Yorkville enquirer. [volume] (Yorkville, S.C.) 1855-2006, March 13, 1901, Image 4
tumorous department.
LAWYER'S OPINION OF THE COURT.
The lawyer's inalienable and inestimable
privilege of "cursing the court,"
when the decision has gone against
him, is marred, as most lawyers realize,
by the fact that the "cursing"
must be done in private. This anim- 1
adversion, however, sometimes takes
the form of a communication of the lawyer's
opinion to the publisher of the
law reports. Parts of some of these
communications have been printed recently
by a law publishing firm.
One lawyer wrote, "The case is a legal
curiosity, and seems to have been
decided by main force."
Another, beaten in a highway case,
wrote of the court, "They do not know
a highway even when they stumble
nver it."
Another requests the publisher to
chastise the court, stating that "it will
be of great benefit to the profession
that this case be thoroughly aired and
the fallacy and danger of it in its farreaching
results exposed."
Another "very prominent lawyer"
wrote, "The opinion of our court is a
schoolboy blunder, deserving of nothing
but scathing rebuke, and a review
of it should run in that line." Most
seductive of all the suggestions was
the statement, "I should be very willing
to pay for such a criticism of the
decision as hereinabove indicated by
me." "This," comments the publisher,
"recalls the Quaker chasing his hat in
the wind and who hired an urchin to
curse it."?New York Sun.
A Decisive Step.?His chum came
in and found him slipping a lock of
hair into an envelope, not furtively
or surreptitiously, but just placing it
under cover in a calm, businesslike
way.
"Hello!" says the visitor. "What's
up?"
"Nothing," he answered. "I'm only
sending back Miss Hamilton-Highlow's
hair, that all."
"Engagement off again?"
"Yes."
"How many times does this make?"
"Five. It's final this time, though,
one way or the other."
"Does she say so?"
"Oh, she always says its final. I'm
deciding things just now. It's off forever
or cards are out soon."
"How do you do it?"
"Little scheme of my own. You
know the color of her hair, don't you? 1
Warm brown, with a little raw umber
in it? Well, this sample of hair I'm doing
up is red. I tell you we're going to
get down to genuine emotion this time.
She'll know whether she loves me or
not, and if she does she'll walk me in
by the ear."?London Mail. j
Now She Hates Him.?A young man
and a young woman lean over the front
gate. They are lovers. It is moonlight.
He is loath to leave, as the
parting is the last. He is about to go 1
away. She is reluctant to see him de- '
part. They swing on the gate.
"I'll never forget you," he says," and '
if death should claim me my last
thought will be of you."
"I'll be true to you," she sobs. "I'll
never see anybody else or love them as
long as I live."
They part.
Six years later he returns. His sweetheart
of former years has married.
They meet at a party. She has changed
greatly. Between the dances the
recognition takes place.
"Let me see," she muses, with her
fan beating a tattoo on her pretty
hand, "was it you or your brother who
was my old sweetheart?"
"Really I don't know," he says.
"Probably my father."?London Answers.
Obedient to Orders.?"You must
push matters a little, James," said the
chemist to his new boy. "By calling
a customer's attention to this article
and that article you often affect a
sale."
"Yes, sir," responded the new boy,
and then he hastened to wait upon an
elderly person who wanted a stamp.
"Anything else, mum," inquired the
ambitious boy, politely?"hair dye, cosmetics,
face powder, rheumatic drops,
belladonna, mole destroyer"?
The elderly lady deals over the way
now.?London Tit-Bits.
Visitor (at poorhouse)?Where did
that fine looking pauper come from?
Superintendent?The city. He owns
the St. Fishion flats.
"My goodness! Why is he here?"
"He charges such high rents that
they have been empty since the second
year."
"Hum! He seems to be on familiar
footing with a good many of the other
paupers."
"Yes; they are the people who were
his tenants the first year."?New York
Weekly.
"Yes," said the author, "some objection
was raised to my story in Boston.
It was pointed out that one of <
the expressions was very inelegant, and ,
I had to change it."
"What was the fault?" "Why, in .
speaking of the cooking in the olden (
times I inadvertently used the word
'spit,' and I had to make the phrase {
read, 'She was slowly turning the expectorate'
in order to make the book ]
acceptable in the best circles."?Wash- ,
ington Post. j
txT Shopman?This matches your sam
pie, perfectly, madam.
Customer?It certainly does. It could
not be closer.
Shopman?How many yards do you
wish?
Customer?Oh, not any yet! You see,
this is the very first shop I've tried!?
London Fun.
it'.r Mabel?Maud is trying to catch
the new minister, isn't she?
Irene?Desperately. She thinks he
would have proposed the other evening
if he had come prepared, but that he
was afraid to undertake it extemporaneously.?Chicago
Tribune.
"Need of counsel? Come up and
let me introduce you to my lawyer."
"Your lawyer? Do you own a lawyer?"
j?er?well, no, certainly not. He
owns me."?New York Press.
Wattsidr dkthmngs.
The British government is the
owner of more than 25,000 camels.
Upwards of 100,000 horses have perished
in the South African war up to
date.
iaT The United States imported $7,500,000
more silver from Mexico in 1900
than in 1899.
New York has the most expensive
water system in the country. It has
cost up to date $115,526,748.
tif The number of deaf mutes in the
United States is over 111,000; the nuber
of totally blind is 88,924.
Last year the total number of new
books published in the United States
reached 6,356, or 653 more than in any
previous year.
The militant spirit is dominant in
Nebraska. In the Fourth district in
that state there were 400 applicants
for the West Point cadetship.
t?r In England the breeding of mice
has reached a high state of development.
A Manchester man recently
paid $125 for a black and tan mouse of
Q nOOQtrV
iST Mrs. Annie Ray, of Oakland, Cal.,
who lately filed suit for divorce, appeared
as her own attorney, and prepared
the necessary papers herself,
without the assistance of a lawyer.
tar Throughout France suicide seems
to have been increasing for sometime.
In the five years ended January 1, 1901,
the number of suicides was no less than
27,000.
?&' It took a force of auditors a week
to locate a discrepancy of 12 cents between
the accounts of the city comp-'
troller and the city treasurer of Philadelphia,
in a total sum of $60,000,000.
tar The Massachusetts Frog company
has just been incorporated in Maine,
with a capital of $5,000, its object being
declared in the application to be "to
buy, sell, breed and import frogs and
animals."
tar The young king of Italy celebrated
his birthday recently by releasing
13,000 prisoners incarcerated in different
parts of his kingdom for offenses
which he considered had been sufficiently
punished.
tar The jury in a recent trial in Wales
comprised one man named Hughes and
eleven named Jones. Seven of the latter
bore the Christian name of John.
The prisoner's name was that of the
seven jurors?John Jones.
tai' Something of the vast magnitude
of the canning fruit business in California
mav be seen when it is known
that 50,000,000 cans are annually shipped
out of that state. To this may be
added the great quantity of bulk fruit
which comes from the state.
tS' A landslide occurred recently in
Switzerland. An inn and its garden
and outbuildings slid down a hillside
a distance of 35 feet without being in
the least injured. Two stately elm
trees in the garden were also moved
without injury.
t?' Governor Beckham has been presented
with a cane by a Virginian, who
claims that it was made from a piece
of Thomas Jefferson's office desk. The
date of Jefferson's birth and death, his
dying words and extracts from the
declaration are cut into the wood in the
most unique and artistic style.
Word comes from Painesville, O.,
that girls decided to do away with the
boycott they put on the boys, and decided
to give a sleighing party. The
boys were going to send regrets, but
the girls heard of It, and called the invitations
in. The boys seem to be getting
the worst of it all around.
iaT During a smallpox scare in Cadillac,
Mich., recently, two hoboes, claiming
to be from an infected district,
walked into town. They were penniless.
of course, but the alarmed Cadillacians
soon subscribed enough to send
them 100 miles south by rail. The two
tramps footed it out of town well content.
iW Mrs. Henrietta Dunn, of Kent Island.
Mo., recently gave a party in
honor of her two sister, Mrs. Eliza
Brown and Mrs. Margaret Weeks.
Mrs. Dunn is the mother of 25 children,
Mrs. Weeks has 21, and Mrs. Brown
has 11, making a total of 57, all of
whom are alive. Fifty-one of them
were at the party.
tii' The Chinese are not so far behind
us in the practice of medicine as has
been supposed. While the yellow physicians
are deficient in their knowledge
of anatomy, and therefore amount to
nothing as surgeons, in their treatment
of common ailments they are in some
cases practically abreast of the most
advanced practice in this country.
The attention of practical mining
men has been for several years devoted
to the deposits of copper in Alaska,
but questions of transportation have
in many cases prevented the ore from
being extensively mined. One of the
most recent reports from this region
states that the copper mines in the
Copper river district will excel in output
any that are known in the world.
S3f Congressman Roberts, in connection
with his work as a committeeman,
recently discovered a forgotten
room in the Capitol, back of statuary
hall. It was full of old books, and during
the Civil war was used as a hospital.
An old stove and some cleft wood
were found, just as they were left over
30 years ago. A soldier's coat, full of
dust and moth-eaten, hung on the gas
jet. The air was stifling and the lock
an the door had almost rusted off.
Jhi>* In the postofflee of some one of the
large cities there is an unknown clerk
who for several weeks has been stamping
religious texts on the envelopes of
the mail that passes through his hands.
Business men of New York, Philadelphia
and Chicago have been finding
lately, printed in purple type across
their correspondence, such admonitions
as "Prepare to meet thy God," or
"No man knoweth the day or the hour
when his soul shall be required of him."
XST Congress is asked to appropriate
$40,000 to raise and restore the Niagara,
Commodore Perry's flagship, sunk in
Erie bay many years ago. Nothing remains
of her but bare ribs and keel.
Everything portable, even to the handforged
bolts which held the boat together.
having been stripped from her
and passed into the possession of relichunters.
It was on the blood-stained
deck of the Niagara, just us the firing
ceased, that Perry penned his famous
modest message to General Harrison:
"We have met the enemy and they are
ours. Two ships, two brigs, one
schooner and one sloop."
pijsccUancoMS grading.
FROM NEIGHBORING CONTEMPORARIES.
News and Comment That Is of More or Less
Local Interest.
YORK.
Rock Hill Herald, March 9: Mrs. J.
H. Stevens is visiting in Lancaster
Mrs. Mollie Cobb is quite sick at her
home on Elm avenue Mrs. J. E.
Reid went to Anderson Thursday to
visit her parents Born, to Mrs. J.
H. B. Jenkins, on Wednesday night, a
son Miss Mamie Hull went to Lancaster
yesterday, to visit relatives
Mr. J. F. Reid and little Miss Florence,
spent Friday in Chester
Miss Sophie Myers, of Charlotte, is
visiting at Mrs. W. J. Rawllnson's
Miss Alta Fewell has been quite sick
at her home on Oakland avenue
Miss Edna Love is expcted to visit
her aunt, Mrs. Kate Fewell, today
Mrs. Jennie Greene, of Lancaster, is
visiting her daughter, Mrs. H. E.
White Miss Daisy Huey has gone
~ * j _ _ ? ? - ? X tirlf
to Lancaster 10 accept a pusmuu nm.
the Heath Banking and Mercantile
company Little Miles, the 3-yearold
son of Mrs. Minnie Rudisill, is very
critically ill with pneumonia, following
measles Mr. Jowers, the venerable
step-father of Mr. E. B. Cook, is
very ill with la grippe at the home of
the latter on Black street The
chaingang passed through the city yesterday
on the way to the camp at
Taylor's creek, near the Waters hill.
The gang now numbers 19 The
bishop's meeting of the A. M. E. Zion
church, colored, will be held in Rock
Hill on March 13th. Members of the
board from St. Louis will be present.
Miss Corrie Mobley is expected
home today from Baltimore. All her
friends will give her a hearty welcome
home, and will be delighted to hear
that she is greatly improved in health.
The ladies of Edgmoor and community
will give a hot supper at the
residence of Mrs. J. C. Dickey on the
evening of March 20th. Excellent music
will be furnished during the evening.
Proceeds for benevolent purposes.
The public is cordially, invited to
attend Mr. W. J. Rawllnson came
home from Florence on Wednesday
and Major T. C. Beckham came on
Thursday. There were only six cases
on the docket and four of the number
were thrown out by the grand Jury....
There was a small fire at the Manchester
mill Wednesday morning, but
was discovered in time to prevent any
damage. It was under one of the cotton
warehouses, and had it not been
discovered at that moment, it might
have proven very disastrous. This mill
has a splendidly organized fire company
of its own. which responded to the
alarm immediately, but the fire was
put out with a bucket of water.
Hickory Grove Sun, March 9: J. B.
Martin was in Rock Hill Monday, on
business Messrs. C. M. and W.
H. Whisonant went to Rock Hill on
Monday on business Mr. E. F. Bell
Sr., spend Saturday and Sunday with
his family in Hickory Grove Mr.
T. G. Stenhouse, of Charlotte, was in
Hickory Grove last Monday Mr.
J. W. Castle visited Rock Hill Saturday
on business. His little neices Sallie
and Anna Iyle Allison accompanied
him Hon. R. M. Carroll, of Blairsville,
was seen in Yorkville Monday....
Mr. R. W. Westmoreland returned
Tuesday from a visit to his son, Mr.
A. P. Westmoreland, who lives near
Anderson in a factory town where he
is a machinist and is making money.
He took unto himself a wife a short
time ago Dr. H. W. Bays, of Rock
Hill, arrived in Hickory Grove, on last
Friday afternoon and made a lecture
In Mt. Vernon church that evening.
4|s subject was 'When to Court, How
to Court, and What to Court." Messrs.
R. C. and W. L. Jackson, of Clover,
s C wprp in Hickorv Grove and vicin
ity on Tuesday and Wednesday
Mrs. Mary Morrison, of Hickory Grove,
died last Saturday, the 2d of March,
about 12 o'clock. She had been sick
with pneumonia about two weeks.
Her age was about 45 years. She and
her little girl Janie had been in the
family of Mr. R. K. Seahorn for several
years. Her remains were buried
in the Hickory Grove cemetery Sunday
afternoon at 3 o'clock. The funeral
services were conducted by Dr. Bays
at the grave, Rev. P. B. Ingraham being
absent at Shady Grove. She was
a member of the Methodist church.
CHEROKEE.
Gaffney Ledger, March 8: On Wednesday
evening last, at 8 o'clock, Mr.
J. J. Webber, of Stice, N. C., and Miss
Minnie Ellis, of this city, were united
in marriage at the home of the bride's
father, Mr. P. L. Ellis. Rev. W. S. B.
Ford, of the Second Baptist church,
performed the ceremony in the presence
of a few close friends of the bride
and groom Tramps seem to be
numerous in Spartanburg, and some of
the are quite Impudent. A few days
ago one called at the residence of Mrs.
F. L. Liles, in that city, and asked for
something to eat. Upon her refusing
to comply with his request he used
some very abusive language to the
lady, but was soon frightened away
and the police did not capture him.
There have been several to ?laffney
recently, but this town is so "hostile"
towards them that they do not tarry
long within the city limits. One, however.
was captured Wednesday for
beating a train and stealing some
things from a box car at the depot.
He is now doing something that he
has probably never done before, unless
for the same cause, and something
that is no doubt very foreign to his inclinations?that
is, working on the
streets of the city with the glowing
prospects of 55 long days of such pastime
before him. These knights of the
road do not act upon the maxim that
"beggars must not be choosers," but
contend for the best that can be had
and become highly indignant if they do
not get it. Everyone of that class
should be punished to the fullest extent
of the law whenever captured
After trying a number of trivial cases
Tuesday and Wednesday the proceedings
in the court of general sessions
came to an abrupt close, the excuse being
that the murder trials, in which
much interest was being manifested,
could not be tried on account of an
affection of the throat of Col. T. B.
Butler, the leading counsel in each
case. As a consequence there was a i
great deal of disappointment on the i
part of the morbid minded who had 1
gathered to listen to the testimony. 1
The cases disposed of and not report- 1
ed in the last isue of The Ledger, are <
as follows: L. A. Jackson and Clar- i
ence McBrayer were charged with vlo- 1
lating the dispensary law. The grand 1
Jury failed to find a true bill against, 1
Jackson, so he came clear, but McBray- i
er was found guilty and fined 5150 or 10 i
months on the chain gang. The cas* i
against Jessie Champion for violating
the dispensary law was continued, i
George C. Williams was found guilty 1
of violating the dispensary law and a i
sealed verdict was handed in. John i
Byars and Sarah Sheers were tried for <
adultery and acquitted. This seemed (
to be a case of spite work, they being <
nrnsepiitad hv snmpnno who had a dis- 1
like for them. The case against our |
old friend "Bob" Powell, for violating j
the dispensary law was continued.
Bail was granted to Charles H. Gait- j
ney and Banks Perry in the sum of (
$2,000 each. Messrs. L. R. Ross and ]
J. A. Gaffney became surety for Mr.
Gaffney. Mr. Perry has not yet secured
bondsmen, but hopes to do so in
a few days.
CHESTER.
Lantern, March 8: Mr. J. Martin
Grant, of Halsellville, who keeps a
record of the weather as it passes, as
well as forecasts of the future, phoned 1
The Lantern yesterday morning that ,
the temperature was the lowest he had recorded
in 13 years, which we sup- 1
pose runs back to the beginning of his
observations Mr. H. H. Shannon,
of Leeds, who was in town Tuesday,
says he has all of his corn land ready
for planting. He says he would rath- !
er be short on cotton than corn. He
has all of his last year's crop of cotton
to sell yet. Mr. Shannon is a hust- 1
ling farmer, always raises his hog and ,
hominy, and makes cotton a surplus.
Mr. Richard Estes, a hard-work- 1
ing farmer and worthy citizen, who
lives near Smith's, lost by fire Wednesday
morning about 1 o'clock, his barn
two good mules, about 60 bushels of
corn, 1,500 bundles of fodder and a lot
of peavine hay, total loss about $400.
No insurance. Mr. Estes bought a little
home of about 100 acres three years
ago on the installment plan and was
working hard to meet his payments.
He has a wife and six little children, ;
and deserves help, sympathy and encouragement
from all good citizens. It
was by hard work, with the help of
some faithful colored neighbors, that
he saved his dwelling. Mr. Estes feels
sure that it was the work of an incendiary
Miss C. Inez Hunter, of
Chester, daughter of Captain M. H.
Hunter, was married Wednesday evening,
March 6th, 1901 at Hopkins, S. C.,
to Mr. W. G. Whitlock Will
Chalk, white, and Robert Carter, colored,
were committed to jail yesterday
morning for stealing a bale of cotton
from Mr. T. T. Castles two or three
weeks ago. The cotton was recovered
in Yorkville, where It had been sold.
Chalk, who is of good family, but destitute
of character, was in Jail for
stealing cotton seed from Mr. G. W.
Lackie, about Chi'istmas, and was released
a short time ago The city
has bought two splendid mules, and
two faithful old mules, still good, have
been retired on full rations and light
work, that is to say, they have been
assigned to the scavenger wagon. This
reminds us to say that mules can hardly
be found that receive better care
than those belonging to the city of
Chester. Mr. Jas. Hamilton gives
them his personal attention, has them
liberally fed with good sound feed of
the most wholesome kind, keeps good,
clean water in their reach, and though
they have to do plenty of heavy work,
no driver is allowed to abuse them in
any way. They have comfortable, well
niio rfnro on/1 Vi o tro nno r\a \r nf
IV\_ L 4 UU ? kVIC, CXUU UU>? V W*IV "V
absolute rest every week. One of the
mules in use now is 18 years old, but
is as sleek as a mole and shows no
sign of failing. Mules on farms, treated
as these are, serve about a generation,
and their keep costs no more than
when they are half fed, if as much.
There would be great economy in caring
for all mules in this way. Threefourths
of the money sent out of the
state for mules would be saved.
LANCASTER.
Ledger, March 8: Messrs. Mike Sowell
and Eli Langley had a difficulty near
the Stevens saw mill while on their
way home from town last Monday
night, in which the latter was severely
cut across the shoulder. A physician
was summoned and dressed the
wound. Mr. Langley's wound is very
painful, but he will soon be O. K
Mr. Wm. K. Marshall, of Pleasant Hill
township, died last Tuesday evening at
the ripe old age of 86 years. He was
a good, honest, straightforward citizen.
He served with the reserves in
the Confederate army, guarding prisoners
at Florence, etc....!..Mr. W. C.
Cauthen sent his bond as county treasurer
for the ensuing two years to Columbia
on Tuesday and received his
commission. Thursday Auditor Cook
forwarded his bond at the same time
and he also received his commission.
STAND FOR THE FLAG.
No Fear That the Empire Will Overwhelm
Us.
Thoneh mn n mnv ho over the* ar> rnu
? ~ \
nor Saladdin much other in his pasor
ill, ours; for weal or woe, ours; the
princes who hammered at the gates of
the Holy City, the world doth move
apace. We are as God made us. If
aught went wrong that happened
yesterday, we did it ourselves. Nor
did we do it blindfold. Not a sovereign
on earth has half the power
lodged in his hands which the congress
just expired lodged in the hands of
William McKinley. Well may he ride
in state! Not Herod in his pride; not
Ceasar in his glory; not even Napoleon
beneath the vaulted arches of Notre
Dame, so safe in his person, so sure
of his commission, so absolute and
puissant in the reach of his tenure!
Imagine a man so situate, an Anthony,
a Rienzi, a Nero; what havoc before
the world could put a stopper on
the light and put it out. And yet,
somehow, we fear not; for there stands
the grim, awkward, grotesque figure of
our excellent and upright Brother Jonathan;
it may be a spectre, a homely
spectre, as it were?a country cousin
nvlted to the feast and unwelcome to
many, but an actual presence there; a
visible reminder; the spirit of Democracy;
the genius of Republicanism; and
woe to him that treads upon those
jlumsy feet of his, who jostle the stalwart
equanimity of this, the real mas:er
of the revels; this, the grand champerlain
of the court; this, the uncouth
Warwick of the modern tourney of
states and parties; this sovereign of
sovereigns; this maker and unmaker of
presidents!
And so, dear Mr. Bryan, let us pluck
ap heart a lick or two. This sort of
:hlng does not suit us; not a particle;
we agree on that; perhaps it is our edlcatlon;
we agree on that; perhaps it Is
jur blood; perhaps It is that we have
Irunk much and too deep of the water
)f the Mississippi and the Ohio; but
what not, let us never despair, nor
lang our heads in shame, nor fall down
whilst imperialism and the imperialists
lourish over us.
Yet, let us be wary still. Let us emuate
the wisdom of the serpent. Where
:he skin of the lion fail us, must we
i'en piece it out with the fox's. Nor
nake mistakes, either. Too many we
pave made already. They are costly,
ifou, being young and optimistic and
irdent, may think you have some time
10 squander; but there are those of us
who are no longer so that cannot wait
:oo many days. In one sense imperialsm
is here to stay. This Uncle Sam of
purs, this Brother Jonathan, grown to
his full stature, has had a taste of
blood. He has felt the touch of his
manhood. There is no stopping him
until he has sown the wild oats and
3een the error of his ways. It is very
wrong; but he is going to have his
fling, and, when it is ended?if, haply,
It should be ended whilst he retains
his health and strength of historic
youth, his right and wrong wholly debauched
and blunted?these outlaying
territories will still be ours; for good
or ill, ours; weal or woe, ours; the
flag above them never to come down.
Let us make no mistake in this, Mr.
Bryan. But, accenting it as a fact inevitable
as the Union itself, let us hold
the Republicans to their just accountability
for the administration of the
country at home and abroad, in the
states, in the territories and in the colonies.
Otherwise, we go to continuous
and certain defeat.
Stand by the truths of the Declaration
of Independence. Stand by the
mandates of the constitution. But also
stand by the flag. Don't let them
write us down against the flag. Don't
let us seem to be opposed to the flag.
The declaration, yes! The constitution,
yes! But, ever and ever, and
late and early and right or wrong, the
flag, the flag, the flag!?Louisville Courier-Journal.
# it i <
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Will be just as carefully exec
office in the country. We an
your work and at a price that
"cheap" printing?do not solic
|%? you are wanting a class of wo
particular we would be pleas<
work. We will guarantee to
y*? work equal to the best to be 1
i'jl fine Commercial work we soli
i \?
!| Law Printing ^
jT4?
Law printing is one of our <
It lawyers that they will get pro:
*X will Krincr 11c tVipir nrintincr
iT f o
%* just what they are looking for
SATISFY YOU.
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does not lose its brilliancy
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!| cause enlargements often
g* aeiecis wnicn <nc uul
H Medallion is mounted by a
g| vex shell, the back being 1
binding the two, giving
|? stability, and is furnished
|f ble easel back, which can 1
|| ble, or for wall hanging.
II tograph, which will be reti
By arrangements witl
|I ENQUIRER offers one c
lions in either of three wa
II cash. 2. For FOUR sub
|I RER. 3. One Medallioi:
|I one year for $2.50.
|! If not familiar with M
|! ed to show you a sample a
ECZEMA.
ITCHING fl
HUMORSPainful,
unsightly eruptions, scabs and
scales, itching sensation, prickling pains,
thin, diseased blood, bumps, and dirty
specks on the skin, pimples, boils, pale
skin, eating sores and ulcers, skin and
blood humors cured by taking Botanic
Blood Balm (B.B.B.). All the sores quickly
heal and blood is made pure and rich by its
use. Deep-seated, obstinate, cases that
resist Doctors and patent medicine trcatinentyield
to Botanic Blood Balm (B.B.B.).
The most perfect Blood Purifier made. 30
rears old. Try it. For sale by Druggists.
81. per large bottle, including complete
directions for home treatment.
Snnd A crnts ??? |?nv posing* on Fro* Trial
: .mi*, uuiou BALM t'O., Atlanta. ?a.
?ir You will find the popular novel,
"EBEN HOLDEN," at the York Drug
Store. If you haven't read it, you have
missed a treat.
Ine,w edition
Webster's
International
Dictionary
New Plates Throughout
25,000 New Words
Phrases and Definitions
4 Prepared under the direct supervision
of W.T. HARRIS,Ph.D.,LL.D.,
United States Commissioner of Education,
assisted by a large corps of
competent specialists and editors.
Rich Bindings. 0 2364 Pages
5000 Illustrations
Better Than Ever for Home,
School, and Office.
We alto publish
Webster's Collegiate Dictionary
with Glotsary of Scottish Words and Phrases.
" First class in quality, second class in size."
Specimen pages, etc. of both
books sent on application. / \
G. & C. Merriam Co. ( Webster's ]
_ .... InnHBunotMJ
Publishers \jwcncrwtY7
Springfield a Mass.
al Printing : : : :
uted here as it would be in anv
i especially well prepared to do
will satisfy you. We do not do
it it and do not want it. But if
rk that will satisfy you in every
id to quote you prices on your
give you a class and quality of
lad anywhere. For all kinds of
cit your business. !!?
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specialties and we can assure all
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And then, too, the price will be
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;;;;
M. GRIST & SONS. U
* ?
<???
1'$!A***' 't 4; 4; 4; 4; 4* v??
jLXonsrs. 1
? H ?
is the latest novelty for ?!
raphs, as well as the latest fj!
ime and satisfy the artistic i||
SF cannot be soiled like pa- fx
I it break like glass, nor ?|
dust, also water proof, and if
ury. Its porcelain finish ||
/. The Medallion is fur- f|
ng from 4% to 7% inches ||
size is recommended, be- $?
result in coarse lines and
ireut in the original. The
special process over a con- $2
likewise convex, the frame ff
remarkable strength and ^
with adjustible and reversibe
used as an easel on a ta- f?
Furnish good cabinet pho- f|
irned. t|
i the manufacturers THE If
>f these handsome Medaltys,
viz.: i. For $1.50 in
scribers to THE ENQUI- f?
1 and THE ENQUIRER S
edallions we will be pleas- fl
t this office. fl
M. GRIST & SONS. 11
SOUTH CAROLINA & GEORGIA
EXTENSION RAILROAD CO.
TIME TABLE NO. 4.
In Effect 12.01 a.m., Sunday, Dec. 24,1899.
BETWEEN .
CAMDEN AND BLACKSBURO.
WEST. CAST.
35. 33. EASTERN 82. 34.
2nd 1st TIME. i8t 2nd
Class. Class. Class. Class.
Dally Dally
Except Dally. Daily. Except
^ STATIONS.
P. M. P. M. P. M. P. M.
8 20 12 50 Camden....... 12 25 5 TO
8 50 1 15 DeKalb 12 02 4 ?0
9 20 1 27 -...Westvllle...- 11 50 4 3fl
10 50 1 40 Kershaw 11 35 4 10
11 20 2 10 Heath Springs. 11 20 3 15
11 ai 2 15 ..Pleasant HAL 11 15 S CO
12 30 2 35 ....I>anca8ter.... 10 55 2 35
1 On 2 50 ....Riverside 10 40 1 00
1 20 3 00 ....Sprlngdell.... 10 30 2 40
2 30 3 10 Catawbs J'c'n. 10 20 i2 20
2 50 3 20 Leslie 10 10 il 00
3 10 3 40 ....Rock Hill... 10 00 8 40
4 10 3 55 Newport 9 35 8 20
4 45 4 02 Tlrzah 9 30 8 CO
5 30 4 20 Yorkvllle.... 9 15 7 F.0
tl 00 4 35 Sharon 9 00 6 50
<? 25 4 50 Hickory Grove 8 45 fl SO
6 35 5 00 Smyrna 8 35 fl CO
7 0J 5 20 ...Blacksburg... 8 15 5 80
P. M. P. M. A.M. A.M.
BETWEEN
BLACKSBURti, S. C., AND MARION, N. (!.
WEST EAST.
11. 33. EASTERN 32. 12.
2nd 1st TIME. 1st 2nd
Class. Class. Class. Class.
Dally Dally Dally Dally
Except Excent Except Except
Sund'ySund'y NATIONS 8und1y Sund'y
A.M. P.M. A.M. P.M.
8 10 5 80 ...Rlfickxburg... 7 48 6 40
8 :? 5 45 Karls 7 32 6 20
8 40 5 50 Patterson Hpr'g 7 25 6 12
9 20 6 00 .Shelby 7 15 6 00
10 00 6 20 ....IJiltimore..._ 6 55 4 50
10 10 0 28 ...Mooresboro.. 0 48 4 40
10 25 0 38 Henrietta.... 0 88 4 20
10 50 0 55 -..Forest City... 0 20 8 50
1115 7 10 Rutherfordlon 0 05 3 25
11 35 7 22 Millwood... 5 58 8 05
11 45 7 35 .Golden Valley 6 40 2 50
12 05 7 40 .Thermal City. 6 87 2 45
12 25 7 58 ... Glenwood.... 6 17 2 20
12 50 8 15 Marlon 5 00 2 00
P. M. P. M. A. M. P. M.
GAFFNEY BRANCH.
WE8T. I AST.
First Class. EASTERN First Class.
15. | 13. TIME. 14. | 10.
Dally Except Dally Except
Sunday. Sunday.
^rrrjT STATIONS, rrr^r
1 00 0 00 ?. Blacksburg. - 7 50 3 00
1 20 0 20 Cherokee Falls 7 80 2 40
1 40 0 40 Gaffhey 7 10 2 20
P. M. A. M. A. M. P. M.
Trains Nos. 32 and 33 connect at Blacksburg
with trains on the Gaffney Division. .
Train No. 32 connects at Camden with ?
the Charleston Division of the Southern
Railway for all points South.
Train No. 33 leaving Camden at 12.40 p.
m., going West, makes connection at Lancaster,
S. C., with the L. A. C. R. R.f at
Catawba Junction with the S. A. L., going ,
North; at Rock Hill with the Southern
Railway going North.
Train No. 11 connects at Blacksburg
with the Southern Railway from the
South. At Marion, N. C., with the Southern
Railway going West.
SAMUEL HUNT, President,
A. TKIPP, Superintendent,
r* i ? at tit i a lTATimrr mnnmriniT
WKULlM&MTt
RAILWAY COMPANY.
Schedule Effective Sept. 16, 1900.
Northbound Passenger Mixed
Leave Chester .... 7.40a.m. 8.30a.m.
Lv Yorkvtlle 8.46a.ra. 10.40a.m.
Lv Clover 9.14a.m. 11.30a.m.
Lv Gastonla 9.48a.m. 1.15p.m.
Lv Llncolnton ....10.46a.m. 2.45p.m.
Lv Newton 11.33a.m. 4.30p.m.
Lv Hickory 12.15a.m. 5.50p.m.
Arrive Lenoir .... 1.16p.m. 7.50p.m.
Southbound Mixed Passenger
Leave Lenoir 6.30a.m. 2.00p.m.
Lv Hickory 8.50a.m. 3.02p.m.
T.v Ncwtnn 9.20a.m. 3.02D.m.
Lv Lincolnton ..11.10a.m. 4.20p.m.
Lv Gastonla 1.12p.m. 5.30p.m.
Lv Clover 2.11p.m. 6.07p.m.
Lv Yorkville 3.20p.m. 6.40p.m.
Ar Chester 5.15p.m. 7.50p.m.
CONNECTIONS.
Chester?Southern Ry., S. A. L., and
L. & C.
Yorkville?S. C. & G. Extension.
Gastonla?Southern Ry.
Lincolnton?&. A. L.
Newton & Hickory?Southern Ry.
Lenoir?Blowing Rock Stage Line and
C. & N.
E. F. REID, G. P. Agent.
Chester, South Carolina.
To Gret a Good
PHOTOGRAPH
Come to my Gallery on West
liberty street. Come, rain or
shine, and you will receive the
best attention.
Very Respectfully,
JT. R. SCHORB,
Yorkville, S. C.
tar TAKE COUGH EASE. It cures.
YORK DRUG STORE.
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The Sunday Sun V
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Price, 5c a copy. By mail, $2 a year
Address THE HUN", New York.