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FOR PUBLIC BUELDINGS. Senator Latimer Introduces Several Bills.-No Chance for Their Pas sage This Session But May Pas at the Wert Session. Washington. Dee. 14.-If the ball that has been set rolling by Senator Latimer and several of South Caro lina's representatives in the honse in the matter of new public buildings. is kept going, it looks as if every town in the st.ate of any conseqnence would have nnifictent public build inp,s in the near future. When Senator Latimer introdned bills a few days azo providing for new l)ings ai Abbeville. N ewherrv. Union. Lnuren,. Gaffney and Oranae bur. he wuac aske if he thonght those plaevs would he so fortunate as to secure apporpriations in the near fn ture. 'Not until Spartanhnre. Rock Hill and Gm--gzeioZtownV were provided for b tree va(r n. saici the sen ator. 'was mine overnment Iionev sp0rt lm noX huildins ir. our state. 1 her. realhzed ha: somet hine oneht (c1h aunt C seur for1 on neonie S i i 1111. 1 : CnI in rs t f hwi-; l!cK ~ . .i('r-.n Oli ar. .iIle Laiure~s. G~f~ft. Ahh .: and New her sh O'd o: L' 1:re nU build Inzs. They ,re cl. rst class towns. Thiey are ?'wing rridly, ana deserve oas r.n as people in e ifer sectin 1:of .he c ountrv. ye-- . ear"y _o be.ir. this work, h h a'.] I cn to secure R .\ik en has also in - i ouse ( :imnilar to I .It iicr. and he c i.- coniceriel lf * ito the b,est of 2 \v 1 Vl W ll,it isz 1111 n an iIn with r10 -NV orl. at the prop e d.no public huild '1 e. h t% I pwards o f tWn tI V ill I 'Har- vi h e li u .1lithorsIi zed to I xm- in di ffereIt parI-t s of th< coinnilrI inl n1vw huildin"u-s. MARK TWAIN'S EARLY LIFE. A Sort of Mr. Hyde, While His Broth er Was Dr. Jekyl. From Mark Twain's Aut.hiozraphy in The North American Review. My mother had a good deal of trou. ble with me, but I think she enjoyed it. She had none at all with i brother. Henry, who was two yearl younger than I, and I think that th unbroken monotony of his goodness and truthfulness and obedience woulb have been a burden to her but for the relief and variety which I furnished in the other direction. I was a tonic I was valuable to her. I never though of it before, but now I see it. I neve1 knew Henry to do a vicious thing to ward me, or toward alny one else-bui he frequently did righteous ones tha cost me as heavily. It was his Jut: to report me, when I needed report ing and neglected to do it myself, an< he was very faithful in dischargini that duty. He is ''Sid'' in ''Ton Sawyer." But Sid was not Henry Henry was a very much finer an better boy than ever Sid was. It was Henry who called my moth er's attention to the fact that thi thread with which she had sewed mn; collar together to keep me from goin; in swimming had changed color. M: mother would not have discovered t but for that, and she was mnanifesti: piqued wihen she recognized that tha prominent bit of circumstantial evh deuce had e'scaped hecr sharp eye That detail probably added a detail t my punishment. It is human. W' generally visit our sho'rteoings 0' somebody else when there is a possi ble excuse for it-but no matter. took it out of Henry. There is aiway compensation for such as are unjusti; used. I often took it out of him sometimes as an advance payment fo: sometthing which he hadn't yet done These were ocasions when the oippor lunity was tooe strong a temptation and I had to draw on the future. did not need to copy this idea fron my mother, and probably did 'nt Still, she wrought upon that principle upon occ.asion. If the incident of the broken sugal bowl is in "Tom Sawyer"-J don'i remember whether it is or not-that is an example of it. Henry never stole sugar. He toolk it openly from the bow). His mrother knew he wouldn't ' aC su:ar when s.he wasn't loo'king, ~ ~~bst~ be ad her doubts a'bout me. Not ~ 4 bis, either. She knew very .One day when she wasn not present. Henry took sugar front her prised and precious old Tnglishli sngar bowl. which was an heirloom in the family--and he managed to break the bowl. It was the first time I had ever had a chance to tell any thing on him, and I was inexpressibly glad. 1 told him I was going to tell onl him but he was not isturbed. Wheu mry mot.her camne in and saw the bowl lying on the floor in fragments,. she mother came in and saw the bowl ly ing on the floor in fragments, she was speechless for a minute. I allow ed that silence to work; I jndged it would increase the effect. I was wait ing for her to ask: "'Who did that T" -so that I could fetch out my new4. But it was an error of calculation. When she got through with her sil enee she didn't ask anything about ith-she merely gave me a crack on t.he skill with he.r thimble that I felt all the day down to my heels. Then I broke out wi:h my inunred inno cenee. expecting to make her very smy T that she had punished the wrong one. I expected her to do something remorseful and patheti.. I told her that 1 was not the one-it was Henry. But fher was no npheaval. She said. wiLhou: emotior. --t's all right. It isn 'l ar.y miIer. You teserve it for something yo,'ve done that I didn't i' v nhl'.nt :and if you havn 't done W).. wh .hIrn you deserve it for some i,ng that you are going to do, that I shar.'t hear about." In those days men and boys wore rather long cloaks in the winter time. They were black, and were lined with very bright and showy Scotch plaids. One winter's night when I was start ing to church to square a crime of some kind committed during the week, I hid my cloak near the gate and went off and played with the other boys until church was over. Then I return ed home. But in the dark I put ie cloak on wronz side out. entered fhe roilm. threw the eloak asid. and 0. n st,od the usual examitnt n. I al,ng very well unti the m 4f the church was we ed. Mv mthe Ir said: "It must hav(. be W to keep arm th(e I didtn't see th a, atnd was tuihP that I w0re m ,1,. I w'as~ int ch-un- , it Onl flr4m ha see Ie h : 1 : k I .ai d tiat was wh: & ha - ..e. 'h sad "Y -u wtreItO in1 : hur1 wNith) 11hat red Scot chi plaid outide and glarin,z 7 Din 't that atrIet any attetition '' Of course to conltinluie such a dia lcue would have been tedious and unprofitable, anid I let it go and took the consequences. There was a Jere Clemens who was a United 'States senator, and in his day etnjoyed the usual senatorial fame -a fame which perishes whether It spring's frotm four years' service or forty. After Jere Clemens' fame as a senator passed away, he w~as still remembered for many y'ears on aec count of another service which he per formed. He shot old John Brown's 'A *1 1l This man out acquaintir of SCHNAPP qualities that less expense tl SamuAPS s b.. paper so that every ch Qpportunity to get acq1 facts and know that di to produce the cheedi the famous Piedmont c tobarras, and that 8CHE~ ought to chew. Still t who accept othecr and thatdA or=e h a (ov. Wise in the hind leg in a duel. However. 1 am not very clear about this. It may be that Gov. Wise shot him in the hind leg. However. I don't think it is important. 1 think that ie only thing that is really i-nh portant is that one of them got shot in the hind leg. It would have beet better and nobler and more historical and satisfactory if both of them had got shot in the hind leg-but it is of no use for me to try to recollect his tory. I never had a historical mind. Let it go. Whichever way it happened I am glad of it. and that is as much enthusiasm as I can get up for a per son bearing my name. But I am for getting the first Clemen-the one that stands furthest back toward the really original first Clemens-which was Adam. The Jamestown Exposition and Erin. "The chosen leaf of bard and chief Old Erin's native Shamrock." This dear little plant around which cluster the memories and the hopes of a valiant race will contribute its aid to the interest that will center in the .amestown Ter-Centennial Ex position. The late Patriefi Sarsfield Gilmore was wont to boast that the best proof that the race to which he belonged was a musical people is to be found in the fact that the harp, that most ex quisite of stringed instrunWnts. was their emblem. The genial handmas ter might have pressed his argument further by claiming for them a dis creet taste in Botany. But the Shamrock, like the sons and daughters of Erin, has taken root in other soil than that to which it was indigenous. On the 20th of October of the present Year a gemIeman of Norfolk. on the wa1y to hi, place of business. espied a spout f Erin's plant -0rowing, l he f.w k. le It T who rote a beutitl po m o t '.'I 1 C ' I ' at the head tf hii artiele is taken, was [he m1 who plantd thie seed? "*Thle pe it lfh uCil and the idol of his own' was twice in Nor folk during the years 1803-04. He' wrote some of his best poetry in that city. particularly "A Ballad on thel Lake of the Dismal Swamp. When these visits were made the fate of his friends, Lord Edward Fitz gerald and Robert Emmet was keenly fresh in his memory. He subsequent ly immortalized both these heroes, the one in poesy, the other in -biography. It is quite probable, therefore, that Moore, on leaving Ireland for his American tour, brought the seed of the cherished plant along with him ........0 bought a supply of g himself with the d S Tobacco, which ha gratify his desire to ban cheap tobacco. advertised in this Soedyte ewer has had an cm p-h xaintied with the ey msdI ug8 are not-used quality found in logaote unr fluhemelred 'APPS is'what hie bere are chewers cheaper tobacos~~cn ut,an Spesrsome dayz~e the: Scnpp-h they'I mised. long agoAen themselve. vith the resolve of givlug it nurture i the free soil of Virginia. But however it camte higher the fact 4 s established that in proximity to he Jamestown Exposition grounds. J A type that blends rhtee godlike friends Love, Valor, Wit forever e AMay be found in flourishing verdancy. The Lonely Little Chap. C The boy sat cuddled so closely to the woman in gray that everybody, was sure he belonged to her, so when j he unconsciously dug his muddy shoes into broadcloth skirt of his left hand neighbor she leaned over and said: "Pardon me, madam, will you kind- r ly make your little boy square him- ] self around? He is soiling my skirt with his muddy shoes." The woman in gray blushed a lit tle and nudged the boy away. "My goodness," she added, "he isn't mine. The boy squirmed uneasily. He was such a little fellow that he could not begin to touch his feet to the floor, so he stuck them straight in front of him like pegs to hang tbings on. and looked at them deprecatingly. "I'm sorry,'' he whispered to the woman in gray. "I hope it will brush off.'" The timidity of his voice took a short cut to the woman's heart, and she miled upon him kindly. 'Are you going up town alone?" she asked. "Yes. ma'am." lie said. "I always to alone. Father is dead and moth ei is dead. I live with Aunt Clara in Brooklyn, but she says Aunt An na ought to help do something. so twice a week she sends me to stay with Aunt Anna. I am going there now. ''Pr dear." said the w.o1man with a h "Y'u Irv a Very little hP toh kneck?d ab 't in this way."' 0Oh 1 don't ind.' he said. "But I h nes, me. smrtimes. and When I ste !::vhiv I think I w.uld like I caT mkv beieve 11-t T am really c r lim hy. That 's ljow I it her 0 :ress diriy." 0 Th w' nn in ray put her arms im i:::1I~. e,*f ani and e.o( l l:e that lie Iurt him. and ,vr ther wom.ian. who hadl 0 verheard his artless confidenee start- . d to mother him. Brotherhood. 'lla Wheeler Wilcox. !.d, what a world!-if men in street an( mart 'elt that same kinship of tihe human x heart hich makes them, in the face of , flame and flood, Iise to the meaning of true brother hood. 'When your neighbor begins to boast of his honesty it 's up to you to get busy and put an extra bolt on your back door. Stage carpenters make more hits than do the high salaried stars. ] 11 ge a tste f th rea stinctali e a stye .sthel e ierkcing is ld etvtseywhereat eandize wcen plugs. a yngeting CNAP t1o Give ust to show that we ai ge we are going to giv fit of Christmas Shopr [ERE IS THE PLAN.-Evei hase of 25 cents worth write your name on in a box. The slips v iterested parties on Ja aving the largest num noney. This is no cat< 0 one dollar bills whi4 how windows. Don't Forget to Put I .ome Early and M MDues' KEEP AN EYE 0 3tore open Until Remov Beginning And Continuing Ae Will Offer Our Sto ing, Hats, Shoe Reduced 'his sale is made imperative I ther quarters early in the ne trge lines of goods as we di ant to sell 'em. No goods c ut on approbation. We quot lea how cheap you can buy I alicoes, per yard ..4 1-2 and 5 1-2< inghams, per yard .. 4 and 5 1-24 re,s goods.... 11, 13, 19, 23 and uj ashmers, brilliantines, etc 38 to 994 lite homespun, 6 yards for 25 ct4 hecked homespun, per yd. 4 1-2 to 6< eans for pants, per yd 13, 16, 18, 23< ther pants goods, per yd. 23 to 37< uting, per yd. .. .. .. .7 to 9 cent, lannelette, per yd. .... 8 1-2 cent. hrockery, Glassware and Tinware a cost. ~ot ions, Neckware, etc., at cost. Ve offer tobacco in 10ib. boxes at 2 cents and up. lonkey and Parrot baking powder, cents a can. fendleson 's Lye, 5 cents a can, 6 fc 25 cents. )L8OTHING Boy's suits, 35 cents, $1.00 $1.2 and up. Men's suits, $3.99, $4.67, $5.00 an up. All Goods at IheS.S. SPROS PEI NOTICE TO OREDITORS. -All creditors of Henry Galnman, de eased, will present their claims duly ttested to the undersigned, or t< [tunt, Hunt & HIunter as Attorneys ni or before the, 27th day of Deceni er, 1908. N. Childs, Excntor of Last Will and Testa lent of Henry Gallman, deceased. Nowberry, 8. C., November 23, 108 An Organ tat will last a life time is what got 'ant. Our O( gans have a pure tonei nd lovely cases. We can supple on with an Organ that will lease iri wery particular for only 6and$7 elivered. Write us for our specal rsof payment, and for illustr a !the beautiful a Organs referred to. fyou preifer a Piano we have beau p on easy torms. Address Malouds Music House, n AWva )preciateyo.ur pat"A e $10 away for the >ers. ry time yOu make a Dr more you are allow a - lip of paper and dro ill be counted by d uuary 2 and the per ber of slips-will get . ,hl No bait-except4 h are exhibited hf 0 r four Name in the oxW ake Your lectio 0ok lore N MY WINDOWS. 1 1 O'clock, P. al Sale Dec. 11th, y for TEN Days ck of Dry Goods, Clot s, Etc., at Greatly P ices, and " y )y the fact that we will mo w year and we must close >n't want to move them. harged during this sale, or e a few prices to give yo rom us during this sale. SHOES Men's $5.00 shoes for $4.37. Men's $4.00 shoes for $3.41 Men's $3.50 and $3.00 sh $2.68. Men's $2.50 and $2.00 s $1.72. . Women 's $3.00 Patent t Shoes for $2.38. Women 's $2.50 shoes for $1 Women 's $1.50 shoes for $1 Women's heavier shoes for 4 Children 's shoes at 40 cents pair and up.t r Boy's and Men's shoes at to $1.13 per pair. 5 HATS. Men's $1.50 hats at 99 eenkS s COME AND 8EE FOR YO ti ti BirgeC ti UITY, S. C. NOTICE. fu Before lett fo the contract your new bU hc ing see W. T. ingston. B, Work. Lo prices.co Lock Box No. 5 Newberry , 'NOTIO m g~ it Stta intro jiorA k Wdeyor otliO p books ed eD. B. I. W this \an.w onW111t