University of South Carolina Libraries
1 i BY CLINKSCALES ft. LANGSTON. ANDERSON, S. C., WEDNESDAY, MAKCH 21, 1906. VOLUME XLI-NO. 40. Copyright 1905 by Hart Schaffner fc? Marx Do You Like It ? Some men pre for tho double-breasted Sack Suit. The illustration hero shows why so many of them prefer pur 'double-breasted Sack. It's different from the ordinary in style, workmanship and fit. Add to the good looks the good Quality, the ?tyle, the tailoring? and you'll understand why ?0 many men prefer our Clothes. H. S. & M. Suits $10.00 up. 1 Other good Suits $7.60, $10.00 and fl* 50, B. Oa- Evans & Co., One Price to All The Spot Cash Clothier!. SEE WHAT Glensea Says firs? Jan. 24,^906~ Analysis Nov 6057; . ^ - ? .'.'.v........;.i4oo' ^/PjLEMSOy FOUND Av*:0os. Acid...,,,..,-14,26 *y$Qtu,24; l?Oo^AijilyiaV Ko, 6865, at A?tnio, 8. a ; . . ^^^few^^?^^^^piAcm. FOTASE* - Oar Guarantee.................. v.v.. .,.?000 200 3,10,1906-Aloysia Mo, 6 at jDpnalds, S? C. y fw v?***^^ . ,v i ? ; y v 116.00 Cl^MSfiy gQ?NDv... ..;,'.V;K:^?:;S^-/%0<> '' 8.65 ' ^;i2^ ^?ftr^?y^ Wo, 699&V at ?bi^e^S. C. V::-l g^^CLBMt&OKT FOUND Ava. Phos. Acid.... .15.62?????$ ?. ACID. AWL POTil^ Oar Guarantee.............. ......865 2.00 iiHK .f.-: V.. }^-?$/m^?^^ol )89,-a?^r^il?e? B.:.0^ Farmers' Union Bureau of Information. - Conducted by the - South Carolina Farmers' Ede clonal and Co Operativo Union. -:;:Li- Communications intended for thin department should be addreabed lo J. C. atribling, Pendleton, B. a Our Cotton on Hand. Our effor s in these columns has been cbielly directed towards checking* if possible, tho increase of acreage by Billy farmers in cotton; we have not thought it necessary to givo any ad vice here to the farmers now holding their cotton. These are men of boai ness, end are usually men with suffi cient grit, pluck and financial backing to carry ? lu ir pointa and know what they aro about. The cotton holders that now have tliis matter in hand are about aa good financiers, and have about as much collateral and backing behind them as the bear ele ment have. Cotton holders know now that about all the acary holders have been shaken ont, and that the cotton bear is now up against the resd solid Stuff. Spot holdere are well e>ware of the fact that the spinner has got to have about all the cotton bo toro tbe next crop comes in, and it matters not whether tho next crop will be a small or a large crop. The thing is this, the mills must run or the walking mobs that are parading the streets of too foreign manufacturing cities calling for work or bread will wage riot. Stopping the mills under such condi tion would be equivalent to striking a match in a powder house. Ho'J yo ar holt, boys, and make them come over! Tl.? CIM. -.O mm?t. -rt ? m. tfi(iw wi ITO sillies. If we are not badly deceived in the aigns of the times, farmers that do not heed the warnings of the Formero1 Union and plant more food crops now, they will be running- around next Foll wanting every bod v's ad vic? about how to bay $20.00 a ton peavine hay and $1.00 a bushel corn with 6 cents cotton! Our big supply men. and mule men, too, hod better butt in this thing at once along with the Farmers' Union in their efforts to induce farmers to plant more food crops and less cotton, or the gama next Winter will be nip and tuck between these men and the buzzards aa to who w??? get the most revenue out of this mule mortgage business. A gootf deal ia being said recently about live a ink associations in each of the counties of the State, which will be a good thing if our farmers will take to them, a lui instead of bragging about selling ptuviur hay and other food crops, they w?il mino and feed more stock ana take cart) vi thc manure, they need not be howling any longer about the guano trust! Our Farmers' Unions should take to this live stock idea like young ducks take to water; it ie the natural thing to do and right along the straight road to the permanent building up of the up-to-date progressive idea of the in dependent farmer of. the South. . AU our Farmers' Unions abonld be each in itself a good live stock associa tion, and talk more ebon* raising more and better stock and talk less about raining more cotton. . . j nw? mm i Bow Aboat This? Some of onr South Carolina Far ro ora7 Unions have been trying to make av desi ?Ith the Uniese is tbs grain grow lng West for their grain, bnt neither the grain growers nor tho cot ton grower Save been able to get cara to ablp the corn. We are told that corn has been offered there from 83 cents to 86 cents per bushel, and thous aads of bushels have been piled on the ground there rotting while cotton far mers in Sooth Carolina are paying 75 costs tc 80 cents for their corn When they, can get it. .It seems that the .grain elevator men and the B* B. men get about aa much out of the Western Cbrn Crop as the corn growers get, while South Carolina; cotton farmers foot the bills tor the whole push. .pow, > thia ts not a mai*** io be Bot tled altogether by Congress Or the courte, for. the reason that yon cannot } legislate common horse sense into cotton farmers' heads, nor drive the bog and hominy doctrine down their throats''unless some other fellow grows th* hog and hominy. Our way out of tots thing is to grow' vour own'food stuffaJ It mattera not how cheap 'Others can grow it, ,some how or other, if there ia anything like ?ood in . thia trad in g business among farmers crops, the men that Stand be tween the cotton gr? weraend the a rain gio were get about all the sugar there ie in the hog, while. the farmers at each.? end are howling calamity and chewing the bag. . ? * At t? Arri?n ? mind ono monkey while be io picking cotton, and it usually takes two of our ?Southern cotton growers to mind ono of those native African negroes while he is growing the cotton and keep bim at it. When we come to reason this thing ovet in our minds, wo aro confident that we have a large number of tamo negroes hero about among our progres sive ootton farmers that would never do a day's work if they could keep from starving .nd freezing without it. There ie no ucceseity for negroes to vrork in Africa for food and ctot':ing, and it is against their saturo to dc ic here as well ns thero. We have rome white men hero that have the jame disease. All this talk about composition with American ootton is rot as? out ot date here, where we knov that the South baa the ideal cotton belt of the world, and we know how to grow cotton, and are learning how to manufacture cot ton, and still moro we. havo learned to count the cost of production of cotton, and how to demand a fair profit upon our products and we aro going to have it. GENERAL BEWS. - Tho Texas farmers have formed I an onion trust. - Americans in the Islo of Pines I have renewed their efforts to have i that island annexed to the United States. - Orrin Stienberger, a we'I known artist of Urbano, Obio, has lived all winter on the top of a majestic ak tree for his health. I - A young white man in Atlanta who answered the telephone bell dar* iog a thunder storm was knooked down and his faoe and arm badly burn* Sw. - Gov. Beckham, of Kentuoky, has called an extra session of the legis lature to outdo the whiskey lobby whioh prevented legislation at the last session. - Andrew Carnegie has given 310, u?U to the railroad Y*. M. C. A. at Richmond, Va., and increased his li* brary offer to the oity by $100,000 making it$200,000. -- Eighteen Americans and 600 Moros were killed in a battle near Jolo, capital of the Snlu Island, Philippine archipelago, whioh result ed in the capture of the Moros' strong hold. - Two armed negroes entered the store of Frank Bolto, an aged Italian, at Gross Point, near New Orleans, La., and shot bim dead, fatally wound ed his two sons, aged 13 and 14, and theo robbed the store. - Mattie M. . Marshall, a grand niece of fotmer Chief Jus tico Mar shall, of the Unite '. States Supreme Court, ?B one of the three women rural mail carriers in ?Qerica, one is oonneoted with the Granite City (111.) poBtoffioe. - During a thunder storm in At lanta on Wednesday the steeple of the Second Baptist ohuroh was set on fire by a flash of lightning. Firemen fought the flames in the rain for two hours. The ehuroh was damaged to the extent of $800. -"Tbs Samoan Islands are in emp tion. Lave is pouring into the sea and the ooean boiling for miles around. Three villages have been destroyed, and at night a wa!2 of mol" ten lava, reaohing five miles into tbs sea, can be seen. - The "British King/* a Phoenix lino steamer, sailing from New York to Antwerp, was wreoked in a storm 150 miles off Oap 3 Sable on Wed nos* day. Twenty-four men were rescued by other Vessels, but 27 went down with the sinking ship. ? ~ Five Koreans in the leland of Hi wai i tortured to death a man who had stolon a Bmall sum of money from them. They prolonged his agonies for hours/ by rubbing his wounds with salt, and then slowly burned the victim to death. - When the translation of the Bible whioh Bev. F. H. Price, amis* sionary to Guam, ia now working on shall hav * b- e r completed, tho Scrip tures or porijyu ? thtrcof, may be road in 300 diffoieal JmiKUNgos. The lan guage of the owtives of Guam is culled Chameere. ._ Th A-VT? * Dspirisssni has decided tVat officers of the commissary de partment shall be instructed in bak ing bread in camp. The officers, two at a time, will be seist to the school Of application for cavalry, aod field artillery at Fort Riley, for a oourse in the s oho ol s for cooks and bakers. A orasy old negress testified re cently thar. Memphis, Tenn., would sink out of sight on tho ; 27th of M?roh and the negroes of that oity are leaving the oily by hundreds every day. The railroads < have ar ranged for excursion traine out of the eity the 20th. to return the 23ib, if thia city is still there. -r Rev. W. H. Wilson, pastor of the Arlington Avenue Presbyterian Church, Brooklyn, insists that here after the women of his congregation I take efl their hats a few minutes be fo re the beginning of tho sorvico be cause so many of the male parishion ers complain that they can not Bee him while ho is speaking. . . -**-, Tinder tbs alleged influence of whiskey Augustus Crawford, of May s vil?e, Ky., lay on the Louisville and Nashville railroad track on the put* sUrte of the town and want to sleep; Shortly after a northbound passenger train oame along and, striking Craw ford ???*re?y At'- tbs side,h micahim a distance of ?10& feet. When pick ed up it was ionnd that there .tea? not a bone broken cor was there a Scratch oin his person. . The distance the man was thrown was measured by tho eon* ductor and hi? crew. Crawford had fl-re bottles of whiskey abotit Ms clothes, none of whioh k?Ai*AM .. .;>^ViJ4v:o -rJsJ8?soref???i STATE NEW?. - Edmund Deus bec called thu State Republican Executive Commit tee to moot in Columbia March 29. - J. E. Normont, tho govoruor'a privato secretary, confirms tho rumor iLat he iu a candidate for Seoretary of Stato. - There ie talk again to tho effect that ex-Senator MuLaurin, of this State, may be invited to a scat in tho cabinet. - Senator Tillman says that bo knows nothing of auy plana to hold a oonventiou of tho friends of the dis pensary. - >iotioo of intention to appeal in tho case of George Hasty in Gaffney has been berved on tho prosecuting at torneys. - Stato Treasurer Jennings, who haa been in a^bospital in Baltimore for several weeks, has returned to Colum bia muoh improvod in health. - Alfred Millson, a prominent far mer near Snelling, in Barnwell Coun ty, shot and killed a negro .by tho name of Tillio at Saolling Saturday night. - The Court of Common Pleas for Abbeville County openod last week with twenty-seven oases on the jury calendar, nine ol them being against corporations. - Representativo Morgan, of Greenville, author of the "Morgan bill," has deolared his purpose to re* tire from politico on account of the presa of business. - lanac ^Anderson, the elevator man at tho Rayai Bag Manufacturing Company of Charleston, was caught betweon the ascending elevator and the third floor and instantly killed. - May 8 bas been chosen for the dedication of Odd Fellows' orphanage home at Greenville. Great prepara tion ie being made and the inoident will be one of the most interesting events of Odd Fellowship in this State. - Jessie Clements and J. F. Baker, both white, at Floreooe, got into a quarrel, during whioh pistols were drawn and each shot the other. When the smoke of battle cleared Baker waa found seriously and Clements dan gerously wounded. - The Columbia correspondent of the News and Courier says: There are 8,804 pensioners on (he lists of the State on account of the Confederate fund, it is a noteworthy fact that one-tenth of all of the pensioners ia South Carolina are in Spartanburg district. - The pardon board disposed of over 20 of the petitions turned over to them by Governor Hey ward. Then? were only four whioh reoeived favor? able, consideration and all of theso were for prisoners^ who have a short tisse to serva and had been oonvioted of minor offenses. - Gov. Heyward has signed the bill changing the bird laws cf the 8tate. Tao open season is now ander the new law, from November 15 tc Maren 1, instead of from November 1 to April 1, thus cutting of? 15 days of November at the start of the BOB SOU and the whole of Marou at the ena. - The tr ne toes of the South Caro lina Industrial School (or reforma tory) have had a number of propo sitions from towns which want the institution located within their bor ders. Ycrkvillo has offered the bar racks of tho King's Mountain Mili tary Academy and other places are making oilers. - The State sinking fund commis sion is now placing between $800,000 and $*C0,vG?? io loans with the vari ous counties of the State. . Thia money is placed with the counties at 5 per Cent but the Stato requires a first Hen on tho taxes to be collected. The only way a renewal can be had is by tho aotual payment of tbo previous year's paper. - The Greenville loo and Cjld Storage Company, a stock company, with John B. Marshall at ita hoad, will construct a forty-ton ioe plant on ! Seedy river. Tbo cite has been chos en aid work will be commenced soon on the plant. They will manufacturo ioe for cold storage, and for re-icing refrigerator c^8. . - In, attempting to cross from the freight depot to the passenger depot at Darlington, Charlea Morten, a white man about 60 years of age, got I both hands ont off. In crossing he undertook to pass under a freight oar just BS the shifting engine struck it. Ho was moving with his family to the Bennetts ville cotton milla. -- The Soothern Railway has pur chased a number of large freight en ?Ines which will be operated on the partanbnrg & Asheville division of tnt road for hauling heavy coal trains. The engines are larger than any that have boco used by tho Southern, weighing 17 tons more than tho lo oomotives now in nie. They aro sim ilar to the engines used on the roads that cross the Bookies and the' great trank,lines in the East. \ . - A Supremo Court decision field last Friday .seals tho fato of Bob Smalls and John Nail, North Carolina white , men, who were oonvioted last spring; in Darlington of the murder of a negro ??am ed Frank Seo ti,, whom they shot on*tho Btroots,. the whito men being in a drunken and 'rowdy condition. Smalls^Was only 32 years old and Kali just i? at tho time of the killing. S ?nails was gi ven a death sentence and Nail, being recommended to meccy, got a Ufa sentence. 8m alls wa? sentenced to hang; last M ry. Tho Supremo coturt affirms the results ia the lowe? *> Dur fe, and Smalls ;,s to be rescnteovid in the near faure. >.. .... - . Refused to Take Oath. Negro Told a Mule. Culumbia, March 1G.-Tho state ment has been made to tho Comptrol ler General that whoo the majority of tho assessors for Greenville County were asked to sign the oustomary oath that they would assess thc property at its "truo valuo" and "equalizo it," Homo of the members of tho boards of assOiJBors balked. It waft stated to them ?hat "true valuo" meant "true value/' i. e., a 100 per cent valuation. Some doolinod to oigo. Then others, so the story goos, wished to insert of thoir own accord, GO per oent. Tho law does not permit any aincudment of this obligation. Now the fact de velops that there is only one assessor in all Greenville Couuty, who is said j to bo qualified. Undor tho J?W all officers must bo commissioned, and there is only one oommission extant in Greenville County for a niembor of thc board of assessors, and that was issued to Mr. Boswell in 1894. If this bo oorroot, then there will have to bo a new deal in Greenville, and the assess ors will have to bo commissioned by some ono before their wo?k will have legal foroo and effeot. They must then take the oath of office or quit bus iness.-News and Courier. Birmingham, March 15.--?. special to the Age Herald from Dotbam, Ala., says: "Following the arrest yester day of Will Christmas, son and Wal ter Holland, son-in-law, in oonucction with the murder of the Christm?T fam ily, now and sensational devolopuionts have boon brought to light. A detective who has been at work on the case declares tho mystery solv ed. Ho has been near Cottonwood several days hiding in tho woods in tho guise of an escaped murderer from Georgia, hiring a negro to bring him meals. Ho suspected tho negro know something of the crime, and with th' s id of a concealed export ventriloquist^'-'-, talked to thc negro through a mule. Tho ventriloquist caused tho mule to apparently inquire of the terrified ne gro tho identity of the murderers. Tho negro's superstition was aroused and it is alleged ho told the details of the murder to tho mule. The arrest? followed. Dying Wife Bil Him. Now York, March 1G.--John Alford, 50 years old, of 96 Wost forty eighth street, Bayonne, is in tho Bayonne hospital suffering, it is thought, from !hydrophobia. Ile had displayed symptoms of the disoaso for several days, and his family, usable tc con- ( trol him, summoned the polios yeates day. Twelve years ago Alford's wife died of hydrophobia from the bite of a dog. JuBt before her death she bit her hus band, who was holding her, on the arm. The woand healed and Alford paid little attention to it, but the bite io suppoEod to bo responsible for his condition now. Colony for North Carolina. Asheville, N. C., Maroh 15.--A statement issued by the Asheville board of trade to-night announoed tho oompletion of negotiations whereby three or four hundred Swedish colo nists will be brought from the Eut te to settle in this section of tie Steted The colonists belong to tho Swedish Lutheran denomination, and they wilf have a resident pastor in the person of tho Rev. W. Kdlund, who has been hero for some timo making prepara tions for the coming of his countrymen. The colonists willengage principally ia sheep raising and agricultural par suits. THE Farmers Loan & Trust Co,, I ANDERSON, 8. C., IS authorized to act as Executor or Administrator of Estates and as Guar dian for minor ohildren. Wo have quite a number of Estates in hand now. We will be glad to talk the matter over with you. mr Office at FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BANK. Anderson,S.0. Garden and Flower Seed. GET THEM AT BASE S NEW DRUG STORE. F. L. S ABB & CO., " no North Matu Street. ?a ..vj.*.' m M M m m m : 'm ?m ; . ? v.- mi r.-;: t*? -M >l4 -?EE M a DE IN ALL THE -- CORRECT STYLES fri OF Sack Goats, Single or Double Breasted. Belt-Back'Overcoatsir Single or Doubreasted GREAT COATS. Chesterfields, [? Top Coats, Etc. If yon wish to be clothed in the latest styles drop in anet take a look at "Eclipse" garments. You cannot do better, and the price will snit yon. FOR SALE BY Wm i ,-. inri! m