The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, April 24, 1913, Image 6
FOII CHOSE
NOTED CASE RECALLED
If VIEAHER 00IEAII
Hue is oosted
VKAL M. I1AVRN HKKKS DIVOUCK
l-'KOM HIS WIFTC.
WOOL ONJRIE LIST
DEMOCRATS KEfUSE TO POT ANT
TAX ON IT
CLASSIFIED COLUMN AND
FARMERS EXCHANGE
plants. Order* filled In an? quan-
Itj. $175 per 1.000 10,000 or
more. $1.50 per 1,000. A. G Lan-
canter. Pine Caetle, Fla.
NOT YET KNOWN
LS‘
i V
FmIs to Dotes It ie Said,
the President ia Summer-
Him For His Action
the Office of Secretary
Willis L. Moore, chief of the
bureau tlnoe 1895, and an
• of the Cleveland admlnis-
Wedneaday was summarily
. from office by President
Hie resignation recently
accepted to take effect July
it after an Investigation of his
efforts to become Secretary
Ettlture in the present Cabl-
rfSeT charges of Irregularity
preferred and the President
leaday withdrew hla acceptance
reignation, dismissing Prof.
Later he referred the subject
i4ke department of justice for in-
Secretary Houston, of the agricul-
>tnfl department, conferred with the
^eldent before the removal of Mr.
re was announced. The Secrtv-
then Issued the following state-
: "Immediately after the re»-
•on of Prof. Moore, of the
er bureau, was submitted to the
lent and accepted by him,
were filed with the Secretary
^culture by responsible men
n the service. These charges
of such a grave nature that the
^/lary of Agriculture called upon
the *depa»-tiu ml of Justice for an In
vestigation.
‘Tha Investigation Is still under
way, but the fact so far secured and
laid before the President Thursday
' Ware sufficient to warrant him In de
clining to withdraw his acceptance of
“ Moore’s resignation and re-
‘ nove him summarily, which hns been
done today. The Preeldent haa
also directed the Secretary of Agrl-
eulture to suspend Air ('harlrd T
Bams, an employee of the weather
bttfaau. pending a further Investiga
tion of his case, take such dlsrip-
llnary measures ns he may deem
necessary with such other employees
• the weather bureau as may bo
’ md to have been unduly active In
«blag the public service for private
nnd personal ends "
The President s letter to Secretary
Houston directing Mr. Moore s re
moval was not made public. Unoffl-
etally It was said at the White House
that the campaign to make Mr
Secretary of Agriculture had
aztanalve; that members of
Congress In various parts of the
Country Jind been canvassed, and that
C tetter-writing campaign had been
conducted among weather bureau
employees.
Prof. Oioore has been a target for
attack Id Congress. Representative
'Fowler, of Illinois. Introduced a res
olution a few days sgo, calling on
the Secretary of Agriculture to ad-
Vlue Congress regarding the appro
priations for official traveling ev-
penaee for the weather bureau, what
amount of the lump of salaries in the
weather bureau was expended for
promotions of weather bureau em
ployees during last January and Feb
ruary and the comparative figures for
the preceding four yoara.
The resolution asked for informa
tion as to what Journeys were per
formed by Charles T Hums, under
official orders and under whnt In-
■tructlons between July 1, 11*12, and
Fobruay 28 last, and also called for
'-data regarding circulars an 1 other
matter printed at Government 'ex
pense and "used by the chief of the
'weather bureau In bis campaign for
Oouple Formerly Acquitted et White-
ville, N. C., of the Murder of Rob
ert Floyd Home Veers Ago.
A dispatch from Wilmington, N.
C., says Neal M. Hayes, formerly of
Columbus County, but for some
months a resident of Wilmington, has
instituted in Superior Court there for
divorce from hla wife. Rona I). Hayes
The complaint has not yet been filed,
but the notice by publication sets out
Biblical grounds for the divorce.
Two or three years ago Hayes and
his wife gained considerable notorie
ty, following the killing by Mrs
Hayes of Mr. Robert Floyd, of Horry
Comity, South Carolina. She claimed
that she slew Floyd In defence of her
honor. She fired several shots into
his body after he fell mortally
wounded from the first bullet.
The people of Columbus were not
satisfied with her explanation of the
shooting with the result that the cor
oner conducted a rigid Inveetlgation.'
The woman was arreste 1 on the
charge of murder and her husband
and her fifteen-year-old brother were
arrested and charged with complicity
In the killing.
The boy was discharged without
his case going to the jury. Hayes
and his wife were tried at the same
time and a ver Met of not guilty as to
both were returned. The trial at
tracted nation-wide Interest and a
number of newspapers and news
agencies had representatives at
Whltevilie to "cover” the trial.
The couple came to Wilmington
soon after their acquittal and Hayes
secured a position as barber, which
trade he had followed for some years.
They lived there several months and
then moved away. It is reported that
while Hayes was down with an at
tack of sickness Mrs. Hayes left him
with the care of the two children.
The children are said to be In an
orphanage In South Carolina. The
present whereabouts of Mrs Hayes Is
unknown. After leaving Columbia
she is said to have returned to Wil
mington for a short time, and then
to have gone to Philadelphia, where
fcho may be living now Hayes Is
now living In Wilmington
THEY STAND BY WILSON
HOU>H AI.1KVS TO RANSOM
Mexican Terrorixlng (Tilhuahua by
Ills IjawleMM Counte.
A dispatch from Chihuahua. Mex-
co. Ri)s Vaoovlo Hrrrera. with 400
followers, is terrorizing the country
near there by demanding ransom
from foreign residents He declines
he Is opposed especially to Americans
According to advices Herrera's
band on Sunday entered the town of
Nnlca and aackel storea and residen
ce#. taking prisoner Joae Hoito. an
Italian subject, Boxlo was released
only after the payment of $2,400
Later the bandlta entered the camp
of workingmen building ths Cou< h >s
river dam. demanding $ 25,000 undei
threat of killing the Kngllah heads of
the construction worka. J. W. Ful
ler the manner, refused and was t!>• !
to a brace, which Herrera threatenel
to send down the mountain. Ho * i-.
offered $.'.000, but the bandit Ins.we
ed that the sum be doubled, which
was done after much parleying
Then the bandits looted the nome*
of the foreign and American work
men. robbing the company storea of
$7,000 In merchandise.
STANDS RV I*ARTY PLKIKiKS.
Senator Tillman told The State’s
correspondent at Washington Monday
that alhhough he had received many
flucrutary of Agriculture during the I requests from various sources to have
*.
last fiscal year".
Th« House committee on expendi
tures in the agricultural department
kud planned last year an exhaustive
larestlgaHen -fulo the weather hu
nt was prevailed from making
Ott account of the Wiley Inquiry,
the Florida Evergl&dee case and oth-
Uf'ipeclftT matters. Representative
Moes, of Indiana, and Democratic
members of the committee, take up
special charges filed agninst Prof.
Moore by James Berry, a former em
ployee of the weather bureau, which
related to misuse of the contingent
furd. The committee, Mr. Moss said,
\. sever found enough In these charges
to press them for further inquiry, it
is proposed, however, to bond net a
thorough investigation of the bureau
os eoon as the committee is organ-
ixed, which probably will not be un
til the regular session next winter.
Keazator Tillman HUIm Protected In
terests to Beware.
Double Hanging in Florida.
hSfflfce Duval County, Fla., Jail Fri-
that fPl^K* Duggar Whitehead and
brought l okt negroes, w111 be hanged,
cases of sPg been convicted of mur-
” tehead killed George Os-
yfalta storekeeper, on No-
Looks Ai 912, Henr y Coo»k killed
^ January. The double
Senator T .
tory of the N* 1 * p 1
the duty on different articles In the
tariff bill restored to their former
irntes that he proposed to stand by
the bill.
"This Is Wilson’s bill," he said,
"futbermore it Is a Democratic bill
through and through and I mean to
abide by It. .
"I would like very much to be able
to accommodate those who are try
ing to have former rates restored,
but as I Jiave just said, I mean to
stand by the bill that the senate and
the finance committee agree upon.
That is the Democratic way and the
right way as I see It, to look on the
mutter and that is the course I shall
follow."
J^iork Herald has noml-
ood for president
•uut to the dk ,
behalf of ike
which to having
The Wh'te Slave Law,
At Augusta Walter - Pounds and
Clarence Rhodes, prosperous farmers,
v-cre found guilty of violating the
federal white slave law. Pounds
was sentenced to 2 years In the At
lanta prison nnd Rhodes to 3 months
Ih the Augusta jail and $500 fine.
The men were charged with taking
three girls from Bath, S. C., to their
plantations and detaining them forci
bly.
. Y>ngre*Mmaa Underwood, the Demo
cratic House lieader, in Defence
of the Rill, Kays the Preeldent
Made Only Two Suggestions Out of
Four Thousand Items.
The Democratic caucus voted de-
tslvely late Wednesday to support
he wool schedule of the Underwood
.arlff Hill, placing raw wool on the
.ee list, after Representative Under
wood ha 1 made a stirring appeal for
.he support of the caucus. By a vote
of 190 to 42 an amendment offered
y Representative Dies, of Texas, to
lace raw wool on the dutiable Hst,
.vas rejected.
Representative Dies’ amendment
deposed to place & duty of 15 per
entfjd valorem on raw wool, he -end
other champions of dutiable wool as
serting that this was the Judgment
jf the ways and means commlttei bo-
lore Presi lent Wilson saw the bill
and suggested a change.
Majority Leader Unde-wood, in
winding up the discussion, warmly
defended bot the committee and the
President. He declared the Presi
dent had a right to make sugges
tions to Congress relating to the
tariff, but that the bill as a whole
met with the Chief Executive's ap
proval when he first read it aa It
came from the committee. ^
"Out of four thousand and more
Items In the bill," said Mr. Under
wood. "the President only made two
suggestions, those affecting the su
gar and wool scbelules It set-ms to
ii,e that we should accept those bug
gestions from the President of the
nlted States ”
Representative Rainey of Illinois,
xml Harrison, of New York, also
spoke on behalf of the committee. d»>
N ndmtc its action and the attitude of
he President The attai k upon the
committee and Presi lent began as
(Hi ns t'e insurgent I»*rm>cr.tts b-
,tn consideration of the Mil Repre
-entatlve Alexander, of Missouri, d —
laieil the (OinniiCee overstepped all
roper hounds in holding up Pres:
en’ \\ il'-on as a club over the hea 1*
.f the members and that tti- l‘r-»
lent bad exerte | undue Intlueme'
n having wool placed on the free list
n the hill.
Representative Montague, of Vir
ginia. a new member, defended the
I’resldent in a spirited speech, de
claring that It was h!s "constitutional
iud Inherent right to suggest what
should go In a tariff bill, and that
neither he nor the committee were
iuMed to crltclsm for their co opera
tion In framing the bill.
Representative Idea Instated that
'.he Government was made up of
three distinctive branches with sep
arate duties to perform.
"It is not only the right of Con
gress," he said, "to original*; revenue
measures, but Its exclusive right, and
my attempt from another branch of
he Government to dictate or Inter-
'> re w::h that right should not be
permitted by this body.”
The debate on this phase of the
’anff fight was heated and prolong-
e 1 Among the principal supporters
of the Ides amendment for a 15 per
* nt duty wop* Representatives Ash
brook. Post and B.xthrick of Ohio:
. rguson of New Mexic»; A lair aim
Clin*) of Indiana, and irtout of Mon
tana.
The forty two Democrats who vot
ed for the 15 per cent, duty were:
\dair, Barnhart and Cline of ludl-
•na. Alexander of Missouri, Ash-
brook, Rathrick, Claypool, Francis,
Post, Sharp, Whlteacre and White of
Ohio: Broussard, Dupre, Eller, Ea-
toplnal, Lazaro and Morgan of Loul»-
lana; Bell of Georgia; Brown of West
Virginia; Burgess, Calloway, Dies,
Hayden, Slayden and Stephents of
Texas; Dersham of Pennsylvania;
Houghton, Gudger, Page and Small,
of North Carolina; Evans and Stout
of Montana; Ferguson of New Mex
ico; Fowler of Illinois; Lobeck of Ne
braska; Metz and Underhill of New
York; Murray of Oklahoma;
O’Shaughnessey, of Rhode Island;
Burke of Wisconsin; Kettner of Cal
ifornia.
Before reaching wool the caucus
disposed of the cotton and flax sched
ules. voting down all amendments to
lower or increase the duties proposed
1 n the committee bill. It is expected
that more rapid progress will be
made in caucus consideration of the
bill from now on.
Representations concerning the
bill file! wRJh the State department
by foreign diplomats have not been
‘iVen up by the ways and means
-ommlttee, but may be condisered at
nem-nc of the committee.
POULTRY AND EG418.
Indian Knnner Ducks White Eggs—
Bargains. L. Pollock, Hohenwald,
Tenn.
tinr-rford’K Koupe Cure—Guaranteed
50c delivered. Poultry Remedy Co..
Sneads, Fla.
PrtzwWhming Roue Comb Reds, In
dian Runner ducks. Mating list
free. Powell’a Valley Farm, Jones-
ville, Va.
Single Comb Rhode Island Reds, ex
clusively, egge $2 for 15, $3 for 30,
$8 for 100. Mrs. K. H. Hill, Wash
ington. Oa.
For Sale*—Pure Berkshire pigs 10
weeks old; fine specimen; perfect
health; $5 each. H. F. Hentlrix,
Leosvttle, S. C. ’~
For Kale—Pure white eggs from
pure White Indian Runner Ducks.
$3 per 12. Mrs. Sue B. Walker,
Cass Station, Ga.
Indian Runner Duck Kggfr—Exmor
strain, white eggs, $1.00 per 13;
$3.50 per 50; $6 per 100. Mrs. Vir
ginia Ward, Belle Haven, Va.
White Leghorn*—Large handsome
birds; great layer winners at many
shows. Eggs, $3, $2 per 15. Whl’e
Runner Duck eggs $2.50, Fawn and
White $1.50; Penciled $1. Mrs.
Sarah Gray, I/ebanon. Tena.
For Sale—Sweet potato plants. Early
Triumph, Nancy Hall, Porto Itlco
Yam and Norto Yam. at $1.75 per
thousand. Give me your o\ ler tor
choice plants. J. W. Staf, Waldo,
Fla.
, Reduction on Barred Rocks
Hamburg, and Runner ducks Egus
at half price as this ad will not ap
pear again Write for circular Val
ley Head Poultry Fai m. Bin Rock.
T* nn . Route 2 H
In *11 laying contents at the top of
the list Try my fine and laying
strain of Rose Comb Rnode Island
Reis \S in w believe- on oxhib i.- i
Eggs for hatching, and bat)', i tiicks
at leaxinab!" prices J Spencer
Blackctone, Va
1a1
Egg
s ile” from firs; pr.-ve
\S inn*Ts
Wli'
I *• < *- pi ", (-i •* I : 'o r '
ed dlre ( t
fr"-
a y • ' .: i ; ( ' • r ' '
1:a. k (>r
; inv
uc ; > ' . i a i,.'*
\X > andot
s : 1
' 15 I 1* Ke..e"
ou nt a.n
Inn
S ('
For Sj»lr—1 i ki* ' I .m-h nv frv>
11 (iron g h br> 1 !'*.[. ml A r •• . •
di:\n K 'j n r*-r ' >•. k ■» » ' • •• • .
strain i. B* k u Hut.(In im
\\ h!'*' Leghorn Chu ken* at 1 i 1
for 15. fertlllgy g uaran’. 1 hi:,
crest Poultry Farm. Greenvi:.*
C . Route 2
PLANTS
\ r4»r< I loan *w«r»l } 1 7 5 per bushel
Box 5. Blanton, FU
Trio IU-autlful White Runner Ducks.
$5 Mrs T R Griffin. Dallas. Ga
Tomato I'lauL*—In 1.0vO lota, }1 per
1,n0o. C F Wkiteomb, Umatilla.
Fla
< ockea Pndtttr x>ecl Corn—Haa been
selected for five years $2 5o bush
el <’!.xreuc*» ('lui.i’e, 1’lnev llle. N <’
flat IN Four 1 laird i'ndiftr secwl l «*rn
— peck $1, bushel $3 Indian Run
ner Duck Eggs $1 per setting O
P S'l.lllngs Enfield. N C
Hwev*t Potato Plant*—Early Tr!
umphs. N.incy Hall. Porto R:co, Nor
ton. and Providence. $1 75 per 1,-
000 H H Thomas. Earleton, Fla
For KhI«n—A f ew bushels of Kuasell s
Improved Big Boll Selected for ten
vewrs Five bale* to three acres
At $3 per bushel. M. L. Chandler,
Scranton, S. <7.
Mammoth Yellow Soy Deans—Re
cleaned. new seel, select, cowpeas.
Any quantity. Buy now and save
high price#. Burrua & Company,
New Bern, N. C.
For Hale—Crystal White Indian Run
ner duck eggu; stock# direct from
Fischel and Patton; the all white
egg strain, $2 for 12. O. Bv. H&rt-
zog, Greenville, 9. C.
Velvf< BDUftDE—From grower to
grower. Save the Jobber's profit.
$2.50 per bushel f. o. b. Quincy, Fla.
One-half peck 90c delivered. Owl
Commercial Co., Quincy, Fla.
Velvet Beane—2,000 bushels select
homo grown Velvet Bean seed at
$2.50 the bushel f. o. b. Lowell; 50
head registered Mule Foot pigs, $10
each. Raysor Farms, lyowell, Fla.
Miatook Add for Whiskey.
Mistaking a Jug of carbolic add
for whiskey, J. W. Aldridge, foreman ,
of a wooda camp at Fargo. Ga.. took a
big drink of tha poison Monday nteht j
and died a few minutes later In great
agony. Ha la said to have been
drinking.
Show Woman Fatally Shot.
At Huntsville? Ala., Mrs. Cora B.
Smith, an attachee of an amusement
company, was fatally shot Wednes
day night by the accidental discharge
'-f a target rifle In the shooting gal-
The bnllet was fired In the car-
,, " , 1 crowd and she fell fainting. The
hnMet having entered her right aide,
penetrated a vital organ. Her home
>> in Cincinnati
Ohio Forty Car—powerful, sturdy,
silent. Will demonstrate on hill or
level. Factory overhauled,,, Ex-
septional bargain. Photos, partic
ulars. Write L. A. Prince, Sumter,
S. C.
Rig Supply very best potato plants
ready now. Prompt shipments.
Porto Rico, Triumph, Red Provi
dence, N. Hall, $1.75 per thousand.
Cheaper In large lots, F. M. Morris
& Sons, Ona, Fla.
for 8al»—Nancy Hall and Dooly
Yam Sweet Potato Slipa. $1.50 per
thousand. Missionary and Ecelalor
Strawberry Planta $2 per thousand.
Write or wire. Southern Plant
Company., W. J. Hawkins, iMgr.,
Plant City, Fla.
Nancy Hall Potatu Planta. Buy dir
ect from grower and gat fresh
Sweet Potato Plant*—Nancy Hall
and Porto Rico, $1.75 per thou-
aand. I am puahlng the Porto Rloo
because they are better; they yield
greater and from four to six weeks
earlier than any I have ever tried.
J. A. Wilkes, Pine Caatle, Fla.
Sweet Potato Plants, Nancy Hall and
Triumph, $1.7'5 per 1,000. I can
fill your or.dqys _}n any quanlty.
Give me your orders for prompt de
livery and choice planta grown un
der irrigation. G. D. Moore, Haw
thorn, Fla.
Nxvcet Potato Sprouts—Nancy Hall,
Providence, Porto Rico and Tri
umph, ready for Immediate ship
ment. Single thousands, $1.75;
5.000 and over $1.70r 10,000,
$1.65. Tomato plants, $1.50 per
thousand f. o. b. Florida. F. E.
Hull, Rock Hi 14, S. C
1.1 Eggs $1—Pure strain Barred Ply
mouth Rocks, Rhode Island Reds,
Black Minorcas, and Fawn and
White Runner Ducks. 12 eggs, $3
-—Prize-winner pure White Runner
Ducks. 15 eggs, $1.50—Cook’s Buff
Orpingtons. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Jasper Fletcher, McCall, S. C. •
Potato Klips for Kal«—Enormous Im
i roved Golden Beauty and Nancx
Hall; will begin shipping aboui
\pril 1 or 15 to July 1; $1.60 pet
1,000 for less than 100,000; $1.5f’
oer 1.000 for 'ots of 1 00,000 or
mire 25 per rent to aceoinpan
'>rd'T. bal.vvo* before the planta ar-
-iblpned C V VirKliiriev. O-aharn
Potato Kill** For Sale—Enormous,
Improved Golden Beauty and Nancy
Hall; will begin shipping abut April
1 or 15 to July 1. One dollar and
fifty cents per thousand all around
Safe delivery guaranteed. largest
plant bed in the South, four acres
You will make no mtaf’fce In pi.ic
ing your order here Sen ! in your
orders in for May and June Mil
lions of plants for Special
prices to dealers C M MrK nne>
Louise. Fla
Potato Plant*—We are t>o-.(\.ng u(
ders now for spring delivery o
Nancy Halls and Porto Kuo vani*
lyet us have your orders exrly so W(
ran arrange to fill promptly Or
i*-rB re,~'wd in January must en
(-|oe,< ‘ a per r»-nf of f i'l s': .(:•
*t,osv Mi PohrjRTv 2o ;>er cent . bsl
anre Id 1h> s t'foie shipping date
y . r h *, rs ra*h ' r. full 5 111 $ '
i tool | 7 5 5 " •( or mote $: ' '
Wr"e u* for pr'e^s on other *rurt
plan's Taft 'txr.'en Go TsM F'»
MOORE GIVES HIS SIDE
- ■
(T/AIMS THAT THE OLD GANG IB
AFTER HIS HIDE
That Atteirqvted to Disgrace aad Re
move Dr. Harvey W. WUey From
His Office.
Prof. Moore Issued a statement
Wednesday night declaring thkt ths
same influenceq that attempted to
"disgrace and remove Dr. Harvey W.
Wiley were responsible” for his re
moval and branding as "infamously
false" any Intimation that he hud
coerced employees of the weather
bureau In supporting him for the sec
retaryship, or that public money had
been expended in his candidacy. His
statement follows:
"I am in receipt of a letter from
the Preeldent saying that an investi
gation of my conduct of the business
of the weather bureau discloses such
Irregularities on my part that the in
terests of the public service demand
my immediate removal. ' •
"In reply, I will say that It is the
same old influences that attempted to
disgrace and remove Dr. Harvey W.
Wiley, without letting him see the
charges against him or confront hie
accusers that is now driving me from
the public service.
"As an aspirant for the secretary
ship of agriculture I announced that
I would, if appointed. ;■ >c tl:<*
I.enzoai** of soda dec's.on, a' eUsh the
R* mson hoard or any other e'Ta ju
dicial hedy in the department that I
(nought h id been d* s j-u" 1 fi ’ t .e
purpose of minimizing the effect:r*
ness of the pure toed an i meat in
spection laws rather than auling in
their efficient cnforct tin and i
would resfaln the actiiUn® of the
solicitor's off ce to r* us nable pr
rogatiice and reorganize the t-
inent
"1 w-'s me s* !cct*d. and. * f roui'c.
Eggs \nd Pol l.TR\
Kao and one ye*r s subacnp
Hod to leading poultry Journal f"
$2 Buff l^*». horr.s, Am-onta. *ln
great «gg machine* W H. Wll
Bam*. Durham N C.
White l/rgtKirns. Bufl Orp.ngtoin
W tilte I’lyuiuu'h Rock* \ Igorous
hardy stock Eggi for h.iti tong and
haby chicks Mating 1.1st Free
Bacon A Haywood, 2c5 Springfield
A ve . Gu > ton. Ga
HMixford's Rou|*‘ <'ur»*—G uaranN-e'l
. or li.-py, r* ! I’oulTy Remedy *'o .
Eneiids, Kin
Wnntisl—don to have your e'er
chan’s get our prices on peas. Pal
metto Brokerage Co . Greenville
Phone S22.
We pay the jxistagv—Semi your col
lars by mall to the largest laundry
In South Carolina. Capital city,
Columbia, 5 C.
latest Facta from oldest authority,
showing that Christ was not Im
mersed, 16c Mahaffey Publishers,
Batesburg, 8. C.
For Kale—One 25-horse power en
gine and boiler, shafting and pul
leys also. Fifty thousand insulator
pins, at Roebuck, 8. C., D. W. Swit
zer .-
We have customers for farm and tim
bered lands If you have any farms
or timber for sale write us quick.
Bookter-Burkhalter, Room 8, Mim-
naugh Building, Columbia, S. C.
Rubber Stamps that print. Aluminum
Trade Checks, Radees, Key Checks
and Seals. Also magic and trick
novelties. Send for 'irts and eata
logues. National Sales Co., D^pt.
J , Box 31, Florence, S. C.
Marry If you are lonely. The Reliable
Confidential Successful Club has
large number of wealthy eligible
members, both sexes wishing early
marriage. Descriptions free. Mrs.
Wrubel, Box 26, Oakland, Cal.
) ,\e [ , > .
’ ' a . 'i' on
tl .ii r r
B it Sei r* ’,
ar y }|oust( n
. al most im m*-
(i:nt**!y npo^ er'ering
the off' ce i-
manded that 1 for * n ,
. t ■ ■ C U:•
.1. : t 1.1 y 1
: • - t,,t: »r.
U . t h ) 1 , 1 , i -
t. \: n g «*•:
f* nt *hi
e ( ( ■ ?;*>
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for ix t'.»! I net p i( *• w .1
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a bo- u m 11 i .'i»* light of pub.
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for V
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er eg
ga 11 for
$J. 2 2
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fair play
for !
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fl' the
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: Ii
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that any
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up
Fawn a n1
White
A
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bureau haa
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for t!.*> place H'l 1 *>p« l.t ".v viv f ■
*■ v an! so d ff !.. in v < ' : v
Is this a '-t m*‘ i: n 1* r ’ lo* • a • - p.
,i’ loi, i ■ f t h '
! shall gladly w .-Hom" at v i' ■
* g at .(in • ii w !, .rtlif pre-s ; - a
ttnl, nnd why limit 'hr impurv nto
:he we,tii*.r hurr.iu’ It ! is- Cm ra
had a clean Mil of health f'orn e\
I'ivi sttgatlng committee that h. *-
looked Into Its affairs, v h h 's
something which cannot he s:U of
several bureaus In the departm* nt to
which Secretary Houston's methods
have not applied."
Serve** Keoretary Bryan.
It will be of Interest to South C tr-
ollnlans to know that Mr. Bryan's
private stenographer at the depart
ment of State Is John H. Prince, of
the Spartanburg neighborhood, who
was at one time stenographer to 'dv-
erngr John Gary Evans. Mr. Prince
has recently secured a promotion m
the Government service hecai se .
efficiency, and the advance has
thrown him into very distinguished
company.
Parcel Poj-t Egg Shipping Buxc -
Adopted by U. S. Government C >u
use repeatedly. Boxes ho! ing one
dozen, 5c each; 2 dozen, Sc; 3 doz
en, 10c; 4 dozen. 12 1-‘2c, ann 5
dozen, 15c. Orders-filled p r o'in ,, v
Theodore Kohn, Orangoburc. ft 0
THE BAILEY-LLxJiJ 1 ^
Headquarters for Gasoline System
Lights, Mantles and all other sup
plies, also Self-Heating Sad-Iron
and Ascetylene Burners. Quality,
high—prices, low. M. L. Pommer.
642 King St., Charleston, ^8. Q.
Agents wanted.
Sweet Potato Plaht*—Nancy Hall
and Golden Beauty. We will deliv
er from March 15 until June 1
Book your orders now. Price $2
per thousand delivered express pre
paid. Satisfaction guaranteed. En
terprise Plant Cd., Meggetta, S. C.
RUBBER
ROOFING.
CHARLESTON, H. (’
Drowned in Escaping.
At Sonth Dayton, O.. Chas. 8. Por
ter, hla wife and six children were
drowned while attempting to escape
from their wrecked home. The wagen
•n which they were being conveyed
U> a plaoe of aafety overturned and
all lost their Uvea.