Wilson, approved by President Roosevelt, *o clerTTse the bureau of the stigma left by the cotton leak scandal. His au thorlty is unlimited. He has been told that he may have whatever Cler ical force he needs and if there are any emp’oyees whose services he thinks shou'd he dispensed with they will be d S' barged. HOMES FOR SETTLERS. President Orders Indian Reservation Lands in Utah Opened. The piesldent has signed a procla mation providing for the opening on August 2k, 1£05, of the unallotted lands in the Unitah Indian reservation In Utah. Such lands as are or May be reserved prior to August 28 for military, forestry and other purposes will not be subject for entry. There are 1,069,000 acres available for en try. BODY OF PAUL JONES ARRIVES. Remains of First American Admiral Reaches Land of His Adoption. A special from Norfolk, Va., says: In the early light of Saturday morn ing the body of John Paul Jones was brought back through the Virginia Capes to the land of his adoption. Cot tagers at Cape Henry, Ocean View and Willoughby Spit lined the shores to admire the pomp of the American admiral's return to his own. The sight, as the ships passed in line, was one of stately grandeur and beauty. SOLDIERS MAY BE REMOVED. Their Withdrawal from New Orleans Probable on Account of Fever. A Washington dispatch says: Gen eral Jesse M. Lee, commanding the department of Texas, has been ordered to investigate and report upon the advisability of removing the United States troops from the forts below New Orleans on account of the yellow fever. Thirty-nine members of the crew of the United States gunboat Ben- attendance w»ll be large. The meet- nington were killed and SO sailors ines cloEe at Inman - on August 1J. were injured, 24 seriously, at 10 o’clock Friday morning, by a boiler explosion that disabled the vessel in San Diego, Cal., harbor. Fifteen sad- ors are missing. There were more than 250 men aboard the warship when the accident occurred, and many men were hurled or forced to jump into the sea by the terrific explosion , , . , which lifted part of the deck and ! u , n ' ier \, lar ^ t . roe ^"" ls a , 5 ‘ ,vare compelled the beaching of the ship. slo, ' m ' Mr ' Horto " leav ‘ s a ,ainll> ' The Bennington, at the time of the accident, was lying in the stream just off the commercial wharf at the foot of H street. The warship had receiv ed orders from the navy department at Washington to sail for Port Hart ford, where she was to meet the mon itor, Wyoming, and convey the vessel to Mare Island navy yard. Steam was up and everything was in readiness for ^sailing, when suddenly and with out i»h^ warning whatever, the star board forward boiler exploded with a deafening roar. The explosion was terrific, people standing on the shore saw a huge cloud of white steam rise above the Bennington. A number of boats were in the vi cinity at the time, and these hurried to the rescue, lending valuable aid In picking up the wounded sailors and transferring them to the shore. At the time of the accident, Com mander Lucien Young and Surgeon F. E. Peck were on shore. The two offi cers, as soon as they learned of tho disaster, hurried to the water front, where Commander Young immediately took charge. On board the Bennington were pre sent efl terrible scenes. The force r»f the explosion had torn a great hole in the starboard side of the ship, and the vessel was already commencing to list. A section of the upper decks was carried away from stem to stern. Blood ax/i wreckage was distributed over thej ship, the after cabin and th^-vlcinity^Qf the ship adjacent to the Exploded boftfcr resembling, a A doz^^^^^H^n men were blown overboa^^^^^ne force of the ter- rifle exij^Ron. Captain Wentworth, who was looking at the Benirington when the disaster occurred, says he saw human bodies hurled over a hun dred feet upward. ’ The bodies of many of the men tak en from the wrecked interior of tho ship were mutilated almost beyond recognition. For a long time the hot steam pre vented access to the space between decks, where most of the dead bodies lay, and it was not until late in tho afternoon that the last w’ere removed. Several bodies were so tightly wedged in by a bulkhead, that the woodwork had to he hewn away to free them. Most of the bodies yet unidentified have been mangled almost beyond hope of recognition. The boiler which exploded, it is said, was regarded as unsafe. Com mander Young stated that during a recent return from Honolulu the steam pressure was kept reduced in that particular one. When" the explosion occurred the engineer was inspecting the boilers as a preliminary to the vessel’s leav ing port and he was not seriously in jured. The following is the list of dead: J. Newcombe, B. A. Hughes, A. Ben- sol, A. Kamerer, W. W. Wright, C. Hoggboorn, E. Dresch, W. Parish, M. G. Quinn, G. Brownlee, J. I,. Burns, W. Chefrey, E. G. Geiss, C. Kuntz, seven unidentified dead on board, seven un identified dead ashore. Fifteen oth ers unaccounted for. RUTHERFORD & Pi» W V I DE ALERS -nr BRICK, LIME Negro Killed From Arr.bush. The dead body of Charley Gllliai., colored, was found a tew days ago in the road near the home of W. W. Spearman in the Silver street section of Newberry county. He had been shot from ambush, two loads of bird shot having taken effect in the abdo men. There is no clue to the assas sin. Manager Resigns Position. Elisha Bomar, who has been for the past 25 years manager of the stores"’ of the Clifton Manufacturing compa ny, has severed his connection witk the companj’ to take effect August 1. Mr. Bonvar will devole h’s time to his own affairs which embrace several splendid farms about the city and other Interests. It is understood that S. T. Reid will succeed Mr. Bomar with the mill company. New Railrocd P r esident Elected. The Anderson chamber of commerce has unanimously endorsed the presi dent, Fred G. Brown, for president of the Blue Ridge railroad to succeed H. Cleveland Beattie, who died rome days ago. Mr. Brown is president of the fertilizer factory and is foremost in all business enterprises. y The trains on this road were draped^ in mourning on account of Mr. Beat tie’s death. t’OKTI.AttD AND ROHENDAI K. CEMENT. PLANTER HAIR AND LATH& I’tAUY ROOFING ETC. Corner of Waohlagtoa and Royaolda Street*. V Vtl« t ca-« sAvbt ■. Dinr.LF., jamka pottfli.. PrekidcnL Yl*e PrexidfaL n. u. mu Kt ! :*ft!Ka, (.'aiililer. The Bank of Aiken * AIKEN, SOUTH CAROLINA. retjefcVk*. Oo-vm.-.'avw G* <ra EXCURSIONS PROVE PROFITABLE TOADSTOOLS WITH MUSHROOMS. WHOLESALT MURDERERS. Bulgarians Attack Two Villages and Not a Soul Allowed to Escape. A report received in Salonica says that a large Bulgarian band attacked the villages Baltina and Grade- shuitra, in the Morinovo district, at night, murdering the entire population indiscrimina’ely and that the carnage did not end until morning. The num ber of victims is not known. MORE TROUBLE FOR EQUITABLE. New York Legislative Committee Wil| Probe State Insurance Affairs. There will be a legislative investiga tion of the life insurance business as carried on in New York state, both by state corporations and by those ot other states doing business within the state. This investigation will be made by a special joint committee with ample powers. Four Persons Die as Result of Eating Poisonous Fungi. Toadstools, mixed with mushrooms, and eaten at a birthday party, has caused the death of four of the six members of the family of Joseph Franzor, a farmer who resided near Landisville, N. J. The dead are: Jo seph Franzor, his wife and two daugh ters. Found Bond Issued in 18C1. While trimming the leaves of an old Bible that has been in the family for half a century F. S. Rand of Worcester found a U. S. bond for $100 issued in 1S61. Although $134,000,000 worth ot bonds were issued at the same time, the treasury report shows that the whola issue has been redeemed with the exception of $9,400. Fitzgerald Collects $100 from Negroes and Have Five in Jail. When Acting Mayor Hooker of Fitz- geiald, Ga., Thursday morning count ed up the amount of fines already collected from the negro excursionists, who were arrekted on various charges Monday, he found the city's funds in creased by $100 cash, and the chief of police’s desk covered with personal effects, tendered by those who had failed to find the money to pay their fines, and there are still five in the pen. RUSSIAN ZEMSTVO CONGRESS Convenes in Mosccw with. 225 Dele gates in Attendance. The Russian zemstvo congress open ed at noon Wednesday in the resi dence of Prince Lolgorukoff. The congress was attended by 22o delegates. Fount Heyden, leader ot ♦ he depntaMon representing the con gress, recently received by the emper or, presided. i Tobin Caught Across the Line. P. Brooks Tobin, secretary and manager of the Augusta Cotton Fac torage Company, which went into the hands of a receiver several days ago, has been again arrested. This time the warrant was sworn out in this stVo, and alleges getting property un der false pretenses. The arrest was made in Aiken coun ty, just beyond Augusta, while Mr. Tobin was on the trolley car, home ward bound. He was taken to Aiken in custody of a deputy sheriff and re leased under a bond f°r $800. Given a Thirty-Year Sentence. Jessie Nelson, the negro who at tempted to criminally assault Miss Bo tha Wilson at New Sumter, was tried and was convicted. The jury was out six minutes. Judge Purdy sentenced the negro to thirty years in the peni tentiary. Nelson was an escaped convict from Clarendon county, where he had a sen tence of six years. There were threats of lynching and would have been car ried out tail for the promise of a speedy trial by Judge Purdy and tho Influence of cooler heads. Son is Held on Suspicion. Aaron Mall died at Spartanburg hos pital as a result of a blow which lie received on the head several days ago. His son, Adolphus Mull, is be ing held charged with inflicting the blow, though this has not been fully established. The younger Mull claims that the wound on his father’s head was caused by a fall- The doctors who made »n examination do not think that the wound could have been caused in that manner. A full investigation Is being made of the affair. POWDER A medicine which makes sick animal* the diseased whole, the weak strong and the thin fat. It will restcre lost Appetite, expel Worms and cure Chronic Cough, Heaves, Influenza, Distemper, Hide bound, Indigestion, Constipati*n, Flat- ^ ulency ard all Stomach and Bowd trouble v* The finest of aQ animal vitalizcrs and tonics and the only one which DAVID E*0UTZ: QALVMPRf. Mb. increases the coeffi cient of digestibil ity of protein. On Girx-mc nr accitouv Pjmphkt | N - hrm. by All DfMUrt. v PRlCt I PKGS ^ a 4g/5 O Fo? sale Lv X. J Platt ,> Go. J. I. MHSt, n ' Agent. fire/' Accident Insurance, Godin Spoclasls Co. EYE SIGHT SPECIALISTS, And Manufacturers of Spectacles and Eyeglass?* For all #efeets of the human eye sight. Eyes scientifically examined free by graduate doctors. Office atri Works, 928 Broad street, opposite Planter’* Hotel, Augusta, Ga. HUB CUTTING anl SHAVING FOR Bail Getting. Sh*ving *nd Sk*7»p<> > ORD W - re YU **- AND- fcESTffi AIKEN, S. C. Basement Dyer BUI unrig, Augusta, Ga. Smi? Co., Augusta, Ga. SHRINER’S INDIAN VERMIFUGE. The most efficient agent for eradi eating Worms from human being*? Mothers should send for piimpli'* "Something About Worms” free on ap plication. This remedy is guaranteed to give satisfaction if used according to the directions, o* money refunded. Price, 25c per IndJle, or 5 bottles for II 00. Ask your dealer for it; but it not supplied send to David E. Fonts, 8r>i- Baltimore, Md. Chattanooga College of Law Law Department of Grant University. Two years’ course, conterrin* decree of LL. B., with thorough preparation for admission to the bar of any state and of the United States. Strong faculty of fourteen members. Terms reasonable. Fine law building in center of city. ' Students may be self-supporting. Lectures open September 20.1905. For free catalogue and literature address Major C. R. Evans, Dean, (Dept. I.) Chattanooga, Tennessee. COTTON BROUGHT 30 CENTS. Inventor Born in This State. Doubless few r<* rf -' onR know that the ; inventor of the first typewriting ma- j chine, John Pratt, who died June 25th | at Chattanooga, Tenn., was born 'n Union, this state, April 14. 1831, and lived there until he was twenty years , old. His father was a merchant and : the first nrobate judge of Union, and thev resided for a part of the time in ' a house opposite the present. : court house, and later at the residence now occupied by Major J- ^ \ Lure. , ... i Going to Alabama his literary taste induced him to enter journalism, and he became associate editor of a paper, | all the while working intently on his invention. After Trust Company Funds. Attachment proceedings against tho funds of the defunct Darlington Trust company, held by the Atlantic Nation al bank a’ Wilmington, N. C., have been instituted by the Third National bank of Atlanta, thtough Its cashier, Joseph A. McCord. Cashier McCord said that the Darlington Trust compa ny is indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $8,0R9.12. President Jos. 3. company. The bank officials in Wil mington refuse to be interviewed re garding the matter. Conference Biffs Dispensary. The Columbia district conference adopted the following report unani mously: "Your committee to whom has been referred the question of temperance begs leave to present its report in the following resolutions: "Resolved 1. That |::|> a district conference, we desire to put ourselves on record as publicly disapproving the manufacture or sale of intoxicat ing liquors, as a beverage, by tin- state of South Carolina. "Rr«olved 2. That we hail with de light the sentiment now rapidly form ing throughout the state looking to the overthrow of the dispensary, the grriu evi] now cursing our country. “Resolved 3. That as a conference and a church, we desire to be u’'d.‘r stood as favoring prohibition as the best solution cf the wit’s key ques’ion ‘-r.TGi Engines, Boilers, Cotton, Saw, Fertilizer, Oil and Ice Machin ery and Supplies and Repairs, Machine Tools, Woodworking Machinery, Shaft ing, Pulleys, Hangers, Leather and Rubber Belting and Hose, Railroad i and Mill Supplies and Tools, Steam 1 Pumps, Feed Water Heaters and | Hoisting Engines, Injectors. Capacity for three hundred hands. I Estimates furnished for power plants and steel bridges, store front*. DON’T FAIL TO WRITE US BEFORE BUYINQ. .. Johnson's Uakery. First Georgia Bale of New Crop Auc. tioned at Savannah. The*flrst 1)316 of new cotton for this season, raised by Deal Jackson, col ored. was sold at auction at Savan nah, Friday morning in front of the Armstrong of the Atlantic National cotton exchange by Hunter & Co. It gave bond in the sum of $1,000. Ho was '. classed fully middling pad j s c jted to appear at the approaching brought 30 cents a pound. term of the superior rdurt to answer There was spirited bidding for the | under oath what funds his bank holds j bale. This is the highest price ever belonging to the Darlington paid n Savannah for a first bale. centennarian MURDERED. Indian Doctor, Aged 106 Years, Slain by Unknown Assassin. The dead body of Doctor Jim, an Indian, aged 106 years, has be*en found under the bridge on the Dairington branch of tho Northern Pacific, near Arlington, Wash., with a bullet hole In the back of the head. The trail indicated that he had been drapged 50 fee; from the point on tCe bank of the Stillagumish, where, it is believed, he had been sitting when he was shot from behind. .VA.a- '! I Li h.V. It $1 Trust PUBLIC APPEAL FOR YOUNG. Subscriptions Asked to Aid Slayer of Convict in Mississippi. An effort is now 1 f ing made to raise by popular subscription sufficient funds to pay for the employment o: abie attorneys to detend Robert Young the while man now confined in 5 be Jackson, Mss. ;al! for killing a ne gro convict n'roc i Collins at Crys a! Springs while 1 el-g carried to Jack son b/ a travel ng sergeant of the penitentiary. Cleanliness and Purity of Materials Are characteristics of all the Bread, Rolls, t akes, Pies, Etc. made at JOHNSON’?* BAKERY, Park Avenue. The Choicest Confectlonerlei and L’*»- dle* always eu band. STONE! STONE!! Estimates given and orders prompt ly filled for ■treet curbings, and cross ings, flower bed borders, sidewalks n blocks, hitching posts, door and t«r- rac* steps, door *nd window silis, osmeterv lot copings, rough and draased ashlers for fronts of build ings, hearth stones, eto. Lakeview stone a specialty. Rtuns from other suarries if preferred. 11. K. OHATFIELP, Aiken, 8. Q.