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The Craig=Cuthbertson Nup= |f Hals. Another Account of the Brilliant Marriage of Mr. Judson Craig and Miss Marguerite 4Cuthbertson. As will be recalled, The News of last Saturday contained an account, of the Craig-Cuf hbertson 0 marriage last Wednesday. The a following is an elaborate writeup of the interesting event by the Waxhaw Enterprise: S( On yesterday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock, at tlie home of the bride's ^ mother, Mrs. Alice L. Cuthbertv 6on, near Woltesville, the mar riageof Miss Marguerite Howard ^ Cutlibertson to Mr. Judso^ Columbus Craier. of Lancaster, was J solemnized. Rev. Geo. H. Atkinson, pastor of the Monroe Presbyterian church, performed ^ the ceremony in his most beauti- . ful and impressive manner. The . C( marriage was a very quiet home affair, only a few relatives and j intimate friends of the couple ,, bl being present. The beautiful and charming V1 bride, gowned in a pretty and very becoming blue broadcloth, ^ tailor-made suit with hat to match ^ and carrying a shower bouquet of , lilies of the vallev and maiden ll q1 r fni?n c nroo mal 1m? * l> r* iiuii IC1I1D) nno IIICI 1JJ mc gH'UIIJ . at the foot of the stairway, and et together they marched, unattended, into tlie parlor to the strains of Mendelesslion's wedg] ding march, rendered by Miss Fannie Shelley. The groom was , dressed in the regular conven? 01 tional black with white waist- ^ coat. , (11 Taking their position under a beautitnl arch of pure white ^ chrysanthemums and ivy, with a background of potted plants, ivy and yellow chrysanthemums, the ceremony that made them man and wife was performed amid an impressive scene that will long linger in the memory * ot those who witnessed it. During the ceremony 4<Meditation" was beautifully and softly rendered by the organist. The parlor was tastefully decorated for the occasion in large white and yellow chrysanthemums, 8* ivy and potted plants. e Immediately after the cere- ^ mony the bridal party came to a* Waxhaw, where the happy con- st pie took tlie 5 o'clock train for c( Lancaster via Monroe and Char- ^ lotte. They will make their f] home in Lancaster, where the ; groom is in the mercantile busi- ir ness, being book keeper and al- 11 so a stockholder in one of the largest and best known mercantile b; firms of that place. di The bride is a highly cultured CJ and accomplished young lady and has manyjlriends and admir- qi ers in this section and elsewhere, pi After finishing the preparatory I f)j course in Waxhaw Institute, she i attended the Asheville Normal j Collegiate Institute and later 1 the Greensboro Normal and In- e< dustrial College. The groom w also took the preparatory course tl at Waxhaw Institute, after which he graduated at Columbia Ku siness College. He is a very promising young business man. 0 and has a great many friends. Attesting the great popularity of the couple, they were on the n occasion of their marriage the recipients of many handsome and T valuable presents in china, cut- * glass, silver, and other article. ci Another Thanksgiving Proc- Ir lamation?Gov. Heyward Designates Nov. 29th as Day of Thanksgiving and Prayer. it lo In accordance with a wise and ime-honored custom, wo as a Iu eople have annually set aside ue day as a day of thanksgiving ca nd prayer. This custom has a 111 eep and primal meaning, a Cl1 leaning which should ever abide *)r 1 the hearts ot those who oh- 'h ?rve this day. !l Now therefore, in lull accor- a" ance with this custom and by V1 irtue ot legal enactment also, I, . C. lleyward, governor of 311 outli Carolina, do hereby set rei part Thursday Nov. 29th as a to ay of Thanksgiving and prayer. And I lecotnmend to all peole of this state on that day to ^-v ssemble in their places of \vor- "U lip, and in happy and grateful ac immunion around the hearth- "u ones of homes also, to give lanks to Almighty God for the a" lessings which His providence a 1 id His tender mercies have Pl auchsafed unto us as a people. T.et the hone, he inrlulrred thai lis day will he hallowed by <v D< iat love which should fill grate il hearts and that from homes ? nd hearts may radiate the cliarv which alike graciously bless5 those who give even as it does. t lose who receive. Given under my hand aiul the reat seal of the state at Coluniia, our capital, this seventeenth Tli ay of November, in the year of lit Lord One Thousand Nine Th [undred and Six and of the inependence of the United States ] f America the one hundred and JJ' lirtv-first year. P? " tc'l D. C. lleyward, on y the governor : Governor. {g]( J. T. Gantt, ' in Secretary of State. Tv ftCl ' ' "" " 1 loi larvie Jordan Says Recent <1: Frosts Materially Reduced v* cii Cotton Yield an Co olurnbia Record. be Farmers are indulging in much j", )eculative cogitation as to ihe ?fr Iect the cold wave will have on od le cotton crop. A good advance ao'i ; no distant date is predicted by ime of tlie shrewdest. In this HC1 in )nnoction the opinion of Presi- J. ant Harvie Jordan,of the South- jf? rn Cotton association, is of some ^ iterest. Yesterday he gave out E. i Atlanta the following statelent: ,lr an "If there was any cotton left I Oil de W ead now after the frost which ftn irae la9t night. Jo or I ' There might have been a 4, uantity of the staple left in the l"1 rotected places by the last Irost on L? f several days ago, but very lit- trt; e survived the chill. I believe le estimate made public by the t? secutive committee last week ill be materially decreased by ^ le frost of Monday night." President Jordan did not take luch stock in the estimate of of ver i *, wyjuij Dales for this ( ear's crop, made by Charles A. owan, oi New York, on Wed- or esday. J , , ^ , , Hft 'hfl NOWQ I)oeH Jol) Panting ' 11C llUIIU for others. Why an't we do yours? ?????? R on Bridge to be Built over Sugar Creek. Fort Mill limes: Through the Forts of the Commercial Club is now a certainty that the ng needed iron bridge over Suir creek will be built within the ?xt few months. Supervisor Boyd of this county me over Friday and with a ltnber of club members and li/.ens went out to the Bailes idge, where they were met by e supervisor of Lancaster and number of residents of Pleas- ^ it Valley who are interested in ^ e project. The bridge matter is at (nice taken up and the pervisors explained what their spective counties were willing do, while a representative of . e Commercial club guaranteed ' 00 in voluntary subscription the people of Fort Mill to help J iild the bridge. This offer was cepted and it was decided to iiId the structure, each county ^ bear ennal Rninniifs nf flip h?l. fcT* ice of cost. It is thouglit that substantial iron bridge can be it up at a cost of 1:2,000 or th :,500. rY * 3 you take The News? jyi ar Sheriff's Sale. m JTATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County ok Lancaster. In tbe Common Pleas. s\ e Pritiah anil American Mort^n^e Com- ! pany, Limited, Plaintiff, VT against onias .1. strait ami southern Urauite Company, Defendant*. Ry virtue of a decree of Judge George E. ince, made in above stated ease, dated Bl t, lltli l'.KJti, the undersigned, will ex- | ae to sale, at public auction, at Laticas- Hg Court House, tn said County and State, F the first Monday in December lOUti, E ring the usual hour of sale, the follow ; described tracts or parcels of laud in a County ot Lancaster and State of South rolina, containing in the aggregate renty-one hundred and thirty-one (2131) res, more or less, an I described as fol- gQ vs. viz: First (Twelve hundred and ninety-six Of Ji'tit acres, more or less, iu Cedar Creek iwnsliip, leing the tract of land conyed to Thomas J. .Strait by W. W. Perry, ark ot Court,by deed dated Dec. 1, 1804, ' d recorded iu office of Itcuister of Mesne uveyance tor said County in deed liook 1" pages 5H~ and 588. and known as the iley, Patterson or Crenshaw tract and 25 ing the land conveyed by D. W. Drown the Cheraw iV Chester Wail Koad Couiuy on I3th Nov. 1874, bounded by lands estate of (leorge W, Crenshaw, estate ids of Griffin Walker, deceased and ! urn* Second, .dlso Five hundred and one (501) res, more or less, iu said Cedar Creek wnship, made up of two tracts, one conning two hundred and forty-one (241) res, conveyed by A. P. Drowu, attorney fact for Annette 8. Cunningham and K. Cunningham to Thomas J. Strait by ed dated day of 1806, and xrrded in said Register's office in deed i Ok "(J'' DfiL'ft t!08 II fl <t timillflcit liw Inn.l F. M. Walker. estate lauds of Mrs. M. I Heattie, lands of T. J. Ktrait and lands own as the Stinson lands and perhaps tiers the other tract contains two honed and sixty (2t)(i) acres, more or less, d was conveyed to Thomas J. -*?tr?it by hn L. Hell, Lawrence M. Hell, Letha ne Twitty aud ltobert J. Hell, and bound by lands of 8. H. Hrown, F. (?. Ferry, ? . J. Hammond, and lands of T. J. 8trait ' d others. The deed of Letha Jane Twitty, hn L. Hell, Lawrence M. Hell and ltobt J. Hell to Thos J. Strait is dated April ^ 18!*.rj, and is recorded in deed book "<i," ge 6b7. Third. All that trnct or parcel of land, e and one-half miles from the town ot \j% lucaster, in Cane Creek Township, conning three hundred and thirty-four 14) acres, more or less, known as the ireton, Adams, Crockett and Wiesenfeld icts, and bounded north by lauds ol J. Funderburk; east by estate lauds of A, Kibler, the Hillings lands and others nth by lands of J. Wren Tillman aud hers, and west by landa ot J, T. Fnnirburk, L, C. Paysenr, Ernest Moore, L. Fenderburk aud perhaps others. The above described land may be sol 1 any sub-divided tracts in the discretion the Plaintiffs Attorney. Terms of sale, cash. Purchaser to pay r papers The purchaser or purchasers all comply with the terms of sale within ie-half hour from the time said property hid off, and upon lailnre to do so, the ? mini ?in lujuiouinieiy proceed 10 re-Hell id property at the risk of the former irchaser. J. P. HUNTER, Sheriff L. < onnty. , E. WYLIE, Plaintiff* Attorney. MULES )ur Mr. Hood has just arrived from the markets with one of the nicest lots of MULES, fjkgg^ MARES IlllPP HORSES iat has been on the market this season, hey are all well broken and among them >me extra nice matched teams of mules, iares and horses. Come one,come all. They e here and must be sold. We need the i i. i* ? 1 $ oney and are going to sell lor the high Dllar. Lilt M 0 IIG DROP IN COTTON In the face of the above fact, we make below me prices that should appeal to the pocketbook everyone. 3,000 yards 10 cents Outing at 7 1-2 cents. 25 pieces Jeans at 12 1-2. 15. 18. 22 1-2. 33 1-3 cents, worth per cent, more money. 25 pieces Cantton Flanel at 7 1-2, 8 1-3, 10, 12 1-2 cents yard. 3,000 yards heaviest weight Sheeting, 15 yards for $1.00. 5 pieces all wool 54 inch Ladies' Cloth, 48 cents the yard. 10 pieces 54 inch Broadcloth worth $1.25, for only 95 cts the yd. 10 1-2 pieces 36 inch wide $1.25. Silks all shades at 98 cents the yard. ARE YOU GOING To buy a Suit, Jacket or Overcoat ? If so, see ours and save 3m $1.00 to $5.00. Solid case Wright's Health Underwear, the $1.00 kind, at 75 nts garment. One case Ladies 25 cents Vests to go at 19 cents. Few dozen idies red wool Vests to close out at 48 cents garment. We are still headquarters for Shoe bargains. Big Stock Trunks, Bags and Valises, to go at CUT prices. n - - t_,ome to see us whether you buy or not. You are welcome. Yours to Please, Funderburk Company Send Us Your Job Printing -