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( MXTY-SiJiO.M) COM.'IiESS (LOSKS President Tait Yetoi's Sundry Chili Bill and .New Mexico Senator Talks Indian Bill to Death. Washington, March 4.?Two of the j annual appropriation bills necessary I to the maintenance of the Federal J government failed to passage to day, i tvhen the 62nd congress wound up its j affairs. Senator Fall, of New Mexico, holding the floor through the closing hours of the session, talked the Indian appropriation bill to death with its 112,000,000 for the support of the Jndian service, while President Taft wrote his veto on the $115,000,000 to ~uke care o the "sundry civil defense" of the government. The house repassed the sundry civil j oill over the veto, but when it reached | ~he senate, Senator Poindexter ob-1 ;.ected to any appropriation for the Washington police force unless an investigation had be^n made of the rio?ous scenes atending the suffrage parade Monday and the senate did not get to a vote on the bill. Mr. Taft vetoed the sundry civil bill oecause of its provisions exempting .abor unions and farmer'* organizaxions from prosecution under tne antitrust jaw. Most of the appropriation -.vould not take effect until July 1, ( .nowever, and the new congress will be able to prepare appropriation measures by tnat time. The provision to which Mr. Tai't object-cu pruviueu tnat no iunus could ue spent in prosecution 01 organizations or inaiviuuais ior "entering into any comomauon or agreement naung in view tne increasing oi wages, suori ouiiig oi iiours or bettering ui-e conuiiions oi laoor, " or lor me prosecution oi' "producers oi lami products anu associations of farmers wIiq co-ope.at-e aua organize 10 ootain ana maiulain a fair and reasonable price lor '.ncir prouucts. ' This he declared was "class legislalion oi tne most vicious sort' ana tilat it would undoubtedly Ue held unconstituuouai by tne courts. Ket'trring lo tne larmers ciause, President TaitJ saiu: "At a time when there is wide- j spread compiaint oi the nigh cost ot living it certainly would be an anomaly to puj. on the statute books ' ' * ? \ /-.r i r* ATt'i./-?T I oi me Linieu ottiies u.11 act. m w-vi ciiLiiiji uie prosecution of comDi- i nations oi producers of larrn products j _or tne purpose 01 artiriciaiiy cornerjng prices.' liie special session of the senate, vhiph vu-*? PivMik nt Marshall called io order today immediately alter tlie j i-^iici congress adjourned, will assem- j bie again at noon tomorrow to receive j and act upon President Wilson's eabi- j -let appointments. "tfuiity Pulls the .Strings'7 Coming.! There is one attraction soon to oe tein at the opera house which has been awaited with eager anticipation, .t is "Bunty Pulls the Strings", which is bringing everybody to its feet, wherever played. It conies to the opera house Friday, March 7, and if there is one vacant seat that ni^ht j ve miss our guess. "Bunty" is a great! jig hit, the biggest known in years, j You may as well see it now and you'll! be glad you went, for above all is the i I atmosphere of cleanliness that ob- i ":ains in the production. As the critic ! of the Xew York press well said: "Bunty is as fresh as a sprig of heather u,;id as pure as a breeze from ^och-Lomond". It is a breeze that Actus uiciiAUi ics iiianv a ucai u ? ix^ | mid-Victorian costumes?the crinoline particularly?and the locals of :he play provides a quaint setting for this picture of quaint liW and manners. Graham Moffat, the author, has iilled in his canvas with types which d roily illustrate national foibles. 'IJii w fx* DmI 1/^ tlx /n Otri no-o'' in o yy\ 7 1 H U U n x Uiio Liic ijn-i'i&o a. xiiiAu satire on Scotch virtues and weaknesses. it depicts the stern,, particular father who lias himself a past, and details with an unerring humorous touch of r markable delicacy the ights and shades of domesticity, frugality and searching canniness. The whole story is told with untheatric simplicity in terms of unforced humor and interpreted by a special company t'.f inmnrteri nernrc flmrniurhlv iniTinprt vith the spirit of the author. "Bunty Pulls the Strings" is a play for those who like the really worth while in .-stage offerings. The attraction comes <mder the direction of the Messrs. :3bnbert and William A. Brady. ^Program for State Teachers' Association. tl. u. Jburis, ^resident 01 tne siait-j Teachers' association of South Carolina, announces that the plans and program for the meeting to be held in Columbia March 13 and 14 are com pleted. Below is given an outline of ihe program, which promises to be one of the most interesting and help-1 ful that has ever been held. Teachers j :rom the entire State will be present j r.nd indications are there will be a re-, cord breaking crowd. On the op ning . \t iii>:g the princi- ( ] !e a(h!' \vi 1 lx- made by former, Superintendent of Education, O. I>.: Martin, who for the past few years j has h-?en doing effective work in the j work, especially interested in the boys | clubs, and Dr. J. LaBruce, ward of the ; State board of health, who is widely j ; known for his work for the public' 'health. On Friday at the second ses- j I sion Supt. J. E. Swearingen is to ad- i I dr-ess the association, and following | ! his address there will be a live dis- j i cussion of some of the live educa-; tional problems of the State, giving opportunity for some of the educators of experience to discuss these. rFor Friday "evening there is a rare ' treat for those who attend when Prof. | W. K. Tate is to give an ilustrated lecture on the schools of Switzerland. , Following this will be an address by L. P. Hollis of Greenville, whose [work in the industrial Y. M. C. A. j i work has become known throughout j " - - ? A- + >.? .>o 1 tne nation, jtie is to <tuui c?s iuc a.o'sociation on the subject of the school, house as a social center. Saturady I morning will be given over to an executive session, not simply the rou- j tine of electing officers but th^ laying of plans for making the association j more effective in its work. Reports come from several counties j of the State that the teachers are ! working for the membership banner. I The handsome silk banner will be a! warded to the county in which the j | largest percentage of teachers are eni rolled as memberte. Attendance is not necessary to be enrolled. Those who pay the membership fee are counted. Railroad rates are most reasonable. Three cents a mile plus 25 cents for .the round trip will be charged. WILL PKE VCH ANNUAL SEK3I0N.I Kev. E. Pendleton Jones of Newberry Has Accepted Invitation. Laurensville Herald. The Rev. E. Pendleton Jones, pastor of the Newberry Baptist Church, ,will preach the annual sermon at the close of the Laurens City schools, i .The sermon will be delivered at the , First Baptist church Sunday, June 1st, T5 1 Tnnoc onnnnnpprl thie WftPk" UUpV. U? iJ. t? ViiVW 4*v/v***w Ui V ?-u .. ? j that he had secured the distinguished . i Newberry minister for this occasion, [ j-and the people of Laurens will look I forward to the event with eager antii cipation. Mr. .Tones is a brother of | I the Rev. Howard Lee Jones of Char-! 1-eston and is a gifted and eloquent \\ preacher. CLAIMED COULD RESTORE LIFE 1! f Alletrod Religious Fanatic Savedk from Greenville Mob. i i Greenville, March 6.?L. F. Free, a * i white man said to be an itinerant! sign painter and alleged religious fa- j natic, was placed in jail tonight by; Sheriff Rector to save him from a mob j that had gathered in a suburban millj village, many in the gathering having: become incensed over the failure of j Frec's alleged claim to restore life to j an infant that died Monday. From what can be gathered of the I facts surrounding the affair it seems! that Free and another so-called "Holi- j ness" fanatic, claiming to have power I to work miracles, and having heard of j. the death of the infant of James Bal-!. lew, went to his home and told the j sorrowing mother and father that they ! ! could restore life to the child. The; ! parents, crusnea in gnei ana sawyea ; by pleadings of the two men, it is said allowed them to begin their gruesome work, which, it seems, consisted mainly in twisting and distorting the little lifeless body until the coroner toi night found it nothing more than a mass of bruised flesh. Officials will! probably take the case in hand tomor- i row. ADEE TO KEEP HIS JOB. i I Bryan to Reappoint Him 2d Assistsi nt Secretary of State. Washington. March 6.?Alvey A. i Adee. second assistant secretary of. 'State, who lias been in the State de-, partment since 1SS7, will retain his i position und r Secretary Bryan. Mr.. | Ad e is affectionately referred to in | Washington as the "wheel horse'' of the department, and it is said that few j important diplomatic notes of recent1 years have escaped his editing. Pres ident Wilson and Secretary Bryan i nnt tn zncpnt hi? resis: i nation. Ij Manton M. Wyvell, a New York law-j yer, a Cornell man and an intimate personal friend of Secretary Bryan,! today was appointed private secretary j to the Secretary of State, in place of Wm. Leslie Coombs, Mr. Knox's se cretarv who resigned to engage in bus- ! A ? , iness in San Francisco. Benjamin G. Davis, of Maryland.! clerk to Mr. Bryan when lie was in ! congress, and lately in the adjutant: general's office in the war department is to be confidential clerk to Secretarv i i1rv;i ?; $h/f? When you purchase a MONUMENT I from an unknown agent representing some unknown firm you are almost sure to pay an exorbitant figure and run chances of having the workmanship turn out inferior, or the marble or granite "Quarry Seconds." In placing your order here j you are patronizing a local concern with a reputation of j doing excellent work andj having many examples of, its work hereabouts for vour inspection. We would be pleased to! submit our quotations, show our stock, designs, etc., to you. | P. F. BAXTER & SON! i Newberry, S. C. Ceutenarian Dead. Columbia, Barch 6.?The funeral of Mr. Abraham Trager, who died ? here last night, aged 104 years, will ^ be held in this city, at the Jewish i Cemetery, tomorrow afternoon. "Vf%? nnv,^ V?-rr f rt'n /^on 0"h_ i I 1*11 . XI dgci IO OUl H?CU UJ I. ?Y V UUUJ)" ters, Mrs. B. Visanska, of Columbia, and Mrs. N. Garfunkel, of New York city, besides several grandchildren. He was born in Minsk, Russia, and came to the United States in the early 50s taking up his residence at Charleston. At the opening of the war Between the Sections he removed to Columbia, af ter tfte first ciasn occurred ai r on.; Sumter. He lived here practically all I the years he was a citizen of the United States. Twelve years ago Mr. Trager went to New York to live with his daughter, returning here last October. His wife, whom he married in ' Europe, died about twelve years a^o. j ALL HOPE FOK ALIENS VANISHES. i Father and Son, Members of Virginia Outlaw Band, to Die in Electric Chair on March 28. Richmond, Va., March 6.?Floyd Ai- i len, leader of the outlaw band in Car-, roll county, and his son, Claude Swanson Allen, will be executed in the State penitentiary on March 28 for their Dart in the Hillesville court murder ? on March 14, 1912, Governor Mann! tonight having refused to commute' the sentence to life imprisonment. The prisoners were to have died to- j morrow, but the governor yesterday granted a respite of three weeks. Th-e respite was accepted by the Aliens as an indication that the governor would extend mercy. The rejection of the petition, however, means that the case is officially closed, as there is no way Kir n-lii/%1-1 it ndn Vio QO"jin nnPTlPfJ ^ ,B Miss Nellie Wisler, a mountain girl i to whom Claude Alien was engaged, made an unsuccessful effort to see Governor Mann today with a final plea for commutation. Early tonight the prisoners had not j been advised of the executive's deci-1 sion and under instruction of the pris-; on superintendent no one was permit-; ted to see them until to-morrow. HAY KIN FOK"<;OYKK.\Oh>. Dr. CliiiKscales Would Champion Cause of Compulsory Education. Spartanburg, .March 6.?Dr. John G. Clinkscales, professor of matlv-; matics at Wofford College, tonight; authorized the announcement that un- j less one of the candidates for gover- j nor should come out positively and1 aggressively in favor of compulsory j education, he himself would be a can- \ J* 4- Vk a Prv ??iv* r. v* ^ *nt* rvn 1 : I UiUcHt Uil luai (Jiauui ill auu ?t uuiu pr-each the doctrine of compulsory ed- j ucation from the mountains to the sea. j Dr. Clinkscales is a magnetic stump j speaker and has perhaps a wider ac- j quaintance in South Carolina than any | other man in the State. The degree of doctor of laws was confered upon; J-.;,-.-. Cjnyinor Kv T?relfitie> r'nllptrp I XII ill iaci opi ilA^ KJJ J Our idea of an optimist is the man j m who thinks he can make a living out! of four hens and a back yard ten ' ii ] ''0'iri^v 1ii5Vs^ // It tells you h< phone line wi same high-cla; now enjoyed 1 T i* TT/Ml Krt 11 )UU Lid tell you how You do not ol Address ne Fi CrtfTTHrDN WW JL AND TELE 163 Sou I The N Capital I EVI C h \ M \ -*- >? V, l-.r I igj A ) m VE " 4th( step tow man has i account, increase! j liability greatest 1 one. j| 'The can j < Four Per JAS. McINTOSH, I nHBHBnBHBIS The Get-Rich- Quick. "I set the Billbys have a new autool>lle and baye sent their daughter to] Farmer I^Tkie r It Is sk for It Today--A1 ow you may conne ith the Bell systerr >s local and long d by more than 5,00( ven't a Telephone to get service at v< bligate yourself by rarest Bell Telephone M armers' Line Departmen BELL TELEPH GRAPH COMP th Pryor St, Atlanta, Ga. ewberry Savings Stock, - $5C iRY DOLL | THE BA WSIHENOT Jthf wi \\ JL JCL JLJtu?J * A. , ^BETWEEN ? Alversii . Cwrizkt 1900, fcy C ? Zlaaeau Ce.~V* C? \ ?DV J I7A11 1 j|\i uuiicu y uu j i bank means ai ard success. No su i ever been without A bank account d prestige and a sens and security, well w< _ ?a. error i in uruc* iu k That Always Has Th( Cent Interest Paid on Savings President J. E. NO Vassar. I thought Billby was just a i cheap clerk." f ;[ Mrs. Billby has wriit v. ; Needs B O OK I Frftft m Postal Will Do ^ :ct your Teleu and get the 1 istance service 3,000 people. , ' ? \l7ll LUIS UUU1V Will ?ry small cost. , J sending for it. anager, or t [ONE . ANY |mj 1 * " 55 1 t . .0 === . 1 I t 1 Bank i.ooo.oo AT? Hll v< IN I m I [ENS '! lll ^: YOU QL< i 3ut in lother ccessful a bank means - -r ? ;e or i cDrth the acquire ' it i ii j " ?: J ) Money Deposits RffOOD, Cashier ?--=1 f I 1 a book entitled 'How to Get and Keep the Modo! Hired Girl.' a:id is push- . " i. off the map."