The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, March 24, 1910, Image 4
m:':
T~-
ROASTS HIS OWN PARTY
Declares that th»> CoBdlttons In New
• *
York are Hcamlaloiim and that the
Democrata Are to He I’attenied
After and <alla Gay nor a Heal
—-. S1L . -
lUrUItJVe -
Recent attempts to organize the
Republican party In New York State
bumbuggory; the Allds-Oua-
ger investigation at Alliany is an ex-
rn»nmlv#t nri/l aLiruYHt- UJUAliMLA _ iiluLt'T-
taking for irhlch *‘r>0 cents worth
of whitewash” arouta be a suitable
■ubetitute; and William J. Gaynor,
mayor of New York, is a real reform-
- et- with a- jmrpose. —1
These views were expressed in a
speech at Troy, N. Y., recently by W.
O. Howard, a State Supreme Court
Justice, and a Republican.
(Professional reformers, the Jus
tice denounced aa **vapld, sapless,
spineless, chinless, sexless beings,
sprung from no race and owned by
no race."
The justice was speaking at a St.
Patrick's Day dinner of the Sons
of St. Patrick of Troy, and after
a tribute to the Irish he took up the
(present political situation In this
State, growing out of the Allds-Con-
ger case. He said In part:
"In my own party a queer condi
tion exists and, in consequence, ev
ery one is seised just now with a de
sire to clean house. Whether It Is
to be cleaned out I have not learn
ed, but fifty thousand dollars Is to
be spent to clean house; 60 cents
worth of whitewash would do as
well. Of course a few dead bodies
may be rattled by these Investiga
tions, or, perhaps a few live ones,
fully protected by the statute of
limitations. But suppose they arc
rattled—what follows? Even If
somebody is punished, what of that?
No reform is worked.
“It la not more investigations that
we need, it Is more honesty; not
more laws, but more common sense.
We have too many laws now—to
many Chat nobody knows what they
are nor where they are.
“The way to clean house Is the
way tkpt Gaynor Is doing It. His
wa> doesn't coat a cent. He is not
a counterfeit reformer but a real
one. He is cleaning house with the
lawa which he has; they do not as-
slst him much nor hinder him any—
ke would do It if he had no laws at
all. He saws wood. Ho wlH clean
«p How York before he gets through
with It and c{ean It up well at a
•aving of hundreds of thousands of
doUars to the taxpayers." He then
declared that "in fact he is arenm-
plshtng more reform than all the
•elf-confessed reformers put togeth-
FARMERS CO-OPERATE
three Mutual oompanhw op.
i
iERATED IN KANSAS.
Shifting to the recent attempt of
Senator Ellhu Root and others to re
organise the Republican Slate com
mittee with the ousting of Thnothy
lx Woodruff, the State chairman, he
■aid:
Ilk .general alarm having been oc
casioned by recent disclosures, every
body, ^ few weeks sgo, was to get
behind one virtnous leader and obey
him in all things so that the party
might be saved. Now a different
plan has been adopted.
"The Democrats are to be pat
terned after and thflj State committee
must be overhauled.
“The humbujfgery of It all appalls
me. There seem* to be no candor
In It. no straightforward deallnc and
I wonder that the people can be so
easily fooled." ♦
BOY POrGHT EAGLES
Half
Starved Giant Bird* Sought
Huouiii Prey.
■Attacked by a pair of eagle* while
on his *ay home from school, Ira
Cottingham. of near Kansas City,
Mo., defeated the birds but he will
Mufry the marks of their .t^'-.yjs \p
iuV*ei|fles *are believed
’to httre been driven to attack the
boy because of the long spell of
froten weather, !q which their, nat-
uart food disappeared. Sheep and
other small domestic animals have
fallen a prey to the giant birds since
the Christmas snows.
The Cottingha'm boy, w ho is only
ten years of age, has nearly two
miles to cover between his home and
the schoolhouse. On the day of the
attack he was walking on the pub
lic rood when he was suddenly start
led by ■ rushing sound, and the next
Instant he was knocked to the
ground by the force of something
which struck him on the.shoulders,
at the same time hurting as though
a knife had been thrust- into his
•neatly tbe publisher U more or leei
Insurance, Telephone, and Mercan
tile (Vmipanies Have Headquar
ters at I pland.—All Paying.
Farmers In Dickinson county,
Kan., are working ont an interest
ing experiment lu co-operation. They
own throe successful mutual com
panies, each paying a good dividend
and under competent management.
That part of Kansas was settled 40
years ago by Germans, who are still
the "majority of population."
Later came Swedes and then farm
ers from Indiana and HUnoi«.. Uu-
land is the headquarters of the tel
ephone, Insurance and mercantile
companies. It boasts less than 100
population, but the amount of bus
iness transacted there Is woriderful.
Farmers attribute the success of their
companies to the low cost of admin
istration, no official receiving more
than $2 a day and that only while he
is actually employed on the compa
ny’s business.
The community idea took root
during the Farmers Alliance days,
back in 1891. A meeting of farmers
was called to take up the question
and each farmer was constituted an
agent without pay to solicit new
members. It was decreed that any
time a lire occurred an assessment
should !>e levied to mak£ good the
loss. Slix years lat* r It had 241
members, with $ 168,000 . insurance
In force.
Today It has 3,500 members, with
insurance representing $4^000,000^
When the company started in busi
ness it was decided that $? a day
was enough to pay any officer, and
that amount has never been raised.
This is paid only when the officer
works. The average yearly salary
list is about $800, due to the simple
methods by which records are kept
and the fact that everybody pays his
assessment promptly under pain of
being dropped at once.
In 1 885 the farmers decided to
build a creamery. Later the advent
of tl»e farm srperator caused It to
be closed up, us there was more
money in selling the cream to the
central butter making stations. One
day when a number of farmers were
waiting for their tickets from the
creamery It was suggested that It
would be just as easy to bring farm
produce along with the milk every
morning. Why not hava a store?
Within a few days a co-operative
organization with a capital of $25,-
000 was formed. Only a part of
this was used at the beginning, but
the store has been so profitable that
the stock is quoted at $150 and the
cash value of its resoums is around
$35,000. Once a year the stock
holders meet in the town hall, hear
the reports, declare a good dividend
•nd elect officers. No one is permit
ted to hold more than $100 worm
•of stock an 1 this entitles him to
one vote. My the articles each s'oek-
holder binds himself to sell all of
his grain and produce lo he Go I ]■ ,
Rule comiMUiy, which Is its Inconror-
ated name.
The business Is don.' largely by
credit. harm produce hroielit in
is credited to the man wno furnishes
It, and le U debited w''h w ha ‘ever
he buys of groceries j' I dry goods.
Cush settlements are made at the
end of each month. The company
owns a grain elevator, but this Is at
Alda on the Hue of the nearest
railroad. A few years ago after a
full discussion it was agreed that as
there was no hope of the railroad
coining to 1’pland the company ought
by buy Alda. It did, taking In the
elevator, stockyards, everything ex
cept the town's name.
The tob phone company serves ov-‘
er 4.00b persons, most of them be
ing farmers. It Is one of the biggest
coneerns in the state It is purely mu
tual, with no capital stock, and this
serves to make certain the retention
of the control in the hands of 4he
farmers Fifteen or twenty trunk
lines radiate from the stone building
in I pland . The officers condend that
the success of the enterprise lies in
the fact that no fixed rental is charg-
\ each owner of a telephone pay
ing a proportionate expense of oper
ation and maintanance.
Each farmer must buy outright
his 'phone. These, it is insisted,
must be long distance Instruments.
They cost about $1(1 apiece. The
cost -of becoming a stockholder, that
is of making a connection, is $10.
Thereafter he Is a stockholder and
all receipts from tolls are credited
to him proportionately. The officer's
of the company are paid only for the
actual time\they devote to the busi
ness. The first year s cost is about
$35. This includes Instrument, con
nection and dues. After that the
cost is about $;> a year. *
MIND WAS BLANK
ONCE ALERT MAN LEARNING TO
TALK AND WRITE.
Injury Huntalned While on • Rail
road Rendered His Memory Blank.
Father Had to be Introduced.
*
Two* months ago Otto Raschke
wag a keen, alert Ijuafness man of
Omaha, Neb. Today be is learning
his alphabet, getting Acquainted with
his own wife and children and be
coming accustomed to the world that
it about him. JHH» mind is llKe That
of a child. The change came about
as the result of a railroad accident
in which Mr. Raschke sufficed pr.
Injury to his head. \
Doctors declare his Is the most
complete case of aphasia they have
ever observed. They predi t that he
will recover completely, Init slowly
(ir that some of these day^ he will
become his former self In an in
stant and will forget ail that has
happened from the time of his in
jury to the time of his recovery.
I hyfllcaKy he is said to be In the
best condition.
It was early In January that Ras
chke was returning from a business
trip to SIoub fhty. At Bancroft. Neb.,
hs swung off -the train for a breath
of fresh air. As the train started
he stepped aboard. Befo.e he got
his balance the train lurched and
his head struck the brass rf<l. 'He
fell fro,)* the platform, was picked
ip In im unconscious condUlon and
was taken to Omaha.
When he recovered consciousness
his mind was a eomple*e blank. He
heard the nures and physician? talk
ing and tried to Imitate them The
ability to talk retu r ned rapidly. One
day his wife and two Uttle t*ovs w -re
admitted to the -vun. Not a sign
of recognition dl 1 ht show.
"Don't you know us, Otto?" ask
ed Mrs. Raschke, with tears in her
eyes.
“I never saw you before,” an
swered Otto.
He was told that this was his
wife, and that the children were his
own. "That's funny,” he said. "The
idea of me having a wife and chil
dren.”
After three weeks in the hospital,
during which he learned to walk a
little, Raschke was taken to his
home, which he did not recognize
when he entered. \VltU a child's Ina
bility to judge distance, Raschke was
at first afraid to attempt to walk,
for fear of falling.
"Who is that man?" he asked.
"Tell him to go out."
"Why, Otto, that’s your father,
he was told by his wife. Raschke
had been very fond of his father,
but in bis new condition he abhors
the very sight of him. Formerly
Raschke was an inveterate smoker.
Soon after his return home he saw
a man smoking and asked what he
was doing. He was offered a cigar,
but declared he did not like the odor.
A week later he smoked one and
was made violently 111.
The most wonderful thing he has
seen so far Is a horse, he never tires
of watching the wagons pass his
house. When a four-horse dray
came by he screamed with delight
and called his wife to see the won
derful sight.
"They tell me she Is my wife and
that these children are mine," said
Raschke the other day, " I have
taken their word for so many things
that I am believing them in this, but
it seems mighty strange to me. At
first 1 did not know how to think
about them, but I grew to love them
again. Everything is new and
I am learning every minute. There
is so much to learn.
"The doctors tell me that some
day 1 may recover. They say It may
be slots-, just a little bit at a time,
or that everything may be made
clear in a twinkle. In the latter
case they tdl me that I will forget
all these days and that there will
be a gap between the time they say
I fell from the train and the time
that I awake, and that I will never
know anything about those days
People come to see me and tell me
they are friends of mine. I don't
know thorn. I never saw them be
fore. Some of them I like and some
1 do not like."
Rasehke's two little boys are as
fond of him as ever and climb
around on their father's knots as
they always did. He has grown very
fond of them and keeps them with
him all the time. •
WAS LIKE ICE
Peary Fhi4 Atlanta Erea Frostier Thai
tbe Arctic Cirde.
SMALL CROWD HEAR HIM
COTTON TO BE CHEAPER.
Burns Three Months.
At Hamburg. N.\J„ a fire which
started three months ago In the 400-
ton pile of coal In the xallroa^
to i
$4 moat
at quMtlooabta
wtortwltb
on paydays.
p«Mlabar, mb*
•bpaldbd
•' tome oaw cwniat«» ii'i" wiikuiiiafa of
food, nooa worth spaakln* of makara
of bread and naat. oongaat tba olttaa.
lowar the rate of wages and raise tbe
prices of provlalona above tba reach of
mtlra Americans who harm tor fonara-
ot tbaa mrtr* t* trar, hungered
for good food
Thinks Next (Vop Will Be Down to
Eight Cents.
The Barnwell People says it looks
like the next cotton crop may bring
in the neighborhood of eight cents
a pound. Why?
1- Hec^ismtjie .sales of horses and
rMdftuMKrtfhfe MrYte, b f
9Wy Wtm If HMM w
add by tba
n tba good
M Csoabr
Book aa
mraiZMff
la m
wall that koapa oat foreign prodneta
ter tea proaacHon of tba fat corpora-
tlena aad ladlttidaala teat pay tea a*-
paoaat of tea KapuUoaa voaar foolers
la tea oasapaigaa far Ooagreaa and tba
haMiiiit af-
teotivaobreitoteTiteflnx
tea Atlantia Coaat will
qoartar of tela aantary
largaty Madltarraaaaal
ttrea bare to gat oat af tea way at tea
Italian. Qretk, Syrian and chair Ua-
Arthur Byara, vi lurin s the past
died of typhoid favar . 15 per cent,
tpplne Islands, last we% period of
eminent two years ago » tea*,
ouitnra to tea FJUplooe. Hit holies
aa for
And it Was as Cold as an Ire Berg
from the Frown North Seas.—
TIte Reception Which He Did Not
Receive Indicated That He Had
Reached Furtherest North,
Some Idea of the frigid treatment
given Commander Peary last week
may be Inferred from the following
account of his reception from the
Journal:
>Peary doesn’t look like a liar.
He doesn’t talk like a braggart.
That he Is a brave man he proved
beyond cavil Wednesday night by
appearing at the auditorium-armory,
for It is doubtless if any dauntless
explorer ever encountered hardships
in the cruel, frozen north, half so
heart-rending or pitiful as the recep
tion accorded Commander Peary in
Atlanta.
Atlanta, the most hospitable city
in the south, deliberately shut her
doors In his face. Peary has not
seen the real Atlanta at all.
The small, unlemonstrated, chil
ly crowd that huddled together in
the centre of the desolate autitorium
came here skeptical and went away
uneanylnced.
Poor, pitiful Peary.
The lecture was advertised to be
gin at 8:30 o’clock. When that hour
arrived, a few hundred impatient
people were scattered amoiu: the va
cant seats in the vast amphitheatre,
oooassionally stamping the feet and
clapping—to keep themselves warm.
The minutes sped. The eold apd
impatience Increased. Have you ever
seen the brethren and sisters wait
ing for the late parson at a Wednes
day night prayer meeting in a small
town? That is what the scene sug
gested.
Presently upon the barren stage
appeared F. I.. Seely and Commander
Peary. Mr. Seely said he didn't
known whether his sp^ch ought to
be an intrductory address of wel
come or an apology. It turned out
to be an an apology.
Then Commander Peary arose. At
the same instant a couple of hundred
people arose in the galleries and
stampeded for the lower floor. They
ir.fav more noise than a small * arth-
•liinke.
Mr. Peary stood Ms ground. How
ever the demonstration was not hos
tile. Tt was not a riot. The people
w'r-> simply seeking better r.e.Vs.
At length Commander Peiry be
gan to speak. Before he had tad;-
ed five minutes he had convinced Ms
hesrers that he had an ineresting
story to tell. His hearers continued
lc doubt, but ceased to dislice (ho
explorer.-
Not one wool did h 0 Rtv of Dr.
Cook, not one word of Governor
Brown's criticism or Mayor Majdox's
unwillingness to welcome him. The
spirit of rough, ungentlemanly brag
gadocio which has been attrlbut >d
to him in more than one newspaper
report was pleasantly lacking. He
jarred upon nol>ody.
After exhibiting two or three
maps showing the location of the
north pole with adjacent lands and
Icy seas, he plunged directly in med
ian res and told the story of hu lat
est and last expedition In th« frozen
north. He was not argumentative
or melodramic. A splendid collec
tion of Intensely interesting photo
graphs, poorly thrown upon the
screen, constituted the principal fea
tures of the evening. Practlca.ly
everything he said was in explana
tion of the pictures.
The only reference he made to the
popular doubt that he had reached
the pole was a short statement tend
ing to refute'the objection thar* he
had made more speed after h Q left
his supporting party than he had
made with It. In the first plneo, in
all arctic exploration, said he, the
final dash was necessarily more rap
id. It was supposed to be. That
was why the last stage was always
called the "dash for the pole."
A regiment could progress at a
certain speed, said he. A picked
company from that reginumt could
go still faster. A picked squad from
that company could make still bet
ter time, and the crack sprinter of
that squad could go the fastest of
all. The last dash he said, was made
practically In that way. with the In
cumbrance of supporting parties and
heavy baggage left behjnd.
Commander Peary was heard with
Intense interest, but there was no
enthusiasism when he flashed upon
the serene his picture of the stars
and stripes nailed td^the "top of the
world," and there was no ovation
after the lecture erided. *
b« brought 1
burial.
Don’t Lend Auto.
Don't lend_your ..auto;-it-giay- cost-
yoM'a matter of $3,000 or so. This
lesson has been brought home, forci-
bTy TriTJamea C. fir ad y, a New York
broker, who has been directed by a
upreme court jury to pay $5,000
Benjamin Frfedbaum, a lad who
Strirere»^l«retemUwta«MBiiichj H0W 000 D NEWS SPREADS.
-i«70~r..m.i.d*r.T.i,^ K r,'V*'*
tea than,” writ* B. K. Toloon,of Kill- nths ago. Mr. Brady had loan
abntetewa. Kf. ‘•IreiTwBaw I S° }
recommend Electric Bitten. iMWauee 1
Tmomf excellent health aah vitality to
team. They effect a cure every time.*'
Tbay nerer fall to ton* tba atomsch.
the kidneys aad boweb, tUm-
flnx tea ritXM of SSiibellver, luvlgbfata
, before tbe first aad purify the blood. Tbay
p.ritrU»bto<«l. Tbiy work won-
r wonky rua-down area aad
health
S’ra&ZVTia^'Z
ft Co.
the car to big brother and a hired
^ffeur drove it. Tbe verdict,
# ^ver, was returned against the
yttof the car. *
gou^
wife Is Worth ftR.OOO.,
S u h k of Toledo, Ohio, was
, Aethiiast week In a dam-
joet.Orooa, Wbwink C. Harrison.
tfarekbaltar, B. A. Ddt“*' Hal *
THE WIRELESS TELEPHONE
. $
■Forty year# agojf anyone had an
nounced t^at tbe human voice would
be carried miles through space he
would have been laughed to scorn.
When Alexander Graham Bell told
the people he had invented the wire
telephone, was called a fool; and
when he exhibited the telephone, it
was derided as a useless toy.
Many stories are now related how
influention and wealthy men refused
to listen to Professor Bell, much less
intest money In developing the in
vention, and thereby missed securing
millions of dollars.
Twenty years after the wire tel
ephone came into use the electricians
began to dream about sending mes
sages without the aid of wire con
nections. Many worked on the pro
blem. Then came Marconi with the
tvireless telegraph. Marconi tried
to Interest people of means In his
own country, Italy, with his inven
tion. The fifteen year ol(f bey was
looked upon by his people as little
better than a lunitle. He went to
France. No one would listen to him.
In England fianciers laughed at
him. The engineers of the British
government, however, looked into his
plans, and Marconi was given a small
p°nsIon to develop his invention. To
day the wireless telegraph Is used
by every government in the world.
Marconi's invention started other
electricians to thinking and experi
menting. Among them was A. Fred
erick Collins, a young electrician of
Philadelphia. If one could transmit
messages by telegraph without wires,
why not talk through space with a
wireless telephone? Young Collins
got busy. He studied ami continued
to experiment. He invented the wire
less teb phone, and secured the basis
patents on the invention.
The Collins wireless telephone may
be said to combine the principles of
the Bell wire telephone and Marconi
wireless telepraph. A remarkable
thing about it is that the voice comes
more distinct through the wirelss
telephone than through the ordinary
Bell telephone. The voice Impulses
are carried by waves of the mole
rules of ether and are reproduced
by the mechanism of the receiver
wherever it may be within the zone
of the radical energy of the sending
telephone station. These sound
waves are called hertizlan waves, af
ter Drv Hertz who discovered their
existence. They travel with a speed
of 1 85,000 miles a second, for inde-
fln#e distance. Wireless telegraph
messages sent out from New York
have h(*en caught and read on the
Pacific ocean.
The wireless telephone has been
so perfected that it will transmit the
human voice with perfect distinct
ness 200 mile. A picture in the issue
of February 16 of the Telegraph and
Telephone Age shows the' inventor,
A. Frederick Collins, at Newark,
conversing with the Collins com
pany's office in Hie Land Title build
ing in Philadelphia. 81 mil's away.
The hertzian sound waves are not
interfered with or obstructed by walls
or mountains. A short time ago a
wireless telephone of the demonstra
tion type was set up in the vault
office of the county clerk in the court
house at Orangeburg, and conversa
tions were carried on through the
foor foot waits, of the vault, and 28-
inch wall of the room across the
hall from the vault. By simply pres
sing a button In the far room the
bell of the phone was rung in the
vault, through more than six feet
of solid masonry.
It is said that with the same fa
cility the vibrations pass through
hundreds of feet of solid earth, into
CLASSIFIED COLUMN
the deepest mines; that by equiping
mines, tunnels and cribs with the
wireless telephones horrible disas
ters, bo far as the loss of is con
cerned, will be eliminated. ,
A Chicago firm of contractors Is
reported to be arranging for the in
stallation of a complete equipment
of wireless telephones In their Land
and lake tunnels new being build
for the city of Chicago. The prem
ises Include 12,000 feet of rock tun
nel under Lake Michigan, 150 feet
felow the water level.
_ The field of usefulness for the
wireless telephone will be practically
unlimited. Mr. Collins has invented
a small but powerful wireless tele
phone to be carried on automobile.
With it physicians may talk from
wherever they are to nurses in the
sick-rooms of their patients. Motor
ists may call up and talk to any
garage in event of tire trouble or
need of assistance.
The Collins Wireless Telephone
now maintains offices in nearly every
State. In each State activities are
in progress for the installation as
soon as possible of commercial wire
less 'phone systems. The headquar
ters for South Carolina are In Col
umbia. Word H. Mills, formerly
ly connected with The .State news
paper is manager for this State. *
YOUTH SEEKS BALM.
Young Man Demands $20.0(>0 of h
Widow 68 Years Old.
The usual order of breach of prom
ise suits is reversed in the case of
Frank Catterton against Mrs, Lucy
E. McKnight, of Baltimore, Md. Cat
terton is 28 years of age, and the
widow In the case 68. The young
man asks $20,000 damage, the claim
Including bouquets, candy and thea
ter tickets which he lavished on
his charmer during their love mak
ing. The plaintiff is a linotype oper
ator. Mrf. McNight is said to be
worth nearly $100,000.
About three years ago Catterton
met Mrs. McKnight at a social gath
ering at hdr home. The widow in
vited the young man to call agrn,
and he became a daily visitor fei-
almut 18 months. Then, it Is ailee-
ed. Mrs. McKnight proposed that
they marry. He agreed, and a month
or two later obtained a marriage li
cense
Mrs. McKnight was to meet Inr
finance and go to a clergyman 3 hene
to have the ceremony t*erformed, bn
he says, when he went to her home,
she told him she had changed her
mind and that they would wait un
til she had her house fixed up and
they would be married there. After
ward, it is declared, Mrs. McKnight
still declined to marry, but told Cat
terton that she would leave him
$15,000 in her will. •
This Care* All Pteaaare Bi
tad to>
free box. Prof. Win. Dttltn«
braaka City, N«bw
4
Eggs from prize winning 8. C. Rhode
Island Reds, $1 and $2
for Ik.
E. H. Craig, Pickens, 8, Q.
■
For Sole—fancy pigeons, ring dove*.
white doves, guinea pigs.
iCrnellas. Springfield, 111.
John
Tobacco Growtre—Bptaated oppo
tunitles here. Writ# for parti**
lars. Tullahoma Tobaooo Worka,
Tullahoma, Tenn.
Shine Up—Agent* sell Electrified
Polishing Cloths. Sample 12 ct*.
Daniel Scott, 271 Main 8t, Po-
keepaie, N. Y.
To Prevent Files on smoked' meat
send 25c. In stamps for details.
Address L. Myers, Jersey Shore,
R. F. D. 5, No. 71.
For Sale—200 tons pea Tine hay at
$21.00 delivered In ear loti at
South Carolina point*. J. M. Far
rell, Blackville. S. C.
Our $1 Adding Machines save time
and worry. Guaranteed. Thousands
sold. Agents wanted. Haynes Mfg.
Co., Rutherfordton. NI C.
ION RE8CI ES KEEPER.
Eden Watermelon Seed for Sale at
76c. per pound. The best flavored
shipping watermelon grown. J.
M. Farrell, Blacksville, 8. C.
Salesmen Wanted to handle high-
grade smoking tobacco; big pay;
experience unnecessary. Word To
bacco Co., Greensboro, N. C.
Agents—Pruett made $30 first day.
No capital required. Send stamp
quick to Wholesale Supply Co.,
Valdosta, Ga. *
Your Fortune Told Free—AIT future
life, love and business; send birth
date and 10 c. In stamps. Samrl
Ellis, 9 West 45th St., New York
City, Dept.'616.
For Hale—Milch cows Jersey’s, grads
Jerseys and Holstelns. All of the
best^, ^reeding. Registered Jersey
male calves. M. H. Sams, Joaea-
vllle, 8. C.
Safety Baartrs Blades Hharpened bet
ter than new. 25c a dot. Double
Edge Bladee, 30c. 50,000 repeating
customers. Fine Edge Co., 28
Lower 7th St., Evansville, Ind.
——— ■
Egg* for Hatching—From selected
pen of white Wyandotts, headed
by cockrel that won first prize at
S. C. State Fair for 1909. $1.00
per 15; $1.75 per 30. T. L. Gram-
ling. R. F. D. 1, Orangeburg, S. C.
Echo Hill Poultry Yards—Begs for
hatching. S. C. Brown Leghorns, $1
per 16; S. C. R. I. Reds, $1 per
doz. Naragansett trukeys at $2.50
a doz C. W. Grissom, Mgr., Klt-
trell, N. C.
Magnificent New Maps—Fastest sel
lers ever published. Salesmen re
porting high as 20 orders per day.
Liberal terms, exclusive territory.
Hudgins. Co., Atlanta, Ga.
Pa.. R. F. D. 5; No. 71.
For Sale—Female Great Dane,
whelped Nov. 13, 1908; light gold
en brindle; pedigreed and regis
tered; the best blood lines in
American. Will furnish papers
free. Von Yon Kennels, 612 N.
McDuffie St., Anderson, 8. C.
Rheumatism!
Not one case in ten requires
internal treatment.
Where there is no swelling
or fever Noah’s Liniment will
accomplish more than any in
ternal remedy.
One trial will convince yon.
Noah’s Liniment penetrates;
requires but little rubbing.
Here’s the Proof
Mr. W. R. Taylor, a resident of Rich
mond, Va., writes: "For the past four
years I have been traveling Eastern
Jsorth Carolina, where I contracted ma
laria and rheumatism. Recently I have
used Noah's I iniment with beneficial re
sults, and te-ke--{»tea^u re in recommend
ing same to anyone suffering with rheu
matism.”
Ur -*T caught cold -and had a severe at
tack of rheumatism dn my left shoulder
and could not raise my arm without
much pain, I was persuaded to try
Noah’s Liniment, and in less than a
week was entirely free from pain. I
ftlgl JujRtfled ln 2»g£UUoa 4(1 jt In the
rrtgnest- terms. A. Crooker, Dorchester,
Mass.
Bjg Beast V|»sets His Cage and Pins
Hyena to the Ground.
Attacked from behind by a fero
cious hyena that had escaped from
a temporary cage, Oapt. Snider, an
animal trainer for Wheeler's circus,
canre within an ace of los'n.L, his
life at Oxford. Pa 11© was ,pav»d
from sure death by a vicious Hon,
which had killed two trainers,
wounded two others and was sifie
posed to l»e untamable.
The hyena was a new arrival la
the menagerie and was still in Its
shipping box. It worked loos the
small door and got ont while Capt.
Snider was eating breakfast. As the
trainer went down under the at
tack he had presence of mind to lb'
perfectly still, knowing that at (he
least movement the frenzied hven-t,
w hich was standing over him. w Mild
pounce upon him and tear him to
pieces. He lay this way for about
five minutes, when help came from
a most unexpected quarter.
The big lion had seen the attack
by the hyena and immediately made
a strenuous effort to break his cage.
This was imitossible. Crouching in
one corner he made a terrific leap
and the impact when he struck the
side of his cage overturned it and
[tinned the hyena to the floor. Capt.
Snider was saved and the hyena is
now in substantia! quarters. *
BABGAINH! BARGAINS! While they!
last.-r-A number of slightly used " "
High Grade Organs for only $58.50. in Bare Bred Stork—rich
When medicine falli you, I will tak«
your cate. Rheumatism, Indigo*
tlon, liver, kidney aad sexual dl*
order* permanently eradicated b)
natural mean*. Write for llt*ro
ture, confidential, free and inter
esting. C. Culle* Howerton, V. ■
Durham, N. C.
Wanted—Hardwoods, Logs and Lum
ber. We are cash buyers of Pop
lar, Cedar, and Walnut Logs. Also
want poplar, ash, cottonwoqd, cy
press and oak lumber. Inspection
at your point. Easy cutting, Write
us. Savannah Valley Lumber Co.,
Augusta, Ga.
Wanted—To place Imperial Self
heating Flat Iron in every home In
South Carolina. Safe, practis'd,
inexpensive. Heats itself for 1-2
cent pei hour. Regulated to any
desired temperature. Ask for book
let. Agents wanted. J. C. Wil
lis, Sales Agent, McColl, 8. C.
These organs appear nearly new and
are warranted to last a long lifetime.
Terms of ^ale given on application. |
Write for catalogue, stating terms de- j
sired. This js an opportunity in a
HfC time to possess a fine organ at
about cost. Artfrwer quick, for such
bargalnst do not l^ast long. Address: !
bargains do not Idst long. Address: :
MALONE’S MIS It; HOI SE, Colum- i
bin, S. C.—Pianos aK'i Organs.
aad rare Berkshire Boar Pigs, 414
months old from regular .stock at
$15 each. (One Bred Sow (China
Betsey No. 119177) Due to far
row In April, at the small sum of
$76; has farrowed twice, first lit
ter 10 pigs, second it. 8. C. B.
Leghorn Eggs—15 for $1; 30 for
$.90; 100 for $5. In answering
this ad mention this paper. A. X.
Sloop, China Grove, N, C.
WE
„ WmVb Liniment Is the best remedy
J. 0 f_ R ^, urnall8m ' Sc'-atlca, Lame Back.
Stiff Joints and Muscles, Sore Throat,
Colds, ^trains. Sprains, Cuts, Bruises.
Colic, Cramps, f" 1
Neuralgia, Tooth- Clri 4twl
Neuralgia, Tooth
ache and all
Nerve, Bone and
Muscle Aches and
Pain*. The gen
uine ha* Noah's
package. !5 cts.
Sold by dealers in
medicine. Sam
ple by mall tree*
Noah Remedy Co.,
Richmond, Va.
- - Will Dye For You
Ladle*' or Men’* Garment* Cleaned or Dy*d to look »%t mom. ’
“* ~ Cleaned and Blocked. - T -1 "
C. C. Laundry and Dye Works,
— COLUMBIA, S. O. ^
NOAHS
LINIMENT
A strong ■■blast, with little effort, can b« procured with a~!
BUFFALO 6? 5 FORGE
The ideal portable forgiy for outdoor work
' •—V- .Writ* lor
COLUMBIA SUPPLY CO, \ 3. c.
•• >?.
it