The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, July 14, 1910, Image 4
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Chorleaton, Where the Mob Took
the Prieoaeri from the Jail and
leached Them In the Preeeace of
a large Crowd Incinding Many
Women and (Children.
An exodua In thtf negro popula
tion ol Charleetonu Mleaourl, la re
ported to be in progresa, following
the double lynching on Monday
when Robert Coleman and Sam
Plelda were hanged by an Infuriated
mdb for the murder of william Fox,
a fttsaittippl county farmer.
~ .JSo ahote wore fired pn either aide.
Ip the crowd which packed Hie court
hquae yard in front of the Jait were
tldlin-ttgy, W0V..P0 UCHBWOMT
many women and children, and the
officers feared on that account to re
sort to rfhootlng. On the outskirts
of the crowd Were several automo-
bilea, their oeenpanta standing on
the Mats to bettnr watch the attack
on the Jafl*
Seemingly the mob waited only
for a leader. About A o’clock in fhe
afternen a man seemed to take
charge and the crowd rushed for
ward. 'A concerted rush was made
at the- jail and In a moment the
front fence of the yard was tram
pled down.
The aheriff and his men were
brushed aside. There was no turn-
lag back then, even had the leaders
baan so inclined, for the hundreds
in the rear were pushing forward
shouting for the lives of the ne
groes. A railroad tie was shoved
forward as a battering ram. The
mob ahouted with Increasing rage
aa the door went down and the
crowd pushed Into the building.
Another door was in the way. This
was smashed In a second and the
erdwd surged upstairs to the second
floor where the two negroes were
confined.
Those In the yard—the women
and children—could hear the sounds
of k sledge hammer as the lock was
knocked off the cell door. In a few
moments a shout announced that
the lock had been broken.
Coleman was dragged forth and
lynched In the jail yard, while the
crowd cheered. A man climbed up
i tmmff pm one end or the rope
over a limb. The negro was jerked
up and soon swung clear of the
erawd.
While Coleman dangled, another
body of men rushed from the jail,
dragging and pnlling the other ne
gro, Sam Fields. A rope was plac
ed around his neck and the mob.
shouting, started west along Court
street.
The negro said he would show
the men where he and Coleman had
hidden the revolver they had uaed iu
shooting William Fox, whose death
ike crowd avenged. The men lu
_after s short parley decided
to take the negro to And the revol
ver, The rope still about bia neck
and drawn tightly by hit captors.
Fields was thrown into a carriage
Followed by the mob on foot, in
carriages and antomobiles, the vehl
cle containing TTeWa-litP r tc<l to the
mile
Kalled to Keeend Same One
to Freight, Causing the Accident.
Interest in Monday’s disastrous
wreck of the Big Four’s New York
Flyer at Middletown, Ohio, in which
more than a score of lives were sac
rificed. was transferred to Cincin
nati Tuesday. A statement from J.
W. Hall, pilot engineer of the Big
Four passenger train which crashed
Into a freight train of the Cincin
nati. Hamilton and Dayton railway,
placed blame for the wreck on train
dispatcher Smith, of the latter sys
tem, at Dayton.
In this he was partly confirmed by
E. A. Gould, general superintendent
of the Cincinnati, Hamilton and Day-
ton. Mr^Ooutv was unwilling 1 to go
further than to say that, "some such
reason was responsible fer the ac
cident." but railroad men about the
headquarters of the two systems as-
cepted the explanation of Wall as
contained the gist of the case.
! Wall's statement follows:
The engineer of the freight train
showed me order No. 60 supposed to
have been used after our train (the
Big Four limited) left Dayton, and
to have been handed to ua at Car
lisle between Bayton and Middle-
town. This order gave the freight
till.j.07 to make the siding at Poast-
town,'north of Middletown. r
“Smith revoked that order so that
it was not delivered to us at Car-
lisle, but failed to revoke the same
order issued to the freight Our
train made up some tftne after leav
ing Dayton and this brought us ip
the Poasttown siding earlier than
1.07.
“We had no warning of anything
in the way and supposed we had a
clear line.’’
Wall also exhibited four train or
ders. net one of which gave any in
dication that the flying passenger
train was to meet any other train at
Poasttown’ or any other siding be
tween Dayton and Cincinnati. Theee
orders, he said, were all, he had to
guide him the day of the wreck.
Local officera of the Big Four are
not yet willing to account officially
for the wreck. "A misunderstand
ing of orders" was mentioned bV
some, but whose misunderstanding
it was. they were not prepared to
state.
With the definite identification of
the four unnamed bodies in Middle-
town. all the nineteen unidentified
are acsounted for. Two more died
Tuesday, one at Dayton and one at
Hamilton. These were John Pan-
kin. Springfield, Ohio., and Evelyn
Lloyd, Round Point. Maine, and their
passing made the death list 21. Four
others are scarcely expected to sur
vive their hurts.
PRISON FOR LIFE.
Sorted t<
ng, half »
r?-
SM'
■cene of the ahooting
south ef town.
^ ffolng part of the wh?- tlTe
negro tots thp,captors he "guessed'
after all he couhMiot find the pis
tol.
A stop was then made and Fields
was jerked out of the carriage with
out any preliminaries, the rope was
tossed over the limb of a tree and
Fields was strung up.
Next morning his body was still
swinging. The body of the other ne
gro was cut down by several persons
who wanted pieces of the rope as
souvenirs.
- The crime which a mob avenged
by lynch law wag committed about
ten o'clock Saturday night. The mo-
tlvs was robbery.
. FLIKH OVER THE OCEAN.
Curtiss Takes Flight of Eight Minu
tes Above Atlantic.
Glenn H. Curtiss made an eight
inute fight over the ocean at Atlan
ta City, N.J., at 6.36 Tuesday night.
The trip included a flight along the
entire front of the city about a mile
off shore, and l.SOO feet above the
ocean. fThe successful flight was
secunfi one-attempted, the first
fhiiQtf&f til s mhihap that nearly
sent Curtiss into the ocean. While
he was attempting to make a turn
from the beach to go to sea an air
current caught the plane and drop-
it within ten feet ot breakers.
made a quick turn and drove
machine;on the beach with such
fbree that a 'wood standard along bis
■eat wm snapped.
Shot All Dogs in Sight.
A. C. Elmore, while celebrating
the Fourth of July at Pacolet Mon
day, docidod that he had to shoot all
the dogs in sight One of the dogs,
fleeing from the shots fired at him,
ran into an >ld gentleman named
Tiffenwer and upset him with the
result that his log was broken, fin
ished jn jail.
Dr. Hyde Sentenced for Swope M ud
der Tuesday.
Dr. B. C. Hyde, convicted of hav
ing poisoned Col. Thomas H. Swope,
the millionaire philanthropist, was
sentenced to life imprisonment at
hard labor by Judge Ralph Latshaw.
In the criminal court at Kansas City
Tuesday morning.
The doctor and his wife, who had
stood by him faithfully, sat side by
side and held each other's handle,
irfidge Latshaw pronifitly overruled
the motion for arrest of judgment
and commanded Dr. Hyde to stand
up. Before passim* sentence he asked
the prisoner if. he had anything to
say
An appeal to the state supreme
court was filed by Hyde’s attorney’s,
and until it is taken up by the high
er court the prisoner will remain in
the county Jail.
BRUTAL ASSAULT.
Janitor Fired Five Shot* into Body
of Patrol Wagon Driver.
r
Stealthily approaching his victim
from the rear, J. B. Allison, aged
46, a former janitor at the city hall,
fired five shots in the body of F. M
McGhee, driver of the city patro!
wagon Tuesday afternoon at Ashe
ville, every bullet taking effect.
After his victim had fallen, Alli
son beat out the former's brains with
a 10-pound hammer. Allison sur
rendered and is now in Jail. Indig
nation runs high abong the citizen
ship, and there is some talk of lyn
ching. The killing according to the
prisoner's statement, is the outcome
of an old quarrel concerning a wo
man.
Twentieth Century Limited Pas
senger While Rounding Curve
CVashe* Into Freight.
Nineteen persona were killed out
right probably fatally hurt, and half
a dozen were seriously injured In
a head on collision between a frieght
and praeeenger train on the Cincin-
nutl-Hamilton and Dayton railroad
at Middleton, Ohio, Monday. Of the
killed, eighteen were passengers,
the other victims being a member of
the passenger train crew.
The trains were the Cincinnati
section of the Twentieth Century
limited on the Cleveland, Cincinnati,
Chicago and St. Louis railroad, (Big
Four) and the second section of a
freight train on the Cincinnati, Ham
jlton and Dayton railway.
The latter was attempting to make
a siding to give the passenger train
a clear track, when the flyer, trav
eling at a rate of fifty miles an
hour, flashed around a curve and
crashed into it. *
A misunderstanding of orders
caused the disaster, which was one
of the worst that that section of
the country had ever experienced.
Pilot engineer George Wald had
received oredrs to wait at Post Town
three miles north of Middleton, and
a siding station, according to rail
road officials. The freight train was
to have passed him there, but was
late In pulling out of Middletown.
Instead of the seven minutes margis
which Wald thought he had to reach
Middletown, the time was less than
five minutes. The first section of
the freight had taken the siding at
Middleton and Conductor John Wea
ver, In cht^ge of the second section,
tried to reach the north end of the
same siding.
Before his train had cleared the
switch points the passenger train
rounded a curve screened by the
thickly wooded lots on each side of
the track. The engine crews had
time to jump and all escaped ser
ious Injury.
The crash when the trains met
was terrific, the freight train was
made up of gondola coal cars, flat
cars and box cars loaded with lum
ber.
Directly behind the passenger lo
comotive and the tender was a com
bination baggage and smoking car
followed by a day coach and a chair
car. All the dead and Injured were
in the first two cars, there being six
passenger# In the smoker and twen
ty-one in the day coach.
Every seat in this coach was torn
from its fastenings, the roof was
thrown to one side and the heavy
weight of massive timbers hurled
with awful force struck among the
men and women in the coach. Even
Vefore the crash came rescuers were
running to the wreck from the Mid
dleton station, some three hundred
yards south of the accident. Calls
for assistance were sent to Dayton
and Hamilton Relief trains were
made up at each of these places and
the injured were placed upon them
and sent to hoapitala in those cities,
there being no such institution in
Middletown.
Frta Ev«ry Sectm Cmm Rrptrts if
Races
OYER THE PRIZE FIGHT
STOPS ON TRACK.
CRACKER CAUSES FIRE.
Exploded Among Straw in Barn With
Serious Result*.
A fire which will amount to ap
proximately $300,000 destroyed 60
buildings, made 3 0 families home
less and wiped out the business and
residential section of 1 Benton, Col
umbia county, Pa., occurred Monday.
An exploding firecracker- thrown in
among the straw in the ham of Geo.
Crosslay was the cause of the fire.
The fire broke out gt about three
o’clock In the afternoon and it was
not until late that night that after
aid had arrived, that the flames were
got under control.
Automobile Smashed to Pieces but
occu|»antM Unhurt.
The southbound train. No. 89, says
a Latta dispatch, struck an automo
bile at Bailey Ford Crossing, about
a mile from that place, Tuesday af
ternoon. The automobile waa hurled
from the track a mass of debris.
The comchatcher of the engine was
demolished and front trucks thronw
from the track. The machine was
owned by N. E. Berry of Dillon, who
with his family and Mrs. L. A. Man
ning, was returning from Marlon
The country road at this point cross
es the railroad diagonally and being
much lower than the road bed, is
considered a dangerous point. Mrs.
Berry was driving the machine. The
motjr stalled as the front wheels
reached the middle of the track.
They made every effort to remove the
machine and sign down the train.
Nobody was hurt. The train was de
layed about an hour.
GOT FOR BOXING..
Jim Jeffries Made $117,000, While
Johnson Secured $120,000.
Jack Johnson wa* $120,600 richer
when Jim Jeffries went down for the
last time in Monday's fight. He took
60 per cent of the $101,000 purse
which amounted to $60,000, *" bon
us of $10,000 and he sold his pic
ture interests for $5Q,000.
, Jeffries took a fortune out of the
defeat at Johnson's hands. He re
ceived 40 per cent, of the purse,
amounting to $40,000, the bonus of
$10,000 and he sold his picture in
terests for $66,666, making a total
of $117,000. The owners of the
picture films are calculating on a
million dollar’s profit.
Negroes In Many Place* Become In
sulting When It Became Known
That Johnson Had Knocked Jef
fries Out in the Great Fist Fight
at Reno, Nev., Monday.
There were clashes between whites
and blacks in several sections of
Philadelphia Monday night follow
ing the announcement of Johnson’s
Physician Accused of Bifamy.
▲ warrant charging bigamy was
■worn out at noon Tuesday against
Dr. J. M. fHgman, a well known Sa
vannah physician, at tha Instance
of Rebecca Plgg, a trained auras,
alleges that haring married her
on. Dr. Stgman la guilty
_ „ because of his marriage
• woman in
- ±Jtk 1..
Kills Two Negroes.
Two negroes were killed and a
third wounded by H. Y. Evans, a
white man at Enoka, about 19 miles
from Lake Providence, La., Monday.
It ia reported that Evans* brother
was being beaten by a negro bar
tender when Evans opened fire, kill
ing the negro. A second negro, who
interferred. met a like fate, and a
negress waa struck by a stray bul-
laU * : ' r-
Chalr Caused Death of Negro. ^
' A sow on July 4th at jColumbia
over • broken chair resulted fatally
for Austin Townyell, a negro boy,
whooo skull was fractured by a blow
with • bat la the bands af Alexander
Brooka. an ll-yaar-oU-nscro.
victory over Jeffries.
At Kansas City, Mo., negroes in
boasting of fight result, pulled from
streets "cars and riots threatened In
down town streets were on Monday
midnight. Extra police were on -duty
to prevent mobbing.
One dead and one mortally wound
ed is the result of an attempt by
four negroes to shoot up Moundo,
111., In honor of Jack Johnson’a vic
tory at Reno. - A negro constable
was killed when he attempted to
arrest them.
At Little Rock. Ark., two negroes
are reported killed by white men,
one by a Rock Island conductor on
his way into the city Monday night,
and the other by a white man at
Second and Scott streets.
At Washington several small race
riots broke out a^varlous points
on Pennsylvania ‘ : a*«nue Monday
night following announcement of
the Jeffrles-Johnson fight. There
were a number of arrests. No one
was seriously hurt.
Rioting between whites and blacks
broke out in seven different points in
New York City Monday night follow
ing the announcement of the result
of the Jeffrles-Johnson fight. One
negro was dragged from a street car
and badly beaten before rescueij.
A gang of white men In the "black
and tan belt” set fire late Monday
night to a negro tenement on the
middle West-Side. The police and
fire department were ordered out on
the Jump. The race feeling is very
bitter against the negroes
Seventy negroes, half the number
women, were arrested Monday night
in the “black belt” of Baltimore for
disorderly celebration of Johnson s
victory. One negro was badly cut
by another and two other negroes
were assaulted and severely Injured
by whites in arguments over the big
fight.
Rioting in a negro quarter ^)f St
Louis at Market street and Jefferson
avenue followed the announcement
that Jack Johnson was the victor in
the Reno prize fight. The police fin
ally clubbed back the negroes, who
were blocking trafic and making
threats.
Minor disturbances between whites
and blacks broke out at Fort Worth
following the announcement of John-
sons victory over Jeffries Monday
afternoon. The most serious was an
attack by two negresses on a white
woman, the latter being seriously
hurt by blows on the head with beer
bottle's.
Six negroes with broken heads,
six white men locked »p and one
white man. Joe Chockley, wifh a bul
let through his skull and probably
latally wounded, is the net result of
clashes at Roanoke, Va., Monday
night following the announcement
that Jack Johnson had defeated Jim
Jeffries. The trouble started when
a negro, who had just Jieard the news
from Reno, said: "Now I guess the
white folks will let the negroes
alone.” A white man replied “no
and the two clashed. Police had
difficulty landing the negro in jail,
being compelled to draw their re
volvers. Later a negro shot Chock
ley and escaped.
In Atlanta trouble between the
blacks and whites as an outgrowth
of the Jeffries-Johnson fight was
narrowly averted Monday night when
the police arrested half a dozen
whites and one negro. The black
yelled "hurrah for Johnson" on a
crowded downtown street. He held
a knife in his hand and in an in
stant several white men had struck
him The police used their clubs
freely after the whites had chased
the negro Into an alley. The streets
were thronged with men of both
races In a nasty humor, but the po
lice were vigilant and say they can
prevent trouble. The first disorder
arose at the Grand opera house where
a mixed audience heard the fight
bulletins read. Later some negroes
started a parade to celebrate the
victory of their fellow black. This
the police stopped at once. On the
order of the police commission the
mounted men, the reserves and the
detective force were called out and
the downtown streets patroled.
At Houston, Texas, disturbances
broke out Immediately Monday night
on the announcement of the John
son victory at Reno. Three negroes
were badly hurt by white men in
side of an hour after the flash of
the result and the police were call
ed to quell the zeveral minor dis
turbances and to break up fist fights.
Charles Williams, a negro, was a lit
tle too vociferous in announcing the
outcome on a street car and a while
man slashed his throat from ear to
ear. The negro almost bled to death
before he reached the hospital to
which be wae hurried.
» ♦ ♦
Bine jackets Mix In.
Race riots broke out all over Nor
folk Monday night and many negroes
were injured. The trouble was
caused mostly by enlisted men from
the various battieehips who attacked
negroes wherever they met them. A
detatchment of marines from the
navy yard are aiding the poDce to
well the Met.
CLASSIFIED COLUMN
Hogs and sheep. Poland China Pigs
ONE NEGRO IN EVERY FOUR
USES COCAINE.
Efforts of Police to Stop the Illegal
Sale of the Poison Have Had Ut
ile Effect.
and Shropshire Sheep. Good In
dividuals. T. E. Brown, Mur
freesboro, Tenn.
Wanted—Boarders. Roqms with fire
places; fine springs; one-half mile
from depot. Beautiful mountain
scenery. Good fare. Mrs. P. 1.
Wocidln, Blantyre, N. C.
We need immediately about 30*mem
end 50 good grade teachers for
desirable locations in this nsd
other Southern States. Write nt
Dlnru.
According to physicians In touch
with the situation in Charleston, the
cocaine habit among the negroes is
spreading to an alarming extent. The
drug, from all accounts, made its
apearance among the denizens of the
under world in Charleston about
twelve years ago, but at that time
was used only by a comp#ritlvely
small number acquainted with the
peculiar inbuence which the pow
der exerts upon the human sys
tem. The use of the drug, however,
spread rapidly, first among the
whites, then in Darktown, until now
It is estimated that one negro in
every four uses cocaine in one form
or another.
The police have at various times
during the last two years attempted
to stamp out the sale of cocaine,
but apparently without success. Sev
eral persons, charged with selling
the drug without a physician's ce*
tificate, were convicted in the Police
Court and fined heavily for his vio
lation of the city ordinance. There,
is at present pending in the Char
leston Police Court, the case of Chas.
Jones, wJiile, alias “VVeatherhorn, ’
charged with selling a box of co
caine to a negro woman on Market
street.
Very often the drug Is used m
the shape of a solution of the crys
talline form, mixed with other in
jurious ingredients and Injected Into
the system by means of a hypoder
mic syringe. Other habitual users
take it in the form of pills. The
devotee using the syringe method,
in many cases upon examination 's
found to have his arms, legs or
chest covered with one mass
of sores, resulting from the punc
tures made by the needle of the
syringe. These wounds as a usual
thing heal up very quickly, but very
often fester and break out, owing
to the unsanitary surroundings in
which the cocaine fiend lives as a
general rule. Cases are known in
which cocaine fiends died of lockjaw
and other forms of poisoning, as a
direct result of festering of the hypo
dermic syringe pricks covering the
persons of the unfortunate users of
the drug.
The most "popular” and simple
method in vogue of taking the drug
into the system is by snuffing it
through the nose. The pure co
caine flakes are crushed to a powder
in a mortar, and retained in this
form. A small quantity of the stuff
Is shaken on the back of the hand
and then inhaled through the nose
Another method consists of dlssolv
ing a small quantity of cocaine in a
teaspoonsful of water, and then heat
ing it over a match. The is swal
lowed.
It has been pretty firmly establish
ed that Indulgence in cocaine leads
to physical wreckage. The users of
the drug claim that a dose g'.NfcS
them "courage," ‘TTe’et dreams,
and a T exuberance of spirit.
liXb 4 - state lasts from two to four
hours, as a rule, but after that wears
off quickly, leaving the victim with
an insatiable craving for more of
the deadly drug. Negroes especially
are very susceptible to the influence
of cocaine and under its sway will
commit acts frem which they would
shrink under normal conditions.
The illegal cocaine trade is car
iffed on by three different sets of
individuals. First, those who pro
cure it from the large drug centers
of the country in wholesale quanti
ties; those who sell to agents; ana
finally the latter themselves who
dispose of it to. the friends. The
profits of the peddler are known to
be considerable. A vial of cocaine
which sells at $1. is made up into
as many as three dozen boxes, each
containing enough of the drug foi
two or three small doses. The boxes
sell at 25 cents each. Not content
with this profit, a majority of the
agents adulterate the pure cocaine
(lakes with other drugs and various
harmless powders. Baroric acid is
principally used for this purpose, as
it is snow white and therefore In
visible unless detected by the eye
of an -expert chemist.
Very small boxes have recently
made their appearance on the mar
ket, which are offered for sale at
a price of 15 cents. It has leaked
out, however, that the fiends refuse
to buy them because of the fact that
the contents are mostly ingredients
other than cocaine, thereby giving
the buyer none of that sensation
which he craves with might and soul.
Wanted—To buy Hides, Wool, Bees
wax, Tallow, etc. Write for prices.
Crawford A Co., 608-510 Reynoldi
Street, Augusta, Ga.
Maplehurst, on the Asheville -and
Lake Toxaway rallroap. Three
hundred feet from station. Mod-
era Conveniences. No consump
tives taken. A. L. & L. E. Daven
port. Horse Shoe, N. C.
CHILDREN DROWNED.
A Property Damage of Over Fifty
Thousand Dollars.
A Lexington, Ky., dispatch says
three negro children were drowned
and damage to the extent of $50,000
or more was done in Winchester and
Clark counties by a cloudburst Mon
day morning. Residences %nd busi-
nesa structures were flooded in Win
chester and boats and rafts used
to rescue families. In the country
several farm houses w»ere washed off
their foundations by the sudden rise
of the streams. Three negro children
were drowned In Poyntertown. a sv-
burb Of Winchester.
Negro Killed by Train.
Ed Rogers, a negro man, about
25 years old, wae found dead Tues
day night near the track of the At
lantic Coast Line rsilwty near Ban-
nettsville. A coroners jury render
ed a verdict to the effect that Rogers
was killed accidentally by the At
lantic Coast Line train and that the
railroad company wae klamslssa.
For Sale—A few carloads of good,
bright Cotton Seed Meal, 25 per
cent protein. A trial will convince
you that there is no better or
Cheaper feed on the market. Also
a limited quantity of off-color Fer
tilizer Meal very cheap. Excellent
top dressing. Write for samples
and prices.- Sea Island Cotton Oil
Company, Charleston, S. C. )
'once tor. particulars. Education
al Bureau. Rafelgft, N. C.
Health without drugs or doctohiTfy-
ter 40 years suffering from nutfi-*
erous complaints doctored my
self. You can find health by same
health treatment, . J'ull Instruc
tions giver for $1.00. J. H. Dur
ham, Oak Park, Illinois.
Wanted—Hardwoods, logs and :am
ber. We are qash buyers of pop
lar, cedar and walnut logs. Alas
want poplar, ash, cottonwood, cy
press and oak lumber. Inspection
— at your point. Easy cutting. Wrlto
us. Savannah Valley Lumber Oo.,
Augusta, Ga.
Nineteen Persons Killed.
Nineteen persons were killed out
right. three probably fatally hurt,
and half a dozen were seriously in
jured in a headon collision between
a freight and passenger train on the
Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton
railroad at Middletown, O., Monday
evening. Of the killed 18 were pas
sengers, the other victim being a
member of the train crew.
Burduco Liver Powder
H * ^
The Great Southern Remedy .
FOR ALL=
UVER TROUBLES
Biliousness, Constipation, Dyspepsia, Loss of Appetite, Indigestion,
Jaundice, Nervous and Sick Headache, Coated Tongue, Bad Breath,
and all Stomach Diseases.
Teaches the Liver to Act and
Clears the Complexion
Sold Everywhere
25 cent#
THE BLACKSTON E SCHOOL FOR GIRLS
Has since 1894 given “Thorough instruction under positively Christian
infhienres at the foweqt possible coat."
RESULT; It is to-day with its faculty of 32, a boarding patronage of 328,
its student body of 400, and its plant worth $140,000
THE LEADING TRAINING SCHOOL FOR GIRLS IN VIRGINIA
$15# pays all chargee for the year, including table board, room .lights, steam
heat, laundry, medical attention, physical culture, and tuition t n al ’subject*
except music and elocution. For catalogue and application blank address,
BLACKSTONE FEMALE INSTITUTE, Blackatone, Va.
JAS. CANNON, Jr., M. A. )
FHOS. R. REEVES, B. A .|Associate Principals.
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of Alcoholim
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DRUGS
‘ON THE CLUB PLAN.’
ORANGEBURG COLLEGE
ORANGEBURG, SOUTH CAROLINA
Expenses are less here than af any other school in the land. Ths
services offered are equai to the very beat. Board on the CLUB PLAN
at actual cost Let us convince you that our school is the school
for you. Write for catalogue and full information: Write right now
while you think of it! Address:
PRESIDENT W. S. PETERSON
147 Broughton Street
Orangeburg, 8. C.
NO CURE I NO PAYII
•11 other nop-contagious diseases combined.
Nine out of every ten cases would have been
cured it NOAM'S OOUORIMIDVhsd
beengivenlntiaie. ltr““!5SSWnn^“-
Isn’t a drench or dope, f
bat U ■ remedy given
on the tongue, so sim
ple thst * woman or
child can give It. If lt[
falls to oqr*. voui
money refunded. Il
your dealer eaanot
supply send 10c in
stamps and we will
mall a bottle. Noah,
Remedy Cp., Inc..
• Richmond, va.
'
NOAHS
COilCREMEOY
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A in your home
» will tore* wntsr to kitehoo, bath