The Lancaster ledger. (Lancaster, S.C.) 1852-1905, August 05, 1899, Image 4

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fc-jTT-Y^. j fe Cluhbi p The La I F to club \vi ppopuhti' p; ft: wliicEi brtu preach of ;?? ^ r ? ; v"r ip " T!n.(.'n . ffiL p PRJ"P p \ T-M1 p tf*. -?U w J -a i. 'A. 3>v VA a J - * K bi.vfecit J i ^ T3 F~: v- ?1 n T P Aajl./LY. r-v < ( /W1 ' >V '5 / / / y frj? iF^ri/Tp*'" ,? ,1111.148', ;Sp ,X" '/rv ^ . 1/^/ 1'. f I 0? I Che flM *^vV, fib The I, ( ?> j Atlanta Aotli r!lp i>? I The L. eI^ ! *Sow ^f 1. IV, I h pill fe I A'* ; Tllfi I,< | Atlanta Je?? ISoth pap 1 ! The L? ' Unmeant ?>i ?tl.c p; ICP I I' r jj^Must : ^ J- ST IP ' -V JLJL1 > [tr v I V-N l^To yr<'t t!i f; s? * Hi >y srribers WL'STi u ?W * |j ^ I lie money before f ? ' ? publishers will n t If, }?/ eeive the money. f'7* ' fi SUHSCUiHU \ ra I* . If you lire not a!re:i /-? seribor to The Ledger f, " .now and got the bent j*! ^clubbing rates. K k fa life Address IP make r< m t. i^hk^4?QL^S I^^F ;^ Mi m$$ Rates. J ^|flj &er has arranged^! til the following 1 ipei\s at pi iccsrJ|| gthein within tlie Jr ' * -.if r:P * TR) 1? Tffo in! 1 s ? sibjl jl ''iii/c.t Kttvh II 'cr/c J #| 4..SJ ?VUJi A UAlUh?tfl " /i*< s Every II 'eck ) rf| ' & I ft 1!' | lit ifjj _?v. //cicr ft -tcrek jm/n>r.) i3|j <n r .? ; > crt ro w. x\ rp fsefl ij.iVwMg *|! 7//. . hjriciilluml paper.) f* ? " "M r* y.'* "Mr** * ? *IV **^222 ^C g i'V? S . 3XidJVk'r)b+*L5-<v512^^ jap Enough. . djjcr (Semi weekly), The ^T>B .Journal (Semi-weekly.) ^pijBi cr> one year for si.75. jjB tidier (Semi weekly), The .jW | ?rk World (Tri weekly) ?jLjB J icrs one year, for $2.00. 1 ?il^er (Soini-weekly), The I? j vj?institution ( Weekly) J[|| J >er> one year, for $2.00. SjrtB J L'duer (Semi weekly) and ~j|, ! Farm one year for $1.50 3j| I ire of I lie Ledger alone. : :.~ - " " *?\?l - . -..v* :Jiuj Fay m AdTance. J|| i ill of liiv- aliove prices sul>- "' ? j 7 3 a a l . an. . We must have sent. The irl the papers n.itII they re ARK VOl IN A KUKAKS ? /rljj If .sd, you cum give us your note ' to V;o duo December 1st, next, for J| 1 )our indebtedness to date, anil pay s3| ycur subscription one year in nd--^|Bj ' vonco and get the benefit of above( all orders and omittances to il| S. CARTER J 'ub, Ijodger, I^ancastor, H. C, tj r r r According to the Chester Lantern ex-Congressman Strait doHares that Senator MeLaurin will 1 not dare to go on the stump again in South Carolina |5gr~Sul>seribc to The Ledger. 0 81T1 CAB0LI1& & GE0R61& . tXTEHSlOB II CtiM"MY.1 SCHEDULE NO. 2. In effect 1-01 a iu. Sunday, Ju:ie 18th ^ DBTWEEN Camden, S. C., ami Shelby, N. C. ' ? Daily. Except Sunday ? West 33. 1st class pass Mixer East 32. I p. m. 1 eave Arrive a. m. . 12 05 Co unh n 1145 1 12 26 DeKslh 1112 12 37 Wcstville 11(H) 12 50 Kershaw 10 45 '< 1 15 Heath Spiings 10 30 1 20 Pleasant Hill 10 25 ,' 1 40 Lancaster 10 05 I 1 55 Riverside 9 50 i, 2 05 Springdell 9 40, 2 20 Catawha Junction 9 30 1, 2 50 Hock 11111 9 10 3 12 Tiizsh 8 32 3 25 Yorkville 8 20 ! 4 25 Blackshurg 7 10 . 5 (Mi Earls ($ 50 5 OH Patterson Springs H 40 5 15 Sht-lby H 30 j l* M. AM IS U T W ii ? N Black.-burg, 8. (', una Marion, N. C. 1 ? Ddi'y, Except Sunday ? West 11. lid class, mixed. East 12 j a m. Leave Arrive p m. t1 S 10 Blacksburg 0 10 8 80 Earls N 50 i 8 4(? Patterson Springs 8 38 9 2<l Shelby 8 30 10 25 Henrietta 7 00 10 50 Forest ( ity 0 35 1 11 15 ltutherfordton 0 05 12 05 Thermal City 5 30 12 25 Glen wood 5 05 12 50 Morten 4 45 i\ M. i?. M. GAFFNEY DIVISION. ? Daily, Except Suuday ? West. 1st class, passenger. East. 15 13 14 10 I p m. a m. Leave Ar Ive a m. p m | 4 30 5<K) Blacksburg 7 00 6 30) 4 50 6 20 Cherokee Falls 6 40 6 10 6 10 6 40 Galthey 6 20 5 50 I I* M A M A M I? M Tralr.s Nos. 32 and 33 connect at B! icksburg connect with trains on the Gaffuey Division. Train 82 leaving Shelby at 6 30 a m connects at Blacksburg with No. 36 on the Southern Ry going Nor h, with 20 minutes margin or transferring, e c. Passengers leaving any i>oiuts on this line between Shelby and Blacksburg can g , to Charlotte, N. ('.. spend 3 hours and 2T. minute*, and return the same day. It connects also with tire Southern going -outh, and connects at Yorkyill* with the Northbouud train on the C ?St N VV R R with 30 minutes margin for trans ferring: and connects at Rock Hill with Aro 33 on the Southvru Ry going South. The best connection this frain makes at Oitawba Junction with tire HAL going North gives 11 hours lay over; going Heutli, 12 hour* and 43 minutes, nearly all the 'ay over is in daylight. Connects at Lancaster with trains on L & C Ii R for (?heater with a lay over of 3 hours and connects at Camden with the ChttrIeston Division of I he Southern for all points South. TiuioNo 33 connects at Lancaster w ith (he I. A. C for Chester ; w ith 'he s. a I. at Ca rtwbt Junction, hotli North and South, with a lay over of about 6 hours ; wi'h No. 34 on tlie Soutlo r i at Itoek lli'? going North, giving 5 hours day-light lay over ; with No 12 at Blccksburg on the Southern Ry going North Also with the Vestibule on the Southern going North. Train No. II leaving Blackanurg af 8 10 a m will get passengers from the South from train 36 on the Southern for a'l points between B'nckshurg and I Marion, N C , and will connect at Ma-1 riou with t lie Southern Ry, both East ! and West. Train .Vo 12 leaving Ma* lion at 4 45 makes good connection at Blacksburg witli (lie Southern Ry in both directions, Samuel Hunt, A.Tripp, President. Supt. S. B. Lumpkin, Gen. Puss. Agt. LANCASTER AND CHESTER RAILWAY. BETWEEN CHKsTKK AND LANCASTER. Scliedule in ell'ect Daily except Suuday on and after Sept II, 189.S. WESTBOUND I KAS'l BOUND. No's. 14 ami 16. | No's. i7 ami 15* A M. P M. A At. P M , 9 65 5 55 Ar Chester Lv 11 00 7 00 9 07 5 07 Richburg 11 38 7 45 i 65 4 65 llascombville 116- 7 55 j P M i88 4 33 Fort Lawn 12 12 8 15 i 00 4 00 Ly Lancaster Arl2 50 S 55 Connects at Chester with (Southern Runway, Heaooard Air Line and Carolina and North-Western Railway. Connects at r ancaster with the Ohio River ?fc Charleston. Leroy Springs, Pres., Lancaster, 8. C. J M Heath, O. P. A., \V H Hardin, V P and Aud., Cheate r Tickled because I pain. 1 can do the .same for y> effects result from my extra< pleasant ness and satisfaction i I've tho experience, the "kn< doing all branches of scientific t: Special attention given Work. No charge for exatnii Dr. J. E. Rutlei LANCASTF I1K YAQUIS INDIANS ARK| ON TIIK WAR PATH. everul Americans and Mexicans. Including Cien Torres, Rep ?r led Killed. Now ' )rleuus, A i _r. 1. A poeial to Tlio Times I Vomeral rom Ortiz, Alex, says: "Any j on tit that Yaipiis an* on the war- : iath in earnest was dispelled to- | ay when news reached here that everul Americans and Mexicans ad been killed in I'ueblos, or j owns in the Ya?pii river valley, ast and s'uithea t of this station. ' "The courier who came in j nth the news of the slaughter | leelares that he saw a desperate ight at a point forty miles south-j ast of Ortiz, and that lie has vidcnce that ?F F Raiiilcy, a merhant of Hermosillo, and K Mil er, a photographer in hiscmplov, vere among the killed. Ramlcv vas one of the best known A'nierians in Sonora. TIIK FIG FIT AT C A I, A M HA. I T it Was Sharp ami Severe While It Luated ? Seven Americans , S Killed. Manila, Anjr. 1?Sunday's fight it Calambu was a warm one. The ! nsurgonts were unwi ling to al?an- ' si Ion the place, which is the key to fi Lhe Luke road. Gen. Hall, hear. Id nr that (Jen. alalhar was pre pa p ring to make an attack, sent Maj. Id Woisenberger with three coin pa- s nios of the Twenty-lirst Infantry, h three troops of cavalry and one of ' t Hamilton s guns to attack the in- !e surgents. Tlio detachment found u force of 1,000 rebels behind | v hastily constructed intrenchimmts. <j I ho rebels held their tiro until the ti contingent of the Twenty first c Regiment was within 300 yards c when they tired a volley. The'c Americans <lroppcd in the high |( grass out of sight and returne v the tire. I^ieut Gove, who was , walking erect along the front of | the men, was shot in the arm. j An insurgent otlicer equally brave stood at the top of the trenches, Idirecting the tire of the insurgents I until he was killed when the Filipinos tied. 1 luring the lighting on the north | C side of the town, a small body of i * insurgents attempted to enter the v south side, but a troop of cavalrv | repulsed them. 1 he total loss at Calninha was ? seven killed ami go wounded. lb dead insurgents have been found. ' 1 he American garrison is going to Calamba. A bod y of insurgents y visited Tay Tay and killed several i nativos who wore friendly to the f Americans. Cfironic Oyspapsia^ ^ 71 FTFlCsuiT^rnigforncarly thirty years 1 from dyspepsia, Mrs. H. K. Duguale. h wife of a prominent business man of Warsaw, N. Y., writes; "For 2S years. I was a constant suitorer from ayspe|*u* and a weak stomaon. The lightest food produced 1 istroas, causing severe pain and the forma- \ tion of gas. No matter Low careful of my diet I suffered agonizing paiu afts r eating. ^ was treated by many physicians aud tried , numerous remedies without permanent help Two years ago I began taking Dr. Miles' | Nerve and Liver Pills and Nervine. Within a week I coinuienced improving, and per- ? si ting in the treatment 1 was soon ablo to , eat what I liked, with no evil effects I keep them at hand aud a .-ingle dose dispels i any old symptoms." Dr. Miles' Remedies are sold by all drug- r* ,^53 gists under a positive Mile*' guarantee, first bottle IfiL NfifV iil A ~!vl t benefits or money re- ^ ' funded. Hook on dis- n>'*<^atOros ? ease* of the heart and WuXy M?cfth nerves free. Address aT&lf/ f ' ? AfjLl ' DR. MILES MLD1CAL\j^ShajtTcT , PIMPLES f ".fly wife had |)|(ii|>lm on li?-r lure, but she has Oeou taking CASCAllfciTS unci tlicy b ive all tlltiappearod. I bad been troubled t with constipation for soinc tone, but after Ink in* the first Casearol I have bail no trouble w ith this ailment. Wo cannot sis ak too hi|?b<- i ly of f'ascarets " Khkh W ah i man. t ftTOH German town Ave.. Philadelphia. I*a I CATHARTIC ^ k&fccwi&fc TMAOf MARK RIOIftTIRID I Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Ta?te f?o<><1 fk> Oood, Never Slokon, WPiikrn. or <1 ripe lOr. 36c. 10c ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... |< Mtrllaf liaity CMeMf. ttkir*. Meetreal. Rw Vat. tit 1 J MA TA DA A Sold anil guaranteed by all dm* i nU-IU'DAU riiU to CV KK Tobacco llabil. 1 i extracted his tooth without on. Neither pain nor after ?ting. My methods suggest n.stead. j >whow" and me facilities for lentistry at tho least cost, to Gold Crown and Bridge nations and estimates. jge, Dentist. !R, 8. C. "The inhabitants of the towns n .and near the Ya<pii valley are n a state of terror. "(ion Torres, commander of he first military zone, which in ludes Sonora, Sinaloa and bower California, who was in the field vith the Twelfth regiment, is relorted among the slain. ' No information is obtainable ret of the number of fighting Julians under arms, but if the outireftk is of the proportions of the ,var ended in 1SD7, the number nay be placed et between three ind four thousand. "This outbreak is a surprise to he State and army officials. "It is impossible to secure accurate figures as to the total num>er killed to d ite. but the est i nate at 50 011 each side is not orifcide:ed excessive.1' Charles Broadway ltouss, tlie* dind inillioniiiro merchant of Sew York city, has made gilts to iitblic enterprises in Winchester, C'a., his former home, aggregating *100,000. His latest gift van made last week, when lie presented the city with the sum >f $30,000 for the erection of a ity hall, coiuliti tned only upon he city contributing *lo,m)0 in iddition for that purpose. Mr Iionss sustained !'; h nuch of his property dm in ' tin* var by the raids ot t!ie l < tVhcn the war was ended he went o New York to recover some of lis stolen wealth and has sue ceiled. He D di\ iding hi- pr vith his native eitv, which was lecimated hy Grant's army. The effort to raise s:.,ooo for lie erection of a mouinenl to Gen Mart Gary has not l?cen ahar.doi. d. The otlicers of the association vill make u linul effort t<> raise he amount hy l'.KMt, and if they ail, the association will disband. \ THOUSAND TO.NGi i!S Could not express the rapture >f Annio 10 Springer, of 11 *Jd Howard st., Philadelphia, Pa., vhen she found that Dr Kind's Sew Discovery for Consumption tad completely cured her of a tacking cough that for many years tad made life a burden. All other 'omedies and do -tors could give ter no help, hut she says of this [{opal Cure ? "it soon lemoved lie pain in my client and I can low bleep soundly, something 1 an scai eely remember doing before. I feel like sounding its praise throughout the Universe." "*o will every one who tries HiKing's New Discovery for any trouble of the Throat, Chest or Lungs. Price 50c. and ?1.00. Trial bottles free at Crawford Pro's Drug Store; every bottle guaranteed. Ilrtita with too wkaUtor 70a oontlooa Orr*? killing loOarn. hthll. NO T? IU(^J 1 nrnorn lha daalr* far U?l>*.o, ?Ut ^41 Ml HH n> MrronilMrtM ?tmIi nleo^fl . IVI^P' Una, [mrtAaa tha blood, I I /X toToa loot oohood. I I l^oo# boioa *?* too atro*?l^| I * 1 JJ^oold ?m0M Is haoitb.no * I ^^A^oo??.i cm r?TB? 7 M |i^"OTOHAC(roo own druirltt who J |l w * ir Toko it with ^ Vl^^^owill,pott, ntly, paraialantly Ota hoi, !. aaoolly curaa, I bviea, MM, Essasva. Fattening Ilogs. No country on earth can produce pork as cheaply ns we can. No fault can ho found with hams and shoulders of American hogs, and only the absence of lean streaks prevents our bacon from taking first place. J'nder present c< nd:tions we can not afford to produco bacon such as comes from Denmark anil Ireland, because there is more profit in producing weight with corn. With all these advantages of cheap food and favorable climatic conditions, wo can prod.ice pork very cheaply, but wo should not bo content with this. Wo should try to produce bettor pork than wo do without adding to the cost. (\ cry few farmers would say tlicy (Id not know sill about raising hogs, but the truth i?, very few really do know tlio best way to feed for the best results in quality, gain in weight and honlthfulness. Most farmers arc inclined to think the best way to feed a lot of hogs is to put them in a lot and keep corn by them all the time. Corn and corn alone is enough for a hog, they think, and to feed this in an unlimited quantity requires neither judgment n r sense. Tho average farmer does not read, nor does he bother himself much | with thinking. The man who is above the average reads and thinks, and he knows there is much to learn in even so simple an operation as raising a hog. lie knows that corn alone does not urnish all the elements that go to make perfect work. The thinkI ing farmer provides pastures of clover or blue grass for his pigs and gets them up to 100 pounds or above with grass, wheat, bran, skim milk and such nitrogenous feed as m ike lean meat and bone. 1 hen he feeds corn and oats and bran, and toward the last feeds Mill the corn tho animals will cat with a good appetite, and goes ; into the market with a finished product that he may be proundof, which has not cost him any more than a full corn fed hog would have cost. When nll/ farmers follow this course then will American pork have come into its own and the price will rise to its true value. - Nebraska Farm Journal. \ CONGRESSMAN ROBBED. Was Traveling in Europe With a Small Fortune in Pocketbook. Is, Vug 2. ? William C hovering, a member of the United Slates hainc of representatives from Massachusetts, was robbed Saturday last while on his way from Ostein! to this city. Mr hovering while in tho station at Ostein! was jostled by two men, but look little notice of the occui ronec at the time. On arriving at this city, however, he discovered that his pocket nook, together with S Id,000 worth valuable papers and notes for 865 1,01111,1 , i rliii,r tiiwl /ltun J . ^ Mt?<? MIOH|/|K Ul Ull. Mr Lovoring ut once notified tliw authorities, and the matter was placed in tho hands of tho police. SUM! ItKWAKDi 9lOO Tile it'i'lcrn of this |mj?er will ho pleased to learn that there is at l-ast one dreaded disease thai science has la-en a le to cure in all its stage* an<l that is Ailarrli Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Cafarrh Cure is taken internally, acting dir<ctly upon the blood and mucous suTraces of the system.thereby destroying the toll ndatToii-of I he disease, and giving the patient strength hy huild( ing up the constitution and assisting nature in doing i<s work The proprietors have so much faith in its i curative powers, that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any cast, that it fall* to cure. Hend for list of tesli1 monlals Address, J F. CHENEY A CO., , Toledo. O. MT.Sjid by Drugg'sts, | Mo. I Wanted?An Idea S252S 1 protect your IdNa; th?r mil twin* you w?*MS writ* JOHN WKDDHiHUHN * OO., PtMl AMs mm, '.Vuhiniiou, i>. 0.. ior (Mr prtM w :#? ? * t l.tniSw