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, • w w ■ » ' * • ‘ ♦ , iL ,...IW. 4||f, J^'K r 1 y. -* OFF FOR THE POLL COMMANDER PRltRT HAILS FROM NEW FORK. ??• .. X . w ■',■■■■ .. *• » Famous Rxplorur Feels Confident That He Will Go Father Than Any Previous Attempt. With the Perry Arctic club’s pen nant fluttering from her main tiuck and the Stars and Striper at her mis- sen, the Arctic exploration steamer Roosevelt left her pier at New York Monday carrying Commander Robert E. Peary, who Is to head another ex pedition In quest of the North Pole. The Roosevelt, accompanied hy a government tug, proceeded to near City Island, Where she anchored for the night to permit (he adjustment • of Her compasses. Tuesday she will <" "-go to Oyster- Bay, where President Roosevelt'will board her to bid good bye to.hey commander and. crew. The ^„R°o*« v elt W 1H then head for Sydney, Cape Breton* where she will stop to goal. " ™ Beforeth^shtirteft 'Peary said: “I have done too much work in the Arctic regions to believe that I nan make the pole without strenuous work. I am not*~rooll8h enough to say that I am going to do or die. hut I am certainly going to put into this trip every hit of energy—mental, moral and physical—that I have in order to succeed in my undertaking I know* my path will be hedged In by many trials and undoubtedly many disappointments but I feel confident as my ship leaves New York today DC ST GERMS Tuberculosis is Transmitted Through Germs Flying in ths Dost. • One germ found in dust needs es pecial mention. Tuberculosis, which may be classed among the dust diseases ravages our country beyond all other tubercule bacilli. Every time the consumptive sends forth sputum where It can mix with the dust of streets or room he sends forth hundreds and thousands of liv ing tubercle bacilli. :Once mixed with that dust, deposited on sand or other cutting particle, the poisoned weapon flies upward ready to cut through and enter the body through ^he lesion formed in the lungs. In caSe^ftfter case we find In the lungs of perfectly healthy persons small French Woman Grieved for Husband Who Died on Wedding Day. For fifty years No. 19, Boulevard Poisoniere, in Paris, a house of four stories, has been closely shuttered, and yet It has been continuously In- 1 habited. Servants were seen to en ter and leave the building and the other day It was dressed In the black and silver trappings which qsher I'Vhnce’s citizens to their last resting place. Mme. de Provlgny, Its occupant for fifty years, was dead. She was an old lady of seventy, and for the last half century she HvWd In that closed and shuttered house without a news paper, without an open book, with out a flower, and without a word to tubercular lesions which h«ve ^utftHherfrom any living soul. For fifty . that if 1 do not reach the pole itself, at least I will carry the American I dangers of flag farther north than It has been the Pullman sleeping car. ed, showing that they were able to combat the poison—when attacked But how about the time of low- re sistance? *How r can-'the citizen tell when that time may come to him or JjClJUs family? The magnificent crusade agalhst^tiHierculosis Is ISfttarg much to convince the Individual of the necessity of care against conta gion. The municipality can do al most as much towards the stamping ont of the plague by a steady con- stmggie. to achieve the. clean est possible street. In the dirt of the assembly hall, of the theatre, of the hotel and the railway ear wa find conditions in which the difficulties which exist in the priyat^hpoike are fourfold multi plied. For hhurs the crowds of peo ple in such places sit breathing the accumulated dust brought from the streets which, rising from the-floor, floats in clouds into the air and set tles heavily on the antiquated plush still in high favor for such places ft Is but a year or two ago that the newspapers considered briefly the that bacterial paradise, A brief * carried by any previous explorer. I spasm of remonstrance passed over Unless unforeseen circumstances In- the country and disappeared as sud- tervene within the next year, I hope denly as It came. The peril from to plant the Stars and Stripes at the such sources was, however, recognlz- pole.” ' ' led two decades ago by more than As the Roosevelt swung out into one, and a quotation concerning the the East river, a few minutes after presence of tuberculosis in such plac- 1 o'clock a crowd on the pier cheered I es from Dr. Mitchell Prudden writ- good-bye, while tbewhisttea of river I ten almost two decades ago, holds as craft joined In the farewell. I true today. On board th Roosevelt, besides, I “Sleeping cars and the staterooms Commander Peary, Mrs. Peary and of steamships and hotel bedrooms their children, Marie and Robert E..|are almost always liable to contain Jr., were a number of members of infectious material, if they have the Pearr Arctic club. Including Its been recently used by uncleanly president, Thomas D. Hubbard; Its consumptives or those Ignorant of vice president, Zenas Crane, and its the, danger of their expectoration secretary, Herbert L. Bridgman; I When the infectious nature of con- several members t>f the Explorers'I sumption becomes generally appre- club and friends of Commander I elated, hotels and transportation Peary. Madame Arctowskl, wife of companies over long routes will be Prof. Henry K. Arctowskl, who was compelled to provide special accom meteorologist of thft Belgian Auarc-1 odations for such persons as are tic expedition of 1897-99, was one of known to be thus affected.’’—Hollis a party of ladies on board. | Godfrey in Atlantic. The crew was kept busy up to the hour of departure, stowing away stores In the hold. Including large S' quantities of books and .magazines French Soldier Losses His Winning and a billard table. Ju*rh4fbre leav- Ing 21 Bibles were received aboard. Lottery Ticket, the gift of Jhe New York Bible so-1 a pr|vnh‘ mildler named Claret, oi » , ««ty- The Daughters of the Revolu-| pni js, some weeks ago bought WAITS A YEAR FOR FORTUNE. mrket of four lottery ticket;, kno>vr: lie tlon presented to Commander Peary a peace flag with the request that he I p am prise, for half a crow,-, carry ft wl'h him to the pole “as 1 a shield and buckler against all dls- pater." « ' OIL FIELDS BURNING. The Blase Is Visible For One Hun dred MDes At Sea. noted the numbers of his tickets ami then lost the envelope in which he | bad placed them Fortunately he had written his ! name on the envelope, which was found and returrvjd to him in bar- I racks. But one of the tickets was (missing, and that ticket wron $tbU;- 000. The immense Mexican oil fields I Claret wrote to the lottery man- between Tampico and Tuxpan are a K°® en t end the ticket has been burning. ~ The Are Is visible mo 8to I , P ed - He w111 now have to walt * miles away on the Gulf. The light “ y ear a,ul a ^ before he will en- U Intermittent and therefore danger-| ter lnto Pos^sion 0 f his fortune. ’ ous to prfkoners A dispatch to this effect was re-1 A " ‘° ,,ot "’father, celaed at the state department TueS- The torrid wave now sweeping ov- day morning from United States Con- er the North is playing the mischief •ul General Emerill Grimih.'nt Tern- j Iany have been penetrated b, the «Nn farther detail, of the lire are ” ,I!W ’"V inieu. i nat section of the country is known there and the cause cannot to be C01nm , 88erated be ascertained. It is believed that h..™ < n .k*, t. , < . the entire fields, probably the largest I ()een D i u . ^ ar In the world, are on Are and wllf be hnt „T a 1 T ° r millions upon melons of gallons of | ctapUon are coJl, When RECLUSE FOB FIFTY YEARS. HEAR CANDIDATES. ‘ . ’■ f SENATORIAL CAMPAIGN PARTY AT YOKKVILLE. years YTmwp-daJVoylngy wore white *atHf?CBhe wore It day and always dressed in white to the end. Fifty years ago Mme. de Provlngy died. They had been married in the morning; and the young husband died of spplexy an hour after the ceremony. When she recovered from thcT'shock, if, need, she can he said ever to have recovered, from it. Mme. •de Provlgny bad thq house shi:t up* iid^ehc tetnfcWN^ier serv Uifnwr'eeif* dltlon that they were never to con front her with a living-.being and never to speak to her agaln. 8he did 8ygtem ^ f tho couptfy not know the trend of public events7| oit/>li l „„ lalaH „ n ac wmil ,, Motor cars were unknown to her She did'not know whether France was a republic. She had never heard of the Dreyfus case, of the death of Queen Victoria, or any na tional or International event. In her will M'-e. de Provlgny left her Chief Interest Seems to Have Center ed in the Cross Fire Between Ma yor Rhett and Mr. Grace. ^orkVlUe, J-uly 8.—Special The Senatorial candidates spoke to a re presentative audience of about three hundred voters in the Court House here to-day. County Chairman Wil son presided. The only incident of special mo ment was an attack on Mayor Rhett by Mr. Jdhn P. Grace and It Is gen erally conceded that the onslaught Messrs. Evans, Smith, Johnstone and Grace devoted much of the^ir time to criticism of Mr. Rhett and his platform, and this was construed by mapy of the .auditors to mean that theybelleved him to bu the man in their way. The first . speaker was Hon. O. B Martin, who t d ev °t e< i hlmeelf to the subjects heffitofore discussed by him. Mr. R. G™ Kheu was next Injreduc ed. He outlined his platform as to the- needed changes In the financial such legislation as would correct the evil of discrimination in freight rates between different sections of the country, and made clear the fact that he was opposed to so hsunpei'- Ing the roads that they would not Newspaper Folk. The Hundred tewspaper men and women gathered at Gaffney are repre sentatives of that which is beat and noblest In South Carolina. The gathering is thoroughly repre sentative. Not all the newspaper workers in the State are here and the pity is that more are not here to oin in the pleasures that have been provided; to talk shop and enjoy a brief and needed rest. No people on earth deserve a chance to get away from the “ever lasting grind’’ than do these men and women who day after day tdli to provide the news. * Dr. Lodge said that he thanked God that there was not a single yel low journal in South Carolina; this was simply saying that there is not a dishonorable or unclean newspaijer published In/ all Carolina. It may 4 umerative to publish a “sensational sheet * T)U the sort of journalism that Is" prac- tlced""iu this, proud old State—and will never be. Newspapers workers deserve ap preciation and they are receiving it more and more evefy‘day.* - * Jt is largely because people are better in- foin.ed because they read mofe and because they see results of conserva tive and well directed journalism Th rewards of the real newspa- man are not what they should be. but that will come too, in due time. An independent and self-re- be able to properly maintain their tr&cks, -tolling stock, pay their em whole fortune to men and women ag- ~j 0 t 8eg • adeTjuaTe' wages and Ore ed over sixty years of good charac ter. She left a large house in., the country as a home for them and'8^- 000,000 for Its support. ■ — i i ■ «i .1 — Fro|M>*o<l Forestry Law. If the legislature of Louisianna passes the forestry law proposed by Ooverncrr Blanchard of that State, and said to have the support of the largest timber owners, it will be the most advanced step yet taken by any state to-regulate timber cutting on I -ivate lands. By the terms of the proposed -statute, the cutting of trees under twelve Inches in diam eter, four feet front the ground, will| t h e Senate he was approached by a not be permitted. The law does not|| )ar ty | n Charleston who evidently apply to those, who, in good faith Lpoke with authority and assured wish to clear the land for agricultu- thaUif he would support a certain ral purposes, or need the Umber on ran( itdate for sheriff that Mr Grace the grounds for roads or ditches, or would not. be a candidate for the In case of an owner or tennant who senate, and that otherwise he would uses the wood for domestic phrposes. an( i that he refused to enter into The lumberman will IV required the conspiracy. to fell his trees in a wa^to cause Mr. E. D. Smith followed Mr least damage to young'tH&ber, and Rhett. He devoted most of bis time tho refuse must not be left where to reiterating his well-known plan Its presence will invite Are or other- for throttling Wall street gamblers wiao-endangpr the small trees—TbeiHud -setm-elng -for the dow-UTirodrlrn stockholders reasonable dividends on tbeir investments. In conclusion h; asserted that he was a lifelong De mocrat and said that while this fact was fully recognized In his home town, a party from’ there, who was posing as a candidate for the same office as himself, would follow hint and attempt to impugn his Democra cy. He stated that the only charge the party would make against him that was true was that he did not vote fof* the President in the general election, in 1R91T. but dt<Tvote -for Bryan In 1900 and for Parker in 1904. Mr. Rhett stated that after he had announced as a candidate for penalty provided for violations of the Ltarved, naked and ignorant cotton .proposed law Is a fine of $25 to $100 rnlsers of the South their share o for each offense, and imprisonment rhe necessaries, comforts and luxuries may be added. Each tree wrong- of life, , evidently oblivious of tba fully cut <will constitute a seperate fact that the people of York County offense. The proposed law not only I where the farmers are the most pro delimits offenses and names penal-1 sperous class, were utterly 'unable ties, but also sets forth the reasonslto appreciate the conditions so elo JiJiy law thought advisable, quently set fort!}. T mber is becoming scarce, it savs Mr. John Gary Evans followed and and ought not be needlessly wasted. I devotedhis time to an attack on the Forest destructon will carry with it financial system outlined by Mr other evils besides dearth of wood. Rhett and also to the need of revis it will cause destruction, soil erosion 1 ing the tariff. and increase floods and droughts, to] Mr. J*. P. Grace was next intrbduc probability that intervention upou the part of Germany would follow and then there would ensue a strug gle, in which the Napoleonic wars would grow small and pale their ires, in contrast with the titanic contest thus aroused. British dip- omacy would not permit any such terrific risk, to involve the empire, to save the amour prope of Japan and a settlement would be effected in some manner, Perhapf, the thorough understanding of this is the explanation of the recent con ciliatory attitude of the attitude of the island empire towards the -ceivi United States. specting press is the surest way to Not Guilty of Election Perjury. Hugh Hood, who was manager of "the Crown trank at Scotland, Ont. was acquitted on a charge of wilful ly making a false oath. The case arose out of incidents in Oakland township, in the recent provincial election. Many a homely woman has posed as a beauty specialist. • it is, he is one of the greatest polit-!tifi‘*'l against Rabens. and upon his ical leaders this country has ever [testimony a verdict of guilty vas !<■- recelve just appreclation.-^affney 1 pr ®^ u ^ ^ 0 ^' , ,n ^ T ace ?? premc court was given, and he was * ' protests of the greatest papers of | et on a $r>,uoo bond, pend|ng hiaowja party, and the persistent ef- the '.cal. The supreme court con- forts of its brainest leaders and l drnif; l 'h® verdict of the lower court, cleverest politicians, he has swept Slnf ° 'heu Rabens has been at large . . , . . . and : e officers of the state, including everything before him. If he can Post >er In8pect d r H . T. Gregory do that and yet do it so quietly as ai {d other postoffice inspectors, have hardly to be noticed in the doing of, been n the watch for him. The what will be the result when he gets surr '* !or * n K act must have been a before thfitwuntry for the election? ! ng ‘l one between Rabens r, , . - ,, .. . land the officers for postofllcer In- Parker has fought his nomination, t KIM . : Gregory was present to re but declar^ahe will be for him ifjreiv. lim when he entered the shcr- nominated and\believes he will win, iff s < Klee. Kidder has fought his nomination I 11 After praying for what you want get busy and do a little hustling. Lagging Business. The boa£t of the Republican* that their policies have carried the coun try safely through the panic, am that business is rapidly reviving does not seem to agree with the facts. For instance, the United States Cast Iron Pipe Foundry Com pany, known as the Pipe Trust has just made its report which shows very disappointing results The President of the company say in his report: “During November, 1907, business absolutely stopped; the company die not loss it* business. There waa.no the damage of the whole people, cd. He spent his thirty minutes in months.” oil, Wos PUT POISON IN COFFEE. mud Charged With Trying to Kill Husband and Two Sons. people In the tenement district of New Yoik city have to crawl on the 'ire escapes i t.night to get a b ea.h of air and I'orcr > i ec a little : running the risk of fallug off to the pavement below, we begin to re alize that we know Very HWe' about 1 weather. One of the qjost d : sa^ ever 'spent ¥ Mrs. Alexander T. Clark, wife of a well known farmer, residing near I greeahle summers we Ingrams, Danville county Va., was was in a Northern city. We longed held for the grand Jury at a prelt- foe the cool nights and breezes of mlnary hearing Thursday at Chat-1 tho South. ham, nn a charge of thrice attempt- f .Take It year ir and year out, and ing to poison her husband and her all the year round we have about two grown stepsons by placing Parlrf the finest climmate to lie found any- green In their coffee. It was only where in the world. The winters are after the third a{£mpt that the I mild and th summers are generally cause of sudden illness of the three far pleasanter than In latitudes far- men was discovered. A physician, ther North. What a charming spring *ho analyzed the coffee, found that was the one of this year, and what a It contained poison. The only rea-1 glorious winter we had! And al- .sen assigned for the deed Is the un-1 though the summer is more than pleasant relations with her husband.* half over, few feel the need of go- l — ling to the mountains or to the sea- Another Star oti the? Flag. ^ shore. Those who have gone did so, After July 4, all flags made forjnoi because’a change of climate was the use of the government wll con-1 npcesstfPF, 6ut simply because it is tain forty-six stars in tfcts field, or I their custom to go somewhere for a union, to conform in number to the vacaton. The rest of us who stai<l at states. home have bedn about as comforta- The additional star follows Okla- ole as we wonld nave been had we homa’s admission to the Union, in gone to the mountains, conformity with an act of congress, One has got to travel about a requring that on the admission of a good bit before he appreciates the new state, one star Is to be added to really magnlflcient climate of the the union of the flag, to take effect South. We who have lived here all on the Fourth of July next, succeed- our lives don’t value It as we ought. Ing such admission. When it gets a little warm we Inia- Okklahoma came into the Union gine that If we could get up North on November 1« last. we should find it cooler. Verhaps; The forty-six stars are to be in six though the chances aye that we rows, the first, third, foqrth and should find it not near so cool. Bar aixth rows to have eight stare, and Harbor, Nahant, Castlne Littleton, ttff second and third towa seven Narraganzet Pier, Shelter Island and stars each. The stars will be on "h other places of resort during the blhe field. summer season can be as hot as the A. great many flags now flying hottest places one ever saw. ftom govern n*;nt buildings will haro | Yes, we are upon the Whole pretty The Torests ought not to bbe wholly an attackon Mr. Rhett. seeki-ig to cut down, the proposed law further impress the hudiqnce with th« M.ra -ays, because they assist in obstruct that Rhetfs entire career was one ing disaaPous tornadoes. I of treachery to the State, to Charles- The Supreme Court of Maine re- ton and the Democratic party. He cently ruled that that state may law- sought to engage Mr. Rhett in a col- full' resli ict tl o ( tearing of private v loquy, but that gentleman stated that owned forest land. If the public after Grace had finished he wonld would be injured by such clearing have a few words to say in reply. Louisinnna’s proposed law goes still When Grace closed he received lit- further In the same direction and tie applause. follows the lines of the opinion ren- Mr. Rhett arose at his seat and derod by the Main Supreme Court, stated in a few words that ahsolute- It Is worthy of note that the twolly every charge Grace had made in states which are first to take this ad- his attempt to wash Charleston dirty vanced stand In forests prSTectTon I linen before a York County audience aye. fifteen hundred miles apart and was false, except that he had -not have forests not at all alike In char-.l voted in the general electron ’for IK ter. different soils, climates with [president in 1898. This was follow- few points, in comnion, crops of whol- ed by long and general' aptdause, ly d.fferent kinds, geography and and when Tt had lulled Graee at- topography of opposite extremes yet tempted to" say something. The air- each realizes the immense impor-1 plause was renewedT'and for several tance.of Its forsts and how essen- minutes he stood and attempted to tial their protection igJ.o The contin- speak, and it was not until the chair- ued prospjei4*y'V#'ifts-people. man appealed to the audience that sf'* s ln ... j he was allowed to say anything, and A Pecular Well business. “When there was added to this natural coridition the depression which was caused by the panic, the result was a stagnation such as has never been known in the history of the cast iron pipe business in this country. Not only was there a ces sation of business and a sharp fal in prices in November, but there was a declining market all through the winter and early Spring in Florida. then irte-j to be alterei to meet the new conrii- mlner* have called well satisfied with the South and its climate in spring, summer, autumn, and winter. We know one may go rtheT Into ikigner latitudes and fare a great deal worse.—Co lombia JUcord. ' *ln their investigation of the wellsMy deaf ears. and underground waters of Florida George Johnston was the next „ i , ,r .. . , . speaker, and by reason of his well the geologists of the United States , , known -ability as a blender of wit Geological Survey have noticed many I and sarcasm he had the audience in interesting things. Among these isla good humor. He devoted some a well at. Welaka, oiTthe St. John’s ,lme to criticising Mr. Rhett and River, from which two kinds of wat- then took "I’ “Smithy” and kept the er are obtained. audience convulsed for a tffllfe- with This well is. n09 /.ft deep The his recital of the dire calamity that length of lhe< using .s 110 feet The awaited the cotton raisers of tho well was first drilled 160 feet. and|§*f ,th ,n c a H0 ,hc iw’oplo should be from this depth ordinary “sulphur” »» foolish as to elect A man who water was obtained... The well'was had accomplished so much single- then carriedd to a depth of 309 feet, handed in so short a time, not only when* it encountcied a strong miner-U°r South Carolina but for the whole al watei, having a disagreeable s*' r .v I United States, in forcing Europe to taste. In order to usq Itoth knds of Pay foe cotton what it was worth. water an iuner tubing was run near- Mr. W. W. Lqmpkin was the last ly to the bottom of the well. Both °f Ihe Senatori^ candidates to speak this and the outer casing were con- and confined his remarks to subjects netted with pumps, so thqt ordinary on which he has dwlet at previous watur ^and mineral water can be meetings. pumped at the same time. A favorite In the afternoon speeches were ji:oe played on visitors is to give made by Messrs. Finley, Butler and them a drink of the weaker water in Pollock, candidates for Congress the first glass and to replace it with) from this district, the brine in the second. Not more-Allan half a dozen wells of this kind are known in the coun- But the report tries to encourage the stockholders, although no divi dend is declared even on preferret stock, by saying “that with the op en : ng of Spting business has im proved.” It need hardly be saic that but very small orders would be an improvement over, the entire- cessation of business reported. The other branches of the stee and iron business, although not making quite as disastrous a show ing.arc nearly in the same fix. Yet ihe Republican platform boasts that Repohlican policies have protected the business of the country. ' - Aspect of the Yellow Peril. The danger of any union between China and Japan, for aggressive purpose, does not loom as large as it, undoubtedly, did three or four years ago, Indeed, between China Weds Anna Gould. A civil ceremony at Strand Regis- try^but there is no reason why sim-K r y 0 f}}ce iu London, and later a relir ilar"wells can not be obtained in re #ions where the waters in the upper strata differ from those lying deeper. In these investigations of the wa ters of Florida the National and State survqjiL^are cooperating, and much valuable information has been fathered during the wnter’s work gious ceremony at’ the French Pro testant church bined Prince Helie de Sagan and Madame Anna Gohld, the latter on Her second matrimonial venture. The prince turned Protest ant, adopting the faith of his bride.* Odessa Faces a Wheat Famine, Cossacks Watch British Legation. I Indications are that the wheat crop sixty Cossacks J|re watching the in the Odess region of Russia will British legation at Teheran, Persia, J be_25 to 50 per cent below .the gver r to prevent the escape of many refu-Taye. American agricultural machin- gees who are In concealment by the. ery manufacturers are countermand- Britiah charged' affair*. * I lag their orders. * T— T anti Japan, there are evidences of strained relations, consequent to Japan’s hold on to Manchuria, which it almost looks as if she-»-ready r *t¥ divide with Russia. The island em pire has also lost, rather than gain ed by her forceful attitude in her recent collision with China, over the seizure of arms, imported from Ja pan, presumably for the use of reb els in China. And it may be that the passage of the fleet of the United States into Pacific waters had a (feeper meaning than that which has been heretofore atUiched to it. • Without control of the sea, Ja pan’s fine army would find it most difficult to make any serious impres sion on the great celestial empire, and while it would crumple up the army of China, should the (latter kingdom accept the gauge of battle and contend for mastery in the plains of Manchuria, the destruc tion of Japan’s fleet would lead to the inevitable discomfftnre of Jap an’s army in time. Possibly it is the appearance of the fleet of the United States.on the Pacific coast, which has enabled the astute Japa- nize to realize the possibities whfi^ might ensue from any undue pres sure exerted on China. It i* extremely doubtful that Jap an could count on British support, if aggressions against China brought remonstrances fr«m the Utued States; for if that was rendered them, there wonld be the extreme T-»— " R A JENS GIVES UP MAN CONVICTED IN OCONEE ON SERIOUS* CHARGE. <!> He \V. s Convicted of Receiving Stol en Oiods in Connection With Post- ofllce Robberies. H. Rudolph Rabens of Charleston, who v as convicted in his absence at Ocon'--county of the charge of re stolen goods, and for whom a s* 1 sentence was left with the clerk • court 6f that county. Thurs day -orning walked into the office of Flu iff Kay at Walhalla and sur- remb W l himseU, ^ He was quietly place-' in a cell, and the bars were secure 'ly placed behind him’ R; bens was convicted of receiving Bryan's Strength. According to our view, Bryan’s phenomenal strength in the Demo cratic convention, now admitted by ,. , as ^overwhelming, has been due to a great pdptitar demand the r • n gods secu’-ed by the yogg- for him on the part of the rank nH a ^ e ' ,7pT| 1 ~ lld 111 nf 11 Imlnal "court of file of the Democracy; but this view of tV p ourtney Manufac t ur i n g com- is questioned byjJerbons as entitled pany ;it* Nfwry several years ago. to their opinion as we ire, and pos- He "• * arrested on the charge sever- eibly«as well informed upon matters al tncritla before the case'came to pertaining to politics. Many of tr,a1 ' aml he WttS J et out on ' ,a,, 11 °[ i • t, i ji r $o,000. When the case was called these claim Bryan worked/ for the nomination and the result is due to for trial he did not prut in an appear ance ,.lt jwill be recalled that the persistant effort upon his part. If li-pfnri.i.-d safebinwer. Mcr.arthv. uia.-. s. us is quite a noted Charlcs- •aracter. His reputation **x- ••11 over the state, and the ma- •jf the people of South Caro- tll l*e interested itv hia-armU- Think of the Horse. •ing the warm days, while vou v feel the discomfort of the says he will not notify him, if he is nominated, and Dr. McElway. of Brooklyn, can not surrender the right of the tail to wag the dog and will oppose him under any and all conditions. But these two will not hurt him seriously—Columbia Rec ord. AX INTERESTING QUESTION. • To the Editor: * Can Hypotism be taught by * malt?—if so. from whofiTTcan I » learn it? 1 umierntaml-riiat IT"» can be taught to anyone. • H. G. M., Columbia. S. C. * Hypnotism is very easily-’• taught" by mail. Anyone caii * learn tp use it. We refer you * to MR. C. Win. RUSSELL, llox * IMG. Ml. Vernon, N. V., an i \- • pert, who will teach you very * quickly. Write to him for par- * ticulars. . * If .V and she v for l and will fight it to the last; but will. ,on beforhim, if nominated. Johnson J((|1 has (ought his nomina.tioa_burlv Hnr and openly; put will be for him if nominated. And so wilt Gray, even if he will not accept the Vice-Prtsi- D dential nomination. Some man in , keen Georgia, whose name escapes us. heat’■ourself; do you think of the hoc ? You are careful to make the best of every opportunity and cir- cur M .ince to make the condition of the U mperature more endurable; do y u do the same for the horse? i drive out you go as lightly orely clad possible: do you the same human consideration e horse? You take a ce oling ^ whenever there opportuni ty, and seek this opportunity if not in • ' e regular course; do you think of • horse? Much may be done by a- hr- e foresight and care to rob the hot ».cather of its discomfort, for beu 1 as well as for man. horse is a noble animal, al- willing, if treated right, to his masttr. He is worthy of all the consideration and care that may l>e shown him. He suffer* fror: heat as much as man. gnd thoi. t h it may be necessary fj^r- the hort-' well as the master to take the luat in the street or in the road son.i Mines, this may be made en- dur. l*io by proper care. T*\iake a horse', load him with heavy, '-hating bar ne.\s check up his- head ;n that he is compelled to hold it stiff?/ enct. and in this condition drive I im through the tun unminef- ful of '.is suffering, without perhaps even giving him sufficient water to drink, is monstrous cruelty. Water, i^ncericdjto prevent the blood ris ing to an abnormal temperature and quench the thirst produced by this condi'..>n, and this should be offered at sh Tt intervals to a horse that is beiny driven in such weather as we are l.a\ing now.—Augusta Herald. Will lx* Tried for Bribery. United States Attorney Maker and Spec! I Assistant Attorney General IMigb have announced that John A. Bens*';], of San Francisco, Cal., will be trii 1 on a charge of bribery in conik tion with theWestern land cases. * LANDER COLLEGE (Formerly Williamsloii Female College.) GREENWOOD, S. C. Rev. Jolin O. Willson. President a Opens Sept. 18. 1908. Comfort able} steaniheated, electric -lighted building, in city limits. Good’ food Home like life and oversight. Thorough teaching and training Fine work in music and art. Cost reasonable. Send for catalogue. Th way plea 1 HO MANY v Haye availed themselves of our Liber al Ofhjt viz, $l5discoiint on HHOand *1)0 • irguns we have concluded to renew the dffer for a short while -so as to get these excellent organs introduced into every county and locality in 8. C. Only 920 first payment, 920 Nov. 1st. 1008,'and balance Nov. 1st, 1900. These terms enable yon to buy thh will prove a Lasting Treasure. Don’t Delay but write at once for catalog and prfee list to the old established —MATrrTFTJrMI SIC Hot HE, Pianos and Organs, Columbia, S. C. 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