University of South Carolina Libraries
*“*.>V-- -V c*. v _?:.„■£-. - f v'.: ■ .; ; i t-{ •-•*“-•,*T' _ • -•• —ii—.—i-— ' r: * ’ ' s. .: -m m • • cr*; * ; 4:- k; U- ■ -.. •>. SKib av k EiK<id rf ill Hum. IG » STREET 'J* MSn > > Three Boy* Were Shot *ad Probe* Mjr PetoJIf Wounded and Several Other People Were More or Lean Oertonaty Injured in Flghto About 'aeoiqr* “ Three boy» were ebot and proba- bly faulty wounded, while several received less severe wounds Tuesday In riots which followed the resump tion of service by the Rapid Tran- ' ’ Ht company. Tfag~tfrootinr occurred In attacks on cars m the northeastern ieettoB Market street, the principal busi ness thoroughfare in the heart of the city, was the scene of disturb- gnces during the entire day. Cars were stonSd and two policemen Were roughly handled by a mob of sev eral thousand persons. A dosen ar rests were msde and the prisoners piaced ih a trolley ear. This was storlned“«nd“-two of the prisoners escaped Prsstdent Murphy of the Central Labor Union still regards a general strike of all tradfe unions In the city aa Inevitable, although Organiser Pratt is reported to be opposing this move. A delegation of labor lead sys left for Washington Tuesday to ask Senator Penrose to use his in fluenoe for n peacable solution of the trouble, v Members of the State Fensibles an independent military organization of about 200 members, were placed on duty Tuesday night, armed with loaded muskets. They were detailed in the Klngsington mill district in the northeast, which is a hotbed of - union sympathisers. In their first skirmish they were badly beaten by the mob, who paid no attention to the drawn bayonets and snatched the muskets from the hands of the young militiamen. Members of the State Fenclble* according to Mayor Reybnrn, acting as though they were on a picnic, a lowing girls in the mill district to wear their caps and cut' the bras? button off their clothing. At one point s group of rioters captured a member of the Fenclbies and car ried him several hundred feet from his post, where they stripped him - Of his cost, hat. cartridge belt and gun and threw him into a sewer. A nonunion conductor was badly hurt at Sixth and Market street late Tuesday afternoon when a crowd at tacked his car after a boy had pull •d. the trolley pole from tbs feed wire. Policemen drove back the crowd at the point of refblvers and started the car. It had gon# but a abort distance when a heavy iron weight, thrown from a window, crashed through the roof of the ve hicle Fifteen policemen quartered in the barn of the Philadelphia Rapid tran sit company st Ridge avenue and Tork street narrowly escaped death whan the entire northwest corner of the building was blown away with dynamite. The explosion occurred Just aa C. O. Pratt was about to address a meeting of car men at a hall at Ridga avenue and Dauphlr streets. This building, as well as others In the vicinity, was shaken by the shock. How the dynamite was plac ed in the car barn ia a mystery. The State Fencibles. after being harrassed and bastes all day by a mob of thousands of strike breakers along Lehigh svenne. were with drawn at nightfall. JC , MW-rvkhrTCBU (gainst the mob, but a half dozen mounted police had ridden up and down driving the riot ers before them during the after noon. Only two cars were run on this line during the afternoon, and both were badly shattered by stones. Policemen in this locality were fired upon by a strike sympathizer, who had concealed himself in St. Blmean’s church at Lehigh avenue and Hutchinson street. This enrag ed the guardians of the peace and they returned the fire, hitting W. E. ColUns tn the groin. "He was remov ed to the Episcopal hospital. -X SHOT UP FAST TRAIN. When Smoke Cleared Two Passen gers Found Shot. ■ L Three negroes who boarded the smoaker of a New Jersey Central train as It was leaving the Jersey City terminal early Wednesday, pull ed out their .revolvers a few roln- utes later and proceeded to shoot up Hie ear in wild western fashion. When the smoke cleared, It was found that two passengers had been seriously hurt. One had a bullet in his abdomen and the other was shot through the breast. The negroes, apparently sobered by the result of their work, took to IT ■! . ' ' b Jumping from the rear platform is the traTh whirled through the surburbs of Jersey City. The Is the Gift of the Various Chapters of the D. A: R. in the State and Will be Presented Shortly. The official battle flag for the bat tleship South Carolina, which will be presented to that good ship during her stay in Charleston harbor, be tween April 10th and 15th, is now in khe poeesslon of Mre. A. C. Li gon. state vice regent of the Daughters of the American Revolution. The flag, which la the official flag of the GIVEN BY THE LADIES I THE TRUE BASIS A HANDSOME FLAG MADE FOR dTHE SOUTH CAROLINA. State of South CaroitiHk, is a magni- a man well equipped for life's orient piece of workmanship. The field of the flag is made of gorgeons navy blue silk with gold fringe. The palmetto tree and cresent are hand embroidered in w hite .silk with -hadlngs in grey. The flag Is nine feet long and six feet wide, the offi cial size of the battalion flag of the United States navy. The presentation of this flag from the State chapters of the Daughters of the American Revolution, will be made by Mrs. Bratton, state regent, ob the e«me-day ihat the silver.ser vice will be presented irom the State of South Carolina by Gov. Ansel. Captain Fechteler of the Uq/lted States navy, commanding official of the battleship, will receive the flag Although this flag will be given *>y all the Daughters of the Ameri can Revolution chapters in the state, he movement to get this emblem was initiated by the Moultrie Chap ter of Orangeburg. The movement really began when the State conven tion was held In Sumter. A commit tee to gather funds for the purpose was appointed from the Orangeburg Chapter. The members of this chapter which is one of the first In the State and from which sprung the other (Eutaw) Orangeburg chapter have all worked dilligently to make the purchasing of this flag possible Soon after the Sumter convention was over, Mrs. Llgon with others made a list of all the Daughters of the American Revolution in this State and contributions poured in pro-rata. The banner, which has handsome accessories, cost almost |200 and will make for the battleship a beau tiful souvenir from this historical society in the State for whom she is named. The above is clipped from The State, and was furnished by its Orangeburg correspondent. RGHT THE TRUSTS OF GENUINE WORTH IN A YOUNG MAN IS CHARACTER. Pitbctk Tell* BY BUILDING FACTORIES IN THE SOUTHERN STATES. Got. Hughes on the Young Mens Christian Association’s Platform and Service. 'We are her today upon a platform upon which all good citizens can stand because there is a knowledge in this association and in any gath ering of American citizens that char acter is the basia of industry, the surety of the endurance of the Re public. What a noble thing it is to 3 WAS ALONE IN * ji LOUIS f| ■ y I The Strange Story v t Johnson, a Slxte^ ' School Girl of Spartaflt’ irg, Who i 1 WM ! Was Induced to liesTb ter Home by a Mau and Wor The Spartanburg H« Ethel Johnion, who 'says Miss steriously ROU1IERY STOPPED. Two Safe Blowers Are Scared Off by Two Small Boys. At Atlanta two small boys, Thom as and Joseph Steen, aged thirteen and fifteen years, respectively, pre vented the robbery of the safe In the German Cafe on last Sun- lay night. The boys were hunting rats and noticing a light in the cafe peered behind the closed blinds and ♦aw two yeggmen Just ready to blow (be safe. , 'Til bet they are yeggs,” whis pered Thbmas; "let’s run and get a cop.” By the time the boys returned with a policeman the robbers had fled. B. W. Mitchell and Fred Sisk were later arrested and made a con fession, saying they were frightened away by hearing the boys Lav^ tho building. About $1,000 was In the safe. SUITS AGAINST FARMER. Exporters Bring Action Against an. . zamfar. — ~ ^rt.' Continue to be brought up against farmers for failure to ob serve their contracts In the delivery of cotton at the prices which were contracted for last summer before the big advance of Che fall months J. W. Lybrand. of Aiken county, is the respondent in two suits brought by cotton firms of the city of Augus ta. Salinas and DeVaughn and Dtr- rett and Doughty. Both firms con tracted for delivery of cotton In the fall months on prices which had been agreed to by Lybrand, accord ing to the bin of complaint, and now alleged that ag a result Lybrand s failure to deliver the staple to them they have been damage in varying amounts which they are now suing tto recover. work, not a narrow-minded man, not one who tries to shield himsdlf from all pleasures of life that go to make well rounded and symmetrical char acter, but a young man who realizes that he Is here in the world to do something and before he can do something worth while, he must be something worth while. What a noble thing it is to see in a demo cratic community, with the develop ment of the capacity for work, which tend to interfere with proper en forcement of legislative work, to see at the same time the soundness of the views of our people on what stands for decency and for justice. W r e honor every organization which attempts to keep men up to the responsibility of their obligations, which attempts to make clear the duty that is placed upon them as free citizens of this republic. Every one of us know's how soon is the relapse if we are not held stead fast to our ideals by social senti ment. It is a remarkable thing that the Youag Mens Christian Association has been so successful in providing so many different fields of activity for young men. Educational, or physi cal improvement, social, religious; it seems to comprehend about every thing that a young man needs. I heard, some years ago, it dfs tinguished educational expert say that the object of a mCral education was the wise conduct of business and the noble employment of leisure That seems to be the object of this association; fitting men to play .their part in life with ability, providing them resources for the noble em ployment of leisure, and giving them proper Actions of how ^ftfe shold be spent. W T e have had a good deal of over emphasis in the past on what has been called success. The young America has started out fired with ambition as he has frequently read of the adventures of those who have proceeded him to obtain what he calls success; and too frequently, that goal has been defined Jn terms of accumulation of material J>enflts and of prominent position. In these days, I think, we are tak ing a truer view of life. It is splendJd sight to see the young man of today going forth to make the most of himself, not for himself alone, but for the benefit of his fel low men. There never was a time in our history when mere wealth gave i:s poseseor so few advantages as it does today, in the opinion of h!» fellows. There never was a time when mere place or office, mere title to distinction, gave a man so li' .le as it does today . The attention of the courury Is riv eted upon worth rather tton nt-on position, upon the means ny which an end has been attained tuiu u accumulation. That is a mo.it wj, some thing. ^T^^&^irtMUeelWnnoral nxltst. a sharpening of the sense of justice, a clearer view of the man's obligation to those around him, a trurer per ception of the limits which a man should set for himself in the pur suit of his ambition, a quiet deter minatlon on the part of the people at large that no man shall overstep those limits and be faithless to his obligation to the community as a whole and at the same time t- ijoy the public respect. There is noth ing in this country that Is worth having which Involves any forfeit ure of that self-respect which con ditions all true results and every real achievement. AFTER NEGRO ROBBERS. They Broke in Dry Goods Store Af ter Setting Fire to House. A dispatch from Fulton. Ky., says a mob of forty men armed with shotguns arrived in that city early Tuesday on the trail of two ne*- groes, who broke Into the Mathis Duke Dry Goods store at Martin, Tennessee, Monday night and ran sacked the premises. It Is believed the negroes are beaded for Cairo, 111., and the Cairo officers were notified to be on the lookout. It is not be lievpd that the mob will proceed to " Cairo ai tnch an armed bfrdy arrtv ing there at this time would be lia ble to create an exciting scene. A telephone message from Mc- Cornell, Tenn., three miles south of FflUon, Ky., late Tuesday night said that "tb« two hegroea “ifad set flrA and robbed a residence there. Find Joy in Your Work. The man who really finds enjoy ment on this mundane sphere is the man who gets his pleasure In his work. If a man can't find real Joy In doing what he does as a matter of making a living, he ought to seek some new employment and keep on seeking until he can find something that will be a pleasure as w'.l as labor to him. Did you ever notice the difference in the work of a man who comes down to the office in the morning with a smile and tin man who sits down at his desk wr.’a a yawn or a sigh as much as if to say: "Gee, I wish this day was over?” The smiling man is usually the one who wins favor from his employer and is advanced, while his yawning brother plods along at the same old desk year after year. Tho one with the smile Is he who finds pltiuure .ln hi* work, while the oth er is he who seeks new fields or try to find pleasure in the task aft which he labors. from her home, 530 Mug -4ia street, last Tuesday morning jt ago, has been located In St. Louie, Mo. Mr. J. W. Johnson, father of the young lady, left |iunday for’ St. Louis to bring her back home. ? i inson receive! a letter Sunday from her daughter in St. Louis. In speaking with a Herald representative last night, Mrs. John son said that the letter she had re ceived was- -one -of the most touch ing appeals she had ever read. She said her daughter had expressed her self in the letter as believing that her ftither would not take her back home, but that If he stoutly refused, she asked her mother tlo send her the money to return on, and that she would work for her until she had paid it back. “I am alone in a great city, among strangers,” said Miss John son in her letter . to her mothe; but I have always asked to be shown to good boarding places along the line.” Mrs. Johnson said the letter was full of assurances that her daughter had kept herself pure, and that she believed her. Albert E. Hill has been retained as counsel for the prosecution in the case against Kate Parham and Wal ter Johnson, under arrest on the charge of abducting Miss Johnson Mr. Hill will ask for a continuance until Mr. Johnson and his daugh ter arrive. Miss Johnson will be placed upon the stand, and It is believed she will tell the whole story in connection with her disappear ance. The story of Miss Ethel Johnson’s disappearance is one of the most clouded mysteries that hag ever hap pened about Spartanburg. A young girl, sixteen years of age. she was going to school dally and seemed to be happy and contented. Some time ago she was noticed occasionally with Kate Parham, a grass widow who has rooms over Sharp’s market on Magnolia street. Tuesday morn Ing a wreck ago she left home with her books, presumably for school Instead she took passenger train No 9 and went to Asheville. Immediately the Parham woman was connected with her disappear ance. Mr. Johnson and a police of fleer searched Kate Parham s apart ments over Sharpe’s market the next night after Miss Johnson left and they found there her school books The Parham woman declared she had nothing to do with her disappearance but that she had been asked by Miss Johnson to accompany her as far as Asheville. Walter Johnson, of Inman, cousin to Mr. J. W. Johnson, had left a ten dollar bill at Maddux drug store for Miss Johnson. This t^A- Miss Johnson caUed^l&r re TffSTrain. The conductor on No. 9 states that Miss Johnson handed him a ten dollar bill front which to take her fare, and that when she reached Asheville she ask ed concerning the connections to Knoxville. Accordingly Mr. John- (*on, in tracing his daughter, went at once to Knoxville. However, he failed to find any trace of her. He returned home on Saturday afternoon. He determined he would offer a reward for her re covery. but Sunday Mrs. Johnson received the letter from her daugh ter. As soon as Mr. Johnson read the letter and learned that his daugh ter was In a strange city without money he wired to her to let him know how much money he should send her. Directly he received a telegram asking tor a small sum. This he sent, and then took the train for St. Louis. Miss Johnson will tell the whole story when the case for abduction comes up against Kate Parham and Walter Johnson. It ia said that the story she will tell Is one that wi.l startle the community, and that It may result In placing somebody in the penitentiary. They Will Doable and Treble the Value of Our Raw Material*, Says Terrell. I * ' % !For years the thrifty North haa sold us oar necessititleg, and now it ia also gelling us our luxuries. Take the item of automobiles alone. You see them everywhere. In some towns the bootblacks have them. They are growing in popularity be yond any invention of recent years. Texas is paying out hundreds of thousand* of dollars for them, hut not one to my knowledge is manu factured in a Southern state. "We sell cows and buy butter; we sell steers and buy beef; we sell fruit and buy 'preserves; we sell hides and buy leather; we sell wool and buy blankets; vf3 sell cotton fnd buy calioo; and then we stand up like brave men and cuss old man Aldrich and the little state of Rhode Island. Would that we could sell a great many demagogues and bny a few statesmen. To be plain about It I would like to purchase Aldrich himself and keep'him down here a few years. I believe it would be a great investment. He would cer tainly turn things upside down, would enjoy hearing those New Eng land ‘Yankees’ groaning and com plaining that the South wag getting ill their money. “Gentlemen do you wonder that the South Is dissatisfied? Are you surprised when you hear complaints? Do you wond^t that her newspapers ire constantly telling of her woes? Whose is the fault? Where is the cause and where is the cure? Can conditions be reversed by eon stantly abusing the northern manu facturers? We have tried that plan for more than a quarter of a cen tury, and our hearts are weary. "'Can it come from political con ventions, from silver-tongued ora tors, from high sounding platform declarations? Alas! we have already had more of these things than any other hand under the sun. "Can we reach It by abusing the trusts? The trusts care but little how we abuse them so long as we continue to buy from them. Haa anyone quit buying from them. Has will not permit them to dowbuslness in Texas, but we send them our dol lars just the same. If we had a few trusts ourselves they might wor ry the people of some other State, but they would bring their money here. They would create a balance of trade in our favor. I have notic ed few complaints of the trusts from the state in which they are sit uated. An old farmer friend once declared to me i« a confidential way that most of his troubles arose from the fact that he paid more for the things he bought than he received for fhe things he sold. He seemed surprised when I told him that much of the trouble of the world arcre from the same cause. “And yet the case Is plain and the remedy is easy. Build fac f »rieg la the Southern StatI-i not waif for a new generation; bull!' (hem now let their smoke rise like in cense. Let them d^ub-'e nu,l treble the value of our iua' materials, and let the money of the S. .U i rejejAn it home. 4 ~ or Will Dye For You CXeaaetf or Dyad to look Uko C. C. Laundry and Dye Works, . COLUMBIA. S. C. / ■' 1 • The Most Popular Fiction The following is a select descriptive list of recently published fiction moflL in demand throoghout the Country. Write for book list. TRUXTON KING. A Story of -Graustark. By Goo. Barr Mc- Cutcheon. Truxton King, big, handsome, goodnatured. and young, ranges over the face of the earth looking for romance and adventure, and finding none until he reaches Graustark Price $1.50 postpaid. JOHN. MARVEL, ASSISTANT- By Thomas Nelson Page. A Sonthern town, and a Western city are successively the scenes of action. Price $1.50 postpaid. WHEN A MAN MARRIES. By Mary Roberts Rinehart; illustra ted In color by Harrison Fisher and Mayo Bunker. A sprightly comedy by the author of "The Circular Staircase” and “Man Jn Lower Ten.” Price ll.bo. LITTLE SISTER SNOW. Dy Francts Little. The love story of a Japanese girl, by the au thor of “The Lady of the Dec oration.” Illustrated in color by Genjlro Kataoka. Price $1 mt. CLASSIFIED COLUMN This Cures All Dlaaaaaa—Bead for free box. Prof. Wm. Dull*. He braska City, Neb. Tobacco Growers—Splendid oppor- tunities here. Write for partlea- lari. Tullahoma Tobacco Works Tullahoma, Tenn. - 1 Iggs from thorough Bred 8. C. Rhode Island Reds. $1.50 per 16. $6.00 per 100. R. T. Dunlap .Lancaster,. S. C-. For Sale—200 tons pea vine hay at $21.00 delivered In car lots at South Carolina pointiT J. M. Far rell, Blackville, S. C. Eden Watermelon Seed for Sale at 75c. per pound. The best flavored shipping watermelon grown. J. M. Farrell, BlafckiVIIW, C. For Sale—Milch cows Jersey’s, grads Jerseys and Holstelns. All of Ik* best breeding. Registered Jersey male calve*. M. H. Sams, Jogs* vllle, 8. O. Sims Book Store Orangeburg, S. C. VIRGINIA FARMS FOR SALE. We have sold more than one hun dred farms to North Carolina farm ers within the past four years. If you will come to see us, we will take you to see some of these farmers who are making 50 bushels of corn, 20 to 30 bushels of wheat and one bale of cotton per acre, and other crops In proportion on land we sold them for from eight to fifteen dol lar^ per acre. We have a large list of farms for sale upon which can be grown large yields of corn, wheat, oats, gras*, clover, cotton, tobacco, etc., at eight to fifteen dollars per acre. Write for catalog and prices of farms and timbered lands. JEFFREYS, HESTER & CO., Inc., Real Estate Agents. Mecklenburg Co., Chase City, Va. wood, mow ANT> vtaxsASDcSktriNY?'iwcJjfr a. ga Have Hotel Fight. At Begor Bridge, La., in a dispute over the ownership of a mosquito bar, Ed Hodges shot and instantly killed August Smoker shortly before midnight Monday night. They were roommates in a boarding house and were employees of ajumber mill.' BAD DOLLAR BILLS OUT. - ' ADVICE TO YOUNG ME X Girl Drinks Acid. "See this poison? Well, here goes,” said 14-year-old Julia MoMillan on Tuesday morning at Jesup, Ga., to her sister at their home. Then the girl, because her parents would"t let her stay at home from school, drank carbolic acid. She lived less than an hour afterwards. Her father is proprietor-of a hotel at Jesup.- The Ijaw Upheld. —.Tim .coastltiitlonaUty oJ Jhe. stat ute of Soutn CaroTfna.'Ml cbffstruct- ed by the state courts, requiring the railroads doing a local business to pay a penalty of $r>0 if they fail to adjust within 90 days a claim tor loss of .goods ia traasporUt'oi was Monday upheld by the supreme court of the United States. Remember, my son, you khve to work . Whether you handfe a pick or a pin, a wheelbarrow or a set of books, dig ditches of edit a paper, ring an auction bell or write funny things, you must work. If you look around, you wiH see the men who are most able to live the rest of their days without work are the men who work the hardest. Don’t be afraid of killing yourself with overwork. It is beyond your power to do that on the sunny side of thirty. They die sometimes, but it is because they quit work at six p m. and don’t go home till two a. m It's the interval that kills, my son. The work gives you an appetite for your meals; it lends a solidity to your slumber; It gives you a per fect and grateful appreciation for a holiday. There are young men who do not work, hut the world Is not proud of them. It don't know their names even; it simply speaks of them as “So and So's (boys." Nobody likes them; the great busy world does not know they are there. So find out what you want to be and do, and take off your coat and make a dust In the world. The busier you are, the less harm you are apt to get Into, the sweeter will he your sleep, the brighter and hap pier your hilldaya. and. ib-e. .hfittgr, satisfied the world will be with you. Bankers Warned a* to a Ikangerous Counterfeit. Warnings have been sent to the officials of the banks here, as well Single Comb Buff Orpingtons, beat winter layers, the Ideal table fowl; color, beautiful golden buff. Eggs $2 for 15. E. B. Kibler, Pi-da- perity, S. C. Our February Book List haa issued. Contains reviews of the latest books. Send tor copy! It is free. Sims’ Book Store, Or angeburg, 8. C. For Sale—Genuine Marlboro Prollfla Seed Corn, bu. $2; one-half bu. $1.25; pk, 75 cents. Last year this corn measured 77 bu per acre, cultivated on Williamson plan with less than $11 worth of fertilisers J. H. Myers, R. F. D. 4, Sumter, S. C. When medicine fails you, I will tak« your case. Rheumatism, indices tion, liver, kidney sad sexual dla orders permaaently eradicated to) natural meant. Write for liters ture, confidential, free and latar eating. C. Cullea Howertea, t. • Durham. N. C. a. - ■ . a Summer Tour Europe, 1910, private party under the leadership of Ed wards B. Murray, Anderson, S. C. There are a few vacancies In this party, and parties desiring to Join should make application as early as possible. Address E. B. Mur ray, Anderson, S. C., care Farm ers and Merchants Bank. Uarg^nM in Pure Bred Stork—rich and rare Berkshire Boar Piga, 4 Vfc months old from regular stock at $15 each. (One Bred Sow (Chlaa Betsey No. 11917 7>. Due tr» «•** iu April, at the smkn sum of $75; haa farrowed twice, first lit ter 10 pigs, second 11. S. C. B. Leghorn Eggs—16 for $1; $0 for $ 90; 100 for $6. In answering this ad mention this paper. A. E. Sloop, China Grove, N. C. BARGAINS! BARGAINS! While They Last. A limited number of slightly as to banking Institutions through- Hijch Orgaua for oalj out the country, putting them on guard against a counterfeit one-dol- $58.50. These organs appear aaai new and are warranted to last » lar bill, so skillfully made that it . j OIlg , Terms of sale give* on application. Write for catalogs* stating terms desired. This is an op portunlty in a life time to posses* a fine organ at about cost. Answet quick, for such bargains don't las* long. Address: MALONE'S MUSIC HOUSE. Columbia, S. C. Pianos and Organs. SAWMILLS S aw Mills mounted on wheels, ae moved aa a mounted Thresher. can hardly be detected by the most experienced eye at a casual guace. The (Counterfeit is said to be in un usually dangerous one. The set leal is that on 1 899. and the check let ter, It is stated, is “B.” The fron. plate number Is given at 4,810. The description of the spurious hill sent to the bank cashiers states that one of the most conspicious faults about the bad bill is the fact that the Lindoln and Grant por traits are printed in a much darker ink than they are on the genuine notes. Some of the letters on it, as, for instance, the words “United States" near the Lincoln portrait. Hingis and Ooubl& Hs## _ Ml Us with all modsrn conveniences and im- are Imperfectly formed. Loci bat.* IT“-iT. cashiers are keeping thelr^'eyes peel- buyers. Write tor circulars, rtattni what you ed” for the imitation bills. THREE INJURED IN WRECK. Reflection*! of a Woman. Most of man’s troubles wear petti coats. Some fast young men are apt to experience swift finishes. Beware, my son, of the dark-hair ed womah. She can’t possibly be fair. The hen is a meek and lowly bird; but she has done more for her coun try than the eagle will ever do. - No, Alonzo; a^girl la not-aeceaaar- lly in the angel class because she’s a high flyer! Killed in Car Accident. Two persons were killed, one was seriously injured and sev&ral were slightly hurt in a street car accident caused by the blowing out of a fuse at El Paso, Texas Tuesday. Flames broke %ut and the people became panic strtclwm. A number Jumped from the swiftly moving car. . Four Die in Collapse. . At Frederick, Mo., four men, three white and one negro, were* Silled by the collapse of a wall of a burning |)Ulldlng Tuesday. Two buildings were destroyed with a loss of $50,- 000. The dead men were volunteer firemen. Several Killed. Tt is reported that two magazines have exploded ia the Bremen oil field In Ohio and that several peo ple were killed. want. Manufactured SALEM IRON WO by KKS. WMh-Mm. a «. The average woman thinks she’s a born actress because of her ability to make a fool of the average man. not be brought to a stop. The in coming passenger train can IniO it, both trains being pretty badly de molished. On account of the slow speed of-both, trains only three were Injured. Judging from the reports that come from all quarters. Dr. Cook, during the past few months, has been In every part of the globe, but the north pole. Passenger Met Freight Head-on Rotf| Traing Going Slowly. A dispatch from Valdosta, On., says the first collision to occu' on the Georgia and Florida railroad," the new line from that place to Augusta, happened Monday morning at Bemiss, a station eight miles above that place, when the southoounl p'i‘- senger train collded with a north bound freight train. ( The freight train had gone be yond Bemiss expecting to bajiC in on the side track there, and Jet the pggsepger pass. ItJrsaid the brakes The “man higher up” Involved in refused to wor^ anjf flia traftTSHiTg ther-SugsrTnmt aifA-ptbev %uelnea* It Is impossible for a man Jto live wholly to himself however selfish he may be. Consclouly or unconscious ly what he says and does influences others and he in turn is Influenced by them though he may not admit It. frauds still moves gbout as free as the air. But the man lower down, who Is an employee of the man higher up, occasionally gets a pris on sentence |nd is exhibited as a horrible case of moraf 'depravity. c THE ONLY HOUSE IN COLUMBIA CARRYING THE “Original Gennine Gandy Belt” Carrying alsg^lubber and Leather Belt, Write us for prices on anything in Machinery Supply Line COLUMBIA SUPPLY COMPANY 823 Weft Gervias.Street, , 4 COLUMBIA, S. C. f 'Bad