The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, January 08, 1914, Image 6

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I * , A BLUOUY BAT III. ! . MEXICAN REBELS FORD' 111)! R4LS TO TOE KIVtK BORDER PATROL ACTIVE ?.? Vltierta's Norlhorn Aiiny All Hut N Heady to Warresuler to Rebels, ( Who Aro TbrrAUxiini; Tlinu With i Kit term! nation? Wounded Crosn ? 1 to the United States. 1 , The northern division of the Moxi- 1 can federal army at Ojinaga, Mexico, with it 1 1 generals, other officers and r About 4,000 soldiers, after u morel- 1 Jobs throe-days' attack by (den. Orto- ' gn's 0,000 rebels Thursday night appeared ready to flee in disorder ^ across the river into the United r States. With a lino of struggling 1 wounded at the border to indicate the -1 cvxtont of the carnage, and deserters already appearing in numbers. Maj. 1 mr xt vt - ' ra. in. Mc.NRinec, commanding tlie 1 border patrol at Presidio, Tox., made 1 every plan in anticipation of the ' flight. liOst tlian D00 cavalryman, mostly ' from tho Fifteenth cavalry, form the ' border patrol. To this small body of ( American soldiers would fall the task ' of surrounding and disarming, per- ' haps, 4,000 foreign soldiers, or 3,000 ! of them if 1,000 havo been disabled or killed. The ability of the Ameri- ! can soldiers to handle the refugees ( "was based on the assumption that the ' rebels would pursue the federals merely to the river. An estimate, as carefully as could be obtained, of the wounded on both sides was 1,000. Most of tho wounded were left on the battlefield. The loss disabled reached tho river and were cared for hy the ltod Cross on the American side. Scores of uninjured federal deserters, In defiance of (he American patrol, crossed the river. All wero disarmed and forced back to the Mexican side. More than POO rifles and other arms and nmnm nit ion were taken. It was impossible to learn accurately the number of dead and tlie belief that it would bo great was based on the number of wounded. Many were believed to bavo died through lack of medical attention, as Hod Cross ofllcinls were not permitted to ford the river even under a Red Cross flag. Those who ventured to help the wounded from tho river risked being shot. A few shots fell on the American side, north of Presidio, but no one was injured. MaJ. McNainee sent Cen. Ortega a warning that any further firing across the river might entail grave consequences. So far Maj. McNamco has adhered to a policy of sending back all the unwounded combatants. Should all the federals come across tliey would be disarmed, but they might bo permitted to remain on this side under temporary arrangement on grounds of humanity. Final disposition of the prisoners would bo in the hands of higher army authorities. It was hoped that the federals, if they came, would erosp without any unexpected incident, and that the rebels would not pursue them unnecessarily near. As for the battle at Ojinaga, one mile hack from tho river, it proceeded uninterruptedly, with the federals confined in and fighting from the adobe houses in the village, while tho rebels, always drawing closer, fired artillery and small guns from the hills and approaches. Soon after daylight the. federals made a desperate attempt to rally. They even extended their linn of fire outward, hut this brought heavier firing by the rebels that sent the defenders back to their inner defenses. Thereafter tho relative position of the opposing forces remained much the same with (Jen. Ortega driving in shot and shell from three sides while (Jen. Francisco Castro's federals fired from what vantage points they had within tho horse corral, tho custom house nnd trenches. Never in border history had there been a scene equal to that of the federal wounded and deserters who scrambled to reach the United States, while from their rear there poured n parting shower of shells and bullets. The trnr'a n/1 fro uroa ^ * MV 1 I f D )' HO (I 1 And half naked soldiers, some rushing pell mell Into tho river, some crying from the pain of their wounds, others crawling, because of shattered limbs, over rocks and cacti, some greedily stopping to drink tho muddy water, and all begging the Americans on the opposite side for shelter from the turmoil from which they had fled. The river bed is of soft mud with water in the middle about waist deep. At one point 200 men, all carrying Arms, waded across. They were surrounded by a handful of United States troops, disarmed and forced back. The wounded were picked up as soon as they reached the Rhore, or If a wounded soldier got stuck in the mud ho was dragged out and placed In the care of the Red Cross. A soldier who had hiR arm shot off, 1 another limping with a wounded foot, fitill more wi.o had actually crawled Into the water, a federal lieutenant bearing the uniform of the rank; a bugler with a bunch of yellow tassels on his arm, a barefooted private who I had lost his shoes, all formed part of the bobbing lino that came down tho tsL NEW YEAR IS WELCOM \|{MN(iT<l\ TO \ Ml* KEMW V\ 11i 1 LKSS II. A SI I AKltOAl). iVHi?liiiit((on is Scene of Inipo: ( Scientific Fffort. When Announcenun I is Sent to tlie World. Following custom, Washington A'ednesday night observed the ad-j 'out of tlio New Year without oaten-1 ation. With but one exception -the j >luish Hush that sped from the great , laval radio towers at Arlington.! i cross land and Rons, telling all vithin range of the passing of the >ld year?the usual program was folowed. At. churchoR, hotels, clubs, lodges ind other gathering places elabornt 4 irograms had been prepared. The isv(onhied crowds watdhod the pnsRnr: minutes of 19 19 and cheered the drt.h of 1914. This proerara of nnusement was little varied in any of lie larger cities. All of them cnoved dancing and feasting. Painstaking preparations had been nade for the wireless New Year flash it Arlington, naval ofheets in charge eeognizlng the importance of tlioir ask to tlie eyes of tlie scientific world. Although the naval observnory for years past, had undertaken o transmit such messages by linked 'allies nhd telegraph wires, Wodneslajr night was the second time in tho ilstory of science that the feat was \ttempted by wirclcsB. According to tho schedule the dcnals began at 1 1.55 p. m. Meridian Lime. The beats of the transmitting dock at the naval observatory, corrected by stellar observation to the most exact, time possible, connected hy wire with the radio towers, were repeated automatically by delicate instruments and translated into radio flashes. Those, backed by tho powerful voltage of the Arlington plant, were dispatched in message form over a wnvo length of 2,500 meters. The last beat announced tho arrival of the New Year in the capital of the United States. Officers said it possibly would be ? week before they could ascertain Just how far the signal reached. It was not doubted that, the Eiffel Tower, in Paris, 3,000 miles distant, received the signals. It was believed, too, that they reached the Isthmus of Panama, tho Pacific const and llif> TInwnHon lolondo I ? TAKEN TO J AIL. Chester County Mr\n is Arrested on Murder Charge. Frank Grant, charged with the killing of Sidney J. Ferguson Friday afternoon in tho Capers IIill community of Chester county, wns arrested Saturday night and is now in tho Chester county jail. Tho arrest was made at the homo of Sam Varnadore, Frank Grant's uncle, where the young man was said to ho in hiding. Tho Varnadore homo is about three miles from Chester. T.ato Saturday afternoon Sheriff Colvin received word that young Grant would ho at his uncle's homo that night. Ho got together eight well trained deputies and .with several of them surrounded the house, which was formerly the colonial mansion of Adam T. Walker, and a very larg^i house. After tho houso was well surrounded between 7 and 8 o'clock one of tho deputies saw somo ono light a cigarette in tho gablo of tho mansion. Immediately It was thought strango that anybody should ho in such an add part of the house. Sheriff Colvin and several deputies then went to tho houso and asked Mr. Yarnadoro if his nephew was there, and Do said, according to the deputies, that ho would not toll a llo about it, that ho was up in tho gable, llo led several of tho deputies, it. is said, to where ho was, and tho youth was arrested. Grant, it is said, claims that Mr. Ferguson came to the barn and asked where his corn was, and not getting a satisfactory response is said to have cursed young Grant and threw a hammer at him, which grazed his coat. Grant, it is alleged, said that ho jumped into tho colt barn and shot Mr. Ferguson through the cracks of tho door. ? Two Brothers Arc Killed. William nnd Robert Russell, brothers, of Petros, Tenn., wero shot and killed early Thursday, and Bcecher Holmes and his younger brother, charged with murder, nre imprisoned. The Russels had testificd against the Ilolmes in a liquor selling case. ? ? Autoist Kills Child. Although his automobile had fatally wounded a little girl, who was returning from a Christmas tree colebration Thursday, Judge Cassolli, an engineer of Ran Francisco, did not stop. When arrested bo said ho saw no reason why ho should stop. mile which Intervenes between Ojinaga and the river. The protest of the fringe of smoke-begrimed, maimed unwounded federals against being forced back into Mexico was pitiable. Deserters went back, but wailing as they went that they would surely ,be killed without their arms. hi u Hthl:* AMtJLK GMIiililAN lilltb AM) TLHKUKlZtS ll!Fh\S WIFE litAl!;'WilllS Sliori .. Killing Through Town Slayer Announced oil lln<l Slain Negro iuul (.oh.g Homo Me Shoots Friend, Brutally Murders Wife and Suicides to I'locapc Mol). Seen rely bartended within the walls of a four room cabin at Crovetown sixteen miles from Augusta, in Columbia County, (Joorgia, Claude Jordan, a well-known white man, 4 3 years of age, held at bay an armed posse of fifty frenzied though powerless citizens from noon Thursday until 5 o'clock in the afternoon, when the mob broke down the door, to find Jordan stretched upon the floor with a hole in his right temple?the work ' of his own hand. As terrible as was this spectacle that first greeted the entrants into Jordan's home, in the next room ! awaited the most grewsome sight many of them had ever beheld?Jordan's wife, whom ho had murdered earlier in the day?probably about 12 o'clock?was partially concealed between the mattresses of a hod which, when they were turned back, revealed the body cold In death, and with very nearly every Btltcli of clothing torn from it. The woman's features were distorted, her face was smeared with blood and the lower part of the trunk showed an awful wound caused by the shotgun with which the husband murdered her. Two small children, need f? and 3 years, wore nlso in the house at he time Jordan murdered his wife and then killed himself, but they escaped unharmed probably only through the workings of Providence. Until throe years ago Jordan was an Inmate of the C.eorgla State Asylum at Milledgevillo in that State, and from the reports of the residents of Grovetown, this last attack of insanity which has resulted so pathetically tragic, was brought on by an overindulgence in drink. Jordan ran amuck sometime during Wednesday night when he loft his temporary plnce of abode nt Grovetown with two two-horse wagonloads of furniture, which ho was moving to the llaynie place, somo miles from Grovetown, where ho had contracted for a farm this year. Tho first intimation of his derangement was seen when he returned to Grovetown riding a mule Thursday morning nt 10 o'clock, and proclaiming. ur he drove wildly through the quiet streets to his borne, that he bad killed Major Green, tho negro who bad accompanied him on tho trip to the ITaynlo place. This Is all the Information that tho residents of Grovetown could obtain regarding the negro's death, and at dusk Thursday a search for the negro's body was instituted, although at a lato hour no traco had been found of either the body, the furniture or tho other three mules. Seing Jordan's condition, on bis return to Grovetown on Thursday morning, his brother, Mr. Tlenjamin Jordan, a merchant of the town, set out to devise means of pacifying Claudo Jordan, hut declined to go to tho house, personally, as the frenzied man had announced in his rage that he would kill him on sight. Mr. J. E. Tteale, who was a good friend of Jordan, was also shot by tho maniac while passing near tho house. Fortunately, however, ho was not seriously injured, notwithstanding the fact that Jordan aimed a load Of buckshot at Tlonlo's hnrlr wl-i nn nnf mnrfi than fivo foot from him. Mr. Ponle, when asked about tho tragedy by an Augusta Chronicle representative, replied as follows: "On previous occasions, when Jordan has been under tho influence of whisky, T have succeeded in quieting him; so at the request of his brother, I went to his house at 11:45 Thursday morning. As T approached, 1 noticed Jordan, with his wife and two little girls, standing near the well, and the moment he caught sight of mo tho gun was levelled upon me. "I asked him not to shoot, and after Mrs. Jordan had told him who I was ho lowered the shotgun and asked where I was going. Seeing his condition, and being unarmed myself, I told him that I was going to the station, whereupon he replied, "Go on then." I was not more than 150 yards from him when Jordan called me and asked for a piece of tobacco. which I gave him. As I turned to leave lie raised his gun and fired." Mr. Bealo said that tho load from the gun knocked him to tho ground and that ho was in the act of reaching for his knife, but, realizing ho had no weapon of any description, and not knowing how badly ho was wounded ho Rteppod behind a grape arbor nearby while Jordan was reloading his gun to open fire on him again. Out of sight, ho seemed to have passed completely from the mind of tho maniac, who turned and walked immediately into his house. After the shooting of Mr. Beale, who was removed at once to his home and had the wound dressed, 4 the citizens of the little town began to take st? ps toward placing the man under arrest. Numbers of armed men ventured near the building hut Jordan, with a shotgun on his shoulder, marched up and down his front porch barefooted, and threatened to shoot down the first man who dared molest him. It was shortly after the shooting of Heal? that the defenseless wife met her horrible death, which, although there were no wye-witnesses, wan, from all indications, the most brutal of acts. The killing of klrs. Jordan followed so closely on the shooting of Heale that the inoh had not gathered near the house, but Mr. C. 1). Norrls, a resident of fJrovetown, was near the house and heard Mrs. Jordan, in 'ho most pleading manner, begging for her life. Her pleas were followed by a report of the shotgun that is supposed to have killed her. With the lack of organization, the crowd of fifty or more armed men failed to enter the house until a few minutes before ,r> o'clock, fearing they would he shot down the moment they crossed an imaginary deadline designated hv the crazy man. who was still believed to he barricaded Inside the house with a plenteous reserve of ammunition. Practically no effort was made to enter the house and provide safety for the little ones until the arrival of Mr. J. J. Zaehry, of Harlem, who voluntarily took the situation Into his own hands, and, with rare bravery and admlrnblo nerve, approached the house and persuaded the little girls to come out under the pretense that hp had a doll for them. May 1b Hip older of tho two and her younger slater Is called Alva. Once out of the house, they related the horrible story of the murder of their mother, which ho frightened them that they took refuge in the kitchen, crouching beneath the stove for ever ho long before venturing to peep into the next room, whore they beheld their father also dead. They were taken from the building hv Mr. Zachry at about 5 o'clock and paid that their father had shot himself sometime before, although none of the men surrounding the house had heard tho report. The little girls were removed and although ragged and bloody, thy were not abused to any great extent. After removing the children from tho house, tho posse proceeded to fire into the roof, in an efTort to get a response from the man Inside?not knowing whether or not to take the word of the little girls?but, falling in this, Mr. Zachry rushed up to the building, smashed In tho door and beheld him, Jordan, In a heap upon a mattress, which lie had spread there. The man had evidently been dead thirty or forty minutes. His head lay in a puddle of blood, and bo was lying: upon his shotgun, which was removed and found to be loaded. Tlioso present then drew Jordan's right hand from beneath his body, and in It was clenched a .18-calibro revolver. It was examined and showed two chambers empty. It was then noted that tho wound in the right temple was a bullet hole. ? 4 SHOT I1Y FUGITIVES. Young Man Is Perhaps Fatally Wounded by Fleeing Illacks. Glover Manning, 22, lay in a Savannah, Ga., hospital Monday night critically wounded as tho result of attempting to turn hack the negroes who are being pursued in Wayne county by a largo posse for an alleged attempted criminal assault Saturday night on an aged white woman at Hortense, Ga. Manning is a bridge keeper for tho Seaboard Air TJno railway at its bridge over the Altamaha river near Jesup. lie was shot in the abdomen and left sido by tho negroes, but at the hospital it was stated that hopes for his recovery arc entertained. The search for tho blacks Tuesday was fruitless but it is not believed that they can evade their pursuers much longer. Feeling is reported as high in Wayne county and has been aggravated by tho shooting of young Manning. Fears of violence are entertained if tho negroes fall into the hands of the wounded man's friends. +. KEGltO CONFESSES. JefT TiCans Tells of Slaying of Newberry Negro. Jeff Leans, a negro of Newberry, confessed Tuesday that ho killed Jack Toland, another negro, whoso t -i ? * I uoay whs rouna last Saturday in a I house on tho plantation of James Ronwick, about eight miles from Newberry. Leans said that with several other negroes ho had been gr mhling at Toland's house last Tuesday night. After the other negroes left, he and Toland had a dispute about some money, and he struck Toland in the head with an axo while thoy were quarrelling. Leans reported tho discovery of Toland's body to tho county authorities last Saturday. Evidence gathered about tho crlmo indicated that Leans had been implicated in it, lie was placed under arrest and Tuesday confessed. Killed at Wedding. Wednesday afternoon Fred China, a nogro, shot and killed Jacob Dargan, another negro, at a wedding on a plantation near Btateeburg. PRAISES BLEASE PARDONED SAFE CRACKER THINKS WELL OF HIM DON'T LIKE STATE PEN "Oakland Sammy," the Burglar and hafe-hlowor, Pardoned by Governor Please, Fnclnt; Triul on Another < hnrge, on lAciiig Scare lied Found to be Provided With Saw and Arid. "Oakland Sammy," the burglar and snfe-blower who was pardoned by Gov. Please, hfiB been taken to Montgomery, Ala., for trial on a charge of robbing a safe near there. A dispatch from Montgomery says roundly scoring jail and prison conditions in South Carolina, .lames P. Kelly, alias "Oakland Sammy", finds the .Montgomery jail a veritable haven and harbor. Kelly was brought back to Montgomery Sunday night to answer the charge of burglarizing the Marion post office in 1901. l'nst Office Inspector Gregory also comes in for a full share of the animosity of the man whose career in twenty years has been one which, if known, would probably marvel tiie most extraordinary stories contained in the wildest detective books. When Kelly was searched soon after his arrival at Montgomery, a small jag saw and a small bottle of fluid, apparently of an explosive character, was found in the pocket of one of his ami w. Arrested just as lie reached the pato of a South Carolina convict camp after his parole by Governor Please, and placed under guard In a jail, officers at Montgomery are at a loss to know how it was possible for the prisoner to secure implements, which but for the vigilance of Captain Cheney, of the local jail, might have permitted another daring escape from tho jail. Kelly himself retaino dubiously silent as to the saw and bottle of acid, disclaiming all knowledge of its possession, and declaring that ho does not know where the articles camn from. Could the five years which the prisoner spent in a South Carolina convict camp be erased from his life, he declares he would not fear the sentenco which awaits him in case he is found guilty of robbing the Marion post office. "Those llvo years have been like h?1 and have prepared me for anything that may come," said the pris oner to a reporter. "Many of the reports about me being mixed up in a jail breaking in Florida are false and other things are false and batched up by the officials who seek to gain a reputation at my expense. T know nothing about the burning of a jail in Florida, and neither have I been charged with any other crimes than the ones in Alabama and the one for which I have just completed a sentence in South Carolina. "After my years in that terrible place in South Carolina, I had hoped to go free and settle down, to establish myself as a respectable man. I had hoped that the laws of South Carolina would prevent mo from being taken from that State, and although I knew of the charge hanging over me in Alabama, I thought to live this down and become respectable. I am not a bad sort, and if thoso officials who have been on my trail for a number of years had let me alone in South Carolina 1 would soon live everything down and become a good man." Kelly has nothing but words of praise for Cov. Cole Tllease, and nothing but words of condemnation for the prison conditions in South Carolina. Tie declares that it was his pood behavior and efforts to do right while confined in the South Carolina convict camps which attracted the attention of Gov. Fdease and caused him to be paroled. "You and the rest of the world may not believe it. but T am tired nf this kind of living The prisons of South Carolina arc dirty and slimy, and terrible enough to make a demon of any human being. Thank Clod, T have lived through it without becoming worse and if I ever get a chance T am going to be good. Ilecaues it don't pay to be otherwise." Teachers with certificates wanted immediately for following positions in graded or rural schools: 3 at $60; 6 at $50; 8 at $45; 11 at $4 0; 7 at $35. Direct from school officials. Special enrollment. Act immediately. W. IT. Jones, Mgr., polumbia, ? n O. <J. WHERE ARE THE DEAD?" Our new book of 850 pages by Rev. T>en G. Droughton, D. D., assisted by several of the world's most noted ministers, answers this question clearly and satisfactorily* It Is truly the twentieth century light versus the dark age theories. A nmsterly defense of the Scriptures. Outfit sent on receipt of 15c. Best tenjis. Agents selling 30 to 50 books per day. Don't miss this opportunltf. Order outfit at once. Complete book sent postpaid on receipt of $1.50. Phllllps-Boyd Publishing Company, i Atlanta, Ga. I CLASSIFIED COLUMN^ Cor Sale?Shetland Ponies. W. 1. Melntyre, Thomasville, Ga. Fur S:Ue?Poplar and pine trees. Addrees J&tne* A. Clark bo 11, Hopkins, 8 C. Wanted?Cow peas, all varieties. The H. G. I/elding Co., 144 East Bay, Charleston, 8. C. Wanted to Buy?Ton Car Loads well berried Holly. Z. M. L. Jeffreys, Goldsboro, N. C. Oranges?Sweet, fresh from trees. Standard size box, $2. Jan. T. llolmer, Bartow, Fla. Cor Kale?Fruit, Shade Ornamental trees and shrubs. Catalogue free. Cureton Nurseries, Austeel, Ga. For Sale?Ideal farm and homo in cotton, corn and cattle belt; good automobile. Ben Wolfe, Monroe, N. C. Girls?Take course In Miss Sparkrunn's Improved Millinery school, 94 % Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga. Write for particulars. Hurry! Choice Mating, Bourbon Red Turkeys; toms, $ '?; hens, $6; Pair, $9; trio, $12. Bourbon Farm, Kemp Mills, N. C. 11 1. lA ? 11*-. ,1^11 If II A 1_ wiv/vio ivihu, yreenwood, S. C. Georgia Cano Syrup-?Pure and unadulterated, juice of ribbon caneboiled down (the old fashioned way) to bright, thick syrup, new 35-gallon cypress barrels, $14 per barrel, freight paid to points In Southern states. Prompt shipment. Goods guaranteed. James L. Mauldin, Cairo, Georgia. Cse Gasoline lighting Systems?Individual or central generation, which have stood the test. Tor par, tlculars ask M. I*. Pommer, Charleston, S. C. Our tanks ar.d alrpumps (the latter also handy for Automomoblle use), are unsurpassed for durability. Mantels and glassware for all lighting systems, the very j best at lowest prices. Order your supply from M. L. Pommer, fit King St., Charleston, S. C. / >?nnrt m .vmnioiu'w leaning sioca for sain at sacrifice. Eggs for hatching. W. P. Causey, 1316 Dickens St., Columbia, 8. C. Marry?Many rich, congenial, anx- * ions for companions. Interesting particulars, photo free. The Messenger, Jacksonville, Fla. Special?Pure white and Exhibition Fawn and White Runners. $5; trio Utility, $1 each or $10 rioz. Mrs. J. F. Carroll, Hohennald, Tenn. lfomor Pigeons?60c. White Wyandotte, Whit? and Drown Leghorn cockerels, $1. Fine Jersey cows. Renbow Farmers, Oak Ridge, N C, For Rale?4 00-ncro stock farm; well improved; lake front; rural route; 3 miles from station. Price $7,000. Terms. Frank Powell, Miccogukoo, Fla. For Sale?One gold trumpet cornet, Holton's; good as new, cost $106. First check for $50 gets it. I guarantee it. Address Box 104, Rock Hill, 8. C. World's Wonder Cotton?4 5 per cent, lint. Wilt resistant; thrives on any soil; heftvy fruiter. Seed, $1 per bushel. Address J. J. Owens, Allendale, S. C. W ;> II ( <M I nnTllHticr ~ ? ? .......>111^,, uvvjivncv:(llllg n L ?* 11 ~ ographic poBitious guaranteed; credit tuition; 1 0,000 enrolled. W. I'. Musick, President, Piedmont College, Lynchburg, Va. * Arc you ambitious? Learn salesmanship. I teach you thoroughly by correspondence in twelve weeks and assist you in securing position. P. | E. Garrett, Pox 1S8, Chattanooga, | Tenn. Lespedezza Seed and Hay (Japan Clover) for sale. Grown and sold at our farm. Write for Lcspedezza circular, samples, prices. Himmelberger-Harrison Lumber Co., Zacliary, La. For Sale?Good farms, all sizes, cotton, tobacco and truck successfully grown. Coming section of Horry county. Ten to twenty dollars per acre. Ask us for list. lteam & lf^tr 1 - ~ ~ iwcrvciixie, l.Ol'lS, S. U< it. Young man, good habits; experience not necessary; to sell paints, oils, disinfectants, etc.; salary or commission; large profits and steady work. We will help you. The Alcatraz Co., Richmond, Va. Cabling? Plants?D 1 r e c t from Younge's Island; 90c per thousand. Rig lots cheaper. Cash with order saves purchaser return charges on money. Fred F. Pooser, Orangeburg, S. C. Motorcycle Special Oil?Five gallons $3.7.r>, once tried always used. C.oodyear tires, belts, chains, Ilarlej parts. Expert motor repairing. Everything for the motorcycle. Mail orders a specialty. Get our catalogue. T. S. Chlpley, "The Mo