University of South Carolina Libraries
PERSONAL MENTION. * People Visiting in This City and at Other Points. ?Mr. H. N. Folk spent Sunday in Orangeburg. ?Mr. A. M. Brabham spent Tues day in Charleston. ?Mrs. Harry All, of Allendale, is visiting relatives in the city. ?Mr. Charles, of Greenville, spent a few days in the city this week. ?Mr. J. J. Simmons, of Holly TTill ft A c* x'ci V* r\r*r\ 1 o o f trnrvlr XI ill, dycui a icn uaj o ucxc xaoi with relatives, k ?Dr. Robert Black, of Bamberg, W is visiting relatives in Walterboro.? f Walterboro Press and Standard. ?Mr. and Mrs. R. W. D. Rowell are at home again from a trip to Washington, D. C., and other points. ^ ?Mr. and Mrs. D. G. Felder, who A have been visiting relatives here, reV turned to Charleston last Saturday. f ?Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Smoak and little son spent Sunday in Orangeburg county with Mr. Smoak's parents. ?Mrs. J. D. O'Hern, of Lakeland, Fla., is in the city on a visit to her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. A. Jennings. ?Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Smoak, of Branchville, spent several days near , town last week at the home of Mr. Griffith, near town. ?The many friends of Dr. C. E. Kinsey, of Williams, will be glad to know that he is some better. He >ioc Koon ill for snmp tim<*. Dr. Kinsey formerly lived in Bamberg. > ?Prof. J. A. Klein, of Lancaster, spent a few days in the city last week. It is possible that Prof. Klein and family will return to Bamberg to live, and their many friends here will gladly welcome them. ?S. G. Mayfield, Esq., who has ^ been at a hospital in New York for ' treatment since the March term of court, returned home this week, much improved in health, which will be pleasant news to his many friends. ?Mr. C. W. Rentz, Jr., who has been in the U. S. Navy for the last few years, arrived in Bamberg last week, and he is glad to get back home again. The life has agreed with him and he is> looking well. During his term of enlistment, which expired only a few weeks ago, he has visited many parts of the world. His many friends are mighty glad to see him again. ?Mr. M. O. Kinard, one of the prominent citizens of the Ehrhardt section and an enthusiastic Confed erate veteran, was in the city Thursday on his way home from the reunion in Aiken. He enjoyed the occasion very much. Mr. Kinard takes great interest in the veterans. He was a member of Company G, from this county, and is captain of the organization of survivors of that historic command. ^ GOVERNOR'S CHAFFEUR FINED. Pays Up and Appeals Case on Ground of Illegality. Columbia, April 28.?Harrison Neely, colored, the chaffeur of Governor Blease, was fined $5.75 this morning in the recorder's court on the charge of violating the speed ordinance of the city. The negro paid the fine and then gave notice of ap peal to the circuit court. The grounds on which the appeal to the circuit court are based are that the speed ordinance is in violation of the constitution of the State and of the code of laws, because the sentence is illegal and excessive, and, ' to quote the language of the formal appeal, "Because the verdict is contrary to the evidence in said case and ? ? ^ t Vi rem crVi maila n d Wcl5 1C11UC1CU luiuu^u uiuiivv uuv. prejudice against the chief executive of this State, whose driver the said Harrison Neely is." The negro chaffeur was driving the automobile up Lady street and was coming up a hill, near the jail, when the alleged offence was committed. City Jailer Marion P. Kramer reported the case. The negro claims that he was not exceeding the speed limit, which is 15 miles per hour. He was alone in the car at the time and was returning from an errand on which he had been sent. This morning made the third time in the past few weeks that the Governor's chaffeur has been fined for violating the speed ordinances of the city. The first time he was given a fine of $3.75, the second a fine of $15.75, and this morning he was assessed $5.75. It will be recalled that a sensation was sprung the first time the negro was fined by Governor Blease charging that it was none through prejudice on- the part of the city authorities to him, and he was f reported as threatening the city with martial law. He finally said that he intended to sue the city for assessing the fine of $3.75 against his chauffeur and said that it would prove the most costly fine the city of Columbia and county of Richland ever collected. "I will show you before the end of the year," he stated at the time. GREEN AND PAIGE PAROLED. Men Serving Life Sentence for Mur- V der Set Free. Columbia, April 26.?E. D. Green and John L. Paige, two young white in men, of Spartanburg County, who M were convicted of having murdered d; Ben Carson while he was lying asleep M because of the love which Green bore m Mrs. Fannie Carson, wife of Ben Car- B son, were today paroled by Gover- ei nor Blease on condition of good be- pi havior. Mrs. Fannie Careon, who en- re ?- ? J a* Vi AT* V? n o_ -Vl gnieert;u. me pivc u.? nuau u.^.i uuoband was foully put out of the way, pi was paroled by former Governor An- T sel. si The crime happened in Spartan- ta burg County eighteen years ago and was said to have been one of the in most coldblooded ever perpetrated in tt South Carolina. Ben Carson, with D his wife, Mrs. Fannie Carson, were gi living on their farm in upper Spar- ti tanburg County. He was a young man and a respected farmer and his si wife was a very attractive woman. n< With them boarded E. D. Green, a sc young school teacher, and John L. sa Page, another young white man, lived d< on the Carson place. d< Story of the Murder. ai Green was a young man with good m manners, and he and Mrs. Carson were said to have been much in each w other's company. Ben Carson, all ai unsuspecting, was going about his tt daily tasks unmindful of the plot W which was hatching in his own house. b< Mrs. Carson and young Green, it is 01 alleged, soon become so enamored of h; each other that they began plotting tt how to get rid of Ben Carson. Once Mrs. Carson is said to have pi tried to poison her husband, but fail- fo ed. It was then that she is alleged tt to have resorted to sterner and more S( certain methods. b{ Consulting with Green and calling h< in the aid of Paige, the plot is said to have been hatched. One quiet bz moonlight night as Ben Carson was m sleeping he was killed. A window ai had been left open and it was charged that Green and Paige silently stole re through the window and into the fr room where the sleeping man lay. Gi Carson was brained and his throat st cut with a razor to make assurances doubtly certain. M The Three Suspected. st Suspicion at once centered on Mrs. n< Carson, Green and Paige, and they kl were arrested and arraigned for the murder of Ben Carson. Terror- ^ stricken Mrs. Carson turned State's of evidence, and on the stand told of the awful plot, of her love for E. D. Green M and outlined the scheme by which ^ Ben Carson was put out of the way. er The trial took place at Spartanburg te in the fall cf 1895, with Judge Jos. H. Earle presiding and Solicitor fo Schumpert prosecuting the cases. -1 Mrs. Fannie Carson and John' L. Paige were. found guilty of murder " with recommendation to mercy and t0 sentenced to life imprisonment in the State Penitentiary. E. D. Green was ol found guilty of murder and sehtenced to be hanged. An appeal in his case to the Supreme Court resulted ^ in a new trial being ordered, and in *?1 .Tnnp 1897. with Judee Buchanan ec presiding and Solicitor T. S. Sease, w now Judge, appearing for the State, Green was found guilty of murder &1 with recommendation to mercy and oe sent to the Penitentiary for life, se where his two companions had al- la ready preceded him. Many Appeals for Clemency. No similar case had so stirred Spar- ^ tanburg and the upper part of South Carolina. No sooner were Mrs. Carson and the two men in the Peniten- _ ti< tiarv than efforts were begun to seal cure clemency for them. Appeals were made to each Governor, but without avail until Governor Ansel's term, when he finally pardoned Mrs. Fannie Carson and permitted her to go back to Spartanburg. With Mrs. Carson free efforts to ge* Green and Paige out were renewed. Finally a petition for clemency in Green's case filed with Governor , tc Blease contained 1,215 signatures, ^ 235 of wliom were ladies of Spartan- ^ burg County. Judge Sease, who prosecuted Green at his second con V1UC1U1L its SUUVIWJI , I CCULLiiiicuucvi. . clemency and many of the leading ^ citizens of the county were on his . is petition. A strong petition for clemencv in Paige's behalf was also ? s^ presented, and it was signed by 4 07 . of the citizens of Spartanburg Coun- Jo t}'- c, Return to Spartanburg. ^ This morning Governor Blease had ^ Green and Paige brought from the al Penitentiary, where they have been confined for eighteen years, to his office, and the two men were handed their paroles in the Governor's office. Green's aged father was present in the office and he was moved with . tr emotion and gratitude on again be Iiuiuiug uib swii <x nee man. 1 nc Governor told them to go back home and try to redeem the past and to ^ make good citizens. . Green and Paige returned to Spar- ^ tanburg this afternoon. Mrs. Fannie j Carson, since her freedom, has been living on a farm in Spartanburg County. ol BODIES HID IN CELLAR. r'onum Tells Police Why She Put Them There. A queer case was brought to light i St. Louis, Mo., when the bodies of rs. Ernestine Kommichau and her aughter, Selrua, were unearthed Wednesday afternoon in the baselent of a building at 2412 South roadway, Marie Kommichau, anothr daughter confined in the City HosLtal with a broken leg, is under ar ?st and will be held pending an instigation. The three women occu:ed the house three months ago. hree weeks ago, Marie said, her ster had died and the mother had iken the body to Illinois for burial. Albert Stuhr, owner of the buildLg, visited the premises and reported le peculiar odor to the authorities, etectives located the newly made :ave and the bodies were found parally encased in concrete. "Before my mother died, she made ster and me promise that we would Dt take her body out of the house, > the undertakers could get her," iid Miss Kommichau. "We had no Dctor for her?there has not been a Dctor in our house for ten years id a good doctor could have done other no good. "I put her body in a showcase, hicii we took from the notion store, id poured plaster of paris around le glass cracks to keep the air out. re kept the showcase containing the idy upstairs in a rear room. No le knew for none of the neighbors id paid any attention to mother and ley did not inquire about her. "When sister died, I knew that peo* - * "* x i j ic e would aSK aooui, ner, auu n liic> und out I was keeping her body ley would ask about mother, too. ) I told the neighbors that mother id died and that Selma had taken ?r to Illinois for burial. "Then I took both bodies into the isement. I laid them on the baseent floor and poured plaster paris id cement over them." Marie said that she needed help in amoving the body of her mother om the showcase and called in a srman woman who was passing the ore and whom she never saw before. "She was clumsy," continued arie, "and was no help. I told her le needn't mind about staying. I 2ver saw her again and I don't low whether she ever told any one." Marie said that one man, Adam Umeroth, living in the city, knows ' the deaths. "He is a very religious man," said arie. "He has called on us now and len for a long while. He said prays over mother's body and over sisr's body. I don't think he knew the )dies were buried in the basement, r I don't remember of ever telling m." Marie asked the police not to allow :e bodies of her mother and sister i be removed from the house. Mrs. rnestine Kommichau was 79 years d and Selma 50 years. Marie is ). m1 1 ? ** ^ f/\orri 1 116 UUUitSS we) c ov/ uismi ulvu lat identification was difficult, rom the neck of each was suspend1 a crucifix. At the feet of each as a porcelain urn of the kind somemes used to hold holy oil. The aves were decorated with two small dar trees, a wire cross and a mus1 shell. Under the corpses was a yer of quicklime. WOODEN CANNON EFFECTIVE. ras Used With Success in Modern Times by West Indians. Anyone familiar with the construcon of modern weapons of warfare id the high explosives used in them ould naturally suppose a cannon ade of wood would be of little or i value as a weapon. Wooden cannons have been used ith considerable success, neverthess, in recent revolutions in Cuba, am, ana in tne uoinmicciii reyuuiit. The wood used in the construction f these crude weapons is a very ugh variety, having a twisted grain tat curls about the log in such a way lat to split the timber with the "dinary means is almost impossible. The best trees are selected and a ece of the log five or six feet in ngth and about one foot in diameter cut. After the bark has been reoved and the log made round, it is vung upon a crude truss and a hole burned into it from one end. The >g is wound with strips of rawhide it from the skin of a steer. When le cannon is covered with the strips : hide, another layer is wound on, id this is continued until the weapi has increased several inches in iameter. After the log is covered and the ire is finished, the weapon is treat1 to a hot draft, which tends to conact the hide binding and which bemies almost as strong as wire. These crude cannon have been red with success in numbers of inances and it is astonishing the num3r of times they may be fired before ley burst or become otherwise disDled.?Harper's Weekly. Some men would rather run for See than to earn a decent living. CHESTER VETERAN MURDERED. John Q. Lewis Victim of Foul Deed. O] No Clue Yet. Chester, April 25.?John Q. Lewis, an old Confederate soldier, was mur- j0 dered at his home, three miles west ^ of Cornwell in this county last night, the motive evidently being robbery, aj as a watch and pistol belonging to the 0f deceased were missing. This morning the murder was discovered by James w Dove, a farm hand, when he went to the house to perform morning chores, ^ and the alarm was spread hurriedly through the neighborhood. Sheriff ev Colvin and deputies arrived on the scene early, but a vigorous search has not yet resulted in the apprehension 0? of the assassin. fr It was at first thought that it might 0l have been a case of suicide, but the finding of two1 wounds, one in the m side and the other in the back, dis- st counted this theory and the coroner's jury brought in a verdict of death at fil the hands of some unknown party. ti( However it was necessary to continue w. the inquest on account of scarcity of in testimony. 0f Mr. Lewis lived alone at some distance from the nearest neighbor, and qi as he was a man of some means it is jn the general opinion that he was mur- w; dered for money that he was supposed to have on the premises. Most of his w; money, however, was in the bank at Chester, and the sum of forty dollars, W( which was in the house, was not ar found by the murderers. m b< SCIENCE AND THE BURGLAR. h( Modern Inventions Utilized by the a Learned Raffles in His Profession. , he Science, while aiding mankind in tr r. 11 KAnofinon+ n*a vc ic Ctt thp 1 ^ ail OUl LO \JL u TIU;W, V* W same time aiding, the cracksman to th pursue his nefarious work with much ni more dispatch, than ever before. The modern burglar now spurns the clum- aD sy outfit of crowbar, jimmies, g and skeleton keys. He knows a trick worth a dozen of those. * He carries a 0,3 few ounces of nitroglycerine, and a blowpipe. With these easily concealed ye tools he can force his way through to the toughest stel. eE The blowpipe is the deadly enemy m which the safe manufacturer is now Ai trying, with the aid of science, to cir- r.e cumvent. Under the intense heat that m it generates the strongest steel crumpies up like paper. A circle some two ^ feet in diameter can be cut through y the metal, even if an inch thick, in a ro few minutes. nc A steel plate which a shell from a ^ 4.5 gun fails to dent will fall an easy m victim to a few cubic feet of oxygen and acetylene gas in combination. When the thermite process for weld- tu ing iron was discovered, advantage Wil was immediately taken of this for the gl purpose of burning through plates of v steel. Deadly forces must be handled t0 with care and an exact knowledge of the power of which they are capable. ^ It is not for the reckless or the bung- ^ ler to toy with the blowpipe or nitroglycerine. So Raffles sets to work to acquire a scientific knowledge and skill of manipulation that, if put to some legitimate use, might open up .. - ? - vi . ?-V ? to mm an nonoraoie uaicei. Quite recently a safe-breaker, g whose successful career was suddenC6 ly halted by the law, fairly amazed expert scientists by the completeness * of his library, which comprised a val- ^ uable collection of books in French , la and German written by scientists for S presentation to technical societies. He made a specialty of the subject of the at force of the blowpipe on metals. He ^ admitted that he had spent three years in this study. A laboratory ^ adjoining his library was small and compact, but for completeness of D equipment would have done credit to a science school. In this laboratory gc he had made some improvements. No sooner does the scientist dis- ^ cover some tremendous force than he ? P< must set to work to counteract that force in the hands of the criminal. It is said that recent experiments have produced a steel that will even with- T; stand the blast of the blowpipe.? Harper's Weekly. Sumter Loses Plant. J1' fc Sumter, April 29.?Fire this after- C2 1 * 1 nlonf rtf h( noon aesiroyea tuc suw xxxxxx piaui ui the Penn-Sumter Lumber Company, w the largest lumber concern doing business in this city, causing an estimated loss of $20,000, partly covered by insurance. The fire originated in w the boiler room at 6.30 and all of the machinery was lost. The fire is the ta most disastrous that has visited Sum- la ter in several years. The Penn-Sum- < ter Lumber Company is backed by Philadelphia capitalists, and Messrs. H Winter and Eisenberger are the local er managers. * n( ? pc If you want an automobile, see C. pi F. Rizer at Olar. He has on hand two Ford touring cars and will re- , ceive todav six Ford runabouts. m ai William Waldorf Astor's son John, of an officer of the life guards in Lon- th don, will go to India to fill an ap- th ' ^ C T ~ _ J + ~ pomtmeilt on Lilt? 5i?iu <ji tiUiu ntti- ic dinge, the Governor-General. qi * TOWN GOES WILD. E>eIousas, La., Turns Out With Ban to Meet "Little Bobbie" Dunbar. Opelousas, La., April 26.?All 0p< usas, the home of little Robert Dui ir, yesterday acclaimed the chil ken from Walters, the tinker, an leged kidnaper, as the long lost so tneir fellow townsmen. The town went wild with deligl hen Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Dunbar an e boy alighted from the train froi bw Orleans during this afternoon. A "half holiday had been declare< ery store in the town was locke< e residences deserted and, despite izzling rain, the entire populatio Opelousas, augmented by hundrec um uie surruuuuiug uuauuj, iuiuc it to welcome "Little Bobbie" bac )me. Several thousand persons jan ed the station platform and tt reets leading to it. Every whist] town shrieked, bells were rung an eworks turned loose in all direi Dns. Every building in the tow as decorated with flags and bun g and a band of more than a scoi joyous musicians blared out "Hon: veet Home," "Hail, Hail, the Coi )ering Hero Comes," "A Hot Tim the Old Town," and other ail hich were deemed appropriate. The Dunbars, literally weepin ith joy, fought their *way throug e throngs of men and women wh are bent upon shaking their hanc id kissing the boy. Mr. Dunbar an Liittle Bobbie," with a commits mded by Mayor Loeb, rode on jok and ladder wagon at the head c procession which passed throug e principal streets to the Dunba >me. Mrs. Dunbar and other rek /es occupied a touring car next i le, and behind them came moi an a hundred automobiles and cai ages. "That's the kid," "That's Bobbie! id similar expressions indicating th meral recognition of the child a e kidnaped Dunbar boy, were hear l all sides. When little Alonzo Dunbar, od ar Robert's junior, was brought ii the car, the two boys immediatel nbraced, and for some minutes r< ained clasped in each other's arm: 3 soon as tne uunoar nome wa ached the little boy of so muc ystery ran to the little red rockin air which Santa Claus brought t Dbert Dunbar a little more than sar ago. He seated himself an eked away apparently willing, : >t anxious, to forget the crowds an e decorations and all of the excite ent of which he has been the cente r almost a week. Half an hour late ? was asleep, and after "mama" ha eked him away in the little be tiich has been empty since last Ai ist, the crowds began to depar ery one apparently satisfied thj eir little Robert had been restore them. kVILL RECOMMEND P. H. FIKE. ewspaper Man May Get Postmastei ship at Spartanburg. Spartanburg, April 23.?Congres) an Jos. T. Johnson announced t< ly that he would recommend Pieri . Fike, at one time city editor of tt partanburg Herald, but until n ntly Mr. Johnson's secretary, fc jpointment as postmaster of Spa] nburg. The announcement whic as made after Mr. Johnson, in h w office, had listened patiently fc tveral hours to the claims of tt ;tive candidates for the place, ws + /-> Hfr Pit? i > iliUCli a. OUlpiloc IV 1U1, J. iuv ?. lybody. He had not sought tt )nor. The position pays thirty-or jndred dollars a year. Mr. Johnson recommended W. I illingham for appointment to tt >stmastership several weeks ago, bi ?on afterwards charges were mac jainst Mr. Dillingham's record t lends of W. F. Young, assistai )stmaster, a rival candidate for tt )stmastership. Mr. Dillingham r< ased Congressman Johnson from h omises and accordingly Senate illman, before whom the charg< ere laid, decided that an investig; on was not warranted. Mr. Dillinj am later renewed his applicatic ?r the place. The controversy hi lused much bitterness, which it aped the appointment of Mr. Fib ill abate. Mr. Fike is a native of Laurei ounty, an alumnus of Wofford Co ge and was engaged in newspape ork on the Herald for ten years b< re becoming Mr. Johnson's seer* ,ry. He returned to the Herald onl st Monday. We object to the appointment of ] . Fike, of Spartanburg, as postmas on the same ground that we di )t like to see Wilkes Knight mad istmaster at Bamberg. Good new: iper men are too scarce to permit ( :eir use as postmasters. Almost an: )dy who can get the appointmei id make the bond, can run a pos fice; but when it comes to givin ie public really valuable service i ie editing of a newspaper, the m? rial is less plentiful.?Yorkville Ei lirer. \ WALTERS A GREATER PUZZLE. d Identity of Alleged Kidnaper of Paul liunbar a Mystery. New Orleans, April 26.?A mystery / i_ within a mystery has developed in the d Dunbar kidnaping case and to-day d the identity of William C. Walters, n the alleged kidnaper, is puzzling the authorities more than the question of it the identity of the child which the d Dunbars have accepted as their boy. 3! Evidence was obtained to-day which, indicates there are two William Walters, both of about the same age, both itinerant tinkers and traders, no relaa tion and born a thousand miles apart, n but both frequenters of the same seels tio-ns of Misissippi and Louisiana and d both so much alike that the neighbors k of one readily recognize him in the !_ photograph of the other. * ie More than a score of county offici[q als and prominent citizens of Jones d County, Miss., have identified the photograph of William C. Walters,' n alleged kidnapper, as that of a native t_ of that county, who was sent to the e Tennessee State prison about twelve ie years ago on a Federal charge. The man in prison denied he was ever in ie prison and said he is a native of -s Robeson County, North Carolina. A letter received today from Charles M. g Blackledge, of Lalisheek, La., states h that the Jones County, Miss., William 0 Walters, the one who was in the Ten[S nessee prison, is working for a lumd ber company at that place. ?e a Shot By Negro Highwaymen. k Chattanooga, Tenn., April 26.?Dr. r Finis Rogers, owner of a drug store at ^ St. Elmo, a suburb, and his 14-yearn old soda water clerk, were shot by two negro highwaymen while in the ^ drug store tonight. Rogers is shot through the breast and will die. The ? boy is not fatally wounded. An angry mob is now in pursuit of g the negroes and a lynching is almost , certain if they are captured. Confesses to Two Murders. e * ' Sharon, Pa., April 27.?Ernest Dye, y a negro under arrest here, in a confession to the police alleges he shot 3- and killed Private Lightfoot, of the LS United States army in the Brownsh ville, Texas, riots in 1906, and that S he killed a police officer in Winston 0 Salem, N. C., in 1911. The negro a was arrested "here when, after he d walked into the police station, he attempted to drink poison. The stated ments of the prisoner were not clear. He insisted, however that several -r persons, one named Green, were be-r ing held for the murder of Lightfoot d at Brownsville. The war department d and authorities of North Carolina i- have been notified. t, it RUN OVER BY AN AUTOMOBILE. d Young Augusta Lady Has Skull Fractured and May Die. . vVJ; Augusta,j Ga., April 29.?Miss p- Ernestine Batey, 19 years of age, lies in a local hospital with a fractured skull as the result of being knocked s- down by an automobile at 12th and > Broad streets last night. The phy e cians say she cannot recover. The ie young lady was returning home from b- a visit and was pushing a baby car>r riage containing her baby sister when r- the accident occurred, h Mrs. W. K. Hagler, wife of a is prominent brick manufacturer, was >r driving a touring car containing a ie number of lady friends and in the is effort, to avoid running over a boy on is a bicycle, ran the car into Miss Batey le and her little sister. The carriage Le was demolished, but the baby, beyond a few slight bruises, was not hurt. I. Miss Batey, however, was knocked le down and run over and has been un. it conscious ever since the accident, le There was great excitement at the >y time of the accident as all four of it the ladies in the automobile fainted, te Fireman Patrick Callahan, who a few b- hours later met a tragic death when is he fell from a fire truck, was one of >r the first to reach Miss Batey and he bs carried her into a drug store, where a- she was cared for until the ambul lance could arrive. The blood of the >n girl was on the clothing of the fireis man when he met death. :: Machinery For Sale IS , I am offering all my ma1 c?iQ cfi n rm ir of one 70-horse power boils' er, one 70-horse power en3_ gine, saw mill, grist mill, I rice mill, system ginnery, (three 70-saw gins), belting, shafting, two log carts, etc., all in good fix except ?. ginnery. Easy terms. Call on or write the undersigned if you mean business. t D. 0. Hunter )f Branchville, S. C., R. F. D. 2, Box 28 I No. Six-Sixty-Six g This is a prescription prepared especially n for MALARIA or CHILLS & FEVER. Five or six doses will break any case, and if taken then as a tonic the Fever will not 1- return. It acts on the liver better than Calomel and does not gripe or sicken. 25c