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SENATOR TILLMAN I'KGF.l) TO TELL WHOLE Tlil'TH j I The Columbia Correspondent of the j American Asks Tillman t-> Make fiood on His Threat to "Specify" as to Manning and Lever. John K. Anil, Columbia correspond-' snt for the Charleston American, .sent the following statement on the night of June 14 by telegraph. The telegraph company failed to de. 'tiver Mr. Anil's statement to the American in time for publication in Saturday's paper. The statement in full follows: -Columbia. June 15.?Senator Tillman's letter to the editor of th? Charleston American, published here this afternoon by a newspapsr which has not yet had the manhood to print original Tillman reply to Manning 'to which the article published this ""* ? aj-T \ 'artemoon reiers, s^ys mu,i me can nas some subterranean way of 'getting news from Columbia," that the publication of his letter in the American was a ' breach of fatih" and that his letter was "filched." These charges directly affect the 'Columbia correspondent of the American, who in reply, simply desires to state that they are absolutely false. The senator's charges against the American will dorJbtless be handled by the editor of the American. The American carries the regular newspaper postage rate at its masthead. And I besn 1 % * 4-s\ 1-*t iff 1 atto If or?rl n*jvt? au5UiULCity 111 uo iu.raii* auu patriotism. Suffice it in that regard ^or me to say that the record of my ?amily in this war, so far as service at the front is concerned, and that is the service that counts, will compare favorably with the record of the senator's family, and that my brother and brother-in-law are now in i ? ^ i I anu anuuier uruuier-iii-iaw is sco;j -o go to France, and now in the' fighting vanks, are aU three volun-' teers, and that I have done what little ' was within my ability and am ready : .Pl'I anxious to do what else I can for ! th?. nation in this time of stress and; 3 trill * J siuGci in an article in the Ameri- i T > can ut--wdnesdny morning: "As to: where the-'-'olumlbia corresDondelU of I '-be American #ot the original Tillmaii i 'letter, thai is nobody's business, so ! long as he got it legitimately and ! i honestly, as he did and so long as he did not vio^to a confidence in pub- i ;iir.h.ing it." That is all I have to stats j n.07:. VC- I shall not "V misled into divulging ' afr' information to where I got r-irat letter. It was a true copy of the ~ which Senator Tillmaii had; "written. It ^ave to the people of the state a portion of what he knew to be ; ^ibe truth. The pity is that he did nm give all the tri'th at that time, in- i stead of giving what he did as to Gov-j ernor Manning toeing "in the business of irakine: a senator for the -people oi* '"tSto^JbOfafuiia to swallow." Then tell-' j ing a portion of the frame-up that oc' eurxed in Washington: and contenting himself with conrluding. in regard to] > ther -which he had formerly ( ^Sliming and Level4, and the services whi?h he had formerly ren-1 derea against Blease, that neither Manning nor Lever would deny what he has done for them, and "if they want n:e to specify I will do so." The specifications which the senior senator threatened would proDaDiy fcave been even more interesting than the letter itself which has caused such, a state-wide sensation. i I Wnat. the people of South Carolina now want to know is not how the Charleston American honestly got truth which the peopi? ' - entitled to, and published it, i "'knowledge*! signature of ' over tfie *r.v Senator' TOlmi", bUt why Senator Tilftntrf riid notfl&ivg bo'e ^ru^'"' | - - - * ~ J. ~*rr? y^^hy he attempted to hOM up jjv? r*be p^?;u)M feven thai portioil which! 7 he did give, in View of the statement j in his former letter to Governor Man- , ning that he was "not accustomed to 1 flaying the game of politics with the ' cards stacked" and that he had foil-owed Jefferson's maxim, "teach the "people.and trust the people and teii .them the truth." j ,.OM write a part > ^JQyt.'rf J5-3.Ior, uiu of the truth, threaten to publish it all, ana then attempt to withhold the part "which you had writtten? That is what the people of South Carolina would like to know, not how the Columbia correspondent of the American sec-irea the copy of your letter over yoar own signature. Senator Tillman knows that deer ' in his heart he is glad the letto? -IV n saw the light. of day. He knows trv > Cr.lijmhv correspondent of the Anier: can got it only honestly, and that n confidence was breached. He doe not know it personally, but in hi own mind he is convinced that ther v*as only fair dealing, and if he di "nake a clean breast he will acknow <idge that he is really glad that pai - of the whole truth which he gave sa he light of day, and that there now a square is:;ue between him and iilea^e, though his letter shows tha: j the great trouble with him is his fear : of Blease. That is the crux of the situation. Those fellows who went to him and induced him to withdraw his letter . never were the senator's friends, ana he knows it; he knows that he has be-11 continually "double-crossed" in the house of his "new found friends" ever since he "found" them in 1912. He talks about bein<r art "old man naturally militant" who "has seen fit | to curb his tongue in order that fric] tion and hot politics may be avoided in the interest of peace at home and war on the common ' nemy." Nobody sympathizes with him in bis old agemore tban I do, but in the publication of his letter, which was a simple matter of news, honestly secured and honestly published. I felt that I wa:s carrying out my duty to my paper J and my consistent adherence to the j reform, doctrine, which he has now i deserted, of giving the people tho l truth. I am only sorry that his ac| tions in the campaign of 1912 have 1 I-;? ? - + rt'lmrA TV V) <5 ^ | placed mm in <t puhiLiun " ^ .. uuu j he writes a part of the truth he Is in the hands of "new found friends" who induce him to draw it, and then cxCtempt to impugn the motives of thcso | who publish it, even though in the recesses of his innermost soul h?. knows that he is glad it came ouc. The senator in his lecture to Th? American quotes with my approval a sentiment from the governor of South Carolina. In view of the famous letter j of the senator's, which appears to be ; so much in issue, the old exclamation j would seem appropriately to apply, "God save the mark." JOHN K. ATLL. I " [THE AMERICA\ ANSWERS | c TO SENATOR TILLMAN. Hon. B. R. Tillman, U. S. Senate, * f Washington, D. C. Civ k/ il . I bee: to acknowledge receipt your letter of .Tune 12. Immediately upon its receipt I wired you: June 14, 1.91S. Hon. B. R. Tillman. I'. S. Senate, Washington, D. C. Your Jet'er June 12 received. Will give me great pleasure to j publish it on our front page to- j morrow morning and, of course, I } will reserve right Jo answer and publish my answer at same time, .'Meantime I thank you for iis courteous, gentlemanly, considerate tone, for vour characteristic ingenuousness, for your sudden j conversion to the avoidance of s "friction and hot politics;" also to the quotation of Manning script- j \:re and for your kind words j a'i'Ou.t Lever, notwithstanding" in' your opinion these worthies were recently .."lying like the devil" | about you. It is to laugh. "Let j the heathen rage." Also in an- : other aphorism which was once j a favorit of yours, "the galled jade winces, my wimers cue un- ( wrung." Editor, Charleston American, j 1 I You will see by the tone o.f this' telegram that I do not take your i scolding seriously, but that rather I i shall turn upon you your own batter- j ies, taken, from time to time, from ' jxiisitions which you abandoned in ; your general retreat into the land of dotage. You are familiar, for in-; stance, with the word "ingenuous-; ness." It was one of your ready de I fenses when with very awkward j fumbling you sought to extricate j yourself from the unenviable plight J in which -Roosevelt left you over the i Oregon lots. Perhaps you remember it. "* '-- ti vnur verv re* ^ Oil Will 3.1S0 ICCa.ii fSfit use of the term "lying like the devil;'f and how when you at once tried to clinib aJboard the Blease wagon after his first election, when it was still your policy to denounce the newspapers which were then, as now so savagely upon his back, you wired him congratulations, saying, "Let the : heathen rage." And was it not o? vou said: "*Let ; Grover uiev cianu i,u>.v v that galled jade wince; my withers are unwrung?" Xot cnlv has the American treated you, as everyone, fairly, but we havf ' disregarded your own habit of rea' i unfairness toward us in our effort tc publish the news, giving you always ! full credit for whatever in your publi< > way you have been able to do o value to your constituents. We neei i only refer to our files to prove thif - However, it must be said that for - <* time back your net output ha J ' iUi;.-, 5 been more in the nature of garruiou 3 interviews than substantial accon e plishment. Ir is well known that yo (1 are hothing more than titular head ( !-: the committee on naval affairs. Du: rt ing the past few years of tremenuoi w naval development Norfolk, whew is senator is in reality the rha?rman < [ that committee. has besn piling up i improvements, work and appropria. I tions for That beeenive of activity, while you have put us off with recurrent "investigations." Even today th_employees of the Charleston yard upholding meetings to devise some pian to keep enough work here to prevent a general exodus of an expert fore? ' that may never be replaced. Your "chairmanship" of this committee has become for Charleston a sardonic joke. Was it also because of your - ~imet that vntl I presume in uiiim fticoi i-uoi. ., ~ . j recently succeeded in keeping us i from getting a shipyard even after i the contracts had actually been sign1 ed to bring it here? But you should be MOHK thai! J chairman of the naval committee. It i is now more than six years since we j read carefully your gratuitous advice ' to oui; then President-elect Wilson on Show to run tiie iioveminsiu, weauus ! into this piece of customary sycophancy your claim by seniority for i the chairmanship of the senate com! mittee on appropriations. Vou were : entitled to it, and yours is the Only / mco nn 7-prnrfi in which exception i was made to the' established rule. ; The president's attitude, and that of ! your democratic conferes, was that J while time and precedent entitle \ j you to it. you were IN COM PETE NT. j and you were shunted off to the nomj inal chairmanship of a committee I which in those days of pacifism gav? j(you nothing to do and was quite suit1 ed to your recognized irresponsibility, j Xot. only Is the wonderful efficiency of our navy due neaTly wholly to the marvelous capa-^uv ux me yei suuuuv of its officers, who as experts merely i tell the senate what to do, but when, J by the advent of war. the senate com; mittee urew somewhat important, yon I were brushed aside in actual practice i for Swanson, who is so thoroughly i capable. Xor will it make any rfiffer| ence if. as a matter of "senatorial j courtesy," Swanson should disclaim j this: everybody knows it. j But as to your charge of unfairness.* On fune 1. at a late night hour, , we receeived t ie following telegram I r\:\T Wa!nirtnn cnrresnondent: ! * ? "V 4 j ITIaGX Collect XPR 6_."p? Washington. I). C.. [une !. 19!3. The American, Charleston, S. 0.: Tillmari has mailed out a statement which carries an implied indorsement from the administration of his >vork. Savs he sent the America# a copy. T don't know whether this is true. He ?-? o AVfyn f< A\f h ?i QH V's' aas iiv/ CAn ci v vj/.- , iiv ...... . COTTRELL. This was our first intimation thaf you were about to fann-ch enaorsements from Washington rather than leave your case to the people of South Carolina, whom for the purpose of geeting their votes you .believe in ''trusting." You will notice tli&i even the or as the lawyers say, as a part .?f the res gestae of the case, our correspondent doubted if you were* dealing witlr him frankly, for he says of your statement that you had sent The American a cony: "T do not know whether this is true/' "Wt^r should he have even then aoai.'Jiea you. Could there have been anything Tacking in frankness', something '"disingenuous" in your manner which left doubt In his mind that you had done in this .c-??*e what you never hare done ?sent your effusaons to the American? Ail the circumstances corroborate Ms InrTcin^ doubt, for immediately apon the receipt ol? his wire, though late 2t night, we made another thorough, search of our 'mail's, anc failing ta? find it we had ?a staff con sultation- over its importance, and i1 | was only after we decided it was toe j late then to wire von or him that w< | resolved" to Cake the chance af beinf I j "scooped" bv oar compe titOTS. W< I put the* facre of the telegram to j gether and implied that, as you hat I "sent" (maiTed, presumably) thi ! statement from Washington that da> t 1 li'ftf/f nTiinfQ t>-? Via -JYTlODf1;] W tJ SlUUU sane v liouvv/ v.j ? t : a:s inferably- you had. also "sent1 ' (mailed* a copy to o'lv competitors i But ic jarred on our- news nerve i when che next morning we saw fcfn ! full story in our enrmperitor.' man festly not "sent" 'by you from Wast ! ington but "handed" ibv you to- it | representative then^, ^rho wirc-rf 1 i . i in. I i! Naturally we regarded it as- new [ < which oar readers should have; s n nrQ r>i11 aiir 'nride in our pocket ar 5 ! republished it the following day. Ar 3 it was news because even though i was but the sad. sad story of "an o i man naturally militant," it m >.' written in *a sensational tone by hi ) a before he decided to "curb his tongi 3 in order that friction and hot politii ,3 may be avoided." It was anything 'hi i-. "'peace at home and war on the cor u | moil enemy," and before its autni )? realized the time had come for "pta< i !"< j anH fl.voidai?.Cd Ill O'/ULIl ^ni ^ :s ta^tiorp-Iism It fairly bristl<'<i wi >e pointed factional bayonets, shrann 5? <>? crirr1on against MaGniR whose scot hi::.a w:?':!s ; >;i now quote ( ( and with high explosives of ridicule y< against tile trea:-hery and presump- ir lion of Lever, wI:ose "young and more u: or less he.idy" aml/t'ons you new act- rn ually commend. Therefore, we pub! d; ished it, even though copied.and 1 ca.i tli assure you it brought forth comment y< ( from amazed readers, ghosts of which c< w-;n rpmmnar before you while the- 01 11 I campaign lasts. i, Xor did you "send the American" ? ( w copy of your further statement in reply to Manniug. Again you left us ^ out in the cold. You admit this your- ^ .self, which luckily makes it unneces- ^ sary for our correspondent to question your "memory." For you say: 1 "The Manning article j!,st published , t i) by voti was furnished .McGowan am' ^ Murray, for the State and the Xews and Courier. x Had Cottf-ell called at ' mv office he would have gotten a ? conv. etc." Ferhaos ho did not know you tlUCi issueu 11, U>?i u;s cin> ia.lt, what reason had ho to supnose that 0 you had not again ''sent" it to us? ( He knows >b.v now that in important' p ' matters you "send" to us, evidently n bv some lame mail that never arrives, ^ ; whereas. yo:i "S'ive" to your newfound friends among our rivals. I'n-i n T , less they are ready to renounce tne ( graves of their dead and the malice of T "V.oH Kn vArv much mis- Av incir living i auun l/\, ? V>4 ^ i taken if before this summer- is over tbev shall not be "handing" some- 0 , thing to you. I But the principal deceit of your let. s ] ? ; ter is the way you insinuate through- 11 , out that it was written before you had 11 any idea that Lever was out of the a race. You say: i 11 y * ' n "In a contest between Mr. Lever j and Mr. Blease, I can find' virtue in G Lever's loyalty to the 'present administration, his soundness hi deniocraLie ^ principles and his clean personal and v ^fRr.ior bohitn juirf coduct. If he is ^ I *1 . young and more or less heady on tne ' ; subject of becoming" a senator it is n : a worthy airMtion because he will 11 I make a better, safer, saner, more ! active and* intelligent senator than Governor Klease lias shown by his f i ei-or.'i he is capable of doing." ^ i ]5 ! Kvery word of this, and many other i parts of your fetter pretend* that yo\ 0 ? I contemplate Leaver as at the' time a i p j rival, whereas the incontrovertible: | record" is that you were morally, if ! not actually, sure that he had de- ( j teririnea to withdraw. AlY except the 1 | 'ast shore letter of the correspondence * | between Mr. Lever and the president, ^ ! were writtten before vou wrote vour ^ i; I ! letter to me and the public report hud 11 : gone out in diaries ton, emanating i> 1 | is alleged from a message from yoor, * | statin** thnt be bad withdrawn" before ^ ; yoa took up yovcr typewriter to- bally-. n I rag me. and speak for tbe first time , ? in many bitter weeks in praise of ^ Lever, actually quoting Manning's virtuous advice, which yoa so lately ( (spv-.oroiy denounced. Don t you see, . senator, you are che same"' old hpvo- ^ | orit?. and that, your hypocrisy is as v -f easily penetrable as in the (fays when- 1 / ' u | you condemned gTaft and did ibusi-;^ .? :ness with Hua'bbelf behind tfie door?' J ' And now you condemn us for doiiuj i ? <3nly what you yourself, solely and1' J alone, originated. TO [J wrote that ' ! ; ( ! statement which we only published, j ; We admit that we published it both1 * .as a matter of highly interesting * inews. and also because you had sue -ceeded in damning nr a moorent of" j- desperation Lever. 'Manning and .;j yourself, pulling down upon your . ! "beads the slimy strut-cure which your J ' ( mutual silence had imposed upon the [ people. Very well. Why shouldn't ; ? we have published itV Were WE un-! . j der any obligation whatsoever not to-: 1 : !-do so? Those to whom you ''gave";, > i the letter may reckon- with you upoii-j > | the question of honor as they will.: Q?i. ?rjlv adrnt""! r f 17iat is tneir auair. uul , 3 we got it only through what you call " \ j . son'e ^subterranean way." Granted.; I This only proves that you are mingle. i'ng with friends yoir cannot trust. a&. r we have so often admonished you, j and that you have desterted friends f i who no longer tru^T you, and who are ; ready for the sake of the cause to ,s snatch the chance to let the rogues r. | who- have fallen out tell what thev [_ j know. i < xr...i ??ni? -ivrntp t *at. statement. ; t- j IULJ. UUO whi.T ;s ' but viiien you rirst gave it out Y0fr' c INTENDED IT FOR ITBMfATHW. i yit our doing so has raised all the i _ j wicked bogies you fear, remember we ' only DID publish tbe very words you : had- INTENDED to publish, and " , which vou: afterwards did release to id i , i the newspapers throughout the stats, It ! , ? giving manifold increase of circ'ula-i la tion. You are quoted in one of these newspapers as follows: mi ? * ? ~ ^! "As the Charleston Amcnvau, l.; ?s ! whom it was not sent or released. ^ has published today my communica- : ? i tion of the 6th, it is hereby released. u- I 3r and hope you will publish it.'' ct;; i It. and many others, did so. Thus, of 'by your own arjt. you saturated the I th state with copies of this doc ument.; o? calculated In your own words to -?r-rn.iA Hnn '?nd hot POlitlCS." Of r r> i/ i. ^ 'J- i f ) : rse. when yoi; vro*?- ' a - statement i; it to have that effect. You e?!;t either to drive Lever out. or t ake him and Manning odious in the r ice. and I am quite certain from the ( ttes of the Lever correspondence i iat it was only when you were sure >u had driven him out that you beune suddenly afraid the publication 5 f your abuse and confessions might iterfere with "peace at home an! 1 ar on the common enemy/' .. i i nut, at any rate, the nrst letters,1 le correspondence between you, Mr.! urleson, the President and Governor ' fanning, which you I>ITj give out, ore. it' anything, even more bitter lan your "statement." You lam- ' asted Lever very thinly disguised lat you doubted Mr. Burleson , nd the president, and branded Maning as one whose "motives were no' i . . ,. i * )ove suspiMDn. Yop say: "What fare you that an j Id man. naturally militant, has see;*. , t to curb his tongue, etc." and then ; roceed to befrry that while you ARE , n "old man," probably doting, you j ave XOT "curbed your tongue," nor ^ Itered by one Iota your well-known lie of slanderer. Cod. save the mark! j ( illman whirling over the fact that hs | : old. not 1 f!"e an old man, but an old ' . ? _ ?? roman, I'nr-Olttmg tne crown ui | 10ms he placed upon the a?ed brow! f knightly Hampton: forfeiting that' y Iris diatribes he toi-e from the I houlders of that old hero the toga' I is grateful people had left to him Jn! is old age as a token of that trust | nd affection whioh would have lived j 1 their hearts forever had Tillman j ot violently uprooted it -by the un-: xampled- furv of his tongue and the) srocitv of ti s envv. T-'ut Hampton ! i 'ent to his; tomb without a whimper. | rhile Tillman sickens the ears or! hose who otherwise might Sv'mpa-: !iize by a mixture of cowardly blows j elivered while fte begs also for! lercy. Yes. senator, well do we know tiic j .merican has been twice debarred, rom the mails. AM) WKLL DO YOC wXOW IT. In charging us you but ptray vo'.ir hand. If it is not a case j f the wicked fleeing. :t is the guilty onfessing. .Murder will out. But the American has been TWICE RESTORED TO THE 'MAILS, and it-, irculation grows by leaps' and ounds. Far more than ten thousand t'ibscnhers will read your infamy tear; Your aim, therefore, has not eeii* achieved. The American still ives. I cannot imagine the knightly Inmpton as having recourse to your nal clap-trap: "To hell with all Ger?n cvH-nathfzers and God bless Wil-1 on." If you began your career by! ickin<r heroes* over, must you end ii I y calling upoir thein the blessing of rod? It is not altogether nnlike you,; Ten as a few years tbadfc you were; toasting that' vcnr were largely of! German origin but now you are ready [ a send to hell ail those who svmpaItize with the" brood" in yonr veins. [ Sometimes when 1* ret'Tect upon your :areer of atrocities, especially among ( he number of these friends who once; ook you in and' nourished you, T wonler if after all this might not .be (but -our reversion to the type that many ;av they witnessed on che crimson :oil of iBelgium. You certainly have ill the attributes: There is no German 'blood in me; iot one drop. And yet there is much sympathy in me for the Germans, nor lowever. in the unworthy sense your jheap shibboleilr implies. And for :>iie man of German blood there is a peculiar sympathy bordering- on pity ?for he is old; he is decrepit, his ;'rr?ilk of human kindness has turned to limberger cheese,'" he struts superfluous on the stage his ruling passion is strong in death?he had v hydropthobia only to bite those who were in his way when young and he barks from his bed of death at thos^ * 1 ~ .1 cVio/IfVisrc; rig can no luugsi un,c <3.0 r~een aftout hi'm. EDITOR. CIf A RLESTOX AMERICAN*. LITTLETOY COLLEGE. Has just closed one of the most successful years in its history. The ?>7th annual session will begin Sept. Write for now illustrated catalogue, also and QiCICKLY for particulars concernins: our special offer to a fe^ girls who can not pay our catalogue rate Address [. M. Rhodes, Littleton. X. C. in yoiaxqss mm They- Serve ^7hcA "V"0 4-L C.^2. ^ lC. j ? rr- * - j 1 - ? v> V *?3 T* ~ T'? ar-reaa ~~ ? Colored (ommittees on >V. S.fl The county chairman and com^B t'.-es on War Savings Stamps fl Thrift Stamps have appointed hurrhes throughout the county aV ollows: 9 Bethlehem Baptist?T. A. William.Miller's Chapel, A. M. E.?Rev. G. ' St. Lke's Episcopal?Prof. J. 3 -X.niJs. |M Calvary Pr?-byterian?H. 0. Reese, j Rev. J. M. Johnson, S. R. Reese. fl Brown's Chapel, A. M. E.?W. D. 1 Rook, W. E Williams, W. S. Glenn, M \V. M. Mitchell. Elliot Robinson. Helena. Baptist?Rev. Bracy. c* TV R T? ppH | ua^/iiot?no, u _ _ Calvary, Baptist?Rev. A. M. Brown gj Pleasant Grove. A. M. E.?I. H Vloffatt. Rev. B. W. Wiliams.. St. .Matthews. A. M. E.?Robt. Ruth* 2rforr?, Hamp Sligh. 1|r| Sweet Spring, A. M. E.?Lott GlennBig Beaver Dam, Baptist.? Jo.-^^H 5Va llace, ?Penney, ?Suber. Little Beaver Dam, Baptist?Wa? ra ren Wilson, Silas Glennn. Bush River. Baptist - Ford Mangunfl Flarrison Ellesor, G. Satterwhite. T ,-t + lrv P!rnr P.flntist DllffCV StePh-M J-ilLLIC x- - _ 2ns. W. D. Crump. ,Jajj& Trinity. A. M. E.? Jim Boozer, 2B8 ford Gary. .T S. Smith. L. Jackson. m Mt. Olive. A. M. E.?W. M. Long, t f t.",.,i w t? ppp^pr m I. \ . :\IUCIIU, ??. ?? -- Flint Hill. Baptist?X. C. Duckett, , | P. C. Sanders. \ I Zion?Gilliam Chapel, A. M. E.-f W. P. Moffett. M. Fowler, Bill Millejb Cedar Grove, A. M. E.?Henry A?rams. Will Wallace. ?Johnson. \ Whftmire?W. D. Davis, A. I). Shuittleworth. Xew Hope. Baptist- ?. M. IMcMorris. Ren wick Grove.- S. Douglas, Geo. Henderson. G. W. C'osson. Enoree. Baptist?C C.. Glenn, /^.j 1,1,,roll 7 S Ppf.rf. f| v ?i;1 i ?? v ? i. * . . Fair View. Baptist?Douglas Cald^^B wolf. F. Ray, Ceo. Caldwell. FoIIo^vsMp Paptist?R. B. Raxfi^ M. C. R'iff, S'im Henderson. LazeirSerry. -ii ' Maybint'm?Rcb. Whitney, jjft Stewart, E. Clark. X. C. XjH Godfrey. Jno. Gibson. |;;J St. Mark's. A. M. E.?Rev. Coleman. J. P. Counts. Will Ed^^^^J^g St. James. A. M. E.?'Jno. Da? Mt. Hebron. A. M. E.?Robt. TdB J. C. Bedeifbaugh, T- Thomas. I "?t. Johns?William Douglas. Rh I A ^ . . j A. .vi. oiruiiR. Little Mountain?P. Hawkins, DrJH^ra| ton Rarf, Geo'. Bates. Oak* Grove Presbyterian?Rev. Rica^H Mt. Morriah?LWt, Olive. A. M". E.? Tas. Wise. Henry Wise, .Tno. Caidwell. f. P. Pominick. ' Lever Cha pel. A. IT. E".?H. B. Rikard. Fred Foozer. Antioefr, Baptist?W. Ji Boozer, E. Dorley. Shiloh. A. M. E.?Rev. Brogdon, ino. Henry, S. J. Wise, Calvin Gallman. Hamolis?, A. M. E.?0. L. Singleton.' Willis Motto; Wil McCrary". .^if Boozer's Chapel, A. M. E!? Boozer. Rev. Rufus-Carringion. M Elisha. A. M. K?H. B. Butler. 2? Butler:. '^ajj| St. Mary's. A. M. E.?A. Dl Davenfl^H port, T. Sfrrs. A. J. Young. Ifffl Week's Zion. Baptist?CUllen ReuI/en, R. S. Moon. ? Vaughn v:Ue. Baptist?Fred' Grigs- ^ i>r. Tones Pitts. G. C. Bluford. Chapnel'ia?Frank- Pitts, Hazzie PTcts, Hal. Harris. I Mudlic?Rev. .T. R. Robinson. Thomas- Chapel?Tom Thomas, 3. t wuson. | NOTICE OF FIN AL STTTT.EITE^T. I will make a final settlement of the esiate of Afrner Julian Derrick: iift the Probate Court for XewlArry f c. aty. S. " r icsday the ^5*1; day of Tuly. 19X8. at 10 o*cfock in f forenoon and will immediately theni J after ask for my discharge as Administratrix of said estate. Felle Derrick, Admx. j' TnnA 19th iceis if? Extlento Medici ne Co., your Exelento Quinini^S Pomade my hair wa^H 'short, coarse and nappy.^H ' but cow it ha* grown to .;2 inches lone, and : so soft ^^9 acd siliy that I cao do it ^^1 np any way I want to. I am sending you my picture to show you Sow pretty Exelento has made ft SA1I.IE RELD. j i Don t let 3ome fake Kitik khbu?w *. . , J you. You really can't straighten your hair I ; J until it is nice and long. That's what ! EXELENTO pomad! j ?'oes, removes Dandruff, feeds the Roots <Sf the hair, and rr.a'.ces it grow lontf. soft and 6ilky. After usin;? a few times you can tell the difference, ar.d after a little while it I will be so prottyand lo.n^thatyoucanfix I it up to su:t you. If Exelento don't do as [ ' Tin'ii o-ive your money back. ! we ciuim, i.... | Price 2Sc by mail on receipt of stamps J I or co?q. ! AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE. j Write for particulars. \DK3XX70 KZZ;C:7iZ CO., At!?rtc. Ce. ] # " ~7y.-rPT:n'J 1