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w GOES FOR TEDDY Soae Uakaowt Mm at Fargo Pats Room clt ia the Aoinias Club Mr riTvurr villi a WAD .KI tALLinu mm a li/iu MVour K\|>oii.<h's Arc llehtg Paid hy the People of the United States, * Was the Reply of a Man When Itoosevclt Said the Outlook Paid Them. At Fargo, N. !>., 011 Monday a man wiio fought his way lo Kx-Presidenr Roosevelt Mid called him a li.-.r gave a had scare to the crowd at Island Park in this city. Col. Rooseveit seized the man and helped to eject lii 111 from the platform. 1 he Colonel iiad jusl finished his Labor clay address, which was delivered to one of the largest crowds which has (gathered to see him on his Western trip. A heavy rain storm drenched the people, hut most of them sat through the afternoon i.i their wet clothes to hear him speak. As Colonel Roosevelt spoke 'he last sentence, the crowd cheered and then there was a rush for thes tuge of thousands of people, who wanted to get near enough to see the speaker and shake his hand. Those on the platform pressed around the (stand and in n moment it was closed with a surging, struggling mass if men and women. Others in the crowd jumped on the platform ind added to the crush. It was a goodnatured, laughing crowd, and the Colonel shook lianas vviui every uue who could get near enough to him. A small, poorly dressed man pushed his way through the mass of people until he could make himself heard by the Colonel. lie wore a battered hat and was unshaven. . "I have a question to ask Roosevelt." he shouted. He raised one arm over the heads of the people, waving it to attract Colonel's attention, and called out attain and again that he warned to ask a question. Col. Roosevelt saw and watched him close.v. .Fighting his way through the crowd the man at length reached the short tlight of stairs leading to the speaker's stand. He mounted the ste|>s and stopped when he readied the top. Standing about siK feet from Col. Roosevelt he called out: "I h?^e a question to ask you Roosevelt," once more. The men and women 011 the stand gtew silent. Col. Roosevelt turned< and faced him. Waving one arm jtfiouted: 'I want to know who is paying the expenses of this trie of yours about the country." x The question angered the Colonel, and his face showed it. He advanced a step toward his interrogator and shot back the answer: "I consider that to be an impertinent question," he said. "However I have no objection to telling you." he added, "that the expenses of the party are 'being paid by the magazine of which 1 am one of the editors." "You lie!" the man shouted so loud that hundreds of persons in the crowd could hear him. As he spoke the words, Col Roosevelt stepped forward quickly and sieZcd his arm just below the elbow. ..inn/) t ll u > ha rl IH lint HO t:,\|iirtincu i utci viuv ? v, v..%? .rv, v know who the man was or his intentions. and that ho had taksn hold of his arm as a measure of selfprotection. He pushed the arm forward. turning the man half around bo that he was powerless to use the arm. It was an old trick of selfdefence, which he had learned years ago, the Colonel said. His vigorous action did not deter the man from finishing what he had to say. He shouted out: "Your expenses are being paid hy the people of the United States." f Although Col. ltoosevelt was the first to act, others ran quickly to assist him. and, even before the man liad finished his remarks, two men siezed him. The Colonel did not release his grip until the stranger was moving rapidly from the stand. ;ie was ejected from the platform and was swallowed up in the excited crowd. Wo far as is known, there was no cause for alarm, hut the story of the incident spread quickly through the crowd and produced considerable excitement. In telling of the incdent later, tht Colonel said that he had 110 idea who the stranger was. "Members of the labor onganiza tions came to 1110 and told me thai they (lid not know him," he said They say that lie hud come from on) of town." An effort was made to find th< wan, but all trace of him was lost Col. Roosevelt said that he was not at all alarmed by what had happen ed. He merely caught hold of th< man to guard against the possibilitj of any sudden move, he said. Killed llis leather. At Glasgow, Ky., last Tuesday af ternoon, Payton Copass, aged twenty, shot and killed his father, Jamef Copass. Family troubles caused the tragedy. Young Copass surrendered. mh uy. , STORY OF SHIPWRECK I STEAM8HIP CAPTAIN TELLS HOW OKKW SUFFKRGI). Went Many Days Without Food or Water Until Luckily They Weie Hesoued in Mid Ocean. A dispatch from Fishguard, Wales says the steamer Mauretania arrived there on Monday having on board Capt. Pinkham and fifteen of his crew, who were picked up by the Cunard liner after they had been at sea in a small boat six days, following the burning of their boat the British steamer West Point. Capt. Pinkham said that the fire on the West Point started in tlie engine room on August 27. The flames drove the engineers from their post and spread so rapidly that soon the donkey engines operating the pumps were disabled by the fire. An attempt was made to extinguish the tire by a bucket brigade, but the hopelessness of the effort was quickly apparent and the captain ordered the small boats lowered From the bunkers the flames made their way to the store room and galley and prevented the provisioning of the boats, the intense heat repeatedly driving away the sailots, who hoped to secure provisions enough to keep them until they were picked up by a passing vessel. Althoug they suffered by the fire, the crew stood by their vessel until Sunday afternoon, when the cap m/iiu'Pii nil hands to the boats. Throughout the night the boats, each carrying sixteen, cruised in the vicinity and in the morning made an attempt to secure much needed stores. The burning craft, which was then sinking, was again boarded. but scnrcely anything of consequence was secured. Monday evening the ship foundered. The two small boats kept close together until the night of last Wednesday, when they drifted apart and neither again sighted the other. The other boat was picked up by the Leyland steamer Devonian Friday morning, while Capt. Pinkhain and his companions were rescued by the Mauretania Friday midnight. The captain and his men suffered severely and only by dint of hard work saved their boat from sinking. "We suffered horrors," said Capt. Pinkham, in telling his story. "We were without food or water and were very cold. The men had to bale the * 1 - - * D 9 ? boat incessantly to Keep it anuai. There was great rivalry among the saloon passengers of the Maure tania for the possession of the Persian kitten that Capt. Pinkhaiu brought with him. The pet was auctioned off and was sold for $1000. This sum was added to the purse made for the shipwrecked men. A WHITK KIKN1>. Whose Neck Should be Cracked as Soon as Possible. At Gainesville, Ga., Jim Morris, aged 25, a farmer, is in jail awaiting trial, charged with criminally assaulting Mrs. Mary Phillips, aged 15, his wife's sister, last Saturday. Fearing that Morris would carry out his threat to kill herself and her husband, Mrs. Phillips said nothing of the alleged assault until Sunday. She declared that after she had repulsed him he compelled her at the point of a revolver, to submit, warning her afterwards that if she told he would kill her and her husband, too. At the preliminary hearing Morris was held for trial in the Superior j Court. SUM IS OICDKKKI) OUT. Aeronaut Falls l>y Accident in Hockfeller's I'ark. At Cleveland, Ohio, a young woman appeared in the yard of John 1>. Rockfeller's home Monday in company with the parachute in which . J - . ?. ~ AIahHD sue nau uescenueu iiwm mc ?.wi. w.->. She had made an exhibition flight in a balloon from a local amusement resort and loosed hor parachute directly above the Kockfeller grounds, mistaking them, she said, for a pub, lie park. Immediately upon her ar, rival at the Rockfeller ])lace she was , waited on by a committee, headed . by the superintendent of the estate, If* 1 w*?? t Uo ol>o H'O U n i iv/ i it i v/i hi vu it v i i tiuv mm v ? t?M vt vm , passing. ; Took Her Own Idle. At Cedartown, Ga. Miss C arrir L Phillips committed suicide at th<< . home of her brother-in-law, Will t Kerr, by shooting herself througl the heart. Miss Phillips was divorci ed from her husband, VV. J. Tate, . some time ago. Whether domestic t infelicities prompted tlie deed is nol - stated. s ?, r l<Tiglitful Wreck. Two persons were killed, 15 were seriously injured, five perhaps fatally, and 20 others suffered minor in juries in the wreck of an east bound Burlington train on the Great Northi ern early Wednesday at Coram, tfd ! miles east of Kalispell, Mont. The train was enroute from Seattle tc Kansas City. AFewRcaa Why It Is I Gives relief for all Nerve, Bone i Aches and Pains more quickl; other remedy known. Its peculiar penetrating1 prop most effective?NOAH'S LL Way be used with absolute confl< purity for Internal and Exter It is Triple Strength. A power and sure Pain Remedy, ther effective in producing resull Not only contains the old-fashic dients, but also the latest date discoveries?NOAH'S L Recommended and sold under a for the following: Rheuma forms, Sciatica, Lame Back, i and Muscles, Sore Throat, Col Sprains, Cuts, Burns, Bruise! Colic. Toothache, and all N? I and Muscle Aches and Pains Drug stores in cities and towi stores in the country, 25c, 50( the bottle, and money back isfied. Isn't this fair? STllIKKS WHOLE FAMILY. Illack Hand Wipe Out the Household of Policeman. To the vengeance of the Black Hand society in New York is ascribed the revolting murder Monday of Policeman Rovolino, his wife and six children in the little village of Pellaro, which lies eight miles south of Reggio 011 the strait of Messina. At 2 o'clock Monday morning some of the townspeople of Pellaro were awakened by the terrified shrieks of a child, and rushing to the cottage occupied by the Rovolinos found the 4-year-old daughter of Rovolino with her throat cut before the open door of their home, screaiotr?ir itoniisiv The villagers carried IUft |/IVX>w?ww . - w her inside the house, where they were horrified to find the remaining members of her family lying dead, all of them having been terribly mutilated by blows from an axe. The Rovolinos suddenly returned from the United States a short time ago and since then, it is said, two attempts have been made to poison them. Mr. Rovolino has frequently spoken of the possibility of vengeance being directed against him. The crime was revolting in its barbarity. Beside the mother lay her 4-months-old baby with its skull crushed in. Despite the surgeon's efforts to save the life of the little girl whose cries aroused the neighborhood she soon died. None of the townspeople saw or heard th-? murderers, who escaped without a clue as to their identity. TOOK HIS OWN lifk. Wiis ? Little Sliort in His Accounts Was the Cause. At Union S. S. Waldrop, well known about town, and houseman for the Union Cotton Mills, died Saturday ni?ht and a coroner's jury found that Mr. Waldrop came to his death from an overdose of laudanum, administered bv himself. Mr. Waldrop, it is stated, was a little short in his accounts with the mill authorities, hut would have had no difficulty in getting what money he needed, had he attempted to do so.' It is supposed, however, that he brooded over this matter until he became | desperate. He leaves a wife and number ot children* White Slave* Case's. First indictments under the Mam i "white slave act," passed by coivgresi ' June 2f), were returned by a federa i grand jury at Chicago Tuesday. Tin indictments are against Nettie Jen kins, of Houghton, Mich., and Kthe , Culver, of Chicago. They are cliarg ! ed with conspiring to place fiv< i young Chicago girls in a resort a Ho ughton. Young Men Drowned. i Monday afternoon by the swamp ing of a gasoline launch on the Ten nessee river, two popular young wo I men, Misses Kosa Miller and 13mm. Sanderson, were drowned near Klor ' , ence, Ala. Their two brothers wen i I rescued iu an exhausted condition j The bodies have not yet been recov ered.. _ - ^ ^ iff ^ 1( IDS J Best J and Muscle y than any ??-jj iprt.ifta are 4^ll^^LjT^' NIMENT. ience in its nal Uses. ful, speedy I k eWJ efore most BHHVV III k I LaUULA >ned ingre- *on "'"m/; and up-to- MAN INIMENT. .... OUAAANTCED DRUGS A< 1 guarantee price, tmi tism in all tARa* Stiff Joints JUchmond, V?, ds, Strains, 3, Cramps, Brve' Bone impoi The genuine Noah's above. Look for Noal _ _ ? trade mark, registered 18, general your protection. Noal i ref* ink on t,ie orlgfna J and $1.00 side container. Accep; Ti * - it-- i . ri? i _ t > J. I is 1110 uiny i'ui ii ni if not sat- guarantee. If your d 2uc in stamps and we fund money If not p fraud; accept no sube CLASSIFIED COLUMN Ship your calves, hogs, sheep, lambs, etc., to The Parlor Market, Augusta, Ga., 1018 Hroad Street. Summer Hoarders Wanted?Kates $7.00 to $8.00 per week. No consumptives taken. Mrs. Wade Harrison, McAlpin House, Saluda, N. a Queen Liver Pills are used by thousands who want to keep well?25c a box. Queen Chemical Co., New port, R. I. Wanted?Men to take fifteen dajh practical cotton course, accept good positions during the fall. Charlotte Cotton Company, Charlotte, N. C. latest Fiction?Our little booklet, "Hooks of the Month" contains a brief synopsis of all the latest books. It is free. Write for it. Sims Hook Store, Orangeburg, S. C. Wanted?to buy your hides, skins, tallow, wool, beeswax, etc., at highest market prices and settlement sent promptly. Telephone 1 820. VVilse W\ Martin, Colum ma, Cut this out?It may not appear again. Mow gamblers win, at slot machines, cards, dice, etc., by secret systems. Get wise. Circular free. Ham. B. Co., Box 1617, Hammond, Ind. Mapiehurst, on the Asheville am; Lake Toxaway railroad. Thre* hundred feet from station. Modera Convenience?. No consumptives taken. A. L. & L. E. Davenport, Horse Shoe, N. C. Wanted?Men and ladies to take 3 months Practical course. Expert management. High salaried poa tions guaranteed. Write for catalogue now. Charlotte Telegraph School, Charlotte, N. C. For Sale.?Four highly bred Dorsett rams at $10 each. Seven colonies bees in Langstatb & Donzbukra hives at $6 each. One elegant new eurry and harness for $l.r>0, worth $200. K. H. l-awton, lOstill, S. C. 5 Wanted Salesmen?A few more husl| tiers on our now Standard Atlas. New census soon available. Splendid opportunities for money making. Kxeellent line for ex-teachi ers. Write The Scarborough Com * puny, Charlotte, N. C. I - 3 Mississippi Delta Lands.?Why toll your life away on the poor farms 1 your grandfather wore out? Conn to Mississippi Delta where one ear 3 grow more than ten can gather t 1 have what you want at tho right price and terms. Come or writs \V. T. IMtts, Indianola, Miss. - For sale?Milch cows, jerseys, and grades of good breeding, registered Jersey male calves. White Coli lie dogs, (registered). Also service from a registered, beaut if u a white Collie Ten ($10) dollar* guaranteed, Bronze turkeys, and Tnnnnonth hogs. Address M. R Sams. Jonesville. S. C. fi rfrrli Mil M r mm 1 M fc M Sot irfSfHi I ul Skill 1JLL3AJJ \ DONE AND MUlCkK fee ANO AAINS IN ? Pol kND BEAST V * AL NO. 141 BO- < Wil UNDCA THC FOOD ANO J, abi ST, JUNK 30, 100A. \\ atl( i'o S SIZE, 25 CENTS *' II. 80C. ANO % 1,00 f. tEMEDYCO, t ft? ,, * Borton. 4 It A* 4 CO! riant Notice for Liniment looks exactly like the Tri i's Ark on every package, our in the U. S. Patent Office, for i's Liniment always appears in .1, both on the label and on out- me ?t nothing but Noah's Liniment. uni emedy sold under a positive tiv ealer will not supply you, send go* will mail you a bottle and re- the erfectly satisfied. Beware of pet itltute. Tri "Heaven and our Sainted Loved Ones"?A tract in neat pamphlet form that will cheer in 1 com for bereaved hearts; author's motto* "The most practical tiling in Christian work is to create a good feeling in troubled hearts." Price 10 cents, in silver, postpaid. Address Ed. Western Christian Union, Hoonville, Mo. Wanted?Every man, woman ano child in South Carolina to knov that the "Alco" brand of Sash Doors and Hlinds are the best and are made only by the Augusta Lumber Company, who manufacture everything in Lumber and Millwork and whose watchword is "Quality." Write Augusta Litimber Company, Augusta, (ieoi-gia, for prices on any order, large or small. What is sadly needed is not more people to the square mile >n th? great cities but more people to the square mile in the country. Burduco Li The Great Sou =FOR LIVER T1 Biliousness, Constipation, Dyspepi Jaundice, Nervous and Sick Heada and all Stomach Diseases. Teaches the L Clears the Sold Everywhere "ON THE C nn* unrni Ir unrtiNULDur OKANGEBUKG, St ? "> i au? Viorii t li ii n ?1 , fliXntrp rt i r icna uv< v. ^ i services offered are equal to the v? j at Actual cost Let us convince > for you. Write for catalogue ai , while you think of It! Address: j PRESIDENT W. 147 Rroughton Street " youmg Proof Positive j| Cared of Bo ate RkenaatliM. I [ had been suffering with bone rheu- fl ;lsm for three years. I have been fl ig Noah's Liniment, and can say V t it cured me completely. Can walk ' ler than I have in two years. Noah's Irnent will do all you claim. Rev, 3. Cyrus, Donald, 8. C." fl Pain In Sl?le and Neuralgia. I For five years I suffered with neu gla and pain In side. Could not. ip. I tried Noah's Liniment, and <fl first application made me feel bet- B Mrs. Martha A. See, Richmond, B Couldn't KhIno Itlglit Arm. I I caught cold and had a severe at k of rheumutism in my right shoul- B and could not raise my arm with- B much pain. I tried Noah's Lini- B nt, and In less than a week was en- fl > ily free from pain. A. Crooker, Dor- fl '? ? , >ster, Mass." \ Stiff Joints mid Backache. fl I have used Noah's Liniment for fumutism, stiff Joints and backache, fl i I can say It did me more good than fl t pain remedy. Rev. George W? fl 1th, Abbeville, S. C." B Sprained Ankle. I have been benefited greatly by ah's Liniment, using It for a sprained fl kle. Men, W. D. Robertson, West fl nervllle, Mass." I'niiiM lii (he Rack. I 'I suffered ten years with a dread- fl ly sore pain in my back, and tried ferent remedies. Less than half a fl tie of Noali's Liniment made a per t cure. Mrs. Rev. J. D. Hilllngsley, Int Eastern, Vu." B Neuralgia aud Tothaebe. I 'My wife suffered for several years B III neuralgia and 'oothaehe. Hhe used B )ut half a bottle of Noah's Liniment fl 1 got immediute relief. J. S. Fisher, llceman, liodges, S. C." fl It lieu Hint I hiii In the Neck. fl 'I received the bottle of Noah's Llnl- B nt, and think It has helped me great- fl I have rheumatism in my neck and H relieved it right much. Mrs. Martha fl Lambert, Heaver Dam, Va." fl For Horse*. fl 'We have never need a liniment we odder the e<|iial to Noah's Liniment B bruises, sprains, .strained ten<loiiH B :1 to use on throat, sides and chest fl distemper, colds, etc. Richmond B xnsfer Co., Richmond, Va." H Hotter Tin*n fVOO Itemed!?*. 1 'We cheerfully recommend all stable B n to Rive Noah's Liniment a trial B 1 be convinced of Its wonderful etna- B e properties. We have obtained as fl jd If not better results from its use fl in we did from remedies costing $-r?.00 B bottle. Norfolk and Portsmouth B xnsfer Co., Norfolk, Va." fl wmmmmmmmmmmammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmrnm Lands for Sale. 7 00 acres, 7 miles Americus; 4 00 acres red and gray level lands; balance sandy loam, slightly rolling, clay subsoil under all; well Improved; good dwelling, ginnery, tenant houses, etc. $15.00 per acre. Onehalf cash. t 100 acres. 2 1-2 miles Outhbert; no waste lands, red pdbble, clay subsoil; 2 good tenant houses, barn cotton house. $30.OO |hh* acre. - ?; i 9 U cl UI CD , I 111 11UD v U vu i/vi t ) v miles Coleman; 8 room house, 2 ^ood tenant houses; gray and pebble and sandy lonjn, with clay subsoil; rented 8 bales of cotton. $8,(H>0 in cash. Write for list to the, SOUTH KltX LAX I) (XIMPAUTT, Anierk-us, (>a., C'uthbert, Ga? or Tliomaston, <ia. ver Powder ithern Remedj ALL?? ^ DOUBLES lia, Loss of Appetite, Indigestion, iche, Coated Tongue, Bad Breath? ,iver to Act and Complexion 25 ceftti LIB PLAN." OAI i rnr iU UULLtUt r )UTH CA HO LIN A. \ any other school In the land. Til# > ry beet. Hoard on the CLUB PL AH you that our school la the school i d full Information. Write right ios S.PETERSON Orangeburg, g. G. 1 liCM Ann I AIIICC 8. 8. T. established 22 INCH Nllll kNlllKa years. Big demand for 1TCI CCRADIIYT our graduates. Students IfclXUImrlll* qualify In few months, paying $50 to 175 a month guaranteed. Quick . Write today for froo Illustrated catalog. ERN SCHOOL OF TELEGRAPHY* j L. Box 272. NEWNAN. GA. jkmiurn