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m W. T. Who Wn* (V)nvlrtcd of Brutally KHIIiik Hln Wife by Ad* mini Mr ring Htry< hnlno to Hrr, FI* - nally Loses Out, and Must Spend Remainder of Days In Prison. T W. T. Jones, convicted wife mur derer of Union County, is now saje and sound tn the penitentiary, where be will spend the balance of his days Convicted of tbs killing of hla own wife, Marion Jones, the prisoner, who'feas spent many months In the Union jail, was Monday evening re fused a rehearing by, the Supreme Court, and the remittitur was sent down Immediately. The Supreme Court, In a few wahIs. tells that Jones's only hope for evem a stay of sentence is over: “After careful consideration of the within petition, the Court is unable to discover that any material matter or question has been overlooked or disregarded. It Is. therefore, order ed that the petition be dismissed and that the order heretofore granted, staying remittitul. be revoked.” This order, signed by Chief Justice Ira B Jones, and Associate Justices Eugent B. Gary and C. A Woods, means a life longterm in the Penitentiary for W. T. Jones. As no Federal question is involvet' 4<he -opinion of attorneys is that the case is ended, and that Jones must spend the remainder of his days it the State prison, unless a petition for pardon ahould he granted. There was considerable talk of an appeal to the United States Court at the Unit Jones's case was affirmed by the Hu prenie Court of this State, but this is not regarded as within the rangt of possibility. W. T. Jones, wealthy planter, of Santuc, Union county, has a serious crime to lie wake nights and think over when he comes to the State pris -on. His wife,'on July 8, 1908, met a horrible death hy strychnine and the testimony pointed to her bus band sis the guilty man. Statements of his counted strongly against him ft the trial. A chain of clrcumstan Ual evidence was woven around him, and In February, 1909, a Jury de clared Jones was guilty of murder The case, a while as to the evidence must have been very strong against Jones. Instances of ill treatment of bia wife and testimony that on th night of the killing cursing was beard at the Jones home, the fright •wed look of Mrs. Jones as she en tered the room of a man, who stop ped At her Jiome one night, thes and gther matters were brought out at t^f trial. It is even true that rf forts were made to cast a shadow upon the character of Mrs. Jones, in order to save her husband from the hand of the law-. She was then In ber grave, hut the verdict of the Jury showed that these 12 men did not belive what was told them about Mrs. Jones. Refused ball before Jus tice (then Judge) Hydrlck, Jones was placed In the county Jail, where he has been ever since. Aside from the general Interest that the order of the Court will create as to Jones, there Is an add ed legal interest, especially to the people of Charleston, because Judge Memminger, throughout, has been upheld by the Supreme Court. anJ the latest order Is even more strong ly complimentary to Judge Memmin ger's ability. It will be recalled by those who have followed the case, that Judge Memminger urged the Jury to agree u)*>n a verdict, calling the nt!enti,)ii of the jury to the necessity of mrors agreeing, it being their solem.t duty On this point the Supreme Court a;.id it was a Circuit Judge's duty to so instruct the jury in such a situa tion. aen Judge Memminger, taking Hoyt-Hayeg case as an example, charged the Jury on circumstantial evidence. In this, too, he was upheld by the Supreme Court. In Ih’ mat ter of statements by Jurors. Cu Cir cuit Judge's ruling was ffihelil also. The order refusing a rehearing b-'t emphasizes these ruling of Judg* Memminger, because nearly all the exceptions were based upon these rulings. Circuit Judge Charles G. Dnntzior wrote the opinion In tho case, afte' sitting with the Supreme Co'ir* on arc., .n* of the disqualification of Juaitce Hjdrick, for the reason above stated. Thus the order, is signed by °*'y three of the Justice^. , , „ ^ ^ ^ WOMAN SHOOTS NEGRO. When He Advanced Upon Her She Pulled Trigger. . 'Mrs. Bertie Rhodes, of Granvilb 3 Count/, N. C., shot and killed Joe Kinton, colored, on Monday. The bowlolde look place filly mUcs from Durham. Before the justice. Mrs. Rhodes, member of a family com posed of a Presbyterian minister, her -brother, a sister in charge of a Tex as conservatory, testified that she bad forbidden Kinton's driving across her lands and that when she again rebuked him he left his buggy and came towards her. Then she loaded her shotgun and fired at him. The shooting took place 16 miles below Oxford/near the Virginia line. Very Heavy Rain. At Spartanburg the rainfall Sat- " and Sunday was very heavy. ies of rain fell between i Sunday. The farms of are badly washed, but, ifht that the orope are) pie Also Taken Out. Up to noon Monday 1,000 bodies had been taken from the ruins of the houses which were overthrown in the earthquake Wednesday evening at Cartago, Costa Rica. The esti mate of the dead placed the num ber at 1,600 but it is possible that this will be exceeded. Tfarg? force* which hare gone to Cartago from San Jose and other points are now engaged in the work of rescue and even Tuesday several living persons were taken from un der the piles of stones and timbers where dwelling houses once stood. The number of sick and injured cannot, be counted, many of them having I»een removed to adjoining towns and villages and since the disaster have died from injuries. Dr. Booanfgra, the Guatemalan repre sentative to the Central American court of justice, was completely de mented when removed from the ruins the day of the earthquake, but he is now recovering from the shock. Physically he was only slightly in jured. The body of his wife, who was killed, has been embalmed pre paratory to being sent to Guatemala. Parosio, a village of 2,000 people alKMit 18 miles east of San Jose also suffered severely from the earth make shocks, reports reaching Car tago indicating that nearly a hundred persons were killed. il.arge fissures have opened up in Par tago province, which have given iddltlonal cause for alarm. Ten thqusfyid persons have been render ed homeless and the severe rains and lack of food and drinking water nre responsible for murh suffering It has been found Impossible to pro vide shelter fur the people, who art huddled together in a pitialHe condi- t Ion. NAILS HIMSELF ON CROSS. Man's Mind Affected From Brooding Over tlie Comet. While brooding over the possible ill effects of Halleys comet'u visit Paul Hammerton, a sheep man and prospector, became Pisan-- and rruc ifled hlmseif, according to niming men who arriv »d Monday at San Bet nardino. Cal., w 'h him Jiammerton was foiRid'-whcre he had nailed ills feet and one hand tc \ rude cross he had erected A though he was suffering intense ag- my, Hammerton pleaded wi - a lii.- reseners to let him remain in his spiked Imprisonment. filnee the visit of Comet A, I'M*', Hanim rton has been much alarm ed. and when he learned that the earth was scheduled to pass through te tail of Halleys comet, his mind ;ave way, and he believed that the end of the world was at hand. Carried From Greenville to Spartan* burg to EncM|>e the Mob That Were ’tlanunoring for His Life. Jesse Fuller, charged with the murder of J. E. Liddell on Christmas eve. at Greenville, was declared not guilty by the jury charged with his case after deliberations of two hours Monday night at Greenville. Trial of the case was begun Monday morn ing and went to the jury shortly af ter stx-^’eloek Monday night. The principal witness for the state was W. O. Stover, who claimed that Fuller confessed to him shortly af ter- the murder. It was on his alle gation that Fuller was arrested and lodged in Jail on Christmas day Fuller gave a satisfactory account of his whereabouts on Christmas eve. which was corroborated by Joe Bar ker, .who claimed to have been with him. The acquittal is me subject of much comment on the streets of Greenville for it was only by the strategy of the sheriff’s office that Fuller was not lynched when impli cated by Stover. A mob formed In front of the court house demanding his life, but he was spirited away and carried to Spartanburg, where he was kept in jail for several weeks. The murder of Liddell was one of the most brutal ever enacted in the city of Greenville and raised feeling to a high pitch. Several persons are still under suspicion. A Mu Who Siys He is tke Oldest Son •f King Edward, tke Seventk AND IS THE LEGAL KING RULES ADOPTED BY THE OFFI CIALS OF THE STATE. How the Recent Act Passed by the General Assembly Will Be En forced. SHOOTING SCRAPE ON STRK'-T One Man Is Killed ami Tv\r. Other** Are Wounded. ■s *ntc 1 his atien- .< i t. Ed vard and ngaged in u pisi -I i of C ■ Because they i lions to their si Herbert Mercer *• duel on the s i • 1 s of Co I ■ 'e < 1 . Monday with Grady Sue ov<. The latter and William H ot >.i, r, :>v- :(tander, were probably fatally wounded and Edward Me.eo- was slightly wounded in the shoulder. Following the visit of Sneligrove to Miss Mercer Sunday afternoon the brothers made such strenuous or jections that Sneligrove was forced to make a hurried escape by means of a second story window. Sunday night Sneligrove and the girl's father discussed the affair and it was thought that there would t>e no furth* r trouble, but as soon as the ytmneer men met on the street Monday revolvers were brought into play. CHEROKEE MAN DROWNED. DIED HEROIC DEATH. Saved Live* of Three Children, but l/ost Hi* Own. At Philadelphia Policeman Wil liam Weiss is dead from injuries re ceived in saving three children from death, und< r the hoofs of the horses in a chariot race last Thursday eve ning at a circus performance. Char iots. drawn by four horses each, were rounding the turn into the home stretch when the children, thinking te performance over, started to run across the track The spectators look ed on tn breathless horror. Weiss ran in front of the approaching char iot and tossed the children back to safety, but was himself struck by the ong pole of a chariot and knocked uttd' r tlie horses hoofs, and was so >adly injured that he died on Mon day. CREIGHTON l/OSES ON APPEAL. Vclloii of tlie South CarolinA Confer ence 1* Sustained. By a vote of 13 to 6 the appeals committee of the General Conference t a session held Tuesday, sustained the decision of the South Carolina Conference, which recently expelled the Rev. C. W. Creighton, of Green wood, from the ministry of the hnrch on a charge of disloyalty. This action of the General Confer ence is final. The etiarge against the deposed minister grew out of nis publication of a paper;' in Green wood, known as the Christian Ap peal, in which were published antag- mistic artichs relating to Church matters. HEIR TO HALE MILLION. After Six Year’* Search Aunt's Heir Is Located. \ George “W. Lipscomb, for whom a search has been mgde for six years, ’wH* found"at" Doogfatt, Gal., Tuesday,' am/notified That a fortune-of |fr00,- 000 is awaiting him at Jackson, Mich , as a legacy from an aunt. A story U\ a local newspaper several Jays ago, telling of the search, fur nished the clue to Lipscomb's where abouts, ahd a telegram from his brother In Michigan - reached him. His aunt was Mr*. Mary C. Lipscomb of Jackson. yMich- \ • ♦ ♦ Ends His Life. J. 'M. Power*, a white man '"who has been runnihg a merry-go-round near Ten Mile Hjll for the past few month*, and who' recently opened a freak anlnaal show In Charleston, committed aulclde Monday afternoon by dralaiag a two-ounoe bottla ot oarbolt© acid. k Efforts of Companions Failed to Save the Enfortunate. Information has just reached Gaff ney to the effect that C. Lipscomb, J R. Graham and George Thomason were seining in a pond on Thicketty Cr»**k Tuesday. Lipscomb could not swim and claimed the jnind was not beyond his depth. Recent hish wa fer washed a deep hole where they went beyond depth. Lipscomb and Thomason both went down, and Gra ham. in trying to save Lii*scomb, nar rowly escaped drowning, as Lipscomb in a frenzy pulled him under. See ing be could not save him, Graham managed to catch an overhanging limb anel get out, where he was join ed by Thoni|vson, in exhausted state, he claiming that Lipscomb and Gra ham, struggling, sent him to the ixittom. Lipscomb's body was ro- coven-d after a searth of three hours. SHOOTS M'.HiH Bolts GUESTS. Suspicion of Theft of His Whiskey ('hiis<*s the Attack. Armed with a repeating shotgun. Arch Brown, aged 3 7 years, Monday afternoon opened fire u|*>n assem bled guests at the home of a neigh- tior, four miles from Staunton, Ya . killing two persons and wounding two others, one of whom may die. Perry Hoy, and a bov, named Higgs, eight years old. are dead. Abe Hoy, brother of Perry Hoy, was prob ably fatally shot and th ■ other shot was the father of the Higas boy. Browns wholesale shooting was a result of his anger having been aroused by the belief that Abe Hoy had stolen some whiskey with which Brow it has entrusted to him. Brown went to Staunton after the shooting and surrendered to the jailer. CYCLONE IN SAMPSON. John George Guelph Tell* a Strange Story in New York, Relating to the I>ate King of England, and One of HI* Early Ijove Affair*. John George Guelph, who claims to be eldest *on of the late King Ed ward VII, hy a marriage which Queen Victoria made her son disavow, and therefore the rightful ruler of the British Empire, was seen at 106 Mon tague street in New York Tuesday, and asked what he intended to do to gain the throne. '"The prince,” as ho is still called by his wife and friends, although Edward VII, is dead, displayed in answer a cablegram he had just dis patched to George V., at the palace in London. “This is the best answer as to what my attitude will be,” said he. The cablegram read: “Brooklyn, N. Y., U. S. A., "May 6th, 1910. “King George, London: “Words fail to express my grief. You understand my position. 1 am at the service of my country. “John George Guelph.” “But,” said the reporter, puzzled, "how does that Inake your position clear?” “You will notice,” said the prince, "that I renounce none of my claims : n that cablegram. In fact, I assert my rights. My position in reality is that of King of England and Emper or of the ^British Empire. George knows that. He will understand what I mean. I do not lay myself at Gteorge's disposition, as a subject might be expected to do. in that las' sentence. I do not offer George my services. 1 offer them to my coun try.'' “The matter of the prince's sue cession,'' said the princess, who was pressent at the interview, “Is with the people of Great Britain, and th* leading statesmen there. It is up to them." '"But," it was pointed ou, “the ca blogram is addressed to King George, London.' It that not in Itself an acknowledgement that George is King?" "That means nothing.” said Prince John, “except tha,t it was necessary to address it in that manner to in sure its delivery.” The "prince" was very much bro ken with grief, and as he told t-he tale of all that he has been made to suffer h e frequently broke down and soidied. He wore black, even to the necktie. And his grief seemed to no very genuine. He is a tall, well built man of forty-nine, who look.-, younger, and there is no doubt th a • he bears a great facial resemblance to the English royal family. The princess, before the prince ar rived, told to the reporter an outline of his story. The late king, she said, while Prince of Whales, mar ried the daugter of an English peer who Queen Victoria disapproved and forbade the public announcement of the marriage. “Prince John" was born. The peer's daughter was hus tled out of sight and never acknowl edged. But the marriage was nev er annulled. “The Prince" wer.i to India while very young. The-,* he learned of his parentage and was of fered a title if he would go to Atis- talla and re ■ there. Bbecause 'he rc entanc' of the t 1 J*. .vould bt at the price of his mother's good name, he refused it. He demand'd acknowledgement for her also. She never received it and is now in the Holy Land as a missionary. \eith*r the prince nor the princes* would tell who she is. “The Prince” says he had a great many letters from the late king ac knowledging him as his son. "Will you make these letters pub lic now?" he was asked. “If I am forced to do so,” he re plied. Jpst what his first step will be in the way of gaining the throne he would not say. Matters of that kind, so he said, cannot be done hasti:y. Farmer's House Demolished and His Wife Radiy Hurt. A cyclone passed through Taylors Bridge township, Sampson county, N, C., late Tuesday afternoon and did considerable damage. The res idence of Preston Bryant, a worthy farmer, was demoHshod and Mrs Bryant seriously hurt. The top of the house was c.ai:ried hudily. .uearlv half a mile away and left injt swainp.^ There* were eight children in the house and these had barely gotten out when the crash came. BODY PLACED ON TRACKS. Engineer of Approaching Train Dis cover* Murder. A. C. Harrison, a prominent resi dent of Mapiesville, near Selma, Ala., was murdered early Sunday morning by unknown parties. To all appear ance* his skull had been crushed in from a heavy blow over Ihe head and placed on the track* of the railway. Th* dlacovery of th* crime waa mad* by th* *n«ln**r and th* aathorltlM war* notified. Rules and regulations for the en forcement of the seed inspection act have been prepared by the commis sioner of agriculture and the director of the state experiment station. The following are the regulations as an nounced: 1. In addition to the sheep sorrel, green and yellow fox tail, yellow trefoil, chickweed, which are men tioned in section 4 of this act, the seeds of crab grass, Johnson grass. pas[>aluin, barh yard grass, cheat, witch grass, nutgrass and other sedges, lamium, iambsquarter, prick ley lettuce, dock, wild carrot, peppe’- grass, wild giustard, plaintain, wild onion, spurge, spiny si la, amaranth, pigweed, lady's thumb, hogweed, ragweed button weed, evening prim rose, purslane, bind weed, Canada thistle, Russian thistle and seeds of other weeds which may be added to this list from time to time shall be classed as impurities. 2L When Inert matter such as de scribed in section 5 of this act. Is present in seeds in access of 3 0 per cent the nature and amounts of such matters shall be stated on the label as specified in this act. 3. Any package of corn, cotton, oats, wheat, barley or other agricul tural seeds which shall contain more than 5 per cent of another kind or variety of agricultural or weed seed than the one speeified on th^ label shall tie considered mixed seed and shall be so labeled, giving the name and amount of each kind or variety of seel that occurs in the mixture. A Seeds shall be considered adul terated when they contain w-ei* seeds, other agricultural seeds or any seeds or materials which would not occur in other seeds in the na tural course of event*, in such cas es tlie conditions under which the seed were grown will be considered. a. Seed shall be considered mis brand'd when the label as prescrib ed by the act does not give the cor rect name of seed contained therein 6 The v rmination power of all se*'d sold in this state shall he stat ed in the latiel, as specified in sec tion I of tdie act in per cent. No seed shall be sold in the state which does not when placed under favor-, able conditions in the laboratory, ger minate the |>er cent guaranteed on the label. 7 Seeds sold for lawn purposes shall lie labeled so as to show what kinds of seed occur in the mixture and the percentage by weight and nutnlierpr each. Such seed shall conform tn purity and germination to the same standards set for other agricultural seeds. 8. Seed containing anthracnose of cotton, smut of corn, wheat, oats, rice, barley, blue grass or other grasses, onions or sorghum, black rot of cabbage or turnips, bladk rot of sweet potato, dry rot scab ‘Nf Irish isitato anthracnose or bacteria', bliaht of beans, anthracnose of wheat, oats or barley, shall be con sidered a communicable disease and shall be considered impure and unfit for seeding purposes, unless pre viously treated so as to kill the caus al organization of such disease with out injuring the vitality of the seed 9. The object 0 f this act is to con- trol tlie sale of seed and prevent the distribution of weeds and other pests through seeds in this stafe. It is the purpose of those in authority to enforce the law so as to secure the lu st protect!' n with the lesist hard ship on any one concerned. With this purpose Iti vi-w the regulations wi 1 ! be modified and added to as oc casion seems to demand. DO YOU FEEL LET DOWN AND UNFIT, FOR WORK DR. KINGS BLOOD &/ LIVER PILLS WILL BRING BACK YOUR* ENERGY THEY BOOST your LIV £ ,R and TONE your SYSTEM MAKE YOU FEEL GOOD ANO LOOK GOOD TOO NOW IS ALSO THE SEASON FOR TAKES FATAL LEAP. I<ndy Patient Jump* from Roof of Charlotte Sanitarium. •Mrs. Virginia P. McDalrmld, 55 years old, of Lumberton, N. C., Tues day afternoon cast herself from the roof of the Charlotte Sanitarium, where she had been a patient for six weeks, to the pavement sixty feet below, meeting Instant death. With other patients and nurses Mrs. Mc- Dairrsid was on the roof garden of the hospital and, while the nurses' attention was directed elsewhere, she rlimlied a railing and threw her self to the pavement below. She was to have left bhe hospital the next morning for her home, her son being in Charlotte to accompany her. MEET- DEATH -41N TRACK. Run Down by Coast Line .Train at Kooky Mount, N. C. Roy Gainey and Wither Devault, two young men, were killed at Rocky Mount, N. C.. late Saturday night by an Atlantic Coast Line train. T.hese young men left Clinton recently to seek employment and were working in a cotton mill at Rocky 'Mount. They met death In avoiding one train at a crossing by stopping ontu another .track, when they were run down by an incoming tiain, which they did not htar on account* of the rumble ot th* flrtt train. Their pa rent* live in Clinton and w*r* ap praised ot tho sad mws. SSS&MMSISSh BOWEL TROUBLES . DR. KINGS DIARRHOEA & DYS ENTERY CORDIAL RIGHTS ALL WRONGS AND IS GUARANTEED. TRICE OF EACH 25c. AUTO KOI NI) IN ALLEY. Su*|M*cte<l to la* tin* Machine that Killed Woman. An automobile with bloodstains on the wheels found abandoned in an nlley at Chlcnw Thursday is be lieved to be the machine which caus ed the death of Mrs. Albert Hehr on Monday night. Mrs. Behr, and her husband, a carpenter, were about to. cross the street when the car is said to .have swerved into Mrs. B hr, who was almost decapitated. The chauffeur di i not stop, it is reported, and dis appeared quickly into Lincoln park. A police captain whose son is be lieved to have been one of the fiv* 3 men in the car, is active in conduct ing the investigation. Three saloon keepers and the driver are said to have been the other occupants. YOENG MAN SUICIDES. STRICKEN DURING SERVICES. Hurried Home for «n Ojieration for Vi >endicitis. At Paduca, Ky., Rev. M. E. Dodd, pastor of the First Baptist church, while in his pulpit on Sunday morn ing was stricken with appendicitis. He was hurried to -his home, where an operation was performed in the afternoon. Rev. Dodd, while on his way to church recently was attack'd on the street and knocked down by a prominent tobacconist because be declined to allow the wife of the lat ter, who previously had been divorc ed, to sing in tlie Baptist choir. KILLS GIRL HE LOVED. Shot Her Mot her and Attempted to Kill Himself. At Schenectady. N. Y., because Mrs Jos phine Liopiello refused to consent to the marriage of her 16- year-old daughter, Angelina, to Lu- cane Milano, Milano pulled a revol ver from his pocket and shot the girl through the temple, causing her al most instant death, shot the mother through the tlww-wnd ten, after a futile attempt to cut-his own throat, took pofson. The mother and Milano will recover. Kill* Girl and Self. John Going shot and instantly kill ed his sweetheart, Miss Baton, Sun day in Amherst county, Virginia, be cause he found the young woman driving with his brother. He then turned the revolver upon himself. His wounds will probably prove fatal. Iveft n Note But Failed to Give Reason for Rash Act. William Clippard committed sul ci le by shooting himself through the h»art. No cause for the rawh act can be ascertained. Saturday he attended the circus at Newton and lost $75 on stuip of the games con nected with it. but In a note left to •his parents he stat d that it was no* the lose of the money that caused him to take his life, but other trou bles that no one would ever know He was the sou of Mr. Andrew (’hlje pard and was about twenty-s ven rears of age. He was unmarried and lived at home with his parents in Lincoln. N. C. Noah’* Liniment is the best remedy for Rheumatism, Sciatica, Lame Back, Stiff Joints and MiiSclds. Sore Thrbat Colds, Strains, Sprains, Cuts. Bruises Colic, Cramps, I* ... ^ Neuralgia, Tooth- -ry* At- 1 - ^ ache and at 1 ** » "I Nerve, Bone and Muscle Aches and Bains. The gen uine has Noah's Ark on every package. 25 cts. Sold by dealers In medicine. Sam ple by mail tree. Noah .Remedy Go., Richmond, Va. NOAHS LINIMENT Make* Ready to f Flght. Peru is m&kipg active preparation* for war with EcuaJor. Twenfr-four thousand soldier* are quartered In the vicinity of Lima while ten t.hou»- and more are •rationed near th* fron tier. WE CARRY OHLEN, HOE, and SIMOND’S INSERTED TOOTH SAWS Columbia Supply Company, «» 823 W. GervaU St., Columbia, S. C. J * CLASSIFIED COLUMN For Sale.—500 bushels fine cotto* seed, Laten strain. $2.00 per bu. f. o. b. R. E. Edward's, Elloree, S- C. Wanted—To buy wool, beeswax, tal low. Write for prices. Crawford & Co.. 508-510 Reynard St., Au gusta, Ga. Our $1 Adding Machines save time and worry. Guaranteed. Thousand* •old. Agents wanted. Haynes Mfg. Co., Rutherfordton, N. C. Kden Watermelon Seed for Sale at 76c per pound. The best flavored shipping watermelon grown. J. M Farrell, BlacksviUe, S. C. For Sale—Milch cows Jersey'*, grad* Jerseys snd Holstein* All of th« best breeding Registered Jersey male calves. M H. Sams, Jo*«* vine s c. Rheumatism! Not one ease in ten require internal treatment. AN here there is no swelling or fever Noah’s Liniment will accomplish more than any in ternal remedy. One trial will convince you. Noah’s Liniment penetrates; requires but little rubbing. Here’s the Proof Mr. W. H. Taylor, a resident of Rich mond, Va , writes: "For the past four years I have been traveling +>astern North Carolina, where I contracted ma laria and rheumatism. Kecently I have used Noah's Liniment with beneficial re sults, and take pleasure In recommend ing same to anyone suffering with rheu matism. ’ t caught cold and had a severe at tack of rheumatism In my left shoulder and could not raise my arm without much pain. I was persuaded t<v try Noah's Liniment, and in less than a week was entirely free from pain. I feel Justjfled in speaking ot it in the highest terms. A. Crooker, Dorchester, Mass.” Teachers wanted for excellent posi tions now vacant. Trustee* sup plied with Teachers Attractive booklet. ‘A Plan" free. Southern Teachers' Agency, Columbia. S. C. White Wyandotte Eggs 10c each. Big blocky birds, snow white. Fishe strain, trio buffs, trio white*, pair Columbian's S A. Fernell, R 1, Columbia, S. C. Insurance—One of the oldest annual dividend life insurance companies offers special contract to part or full time agents for this county. Drawer 70. Columbia. S. C. Wanted—Name* of those wanting teachers: names of teachers de- eiring positions No charge to school officials Address with stamp. Piedmont Teachers' Bu reau, Durham. N. C. Agent* Wanted.—$3 to $5 dally as sured selling our harness attach ment line holder Lightning sell er; cheap; exclusive territory giv en Write today. National Spec ialty Co., Dept. S., Lexington, Ky. Young Men Wanted for Railway Mall Clerks and other Government pos itions. Salary $800 to $1,600. Examinations soon Common ed ucation sufficient. Write for par ticulars. American Institute, Dept. 2 8. Dayton, Ohio. Wanted—Hardwoods, logs and lum- t** r. We are cash buyers of pop lar, cedar and walnut logs. Also want poplar, atJi, cottonwood, cy press and oak lumber. Inspection at your point. Easy cutting. Write ns Savannah Valley Lumber Co., Augusta, Ga. Late Seed Potatoes for sale, “New Dixie.” Good keepers and croppers. Practically bug and blight proof. I made 970 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 or before May 15. J. M. Hughes, Claremont, Va. Pedigreed English Setters, Puppie*, 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. Bargains in Pure Bred Stock—rick and rare Berkshire Boar Pig*, 4 Vfc months old from regular stock at $15 each. (One Bred Sow (Chin* Betsey No. 119177) Due to far row in April, at the small sum of $75has farrowed twice; flm Itf-' t»r 10 Dif*. *econ4 Hf. fit C,. B Leghorn Egg*—15 for $1; SQ fof $.90; 100 for $5. Id anawerlxg this ad mention this paper. A.. I. Sloop. China Grove, N. C. IMPORTANT NOTICE. For a short while we have decided to save our future customers agent*’ 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. Leas the discount as stated above. Write at once for catalogs and term* to the old established. MALONE’S MUSIC HO La*. Columbia, 8. 0. J.