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/ I- ?7< " % ^ BRYAN IN REPLY Scores Roosevelt for Lowering Dignify of High Office. TAFT PET OF TRUSTS The 1 ?emo?-iut ie I'lrslifrnllHl Candidate ICeplies to the Letter ?f tlio IVraidnit W i 111 (lu< Stcongiv<< Doctuiu'iit That Hits \ppeared This (hunpnign |?'roiu Any Somen. VViu .1. ifryan, eandidato lot* Resident, on his way from Madison to Milwaukee, Saturday, nave oil', the following letter for j??t 1 ?1 ifiition "lion. Tlieodore Uo >sevelt, President of the United fit ales. Washington, I). (! Dear Sir: While I hnvo not yol received >onr letter end shall not unlil I roach home mxi week, I have read a eopy of it in tho press and hog leave to submit the following ie|?|y: "Mr. llasiioli having voluntnril. ro.ni.gned from the committee thai, ho might be more fieo to nroseciiU' those who have brought charges against him, I need tu t discuss the question of his guilt or innocence further than to say that the public sorvice which he has rendered and ?ho vote of confidence which ho has received from the people of his own . Slate ought to pi meet him from condemnation until the charges can he examined in some court where partisanship does not bias, and where campaign exigencies do not) compel prejudgment. I would not. doom it necessary to address you further hut for the fact that you sei/.e up.>h the chaises and attempt to make political capita! out of them. You'even charge that my connection with Mr. 11 ask el 1*8 selection as a member of the resolutions commit tee raises a question as to my sincerity as an opponent of trusts and monopolies. As an individual and ;u* the candidate of my party, I resent the charge and repel the insinuation. I have been in public, life for eighteen years and I have been sufficiently conspicuous to make tny conduct a matter of public inUuest. I have passed through two President ial campaigns in which party finding ran high and epithet was exhausted. 1 have no hesitation in saying you cannot Mini tin act, a word or a thought, of mine to justify partisan charges. High Tribute to Haskell. "I have never been informed of I I,..I I, ..I lw.,? ..I.. i4 ii j v>nui h1 < iki i M.iii ?ncn 11 MUM" against Mr. Haskell connecting him with the Standard Oil (Company or with any other trust. I had known him as loader in the Constitutional Convention of Oklahoma, and hud kuown 11iin as one of the men principally responsible for the excellent Constitution which has since been adopted and adopted by a majority of over one hundred thousand, woven ty thousand of which was furnished by Republicans. I had known of his election to the Covernorship of that great young State by a inajoiit.v of some 'hivty thousand. I had known that the Constitution was adopted and the Covernor Haskell was elected in sjdto of the speeches made in Oklahoma by Mr. Taft. "You say 'hat i! was a matter of common nomrie'y that Mr. Haskell was connoted with the Standard Oil Company. I have a light to assume that if so serious an on lection had existed to Mr. Haskell's eiectiyu atpj had heeu it unit lor of TToinlhon notoriety in Ohio, as yod say, .Judge Taft would have felt it his conscient iotis duty t> warn the people when he spoke In Oklahoma. i lie dui not have the knowledge, why can it be assigned that 1 had it? And, if he had It, how can you .w. I.?~ f..Jl VAuunc 111 r> Ulllllir (() COIU^l II IIK'il'<> the information to the people of Ok lahonia ? if you feel It your patriotic duty to denounce Mr. Haskell when lie is only a member of the national organization, how much more would Mi. JL'aft have felt n his patriotic duty to denounce Mr. Haskell when In was aspiring to be the Chief I0\OctiMve of a great nation.' Know of no Suit. "I could have no knowledge of the suit to which you refer when he whh appointed chairman of the resolutions committee of me Democratic National Convention, because tho| 811 it was begun while ho was at Den- I ver and. ;ik h mailer of fact, I did ! not know anything of (he natife of the suit until after ho was made treasurer of the national committee, and no fair-minded person can decide upon the merits of your charge without an examination of the pro- j visions of the lOnahling Act, passed by a Republican Congress and the provisions of a license franchise issued to the oil company hy your Administration. "J need nardly refer to the newly found evidence upon which you lay so nr'th stress, viz, the article in! tl:/> look of September 5. My attention was never called to that article until I road the published : copy of your letter, and while I have great respect for the Outlook, and I suppose I have for the writer (although you do not give his name), f would hardly feel justified in deciding as promptly us you do on an ex parte statement without exarui-1 a nation. t The Trust Question. v "You present an indictment j< (Continued on page {>.) fi against our platform declarations c< on the trust question, hut you do a net refer to all of the planks and a do not deal justly with those to C which you do refer. Our platform f: declares in favor of the 'vigorous v enforcement of the criminal law \\ against guilty trust magnates and e olliclals.' Your platform does not tl contain any such demand. Will vou k say that your platform is better than tl ours in that respect? Our platform k demands that corporations beyond i certain size be (--impelled to sell at p the same price in all parts of the b country, due allowance being made tl for the cost of transportation. Will li you deny that tins is in the I it forest r of the consumer and in the interest f '?f the smaller competitors? \Ve present a plan under which no corpora- i ?i-'ii will be permitted to control c more than one-half the total product, n It has been stated that the steel s cotnpanv. with your express consent, < purchased one of its largest rivals d and thus obtained control of more c than f>0 per cent of the total out- i put. Will you insist that in permit- <1 llig this- you sIkavoi! less favor toll 'he monopolistic corporations than ! ! <io in i nposing it ? i Steel .Men Helped Hughes. "Vim quote at length front a ! speech made hy (Jovernnr 11 unites, l in which he ridieules one of our anti- I trust remedies. Is tliis the same t Governor ! lushes who was counted \ as one of the 'alies' who endeavored i to defeat Mr. Tal't when, as you i insisted, Mr. Taft represented the Is 'reformers' of your party ami his i j opponents the reactionary element .' t Did not Governor ICughcH have the j support of the N'etv York deleft < tion in the Convention, and is not New York city the home of many of the Republicans most Conspicuous ; in their connection with tlie law > defying e.orporntions? You are cer- i tninly aware of t lie fact that in the \ statement tiled hy George it. Shields, | then treasurer of the Republican i State committee, two years ago, af- i ter Mr. Hughes's election, it appears ? that the following cont rihut iods i were made to the campaign fund: t .1. I'. .Morgan, $20,000; John I) > : Rockefeller, $.r>,000; Andrew Car- i i negie, $.">,000; Chas. ,\i. Schwab, 1 I'J.oOO; John \V. Gates, $f>,<)00; \Y. i i 10. Corey. $2,000; \Y. Nelson Crom- i I v, ..I 1 * I 111..I W I.' 1 1 i i, ^ w . r . iiiivi'iliyt'V, 5 MMI ; | It. i\l. I) Ilk*', $;"?0 0. Severn I of t liese I men are known to Ik* oflicially con- I nccU'd with I In* trusts. 1 "Would the fact that these gentle- < men contributed to his campaign t1 'fund strengthen or weaken Ills testi- i nioiiy against tlie reasonableness of f our anti-trust remedy? I Hughes a Fault Finder. % I "Von cannot have failed to notice | that (Joveruor Hughes in his speech I assumed the role of lite critic, and I not that of tin* constructive states- < man. Any one possessing a vivid t imagination and a pen can tiud oh- a jeetions to remedial measures, s Lord Macaulay is quoted as saying s that eloi|uent and learned nun could v he found to dispute the law of gravi- a tatlon if there were any advantage i1 to Ik- gained hv it Hut when a 'known abuses' are to he cured, an p ounce of remedy is worth a pound h of fault finding. I "As you quote from (lovernor h Hughes, I take it for granted that n Mr. 'I'aft has not yet expressed him- l> self in a satisfactory manner on the u subject, for you would naturally Jl prefer to quote from the PresidentiaI I t! candidate wherever possible. You w say:. 'Let us repeat that no Inwlti defying corporation has any other I>' reason to tear from you save what t? ? h.il it will suffer in the general ?n paralysis of business,' etc. in Trusts Supporting Taft. at Refering to the last part of the sr sentence first, I might question your 01 ability to act as tin expert sis to in panic preventatives, since you now tl have one on your hands, hut as to ni your charge that no law defying d< corporation lias reason to fear the direct effect of the unit-trust remedies which I favor, permit mo to suggest that your testimony on this subject is not conclusive. You are M a witness, to bo sure, but your interest in the result of the election lntmf be taken into consideration in weigh iug your testimony. There is better evidence. The trust magnates know | ( their own interests, and they are supporting Judge Tuft. Not one of the trust magnates helped to secure my u, nomination, while it is a matter '"'[(j, common notoriety that, they were'jp conspicuous in the Republican (Jon- (h vention, and U is equally common yj notoriety that they tire supporting (.( your party in 'his campaign. If you aj win nil in** (i single oineiai connected [ w with 'a law defying corporation in monopoly or trust who lias declare! | (j} or will declare t he is support'eg me, I will puhllcy warn him that I will on force against liltn the present \< criminal law, and will enforce agains' him also tin* laws demanded in the j; Ocmoeraiie platform ..s soon is he laws can he enacted, < . .ipnigu IVj'ei Ky. "Hut there Is another fact which (j, raises a presumption in fnvo' of our r( party and against your party. I referred to it in my former letter to w| yon, hut you inadvertently over- W1 looked it in your reply , and the jn nu'inhers of your Cabinet called in ()f for consultation evidently did not rj( notice it. I stated that we had not aj knowingly received a dollar from any jj. of those connected with a corpora- n tioti known as a trust, and that any'o, money so received would he returned Hj] s s Hoon us wo received knowhtlgo of he fact. 1 now remind you that our Convention deliberately rerouted by a vote of 9 to 1 tbo plang uroring publicity as to campaign | ontributions. Mr. Taft has repuditod the action of the Convention nd rebuked the members of the On vent ion by declaring himself in ivor of a publicity law, but he fa- i ors publicity after the election, bile wo favoT publicity before the lection. Which do you regard as lie hotter plan to let the people now before the election what ir.uenceH are at work or to let them ^ now after the eltction? "Are >:>u willing to say that any J ublic Interest was served in 1901 1 y concealing until after toe election ? lie contributions made to the Ucpuh- i lean campaign fund l?y Mr. liar- ( iman and those collected by him rom others? "Are you willing to say that the i >u bl hurt ion before election of the out i ihutions then made would have <> effect oil the election? As I have aid. we shall publish the names of rout rihutors above one hundred I Hilars. Will you ask your national j niuiuit ten to publish before the elecion the conIrihutions above one bun I red dollars? Or it you regard his as s;>o small a sum, the eontriiuI ions above a thousand dollars, o.* , f this is also too small, the conrilnit ions above ten thousand (hilars? If not, what reason can you ;iv?? to the public for not doing so? insist that our willingness to lei ne public know the source from vhich we receive contributions rafs s a presumption in our favor that nust bo overcome before you can isk the people to accept your stateucnt that the law-defying corporaions have no more to fear from Renihllean success than from a Demo ratio victory. I try an as (Jood as Taft. "In I'lilU'llluliiii \ <iii vn v lli *i I vim isk support for Mr. Tnft because ho hands for the moral suplift of the intion; because his deeds have made *ood Ids words and because tin* >olicies to which lm is committed in* of iinnu'asti raldo consequence ilike t?> tlm honor and the interests >f the whole American people. I lare yon to compare my efforts for he moral uplifting of the nation villi the policies to which I am com-j nitted with the policies t owhicii ie is committed, and moie than that, f I may assume that In* will follow n your footsteps, 1 dare to comtare my ideal of the Presidency with iiin. 1 do not regard it as prope or the President to iiso his prestige, lis influence or his patronage to aie. me member of his party as against mother who aspires to office, and I egard it as a violation of the obligation that the President owes to ho whole people to use an office that >elongs kto the whole people as a >arty asset for the advancement of a lersonal friend and a political irotoge. Relieving Dial the Presilent should not he tempted to use 1 hat power for his own advantage, ,nd it is equally repugnant to the ' pirif of our institutions that he Intnl.I use It for any one else's it.I 1 antago?I tried to secure tut ' mendinent to the Constitution liin- ' ling the President to a sIiirIo term, 1 nd I have announced in three cam- 4 nigus that If elected, 1 would not f ie a candidate for renomination. 4 believe that the occupant of to 1 i?h an otlice, with such an enor- 4 ions power :?t his comniiind, should 4 e absolutely free to devote himself ' nselflshlv to his country's welfare, 4 ml I am sanguine enough! to believe ' lutt entrusted with the power, I oul.l be able to make my admiuis- ' iition so successful that the mem- a ers of my party could, without in rference from me. select the one lost wot thy to carry on the work iRtin by me?so successful that the *! Iministration would not be necesiry for me to defend it in bulletins pronunciamentos. I think I could, this way, give to the members of r< i?> opposite party as well its to the X embers of my own party, a 'square tl ml. Very truly yours* tl "\V. J. Bryan." a it OILMI NATION OK ROM .AN CIO. If it iss Louise Davis (^uO'tly Weds II. o t A. Stokes tit Columbia. P A little romance was enacted at ? ilmuhia Wednesday when Miss " niise Davis became Mrs. II. A 4' okes. Miss Davis came here to s>l tend college, hut a note left at v ie liotel tells briefly the story of ^ .! surprise. Mr. Stokes is a n?a- 11 ve of Korsythe, (Ja., but is now in J* o civil service tit Athmtti. He me; iss Davis hero and the two pro eded to the Methodist parson;<\ where they became man and ife. Mr. and Mrs. Stokes arrived Atltinta today, Mrs. Stokes is the lughter of Mr. T. F. Davis, a prom- ^ ent banker in Ilishopville. ividfnt on rm:\cii <iuisi:k. ^ ifle <>iiii Kxplodcfc and Killed () <V?*w of Thirteen. - T \t Toulan, France, daring a gnn g ill Tuesday one of the big tur- h; >t guns on the French armored o uiser LaTouehe Treville exploded o ith terrific violence, complotolv w recking the after turret and kill- it g outright the entire gun crew w 13. A number of men were se- fj uusly injured, some of them prob>ly fatally. The accident was aimir to that aboard the gunnery d" m yeres August 12, last, when, by w o bursting of the breech of the gun al x. men were killed and 18 injured, tl ? WRECKER CAUGHT I'h'OVES TO HK A FIFTKKN YKAIC HOY Who Admit* Having Thrown ' the Switch, Which Kcsultnl in a Wreck and Death. A special to The News and Courier from Spartanburg savs Clarence ? Agnow, colored, who was arrested < Friday morning at Well ford ov Condatdn T. W. Moore on suspicion of having thrown the switch of the , Southern Road, near Wellford, t wrecking Passenger Train No. 11, resulting in tike deatii of Engineer d. W. Konville and Fireman Bowers, und seriously injuring Baggage ] Master McConley and Pruo White, i baggage agent at Spartanburg, made 11 full confession in jail this afternoon in the presence of Chief lietective Connelly, of the Southern Itoud; Special Agents L. A. Farr and Johnson, Constables Metcalf and Moore. Agnew is about fifteen years of age. lie said that his homo is in Toccoa, (la. fie had just finished serving sentence on the chaingang at (ireer yesterday at noon and started out walking down the railroad track towards Spartanburg About G o'clock in the afternoon ho passed through Duncan, and when hr came to the first switch he found the leek unlocked and threw the switch hack and closed (he lock, When lit* came to tho switch at Grace's side track, near the mill, he Ha id ho reached down and gavo the chain a jerk and the lock sprung open. Ho thr?w hack tho lover of the switch and closet! it down. He looked abont the track and picked up a piece of iron and broke tho lock on tho rails, lit; said he threw one part of tho lock away and put tilt; other in his pocket and walked on down the track to Well ford. As ho passed under an overhead bridge he throw tho othos portion of the lock away. lit; told the otlleers ho he could go back and find the pieces of tho lock. Agnow said that \\ lion he reached Wellford bo crawled in between a box car and cotton seed house This morning when he awoke ho started down the railroad track and asked some one if there had boon a wreck. Upon being told then; bad boon he said to himself he hoped no one was killed. Ho continued on down the track to the scone of the wreck, whore he was arrested by Constable Walker Moore. Agnew made a desperate attempt to got away and fought tho officer j furiously while the handcuffs were being placed on him. The mot I vo that prompted the negro to open the switch resulting in the loss of the lives of two men and :ho injuring of several others cannot be imagined, unless it was pure MissednosH and a spirit of revenge to ?et even for having served on the huingang. That his motive was not 1 obbery is certain for after opening ' he railroad switch ho walked on 1 lown the track and did not go back 1 or several hours afterwards. It is bought that oflicers will take Agnew ( o Well ford tomorrow morning to ' ook for the piece of broken switcu s ock be.was said to nave thrown ' way. i 1 SHKKMI KILLS MKJHO. > v eorghi Olllcer Shot five Time's, 1 I Itut fjets His Man. j Sheriff W \V. Heard, of Clay * ennty. (la., was shot five times here londav morning by Ooorgo Thomas, he negro alleged to have ninrdered ' ho Hlne l)oys ahont ten days ago, nd Thomas In turn was shot, and istantly killed by the sheriff. SherT Heard met Thomas on tlie street nd ordered him to halt. Thomas penod bre and wounded Heard five imes before ho could draw his istol. Heard finally got his pistol ut and shot Thomas dead. Sheriff card's condition is reported to he ritical. Three other negroes, TOs- | in Coleman, Alma Johnson and Sa- * nnnuh Woods, the woman whose onse is near the scene of t.he ngedy, are conflend In the county lil as accessories. IXSANH MAN IvltTLS TWO ikI Injures a Woiimn at the Washington Asylum. At Washington in detnanirnl fury, ndrew Light foot, a mulatto inlate of St. lOlizabeth's asylum for le insane, Tuesday killed Patrick laloney, overseer of the grounds, nd Millie Foil in. a vminer inmatft f the asylum, and severely injured liss Hohlnson, another inmate, ho murder escaped from the rounds and lied to the swamps nenry where, shortly afterward, a score I' police surrounded the place f his concealment. lie flnallv ss as subdued after the police found necessary to shoot him, Inflictinv minds in his legs, and he was ikon hack to *.he asylum. One of the host Investments a faricr hoy can make Is a kodak. It y ill teach the whole family more bout the beauty of the surroundings tan they have over known before. wm * \ HEARST FLUNKS lltt l>KCIJNH? GO\, IIAHKKLI/S C1IALLENUR. 1 he Yellow Itciiegudc Knows That lie Would He Proven a Liar If He Accepted. \Vm. It. Hearst, who has been campaigning f^r the nationul ticket t)f the Independence party in the South and Middle West, returned to New York Monday night and soon afterwards issued a statement concerning the challenge of CJovei nor C. N. llaskoll, of Oklahoma. In his recent speeches Mr. Hearst had charged that Haskell, who .'s now treasurer of the Democratic national committee, sought in 189!) to Influence Attorney (Jeneral Kraiiv Monnett, of Ohio, to dismiss certai i suits then pending against the Standard Oil Company. In a telegram to Air. Hearst, which he made publm Sunday night, (Jovernor liaskcil invited Mr. Hearst to publicly prove liis charges before a committee of editors. Mr. Hearst refuses to accept the suggestion of an editorial board of arbitration in the following language: To the Associated Press: T nd. dross (his communication to you, a* I cannot have the slightest correspondence or controversy with man of Mr. Haskell's character. "Mr. Haskell's proposition reminds me of the well known story of the burglar who was caught in the act Ijy the police. When the police hurst in upon him they found hint in front of a safe which had been blown open, with his tools in his pocket a dark lantern in one hand and his other hand on the valuables in the safe. The police dragged the hurglar to the court room aiul the judge said to the culprit: " 'Well, what have you to say for yourself?' "The burglar said: 'Rook-a-hero, Judge, let's arbitrate this case.' "The court records, the complaint of the ex-Attorney General of Ohio. Mr. Monnett, the alliduvit of tinpresent assistant of the present Attorney General of Ohio. Mr. Uurnett, the Court of Records of th? State of Oklahoma in the Rrnrie () and Gas Company case accuse Mi Haskell and not 1. "Mr. Haskell has had many yeark In which to sue Mr. Monnett if that gentleman committed a libel in naming C. N. Haskell as one of the men who attempted to bribe him in the Standard Oil case. "Mr. Haskell's proposition to arbitrate the matter now shows that he has a sense of humor, even it he liaH not ji sense of honor. (Signed) "William R. Hearst." ANSWKKS CALL TO PKKAC1I. Sives Vp Itig Salary to JOnter tlw Ministry. After spending three years In the making of iron and steel and in hat time teaching his friend, W. hlis Corey, most of what lie knows oday of steel making, (leo. I,. Glunt, uiperintendent of the 1 10-inch mill >f the Carnegie Steel Company, at lomestead, has resigned his portion and will enter the Western "heologicai seminary, to become a 'reshyterian minister. Mr. (Hunt eaves a position worth $10,Odd a ear, including a bonus for fast i'ork. When it became known hat he was to ?111 it the mills at ' lomestead, a line position, high up n the calculation department of he steel corporation was offered dm. This lie refused, saying ho ^ ielieved he had been called to reach. WHOLES plumbing su{ machinery su; Southern States co lum b sknd us your ] r e Portable, p< GIBBES JP|j^ : 3 AND ft II. r.ftKIDDF.D. ^ ?? t/unipieie liiiorinatlon (rOOfl ' GIBBRS MACHINE V/Vy vl Seller* of "C<ti>hc* C.uir jnucil , V . " llvx 1*00, CO LI ?v THE ONLY HOUSE IN C CARRYING THE "Original Genuine Gai Carrying also Rubber and Lea /rite us for prices on anything in Mac COLUMBIA SUPPLY C 823 Wefct Gervias Street, DC v.y> FORAKER HITS BACK. SAYS IT I>119 NOT K1CKM TO UK * A CRIMK " 1 For Camli(l?t? Tuft to Knf>?Ko W?. self With Trust Magn*(?w oml 4m Hide in Their Prhinte Cnm. Senator Koraker issues a long let- < ter in defeuce of himself, in which ho scores Roosevelt and Tuft iu pronouncing him guilty before lh??v heard his side. Ite shows that b? is not the only Republican of prpnniience that has a soft place In h;.s heart for trust magnets. In speak ing of Mr. Tuft he says: Only one month ago, wliea M Tuft visited Middle Mass v aud Toledo. he was thfc guest of Up. ('. l\ Lewis, of the law firm of l)oyl<? & Lewis, who have been the attorneys of the Standard Oil Company for many years, standing next in rank in that relation to Mr. Virgil !'. Kline, and when Mr. Taft b-i ! H'easioti to pass back and forth be I ween Middle Lass and Toledo, where ! had the pleasure of meeting him. ho travelled on the yacht of Mr Richardson, a prominent, magnate of the Class Trust, at least the papers so announced, when traveling from Hot Springs to Toledo on his way to Middle Mass, yet noverthelgm h* I .? ? I--. A 111 iiit' |irivju<> car of (MHVyOf the oflloors of the road of which _ also Messrs. Doyle & Lewis are attomoy-; What a series of unpurdoanh'.o crimes! "There did not seem to hft nny such righteous dislike of theso standard Oil and other trust representor lives rankling in the bosom of Mi. Tuft on the occasion to which I re for. On the contrary, ho acted like a good, square, sensible, hone.siminded man. who really oujoyed the company lie was keeping and the entertainment he was receiving and who recognized, as the late Senator Hanna was accustomed to say, that there were 'good trusts as well as had,' and even decent people In the employment of the Standard Oil Company as well as object ionahl* people, and all that is to his credit. "Ft is also highly to his credit thai when, three years ago, the President had occasion to appoint a 1** it'll States District Judge lor th ? Northern district of Ohio, Mr. Taft, knowing the abilities and high char aeter of John II. Doyle, of this Standard Oil firm of Doyle & did not hesitate to recommend him to the President in strong language for appointment to that Judgeship ' , I PI AQSlPirn rniiiMM ilw UULUITII1 WANTED. TEACH EDS?TRUSTEES. We Beeure schools for teachers and have many excellent vacancies. \\ o recommend teachers to trustee* and sell school furniture of nil kinds. Write. Southern Teachers' Agency, Columbia, S. O. WANTED?Hy the American Cotton and Cosiness University of .Milt edgeville, Ceorgia, Students 'o take one or more of our cour*? s in cotton grading, inlying and selling. Cosiness course of Itool< keeping, Shorthand, Typewriting-, or Telegraphy ami Railroad course. Positions guaranteed under reasonable condtiions Write at once for our consolidat ed Catalog, Largest College South. <t)it SALE?Common building brick, red color, immediate delivery Price upon application. CaiwP'n Press Rriek Co., Camden, S. (). A'ANTED?Pine logs bought for cash. For particulars address Press Lumber Co., Sumter, H. ('.. >pliew fcjj| oplies * $& '/ Supply Company ia. s o VI AIL ORDERS. owerful? Next BES GASOLINE iNgines Week'\n ideal power for T T J l 1 jvery day purpose*. VVciLCil a v e s Time. This on application to ? RY COMPANY, I Machinery."?All Kind*. JMUIA, 8. 1 ' "" , 1 3 10LUMBIA ^ ady Belt" hinery Supply Line OMPANY >LIJMBIA, 3. C. ' ? "?* "?>?