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IUTAL FATHER 6MFT G * L0RE WRECK FOUND Whips Hts Daughter to Death ' v - With a Whip. HOW THE PEOPLE HAVE I1EEX ROBUED OP MILLIONS. Of A British Warship Missing Eight Years In > THE BRUTE IN JAIL ^ ■ }r go SrT«r« Wiu the noting Give.. the Girt by Her Inhuman Father That Her fikull Wa« Fractured by It, From the Effecta of Which Hhe Died. A Hpecial dinpatrh from Lamar to the Columbia Record »aya word reachad there on Tuesday afternoon that a young negro woman, daughter of Ellis Woods, who lives on the place of Mrs Board, near Carters- ville, was dead under suspicious cir cumstances. Sheriff Blackwell, of Darlington county, upon being notified appoint ed Trial Justice J. W. Boykin to act as coroner. Judge Boykin went to the scene aljout 6 o'clock with a erowd of others and a coroner's Jury was empaneled. * Witnesses were examined and It developed that Ellis Woods had heat his daughter, a girl of 18 years, un til she died from the treatment. Another daughter of W'oods testi fied that he had beaten the dead wo man with a wagon whip There were cuts and bruises on her face and head and It appears that her skull was fractured. Woods claims that his daughter w'as complaining of feeling sick and that she fell out of the door and killed herself The jury rendered a verdict to the effect that the deceased came to her death at the hands of her father. Woods was carried to Lamar and placed in Jai! for safe keeping. LEAPS TO DEATH, Jumps From Window of Bye and . ..a. - ^ Ear Infirmary. While a nurse was in an adjoining ward at four o'clock Tuesday morn- William Powers, thirty-five years old, a patient In the New York Eye and Ear Infirmary, Second avenue and Thirteenth street , gnawed the “restraining sheet" that kept him strapped to his cot and made his way unseen to a window on the Sec ond avenue side. Several patients saw the white rbbbed figure open the window, climb to the sill and leap out Into space. The alarm was given and doctors, nnraos and orderlies ran to the street, where, they found Powers ly ing dead os> the stone area. Powers, who was a laborer, liv ing at No. IT)72 Third avenue, New York, was suffering from mastoid trouble. BOMB IX LAUNDRY. Hip Song Tong ( barged With the Deadly Crime. In the war of the Tongs, In wtyl^ there have he.m maqy,.,. a(jUaltle8 ,,1 wr r Tffk city, a bomb was explod ed Tuesday night in a Chinese laun dry in East Twenty-second street. A minute before the explosion a Chinaman presumed to be the one who placed the bomb, and came out of the laundry and warned a score of children playing In the street away from the scene, telling them that there was soon to be a great explosion. A minute later the laun dry blew up. The Hip Sing Tong of which Sang Lee, the owner of the laundry, is a deadly enemy, was credited by him with the explosion, The laundry was wrecked, but no one was injured. The Astounding RevcUUIons Mnde by Senator Beveridge About the Stealing of the Tobacco Trust. No revelation of the extra session has been more startling than that which Senator Beveridge made about the almost unbelievable graft of the Tobacco trust for eight years, says the Washington Times. That was a case of legislative partnership with a trust in a project to fleece the peo ple. Somebody must have been "fixed," "Greased." "oiled. ,, It is in conceivable that congress will plead guilty to such sublime innocence and Incompetence as would bo testified by the explanation that nobody in congress saw what was being given to the Tobacco trust. Here is wbat happened; When the Spanish war taxes were imposed, the Internal revenue duty on tobacco went up. The law was so arranged that tobacco dealers were permitted to sell underweight packages, de ducting enough from the weight to compensate them for the increase In the internal revenue tax. Thus a “tobacco pound' was considerably less than a 16-ounce pound; but It was legal because of this legisla tion. The tax was thus carried down to the consumer, and nobody partic ularly felt it. ^ But when the war and the need of war taxes passed, what happened? The additional tobacco tax was re pealed, but the trust's privilege of selling underweight packages was not stopped. The trust was left col lecting the war tax from the people, but pocketing It instead of turning it Into the Federal treasury. By this process, in eight years, the trust has got away with 1184,000, 000 of the people's money. That money ought either to have been left In the pockets of the tobacco users or else to have gone to the Federal treasury. In fact, it went to the coffers of the Tobacco trust. It is manifest that to repeal the war tax. but to forget to repeal the shortwelght privilege must have been difficult and complicated. Some skilled person or persons must have steered that thing through congress with consummate cleverness. Who did It? W'as he an “Inside worker or an "outside man?" If he was an insider, his identity ought to be known, so that he can be duly de feated next election by a betrayed constituency. If he be merely smart lobbyist, be should at least be questioned about tl^e methods by which ho Induced committees and leaders and organizations to permit such a tremendous steal. Senator Beveridge has gftne about this business In a fashion which indi cates purpose to stick by it till the whole Inwardness of this strange transaction is bared. The present |2li,000,000-a-year largess of the To bacco trust should first be taken away; then the process by which con gress was either befooled THE PACIFIC OCEAN ed shouts ue investigated. WOMAN SHOT HERSELF. Attempted to Commit Suicide, But Failed to Do So. The Newberry Observer says Mag- K ieWaldrop, a young colored woman, attempted to commit suicide Mon day morning about six o'clock, at th« home of Mattie Miller, wife of Frank Miller, colored. She got hold of a pistol and declared she was go- Wig to kill herself. The other wo man tried to take the pistol from her, and In the struggle It went oft, the ball striking Maggie in the thigh, Imbedding ItaeTf in or near the bone, where it remains. No reason is as signed for the attempt, except that her mind has been a little daft for a day of two. PITCHED BATTLE AT CHURCH. Abe Moseley Stab* John Allen at White Pond. There was quite an exciting time gmong the negroes at their church at White Pond In Aiken county on Sunday. Pistol balls flying In every direction, women and ehi)4rqn - wrenmlTJg twd falling between bench 5« to shun the balls, all resulted from J agmel be twee n - Moseley ec-d It is n wondrous interesting clr cumsUince that the trusts which seem most Influential with congress are those which most often appea in the criminal courts as defendants The Sugar trust has seldom been out of the criminal courts In the last two decades, on one charge or anoth er or defrauding the government Its reward is the privilege of taking 1660,000.000 in twelve years from the people. , Why should such a special privi lege be freely given to a crlrelnn! of the most fixed and persistent crim ina! habits? The American Tobacco Company If now defendant in a great rasi brought by the government under th* anti-trust laws, charging it with con spiracy in restrain of trade. That It is actually, if not teehlnally guilty is the common knowledge. Does It not seem strange that it, too, should be able to have conferred upon It a special delegation of the taxing power'* Does congress have any particu lar preference for the great crimi nals'* its distribution of Its favors seems to suggest something of the kind. Kills Man and .Mule. A bolt of lightning killed Jim Byrd, a negro plough hand, on the plantation of Mr. J. A. Clinkscales. south of Anderson, and the fine mule he was working. Same Clinkscales, the young son of Mr Clinkscales, who was ploughing two hundred yards away, was knocked down and badly stunned, and his mule was also knocked down by the bolt. Victim of Lightning. William Camp, a farmer, was kill ed by lightning at his home on North Pacelet River, 19 miles from Spar tanburg Tuesday afternoon. Wil- lism Simmons and his family of five children In the same section were terribly shocked by a bolt that set fire to their home. John Allen, the former stabbing the Utter la th* back wKh his knife, VlSUL .woand. Sbar i ff Ra . bun was soon upon the scene, ar- rastiaf negroes tor carrying conceal ed weapons,'hot did not get Moseley, as be ran to a nearby swamp, and has not been captured yet. Killed by Lightning. Mr. Mgrioa Eugene Brown. 21 year* of age. was strut* by lightning and inttaatly killed on hie thrm. near Mount Holly. OB Thursday. He was a son of Mr. and Mrs. Willie C. Brown, who, together with a wife two children, two brothers and •(stern, rarvlos him. ; Refuses to Open Cose. Th** Supreme Court has. telused .to reopen “the case of the State against R. A. Adams, thus finally disposing of one of the remarkable criminal records of Colleton county. Adams killed Henry Jacques about five years ago, and after considerable trouble was caught, tried for murder and sent to the penitentiary for life. JBnritd Under Gravel, n result of a cave-ln of • grave, pit at Oliva Branch. Miss., a few days ago, ire negroes were killed. Tons of gravel fell on them, crushing their bodies. MORE DAYLIGHT ' PLAIN FACTS Southern States; Supply Company THE MOST VALUABLE THING IN THE WHOLE WOKLD. BUY FROM US Why Not Have Two Hoars More of It When It l>oe* Not Cost You One Cent ? About tbo Tariff bill Told by Sanator Smith ON FLOOR OF SENATE Machine;*-^ SuppHew PIumtxtMg^JS^gglh COLUMBIA. S. O. The Condor, With a Crew of One Hundred and Forty Men, Sailed From Esquimau and Ha* Never Been Heard From Since Sailing Until Foand a Short Time Ago. The wreck of the British sloop of war Condor, whose fate and that of the 140 officers and men forming her company have been one of the mysteries of the sea since Decern ber 3, 1901, has been located, sub merged in comparatively shallow wa ter, abbut one and a half miles off shore at Long Beach, mid-way be tween the southern entrance to Berk eley Sound aad the settlement of Calyoquot, on the west coast of Van couver Island. The wreckage is about fourteen miles distant from the village of Clayoquot and seeming ly rests upon an uncharted reef, of which there are many in the vicini ty of Long Beach and Wreck Bay, which adjoins it. The news of the discovery of the long missing sloop of war was brought from the coast by Bonney- castle Dale, an English naturalist and Journalist, who has communi- cated his discovery to the British Admiralty. He regards the evidence of identity as incontrovertible, and it is expected that immediate Inves tigations will be made by the admi- rality upon his report. The principal obstacle in the way of salvage oper ations Is believed to be the prevail ing heavy swell-met within this lo cality in the calmest weather. A surface wave beyond the line of the barrier reef that fronts the bay marks the spot where the vessel is supposed to lie. A few weeks ago a spar stamped with the admirality mark, with nitches patched with cop per In naval style, after being vis ible four days, floating attached to the wreck beneath, drifted ashore. Upon the same beach some time ago there drifted a Jib boom spar stamp ed "Condor," a life buoy similarly marked and several signal rocket cases marked with the name of the Ill-starred vessel, mute testimony of the whereabouts of the long missing sloop. About a mile and a half out from Long Beach the surface ripples over the ship that is supposed to be the sepulchre of one hundred and forty officers and men of His Majesty's navy. At high tide it is hardly visi ble but at extreme low tide the sea bolls about the obstruction. Half a dozen residents of the west coast who have gone out to the spot in smooth water and at low tide declar ed that the hulk of the submerge' ship Is plainly visible. On the morning of l>.cember 3 1901, the sloop of war Condor, in company wUK ^ M s Warship, left Esquimau, the former never to re turn. The Condor was bound for Honolulu and Tahiti he«vily laden with coal for a long cruise and carry ing a large consignment of mails for the British inhabitants in the isolat ed South Sea Island. In the straits a strong southeast gale prevailed and the war ships parted company, the Warspite con tinuing on her way south and the Condor starting to carry out gun practice at the entrance to the straits prior to making for Honolulu Whether this gun practice was car ried out has never been ascertained Outside the straits that faleful night a terrified storm was raging, which compelled every vessel in the region to tight for life, and In this storm the Condor was seen for a brief moment, laboring heavily and flying signals of distress, by Captain Janies Boyd, now of the Bank line steamer Aymeric, and then in command of the south hound lumber ship Spring- hank. Naturally the name of the strug gling waship was not made out, but there was no doubt of her identity in tho minds of Captain Boyd and his officers. They did not go to the supposedly disabled gun boat's assistance. Indeed, they gave her scant thought or attention at the time, as they were having all they could do to save their own ship and their lives. This was the last seen of the Condor or any of her com pany. The Condor never reached Honolulu and gradually her name passed Into history as identified with one more of the tragic mysteries of the sea. Toward the end of that December stern sqiff and lifebuoy with the name "H. M. Condor ' on were picked up In the neighborhood of Wreck Bay. Theories are numerous as to the fate of the vessel and the 140 lives she carried. The same night was responsible 'or anotner mystery of the North Pacific. The collier Mattewan left Nanaimo for San Francisco op, De- camb^lF 2 and never reached her port. Some believe sbe foundered. Sqm* wy gh ft crashed Info the Con dor and both vessels were sunk. The Condor was M similar type to the Algerine apd the Shearwater, how at EsqulnaalU-BtoUon. -She had a very low free board, and the the ory has been advanced that she ship ped a tremendous sea, and before It had time to run through, the scup pers were struck by another, which caused her to founder. Another fa vored theory is that her coal cargo shifted Ip the gale, and that she turned turtel. An Inveetlgatlon of the wreck beneath the waves off Long Beach may throw light on the mys terious happening and will doubtless disclose the bodies or many of tb# bluejackets penned beneat$ decks ▼hen the ships went to-their doom. ■ 'V. If, on May 1st of each year, the standard of time throughout the United States was advanced two hours, so that what is now five o'clock become seven o'clock, etc., and changed back to our present standard on October 1st, it would add gretaly to the health, comfort and pleasure of all, through the sfim mer, without necessitating any change as to daily habits, or create any more confusion than if a West- era men- went to some point East, having a time one or two hours fast er than that to which he was ac customed, but would give two hours additional light for recreation and health-giving, and the use of two of the coolest and best hours of the day for labor. Americarts, in this manner, would obtain what those in England greately enjoy today, namely, two additional hours of light. This would leave the same number of hours for business aud sleep as now, and would give two better hours for the day's work, and two addit ional hours of daylight to the even ing hours, which today are too short to be of much benefit to those liv ing any considerable distance from their place of business, and, as the hours after business are the only portion of the week-day devoted to pleasure and exercise, the lengthen ing of same would be appreciated by all. Nothing is more conducive to health than outdoor exercise, such as ball, tennis, gotf, boating, bath ing, gardening, etc:, so why not read just the hours devoted to business, sleep, and pleasure to the benefit of all? Thousands of families would, un der these circumstances, move into the country or suburbs, who are now held back by the fact that the men at the present time could not reach their homes until too late to get much benefit from a move of this kind. As elderly persons and children are given to early rising, the break fast hour will become more regu lar, and many annoyances of today will be avoided, and, during the heated term, it should prove of special benefit to the school child ren As a rule, nearly every proposed rule. law. or custom works a positive injury or hardship to many v.ho club together and bring ibout much opposition; it de'.^s and discourages those int«vff.gted in its passage, but, in this' case, as no property is de stroyed or depreciated, no one can be interested in apposing ft, and It is one of the few changes that could be made to benefit all citizens of each and every state in exactly the same proportion, and not call for the expenditure of money by the gov ernment, State or people. Railroads would not be compelled to change their time-tables, as all trains would leave in future at the same hour as today. Local travel would be great ly increased, additional money put In circulation by the purchase of such things as are used for pleasure and recreation, and additional value would be given to what already ex Ists in the way of parks, play grounds, gardens, resorts, boating and bathing facilities, tennis courts, automobiles, carriages bicycles, etc. etc. In England, though they enjoy in summer time the benefits to be de rived from a movement of this kind, they are endeavoring io establish a custom to more closely follow the movements of the sun. which would enable them to gain millions of dol lars paid out each year for artificial light. This change is being opposed, however, by every gas and electric light company, and their stockhold ers in every village and hamlet throughout the kingdom, so that, the proposed movement in America should not be confused with that being agitated in England, and should be accomplished at a compar atively early date, from the very fact that is injures none and would be of great benefit to millions. To be beneficial and not confusing, is-firtrecessary that the law or cus tom become universal throughout the United States. It has no political significance, so all should lend their aid to the movement. Talk it up. See that your friends thoroughly un derstand It. Remember that mil lions In England, for centuries, hav e been accustomed to exactly these same hours and its benefits. If you do not need these additional hours for recreation on yourself, aid in obtaining it for those who do. He Boldly Declare* That the Whole Tendency of the Present Legisla tion is to Give the Manufacturer CAN’T AGREE CLASSIFIED COLUMN AND WILL ARBITRATE DIFFERENCES. The Georgia Railroad and the WTiite Firemen Will Soon Settle Their Trouble. Unable to agree on terms of a settlement, says a dispatch from At lanta, the officials ofthe Georgia Railroad and of the Brotherhood of Firemen have invoked arbitration under the Erdman law. It was near ly 7 o’clock Monday night when Commissioner of Labor Neill and Chairman Knapp, of the Inter-State commerce commission, reluctantly gave up the battle to bring the war ring elements together. I ’ “ ~ ~ ~ “ Commissioner Neill notified both t 73c per •rtting—PuroS. C. Diamond parties to the dispute to select an | arbitrator within five days. Thea® i MI LE KILLED BY LIGHTNING. Two Colored Men Driving it Had Narrow Escape. The Columbta-fterrrrrr gays a mule belonging to Wilson Herbert, color ed, was killed on Sunday aJUrnooo by, lightning in the road near Mrs. E. S. Herbert's farm. In Mendenhall township. The mule was being driv en along the road by Wilson Her bert's son, John Henry, and Hiram Nelson. There came a blinding flash and a terrific report, and the mule fell dead. Herbert was rendered un conscious for a good while. Nelson was thrown about ten feet out of the buggy. The mule was a valuable one. In the same section of the county, only a mile away, a cow be- onging to Jake Kinard. colored, was struck by lightning and killed In Mr. Boulware's pasture. Undue Advantage Over the Pro ducer aud the Consumer. Denouncing the pending tariff bill as giving the manufacturer an undue advantage over the American farmer and working man. Senator Smith, of South Carolina, unequivocally ex pressed his faith in a free trade poli cy in an extended ateech while the cotton schedule was under consider ation in the Senate on Tuesday. The following write-up of the speech was furnished The News and Courier by its Washington correspondent: "The whole tendency of this leg islation has been to cheapen the raw material and raise the price of the finished article,” said Mr. Smith, thereby giving to the protected manufacturer a double advantage, lessening the price of what he has to buy and raising the price of what he has to sell. "I am not pleading for, nor shall I vote for, protection for the raw material. I believe a thing is worth what it will bring in the open mark-! ets of the world. What I shall vote against is the iniquitous and inde fensible system of legislating a profit by artificial methods. I believe that American skill and the wonderful mechanical devices operated by steam, water and electricity, our nearness to the source of supply for the raw material makes it possible for u* to compete with the nations of the world." Senator Smith said it was abso lutely idle to talk about the protec tive tariff being a benefit to the cot ton and grain growers of America. In support of his position, Mr. Smith quoted, though not by name, a “lead ing manufacturer of the South,” who, he said, had told him that he be lieved it was right and Just that the protective feature of the tariff on Cotton goods should be entirely wip ed out. The protection of the Gov ernment, asserted Mr. Smith, giving such a margin of profit, has invited and brought into the cotton manufac turing business "a lot of financial buccaneers and plungers, who, by the marvelous profits that could be fig ured. possibly on paper, put on foot impossible schemes, which have re sulted djadstej-onijr f 0 th e milling industry of the country." He said that what is true of the cotton in dustry is largely true of every other 'manufacturing Industry. "The monstrous injustice of this bill is made in two particulars," con tinued Mr. Smith. "This bill de clares that it is for the purpose of encouraging American industries and guaranteeing to them a reason able profit, while on the other hand, in sharp contrast with it in the bill, is incorporated a tax on the very fertilizing element upon which the agricultural laborer is dependent for the enrichment of his soil. This ammonia, or this nitrogenous ele ment that is so costly and so essential in the production of this crop, must be taxed because of a few coke and gas companies, who, already protect ed aud making their millions, can not be denied the privilege of mak ing other millions.out of that which the Government ought to see that the farmer gets at the lowest pov sible price." During the course of his speech Mr. Smith read some interesting figures to bear out his contention that the protective tariff worked a hardship upon the people pf the South, who had to pay most severely for the prosperity enjoyed by the manufacturers. The eleven cotton growing States last year produced $716,352,265 worth of raw cotton, he said, and $90,000.fiO-O w-orth of cotton seed. This cotton they had to put upon the market at a price fixed by Liverpool. That price was fixed in Liverpool upon the basis of the cost of labor In Europe and the price at which they sold the finished product. "Therefore the whole American cotton crop is sold upon the basis of free trade." said Senator Smith "so that, in the cotton growing States, according to the census fig ures of 1900, there are engaged in agricultural pursuits 4,000,000 peo ple, and their average earnings for the year are $133. "Taking the outcome duties on articles imported, such as are used on the farms, there are consumed about $66,357,000 worth. Taking the consumption of domestic man ufactured goods, the proportionate part of the South is $2,885,000,000. The indirect tax paid on this con sumption, due to protection, is $855,000,000. Now this for the en tire South, regardless of the woek engaged in. Dividing this by the population of the South, the taxation capita due to these duties paid on domestic and foreign articles is $6.1 in round numbers. Deducting cra, I c members of the Senate, who this >61 from the $183 there Is left him that'What he'sald w^s Wedding Invitation* and announce ment*. Finest quality. Correct style®. Samples free. J. H. Looff, Dept. 16, Grand Rapids, Mich. A good worm powder for horses and mulus. Safe and effective. Sent postpaid on receipt of 25c. T. E. —- Wanna.maker, Cheraw, Sr O. Glenn Springs, 8. C.—"The Inn Glenn Springs, 8. C.—"The Inn, cen’irally located; near spring, ho- reaton—Good service guaranteed. > Mrs. R. G. Hill, Proprietress. Tear hers*. Bureau, conducted by Miss I. D. Martin. An exchange for supplying teachers with positions arid schools with teachers. Ad- / dross 1702 Blanding St.. Colum bia, S. C. two men will select a third. The Erdman Act provides that should the two arbitrators be unable to agree upon the third member of the com mission, he will be named by Knapp and Ntdll. The decision of the arbi trators is made binding upon both, parties by law. As expected the disagreement came over the retention of negroes. The firemen first demanded the dis missal of all negroes. This was re fused flatly by the railroad. After considerable labor on the part of Messrs. Neill and Knapp, the fire men submitted another proposition. They agreed that those negroes now- employed or who were employed pri or to April 10, should be retained on their present footing. Recent promotions of negroes had been can celled before the men returned to work. They demanded that all white fire men should have seniority over all | negroes. That is, if a white fireman was employed today, he would rank ahead of all negroes no matter how long they were in the service, when it came to promotion to better runs. In addition, they asked that at no time should the total number of ne groes employed exceed 25 per cent of the white firemen on the compa ny's paV-roll. If at any time the number of negro employees dropped below 25 per cent no more were to be employed. It is said that tho Georgia Railroad might have con sented to this were it not for the op position of the terminal company. ^When it was seen that agreement was Impossible the Federal officials gave up the fight and ordered that the dispute go to arbitration. When the men returned to work Saturday afternoon the road agreed that the status of April 1 should be restored. It was upon that date that the trouble began. The company had then promoted several negroes to good runs and removed white fire men to make room for them. Al ready the company has restored tne white firemen to the runs they held or April 10. AH other disputed points and demands were conceded except the senior!tv of white men and tht limitation as to the number of negioo* employed. The white firemen claim that ne gro firemen are not held to a strict enforcement of the rules as are the the whites, and they intimate that the policy of the road seemed to be to discharge whites at every oppor tunity and replace them with blacks, who get less wages General Man ager Scolt denies this and declares his willingness to agree to a strict enforcement of all rules against the negroes. Jubilee and Buff Orphlngton. Black Langshars, Barred and White Rocks, R. I. Reds, Leghorns, Andiluslon. Willi® Nlckes, New berry, S. C. Why don't you work for Uncle Sam? Civil Service Manual, which pre pares you for the examination. Three voluiAa (with maps), $S. express prepaid. Sims’ Book Store, Orangeburg, 8. C. Shooting at Union. At Union Tuesday Munroe Ward fired two balls into H. R. Miller, tho balls entering the left side, one near the heart, and the other slightly towards lower down. The physic ians are unable to say just how se rious the wounds are, hut from their location of the balls, little hope of his recovery is entertained. to an already prosperous protected industry, but he must also pay a duty on his bagging and ties in order to build up a bagging industry on American soil, where no raw jute material was produced, and on the other hand to add to the profits on the great Steel Trust. Mr. Smith cited the fact that the recent election of L. W. Parker, of Greenville, S. C.. at Richmond iasr week to be the head of the Manufac turers' Association on an anti-pro tective platform $or manufactured goods, over I). H. Thompkins for a duty, was the best possible evidence $72, representing the actual value received by the laborer for his year’s work. He could purchaso for $71 in Europe, where the price of the raw material is fixed, what he would have to pay $133 for here. There fore, out of the $800,000,000 pro duced by the cotton growers of the South, practically $400,000,000 of It goes Into the coffers of the protect interests." 3 00 ! Mr. Smith said JU J true that th+ m '^ ^ had to p-** prodt* \ orde; country wanted ho such duty on their goods. When Mr! Smith enadtided bis speech he received the congratula tions of practically all of the Demo- not only very interesting, but would be of great benefit to the tariff ques tion generally. Several Republican Senators also came across the cham ber and congratulated Senator Smith, among whom w« « Beveridge, Nelson and LaFollfl to Uli> Teachers Wanted—Teachers ing good schools and schools a< ing good teachers, should wr Sheridan's Teachers' Agency, Greenwood, S. C., endorsed and patronized by leading schools and colleges. Wanted — Agents In every town. Best selling household article. ; S Start at once. Large demand for t goods. ' $25 to $5b a week. Suc cess assured. Investigate today. : James Importing Company, Box 165, Greenville, S. C. Teachers—Write for free booklet, "A Plan,” showing how we help you get a better position. Thou sands excellent vacancies open, paying $30 to $150 monthly. Schools supplied with teachers. Southern Teachers’ Agency, Co lumbia, South Carolina. ORIENTAL RUG COMPANY. 110! Cathedral 8*., Baltimore, Md. We make you handsome and dur able Rugs from your old wornout carpet, any size to fit a room or hall. Let us send you a price list; Just write for one. I have for sale a number of large and small Improved and unim proved farms in Habersham coun ty, Ga., suitable for general farm ing, fruit, stock or poultry rais ing, I can sell at $3 to $10 per acre on y»r own terms. We can raise 60 bushels corn, 30 bushels wheat, 200 bushels potatoes, 4 tons hay, a bale of cotton per acre, and everything else In pro portion that grows on a farm, and we have good home market for everything that is raised. We have mild winters, cool summer nights, fine acenery and the mir-j- eat and coldest water on earth.^ Habersham county, Ga.. la the^ healthiest county In the United States (gee U. S. health map) and if you are looking for a home in a healthy country where you can raise anything that grows on land you will make no mistake In com ing here. Write for my Illus trated booklet and descriptive price list. Address J. H. Hlcka, Clarksville, Ga. WHAT 18 HOME WITHOUT MC8IC? Don’t any, “Can’t afford an Organ or Piano. We will make you able, granting from one to three years to pay for one. We supply the Rweet Toned. Dur able Organ* and Piano*, at the low est prices consistent with quality. VI rite at once for Catalogue, Price* and Terms, to the Old Ea- ta blinked MALONE MUSIC HOUSE, Colombia, 8. C. BILL PASSED FOR BABIES. Legislature Goes on Record as Fav oring Them. Discrimination against babies by cold-blooded landlords was stopped at Chicago., 111., when the Illinois legislature passed a bill, this week, providing that no lease for a flat or apartment shall contain a clause that the cotton manufacturers of the prohibiting children from llvln* in flats or apartments. Gov. Deneen aaya he will sign the bill. - Women, a* well fta Mblea. come In for protection from the legisla ture, which has passed the "10- h ? ur A-hLU providing that wo* men and children shall not be re quired to labor more than 10 hours in 24. This bill Is a blow aimed »y organized labor at the hops. sweat-a It takes more than a sinecure to cure most people of their sins. 212 East Bay St., T-ACS to suy your" * B v,'S -n#ry Too,# 7 ir 1 *** ***** Ifyoudororwewha.youw.n, '•« us. W« hand* ■ ■ ,u •ny and