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The Horry Herald, CONWAY, s. e. Thursday <??n?^nr>h#r V3 19^6 Xr5il]5T^TTSYl5 AND THOSK DKMOOKAT8 WHO AGHEK WITH HIM. Jerome Peeking Aid of Gold Temocrats and the Fepublicant in Hia Fight. District Attorney Wm, Travers Jerome of New York was the central figure In the conference of up StateNew York Dem orat8 called to meet at Albany, N. Y , on Wednesday V consider the oondltion of the Demo oratlo party in the State of New York. It was declared by the sponsors of the conference, leading among whom was ex-May or Thomas M. ()a borne of Auburn, that Mr. Jerome was present merely as a speaker, not as a party to the conference and that the meeting was not In the Interest of his candidacy, or that of any other man for the governor, i i Mr. Jerome mentioned no names In his address. He dealt with the gen eral purposes, general condition and 4 possibilities of the Democratic party. He deolared It as his understanding that the conference was In the Interest of no particular candldaoy, least of all "to dlotate to or threaten the convention of our party soon to assemble at Buffalo." He took direct Issue with the opinion recently expressed by Gov. Folk of Missouri and others though he named no one. "H-a&I leadership Is nowhere In sight," said he, "and what passes for leadership seems to consist of demsg ogle denunciation of existing conditions and the advancing of vague schemes of socialism and paternalism, whioh are essentially revolutionary In oharaotcr. "We are not 'on the threshold of the greatest political awakening thl? nation has ever known,' marking 'the beginning of a new age,' but we are, T haliave. ahnut tn reuirn to our senses and to earnestly address ourselves to the solution of the difficult problems confronting us by the methods whlob the past bss shown to be entirely ade guate to meet the greatest emergen cles. "Our elections, where national political parties are involved, have be come little more than ignoble scram bles for office, in wbloh each oandi date declares how good he will bo it elected to offioe and vies with bis op ponent in claiming trust-busting and antl-orrporatioR virtues, not forgetr ting to emphasize how warmly his heart beats for or*an'zed labor. ''In tbe midst of all this, 'the plain people1 go about their business, seeing no real issues of present interest in dividing the national parties, tbey tand Indifferent to eaoh, ready ana free to ohoee wben an issue arleet that interests them." The Republican party, he continued, had always been conservative, cp posed to change and innovation, until today, half consciously it voices lw character by declaring Itself to be the party of the "standpatter." "On the other hand, the Democratlo party has been the party of the Liberal. Only recently, be said, bad efforts been made to drag the party fron* path of progress to tbat 01 revolution. 1 'The men responsible for tbe present demoralize condition of tbe party maohlnary should be driven out. From m great vote getting organization, tbe ..ve maae It simply a delegate getting machine." Tbe Democratic party, "disgraced and humiliated br years of mismanagement, to give It no barsber name," would array themselves behind their party candidates If they are men of character, standing on a platform of real Democracy. "And in tbat platform," be said, "they want no crazy colallsm nor revolutionary paternalism. What they want is men and not measures. They have little faith in news laws while there is not honesty and capacity enough In public servants to work the old." slew Hlxieen. Sixteen of the so-oalled Christian Filipinos who were dealing In Man daya slaves in Davao district of Mln danao, Philippine Is lands, have beet slain by the avenging relatives of thi women and o h 11 d r e n stolen Details of the tragedy have beet received here Elirht Mandavaa en tered an Isolated building occuptec by the slave traffickers, killing then all. The house and all its content were destroyed by fire. Slave baitini :s carried on by Filiplfios along th eastern coast of Mindanao, and unti the praotloe shall have been brokei up by the authorities it is eipecte reprisals of the charaoter describe) will continue. Walked In Ills Sleep. Master Teague Harris, the twelve yeai-o a son oi Mr. W. P. Harris o Youlhh township, Laurens cruaty uncousch usly accomplished a remark ably feat a few nights ago. Th youth is a somna-nublist and at tw o'olook Wednesday night the entir household of Mr. Harris was arcusei by cries from the boy vho was foum perched cn the chimney top, twent feet above his sleeping apartment, h having climbed up through th flue of the chimney Irora an open fir plflco in his room while as'eey and ladder was Immediately secured am the lad was rescued from his perilou position. _2t VIGOROUS VLBWS. Mayor Hoddejr, of lioek Hill, on Got- \ ton Future Dttling. Hon. John T. Roddey, mayor of R>ok Hill, bu during hit lnoumbeooy i of about one year done quite a lot by j his firm dealing to break up lawless- < nest in his jurisdiction. He was at r one time a well- known stook broker In ] New York, and the letters from his t Arm were published In the prominent j papers of this Stave. In view of this < fact his stand In regard to cotton s "exchanges" and "bucket shops" is i an Interesting one. lie bu been i asked to speak on this su jsot at i dl(T reut times, aud did so recently i at the Tlrzah campaign meeting. In i a letter to a Rook 11)11 paper he says: i "The writer has visited many of the big gambling houseB In New York; < has played poker, faro, roulette, < horse raoes and cotton futures, and unhesitatingly declares that cotton futures, In his opinion, is ths lowest < down form of gambling known, or i that he has even seen or Indulged Id," etc, etc. Further on ne says: "And now I want to say to the people of ] R>ck lldl that if the city oounoll will lioense this form of gambling, which, In my estimation, is ths lowest form | in existence, then the olty oounoll must not Impose the Uut on the Ave < oents crap-shooter and the ten-oento ( poker player. I oannot conscientiously do It, and I will not. The oounoll j must try suob oases. If a man Is , allowed to take a ten or twenty tbous- , and dollar stake and bet It on these < boards and a few tloks of a telegra , phlo Instrument deoldes whether he , wf no on liteao Vila m/mn? fhsn T nen' f "'U? Ul K/BUO UIO AliV/UV/ ) VUUU A VIMA V conscientiously Impose a tin* on a negro for a few dioe ticking against ] the ground for a tire-oem stake, for ( the poker player for a few oards tick- , Ing against a table oloth for a ten oent stake. There Is no justice nor ( fairness In it, and 1 do not need the position of mayor of this olty or any other position enough to make me do it." Thrashed Him. A dispatch from Prosperity to the News and Courier says that town was thrown Into a fever of excitement late Teursday evening by the report that an enraged father had assaulted, and seriously or painfully hnrt, the wouldbe gallant of his tlfteen-year-old daugh ner It seems that a man named O'Bryan, a travelling photographer, claiming to be from Indiana, bad been boarding in the home of tbe vounv ladv and bad been Davlnc ber some attention!. At Boon at tbe parents learned of this, it it said, that they forbade him the bou-c. A short time ago O'Bryan went to an adjoining town, about twenty miles away, to engage in his regular work. He came back once or twice, it it said, and trsed to see the young lady. The vlglhuoe of her father prevented this. On Monday the young lady started to sonool, and on Wednesday O'Bryan appeared on the scene onoe more and attempted to see her at school, whioh was denied him. At re oeas he forced himself into the buildlug, but was ordered off the premises by the superintendent. It is said ho lay in waiting, trying to speak to her, but falling in this, he si cceedod in getting a note to her, asking her to meet him at the evening train, as it would In all probability bo her hut opportunity to see him. The irate father had hunted him all the afternoon and was on hand at the train, upon O,Bryan appearing he at ono<attacked him beating him over the head and shoulders with a cane. The town marshall appeared on the scone and took the now fully aroused father in nana, out not oerore ne naa tir ctlvely booted O'Bryan the length of the ooaoh, Into which he scrambled with alaorlty. Ctrl Kndod Jbtfe. At Chicago Miss Abayia Thorp, disappointed in love, Thursday tired a bullet into ber head, killing herself in the office where she was employed as a stenographer. A bundle of letters carried next to her heart and written by George H. Scott* attorney for the Illinois Humane Society , caused the Coroner to begin a fruitless searob for the man. Scott, it is said, > almost oollapsed when he heard over the telephone that she had killed herself. Miss Tborp, It is said, visited Scott at the office of the society, i He is divorced. Friends of the girl . understood she and vScott were engag> ed to be married. Go one of the let* ters was a pencil notation made per 1 haps only a short time before death a by the Rtrl. She had scrawled: . " Judcre not, that ye be not i Judged." j About Ten Cents. q At Greenville, S. 0., J. M. Ray H borne, a young White man olalmlnp . Oedartown, Ga., as his home, wa> R seriously out in an affray with Ralpt I McCall, his companion, Wednesday Hnt.h men were drlnklrnr Villnri tiu*i 3 whiskey and the trouble was the out 3 come of & dispute over ten cents, Bay Done was cursing and pursuing Mo Call, when the latter drew his knlfr and Ir fllcted a long gash aoross Bay home's neck. McCall was locked up | He oamo from North Carolina severa v*aT9 ago Bay home's father Is s ' Baptist minuter at Odarf-'wn, Oa. P Shot on Mtroet. o Shot down walking with his sweet e heart on an East side Street In Ne* 3 York Thursday. Joseph Grnsso. aver d eighteen, o'*d at a hospital Frldaj > morning. Joseph Lowentbal wa> e wounded by a stray bullet < f Grasio'j p. assasin. The police think Grosso wa* c tia?n by a r< hottd suitor cf Margarei a Garnovale Grasso's sweetheart. Tht d fssasin was not apprehended. Tht s Garnovale girl and a girl friend art Leld witnesses. . : " 1 * 1 11 UAL BAD STORY. Pfll* Imported and the Hatband IVe- * turned to Columbia Alone. The Columbia lUoord says Mrs. lellemy Salbagah, who was So bare i jioed her husband, George Sabbagab, < lore two months ago, and of wnoae nany troubles In the attempt Tue Ucord has told from time to 1 aroe, bis been finally deported, af- t :er getting as for as New York. It < *as suspeoted in Franoe, whenoe she | Parted on the second stage of her < ong Jv urney from Syria to Columbia, , that she was suffering with trachoma, i disease of the eye peculiar to Syr lans. but she was giveu the beucfit of < the doubt and al'owed to prooeed ou her way to Now York. Tntre it was found thatshe was suffering with tra ohoma in aeoordanoe with the custom of the immigration department she i was ordered deported. Sabbagah, however after exhaustlog every effort here and expending more . than 9400 from his savings, had gone to New York, personally to do what < he might. Through the Syrian bis- , bop In New York he took up the case , with the higher officials of the Bill* Island Immigration station, wnere < blsiwife, with ber two-year eld child, i was detained, and the matter finally same up to Secretary Metcalf, of the drp&rtment of commerce and labor in , Washington. The best th&y the Sco retary oould do was to advise SabbaUtah to send his wife back to Franoe or Syria and have her try again, if she oould be cured of trachoma. He refu ivd to break the departmental precedent and reeoind the order of deportami i. 1UU. XU?b WW UUftl. Sabbagah took a last farewell of bis wife and babe, supplied her wltb all the money he and his friends here oould raise, and urged her to rot urn to Marselles sna there put herself under the care of specialists, In the hope that she may be cu^ed of the disease, and be permitted after all to realize their dreams and rejoin him In Go lumbla. The goodbyes had to be said through the Iron bara that divide the visitors room of the station from the great pens under the sheds where suspected immigrants are detained. Sabbagah has returned to Columbia and begun to work and plan harder than ever that he may replace the money lost In the present vain effort and save up more agrinsli the reunion whioh he confidently expects within a few months. The ohllds eyes were ho unci, ana ne migni oavo orougot It with bim but would not deprive tbe poor mother of its oomfort. TEEEItfLS MISTAKE. Saint IioniH Woman Hent "Ypb" to tlie Wrong Man. A dispatch from St. Louis says Mrs. Robert T. Sturgeon, wife of the as Blatant cashier of the Merchants' Laolede National Bank, who blundered Into acoepting his proposal of marrlage by sending him an acceptance Intended for another, has disappeared ller husband Is suing her for dlvoroe. The Sturgeons were married In February 1900. The bride was Miss Amy Bay, a daughter of a Virginia family, a young society woman of this oily and an Intimate friend of Mrs. Rosemary Sartorls, the grandaughter of President Grant. She wae a.pietty girl of great charm and her suitors were many. F>r three years it was much of a butteitif obase between Sturgeon and a hand some young Kentuokian. Each was Jealous of the other and Miss Bay never gave either the slightest Lm presslon as to whloh she preferred. She corresponded regularly, went riding and played golf with both. Then the two suitors wrote to the girl on the same day?not the ordinary kind of love letter, but an appeal 4uoh as a man writes onoe In a lifetime. And Miss May answered. To the Kentuckian the reply was: "I love you. Yes." To Sturgeon: 111 love you. But?no." Then in her feverish baste, with t thousand thoughts whirling through tier mind, she mailed the two. And it was the unexpected that happened, for cn the following day, glorying .In his triumph, Sturgeon oame to olalm her. The girl was bewildered, but real zing that she must have put the letters in the wrong en velopes, she played her part. She was young and soft*hearted, and now that It happened, she oould not make her confession. The Kentucklan went away from : St. Louis and dropped out of her life? but appaerently not out of her heart or her mind or her soul. Yet she married Sturgeon, never telling him that she didn't oare for him, save in an amiable, companion-like way. The six years that followed were far rrom pleasant sturgeon soon realized thai ha had won the w fi, but not the h<art, and at last the two separated. r No * he Is tuing for devorce. The error of the hand has been a bitter cup of yah. Yet it la not over, for process servers are unable to lind the wow&n, and Sturgeon cannot pain ' his freedom. > A lir?v? Cilrl. At Auburn, N. II , on Lake Massabe88io, In the terrltic ? quail ?f Thursday afternoon, Miss Helen E. Joyce, 18 years old, of Msplewood, Mass., rescued fcur men from a disabled steam launch. The waves were dashi log over the little craft and she was ' drifting rapidly to the shoals when Miss Joyce, rushing to a skiff near hei - cottage, Jumped It and put off. Just as she pulled her boat under the lee ol the launch tbe latter grounded and 5 tbe waves rolled completely over it, J Taking the four men aboard, Mtsf > J )jce rowed into oalmer water neai the shore. 71X10 AT TSB GEM TO. | Cotton Growsii Advlaed Not to Hell Under That Prlee* A diRpatoh from Hoi SprlDgt, Ark., iay? the executive committee of the Southern Oottou Association late this ifternoon reoommended to Its members and ootton growers of the South that no ootton be sold during toe pres ant season at leas than 10 cents per pound. In a resolution adopted by tbe oommitiee It Is stated that the urop Is In a state of deterioration, and for that reason no estimate of the crop was made. The resolution states, however, that the committee It latLstied that the crop will not be as largo as toe current estimate. The placing of the minimum price at ten cents was In the nature of a vlotory for the conservative element of the association. The resolution adopted by tbo com mlttee, wblcb Is in the shape of an address to the public, follows: "Inasmuch as we, the cotton growers of tne South, know thore has been great deterioration In the cotton orop since August 15, and, "Whereas the consensus of opinion of the members of this oommlttee is that the deterioration Is still going oa, we deem It unwise to make an esti mate of the orop at this time. We are sati- tied the orop will not be as large as the current estimate. "We, therefore, suggest and urge upon all our members and producers throughout tbe South not to sell their ootton at a figure less than the cost of production. "We call upon all Southern interests to aid In maintaining for all time this price ss a minimum. We urge the necessity of marketing the orop slowly and only on an advancing 1 market, and withdraw all oofcton from 1 the market at every decline." The committee took up the ohargea ' against Secretary U*chard Cheatham, j of dealing In futuiea while an ottioer 1 of the Association. After a spirited ' debate, In which J. A. Drown, of 1 North Carolina, led the opposition, ( the oommittee deo'ded to go Into exe cutlve sessions to consider the oharg- ' eft. The oommittee exonerated Cheat ham. Mr. Brawn then left the room in whioh the oommittee were meeting and announoed that he had refused to sit in executive session on the matter. Mr. Brown has maintained throughout the sessions that they should be open aud not executive. AMaFFBCTIAG ioJEHB. A IiOverkUoes Homo to Dl? on SweetHeart's UiBve, A dramatio aoene ccoured Thursday In New York on the Frenoh line pier just before the steamer La Provtnoe left for Havre Among the passengers was Lulgi Contanrinl, aged thirty-four years, bound for his old home in Italy to keep a suicide pact to die on his sweetneart's grave. Antonio Contanrinl, brother of the passenger orcated a scene and after w&ru wia ills LMHiwuer s s?ory. n* **ir that Lugl became bethrothed to J phlne B&llatlni, a girl in bis ii?a>v town. Her parents opposed the maton, preferrlug & welthier suitor, and Lulgl with his sweetheart's promise to keep faith, cams to this couuiy to seek his fortune. He established himself in Oklahoma, where hs * ecu red a farm. Then he wrote for Josephine to come, but she replied she could not, that her parents forbade, that she intended to commit fuioide, and thatsheexpeoted Lutgl to join her in death. The news that the girl had carried out her purpose was received and Luigl sold, his property and started for Italy to kill himself on the girl's grave. His brother Antonio lives in Peterson, and Luigl went to him, told him the story, and bade bfm farewell. Entreaties failed to swerve the man, and on the plerAnfonio made his final appeal ^eal. Ho clung to his brother passionuely, imploring him not to go. Luigl shook his head, Antonio then h& f dragged his brother to sn open sp&ot on the pier and foil on his knees. He raised a ciuoiflx aloft and re newed his pleadings, Lulgl could not be moved and finally turning his back on Antonio, went on board La. Pro vlooe. When the ship sailed Lutgl, stood at the rail watchlnp Antonio, who had again fallen on his knees, and with outstretched arms was beck oning to his brother. Many On One Tree. A tree bearing twenty-three dis tlnct varieties of fruit and nuts is growing on the farm of Thos. Glaza, in Rjint.rm nniintv 1 lint". t,nrnou kho Willamette R^ver from Albany, OregIt is healthy and flourishing. Mr. Gli&s undertook to grow the tree as an experiment, and by Judicious grafting, has succeeded In producing a marvel. lie secured all the kind* of peaches, plums, and prunes that he onuld and grafted them onto the trunk of a healthy growing apple tree. All the grafts are growlDg and bearing. Then, as a further experiment, he grafted an almond branch on the same tree, and It also is growing. Attempted Hutoide. A f \JL7auV V-h a a fr a v Da itieK Ka#a?a f\ yj ?? oou v^utowoi} JL ? | juiu uciuic being hanged Thursday for the mur der of Marie and John Deiucea, ohll dren whom he had kidnapped, R oar I do For to attempted suicide, Ho slashcd his wrlhtd with tin tags from to i bacco pouobes. The j*llor seiz d him i and held him while a doctor baudag ed Ms wrists. He was then taken to j the gallows and hanged. The crime II for whioh F>rto was executed was I! committed at Howellsvllle and at the , | time feeliog ran so high against the ) murderer that it was necessary tc r spirit him to the county jail to prevent lynching. ?MTH* KUISUX DOOttA a Most Complex ACMr Composed of Many Paople. The following Is a Hat of the differ* ent racea represented, for you must remember that the larger part of Russian territory was acquire! by jonqueafc. If you will look at the map ind observe the list of Independent nations that hare been subdue! and brought under the Russian control, you will realize how difficult it will be for the liberal leaders to amalgamate bhelr representatives. The situation Is still further oompllcated by an Intense predjudloe, and In many o&i etui underlying hatred, toward the Russlau race and lis government, ac juired through generations of suffer lag and oppression. At the same time [die Russian rtolprooatea the feelings if antagnolsm and hostility. The following Is a list: Tartars, Slavs, Poles, Celts, Lithuanian". Finns, Mongols, Germans, Jews, Georgians, Soythlans, Armenians. Also several others whose distinctions are not so clear. That is going to be one of the most serious of the liftkultle* In securing harmonious action against the autocracy. Jfctoh race has Its lndlvldualltv. each naa Its patriotism and ltd particular purpose. Its representatives will act with Ihe other opponents of the government so long as they support Its If claim and promote Its interests. But Poland given autonomy, for example, ftvevy other oocquered race and nation will demand the same recognition. Finland waH a more recent conquest than Poland, and other provinces In Asia have been acquired ilnoe: I have not been able to obtain the exact number of representatives of the different religions, but the following are represented In about tbe or3er In which they are given and the numbers are approximately correct: Orthodox Greeks 32 Uoman Catholics 30 Jews 12 Mohammedans 12 I Protestants 11 Armenians 9 There are said to be ri presentatlves of the Budhlst. faith also, and the sects of the Greek church each has Its quota. The most striking tigure In tbe entire assembly is a Roman Catholic archbishop, Mgr. Roop, of Wllna, whose serene faoe, stately presence and purple *obes make him consplou- j ous. There are hajf a d( zon Catholc priest from Poland and the German provinces, and ODe of tbem made an eloquent address tbe other day when the subject of demanding amnesty for Imprisoned revolutionists was under debate. Seven MobammWan mullahs, or priest, have b*e i H-nr up >>y the Tatars of the Caspian pro v4 roc*. They wear their conventional robe?> and turb? r?s. There are a number of Jew h rab bis also, who are h'ghly r? gaicel re acquiring yeat li lluenoe although no* p of ihem has been heard In debates thus far. So far as Is known, the occupations of the 460 members are as follows. Peasant farmers 56 Boyars, or large land owners 46 Lawyers 39 Clergymen 27 VUllage officials 21 College Professors 19 Factory workmen 17 Physiolans 16 Government c ffiolals 24 School teachers 14 Army officers 13 Newpaper men ' \11 Merchants 24 Managers of large estates 26 Engineers 11 Contractors 9 Capitalists 221 Bankers 7 Com mission men 16 Railway n en 4 Solentists 3 SHOULD BE HJJNJLekUU). A. Scoundrel Who Wants to be Lynched Badly. The Columbia Record nays Wednesday morning a negro carpenter entic ed the ten-year-old daughter of a well known white ott'zen Into a building where he was working. There he lnaulted the little girl several times, with grossly Immoral suggestions and obsoene actions. She told her father of the occurrence and he started immediately for the scene. A shooting affray that would have terminated fatally, for the neg*o, at least, was probably averted by the appearsnoe of a policeman )ust before the father's a r r 1 vi 1 IV&A1 T WAt The negro wr.s looked up forthwith end shortly afterward was given a hearing before city reoordor. Recorder Stanley was very sorry that he could not Impose a punishment In keeping with the prisoner's offense, but he gave the brute all that the law allowed, a sentence of $100 tine or thirty days, with ten minuter at the exDtration of his time on the gang in whloh to leave the city, never to return. The case was beard In the of We Have Ore 25 horse power Talbott, second ly been overhauled. This Engine a great bargain for anyone who is h 1 We are headquarters for anything 1 prompt attention will be given to al 1 care. Write us when you are in th ' to get onr prices before placing yoi Cftlninhia Sanoly Ca., flee of Chief of Polio? Daly, to as to old a Mutation. Probably thlt precaution averted at least an attempt at aummary violence by outraged eltlsens The names In the oaf? will be withheld from the public, at the request of Recorder Stanley and Chief Daly, at trtubl? might develop If the facta were generally known. The negro waa scared half to d^ath and gladly promised to leave the city for good r the minute he la released Jfc .. Whtlp the brute's actions were su3h X* | aa would 0 ak* tho hlnrd of every S > I good otti&m boll with Indignation, he M ^ | did not get far enough to b'lng the cane within the Jurisdiction of the a*, general sessions oc^hrt. About the only wav In which ha omild have been handled was through the broad and general terr-s of the oltv ordinance regarding ? ff n*e? of this nature, and the few people acquainted wlt,h the c'rru-nstanoss art ratified that Dr. Stanley disposed of the matter In the best way. A fttow. Col. Horace Welch, of Jefferson, Texas, who traveled 2 000 mllea to attend the reunion of the Fourth Ohio volunteer regiment, at Columbus, Ohio nearly created a riot at the Memorial hall, Wedneadav afternoon by waving a Confederate 11 \g In tho face of the fifty union veterans present. Some treated the matter Jocosely, but. ?cmo shouted "shoot him,1* ' tire on tne flag," as the emblem of the oause they had fought against fluttered before their eyes. Wheloh displayed the flag after he had presented resolutions adapted by Qen. DloV Taylor Camp, United Confederate Veterans of J-ff jraon, Texas, expressing friendship for the northern veterans and asking them to visit Texas. No aotlon was taken on the resolutions. fountain Pens Par Sale. We have several dozen good Fountain Pens for sale. Guaranted 14 karat. Prices $1 and $2 eveh, postpaid. Leather Pockets for two MLjihree pens 15 cents each. Mail orders solicited. Adoress Sims' Hook Stokk, Orangeburg, S. 0* An Organ that will last a life time is what you want. Our Organs have a pure tone and lovely cases. We can supply you with an Organ that will please in every particular for only $(15 and $70. delivered. W'ite ug for our special terms of payment, and for illustrations! of the beautiful Organs referred to. If you prefer a Piano we have beautiful and good new Uprights from $186 up on easy terms. Addrw s ML&lons's Xnalo Hons?, Columbia. 8 Ropp's Commercial Calculater '\\TILL PREVENT MISTAKES, Vv relieve the mind, save labor,, time ai d money, and do your reckoning in the twinkling of an eye. A Ready Calculator and Business Arithmetic combined. In the tirst 00 pages, it fehows, at a glance, the correct answer to almost every calculation that i likely to occur on the farm, in the shop, or in the ollice. This valuable Ixxik will be sent postpaid to ativ adf \ roce OK rtr. r* * o * * j ~1 " v<ivoo iui ~<J IA}1119 111 3' illllUM Address Sims' Book Stork, Orangeburg. S. 0. Are You Sick? If You Have a Disease For Which You Arc Unable to Find a Cure Write Us. We Have Been Remarkably Successful In Curing Deep Seated and Stubborn Cases. If you liave any disease of a ohronio naure, no matter how m?ny dootors have S? " ?""" failed to cure you or how much other treatment you have taken, we wont you to write us a letter. We are specialist* . with over 20 years experience, having been located in Atlanta for nearly 18 years, wher e we liave established a reputation for curi. MWTON B ITBlVfAT, M. D. UIX ?,ur P* 1' ent." 1 which we boliove is Graduate Part mouth Be-d. Col- second to none in I Dge1881. IxcPree?V. Mich, this country. 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I> ?*.! in I'nmnr All necessary medicines are prepared in our own private laboratory to suit the conditions of each individual case, without oxtra charge. M >ny cases ' curable by our homo t rmtnymt plan. KxI pert opinion of your esse free. Write for examination hlan?. Address us as follows: I 1 DR HATHAWAY & CO., 88-11, luman I | lluilding, Atlanta, Ga. | Pnr V? hand engine in stock which has recentis in first elates condition and will be a the market for such a size engine. I in the way of machinery supplies, and 1 inquiries and ordeis entrusted to our ie market for anything, and be sure ar ordejs elsewhere. Celmnbis,