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' Xr- 1 : J' - . . \. v -.,.: - : :irr-. J w > * *■'•-* States S«*rtv Compaiit 7^ * ■- T k&ae b Fmt Pomm ari Cwm MlfP h r-' BIT OTBER DOCS AUO if&v&i bf the Aatantl, Which m Bird Dog, Were Mr. OWNBD BY HUNTER, Gore Her Alfred WoOoce, AIM WollMO, Jr. Mrs. Mojmat, •ad Mr. A. of the Bute. . * •.W.LFJfa.rfSL laOhm, SW W WITHOUT PROVOCATION P^vvi^d It ' .''' Er, -W* .It# The SUte njra Quail, aa English •otter beiagtng to Altred Wallace, of Columbia, appears to hare be come aJUlcUJ with hjrdropbobla, and has attacked seTeral persons. Not wishing to alarm the people of the city unnetessarlly, no statement was given out at the time, for it was hope! that the dog was not affected with rabies, and the animal was put under lock and key awaiting devel opments. The persons attacked by this dog are Mrs. Marrant, mother of Mrs. Wallace; Alfred Wallace, superin tendent of the street railway; Alfred Wallace, Jr., attorney at law, and A. Hamilton Seats, of The State. A very fine dog. the property of Magistrate Jas. H. Fowles. Is known to have been attacked, as well at other logs being under suspicion. The members of Mr. Wallace'* household were attacked Sunday The animal was supposed at first t> have been 111 tempered on account of having probably been polsone> by chicken thieves who visited the place, corner of Senate and Header son streets, one night last week However, Dr. F. A. Coward, th* State ba terlolojlst. was notified an all wounds were cauterised and th' animal was locked up pending de velopments, for if It were affecte with rsbles, death would come In ffve days. It would not be neceesav) to administer to the persons stuck •1 any Pasteur treatment within tbs* length of tlmo. * _ loot ay night tho animal freed Itretf frdtn Its fa/tenlng and at th< earner of Senate and Barnwell strer a;tacked Mr Seats at hs wss on his way to sapper. The dog struct Mm in the chest without wsrutn* end as Mr. Stats fall back from tb< Impact, tho dog fastened lu feet In his Isfi arm Juat shove the elbo* He wont St once to Dr. T. M Du Boot and had tho wound cauUrised Dr. Coward stated that sven shoul the animal he caught and found t he rahld. he has at the iaboraton enough vtrua to treat all the personr who have been attacked. Quell Is a white teter. female with liver colored spots. Even patrolman in the tty was gives be deodrfptloa end Seagt Sloan saw he at the corner of Main and Oervai streets at 1 o’clock la tho morning He fired one time end is satisfied that be wounded the deg. All per A dispatch from Savannah says devslopmenU Monday night In the aftermath of tho trlppln murder of last Friday afternoon gave birth to ths sUrtllng theory that not a single murderer, but two or possi bly throe wore engaged In the com mission of the Urrtble crimes. County officers declare that of these J. C. Hunter, husband of Mrs. Mag- gis Hunter, whose death Monday added a third to thr^ number of murdered women, la cerUlnly one. They declare thfU the chain of evidence la compleu, asserting that some clothing, badly stained, appar ently spattered with blood, which was found and belongs to Hunter, Is the final link. This clothing Is la •dared, was worn by Hunter on the day of the crimes, and a walking cane found In the house of the mur ders Is declared to have been car rled by Hunter on the same day. It was declared by a physician at the Savannah bospiul that state ments made during a moment of 'oasciouanesa by Mrs. Hunter early Monday charged the crimes to her husband, and that she was being held by s negro man when the blows were struck that caused her death. The Rev. J S. Wilder, pastor of r. Baptist church in Savannah, stated that Mrs. Hunter, after recognlxin Mm. declared s white man had struck the blowa. LAYING UP TREASURE. The Noble Gift of • Lady to thr Sumter Poor. A dog is killed to notify at once th* police station «r Dr. ^lod. rahld dog run and create ’ oa Main aad A* sSf;'' We fully agree with the Sumter tem that of all the bequests for harltable and other purposes enu aerated In the will of Mrs. Ells i uomey, none showed s finer spirit >r • kinder, tender thoughtfulness 'or her needy fellow creatures tbso hat to provide Christmas cheer for he poor of Sumter. The Income 'rom the 13,000 left In trust to the •Ity council to be expended st Christ nas each year for the relief of the >oor of Sumter will brighten the lives of thousands and bring to them i portion of the Christmas spirit of vhlch they would be destitute other vise. There ia in this gift of Mrs (uomey something that appeals t” the humanity that is In us with pe ullsr force, end we feel that it Is the grestest and beat of her bene actions, in that for decades and de sdes to come It will bring glad- teas and Joy to numberless hearts t the season of the year that tb* 'oor aad the chlldrea of the poot *eel most bitterly ths pangs of pov If Mrs. Tuomey had ; don ate# for charity, this thoughtful remembrance of tho poot t Christmas time is swfleieat \t- lace bsr name oa tho roll of tk rho had thought for tko chi' f tho poor. While Waiting tor a Train to leave Prom tho Unlaw Depot at CSu lotto Hairy Jonea, Who DM the SEVEN LIVES LOST A FOUR-STORY CINCINNATI TENEMENT DEATH TRAP. Too Abtaae With Bsvry Oa- Infant she I tor boarths Ufl tii Hows at, aad ffndini y bo the means of bring to Justice the parties who oom (Silted the murder—if qferder then f cleertg op the »yat«ry northern capital establishes 1 ““ 1 ^ lives as ' eottou mtlto and Mf* or as hangers on The South has hold Its ow« again* t letlori. and now that the Two men let the -#• of the Jail to Await Folder’s A special dispatch from Charlotte to tho Coiumbik Record says Mr W. L. Fsidor, a weil known holi ness man of St. Matthews, 8. C.. was abet In the left arm and side st the Southern passenger station there Tuesday morulag by Harry Jonsa, an express messenger. Mystery surrounds the affair, no provocation or excuse for the ahoot- lag being given by either Jonea or Felder. The abooting took place at 2:30 o clo k Tuesday morning, shortly after the arrival there of train 39, and was witnessed by two other express messengers, who de nied say knowledge of the affair at first, but afterwards told about it after they were arrested. Felder, who is not, it ia hoped, dangerously wounded, is in the Presbyterian hos pital. Jonea is in Jail, where he will be held for the preliminary trial. The Record gives the following particulars of the shooting: The first person to reach Mr. Fel der was Capt. F. B. Flshburn of Columbia, while Dr. A. B. Knowlten il^olumbia was also near aad gave the wounded man prompt medical mention. The shooting occurred ai the Charlotte union station about 2:45 a. m. Mr Felder, aa well as Capt. Flshburne and Dr. Knowlton. was at the station expecting to come to Columbia on Southern railway train No. 29. due to leave Charlotte at 3:30 a. m. While in the lunch room Capt. Flshburne had been talk ng with Mr. Felder, but left and vent into the combination baggage car to lie down. Mr. Felder, It seems, walked up to the door of the express car, where the express messenger was checking np his express with the negro porter, and It is said that Mr. Felier asked if he could get aboard the car. as the pasaenger coaehs had not been opened and It was cold out- •Ide. What elst* passed between them is not known, except that Mr. Felder stated afterwards that he was •hot, without warning, from the press car. ' ^ Capt. Flshburne was first to reart th# wounded man, and havlag >ton Dr. Knowltoa at the atatlMh moned him. Mr. Felder was carried to the Stonewall betel, »• ^ ■**' tlon, until he could b# taken to the hospital, and after rtlay th# imbalance arrlveff rtod to tha At Mr. Felder ton remained hlm - returning to Columbia ©a No. 35 instead of No. 29, and rya**lns Columbia at 10.30 j*. fgddneaday. had been to High Point, der for fnrni- OO ftels visit that at that tl three thousand booklets per day werd| regi being mailed, that the daily receipt*' as a matter for serious regret amounted to from 985 to 9100, and sttltudf of Colller'n toward that the business was ateadlly - 'C. He* Lari Many Down In a Art at Clnclanatl that de stroyed a tenement house shortly before daylight on Tuesday morn lag seven persons wsre killed sad 10 Injured. Ths bnildlng was a veritable death trap. The one fire escape was ren dered useless by the flames aad the emergency door, supposed to Wad to safety, ssd ordered kept open by the firs depart®* nt » was nailed shut Ths building Is a four-story strut tare with tenants on every floor except ths first. The hallways are lighted by kerosene lamp# and in some way the lamp on the second floor was upset end in s very few minutes the dry woodwork in the hall was aflame. The blaxe shot upward, making it Impossible for the tenants of the place to get out by way of the stairs Some of them Jumped out of the wMc'ffwe and were badly hurt. There were fifty persona in the house at the thne. The first firemen to reach the scene saved several of them from the rear of the burning building. The captain of engine company No 4 c•’tried down two bodies on the ladler and several women were found huddWd together on the fourth floor. The .bodies taken to the morgue were, ao badly burned that lientifleation was almost Impossi ble. Patrolman Clark and Trinkler. who were the first upon the scene, picked up a blanket from in front of the building and yelled to the terrified people In the windows to Jump. Holding the blanket between them, they called te % woman on the second floor to Juinp into it. As she Jumped to safety the oflic- HER CHEAT RESOURCES Her Undeveloped Lands, 1 Forests Are Attracting tog Men af •> Willing to Take Jr 1 . - Possibilities to ot Her A Feather in oar system of sarllag and dyotoff float kera. Bw» we have many other feathers In In sieaBtag aad af dress ffoeds, aad even Garptta. Wo tha finest fabrics. Our work Is tha moderate. A poets 1 will bring THE W. S. COPLESTON CO. "A greater nation through a great er South!” f This ia the tocsin that ths Saath is sounding today from Atlantic to Pacific and from the sontharoMst everglades to the northern pines, says the New York American. The South went# man and mon ey—men that her vast reseureec any be given over to oaitlvatioa ana industry, and money tor anttpriaa. that their products May toed tha markets of the universe. She has produced a cotton crop this year which will act about $1,- >00.000,000. Her grain will til ffifi, bushels. r Her total agricultural products will foot up nearly flfl.SfiO.OOO.uOO. She is nflning 90,900,000 tone of bituminous coal. Her cotton mills arc using nearly 3,000,000 bales of cotton a year She commands the flulphur trade ot the world producing nearly cue- of the whole production of • iw CHARLESTON, ff. € BOOZE POURING IN SUMTER. Company Opens Extra Of- t flee to Handle It. CLASS1FIE0 COLUMN er* called to a small girl Mho was on the verge of dropping from window on the third floor. The'girl took one look st the outstretched blanket and Jumped head first in ti. Both woman and child wer* badly horned aad were quickly rush ed to the city hospital. Two offtoers carried maay of the tenants to safety over the neighbor ing roofs. half the world. Her porta are second to New Tort in their shipments. ? She is spending today fltO.OOO. 000 in new cotton mlllA Nearly a quarter mMItoa of peo ple are swarming into her rich country to help win for her the success that has been ao long com log. Her resources are withal bat beginning to show their worth, for she has lacked in capital aad the kind of labor necessary to bring her soil and opportunities to their full fruition. She has 40 per cent of all the A special to The News and Cour ier from Sumter says "Since the closing of the Stats dispensary in Sumter oa the 15 th of November, the liquor handling business of the Southern ExpiWes Company has reached such large proportions that It waa found Impossible to handle the large shipments of liquor at the regular office. Hundreds of packages 'for personal use* come in oh every train. The local manager of the express company has been forced to open up a ‘booze sub-sta tion’ oa West Liberty street for ths delivery of packages of liquor ‘to be called for.’ The liquors for Imme-1 diate delivery ere still handled In the regular way. The sub-station threw open its doors to the thirsty pnblle Wednesday with a stock on hand that would fairly rival the old grog shop, the county dispensary. The floor of the store building was literally covered with packages of liquor of various sixes, shapes and quality, heralding the advent of another great moral Institution.. It certainly seems that legislative pro hibition in Sumter county Is a de lusion and a snare.” * Bed FoBed CWttle> Berkshire Hega aad Augora Goats. Broaden. W. R Clifton, Waco, Texas. Use Latest Books—Send for our lat eat booklet describing them, films Book Store, Orangeburg, 8. C. commission offer oa earth. New, all retailers, sam ples. Coat pocket “Very Protto- able,” Iowa City, Iowa. For Sale—One Upplncott’s fount and fixtures. Price reasonable; good location on Mala street W. H. Marchaat, Oraniteville, \ C. CORN YIELD AWARDED. Senator Aldrich says the 1907 panic coat the country two billions. If it had not come aa it did, the timber lands In the United States. »P*eulators would now be building about 62,000 square miles; quarries • pyramid of values that would coat that are rich in the most beautiful ,OVr billions when it toppled over, and useful stone, marvellous ores, ———————————— Wanted to Bay—Hides, Fort, Wool, beeswax, tallow, scrap Iron, cow peas. Write for prices. Craw ford Co.. 601-610 Reynold BL. Augusta. Ga. Typewriters—Special tow rebuilt aad second-hand all kinds, tor fall trade, for price list. General Company, Dept O, Augusta, Oa. John R. Dtagfle of Clarewdoa County Wtoa First Prise. ke car- ougtily wiih the vicinity of minutes before the jartlc- ithetic. Aged and Infirm finding themselves unable te a man and a woman hanged themselves to a bed post. The hos pital at Ivory, containing 2,000 pa Uenta, Is surrounded by water end grave results are feared ' President Falllerea and Premier Briand made an automobile trip through the flooded districts In the eastern section of Parts. They walk ©d through some of the streets, knee deep In mud and water, and saw the crowds fleeing, men tugging at vails es and trunks, and weelpng women burdened wtth children and al aotU of household belongings. Tho con / that ma conritler the second ianc«*. Titan hang am! sdnol hard wood sawdust Jak or any sort is im as Ma hl|. little pond about December 1. 'Te says h.e Is a great admirer of birds and la often called all kinds of ‘•green things” because of this fan- ey; petting birds and not shooting more than he does. “But this,” he aays, "is worth a whole season’s shooting to me. "I suppose,” he continues, “you will think I have wheels In my head, and sometimes I think the same, but I am a great lover of birds and can’t help It.” In his letter Mr. Bray wrote that the duck had come to the best place In the United States, and following out the thread of humor, Mr. Mine- writes that the duck was fed in the only heaven on earth. iK7syi« ■» aaetoiws tvs mwv» , and i nUltudp of ColHer’i --WV ( I tut you creasing. She further «nformr^e r * mtn , Mlirch ^ Deoem Inspector that up to ,h ‘' - j, i'—-' ad accumulated as rlglu !n pmrextlne 'mlng of large number* of HffuiMisim. Hungarians, Poles This would onlv nuke u bad mat ter worse, and complicate Blatters SJiM further. What would help, howe A dispatch from Columbia sayr the first prise oa yield In the Bute corn contest has been awarded to John R. Dingle, of Bummertou, In Clarendon county, as also the first prise on points. Hla yield was 1C6.7 bushels on one acre. This is the •eeead State contest that has bee. 1 by a Clarendon county fanner The total points made were 99. Too first prise on yield Is |175. The award waa mile at a meeting of the State Cora Con test, which is com posed of Commissioner Watson, President P. H. Mell. of Clemson Coi ^jr-llege, aad D. N. Barrow. | RspUbfifiiM M f* con d prise for yield xnd Bascomb Usher, b°y who been particularly xnd thousands of square miles of the most fertile aad greatest pro ducing fsnn lands in the world. Everywhere tba railroads are pushing colonies aad building their extensions, until five years beoee It Is believed that every available mile of her lands will be within easy reach of some road. Millions of dollars are being put Into her mines; other millions are going into her tax til# 1 , ad vantages. Along the line of one railroad alone 460 textile mills have baen erected. THE NEW FERTILIZER. A discovery of far-reaching impoi taace to the farmers of the South l» the new fertiliser which has beer perfected oa one of the Islands nee Charleston. 8. C. It has long bees known that lime Is an essential foo for plants of all kinds and that they cannot live when It baa been exhaust ed from the soil. It has also beet known that old worn-out lands sr> tremely deficient In lime, end tha* v v . w ^ eour. badly-drained lands have t**l' Her p^p . . M. «« Mm » r» I|IM „ . t,. ed to tbs fullest limit of tbeL growing crops. •nt capital. Her tobacco crops are rarmsrs’ Ball*"" No. 1*«. U. 8 ays: “Al If yoa are sick or ailing aad have failed to find relief, writ# to me at once. Give name, age. aex, color of hair and eyes, moot troublesome symptoms. 4c peat- age. Dr. J. C. Bstdorf, 39 ding.. Grand RapMs, Mleh. When medicine falls yon. I will taka yoar ease. Rheumatism, ladlgea- tlon, (Ivor, kidney and sexual dis orders permanently eradicated by natural means Write for litera ture, confidential, free aad Inter esting. C. Cullea Howerton, F. R. Durham, N. C. Young Ladles aad girts over If years of ag« can sec are stead v aad proit- able employ meet and ba taaght to make ctpara. Will be paid while iearwtot. good, cheap board can be secured Bear the factory. Aay girl can make from 94 to 913 per maeh more) after We need 600 young to dtoa Immediately Apply to BaM- enbsrg ff cSb . Opposite Union De pot. Charleshpa. 8. C. learning.' enormous, and la every spot touch- ^ Afr icultur«. ed by the tide of toveetasent springs ^ applications of Mme'Bcreased tb* forth a golden return greater than • • T** **"* Yields war* their investors ever dreamed ef. 'obtained with i**J ,B> * ,n th# forw With a population ef nearly 3f. CAN Ji*- tkset? took it upon tnfornSk... 0 .? yourself 000,000. or about a third of the to tal of the United States, she ia put- »pt ••*.».trasKs',...***- aimer ef car boa*** j** *®* ly •round oye tor shells *** rfl ** ® r * t * the was OflUe^ org/ to" rhene -i ocy c 0110 HI * mor« p: n to sell out by Xmas Kve Night, Co Display, >'An<! to buy at low tide prices jlacc to ^ct such chafmiutr Christmas Presents ant] New Yeal ’•Teach y«>ti a lesson. Was that un- klutl? How many nien do you sup- i»> , 5c inutiy^d curses upon you for •' wooed lire?** /rices! Trustees of Wiufnrop college—*-rr R. Tlllrnffo, of Edgefield; D. W. Mc- Laurln, of Dillon. Trustees University of South Car ollna—8. P. "Hunter, Jr., of Dillon; C. E. Spencer, of York. Trustees State Colored College — G. B. White, of Chester; J. W. Fljvd, of Kershaw. PRISONS ARE FI LL OF ALIENS. Influx of InuiiigrantH the Cause of Increase of Criminals. fe - ' ditto ns are appalling, and the presl- duct and premier hastened r way to >e)t means of relief for the suf fering people. BOOZE DOWNED HIM. Another of Rag Time Music Goes to the Poor House. m - Kill Each Other. (A dispatch from 8t. Petersburg^ •ays more than 100 persotrrj “ been killed and many wound ed as the reeult of religious con llicts which have been waged in old Bokhara between the Sunltes and the Shiahs for two days. The Sun ties demand the replacement of tho 8h|ah officials by Sunites. At the request of the Bokbars au thoritles Russian troops and machine guns have bean sent from Samarkand M scene* of the fighting. -V Hugh Cannon, who wrote "Goo Gop Eyes,” “Ain’t That a Shame, ’ Bill Bailey” and other classics of ragtime, was sent to the Elolse poor house at Detroit Tuesday at the age of thirty-six. He told the pathetic story of his life In short, expressive sentences. “I quit coke easy,” he said. “I hit the pipe in New York for a year and stopped that. I went up against morphine hard and quit, but booze, red, oily booze, that’s got me for keeps. Except for seven months on the water wagon, I’ve been pickled tTm#." That the recent remarkable in crease in prison population In New York state Is due largely to the Influx of immigrants into the state, is the conclusion of C. V. Collins, superintendent of state prisons, who, in his annual report to the legisla ture, suggests that the federal gov ernment, which permits these alien criminals to land on Its shores, should assume the burden of main talning them till they have served their sentence when they should be deported and never allowed to re turn. A census of 4,320 prisoners in Sing Sing, Auburn and Clinton prisons, showed that 1,091 or 25 per cent were aliens. ifelft dispatch to The News says a candidate' for bn a high license platform announcement definitely - whe 1*1* eloee- touch alignment of Bouth jammer a gentle- oorae ont in the who will advocate •^system af license for tha handling of liquor traffic to thM State. Shot Him Down. John B. Tatum, a prominent resl dent of Autauga, Ala., was shot down Sunday night by, an unknown man and Instantly killed. Tatum was on tha hom» ,of a N. 0., whits ; assaulted his wife. »-r his way home with his son-in-law. when the shot was fired from am bush Is said to have been the result of an old feud, Died of Rabies. At Durham, N. C., Bennice Man- gum, a young boy died of a typical case of hydrophobia Monday morn ing at Watts hospital. The young boy was taken to the hospital Sat urday night and he developed rabies rapidly. Prior to the treatment the madstone had been successfully ap plied and nobody waa anxious. For two "days he" suffered the horrors of the damned and had to be chain ed to the Tied. Confesses to Murder. James Rail, an enlisted man In the nSTy, figs confessed to th# murder of Anna Schnmaeher at Rochester, N. Y., In 1109, and is now under arrest at ^hta^^T Clote The «M wa« killed toY Garfield Opposed Ballinger, Former Secretary of "th# Interior Garfield Tuesday appeared^ybefore the senate committee on houart and lands, and opposed the bill submit ted by Secretary Ballinger, authorto Ing the decretory to withdraw froirf Settlement, p r.* HTri >*r ^ . v. ,r ~ s Inflation meno^ 1 tlon to V ■ r \ one of his cousin’s children at the time Mr. Tillman came In In a rage. In an affidavit submitted to the court Monday Mrs. Tillman says that one occasion she was forced by her husband’s drunken debauches and cruel treatment >10 separate from him, but “not until deponent's hus band under the influence of exces sive drink made a most outrageous, false and degrading attack upon de ponent's character, that deponent, so outraged and insulted flew through the night time with her two infan* children from deponent's home at Edgewood’ to her sister's home in Edgefield for protection, where she remained for several months.” It would seem from the number and character of the affidavits read Monday In support of Mrs. Tillman's right to the children, that practi cally every man and woman of stand ing in Edgefield is up in arms against Senator and Mrs. Tillman and their eon. Among the signers of these affidavits are several relatives of Justice Gary,-himself a member of the supreme bench. There are over signed by two or more, and several fifty affidavits, practically all of them having from 25 to 50 signatures. The signatures Include the follow ing, all testifying that they have known Mrs. Tillman either several years or from infancy, and that she- is a woman of irreproachable char acter, modest, refined, cultured, dis- "peeullarly fitted ■ and _ amply finan cially able to care for and educate cate her own children. Dr. J. Tompkins, her family phy sician; Judge J. W. DeVorpe, mem ber of the circuit bench; the Rev. C. T?. Burts, paster of the Baptist church at Edgefield; the pastor of the Presbyterian church at Edge- field; L. Wlgfall Cheatham, editor of the local newspaper; over a hun dred of Edgefield's most influential matrons; Including Mrs. John C. Sheppard, wife of the governor whom^y^j,' 8 acc^<taL and Mrs. ndo Sheppard, wife offtr^^Mt grand master of Masons e*d many young society e on the sad It will be s v >. • . •. — ¥ Men’s Ovt.* Boy’s and YoutK’ Mi-n’s fl a ml 4..V) Pants, now ” 3 and :i SO - •• . ” 2 and 2.o0 “ ” •"-N SAYS WOMEN ROBBED HIM. A New York Ranker Deapoiled of Big Amount of ('ash. In New York Wedueaday night Warner M. Van Norden, the banke- and president of the Van Norden Trust Company, was robbed of 928,• 000 as he was leaving the Waldorf- Astoria. With the arraignment a few days ago of Bessie Roberts, alias Kitty Dowell, of Chicago, and Annie Williams, alias “Chicago Maggie. ’ the story was made public. Mr. Van Norden saw two women walking along Fifth avenue. One dropped a pocketbook and Mr. Van Norden politely picked it up and re turned it to her. A hearty slap on the hack was the somewhat startling and unconven tional manner in which one of the women signalized her thanks. There was a profusion of thanks and bows and one of the women fainted sud denly on Mr. Van Norden’s shoul der. The woman revived and a few minutes later Mr. Van Norden misl ed the 928,000. The women were held in 930,000 bonds. A girl likes an extravagant young man—if she isn't going to ma r ry him. —- All that glitters is not gold; some are blondined. You cannot tell what a aims at by what she hits. nee to the farmers of the South la the new fertilizer which baa been perfected on one of the lalanda near mounfsmn-WSW. abort oanied oa wheels for aaw- ~ — - • ■ * Lm Sew Mill* In* R. H. crow-Uee, etc. Huetler Sew Mills with Rachel Hteei Head Blocks All eliee, Wn^le aad Double. Hege ~ Charieaton, 8. C. It has long been wme for circular.tatln g 'whar,ou woman knows that lime Is an essential food for plants of all kinds and that they cannot live when it has been exhaust ed from the soil. It has also been known that old woru-out lands are extremely deficient In lime, and that sour, badly-drained lands have their lime is a for 'tnthaf la not usable by growing crops. Farmers’ Bulletin No. 124, U. 8 Dept. of Agriculture, says: "All the applications of lime increased the yields • • The best yields were obtained with the lime in the form of carbonate, the finely ground oye- ter shells standing first • • Lime with fertilizer was more profitable than depending upon fertilizer alone.” This new fertilizer which present* lime in its most uaable form ia mad** by & new process of burning oyster shells and using a burner that can supply potash. The result is a high grade fertilizer costing the consum er only 97.00 per ton. It reclaim* worn-out lands in a marvelous man ner if applied broadcast two month* ahead of ammoniated goods. It’a sweetening effects on sour lands is almost magical. Charleston freight rates apply on this new fertilizer. The factory is located on Young’s Island. 8. hat. all Isjttota should he addressed fo H. L. 'OommlmF. Sale* Agent, Meggetts, 8. C. Free descrip tive circulars will be sent to any one on request bitter one, bbth Sides having em ployed' Utiir—tegur'talent. For the younger Mrs. Tillman appear* Messrs. DePass & DePass of the Co lumbia bar, and Mr. Samuel McGow an Slmklns of the Edgefield bar while for Senator and Mrs. Tillman appear ex-Solicitor J, William Thur mond, who prosecuted ex-Lieuten- ant Gbvernor James H. Tillman on his trial for the killing of Editor N. G. Ganzales of the Columbia State, and Senator Till man’s son. Mr. Henry Tillman, of Greenwood. Mill* with all modern convenience* and Im- ( I l he SALEM MOM WORKS. provementa. ALL equal to tha beat and su-I A Mill tor every claaa of a a BARGAINS! BARGAINS I* While They Lea*. A limited number of slightly used High Grade Organs for only 958.50. These organs appear near and are warranted to last a new long lifetime. Terms of sale given on application. Wrfta for catalogue stating terms deal red. Thie Is aa op portunity In a life time to poeaees a fine organ at about cost. Answer quick, for such bargains don’t last long. Addrees: MALONE’B MUSIC HOUSE, Columbia, 8. C. Pianos and Organs, CAN TUBERCULOSIS, ffifc CURED? According Co Stotomewt Issued by the Michigan . ’JJepartmewt of Health, It Can Be Cared ttad Pre vented. I, the undersigned, hereby certi fy that I have suffered ellghtly for several years, and eadored pains anjB spitting of blood from tnhereuloels trn Hto.8iffi.lME* JfafL Saastamoinfcn Hemedy .for thr*. months, I feql_myse]| perfectly. we»l. Two doctors, after cskHMl vkamln^ tiona,' hate' pronounqsl me J»)ly ri-' covered. CBlgnqA^ _ For testimonials uiLJerma, writ# JO isSafc- . • / bttLi -&■. ■■■> ■ i.iii * —g-: * - *.. ■ ... ■ % ^