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'5> TOWNS two firemen die sacijAd bokn AaiAcDettk ai l«*ry tf a Great 1 ^ Tarriila ■taj rMpk ly lernaie FIGHTING A STUBBORN FIRK IN CfprOF NEW YORK. 'ITALIAN EARTHQUAKEQ Orwit IN*Mter Befalla Italy.—Death .«ad Devastation are Oaoaed by the Severe Earthquake*-—Troops Has 4 tea to Render Aid.—Survivors ^ Flee In Terror Into the Country. A dtipateh from Naples says s Uqnor* and Die Stuffs Stored in Building Produced Large Volumns of Deadly Fumes. Two firemen were killed and more than a score were overcome by atifl ing fumes in fighting a stubborn VALID GEORGIA POUTICS WANTS HER MONEY I CLASSIFIED CAUSE REIGN OF TTOROB IN VALLADOLlb, MEXICO- 4 (■partial Deewaa la Fmftri Rea4ere4 by J«if e DeYtre ^ ’ WATSON AND EDWARDS THE WIRES HOT. MAKE ANOTHER CHAPTER PENDING IN wax, Wantdd—To buy Hides, V6bl, Bees* , Tallow, etc. Write W pricea. Yuratan Indians Rise Up and Mas sacre the Mexicans and Spread Terror in That Region. The most serious uprising with which the Mexican government has had to deal In a long time has start ed In the State of Yucatan, and the ABOUT BUYING COTTON savers earthquake shock caused s number of d«aths and much property damage In Central Campania early Tuesday. - The disturbance appears to have, centered in the Province of Avelllna. . j Meager Ihftrmatlon received this week indicate^ that the greatest dam- age was dons at^Mtrt ( Avellina Pro vince.) Calltri Is said to have been fumes in lighting a warehouse fire near the North river front in 'New York Monday. Ten of the firemen overcome were I troo P» a r® being rushed to the dis- caught in a back draugh on ttvelturbed area. In the meantime, re fourth floor of the building. ~ Two I ports which have reached Vera Cruz men who managed to avoid the very I Indicate that there has been much worst of the burst of flame, and bloodshed and that the Insurgents dense smoke, screamed from a win-1 are preparing for a battle with the Counsel Jor Defense Announces Case Will Be Appealed to the Supreme t Omit.—Action Test of Constitu tionality of 1010 Act.—Law Pro- vidcM Six Per Cent. RedwctloB. Judge DeVore has handed down on order sustaining the magistrate dow for help. Ladders were raised government forces, which is sure to In the cotton tare case, brought to Mr. Watson Threatenr to Prosecute, - and Oongressmaii Edwards Says “Make Charges Good.” The Atlanta Journal says a new chapter was written Tuesday In the controversy between Congressman Charles Gordan Edwards, of Savan nah, ‘ and Thomas E. Watson, of Thomson, concerning charges of Im morality made by Watson - against Edwards. Tarf telegrams weVu ex- chsnged In an Intereating passage at ,arms. f, Mr. Watson threatens to prose cute Congressman Edwards for false ton Tare Act of 1910. Messrs. Lyles snd the unconscious men were car-1 come soon. tied down. [ The Independent newspaper, El 'Fireman Timothy Colter died on Dlctamen, publishes dispatches from the sidewalk after having been car- Merida, the capitai of Yucatan, to and ky' 68 - attorneys for W. G. Mul- ried from an upper floor, where he] the effect that forty persons w^re lins, of Columbia, who was charged had lain uncoawcious for more than I killed by the Maya Indians oh Sat-r with violation of the Act, state that an hour Th a pool of water. Fire- urday. Further dispatches received they will appeal the case to the man William Healey waa taken out here state that 6,000 of these Supreme Court, half destroyed and twenty people are of the building dead. Three of the Indian insurgents sacked the The Cotton Tare Act provides that reported to have been killed at that | injured firemen are still In a hospi- town of Valladolid, 95 milea to the 6 per cent, of the bale of cotton place*' ^ -*7’” • *1 tal in a serious condition. The southeast of Merida, killing all the I sold shall be deducted for tare. Other deaths occurred at VAlata, I tire was In a five-story building oc- principal government employes, the Heretorfore the amount was twenty test the constitutionality of the Cot- swearing^ Mr. Edwards^ challenges nearby, and It Is feared that fa- cupled by the free storage bonded | chief of police and others, telitiea will he reported from other I warehouse. The loes is estimated at villages wblth for a time are cut ofr[|7&,000. from all communication with Naples. . The shock occurred at 3.07 Tues-1 day morning while the people were] still in their beds. Many houses at | Calltri tumbled, hurrying the occu pants in the ruins.. ^ Those who escaped death of ser ious Injury fled terror stricken from their -homes and tflto the Country. The dangerous character of the fire became apparent when the first gangs ot firemen entered In with •hose. A large part of the contents of the warehouse consisted of 11- They seized rifles and pistols and instituted a reign of terror. Many of the inhabitants - of Valladolid are fleeing to Merida. The gunboat Morolos has already left Vera Cruz, with 600 soldiers aboard, while the Yucatan gunboat pounds, as is the case in other States. 1. That the Act of the Legisla lure deprived the defendant of the equal protection of the laws. 2. That the Act of the Legislature deprives the defendant of his lib I erty and property without due pro qqors and anallne dyes, and noxious Zaragoza is lying In the harbor ready cess of law. fumes from these burning substances caused the firemen to drop by tha dozen, it was only by heroic work hjon* wanted to don stf«*t clothes I that their companions succeeded in and as a result many subsequent suf-l saving several of the unconscious to take 1,000 additional troops, who I Judge DeVore says as to the first are expected soon to arrive from the] point: “It Is well settled that the Interior. Legislature has a right to make dif Railroad and telegraph commun-1 ferent classes, and so long as all Iration between Merida and the members of the same class are treat fered from exposure. men. Fire Chlpf Croker personally scene of the trouble la now cut off I ed alike, if the classification be reas Troops were dispatched from all I directed the reacue. I Twenty miles of the Yucatan rail- ] qbkrtfers into the affected district as I Lieutenant Campbell was over-1 road have been destoyed by the In- s6on as the loss of life and property I come wJille at the head of a rescue I dians. It is reported that many tel-J dkmage became known to the gov-J party. He was missed when the par-1 egraph operators have been killed element and'officers of nearby cities | ly returned to .the street and anoth-1 or are held as prisoners. The jefe enable, the Courts will not declare such legislation unconstitutional Citing a case, Judge DeVore conclud es: “The defendant, being engaged in the busines of buying cotton News from Salerno, at the head ofj er detatchment ha*d to enter the politico and the judge of the crim- comes within the classification made the Gulf of Salerno, thirty miles east building at great risk and save him Inal court are amgng the dead. of Naples, Is to the effect that the He was revised with the many oth- shock was distinct there and caused I eti, over whupi a big force of am-1 considerable damage. Details are I ^ulance surgeons worked like beavers | lacking. \ * 7 ! Ithe sldewrflks nearby. Tbe%hoc!r was felt for ten set^nds , ecarchcrs %>lng through the build- in the province of Avelllno. It was Upg after the (lames were under con- also felt %trongly. *but for a shorter Jtrol stumbled over the bodies of sev- timq,. at Coxensa, Paolos, Ganiaa- eral of the firemen who had dropped xasot Reggio. Potenza, Beneventd. ip their* trackd. ' Moat oT them wei’e Capua and Melfi. It is said, .haw-1 revived,- tint Ldward Donevell may ever, that- the ,damage In these I die as a result of Inhalation of smoke tqwof wks not serious an4 that | and tWm«M. there was ho loss of life. The shocks was first lelt In the dapartmetyjs of Raslllcata, (Jlaehria and Sicily• Although centred in tfe* Frovlnce of Avelllno, it- extend ed throughout the provinces of Ben- evento, Campobassa, Casert and Naples. -A panic waa created at Terre An- ■ unslata and Terre Del Greco, where The rebels are strongly entrench ed in anticipation of the advance of the federal troops. Maximiliano Ramlrex Bonilla, the former rebel by the legislature, and, in my opln ion, is not deprived of the equal pro tection of the laws On the second point Judge De Vqre says that the test seems to he leader, and Col Victor Montonegro I whether the regulations of the Legis BRAINS KNOUKTD OUT. are said to be at the head of the uprising. The towns of Tinum, Uayma, and Timkas, all between Merida and Val ladolid, have been attacked, but the reports say that the families of all the residents, except officials, have been unmolested. To what extent the insurgents pillaged at these places has not yet been learned. lature are reasonable. "If they are unreasonable,” he says, “then such legislation is unconstitutional; if they are reasonable, then, in the | exercise of its police power the Legislature has the right to enact the law-. In the absence 6f a statute on the subject, the reas- [onableness of a contract Is a ques tion for the judiciary, but if there An Unknown .Man Tric« to Jump Off | • Fast Moving Train. An unknown white man In trying] to jump from Southern train No. 30, north of Toccoa, Oa., was kill-1 the population live in constant fear | ^ Monday night. His brains were A strict censorship has not been I is legislation on the subject, and the of na eruption from Mount Vesuvius. 'Report* from Rnscllicata says I apd the sleeping town waa arrouaed Potfea. Similar reports cpme from Psolu «a4 Cstasaro in the eompart- naeut of Claebrla and from Palermo [ on the northern coast of Sicily. battered by the rocks In a cut as the porter held his legs to keep him from Jumping out of a train window. Passengers on the train noticed | ffiat any Americans are involved, the peculiar actions of the traveler for some time before the accident. established. The original telegrams giving the first details of the up rising were sent before the govern ment took charge of the news. It is understood that the cause of the trouble Is dissatisfaction on the part of the Indians over the ac tlon of government officials regard ing lands, but the exact point of controversy has not been made clear In the reports. It is not thought A CARKLKSH NURSE. The provlnc* of Avelllno occupies I Finally he went Into the rear of the tha central part of the compartment | coach. After a while the porter, who] Causes the Death of an Infant in of Campqnia and is directly east of Maple*. Calltri, which according to | reports, suffered the most, is a town •f #00 Inhabitants. It is situated oa tha Osanto river, several miles northeast of Coma. It waa the darkest hour of the morning when the shock was felt and the sleeping town was arorsed by the shaking of walls, the rattling of fnrntture and the falling of plas ter from the ceilings. In a moment feared that some trouble was brew ing, followed the stranger. He] arrived Just in time to see him Jump out of the window The por ter caught his legs, but the body of the traveler out of the window as the train passed through a deep cut, the body of the man struck the projecting rocks and his brains were beaten out against t.he bank The body was taken back to Toc coa. The man carried a ticket read- I panic seised the 20,000 inhabitants ing from Augusta to New York, but wrho live in daily fear of a seismic | no other means of identification. disaster. Half naked men. women sad children fled from their homes | FIFTY THOUSAND NTOLEN. screaming wlt4» terror. JThey had In their mind**visions of a Messina and the horror of Reggio. Recently there wpt gossip ^bout a prediction that the approach of Halley’s comet por tended the end of the world. Th* authorities kept their heads, but they could not stay the mad rush for the squares and open districts Wild confusion prevailed and the frightened ones could not be reason ed with; could not be stopped. In t^e squares hundreds threw them- work,n * : on selves upon their faces and Implored | mouncjjment the mercy of the Almighty. Then the religion fervor found expression Hope to ratoh tfte Thieves When Pa pers Are Offered. _ * * That William Miner, president of the William M. Miner Company, of Chicago, was robbed of $50,000 while en route from Chicago to New York last Thursday night has become known. Detectives in New York have been the case, but no an had heretjofore been made, as it was hoped that th thieves might be caught while try Charleston. At Charleston Little Fraser Graff, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Graff, who was permitted by the carelessness of his nurse to drink concentrated lye In the house of the nurse Monday afternoon died Sunday at the Roper hospital.. Carrie James, the nurse, who was arrested Monday and held by the police department charged w-lth crim inal carelessness was liberated M<fb- day afternoon following the inquest over the infant's body. The father of the child said that he thought it was simple carelessness on the part if the nurse with no maliciousness and the verdict of the jury was that the child met an accidental death in the way stated as a result of care lessness of the nurse. The nurse is only 16 years old and had just been employed. STUCK TO THE PLASTER. Woman Put* Fifty IMlar Hill on Husband's Hack* A short time ago a merchant of Legislature had the power to pass such a law-, then the statute con trols." Citing several cases. Judge DeVore concludes: ‘The cotton buyers and cotton sellers differ as to the amount of bagging and ties that should be plac ed on a bale of cotton. The Legis lature Intervened and established scale of cotton tare, and, so far as I am able to judge, the legislation is reasonable. “Cotton is one of the chief pro ducts of this State. There are great many persons and a great deal of property and a number of organ! zations engaged in the cotton bus! ness. "What the tare Is In this State what It Is in Liverpool or what it 1 in New York, are not matters for thi court to consider. This Court will presume that the Legislture took into consideration the conditions con trolling the marketing of cotton and enacted the proper law regarding the tare. But this is not a new ques tlon in this state. A law fixing tare on cotton seems to have been enact ed as far back as 1846. “Cotton buyers have a great many customers, many of whom are ignor ant and I can readlty see how such legislation as this may be both wise and beneficial” The judgment of the magistrate is therefore, affirmed by Judge De Vo re W\ G. Mullins, a cotton buyer of Columbia, was arrested a few week? ago for violation of the Act. and the case was a test case to determine the constitutionality of the Act. It is stated that $1,800,000 is involved in the Act. It will be carried to the Supreme Court. The State Farmers Union is Interested, and all dealers Iq half organised processions to thel*^ to dispose of some of the ne- Middletown, N. Y., on retiring for in cotton are watching the proceed b ' B--. , [ shrine of St. Andrew’s, the protec tor of the town- Others climbed to the sanctuary of Monte Verglne. After several hours of frantic en treaty the authorities succeeded In rOOatabllshtng a semblance of calm and relief squads were organized. It was then found that no one had been killed, although an aged man had dJ*4 daring the excitement. Many houses were damaged as were the belfries ot / the churches. ' As ta usually the case the inhab itants refused to re-enter their homes, Tearing that another quake would occur. Throughout the day the police were busy bringing to gether 4he scattered members of faiftUle* and reassuring the frighten ed one*. gotlable paper included in the los amount. The money was in a traveling bag which he had at his side in his berth In the sleeping car. He did not discover his loss until he reach- the night left some bills on the top of a dresser. He had a lame back and asked his wife to prepare a po rous plaster. 'She did so, but after] heating it accidently dropped it on the dresser. In picking it up she! ing with great interest. KILLED IN RACE FIGHT. ed his hotel In New York. About Ljhi not notice the $50 bill clinging half the sum was In the shape of a negotiable letter of-credit on which payment has been stopped. WORKED GAME IN PRISON. Two Convicts Are Arrested for CY>nn- t or fell ing. to it and applied it to her husband's back. The bill was missed and ser-J vants were suspected of haven stolen Jt. The wholy household worried over the matter until last night the merchant removed his porous plas ter and the bill was found sticking to it so firmly that it could not be J shooting took place during a heavy One Negro Dies From Shot and One Other is Hurt. As a result of a long feud between certain elements of whites and ne groes at Orange, Texas, Rankin Moore, a negro, was killed last night by a fusillade of shots said to have been fired by three white men. The A fully equipped removed without tearing it to pieces. | counterfeiting I The merchant w 11 send the plaster to —-r* <-* m plant was discovered In the Missouri penitentiary Monday. Federal in- ] spectors found the outfit in the cell occupied by Lee Jayer and Joseph Vail, and they wjll he brought to trial in ,the federal court on the | ehaiige of counterfeiting. Gov.Had-] the treasury demption. department for re- Stormjr Life Closed. —“-My whole life haa been stormy that I Can't believe that it Is a sin to go thlr #hy.’ r Leaving this brief I electric stortn. Earlier in the day Douglass lemon, another negro, was found on the street, having been shot to death by unknown parties No arrests have been made. The ra cial feeling Is such that serious trouble may be precipitated at any time. At Strikes Regiment. Dresden. Saxony, lightning •ad tr*d. ■Md lately. Jackacja died almost Ixn- MM ffw WTiiriiiliif Apparently without cause,. Ben ^^~Hkrper“fataIly «liof Isaiah Jackson, _ _ jp”' near^lAUptl#?, la Aiken county. Sat- ,ey announced that he will pardon t, u t pathetic message as an excuse Egttr- wdajr night. It is stated, bjr other men in October next, when f or her act. also a letter to her hus- ... „. „ • negroes present, that Jackaon'iaaked t '^ e tederal court convenes, that they band in which she chided him for struck an infantry regiment that : nj^arper to let him see his pistol, may be prosecuted. Five pairs of his lack of affection and support, was marching into the German camp — •• ~~ whereupon Harper pointed tfr-pte and several half and quarter- Mrr. W. H. Heaton of Tampa, Fla., there on Tuesday: A whole com- tol at Mm. saying. *40yon dollars which werq good imitations Tuesday committed suicide at an At- of real money were taken from the lant& hotel ^y Inhaling chloroform. c*u. ... _ t t , , „ _ Fatal Fall from Trestle. Girl Will Recover. orderer Arrested. E . q. Rideout, of North Emporia, 'Altitooifc OMRfletOly scalped. Myr- DIspateke* from Bowling Green. Va ( an e i ec t r iclan. working at the Goe8 to Liberia, tie Vo**, 4t poar* old, daaffhtef of Ky.. tell o« th* arrest of • man who MoncriM shops of th* Atlantic Coast President Taft nominated William ifcBMt citixen, of Monroe, La., atwwer* the description of Joseph Line at Jackeonvllle, Fla., while D. Crum* of South Carolina, to be to Wqndllng. wanfed for the murder of walking back to the shops at an early minister resident and consul general Alma Kellner. . The police A*y the hour Monday morning lost his bal- at Monrovia, Liberia. Cxum is the man talked Th coherently of haying snee oa a railroad trestle and fill, negro whose appointment by Mr. boat late j blood on hla hands. Ha had been He died later in Che day from a Roosevelt as collector of the port *t entlye I employed as a laborer ia a Bowling fractured akull, Injured spinal col- Charleston raised auch a storm of lOreen mill only a week. ~v • > - rmOn and internal injuries. - - protest In South Carolina. pany was hurled to the ground. Sev eral soldiers were killed outright, and fifteen others were seriously in jured. Mr. Watson to make good on his original charge of Immorality, or go unnoticed in the future. Mr. Watson’s telegram follows: “Come info the jurisdiction of the courts of Georgia and make oath to the statements contained in your telegram and In your card In the Savannah Press. If you dare do It. and I will prosecute you criminally for false swearing.’ Congressman Edwards' wire fol lows: “Your telegram received. I have denounced your charges as false and have challenged you to name wit- neYtses. Comply with this like man, ^otherwise you shall go un noticed..” Mr. Watson precipitated the con troversy with the congressman when in his paper, he called upon Mr. Ed wards to answer several pertinent not to say sensational questions. He dared Mr. Edwards to deny a charge of immorality. Congressman Edwards accepted Mr. Watson’s dare. He did deny the charge. He branded it as an infam ous lie, and so wired Mr.. Watson It was his telegraphic denial that called forth Mr. Watson’s telegram Tuesday morning, threatening to prosecute Mr. Edwards for false swearing. SMALLPOX IN CHARLESTON. CuAes of Debatable <Ti»r*cter Re ceiving Attention. The News and Courier says th officials of the city health office hav discovered several cases In varion parts of the city which they believe to be smallpox, and which are now receiving the attention of several physicians. The health officer has requested the aid of the police de partment in keeping isolated the patients and inmates of the build ings believed to contain these cases Several policemen were detailed Tuesday night to stand In front of the various houses in order to make sure that aobody entered or left the dwellings. It Is as yet not certain whether the cases are genuine small pox, but the health officials are un willing to take any chances, and are making a rigid examination. There have been, it is stated, several minor cases of smallpox in Charleston dur ing the last few months; the sick n^ss appearing among whites as well as negroes. REPUBLICANS ARE SCARED. I>enioorats Stand GWod Chance of Capturing Maine. A dispatch from Portland, Maine says as the two big State convention? draw near—the Democratic on June 25, and the Republican on June 29 —coservative Republican leaders admit that this rock-ribbed Republi can State is in doubt. The Demo crats are especially hopeful of car rying the first and second congres sional districts and are working hard to elect their candidates to the next Legislature which must choose a successor to Senator Eugene Hale, who has announced his retirement At the Republican State convention Govenor Fernald in all probability will be renominated by acclamation. Before the Democratic convention at Augusta, there will be two candi dates seeking the gubernatorial nom ination. O. Gardner of Rockland and Frederick W. Plaised, the present mayor of Augusta. No Democratic candidate for Senator has been nam ed. MUTE KILLED ON RAIL. J. T. Carter Fatally Struck by a Passing Train. J. T. Carter, bookkeeper for the Kennedy Mercantile Company, at Blackstock. was knocked down and killed Wednesday morning by Train No. 3 6. one-half mile below Black- stock, while on his way to work. Mr Carter regularly travelled the pub lic road, but probably on account >f the heavy rains of Tuesday, which rendered travelling heavy, was using the railroad track. Passen gers state that the engineer blew his whistle several times, and endeavor 'll to slovrdown hi s'“train' w fieri Tie saw what waa going to happen. The- deceased leaves a wife and four chil dren. He was formerly a professor in the State institution for the deaf, dumb and blind, at Cedar Springs. F*U In a Well, y On Sunday morning the body of Llge Pontoon, a negro, who worked on the place of Mr. J. W. Baughman near Wagener, was found In a well on his premises. It Is supposed that he fell In the well by accident upon arriving home Saturday night. The man waa missed by his wife, who, after a search, discovered the body at the bottom of th* w«l, which I* 60 feet deep. His skull,.#** crushed in by the fall. An Inquest was hell and a verdict of accidents}, death' rendered. THE TILLMAN ROW. Young Mrs. Tillman Hues for Cash She Claims Her Husband Squan dered of Hers. A Columbia dispatch says another sensational legal battle Is about to be joined between Senator Tillman's family and his daughter-in-law. Mrs. Lucy Dugan Tillman, of Edgefield, who gained such a signal victory ov- er the senator and his son last wla- ter before iba tupreme court In the fight for the possession of Mrs. Till-, man’s two little daughters^. .Edgefield relatives of Mm: Tillman say Attorneys DePass and DePass of Columbia have been employed, to institute suit against young B. R. Tillman to recover money he acquir ed out of her estate and money which he borrowed from her and col lected from her rents to the extent of about $13,000 and that w-hlle he 1* possessed of practically no prop erty it is hoped to make Senator Tillman pay the judgment if one can be secured'. • A representative of -the law firm mentioned was in Edgefield recently in conference with Mrs. Tillman on the subject of bringing this suit, but when asked today whether the pa pers had been filed in court he said teat the complaint had not beqn and would not be until after the firm’s rush of business was over with Court here in Richland, that as a mktter of fact it was not yet deter mined In wteat amount the suit would be brought for. It is said In Edgefield teat the two children were carried to see their father recently for a short visli, much against the inclination of their mother and against their own wish es. Mrs. Tillman's counsel advise her not to refuse this request, it is said. VV\hen‘her Columbia attorneys were asked abouKthis they said that 'hey had not been advised that such request had been granted or made. Crawford ft Co., 608-610 Reynold* Street, Angusta. Oa. ■>' 1 Eggs for Hatchlag—Mperior quality. Buff Orpington $1.60. Brewn Leg horn $1.00 setting. Geo. A. Aus tin, 738 Glenn' St,. Atlanta, Oa. — r Know Your Itestftay.—Yopr past and entire future told by astrology; pend birth date and 12c stamps. 5K. Clark, 210 West 21«t street, New York. •• . WANT THEM MOVED. Negro Soldiers Not Wanted Because of Their Arte. For the second time within a few months members of the Twenty-fifth United States infantry (the n\gro regiment of Brownsville fame) were naraded before a woman in an effort to pick out a criminal; the result was negative as was the case tn the cas.- of the first affair. (Mrs. J. W. Redring, a woman who asserts she was attacked in her home by a negro dressed as a sol dier. was unable to Identify any of the soldiers as her assailant. As a number of them acted as escort at the funeral of Major John S. Kulp. the inspection will be con tinued later. Residents near Fort Lawton, where the negroes are sta tioned, are preparing to hold a mass meeting for tee removal of the bat talion. Wanted.—A, flFst-cJaSs cook at sum- oner resort. Time will be 2 to? 2 1-2 moifths. Gooff wages to right par- ty. Address'3. Ji. Rogers, Dillon, e. c. Wanted—Hardwoods, logs and lum ber. We are «*•*» fcuyem of pop- > larTcedar and walnut log*. . Alio . want poplar, ash, cottonwood, cy press and oak lumber. Inspection at your point. Easy cutting. Writ* us. Savannah Valley Lumber Oo., Augusta, Qa. 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 L» per cent on Pianos. Organs, from $75 op. Pianos, from $225 up. I,ess the discount as stated above. Write at once for catalogs and term* to tee old established. Clip this and send for catalogue. MALONE’S MUSIC HOUSE, Columbia, 8. O. Beaten to a Pulp. James Harding, his wife and son living sixteen miles southwest of Marshaltown, Iowa, were found In their home early Tuesday, their heads being beaten to a pulp. NO CURE I NO PAY!! Be prepared tor an emergency by haring a bottle of NOAH’* OOLIO atMIIDy on hand. More animal* die from colic than all other non-contagiou* di»ea*«a wunbtoM. Nine out of every ten ca»e* would have teen cured if NOAM’* OOI-'O W — aPY had bcengtven In time. It isn't a drench or dope, but Is a remedy given on the tongue, so sim ple that a woman or child can give it. ltd fails to cure, your money refunded. If your dealer cannot supply send 50c in stamps and we wil' mail w bottle. Noa.‘ Remedy Co., Inc., Richmond, Va ■ v . Held Live Wire. In sight of a younger brother with whom, he had gone hunting young birds. Harry Eulerg, 17 years old, was electrocuted b^ coming in con tact with an electric wire when he climbed a pole to get a nest. The accident happened in Chicago. It Is predicted that trolley fare* must rise, but as almost everyone feelc that they can afford automo- ^World’s Greatest NOAHS LINIMENT For RkenmatMm, joints ana Muscle*. Sore Remedy Sd* and Pains. The era in c*.. ore. Bone and Muftte Ache* e genome has Noah's Ark oa 2&..5pc..»d$|.OOb y *Ui-l.. rrerywher*. 5esw..<K JmMfrm /or llQUOR and HgUG JIABITJ SdicTEO^ NERVOU,S| CA3E3 Docto r CORBEIB PLACE GREENVILLE 5 C V. No Hypodermic**? Utjed in' treatment of Alcohol Lim 0RUG5 Rc4uc$4 [ Gradually V DO YOU FEEL LET DOWN AND UNFIT FOR WORK DR. KINGS BLOOD & UVER PILLS WILL BRING BACK YOUR ENERGY THEY BOOSTyour UVER and TONE your SYSTEM MAKE YOU FEEL GOOD AND LOOK GOOD TOO NOW IS ALSO THE SEASON FOR _ BOWEL TROUBLES T DR. KINGS DIARRHOEA k DYS ENTERY CORDIAL RIGHTS ALL WRONGS AND IS GUARANTEED. PRICE OP EACH 25c. A -)f//j/V i n your home * , fore* water to kitchen, bath room, laundry, bora, anywhere about the place. You may have both soft and hard water, and have It hot a* well M cold. No elevated or attic taAMo fre— or teak.... i •• .-v-.-:.rggrr: gdumbia Supply Co.* ~ - Columbia, 8. C « < ' V’”- ■i*- MOM