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65419 i. ?-? an?. "--. feet clay wi. be palnte. king's palau come clear lau power of drawin, and the red, tue g. pie rays of the sunlit an opal. The sand wi., hard and white, and have of drawing to itself the bli the sunlight and become a s. The soot will become the barde* whitest substance known, and changed into a dimond. The wate ln the summer is a dewdrop, and ii the winter chrystalizes into a star Even so the homliest lives, by draw lng to themt.elves the coloring u truth, sincerity, charity and faith may become crystals aud gems "o purest ray serene." * ? * WHAT SHALL WK READ? Paul once stirred up Ephesus witl some lively sermons about the sins o that place. Among the most import ant results of these sermons wes tin faot that the citizens broughc ou their bad books and papers and in j public place made a bonfire of them One of the wants of this cammunit; ls a great bonfire of bad books am newspapers. We have in this vicinlt: enough of such fuel to make a bia/. 500 feet high. Take forth this trasl and put it into the lire, and let lt b< known In the presence of God ami - angels and naen that you are going ti ria your homes of this curse of prudi gate literature. We believe it ls in tended that the printing-press shall be a means for the world'3 rescue and evangelization. The great last battle of the world will not be fuught with swords and guns, but with types and presses, a purified literature triumph lng over and crushing out forever that which is depraved. The great est blessing that ever came to this nation is that of an elevated litera ture, and the greatest scuurge has been that of unclean literature. This last has its victims In all departments of life. It has helped to till insane asylums and penitentiaries. The London plague was nothing to it. "What boo'.;s and papers do you read? A newspaper is onlv a buok In a swllter and more portable sbape. In selecting your papers do you make no distinction between the tree of life and the tree of death? Cherish good books and newspapers. Beware of the bad ones. Benjimin Franklin said that thc reading of Cotton Math er's essay on "Doing Good" molded his entire life. May not the reading of this Home Circle Column, crude though it mayjbe, have an intluence upon your children in molding their lives while they are yet easily Im pressed. Wo strive hard to keep the columns of this paper clean and pure so lt can be warmly welcomed into the best homes of this community. In our nest issue we will have some thing to say abuut novel reading. ? # KOND OK CONTENTION. As Individuals, as families, commu nities and even as nations wo seem to be coming more fond of contentions. It is contentions more than auy other one thing that takes from the Home Circle its every charm. Kussia and Japan at the present time are only samples of the o .intention that can be found in too many humes. In this country where our blue skies are full of robins and doves and meadowlarks, we select as our national symbol, the fierce and filthy eagle. In Great Brltlan where they have lambs and deer their symbol ls the merciless Hon. In Russia, where from between her frozen north ami blooming south all kinds of beasts abide, they choose as their smybol the growling bear. So fond are we of contention tbat we climb out through the heavens and baptize one of the other planets with tho spirit of battle and call lt Mars after the god of war. Wo suppose cur readers ha\e noticed how warmiy in love dry goorls stores are with other dry goods stores, and how highly grocerymen think Of the sugars of the groceryman in the same block. You have no ticed In what a eulogistic way allo pathie and homeopathic doctors speak 1 . bi I in edi. , boll wee. ? do. Short*. Clemson Cjlk, weevil to be i throughout the en "The adult wee 3 square to the boll lu bi. 1 her eggs which are pu r square or boll through a h. e by the female by means ui t snout with jaws at the end of li a. egg in about eight days develops . . the larva which at once begins feedi y on the substance of the plant In wh i it is encased. The presence of an c y Inside the square or boll may be c ? tainly detected," says Prof. Cha i bliss, "by the preser.ee of a small di wart on the outside, where the fem i has bored into the plant i As to the dangers of bringing 1 weevil Into t?i?s state Prof. Chambl says that in winter the boll weevil habits houses; bins, barns or anywh where shelter may be found and hei the great danger of importing Te: grain which may contain the wee; lu large numbers. "Another important fact," says 1 "ls that the pupa in its cell resemb very closely the cotton seed itself a the two cannot be distinguished i cept by trained eyes. "The pupa, which ls the interme ate stage between larva and adult, found imbedded in the bjlls and wi the cotton is ginned these pupae 1 through with thc seed without bel hurt In the least and if the seed , shipped away the pupae go too a soon we have another infected c trict." On the mount which Prof. Cha bliss has prepared ls a striking pict' showing the similarity between c ton seed and the pupae cells. The t are the same size and outward ape ance and it would be impossible clean infected seed after the cells once mixed, unless they were piel out one at a time, which would be together out of the question. THE Republican state conventiot Montana, which nominated Willi Lindsay for Governor, felt c mstraii to take a hand in Colorado polit also, which it did by ar?opth^ resolution denouncing the Republic Governor of the latter state for h'gh-handed and unlawful actloi: deporting citizvns for alleged crlrc without "due pro'ess of law." TniiKE is nothing the thought voter should Investigate KO cloicly the government expend?;urea i receipts. The Roosevelt admlnist Mon and the Republican Congi seem perfectly reckless about how taxpayers' money ls expended. WI under the last year of the hist Der eratic administration the Army i Navy cost $82,000,000, thc pres expenditures for those purposes costing 8*217,000,000. Tine facts that Chairman Cortel; has been promised the ofllce of Pc master General, and that while was Secretary of thc Departmenl Commerce and Labor, he beca familiar with many Important t poration secrets, and that as heat the l'ostulllco Department, he \ have to deal with large maii-carry railway systems, explain the power has as chairman to pull the legs the corporation bosses. M KMnuns of tho Republican ] bional Committee are figuring ui victory without New York, lt Is f sible, but it has never been thai candidate for President won with the State of Now York. Ot .1 bi ber b; P or b; ney. liL (Kl. ideal party tba ot money and tb oe able to vote tb! Therefore, Indian relied upon to go 1 ir th j can control su Hielen i money to buy those voter ep them bought. This is, c e, a pretty tough statement t .?ce, but it is nevertheless true, fu uere is always in a national elcotio from ?10,000 to 50,000 votes in Indian ) for sale to the highest bidder, and th r party that has the money to buy bhos i votes will win the election. ' KErUllLlCANS GIVE Ul" lNDIAXA. Democratic campaign managers sc ! in the refusal of the uatioual Rspubl can committee to send any of il ' prominent speikcrs to Indiana a t abandonment cf the state by Republ ' cans rather than a belief that tb ' state is safely Republican wi toot further campaigning. That th ' excuse given by the Rep?blica managers is both bald and lame shown by the fact that Indian leaders are wroth at tho determin; tion of the national ci mmlttee togi\ Ne-v York and other states all tb good things in the oratorical lim while Indiana gets lesser lights. J the state were safely Republican, as Democrats with a smile, why shoul the action of the national commiltt came such construction in Republ can ranks. Mhot Two Mun. At springfield, Mass., Dr. Edwai J. Heit Saturday evening shot .luise Strong, a wealthy real estate mai and Dr. Benjamin Jackson, a medici electrician and then took carbol acid. Dr. Belt died in the Mere hospital half an hour later, .ludsc Strong's wound is serious and be ma die. Belt was a graduate of 1 larval and his home was in South Bostoi Ile had been in Springfield thre years. Dr. Belt occupied an olllce i .Judson Strong's block. He entert Mr. .Strong's office where the tatt? was engaged in conversation willi D Jacks ii and immediately opened Iii on them with a ;?2 calibre revolve Two bullets entered .Mr. Strong's le j iw, one lodging in the throat. Ai other Inflicted a slight wound ou D Jackson's scalp. Dr. Belt then wei to bis olllce and took a dose of ca rb Ile acid. The three men were remo ed to Mercy hospital, where Belt dh a short time afterwards. Previous l ibe shooting of the two men it alleged that Dr. Belt bad made ; attempt to kill Miss Amelia Duma to whom he was engaged. She ni him in Iiis ( lllce by appointment ar after a struggle with bini escaped. Ach ill on thc Ocean. At New York while a heavy, slur which broke during the night was its height, three coal-laden can boats, each with a family on boa tore loos2 from their moorings In tl Bast river and swept, down th rou; Hell Gate past Blackwells Island ai into a wider stretch of the rive where all trace of them was los Their piogress to this point was tra ed by cries fjr help from those < board the little craft, but the swi current in the river soon carried the far out toward the stonn-swopt ba Tho police, after valdly trying to s cure some tug boat or other craft go to the rescue of imperiled boat notltled the various ferry linc s, li boats and railroad tug boat line watch for them. Although a contin ous search was made for the missil boats, no trace of them has bei found this afternoon. J? and robbers ..o contri j enable tbe continue in .e of robbing tbe democrats are not j money from such just look to the people .ivor of Democratic suc the campaign chest with j contributions. There are of . some rich Democrats and some ^rations that contribute to tbe mocratio fund, hut all the money .nus obtained would not equal the fat Tried out of a singe trust by Roose velt's man, Cortelyou. The Democratic National Commit tee needs money and is not ashamed or afraid to say so. George Foster Peabody, the treasurer of the commit tee, would be glad to receive contri butions, large or small. Ile would welcome suras as small as half a dol lar. Mr. Peabody encourages the mak ing of small contributions. Ile would rather receive 3100 from one t! jinked persons in sums of one dollar each than the like sum from a single.indi vidual. Mr. Peabody hopes io bc fav ored with many small contributions from the south. Himself a native of Georgia, he says it would please him immensely to have the D?mocrate bf his old home state evince their inter est in the cause in this practical way. He would be glad to have the Dem ocrats in other southern states join. And why not? No portion of the country would receive greater benefit from the election of Parker and Davis than the south; no portiou has so much to fear from the election of Roosevelt as the south. It would be a handsome thing for Orangebuig County to raise at last one hundred dollars to hi lp the good cause along. The Times and Democrat expects to make a. small contribution to the Democratic campaign fund and would gladly receive contributions from others for the same purpose. All con tributions will be acknowledged in these columns. Let every man do bis 3uty. Lost in Turritlc (Jaie. A dispatch from Chatham, Mass., >ay? a small part of the forward sec tion of the hull and a slanting fore ma: t stood as mute reminders of the tragedy enacted there Friday night ivl:en tiie three-masted schooner Wentworth of Moncton, N. Ii., struck >n Chatham bar during a raging north irly gale and all on board perished in die terrific seas. With the exception >f the loss of tlie steamer Portland In November, 185)8, the wreck of the Wentworth is the worth disister that las occurred on the Cape Cod coast luring the last decade. Of the 12 jersons who were on board the strand id vessel, not one reached the shore dive, although two bodies were res ined from the surf Friday morning, me of them that of a woman, be loved to be the wife of the captain. iVIth her three children she was ac lompanylhg her husband on a trip rom Hillsboro, N. B., to Newark, S'. J. A Biind Murderer. A triple tragedy occured about bree and a half miles east of Plano Pesas, Thursday afternoon when Will iocbran, a blind man who has been 'parated from his wife for about six vioUs, led hy his nephew, tifteon tars old, called at his mother-in iw's house, entered tho front door, ailed for his wife. When she sat down iy him he grabbed her, stabbing her o death with a dirk and then killed i's mother-in-law, Mrs James Skel on, seventy-three years old. He then bilked around the house about wenty-tive yards, stuck his dirk hi he ground, and pulling out a pisto', hot his brains out and died instantly. Must Too tho Mark. Charles F. Murphy, leader of Tam lany Hall, said Thursday that he had int notices to tho 50 or more candl ati s on the county Democratic ticket [..questing them to decline endorse nut by any party other than their wo. "Democrats must be Democrats nd nothing else," said Mr. Mi rphy. 'he Populists have endorsed a imm er of candidates. IT IS stated that the Panama Canal ommission has already spent S 1,000,. JO for supplies without advertising >r bids, as the law requires. This ls ut one of the early Items of the great anama graft. ~t wai , oy tbe J b gan j ii tbe two s constantly in ? .-. shouted from , It tm bar ra? sed .man. I 1 . some boisti rousiv s l)e said, '.but it ain't 1 spared to our meetings lu ! roll na, this is buta gen! le ' zephj r. " invited their interruptions. Ile ? dd them to dov/n him, and tbe-ir ' .lestions only served to elicit bis bit- ' mg epigrams. ' "I've got so much devilment in mo tonight, 1 want to throw out some heell?re in your direction," lie said, and that started things: "Why should tbe laboring man vote ' or Parket?" shouted Mrs. Lillian 1 Forberg, one of the most insistent of ' the. Socialists present. "Why," thundered Senator Till man, "because if you were in he'l 5 wouldn't you like to get into purga- 1 tory a while." Again, when the Sieialists wt re | harassing him on all sides, he yelled, . "Any Socialist who votes for Debs in 1 preference to Parker is spitting in bis ' own face and is a donkey." Ile was proclaiming the principles ' of Bryan-lt was much more a Bryan 1 than a Parker meeting throughout- 1 when some one asked him woy bryan ' hadn't been elected. "Because you peopledinn't vote the ' way you whoop. When a man talks 1 one way and votes another, God have ] mercy on his soul, because the devil j has a bill cf sale on him." Picking up the pink card, upon 1 which the Sjcialists had printed a list j of questions for him to auswer, Seua 1 tor Tillman exclaimed: "Socialism, social equality on the one side, yes, and amalgamation of races, and hell and damnation on the other." His choicest invectives, however, were saved for President 'ftdosevelt, whose policy towatds the blacks in | the South he bitterly assailed. "If a nigger is good enough for the President to eat with, he Ought to be Hood enough for him to sleep with," he said. ' Nigger," explained the Senator, "means a black man, and is the phrase , used colloquially when spoken. Negr . is the term you us.i when j ou write . and want to be polite." '. "Are you going to trust this coun try again to a man who wants to be the whole sbcotin' match?" was , another of his phrases to describe the President. A man, evidently a leader of thc So lalists pres mt, bavin g r- quest, d that enator Tillman be allowed to' have his say before he was interrupted with questions, the Se dior was -left com paratively unmolested during tbe ; opining of his speech. He was well aware that there were many Socialists present and bc commenced with thc i remark. i "There ls an old adage which says < that a fellow feeling makes us wood- < rous kind. Now, 1 have bein dubbed i a crank, an Anarchist, a wild mau i from iijrnco, and 1 am sure that no ? one here will te any wilder iban I \ ara. I come from a part of the couti- ! try where we have a problem which dwarfs all other problems, and it ls that which keeps the while men in the South in a solid line in the Demo- , eratic party. You can't tell anything ibout lt unless you live lhere. "The Republican leaders of to-day ' ire subservient sycophants, bowing i iud scraping at the White i louse, and j betiding themselves up to < ne man . who directed and controlled Hiern in Lhe National Convention. Every last ' >ne of them falls down a whipped cur jeforc this man in the White House. I have heard Republican leaders, ta;k- | ng among themselves, say that they lad no personal liking for Roosevelt, ( 30 not one of them, but they IKIW to dm because he bas the whip hand and J. :an distribute the patronage. . "1 know you fellows want to vole t 'or D?bs. 11 j ia my friend. We have t jad many a little confabulation to- ;, pether, and 1 think that he isa little ? fattie pated, and maybe I am, but 1 ;l lelieve I still have some sense. 1 want- s id to elect Bryan, but you fellows \ wouldn't vote as iou whooped. 1 have j leen In Chicago b-.-fo e, right out in (] .his district, too, and 1 heard you fei- 0 ows whoop for Bryan, and 1 said to n nyself, Ibero ls nothing to this, 1 (i lave carried the town. But when e?ec- i donday came I found that iou didn't j 'otc the way you were yelling." n "Do you stand for tho'equality of (, ?be races?" he thundered. c "We stand for their equality as far p s wages go," carno thc answer. t( "You can't stand upon one platform nd not on the other," thundered Till aan. "The record of the ages shows hat wherever the white and black aces have contiioted the whites have eeo tho masters. You can't tell his- a ory that it lies." ti "Has Parker declared himself upon K he negro question?" came Lom tho a all. ! ai "My friend, woof the-South aror? rilling to trust tu Parker, cortainly I O ou ought to be." ls be .J pros f. Mean ? attcndlug jeir own and jeir chances bi adid ll 'publicani .dook of tbe election ..ubbful, and tbat tbe juy win, as they dio> In and 18".)2. If it was not jim; nse corruption fund given .publicans by tbe protected la sts of thc cjuntry there would ta 0 doubt as to Indiana gol^g Demo cratic. A Corruption tjunti. The New York World, Brooklyn Bigie, and New Yoik Times are all tfter Roosevelt and Corte! j ou with marp sticks for the alleged "holding ip" of corporations in the Interest ot in: Republican corruption fund. These papers charge that a sysvem of political blackmail bas been adopted jy thc Roosevelt managers and that railroad compauks, banks and other corporations, some of which are legit aa'.e business concerns and uot in iympatby with the policies or caudi Jates of the Republican party, have .o il threatened with the "dispieas ire" of the administration if they do lot foi th wit ti con! ri bute large sums yo Ui3 already swoTen bank account f the Roosevelt highbinders. The Uro ildyu Eagle also gets after "Boss" Jdell, and charges h'm with having idmitted to a friend that he had ar ranged to spend $800,01)0 in an effort JO elect tbe Republican state and na . ional ticket iu New York. The K igle, walch is one of the most con isrvative aud truthful ne>\sparers in Lhe country, and respon-lb?e fur its jtterancis, gives details in making ?.his grave accusation, and calls upon "Boss-!' Odell to make specific denial f ho dare. That the Republicans have .v; u g an enormous amount of money from thc trusts and corporations is )ey< n s question. Teat they will use aillions of ibis blood money corruptly io honest man doubts But they lia ve lone the same tblugs, though in lesser h grce, in previous years, and yet lost :l.e election. A vigilant and unpur maseable press has heretofore aroused ,1JO public conscience and prevented > .e deigned theft of the Presidency. Th s is the only hope of electing Par ?wer and Davis. If the. Republican 1 arty can lind the vut^s to buy they lave the price, and they will carry che election their way. SLniiilt) isy Lils Ouns. The Repub'lcan macnine in Indiana is making desperate elf rts to embar rass the c.dored man who ls running tor Co gress in the Indianapolis dis trict as an independent Republican, but the colored man stands by bis ?urns and declares be will not be bull io ized. There are some live thous and colored voters In the district, but the Republican machine has never perinttied them to get within smell ing distance of the "doughdisb," al though it has always claimed their votes as by Divine right. It is tue ?ame way in Massachusetts, where un inte'?gent colored man, who Had s^rvv d His party well, dared aspire to congressional honor. Ile was one of three candidates at the Republican primaries and was beaten jut of sight. An analysis of the \ot<; cast showed ttiat every white R>publican had voted against the eulorel brother No wonder intelligent colored men" at the North are getting tired of th's sort of treatment and are breaking away from the par ty which cares not for them, but only fi r their votes. The Democrats could not treat them worse if they should l.ry. Tue Northern negroes are tire! yt b dpg used as a catpaw to draw ivhite Republican chestnuts from the iie without being allowed to even .?ste them. Bat the Southern ne ;ru can be relied on to stand by the .vhite Republicans who hold the of ic?.s. KcpulMlcaiiN l'or Parker? A dispatch I rom New York says veal thy and influential Republicans md independents uf Plainfield, N. J., ncluding New York commuters; have irgani/.id a Parker Independent club ind will wage a vigorous campaign ,here, pleading that the Democratic candidato for president represents lonstltutional government. There wib >e no lack of ninds to defray the tx jense of weekly mas meeting in the Casino, and the distribution of cam ?alga liteia'ure has been a*ranged. Icorge S. Clay, a New Yo k lawyer .nd private secretary to Judge Dillon, las neon chosen president of tlteclub, suau L, Miller and Samuel Hunting JU. both New York lawyers, are vice ire ?Me:.ts, and Deusen M. Van Yleet, , retired member of the TS'ew York 'reduce Exchange is secretary. All .re Republicans, .lohn O. Stevens, ecretary of the Postal Telegraph Ca ile Company an Independent R'.'pub ican is treasurer. Judge Stewart, au itor of the American Smelting Co., f New York, a Republcan, is chair man of the Advisory committee. No oubt there are m iny thousands of pa rlo ic Republicans f ir Parker and >avis, and If it-was not for the im ictise corruption fund which thc rust have cont ribo'.od to the Ropubli an cmapa'go chest, there would be no ni ht of a sweeping Democratic vic i'ry- _ In Knell otliciH Arm. A suicide has resulted in the death t' Miss Minnie Uland, 20 years old, nd Lulu Cook, 14 years old, daugli Ks of farmers, 20 miles south of ankaker, 111. Clasped In each others rms, the two, drank thc contents of n ounce bottle of strycnnlne. Death .me before medical aid could be suin ioncd. The reading of trashy novels said to have led to thc suicides. j to any man simply upon bls-wr.Utea J of my CI-paKO book on lost raan?ood, dillly, Impotency, stricture, varlcocele, .cit of tho prostate, blood poison, and re? ,oases rcsulUnn from tho above, such es erup? j ot tho skin, rheumatism, urinary disorders .cs, rectal diseases, etc. It will tell in plain ?ad ' dlmplo language all that you want to know, lt ls ucl I vu and iv i ll open your eyes. It win show asimplo . own homo, privately and without tho publicity aud ex? ordruirc'st. I have been practicing this speciality formero century and havo in my vault? the names of hundreds upon ?hom I have cured ot these disease? afwr they baa wrlt-Wu ino ,w"? voa rs I hu vc developed ft system of euro that ls entirely ...I T i differswidely from thc old methods. "With it I am enabled m?B in ?? tail yet cffectivo way. . Write mo and I -rrill show you tho .l'talilv onoI Bt?onBth. yourmnnbood and health, no( matter bow old Ol' . J11 . L.. ,i,.fi vo i will stnv cured forever. If you will mention how you ., tnorouK^V^ >.? .^niH,"it riSHf Kiaminatlon niankon yourdlscasoso enclose besides S^XYo?l cliarire. I have ohfht ot her medical .day sure. UR. J. NEWTON HATHAWAY.^ r Building, 21J S. Broad St Jania. On. PRESBYTERIAN COLLEGE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, CLirSITOIV s. c. BOARD, ROOM-RENT and TUITION for Collegiate Year foi $117.50. Next Session begins Sept. 22, 1904. For Outargue or information address HOMDERFUL. RECORD. Fourteen students of Osborne*! BiuineBfi College kare secured positions within last few dajs. Several ladies as stenographers eaa? tj sew rilera ia both Georgia and South Carolina, SJB? yeeag nea as bookkeepers, shorthand writers ansi fe KILFYRE! KILFYRE !! KILFYRE ! ! ! That is exactly what it is. a Fire-Killer. Demonstration every day at the State Fair showing its lire fighting qualities. Every Farmer, Oil Mill, Saw Mill, Ginnery and any one owning property should have them. For sale hy COLUMBIA SUPPLY GO.. Columbia, S. O The machi lory Supply liouae of^fe?rState Ut r? i? VA' 'l U Don't think that avery one who hangs>QH?^7Q^f^?^^' lille VV ii LL ll maker"- ia competent to repair yourfbATTwatch. Repaire ra who ^ . . aro fully competent are scarce, ff?-o do work only ono way,_th j rv PT131 VI Tl O" best-wo can make any part of a watch, or a complete watch. 4Vvt/C*lX'lll&? Our prices aro often no moro than you puy for inferior work. ?Vbenour charco for work is ?1.50 or over we will pay express charge ono way. Bead ai roar .h P. H. LACHICHOTTE & CO. Jewelers. 1424 Main St-, Colombia, t?. O. CHARLESTON, S. C. Building Matena] of all kinds. High Grade Roofing prices. "RUBEROID." Write for Cigaret Habit An Drug and Tobacco Habits. Whiskey | Morphine Habit, Habit Cured by Keeley Institute, of ?. C. 1329 Lady St. (or P. O. Box 75) Columbia, S. 0. Con?dential correspond. solicited. JL^iiiie Cement, Plaster, Terra Cotta Pipe, Rooting Paper, Car lots, small lots, write, Carolina. Portland Cement Co., ?Thnrleaton. ft O A BIG HAUL. Constables Seize Two Hundred and Fifty Gallons Whiskey. The dispensary constables Thurs day night made the largest haul they have got lu some months when they seized 250 gallons of c urn whiskey. They think lt ls the fair week suppl} of Sellers, Kiug of Blind Tigers. Sellers announced about two montbfa ago that he was going out of business and his pUce on Gervais street is now operated by a man named Moore. Mr. Moore has been up before Dr. Stanley for selling liquor recently, however. But the constables think Sellers ls still at lt. On Friday, September 30th, they learned that 250 gallons of corn bad heen shipped here over the Southern consigned to "No. 7, Colum bia." After midnight the cir was unloaded and next day Sellers pre sented the bill of lading, properly en dorsed to thc agent. The constables have been looking for the 250T?allous ever since. Thursday night they found lt In an outhouse on the lot, corner Plain and linger streets, two blocks from the penitentiary. The name of the man residing in the house was g i ven to the constables as "Artie Ellison," but no such name appears in the directory. The place is o:i the sam?, block as the bouse in which Mau le Allen was mur dered. E llson will be brought be fore the recorder Fi iday morning to tell bow the whiskey happened to be on bis premises. It was sai i Thursday j night that lie hid rented the outhouse to Sellers, and unless he eau substan tiate some such claim as that ha will have to answer to Hie charge of stor ing contraband liquors. The information leading to thc dis covery of the liquor was secured by Constable Garner and the seizure Thursday night was made by Con stables Garner and Elson of District Chief Osborne's squad. That a blind tiger should have the nerve bo import 250 gallons of whiskej into Columbia Is remarkable enough but that the car should be unloade I in the dead of night is even more dar lug. This Incident may bring still further trouble upon the consignee. The liquor, lt is stated, was sent from Asheville and it should be easy enough to ascertain the true pur chaser, lt was sjnt prepaid, of course. Sillers bas done the same trick sev eral times before and the frequent visits of the constables only seem to discourage bim-he keeps at it.-Co lumbia State. Shoe to Dual?. W. S. Burton, a well-known carpm ter, was shot to death near his home in the suburbs of Bristol, Tenn., Wed nesday night and Henry Cole, who was with the murdered man, escaped with his life, after being shot at live times, once with a shotgun. The shooting was dono by one of four members of a family of Watsons, to whose home near that of burton, the murdered man, and Cole had gone to protest against loud profanity and dis orderly conduct on the part of the Watsons. The Watsons disappeared soon after the shooting and no iirresis have been made. Burton was shot once in the head and three times In the bands as he attempted to seiz thc pistol of his assailant. ? . PIANOS AND ORGANS, -And Lots of Them S WE SEL THE BEST MAKES. . Our pric?sare about ten per ? cent under Northern prices. e) E/ory l*iwno or Or ?ca ii we Bell S is Tully warranted by the makers, . and bucked np l>y us. Write us at 2 once ior culaloguo, prices and 5 terms. ? /MALONE'S MUSIC HOUSE, ? COLUMBIA, S. C. ?.?.?..?.?.?.?.?.?.????..M A Private bauitarium. Dr. L. G. Corbett, for so long; at the bead ot the Keeley Institute In South Carolina, and ol' late connected with the original Institute at Dwight, 111., has returned to South Carolina and es tablished at Greenville a Sanitarium for the treatment of nervous diseases, and the drug and liquor habits. His friends and former patients know that his ability is unquestioned; and as he isetiablcd to give this service at.a moro reasonable cost than is usually paid, many alllicted with these maladies are availing themselves of the; benefit to be derived there. Mu^laudTetTMu^ and all kinds of Fresh and Sa?t Wat^r tish and oysters. If you are dealing in Fresh Fish or intend to>deal in them write for prices and send your ordrs to TERRY KI S II CO., Charleston, S. C. or COLOMBIA FISH & IOE CO Columbia S. C. We ship only fresh caught tish and our prices are as low they can be sold at. Write us. Try us and he convinced. U?XRITET^ WHOLESALE DEALERS IN FISH AND OYSTi-RS, 8 and 20 Market Street, Cliarleston, S. C. Consignments of Country Produce aro Re spectfully ?Solicitud, Poultry, Eggs, Ac Fish pucked in barrels aud boxes for country trade a-special ty. Pf v * GUARAN. TEED i BY A RANK DEPOSIT Railroad Fare Paid. 500 FRISK Courses Offered. E3BSHSB9BBSBB B-.ard al Cost. Write Quick GEORGIA-ALABAMA BUSINESSCOttEGE.Macon.Gs. TOM Watson sajs with great in dignation that he is not getting any pay from the Republican National Committee. If that ii so, why does not Tom call around to the Republi can headquarters, assuage his indigna tion and get his check. If there is none waiting for him, there ought to be; for Tom is certainly earning tho money. Tun liejf Trust is for Roosevelt, of course. J . Ogden Armour, speaking for himself and associates, said in a recent interview: "We are going to support Roosevelt, most emphatical ly. We have been satislied with his administration, and will be well satis lied to have him continue In office." "WIIISKHKS" Pefferhas gono on the stump for his first love, the "Grand Old Party," but his iniluenc? is more th au offset by the fine work being done on the Democratic stump by General Jamos B. Wi aver. The Iowa man proved his popularity in 1892 when ho ran for the Presidonoy as a Populist, and polled more than one million votes.