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Get Your Money Notes from Newry. _ Newry, April '27.-Editors Cou rier : Amid the many wrecks along the shores of Time, we are glad to say that the frail barque of life is still afloat on Time's storm-tossed ocean, and that we are yet able to read that good, old and worthy f- paper, The Keowee Courier, which has survived all of its former editors except its venerable ex-oditor, Col. Robt. A. Thompson Whose bark, we trus*., lb not . Near tho other ..ide, And that it '?till be tnauy days Io orording the chilly tide. Newr/ is moving on nicely, with ?wo good Sunday schools-one at the Baptist ohurch in the morning, conducted by W. J. Jones, and the other in the evening at the Metho dist ohurch, conducted by Capt. P. S. Haskell. Also we ha?e a good literary school, with Miss Lyda Bowen as prinoipal and Miss Leona Grice as assistant. These ladies have been teaching here for the past five or six years and have done last ing good. But we think they, like J most, if not all, the teaohers, try to teach too many books. We think it would be best in our free common sobools to confine the ohildren to the most, useful studies, suoh aa gram mar, arithmetic, spelling and read ing, eto. With the short time that the free schools run, and most of the ohildren oan attend, we think it best to give them suoh studies as will be of most service to them, instead of taxing their minds and parents with a great lot of books ; and the chil . dren in the end know but very little about any of them. A lew good and useful things well understood are worth many things half under stood. We had the pleasure of a call by Dr. D. L. Smith, of Walhalla, a few days since. The dootor looks muoh im proved by WalhalU's.pure air and crystal water and congenial asso ciates. Dr. J. H. Moore has been with us for a few weeks and is fast making friends down here. We were sorry to lose Dr. Smith, but glad to get Dr. Moore in his place. Ben Thompson is now able to be up and about from a protracted spell of sickness. ti bi ?" ^' ^00D? wno nas *or 80me time been employed by the Courte nay Company as engineer, left a few days sinco for Rock Hill. He is succeeded by G. 0, Head, one of Oconee's former boys. Mr. Head informs us that, he onco lived at thc foot of Stumphouse mountain. Manley C. Sanders expects soon to attend DraughtOn's Business Col lege at Atlanta. St. John Courtenay roturnea a few days sinco from a visit to lwf? parents in Columbia. Ho reports his father much botter than ho was when he left Newry, which wo are glad to learn, as Capt. Courtenay will long linger in our momories and affections for his many kind and helpful acts while at Newry. Henry R. Buist, of Charleston, is stopping with Presidont Campboll Courtenay and brothors. A few days since wo had the plea sure of mooting with our old friend and school mate, J. D. O'Bryant, now of Anniston, Ala., who is visit f? . ing his sick mother at Evatt. The mill has plenty of help and is Why nc People y grow excited o some of them g the actual anal} Too ma economies and J S save a consider your ia rm worl Take o actual analysis our brands, ext Come ai than give you ] doing nioely. The repairs on the dam are nearing completion. Some of the boys here speak of | attending the Jamestown Exposition. J. Mat Whitmire, Esq., and wife paid their son and family a visit last Sunday at Seneca. From tho appearance of many nico homes in the New Hope section of j Oconee, it is fast ooming to the front i as one of the best sections of our | county. R. L. Bogga, of this section, the expert bee man, says he does not care to cross his bees with lightning b.igs or any other humbug, neither does he care to graft his peach trees into willow stumps. He had rather have the pure article or none. We think he is right, as the grafting business has been carried far enough since President Roosevelt has de manded the "square deal." R. Disturbed the Congregation. The person who disturbed thc congre f;ation last Sunday by continually cough ng is requested to buy a bottle of Foley's Honey and Tar. Dr. J. W. Bell. Wolfs Mutt Face Trial. Columbia, April 28.-W. H. Wolfe, the former dispenser, was again arrested Tuesday morning aud taken before Recorder Stanley, who informed bim that he must strengthen his bond. Wolfe, had been released OD his own recognizance. Wolfe was taken to jail, but later he gave bond in the sum of two thousand dollars. It will be recalled that Wolfe was a dispenser under the old dispensary system, being in charge of the dis pensary at the Union passenger sta tion, which do ".H a buoiness of about $75,000 a year. He was reappointed dispenser by the new county board, being well recommended, and his stock and accounts were oheoked up at the time the business was trans ferred from the State dispensary to tho .county board. Several weeks later a shortage was discovered in oheoking up Wolfe and he was ar rested, but upon payment of tho amount, about $1,590, the Solioitor, at the request of the County Boani of Control, agreed to drop the case and Wolfe was accordingly released on his own recognizance by Recorder Stanley. At that time Attorney Goneral Lyon was out of the State and upon his return he held a con sultation with Soliui'or Tim merman and advised that it would be better uot to drop tho case, even if the shortage was ma<good, .but that the defaulting dispenser should, for obvious reasons, be proseouted, and as a result Mr. Timmerraan agreod to prosecute the oasc. Instructions were issued several days ago for the arrest of Wolfe ?nd he was plaoed under arrest Tuesday morning by ?t get your 44 Money's Worth " ^ ick about the price of Corn-st ver the way they think that the o right ahead paying two or ihn rsis of the goods will warrant? ny of us struggle for reductions better values that are open to CA |? and discretion in buying F< able percentage of your money, !< if you will only buy your Ferti ur celebrated G. W. G. Soluble with Guano sold by our compe ra values are obtained in each w id talk over Fertilizers with us roar money's worth. Deteotive Broom, hoing at bia home on Blanding street near Main. He baa not made any attempt to evade arrest and there was no diffi culty in finding him when be was wanted. Wolfe has of course been dis charged as dispenser, and, in fact, be was discharged before bis shortage was discovered, the charge at that time preferred against him being drunkenness. When bis books and stock were checked up, afl3r his dis missal, the shortage was brought to light. It was the o<istom under the old dispensary regime to drop cases of this Hort when the shortages were made good. In the last annual re port of the board of directors of the State dispensary there is one item of $10,464.41 put down as "suspended accounts in process of adjustments." X-Ray Develops Cancer. Chicago, April 26.-Wolfram C. FuchB, an expert in the use of X-ray, died here to-dav of cancer, which he contracted three years ago from com ing in contact with ihn X-ray appa ratus. Since Dr. Fuchs became affected with canoer he has sub mitted to a number of operations, several of his fingers having been amputated. Tbese operations were unsuccessful and the disease steadily spread to diflerent parts of his body. - -i JUST ONE WOR D ?*?* wort Is lt refers to Dr. Tutt's Liver Pill* and (WEANS HEALTH. Are you constipated? Troubled with ludlgflstion? Sick headache? Vlrtlgo? Bilious? insomnia? ANY of 'hese symptoms and many others Indicate Inaction of th? LIVER. You 3sr???<aL Tutt'sPills Take No Substitute. Clarence Jones at Gaffney set 60 eggs under four hens and there were batched out 64 chickens. Dr. James II. Ware, one of the old est citizens of Greenville county, be ing 92 years of age, is dead at that | place. A young woman of Aiken was burned to death while kneeling by the fire saying her prayers. A Charleston truck planter has tried with success the plan of putting a jug of booze at the end of bis rows and the negro getting to the end first gets a pull at the jug. The negro?;* work fast. .talion Stimulated j rluscies and Joints ted by using oaov*s invent 5 25o 50c 6 ? 1.00 ld by &II Dealers realise On The Horse" Sent Free Dr. Earl S.SIoan.Boston.Mass. vhen you buy Fertilizers ? ruggle for reduction in the prie y are being robbed for these n :e dollars per ton more for their that are hard to secure, and o: jery Farmer who will use good ?rtilizcrs. You can surely HI and you can secure much mort lizers right. Guano for example. It measu titors at much higher prices-i ithout extra cost to the Farmer. . If you have any trade in yo Copy of Old Pendleton Messenger. ("Anderson Mall.] A friend has left at this office a oopy of the old Pendleton Messenger, dated Fri day, Ootoher ll, 1830. We havo found in it a great many things of interest. The Messenger was a ?ve-colttmo, four page paper, and the subscription priue was $2.50 a year. T. H. Russell wan publisher and F. W. Symmes was editor. It was printed as neatly in all respects as any of tho newspapers printed in this Beotion to-day. The paper oontainB little of what would bo called local news. It 's made up, for the most part, of general news, taken from New York, Charleston and Augusta papers, and political articles of various kinds. There is somo discussion of tho proposed Charleston and Cincinnati rail road, and Editor ?Symmes expresses tho fear that the route by Augusta, Madison and Ked Clay, Ga., will be found to be better than tho one through Rabun Gap. There was an epidemio of yellow fever in Augusta, Ga., at this time, and the whole South had been suffering from drouth. Crops were reported to be badly injured. The paper contains an account of the death of Robert Y. Hay no, who was at the timo of hi? death president of the Louisville, Cincinnati and Charleston railroad. Notice is given that there, will be a meeting at Flat Rook, N. C., at an early date to fill tho vacancy. The Messenger was the only paper published lu either Piokens or Anderson district and was the official paper for both districts. The issue before us con tains official notions signed by W. M. Archer, Sheriff of Anderson district, and P. Alexander, Sheriff of Pioknna district. There is a notice of a meeting of the Pendleton Farmers' Society, which shows that J. C. Calhoun was president; Dr. Jame. Stuart, first vioe president; J. V. Sbanklln, second vice president; Dr. F. W. Symmes, corresponding secretary and librarian, and E. B. Benson, correspond ing secretary and treasurer. E. B. Benson, J. T. Sloan, B. F. Sloan, T. M. Sloan and W. H. D. Gaillard give uotioe that at the next session of the Legislature they will apply for a charter for the Pendleton Manufacturing Com pany, the corporation to have a oapital of $100,000. There are several notioes of sale by ad ministrators, etc., and several of the no tioes say that negroes will be offered for sale. John Ramsey offers for sale his planta tion of 700 acres, four and a half limden from Anderson court house, as he "is determined to move to the West." There are many other things of inter est in the old paper, whioh was printed 09 years ago. T. H. Russell, who was the publisher, was the father of D. H. and W. W. Russell, of this city, and died only two or three years ago. He was a milter printer, as this speoimon of his handiwork when a young man very clearly shows. Kidney complaint kills more people than any other disease. This is due to the disease being so insidious that it gets a good hold on the system bofo re it is recognized. Foley's Kidney Cure will prevent the development of fatal disease if taken in time. Dr. J. W. Bell. The Governor of Florida wants the Unitod States to buy an island, somewhere, move all the negroes to it, set thom up in business, and make them stay there. Tho Governor must have been at tho 13th round of a banquet when ho mapped out that program.-Darlington NewB. Governor Ansel has re-appointed Earle Sloan, of Charleston, as State geologist for the term of two years. Mr. Sloan was appointed to this po sition by Governor Hoyward two years ago, when the Act creating the office was first passed, and he has demonstrated his fitness for the posi tion. A bill introduced at the last session of the General Assembly to abolish the office was not pushed, after an unfavorable report made by the committee to which it was re ferred. Mr. Sloan's term expires April 80. His salary is 11,400? A e of Flour and ecessities. Yet Fertilizers than (ten ignore the common sen sr z satisfaction in res right up on so it is with ali u we can more Seneca Fertilizer Co. G. W. Gipilliat General Manager. narr AND LAST SHU HW 5H0E$ Mean $ $ made to all who buy or wear them. In style,! ease and durability, "Shield Brand Shoes7, toe the mark of perfection. ??GD DY RBUABLB MBRCIf AMI a ONLY M. C. KISER CO.. Manufacturers. ATLANTA, CA. No Need to be Chummy. "Yon want lo marry my daughter, do you ? Let me tell you that you're not exactly the sort of man I would choose for a son-in-law." The \ <>uiii nodded. ..Weill; to he frank," he said, "you are not thu sort of man I'd choose for a father-in law, either. But we needn't chum up, you know, unless we want to." How He Earned Hit Dil sr. The pompous judge glared sternly over his speotaoles at the tattered prisoner, who had been dragged be fore the bar of jumiou on a charge of vagrancy. "Have you ev??r earned a dollar in your life?" he asked, in fine scorn. "Ye?, Your Honor," was the re sponse. "I voted for you at the last election." ]^Pf When ? ^^3P^JP th? O?d Wagon * ,jAy Breaks Ay Come in and get one of our line of Studebaker*-the kind AY that stands up. If you have much hauling to do a St?de A* baker will pay for itaeii in a few months by saving you time m m and trouble and the expense of constant repairs. ^?t f You Know the Studebaker Wagon \ F l'or more than fifty years its reputation has grown better every year- m f This reputation is duo to the good quality that has always been a part ? of the Studebaker Wagons. Each part is made from the lumber tnat ie 9 best fitted for that part. New England black bitch makes tho best nObO-- m the Studebaker hubs aro made of it. Butt cut, second growth blame HICK- mm ory is the best for axles-Studebaker axles are made of it. Selected H white oak is beal for spokes and running gears-that is what ia used in tne H Studebaker Wagon. The Studebaker Wagon E i ls Perfect In Every Detall B k That is wfty we sell it. Come in and let us talk it over. Wo have some M ? interesting wagon books for every one. ?W \ C. W. PITCHFORD CO.. Wa!k^!!^^^^^^ I AM DETERMINED TO DO THE LIVERY BUSINESS for this community. Come on and get your teams. Hauling Teams, Single and Double Buggy Teams and Saddle Horses, Always on hand. Prompt and polite service at reasona ble prices. Teams sont out at any hour, day or night. Phone 10 or ll for qulok teams. ?. lt, ?10UCHINN. Walhalla, S. 0.