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HE GAVE UP. amm Emerson. Murdtrar of Mr wWwFBl W^Fw FFF ^F ■ FWI I Drafct, YoMarfiy Sumndirs ENTERS ON LIFE TERM. R ■•tr*'"' r A Howard of 91,100 Wm Offered for His Capture.—He 8*jrs He Is Not Worried About the Crime He Com* milted. But Was Remorseful B«r o cause It Was Suspected That He Had Been Aided in Escape. Alien Emerson, convicted, mur derer, refuge* from justice, with a standing reward of $1,100 for his capture dead or alive, gave himself up to the authorities of Anderson coupty and donned the- garb of-a ANNUAL tioft of Comity Dteptflurios. convict at the South Carolina Pent* tentiary. He was in hiding for five months and up to the very mhrote that he walked out into the middle of the lone public road In the southern part of Anderson county last Satur day night, and revealed himself to an officer of the law his whereabouts were a mystery to the authorities. Emerson was delivered to the pen itentiary authorities Monday after noon at 4:30 o'clock by Sheriff Green of Anderson county. Emerson was shaved and got the regulation hair cut and a brand new suit of stripes and was registered on the en try book as .No. 17,629. After being weighed and measured and a general Inventory registered Emerson sat down and told the following story of his escape and wanderings: "1 did Sheriff Green a dirty trick by breaking out of Jail and going off leaving hlifi to be criticised," said ISmerson. “I never had a better friend in all the world than that man, and I haven't got a better friend than him .today. I was a long ways from home—I don’t care to say exactly where—when my con science told me tt^kt I must come back and give'up. I had figured on going farther, God knows wherei^- Just farther away. But that thought that I had doue Sheriff Green a low down trick stayed with roe. I saw in the newspapers where he was sus pected of aidin|; me.. Finally I tnade np my mind to come back and from tha day I turned my tracks in this direction I never for a minim* thought of turning back. The near er I got to my old home the better I felt. ® "Saturday I reached the Savannah river and rowed across In a batteau. I had two good pistols with me, load ed all around, and no one looking for the big reward should have tak en me. I had made up my mind to come back and surrender and I did not want anybody to get any of the reward. I didn't want Sheriff Green of the State or the relatives of the Books ,1b Good OondftioB Ooe> of Office Not Heavy-—Aggregate Seles Very Large Tabulated Statement. Mr. W. B. West, the State dispen sary auditor, Thursday submitted his first report to the general assem bly, showing the operation of the county dispensaries aince their es tablishment in March. The report goes Into the work of systematizing the books in each county end ex plains how each book is kept. All of these books have beep examined and Mr. West has met from time to time with the county boards and ad vised them as to the management of the business. The only shortage dis covered during the year was In Col- nmbia when one of the. dispensers fm. $ 1,6(10 short-la -hit- accounts. This amount was paid up. Outside of this'case the books and accounts have been wall kept, Mr. West says that "the cost of this office from the time it was opem ed in March to the 31st day of Dec ember was $4,100.47. The aggre gate gross sales made by all the dis pensaries in the State was $2,691, 663.43. The total net profit was $696,056.61. By a comparison of these figures it is seen that the cost of maintaining this office was 3-20 of 1 per cent, of the gross sales, or -3-6 per cent, of the net profit earned.' "After haring had 10 months ex perience in the work it Is my-opinioo that It can be done in accordance with the law if-i am given Hie as sistance of two competent clerks and a stenographer, but as it Stands now It Is a physical Impossibility for me to cover the territory in the limited time required by law ‘The grots sales of county dis pensaries for the month of December were as follows: Abbeville county.. Aiken county .. . Bamberg county., barnwell county.. Beaufort coonty.. Berkeley cofrnty . .. Charleston connty.. Chester county.. . Chesterfield county Clarendon county " Colleton county .. Dorchester county Fairfield county .. Florence county .. Georgetown county Hampton county 7,978.61 Kershaw county 15,635.07 e e e e • • e e • • - • s e e e a ..$16,612.70 .. 16,312.27 .. 9.857.38 .. 21,060.65 14.780.76 9,856.65 61.974.20 ..14,771.07 13,947.45 8,296.86 10,853.31 8,759.46 9,782.76 lA.fl8.fi* 16.767.76 Laurens county.. Lee county Lexington county.. Orangeburg county Sumter county. Richland county.. . Williamsburg county • • e • 22,582.64 8,969.75 9.260.32 32,099.03 22,014.53 51,101.25 12,664.90 Total .. .. ..$431,052.48 The total sales of county dispen man that l killed to have anything 1 8arl e 8 for Quarter, begffining Oct. 1 to pay. I Juat wanted to give up. and ending December Slat, 190' 1 “I made np my mind ot go to the are as follows: „ house of WIU Adams, a magistrate’s County. Profit, ooastabie, who lives about 18 miles I Abbeville ..914,600.00 from Anderson. I was on my way Aiken. .. to his house when I met him in the Bamberg.. road. He was in a buggy. I don’t Beaufort.. believe he would have recognized me Berkeley .. but I called out and asked, if that Barnwell ...16,386.20 w«a BUI Adams and he said it was. Charleston ..30,267.00 ‘ I told him who I was and what my Chester .. 16,185.76 purpose was. He said he would be Chesterfield.. 7,576.02 glad to take me to Sheriff Green’s Clarendon .. and tuimed hla buggy around right Colleton .... there In the TOld and carried me Dorchester .. straight to the sheriff’s house. He Fxlrfisld • • •• told the sheriff that f surrendered Florence, to him on the terms that no reward Georgetown. .14,719.39 whs to be paid. 'IHampton.. .. 5,239.06 • "I wm sure glad tp get back and Kershaw.. ..12.306.96 pujt myself in Sheriff Green's hands Lsurens.. ..13,138.24 again. It’s an awful thing to be in L«e 7,972.67 this place, but I feel better than I Lexington ... 6,231.31 THE RACE ISSUE la a Crowdid Caft la Um CKy of Mtomai lafdra tho Heaton N«w York. MURDER AND SUICIDE. Frank Brady, Newspaper Advertis ing Solicitor, Made Target (or Ftre Pistol Balls from Weapon in the Hands of Woman at Whose House He Had Boarded, Which Created a Panic In Cafe. 8,533.87 . 6,971.41 . 9,305.64 . .6,327.44 7,869.47 . 6,280.14 . 6.037.94 . 8,316.00 .16,120.63 did any day I was away^because the Orangeburg. .24,555.65 thought that 1 had done my best I Richland ,. .. 35,696.13 friend an Injustice left me—It justlSumter .. ..24,334.03 made me miserable and if I hadn't | Williamsburg. 11,700.27. conie back I never would have see any peace. I wouldn't be in this I trouble now if I had listened to that man, but that's done and tlrereTtWl] no use to talk about that now. Sales. $44,047.63 37,852.69 26,460,37 32.222.20 27,944.02 56,180^5 169,831.05 37,083.13 37,107.82 23,375.24 22.380.21 22,421.71 25,730.99 48.207.47 43,226.85 21,632.79 40,602.42 64.106.64 26,117.27 23j286.20 83,121.60 149.304.40 61.843.64 36.633.48 The was a terrible tragedy enact ed in a crowded cafe in the city of New York on Thursday. Sweeping* /[rough the crowded restaurant akes up the eighth floor of Macy’a department and into the gentlemen’s cafe, “aTalT, stylishly dressed woman J>ent for a moment over the shoulder of a diner, whispered something In his ear and'then drawing n revolver from her muff emptied the contents of the five chambers Into his body. As the victim, Frank Brady, a hewspaper advertising solicitor, slip ped* lifeless to the floor, the woman flung the ^revolver from her and taking a second revolver from her muff shot herself first in the head, and then twice In the breast. She died half an hour later.. A note fuond In the woman’s purse proved her to be Mrs. Mary Roberts Clark,*a manicurist, the widow of a police officer and stepmother of a six-year-old son, Raymond. Brady was thirty years old and the sole support of » helpless aged mother, for whom he had made a home. The shooting was the culmination of a series of violent quarrels, and, according to the woman*! intimates, In fulfillment of a' threat to murder Brady in a public place. The suicide, who was about thirty years years old, was Mary McLean when she marired John Roberts. When the later died a year ago she assumed the name of Clark and sup ported herself and child first as the wardrobe woman at kn up-town the atre and then a rfihnicurist. She was or a preposslng appearance and had marked business ability. While she wm in prosperous cir cumstances and before tbe death of her husband Brady had lodging at bar home, and she declared that she had helped him to the success which he subsequently attained. A few months ago he left her home and made a home for his mother, whom he brought from New Jersey. Recently Mrs. Clark thought that Brady was avoiding her, and when he called at her home, occasslonally they quarrelled. Thursday Mm Clark went to }er bank, made a cash deposit, wrote a note identi fying herself and referring the read er to her* attorney, and armed with three revolvers went to the store where she knew Brady usually lunch ed. % She made her way hMtily to a small smoaklng room Tor gentlemen just off the dining hall. The big room was filled with women who were lunching after the morning shopping, and amid the buzt of the conversation hep- agitated manner at traded the attention only of The waltressesss. In a moment she stoojT behlht Race IBM Wm Bat n Temporary Subterfuge Which Must Loom Efficiency,— Favors Immigration. ■•fore several hundred people tor B. R. Tillman Thursday night delivered la the State capltol an address on immigration as it af fects the race question. He’spoke in 1 re^ponce to an Invitation from the general MMmbly. The address last- not quite two honrt and wm •f Hi Mitfil MORE WMTE PEOPLE in this Only Solution of the la This ed closely followed by those present. His utterances on ths immigration question are perhaps his first from s platform in this State and were therefore of particular Interest to the members. On the race problem the senator' touched, arguing in the main for a repeal of the 16th amendment of the constitution of the United States, but his main argument was that South Carolina needs more settlers of the right sort, the kind authori sed in the act creating the depart ment of agriculture, commerce and Immlgratkrarhnd the only way to get these Mttlers la by advertising the advantages of South Carolina— a plan now being used In the Weet, where there are also many advan tages, where wages are higher and where the negro is not met-te corn* petloa. Senator Tillman annyllsed the re sult of his lectures In the North, told of the dlMppearence of sectlopal feeling and ckMgd with i strong plea for more education of the whites, calling attention to the growing ex tent of the education of the negroes, pointing out the fact that the con stitution of 1196 wm only a tem porary remedy and emphMlslng the growing danger of the use of the educated negro for political purpos- flcatlon on account of the inyita tlon and declared that he would try to comply with its terms. He be lieves ths discussion of immigration and the race quratlon to be so close ly Interwoven that one can not be handled without the other. There Is still n wide divergence of opinion on the race question, but he is not disposed to quarrel with those who differed with him. He Is will ing to debate his views with any one, however, becauM he believes he la right He la now three score years of age and he had found that young men who werq infanta In the days of Hampton, Gary and 1376 ars under taking to lay down rulM of con duct on the subject. Sees • Crisis. He believes that the most dread ful crista la ahead of ua and claimed that he could prove It to an Intelli gent audience. Some have said there la no race problem; that It wm aolv- Totals. . .814f.lA0.O5 1,150,719.86 Woman Shoots Man. A sensational shooting occurred Tt wasn’t the crime that worried (during the lunch hour Wednesday iw me. I killed Drake and the Judge I the restaurant of a large Broadway sentenced me here for life and 1 am department store in New ToiT:—XTa here to serve my smiUiime. I don’t 1 time when the room was crowded believe I should have been found mainly with women, a young woman guilty of murder in the first place, entered; and walking rapidly to a but I am here and I’ve got nothing table at which Frank Brady, an ad to say against the court’s decision vertlsing solicitor was sitting, shot now. It wasn’t the crime, but it was him causing Instant death. She then the thought that I had done Sheriff shot and killed herself. Green a mean trkk, that brought me I ' ■ ■ ». ■ back—and the jailer—I want to and went out that and then climbed clear tbein both." the wall and got down by resting my Emerson was asked Jp- tell about foot on a little house which stands his escape, and this Is his story about just outside the jail yard, that feature qf the affair: "I won’t say just where I went to. "I was In the upstairs part of the no where I have been since I have jail and nobody else was up there, got out, but this I will aay, I cross One day, about a week. I guess, be- ed several States and ta one time fore I got out some plumbers were figured on going a mighty long up there fixing something about the wayf from home only that thought fcewer and. they had to go back to about the trick I played on Sheriff the court heuae for some tools or Green kept working on me until I something. They left their things made up my mind to come back, and in the jail and while they were gone I walked most of the way from where I hid a piece of the solder. They 1 was back to Anderson. I slept all never mlsed It, anyway I never heard right at night, but .while I was anything about it If they did. awake the thing troubled me. T knew thq..shape of the key "There ain’t a better man In the that unlocked the door which led up world than Sheriff Green and I am the upstairs cells for I had been de- just as glad as can be that I came pnty sheriff under Sheriff Green two back. It wm a dirty trick, a mean, yoara and had handled the key him- low trick and I am aorry I ever did dreds of times. I went to work on it. That man’s been too good to me that piece of solder to make a key. for me to treat him that way. but it small knife which wm left in i B all right now, aa much all right BradyVchalr and. spoke to him. Be fore he had time to reply she had shoved a revolver In his face and commenced flrhtfr; The head, the neck, the shoulder, the breast-and the abdomen were successlvely^plerc- ed by bullets, and Brady lay dead at her feet. Giving one glance to the half doz en men nearby who wene momentar Uy stunned by the pltlleza murder Mrs. Clark whipped another weapon from her furs and put a bullet near right ear and two others in her bosom ; ~ The report of the discharges crest StT constefnation and there wm rush for the elevators. Employees of the place quickly closed the doors shutting off the view of the smoaklng room and reassuring the women pa trons, few of whom realized what had occurred. The .police broke the news to Brady's aged, mother and the Gerry Society took charge of the dead woman's body.—^ SHEARS A 111 MMt Ml If ■im Mi fegM amt •jrr. ■ Have Bought at Home Oouatry Merchant. Shearf * Sawbuck kept a store City folks thsy wonldifft Mil. Wouldn’t let them have a small. Fetched their money—bat by jlng! Couldn’t buy a blessed thiag! Couldn’t meet ’em taco to face An’ then sell ’em with good graeo. ’Fore Jim used the plow an hoar Found the blame thing couldn’t scour; Tried his harness—broke ^tug— Sought for solace In his jug— In the cooler all that night Jim reflected on his plight; _ la the morning, Richard Stout,- Country trade wm what they Mugkt; Hardware merchant, balled him out. Folka would pay for what they bought ’Fore they aaw 1L hide or tail. They sent catalogues by mall Out to ev’ry bleeaed one Glttln’ mail at Poasum Ron. We Mt up nights and read When we'd orter bean In bad. Book wm 'bout m big m sln-r Had a lot of plcturas la, And a list of merchandise, Ev’ry kklnd and every sise— Givin’ prices that thay swore Knocked out ev’ry country store, Looked so straight and seemed so true I bit at It—and Jim did, too. Jim said after that htTd stick ' CIom m brick to good ol’ Dick. Since he left the Possum jail i Says he won’t buy goods by mall; j ft Saya Dick's cheaper, anyhow— |.® Might have aaved some on the plow, 11 1 ■ |>| 1 On the other goods some more, LET US SHOW YOU HOW TO GET At hla oT friend’s hardware stork,;—r— j THE BEST MAGAZINES FOR had not yet been safely solved but he believed there wm only one answer to the question-—the white race must be reinforced. We have no race suicide or divorce and we have the purest blooded citizenship in America with tbe most glorious history. All this should nerve us to get at once more white men and women In South Carolina. In hla travels across the continent he had noticed that other States want more settlers and a great many of t£ese States have far more advantages and it could he eeaily un? darstood why the people are not bruuhing their necks to get here. ,‘Tt’s a good Stale, hut • groat many coldblooded people will ape the gal leys and the swamps, and may go elsewhere." However there are things In this State we have to offer and these ad vantages can be displayed. He hM found people who do not want new comers. He would like to adopt that tbeory, but conditions are such that settlers ate needed and are necasary. As to what kind ar best, he declared . , , . - , w .. * fellow feeling for the After introduced by Lieut. En gn 8h> German and Irish, having Gov. McLeod .be expressed bUgratl- ifipfblood In his veins. He, however. SHE CAPTURES HIM. A Frail Little Woman Held Burglar >- Until Police Came. ^ gz i, /. • 1 At Waterbury, Conn., Mrs. Lizzie Wolff, a frail woman, wife of Ad rian F. Wolfe, superintendent of the tool room In the Scovllle company’] works, held up a flat thief In their home on Ridge street Friday night made him disgorge, and then with a revolver, held him cowed In a cor ner until the police arrived, .elg^tpeu minutes later. v He Is Arthur Rosenthal, a Boston crook, sentenced for burglary in Con cord, March 28, 1906 and having long criminal retold. Mrs. Wolff was at *supper when, hearing a noise, she grabbed a re volver, swung the electric switch lighting the apartment, and found him ransacking her chamber. the jail by a -prisoner Who had gone las I can make It.’ '%Bl the only thing I had to work Allen Emerson wm convicted of with. I need this to cut the key having shot and killed ThomM F. ont of the eolder. Of course, the Drake, August 12, 1906. Drake had first time I tried It it didn’t work, I a daughter to whom he hadn’t spoken hat by turning It In the lock I could for thirteen years. The woman had •M jut how and where it needed j married William Bailey, who wm al- be trlmteed apd cat and I kept leged to have been the author of her on woffclag at itfpntll I bad it all downfall. Bnt Bailey disclaimed this and derarted the woman. She quarter of one o’clock two year* later became a mother on the night of August 20, 1907, I gnd alien Emerson was alleged to doer and slipped down Lave been visiting her clandeetlvely. into’ the Jailer's office, I i n consequence of her immoral con- . toe them Match on the out- Auctl her father became completely Bank Your Money. The Newberry Observer gives this good advlcp. "If you have any money put it In the bank: Don’t keep it about the house JIm a temptation to thieves and robbers. Banks are safe. Not one In a thousand ever falls. A railroad engineer in Augusta had $1,- 600 stolen from his residence one night last week. Jt hM not been many years since a good woman of this county had $1,300 stolen from her premises and a good man had ;700 from his. The bank la the place for yonr moeny until yon got ready to spend It. Of course one ought to keep a little looee change about him tor convenience; but home is no plaoeTor laying up money for * ed by the convention of 1895; that the negroes are now quiet, why stir it up? These very men were oppos ed to this convention and m "I was one of those who advocated the con vention I have-a right to speak and show that everything Is not quiet." It is true that the new constitution disqualified many negroes and that the government Is now conducted by white men, but his analysis of con ditions Is that despite the education al and suffrage qualifications, th* expedient - !! ~6hly Temporary, "not a remedy but .the best that could be done at the time. Therefore he want ed to warn the people that the terms of the constitution requiring a man to read and write or pay taxes on S300 of property before he could ■vote, might react. The report from every county showed that^more ne- groes were ‘ going to school than white chlldrap. There are more of them. « He reviewed the work of the con stltutlonal convention of 1868, which he said wm attended by three-f6ur- ths negroes and nearly all the car petbaggers. The people seemed to forget the negro rule of eight long years thst followed. Of course this can not return, but something worse can. The. school attendance by the negroes shows that, at our expense, they are now getting tlie ability to re*d and write and can comply with the requirement^ of ths constitution He* was not one to object ter tbelr education, but how long would It be before enough of them can read and write fe^equal the white vote and then balance the power? ‘He was not objecting to the negro schools; le wanted to emphMlse this, but they are here. The 14th and 15th amendments are staring ns in the face and the Southern people are manacled to them. With the millions of dollars being poured into the South for ne’- gro education tt can not be denied that in the future there will be a strong straggle for mastery—no doubt uraed by unprincipled white men who wish power. And yet It is charged that "Tillman is running up and down the country making money n lectures on the rac* question..'/ Those who believe this were Chirac terlsed m either oatrichei. who hid rom danger by stiking their heedr- la tbe aand, or fools. ‘ Nothing hM saved the South from the negro being the balance of power but the Democratic primary* Ha re ferred to North Carolina and "the venture of that State by Pritchard." och a thing wool* not happen in Bfith Carolina ta his day.. the Remedy. Coming to a qaesttoa of remedy he In going through this State wm struck with the good stock, the pure blood and the fact that every citi zen was proud pf the State. More of this kind are needed. The general assembly a few years ago passed a bill for a department ol immlgfatlon. Now what is wanted are homeaeekers. Those of us who have thousands of acres of land and are facing labor trouble with the negroes, realising that the negroes are more and more independent, know that something must be done. The difficulties grow day by day and what would be the result of an influx of 290,000 people who seek to be come South Carolinians? Can we expect them to come here, however, when the advantages of the West, with its high wages, anP being constantly advocated everywhere and the government spending millions of dollars on the desert land? He had served notice, however, that If this government wm going to pht Filer FWtod to my flrat that the problem to tegro doataatton. on the desert lands of the West h# expected the government to take the water off. of tbe lands of the eoMt of South. Carolina.. But suppose ^thla Is done. The settler will find the ne gro there, lira and 1ft to one. He believes firmly, that Immigration Is the solution. True, he did not be lieve in tbe certain classes now pour ing into the country, but the’other kind make good cltlsehs needed. .. Fifteenth Amendment. When Lee surrendered at Appo mattox we knew that the Union was one and that slavery existed no long er. But. we did not know that sec tional hatred would make the North forget all the long pMt and declare the. negro m good While Radicalism hM been thrown off temporarily there is only one de finite and permanent remedy—tha repeal of the 15th amendment. 7 He was told that he wm the only Southern representative 4rho advo cated this. He had talked to hun dreds of Northern audiences and found that they had very little use for the negro, although they wanted his vote and are consequently vert polite to the colored brother. It wm a question with him, he said, whether or not it wm not time for the South to unite and call for the repeal of this amendment, if the South never uked for It they would never get It. In roaming over the land he was able to bring the newt back that sec tional feeling was dead. There were a few old men who still cling to the old IdeM. But there are many who have come South during the Span- ish-American war, have invested their money here and have visited here and they have the same Ideas we have.' He claimed that he had aroused more enthusiasm in Wiscon sin than here on the matter of white supremacy; he had followed his old style of hand primaries and usually secured a unanimous vote. It Is now a question of nerve or courage to se cure a repeal of this amendment and the South should demand, it. Ha wishes td have credit for fore sight. He wanted, however, to press upon j£he people the fact that the tltQF will come when the negro vote in the South will count More white map are needed and we can not get them we most say to the North that this amendment must be repealed. The question must be pressed upon them bemuse the North knows noth ing about It ' . Every day he mm evidence of more and more friction between, the raeee. He had no purpose of creating more of it bnt all that he wished >o say Carolina woaM aeraf 4. •mm B? Jim’s my neighbor, cross the way— Beet man ever worked In hay. Just let him top off a stack— Skeds rain like a turtle’s back. PlsMurs jsst to see him work* Nsvsr knew ol’ Jim to shirkr~ Swings a scythe like it wm jplayA Lora to watch him in ths way. Well; we,llke a pair of fools. Sent off—got some hayin’ tools. Jim got harness and a plow, I. m range, I see it now; Drat the thing, It was so light Used it for a touch at night; Throw’d the darn thing in the yard— Um It now for rendering lard. ’ VALENTINE POST CARDS. We have ail the latest and pret tiest cards i n the market. All prices, 1 cent, 3 for 6c, 2 for 5, and up. Send twent-.-five cents In stamps tor a sample assortment, containing some at, all prices. BOOK STORE, ORANGEBURG, So. Ca. $15COLLARS SAVED TO ORGAN CUSTOMERS For Next 40 Days. We will sell our excellent $80 Or gans at omy $65. Our $ 9Q Organa for only $7.1. Special Terms: One- third now, i ne-third Nov; 1908, bal ance Nov. 1909. If interested, clip this ad, and enclose It with your let ter, Mklng for catalog and price list. If you want the best organ on earth, don’t delay, but write us at dace and save $15 mid make home harmont- Addtess: MALONE’S MUSIC HOUSE, Columbia, S. C. Pianos and Jim says, "We can’t sell .no truck To such folks as Shears-S&wbuek. They’ll take all our cash away, But won’t buy our corn or hay." That seemed purty strange to me So I wrote them that night Jist to sm if Jim wm right. THE LEAST MONEY. SOME GOOD OFFERS: Success Magazine .. ..$1.00 Woman’s Home Comp... 1.00 Our Price for Both $1.65 Mother’s Magazine.. Ohr price for all. ■jlsny - Pictorial Review . 50 ..$1.00 Success Magazine .. .. l. ft 0 Cosmopolitan . 'r.” 100 - Ast ’em what they’d pay for oats? Ast 'em what they’d pay for goats? Dressmaking at Home . .$0 60 Could they use some likely shoats? National Horae Journal. .50 Had about four tons of hay I could ship ’em right away, pould I furnish Mr. Shears With his family roasting ears. Also would my friend SaWbuck Buy some of my garden truck? Answer came one summer day. •, Said they couldn't use our hay; Couldn’t use our pats and shoals, Didn’t "like our billy goats. When they needed truck to eat Bought It down on Water street— Sorry, but they must refuse „ Anything but cash to use: — -t I Mt down and wrote ’em then: "Hatp to trouble you again, But I want to thank you, sirs, *' For your bunch of cockle burs, If you love ycur feller man. .$1.J9 Our Pri_e for all... -American Tda'g&zine. I Cosmopolitan .. ..— . Argosy (rr All Story) Our Price* for all.. . $2.30 .$1 00* . 1.00 , l.ftft $2.65 American Magazine. ...$1.'00 McClurers Magazine .... T.60 ^ Our Price for Both.. ..$1.65 Review of Reviews . . .$2.00 Woman's Hf-me Comp.. 1.00 Success Magazine . . .. 1.00 Our Prl e for all.. }. ..$3.00 Review of Reviews . . . .|3.00 CosmopcHltiin .1-00 Do him good, sirs, when you can— McClure’s Magazine ... 1.50 While our merchants sweetly sleep Qur Price for all $8.00 Shears A Sawb.uck shear your sheep." —- ■ — Bend for.our Catologne which gives When women borrow trouble they lowest rates on all Magaainm. usually pay back double. ORANGEBURG It doesn’t take much dough to buy SUBSCRIPTION, AGENCY, a paate diamnwil. P. O. Box 64. Orangeburg* C. ‘little Giant” Screw Plates 19 assortments. Each assortment is pot up in a neat wood case, as abowaiacut Eachae- aomnent has aRmlaMe tae frmIm for hoMing all sizes of taps contained in assortment. Threads all sizes rod from 744 in. up to 11-2 in. GIBBE’S Guaranteed Machinery. INCLUDES GASOLINE AND STEAM ENGINES, PORT ABLE AND STATIONARY BOILERS, SAWMILLS, EDGER8, PLANERS, SHINGLE, LATH, STAVE AND CORN MILLS, COTTON GINS, PRESSES, BRICK MAKING OUTFITS AND KINDRED LINKS. Our stock is the most varied apd complete In the Southern States, prompt shipment being oar special- ty. A postal card will bring our salesman. GIBBES MACHINERY COMPANY, Box 80, Colnmtnm. a. C. PLANTS FOB TIE SOUTB WtesflsM Ctmilf/owm Grows from Thsy hsvs j I tt Jb i Ws hsvc worked dU«asotty its My ;»Uy i Wti thy ths i i mb « MUCSSc i MM SSd tsls I 11 s. h. Vow to-day they i > (rowan ol < ■ ot cold M r teettos at I i«a< ax oo ps Writs i •I I1.J0 I at tU goods shipped by sxprss rfsod. M0 lor 01.00; I to XOOSst tl.M *.000 ssd over si It JO sot Mnusd W. R. HART. ENTERPRISE, R c SN0WDRIFJ1 HOGLESS The Southern standard of super lative satisfaction. Purity person ified. Nature’s natural cooking- fat, for all purposes, from'bread making to fish-frying. Economy, wholesomeness, and healthful ness combined. There’s none other anywhere near so good. TTiE-SOimiHfflCOrrtKPOILCO.