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V' . ' * > .v * j".'r> 'r& jPffiE SLOSH FUND V. L Cttk, IukmU bmktmu * > .p Swears Be Beard Edward Hises !# BARGAIN FOR LORIMER Ob the Stand, at Bribery Enquiry, Declares He Listened While Hines # Told Some One in Springfield to Spare No Expense to Get Lorimer Elected Senator. At Springfield, 111., C. F. Wiche, brothera-ln-law of Edward Hines. of Chicago, a lumberman Tuesday admitted before the senate bribery investigation committee that Hines sent Mm on a midnight mission to the Grand Pacific Hotel in Chicago in an effort to have W. H. Cook and Wil* 11am O'Brien, Minnesota lumbermen, evade Cook county process servers at * the time the charges that bribery was used In the election or winiam i.orImer to the United States senate were flrst published In May, 1910. ; Wlebe's statement followed the testimony of Wiltcr Cook of Duluth w ho, it was brough' out? had written a threatening letter to "Hines. Wiehe corroborated some of Cook's state ments, but denied the pungent part of his charge. Cook declared that he, was in a room at the Grand Pacific hotel, May 26, 1909, with William O'BrieD and Edward Hines when Hines telegraphed to some one called "Governor" at Springfield. During this telephone conversation by Hiues, Cook said that Hines declared that he was ready to take the next train to Springfield with all the money necessary to effect William Lorlmer's /^jplectlon to the senate. Lorimer's MMufctton occurred later that same B. Cogn, investigator for the ^R^^Hmlttee testified that he inter^H^^Hlwed William O'Brien in Duluth ^^^^^Bthin the last week and that O'Brien about the same story as Cook Hp^^ronly differing that O'Brien got the ^EJVlmpression that Former Gov. Richard Yatea was on the Springfield end of the telephone. Following the recital of Cook be"lore the Investigating cdlnn^ittee Gov. Chas. S. Deneen issued a statement " * *- - J ? A ?U ?* VoH rm wnicq tie qwihicu lull u? neve at anytime held such a conversation with Hines. Former Gov. Hines also denied that he ever had any such conversation with Hines as that related by Cook. Wlehe stated to the committee that he, although not In the room when ^^^Hlnea got the Springfield ca41, believLor g?E M e. Washington toT^^^P'Wr^lIines ssid he had "put in" several telephono calls to Springfield on that day but did not know whom Hines was calling. Hines at a previous ^BjHearing testified that he taittea wuu Gov. Deneen on that morning from the Continental and Commercial National bank. Cook declared that he answered the telephone in his room at the Grand Pacific when the call came for Hines. ? \ "I understood the central girl to say, 'Here's Governor* or 'The governor of Springfield for Hines.' " He then related the conversation as he remembered it as follows: "Hines took down the receiver out of my hand and he in the phone. He asked: 'Hello, hello, helI lo. lathis you, governor? Well, I just left President Taft and Senator Al drlch last night in Washington. Now they tell me that under no consldera tion shall Hopkins be returned to the senate. Now, 1 will be down on the next train. Don't leave anything unj^^B done. I will be down on the next train prepared to furnish all the money required. Now, don't stop ct anyBHK thing: don't leave anything undone; I will be down on the next train. Or ^^^B^words to that effect, repeated over hree or four times." I Jook was specific regarding the ^^^^Buiatter of money (being mentioned ^^f^knd on cross examination repeated ot the conversation. On of the Grand Pacific hotel ^^|^H|^reHatlon V Hines Wiehe "Why, the ecnversatlon was subnrirtirallv as follows: sranuaii* ? 4I have just talk-d with the governor In the long distance telephone ami he assures me he will do what you ask. You know what the administration wants. Now, leave no 6tono unto be elected. I will get down to Springfield if necessary in the morning.' "And when he got through talking he turned to the people in the room and said: " 'I have just been talking to "Senator" Lorimer.' " Weihe stated that he, O'Brien. Cook, k Isaac Baker and Hines were present at the time. Weihe asked to be allowed to question Cook and was allowed to do so. He charged Cook with trying to blackmail Hines and the Weyhauser lumber Interest. Cook admitted that he had senl a letter to F. E. Wyerhauser an<1 also to Wiehe in which he threatened to tell what he knew of the Lorimei matter unless they agreed to settle 8 flight among the stockholders of th< * Virginia and Rainey Lake Lumbei conipany. These letters were pro duced by Cook, who also teetiflec that Edward Hines Lumber coi i,?an\ held $130,00.0 of Cook's notes anc mortgages. Oook also testified that he ant Henry Turrish of Duluth met .Mr Hines going through the hotel loDb> in May, 1909, shortly before th< election of Lorimer. "Mr. Turrisl asked him," said Cook, "how he wa; getting on down lb Washington. 'Oh, he said, 'I am having a hell of ? old Stephenson." After I elected him old Spethenson. After I elected him he has gone down to Washington anc started working there for free lum ber. 1 had a terrible time g< uire him lined up." Then he went on anc told about what a time he had witt the Southern Democrats. He said h< B would have them all fixed up todaj and tomorrow they would flop and h< would have.to go and fix them al brer again. < "Mr. Turrish asked him he* thej were getting along with the senator' OUTLOOK FOR COTTON FORTY-TWO MILLION BALES REQUIRED TO CLOTHE All the People of the World When They Become Civilized and Wear Clothes.. "To clothe the whole of humanity would require 42,000.000 bales of cotton each year." This statement vat made by President Hobbs of the National Association of Cotton M nufacturers, at its recent annual r:e.*ting in Boston. Mr. Hobbs. said that, of the 1,500,000,000 inbabitauli* of the world only 500,000,000 are completely clothed, while "50,000,000 are only partially clothed and 250,000,000 are practically not '.iothed at all. As civilization advance, the proportion of the partially clothed and the unclothed will decrease, and this with the increase of the population in civilized countries, will call for an increased supply of cot on. The cotton belt of the United States now furnishes fully two-thirds of the world supply of cotton, and, as the demand increases will be be called upon greatly to increase Its annual production. In speaking of the cotton situation President hcdds says: rrum iu? present acreage the production could be doubled if proper methods wore used." There must be Improved methods of cultivation, a better method of pcking a "general improvement in every step and pfocess between the planting of the seed and the delivery of the cotton to the mill." "We have drifted too long," he said, and "the time is now ripe for concerted and determined action if we are to maintain our commanding position." While the^rest of the world is "actively trying to find means to increase the production of cotton," we "continue in the old ways of producing and handling," and little improvement has been made in many years. It is estimated that only about one-third of the available area is cultivated, and if scientific knowledge were applied to natural conditions of soil and climate, "we can well raise 50.000,000 bales" or cotton a year and clothe all mankind. It is a clear understanding of this condition that has led th<* Southern Railway company to organize a Cotton Culture Department to work in co-operation with the United States agricultural department and the agricultural authorities of the Southern states, to keep^the cotton production of the South abreast of the demand hy bringing about the daption of those cultural methods which will result in larger average yields per acre, thus increasing the profitableness of cotton growing and leaving surplus lands to be devoted to other crops and the growing of live stock. It is clearly more profitable to a farmer to produce fifty bales of cotton on fifty acres than to produce the same amount on one hundred acres, for he tfill receive the same amount for his cotton and yvill have fifty acres for other uses. Under ordinary circumstances, every increase yield of cotton per acre reduces the cost of production per pound and yields the farmer a larger margin of profit between the cost of growing his crop and the selling price. TIIK TYUHOII) FLY. The Pesky Mosquito and How to Destroy llitn Entirely. An interesting and instructive bulletin issued by the state board of health deals with the mosquito and the house fly or the "Typhoid Fly." In the bulletin Is it pointed out that the mosquito needs no introduction in South Carolina. "A human fiend," says the bulletin. "who would enter our stroes and markets by night and after gorging himself, leave poison in all the remaining food to spread suffering, disease and death throughout the community would l?e execrated, pursued and torn to pieces by an outraged populace?yet a useless insect, th< fly. playing his role to perfection is living among us constantly and is * * *? ? ? ? "An eon r\ f resaraea merely n? ? num ok.hv*annoyance often as a subject of jest." It is pointed out in the bulletin that it is not beyond the bounds of possibility to abolish the mosquito entirely the prime prerequisites to such an undertaking being the participation ot every man, woman and child in the campaign. "The chiel important fact." says the paper about mosquitoes is this: without tht existence of stamling water theii breeding is impossible." lirings Rig Price. The first book ever printed from movable type Mond..;/- ought the highest price evt r paid for any book. The prize was the "Guttenberg Rible." the purchaser Henry K Huntington, of Los Ang< les. and th< price was $.">0,tH>0. it was sold ii , New York at the Hoe library sale Five to Hang. t At Oklahoma City five negroes I were sentenced to hang from th< I same scaffold on June 21, for th? muredr of W. H. Archie, who wai l robbed and killed March 9 The Lumber Trust buncoes th< - consumers of lumber out of $59, 1 000.000 per year, and not $5,000,00' r as we stated a few days ago. I ial deadlock. 'Well,* he said, it i; 1 all fixed. I will tell you confidential . ly ^orimer will be the next Senator r We had Houteii fixed for the sena 1 torship. He had promised to work t< i keep the $2 tariff on lumber, but i when the lumber schedule caine u] before the house ways and mean i committee, he was working for fre , lumber. I immediately took it u , with Senator Aldrieh. and so decide I that we had to have another man, - man whom we could depend on. I : was decided that I should have a tall i with Lorimer I did. Lorimer ha } agreed to stand pat He will liste: ? to reason. I have got it all fixed; h f will be the next senator from Illinois ? "That was the substance of th 1 conversation." Cook said he "inferred it was Ste p phenson from Winconsin" to whon Hinee alluded. u AGREE ON PEACE England aid United States Will Arbitrate All Differences. ADVOCATES OF PEACE Most Significant Mooting Held In the Venerable Guild Hall in London. ?Resolutions .Adopted Hedging Support to Complete Anglo-American Arbitration. What Premier Asquith described as "this venerable Guild Hall," without whose seal of approval no popular movement in London, England, is launched, witnessed Friday a meeting for the adoption of resolutions pledging the city ?o the support of Anglo-American complete arbitration. The lord mayor of London in his scarlet robes and with the mace in front of him. held the center of a temporary stage. On his right was the prime minister, at his left former Premier Halfour, leader of the opposition in the House of Commons, while grouped about the mayor were the Archbishop of Canterburg, the Archbishop of Westminster, Lord Loreburn. the lord high chancellor; Lord Strathcona, high commissioner of Canada; Sir Joseph G. Ward, premier of New Zealand, and other notables. Over their heads the I nion Jack and Stars and Stripes were entwined. Mr. Asquith and Mr. Balfour spoke eloquently of the treaty first proposed by President Taft, declaring *hat it would mark a new era in civilization, but both pointedly disclaimed that a peace pact between Great Britain and the United States providing for the submission of all differences to arbitration would mean an alliance between the two countries. Mr. Balfour warned his hearers, than whom, he said, none in the world felt more the burden of preparing for war. that the treaty would not mean the immediate reduction cf armaments. The meeting represented the Democracy of England rather than the aristocracy. Among those on the platform were the Bishop of Hereford, the Kail of Aberdeen, lord lieutenant of Ireland: Sir Geo. H. Reid, high commissidner of Australia: agents of all the other British colonies, along with representatives of the banks, the railways and the steamship companies of England. Premier Asquith spoke in pari: ^'The unique situation which we have met to recosnize and welcome has not been organized or engineered by the apparatus of diplomacy. The seed which the president of the United States sowed fell on ground unpre pared to receive It. That wntcn h few years ago, even a few months ago, might have been regarded a^ the dream of idealists, has not only passed into the domain of practical statesmanship, but has become the settled purpose of tvfo great democracies. "The profound significance of the new departure is that, between Great Britain and the United States whatever the gravity of the issue and the magnitude of the interests involved; whatever poignancy of feeling may he aroused of war as a possible sj'iution, and the substitution of argument for force; and the supersession by judicial methods of the old ordeal of battle." After declaring that their proposed agreement implied no menace to the rest of mankind and did not pro vide for an Anglo-American alliance aggressive or defensive, the premier continued: "Hut we may hope and believe that i other things will follow. It is not for us to distate or to preach to oth er nations, but if the United States I and Great Britain renounce a war a ; step will be taken of immeasurable and incomparable significanse in the onward progress of humanity." .Mr. Asqulth then moved the fob 1 lowing resolution: ! "That this meeting of citizens of > London assembled in Guild Hall cori diallv welcomes the proposal of the i United States in favor of a general ' treaty of arbitration between that country and the British empire and pledges its support to the prinicples of such a treaty as serving the high' est interests of the two nations and i as tending to promote the peace 01 the world." 1 The resolution was received with 1 tremendous applause, which continu. ed until Mr. Balfour rose to second it i The opposition leader said that Anglo-American arbitration was nearer fruition at this moment than ever before in history. Some, he said, regarding it as an idealistic i dream and believed that when the t clash of conflicting interests came all paper barriers would be swept away UI1U II*.- VV/UllIi UVU . "It is true that t is follv to make ? international law fro far in artv met i of public o|tinion. I cannot imapint . a more hitter blow to <i\ilization that if. or 1 will rather say, when such f treaty was made either party shouk s break it. Hut as far as I can reai ? opinion on both sides of the Atlantu ? I cannot endorse these ]>essimisti< g views. I believe that the great mas: of diplomats can embody this feelin' in a treaty. I do not believe tha , when the stress of international dif Acuities comes it will be broken, j "Some ask if public opinion ii thus, why a treaty is necessary, do not believe that these logical di ; lemmas represent what actually hap pens. I grant that paper formula: are useless in themselves, but if the: _ represent the settled convictions o 0 the people they are valuable." I International agreements with n< p jmore power of enforcement had mad< s j warfare more civilized in the past e the speaker said. p ? * * d A Fifty-Cent Word, a A little boy had got into the habi t of saying "Darn," of which his moth k er naturally did not approve, s "Dear," she said to the little boy n "here is ten cents: it is yours if yot e promise me not to say 'Darn' again.' >. "All right, mother." he said, as In e took the money, "I promise." As he lovingly fingered the mone; - a hopeful look came Into his eyes j and he said: "Say, mother, I knot a word that's worth fifty cents.'' WOMAN IS BOBBED "BUILDING INSPECTOR" BADGES WORN AS BLIND. As Her Boy Cowers Under Death Threat Robbers Flee with $2,000 They Find. Two men in the uniforms of building inspectors and wearing the gold badges issued by the Building Department knocked at the door of Angelo Mayo's fiat on the second floor of No. 307 East Eleventh street, New York City Tuesday afternoon. When Mrs. .Mayo opened the door the men said they wanted to inspect the pHce. To questions Mrs. >m>o repiied that the seven rooms were occupied by herself, her hushand and their eight children. The men looked closely at the fire escapes, even testing its strength. "Now, how about the sink?" asked one of the men. She took the men to the sink. One crawled tinder the examined it * carefully. Then they went to the bedrooms. ?>lrs. Mayo explained that two of the rooms were occupied by her four daughters, two others by her four sons and another by herself and husband. Besides there was a parlor, dining room and kitchen. When '.Mrs. Mayo was showing the men about the rooms, her son Rocco, aged nine years old, came home from school. He followed his moth ed for a time and then went into a front room. "What do you keep in this uureau?" one of the men asked Mrs>. Mayo as he shook a big chiffonier. "That contains the clothes of my children, my husband and mys?lf," was the answer. Just then one of the fellows seized her by the throat and bore her lo the floor, choking her so that she could not breathe. Both drew revolvers. The second man wet a sponge with chloroform and pressed it against Mrs. Mavo's nose, holding it there until she was only half conscious. Then he produced a vial containing a white fluid and tried to force the stuff down her throat. Hut she clenched her teeth and the liquid poured over her dress. Again the chloroform sponge was applied, and when Mrs. Mayo became unconscious the intruders got strips of cloth and twine from the bureau and tied h?r hands and feet. When they were at this Itocro came to look for his mother. A revolver was thrust into his face and he was told he would be killed if he cried out. By that time both men had masks over their faces. While one of them held the boy at. revolver's point the other began a search of the flat. First he procured all the clothing from the wardrobe, tying it up in furniture coverings which he tore from chairs and^ofas. Then he searched drawers. For ten years Mrs. Mayo has been secretiy saving money given ?to hei by her husband for household expenses. She wanted to give him a pleas-_a J i? fntn'ro In am BUri'l IOC III uic lirai iuiu.v.. ... a bottom bureau drawer was a stockwhich contained $2,000 in bills ranging in denomination from $1 to $10. Mrs. Mayo was positive no one knew of the presence of this money. The robber drew out the drawer, turned it upside down and the old stocking fell out. He began to stuff bills in his pockets. So great was h!3 excitement that whe? $125 dropped on the floor he did not stop to grab it up. His companion pulled a $500 pair of earrings from the unconscious woman's ears. Then the men turned to the boy and told him he would be killed if he made an outcry. They walked out and, it is believed, ran to the roof and escaped by way of the adjoining building. Mrs. Teresa Massaro, a neighbor, was the first to reach Mrs. Mayo. She untied the victim's hands and removed the chloroform sponge. Then the police and doctors were called. Mrs. Mayo said one of lmr assail1 ants seemed to be about .15 years old, weighed 200 pounds, had dark hair slightly flecked with gray and apparently was a German. He was addressed as "IMll" by his companion, who was about .10. with light hair and eyes and with an Irish brogue. HKIMVS DKIIT TO "PETE." c,?i? ?r r<irmpr slave Hero Acnuitted of Murder. i At New York James W. 03borne, former assistant district attorney, whose life was saved by "Pete." a slave in his father's family in Charlotte, X. when he was a boy, re. paid the debt Monday afternoon by winning for "Pete's" son a verdict o( acquittal on a murder charge. The ; jury was out less than fifteen niini titos, following an earnest plea ol , Mr. Osborne. The defendant was . Edward Osborne, "Pete" having , adopted the name of his former masI ter. who was charged with killing another negro during a quarrel. He pleaded self-defence. New View of the I-'ly. ? The "busy, curious, thirsty fly' i has at last found a defender, lie if i Prof. S. A. Forbes. Illinois State en 1 tomol g:st, who has experimenter 1 with the "fly problem" in Chicago foi ; two years. c "Don't swat the fly; swat the per s son who gives it opportunity to uc r deadly work as a disease carrier,' t said Prof. Forbes. "The fly, instear - of being evil, is an agent for good "The presence of the fly points tf s an unsanitary condition?that tlx I householder is not taking proper c ir< - of his garbage or is careless with . his table scraps. Take warning o s the flv. It will save doctors' hills r Fly carried disease is the punishmer. t for not heeding sanitary laws anc the fly's warning." ) ? Fifteen Drowned. The steamer Charles Pzat, operat * ing between Manila and Corregigor foundered in a typhoon Sunday. I is estimated that fifteen persons wen t drowned. Fl^bc-men rescued i nurntar of the crew and passengers One American is missing. i Draped by Train. Tuesday n' ht Mr. S. II. Oeorge e of Augusta, was painfully injured a 'M'ontmorenci hv falling from a train y While his Jnlules are very painfu >, they are no' thought to be of < e serious natnrr His body was drag ged for some distance. ' MINERS KILLED 1 * 1 Explosion in Coal Mine Brings Death to i ' Underground Workers TWENTY THREE IN MINE Disaster Occurs at Elk Garden, W. Va., and Cause so Far Unascertained?Rescuers Re^ln Work at Once with no Hope of Finding Any of the Victims Alive. At Elk Garden, W. Va., twenty three miners are entombed n Ott mine, No. 20, of the Davis Coal and Coke Company, as the result of of debris that has thus Tar deterred the progress of the rescuers. It can not be learned yet whether the explosion was caused by dust or gas. Officials of the company say they have never known tnelr mines to he gaseous. As soon as the accident became known. Superintendent Robert Grant organized a rescue corps of the miners off duty, and these attennted to enter the mine after notifying the officials of the coal company at Cumberland, Md. The rescue parties had not advanced for into the workings before they discovered it would take several days to dU through the heaps of roof coal and slate that had been loosened by the explosion. It was then decided to effect an entrance nearer the probably point of the explosion by cutting through the wall of an adjoining mine owned by the same company. Late Manday afternoon the rescuers had penetrated to No. 20 mine, at a point about 4,000 form the outside entry. They still remained about the same distance to go before reaching the miners. The Ott mine. No. 3 0, is almost directly under the town of Elk Garden, which is on a hill. The mouth of the mine is about half a mile from the town. In striking contrast to the usual mine explosions, the victims in this case, with one exception art Americans. The mine, usually employs 200 men on the day shtrt, ana aDoui the name number at night. A temporary suspension of work, however, required fewer men in the mines, else the casuaiities might have been greater. After penetrating about a mile down the main entry, the rescuers found the body of a man not yet identified. It was crushed beneath a fall of slate, as though the roof had crumbled as he was running out of the mine. The discovery of this body leads the rescue party to believe that none of the others are alive. Several yards beyond, the passage was completely blocked by the collapse of the roof. Behind and under this fall, it is believed, the bodies of the miners lay. Havoc which was wrought in the mine would Indicate that the explosion wan terrific. For a square mile or more the slate and coal was slit and props were splintered, letting the roof fall in large portions. srx ECLIPSE ON* FRIDAY. Interesting Phenomenon Will He Observed During Afternoon. A total eclipse of the sun will take place Friday afternoon which will prove an interesting phenomenon occurring at an hour when with fair weather conditions, it will be generally seen. Occurring as it does just before sundown, the whole progress of the eclipse can not be watched from this section of the United State, because of the setting of the sun before the shadow passes off; but there will be ample time to see the effect of the total shutting off of the sun's light. There will be a greater degree of darkness probably than at any other time of the day because of the nearness of the sun to the horizon, and the consequent lessening of the sun's rays in the air. The refraction will not be so great, and it will be night time in the day. The chickens will co to roost early and they will have I a long night. The eclipse will be visible in a large portion of the United States. The sun will set eclipsed east of a line drawn from Pittsburg- to Matagorda Hay, Texas. Washing on is at . the northern Atlantic boundary of the . area of visibility. The ellipse will be invisible north of a line drawn from Portland. Ore., through Mil. waukee and Pittsburg to Washington. The eclipse will be very small in the > Western and Middle States. At San ; Diego less than one-half of th<> sun's : face will be obscured, whils at Chica. go less than one-sixteenth will be ; eclipsed. "CAUSAIt HEAD" Tl RXEI). I'll II i Oils I'eak of Blue IMrige Suffers from Earthquake. A dispatrh from Asheville, N*. C'., ' says belated reports from the mountain section of Transylvania County state that "Caesar's Head." a famous peak of the Blue Ridpe, about twenty * miles from Brevard, had been overturned by the earthquake shocks ' which is said to have been felt in various sections of Wes-.ern North } Carolina Friday nicht. "Caesar's ? Head" has been one of the show places of Western North Carolina 1 since this country was first developed. ^ and it would be greatly missed by visitors if the earthquake has really r destroved it. 1 . , , Pullman Car Hurried. The Pullman ear Yucca, attached to *he Palmetto Limited, of the Atlantic Coast Line, was destroyed by fire Thursday morning, while the c train was standing at. the station at ' Rocky Mount, N. C., and M. J. Prob1 stein, a traveling salesman, of New York, was suffocated, and Flagman J. C. Russ and Mail Transfer Clerk l W. F. Ireland were badly burned. Gas from a leaking tank under the . Pullman was ignited by the flagman's t lantern. Ten passengers were asleep . on the car, four of them ladies. 1 i They saved only a part of their bei j longings. Probstein was a young -'man and had only been married four | months. I ajfrtiTf I CLASSinED COLUMN For Sale-? Pure King Cotfbn Seed at Poultry Yard, Darlington. 8. S. For Sale or Rent?two story brick store. For particulars apply to S. A. Lowrance, Mooresville, N. C. For Sale?Thoroughbred Berkshire | pigs. Write for prices. L. R. Duffey, Humboldt, Tenn., Route No 11. Money Maker Cotton Improved and ^elected by T. J. Klrven Is the best. Seed at $1 per bushel. T. J. Klrven, Providence. S. C. For Sale?Summers Improved Cotton Seed, Peterkln variety. Very prolific and fine line. $1.00 per bu. Dr. S. J. Summers, Cameron, S. C. Wanted?Poplar logs for export, 24 inches and i^p in diameter, 10 feet and up in length. Inquire H. E. Glaeser, Box 251, Florence, S ,C Guernsey Bull three years old; heifer six weeks. Prices $100 each. For pedigree and all particulars, apply S. A. Lowrance, Moores ville, N. C. i Some Rare Bargains in cheap lands in southwest Georgia, the comlq,g section of Georgia. For particulars write to Robert E. L. Spence, Newton, Ga. For Sale?S. C. R. I. RedB, White and Brown Leghorns, Black Langshang, Plymouth Rocks. Eggs for setting, 15 for $1. M. B. Grant, Darlington, S. C. For Sale?Fine lot highest quality Duroc' Jerseys, ready for immediate shipment. Males and females, not akin. Address L. L. Hart, Holly Hill, S. C. May berry's Chicken Remedy for Gaps, Roup and Cholera. Satisfaction guaranteed. Postpaid, 25c. Telia how to get future supply free. Guy Mayberry, Newberry, Ind. Eggs in incubator lots or single sittings from S. C. Reds, $1.50 per 15; $8.00 per hundred. Nice cockerels, $2.00 each. Eugenia Hammond, North Augusta, S. C. Pain?Why suffer at all? My remedy gives quick and sure relief. Used many years in my private practice. Never fails. By mail, 25c, $1.00. Address, Dr. Strieby, Swarthmore, Pa. . 4,000 acres, 2 1-2 miles R>\, 1,000 acres in cultivation, 50 tenant houses, good barns, excellent fences; 3,000 acres timber; $20 per acre. Harris Realty Co., Clarendon, Ark. Feather Beds?Mail us $10 and we will ship you a nice, new 36-pound feather bed and G-pound pair pillows, freight prepaid. Turner & Cornwall, Feather Dealers, Charlotte, N. C, S. ('. Rhode Island Beds?Heavy hens sired by 11-pound cock. Mated to finest strain cockrels. Lay all winter. 15 selected eggs, $2. No fowls for sale. J. M. Norfleet, Tarboro, N. C. Dropsy C ired?Shortness of breatn relieved 'n 3 6 to 4 8 hours. Reduces swelling in 15 to 20 day?. Call or write Collum Dropsy Remedy Company, Dept. O 512 Austell Bldg., Atlanta Ga. Buys?Agent!*?Girls?Sell staple articles, and receive Camera or National League Ball and Glove free. Write today. Reliable Supply Co., Dept A2?10528 Hudson Ave., Cleveland O. Agents Wanted?The easiest tool on the market td sell. A long felt want. The Little Gem Lawn Mower Sharpener. It will pay you to investigate. Gem Mfg. Co., North Vernon, Ind. Porto Ricos are good as gold and just as yellow. Fine keeper, one of the very best yielders and early. Wins wherever tried. Plants $1.S0 per 1,000, now ready. F. M. Morris & Sons, Ona, Fla. Dohhs' Single Comb Rhode Island Reds and "Crystal" Wnite Orpingtons win and lay when others fall, stock and eggs for sale. Send for mating list. G. A. Dobbs, Box B. 24, Gainesville, Ga. Wanted?Men and ladies to take three months practical course. Expert management. High salaried positions guaranteed. Write for catalogue now. Charlotte Telegraph School, Charlotte, N. C. l."> Eggs. $1; 30, $1.75; Rose and S. C., R. I. Reds, Silver Laced Wyandottes, S. C. Rlack Mlnorcas, S. C. Rrown and White Leghorn, Wyandottrs, trio $5 from 1st prize. O. F. Eller, Miller's Creek, N. C. Wanted?Men to take thirty days practical course in our machine shops and learn automobile business. Positions secured graduates, $25 per week and up. Charlotte Auto School, Charlotte, N. C Wanted?Rookkeepers, stenographers, clerks, write us if desirlni employment. We place competenl husiness help and are not able tc supply demand. Carolina Audit & System Co., Skyscraper, Columbia S. C. For Sale?Esps from Rhode Islanc Reds, Rarred and Ruff Plymouth Rocks, Cornish Indian Games $1.50 per 15; Rrown Leghorns J 1.00 per 15. Extra fine birds Dr. S. J. Summers & Sons, Cameron, S. C. The South Carolina Cherry Red Herd of Duroe-.Iersey Swine?Will booI< oders for 3 0 pigs May, June and July delivery. Prices, cash with oder, $8.00, eight weeks old; $10 twelve weeks old. Pedigrees furnished free. Pudding Swamp Stock Farm, Walter T. Gfeen, Proprietor, Shiloh, S. C. For Sale?120 acres good land, 3C i acres cultivation, dwg 6 rooms entire tract can be cultivated, neai good school and church, 1 miU shipping point, only 23 miles famous Hot Springs; only $12.50. j, | Elmo Young, Malvern, Ark. . / LEE'S HEADAC NEURALC Safely Surel Corel Headache and Neuralgia oua testimonials on Hie In our office Read the following: I have been a constant sufferer could not get any relief until It ha d I tried Lee'i Headache and Neuralgia lief. I heartily endorse It as the bes t I (Signed) H Sold everywhere. Price 25c and 60c. Rurwell & Dunn C WANTED YOUNG Four to six months requl MEN Personal Instruction. IN AND paro or money refunded. WOMEN LESSONS BY M <?outl?er9 Conjnje Calhoun & Meeting Sts. Wilmington, Winston-Salem, Salisbu r> dorsed Business College in the South i When Medicines Fail, will take your case. Diseases of Stomach, Bowels, Kidneys, Liver, Lungs and debility (either sex) permanently eradicated by Natural Methods. Interesting literature free. C. Cullen Howerton, Durham, N. C. Do you suffer from Blood, Liver or Kidney trouble? If so, send for I free sample of "OUR STANDARD REMEDY". Cure guaranteed. Treatment XI.00. Address A. E. Butler, Agt., Std. Med. Society, Hampetead Sqr., Charleston, S. C. Wanted?Hardwood logs and lumber. We are cash buyers of poplar, ash, cottonwood, cypre68 and oak lum ber. Also poplar, cedar, walnut, dogwood and persimmon logs. Write for specifications. Savannah Valley Lumber Co., Augusta, Ga. Bargain for Quick Sale?Forty-eight shares 7 per cent preferred stock, Fountain Inn Manufacturing company, Fountain Inn, S. C. Forty shares common stock Simpsonville Cotton Mills, Simpsonville, S. C. Address, Quick, box 475, Durham, N. C. Good Live Agents wanted In every town to sell a meritorious line of medicines extensively advertised and used by ever family and In the stable. An exceptional oppor tunity for the rigni parties to make good money. Write at once for proposition to L. B. Martin, Box 110, Richmond, Va. Wanted?Every man, woman and child in South Carolina to know that the "Alco" brand of Sash, Doors and Blinds are the best and are made only by the Augusta Lumber Company, who manufacture everything in Lumber and Millwork and whose watchword ie "Quality." White Augusta Lumber Company, Augusta, Georgia, for prices on any order, large or small. Don't Delay Longer?In providing your home with a good piano or or -?an. Doubtless, you have promised your family an instrument. No home is complete without music, and nothing is so inspiring and cultivat-l ing. Music helps to drown sorrows, and gives entertainmet for the chil-' dre, and keeps them at home. This Ij our 27th year of uninterrupted success here, hence we are better prepared than ever to supply the best pianos and organs and will save you money. Write us at once for catalogs and for our easy payment plan and prices. Malone's .Music House, Columbia, 8. C. For Sale?Do you want to make a large cotton crop? Do you want o plant a variety that stands j thicker in the drills tnan any | other? Do yon want to plant a variety that will turn out more lint than any other? I)o you want to plant a cotton that will stand more wet and more dry weather than any other? Do you want to plant a cotton with longer lint than most short varieties? Then plant Toole's Prolific cotton seed and you will certainly be pleased when you gin this this cotton. These seeds are sound and well matured. For sale by J. A. Burton, Newberry, S. C. NKGROKS BOYCOTT WHITES. Women Driven Off for Washing for White IVople. .Spartanburg letter to The State says according to a story told Magistrate R. J. Gantt certain negroes in t the county, angered because they de-l * ' * 8?? "r oHnmntoH ' Hare Gary tiist s crime ui ?uCu.r? : criminal assault was not sufficiently heinous to warrant the death penalty, . and because they think sufficient ef, fort has not been made to apprel hend Bam Davis, a white man, accused of having assaulted a little negro girl, have organized themselves into a society to prevent the ne. gro women from laboring in white families. The story was told by a negro woman, who claims she was I driven from her home, near Glen. dale, because she washed for ^hite I people. She gave the names of the , negro men who threatened her. and three of the six, she said, were In ! the mob, were arrested and lodged , in jail. When Man May Slap Wife. A man Is justified In slapping bis ) wife for going through his pockets, , is the opinion of Justice M. C. Lee, of the Superior Court, of New Jer( sey. Judge Lee made this ruling in ia divorce suit brought by Elizabeth I England against her husband, John |E. England. j STe"and ilA REMEDY. y Speedily no matter what the cause. Numer? bear ui out la thli statement from headache for 12 years an! run its course or take morphln* Remedy and found permaneat r? thins I have ever tried. . A. GANDY, Hartsvllle, 9. 0. Manufactured by i Charlotte, N. C. *ERS rENOGRAPHERS TELEGRAPHERS 3MEX AND CIVIL SERVICE HELP, red to make necessary preparation. )SITI0X8 secured for all who preWrlte for full information. [AIL IF DESIRED. reiki ?cl?ooI , Charleston, 8. C. k Durham, N. C. The highest enAtlantic. DON'T SUFFER WITH Cuts, Bruises Strains and Sprains, but apply Noah's Liniment. It is antiseptic and will take the poison and soreness out quickly, when all else fails. Noah's Liniment will save any amount of pain and can be taken internally for Colic, Cramps, etc. Nothing better for Toothache. Noah's Liniment is the best remedy for Rheumatism, Sciatica, Lame Back, Still Joints and Muscles, Soro ThroaLColds^B Strains, Sprains, Cuts, Bruises, Colic, Cramps, Neuralgia, Toothache, 1**3 and all Nerve, Bone j&lQk. ~aI K'^ and Muscle Aches and Ifo^jifcltl I sf Pains. The genuine has iWC'-VijJ Noah's Ark 011 every ? package and looks like [TrVTTVj BjgJ this cut, but has RED I11 band on front of pack- Illf^llW age and " Noah's List. ||TTj|TTjT|| ^ moot" always In RED Km Ink. Beware of Imlta- | ""s.'scrTl tlona. Large bottle, 25 w cents, and sold by all ""y* I ??j dealers in me d I c 1 n e. jrSriEirS1 l ''x Guaranteed or money IVS refunded by Noah ? mm mam I'1# Remedy Co., Inc., ?ji? Richmond. Va. [ tettBad ^ MURDER MYSTERY VEX;HO FOI'XD Wm'NDKIt IN <KLI.AH OF A BITLl)l\(>. He Hied on Tuesday and the Spartanburg Authorities Are Investigating the Cane. The Spartanburg Journal says on Friday morning Clarence Wlngo, colored, was found in an unconcious condition in the cellar of one of the new buildings on North Church street. He died at the People'^ Hospital Tuesday morning as the result of the mysterious wounds he received. An inquest was held over his body Tuesday afteinoon in the Floyd undertaking establishment, and the Jury returned a verdict that he came to his death trom causes unanown 10 them. I About six o'clock Friday mornirg Latis Haynes, a negro porter in Mr. Green's office, in coming through one of the new buildings, heard a noise as if someone was struggling for breath, and, after tracing the noise, found Wingo down in the elevator shaft. Help was called and the injured negro was taken to te hospital. Dr. G. A. Bunch was called in an.l found two dangerous wounds in the head, the skull broken on top and the left Jawbone broken. Foul play was suspected and Sheriff White and the police made a diligent search in the hope of unearthing some clue that would lead to a possible assailant. Dr. Bunch said that on two occasions Wingo regained consciousness ^ long enough to say that "Good hit him." Upon investigation, it was found that he had been going with a woman named Good, but she denies any knowledge of having seen Wingo on Thursday previous to the finding of Wingo Friday mornnig. It is believed that Wingo was knocked in the head and carried 'nto this building and thrown in tne elevator hole. The two wounds on the top of his head clearly show that to have sustained these by falling it would be necessary for a man to dive headfirst into the cellar. The sheriff is investigating the case closely and hopes to clear th" matter up in the next few days, and several arrests will more than likely follow. Wants Everybody Pardoned. Following the unusual number of pardons, paroles and commutations, the governor of South Carolina has received a letter, written in an uneducated tone asking that he pardon all of the convicts in the State penitentiary next Thanksgiving Day. The letter has been taken under considedatlon by the chief executive. Over 1100 prisoners have been liberated by the present governor In three [months.