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DO NOT NEED if What a J.ck mid* N*w<p per Slid Ab >at H/rse R*ci?g There. MORE HARM MAN GOOD Charleston Should Profit by (ho Kvpeiionoo of I lor idoiida Sister and Ask (Ijo Legislature to Abolish Petting on Ilorso Paring in South Carolina. Tho Legislature should not allow South Carolina to be made tin? stamp - " \ ~ ^ ing ground for a 101 01 gainineia w?v have been driven out of New York, Florida and other States. They are now about to locate in Charleston and other points in South Carolina, but they should be made to move on to some more congenial clime. The Florida Times-Union of Jacksonville is a conservative newspaper. It is friendly to, if not controlle by, the interests which control J lie Florida Bast Coast railway and the big tourist hotels of the Florida Bast Coast. It is not a muckraker, nor a ycliow journal, nor p. Puritan publication. or anything of that sort, but ! a straightforward, progressive, conservative newspaper. While tlio bill to drive horse racing out of Florida was pending in the Florida legislature?and the bill passed with only one vote against it in the house and 110 votes against it In the senate?while this bill was pending, while the Business Men's Anti-racing association was urging its passage, the Florida Times-Union, on April 9th, 1911, published the following editorial: 'The Fishermen and (ho Suckers." "The people of .Jackson\i!le have tried race track gambling lor two years and we believe have gotten enough of it. We think that public sentiment here, with scarcely a dissenting voice, will back any efforts [ iii tbo legislature to put an end to it. "We need not discuss gambling in general. It is against the policy of tho State and of the city. It is against the policy of practically all States and all cities. We seen no reason why it should be permttied at race tracks and forbidden everywhere else. We do not see why men Bhoul'J be permitted to play for thousands at Moncrief when negioes are arrested for a sickle crap game in Jacksonville. But leaving entirely out of sight the moral aspect of betting 011 horse races, it is now pretty generally known that it does not pay. It does not pay the amateur who risks his m;>ney and generally loses it and U does not pay the community that permits it. "In .all sorts of games and occupa tions in which chance plays a large part in the result, those v ho play are divided into two classes--Ihe suckers ana those fishing fo? suckers. The suckers go after the bait not knowing about the hook. The fishermen go after the suckers. "This is true of the sloe* exchange of New York, the races at Moncrief, tho gambling places where some men make their living and others supply it, and of all so-calle.l games of chance. We arc not certain that there is a game In which skill gives no advantage. "In tho horse racing the men who are fishing for suckers come to Jacksonville. The suckers are already here. The race track employes, the followers of the races, thousan !s in number, are supported o it of the pockets of the people of Jacksonville. They don't come here to spend money; they come here to maki money, 'J iiy tion i come 10 mane it ny worn that adds to the wealth of the community. They come to make it without work out of the earnings of the community. The peoulo of Jackson ville i?ay their board and buy theii clothing and furnish thorn witl spending money. They come witl the expectation of living during tin racing season and leaving with uiori money than they brought . "Wo aro not condemning thesi men. They are simply accepting ai invitation. We are charging then with crookedness. Hotting on race Is their business and they make i Jiving at it by being better judge than tiio average man of the merit of the horses. They don't take a dol lar from any man who is not tryin to take a dollar from thorn. With n linkii dness to these men, we simpl ask that Jacksonville's invitation t them to come here and live thro months at tlie expense of the city b withdrawn." Held for Father' s Heath. S. Edward Stlbbcns, aged 3 2, a so of George W. Ktubbens, a wealth farmor, mysteriously shot to deat at his home near Petersburg, Ind Friday night, was arrested at Vir lenncs, Ind., in connection with hi lather's death. Tried to Fescue Prisoner. Chief of Police Fred McGregor c v* fiheilield, Ala., shot and killed Rot coe Johnson and Lewis Cloffman eai ly Thursday when they attempted t reecoe John CofTman from the ofllce; McGregor surrendered. KILUD BY tMClNE UNKNOWN MAN FATAMA' HURT IIY IjOCOMOTIVK. Died at the Union Station at Coliim1>I? as the Train that Struck Him Pulled In. The State says unknown and apparently far from nome, a young while man, about 2 1 years of age, was sruck by a south-boun 1 passenger train of the Southern railway, coming from Charlottte, near Chappels, Richland county, Thursday morning and was fatally injured, lie was brought to Columbia, but -ju. ?in into | UeUlll UHIUV do nig vt atM vovw ? ho union station. Acting in the absence of K. D. Walker, coroner, .las. II. Fowles, lagistrate investigated the case am. coined and inquest unnecessary. It is alleged that the unfortunate man was sitting on the crosstles, seemng asleep when passenger train No. t.*? rounded a curve and struck him. i o never regained consciousness. His -kull was fractured and left leg broken. The dead man left little clue as to his identity. He was dressed in a pair of blue overalls with a black oat, and carried as his only baggage t small bundle of underwear. On ihe inside of his coat collar was the name "II. M. Lewis, Staunton, Va." The name was sewea on a muu m&, and was evidently (he Arm from whom the coat was bought. The unlorwear was wrapped in paper marlced in two places, "C. A. Carter, Smith's Turnout, S. C." Smith's Turnout is on the Southern railway, between Chester and Rock Hill. Judge Fowles is doing everything Smith's Turnout Thursday in hope of getting some information as to who the man was, but secured /no news. On the man's coat were a few cotton linters, and the presumption is that he may have heen a cotton mill operative, going to some manufacturing town in search of work. He was seen at Ridgeway on Wednesday, and asked an old negro the distance to Columbia. Juge Fowles is doing everything in his power to identify him. He was five feet, nine inches in height, had blue eyes and rather light hair, was clean shaven, and looks as if he parted his hair in the middle. A prominent side tooth is badly decayed, and he had at some time been operated m for appenicitis. The body is being held at the undertaking parlors of J. W. McCormick on Hampton street for identification. -v ^ ???'?? f * 11^ i\? f?rM\ TWO 15U1W ISI 1 i .> i'iW Di-i i/. Horrible Fate Overtakes Victims of Country Fire. A dispatch from Abbeville says Brooks Wilson, the fourteen-year-old son of Walter B. Wilson, a prosperous farmer of that county, and Joseph -herard, the seventeen-year-old son of the late Br. Sherard, of the Lebanon section, lost their lives early Tuesday morning in a fire which destroyed the home of -Mr. Wilson. The two young men went to Abbeville Tuesday night, to attend the show in the opera house, and returned to Mr. Wilson's after the show. No one heard them enter the house on their return, which must have been after 12 o'clock. About 1 two o'clock Tuesday morning Mr. Wilson awakcncAl to find his house in (lames, lie barely escaped with his i small children. The fire was burning * * -- - * il - L A in I no nanway 01 me iiuuhu ami im 1 was unable to reach tlic up-stairs room of bis son. IIo tried in every way to awaken the son from below, . and when lie was not able to do so, ; eeided that lie must h ive g< ne hoinc with young Sherard. A piessenger roon brought the news that this was not the case. The house was by this time wholly r consumed. When tho lire had died 1 down enough to ascertain, the ? charred remains of tho two boys were 2 found on the bed springs of the bed ? in which tlioy evidently were sleep' ing. li is supposed that they must s have become suffocated \wth th< i smoke and thereby rendered uncoil i scions of the danger, and that the? s died without knowing of tho terribb n Mow which the fire was striking a s their loved ones. s lloth were manly boys, with largi i- numbers of relatives and it lends ii 3 their part of the county. Their un o timely and tragic deaths rue a sourc, y of great sorrow and bereavement t< o the community. e 4 Have Located Him at Last, From a description and a photo graph, the man who registered at tl\ Hotel As'or in New YorK as Mauric n Stuart an! shot himself through th y h> art on November G was uuofllrlall h identified Monday'as Edward West moreland Darret, who had raid h i- was the head of the company bearln a his name of London. , ^ Daughter Kills Her Father. With a loaded shotgun in hi if hands and uttering threats to ki ? the whole family, Frank Young, 5 r- years old, was shot down and Ir o stantly killed by liU daughter, Mn r. Vlarlon Mills, at flxo' latter e hom near Flint, Mich./Monday. BATTLE WITH OUTLAWS. Two Member# of Sheriff's l'osse Killed in New Mexico. Sheriff Stevens of Luna county, New Mexico, arrived at Engie Monday morning with the bodies of Tom ? I ill 1 and A1 Smithers, members of his posse who were hilled near Engle while attempting to arrest three outlaws who escaped from Doming jail on November 7. They also brought with them the body of the leader of he outlaws, whom they killed and hose name is unknown. The out'aws were surrounded Sunday at a ranch house while at dinner. They rode out to meet tlie posse. Suddenly hey dropped from their horses and opened fire, killing Tom Hull and Smithers. The posse returned the tire, killing the leader and wounding wo other men who escaped to the mountains. TWO Jvl lihlOD IX AI TO. \ Man and a Woman L?osc Their f ives in Atlanta. Charles Griffin of Atlanta Mid Mrs. \. E. Nelson of Birmingham were killed in Atlanta Thursday .night in m automobile accident when their ear, in attempting to get out of the i .1 way of a trolley car, swerve i aim ran into a telephone pole. Three other members of the party escaped without njury. The accident occurred 011 tlie "death curve" of Peach tree street. The headlight of the trolley car, it is said, blinded Charles Brady, the negro chauffeur of the automobile, causing him to lose control of his car. When the machine struck a telephone pole Griffin and Mrs. Nelson were pitched out 00 tlioir heads, suffering injuries from which they died a few minutes later. *+ VICKY CONSIDERATE Jl'PGE. * Sentence Man to Prison a u\c 1 li 111 a Bible. At Chattanooga, Tenn., In overruling a motion for a new trial and formally sentencing Joe Saulsbery to the penitentiary for life for the mur dor of Nicholas Shentzen, the hermit of Alloona, Judge .1. A. Bilbo at Gadsden presented the prisoner with a Bible, in making the presentation the judge said: "Within the pages of this book you v.*i 11 find promises certain and sure that your sins, though they be as scarlet, can be made as white as snow. I commend the book to your careful study." SUGGS ABDUCTED A GIRL. Arrested in Darlington and Carried Back to Florence. Winston L. Suggs, a white man about 2 8 years of age, was arrested in Darlington Tuesday, charged with abducting a young white girl who i3 a member of a well known family of Florence. Suggs was taken up on a warrant issued by the mother of the child, and taken to Florence for a hearing. A preliminary was held he- ' fore 'Magistrate McClenegan, and Suggs was committed to Jail to await trial. It is stated that Suggs mar ried into a prominent family in Florence. ?* Come to the Cotton Field*. The negroes of Charleston are still calling for aid for the storm sufferers on the islands and in the city while for some months we have seen the appeals to them to get out and do the work that is waiting on them in every community around them and it would not he necessary for them to appeal for charity. Why don't they come to the cotton fields, where they are needed. I.ad Crushed to Death. .T. R. Taylor, a white lad of about eight years, was struck and i killed by a freight ear on the Southern Railway, in Newberry Tucs day afternoon. The little boy, the I son of Mrs. Josephine Taylor, of the . Newberry Cotton Mills, was on his ? way to the city to buy a spool of thread. t More Deaths Than Ilirths. 3 The serious attention of the public - has again been called to the popula/ tion question in Franco, by the pub ? lication of official statistics. These f, cover the first six months in 1011 and show an excess of death over e births of 18,279. The figures are all n the more discouraging from the fact - that for the same period in 1010 the o births exceeded the death by 21,181 0 Train Kills Mule nnd Horse, Southern passenger train from Columbia to Charlotte ran into a wagor I. with a mule and horse to it an (, loaded with negroes at Nazarenc 0 crossing, south of Rock Hill, .-'atur c day evening, killing both the horse v and mule hnd injuring Hill Lumpkin , a negro, who was driving, and twe e negro women. C Eleven Miners Killed Eleven miners were killed and an other badly injured by the fall Mon s day of a rock in a potash mine ii II Lh0 district, belonging to the Prus 0 -dan government. i- ? 3. Toddy launches his president la e boomlot by snuggling close up to tk< trusts. COIION GINNED Up to th? Middle of November Breakes All Former Giouiig Records. THE RLF08T BV STATES ? Over ICIevcn and a Quarter Million Hales of Cotton dinned and Packed This Season, Which is a Million and a Half More Than Any <)1 her. In no previous year lias so much cotton been ginned to November 13 ^ t h ^ 11/AO/Nf) OA icon { ll Pk iit> IIU1 lllg I in; (M L'DCil 1, odjow.i, ....v. census bureau's report showing a total of 11,209,980 bales, which is almost a million and a half bales more than was ginned to that date in the record year of 1904. The feature of today's report, however, was the figure for Georgia, which shows 2,103,979 bales had been ginned to November 14. This quantity of cotton is more than evegrown in Georgia before and by the time the final ginning reports are received it will have far surpassed the previous crops of any year. Every cotton State except Mississippi and Oklahoma showed a greater amount of cotton ginned than during tlie past two years. While the total was greater than any omor year, me umuuui gmueu between November 1 and 13 this year was not so large as that ginned last year during that time. Only 1,299,08 1 bales were ginned tbis year compared with 1,359,279 bales ginned during the period a year ago. The census bureau's fifth cotton ginning report of the season, issue! at 10 a. m. today, and showing the number of running bales, counting round as half bales, of cotton of the growth of 1911 ginned prior to November 13, with comparativa statistics to tlie corresponding date for the past three years, is as follows: United States ? 1 1,269,980 bales, compared with 8,780,433 bales last year, when 7 5.9 per cent of the entire crop was ginned prior to November 14; S, 11 2,1 99 bales in 1 909, when 80.5 per cent was ginned, and 9,595,809 bales in 190S, when 73,3 per cent was ginned. Ginning by States, with comparative statistics and the percentage of .he total crop ginned to November 14 in previous years, follows: Alabama?1,198,191 bales, compared with 895,S94 bales last year, when 75.1 per cent was ginned; 8 0 5,849 bales in 1 909, when 77.5 per cent was ginned, and 1,020,7 24 bales In 190S, when 70.6 per cent was ginned. Arkansas?5 02,5 4 2 hales, compared with 4 79,1 22 bales last year, when 6 0 per cent was ginned; 557,857 bales in 1 909, when 80 per cent was ginned, and 665,232 bales in 1 908, when 00.8 per cent was ginned. Florida?65,23 8 bales, compared with 4 0,84 7 bales last year, when G9.7 per cent was ginnodd 51,612 bales in 1 909, when 83.4 per cent was ginned, and 51,4 97 bales in 1908, when 7 2.9 per cent was ginned. Georgia?2,1 03,979 bales, compared with 1,436,997 bales last year, when 79.3 per cent was ginned; 1 ,r. r. o s?s hnips in 1 909. when 84.3 per cent was ginned, and 1,564,03 7 hales in 1008, when 70.1 per cent was ginned. Louisiana?268,4 08 hales, compared with 183,818 bales last year, when 7 4.5 per cent was ginned; 2 17,4 33 bales in 1 000, when 8 4.1 per cent was ginned, and 34 1,953 bales in 100, when 73.3 per cent was ginned. Mississippi ? 7 20,7 4 8 bales, compared with 759,1 52 bales last year, when 62.6 per cent was ginned; 73 1,354 hales in 1 0 09, when 68.2 per cent was ginned, and 1,086,183 hales in 1908, when 67 per cent was ginned. North Carolina?71 5,53 7 bales, compared with 4 9 4,920 bales last year, when 65.7 per cent was ginned; 166,797 bales in 1 909, when 73.7 per cent was ginned, and 4 5 1,43 4 bales _ , r. o r /? trno ill I !) U OI \V II I. II UU JJtl villi ? ac ginned. , Oklahoma?656,106 bales, compared with 7 27,65 4 bales last year, when 7b. I per cent was ginned; 4 7 6,471 bales In 1909, when 86.2 per*cent was ginned, and 3 22,051 bales in 1908, when 73.3 per cent was ginned South Carolina?1,1 64,1 4 9 bales, compared with 888,291 hales las! ' year, when 73.4 per cent was ginned; 91 3,440 bales in 1909, when SO.3 pei cent was ginned, and 938,926 balet ' in 19 0S, when 77.2 per cent wai ginned. Tonnesce?2 6 4,83 0 bales, conn pared with 192,213 bales last year | when 59.9 per cent was ginned; 183, 529 bales in 1909, when 76.2 per cen! was ginno I, nilci naies n 10OS, when 72.0 per cent was ginned 1 Texas 2,4 78,802 bales, compare' ' with 2,020 000 bales last year, wber ) 89.4 per cent was ginned; 2,1 04,321 bales in 1 000, when 85.2 per cent was ginned, and 2,803,528 bales ir 1008, when 78.0 per cent was ginned All other States 71,390 bale: - compared with 38,820 bales l ist year l when 4 5.8 per rent was ginned; 43, - 700 bales in 100 0, when 7 0 per cen was ginned, and 46,751 bales in 1008 when C3.0 per cent was ginned. 1 * t* Teddy wants to supplant his mai i Friday now. CUSfrtFlfct) com MM Wanted?To purchase ash and yellow poplar logs. Tarver-McMillan Lumber Company, Savannah, Ga. Good Farm for Sal#*?near town, and and graded school. Write for par- J tlculars. W. H. Parrish, Coats N. C. For Sale?Two-year old roses. Heavenly blue violet plants and Azaleas. Azalea Gardens, 13ox 85, Summervlllee, S. C. established 1704. D. A. Walker, 15U Meeting St., Charleston, S. C. Marble and granite works, Iron and Wire fencing. Send for prices. For Sale?Trained coon and oppoo6uin Hounds, Red Hone Fox and Cat Hounds, trained Pointers and 'Setters. M. L. Crawford, Tiger, i Fgiis Waited?Ship us your liens, chickens and geeee. We guarantee you the highest market prices, j (). I). Sires's &. Co., Charleston, t S. C. i The Ciirncaii Pigeon is Iho greatest money-maker of all poultry. Special Jow j)rices, also Racing Pigeons for sale. Write: Fancy Stock , Yards, Columbia, S. C. Bookkeeping or Shorthand $25. j Combined Course, $65. Subjects' taught by Specialists. Address the! Greensboro Commercial School, Greensboro X. C. for literature. Southwest Georgia Farm, and pecan lands. Any sized tracts. Best country in the world. Write for illus- 1 trated booklet today. FlowersParker Realty Co. Thomasville, Ga. " Fine Farm Lands for sale?Write C. M. Simmons, Blakeley, Ga., for [ best locations and prices on ideal farms; laige and email in Early i and joining counties; soutuwefrt Georgia. For Sale?Pure Breed Pekin Ducks. ( White Sherwood Chickens, Rhode Island Reds. Plymouth Rocks (Barred) at $4.00 for trio of either. Address Mrs Mary E. Littlejohn, Jonesville, S. C. Pillows Free?Mail us $10.00 for 20pound Feather Bed and receive 0pound pair Pillows, freight prepaid. New feathers, best ticking, satisfaction guaranteed. Agents wanted. Turner & Corn well, Feather Dealers, Charlotte, N. C. Eggs to Set from my beautiful Rhode Island Reds. 15 for $2.00, have Rnmn rheanor. ('hicks. 25c each. Orders received now for future delivery. Address W. W. Moyle, Charlotte, N. C. 11-10-3 Wanted?Men to take thirty day's practical course In our machine shops and learn automobile business. Positions securer, graduates. $20 per week and up. Charlotte Auto School, Charlotte, N. C. Hardwood Logs and Lumber wanted. We are cash buyers of poplar, Ash, Cypress and Gum Lumber. Also want Poplar, Hickory, Cedar and Walnut Logs. Inspection at your point. Write for prices. Savannah Valley Lumber Company, Augusta, Ga. Christmas P?o\?DO Toys for $1.00. Fifty assorted /and novel toys worth $3.00. Size 2 to D inches for .baby boy and girl Satisfqfction guaranteed or money refunded. Shipped prepaid upon receipt of $1.00 Import Novelty Company, 201 Broadway, N. Y. City. Complete Course hi Automobile construction driving, repairing. Graduates assisted in getting employment. Best equipped auto school in South. Graduates getting $15 to $4 0 weekly. Write for particulars. Automobile School, 108110 Liberty St., Savannah, Ga. Well Broken Beagles and large Rabbit Hounds, Fox Hounds, Coon Hogs, Setters and Pointers; young dogs of above breeds partly , trained; also pups, Boston Bulls, Fox, Black and Tan Terriers and Bull Terriers, Poodles, Spaniels, Collies, St. Bernards, Newfoundlands, Great Danes. As represented or money refunded. Ilarry , Reedcr, Thorndalc, Pa. 5 Bains I)o Much Damage. Farmers in all sections of Monroe ? county, Georgia., are complaining ol ' heavy lossage in cotton because ol ' iho excessive rains of the past sev1 oral clays. Those rains have boon general throughout the county, and ' large quantities of cotton have been 1 washed from the bolls. ? Toddy will be an easy mark foi the Democrats to boat next year. 3 "Pulleys! Pulleys! Pull \ t Largest stock of Steel Split Woo< Puiloys with Interchangeable bushli At least favor us with your Inquiries COLUMBIA 8UI i 823 West nervals Street. f / EMM DON'T SUFFER WITH I It is the most distressing and dis.ournging of nil troubles. Nine cases out "of ten can be cured by Noah's Liniment. Where the.e is no swelling or fever a few applications will relieve you. It penetrates? does not evaporate like other rem e die??rccj uirco little n rubbing. n J Ncnh'i Liniment I* I iio best remedy for D f Itluumati in, Sciatica, Lamo back, Stiff H f Joints and MubcIoh, Sore Throat, Colds, H j Strains, Sprains, Cuts, _ * j t i.. < ..<*, v>r'|!wj an I nil Ncrvo, bono %? |m|| a:, ! Mu." lo Ai lion ami ?V 1 1 "r " ; '-.v.j | p:ic.;a",o tin 1 looks like ftTjjJjjWfK b.i.id 0:1 Cant of pack- nmfl ir"i a a 1 "Njah'a l.ini- Ml'l! $rfl m jnt" always l:i KED ' j Ink. ]>t".varo of l::ilta- -Mi > t or,:'. Lar;o bottle, 25 ^ 0*fy" ice its, nn ! sold by all mkih**? v$v d.-.xlers in mod lei no. "rtrvl/.Tt tTT* jyH (itiaran'.ocd or money ^ I f II II d <_ d by i?'nlll vo? a,,, arvun 'Mi J II fined y Co., Inc., .<*3 1 - ? [tegjafp Ti;\(.i:i>ii:s ox tiiiktkhntii. \ Two Suicides and Murder Occur at Hopkinsvillc. Numerous tragedies marked tho passing of (lie night of the 13th in Ilopkinsville, Ky. Mamie Williams, a pretty girl who went there from I leech wood, killed herself. Calvin Allen, aged 4 5, killed himself by swallowing laudanum. Millie Moore was fatally shot by George Sanders, said to have ben an admirer whoso attentions she did not seriously regard. Tom Young and John Winn, ^ residents of the outlying country, plunged over a rock quarry bluff. Young was instantly killed and Winn is dying. jjjjF 3 jfl ill j >u?rtw? ??> n'i? ??.. i ; J jJI r? mm , 1 j Rl KtU) mi ?iu (jj | < MCOMM tO? | 1 | I m ?-<**"* 1 i J at IM Mk KIM 1|| V 1 OAH StMtOT CO. | ( mmw. ?k u ? ^ ' 1 Every Horse Owner j drce/la that most dangerous d incase, Colin, ? Bo prepared for an emertte'cy by having ^ a l>ottl? of Noah's Colic Krmcdy on hand. ' More animals dlo from Colic than all other non-contagious diseases combined. Nine out of every ten cases woulu h?ve In-en t cured If No?h'? Colic Remedy hud been given in time. It Isn't n drench or dope, but is a remedy firiven on the tongue. to simple thut a woman or child ran give it. //it faila to cure, your money will l>? i ofunded. If your dealer cannot aupply : ou iitnd f>Oc in stamps ^nd wo will mail j ! t bottle. 9 Noah Remedy Co.. Inc.. Richmond. Vs. THE BAILEY-LEBBY CO ^^>^RtySS?R r ROOF/NS' CHARLESTON, S. C. . ? i 1 ???? ? Killed in Wreck of Train, Engineer W. A. Kinney was killed, Eireman Ed Townes, colored, seriously injured, and the mail clerks and passengers were badly shaken np when Southern railway train No.37, , from Washington to New Orleans, was derailed between Benaja and Reidsville, about 20 miles north of ' Greensboro, N. C. This is one of the finest trains in lhe South. i ?* \ Shoots Hrother l>y Acc ident. Itobert England, eight years of ago, was accidentally shot and hilled i Thursday afternoon at Port Tampa I Ci'y by his brother Tom, 13 years i old. fl he boys had gone in search of a cow, carrying a gun witn them. Tho f gun was discharged, the full load of * shot entering tho younger brother's head. I cys! Pulleys! Pulleys." 1 split and Universal Cast Iron Split a gs, carried. Let us have your order*, >. ?PLY COMPANY, Colombia, 8. CI