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BACK TO !OE AGE \ * Date of Hitman Being's Apoear- j ance in America. Probability Ik That He Croscec! From Asia When the Continents Were Connected Leaving a*He l\?r the juvseuf the i tooth of the Xebra ka "ap.-man," no ; trace of human beings oiuer than homo j sapiens i:.ts ever been found in America. A million \ears up' ihe "promises of moil" lived ill Africa, lu Ma- f la\sia, ilk Asia it>eif. an ? cvon in I*u~ i rope. W'e see dim remains of a whole troop of extinct humans behind t;.-.' horizon of the present, the short up- , Standing Java Pithecanthropus. u ui;iii ! in body but all ape in ho:;;!; the Ai- ; rican ape man. tail, erect and dark skinned, but with no forehead: the heavy-jawed Heidelberg man. a creature whos-e children had mouths as big as those of large adults of today; the J dog-faced I'iltdowns. and squat, stoojn j shouldered Neanderthals. who bobbed j along (n ihe outside of their feet, peer- ! ing with tiaiid. furtive eyes l'roin beneath their shaggy brows. None of these men ever saw America. Our continent was devoid of human habitation until the middle of the Ice age. Man came int;> America only t yesterday, in a geological sense. lie j appeared here 50.0KJ or tXUXK) years j ? " - < >* Anil rlin sir^r fact i OmV a. V..W ~ ~ . .. -. ? t still rem;:ins that ho was t?:* American j Indian, everywhere from l'atagonia to I Alaska when he did come. There are different kinds of Indians, i Some have round heads, some have long hi ads; there are Indians with j wide cheeks and there are Indians j with narrow faces. Yet the more the ; evidence is studied, the stronger is the I conviction borne in upon the minds of J science that Indians are derived i from one common parent family. Where did they come from? A ! glance at the shores of Asia opposite j us reveals Mongols. A bridge with ! Asia in the past there certainly was; civilizations on both sides are much the same, but now the people are different. Culturally the northeastern Indians are more related to European white men of the Ice age than to the j rest of America. The land bridge of i i Atalantis may have been above water i when the lirst tribes or' Indians reached America. The answer to this riildle lies in Asia. Indians are Asiatic, but in most of their former homes they have been submerged by the yellow men whom we call Mongols. I lis- j torians. will record that the 40.000 J years centering about the Twentieth j century A. D. saw the rise of two rival races of men, who totally eclipsed anil outdistanced all other races, the white Aryan and the yellow Mongol. We know how our race has grown, j Tho ?tri.ips of the Mongols are even j greater. They are now spreading with much rapidity; they have either crowded out or absorbed the native peoples I over most of eastern Asia. They are ' even in America as Eskimos. Mongol blood is thirsty; it drinks up the blood of other races with whom it interi marries, leaving only slant eyes, flat I faces and high heads. A The Eskimos are much later comers W to our shores than the Indians. They arrived here only a few score centuries a^o. They are still coming. The whole ocean littoral from (Greenland to British Columbia knows them. Men of unmistakable Indian cast have been found in out-of-the-way valleys of Siberia, in Formosa, in the Philippines, and even* in Sumaira. There was a time when eastern Asia was inhabited by the prototype of American Indians. Mongols came down from the highlands of Tibet, and have all but eradi cared their breed. They would have followed them to America but for t he rapid sinking of Hering strait, which separated the two continents and made the migration wait for the invention of means of navigation.?Cnicago Tribl une. I Radio's Predecessor. Broadcasting wireless as a news service is merely a development of a plan inaugurated many years ago. in 1SSJ3, in Budapest by the establishment of the Telefor Hermode or Telephonic XQwsteiler. which soon counted its subscribers by thousands, at the rate of a penny a flay. News was col- j lected in tlie ordinary way. printed by I lithography on long strips of paper and telephoned by specially trained "ster.tors." It provided also for advertising. For one ilorin the st en tors would reel off advertisements for "1U seconds carefully sandwiching them between interesting items of news so that the subscriber would not disconnect for fear ol missing something he ' really wanted to hear.?Montreal Ga zette. i i Vaccination Must Be Thorough. : In order to be of value f<>r proteo-i tlve purpose against smallpox ;i:o j operation of vaccination must 1??' th?>r-i ouglily carried out. The more thor- J ough the vaccination the m??re 1 nounced will i?e the immunity and the] longer will jt he effective. The examination of smallpox pa-' tieats in hospitals lias shown that) those who have only a small soar of' vaccination are more numerous, and have the diss ase more severely, than; those who show a hicrher number of j scars. Imperfect vaccination in a community "is almost worse than 1:0 vaccination at all. lor the immunity j is short-lived and the individual who, imagines himself protected is not really so?New York World. j PROBABLY SAVED fvlAfiY LIVES Lighthcuse Keeper Proved Mi.n ov Resource and Courage In Tijne of Emergency. The Indians calivd ilu* island Xatiscc?rlu' vomitv\ *4" \v:!i;i:iir. and dor tin4 iiKMlvrn rornijuioii >!' Anti< ;'s!i ir ha* added to terrlMe ivnown. i Its \vh< !?* hisri.ry, from 11 ?*> day it was dis ovon-d !?y .laonios v'ariit-r in l-":; to tin* present. a record of human ! suffering. In August. 1 S';i\ the family of Kdward l'ope, keeper or' the KMis I -ay lighthouse. was stricken ?! ?\v:i 1 >y typhoid lever, ami to add to his misfortunes, liie revolving apparatus of his ]:it!11 broke. The ltd*eminent steamer had ,c.?ne. and pope haft no means of communicating with the marine department at (jtjehee or ?lsewhere. The li-lit revolved or Hashed. as the terlmieal phrase is. every minute and a half; and if it ilashed no move it would pro!>:>o|y he mistaken '?v passing vessels in thai region of fog lor the stationary liirht at the west point of the island, and thus lead to dire loss of life. Pope found that with a little exertion he could turn it and make it tlash. and at once determined to Ii!l the place of the automat ie gear. Accordingly, this humlde hero s::t in the turret, with his wa;eh hy l:is side, turning the light regularly at the aittt..,. UI-I1VV lli.fiir !r,)!!1 7 11 ?>? JVM II * I illitKJ V ? V 4 . j uuril 7 ;t. 111., iroii! ihe middle of August until the first of I>e?*embfr and from riif first of April until the end of June when the government steamer came to his relief with a new apparatus. All through the first season, I'<ve's daughter and grandchildren were ill ur.to death, with nobody save* him to nurse them. He waited on them tenderly through the day. but as night fell 011 the iron-bound coast he hastened to his vigil in the turret, doing his duty to the Canadian government and i to humanity with unflinching devotion. In the second season his daughter, who had lived through the fever, took ; turns with him in tiie light room, j This man ma;: have saved a thousand ; lives. He lied in 1872, and his deed well deserves to be chronicled, for of the heroes of Anticosti. as of the long roll of her victims, the world knows nothing.?Montreal Family Herald. ) Where the Sparrow Justified Himself. News dispatches inform us that the i English sparrow "invaded Alaska this | spring for the first time." Arriving in ! America about ISoO, it "has been gradually working westward ever sin^e." j driving out most oiher small birds as j it goes. I: has already spread over nearly the whole of Europe, and in spite of everything seems likely to j make a place for itself all the way : round the world. Because of its fecundity. Its inahil- j ity to live peaceably with other birds. | and the depredations it has been ac- j cused of making on brick chimneys : ami buildings, some people?even bird lovers?have greatly deplored its j coming to this country. But it can be a useful bird, as it ! proved to South Carolina farmers in 1 10! 7. writes a correspondent of Pennsylvania (Jrit. In the spring of that year the army worms started an inva- j sie.n of our fields, devouring everything as they went. The fanners were in j despair, when they saw how bare the , worms were leaving the earth. Then the English sparrows swarming in the fields in greater and greater numbers ; daily, began to devour the worms with a voracity truly gratifying. The mini- j ber of worms which one sparrow wouiu devour in a day was incredible, a farm- j cr told me. And the poisonous mix- ' ture. with which the worms were, lirally exterminated, before- they, had injured the crops irreparably, had no j il! effects on the sparrows. They ate worms so Ion? .-is there were any, dead or alive, to be found. No Flies in Alaska. Everybody knows that mosquitoes are a frightful pest in AlflsVa: but it is news to lojirn that Iiouseliies do not exist there. This interesting fact was definitely ascertained l;y I):\ .7. M. Alurich of the United Stares National museum, in the course of a recent expedition which he made for the purpose of snidyinir Alaskan insects. lie found two entirely new secies Ol niOSf|Ui[?H?S. ilOl'Se illOS Were aoiliiUant everywhere. lint there were no housellies. In vain did lie explore grocery si or os. restaurants, canneries, parhnjre dumps other likely places for them. The fact i< that the horsefly is ;>y oriirin a tropic;-1 insect. It cannot endure cold weather. In temperate I :iitudes a few houseflie- manage to live over the winier in heated houses? enough of Theni. thai !> t<"? say. t;: start a fresh crop in the following spring.? Philadelphia Ledge r. Mails for the Far Ncrih. Post oilU-e regulations, stamps and a new imprint hearing the name "Aklavick" are now <.;i their May to the Arctic circle. v. here the Dominion govofivncnt >.n-.n will ciu-n the most north riy I< ?!:? ( in ('anuria. Aidavu-k is a Trading jn?>t on The delta at toe month < .' I':* Maekenzie liver. 1 w<? mails will leave the new post office by steamer durinjr the season <>f open v'.irer. ami <>ne mail by team during the winter, the hitter beini: the longest ami 11.<lonely pcsuil route on the continent. N'ow Many Postmistresses. "Washington has recently officially san'-ti? lu-ti the title of postmistress. The m;mber of women serving In tit"1 eupaetfy i< increasing r.ipidly in tlit t United Stiiiea. Trt wm yrrthcU sy fyuLj Maideis and Children Unhappy Victims of Baal. Archeologists Have Unearthed, In Ruins of Cnrthagg, Temple Where infamous Rites Were Practiced. Uiwarthed anions: Thyum? of Onrthtiiio, ill ?i<'I'lliv.ji*n Africa, according to ollioui 1 n?".iiJicni icii received hy the French iroverninent from Count Kyron l'rorok. Ihmicus ar? hcoloirist, is ih<? great temple of l>:ia!. v, lie re jKiirais priests practiced their indescribable l.viii!:in sjit-rilices centuries mlto. i Count I'rorok has sent word to his government that :i set of sacrilirial urns boiieved j.o contain '.ho bones ? ? maidens and children sacrificed to Hani have been unearthed and identified. Idem:nation of the temple of I>aal bevoiul any question of doubt is possible through the discoveries already made. I'aai. or Kaal-llanimon, is the ' monstrous deity mentioned hundreds 1 of times in the I?ibP r.ml in other an| eient writings. Students of the I?i:?Ie and children who attend Sunday school remember passages in the old Testament telling how the Israelites were i warned against this idolatrous worshi;> and its infamous practices, i The chief characteristic of tlu* Baal' Hamilton worship was the sacrifice of | human beings in cruel and varied ! forms. Kach temple of Baal contained 1 a huge and monstrous idol, usually of , bronze, but sometimes of stone, and it w::s to ibis idol that the victims | were sacrificed. Occasionally young children were offered up. but usually, i it was some beautiful maiden who was chosen r<> become tbe "bride of IJaal." i Sometimes the victims were conl suined by lire. Frequently they were ; subjected to longer and even more atrocious torments. When the victim was to perish by fire, three different methods were used. In every case, however, the maiden was first placed j "in the arms of Baal,*' or, rather, on a sort of platform on the knees of the seated idol between the arms r.y one method tire was made to spout from the mouth of the overl hanging head. By another tbe platform itself was heated redhot. I?y a third the platform was tipped backward by a mechanical contrivance and ! the victim was hurled into a seething fiery furnace in the interior oi the idol. More cruel even than the death by tire was the placing of the "bride" on luxurious cushions laid in the lap of Baal. When tbe priests departed, i!w> stone doors after them. lions or other savage boasts were turned loose to roam the temple floor. Tiio terror-stricken maiden could then remain on the cushions slowly to starve to death or might choose the quicker method of casting herself to the beasts below. Nothing for Nothing. j' It was said by all the neighbors of Mr. Tightleigh that he had never been known to give away anything in his life. He either sold it or demanded something in exchange. On one occasion he was making a long railway journey. The seat directly in front of him was occupied by a man who had been coughing and sneezing at frequent intervals for more than an hour. At last Mr. Tightleigh leaned forward and.spoke to bim. "That's a pretty bad cold you seem to have." he said. "Worst i ever had in my life," wheezed the other. "Well. I know of a simple and harmless remedy, absolutely sure, that will cure it inside of two days." "Some patent nostrum?'' "Xo, you can make it up at home." "I sl^all be very grateful if you will tell me what it is." "I'll d<> it," said Mr. Tightleigh, narrowing his eyelids, "if you'll tell me what'll <lrive away these warts I've got <m my left hand."?Milwaukee Sentinel. Dcg Cures St. Vitus Dnnce. Curing St. Vitus'fiance by having a poodle dour sleep with the patient has been announced !>y a Denver woman as the m?:<t effective remedy she has yet for her two daughters. The woman. Mrs. J. Morris of ?004 South (.'rant street, declared that for six years she has kept a French po:>die <"!?that r.iternau iy sleep* with her yoUML' daughters, both < !" whom are alllicird with Si. Vitus dance. One i f I lit- 'laturlitei'S. tiui eliK'i* one. now is virtually euro<! of tl:e disease. according to .V.s. Morris. ami the other is showing raiM iiupri'Veinent. "An oUl lime physirian to';! me jiliout litis remedy." Mrs. Morris said, "and as an experiment I tried it and found it nii.ro soothing to tho nerves of a St Vitus dame patient than any medicine ever prescribed.'?Louisville Courier- Journal. Bernard Shaw's Manners. Hoist !>y his o\\i: j-t::r?I" w.*js the fate lilt* ? .<i:iy of IH-rnani Shaw. To a woman ot I.?>n<loii's bo>r .^icieiy wi:o ]:;:?! inviio.l him to lundi lit' an-; sw? iv<! vviili This toli^Tam: "Xcvrr in my Hi".'' What havo I done that you want mo !' cli mire my ohoirishPi] hahits?"' Tl;o woman ivj>.ie<l with :i . Yeniahit ":ir for tat" in the following disirjRi:: '1 (i > n<>t kn >\v what your ohoiishrc hahits ;i -i'. l is: I am sure that tin y ar< 1 not wn::h more than your . . < inannors. T<? il>is G. B. 8. ventured zo r< joir.Jer. i HUGHES PASSES AT MAR!ON HOMI Although in III Health f or So:r.< Time End Comes Without Warning The Si .'it e. | Mar!<-n. ~>.?Kddmjjs Thoma 1 Ii;ciiairnian of tiii' way- an* means committee ol' the South i'aro iina h.)U.-c of representative.-. \va lour. . aead :n his iiome here tonight A corom jury found that he cum to his death from causes unknown t j the jury with no evidence of fou luny. ??lr. Hughes had oien in i; health i six months or more an j .- evevi:! iv.onths ago suifere.^ a sever* ' at'uck while in Columbia. J Members of Mr. Hughes* famih j art at their summer home at Mur j reii's inlet and he had spent th week-end with ihtm, returning t ??I.;non this morning shortly befor noon. lie transacted so me busiries J at his office and then wont to hi home. Ji the absence of hi.? /ami! he has been taking his meals at th home of his mother-in-law, Mrs. Ca: michael, who lives across the stree from tiie Hughes home, and she i was v.*ho discovered the body lyir, fully dressed across :i bed. when sh ! went to the house tonight about o'clock. Death is be'ievi.i to hav 1 resulted from an ,.iti:i--k of apo.ve>*\ j Funeral arrarcements hove no j been mode and will nut be an noun, ed until the return of the family t< j ?J-> rion. E. T. Hughes, who would h.jv been 43 years of age had ho lived un til October 12, was a native of 0? angeburg, but had 'ived in Mario: since 190"., being a member of th law firm of Mullins Huuiu i. H was a gradoate of Clemson colleg' in the class of 1001 and won his i::v or fbA 1 "n ivor-it v of Sout ~ ?- - - I Carolina in 100"). He married Mis Edna Carmiehael of M-irlon in 1910 He was a member of the board o! j trustees of Clemson college fron j 1912 to 1916 and in 101S was elect ' ed a member of the house from Ma I rion. He was elected chairman o the ways and means committee ii 1921 under the new rule requiring election instead of appointment. H' was net a candidate for re nam in:: j tion in the recent primary, explain in;.; to many who besought him t< make the race tl.at his health wouh not permit. He was a member of th. P re sbyt eria n c h u rc h. EYE WITNESSES TESTIFY IN CLOVER, S. C? SHOOTINC William C. Faris Held Responsible For Death of Three?Caused by Family Quarrel York, Sept. 7.?Four eyewitnesses of various stages of the shooting al Clover yesterday, in which three per sons lost their lives and three other? were wounded, one perhaps fatally testified at the coroner's inquest nek today at Clover. The verdict of the coroner's jur\ was that the three persons slain Claude Johnson, 21; Newton Taylor 13, and Miss Leila Taylor, 15, eanu to their death from gunshot wound: at the hands of William C. I-liris. Those testifying at the inquiry conducted by the coroner wore Ton. Perry, Eldred Bailes, E. Z. F. I.eath erman and .J. M. Taylor, the latter the father of two of the dead. Details cf the Shooting None of the witnesses sa.v all the shooting and none could give \ ver\ comprehensive account of the details. The testimony indicated that Fari.first shot Newton Taylor and then standing in his yard across a narrow street, shot Johnson and the other members of the Taylor family a? they appeared on the scene. According: to the testimony, he used two shotguns, or:e single-barrelled and the other double-barrelled both loaded with buckshot. Family Quarrel The testimony showed that th.cause of the tragedy was the quarreling of the Faris ' and Taylor children in which parents of bo.h bL-cann involved. The Taylor? accused tv;? of the r..r:~ boys, aged about s:x an seven yea:.', with mistreating the!: little daughter, aged three, and the Faris family charged the Tavlov v.-.-'.-s; iii t'UIiU I f U \V ! I; 1 ill; un Hi, i , ... .. well used jointly by the two families. The third victim was added today when Lola Taylor, 1";. died in a hosit.;] in Ga-tonia. ?.n?s Gertrud'" Taylor, 21, shot through the arm and m*ck is expected to recover, hut will probably have a paralyzed arm a? a result of severed nerves. Dolly Tp.yjor, nine, is she: in the arm and her early recovery is assured. V.'m. C. Far is. known a- "Fi.?:htinu* Bill,"' is beinic he'd in the state penitentiary at Columbia. The dye ind'i try in this country still claims to be a dyini; indu-try. but doesn't ,r< t a gre..t deal of sympatic . j i-'AMOUS FLYING PARSON VICTiiv: OF AIR TRAGEDY ! Lieutenant Bclvin Mayna~d, Mechanic and Passenger Die When Plane Crashes Uutiar.il. Vermont, Sept. 7.?Bofore a cruwil (if people assesn>led at i:ie Rutland fair' grounds i||< . iteniuoii, a "rSyni^c eircu^ st.._rc i .vitii aeiop!ar.o> a?iii bailooii:? was .urn.".l into a tragedy, four parri-:-, ants nieeiiii.ir death. Ail aeiY?pi;:;u !ashed irons a iv.'iuni ??i li.OiH) *<et.: arryinjr to the:r (iei.ths the pilot.' n? cha:iic and a p:;s? n:,er. A few | ' j r 1 lours later an aeronaut li'apms: I : balloon 1,~?U0 UK in the air. was j ciliiMi when his parachute failed tu'j >pen. The dead: Li. Belvin \V. Mavnard.I tnown throughout the country as j 'The flying; parson," pilot of the air- j .)iane; i.t. L. ii. Wood of fi.jncl.-r-j >^n, X. V.. passenger with -Maynani;j K-fhanic Charles .Mioneite of I'la ' >urg, X. \and lu*nry A. (Dare* Jevil) Smith of Boston, aeronaut. Aeroplane Crash First Lt. Maynard and his companions .vhu had been making daily flights at j he fair grounds, crashed about one | j'clock in a field near the grounds.! lardiy had the crowd recovered from he shock and thrill of this tragedy ?\ hen the second accident came. -Jmith, a professional aeronaut had 11 ready made two successful para hute leaps ar various altitudes this ifternoon. On the third attempt the >arachute was seen to open slightly. Then the aeronaut dropped like a jlummett, falling just outside of tin.'ence of the grounds. Smith who was 43 years of age. lad been giving parachute exhibi tions at fairs throughoot the east! 1 or the past ton years, and was recarded as one of the best in his line. Iavo years ago, while attempting a parachute drop from an airplane at -ynn, Mass., he fell SOO feet and .vas severely injured. The pilot of :he plane was killed. The aeronaut ,-laimed that his average was thirty parachute drops a year. Death Almost Instant Li. Maynard and his two companions crashed to almost instantaneous leath this afternoon when their plane went into a nose dive at an altitude >f two thousand feet and fell to the ?arth. , Ltr Wood and CarlesK Mionette. A'ho with Lt. Maynard comprised the personnel of a "flying circus" that lad entertained large crowds daily for a week with a stunt flying, went up today as passengers. Both were nstantly killed, Lt. Maynard who piloted the plane, was breathing when spectators rushed to the wreck but iied on the way to the hospital. The aviotars, using Maynard's machine, ook off the field about 1 o'clock for .in exhibition flight. They had performed several of the stunts on thei; program when at an altitude of 2.U00 feet Lt. Mhynard tri^d a tail spin, jpparently believing that he was at creator altitude. The plane refused to respond and fell into a nose dive, rinding in a corn field at the edge of he fair grounds, a mass of wreckage. Gov. Hartness and start" were unong the crowd, which was the largest in the history of the fair. The oody of Lt. M.iynard was sent late :onight to his home at Maynard. -V. C. The local post of the American Legion took charge of the arrangements and escorted the casket to the train. To Childhood Home Wilmington, X. C., Sept. 7.?The body of Lieutenant Belvin \V. Maynard, who wa? killed at Rutland, Vt., :oday while giving exhibition flights n his airplane, will arrive at Wallace, .SO miles north of Wilmington. tomorrow afternoon and will bo tak?n to Harrell's store, the 'childhood home of the famous airrmui, where 'ho funeral will be held Saturday afternoon. ? 1 '? It is about time to hoid another European eonferer.ee. A pretty man may enjoy him . li. b^t few other people do. i'MY ar yt.U .UO <iu;u v> ju . care how long you stay. The real trouble with ?. strike is that it is so hard to stop it. (lot.d salesmanship is often th? thing that k? , j>.; \<>u i:\m\ .'ivlti-u what you want when you go into a store. ANNOUNCEMENT I hereby anounee my.-: if as a can-i didate tor thhouse of ropre.^enta-j lives from Newbrrrv eountv and I *. * 1 piauge myseil to I. :?< the result of [the Democrat! prim-.ry < eoiion. ELSTOX X. K1ULER. i HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES j 1 hereby announce myself a candi-i date for the House oi Representa-i t'.vcs from X?-w!>erry i.'euniy, an.I w;:I abiiie the ruies and roiruiations or t he Democratic primary. W. i>. Loincst. FOR MAGISTRATE FOR TOWNSHIPS I A:\D S I ii :r?'l?y ; nnounce m\vc"f a candidate fur .M:^:>tra*<- for Townships Nam hers 1 ar i 8. subject to the Democratic primary. If elected 1 shall endeavor to perform the duties of the in tfiitilVi. <; I *n T hi without fear or i'avor, and with fairness to a!!. CHARLES W. DOUGLAS. I am a candidate for magistral for townships Xo. 1 and S and will abide the rules of the Democratic partv. J. II. CHAITELL. MAGISTRATE NO. 10 1 am a candidate for reelection as ?a??en mmwmmGjnmm*m? nTfiwva , icj re. j * i I j i ! i Landreths White Eg! ! Purple Arnfee: Yelk 5e\ A ????i i i I I ! ^ ^ _ ; mf fesfetfm %>g i fa wrrtfiij?& ?HC*?- 20" *2?Ip&? / MI ?M fc^JH'Uii\KJsmasL c-.wx. J i 11 i i Hi- i If you are in the m^r CORN MILLS WOOD SAW FRAP GASOLINE ENGIN Write: Columbia Suf S23 West Gervais Street j wMew in* m mm amaai iwir: limiM i I CO/2 ! Ri iviajvo u\ i | Pound Paper < Jo Match a\ i I I Newherr innarw ~ - ?- mm* a? f :i!:.'ri>trarc for No. 10 township and jwil! abi-ie the rules of the Democratic nrimary. J. A. KINARD. i 1 :.i:i a <ai)?lii!atc for magistrate ; for X?>. lit township and will ab > llic. r ;!?>s of tlu? D '.iio^ratic partv. P. B. ELLESOR. I ) Cures Malaria, Chills and Fev( er, Dengue or Bilicus Fever. It j kills the germs. ) i I Top r Giobe 3W Aberdeen IT' ren lops i T LA 230 ! _ i aw BBMMWBfli?tai c?s????mm ket for the following: AES E DRAG SAWS >piy Company Columbia, S. C. i ? D ne to )ok Store and Envelopes i a Bargain : Variety Store y, S. C. ltmti? ' *1 ? ' ?C