University of South Carolina Libraries
.. DONATES HEROIC REUSF PARTIKH 8TRUO- HERDS LARGE SUM TO OLE NIOHT AND DAY. QUAKE SUFFERERS ! Fnquint Skocks K«tps tbs Poor Sufforors io Tirror. -v u ' ’ S’" .s'',’; •n W»rel«M T«*«- fi«Rlni Work Up- the Great Inland Southern Ex- o( Its Conunrrclal DispatrCt Ordered. - Iff? ttiV«iilir8 deroted to~ the wlreteec telegraph and telephone bue- wlu oentaln an Jntereattng «r- tlcle on the proposed extension of the hsudneee of the UhIQmI Wireless Telegraph Company, and from ad- Tahoe proofs 1t Is learend with pTeaa- ) are and Interest that Columbia . I s on the Hat of new offices to t>e es tablished. The company ts making preparations to form a complete sys tem for over-sea and over-land bus iness and expects In the course of -time to be in netlve competition with the wire lines in busino8s„social and official transactions of 'mediate*. - The following from the article men- tlned will be of general Interest: The eastern operatlng»department of the United Scutes Wireless Tele graph Company announces the plac rag of an order with the company a , manufacturing department, for 260 complete seta of wireless Instru ments, all of which are soon to he inatalled at atatlons to be establish ed In dtles east of the MlssisslpP' river. This Is the largest order for wire Isas apparatus and to manufacture,, erect and put the stations into op eration, will require an expenditure exceeding 1600,000. The majority of the atatlons will be of one or two k. w. capacity, with-a range from 100 to 300 miles, but some, which mre Intended for long distance serv ice, will be t)f from 5 to 20 k. w. to transmit wireless messages, under .. • a all conditions of weather, for a range of from 60 to 2,000 miles overland mod from 1,000 to 3,000 miles over ’the water. fs'. -C*' The United Wireless Telegraph ’ 0$.. Company’s manufacturing depart- ' ment embracing three complete fao- i-- 4 torles, two of which are located in Jittey City, N. J., and the other in Seattle, Wash., have a combinad ' ^ta p a c 11 y of over $1,000,000 worth of wireless apparatus per year. The ./ larger part of the entire output of these factories has heretofore bee'n needed In filling orders from varlou governments and for the United Company’s marine department. It Is probable, uowever, that with an extension of this factory equipmenl, which will be made In the near fu ture, the 260 seta will he completed and the new stations be ready fot operation In 1909. The company promises to erect stations not only In the States ea^i — of the Mississippi river, but a4?*o 1 the Western States from the Pacific coast eastward, until they complete an Intercommunicating wireless sys tern covering all Important comihei- dal mining and manufacturing cen ter* throughout the entire Unite', States. Inasmuch as nearly all oi such cities are connected with man.' ■mailer places by local telephone eyr, tern*. It is expected that the United Wireless Telegraph Company will b In a poaition, by the end of 1909, to receive and deliver messages 'at several thousand points where the wire companies at present maintain offices. Xhe operating department- of th company Is now organizing Its forces to begin the ■election-' of locations for these new stations. Contract? and leases will be entered Into and thO advanced work completed, ready for the installation of the aparatu^ as rapidly as suitable sites can L>< secured and satisfactory arrange ments made. Among the stations proposed are the following: North Carolina—Elizabeth City. Cape Hatteras, Beaufort, Newberu, Raleigh, Wilmington, Greensboro, Charlotte, Asheville, Henderson and Winston-Salem. South Carolina—Charleston, Sum ter, Columbia, Spartanburg, Green- , Tille. Anderson and Abbeville. Georgia—Savannah. Brunswick Valdosta, Albany, Augusta, Griffin, LaGrange, Athens, Atlanta am, Rome. Fllortda—Jacksonville, St. Angus tine. Gainesville, Ocala. Tampa. Key ••• West, Tallahassee and Pensacola. Alabama—Mobile, South West Pass, Selma, Montgomery, Tuscaloo- »*, Birmingham. Anniston, Gadsden And Huntsville. Mississippi—Columbus, Greenville, li— H•ridlan, Jackson, Vicksburg, Natch- es and Biloxi. ^ Louisiana—New Orleans , Batoi. Roug®. Alexandria and Monroe. Tennessee—Chattanooga, Bristol, Knoxville, Columbus, Nashville, Jackson and Memphis. »• article further states that the imant of the western opeiWt- lent will be made Ini a iWttf the location 'of In the States west of the Missis *&- will be put with the stations al- thore uding sea equipped, by this Joel ad - King and Queen of'Italy Share Un flinchingly in Dangerous and Heart-breaking Task.. Messina, Jan. 6.—Althongh con fused and without system, the work of rescue has been carried on brave ly by night as well as by day. Heach lights on the warships flood the ruins with their rays and give light U the salvage parties. The king and queen of Italy, on board, tha battleship Regina Bl.ena, ” j pave given anotehlJLexample of de votion. The King, with some of hls ministers st his side, haa been di recting and auprevUing the relief work, yet he^ias found time to visit the Bold hospitals and sp_eak words of encouragement to his stricken sub jects. The queen has hqeir spending 16 hours a day beside the sick beds on the Regina Elena, attending and consoling and encouraging. The brunt of the work of rescue has fallen on the sailors, foreigners as well as Italians, and all have done their duty nobly. Praise of the Rus sians are on every lip. They hesi tated before no danger, digging un der tottering walls or entering the uneafost shells when asked to do ro by some frantic woman who had nqi lost all hope that husband or child was still alive. Although the air In Messina is heavy with the stench of putrlfying bodies several groups of Sicilians have camped out In the cleared spat es of the city and obstinately refusj- the Invitation of the authorities to move away. The survivors of the disaster rfre ho dazed and worn out that they are quite Incapable of describing their experlnces connectedly, but the,.Ac counts of all agree that the devas tation was accomplished in less than one minute. The strata below tin strait slipped, then a tidal wave rush ed in and out and all was over Those capable of expressing their sensations say that as the shock came they felt an upward thrust of the earth. This was followed by an osclllary motion and the crust of the earth vibrated. Few of the survivors are able to explain how they escaped. They know only that amid falling plaster and mansonry they 4 managed to jump safely from windows or^tum bled down crumbling stairways. Special Message From the PreaMent Recommending Aid for th£ Strick en Sister Nation. - Washington, Jan. 4.—Bountiful provisions for the earthquake suf- llerers of Italy was made by con gress today and that, too, by un animous vote. In the house there was vigorous- hand dapping as th* hill carrying the appropriation was.. cent c.a its way. The munificent sum of $8On,- 000 was granted almost Immediately ALIVE IN THE RUINS. Home Are Being Taken Out and May He Saved—Dreadful Desolation oa AH Sides—Corpses Floating in Bay of Reggio—American Fleet Send ing Relief. Idesalna, Jan. the Advice of the - • Fanner. -A RECEIVES ^Feere ago I wrote of visiting a man's farm, where all the 'land' was in cotthn right up to the standing unpainted in a bare field. A hopeless-looking woman was fry ing some Western bacon for th» Ain 6.r—Earthquake after the reception' in both houseslare continuing here, though they are PRIEST MAY BE UNFROCKED. Mysteriously Disappeared Young Girl. With : U*- --Jiw- Newark, N. J., Jan. 6.—Rev Fllomena Sianl, assistant priest a 3t. Roccos Roman 'Catholic church this city, and Julia L^sta, 17 yeat ;ii<L disappeared siimillanaously last Thursday and today tho girl's fatb or received a letter from the prie.» stating that they had been marrie 1 n New York, and would . not b< heard from again. Rov. Father Sianl had been a cu rate In the church for two years He had heard confessions offered the eacred of the mass dally. Ho had heard many times the confessions o he Rlrr with whom' he eloped and hud calkd.frequently at her home Rev. James Zuceorell, raptor of tin •hurch, snfd today he would tak* deps to harr-thc eloping priest uu frorkoi. Bishop O'Connor has been informed. of a message from the president cull ing alien floh to the calamity and the pressing need of aid for the stricken, sister nation. The president’s signature was aot affixed to-the bill tonight, sa lt did not reach him, neither the vice president nor the speaker yet hav ing signed It. The house hal ad journed and Speaker Cannon had left the capital before the seiafo passed the measure. President Roosevelt wil sign the hill, making ft effective when it reaches him, which probably will be tomorrow But for the fact that the national legislature was adjourned for the usual holiday recess when the earth quake-occurred earlier action would have been taken, although by the president's direction and with con fidence of oongresslonal approval supplies aboard the naval ships Celtic and Culgao, Intended for the battleship fleet, were diverted and ordered to the sufferers. No such generous help ever was extended to a stricken people by this government before. The legis lature received the message and fllle.l with a sympathetic desire to lent ; their votes to, anything which would bring relief were early In their seat^ and prepared to take Immediate ac tion. Confident that^ the further cor. trlbutlons of the American public will justify Us assumption of respon sibility In authorizing Ambassador Grlscome at Rome to charter and load with supplies a relief vessoi and also to transport refugees, the American National Red Cross ad vanced the necessary means where with to meet the suggestions of the ambassador and his committee of Americans In Rome. Over $330,- 000 has been collected through the Red Cross alone, of which $60,000 represents the advance referred to, one-half of which The Christian Herald has agreed to raise. Because of the belief of the prime minister of Italy, expressed In a mes sage today, in response to a qible- gram from the president to Ambas sador Griscom, transmitted last Sat urday, that the American fleet of oattleships will arrive at the scene of disaster too late to be of great assistance, qonferences are being held with the view to rearrangitiR heir sailing programfh**, especially .s It has been determined that the leet's visit to the several Italian oorta where preparations were mak ing for Its appropriate reception vouid be ill-timed under the present ircumstances. dlmiaisjiing In Intensity. At night especially are they frequently felt. Fires In the city also are being grad ually extinguished. Thirty thousand rations were distributed yesterday. Official figures compiled thus far show that 14,000 bodies have been buried In the four cemeteries, that 9,000 refugees have left the city and that 9,000 persons still remain here. Instead of excavating in an endeav or to find the bodies burled beneath the ruins It has been proposed that every house in which It is believed perons are burled shall be covered with quick-lime. The Associated Press correspondent has made a vis it to Reggio and carefully Inspected the towm it has been found that the number of persons killed here and damage done to property x is much less thau at Messina. Only the central section of the city U damaged. . “ ' 4 The official figures place the wounded at neggio at 1.U00. The number of dead in the ruins Is not known. Reggio Is practically aban doned. The bay of Reggio Is still strewn with broken boats and other debris. Numerous persons still Jlv ing were taken today from beneath the ruins, while the voices of otherr 'ould be distinctly heard, appealing :or aid. 'The tottering building will he raised and the bodies that have not been buried will tie burned. The Associated Press had the first correspondent on the scene at Mes^ sma. The bodies of the dead lay everywhere on the stirface of the ruins and limbs protruded here and there from the wreckage. . In the camp of the refugees piteous scenes were enacted. Conrtant light shocks followed the first great disturbance until forty five were recorded. The home of :hc American- consul, Dr. Cheney, was crumbled In the first shock and Its inmates were almost Inextricably hurled beneath the ruins. The escape of Vice Consul Lup ton, who was in his room in th Hotel Victoria when it collapsed, wx« remarkable. He had only his troua ers on, and, carrying his shoes and overcoat, he groaped his way along 'he quay knee deep In water to wild the American consulate On his way he three his coat over the shoulders of a woman. Clambering oyer'the ruins of the‘consulate he became conscious that his feet were cut and deeding. Later . be raised tho Hnited States flag over tae new con solate and began an industrious search for Americans. All Americans not yet heard from President Roosevelt In a message ^ considered safe. Probably AMERIC ANS CHARTER STK CAM^R Secure Austrian Lloyd Liner Oceania to Aid Suffering Italians. Rome, Jan. 4.—Ambassador Gris- :’.om and the members of the Amen- ■an relief committee have chartered for two weeks the Austrian Lloyd steamship Oceania. The steamer can accommodate 1,4 00 steerage and 100 first class passengers. She is now being fitted out. Ambassador Griscom today dellv ered to Count Taverna, head of the Italian Red Cross, $250,000- from the American Red Cross. Count Tav- 3rna was overwhelmed and said he would make an exception to . the fule, which forbids the distribution :>f money through any but Red Cross channels, and returned to the ambassador $2,000, q^ilch he had contributed to tho expense of the{# oans for supplying the \jants relief ship. KILLED BY WOUNDED DEER. 200, and; • _ _ ^ . . •bore the distribution Wounded Ruck end Ris Victim Found Near Together. Raleigh, N. C, Jim. fir-—That F. R. Swindell was killed by'a wound- d leer was the verdict of the coroner's jury at the close of an ivestigation into the death of a prominent ^It ‘zen of Beaufort county, whose body was found In about three feet of wa- er in a creek near tae spot where he suddenly disappeared from a par- v of hunters Wednesday near Broad Creek. Hundreds of men had searched for two days for the misaiug man whose body was located by blood hounds In a mill pond, a largo buck-deer. Joeing ?dui>q near blm, grounded. ’ A Tvumber of cuts and bruises on the body and head of the man were feund. V Fight Officers. San Dlisgo. Cal., Jan. 4.—Advices lust received from Mesa Grand, for ty miles from here, tell of a pitched battle thirty miles from there, be tween a tang of cattle rustlers and members of a vigilance committee. Tsn Ml m aadja whlt* with the wire seriously o congress today asked for a direct appropriation of $500,000. At the conference at the White House last night, attended by Speak er Cannon, $500,000 was agreed up- in as the' amount which should be apjiroprlatod. Ten minutes before the house convened the speaker re ceived a’ letter from the Whitt House suggesting that the amount bo Increased to $800,000. Before my action could be taken by the committee on appropriations the house was In receipt of the presi dent’s message on the subject. At he hurried meeting of the commit tee In front of the speaker’s desk, ‘he $500,000 which hhd been placed In Its measure was Increased to con form with the president’s later rec- ommendation. The president's mes sage follows: To the Senate and House of Repre sentatives: - “Tho appalling calamity which has befallen the people of Italy Is followed by distress throughout a wide region among many thousandc who have escaped with life, \bui whose shelter and fbod and means of life are destroyed. The ordinary of civilized communities is paralyzed and an expectional emergency exists, which demands that the obligations of humanity should regard no limL of national lings. “The immense debt of civilization to Italy; the warm and steadfast friendship between that country and. our own; the affections for their na tive land felt by a great number of good American citizens who are im migrants from Italy; the abundance with which God has blessed us In our safety—all these prompt us to immediate and effective relief. “Private generosity Is responding nobly to the demand by contrl* \- tions through the safe and ce- C { eat channel ofthe American Red Cross society. -xi- - - - •= “Confident oi your approval 1 have orderei tho govejyunent sup ply ships Celtic and Culgoa to the rcehe of disaster, where, upon re ceiving the authority which 1 now asit from you. they will be able- to dispense food, clothing and other supplies with which they are laden to the value of about $300,000. The Celtic has already sailed and the Culgoa is at Port Said. Eight ves sels of the returning battleship fleet are already under orders for Italian waters and that government haa been aaked it their services can he uae- fttl. "I recommend that the congress approve the application of supplies ner, while the man toiled In the cot ton. And I got to thinking over tho matter. 1'here was no stock on tin place but the mules that worked the cotton. And as I saw that bacon, l thought that some farmer out West raised that hog. and probably made something out of it. Some railroad carried It to Chicago, and certainly mad* money. Some packer bought and Cured tho , and grew to be a milltonalrj. Another railroad brought it South and paid dividends by llolnf it. Soon* merchant bought it, and sold it to that man out there In the col ton field at a big profit—and he works all .summer in the cotton making, all-these people prosperous out of his one crop, while at the end of the year he is as poor as ever, and his land grows less and less productive, while he might have made all those profits himself In raising the bacon at- home. , The Western farmer makes corn, the railroads haul It, the merchant buys It and,sens it to t^e man who could raise the corn at more profit than the Western farmer If he im proved his land. Yet he goes on In the old hopeless way imagining that cotton Is the only tiling .o get mon ey out of, and that corn, oats, and wheat are only “supplies, and the Western farmer gets rich supplying him When will the cotton farmer get out of this slavery to everybody else? Ncrt till he goes to farming Just a* the Northern and Western farmers do. He has a crop that is far superior as a money crop to an' - they have, and a crop that fits late an Improving rotation of crops ful ly as well as ally they have North or West, and while they get rich la sending him “supplies'’ he gets poor furnishing the crop that main tains the trade balance between this country and Europe, and selling the cottonseed that fatten tho cat tle that make the meat he buys la various forma. Now, then, is/the t.me to resolve to change all this. Plan a rotation for your farm and stick to It, grow plenty of forage and make'Hlanure. and when you once have manure enough to cover a corn-field, you will be on the road out of this slav ery to the North and West. Nine-tenths of the letters I get from farmers ask what fertilizer I shall use for this, that or the other crop, when the man who farms right will need to buy little, and that only of the mineral forms of acid phos phate and potash, or but one of these, perhaps. I have been hammering away a' this for many years, and yet .how few have taken the Idea. But 1 do hear now and then from farmers who have broken loose from thp old ruts, anJ are succeeding. Would to God thai I could get all of them to do so! A Woman Claims She Has a Spirit . Friend'Who Helps Her do Wonder ful Things. London, Jan. 3.—Seeing the an nouncement, emanating from New York, that * Plymouth lady spiritu alist Infndod claiming the prise of $6,000 offered by*, the American Phjrchlcal society to anyone who could prove having received a mes sage from the dead.. I haye Inter- vlewed "'the lady, whoge name Vf a oS'l m a* Ksvw a* 'Dlvrvtr V.ir’ rtp* '* FROM ONE WHO DIED LONG SINCE. , NO REASON FOR SLUMP Df MAR- ivIAUEH. South Carolina Charged With Mak- fn Augusta Clearing House tor ■ -*■' ‘ # > ’ ’ •* Her Mie-Matches. ^ • * its The Augusta*Chronicle says: •*A ,ajin»p 1* «arria«ea mid an Increase In the number of divorce proceedings were registered In the county of Richmond last year. Richmond county has for years been a sort, of a clearing house for mls-matched couples from South CarolfojL^nd.. thla ficLJuiP -Caused the large number of divorce proceod- Tfiu ordinary tact year Lasled 666 marriage license, against 689 of tho year before. There is no especial reason given fof the slump In mar- i lags llaenaea for. the year. The di vorce mill showed that thel'e were 79 divorce proceedings filed for tho year, as against T'J of IML—- The record shows that one out of/ about every nine weddings In thb county pan out bad. The per cent is .between 12 and 15 per cent for the county. All-'of this, ^Owewen n\sy show up the outside world very h*d for Rich mond couhty, but, when it Is taken Into considrratfon that so many casus nrr dumped on the county fr.'m Caro lina, the record is.nqf, so bad after SHINGLE mill burned. Martin, at her home at^Plymouth tddreas ■hoiild not joe givan. she Inf in the couuty each year. readlly cdaiehted to the Interview. “I have made no enort to prove that I have received .a message from the dead,” she said, “but I am cap able of proving It.” She had, she asserted, received very good mes sages from the dead on several oc casions. *■ V ’ The lady explained that she re cently saw In a London piper a tel egram from New York containing an announcement by the Metropolis tan society of New X or ^ to tlle feet that they had raised $5,000 now In the hands of David Goldberger, 747 East 136th St., to be given x any pervon who would shut his eyes and with the help- of a splrR, or by any other means, count a few- oranges split on a table behind hljn. She wrote to the address giVeu and offered to accept the challenge To the remark that this would Inv volve her going to New York, she replied, “Oh, no; with ray spirit friend, I can go there and fetuin again—that Is, In the spiritual sense. From my house here I could count tne oranges as they aiA sp.it on the table In New York.” Questioned as to the Identity of her spirit friend, she said, “I would not like to give the name • I qever knew my spirit friend when she was alive, but I have seen her many times since. It is with her aid that I claim that I can do wbat 1 have offered to do. She added, that, as a rule the message from her friend came to her when she was In bed find were communicated tn *vhlspers. As an Instance of her powers of claravoyance, she mentioned some time ago & friend of hers attending a dinner at Exeter. Although she remained in Plymouth, she was able to repeat the conversation which her friend had with another friend -at the dinner, .tell what wine was drunk, and give otuer utffalla. All this, she said, she did with the aid o» ^er spirit friend. ’ Damage \VIU Amount to - About $4111,000. 5 * . Bellingham, 'Wash. Jan. 4.—The plant of the Puget Sound Mills and Timber Company, said to he ibe big gest shingle mill in the world, burn ed’ last night. fh^T damage was about $415,000, with Insurance of $150,000. W. L Cleveland, a saw filer, was burned to death, and sev eral persons had narrow escapes. The fire started from a hot bqx CLASSIFIED COLUMN Ladles — Aresa capsules, perfect emmenagogue; never "disappoint; Infallible la e.very case. By mall $2 per box. -Free booklet.' Ad dress F. D. and Specialty Co.. P. O. Box 639. Atlanta,, Ga. r T ** . ,i ; ■* , / Of ; W REVOLUTION REPORTED. We are haying Cow Peas Advise us the n,umber of bushels you have for sale and serid us samples; we will make you our best price delivered Charleston..*!. M. Pearl- stine & Solis, 201-203 East Bay St., Charleston, S. C. A GENIUS AT FINDING MONEY. all are in the south of SlcIiy. YOUNG MAN KILLED. Much Feeling Against Those Charg ed With the Deed. Walhalla, Jan. 4.—Mann Phillips a young white man, was found dead two miles south of Walhalla yester day afternoon. Officers and an im mense crowd rushed to the scene It was seen at once that young Phil lips had been murdered and a ciue was started that led to the arrest last night of two young men, De- Wltt and Cleo Vandiver of West minster. It is believed that Phillips was killed Thursday night and carried dead or dying to the place where he was found, as tracks of several oth ers were seen there. The only wound was a stab Into the heart. Young Phillips had on his overcoat and heavy driving gloves and no knife or pistol was found-upon his person. This murder has stirred the com munity, as it has never been stirred before and wild rumors of sensational nature qre afloat everywhere. Mann Phillips formerly lived here and Is well connected. The Vandi vers are among the most prominent people in the county. - / Made Solemn Pledge. Cleveland, O., Jan. 4.—A move ment which, haa been in the course of preparation for several weeks was put into effect here today when 1,- 800 young people pledged them selves to “live as Christ would have lived.” The plejges were made at the Epwortb Memorial church, where hundreds of members of the Ep- worth League, Christian Endeavol and Baptist Young People's Society met. Illinois Carpetner's Instinct fyeads Him Right to It. When John Ehlenfeldt, a carpen ter, who has 1’ved in Elgin fir years, was arrested veste’day on a war rant'sworn out by Mrs. Ehlenfeldt^ |t became known that he has a gea- lus for detecting the whereabout:/ if money says the Baltimore Sun The vife and her two daught-rs went to the office of Assistant State’s Attorney Robert B. Phillips and asked him to tell them how to save their money. Phillips told them to hide it until a deposit in me hank could he made. "We have hidden it in the most 'mposslbie places we could think of.” said Mrs. Ehlenfeldt. “This hu. hand of mine Is a genius. I have not reported it until It became ab- ‘-olutely necessary, hut he has an abnurma' instinct for finding money. No matter how welt hidden it Is bf goes right to the place and gets it without any search or trouble.” A test in the State’s Attorney's office was then arranged. Money was concealed In a desk drawer. Ehlenfeldt was then taken Into the office. He looked around the room an Instant, then suddenly walked to the drawer and drew out the hidden money. Mrs. Ehlenfeldt says she saved $96, which she expected to pay on mortgages. She divided the sum into ten portions and bid It in as many places—in a ho'e m a flower bed, In a hole In a closet wall, under a clothes’ chew In the barn and In a bag at the bottom of a flour bar rel, on which she thr?w more than 10 pounds of flour.. The next morn ing, she gone. Stated That Nicaragua, Salvador and Guatemala Are Against Honduras. New Orleans, JaA. 4.—The Times- Democrat publl»he8 l ’tcday a story based on Reports received from Cen tral America which are to this J tef- foct: "Nicaragua Is marching troops from the frontier into the vicinity of Cholucteca" of Mignel 'Qavllla, president of Honduras. It is report ed that the Nicaqaguao, Dr. Arrias, has recently received ajfllfbst $4‘D,- 000 In army supplies, medicines, etc., shipped by secret agents of Zelaya In this city, and that all preparations are heliig made for a long campaign. v “The Informants of The Tlmes- Dsmocrat stated that it was general ly understood that the revolution, was a four-cornered affqir, with the Honduran malcontents attacking thr Zplaya forces, backed by Supplies and men from Salvador. It is also al leged that the Guatemalan govern ment had supplied men and arms. The consulqr^-repregentaitives in New Orleans of the governments con- ceraeiF deny any knowledge of the movement reported. .Roosevelt Defies Senate. Washington, Jan. 6.—^The Presl dent In a special message to the Senate today declines to permit the attorney general to say why he ha^ failed to bring action against the United States Steel Corporation on account of the absorption of the Tennessee Coal and Iron ^Company. The message is in response to a res olution introduced by Senator Cul- benlon. Wanted^—Engine, between 8 & 20 H. P. Shingle Saw (mill), FJaner, less than 20 miles . Tr 8;- Lee, North, 8- C- - ^ t —,— ORIENTAL RUG COMPANY, tabr Oslhednd St., Baltimore, Md. We Wtake you handsome and dur able Rugs from your old, wornout carpet, any size to fit a room or hall. Let, us sead. you a price Hat; Just write for one ^ ■ 11 » Wortted—Laundry .‘agents; liberal • terms, best Work? aew manaig j- ment. * Sumter Steam Laundry, Sumter. S. C. - ( want % hustler In every city and town In Soutlh Carolina. I have a proposition that will interest yo i. John A. Young, Mgr., ColumbU, S. C. ' ; Shop by Mall—Send for our Catalcj of bargains, It’s free. E. Dowda Co., Mail-order Merchants. Box 302.' Atlanta. Ga., WHAT 18 HOME WITHOUT MUSIC? Don’t say, “can’t afford an Organ or Piano. We will make you abl?, granrtirg I’roru one to three yeans to pay for one. We supply the Swept Toned, Dur- * hie Organs and Pianos, at the low- «t prices consistent with quality. Write at onre for Catalogue, 1’rices and Terms, to the Old Es tablished MAliONF MIHIC HOUSE, Columbia. H. O. iouthern States Supply Comply Machinery Suppjfcea Plumb!: tut said, all the money wa? PHONE 104. COLUMBIA^ S O AUTO ACCIDENT AT SAVANNAH. Virginia Millionaire Collision. Hurt In n Atlanta’s New Mayor Installed. Atlanta, Ga., Jan. 4.—Robert F. Maddox, who dras recently elected mayor of Atlanta, defeating the reg ular primary nominee, -was Installed in’offlee tonight. * - above indicated and further appro priate the sum of $500,000 to be applied to the work of relief at the discretion of^Jhfi executive and with the consent of the Italian govern ment. : “I suggest that the law follow the form of that passed after the Mount Pelee disaster in 1902, “Theodore Roosevelt. “The White Hoofs, . Jan diary 4, im.**. Savannah, Ga; JIB. 4.—David Dunlap, milllpnqlre horseman and tobacco manufacturer, of Petersburg, V*:, was injured-tonight when hlr touring car was wrecked by his chauffeur, who chose that method of~ preventing a fbTIIssion " with an other car, driven by Mrs. J. N. Knight, wife of a local physician'. Both cars were ynoving at high speed. Dm lap's car tore away a portion of thq guards . on Mrs. light's machine, so narrow was the escape. Dunlap, with George Van Gopsbeek and M. L. Lynch, two friends, were honed out of the wrecked car. Dunlap struck on his face and was badly scarred but Is j not seriously hurt. Gibbes SWING SAW I Drop Support*!* Smooth running AoeoruM cutting Thoroughly brxod Coot Iron and Moot oombimdk Plnoot habblUlnc *Ht! Sir prim aa« partfesiUart . GIBBE* fcACHINKAY COMPANY Sol loro of Cfi Next Week! ltdF ■This ^ *, ■ ’» Space. “IHUt CUiT SffHt: Heal In a neat wood < rx.,v •ZSm S i'j.*. ■'' ai*je • W. mt / mm