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M N«w Tnvdiai of Tooaff wtmo Mob to Dooth of lUyor's Broth Wounding of Monbor of Pomo. XaffBolia, Ala., U quiot Tunoday - WITH ENORMOUS SPEED JL f coming: CLAIMS TO CURE CANCER Ult i wmiorr OPMKATIOV OB THX night, following a day of Inteaao <a- dtatnent with much bitter fooling Af&innt White Womro manifested between the white# amt Woe the Caoae of the Majority of bUck * of that °o mmUQlt y J'i 1 * m m Slade, one of four white men shot by Clinton Montgomery, a deeperaiv AoinlriUlf to a report las nod from ; noiro, la fatally injured, and hla Waablngtoa, D. C.. a few d^i' ago, death, expected at anjr minute, may ly.chlng. in 1809 have numbered.^ td furth#r <». tb< of ?t, the hlgheet number recorded atnce lt04. The rictlma numbered raCe halre<1 11 white# and 69 negroea. The Clinton Montgomery a charred negroes. The tyachlnie occurred In IS State# and body Met in the ruin# of e email oae territory New Mexico. Aa In aegro house, near the town, proTioeo years, crimes or eliegei-- crimes against white women and W'JI r JSm < if murders caused moat of these sum mary executions. One case, occurr ing la r Balro, 111., combined both caus,'# an: resulted In the placing of the city under military control for several days. Tha Cairo lynch Inga were the only caeee of the kind that occurred north of the Ohio river during the year. Several double truckings occurred at various polati in the South, and Oklahoma fum lehed a quadruple lynching, with four cittlemen as the vlctima. In the following record the wor. “lynching" has bees held to appl) cnly to the summary punishment In Ilote by e mob or by nay numbei of cltliena on e person alleged u have committal a crime. By State the 79 lynching eases here reoord cd are classified aa follows: Georgia u wm&r- i"re •••• ., i( FU rids ... ... .. | Mlaa salppl . . ■; I^oulsiaaa ; 1 Oklahoma j Kentucky < Arkaaeas 3 * South Carolina j New Mexico j Illinois j Missouri j West Virginia ] The detailed record for 1909 <1 ae foliowb. Jan. <—Lexington, 3. C., untden- work of a posse of cltliena. Bolster ind Shelly Montgomery, brothers of che burned negro, barely eaeaped lynching early Monday morning *ben the sheriff of Marengo eeunty aptured them anl eluded the ma'i hunrers. taking them to the couity ill at Linden. Search la being continued for Will -fontgornery, another of the four irothers, charge 1. with the brutal murder lata Saturday night of Ai rmen Lewis, a young whits man which crime precipitated the trouble *en lay. -Practically every aegro esldeat of Magnolia left there Mon ay afternoon. The whites are well rmod. r« i 11 tilled aeiro, attempted criminal as ■suit. •I*n- •—Marthavllle, La., Jim Oil bert. negro, accused of counterfeit ing. Jan. 19—Poplarrlile, Mias., Pin) Willis, negro, attempted crimlna assault. Ja», 19—Hope, ^rk.. Hilliard, at gro. Insulting white woman. Jan. II—Mobile. Ala.. Douglas Roberson, negro, murder of a deput sheriff. ■I*®- 94—Leighton, Ala., Sam Dav enport, negro, incendinrlsm _7 rr Mexln. Ain.. Oerval the morning Mon ’ay afternoon Clint Moatgom- ry and several other neiroee were ' ’unJ bsrrlcated In a house, which via soon surrounded by a deter tlned boty of whltee. Fearing for elr lives, Montgomery’s eompaa ->ns deserted him and surrendered o the posse. Montgomery fssteaed he door, after defying the men to (tempt to get him. One of his negro companions wav hen forced to set fire to the house nd ehen the building was eave- oped In smoke, Montgomery three nen t window and opened fire upon he poese with a magaalne shotgun Ernest Slade fell mortally wounds 1, Is face and bedy filled wltk shot. N f. 0. Cxrlton. Tom Shields sad Wm Indaey were also wounded, though iot seriously. A fusillade of shots struck Mont- romery as he was attempting to leave he house, his body being riddled nd then allowed to be consumed In he burning building. A report i« o the effect that Brlster and Shelly fontromery were placed la th in tan Jail. Albert Watkins, anotb •r negro suspected of harboring the ^ntgomery brothers, is under ar est. Jaet New the Path of the Brratie Visitor le Directed Both Toward# the Barth ead the Su, Bat It WU1 Boms Draw Away From th LBS OF KITIFB Of ANT WAT. Dr. Armetreeg, ef New York, Says Hla Treatmeet Haa Beea Sacceaa- tally Tested. Dr. Tkemaa M. Armstrong, of Naw Help Along tha Town. Where one lives, makes hla do 'eMle home, reara gid ^eai and Joy to numberless hean t tka season of tha year that th* K>or and the children of the poor ’eel moat bitterly tha pnnra of pov ,—.. Brad oae Lima and la •aUsfle ’ that be wounded the dog. All par sons In the eltr ara adriaad If auct arty- « “ra Tuomey had don. 4 dog is kUU|| te notify at onea thf 'htklhff #♦## for charity, th! ir Dr. “ lorgbltri^ 1 Infant shelter bar rabid dog ran y and create' on Main and Ae- othtar e thoughtful remembrance of the poot t Christ me# time la aaflcleat it” leee her name on the roll of th vhO had thought for the chi f the poor. them T^ai and northern esplral eat nt. and finding may be the means e! bring- f to Justice the parties who com mitted the murder—If «0brder then. the m on Msbew as hangers Ike iivdu'trtea that are to come. TIm Soatb baa held its ewo nffaln.t letter*: and now that the Twonme^W^il^ b*» the the vicinity ol-. the of cleerig mystery Camille Flamarlmon. the dletln gulshed French astronomer, writes of Haney’s comet to The New York Herald aa follows: Halley’s comet, the arrival of which I waa permit ted to wltncsa by quite a celestial favor oa the photographic plates >? Hei ielBerg ITnTversTty. Ok Sep tember It, la advancing rapidly to ward the earth. At that time It was vit million kilometers from uat this Istaace has beea reduced to 124 nllllon, which Is about the dlstaace of the orbit of Mars to the aun. The comet then baa come shout three hundred million kilometers closer to js In seventy-six days, which gives t an average speed of S,190,000 kilometers, or very nearly four mil loa kilometers s day. Truly a pret ty fair speed! That speed, too, will go oa Increasing according as tbe omet draws nearer to the sun. Just now the comet's path la dl- ectad toward both the sun sad the •arth. After the middle of Decem- ter, while still speeding oawsrd toward th# sub, It will draw away from our planet. Later oa, how ever, It will again move toward the 'varth through the combln&tloa of Ita elliptic orbit with the almoet -Ireular path which tbe terrestrial globe deecrlbea every year around the radiant heat center of the solar vvstem. As a pale nebula. Invisible even by mesne of the meet powerful in Urumenta, perceptible only by the ((holographic eye, the comet paes @1, la the middle of September, from the 17th to the 1 #th magnitude. By the middle of October It had reach ed the 16th, and at the beginning of November the l«th. It has now -eaehed tbe 13th magnitude, and its movements are followed punctually by the powerful Instruments of the •bsorvstorles. Even Ita spectral inalyais already has been commenc ed. The comet shoul 1 pn April 20 reach tbs point of Its nearest ap- oroacb to the sun. Its perihelion 90,- 000,000 kilometers from the solar ■♦phere. its speed Is then 64,000 neters a second, 3,240 kilometers a minute, or 194.444 kilometers an bnur. Bathing In the effluvia of the ■lectrlc. calorific, luminous radia tion of tbe sun, It becomes Impreg nqted wUh Ita rays, un ’ergolng In to the Stofiffiriflf W>*liLJr»n«for- tlon, until he could b* hospital, and altar eonae delay the imbalance arrived k* WM enr* ried to the Pleekrteriaa hospital At Mr. Felder # reQue*. P*- Kaowl ton remained ^ 1““. retnr«t«g to Columbia on No 35 Instead of No. 29. and reef* 1 "IT Columbia at 10.SO aday. r had been to High Point, <mler for fnrni- 0n this visit that at tb&tn.. York, asserts he haa discovered an almost certain cure for cancer; other physicians seem to agree in th!* opinion. Dr. Armstrong who lives at No 100 West Thirty-sixth street. N?* York City, Insists that he doea not j GEN. R. E. LEE It b Said Northerners ttject (• Efi bale a the Capital ALL TOURISTS SEE IT Virginia May Refuse te Let Statues of Lee and Washington Remain Unless Congress Accepts the Form er Promptly In the Spirit In Which It Is Offered. seek newspaper notoriety, but f m il» a Washington dispatch to The bound, for the sake of suffering bu N < ewi aif Courier says It la learned menliy^ to make kla cure kiuwva- f hit - imineglktely After the kolldays waa graduated from the medical 11 «- partment of Toronto University ... (rom tte m.dlc.l 0.- , qn<<Uon wh(tll , r „ , ol lh( . .IJ7 ..d h.. pr.rtlo.J m.Heine !» ! 1>r ““" ot Rober « the West and in New York. Twenty four years ago be bejan to stu.l> 'cancer" In' the living patient 'andthe govexnmant or returned-^t9 E. Lee, recently placed in Statuary Hall at the capitol, la to be accepted mlcrococplcally and chemically. “I found my cure nine years ago,” said Dr. Armstrong a few days ago Since then I have treated thirty- nine cases of true cancer, thirty- <Ix have been cured perfectly. Tbe three failures, I believe, resulted be cause the physicians In Immediate at tendance did not strlckly follow my uethod of treatment. Ninety days is the shortest period In which 1 lave effected a cure; succeasful treat ment has taken from three to flvt months cn the average. “I sever use the knife. My treat ment Is twofold. 1 use a lotion and i me Heine taken Internally.*’ It eeema that Dr. Armatrong con ftdee his treatment to other physl lane, ae the ethlce of the medical profeaelon require. He mention^ the names of several physicians in New York who he aald have en> iloyed" the treatment. One la Dr ?. W. Popham, No. 354 Schermer 10m etreet, Brooklyn. “I am using Dr. Armatrong’s treat ment In two cases with excellent 'e- jults.” said Dr. Popham. “One pa tlent kas a deep cancer of tbe back After three months of treatment >oth patients are greatly Improved Tak . lotion which Dr. Armstrong prescribes seems to eraijcate tht Ilseaeed tissue; to dispel the car, ■eroue growth.’’ The reporter aeked Dr. Pophan If Dr. Armstrong keeps his treat nent secret, sad. If not, to tell wha, It Is. “I do not know that he keeps 1; lecret,” sail Dr. Popham. “It con lists of phosphorus sulphate" Then pausing as if in second thought, Dr. Popham added: "No, 1 -.hall not tell you." “Do you know of a case whirl has been cured absolutely by thb treatment?” “Yes, one,” said I,*'' Popham; V woman who waa a patient of Di Vgnes Sparks. No. 140 South Port land avenue. This patient had bee treated for cancer for two year iuj waa going from bad to worse r. Sparks bad treated her fo. buri>eli*BB Dr Armatrong * Virginia will be settled. The mat ter. It is understood, will be forced to a decision. A member of the Virginia com mission charged with the duty of arranging noth for the preparation of the Lee statue and for Its gre- sentation to the government on be half of the State of Vlrgla'a, Wednesday stated In moat emphat ic terms that the Old Dominion would not let the question be fore ed, neither tbe acceptance of tbe itatue, together with that of Gen. Washington, by the government. “As a member of the commission,” he sail, "and a cltixen ef Vlrgla'a, ( will do my best to have the statues doth of Lee and Waablngtoa re moved at once from Statuary Hall In the capitol and carried to Richmond mlese congress shall agree to accept hem both, not oaly pleasantly but in the best of spirit. Virginia, you may be sure, Is not anxious to forc^ •ongress or any other body to recog nize Lee In Statuary Hall. In fact I feel almost justified In saying that the matter has gone too far already The grand old State of Virginia, and. n’eed, the entire South, has beea nsulted by the very thought of re jecting the Le# statue. “If congress will not accept It In he spirit ^ In which It Is offered then I feel tafe In laying that a •lace will be found not only for this -tatue—the Lee statue—but for that >f Washington also In the State cap ’ol In Richmond. The people bo' only of Virginia, but of the entire "ovth would be glad to see both Vashtn?ton Nnd Lee In the city o' r M''»mond. But I hope slncerelv that no more will be said In a way h-t will make the Virginia people eel that they would have to takr uch action as might some day be •really regretted.” It Is learned here that there is e -onstderable amount of ill feeling i-enderel by the placing of the*' tatues In the capitol. The official •ul’es, who conduct tourist partler II through the building sad see sad alk with people from all over th! c A Feather in Our le o«r system ot esrUafi ab4 fijreing feathers. B«4 we have a say ether feathers la oar cap. We exeel la eleaalag sad dyefag Olevee. Laee Curtains, til kinds ef dress goods, add area Carpets. Ws never Injure the Baeet fabric#. Oar work le the best. Oar price moderate A peete 1 will hriafi them. '-r* c THE W. S. COPLESTON CO. 8B Society Street, Local CHARLESTON. & C. ■tew — Southern States Supply Compani «irr non m . -Vjpte IVI ec hjneryJSuppl lea Plumb! ni ► V < COLUMBIA. S. C. mm A smile on hla face and n wave’of hla hand For tBe chTldren who' stood at tli gate. He rode by the side of the klnglleat knight, And deemed It a guerdon to share Hla tent, and the march, or the danger and fight— To kneel by his chieftain In prayer. CLASSIFIED COLUMN Red Foiled Cattle- Berkshire Hogs • and Augora Goats. Breeders. W. R. Clifton, Waco, Texas. The Latest Books—Send for our lat eat booklet describing them. Sims Book Store, Orangeburg, S. C. He lay where he fell, with the light on his face, Untouched by dishonor and shame. Defeated—yet true to the pride ef his race, The home where he’d dwelt and hla name. The tears were like dew In the eyes of the chief, Who gaxed on the form of hla friend. And thought of the children at home and their grief, The blussom of life and Its ead! Tobacee Growers—Splendid oppor tunities here. Write for particu lars. Tullahoma Tobacco Works, Tullahoma, Tenn. -Beat eommtsslon offer on eertk. New, all retailors, aam- pl«a Coat pocket. “Very Profits able,’* Iowa City, Iowa. He sent, all entwined with hla pity and love, The flowers that grew where ke fell—- And angels who walked on the ram parts above, Repeated their call, "It la well!” Tls well, tho' for years he kas slept 'ne&th the sod, Uncrowned Jjy the laurel* of fame, And almply a man who was true to his God, Tke home where he'd dwelt, and his name! * THE NEW FERTILIZER. For Bale—One Llpplncott’s fount and fixtures. Price reasonable; good location on Main street. W. H. Merchant, Granltevllle, S. C. For Sale—Milch cows Jersey's, grad# Jerseys and Holsteins. All of tha -beet breeding. Registered Jersey male calves. M. H. Sams, Jones- vllle. B. C. Waated to Buy—Hides. Furs, Wool, beeswax, tallow, scrap Iron, cow peat. Write for prices. Craw ford Co.. 608-610 Reynold St. Augusta, Oa. Typewriter*—Special low prices oa rebuilt and aecond-haad machines all kinds, for fall trade. Write for price Met. General Supply Company, Dept. O, Augusta, Ga. nd other countries, form aa ejxel A discovery of far-reaching Impcr anoe to the farmers of the South li he new fertiliser which has been ‘effected on one of the Islands near "harleston. 8. C. It has long been nown that lime la an easentlal food or plants of all kinds and that they annot live when It has been exhaust- ‘ J from the toll. It has also bees mown that old worn-out lands •xtremely deficient In lime, an^ ' •our. badly-drained lands bq, e theli Ime Is a for mthat Is noU' ut4 b| # b? .•rowing crops / Farmers’ N« iii4, U 8 MlUloae Eat Baited Peanota—Our penay peanut machines are tbe greatest money getters known; aomethlng new. Can be operated evenings. Terms eaey. New Eng land Venting Machine Co., New Haven. Conn. If you are sick or ailing and have fe'.'tJ t# find relief, write te me at once. Give name. age. sex. color of hair and eyes, most troublesome symptoms, age. Dr 7. C. Ratdd Graad Rapids. M'rb. J)OSt- dlag , ^ ^ of the that mu con-lder the second ^ ta04)e. Then hang anj sntTT ougtily wuh hard wood #tiw.Ju»', Hull BfiB^B^Mlu link *‘ r soy sort L minutes before the of v I sHSh V tthetie. Aged fining themselves unable to a man and a woman hanged "themselves to a bed post. The hos pital at Ivoryt containing 2,000 pa tients. la aurronnded by water and grave reaulta are feared. Preatdent Falllere# and Premier Brtand made an automobile tilp through the flooded districts in tbe eastern aectlon of Pari*. They walk- 1m as Ma hT* HtUe pond about December 1 says hje Is a great admirer ^ I bird* and ta often called all kinds of and rnnrro \ thlngB - because of this fan cy; petting birds and not shooting more than he does. “But this,” he says, “is worth a whole season's shooting to me. ”1 suppose,” he continues, "you will think I have wheels In my head, aryl 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 three thousand booklets per day we: being mailed, that the daily receipts xmountel to from |85 to 9160. and that the business waa steadily .,|^ creasing. She further InfornY*^*.. * Inspector that up to that ad accumulated as right !n proteotlne log of Urge number* of luMimi*, H tingitrUns, Poles I’his would on!v m «We si bsd nuU ter wor»e. end compHrsm uixTrers iqltt further. WIihC would help, howevei second State con — —, — , ~ k, . CI,r»Ddon county Cm.r “f* •"'"!*? ' U— l. . tor m.l... 1. not i ed to the fulleet limit of tha^ prea- irowlng c^p. ent capital. Her tobacco crops are Farmer*’ Bull**'" **<>- , * 4 ’ D 8 enormous, and In every epot touch- Agriculture, aayv: ”AI ed by the tide of Investment springs .pplications of * acr ®»aed tb< forth a golden return greater than r |«|g s • • T#e Yl e, da w#r« their Investor* ever dreamed ot. With a population of nearly 88. 000,000, or abont a thlffi ot l ba fa tal of the United State#, ebe ta put- Tha total points made were 99. Tnc first prlae oa yield is 1175. Tc* award waa mad* at a meeting of the State Corn Content, which la com posed of Commissioner Watson, President P. H. Mell. of Clemson Coi lege, and D. N. Barrow. second prise for yield and aa * matter for eertoua regfV Baacomb Usher, attltudf of Colller’ii toward > 4»pty boy who will-. been particular!) p ban a moot j^nimlMarch and afriealtayal ^ril.^vrr. wrr»L obtained with ,n fh « forB ef carbon*** _ « round oye ter abatis 0^ atmt flr<t * ‘ with “° r * P ■—nnnft # :ig rou took it upon you me If But to" - “Teach y<>u a lesson. Was that un- klud? How many men do you su|v 11os,- Tnuf curses upon yon for urix-Mure f" Oltlce ^o org, 1 hrne h. . sell rmt hy Xmas Kve iful Display, And to buy at low tide j>nco*.' dace to ^ct such chxrmi il; Christmas Presents ami New Yea -nCV-Xt it*- bottom d» ,4 J rices! Trustees of WTutnrop"college—nr tt. TUlin^p, of Edgefield; D. W. Mc- Ijiurln, of Dillon. Trustees University of South Car oltna—S. P. -Hunter, Jr., of Dillon; C. E. Spencer, of York. Trustees State Colored College — G. B. White, of Chester; J. W. Fljyd, of Kershaw. . fin (U- ^ Vneeltbe duck had come to the best place ad through some of he atreeta knee I n ^ Unit(>d ^ foHowln)? a??p ,n * Dd _! r *t er . I 'he thread of humor, Mr. Mine’- crowds fleeing, men tugging at valtr aa and trunks, and weel png women burdened with children and al aorta of household belongings. Tho con ditions are appalling, and ihe presi dent and premier hastened r vay to writes that the duck was fed In the only heaven on earth. BOOZE DOWNED HIM. means of relief for tho suf-1 Another of Rag Time Music Goes fering people. to the Poor House. ma ■’■4 Kill Each Other. A dispatch from St. Petersburg, f, Wya «ofe than 100 persons] Hugh Cannon, who wrote “Goo Goo Eyes,” “Ain’t That a Shame, “Bill Bailey” and other classics of ragtime, was sent to the Eloise poor - . been killed and many wound ad M tha raault of religious con Meta which have been waged in old house at Detroit Tuesday at the age Bokhara between the Sunltea and of thirty-six. He told the pathetic tha Shiahs for two days. The Sun j story of his life in short, expressive Itee demand the,replacement of thu sentences. “I quit coke easy,” he ■mi.* officials by Sunites. At the said. “I hit the pipe In New York khara au thorlties for a year and stopped that. I went and machine guns up against morphine hard and quit from Samarkand *0 I hut booze, red, oily booze, that’* got the fighting. 9c?t request for seven me for keeps. Except I months on the water wagon, I've I been' ijAfttled most ’Of th^ time ibis dispatch to The News A candidate toil -* higbSIcense platform ] Men’.* Ovc.’ Scar^^fiins Bey’s and Youth * Ovcs Mill’s ft an l 4.50 Pants, now “ ;i and :(go “ ” , “ 2 and 2 .V) “ •• . 17#*” PRISONS ARE FULL OF ALIENS. Influx of Immigrants the Cause of Increase of Criminals. 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 ltar~ 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. Shot Him Down. - _ . _ John B. Tatum, a prominent resi announcement definitely j dent of Antauga, Ala., was shot down Ob# who la in close touch I Sunday night by an unknown man 'tItgfimO&rof fiouth} and Instantly killed. Tatum was on summer a gentle- hla way home with his son-in-law T oomo hat In the when the shot was fired from am- who will advocate ha*h la said to have been the result ^Car tha handling (of an old feud, » » » Pled of Rabies. At Durham, N. C.. Bennlce Man- gum, a young boy died of a typical case of hydrophobia Monday morn ing at Watts hoipUal. 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 was anxious. For two days be gutter ed.,. the horrors of the damned and had to be chain-' ed to the bed. .. Confesses to Murder. James Hall, an enlisted man in the tha hom» „of a I nary, has confessed to the murder N. CL, while of Asm Schumacher at Rochester, [N. T., In 1999, and is now under Zm id at tha Portamogth yard* girl waa killed to a cemetery tag a recommano'’ tlon 10 ** legislation, ar- e, .• X . * * *• Garfield Opposed Ballinger Forifiar Secretary of tho Interior Garfield Tuesday appeared^hefore the senate committee on housefi am lands, and opposed the bill submit ted by Secretary Ballinger, authorL tog the Acre ta ry to withdraw ‘j, —I/*’ 1 from Settlement, 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 (Tehauohes and cruel treatment 'to 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 practl cally every man and woman of stand ing In Edgefield is up in arms against Senator and Mrs. Tillman and their son. 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 60 signatures. The signatures include the follow r Ing, all testifying that they have known Mrs. Tillman either several years or from infancy, and that she is a woman of irreproachable cha’- acter, modest, refined, cultured.,dis- peeulfOWy and amply flnan- j hfm daily 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. E. Burts, pastor of the Baptist church aF'EdgefleTd; the’ pastor of the Preabyterlan 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^^n' g 'ncce^«L^ nd Mrs Yando Sheppard, wife of £bw>*{>ast grand master of Masons aa® many young society wo The real «>•«■* trifl come on the return,arth* rale, sod It will be a SAYS WOMEN ROHHED HIM. New York Banker I>es|>oile<l of Rig Amount of (’ash. In New York Wednesday nigh* Warner M. Van Norden, the banko- and president of the Van Norden Trust Company, was robbed of $28,• 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 back 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 misv ed the $28,000. The women were held in $30,000 bonds. nee to the farmers of the South la the new fertilizer which has been perfected on one of the Islands near Charleston, 8. C. It has long been knows that lime Is an essential food i for plants of all kinds and that they cannot live when it has been exhaust ed from the soil. It has alsp been known that old worn-out lands are extremely deficient In lime, and that soar, badly-drained lands have their lime Is a for mthat Is not usable hy growing crops. Farmers' Bulletin No. 124, U. 8 Dept. of Agriculture, eaye: “AU the applications of lime increased the yields • • The best yields were obtained with the lime in the form of carbonate, the finely ground oys ter shells standing first • • Lime with fertilizer waa more profitable than depending upon fertilizer alone.” This new fertilizer which presents lime In Its most usable form la made by a 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 $7.00 per ton. It reclaims worn-out lands in a marvelous man ner if applied broadcast two months ahead of ammonlated goods. It’a sweetening effects on sour lands is almost magical. Charleston freight rates apply on this new fertilizer _ eestlj moved aa a oaountea TarMni. Short Led Saw Mill* mourned on wheels for aaw- UoTK. R. croea-Uea, etc. Hustler Saw Mills with Reehet Steel Head Blocka. AU alsea. Bln ale Ond Double. He#* Log Beam Saw 'enleocea and Im- Blngle Mills with all modern cdnve eou eerlor to the rest. A MtU tor every class ot OUT lyera. Write (or circulars,stating what yon want. Manufactured by RKS. Wtahs-Mm. SALEM IRON WORl N. «. A girl likes an extravagant young roan—if she isn't going to ma-ry 1* located oa Young’s All that glitters is not gold; some are blondined. You cannot tell what a woman alms at by what she hits. Island, 3. G., but -alL-lettera ahoaid to* be addressed to E. L. Commins, Sales Agent, Meggetts, S. C. Free descrip tive circulars will be sent to any one on request. bitter ope, both aide* having em ployed fine legal talent. For the younger Mrs. Tillman appears Messrs. DePass & DePass of the Co lumbia bar, and Mr. Samuel McGow an Slmklna of the Edgefield bar while for Senator and Mrs. Tillman appear ex-Solicitor J. William Thur mond, who prosecuted ex-Lieuten- ant Governor James H. Tillman on his trial for the killing of Editor N. O. Ganzales of the Columbia State, and Senator Tillman’a non, Mr. Henry iTHlman, of Greenwood. BARGAINS! BARGAINS!’ While They I>**t. A limited number of slightly used •US High Grade Organs for only $58.50. These organs appear near new and are warranted to last a long lifetime. Terms of said given on application. WflW for catalogue stating terms desired. This Is an op portunity In a life time to possess a fine organ at about cost. Answer quick, for such bargains don’t last long. Address: MALONE'S MUSIC HOUSE, Columbia, 8. C. Pianos and Organ j, - CAN TUBERCULOSIS SB CURED? According to Statement leaned by the Michigan .Department of Health, It Cha Re Oared ahd Pre vented. I, the undersigned, hereby certi fy that I have suffered slightly for several years, and endured pains and spitting of blood from tnhdrculoala Sa&stamolnfen Remedy i.fe,ff threv months, I teqljnyse]J perfectly. we*L octoTi, after egrritol «kf Two doctors. rirtmU.r tiona,' hare pronouneetj me i»»ly r*-- ed. r-'.V-V-e covered (Signed) * (LV V., ■'P moirntm n 11 eiieii Vi.. - • ' r