The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, June 09, 1910, Image 4
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PRIEST
Little Girl Clnred Up.
WHO HAD HAD CRIMINAL RE LA*
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TIONB WITH HU WIFE.
J m GOOD WORT f (^T : (JAWS LAST HOPE GONE KILLED TWO MEN
THE CLEAN SPORTS LEAGUE OP
THE CAROLINAS.
laic is Capital brcstai is Sssth
Carafaa ,
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FOUND IN CELLAR
Before KiUlng the Guilty Meet, the
, ^
Outraged Husband Killed Hie Wife
5
After She Confeewed.
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Has Been Carefully Organised and
Arrangement* Made to Put It Into
Effective Operation.
SINCE FIRST OF YEAR
m-
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yvSfj.
Of St. Joseph’• Catholic School, at
Loulerllle, Ky., Where thb Victim
Lived W ith Her Parento When She
* Few Months Ago
-•*-•••■
■k.i
of
aliaer.
■mg
r. the eight-year*
Fred L. Kellner, of
Ky., waa murdered and
iliped. waa proven Monday
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i atTrQ umnit?mwrea
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was found in the cellar of St
Catholic School, at Clay am
_ - . . ^ .Joe
from her home.
The mystery surrounding the girl
disappearance, on December 8 last
•ompletely baffled the police, and
notwithstanding a search in all parts
of the United States and Canada, no
tidings of her whereabouts was re
celved until about 10 o'clock Monday
morning, when a plumber, searching
for a leak In the basement of the
^ school, discovered the body.
The detectives are working on tlje
theory that the girl was murdered
in the vicinity of the school, and af
ter attempts had been made to burn
. the body It was surreptitiously bur
led in the sub-cellar and quick lime
used to disintegrate the flesh.
Every bone In the chllds body was
broken afld the skull was crushed
and charred, showing that the at
tempt to burn the body, If such was
made had been Interrupted or the
perpetrator of the crime had chang
ed his mind regarding Its disposition
The finding of the body has arous
ed Intense excitement and a large
crowd surrounded the school all day
The ^child’s mother has not yet seen
the body, but after she recovered
from a collapse, she merely said: "I
have been relieved.”
The torso was found wrapped In
a piece of carpet, save for one limb
which was later discovered in a cor
ner of the cellar and hurled In the
clay floor of the basement to a depth
of perhaps three feet. The leak In
the water pipe, the cause of which
has not yet been learned, had caused
the water to flow until the floor was
covered.to a depth of three feet
The scene of the discovery Is only
five blocks from the Kellner home
and the school adjoins St. Johns
ohurch, where the Kellner family
worshiped. The body was very had
ly decomposed, and had probably
been In th e basement five months.
It wus to attend services at St.
John’fl. church on the morning of
December 8 last, that Alma left borne
about a quarter before 9, and seen
a few moments later as she neared
8L John’s by a druggist, who noticed
her stopping for a moment to play
with a cat which was sitting In the
window of his store. The durggist
was the last known person to see
the child alive. 1
The police are looking f<*r Joseph
Wendllng. former janitor at 8t
John’s Church, who since January
14, a little more than a month after
the disappearance of the Kellner
child, has been missing. Mrs. Lena
Wendllng, wife of the missing msn
and housekeeper for Father Schu
mann, pastor of St. John s Church, Is
under surveillance.
In a sworn statement made before
Capt. Carney, chief of detectives.
Mrs. Wendllng admitted waahinft
muddy clothes of her husband short
ly after the disappearance of the
Kellner girl. The detectives have
these clothes, trousers, shirt and bat,
and declare there are still blood
staina on them.
Wendllng is described by the de
tectives as being 27 years of age.
about 5 feet 10 Inches in height,
weight about 160 pounds, a small
black moustache and dark bair and
eyes. Mrs Wendllng Is 4 2. A lit
tle more than a year ago Wendllng
was arrested and fined for ImproperJp
conduct with a young girl.
Wendllng’s parents live at Oenlis,
Oote d’Or, France. According to the
wife's statement to Capt. Carney.
Wendllng was a deserter from the
French army. Father Schumann
said he had learned since Wendllng's
disappearance that be had left sev
eral position* without notice. His
departure from the church was a
surprise to the priest.
At South St. Paul, Minn.. J. P
Gibbons, a live stock comlaaion man,
shot and killed hla wife at their
home In that city. A few minutes
later Gibbons rang the door bell at
the residence of Father E. J. Walsh,
the young pastor of St. Augustine's
Roman Catholic church, and as the
door WSi opened Gibbons fired two
shots into the priest's head, killing
him almost Instantly. Gibbons was
arrested and brought to St. Paul, as
there had been talk of lynching at
South St. Paul, where th» priest was
popular. At the jail Gibbons aald his
wife had made a confession in which
she used the name of Father Walsh.
‘‘It Is a peculiar world, looking at
It from my angle.” he said. ’Tve
viewed It In several ways and don't
know much about It yet. I had a
wife once who did not care for me
but liked the companionship of oth
ers.
“When Father Walsh came to
South St. Paul I was Jubilant. He
appeared such a nice fellow and I
went to him and volunteered what
support was in my power to give
him. He thanked me and w e be
came fast friends. Then followed a
game of treachery and deceit—a
game that I waa not In on, yet deeply
Interested In.
■“I had Invited Father Walsh to
my home and Introduced him to my
wife. Whenever he called a box of
cigars were at his disposal. Mind
you. they were not the brand I smok
ed, but much better.
“The calls of Father Walsh were
becoming too frequent to please me.
He appeared at my home afternoons
when I was at my office, and spent
several hours In the company of Mrs.
Gibbons. Sometimes my children
were present, but more often were
not.
”1 said nothing to my wife, never
menMoning that I thought anything
of the frequent visits. I had plan
ned my little game, which worked so
successfully.”
Gibbons has lived in South St.
Paul for twenty-flve years. For a
loug time he was chief of police.
CUPID GOT REAL BUSY.
And (wptured All the I July Teachers
in a School.
at
A triple wedding occurred
Westminister on Tuesday. Miss Eva
Martin of Cnose Hill married Burt
Mitchell, a prominent Westminister
merchant; Miss Gussle Harper, of
Clinton married A. W. Lathem, a pro
gressive farmer of Westmiater; Miss
Augusta Smithson of Westminister
married Dr. Samuel C. Moon, a pop
ular Westminister physician. The
ceremony occurred* at two o'clock and
the three couples boarded No. 3 8 go
ing to Asheville for their honey
moon. The three bribes were teach
ers the past session In the Westmin
Ister. high school. This is believed
to be the first time on record when
Cupid has invaded a school and cap
tured the entire teaching force with
the exception of the superintendent
who in this instance Is already m
rled.
SOLON'S LOSE THIR JOBS.
Nearly All Alaltama Legislators Were
Ij>ft at Home.
:V
POLITICAL SINNER REPENTS
Tom Watson Announces Return to
Democratic Party.
The Hon. Thomas E. WatsoQ, once
,»A Jpemocfatlc member of Congress,
twice nominated by the Populist par
ty for the Presidency of the United
States, and who has long been one
of the chief controlling factors In
politics, as a Populist, in Georgia, an
nounces In a card, issued Tuesday,
Ms return to the Democratic party
His language is strong, forceful and
leaves
doubt that
has
lO UOIlMrefiB
.7 f w 1 1111
Drank Carbolic Acid.
Albert Betts, aged about 67, de
spondent over hi^ inability to secure
employment In Greenville, committed
' Tuesday morning by taking a
of flgrbollc add. He left a note
hie reasons for taking hla
and biding hla friends and
! good-bye.
A 'Montgomery dispatch says show
ing, It Is claimed, the reversion of
sentiment since the last Legislature
which enacted the State-wide prohi
bition and other laws, only eleven
men out of the 105 composing the
Alabama Legislature will be return
ed to office. This fact developed Mon
day in the first official compilation
names of the new solons. Two
preachers were nominated In the re
cent primaries and will be elected,
n three counties the Democrats put
no candidates forward, and the Re
publican nominees will be elected
without opposition.
GRIPPED HY FIERCE BLIZZARD.
Damage Done by Htomf In Lake Su
perior Section.
A special to the Detroit News from
c *
Calumet says that Lake Superior and
the surrounding country are In the
grip of a fierce blizzard, with high
northerly winds and a heavy snow.
All boats are seeking ports of re
fuge from the gale. A heavy sea is
running all along the southern coast.
No -boats are reported within reach
of the wireless. Wire and train ser
vice are practically demoralized.
DEATH OF AN OLD HERO.
The Clean Sports League of the
Carolines has been carefully organ
ized and elaborate arrangements
have been made to put into operation
an effective working machinery. This
organisation will have no legislative
power per se but will direct Its efforts
along educational lines. The bead-
quarters are In the Y. M. 0. A.
building, Charleston.
It bss been organized to popularize
athletic sports and to Improve the
standard of athletlc-actlvltlaa. so aa
to harmonize them with the high
purpose of education and good citi
zenship. "Sport for sport’s sake” Is
Its motto.
In 1909 one hundred and nineteen
professional players of the National
League were suspended for rowdy
ism and other offences. Undoubtedly
many offences were overlooked. Sim
ilarly in amateur ranks there Is a
continual violation of rules and prin
ciples which reflects upon our boast
of being true sportsmen. Amateurs
too often do things they hope will
not come to light. Frequently spec
tators and rooters are unjust in their
actions not always In accord with
what Is known to be right. The
Clean Sports League of the Caro-
linias is an educational organization
composed of the leading colleges and
Y. M. C. A.’s of the Carolinas.
It is endorsed by the—
1. Southern Inter-CoHeglate Asso
ciation.
2. Athletic League of North Amer
ica.
3. South Carolina Inter-Collegiate
Association.
4. Carolina Federation of Y. M.
C. A.'s.
5. Charleston Amateur Athletic
Federation.
The following adopted code of eth
ics is simple—fair to the individual
to the large as well as to the small
colleges, schools or other organiza
tions It appeals to the manhood
In man. and all lovers of clean sport
are asked to support It.
1. Both the home team and the
home town should treat the visiting
team as a guest.
2. Both players and spectators
should recognize good plays of the
visiting team by suitable cheering.
3. Players should play ball fair
and be good losers.
4. The umpire and referee have
difficult tasks to perform. Specta
tors should accord them their moral
support. The players shoald extend
them hearty thanks as they leave the
field.
•5. Condemn all use of profane
language on the field.
Lists will be circulated In every
town In the Carolinas, and every man
and every boy big enough to swing
a bat Is requested to add his signa
ture, with the understanding that an
honest effort will be made to live up
to these principles. Such action will
add greatly to the pleasure and dig
nlty of athletic actlvties of the Car
oltnas.
Over Eleven Million Dollars in Peti
tions for Ohiirters and Commis
sions.—The Fees Paid the State
Larger Than Ever Before.—They
May Break the Record.
PINK FRANKLIN LOSES HIS CARE
.*■ .
AND WILL HANG.
JEALOUSY PROBABLY CAUSES A
DOUBLE MURDER.
For Sale—100 bushels fine COttoH
seed, Laten strain.. 11.00 per bu.
f. 0. b. R. E- Edward’s, Ellorna,
8. C.
The United States Supreme Court
Has No Jurisdiction In the Case
and Dismisses It.
Negro Man in Jealous Rage ghoots
Down Two Negro Women In a
Wanted—To buy Hides, Wool, Bees
wax, Tallow, etc. Write for prices.
Crawford A Co., 508-510 Reynolds
Street, Augusta, Ga.
Field.
GOING IX)K HIS RECORDS.
Explorer Cook Getting Ready to Go
to Greenland.
The New York American says the
mystery of the whereabouts of Dr
Frederick A. Cook has been solved
He is In Scotland preparing for his
trip to Etah, whence he plans to
bring back his records of his dlscov
ery of the North Pole and his In
struments which are cached there.
He also Intends to bring back the
two Esqulmo boys who accompanied
him on his dash to the North Pole
Chester Beecrolf, of Pelham Manor,
N. Y.. has announced that he will
sail from EtaJi on June 15 with the
Bernier expedition to the Arctic in
the hope of finding the record, which
Dr. Frederick A. Cook loft in the
North.
DIED WHILE RAISING FLAG.
Flag Wire (lot Crossed With a Live
Electric JWre.
Served on the Merrlmac in Battle
With the Monitor.
The Rev. A. A. Jones, aged 67
years, one of the oldest active mem
lowing a stroke of paralysis. At the
Wms of the Hampton Roads engage- from h revolver. Jealbuay la atleg-
Wreck Train.
Inch iron
•witch frog
railway
ment between the Virginia and Mon
itar Mr. Jones was on the Virginia
and was in one of the last two boats
that Isft the Virginia when she waa
subsequently blown up by her own
men off Cr&ney Island.
Burned la Ho’
At Eaufanla, Okla., Pucnobojo
Lowe, Peter Beaver and the latter’s
wife and child, all from Weleetka.
Okla.. were banted to death in a fire
which destroyed a rooming house
early Monday.
Bearer and Lowa
The patriotism of John Gierlow-
skl, a middle aged Polander, has
cost him his life. While trying to
hoist the Stars and Stripes for Me
morial Day on the roof of Turner
Hall. In Glendale, Pa., a copper wire,
on which the flag was strung, came
In contact with a live HgJU wire. The
shock which travelled to Gierlowskl
knocked him down, and entangled
him In the flag and wire, he rolled
to the ground, thirty-five feet below.
He died half an .hour later, either
from the electric shock or the In
juries received in the fall.
The State says over 111,000,000
repesents the amount invested In en
terprises in South Carolina since the
first oY the yeSr which Is ah unpre
cedented redord for the State as to
the eapltal need,
ces companies were organized and re
chartered, but the majority of the
$11,000,000 represents new business
Tbe records In the secretary of
state’s office shows that to April 1
charters were Issued to companies
with a capitalization of over $7,000,-
000. Since April 1 several large com
panies have been chartered and re
chartered.
The Charter of the Pelzer Manu
facturing company will expire at an
early date and a new charter in per
petuity waa secured. This concern
has a capital of $1,000,000 and was
chartered by the legislature In 1880
for a term of thirty years. The
Pelzer Manufacturing company is a
pioneer In the texiie industry in this
State and la one of the most suc
cessful manufacturing concerns.
Another large company to receive
a charter since April 1 was the San
tee River Cypress Lumber company
of Ferguson in Oraneehurg county.
The company has a capital of $1,-
500,000. In connection with a gen
eral lumber business, the company
will do a general mercantile busi
ness.
The secretary of state has turned
over to the State treasurer the sum
of $7,051.91 as rharter fees received
since the first of the year and up
to April 1. Since April 1 over $2.-
500 has been received by the sec
retary a* charter fees which will be
counted on tbe presnt quarter.
The total amount received as char
ter fees from January 1 to April 1,
1909, was $5,561.48, which Is nearly
$2,000 less than for the present year.
The total amount received in char
ter fees by the secretary of State for
the year 1909 was over $20,000.
Judging the Increase over the first
quarter of the year of 1910 and
1 909, it Is estimated Chat at least
$3 0,000 will be secured from char
ter fees, which amount will be the
largest in the history of the State.
The number of dissolutions for the
present year has Ven less than for
1909 to the present time.
The records in the secretary's of
fice show that the Industries that
have been chartered are varied. There
have been a large number of com
panies chartered with capital stocks,
ranging from $10,000 to $100,000.
A number have been incorporated
with over $1,000,000.
The larg'^t number of companies
to be chartered were la Georgetown,
Charleston and Greenville. The in
crease In these counties has been
most marked.
There has been special activity in
real estate. 'More than a score of
large companies .have been organiz
ed in Charleston and Georgetown,
and especially Georgetown, which
oounty makes a fine showing for real
estate companies.
In Charleston real estate values
are said to have made phenomenal
advances during the past few years
Property Is said to have doubled in
value. This fact Is shown bhat at
least a dozen 801)81801181 real es
tate companies, backed by the lead
ing business men of Charleston, have
been chartered during the first thro
n.onbhs of the yea*. The cap ♦ .1 of
these companies average from $ n--
000 to over $200,000.
A number of smaller in Insides
l eer organized with subst>>ile!
Pink Franklin, the South Carolina
negro, whose conviction for tbe mur
der of Special Constable Valentine
led to an attack on the so-called la
bor contract laws of the South,
will suffer the death penalty, ac
cording to the declaion Tuesday of
the supreme court of the United
States.
» It was claimed by Franklin that
the constable came to hla home at
night and entered without^announc
ing himself ae an officer of the law.
It was while in Franklin’s cabin that
HTTgrcar Inatgfa- f v,l * nt1n « *** mortally wounded by
a shot.
Former Attorney General Bona
parte became Interested In the case
and after the negro lawyers for the
condemned man had appealed the
case to the supreme court of the
United States, Mr. Bonaparte filed a
brief in Franklin’s behalf. He con
tended that Franklin had a right to
resist arrest, which was sought to be
made on a warrant Issued under an
unconstitutional law.
This law was the so-called "labor
contract law,” which provided that
agricultural laborers under contract
to work were guilty of misdemeanors
if they break their contracts after re
ceiving wages in advance, Mr. Bona
parte denounced this law as an at
tempt to reduce the negroes of the
South to captivity.
Justice Day, in announcing the de
cision said the court could Inquire
only into federal questions. He said
the question of resistance of arrest
under ait .unconstitutional law was
not raised in time in the State court.
'Mr. Bonaparte’s connection with
the case was confined to the filing of
a brief for the defense. Soon after
his brief was filed, the two negro
lawyers for Franklin announced that
Mr. Bonaparte was not of counsel in
the case.
(Jacob Moorer, one of Franklin's
lawyers, said that Mr. Bonaparte had
been employed by rich negroes in
Philadelphia, without any knowledge
of the two who had taken the case
up to the supreme court of the Unit
ed States.
Evidently In a jealous fit of rage,
James Robinson shot and instantly ,
killed Willie Brown, about 35 years
old, and her mother, Fannie Brown,
all the parties being negroes, rn the
lands of the McNamee Kaolin works, |
near Bath, in. Aiken county, Tuesday
morning about eight o'clock.
(The only eye-witness was" a tittle
boy. From evidence given by him
at the coroner's inquest, it seems
that the two women were hoeing cot-
toirtn a tittle patch near their home,
when Robinson was seen to come out
of .the woods nearby with a rime in
one hand and a satchel in the oth
er.
Seeing that he was mad about
something, the woman asked him
what was the matter. Saying, with
an oath, “don’t ask me what's the
matter,” he raised his gun to the
level of his waist and shot Willie
Brown, the dughter, the bullet en
tering the right side of her body
just above the waist and lodging in
her body.
Running off ten or twelve feet,
Robinson turned and shot twice at
the mother, both shots taking effect,
one in the back and coming out
through her right breast, and tho
other entering at the thigh and com
ing out behind. Turning then, he
fled to the woods, were be met Caro
line Jeter, colored, who asked him
what he had been shooting at. Giv
ing an evasive reply, he continued
his flight and has not as yet been
caught.
The coroner held an inquest over
the two bodies Tuesday afternoon,
but from the testimony nothing was
gathered as to the cause of the shoot
ing, although from outside sources
if is learned that Robinson and the
younger woman had been living in
iutimate terms for some time, and
he must have heard some reports
that aroused his jealousy, causing
him to commit the double homicide.
He has be°n employed in the South
ern Railway yards at Augusta, Ga.,
for the past two years, making oc
casional visits to his former home
in Bath. The coroner's verdict laid
the crime at his feet.
For Sale—Juniper telegraph and tel
ephone poles, 20 feet to 65 .feet
long, 4 to 8 Inch tops.. Reeder
'Bros, Edmund, 8. C.
Eggs for Hatching—superior quality.
Buff Orpington $l-50. Brown Leg
horn $1.00 sett!ng. Geo. S. Aus
tin, 738 Glenn St., AflaSTabJ GA.
SAYS THEY ARE ALRIGHT.
Supreme Court Upholds Jim Crow
Car Ijiw.
.iv<>
His Prediction True.
Samuel Fords announced that he
was to be married Monday night and
that It would cost him his life. When
Ford
and killed him with several' shots
ed to have been the motive,
tragedy occurred at Pollock.
The
Dry Dock Waa Sunk.
A Manila dispatch saya the exam
ination of the United State# dry dock
Dewey has strengthened the belief
of, those of the navy who fiave held
that the damage was done deliberate
ly by conspirators against the gov
ernment. _ %
—... ■ » + »
Cotton Acreage Reduced.
Reports from the _ various cotton
caplt.Kt included under this might
be mentioned the large number of
mer. -. 1 ie companies that have hu n
chartered in almost every town n
the state. This would Indicate that the
mercantile business is good. ’ F^w
dissolutions of this nature of busi
es have been reported.
More companies have been organ
ized during the year for the pro
pose of conducting farms than !u Him
history of the State. Two companies
:>vn been organized with a cantU
more than $35,000. Generally a mer
cantile company Is conducted In eon-
reetton with these companies.
Other corporations organized h -
elude banks, buildings and loan as
sociations, realty companies, tele
phone companies, vegetable com
panies, boat lines and loan companies.
The organization of texiie com
panies has been unusually active.
Something new for the State has been
the corporation of the two underwear
factories for Greenville. Each of the
companies has a capital of $50,000
and will manufacture high grade un
der wear. These orrmptmtrs are con
trolled by South Carolina capital.
Several knitting mills have been or
ganized with small capitals.
An attempt to have the Supreme
Court of the United States pass on
tbe authority of common carriers in
Inter-state commerce to make "Jim
Crow” regulation met with failure
on Tuesday when the Court dismissed
the so-called Chiles appeal from its
docket.
The question arose In a suit which
J. Alexander Chiles, a negro, brought
suit for damages against the Ches
apeake and Ohio Railway Company.
(Chiles bought a through ticket
from Washington. D. C., to Lexing
ton, Ky. At Ashland, Ky., all the
passengers except those In a sleeper
were required to take other coaches
Over the objection of a brakeman, ht
insisted on riding in a coach set
aside for white passengers. He was
compelled by the conductor to go In
to the coach for colored persons.
In the suit for damages the rail
road relied on the defence that it
had acted in conformity with its reg
ulations. The supreme court of
Kentucky found these regulations in
regard to the seperate coaches for
the two races to he reasonable. In
asmuch as Chiles had been furnished
accommodations equal to those pro
vided for white passengers, according
to the trial jury, a verdict was ren
dered for the railroad company. From
this Chiles appealed. The Supreme
Court affirmed the decision of the
State Court.
Ih-stmotive Tornado.
Many houses in the village of
Guthrie, W. Va., were destroyed by
a tornado which passed up the Elk
Valley Monday afternoon. Several
persons were injured and much live
stock killed. The coal and coke rail
way was a heavy sufferer.
SagTS] WorlcFT
Greatest
NOAHS
LINIMENT
MEETS DEATH ON TRACK.
Two Young Mon Hun Over and Kill
ed by a Train.
Three Were Killed.
When a northbound freight train
on the Mobile and Ohio railroad waa
wrecked Monday, near Scooba, Miss.,
three men lost their lives, consider
able property waa damaged and sev
eral are reported Injured.
Braved Been Hastily.
While robbing a bee hive that had
been made in tbe coping of the Bap
tist church, at Johnson, Mr. Pariah
waa ao badly stung as $0 require the
service* of two physicians to relieve
him of the pain. About 71 pound*
of honey waa found, an
Shuford Abernethy was instantly
killed and Robert Hodges perhaps
fatally injured by westbound through
freight No. 75 at Bridgewater, N. C.,
Monday evening at 8 o’clock. Two
trains, 72 and 75, were to pass at
Bridgewater. Abernethy and Hodges
were walking along the sidetrack,
keeping out of the way of train No.
72 on the main line, and evidently
did not see train 75 as it rushed up
on them. Abernetfiy was frightfully
mangled and was doubtless killed In
stantly. One of Hodges’ feet was
cut off and he is otherwise seriously
Injured, but there is a fighting chance
for his recovery.
Cause* Serious Sickness.
"Watch the fly as he stands on the
lump of sugar, industriously wiping
his feet. He is wiping off the dis
ease germs; rubbing them. QU Jthe.
sugar that you are going to Jat,
leaving the jjojson for you to swal-
low. There la special danger when
flies drop into such fluid as milk.
This forma an ideal culture tnaterirti
for the bacillus. A few germs.wash
ed from the body of one fly may de
velop into millions within a fow
hours, and the person w-bo drinks
such milk will receive large dose-,
of bacilli, which may later cau&e
serious sickness.”
Remedy
•cka and all Nerve. Bone end Mu trie Act—
and Pun*. The mnuina ha* Noah * Ark on
package 2 V . 50c and St.OOhy aOdeai-
er* in medicine everywhere. Smmflt I* mtmtlfrm
Ca. MA—d. Va. and
Wanted—Names of those wanting
teachers; names of teachers de
siring positions. No charge to
school official*: Address with
stamp. Piedmont Teachers’ Bu-
.reau, Durham. K. G.
Wanted—Hardwoods, logs and lum
ber. We are cash buyers of pop
lar, cedar and walnut logs, ^iso
want poplar, aah, cottonwood, cy
press and oak lumber. Inspection
at your point. Easy cutting. Writs
us. Savannah Valley Lumber Oo„
Augusta, Ga.
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 S7.1 up.
Pianos, from $225 up.
Less the discount as stated above.
Write at once for catalogs and terms
to the old established.
Clip this and send for catalogue.
MALONE’S MUSIC HOUSE,
Columbia, 8. C.
no cure: nopayii
Be prepared for an emergency by having
a bottle of no
NOAH’S COLlO RBmIDY
on hand. More animal* die from colic than
all other non-contagiou* disease* combined.
Sine out of every ten cases would have been
Cured if NOAH’S *5M*DY hfl'
been given in time.
Isn't a drench or dO| e.
but ts a remedy gi-’en
on the tongue, ao elm-
pie that « woman rr
child can give It. If if
fails to cure, your
A. If
money refund
your dealer cannot
■upply send Me tn
stumps and we wh
mail a bottle. Noah
Remedy C'rv. Inc.,
Kl<
licbmond, V*
Docto r
for
liQUORaNd DRUG
HABITS
mnd
SELECTED
NERVOUS*!
iCAaSEiS;
4
COMIB
PLACE
GRtXNVJlLE^C
C. No
Hypodermicj
ujed in'
treatment
of Alcoholism
VHUKEY
DRUGS ReduoMl
Gr*du*lly.
V
DOJYOU FEEL LET.DOWN AND UNFIT FOR WORK
r *
DR. KINGS BLOOD & LIVER PILLS
WILL BRING BACK YOUR ENERGY THEY
BOOST your LIVER and TONE
your SYSTEM ^
MAKE YOU FEEL GOOD AND LOOK GOOD TOO
NOW IS ALSO THE SEASON FOR
4
A Hint to the Heart lees.
“The lamp-post and the common
people.”—Senator Cummings
The poor may starve, you do not
mind.
It troubles not your pampered
sleep.
Yet you may wake some day to find
That rope is cheap.
Your money moves the lawyer's Jaw,
It buys the scoundrels of our land;
But fhouvh - you overthrow the law,
Our lamp-post stand.
You men whom lust of power con
trols.
You men who rise on human
wrecks;
You have no hearts, you have no
sjuIs,
But you have necks
‘—J. J DOOLING.
It Is predicted that trolley fares
must rlso, hut as almost everyone
feelc that they can afford automo-
lilles, what do we care?
I
TROUBLES .
DR. KINGS DIARRHOEA & DYS
ENTERY CORDIAL
<
The war againat consumption RIGHTS ALL WRONGS AND IS GUARANTEED,
should have the sympathetic co-oper- ' , ■ ' . , .
atlon of everyone. That Co-operation
may be effectively given by cloae at
tention to sanitation. Foul air is
one of the moet prolific causes of
the disease, yet how many people
there are who seem to dread pure
air. They sleep with tbe windows and
door* of their rooms hermetically
*>*■ , - • • *
PRICE OF EACH 20c.
L ;
A j n your home
will force water to kitchen, bath room, laundry, barm, and
anywhere about the place. Ton may have both soft and
hard wator. and have it hot aa wall a* cold. No alevated
or attic task to treaaa or leak.
Columbia Supply Co.