University of South Carolina Libraries
Vi •t ■< / - FIGHT m CEASED ' 2 i BOTH AIUfEBS REST AFTOTTlOt 'MKNDOVJ8 ACTIVITMa. /: Heavily la Holding of Yaer CmuO—BolgUns Oome in for Pro lee Now Attempt to Break Allied Linea U Expected Further Inland, Safe from Shi pa. The limit of human endurance has been reached in the battle in West Flanders, and the fighting which slackened on Tuesday, has come to an almost complete stop They may hare been some infantry attacks, and these may continue, but dispatches from points along the Dutch frontier state that the artillery firing has ceas* ed. Passengers who crossed the Chan nel brought the same news. The fact is that the two armies bare fought themselves out temper arily and that the Germans’ first ef fort to break through the Allies' line has failed. Neither side could con tinue any longer, then men haring been without sleep or rest for the ten days that the battle has been in pro gress, over ground which at best Is a morass. The Germans succeeded last Satur day in getting some men across the Yser canal, and they put more men across on Sunday. Rut the force fac ing them was too formidable, and now the opposing armies are taking a long needed rest. There is every evidence,'"however, that the Germans Intend to renew their attempt to force their way through to Dunkirk. They are bring ing up fresh men and more ammuni tion and guns, but at the same time are taking the precaution to prepare a second line of defence should their forward movement again meet with defeat. The new attempt, it Is believed, will be made further inland, for the failure of the first one was largely due to the bombardment that the troops and artillery b*d to undergo from the British and French war ships off the coast of Belgiim ; This cessation of heavy fighting seems to have extended along the llfre as far as Arras, the result of It all is that the Germans, while they have suffered heavy losses and have in flicted similar punishment on the Al- , lies, are further away from the • French coast than they were at the beginning of the battle. "The Belgians never entirely dis lodged the Germans from the footing they obtained across the Yser near Pervyse, though the Germans suffer ed terrible losses in keeping the strip of ground thus won in the bend of the river. Again and again they have been practically swept away by Belgian shrapnel, but they have con tinued to pour men into the death trap, which served them as a bridge head. At Dixmude and Meuport the struggle has been equally severe. At Dixmude the French marines were obliged to withstand a forty-hour continuous attack before they were able to expel the Germans at the point of the bayonet. Last Saturday the Germans made another crossing further south, near Saint Georges Capelle, and a fright ful struggle ensued between the river channels The Germans occupied the village of Stuyvekenskerke and were driven out, -hut not for long. The Germans concentrated their mitrail leuses on the canal bank and raked the Belgians, compelling them to re tire again. The fighting continued till Sunday morning, when the ar rival of the French forces resulted in driving the Germans back over the river, except the little forces holding the bridgehead at Tervaete. The main point at which the Ger mans crossed the river and where the situation has been most critical is north of the village of Pervyse, on the railway line from Nieuport to Dix mude. They crossed last Thursday, but were prevented from advancing over the main waterway at that time. On Saturday they succeeded in get ting across the second channel and nearly reached the railway line. They were finally driven back after fierce URGES SUPPORT OF ^ STORY OF FIGHTING McADOO APPROVES FUND FOR COTTON GROWERS’ RELIEF FIGHT IN MUD-FILLED TRENCHES TOLD BY FRENCHMAN. Secretary of Treasury Declares Phat Subscriptions Will Act la Bringing About Improvement, r 1 ; ' Secretary MeAdoo Thursday night made public a letter he has sent to tleurinf house chairmen throughout the country urging support of the $125,000,000 cotton loan fund. The secretary said the cotton situa- atlon presented a problem "of the most urgent character," and declared his conviction that prompt subscrip tion of the loan fund would "be pro ductive of immense beneclal results.’ The contemplated acceptance of subscribers' certificates as a basis for emergency currency Issues, he added should greatly facilitate the banks in making and taking care of their subscriptions." More replies favorable to the loan fund plan reached the federal reserve board Thursday but members of the board pointed out that consideration by clearing bouse associations and then by Individual banks might delay final action in the matter for several days. ' ♦ •' Secretary McAdoo’s letter to the clearing house chairmen follows: The cotton situation in the South presents a problem of the most ur gent character. It is imperative that some intelligent financial measures shall be Immediately adopted to "re lieve that situation. The problem is not local but national, because a se rious hurt to the South affects the entire country. To help the South in this emergency must appeal, there fore, not only, to our better Instincts, but also to our material interests. Gov. Hamlin of the federal re serve board has sent you a letter to day, together with a plan which the board has approved for raising a fund of $135,000,000 to be loaned on cot- prompt subscription of this fund and its use as proposed in the plan will be productive of immensely beneficial re sults. I wish earnestly to urge upon you the importance of the banks in your city and In your federal reserve dis trict promptly subscribing the amount allotted to you. New York has already led off with a $50,000,- 000 subscription, and I sincerely hope that there may be no doubt whatever about the raising of the remaining $5t>,Q00,000 in the other leading financial cities of the country. "I am sure that we may confident ly count upon the local and patriotic aupport of the bankers of your city In this emergency. The federal re serve board Itself, notwithstanding the oneroua duties which now de volve on the federal reserve system, will constitute Itself a voluntary com mittee for the purpose of supervising the administration of the' proposed fund becauae of the seriousness of the emergency and the necessity for un selfish service on the part of every citizen who wants earnestly to help his country. In order to assist the banks which may subscribe to this fund, I desire to say now that, In the exercise of the power and discretion vested in me by law, 1 shall upon compliance by the banks with terms and provisions of Aldrich-Vreeland act, as amended, ac cent tbs Class A certificates referred to in this plan as ‘securities' at 75 per cent of their face value as a basis for issues of so-called ’emergency cur rency' when presented to me through national currency associations. This should greatly facilitate the. banks in making and taking care of their sub scription. "Will you be good enough to tele graph me on receipt of this letter If we may count upon your co-opera tlon?" The secretary said that in order to help the Southern banks which may subscribe for Class B oertifleates, he had determined to accept them also as "securities" a basis for the issue of emergency currency. GRAPHIC STOIY OF WAI Writer Describes Keenly his Feelings Under Terrific Fire—How Steady Wall of Germans Overwhelmed His Position—Deecrlbed Journey Foot to Hospital. on SHOT IN DARK. fighting and it is the railway embanks ment which now forms the main line* of the Belgian defence from Nieu port to Dixmude. The correspondent pays a high tri bute to the Belgians for their valor and tenacity. He says: "On top of two months' hard fighting, followed by a long, discouraging retreat, and while tried and disorganized, they were called upon to hold the line of the Yser when they well deserved a rest. Yet they fulfilled the task longer than was expected under the trying conditions. The infahtry has been in the trenches almost without repose for ten days, drinking only the water from the canala which they are guarding, with little opportunity to prepare a hot meal, and constantly under a rain of German shells." CRUSHED TO DEATH. White Man and Negro Mashed While Working Under Cotton Press. At noon Wednesday a fatal acci dent occurred at Brooker Zorn's gin nery at Govan. Two men, Lewis Ken nedy, white, age about 19, and Luth er Nlmmons, a negro, age abont 25, were entrapped beneath the press and mangled beyond recognition. They were In the act of setting the press preparatory to packing a bale of cot ton when the follow block slipped, catching tlnwii. KIBe Wife, Children and Self. . W. W. Strom berg, a confectioner of OaMmrg. tnh., Wednesday killed his wife and three children and then Man Wanders in Neighbor’s Yard ami s Seriously Wounded. A specialist in surgery was carried t6 Laurens Thursday from Columbia by special train to perform an opera tion in an # effort to save the life of John Watts, only son of Richard C Watts, associate justice of the su preme court of South Carolina. Young Watts was shot and danger ously wounded at 4 o’clock by Eu gene H. Wilkes when the young man, then not recognized by Mr. Wilkes, was discovered in the yard of the Wilkes residence. Some time before 4 o'clock Mr. Wilkes and his wife were aroused by the banking of the dog. Later they heard a noise in the back yard which sounded like some one scrambling over the fence. Thinking it was a coal thief, Mr. and Mrs Wilkes pro ceeded to the back door and Mr. Seeing a figure of a man in the dark- Seelng a figure of a man in th edark- ness, Mr. Wilkes hailed him: Receiving no response, he fired, aiming at the lower part of his body. The man fell, then arose and ran Across the street and fell in th« front porch of B. L. Clardy's residence. It is stated that he appeared to be un der the influence of liquor when found and this probably explains his was going or what he was doing French Lose 40,000. — * Swiss reports are that since the since the capture of Camp des Ro- maines by the Germans the French loss between Toni and Verdun has been more than 40,000. N®ed 75,000 Bales • Month. • United States Ambassador James W. Gerard, of Berlin,, has telegraph ed that Germany needs 50,000 bales of cotton' each month and that Aus tria will nse 25,000 beta' ' er: and tore at each other like maddened beasts in the mud filled trenches along the Aisne with pnly a wan moon and the glare of bursting shells to give them light is told in another remarkable description of the war by Sergeant Louws, of the 216th regi ment of French Infantry reserves, re serves, received by his fiancee. Writing from his cot in the general hospital at Havre, the soldier con cludes this grim epic of a modern war with a picture of the Sisters of Chari ty, who creep behind the battle lines, aiding the wounded and sick. Paint ing them as gentle angels with the courage of stoics, the sergeant cries: '‘‘Here is the spirit of France; France still lives, thank God. Vive 1’France!" With his company, the Nineteenth, the sergeant, on September 14, in a trench near Fontenoy, where the con flict raged most fiercely, day and night. On Friday, September 19, af ter five days of continuous fighting, his company was sent back for a short rest, while fresh troops piled into the mud filled trenches into which a dull, leaden rain was drip ping. Was Too Tired to Keel. “Like caricatures fashioned of mud, suddenly called to life, we hob bled wearily out of the holes where we had lived under a hell of burst ing shells, searing flame and nause ous gases for days," he writes "We were relieved by other troops, who saluted us as they passed. Did we salute back? I do not remember I only know my weariness was past a physical sensation. I was a dead man who somehow had the power of moving. We were marched to the castle farm of Goudrecourt, near Fon tenoy, north of Aisne; in sort, back of the table land, where we were since Sunday, the fourteenth. Here we slept, despite the shells which screamed over us and tore at the walls, biting in them great, livid holes. "I thought of you, and then thought of my first day of war on the crest above Flachslanden, in Alsace. I sAw there my first dead—Bavarian dragoons. My God! Hpw big they looked, sleeping on the gentle slopes. Since then I have seen so many dead —my eyes are neared- Our French look so small and quiet, after they cease crying out in path and die Their knapsacks are little; their blue overcoats twist about them in such a ludicrous way. I have gotten so when I see dead men 1 let my eyes fall on their hands—the hands that are always stretched so wide, as if they sought something. And on them I see so many little gold bands that are wedding rings Back to Trenches Again. "All of Saturday, while we rest and eat and eat, great warm meals, and seek water that we may wash, the shells come. We watch the great walls about this castle farm crumble in jets of white smoke and we shud der at the explosions that seem to come a moment after. All of us clean our arms, so rusted by the rain —the eternal rain that will never stop. , Our officers put. in order the wavering and mixed units, and that night we are told we are to go back to our posts. But our officers agree to let us rest. “At two or three o'clock Sunday morning we fell in again and went back tb aid our comrades in the trenches and redoubts. “In the trenches we crouch while the shells and bullets from the Ger man infantry play over us—;an(L alas, on us. Overhead'the moon struggles about in the clouds,'for |he rain has ceased a little, while mad streaks of white light whisper their way from the German trenches and touch some where along our line. In a moment there is a screaming shell where the light was, and we know that some of our comnades have answered France’s last call.' Germans Come in. Blocks. “We were not paying much atten tion to anything after two hours of this. We just fired when told. Then suddenly at daybreak the Germans came Fifty yards away we saw them! in the streaky light that beck ons the sun in these table lands. They came like solid blocks WLhlch were machines. We fired—my God! We fired into their faces, and they stretched dead. But they came on, sometimeq shouting, sometimes puf fing. We beat them with the butt ends of our muskets and we stabbed them with our bayonets. It was hor rible. They did not flurt us so much, for we were in our trenches, into which they tried again and again to com*. Our grape shot tore chunks out of that machine, which were fill ed up. ' Our bayonets ripped great holes in it. Tlie holes disappeared. so gay, so happy! How he loved life! He had so many friends. We were like brothers. I shan’t see him again, it is sad, this war, is it not? I can. write no more. I am too oppressed." WILL NEED MANY HOUSES. conduct, as he did not know wheredie 'S4"We were exhausted. Would there never be an end to them? r Some times one came into the trench. He died, with many aiding him. ' The machine grew heavier; it overflowed us Daylight found Germans all about us.’ Only our rear was open. I was wounded twice—a bayonet was hut still 1 fought on. W T hat else was thsre to do? Keep oa Ooming and Coming. "We were exhausted.from killing. Then came the order to abandon the trenches. There w«re so many there ho would never bear that order, Enormous Demand Will Cause Prices to Go Up Referring to reports that agents of the European governments are buying large numbers of horses in the United States for war purposes, President Harrison o the Southern Railway, said Wednesday: “This is a matter that directly con cerns the farmers of the South. On account of the great destruction of horses that is now going on in Eu rope, we may look fofward to»*an ac tive demand for draft animals during the war and for some time after the restoration of peace. The natural ef fect of this will be to bring about higher prices, and this emphasizes the Importance to the farmers of the South of raising their own draft ani mals and not buying so many horses and mules from the West as hereto fore." * MAY FORTIFY LINE. German Invasion Checked Bbt Jnvad- ers Can Maintain Positions. An English correspondent says: “It is possible that the Germans in tend to hold this line all winter and if -they fortify their positions, .it is certain that they can make no further move forward into French territory. „ "Around Rhelms there now is only one point where the Germans have heavy artillery and this consists of only one big gun and 20 pieces of small artillery. These are all Aus trian. This artillery is located near Berru, some distance from the city, which, however, Is well within the range of the big gun. This gun, a rapidly moving piece, pulled by a mo tor tractor, contents itself with a shot or two daily/’ 10,000 Bata to Bremen. The steamer Rhinefelte is en route struck me-^-ffioin tatregten,- Twtas. 1 CLASSIFIED COLUMN 0,000 heart cypress shin gles. I. 8. Hutto. Dorchestw, 8, C. Fbost,Proof Cabbage PlaaU,.75c.per 1,000. W. W. H. Proctor, Morris- vitte, N. G. Cabbage Plants—1,000, $1.26; Ber muda Onioo and Beet Plants, $1.40 per M. J. L. Padrlck, Tifton, Oa. For Hale—100 bushels of recleaned Fulghum Oats. $1.50 per bu. J. F. Cason, Warrenton, Ga., R. F. D. 4. Cabbage Plants—$1 per M. All va rieties. Cash with order. Farm Science Institute, 253 E. Russell St.,‘ Orangeburg, 8. C. Wanted—Colored agents to sell Magic Shaving Powder. It shaves without a razor. Write .Shaving Powder company, Savannah, Ga. For Hale—4,000 bushels choice pure Appier seed oats, cleaned ready for drill at 75c per bu., f. o. b. Cameron, S. C. Jas. M. Moss, St. Matthews, S. C. . “ Is Your Income Protected? If not drop me a line stating your age and occupation and I will tell you how to protect it. J. Lockwood Murphy, Charleston, 8. C. For 8al e —Well rooted Armor River pivet cuttings at $1 per hundred, ready for planting the last of Nov ember or later. Mrs. J. C. McMil lan, Renno, S. C. and others wbe cried out when they found they conld not cratrt away from those animals, who kept i on coming and coming. Thajr looked horrible In the new light, with their stubby, dirty faces; their tight uni forms of the color of the earth. ‘T retreated'with my company. I could-hardly go on, hut I did not want to fall into German hands. After two miles I was exhausted stopped,in a.barn, which was being used as a temporary hospital. But the Red Cross surgeon who was there said It was not a safe haven. If was able to walk, he said, I had better go Already hells were striking about; I was only a little distance off when I beard the thunder of falling boards, and cries and screams. I knew the bam was a target. “I walked six miles to Vic-sur- Aisne, to the big hospital. My way was along the pathway of the fire which had been there a short time before. Everywhere death and deso lation. How France suffers! There were tears in my eyes, and they were not tears of pain, raa petite. Wounded, Goes Twenty Miles “At Vlc-sur-Aisne, the surgeon there, after treating me, sent me, with others, to a sanitary train at the station of Villers-Cotteerets twenty miles away. What a jour ney! I walked, I rode on a freight wagon. I rode on the train. Twen ty-slx or eight hours afterward I ar rived at Havre,, where I was sent 4o the General Hospital. During this long journey what pity, what mercy 1 met! "Still with the mad memories of that last morning in those trenches with those beasts about me, 1 see that the courage of my country still lives in its women. They give us danties from their poor stores and they we«?p over us. It is this which makes us courageous over those barbarians “In my ward, where I lay, the wo men who minister to me and the oth ers are renewing the miracle of evau gelical charity. Only this time it is not a ceremony but a necessity. They washed us when we came—our faces our hands, our feet—and brought us back to human semblance from un derneath cloth of mud. “For eleven days now I arm here We all are comfortable/ We have the attendance of the best physicians in Havre, and we.ha.ve, above all. the care of th% Catholic Sisters of Char ity. Pays Tribute to Sisters. "How shall I praise enough these angels on earth? Of infinite good ness are they, without sentimentality or affected sensibility. So I have seen them where death and destruction abounded, and so I see them here— the same. In these women one finds no romantic goodness that is in real ity only selfishness projected for self- satisfaction. One finds the goodness of great souls; the goodness of a pity that is divine. Here is the spirit of France; France still lives, thank God! Vive la France! "I have seen these, oh, so good women coolly, laboriously, dexter ously treat the most horrible of wounds, that made even me, who am hardened now, turn white. They are so free from the dramatic; so uncan nily adept and perfect in demeanor. ^ “Well, to-day is the reopening of school; the vacation which began so kindly'tpr me when I bade my pupils godspeed ends most strangely, does it not? "I wanted to goHjorne for my con valescence, but now I do not care Since I have written I havejust heard of the death of my cousin George. H „ e ,h! 8 nV lle< ! fl ? h ! ,n 5n at B ° ullIa ^H| Want Your Subscription for maga- on the Oise, just six kilometres from me. Ah, my poor George! So chic, drove pick in gnu* Fulghum Oats, recleaned; will weigh 40 pounds to the measured bushel; $1.25 per bushel of 32 pounds; check with order. S. T. Gassaway, Honea Path, S. C. #50 Reward for return of a black mare mule, 5 years old, 950 pounds, tan face. Scar under right flank. Stdlen October 2, 1914. S. G. Mc Allister, Gastonia, N. C. For Sale—One Interational Harvester . company steel frame mounted Hay Press, almost new, cheap for cash, or will exchange for cows.- Address L. A. Parsons, Andrews, S. C! Un wanted—Everybody to know, we p highest market prices for Hides o fevery kind. Furs, Rubber, Metals, etc. Write for prices—tags. Satis faction guaranteed. H. S. Waddell & Co., Sumter, S. C. » Marry—Large list of wealthy mem bers wishing early marriage. Con fidential description free. Reliable club. Mre/ Wrubel, Box 26, Oak land, C*!. For Sale—Abruzzl Rye. The great est rye known both for grain yields and grazing. Price, $2.50 per bu. f. o. b. Hartsville. $2.25 in 10 bu. lots of-over. J. J. Lawton, Harts ville, S. C. Convict Murders Guard on < burg Road. Will Hughes, sentenced a more than a yearwgo to Ufa im ment for the murder of Cofer near Tucapau in Spartanburg count; Monday' Afternoon kitted Rober Stephens, the guard in 6narge of the gang on which he was a prisoner with a pick, robbed him of his two pistols and $40 in cash and made -bis escape. All day Monday and Tuesday the offi cers of the county and many deputies armed with shotguns are scouring the county in automobiles for the fugi- tlve. Stephens had been warned that Hughes-was plotting to kill'him and make his escape, 4>ut apparently had paid little attention to the warning. The gang was at work oh the road south of the city, near Arkwright, when Hughes saw his chance and, seizing a pick, landed a terrific blow- on Stephens’ head. The guard drop ped his pistols and, going through the pockets of his clothes, took what money he had on his person. Most of the other prisoners were panic-stricken and made no effort either to escape or to rush to the guard's aid. After arming himself, Hughes compelled a negro at the point of a gun to break the chains that bound his feet and later ex changed clothes with another negro whom he met on the highway. Stephens, the guard, was taken to the city hospital, but died in a few hours without regaining consciousness. The murder for which Hughes was convicted was one of the most cold blooded crimes ever committed in the county. It was stated at the trial that he killed Cox while Cox stood with his hands up begging that his life be spared. A negro woman. Lula Huff, was an accomplice in the cri and was tried with Hughes. She, was given a life sentence and is the penitentiary. Hughes h » For Sale—Exhibition Itarred Rock cockerels $5; Single Comb Reds and White Leghorns. $3; Hens and pul lets, $2 each; thoroughbred stock; correctly mated. Ridgeland Farm, Helton, S. C. - For Sale—J uniper fence posts, any length or size,- Juniper telephone and telegraph poles from 20 foot, four inch tops, to 50 foot, eight inch tops. H. C. and T. W. Rfeeder, Ed mund, S. C. in never been taken to the penitently but was allow ed to serve on the cot ty chain gang. ' - Hughes is the son of a farmer resfd ing near Reidsville, in Spartanburg countd, is about 30 years of age., heavy-set ami has a heavy- face w ith ruddy complexion. A Tuesday dispatch says William Revels, the convict who fled with William Hughes Monday night, after Hughes, who was serving a life sen tence for murder, had killer Robert Stevens, their guard, with a pick, sur rendered Tuesday. He said Hughes, at the point of a pistol, compelled him to accompany him, but that he had given Hughes the slip as he was sleeping in woods near Greer*early Tuesday n)orning At the inquest into Stevens death testimony contradicting Revels’ story was given, and lie was ortei&Lheld as an accessory to the murder^Pf Nh*\ guard. Hundreds of armed Mbn searched the county without finding Hughes, who. according to Revels. In tended to hide in the North Carolina mountains. ■ Hickson’s Old Glory strain Barred Plymouth Rocks: 15 years’ cockerel breeding line exclusively. Bred to win and they do it. I offer some ex ceptionally fine cockerels and pul lets, also few last year’s breeders at very reasonable prices. Their blood will improve any flock. Can furnish guaranteed show- winners. Write me. R. R._ Hickson, Cheraw, S. C. ZBtes. ^ly clubs are the best. Will dupltale all prices Send for cata logue. .frnoings Subscription Agency Douglas Jennings, Prop., Bennetts- ville, 8. C. We Will Teach You the Barber Trade and give you a position in our chain of shops, all for $30. Terms: ^$1^ down, $15 in ten days. Tools fur nished free. You make money while learning. Write us to-day. Jack sonville Barber College, 822 W. Bay St., Jacksonville, Fla. School Trustees—We can supply you at any season with the best teachers available upon request. Write or wire at once. Carolina Teachers Agency, F. K. Graham, Manager, Kingstree, S. C. Georgia Cane Syrup—New crop, new STv-ppl harre’s, $15 per barrel, freight prepaid to your nearest rail road station. Prompt shipment. First class goodi. James L. Maul din, Cairo, Ga. Wanted—Everybody to know w,e pay highest market prices for hides of every kind, “furs, rubber, metals— etc., write for prices—tags. Satis faction guaranteed. H. S. Waddell & COi, Sumter, S. C. Wanted—Department store manager and buyer desires change; 12 years experience in general dry goods and department stores; modern mer chandise methods;| good publicity man. Address G. A. Eicbelberger, Salisbury, N. C. We Have Farms in Houston County, Ga., of from 40 to 2,000 acres that we can sell on terms of 1-4 cash, balancedn 1 to 5 years. Price from $25 to $60 per acre. Southerd In surance & Realty Cp!, 314-Georgia Casualty Building, Macon, Ga. Wanted—Early American and Con federate letters, documents, money, stamps prints, newspapers, Colonial Books, portraits, paintings, coins. Send full description and stamp. J. K. Smith, 1069 W. Bridge St., Grand Rapids, Mich. SCIATIC RHEUMATISM CURED * * Five bottles of Mrs. Joe Person’s Remedy cored T. H. Harrison, Clerk Superior Court. Yancevville, N. C., of sciatic rheumatism. Tne blood Is puri fied, the body built back to health and strength and all the ills resulting from impoverished or poisoned blood, such as rhenmatism, nervous dyspepsia, gas tritis indigestion, eczema, scrofula, etc., are completely overcome by Mrs. Joe 'Person’s Remedy. This remedy baa been successfully used for forty years, and hundreds of testimonials declare Its superiority as a blood medicine. scientifically compounded of vegefc# Ingredients of the highest purity. VreM® you suffer these ills, you need Mrs. Joe Person’s Remedy for your blood. Your druggist should have it; if he hasn’t we will supply you. Large size bottle, one dollar. Remedy Sales Cor poration, Charlotte, N. C. lira. Joe Person’s Wash should be used In connection with the Remedy for the cure of sores snd the relief of inflamed and con rested surfaces. It Is especially valuable for women, and should always be used for ulcerations. Manufactured by BOTANICAL MANUFACTURING COMPANY Pharmaceutical Chemists 315 Race Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Africa Faces Second* Rebellion. The Union of South Africa is fac ing a more serious rebellion. Gen« De Witt, the great Boer cavalry lead er, has joined the new rebellion. Cotton Sent From New York. Tuesday’s exports of cotton from New York was more than double any previous day’s figure since the begin ning of the war. If you will consider the men- in this town w-ho are well-offi you will find that most of them made^fcpir money here. • • UU WII a i WPWBMT with-HMMH) bales of cotton. - Gets Big Contract. All twine to be used In the United States post offices neat year will be made from cottea at the Beaumont mill In Spartanburg. ' ROOFiNG-ROOFINe-RC^ J*G j $3.00 PER SQUARE * First-class Galvanized Corrugated and Y-Crimped Roofing In 6, 7, 8 and 10 loot lengths. .. . . Sticks 10 cents per square extra. Only required with Y-Crimped Roofing. COLUMBIA SUFflT COWART, BIS Gsrvsis St, fihniHi, L C