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: 1 "hold up game By the Sugar Trust With the Assistance of the REPUBLICAN PARTY Under the Present Tariff Law the Kuftur Trust Is Given the IU|ht to Take Elghtjr-Three Million Dollars Out of the Pockets of the Consumer. The masses of the people know very little about the Iniquities of the protective tariff, and consequently hiivo lit t lo irtPA nf the imm??n.?w? sums of money that the lomber and other trusts are allowed to rob them of each year. Ah a sample, take the sugar trust and the sum of money it is given tho right under the protective tariff to rob the masses of. Here are the facts as given by a writer in the Commoner: One of the heaviest burdens carried in the tariff bill is that of sugar, and the persons who carry it are the consumers. Sugar is a universal article of diet in this country. The poor man uses as much of it as does the rich man, and, there being more poor men than there are rich men, it is easy to figure out which class is most afTected by the tarifT on it. As some one has put it, it taxes poverty in proportion to its needs and the more tax poverty pays the more wealth gains in unjust exemption. It is easy of demonstration that the only real beneficiary of the tariff is the sugar trust. The growers are deluded into the belief that if it were not for the tariff the trust would pay them less for their cane and beets. Vet it would be difficult for anyone to conceive why the trust, which dominates the market and fixes all prices, would pay more under any circumstances than it was compelled to do. No balder, bolder bit of briggaudage than the sugar schedule reveals can be found in the whole tariff bill. Th? American people consume annually a per capita of eighty-one pounds of sugar. Kvery pound of this passes through the hands of the sugar trust and the other refineries that accept its price dictation and, never warring with it. may well he assumed as u part of it. The (Juriff on refined sugar of standard quality is $1.90 a hundred pounds, which is just a little less than it costs to manufacture a hunto shut out reflued sugar. That it deliberately placed that high in order to shut out refined sugar. That is is effective is shown by the fact that in 1907 but 219 tons wero imported. while last year there were but 430. Iu order to still further entrench the trust in its position, the tariff bill provides that no sugar may be imported unless it is of a certain standard color, which menus that it must be in a certain state of rawnest that renders it unsalable except to the sugar refiners. This is important because three-fourths of the sugar we consume is imported. So important is it that the price of all sugar is based upon the price of this "Dutch standard" in New York. An examination of the sugar schedule proves the truth of the contention of Senator Clay of Georgia in his recent speech, when he said that j the tariff is so adjusted that for every dollar collected in duties, the trust cau aud does exact more than a dollar of profit from consumers. Hero is how the tariff ou sugar, n necessity of life, affects price: The average wholesale price in Hamberg in 1908 was 2.64 cents; In New York It was 4.96. The trust has frequently sold sugar for export, its surplus, for three cents a pound, because the tariff shut out the foreign refiner from the home market and enabled the trust to compete elsewhere. That the truBt gets the greater part of the tax Is proved by this computation: There are approximately 90,000,000 persons in the United States, each of whom consumes eightyone pounds. The average difference in price of sugar between Ham berg and New York for ten years has been 1.89 cents a pound. Multiply this by the amount of sugar consumed and It means a difference of $1.16.000,000 a year. Of this sum the government collected and received by reason of the tariff $63,000,000. The other $33,000,000 was taken by the trust as its share of the tariff loot. Stated in other terms If the tariff were removed entirely, It would cheapen the cost of sugar to every consumer nearly 2 cents a pound and deprive the government of but $63,000,000 of revenue. If the schedules were fixed unon a atrletlv r.. vomit Xt-i, sugar would be reduced about 25 1 per cent In price. < Protection to the extent of $83.- t 000,000 a year is given the trust, 1 which stands convicted of robbing 1 its beneficiaries by short weights. 1 The schedules as now arranged give i it the lawful right to exact that t amount in tribute from tho eonsu- t mer and its character as a monopoly 1 makes it possible for it to decide t how much of that amount It will 1 give tho cane and heat growers. i j Wife Be-ater Slain. t Frank Crawford, a farmer living I near Selma. N. C., was struck on r the head and his skull crushed by f an axe in the hands of his thirteen- F year-old son Monday morning. Crawford had his wife down and was beating her and tho boy. not being able to get him off without force, used a the axe. Tho boy has been placaw b, in jail at Smltbfleld. c iipi COMMITS SUICIDE IT LTNKKQUITED LOVE CACHES A B VERY SAB TRAGEDY. Gersham FrudelNon Shoots Him- Y self Because a Young Lady Rejected His Suit. Geraham Fendelson. a young white man of Columbia, aged twenty-four N yeans, oommltted suicide Monday v night, and Coroner Walker, viewing d the body Tuesday morning, decided n that there was no need to hold an s Inquest. Unrequited love is given n as the cause of the suicide. n A clear statement of the cause of e the tragedy was given by Miss Mamie c Watts, who lives with her step-father, Mr.Ferguson, at 2,005 Wilson .( street, almost directly In the rear of b the Uranby Methodist church. Sat- e urday afternoon the young man re- t turned a- photograph which she bad 1 gtven him. He also sent her word d by her younger sister and sought the b return of a scarf pin and a ring that li be had given the young woman. She o declined to return them except to him directly. a Fendelson boarded with Mr. Jenk- s ins, whose house faces the street f on which the church is located, and b the back yards of the two houses ad- t Join. He had beer, living in Colijm- a bla since February and went there t from Darlington. Rooming with him s were some young men whom he had a known. Monday afternoon while v Fendelson and some other boys were s looking at some post cards, he pick- t ed up a .3 2 calibre Colt's magazine gun and put it in his pocket, stating j, that he had to go over on the Pal- f metto mill hill in the evening and c some of the boys over there had it r in for him. The pistol belonged to a Willie Minis, who was not in the j room at the time, and the other > boys did not stop Fendelson, for he claimed ta have permission to get it. Fendelson went over to see Miss Watts early in the evening, and they * with her mother went to preaching at the church on the Palmetto hill. 11? talked to the girl but little and was with her mother most of the s time. On the return to the house the girl took off the scarf pin and f ring and offered them to the young ( man. but he declined them, saying 1 that he would never have any fur- < ther use for them. Miss Watts stat- * ed that he seemed sad and spoke ? strangely. Finally he took from his * pocket a photograph of himself and * said tt was for the girl's mother to < remember him by, bb he expected to 1 die. I With that ho walked out of the 1 house, and in a moment there was the report of a pistol. Tho girl call- ' ed her mother. She was not alarm- 1 ed, but thought Gersham was just 1 trying to worry her. But tho moth- < er had observed with a closer intui- 1 tion and declared her belief that the * boy had really harmed himself. The ( girl went to the door with a lamp ? and. peering out into the darkness. ' saw the for mof the young man strug- 1 gllng In the death throes. ( Thoroughly horritied she then ( aroused the neighbors, who summon ( ed Policeman Salters from his beat. The officer did not hear the report of the pistol as a train was coming In. but one of the wiatchmen in that ( neighborhood told him that the report was heard at fifteen minutes to I o'clock. BOGUS LORD ALMOST MUMMY. Body of Sidney Iaiseelle* in Ashe- ' ville (establishment. Standing erect in a case in the rear room of tho undertaking estab llshment of Nolan, Drown & Co., of Ashevllle, la the embalmed and now r almost mummified body of the man t known as Sidney Lascelles, the bogus t Lord Heresford. I The body was embalmed six years j ago and is now as stiff as a board y and when laid between two chairs. s with only the head and feet touching it will not bend. The undertaker says that the man came here from Norfolk, claiming to bo Lord Beresford and they embalmed the body ^ on the supposition that wealthy relatives would care for it. Cablegrams were sent to Lord Heresford in Kngland. but no response was received, t The undertakers now admit the a man was an impostor and are keep- 1 ing the body as a proof of their s skill in embalming. They have refused to sell the body to shows, be- k Ing offered $-'.000 for it. v THRILLING KXFKRIKXCK. >lan Fall* Three Thousand Five P Hundred Feet. h A local Inventor dropped 3,500 ' feet in a crippled aeroplano at ^ Barwyn, Neb., Tuesday. He was not j seriously hurt. Th? amateur avla- n. tor was U. Sorenson, a blacksmith. ?ho in view of several hundred townsmen, made the ascent in a bal- f( oon and then attempted a descent n an aeroplano that he had conducted after several months labor. A hen lie cut tho aeroplane loose it >egan to descend at a terrific speed, urning over and over as it dropped, iti rhe inventor clung to the craft, and pi vhen it struck the ground he was O n a sitting posture. The aeroplane di vas damaged, but Sorcnson. although a; tnocked senseless and sustaining lumerous bruises was soon revived, lot seriously worse off for his e.\? lerlence. ???????? w Woman Shootn i* Man. y A negro woman shot a n-^gro man o( t. Greenville on last Monday night cl of Jealousy. Thy woman ex lalms self defence. ^ J be AKES DEADLY DRUG BCAl'SK OF DISAPPOINTMENT IX LOVE IX AIKEX. oung Man From CharlMton Attempts to Oommtt 6ui?ide But Was Saved. A dispatch from Aiken to. The ews and Courier says lato Monday veiling Ed O'Nell. of Charleston, at?mpted to commit suicide there by rinklng* several drachms of laudaum. The quick presence of a phyioian saved his life, though the lau avows his intention of yet comlittlng the rash act. He was placd in the city jail to prevent him arrying out his avowed intentions. O'Neil is a young man who went o Aiken from Charleston. He has een In the city for some time. Sevral days ago he was heard to say hat he intended taking his own life, 'uesday evening he went into Hall'3 [rug store on Main street, and said ie had toothache, and bought some audanum for the purpose, be said, if easing it. He then seated himself at a table nd called for a soft drink from the oda fountain. Instead of drinking rora the soda glass he drank about ialf the contents of the laudanum ottle, and In a few moments be rose, threw a note across the cornier to the clerk and swooned. A phyIcian was with him in a moment.1 ind after a great deal of effort he ras made to drink an emetic, and ho ?on recovered from the effects of he laudanum. Hut he still insisted that he would Lill himself; said he would Jump rom the hotel and kill himself, acordingly he was locked up for the light. The note was addressed to i young lady of Aiken, and disaplointment in love seems to have velghed too heavily on his mind. SEVERE STORM IX VIRGINIA. L"ousidecable Damage Was Done in the State. A special from Hig Stone Gap, Va., lavs: Five deaths are reported and damige to propertj' estimated at upwards >f $100,000 as the result of rains ind electrical storms which swept iver that section Saturday night and Sunday. Railroad tracks were wash d out, causing landslides and a tentoot rise in tho sluggish Powell riv?r in two hours. The heaviest storm accurred Saturday night, breaking iorth of Hig Stone Gap, along the Ines of the Louisville and Nashville, ind the Inter-Stato Railroad. The Inter-State Road lost more han two miles of road in the sixmile si retch of track between Apxilachia and Stonega. A passenger rain was left stranded near Arno, vith the track impassible on either side. Hig slides occurred in deep ;uts at Appalachia and Dorchester function. i no t'oweii valley l.igtit md Power Company's plant here, ,vhich furnishes lights for Pig Stone Jap and other towns, was put out if commission by lightning, and rrops were injured. RALEIGH MAX A Sl'IClDE. 11. Edwards, Well Known Printer, Cuts ills Throat. A dispatch from Raleigh says C. i. Edwards, Jr., committed suicide it Pullen Park a few nights ago by rutting his throat with a shoe knife. The body was found about 10 o'clock Saturday. He was the son of C. B. Cdwnrds, of the Edwards & Broughon printing establishment and was general foreman of the printing oflee. Edwards left no word as to the eason for the act, but has been a leavy drinker and had made an atempt on his life before. He had aken treatment for the whiskey habt a number of times. He was H8 ears old and leaves a wife and five mall children. SOUTHERN PUBLISHERS MEET. >'ariou* Subjects of Interest to the Profession Discussed. The Southern Publishers' Associaion met Tuesday in annual session t Birmingham. Ala. President J. Caldwell, of Charlotte, X. C., pre- | ided. The attendance is said to he as irge as that at any previous conen t ion. Tore Father's Will to l'leces. I)r. William M. C. Mlllan. an emloyee in the United States custom ouse at New Orleans, tore his fathr's will to pieces when he discovred that it gave more property to im than to his younger brother, his fact was disclosed when the m ti la ted document, that had beeu atched together, was filed in the ivil District Court in New Orlean? ir probate. The amount of the roperty involved is about Killed in Kvplosion. Four men were kiled and four ijured in an explosion in the power lant of the Denver Gas and Electric nmpany, at Denver. Col., a few iys ago. The plant was badly darned. Sixth Set of Twins. By the birth Sunday of a set of vins. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Rogers, ho live eight miles from Asheville, i . C.. are the parents of six sets ' twins. They have been married ght years and have no children i :ccpt the twelve twins. Eight are 1 ?ys and four girls. STREET FIGHT \ ~ Two Dead and Five Others Are * Badly Wounded. WAS BLOODY BATTLE Thin Wan the Sequel of Anoths er Tragedy That Grew Out of a Political Content iu Meadville, Mis*.?Troops Hushed to the Scene to PreTent Rioting. There was a bloody street battle at Meadville, Miss., on Tuesday afternoon, in which two men were killed, two perhaps fatally wounded and three others slightly injured. As a result of the unfortunate affair, feeling at Meadville ran high ! and State troops were rushed there from Brockhaven Tuesday night to guard against a possibility of rioting. i iiumm k utea in me anrav were Dr. A. M. Newman, clerk of the Chancery Court, of Franklin conn- ' ty, and Sllaa G. Reynolds. Dr. Le- 1 nox Newman, a son of one of the ( slain men, is believed to have been 1 fatally injured, and Herbert Apple- ' white, an attorney, may not recover as the result of his wounds. Km- 1 mett Newman, another son, was shot in the leg. The three were taken to Natchez 1 for medical attention, after having been formally placed under arrest. ' Two men named Hoyd and Parr, : alleged to have been involved in ' the affray, were slightly wounded, ' but escaped and have not been cap- ' tured. L. P. Prltchard. a brother of Cornelius Prltchard, whom Newman killed seven weeks ago, was arrested ' and charged with complicity in the tragedy. 1 The killing of Pritchard by Newman was the first bloodshed to mark a feud that had existed between the 1 two men. relatives and friends, for months. This bitter factionalism had ?ts inception in a political campaign in which Newman and Prltchard were opposing candidates. Newman was tried a few weeks ago for Pritchard's murder, and was 1 acquitted. This served to arouse even mote bitter feeling among the 1 relatives and friends of Prltchard and the Newman family and faction. Tuesday's fight occurred almost on the same spot where Pritchard was slain. Apparently Newman was first fired upon as ho was passing the Butler building in Lis buggy. The shot came from one of the tooms ou the second floor of the building. It failed to take effect, and Newman jumped from his buggy, rushed to the front of the building, drawing his pistol, it is asserted, in tho mean | UIBP. It is claimed that, as Newman reached the sidewalk he was attacked by Reynolds and Applewhite. Sons of I>r. Newman, who were nearby. rushed to the scene and engaged in the duel. Numerous volleys were exchanged, but it is apparently n . matter of doubt who fired the fatal shots. ( The gragedy is thought to have been a direct result of the killing of Cornelius Pritchard by I)r. Newman seven weeks ago, and Dr. Newman's acquittal recently on the charge of murder. The feeling between Applewhite , and Newman is said to have been t very bitter. On several occasions it is reported that Newman had or- | dered the attorney from the chancery clerk's office. Applewhite was , wounded in the Newman-Pritchard . encounter. , The encounter, from the meagre . facts known, were fiercely waged, ] and the lives of numerous bystand- ( ers were jeopardized. , IJ3FT ESTATE TO SWEETHEART. ! 1 Trained Nurse, of Kouuukc, V?.. 1 i Gets $2.">,000 Request. I Mrs. M. E. Mayo, a trained nurse. ' & of Roanoke, Va., has been notified j by a Danville, Va., lawyer that Capt. } Wm. II. Rlackwell, who died there c recently, left his estate, worth $2r?,- f 000 and unencumbered, to her. h As a girl Mrs. Mayo and Rlack- j well were sweethearts. She married another man and was ten years ago left a widow. Some years later she nursed Rlackwell through an illness and he renewed the suit. East November the marriage was indefinitely postponed. BITTKN BY RABID DOG. A a A Little Eight Year Old Boy Was j the Victim. At Abbeville the eight-year-old son a of Mr. Tom Nickles was bitten by a ^ dog that has since been pronounced R made by the Pasteur institute in a Atlanta. Dr. C. C." Gambell will get a the virus fresh every day and treat t< the boy at home. Early in April 81 the South Carolina State board of health authorized the establishment of a Pasteur Institute in Columbia, but it seems they are not in position di yet to treat patients. It is not known ai whether the dog bit any one else or tl not. in ol Suicide at Greenville. el At GreenNille Monday afternoon a negro woman named Lizzie Clark went into the kitchen of the Blue Ridge Hotel and called Henry Brew- di ion out of the room to speak to hint, st While talking to him she turned her p; back and drank a dose of carbolic ti icid. which killed her a few hours fe later The woman was married, but her husband Ihed in Walhalla. ca THE PEOPLE ROBBED i TARIFF FOR THE PURPOSE OF PROTECTION IS GRAFT. t Gives a Few the Privllefc by Law of Preying Upon the Rest of the People. Former Governor Joseph W. Folk, itopping in Denver after a trip hrough the West gave an interview o the Denver News in which interriew he said: "From what I have earned in my trip through the West. can say that the Democratic party vill undoubtedly win out in the next residential election. And tariff is it the bottom of it all. The discussion of that great national and nternational topic has made it clear o the people that the tariff is a tax. "They are awakening to the injus.ice of 80,000,000 people being tax?d to make a few very rich, and. that t is more important that all of the veople be prosperous than some of :he people bo extremely wealthy. Instead of protecting monopoly 1 lgainsi me people, tne demand now s that people be protected against monopoly. A tariff for the purpose 5f protection is graft. It is a privilege conferred on the faw to prey upon the rest of the people. "If the Democratic party will stand for the real principles of Democracy, which are opposition to the privilege of lawlessness and privileges conferred by law, it will succeed. The trouble has beeu that so many who call themselves Democrats voted against the party's principles when Ihey see a chance of getlng a part of the graft for their own States or districts. This must stop," he interjected emphatically. The great fighter of graft and crime took occasion to criticise severely the stand taken by a number of Democrats in the present congress. He insisted that recent votes in that body indicated clearly that tiny had deserted the teachings of their own party and had declared without the least hesitation for the monopoly tariff as framed by the Republican par'y. "As a matter of fact," he said, "the tariff discussion in congress seems to have degenerated into a game of grab, with many of the senators and representatives trying to get a pnrt of the loot for their own districts. The Democratic party must stand squarely against the monopoly tariff and for equal rights to all. otherwise it stands for nothing. And then, if the party declares bodily for the rights of all, as opposed to the privileges of a fern-, it will win." SHOOTING SCRAP IN MARLBORO. One Mail Killed and Another Severely Wounded. In a shooting scrape in the upper part of Marlboro county Sunday morning. Sandy Purvis was killed and George Robinson wounded in several places. The homicide occurred Sunday morning about 9 o'clock, and Coroner McCall had an inquest Monday afternon, but none of the particulars were known until Monday morning owing to the fact that the coroner did not get back to Hennettsville until late Sunday night. George Robinson is in jail with gunshot wounds, small shot in his right eye, breast, arm and stomach fie has one wound on his left knee, which seeius to have been caused by a pistol. It seems that Robinson and his wife had some trouble last week, tnd she had gone to her pcple. with whom Purvis boarded. Mrs. Robin?on, with their children, went back home Sunday morning for some Nothing, but remained only a short ;ime. She started to return to her jeople, and her husband aecompalled her part of the way. lie tried to detain her and Purria lame up. Robinson and Purvis got nto a fight and separated, each gong for his g.'n. The difficulty was "esumed and Purvis was killed, the ihot having entered his back. Robnson savs that Purvis shot first, but ihtima McLean, the sister of the wife if Robinson, says that she fired the irst shot that hit Robinon. Sandy Purvis boarded at the ionic of Emma McLean. REIM TV KILLS PREACHER. MIk'er Shoots Minister who Resist | ed Arrest. A special from Pocahontas, Ya., ays at Itoissevaln. Va., a few days go the Rev. John Phillips was shot nd killed by Deputy Sheriff H. N. lorris. Phillips had a difficulty with man named Proffit Saturday night, 'rotfit went to Pocahontas and got w-arrant for the preacher. When unrris weni io servo tno papers iinday Phillips resisted and drew revolver, and it is said was in the rt of shooting Morris when the lat?r fired on Phillips, killing him inlantly. flrained With An A\e. In a fight near Wilson. I.a.. Mou- i ay morning between John Palzo j nd George Tlrat. the latter brained I te former w ith an axe, death being I istantaneous. It is said that both i r the men were under the inflneuee f whiskey. 1 1 ' Crushed hjr Holler. Peter Zualno. a watchman whose illy it was to walk ahead of a( earn roller own ^d by an asphalt i\ing company and warn pedes-I ains of th?-lr danger. Tuesday night i 11 in front of the machine at North enue and Halstead street, in Chi- i ico. and was crushed to dea'h. DON'T SPEC INVEST Yi THE BEST INVESTMENT THAT C ERN REAL WE OFFER FOR QUICK S .TOO in Horry County?150 aer land. Situated about 15 miles fro and 2 miles from Red IllufT on Terms reasonable. 300 Acres, Timber and Pasture I.and, 250 acres timber land and remaind Terms very reason?n?e | 12."? Acres?Two and one-half miles f | timber on this land has been sold, build residence. Price *5 ner One I.ot in Waycross, C*a.- Iu the 1 $100 cash. The Kmeralda Stock Kami Situated on the south and west by I,ake C Entire tract fenced. The lands a all the native and other grasses, pose would furnish pasturage for be admirably used as truck farm, t farming. There are two dwellings, etc., on the place. Personal propr jack, one colt. 1 f>0 head of cattle, mower, reaper and binder, and mis with sale. Reason for selling, in a of old age. For price and further IF YOU HAVE ANY PROPERTY FOI list it with us. No charges unless Carolina Sa ORAXUKlll Southern States COLUM E STATE BOARD MEETS IX COLUM1H V TO EQUALIZE TAXES OF CORPORATIONS. ImportMiit Matters Affecting Textile Industries Will be Passed on by the Members. The State board of equalization met i in Columbia to pass upon all returns ; made by the various textile concerns and the oil and fertilizer companies. ] The meeting this year is of consid- j erablc importance. The board will prooaoiy pass some resolution on the method for assessment of property as all real estate will have to be reassessed next year. Mr. I'. H. Gadsden of Charleston is tho chairman of the board and the comptroller general 'is secretary. The members are as follows: Abbeville, J. K. Lomax. Aiken. J. Cal. Courtney. Anderson. A. N. Richardson. Ramberg, S. 1). Guess. Rarnwell, U. It. Johnston. Ileaufort, C. A. Verdier. Berkeley, J. St. Clair White. Calhoun, It. M. Claffey. Charleston, P. 11. Gadsden. Cherokee, James 11. Turner. Chester, R. H. Nardln. Chesterfield, William Godfrey. Clarendon, 11. M. Richardsou. Colleton, A. C. VonLehr. Darlington. Gen. W. K. James. Dorch?-ster, C. M. Gavin. Kdgefleld, It. A. Cochran. Fairfield, Thos. W. Traylor. Florence, Charles A. Smith. Georgetown, J. Harleston Read. Greenville, C. O. Goodwin. Greenwood, J. W. Alton. Hampton, H. It. Kittles. Horry, Jeremiah Smith. Kershaw, J. 11. DeKay. Lancaster, Waddy C. Thompson. Laurens, R. P. Adair. Lee. N. S. McLeod. Lexington. M II. Kdwards. Marion. S. U. Davis. | Marlboro. F. P. Peguos. Xewberry, L. W. Floyd. Oconee, A. Zimmerman. Orangeburg, Jno. I). Shuler. Pickens. W. T. Odell. Richland. Jno. H. Ilollin. Saluda, M. A. Coleman. Spartanburg. J. J. Vernon. Sumter. II. J. Mcl-anrin. l'ninn. I)r. !i K. Smith. Williamsburg. \V. H. Funk. York, T. Ij. Johnston. The tariff law that will be pushed through by Aldrich i.- framed in the j interest of the privileged few, while the great mass of the people will bo taxed heavier than ever by it. Announcement. This being our twenty-fifth year of uninterrupted success, we wi.'h it to bo our ' Banner year." Our thousands of satisfied customers. and fair dealing, is bringing us new customers daily. If you are contemplating the pur- ] cba^o of a piano or organ, write us , at once for catalogues, and for our special proposition. MAI/ONK'S Ml SIC flOI'SE, < Columbia. S. C. c E COLUMBIA 8UPPLY C Your Engine Nec What a man of cxpvnrncc h is to *as governor*. ?sf various make*. Ih?- (.unltivr-Wniihc ! his governor ever W# < irr s all sir? in stor k rotuiwaiA surrtv I i iULATE OUR MONEY * . '1 AN BE MADE IS Bl'YIXG SOITH, ESTATE. ALE THE FOLLOWING: ** *; e?s cleared and f50 acres timber m Conway. 12 miles from Lorls. Waccamaw Hiver. Price, 12.000. Situated i* Horry County?About er in pasture land. Price. 91>800. v rnm railrnaH stntlnn Tt.? ?? ? a ?ir |iillC This wouid make a good plate to ere. liverside addition to that city. Price, I in Lake County, Fla.. and hounded rrlflin and the Oklawaha river, re well adapted to the growth of and if used exclusively for that pur1,000 head of cattle. I>ands could he land being suitable for general four tenant houses, barns, stables, rty. consisting of nine mares, one 3 4 head of hogs, buggies, wagons, cellnneous farming implements go bility to look after place on account particulars write. t SALE, no matter whero located, sale Is made. ties Agency l ug, s. c. Supply Company cs ifWh ux>p|he:s 3 i a. s. o. CLASSIFIED COLUMN Wedding Invitations and announcements. Finest quality. Correct styles. Samples free. J. H. DeLooff, Dept. G, Grand Itaplds, Mich. A good worm powder for hordes and mules. Safe and effective. Seal postpaid on receipt of 25c. T. B. Wannamaker, Cheraw, S. C. ManuMTitif of Yovot?- ?.?.?? - ?' - , - . ...-I voira.i c. iJiafl, poetry, etc.. wanted for issue ia book form. Address Broadway Publishing Company. S33 Uroadway-, N. Y. Teacher*' Bureau, conducted by Miss I. F>. Martlu. An exchaugo for supplying teachers with positions and schools with teachers. Ad- t ? dress 1702 Blandlng St., Columbia. S. C. Iteal Kstnte?If you have any property for sale list it with us. No charges "unless sale is made. Carolina Sales Ageucy, Orangeburg. S. C. Bagging and Ties?dinners, farmers | and merchants, save money by making contract with us now for fall delivery. Write without delay-. Address, Bagging Factory, Boykiu, S. C. Why don't you work for Unci* Sam? Civil Service Manuul, which prepares you Air the examination. Three volumes (with mapH), $3, express prepaid. Sims' Book Store. Orangeburg. S. C. Teachers Wanted?Teachers seeking good schools and schools seeking good teachers, should writ# Sheridan's Teachers' Agency, Greenwood. S. C., endorsed and patronized by leading schools and college?. Wanted ?Hardwood lumber and log?. In lumber we want poplar. a*h. cottonwood. gum and cypress. In logs we want cedar, walnut and popiar. t'rompt cash and inspection at your point. Savannah Valley Lumber Company, Augusta, C?a. Liquid Ice?2 spoonfuls of which will keep your butter fresh 6 months, or your milk sweet and fresh 4 days; can be made at home for $1.50 a gallon. Guaranteed sure and harmless. Formula and directions $1.00. I. \V. Wooley. Charlotte, N'. C. Teachers?Write for free booklet, "A Plan," showing how we help you get a better position. Thousands excellent vacancies opes, paying $30 to $150 monthly. Schools supplied with tosehcri. Southern Teachers' Agency, Columbia. South Carolina. OF.l FATAL RIG COMPANY. IIOI Cathedral St., Baltimore, Md. We make you handsome and durable Rugs from your old wornout sarpet, any size to fit a room or hall. Let us send you a price list; Juat svrlte for one. It may be brass, not gold, that ronies to view when the copper is reliiired to show hie mettle. IOM PANY COLUMBIA. S. O-'l ids a Good Governor. after lining lh. loading aiakea:?"I have m?d hnl failed to tet proper regulation un'ij I uv4 J givr? better regulation than inv other I ha** [.llanged or *<re v? ed h,.tT..rn with ?Cie? ed lid* B COMPIMY. rOUIMHI. % C. f