University of South Carolina Libraries
?- ..... ; ihurlow 8. garter, | ^ Family Netcrpapcr : Fur the Proniotv/n of the Political, Sbnial, Agricultural and Cotnmercial Interest*. } tcrms: su,>0 a Ysajv BdITOB am) liiUftAOKB. ) 1 j... ) l AIAllIiK is AliTUMiE. ShMI-WEEKLlf bill' IUW. LAN CASTKK, 8. X!.. ()(''!'. !,*>, ESTisBI LSHHl fRM BEHIND PRISON DOORS. Tho Risers, of Newberry, Placed in tho Penitentiary. Tho State, 13th inst. The people of the State arc generally familiar with the sen sational arrest an<l subsequent trial of tho Riser brothers at Poniaria last spring, on tho charge of systematically robbing some freight cars. Last week their attorney with drew their appeal to tho State supremo court and yesterday the two unfortunate young men wore brought to Columbia to live r felon's lifo for tho next five years, unless executive clemency be sooner enlisted in their behalf. 'Idio young men were neatly dressed, and had not the hardened look, nor indifferent air of the convict, and the information that they wore sentenced men brought with the announcement a decided shock. Shot Hi? Bride. Correspondence Greenville News. Saluda, S. C., Ort. 11.?Another homicide was added to the largo list for our county last Friday. John Berry, colored, shot his wife who, died from her wound on Sunday. Berry says that it was accidental, out the woman in her dying declaration said that her husband wanted to go to a cotton picking to which she objected and a scuffle ersued and he pulled the ever ready pistol aud fired. They had only been mar lied two or three weeks. MORE WAR FEARED. Spuniards Uneasy Over.the Hitch in Peace Negotiations. Madrid, Oct. 13.?The Spaniards fear that the war between the United States and Spain may Iii> rnsiimo/l ! ?<j ?-1~f ... v.. . lb in i W|Hll ICU 11 U111 the interior time the hitch in the pence negotiations is causing a painful impression among the people. What letter won <1 have made Noah's ark very noisy? B, for it would have made it hark. Subscribe to The Ledger. MOTHER! 53 and about which such tender and holy recollections cluster as that of " Mother "?she who watched over our helpless infancy and guided our first tottering step. Yet the life of every Expectant Mother is beset with danger and all effort should be made to avoid it. mm so assists nature Mother s is^ssrss; pa B . the Expectant Lf I Ann Mother is eMail I OIIU blcd to look for" I Willi ward without dread, suffering or gloomy forebodings, to the hour when she experiences the joy of Motherhood. Its use insures safety to the lives of both Mother and Child, and she is found stronger after than before confinement?in short, it "makes Childbirth natural and easy," as so many have said. Don't be persuaded to use anything but MOTHEjfSJRIEND "My wife suffered more In ten rainotea with either of her other two children then she did altogether with her lest, having previously used four bottles of "Mother's Friend.' It Is a blessing to any one expeotlng to besom a e MOTHER ,M ears a customer. UaNDaaaoM Dili. Csrml. HUbaI* ?f ? 9LM. ?r >y tiyrtN on wwl>> of pruy. Wrtf for nook ooolamiog iMUnoahui an* rOtoobio iWwmMM for *11 MoUoro, frwo. fko feniMd BofoUlor Ok, MIooOo, So. v | ON TI1K STUMP A(iA1N. I % 1 Senator Tillman Goes to Virgin to Make Speeches. Senator Tillman passed thioug j I the city yesterday on his way 1 Virginia whore he will take tl . (stump in behalf of free silver an Democracy, lie will speak i Rocky Mount Saturday, at Cha 5 ham Monday, Richmond on tl j 19th, and Fayettoville, N. C i next Friday. I The senator looked well, had c | his fighting clothes and will gi\ (| the peeple of the "Old Dominion and of tlin iiOI/l lHII III OllllU something to talk and think abou ( ?The State. JESSE JAMES, JR. I s Police of Kansas Relieve He's Chit) olT the Old Block. . ' Kansas City, Mo., Oct. 11.| Jesse James, .ft*., son of tho n< tor ions bandit, Jesse .lames, Mil souri's pioneer train robber, wi taken from his cigar stand in th county court house by the polic this evening and is being secrete by the authorities. Jesse James, Jr., has been ur der surveilancc since he last of tl many train robberies in tho ou skirts of Kansas City. This wi tho rot)tiery of a Missouri Pacif express train near tho Leeds o September 24. Lato tonight became known that the police hr also in custody (till Ryan, one < the notorious robbers of the ol ?Jalii Co ^uu ^. Smothered Under Cotton Seed. Special to The State. Anderson, Oct. 11. ? Minnh tho 2 year-old daughter of Mi and Mrs. R. \V. Pruitt, who li\ a few miles below town, lost lie lifo life last Friday as tho resu of cotton seed, in which she wi playing, falling upon her an ! smothering the little one; assis tanco came as promptly as poss hie, hut too late. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bough Signature of Tho State newspaper has it doubts, it says, regarding th riglit. of Tho Greenville News t call itself a democratic newspape J because wo oppose tho free silvc coinage heresy and hold the prefc ent leadership of the party i very thorough contempt. Th | dispensary is a plank in tho plat form of tho democratic party c i this State. Does Tho State en r1.'hl*fiA If orwl Vilalo Ino/lnHuliir ,? !'? ?tv tv uuvi niv uiaiu iuu'H'1 nuij 1 If not, according to its own nil j ing, has it any right 4o call ilsel a democratic newspaper??Green I ville News. ^ Foul is his heart whose tongu runs to slander; hilt ho who give it a freo ear outranks the slanderer Trust him little who praises all bin) loss who censures all, and hin least who is indifferent about all Subscribe to The Ledger. A Wonderfal DlicOTtiy. The last quarter of a century record* many wonderful discoveries in medioina, h\K none that hare accomplished more for humanity than that sterling old household remedy, Hrowns' Iron Hitters. It seems to contain the very elements of good health, and neither man, woman or child can take I*, without deriving the greatest benefit. Frowns' i- . Hitter* is sold by all dealers. FIGHTING AMONG TUHNISEI, VES. i v .a ^ ! One Cnval.vinan Killed, 2 Fatally 1 " -J and 2 Seriously Wounded. ;h to lluntorsville, Ala,Oct. 11?Th?:t io Tenth cavalry ^colored) arrived id from Montauk tVis morning and it had not been olf the train an h?u?i , t- before some of its members Ikj- i io came involved in a difficulty with the provost guard. One man was | Killed and tive wounded, two ?n fatally. e Soon after the men left the 1' train one of the cavalrymen went " to a house frequented by white I. men and attempted to clean out I the place. lie wan arrested by a i corporals detail of four men of the provost guard. The arrest j I was quickly noised about and the a i negro cavalrymen uttertipted to I rescue the prisoner. The first I man who advanced toward the! _ guard was halted and as he j i turned to run was fired upou. j Firing then became almost general j' ls and continued several minutes.. eICorp'l McLaughlin, Co. L. Sixth ,c I infantry, commanding the detail,! ((j was killed at the first fire. Private! I E. Wiles, Co. M, Sixth infantry, . 1 was shot in the knee and Private I | ,ej Larkin, Co. L. Sixteenth infantry, j j. | received a ball in the leg. Wiles'; ls I leg was amputated later at the ' jc hospital. Private .James Gleeton, i n troop M, Tenth cavalry, received ' it a bullet in th3 spine and will die. ' l(j Two other Tenth cavalrymen 1 whoso names aro not known, were wounded, one of them fatally./ J The affair would have bean atj tended by more serious conse| quences had not a mounted platoon i from the Tenth cavalry scattered ! the beligerent negroes with drawn sabres. The wbito soldiers hore enterr |' 1 t&ined a very hitter feeling against |' | the negro troopers and it is feared i trouble will occur whenever the It, I I two races meet. The Tenth was given a camp | situated more than a mile from 1 | ! any other regiment. i On an order of the state hoard, , Messrs. Thompson and Gaston of tho county hoard elected Mr. I Davis B. Refo dispenser to suct ceed Mr. J. M. McDaicl, removed. Col. Gulp refused to have any- j r thing to do with it. Mr. Refo opened tho dispensary and took \ 8 charge Saturday morning.? e Chester Lantern. o! m ? , ItOKIlKI) TIIK GRAVK. * ir A startling incident, of which Mr John Oliver of Philadelphia, * was the subject, is narrated hv " n j him as follows: 4tl was in a most c I dreadful condition. My skin was . almost yellow, eyes suuken, tonifigue coated, pain continually in I hack and sides, no appetite ? | gradually growing weaker day by < ' day. Three physicians had given , ' me up. Fortunately, a friend j f i advised trying 'ftleetrie Bitters;1 r ? and to my great joy and surprise, 1 the first hottle made a decided ' improvement. I continued their g use for three weeks, and am now 0 a well man. 1 know they saved s my life, and rohhed the grave of | another victim." No one should , fail to try them. Only 50 ets ? por hot. at Crawford Bros, I>rug a Store. Georgia Negro preacher to his flaplf f - ? 11?1'? A ^ ..vv?) ii ? uaio n ClJIItJCUOn 10 make this morning, and, for the * glory of heaven, whichever of yon stole Mr. Smith' sheep don't j put anything on the plate." aswjssstoSisswaafrs < DESPERATE RIOT. | Miners and Negro Laborers Battle in Indiana. A THOUSAND SHOTS. Many Men Killed and Wounded, the Town in Turmoil and Panic?Troops Hurried to the Scene. Virdin, 111., Oct. 12.?The arrival of a train load of imported Negro laborers from the South at J 12.30 this afternoon, was the signal for a desperate battle. I Nearly a thousand shots were ex,.i ?i ? -- ? * .... i uuuiiji?u iicuvccii tne striking miners on the one side and Slier iir Davenport and* deputies on the nther. In the stampede it is difficult to tell the number of the dead, hut it is conservatively estimated fit fifty-five miners and six officers killed and a dozen fatally wounded. Governor Tanner orders two regiments burned here and they will arrive tonight. The fighting is yot going on in that section and the town is terror stricken. Men are securing whatever arms they can get hold of, expecting to use them for their own protection if the trouble spreads. The women and children kie running to their homos and bariicading the doors. Some of the wives of the dead tumors, however, decline to go to their homes and are almost mad with grief and anger. It is said that the miners were fired upon from tho stockades after the train had gone through. Mayor Nail has sent messengers to Girard for doctors and nurses. Governor Tanner wires forbidrlinor t ho nnlntiilimf e> i~> "* ""i"'1 luw labor. lie says the mine owners are responsible for the carnage and shall be indicted for murder. Special trains are now hurrying hero from Springfield and I Chicago. When a South Carolina Senator J endorses a Republican President' for re-election, with the Colum- j bin, Stato an administration sup- | porter, the Piedmont Headlight taking an occasional lick at the dispensary system, and Charleston politicians wining and dining Ben Tillman, the Democrats may earry New York after all, in spite | ef the Rough Rider's war record. I ?Greenville Mountaineer. Burial Placo Sacred. Columbia, S. C., Oct. 1'2.? \ttornev General Townsend decided today that tho Stato had no ight I ,o sell land that was a burial | 'round and that such property is jot taxable. This decision rentes to tho Maverick burial ground of Pickens county. She--And what shall 1 say in case 3&paasksnie what your prospects ire! Ho?Woll er-you might say that; t am figuring on securing ono of the most prominent,influential and wealthy men io the city for my 'arther-in-law. That ought to fetch 11m.---Chicago News People who hope are generally people who help. Reprove your friend privately, ommend him publicly. "SUPPRESSION OF THE lilt ALLOT.1, It M The Key-Note of the 1- ight the Republicans Will Make? r Chairman Tolhert Issues an Address. c I G teen wood, Oct. 1.?It B Tol- C bert, Jr., chairman of the ltepub 1 lican executive committee, has t just issued the following address: v To the Republican Voters of the * State : 1 The continuation of the ltepublican party in the control of the j ^ affairs of the nation is of vital im- I portance to the American people i at this time, and they have to con- c gratulate themselves upon the fact i that at one of the most critical 1* momenta in the history of the nation a wise, considerate, humane I r and patriotic chief executive in I the person of President Wm. Mc- c Kinley, presided over the atTairs ! of state and brought our country r honorably and safely through its i* 't trying period of war. The present State administra* : tion and the present representa- j1 tives in congress from this State! owe their socalled election to the v suppression of the ballot by a j v criminal nullification of the con stitution and laws of the United * States. This iniquity suppresses the political voice of 100,000 vo- ^ ters of tho Republican party of the State and bears tho stamp of a double crime because of tho false color of legality givon by ^ tho State constitutional conven- r tion of 1895. * The vice, crime and immorality Iof this legalized infamy has been <: connived at so long that at last X tho Democrats of tho State have j f come to regard the right of the 1 . . ballot as belonging exclusively top themselves, and the outgrowth a of such views is expressed openly t at times of registration and on o election days in South Carolina. t Republicans of the State look c with impatience for the proper t correction of these evils by the o Republican party, which is now a in control of the three branches p of tho national government; for t it cannot bo believed of a party, t pledged to the protection of the | ? rights and liberties of the citizen, ? ti nt it will not eventually see its a duty and exercise all its power t and authority in making such 1 pledges effective. ^ A free and honest ballot is the foundation stone of our ltepubli- * can form of government and when the present congress comes to pass ( upon the election cases of licpub- |s liean contestants now pending we , 1 believe that it will accentuate its c disapproval of the lawless moth- \ ods used to secure the return of , Democratic members from South | Carolina and thus compel fair elections in this State. j t It is deomed wise and politic to , t await the results of the reaction i * | 4 which will eventually set in in South Carolina and will retire j iL. _ motso who iiro prominent in the t commission of crimes against suf- c frago, and until this condition is * brought about by the action of ( congress, we deein it best to re- | frain from nominating a State j ticket, at least for the present ? year, and vour State executive 1: committee has so decided. ^ We gladly call your attention j to the fact that a reunion of all ^ Republican elements in this State ] has been effected and those who separately contended for the main tenance of Republican principles ] ecognizc the truth of the maxim hut "in union there is strength,'' ,nd have again enlisted under the 'Union Republican Banner," a eunited party. In most, if not in all, the con ;ressional districts of the State tepubliean candidates for tin* 5(Jth 'ongress of the United States wiP >o voted for at tho coming elec ion and all efforts and energies vill be concentrated to secure heir election. Tho united sup >ort of all Kepuolicans to these lepubliean nominees, without re^ :aid to past party affilliation, is he imperative du*y of the hour. Ul Republicans are urged to turn ait at the polls on the day of the lection and east their ballots for heso Republican congressional lominecs. If any have been denied the ight to register under the new onstitution, let them offer to vote nd, if rejected, have immediate ecord made by those who will be elected by the party to give alention to the matter. Relieving in the ultimate triimpli of right, and relying on the verruling hand of Providence, vhich aids in all laudable efforts, ve advise the ceaseless warfare or the principles which are dear o all true and patriotic men. R R Tolbert, dr., Chairman State Executive Com. Greenwood, SC., Oct 11, 1808. If Chairman Tolbert of the iepubliean State committee is a nan of intelligence ho must know hat he is holding out to the ne;ious of South Carolina a most (elusive hope. The Republican >arty of the north has finally and orever abandoned the policy of nterfering with the suffrage in he southern States; it has finally nd forever abandoned the negro o the control of the white men f the south. Public opinion in he north sustains all legal and onstitutional methods by which he intelligence and the property f the south maintain ascendancy, cd it is heartily sick of the comilaints that come from this secion. That is the plain and proven ruth. \ny negro party in this Itate oxists merelv to provide fovernnif?nt r?lnoAa ife mnn , t .w? .VO ?.?Ugers and a supply of delegates o be suitably bribed at national iepublican conventions. ?The state. *rig. Gen. Miles for Greenville. Washington, Oct. 12.?Brigalier Gen. Miles has been asiigned to the command of the Mrst brigade of the Second army :orps with headquarters at Green ille, S. C. I*KM AUK AltliK ItKSCUE. M rs Michael Curtain, Plainield, 111., makes the statement, hat she caught cold, which setled on her lungs; she was treated ! ih t .. I i! * 1 ? ui ji iiioiuii ity iici" jsunny pnysi ian, but grow worse. lie told ser she was a hopeless victim of :onsumption and that no medicine ;ould cure her. Her druggist niggested I>r King's New Disiovery for Consumption; she xaigtit a bottle and to her deight found herself benefitted from irst close. She continued its use ind after taking six bottles, found jersolf sound and well; now does jer own housework and is as veil as he ever was. Free <rial Kittles of this Great Discovery .4. /I # 1 * * -V n v/rawioru nros imip more. Uirge bottles 50 cents and $1.00. Our last robe is made without pockets.