University of South Carolina Libraries
. \ V LOCK HORNS ( Over the Dispensary Problem in the Pulpit of a Church AT A UNION MEETING. Merits and Demerits of the Question Discussed in the Historic Red Hill Baptist Church. One Speaker Predicts that Prohibition Means Barrooms. A dispatch to The State says Hon. "W. Jasper Talbett and Former Solid- [ tor J. W. Tourmond locked horns In ' a dispensary discussion Saturday at a c Baptist Union Meeting at the his- 1 torical lied IIill baptist Church near 3 Parksville jfi Kdgetield County. Toe assembly was large and the , speakers stood in the pulpit. At the close of an address by Or. Bell, Mr. Thurmond advanced ai d delivered a very earnest speech, advocating the 1 dispensary. He declared thau if it was rightly oonduded it is the best f soli.Mon of the liquor evil and that there would be open barrooms in South ' Carolina within two years if the pro hibUlonlatk should win their tight. la his speech Col. Talbert declared ! that the welfare of the nation depends more upon the character of its citizens than the strength of its army and navy; that total abstinence is the , only logical and safe practice for a religious man. Some men remain s moderate drinkers without ruin, but . their example Is deleterious to others who are not strong enough to keep ' from excess. "There is no impropriety in speak- ,( ing of the dispensary in the church. 1 believe In lighting the devil any- ^ where. 1 shall attack the dispensary J' anywhere and everywhere. I arn against It In any form. If a man j thinks he can reform an ancient e^g. let l im reform the dispensary. 1 nev >;* saw a rotten eyg made fresh. "To say prohibition dues not pro ^ hibit la silly. The law against steal ^ Ing, murder, arson and rape do not ] prohibit, but they restrain. So will ^ prohibition restrain. 1 do not think there can be more bliud tigers under * prohibition than under the dlspeu- a sary as now conducted." 10. "The prohibition movement Is not ah failure; to It is due the credit for t ttie present activity. I love every a* Inch of nay State and I am honest in my readiness to tight whiskey. When- ^ ever the church membership of this s country quit drinking liquor, deter- ^ mine to wash their bauds of com- ^ plais&Dce with those who deal in it R for selfish gain aaul go to work against j whiskey, we will have the prohioition t which we neeff In South Carolina." Hon. J. W. Thurmond came to the platform a .d made an address. He said that he recognized the great evil in whiskey, but that men might hon c estly differ as to the best means of re duclng the e> il. Does the present moue of selling liquor produce more evil than other xways? " Some evils must be prohibited outright; others ? are best prohibited by controlling ! them. This is the case with whiskey. , a Prohibition in lOdgetield county 8 formerly was a complete failure. One f of the worst things a State can do is J to put a law upon the statute booKS which cannot be enforced; and the 8 prohibition of liquor cannot be en- ? forced. You teach people perjury by ? bringing them up before grand juries under circumstances which experience has shown will make them lie. If you will take your present law . and enforce it, it will be a good solution of the question. If you vote pro K bibition you will not have it but a ' year or two. The leaders of this anti s dispensary movement in Columbia are ^ working toward high license and pro * hibition is but a step on their way to that. end. Today this county gets from the ? dispensary about $(>,000 for education. . The cjunty also gets $3,300 for roads and the towns $3,300. The speaker ? advocated educating the rising gen eration on money secured from whis- f key taxation. He said to kill the dispensary is to take one third from the schools of the county, and practically pull down the school houses. t Mr. Tlmrmund went on to show the 8 union meeting attendants how it ( would touch their pocketbooks, if $ they voted out whiskey. His views ] are uniquo In deliverances before \ South Carolina religious assemblies. ( Hut in Mr. Tnurnrund's address there t was the ring of conviction. i rirti t.>II?*- J * - wi/i. jluiuci u aMKou bue NpeaKer ir it } was possible for the legislature to vote ( open barrooms, and he unqualitledly i affirmed that It conld do so. i Ool. Talbert?"Do you believe that i It will dolt?" Mr. Thurmund?"I believe they ] will do It within two years' time." i Ool. Talbert "Then, God have i mercy upon their souls " 1 Wantodi Bread. A number of German Immigrants , who recently passed through Charles- , ton to work In a saw mill near Oolum- | bia, have returned to New York, al- ( leglng as the refusal to work in this State that they were not given wheat or rye bread. They were given rice and pork which they did not oare for f and upoq the refusal of the mill peo- 1 pie to supply bread, they laid down i the tools and quit work. \ HIS ONE TEMPTATION. )harlc? J. Cooper Cannot Help Stealing Woman'* Shoes. The Baltimore Sua says that Chas. r. Cooper, of that city, who Is absoutely sano on other subjects, claims ?hat he cannot resist the temptation ,0 steal women's shoes; that he does lot steal them for the purpme of sell uk them; once he has stolen them, jhey might lie forgotten in his house or months. The mania is limited to vomen's shoes. Men's shoes do not iempt him. Neither does money nor ewels. Cooper has Incn employed by the \dams Express Company about two nouths. All sorts of valuables have passed through his hands untouched ?rich olothlog, jewelry, and money. Hut when a dainty pair of No. 4s ;ome within his range of vision a force -vhloh is stronger than himself seizes lira Detectives Thomas and Mason arested him. The company has been ulsslng shoes for feme time, and a le.cov hnx nf markt ri fn'?f wnnr uiou ilaced In Its rooms Tuesday night and l watch put upon thorn. Jn the midHe of the night Cooper was seen to ipproach the box. He took it In his lands, shaking like a loaf, according 0 the detectives, opened and graspei ihesLiois, evidently utiber tlie infiu:uce of strong excitement. When arrested lie confessed without lesltatlon, giving gratuitously the in brmation that lie had six more pairs it ills homo, andsayiog that he would lave bad more if he had not been aught?not because he wanted to, ait because he could not avoid taking hem. Capt. Pumphrey talked to him for nore than an hour, Cooper being ner ous in the extreme tiiroug .out the otervlew. Nearly six feet tall, broad boulders, and deep of chest, one would ay upon first glancing at him that lie, ?ast of all men, would be one to be bought a victim of a nervou* disase. ' Often," he told Capt. Pumphrey, 1 have stood in front of a shoe store dndow, field there a^ by chains and gliting witli myself to avoid break jg the glass, gathering all of the wo ien,s footwear there and rnnnlng. I uve never yieiaea tu Uie temptation nrtar such conditions. I have kept s far from this horror of my life as 1 an. Yet it tinds mo out. 1 thought rhen 1 got tills position I would be ree from it. When tiie iirst pair of hoes came in my way I fell. Try as might, 1 could not help taking them, was trying to get a position as a ailroad lireman, thinking trat there t least, I would be safe." "What would you do if you were mployed in a shoe factory?" the cap aln asked him. Cooper moved his _>ng hands In a spasmodic gesture. "I ouldn't do it," he answered sharply! t would drive me mad." Cooper ays he lias suffered in this manner or several years. lie is married and ias two children. His story convlnc d Capt. Humphrey and Detectives ?homas and Mason, all of whom say hey feel sorry for him. EIGID QUARANTINE. yhnrlcstoii Will Place Inspectors at All .functional PointH. The yellow fever scare has at lasl truck Charleston, and the board of lealth of that city has decided to put nto effect a more rigid quarantine ,nd authorized, the employment of inpectors for trains at all Junctional >oints and for the river steamboats as veil, passing a resolution requiring hat passengers coming to Charlestan hall produce proof that they have not >een within the fever district for a teriod of ten days They will be statoned at Hranohville, Lanes, Hreglals, and Yemassee. The action of he board is largply predicated on the ecommendation of Health Officer irunner of Savanpah, who advised a tricter quarantine for that city, after , personal investigation of the exist un ouuuibiuns in iiiui iever nisLnci/. lavannah determined accordingly to tut out Inspectors and Charleston will ct in accordance with the recommenlations of tho Savannah health officer, vhose opinion is held in high regard n Charleston. People visiting Chareston from the interior of the State nust provide themselves with health lertiticates, to show that they have lot been In the infected district since he fever began. Meld Captive. At Chicago Mrs. Mary Mulholland, ihe wealthy Vloksbu rg, Miss,, widow, illeged to be held a captive in the 3erald building, 26th and State itreeta, by her two daughters, Daisy E., and llattic Mulholland, h\s been 'ound by a deputy sheriff at the resilence of her brother, Fred Sloat, >422 Shields avenue. Mrs. Mary Fo roll, also a daughter of Mrs. Mulholand had begun habeas ^corpus proi?edingR. DiscoveirytOfSthe missing woman brought witn It a threatened irrest of Miss Daisy Mulhrlland on the charge of contempt of court. She was taken Into custody and then re leased on promising to produce her mother before Judge Dupuy, where the battle for the aged woman's custody will be fought. Patrick Henry, idmlnlbtrator of the estate of Charles Mulholland, who Igoame wealthy operating MiHSlssippfptyar steamboats many years ago, is in Chicago ready to take part In the controversy over the custody of the widow. Iloat iilown t^i>. The Swedish naval boat while enraged in maneuvers near Uelsingous' Fair land, struck a submarine mine ind was blown to pieces. Seven men were killed and eight were wounded. / A Bong Of Motherhood. Sew, sow, sew! For there's many a rent to mend; There's a stitch to take and a dress to make, For where do her labors end? Sew, sew, sew! For a rent in a drjass she spies. Then it's needle and thread and an aching head And see how the needle ilies! Brush, brush, brush! For there's many a boy to clean, And start to school with a slate and rule, With a breakfast to get between. Comb, comb, comb! in the minute she has to spare, For what is so wild?unreconciled? As the wastes of a youngster's hair? Sweep, sweep, sweep! Oh, follow the Hashing broom, As with towel bound her forehead round She goes from room to room. Dust, dust, dust! As down on the knees she kneels, For there's much to do in the hour or two Or intervals 'twixt meals. Bake, bake, bake! For the cookies jar piled high But yesterday, in some curious way Is empty again, oh, my! Stir, stir, stir! In a froth of yellow and white. For well she knows how the story goes Of a small boy's appetite. Scrub, scrub, scrub! For the floor that was - pick and span, Alas, alack! has a muddy track Where some thoughtless youngster ran. Splash, splash! splash! For the dishes of thrice a day Are piled up high to wash and dry And put on their shelves away. Patch, patch, patch! And oh for a pantaloon That would not tear, or rip or wear In the course of an afternoon! Patch, patch, patch! And see how the needle flies, For a mother knows how the fabric goes Where the seat of trouble lies. Toil, toil, toil! For when do her labors end With a dress to make and a cake to to bake And dresses and hose to mend? Stew, stew, stew! Fret and worry and fuss And who of us knows of the frets and woes In the days when she mothered us? A Itioh Farnior. The dispatch from Pickens to The State says the largest lot of cotton ever sold by a planter In Pickens county was sold a few days ago by Mr. J. Samuel Wilson to Heath-Bruce-Morrow company of Pickens. Mr. Wilson sold 720 bales, a portion of two crops. The lot brought 10i cents round, aggregating nearly $40,000. In many respects Mr. Wilson is a remarkable man. lie was a valiant Confederate soldier In the Civil War and at the close of that conflict came home with absolutely nothing. lie brgan as a day labjrer and saved everything he made, finally purchaiing all the lands owued by his former employers. Mr. Wilson mdftV lli t.hp lnrnouf W ? ?-J ?# v??v J LJ upper South Carolinr and owns some of the finest cotton lands to be found In Pickens and Anderson couutles. Bolt Found lice Trco. At Nutley, N. J., lightning striking a tree near the home of John A. Frobose, In Chest nub street, ripped open the trunk, spilling several buckets of honey upon the ground. The tree did not branch off until about 20 feet from the ground, and the hollow trunk, over three feet In diameter, was tilled with honey, which had been accumulating for years. As soon as tbe store of honey was discovered, several persons made efforts to get some, but were kept away by the angry bees. A few minutes later a lightning bolt struck the home of Mr. F.obose, slightly shocking him and ids family, who were eating luncheon. Next to tbe house is the livery stable of Joseph Stiuak. lie was standing in front of the stable when it was hit by lightniug. He received such a severe shock that he did not recover for more than an hour. Several of his stablomen were less seriously shocked, Fell Sixty Feet. A dispatch from Greenville to The State says P. S. Seay, a native of Virginia, was killed Thursday by falling from the top of the Southern railway's new steel bridge over Saluda river. The unfortunate man lnot. MaSnio, ? 4V/I.U rx II UIVKIIIWU) falling upon a bed of rock (>0 feet below. The body was horrible mangled. The remains were carried to Greenville, where they were prepared for burial and thence shipped to Virginia. Seay was emp'oyed by the American Bridge company. To UrtilK" *he Saluda. The Boards of County Commissioners of Greenville and Pickens counties have let the contract for the * nJi-- - ? uuuuing or a nriage across Saluda river just below the new dam. The successful bidders were King Bros. The bridge is to be entirely of steel, with 140 foot span with a fifty foot approach on the Pickens side, and is to be finished and turned over to travel by the first of December next. A Hhame. Sporetary Wilson is a harmless, dull old bureaucrat, who has held the agricultural portfolio slnoe 1897, simply because nobody else wanted it. It is a shame, like robbing the children's banks, to take advantage of him and locate costly leaks in his department. Will Got Well. The Columbia State says that El Reese, the man who was shot at Gaston on the B'ourth of July, has recov ered and gone to his home. It was thought impossible for him to live. .. . ^ I,. m GINNKRB ASSOCIATION REPORT. Twenty-Five Million Acres Is Estimated for Cotton Crop. The following is the report of the National Ginners' Association on the crop condition and the reduction of acreage as gathered from replies to more than 7,000 letters of lrqulry sent out by the association, and received at the cilice of Secretary N. T. Hlaokwell from July 25 to August 1 at Dallas, Texas. Alabama?Condition, 70; reduotlon, 15. Arkansas?Condition, 50; reduotlon, 25. Florida?Condition, 85; reduction. 10. Georgia?Condition, 80; reduction, 14. Indian Territory?Condition, 85; reduction, 20. L mlsiana?Condition, 00; reduction, 22. M's Issippi?Condition, 65; reduction, 20. Missouri?Condition, 90; reduction, 15. North Carolina?Condition, 80; reduction, 15. Oklahoma?Condition, 90; reduction. 5. South Carolina?Condition, 75; reduction, 15. Texas?Condition, 05; reduction, 18. Tenne.'-s^e?Condition, 00; reduction, 30. Virginia?Condition, 80; reduction, 15. Average condition, 73; average re,1. . ~ . I ~ 1 ~ r> uuuutwu, I <. u. Estimated abandonment, 5 percent. Acreage, 2<>,021,000, Secretary Black well said: "Only about 25,000,000 acres are In cultivation that will reach the pick ing stage of maturity. This association is organized purely for gatheriug statistics to protect the pinner and 1 planter, and is working In harmony with the Southern Cotton Association. j "It does not conlllct with the cen- I sus bureau, but encourages prompt ' and accurate reports to that depart- 1 ment." COTTON IN SOUTH AF&ICA. < i KflorlH of tlio IlritiHh to IUIho the (Staple Oyer Tfiero. Great efforts are being made, it would appear, from reports recently received in this country, by the Brit- j ish Cotton Growers association to pro- 1 mote tiie growth of cotton in South Africa and other colonies in the United Kingdom. The greatest obstacle ? which threatens the plan of the asso elation at this time is said to be the system of slavery which exists there in its worst form, it is said, than ever existed in the United States or any other cuuntry. The Brit'sh Nigeria company Is a huge monopolistic labor concern, and the British Cotton Growing associa tlon has the sole right to cultivate ootton In any part of the 400,000 square miles ov?r which the N goria company Is overlord. The population of that area Is about 25,000,000. On the cotton plantations operated near Lagos, the c^st of labor for Btxteen hours per day and seven days In the week Is twelve cents. This Includes ; rations, clothing, medicine, quarters and mperintendence. < It Is said that with this slave labor, that within live years the cotton produced will be ample to the require meats of Great Britain. While there was, not many years ago, a large American trade done on the territory of the Nigeria company, that concern has of recent years entirely shut out i American goods in any shape from competition. American fabric*, spirits ( and other kind* of goods are debarred into any of the territory now owned or operated by the Nigeria company. The trade of the New England mills was especially good in the country now closed to them until a few years back, as British free trade so called , does not apply to any territory committed to the custody of a chartered company. On this account American manuiacturers must necessarily lose quite a large sum of money each y^ar i>n account of the fact, as stated, that the UU les of the Nigeria company ah- ( solutely refuse to patronize them or allow any of the slaves in their era- ' ploy to patronize American manufactures in any way whatever. , Found in Africa. < The Boston police department is expecting to hear at any moment of the arrest of Frank C. Miles, former treasurer of the Boston Safe Deposit < and Trust company, who disappeared ] from there nine years ago, and was af i t.erward accused of embezzling the in- 1 stitutlon of $150,000. Miles, the po- ! lioe have learned, has been located at Cape Town, South Africa. The authority ah of t.ViA oif.w ' v*?v vi wj tin v u UCCII 1 LI | communication with those of that city, and have Instructed them to i put him under arrest. Besides the ; alleged embezzlement of the com pa ny's funds, It was charged that Miles looted the treasury of the Union club of about 917,000. It Is said that Miles wrote a letter acknowledging that he had pledged securities of the company for losses that he had sustained In the stock market. After Miles disappeared the police kept 1 watch on his residence on Beacon street, as well as at his country place at Londonderry, Vt., but nothing came of it. Some of his friends got the idea that he had killed himself, but the company in New York that bonded him never believed so. Miles is now about 62 years old. V I ' ' . ' I AUOU81 Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Typo guaranteed course 20 weeks. Ringl hand, 8 mos. 12 calls for graduates i mand. Write. Machinery Supply H WE SELL E^ Headquarters for EVERYTHING i All kinds of Injectors, Lubricators, ] Supplies for Saw Mills, Oil Mills and Large stock of Well Pumps and Cyii COLUMBIA SI Coliimbfa, S*. O. The nw : The Guinard 1 " COIyUMU] 9 Manufacturers Rriok. Fire Proof rJ Flue linings and Drain Tile. Pre] J or millions. if n * r <t w ? m a * A ? a ? p o e k <e 0 d "V ' t ? 1 * vJ-; \cA ^ -iiBy 7aill. , 'S'l.V }. ''I'll fi 1 ,-r? f -.- " - -W ' '.li - '..ft/** Ij Whlsko I Morphine I Cigaret Habit, I Habit | Habit Cured by l^leolo^sr 1: 1329 Lady St.. (or P. O. Pot 7<5Wlolui no pitH Hock Mm to Hli>ep , This is one of the songs which, is Longfellow said, "gush from tlie , tieart of "some humbler poet." In | Lhis country, at least, it lias been ex- c Lremely popular having been set to k music and sung In innumerable house- j holds. Elizabeth Akcrs Allen was born in 1832, and still lives at Tuckahoe, N.Y. She wrote poems from the age if 15,and has publisiied many volumes. The poem here published iirst appeared in 1859. A new volume of her verse is just announced in Boston. Backward, turn backward, <) time, in your (light, Mr l.o mo a child again just for tonight; Mother, coino hack Iroin tho ect olosa shore, Pake mo again to your he:irt as of yore, Kiss rom my forehead t o furrows of cure, Smooth the few silver threads out of my hair; Over my slumbers your loving watch keep; ltock me to sleep, mothor?rock me to sleep. backward, (low backward, O tide of the years, 1 am so weary of toil and of tears? Toil without recompense, tears all in vain ? lake them, and give me my childhood again! I have grown weary of dust and decay? Weary of flinging my ?-oul wealth away; Weary of sowing for others to reap? ltock mo to sleep, mother?rock 1110 to sleep. Tired of the holler, the base, the untrue, Mot or, () mother, my heart calls for you! ( Many a summer the grass has gro 1 n green, 1 1 ? - i ? Iiuonuinuu, HUU IUUCU our IHCCS DOtWOOIl! N ot, with strong yearning and passionnto pain Long 1 tonight f r your presence again. Come from tlio silence so long ami so do p ? Rock mo to sleep, mother?ro. k mo to sleep. j Over my heart in the days that are flown, No love like mother love ever has shone; No other worshi p abides and endures? e Faithful, unselfish, and patient like yours; | None like a mother can charm away pain j From the si k soul and world weary brain. 'j Slumber's soft calm o'er the heavy lids creep? j Rock 1110 to sleep, mother?rock me to sleep r t Homo, let your brown hair, just lighted with gol r Fall on your shoulders againas of old; t Let it drop over my forehead tonight, ? Shading im faint eyes away from the light; I For with its sunny edged shadows once more c Happy will throng the sweet visions of yore; t Lovingly, s ftly, its bright billows sweep; r Rock mo to sleep, mother?rock mo to sleep. i Mother,dear mother, the years have been long Since last 1 listnod to your lullaby song; r Sing, then, and unto my soul it shall seem y Womanhood's years have been only a dream. *j Clasp d to your heart in one long embrace, u With your light lashes just sweeping my face, j Never hereafter to wake or to weep- 1 Rock mo to s eop, mother?rock mo t.o sleep. , Country itoy No Fool. * A boy sat on a rail fence enclosing c a corn field. A city chap passed by, * said: "Your corn looks kind of ycl v law, bub." "Yep, that's the kind we n planted," replied the bub. "It don't 1 look like you will #et more than a N half crop," said the city chap. "Nope; J we don't expect to; the landlord trets e the ottier half," retorted the young- 1 iter. The stranger hesitated a mo- J ment and the ventured: 11 You are not very far from a fool, are you, my J boy?" "Nope, not more'n ten feet," *ald the boy, and the city chap moved y 3n.-*-X e A Proposition of Interest 1 To all readers of this paper, who * jail or write for treatment within the next 30 days I will cure them of the f following diseases for ONE-HALF my I usual charge: LOST MANHOOD, I SYPHILIS (blood poison), GONO- | RII E. GLEET, STRICTURE, VARI- C OOCELE, RUPTURE, CATARRH S and all CHRONIC DISEASES, of a both sexes. Diseases of women cured without operation. PILES cured under guarantee without the knife ot a any tying or burning operation Consultations, Examination, Adv ! Free. T. S. HOI LEYMAN, M. D., ] TnifiPWUATTOm < - muinijiOXt I Rooms 421 and 422 Leonard Building, J Augusta, Qa. ' N.^B. Catarrh of worst.form^curei J 'itt onoBANK DEPOSn i R?Hroa<l Fire P?ld fiOi ^R*K(P0Ur,^10fQr0<J f f OfleiA-AL ftBAMA BUSINESS COLLEGE.IIftCMufe pa, OA. -writing,. English brandies, Fu^^^ e course of either Business or Shot in about 20 clays. Can't sifpplv d > v * ouse for the State. /ERYBODY. n MACHINERY SUPPLIES. Pipe, Valves, Fittings, any one in Machinery business, nders. Get our price. ] PPLY CO. hinerv Supply houee of the State BllICK WOKKS, | [JV, o. Perra Ootta Building Block ,for pared to till orders for thou andg m a , .. V;. -k. 1 : VW.*. . ' . V' y* iifiiS* -v,< r | dips# ife% a t "4 wv * l. , h&c I All Drug and Tobacco Habits. Q?titTite, of ^1. i nbiv S. (]. D^rflrianMai w In Expert Specialist At Your Own Home. >eok the Advice of the Soutl^n Most Skillful Physician?lie will Counsel and Advise Any Sufferer on Any Disease Without Charge ?!21) Years of Expe'rienco. Valuable Hooka Free? Write for Them. 1)11 HATHAWAY, [leooKuizod a.4 tho Oldest Established and Most Reliable specialist. Every afllicted reader of this paper is invit(1 to consult l)r. J. Newton Hathaway of Atanta, Ga., the South's mosk Reliable Specialst, on any disease, absolutely without charge. This great specialist has had over twenty live 'ears of expo ience in the study and treatoeat of diseases of a chronio or lingering na ire, and we unhesitatingly say tha there is 10 case, no matter how sevoro, that he cannot horoughly understand from the very first, tnd prepare the correct treatment, which is tound to elTeet a permanent cure. Ily the aid ?f his system of home treatment, ho places at he disposal of every sufferer his advanced nethods of treatment, of which e is the orignutor, no matter where ho or she resides. FltKK MEDICAL ADVICE If you suffer from any disease of a chronio iaturo, such as Nervous Debility, Stmicture, /aiicocele, Rlood Poison, Kidney or pladdor ['rouble, Diseases of the Heart, Liver or stomich, Throat and Lung Trouble, Lost Manhood, Ivdrocelc, Urinary jlisordets, Skin Diseases. ineumatism, Catarrh or private diseases of i en, suth as Gleet, etc., and diseases pe uliar ,o women, etc., etc., do not n ake tho mistake >f consulting your homo doctor, who will .harge you anywhere from 1 to $25 for conultation alone, but sit down and write to Dr. lathaway. lie will counsel and advise you 1 -* ' . vino wut 01 cnarge. ilo is the recogtized authority on these disr uses in this counry, and you can, therefore, appro into the 'ftlue his opinion of y >ur case would lie to on. lie has been established in Atlanta foi 0' rs and years, and his reputation is not quailed by any other physici n. Have no lositaucy in w riting him. lie will also send '< u a valuable book on your disease, all barges prepaid. Yo" are especially invited to write for his took f< r men, entitled, "Manliness, Vigor and iealth." a. lie sure to write this great speciali#?*out rour diseases- today. 11 is business is qoniluctd in an honest, straightforward manner, and on can always fool assured of "a squaro deal." .'he address is J. NEWTON HATHAWAY, M. I)., 88 Inman lildg., Atlanta, Ga. j Pianos j j Organs | I VAll two*>4- 4-? r% -1 a uu nauu but! U6SD YVC tlftY8 2 exactly what you want. Don't wait to feel exactly ready. Wo an make you able. Our prices 2 are LOW?our terms are EASY. ? W rite us at once for catalogues, * I prices and terms. Address ? ^ - \ MALONE'S MUSIC HOUS* ' L COLUMBIA, S. C. j LEARN TELEORAPHV tnd R. R, AGENCY--We also train you for lie U. 8. SIGNAL CORPS* Softool eetabiBhed 17 yoars. Cheae board, low tuition, nd Our Plan INSURES position. Catalogue ree. OA. TELEGRAPH COLLEGE. Benoia, Ga