The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, November 25, 1909, Image 7
NAY MEAN WAR
?
Fat Americans Captured and Execated
by the Nicaragnans.
? ?
WO WAR SHIPS ARE SENT
rVMidnit Taft Greatly Incensed on
Hearing (he News, and I>eclin?t?
to Iluve Any Communication With
the New Nicnragunn Minister, Who
atwt Reached Washington.
A Washington dispatch says two
American war ships have been ordered
to proceed to Nicaraguan waters,
nad President Taft has postponed
indefinitely his mooting of Isidore
ftavera, the new minister from Nicaragua
to this country, as tho result
of news received hero to the effect
that two Americans, Leonard Grace
and Loltoy Cannon, captured while
Aerving with tho revolutionists' army
in Nicaragua, havo been sentenced
to death by President Zelaya's
orders, and it is believed that BentOnco
has already been curried out.
Orders have been issued for the
cruiser Vioksburg to proceed in all
b&ate to Corinto, and the gunboat
DcaMoiues will proceed at ouco to
Port Llmon to observe events there
and report the situation at that point
t>y wireless. Tho news as to tho two
Americans reached the State department
Thursday uiglit from the American
Consul at Managua, who stated
that their capture hud been followed
almost immediately by a death
Hen ton ce.
A dispatch received Friday at the
State department is to tho effect
that the men havo undoubtedly been
Arruvufnil ITn/?i> fl.li. I e * 1 ~ " ? i- ?
UI\V?/U<<.||. V't'WU lino 111 IUI uini IUI1 UH"
ftooretary of State asked the See. of
the Navy to order the Vickaburg to
proceed in all haate to Corinto for
the purposo of protecting Americana
tad American intero6ts. The DeaMoines
was also ordered to proceed
10 Fort Limon at top speed for tho
flame purposo. These vessels will
)?e in constant Qommunicntyon by
wireless with tho Stato department.
Tho brutality of tho Nicaraugan
Government in ordering the execution
of these two Americans, who
happened to he found in the revolutionists
army without trial of any
sort, is likely to result in this (lovfjrnmont
taking drastic measures to
prevent a repetition of it, and President
Zelaya will he held to a strict
accountability (ft r his action. At
the Ntcarnguan legation it was stated
that no news of the execution of
the two Americans hud been received.
Nothing is known at the Stato department
of tho antecedents of Leonard
Grace, who is reported to have
been shot by order of President Zolajra,
but the other American, LoRoy
Cannon, seems to have had an un
usual career in Central America,
ftome yoara ago he went to Central
America and since then his name has
figured prominently in revolutions
'ill those countries. During his career
he has been arrested a number
of times and tried for heading raids
and on several occasions has narcawly
escaped a death sentence, it
ffc alleged.
A dispatch from Panama says passengers
arriving there from Nicaragua
Thursday report that a reign
Of terror exists throughout the portion
of that country controlled by
President Zelaya. Government troops
are rounding up every persons suspected
of sympathy with the revolutionists
and exocuting them without
trial. More than Ave hundred men
Mspccted of revolutionary sympathies
have been summarily shot and
Mill the bloody work continues,
ttestdoncos are ransacked by Zelaya's
soldiers in search of incriminating
letters or evidence, and when resistance
is offered the houses are destroyed.
Women relatives of revolutionary
ajrmpathizers havo been subjected to
the most horrible indlgnaties and
utrages. Nlcaraguan refugees, arriving
on tho Isthmus and in Costa
Rica declare it is time for the civilised
powers to forcibly Intervene
aaH r\iv I o n on /i 1a ohaIi lw> nhi. nli l/.n
MiU |MU all 17uu tv DUl/H uai 11(11 llltiri
Mid atrOHltiOB.
Tripplo Hanging.
At Floyd, Tom Till, Joo Gilford
and Aloo. Hill, throo negroes,
were hanged Friday for tho murder
?f Mohch T. Brock, a prominent farmer
of West Carroll Pariah. Brock
was killed a few weeka ago as he
went to investigate a gunshot on his
bog ranges. Tho throo nogroes con-|
(tossed to tho crime. *
A Valuable Find.
James Curry, a fisherman, found
tit pounds of ambergris in the
Straits of Juan do Fuca, a fow miles
from Port Townsend. Chemists ?ximlniut
tho An/1 omi) J . ~
PMUliuv\l ?I1V MUM UUU |J| UUUUUUfHl Its
alne to be $100,900. *
? ? ? i
Cotton dinned.
Tho regular monthly report of
Oho National Glaners' Asaooiation
showing that 8.090.000 bales of cotton
have been ginned during the
presont season up to November 14.
was Issued Thursday from Memphis.
Amount ginned in South Carolina
*11.000. m
KNEW NO FRIEND
MAN Kllil.KM IN T1IK 8KAIIOA11D _
T?
WHKOK WILL 11KMAIN
Mystery?Worked for Columbia Undertaking
KNtahli.sliment Some
Time bnt lieft for Tarts Unknown.
The State cays J. R. White, who r
was killed in the Seaboard Air Line
wreck near Denmark early Thursday
morning, was known in Columbia,
having been employed by D. P.
Collicutt, an undertaker, for a month
prior to his death. John R. Whlto
was his name and ho was a roving
fellow, though Mr. Collicutt says he
wan an exceptionally bright young g
man ami did his work around the t<
place well indeed. Ho was about 21 i,
yeara of age and told his employer p
that he came from Tennessee. He j
worked in the Olympla mill after n
coming to Columbia but left there ij
to take up work with Mr. Collicutt. r,
The lure of tho wanderlust was
too strong and while he moved cof- e
fins and did other work al>out tho n
establishment tho call of the wild S(
was urging him to seek other fields, (]
and Wednesday afternoon he secured ?
a berth on tho back of an engine.
He did nt tell Mr. Collicutt where he j>
was going and his destination will j,
never bo known. t(
A letter was found In his pocket n
addressed to "J. U. White, Colum- ?
bla, S. C.," and marked in care of tc
J. H. Hamilton, 120G Laurel street. n
Nothing could bo lonrnod from Mr. ?
Hamilton for tho reason that Mr. j,
Hamilton was not seen. Unfortu- jj
nately for tho seeker of news, looking
for additional particulars about el
the dead man, 1205 Laurel street j,
was found to bo vacant and instead x
of J. If. Hamilton greeting a ropor- (>(
tor calling there he was welcomed by (j
a sign that read "To rent." A dill- n]
gent search was made for Mr. JIamil- ^
ton but he could not be found, and (j
whore ho moved to is the question. a]
At the postolfico mall now goes to aj
general delivery and no one arose r(
to point tho footsteps of the wander- jj
or to the spot whero ho doth abide
now. 4 0
ItlUAKS TI1K KKGOKD. h
tl
Cotton Reports This Year Lirgcr tl
fc
Than kvct Ilefore. rl
A WaullfnArtatl .1 i t' hmtn P'
??. ?r uoutagvuii UK.K, II OCl/n LV71"
n
ton exports last month exceeded in ()
value those of any earlier month t<
in the history of the cotton trade of d
the United States. The total value w
of cotton exported in the month of "
October, 1909, was, according to the w
latest reports of the bureau of sta- ai
tistics of the department of com- \h
merce and labor, $88,883,360, while a]
no other month ever roached the B
eighty million dollar line in the val- d<
ue of cotton sent out of the country.
Tho value of the cotton ex- 1
yorts for the ten months ending 1!
with October, 1909, was $328,626,- tl
886, against $316,693,266 in the cor- tl
resjionding period of 1907, the high- te
est record ever attained for a like cc
period. m
This highest record of value of Ci
cotton exports, made by the month p<
aC Oof a har n ml Kv 1 Ka 1 A /vm V>,. t \,
vra. V MV-t uuu II; I 111] IV 1I1UIUIIM II,
ending with October, 1 909, suggests c*
that tho value of cotton exported in tn
the year of 1909 may probably ex- m
ceed that of any earlier year in the at
history of tho export trade. Should
the figures for November and December
equal those of October, the total
value of cotton export would cross
tho $S00,0?9,090 lino. This high
water mark in tho value of cotton
exported is the result of the combination
of largo quantities and high
prices. * al
is
TIIW WACiKH OF SIN. p,
P<
Onoo Prominent JerseyIte Died in 11
fli
a Poor House.
A dispatch from Charlotte, N. C.,
says an eventful oaroer ended Mon- w
day afternoon with the death at the
Rowan Oounty Home of Charles A. v<
Comer, a former member of the New
Jersey Legislature and once promi- fl
nont in that State. Several years ai
ago he left his wife and came to w
Spencer, N. O., with a woman whom
he claimed was his wife. This wo- 81
inan later became insane and died ai
In the State hospital. Gomer brood- w
ed over her death and soon became al
?_ Ll .. . - - - ?
m wruw minseir, losing his eyesight. "
Before kiii death ho confessed th.it Kl
the woman with whom he lived at
Salisbury was not his wife.
m
FiendIn Awful Crime. ^
811
At Staunton, Va.. a true bill was Q]
found by the special grand jury ^
agaist Clifton Beckenrldge, the negro
charged with repeated assaults h,
on the six-year-old granddaughter of jg
G. A. Hutoblnson, the county Jail
keener. Tho nncrn -?o... 1.. />???
- , . uun IV II u I I II TT I J VDUUpCU jj |
lynching at the hands of a infurl- ej
ated mob oa Friday night.
* C(
Negro Kills Another. U
At Chester, in a quarrel on Tues- c$
day night, between two negroes, in
John Macon and John Win, the lat- hi
tor wm shot by the former and died bi
Friday from the Injuries received, w
The slayer was arrested and lodged b<
la JUL oi
FOOLED HIM
) the Cemetery to Weep Over a Crave,
Sandbagged and Robbed.
AN UNUSUAL ROBBERY
?
wo White Youths in Augusta Lure
a Man From the Country to a
Graveyard, After Filling Him
U'UI. ItlViV... Tl * ' ?
ww JL I It'll i\ IllK'lv ?11111
IK>\vn and ltob Him.
The Augusta Chronicle says In the
hoBtly shadows of the City Ome*
ry, with the silent tombstones us
lanimate witnesses, two young hoys,
. J. Proctor and K. Alexin, set upon
. W. Cronager, a North Carolina
tountaineer Friday night; and, havlg
knocked him unconscious, and
obbed him of his purse with Its
mall store of savings, the two whom
von the sacred city of the dead did
ot deter from brutal violence,
ought to escape arrest by scaling
to high brick wall, leaving the stuned
man alone beside the graves.
The pretext on which the two robers
induced the mountaineer, whose
rain was befuddled with whiskey,
> go with them to the cemetery,
takes the subsequent assault even
tore brutal, for they begged him
) accompany them that Proctor
tight gaze once more "upon the
rave of his dear mother who lay
ttriod there." Proctor has 110 relavos
at all in Augusta.
Alexin and Proctor met Cronager
iriler in the evening as he was g<>lg
111) McKiltne street toward th?
orth Augusta Bridge. They accostI
him, invited him to "have a
rink," and the one drink became
lanv, until Cronager was no longer
eenly alive to the unseemliness of
le hour, for a visit to the grave of
uy relative, however beloved. He
greed to accompany thorn. On
'aching the cemetery, after the three
a<t wept a few crocodile tears, the
vo modern highwaymen knocked
ronager down and stole his purse.
The watchman at the cemetery,
owever, had seen the men enter
le cemetery, and was Kiisjdeious of
lent, so he sent to police barracks
>r assistance, and the officers arived
in time to nab one of the
athetically grieved highwaymen as
e departed hastily from the "grave
f his dear mother," and took him
> the police station where he was
uestioned as to who his partner
as. Ho finally said that he did
ot know his name but that ho was
om Atlanta and had been staying
ith him for several days. Ideutennt
Brltt thon went out to Alexia's
ouse, and tarries tie <ft Proctor, and
II three men are now held at the
arracks pending trial. Cronager
stained as a witness.
Alexin is an Augusta boy about
S years old, and Proctor is about
!) years old, but though so young I
ley seem rather hardened. When
ley were interrupted at the cemery
a valise was found containing a
irpenter's apron, somo nulla, a
Leasuring tapo and other tools,
ronaper is about 3f> years old. His
>cket book, which was dropped by
le two men In their efforts to eeipe,
was returned to him. It conilned
about five dollars. Policean
J. A. Wilklns arrested Alexin
, the cemetery.
VEItY SIMPLE HKMEI>Y
or Tuliereulosis If it Proves to be
Successful.
A simple remedy for tuborculosls.
ad ono declared to be a sure cure,
announced by a Texas Methodist
reacher, Rev. L. G. Grimes, of CopDras
Cove. He is now living In that
ttle town with Ills second wife, his
rat one having died with coaaumpon.
Shortly after the death of nls drat
Ife, ho himself was striekon with
io wh te plague, and the disease desloped
so rapidly that ho was forced
> give up his work. He had fto
unit m HI' / i i n c\fc\'n iiujji ? lit; iuu;^,
ml tho only exorcise ho could take
as horseback riding.
One day he rode over fo *he blacknith
shop to have his horse shod
ad while the smith was dclug the
ork he got on tho forge to warm,
rid accidentally inhaiei ;he amoKe
om the stone coal. It seem>d tc
Ive instant rellof, and he inhaled
for some time. He returnod home,
>ellng better than ho had felt for
ionths, and determined to continue
le experiment. Kov. Mr. Grimes
iys that he never had another hemrrhaee:
that six treatments cured
im; and that he has never had a
rmptom of consumption since. ^ He
id a lady friend who waa In the
at stages of consumption. She
dd given up all hopo and waa conned
to her hod, which she never
cpected to leave. Mr. Grimea told
ar how he was cured, and as she
>uld ait up her husband had a Ute
furnace made, and with pipes j
>nveyed the fumes of the stono coal
ito her lungs. Her physician foride
the treatment, but the husind
refused to desist and In a few
eeks the lady was able to leave her
3d, and has never had a sympton
' the disease since. i
CLASSIFIED COLUMN
t Red Polled Cattle?Berkshire Hog*
and Augora Goats. Breeders. W
R. Clifton, Waco, Texas.
For Sale?Pair of fine Kentucky
horses. Address Box 9, Greenville,
8. C.
I
Salesmen?Best commission offer on
earth. New, all retailers, samples.
Coat pocket. "Very Profltaable,"
Iowa City, Iowa.
Wonted -Agents to bell embroidered
shirt waist patterns. Keystone !
Embroidery Mfg. Co., 1 438 North |
Hobart St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Agents llustlo?Only pancako grhldle
in world that bakes square
cakes, turns them. 160 per cent
protlt. Canton C!riddle Co., Canton,
Ohio.
Wanted to ltuy?Hides, Furs, Wool,
beeswax, tallow, scrap Iron, cow
peas. Wrlto for prices. Crawford
Co., 508-610 Reynold St.
Augusta, Ga.
100 name cards or business cards?
i/oathor case, 50o.; 25 cards, 15c.;
stamp or silver; agents wanted.
Martin Agency Sales Co., Holly
Beach, N. J.
Simple way How to preserve and
have fresh blown garden flowers
all winter. Great secret for 25
cents silver. A. II. Kliater, ltib
Bake, Wis.
A
Ihm't Whip unx.il you get a free list
of reliable produce dealers in 2 9
leading markets from the National
l.eague of Commission Merchants
Dept. O. Buffalo, N. Y.
Pi'lUX I."*! ft .*11 l'
. . w * in; um r IIVIII UV SOUgS,
words and music, lithograph covers,
for addresses of twelve teachers,
not over two from same school.
Box 182, Greenwood, S. C.
Perfume-Gloss in Starch gives clothes
lasting perfume of azure violets;
makes them white as snow ;sample,
4 cents; agents wanted. Shipman,
Lewis Block, Buffalo, N. Y.
Typewriters?Special low prices ob
rebuMt and second-hand machines,
all kinds, for fall trade. Write
for price list. General Supply
Company, Dept. O, Augusta, Ga.
Duly or Girl Wanted each town,
good pay spare time, copy names
for advertisers, cash weekly.
Stamp for particulars. Am. Adv.
Bureau, Snnhornville, N. H. i
For Sale?The Wheeler hotel property
in Hendersonvllle, N. C. If interested
communicate with us at
once, before this property Is sold.
Howard Caldwell 6c Co., Colum,
bia, S. C.
I- , ...
When medicine falls you, I will take
your case. Rheumatism, indigestion,
liver, kidney and sexual disorders
permanently eradicated by
natural means. Write for literature,
confidential, free and lnter*>uHnrr
f C?.. 11a.. II.
v. <111111 uunn iuii, r. S3.,
Durham, N. C.
Youug Ludies and girls ovor 14 yeara
of ago can secure steady and profitable
employment and be taught to
make cigars. Will be paid while
learning, good, cheap board cai
be secured near the factory. Any
girl can make froui $6 to $12 per
week (some much more) after
learning. Wo need 600 young ladles
immediately. Apply to Soidenburg
& Co., Opposite Union Depot,
Charleston, S. C.
I .
Fine silk four-in-huml Sunday tie,
16c, by mail, prepaid. All new
popular solid colors, correct shape,
state color preferred?send stamps
or coin. All careful thrift/ buyers
take advantage of our big bargain.
We nro the largest excluI
sivn men's and boys' outfitters In
America. We manufacture all our
! own clothing. Boys' warm winter
caps made with pull down bands,
16o by mail prepaid. Big catalogue
mailed free?write today.
Mall Order Department. The Big
j Storo, Cincinnati.
Marlon County Farming f>ands for
H<Ue?On the first Monday Sales
Day in December at the Court
House in Marlon, in settlement ot
tho Bstate of W. C. McMillan,
there will be sold 2,264 acres, divided
Into tracts of land varying
from 160 to 350 acres each of fine
I ? mi ? i
(fiuuuv/uvn, umim/ mini. I llimcr
has boon Hold with uhuaI farm
privilege* and In no way Interfores
with the farm. Conveniently situated
on good road 8 1-2 to 10
miles from Marlon Court House,
It was In this very cotta
from Birmingham, Ala.,
dlod of Favor. They had
son's Tonic cured thorn i
The two physicians hero had 3 very obstl
were Italian** and lived on a creek 00 ya
months standing, their tomperaturo rangln
thing In vain. I persuaded thom to let mc
ed matter and let the medicine go out In a ]
feet in all three oases was immediate and p
was ao rocurrenosof the Fever.
i Writs to THI JOHIIIOW'I OHILL
A Feather i
WC ^ave many ot*'
VSkafP** 'Wjfli) ,n cl*.'atiiiiK arul dy
;s^5K of dress goods. an
finest fabrics,
moderate. A posts
THE W. S. COI
HO Society Street,
Ix>cul and Long
Southern States
m ^ nil U rit
IVIechlner^
COL.U M E
and directly on a surveyed line of
Railway being built,and now within
a few miles from Georgetown,
via Marlon, north. Terms, onefourth
cash, balance in one, two
and three years with option of
cash payments. For further information
address and ho on, see
or write W. C. McMillan, Administrator,
Columbia, S. C., or Montgomery
& Lide, Attorneys, Marlon,
S. C.
PECANTREES
Budded and grafted from choice*
varieties. Lowest prices.
BAULK I* ICC AN COMPANY,
Pi Its view, Ala.
We will Buv Cow Peas
EVERY DAY TILL JULY 15th.
Quote us with samples for present
RhlnillOlil nr nnn t rm>( f i\f f iitu r.>
./ (/ VMI, v? vvti VI uvt l\/? 1 II I U I v O II I J'
ments on?
MIXED PEAS,
STRAIGHT PEAS,
IRON PEAS.
Will buy 5 bushels to a *cnr.
N. L. WIIjIJKT HKKI> CO.,
Auf(us(a, Gtt.
We Buy
The Following:
(Submit samples, give
amounts and price):
COW PEAS, largest amounts wanted
October to July. PLANTING
COTTON SEED, fancy pure
types. SEED APPLER OATS.
N. L. W1LLET SEED CO.,
Augusta, Gu.
i. ?
+ ** + * + + + ** + + 0*
* ORGANS.
| * We have a few slightly used
* $90 organs, will close out at a '
* big reduction. If you are want
*ing an organ now la the time to
* buy one of the best organs made
* at a great bargain. Write at
* once if you wish to secure one
* of these organs, for such bar
* gains don't last long.
* Write for illustrations of
* these organs and for terms.
* MALONE'S MUSIC HOUSE *
Columbia, S. C.
+ + * + ****+* + 0*1
Ixiwyer Commits Suicide.
A dispatch from Morganton, N. C..
says Charles Julius Redding, aged
n r \. ? ? *
ov, it nuvjt'i ana rem estate D?*OKer I
of Charleston, H. C., committed sul- i
cide there Tuesday by shooting him-?
self in the chest with a shotgun.
The cause of hi*! iash act was suj posed
to have been due to melancholy.
His remains were shipped to his
home in Charleston.
Tied to the Poor.
People who broke into a burning
l
house found a baby girl dead in her
cradle and her three and u half year,
old brother, John Koran, unconscious,
tied to the door knob with
a rope. The children's mother had
gone shopping, and to prevent the i
boy playing with matches, had tied
him to the door.
The giraffe may not bo economical,
but he certainly knows how to
rnoVn n 11 11 o food ero a long ways.
ige in Brookslde, 15 miles
that three Italians nearly
been sick 3 months. Johnqulckly?read
letter below:
Brookslde, Alt., May 4,1905.
nate canes of continued Malarial Fever. All
,rds from my store. These canoe wore of three
g from 100 to 101. The doc torn had tried every?try
Johnson's Tonlo. I removed all the print*
plain bottle aa a regular prescription. The efermaneuU
They recovered rapidly and there
B. It. 8111FLETT. ^
* FEVER TONIO CO., Savannah, Ga.
\
%
in Our Cap ,
curling and dyeing feathers. But \
;er feathers In our cap. Wo excel
elng Gloves. Lace Curtains, all kinds
d oven Carpets. We never injure
Our work Is the best. Our price
1 will bring them.
3LE3T0N CO.
C1IAKLKHTON, 8. O.
I>l*tanco 'Phone.
- i
Supply Company
MI*
^Supplies
Supplies
3 I A. S. C. 1
CAN TUBKItCl'IiOSIH UK (THKD?
According to Statement Issued by
the Michigan Department of
Health, It Can IVo CwiihI and Prtv
vented.
I. the undersigned, hereby certify
that I have Buffered slightly for
Bovoral years, and endured pains and
spitting of blood from tuberctiloslH
for the past year. Having taken the
Saastamoinen Remedy for three
months, I feel myself perfectly well.
Two doctors, after careful examinations,
havo pronounced me fully recovered.
(Signed)
For testimonials and terms, write
..The SuaNtamoiiien Remedy Co.,.. '
South Range, Mich.
I,. M Power m
. _ u. , h'.. Ill Ullill
Pointed Paragraphs.
People Beldoni talk too much unless
thoy know too llttlo.
Vanity enables a man to convince
himself that he isn't vain.
TIIM NEW FKKTILIZEK.
A discovery of far-reaching importance
to the farmers of tho South Is
the new fertilizer which has been
perfected on ono of the islands near
Charleston, S. C. It has long been
known that limo is an essential food
for plants of all kinds and that they
cannot live when it has been exhausted
from the soil. It has also boon
known that old worn-out lands are
extremely deficient in lime, and that
sour, badly-drained lands have their
lime is a for uithat is not usable by
growing crops.
Farmers' Bulletin No. 124, U. 8.
Dept. of Agriculture, says: "All
the applications of lime Increased tho
yields * * The best yields were
obtained with the lime in the form
of carbonate, the finely ground oys- _
ter shells standing llrst * Lime
with fertilizer was more profUablej^HHl
than depending upon fertillzer^B^W
This new fertilizer which presents
lime in its most usable form Is made ^
by a new process of burning oyster
shells and using a burner that can
supply potash. The result Is a high
grade fertilizer costiug the consumer
only $7.00 per ton. It reclaims
worn-out lands in a marvelous manner
if applied broadcast two months
ahead of auimonlated goods. It's
sweetening effects 011 sour lands is
almost magical. Charleston freight
rates apply 011 this new fertilizer.
Tho factory is located on Young's
Island, S. C., but all letters should
be addressed to K. L. Commlns, Sales
Agent, Meggetts, S. C. Free descrip- *
tive circulars will be sent to any one
on request.
W^-USTTIEID
(J young men and 4 young &
ladles to prepare for positions
now awaiting them. Oreat
opportunity for young people of good
moral character who want to rise
to an honorable position. Lessons
by mall If desired. For full Informatlon,
write
Houthcrn Commercial School,
Winston-Salem, Rocky Mount,
Greensboro, Wilmington, N. C.
^^^w^DjcaoN Arm *
BfMnr PtcMni, l.idnc.
LOUBARI) COMPANY. A JCUsTA. OA.
COMPANY. COLUMBIA. 0.-O.^ i
aeds a Good Governor! 1
iay after using the leading make*?Ml have fried I
sa, but (ailed to get proper rtguktioa until I need V
K>r gi ves better regulation than any Other I have I
xk.flanged or screwed bottom with screwed aide m
IY COMfANY, COLUMBIA, I. C. |
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