The Carolina Spartan. [volume] (Spartanburg, S.C.) 1898-1913, April 30, 1902, Image 2

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THE SPARTAN* Gil AS. PETTY, Eli'orzna Propriety ? a Wednesday, April 80, 1902. I'nion has three candidates for | Mayor: Macbeth Young, the incutn- J j bent. l)r. H K Smith an 1 Rev W K ti Humphries. Miss Stone has begun her lectures. ^ ? < The entire sum received will be devoted to returning the money paid ( for her ranscm. In the Dakotas and Nebraska there ' was a heavy snow last Tuesday. It:, w is 12 to :&) inches deep and was the biggest snow storm ever reported in i April. The pension list is groring larger and larger. Deaths of veterans do not diminish the number. For each one thut dies there are about three new ap, lie .nts. When one looks over the roster of, court cases in various States it looks as if many^people were endeavoring to make a living by suing corporations for damages. Vale t'niversity is to have a new organ which will cost $tfU,0UO. It i will be 90 feet wide and 57 feet high. It ia the gift of Mm. Helen W. Newberry, of Detroit, in memory of her husband. Mrs. W. W.Jones, wife of asection master between Charleston and A lam's Run, was murdered one day last week and the house robbed. There was a great excitement in th? community. The Kansas hot speh which began the 19th wa* broken ther 21st' and rain fell over a portion of the State. The temperature ranged from 90 to 100 for a few days and a hot wind and clouds of dust made >t unbearable. ' The South Old and New," is a new Southern magazine, the first number of which will appear about the first of May. As the name indicates the editors and contributors will be Southern people. It will be published in Atlanta. The census report shows that there were 2,938,952 acres in Irish potatoes last year. The average yield was about 92 bushels to the acre. The acreage in sweet potatoes was only 537.547 acres with an average yield of 79 bushels to the acre. L,. L. McAllister and his step-mother wife have separated because they were told that the marriage was illegal. What do you think of u preacher or civil officer, who would perform the marriage ceremony for a man and his stepmother? Walter Vrooman, a social reformer, Koa nnnnncof] fhftf-, he Will build ' a co-operative town near Kansas City. There will he a dozen factories, churches, schools, libraries, and places of amusement. This is intended especially for children and female nurses and teachers will look after them . Atlanta has two boss hall and parlor thieves. They would enter the frontdoor of houses in day time and take fine rugs, brie-a-brac, silverware, and the like. When discovered by one of the family the negro would innocently ask if they wanted to hire any one to do work. They would move heavy furniture and take out rugs when some of the family were sitting in the back room. One woman caught one of the rascals taking up rugs in the parlor and he said: "Missis, lies came round to clean dese tings as you hired me to . do." He then showed the woman I that it was a mistake and he had B come to the wrong house. When B their hiding places were searched ^B more than a $^,000 worth of property was found. Food For Children. It is a common mistake for parents ^ to begin {feeding their children on solil food too early, writes Helen W. <-5oke, M. D., in Good Housekeeping . For a cnild under fourteen months it is much the safer course to give no 9olid food at all. .It is true that many children seem to be able to digest solid food at an early age, but it is! also known that giving it at this period is fre juently responsible for the digestive disorders occurring during V-? the second year. After the child is a year old it Bhould have some form of farinaceous food added to its milk diet. The best method is to make a gruel of some cereal, for example, oatmeal if the child is inclined to be conttipated, barley, if its bowels are inclined to be loose, and add this gruel after J straining to the baby's milk. Beef juice (made by boiling a piece of round beef lightly and squeezing the juice fr->ra it) may be added to the diet as early as the fourteenth month. Begin with a teaspoonful and grad utlly increase to two or three ounces at a time. The child may take orange and prune juice a9 early as the fifteenth month, and a little lateh strained prunes and baked apples without the skin. Fruit i9 an important part of ? child's diet and should ' be given regularly after the fifteenth month except in the cases of diarrhoea. After the eighteenth month, half a soft boiled egg may be given instead of. or in alteration with, the beef juice. , mammmmmmmmmmmmmmam a fiftKAT (irtovr on.\n, By Bishop Warren A. Candler. About thirty years ago there was a I ;reat group of preachers in and> iround New Yoik. llcnry Ward Beecher, Richard S ! Jlorrs, Charles F. Deems and T. l>c| ,,r, lo^r, of them iflll i tuv . vissed away in Washington ci'y a ew r*ays ago, and a retrospect of hem may be useful. No principle of classification would ustify grouping them together ex | . ept that they all appeared about the) jame time. No men were ever more j unlike. .By far the ablest of them was* j Henry Ward Beecher. His was a co- ^ lossal brain. In his day no intellect ; appeared among the public men of, ,\meriea superior to the mind of Beecher. He was no} a man of schol- j arship. uoronrt of very uecunte in-1 formation. There is no sa\ing what j he might ha^e attained if he had been a careful student. But lie was i un orator, aiming alwuvs at itnmerii . . ate effects, and generally absorbed in pressing >ome reform. For success in such a career his remarkable brain furnished without much study all that was necessary. In his earlier days he was a man of simple faith, and in those days he was almost ir- 1 resistible. In bis latter days In A. _ I seemed to believe very little, ami have no fixed faith in anything long at a time. His cieed was in a state of flux, and underwent the most fre quent and rapid changes. His pulpit power w?? diminished and his pulpit utterances were often contradictory with each other withiu the limits of a fortnight. He rarely hit in the eame place long at a time, and his blows became ineffective. Richard S. Storrs was a far different man. To the graces of an orator he added the studious habits of th? scholar, and he brought only wellbeaten oil into the sanctuary. His sermons, delivered without notes, might have been printed as they fell from his lips, and then they would have been more perfect than the cart fully written pages of most men. He was always orthodox, and he never was sensational. He delivered strong, steady blows in furtherance of fixed convictions. Charles F. Deems was a Methodist preacher, who from North Carolina went to New York after the war, and became pastor of the church of the Strangers, where Commodore Cornelius Yanderbilt with his southern wife worshipped. Doctor Deems, in fact, created the Church of the Strangers. He was a man of evangelical o ? w faith, captivating utterance and of almost infinite industry, lie was without Beecher's genius and without the scholorship of Storrs?a nervous, ready speaker of great power, nevertheless. / I)r. Talmagc was utterly unlike and of them. Ho was 1oh>> mtoucejr ual than any of them. He was or thodox, but hearing cr reading his sermons you never thought of his or thordoxy or his heteordoxy. He treated simple, common-place truths in a bright, scrappy, illustrative style, and he delivered what he had to say theatrically. One will seek in vain to find an original thought or a duU line in all his thousands of sermons, and he literally printed thousands of discourses, for he and the newspapers got on amazingly well to gethe. Of course there was a sameness about his sermons. They seem ed to have been manufactured products from raw materials drawn from scrap-books and "cyclopedias of illustrations." They bore no mark of ... . ??* j euner learning or pruiuuuu mcuimtion. Yet they interested a.id profit ed many thousands. When he died the other day the hearts of multitude.were bowed with grief. The work of Dr. Storrs will outlast that of all the others. Plymouth church is an isolated organization, which seems to care for none of Beecher's views. Since the great preacher went away they have had the rationalizing Lyman Abbott and the orthodox Hillis as their pastors The church seems to care little for what is taught from its pulpit if onl) the pre cher tiles wjiat he teacher in a bright and interesting way. Orthodoxy is nothing and heterodoxy is nothing, but a pleasing sermon is all and is all. The Vanderhilt9 worship no ntore where Deems preaenea, aDa me pas tor of the "Old Commodore" has had no successor. When Talmage's church burni down there was not left enough life and zeal in the congregation to build it, and he removed to Washington where he died without a pastorate, ^at the last. I believe. But Storrs labored in the greal field of foreign missions, as president of the American Board, and beside that great work he left his work as a pastor fastened to something permanent. tn crive it endnrim/ force. ,,V"V VV O" ' " " O Herein is a tjrent lesson : An isolated ministry is an evanescent min istry, though it be the ministry of the highest genius. A man must belong to something and stand for some thing if he is to amount to much. A hen that does not lay in the nest max be a great layer, but if some other hen were not employed to do th< hatching of the eggs, her breed would speedily become extinct. If Beecher's church had been leeindependent, a:d hail more perfecth kept the step with the great Oongre gational body his ministry woulhave been a thousand fold morf uitful. Many erratic utterances 1m would have suppressed Ion.- enough to think twice about them, and the he would not have said them at all He would have felt more re-ponsibility for what he sai 1, and would not h. ve been so reckless at times it W Hlld hnVi"; tiivod 1 }!1j l?:?;ny Iik'oii. | sistencies of speech?and doubthss some irregularities of conduct. If l>r. I>.ems could have left the! church of tlu* Strangers incorporated in some such b >dy as the old North Carolina conference, of which he was once a member, the fruits of his toil would not so quickly have disappeared. If Dr. Talmagc had identified his work more perfectly with the%te>h; J 1..' terian ciiurcn 11 woum hh-i?..? been foreordained to last longer. When his tabernacle was consumed by Hunt's another structure would speedily have risen in i's place, and another man could now carry forward his work. As it is his work has ended. I nd-pendent ism may be a very firm thing, but it is very transient in its hold mi mar. That one may speak today in one way and tomorrow may feel at liberty to deny all he thought today, may be very exhiliarating; but in the long run it does not command contideme. Men say < f a man who does so: "Well, doubtless, he ivery honest, but he is not safe. litalways says what hf thinks, hut he does not think enough to have the sameopinion two days in succession."' ('fihiets attract more attention while they last than all the >!ars in the heavens; but men dr. not >ail by ttieni. Fixed stars only are reliable guide-posts for the mariner in the trackless deep. Moreover, preaching simply to entertain a crowd is somewhat of a pro, fanity. Jt is much as if the messen ger of God, commissioned to proclaim eternal truth, should renounce his high calling to win wages and ap plause as a harlequin. But preach ers who hire themselves to a congregation rather than attach themselves to a cause may easily yield to tin ever present temptation to please th? men who hire them rather than th? Savior who redeemed them. Nor are men greater for being independent. Storrs was great enough, His influence went far beyond the limits'of his denomination. Dr. Jno Hall did not limit his influence b\ being a sturdy Presbyterian. Phil ips Brooks was felt, and is felt as 11 national force, though he never af fected independentism. Beecher, Deems and Talmage? great men. all of them, but great a.> they were, they will soon be litth more than traditional names. Th have left little that is permanent. Sr is every one that doeth like them. Neither >n New York nor clsewher* are present day preachers as great a: the men of thirty years ago. Livin; evangelists are far below Moody am Finney. Living pastors do not ap proach the great preachers of I ha ..? ...1? I gruup nuu 11?i > u nun un ???; We have tent-stretchers and hymn biok peddlers ai^[ photograph ven tiers, anil faith lit-fllers and rcf?n???o u' Kill. 1 hive musical programs and sjih'i di-ljbuildings. but no Storrs or Urookj in the pulpit. Great n.en in I hi American pulpit were never befori so scarce. It is difficult, if not im possible, to point to one of the firs magnitude now living. Why is this so? For one can si more than all others?commercial ion. Prophets are scarce in a nat-iot that fal's to worshiping Mammon. Is r..el was never so prosperous as whet Solomon reigned, but Israel had n( prophets then. David had his Xu than. Aht?b hud his Elijah, and M; nasseh had, his Isaiah, but Sblomoi had no messenger of (iod to reprov. Iiim of his idolatry and immorality In his glo i ?us temple there were am number of petty priests burning will Infinite precision '"the fat and lh< two kidneys;" hut in all the lanr there was no prophet. So w* hi.vt an abundance of mm of a certair sort. Many of them make a lir.ir 1< members of a musual programme and say beautiful little pieces betweei the choir acts. Da n v orators swoor away under the influence of sacrec entertainments, but t! e sermon musl be pretty, and it musf not be long Preaching is scarce bcea is - it i* nol much in demand with a commercial ized people, who prefer to be soothec rather than saved. Some men in the pulpits of toda.\ would preach if they only believec the Bible. But by what is sometimecalled "the higher criticism" anc kindred rationalism of a scientifk sort they have been emasculated With the fear of the critics before their eyee they com* into the pulpii as Agog came into the presence ol the royal cap'or?"walking softly.' Commanding pu I pit power is impos sible in the absence of confident fait h Men who preach with great authority must be great believers. "J txlievtherefore have I spoken," is botl David's and- Paul's account of tl earnestness and eloquence of theii speech. Pertinent in this connection ar the words of old Basham Miles, ii Page's''Old CJeotleman of the B'? ch Sock."' He says. "The pulpit ha? lost i s power.; thrown away its he?i prerogative?the gift of preaching The clergy no more believe with pow er, because they no more heliev* with strength. * * * * Win should I go to hear a young man r> far less knowledge than myself, hold ing forth toworldiy considerations t< induce them to embrace n religion < which the Founder preached tin blessed cess of sorrow. The poore: preacher, sir, is impressive so Ion as he believes himself the minister ?? <Jod. I may no' accept his irescag<> hut if he believes in his mission 1 shall respect him. If, however. h< questions his own credentials I wil not listen to him. Bring your Job Work to the spak tan office. i he ivtoi'iiiuM?*" lity Oi'tfunl l)eseret News. jj i It was in ISfiJJ that President Yffuog first spoke of building an orgao^one that would be in harmony with the i mammoth tabernacle, (rreat diEacol* ties were encountered in the buililng of the instrument, particularly \&aecuring suitable wood for the gigantic pipes with which it was equipped.jp Some of these pipes took us mucP'Ss i son feet of tin her. i^.. J The mountains far and near Jere f :-l.. .,.,1 tl,A l.:_* -i liil'l.t iui uic aimj ui pine, hundreds of loads of which vere I hauled by teams from a point nWly ' i miles south of Salt Lake. jjrei quired two mouths "to make a nind trip. ? | j The workmen were all pionert^ettiers The method of uniting ^be wood was unique, the closest joijjkz | being dotte by means of home-made i glue, the making of which constupfd! hundreds of cattle and hides maEng the bellows. a Altogether ten years were conlanre?l iii the building. Since the iu*e I that it was first given to the I th? re have been numerous additions 1 a ml change*, until today it is retf j ni/ed as one of the very best | in the world, if indeed, nutthe md i tie grandest. A year ago many of the ol^pu* were taken out and thorougli^o^P hauled, and more than 4,000 ones were added. The instrument action is marvelous and more respujsive than a grand piano as it has 10 "inertia*, to overcome- The rep^ir?-_ power of easch key is 72(5 times to 1 the minute. All of the latest rot ' i chanical devices have been iticorp*|F | ited in 1 he instrument, any combfe nation of tone desired can l>e <fh I net ly brought out. Especially fine t n> the "string" tones, the violi* 11 > I a gambn, VelJo and base: the iitrinet, two echoes, bassutn, eighi varieties of tlie fine tones (each on* Iruetoits name). fo:tr piccl.i stops four trumpets, tube trombone, sais' ' phone, clarion and the vox huraala .vhich is the pel of tlie organ tor makes "human" tones that deceit even the trained musician. In all the organ ontain 108 sUp1 and accessories?five complete or gans- -viz: solo, swell. great choir r c pedil. The speaking length of Uu pipes varies from a quarter of at inch to thirty two feet. In "full or gin" the immense bellows displace) HK) cubic feet of air per minute* ? The Great Dismal Stvuinp. s Of Virginia is a bree ling ground o d.i I aria germs So is low, wet o narsiiy ground everywhere. Ti?e&' germs cause weakness, chills and fe ver, aches tit the bo ies and muscles i iud may induce dangerous maladies .d it Electric bitters never fail tod* droy them and cure malarial trou ales. They will surely prevent U" p'soid. "We Tried mrnv^reT^I o.yiut&ii/?t 1 "Wlffne.s,7' writes John Charleston, o tyesviile. O., "but never found any liing as good us Electric Hitters.' P?.. il'om Onlu In uf l.ionn'u irhi 11 J Ull^lll* VUJJ w V w ? ? [ ;uaruutee8 satisfaction. i Western Guatemala has been ruin 1 1 by earthquakes a id volcanoes i'heir towns have been shaken up an* i..ie people are in constant terror i\vo voleances arejn eruption . Governor OJell will be the Repub . licsn candidate for governor of Xei t'ork this fall. ^ ^ "Let IBM Chicago, Ni HURRY Buy your Vehi< an J Farm Imp m?nts at Wholes i Cost when you c Why pay more? 1 We are overstocked. ' Cash or good paper will them until stoc'< is redi i Try us. We mean all we Don't forget the place, o [ site First Baptist Chi Spartanburg, S. C. Green's condensed stories. Wonderful Things In Boston srd In Havre, France. Lazare Weiller, who came to this j country on behalf of the French | government to study industrial con- j ditions, in speaking to the chamber of commerce a few days ago made an unusually happy speech in reference to the kindness with which he ' ? tad been treated in .-inicricu, m im.coursc of which he said: "I was at that New Kngland society dinner where the speaker, after eulogizing Boston, told of meeting a New York friend, who asked: " 'Well, tell me as a Bostonian j what is the most wonderful thing you have in Boston?' And he replied, 'The 5:-'3<J train for New York/ "Well, gentlemen, taking my thoughts across the sens that separate France from America, I have this impression: The most attractive thing in our French port Havre that I shall find hereafter' is the ship which will take me again to Amcrid." He Had a "Frank." One of the."characters" of Chicago is Inspector Mox Ileideimier of the police force. * Mox, or "The Burgomaster," as he is called, is a stocky little- Luxemburger in "I'LL SHOW YOU MY STAR." -charge of the welfare of the "nor . seit," where so many of his felloi I countrymen live. Not long ago he had occasion t ( use a telephone at a public pay sta tion. He told central that he want ed the East Chicago Avenue polic ' station, giving the number. The an swer came hack: "Drop in a dime, please." "Yot's dot?" said the inspector. -Put in a ten cent piece." f "Dot's a yoke, aid id ? I put ra r no money in. I'm on de bolic force." i "That makes no difference." i. "Oh, don'd id ? Meppe you don' ? know who I vas. 1'tn Inspchdc - Mox Heidclmier. I'll show* you ui * jtahr. See?" And the ijidigna: * c 'T^iLtn> "pig to ^ ephone his yllrTrr Mar. Caatlag Siberian Nailvn. " When compelled to travel nil nigh o the Siberian natives always make I practice of stopping Just before sui ' rise and allowing their dogs to go t ; sleep. They argue that if the dog goc ' to sleep while it Is yet dark and wakf i. up In an hour and finds the sun shii ^ ing be will suppose that he has had full night's rest and will travel a ' day without thinking of being tire< One or even two hours' stop at an other time Is perfectly useless, as tl; dogs will be uncontrollable from tin time forward until they are permitte v to take what they think a full allov ance of sleep. BOLD DUST twins do. Washing dishes in the old wa year in and year out?means drudg ? GOLD will do more than half the work f grease and gr;rne ; rr.akes d:shes sh FAIRBANK COMF v Tort. Boston, St Louis??Makers of O HIIPRY 5 Carr'?a?e i n??rfVi i PAVOM5CHKI3TIAN TM?AYER j Pltl-Omrc rifrsyman 9okk<'?i? En- I dowmrnt uf IMo yhoB?e?i. ji In his sermon the other night the 1 Rev. \V. Torhush in the West End. Methodist Episcopal church of Pitts-1 Liuig said, according to tlie New Tori; I World: "Judging from the enormous patronage plnys like it^n-llur' draw, the .111,!!., isi o-e-er to see and SUDDOrt play* of moral worth. The tendency of the1 j stag is toward dogma-racy as the ! vast majority of playhouses are run to- j day I helieve Christian men and women should endow Christian playhouses. where moral performances | would do lunch toward destroying the | Influence of the immoral forces tit | work. The Christian theaters should j ; he supported hy the church and run j | even :lt a loss. As churchgoers are for saking the elmrch to attend showhouses. the evil should he met by giving human nature what it craves." Senate Xavcl P.oom Whnlea. The new ro 111 cf the senate naval I committee at Washington was dales rately deeoratml on walls and ceiling l>y a marine artist. There are broad expanses of sett and pictures of -til sorts of lishos and ships. The artist ran pretty ln avilv to whales, and there is a monster or two on every wall spouting water up to the ceiling, says the New York World. "IIow eouies it there are so many whales on the walls?** a friend asked Senator Hale, chairman of the committee, the other day. "Thev typify the size of tluv^r proprlA'ons we are expected to the sector replied gravely. ( i ' i J& A $"?,'):)!> C.isli CU'er. The Atlanta Constitution $5,000 in a new cash prize contesl upon the nu nberof hales in the tota' United Sta'es cotton erop. 1901-02 provided the est?m--tea are receivei during April. 10;>2 There are foui prizes. $2,000, $1,250 ar.d $750 f >r t In best three estimates, and $1 (MHJ f<> gentral distribution among all esti mates comin r within 500 bales eithe vay from the -xaet figure Every es fimiite must, he necmiiDnnied by : yearly subsc iption to The Weekl. Constitution, $1 yer year, and donbl estimates are allowed on all Const it n tion and Sun iy South coinhinatio subscriptions, both for only $1.25 pe year. The Constitution stands exactly u to the letter upon all its offers. Sen in today and put the whole thin* letter, money and estimate, in th same envelope, address to The Atlanta Constitution, j Atlanta, Ga. It is believed that 70 lives wei 0 lost when the steamer Pittsburg w; i- burned on the Ohio ten days ago. e Notice Co. P.. 13th Kejj., S.?. ^ The annual re-union appointed fc the first Saturday in May has bee postponed until the third Saturda in July, 19th. The reason f- r th postponement is that the first Satu e day in M iv is too* busy a time of tl: year. S> the time Co. F. will ha\ e their reunion will be the 19th day < July, which is the 8rd Saturduy I the month. We hope to have a fu J attendance of the compuny Saturda; ?r the 19th of July. 1902. iv B. B. Chapman. it j . \v. David O'Shields, ? I W. M Bomak, * ' Com. i t I Hijr Days at lit: Exposition. a j Louisiana Purchase Expositi< v j Day, April 80, 1902. 0 State Bankers' Association, Miy * 1902. '8 Southern Cotton Spinners' Ass ciition, May 8, 1902. a Independent Order Odd Fellow 11 May 18, 1202. J i In addition to the dates state th?re will be a Maryland Day. a By ,e ti nor? Day and a New Yoik Sta Day. The governors of most of tl d States have under considerati >n tl v' appoin'iner t of days for their respe Vtive States. your work." y?3 times a day, 1095 times a year, ery. DUST or yov. It softens hard water; cut? ine like a new dollar, st, best and most economical way of es, glassware, silver, pots and pans, substitute worthy the name. Insist DUST. ., v : 'ANY, VAL FAIRY SOAP. HURRY mi- m lUMjagmgaMW 7 J 1 Works W. L. CANNON, I Cotton Hnter for the Spartan Mills, office ut 1'hifer's Hardware Store. . Cotton weighed at D.Ward's Stables. I Time and trouble saved and highest price paid. IBik; TO PURCHASE Cut Glass, Stcrluig Silver, |? Engagement Rings, Wedding Prcstn s, | ! Latest Styles of Handvune jewelry, ! t Are our specialties for the Spring. Call and exantim j Good**. D. C. Correll.i Summons for Relief. State of South Carolina, ("our t v of Spartarburg. t'OL'lvT OF COMMON" I'l.KAS. 1 Wen Lipscomb, Robert Lips^i<K>a?b, Fhvd LipPiMirib. F.rnest V Julcoml) nn<l f j .if* jtBp?TTrtrrit!i?i i<. C'. (iosseL?Plain I . Against .! W. F. (?i!liland. W. R. Dillingham. ! Jud CfiilTney, Moses Lipscomb and rj Dolle Lipscomb; or the unknown heirs of Moses Lipsc-mb and Dolle | Lipscomb.?Defendant*. To ihe above-named Defendants. ' | Moses u?'d Dolle Lipscomb or their ! unknown heirs, iu this action : I | YOU are hereby summoned and re quired to answ er he complaint in I hi' action, n copy of whir h is fi'ed it the office of the Clerk of the Coirt of ' Common i'leas of said county r and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint or II the subscribers At their office at Spar d tanburg, South Carolina, withir ' twenty days after the service hereof 0 exclusive of the day of such service and if you fail to answer the com olaint within the time aforesaid, tin Plaintiff in this action will apply t< the Court for relief demanded in th< *( complaint. s SEASE & HOKE, Plaintiffs' Attorneys. March 6, 1902. : FRUIT JARS y ? Special P re | 5f I In order to reduce our st ,'J | we offer One Thousand Tli f.I PORCELAIN UNKD J Ah | cents per dozen for Quarts, 7 | Ions. Spot Cash. LIQON'S Di )n "TIME AN 1 want to ,save ti j Superior One=h w y For salf "IX SPARTAN H/ =1 x>ooooooo^oc^ The Central National Banl< Of Spartanburg, S. C I Solicits the accounts of C01 i ness men generally. All 1 tended customers, based up< pVJH31 Ull Uj . W A. 1 G. L. WILSON The Spartanbu | Was organizer! to assist in the Hundreds of people in Spartanl and even in other States have deposits dr&w interest, if left ft this interest is calculated and a 1st and July 1st. The funds thousands of dollars have thus : safety, profit and convenience < You are invited to open an ! WM. A. LA1 11 ========================= See He I Eir Bill 1 |IJ E [ ! An 1 Pan t I Citizens 91 J I y.l The Spartan MEtiEEPERS Supplies H|fr The mott Up to date Hives, Smokrs, Comb-Foundation, and everyhin?r perfr.ining to Bee Culture, t'rii-e Li>t Free. Write to D. VV. SW1TZER, " Roebuck, S. C. FOR SALE Three Young ShortHorn Bulls at Popular Prices They are fill 11 oroughbred, have hren in this State for five months ard inoculated to render them im? inline to Acclimation fever (Texas fever). SON OF PRIZE CUP, No. 116906, red. *2(i months. 1080 pounds. CHKRUR OF MT. .ETNA 2nd, No. 174-198, red and white, 18 months, 077? pounds. . MI' -ETNA BUTTER WORTH, No. ; 1<?;|7)7#?. red and white, 17 months, 95.7 pounds. ^ Ready for immediate delivery Write for pa rtlculars. Dr. G. E- NESOM. 1 ' ???? C.D. WHITHAN'S Is the Place to Ba) CHINA GLASS / 1 And ID ?If War?, . . " ..ALSO J . : *The Best Cooking Stoves] J We always aim to Pleas* Oar 3 '^A Customers. C. d.Whithah. * 'rice until April 20 ock of Fruit Jars (just received) tree Hundred Dozen MASON LS at the very low price of 55 o cents per dozen for Half Gal/ <UU 91UKC. OCOOOOOOPOOOOC D MONEY" S me and money, buy the A orse Corn Drill, a i only by A vRDWARE CO. | !>0?000000000ix Capita! - - $100,000. w Net Profits - 28,000. Organized May, 1895. rporations, Merchants and busi-easc liable accommodations ex3n balances and financial resLAW, President. I. Cashier. rg Savings Bank accunVulation of small savings jtirg and the surrounding country accounts with this bank. Their "^ll >r as long as three months, and idded to the account on January are loaned carefully and many bec.i earned for depositors. The [>f this plan is evident, account. W< President, jre.... I irelopes I Heads :e Heads ter Heads mrsion Dcdgers kinds of Law Work aphlets and Book Work Phoned SPAR / J 1 , \ $