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I MMMiin gp |E|jr ^-m-M-M-i i 1 : I : i :-i^444 ! = I The Umbn Saily Times I ~ ~:= i I DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY EstaWlUhcd in 1850--CoaTflHl^f^^BuM Dilly Tim.. Oc tob?r 1. 1117 DAILY EXCEPT JUNDA \ | ,|h|m|"|. iji J 0'H.r I' I1'X11 J' J iJi i|i i|i i| | |. _ ^^ ' y v"i**?~v""M**!' ..." v .' 1* ' / ' ?1 ? - - 11 ? ? sajwdj^^Mpg=?? . - ?*_ j.?H *M .. I..? ?i? i? - - 1 -' Vol. LXXH No. 1425 ^ Union, S. C., S>turday^^^^^^^y^July^S^19B2 . 3c Por Copy MUCH VIOLENCE IN NEW ORLEANS New Orleans, July 7.?Fred J. White, superintendent of the car department of the Illinois Central road at Harahan, a few miles from New i Orleans, was assaulted at Carrollton avenue and the Yazoo & Mississippi ] Valley railroad crossing and one I white man and three negroes were shot and wounded as the result of two clashes tonight between men 1 said to be strikers or sympathizers and company workers. t Superintendent White was set upon ] by two men who gave their names to < the police as Conrad Hudephole and 1 George Lenzener, when he alighted i from a suburban train. He was only I slightly injured. < When Patrolman Ijiv at.temnted to 1 arrest the two men he was said to have been attacked. They were ar- < rested and charged with assault and < battery. ' The three negroes, employed in the i Illinois Central shops at Harahan, : were fired upon by a number of white ' men as they left the same train. One 1 of them was seriously hurt and police 1 said all three returned the fire as they lay wounded. About 25 shots 1 were exchanged. Police disarmed the negroes and dispersed the crowd but made no arrests. Vincent Palao, a grocery clerk, was ^ hit in the leg by a stray bullet. Rochester, N. Y., July 7.?Striking railway shopmen in the Rochester district today adopted a resolution calling up the executive council of the railway employees department of i.1 A T71_ A* T T A ~ me Amencttii reuerttuuu ui uuuui iu withdraw all support from railway signalmen because of their alleged refusal to strike as the shopmen claim they promised to do. The resolution reads: "Whereas, it has pleased President Helt of the Brotherhood of Railway Signalmen of America to violate his given word and withdraw his support from the shop crafts of railway employees department, A. F. L. "Be it resolved, That we petition the executive council, Railway Employees Department, A. F. L., to hold . no ..mW.stggiog^sF, conference with the Said president ana ?6 trftftdravir all moral and financial support from the Brotherhood of Railway Signalmen." Huntington, W. Va., July7.?Officers of the Chesapeake & Ohio here reported today heavy shipments of coal moving and all lines of service being maintained. Union leaders said the shipmen's strike was still 100 per cent effective here. The Baltimore & Ohio has put men to work at Clarksburg, f'airmont anu Bennwood. Union leaders at Parkersburg said that men imported to the Baltimore & Ohio shops there had refused to work a^d were being cared for by the union. World's Best Horseback Rider Belgrade, Jugoslavia, July 7.?The world's best horseback rider is said to be Lt. Pietro Hudenko, once of the Imperial Russian hussars and now a waiter at the Anflo-American Club, v * He claims never to have failed to break and 'tame the wildest horse. He says he does not use strength and agility, but mesmerism. He takes a wild horse, slips a halter on its head, passes a rope twice through Its mouth, jumps on its back without a saddle, gets a knee grip, and lets the horse rear, buck, or run at will. After the horse is tired he pets it, whispers strange words into its ears, words known to a few Cossacks of me Caspian steppes, hihi men, ncm again, wil Ithat horse bite or kick or disobey a man. Pietro soon is to become trainer and horsebreaker for King Alexander. Death of Mrs. Sara Rodgers Mrs. Sara Rodgers died at her home in Spartanburg, Wednesday, July 5th. Mrs. Rodgers was found dead in her chair and was sewing when death struck her. She is survived by two sisters, Mr^. Lizzie Lowe of Columbia, and Mrs. R. L. Plaxico of this city. The burial was at Cedar Grove church, Spartanburg county, on Friday, July 7th. Mrs. Rodgers'was before her, marriagq, Mies Sara Fowler of this county. American Wins Championship Henley on Thames, July 8 (By the Associated Press).?Walter M. Hoover, the American champion oarsman, won at Diamond Sculls here toaay. Concert Tomorrow Afternoon The let S. C. Regimental Band will give a concert in front of the court ^ house tomorrow afternoon from 5 to 6 o'clock. The public is cordially invited tc attend. CRISIS REACHED IN GERMAN CAPITAL Washington, July 7. ? The fall of the German government is threatened and stringent measures have been enacted for the protection of the republican regime, the commerce department was advised today in a cablegram from Commercial Attache Herring at Berlin. . The political crisis resulting from the assassination of Foreign Minister Ratheneau, Mr. Herring reported, has aggravated the period of currency depression inaugurated by the failure of the^foreign loan negotiations and the feeling is now general that Germany faces grave political complications with the fall in exchange, which dropped to the lowest level in history today. "The consideration by the reichstag of important legislation," he said, "including the forced loan bill and grain subsidy measures, was interrupted by the Rathenau incident and by the consequent consideration and exactment of stringent measures for protecting the republican regime. These measures provide the death penalty or life imprisonment for conspiracy against the republic. "Bavaria, where the anti-republican feeling is believed to be most prevalent, refuses enforcement of these protective measures, alleging that no necessity for them exists. "Intense party feeling prevails in Germany, "being manifested in nunier. ous assemblages under police supervision. All anti-republican agitation is being suppressed. A strike among Berlin printers has resulted in. the suspension of nearly all newspapers. "The passage by the reichstag of a grain subsidy measure providing for the assessment of large quantities of bread grain from farmers at prices appreciably under the market level has aroused bitter opposition from the agrarians and the national party which threatens the fall of the government." Water-Lifting Apparatus Invented London, July ?A water-lifting awwtfltps .whk'Ji to flaut tha natural"!that water camtoTrun uphill, and by which the tremendous energy of the rising tides may be harnessed for use by man, is an invention of Thomas G. Allen, graduate of Washington University, St. Louis, and now a British subject. The "Hydrautomat," as the apparatus is called, is the result of two years of experiments. A workine model has been viewed by scores of engineers, some of whom have been baffled by the simplicity of the cycle of operation. It has lifted water 20 feet above the river level. The hydrautomat is designed to raise water in any quantity from a running stream to any desired height without the use of standard equipment such as pumps, rams, or waterwheels. The apparatus harnesses two natural sources of energy, the weight of a column of water and atmospheric pressure. By means of a series of tanks, one above the other, and a sluice gate, which alternately brings suction and pressure forces into play, 80 percent of the energy ol the pressure water used is obtained The height required is reached by carrying the sris of tanks, alternating open and closed chambers, togethci with air conducting pipes, to the de>ired height. It is believed there is unlimitec scope for the hydrautomat on streams where hydraulic power developments are not feasible because of the smal amount of fall. One of the first ap plications is expected to be on irri gation projects. In a broad sense, according to th< inventor, the purpose of the hydrau tomat is to convert the contained en ergy of large quantities of water a1 a low head into that of a smallei quantity of water at a high head, 01 to compel a stream to hoist part o itself up over the land for tommer cial or agricultural purposes. Thi principle is fixed; the application i to be determined by local require ments. World patent rights have been is sued. It appears that in the world' inventive records the principle of th hydrautomat has been. remotely ap j proached, but never attained. Playing For Championship Toda; Wimbledon, England, July 8 (B the Associated Press).?America tennis lovers in England thronged t< day to Wimbledon Courts to witnee the long awaited match between Mil Suzanne Lenglen and Mrs. Moll Fiiiirstpdt Mallorv for fhe world chan pionship now held by the French gir The playing of the rivals thus far i the tournament Indicated both to I at the top of the game. 1 ^ ' Mrs. James W. Mixson will lea\ Monday for Wlnthrop College to tai the course offered for club women. WELCOME GIVEN WOODMEN HEAD Spartanburg, July 7.?Headed by W. A. Frazer, sovereign commander, a group of fcl* highest officials of the Woodmen of the World invaded Spartanburg tonight and were welcomed here by Woodmen from every section of the state, gathered for the Woodmen rally at Converse college tonight. Met by a delegation of uniformed Woodmen, Sovereign Commander Fraser and his party were escorted | to the college, where he addressed the South Carolina Wodomen assembled I there. Mr. Fraser tomorrow will go to inspect a site offered as a possible location for the $1,000,000 Woodmen home that it is proposed to establish somewhere in this section of the aoutn. ine woodmen of the World, Mr. Fraser told the South Carolinians, in addition to erecting the home for aged tubercular members of the order as previously announced, are now planning also to build an orphanage. The address of welcome to the visiting officials was made by I. C. Blackwood, while Sovereign Commander Fraser was introduced by Max G. Bryant of Rock Hill, head consul. Music for the rally was furbished by the Saxon Wodmoen of the World band. Various vocal numbers by Donald Sanders, Mrs. J. Wirron Willson, Maury Pearson and Charlie Shockley added no little to the pleasure of the session. Comprising the part of visiting officials are: W. A. Fraser, sovereign commander; S. Wood Jewell, sovereign advisor; John T. Yates, sovereign clerk; S. A. Terrell, sovereign escort; C. D. Mills, sovereign watch.man; S, L. King, sovereign sentry; J. E. Fitzgerald, chairman sovereign auditors; E. B. Lewis, sovereign auditor; T. E. Patterson, sovereign auditor; E. D. Campbell, sovereign auditor; William Ruess, sovereign audi*, tor; R. T. Wells, sovereign auditor jl W. M. Crawford, sovereign auditors D. E. Bradshaw, general attorney; Am D. Cloyd, M. D,. sovereign physicians Tomorrow morning, SoveraUflB Commander Fraser and his party, adfl compaOftd by a delegating of ,reprkfl optative bankers, busineaa Woodmen of Spartanburg, will motor to inspect the proposed Woodmen home site near Tryon, N. C. The sovereign commander and his party was delayed about an hour by an automobile accident. The automobile in which Mr. Fraser was traveling from Hendersonville, N. C. prncVinil intn nnnthpr PAT POlYlinC? from Greenville, in rounding a curve in the mountains this afternoon. Both automobiles were considerably damaged by the smash but the occupants of neither car were hurt, and Mr. Fraser, after some little delay, continued his trip to Spartanburg without further trouble. The Woodmen officials tonight are the guests of Spartanburg Woodmen. > Conference Waits Until Next Monday 1 Washington, July 7. ? Anthracite >, mine operators and officials of the ' j miners' union who have been meeting l! at President Hardin's call to consider I means of settling the present strike, J adjourned their sessions today until r| Monday without definite results being : j accomplished. Secretary Davis, who j sat in today's meeting as the repre - sentative of the government, said, l however, that "a little progress had 1 been made." ? The anthracite adjournment left * this section of the general conference 1 11 /? t Vt/> aaaI irt/lnot t*ir'e 1 qKiii* IU VUC tvai HIUUOVI jr a iwuvt troubles in a position similar to that of the bituminous confex^nce. Both sections are now awaiting a Monday - gathering, at which President Hard ing may present some views in behalf - of the government. t r Germany May be Unable ? To Meek Her Payment b London, July 8 (By the Associated Press).?The P merican Embassy officials said today while no formal rep. resentations have been made by the British government looking to the participation of the United States ah lied efforts to rehabilitate Germany. 0 The subject has been discussed foi some time in diplomatic and other circles and the hope was expressed thai the United States might be induced to lend its support to the project. A colf lapse of German marks accompanied by reports that Germany would be un y able to meet her July reparations payn ment, due a week from today. 18 Tobacco Crop of 1922 e. Sixty Million Poundi la" . i- Madison, Wisconsin, July 8.?To I. bacco crops of 1922 are expected tc n amount to 60,000,000 pounds and wil >e be cooperatively marketed througl northern Wisconsin tobacco pool, th< state department markets announcet re today. Over 75 per cent of 50,001 te acres has been contracted for by th< pool, it was announced. By J Washingt?^^^^^^Rp*lte strategy involved Movement today for baaed on hope become that the Republica^^^^^^^^H^larifT legislation IBM ^fisocrptic obstructionj^^^^^^^HSiaator Oscar W. Undaj^^^^H^^KUc leader, in *n K That tjgl^^B^^^^^Hfta ^n^iated in defeated, and thd|^H^^^^^^K?hd P<'ratk?4^^^^H^Bg&&l effect, Senatdfl Hped to be true. "It.'^raafS continuedjM^^^^^^^^HFcountry Swcein^ He prior i Hportant < I cotton, Htso unHhlicans me by Hamend- i Hs foolH under Hkfe no H He, conHto cerHto em. I of the Hta with Htguinat H> counHolitical Hinst a ' RepubHey can trot ? ga ^^:^.PWiH|Hj5do, name. j* x"; ev/-k' _ by who f^pHt the bill to SiifBP to thb' #^wR7^:;- *&? ?iJRT*^hT>''irt*' "^ T* < |*IMBB|il III IW. Ullf. tie VX9 P pressed a determination, however, adequately to discuss and dissect it. He declared that the country demanded this service of Democrats. It was his prediction that the bill would pass the senate by August 10. Washington, July 8.?The senate continued the consideration of the tariff bill under the usual procedure today, the attempt of the Republican leaders to shut off the debate having failed with the defeat of the motion to invoke the existing cloture rule. Fire on Tran-Atlantic Liner Hoboken, July 8.?Fire broke out today on the transatlantic liner Nieuw Amsterdam at Holland American line docks. There was little damage, but considerable excitement among the passengers. President Will Return Today En Route With President Harding, Uniontown, Pa., July 8 (By the Associated Press).?After a week's absence from the White House, the rresiaent is expected to De duck dy this evening, a 225-mile automobile drive faced him early today when he left his hotel near here on the last lap of the return trip. Johnny Sanders Missionary Society The Johnny Sanders missionary society will meet tomorrow afternoon at 5 o'clock in the church parlors. Senator and Mrs. Watson Recuperating Washington, July 8.?Senator Watson of Georgia and Mrs. Watson, both of whom have been ill with bronchitis at their home in Chevy 'Q|iase were i said by physicians today to be conva lescing. The senator, however, will not . be able to resume his duty for another week. Circle Meetings > The circles of the First Presby terian church will meet Monday afterI noon at 5 o'clock at the following homes: No. 1?Mrs. S. E. Barron. No. 2?Miss Emma Brandon. No. 3?Mrs. George Perrin, Jr. l Prominent Masons Visits Union Masons > C. B. Martin of . . ewberVy, District 1 Deputy Grand Master of the Ancient ? Free Masons of South Carolina paid s an official visit to Union Lodge, No 1 75, A. F. M., last evening. D Mr. Martin was accompanied by R. t C. Longshore, a former member of Union Lodge. , 4 ) A m W 4 RUPTURE AVERTED F / IN CONFERENCE I _____ r The Hague, July 7 (By the Associited Press).?The Hague conference P Allowing the dramatic pathway of tl Genoa's famed conclave came very ec ?ear a rupture today, the issue on IS which the conference threatened to n< iplit being the treatment of confiscated property in Russia. , What Russia proposed to do in the P way of restitution, as explained offi- st dally by Macin Litvinoff, the Russian ci ipokesman, fell like a cold shower m in the expectant delegates. Sir Philip m Lloyd-Greame of the British delega- b< .ion arose and declared it was per- pi 'ectly absurd to continue the discus- th lions unless more satisfactory assur. hj pices were forthcoming. Only M. fo fCrassin?"Krassin, the conciliator," co ?s he is beginning to be called?saved die day by suggesting mildly that hi controversial matters be left aside for pi iio moment and a real effort be made re jo find a common ground based on niu- di :ual advantage. ai The difficulty started at the after- ti loon session of the conference when tc M. Litvinoff read a long list of oil and jr ether concessions which Russia was 5( ready to give to foreigners. M. Cat tl tier, Belgium, suggested it would be 'nice*' if M. Litvinoff would explain ti (which of the properties listed were fi, under "foreign ownership previous to their confiscation, and what foreign C( propertv were excluded from the list. s, M. Litvinoff replied that he could u aot say whether the properties be- w longed previously to foreigners or Russians. It was difficult for Russia (i to identify foreign enterprises; all je that could be done was to publish the w list and let foreign owners identify w their property if they could. p "Do you really mean," Sir Philip Lloyd-Greame asker, 'that, having nutionalized these properties and admin- ^ istered them, you do not know wheth- t] ?r the owners are foreigners or Rus- 1. kians?" c* ^"Exactly," replied M. Litvinoff. "M. Cattier said: "We understand a than there is no question of restitu- t) tioil to the actual property and that Russia will grant concessions to any ?, foreign capitalist who is ready to in- jj an(^ not necessarily to a ^ To this the Russian spokesman made the answer: "We do not go back , on what we said at Genoa, namely, ^ that the first option on concessions would be offered to former owners." j A long, exciting discussion followed, with frequent murmurs of astonishment or disapproval. Boy's Body Found McCormiek, July 6.?The body of Albert Freeland, the 18 year old son of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. C. Freeland of Plum Branch, who was drowned in Savannah river at Ferguson's old ferry on last Sunday afternoon, was found yesterday afternoon about five miles below the place where he was drowned, at Freeman's ferry. A viligant watch had been maintained along the river from the time of the drowning until the body was discovered floating down the river by the ferryman. The remains were laid to rest yesterday afternoon in the Freeland cmetery near Plum Branch. Today's Cotton Market Open Close July 22.08 22.09 October 22.07 22.75 December 22.50 20.40 January 22.25 22.12 ] TtC U OO lO OO A1 miii ] 1 N. Y. Spots 22.75 , Local market 22.50 ] PERSONAL MENTION Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Whitney of Route 3 are among the visitors in Union today. Miss Margaret O'Shear of Savannah, Ga., is spending a few days with friends. Miss Mahala Smith will leaVe Mon day, where she goes to assist in the short course for club women and girls at Anderson College. Miss Theo Young will leave next week for Summerville to be the guest of Miss Lucia Miler. J. McJ. Fant of Santuc was a business visitor in the city today. Miss Minnie lice Charles left today for York to visit friends and relatives for some time. Miss Sara Rasor has returned from a vir.it to Miss Fanny Cohen in Spartanburg. Mrs. J. H. I,ampley and children will return to their home in Greenville tomorrow after a visit to their parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. V. Askew, on South Mountain street. Mrs. D. J. Gregory of Route 3 was among the visitors in Union today. V Mrs. Lucile Belue has returned to her home in Spartanburg after \ week*8 visit to Mrs. Foster Bentlley. There are fewer foreign-born farmers in the South than in anv other J section of the country. REE STATE SCORES SUCCESS Dublin, July 8 (By the Associated ress).?The casualties suffered by ie National army during the recent rnflict at Dublin were lt> dead and 12 wounded, it was officially anjunced today. Dublin, July 7 (By the Associated ress).?The activities of the free ate forces in the provinces as indiited by the latest official reports are eeting with complete success, large ambers of insurgents continuing to > captured. In various parts of liv rovinces the irregulars,( alarmed by ie advance of the national sol 'iers, ave abandoned and burned theii irtifled positions and fled into the mntry. The encircling movement in the lis south of Dublin is rapidly ap coaching success, virtually whole iving bands ot irregulars being riven into Blessington, where thc\ re practically invested with the na onal troops holding part of th< >\vn. The total number of iregular; i Blessington is placed at more thai )(). There are persistent rumors wit Eamon De Valera and Erskim hilders have been seen in this dis ict, but these have not been veri ed. In Dublin itself life is rapidly bo iming normal. The railways are re iming service though damage to th*. no prevents direct communication itii Cork. The tragic end of Caethal Brughi Charles Burgess), the first irregula ader to fall in the present lighting as the foremost topic today. I as recalled how, when fighting thritish forces, he received no les lan 14 wounds and for a month hov red between life and death, eventual ! to become minister of defense ii ne first Irish govrnment, thougl iter he espoused the Republicai nuse. Harry Boland is known to bi mong those besieged at Blessing in. His brother, J. Boland, was cap ired today after a brisk fight at i arm house two miles north of Bless lgton, whence the rebels fled. Bo |nd, with 11 others, drove up to th arm house hrterr-sapfKiyliiy tt to bt till in the hands of the irregular; nd the whole party was capture* dth a quantity of arms. Brigadie1 leneral Macdonald, commanding: th regulars, also was captured. Stronghold of Tartar Tribes Peking, July 7.?Mongolia, ; tronghold of Tartar tribes long be ore Genghis Khan, Kublai Khan an< heir descendants invaded Europe an* xtended their dominion throughou Vsia in the thirteenth century, i igain giving China trouble. Under llutukhtu, a spiritual leade vho claims to be a living Buddha, th< 1,000,000 . ongolian people, who de dared their independence of Chin; iroper more than a year ago, have filtered into an alliance with Soviet lussia. Russian soldiers now police LJrga, the capital, anel Russian ad /isers are saiel to dominate Hutukhte vith the result that titles te> all prop *11y held by foreigners have beet mnuulk-ri and thirty year leases giv n instead. The titles held by for signers have been taken out of Mon ?olia for safety but in the meantinx he Mongolian government has begin Lo exact rent payments under tlx leases. So far the Chinese government has been unable, because of emergencies nearer home, to send an expeditioi to overthrow the independent govern ment, but a protest has been sent t< Moscow. The Far Eastern Repub lie at Chita, Siberia, also has recojr nized Hutukhtu's rule. Mongolia which stretches acros northern China is without a railroai in any part of its 1,370,000 squan miles. Urga's only telegraph com munication is with Chita, a line t Peking having been destroyed. Th trip from Peking to Urga is five day by automobile. Wool, furs and hide form the chief Mongolian industries Whether China will ever be sutli ciently strong to regain Mnogolia i the subject of discussion in the Chi nese press. 'As usual China is th immediate nnd innocent sufferer, says the Peking North China Stan* ard, a Japanese owned newspnpo published in English. "It is not t be expected that the other powers ii terested in Mongolia will take th blow lying down and without protest ing. Mongolia being still regarded a a part of China by all nations exeej Soviet Russia, China will he present ed with another bill for damage done, and she wil leither have to re* oprnize it and pay, or refuse respot sibility and at the same time adm the absolute independence of Mor prolia." The glass-making industry In th United States uses nearly 2,000,00 tons of sand annually. The latch is sometimes called th fly. WEEK CLOSES ON RAILWAY STRIKE Chicago, July 8 (By the Associated Press).?Railway shopmen entered the second week of their strike toda> with no apparent inclination to follow the only avenue to peace held open to theni by the Railroad Labor Board, that of returning to work and then entering into negotiations for a settlement. The railroads remained immovable in their attitude of considering the strik0 as against the government rather than against the road . Chicago, July 7 (By the Associated Press).? The first week of the strike of railway shopmen ended tonight with sporadic outbreaks of violence reported in widely scattered sections of the country troops held in readiness to quell trouble in Illinois and soldiers requested in other states and union officials, railroad executives and the United States railroad labor board standing firm in the nosition each assumed when (he walkout started, duly 1. The attitude of the federated shop crafts was indicated tonight when B. M. Jewell, head of the railroad employees' department of the American Federation of Labor, issued a statement disclaiming any further responsibility for continuation of the strike and holding the railroads and the labor board to blame for the length of time the walkout lasts. "Those who complain because the railway shop strike has not been settled should understand that the men have been forced out much against their will," his statement said. "The strike has now been in progress one week. Notwithstanding the fuct that we have by every means available to us made it known that conference was desired with any responsible person authorized to negotiate a settlement, or that any proposal by any person properly authorized would be carefully considered, no move has been made by other parties to bring about a settlement. "The striking employees are not to be driven back. They are asking only justice and will not willingly submit to less." Chairman Ben W. Hooper of thu lBbdt * Hjoiu'W'?luiim.* ?i ?i statement In which he asserted that "the only feasible way for the shop crafts organization to end the strike is to follow in the footsteps of the maintenance of way organization, whose officers this week appeared before the board and agreed to postpone heir strike pending further negotiaion." Old Projectile is Found in Charleston A pood sized projectile, supposed to have been fired during the Civil War was found recently in front of 1 :;r> Church street, while the city force was digging a sewer prior to street paving. The projec.de, weighing a good many pounds, measured 10 inches lengthwise with a 1 1-2 inch cross section. A hole bored through the entire length is supposed to have held some unexploded powder which it was intended should have exploded upon striking. The missile was found buried some six or seven feet below the level of the street by Victor lloudolf. one of the workmen. The building before whit h it was found is the old l'lant eis' Hotel and it was there that the rice planters made their temporary lodgings whenever they visited Charleston in the days before the Civil War. Charleston American. Notice Baracas We want 200 men in the Buracu class at the First Baptist church tomorrow. A male quartet 'will furnish I special music. \\ on't you come out ? 1). Fant Gilliam, II President. Arsenate Poisons Cow Chesterfield, July 7.?11. L. Cato, on .1. C. Rivers' place, east of town, lost a fine caw by accidental poisoning. She licked the edges of a bucket that ( contained boll weevil poison mixed ? with molasses. Selects Americkn Engineer o i_ Cairo, July 7.?French .-olonial autliAi.i(ioii lioi'n t... 1 an Amcrii'Aii engineer to report on a project of ?rlR rigation in the Niger valley, in West Africa. He is Dr. Herbert H. Forbes, former dean of the College of Agii... i ultlire of Arizona, and lately agronomist of the Royal Agricultural Society of Cairo. it The work on the Niger contemplates an irrigation dam similar to the Assouan dam of the Nile, and it will be carried out under the direcie tion of the Governor General of 0 French Occidental Africa. Honolulu has one of the finest and ie most efficient telephone systems in the world. r a