' hOl'A h BRIEFS. ? (I Mf. Her?oy.n student of the South ; Carolina College, died !a>t Tuesday. t Married Sunday. April 20, 1(H?2. by Rev. E L Archer, Edward Strain and y M iss Hettie Atkins, both from Whit- j ? ney. ' t The city schools will observe Memo- 1 rial Day. J. F. J.Caldweli, of Green- ' wood, will make the address to the 5 children and citizens. Mr. Green, the WofTord student,!J selected to enter the oratorical contest at Greenwood, is improving. Hop was quhe ill with pneumonia. Mayor A. B. Calvert has returned JI from New York, lie has been talking about his i e\v cotton mill. He says the outlo ik is most encour.ig- : ; Be sure to get a ticket for the May ' Festival Friday night. Kvery con-h cert will be good, but l>avi- j tation in that State. Mad dogs are getting too common about Columbia. 'The fact is they | always have trouble of some sort there. If it is not mad dogs, it is po- ( ^ litical conventions, mosquitoes, mudv dy water or the Legislature. \ The citizens with Goshen Hill as a centre, are agitating the idea of a new county. They wish to take slices from Union, Fairfield, Newberry and Laurens. It seems that Union has precious little territory to spare. They do not know how to hang a man in New Jersey. Up at Newark , they jerked off a man's head last Fri- ( day. They ought to come down this way and attend a lynching or two and learn how to do the job in an ar- , tistic manner. , It will soon be time for partridges, 1 or quail, which is the correct name, ' to lay. Let all farmers protect the nests as far as possible. Boys should ' not be allowed to take the eggs. The 1 birds are needed. Let them hatch and raise their young. ! Lest you forget, consider the dates of the courts held in this county. The couft of General Sessions meets the first Monday of January, March, , May, July and October, and the 4th Monday in November. The civil . court is held the Monday following. Last week was most favorable for ] farmers. They were able to put in 1 every hour in the fields, except in i places where the rain of Saturday, i the 19th, was very heavy. The tern- i perature ranged from 60 to 7S. Corn I began to come up in a vigorous man- i ner. We desire a copy of the "Southern 1 Reader" which was published in I Ohail^ston about 1842. It was used I in schools 1842 to 1850. If any read- I er of this notice has a copy he will I con fer a favor ?on?llnfi it _m_ Spartan* office. If desired, it will De returned in good order. < The Living Age has begun a new ; serial by Miss Christabel Coleridge, J which opens attractively. Miss Col- ( eridge comes naturally by her liter- , ary gifts, as she is a granddaughter of , Samuel Taylor Coleridge. She is a writer of the type of Miss Yonge, and is now engaged on Miss Younge's biography. The Annual Convention of the Cot- J ton Spinners' Association will take place in Charleston Mav 8, 9. Dr. J. ! H. McAden of Charlotte, is president. Geo. E. Ladshaw, hydraulic engineer of this city, will make an address on 1 'Water Power?Amount Available ?Commercial Value?Cost of Development." W T Etters and Kelly Goode were tried in Greenville last week for assault and battery with intent to kill Thomas M. Hill, depot agent at Greers last year. They were found guilty with a recommendation to 1 mercy. A motion was made for|a 1 new trial. rni3 was a case in which hypnotism was used to advantage by policeman Tucker. Mr. Hill finally 1 recovered and went to work again. 1 The poetry of the May number of j yincott's Mayaxine is strong and idant. Those contributing are Sara C F Hallowel, long the edif the "Household" of the Philalia Ledger, Mabel Earle, Marco < ow, Albert Sigelow Paine, Lulu j Idou Mitchell, Arthur W. Atkin- i Dora Reed Goodale, Elizabeth ] nan, Geraldine Meyrick,Clarence y; Clinton Scollard, and Edward i ur Mason. jitors and Veterans began to refrom Dullas last Saturday morn | .lorry Lee was the first one we cruas^uestioned. He visited his brother out 75 miles from Dallas. He , reports that the long drought tells on the crops. Wheat is very small. | Corn is 8 to 12 inches high. Cotton is up and much of it is worked over He says that he puts more work in the preparation of his land than they , do in making the crop. He saw fine. , cnitln l.v ihp hundred rpiidv for ??V ? - ?shipment. W. B. Padgett, who writes from 1 Pelzer, SHI .came from North Caro- > Jina to this county many years ago. : He assisted in getting out the heavy ; timbers in VVoflord college. He board- : ed himself uiul worked ior 7"> cents a i day. Many of these pieces aie 1(1 1 feet long and 0 by 12 inches. Tinlongest piece is .">6 long and f the country. Wholesale i prices to city authorities and mill * men for shade trees. He will be here until after court and may he seen about tfie court house or at Mr. Can- : troll's boarding house, 71> North Church-trcet. If you need anything f in his line give him your order at O'j e fir early fall shipment. [ Col. J. 0. Evans nut returned from JoiinecticUt and is In his office again. Miss Seddie If. Acpell, of New fork, is visiting Mrs. Chns. Potty. 1 >he is illustrating books, magazines, ind papers. She ranks high in her lepartment and manifests originality n her sketches. She will be in the :ity some time. You mi^ht begin on the potato >ugs at onee. They are here, They ire multipliers. Paris green will cerainly kill them and it does it (juick. \.pnly it just as soon as you notice lie first bunches of eggs on the under =ide of the leaves. The city council forbids the display j )f goods in front of stores hereafter They nlso stop advertising on sidovalks. No paper and trash must be :hrown on sidewalks or streets. Look i >ut for tlie poliee. They will get you I f you violate these ordinances. Iu liK'l tlie pension roll of the; state was (> There was an in , urease of J, 180 this year, making the iist 7 088, an increase of 18 per cent. If tlie $2<.>0,(H.iO should be equally di rid- d each person would receive ?-0 Hut as some receive fs a month the ;o?ninon pensioners need not expect I more than $2-4.50. San Wood, a 180-pound hoarding house keeper, near the Southern station . was knocked down .Monday afternoon l\v Annie lioodson. She walked up to him and without warn | ing hit him with a bottle on the fore- | head. He fell suddenly and kicked is it it was all over with him. He soon rallied und rose again all right. 5he was arrested and had to appear; before t he*mn} or Tuesday. The Democratic c!nl?s of the cityj net Saturday. They reorganised md elected delegates to the county invention: Ward. President. Delegates. 1 Geo. W. Nicholls, It) 2 ('has. H. Henry, G ^ * 0 ? ueo. uonem, jr., o 4 R. J.Gantt, lt? 5 F. C. Fowler, 8 5 W. P. Johnson,(s.M.) lo 0 W. G.S. O'Shields. 14 Total number delegates 02 We verily believe that or.e-half of the fertilizer and lot manure is wasted in thisState. The farmer wiil apply lot) to 2oO pounds of commercial fertilizer to the acre and then allow the grass to appropriate about half of it. One-fourth of the lot manure is wasted before it is raked up and composted and wheu it is put out in lumpy condition it is still greater waste. This can be remedied by killing the grass as soon as it comes up and by taking better care of lot and stable manure. Two new rural mail routes will be put in operation Thursday. May 1. from Moore station. Route No. 1, Ue.ldes Grim. carrier, will go out by Thomas Anderson's. Nazareth, Grim. Major Frank Anderson's and back to Moore. Route No. 2. J. P. Moore, carrier. will go by Walnut Grove, S'esbitt's and Cavins s?nd bick to Moore. They will leave abvit 1 p. m. so as to get the imrning tniil from Spartanburg. Subscrib rs in each of these routes will please no;ify us at once as to the rout9 they vish their mail sent out on. The price of flour keeps down so as :o put it in reach of families with ' ight purses. It has beea our good | 'ortune not to be reouireil to buy , Hour for two or three years. We; foil i? (lour we asked Bagwell Brothers for juotations last Friday. The highest patent Obelisk is $5 75 a barrel. A ?ood straight flour, good enough for any 'one to eat, is #4.75. That is ;qual to the flour made from good wheat at our county mills. Another grade of good flour they sell at $4.30. We suppose other grocers sell at similar prices. It seems that it i? not a new Fe"eral court district that South Cart) I lina wants, but the organization of a court in the Western district estab lished in 1823. Hon. J. T. Johnion had a bill to divide the State into two | districts. When C. P. Barrett was tried and convicted, ho in his appeal ! claimed that he should be tried in his own district, the Western, and not the other. He brought the matter to light. All that Congress has to do is to provide for court officers and the machinery necessary for the court. There is a court house at Greenville, i It will become necessary to build another one. The line runs from Edgefield to Lancaster. The conditions of farmers in this county the last week of April is about as follows : Corn very scarce, cotton generally out of producers' hands, fall sowing of oats killed or much thinned, abcut half the wheat promises a fair crop, the other very light. Preparation and planting have been pushed and three-fourths of the corn and cotton were planted by the last day of April. Supplies generally short anddiens and hard living and high prices may be expected, Early planted corn and sorghum seed began to come up the 21 to 25th instant. Hoes are very scarce. Everything the farmer has to buy is 50 per Cent, higher than it was two years ago, except flour which lias not advanced much. The land generally seems to be in fine condition. Half of it is wanting in humus and much of it was plow?d too wet. It will require clean cultivation and good seasons to make in abundant crop this year. An air of spring pervadt'6 Scribtier's Magazine for May. It contains i beautiful drawing in color by Henry ; McCarter to illustrate Heine's "Maysong there is a breezy salt water narrative'by James B Collony, wh"j ?ives the adventures "On a North Sea Smack" illustrated by M. J. Sums)?another of those inimitable i ishinir sketches which have already j put Mr. Connolly in the first rank of I .vritors of the sea; an exciting Fight with a Muskalonge;" by John It Rathom, who in a very brief space jives the reader ail the* sensation* hat an expert fisherman gets ir and.'ng a gamy lish (i11 list rated by a spirited pietue by A If Frost); and here is "Early May," poem by John Burroughs. I're.-ident Oilman con dudes the reminiscences with ' Some Pleasant Incidents." coining down a* j a e as the Yale 2n. and ending with Or. (idnun's latest academic achievement he formation of Mr. Carnegie's great S'ational Institution. Or. Oilman ells in this paper some of the inside listory of that philanthropic enter 'rise. Jleufy van Dyke's poem coin nenioraling the centennial of the irtli of Victor Jingo is printed are! The Story of Three Stutes 'by A1 red Mathew s is concluded. It curiam* some wonderful color pictures y 1'yle Yohn and Fink. John ,J Ifc-niphlM war in hr.vnj Monday. The Sou!hern Baptist eonven'ion j t< will uieet it: A-hevil.'e Alav | v ! h Wednesday afternoon Ftirman wiil j n come over and moss hats wit 1? W'of- y ford. ? . C Street cars will run every ten nunutes on the Alain street line tliis week. I, The window artist of the Aug. W. P Smith store gives a line show every t morning. | *l Your street tax must he paid lx - j s fore 1 he lirst of May. <>r there will b( 1 | trouble and lots of it. ! e 'I he Bee Hive is bust iing this week. j1 The wholesale department is drawing the country merchants. For stylish, substantial, durable t dress poous the ladies should visit ?! t he store of James it Stewart. v Riv. A. It. Mitchell, of (ireenvi'le. has received the appointment of Vrchiliacpn in the place of Dr. Jno. D. AicOollough. Dr. .1. C. Kilgo has authorized War- ( ren Dul'iv to have a portrait of Bish- ' op Duncan made for the Preston So- J ciety of WolTord college. I.ast Monday cotton advanced, t May cotton closed a! 1MJS; August t J ;?{>: October S :{:> D-retnl-r .Soli. ' Spot market in New York !> 67. i The series of meetings at CJreen ! Street Baptist C.'-.uich are well ut- L tended ami much interest is muni- L fe.-led. Services at t> ami 7 i~> p. "i , T/.e I'eopl. s Building nod Loan J j Association reveille olosed a series which averaged S.7 per cent. A. L. ' White is treasurer and financial manager. Kansas farmers have held a convention for ihe purpose of fixing prices I of wheat and corn. They refuse to accept the terms of the Wall Street ; exchange. J It is time that you were hustling oil to the Charleston exposition. It is now at its best and Charleston is at its best, and you will see and hear i enough to last you the balance of this year. If you eat supper at your house, have it over before 8 80 o'clock, so as to be in time at the concerts this week. Dr. Peters is a very gracious man, but he will not allnv three! minutes grace, for tne doors will be closed at 8.80. Clarence Hardy, out on Tyger. was ploughing Monday. While exhorting j his nu'e the single-tree struck a j cocklehurr weed and one or the burrs | bounced back and clown the young j man's throat. He had to come toj town to huve it taken out. He could | not speak while it was in his throat. Monday the Church of the Advent elected the following: Wardens? J M Klford, W S Manning; Yestry| men?ST Pointer, H A Ligon.J F j ICleveland, W K Lindsay, Arthur Ir-I win, R H Peters. W B W Howe; Delegates to convention at Georgetown! Alay IS?.1 M Klford, S T Poinier. W I B W H'.we, H A Ligon ; Alternates? A AI Adger, W G Haughton, R 1) i Galhraith, E OKrierson. Franklin L. Varner died at his home near Walnut Grove Sunday night last. He was a native ..of this county. He was btined :tt. Walnut (irove Tuesday, itev- : agagaM oral years ago after which lie mar-j, ried a Miss Yarboroagh, who with; one child, survives him. Mr. Yarned) was a quiet, honorable, industrious) man and never did harm ff lie knew it. His neighbors had the highest re- j, spect for his integrity of character. Prof. Clinkscales will leave this week for the General Conference at ' Dallas, Texas. M ich interest is felt j in regard to the Dnrbec telegrams to I the Senate about, that $2SS (XJO. It j strikes us that if Dr. Barbee had been j j u member of the cotton exchange and ; acte 1 us lie did. he would have been j turned out. The church ads on a 1 different plane. Love and forgive-1 ness with a little whitewash sometimes smooths the rough places better than the more strenuous methods, j A series which should have been , named "The Enchantment of the j Modern Aladdins," if considered J; solely from tlie point of view of ro- L mancc, is begun in the May Cosmopolitan. But these sleet-lies p>s sess as well a busiress interest equally for clerk and capitalist, for manufacturer, farmer and merchant.: The mm who would understand the! I drift of our news in finance and busi I ness must read these lives, so full of j j incident, of chance, of hard labor < I an J marvelous success. As it is, the series receives only the commonplace name of "Captains of Industry." | Each character is treated by a noted writer familiar with his subject. In the stories of Child Life, Me- ' Clure's Magazine stands head and shoulders above the vest. William Allen White's Boyville boys, Mi?s Josephine Da^kam's Philip, Pickey. Edgar and Ardella,and Miss Martin'.-!. Emmy Lou are probably the most j real and most genuine children in 1 i contemporary lie J ion. Mr. White's and Miss Daskam's stories have been i . published in book form; and Emm\ J' Dou, the most lovable of them all.i has only a few more appe-ranees t?> j muke in the magazine. In the M?v j ....... I..... niiKII.Im,! 'I'll.. Il.ii fin... IJUMIUCi (lUt/nnin < * .. of Consistency," which tell- o.' Iier ' first experiences in the grammar school. When lliis series is coin plete the editors of MeOlure's wit! " have to hustle to find other stories o* equal excellence; for the readers oI the magazine will he satisfied withi nothing short of the best in this kind of writing?as in numerous othe { kinds. It. would seem that it would he impossible to spring a ne.v cause of uc j tion in the courts, but there is n end to reasons assigned for damage suits. The biggest case tried in thiState was at the York court l?>t j week. S. W. Mitchell brought suit I against the officers of the Woodmen > t of the World for alleged personal injuries received while they were ini i tinting him at Hickory (Jrove If-1 thought tliat about would I take the soreness out of his limbs i ^ which soreness was caused by the '"cantankerous" goat which he w:o j t forced to ride. The goat was a very 1 innocent ^animal. as mu-li so as n ! ^ aooden headed man, when iutroduc- j 1 i*if into eouct hut Mitchell claimed i hat he cavorted and reared up at i0 both ends and in the mid lie, ami J bruised and injured bis person uolil j his suffering was great an I lasting ; \ft*r a three days' trial the jury re-|^ parted that they could not ag^ce and a mistrial was ordered. |F The OaiNlni. ?rr i 'd The garden demands constant ? ?ni ion these days. Frequent cull-j ^ ation is necessary. If the grauJw I y as been well prepared a light rale nd A pronged hoe are the best todb [ever lire vegetables when they ire et with d *w. Plant out tomato and abbage plants. It is generally bfter to put these out in dry weathtr | nd water them a little. Soak t!\e ed with wuter a half hour before the hints are drawn, so that some of he dirt will adhere to them. Put hem in place and pack the (lift ently around them. Let the dirt be cooped out from around the Dlant.! 'our water around. Next morning arly put about an inch of diy dirt round the watered part, so that here will he no evaporation. Plant I second crop of beans as soon as the irst is up. Watch the Irish potaoes and dose the bugs with Paris [reen. Lettuce transplanted now kill make fine heads in four or. five reeks. 51 The Greatest of S;;;ger.s RereA David Bispham.who will sing a J Converse College Friday, is a nativ? >f Piiiladclphia. He is a most at?i ractive man personally, cultured, re* lned. and in every sense he is ar.| \mtrican gentleman. There is a pej* Miliar attractiveness about his voice hat thrills the audience. In Nev' fork where the best singers of al amis may be heard, David Bisphai .lands in the front rank withou piestion. Out people will enjoy th are opportunity of hearing him Fri lay tii.-lil at jJ S A rt is! ' llifjht T f you cart Spttf? ine ami money for only one coiK^ttj L>c sure to take that in for there is jnly one Bispham to be heard. The New Public Dili Ming:. ^ Amorgst the appropriations for, public bui'dings, the committee in the House recommends $f?0,0<)0 fir Spartanburg, i Here is n proviso inai. not more than 15 per cent should bei paid for the site If the building -dionld be 40 by 60. the lot would imve to he at least 100 hy ISO, for 00 'eet clour spice will have to be re q iircd around the building. In case f enlargement and preparing for a Federal courthouse in the future it would l?c better to have a lot 200 hy 210 ftet. Measure your lots that are worth less tlinn $9,000 and see if yon can s'rikc a trade with the (govern tnent. The Eclectic Magazine for May ha* two articles at least which should appeal strongly to women readers; the first a throughtfol, friendly and broad revie of "The Progress of Women," from The t^.iarterly Review; the second a budget of Recollections of the Empress Frederick, by Lidy Paget. For readers who wish to keep informed touching the great, movements of world politics the>-e are also two articles of more than ordinary importance, one a consideration of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance by A. Mitchie, and the other a discussion of European Expansion in A*ia by Major Young'iusband. In the dom-?in of letters there is un ar tideen the proposed British Academy of learning from the larterly Review; timely articles on Victor Hugo and Stephen Phillips' "Franceses de Rimini" by Arthur Syrnans; and a keen, clever article on Art and Eccentricity by Herbert Paul. Dr \rticle "Jesus" in the three latest fMicvclopedias: there is a striking story of army life in Indi i by Hugh Clifford ; and shorter literary essuys, articles of travel, criticism and science, and a poeni by William Watson. Harold Begbie and others complete ti e number. The Living Age Company. The members of Congress will be able to tell their constituents about the many things they did not do at the present session. While adjournment is so far off that nothing is said about the date.it is pretty certain that the ship subsidy bill, the Crumpacker resolution, the isthmian canal and tariff revision will all" go over till after the fall elections. The Republicans are much afraid of a Democratic uprising whi :h will give them control of the next house. Sunday School Celebration. There will bo a Sunday school celebration at Bethlehem church, near R .fbuck, on the first. Sunday in May. Addresses by S B Ezell, of Spartanburg. and Dr. A. I'. Montague, president of Kurman University, (ireerville, S. C. The exercises will begin promptly at 10 oVIcck a m. The public is cordially invited to attend.! Col. R G Lamar, a Confederate vet eran, died in Columbia last week. A (D Ttiis sijpiaMiro is on every box of tbo genttini Laxative Bromo?Quinine Tabicu rfce it'iDcdy that eww a cold %m owe 'Jcy" CANDIDATES COLUMN County Supervisor. I hereby announce myself j?.sa ennlidate for county Supervisor, subject o the rules of the primary election \V. Frank-West. Get the Best ORDER AT ONCE I am handling several brands of highly aninoniated commercial FERTILIZERS, A,cicl Phosphate ? AND ? K A I N IT, aid am prepared to ship to all minis. Get prices before mying. Put in your orders arly. Special Fertilizers for awns, small grain and T.ISSCS. J. P. AMOS, Hive in Grocery Store of J. A. Lee vfc Son, Broad street, eb. 2, 1902. it. Tgp following Is n list of jurors! mwn for the May term of court of ommon picas, which convenes here ~ lay 12th. and over which Judge R 0 ! p Vatts will preside: i" R A Walden, Fair Forest. : 'l0 W B \ViI?on, Lolo. ! ~ \V J HatchelJ, Walnut drove. | J J Frey. Wellford. ;, T 0 Burroughs, Glenn Springs. i O F Lowe, Spartanburg. r W S Gray, Woodrnil. I W W Boiter. .\Liore. ; pi J G McOorkle. Spartanburg. ! G J W P Greer, Duncans. s? L K Lai. ford. Woodruff. j pi J C Harnett, Woodruff. j B W L Stewart, Wei I ford, p M Turner, Cherokee. f ? G Pearson, Greers. I J F Cash, Martinsville. . s? K L> A Powell, Cedar Springs. t( P F T Broekman, Reidville. si K A Boiter, Duncans. si Columbus Hishop, Whitney. H J M Wofford. Hebron. II M Edge, Orim. j J L Berry, Criiii. j J L Fleming. Woonruff. . James Cofteld, Spartanburg. J H Kirby, Woodruff. W A Harper, Glendale. j J S X Neabitt, Xesbitt. ! j J West Harris, Spartanburg. j t Edwin Smith, Rock ford. h J 0 Trimmier, Spartanburg. iA H Ross, Gramling. I . M P Burnett, Lolo. J T Costman. Ionian: It H Dodd, Fingerville. \v A Moore Cowpens. Castor i A ! / For Infants and Children. ? The Kind You Have Always Bought AT COST We are groin-* to close ont our entire ' stock of Books and Stationery. If; you wish to secure Bargains. call and gee what we are offering. Everything! j&rIcily cash. In future we will devote-our entire! attention to our Job Printing Establishment. The Trimmier Book Store __ - Notice to Creditors. i All persons holding claims against i the estate of William Choice, dece isied. are hereby notified to present " them to the undersigned on or be; fore the 10th day of May next, properly proven. J. Choice Evans, Ex'rWm. Choice, Oec'd. April 16, 1902. 8w. I The Aug. \V SRibbol 400 pieces Satin L,ib< sate this week. Thjs_js_jj ar^ retailed everywhere at put them on sale Monday, | ^aie ui rui | Thtfse Silks are 24 i t shadings and patterns. T1 j ; are the only correct Foula ^ I have never seen them on 1 j s than 98c. With us, begii I^j morning, per yard, | Embroi P ^ The strck of Embroid p by Monday morning and tl $ thioughout the week. Thi 11 I chance to c me in this wee! I S nity of getting some gooc don't mi.' s, for you cannot Inity of this kind pass. The Aug W * East Main Street. MMOOQyfltt &&SBSQ3 40w*f*v^*v*ifv*yvw ==== fiervi< %prin UHOt MODERATE!. ROBERTSC 3 d^ors above 1 TO CLOSE OU ?Our Stocl Red Vale We will se'l them as long as At $1-50 per ROWE & ROW! ? J BUSINESS* NOTICES. I 'ARM HORSE for sule, cheap, for cash. Apply tit Hallott's ice >use, Spartanburg, S. C. BO-Jit. ;<;gs FOR sale:.?Burred Fly- ( * mouth Rucks. Fine large, pure ed birds. T. A Irwin. ^OR SALE?Fggs for hatching, $1 ' per'setting. Bull Plymoth Rocks, rize Winners; Single Comb, White eghorr.s, Vanderbilt Strain ; Golden ubright Bantams, lirst-class. Ap- i iv at ' i iu> u.iks or genu oruers 10 . W. (ietsinger. Spartanburg, S. C. Z^tjtiS (l()R SALE?White and Sil-* ver Laced Wyandottes $1 50 per; Mting (15 eggs.) good hatch guarun-1 >ed. White Wyandottes Duston | train,Silver Wyandottes, Steinmesch | train. See or write H L Kdney atl lecker's. IJ'tR SALE ? Burred Plymouth j ' Rocks, fine large beautifully-bar-; ed. pure b ed birds. T. A. Irwin, in 19-tf. MONEY TO LOAN?We negotiate' '" loans on improved farm9, for long >r short time, at seven per cent in-i erest Simpson & Bomar. Attorneys. Sopt. 25,1901. 8 mos. Best Ever Offered The Cosmopolitan Magazine. The Woman's Home Compauion. The Tkrice-a-Week World, 6 page?. The Carolina Sp.> liey are satin faced, which ? rds for this season. You >> my retail counter for less 35 Lining Monday 59c. | ideries. ? eries will be replenished >? le sale will be continued =>> ose that have not had the ? k will have an opportu- -iB 1 things on Monday, so : ciffoitl to let an opportu . Smith Co. | Palmetto Block. :eable g ? r < Y MARKED I' )N, - L /lain St. Ry. Crossing a _ t i w T y k of? ' y * I ntine BeansT V the present supply lasts Bushil. ^ I s, Druggists. ;IS Fifuifissianai Cards. M'CIiA ri d; 11UXT It It OS., A TTOltXEYS A T LA It )tfice over Brede's Bakery, Spartanburg, S. C. J Ieo. W. Nicholls Wm. M.Jones Notary Public NICHOLLS & JONES A TTOliXEYS A T LA Jf In Rear National Bank, Snartanuurg PATILLO Jf. Mc(tOWAF A TTOJtSF.y A T I.A II AND NOTARY PUBLIC. Oflcc- over T. I.. Bryant A Co. DR.J.T. CALVKRTi i) ex rim OfSce and rooms at the same place jrmer occupied by Calvert & OelauJ ersons desirin work should make their engaeementsbeforthant" 1IC00WAN & Ul'XTER AT1 OliSEYS AT LA II Spartanburg. S. C. Practice in all Courts, State and ! Federal. \ Idle Money. use it for Cotton. Will sell mi tod numi'f.r pf our 7 per dent rt'ftiiifa'ii s. I >it< A?st payable fun.aary atxl July. Tin* be.-t Cotton ' Mill investtnent offered. AMOt'NT i ro SUIT. NO DEPRECIATION ! REDEEMABLK ON SHORT NO| TICK. Guaranteed by *50.000 paid in capital. Remit direct or call at I our Spartanburg office. FIXGERV1LLE MFG. CO. J. B. Liles. l'rcs. and Trea*. Fingerville, S. C., Oct. 1. tf. ' I Wt Are headquarters For Garden and Field Seed. Early Mastodon Corn (2P5 bushels to one acre.) Early Snow-flake Corn. Golden Dent Corn. Amber Cane Seed. Orange Cane Sued. Kaffir Corn. Millo Maize. Pearl'Millet. I German Millet, j Orchard Grass. Blue Grass. | Bush Beans. | Pole Beans. ' Lima Beans, j Onion Sets. i A full line of Garden Seeds, j Try our TreeTomuto. W. E. Maddux, Pharmacist SPARTANBURG, S. 0. Both Phones 222 We Keep All Repa SOUTHERN WEI such as Bucket Ratchets, etc.; used on it. Phifer's Har Next door to Bee Hive. , NEW YORK R/ JUST RECEIVE!) a Men's and Ladif line of Men'* and Boys' Straw Huts a | box paper from 5c. up. Men's and Li of Notions, pins, needles, thread, but brellas, and others too numerous to rr linery business and have a few fine bunch. Fine line of silk ribbons at It to close out at 30c. yd. These goods to move them. Also a line of windc wcoden fixtures at 25c. each. Come e Respectl I\ Tis Not 0 That Makes but the Style and Qualit Smallness oi Three simple words, whic! ing?Needful, Useful, Helpfi You are Needful of the Go We have the Useful kind,; ;o save you money. Tittle bits of prices reach 1: No matter when or wlier ilways get a better one for you. No big hurrah, no baits, : joods for the Least Money ahv; No matter how we slash th< tijures the quality. We have already sold as mi s we expected to sell the who -e are the milliners of Spartan! We now have our second n< ou want a stylish hat for a ] our wants. We promised to keep a Bai his we are doing, and have s.ni isit often the Up-to-Date I Shoe Stc JAMES & S J. HERBERT ; Main Street. USE Tiger Brand FERTILIZERS [f you want good ^rops. Buy your Fertilizer from us and you can haul it as you want it, you will not have to haul in bad weather and your wagons will not have to go home empty when you come for it. We keep a comp1ete line of Fertilizers and Acids on hand and make our goods from High Grade Materials and they speak for themselves. Call aud see us if you want Blood Goods. ^mrtflnhLirtr Fertilizer Company. You Should Know. That I am carrying the beat selected stock of Saddleiy Hardware, Wagon and Buggy Harness, Bridles^ Collars, Hames, Trace Chains, Cow Chains, BacJ( Bands, Hame Strings, Collar Pdss. Roping Bridle Bits, Curry ( utn'is. Brushes, Sole heather. - 11 Tap Soles, Shoe Nails, Saddles, Lap Robes. Special attention given to repair- ? ing harness. Highest market price paid for Beeswax, Dry Hides. Remember the place, 87 Morgan Square. T, 0. MONK. ; The Young Astronomer By JamesJH. Carlisle^L.L-D 'I Price 50c Palmetto Book Storo Notice of Discharge, Is hereby given to all whom it may concern, that I will apply to Hon. J. J. (ientry, Probate Judge for Spartanburg county, S. C., on the 24th? 1 dty of May, 1902, for a final discharge as administrator, de bonis non, with the will annexed of Mary M. Wa.'den, deceased. " 'I hos. J. Atkins, Adro'r, etc., of Mary M. Walden, deceased. I April 12, 1902. ^ ^ irs for LL FIXTURES s, Valves, Wheels, Cranks, also the best Rope to be dware Store Both Phones No. 22. \CKET STORE. s' Slippers and Summer Shoes. Neir rid Cays. A big line of Stationery, adies' Summer Undervests. Big line tons, suspenders, ties, hosiery, umlention. We are going out of the milflowers to close nut at ten cents per >c. per yard. A few colors of malene are worth more money, but we want >w shades and curtains. Poles with arly and get first choice, fully, /IRS. A. A. KENDALL. f ur Name Hit t* Como V/Ul 1 til 1IV y of our Goods and the t our Prices. Ii have a great deal of mean il. ods. and we lend the Helpful hand >ig lumps of value here, e you see a bargain, we've no catches?simply the Best rys at our store. ; prices of our goods, it never uch Millinery up to this date le season. This proves that mrg. ;w line of Ladies' Hats. If little money, we can fulfill gain 5 and 10 cent Counter, ue new bargains every day. )ry Goods, Millinery and >re of TEWART " JAME* Spartanburg, S. C?