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V 'V - V By i Fierce M«b at Cain, Illinois far the BarriUeCraeer * WHITE MAN SWUNG UP POE MURDERING HIS OWN WIFE. ' Fiendish, BraCish Negro, After mfessing to the Crime# of A#- sanHing and Murdering M1m Pelley, Who^ Body Waa Found In an Alley, Lynched and Burned. Will James, the negro suspecteil of being the murderer of Miss An- ale Pelley, was lynched at Cairo, Illinois, Thursday'night by a mob. He was strung up to the public arch, the rope broke and at least 500 shots were poured into his body. James made a confession, implicat ing another negro, Arthur Alexau der. The lynching took placo in the ) most prominent part of the ci y, and was witnessed by ten thousand peo\ pie. Women present were the first to pull the rope. When it broke, the frenzy of the mob was uncontrollable, and they fired volley after volley into Jame s body, shooting him to pieces. The mob then dragged the body over the streets for more than a mile, to Twenty-sixth and Elm streets, in an alley, and burned it where the murder was committed. James was found with Sheriff Da vis between Karnak, 111., and Belk nap, by the Cairo crowd, who went up Thursday afternoon. The crowd overpowered the officers and took the negro from them, and after a conference it was decided to bring — their prisoner back to Cairo and lynch him. Sheriff Davis had been fleeing from the mob Tor twenty-four hours with the prisoner. Driven from town to town by menacing crowds the sheriff had taken to the woods with James, but the persistent search of the summary avengers proved effec tive at last. Fully a thousand persons went out to find the negro, and when the pur suers arrived in Cairo with their quarry, they were met by a howling mob of 0.000 others bent on slaying the negro. They marched the negro direct to the public arch, sweeping the streets like a flock of sheep might tread a narrow lake. Many women were in the crowd and a’ » $ to help do the work. V—k° tuMJe* Sheriff Da\ls . in his attempt ^ oa t eve , pleaded for the % a |y turn- ^ ’rOHu- nately, however, the express office and the Baruche-Netties store had closed some time before and only the occupants in Watkins Brothers were hurt. The explosion shatter ed glassea throughout the city, prin cipally on Main atreet. and the shock could be distinctly felt for miles many thinking that It was au earth quake. In the nearby bather shop men rushed to the-streets with half shav en faces and one shoe ehln«><1^j£ After Lynching the Negro the Mob Attacked the Jail aad Made Quick Work of a White Man. •At Calto, UHaoM, Henry Balaner, white, a photographer, who skilled his wife last July with an axe, was taken from jail at 11:40 ao’clock Thursday night by a mob and hang ed to a telegraph pole, and his body riddled with bullets. The lynching followed closely on the lynching of Will James, a negro, who earlier in the' evening had been hanged for the murder of Miss Annie Pelley* The mob gave Salzner a chance to confess after Jbe rope was around his neck, but he was so frightened that he could only mumble that his sisters had kiled his wife The mob became furious at this, and it was hard work to keep them off Salzner long enough to give him a chance to pray. The mob finally subsided and a short religious service \was held, after which he was strung dp, the rope being placed over a tele graph pole at 21st and Washington streets. The mob found some difficulty in breaking the cage, as it was an en tirely steel structure, but after a half hour of teHing blows upon the door it gave way \and Salzner was secur ed. The mob rushed him out of the back door of tt^e Jail, which is in the basement of the court house around the building through the yard and out into Washington avenue and up to 21st streC^, which is a prominent corner and qas a public square. He cried and begged pitkously for his life and was met by c>|es and blows from the mob. When Salzner was asked for his last statem^it man, a stranger in the crowd, step ped forward and said he believ Salzner was Innocent, whereupon th mob fell upon him, kicked him and finally knocked him down, and was only the pleas of cooler p er _ sons that saved his lifer-'' He was compelled to/i )e g for mer cy from the mob, anA announced In a loud voice that Sajf zner should be lynched, after whicl^ he was driven from the mob andi a n attention was given to Salzner^f After Salzner was hanged, anywhile the body was being riddled «ith bullets, the rope broke and thp body fell to the ground. »b«^. p now lies, the mob going awaA, n ,i leaving it. BalznerfajRu born and reared at ft,*r« iro - j-g j*f>)arried about A Ftke Story Atari Op in Coinnbia and SENT TO NEW YORK SUN Mr. A. J. Bethea, Governor Ameel'a Private Secretary, Wrath With the Writer of the Dispatch, Which He Brands as • Yarn Out of the Whole Cloth. tblJ,/\ ^v‘ , ’KL42- l ^ cording to a message found r >n ,i under side of a wooden toOH'* basket of grapes bought by v * : V. Hubbard, 825 Noiuft t. Indlanapokhj. wjtU Mr ’. sires a huslirs with M.r. nla street widow desire be "nice," wealthy an»*.ic Hudson py disposition. She afl'" 111 * A’ el1 to have dark complex bln) for the remaindei; finish their toilet t* are e. V nor a ml jr^*l uiHti ,e messag.y.^ !T?.^ H , n in ‘‘Ollt a ‘ ' ’.i.^8;mne(l Mr. A. J. Bethea, Governor Ansel's private secretary, writes the follow ing letter, which explains Itself: The governor's secretary has writ ten the following letter: Senator B. R. Tillman, Trenton, 8. C My Dear Sir: I have Just read the story In The News and Courier enti tled “No Drink for Tillman,'’ copied fjom the New York Sun, and to say that I am disgusted and outraged hardly expresses my feelings. There Is not a semblance of truth in this article, which, of course, you know as well as I do, but in Jus tice to you and to myself, I hasten to write to assure you that It did not come from me nor any one con nected with the governor's office. There Is only one way in which it could possibly have originated, and the truth has been so distorted that it strains the imagination to account for it. On Friday of last week a gentle man came over from Winnsborp, and was in grteat distress because he found the dispensaries closed, mak ing it impossible for him to purchase champagne, which he wished to use at a reception at his home the ne* day. The governor was absent, and as he had ordered \0e dispensaries closed lor that_4aT and the next, I 'gentleman I could do noth- for him, although he brought him a physician's certificate, the luncheon on Saturday 1 sat by M\ Robert H. Hazard, a repre- sentstiVe of the United Press, and during the course of conversation I related to x m the above story, tell ing him of distress of the gentle man. but without mention of his name, and certainly without any thought of your* in connection with Rt \ 1 do not say that Mr. Hazard wrote this article, hut I cannot ac count for It In any Vher way. It la certainly far from ftae truth, and I hope you will underhand that I K and that I object to being i i ^ er loved a.. The Young Bnndit is R*n Down and Captured After He Shoots One More Man. „ ,/' r a sA7 ; , “ , sf ‘D. .Jfiiul veil , * '"r V>V''y. w ■ *'a s BA-VK’s PAPK^tf J#n, "'rr »:V ; / ^ s *e dUi na.ror , th * new Ketbo- rsconTfrom*v A r n< * ''' hrln «- • fine from Newberry, where he ha. »Ver had u 1 i< h Oeauiiful blonde, tnlred hr all who know her. Grubb* D the veiy efficient nGenman »?.' Hie •t-mpb yme.it of Mr K. P l.ee where lie will continue after msrrUge. and their many friend* sre glitl to know that th-y will make K.lko their home At tin, writing the mirrUge i* two Jay-* off and a detail d account of the nmiriago can not be given until laier. A delightful attention to the bride- elect, Mi** Fai-y Pender, w a* a ’’Tin Shower” tendered h< r on Monday • tternoon from 4 ::i0 to (i ::i0 hr Miaa Janie S'l ingfellow at the home of her *i,ter*Mra l.ueift Lott. Gut llowers plants in i.rofuaion were ratlona Tno hall, parlor, ere hear.Ulnl’y de '’'•XL-"*'"Ay 1 In an attempt to rob a bank at lNeK.-Alhany^ Ind■, a young man en tered the Merchants’ Bank at noon Thursday and killed J. Hangery Fawcett, cashier of the bank, serious ly wounded John K. Woodward, pres ident of the bank, and wounded Jaa. R. Tucker, a negro chauffeur, prob ably fatally. When Hall entered the hank he carried a pistol in each hand. After commanding every one to throw up his hands and "get into the vault,” HttH began sheeting. - Cashier Fawcett was shot through the chest and neck and died almost Instantly. President Woodward was shot through the liver and his intes tines were perforated. Tucker, the chauffeur, was shot through the body. Following the shooting the mur derer rushed from the bank and tried to escape in an automobile, which he had taken from the curb in front of the residence of its own er, Mrs. Walter Escott, in Louis ville, Ky. He had forced the negro chauffeur at the point of a pistol to drive him to New Albany. After the shooting at the hank the chauffeur, paralyzed with terror und apparently incapable of acticu, sat still when the robber jumped into the car and ordered him to speed up the machine. The roober then jumped out of the automo.tile, shot the negro in the back and ran two blocks to the Ohio river. He seized a skiff and was on his way to the Louisville side of tbo riv er before the frightened citizens of New Albany knew whac had happen ed. An alarm was alvsn though a .^l^apiione on a dredge .. a short time several policemen had started lu pursuit in a fast mold boat. After being captured the bandit refused to give his name, and had little to say. He said that he had been around Louisville for several days. He did not know Tucker, the chauffeur, and declared Tucker was not implicated in the attempt on \he bank. A dispatch from Louisville, Ky.. says the bandit was identified as Thomas Jefferson Hall, and according to William J. Hall, his father, the desperado Is but 17 years old. The older Hall, who has a furniture store at No. 802 South Preston street, in that city, said that young Hall was a household tyrant, and not insane at all. "He is simply mean,’ said the fath er. The family is formerly of Knox- •^Vjdlle, Tenn. . J A- Ha11 detailed his son's ac **** ''^rs^ast few years, say sud Uao.n^WUl 18 had been the The Bond Men After Betag Rob bed of Their Valuables, Spent Five Hours Together After the Thieves Who Had Deprived Them „„ , -—" Hatiifi-at a Safe Retreat. A dispatch from Ridgewood, N. J., says fifty Italians employed in build ing a trolley road from Paterson to Sufferin were held up by a few band its by night in this place, bound hand and foot, and robbed of all their money and Jewelry. The victims were left lying tied in a shanty un til morning, when one of them man aged to free himself and inform the police. The robbers, of whom there were only five, got away with twenty watches, many trinkets, and $1,458.- 51 In bills and email change. Seldom has there been a robbery In which the thieves were so tricky or used such generalship in handling a large body of victims. So skill fully did they do their work that at no time were they in danger of being attacked by more than one man. The laborers lived In a shanty in the Bergen county cutout, aa Is customary with gangs employed on new railways. The gang foreman was supposed to look out for their welfare and see thht they were amp ly protected against thieves. But with half a hundred men around him, he had no suspicion that four or five men could get away with 1 ftoet. con senten xml potte used fnr ill vruu^. Ml v J-ut competed two yesr* „ f 8ervice th« leading church i i„ r i„ , ui ,Ce * r*tr thxra tiu a ,, , hi* S tVe ehur ^*‘ ,,li,i . 0n * ,uve ',ude _ t«j* church membership, about 2.to .nV* atren,,e ‘ , the SunrUv and oyer (4 000 Pupil* bcliool •ach /aar to church purpoae*- contributed on ->*' bettei* the forty year* 1 haVS^v _ Hlvvav* enjoyed ,li* confid-m* _ - em r:;"-/.„.rj .s;, exercised more rw W* i G ti0 have 1 'h ‘SHuiar FX/rfi. Puncke, an old German was A'icniiale, b*urant and bakery in-’--- (tlfiJv will be ci*”7 was found lying above u*tea. - ’*ove in the J. IGA Guuntv Fiji Rnrnwel\S. C , Nov. Kith l<»vg eaa ’ protJI’iC'“ "rr'r” .. DterMO. in Vrt '• th * 1 > 0, ‘ U A good, *ober\ honest mi^, of the man to attend tofour ' ,0 . 4 He must be t.ble t\nianHge Good a a Foreman Tackled First. Therefore, he felt no fear when man appeared at the door of the shanty in the night and said he wanted to see the boss of the gang. The foreman went opt and met the bandits, all of whom spoke Italian. They informed him they were gov ernment officers, and that they had been sent to arrest him for selling liquor in the shanty without a li cense. They led him away from the shanty, and, keeping two pistols aimed at his bead, they bound him hand and foot. They carried him to a spot well away from the house and left three men to guard him. One of the bandits then went to the shanty and called out another of the laborers. He. too, whs told that he was arrested. led away, bound hand and foot, and carried to the place where the boss was lying. The trick then was used to lead the other workmen oat of the shanty, and, one by one, their captors bound them safely and carried them away. Those left Inside the shanty never missed their comrpanions. most ot them having prepared to go to sleep, 'll The ones lying bound with ropes did > 'Ot dare make a sound, for fear the -r-utenCbs „ uar< n ng them would shoot, penitentiary*-than Knur t to perform s At Cincinnati. Ohio. Mrs. Jeannette Stewart, also known as Mrs. Ford, one of the women accuasd by Chas. L. Warriner, defaulting local treasur er of the Big Four Railroad of hav ing shared in bis speculations fay Mjjjwalttol May Hyrtorti m would tell the whole inilde Story of the J $643,000 theft, when the case came to court. Mrs. Stewart denied she had ever received money from Warriner. The sudden breaking of her al lencc was caused, according to her, by a quarrel which she had with another woman, who has also been mentioned by Warriner. This quar rel resulted in the attachment of Mrs. Stewart's furniture. Tbs of ficers who made the attachment were quickly followed by reporters, and In the street of excitement, Mrs. Stewart’s reserve broke down I never received a cent from Charles Warriner,” she aald, “and I never gave any Information to the railroad about his shortage. It was another woman that did it all; woman I thought was my friend, know the whole story and I will tell It In court, too." At present the question that is exercising the railroad officials is. What became of the $643,000 which Warriner admits haring stolen? Warriner aaya he lost it in stock speculation and in satisfying the demands of blackmailers, but that explanation th not satisfactory to the officials. Warriner says he Is penniless and his neighbors at his home In Wyom Ing, Ohio, declare that he is a sick man. It Is admitted by railroad officers that Warriner might have continued his speculations indefinitely If he had not been betrayed by a woman, so great was his superiors' confidence in him. Amort, vim* vxraricwa of PELLAGRA CAUSED DEATHS. Was at First Thought to be Ty phoid Fever. But the A dispatch from The News and Courier sayfa from do* velopmenU within the past few days it seems likely that Dr. (1. C. ham. who with W. B| As victed at the last manslaughter for Bigham on Barrel's escape the penalty half years’ hard labor tentiary, imposed by Judge The notice of appeal made Hr tfcr defendant's attorney, J. W. not having been filed within the ton days allowed by law, Solicitor Wells * wired Sheriff Scarry to approhrtid the convicted parties at once, they being out on a $1,500 bond. ' S On Saturday Avant, learning of his being wanted by the sheriff, west to Georgetown from his home at Harpers and surrendered himself. He is now In the county Jail. Sheriff Scurry wired Sheri! of Florence county, to arreot Dr. Bigham Immediately, but from lafor* mation so far received it Miiii that he cannot be fonnd. The sunnine ie that he has fled the State. There seems to have been com* Inconsistencies In the bonds requir ed by Bigham and Avant When the men were first arrested on the warrants issued by the coroner, the bonds were fixed at $600 each, be ing later railed, at the Instance of ^ the solicitor, to $1,600, under which amount they appeared for trlaL After conviction hod sentence the men were turned loose under n bond of only $1,*00 eaqh, pending the re*, suit of sn appeal to the supreme court. It Is said that as Dr. Big ht m's family are well-to-do, the ^ forfeiture of the bond Is of email consequence. • • • ' Wanted. bC T*3- hi V enltet WbKhie more than an hour for complete the work Then they in InTZT* " iU ‘ ,hi,n P^n o' m l i 7 re 1 '■"■'Ihl. d in Her* iVru?, *'"'*>'* friend. In rsit Hi in pro, ( ,erity. Tlu>r« Blackvllle. a. C. Doc. iOtl-, im. My Drar Santa Claus; rite and tell -- _ f . ? ,n *ry tojthe' nnf, Chriatim* w 'hHt I warn for k/iL* ^ 1 w,,,h th,,t yo» w «"*r.:7’r ,,u “- 1 *" km. .tl', d 1 W * nf " Omo n,lts 1 hImo imncil^'eT 0 " W 2 U,< 1 hri "* » 10 I? Mias r S^.?° n r «*"h- ! Pauline Whitley. i» , "»Uhtv good teacher. I ,„i h o ‘ * old girl and I am in the Gth grade Your little friend. Isadora to d her that I influ earth him non#* truer \o nn , , couhl b« i-th more than I '^n. f /‘‘S " ~ tl * whlclJ h.vemv h Mr. James M p HltcrjMln wbo w ^preventative of the Bar mild | beautifully of 'hi* >1 P" I ' <? with Mr. Tobin Hi-.d in All of ii* ((ur teiu , ur r^j, Umi* and amm-g my carllo.t ia a l.ride ami «room on their ’ ’ 1 Mr*. i'obin. •Jlive . U 8li or, on 7 ‘J, ’ e>t '"| J »‘. '^ Te P °" d * K'lCo *'••* m ill*. add-lr v* c TT* '•val/road' rer eoUentlary at to perform for the action, tMbyr*-’' the claim thflf Prv all the trial and Secretary Knox’s nlg.^y any of the no devolopmenta In tik"Por the Friday. To alfT^ .ered, Pe - *Jr/// jjartment la^ "mar’ *or iurtl from Mr way home, Mr. and Haying been mr father’* boyhood friend and having touuhe.l -a. '.. . Ida Mae Gardner. wifii him in that COTTON CROP NEWS. The cenans cotton rojmrt Daued on lln™' d 'l' t ;.: i v a00 - 6 q i5 b -' e ’ S ^ ginned. I hi* year South Carolina ha* come nearer making an average cron than anr other S ate. UMfidii bale^ ► holtldera T'f r" "> ""rVle ,j;!J friend than niokt membitra of our Bur *nd hi* death more keenly «tt,m a n(I f |t ^ [UleiJ1 , n than that 0 ^ b, '- n ' > . hi k l ‘9 r PatHotLm (-reek (1) mil,*: * '‘" U Tloker * lB.’h Land I f;;,m, 1 I ^ ,n,er# KniJ I* air fax (34) mills. Beroulea and Leos (4) mil]* Barnw^ 11(4J , rnItU ; B ' WHHston (SJ) ninis. Si| L var C^i„ 8 r re " Cl,rren CT. Gohl »nd p; ; >r r . y « P Vrred;,n’^tS zP'~ix.-£v.ri. J ; R Armstrong. *• c..*SK 2 T i r .uS r ' J give red*** » at , ^R LO ^orth of Denmark. d. ii. mx, general MANAGER. Portsmouth, V a ., ^ IHth, 1910. That hundreds of deaths which occurred at the Confederate prison at AndersonvllM, Ga.,, during the summer of 1864 were not due to ty phoid fever, aa then supposed, but were caused by pellagra, was the opinion expressed before the South e>rn medical convention In New Or leans a few days ago by Dr. J. W. Kerr of Corsieens. Tex^ Dr. Kerr, who was surgeon at the Anderson- vllle prison, described the symp toms of the disease, which attacked the inmates so fatally at that time, and in nearly every particular they were recognized as being character istic of pellagra. This view was further strengthened. Dr. Kerr seta, by the fact that musty or spoiled corn, generally accredited by the medical fraternity aa being perhaps the cause of pellagra, constituted the main diet of the prisoners, be cause of inability to furnish them other supplies. The consensus of opinion among physicians who presented papers bis gub j ect was that pellagra Is scrimmage, spoiled corn session Of tbs ged him s short d him to deat^^|e||^^UDdiv ^ on the ww—<f MURDERED BY SMUGGLER*. Eighteen Sailors Made Then Killed. New Or-' / ey ^r' u 7 frFi j. i "‘z* rtw- .v«nl a J^kULT. Passengers arriving at leans on the steamer from British Hbadaras told ot the scuttling of the Hoadurae gunboat Tatumbla and the teen of her crew hauled a British steamer smuggling between Jamaica t duraa Six days ago the Tatnmbte hauled the smuggler fifty miles oat of Puerto Cortes and twenty of tho gunboat’s crew boarded the amagglor. The smuggler crew surrendered aad the smuggler captain toM OapC Zalella that there plenty of good ram In her hold. Zelella ordered a celebration. The prisoners feigned Intoxication, aad when the gnaboat’s crew succumbed to 'the rum they were thrown over board. The smuggler's crew seat- tied the ganboat aad then escaped. Two of the sailors who. wore flnng overboard reached one of the fioatfl ing lifeboats of the sunken Hondu ran vessel and reached Puerto C>rtee with the story of the wholsaal j mur der. *,"■ -.JS for V I % false economy H A CAI{ LOAp OF -BEST BHeeiES *. means FAILURE. Deal in GENUINE ECONOUV c /op. Don’t try to save on ^coit^SKru' C ?JL? f a t r a "'i la!>or 0" poor seed. H c ccmi.^de.n Don r w,s!c RW hW." ffin ' t i“ality through planting th? B F ^ T ^°l lu M c t n ¥ • 1 P?' MH '- U ,n lh<: r rkc< - and youMders «rb f„ C r ANTAL «' 1 E Act** In Barnlcpr | floiiws and Inrprovenienu, *■ from Bsrnwe/I Court House. acre* In eUltiretl 4B h* wood anti titnbef Term# At' !£ l 'Vt*i!*2****m —W—J—MOSS fentii esny. * 1,134,183 Ihic year. Barnwell lodge no k; k of p . C. C.-^ll,. (J*#in. • t— ^ —— 'T.O.-H. L. CBannohr Jwtoto-Rev. J„° K. Goode. Sr’ rf ^ . C JCtinltitr*. X 5'Iff jE *ii M W r u ' W '" of IE,—G W. Manville T. Owens. LtfrtL. F. OafUjr L—E. Harley. Trtiptees S J. Furtd-J. H*rbfv. O. ” —H.uier Hsrf.md. , Mr. I uhin wsh In thi» ver V hnlj and in the mitDt of * speech, carried Into tint room, then for the first time did k* know th*t toe dread destroyer hml tiamed him for hi* own. From thru thne nine long vesr* n<j., be niH'le hi* 'o^ol'tte* sod with ‘ km^r, , r‘ ,f8 '? tWadrr and fewhh*( rtumbereil M«:t.ing fair... world .,,,1 to Il tHreSr a r' pil/lIfum“'I ln ! iV ejt *Hed by dai as tl a .y c p> mn . J foes ll'* tt,Ht th » """ ,t tovWlen. of all F,NAL hisciiargk notice. Notice 4* hereby given that on T..n. _5i.-ihc laurUi rrf .fgR ulTf v TTnT) fl r Soom' 1 " 1 W V'' Joll'n •orvivtn, K.wMHor" of 'th. '“'J.™ ij J'^eph M. Chitty tleceaae.l f r r ° r Letters DI,mV«or- ‘ tnd Hpp ^ N GEM CANTALOUPE SEED- 00 Acres thtee tn‘)e| r.* Gowrt House. JlSled menu. Saved Sc grown at December 3rd 1909 •ry. w. n. chitty. Executor. I'or Sale, Not Storage, at -REDl/CED PRICES.,. ^ H'rtmcT-sn.-Rn ifitTThtvis Cuk*; A T OR SALE ONLY byf A. F. YOUNG & , W? 308 Washington Si NEW YORK, N. r 'P' n ori /], e vines super- 30 A 1 “Tr ^7nd r tTJhe5 > Ur ,Uk,D Turin* Mdy. tj Oood and con yen lent Railroad fectlt Afethtoa pmpsrtlesx •L O, Fattersua A e A Mn. - ■ ■ H. MATHIS, ^ckviele, S,C. C. F. CaJJWBD, - w?" P. I. Bickifigug R1H. — WHnted- onknown ^ 0U,,(, or . Th /y w «re made of the best material I Dixie Fiour and Grain Co. I mantift.mnp.-n . r . ro,n . | MOflCK ft) I’KNjflONSlRS. fW Pension OumniDsicuter will b 9 U a xnMfatv Auditor ou , M ^ . . — - « <■»*(,re voo January ItHO from IQ t , n *f* b F th « remarks froui tnetnsrk. 1 di.1 n.u know ah.* IBs 1 that following retuirk.: • * ’ m,,Ue THiireiw, 8, C, o/™™ f J u 'Z* ar ' brTrt, ' u '* ’ South v * Attr, Bsrtfwell, 8i. C ’ '» » 8KRD Rf E For if a l e the kind c srSoi'i't",' L. N. BufcfcbaUer, Barnwell, S. C. 1XJAN3 NEGOTIATED, ThD K. a high /w.lae, f avspre yoff. fiwri [aay p. IU. fo lion* Oeftrro Mm * are already on fht -*•5*"* Fi - 0 Ar,tf y- That Is a gr*u dirfl for a ms,.' u, te, d* f ' ■■outrtr, « aJZ*' .{few* {».«* KOHEY to lend Rwal manufacturer,, .re being *«id f re e frn„, expense, g«d profit, of middle «„^ r ‘ J r ‘ c ‘ * m- chanffc bf long j Is to ewisJi 1 -oS ZT ist 1 everreustomer. S44f£ OLD MAM. BUT WITH NEW WTHFl WLS Al n v , ‘' u,e f,,# ^*t sbfmiM^p,^ evervj/ni; turner. All Work guaranteed to #fte satisfaction. fJlve me a trial.' " 1 Jm t any achlutjtt Work. orCr tn# cortn WAf. IDEAS. D. P. JOHNSON, fiUCKVlLLE, s. C. c ' Vl1 ' r , dtr * n # tee no better Work cam facan do. Grrfy-regntaf MpfrontlQ Avoid theae Jack legs scattered -.ri. 1. <», «*,. <,,« 8emcf of our specialt!s»;— \ J oe* Mfton r,^ atkorlo, Crltndor, -*«ty whifh tfiatr bavfc mote of their Calhoun & Co •«•. Life, '" C Y m 'm :■ : m ' . . . rt were here THEY FASrf MUSTER. ^Jth the Di6k (aw lu cduipth^ , 0 ^T, *•'*? »to« as when we v too too,. GrUI Headquarters for Gasolloe ' of that kind made here, e; Hwatn Engines, Boilers. Cot —^.Al L *4 wife hate an exi a 3sgs 4 4 ^ •)»-- - "i * . ~.w,-«h,.^ EMachj _ (ll -At ESb I . ; ., . ... jA' v rW 1. *1 V ^ hT 1 rur’T,"' rVV