University of South Carolina Libraries
1893. ^?SiEIp^ ^1593, "January. SlMTTT F'S' -r-H-H 1 2 S 4' 5: 6j Sj 9101?21314? 1511617 IS 192021 2223:24.25 2e27:28; 293031 ..I.. .. F. February. ..{..J.J ll 2. 31 4i 5 6 ! 7 S 91011 1213141516,17 IS 19 202122 28 24 25 26;272S I March. ..!'..!..'' li 2 3 4 5 G " ?. 9.1011 12 131415 1617 IS 1980 2122232425 20272S29.30?31 .. April. 2 3 4 5 0 7 S 91011121:;: 14 15 1017 IS 19202122 23 24 25 2? 27 28 21? 30..I..;..!- .j..!.'. May. ..ll 2 3 4 5| 6j 7 8 9.1011 12'18 14?151617?S'l92Q 21:22 28 24 25 2027 2S:298031....... . LA. I.J.A.J.J July. :S il'T^T T S 4| ?! 6? 7 ! 9:10?1I:1213:1415 16:17 IS 192021 22 23 241252e 272S 29 30 31!..;..!..|..| Aug-us*. ..(..] ii 2; 3 4; 5 C. 7 Si 91011,12 1314 15 [16 17 IS 19 20 21 22 28 24 252?; 27 28 29 80 81 ..I September. ..?..:..._i 1 2 8 4 5 t; 7 8 !? io ll 12 18 14 15 lt.; 17 IS L9 20 21 22 28 2-1 25 2? 27 2S 21 ?80 October. June. - . .1. .[. .:. . 12 .> 4 5 6 7 s ll 1218 14 15 IC 17 1811>2<>2l 222824 25 2t> 27 28 21? 80 . . 1 2 8 4 5 t? 7 s 10 11 12 1314 1516 17 is l!?2021 22 28 24 25 2? 27 2> 29i3031 . i j i i I. November. :..;..!..; li 2? 3 4 5 C. 7. 8 9 1011 12 18 14 15 lt; 17 IS !?'202! 222- 2425 2?; 27 28 2;' 30 .... December. 1 8 4 5 t; 7 s it 10 ll 12 18 14 15 M 17 IS ll? 2<? 21 22 28 24 25 26 27 28 29.30 LOCAL MENTION. The prospects are favorable to a good fruit crop this year. T. E. Alexander has plenty acid phos phate on hand. It is reported that some snow and sleet 'fell near Walhalla on hist Wednesday morning "before day. Dr. W. J. Bramlett is improving his residence, on Main street, hy the addi tion of a neat piazza. And now comes the news that Hamp ton is sure of a $100,000 factory. Verily the mills are coming to the cotton. One car each of C. S. meal and hulls just received. Strictly for cash. G. ?C. MAXWELL. Very heavy showers, followed by "^feather this Thursday morning, will, no doubt, do a great ilea! of good. Miss Carrie Perry will leave this week for Chicago to attend a meeting >f the! Board of Lady Managers <>f the World's Fair. The weather last night was of the typical April sort-wind,lightning, thun der, rain-with delightful sunshine this '. rooming. On and after April 1st, IS?3, Dr. Fahne stock will work for those only who come prepared to pay cash for all dental ope rations at the end of each sitting. Those interested in base hall are re quested to meet in the office ol' Mr. < ?. H. Schumacher, in the rear en i of his stoic. ; to-morrow (Friday) ni uh t at eight o'clock. ; M. W. Coleman A- Co.. of Seneca^con? tinue to please the lathes and hence their dress goods go so fast. Read what they , say about their second order ia this issue. We would suggest that the hoard of health have a general cleaning up of all the lots and premises of the town resi-; dents before the warm weather arrives. The yung men are meeting with sui? stantial encouragement in their effortsto build a park. The subscriptions amount , to over ?150 already. Hurrah for the boys! j1 Some of our young people greatly . joyed a ..< 'old Water Party" last Monday night. They report a delightful evening, spent Under the auspices of Mr. C. 8. Reid. Married, at the residence of the bride?s mother, in Hart county. Ga., on April 9, 1893, by Kev. F. M. Cole, Mr. P. i.. Pul len, of Fair Play, S. C.. and Miss Sallie E. Martin. Columbia is to have a carnival in May. Messrs. W. J. Stribling, of Walhalla, ami .1. C. Cary, of Seneca, have been invited | . -.lp act as civic escort to the rCakcrs on the. ocC?inr;. - The youthful fisherman has come out of his wintei quarters, with hook and line ready for business his bait-box being, generally, of largeropacity than his game bag. Married, at the residence of the bride, in Walhalla, on Tuesday night, IStli instant, at S o'clock. Mr. Anthony Effrieg to Mrs. Laura T. Simmons. Kev. ll. W. Seymour officiating. Mr. Willie J. Neville. Jr., i> at home from Moore's Business College, Atlanta. Ga. Tho institution ha.- changed hands in consequence of financial stringency, but Mr. Neville completed his three months" course in book-keeping before thc* crash came. D 'f i^r" ^ m" ^?.L'-s rtn^ family left Tuesday ~ ^aorninji for their Vorthern home in IWTli L\'ither, Michigan. Their Walhalla ? 1 friends wish them a safe iournev. Dur ini! . \ , . .- , - . ing thV several w inters they have spent in Walha?a our people have learned to "know and love them. The regular meeting-ot the 1. ( ?. <?. T. will take nlace on Monday night. April 24 th. at 8 o'clock in Van Di viere's Hall, over the 2?7e?es office. All members are earnestly requested to 1 present, as business of great importance w ill require our at/ ..niion. K. W. SEYMOUR, L. D. *)T. Fletcher S. Porter, of the grad sat ing classof ls;*.".. College of Physicians and Surgeons, Baltimore, has our thanks for an invitation to the commencement exercises on Wednesday, April 19th. The many friends of Dr. Porter congratu late him on his graduation and wish him a long and useful career as an eminent M. D. - - The committee appointed by the I'ark Construction Company to meet the Town Council, complied with their orders, and at a meeting of the Council on Wednes X>vt dav night, thc honorable body granted A ttnigh; company the privilege to use Adger #le reece grounds and part of North Broad 1 lt. L(for the purpose ol building Carlia '~?n. ^ Vv- - mans uonjes . 7 ' vi- A h - . - MA- -. . UT crett . De}jpresent. , Gouid ?nt< iag graduated .od as naked a?College. Atiantav est pauper whos-e has ??ken a full .nken frame; was Ci penmanship and .-.otters fie-d. Wb?e eldest ?0n of .re bet,-pen the^ bis father? is -?tter off is t?e;ehjg a younff man " d rare attainments ?many .ife. j el . Cotton is coming np where it was planted early. Some farmers in Oconee have worked over their corn the first time. . Mr. J. E. Rideout, of the Mountain Eayle, published at Highlands, N. C., was in town this week. Mrs. Kate 0. Lewis and Miss Lucia Lewis left Tuesday for Enoree, S. C., to visit the family of Mr. Wm. G. Perry. Mr. D. A. Smith left Tuesday morning for Orangeburg to attend the meeting of the Grand Lodge of Knights of Honor. Miss Emmie Verner, one of Seneca's most charming young ladies, spent a few days in Walhalla this week, visiting Miss Addie Hal ti wanger. .Dr. Geo. C. Probst expects to be in Westminster Monday, April 24th, 1S93. Persons wishing to have dental work done will lind him at Dr. J. W. Quillian's house. Sallie Clark, a young colored girl, liv ing near Walhalla, died suddenly on last Friday afternoon. She was buried at Flat Rock cemetery on Saturday after noon. The building of the hoop factory is progressing rapidly. The forty horse power engine, which is to furnish the power, was brought on the grounds last Tuesday. Mr. Clifford S. Merrick, the exceed ingly swift stenographer and typewriter in the Ricdiraond and Danville office, at Columbia, was ou a brief visit to his parents, in this city, this week. Maj. E. B. Murray, of Anderson, has accepted an invitation to deliver an address at the closing exercises of the Westminster High School on May 19. A literary treat is in store for those who hear him. Davis <? Davis is the style of a new law firm in Waco, Texas, composed of W. If. ami X. L. Davis, formerly of Oconee county. Their many Carolina friends wish them unbounded success in their professional course. The United States Senate, in extra session at Washington, has adjourned. The President will be relieved from the pressure of ollice-seekers. many of whom are following the honorable legislators to their respective homes. Kev. S. Lander. D. I)., of Williamston, will preach in thc Walhalla Methodist church next Sunday morning at the usual hour and administer the sacrament. Dr. Lander is well known in Walhalla and we bespeak for him a large congre gation. The contest over the location of thc State Industrial and Winthrop Normal College continues to excite much inter est. The points competing now are Chester, Kock Hill and Spartanburg. Columbia and one or two other belated towns are endeavoring to put in bids. Messrs. Drexel. Morgan & Co., of New Vol k, have accepted the huge job of re ordan iring the Richmond Terminal, and all the railroads owned and operated by that mammoth corporation. The obli gations of the company are to Ia. shaved down until the interest can be made and paid on them. We hope they will pay their taxes promptly hereafter. Dirt has been broken atlast for the I erection of a large factory on the Colnm- j bia canal. The long sought for has' arrived, and it now begins to look as if the *'big ditch" will be utilized at last Large contractors have the work in charge. Wm. Chapman & Co.. of Pro vidence. K. L, have the contract, ami their tools and machinery are arriving and being put in place for active opera tion. Mr. (reo. A. Ledford, advertising agent of ll. E. Bucklen * Co.. of Chi cago, paid us an appreciated call last week. Being a gentleman of culture and large information, he is a ^reat friend of che press. His house does an extensive business in all parts of the country, and reach their thousands upon thousands of Customers through the medium of the ?'less. See their advertisement of Elec tric Litters. Dr. King's New Discovery. ;md Arnica Salve. Why has not something been done to '.any into effect the resolution of the Town Council to ?mt a fence around the new cemetery? lt is said that the money is in hand to do the work. There should l>e 11 o rest in this matter until the sub stantial fence stands to ward off the .dep redations of stockjon that which should Sc the most sacred spot on earth-the rentintr -Hiace of loved ones gone before Let every one who has an interest in the new cemetry urge the erection of this fence at once. < >n the night of April ;?th. in Glassy Mountain Township, Greenville county, the house of a mau named Henesley was burned. Five persons were mysteriously burned to death, viz: Henesley, his wife, his m i h.;.. a young woman of twenty years and a hoy. No satisfactory expla nation of the burning has yet been made Conclusions are settling flown between two theories. One is that there were a crowd of men and a good deal of whiskey there: that a drunken brawl arose and Somebody was hurt or killed, and that the desperate conclusion was reached to ?mt th?- entire frmily out of the way and apply tire. The other is a mere whisper and hints at a preconcerted raid to clear out what may have been considered a den of vice and a source of neighborhood discord: Spartanburg Spartan: "Thc Wage Karners" Convention will meet in Colum bia Wednesday afternoon. It is said that invitations have been sent out to every county of the Statcand that there will be a large meeting. The object of this meeting is to organize the State tho roughly and have all classes of wage earners represented. It seems that these class political leagues and alliances are not the best for the State. They tend to develop a partisan spirit and a general distrust of all classes not belonjring to the league. Politically speaking, the Democratic party is about enough for us and we have a poor opinion of the lasting benefit of all these class political organizations. We do not deny their right to organize, but the danger is that they will soon set class and industrial platform above the Democratic party." Union Meeting of the Beaverdam Asso ciation. The union meeting of the Beaverdam Association will convene with the Poplar Springs Baptist Church on the fifth Sun day and Saturday before in April at 10 ,v ductory sermon by Rev. D. B. napkin ;1 A. M< ,and Ifcvts tor discussion: befor What should be done with church amj >ers who constantly forsake the as lingof themselves together ? Speak ". W. Bearden, Rev. J. H. Stone. v*tid. What is the aim and object of church discipline ? Speakers-James Seaborn, J. M. Callas, J. W. Shelor. 3d. Is not the want of spirituality manifested owing to the want of proper discipline ? Speakers-T. R. Norris, H. S. VanDivieae. Sunday school mass meeting at 10 o'clock Sunday morning. Addresses by H. A. H, Gibson, Rjof. J. W. G^nes. Churches will please send up a full delegation, and dear brethren, when ap pointed, please come. B. W. SETMO JE, - Chairman of Committee. CATHARINE PARK. At a meeting of the young men, held at Reid's Hall Tuesday night, April 18, " The Walhalla Park Construction Com pany " -was organized with twenty mem bers. The object is to build and main tain a City Park on College Hill. The following officers were elected: C. S. Reid, President; B. R. Moss, Vice President; James Thompson, Treasurer; George Seaborn, Secretary. A committee ?f six, consisting of C. S. Reid, E. L. Herndon, J. R. Kay, J. A. Steck, E. R. Kay and James Thompson, TO elected to superintend the building of the park. A financial committee of three mem bers, consisting of E. R. Kay, George Seaborn and F. A. H. Schroder, was elected to solicit financial aid from the citizens of the town. C. S. Reid, E. L. Herndon and James Thompson were appointed on a commit tee to confer with the Town Council and invite their co-operation and assistance. The members of thc company are young men with pluck and energy. They will leave no stone unturned to give the citi zens something to be highly appreciated, besides fm nishing a nice place for visit ors and others to spend the long summer days. The composition of the committees and officers of the company constitute a guarantee that the work done will be first-class. These young men have been tried before and never found wanting. If they can receive the hearty support and co-operation of the citizens of the town, they will soon transform the brow of College Hill into a beautiful and en ticing pleasure ground. ''Catharine Park " is to be its name, in honor of the memory of one of Walhalla's sainted women, who, living, ever had the best interest of the town at heart. Help from all is earnestly solicited. It is understood that the ladies, too, will lend their intlucuce to further the enter prise. A nucleus of i^'C has been donated to the fund by the Walhalla Comedy Company. This is a good beginning. Donations from thc citizens will doubt less swell the sum? to some $200, and j Catharine Park may bc written down as ? one of the attractions of Walhalla. The Teachers' Column. In this issue Prof. J. W. Caines, of the ': Westminster High .School, has assumed , editorial management of a column on our j first page, known as thc ''Teachers' Col- ! umn." Prof. Gaines is a wide-awake teacher, and, in his endeavor to make j this column what it ought to be. he in-; vites thc earnest support and co-opera-; tion of all the teachers in Oconee county. Teaching is no longer a mere pastime for drones and laggards, but a high, ex- j acting and honorable profession. The condition precedent to all successful teaching is thorough preparation. The j purpose of Prof. ("aines and those who j assist him in the conduct of this column is to stimulate a desire for still more j thorough preparation, and then to render : mutual help by a free discussion of the means for achieving the best results. This:column should be one of great; interest and attraction to every teacher in the county, and then as a recompense for the good received, let each and every one feel free to furnish Prof. Gaines an article on the experiences of the school : room during the year now drawing to a. close. Retid and write to the end that you may the better teach. T*? Memoriam. Mrs. Cynthia, the beloved wife of j Mr. John Lindly. departed this life at j her home, in West Union, on the morn- j ing of the 17th instant, in the ."?3d year of I her age. She was a native of Laurens county, and about four months ago moved '? into this country. In early life she united herself with the Kainui Creek Baptist ; church, in Laurens county, of which church she remained a consistent mem ber. For thirty-live years she followed Christ, and those who knew her best say that her lift was a luminous commentary upon the profession which she made. She suffered a great deal before her death. A part of the time she could not lie down, and what little sleep she enjoyed was obtained while she was propped up in bcd. Nh<: did not complain or mur mur, but bore it all patiently. Thc day before sin- died she called her children lo ln-r lu-d side and spoke lovingly and tenderly to them, telling them she was happy and resigned. She was sustained and comforted by her Saviour in this moment of great need and passed away singing the triumphs of redeeming grace. We laid her to rest on Tuesday (after preaching her funeral sermon) in the quiet grave yard connected with the Bethel Presbyterian church, to await the | resurrection morn. Our sister was twice I married, her latter husband surviving. Many relatives and friends mourn her loss. Death to her was gain. She is absent from the body only to be present with the Lord. God bless and comfort j the bereaved. li. W. SEYMOUR. Laurensville Ihr nhl please copy. A Horse Thief from Georgia. TOWNVII.I.K. April lt?.-Frank Tims, a Georgia horse thief, was captured herc on Friday morning. He came here on Thursday morning riding a good mule, which he sold for twenty-live dollars. He had stolen the mule from Mr. James Prather. on the head waters of the Savan nah, in Habersham county. Ga. Mr. Prather was in close pursuit all the way and caught the thief as he started. Our people have been agitated for some time on the subject of holiness, and so intense is the feeling that schisms ii) the several churches are likely to result. The Rev. T. C. Ligen, pastor of the Presbyterian church, is attending the spring meeting of the South Carolina Presbytery at Honca Path. Prof. Kice, assisted by Miss Olivo Brown, who was educated at Greenville and Vassar College, New York, is just closing a very prosperous session of the Townville High School. Many rise in the morning with a head ache and no inclination for breakfast. This is due to torpidity of the liver and a deranged condition of the stomach. To ! restore healthy action to these organs, noshing is so efficacious as an occasional dose of Ayer's Pills. There have been three decisions by United States Courts lately that are dis couraging to labor strikes, one at New Orleans and the other two at Toledo, Ohio. They are to the effect that re straint of trade by force is in violation of the laws of the United States, and that railroad employees as public carriers cannot boycott a road that is at outs with a brotherhood of its operatives. The sentiment is increasing about ex Congressman Hemphill securing a for eign mission. Some of the knowing ones go so far as to name Russia, and be lieve he will fall heir to this juicy morsel. Mr. Hemphill was seen Tuesday after noon, but was non-communicative. "I bave heard that my name is being dis cussed in connection with a foreign mis sion, but which one in particular I have no idea. I have made no application, and will not. If Mr. Cleveland sees fit to appoint me, well and good." . CO>>"EEOSS. [For the Keowee Courier.] "' The question has frequently occurred to me, Shall we let all the beautiful legends which the Indians left us utterly perish? XO portion of the State is richer, perhaps, in Indian legends and traditions than Pickens and Oconee counties. Why may not many of them be rescued from oblivion before it is too late? There is an interesting legend con nected with the Conneross creek. The name Conneross is an English corruption of the Cherokee word Kaxcanarasu, which signifies "At the duck track." The name refers to a local legend relative to a fabu lous duck. Do any of the old citizens of Oconee remember ever to have heard the legend? If so, why not write it up for the COURIER? I sincerely wish it was in my power to produce it, Oconee was not "named after the Oco nies" (erroneously translated "Brown Vipers"), ''a minor tribe of the Chero kees, who formerly lived in the territory embraced by the county," as some his torians have stated, but the word Oconee signifies "At the head of the water courses." It is from the Cherokee loca tive ending ., generally written ce in the translation of Cherokee words into the English tongue, and ooka, water. I have succeeded in obtaining the mean ing of nearly all of the Indian names in our State.? Oconee abounds in beautiful Cherokee place names, and I am satis fied, from the meaning of many of them, that the legends connected with place names in Oconee county alone would make an interesting volume if they could be rescued from the devouring jaws of the past. To save them, if possible, from utter oblivion is a duty that the present I generation owes to those who shall come after us. If you, gentle reader, know a legend, write it for your county paper or tell it to some one who will. I beg pardon. Mr. Editor, for trespass ing on your valuable space--I mean the columns of your paper. I have many : pleasant recollections of the years spent in Walhalla, of the beautiful blue moun tain?, salubrious atmosphere, "students' frolics," and most of all, of the kind citizens. Fourteen years have passed ; away since the old college bell called me to recitation in the old building which lies in ashes, but it seems but as yester day when I walked your streets. May your paper and the town be crowned with prosperity. J. W. DAM EL. Chester, S. C., April 14, 1S93. Westminster Dots. WESTMINSTER, S. C., April IS, 1893. DEAR COURIER: The Westminster Lodge Knights of Honor, No. 3,345, is represented at the annual meeting of the Grand Lodge at Orangeburg this week by Mr. W. P. Anderson. He went down' on Monday. At the regular meeting of the West minster Lodge I. O. G. T., No. 117, on Monday night last, the following new officers were elected to serve for the ensuing quarter, beginning April :Wth: Col. R. E. Mason, Chief Templar: Miss Bessie Zimmerman, Vice Chief Templar; Rev. W. W. Leathers, Past Chief Tem plar; J. B. Sanders, Chaplain; Miss Paul ine Mason. Superintendent Juvenile Tem plars; Ja"bcz Jones, Secretary: W. L. England, Financial Secretary: Mrs. Lila England, Treasurer; G. Blackwell, Mar shal: B. M. England, Guard; Walter Zim merman, Sentinel. The Secretary and Marshal were requested to choose their assistants by the next meeting. The attendance the past quarter has been very small. About half the members have not beeu present since the lodge was organized. Th? meetings are held ser .'-monthly, on Monday night after the first and third Sundays. A new location has been surveyed on : the public road leading from here to Jarrett's bridge, on Tugaloo river. The bridge over Chauga, at Capt. R. A. Gil mer's, is unsafe and a new one is to be built The County Commissioners found they could save several hundred dollars by building it about one-half mile above where it now is, and put the road on bet ter ground and make thc distance much shorter. The new route will leave the present route a short distance West of Hopewell Methodist church and will intersect again about one-half mile West of Gilmer's mill. Thc Commissioners say the bridge on that route will not cost over ?100. Rev. W. W. Leathers preached two able sermons in the Baptist church last Sun day morningand night. He also preached at Mt. Tabor, several miles below here, in the afternoon. Rev. Leathers certainly does a large amount of ministerial work. Mr. S. T. Marett has opened up a stock of goods in Col. Mason's brick store-room in rear of the bank. Mr. Marett will con tinue to travel on the road and the store will be managed by his brother. Mr. G. W. Marett Mr. Claude Little, Westminster's cham pion base ball pitcher, visited his former home at Harmony Grove. Ga., this week. About twenty-two of Westminster's citizens took in Clemson College at Fort Hill last Saturday. The railroad officials sold reduced round trip tickets. They all report a pleasant time. Mrs. W. M. Gossett is on a week's visit to relatives and friends in Pickens and O reenvide counties. Miss Florence Norris, who has been teaching school in Anderson county the past six months,, has returned home, to the delight of her many friends. Dr. J. W. Quillian had the misfortune to lose his valuable milch cow this week. E. Ayer s Pills Are better known and more general ly used than any other cathartic. Sugar-coated, purely vegetable, and free from mercury or any other inju rious drug, this is the ideal family medicine. Though prompt and ener getic in their action, the use of these pills is attended with only the best results. Their effect is to strengthen and regulate the organic functions, being especially beneficial in the various derangements of the stom ach, li.er, and bowels. Ayer's Pills are recommended by all the leading physicians and druggists, as the most prompt and effective remedy for biliousness, nausea, costiveness, indigestion, sluggishness of the liver, jaundice, drowsiness, pain in the side, and sick headache; also, to relieve colds, fevers, neuralgia, and rheumatism. They are taken with great benefit in chills and the diseases peculiar to the South. For travelers, whether by land or sea, Ayer's Pills are the best, and should never be omitted in the outfit. To preserve their medicinal integrity in all cli mates, they are put up in bottles as well as boxes. "I have used Ayer's Pills in my family for several years, and always found them to be a mild and excel lent purgative, having a good effect on the liver. It is the best pill used." -Frank Spillman, Sulphur, Ky. * Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mas?. Sold by DroggisU Everywhere. Every Dose Effective ITEMS OF GENERAL INTEREST. The Turks say, "The adrice of woman is good for women." . A man's second childhood begins when a woman gets hold of him. The word "licorice" is of Greek origin and means "sweet root." The increased acreage will so reduce the price of cotton that Texas proposes to raise cotton seed. The city stables of Atlanta were burned Sunday morning, and 140 mules perished in the flames. Postmaster General Bissell says that Republican postmasters will be allowed to serve out their terms of four years. Five inches of snow fell at Rochester, N. Y., Saturday and six inches at Cleve land, Ohio. In the next House the Democrats will have 220, the Republicans 127 and the Third Partyites 8. There have been bloody collisions in Belgium between the military and police and striking mobs. In a lady's dress of the prevailing fash ion, about one-third of the material goes into the sleeves. Horrible stories of famine in Russia are being printed. People are said to be dying by hundreds. The Branchville and Bowman Railroad has been completed and will likely be opened to traffic this week. The English, Scottish and Australian bank has failed, with liabilities of $30.000, 000. It began business in 1652. Charles E. Thomas, of this State, bas been appointed confidential clerk to (ion. Hampton, Commissioner of Railroads. Thc city elections in New Jersey Thurs day resulted generally in Democratic vic tories in all the important cities and towns. Columbia is to have a large cotton fac tory on the canal. Columbia is to be I congratulated on the success of her "big i ditch." Two negro children, aged 3 and ? years, were burned to death near Florence Wed nesday. Thc mother left them in her house alone. A general invitation has been extended to all Confederate veterans to be present j at the interment of Jeff Davis's remains at Richmond. The American llag, which bas been j floating from the government building in Honolulu for two months, has been hauled*! down by Commissioner Blount. Gen. Schofield and Rear Admiral Belk- ? nap have been assigned as military and naval aides to the President on thc occa sion of the naval review in New York i harbor. There is talk in railroad circles to the effect that Receiver Chamberlain, of the South Carolina Railroad, will be made one of the receivers of the Richmond and Danville system. By the collision of freight and passen ger trains three miles from Edwardville, UL, Tuesday of last week, four persons were killed and a number of others seri ously injured. Cashier John Schardt. of the Mechanics Savings Bank and Trust Co.. of Nashville, ! Tenn., has turned up short between $40,000 ant! SS0.000. He was an old and trusted employee. The European authorities are looking forward with dread to the Socialist dem onstrations on May day. The Belgian government has collected a large military force at the capital. The Chicago Ttmet of last Sunday says that the famous bichloride of gold cure for drunkenness has been sold by the Leslie E. Keeley Company to a New York syndicate of capitalists for $H?.(i?n,000. The safe in the store of D. H. Traxler, at Timmonsville. was blown open by bur glars Friday night. They obtained only $L25. This is the second robbery of Mr. I Traxler's store since Iiis appointment as | State Dispenser. Mi's. John Budner. of l?eaverbrook. near Blairstown. New Jersey, gave birth to four children last Thursday morning. Two ot the babies are boys and two girls. Mrs. Budncr is the wife of a young far mer and is but 16 years of age. Both mother and children are doing well. A colored woman in New York is bringing suit against the East Tennessee and Virginia Railroad for $5.000, because j she was not permitted to ride in the I coacli assigned to white people, but was ! forced to ride in the car provided for col ! ored people. The jury gave her $S00. The Citizens' Industrial Alliance has issued a call for the industrial classes of America to meet in convention in the city of Chicago on the 4th day of July. 1893, there to formulate demands as a basis fer permanent political union for the better protection of the industrial classes of America. The barn of Charles Reed, a prominent horse man of Tennessee, near Gallar?n, was struck by lightning Wednesday night ! and twenty-five brood mares, in foal by ? the horse St. Blaize, were instantly killed. Thc barn, which was valued at $6,000, was also destroyed. The total loss is over $300.000. The question of removing the capital of Kentucky from Frankfort is now j before the people of that State. Thc city of Louisville will vote on the 27th on the proposition to give the State $1,000,000 ; in bonds if the capital shall bc removed to that city, while Lexington offers $250, 000 and a building site. The present Legislature will have to settle the mat ter, and it is said that it is strongly in favor of removal. Trying to please the Lao on some of our choicest pc had to re-order, and have ? a con cession of prices, wh it ers the advantage of We have opened this w 38-inch Cashmere, in all th cents per yard. Dotted Swi 25 cents per yard. You ca for less than SO and 35 cen " To cap the climax " u ter s for this week a line of coes, in fast colors, sold i price only 5 cents, but for c .them at this figure. They o and all who desire to make by seeing them before buyir, Respect M. W, COU Senec 4pril20,1893, Miss Rose Cleveland, the sister of the President, is travelling in England. On Saturday she occupied a seat in. the ladies' gallery of the House of Commons. She is an ardent home ruler, and after leaving the gallery held quite a reception in the lobby, when John Dillon, William O'Brien, T. P. O'Connor and Edward Blake were introduced to her. Just received a large and selected line of gent's straw hats, collars, cuffs, cra vats, ties and scarfs. The Carter Merchandise Co., Westminster, S. C. In the Yosemite Valley, the "Father of the Forest,'"a fallen tree three hun dred feet long, and several centuries old, has been hollowed out so that for a dist ance of sixty yards a man can walk up right inside it. In the mountains of Northern Califor nia, at an altitude of two thousand feet, ther."! is an extinct crater eight miles in circumference, and at a depth of eight hundred feet there is a lake of fresh water with an island in the centre. People with hair that is continually falling out, or those that are bald, can stop the falling, and get a good growth of hair by using Dall's Hair Renewer. Some idea of the stamp collecting craze may be obtained from the fact that it employs a capital of about $3,000,000, and engages the attention of about 300, 000 collectors: $1,000 is offered for a penny stamp of Mauritius dated 1S47. Bed room suits, hat racks and all kinds of furniture, coffins, caskets and burial robes at lowest living prices at The Carter Merchandise Co., Westminster, S. C. A freight train on thc Jacksonville and Tampa Railroad turned a draw-bridge six miles below Palatka, Fla, Tuesday nijiht, and the engine and six cars plunged into the river, killin'; three men. Can You Read The Future? Do you know what your con dition will be 20 years hence? Will your earning capacity be equal to the support of yourself and family? This is a serious question, yet, you could confidently answer "yes" if you had a twenty years Tontine Policy in the Equitable Life ? method which guarantees ail the protection furnished by any kind of life insurance, and in addition the largest cash returns to those policy holders whose lives are pro longed, and who then need money rather than assurance. For facts and figures, address W. J. RODDEY, Manager, For the Carolinas, ROCK Hil ?. S. C A. t lan tic Coast Line, Passenger Department, Wilmington, .V. C., April IS, 1S?3. Fast Line Between Charleston and Columbia and Upper South Carolina, North Carolina, and Athens and Atlanta. WESTWARD. .No. 52. Leave Charleston. 7 00 am " Lanes. S 32 " " Sumter. 9 43 " Arrive Columbia.1" 55 " " Prosperity.12 22 pm " Newberry.12 38 " " Clinton. I .*io " " Greenwood.2 51 " " Abbeville.:i 23 " " Athens. 5 52 " " Atlanta. S 15 " Winnsboro. 5 IO p m " Charlotte. 7 30 " " Anderson.4 35 p m " Greenville. 4 50 " " Spartanburg. o' 50 " .' Hendersonville. 9 05 " " Asheville.10 10 4< EASTWARD. .No. 53. Leave Asheville. 7 00am " Hendersonville.S 02 " " Spartanburg.10 20 " " Greenville.-12 10 p m " Anderson. 1 15 " " Charlotte. 9 35 am " Winnsboro.ll 54 " " Atlanta.S 30 a m " Athens.ll 04 " " Abbeville. 1 42 pm " Greenwood. 2 15 " * Clinton. 3 30 " . " Newberry. 4 18 " " Prosperity. 4 34 " " Columbia*.. .6 10 " Arrive Sumter. 7 25 " " Lanes.S <t? " " Charleston.10 15 " . Daily. Nos. 52 and 53 Solid Trains between Charleston and Clinton, S. C. H. M. EMERSON, Ass'f Gen'l Passenger Agent. J. R. KENLY, General Manager. T. M. EMERSON, Traffic Manager. lies. Having had a big sale vt ter ns in Dress Goods, we duplicated our purchases at ih we in tend to give custom eek a nen: line of beautiful \e light shades, for only SO sses and Dimities at 20 and ,n't match them in Atlanta ,ts. 'e have thrown on our coiin Challies, Muslins and, Cali iverywhere at 7 cents, oui ash only. We can't charge ire new and beautiful goodA j purchases will save money ig elsewhere. Lfully,_ SMAN & CO., a, S. C. Highest of all in Leavening Power.-Latest U. S. Gov't Report bwder ABSOLUTELY PURE The Fae Similes of Columbus' Ships, j HAVANA, April l.">.-The Columbus caravels "Santa Maria,""' "Nina" and "Pinta'" sailed for the United States to day. They will take a prominent part in the great naval review to be held at New York. Charleston has waked up a little. It is reported that the hayburner street cars, ia that city, are to be superseded by j electric cars. IFE"?. LIVER and TS TI> (Cures DYSPEPSIA. LIVER and I KIDNEY Troubles when all else fails. -25c, 50c, 8I.OO. MEDICINE COMPANY, Spartanburx. S. C. anc Ouimn Habits Cured b.1 nome wilt? ou: pain.Book of par ticulars sent FREE. _ B.M.WOOLLEY.1?.D. Atlanta, ?-..^ O?ce HKX> WhiteiuiilSfc CHEAP FOR CASH ! When you want Goods Cheap for Cash call on ALEXANDER, dealer in General Merchandise. Hats, Shoes and Groceries a spe cialty, at hard-time prices. T. E. ALEXANDER, Walhalla, S. C. April 20, 1393. THE ERGHANDISE HAVE O I* E>~ El) UP THEIR SPRIX(r STOCK. !n Their Dress Goods Department See their Mulls. Tissues and White Goods of eveiy description. In Their Shoe Department There is nothing lacking. Genfs and Ladies' Ox ford Ties. Patent Leather Pomps :ui<t Shoes of all styles at lowest prices. When it Comes to Clothing And Gent's Furnishing Goods we have a large and selected sto.-k for Spring a:i>! Summer Wear that can not bc excelled in Style, Quality or Price. Remember that we keep on hand A Select Line of Bed Loom Suit.-; and Furniture of various kinds. Wc als.? trim Coffins at all hours. Slayers of High Prices and Shoddy Goods. WESTMINSTER, S. C. April 1S93. 01 ll T il I \ Just received a full line of Spring and Summer Clothing, all in latest styles as to pattern, cloth and cut. Also full lines of Ladies' Low Cut Shoes, Oxford Ties, &c. Give us a call. rr Very Respectfully, la MSSM & OUR STOCK IS NOW COMPLETE Pf l>l:\ GOODS, NOTIONS, HATS.SH ?ES, CROCKERY, HARDWARE AND GROCERIES. We also have a nice line of SADDLES, BRIDLES. HARNESS. WHIPS AND LAP ROBES. We handle the best FLOUR made-OBELISK and LOTLS. Lei us sell you your next FLOUR. We will deliver it in your house and guarantee every barrel or sack. Come to sec us. We have what you wan* and will do you right. Yours respectfuHv. C. W. PITCHFORD. March SI. 1S93. Fresh Garden Seeds! .T is nearly time to plant your gardens, and I have thc Seed, [f you want the BEST SEED, either in papers or quantity, ^et them from me. gy FRESH DRUGS AND MEDICINES ALWAYS OS HAND. A FIXE LOT OE TOBACCOS ALSO. * It Ii-.Ul?ll?j SENECA DRUG STORE, Seneca, S- G " February 0, 1S03. CHEAP FOR CASH! QUICK SALES AND SMALL PROFITS ! Call and look over my well selected stock before purchasing eLsewhere. A few Christmas goods I ?rn still offering at cost : SILVERWARE, KNIVES, BANJOES, JEWEL RV, RAZORS, VIOLINS, ACCORDION?, BRUSHES, SHEARS, COMBS, ALBUMS. VIOLIN" AND BLANK BOOKS, PERFUMERY, . CIGARS, BANJO STRINGS, WRITING PAPER, HAIR OIL, TOBACCO, INK, HAIR DYE, PEPPER, MUCILAGE. A fresh lot of Drugs and Patent Medicines jost received. GARDEN SEEDS, ONION SETS, TOBACCO SEED AND. SEED IRISH POTA TOES ! ' -ALL AT-- I February 9,1893.