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'* jjfei DOG WAS MAD T Bit F?r Person mi Canes Great Exii Calukta i BIT OTHER DOCS AUO Those Bitten by the Animal, Which 7* i Was a Fine Bird Dog, Were Mr. , Alfred Wallace, Mrs. Mayrant. Alfred Wallace, Jr., and Mr. A. H. Seats, of the State. /, The State says Quail, an English setter belnging to Alfred Wallace, oi LOiumoui, appears 10 nave oe- i come atllictei with hydrophobia, and | baa attacked several persons. Not wishing to alarm the people of the city unnecessarily, no statement was given out at the time, for it was hopei that the dog was not affected with rabies, and the animal was put under lock and key awaiting devel opments. The persona attacked by this dog are Mrs. Mayrant, mother of Mrs. Wallace; Alfred Wallace. superintendent of the street railway; Alfred Wallace. Jr., attorney at law, and A. Hamilton Seats, of The 8tate. A very fine dog, the property of Magistrate Jas. H. Fowles, is known to have been attacked, as well as other uogs being under suspicion. The members of Mr. Wallace's household were attacked Sunday The animal was snpposed at first t have been ill tempered on account of having probably been poisone by chicken thieves who visited the place, corner of Senate and Henderson streets, one night last week However, Dr. F. A. Coward, th< State ba teriologlst, was notified am' all wounds were cauterized and th?animal was locked up pending de elopments, for if it were affecte with rabies, death would come in five days. It would not be necessary' 1 to administer to the persons attack el any Pasteur treatment within thai length of time. Tues 'ay night the animal freed Itself from Its fastening and at th< corner of Senate and Barnwell stree attacked Mr. Seats as he was on his way to supper. The dog struct him in the chest without warning and as Mr. Seats fell back from thr Impact, the dog fastened its teet' Iiq bis left arm Just above the elbowHe went at once to Dr. T. M. DuBose and had the wound cauterized Dr. Coward state 1 that even shoul the animal be caught and found tbe rabid, he has at the laborator> enough virus to treat all the person; who have been attacked. Quail is a white seter, female with liver oolored spots. Ever? patrolman In the Ity was given hedescription and Sergt Sloan saw he at the corner of Main and Oerval streets at 1 o'clock In the morning R He fired one time and Is satlsfle I that he wounded the dog. All per I sons In the city are advised if such Bg a dog is killed to notify at once the B police station or Dr. A. F. Cowar B so that the brain may be tested. I There was another rabid dog run I nlng amuck Wednesday and create jj| much excitement on Main and Asm eexnbly streets In the section fron H Waahlnrton street to the postofflcr H Two oflloers were needed to kill it I the animal 'refusing to d4e afte I being shot and severely beaten abou ? the head by the first officer, wh p essayel to dispatch it. The anlmn aS tommenced ita last run on Assem B bly street and after attacking an I other dog. It was seen to be clearl I out of Its sense. g| Policeman Dreher therefore aboil; It and when the-antnmt r?n ? ? - * ? ? ?v??, nv at* Ivanced and after beating It vigor ourl? with h'B club (eft it for dead The dog recovered in a few moment' and ran into Main street, ereatlnr much excitement on this thorough fare until Policeman Sligh was en countered in front of Monckton' and the shot fired that ended It* txlstance. DEADLY PARLEU RIFLE. Lad, Shot by Companion, Dies or Operating Table. At Hickory, N. C.. Winston Mor ton, the 12-year-old son of Mr. E ' V. Morton of that city, died on th' operating table Thursday mornin from heart failure due to the effect of chloroform admlnistere**. The boy was shct in the left eye Monday afternoon by Elon Aber netbey. another lad. Elon was play ing with an air rifle and the shot was not intended for Winston. It Wts fonnit ??? - ? <*?? ? ? * * iu icuiuve me hot from the eye an1 It was while r.niergolng the operation the little i fellow died. Doctors Menzles, Shu ford and Stephenson performed the operation. * One Day to the Ideal. It is beautiful to give one day i occasionally to the ideal. One day in which books and stocks and deeds and notes, and interest and mort- ] t gage, and all kinds of business and ( *" trfc~e are forgotten, and all stores < and Bhops and factories and offices , and banks, and ledgers and ac ounts, , and lawsuits are cast aside, put away and locked up, and the weary heart , end brain are given a voyage to , fairyland. Let ns hope that such a t day is a propheey of what all days , will be. t Commits Suicide. B. B. Dillard, a well known and r wealthy citizen of Roanoke, Va.. t killed himself in the presence of his r Vwife at his home late Wednesday night. It la said Mrs. Dlllard was c trying to persaade hev husband not c to leave the house when he drew a > a revolver and shot himself through t the head, dying instantly. d : ; ACCUSED HER HUSBAND I J *OLlGE FIND BLOODY OLOYHBS OWNED BY HUNTER, Whose Wife Declares That While a Negro Held Her He Gave Her a Fatal Blow. A dispatch from Savannah says ^ developments Monday night In the aftermath of the trlpplo murder of last Friday afternoon gave birth to the startling theory that not a single murderer, but two or possibly three were engaged In the commission of the terrible crimes. County officer* declare that of then* l( J. C. Hunter, husband ot Mrs. Mag- y gle Hunter, whose death Monday added a third to the number of 11 murdered women. Is certainly one. * They declare that the chain of a evidence is complete, asserting that t some clothing, badly stained, appar- j ently spattered with blood, which was found and belongs to Hunter, Is the final link. This clothing is Is p "eclared, was worn by Hunter on the li day of the crimes, and a walking f cane found in the house of the mur- a lert Is declared to have been car- s ried by Hunter on the same day. t It was declared by a physician o at the 8avannah hospital that state- n meats made during a moment of a consciousness by Mrs. Hunter early li Monday charged the crimes to her < husband, and that she was being ? hell by a negro man when the blows p were struck that caused her death. b The Rev. J. 8. Wilder, pastor of r. Baptist church in Savannah, stated p that Mrs. Hunter, after recoguisin,; him, declared a white man had struck d the blows. _ C m a LAYING UP TREASURE. t a The Noble Gift of a Lady to thr l, Sumter Poor. C v We fully agree with the Sumter t tern that of all the bequests for t heritable and other purposes enu- a uerated in the will of Mrs. Ella r t'uomey, none showed a finer spirit )T a kinder, tender thnn?h?fninu,. " 'or her needy fellow creatures than c hat to provide Christmas eheer for he poor of 8umter. The Income 1 'rom the 93,000 .left In trust to the ' ity council to be eipended at Christ c uas each year for the relief of the ' >oor of Sumter will brighten the T Ives of thousands and bring to them 1 i portion of the Christmas spirit of r vhlch they would be destitute other- * vise. There it In this gift of Mrs ' t'uomey something that appeals t" 1 the humanity that is in us with pe'ullar force, and we feel that It It ; the greatest and beet of her bene"actlone. In that for decades and de l *df? to come It will bring glad* tees and joy to numberless heart* t the season of the year that the 1 oor and the children of the poui *cel most bitterly the pangs of pov * irty. If Mrs. Tuomey had don* ' othing else for charity, thl? 1 thoughtful remembrance of the poor t Christmas time is sufficient * lace her name on the roll of thov vho had thought for the children f the poor. 1 GA.VB LIFE FOIl CHILDREN. * t * li Vith tier Clothes Aflame Bhe Leap- j. ed Through Window. ^ One of the greatest sets of hero a cm whl h has occurred in the sec- ^ .Ion of Marion, N. C., In years was '' hat nt M ? f-v- * ** ' .. _. <>. ?vuu ucwu vi vein vfountalQ, who sacrificed her life * "rlday afternoon to save her three c hildren from being burned to death. 1 Mrs. Lewis was standing before * he open fire place and her cloth- * ng caught fire. She started to rush ^ or the bed in the room intending o smother the flames. The chll- 1 ren who were in the adjoining room ushel to their mother's aid. For "ear that the clothes worn by her 3 hildren would catch fire Mrs. Lewie eaped through a window and ran ^ "t several hundred feet before fallng exhausted and dying. Her screams attracted neighbors n1 when they reached the body all r lothing bad been burned off except j wo small pieces under ea fc arm. Ter skin was burned to a crisp and >lackened by the smoke and flames. ^ Hood was flowing freely from many ^ >arts of her body. Tender hands carried the dying ,, romsn back to her residence, where j 'he expired a few hours later. Her ^ luffering was Intense. m W CORPSE HOLDS AUTO WHEEL. {( tl a a rmriicf) OK 1*11X10 ITfVfllUl b g Tragedy on French Road. Mme. Maurice, of Roanne. Franco. h las had the terrifying exporien o of ? lriving in a motor car with her dead h lufhand clutching the nteerlng wheel * ind a four-year-old baby In her lap. She had gone for a drive with J' ser husband as chauffeur. Noticing ' hat the car was pursuing an erratic ? jouree, she spoke to her husband. 11 jring him to be more pruden. There n was no response, for he was dead. r In an instant the woman realir- 1 Ml the truth. She was ignorant of 1 ho macbtnism. and could not stop * he car. But with remarkable pros- * ?nco of mind she did the next best hlng. Lifting her baby up. she leanid out of the auto and dropped it on .ho roadway. Then, taking the iteering wheel, she headed the au- t! omoblle for a ditch, into whi<h It , tl -an and capsized. T< Mme. Maurice, who, with the ft yoTpee of her husband, was Cans ti >ut, fortunately escaped with very ! light injury. The baby was fotrod w inharmed. The husband's death was n iue to heart failure. S It ' ' v ???1 v u * SHOT AT DEPOT I r. W. L FcUer, of Sl Vittkews, Skot ky Express Messeager WITHOUT PROVOCATION lliile Waiting for c Train to Lmtp From the Union Depot at Charlotto?Harry Jone*, Who Did the Shooting. Arretted and Put in Jail to Await PeMer't Injury. A special dispatch from Charlotte a the Columbia Record says Mr. V. L. Felder. a well known busies* man of St. Matthews, 3. C., ras ahot In the left arm and side t the Southern passenger station here Tuesday morning by Harry onee, an express messenger. Mystery surrounds the affair, no revocation or excuse for the shootag being given by either Jones or ^elder. The shooting took place t 2:30 oclok Tuesday morning, hortly after the arrival there of rain 39, and was witnessed by two tber express messengers, who delied any knowledge of the affair t first, but afterwards told about t after they were Lxrested. Felder. ho Is not. It is hoped, dangerously rounded, is in the Presbyterian hoeital. Jones Is In jail, where he will ?e held for the preliminary trial. The Record gives the following articulars of the shooting: The first person to reach Mr. Feler was Capt. F. B. Fishb'trn of Columbia, while Dr. A. B. Knowlton if Columbia was also near and gave he wounded man prompt medical ttention. The shooting occurred at he Charlotte union station about :46 a. n>. Mr. Felder, as well as lapt. Flsbburne and Dr. Knowlton, ras at the station expecting to come b Columbia on Southern railway rain No. 29, due to leave Charlotte t 3:30 a. m. While in the lunch oom Capt. Fishburne had been talkng with Mr. Felder, but left and rent Into the combination baggage ar to lie down. Mr. Felder, it seems, walked up o the door of the express car, vhere the express messenger was hecklng up his express with the tegro porter, and it is said that Mr. pel-ier asked if he could get aboard he car, as the passenger coacha had tot been opened and it wii cold out* ilde. What else passed" between hem is not Known, except that Mr. 'elder stated afterwards that he was hot. without warning, from the eatress car. Capt. Fisbburne was first to reach ho wonnded man. and having seen jr. .Knowlton at the station, sumnone J him. Mr. Felder was carried o the Stonewall hotel, at the station, until he could be taken to the losplta), and after some delay the imbulance arrived and he was car'lel to the Presbyterian hospital, tt Mr. Felder's request, Dr. Knowl on remained with him. returning to lolumbla on No. 35 instead of No. :9. and reaching Columbia at 10.30 .. m. Wednesday. Mr. Felder had been to High Point, f. C.. to place an order for furniure, and was on his way home. He s a member of a prominent family n the Orangeburg section. Dr. A. B. Knowlton. who was with^ <Ir. Felder just after he waa shot t Charlotte eariy in the morning, iltterly criticised the Charlotte poIce department when he Arrived in Columbia. He says three officers rere notified and given all the facts >ne after the other immediately fter the shooting, and afer they rere finally gotten to the scene act1 like a lot of dnmmies. He could et them to do nothing, he says; and he most important witnesses were doui 10 disappear, when he apeiled to Attorney Shannonhouse, rho began to get results as soon s he arrived. Dr. Knowlton says the shooting as most wanton and inexcusable, "elder was thirty feet away from the 1 oach when fired upon, had never eon In the coach and was walking 1 way when fired upon. Mr. Felder, 1 >r. Knowlton says, had been walk3g up and down the cement floor ' nder the shed between the fruit tand and the first track, waiting or train 29. He approached a ouple of express coaches which 'ere coming to Columbia when No. 9 arrived and asked a colored man i one if it would be allowable to i ome Into the coa'fh and keep warm i 111 the train arrived. I Mr. Felder says the colored man < aid him that this would be against i he rules and he went away. Just i efore being shot he had turned 1 bout to watch some antics the neroee were doing in the coach be < ad annroachefi K- ? 1 _ . ?MVM luvmuag' ; r came to the door and ordered ) tm away. He aaya he atarted Bway < rhen he was fired upon. < The bullet entered the right aide 1 tist under the arm, probably puneured the right lung and made Ita Tit at what la commonly known aa he breast bone. Dr. Knowlton could i ot estimate Mr. Felder'a chances of I ecovery before leaving Charlotte i hat morning. At Mr. Felder'a re- ' ueat Dr. Knowlton remained with i fr. Felder nntll the next train, 1 rwblch arrived in Columbia at 10.30 < . m. I Froxe Steamer's Whistle. Newa cornea from New York that he weather la so cold up there I hat it froze up the whistle of the < tallan liner Citta del Messina, &c- I ordlng to the report of her cap- 1 ?ln. Members of the crew, he said, i ?ent several hours thawing oot the i blstle by burning oil soaked waste ? nder U before the sht^ ronld make < c way up the harbor at New York. < i SEVEN UYES LOST Df A POUR-STORY COfCXNHATl TENEMENT DEATH TRAP. Toe Houe Ablaae With Kerry Occipaat Sleeping Firemen Carry Many Dorm Ladder* Safely. In a fire at Cincinnati that destroyed a tenement house shortly before daylight on Tuesday morning seven persons were killed and 30 Injured. The building was a veritable death trap. The On* Are escape was rendered useless by the flames and the emergency door, supposed to lead to safety, and ordered kept open by the Are department, was nailed shut. The building Is a four-story structure with tenants on every floor except the first. The hallways are lighted by kerosene lamps and In some way the lamp on the second floor was upset and in a very few minutes the dry woodwork in the hall was aflame. The blase shot npward. making It impossible for the tenants of the place to get out by way of the stairs. Borne of tbem Jumped out of the windows and were badly hurt. There were fifty persons In the house at the time. The first firemen to reach the scene saved several of them from the rear of the burning building. The captain of engine company No 4 carried down two bodies on the ladder and several women were found huddled together on the fourth floor. The ^bodies taken to the morgue were so badly burned that t-fenllflcation was almost impossible. Patrolman Clark and Trtnkler. who were the first upon the scene, picked up a blanket from in front of the building and yelled to the terrified people in the windows to Jump. Holding the blanket between them, they called to a woman on the second floor to lumn Into it. Ail the Jumped to Bafety the officers colled to a small girl who was on the verge of dropping trom a window on the third floor. The girl took one look at the outstretched blanket and jumped head first into. Both woman and child wer? badly burned and were quickly rushed to the city hospital. Two officers carried many of the tenants to safety over the neighboring roofs. OOBX YIELD AWARDED. John R. Dingle of Clarendon County Wins First Prize. A dispatch from Columbia sayr the first prize on yield in the State corn contest has been awarded to John R. Dingle, of Summerton. in Clarendon county, as also the fir.n prise.on points. His yield vas 166.7 buahels on one acre. This is the second State contest that has bee.' won by a Clarendon county farmer The total points made were 99. Tno first prize on yield is $175. Tea award was made at a meeting of the State Corn Contest, which is composed of Commissioner Watson. President P. H. Mell. of Clemson Coi lege, and D. N. Barrow. The second prize for yield and points went to A. Bascomb Usher, the young Marlboro iounty boy who produced 152 1-2 bushels on one acre. He will rece'.ve t75. The fire-acre contest was wou by J. M. Mouse of Bt. Matthews. The number of bushels produced was 500.5. This prise Is worth 9200. The second prise of the flre-acre contest was awarded to Thos. Taylor, of Richland county, who produced 251 bushels. This prise Is ISO. There were 156 entires In this year's contest, representing 36 counties of the State. Many of the contestants are boys. Of the total entries only fourteen compiled wltfi ail of the requirements. Many of the contestants failed to send In samples of their corn. The best ear of corn Bent in the opinion of the commission was tha' of H. K. Hayes, of Marlon county, who won second prise in last year's contest. A close second to Mr. Hayes in the quality of corn was sent by Usher, of Marlboro county. Captain Admits His Gailt. Capt. Thomas Franklin, U. 8. A., twice commended by Gen. ChafTee and Gen. Otis for distinguished service in China and at Manila, plead guilty a few days to a long series of petty embecslemenfs from the mess fund of the West Point cadets, as commlsslonary and treasurer of utmea cnaie? Military academy, and iras sentenced by Judge Hand. In the circuit court. In New York, to two years and six months in the federal penitentiary at Atlanta. Ga. His counsel gave notice that they would apply for a writ of error and reHew. Negro Identified. A dispatch from ThomaevMe, Ga.. nays Lucius Robinson, a negro, was Identified by the two young daughters of Mr. Jack Walkor as the man who confronted them In their home tnd after holding a pistol in their faces threatened to kill them If they screamed. He is In jail. The negro after frightening the girls fled One Killed, Throe Hart. One person was killed, one fatally Injured and two others badly bruls?d when the automobile In which hey were tiding tnrned turtle and plunged In a ditch near Atlanta. Ga.. l few days ago. "Dare DevH'" rosea, an amateur driver, waa V111?d and Ralph Kaplan, an employe )f an automobile agency in Atlanta, was most seriously Injured. COMING SOOTH New Lud if Praam far lUiam af # HER GREAT RESOURCES Her Undeveloped Uiwh, Mlaea ud Forests Are AUncUsf Emtevprislug Men of M?wu sad Tbote Willing to Take Advantage of Her Possibilities in Farming. "A greater nation through a greater South!" This Is the tocsin that the South is sounding today from Atlantic to Pacific and from the southermost everglades to the northern pines, says the New York American. The South wants men and money?men that her vaet resources may be given over to cultivation ana industry, and money for eatrprlse. that their products may feed the markets of the universe. She h&B produced a cotton crop this year which will net about $1,J00.000.000. Her grain will fill 800,000.000 bushels. Her total agricultural products will foot up nearly $2,500,000,000. Sho is njinlng 90,000,000 tons of bituminous coal. Her cotton mills are using nearly 1,000,000 bales of cotton a year. She commands the sulphur trade of the world producing nearly onehalf of the whole production of the world. Her ports are second to New York In their shipments. She is spending today $20,000, 000 In new cotton mills. Nearly a quarter million of people are swarming Into her rich country to help win for her the success that has been eo long com tufc. Her resources are withal but '^ginning to show their worth, for she has lacked In capital and the kind of labor necessary to bring her ?oil and opportunities to their full fruition. She has 40 per cent of all the timber lands In the United Btates. about 62,000 square miles; quarries that are rich In the most beautiful and useful stone, marvellous ores, and thousands of square miles of the most fertile and greatest pro-. lucing farm lands in the world. { Everywhere the railroads are nushing colonies and bolldlng their extensions, until u?e ye?f? hence It Is believed that every available mile of her lands will be %lthln eaay -each of some rood. Millions of dollars are being put Into her mines; other millions are going into her textile advantages. Along the line of one railroad alone 4 50 textile mills have been erected. Her phosphate beds are being worked to the fullest limit of thtl. present capital. Her tobacco crops are , enormouB, and In every spot touched by the tide of lnveetment springs forth a golden return greater than their Investors ever dreamed of. 1 With a population of nearly 28, I 000,000, or about a third ,rL- ' tal of the United States, she Is puttin? out in agricultural product alone the equal of all the States hi 1890. Nearly 92.000,000.000 will be spent by the railroads during the next ten years to add to her wealth. Everywhere the cry le going up tor better roads, and every State Is bending Its efforts to make the Southern roads the peers of those of any other States. "I do not believe that there Is any land on the face of the earth that equals, acre for acre, the lands of the South. It Is a greater prolucer than the land* In the north west, and?It Is immensely cheaper j "Then. too. there Is Its fairer climate and its easy markets; Its cheap freights, short hauls. Immediate sales, until you hav? an Ideal condition. Here, too, you have a land well w?tored bv go >-l w.itera, where artificial Irrlgr.tlc i may be reduced to a m; > I mum to produc marvellous p-l'i.'s Ooai Is nt h-a.}, railroad fa;il'."' m nrv go. J and water hauls first class. "You have water power for the 1 mills, which Is cheapest; cities with all modern things cloee at hand; a wideawake population both on form and In city, until the situation would , seem Ideal." Here are some of the facts as to what may be done on Southern lands: Peanuts hive recently be come a world staple. Virginia an t North Carolina produced this ve*f 5,457.400 bushels of them. Georgia melons are as famous the world over as the Rockyford cantaloupe. Georgia peaches are the best n the market. Florida's oranges and clt- rus fruits are being pushed hard by Its grape fruits, which stand more frost and bring better r.arket prices. taken all in all, than oranges. Of the tobacco, cotton crop, grains and such there is no space to dilate here?they are so much a part of ?he South that a sufficient knowl It was In this very cottai from Birmingham, Ala., 1 died of Fever. They had I son's Tonic cured them q Tha two physicians hers had 8 rwy obst&n were Italian, and lived on a creek 60 jar month, .landing, their temperature ranging thing tn vain. I persuaded tb.ro te lei met ?d matter and let the medJetn* go out tn a pt feet in all three eaee. wae immediate and pei wm no recurrence of the Fever. Write to TNK JOHNSON'S ?MILL I Southern States i tot ww machinery 2ib?s?lssi col ume A Feather i tli our system of < ^ we have many oth? ^ In cleaning and dye __* of drees goods, ant - the finest fabrics. moderate. posts ] THE W. S. C01 am Society street, Local and lx?> BOOZE POURING IN SUMTER. Bxpreee Company Opens Extra Office to Handle It. A special to The News and Courier from Bumter says "Since the closing of the State dispensary In Sumter on the 15th of November, the liquor handling business of the Southern Expirees Company has reached Buch large proportions that j It was found Impossible to handle the large uhlpments of liquor at the regular office. Hundreds of packages 'for personal use' come in on every train. The local manager j of the express company has been ' forced to open up a 'boose sub-station' on West Liberty street for the delivery of packages of liquor 'to be oalU^ TV. ~ 11 ? ?? .v., ?ur uquuiB ior immediate delivery are still handled In the regular way. The sub-station threw open Its doors to the thirsty public Wednesday with a stock on hand that would fairly rival the old grog shop, the county dlapensary. The floor of the store building was literally covered with pftckagcs of liquor of various sizes, shapes and quality, heralding the advent of another great moral Institution. It certainly eeemB that legislative prohibition In Sumter county Is a delusion and a snare." Senator Aldrlch says the 1A07 panic cost the country two billions. If It had not come as It did, the speculators would now be building a pyramid of values that would cost four billions when it toppled over. THK NEW FERTILIZER. A discovery of far-reaching tmpor tance to the farmers of the South !> the new fertiliser which has beer perfected on one of the islands nea< Charleston, 8. C. It hAS long been known that lime Is an essential foo for plants of all kinds arid that the? cannot live when It has been exhaust ed from the soil. It has also been known that old worn-out lands art extremely deficient In lime, and that toar, badly-drained lands have theli lime in a for mtbat is not usable b? growing cropa. Farmers' Bulletin No. 124, U. 8 r\?? ? ?.rcv?i.. 01 Agriculture, Bays: "Al the applications of lime Increased th? yields The best yields were obtained with the lime in the form of carbonate, the finely ground oye ter shell* standing first * Urnwith fertiliser was more profitsbl< than depending upon fertilise' alone." This new fertiliser which present: lime In its most usable form Is mad* by a new process of burning oystei shells and using a burner that can supply potash. The result Is a hlgt | grade fertiliser costing the consum ! er only |7.00 per ton. It reclaim* I worn-out laads In a marvelous man ner if applied broadcast two months ahead of ammonlated goods. It'v sweetening effects on sour lands I* almost magical. Charleston freUh' rates apply on this Dew fertilizer The factory Is located on Young'* Island, 8. C., but all letters should be addressed to E. L. Commtns, 8a!e* Agent, Meggetts, 8. C. Free descrlp tlve circulars will be sent to say onon request. We sill Bay Cow Peas EVERY DAT ^ILL JULY 16th. Quote us with samples for present shipment, or contract for future ship mente on? MIXED PEAS, 8TRAK1HT PEAS. IRON PEAS. Will bur 6 busbolB to a car. 97. U WIMiKT HEKD CO.. AaguHta, Ga. _ WOOD. WOW AND STtO. tOmAjoC^ko'AN??'/ frou?TA OA. ALBANY For AH KIttdm raffl^Vv^'luj Doe* Not Drip. Spl* Pin op in I,*. 10. M.to lb 1 Xzfcjffik^ COLUMBIA fcUFfLT CO Be In Brookslde, 15 miles that three Italians nearly ^een sick 3 months. Johnjulckly?read letter below: lirookaide, Ala.. May 4, 1903. at* caaea of continued Malarial Fever An da from my store. These oases ware of three from tQA to 104. The doctor* had tried ev?ry rj Johnson's Tonic. I removed ail the priotatn pottle aa a secular prescription. Theef"maneoc They recosarad rapidly and there B. TL flHIFLETT. ^ I nvni TONIO CO., Savannah. Oa. .1 sszssssstasaaaBg* Supply Comp*n> j] _guppii?? IB ilA. B.O. In n?<?* r 111 vui vap iurllng and dyeing feathers. >r feathers In onr cap. We ezos) ilng Olovee. Lace Curtains, all ktada 1 even Carpets. We nerer Injurs Our work la the best. Our prioe I will bring them. PLESTON CO. CHARLESTON, S. I IXstanc* 'Phone. ' ??????mmmmm?mmm CLASSIFIED COLUMN Red Polled Oatttov Berkshire Hegs and Augora Ooata. Breeders. W. R. Clifton, Waco. Texas. The Latest Books?Bend for onr 1st eat booklet describing them. 81ms Book Store.- Orangeburg, 8. C. Raleemen?Beet commission offer OB earth. New, all retailers, samples. Coat pocket. "Very Protta* able," Iowa City, Iowa. For Bale?One Llpplncott's fonnt and fixture*. Price reasonable; good location on Main street. W. H. Merchant, Granitevllle, 8. C. Wanted to Bay?Hides, Pars, Wool, beeswax, tallow, sorap Iron, cow peas. Write for prices. Craw. fnr.l Pn K no It 1 ft o. ? w., HVD-viv n?;auia 01., Augusta, Oa. Typewrtun?Special tow prices os rebuilt and second-band machines, all kinds, for fall trade. Wrtts for price list. General Supply Company, Dept. C, Augusta, On. If you are sick or ailing and bare failed to find relief, wrtts to me at once. Give name, age. sex, color of hair and eyes, moat troublesome symptoma. 4c postage. Dr. J. C. Datdorf, 89 dlag.. Grand Kapida, Mich. When medicine falls yon, I will take your case. Rheumatism, Indigestion. liver, kidney and sexual disorders permanently eradicated by natural means. Wrtto for literature, confidential, free and Interesting C. Cullen Howerton, P. 8., Durham, N. C. Vnnnor 1 jutiM and girls over 14 wears of age can secure steady and profit* able employment and be taught to make cigars. Will be pall while learning, good, cbeap board caa be secured near the factory. Any | girl can make from |6 to |12 per week (some much mors) after learning. We need 600 young ladles Immediately. Apply to 8el4enburg A Co., Opposite Union Dopot, Charleston, 8. C. PA v ?rr*nrxwi^??T? ~ ?? vuui iKuanvi^UUMH UK t'l liKDT \orording to HUtrment Iw??4 by the Mtchtg? Department at Health, It Cu Be Cirad ud Prevented. 1, the undersigned. hereby certify that I have buffered slightly for several years, and endared pains and spitting of blood from tuberculosis for the past year. Having taken the Saastamolnen Remedy for three months. I feel myself perfectly well. Two doctors, after careful eliminations, have pronounced me fully recovered. (Blgned) For testimonials and terms, wrtte .The Haastamotnen Remedy Co., Mouth Range, Mich. L M. Power. M. D.. In oharge. ttpectal Notice. Any one who will clip and send thin advertisement with $10 or P O. money order will receive a receipt for $26 to apply on a $96 organ, the balance to be paid aa follows: $16 Jan. 16th, 1910; $16 April lat, 1910, and $40 Oct. 16th, 1910. For further particulars and Illustration of this excellent organ, write Malone's Music House At once, as this is a Special Holiday Offer. Those who prefer pianos will recelvs special Indnceroents. Write for particulars. MALONE'S MUSIC HOUSE, Established 25 years, Columbia. S. C. PECANTREES Bndded and grafted from choices varieties. Lowest prlcea. KACLK PECAN COMPANY Ptttavlew, Ala. GREASE and Safest Lubricant mi MaeMosor Vish or Wmle Away IIUAjRlM rin?am1 Kent, s Bla A Hla a 1 Bmi Prim" ? * Calamhla, S. C. VjBSr