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i III I ^ u. ioBM> inu mi, l?ja till RnHh m KmM^I Abottluwvy 1. In the ImI lMue of Ibo Ootton Journal Mr. Harvle Jordan, the pre* Idenl, it a tee that be will retire from that poittlon In January, when hli term expiree. After referring to the reoent dlff arenoet between the Farmen' Union offlolale and himself Mr. Jordan save: "I shall retire from my present position In the Southern Ootton Asaoola tlon next January, but until' that time I shall faithfully discharge every duty Incumbent upon me, and do all In my power to maintain effective oo operation among the people In an effort to keep the prloe of ootton at a profitable figure to growen." Mr. Jordan has been president of the Southern Cotton Association since Its organization, and his administration of the offloe has not given satisfaction all the time, but he has had very loyal support even from those who thought he bad made mistakes His recent newspaper controversies with eft) jlal* of the Ft mere' Union have to some extent weakens i him and have not dono the Cat ton Also elation any good, It, was Jordan who, without authority, demanded the 15 cents' mini mum last year, and U was he who stood by Richard Oheatham, the secretary of the organlz'.tlon, who got mixed up with the bucket shops in Atlanta. Tt 111 Bf.kt.cH t.v-l? t tVlA n .. .w wwww wv. ?u?ll IU1D VJIUU1 K I?ILU rs may put forward, the justly cele brated Tom Watsou for president. At a reoent meeting in La Grange his name was suggested, and the suggestion was said to have been reoeived with enthusiasm. The alleged pur pose of the Association has been to keep out of polltlos but Mr. Watson has ~>ever shown any ability to keep out of politics, except when he was put out by the voters of Georgia and his election as president would certalnly meet wltb strong opposition from the South Carolina branch of the Association. In faot, if Mr Jordan retires from the presidency, there is a well defined sentiment for the seleotlon of Mr, E. D. Smith, if this State, for that post, since it is well recognized that he has been the brains and balance of the Association in more than one orlsiB. South Carolina will probably present Mr. Smith for president to suooeed Harvie Jordan. TO FIGHT WALL 8XK1BT. Ill it Ootton Combine to be Organized In the South, At Atlanta, Ga., a movement de_ -J II,._ _ - ? ' " " bikucu bu maini*in a orontable price for ootton against the conspiracies of Wall street," was Inaugurated Thurs day evening at a meeting of the executive oommittee of the Southern Ootton Association. The method proposed for accomplishing this purpose is formation of the Southern Ootton Company,' with an authorized capital of 9100,000,000 to build ware houses, buy up ootton at reasonable prloes, and otherBrian ? ?? vuuvu v/A IU ivguiawa soiiiug BU that ootton shall be traded In on basis of its Intrinsic) value, rather than on speculation. Fifteen members of the exeoutive committee of the Southern Ootton Association attend Thursday's meeting. They represented all the ootton _States, and included for most part "very prominent planters. A tentative plan for organization of the proposed buying and handling company was presented by a speoial committee, consisting of Messrs J. P. Allison, of North Carolina; E. D. Smith of South Carolina; S. A. Wltherspoon, of Mississippi; E L. Maxwell, of Louisiana, and J. C. Hiokey, of Texas. This charter provides for organization of a stock oompany with an authorized oapital of $100,000,000. and an initial capital of perhaps $10,000,000. It Is proposed that the afTalrs of the oompany shall be administered by a board of thirty-five direotorswho shall estimate fair ootton prices, and endeavor to have them maintained. The management of the oonoern Is to ereot storage warehouses, and oonduot buying, holding and selling. The par value of the stock is to be $2 per share opening membership to small ?s well as large planters, members of the Southern Cotton Association, and others. Should the directors believe ootton to be worth more than the Wall street prloe It will pay such price regardless of the so-called market value and hold the produot for a rise. After dlsousslng and amending In some respects the plaD for organization, It was decided to defer final action on the project until the next meeting of the executive oommlttee, to be held In January. Backs Hearst. Fred Oakes, a New York ourb broker, offered Saturday to bet $1,000 against $10,000 that Hearst will be mayor of New York within a year. He had , been commissioned to plaoe the wager, Mr. Oakes said, and believed that the offer would remain open for several days. There was no taker Saturday. Mr. Oakes would not disolose the name of his principal, but said that he was a man who believed that the attorney-general-elect would have the ballot boxes opened and prove that Hearst beat'McGlellan a year ago. The Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad has refused the demand of the switchmen for an in, creese of ten oents an hour in vWlffSS. ViAAateWtfluii. ' BiilikMM 1rth ItfilMrtliM MH 1 Am Awrtii. The imidI visit of several eottoo mill men of Lancashire, England, lo the United States lo apparently about to bear fruit ao the following statement Issued by the department of oommeroe and labor will show: "A sequel to the Washington ootton conference and tbe visit of tbe Lancashire manufactures to this eountry last spring Is the proposed Investment of Lancashire capital, In the rasing of American ootton. Wc are Informed that two Lancashire manufacturers will arrive in the United Stales with In a few weeks and complete arrangements for the purchase and management of a large ootton plantation in the South, probably In Teaas. The plan is to adopt the most Improved methods of cultivation, ginning and balling, and to ship the ootton dlreot to the Lancashire mills oontroled by the promoters. There is said to be ample capital back of the enterprise. It Is to be hoped it is said In England that this venture by English manufacturers will be entirely suooessful. 1 Its suooess will mean muoh for the ootton trade. MWe have had a surfeit of preoept they aay as to the evils thAt. nnnrpna ah a nnt.tstn and their remedies, all to no purpose. The evils have grown greater, and those responsible for them have treated all protests with contempt. What we need now is an example. The example of a large plantation In the South, produomg cotton properly baled abd shipped to Lancashire and there rcoelved in good order at the mills wouid mark the beginning of the end of the present disgraceful methods of baling American ootton. The existing oomblne of gloners that blocks all attempts by planters and manufactures to improve conditions might for a time resist even the Influence of good example, but eventually they would be forced to adopt the improved processes. It may be safely assumed that the present methods of preparing ootton for market cannot exist permanently along of right methods. The sormer have oontlnued because all American ootton has been and Is baled in an equally bad way. 1 "The lnfluenoe of such a plantation : on the other evils that i 111 lot the cot- j ton trade are not equally evident. 'IMw ?... I- ?? J L. I . ... 1 j-ucic is uu uuuut, nuwever, duc tnat ' such lafluenoe would be entirely for j good. A large and well managed oot- , ton plantotlon, owned by ootton mauu faoturers, producing ootton for the mills of Its owners, forming a component part of one complete industry, might not eliminate the speculator from the ootton market, but it could not fail to indloite to the manufao turer a refuge from the speculator'h 1 attacks." The commission that Is ooming here to make purchases will in all probability go over much of the same 1 ground as that covered by the former 1 commission when it toured the South and Southwest in quest of good oot- j ton landB. Their route will probably take them through North and South Carolina and the other ootton grow lng states east of the Mlsslstippl river, 1 with their final survey in Texas. While the object of the commission ' will primarily be to secure land for cotton-growing, it is said that there is a possibility of some large mills be lng ereoted by them, should the oon ditlons prove favorable. It is known ' that some of the members of the first 1 oommlsion discussed the mill-building ' projeot with men in the different sections through whioh they passed and that the amount of dividends declared annually by some of the mills ( in the South struok them with considerable foroe. ( ( U bt C. MUliomn Pardoned* , Gov. Hey ward Thursday granted a I pardon to Ubi 0. Millloau, the Spar- t tanburg boy who killed his stepfather t last spring. The ease is one of the c most extraordinary that have ccim x before Got. Hey ward In hie eventful I four years' servloe. Mlllican killed r bis step-father on the public square a at Spartanburg while there were a a great many people on the street. A t Winchester rifle was used, and the ^ whole affair was a spectacular way c of avenging what Mlilloan deolare* \ was an improper proposal to his sis- \ ter. The State says the pardon wav c granted upon petition of the jury and s rcoommcndatlon of Judge Dantzler and Solicitor Sease. It appears that the jury brought in a verdict of guilty with the understanding that Mlllican q was guilty, technically, but that the c solicitor would reooommend a pardon. Mr. Stenyarne Wilson of SDart&n* burg was here yesterday and urged this mattor upon the attention of Gov. Hey ward. The pardon is grant ed on the grounds of humanity urged by the members of the Jury. Milliken, when oonvloted, entered an appeal, but bisattorueys subsequently abandoned the appeal. Murdered for Money. t Mra. Catherine Stauffer, a widow, c was found murdered In her bed early c Friday at Lambertsville, a small vil- 1 lage in Somerset County, Pa. There J wu a bullet hole In her head and ? when discovered she was lying in a 0 pool of blood, It is believed Mrs. Stauffsr was murdered for money, which she is supposed to have possess* ed. A oouple of grandohildren were 1 living with her, one of whom, a girl. ? who Is almost grown up. The girl was I awakened by the presenoe of a man v in her room. He tried to ohoke her t and oholorof orm her, but she made her d escape and aroused the neighbors, a When they arrived on the soene the li mhn had gone, but they found bis a footprints and are now soourlng the t country for him* ? si m LfUJfcM MM, ? ' Vtet Soo?m>4 VJ? lo llMf ? Om Mother'! Pil?h Hush, my dear, lie still and slumber! Holy angels guard thv bed! Heavenly blessings without number Gently falling on thy head. What tender tendrils of memory reaoh far baok through the fugacious years and cluster about the slumber 6ongs of our lnfanoy! If there Is one thing In all this world of sordid influences that alienating vloolsaltudee cannot obliterate It Is the lulaby that soothed us to sleep upon the mother'! breast. If there has oome Into our adult Usee anything of beauty, sweetness and ohaim; if we have been blessed by the miracle of happiness, or if in the garden of our souls there bloo us one transcendent bios som it Is associated with the fairyland of an uuforgetten home. In the ulJaby of childhood there is lore sano 11 fled and unselfish and made pure in a saorlfioe as holy as an echo from Calvary 4 Perhaps you oan't remember all the words of that simple hymn that crooned you to sleep In the dawn of your awakening life. The gentle tune may halt aud falter when strange omotlon clutches at your throat, but the memory is there In your heart, indelible and all-enduring. There may be more cultivated voloes, more olasslo nhraslnur. mora crr*/u?fnl expression In tbe palling world of art, but not to you. That sometimes tremolous voice which you did not know was choked with the dews of sorrow will whisper upon heartstrings when all else becomes dim nothingness God sends the white souls of children out of heaven Into mother arms that the transition may not be too sudden and he appoints motherhood his deputy to guide the wan derlng feet aright. Too late we un derstand. "Some must watch while some must sleep,"and some must press the tired bodies of children in their arms and lull them Into soft forgetfulness. What a blessed privlledge it would he If world-wormmen and women of today could repose onoe more in the saored security of all encompassing motherlove; If they could only take their heart hurts to the compassionate shrine where little souls are calmed, snd with the oellestial lullaby of those sweet days wetting tbe parch of thirsty ears dream on. and on, and on Young: Woman Killed. While attempting to oross the traoks in front of a Southern Railway train, at Dunoan's, a small station tifteen miles from Greenville Friday sfternoon, Miss S. B Hand, a young iohool teacher, was Btruok by a south wvuuu . iiumou ?uu lUBMUIUy KM 16(1. Miss Hand was a sister of Prof. Hand of the South Carolina University, md had been engaged in teachlug in the school at Duncan's. The limited was running several hours late, and it Is bellved that Miss Hand mistook bho train for a loc*,l, rrhicfc atops at Duncans. It was not until she step, ped on the track in front of the limited, which was thundering down upon her at the rate of sixty miles an hour, that some one oalled to her to look out. It was too late. The young woman barely had time to glanoe up when the pilot of the looomotive tos9d her body into the air. She was not mangled, but death was instantaneous. Don't bike It. The State's Washington correspondent says a number of negroes in Washington are expressing great indignation at the aotion of the president in disbanding the regiment of legro troops on acoount of shooting Dy some of the men in the regiment n Brownsville, Tex. They sav that .he president timed the disbanding irder, making it aftor it was too late k> effect the elections. They have leld a meeting and issued a call for a lational meeting of negroes to protest igainst the action of the president md decided to ask Senator Faraker o take up their cause. What they vlll demand will be the reinstatement >f the regiment. This action of the | iresidont is being widely dlsoussed in wasmngton, particular! ly In army ilroles. It Is the tirst time that such ummarv action has smr been taken. Monsibto lnaians. Tho constitution of the new State if Oklahoma will bo written by Demlorats. Vernon Whiting, seoretary of he Oklahoma Republican central lommittce, concedes the Democrats .nri three delegates while Chairman fesse Dunn of the Demooratlo ooranittee says there will be at least 78 Democratic delegates on the floor of ha Gonvantiftn. R?mihHr*n r?na??o r? irs admit that Oklahoma proved a ?eat disappointment. The "unknown" quality of the Indian Terriiory was a conoession to the Demoirate but Oklahoma districts counted in by the Rebublloan leader were ear led by the opoeitlon. The Osage naion elected two Demoorats. The Inlians as a general rule voted the Demior*tlo ticket. Hilled by a Tree. Dook Brewster, colored, was killed Thursday night about 11 o'olook near t (impsonville, in Greenville County. Ie and a white man and a negro boy j ras out possum hunting. Tli* dogs i reed and the three set to work to out i lown the tree. In falling It struck t nether tree and lodged, but a moment < tier sllped from where It was lodged, t huge limb striking Brewster aorots t he head and killing him almost In- i feantly. 1 V ntiim yyyirMp o<*? I Lone Be?b, Oal., At? stories of the central wing of the new 9760,000 Blzbj Hotel oollapsed Friday oarrjing nine workingmen to death in the tool of tangled wreckage. About 160 artisans and laborers were scattered through the struoture at the moment it fell, and of these 200 were carried down in the ruins, nine being severl? hurt. Thirteen men on the contractor's rolls are unaooounted for, but are probokly safe. Hone of the injured will die. The dead: B M. Perkins. Carlton I) rash ear. A. Benseuo. Albert Hartle. L M. Phillips. Four unidentified workmen. The injured: B. P. Watson, bruises and laorea tlons. Alexander Bavay; ribs broken. George Parker, shoulder dislocated. jr. H lmlay, out about head. H G. Binabarger, leg broken. J J. Walsh, leg amputated. Nloholson, fell five stories, sprained ankle. Alexander Ztzay, leg orushed. F. W. Sohulte. I dq mead lately after the collapse of the structure hundreds of bystanders lent aid In the resoue. Company H 7th regiment, National Guards, was oalled out and lines thrown around the building, all but rescuers being excluded. Pitiful scenes were enaoted ?. nong the throng who stood outside *be J lines waiting for news. An aped mother sat all day long on the bluff overlooking the hotel, weeping and watching for her son. I LONE ROBBER Enterod a Pullman Car and ltobbod ' t ho PaksonKora, A lono robber, heavily masked, 1 boarded the rear sleeper of the east * bound combination, Chioago and Al- 1 ton Rook Island California Limited 1 train known on No. 44, between Sla- 1 ter and Glasgow, Mo. Shortly after ' midnight Thursday night, robbed 1 three passengers scouring about $65 and escaped in the darkness. The train left Kansas City Tburs day night at 9 o'oiook and was due to i arrive In Chicago at 8 o'oiook Friday ( morning. The robber who Is desorlb ( ed as being tall and wearing a long . black overooat, boarded the rear sleep- r er at Slater. When the train had c gotten well under way he entered the sleeper and observation oar, bound h through from California. He enoount t ered the Pullman conductor and por , ter and at the point of a revolver t oommandcd them to prcoeed ahead of t him and wake up the passengers. The t sleeper was well filled. As his com- c mand was carried out the robber foro- f lng the conduotor and porter ahead of him, seoured what booty he oould t as he hurried through th? a** ? WW wVI IJ?U Jhe had made hlB way through to the ^ front end of the oar, he started for ^ the second Pullman. Befpre the rob- a ber oould enter the second oar the ( porter slammed the door In his [ faco. The train then was at a t point about one mile eaat of Glas- c gow. Realizing that he oould prooeed Q no further with his work the robber a pulled the air rope. While the train ^ was slackening its speed he jumped off t and disappeared in the darkness. t Early Friday morning offloexs were r started out from Glasgow, Slater and f Kansas 01 tv to traoe the robber. ^ Brute for Huabend* S At Columbia a handsome young wo- 13 man about twenty-three years old, a who, when questioned, gave her maid- J en name as Nellie Bryant, of Darllog- P ton, picked up under a Barnum & Bailhy circus oar at the union station before daylight Friday morning in an unoensoious condition. When taken n to the polloe station, she said she had t followed her husband, whose name she t refused to disclose here from Darling- b ton. She found him at the olrous, s1 where they quarreled about his de- t; Berlin# her, but she promised to go h baok home with him after the show. * When uhe went after him at the sta n tlon, he struck her and knooked her e under the train and left her. When * she left the police station she would ti not say where she Intended going. t t: Hose Fire Raging, ^ A dispatoh from Canton, China S Friday reports that a conllagation is d raglbg on river side oppesite the EuritnAin nnavt'.A* a? + * ^ ? J ?*-? \|uaiJL ?w> UU ?UO IOIAIjIU HUlUrO of Shameon. More than 500 bouses have been destroyed, including ell k restaurants, brotbels end gambling o bouses end is burning fleroely. Ma* a rinee from foreign vessels in the bar* ^ bor have been landed and are herolo- v ly combatting the flames. No lives 1 have been lost, but the damage al* * ready exceeds a million dollar, The ? oause is unknown. p r Murder and (Suicide. ( Clarence llgenflts, aged 20 years, y, Sunday shot his sweetheart, Mary ^ Kutz, and then committed suiolde. The shooting oceurred at Drytown, Pa., llpenfltz had been paying atten- j lion to the girl for several months, hut beoause they wore first cousins, ~ Miss Kutz refussed to marry him. Sunday night Ilgenfitz lay in wait for 0 the girl and her grandmother as they K were returning home from ohuroh. As a they passed, he shot the girl twice, >ne bullet entering her head back of the ear and another entering her left *> thigh. llgenflts then plaoed the revol* ? rer to his forehead and sent a bullet * nto his brain. mumma* mnnp ir?(w tk? ampidi um vim riw< ?t I U 4 V'C ?.. \ ?T - < t~i ,X. UM VMk. > ' 'r v'F 'VI Sprlngfleld^oae of the prettiest end moet progremiTe little towns in Orangeburg County wee visited by the fire fiend early Friday morning, and one of the main business bloeks was completely destroyed. The value of the property destroyed Is estimated at from $76,000 to $100,000. The insurance approximates about one-half of this amount. The fire originated in the home of Mr. M. L. Posey, Just above his store. It was not discovered until the flames were beyond oontrol. The alarm was qulekly given, but before the hastily awakened Inhabitants of Springfield oould reach the spene the entire building, a wooden one, was in dames. The bucket brigade, the only pro teetlon against fire whloh the town sffords, did everything poeslble to oneok the Hemes, but so intense was the heat tnat the adjoining building to the right was quickly ablaze, and not long afterwards the one on the left also. The fire continued its work of destruction until the entire block was in ashes. Ouiy by the most desperate c ft jtib was the first store on the next block saved. Fortun fcely the wind was not blowing. Among the buildings burned were the following: M. L. Posey's store and resldenoe, L. B. Fulmer's general merchandise store; L. B. Fulmer's furniture store, barn and ware house; H. B. Fulmer's milinary and dry goods store; A. D. Fulmer's store, barn and resldenoe; a two-story building, between A. D. Fulmer's and H. B. Fulmer's, used as a storage place. The whole block on the front side is burned to the ground. The origin of the fire has not been ? a Tl * * uwuuiiot/ uibo iToreu, it IB CtlOUgnt that It was oausod by tho igniting of matohes. Many people from the surrounding country, seeing the retleoUon whioh lit up the heavens for inlles iround, comj. Into Springfield. E/ery me sympathizes with those whose lomes and property have been deitroyed, but it is hpped that the fire will prove beneficial to the town in jhe end. It is altogether likely that lew brick buildings will replaoe those lurnlng to day, and Springfield will rise frcm the ashes a far better town. Should Stand Together. If those whom you owe want their noney, and many of them are almost ?m polled to have It, don't sell your sotton if the price Is not right, but ?ut it In the warehouse and borrow noney on It and pay your debts, infiudlng your subscription to the paper ?ou take. We hove no hesitation in laying that the present price of oot ion Is too low. The Wall street sharks who never saw a field of cotton are lzing the price, and are not permitting the farmer to have a voioe in the lxing. Don't let any onedeoeive you ui this question. Join your brother armers who are trying to resist op irAflRlnn nnnlf ,JU * vuu v DMtftUU 1U1B. UBD | >usy. The Lord helps them who lelp themselves. "He who dallies Is lastard; he who doubts Is damned 1" Vlll you stand like a lot of slaves md be robbed I From the Atlantic to Oklahoma the ooUon farmers are rlsug up Id their might and banding hemselves together against thler ommon foe. Lay aside all differences if politios, religion, and personalities knd put your shoulder to the wheel, fou owe It to your wife and ohlldren o do so. It will not take thirty days o win the fight. Let every farmer esolve not to sell a pound of cotton or less thon ten oents or more. Zou tare masters of the situation, itick together and win or divide and ie ruined. Warehoose your ootton nd pay your debts but don't sell our ootton for less than ten oents per ound. Work of Vandals. The bronze tablet on the monulent erected in the Lutheran cemeery In the outskirts of Brooklyn to he memory of the victims of the urning steamer Qeneral Slooum was tolen last night. The cost of the ablet was about 1460. The tablet ad besn pried off the monument rith crowbars, the face of the rnonu* lent being defaoed in the opration. An unsuooessfnl attempt ras also made to remove the tablet rom the back of the monument. The ablet is three feet square and is hree feet square and is a representsion of the burning of the General looum and the story of the great lsaster. Fatal Explosion. At Pittsburg, Pa., one man was tiled, two fatally !r jured and sixteen ther seriously hurt in a dynamite xplosion shortly after noon, on Voodland avenue, Oarrlok Borough, rhere a sewer Is being oonstruoted. ?he men are all foreigners. They rere seated about a fire eating lunoh rhen a dozen sticks of dynamite, laced near the fire to thaw, exnlodad >ne man was blown to places, another )st a leg and the eyes of the third rere blown out. Two were so badly ijured that they will die. France will have a squadron at the amestown Exposition. We Have t ne 25 hone power Talbott, second ha ' been overhauled. This Engine is great bargain for anyone who is in t We are headquarters for anything ii rompt attention will be given to aU ii are. Write us when you are in the i ?get pourrioes before planing your i ill?Me iffly ie? IttMC I* Bold ltd >MtlBC * *? The Baptto*8t*le Convention neili in Spartanburg next month. The Baptist Oourfter nji editorially m to the plaoe for Meeting in 1007: "The following telegram has been received from Bro. E. M. Llghtfoofc, paator of the Orangeburg Baptist Church; 'Orangeburg moat oordlally Invites the State convention to meet with as In 1007.' The ohuroh took aotlon last Sunday. This will be pleasing news to the brethren of the convention. Orangeburg has not had the convention slnoe 1888 and they entertalned it very handsomely thai year. "The town has grown very mueh slnoe then, and the Baptists have made very gratifying progress. Slnoe then the Atlantic Coast Line has built a road running from Flurenoe to Augusta, via Sumpter and Orangeburg while the Southern trains between Columbia and Charleston pass several times every day, The railway facilities are first class, and the olty is easily aooessible. Orangeburg is one of the best towns in the Stats, and surrounded by a floe oountry, one of the rlohest agricultural sections of the State. The effect of the Baptist convention In Oranfireburiy will Ko ? P < WW u?l|IIUI bU UI I cause in that town and throughout the country, and the aurr luoding counties. Is will afford our brethren the opportunity of seeing something of the Orangeburg Collegiate Institute, a Baptist school of decided merit, and that is doing muoh for that section o^ the State." >? Tti?y Qnt a Haian. The Standard Oil company announced Friday the first of a series of general advances In its wage scale, which will permeate the entire system from the field workers to the jofflaemen. The employes of therefining department are granted five ' and ten per oent increases, the latter including all employes under 9200 a month. jST Ci rz AAA BANK DEPOSIT J)3sUUU urwMileeWw ^ " 900 FBBB COVBSBf Board Co at. WfhtOtn r y e i auujuuii a eu si ess eeuae e. awwk Fountain Pens Por Sale. We have several dozen good Fountain Pens for sale. Quaranted 14 karat. Prices 91 and 92 eich, postpaid. Leather Pockets for two or three pens 16 cents each. Mail orders solicited. Adore?* R IUa' Rit/W CmrvT. ? wmkw jLfv/vm uiuUQ| Orangeburg, S. O An Organ that will last a life time li what you want. Our Organs have a pure tone and lovely cases. We oan supply you with an Organ that will please in every particular for only $65 and $70. delivered. Write us 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 $185 up on easy terms. ddrets Malons's Music House, OfrlrnnW* ? C, Are You Sick? If You Hay* a Diss as* For Whlel You Are Unable to Find a"Cure Write Us. We Have Been Remarkably Suooessful In Curing Deep Seated And Stubborn Cases. i If you hare any disease of a ehrcnio nanre, no matter now many dootore Save failed to cure you . or how muoh other treatment you haYe taken, we want yon / ^5^^ to write us a letter. We are speoialists with ever $0 years experience, haying beea located in Atlanta for neerly IS Jspi^k Gars, where we e established a reputation for curing our patiants j nwtM in is it S whioh wa belleYA la ** H T0114TllliT' * second to nose in irtfittt kit Milk M. fcl> this country. lig?1tSI. Ii.frw,! Ibk Our standing both Iri.Sedttj. tx. Iisk professionally and ItaUlsA la, bait * flnanjially, is at the rfs-HW Ysry highest, and yon oan consult us with perfect oenidanoe We do not resort to olaptrep methods to eeoure patients, but oondnnt All* SiwaaAl^A I ??h i^iMWVV in * ?t' aighforward manner. Oar Specially ii ohronio disease* of both raee and women?euoh as N err on* Debility. (nervous exhaustion.nervous prostration, lost vitality, etc., Kidney and Bladdar Diseases, Stricture, Rheumatism, Varioooele, Catarrh of the different organs, Speoiflo Blood Poison, $4kmach, Bowel, Liver and Heart Diseases, Piles, Fistula, Enlarged Prostate, diseases peculiar to women, eUx, etc*. We invite every afllioted person to eonsuit os free. Send for examination blank. After yon have reoeived these, together with our expert opinion of your oaae, and < you are not entirely satisfied, both as to our < reliability and ability to cure your disease, j 1 you will not even be expeoted to take treat- * ' menu We Do Not Deal In Ps?sm -?s*>ciiainoa. All neoeeeary needioine# I are prepared in onr own private laboratory I i to suit the oonditiona of eaoh individual I oaae, without extra charge. Many oaaea curable by our home treatment plan. Expert opinion of your ceee free. Write for examlitttion blan*. Addreee ua as follows: I)R HATHAWAY A CO., 88--B, Inrnan , Building, Atlanta, Ga. j Q ? imi'wmnn n II .. or Sale nd engine in stock which has reoentin first class condition and will bo he market for such a size engine, i the way of machinery supplies, and iquiries and orders entrusted to onr narket for anything, and be save jrdsrs elsewhere. Itlmkta, ft. ft.