The Lancaster ledger. (Lancaster, S.C.) 1852-1905, September 18, 1901, Image 1
i '
? I "
I ^ Funnily ?Jf*o*rpap cr : For C*e cf (Jke Political, Septal, AyrtcmtCmral mad Gnamnarr&al Fmkaaaata. j ^y.SB ^4
?"*rrTn~r^~~~r~' " i. : . ?; . 1. 1 f . , ^
Mil 41 >v ijj -i\ IjY L \ hi E i ii K ft IK 1I ?ifci/U?^ ? .. 1
o? GE
Our Buyer i
expect great thi
cheapest stock o
? ^
To show oui
pE<
<3ries unci Laces will be the Bpecial
Some great Values will be offered.
Something Special ii
We are solo Agents for "Que
be the best ladyiss shoo in the Uni
e? 1 ?*
nuiw ior goou wear. Wo still hav
dren's slippers and low cut ties wl
prices.
LANC1
QBSTfi CUMIN & GEORGIA
^ EITEBSIOI B:1 C0MP48Y
General Passenger Department.
Schedule; Effective Junt 15th, 11J01.
Eastern Time.
' V * |
wk8j bound
JLkavks. No. 11 No. Ho. No 33.
Dally.
^?'?deu 8 20* 12 50p
VVeHtville ? 20a 1 27t>
*Kerehaw 10 50a 2 0-p
Heath Springs 1120a 212p
, I anca>ter 12 20p 2 47p
River*i?te 12 40p 2 50p
4'itlawbi Jet 2 30p 3 lOp
Roe* Hill 4 OOp 3 40p
York?ille 5 20p 4 18p
Hickory Grove 8 05 4 50p
Akrivks.
Blaokaburg 6 60p 5 20p
leavks
PlackHburg 5 45a 5 25n
Patteraon Hpg 7 45a 5 49p
Shelbtr 8 20a 6 00p
Henrietta 9 25a 6 41p
Pnreet t 'ily 9 55a 8 59p
Rutherforuton 10 30a 7 15p
Thermal t'lty 12 00a 7 60p
a uuy v ru.
Marion 1 OOp 8 30p
KASTBOUND I
.. I
No. 82. N/> 81 io I
Daily.
leavfs.
Marion 5 04)p 2 OOp
Thermal City 5 36p 2 4ft p
ftutherfordton K05p 3 26p
Forertt City 0 20p 3 50p
Henrietta 6 3Sp 4 :0p
iKholbv 7 15p 0 OOp
Patteraon Kpg 7 25p 0 12p
arrive
Blacksburg 7 48p 6 40p
Leaves.
Blackaburg 8 15p 7 00a
Hickory Grove 8 45p 7 50a
Yorkviile 0 I5p 8 50a
Rock Hill 10OOp 12 00a
i atawba Jet 10 20p 1 30p
Riveraide 10 40p 2 OOp
Lancaster 10 553 2 87p
Heath Springs 11 20p 3 15p
*Kt?rehaw 11 85p 4 lOp
Weatville 11 60p 4 30u
arrive.
Camden 12 25a 5 30p
OAFFNEY BRANCH,
westbound.
No. 16. NO. 13.
LlBAVKH.
Blaoksnurg 5 30p 6 00a
iA K1VE8.
Oaftney 6 lOp 6 40%
KABTBOUND.
Lbavfs.
Gaffbey 7 10a 6 40p
A RIVES
Blacksburg 7 60a 7 20p
* 20 Minutes for dinner.
Note?Trains Noa. 32 and 33 are
operated daily.
I Trains Noe. 34 , 86, 11, 12, 13, 14. 16
and 16 areoperated daily exoept HunConnections:
At Camden with
Southern Ry., 8. A. L.. and A. C.
Line. At Lancaster with L A C. R,
B. A Catawba Junction with Seaboard
Air Line. AC Rock Hill uith
Iovutuviu iwiwaj. At i oravma witli
Carolina 4 Northweetern R. R. At
Btaeksburx with Hootharn railway.
At Shelby and Rutharfordton with
6. A. ft. At 'arlon wl'h Southern
H. RAW, ,
iMlmTNTEUHiit
- ay I 1,^ *tik I A Jl H ^ ^ - I
FT
' TTINGJB
s now searching
ngs this season.
?f goods ever ofi<
VILL BE
* new stoek. AV
HAL Si
llisl (ill
mggle over prices now. Ktnbroidfeatures
for the next two weeks.
^ T ? J: ?' ??
.* wauiCit' a no OS I
un Quality" $.'i. Shoes, given uj? t<
ted States. Sold under full guar
e a good line of ladies and eliillieh
we offer at greatly red need
ISTER
III *11 m* it i
niiiiam sciuniey.
A Sketch of the Life of the
Twenty-Fifth President of the
Uniteu States.
Williem McKinley, twenty-fifth
President of the United State#,
was horn oe January '29, 1843, in
Nilee, Ohio. He received his
higher education at Allegheny
College and taught school for a
while. In 1861 he entered the
army as a volunteer in the Twinty-third
Ohio Regiment, was continuously
promoted till be became
captain and was brevetted major
in the United States volunteers by
President Lincoln for gallantry in
battle March 13, 1865.
After the war Muj. McKinley
studied law and began its practice
in 1867 at Canton, O., and there
his home has beeu ever since. He
served a term as presecutmg attorney
of Stark county. Beginning
in 1876 he represented the
district of which his county was a
part for 14 years in the eational
House of Representatives. As
j *l *
chmuuihu 01 io9 ways una matins
committ*# b? reported the tariff
BErdStimt
For Tiger.
No use to hunt timers with
bird-shot. It doesn't hurt the
tiger any and it's awfully risky
for you.
Consumption is a tiger
among diseases. It is stealthy
*?but once started it rapidly
eats up the flesh and destroys
the life. No use to go hunting
o o
it with ordinary food and medicine.
That's only bird-shot.
It still advances. Good heftvy
charges of Scott's Emulsion
will stop the advance. The
disease feels that.
Scott's Emulsion makes the
body strong to resist. It
soothes and toughens the lungs
and sustains the strength until
the disease wears itself out.
Send for free sample.
ICOT r a BOWNE. Ch??r>ia??. ? > Pearl St., N. Y.
jmc lad ti-oo, ?u druggist*.
. . ;u |
tEADY F?
;"tlie Northern nii
No time or exp
3red to the people
ESADY
ill promise some
UMMER
Is Oar Furniture and Car
You will find in this Departir
the home. Fine Parlor Suits, Ila
> niture. Dining Room outfits, odd ]
Down and Felt Mattresses, full 1 in
Rugs of every description, Curtai
Window Shades of every kind and
in an up to date Furniture and Ca;
MERC
... .
law of 1890. In November af 1
that year ha was dafaated for
Congress, his district having baan I
gerrymandered, but he reduced
the usual adverse majority of 3,*
000 to 300. In 1891 and again
in 1893 he was elected Governor
of his tiutive Slate, in the first
election by a plurality of 21,511
ano in ihe second by a plurality
of 80,995.
, Mr. McKinley was three tunee
a dclegate-at-large to the national
nominating couventien of his
party. In the conventions of
1884 and 1SS8 ha whs chairman
of the resolutions committee and
reported the platform. In the
tirst convention he supported J as.
G. Blaine and in the second John
Sherman. He was chairman of!
the convention of 1892 and sup.
ported the renominatiee of Ben* |
jacnin Harrison. Although he1
was not a candidate, he himself
received 182 votes for President
in that convention.
At St. Louie national Republican
convention, on June 18, 1890,
Mr. McKinley was nominated for
President, recieving 661 out of a
totul of 905 votes. He was elected
in the following November, receiving
271 alsnlnral
! against 176 for William J. Bryan,
i At th? Philadelphia national
convention of bis party in 1900,
President McKinley was re-nomiuutsd,
was again elacted Prasi-;
I dant in November of that year >
and was inaugurated at Washing^
t ton with imposing ceremonies on
the 4th of March of this yaar.
Church at Seneca Struck by
.Lightning and Burned.
Special to The State.
I Sanacu 10 t>l _ -'
I'v* iUiX11V 9lMpl9
of the Ar. M. G. Church vu struck
by lightning and sat on firs yestarday
aftarnoon. The church
was a frama building and was totally
destroyed. The fire burned
yery slowly and could haya bean
extinguished if there had been
ayailable water. But the building
was on the highest hill in tewn
and no water near so the fire en- i
gine could not be used. I
PR FALL
irkets for tlieir
ense will he spar'
;,of Lancaster.
IN TWO
pleasant surprise
SflLB
rss in IM
pet Department Up stairs!
lent everything needed to beautify
ndsome Bed Room Suits, Hall furpieces,
tine Chairs, Lounges, etc.,
le of Carpets, full line of Mattings,
us, Curtain Roles, Brass Rods,
price, in fact, everything carried
rpet store.
I1N T T I
n 1 1 L
Tbeodorc Roosetelt
Who Nov is President.
Ha Who Takes McKinley's Place.
He But Forty -Two Tears
Old.
Theodore Roosevelt is a member
of aa old Dutch family which
was founded in this coentry aWeut
the middle of the seventeenth
ceitnry by Klaas Marteneen
Roosevelt.
He was horn in New York city (
Octeber 27, 1858, and was pre- j
pared for Harvard by private ,
tutors. Young Roosevelt was
prominent in Harvard athletics,
and as one of the editors of the ,
undergraduate journal?the Advo
cate. A year of foreign travel
followed hiw graduation in 1880, I
and almost immediatelvthereafter
he entered upon a public career. ,
His tirst pobitien was that ef
Membership in the lower branch
of the New York Legislature, in |
which he sat during the sessions
1882 and the twe following years.
The bent of bis mind politically
was developed at this early stage
by his introduction of the first
ciYii service bill in the Legislature,
which bscame a law in 1883.
Ho was an independent candidato
for Mayor of Now York city
in 1886, with a republican oa- 1
dorseuient, but wait ?ot oloctcd. j
President Harrison appointed him (
a member of the Civil Service
Commission in May, 1869, and
he tarred at a member of the
board and it a president for six
years, displaying during the whole
of that period a determined purpose
to enforce the law. la May,
1895, ho resigned to become
presideat of the boaid of Police 1
commissioners of Now York city, i
is which position ho displayed
equal fearlessness. !
On the inauguration of Piesi- <
dent McKmley, in It97, Mr.
Roosevelt resigned from the Po- <
lice Board to become Assistant
XT I- ? * '
wv>?wi7 ?i iu? iu ,WP1CM I <
poniti*! he tarred natii the eutjpreak
ef ,the hoetilitiee with Spain,
ft*! ta.hi?.M?rgj fau N?,?jo?$ly
noribed by nb?, the reedUeae i
1 v
' >? *'
BUSINESS
choicest producti
ed in accumulatii
? WEEKS.
;s. In the mear
(JONTINI
We Call Special Attention to onr
which has been greatly enlarged
tion given to orders for quick delivei
aud sold at muket price.
A Great Chance for Retail Herein
We are doubled stocked on mac
During the next 30 days we make sp
grocery department many items at c<
will go at a sacrifice Bear in mind t
can be found in our stores, and our p
our aim and purposo to make our stc
part of the State.
E COM 1
f the naval branch of the service Pi
to enter upon that briaf and bril
liant contest. H
Whaa hostilities wara thraatan- P'
ad, Mr. Roosevelt left tha Navy j
Department to become lieutenant- ^
colonel af a regiment of Rough ,
Riders, of which Maj.^Gen. Leon- i
ard Wood was colonel. A part t ^
f this force embarked for Cuba i A
with the advance guard af Shaf- J
tar's army, os June 14, 1898, and , J1
took part in all tha engagements i
preceding tha capture of Santiago, j
including the battles of Las Guasi ' ^
mas and Kan Juan. On July 11 '
Roosevelt succeeded Wood as to
colanel of the regiment.
r o.
la September fallowing Col. ju
Roosevelt was made the Republi- in
can candidate for Governor of tr
New York, receiving more than ^
Lie
three-fourths of the votes of the
eu
convention, lie defeated'Augustus (r,
Van Wyck, the Democratic candi- Gf
date, at the Novernher election by ly
a plurality of 18,079. ^
At Philadelphia, Juue 25, 1900, *ir
the Republican National cenveation
unanimously nominated Col. ar
Roosevelt for the vice-Presidency. ?t
He was relunctant to accept the H
nomination, but was induced *
do ?o. Col. Roosevelt mad* a me- ?
morabl* campaigning tour of th* P
country, speaking in citi** and ?
town* from th* Atlantic to th*
I'acific.
Col. Roosevelt ha* he*n a hard
student *v*r siac* h* left collage, IV
asd numerous interesting volumes
ha** come from hi* pea. Among
th* number ar* "The Natal War
of 1812," "Hunting Trip* of a
Ranchman" and two other volumes 1*
of a similar character; volum** rii
of biography, having Thoma* H. yc
Benten, GouT*rn*ur Morris and nc
Oliver Cromwell for their subject, g)
a "History of the City ef New It
York;" two volumes on political pr
topics and a four-volume history yc
entitled "The Winning of the
West," hi* naest important liter 11
sry werk. Hip experience in the to
Santiago campaign has also been
ietpiled in graphic fern in the r
"Reugh Riders," published in ?
L899.
Vice-Presidents of the United
?Ut*s who have succeded to the
1
I r I . . Ij' I J
3S. J>=>
oil. You may
i^' the host and
1 while our
IRS!
Grocery Department.
and unproved. Prompt at ten ry.
All kinds of produce bought
mts.
>y things and wo ncod the room,
ecial prices on everything in our
?st aud even less ah ut I'M) l> >xe
hat there is nothing but what
rices are nlw-ivs right. It is
res the best trading place ill thin
D AN Y.
reaidncy buve been uk follows:
John Tyler, succeeded William
enry Harrison, (died of bilious
urisy) April 4, 1JS41.
Milliard Filmore, succeeded
achary Taylor (died of bilieus
er), July 9, 1S50.
Andrew Johnson, succeeded
brahan Lincoln (assassinated),
pril 15, 1865.
Cheater A. Arthur, succeeded
imea A. Gartield, (assassinated,)
>pt. 19, 1881.
IIFIR NK' KET IS OUT
A11 Sadieville, Ivy., was curious
> leurn the cause of the vast itn ovemont
in the health of Mrs*
P. Whitaker, who had for a
ng time endured untold sutlerg
from a chronic broncbitnl
ouble. "It s all due to Dr.
ing's New Discovery," writes
sr husband. "It completely
ired her atd also cured our little
and-daugnter of a severe attack
Whooping Cough. It positivecures
Coughs, Colds, La
rippo, Bronchitis, all Tin oat
id Lung troubles. Guaranteed
)tlles f)Oc and $1.00. Trial
jttles free at Crawford Bros.,
id .1. F. Maekey & Co.'s drug
ore.
ELLIOT &
CRAWFORD.
IEW BUGGIES!
NEW BUGGIES I
We have just received tl o
rettiest lot of Buggies and Car
ages you ever saw. We invite
)ur attention especially to our
)W, up to-date rubber tired bug'?Nothing
like it this country
must be seen to be fully apeciated,
so call and examine it
ur self.
We also hare now a lot of Nice
orses, and Harness and Saddles
fit them.
LLIOT &
CBAWFORD.
V
N*>VS* v .