The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, May 12, 1910, Image 4
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A» tart Cm Wfc Mat-
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"STATE COBRTS RltBT
that Mtartlacippl Hm Legal
Bight to Disband Lumber Dealers
“> ,
to 01 the Utandard OH from that
The hands of the State In their
fight against “trusts” were upheld
Monday by the Supreme court of the
United States with telling effect.
-&he association of Retati Lumber
:W'* :
Dealers in Mississippi and Louisian
jag^jras disbanded by affirmance of
the decree of the supreme court of
Mississippi and the Standard Oil
jOompany of Kentucky was ousted
from Tennessee by the approval of
the decree of the supreme court of
Tennessee. Both, the state courts
leld, violated the anti trust act
of the respective states.
Justice Lurton announced the opin
ion of the court In the Mississippi
case. It was his first utterance from
the ^supreme court bench on the
“trust" question. He said the mem
bers of the association had obligated
i not to deal with any man
ufacturer or wholesaler In lumber
who sold to consumers In the locali
ties Jn which they conducted a busi
ness sufficiently large to meet the de
mand -of the public.
He accepted the findings of *4be
state courts, and declared that it is
an Illegal combination and conspir
acy under Mississippi statute.
The proceedings in the Standard
Oil case were begun In 1907 under
the Tennessee antl-trusf act. The
chargee against the standard origi
nated out of a transaction at Oalla-
tin, Tens. The Standard of Kentucky
had oil stored in tanks In Tennessee,
from which if procured a supply to
serve merchanU throughout various
sections of the state. The Evansville
Oil Company of Evansville, Ind., sent
a salesman to Gallatin to sell oil.
He obtained a number of orders
whereupon the agent of the Standard
Oil offered to give the merchants ten
gallons of oil per barrel" to counter-
msnd their purchase orders with the
■vansvllle oil company. Four of
them accepted.
The Standard and two of its agents
were Indicted under the State anti-
truet act. One of the agents was
convicted, bat the Standard escaped
pantahment on the ground that it
could not be fined under the act, but
could only be ousted.
Ouster proceedings were then be
gun against it. the charges ' being
based on tbq Gallatin transactions
The State court* issued au ousting
deers* from which an -appeal wa*
. takan to the Supreme Court of the
United States..
Ijnsfice Holmes announced the
opinion of the court All th* conten
tions of the company were disponed
of favorably to the State.
QUICK WIT SAVED THEM.
Mew Climbed Gable to Avoid Shock
M P*I ,
5.>> •'
Thanks to a rare presence of mind
Otto Herold and F. Howard, struc
tural iron workers, at Memphis,
Toon., escaped what seemed certain
death with nothing woree than blis
tered hands, while C. Porter, a fellow
.worker, who was not so quick to
grasp ths situation, was painfully,
if not seriously, injured.
Completing their day's labor near
the- top of a 17-story building In
coarse of construction, the three
started to descend on a frail eleva
tor. All went well until the 14th
story was reached. Here something
happened to the engine whkh hoists
the car and the elevator started a
rapid plunge downward.*
Howard and Herold, grabbing the
.steel oeble, sUrted a climb against
the rapidly descending lift, making
such headway that they were several
feet above the car when It reached
the ground. Porter clung to the car
and suffered several broken ribs and
was badly brqlsed, while his two com-
paukme were practically unhurt.
CONVINCING AHGUMKNT.
- •*
Lash Prove Efficacious in Georgia
Convict “Strike."
The strike of thirty long term con-
ville, Qa., has ended, and their threat
to die before returning to work prov-
ed baseless. Twelve able-bodied
~ fuarda, armed with whips, gave the
^Jhlilx JBefi a sound whipping, and
before the laahee had .ceased to fall
jQmh the backs of the prisoners the
, strike spirit oozed away.
Supervisor Tuggle superintended
the job, end It was well done.' The
wholssale punishment was admlnlt-
muAH kumsia FARMERS UNION
IS QUITE PREBLE BUT IS LOOK*
ING VERY WELL.
The Visit of the Senior Senator Was
of a Personal Nature, but Took a
Shot at Teddy.
The Augusta Chronicle says Sena
tor Tillman was In Augusta for a
few hours Tuesday, and while there
was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. C.
Morrison. Senator Tillman was ac
companied by his wife. The objbet
of his visit was of a personal nature,
to look after the Improvement of cer-
taln property of his In the city.
Oenator Tillman was set#n by a re
porter of The Chronicle Just before
hoardingllieJ rAiB. Tjj Af t^neon
for bis home. The senator, though
somewhat feeble, and larking the ac
customed heartinese of handshake,
wae very cordial in his answers to
questions regarding his health.
Having found that his visit was
purely of a personal nature, the re
porter asked Senator Tillman if he
had kept up with the happenings of
ex-President Theodore Eoosevelt.
The senator’s look and silence
spoke more than any amount of sar
casm or ridicule could have done.
After a few minutes he mildly re
plied that he no longer tried to keep
up with Roosevelt, that In his fam
ily the newspapers were read to him,
but all references to Roosevelt were
skipped.
‘‘He Is the grandest fakir in the
world,” said the senator, "and he has
t.he l>est staff of press agents that
there Is In the world.”
IWIhen asked to tatk further upon
topics of the day, especially the
switch of Republican strongholds to
Democratic strongholds, the senator
asked to be ercused, pleading weari
ness. “ r ~ ——™ •
'His friends In Augusta were glad
to learn that tdie senator was well
enough to make the trip to Augusta.
He came to Augusta from his home
In Trenton, S. C., and returned there
Tuesday afternoon.
Meet ■ CeaveMiea it St. Lean to Dis
cus Geaeral letters.
V. J. BRYAN WILL SPEAK
A Few Reasons
Hl.MTEU MAN NUCIDES.
NAYS TEDDY IS A BOOR
For Not Meeting the Pope Says Cath
olic Arch Bishop.
Theodore Roosevelt's action In not
meeting Pope Pius on the former
president's recent visit to Rome,
called-. Insulting and a violation of
Mr. Rooaevelt's principle of a squar*
deal by Most Rev. William H. O’Con
nell, archbishop of Poston at a pub
lie meeting of the American Federa
tion of Catholic societies of t.he dio
cese, in Lowell. Mass., Tuesday. Jno.
Callan O'Loughlin, former assistant
secretary of state, who conducted tin
negotiations between Mr.*. Roosevelt
and the Vatican, was severely cast!
gated by the archbishop.
WHITE NIiAYK TRADE.
I >1 YX ■ OiOhM wim * it
Georgia .fudge Charges the Jury tm
the Subject.
As a result of Ui? charge of thi
grand Jury at Columbus, Ga., Mon
day, by Judge Gilbert of the supet
ior court, ind+ciments of white siav-
traffickers are expected to be hand
ed down. Judge Gilbert told it.i
Jurors that New York city wat no'
alone in its horrible examples of tin
sale of young girls into a life cl
•fflaTfife' ana mac it
court exepected Indictments return
.1 fed against several ..Columbus people
diaries S. Poole Ends His Life by
Taking Poison.
Anothern suicide has occurred at
Sumter. Leaving a sealed not ad
dressed to his wife, the contents of
which is unknown, and with -no
known reason for the act, Charles S.
Poole died (Monday at the Hotel
Sumter, at 3 o’clock, from the effects
of a large dose of bieloride of mer
cury, which he administered to him
•elf. Mr. Poole, who is a native ot
Sumter, but who has made his home
away for the past .several years., was.,
in the city on a visit. To all out
ward appearances he was his nor
mal self, and there was no reason to
suspect his rash act.
Sunday night he registered at the
Hotel, was assigned to a room, hut
Before retiring, he went dnto the
writing room and there wrote a let
ter, which afterwards proved to tv.
the one addressed to his wife. H»
went to his room after 2 o'clock, and
shortly before three, a bell boy was
summoned to his room. He was
found in a horribly nauseated con
dition. and instructed the boy to
phone for his w*fe,- and to inform
hsr that he was dying.
'Mrs. Poole was summoned and a
physician sent for at once, every pos
skble effort being made th save him.
but he succomed to the terrible rav
ages of the drug at three o'clock
Sunday afternoon, Just twelve hour.-
after It was administered. Poole was
twenty-seven yvai's old.
r- 4 • -JmmitSW
A Fatal Fall
In the collapse of a scaffold on
which the bricklayers were working
at the new Central of Georgia Rail
way shops (Monday at Macon, Ga..
[four men were injured, one of them
dying a few hours later at the Macon
Hospital. Without a moment's warn-
ire gave
way, and the men fell a distance of
abobt fifty feet.
The Assembly Repreeents Millions of
American Producers.—President
Barrett Sounds High Note for the
Planters.—Farmers Should Com
mand and Not Reg.
t
The Joint convention of the "Far
mers’ Educational and Co-operative
Union of America, the American So
ciety of Equity and 406 subsidiary
organizations opened In St. Louis on
Monday morning.
‘Ninety add reuses are on the pro
gram, which concludes Saturday
night, with an address by W. J.
Hryan. Samuel Oompers. president
of the American Federation of La-
boV, spoke Monday afternoon and
outlined bis plans for Ixringing.jbqut
a new political party through anjtf-
fillatlon of the farmers with the la
boring men.
President Barrett In opening the
meeting made an excellent speech.
He began his speech by saying that
as the "representative of 3,000,000
mriHtant American termers, whose
organized army rests one flank upon
the Atlantic and the other upon the
Pacific ocean, I give to you a cor
dial greeting, which shall know no
boundaries of State or section, no
narrowness or political partisanship'
or bigotry, but a tolerance as broad
as justice and as wide as that sin-
crity that underlies our common;
heritage of American citizenship.” 1
Among other things he said-: "the
American farmer of tradition has
been the farmer of the more of less
humorous cartoon or caricature, var
iously represented as fair prey to
the green goods man or the gold
brick artist. And the farmer has
been slow in awakening. His en
vironment, in the first place, was
against his awakening. The tardi
ness of facilities for communication,
the Infrequency with which news
papers penetrated to the far rural
districts, and the natural suspicion,
which Is a part of his temperament
all militated to keep him In shackles
as to his own power, and his duty
of self-government in the premises.
"The V-ra of sleep Is at an end'
The era of wakefulness to self-duty,
to the obligation of self-help, to the
obligation of duty to country is al
ready dawning! I do not say that
the farmer as a class is roused to his
national Importance and to his no
tional obligations, But I do assert,
with all ’the emphasis at my ^com
mand, and supported by all the ex
perience of a lifetime, that the leaven
or readjustment of revolutionary
change Is stirring throughout the
mass of the American farmer.”
After stating that vandalism and
?raft are being eliminated from our
:>olltical life, the speaker said: "We
are standing more resolutely each
lay for a literal Interpretation of
the doctrine of the ‘square deal.’ We
ire determined that the people and
not the politicians shall rule. The
Farmers' union is responsible tyoth
for the awakened farmer and the
awakened nation, as regards the far
mer.
tPleadlng for sincere, constructive
leadership among the farmers, Fresi-
lent Barrett said in the degree that
this pervails. now and In the days
to come, "we shall solve the agricul
tural problems' perplexing the best
md most consecrated thought of this
country." He said the selfish leader
ship is inevitable Incendiary and de
structive. "For it is almost crimi
nally selfish aims it is willing to turn
’.he farmer against his neighbor
against his merchant, against the
banker, against the resident of the
ity. It Is ledership for revenue on
ly, without one redeeming aspiration.
"A distinct i>art of the rural prob
lem is the cultivation of a better and
i more cooperative spirit between the
city man and the country man. Af-
t t all, they have almost everything
n common. We are both interested
in the curbing and purging, not the
esfruction, of great agencies of civ-
lization. We are T>oth interested, in
building up a more staunch Ameri-
■an citizenship, free of pollution from
iamagfng alien strains, bnM and
brought up to fulfill the Ideal of pure
Hid militant Americanism. And un
less we realize this close mutual re
al ions we shall both suffer.” .-
Speaking of the campaign of the
Farmers’ union for the enactment of
-ertaln national legislation, Mr. Bar-
ett said: "Politicians in general
have paid and are paying more at
tention to the farmer, and that is be-
'ause the farmer is paying more at
tention to the politician. Once let
the public officer conceive the idei
'hat. he is being watched continuall
>y liis constituent, and that the.lat*
ter Is carefully comparing promise
with performance, and we shall el£
TarrTrT?' srarrmrnT or "irnwir
n this country.
- .‘-il-have urged .upon Farmers’ un-
ion members ro* refuse to let their
attitude toward their congressmen
be colored by any trival gifts on the
part of the congressniM, the bribery
of a petty office tor a relative, or a
cordial hanshake from the great man
himself. The test of worthiness of
continued endorsement at the polls is
deeds, not flattery, and that man is a
traitor to his country and to his
ideals who hetrays his fellows by con
sidering a public obligation cancelled
by a private favor.
Oivto relief for all Nerve, Bone and Mnscle
Aches and Paine more quickly than any
other remedy known.
Ita peculiar penetrating properties are
Affective—NOAH’S LINIMENT,
May be used with absolute confidence in it«
parity for Internal and External Uses.
It ia Triple Strength. A powerfhl, speedy
and sure Pain Remedy, therefore most
effective in producing results.
Not only contains the old-fashioned ingre
dients, but also the latest and up-to-
date discoveries—NOAH’S LINIMENT.
Recommended and sold under a guarantee
for the following: Rheumatism in all
forms, Sciatica, Lame Back, Stiff Joints
and Muscles, Sore Throat, Colds, Strains,
Sprains, Cuts, Burns, Bruises, Cramps,
Colic, Toothache, and all Nerve, Bone
and Muscle Aches and Pains/
Drug stores in cities and towns, general
'stores in the country, 25c, 50c and $1.00
the bottle, and money back if not sat-
+ isfled. Isn’t this fair?
tv s 1
lit t <
W 2
£
NOAHS
LINIMENT
atrtvs, SMS SMS MU SC LB
ACMES AMS MAIMS IN
MAN AND BEAST
SSM4AL MS. 14IC0.
•VANANTCCO WNDCM TMl FOOD ARM
DAMS ACT, JUNC CO, ICO*.
Pmcc. this size, >6 CKNT*
LAMM axes. COO. AMO St.00
NOAH REMEDY OO.
.* B'MlOC.MMh.U.lA.
important Notice
The genuine Noah’s Liniment looks exactly like tho
above. Look for Noah's Ark on every package, our
trade mark, registered In the U. S. Patent Office, for
your protection. Npah’s Liniment always appears In
red Ink on the original, both on the label and on out
side container. Accept nothing but Noah's Liniment.
It Is the only Pain Remedy sold under a positive
f uarantee. If your dealer w^lll not supply you, send
5c In stamps and we will mail you a bottle and re
fund money If not perfectly satisfied. Beware of
fraud; accept no substitute.
N Proof Positive
' A —IMS.II I rt—M
nf had bisn^MM^Sflng*wUh ton?*irhsu-
matlam for tbrs • years. I have bssa
& E. Cyras, Dosto d. & CL -
Pate la Mm mm4 Ifewralsta.
"For flv* year* * u ®* r * d * D *®7
a*? r.rfis%£hi“ti..£!s? $
s:?.
Va.” ——
CobIMbN HrtiACr JU*kt Arm.
-I caught cold and J»ad a aeyere at
tack of rheumatism la my right shoul
der and could not raise my arm with
out much pain. I tried NoaMa Lini
ment. and In less than a ^k waa en
tirely free from pain. A. Crooktr. Dor
chester, Mass."
8tur delate mart —
**I have ueed Noah a
heumatlsa
"i nave usea rwan ■ u/nlment for
rheumatism, stiff Joints and backache,
a v .. ■* aia vet a win PA srnrwl t non
and™Fean aay'ft'dMTmajmcra^o^thsm
ahy pain remedy. Rev.
Smith. Abbeville, & C.’
•T have been benefited greatly fiy
Noah’s Liniment, using it for a sprained
ankle. Mrs-- W. D. Bohortfon^, West_
Somerville, Mesa.
Patna la the Back.
*T suffered ten years with a dread
fully sore pain In my back, and tried
different remedlea. Less than half a
bottle of Noah’s Liniment made a per
fect cure. Mrs. Rev. J. D. Billingsley,
Point Eastern, Va.”
Nearalgla and Tothaehe.
“My wife suffered for several years
with neuralgia and toothache. She used
about half a bottle of Noah's Liniment
and got Immediate relief. J. S. Flaher,
Policeman, Hodges, S. C.”
■ - 3" ' J*
Rbeamatlsm ta tho Neek.
‘T received the bottle of Noah s Lini
ment, and think It has helped me great
ly. I have rheumatism In my neck and
It relieved It right much. Mrs. Martha
A. Lambert. Beaver Dam, Va."
' For Horaea.
“We have never used a liniment we'
consider the equal to Noah’s Liniment
for bruises, apralns, strained tendons
and to use on throat, sides and chest
for distemper, colds, etc. Richmond
Transfer Co., Richmond, Va.”
. Better Thna RkM ReaMdlea,
“We cheerfuilv recommend all stable
men to give Noah’s LiTilment a trial
and be convinced of its wonderful cura
tive properties, We have -obtained as
good If not better results from its use
than we did from remedlea costing Ifi.OO
per bottle. Norfolk and Port.unouth
Transfer Co., Norfolk, Va.”
'V
From Hickory Harris ft Littl* on
Moadgy shipped ISO crates or 5,100
big carload. This U
he tie largest sklpment qVer
ipbi
if this leading en *mpbr-
Two Die la Sewer.
A sewer ditch in West Winston, N.
C.. caved in at fioon Monday, killing
Harry Stockton and WtQinm Naah.
aegroaa. Three other sen had Mr-
A UVELY CORPSE
WERE MOST AGREEABLY SUR
PRISED ON TRAIN ARRIV AL
Went to Meet Dead Body of Brother,
but Saw Him Get off Train Well
and Happy.
Through a misunderstanding In a
long distance telephone message rel
atives of T. C. Chandlers of Washing
ton, D. C., went to the depot at
Wadesboro, N. C., the other night
expecting to meet the dead body of
Mr. Chandler, and were most hap
pily surprised to greet him well and
happy. The Messenger and intelli
gencer tells the story:
T. C. Chandler of Washington, I).
C., John W. Chandler of Virginia,
and R. W. Chandler of Mangum,
Richmond county, are brothers. They
are all getting to be old ni n, and,
though their paths through life have
been divergent, they nevertheless,
have preserved an unusual affection
for each other.
John W. Chandler has for some
time l>een on a visit to R. W. Chand
ler at Mangum. T. C. Chandler at
tended the reunion at Mobile and
reached Charlotte Saturday on the
return trip. From Charlotte he tel
ephoned R. W. Chandler that he
would pay him a visit and to m et
him in Wadesboro, with a wagon
Saturday afternoon to carry his trunk
to Mangum. Mrs. R. VV. Chandler,
who is slightly deaf, received the
message and she understood the per
son talking to say that T. C. Chand
ler had died suddenly in Charlotte
and to request that a wagon l» j sent
to Wadesboro to meet his remains
that evening.
’Immediately there was consterna
tion in the household and John W.
Chandler at once made preperatlons
to come to Wadesboro. He hired a
team and reached town in time to
meet the seven o’clock train from
Charlotte. It was his intention to take
charge of the supposed corpse and
take it to Virginia and deposit it
beside the remains of his ancestors.
With this end In view he went to
the express cpr as soon as the train
stopped ami. asked the express mes
senger if he had a corpse aboard.
The messenger answered in the nega
Uve, and whjle they veer© talking
about the matter someone walked up
from behind and slapped him on the
shoulder. Mr. Chandler was so over
come when he saw his brother stand
ing before him alive and well, fie fell
on the supposed corpse's shoulder
and wept. -
The good news was quickly tele
phoned to the grief-stricken family,
at Mangum, the brothers spending
e night here and joining their
rother at that place next day.
* * ■ ■
TEDDY TALKS
SAYS HE WILL NOT BE A CANDI
DATE FOR RESIDENT.
Sticks to Taft, Who He 8*ys, Is
Working to Carry Out the Poli
cies He Started.
rrhe Washington Post says in let
ters which Theodore Roosevelt is al
leged to have written to President
Taft, Senator Root and Wm. Loeb,
Jr., the former president thoroughly
endorses the Taft administration,
TavbrS M. Loeb to succeed Governor
Hughes of New York and indicates
that his decision to remain in private
life is final and unalterable. The
Colonel will aot even be a candidate
to succeed Chauncey M.. DePew in
the Senate and much less would he
desire any other office.
It is said also the former presi
dent will in no sense be a candidate
for the presidency in 1912. On the
contrary his letters are said to indi
cate that it is his conviction that the
re-election of President Taft is the
Republican party's duty.
While Col. Roosevelt believes that
a fight within the party, when it is
confined to opinions of legislation,
may be healthful, he does net favor
a d’gree of insurgency that threatens
to disrupt the party at the polls and
will probaldy deliver some speeches
in the congressional campalzn in the
West, urging the return of republi
cans to Congress.
When Col. Roosevelt speaks be
fore the national conservation con
gress in St. Paul in September,-it Is
said he will declare himself again
for the [Ktlicies for which he has al
ways stood, but will insist that
the work l>e pressed forward with
out conservation a pivot for politi-
<al expedients.
In a word, former President Roose
velt before seeing Gifford Pinchot in
Kurope and since, has expressed him
self as convinced that President
Taft has been working hard and con
sistently to rarry out the policies
which started during the Roosevelt
administration, and has given to the
Taft administration his whole ap
proval. *
Charlotte, N. C., First Became Fa
mous May 20, 1775
by declaring herself free and independent of Great Britain
thus arousing the other twelve colonies to action and the Phil
adelphia Declaration followed July 4th, 1776 ridding them as
a whole of the depressing effect of British Domination. Kbe
is becoming more and more famous by the manufacture of
Lee’s Headache and Neural
gia Remedy.
enabling every American by Its use to declare themselves free
from the yoke of ail kinds of headaches and neuralgia and by
also giving to the
Burduco Liver Powder.
The use of which so arouses a torpid liver as to cause it to at
once throw off the yoke of biliousness, constipation, jaundice,
sour stomach, dyspepsia, loss of appetite and all similar
troubles and thus enabling one to declare themselves free from
the depressing and dangerous effects following such diseases.
Price 25c each. Mfg. by Burwell A Dunn Oo., Charlotte, N. C.
■?’ ■ jm
REFUSED TO ANSWER.
GAVE UP THE FIGHT.
“When a Man’s Down and Out It's
Time tx> Quit.”
At Chicago J. Henry Ball, a car
penter, 53 years old, comniitted sui
cide In his room at a lodging house
Tuesday by drinking carbolic acid.
He left a letter addressed to a fellow
carpenter, which reads:
“When a man is down and out, in
Census Questions and Warrants Have
Been Issued.
The Columbia Record says Census
Supervisor Dupre may in a few days
cause warrants to be issued against
four persons in this district, who are
refusing to give Information to enum
erators. Three of t-hese live In Col
umbia, and the fourth in Orangeburg.
In all four cases, the only reason
given for refusing is that the persons
"just didn't want to bother wit.i an
swering question*.”
—Htfrr'-PTiPre faar-
directing the!.’ attention m teclion
,23-jof. tie xena'U_ aw*. _w bij h jjn ikos
refusal to' give tnlorma’io i * mis te
rn ea nor subject ’O * flue of tluO.
On© of those refill? is a^lady of
some prominence >»• Columbia e
referred the enu m,m • to her hus-
'hand, who also refuses to give tao
information.
The Record does rol name the
parties for whom warrants have been
CLASSIFIED COLUMN
For Sale.—f>00 bushels fine cottoi
seed, Laterv strain. $2.00 per bu.
f o. b. R. E. Edward's, Elloree,
S. C.
Our $1 Adding Machines save tim*
and worry. Guaranteed. Thousands
sold. Agents wanted. Haynes Mfg.
Co., Rutherfordton, N. C.
Eden Watermelon Need for Sale al
75c. per pound. The best flavored
shipping watermelon grown. J.
M. Farrell, Blacksvllle, 8. C.
For Sale—Milch cows Jersey’s, gratK
Jerseys and Holstelns. All of tk»
best breeding. Registered JarMy
male calves. M. H. Bams, Joasa-
ville, S. C.
Teachers wanted for excellent posi
tions now vacant. Trustees sup
plied with Teachers. Attractive
booklet. ‘A Plan” free. Southern
Teachers’ Agency, Columbia, S. C.
Whit© Wyandotte Eggs, 10c each.
Big bh-eky birds, snow white.
Flshe strain, trio huffs, trio whites,
pafr ColumbfatUs. S. A. Fernetl,
R. I, Columbia, S. C.
Pedigreed English Setters, Pnppiss,
and Pure Gordons, Setter Puppies,
at prices that will please the lov
er of bird dogs. Also Barred Ply
mouth Rocks and Rose Comb
Rhode Island Red eggs from best
of pure stock. $1 and $1.50 for
15 eggs. Write B. H. Middle-
brooks. Yatesville, Ga.
up-to-date goods has spread far out
Bargain* in Pure Bred Stock—rick
and rare Berkshire Boar Plga, 4ft
months old from regular stock al
$15 each. (One Bred Sow (Chin*
Betsey No. 119177) Due to far
row in April, at the small sum ol
$75; has farrowed twice, first Ut
ter 10 pigs, second 11. 8. C. B
Leghorn Eggs—16 for $1; 30 for
$.90; 100 for $5. In answering
this ad mention this paper. A. ■.
Sloop, China Grove. N. C.
Agents Wanted.—$3 to $5 daily as
sured selling our harness attach-
*^ment line holder. Ligfitning sell
er; cheap; exclusive territory giv-.
en. \yrite today. National Spec
ialty Co., Dept. S., Lexington, Ky.
Agents Wanted for household com
modity guaranteed under Pure
'Food law. Big ctnpniissions. Send
10c. for gamble instructions, etc.
IMPORTANT NOTICE. *
For a short while we have decided
to save our future customers agents’
expenses. This will save about twenty
per cent, on Organs, and about ten
per cent on Pianos.
Organs, from $75 up.
Pianos, from $225 up.
Less the discount as stated above.
Write at once for catalogs and terms
to the old established.*
MALONE’S MUSIC HOUSE,
Colombia, 8. C,
♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ft
a land of plenty, and cannot even get issued not the question they refused
a meal, it is time to quit. I went last
night to the Moody chdrch and after
the service I asked one of the minis
ters for aid.
He opened his pocketbook, as h$
to answer. Nor do we whow who
the Orangeburg party is but will
all come out when the warrant is
served. The government h«K good
reasons for asking the question* It
did his heart, and gave me $5 cents. | does or it would not ask them, and
I bought the add wlth'that 25 cents.! all will save themselves Uouluv I y
jro.u ever toe kiln thank him for I answering them as best they can
xae. I ought to write to him *to | we hope all the CMto will he ad
Ui*»k him, hut l fcate uot the Ume.” Justed.
No risk; money refunded. San
Alco Co.. 29 N. 13th St., Phlla-
r. derirnKTs: ——
Wanted—Hardwoods, logs and lum-
~1rr. We are cash payers of pop
lar. cedar and walnut logs. Also
want -poplar, ar.h, cottonwood, cy
press and oak lumber. Inspection
at your point. Easy cutting. Write
us. Savannah Valley Lumber Co.,
Augusta, Ga. 1
WE CARRY
OHLEN,
HOE, and
SIMOND’S
TOOTH SAWS
Columbia Supply Company,
823 W. Gervais St.,
Columbia, 8. C.
Late Seed Potatoes for sale, "New
Dixie." Good keepers and croppers.
Practically bug and bli?ht proof.
I made 979 bushels on 5 1-2 acres
planted July 14 and 15 last year.
Price 75c per bushel f. o. b. Clare
mont, Va., if ordered on os before
May 15. J. M. Hughes, Claremont.
Va. v - i
Stove Explodes.
At Philadelphia Mrs. Yette Fried
man, 60 year* old, was killed Monday
by an explosion of mftat is believed
to have been dynamite hr the range
of her home. Several other persons
were injured and.
ly damaged. It 1
MJdoslve wag gland
ft
ft
v- vj i-J*.