The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, December 18, 1913, Image 14
1 ;
-,
CONDEIO TO DIE
♦
kTEI OF BARNWELL MERCHANT
- FACES DEATH
DEATH LIST IS GROWING
LATEST REPORTS FROM SOUTH
TEXAS SHOWS 150.
TO DIE BEFOBE XMAS
Trial at Barnwell Result* in Convit-
Mon of N' gro, Scott Madison—Tes
timony Clearly Against Him and
Two Said He Told Them of Killing
a White Man.
Scott Madison, colored, will pay the
death penalty for the murder of Mr.
E. Peyton Best in Barnwell on the
night of December 8, between Fri
day, December 19, and Monday, De
cember 22, inclusive. Such was the
sentence of Judge Gage late Monday
afternoon, after the jury had brought
In a verdict of guilty of murder as to
Madison, and guilty of assault and
battery as to Gilbert Miller, also col
ored.
The testimony of the case seemed
to show conclusively that Madison
was the guilty party, although he de
nied having committed the crime. A
summary of ^he testimony is given
below. Ed Durant, a negro, who was
th* flrat witness, testified that Mr.
Best pushed Miller, who was stand
ing In the door of the restaurant,
out of his way, when he left the
building, and that Miller then threw
* bottle at him and ran. According
the testimony, Mr. Best turned and
ced Scott Madison who hit him, the
-“fendant replying that the man that
hit him was the one running down
the street. Mr. Pest then turned to
walk away and the fatal shot was
fired.
The testimony of Rufus 'James,
MitchMl Stroy and Julius Williams,
the proprietor of the restaurant and
pool room In question, all corrobo
rated in the main the statements
made by Durant.
Major R Boyd Cole testified to
finding a pistol under the depot, upon
Information given by Andrew Simms,
the aame being, it was alleged, the
one with whl<h the murder was com
mltted
Dr R C. Kirkland testified as to
the nature of the gunshot wound on
the body of Mr. Best—that the bul
let entered from the back and passed
entirely through the body.
Mr. Alva Mellett. the undertaker,
testified that there was a small bruise
behind the left ear of the dead man,
which could have been caused by a
blow from a bottle.
Mr. Vince Dunbar, who was atand-
Ing In the doorway of Kearse’a pool
room at the time of the tragedy, tes
tified to having seen the smoke from
the pistol immediately after the fir
ing of the two shots; that Mr. Best
staggered towards him and Mr. A.
M Harden, exclaiming as he fell,
"Boys, I'm shot." That deceased
died Immediately thereafter.
Mr. A M Harden, who was stand
Ing by Mr Dunbar at the time of the
ahooting, testified to having seen the
flash of the pistol In front of the
negro restaurant and that he caught
Mr. Best in his arms as deceased was
falling.
Andrew Sims, a negro section
hand, testified that Scott Madison had
attempted to buy his pistol—a 38-
calibre, left-hand Wheeler—from
on the afternoon of the shooting;
he refused to let the defendant
ve it and that It was later stolen
from his trunk, presumably by Madl-
•on returned the pistol and said that
he had killed a white man; that wit
ness became frightened and hid the
pistol under the A. C. L. freight de
pot.
Albert Cave, colored, testified that
ft negro threw a bottle at Mr. Best,
who turned and asked who hit him.
No one replied, and deceased then
turned and started up the street,
when a negro snapped a pistol at him
three times. Another negro, he said,
then fired the shots, one of which hit
Mr. Best in the back. Witness could
not identify the assailants, who were
strangers.
Scott Madison is from Remlni. He
was put upon the stand in his own
defence, and told a story entirely at
variance with the testimony of the
witness for the State. So unsupport-
ftble was his testimony, that he got
badly mixed In the telling and no
weight was given to It whatever. He
denied doing the killing, but said that
It was done with the gun he had got
ten from Andrew Simms. He accus
ed one Seaman Moore of the crime.
Gilbert Miller testified In his own
behalf, and apparently told a
straightforward story, Impressing his
hearers with the truth of his state
ments. He admitted buying a bottle
of whiskey In the restaurant; stated
that Mr. Best had pushed him out of
the way, and that he had hit the dead
man with a bottle, after which he
ran away, and that he was quite a
• I distance off when the shots were
I. He later met Madison, who, he
, admitted having shot a white
mail.
Two negro women and Seaman
Moore were put on the witness stand,
but they denied linowltfl^anything
connected with the tragedy.
This completed the case. The Jury
was out about twenty minutes, re
turning the verdict given above. Mil
ler was sentenced to thirty days on
chain gang. After sentence had
filNNINOUHEAO
THIS TEAR SHOWS GAIN OTER
LAST TEAR’S REPORT
MAY TAKE THEM OVER
Fear Freeze and Famine — Appeals
for Help From Flooded Districts
Meets Hearty Response.
The number of known dead as a
result of the flood, which waa spread
over the lowlands in half a dozen
counties in South Central Texas, has
reached 150, with several thousand
refugees marooned in half-flooded
cotton gins and dwelling houses, safe
from the water for the time being,
but suffering from hunger and expo
sure. Four-fifths of the dead and
manooned were negro farm hands.
Of the dead the greater number
lost their lives in the vicinity of
Bryan, where a thirty-mile stretch of
levee along the Brazos river crum
bled under the pressure of the flood.
Hempstead, In Walter county, from
which reports up to this time had
been meagre, reported twenty drown
ed and others missing. Reports from
half a dozen other small towns in
Walter and adjoining counties ad
vanced the total fatalities to 150 in
all.
The San Feupe section of Austin
county, where fears were expressed
for several hundred persons maroon
ed on a slight elevation, received a
shipment of motor boats from Hous
ton, which rapidly removed the refu
gees to safety. The great danger
now Is freezing and starvation. For
the second successive night Ice was
forecasted over the thirty-nine dis
trict about Bryan, where 1,800 per
sons, mostly negroes, are marooned
with little food or fire.
Urgent appeals for blankets and
food were received from all over the
stricken district, from central Texas
almost to the Gulf coast. A train
load of provisions was ordered from
Austin to Gause, in Milam county, on
the Bazos for 500 marooned. Close
to Simonton, in Fort Bend county,
near the mouth of the Brazos river,
fifty persons were shut up in a ware
house without food.
The Brazos crest went through a
dam near Richmond Tuesday, flood
ing a State convict farm. The pris
oners had been removed. Texas cities
have all began pouring money and
supplies Into the flooded district.
Houston raising $8,000 in cash.
In the vicinity of Bryan seven of
those drowned were members of res
cue parties whose flimsy boats were
overturned. One of the most heroic
sacrifices was that of three young
Bryan business men, all of whom died
in a tree north of that city from ex-
posude after their two motorboats
had capsized These three, Howard
R. Cavitt, Clifton Elzie and Asa J.
Robbins, started Saturday noon with
Tom Evans, another Bryan man, to
carry provisions to a point about
twenty miles north of Bryan. Their
boat overturned on a snag. Robbins,
Cavitt and Evans got into a tree to
gether with Elzie In a tree fifty yards
away
been passed Madison asked permis
sion to speak, and made several re
quests as to the disposition of his
body, the collection of some money
owing to him, and that he be allow- 1
ed to thank his friends for what they
had done. The defendants were then
remanded to Jail.
OYER TWELVE MILLION
Would You Only Come Rack!
(Ralph M. Thompson, in The Chris
tian Herald.)
Would you only come back, little fel
low, to me,
From the land where your spirit for
ever 1b free.
You might muss up my collar and
rumple my shirt.
You might dent every floor with
the point of your top—
And though your email fingers might
fill me with dirt,
I should nevermore peevishly tell
you to stop!
Would you only come back, little fel
low, to me—
Would you heed when I call you, and
hearken the plea—
You might load down your pockets
with rocks every da^ 1 *—
You might spatter your best Sun
day garments, my lad;
And though you should throw all my
trinkets away,
I should strive to be kind, and
should scorn to "get mad".
Would you only come back, little fel
low, to me,
From thaj. Home where you romp
with the angels In glee,
You might scratch up the furniture,
mark on the wall,
* And deface every volume you
found in my den,
You might litter the parlor and shout
in the hall,
But I never should scold you, ah,
neyer again.
Could you only come back, little fel-
lowj to me—-
Could you kneel as you used to, once
more at my knee—
I should hold your heart close, to
atone for my loss,
And should bid you to pray the
dear God, who Is good,
To forgive your poor daddy for hav
ing been cross—
And I feel if you asked It, my boy,
, that He would!
According to Government Report
Amount Prepared for Market to
December 1 is 12,081,100—South
Carolina is 120,000 Bales Ahead of
Last Year at This Time,
The sixth cotton ginning report of
the census bureau for the season,
issued Monday morning, announced
that 12,081,100 bales of cotton,
counting round as half bales, of the
growth of 1913 had been ginned
prior to December 1, to which date
during the past seven years the gin
ning ^average 83.2 per cent, of the
entice' crop. Last year to December 1
there had Jaeen ginned 11,854,541
bales, or 87.9 per cent, of the entire
crop; in 1911 to that date 12,816,807
bales, or 82.4 per cent., and In 1908
to that date 11,008,661 bales, or 84.1
per cent.
Included in the ginnings were 85,-
760 round bales, compared with 73,-
030 round bales last year, 87,996
round bales In 1911, 101,718 round
bales In 1910, and 134,393 round
bales In 1 909. *
The number of sea Island cotton
bales Included were 61,516, compar
ed with 51,275 bales last year, 87,656
bales In 1 91 1, 77,591 bales in 1909
and 68,396 bales In 1908.
Ginnings prior to December 1, by
states, with comparisons for last year
and of the years and the percentage
of the entire crop ginned prior to that
date in those years follow:
Alalmnia.
Year. Ginnings. Pet.
1 91 3 1,365,888 ....
1 91 2 1,1 61.482 87.4
1 91 1 1,436,076 84.7
1 908 1,1 75,629 88.3
Arkansas.
1 913 789,038 ....
191 2 659,505 85.5
191 1 680,434 74.9
1908 776,461 78,0
Florida.
1 91 3 58,490
1 912 48,630 82.7
1 91 1 74,056 78.4
1908 58,603 83.0
Georgia.
1 91 3 2,064,792 ....
1 91 2 1,564,428 86.3
1 91 1 2,339,354 83.7
1908 1,539,657 88.0
Louisiana.
1 91 3 340,086
1 91 2 343,323 91.6
1 91 1 313,624 82.4
1908 394,91 8 84.6
- Mississippi.
1 91 8 955,588
1 91 2 817,707 81.4
1 91 1 892,495 76.3
1908 1,297,677 80.1
North Carolina.
191 3 622.746
1 91 2 754,569 83.3
1 91 1 828,660 73.6
1908 554,346 81.1
Oklahoma.
1 913 761,439
1 91 2 869,278
1 91 1 783,989
1 908 505,584
Bouth Carolina.
1913..
. . . .1,161,437
1912..
. . . .1,041,689
1911..
. . . .1,310,963
1908..
.. ..1,051,550
Tennessee.
1918. .
.. .. 304.502
1912. .
1911 . .
1 908. .
. . . . 279,654
Texas.
1913..
1912..
. . . .4,314,821
1911..
1908. .
Other States.
1913..
1912..
. . . . 70,388
1911..
. . . . 89,245
1908..
85.1
77.5
86.5
78.•
74.4
83.7
92.9
91.3
88.0
78.1
64.2
76.6
The ginnings of sea island cotton,
prior to December 1, by states, fol
low;
Year.
Fla.
1 913 23,207
1912.. ..
Ga.
34,815
29,756
51,496
. . . .17,826
-191 1 32,250
f909 25,905 43,164
1908 . 27,907 32,140
S.fc.
4,496
3,693
3,810
8,522
8,349
SAD DEATH OF LITTLE BOY.
Died From Hydrophobia After Being
Bitten Nine Weeks.
The Greenwood Index says the lit
tle seven-year-old son of Mr. and Mr*.
H. M. Rhodes, of Ware Shoals, died
Monday from what was reported
to have been hydrophoia. The little
fellow was bitten nine weeks ago by
a mad dog. The dog’s head was sent
to Columbia Immediately after for ex
amination and was found to have
been affected with rabies. At once
the parents had the little boy and his
sister, who had also been bitten,
given the Pasteur treatment and the
little fellow had seemed to be getting
along well until Monday morning
when he had a quick change for the
worse anfl passed away despite medi
cal skill. The little girl is getting
along very well and it Is believed
that she will recover.
GOVERNMENT TELEGRAPH OWN-
ERSHIP CONSIDERED.
•
Postmaster General Burleson Will
Submit Findings on Question in
His Annual Report.
Government ownership of tele
graph and telephone lines throughout
the country is being seriously consid
ered by President Wilson. Confer
ences between the president and
Postmaster General Burleson have
led to a gathering Information about
the practical working of government
ownership in those juations where
such a system is in operation. The
subect will be discussed at some
length in the postmaster general’s
annual report, soon to be made pub
lic, though it is by no means assured
that he will make any positive rec
ommendations.
The postmaster general saw the
president for a few minutes Wednes
day and while they did not discuss
the subject. Mr. Burleson said as he
left the White House that on previous
occasions when he discussed the sub
ject with the president he had found
his mind open and receptive to Infor
mation. Though bills have been
drafted by members of congress look
ing to government ownership, none
has been agreed upon as an adminis
tration measure, while the result of
Mr. Burleson’s Investigations are be
ing awaited.
"There is no doubt,” said Mr. Bur
leson, "that the Inauguration of the
parcel post and the postal savings
system have given a tremendous Im
petus to the desire of people all over
the country to have the government
own the means of communication
everywhere. It is a subject involv
ing two or three hundred million
dollars and we must go very slowly
in Inquiring into it. Every great
nation except us has adopted it.
"When Sir Herbert Samuels, post
master general of Great Britain, was
here recently, I had two long talks
with him. It has proved a success in
England. I do not want to make any
recommendations to congress until I
am absolutely sure of my ground.”
Although Mr. Burleson seems to
favor the plpn for government owner
ship, It is said that It will not meet
the unanimous approval of President
Wilson’s cabinet. It Is believed in of
ficial circles Attorney General Mc-
Reynolds, for one, would show his
aversion to such a plan if the matter
Is seriously taken up in the White
House. •
♦ ♦ ♦ ■ -
The Long Ago.
A wonderful stream is the River of
Time, ^
As It flows through the realm of
tears
With a faultless rhythm and musical
rhyme,
And a broader sweep and a surge sub
lime,
Ere It blends with the Ocean of
Yeifs,
How the winters are drifting, like
flakes of snow,
And the summers like buds be
tween,
And the years in their sheaves, as
they come and go.
On the river’s breast, with its ebb and
flow,
Ere they glide in the shadows and
sheen.
There’s a magical Isle up the River of
Time,
Where the softest of airs are play
ing;
There’s a cloudless sky and a tropical
clime,
And songs as sweet as a vesper’
chime,
And the Junes with the roses are
straying.
The name of that isle Is The Long
Ago;
We bury our treasures there.
There are brows of beauty and bos
oms of snow;
There are heaps of dust; but we love
them so;
There are trinkets and tresses of
hair.
There’s a fragment of song that no
body sings,
And part of an infant prayer;
There’s a lute unswept and a harp
'’without strings—
There are broken vows and pieces of
rings,
And the garment she used to wear.
There are hands that we waved, as
the fairy shore
By the mirage Is lifted in air;
And sometimes we hear, through the
turbulent roar,
Sweet voices we heard, In the days
gone before,
When the wind down the river Is
fair.
Oh, remember, for aye, be that fairy
Isle,
All day of life till night;
When evening comes on, with its
beautiful smiles,
And we are closing our eyes to slum
ber awhile,
May that Greenwood of souls be in
eight.
SH01INJIS HONE
ALL BATESBORG WONDERS WHIT
PDLLtD TRIGGER
MYSTERIOUS SILENCE
CLASSIFIED COLUMN
■«S|
Victor.Vlctrola* for sal* by Sima
Book Store, Orangeburg, B. C.
For Sale—Shetland Ponlea. W. L
McIntyre, Thomaevllle, Ga.
For Bale- ■ Poplar and, Pine trees. Ad*
dreee James A. Clarkson, Hopbine,
8. C.
J. Milton Hite Goes to His Home for
Supper and is Soon Afterwards
Found Wounded—Telephone Line
man and Mrs. Hite Are In Jail
Awaiting Investigation.
Mystery shrouds the shooting of J.
Milton Hite, of Batesburg, which oc
curred Saturday night in the Hite
home, and In the presence of Mrs.
Hite and her eight-year-old daugh
ter. The wound may prove fatal, for
the doctors at Augusta, where Mr.
Hite was carried, say he has a meagre
chance to live. Walter E. Gurgan-
ous is held charged with the shooting.
According to information obtain
able, Mr. Hite left his work & little
before 7 o’clock Saturday night to go
to his home for supper and upon
arrival there, It is said, he found Gur-
ganous in the hall and his wife and
little daughter In the bed room. It
is believed that a quarrel followed
and that Mr. Hite ordered the stran
ger to leave, and that during a acuffle
with Gurganous the pistol was fired.
Sheriff Miller, who made a thorough
Investigation, refused to divulge what
he terms as the inside story, saying
that he would hold It until the proper
time.
Gurganous was arrested Satutday
at the home of Mr. Hite soon after
the shooting by Chief of Police Darby
of Batesburg. An automobile was se
cured and Gurganous was brought to
the I.exington jail, where he was
placed behind the bars. Chief Darby
stated that he chose a circuitous
route in order to be sure that no
harm would be done his prisoner, the
feeling at Batesburg being strong
against the man.
Mrs. Ella Delle Hite, wife of the
wounded man, was arrested at her
home by Sheriff Miller Tuesday and Is
now resting behind the bars of the
I.exington county jail. She was ar
rested on a warrant sworn out before
Magistrate A. H. Blease by John G.
Darby, chief of police of Batesburg,
in which she Is charged with being
an accessory to the shooting. The
affidavit sets out:
That on Information and belief at
Batesburg, Lexington County, State
aforesaid, on the 6th day of Decem
ber, 1913, one Ella Delle Hite did
unlawfully assist, aid, abet and pro
cure one Walter E. Gurganous, with
out Just cause or provocation, to vio
lently assault, shoot, penetrate and
wound one J. Milton Hite, with In
tent, him, the said J. Milton Hite, to
kill and murder, said aiding, abetlng,
assisting and procuring being against
the form of the statute In such case
made and provided and against the
peace and dignity of the State.
Mrs. Hite refused to be interview
ed after reaching the Jail, • telling
Sheriff Miller that she would not
make a statement now, but in a few
days she would be pleased to talk.
Gurganous, who is charged with
the shooting, is occupying a cell on
the upper floor of the jail, while Mrs.
Hite occupies a lower cell Just to the
right of the cell occupied by the
young man. Carrying out the In
structions of Solicitor George B.
Timmerman, who accompanied Sher
iff Miller to Batesburg, Mrs. Hite and
Gurganous will not be allowed to talk
to each other. A close guard will be
placed around the pail during the day
in order that no message may pass
between the two.
Mrs. Hite showed no visible signs
of emotion. She took her arrest
calmly, It Is said, and the outcome of
her husband’s injuries will be await
ed before any attempt is made to
secure bond for either Mrs. Hite or
Gurganous. Mrs. Hite Is a typical
brunette, very attractive In personal
ity. She was becomingly dressed In
a blue coat suit with a hat to match.
The shooting for which Gurganous
and Mrs. Hite are being held occur
red In the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Hite, at Batesburg, on Saturday night
about 7 o’clock. Mr. Hite left his
work at the store of L. D. Cullum to
go to supper, a little before 7 o’clock,
and a few minutes later a pistol shot
rang out. Nearby neighbors rushed
to the home only a find Hite with a
pistol wound In the lower part of the
neck. v
.. u
Gurganous and Mr* Hite were
found In the home together, It
Is said, Mrs. Hite being at the tele
phone trying to get a doctor when the
first person arrived. The weapon
with which the wound was inflicted
was, It Is alleged, the property of Mr.
Hite and has never been found.
When seen at the county jail Sun
day morning, which was two daya
prior to the arrest of Mrs. Hite, Gur
ganous refused to make a statement
further than to say that the shooting
was purely an accident. He said also
that he did not do the shooting; that
there was no one In the room at the
time except himself and Mr. and Mrs.
Hite.
Wasted—Cow peas, all varieties. The
H. O. Leidlng Co., 144 East Bay.
Charleston, 8. C.
Wanted to Buy—Ten Car Loads well
berried Holly. Z. M. L. Jeffreys,
Goldsboro, N. C.
Orangee—Sweet, fresh from trees.
Standard sice box, $2. Jas. T.
Holmer, Bartow, Fla.
For Sale—Fruit, Shade Ornamental
trees and shrubs. Catalogue free.
Cureton Nurseries, Austeel, Ga.
Harry! Choice Mating, Bourbon
Red Turkeys; toms, $6; hens, $5;
Pair, $9; trio, $12. Bourbon Farm,
Kemp Mills, N. C.
White Wyandotte*—Yearling stock
for sale at sacrifice. Eggs for hatch
ing. W. P. Causey, 1315 Dickens
Bt„ Columbia, B. C.
Harry—Many rich, congenial, anx
ious for companions. Interesting
particulars, photo free. Th# Mes
senger, Jacksonville, Fla.
Sperial—Pure whit# and Exhibition
Fawn and White Runners, $5; trio
Utility, $1 each or $10 dos. Mm. J.
F. Carroll, Hohenuald, Tend.
Homer Pigeons—50c. White Wyan-'
dotte, White end Brown Leghorn
cockerels, $1. Fine Jersey cowe.
Benbow Farmers. Oak Ridge. N. C.
For Rale—400-acre stock farm; well
Improved; lake front; rural route;
3 miles from station. Price $7,000.
Terms. Frank Powell, Mlccosukee.
Fla.
For Rale—One gold trumpet cornet,
Holton's; good as new. cost $101.
First check for $50 gets It. I guar
antee It. Address Box 104, Rock
Hill, 8. C.
Are yon ambitions? Learn salesman
ship. I teach you thoroughly by
correspondence In twelve weeks and
assist you in securing position. B.
E. Garrett, Box 188, Chattanooga,
Tenn.
Cabbage Plant*—D I r e c t from
Younge’s Island; 90c per thousand.
Big lots cheaper. Ca*h with order
save# purchaser return chargee on
money. Fred F. Pooser, Orange
burg, 8. C.
For Rale—Good farms, all sise*, cot
ton, tobacco and truck succeesfally
grown. Coming section of Horry
county. Ten to twenty dollar* per
acre. Ask us for list. Ream A
McKenzie, Loris, 8. C.
Postmaster at Paxville.
Leila L. Corbett was Tuesday ap
pointed portmaster at Paxville, Clar
endon county, succeeding E. M. Brab
ham. resigned. •
Two Killed Near Snmter.
According to a report from Sumter
Mose Deas, colored, shot and kUletJ,
hit wife and a man named Allston, at
Providence, on Saturday.
Engraved Visiting Card* and Wed
ding Invltatioq orders promptly fill
ed. Write for styles of engraving.
Visiting cards engraved in scrip,
$1.60 per 100 postpaid. Blms Book
Store, Orangeburg, 8. C.
Young man, good habit*; experience
not necessary; to sell paints, oil*,
disinfectants, etc.; salary or com
mission; large profits and steady
work. We will help you. The Al
catraz Co., Richmond, Va.
Teacher* with certificates wanted im
mediately for following positions in
graded or rural schools: S at 960;
6 at $50; 8 at $45; 11 at $40; 7 at
$35. Direct from school official#.
Special enrollment. Act immediate
ly. W. H. Jone*, Mgr., Columbia,
8. C.
Motorcycle Special Oil—Five gallons
$3.75, once tried always used
Goodyear tires, belts, chains, Harlej
parts. Expert motor repairing.
Everything for the motorcycle.
Mall orders a specialty. Get our
catalogue. T. 8. Chipley, “The Mo
torcycle Man,” Greenwood, 8. C.
Use Gasoline Lighting Systems—In
dividual or central generation,
which have stood the test. Tor par
ticulars ask M. L. Pommer, Charles
ton, S. C. Our tanks and airpumps
(the latter also handy for Autpmo-
mobile use), are unsurpassed for
durability. Mantels and glassware
for all lighting systems, the very
best at lowest prices. Order yonr
supply from M. L. Pommer, 64t
King 8t., Charleston, 8. C.
WHERE ARE THE DEAD?”
Oar new book of 850 pages by Her.
Len G. Broughton, D. D., assisted by
several of ths world’s most .looted
ministers, answers this question
clearly and satisfactorily. It Is truly
ths twentieth centnry lightjtrprsns
ths dark age theories. A m*4t*rly
defense of the Scriptures. Outfit
sent on receipt of 15c. Best ternp.
Agents selling 30 to 60 booki per
day. Don’t miss this opportnnltf.
Order outfit at once. Complete book
sent postpaid on receipt of ll.M.
Phllllps-Boyd Publishing Company,
Atlanta. Ga.
Old
for sale