The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, February 17, 1910, Image 4
IP
"loss by fire"
Amount to Over One Million Dollars Per (
Day, Says Report.
MORE CARE IS NEEDED
-Geological Survey Prepares Report
Showing Contrast Item eon Saudi
Losses by I'ire to Government ami
lCnormous Losses Reported from
the Country as a Whole.
Owing buildings that cost more
than $300,000,000 and spending
moro than $20,000,000 for new ones,
and not a cent of fire insurance from
one year's end to another Is Uncle
Sam's way of doing business. Just
how this is accomplished is interestingly
told in a story from the Geological
survey:
Tests to determine the strength
and lire resistance of building materials
are now made by the United
States Geological Survey, and, although
these tests are designed primarily
to meet the needs of the Government
as the largest consumer,
their results are also available for
general uses.
The results already obtained show
that cheaper fireproof materials can
be used and that the difference in
cost between fireproof and inflammable
buildings will soon become so
small that it will cease to encourage
flimsy construction. They indicate
that three to six times the necessary
amount of material is habitually used
in structural work. They also show
the necessity of better building codes
in cities and especially of a better
enforcement of tho codes already
enacted if the present enormous fire
losses are to be diminished.
The contrast between the small
losses by fire to Government buildings
and the immense losses reported
from the country as a whole led
the geological survey to make an Inquiry
as to the fire losses In the
United States and as to their exact
cost to the people. Tho results of
this inquiry are presented in the
Survey's Bulletin 4 IS, just published,
ttflllnb P'lii nht n f\wr n n
plying to the director of the survey
at Washington. The report is entitled
"The fire tax and waste of
structural materials in the United
States," and was prepared hy 11. M.
Wilson and J. L. Cochrane, of the
purvey. Thelnquiry covered not only
rh? yalue of the property destroyed
Hiy firt?/ hut also the cost of main
tabling fir<? fiepartmcnts, the amount
of insurance premiums paid less the
amounts returned, the cost of protective
agencies, the additional cost
/of water supplies, and other elements
of til e fire loss.
The Investigation disclosed the fact
that the total cost of fires in the
United States in 1907, excluding that
of forest fires and the marine losses,
but including excess cost of fire protection
due to bad construction and
excess premiums over insurance paid,
amounted to over $4 5 6,4 85,000, a
tax on the people exceeding the total
value of the gold, silver, copper and
petroleum produced In the United
States in that year.
The cost of building construction
in 1 907 in forty-nine leading cities
of the United States reporting a total
population of less than 1 8,000,000
amounted to $661,076,286, and the
cost of building construction for the
entire country in the same year is
conservatively estimated at $1,000,000,000.
Thus it will be seen that
nearly one-half the value of all the
new buildings constructed within one
year is destroyed by lire. The annual
fire cost is greater than the
value of the real property and Improvements
in either Maine, West
Virginia, North Carolina, North Dakota,
South Dakota, Alabama, Louisiana
or Montana. In addition to this
waste of wealth and natural resour
1 A A II 1, ill.wl o,,fl r. _
t't*a i , 'H f jiim awnn wii ^ n iii\;u uuu i
654 were injured in lires in the '
United States in 1907.
The direct loss by fires in this
country is eight times as much per
capita as in any country in Europe.
The actual fire loss in the United
State .due to the destruction of buildings
and their contents amounted to
$215,084,709, a per capita loss of
$2.51. The per capita loss in the
cities of the six leading European
countries amounted to but 33 cents.
Comparisons of the total cost of fires,
which includes the items already
stated, show that if buildings in tho
Tinned btatf's were as nearly Areproof
as thosQ in Europe the annual
fire Q(jaS ivottld bo $90,000,000 InWad
of $4 56,000,000.
The report states the method ol
gathering the statistics collected
_i?j.. ~? ii.? n..#? l/.uu in
inaKCB an HHKiyHia ui mu m<3 ??o0 ..
city and country and on frame and
brick buildings, and contains tablet
showing the Increased cost of flr<
protection due to faulty construe
tlon. The predominance of fraim
buildings is set down as the nios
Important cause of the great fin
waste in the United States. I)efec
tive construction and equipment con
jv stltutc a second cause.
A Freak Hill,
pi; Representative J. H. Foster ha
Introduced a hill prohibiting washet
women from wearing their patronf
y clothes.
?
_
A WHITE FIEND
Arrested for Brutally Murdering a Fourteen
Year Old Girl.
WHO WAS CUI TO PIECES
Tlio Knife With Which It is Sup
|H)sc(l the Fiendish Crime Was
Committed and Moody Clothes
W as Found in the Koom of the
I toy Arrested.
Following the finding of tin* horribly
mutilated body of 14-yearold
Mary Tedder at the home of her
father at Glen wood, Fla., Saturday
afternoon, Irvin llanchett, a 16-yearold
white boy, was arrested Sunday
morning. He was immediately spirited
away by the sheriff to escape
the enraged citizens also in search
of the murderer.
Additional details received from
the murder are horrible. A bicycle,
which the girl was riding, was found
100 yards from where her body was
discovered, indicating that her assailant
had struggled with her for
this distance after knocking her from
the wheel.
The body of the girl showed 65
knife wounds. She was lltorally cut
to pieces. That the girl's assailant
had other motives than murder is
believed from the condition of her
clothing. She had been beaten about
the face before being stabbed.
Following the organization of posses
of citizens ill snnrcli nf ji noirrn
supposed to have committed the
crime, the sheriff secured bloodhounds
and followed a trail iu the
oratige grove of William Woolsey,
where young Iianchett was employed.
After a careful investigation the hoy
was placed under arrest. In his room
was found bloody clothing and the
knife with which it is believed he
committed the murder. When he was
arrested he seemed unconcerned, but
strenuously denied that he had committed
the crime.
The boy came to Glen wood last
October. Previous to this he had
been confined in a school of correction
at some point in Connecticut.
The boy is said to be of an unusually
vicious tempermament, and as soon
as it was learned that he had been
arrested on a strong chain of circumstantial
evidence excitement was
intense. He was spirited away in
an automobile, and is believed to
have been carried to Jacksonville
and placed in jail.
III0K LAST LK Fl'LIt.
Woman Killed !>y the Fumes of
lturncd Natural Gas.
Lying on the floor, face downward,
her arms stretched toward the door
she could not reach, Mrs. Caroline
Pretzler was found dead in her home
in Cleveland, Ohio, Sunday night. She
had been asphyxiated by the fumes
of burned natural gas.
On a table was a letter which she
had been writing to her brother, the
Rev. Frederick Kretz, of Brooklyn,
N. Y. The last lines that she had
written read:
"I am beginning to feel very tired.
Something is wrong."
Here the writing wavered. The
last words were almost illegible. "I
am getting ill," she had written. "I
am unable to write more tonight,"
the words trailed off, irregularly
downward. "I must put it aside and
finish cit torn?" Apparently at this
point she had arisen from her chair
and tottering toward the door for
aid had fallen and died.
THIEF MAKES HAUL.
(irahs Stark of Hills from l'ostofilce
Stamp Clerk.
While J. A. Dial, stamp clerk ir
the Birmingham post olllce, was
counting out his money to make hi;
purchase of necessary stamps for th<
day, two girls walked up to the win
dow and asked for some one-cen
stamps Friday morning. As he be
gan serving the stamps, a white ma1
walked up hurriedly, grabbed th
stack of bills on the counter an
made away with it.
Mr. Dial cried out: "Stop thief,
and jumped through the window an
made after the robber. Others joit
ed in the chase but the robber ha
' the start and got away after belli
followed for six blocks. The ell
detectives and federal authorith
wo immediately notified and ai
> working on the case. More thf
eight hundred dollars, ranging
, bill from one to fifty dollars, wo:
I Btolcn.
i ? ?
j Robber Identified.
Mrs. Jerry McAuley of McKeespoi
3 Pa., was shown a picture of a mi
t killed two weeks ago, while robbii
n the postofflce at Tallahassee, Fli
- and she Identified him as that
- her husband, who has been missii
for nearly a year. When dying t!
robber continually muttered "M
Keesport."
s m m
What a man likes about holida
i is how glad he Is to get back
business when they are oyer.
WHAT TO TAKE j
SOME SUGGESTIONS TO TIIE OLIV
AS WELL AS TIIE YOUNG.
Give Them a (i(K)(l, lloncst Trial uurf
Sc?? if You Aro Not licncllttcd by
Tlu'iu.
I ho virl van lavo ta lin vaiir
wife, if she is willing.
'lake care of your health. It i?
the moat valuable thing you have.
Take a hint when it is i'hen.led
for you. Don't wait to be k io.jk d
dow 1).
Take flattery atf .an insult, and an
honest compliment as some; king jo
be grateful for.
Take pains to be faithful and conscientious
in business. It will v?rii#g
you success.
Take offence only at things wcvfh
being offended at. ft is sure evidence
of a small mind
tritles.
Take hold of any work that conic*
to your hand rather t.h<?n ye idi'..-.
Luck always waits upon the bns> <
man.
Take time to be polite and kind
always. Rudeness never pays, ?.,ie
boor may think so, but he is wrong.
Take trouble like a man. Den'r
go winning about when it c*>to<?8, !>nt
sliut your moutli and stand iup under
it resolutely.
Take a trip now and then, and try
to see something outside of the tow,:
you live in. Travel is one of the
greatest educators.
Take pain in your work. The
conscientious worker is the one who
gets to the front?and the one that
never needs be idle. <
Take care that you make this day
:? mourn ior an ino days to come-?
and then copy after it. Live this
day so that it will bring yon no regrets.
Take time, young man, to go out
with your sister. if she Is a good
girl she is much more desirable com?pany
for you than that other girl
who flirts with you so desperately.
Take the sunshine into your life as
something to be grateful for; don't
darken it with shadows of your own
making. Trouble will come soon*
enough without your coining it.
Take your wife and children wil.n.
you when you go out to lie amused.
That is not a proper amusement for
you that you cannot take your wife
to?and you know it.
Take* as much care of your money
as you can, if your means are limit- .
od; hut don't try to save your smiles
or your kind words. The* more liberal
you are with these the more yoir '
will have.
Take a walk?several of them. It
is healthful to walk, and if it is a
nico moonlight night and somerich
old man's pretty daughter is
hanging on your arm, it is especially
healthful.
Take time, young man, to b3 kind
to your brother. He Is onv of your j
best friends, sure. He will protect
.vou always. Take time to .>e good
to him.
Take pains to hear both, -sides of a
story before you coine- to decision,
.lumping at a conclusion,, one time
and another, has filled the world with
enemies and deluged it in blood.
Wait to hear both sides of a story bo- I
fore you speak.
Tako a wife If you are able to
support a wife, a very-, very stylish
one. It is every able bodied man'**
duty to help some good womat#
t hrough the world. Where would yo ?j
he now if your father had 1101 done
this?
Take heart, if you are ens* down
Your luck will change; ere the yeair is
out. What though the clouds; do
cover you now, the sun will shino by
and by. No life is made up. alto
getber of shadows, and God never >"n
wholly deserted a resolute man or a '
brave woman. Fight on and victory
will come at last.
Take a rest if you are able to afford
it. Rest is sweet and you dor/t
wear out while you are rest-frig. The
Savior bade the weary come unto
5 Him, and He promised them?rent. *
3 ?
3 HOYS THROWN FROM TRAIN.
1 One Ik Dead and the Other Wave- a
a Dying Statement.
e
rj Two boys riding from Toteda to
Chicago on a Lak<* Shore freight
train were Friday thrown from a
(] coal car by a brakemau while the
j. train was*running twenty miles an
hour near Daporte, liid., according
,g to the dying statement to Coroner Osly
borne of H. K. Carps, 17 years oi
as age, of North Iloulevard, Atlanta
r(> Ga., wno is in the hospital with h.fc
in skull fractured and both legs broken
In ins companion, unwara larnasKi,, o
rQ Willow* River, Minn., was killed. '
XTnknown >lan Decapitated.
At Atlanta an unknown man, o
rt, about 65 years of ago, was run ove
in and killed by a west Hunter stree
ig car on Highland avenue Saturda;
a., night. The man's hoad was late
of found in a ditch several yards fron
rig tho body. The only marks of iden
he tlflcation about the body were th
[C- initials "J. T. T. in the hat.
Mr. Boney has severed his connec
ys tion with the Laurens Advertiser ti
to accept a position on The News an<
Courier.
A .i.' ,.tJ ! ,
m
\
BRAY OF AN ASS"
Senator Heyburn, of Idaho, Makes an
Exhibition of Himself j
WAVES BLOODY SHIRT
lie Protests in Vuin Against the lies- olutiou
to 'jend (jioveri&iiieiit Tents [
for Use at Aliflmma Confederate ^
Veterans' Reunion?All Other Senator*
Voted for the Resolution.
(
Protesting against loaning Government
tents for the use oC the Confederate
Veterans at their annual reunion
la Mobile, Ala., next April,
Senator Heyburn, of Idaho, in the
Senate 1jM? Moaxlay night, made the m
sharpest comniemt upon the* issues of
the civil war thati has been heard ItsCongress
1? twenty years.
He inveighed aflptinst men in "rel> *1"
uniform' being: permitted to oc- t
<ni>py government property, *?r the it
"r^bel" tlag being allowed trr float p
a to-ve it. Finally her drifted inV> the f
<1 nuation of honoring: men by pricing ^
theilir statues In the* Congressional f,
hall 'iff fame, ;t*id by unmistakable c
inference condemned the action' of 0
Virginia in sendi rg thosftatue of G'?n. ^
Robert K. Lee to Washington. 0
"TaUf it away and vrorshlp it if Al
yon pleai*e," h<> t;Kunde/.ix!r "but dlft ]]
not inrnde it upon ;3he piwple who d'P ?
not want If."
Democratic Sena?eta mowd uneasl- 7^
yl about the floor, conversing with lie
i?aeh otheror sat frowning and anger- -j
cd. Finally when Steiator Heyburn c,
had concluded, Senator Bank head 0
said: ' t(
"I am suit? the Senator frrvao Idaho i *
feels much' better, aiuf I aHft for a f]
rote." &
"Hy roll'call," shouted: a diszen or
more Senators, and bauds- w^ut up jj
iir a second iV? that request: from ev- j,
ery part, of the Senate < hmanbers. s]
When the' rote was hrfrifl on the 81
tent loaning measure all of t.lie Dem- R
ocrata and all!of the Uepiit/Mearixs, except
Mr. Hejrihrm, voted for it. His ^
nesrative vote was uttered iii a loud u
amr defiant tone. a
This measure was reached near the g,
close of the session. Mr. Heyburn was a
prompt to raise an objection, .and Mr. r
Hankhead just'as alert in mo.rims the ^
consideration, regardless of the oh- j,
jecfion. It immediately was^avidont j}
that1 the objection roused soi:ae feel- ^
infor with a finished face and ani- tj
mated voice, Mr. Hailey declawd that
if this meamre was to he. ruled out
of order not other business cowJd be ^
transacted.
The Hanlthead motion being: undo- ^
bateahle, the Senate immediately proceeded
to arayo aard nay vot# na the
question a:? to whether the resolution
should' be Ucfcen up, and it was
adopted unanimously, Mr* HXyyburn
hktnself reitainitijf-from voti**?.
With tlto resolution adopted, Mr. f,
fib y burn look JihJe floor; mcude a gj
speech ill which h'e went om many g]
of the ifc8V\ies of'ttie-war and'declared f(
himself a? much a patriot r.awr as he g
Pad been in 186^1863-181141. Ir
The Southern Senators held' a burried
consultation, while- the- Idaho ^
Senator was proceeding a&tl! decided ?
to make oo reply. .
It- cltumiced thart.-Mr. Heyvjuwtfs colleague,
Senator Borah, of- Idaho, was
tho lil-st of trte Republleuna to be
reaches!" in the roll-call.1 IJY? voted In
favor-off tho nfoption oVftjlhs- resolution.
Never before, perhaps, has the |
SonivttJ* listene t!to a maweiinwasslonod
plea from a Member of that dou/.
Startling his remarks by declaring' !
that' he spok? only \v.?lil the best in-, j
tent ions, thf jrhe harbored malico to I
ward none, and tlnitt whatever coin
struetion night be placed upon lus !c
woitla by tbx> press-.oftrhc South, that *
he wouln continue* to. speak and up*- 1
poae such movement^ as the one jon- 1
'Uemplatedw 1
The Idnrho Senator made the words i
I "rebel" s?nd "traitor>' fairly hhts and i
thunder aroumV tho Senate chamber. 1
S Flo dee tared tAut it the purpose of 1
the resolution were carried oib those
Alabaicra "relfttdV* clad in tire clothing
off "TohcdH," would he marching
undeir a flag; of a rebellions section
and one off the Union at tho same
timo, and would firmly plant that of
the Confederacy squarely above tho
property that the Government would
loutn thorn.
Asking if the men of the present
day were less patriotic than those of
the. ftp's, and paying a glowing trt- i
, i but? to the memory of the G. A. R.
"men, Senator Heybnrn passed on to
K the matter of Ueo's having left the
1 United States Military Academy to
" take tip the cause of the South. Ho
K declared that the statue placort ?n
the Capitol by the.- State of Virginia
should never have been there, and
again thundered and hissed at the
f thought of such a thing. He talkod
r along this line for almost an hour,
t frequently using the name of tho
y Deity to emphasize his words, and at
r the expiration of his time asked for a
ft vote.
No one objected. Sixty-two senae
tors answered to their names, and of
that numbor sixty-one voted for the
passage of the resolution and one on
ly?Heyburn?voted against it. This
o action in the opinion of Senators on
d both sides of the chamber will do
more to forevor stop such fepeeches
,1a.. i ' r _
I
~ VS}
Will Dye
^adle9' or Men's Garments Cleaned
Cleaned a 11
C. C. Laundry a
COLUMN I
Southern States
lYIechrnery
Plumbing
1 iTiJiHT'i fii
CO L-.U M E
ninj NEW i KKHLimt.
A
A discovery of far-res#chlig lmpor- |
ance to the? farmers of fh? aJouth 1?
he new fertilizer whl<rh ha* been
ierfected on ??e of the felandfs near
Jharteston, S. C. It has long been
Qovn that lime Is an essential food
or plants of all' kinds am? that they
ftM-not live when- ft has bet*' exhrtnstd'
from the scrfl1. It has alfeo been
miwn that old won-out ^ourls art '
xtremefy deficient In lime, wid thai
our*, badly-drained lands hswe tbolv
Ime Is a for mtLar is not ueeble b? ,1
rowing crops.
Farmere' Bulletin No. 12 4, U. 8
)ept. of AgrlcuiUire, says: * * A1
tie applications of Un? Increas ed th?
leldB ' * 9 The besf. yields were !
btaluect wtth the dhie In the flbrm ;
f carbonate, the flitely ground oyp- '
rr shelliB standing fl'tat Hthe'j i
r*th fertilizer was :nor?> profitable
tian depending u4?n fertilizer
IOHBC. '
ne\r fertilizer Thie'fc present*'
m? in itt rnosrt usabl?"fbrwr t* mail*'5 e
j a new i>noe?*? .of ttortiMlff oyster k'
bell* and a buvtmr Bhai can }
uppS* potajvHi The rortttlt Sir a high
rad-? fertiliser costing' ttae 60?Humr
onfcy $7.(W p>?r ton. It Rectalm?
rorn-zmt lantfb Sjj a inaiVeld'te man
er Iff applied hr*<m!0casUtwn< ?rM??n* J
head of am anorf'.tfced gooahi 11'
weet*otag eif&ot* on s< <mt Hunts Is
lmos?n magical!. Chapltieloni freight
ates aip-ply ou- tits new fertilizer
'he ftotory lb? Iwated on Y'*,nng'i? aland
,.S. C., '1uD all letrnrs should I
e addressed tfc.>ffi_ L?. Coiuuiina> Sales
.gent, Meggettt, S. C. F ree descrlpIve
ciranlara wdiT be sent *o aay one
n reqaest.
JAN TUBERCULOSIS 1JB CUKKIM .
? i
iccor^teg to Mntement looked bj |
the Mirhigaa DepastiiMBt of j
Hrstth, It (la* Be Cttr?>?# a*d Pr*
reiM. |
I, tile undersigned, hereby eerti- |
r that. I have 34iffered i *Jbghtly for ;
Bvertsl years, a ad endured! pains ano ;
pitting of bloMi from. izcrborculosl#. j
>r the past year. Having taken th*?)
a agtismolnen Remedy- for thre*. |
lonViks. I feel aayself perfectly welb }
'wo-doctors, after caretfal examine )'
Ions, have prcoaounoed aoe fully r?* j
ovMvred.
I Signed)
Nor testimonials andi terms, wrKv l?
..Dhe Sunstuiaoinon Remedy Co*,
South Range, Mich.
li*. M. Power. M. D.. In charge.
fUTlCLAH; TO DHK IN CHAtiB;.
h*rth Carolina Negro Found (iaiKiy
of Firwfc Degree Burglary*
At Newhern, Jioss Whitehead,. col>red,
changed with burglar.lfcing, a
lumber ct houses in the ciyy in the
i?a*t throe movnths, and in. whose
louse al out $.r?.d0 worth ot loot was
round ai few days ago, vv.as found
guilty of burglary in the KJirst degree,
vnd sentenced by Judge- Peebles to
lie el eo croc u lied on April 29. Whitehead
was caught by tho atevrr work
of tlw city police, and at first admitted
his guilt to the- officers, but
afteivrards denied it. *
Kleven Miners. Killed.
Ten Hungarians and one American
is the death toll of a gas explosion
Monday in the Nou 2 slope of the
Rrnest mine of the Jefferson -t Clcvlleld
Coal Co., five miles north of ,
fndiana, Pa., The explosion occur-'
red in a (leading where 12 workmen
w<>re located and one of these, Andrew
Krazecr. escaped by crawling
on liis stomach to evade the noxious
gases.
than anything else that could possibly
happen.
"There is not the least doubt,"
said one Senator, "that the waving
/vf *h ^ I- 1 1-- - ?
^WmPfTTTTWiy hIui'L 111 Ihe Senate has
boon stopped for all time by the overwhelmlng
and crushing defeat administered
to Senator Heyburn today."
- -V
r XT ~
8 2j
For You
or Dyed to look like new. Ha|*
id Blocked. (
nd Dye Works, *
A. 8. O.
Supply Company
<mS>u r>r>J 1
3ni>x>lietai tELW/Bw
m*i '? < . vttu i/^/tviKvW
HA. S C.
CLASSIFIED Wim#
IIiIn Cure# All Diseases*?Sen A for
free box. Prof. Wm. jtvulln, N*>raska
Cll'.y, Neb. '
Tobavro GrowfTi?Splendid oppot*
tuivJlies here. Write for paWtlctt- J
lars. Tullahowa Tobacco W.Wklt 1
Tullalfroma, Tens. \
??? i ii .^ i ,i M?i i n im <lii^ |
For Sale?-200 tons pea vine hay fVti
$21.00 delivered' In car lots at
South Carolina points, J. M. Farrell,
Blackville, S. C. I
ffrlen Watermelon Seed for Sale at
75c, per pound. The best, flavored
shipping watermelon grown. J.
M. P'arroll, Blackeville, S. C.
For Sale*?Milch cows Jersey's, grade
Jersey* and Holsteins. All of th?
best breeding. Registered Jersey
male calves. M. H. Sams, Joaee
ville, Sv G.
Owr February Book List ha* been
Issued. Contains reviews of alt
the latent? books. Send for copy.
Ii Is free;. Sims' Book Store, Orangeburiy;,
SK G.
>innfT'lt?>.^utftfr' ?-wr ^v* v
Will hook ortllers for eggs at 15
for $1. Chill water Berkshire'*
Hog and Poultry Farm. A. C.
denied, Chinagrove, N. C.
HVr Sale?Commercial fertilizer distributors,
two or three rows or
broadcast 200 to 2,000 pounds per
acre. Man. and mule does work of
til roe men and three mules. W. M.
Patrick, Woodward, S. C.
When- medicine fails you, I will tak?
youT case. Rheumatism, indige*
tionv Hver, kidney and sexual disorders
permanently eradicated by/
natural means. Write for liter*,
toure, confidential, free and Inter-^
estlng. C. Cullem Howerton, F. ?.
Durham. N. C.
BAKU A INS! BARGAINS!
While Tliey Last.
A limited number of slightly used
High Grade Organs for only
$58.50. These organs appear near
new and are warranted to last a
long lifetime. Tor,uis of sale given
on application. Write for catalogue
stating terms designed. This is an op!>ortunity
in a life time to possess*
a fine organ at about cost. Answer
quick, for such bargains don't last
long. Address:
MALONK'S MUSIC HOUSE,
Columbia, S. O.
Pianos and Organs.
SAW MILLS
Saw ML ill mounted on wheels, as. easily
moved us a mounted Thresher. Short
Log Saw Mills mounted on wheels for sawing
It. li. cross-tins, etc. Hustler Saw MiUo
with Pachot Steel Head Illocks. All sizes.
Hlnglo and Domtte. Hege Log Boom Sow
Mil la with all modem conveniences and Improvements.
ALL equal to the. best and buEerloe
to the rest. A Mill forerery class of
uyecs. W rile tor circulars, staalng what you
want. Manufactured by
SAX,JEM. IKON WORKS. WMM-Sgts. K C.
lRON
ndtlns. Ptclilts, LtcInK _ .
LOMBARD COMPANY. AJOUSTA, OA.
* CALLED
SUICIDE FOOLISH.
Holts Doors From Family and ShootJT
Self to Death.
Aftor tejl\r>g his friends only a few
hours before "how foolish it was for
a man to take his life," Dozier Slappy,
a prosperous young business man.
went to his home, bolted the door,
and blew his head off with a shotgun.
The family had to hreal^ down
the door when they hoard the report,
of the gun. Til health !? assigned aa^
the cause of the suicide, althou^jJPi
young Slappy was unusually choorful
the day before.
-jig-Li"""1" 1 11 ? ' ???m
tie Giant" Screw Plates
sortments. Each assortment is put up
at wood case, as shown in cut. Each assnt
has s4|ostaMc tap wrenches for holding all
f taps contained in assortment. Threads
s rod from 7-44 In. up to 11-2 in* **ttSX r
l?STPtlOS."CilMll><Wiitya.CilMNaJX,