The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, June 18, 1908, Image 4
TURTY CHILDREN 0
IJOIW rif WXTKK.V YEARS TO THE
SAME MOTHER.
Tb« Mod H*m*rkal>)«‘ Cm* on Rf
. rord. S^renteeB, 6f the Thirty
CtHMmi Are tlving.
Four boys were born to Mrs.
Abram Ck>to(sky, of Terry Hill. N.
J., on Wednesday. All of them are
In good health. The combined weight
of the quadrouplets is 16 pounds
and four ounces.
Mrs. Ootofsky, who le 32 years of
age is the mother of 30 ehidtern, 17
of whom are living. She was l>om
near Warsaw. Poland, and came to
this country in 1891.
She was married In New York lu-
April, 18927 and Immediately left
for her near home on an 18 acre
came, and that one died within a|
week after Its birth—Twins follow-!
GOV. HEY WAR!) VERY HICK
Hm
Announced Withdrawal fron
Senatorial Race.
■s
The Columbia State says it hat
been known to his most IntlmaU
friends for two or three weeks that
Oov. Heyward's health was in a pre
carious condition. The condition
however, was not considered serlout
by any . other than his lmmedtat<
family and hie physician .nntll aftei
hit trip to Georgia last week.
It was hoped that thls'trip woult*
entirely restore him, but^ It falled7t<
do so. On his return from Georgia
his condition was found to be seri
ous, so much so that hla physician)
have been Instating for several dayt
on taking him to a eanltorium. H<
has, however, strenuously fought
this Idea.
For aereral days he has been con
fined to his bed and hts condltioi
has grown so much worse that It ha:
been found Imperative that he g'
away at once for treatment.
Got. Heyward was too 111 to 1m
eeen Wednesday, but It was stated ot
hie behalf that he will not lie a can
didat* for the senate since hts physi
clans, Drs. McIntosh and Guerry
enter the campaign.
While It la hoped that rest and
treatment Fill completely reston
him to health, hts physicians stab
thht he will be unable to return hom«
or to engage In any active worl
within lees than three months o
more.
It is understood that Gov, Hey
ward will leave Thursday mornini
for the Philadelphia Orthopaedh
hoepltal, accompanied by Dr. Me
Intoah.
lAfCKKD IN CAK SEVEN DAYS.
Machines* Has a Terrible Experienc«
In IVttato Car.
At New York, erased from want o'
food and water. Chester A. O Connell
a raachlnest ef Bath Beach, was re
•cued from a freight car In th<
Harlam yards and taken to Lincoln
Hoepltal, where It was said that h«
might die. O'Connell was working
tn Jacksonville, Fla. and losing hi
Job, crawled in a freight car ladei
with potatoes to make his way hack
fo New York. While he was asleei
In tb€ car the door was locked anc
the car etarted northward. For sev
en days and nights he was locked ii
the car, and the heat waa intense
To appease his hunger he ate som<
of the raw potatoes, but they inadt
hlmdeatKIy ill, ifnd; some time in
day he Tost-consciousness
Finally after a Journey of 1,20c
wiles the train reached New York
where the Car was opened. O'Con
nell was found unconscious and taken
to the hospital where typhoid fever
developed. •
LAD RREAK8 HIS NECK.
THE SOLDIER BlTglEESS.
A Modern Amy Should be Organ!*
ed Bo As To Attract Good Men.
In the old days of chivalry tbs
soldier did not receive direct pay In
the exact sense that ha doea to-day
but for hta services rewards wen
due, and necessarily so, to preservs
in him proper subordination. Uli
keep and hta weapons were furnish
ed him by hta “over-lotd,” and with
them food and raiment, and certain
privileges pertaining to hla art, now
inown and Included in the modern
term "loot,”-
• The rule has passed down the as-at
that a fighting man must neefls fight
for something more substantial than
principle, and more satisfying than
patriotism, so that even In the Rev
ilutlon, the obscure pages df history,
;<* found this momentous question ol
pay, and right troubling *a it was at
.hat' time.
Jtt the War of 181.2, a better regu
•atlon had come Into effect and'tht
furra near Terry HUIa.
Mrs. Ootofsky gave birth to twins]
on March 22, 1893. Both are living.
Since then the Gotofvsv family hasj
had an annual increase of one, two
or three members. In 1894 but one]
and
somewhat lower nowadays, but price*
illowancee for ratlona and clothing, gre still high enough,to make diving
tnH , «r WAVA AAA A* n «% ,4 A I, I PA' AA+4,
md pay were saner and more satia-
tylng, aa Indeed was true In th«
ater war with Mexico, and In th<
;reat Rebellion of 1860. The side
vop which had the money behind It:
he armies wbflch were fed and cloth
->d- paid, were maintained at
ed In l|9fr, and in triplets, all]
of whom are living. The twins horn
In 1897, 1898 and 1899 all died in
in'ancy.
5Mrs.,,Ootofsky-gave birth to on*
child only in wiBli uf the two
Ing years, but In 1902 she wa* ajcain
the mother of twins. For the next
three years oqe chfld was Itorn an
nually, and thsir In 1906 triplets
came. Last year they were twins
and the four which were added ot.
W ednesday make the total numbe
of 30.
Besides raislrflMHs family, Mr. Go
tofsky has had such great succest
that he now owns the place with no
mortgage and has added altout 20
acres to the original 18.
New Methods Have Changed
' the Work of Gathering.
PEARLER WELL EQUIPPEC
With a Balt of India Rubber* Coppei
He Descends to the Bottom of th<
Sea- -Spends From Six to Eight
Honrs There.
The Servllla pearl given by Jullui
Caesar to Brutus’ mother was said U
have been worth 9176,000, says Lon
don Tit-hits. For a pearl an Incb
In diameter a Persian shah of the
seventeenth century ta said to bav«
paid 6320,000. The pearl market n
. . . by mango fringed salt water creeki
M a^ dlverslon ln ths few remain- KQrchlng desert* of spinTTex and
sand. Long before inland gold was
ffectlve strength during the terrl-
-ile Uter days’ itrugglea, while tbs
ess fortunate opponents found theli
'.ghtlng strength dwindling away,
.rue perhaps, owing to physical ex-
taustion, but nevertheless equa'ly
true. Indeed, owing, to an uncertain
>upply of the essential elements Tor
toldlers; and not the least of these
pay.
Parallel with this quostloh arises
the fact that a soldier’s profession If
i trade In exactly the same sense that
arpentry, masonry or mechan'o-
>re a source of livelihood, and to
uklntaln an effective, disciplined ar-
ny, the renumeration must be com-
lutltive with the price paid In civilian
ife, So In--the-War of the Rebellion.'
rter the supply of volunteer enlUt-
lento had' been practically exhaust-
, the authorities did not appeal
o the partiotlsm of the nation, ’'ut
the pockets, In the shape-of <i
ounty, and this certainly did meet
be situation for the time being.
The days of going to church with
i rifle over the shoulder have been
orgotten, the menace of the Indian
f the West has passed, there is uni
ersal security practically from one
6d Of the country to the other, and
He soldier’s weapon, ones so neceis-
ry for sqff-preservaUon, Is used on-
y
.ig gam* centersj and In the target
allerlea.
With thia has passed the fellow
•elIng for the. man wbo must face
oyslcal annihilation at the call of
principle and the order of hla m-
trior. 8o that the first question
eked by a prospective aaprult Is the
.omentous question of pay.^and- JBa
rst mental action ta a comparison
etweon the soldier pay and that of.
.s former occupation. The attrac-
ve recruiting posters do not state
iuch about the actual advantages o'
soldier's llfeJroip a^patj^lotlc point
t. view; they dwell upon the pay
id the allowsttees. and somewhat ot
-urse upon the change of life In
ti ved.
So the great fallacy that each and
«ry American is a soldier by In-
.inct and race If a rifle is but plac-
J in bis hand, Is pathetically appar-
nt’ to-day. This was Indeed true to
, certain extent when the edge of
he forest might harbor Hhe savage
ndlan, but that haa long itassed, and
he performances of our citizen sol-
tery, such as at Bladensburg and
.t Queenstown, and later in the earl-
er days of the Civil War, does not
tflect any grekt amount of credit
■n America.
A modern army to-day mue.t be
rganlzed upon a business basis if it
oust compete for men with the n-
ustrlal world; the soldier must re
elve adequate pay aud allowances
o be contented, disciplined and'e*Tl-
lent, so that the present scale of
tay, existing since 1870, both for
>fflcers and enlisted men, Is totally
nadequate to warrant making the
rmy a career for the best men of
h« nation, and the American Army
hould be of the best the country can
urnlsh.—From Army and Navy Life.
profitable.
The era of naked divers exposed
to peril trom sharks has passed
sway. Modern progress equips th«
pearler »lth a suit of India rubber
Copper breastplate,' with leaden
weights back ahd front; helmet, glast
panelled-and with telephonic attach
ments; gir pipon. Uft Hnen and a
submarine searchlight. Thus equip
ped the pearl diver may spend six or
sight hours at the bottom of-the sea,
whereas In olden times three minutei
made a record. -
Although pearls are found In near
ly all moliusks and even In univalve*
like the Australian haliotls, a kind
of barnacle, true pearls are produced
only by the pearl oyster or motbet
of pearl shell. The latter la really
the diver’s bread and butter. Tb«
shells are as big as dinner plates and
weigh two pounds when ciegjied
They fetch from 9500 to 9750 a ton
The ancient fisheries were chieti)
in the Indian Ocean and Persian Gull
bat nowadays the beet pearls corn*
from Ceylon aud from Australiai
waters, especially Torres Straits.
Pearl fishing in Ceylon is a govern
ment monopoly. . In March the dee!
starts for the pearling grounds, each
vessel with twenty or thirty divert
and their assistants. But the head
quarters of pearling are to-vbe fornd
in the desolate country extending
from Exmouth Gujf to King Sound
in Western Australia.
A glistening white coast line it
thia, whose monotony is broken only
■y Falling From Stair Railing While
r Sliding Down.
While sliding down a stairway |
felling In the cotton mill at Tucapu
In Spartanburg County, Friday
Clarylce Prince, aged 9 years, fell to)
the floor and broke his neck. He|
died instantly. The accident happen
ed bhorUy after 12, aa the boy war]
ihome after havtngg carrlyd
dlnner-lo hta'faiher. He stniddlei
the railing at the stairway and start- j
ed to alHfe down when he lost hit
h*lance and fell. The coroner was]
notified, an inquest was held and a
verdict of death by accident was re
timed. *
Almost Human Intelligence.
Something new and interestiu*
ibout ants was recently learned by
lorlst. For a week or so he na I
»een bothered by ants that got Into
ioxgh of seeds, which rested on r
keif,
To get rid of the ants he put Into
-locution an old plan, which was to
dace a meaty bone close by, which
the ants soon covered, deserting Uw
boxes of seeds. .
As soon as the bone vecame thick
ly Inhabited by the little creeper
the florist tossed It Into a tub ol
water. The ants having been wash
ed off. the bone was again put In
use as a trap., ,
The florist- bethought himself thn*
ho would save trouble by placing tht
bone In the center of a sheet of fly
paper, believing that the ants would
get caught on the sticky fly-pap-j
while trying to reach tbs food.^Bui
the florist wm surprised to find that
the ants, upon discovering the nature
of the paper trap, formed a working
force and built a path on the papet
clear to the bone.
The material for the work wai
sand, secured from a little pile near
by. For houra the ants worked
and whan the path waa completed
they made their way over Its dry sur
face tn oouplea, as In a march, to th*
bone.—Nature.
for pettrie, and they p*id
many visits to Roebuck Bay and
what 1s now tho pearl town oi
Broome.
Chinese and Malays as well as
tribes of native black fellows arj
Fixing Fp Things.
Tift’s friends being in s majority
on the National Republican Execu
tive Committee have things their
own way, and what they say goes.
The committee has been in session in
Chicago for several days arranging
the contested delegations, which are
mostly from the South. From near
ly every' Southern State there is a
Taft and an anti-Taft delegation.
people much. They proceed to fix
up things easy for Taft by putting
the names of those delegates who
are favorable to him on the list.
The opposition is full of rage, but
it rageth in vain. As the Charles
ton Post says “all is Taft that comes
into the hopper of the national com 7
mitte, or rather all is Taft that comes
out of the mill. Evidently it is in
tended that no chance shall be tak*
en. The convention is to be most
carefully constituted so that it will
turn out no other result than a Taft
nomination, and the national com
mittee is on the job. Taft agents
and exponents hold proxies for
the Taft tics, as such, but is interested yi the
seats on the committee, his em
ployees swarm about the scene,, and
steadily the grind goes on that is to
convert the opposition into support.
In vain do the “allies” shriek to
heaven that they are undone by this
high handed proceeding; that
is
what the Taft machine is for, made
and guaranteed for just such undo
ing work and its operators are quite
accustomed and are entirely indif
ferent te the shrieks of the victims
D
The order has gone out of the White
House to nominate Taft and that
will be done, in spite of the conse
quences. The full brutality of the
Roosevelt policy is being illustrated
to the eminent gentlemen who are
candidates against the favorite.
They may be Republicans In good
standing but they might just as well
be Democrats for all the considera
tion They are going to receive
this business of Mr. Roosevelt’s.
“Maybe it is a winning game, hut
maybe, too, it will be carried to far.
The Republican convention this year
is to be a political massacre, and
the shedding of so much Republican
blood must leave some sorrow and
in
dreamed of roving natives Ashed~ some hatred behind. Will Mr. Fair
banks-
on
14 KOREANS ARE CREMATED.
there to-day, "but the old nude div
ers, the reign of terror and piracy
-‘when a laige haul was made—then*
and sliuilar conditions have pas«ed
• w-ay,.-giving place to fleets and lug
gers carrying modern diving outfttii
and representatives of the Inevitable
capitalist In the person of the master
pearlers*Here aie six hundred
utiles of const Hue, with perhaps five
thousand hardy adventurers engag
ed In the pearl trade.
There are some thousands of Jap
anese, Manllamcu, Malays and men
^If other races acting chiefly as crpwt
for the vessels. The vessels art-
schooner rigged and from seven a
founteen tons burden. Each carrle-
a master dlVer aud a crew of (pm
one of whom ta the diver’s assistant
and works the air pumps. Anothet
bolds the life line and pays attention
to signals; another Is catching fish
or peeling potatoes for dinner, ant.
it may he a third has gone off in the
dingey for fresh water and flre-wood\
The shells are found on ledget-
about ninety feet down in the see.
but they are far more plentiful at
greater depth. Foitune awaits the
inventor of a diving apparatus which
will enable the pearler to work In
comfort one hundred fathoms down
The lugger ,has a low freeboard tc
allow the diver with his heavy drest
and gear to be easily hauled
board. He carries a net holding th
shells with him, and when this
full he has It hauled up so thjkt h<?
himself may run no risk of entaug
ling life line or air pipe.
When the pearler works at, say
twenty fathoms he moves easily, not
withstanding his forty-pound booU
amid groves of coral trees, lutprlac., .
ed with fluttering, fern-Uke plants
among whose branches swim gorge
ous tropical fish and sinister water
snakes, which seem to resent the in
tru^ion of so strange a monster.
A good day’s work^ta anything
more than two hundred pairs of
shells. The business is absolute!}
speculative. One diver may gathei
ton after ton of shells without se
curing anything of greater valu
than a few seed pearls, while an
’other may take a fortune out in t
day’s gathering.
The most famous pearl discover
ed in Australia of late years Is knowi
as the Southern Cross. It consist
of a cluster of nine pearls In th-
shape of a cross. This freak of ns
tore was picked up at low water oi
the Laclpede Island by a beachcomb
et named Clark, who, after buryln
It for some time for superstition
reasons, sold It tor 960; later, >
brought 960,000.
The pearl direr of to-day, protect
ed aa he ta by every device know,
to modern submarine engineering, I.
exposed to many perils. He may to*,
hla life by the tearing of hta dree
upon the sharp coral rocks.
Mm Graft.
ten employed on the Virginia Japanese Fire House in Which Rebel
iV R1 ‘ : i ,u ^ ondl Leaders are Hiding,
startling discover-1 i - ^
f waa completed !t ** r ®P° r to<l (fom Korea that on
to already In bad Thursday the Japanese expeditionary
DoorworkmaaahlD 1 forcc * hi Sonjuin in the pourae of
• I their fight with the rebels, surround-
]ed the Koreans’ hbose, tn which one
of the rebel leaden was entrenched
The Japan me • fl
fired
house,
Surplus Labor Causing Trouble.
A number of young men overturn
ed a wagon loaded with Japanese
laborers at El Centre. Cai., on Thurs
day, and a party of Japanese was
stoned at the railroad station. Sev
eral arrests have been made
Brawlay a number of Japanese were
taken from a wagon and. threatened
The troabble to due to the anrplaa of
non and Mr. Knox and Mr. La Fol
lette feel like whooping it up for
Mr. Taft after the convention has
jammed him at the head of the tick
et over their mangled corpses? Of
course they will whoop, all right,
but will they feel comfortable and
enthusiastic? Not very much so. And
there will be a good many thousands
who will know their feeling and will
take it out at the poilt The Republi
cans are a well disciplined political
crowd but they have their limit of
endurance and the allies may have
reached it this time. .
“They certainly should have, for
there never was seen before—no.
not even when Hanna was framing
up the nomination of McKinley -
such wanton disregard of the rights
and interests of all save the favorite,
as has been in the preliminaries of
the Chicago convention. It was
pretty had in 1896 and the effect of
it would have shown in the election
too, except that every thing was
forgotten in the face of the free sil
ver menace of the Democrats. There
will be no cloud of that sort this
year to obscure the enmities of the
Republicans, nor under the cover of
which they may make truce, and
the raw spots the convention is go
ing to make on the party will not
easily be healed. The Republican
convention is being run in a way
that promises some comfort to the
Democrats. From the point of
view of a Democrat the performance
is distinctly entertaining.”
the courage to protect the people’s
interest. They love Theodore Roose
velt for the good he has occomplish-
ed; they love William Jennings Brjr-
an for the good they know he can
accomplish,
will either nominate Theodore
Roosevelt* or go to defeat if the
democratic party nominates William
Jennings Bryan. The National Food
Magazine has no interest in poli-
The several gentlemen who j
thoi ght they’,were candidates for!
Hie 5 residency before the Republi-
tan Convention don’t like the way
Taf is ’Tixing” the delegates for
The treacherous tide* of Tybee
The republican party Tuna elf, but they will all submit ] Beach have claimed their flrat vic-
and pull for the ticket because they j tim early this season. 1 Fritx SclS-
knoi v they would do the same thing
for themselves if they were in Taft’s
plade.
election of men who will strive for
the passage of good laws and insist
on their execution. For thirty yeaf e
the United States was in sore need
of a food law that would prohibit
the swindling adulterator from pois
oning the people, but it was not un
til Theodore Roosevelt became pres
ident that such a law was made pos-
$'klb, a voi*nx man about 19' years
of as-*, -'as riowned the^e .Sunday
a'teritcoii v > . c enjoying a su ‘ bath.^.
He and a companion went into the >
surf late in the afternoon when the
It makes no difference *hat Taft tide *** ! 5 olD * 0,lt at a * reat rate
, , . , aUa,,* speed. The young man got into the
and his manage™ do about / nderK|w aI]iJ w(0 „ b( . reall2ed b|a
kick ug out anti-Taft delegates from ^ an g er ». e was being carried out? to
the Republican convention there- se a. When he found that he was iu
vrill be no bolt. The Republican danger of drowning he grabbed -bln
sible. The “interests” were too
strong until the man of courage
arrived at the White House. We
know what he accomplished for the
cause this magazine represents and
we would therefore prefer that
Theodore Roosevelt be retained as
the president of the United States,
butjf this cannot be done, our pre-
ference is for a man who believes
in the same principles and who, 'we
believe, has equal courage in action-
William Jennings Bryan.
The Old Veterans.
Again the United Confederate
Veterans, grizzled heroes wtyo
fought on many bloody battlefields
for a loosing cause, are assembled
in annual reunion at Birmingharp,
Ala. Death has thinned the ranks
visibly since the general reunion jn
Richmond fast year, and a hush
sadness has fallen upon the remnanjts
of the vanishing hosts of the Con
federacy because of the recent death
in Vicksburg of GeneriTStephen D.
Lee. commander-in-chief of tie
United Confederate Veterans. Tie
conclave, which began Tuesday in
the Magic City will be a time fpr
recounting past victories and defeats
from which all the old sectional bit
terness has departed, and for last
greetings and partings between
many of the aged veterans who re
alize that on this occasion they majy
answer to their last roll call op
earth. Many federal veterans were
present and fraternizing with boyif
Tn gray Ihe'enmity between ‘ ‘ Vanksj’
and “Rebs”, forgotten. The gray
line grows thinner and thinner, and
soon the last Old Confederate Vet
eran will cross over the river to
rest under the shade of the trees
with Lee, Jackson and the host of
others who made the name of the
Southern soldier immortal, by their
vfilor and heroism.
Canght in the Undertow and Drown
ed at Tybee.
party is organized and run in the. '’om pan ion by hi. bathing suit and
inteXsta of the trusts, and the Re-jf “7°,
publican leaders, who are the active j John Seigers, who was with **
ts of the trusts, know that the the vlotiru ot the surf, came near be- -
t way of getting results for'lug carried down with him-and only
theif trust masters is to stick to the W'reiirhed from the grasp of
Ithe drowning man by the greatest
machine. So they will stick.
_ effort. His clothes were partly torn
TgE Washington Post thinks that from his back before he succeeded
the large number of operations for <» l.reaking the yo..ng mnn’8 hold.
j j- u 7 iu * After that he d d all he could to
appendicitis throughout the country savp hJm hut wa ’ un3ucce88 y ul .
is one of the unmistakeable signs of %There W ere several people in bath-
returning pjfosperijy. ing at the time and there were large
crowds on the beachi bnt the drown-
YlAlITfcPD milPPP ing did not create a great deal of ex-
IjAZlUIill UUllljIlUU- - cityiraeiu in any part of the island ex-
immediate vicinity in
(formerly YVilliamston Female
College.)
GREENWOOD, S. C. '
R()v. John O. Willson, President
Opens Sept. 18, 1908. Comfort-
eept lu the
whi>h it occurred. The body of the
young man was carried out to sea.
able
building, tn city limits.
Horn
Fine
rensi
steanjheated. electric
A Smooth Article,
i Sporting Life says ttirough some
lighted .misunderstanding the' Bostons had a
;-llke life and oversight.
Thorough teaciting and training.
(HI
?ad
work
able.
Good food, funny c'jtetience at New York with
Roy Evans formerly a National Lea
gue pitciter, v.ho entered the club
honso last Thursday, donned a Bos-
Sead for catalogue
in music and art. Cost fon UB|fonn and had , (W1 at practice
half an lour before Dovey and Kelley
v_
discovered him and asked him w
wa. 7 There wM alnroBt a feitt
Kelley w UVn Evans announced
smile .that he liked the
- Of Interest to Democrats.
The •National Democratic Con-
Bryan Will Beat Taft .
ȣTaft is certain to recieve the Re
publican nomination for President
art Chicago this month, and he is
equally certain to be defeated at
the polls in November by Bryan,
who will be nominated by acclama
tion at Denver as the Democratic
Presidential candidate. As. tbt
National Food Magazine puts it
“the politicians have agreed under
the will of Mr. Roosevelt and Taft
inflqence, that the 350-pounder
shall be nominated by the Republi
can party but the people do not
want Taft.” The Magazine goes on
to aay that “the people have two
idols; they will be satisfied with ei
ther. TRetr preference/ howeVer,
would be for the one who has m!
tried and found honest, cour
and just. Therefore the people
would rather vote for Theodore
Roosevelt than for William Jennings
Bryan. But they believe in Mr.
Bryan-- they know that many of the
policies called Rooeevelt policies to
day were the Bryan pc ideal of
; welve years ago, executed by a man
laving the courage of his convic
tions. They know now, from the
exposures of recent years that Mr,
gressional Campaign Committee hat
begun active operations at its head
quarters at Washington, "D. C. In
addition to its regular work, it u
now preparing a campaign hand
book which it hopes to have ready
for distribution by July 1—two or
three months earlier than hereto
fore.
The Committee is charged with
the duty of assisting, in every wav
possible, the election of a Demo
cratic Congress? We wish the ac
tive co-operation of^evey voter in
the United States who believes, with
ua, that the election of a Democrat
ic Congress would greatly benefit
the country. We must rely upon
the people to sustain our work by
giving information as to local con
ditions, and suggestions for our
guidance.
Each individual can at least aid us
by making a contribution. Will he
not do so and interest others in help
ing us, too?
We wish our campaign hand book
distributed as generally as possible,
and we will furnish a copy, as soon
as published, to every one who con
tributes to our committee.
Send remittances to me at Wash
ington, D. C.
WTty'Ruy an Organ from fht-T’tflffTer.
Whed you can buy a superior organ
from jyour factory representative for a smile .that he liked the Bostons
less money, nnd on easier terflu, and and would stick with thept. Evans
havg absolute protection in ti e guar*! was-thrown out of the uhiform. and
ante** given by the makers. We make j later President Dovey whreeehed
low |)j
Mara)
and only bind the organ ns security ^Boston ball players and had been
We stlive you moneyandsupplyOrgan* thtere all week. Evans tried Jp I°* n
e given by the makers. We make j later President novey mnrwi uvu
pjrices and grant from one to two | iwardeycwhen he found Evans had-
sj without Interest, for settlement legLirieil at Itte-hotel as one of the
that will prove a life long pleasure
WT Be at once Jor catalog and specia
prices and terms to theoldestablishc
MALONE’S MI HIC HOUSE,
Piaook and O'gans Columbia, S. C
CLASSIFIED
COLUMN.
WANTED.
Wanted—Lumber and Logs. WrIU
—4f you hare Prrptar, Ash, Cy
proas,Hickory or Cottonwood Lunt
her. A 1st) want Walnut ami t> lai
Ixtgs Savannah Valley Lumbe-
Co.,j Augusta. Ga.
eU—1
Wauled—Boys..from 7 to 12 yeArt
of age, who would Hke to earn r.
valuable w'at'h for a few hours
easy 1 work, to send name end, ad
dresjg to Lock Box 175, Foil MIR
s: d
Desirable, l/x-ation.
CheraW, S. C„ is the plaee to locate
In fo'r business. Populoalon II.O'iO,
growling fast.'.Six railroad outlets
steatni>oat»"4o tli*» swai wiaiumn tag
to easterrt cities 25 per cent, cheap
er than neighboring towns Ad
dress Board of Trade, Cheraw, S. C
James T. Lloyd,
^Chairman.
The Taft interests have started a
Vice-Presidential boom for Cortelyno
Who Is said to have been Wall Street’,
iryan was defeated for the preai
At Jdency in both )us camptgns by a de
late of money coming from the cof
tea of the ‘twilight son’ marau
den. Thay believe that William
- w
choice for the Presidential nomina
tion. Heds to act as a buffer be
tween Taft and Wall Street in ex
tracting funds from the trust mag:
nates to finance the campaign.
is said this,brilliant stroke originated
with President Roosevelt, the great
and only trust “buster.”*'
• One of Taft’s political managers
says “from the way things ?re now.
going, no name but Taft’s will be
presented to the convention.”"'Sure.
What would be the use, after the
Taft committee gets through “fix
ing” the delegates as they have been
doing at Chicago for some days. The
Taft managers have found it cheap
er to count but the Foraker “nig
gers” than it is to buy them, and so
they have counted them out.
WhiiDhI Detective*.
«
WA\TF,D—Detectives In every lo
cality to act under orders, no ex
perience necessary, address Fed
eral Agency, Gary. Ind.
FOR SALE—iMISCELLAltEOl’S.
Kcgtxtei-cd English Setter and point
er puppies and young dogs. Brok-
tn and unbroken stork. Bitches In
whelp. English and Llewel'm tet-
~Ter, and pointer dogs at stud. All
'of the best breeding obtainable,
and at the prices you pay for
scrubs. Write for catalogue. Tryon
Kennels, Saluda. N. C.
For Sale Cheap—One Ruger Bread
Mixer, one Thompson Moulding
Machine; four Bread Presses; two
Bread Troughs; one Cake Machine
50 Plane Moulds; and many other
things used In a first-class bakery
\Apply to L. E Klley, Orangeburg,
S. G.
the Orangeburg team last season.
Dollar Stomtcd the Bullet.
Brice McLeod owes his life to the
fact tb:it he* carried a silver dollar
to the wetch pocket of his trousers.
\\ Idle In Raragould. Ark., recently a
negrtr'fired at him but the hall flat-
iFne^ against the silver and stopped
there. The negro esca|ted.
No Fo-aker “rugger” need apply
for adm aaion to the Republican con
vention. None but Taft, “niggers
will be admitted by the Taft com
mittee. who are in charge.
The mm in the White House with
the big s.iek has determined on the
nomina pm of Taft by the Republi
cans for President. It remains to
be set n if he can make the people
elect him.
The recount of the mayorality
vote in New York is showing that
H.-.W jint uliont aa mneh fraud
on one side as on the other,
not as much on either side as liearst Y
claimed there was.
f
SoME.cf these easily deluded Dem
ocratic pat>ers that hailed Roosevelt
as a gn*a f trust “buster” will no
doubt bo c mvinced of their mis'
when they eec the trusts lining
for Teddy’s man, Taft. — .
The “fat frying” of the big
porations in the interest of Taft
already begun. The Republicans will
have an immense campaign fund as
usual, but we do not believe they
can buy the people this time.
The Johnson Bureau at Washing
ton like his presidential boom, seems
to have petered out. At least wc do
not get any more literature from it.
For Sale—One twelve borse power
timate of the standing of delegates
elected to Denver on the presiden
tial nomination, says Brvan now
has over seven hundred delegates
Blakesley Gasolene Engine, cheap
Also lot of shafting, pulleys, etc
Apply to L. E. Riley, Orangeburg, and that no other name will be pre-
8. C.
' sented to the convention.
“Keystone” Reversible Ratchet
Comb.
No. 200
You'll make no mistake in buying this the Ass# and onfy
COMBINATION made. Three Ratchets in one, taking
Taper and Square Shank Drills—Long and Short Feed.
NONE CHEAPER i ASK FOR PRICE.
COLUMBIA SUPPLY CO. Columbia, S.C
37500 Square Feet Floor Space
Covered With - - - -
Pumps, Packing,
Belting, Pipe,
Valves, Etc,
... write Tor prices
SOUTHERN STATES SUPPLY CO,
l-r«* a#'**
Pulleys,
Fittings,
i
i»V -v v’;
Whin a trust owned newspaper
like the New York World is corner-
fd it splutters out - brazen lie;
against the real trust fighters, like
Bryn and others, which are taken
up and mochoed all Tver the reur-
mery
line and Fteam Engine P •rfa'.V urd
iepBi Sawmills, ledgers, I'iti'rvrF, 4 **— , | M<
ve s<i'i Com Mr.k Cotton Uuie, Prtueen
trick Making Outfito aud i udred Lines.
Otu sio k i he moet v n d and complete in the
Southern States, pro npt Liptrent being o«r specialty.
A postal card will bring our galoeman