University of South Carolina Libraries
W3S // / I f A ' 'i y / / C _ ~/f r - - 1' ?.?.. - -' --** '. -' ... . _ _-_ _ T-?.L '. - ' .: ? **S$bilow a. oartxr. 1 - in ,fn - ? r? rmriMii m-m. i ...n ,, T ??? ri iu', * ? lnv? ud lfAMam f ^ >i KJ Axsisn" ^ ,VV';UvVKm;lY. L.ANUA8TE tt. 8. 0.. BELM'EMBEU 17, 1904 h?1A BL is iTeTT " ? ^>2 READY FOR r-xa sea -V' 1 have just received a which I will sell at Prices tomers. I carry everythin class grocery is expecetwd ti I also carry a full line i SHOES, NOTIOI DRY GOODS, BEWWG STOVI 1 am located South of Post Strictly Cash business enabling me toniers. Give toe u trial an.I I am prica ami tju-ility. G. C C South E- D. Bowers, W. G. Bowers| | BOWERS' BROS. Builders and Contractors 1 Lumber, mII kin<H. for sale. DrtSnirig and Matching at short notice Turnul work and Scroll work aapeclaitv. tidf Ivo IT ? >-ir or 'erH. BOWERS BROS. Near Depot. F?'?y. 23. 1904. Furman University, Greenville, S. C. Edwin MoNf.il Poteat, President. Courses leading to the degree of linclc elor of Arts(B Aland Aiaar r of Aria (M A) li brary lV-udir.u Room L?sb<oratories, larue and coni'or'ab e d-?rmitoiies, ex ei aes reduced t<> a millinnnUi Next > eaaion b gins Sep* 11. For rooms a^p'y io Pint H P? ( cok, For catalogue 'T in for mud >i>, address. 1 he Necreturv of the Fueuhv wnrninn r.m.i IIUl 1 Uliy UUULILJUU Spartanburg, S. C. Henry n. snydkh, Litt. D., M. A.. President. Four lull College courses Favorable surroundings Clevebud ricienee Hall, Gj nnutsiuni Aiidetic gmuiidH, Lecture course, Library futilities. 51st year buglus r*rpt. 21?t 15)04. J a Gatuewell, Secretary. WOFFORD COLLEGE FITTING SCHOOL, SPARTANBURG, S. C. Elegant new building t arefu- attention t>> individual etude: te. Hoard h< d tuili ii for year $110. All iuforma-ion g veil by A. M. DUPkk, Head Master. J. E. RmEDfiEJDentH Lancaster, S. C. WurkLng on credit doesn't pay, and my terms from this time henceforth arestiictly cash. RecLSonaDld rrtcos. Gold Pilling $1.50 Amalgam Filling 75 eta. Cement F'lling 75 et RUBBXR PLATE, Full upper ?et of teeth $12.00 Upper and lower set $25 50 These prices are atrictly for cash. No work don? except for cash or good security. J. E. RUTLEDGE. Dentist. B A>" HER &'A 'l V E the moat * ?all?o ?<?? - " , .vr%r!<*. I Foley's Money Tar for children,safe,sure. No opiate* BUSINESS! Al Ixa ?*> ci*o r nice line of GROCERIES that will please my Cus= g in stock that a first ) handle. b. of It *> '{a ?o, PANTS, : i MACHINES, 5 SS, GUNS, ETC.:: Office on Main Stieet, will do a In to make closer prieo to my cu6- te 6ure 1 can pleaso you in both m A ARNES. s of Post Office. f I As to Sick Cows. b? \ Reader Wants to Know What n( is the Matter With His Herd. ci To the Editor of The State: Will you kindly publish this: I y( have quite a number of sick cows. m Thev have been on hjv rivpr nlant a J K tv ation all summer, in fact, us that jj is ni) only pasture and as I have \\ raised all my cows, I uii^iit say it they have boon on the river all jj their lives. A week ago 1 found in ihv pusture a dead cow and on going to the bunch 1 found a number of ^ droopy ones. 1 bud them all ^ brought'home and put in my lot ^ and since last Friday they have "j been steadily dying at the rato of . ? in tro'ii two to four a day. I have . P1 1 ist 12 old and young ones in that time and now have 3-f sick ones <T| They died in from three to four * st days after they show they are * pi sick. On opening them 1 find the ^ third stomach, or ''manifold" or "book," as it is variously culled, is tilled with dry food?as dry as a powder house?and of course very hard. The spleen seems a little ^ too large and the gaol is coated ol with a coarse rough formation. ^ All who see the cows pronounce it ^ fever, but this "manifold" is the ni immediate cause of their death, 8( whether it is the result of the 8< fever o" the direct cause 1 hm not ei able to say. It seems I can get ai nothing to penetrate this "mani fold" und soften the food. I will greatly appreciate any information about treating 4.his disease or advice, either through the columns of The State or ud ] dressed to me at my po3? office, JenuingH, S. C. \ John D. Lutner." Jennings, Sept. 14. FEARFUL ODLB A<->AINS5 HIM. T Bedridden, alone and destitute. ,j Such, in brief was the condition of an old soldier by name of J. J. Havens, Versailles, O. For years he was troubled with Kidney d?s in ease and neither doctors nor tried- dt icino gave him relief. At length , ho tried Electric Bittors. It put him nn hla f>.ol ir? uhfirt in'ilnn ..n/4 ? ?'? uiu * v*> *. mi nnv/l % \/| MVl UIIU now he testiiies, t4I am on tho road to complete recovery." Best on earth for Liver and Kidney troubles and all forma of Stomach ^ and Bowel Complaints. Only 50c V( Guarantee 1 by Crawford Bros., J ? F Mackoy & Co., and Funderburk Pharmacy. Happenings in The State. . 4. 3 Chronicled by the Alert Corespondents of the Columbia State. COL. E. K M'IVEK DEAD. Darlington, Sept. 13.?Col. It. Mclvcr died this morning 3.30 o'clock. fl~ ? no luiju. ucuve pun in mo remiption of Smith Carolina in 176 ami wbon (ion. Hampton as niu le governor he was one of 0 first appointed to servo on his air. Dariag the incumbency of ov Richardson Col. Mclver was ipointed to fill out the unexpir1 term of the state treasurer, one Bamberg, who died soon nfr ho was elected. Being a farer he took great interest in the gricultural society, of which soety, he was president for two Bars. Thero was no inoie en- ! uisinstic Confederate survivor. ormer Sumter Woman May Fall Heir To Twenty Million. Sumter, Sept. 13. ? Thero has sen published in a New York iwspaper that Mrs. Sigmnnd folk, a restaurant keeper of that ty, has fallen heir to $20,000,-| 'II ? ?... J il ? -* - jv, i-ue ueuin or a orother in >nili Africa Her husband forerly clerked for .1 Kyttenhdrg Sous ?i U ??c Hill, this county, e was known here as Sigmund /olkowUki, he has dropped the owiski" to-his irMme. Tfle fiini- j y are reraombered well here Ivij ? . A Iw 1; AuLD DEAD Camden, Sept. 13. ? Uev. .. II. Eurle, pastor of the Lyteton Streot Methodist church, 10I here this morning at 10 'clock. Ilia health he^an fa:! ig some six months atro and Um. ito h>s patient efforts for iliof he has heen gradually rowing weaker. Hih fathor and veral brothers died in their rime of the same malady and lr. Earle looked upon his illness i fatal from the first attack. Explosion at Oiympia Mills. | Vs a result of the i upinre of ono f the tubes in boiler No, 3 of the lympia mill's buttery of 12 ahull Safety boilers yesterday mrning at 11.30, Sholton .John>n, u colored fireman, was fatally raided, and vVest Adams, nnoth* colored fireman, was painfully nd seriously burned about the U 1 1 * 1. ivu Muuita itiid ieoi CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. lis Kind You Have Always Bought ? Lynchera Indictod. II M _'I1 * mmisviue, Alii., Sept. 14.? ho special grand jury invcstigiing Ihc Lynching of Horace laplcs, tlio negio who killed >bn Waldrop, hay roported ten allotments aguiust alleged mur?rers of the mob. Arrest will lickly follow. Used For l'uciiiiioiiist. Dr. C. 1*. Bishop of Agncw, lich., says, ?'havo used Foley's a>ney and L'i r in th?*eo very sell ro cases of pneumonia with ooct ro.?nlts hi every caso." lie ise suostilutus. Sold by Fundei urk Pharmacy. % tieorgetown Swept By Heavy fi Cyclone. IVn Thousand Dollars Dumnge Done in the City?ltice Crop Greatly Damaged S| S; ocial to Tho State Georgetown, Sept. 14.? The -F ?voi st storm since Oct. 20th, 1003 w passed over this section last night at and this morning. From a nor- sti uial reading of20.01 the barometer ol dropped Isist night to 28.95. t lie hi wind begun to riso at about 9 gi o'clock, coining from the north- m east in gusts ihnt increased in w violence each hour accompanied t< by heavy showers of ruin nnd at- w turned a maximuu velocity of F about 80 miles nn hour near tuidnigbt. Towards morning the o< wind changed completely mound g blowing strongly from the south- a west. The storm came without w warning from the weather bureau n and the rice planters have suffer- t< ed severely. A large part of the e I ci op being cut down and lying in tl the tields. The damage to pro fi perty in town will foot up fully tl $10,000 Many shads trees have tl been stripped and uprooted. The b county has not been heard from, the telephone lino being down, g Tugs sent to the island early this N in uning have returned ard rep rt " all safe This afternoon th< wino tl has subsided l> it the skv s st ill 8 overcast with threatc ug cl i uds. v V ; V . - CONSIDERABLE DAMAO!: A? MARION Marion, Sept. 14. -A terrific storm has hoen raging since last . n n night, Houses -.re' blown ('own, trees up* ioted telegraphic communication is entirely suspended. Crop, are ruined and the electiic ' . v ! _ at wires aro broken down in i . . . n many placs. Hommumcatinn i ven by private conveyance is cut off. No fatalities have been re ' ported, but information as to the j extent of the damage in tho county is very meagre. ^ SEVERE IN FLORENCE. Florence, Sept. 14.?A severe ( wind and rain storm struck this I place last night about 12 o'clock t and raged incessantly until 1 oclock 1 today. A great many shade trees s in tho city were blown down, se- fc vera! fences demolished and con- t siderable damage done in break- d ing skylights and plate glasss t1, lu show windows. Reports from v the country say that the cotton ? crop is badly damaged Tho d .......la Ll?l- ? ? ' unus nit) UlUCKUd Willi It'CCS and I] tho telephone wires are badly n bvoked up. In the city trees t were blown on several houses but t nono were damaged to a great ex il r> r5 tent. il General Over North Carolina. lialeigb, N. C., Sept. 14.?Tho ^ State was swept today by a storm e of cyclone violenco. At Mount Olive a negro church building o was demolished and a number of p houses blown down, in one of ^ which an aged woman named Mus J grave was caught and seriously j hurt, and a small negro child fa. tallv ini tired. %! V ? ? At Durham chimneys wore prostrated, roofs blown off and much ft damage clone wires Near War- c renton, houses, trees and fences p wero lovehd by a tornado which ( swept a path toward Virginia 100 miles long. Thus far, howuvet j? no fatalitios have been reported from tbnt section. 11 iven Preliminary Hearing. egro Charged \\r 11ii Attempted .j.( \BiSiiu11 Ipon Wi ito Girl at Brevard, N C , Hold for ^ I ho i lrial. . alrea . ,n, .. prep poem I to 1 ho htnto. .. tion Brevanl, N. C., Sopt. 13. ? ... . whlC iirrnan Hutchinson, the nemo r. two hum it is alleged lust 1 uesdiv . . . , - OV t tempted to commit criminal us- ?: . . SPlll! in It on the lU-vinr ?iM duughtei * . rot' < : a welMo-do rico and s>11?:?r ,, Mor roker of Now Orleans, was tod:i\ . in, ivon a preliminary hearing, and ^ ? a result of the evidence taken .. a fo< as bound over until the next . , old i nn <?f the superior court which . noit ill not bo held here until next , end ebruary. . . ui? Hutchinson persistently declur1 his innocence, but ho could , cd a: ive 110 clear account of his whereveo bouts at tho exact time the crime mini 'as attempted, and it was this ^ oason particularly, as well as tho , , and sstimony of a number of witness . . , . new s, who testified as to his be inn m . . and lie locality referred to, and the! ^ net that his shoos littod perfectly J ^ ^ tie tracts found there, on which! . ' e Of O tie grounds for his detention were , nect ased. The girl, who to avoid publicity, ? ... fore uve her testimony privately to . , ,, new lagistrates Shipman and lien- ^ :-g, would not positively identify ' tie negro as her assailant, though ho said his looks and clothes were u im .L sevc ery much like tno man. I* bus boon recalled that when C( s> GV01 he negro was first brought boforo ' er ho was told to repeat tho fords, ''Shake hands with mo," m ii order that she might recognize ho tone of his voice if possible. nd that when doing Iliis, he said, . best 'Shake hands with me?Is that that 1 said to you ?" In tho am ainds of the few who were pros- imM lit at the interview tins was a ' a ilain, though unconscious admis. ('t< ion of his being tiio person who ' aid addressed her. T 'eculiar Kscapo Of Criminal ' M COU Bristol, Va , Sept. 13. ? Wiley jibson, a youth being held in tho joo county j til at Joncsvillo,Va., '>U' o await conveyance to tho pen at tichmond to servo a ti-'o years' uU ontcuce for robber;*, made good lis escape yesterday by depar- m?' ing from tho prison clad in the c Iress and bonnet of his aged ... Fiv notlier, who had boon left alono vitli her son, thut she might suy ;ood bye. Gibsons' osc.ipo was ^ liscovored when a fellow prisoler aftor the departure of his U0( nother want to the young robter's cell to comfort him, and m ' hero found the aged mothei 1 ct Ircssed in the clothes her son had % *u liscardod. , and WMAT 13 LIFE. ,n 1 In the last analysis nobody ' ,(r>l mows, but we do know that it is ^ mder strict law. Abuse that law 'it i" von slightly, pain results. Ir? 1 egulur living means derangement if the organs, resulting in consti- jj intion, Headache or Liver troublo >r. Kings now life pills quickly ' 1 o adjusts this. It's gentle, yet borough. ' ?niy 'JDe at Crawford sion Iros. .J. F. Mnckoy Co , an<l com I'underburk Pharmacy. (ltje Mr. K. C. Logan, of Kingstroo, l>r?l signer of the ordinanco of so- tho eiston, is dead. This leaves but hreo survivors of tho convention, Rwir hoy being Mr. 11. 11 Thompson, &igm f VVulhallu; l)r. Carlisle, of ipartnnhurg, and Col. Joseph )aniel Pope, of Columbia. tng< Muwmnts ut Springstein iter Lantern. in Springstein cottou n.il 1 uiny will enlarge their mill in ltnr future, a squad of men ,?ly having begun excavating, aratory to lading the foumtafor tin' additional building, h will be 1 Iti by .~?o feet ami st< lies high. It is proposed lie authorities to mhl b,l>-is m : i i ? 1 ' 11n, ?II!I llurcSMli v IlKlCnilK ry opening and j?r<*; nrinu cnllon, c d\ ing machinery will ho put and additions will bo made to inishing plunt. The company >v weeks ago purchased the snloroc. school property to the h of tho mill, and it. is at this of tho mill that tho now build, will 1)0 croetod. Told; has necntly boon rcsuin fter hoi11ir suspended for three ks, durinj* which iptite a iher ol' improvements were o. 'lhreo now one humlrod tifty horso | owor boilers, and engine oylir.dois worn put in other improvements made. i?;ht work has been shut down pother and it is tin- impression no of the men prominently con cd with tho mill that it will ir ho resumed. It will there i not bo necessary to erect any buildings for the operatives, bout the same number of hands lw> iminliivixl 'w vi'lmn 1 lw? mill 1"" ' ~ * " both day and night. About !ii hundred hands will bo ncary to operate machinery when ything io completed. The capacity will linn bo 14,112 dies and 1192 looms and about e thousand bales of cotton will iscd per your. ho Springstein is < tie of the nulls in this section, being ug the ftw in this part of the it ry u hich inaiiufactiu o.s solely dard staple ginghams. It is silently managed, as shown ho addition" which arts neccsto be made. ho management in no hurry unplete the now building and ip it with machinery, as the hot at this time is lather dull, s thought, however that the crs' stock on hands will soon mie exhausted and business will 3ssarily pick up a little later, the mill with all iis improveits will tie running to its full acity. ? - w e?e Georgia Olliecrs Will Ho Tried by Com tm il Iial. vtlunta, Gi?.. Sept. 1 :> ?After ?ivi11l; and considering the full art of tho Statcsbor.? court of airy, (iov IVrrell has ordered )urt martial to deei 'e a- to ithcr or not Cup!. Hitch, Lieut 11, Lieut, Grin r, Lieut. Cone Lieut Morrison were derelict heir duty (hiring the recent 11?lc at State.sboro. 'lie court martial will convene ewunnah Sept. lib. lie report of tho court of in^ y amounts practically to an etnient oftho? fliccrsin cliuigc lie troops at Ktutcsboro. Lieut ntyro was tho ( nly eomtnis rd otlioer exonerated hv the ; t. llis action in making nn ni])t t > withstand the molt and :ect the prisoners is praised by court. c y.\. m 4Z5 ~x~l x ./til.. ?. *? /> ^6 Kind Yiiii Hate Always Baught -For Kent 1 Five room eot ?. Apply to ,1. M. 11<>od.