University of South Carolina Libraries
(?o**! l'or li;?? Ki'itlir? Or. JONES' LIHIMENT promet H bhwlng in every hum? w lii'i v tL<!i t .ii u c Jj 11 il r? ?. ' {Geld ?o Chest, SOM Throat, rube?, Strain* nod Swatting*, OAld# ?od Burns wiU ?(sickly yield I? * ''piii down with Dr. Jotiw' ' iiinimenf./ BO*.pcrl**tle. iVJfd sls***ev Bold by Evens' Pherraucal Compa* irr, Krlerson's Pharmacy, linton andi ail Druggists. tlUl'ISl, ^H'j Jl'.. ?. ?JSl.HHU'iJI - J-L.JJU ICET The lice question it quickly' 'irttled ii you duse you* lotah with'1 Conke/a Lice Powder^ lt's Mle, quick ?nd ture.'i Saves your potStry peoftti because Kills the Lice ?j??2'i Hftr? Chickens , Prier 2? cent i, SO cern? ind J11?. ; te* rf? Mn that rude m int cracks by . tty and atj on chlckrrw ai nigln, ?pray j you? powkry Iwinc wi?? ;Conkey,8 Lice Liquid , Orana chm out HiaumMy Oort U Cms, ht! gallo? 60 ernes gifln". Slir* i.r*f int dmfly Ind buar use \ CONKEY'S HEAD'LICE ^ OINTMENT ; tttctW Md cW-rWi lif.n chitts. IO Sin nata. Monty bwk ii I bur _ ; ancorarlo? du noraatuiy >.' ?9? j . TM Cl C?*o C*. Ct, .,V?A Ot? V 8014? BY ?VAN8* PNARVAC'Y. , AMw;s?.fe., w II li s? j, ' "i ? ,i. II , mi HRS. JOE PERSON'S F(W BKKKi fifi? RftlTi liff rortr rasia. KMSK3L NMaaiy u7tavvxrrtwettva but S fla? tonic, enriching the blood ?a well aa fWujgtog. Hence H relieve? all nervoua. The sa anula of YOU Ft eftrigfefeera Yostlfy te Ha Vnlwe .'!t?*?1^4??Iiian*??nui>iMMantl nen fra! 5teW?? for wwi y ?i* ye*?. Brarr lew day?! had nerrous BpelU, and bard br had "Ito. VMM . n.a a,lft.na^A tonhAllUanf roar R?Su??y fa? bull laa^ffiwrtfre* ew*<!, Trubli will da what you Claim tor Itand la a y'Majal teaat:.'1-Qhuitie a. repper. Aceat |^?fj^ ?uk should be Why we want Small Accounts Do yow realise that a hundred a?u)l accounts maka a bank stronger than a dosen l^ge ones eran It they aggregate the sama total ot deposits? That's why we are constant ly seeking new oustomers. We ?ant ss wide a circle ?I friends sat customers sa possible. Of course, large accounts are Welcome, too, tor ft ls our pur pese to serve ALL people. Bot we want men and women of limited mear.ii to knew that tide bank ls willing to accept their deposits and give them the tdTSatsga et our adrice and ev ery facility ot the institution. If rou are not a bank deposi tor at all oame ia and ?st ac IWftlPiisI ?Mk aa. We wdll as {?ac to talk thiugs over with National Bank fpH.i I 'I mm The led,*** ot the Central Presby terlsto <ctrereh are going to have an old ?artrlesed Hauy ?how May is**. l&Ht at 5 o'clock at the Chamber of; Cl^e>^8fflsW is 4nrite4. espec. lally, ypurs^" aSya tro committee. Three p&os*r* t*^atrrap: (hts te the impost Vk^ry ??der sis months? oh? tp tho Unset boy between six months and four ye?}? old, sud the other, to the gpesi- ffrVaeOJ sis r ?nte; entrance tc? tor hebten to be Dnre f?r m&fi?dtj, yiesrdyr*. HONOR PAID sn's OWN GLORIOUS SONS ENTIRE C1TYJOINED SUNDAY IN EXERCISES MR. MANNING SPOKE Following Mik and Address. Women and Children Deco rated Graves of Heroes .lust UH thc entire South celebrated Sunday the une day in all the year when the HOHH of Confederate ?on? and tht! daughters of Confederate daught ers Join hands for paying honor to thc heroes who were tho gray, so did An derson celebrate Memorial day last Sunday, lt is a day of all tbe year for many of Anderson's older people and they have pased the Inspiration on down to the younger g?n?ration and now in any part of the South will be found a band of people on Memorial day, paying tribute and honor to the glorious heroes who were the cray. The exercises were held in Ander son Sunday at the court house and the auditorium was packed with thc louth's own native sons and her benn ? tiful women. The Hon. Richard 1. Manning of Sumter waa the speaker add evety word he uttered was heard by the enormous crowd. Mr. Manning made what may be properly termed u splendid address, lt was a gem of its kind and aa such is given to Intelli gencer readers.' Following I* a- synopsis of Mr. Manning's address: "The statement that slarery was1 ?in. cause o> tu6 war should net fee permitted to pasB unchallenged," sa'd Mr. Manning. "It is true that the fate of slavery was. settled finally ?ad forever try th? result of the war, and that the question intensified the bit terness of the war. and it.J?.".ted a mer ?1 and semi-religious sentiment rate it. "The strongest chsrac?o. ?alic o? the Anglo-Saxon ls bis Intense Instinct of local self government. It was thhj instinct that divided' the English of the Angles and the Saxons Into a heptarchy--it was the instinct of lo cal government which secured Magna Obarta from the Plantagenet*, ' and which established the 01U of Rights in the time of the stuarts. "No where penong men bsd this tide riaen so high as among the colonies after the war. and lt took time and pa tient effort for the thirteen Indepen dent states, whoso Independence has been acknowledged by Great Britain, to settle by compromise their local Jealousies so far as to form a union among themselves. f*e?e Are 'Ce*ses,t 1 "It was to maintain this right/ to preserve this form of government and io save the Constitution, that brought the war. Honest difference cf ic*; b?t^eer* j individuals, between sections? between nations, declared the speaker. j "Let us look calmly after the con ditions which prevailed at t-^e end ot i the eighteenth century and darin? the i?rsi half of the nineteenth," s*y? Mr, Manning. "When the union was form ed thor? was no dlfffaence of QPAuloa ?bout slavery, nor wag there any dif ference of opinion in the Jealousy and sacredness with which the rights ot tee States wore held. "Every ope ot the original thirteen states was a slave state. The Con stitution allowed a slave holder one rote for himself-and three-fifth* ot a taite for each of bis adult' slaves-re cognising those slaves nat as men, whose right of Itfe, liberty, ?nd the pursuit of happiness Anglo moi ./? were to respect, nor were the in WW" regarded aa bevin* these rights, nor even right* to the soil which bad be longed to them and their ancestors for generations. So th? declaration of Independence of three million Anglo Saxons carried with lt the right to enslave seven hundred the ?ea nd blapk men. and to dispossess one. imndrsd and fifty thousand red men* .?pRaeJt?en tip tilgre 'Faade* But before lffta- thar? was strang opposition t? the ?laye trade tn the South. |p 1760 the legislature of Vif. ?inls prohibited th? Importation of slaves, lp 1787 ia the Federal Con vention. New ap gland voted with Georgia and South Caranna for the prolongation of sig va. trade (or twen ty yaars against the sturdy opposition of Virginia. Antislavery W'**m* Becfr. in bia "Genius ot Vaiveraal **naac4 pation." Landy sags there were la 1827 18? anti-slave societies ia th? United "atetes, with ?42$ aeetebere. cd these 10? with S,16e or ?re algias of, ! the whola were in the Baottt. ku racy North Carolina In Iffft-af-Jg, ead that a colony of three hundred tree ne groes exercised the right et suffrage tm i?t5 and under the grandfather dsnee of th? North Carellan Ant that ?he deece?4eats ?ff the whH* veter? before laso vote new by inheritance. Again, ta Virginia In Itu there was ? wann nan-slavery eattnatgn. Int the Mdalatnns teere was a tie, and the . presid? ag offloar though Ja favor of a gradna) ?mancipation of the slaves ot Virginia, cast the the diriifteg rou ea&ist it on the grenada that U so important a matter it shout* only he undartbkea when carried hy. vj^mnm majority. But about this tims senti ment ia the ?oath was cbaajped *y ?he abolition hretea?t of tym. He i ? - Tisoa. the trat fruits of which w . : murder ot sixty odd women and chu Nat Turnear and hk folio wera, and la tcp succeeding ymir? every antt-aiav ery society ha? gUeppnareg. ??, was TOe afwt oi uarrisoRa ?.M?MI? fc?B^ln^ luffi. ?a suited to their climate and conditions, I HH HAH?J so they sold their slaves to those whose [dlrnuie mid condition suited them. Ho gradually slavery gravitated to the .South, and then the question became sectional and with the invention of I the cotton gin, sluve labor becume i profitable nnd this tlxed it as a south ?orn in.-Mt ni ion. Bo that starting out with the same dews and practices, business interests I gradually shifted thc institution from ?one section to the other. Thc doctrine of State Rights was I held by the States of both sections, and by political parties until about II 830. Right of Withdrawal. The right of withdrawal from the Union had been claimed formally sev rai times prior to 1860; by South Caro, lifm ?ii ? S??, ivim:"n claim waa repress ed by Andrew Jackson; by New En gland sis times, sn 1803 it was fearod by New England that the Louisiana purchase would diminish the influence of New longland and Senator Picker lag aivocated the formation of a Nor them Confederacy. In North More than South. Again, it is to be wondered at that j the belief in secession, as one of the reserved rights of the States, was more generally held In the North than in the South when w? learn that this principle was taught hy authority of toe Government Military Academy at West Point up to 1$40. Hohe rt C. Lee, Jefferson Davis and Fitzhugh Lee studier! as a tp.xt hook at Weat Point, "Hawie on> the ('onstitutioDj' and iroui this authority we are taught hy the United States government at Weat' Point thai the Union) was dissoluble, and that ff it should be dissolved, aile. Slaney? to. the Union ceased and re verted to the States by which the Un ion bad been created. This sisteme'-: is also justified by the action ot Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania and other Vn*fh*>iT? Ai nt CB In rmi t undine for the rights reserved to the States to the States as shown by the resolutions adopted by theso states pending the adoption of the Federal Constitution. The entering wedge of difference appeared first from selfish material In. ierest. Protection, concealed at' first, put no less a fact, was foisted on our people in 1816-the excuse for lt be ing the debt Incurred in 1812, just then ended. To raise revenue to pay debt ss T?ejl as to pay current ev. penses was the tariff of 1816 enacted, and beside thc raising cf the revenue was the incidental protection it gave to the Northen manufacturers. This was really the Vginning of the trou ble. Hsdltkottlon la South Carolina The enactment of a protective legis, letton followed by the nullification in South Carolina in 1832, and though UM question was settled by compro mete m 1833. we see from this time on the North growing more and more in strength and in wealth, and becoming more and more aggressive ' in those plans and policies which advanced her own interests at Ute expense or the interests of the South. fejsi* *>;? Triante. Under this system, lite South though prpdiijclng great money crops was pay. lug tribute to thc great manufacturer pf. the North, and everything thar the hroUh used was bought from the man ufacturing h*co*h. This conflict arose and was Buffered under a compact of Sovereign fi Mes formed tor their common .JU. Patrick rienry said, "But I sm sure that the dangars of the system (the federal Constitution) sra ress when ipps't who ?ase ne similar Interest wttk the popple of the South sro to legislate fer u#-when opr dearest rights are to be left in the b?nde of these whose advantage it will be to ^*m?t?*H m fetation. That ala very waa stet the ? eastlea which brought on the war ts shown kV tqe fact that the following waa " ?tad by the Federal congress stter resolved, That tho war Is not waged on our part in any spirit of oppression * for tho purpose pf conquest or for. userferrlng with thc established in stltutlon ot these States, bat to defend ead; maintain the supremacy of the Constitution ?lid to preserve the Un ies with all the dignity and rights ??ti. >?U~I rf.ty ii?tmrvn lr?<t Ww MAsiiesrrl CUMsxprsasiss. The repeal ot the Missouri Compro - thar the Missouri Cesn tnoonsletsoi with the aftapisMai ussitasa by Con with slavery in th? fitstes sud ri?s tts recognised hy the leg o4 18tb called compromise ia herebv declared monera ??J; it b*!*\5 tho trae Intent of this act not te kegla avery into emt state or ter^tttre. to exaude it therefrom., tatt Ha s the people thereof, perfectly tree form s?*d rasnlate taeV domesUc nations, subvert only to the Cen itsUion of the United States. MASSING, Tli is act, ju nt and proper, was dis tasteful to the North. The Republican party suddenly sprang into importance in the eyes of the North and at the i\;xt election 3wept everything be fore lt. In I860 the party in their na tional convention adopted the plank that slavery should thereafter be ex cluded from all territories. This was not a moral but a political question, and its effect on the strength of thc political parties was the question at Issue. Daniel Webster himself said ia ref erence to the nullification of the fugi tive sla,ve laws In thc fourteen States, t'l do not hesitate to say and repeat that if the Northern states re?ase wil fully and deliberately te carry late ef fect that part of the Constitution which respects tee restoration ot fu gitive Blaves, the South would no long er bo bound to keep the compact. A bargain broken on one side ls broken on all sides." South (a*ep>e te If*" Vnien. Thc South was loath to abandon the Union, hut every effort ta avoid disruption, availed nothing. The ques tion at issue was one tba* involved thi question ot co-equal 1" I the Southern states with the .?orthern, states. It was* a question ol principie, a fundamental principle. Nothing re mained to the South. "The South had trusted to human honesty and the ex periment had failed. She must next trust to human interest." The war was not undertaken far the spoils nor the anguish iee nf territory -it was ant to further the ambition apd glory of any man or any sat of men-it waa not a war of retaliation ox revenge-'but it was to sase tte? "Constitution"-t?s. save ourselves. The encroachment on oar rights grew/ more and more dangerous and unen durable. Our Hghtt.'dad ?our liberties were in peril. These dangers grffw apace by each aggressive and'succeed ing act. Every effort at peaceful so lution of these vexed questions avail ed nothing, and when "there was no longer any room tar nope" we 'uv pealed to arras and to the God of Battles." Deeds of ('??rage. The history of that war is familiar to many of you. The deeds of daring, the acts of courage, and fortitude, the self sacrifice of officers and privates is the proud heritage ot us cf the South. There Ja no parallel in history of such a war. Our men shut their eyes to questions of ex pea len cy or of policy and fought throughout the was with devotion to sentiment ead to conviction. Tens of thousands were slain-homes were destroyed, our hearts stricken and homes destroyed, while the groans of tbs dyttfg aad the walls of those bereft tillen the air from Maryland to. Texas. lt the conduct and the. heroic ser vice of the Confederate St?dler called forth the praise of the nations of the world, how can we descre??'his con duct at Appomatox. ''Ha dreaded death less than surrender, sad what did he find on reaching his boree? His house in ruins, his lands devastate!, his barns empty, his money worthies*, his credit gone, his slaves freed, and the " question before Mist of what was to be done with th? liberated slaves. But they met thc situation like men. With no a.iolaav to majj-a, with nothing; to take back for the South, they turn ed their faces toward the future to make the moat of the a^ssaVanes Oed had bestowed upon -the South and, "God. who had stripped bim af his prosperity, inspired him In his ad versity.' I How well they have used these ad-j ?tt?tagcB, how wei, and ".vinciy j and patriotically they have,met their new problems ?nd conditions which con apd prosperity attest ter thonusives -they hare faced the inevitable bet mslntplgaft their self-respect. They, had fenght fer principia and had sac rificed a? far ?fcsr beengtetJay. what they fettered te he right. The result hart \<t-n accepted as heal. The SpMiish-Ataaricae war han demenatrated tl*.?f-* tka the loyalty of the 8o?A te tW Katie* ts true and today with war cloud* banging aver Mexico, a call for defenders el ?Mr pa. tion'a honer will be answered hr a dash to arms by oar Oanasieritss. We will de well to* tam ear Janes te the tetare-te ms I stein tea Mania ?ad standards thal were oma ia the trying day* ??'?ive pant. Te* spirit-which cc tuat-.? the Confederate soldier ls the sard* spirit watch has acte^ed tl?? pa triot at ali ttes-a. T*e ?ehosdtonth-a of self and self interests to the good, to th? honor, and te the high .charac ter of tho State, te Wis ?-ate tn lite. . it mpy net tau te our let to lb-? tn Ute tlaxe ot war, which calls forth ?he traita ot ?he soldier an? tee areas, military chteftele. ?aid Mr. Mes-aiag. "but tn time of reece a*?MU ?W?|, there are abundant oppprtu4|M*$ service to bar country. Which are ss Un portan^ as these te tteie of wpr. The example* of these who gave their live* for public good will lead us, il we learn-our lessons right to em fl ?NAL OQUBI BEGINS IIS Sail FIRST DAY OF SESSION HELD| MONDAY FORCEFUL CHARGE Judge Prince Made a Stirring Plea for Better School? ajad Better Roads The first day of thc court of g?nerai sessions for Anderson county, sum mer term of court, tried one case and started another yesterday. With Judge George E. Prince pre siding und Soliciter K. P. Smith sad Stenographer Clyde Smith in their places, the court convened at 16 o'clock yesterday morning. The court roca? w?f filled to hear the charge of Judge Prince. This was one of the best efforts ever heard in the local court room and the people present were impressed. The two main topics touched upon by the Judge were good roads and education,. He first dis cussed the general duties of the caupty edi leers, told them of his un derstanding of their duties and offer ed helpful suggestions. He next turn ed his attention, to the good roads question and made a strong plea for better roads. He said that the super visor of a county should he a com petan t road engineer . and that he should be a road expert. He consid ers that the supervisor should be abie to design roads and bridges and ridi culed the present road system. He said that the supervisor was the only man in the county with the power to bankrupt the. county and showed that such a position demanded that the holder be selected With great care. He said that the peppin of the eiiijrw slate J bad never been able to realize the val ue or good rp*d* and urged that they consider some system whereby per manent highways might be secured. He said that the present public school system waa a force and that radical changes were necessary if the people were ever to he given s chance to educate their children. He said that the salury of the superintendent pf education is ridiculous and that thia official should be psdd some rea sonable sum for bis services. He cemjdimcate? Ifr, Cramp, the janitor, upon the splendid manner in which, be kept the court house and said that while court was in session, ali sanitary rules would he respected. He said tie wonjo not tolerate any O&e expectorating upon the floor or eating pesante tn th* court repa? and that he wanned no disorder cd any kind, He fprre the eaer?f Instruc tions to arrest any one guilty of either of these acts and te ?ting up woulo^r^c^iS^*^1** . ' Judge IMacefs ?ekaas* leafed - fe* over an hour and he held the closest attention of everyone in tin. court room throughout lt ail. The following grand jurymen re S?r*e* ,r>r ?b?*y and were handed the various Indictments: J. B. Donthit, foreman; Will C. CUnkecaies, il. V. G. Cooley. P. H. Berle, S. A. Burns, J. P. McDonald, T. J. Clatworthy, W. J. Saylors, H. W. Tribble, W. 8. Maaldts, Lynaus Mc phail, a N. Gilmer, H J. Martin, Jas. B. Anderson. JD. C. Brown, J. T. Wat son, H. A. Sullivan, E. M. Duckworth. Several cases were nolle pressed by the solicitor owing to the fact that s uuuibcT o? fias??- on the csstlnusd docket could ?ever '?e called for trial and then the regular order of busi ness waa taken up. Jim Jordon entered a plea of guilty ta the charge of selitag whiskey and was sentenced by the const to pay a finn of Sids dr ta serra on the county works tor sig months. He asid. The second case taken np hy the Jury was that Of Ryon Cox, charged with violating the dispensary law. The' rase went to the jury shortly be fore the adjbumsrKt t hour ead s ver dict of guilty was returned. The de fendant has nat yet bpea sentenced. At th?, tfane of adjournment the Soort waa engaged ia the trial of W. I Gentry, charged with vieleinig the ?ispensary law. This casa will be completed acme time during this ir or uing and will probably go to-the Jury before npo*> The gfaad l?ry returned "na WU" te th|wSK .ndt^anrw ^^V^^^i^^^ liam Shaw. Carl Shani, ifeftas&f fcha*. ?srauit and oaijegf ,w?*js. wwy.wi Sui; ry tn Brown, murder; Dock Brown, murder; Will _afrrty ; Aeree C Brown? murder; WIlBKstsssa^HlBMfl sault and battery with IttS* t* kill. Wiag%ay<Stnfl Wtiv^m^: ulat? tte deeds of honesty, and ?db?r??re te principles. We a--e net defenders of the past-we are the guardians of the present; asjd M&V The reasnspfsgr rests os, as te see, that the character of our cttJseaBhlp grows higher, purer and nt?bier; that educatlou is its broadest sense should consnsMnatiou rs fae (tandan rtu^e. Titan indeed, will eur coustry be safe -but sh- is sate ^ii' ** w0 "FRJ^B to daty; trete to ourselye*. and true I^aWvlsg ?ie conclusion ot tho ad dress the women and. chtldren and losny of tho mea went from the court hann? tm. SW?** BrnnV rt^otery where ail the graves of v?t?rans were deco rated with ?Mens aaa ?oxsns. oi now ?sa.. Maay ot ther retained at the, ?metery. by the graves ot brothers kW fathers tiatM th? ?fedd? of cv?n. lag fell and thus came to a dru* a day of meaning to erery mas, woman and chile! Of the South. " 1 / Not satisfied with your hair? Too short? PIT\ Falling out? Kou$h>* Uneven? thai v' y v* why not consult your doctor? Isn't your -y vv hair worth it? Ask him ii he endorses ri /> H /Y ff? Ayer's Hair Vigor for these tta?r troubles. C # g w ?luif Does not color the hair. ?UnEZ ^E^PRi/^NTMA^W/LL BEWARE: OFsto??mi STRANGERS w/r/y N/CE 1 If ?JD of these schemes watch ''Smooth" slangers coma around tp pc4^c are such great "Money Makers'' irby don't ?bey KEEP them themselves? When a man is trying hard to sell yon. a proposition there ?a something in it for HIM-that's a sure thing U i% not better for us all to keep our money at ^ ^ ~? L~:tj T rjljp OWN ?^mmtmjty ? T The mao who does this is prosperous. We pay 4 per cent, interest on Savings Make OUR Bar.k-iOUR bank Anderson, S? C. 20 Tons Baled Burmuda Kay $20.00 Per Ton See Fair Play, S. G. For the largest Water, Melon grown fromour. Beed. We hav? TOM WAT SON, KLEKLEY SWEET and MONTE CRISTO. We also hare fer Jutrodse. litten, several hundred packages of three entirely new we ter melons which will te g?e= ?f? to any o? our former friends who will call at our stoic. nar PlMVP9tfM li I I FARMERS AND MigBeiSANTS -BANK... ar?d The Farmers ILoan & TroatjOo. Will be pleased to discount from l5oo to 2000 gilt edge notes running front $50 to $100 each, that ?wil bc paid dating tie months of October and November. $40,000 for In Annual The new rates to Anderson which viii ftve this city very great reduc tions in nearly ali commoditle*; from Ohio River point? and points based thereon and also from >'ew York Stale and New England pointe, estimated to save tho Citr of Anderson from f40, 000. to ico.ooo. per annum, will go into effect on Jene 10th. This action 1? in compliance with agreements tentatively reached at the Atlanta conference of Piedmont city represente Uves, held some six weeks ago. apd at which Anderson wa* rep resented by Meas. W. W. Sullivan eng t>. A. Lesbotu- r of.the Traffic Commit, iee of th? local chamber of commerce. 1 The ne^ rates will put Anderson on a hotter <?;/vjictltive frengSHH wup regard to'competing Carolina and Georgia cities than st any time in her past history, la feet Andersen w*)t now a? ante to taeet the ccaapnt?&on of any. etty ia this ?otee n^vai almost any conahodity. i s1**** rates aa? aaa? ?* reduction wiu shortly he rTrTfWr* hy the' railroads entering thia territory. . , Wappa ibaat Fish ttcefrajgSaa. Atlantic ?City, May ?.-Uni??* t?m federal. Government takes iTrtVaodlata action te rageJat? the ase. ot nese a?d polluttoa of, Btreaina, the, ?.* ol HMM m rivsr: of tue country soon, wlil be ejthausfid. This was the state ment madf, today by ChaiWs Un?hicum ot fore th? annual convent ional .>U?ociatrbn of Shell Bioners In ?Aulon here.