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% T *•'**!*- h* w& -4* CL-?* \ MICROf iLMtJD * •% ■ E* "'V'” •->•' >? • 4 i » -.-« W-' 51 H Arthur F. Forit^Tditor and Proprietor. SCRAP NOW LIVELY Guatemala and Salvador May Have Real Little War. LIGHTING ON THE BORDER AT BEHEST OF SPIRIT. Fanatical Mitchell Woman Says She Slew Brother at Urgent Command of Ghost of Her Betrayer, o. •• -^;-V With 40,000 Troops Available, Guate- . mala Seems to Hold Key to the Situation — uncle Sam May Act as Peacemaker. m I A caL!3*ram received at the state department in Washington Friday fr>m Minister Merry, at San Salvador, states that fighting is proceeding on the border line between Guatemala and Salvador, and also that Guate malan troops have crossed the line Into Honduras. This latter is under stood to be part of the Guatemalan attack on the fugitives of Regalado’s army after that leader was killed on lliursday. From those advices the impression Is given in Washington that Presi dent Cabrera of Guatemala holds tho key to the situation, and the question of war or peace depends upon the success of the eHor* 1 *" «»hich the state department w"now making to induce him to forego attacking either <$al- ^*dor or Honduras in retaliation for “Ti-.^*art played in the attempted rev olution by the Salvadore ^ troops under Regalado. The state department is informed that Oabrera has gath ered a force of no less than forty thousand men under arms. •At the instance of the state depart ment the navy department cabled to Commander Mtilllgan of the Marble head ajt Panama to proceed immedi ately to La Libertad, on the coast of Salvador, to safeguard American interests. She could arrive at that port Friday or -Saturday. There is no other American warships within 2,500 miles of the scene of trouble, so the Mar- bJehead may have to divide her time between Salvadorean and Guatemalan ports. During the day a cablegram was received at the state department from Mr. Brown, secretary of the legation et Guatemala City. He reports con- tfnued fighting near Oonte Pequei, In the neighborhood of the place bwhere Regalado was killed. The ag gressive attitude of Salvador toward Guatemala was, Mr. Brown says, real- ■ ly on account of the personal acts of Regalado's troops. Consequently his •» removed the principal ob- e restoration of peace. aS* Salvador A dispatch from Seattle, Wash., says: Immediately after the arrest of fitether Mitchell the 17-year-old girl who killed her brother Thursday night, orders were given for the ar rest of Mrs. Maim Creffleld, the wid ow of the prophet, whose death at the hands of George Mitchell led to tho tragedy. Mrs. Creffteld, however, tel ephoned the police where she was to be found, and when taken to the station frankly admitted that she had entered Into a compact with Esther to kill the slayer of her husband. She will be held as an acomplice. Esther Mitchell made the following statement Friday evening: “Mifs. Creffleld and I talked over the matter of killing George. The OHO tiwrt ' iTf**!—tHe —CO cio- At. Mrs. Creffleld bought the gun. We were at the room about 4 o'clock this afternoon, and I thought I would have a better chance to do it than Mrs. Creffleld, as my brother wanted to see me, and believed that he would think nothing about my going to the depot. Then Mrs. Creffleld gave me the gun and I was to do it. We agreed that it must be done as soon as possible. My brother Fred was up to my room today and said that Per ry and George were going to Portland this evening. I ^nt to the depot and saw Perry got his ticket. At last 1 saw George and I shook hands with him. He and Perry were walking in front and Fred and I were walking behind. I was walking to the door and George was in front of me. That was the chance I wanted and I shot him.” The girl is also reported to have said that the spirit of the “Holy Roller” had visited her and urged her to kill her brother. At the recent trial of George Mitchell for killing the “Holy Roller” prophet* it was claimed by the de fense that the prophet had seduced not only Esther Mitchell, but her sister, and that in killing the proph et. George Mitchell only did what any brother would have done under simi lar circumstances. This plea was ef fective in securing the acquittal of Mitchell. No one suspected that Esther Mitchell was so infatuated with her betrayer that she would avenge his death by killing her brother. AIKEN. S.<J„ THURSDAY MORNING. JULY 19, 1906. A CRUSHING DEFEAT EstablisM 1881. Price Visited Upon Guatemala’s Troops by Salvador Army. TWO THOUSAND SLAIN CREDITORS AFTER ALEXANDER. Claims Are Filed by Banks Against Defaulting Cotton Firm. ie only development at Augusta, Bloody Fracas In Pigmy Republics to Be Stopped By United States. Our Good Offices Welcom ed By Both Sides. BRYAN MORE RAD.CAL Nebraskan Says He Has Changed Somewhat Since 1896—Comment* on Word ‘'Conservative.” According to advices of Sunday from San Salvador Saturday night the Salvadorean army again attacked the Guatemalan forces at Platanar and obtained a victory over them. The Guatemalans suffered a loss o» 2,000^ men in killed, wounded and prisoners. Nicarauga to Remain Neutral. In reply to a request for a state ment as to the truth or falsity of re ports that tNacaragua has assisted in the war against Guatemala, the Asso ciated Press Sunday received the fol lowing statement from President Ze- laya: "Nicaragua has been, is and will remain neutral. (Signed.) “ZELAYA.” Guatemala, with a strong army, has invaded Honduras and Salvador and battles are being fought in both countries. Guatemalan troops arc ad vancing in Honduras. American Diplomats at Work. A Panama special says: United States Ministers Coombs, at Guate mala City, and Merry, at San -Salva dor, have approached, respectively. Presidents Cabrera and Escalon in an endeavor to re-establish peace be tween Guatemala and Salvador. Pres ident Cabrera informed Mr. Coombs that he is willing to enter into ne gotiations for peace provided the Unit ed States government will guarantee that further hostmiles against Guate mala will cease. Assistant Secretary of State Bacon, on Saturday, cabled Instructions to Messrs. Coombs and Merry to renew their efforts to establish permanent peace between Guatemala and Sal vador. Honduras Not Involved. The following dispatch has been re ceived by the Associated Press at New York from Presic'mt Bonilla of Honduras: “Honduras has not declared war. Guatemala invaded territory without previous declaration. (Signed.) “BONTL A London special says: William J. Bryan, having had the opportunity of reading American newspapers, con sented Thursday to discuss some of the questions which have been rais ed since he has become prominentias a presidential possibility for 1908. He said, in part: "I notice that I am described by some as a conservative and in order that there may be no misunderstand ing on that subject, permit me to say that in one sense I always have been a conservative. The democratio poli cies are conservative in that they embody old principles applied to new conditions. There was nothing new In principle in either of the platforms on which I stood. We were accused of attacking property when la fact :1N0US BUTCHERY Man, Wife and Children Mur dered as They Slept. Ivat Q»‘ &L Ae hoatilities, but com- „inst the aggressive attl- uatemala. o Arms by Guatemala, istilitles have taken place rder. The invasion of the by the Salvadorean troops considered to be a declaration of war. War is accepted by official de cree. The country has been placed un der martial law and there Is a general call to arms in Guatemala. STEEL TRUST IS FAVORED. Combine Get* Us Slice in Award of Armor Plate Contract. 'Secretary Bonaparte of the navy department announced Friday that the Carnegie and Bethlehem steel com panies will be given the contract for the armor of one of the new 16,000 ton battleships at the price named by the Midvale Steel company in their bid. The contract for the armor for the other battleship will gb to the Midvale company. The Cfernogio and Bethlehem companies are to snare equally the contract given to them. The Carnegie and Bethlehem com panies, which are controlled by the steel trust, put In much higher bids than the Midvale company, which Is an Independent concern. Charles M. Schwab went to Washington after the bids were announced in the interest of * the trust armor plants. Congress pro vided that the contract should be let ta.the “lowest responsible bidder.” lomae w. Alexander and the failure "for something over $145,000 was the filing of a petition in bankruptcy in the federal court by the Georgia Rail road bank, the National of Augusta, and the Southern States Phosphate and Fertilizer company against the firm. The schedule shows claims as follows: Georgia Railroad bank, notes, $120,- 000; Southern States Phosphate com pany, $11,681; National bank, $7,500. In addition to this total it is esti mated that T. W. Alexander s per sonal liabilities will amount to about $26,000, making a total for tho firm and the individual who was its head, $165,181. Mr. Alexander’s whereabouts Is still a mystery. It is believed that there will be no criminal action taken by any of the creditors. COAL DIGGE.R6 RESUME, Forty Thousand Men in Pennsylvania Return to Labors. The men in the collieries of the central Pennsylvania bituminous coal district, numbering nearly forty thou sand, who have been idle since April 1, when the mines closed down be cause the operators would not restore the scale of 1903, will resume work on practically the same scale as in 1905. The agreement to do this was made in a conference at Harrisburg, Pa., Friday that was atended by prom inent operators. WRIT OF ERROR FOR ROSE. Case cf Kansas City Mayor Goes to United States Supreme Court. W. W. Rose, mayor of Kansas City, Kans., has been granted a writ of T*^Yns y^rinparlay on a error by Justice Brewer or rtre Su preme court of the United States, which reverses the decision of the Kansas supreme court, and stays its judgment in fining Mayor Rose $1,000 and demanding that he relinquish his office. Mayor Rose 'will cquy^e to per form his duties as i*j»yor Ajutil the case is acted upon, ana it biTbelieved his term of office will expire befora that court decides the case. RELATIVES OF McKINLEY. Bound Over to Grand Jury Charged With Falsifying Records. Mrs. Emily McKitiley, postmistress sner, URlJUioma. and a wid- of a cousin of/tfre late President cKinley, was arraijrnfJ^before the ited States commission Wednesday, arged with falsifying redpros. John McKinley, Lizzie McKinley and ra Godfrey, assistants, yvere also ign»fc?' They all waived* a prelim- • hearing, and were bound over e grand jury. (LVADOR IAL KILLED. »r President of Republic Fall* Praea* With Guatemalan*. t-lado, former president of Sab rod the leader of Salvadorean | in the present la, was killed in battle ’Bpiirs. announcement of his death the stateNd'epartnj^nt'through from United States Min- rry at Sa^j&alvador. BAD ADVICE TO BOYS Causes Aunt Carrie Nation to Collide With Mail Regulations. Mrs. Carrie Nation was arrested at warrant charging her with having misused the mails. She was carried to Dallas, and after apearing before United States Commissioner May waf released on bond in the sum of $2,- 600. The examining trial is set for July 31. The warrant specifies that she deposited in (he postoffice a pub- lication“cont.i(ning an improper article headed “A Piivate Talk to Boys.” FIVE DIE IN TROLLEY CRASH, an; Motor Cars Collide at Switch Deal Death to Passengers. A dispatch from Buffalo, N. Y., says: A train of two trolley cars, westbound from Lockport, on the lin«,s of the International Railway company Wednesday night, and due at Tona- wanda at 9:15 o’clock, ran into an open switch at a siding just east of Martinsville and crashed into a trol ley freight motor and a train of seven freight cars. Five persons were killed and a score injured, several seriously. Dili Guatemala and Salvador have accept ed the tender of (he good Alices of this government looking \.6 a settle ment of their differepoes. This in formation is conveyed in official dis patches received At the state depart ment Sunday from the American di plomatic representatives in Guatemala and Salvador, announcing that the two belligerent countries have avail ed themselves of the tender of the good offices of the United States look ing to their approaching each other in a conference having in view an adjustment of their differences, the cessation of hostilities and the bring ing about of peace. It is stated that while both Guate mala and ’Salvador have accepted in principle the proposition for a peace conference, the question of arbitration would bo a subject of future consid- eration. The advices regarding the Central American situation were forwarded to the president at Oyster Bay by Acting Secretary of State Bacon, who is in charge of the state department affairs during the absence of Secre tary Root. It was stated that the next step looking to peace negotiations is the fixing of the time and place for the meeting of conferees, and that while these matters are being determined the American diplomatic representa tives in Guatemala and Salvador will be the mediums through which com munications will be exchanged. This procedure may consume some time. the democratic party is the defender of property because it endeavors to draw the line between honest accu mulation by honest methods on the one side and predatory w r ealth and immoral methods on the other. “It is to the interest of every hon est man that dishonesty should be exposed and punished; otherwise the deserving are apt to suffer for the undeserving. “If, however, by the word conserv ative they mean that I have changed my position on any public question or moderated my opposition to cor porate aggrandizement they have a surprise waiting for them. I am more radical than I was in 1896, and have nothing to withdraw on econom ic questions which have been under discussion. “The only question we discussed in 1896 upon which there has been any apparent change is the silver question and that has not been a change in the advocates of bimetalism, but in con ditions. “We contended for more mo^s^- 3^ urged the free coi the only means t ? securing it. The p has brought in pa expected to secure tion of silver. T ume of money in is almost 50 per than it was in 18' brought by this only vindicated tl of money but ha-'*' NPS fits of the largei No. advocate of t ^ ^ cl ;.m the trium) 0 f his . .1 believe In b, jetallism, ay 1 ;-ve that the pt ‘storation of would bring, stii. turther prosf * ^ in ,nnVi—-~ coun . tries; but I recr as do all Oiher bimetalists whi „ aave met abroad, that the unexpc ad and unprecedent ed increase in Ad production has for the present <emoved the sliver question as an is .e. “While the ri^ney question has w r aned in importaye, other questions have been forging, L o the front, and to these questional a must apply the samp principles 'a applied to the money question aji seek to secure the greatest goo* to the greatest number by legislatii which conforms to the doctrine of fl;al rights for all and special privllej.s for none.” Mr. Bryan added at he would dis cuss the trust, taif, railroad and labor questions, impMalism and oth er issues at length hen he reached America. FOUR NEGROES ARRESTED Two 'Daughters Sleeping in Upper Rooms Were Not Molested and Gave the Alarm.—After Mur ders Hous e Was Fired. One of the most horrible tragedies in the history of Rowan County, N. C., occurred near Barbers Junction, about forty miles from Greensboro Saturday morning. Between tho hours of 1 and 2 o’clock an unknown per- sga or persons entered the home of Ike Lyerly, a well known farmer, while its occupants were asleep, kill ing Mr. Lyerly, his wife and two of the youngest children, and* fatally wounding a third. The parents and three children were asleep in the front room on the first floor, there being two older daughters sleeping upstairs, who were unmolested and were awakened by the >-moke and flames from below, the criminal or criminals having set fire to fhe house. The tyo girls descend ed the stairs to awaken their father and mother. On reaching their room they beheld their father and mother and the thiAe youngest children lying on the bed, their heads crushed and their faces tadly disfigured. Tne two . older daughters, M end Addie, aged 18 and 16, resj ly, managed to carry t from the home fames. Then neighbor, FERTILIZER MEN LOSE OUT. is Decision of Court at Richmond Against Them. In the Virginia-Carolina Chemical Company case, at Richmond, Va., Judge Goff denied the writ of habeas corpus, thus sustaining Judge Wad- dill. Mr. Tinsley, representing the Vir ginia defendants, was remanded to the custody of the marshal. Judge Waddlll’s decision was that the case should be tried in the jurisdiction of the Tennessee court where the in dictments were brought. Notice of an appeal to the supreme court of the United States was given. STRIKES DEFY A 'HORITIES. a Well Armed, On e ^irdred Take Charge of Govermfent Camp. One hundred strike*, have taken possession of the gov-nment camp at Corbett tunnel, in xe Shoshone reservation works, eigl miles from Cody, Wyoming, and h^e created a reign of terror. They hreaten the Jives of 500 other men ( jiey return to work. Sheriff Halmette of C* , with fif ty mounted deputies, hetly armed, left Thursday afternoon fc the scene of the trouble. A battle i probable, as the strikers are armed ad are in censed at the officers be.use they drove them out of Cody, .'ly 4. APPRENTICES TOO LUTED. POSSES PURSUE M’PHERSON. DESPERADO SLAYS SHERIFF. Florida Officer Lose* Life in Attempt ing Arreat of Negro. In an attempt to arrest a desper ate negro Tuesday afternoon Sheriff Wilson of Clay county, Florida, was shot and instantly killed by the ne gro. Wilson’s deputy ..killed the ne gro. Great excitement prevails in Clay county, where, the t gedy oc curred. Wilson was *• prominent man. Li- Young Man Kills Knoxvill e Citizen and Fatally Wounds Sheriff. John McPherson, aged 24, Is a fu- giitfre from Justice with two posses pursuing him, charged with the mur der of Grant Smith, a former mer chant of Knoxville, Tenn., and the fatal wounding of Deputy Sheriff Wil liam Walker, who attempted to arrest him. McPherson shot and killed Smith in the house of a woman named Nettie Hall, apparently without provo- cation. POSTMASTER KNOCKED OUT. Robbers Get in Their Work at Little Town of Glen Bernie, Md. The postoffice at Glen Bernie, Md., a small railroad station, was robbed of abeut $1,000 Sunday night, the rob bers knocking senseless the acting postmaster, Adam ^ingert, whom they bound and gagged before mak ing good their escape. There Is no clew to ites robbers. taught a trade in school, iu^id of under the restrictions of a lali* un ion, tho members of which are .ulous of o*s advancement, was asserSd by President S. L. Luther, of Trinit Col lege, Harvard, in the convent Va of the American Institute of InstrjUon. President Luther said in part: \ “Today there are few appredees and such a# may still be founiinre learning very little. The labor un ions restrict the number of ar-en tices to limits grotesquely bekr ob vious needs. The boys surer ;om the jealousy, ill-will and incompetace of those who are supposed to Hch them and Irom the greed of emp\y- ers. who try to get a man s work of them for a boy’s wages.” WILL DICTATE TO COURT. Jhan Ing. There wiffT to ind^ lynching at Salisbury, but the sheriff thought best to move the prisoners. The coroner’s jury Saturday night fastened the crime ^upon all the pris oners. THAW FIRES HIS LAWYERS. Prisoner Would Not Consent to In- Sb sanity Plea as Sole Defense. Harry Thaw has dismissed the law firm of Black, Olcott, Gruber & Bonynge in a fit of anger, and that firm will not defend the young Pitts- burger. The dismissal came, it is said, as the culmination of a number of argu ments Thaw has had with various members of tho law firm over tho question of Insanity as a defense. “ i am tWi boss,” Thaw is said to have declargd. “And I will not stand for the insanity plea,” the prisoner added. WORK OF CHINESE PIRATES. British Steamer Attacked and Ameri can Missionary Killed. Advices from Hong Kong state that the British steamer Sainam was at tacked by Chinese pirates at a point fifty miles from Wu Chow. Rev. Mr. MacDonald was shot and killed. Tho captain of the steamer was badly wounded. A Chinese passenger also was killed. MacDonald and his wife are stationed at Wu Chow in the in terests of the Wesleyan Missionary Society. ATLANTANS ENTERTAlft JEROME. College President Says LabcAUnions Injure Boys of United Sm^s. The American boy’s righpto lul-. gliojsts. William Travers Jerome, the New York District Attorney and Two Assistants Warmly Welcomed. Monday three very distinguished famous district attorney of New York, and his two assistants, Arthur C. Van diver and Francis P. Gar van, were en tertained by citizens of Atlanta. This trio of legal talent that have become national arrived in the city Sunday afternoon enroute to Warm Springs, Ga., where Mr. Jerome was slated to address the Georgia Bar Associa tion. TINNED MEATS LOSE FAVOR. Labor Unions to Demand Bail or U mediate Trial for Heywood. The Silver Bow Trades and Label Assembly of Butte, Mont., has issuer i an “appeal to every central labo body In the United States to sei’ apart Sunday, August 5th next, for a , general, united and direct demand of Judge Frank J. Smith of Caldwqll, But Small Quantity Goes to London Compared With Past Orders. A London dispatch says: In June of last year there arrived at the Al bert docks from Boston and New Or leans 27,000 cases of tinned meats;, in June of this year the receipts were only 4,000 cases. In July, 1905, 24,- 000 cases were received, but thus far month no tinned meats have ar- from the United States to either give an immediate ADMIRAL ASSASSINATED. Sen mander of Russian Black Fleet Put Out of Action. z Advices from Sebastopol, Russia, to Charles H. Moyer, Wil- y »tate that Vice Admiral Chouknin, ywood and George A. Pet ^commander of the Black sea fleet, 4# with the murde: .if, was Wednesday, supposedly adopt resolutions addressedThursday morning without urge to District Judge Smith. j bving regained consciousness. mi m ieSS&xgS'USSj 20 s ^ ■ —'i- jPalmettoStateNews: BICTIT H. DIBBLE, PresldcnL JAMBS POi Tie* Pr**l Negro Murderer Captured. The negro who killed Mr. Schlegel- milch is now in jail at Beauton. The negro was caught by a posse in the marshes twelve miles ;'rom Bluif- ton. He was carried back six miles to the scene of the killing and turned over to the deputy sheriff. The mur dered man’s father and brother were present and uigtd their neighbors, a large number of -whem were present, to allow the law to take its course. McCully Goes to Seattle. Lieutenant Commander Newton McCully, U. S. ’N., who has been vis iting his mother at Anderson for the past two weeks, has been ordered to Seattle, Washington, where he will assist at the trial of the Nebraska. From there he will go to San Fran cisco to the trial of the California. This will be ihree big ships that he has been assigned the duty of tho testing on their initkU trips in one month, having assisted recently in testing the Georgia. The Bank AIKEN, SOUTH r$*m.** W. J. RUTHE! DE.' BRICK PORTLAND AND BOSENDALEj Tough on the Boys. The Charleston News and Courier facetiously remarks: \That a fine lot of farmers have bfiMgl^gpiled in tho making of bas(^£fiircE|^kthis part the RUDY ROOFING ETC. Corner of WaokisgtoB tZA, r* iiimist, 1 !*! Agent. Lile, Mm, Insurance, -AND- Col. Lumpkin W'/fy .uiiiprviM w * v*. 7. Lumpkin ha.'Q O ice for United Col. W. W from the race for United^ £j» ator. This leaves the field cl<-?/ ^rge attendane! Senator Tillman's re-election. meetm!! !n cve ' Lumpkin issued the following caru / >ns point a most sued way. to the public: “On account of the change of con ditions surrounding the senatorial race, I deem it best to withdraw from the contest. I have endeavored to con duct my campaign in a manly, straightforw-ard w*ay up to this time, and retire feeling that I have not Intentionally wronged anyone. (Signed) “W. W. LUMPKIN." No cause Is assigned for this move, but the hopelessness of the fight is generally conceded by the press of the state to have brought the matter to a climax. Alleged Forger Nabbed. An Atlanta news item is as *foi lows; A message has been received by Chief Henry Jennings from iff R. F. McCaslon of Greenwood, S. C., stating that he would come to ita some time during Friday for S impose of carrying back with . Frank Alexander, the young rrested by Call Officers Cooper and Wells, suspected of being the person who some w'teks ago passed a forged check on tho Oregon hotel, at Greenwood. The identification of Alexander w r as made complete by a RUSS GENERAL ASSASSINA^ Mistaken for Trepoff, Kizlov is Slain Near Palace of Czar. A dispatch to a London news agen cy from St. Petersburg says that Gei oral Kizlov, of the headquarter! staff, was murdered in the parl^ Peterhoff Saturday. His assajj a revolver. The three were all effective. The under arrest, but has not fied. The case is regarded NPPrhystor- ious, as General Kizlov was not eon- neeted with any political agitation. The murderer carried a photograph, at which he gazed attentively before firi.ig, as comparing it with General Kizlov. It was a photograph of Gen erai T.-cpoff,^ FOR AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE. * Georgia House of Representatives Votes Sum of $100,000. After a prolonged and determined fight waged by tho friends and op ponents of the measure, house bill No. 1, by Mr. Conner, of Bartow, ap propriating $100,000 to the state ag ricultural college at Athens, was pass, od Wednesday afternoon by the lower branch of the Georgia general assem- member of the firm of the California j bly by a vote of 95 to 60. Cheers from the advocates of the Specialty company, 27 W|est Mitchell street, for which he has been a trav eling salesman. The amount of tho worthless check is said to have been $20. Alexander denies that he is guilty of the charge against him. Alderman and Ex-Cop Mix. Alderman J. T. Willard and ex Policeman John Kitchen engaged in a lively personal difficuly in Spar tanburg. The two men came together after a few* minutes’ heated argument and exchanged blows. Neither was injured to any serious extent, and the combatants w r ere soon separated by several members of a large crow*d of spectators which quickly 4 gathered. Al derman Willard landed several blows and Mr. iKtchen attempted to retal late, fiut it is said by eye-witnesses that lie failed to touch Mr. Wellard The fight was the sequel to thi charges which Mr. Kitchen mads against several policemen and one! bill greeted the announcement of the vote. Notice of a motion to recon sider was given by Mr. Flynt of ding. CANDIDATES COME ACR< All Aspirants for Office in Georgia Pay Assessment. All the candidates for Georgia state house offices have paid their as sessments. The candidates for govern, or, Howell, Russell, Estill, Jim Smith and Hoke Smith, have paid up. So have the candidates for the four places on the supreme court bench come across. All the state house offi cials w’ill stand for re-election. The two oniy candidates who are giving the incumbents opposition are Vin cent T. Sanford, candidate for comp troller general, against W. A. Wright, and Mark Johmson for state school commissioner against W. B. Merritt. sergeant, which w*ere to have been Investigated by the council at a spe cial meeting. The members of the : council were on hand at the hour | appointed, but it was decided that ac- ; tion wcnld be postponed until a later day. Annual Meeting of Editors. Arrangements are proceeding for the annual meeting of the South Car- 1 olina Press Association, which meets at the Isle of Palms, Tuesday, 18th. Addresses of welcome delivered by Mayor Rhett dent P. H. Gadsden of dated Railway company will be made by Col secretary of the ‘WATER WAGON” MOTORMEN. Only Ones Chosen for This Munici pally Owned Street Railway. In choosing motormen for what Is said to be the first municipally owned street railway In the United States, the street railway of Monroe, La., Mayor A. A. Forsythe said that the first test for positlqi be total am notj layer, tat MEM for 3 me 25 cents fei men $1.00i land I THE prod lie powerful Young ml old men using ltl<: moves Nt VVeaknes.-rsuc' Wasting Disc: excess and In study, buslnesi by starting at I nerve tonic back the pink, storing the tirel proachiiigdisc; other u\ Basement John! _ \ ■ Sr*-, •• „ .