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WEEK'S NEWS | STORIES RETOLD Events That Made a Stir Con1> densed to a Paragraph. I; WHAT WASHINGTON IS DOING News of Interest That Trickles From ] the White House and the Various ? Departments?Catalogue of | Crimea and Casualties. ^mDBBHmuniHimiiimRiiRiimnmHmBifmiiinmitiinunuHiisnuiuiiiit^ I. | Washington | Spl ' The drought in such cattle raising States as Kansas, Iowa, Nebraska, fel Oklahoma and the Southwest gener?&> <dly may cause an imprecedented rise f:' in the price of fresh beef. The situar y , tion is regarded with concern by Department ot Agriculture officials. j| V A public reprimand was administered to Ambassador Henry Lane Wilaon, as a result of his affront to Great |p; Britain, when the President forwarded a note to London repudiating the ^ Ambassador's statement Senator Saulsbury, of Delaware, in Produced a bill to increase the salary I ef the Vice President from $12,000 V to $25,000. r President Wilson was pleased over I Mexico's reception of Mr. Lind. f wninnnmu!?!!uiimnininiiirmniiiiH!mii!iiini!iiuiiM!niii!iiii[iuiiiHiBme Personal | iriJUMuuiauiiiuuiiuuiiiniuiiiiuuiimiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiHuiuiiimmniniutiihc (The Grand Duke Alexander Michael?vltdh, brother-in-law of the Czar of Russia, arrived for a visit to Barclay Varburton, of Philadelphia. Ex-President Ta?t notified the Tax Board of Cincinnati that he was a citi*en of New Haven, Conn., and no longer a resident of Cincinnati. John Raymond Audi, eighteen, son of a vice president of the Reading Railway Company, eloped with and married Miss Edith West, twentyeight, a trained nurse. Nat Goodwin, the comedian, sailed tor Europe with his fifth wife, on a honeymoon journey. I Sporting Ban Johnson has informed all imtiripfln T.ftaCTm n moires that no balk shall be charged to a pitcher when he, while in the act of pitching, accidentally drops the ball. Ban Johnson, president of the American League, said that the National Commission had decided to start the world's series on Monday. October 6. Pitcher Hedgepeth established a world's record at Petersburg, Va., when he pitched both games of a double header against Richmond and was hit safely but once in the eighteen consecutive innings. He was not scored against A new record for the International League was established when the Jersey City Skeeters and the Toronto Maple Leafs battled through twenty scoreless innings at Jersey City. Three hours and twenty minutes were required to play the game, which was called on account of darkness. giMMiiiiiiiiimiiMiiiiiiMniiaiininiiiaanmiwmimmiiutmmtiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiy General linnP!!im{!Rll!fl>il!lllllllll!HIH1t{lil!!!l!llllltlllllll!f!lll!1ll!lltUinnilllll!U1li^ Miss\ Krill, accused of the murder of Dr. Tron, ras discharged at Utica, N. Y. rTVU ? ~ V. Onotvin l ilt; yet ltd u auuy vi tuc uiiai uu Foundry Company, at Sharon, Fa., was destroyed by fire at a loss of $75,000. A thief entered the New York State National Bank in Albany and stole $870 from the paying teller's window. He escaped. That racing is being re-established ; on a firm basis was manifested by the j action of the Saratoga Association in announcing stake races for 1014 and 1915. Albert J. Fountain and Charles Davis, of Saratoga, N. Y., were kilied when their automobile struck a tree on a sudden turn of the road at the foot of a hill. The American tennis players who brought back the Davis Cup were cheered when they landed at New York, and Champion McLoughlin was hugged by tennis enthusiasts on the pier. W?at and rJiwne'ht r-nnriitioiis in the Middle West have become so serious ^bat corn and other crops are in peril of destruction and epidemics are threatened in various localities because of impure water. Live stock is perishing for lack of water and the Sre hazard is alarming. The trade reviews point to a maintenance of volume of business, made omewhat more conservative by the damage to the corn crop. Favorable conditions, among them better finanipial outlook due to the Treasury action, predominate in the business situation. At St. Joseph, Mo., three brothers, Frank, Hemry and M. A. Matheny, of Blockton, Iowa, were operated on for appendicitis the same day. The Rev. George R. Warren, ninety ce, the oldest minister in the Central Presbyterian Conference of the Methodist Church, is dead at his home in Tyrone, Pa. He preached tor nearly sixty yeara. All over Missouri, Kansas and Oklahoma heat records of a quarter of a century, it :a saia nave uotu i/iv&cu. The big Arkansas River, n^ar Wichita, is dry and so is the Xinne3C*h. Sfc'JSB. '?& &?' ,k ' - > The thermometer registered 110 deI grees in Kansas. | September 18 was set as the date ! for the trial of Governor Sulzer. i General Edward F. Jones, the Civil j War veteran, died at Bingharaton, N. ! Y.# aged 85 years. M. H. De Young has resigned as chairman of the Panama-Pacific Exposition Committee. The Knights Templar, in session at Denver, voted to hold their next convention at Los Angeles. The State Commissioner of Agricul S ture estimates the loss by the drought in Kentucky at $30,000,000. William H. Locke, president of the National League Baseball Club, died at Ventnor, N. J., after a long illness. Mrs. Hinman Barrett, 72 years old, | of Indianapolis, Ind., died when she saw her dog killed by a blow from a whip. Samuel Lewine, a feather manufacturer, of New York city, died of acute j indigestion, while riding in an auto| mobiles Governor Sulzer and Lieutenant Governor Glynn both undertook to transact the State's business at the Capitol, Albany. Nine miners were killed when a cable pin on an oar car snapped, causing it to speed down a 2,000 foot grade near Clifton., Ariz. Sanders Franklin and Henry Ralston, two negroes, were lynched at Ardmore, Okla. They were accused of killing a man and a boy. The seven cotton mills of the Fall River Iron Works, shut down since early in May, will resume operations. The mills employ 5,000 hands. c?:_ A -4.1 Tmv XT i Oil a.i Liiui ui iiuji, 11. j Y., was elected Grand Commander of I the Grand Encampment of the Knights Templar of the United State. The Manila, now at Mare Island Navy Yard, is offered for sale at $10,000. She was captured by Admiral Dewey in the battle of Manila Harbor. Abraham Snyder, of No. 65 Market street, Paterson, N. J., is dead as the result of being bitten by a spider during a straw ride in Sullivan County, N. Y. Mrs. Nelson L. Pollard, of Elizabeth, N. J., accused of sending "poisoned pen" letters to some of her neighbors, was held for the Federal Grand Jury. Porter Charlton was taken from New York in the steerage of the Italian steamer De d' Italia to answer to the charge of killing his wife at Lake Como, Italy, in 1910. Friends of Mayor Gaynor, of New York, told Tammany leaders mat ne oould not afford to accept a renomination if the fight with Governor Sulzer were carried to much greater lengths.v Henry Jackson, a negro, of Philadelphia, who pleaded guilty to seven indictments charging him with robbing seven saloons at Camden, N. J., was sentenced to 25 years in the State j prison at Trenton. Water famine in Butler and Bloomingdale boroughs, New Jersey, has been averted through the generosity of Morris and Warren Kinney, cigarette manufacturers, who will lift the sluice gate of the Kinneylan lake. A factory firm in New Britain, Conn., enclosed notices in the stenographers' pay envelopes warning them against slit skirts and transparent hose and waists. Many of the young women took umbrage at the order. Messrs. Sulzer and Glynn, each | claiming to be Governor, signed requisitions. Efforts to arrange a plan for a test in the courts did not succeed. A Sulzer adviser said Tammany had paicf cash for votes to impeach the Governor. The Reading Coal and Iron Company gave assurances to the widows of all the men killed at East Brookside shaft, where twenty miners met death two weeks ago, that they will be carried on the paydoll of the company indefinitely. The Roseville Trust Company, of Newark, N. J., was closed by State | officials after a shortage of at least | $300,000 was discovered. Detectives ! and poiice were seeking Raymond E. | Smith, Secretary and Treasurer and i virtual head of the concern. | UIIIIIIIIl!!!li;!IIt!(llt:iniII!lllil!l!UI!!!!!!(M!IIimiUlini!l!ll!!!I!!lI!ll(lliHin>nifffts I i r+ jc ; | rureiign I | filIilili]li!tl!!lltl!l!llllilil)H!Hllii!lil!llllt{?!iHlliUIII!IHII!l!!lll!IIIIIIIIiIIIUIIIilKi ! Prince Albert of Monaco arrived at | Halifax on the steamer Princess | Alice. | Chinese government troops captured I j a position that commands the city of i I Nanking. j J The Mexican Constitutionalists are ; ! reported to have captured Saitillo, the j i capital of Coahulia. i King George's grouse shooting party j I of six guns at Dallowgill bagged 43i' j ! brace in one day. Followers of the Mad Mullah in j Somaliland ambushed and badly crip- j pled a native British force. Alexander Gibson, lumber king of j New Brunswick province, died at Fre- j derieton. N. B? aged 94 years. | Czar Nicholas has decided to e?- j tabl-ish a department of sports for the j promotion of athletics throughout the Russian empire. It was announced in Tokio that the j | United States would favor the pay- l ment of an indemnity to Japanese who \ were affected by the Alien Land law of California. Aim? Moret, the French painter and I officer of the Legion of Honor, died ! at Dinardt, France, aged 63 years. August Ferdinand Babel, the Ger- ! man Socialist leader, died at Zurich, j Switzerland, aged 73. Bebel Joined i the German labor movement in 1862. ' j Application has been made to the ; authorities at Heidelberg to declare > "dead" officially 14 persons who emi- i grated to the United States in 1S52. ! Pastor Schuster, a noted ornitholo ! jEflftt of Berlin, declared that the ; i French war offi .'e will ti*nin <>*?srl-os t-n ! harass possible enemies in aero| planet. Much Interest In Farming. Barnett.?An enthusiastic farmer meeting held in the academy at Ga nett, Hampton county, marks clear the day of new interest in this gre, work. Men, women and children a sembled for miles out of town to me* lecturers from Clemson college. J. 3 Riley was called to the chair, and tb Methodist minister, the Rev. J. I Brown, opened the meeting with a appropriate prayer. Prof. J. M. Bu gess ably discussed live stock an silos. Prof. C. F. Niven ably folio? ed on fruits and truck. Hall Storm Does Much Damage. Laurens.?A hail storm in the vicii ity of Boyd's Cross Roads, wroug'n considerable damage to the growin crops, eight or ten farms being strucl The young cotton was badly beate down and stripped of limbs and foi age. Corn also suffered from th hail and wind. At Madden an old gi: house was blown down and in the cit r\f T ,9 liron e a noffrn woo rattan' Vi. AUVtUl V/JU.U fc* V ViiUi Vi* " ug M 1 ed. At Watts mills a small house wa struck by lightning, a bureau d? molished and a large opening rent i] the gable of the cabin. Want Money to Carry on Work. Columbia.?J. W. Babcock, M. D and E. H. Aull, representing the Stat Hospital for the Insane commission appeared before the sinking fund com mission and asked for a loan of $25. 000 to carry on the development worl at state fair. It was held by th< members of the asylum commission unon the advice of the attorney gen eral, that an act of the legislaturi gave them the right to borrow th< money. The proposition was takei under consideration by the Binkini fund commission. THE LEXINGTON COUNT'S DENTIST. To My Friends: This will inform yon that I am sga-i t ftinr. wicVt rn c?v T \<Til ii*' J V uuvt ir 1 t v va< M v ____ ___ d ^ ^ ^ ' ~~ so you wil k: v?v ju.-i what you will have to pay I :o no Dental Work lor jSQTHING : . i want the: cash when it is delivered, I '- ork on STRICTLY ethical Principe sand guarantee satisfaction, as 1 i. ? -e ahvavs clone, if my work doe? xr r, do as recommended and if vei f' ."i't come to see me about it, it jyour fault. : DR. Gr. R. HARDING 3404 Main Street, Columbia, S. C. Ridge wooa cars pass the office every 15 minutes. I The Farm IS ' ri ffTf OU and you J IfflXj srea- ^ea- ? JSJinr 3Tour tools, : ^ v? -wheels roll grain, sacks of produce market, loads of sand that needs moving. \ top of a load, listen tc creaking, groaning so and wheels, as the load over the road ruts. It I stand up long under tl: Weber Columbus give the buyer the mc money because the}T d longest time, and are These are a few of th to the making of the u reputation. Selection lumber, oak, hickory ai || quality steel and iron; rr I* ing, air-drying of every || assembling of parts, lit' H and perfect shaping ar II of the purest paint to tive and to prevent shr |j the wood In the cc 0 undergoes many careful ? who test every part an( S so that when the wagon g it is practically perfec II thoroughly up to the I p| Study I H C wagons H Get catalogues from hi; | International Harveslei fr m aw??????mm ? ? i Tutt'sPills I It FOR TORPID LIVER. -1. A torpid liver deranges the whole ie system, and produces i. SICK HEADACHE, n Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Rheur* matism, Sallow Skin and Piles* d There Is no better remedy for these v- common diseases than DR. TUTT'S LIVER PILLS, as a trial will prove* Take No Substitute. u?JP iwvtfmwrtt TSP~TW rycr, *" Rock Hill.?Following the raid of 1 the five social clubs here by State ^ Constable Jackson, came the trial beL for Magistrate Wingate of B. C. Small j1 and R. B. Small, who were arrested at the Mechanics club during the raid e there. They were charged with violating the state dispensary law. y m s Hew the Trouble Starts. > Constipation is the cause of many a ailments and disorders that make life j miserable. Take Chamberlain's Tab! lets, keep your bowels regular and you 1 will avoid these diseases. For sale by g | AJ1 Dealers. adv. L" Columbia.'?Tvith the arrival in Co| lurnbia of R. H. von Ezdorf, the. Unifc1 : r-A states public health service launch3 j '-la campaign for the eradication of L' malaria in South Carolina. Dr. ven l" : Er.dorf will work in conjunction with a j 'I I the state board cf health and the city SI ~ : boards of health. Ij | The Best Fain Killer. ^ r ! Buckien's Arnica Salve when applied ~ to a cut, braise, sprain, barn or scald, | or o* her injury of tne skin will im- C i mediately remove all pain. E. E. Ohamj oerlin, of Clinton. Me., says: "It | ; robs cuts and clner injuries of their 1 ; terrors. As a healintr remedy its r i equal don't exist." ?vTd do good for I I w.u. Only 25c at Harmon Drug Co. II i t St. Matthews.?In the municipal r election recently the town made a ? general change of administration. The t total vote cast was 171. For mayor, f i J. G. Stabler received 92 and Walter . | Spigener, 79. For alderman the vote j was: McMillan, 83; Pearlstine, 98; ' | Kenagan, 128; Robinson, 68; Darby, J 101; Murray, 141; Buyick, 113; Drel her, 125; Hildebrand, 143. Dr. T. H. ; Dreher was unopposed for commisr -sioner of "public works. t Pj'!mastc-r Antoine Deloria, Gaic( nj.\ Mich., speaks for rho gu'd-.iiee 1 cf those troubled with kidney and ? j bladder irregularities, and says "From i :nv own experience I can recommend Kidney P?H<?. Mv father also ! was cured of Kidney disease, and many neighbors wore cured by Foley Kidm-y Pills." Ac ijarinutr Drug Store adv. I ! II II I m I I ll HI 1 II | f I ?I Ill II III II I I I J I fii! & ||| m urden Bearer 111 r farm wagon spend a jK j |1 f time together. Of all ||( ? it is }*our standb)\ Its k; j fi along under big loads p I m wering racks of hay and || j B over miles of reads to |g j m and gravel, anything I? j S Vhen next you ride on | j w ) the constant racking, | j ^ und of the wagon box i 5& i pitches back and forth | j takes solid strength to j| i lat. I K C wagons? | ! ? jw Bettendorf Steel Kiiig |;jj| >st he can get for his fc jS; efy hard usage for the || c| easiest on the horses. ft >; e things that contribute ?< \j nbeatable I H C wagon fe >! r\( fliQ n?>cf crmdpc of fei I Si VI 111V ? id pine, and of the best , p c lany months of toughen- >j ' piece of wood; skilled || v ting of bolts and rivets, H Jj id ironing; application 4 ii act as wood preserva- <| inking and warping of ? >j instruction, the wagon si I inspections by experts ; g| cj I verif}r each operation H ' Jij i is ready for the farmer* if <j! t in every detail and g|; ]>j H C standard. p; j!{ ; at the local dealer's. j| i ![j m, or, write the S J ii * Company of America 1 |i -orated; ? cj *+ H \: I 1 S* | Si BARGAINS THIS WEEK! ' them h)Ti^lifc new .8 Rtallinfi^i 8 Apmtfrnnn I uiuiuuiju u in muii unu New BrooMaiid, S. C. More Goods for Same Money, Same Goods for Less Money. olumbia, S. C. Phone 49S LORSOK BROTHERS Jobbers and Dealers in Stoves Mantles Ranges Tiles and Grates Furnaces Heaters Stove Pipe btcam, Gas, water Pipe Hollow-ware and Fittings ? ? Valves Enamel Ware Water Closets and k Tin and Galvanized Ware Trimmings "Wear Ever" Enameled Iron Aluminum Ware Bath Tubs and Lavatories Bath Room Accessories Terra Gotta Soil Pipe and Fittings ' Sewer Pipe Compression Cocks Flue Pipe Stops and Bibbs Farm Drain Tile Fire Brick and Fire Clay Sporting Goods Tin Plate Pig Lead Solder J?M Asbestos and Regal Copper Roohrg Metal Shingles Slaters Felt Ventilators Tar Pap^r Galvanized and Black R & Rosin Sized Sheeting Sheet Iron Roof < 'coring Metal Ceiling Rocf Paint Gutter and Conductor Pipe Tinners' Tools Corrugated and V. Crimp ed Roofing Pumps and Well Goods Ridge Roil Rubber Hose A'alley, Etc. ir Stock is Complete; Prices Low; Deliveries Prompt. Let us quote you before you buy. mMMranMaMfioMUBHD( i ?KOHC33inBi awawcM??a??au? ??<?? MANUFACTURERS OF g Sash, Oaars an?3 Blind, interior Finish, ? Pins, Gyprsss and Oak, 1 Flooring, Ceiling, Weatherboarding, Moulding, jf Door and Window Frames. R ^ ^ Coiii^^ia^S outh 1730 Mm STREET, COLUMBIA, S. C. II Is where you can find one of the best stocks of | I OF ALL KINDS I DOORS, SASH, BLINDS & GLASS LIME AND CEMENT. | I CABINET MA.'NTLES. j| I Call or write for Prices, , 3