University of South Carolina Libraries
BURNING OF A STABLE. The Immense Feed, Livery and Sales Stables Destroyed by Fire?One Horse Consumed? Other Houses Redueed to Ashes. Koi'U Hill HortiM. Ot t. 13tli Monday afternoon at half-past tive o'clock, Kerr A: Heath's t mamuioth t-l; 1 ?K* <?n Main Street was discovered on lire. When first noticed there was hut a tinyj puff" lokc comin<: through thej root he centre of the stable. Iu lei. nan a minute's time the whole roof was ablaze and within a quarter of an hour the entire structure war in ashes. As scon as the alarm was fir-t sounded the horses and mules were liberated, some ol the vehicles rolled out and a loi ol harness saved hv those who arrived helorc the heat became so intense. It was though! that every horse was saved, but one, eonlined in a box stall, was overlooked in the hurry and it perished in flames, its charred remains being found afterwards. Two buggies one surrey and a cart were also destroyed, besides a lot of new harness?about a dozen sets. The house occupied by Mr W. TV Hamilton was consumed. An old: buildingat the rear of the stable! - 1 1 v 1 1 l A f ? I was uuriifii. i\ uaiii ik-mmiu ?ui. Hamilton's home was likewise consumed. By the efforts of neighbors, assisted by the protection of trees in the front yard, .Mrs. Woods's home was saved, as were others which were threatened. The lire department, commanded by the chief, Mr. J. F. Reid, and the mayor, Mr. W. Ch Hutchison, responded promptly to the call and placed its hose in a lew seconds. It required perhaps ten minutes to heat the water in the boiler of the firo engine. While these minutes were exnir ing, the fire burned w ith renewed | furv. The hose on the street be | gan to smoke and scorch, 1 >ut 1 finally there was a shrill shriek I from the engine whistle, a drum ming, thumping sound and the crowd waited expectantly to see the water spurt.. l?ut, when it did come, the stream was a disappointment to the liremeu. I (WiLlll"' li H'lv iliiMK lii?* ! i tin III of hose, wafer could he seen pouring nut at a number of places. The hose was uncoupled and new pieces substituted lor the sections that had burd, but these, ton. were unable to stand the pressure. After the lire was over, it was found that ten see lions of ho e had bur-fed. J lie wooden stable wa> built by .Mr. Kd^ar i'oa_r, about twelve vears airo, was two stories in i ' height, lot) feet in length audi Contained about loo.Out) pounds of roughness. When destroyed! it was owned by .Mr. Samuel Friedheim, of Fort Lawn. It was) insured for $1800 with Mr. I\ (, rong. i The J. Frank Workman cottage, i jn^f West of the stable, was also owned by Mr. Friedheim. ami was ; insured lor $f>00 with .Mr. I'oag. This house was occupied by Mr. \V. I'. Hamilton. His furni tore, some of which was saved, was insured for $-00. This is the second time this year that Mr. Hamilton's homo has been visited by fire. His father in-law? Mr. J. W. Taylor, was so mucli excited that he could with diffi culty be removed from the burn ing building, and his daughter Miss Carrie, had also to be re moved, as she had not observed her danger. At the time of the fire then were 47 mules and horses and about twenty vehicles in tlu stable, in addition to a large amount of feed stull". These wen owned by Kerr A Heath and wen insured for $.'5000; $500 beitu with I'. <i'oag; $750 with \Y .1. Roddev; and $1750 witl Hutchison iV Cherry. The oh building at the rear of tin' stabh was not insured. Spontaneous combustion was possibly the cause of the lire i?nt the cause is really unkno.vn How's Thi*.' Wc iillor One Huntlrcil Dollars Reward fo Hull's i atarrli ?'urc. K. .1 Clli:xi:v & Co Props. Toledo. O. Wo tho undorsltrnod.taavc known l-'. .1. Ctaono; for tlie Inst If. :y< urs.inul believe Mm prrfi'.M! houorabic iiiull business transactions and tin uncinlly able to carry out any obligations mail by their llrin. \\ i.>r \ Till" i\. \\ hob-sale liruyclsls. Toledi i> \\ \ 1.1' 1 n<.. Kinnan & MaUIIN, Wliob'sal I irutfi'i.sts. Toledo. Ohio 11 n'.l > ?'.it.irrli < ure is lak? 11 internally, act In directly upon tiie blood and mucous surfaces c the s\stem. Price 75c. per bottle. Sold by al Uriictrists. Testimonials free. Hall s Family Hills are the tiest Cure For Hot: Cholera. Kimtok St ah: ? 1 laving recentl; seen that some farmers are losinj their hogs I>y cholera I concludec to give my experience in curinj said disease A few years ago ii late autumn I discovered that m; hogs had cholera, live died, previ ous to that a little, I saw in a new paper that turnips and kerosein oil were both good lor hog cholera I had .just put away about tei bushels of turnips for winter use The hogs would not eat them rav so 1 boiled them in slop water aix lhey ate come although mopinj about heedlessly here and there 1 then immediately mixed incori dough, a spoon full of kerosene oi to each hog, all ate of it. I re peated tin* dose of turnips an< nit till !1 1! !lt li ill' if irl'nnil i I i* got well I have heard it said tha to drench a hoy; would kill it hu such is not. the case lor 1 hav< drenched a groat many and non< died ironi it hut it takes four per sons to successfully drench a hog Turn it on its hack, then tw< hold in and across its mouth ; stick three fourths of an inch ir diameter and fine to pour m tin medicine whatever it may he will a spoon. ("opperas is good foi Iio^ rholera ton. Dissolved ii water I drenched the same i*lt> 11 I ieal hoe t wo or t Inee I inies a da\ for lour day.*) in succession, it at t t.othiuu: at all lor live days then it heir an to eat ami made a ir? ???i porker. I Itolieve that hoi; rholera i>* l?>th contagious and rural Je. It. ( i. WkI.I.S. Shelhy. N <\ The Little Farm. Six aeres of land is not tnueli r. t I > l*t >1 l.nt ? ' ?> ....*.*.* * ?* " III, I /II I J I I <111 -II jljMM | ,| family in comfort, if intelligently managed. A Santa ('rnz (Cal.) paper, gives a case?and it is not an umiMial one?of a man doiiifj well on a plot of ground as small as that. "When K. N. Stocking came t< California, he was in search ol health and a living, hut discour agement stared him and his fami ly in the face. To find employment seemed impossible, so he bought i on the Hranciforte Creek six acres of land. He put the land out in vegetables, berries, and j , treefruit, and a chicken yard. With the combination of thrift, i I industry, and economy, those 1 barren six acres of a few years ? ago now lairly body blossom, and I ripen. Last year three hundred ? and sixty live dollars were har- 1 vested from a patch of straw?| berries of one-quarter of an acre ?jand two rods. Just think of it, ; i ye men who let the pennies slip . 5 away, and who cry hard times! i In the winter, lie confines him-; 1 selt to raising hiekens. Kvery inch of ground is utilized, and a | bappv, contented family is the s! result." \ mm: million ckoiv The Estimate of an Authority That Has Struck it liight v 1 Twice in Succession. y I New York, October 13.?The j Daily Dry tioods Uecord to-mor j row will say: Working on those R lines bv which such close esti ! * "i mates to the actual cotton crops I of the last two years were obtain led the figures .just now obtained ! indicate a crop for 1 *'.>7-0$, which varies from 8,953.788 bales to 9,371,532 bales of .r>00 pounds j each, l-'or the last crop of 189097 our estimate was 8,722,901 ^ bales, against 8,71 1,011 bales, as t the actual returns, while the estimate lor the previous year, or I 1895-90 was 7,142,000 bales s I compared with 7,102,473 bales. The closeness of these estimates to the actual returns had stamped them with the imprint of correctness, and for the current crop j year our estimate is submitted with a degree of confidence that, barring unexpected happenings, the yield for 1697 98 will not oxI ceed the maximum tigures of 9,37 i .522 bales of 500 pounds each. !| Kgg and Poultry Bussiness. i I I According to the report of the | . ' 1'nited States Commissioner of' [Agriculture. England imports' i for annual consumption $4s,000,-' I 000 worth of eggs. New Vork City and state alone consumes $48, : 000,000 worth of egi:s and poultry } every year. The I'nited States II yearly consumes $500,000,000 of ?' eggs and poultry. Canada exports ! $30,000,ooo of eggs annualy. The! i egg industry is worth $150,000,. j r <?()() more than all the dairy pro- j rlncti! fit' tliiu nntirm Tl??? riftnllrf ' 1 , ! products of this country aggro-' . gate more in ? year than an}'I single crop. < >f all the country's' industry the poultry industry is most generally pursued. In l^'.XJ I the poultry earnings of the I nited States amounted to $200,000,000,1 being a greater value by $52,-1 000,000 more than our entire wheat | frop, $105,000,000 greater than our swine brought us, $00,000,000 j more than our cotton crop, more than throe times as great as till I the interests paid on mortgages during the year, $ 112,000,0001 II more than we spend for schools, i and yet there are people who , I think the hen ' small potatoes." I _ !"an Ideal Tamil* medicine] I ! F"f Vntllffitlon, f S I II r??1 a? h??, (nnsttputlon, Ikuil I ( ion pl<-1 Inn, KITrn.Irr II rent h, I . *n>t all <iln. r l.-r* of Wio tiW.uiach, R 1 f U'oruxl Uowela. /<& _3^^P7' 1 RIPANS T A RULES : I u>t (tfntlyrrt prumi'llr. ri>rfact\^^^Bg2yA^ ' J >li?r?>iii>n follow* tiirir nan. I U?f bn obtain, ,1 hf I I ppllraUun (o anrnt Arii((tiL I Yfllow JkcI< 14 III; ;?, CnacnretM. Candy Cathartic Will-* Yellow Jack whi-ri'Ver they IIrid htm. No one who takes Cnxcaret.r regularly ari'l Myslematlcally Is In i danger from the dreadful iliHcuti' faxcnrets t- kill Yellow fever germs iii the bowels ami |<rei vent new unio from breeding lOe. liTx. Kb all ' I druggists Alphabet on a l*in Head. Frank J. Mollenhauer is perhaps the most export engraver in New York, if not in the world, nays the New York World. In delicacy of touch and skill in handling delicate instruments his work is something marvelous. 11 is latest achievement was to ongrave the twenty-six letters of the alphabet on the head of a pii>. Under a magnifying glass the letters are clear and distinct, and each is as perfect as any ever engraved for a visiting card or wedding invitation. Hut with the naked eye the minute letters are; merely scratches, which have no discernible foim. Mollenhauer's, work was the result of an attempt! to beat the work of a man who j had engraved the Lord's prayer! on a .'brent piece, and experts j assert that in this ho has sue-j ceeded. A ( lire For Hi 1 ions Colic. Kkso( K('k, Screven Co., Ga.? I have been subject to attacks of I of bilions colic for several years.! Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrlnra Remedy is the only sure relief. It acts like a charm. (>ne dose oF it gives relief when] all other remedies fail.?(1. D. Sii.mu\ . For sale by .1. F. Mackey A* Co., and B. C. Hough & Co., Druggist's, Lancaster, S. C. What Boys Are For. Some time ago a gentleman, in addressing a company of boys, said: "Can any one of you tell mo what a boy is good for?" One of them held up his hand, and began to snap his lingers. Said the speaker, "What is it?" The boy replied, "A boy is a good thing to make a man out of." "Yes, it is a tremenous good thing" was the response of the man. This question and its answer have put us to thinking. If a boy is a good thing to make a man out of, the proper question is, What kind ol a man? That will depend on the influences which surround that boy and the training he has. If influences are bad, then there will be necessary, careful training to counteract tlie bad. The boy does not understand the danger with which he is beset. He does not understand the pitfalls which are in his pathway. He must, therefore, bo warned of his danger when he is a boy. and be taught to oe a man?a royal man. lie must have the education thus uH'orded, and more in the higher Christian schools it possible. If boys are to develop into rood hum), they must I"' widely! trained for nobility ami worth in our churches ami homes. They! must have the right kiml ol mlture?heart, mind and hotly?to make out of them the right kind of men. The two week's old infant of, Mr. and Mrs. J. Lewis Sowell died last Saturday and was buried in the village cemetery Sunday morning. The funeral services were conducted by Uev. J. H. Bo/.cman.? Kra, 14th. When monev talks wo novor pauae to criticise its grammar. Never strike a man when he's down?especially for a loan. A mouse can make dress goods go quicker than a high tarifT can. Tutt's Pills Cure All Liver Ills. y A CLEAR MEAD; good digestion; sound sleep; a fine appetite and a ripe old age, are some of the results of the use of Tutt's Liver Pills. A single ^ dose will convince you of their wonderfif effects and virtue. A Known Fact. An absolute cure for sick headache, dyspepsia, malaria, sour stomach,dizziness, constipation bilious fever, piles, torpid liver and all kindred diseases. Tutt's Liver PiJSs WE SEN? IT FREE " TO MEN t We will send you by mail (in plain package) AllSOblTKliY FKEE, t lie powerful DR. HOFFMAN'S VITAL RESTORATIVE TABLETS, f with a legal guarantee to permanently jenre LOST MANHOOD, WKAKN KSS, V A KICOt KI.K ; stops forever all unnatural drains. Speedi'y re' stores health and perfect uianuood. | We have faith in our treatment and if we could not cure you we would not i send our medicine PKPP to try, and | pay when satisfied. WESTERN MEDICINE CO. (Incorporated), KALAMAZOO, MICH. feb.H-Iy. INervous Debility, i fcstMlfc/11 3 - i / w. nr..'/'t n t at m r \ r_^j i>R. E. C. WEST'S ^ MERVE m SRJifJ TRcATiiiENT t::r snigijial, r i ctj'.ers iv,;t.\t!o;?s. | 1:1 Fold II-il<r po-ilivu V. ri( (I'll B. liririinlrC, | l>y aii! > 11 nin- i imlj, t<> our.> W '-:ik M' .'u.ry, I i -til.. Wiikt'fnliu'Kf, 1'iir, 11>-ti-r'ii (Juirk' I . ' '?:! ' I.*.** *"-*, I'.vil I : ii.. K i Couti. | Ni-rviuif h, IjiiHsjiu'Ji'. nil l)niln?. Youth- ^ I ful Krrnra, or Bxco nivo U"o of Tolmri'.i, opium, ^ I it l.i (tiitr W i.-'i li'jule in Minor> i oi.Miiniitioll, j liiMinii) nnd Doiitli. At bi . ??.. u.ail, $1 a 1 III!*: .X fur *" v.'I'Jt'l'II |?IM8l*Jlllf t*P tu I curt' or rofm . i pi pip piirk* I iii;o. 'uniai iiuf iita (Inyii ;r- id t, with fall | in -i 11. : .. i i ?.. , iiic only old to onrli I- " - in. A- 11.: n or I v ii.. i . ks?; if?J ' " ; ' ; ^ I V jrf*tr? ' _V<i t. . . t M y v uLrORciir i,\ ii. APTtR .1. r M.nh . .v i'o. u>l H t ll'iu.u & Co $100 To Any Man. WILL PAY $100 FOR ANY CASE Of Wraknran In Men Thry Trent and I-oil to Cure. An Omaha Company places for the lirat time before the public n MahH ai. TiiBaTmen r tor tin'euro of Lost Vitality, Nervous in I .* > -.xunl Woakiif- aud llcstorution of Lile I'orce in o'd ami vounit men No worn out French rormsly; <-011(11111.4 no rnospnorous or iitiicr harmful drugs It is a Wi/MiuiiiTi. Tkbaimk.st magical in its effect* positive in its euro. All renders, who are sutroring from n weakness that blights their life, r.ui.ing that mental and pli) a en I siill'oring peculiar to ls>-t Man1 'mod. slumill writo t i th : 'TATE M El > If AIj l( m.Ni! \NV, Omaha. Mob., ami they will i serai \ i fil?- lately KllEE. a valuable ^ paper uii these diseases, and positive proofs of tie r truly Me>i' vi. Tkkatmknt. Thousands of men. who have lost all hope of a care, are being icslored by them ton perI feet condition This .m,\oicvi Tkkatmknt maybe taken I at home under their directions. ?>r they will j pa> railroad faro and hotel bills to all who prefer to go there fur treatment, if they j fail to cure. They are j?erfe<;tly reliable; t have no Free Prescriptions, Free Cure, jk j Free Sample, or C. O. 1). fake They have ' \ ',<)(>() capital, am! guarantee to cure j every c use they treat or refund every dollar; or Mieir charges may l?e dejiofitod in a | bank to be paid to them when a cure ia effected. Write them today.