The news and herald. (Winnsboro, S.C.) 1901-1982, December 13, 1905, Image 4

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That's i 0d being sold 0a if you hai money's I precedent Two 9 The best F Groceri Our stock of Gr< thing carried. Tho for anybody. Ever3 SI When it comes here. Stout servic< to $3.00. All bong] Har Big stock of t wholesale prices r A. NEWS AND HERALD PU(BL1SHED WEEKLY, --BY WINNSBORo PRINTING Co. J.FRENXK FOOSHE, - - -Emo TERMS, IN ADVANCE : One Year,............--------. sixMon~ths....-.--.--------.--. WINNSBORO, S. C. Wednesday, Nov. 29: 1905. The more the courts are ap pealed to for saving the dispen sary from its complete overthrow, the more sure does its final doom become. The State is sure to have some mighty interesting letters from Washington during the coming session of Congress. The fact that Mr. Zach McGhee is to act as their correspondent is a full guarantee of this. If Winnsboro is a dead town, it is a pretty live corpse. Paying the very highest price all the while for cotton and selling all goods at prices that make it the best place in the whole country to trade at are very fine charac teristies for any town, dead or alive. Two more counties have joined the prohibition ranks within the past week, Williams burg and Anderson. Significance attaches to both of these votes. Williamsburg is adjoining Flor ence, the only county in the State in which the effort to vote out the dispensary has failed. In Ander son in the last few .days be fore the election was held enery effort was made to save the dis pensary from being voted out. Teagitation brought out the aretvote that has. yet been cast in any county on this propo sition. The dispensary lost by a vote of 2 to 1 against it. The re suits seem, to be the same whether few or many vote. Superintendent of Education lartin. has recommemnded in his annual report that the State do something in the matter of supplying county high school to bridge the great gap there is between the lower schools and the colleges. This recommendartion is backed by an array of statistics from other states as to the practi cal wo.:king of such schools and the maginficent work they are do ing in bridging this great educa tional chasm. The plan along which he proposes for this need to be supplied is that the State furnish assistance to each county Just vhat our 4 at this st ie got to vorth. S( ed and un 8=Ib. Sacks, Thi One 98=11 irst Patent Flo s! ,Groceries ceries is always kept right e Molasses that taste like tl ,thing in the grocery line for ioes! Shoes! to a shoe for all-round servi mable Shoes a specialty here. it before the rise in price, at ness, Bridles at hese and at prices lower ow. Be sure to call here B._CATH ment of a county high school'and J I p'vide therefor some permaient S and sufficient income. This sug- I gestion is right in line with our t efforts all the while and as Fair field was the firsb county in the I state to lead off in the~ matter of t local taxation for aucationalc purposes, it would be a great thing if it could take the lead in ' providing for these high schools. t SENATOR JOHlNSON EXPLAINs f His Remarks To a Juror am I Is Purged J of Contempt of cou rt. The case of the State of South e Carolina against the architects t and contractors, who completsd e the State House, was begun in d the court of Richland last week b and is still in progress. Quite a c sensation was sprung Fii lay when ,t Senator Marshall, who was a member of the commiss ion that i had charge of the work,, informe~d i the court that a juror had re- f marked that some cae had ap- c proached him and had talked of I the case. Judge Gage at once a asked that the jurori stand up. r Mr. W. A. Ruff arose., and said t that Senator W. 3?. Johnson of' t Fairfield had remarked to him in r the presence of two other jurors 1 that thA suit was an outrage. As c Mr. Johnson had left the city for his home in Ridgeway, because of illness in his family, he we s teie-t graphed for and re mirned to Col umbia the next moruing. The c following aecoun t o; Se'iato' Johnso's explanatio n of the~ a! fair is take a irorr the State: Senator Johnson stated th r bIm hal been. very amech Sm- >ris a d r:ceive a tel'egrami calling hin i beck from his htm o nRdgewa s on accouvt of the :kegationl that he had addressed jamarks to a juror. He could not think what b ad inspired this but; malice and itred. "I will state the conversation, as it occurred verbatim as near as my memory will permit," he continued. When I lef t the court( house I overtook Mr. Ruff and I Mr. Blair. I spoke to i em pleas- 3 antly, told them good evening, ~ and Mr. Ruff said: 'Wha t are you doing down here? Are ycu on this case?' I told him I wa .; that I had been subponaed a < a wit neIs did not use the s anage that hie says I used, but I told c him I thought the case was a* damned fraud, and thatv if e work had been properly done and passed on. 11 "At the time this convers;ation v~ occrred I did not recall th,e fact I that Mr. Ruff was on the jury, a although I had seen him on ther jury while I was i~n the court a house. "I will be candid enough to y tate howr, ta if T had n Swa; competit( ore. We buy, for you do, .equaled f : ]Baker's King b. Sack, The B One 48=1b. 0 ur on the mar Groceries! up-to-date. The best of el iey used to are just good en Christmas here. Shoes! ;e, you cant do better than Extra good Shoes from id go at the same old price id Saddles. than they can be bougi for these. CART, U nown this fact at the time, the ame conversation possibly would ave occurred, because he led up o the conversation." Mr. Johnson, after defending iS jntpisy,d:scaimed any in enion to be disrespestful to the :ourt. Judge Gage: "I think Mr. Ruff as right to report the matter to he court. Mr. Johnson disclaims ny intention of being disrespect tl to the administration of jus-' ic. I think it was improper, Mr. ohnson, and I think it is im roper in anybody to refer to a ase that is pending in court. I hink it is improper because it mbarrasses the juror. It is ofte n one, but the tendency of it is 1 o inder the lawful administratic .n f justice. Jurors are men, arid ey cannot help but be influene -d y opinion on the outside on il ae sues pending before them,. e s ecially when that opinion com esI om one who is entitled, uni ler r d in a r y circumstances, to> be eeded. I think the matter maii ;ht .s well be stopped here. II am atisfied under your staten ant hat the conversation was lea up o. You stated you were so -it Less. I know as a matter o p ib ic record you had been em t. bis omission, and perhaps fern1 ad ore interest in the mattere I] an ,n outsider would have. Ia.w n t o sayF emphatically it is. b ad >ractice, and one to be n n emned, no matter who exenis es Roigh skin and cracked handa : are Lot only cured by DeWitt's Wil ch fazel Salve, but an occasional apyili ca 10on wiilI keep the skin soft and sm ta th. lest for Eezema, Cuts, Burns, % ils, t. The genuine DeWitt's VGJ ch -lnzel Salve affords immnediate relid in 1 forms of Blind, Bleedin~g, It~i ng nd Protruding Piles. Sold by all &k 'al Knights at Chester. The Sixth District Convedo; ', ~nights of Pythias, was heI writh Rathbone Indge '7, o f hester Wednesda y. , It va resided over by L. T. Baker; )istrict Deputy Grand Chane or. The address of weleone ras responded to by WV. W. )ixon. Esq, of Winn Lodge. )ther knights from the lodge Lere were: Messrs Preston Rien, I. B. :Refo, J. J. Neil, Sr., R. Y. olick. K. B. McMaster, E. Glad en, J. L. Robinson. For overSixty Years MRS. WINsLoW's SOOTHING SYRr? as been used for over 60 years by miu ons of mothers for their ebhdren rhile eething, with perfect srceesss t soothes the child, softens the gumis lays all pain; cures wind colic, and is de best remedy for Diarrhoea. It willi lieve th2e poor little sufferer immedi tely. Sold by druggists in every parS f the world. Twenty-five centsa ttle. Be sure and ask for "Mrs.I rinslow's Soothing Syrup," and take. aother kind. p ing Dollars. irs term the way in which Flour is I, if it is, it is all the better for you it means that you get your full and more too, as the following un= igures will show: , only $3.75. aker's King, only $1.90. Sack, The Baker's King, only $ 1.00. ne 24-lb. Sack, The Baker's King, only 50 cents. -ket is Crystal, and the price on it is just low enough. Wagons and Buggies. ery ough The Birdsell Wagon is second to none on the market. Those who like them best are those who have used them the longest, for the more they are used the more one is satisfied of their superior merit. The Engel Buggy is full value and always pleases. Try one. right ** -O Farming Intplements. The Middlebuster sold here costs much less and is equally as good as the it at highest priced ones. The very thing for getting your cotton land in proper shape. Two-horse Plows at good close prices. A big stock of Plow Hoes. roceries and Farm Supplies. Correct{3kthesf Designed and made by Schloss Bros. at8w1 N Y & Co., and W. S. Peck & Co., the Great 8*K Clothes Makers, are distinctive char= acteristics. They carry the impress of the wearer's good taste==good judg= ment. Appearances go a great way. CLOTHES DO IT== the right kind== OUR CLOTHES WILL. Schloss' and Peck's clothes are word . by the best Dressers in the fashion centres of the word. Clothes must be stylish, becoming, well tailored== they must give you that well dressed fill feeling the moment you put them on and look well at all times. Schloss' and Peck's show their CLEAN CUT thoroughbred lines the moment your - eye rests on them===there is grace and style in their splendid proportions and fit; the fabrics of pleasing color tones give richness and distinction hard to find. We have also an endless variety of Overgts and Rlain Coats. Suits to please the boys; Prices to please the parents, D. V. WALKER & CO. Lumber! Lumber! Smooth Sailing Big stock of all Building MaterialsW iiow on hand===Flooring, Ceiling, IS WHAT YOU HAVE WHEN YOU USE A Weatherboarding, Moulding, and HACKNEY or a CHASE CITY S.hingles. Will be sold at closest BUGGY, which rides easy and costs as little as an article of such superior merit can be sold at. 2 Anthe bi shpmet o Ge an The Oweosboro wagoni is as goodt as money Jes vel Bugies,==the kind that cost can buy. little and give lots of satisfaction. I nr~ ess, Bridles, and collars at good close J. 0. BOAG. 'K. R. Mc aster.