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MEMPHIS GETS NEXT REUNION. General Evans is Chosen to Com? uland Veterans. Birmingham, June 10.-With the selection of Memphis as the place for the next reunion and the election of General Clement' A. Evans, of Geor gia, as commander-in-chief to suc ceeds the late Geneiai Stephen u. Lee, the United Confederate Veterans ad journed their annual convention late to-day. General Evans has been active in the United Confederate Veteraus, having attended all their reunions #pt one. He was commander of Georgia division twelve years with the rank of major general, suc ceeding Gordon as commander of the Army of the Tennessee department with the rank of lieutenant-general. There was the greatest excitement in the convention all this afternoon when the time came to elect a new commander-in-chief. Gen. Bennett H. Young nominated Geueral Evans in a glowing speech. General Withers nominated General Cabell and the vote resulted: Evans, 1,232; Cabell, 1,084. In the contest for th next meet ing place the vote was: Memphis, 1,19?; Atlanta, 1,120. Upon assuming the command Gen. Evans issured the following general order, No. 1. "In obedience'to the mandates of my beloved comrades, as expressed in convention this day, I assume command of the United Confederate Veterans. Oommnnder William E. jjHTT] kle ls hereby appointed adjutant ^general and chief of staff, with the rank of major general. He will im mediately enter upon the discharge of his duties and will be obeyed and respected accordingly. Fllowing the election, Commander in-Chief General Geo. Gorden was elected commander of the Depnrt mept of t^he Tennessee to succeed Gfmeral Evans. '?' General Irvine Walker was re-elec ted commander of the Army of Northern Virginia, and General Ca bell, commander of the trans-Miss issippi department. There is no Color Line in Brazil. I (Arthur Ruhl, in Scribner.) Of the various manifestations of atmospheric laxity none is more in teresting to a North American than the haziness of the jolor line. This land of coffee and sunshine is a land tinged with African blood. Of the seventeen and a half millions of peo ple in the country only some six mil lions are whites. There were .'50, 000 slaves in Brazil when the Prin cess Regent emancipated them in 1887, and there are neighborhoods where the negro problem Is a prob lem only in so far as life may be a problem to Africans in their native jungles. You go ashore, for instance, to buy cigars at Bahia. It was a great place in the old slave days, be fore the center of industry moved down to San Paulo, ls a fine place still, with its tall stage-scenery build, inge, painted white or pinkish or pale blue, the fronts-an echo of the Dutch visitation of long ago often decorated with tiles. You climb the narrow winding streets to the upper town, looking out on the turquoise sea. Everywhere are ne groes-huge women, with enormous chocolate-colored arms, in white cot ton wrappers and turbans. They come swinging down the cobble stones, squat beside their fruits and green 1 parrots, lean out of ground floor windows, smoking fat black cigars. Try to take a photograph of one and her broad, Bhining face clouds over with fear of the unknown and up goes her apron over her head, in the cool interiors of these houses with spotless patios and doorways, white folks doubtless must be hiding from the sun, but one scarcely sees them. Eighty per cent of the inhab itants are negroes. You feel as though you were walking through a deserted white man's city held by a black army of occupation. About one-third of Rio's popula ion are negroes. From blacks who night have been landed from a slave ship yesterday the African tinge fades out through every gradation of mixed blood up to that of the cul tured whites of the ruling class. The Time and Place, a Secret. Paris, June ll.-In order to avoid the possibility of any unpleasant in cident it bas been definitely decided that the wedding of Madame Anna Gould and Prince Helle de Sagan will not take place in France. Al though the time and place of the ceremony are still rigidly guarded, it. can be stated that the couple will he married before the end of this month, probably in England. Students Drown Off Cat Island. New Orleans, La., June 10.-Bro ther Clement and Elmer Wilbert, of St. Stanislaus College, Bay St. Louis, were drowned off Cat Island Tuesday afternoon. With seve-al others they were pushing their boat on a sand bar, when the craft becoming sud denly dislodged, shot out into the water, causing them to lose their balance. The bodies were recovered with oyster tongs in thirty feet of water. Wilbert, who was a student, IB from Plnquomlne, La. The Rook-Keeper on the Farm. First Farmer-That, new hired man of yours must have been a book keeper heforo he came to you. Second Farmer-Why so? First Farmer-I notice that every time he stops work for a few min utes that he puts the pitchfork be hind his ear.-Woman's Home Com panion. MR. HEYWARD WITHDRAW?. Ho is IR and Condition Serious Rhett May Run. Columbia, June 10.-Hon. D. C. Heyward will not be a candidate for the United States Senate. He is ill and leaves to-morrow for Philadel phia for treatment. Gov. Heyward has been regarded as one of the leading candidates, and it was considered that he would cer tainly be iu the second race. He has done a good deal of preliminary work and built up a strong organi zation among his friends throughout the State, who regret his forced de cision to relinquish his chance for the Senate. It has been known to his most inti mate friends for two or three weekB that Gov. Heyward's health was In a pecartous^eondttlon. Th!? condition, however, was not considered serious by any others than his immediate family and his physicians until after his trip to Georgia last week, lt was hoped that this trip would entirely .restore him, but it failed to do BO. On his return from Georgia, his condition was found to be serions, so much so that his physicians have i been insisting for several days on I taking him to a sanitarium. He has, however, thoroughly fought this idea. For several days he has been con fined to his bed, and hie condition has grown so much worse that it has been found imperative that he go away at once for treatment. While it is hoped that rest and treatment will completely restore 1 him to health, his physicians state that he will be unable to return home or to engage In any active work within less than three months or more. lt is reported that Mayor Rhett, of Charleston, will be a cand?ante. Mr. Rhett Announces. Charleston, June 10.-Mayor Rhett announced his candidacy to night for United States Senator. Following a conference at his of fice at the People's National Bank he gave out the following statement: "To the Democratic voters of I South Carolina: I have determined 1 to be'a candidate for United States j Senator at the approaching primary : election. I shall to-morrow file my pledge with the State Democratic committee as required by the rules of the party and will abide by the rules of the primary election. 1 respectfully solicit the support of Democratic voters of the State. "R. Goodwin Rhett." O. H. P. BELMONT DEAD. Prominent New Yorker Dies- of Ap pendli (tis- End waa Sudden. New York, June 10.-Oliver H. P. Belmont, aged BO years, died at his home in Hampstead. L. I., to-day af ter a ten days' iii vith appendi citis. . His death had ueen anticipat ed for days, but in the end it came suddenly and so unexpectedly that, with the exception of Mrs. Belmont, norie of the members of the family had time to reach the sick room af ter the hurried summons,was sent to them. Mr. Belmont had not been actively engaged in business for some years. He was graduated from Annapolis Academy in 1876 and served out his two years' cruise following gradua tion. In 1878 he resigned to en gage in business with his father and brothers. After retiring from his fath'.r's old hanking firm, Mr. Belmont devoted his attention for a time to politics. He was a Democrat and in 1900 was chosen as a delegate from New York to the Democratic National Convene tion. The same year he was elected to Congress from the Thirteenth New York District. Mr. Belmont's first marriage was with Miss Sarah Swan Whiting, now Mrs. George Rives. His only child, Mrs. William Burden, died several months ago. Mr.Belmont's second marriage was with Mrs. Alvah E. Smith Vanderbilt, who prior to her divorce, was the wife of W. K. Vanderbilt. Constipation causes headache, nau sea, dizziness, languor, heart palpi tation. Drastic physics gripe, sicken and weaken the bowels, and don't cure, i loan's Rogulets act gently and cure constipation. 25 cents. Ask your druggist. Eighty Chinese Drowned. Hongkong, June tl.-The British passenger steamer Pow An, running between Hongkong, Canton and Ma cao, struck on a rock off Lanta Is land last night and is a total wreck. Eighty natives are missing, but all the European passengers and officer? of the steamer were rescued. The Pow An was a twin screw steamer of 2,339 tons, built at Glas gow, and belonged to the Hongkong, Canton, and Macao Steamboat Com pany, Limited. S partan burg's Chief ls Dead. Spartanburg, June ll.-Chief of Police A. B. Dean died this niorning nt the Spartan Inn, after an illness of several days. He had been in failing health mr two years. About eight months ago ho went to Hot Springs to take warm baths for rheumatism, with which ho suffered. He returned much Improved In health. Last Sat urday he was stricken by heart trou ble brought on by acute Indigestion, and this, with complications, waa the immediate cause of death. KING OTTO, OP BAVARIA. Sixty Year? Old and Closely Con flited for Thirty-Seven. (Washington Post.) ? Bavaria has just recently celebrat ed, in its customary manner-that is to say, with a display of flags, mil itary honors, and gun flring, and with festivities of a less official and more popular order-the birthday of that crazy king upon whom his peo ple have never set eyes since he suc ceeded to the throne just twenty two year? ago. ? No authentic portrait taken of him since his ascension is in existence, the only bona Ade pictures ot him dating from 1868 and 1869-that is to say, forty years ago. Consequent ly none of his subjects has the slightest conception of what he looks like, and he might, if he recovered his senses, which is out of the ques tion, travel from one end of hi3 do minions to the other without ever being recognized. All that his lieges know of him is that he is very tall, that he has'become quite stout, and that be has a long beard. The anniversary which he cele brated the other day was his six tieth birthday, and he has been un der restraint as a lunatic, and in seclusion, ever since his sen sa tina I arrest In the Chateau of Versailles at the beginning of 1871. He form ed part of that cortege of petty sov ereigns of Germany, and of princes of the blood, who assembled at Ver sailles to follow the operations of the ?lege of - Paris, and to take part In the birth of the present German em pire and in the proclamation of old King William of Prussia as Kaiser. \\ urn His Mind Collapsed. Prince Otto, of Bavaria, as he was then, was present at Versailles as representative of his brother, King Louis, and had been attached to the headquarters staff. But whether it was the excitement of the military operations that were taking place, or the unaccustomed restrictions of a military character, to which he, like every other member of the staff was subjected, as in a hostile coun try, he completely lost his mental balance. He insisted upon pressing his opin ions with regard to the conduct of the war upon the old Emperor and upon Moltke, and his political vlewe upon Prince Bismarck, issueu with out warrant military orders right and left, which were the cause of considerable confusion, and Anally was found to be carrying on an ac tive correspondence with the enemy, sending letters of the most amazing character to French military com manders and statesmen. This proved the Anal straw and he was placed under strict arrest. Of course there were some at Ver sailles who. cn learning of his in trigues with the enemy, insisted that he should be dealt with In the most rigorous manner, and as a traitor. But the German crown prince (af terward Emperor Frederick.), who had been watching him carefully since bis arrival at Versailles, and who had been subjected to no end of annoyance by him, urged that the man was insane and altogether irre sponsible for his actions, and should be treated as such. y , People Reconciled to His Fate. This view commended itself also to Prince Bismarck, who realized that it was the only politic way to deal with the affair, BO as to avoid allentating the Bavarian court and the Bavarian people from the cause of German unity. The consequence was that the physicians pronounced him mentally unbalanced, and he was sent back to Munich, not as a pris oner, but as a lunatic under restraint and has been conAned as such ever since. . For several years he was Impris oned in the Chateau of Nymphem burg, in the suburbs of Munich; then he was transferred to the Chat eau of Schleisheim, and in 1878 was interned in the Palace of F?rsten reid, not far from Munich, and at Furstenreid he has been ever since, that is to say, for. thirty years, never goiug beyond the lofty walls by which lt is entirely surrounded. . Each year he ls visited by a com mission of specialists, appointed by the legislature, to report to Parlia ment on his condition, and upon the manner in which, he is cared for, and each year, too, the cabinet makes a report of Its own to the legislature, so that people are thoroughly con vinced that there ls no in jut Mee be ing done, and that there ts no truth in the foolish stories circuited at the time of his ."'cession that he was a victim of Pi.nee Bismarck's policy, and of Prussian intrigue, and that he was in reality perfectly sane. So general was this belief twenty y?ars ago, that several peasant ris ings took place, with the object of releasing Otto from his captivity, while the King's uncle, the present regent, was denounced as a usurer, subjected to all sorts of demonstra tions of unpopularity, his portraits being treated with indignity, and his statues and busts smashed. To day, however, a revulsion of public sentiment has taken place, and at the present moment the old regent ls probably the most popular man in Bavaria. Will Cure Consumption. A. A. Herreu, Finch, Ark., writes; "Foley's Honey and Tar ls the best preparation for coughs, colds and lung trouble. I know that lt has cured consumption in the flrst stages." You never heard of any one using Fogy's Honey and Tar and not being satisAed. Sold by all drug gists. Baby Weighs 110 Pounds. New York, June ?f>.-Adellnn Oul tllla is 2 fi months old, weighs 110 pounds, is still growing, and the East Side, tn?t precinct of many wonders, declares Adelina the real wonder of them al' Sho lives with her parents in a tenement. The baby ls a puzzle to the physicians who have examined her. She was born In Springfield, Ohio, and last winter won a prize at tho exposition held at Jacksonville, Fla., for being tho cutest, chubbiest, biggest and most infereitlng baby In the show. Her father ls a tailor. I HLIXD PREACHER, DUMB PRINT. One Sees Not, One Mears Not, Yet They Converse Together. (Anderson intelligencer. 12th.) J. T. Mnnu was a visitor to the city Tuesday. Whllo In the city he dropped lu this oflice to see his old school mate, Oswald Glover, a deaf and dumb printer. While one "ould not see, the other could not hear or talk, but they were ablo to carry on a conversation by means of hand grips. Mr. Mann, who is blind, spent ten years at the Cedar Springs Insti tute, as did Mr. Glover, who can neither talk or hear. Mr. Manu is one of the best preachers of the county, and Is at present serving as pastor of several churches. Mr. Glover is one of the bes*t printers in (lils office and makes a great deal better living than lots of people who can both hear and talk-in fact, some people's mouths keep them from holding good Jobs. We have Known Mr. Glover for several years and during all this time we have never heard him say a word. Mr. Mann has been living in the Whitefield section of the county for several years, and he Ands no trou ble I" making his way to the homes of his neighbors whenever he feels like visiting. He states that he fre quently walks alone four or five lillies In each direction from his home. He says that he knows every rut In the road between his home and the city. Several times he has made trips to TownvlUe, where he fills an appointment, with a driver who did not know the way, and he would tell him which road to take as they st niel; cross roads. Never can tell when you'll mash a finger or suffer a cut, bruise, burn or scald. Be prepared. Dr. Thomas' Eclectic Oil instantly relieves the pain-quickly cures the wound. Reils of the Ages. At even's close the sexton old Crept up the old church tow'r, I And swung the bell that slowly tolled The close of even's \iour. ?The twl-light deepened Into night, The glow passed from the WeBt; [The sexton watched the fading light, Thenjald him down to rest. The old bell in the mould'rlng tower Still peals its plaintive sound; ?The sexton now at even's hour Lies sleeping 'neath the mound. I And thus the bells of ages toll From out the tow'r of time, And mark the close of some life's scroll With each returning chime. -H. R. H. t Thi Kind YOB Haw J?wtjt B??K Roy Hurled to Instant Death. New York, June ll.-Pouncing on a sofa beside an open window, four year-old Willie Willsick, living with his parents in East One Hunderd aud Sixtieth street, jumped once too bard late yesterday afternoon and the springs tossed him high in the air and through the window. He fell five stories to Instant death. WOMAN'S BACKACHE The back la the mainspring of woman's organism. It quickly calls attention to trouble by aching. It tells, with other symptoms, such as nervousness, headache, pains in the loins, weight in the lower part of tho 1 ><idy, that a woman's feminine organism needs immediate attention. In such cases the one sure remedy which speedily removes the cause, and restores the feminine organism to a healthy, normal condition ia LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND Mrs. Will Young, of 6 Columbia Ave., Rockland, Me., says : " I was troubled for a long time with dreadful backaches and a pain in my side, and was miserable In every way. I doctored until I was discouraged and thought I would never get well. I read what Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound bad done for others and decided to try it ; after taking three bottles I can truly say that I never felt so well in my life." Mrs. Augustus Lyon, of East TCirl, Pa., writes to Mrs. Pinkham: "I had very severe backaches, ano pressing-down pains. I could not sleep, and had no appetite. Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound cured me and made me feel like a new woman." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia K. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female Ula. and has positively cured thousands ol I women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges tion,dizziness,or nervous prostration. Tho Kind You Have Always I in uae for over 80 years, 1 - and In All Counterfeits, Imitations ; ISxperiments that trifle with infants and Children-Expei What is C Castoria is a harmless subs goric, Drops and Soothing ? contains neither Opium? Mc substance. Ita ayre is its gus and allays Feverishness. It Collo. It relieves Teething 1 and Flatulency. It assimila Stomach and Bowels, g.ving The Children's Panacea- Th< GENUINE CAST Bears the j The Kind You Ha? In Use For 0\ TH? CtMTAun COMBAN*. ,? MU $25,000 Fire at Easley. On Tuesday ot last week Basley was visited by a severe fire, two handsome brick buildings on Main street being destroyed. The total loss will aggregate in the neighbor hood of $26,000. The lire origi nated in a two-story brick building belonging to J. O. Plckens, in a pile of trash on the second floor. This story was used by the Easley Furni ture Company, coffins being stored in it. Part of the second story was used by C. N. D. Taylor, a photog rapher. His loss is complete, and is estimated at $500. The store of J. W. Ellison, who carried a stock of general merchandise, was burned, and his loss is estimated at $15,000. He carried insurance in the sum of $6,500. The Easley Furniture Com pany's IOSB is estimated at $4,000, insurance $1.000. The stock of W. H. Pickens Sons was damaged to the extent of $3,000 by the removal of the goods from the store. The loss of J. W. Ellison is probably the heaviest. KILL.T, COUGH twa CURE TH? LUNGS WITH Qr. King's Now Discovery FOR CM8P* .??SSft. AND ALL THROAT AND LUMP TROUBLES. GUARANTEED SATISFACTORY OR MONEY REFUNDED. LOTH'S STOVES AND RANGES. CHICAGO AND COLUMBIA AIR TIGHT HEATERS. TINWARE, ENAMEL AND STOVE WAKE. KITCHEN FURNITURE. GENERAL REPAIRING AND TIN WORK. -CALL ON B. 8. LOOK, WALHALLA, 8. C. MITSHWETHLAR ?tO?? tia? cou ?fe anett ??.?!. lmmg? \ - C. R. Houchins. WE ARE DETER MI LIVERY B knight, and which has bv i vs horne the signature bk is , eon made under his per lupervision since Its infancy? , no one to deceive yon in this* md *? .Just-as-good M are bub and endanger the health of rience against Experiment ASTORIA rifuto for Castor Oil, Pare Syrups. It is Pleasant. It trphine nor other Narcotic trantee. It destroys Worms cures Diarrhoea and "Wind Troubles, cures Constipation tes the Food, regulates the . healthy aud natural sleep? ? Mother's Friend? "ORIA ALWAYS re Always Bought ter 30 Years. nnAY mutT, mw von? CITY. _ PROFESSIONAL CURDS. W. J. GARTER, M. !>., Dentist. Office two doors above the Bank, ia Carter's Pharmacy, WESTMINSTER, S. C. DR. W. F. AUSTIN, Dentist, Seneca, Booth Carolina. Office over J. W. Byrd ft Co. DR. D. P. THOMSON, Dentist, Walhalla, South Carolina. Office over OW. Pitchford Co's Store Phone No. 3?. DR. J. H. BURGESS, Dentist, Seneca, South Carolina. Office over Witsell Bro.'s Store, Clinkscales Harper Building. Office Honrs:-9 A. M. to 1 P. M. 2 P. M. to 6 P. M. mmravNEircuRE ?akas Kidney? end Blvddsr Rlfjht E. Ii. II 10 RN DO N , Attorney-* t-Law, Walhalla, South Carolina. PHONE No. 61. J. P. Carey, J. W. Shelor, Pickens, S. C. Walhalla, 8. 0. W. C. Hughs, Walhalla. CAREY, SHELOR A L'UOh ), Attorney? and Counsellors, Walhalla, S. O. Practice in State and Federal Courts. R. T. JAYNES, Attorney-?*^ Law, Walhalla, South Carolina. Practice in State and Federal Courts. Bell Phone No. 20. J. J. McSWAIN, Attoruey-at-Law, GREENVALE, S. CAROLINA. M. G. LONG, Attorney-at-Law, (Office Over Post Office,) Anderson, S. G. Will practice in'all Courts In South Carolina. 46-'08 WEDDING and other Invitations, Announcements, etc., either printed or engraved, as your taste may re quire. Only flrst-cla?s work; any style; best stock. Call or write THE KEOWPE COURIER, Walhalla, S. C. Louis A. King. NED TO DO THE USINESS FOR THIS COMMUNITY. COMB ON AND GET YOUR TEAMS. HAULING TEAMS, BINGLE AND DOUBLE BUGGY TEAMS AND SADDLE HORSES, ALWAYS ON LIND. * Prompt and polite service at rea sonable prices. Teams sent out at any hour, day or night. Phons 10 or ll for quick teams. HOUGH INS A KING,