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^ ' * M v v ^^SMiOW ft nATlTlgH- | ' ' ' XtaBflTjrM <n?in - n-"- n Av&atito^*r&1Zte>umK,?s-!?j&Mata, > ? tram ajtd I! imam. I * ' w ---^..^ -? - f "'_. . ^^I'lvilsWEKKLY. L A N C A 8 T E U S. C.. '. ?' U N K 11, !! )+ ESTABLISH I ;> '. ; H/Te j in it THURS1 ?4 ALLTE _Js! ? ' . [ I ! iss Cc Y(?'k quite : pe-.-e to j lin - y.W< ONC rte believe wi we art anxious for 3 1=2 jcats per yard tin sore and a Remembe Unca Beff to Aim liilili SIM nu U91 i i ^ ^/V.y* Ml MARCH : And to Invi IF T QnTF<s Ti LJ-J UI1L/1UU JL 1 t DME AND SEE OUR ( 86e3?E3sOro8BS8rej8y ippedge, our milliner, a while and spared n get a nice up-to-dat< & will also make A Special Displa IUR DRY GOC * i have the NICEST STOCK that has the public to see our goods. We I up. isk the prices when you are looking r we will not be undersold. ster Merca "UIIIV nr ni u a ? 24TH te {>? r 0 LOGOS ?r , stayed in New o pains or es e stock oi Mily ; IDS SIDE h ever been in Lancaster am have them ranging fron ; around. i ? utile Co, Happenings in Tiie State. ! As Chronicled by the Alert Correspondents of The Columbia Stute. SHOT IIV Ml so 11 VXOK. Greenville, June 7. ?Will Moonoy, a popular young nuin of the city, was accidentally shot [ last night about midnight. lie was leturninsr homo and finding the door locked, ho attempted to enter through a window. 11 is younger brother, Joe, was uwhkuuuu anu mistook him for a ! burglar, and shot him. Mr. Moonoy is not thought to bo seriously shot, though ho is painfully wounded, ono ball from the pistol striaing him in the loft ear. PAH DON KI) DYING MAN. Gov. Ileyward yesterday, upon receipt of word that Joseph Thompson, a negro sentenced in Greenville county this year to three years for manslaughter, was dying; ordered him released The petition had been refused previously, but the attorneys and others interested made the above showing and telegraphed it to the governor, so that there was no other action to be taken. ? Male. Prof. Gordon l>. Moore Will Fill History Chair. I The board of trustees i the! South Carolina college held 7n-1 other nil day session ve.-tt rday, wish the exception of Iho time spent in attendance upon the commencement exercises. (Jov.IIcyward, who h:.? 1 beer, detained by an engagement to speak at a lmn/ quet in Greenville returned to Colunibi i at 5 o'clock in the af^ term a ami went straight to the college from the depot. lie was a present when the matter of electing a professor of history was taken up. Dr. Gordon I>. Moore, former professor in Furrnan un iversity, wus elected on the second ballot. The members of the board with unanimity rcjoico over t I. ? It TA._ * iuu itsuiu i^r. moore is rocoirp nizcd us u profound scholar and thinker. Kenred on a Virginia farm, educated at Richmond collego and the Baptist Theological seminary in Loiusvillc, Ivy., he is beet known in his adopted State of South Carolina by his career as pustor of the Baptist church of Darlington and as professor in Furman university and associate! editor of the Baptist Courioi. ?' The State. , ! | Mother ar.d Child Killed by Lightning. O r-? | Jane and Bona Fair, wifo and 3-year-old daughter, lcspectivcly, of Myers Fair, a Taylor street negro restauranter who has accumulated much property, was in. stantly killed yesterday afternoon noar the "tin bridge'' by a bolt of lightning which descended the trunk of a tree under which the woman was at work washing clothos.?The State, 8th inst. DRIVEN TO DESPER/i I ION'. Living at an out of tho way place, remote from civilization, a family is often driven to despera. tion in case of accidont, resulting in Burns, Cuts, Wounds, Ulcers, etc. Lay in a supply of Bucklen's Arnica Salve. It's tho best on \ earth. 25c, at Crawford Bros., J. F. Mackey Co., and Fundcrburk Pharmacy, drugstores. * * r* ? ? v I Parker's Chances. i ilus 202 Instructed Del. gates so Far. Ilcurst lias 11:} Posi* lively For Him?-The I Probabilities Counting the delegates from Hawaii and Idaho, the Democrats have now elected Gibs of the GOl delegates to their national con- < vention at St. Louts. Granting that Idaho and Hawaii both have 1 leanings toward Hearst, Parker has 202 of the delegates, Henr.-t ( 143, while 22S are unioslructed I and the remainder are counted as i for favorite sons, like \Vnll,()lney and Gorman. Parker's positive strength of 1 202 is as follows: Alabama, 22: 1 Connecticut, It: Georgia, 20: I Indiana, 3b; New Hampshire, 1: ? Now York, T-S; Ohio, 4; and I Tennessee, 24. 1 Hearst's positive strength con sists of the following delegates: Arizona, 0: California, 20; ( Florida, 3; Iowa, 2(5: Kansas, (I: 1 Maine, 3: Massachusetts, (5; m Nevada, ti; Now Mexico, (5: Ohio, 11; Oregon, (5; Ivhode Island, (!;! South Dakota, .s; Washington,10; 1 West Virginia, 2; and Wyoming, (3. if, as ready stated, Hawaii 1 ! I 1 .? l-? #? ApAt'Olij l(Mt J ii . ! semtiled yesterday, chose dele- 1 gates for Hearst, as has licen c.\ pcotcd, notwithstanding leanings < toward Parker iii I<? <li*>. Hearst ' has 12 more delegates. I hon,according to advices from Illinois, i' 5-1 moro arc to t>o added to his i1 column when the Democratic state |! convention meets at Sprin:*!!' id. That would bring his stren.ili up i foH'7 del agates, but the total will 1 be reduced considerably by the < enforcement of the unit rule in sever*! delegations. Most of iho statisticians prefer 1 to place Mar*, land, with 1(5 dido- i gates; the District of Columbia, < with 6, and 'Vest Virginia, with i 12, in the Gorman cjlumn, but I that leaves the column of unin. structed delegates as follows: Florida, 7; Kansas, 14: Maine, b; Massachusetts, 1; Michigan, 2S; Minnesota, 2; Montana, G; Nebraska, 16; Now Hampshire, 4; Now Jcrsoy, 24; Ohio, 21; Oklahoma 6; Oregon, 2; Pennsylvania, OS; Rhode Island, 2; and South Carolina, 18. Thnvo o i'A iln!nnrofr(y vrd i t\ ! i IJVIV. t? IV/ t ^ V/l I W ' Vchosen, which is a liltlo less than one third of the whole. The last state to choose delegates wi'l be Missouri, the convonti in meeting Juue2'Jth at Joplin.? Washington Post. Warning If you have kidney or bladder trouble and do not use Foley's Kidney Cure, you will have only yourself to blame for results, as it positively cures all tonus of kidney and bladder diseases. <r> ca?-? Killed on the Southern. Charlotte, N. O., Juno 8.? Southern railway mail and passenger train No. 10, northbound, ran into an open switch near Salsbury tonight. Engineer Tyler 1). Ilaynes of Charlotte and his lire- | man, jim Wadkins, colored, were killed and an unkno vn liremun who was tiding on the engine was seriously hurt. No passenger was njnred. The engine ami mail car left the track. The Colorado Democrat o convention refused to instruct itsdclegates to the national convention. n rwo Convicted Of Arnold Murder. 'erry Butler ami John Carter May I>o Hanged?Jim Brown Convicted of Murder, Buv, Recommended to Mercy. ircenville News, 9th. Pcjry Butler and John Carter were convicted of the murder of Anson Arnold in the Court of Jenerul Session yesterday. The two other negroes named, in the indictment, Joe Parks and .Jesse Harrison, were acquitted: Connscl for the convicted negroes imtied lately gave notice of a motion for a new trial. Butler and Curler will probably bo sentenced tolay by .Judge Townscnd to he hanged. Four doomed men are now locked in tho county j lil. Byrd and Cois'.\oll have already been sentenced to die far tho niurler of Magistrate Cox, and the conviction of Butler and Carter adds two nio:c to the list. Tho record made by Solicitor Hoggs during the past nine days in this court has been remarkable. 11 o has secured convictions in seven-eights of the cases tried, md four of these have been for murder involving capital punish* inent. The docket has been one ?f the heaviest in the history of tlm county, and in almost every instance the cases 1 avo been bitterly contested. The Anson Ar noid (consumed tivo ilays, ind was a severe trial upon the Ulcer.; of the court and the attorneys interested, especially the solicitor, win conductod the prosecution. Jim Brown, a negro was tried )e-t '!(liy ami also convicted >? murder, hut the jury recommend d him to the mercy of the :ourt. This saves his neck, but makes it i in per ilivc upon the presiding judge to sentence him for life to imprisonment in the penitentiary. Troops and Miners Fight. Victor, Col., .June S. ? A pitch ed battle between the military and union miners was fought at Danville, the new mining camp, Id miies out of Victor, shortly after d o'clock this afternoon. John Carley, a union miner, was killed and live others. The trpops re turned to Victor at 8 o' clock to night, Wringing with them 14 cap tivu-. Before the special train loft Victor bearing the force under Gen. Bell it was reported that miners in hills about Dunnvillo numbered about 250 men, and that it was their intention to march into Victor tonight in a body and attempt to liberate by force the inmate- of the temporary 4,Bullpen" in Victor. That the force actually consisted of but 21 men is the statement of one of the 11 who were captured by the militia. Ten Years in I5e<l. K. A. Gray, I'., Ualivillc, [ml., writes: ten years 1 was confined to my bed with dis ease of my Kidneys. It was so severe that I could not move part of the time. k 1 consulted the very best medical sKiil available, but could trot no relief until Foley's Iv ln-y C ure was recommended to me 1 has been a Godsend to mo.'' Fold by Knderburk Phar ma cy.