The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, March 07, 1912, Image 6
I
BANK Of
Conwa
Has largest capital and surplus of i
than the combined capital and surf
CAPITAL STOCK. . ..
SURPLUS
LIABILITIES OF STOCt
SECURITY OF DEPOSIT
DIRE(
.>bert B. Scarborough,
. L. Buck,
Jeorge J. Holiday,
We offer our customers every acc
will justify, and we
T 1
robert b. boarborough, l
President.
We continue to pay 5 pe
PROFESSIONAL CAJKL38.
H. H. WOOL) WAKD
Attorney and Councolor At
CONWAY, 8. C.
T, .
JA. Li. SCAliliKOLtiB
CONWAY, S. t.
Attorncj at Law.
'.J
H. H. ULitHOLOHK
^hyHician and Surgeon.
CONWAY, H. C.
Si. WOFFOIID WAIX.
Attorne j at L?w.
Rank of Horry Iluilding.
CONWAY, 8. C.
RENE RAVEXEL
Rand Surveying
and
Drainage
Spivey Ruilding Conway, S. C.
HE WORLDS GREATEST SEWING MACHINE
k JLIGHT RUNNING ^
llfyoa wantrlthora VlbrotlnRShuttle, RotaiV
Ell, ..4. 1,. ? Uln/.lA'l<l.4m.,l f/Tl l.nin ii.'Kl
OUUU.1C VI a J IIIVUU wwv.^
Sewing Machine write to
MIEW HOME SEWING MACHINE CQMPAI*
Orange* Mass*
Mfcoy?ewfne machine* are marie to ?eMreffardlea?#
*a*lkr. but the Xctv Homo Is made to wem
Out guaranty never runt out
iMMI tOf Authorized dealers MdUL]
v foa eaiji as j
BURROUGHS tk COLLINS CO.,
Oomvay, 8. C.
CHIN ICS IS WORM IIAS Tl'RNKI).
The Now Republic Demands Redress
From Holland.
Chinese warships have been ordered
to Java under instructions to
begin a bombardment of Batavia if
the Dutch government does not pay
an indemnity demanded for the killing
of Chinese by Dutch soldiers. In
an ultimatum sent to the Dutch government
yesterday. Dr. Sun Yat Sen,
provisional president, stated that an
attack on Java would be begun if the
indemnity wore not paid within a
week.
Dr. Sun declared in his ultimatum
that passports would he handed to
the Dutch minister, who is said to he
at Sbankhai, en route to Peking, if
the indemnity was not paid. The
three cruisers which left Sbankhai
are the Hal Chan, the Hai Yuhe and
Ilai Sun.
They were fully provisioned and
equipped, under orders of Wonp
Chung Wei, minister of war. Adin
ili n Phlncfio 11 n U'SMfl nor hoi'(
VHX* iv uh: M i uv ^ ^ ..w..
declare that the attack on the Chi
nese by Dutch soldiers was made
without provocation and that three
Chinese were killed and many othori
J , arrested.
?
"Pointing with pride" and "we do
mand" will bo terms much in evi
dence during the coming month*
when political parties frame then
platforms.
X
r HORRY,
y. S, C.
iny bank in Horry county. Morr
)lus of all other banks in the county.
160,000
12,600
^HOLDERS .. .. 60,000
ORS .112,600
:iors
ARDSON 1
W. A. Johnson,
Will A. Freeman
ommoclation which their account*
? 1 ? ti/Mic Un.inpat
3UI1U11 Jf KJUl uuomvwwt
). V. Richardson, will a. freem^i
Vice President. ..Cashi**)
r cent, on yearly deposits.
WHAT SENATOR TILLMAN SAYS.
?.
Gives Advice in Choosing Delegates
From South Carolina.
Senator Tillman recently gave out
tho following:
"in view of the fact that I am a
member of the democratic national
committee and have been since 1892,
and have attended every national convention
except that at Denver, during
the last 20 years, it may not bo Improper
for me to express my views on
the coming convention at Baltimore.
"I believe the South Carolina delegation
should go uninstructed as far
as candidates are concerned; that has
been the custom with our people so
long that it is almost a rule. Let tho
state convention select good, representative
men and instruct them to
look over the field and determine
what candidate they will support by
bailot among themselves, and the
chairman can announce the results.
In this way the state will wield an
" i-i-l- 1,1 1. ?
miiuence wmcu wuum uc nni<uo?iuic
if each delegate should vote his individual
preference.
"But 1 am more concerned lest the
fight on local issues shall result In
embittering the situation in the state
more than it now is. State politics
should not govern the selection of
delegates and it would be unfortunate
if the delegates to Baltimore are
elected to do any one man's bidding;
in other words, we do not want a
Bleaso delegation, a Jones delegation
or a Tillman delegation, but a delegation
alive to the best interests of the
democratic party and that only. We
have, in my opinion, the best chance
to elect a democratic president since
the war. I never regarded Cleveland's
administration as democratic,
and I do want to live long enough
to see a democratic president inaugurated.
If we make no mistake in
the nomination, we are bound to
win."
MULES KILLED BY WIRE.
A Farmer Lost Two Animals anil
Was Shocked Himself.
W. B. Keenan, a Cherokee farmer,
who lives in the Midway section of
the county, suffered the misfortune
to lose two mules Monday morning,
the animals being killed by a broken
I electric wire. Mr. Keenan was en
route to Cleffney, bringing a load of
I wood. He had alighted from the
wagon and was walking behind.
When a.bout three miles from Gafftiey,
at the point where the main
power linos of the Dravo Power company
cross the public road, he saw
one of the mules rear up as though
frightened and fall heavily to the
ground. The other mule acted In
the same manner. Mr. Keenan ran
to them and attempted to get one
of them up, but when he touched the
animal he was almost knocked o!T
his feet. It was then that he discovered
the fallen wire. It is pronttble
that the power company will reimburse
him for the mules.
FHKKZU TO DKATH IX TKXAS.
?- _
Man and Woman Die in Ylliz/ard
That Swept the State.
Two persons were frozen to death
in the blizzard which swept the Panhandle
of Texas Sunday. A searching
party which Wednesday started
out when a report reached Dallas
that Mrs. M. Joseph Sayler, wife of
a ranchman, had disappeared, returned
at midnight that night with
her body. She had wandered 14
miles on the frozen range before she
1 succumbed to the cold. Mrs. Sayler
had started out In search of her hus'
band, who was attending to stock.
The second death from exposure to
i the storm was reported at Romero,
Tex., 4 0 miles west of Dalhart. The
I namo of tho man frozen to (leatn is
>r not known.
Tlie delegates who are elected to
-Mho national convention represent the
s people of the State, and not them3
selves. Therefore, the people have a
3 perfect right to instruct those delegates
who to vote for.
South Carolina favors a progres
sive Democrat for the presidential
? candidate, and no delegate should be
p sent from this State who will not vote
I for such a candidate.
/
Tim HOOKWORM.
Dr. T. A. Asbby Sajra 5,dOO Caws
Bxlil In S*Itlnior?,
"I am convinced that If an accurate
diagnosis could be made 5,000
j^aaos of hookworm would be found
in Baltimore elty and between 10,000
and 15,000 cases In the State
outside."
i This startling statement was made
by Dr. T. A. Ashby, one of the most
prominent physicians of the city and
a member of the Maryland House of
i Delegates two years ago, says The
Baltimore Sun.
"While Maryland Is spending millions
of dollars In building roads,
bringing Immigrants to the State and
in other forms of industrial development
it is losing an Incalculable
amount annually by neglecting the
health of Its people," Dr. Ashby continued.
Ho declared that he was greatly
intorosted In an address on tho hook
worm delivered Friday night by Dr.
Charles W. Stiles, of the marine hospital
service, who told of the ravages
of the disease in the South.
"It is true," said Dr. Ashby, "that
but few cases have been treated in
this State, but that is because hundreds
of persons are suffering and
dying from this disease every year
without knowing what is the matter
with them.
"Our physicians have not been
trained in diagnosis and they are
treating those suffering from hookworm
for some other disease. This
disease, which is so prevalent in the
South, is sapping the life of our people.
It arrests development and
when children have it they are either
unable to go to school or are in
such poor physical and mental health
that they are not benefited by going.
"Men and women are unfitted by
this disease to do the work they
should do. Their earning power is
thus decreased and instead of being
producers and thus adding to the
wealth of the community they are
an expense.
"Cure of hookworm trouble is not
difficult. Until the disease reacnes
an advanced stage it can be cured in
from one to five days. The principal
cause of this ailment is lack of
sanitation. It is not contagious as
tuberculosis is, but is carried in
food stuffs, by flies or may get in
through the skin. Children walking
barefoot over noil that is infected
with the hookworm parasite are liable
to infection.
"Hookworm is a tropical trouble
and was brought to this country by
the negroes. The worm is a little
parasite which finds its way into the
intestinal canal, leads to arrested development
and perverted nutrition.
While it is spreading among all
classes in the South, it is found
largely among the negroes. Remove
this disease and the morals of the
blacks will be improved.
"In the Southern States last year
140,000 canes of hookworm were
treated and cured. It is estimated
that there are 2,000,000 cases of this
disease in the South. It can readily
he seen what a drain upon our resources
this is.
"What we plead for is more liberality
foward our State board of
health. There is an urgent need in
every county of this State for a sanitary
officer who shall have absolute
power to enforce lawn regarding sanitation.
These officials should be
appointed by the board and paid
from the State treasury.
"I firmly believe that with proper'
aid on the part of the State, hookworm
could be eradicated and other
communicable diseases greatly reduced.
We seek to induce immigrants
to settle in Maryland In order to
build up our waste land, while
through a false spirit of economy we
are permitting our own people to suffer
from diseases which prevent them
from being useful citizens. While,
of course, I nm interested in aiding I
these people from the humanitarian
standpoint, yet if not for that reason
then at least from the economic
standpoint the State should he willing
to help.
"What I have said of hookworm
holds good for other diseases. It is
difficult to convince the people at
large that by a parsimonious attitude
on the part of the State toward
the State board of health, hundreds
of lives are sacrifled and thousands
of dollars lost annually."
Thirteen Rebels Killed.
Thirteen rebels were killed and
many wounded in a battle with State
troops fought at Tonaya, near San
Oabriel, Mexico, Jalisco, Tuesday.
The fedoral troops lost one killed and
three wounded.
So far as the old Tillmanites arc
concerned Judge Jones has a greater
claim on them than Governor Blease.
Tho Judge has always been true to
the Senator while tho Governor has
at times wavered in his allegiance.
Will Fly Across Ocean.
Harry N. At wood's proposed flight
across tho Atlantic Is no longer an
unformed plan. He said in .May it
the weather conditions will permit
lie declares he expects to cover the
distance to Ireland in thirty hours.
May Hntcr Knee.
Former Senator John L. McLaurlr
is quoted as threatening to enter the
race for governor in the event thai
Gov. Bilease vetoes the warehouse bir
?j , ^ - ,< BP I
MAN WHO CAN WIN
GARDNER THINKS WILSON CAN
CARRY THE COUNTRY
?
POPULAR IN HIS STATE
i
?
TJio Maine Senator Says the Now Jersey
Governor is Ono Man Who Can
Defeat the Accomplished Faker,
? i
Teddy Roosevelt, in tne :>'exi itm>
idcntial Election This Fall.
That Roosevelt if pitted against
either Clark or Underwood, would
have an easy chance to sweep the
country, and that Gov. Woodrow Wilson
is the only Democratic candidate
who would have a fighting chance if
nominated to carry Maine are two
sharp expressions taken from an interview
with United States Senator
Obadiah Gardner of Maine, In whloh
he gives his reasons for believing the ,
New Jersey executive the most available
man In the party, and pledges
his support to him as the man who
can win.
"If the Republicans nominate a
progressive, like Col. Roosevelt, and
the Democrats nominate a conservative,
like Mr. Oscar Underwood or
Speaker Clark, the colonel, who is the
most successful faker I have ever
seen, and who now has Ills curricu- '
luni full of progressive policies which
lie lias borrowed from William Jennings
Bryan, will have every chance
to swoep the country overwhelmingly.
"Gov. Wilson is the man who can
win, because he is the representative
candidate In the field. By representative
I mean showing the characteristics
of no single class alone, but
typifying the virtues of many classes
and representing them in his desire
to lead all along the path of pro" "Of"
with annul atiiA nnrl ranldlt.T.
ft* ? ? 1 .
"Personally I havm a great deal of
admiration for Mr. Underwood, but
this does not deter me from seeing
:hat he can not rightly be classed a
progressive. He is a conservative,
and a conservative candidate that cam .
win for either party this year.
"I consider Speaker Clark a progressive
conservative, but not a progressive,
and for this reason not a
candidate who can win in the coming ,
presidential fight.
"In presidential campaigns the
shadowy visions which are products
of the imagination often have as
tnuch or more weight thf?n the real
issues on which the fight should be
decided. This must be borne in mind
in nonfinating the Democratic candidate.
"Woodrow Wilson is not put forward
as the favorite son of any State.
He is advanced as a man wnu, without
making any appeal to any section,
can win for the party. He is being
recognized as such a man everywhere,
and nowhere more so than In
my own State of Maine.
"Recently I had an opportunity to
sound the sentiment of the people in
every section of the State, without
expressing myself at all. I round
that on an average there were Tour
Wilson men for every man who favored
any other candidate.
J "The last State campaign has convinced
the Democratic national committee
that we can carry Maine In
0 presidential election. The year that
Taft was elected the Republicans carried
Maine by a slender majority of
3,000 votes after spending more than
$200,000 in the last week before
election day. The Democratic State
committee all through the campaign
had never had as much as $1,200 in
its treasury.
"We want to carry Maine this
year and to do this we need the impetus
of a winning national campaign.
Woodrow Wilson's fight will
he such a campaign.
"He is the only man in the country
who would have a fighting chance
to carry the State against Roosevelt.
"Personally, I favor Governor Wilson's
candidacy for many reasons.
"From studying his record in New
Jersey and at Princeton university, I
have been convinced that he was a
high type of scholar-statesman; that
was before I saw him.
"The first time I saw Gov. Wilson
was at the Jackson Day banquet. He
was there with all of the other Democratic
possibilities, including darkhorses,
except Underwood. One claim
1 make for myself that I am a keen
judge of human nature.
"That night from seeing Gov. Wilson,
literally beside the nien who, it
was known were to he his rivals, I
? ? nf his sunerioritv. and
>v aa tun ? iuvvx. x - from
that night, had I not already
decided to support him, he would
have been my candidate.
"By the side of the others he
seemed magnificent, broad and sane,
1 he i,s the man who can win for the
Democratic party, and I am for him
for this reason."
Murdered by Two Negroes.
At Gallipolis, O., Peter Sorrier, a
prominent farmer, was murdered and
' his home robbed and then burned in
4 an attempt to cover the crime. Two
f negro suspects were arrested after
1 ?he bloodhound? trailed them^
CLASSIFIED
Cow IVtts, Soys, Velvet Beans, Cotton
Seeds?Get catalogue. Willet Seed
Company, Augusta, Ga.
Boys, Girls?Send stamp for 3 6-page
Illustrated Catalogue. Klrtland
& Company, Deep Itiver, Conn.
ltcduce Your Fat?Send a two cent
stamp for particulars. Address
Sheldon Polish Company, Sheldon,
Mo.
Kellerstrass Crystal White Orpingtons.
Famous layers. Eggs $3.00
for 15. Harry P. Shaw, Gaffney,
S. C.#
Early Sweet Potato Plants. Best
varieties. Descriptive circular
free. Bass Pecan Company, Lumberton,
Miss.
For Hale-?Cow Peat, Chufas, Soja
Beans, N. C. Peanuts, etc. Write
for special price list. Hickory
Seed Co., Hickory, N. C.
See Europe at the cost of a summer's
acation. Parties being enrolled
now. For circulars, etc., write Jas.
Izlar Sims, Orangeburg, S. C.
Crushed Stone, any size, any quantity.
Prompt shipment from Columbia,
S. C. Write or wire for prices.
Marshall and Spencer Co., Jacksonville,
Fla.
Crystal White Orpingtons, from ivellerstrass,
$50 pen. Eggs, $3.00 per
15. Cockerels $3.00 each. " Beale
Poultry Yards, 910 E. Park Ave.,
Savannah, Ga.
For Sale?Planting Seed. Long Staple
Upland Cotton at $1.50 per
bushel. For further information
apply J. R. Young & Company, Box
4 13, Charleston, S. C.
For Sale?(Will sell the rest of my
celebrated Columbia Long Staple
Cotton Seed for 75c per bushel.
Address R. IL Cuthbort, Summerrille,
S. C., Box 144.
Printing Press Free?Send names
and adresses of six boys under 15
yearn of age and get a Press,
FREE. Gage Mfg. Co., Dept. P10,
RJlsdon Sta., Chicago, 111.
Ship (>. I). Siren it Company, Charleston,
S. C., your poultry and eggs.
Cane Syrup, Butter, Hides, Skins,
Beeswax, etc. Highest prices paid.
TOO bnshrls improved Pulnot Cotton
Seed finest lot planting seed to
be found. Tields 2 bales per acre,
1 bu., $1.00, 5 bu., 90c, f. o. b. Athena,
Ga., Route 2. S. P. Kenney.
Agents Wanted?Big money to hustler
in every South Carolina town,
selling real estate. Write for free
lot offer. Columbia Realty Co.,
Southern Bldg., Washington, D. C
10,000 White and Brown Leghorn
Cockerels and laying Pullets. Bred
for egg production. Poultry farms
supplied with birds. Prices reasonable.
American Poultry Plant,
Cleveland, Ohio.
' %
.Maternity Sanitarium?Private, refined,
homelike, limited number of
patients cared for; homes provided
for infants; infants for adoption.
Mrs. M. T. Mitchell, 2 6 Windsor
Street, Atlanta, Ga.
Cotton Seed?Cook's Improved Big
Boll, grown from pure seed, ginned
on farm; makes 1 to 2 bales per
acre; lint 4 0 lbs. per hundred;
opens early. Price $1.50 per bu.
J. H. Barnett, Westminster, S. C.
ftggs Tor i laicinng, a m
$1.50 per setting of 15; three settings,
$4. A fair hatch guaranteed.
Varieties: Barred Rocks.
Buff Orpingtons, S. C. Brown Leghorns
and S. C. R. I. Reds. C. M.
Mahone, Unadilla, Ga.
Acme Long Staple Cotton Seed, $1.00
b., ten bushels or over, yield equal
to Short Staple. Past. two years
gold for 18 l-2c to 27c. Poland
China pigs and boors, immune
from cholera, for sale by R. C.
Commander, Florence, S. C.
Eggs for Sale?Your hens don't lay?
I have single comb brown leghorns,
prize winners, bred to lay. $1.25
per 15 eggs. Mammoth Pekln
Ducks, fine stock. $1.25 per 11
eggs. I brod no stock akin. J.
L. Phillips, Orangeburg, S. C.
The Southern Commercial Bureau Is
a business clearing house?supplying
business men with high grade
help of every kind; and furnishing
clerks, stenographers, bookkeepers,
and other salaried people with positions
suited to their ability. Write
for particulars. Room 20, Carolina
Bank Building, Columbia, S. C.
Lain! at Auction?We sub-divide land
into town lots, or largo farms into
small tracts, and soil at auction,
We do vigorous, up-to-date advertising,
and with our force of auctioners,
advertisers and ground
men (the best in the South), wt
get the best results possible, and
get it quick. We sell in 10 States
If you want to convert your prop
erty into cash and interest bearing
notes, write or wire us. E. M
Andrews, Manager, Southern Rpal
ty & Auction Co., Greensboro, N
C.
Candy Cigarettes Kill Hoy,
Fred Miller, 12 years old, o
Stroudsburg, Pa., is dead as the re
suit of eating candy cigarettes. H
ate two boxes, of the "cigarettes,1
which are of the length and patteri
of the kind which are smoked, am
was taken ill immediately afterward
with all symptoms of poisoning.
%
AD COLUMN I I
Genuine Indian Kauner Ducklings
and ?ggs. Order now. Brentwood
Poultry Farm, Claremont, Va.
Buff Orpington Iggi sad Chicks; i.
splendid lajers. Write for folder..
Mrs. J. D. Davis, Fremont, N. C.
First class frait trees cheap, write*
for catalogue,agents wanted. Catawba
County Nursery, Newton,.
N. C.'
Choice S. C. Buff Orpington Cockerels,
and Pullets, each, $2. Eggs, 15
for $1.50. A. Perkins, South Hill* w
Va. '
Free Wholesale Catalogue Jewelry
new book novelties, etc. Fagan
& Co., 450A Bank Building,.
Barnesboro, Pa.
Kellerstrass Strata Chrystal White*
/V * 1 Dr/vn a nurd tft W. A.
wrpingiuan t/n/k? ? ??. - ? ...
E. Fort, Marion Junction, Ala., for %
booklet containing useful information.
Cabbage riant*?Frost-proof. From,
best seed obtainable. Orders,
filled promptly. F. H. Marsh,
Marsh ville, N. C., Route 2, $1.00
per thousand.
Haperh (iolden RulT Orpingtons, Imported
stock. Eggs from Spocial
Matirigs, $3.00, Utility $1.50. Mating
List free. Elk-Villa Poultry
Yards, Elkin, N. C.
liaseball Uniforms Free.?Send for
24 needlebooks, sell thorn, return
proceeds, and we will nonet you
baseball uniform. Needlework:
Co., Asheville, N. C., Desk 5. ^
Frost Proof Selected Cabbage Plants,
bunched, correctly counted. $1.25
per thousand delivered In South
Carolina and North Carolina. En
ornrlu. Plant f!n.. MfilTlTOttS. S. C.
For Sale?Two hundred bushels
"Hank Account" Cotton Seed. Produces
more lint and better than
anj other. J 1.25 per bushel. Order
at once of L. Ii. Simons, St.
George, S. C.
For Sale?Eggs from best White Orpingtons
to he had; prize winners
wherever entered. Three and five
dollars por 15. Write mo for*
price on large quantities. B. Lewis,
Pickens, S. C.
Wanted?Men to take thirty days ,
practical course in our machine
shops and learn automobile business.
Positions secured graduates,
$25 per week and up. Charlotte
Auto School, Charlotte, N. C.
Housewives?French dry cleaners
and spotter. It cleans clothes, carpets,
feathers and the like to a
charm. About fifteen formulas.
$25.00 value for only 50 cents. No
stamps. E. Mussel man, Weatherly,
Pa.
For Sale?In the "Land of the Sky,"
53 acres, fertile, new 9-room
house, splendidly located, on
French Broad river, at station between
Brevard and Lake Toxaway.
For particulars write N. E. McMinn,
Cherryfleld, N. C.
Wanted?Good man to handle line of
Ciders and Vinegars. Exclusive
territory mid high grade goods.
Liberal commissions, weekly settlements.
Exclusively or side line.
References required. lied lands*
Mfg. Co., Richmond, Ya.
For Sale?Limited number year old
White Plymouth Rock Cockerels at
sacrifice sired by high priced prize
winners, guaranteed pure line bred
Fishel strain, also pullets, day-olds
and eggs for hatching. White Rock
Poultry Fartn, Leeaburg, Fla.
Spartanburg Poultry Supply Store
carries full line Essex Model and
Ruckevc Incubators. Poultry feed
and supplies. Eggs from prizewinning
White Leghorns, Black
Minorcas, White Orpingtons. (Owen
Farm). C. W. Anderson, Prop.,.
Spartanburg, S. C.
Oct on the Safe Side by reducing cotton
acreage to raise the price, and
planting Felkel's Improved Cotton
Seed to increase the yield. Other
seeds are losing territory, not able*
to compete with Felkel Improved.
Turns out 4 2 per cent, lint, 100
perfect boles weighed 1 pound, 7oz.
Price $1.00 per bushel f. o. b. Wnu
D. Felkel, Elloree, S. C.
Black Orplngtoa and Eggs for Sale?
Prize winners at N. C. St.nte Fair
and Charlotte Poultry Show. Fine
winter layers nnd early broilers.
Eggs, $5.00 for 15 from "King
fJeorge" (imported) or "John.
Bull" pens, $3.00 for 15 from pen.
nenaei ny "macic auimn." rrios:
$10.00 to $15.00. Write Tor circular.
A. S. & I. B. Watkins, Hen>
derson, N. C.
Cotton Soe<l for Sslo?75 bu. Tool's
Prollflc, 125 bushels Heit's Prolific,
I 100 bushels Simpkin's Prolific, 50
' bushels Broadwell's Double Joint.
I All of the ahovo seed were grown
from seed bought from the originators
last spring, and have been
? specially grown and selected for my
own planting. I offer them for
sale at $1 per bushel, or will give
special prices on all of any one
kind. S. T. Tygart, Nashville, Ga.
for hatching, s.
f hi .(.s c, black minor.
_ ca*s greatest
e all year layers, $1.50 for fifteen. Mrs.
" e. e. Marsh, Marshville, N ,C.
a
i
s South Carolina Republicans are
for Taft.