University of South Carolina Libraries
i ". '?' ---~- *--M--?-;-' .' ._^^^^ ~ <m?:mWirnr?r\ A -WT r>?T7iV?mir;ni<r Y?T/\T? C?A inAC . 37/YT TT M TT. YT.T_"Ki\ 1/1 r FOR HEN! Our showing of $10.00 Suits for this Spring is, perhaps, the largest assortment we*ve ever shown at this price. The line includes all cuts Slims, Stouts and Regular Sacks, made well, correct out, and we show them in a vari ety of patterns that should please any man : Blue Herges? Black Thibet, Black Wors teds, Cassimers, Hard Finish Copyright 1904 by Hart Schaffner &f Marx in this lino in quantities tha$ surprise the average' buyer of Clothes. It's no secret how weare able to sell suoh values at $10.00. You know we buy for Gash, get all the discounts and then we sell for Cash, have no losses by bad debts. We don't maire as mttOhon our $10.00 Suits as credit Stores do, but by giving BETTER VALUES We sell moro of thom, and tho small, sure profit that wo get on each Suit makes a satisfactory showing at the ?nd of the year. Tho next time you want a Suit of Clothes COME HERE ! You'll como without being urged after buying once of us. l#i?l??i ll 9 ? : ^M?h ?*s. supply scything ?om a J? vc SEAS? t? OB0&? cr PIANO you will find with ?a wsusic Our Piano pricjre now from $175 upwards. Our Orgiin pricei now from eSO upwftrdu. ?ecoBd-haad os? ia great varley cheap.' . Be^ ptjm^^ to wit eisy one. ' . :- v Ck?iK9to see or wrste UBa ^.jj^ supplied. .? .SED. G. BROWN, Frei arul .Ereae. * ^ B. F. MAULDIN, Vice Praaldent. ? ^isK .-' .'. ?????? . T?hi? Anderson xReal Esiatie !; - ifsr facilities for handling iyour property are perfect, as l^'J?largo advertisers ali tho country. Bight now laing Counties, and owners of farm lan&* in thePtedmo&t oti$pm$^^ ? are in a position to make quick and satisfactory S^^^ M^??^^t^coto ??yo'?ttsntioa properties en? Address ali communications to Jf C. Cummings Sales Farmers' Union Bureau7 of Information. - Conducted by the - (South Carolina Farmers' Educational and Co Operative Union. ?&T~ Commuoioationa Intended for this department should be addressed to J. C. Stribllng, Pendleton, 3. C. - What about that farmer that con tinues to drive a nail with a rock, or old plow, aud allowa his wife to do the same way, when the price of three drinks of whiskey and a plug of to bacco would pay for a good claw hatchet? - There seems to be no salvation or hope for that miserable, simple-mind ed "all cotton farmer" who absolutely refuses to heed tbe warning of the Farmers' Union about not planting moro food crops. Nothing in the way of words seem to affeot these elavea of a ruinons system. They cannot be made to feel anything of less force than a rear-end collision with a billy goat or a hungry cotton mule that would foroe them to eat their meat* from the mantlepiece for about a week. _ _ - You Farinera Union man atand np there and pull off your bat, we have something to tell you that will make you feel proud. Did you ever think that our South Carolina Farmers' Ucion-eolumn was now being publish* -ed io papera that reach over four hun dred thousand Southern people whs subscribe to thees papers? Newspaper men tell na that ia aol Thia should re mind all who fnrniab infuriation for thia column that we should be very careful what ne say, lox this responsi bility is not only great, but oar teach ings along thia educational line ahould be conducted upon a high plane. Building Our Forts White Comparative Peace is in ina Southland Cotton Market. In answer to many inquiries from farmers for the cheapest plan for far mers to put up their own warehouses we are getting together a lot of very interesting information as to plans and coat of a very aimple, good and cheap Formers' Union warehouse that most any atrong local Union can put up themaelvea at comparative email cost. Send ia to our bureau all the iofor mation you have on thi ssubject. m <? -? The Founder cf The Farmers' Union is Newton Gresham, the father of tho Farmers' Ed neat ion ul and Co-opera tive Union- of America, died at bia home at Point? Texas, April 10th. Newton Gresham ia dead bat bia work and spirit livea on in the Far mers* Union, which ia already the greatest fanners' organization that the world baa ever known. In the Farmers' Union organisation Newton Gresham has left tc his peo ple, his family and the Southern far mera as well an heritage and monu ment to bia memory that is far greater than a mist ai gold and roany 8tames in bronco. . ?". , His South. Carolina Union brethren mourn bia loas, While we bow to the will of Bini who gave bim for our good. Peace be antonia ashes,. . Farmers' Volon News. * Thia South Carolina Farmern' Un ion column la now published in every Sonthora fifiato frnra ?ho VUAG?S??dC f ~ the) James Eivers. . .. - Texas and Oklahoma papers State that our Farmers' Union momharc nn? round np more than ?Ix hundred thous and farmers that belong to tba union. Cheer upV- farmers, your organisation is growing; wy fast in both numbera and knowledge,. " c <>; - Toll ail tanners, whether they are delegates or cot, to come to Anderson* S. C., ou May Sist, to be present at tba organisation of the State'! Farmers' Union. > V-, ?$?m?m?. .-Any farmer not already a member ox the anion can be initiated at ?oder-' son and become a member and repre eentative at thia State Union front any county that has no organisation already in the union. . . . > ' : - ~- National President of the Farmers* Union, E., F. Duckworth, O. P. Pyle, lecturer, President Barrett, of the Georgia State Union, and several o t h er noted uoion mon and o?lcers of - the National Union willi be on hand at An derson May Slat to assist in organising the State Union. Every local and county union in the State should be represented at tole State Untonv: - ??- .' -.^.j ?-. - Notice. Tb tile Farmers of South Carolina: =.' You are hereby cal Jed to meet in dele? gated power at Anderson, 8. C., May 31st, 1906,'for the p u rpo se of or? au izi n g a preliminary State Union. Basis: of representation in onranieed counties .will be one for every 100 members, or majority fraction thereof. - v In couuties where there is no County " pion, one delegate from each local union. ' All farmers who ero members aro invited to attend. All counties that have rio Farm era Union organisa tion aro invited to send farmer de!e> Vteflw Please send names of delegates . B. Fi ':Earle, Andareon, S. C., ten Sdays before. The purpose for which the State nion ia cabled ia-to adopt a constitu on and by-la we to govern the Farmers' Union in South Carolina; also to bring the fannora in a close and secret or ^duissticn for tho nnrnoae of hold\nar and controlling thai price, of cotton; also, to encourage tie bniidi?i: Of a Formera' Union Warehouse in ?vury county in. Son th. Carolina, io be owttftd and controlled by, faders. ^:--:^-_:::--'y>- JBvF.^rie, ;.. , ??^^^v^^:?<^tate: Organiser. Afcderson, S. C. :. :. ? '. <?;<.?.>;?? :>,,. -;' ' uiuiiiiinii/wii- iii .ir i'm ?rii?i?nir . _' V ' '.^ ~- TJie Virtfaia-Garoll^ ] Company, the largest manufacturers bf commercial fertilisers ia ?he world, ' ts booked for a lot of trouble ia tho UMPJ? etstes courts. ? t c on trois a J large psrt of the phosphate lands and many cotton oil mills lo this State acd Will lave to answer lo the charge and Complaint that it is a trust contrary to j STATE KEW?. - Constables in Pickens caught a large gang of blind tigers at a singing Convention. - The Attorney General thinks the law with regard to road tax does not apply to temporary residents or visi tors. i - Application ha? been made for a charter tor the Yardley cotton mill whioh has been lying idlo for twelve years. - The tenth annual meeting of King's Daughters and Sons will be held in Laurens May 8th to 11th, in clusive. - Plans have been adopted for a new court house at Sumter to cost about 170,000. The material used will be granite or fine brick. - Mr. Ed TOWUB, overseer on the Barnwell county chain gang, who ac cidentally Bhot himself recently, died at the Columbia hospital where be was taken for treatment. - Governor Hey ward has granted respites to Epps Snowden and Arthur MoFaddin, both of vrhom are under sentence of death for murder, and who were to have been hanged on May 4th. - Following Dr. Pearson's gift to Nowberry College of $25,000 provid ed a like sum is raised by .thc college for endowment, Andrew Carnegie has offered $10,000 for ? ic iii io depart ment. - Robert R. Noffs, of Cross Hill, aged 17, pleaded guilty in th? United States court is Greenville of brook ing into the posiofBco at Cross Hill Sud was seutenoed to two yesrs in tho government reformatory in Wash ington. - Fire whioh started at 2 o'clock Wednesday morning in the wooden annex? of the Bamberg cotton mill destroyed that building and six or seven other buildings aoross the street, entailing a loss of probably 130,000. - Dr. Rupert Blue, a native of Marion, brother to Victor Blue, of the navy, and a surgeon in the United States marine hospital service hes been detailed to 8an Franotsoo to as sist in the oare of the injured and sick of the stricken oity. - J. T. Durst, the young white man recently shot by a negro in John ston, is deed. He died in the hospi tal at Augusta, where he wss carried for treatment: Thc negro escaped, and the governor bas been requested to offer a reward for bia ospture. - The suit of Jos. Oliver Carr against the Southern Railway, for $10.000 damages, was tried in the United States distriot oonrt at Green ville and resulted in a verdict of $2,000 for the plaintiff. Carr is s young brakeman and was injured at Hickory, N. C. - Grand Chancellor B. A. Morgan, of the Knights of Pythias, bas issued an appeal to every subordinate Lodge in the State to send help for the home less, ; penniless and almost hopeless members of the order io Cslifornia to C. F. Neal, President Board of Con trol, Manhattan Building, Chicago. - There were three unusual eal Ie ra on Commissioner Watson a few days ago. They were three Russians. They bsd come direct to New York from Rn na i a- and tSS d?^s' f. tcp in ?sw York, esme to Columbia to consult Commissioner Watson. They have money and experience and wsnt to engage in stock raising. . - A number of whiskey houses from whom it is claimed the former State Board of Control bought whis key illegally, have agreed to take back all the whiskey bought from them whioh the dispensary now hes on baud, and this action relieves the situation to a grast estent. A few houses have ref used to take any back. - Cl are nco Daniels wss shot and instantly killed io Columbia by W. P? Little* Buth are white men and wore employeesof the street rsilwsy company. The killing occurred at ?be oar barn when tbs men had Some u oil duty. There, had been bad blood between ?bo two for some time. Little would make no statement; S Thc Methodist Church st Clifton Mill No. 1, Spartanburg, wss struck Thursday afternoon by a bolt of light oing and completely burned. The conflagration happened between four and five o'olock^during a severe elec trical storm. ' Tbs Joss was total and amounted to $B,500. .-This is the sec ond time thal the ?difi?e has been struck sinoe its completion about eight years ago, and the building was being repaired when it was demolished. ^ -4 It is dearly twenty years since the great earthquake whioh wrought snob havoc in Charleston. That dis turbance occurred on the night of .August 31, 1886, and tbs first shook lasted about forty seconds. The total loss of property from the earthquake was estimated ai five million dollars ?nd tbs loti of 11 f * * t*f i bu ted to lbs disturbance including those who died of exposure as weil as those killed outright by the felling of buildings reached to very nearly a hundred per sons. ? v' .; ;>r Bliss Lucile Me'Ninob, employed hi the overall factory at Chester, was the v ic ti m. of ; what might have been a serions accident last Thursday. As it vraB she escaped with only a few bruises and thc loss of her clothing. She became entangled in one of the machines and, before she could extri cate herself, was drawn bodily; into tho machine. Fortunately, however, Supt. Baker noticed th? : occurrence and threw the belt off the pulley just lc tho nick of tim?, thus undoubtedly saving the young lady's life.. UESEKAL NEWS. - Reporta point to the largest yield of wheat ever grown. - Last week there was a heavy fall of Buow over the State of Maine. y-349,440 persons aro being fed daily by the San Franoisoo relief ooin mittoe. - Mrs. Katie Butler, of Atiaula, sues her husband for divorce beoause te slept lato. ~ About 453 blocks and 00,000 buildings were burned in the San Francisca fire. - A Philadelphia minister has built a church on wheels, so as to roll it out of reach of saloons. - Spoaker Cannon says Congress will oloso between June and August, but doesn't knew when. - A beggar on the streets of Phila delphia was found to be a ri oh man, owning eight fine houses. - There aro now 32.000 rural routes operated in the United States, and ap plications are filed for 4,000 moro. - Thc total contributions of thc Knights or Pythias to the San Fran cisco relief fund will amount to about (600,000. - Express traine now ruo from Mexico city to St. Louis ia 50} hours -an average of 33 miles an hour for 1,877 miles. ^ - AU thc bank vaults in San Fran cisco were found tobe intact. The money cod papers on deposit are therefore safe. -- Thc senate iooreased to 11,500,* 000 the additional appropriation for San Franoisoo, and the house agreed ?J tho amendment. - A Philadelphia woman, who is supposed to have been demented, turned OD the gas and asphyxiated herself and two daughters. - By his will, a paupor who recent ly died at the Womberry workhouse, in England, left his oat to the King of Spain as a wedding present. -? Starved doge were found eating the bodies of persons killed io the San Franoisoo earthquake. All stray dogs were hunted down and killed. - The fearful experience of B. K. Coffman, a commercial traveler, dur* lng the 8an Franoisoo earthquake caused bis hair to turn grey instantly. - Close friends of President Roose velt think he will be a candidate for the Senate from New York after he retires fronr the president's office in 1909. - Jap aa is arranging to have erect ed in Washington the finest legation building ia the national capital. It will surpass in magnifioenoe all other embassies. -- A toreado praotioal!; destroyed the town of Bellevue, Texas, Thurs day, leaving only three ont of over two hundred buildings standing. At least eleven persons were killed. - On April 25th a 17-year-old boy was lynched by a mob of seven men io Oak woods, Texas* He was identi fied as the one who had entered the home of a widow near that place, - Mrs. Ella Knowles, of Montana, an attorney; has every attribute of a soaoessfal lawyer. She ran for at* torney general, was bebten, and mar viaA thu mon *?fco defeated -2? At thu polls. - Capt. Richmond Pearson Hob Bon, or merrimac and kissing fame, was nominated for Congress from the 6th distriot of Alabama, having defeated Congressman J. H. Baokhead by 495 ?otes. -<. San Francisco bsd another earth quake shook Wednesday, lasting one minute, and which threw down the walls of many barned baildings. One lady wai killed, aod considerable alarm was felt, - - Women aro dressed io mei's clothes io the Sao Fraooisoo refugee camp, and {liscard to tell the sexes apart. They oed nothing else to wear. The women say it is do time for false modesty. * *-Stocks sod bonds worth $500. 000 belong! og to J. D, Hand, a promt* oeot sawmill operator io Bay Mioett, Ala., were stolen ' from the. home of W. A. Collier, aa attorney, of Mootgomery, Ala,, where he is visit ing, ir --There a? 107 companies to share the Baa Francisco insurance loss. This loss is estimated by the looal agents at between $175,000,000 and $200,000,000, bat New York sends word that the insnranoe men there think the loss will not exceed $125, 000,000. Chicago's loss was $125, 000,000. , -- The waters around Savannah are alive with blood red creatures, in length from a half to three inohes, re semble worms or caterpillars, and which give out blood-red Laid when mashed. Sailors who have travelled all over the world say they never be fore saw such things. They are rapid ly increasing, sod the river is swarm ing'with them. '<-Thomas Leisure, a yoong farmer of DavieiB County, Kentucky, was drowsed io Rough River while son his way to meet his wife, from whom he had separated, fricada having arrang ed for the conference. When he reached a stream in vie/? of his wife's hos.* he found the bridge washed away, aod attempted to swim across, with tho fatal result. -.Col. Thomas Johasoa, veteran of the Mexican aod Civil- wars aod said to be the last aurviviog member of the Co nf odom te. Congress is deed at Mount Sterling, Ky., aged ninety three years. He bad served several terms RB State Senator and Repr?sen tative. Col. Johnson, who left a large QHate,' Wa* born io Baltimore, his family moving to Kentucky when u? watftehild. A Marvel of the Earthquake. San Francisco, Cala., April 20 - Probably ihc most marvellous escape & from death during the earthquake is o that of "Gimpy liill," a well known 5 character, who escaped from an upper ti Seor of a building at the height of the ? quake. t< Every resident of San Francisco .R knows "Gimpy Bill," though perhaps g not by that name. He is a cripple and h mendicant, who soils lead penoils on s Market street. His legs have been cut off at tho very hips; and in place of s legs he moves ou wheeled platforms, o strapped to the stumps. He works t himself along the pavements with two s short canes, and his head is about at c the level of a dog. He is a man on oas- 1 tors, instead of legs. c When the earthquake came Bill was sleeping over a saloon on Washington s i Btreet, near Montgomery-a region t uhioh get a heavy shock. His street i legs wore unstrapped, but he had his c clothes on. He was pitched out of bed 1 and rolled about the room like an cmp- i ty demijohn. A heavy cornice fell \ through the ceiling of his room and missed him by a foot. He rolled away from the wreok and managed to get to his rollers, whioh he strapped on. He tried the door, but the wreckage had 1 him penned in a prisoner. He trun- 1 died himself to the window, and saw that the d?Btriot wee already on fire. Bill went back to the bed, twisted the blankets and sheets into a rope, tied his canes about his neck with a cord and slid out of the window. His rope was ?no phort. At the end of it he hung ten feet above the street. There ho swung and yelled, afraid of what the drop might do to his trundle plat forms, until some one passing threw up a pile of boxes and helped him down, in one day, driven always backward by the fire, this cripple cov ered about fourteen miles, ending in a camp in Golden Gate Park. At one time he grabbed the tailboard of a wagon and held on, his platforms bumping over the cobble e. At an other time his only way of esoape f rom tho fire was across Russian Hill, ip whioh an Italian boy pulled him with a rope for ten oents.-News and Cou rier. Not Gullly. Atlanta, Ga., April 27.-The trial of Irs. K.M. Standifer for tho murder f her sister, Miss Chapel! WUisenant, larch 9 last, which was beguu early aday, was concluded early this eve* ing with a verdiot of acquittal, after an minutes' deliberation by the jury, Irs. Standifor entered a plea of not uilty and while admitting the killing, er oounael declared that emotional in anity impelled her to tho deed. Mrs. St&odifer ?hot and killed herr ister nearly two months ago, on ac*- j ount of the marked attention of her lusband to tho dead woman. Her uspioions bad been confirmed by tho * li8covery of letters that had passed >etween the two. Asking her sister ta lieoontinuo encouraging Mr. Standi 'er and being rcYused any promise of $ ?form, she fired a bullet which trough t almost instant death. Stand* fer was arrested subsequently on the thargo of disorderly conduct and when lis trial was called, he failed to appear md bis bond was forfeited. Hie thereabouts is unknown. - It is a great mistake to suppose that there is danger of disease ia Sau Franoisoo oa aoeouat of the decaying bodies of the dead, says the Chicago Chronicle. It has beea proved ia many ways that the exhalations of de? oaying animal matter are not injuri ous to health, and there are even reasons for thinking that they are beneficial. Bridgeport is the health* ieat part of Chicago, The decay that is deadly is the decay of vegetable matter. A single deoayed oabbage is more dangerous than the entire Uaioa otock yards. - The big fertiliser treat is to be prosecuted by the department of jus tioe for violation of the Sherman anti trust laws. Proceedings are sooa to be instigated before the United States grand jury at Nashville, Teaa. This is the Virginia-Carolina. - If the world were biriless, a nat uralis deolares, maa could aot inhabit it after oioe years' time, ia spite of all the sprays and poisons that could be manufactured for the destruction cf insects. The inseots and sieg? would simply eat all the orchards and crops io that time. AND READY-TO-WEAR ARTICLES - FOR_-: LADIES, 11ST GREAT VARIETY, AT -Sir PRICES DEFYING- COMPETITION". Exceptional facilities in baying special drives in large quantities, rigid economy in the management of our busi ness, close application, constant study, modest pretensions? small margins and large sales, are factors enabling us to sell merchandise 25 to 50 per cent cheaper than others. We are not in the habit of making extravagant stats? meats ; we simply wish to convince you of our claims, ask? lng you to Visit Our Store, Where you can Bee with your own eyes, trusting your own judgment and experience in deciding for or against us. Our Stock is complete, fresh, new, stylish, promising t? SAVE YOU MONEY On any article purchased in our Store. Miss Dora Geisberg, North Side Court Square. . Two doors East of Farmers ard Merohants Bank, Anderson? S. C.