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m ' - . . tim BY CL?SKS0ALE8 & LANGSTON. ANDERSON, S. C., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21. 19067 ~ VOLUM?IOJ-.-NO. 36. EVERY DAV NOW M ? WE ABS OPENING UP CASES OF You'll find that ibis Spring, as usual, we show the New Styles for Men first. ii New Spring Styles in Keith Konqiieror Shoes il 18.50 and $4.00. New Spring Novelties in the celebrated $1.00, $1.25 and $1.50. New Shapes and Colors in No Name Hats. Com chere for the New Things In Men's Wear. , u. c y am a tu, TheSpotCash Clothiers, . SEE : WU ?T ABOUT Says mm ?HM pan. 24,1906?A^s?? l?o. ?t??, *t Wdoi^b, ? d ... ?..?..V; 14.00 'aa. 24,1906-Aaa?yai? Ko; 6855? ?i Auton, 8* 0. v ACID. POTASH. Qc* ;$u*ry^;v.^.. -.v.. .-V.v. v...10.00 2.00 eb. 10, ?906^A^^ t?alda, 8. C. 1 W?!^^ ?Maof^ Acid..; ??'\?eM ?. '-V;;V:::,^ACID. AM. POTASH. ^EMSON; FOUND;., ^^m^^?^?BW-P'z^t mm* io, ;ii#ft??j?^^ s?fc^i^^^? Oui Giw?ntea., ,^??l;; /80^ 2.002.Q0 '; V^o?G?^^ ,,.* .10.00 . '''ft."*'' "' " ''"1"" 1 ' ?^r--^-- '. .."jj. S? A0tr^'?|^;POT mwmm l?0^A??v8b|^ >Jur-vauivTaa5oO. j . ;, .,. . ?.... ? .. ? ,y.#>-, , . . o.<)0 '**Vj??-WS The Farmers' Educational and Co-Operative Union of America. OONDUOTEO DY .j. O. 8TRIBLINQ. r ~'J- Coromulcailons intended for tide dspart'??ut ahnui? bo addreBsod to J. C. Strlbllng, POL dloton, 8. O. What Are You Doing For Farmers? No doubt many farmers are doing what they consider the best thing for their own selfish enda and expect others to do the same. But this is not so. A world-wide market product like cotton cannot be priced ny the pro ducer wi'hout a concert ot action in a co-operative way among the produc ers. _ What it Cost to Organize. The United Miners1 Union paid out last year over seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars in support of the principles and maintaining tbeireystem ot enforcing a demand to have a say in setting prices on their labor. Farmers, how much have you con tributed toward organizing the Far mers7 Union that io the originator of tue plan of co-operation among cotton producers! Thia plan has swept over the South and forced cotton specula tors to pay from 810 to? ?15 mere per bale for your cotton. And if you have not joined the Farmers7 Union or con tributed to thia grand movement in other ways you should take yourself out behind the barn and give yourself a real good bouncing on a rough stone or wire fence. i Shallow Ploughing; Going, going, gone to the lower side is the way of all shallow ploughed lands! Some wrong thinking people seem to think they can defend their i poor ploughing by terracing, but men I of experience will tell yon that there ie absolutely no system of terracing that will keep shallow ploughed lands from washing daring these big frog strangling floods of rain! Now is a good time for the farmer that hos his richest lands down in the briar patches at the lower side of his fields to go after it; clear out the rub bish and plans these places in corn, po tatoes, cowpeas and pumpkins. You had just as well make up your mind that you can't fool nature! Yon may sometimes deceive meo by half doing things but nature only gives up what she has in store for the farmer, and j net as sure as the sun shines it you do not go at it right you will never unlock the riches of the adit unless you use the right key to each of na ture's storehouses. Prepare Your Land Well. -' Water; water; Dry; Dry; will be the cry, next July and August if you do not prepare your lands well now to store up moisture for the dry times that are sure to come. . The-?armer is well aware of the dis astrous consequences if ( he undertakes to give his horse all the solid foods the horse needs and not give thB "critter" any water! The horse would snrelv die for the want of water even if he did have all the food needed. So it ?8 about furnishing plant food for your crops. Yon may apply 1,000 pounds of the beat guano to the aore, but if the land has pot been deeply plo usted and abundant moisture in the eoll in pro portion to tho amount of concentrated fertilizers used the crop will starve for want of moisture, and maleas it should rain ev^ry few day a the more fertiliser Jon use on shallow ploughed land the ssa crop you will make. Now fa the time to prepare the land to atore" up moisture for use during drouth. .?{'- , How can ft sane man expect to get good re turns from concentrated fertil isers pl?v?o on ianda where there is no moisture to diarite these fertilis ers! . . ;? ;.;.;T?' " .?.:. . Tl^ Farmer? Uoionv The Farmers' Educational and <te= operativo Union baa paid out about ?ve hundred and sixty thousand dol lara in the wa; producers, n Thia, grand _ with the Far mero Union. L&B increased the valu? of the cotton farmer*' money crop, cot'OD, over fifty million dollai? on t?o one crop of 1904. v Now, neighbor how Urach have you paid into the Farmers' Union or ?any 0thor effort ;t: help out the work that brought about this grand victory io the iuterest of the Southern farmore' cause? ' The South Carolina Fartner'a Union now has several organizers in Laurens nod other counties cf tho State; and plans aro now on foot to ser.d out at loarjt teri more good men to can vaes the State and: rally farmer? to organisa unde:: ?fie banner of tho Farmers' Edu cational and Co-operative Union. : All good union men aro reqneftted to ge t together \ vq?? select' some of the most competent men and practical farmers and recommend them ea State organizers,^ to take hold at once to bring the farmers together. Good men that will gasher tho farnaera together will get good pay for good work; Tne Cotton Farmers and thc Bucket . v; ,. ' Shop*. ' 1, * ; - the Backen will have no water in the bucket to swim in when swimming time comes to them. It the bucket keepers win thoy know how to pocket the money, sud if they lose much they also Know how to break at the right time and get out of the wav of the wrath to como. GENE H AL SEWS. - Russia is holding up the money sent from friends in America to the Jews, - Two negroes held up a pay train in Alabama and got away with $1, 200. - Three women in Now York were badly torn in a battle with an infuriat ed oat. - Nearly 500,000 persons are said to be starving in three northern prov inces of Japan, where a p&nio pre* vails. - A boy in Massaohuaetts, while eating, bit his tongue and bled to death. The hemorrhage oould not be stopped. - Joseph Watts shot and killed two brothers? D. S. and Orrin Mo Duffie, at a party in Roohelle, Ga., Saturday night. - A steel splinter in a sansago stuok through the tongue of a man io New Jersey, and it took a medical operation to remove it. - One man was killed and three were seriously wounded in a pistol fight between members of political fac tions in Savannah, Ga. - There aro rumors of war between this country and China. The gov ernment is said to bc rushing war sup plies aBfast ?H poaoiuio to the Philip pines. - At Biokaale, Tex., W. J. Poole was shot and killed by W. J. Barris. They were night watchmen and the tragedy is said to have boen duo to jealousy. - Mr. Riobard A. MoGurday, late president of f,he Mutual Life Insur ance Company, who claims ne is now a poor man, is going to make his f ature home in Paris. - Sarah Jones, 70 years old, has been convicted of murder in Phila delphia-the killing of her foster daughter's child within a few hours after it was born. - Booker Washington escorted a delegation of negro students to see the president, the young coons sang for Teddy, who made them a speech and said he was dee-lighted. - While fighting a fire in one of the worst storms of years, William T. Chea well, the popular ohiof of the Boston fire department dropped in his tracks and died from heart failure. - A young white man named M. A. Blaok, of Atlanta, who was con victed for larceny, had his fine paid by his poor old mother. But before his release oould be signed, the moth er died without seeing her erring boy. - Capt. Norman E. Webb, a well known capitalist of Birmingham, Ala., committed suicido while the other members of the family were at break fast, mending a bullet through bis forehead. Ill health ia the ascribed cause.'' - Th oro ls a man in Ncc? Yak city who began poer, never got a larger salary ' than $30 a month and in 15 fears has managed, to save $100,000, [a is a waiter in tho Astor house res taurant. .?' - Tho poBiofSco department hes notified the' promoters off the'James town exposition that souvenir, a tampa of appropriate design: commemorative of the exposition will bo issued. They will be of tho denomination of one and two cents. ?-? if irs sa ?SO -iwuwu oauutug, lao largest of?iee' structura io Augueta, threatened the prinolpal business block Friday afternoon. The build ing was badly wreoked. The lossie $50,000, insured to th? extent of esr enty-fiyeper.c*nt . \r-/' ? - Th? cuuiujittee invettigatiog the affairs of the New York Lue Insur ance Oompany recommended that the officers and trustees responsible for campaign contributions ba sued .to compel restitution, v irr-BWbg 1904 BrasH produced nearly 16,000 bags of. coffee, valued at about $140,000,000. The United States is Brazil's heaviest customer in corle?, the annus! imports amono ti og to nearly $60,000.000. ^ Out of. forty-one aotions for di vorce entered On the docket of tho Caledonia County, Vt., court, but tea Were grouted. In one case, wheres ^ouplo.vhid heen married for forty eight years the judge refused rather sharply to grant ? separation. - In au address before tho 50 dele gates, attending she convention cf oe groes i a Macon, Ga., to discuss racial problema, Bishop H. M. Turner, de clared tbe American flag to bo a dirty 3nd contemptible rag. : He farther aid that hell was an improvement os the-Gniud States when the negro was thrived.'1 ;?t took a squad of policemen with drawn revolver? to keep a thous and men and hoye from lynching a negro, Olarcnce Brooks, in New York ^^MAQOther; negro had bean killed and Brooks is said to have, been in the shooting affray. The South is not tho only section where the lynching spirit prevails. ^ThO ^?nh?bitanta of the iowa of Mf?m?Wi?Wfr?i? and which was practically wiped out by fire lost week hive ioat heart ; aad wiii abandon the pl*e?VOoo saloon Waa left and whoo tho pr#riatojr refesedyto :obey the mayor's order and close, he.sent men there ; with Vates;-; who; knocked1' the STATE MEW?. -' A white ohild ia Newberry while playing before a fire, waa burned to death. - Rev. Thomas C. Jaoks, a promi nent Baptist minister, died at his homo in Laurens County on Thursday in the 27th year of hi? ago. - Allan Mack, who killod his wife in Charleston sevoral days ago, has been exonerated from all blamo, tho killing being aooidental. , - Hannah Kelley, colored, of Union is 106 years old and is still strong and 1 hearty. Sbo has only one ohild liv ing, a daughter aged 08. - Three illioit stills were destroyed in tho Dark Corner of Spartan burg County last Thursday by State Con- ' stables Miller and Mulligan assisted by two constables from Greenville. - George Baten, a young man of Piokons, bought a horse and buggy in Greenville for $185 and gave a forged oh eek for $200 for. them, receiving $15 in change. Ho has been arrest ed. - A new bank with a hundred thousand dollars capital has been or* ganged in Greenville, with B. A. Morgan, author of tho far-famed but no 7? defunct "Morgan Bill," as presi dent. - J. R. Lylos and Roy WobBter, members of the Preston Literary So ciety of Wofford College, have been elected to represent Wofford in the annual debato with Furman Univer sity, to bo held early this spring. - William Gilder, a colored sohool teaoher, was beforo the mayor in New berry on the charge of selling liquor. Tho proof was positive, and he was found guilty. The mayor eentenoed bim to paya fine of $100 or servo thirty days on the ohaiogang. - A 12-year-old boy np.med Mo Mahan, whose father works, in the granite quarry at Pacolet, was killed as the result of a dynamite explosion. A piece of rook as largo as a man's fiat was thrown 500 yards, Btriking the boy on the head and crushing his I skull. - A few days ago Gov. Heyward granted a . all pardon to John Har rison, sentenced ten years ago from Williamsburg to a life term for mur der.' This is the negro beforo whoso celia ooostablo, in order to get are ward, appeared for a numbero f nights dressed ia a sheet and frightened in to a confession. Tho ooo stahl o after ward confessed his methods. - Prioleau, the negro who is con testing Congressman Logare's seat, may not be present at the hearing of the oontest, when it oomeB up. He may be "unavoidably detained." He is under a jail sentenoe for tampering with tho mails while a postal derk between Sumter and Charleston, and the aoart of appeals says there was nothing wrong with the conviction. - In celebrating tho ordinance of the Lord's Supper a great many churches are disoontinning the use of wine containing alcohol, using instead on fer men ted wine whioh is the pare juioe of the grape. The Methodist ohurch of oar town was the first in EdgeSeld to adopt the unfermented .fine and it is probable that the other oharohes will do likewise at no very distant doy.--Edgefiold Advertiser. Receivers E. W. Hoghes and B. A. Hagood, of the Columbia Savings and Trust Company of Charleston, which failed a few days ago, filed their bonds and qualified. The olaims ?gainst the bask are now to be 'Prov ed before Master fi. H. Sass. There is muoh speculation on the amount whioh will bo realised. It was stated that the depositors may expect about sixty por cent, but the statement was ooto&toial. ; -. The body pf an old, gray haired man was found near the Southern Railway bridge near Fort Mill? There were no signs of violence and it ia very probable that the old man froze to death. Abont $47 waa found in the pockets of the overalls, which, with the exception of some very thin underclothing, was al! he had on. An old letter in his poekat contained one sentence that could be read: "William Maxwell died Bee. 1882." .*\- A dog supposed to be mad bit the four-year-old son of James E. Dill, on Brawley street, in Spartan burg. The ohild was playing near bis father's home, when the dog ap peared and sprang upon the child, tearing away a portion of the flesh from his cheek. Prompt medical as sistance was given the wounded boy. It is said that the dog bit and snap ped a number of dogs in that seotion of 8partahhnrg. The dog'was finally killed by a member of the polioo force*'1 ? . .; O. B. Evans, of Buffalo Cotton Mills, was. Strock by train No. 40 early Wednesday night while walking along the track from Spartanb arg Jnnotion to Spartanburg. He was thrown some distance from the track, where he remained in an unconscious oondition for more than one hoar. When he regained consciousness ho walked to Maddox's drag store, where his wound s were dressed by Dr. H. E. McDowell. He sustained a oat on his face and received several braises abont his head. . - A notable instance of a dog's do? votiou . to its owner ocoarred in this community a few days ago. Mrs. Julius Blackmon? who recently died in Lancaster, as noted in The News-at tbe t?mo, owned a* little- '.floe," to w?ioh she was greatly attached. Hav ing no children, Mrs. Blackmon was want topouho dog a'freal deal. And when she died tho griof of tho little "Soe" was inconsolable. J% bo ?led most piteously, for several days and nights, refused to eat anything and [fioaJly di^ vt?&iM?ti\ ;.. '?.?",tu-.? ? ' -: jr . ': Mr. Fan? an Honest Man. Chief Constable Fnnt seoras an hon est man and his honesty ia brought out all the moro clearly by the position he occupies in connection with the dispensary eyk?etn, ?G which there ap pears to have boon much rottenness ?cd corruption. Tho experience Con stable Faut had wi'h tho higher otli cors of tho State, wheroin they ignored his charges of crookedness, was enough to make a grafter out of any man ol: less honesty of purpose and purity of lifo. Ho could have put ouly oue con struction on their conduct, and that, they winked at tho rottenness. Con stable Fnnt might have gathered from this attitude ot the highest authori ties that his best course would be to get out of his position all there was in it. Hut, after this seeming license to grafters, tho constable, it appears, continued to administer the a fl air s of his ofilco in an honest way. Had he not done this he could not now, four years after his ?rst charge of crooked noas, stand so firmly on what ho said at that time end declare "It is true and I will provo it." No man comes forward now toohargo tho constable with dishonest prac tices, though he has administered the niiairs of his oilice during these four years knowing the authorities of tho State had refused to pnniBh apparent dishonesty and thereby endorsed, in a measure, sucn conduct.-Spar canburg Herald. Have you boen troubled with broken Plow Stock Deamh? If so buy a Steel Beam Plow Stock from Sullivan Hdw. Co. Tho Boaraa in those Stocke will not * break. i nc Farmers Loan & Trust Co,, ANDERSON, 8, C., IS authorized to act as Executor or Administrator of Estates and a9 Guar dian for minor children. We have quite ft number of Estates in hand now. We will be glad to talk the matter over with you. t&- Office at FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BANK, Anderson,S.C. L - 5 5 .*"' ? Garden and Flower Seed. GET THEAN AT BARR S NEW DRUG STORK P. L. BARR & CO., 110 North Main Street. ARE H ADE UT ALL THE RRECT STYLES OF Sack Coats, Single or Double Breasted. Belt-Back Overcoats. Single or Donbreaited Chesterfields, Top Coats, Etc. If you wish to be clothed in the latest styles drop in and take a look at "Eclipse" garments. Sou oannot do better? and the price will suit you. FOR SALE BY OM Bid, BB BBS! This Establishment has been Selling IN ANDERSON for moro than forty years. Puring all that time competitors have oome and gone, but we have remained right hero. We have always sold Cheaper than any others, and during those long years we have not had one die satisfied oustomor. Mistakes will sometimes occur, and if at any time we found that a customer was dissatisfied we did not rest until wo had made him satisfied. This policy, rigidly adhered to, hasmado nsfriohd^i true and last ing, and wa oan say with pride, but without boasting, that we have tho confi dence Of the people of this section. We hava a larger Stock of Goods this season than-wo havo ever had, arid we pledge you our word that we bavernover sold Furniture at as dose a margin of profit as wo aro doing now. This ia proven by tho fact that *?e aro selling Furniture not ouly all over Anderson County but in every Town in the Piedmont section. Come and see us. Your parents Saved money by buying from us, and you and your children oan sa*re money Dy buying Inte tt?. Wo carry EVERYTHING- in tho Furniture line?