• • ^ ■■■>■«-->. ,- ' v'-i • •'< ■'^ s -r:r—V-'i. ’■ BRYAN SPEAKS III I ondon on the White /Man’s Duty to Others TO LABOK AUOIiNuE. Says Am rlca Has Been Moving Along Remarkably Weil Hobblirg Alcng on Ooe Leg, and Wonders ■ ‘ , ' •. ■ Wbai It Would Have *• # J • Done on Two. William J. Bryan was the oentral figure at the annuel Indrpenclerc* Day dinner of the American .S>c!etj of LonJ> n, Englacd, at the Hotel Boll Wednesday night. Nearly 600 member;, and guests surrounded the aoclety’s board" and obeyed pair loll'* sentiments wlLh the peeulhir -seat heme of eille. Ambassaddr White- law Rdd and Mr. Bryan engatnd ir Kjme stivrpc but £Xd humcred rail lery and banter ever pn’itioal dtiT^r. areas, the crowd evincing its trjay meat of the >port with cheer? and shouts tf „la: K ter. Mr It:ld, ic respondli k: to Sir W. B. RtuhrtondV graceful prc'poaaT of 'hlrt-hralth, said* with refereuce to Mr. Bryan: “At heme, as a citizen, I b&vr openly and (quartly ooposed him at every stega of his coAsplcuous career. I am reas nablyjiMi'e „ that when I ui turn home 1 shall continue to do tr.t sam). 1 bellsvu uo tou.gub Is aa well satisfied tr i am, though b’ dttf'.rent reasoning, that the coun'ry we b' b love and try to serve h&» not b en ruined by ittf gold. A bn ad an ti e official representative of.tbe Ameri can people, without distinction as :.c party, 1 am glad to welcome here a typical American wbtyo whole lift has beta lived th the daylight and one whom such a great host ct my coun trymen have k ng trusted and honor man’s burden—a burden wbioh the white man should not sblrk even If he could, a burden wbioh be could not shirk even If be would. That no one liveth unto himself or dletb unto him self baa a national as well , u an In dividual application. Our destinies art so Interwoven that each exerts an influenoa directly or Indirectly upon all others. USUBUAL OPLRATIOI. ^ ^ r ~""" A Ckdet’a Ur* Made It Over Three *• 9 ” y • ' Inehee Longer. Wilde, the West Mr. Brian, rising amid laughter and cheers, said: “Tne temptation to make a politi cal speech is strong within me. 1 have not bed a chance to do y fnr tan ^ mocths. HowCvtr, 1 will restrain' myself. With reference to the am basufi^ -1 " gofrt, I wTStrtd say that when 1 seS the progress my country has made walking ou o r 1 wonder wb&t it would navt, a u walking on^two legs. It Is picasug to tMtify that the smbassad r (tot only has fought me, but that 1 e ha- done It weil. No Ameilc&n rij dees more than Itl at he Is three thous and miles frtm his baoe. Wilh. abroad 1 have bad many gtCb Re publkanj—fcoidlug iffloe—aed I m lT wish there were eucugn cOiocs shrewd to take all ths Republicans cut if iht oountry. H airman E. W. Jones prrpoatd tb< 1th ol King Eawaid, and Hayward Greenweed, president of tbs Canadian society and member of parllameut for the city ol York, proposed the health of Pxssident Rocacvelt. When they arose to drink the toasts the orowd disoovtud Mrs N.choics Longsworth la the galitry and cheered and drank her health. Fohowicg the passage between Ambassador Reid and Mr, Bryan, the latter read bis formal speech. The reading of the speech proved a disappointment to the crowd, as they wanted to hear Bryan speak, who is a gx^a^aotw, unham pered by maniLeripir Toe subj ci of Alt.' Bryan’s sudreai was ‘Tne White Man’s Burdeh ” Tne follow- log opening paragraphs of his speech will give an idea of how he treated his subject: Tho memory of the evening spent with the American Society, Thanks . giving day two and a half years sgo, la such a pleasant one that 1 esteem myself fortunate to be able to toe pt the invitation so kindly-extended bj our distinguished ambassaduy, H n Whltelaw R.ld.to be your guestdn this occasion. Our Ejglish friends, under whose fli Walter Wilde, tbe West Point fourth classman who last fall bad bis right leg ao badly crushed that when It mended It was three inches short er than tbe Wher, will rwenter West Point this MB. To get back to tbe academy tnHadet has suffered agon les, allowing tbe dootors Co rebreak his leg In several places In order that by weighting it it might be restored tJ Its normal condition. Young Wilds, who Is one of Presl dent R osevelt's personal appointees entered West Point lu the Fall of 1904 In S plemhe', last he was horseback riding when the horse fell, rolled over him, crushing him end breaking in several.places the bones of his right leg. Realizing that it would be impossi ble to c mtlnue hia military education with such a handicap, Wilds consul ted with anura’ cr of eminent surgeons who finally told him that If he would submit to a very painful and unusual operation his leg might possibly be rs stored to Its proper' length. Wilds l mmediately consented to undergo the operation. Accordingly the young man went to the Polydynlc H ospi tal, In Puila- delpf la, wlirr* the operation waa per formed. The bones In the short leg wars broken and Immediately reset., This dune, tbe surgeons attached s very heavy weight to the leg, by 0.6*08 of a rope and pulley. The limb was then drawn out from the rot Sud Wilds was informed that It vould have to remain in that posi tion until the bones bad reknit. - For two months Wilde lay upon Ik cot In the Pjlyclinio with tbe weight attached to his' leg. Never oooe did he complain and hia fortitude exclt d the woider and admiration oil poratlon newspapers of - be s ir,, eon and nurses. A few days that are. very anxious ago the surgeon* examined the leg od told Wtlde that his suffering was at an end. The weight was removed fcod Wilde stood up for the first time over "eight weeks. Hli Tegs were the same length. Next fall he an? physical defects. Tribute to Ur Carlisle. Hon. M. L. Smith, who delivered the literary address before the gradu I. , log clats at the cm men cement ex ercises of tbe South Carolina Military Acadrmy paid a high tribute C# Dr J. 11. Carl Isle of Spartanburg. The Charlethon E cning P-wtln speaking ; ti e address says. Mr. Smith’s ad c rfci was appropriate to ths occasion, a id when near the olotemf hia sp»seh be declared that in the great“want . ,.1,0,1.' of the world the most Im portant “ad,’' was, “watted—a min,” n.a touched the keynote of the har- mbnious language in which his brill teot thoughts were sounded, and brought at once to the esuter of a$; tention the necrsslty «b oh fso d the young men In the graduating oiass to prove themselves men In the battle of rife H ■ showed them that the trend toward materialistic Mess, wbioh was n~iw so evident in this country, was d,*u„eriUH, and he hMrmght them, to make a stand against the oondltion, which threatenfd ruin to the country, ibdheieg hts address Mr. Smith com- pared tho character* of- Napoleon and Dr. J. H Carlisle. He outlined clear ly the achievements of the man of war and eulogizsd those of the man of pjace, giving the paim to the Chris tun knight. ThuodePHA* applause was accorded Mr. Smith’s magnificent address. WANT HIM TO WIN. ■OW TILLMAN U -REGARDED . OUTSIDE TBE STATE. Papers lay His Defeat Would Be a Great Loss to The Whole Country. — Ths New Orleans States says: The Northern newspapers have recently given much spaee to discussing the candidacy of one Col. W. W. Lump kin, who, from all accounts, has ap peared on the hustings in South Caro lina as an opponent to Hon. Benjamin Ryan Tillman for the United States Senate. Without stopping to Inquire aa to who is Lumpkin or ths strength or the prospects of his candidacy ths Baltimore Sun takes occasion to pay the following tribute to Senator Till man: - “But Senator Tillman is strongly Intrenched in the admiration of the people of South Carolina and it will be difficult to dislodge him. That South Carolina has long thought well of Mr. Tillman has been shown by his election for fifteen years to the high est offices the State lias Co bestow. But the country at large, which at first, feared the untamed fire eater with his pitdhfork, has come to real ize tbe sterling virtues of this rugged old Roman. His nnlmpeachable bon esty, his continual championship of the cause of tbe people, and bis un failing courage have won admlratloh and esteem even from his political enemies. Not only this, but in his management of the Important-mil BRYAN VIEWS. Does Not Regard Actions of Va- / rious States as Binding. AS TO NOMINATION. He Is Averse to “Home-Comiaf" Recep tion Being Regarded as aa Endorse- for the meat Nomination. Thinks Others Should Have a Chance. flig we meet tonight, recalllrg , that this is the aaplvt-rsary of-flauia- tlon’s birth, would doubtiesa jurdou AAc H our it] "letny ooi. u. l tiT,T~io tr, e- thing if teU-Ccngratuiatirm,Itnrlt is at knob times as this a at we are wan’t to review those national achkve- nents which have givtn to tbe Uuitfcd Stales its prominence among —— ; —■—-—— But 1 hopj 1 shall not be thought lacking in patilotlc spirit If lustf a-* _ a picture of the paat, bright wiin hsriic deeds and uo- par%iiclkd in progrv.s*, I summon you rather to a serious couaiuiratlon of the responsibility rcBting up ,n those nations vrnich aspire to premiership. This line of thought is suggested by ,,*a sense of propriety as well as by re r“«Mit expertenoca—by a sense of pro priety because such a subject will in teres* t;.o Briton as weil as it e American, and by repent experlen-'ns because tuey have Impressed me t.-t less with cur national duty than with the sneerloitty of Western over East ern civli.za.ion. Asking jour attention to such a theme u Is not ucfl.ting to adopt a phrate coined by a poet to vbum America aa well as England cal Isy some claim, and take fur my text “The White Man’s Burden,” “Take up the White Man’s Burden, » In patience to abide. To veil the threat of terror . And eheck tbe ahow of pride. By open speech and simple, An hundred times made plain, To seek another’s profit, And work another’s gain.’’ Than sings Kipling and with the of the third line (,f the , of which I am not quite sure) the stars* embodies the thought which is uppermost in my mind to- No one can travel among tbe races of the Orient that the white man favored pos: children of men and ths accempani there, is s with Aha road rate bill—an honor unexpectedly thrust upon him—he exhibited states manlike q aalittea that revealed a new phase of his character. m “South Carolina has reason to be proud of Senator Tillman and the people of other States will be pleased at bis re-eleotion. He Is a good man to keep in the Senate. The Senate and the country need men of his type now more than ever before.” In view of the faot that Ool. Lump kin Is muoh better known to the oor- the North to see the pitchfork” retired from the Senate than he is to tbe people of South Car olina there is not muoh reason to fear that Tillman is in any danger of losing his seat. For instance, the Charleston News and which has, never been accused of harboring muoh ad miration or affeotion for Senator Till man, regards tbe Lumpkin candidacy as little more than a bit of political by-play and is somewhat amused by tbe interest it has aroused in the North and the publioaMona there of the prominence and influence of tbe Lumpkin family in South Carolina Our Charlsstoa contemporary say?: “At things now stand, Col. W. W. Lumpkin, who is running for United States Senator from this Siafer, does nob appear to have much, if any, ebanoe of election; but he la A good citizen now, as he was a fine soldier in the war for Southern independence and be Is only doing what be had right to dd under tbs rules of the party. We do not know what his platform is nor do we care particular ly, except that he Is a Democrat of long standing and of good record. He probably agrees with the views ex pressed by Senator Tillman in his speech In Pennsylvania the other day t r at ’you cannot keep politics healthy when one party is always in control However, that may be, and whatever his reasons for making hts present oampaignj the colonel la entitled to .respectful consideration. He has not yet warmed up to hie work, but it is hoped that he will grow more cor tain of himseH as the campaign pro ceeds.” : ■ We do not believe it is too much to say that there will be universal re juicing over tbe faot that the activity of Lumpkin does not threaten td’ooat. Mr. Tillman his high and honorable position in tne Senate. We do not believe that tbe American people would regret anything more at this time than tbe defeat of the ruggedly hootst and fearless statesman from the Palmetto State. He has grown so In ths public estimation aitolm come more Mr. and Mrs. William Jennings Bryan arrived In London from Nor way one day last week, and was given a big reception by the Americans liv ing or visiting in England. They landed at Newcastle and re mained there over the day. Mr. Bryan desiring a chance to quietly eumplete some writing. Arrivlng bere, llki. Bryan went te the-Hotel Cecil, where he soon was besieged by callers. John Burns, William T. Stead .and Mrs Stead came early la the evening and paid an extended visit. Messrs. Bry an, Burns and Stead engaged in an an 1 mated discussion of economies and of the social and labor questions. Mr. Bryan received a great mass of Amer ican mall. When he had finished read ing bis letters he received a deputa tion of newspaper correspondents and dictated the following statement. “The dhst suggestion of a reception forme at New York came prior to the action of any of tbe State conventions and before there was any discussion of tbe next campaign. It came from the Commercial Travelers’ league, of which Mr. Hoge'ls president. I assur ed him I should be pleased to meet the members of ths league, suggesting that ths reception be character; zjd by simplicity. . “New that the actions ef gome ths State oonyentlons have raised question as to tbe political signilioance of the receptlOD, I am glad to say that It must not be regardecTm the light of an endorsement for the presidents nomination. . While I appreciate the PEOPLE WARNED. SOME EAOT8 ABOU f THE COTTON AT ALMA PAPER OOMPAN Y. The Tradesman Cautions Intending l-^lnvestort' to Look OartlSUy and a negro man were fDhd by ne- iato ths Buiinsss/ SMEiaimtU wui.lw that a few minutes before the killing he was sent Ly ‘ Jim” Hargis to get “Tom" Whit" 1 , and was later 'dis patched by “Ed Callahan to get Cur tis Jstt. A few minutes la’ter, while Hp^eer was in tbs Hargls store, two shots-rang out and Marcum fell dead in the freut door of tbe e urt house. Spicer's Jil that he waa r ffured 1600 to kill Maroum. Theiffjr, he said, was mt^afew days before Marcum was killed^ Spioer said he had refused to kill Marcum and that he had also refused previously to kill “Jim Cook rlU. Jumped From Train. When returning from Savannah to his home at Gjennvllle, Tatnall coun ty, W. Preston O Quinn jumped from a S A. L , train near Pembroke and breaking his neck, died almost in- Mtantiy. O'Q ilnn had been spending the day In the olty and during the lime be was hgre securing some whis key. ’On his way back to his home at Glennviile he became obstreperous, and when near Meidrtm began shoot ing his pistol from tbe rear of the train. Conductor Knowles, with sev eral passengers, approached O'Quinn, and after a struggle got him t$ go for ward to the baggage ear. People in the car had dismissed the idea of watyiUng the young man, when, without warning, he dashed for the door of the oar, and before anyone 0 mid stop him sprang to the ground. When the train was stopped sad re turned O Quinn was found dead. Weevil Hpreadln*. Professor Hunter, the government entomologist, has issued a special re port on the boll weevil In Texas, In which he states that ths weevil is numerous over the whole of the cot ton territory, and that mnch damage is sure to be done in eastern Texas. With wet weather there will he con siderable injury over the whole belt, ThllA will be a minimum ot _ .. ~ Paid to Mill. At Bestbyville, Ky., e sensation was caused at the trial of Former Judge Hargis and Former Sheriff Callahan of Breathitt county^charged *iih the murder of James Marcus. Asbury Spicer, it wu announced, had made a confession Implicating the t wo chief defendants. On the day Mr rcum was killed-. Jackson, k7, lii delge. HfTEtfr ^^^i^maaattot^the-plaJn Ites before the killlmt P 60 ? 1 * hAfl him as a Senator of the wliole country, and especially as a champion of their cause and interests: Hie defeat would oome to them as a great calamity, because he has won their confidence aid admiration by all times standing like a Hon in the chicane, Great as is plutocracy's hatred of him it is nothing compared to strength of the affeotion be has won from tbe people, and it is true, as the Baltimore Sun says, that the whole country 'has oome to realizs tbe sterling virtues of this rugged old Roman,’’ and its only regret is that there are not more men like him in the Senate to denounce and battle against the sohemea of fraud and cor ruption. RoOMfVeU Declines. William Hoge, president of the Commercial Travelers' Anti-Trust League, sent e letter to President Roosevelt inviting him to preside et the reception te be tendered William J. Bryan in New York upon hie arriv al from Europe early in September. Mr. Hoge expleined in his letter thst the Commercial Travelers' Anti-Trust League is not a Democratic organize Mon, nor a partisan organization in any senee, and that the organization regards Mr. Roosevelt es being es much opposed to the trust ee if Mr. Bryen. The President declined the invitation. Redly Shocked. - At Trenton, N. J., David Crumbly, 17 yean old, end several companions of aboafc the same age were swimming in the canal when without warning a charge ot lightning descended into the stream nearby, aleetrlfylng the water. Crumbly was knocked sense less and tbe others were badly shock ed. gome companions on tbs shore rescued ths boys, the electricity seem ing to leave the water almost as conventions, 1 do not regard their ex preasions as binding upon them or up on the party of their State. I shall not prosecute them .for breach promise if they transfer their affto Gone to another; I will not even pub Hah their letters. To allow the recep tion to be regarded as an endorsement would Id the first place be unjust to others who may be candidate i. “I have seen the names of several mentioned as possible candidates among them Congressman Hear-it S nator Ballsy and Governor Folk who have all rendered conspicuous service to the party and the country and their claims should be considered The party is entitled to Its most avail able man, and the question of aval la bllity cannot be determined so far in advance. Circumstances and issuee may strengthen the claims ot some one of the gentleman mentioned and the list should be an open one unti the time comes to choose. “L may add that it would not be just to me to be put in tbe attitude of announcing my candidacy or ad mittlng the certainty of my being candidate. It-ia two yean before the convention meets, and ! am not will ing to sit on a stool and took pretty that long. I prefer to be In a position to say what I think ought to be said write what I tbl^k ought to be writ ten and do what I tbh.k ought to be dens. 1 am advancing in years and cannot spare two yean out of my life A Word to Wtrae Y u are a wife The whole making or marring of your husband is in your hands. A woman can seldom to ele vated by a man, bat a man seldom - fatls to rtse or fall to* tBa-wbrnib he lo»ca- H tprtBgs upw^tOtrrfset like fl wars at the footsteps of rain and sunshine In th^Spring—that Is, if you are tho right kind of a wife. Ten thousand men, however brave of just at this time. “I shall be glad tjp rsturo to Amer although every day of my trip has been enjoyable. I shell be glad to meet pay friends in AmdrlcA, and after ! have met them they wiU be Just as free as before to do what they think best on issues and candidates Died In Tool Cheat Little ' ’Jimmie” McCallum, « yean old, after playing with his spade 4 the back-yard jol his grandfather 4 ! home at 364 West 4^ th street, New York, rummaging among some old hexes and barrels In a pom&rjbf the yard. Floally he pulled but a big too chest that was empty. It was just big enough for a little playhouse. Tbe boy climbed inside and sat down. In .. sc-, i- uuy uuuioau iiiaiuo an., va« uuwu. in ^ 0D fi r6, » ° Pal corr yP t>0n ^ moving about be shook the box and The Chattanooga Tradesman in Its next issue will call attention to a re cently organ.z d oompady that has been heralded by its promoters as one of great value to theSoutb, In that it converts a hitherto waste product into articles of daily consumption and great commercial importance thereby adding many millions of dollars to the productive waalth of the South. This company ia styled tbe Cotton Stalks Products company, and was in corporated under the laws of Msine with a capital z .tionof 116,000,000 as stated in the original announce men ti made concerning it, although another statement from cne of the promoters gave the information that tnif capi tal z alien was on ths basis of t3,000,- ooo of 7 per cent preferred Rtpok and •151,000,000 of common stock. In reply to a letter from The Trades man to Mr. W. P G. Harding, of Bir mingham,, president cf toe First Na tional BaCroTtmcltv, and who was named.asona cXXhe dir ectors cf this company, Mr. Harding m^es the fol lowing statement: “The understanding, however, upon which I author z;d the me of my name as a director, is distinctly that only so much of the stock, urobably about I3Q0.000, shall be offered for sale at present, as may be necessary to build, rq Up and finance one mill, to to located at some eligible poig^, and that future stock (ff?rlnga to the public are to be based, entirely upon ths actual results obtained by this mllL” ——-— In the announosment made of the promotion of this company, together with an explanation of its plans, and whibh appeared exclusively In the New York Comffieroial, such details are given as would indicate that the enterprise had pass-id the experimen tal stage, for in ths body of that an nouncemeat, Harvie Jordan, its pres ident,*is quoted as aaylcg: 1 Paper manufactured from-cotton stalks is of the strongest texture end softest fin IshT Several plants will be erected during toe next few months lu certain sections of the South, which will be fourth With one ex3.ption this is the first time for over SO years that a negro has killed a white mao in this acetion. Mr. Hugo Sohlegelmileh of Hardee- vlllo was killed by a negro field hand at bis plantstion IT mils* from Hardeeville at sundown on the fourth. Mr. A. Sobelgelmloh was walking through his field with two compan ion* and met two negroes who worked on ths place. Without warning one of them thot Mr~ Schlegelmllch through the breast with a shotgun. Death was Instantaneous. Mr. Sohlegelmileh had never had any trouble with the negro, but one of n!a companions bad. Tne negro escaped and had Lot been caught up to Wednesday afternoon- • ■ Hr. H. G sjHeyward. magistrate at Hardeeville, rt-eeived toe news Thurs day muznlng and. went at onoo to the scene with a-posse. Mr. Schlogef milch waa an exemplary young man about 26 years of age and a general favorite. He was a graduate (f O-m- son and peno several years oh rat ch es in the West. Charles Slmanons, tbe 13 ear o d son of Mack Hsrrisoo of Prjtofcerd- ville, was wounded In the stomach by a negro bny on the afternoon of the fourth. The wounded lad was car ried to the hospital in Savannah, and is reported to be dying Tus shoot ing occurred about five miles from where Schlegelmllch was killed- a little later The shooting waa d rS wtthagun and is said lo hAva been Intentional. The negro escaped. _ Ou the eve of the fourth a n gro carpenter was killed by a negro team ster at Purys’-urg, abcut two miles from Hardeeviue. There was a qaar rel over whiskey at a gath ring, re sulting In a fatal knife wouud in tbe neok. Toe same night a negro was shot in the shoulder at a negro club house on toe outskirts of the’ town, but not fateHy injured. —jim Glllevpte Dead. The Spartanburg Journal -say?: “Jim Gillespie, colored, who is known to hundreds of former Wofford Col- 'nf^p.r.Uoaby 1, 1»07" t thKU -tal of SI7 500r 11 ocst SI per her rel to put them on market, or 13 500, leaving a net*profit of 114,000. Cnme. At Chicago an ordinance itmt'ing an experiment, but a remedy tried and tested without a lailure in hundreds of the worst cases. TANXOTIL1NE OINTMENT is sold with an absolute guarantee. Our confidence In this remedy is un bounded. Hundreds of voluntary tes timonials to its wonderful vlrtues- Easv and convenient to use. Upon beingapplied it exerts a cooling, heal ing arid astringent effect that takes away every evidence of discomfort at once. Cost a little more than many so-called ‘-Pile Cures,” but worth many times the difference, Price irOO the nujffiber of saloons to one for every 600 piraonif became a lav without Mayor Duane’s signature at the ad journment of City GouloII Wednesday night. By the terms of the measure, no new saloon Hoenses will be Issued after July 31. Licenses wbioh are in force on that date may be renewed or lD 8»J retisoed. Guaranteed satlsfactorjpMs to every purchaser. AT DRUG STORES. Prepared by tbe • " Murray Drug Co., Columbia., 8. 0 A Pianer or As Orgaa ferYos. To the head of aiery family who ia amhi- Uoua fer the future and education of kia chit. dren, we have a Special Proposition to No artiolvin the home ahowa tho D-. wdly Lightning. Tlyirsdsy afternoon during* severe^..... _ , thunderstorm the thfe* tittie girjs of] ^oSnudl ■“ H. P. Humphrey of Mayfield, Qa., ijhjp of a high gmdoAHpao er< »makw. /» of culture that doe* a Piano or Organ, oomplishment givea aa muoh pinmara or ia of m great value in after Ufa aa the knowledge play wall. V were in ths yard under a tree. L'ght nlng struck the tree, killing two of the children instantly and the other Is so seriously Injured that there is little hope for her recovery,. Firat Bale, " A dispatch from New Orleans says toe first bale of cotton to be shipped from tire 1906 crop in tbe United neaday night reported on its way there from Brownsviilp, Tex.. _It#ss consigned to the New O.-leads Charity hospital. list a few dollar* gown and n . . each month or Quarterly er aMaiwoMmlly u d theinatrnment ia your*, ite ua today for Catalogue* and on Bp-:o reposition of Eaay Payment*. Addree" Malone’s Mule Co., Columbia. 8. C , jj_ — M-Faisl SOO PSBMCOCRMt Bowd at Coat. Write 03 v»f>waiA-4ugamitmsiisew««««« nrn to J. HWTOI11TUVIY, I. D. tadmukrtmoolb 1W, C4- Itg'llft. ii,Prei,K. lick. M.Mttjr. h. Irmber iUU lei. f«., knrd * W Ittltk, He, ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦see Chronic Diseases Of Men and Women Successfully T rested. If Buirtring from KhpumatUm, Spociflo Blood Poiaon, Nerve ua Exhaustion, Debility, Break Down, etc, CaUrrh Varicocele, Stricture, Gleet, any diteaae of the Haart, Liver, Stomach, Bowela or Lunga; Skin Diaeaep, Blood Diaordera, Kidney or Bladder diaeaeee, Diaeaaee to women, etc, call on or write jua. We have had over 20 yean’ Experience in the treatment of Mmwq - ,l —nrn_ Reputation firmly eaublished. Examination Llank and our books “Brain and Nerve Exhauiuon” and “Health’' and “Men’a Diaeaees” aent free. Pereonal adviaed. Addresa DR. HATHAWAY A CO, Suite 8S-D Inman Buildiug, Atlanta, Georgia. Insurance At Absolute Cost T. S. Sease, President. , i- J. B. Atkinson, Seo’y A Tress. PALME 1T0 MUTUAL HRE If^URANCE COMPANY, . f fsrtanbnrgyf. 0. * apb ’ 8ousD ’ 3ro< ?^ B# 5t» > We.Have For Sate prompt attention will be given to •rein pnees m juiriemdnd orders . ' Iprsnytlung, Agents Wanted.