The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, October 12, 1905, Image 8
GOOD LIBRARY FREE.
An Opportunity That No Farm' r
Should Let Pass Him.
How Every Progressive Header cl
Thin Paper Can (Jot Good Heading
Matter Absolutely Free.
The Bulletins named below Are cf
fered to the farmers everywhere frt't
of charge by the National Denartraeir
of Agriculture. These Bulletins an
published at an expense of thousand*
and thousands of dollars; and the big
gest and most enterprising farmers
the ablest and most experienced sclen
tist, have co-operated in making them
as accurate, helpful and up to date a>
money and brains can make them. 11
these publications were lssuod there
fore by some private publishing house,
they could not be sold for less than 60
cents each; ??nd at this price undoubt
edly some good agent could sell y< u.
Mr. Reader, not a few copies bearing
on subjects in which you are interested.
And that would be all light, too;
you would get your money's worth
But now these Bulletins are ( ffered
free, and the long winter nights art
coming when farmers should have
plenty of reading matter on hand.
We urge every farmer to make a list
of those lie wishes?those relating t<
the crops and subjects in which lie is
especially interested to his Represent
ative or Senator In Congress, or tothe
Secretary of Agriculture, Washington,
D. C. The copies asked for will then bo
promptly forwarded, free of cost to
him. Some of the Bulletins relating
to gardening, dower-growing a no
household work, your wife may need
for herself; get them also. Here Is the
list from which you can make your
selection:
No. 22. The Feeding of Farm Ani
mala.
No. 24. Hog Cholera and S*lne
Plague.
No. 25. Peanuts: Culture and Uses.
No. 27. Flax for Seed and Fiber.
No. 28. Weeds: And How to Kill
Them.
No. 20. Souring and Other Changes
in Milk.
No. 30. Grape Diseases on the Pacific
Coast.
No. 31. Alfalfa or Lucerne.
No. 32. Silos and Silage.
No. 33. Peach Growing for Market.
No. 34. Meats: Composition and
Cooking.
No. 35. Potato Culture.
No. 3(1. Cotto nseed and Its Products.
No. 37. KatP.r Corn: Culture and
Uses.
No. 38. Spraying for Fail7 Discos'
es.
No. 39. Oaton Culture.
No. 41. Fowls: Cure and Feeding.
No. 42. Facts About Milk.
No. 43. Seweiage Ditpcsal on tin
Farm.
No. 44. Commercial Fertilizers.
No. 45 Insects lujurlous to Stored
Grain.
No. 40. Irrigation in Humid Clim
ites.
No 47. Insects Affecting the Cotton
Plant.
No. 48. The Manuring of Cotton.
No. 49. Sheep Feeding.
No. 50. Sorghum as a Forage Crop.
No. 51. Standard Varieties of Chickens.
No. 52. The Sugar Beet.
No. 54. Some Common Birds.
Wo. 56. The Daily Herd.
No. 5(3. Experiment Station Work
?I.
No. 57. Butter Making on the Farm.
No. 58. The Soy Bean as a Forage
Crop.
No. 59. Bee Keeping.
No. GO. Methods of Curing Tobacco.
No. 61. Asparagus Culture.
No. 62. Marketing Farm Produce.
No. 63. Care of Milk on the Farm.
No. 64. Ducks and Geese.
No. 65. Experiment Station Work
?II.
No. 66. Meadows and Pastures.
No. 68. The Black Hot of the Cabbage.
No. 69. Experiment Station Work
?III.
No. 70. Insect Enemies of the
Grape.
No. 71. Essentials in Beef Production.
No. 72. Cattle Ranges of the Southwest.
No. 73. Experiment Station Work
?IV.
No. 74. Milk as Food.
No. 75. The Grain Smuts.
?No. 77. The Liming of Soils.
No. 78. Experiment Station Work
?V. ,
No. 79. Experiment Station Work
?VI.
No. 80. The Peach Twlg-borer.
No. 81. Corn Culture in the South.
No. 82. The Culture of Tobacco.
No. 83. Tobacco Soils.
No. 84. Experiment Station Work
?VII.
No. 85. Fish as Food.
No. 86. Thirty Poisonous Plants.
No. 87. Experiment Station WorV
?VIII.
"No, 88. Alkali Lands.
No. 89. Cowpeas.
No. 91. Potato Diseases and Treat
ment.
No. 92. Experiment Station Work
?IX.
No. 93. Sugar as Food.
No. 94. The Vegetable Garden.
No. 95. Good Uoads for Farmers.
No. 99. Raising Sheep for Mutton.
No. 97. Experiment Station Work
?X.
No. 98. Suggestions to Southerr
Farmers.
No. 99. Insect Enemies of Shadt
Trees
No. 100. Hog Raising in the South
No. 101. Milieu.
No. 102. Southern Forage Plants.
No. 103. Experiment .Station Work
?XI.
No. 104. Notes on Frost.
No. 106. Experiment Station Work
! ?XII
I No. 100 breeds of Dairy Cattle.
No. 107 Experiment Station Work
-XIII.
N ). 108 S ?1 bushes.
N > 109. Far Reading Courses.
No. 110. Rice Culture in tbe United
.States.
No. 111. Farmers' Interest la Good
Seed.
No. 112 Urcad and lirrad MaklDg
No. 113. The Apple and llow to
Grow Io.
No. in KxperlmentlStatfcm Work
?XIV.
No. 115 Hop Culture in California
N.). 11(5. Irrigation in Fruit Growpg.
N). 118 Grape Growing In the
South.
N> 119 Experiment Station Work
-X V.
N ?. 120. Insects A 1Ymating Tobacco
No. 121. H^ans, Peas, and Other
Le 'um-K as Food.
No 122 Experiment Station Work
XVI.
No 121 lte-1 Clover Seed: Informa
don for Purchasers.
No. 124. Experiment Station Work
X VII.
N i. 125. Protection of Food Products
from Injurious Temperatures.
No. 120 Practical Suggestions for
Farm Hulldlngs.
No. 127. Important Insecticides.
No. 128. Eggs and Their Uses as
ICnnrl
No. 129. Sweet Potatoes.
No. 131. Household Tests for Detection
of Oleomargarine and Reno
vatfd Butter.
No. 132. Insect Enemies of Growing
Wheat,
No- 133. Experiment Station work.
Will.
No 134. Tree Planting iu Rural
School Grounds.
No. 135. Sorghum Syrup Manu
facture.
No. 136. Earth Roads.
No. 137. The Angora Goat.
No. 138. Irrigation in Field and
Garden.
No. 139. Emmer: A Grain for the
Standard Regions.
No. 140. Pineapple Growing.
No. 141. Poultry Raising on the
Farm.
No. 142. Principles of Nutrition
aud Nutritive Value of Food.
No. 143. Conformation of Beef and
Dairy Cattle.
No 144. Experiment Station Work
? XIX.
No. 145 Carbon Blsulphld as an
Inseotlctdo.
No. 140. Insecticides and Fun#!
cidf'S.
N147. Winter Forage Crops for
I the Soutn.
No. 148. Celery Culture.
No. 149. Experiment Station Work
?XX.
No. 150. Clearing New Land.
No. 151. Dairying in the South.
No. 162. Scabies in Cattle.
No" 153 Orchard Enemies in the
Pacific Northwest.
No. 154 The Home Fruit Garden:
Preparation and Care.
No. 155. How Insects Affect Health
in Rural Districts.
No. 150. Tire Home Vineyard.
No. 167. The Propagation of Plants
No. 158 How to Build Small Irrigation
Ditches.
No. 159. Scab in Sheep.
101. Practical Suggestions for
Fruit Growers.
No. 102. Experiment Station Work
?XXI.
No. 104. Rape as a Forage Crop.
No. 105. Culture of the Silkworm
No. 100. Choese Making on the
Farm.
No. 107. Cassava.
No. 108. Pearl Millet.
Nr. 109, Experiment Station Work
?XXII. u
No. 170. Principles of Horse Feeding.
X). 171. The Control of the Codling
Moth.
No. 172. Scale Insects and Mites
on Citrus Trees.
No. 173. Primer of Forestry.
No. 174. Broom Corn.
No. 175. Home Manufacture and
use of Unfermented Grape Juice.
No. 170. Cranberry Culture.
No. 177. Squab Raising.
No. 178. Insects Injurious in Gran
berry Cub ure.
No. 179. Horse-shoeing.
No. 181. Pruning.
No. 182.. Poultry as Food.
No, 183. Meat on the Farm-Butchering,
Curing, Etc.
No. 184. Marketing Live Stock.
No. 185. Beautifying the Home
Grounds.
No. 180. Experiment Station Work
?XXIII.
No. 187. Drainage of Farm Lands
No. 188. Weeds Used in Medicine
No. 189. Information Concerning
the Mexican uotton Poll WaavII
No 190. Experiment Station Work
?XXIV.
No. 191. The Cotton Boll Worm?
1903.
No. 192. Barnyard Manure.
No. 193. Experiment Station Work
?XXV.
No. 194. Alfalfa Seed.
No. 195. Annual Flowering Plants
No. 19(5. Usefulness of the Amerl:
can Toad.
No. 197. Importation of 'Game
Birds and Eg^s for Propagation.
No. 198. Strawberries.
No. 199. Corn Growing.
No. 200. Turkeys,
r No. 201. Cream Seperator on Western
Farms,
i No. 202. Experiment Station Work
?XXVI.
j No. 203. Canned Fruits, Preserves
and Jellies.
No. 204. The Cultivation of Mushrooms.
No: 205. Pig Managtment.
No. 206. Milk Fever and Its Treatment.
No. 207. Game Laws for 1904.
No. 208 Wi^ties of Fruits Recommended
for Planting.
No. 2')9. Controlltnii the Boll Weevil
in C- t ton need anc. at Ginerles.
No 210. Experiment Station Work
?XX VII
No. 211. The Una of Paris Green in
controlling the Cotton Boll Weevil.
No. 212. The Gotten Boll Worm?
1904.
No. 213. Raspberries.
N ?. 2U Henetlcl&l Bacteria for
Let/uroXious Crops.
No 215. AlfalB- in the Eastern
Stn'es.
N i. 210. Control of the Cotton Boll
Weevil
No. 217. Essential Steps in Securing
and Early Crop of Cotton
N'?. 218. Tho Soliool Garden
N >. 219, Lesson Taught by the
Gmm-Rust Epidemic of 1904.
X >. 221. Fon^us Diseases Of the
Cranberry
No. 222. Experiment Station Work
? XXVJ11
No. 223, Miscellaneous Cotton Insects
in. Texas.
NnPls> Canadian FiAlrl Pa?h
n|? u<5. Expeiiment Station Work
-XXjtfv
N j.'22(>. Halation ( f Coyotes to
Stock Raising In the West.
N 227. Experiment Station Work
?XXX
No. 228. Forest Planting and Farm
Management,.
A StraiiKo
That Mrs. Mary J. Harris, who
died at her home In Newark, Satur
day night last, had a vision of the
death of her son, who died in Littleton,
Col., on September 0, Is belleveo
by her relatives. Mrs. Harris, who
nad been ill, was much concerned over
the condition of her son, who went to
Colorado for pulmonary trouble. On
Sspt* moer G the young man died in
the nignt. The news was kept from
the sick woman. A few days later
the mother told the members of her
family that she had seen her son in
death the night before. Efforts were
made to remove such an impression,
but the mother would not be comfort
ed, and her own condition grew stead
lly worse. Finally the dictor told
her husband ho had better break the
news of her son's death to her and re
lieve her mind. When she was tolr
Mrs. Harris looked np and said: 'T
knew it all the time."
Deadly Football.
Forty-live deaths and hundreds of
serious injuries is the rtcorc} of footoall
for the last live years, according
t-A a dQitttr. lij ?v?.. '1^ L -- rnu - XT xr 1 -
wj iv vnuiita.1 uucui: uy J lie new X orK
Ileiald. The result of this was printed
Widuesday. In almv st every instance
the death ( r injury was due directly
bo heavy mass plays, against which.
Herald says, President R oeveltand
i he country at large are protesting so
vigorously. Sixteen died as a result or
internal injuries, four fri m broken
nocks, six from concussion of th<
brain, eight from broken backs, thret
from paralysis, two from heart fall
ore, one from lockjaw, one from blood
, poising, one from hemorrhages and
two from racmingitls induced by
| spinal iDjuiies suffered in play. Tin
injuries included ten legs aud fourteen
collar bones broken and four
-kulls fractured.
Three Iilvlnxc WIvoh.
John W. Chasteeo, who had been a
resident of Live Oak, Fla., for several
years, has been arretted and lodged in
jail here charged with bigamy. It is
alleged Cna9teen has three living
wives. At the outbreak of the Span ,
ish-Ametiian war Chasteen left his
second wife, who now lives in California,
and enlisted In the army. Rec
ently he applied for a pension from
the Federal government. IIis second
wife, believing him to have died while
in the army, had likewise applied for
a pension as a widow of a soldier. By
a comparison of notes at the pension
bureau, his second wife was informed
of his whereabouts. The outcome
was his arrest.
Killed Two
At Chicago on Wednesday Robert
Newcome, colored, ran aoauck and
killed a policeman and a vioman and
fatally Injured a negro. Newcom*
went to the home of Florence Force,
colored, 1255 West Gist street and
during a quarrel shot*her dead. Rob
ert Snow, colored, went to the assis
t&nce of the woman and was fatalh
shot by Newcome. Newcome thei
barricaded himself at home and stood
off two squads of polic ;men an hour
tiring many shots and killing officer
John Shine.
Krtttor (Jullty.
In tbe case rf Alfred B. Williams
editor of tbe News-Leader at Richmond
who was chaiged with violation
of the election law in the recent Demo
craUc state primary, the jury returned
a verdict of guilty and fixed
too amount or the fine at $100, at
the same time expressing the belief
that Mr. Williams unintentionally, and
recommending that the fine be remitted.
Will|8top It.
A Kansas City judge has well nigh
broken up carrying concealed weapons
In his distrlot by Imposing $500 fines
or an alternative of 500 days on the
gang. Some immigration of the sort
of this judge would be acceptable down
this way.
Schwab, the steel magnate, has ordered
himself a $150,000 silver dinner
service. Even with that, however,
says the Chicago Record, he will find
it impossible to take more than one
mouthful at a time.
Tub Marlon county farmers are
standing out for 11 oents for ootton.
Only two bales were sold In Marion on
Friday and none on Saturday.
CHEAP UX0UR8I0N BATES 10
Colmnbtf, 8. C., And lloturn, Via
Southern Hallway*
The Southern Hallway will sell ex
cursion tickets to Columbia, S. C., and
return, from all points within the
State of S^nth Carolina, and from
Charlotte, N. 0., Ashevllle, N. C.,
Wilmington, N. C., Augusta, Ga.,
Savannah, Ga., and Intermediate
points, account Statk Agkicultukal
and mechanical pair, octoiiku
24f/?27th, 1905, dally October 22?id
to 20 h inclusive, and for morning
trains scheduled to arr'v^ in Columbia
before Noon, October 27%h, at rate (?f
one tirgt class fare plus 25 cents plu>50
cents for round trip, the iifty cenU
covering olo admission to Fair
Ground*.
For MJMtarv Companies and Hr?sv
hands In Uniform, 20 or more on oru
ticket, one cent per mile traveled ii
each direction pluss arbitrages per
capita. Dates of sale same as f>,r Civil
ians as shown above..
Fin a i. Limit All Tickets Cctohek
29?h, 1905.
Southern Hallway, in addition t<
the regular passenger trains running
on convenient schedules to Columbia,
will operate speoial trains October
25th and 20th between following
points:
between Branchvllle, Camden, Sum
ter and Columbia. Spartanburg and
Columbia and Intermediate points.
Anaerson, Hilton and lntermcadlate
points to Columbia.
For further Information, apply to
any ticket agent, or write
R. W. Hunt,
Division Passenger Agent,
Charleston, S. C.
To Chicago, 111., And Return
Account National Baptist. Conven
fclon (Colored), October, 25th 31st,
1905. Jne fare for the round trip
Tickets on sale October 23rd and 24th
limited to return leaving Chicago not
later than November 5th, 1905.
For further Information as to rates,
schedules, etc., call on any Southern
Railway Agent or address,
R. W. Hunt, D P. A.
Charleston, S. C.
Brook8 Morgan, A. G. P. A.
Atlanta Ga.
IjCMPh In.Ill n Window.
In New York, rather than face
trial on the Indictments charging him
with fraudulently taking money from
the Weissel estate, Armitage Mathews,
lawyer and secretary of the couutv
Republican committee, crmiuttted
suicide today by jumping fr> m a win
dow in Ills apartment to a stonepaved
courtyard. He struck on his head
fracturing his skull, and died in a
short time. Mathews, who was :
young man, had advauced rapidly,
both in the practice of his profession
I I - M?l T' * *
inn in p nines, ue wan a rrteivt oi
Kormer Governor Black and of Abraham
G uber and they were loyal to
dm in his trouble, acting aw legal advisors
and doing all they cculd fcj aid
illm to obtain the change of venue
from Ms ccuaty, for which he appeal
ed. Toe change of venue was denie > ]
Wednesday ?? d the trial of the castwas
set for T luraday before Justice
Davy In the criminal brunch of the
supreme court. Early Wednesday
morning Mathews received a special!
delivery letter. After reading it his
housekeeper heard him go to a bath
room and open a wlncow. A few sec
ends later he jumped to bis death.
Several tenants in a house in the rear
of Mathews' apartment saw him
jump. A doctor was hurriedly sum
moned, but could do nothing and
Mathews died In a few minutes.
JLSik <J?i>ii?1 l'rojected.
President John S. Shaw and the
board of directors of the Lake Erie
and Ohio lt.ver Ship Canal Company,
accompanied by a Lumber of engiafters
and other advisors, started from Pitts
burg, Pa , Friday on a two days' trip
to examine the two routes proposed
for a ship canal connecting the Erb
Lake with the Ohio river. At Ashtabula,
Ohio, the Pittsburg party will
be joined by the cllloers of th* Ohio
and Pennsylvania Snip canal Comp
any, of which Joseph EI. Cassldy, of
Cleveland, is president, and the two
organizations will continue the trip to
gelher. One of the two routes is from
Ashtabula, Oalo, to Pittsburg, the
other from Erie to Pittsburg. Eioh
route is about 105 miles long, and the
cost of either would be about $30,000,000.
President Shaw is of the opinion
that the work could be completed and
the canal opened to tr&tUo In the summer
of 1911.
Kttfugeil m lloom
William S. Brown, of Wakefield,
N, J., filed in the United States circuit
court at New York a suit for $10,*
000 damages against William O. Muschenhelm,
proprietor of the New As
tor hotel. Browns says that on the
night of August 0 he attended the
theater in New York with his wife
and was delayed so that he missed his
last train home. He went to the hotel
and applied for a room, but It was refused
to him. The hotel clerk, he says,
intimated that Brown was with a lady
not his lawful wife and refused him
accommodations in the presenoe of a
number of guests in the hotel lobby In
such a manner as to cause him $10,000
worth of damage to the feelings
of his wife and himself.
If you have in mind anything that
will help the town to grow and prosper
let it be known that those inter*
{ ested in pushing the town to the
I1UUU U40JT IIOYO wuo UCUOUk Ui yuui
1 judgment in th*> work t.bev have had.
The Augusta Herald says: "Caroi
Una's graft Is not confined to the dispenary
alone, no matter how wicked
folks would have us believe It." That
Is too true.
-Si O R S B C
AUOU?"
Bookkeeping," Shorthand, Type
guaranteed course 20 weeks. Sing
hand, h mos. 12 calls for graduates
manti. Write.
cGrTcrTTjiM
Write for Prices 011
Babbit Couplings Guages
Drills Guage Cocks Oil Cups
Mack Saws OilCans licit, leat
Killings Injectors Pipe
Lace Leather, Packing all kinds, Shaft!
else in rnachlr
Columbia Supply Co.,
5 The Guinard
COlvUMU
t Manufacturers Brick, Fire Proof
Z Flue linings and Drain Tile. Pr<
or millions.
TEN THOUSAND DROWNKn
Fearful Work of the Typhoon on the
Coast of China.
The steamer Tartar, which arrived
at Victoria, B. C , on last Wednesday
night from the Orient, brought news
from Shanghai that the loss of life
among the native of the island at the
mouth of the Yangtse River as a result
of the typhoon at the beginning
of September was tremendous. The
North China Dairy News, of Shanghai,
says:
"To the east of Tamagming, two
islands, one calling Yawoshwa, the
other Shihlousha, distant about twen
ty miles from Woosubf, have suffered
much from the typhoon, nearly all the
inhabitants having been swept away.
The It-lands have only been Inhabited
'or a short time, comparatively speak
ing, as they are of recent formation
and aie not much shove high water
mark. Lt is reported that nearly 10,000
pe pie have been drown* d on these
two islands and the smaller islailde
adjacent. Tamagming itself has not
suffered much, being well above the
ngti water making."
The Shanhai papers say that the
lamage to the Canadian Pacltio L'ner
Him press of Japan by the typhoon will
necessitate the expendil ure of $ 100,000
for repairs. During the stom the steamer
Pechlli, formerly the Rio Grande
hi S -1, foundered near the mouth of
the Yangtse. Her crew nf f<4 wnivaai/.
od by tbe German steamer Albertj.
Own Your Own lloiti).
Lt Is surprising the amount of rent
a man will pay, if he stops Ion*? enough
totlgure it out. Many young men who
marry and "settle clown" and begin to
pay ront will be far better i IT in ten
yearsjlf they begin purchasng property
this year than if they continue to pay
rent. Many of them do not stop long
enough in their dally work to think of
\ possible rainy day and years of old
age, but go on spending ,-the fruit of
their toil until the time comes when
they have to step down and out to
make room for the young men of the
future. Then comes the old, old question.
They are not prepared for an
emergency of this kind, and they wish
that they had bought when they were
young and nave a home of their own
when the the time of acquiring it is
passed. Ninety-nine times out of a
hundred the property purchased increases
in value. Why not tigue this
out to your own satisfaction, make up
your mind and start at once to pre
pare a home, Where were you six,
eight, teD, or fifteen years ago and
what did you have. If jou have paid
reDt all these years you have your rent
receipts to show where your money
uas gone, but where is the home you
might have owned if ycu had been
paying your money towards a home of
y< ur own. What will you have them?
Will it be a home of your own or a
bundle of rent reoelpts. All real es
to tft Kou ? *?A1*I* - 1 j ? -
| v(4uv uan A vdiui'j dUU 11 pUTCIlftSGCl Uti |
this value the buyer cannot possibly i
lose. Lo' k around you, if you are an
old resident of this city, you know
about what certain pieces of property
sold for ten or fifteen years ago. Wbat
are they worth today ? We do not
need to answer. In the history of the
past you have many models, and all
before you is an almost absolute certainty
that real estate valures will
continue to rise, with the Increase of
population and the natural demands
for residential and business locations.
Which do you prefer, the oomfort of
y ur own home or a package of rent
receipts, and live In the other fellow's
hnilHA Who """ A
. ?? ??j iuiik^I |iny m iuuio DO
Caesar? Why not be independent?
A Canadian farmer, noted for his
absent-mindedness, went to town one
day and transacted his business with
the utmost precision- He started
back; on his way home, however, with
the firm conviction that he had forgotten
somethi g?what It was he
could not recall, try how he would.
As he nearea home the convlotlon in,
creased and three times he stopped
his b- i8e and went carefully through
hi? pooketbook in a vain endeavor to
iisoover what he had forgotten. In
due course he reached home, and was
met by his daughter, who looked at
him surprise, and exolalmed, "Why,
father, where have you left mother?"
> R N E '? *- | i
da, G A. I
v-writing, English branches" Fij
le course of either Business or Slioij
in ahput 20 days. Can't supply d:
%^vvv\^>^i/vv%rwrwr>Ar?/Nr?rk/VN/vvv> 1
ucMTiMn<ruwis^ *
the Following
Lubricators Belt, Gandy
Belt, Rubber Drill Press
lie r Ejectors Hammers
Files Pulleys
ng, Collars for Shafting and anything
icry supplies. 1
Columbia, S. C.
Brick Works J I
;ij\. o. !!
Terra Cotta Building Block or G
spared to till orders for thou andg *
1
Honest Treatment for
Weak Discouraged men.
Do Not Throw Your Money Away on
"WorthlessTreatments, But Write
to Dr. Hathaway, the South's
Most Expert Specialist, j
Who Can Be Depended'
Upon to Cure You.?
25 Years Experience.
MEDICAL BOOKS FREE, Wirte for Them
If you are a man s iToring from unnatural
disoluirgos, omissions premature disc1 urge, or
from a complete loss of your mnuhood, do not
throw your money away on the many worthless
t reatments from lake medical companies,
"institutes," etc., hut sit right down and writer
to Dr. J. Newton Hathaway, 88 In man lildg.,
Atlanta. Cla. This physician lavs perfected a
method of trea?ment after over 25 years of experience
that will positively restore any weak,
wornout, discouraged man to a type of perfect
manhood, whether tho patient, is young, old or
middle-aged. Heady made medicines cannot
possih y cure this condition, but each and
every case requires specially prepared treat- /
mont administered by an expert phjsician who / I'
is competeut to understand just what your
case requires. The vast experience of Dr.
Hathaway has given him a knowlodgo of this
condition in men not possessed by any other
pliysi -ian; and every man in this condition
should write him without delay. Everything
is kept stfilcly confidential, and all modioines.
which aro pro oared in his own laboratory,
are sent in plain pickages. During the
years and years ho lias been established in Atlanta
he htm nnndii ??<t l?!u ?. ?
vwvt ? loiuuas in iill
honest, straightforward manner, and hia reputation
is known to all. He wills-nd to each
sufferer His hook for moo, entitled '"AI uiliness,
Vigor and Health." Ho also cures all
other disease* of men Mich as Stricture. Varicocele,
Gleet, etc., and if you are afflicted
writo him tor a hook on your disease. He
has a number of tli-un. Have 110 hesitancy in
writing him. The address is J. NI5W PON
11 \T1 i A WAV, M. D., 88 Ionian Hldg., Atlanta,
Ga. x
| - - ORGANS - - |
^ of thobest puality $45 up 2
? Upright Pianos
^ From $225 up. J
| Write Us
x for catalogues and terms. x
t Malone's Music Honse, S
% 1432 Main Street
Almost opposite Masonic
m Tom pie. <
? Columbia, S. O.
{Struck a Mine.
A dispatoh from Toklo, Japan, says
the British steamer L?.ho struck a
11 >ating mine ninety miles east of
Sbatung lighthouse on September 30
and llfteen of her crew and passengers
are reported missing, among
them two foretum engineers.
Girls, Ju9t because t young man hasa
oarrlage and a horse that oan go I
fast, do not conoludo that he Is jast
the man you must have for a nus- J
h nd. Takes something more than
\ at, to mase a sensible girl happy,
book for a man. Don't be In a bur- if
vrv mu?
i/. me r? are iota of them in the jf.
world, only It takes a IHtle time to
tind them. ^
-
In Spartanburg the gamblers have
threatened to give out the names of
some of their patrons If thejiuthoritles
persist in their purpose oY closing
up the dens in that city. The men
who visit gambling dens should be exposed.
We know of no more pffAn>i??
- VMWVI O1
way of breaking up the gambling habit
than that.
A mkgko was taken from constables
near Balnbridge, Oa.. on Saturday and
lynohed by members of bis own raca
lor assaulting a young colored wommoi
i