University of South Carolina Libraries
s I l}l38a??S'v'r-1}.* :t: I '.it onre ?">; 1* t:-r. ;uj?1 eczei i;?. Ch.iii:: ;i > Lye r.sa 8ki:s * '.ir ?; ar vq.u?l. If rthV.ts :h.- i;ch .?.! . 1-rvM- Ji'rn (Ml ir V * xntrruoi n.** t'ttccT? a j?-meritI It also cures itch, barter's itch s .A head, sor? nipple-.*-, itching rile*. : cm;.I'm* <] hands, chronic sore eye* and i ..related lids. i'r. Cady's Co-.diiion T'tmrPrs for j ho: vs are the besi tonic, bioocl pnrifier ' rati vermil uge Price. PS cents. Sold In ! Atlantic Coast Line. Condensed SCHKDCL::. 1UMN.H OdlXil N-'fini. j Dated Jh::. 13th, 1J01 TRAIN'S GOING SOl'TII. No.35 Jio.23 N'o.53 No.51 i A 51 I* 31 A 'A Lv. Florence 2 50 7 55 y 40 ! Lv. Klngstree 8 54 10 58 i Ar. Lane* 3 55 Ull P. >1 11 10 { Lv. Lanes 3f.6 Oil 8 47 31 16 t Ar. Charleston 5 23 10 55 8 30 1 JO ' A.51 P.M. P.5L P.M. I i TRAINS GOING NORTH. No.76 No.S2 No.32 No.50 ? I A M PJI AM 1' M Lv Charleston 6 45 5 22 6 25 4 15 Ar Lanes 817 G 00 8 00 G 00 Lv Lanes 8 17 6 00 .... GOO " Klngatroe 8 33 Ar Florcnoe !?50 7 30 7 30 A M P 51 A 51 P M Daily. J Daily wept .Sunday. No. 52 runs through to Columbia via Central R. it. of S. (!. Trains Nos. 78 ?!>'i 32 run via Wilson and Tayetteville?'Short Line?and make close connection for a'.l poluts North. Trains on C. A I>. it. It. leave Florence daily ex(,ept Sunday '( 50 a. rn., arrive Darlington 10 15 a. m.. Hartsville 0 15 a. m., Cheraw 11 SO a. m.. Wadesboro 12 35 p. m. j Leave F.oreuce daily except Sunday 8 00 p. | m.. arrive Darlincton 8 25 p.m., Bennetts- ' viiie 922 p. Oibs.m 10 20 p. m. L ave | Florence Sunday oulv 9 50 a. m\ arr.v> DarJlnirton 10 15 a. in. j Leave Gibson daily except Suadiy 3 50 a m., Bennett:-vitie 7 00 a. m.. nrr.vc Darlington 7 51 a. m., leave Darlington 7 55 a. m., arrive Florence 15 a. m. Leave IVa.iesboro daily except Sunday 4 10 ;. m . Cheraw t 15 p. m., Hartsville 7 00 a in... Dariinctou 6 29 p. m., arrive Florence 7 Oj j>. in. Leave Darlington Sunday < nly 8 50 a. m , arrive Florence 9 15 a, m. H. M. EMMEKSOX. (lea Fa-.*. Agent. J. K. KF.NLY. t?c?'i Manager. T. M. EMMEItSON, Traffic Mauagor. Registration Notice. The office of the Supervisor of Regp . ff-tration Will he opened on the liret Monday in every month for the purpose of tile rcgi-di ring of any person .? who is qualified km follows: Who shall have beeu a resident of j ^ jtho State for two years, and of the j v jA,3Poui.ty oreV-ar uii: of the polling' * w iiioli tin? elector oilers to [ * four months btiore thednv otelec y <*6n. uud phali Imve paid,six months be' any poll ffis fbec due and pay able, : iu. .I who jaii r if] arid write any fctetion of tin- Oonhtitntion of 18^5 iu' mutci to biro by the snperviscrs, of registration. or mn show tbut be owns, ami hit;- ub t xoh collectable tin- present y oa property in this State .A r.r thro.- hnmlred d illura or tuoro. J. ?. EADDY, CJeik of Board. mmwm n.ir rohimA^ if wp fail. Ar** o any Invention will promptly receive or ability oi sane. '-How to Obtain a J secured through us advertise 1 for sale Patent taken out through us receivi The Patent Record, an illustrated an by Manufacturers and Investors. Send for sample copy FREE. A< VICTOR J. E< (Patent A Evans Building* Labor Saving Busy Men an $3.00 a near TII t" (|l A cat a day JL 1- 1JL* A Weekly Newspaper and an Illostrati ' of world-happenings every week in brie is tbe Editor-in-chief. and Hamilto JACOB A. RMS The author of " How the Other Half Lives " will give in Tub Outlook an intensely human and vivid account of his ,-xperienoes as a child in Denmark, an immigrant in America, a workman, a traveller, a reporter, and Anally a student of tenement house problems, and an efficient aid to Theodore Roosevelt in reorganizing the New. York police. Mr. Riia writes with simplicity, humor and vigor. <* LYMAN ABBOTT will contibute a series of important papers on fundamental political principles as applied to twentieth century probleins. It will be called "The Rights or Mam, and will define industrial, educational and religious, as well as political, rights and duties. . V v 1 pifcn o. ro^nfc* LUELL & Luj-rilo ;;c ' ?, ?; fcV* \J ' *^S n J mn ai. i <Ye continue off-ring inducements to close ! out-ur Sumner Goods. We can mention ; only a few ol the many good* reduce J: La iK-s' Sc Under vr.-ts lor 5o. 10' Tie.- ami Bows lor 80, 25- 1 ns nud Bows i r 15c. Initial Handkerchief*. 11. S., embroidered, j '1 in a ' or 19<*;"23o goOiL. ' , lit-* ii1 - ltlack initial Si.k Handkerchiefs | i-.r h> -. jl Moj'.t lurgo VTbi'e Figured, Drnwu Stltch, Jnpoae: Ilstndkerchtef for 16'.; worth 25c. s.x Lar..-" White FlueH. S. H .n-l.-.erchiefi ' for U)e. in fancy b x; cheap at 75 . Thrclarge White Fine H. si. Handker- ; cnieff. in fancy box, for 40c- worth 5o. Black-bordered Linen Hundtierohiefs for ; 12 ;; efcraji a; lac. Good Mourning Handkerchiefs for 4c. Handkerchiefs for le. Hundkei chiefs for 2 l-2c. Handkerchiefs for Sc. is-Jnch Madra* f?r 7 l-2c; worth lOo. 36-.n b Madras for 6 l-2c; worth 6c. LAWNS AND ORGANDIES FOR ! LESS THAN COST. Shirt W'uists for much lees than it cost to : make them. BIG REDUCTION ON SKIRTS. 40c Pique Skirts for 25o. 88c Crash Skirts for 81c. All Summer Goods are being sold at re- ! duoed price.-". NEW GOODS. Ons case Lonecloth 5o; no starch. Fine Black Henrietta at 50c. TINSEL DRAPERY SILK A LINE, BALL FRINGE. Black Duck at 8 and 10c. ns^vinltOf I\ L" t? A 1>TH W VT r iJiv.i 11 van r nu i .*? ? . lO piecfs Walnut Suits $7? to $100. 10 j iece Solid Oak Suits $18, $22, *25, $80, J3>. 440. *50. *55. Oak flail Racks, French Plate Glass, $7, i ..50, 19.50. Wardrobes $8 to $25. Bed Lounges 19 to $15. Bedsteads $2.25 to $10. Iron Beds. Iron Cribs. Parlor Suits $38 to 150. Baby Carriages $6.50, *7, $7.60. Floor Oilcloth 30c. Matting 10; 12, 14. 15, 16. 20, 23, 25. 27 and 0c. 10-plece Chamber Sets $2.19 to $3. Window Shades 11, 15.30, 35, 40c to $1.24 Stoves #6.50, $7.50, $10 to $14 Trunks $2.50 to $6.50. ILL11I n I uyspepsia idire Digests what you eat. It artificially t> the food and aids Nature in :-:v.?n/th?,niijg and reconstructing the < xhaunted digestive organ*. it i:?;h ..tT';- dUovereddigestant and ronjc. ther preparation | ean app:=;;?? !i i: ;,i efficiency. It instantly ieiiev '.cr.uaiit ntlycuree Kyspepsin, ion. Heartburn, HfltuU'nee. .-,:omaek. Nausea, 8iekHeariucli'.-.* : TMiCu.Cramps,and all ottoer result- . .-.v-ri-'-uiigestion. PmjaicJ tv I-" A fn Cbiccacno sending sketch and description of r opinion Ireo concerning the patenter.? ent*' sent niton request. Patents i at our ozpense. ? special notice, without charge, in <1 widely circulated journal, constflted 1 dress, /ABSS & CO., Homeys,' washington, d. c. > Reading for d Women, in r ttt r\r\ir 52 numbers | U 1 LWUI\ a y e a r id Magazine in one. Tells the story :ff clear-cut paragraphs. Lyman Abbott a W. Mabjc the Associate Editor. RALPH CONNOR Under this pseudonym were written two of the most striking jf recent novels, " Black Rock " ?nd "The Sky Pilot." A new novel of Canadian and Western life by this author will appear in The Octiook during the year. Inspirit, humor, pathos and strong character ^drawing it U eveu superior to its predecessors. | SPECIAL To introduce TheI I OF F F R Outlook to new readers we will send it for two months' trial for 25 cents provided this paper is mentioned. Address TH? OUTLQOK, NEW YORK MUTINY IN A MINE j Convicts "old Tiifir Guards as i!ost^es. STRIKE MADE FOR BETTER RATIONS The Warden Refuses the Demand of the Convicts and Says He Will Starve them Out. I Lea'.enworth. Kans.. Special.?In I the. Kansas Stale penitentiary coal | mine at lumping 2St prisoners, who went down into the mine on Monday j morning, have n: untitled and are I holding lj guards as hostages. They refuse to let the guards come to the I rurfjea until Warden Tomlinson pro- | n-isi.s to give them better food. They threaten to kill the guards if their do tuands arc not complied with. The mines are worked by thrt worst class cf convicts and among those who have j muriate 1 are twenty life prisoners. Warden Tomlinson has refused to grant the demand.. There was great consternation Tuesday afternoon among the families of the guards who are h<-ld by the convicts. All the penitentiary shops have been closed and the convicts have been ordered in j their cells, in order to have all the guards in readiness for an emergency to handle the convicts should they attempt to rush from the mine. Many complaints have been made by the prisoners because of the grade o: fool furnished them, and to this dissatisfaction has been added allegations of mistreatment. No outbreak was attempted, however, until the men who had entered the mine, refused to return unless their demands were granted. They killed the mules used in the mines and are living on this meat. Serious trouble is apprehended if it is found necessary to send deputies into the collery. The miners have threatened to wreck the mines but the threat is laughed a: Warden Tomlinson. who says they would not attempt this, as such action would endanger their lives. He says he will starve them out. A communication was re reived from one of the guards stating that they were hungry' and tired, but so far as he could learn all were alive. The first outbreak in the mine took place shortly after the neon meal Tuesday and was started by the convicts in division Xo. 8. Ci the 19 men in this division, 16 seized the guard and overpowered him and announced that they had decided to strike. They told the guard that they had decided to mine two instead of three cars of coal as a day's work in the future and that they proposed to have better food. This guard was left in charge of two of the corvicts in the mutiny while the others ma roiied to he adjoining division and called on the convicts there to jo:n the revolt. The convicts were soon marching :hrough the mine from one division to another, yelling and yw.r.ging their lamps and picks. Othrr desperate convicts entered into the spirit, while the short-te:m men generally offered ro opposition to the mutineers and quietly joined them. ?0 far us can be learned no opposition of any kind was offered the convicts. The oh leers .being una-med, were helpless, and the life of any would have been forfeited had he tried even to (hc. k the niad spirit of the convicts. Guard McPhane. one of the 13 hostages, was hoisted to the surface to night. the striking convicts permitted jt bco.-use of his being ill. He reported that the prisoners' have been careful to avoid anw violent act. The other guards, he said, are in good condition and will hold out as long cs long as the convicts itmain mucinous. An. hour later a signal came up from below and one convict, not in sympathy with the strike, was hoisted out. As the cages were half the distance from the bottom of the shaft the prisoner was forced to climb 400 feet, crawling up on the shaft timbers to * * T?U? CO1M flip reacn tne cage.s. iuc wu??'v men in the mine had had nothing to eat since noon yesterday except some corn coffee, which was made from corn used to feed the mules in the mine. The mules, he said, will be eaten unless jhe stjjke. is ended soon. Late Tuesday night another convict was hasted to the surface to confer with the warden. Warden Tomlinson sasy that he will force the convicts to surrender unconditionally, much a# he regrets starving his own officers. Want a Conference. Scranton, Pa.. Special.?As a resu't of the conference held 'between President John Mitchell, of the United Mine * ? * e U ~ /UctrJftf nrfl:.l W OrKerS, anu W1V uiouim j/iw.dents of the anthracite region, communications were sent out this afternoon from the mine workers' head, quarters to the presidents of all coal companies and the large individual operators. Those communications con. tained a report of last week's convention and a resolution asking their attendance ait the conference of April 1, j and further expressed their acquics- j ence in that action by the national | president anl presidents of dietriotf i N-cs 1, 7 and 9. . I A Recommendation. The board of atvar s cf the Navy Dopar: mer.t has rec m mended to Secioti;y Long that Colonel L. Meade, cf [ the I'nited States raarir.e corps, he [breveted brigadier general T'nue! States marine <-orrs. "for ds ingni.-bed conduct in the presence cf the encmv at the battle of 'fien-Tsin. J.:ly 13. I?bO," junior giade. United States navy, bo junior gr :de. United S ates Navy, be advance;! four numbers "f..r eminent and conspicuous coudu t in batUe at Malabon, Philippine Island.", March 4, 1S99." For La Orippc and Headache. These disagreeable and dangerous diseases may be relieved immediately by the tmely use of Hicks' Capudiue Headache I Cure. 15c, 25e and 50cat all drug stores. If your druggist does not keep it send 6c for postage on trial bottle. Hicks Chemical Co., Raleigh, N\ C. j Mrs. WiosloTV'"i- Soothing Syrup for children teething, sofc-u the gum*, reduces inlUmma- I tion, allays pair., cures wind colic. 25c a bottle i Tell a dignified individual io pull down his vest and you raise his choicr. I do not believe I'iso's Cure for Consump- | tion hoe an equal for coughs and colds. -Joirt ! f. Boykr, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15, l'JOC'. i Harrowing a man's feelings won't help < toward cultivating his acquaintance. ' A Noted Boston its Symptoms a Severe Cases C Pinkham's Vege : WILL te I am so nervous I no one i j isn't a wHl inch in my body. j are diseased, my cliest pains mc am so weak at my stomach, an* ; palpitation of the heart; am k , and backaphe nearly kills me. a There is a weight in the lo> j down all the time, with pains ! can't sleep, walk, or sit, and bin; the most miserable of women. This is a most vivid descripti nervous prostration, caused b\ diseased condition of the worn No woman should allow hers of misery when there is no i Williamson's case and how shi Two Gasss of Nan ''Dear Mrs. Plvkham ; ? I was suffering such tortures from nervous prostration that life was a burden. I could not sleep at all, and was too weak to walk across the floor. My heart was affected so that often I could not lie down at all without almost suffocating. I took Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound and it workedTTCe magic. I feci that your medicine has been of inestimable benefit to me." Miss ad elk Williamson. ^^^lesN^Boulevard^Ulaiirta^ra. ApAAA REWARD.li*ve deposit Vfftia'sjB ho I""*! to any porsot 0 JUUO "mo"' FftACRANT Sozodont Tooth Powder in a new Taten: Box, handy :o Ese mm ft SOZODONT LIQUID . 25c Jt% Urge LIQUID & POWDER,75c fa ?J At all ths Stokks, ok Br Mail. A do bus, HALL A RUCK?L, NEW YORK I I j The failure to reach the goal set in life | is not necessarily a defeat. f'urifies the Hioott-t'Oiiils tioiiiin^ to Try. B. B. H. (Botanic Blood Delink is the fuel and i?>s: spring Blood Purifier niaJj. it. B. B. gives life, vigor and strength to the blood. B. B. B. cures the worst K:/.exna. lulling j Ifutnora, Boils. Pimples, by giving r. healthy i blood supply to the skin. B. B. B. cur ; Ul, errs, Bating Sores, Scrofula. Cancer. iculj I evorv sore and makes the blood pure and r>h. B. B. B. cures old Khcnmalism. Aches and j P.iin t in Bones, Joints. Try Botanic Blood j B tlm this spring. Druggists, $1. Trial treat nort free by writing Blood Balm Co., 12 Mitchell St.. Atlanta. Ga. Describe trouble, and | free medical advice given. f An astronomer reports that his business ^ is looking up. Dr. I.uke 2*. It lack bum Writes concerning Crab Orchard Water: "In iardy rnoiion and chronic constipation of th? bowels it excels all other medicines known to tii" proicseion. The distinction among animals requiring least sleep belongs to the elephant. Don't forget ail pains relieved at once by Goose Grease. No ccue. no 1'ay, It is estimated by Grove that the /flea of the pine organ was borrowed from the human chest, mouth and larynx. Woman Describes nd Terrors.?Two ured by Lydia E. table Compound. !! I r 1 19 j| j| | j 8 wreCTTrr--.1' "IBti^ J ever suffered as I do! There 'I honestly believe my lungs ; so, but I have no cough. I i have indigestion terribly, and " I >sing flesh; and tins headache I nd yesterday I had hysterics. A '.vr part of my bowels, bearing in my groins and thighs ? I ?. ? oil goodness! J. am simply m of a woman suffering with inflammation or some other ? elf to reach such a perfection ^ iced of it. Read about Mis3 ^ s was cured. rsus Prostration Cured. ' I had nervous prostration terribly, caused by female weakness. I suffered everything; was unable to eat, sleep, or work. After a while I was induced to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and I really began to improve on taking the first bottle. I continued to take the medicine, and am now better in every way. and feel like a different person. I am simply a well woman." Mrs. Deli.a Keiser, Marit-'uville, Pa. ed with the National City Bunk of I.jrnn, $5000, i who can find that the shore testimonial letters bed before obtaining the wrltc?i i^eoial ger JLYDIA IS. ru* AUAJ* nqin^ini: v,v. 8|b3e ^# k] Best Cough Syrup. Tutet Good. Use gl CI lutima Sold .fey druggists. "The Sauce that made West Point famous." MclLHENNY'S TABASCO. Use CERTAiNW0URE.il So. 13. Ir?3?e?&r2? I Tlwmfli w'?li? Watir A *tti