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pf. 'SOME NEW KUL1NW8 WHAT HUH A Li CAIUUKK8 MUST AND MUST NOT DO. A Postoffioe Official Gives Oat a State * ment as to Their Duties. Head It. I 1 "Now that the rural free delivery I system has been so eztouded In this 1 oountry?In faot it will be but a short time when the merry rural free delivery oarrier will be trotting over the snows and lev peaks of Alaska? the department Is in constant receipt of letters to what rural carriers may oarry on their routes hesidesthemselves and their mall," sa d a postoffioe department official recently. "In the hrst place, they cant oarry any liquid that stimulates either on the ln*!de or outside of their persohs; intoxication means instant dismissal, and they are dismissed when they are detected drinking even off their routes. Nor are they permitted to carry spirituous liquors for the acc )modatlon or their patrons; personal incnasmp co*? n'& go wun rne fltpartment in these oases, ard no exceptions are made with the rule. "Rural oa-rlers must oarry the mall and nothing else, even though business houses seek oftimes to make errand boys of them. Carriers must not either In peron or through others, directly or indlreotly. solicit money, gifts or presents, nor Issue for profit souvenelrs or postal handbooks, nor oo-operate with or assist the publishers of the same to seoure the patronage of the public. They are also barred from compiling or assisting in the oomplllng of directories for publlo use. Business firms with large mall lists have caused us a great deal of trouble in attempt ing to engage the carriers as their agents, so we have strictly prohibited them from furnishing the names and addresses of patrons on their routes for pay or favor to any t, business establishment, or to any Individual except to the department officials who are entitled to them under the regulations. rnu - J a. a- t * j. uu uuparbmenii nas received lottern from patrons complaining because the oaariors refused to oarry their milk cam. This Is funny, but It Is true, and it shows what some people in the oountry think the rural delivery servloe was established for. Carriers are not permitted to oarry passengers, nor to permit any person other than authorized postal officials, to ride with them or to have aooess to the mallB. They must not engage in any business during their presorlbed hours of servloe or to oonduct any business after hours which offers terntallon to sollelt patrourge on their routes, or whloh by reason of their positions in the government service gives them special advantages over competitors. We rigidly bar them from acting as book canvassers, lnsuranoe solicitors sewing maohlne agents or aoting as agent of any kind or occupation. We allow carriers to carry merchandise for hire upon the request of patrons residing npon their respective routes whenever it will not lntfore with the proper dlsohargo of their official duties ,under such regulations the department may preeoribo. Oountry storekeepers try to use the carriers vehicles as delivery wagons, but the government is not in that sort of business. We allow the carriers to receive no compensation from the seller of the merchandise and where the merohandi8e is carried on the request of the patrous for hire for -the carrying, oarrying muat be paid by the paiicob. "We gel thousands of letters from all over the country Just ou this one point ?what carriers may carry on their routes. If the rural delivery patrons would only remember that the govermeut is not In the express business, they would save themselves, the carriers and tho department a great deal of trouble." Brutally Murdorml. At Wilmington, N. 0., Bettie Johnson, a negro woman about 25 years of age, was brutally murdered Saturday night by Frank James, a looting South Carolina negro of bad police record. Saturday the woman was assaulted by James and early Saturday night as she was returning home from a magistrate's ctllce, where she had sworn out a warrant against the man, he again attacked her. With a razor he out her throat and savagely gashed her body. Death resulted in a few moments from hemorrhage. James is at large. The fiefld when caught should be made short worlr of. Fatal Fight. At Grand Rapids. Mioh., Mike Word, the pugilist, of Sarina, Ontario, died B'riday morning at 0 45 o'olook as the result of a knockout in alight Thursday night with Harry Lewis, of Philadelphia, Ward died of oerbral hemmorrhago, aocording to the physloians who attended him. Ilsrry Lewis, Referee Bvan, of Detroit, and Frank O'Brien, Lewis' trainer were plaoed under arrest. Put Them to Flight. While E. R. Goodshall and others were attempting to kill a bull at Union the infuriated animal turned on them and put them to flight, dnrlng which Goodshall fell and the bull attacked him, inflicting several painful wounds. Will Honor Lee, The University of South Osrolins i will observe in fitting manner the cen- < tenary of Robert E. Lee. Major ! Young of Charleston, one of the few < surviving members of General Lee's 1 ten; will deliver en address* t I K>' i BIRD TRAOXDY. rtie PMienger Pigeon, Onoe Bo Plentiful, Now Extlnot, The greatest of all tragedies In the leathered kingdom was tne sudden jxtinctlon, the magtoal disappearance, jf the onoe countlc si hosts of passenger pigeons. The question as to what beoame of them and why they went has beoome one of the most puzzling problems of ornithology. Those old enough to remember these beautiful birds hare never oeased to regret their unaooountable extermination. One day as numerous as the sands of the seashore and flying in myriads that darkened the sky for hours at a time, next day thev have disappeared as oompletely as if never in existence so completely that a large reward c ffored for a pair still remains unclaimed. A celebrated American ornithologist estimated that a fleck he saw early In the laBt century numbered largely over two thousand two hundred and thirty millions, and they would consume seventeen million four hundred and twenty-four thousand bushels of mast every day! These are tremendous figures but many of our older rea aers, r memboring flocks seen In their boyhood, will readily believe them to be true. As late as the sixties it was no uncommon thing to fee In Kentucky, Indiana and Michigan, flocks that darkened the sky in every direction as far as the eye oould reach and they would be passing for hours at a time. It has been over thirty-three years since any considerable number of these birds were seen south of the great lakes though an extensive nesting was reported from the regiu of PetOHkev as late as 1881. Though hundreds of men were engaged in netting them and oaptured fully 10,000,000, It was estimated that not one bird in a thousand was taken. An eyewitness declares that this nesting covered an area twenty-eight miles long and fully four miles wide while evory tree of any size oyer this extensive space had more or iess nests and many were full of them. This, however, seems to have been the last of the passenger pigeon In numbers. Soon thereafter ho disappeared as suddenly as the Virginia sora after a frost as oompletely as the great auk of the southern boss. What beoame of them still remains and doubtless always will remain one of the unsolved mysteries of solenoe. It was at first thought that they attempted to oross the ooean, but unequal to the long lllght fell and were swallowed by the waves. A more probable oonoluilon is that In the destruction of the forests, whioh deprived them of their natural food, aided by the relentless persecution of main In ev'erv locality, we mav find thn real explanation of this delorable tragedy in the kingdom of the birds. Bomb In St. l'otura. At Rome, Italy on last Sunday morning a bomb was exploded in St. Patera, whioh 1b the largest ohuroh building in the world. The edifice was crowded and an indescribable aoeno of oonfusion followed. There wero no fatalities. As soon as the eohoes of the tremendous roar had ceased, a canon sought by reaRsurlng words, to quiet the poople, but in vain. They tied in all directions and a number of women fainted. Women and children screamed and men tried to protect their families in the crush. The ohuroh is so large, however, that there was ample room for the crowd to scatter and no one was irjurod. No traoe of the perpetrator of the deed has been found. No Obago Wanted A dispatch from Richmond, Va., says by resolution the Y.rglnia Baptist Oonvtntlon Wednesday broke off all relations with the American Society and refused to use their publications. The trouble gievv out of printing by the house of bibles for Asiatics, In which the Greek word "baptiso" was translated "dlpptd." The American Society oontend their transalatlon is oorreot and refused to change it in Baptist bibles. Negro Bank Closed. The Worklngmen's Savings and Loan company, a negro bank In Greenville was closed last week by State Bank Examiner Hollemau. The books of the bank are in a very bad condition and is probable that there will have to be a complete reorganization before the Institution can resume operations. It Is not thought that there has been anything criminal in oonneotion with the bank It being merely mismanaged. The bank has mnde sovoral bad investments and has been running at a loss for some time. The bank since its Institution na? paid a dividend of 10 per cent annually and It Is thought that thin was paid out of the capital Instead of the earnings. A WIho Woman. There is a wise woman In Poughksepsle, N. Y. She Is Mrs. James Crawford, who for years has supported her husband, who drank up all the money he could get while she did seven washings a week. Little by little she kept putting away savings f.\ t> her meagre earnings until she had $100. She caused her husband to be summoned before Justloe Carpenter and offered him the $100 If be would sign an agreement to leave the village and never come near her again. Crawford signed the paper and took the money. Eight Men Burled* A dlspatoh from Douglass, Arliona, Bays that eight men were burled under tons of roek by the premature explosion of giant powder at a lime quarry near there i Employes from the smelters hate been sent to dig them out. bad wukck. a ONB MAN KlLiJLBO AND ANOTHER * FATALLY INJUliBO. Collision Between a Work Train and m a Freight Attended With ^ Fatal leaults. o< One man was killed, another fatally m Injured, several others severely hurt ?' in a collision Friday morning between * a work train and a freight seven * miles from Columbia on the road ? between Columbia and Charlotte. ? T. G. Lloyd flagman, on the work * train, ?as killed. * M. W. Kelsey, white, flagman on ? the work train, was fatally Injured, t but was brought to Columbia alive. ]; J. A. Trlplett, oonduoter, bruised g and shaken up. f G. W. Parish, engineer, slightly u hurt. W. F. Snipes, engineer, seriously v Injured. o Ernest Clayborn, fireman, slightly a Injured. r M. T. Crouch, fireman, slightly 5 hurt. d All of these live in Columbia, ex- s oept Kelsey, whose home is In A Chester. All are white. Crouch had fc only recently gone to work on tho s railroad, having served an enlistment f of four years In the navy. He is a v oounin of Senator eleot B. W. Orouoh, o of Saluda. C The w rk train was extra No. 476, o working with limits between Oolurr- I bla and Bl>thewood, a distance of 19 a miles. The work train had orders to t protect against No. 828, extra freight, c northbound. It is stated by the a railroad oftlotals that these ordors w wore disregarded and that the work v train was on the main track when it i< jhould have bet n on the side track, and as usual tne crow of the train n suffered for tho ovornight ' w Extra freight, No. 828, north- si bound, ran into the work train at h 8 05 o'clock. The orow of the freight 1 train saw the work train In time to b jump and none of them was hurt, o The freight was In charge of Oonduc- li tor K. S. Motte and Euglueer George o W. Parish. Gapt. Mott's home is at No. 2 303 Park street, Columbia. Engineer Parish lives at No. 1,910 Blending street Columbia. q Tho work train was in oharge of t Conductor J. A. Triplett and En- g g.ncer W. F. Snipes. Conductor u Triplett's home is at No. 1,917 Tay- p lor street. T The collision ooourred at the 09- 0 mile post, Beven miles north of Co- a lumbla. The engine of No. 476 was t badly damaged, and the oabooso also, t A oar of merchandise and seed was a torn up, but the rest of the train was not8erlously Injured. o Passenger train No. 30, due to f leave there at 6.10, was running two d hours and 20 minutes late and reach- o od the scene of tho collision soon after a It occurred. The passengers from i No. 27, duo here at 10 a. m., were v transferred to No. 20 aud No. 30 oamo t baok to this oity, being sent to Char- a lotte by way of Spartanburg. Neither \ No. 30 or extra freight No. 828 had ii any orders in regard to tho work Q train, as it was tho duty of the work train to keep out of the way of the d freight and passonger trains. d The orow of the freight train saved n themselves by Jumping, as they saw u the work train 100 yards off and the t engineer put on the breaks in time. r< It would seem that the men on the d work train did not know anything at a all about the approach of the freight, o as they were all hurt more or less t seriously. a Southern's surgeon, Dr. F. D. Ken- a dall went at onoe the soene with f( a wrecking train, and Dr. Ken- g dall came back to the city t with the Injured. Gapt. Williams remained at the scene all day super- e Intending the work of olearlng the e traok. li Ugly Murder lteoor . ^ "During the last five years 45,000 d parsons were murdered la the United 11 States. More persons were murder- b ed last year than died of tvphoid fev- b er. Tbls awful total has been due ~ to the way the law was admin- e' isrered, and the law Itself Is 3 bad and lneffloent. It In hiini?nnri V with restrictions and technicalities, and in almost every case the criminal a has nine ohanoes of escaping to one of being found guilty." So declared *V Judge Marcus Kavanagh In an ad ^ dross before the alumnae of St. Igangantlus College gathered at a banquet P at the Great Northern Hotel at Chi- d cago. He spoke on "Enforcement of ^ the Law in the Large Cities," and 0 vigorously assailed the operation of h courts under the Jury system. That *i the United States is the most criminal 11 oountry In the world, the jury the a most looso and antlau&ted. and the s< law the most open to attack are * among the assertions made by Judge H( Kavanagh. * MOAlded to Do?tb, ^ Six men were killed and five were ei seriously Injured last week when a a boiler In the power house of the Lake * Shore Railroad, In Colllngwood, a suburb of Cleveland, Ohio, blew up, The men were olose to the boiler working on thejfoundatlon for a dy- M namo. They were all In the mouth si of a subway facing the end of the b boiler that blow out, and the six men f< were soalded to death by the steam, w Engineers at the power house say P the explosion was due to the forma- U tlon of a "mud ring" in the filtering h apparatus which elarlfles the water k before it passes into the boiler. The A shook of the explosion created muoh si excitement si OTHER OUTRAGE IE ATLAETA. ocro Beat, Bound and Criminally AaaaultedlWblte Ltady, Some of the negrooo of Atlanta LUit be determined to pull off anothr riot. One of the most dastardly tsaults ever perpetrated was that mmlttcd there on Tuesday of last eek by Joe Glenn, a negro SO years Id, when he entered the home of Irs. J. N. Oamp, on Oasoade avenue, bout 9.30 o'clock that morning, ohokd Mrs. Gamp Into unoonolousness, Led a leather strap around her throat nd assaulted her. Leaving his vie lm In an unoonsolous state he plundred the house until she had partly reived, when he returned and attacked ler again. He remained unconoernody about the house until she had realned her power to scream and run rom the house, whereupon the then inknown assailant made his escape. Mrs. Gamp was found by two men vho were passing shortly after 10 'clock that morning, bound to a tree ^ 1 I -31 JM M M m ,uu uvmuiy uruibuu uia iDjurea as a esult of the negro's criminal attaok. ihe was taken Into the house In a langerous condition, and there is ome question as to her recovery. Irs. Gamp is about 35 years old and tas several children. The Gamp home bands about a quarter of a mile away rom the nearest neighbor, and ehe ras practically unproteotod, The ounty police and the marshal of )akland Olty were notified of the rime and at onoe Instituted a search, jate Thursday afternoon a negro nswering the"general|desoriptlon v. as raced ta Cascade Spring, and when aptured, was found to more closely nswer the description. When he ras taken into the presence of his ictlm Glenn was at onco positively ientltied. The c fflotals anticipated trouble and lade a rush for the county J all, rhioh they auocseded in reaching ifely before it was known that. G'enn ad been either oaptured or identified 'he negro is now safe behind the ars, and there has been no unusual Dmmotton about the city either durag the day or night on account f the orimo. I'roflt Not Cost. Mr. Sterrett Tate, replying to a uotatlon from the New York Herald o the effect that as ootton can be rown at five oenfc per pound, it Is inreasonable for the produoer to exieot more than ten cents for It. Mr. ?ate successfully ridicules the propsltion that ootton can be grown at iye oen&s a pound and Bhows that en oonts 1b too low for the producer o make the reasonable margin of proit to whloh he is entitled. It is a very simple matter for a lewBpaper a thousand miles away rom the fields to tell the ootton proluoer what it coBts por pound to raise otton, but when reduced to its last nalysis advloo from the neighborLood of Wall street is of no more alue to the average cotton farmer han would be the opinion of the vorago ootton producer to a New fork speculator who might be seekag evidence as to the latest movecents of the Parlsion bourse. Every item entering into the prouotlon of cotton has vastly Increased uring the past few years. It costs core to buy land, fertilizers, stock, teuslls, to pay for labor and to meet he expenses of living than ever beare. The oost entering into the prouotion of a bale of ootton today is lraost double the cost of the making f a bale ten years ago. While it is rue that ten cents will perhaps meet otual expenses and give the producer nd his family a living, it is not just ar the world to expeot the cotton rower to be satisfied with only aoual living expenses. The cotton grower 1b just as muoh ntitled to a reasonable return on his ffort, his energy, his time and his avestment as the Wall street broker i entitled to his profit. What would Vail streot think If the cotton proucer should take the position that &s brokers and business men should e entitled to no more than aotual ving expenses out of their business -and yet that Is the position assumd towards the cotton growers by a reat many people the world over. Vhat Wall street doesn't know about he coat of making cotton would fill great many books. In the meantime The constitution gain urges the cotton produoers of he south to let Wall street alone, nd to make its arrangements lndeendont of advice received from that treotion. The secretary of the Llasissippl division of the Southern otton Association was right when e warned the produoeis of the south gainst the bear movement emanatjg from Wall street, and It is notlceble that it comes this year from )me of those who only a year ago rere coddling the farmers of the )uth with the view, evidently, of working Into their oonfidenoe to bag ig game this year. Notwlthstand* lg this cotton has gone above elevn r?Anta r>d a nam nnim/1 11? ? ?uu wiwi/ yuuuu uuw UU HUD larket Is worth that muoh at least, ud if marketed slowly will bring it. He Fought Hard. At Mllledgevllle, Ga., on Friday. Lima Devereux, a negro, fought the lerlff and his deputy who entered Is oell to escort him to to the soaf>ld. After a hard fight the negro as overoome and was later hanged, reylously he had tried uniuooeasfully > kill himself with a broken glass Dttle. Deyereux was oonvleted of lillng another negro in a card game, n applloallon for oommutatlon of intenoe was refused hp the oommison Thuxadaj. I KTOJtM bWlSJSPS OVER NORTHERN MISSISSIPPI AND WESTERN TENNESSEE On Last Saturday Might Leaving Daath and Peetruotion in Its Wake. Telegraphic and teleohonio communications reoeived Sunday night from points In Mississippi, Arkansas and Tennessee for a distance of several miles, report that territory to bare suffered Saturday night ani early Sunday from one of the most deatructire rain and wind storms experienced In years. Only meagre details are as yet obtalnable, but five lives are known to have been lost ana great damage done to property and crops. Railroad tratlo Is completely demoralized by numerous washouts, and many trains have necessarily been annulled. From the reports so far reoeived the great damage occurred In the oentral and Delta regions of Mississippi. At Winona, Miss., the Catholic, Christian and negro Methodist churches and the Hesty brlok yard were demolished, and numerous buildings unroofed and badly damaged. Among the largest buildings damaged at this place are the postoflice, Opera Houso, the oil mill, the compress, ware house of the Jackson Mercantile finmnrnv and the residence of E. J. Dunkston. Besides these, about twenty-Ave smaller buildings were almost completely destroyed. Of those buildings not totally destroyed, the oompress was probably the most badly damaged. The roof of thiB building was torn off by the wind, which at times reached almost tornado-like vclooity, falling on the homo of E. J. Dunkston, 260 yards away. The wind storm was preceded and followed by heavy rains causing serious washouts along the route of the Illinois Oential Hill road, and badly damaging crops. At Maihison, Miss., serious damage is reported to have occured and a woman killed by a falling building. At Tehula; a falling tree striking a small frame building, caused it to bo set afire a woman and child were burned todoath. At Nonconnah Creek a railroad trestle fell uudv the weight of a switch engine plunging Into the swollen stream carrying with It Engineer Ch V. Peterson and Fireman A. R. Rltohie, who wore drowned. West Point, OolumbuB and Mabon, Miss., are reported to have suffered serious damage, but as these points are completely out off from communication It is impossible at this time to ascertain the extent. irr^i a "ni - wuii rwivor, a smaii stream id the vicinity of Rossyille, Todd., Is out of its banks, the water Hooding the surrounding territory for many miles. The entire town of Rossville is inundated, the water in the public square reselling a depth of four feet and great damage has boon done to property at this place and eastward. A railroad employee reports the people in a state of pauio, the flood boing the worst in the town's history. Quantities of loose cotton has been washed away, as well as many small buildings and livestock drowned. For 1 a distance of eight miles, between that place and Moscow, Tenn, the water is from one to six feet deep on the traoks of the Southern Railway. ttilvor tiooi IJp. Bar silver has reached a price so high that the director of the mint deems it inadvisable for the government to make any more purchases at present. For several weeks the government has been buying sliver for ooinage, and the prloes have been invariably high. The purchases last week were at as high a figure as 71.79 Dor tine ounce, but the lowest bid received Wednesday was 72 oents. Dirootor Roberts thereupon rejected 1 Liie Dins, ana announced that no more purchases would b? made until such time as the price of bar silver declines toward the normal Given'* Dlvoroo. At Paris, France, the Oounfces de 1 Oastellaae was Wednesday granted ; an absolute dlvoroo from her husband , Count Uoni, and the conrt gave her i the custody of their two children. < While the Countess will have charge of her sons the decree of the 1 conrt forbids her taking them out of 1 France without the oourt's permission. We Have P One 25 horse power Talbott, second ha ly been overhauled. This Engine is a great bargain for anyone who is in tl We are headquarters for anything in prompt attention will be riven to nil in oar?. Writ? us when yon are in the a to get pourrioe? before placing your c flalfiroWa finro'v Cn . ~jjjr? Chronic Disci (jg^ Successful it^ ^ suffering froc ^uT\$Wm^ N?rroai Mxhaiwti Varioaoala, Striot a nttitTM^ LWer, Stomach, B to woman, ato, mI I tK; X CatetikitMU W M- oar books -Brain i X l?rlUth,N||&lkk ant -Man's Diana fei.Mttf. t Uwkm adrland. Many oas Ms I #4. k, Ml ExOnrt opinion of II ? leaaaa A^AAAAAAMMAAAAAAM4AA4i DABTZLU WILL 00K1ST 80 As Hs and Moorer Can Get a ) LilttIs Stake. < The commissioners of eleotloo for Orangeburg County met 00 Tuesday and organized themselves Into boards of canvassers for the purpcae of canvassing and tabulating the vote polled at the general election on the Oth Instant. O&e two boards of this county are oomposed as follows: Federal?J. A. Berry, chairman; J. C. Redmond, J. B. Stroman; secretary, M. F. Inablnet State?John S. Bowman, Jr., Chairman; D. B. Berry and Thos. J. Hart, secretary, S. J. Holllday. There were fewer votes polled in Orangeburg County this year than two years ago. Governor Ansel only reoelved 1,888 votes, and the bAlanoe of the tickets in the State and county boxes reoelved about the same. For Congress, Mr. A. Frank Lever reoelved 1,979 votes In the county, while the negro, Alex. D. Dantzler, only received 83. It is presumed that Dantzler intends going before Congress with another /contest. Jaoob Moorer, a colored lawyer of this pkoe, who has been conducting these biennial contests heretofore, appeared before the board of Federal canvassers and served the following notice upon them: State of South Carolina, Sevonth Congressional District. To the board or county cauvassers for the county of Orangeburg. Piease take notice that the undersigned, A. D. Dantzler, Republican candidate for a seat In the 60th Congress from the 7th C mgretaioual district of South Carolina, protests against the counting, canvassing, tabulating and returning of any and all votes cast at the election held November 6, 1906, for A. JT. Lever, Democratic candidate for^scatln the 60tli Congress from the rf^venth Congressal district of South Carolina, upon the following grounds^ First, that the laws under which the election was hold, Novenre; 6, 1906, are In violation of the 14'.h and 15th amendments of tho Ft;d?r*l Constitution and should be declared void and of none etfeot: Seoond, that the managers of election were partial and unlawfully permitted a certain class of citizens known as Confederate soldiers, to vote without the qualifications required of other citizens, to the great Injury and prejudice of the Republican candidate. A. D. Dantslkr, Protestant. Jacob Moouku, Attorney for Protestant. Hits Last Time. W. R, Ilearsb p?n.sed through San Antonio, Texas on Sunday on his way * to Mortery, Mexico, where he has mining property. In reference to politlos In New York he said; "I will never again be a oandidate. I shall continue to live In New York and advocate and support the principles of reform whloh I have always stood for, but these principles are now sufficiently understood bv the general public for it to be no longer neccessary for me to be a candidate, and on that account to be attacked with such bitterness." Fountain Peas For Sale. We have several dozen good Fountain Pens for sale. Guarantee! 14 karat. Prices $1 and *2 each, postpaid. Leather Pockets for two or throe pens 15 cents each. Mail orders solicited. Address Sims' Book Stork, Orangeburg, S. O ? TZ AAA BANK DEPOSIT J>v3%UUvJ * Mote*fflfcto ^ * 800 PRBB COCR8B* Writ a OA* rT" ?t Trffirnigiff Iftma fti An Organ that will last a life time is what you want. Our Organs havo a pure tone and lovely cases. We can supply you with an Org^n that will please in every particular for only $65 and $70. delivered. Write us for our special terms of payment, and for illustration! 3f the beautiful Organs referred to. If you prefer a Piano we have beautiful and good new Uprights from $185 up on easy terms. ddreps Malont's Music House, Columbia, S. C. or Sale nd engine in stock which has recentin first class oondition and will be tie market for such a size engine. l the way of machinery supplies, and Lquiries and orders entrusted to om larket for anything, and be sure >rders elsewh/re. f * * ases Of Men and Wnma? ^ ...... 11 VII1VI1 J ly Treated. | a Rheumatism, Speoiflo Blood Poison, m on, Debility, Break Down, etc., Catarrh Z are, Gleet, any disease ef the Heart, * owele or Lunge; Skin Diseases, Blood T or Bladder diseases, Dlaeeeee peculiar Z tl on or write us. We have had over Y ice is the treatment ef these diseases. X established. ExaraWtion I lank and Z md Nerve Exhaustion and "Health** A iesH sent free. Personal examination ee onrable by our heme treatment plan. your case free. Write for elimination T DR. HATHAWAY A 00, limits tt-D 1 tlanta, Georgia. Z