Newspaper Page Text
Ono Hundred and Seventy-five
Little School Children
MEET AWFUL DEATH.
fJ lie Terrible IloUocnus; in School
House at Col linwood, Ohio.-Thc
Furnace Was Overheated and thc
Pen rfu I Disaster Followed.-Chil
dren in Koonta on Second Floor
mid iii Attie Perished hi Flames.
An awful tragedy occurred Wed
nesday morning in tho public school
of Col I inwood, ohio, which has some
eight thousand population. One hun
dred and sixty (ive corpses were tau
en out of tho ruins up to t( a o'clock
Wednesday night. Six children arc
Billi unaccounted for and all the hos
pitals ami houses for two miles
around contained niinihors of chil
dren, some fUleliy nnd many less
seriously Injun d.
All ol' (h<> victime wore between
six and ilftt i a voa Hi of ago. Tho
.school contained between ."> i " and
325 pupils, and of fhh; entire humber
only eighty ii VG known io have I'll
tho building Unhurt. Il will bo sev
eral days before i ho exact number
of killed is known, as; tho ruins may
Milli contain other bodies and the
list of fata litios ni ay ho increased hy
a number of deaths among tie- dill
dron who tire lying in tho hospitals
hovering between Mle and death.
The school house was of Prick,
1 wo Stories and an allic in height,
normally largo and tile smaller chit
part ot' (he building. There was hui
dren had Peen ?.laced in the upper
part ol' Hi building. There was bul
One lire e:<apo and (hat was in the
rear ol' Hie building. There were
two stairways, one loading to a door
in front and thc oilier to a door in
the rear. Holli of these doors open
ed inward and il is claimed UK; rear
door was locked es well.
When the Hames were discovered
tho teachers, who throughout seem
to have acted willi Courage ami self
possession and io have struggled
heroically for the safety of their pu
pils marshalled the lillie ohos into
column for tho "Uro drill," which
they had often practiced. Unfortun
ately the lino ol' march ia this exer
cise had always led to tho front door
and tho children had not been tripli
ed to seek any other exit.
The lire caine from a furnace sit
uated directly under this part of the
building. When the Children reach
ed tin; foot, of UH- . lairs tildy found
the llames (dose upon I hem, and so
swift a rush was made for the door
that in an inslant a li ri.I ly pricked
mass ol' ch 11(1 IOU was pilled up
against. . lt. From th" second floor
none of those who were upon any
portion of the flrsl flight of stairs
had a chance for Mo ir lives.
Tho children at the foot of (he
stair started io light I heir way back
to the flOol" above, while those who
were coining down shoved them mer
cilessly hack into tho flames below.
Ja an im ian! lhere was a frightful
panic, willi 200 or the pupils lighting
for their lives. Most of those who
were killed died hore, The greater
part of thoso who escaped managed
to turn back and reached the lire, es
capo and tho windows in the rear.
Tho school was a two-story and
attic, brick building, constructed : ix
years ano. It was overcrowded with
pupils and lt was found necessary to
Utilize tho attics for those of the
ages between six and bight years.
Nearly all Hie children wore kill
od in the. mass at the first floor door,
which Anally was opened by men
from the Latte Shore Railway shops,
who hurried to Hie scone. A wall
of Haine had formed across it, how
ever, and most ol' the hcildren were
dead by tho time tho doors were
swung. . ' ? '?
Miss Catherine Weiler, one of IIP'
nine teachers in'tho' scho'pb loss her
life in a vain effort lo marshal tho*
pupils ol' lu r class and load them
10 safety." She died in the crush at
Hie rear door. lier room was on
tho second floor and win n the lire
alarm sounded she marched her pu
pils Into the hall, thinking lt . was
only a lire drill. There the truth,
dawned upon both the teacher und
pupils and control was lost. The
children in their frenzy plunged imo
the struggling mass ahead (d' them.
Miss Weiler attempted to stem the
rush, but went dpwn under lt, and
her body was found an hour late;
piled high with those of her pupils.
Miss I'Msk, another torcher, was taken
out alive, but she cannot live. After
thc lire had practically burned I !
self out (he Work of rescuing the
bodies was l.enuu by Aromen ?ind
railroad employees from the Lake
Shore shops.
The railroad company turned over
one of ils buildings nearby to ho used
11 s temporary morgue and hither the
charred and broken llltlo bodies
were removed ns fast as they could
be dui? from Hie ruins. They were
over, and most ol' the Children were
Identifications wore made only hy
means of ClOhting or trinkets. The
/ire hail swept away heany all re
semblance to human features.
Distracted parents soon hogan to
gather ?ind tho work of identifying
tho blackened and mangled corpses
began. Thegrewsome task of Ink Inc
out the blackens* torsos and bits of
APPOINTSjBOARD
Judgf? Pritchard Asks Commission
to Manage Dispansary Fund.
Arthur, of Vnion, Accepte, But thc
Other Members of tho Commis
sion will ind lue.
At Asheville on Friday application
was made to Judge Pritchard In tho
I) ni tod States Court by counsel In
tho case of Fleischman!! & Co. vs
VV. J. Murray, et ats, und Wilson Dis
tilling Company vs. \V. J. Murray, ot
als, tor tho appointment of n tem
porary receiver for tho South Caro
lina dispensary fund.
The defendant commissioners were
represented at the hearing hy Daniel
NV. Rountreo of A vi an ta, Ga., who
waived the required notice of motion
? s to tho Flelsclunann Company, and
i flor hoarhifi the pei iii JU. tho Court
sranled au order appointing tho de
fendants, Messrs. NV. J. .Murray, C.
!. Henderson, Avery l*nttou. john
MeSwcen and P.. F. Art luir, ns teni-'
Mora ry receivers for tho dispensary
funds now in their poaesslOii;
Tho petition upon which tho mo
lina '.sas granted slated thal a Mil
had hoon introduced in the South
Carolina Legislature directing thoj
defendant commissioners io return
he funds '?ow in their hands lo the
SI ute Treat aror.
Tho commissioners were linnie-1
Palely noli (led Of their appointments I
is receivers, hut up lo il hilo hour)
Friday night only ono response had j
>een received, that of Mr. Ll. F. Ar
thur, who slated that ho would ac
ept and would net as a receiver.
Murray has declined, since to
accept would he to ad m il thc juris
llctlon of Mic Federal Coprt. Messrs.
Pallon. McSweeil and Henderson will
not accept. \V hellier <>r not Covern
or Ansel will call ail extra session ls
now thc question.
FHAHFH FOI! NlOGl?O'.S LI F Ii.
Alleged Assailant of "Noun;; (.'?ri Ho
moved to renitent iary.
A special to Tho New:; and Cour
ier from Laurens says aa a maller of
precaution Sheriff Duckett carried to
tho penrtontary a nemo prisoner,
F rod Hldroge, who was lodged In
tho prompt action of Conslablo RI-1
ossaulting tho 7-year-old daughter
of Mr. MacGambrell, of Princeton.!
The child is reported to he in a
serious condition and much excite
ment prevails in the Princeton sec
lion. When the matter became
known offorts were made by large
parties Of cll/cna to run the alleged
rapist down, but wore thwarted hy
the prompt action ac. Constable Kl
ledge, who arrested and carried the
negro <<> jill li thus for the limp sav
ing the hoy's neck. Late in I hi" af
ternoon, however, rumors reached
the sheriff that a irowd was bel HM
organized lo make a raid on the jail,
heme the prisoner's remov 1. *
Took the Wire Houle.
For a murder committed lo~s than
three months ago, George NV ll so ii, ti
negro, paid tho extremo penalty in
(ho electric chair at. tho state prison
at Trenton, N. J., Oil Wednesday.
human remains was one of horror.
A line of rescuers was formed, back
ed hy a dozen ambulances. As the
Doilies w?ne untangled from tho do
luis they were passed aloin; to the
stretchers and then loaded in the
ambulances.
At tho tempory morgue In thc
Lake Shore shop the scene became j
fourfold in thc Intensity of human
suffering as fathers, mothers, broth
ors and sister passed np and down
tho lines formed of one hundred and
sixty corpses. To facil?talo identifi
cation tho bodies were nu ni bored as
they were received al the inorguo.
Tho H I'S I idcul iiicnt ion was made
hy the mother of Nell and Tommy
Thompson, aged six and nine years,
respectively. The heads and arms
had boon hu mod from liol li bodies,
but the mother recognized thc shoes
>n len- children's foot. And so the
dish? artehlng went work on, accen
tuated now and (hen hy (he piercing
shriek or plaintive moan as a loved
one was recognised hy clothing or
lok on, stich as ring or necklace.
.Miss Colman, one of the teachers,
said: "Il was awful. I can seen I he
wee things in my room holding out
their tiny arms and crying to mo to
liolp them. Their voices are rind
ing In my ears yoi and I shall never
forgot them. When the alarm gong
ran/; 1 started the pupils to march
ing from tho building; When we
started down the front stairs we wore
mel hy a solid wall of dame and
( louds of dense smoke. We nd rent
ed, and when wo turned the ohildren
hocanio panic stricken and I could
not do anything With them. They
became jammed n tho narrow stair
way, and I know that the only thing
for nie to do was t? net around to
tho rear door if possible and hel|
I luise who wore mar the entrance.
When I got there after climbing out
a window I found th children so
crowded In tho narrow passageway
that 1 could not |iull even one of
them Ollt. Those behind pushed
lui ward and as I stood there the 111
llO ones piled upon om- another
Those who contd stretched out their
arms to mo and cried for me to led;
them. I tried with all my might I"
pull them out and stayed there un
til th? (lanni drove in* ?way."
THEY MUST GO.
Secretary Straus Issues Sweep
ing Orier About Anarchists.
Says HP Wallis Commissioners ol
Immigration Inspectors to Look Af
ter Deporta?on of Alien Criminals,
Soerolnry of Commerce ami Labor
Straus Wednesday issued a sweeping
order to all commissioners of immi
gration and Immigrant inspectors in
charge, directing Hiern to confer with
thc police In their respective jurisdic
tions, with a view to "securing tho
CO-oporatotl of police and detectives
in an effort to rid the country of
nilen Anarchists and criminal fall
ing within the law relating to depor
tation.
Thc order of Secretary Straus fol
lows: .
"To all commtsisoners of Immigra
tion und I inmigrant inspectors in
charge!
"lt S hereby directed that, with
view io promptly obtain definite In
formation willi regard io alien Anar
chists and criminals located in the
United Slates, you shall confer full.'
Willi lite Chief Of police or the chic
of Hie secret servie' of Hie elly i
which you ere localed, furnishing
such dillcials with detailed ufori;
Hon with regard to tho moaning <
"he Orin Anarchist,' as used lu (J
Immigration Act of February 2
i fl07, und \\ ii h reg n d to t he Inlii .
Hon Of tho statute against aliens of
Hie criminal classes, explaining tho
powers ami limitations imposed by
said statute upon tho immigration
officials with respect to shell persons.
"You should call to tho attention
of the chief 0f police or tho chief of
secret service tho d?finition of tho
icim 'Anarchist' contained in Sce
llons ? and :'- con I ai ned in tho A cl of
February 20, 1007, and provision of
Section ii, placing within tho ex
cluded classes 'persons who have
boon convicted or ndinil having com
mitted a felohy or other crime' or
misdemeanor involving moral turpi
tude, 'pointing out thal if any such
person is found within tho United
States Within three years after land
ing or entry there he is amenable
to deportation under the. provisions
ol' Section 21 of said Act. Tho co
operation of said chief of police
[should be requested, making ll clear
that in order that any particular
Anarchist (jr criminal may 1)0 de
ported evidence must he furnished
showing (1) that tho perso' }n o'ies
ttou ls an alien subject to t'v"- immi
grant Acts, (ii) that he is an Anar
chists or criminal as defined in the
Statute, Cl) thc dato of his arrival
ia tho United States, which must be
within three years of Hie date of his
arrest. (I) ibo name of thc vessel or
the transportation Uno hy which he
came if possible, and (0) tho name
of Hie country win ncc he callie; thc
details with reaped to Hie last three
items hbillg kepi, at the various ports
ol' entry in such a manner as to he
available if Information is furnished
svIth respect to the Anarchist's n tine,
tho dale of his arrival '.nd the pori
?d' (?nt ry.
"IL is desired thal the above in
dicated Slops shall he I alvon at once
timi (hal no proper effort shall he
spared to secure and retain the co
operation of tho local police and de
tective forces ia an effort to rid the
country of allon Anarchists and crim
inals falling within the provisions of
tlc: statute relating to deportation."
DECLABK FOB ?BYAN.
Nebraska Populist s Instructs Dele*
gales to Vote for Him.
With the largest number of dole
gates at any Nebraska n Populist
mooting for four years, the Populist
convention was called to order at
Omaha Thursday afternoon Resolt?
lions reaffirming the Omaha platform
enunciated tn I s:i:; and declaring for
tho support of llryaii by nil Populist*
were adopted. The convint ion at
lerwards listened to speeches of tile
(ruo Populist brand made hy differ
ent loaders, while tho committee pre
pared a platform fiery enough for
ihe old-time Populists. Alter a do
ha lo lasting two h on rs tho conven
tion decided to respond io tho cali
lo the national committee and to send
;i full d?l?gation lp Hie Populist na
tional convention nt'St. Louis,. Thir
ty seven delegates were selected for
that purpose and instructed to vole
md work for thc Interests of \v. J,
?ryan. *
GOT TH Kl? MON KV.
Certain Whiskey Houses P?hl by the
Dispensary ( 'omiilission,
A dispatch from Asheville to The
State says Judge Pritchard In the
United States Court Thur.-.day made
III) order In tho Wilson casa?, other
ui'odltors intervening authorizing the
South Carolina dispensary commis
don lo pay certain creditors amounts
agreed on between the commissioners
ami creditors; (
The total a mon n t ordered paid out
hy Judge Pritchard, In ac-c?rd?nco
with thc judgments render? ?I by tho
Mspensary commission, ls % I I.s.721.
30. The ft WO m (daims bled willi lil?
commission In the i t cases amo/intcd
to $174,070.50. The total nniouhl
>f "graft" and Overcharges ,'?c?v<u
by the State In theixi cases lay $20,
8?4.?7.
BACK TO UFE.
Making Homes Again Amidst the
Ruins of St. Pierre.
Terror of Moni Peleo Deporting With
Lapse of Time wild Settlement is
Forming.
A correspondent of Tho Now York
Herald writes from St. Pierro, Mar
tinique: Six years hare passed since
St. Pierro was wiped out hy tho vol
canic forces of Mount Pelee, and In
lon short minutes became a city of
the dead. For a long time the de
vastated region was shunned and
empty, for the horror of that May
night in lillie held tho slanders ?a its
grip. Put slowly this bas changed,
and the last few months have wit
nessed a gradual, hut growing re
population Of tho district. St. Pierre
today lilts a hotel, a wharf ls being
constructed, steamers soon will bo
in the pori whence only one vessel
was able to escapo the nigh! of the
disaster, ami the authorities have
found n expedient to establish a local
police loree.
The destruction of six years ago
vas widespread, and those who were
lefl alive dod In terror. The onllrc
dist rel of St. Pierro, eovorlng some
(illy square miles, boca mo desolate
and uninhabited. St. Pierre, a mass
?f ruins and waste, was particularly
avoided by tho islanders, because of
the fearful story of death hidden be
neath ils blanket of ashes. Then with
iucrcdibble rapidity the coarse trop
ical vegetation took root and nour
ished ?n tho Volcanic matter covering
the numberless dead amid the fallen
walls ?d' their old homes, and nature
decked with green foliage tho handi
work of Hoi unleashed forces of de
si ruc! ion.
Such has boen tho situation in the
stricken aroa until about a year ago.
whoa slowly tho people of the sland,
He ir fears and horror stilled by the
lapse of Hmo, began retuning te
their old homes. This movement
Weill on by degrees, (he more timor
ous finally making up their minds to
follow theil- braver brothers, until
today (he district ls resuming ils old
life. St. Pierre is still abhorred by
many, (hough it. has its own share of
the movement of repopulated, bul
Moree Kongo, Ho Pr?cheur, Grand
Riviere, and Ajouoa Bouillon, ham
lets that six years ago were familiar
to newspaper readers because of tho
stories of death, (error and desolation
that came from (hem, hnve now a
population that is Increasing each
month, and with tho people have
como telegraph ami telephone lines,
schools, priests, lo say mass in the
reconstructed churches and other
evidence ol' a growing rural commun
ity.
lt would porhnps be too much
to say (hal St. Pierre is to he re
born and i . come again ihe com
mercial center <>f Mnrtlnqiie, fm
other ports on tho island. Fort de
France and Trinlto, offer belier an
chorage to shills than did St. Perre
ill (he obi days. Hui St. Piere is
the huh, tts lt were, of tho roads to
the island. lt ls aster to move
merchandise into St. Pierre lien
anywhere else, and this revival of
traille will ass uro a certain nctvlly.
There ls today enough movement in
and about tho city to have made it
worth while for an enterprising
Frenchman io open a hotel in st.
Pierro, in the Place norlin. This
house is frequented hy local travel
ers, the tourist who come to look al
th?! ruins, foreign naval officers on
through steamers calling at For! do
Franco or Trihite. A new wharf will
be completed and steamers ot' the
0corin line are to resume calling a:
St. Pierre as they did before 15)02.
Already several merchants have
cleared away tin- ruins of 'heir v.;
houses lind started reconstruction
with the Idea of opening" u;> ngiUiu
mid they doubtless wll have Imita
tors who desire to get Hear shari! of
tho local (rade.
The authorities do not officially
sanction this activity ni St. Pli
and still warn the p0o|'i!o of iho . >i
ger of Mont I'edee. Si Ul tho pr?senta
of people in Hie cly has made nor
.-..arv the Installation of a police
force and the clearlsg aw?) to? ]
opening up of several si reels. TIlO
nnvomonts, sidewalks and gutters
uncovered were found ld bo ?a ex
cellent condition. 'lids excavntio'i
brought to light large quantities of
human bones, principally In tho lino
d?! la Madeleine. Tho eoinolnry al. o
has been partly uncovered and mosl
Of the grave stones wO:'o found lo he j
in a remarkable state of presorva- ?
ton,
SHOT HY STRAY HI 1.1,HT.
Young Lally Sustains Serious Injury
From Lille Hall.
Miss Russie Prather, one of the
best, linotype operators In Spartni
burg and a young woman ? i wt?
acquaintance ; ?d popularlt;, v .
Seriously wound' I >\ \ st ny ride
ball, waile walkin 111 the -urhuvbs
Friday evening. .. ie was alone al
tho time, and was retur.nlOg from a
visit lo n n Ult IVO. 'The nail | ..ne
teated her ri.-.ht hit? Inflicting n
wound that h ed profusely, causing
her to rall froi i osha asl lon ' nf oro ho
ri ; llzed that she hat been hot fi un
ambush. V> ho fil ) I the .hot I >m
knowu.
TRAMPS KILLED IN WRECK.
Two Negro Men (nul One Negro Wo
man Perish.
Two negro men and one negro wo
man were killed in u wreck on a
Norfolk and Wcatcrn froight train
near Tazowcll, Va., Friday. The ne
groes wore beating their way in a
box cnr.
Tho wreck waa caused by a slide
in n deep cut. The two engines clear
ed the slide, but tho cara wore piled
in a hcapc. There are about four
hundred tons of coal In the cut and
it is said two moro deadbeats are
under tho wreckage. None of the
crew of the train were seriously in
jured. .
915 DOLLARS HA VED TO ORO AK
CUSTOMERS For Next 40 Dnya.
Wo will soil our excellent $80 Or
gnus at only $05. Our *$i)0 Orgam
for lily $75. Special Terms: One
third now, one-third Nov. 1008, hal
anec Nov. 1000. ff interested, elli
this nd, and enclose lt with your let
ter, asking for catalog and price Hst
If you want tho best org:r- on earth
lon'l delny, bat write us at once and
-ave % 1 Ti and mahn nome harmoni
ous. Address: MALONE'S M P.SM
MOPSE, Columbbi, S. C. I'iam.s and
Organs.
Row to Onrc Rheumatism.
Tl?? ennui of Iti-uun ith.ni ?nd Kimir.-a d ol
ca'o . is an excess ol' urie acld| in tho blood:
I'" cure this torrible d BOUS tho noid intuit
be expollcd mid tho system BJ rogulatett that
no iuoie i cid will bo formed in oxcesslve quan
t iii i it, It dc n j nu I ism is an i ii Inn ni d ncn.'ie on (I
require nu intoned remedr. Iltibbhi? with
oilKAiid lhiimonts will not cure,afford* only
temporary relief al boat oau?e? you to de
lay the ; roper treatment, ano ?di JW? tho m ni .
ody to got n firmer hold su you. Liniments
limy cane the pnsin,bnt they will n<> moro euro
Ithonintisiu than paint will chango the fibre of
rotten wood.
Science hiss at la9t dlioororad a purfoot
nd complete cure, which is odlod Itheuma
i do. Tes ed in hundreds of canon, it liai of
oeti'd the m<>ot mavolous euron; wo believe
twill cure yo, lOieunuicld?? "eoU? at tho
ol nt a from tho insid<>," swops tho poisons
out of the sTHt"in tonn? up tho <<t on>oh, r?g
ulftp s tho IiT'>r und kidneys and iu;i'tes von
well all oviir. Uhounvtcid . 'Vrikos t'io root,
nf tho 'UHBJUSO end remover ?tn causo" TVtu
Hrlondid remedy ta ?old hy druL'gUti and
do'lers pone rn ll y at &0e. a-il I <\ bottle. In
tablet format 2.r>c. un 1 50?, a p ?oki jo. Got
a bottle today ?loin vs uro itatignrotiu
Thirty-Two Cent Cotton*
i ?I
VOK 8AL.10-Wataons celebrate*
Improved "Summer Snow" upland lonr;
stuplo cotton need. Makcn bale aita'
moro por aero ordinary land under fair
conditions; sella for 17 Vi to 32 cento pw
jiound. ICaolly pickoa Ginned dry
on ordinary ?;:iw Bin. staple? 1 H to.
i h* luchos. Price: 1 bushel, $3.oo. s
bushels, $4. 00; G bunhcls and over at
$1.00 per bushel. W. W. Watson. Pro-:
jjriotor. Summerland IVJU-UX i'au??bura?
"Little Giant" Screw Plates
18 assortments. Each assortment is put up
in a neat wood case, as shown in cut. Each as
sortment has adjuslnhle lap wrenchesfor holding au
sizes of taps contained in assortment. Threads
all sizes rod from 7-64 in. up to 1 1-2 in. "BEST
GOOUS.DLSTFRlCES."ColurablaSupi)lyCo.ColuuibUi,S.C.
C,\ULlf
W?KE?
I A M II
Wakefield and Succession Cabbage, dig nosion Let?
luce, .md Urge type Coulif.owcr. Clown from se?ids ol thc
liest i;r isvcrs ni ibu world. We have worked diligently mi out
?tock (or 20 vi .us, ami ii s safe lo say Ulai to-day lin y arc tlie bcsl oh
(ainablc. The) have success illy stood (he mo.ll M vero lesta of cold ami
di ont Ii ami atc >< lied on by the most prominent growers ot every sci timi ul lite
South. Wc (?uaraitior lat? conni ami salo arrival ol all goods shipped hy express.
PRICES: Cabbage ?ml l ettuce 1. o. h. Young's Islam!. 500 for $1.00; t to 5.C0O at $1.50
per thousand; 5 to 9.000 at $1.25 per thousand; 10,000 and over st il.09 per thousand
Cauliflower, $.1.00 pi'' thousand, quantities in proportion.
Wnle jour name and express office plainly ?nd mail orders to
W. ll. HART. KNTKRrKISK, S. C.
Referemes: Enterprise Hank. Charleston.S. G.; Postmaster, Enterprise, S. C.
.jr.Rsr.V
irV>
lil'/ST
'Asuarjf
O
III
?
III
As good as butter, and cheaper, for
all kinds of cooking, from making bread
to frying crullers. Absolutely pure cot
ton seed oil, super-refined by our original
Wesson process. Thc Standard cooking
fat of thc South,-unrivaled in purity,
unapproached in economy, unmatched in
effectiveness.
TI IE -SOVTHE?N . COTTON . 0!L- CO. f
NEVYOKK'SAVANNAII'ATLANTA-I IWORLl?A?SS'CHICAGO. j
ll!
GIB!iES Guaranteed Machinery.
INCLCDES GASOLINE AND STEAM ENGINES,PORT?
ARLE AM) ST?TIONAlyV l?OlLERM, SAWMILLS.
EDOEHS, PLANERS, SHINCILE, LATH, STAVE AM'
FOHN AULLS. COTTON <HNS, PRESSES, UR I CK
MAK1NC OUTFITS AND KINDRED LINES.
Our stock ls the most varied and complete in thc
Sont hern SI ales, prompt shipment being our Special*
ly. A postal card will bring our salesman.
ti IHRES MACHINERY COMPANY, t : ?ox KO,
Colimitiia, S.
SrORS?LE
PPP
/ , .%-"'v.'!k ?cs "ns. i mic nrtiiR in? nest snown reuiiniii van
V/j ? , '? I f? . 'si v ia, m? -. Those plants are gross n out in thc o
' 1 . \f\will st mil : ? ere cold svithiml injury,
i ki [? ' i if V -.<, M I'ricesi ;.. .C0 for 500 plants, In lots of 1.0CC
?.'.'.> V' fOlV? Wsantl, 5,000 to V.oro at f>l.25 pcrlhoueand, 10.000 nu
(. . .', '..*"i Av \V( have special low Express mu') on vegetable
I have had several years experience In growing Cshhsgo plan?? and alt
ottur kinds of vegetable plants for fhc trade, viii Beet plants, Onion plant?,
Collard piatas, ?nd Tomato plants.
I pow have ready for shipment Beet plants (ind Cabbage plants as follows!
Fartv Jersey Wakefields, Charleston 1 urge Type)Wakefield?, and Henderson Sue
restions. I hese being the bcsl ki.own reliante varieties to all experienced mick
open slr near salt water ?nd
0C0 to 5,CeO ut $1.50 per thou?
mid over al $1.00 per thousand.
.. .ile plants lion? this point. All
om .ts vit! lie ?hipped G.O. I>. Unless you prefer sending money with order?.
{ would advise sending money with orders. You will ?ivo tho charge? for
reim ni / Ibo (.'. O. D'?.
dh. i plants will he re idy In Febninry. Your orders will have my prompt
in need ol Ycgcuhlc plants give moa trial order)
Iress all orders to
?A '?v nndpersonal attention. Winni
vK I guarantee satisfaction. Aihire