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LANi Vol. XII. STRONG REA FULL On CIVTV nwp nnsui oEAii-rivc man AND U Mr. Ralph Bullock Who Is In His 1 Is as Young ai His Grandchild Pounds, and H * DUFFY'S PUSE "I was always fond of life." said Mr. 1 * a great deal of it wh?-u 1 wa# yaung. aad RAL.ru UULLOCK. 101 YEARS OLD. of drug? and medicine alone. To It I w!?1 and strong. If tin- fathers and mothers k disease, tin re would he no sickly, puny cl body In a state of normal health by usln solutely puro stimulant ard tor.lc which Ingredients. P<> not fill your ?.-,f.rrn with There are thousands of cr. eg similar W used Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey as direr least twentr years. Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey has cured scribed by ov r 7,000 doc'or.s and UFtd ex genuine Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey Is 4 Sold Ai Ait or dlreef of ft no n hottl*. R ."u:*e nuuu >?.- i'uiit n. i; in in" till iv " n clue. This is a guarantee. Valuable wci Company, Rochester, N. Y. /Suggestion from :t New York Newspaper. The editor of the Chronicle has received a letter from a New York newspaper in which we are invited to contribute to a fund for the employment of competent lawyers to prosecute Lieutenant Governor Tillman for the killing of Editor Gonzales. The action is based on the idea that the killing of Editor Gonzales is an attack upon the freedom of the press, and as Air. Tillman boasts that he will be defended by the very beat <5. lep.il talent in South Carolina it is thought the prosecution should be conducted by the most capable lawyers in the southern ^ states, and the newspaper should aid in employing them While not questioning the mo .tive and good will of the sugges tion, we do very seriously question its wisdom. We have never known the prosecution of a criminal case be helped by the employment of distinguished lawyers from a distance. I r gives the defense the opportunity te argue before the jury that the friends ?>r the tamily of the deceased, recognising the weak ness of the state's case, we re not willing to trust it to the solicitor general and such legal assistance as was available at homo,but sent abroad and scour cd the country to procure the ablest lawyers, in order to hols ter up a weak ease and perse W. cute the prisoner. The effect is ahvnys to prejudice tlio minds of the jury r>. < ?t the pros-ecu 0 tion, and to rn;\';e sympathy foi the prisoner. *ASTE LANCASTER, S. LTHY, AND VIGO P. AT 104. IGGH'LSREN LiVINC IQlliitilMn IflKHItU. cf Brooklyn N. Y.f , 105th Year, Says He id Active as Any o1 | ren--He Weighs 175 , lis Only Medicine Is < MALT WHISKEYj! Bullock to a reporter last evening. "I saw to this day I can laugh as heartily as tho youngest of niy grandchildren. I am good I for some more years, and 1 scarcely feel my age. My \lgorous constitution and re- 1 marknble freedom from disease Is due to tho daily use for many years of Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey. Though I ara past 104 | years of age, 1 feci as your.g and hearty as forty years ago. I weigh 17.1 pounds, my appetite in good, and I still do all the chores. I cannot say too much in favor of Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey, which ( > indeed a blessing to old people and invalids. I know it has prolonged my life uiauy < years." Mr. Bullock's wife died twenty years ago, 1 an 1 lie living with one of his grandchildren. Sixty-live grandchildren ar? tnarriid, and they are all stioi < and healthy. * His descendants who live in Fort Hamilton. Brooklyn and Manhattan are the Me- < Donald. Watts, Hurst, Bullock and Clark . families. ' The health and vigor of Mr. Bullock's 1 ( hil l. i. ;ii',d giau ic.iteii i u show tout their fath< r thought of his descendants and kept | his constitution strong and vigorous with a pure stimulant and Ionic, leaving ail kiudS 1 li a woman; she should keep herself healthy i ept their constitutions strong and froe from hildron. It Is an carv matter to keep the g Duffy's Pure Mall Whiskey tho only nbI.i free from fus?-i oil n-nl other dangerous patent mod! la-'s and drug --, to that of Mr. Bullock':; and If c*rrv one ted. the avorag* life u.d be i rul..:i,: at ( millions In the Inst .in years. Tt l? pre- j cluslvi ly by ".000 prominent hospituls. Tho ( DUp&nsaries, Uvis iM rvl>?'H i . h'Tr Is roil" luaf is y r?"? geliod \y ?h" Oovpi nrvr-rt us n medillcal booklet soul froe. Duffy Mult Wlilskoy While this case has stirred up the public, without reference to state lines, we do not believe that justico will be furthered in any way, by the plan that is proposed. The solicitor who will represent the state and such attorneys as the Gonzales family may desire to employ, will be amply able to conduct th6 prosecution. There are no abstruce points of law involved in the transaction, and the jury, made up from the fellow citi zensof the dead editor and of his slayer, will have the facts and the law plainly before them and will lie quite competent to deal with the issue, without any unusual display of legal talent from elsewhere ?Augusta Chronicle. I I ; <8 . I Thi? tun la on every fi<ir ' the sen nine j Lanr.tivc Bromc-Quirinc TnMen (bo ron.H !y fti ?f t:ur- ? -> in ?>mp ?ln^ - A Cure for Lumbago. | W. C. Williamson, of Amnerst, ! , Va., sav -: "For more than a year , I I suffered from lumbago. 1 final-^ )y tried Chamberlain's Pain Halm ' and it yave me entire relief which i ' all other remedies had failed to { 5 do." Sold by J. F. Mackey. ' Vou Know Whul Ik on %ro TnliIi?k ! i ] When yon take Grove'a Tastelea* Chill . i . I Tonic because the formula is iilnin^v ' printed on hvitv hnttlx ihowinc that I' .1 is dimply iron and Quinine in u j < *isM "form No pun , i, > pay. ."On I R. EN C., WEDNESDAY, JA WILL DISPOSING OF TWO MILLION DOLLARS. George W. William*' Will Probated in Charleston?Largest Estate Left by a South Carolinian in Yearn. Newfl and Courier. The will of the late George W. Williams was tiled yesterday in the ofliee of the Judge of Probate. PL . .1 1- ? ? 1-" 1 i iie ciucuuient given piain ana specific instructions anont the distribution of the large estate of ihe dead financier and it is drawn in terms so perspicacious as to eliminate the possibility of legal contention. It would be ilillieult to obtain an accurate estimate of the value of the estate, Once the will directs the execu trix and executors "not to file any inventory of my estate." but it is believed to approach two millions or more. The v ill was made OctobQr 22, 1801, and was witnebsed by John I). Kelley, E. M. Wilson (now Jeud) aud H. F. Evans. Thereafter three codicils were appended. The first, November 2, 1807, was witnessed by F. M. Duque;ron, Andrew Moreland and S. Lawrence Stein, J r ; the second, |Y>ronihor 1, ] S00. was witnessed k>y S. L. Stem, .IrM F. M. Duque'ion and II. W.Clauss; the third, 3ct. 16, 1901, had as witnesses J. W. Knobeloch, 15. F. Evans and W. P. Fir Joy. While no puLlic benefactions t*re mentioned in the will it in learned on the authority of Mr. Lleorge W. Williams that his lather left certain wishes to be carried into effect after his death, one among them being that the sum of $5000 be given to the Charleston Orphan House. Mr. Williams names his wife, Martha Fort Williams, executrix, *nd his sons.George W. Williams, Jr., and Henry P. Williams, exicutors. He directs that (isaid >xecutrix and executors be liable >ach for herself and himself and ler or his own act, and not for me anotner, nor shall they be iable for errors of judgment, but or wilful negligenco and default. \nd I advise and recommend my iaid executrix and executors in he conduct and management of ny estate and its settlement and livision to take counsel of my riend and legal adviser, George Limb liuibt of Charleston, as 1 mve every confidence in his pro essiohal wisdom and experience." item first directs that a suitable monument ho erected to the riemory of Mr. Wil!i?rn<>, at a *,ost not to exceed $.">000. The urther stipulation is made that die interest accruing from $1000 I'ncnnNcioua I'roni 4'roii|? During a sudden and terrible attach of croup our little girl was unconscious from strangulfttion, (iivh A. 1.. Snaflr>rd- nnutnmator Chester, Mich., and a dope of (>n Minute Cough Cure was administered and repeated often.? It reduced the swelling and inflammation,out the mucus and shortly the child was resting easy and speedily rncoverec. Ir cures t oughs, Colds, LaGrippe, and all Throat and Lung troubles. One Minute Cough Cure lingers in the throat and chest and enables the lungs io contribute pure, healthgiving oxygen to the Liood. Cra.vf r' Pros TERP NUARY 28, 1003. 1 I of 4 per cent stock bonds bo ox peuded in Reaping tho plat bur rounding the grave free from evi deuces of neglect. To his wife, Martha Fort Will | ianis, Mr. Williams directs that| $200,000 in "well selected stocks and bonds or available real estate" shall be paid or transferred, j Also during iier natural lite she will have the use of the house and | land at No. 16 Meeting street j where she now resides, "with all j personal property pertaining to same," and "all furniture of the property at Nocoochee, Ga., which includes "horses, carriages, cattle and all personal I I property of whatsoever nature.'" | At her death this bequest shall; revert to and become a part at)d! parcel of the remainder of my estate and shall be disposed of as hereinbefore directed." The executrix and executors are instructed to deposit $5,000 in their names in the Carolina Savings Hank or some other safe savings institution in the State of South Carolina and collect interest on it as it accrues and pay same semi annually to my sister, Sarah L. Dobbins, of Nacoochee, Ga., during the period of herj natural life." Thereafter it will "revert to and become a part and I parcel" of the original estate, to "be disposed of as hereinbefore directed." It is further directed that the same sum of monoy under like conditions shall be deposited in u savings institution and the interest accruing therefrom be paid semi-annually to I] r. 1. \\t r ?.t i ii.tuiinii ? . oifirr, ui rsacoocnee, Ga., a sister of Mr. Williams. He also stipulates that his brother, Kdwin P. Williams, shall receive the interest s^mi-annually of $5,000 in accordance with the': conditious governing the bequests to his sisters. "All the rest of the estate of every kind, notion and character whatever I give, devise and bequeath unto my executrix and executors, in trust, to divide and distribute into four equal shares or parts?one-fourth part to George Wilton Williams, Jr.; r iL i- J t a. - ? n . uuoMouriu to my uaugnrer, oaran Porter Calhoun ; one-fourth to my daughter, Martha Wade Carrington; one-fourth to my son, Henry Porter Williams. The child or childreu of either of my four children who may die before me to represent his, her or their pareut and take (he share which such parent would have taken if alive." "Having advanced to George i l Walton Williams, Jr., and daugh-1 ter, Sarah Porter Calhoun, to the' i amount of $40,000, and to daugh jter, Martha Wade Carrington,' I $35,000, and to Ron, Henry P. j Williams, $25,000, all of which is j charged against my respective! children in the book known a?. "George W. Williams's Kast Hay j Books,' without interest being computed on same, in the event I lot my death before equalizing the above advances, I desire that! my two last named children re : ceive out of my residue estate a' ?um sufficient to equalize same1 amount and pdaoe ttiem on equality in their share of my estate with their said brother and sis-1 ter." The first codicil to the will, written November 2, ISJ7, directs the executrix and executors "uwt, to file any inventory e? my cs-1 RISE. No. 45 mm ? ?i ? ? ? i bbm| A Golden Rule of Agriculture: Be good to your land and your crop will be good. Plenty of Potash i1 in the fertilizer spells quality J and quantity in the har- >] vest. VVrito us and we will sand ywu, free, by next mall, t.VM1 our money wkiHing w?Wt llisS: HERMAN KAU WORKS, 93 Nassau Streat, 1 tate, but to divide my eEkale amrnp the legatees and deviates under the terms and conditions of my will, without placing on record any inventory of same. Under no ciroumRta noes Ahull my nominated executrix and executors be required tog.ve any bond as a condition of qualification " The second codicil, appended December 1, 1800, dir ct.s uif $ either son should fail to qualify" as exocnf?.r Mr. W. 1*. 'rrjncton, a son in-law of Mr. Williams, shall take his place. I '\ the codieti npoinded Oct. Id, 1001, further provision is made for his wife. d'r**oting that an additional $200 000 h*? in"'>pt'?d "by purchase of well selected interest bearing bonds and storks" and the interest accruing ou SH're tv> be paid to her sem -annually. jii/\,Y.oLw ft/lhibD Trustworthy, cither sex, by Whole*-ale Vm'chandi Company of solid financial standing, to manage Local Representatives who will organize clubs among consumers. 4o per cent, saved for our customers. Business uo experiment but a proven success. Salary $18.oo a week, expenses advanced. Experience unnecessary. Address D . Clarkson, Mgr , 33*1 Dearborn St ,Chicago,111. jau7,2m Til It EE I'A EE ItS A WEEK _______ The Enterprise and the Twlee-aWeek Charleston Xeirs ami Courier fine Year for Only $1 HO. We have completed arrangements w1111 the Charleston News and Courier by which we are enabled to furnish the Enterprise and the Twice-n-Week edition of liie News and Courier n>r $1.50 a year, which must be paid strictly in advance. Sample copies of that paper will be sent to our subscribers, and we ?iu?t that many will take advantage ot this libera' clubbing elb'r. I'he regular price ot the Enterprise, as you knov } i- $1 a year, aiul that of the Semi-Weekly News and Courier, an eight-page paper, is $1. Hut under this clubbing arrangement yon get I hem both tor $ 1.50. Sew Century Comfort. Millions are daily finding a world of comfort in Bucklen's Arnica Salve. It kill* pain from Burns, Scalds. Outs, Bruises, conquers Ulcers, ami ivu r Sores; cures Eruptions, Salt llheum. Boils HiiJ Felons; r?uuoves (Jurns and Warts. Bept File cure on esi th. O o iy 'Joe ai i>. ,.s, uitvl J, I1. Muck. j w Co t ui Up store.