The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, April 07, 1910, Image 5
jBR *4
"torn of tide
Demerits Will Smi Find Government
Reins in Their Hands.
SAYS WOOOROW WILSON
Tlie President of Princeton College
rrcdicU tlmt the People in tlieir
Distress Are Turning to the l>em?
ocratft for Ilolief.?Ho Tells How
the Country Will He Benefited.
That the political tide is now
turning Democratic, and the day
when the Democratic party must
take charge of this country's affairs.
almost at hand, were declarations
^Qtade by Woodrow Wilson, president
iPf Princeton university, in a speech
at the Democratic dinner in lOlizabelh,
N J., recently. Mr. Wilson outlined
the character of legislation
which the Democratic should give
the country to meet the present
economic problems. In this connection
he said:
"In the first place we should wish
not merely to curb the trusts, and
above all, wo should not wish lo
regulate them in such a way as will
make them either partners or creatures
of the government itself, wc
should wish to Bquare their whole
action and responsibility urtth the
genera] interest regarding them, not
as objects in themselves, but mereily
as conveniences in our economic
life and development. Recent proposals
or regulation have looked too
much like a wholesale invasion by
government Itself of the tield of business
management.
"Our regulations of public interest
must be legal regulation and not
direct management. 'In
t%e Becond place, it is clearly
our duty to take the government oul
of the business of patronage, the
business of granting favors and privileges,
of arranging the laws so that
this, that, or the other group ol
men may make large profits out ol
their business and draw it back tc
the function of safeguarding right*
general, not particular right; the
rights which make not so much foi
the prosperity, which enables small
groups of individual to pile up enormous
fortunes, as for a general stimulation,
a universal opportunity for
enlightenment and justice. 1 am
thinking of course, of tariff legislat
ion.
Whatever may be our views with
regard to the policy vagely called
the policy of protection, it is clear
that in fact it has long since, as
dealt with by congress, ceased to be
a policy of protection, and become
a policy of patronage.
"We are told that the present ex?
) a t?ir K t <v b t \ <{ o/i o/tnr
V i i\\J i iiinai j ii 11 |' i i vc v/ i v/w in uiv/vi
ities is due, not to the tariff but
to tile fact that we are not producing
enough to keep up with the
daily demand, and that is particularly
true with regards to things we
eat and have daily need.
Take meat for example and see
what Ihe truth is. The truth is that
the meat trust has been able to control
the meat market to such an
extent that scores of ranchmen have
been driven out of the cattle raising
business because it was unprofitable.
The short supply of meat is due to
the monopoly created by the moat
trust. It is therefore true that the
supply iR short compared with the
vast demand, but it has been made
shcfrt by the operation of a trust
unquestionably fostered by the legislation
of the government.
"in the third place it is one ol
the chief duties of the Democratic
party to introduce such reforms in
local and federal governments at
will secure economy, responsibility
honesty, fidelity.
"In brief our program should be
a general revival of popular politics
of 'common counsel, of responsible
leadership. We must supply efflcioni
leaders, and eschew all the lowei
personal objects of politics. It is t
case of must as well as a case o
may a oase of necessity as well a*
a case of privilege. A new day hai
come. Men and measures are be
ing scrutinized as never before. Foi
myself I veritably believe we ar<
upon the eve of a new era of politics
liberty, when more literally and tru
ly than ever we can realize the ideal;
of popular government and of in
dividual privilege."
Good Long Term.
Eighty years in New Jersey Stat<
prison was the sentence imposed bj
Judge Blair in Jersey City Frida:
upon Ernil art Von Muller, the "mar
rying count" who was convicted 01
Tuesday last of bigamy. Testimony
at tne triai snuwcu uiai vun munvi
married various women in many dlf
ferent States
liCft ldttlc Fortune.
A1 Grand Rapids, Mich., Mrs. Maria
Heldlaff, a supposedly poor scrul
woman, died last August. It is now
disclosed by a local bank that the wo.
man left seventeen thousand
to charity.
LOVE AND THE CARDS
\V11K>\V KKAl) SIIK WAS TO MAK<
HY A VKllY RICH MAN.
lie Wan a Nobleman and Worth
$20,000,000; Now She is Wiser,
the Knowledge Costing $;t,000.
In tho bustling Gorman city of
Hanover Uvea. Krau Stier, who became
lonely after she had lost her
husband, ho lonely that sho decided
to mend her heart with another.
With that view she consulted Frau
Nixdorf, who advertised to straighten
out life's tangles by card reading.
All the cards ran the Widow Stler's
way and she was told that she was
to marry a wealthy nobleman, Chamberlain
von Iluelow, who was worth
$20,000,000, and would forever live
_ happily.
In a few days Frau Stier's phone
summoned her to a love avowal, the
voice at the other end of the wire
professing to be that of Chamberlain,
who said that one glance of
, her on the street had so excited his
emotions that he could no longer restrain
himself from declaring his
undying love for her. lie begged
her to give him hope. Then and
there she, accepted him.
Another telephone call, a few
days later, purporting to be from
Chamberlain, gravely informed her
that he had discovered that she was
a woman of lowly birth, and that it
would be necessary for her to bo
ennobled before he could wed her.
This could be accomplished, he said,
by a deposit of about $3,000 in a
Hanover bank, believing in the cards,
tne widow deposited the mono/.
Then came the awakening. Frau
Stier accused Von Huclow of the
1 crime, but he had no trouble clearing
himself and showing that he had
absolutely no knowledge of her love
affairs. Then her lawyers turned to
Frau Nixdorf. That proceeding
brought ts light a Journeyman shoemaker
as the senior of the telephone
f m ooan (yoa o h/\ 1 ??- ? ~
CDOI Iftvo, mm UIU UIW auuil IlltlUU
t short work of both him and tho
> soothsayer.
t MEKTS WITH IHOATIf.
r
[
| Noted Arcplanist Killed in nn lO.vlii?
bit ion Flight.
I
Another French aviator has met
I death while making a night in an
' aeroplane. Hubert Hellion, was kilj
ed while making an exhibition flight
at San Sebastian, Spain, Saturday.
. He was circling the royal palace of
Miramar, at a height of 140 feet,
when his motor broke down. He
attempted to glide back to the shed,
but the machine turned over and
i swooped with terrific force against
the rocks. Tho aviator was crushed
like a shell.
Mine. Le Blon witnessed the accident,
and when the body was recovered
fix>m the sea she rushed shrieking
towards the ambulance to which
it was being carried. She throw her'
self upon the lifeless form, kissing
it repeatedly and refusing to be led
away.
lAs the weather was stormy, He
Blon's flight was unexpected and only
a few nersons assenihloit tn b?o tn??
start. After the accident, however,
an enormous crowd quickly gathered
' and follow-ed the body to the police
hospital. There an examination was
made, but the doctors were only able
1 to confirm that death must have been
instantaneous. *
HOOT MAYOK OFF STAGE.
Four Thousand Citizens Show Their
Indignation.
At Pittsburg, Pa., the indignation
i of four thousand citizens and of many
* women who wish to be, over the
> i>olitioal corruption now being unearthed
by the grand jury and by
> council manic confessions and denun*
elation of civic vice generally was
* vehemently expressed Friday night
t at a mass meeting in Exposition Hall.
* Mayor William A. Magee, who sought
1 to address the meeting was hooted
f off the stage. The resentment shown
3 was at his alleged failure to work
3 promised reform in the red-light dls"
trlet, delayed action of traction probr
lems and other local matters. *
3 ? ? ?
' Drank Poison for Boo/e.
As the result of mistaking a hot3
tie of carbolic acid for whiskey, J.
Luther Abbott a clerk in a tobacco
ware house at Danville, Va., killed
himself. Abbott had a bottle of
urh ial/atr a? o Kunoo i? ^ K*/>. 1 J - 11
i iiimivj wit ? uuicau ailtl UumilC II
a was another bottle labeled whiskey,
/ but containing the poisen which he
/ drank. He died in terrible agony in
- thirty minutes.
\ ?
r' 1/ost Life for Shoes.
p 'At New York Alfred Payne, a
" clerk, lost his life in an early morning
tenement tire because he stopped
to put on his shoes after he had been
awakened by the cries of the ten
ants below. Fireman found his dead
> body seat'd upright on the edge of
' the bed. He had been pulling on his
shoes when smoke and flames swept
\ in through the air shaft and suffocated
him.
! KEEP THE REC
1 By J. Coll
To the editor of the Atlanta Journal:
In his recent Bpoech at Ogdenbuig,
N. Y., ex-Vlco President Fairbanks
repeated tho untrue and worn-out
phase about the war between the
north and the smith being fought to
establish the freedom of the negro
slaves.
iMr. Fairbanks said: "The sword of
the nation was drawn in order that
the eonalitv of men beneath the flaz
of the United States might become
an accomplished, a living fact."
Note that Br. Fairbanks says 'the
sword of the nation was drawn." It
is not difficult to understand Mr.
Fairbanks' pretty conceit about that.
Abraham Lincoln, however, never
indul.zed it, and that really was one
of 4he causes of the war. He would
recognize neither sectirr ts "the
nation," but insisted on that name
being applied to the unbroken union
of the states.
Mr. Lincoln said in plain words
that the fate of slavery was not to
be considered, that ho would free
the slaves or not as the one or the
other course would tho better serve
to savo the union.
I do * ot intend t.^ recropch up >n
your space with a detailed recital of
violations of the principles laid down
in the Declaration of Independence,
and that basis of the confederation
known as the ronstitution of the Unit
ed States. I will say at once that
the war was fought for the principle
and right of self-government. Is
anything clearer in statement than
this. "That governments derive
their just powers from consent
of the governed," and are instituted
among men to secure
their inatienable right of life, liberty
and the pursuit of happiness,
and that whenever any form of gov
eminent become destructive of or
fails to sociure these ends, it is the
1*1 rv I, nf t l,? I _ -I. - - ,
iiKuv ui mu (ii-upie iu niter or anoiish
it, and to institute a new government
laying its foundations on
audi principles and organizing its
powers in such form as to them shall
seem most likely to affect their safety
and happiness." '
What, in all history, could more
clearly define the right of the southern
states to withdraw from a union
into which they had, as soverign communities,
voluntarily entered; that
the denial of that right was a violation
of the letter and spirit of the
compact between the states; and that
the war waged by the federal government
against the seceding states was
in disregard of the limitations of the
constitution and destructive of independence?
In all free governments the constitution
or organic law is supreme
over the government, and in our federal
union this was most distinctly
marked by limitations and prohibi
tions against all which was beyond
the expressed grants of power to the
general government. At the very
beginning, then, we may take the po
sition that those who resisted violation
of the compact were the true
friends and those who maintained
the usurptation of undelated powers
were the real enemies of the constitutional
union.
Sectional issues appear conspiciously
in the debates of the convention
which framed the federal constitution
in 17 87, and its many compromises
were designed to secure an
equilibrium between the sections,
and to preserve the interests as wd.i
as the liberties of the several states.
African servitude, at that time was
not con lined to a section, but was
numerically greater in the south tha i
in tho north, with a tendency to its
continuance in the former and cessation
in the latter. It, therefore, thus
easily presents itself as a disturbing
element and the provisions of the
constitution, which were known to be
necessary for its adoption, bound all
the states to recognize an t protect
that species of property.
Wthen, at a subsequent period,
there arose in the northern states an
anti-slavery agitation it wis a harmless
and scarcely noticed movement
until political demagogues seized upon
it as a means to acquire pjwu**
Mr. Davis, in his book, "il'se and
fall of the Confederate Government,"
says of this anti-slave agitation that
' Had ii been .eft to ps? ido-philnntnropists
and fanatics, mo-d zealous
where least informed, it nrtver could
h ive shaken the foundaCj?3 of tin:
. union and have incited one section
10 carry fire and sword into tbe
i o'her." Ho has shown in the same
[ work that the ackatio 1 wai t.oliti".l
in character and was clearly devel
oped as early as IS03. H >fcre the
\ ar an ! during the war Mr. Din
. colli said that it? .. ." .?<
- ru.|'UU M UO HUl 1 U
free the slaves but "o restore the
union. The emancipation proclamation,
which when it wa- issue,!, he
humorously admitted to do n utility,
had to bo validated by the action of
the highest authority known t ? our
institutions?the people assembled in
their several state conventions.
It has been asserted, and it is by
many still believed, that the south
was -fighting to maintain slavery.
itv
In this proclamation Mr. Lincoln
stated that in all the southern states
which might re-enter the union by
January 1, 18G15, the institution of
ORD STRAIGHT 1
ton Lynes. S
slavery should remain under the control
of those states and be retained
or relinquished as they might see
fit. But, said the proclamation, if
you do not re-enter the union.th?ts
date I shall then declare yous slaves
free. You will find this in the statutes
at large of the United Sttes for
. t T* I _
>uv?-uu, u|f|icniii.\t i. 11 IS Ull
express and unmistakable offer that
if the south would renounce Independence
it might retain slavery.
/The south declined the offer. It
was fighting for independence and
not slavery, and it would not renounce
independence. Then Mr.
Lincoln carried out his threat and
issued his famous proclamation. This
has been glowingly represented as the
sun of righteousness arising, as the
genius of liberty shattering every
fetter, and so on and so on in many
a hign-flown platitude, but the proclamation
speaks for itself. Mr. Lincoln
never claimed to be doing a
philanthropic or benevolent thing.
He was a plain, direct man, and he'
blurted out the real truth of the
matter in a blunt, unvarnished honest
way. He said he issued the
proclamation by virtue of the power
in me invested as commander-inchief
of the army and navy of the
United States in time of actual armed
rebellion against the authority and
government of the United States, and
( as a fit and necessary war measure
for suppressing said rebellion," and
then he proceeded to justify his act
as one "warranted upon military
necessity." ?
The "military necessity" was that,
at that time, the Confederate forces
stood before him invincible, a serried
wall of steel. His best commanders
had been out-generaled; his
11 nest armies^nad been overcome; the
i roar of the southern guns, the rattle
! of the southern sabre, the tramp of
the southern infantry were resonant
i upon the air. Behind, these ruagnift,
cant troops were millions of contented
slaves who tilled the fields and
furnished the troops food and forage.
The slave must be roused to
mutiny and turned loose upon the
I rear of the southern army, just as in
I the Revolutionary war Great Britain
i had stirred up the Indians and then
launched them at the back of the
colonists.
The fields must remain fallow, so
that the armies should remain unfed.
The internal peace of the south
must be broken so that troops must
be withdrawn from the front to restore
order. This was the "military
' necessity" which led to the emancipation
proclamation. It was a cruel
and shrewdly derived thunderbold
of war, but, to the credit of the
southern slave, and for which he
should have a monument?it failed,
i He remained quietly at home tilling
j tho field and supporting the soldiers;
I he was the happiest, the most contented,
the best fed, and longest-lived
laboring class tho world has ever
known.
By the terms of this celebrated
proclamation emancipation was specifically
restricted to so much of the
south as was in arms. The slaves of
Maryland, of Delaware, of West Virginia,
of Kentucky, of Tennessee, of
Missouri, of tide-water Virginia, and
of half of Louisiana were to remain
slaves, or, as the document itself puts
it, were "left precisely as if this
proclamation were not issued."
When anyone hereafter tells you
that the Confederate soldiers died
in an effort to maintain slavery,
point to the federal statute book and
say. here is the nroof nmt
, . v?V4b liv iUUglll
for independence, and not slavery,
for, here is the promise that if lie
would renounce independence he
might retain slavery.
The truth remains intact and inconvertible,
that the existence of African
servitude was in no wise the
cause of the conflict, but only an
incident.
It is said that the Confederate
soldier was a foe to republican institutions
and fought to tear down
the constitution. The fact is the
military glory of the southern Con- j
fedoracy has so far overshadowed its
civic renown that few, very few,
know anything of the principles upon
which the government of the Confederate
States was based.
The Confederate constitution was
1 framed amid the mutterlngs of impending
war, and, after a brief and
' stormy existence, ceased to be operative.
It was never well known and
is now almost forgotten. Desuetude
' and oblivion have been its portion,
but for all that its history and prin'
ciples are worthy of the most care'
ful consideration at the present day.
That history lies upon the shelf, as
1 it were, unoticed and unguarded, like
a jewel long overlooked, but when
we brush off the dust and let in
the sunlight the diamond will be
found a diamond still.
Tlio Confederate constitution was I
modeled on that of the United States,
and so modeled because the ante- !
helium south loved the organic law
of lfs fathers. It was framed by
deputies chosen by the South Carolina.
Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Mississippi,
Louisiana and Texas secession
conventions, and from the journals
of these bodies it abundantly j
appears that the south revered the I
constitution of the United States
and never would have seceded if the
north had in good faith respected
and conformed to that document.
When the South Carolina convention
adopted its ordinance of secession
it issued an address in justification
of that step, and in this address
said: "The one great evil from
which all other evils have flowed, is
the overthrow of the constitution of
the United States." (Journal, page
437); and, following up this, it resolved
"That iu the opinion of tnls
convention the constitution of the
United States should be and constitute
the basis of the confederation
of such states as shall withdraw their
connection with the government of
the United States." (Journal, page
467 ); and, following up this, it reces
of the seceding states we find
this adoration of the principles of
the Declaration of Independence and
of the constitution of the United
States. Hut notwithstanding the
clearly established rights of the
states to individual soverignity the
north decided on coercion or war.
War it was. Six hundred thousand
southern men took the field
against over two million northern
enlisted men.
Of the 600,000 southern soldiers
only 200,000 owned slaves. What
were the other 400,000 fighting for?
Yours very truly,
J. Colton Lynos,
Late Adjt. Gen. and Chief of Staff,
Georgia Division, U. C. V.
Atlanta, Ga., January 17th, 1910.
Killed in Wreck.
Engineer John Griffin was killed,
Fireman Vaughn was more or less
seriously injured, and five passengers
were slightly hurt, when Norfolk &
Western passenger train No. 17, west
bound, left the rail near Watts Tank,
W. Va., at 4.20 o'clock Friday afternoon.
The engine, tender, baggage
car and three coaches jumped the
track and turned over.
Bribe Taker Resigns.
At Albany, N. Yn Senator J. P.
Alltls, who was accused by Senator
Benn Conger of having accepted, a
bribe to further the interests of certain
bridge legislation in the New
York Legislature, has filed his resignation
with the Secretary of State.
Hlioots Indian.
At Murphy, N. C., Dan Bird a
full-blood Cherokee Indian, was shot
and instantly killed Saturday by Ed
Sneed. Sneed is night watchman at
the planing mills and claims the InJ
i -ii - -* ' * *
untu utiacKea nun witn a RiilEG.
Manager Prank J. Shaughnessy,
of the Virginia League
Champions, found Noah's
Liniment best for
Sore Muscles
bruises, scratches, stiffness.
One trial will convince you.
Noah's Liniment penetrates.
Requires but little rubbing.
Here's the Proof
"I have liad occasion to use Noah's
Liniment on two of my players' arms,
and the result was most gratifying.
Both were immediately relieved of soreness
and able to resume throwing with
their former speed. Have also used It
myself, and consider It the best liniment
I ever tried. It Is ftne for bruises,
HCrntnhps ut I ffn.mu -- - "
, ciu. r runic J.
Shaughnessy, Manager, Roanoke Champions,
Roanoke, Va."
Noah's T.lnlment Is the beat remedy
for Rheumatism, Sciatica, L<ame Rack,
Stiff Joints and Muscles, Sore Throat,
Colds, Strains, Sprains, Cuts, Bruises.
Colic, Cramps, ?' ...
Neuralgia, ^Tooth- I
ulne has Noah's *
Ark on every
Sold by dealers In Vlif .1 ^
medicine. Sam- k lVJ *11 1
plo by mall tree* AaBHU^lJapAMB
Noah Remedy Co., IlLlltilltll
Richmond, Va, LUiUJUuAJU
__
Will Dye
LmUm' or Men's Garments Cleaned
Cleaned a
C. C. Laundrv f
miiiiMr
fWI&Ffasrjx
tRYTHINOIN? freight dep
:HIUERY ife,ius-f
IPPUES- i
CLASSIFIED COLUMN |
Fggs from pri/e winning ?. C. Rhode^B
Island Roils, $1 and $2 for 15. ^B
E. H. Craig, Pickens, S. C. H
i 1 " ^B
For Sale?fancy pigeons, ring doves* H
white dovos, guinea pigs. John^B
Ornellas, Springfield, 111.
To Prevent FMes on smoked"*&^at^|
send 25c. in stamps for details. ^B
Address L. Myers, Jersey Shore,^B
R. P. D. 5, No. 71.
For Sale?200 tons pea vine hay atl
$21.00 delivered in ear Tots atfl
South f?ar?r\ii?n * * ?
vwivuua |/uiuus? j in* r AT*
rell, Blackville. 8. C. fl
Our $1 Adding Machines save tlmel
and worry. Guaranteed. Thousands^B
sold. Agents wanted. Haynes Mfg.^B
Co., Hntherfordton, N. C. ^ M
Eden Watermelon Seed for Sale
75c. per pound. The beat havorsdjH
shipping watermelon grown. J.B
M. Farrell, Blacksville, S. C. ^fl
w
For Sale?Milch cows Jersey's, grade H
Jerseys and Holstelns. All of tfcefl
best breeding. Registered JerseyH
male calves. M. H. Sams, Josen* W
vllle, S. C.
Eggs for Hutching?From selected^B
pen of white VVyandotts, headed^B
by cockrel that won first prize at^B
S. C. State Fair for 1909. $1.00 H
I per 15; $1.75 per 30. T. L. Gram-S
ling, R. F. I). 1, Orangeburg, S. C. fl
Magnificent New Maps?Fastest sel-^B
lers ever published. Salesmen re-^B
porting high as 20 orders per day. H
Liberal terms, exclusive territory.
Hudgins, Co., Atlanta, Ga. fl
Pa., R. F. D. 5; No. 71.
For Sale?Female Great Dane, H
whelped Nov. 13, 1908; light gold-H
en hrindle; pedigreed and regis-^B
tered; the best blood lines In
| American. Will furnish paperafl
free. Von Yon Kennels, 512 N. V
McDllfflfl St A n/lntr./." a
^w.| a&uugiouu) o. \j. ^?
!
Pedigreed English Setters, Puppies,?
j and Pure Gordons, Setter Puppies,
at prices that will please the lov-^|
er of bird dogs. Also Barred Ply- ?
! month Hocks and Rose Comb?
Rhode Island Red eggs from best?
of pure stock. $1 and $1.50 for?
15 eggs. Write B. H. Middle-?
brooks, Yatesville, Ga. ?
Prize Winning S. C. Rhode Island
Reds, Barred Plymouth Ro^ks,?
Buff Orpingtons, White and Brown?
Leghorn, eggs, $1.50 per 15, $2.75 ?
per 30. Mammoth Pronz-.; Tur-I
keys, eggs, $2.50 pei 9; $5 per?
20. Mammoth Pekin Ducks, eggs?
$1.50 per 11; $-.75 per 22. Our?
birds have been carefully bred for fl
show qualities and superior egg?
production. Good hatch guaran-?
teed. Hermitage Poultry* Farm, ?
Box too, llemler.sonville, Tenn. ?
Bargains in Pure Bred Stock?cfl I
and rare Berkshire Boar Pigs,
months old from regular stocfla^H
$15 each. (One Bred Sow (China?
Betsey No. 119177) Due to f&r-H
row in April, at the small sum of?
$75; has farrowed twice, first lit-?
ter 10 pigs, second 11. S. C. B.fl
Leghorn Eggs?15 for $1; 30 for?
$.90; 100 for $5. In answering fl
this ad mention this paper. A. H. I
Sloop, China Grove, N. C. fl
Bargains, Bai-gains?jus long as they ?
last.?A number of slightly used $05 fl
High Grade Organs for only $58A0. fl
These organs appear nearly new uAd ?
Terms of snio ~*
-- BMUI viu application.
Write for catalogue, stating terms de
sired. This is an opportunity in a I
life time to possess a fine organ at
1 about cost. Answer quick, for such fl
bargainst do not last long. Address: I
j bargains do not last long. Address: I
MAbOXF/S MUSIC HOUSE, Colum
bia, S. C.?Pianos and Organs. I
Drops Deiul on Train. I
John QUI Landrum Compton, a j
prominent and wealthy young man
of Campobello, S. C., who had been fl
' a patient in a Spartanburg hospital
i for three week3, dropped dead in a I
j Southern Railway passenger car at
Spartanburg Saturday night.
Qen. Itoyd to Quit. I
Adjt. Gen. Boyd Saturday an- fl
nounced his retirement from politics m
on account of his failing health. He
won't run for reelection. I
rE I
For You
or Dyed to look Hko mw, WiH
nd Blocked.
ind Dye Works, 1
ITA ? r ^ Uilt
up a reputation for making prompt ship,
we are justly proud of. We are located near ail
ots and can get goods in at the lateat moment,
over long distance phone, telegraph or write us.
tress shipments are given special attention by ua,
COLUMBIA SUPPLY COMPANY,
Cohunbla, S. C.