The Aiken recorder. [volume] (Aiken, S.C.) 1881-1910, December 05, 1902, Image 13
N
V
effort if
Mition of the race aV
/ter citizens, does not^
As the Columbia State*.^
“Roosevelt has succeedetWfr'spo...
the best negro the race has so far pro
duced ” Booker T.. as political boss, has
stepped down. Don’t let us forget that
under all his furs and feathers, Roose
velt is a politician—whether a keen one
or not, time will show.
- -vf , call a f
{or
to
h>olisliTfJ|^^^^mTstate one thing sure, for the frost the other ,
holidays Tl^^Tractice is a jay killed bolls, blooms and everything |
^^Blbjectionable one, because of its else as dead as Julius Caesar; so if the .
mmisiveneas to moat paop\e, besides its top crop out West matures it wiH do
Ganger to those who engage in it, and m ore injury than good. f
it would not be tolerated in any com- Mr. Tony Weeks will move to Mrs.
munity at any other time than Christ- Jeffcoat’s place, near Rocky Spring,
mas. The Legislature has very proper- where he will run a farm next year. ,
ly ordered in the public interest, that Mrs. C. H. Redd, who has been quite '
shall not obtain at the Christmas ill for some time, we are glad to report
me also, and the penalty provided for i 8 about well again.
*mn of the order is quite se- Mr. Walter Weeks, our esteemed
-'-e general respect ma il rider, is quite ill at present will
rheumatism.
’T'he singing school at Clear Water
‘ - fairly well under the teac
The Sabba
"'fency
i-St. 1.
xt books adoptca o,
f Education, for sale at whoiv.-
trices.
2nd.—Section22 of the school law rM
quires that every claim or war rani
issued by a board of trustees must be
signed by at least two members of the«
| board and the clerk of the board ; when?
it is inconvenient .to reach the third?
member of the board, then the clerly
should sign the warrant as trustee a®
well as clerk ; the signature of the clerlf
1 is the evidence that a record has been|
made of the same. A strict compliance ’
">th this section will save delay and
*he approval of the warrant.
‘ -'f the school law' re^
-'•■tain fixer
t is « t
ir not, time will sn.,.,
The appearance of the stores call at
tention to the near approach of the hol-
* \ay season. It is wisdom on the part *
~*^dday purchaser to make selec-
^^““■"••ihlcafter the open-
ity at any
is. The Legislature na»
ordered in the public interest, i,..-
shall not obtain at the Christmas jjl for
me also, and the penalty provided for j 8 about well ag».~
he infraction of the order is quite se- Mr. Walter Weeks, ov.
■ ere enough to insure general respect , na il rider, is quite ill at present
for it. rheumatism.
The issue now rests with the police The singing school at Clear Water is ,
authorities. It is forbidden that deal- progressing fairly well under the teach- '
ers shall “sell” any crackers above the ership of Mr. Webb. The Sabbath
prescribed proportions. The collection school is under the superintendency of
of a few IKX) fines from early offenders, Mr. J. P. Johnson. Mr. Head’s Sun-
if any, will make the prohibition effec- day school at Rocky Springs, we under-
tive, and help the municipal treasuries stand, has gone into winter quarters
in the same measure besides—News and f or the season.
Mr. Editor, your scribe has never yet ,
—had the pleasure of sending you a mar
riage announcement; but I am not dis
couraged—probably they are waiting ‘
until Christmas-tide.
Bill Bittlkk.
a -
hould sig..
veil as clerk; thes. fe .
is the evidence that a recoil
made of the same. A strict compliant
with this section will save delay and-f
j trouble in the approval of the warrant.’
' 3rd.—Section 44 of the school law' re
quires trustees to have a certain fixed ’
1 monthly salary for teachers.
4ih.—I will be at my office in the^
court house on Monday and Saturday off
each week until further notice. A<W
dress all communications to Aiken, S. (■
j A. W. SANDERS, y
Supt. Education A. C.
Nov. 29, 1902. j
rw - • r* •
Nov. 29, 1902.'
...Know a Tree by Its I -
That is the standard we are willing o
j Trees should be judged by. We hav
* number of customers in Aiken to wh
we wijl refer prospective buyers. <
plants are carefully grown and f
j prices are right. Don’t buy from ag
ur.lcss you have money to throw a....
Write for our catalogue to-day. Finef
j line of roses and hedge plants; alsr
shade trees. Three to five feet peac
j trees for Sixty cents. Other things j
proportionate prices.
i BAMBERG NURSERIES,
1 Bamberg, S. C
RAZAAR:
r Jub woman, Mrs. ^
/Edgerton, Wis., tells
was cured of Irregular!-
uterine trouble, terrible
d backache by Lydia E.
u Vegetable Compound.
ago my health began to
female troubles. The
^I^^Hkhelp me. I remembered
-diat my^^roer had used Lydia E.
Pinkhum’s Vegetable Compound
on many occasions for irregularities
and uterine troubles, and I felt sure
that it could not harm me at any rai
to give it a trial. —^
“ I was certain!
within a
terrj
, Jht
•ularly
He had
cap and an
Tcf fine large oily
joked just like the
lauffeurs in the comic
vn as standing at the pris-
_jck in court, by preference.
Inie along with me, old hoss,” said
Juggles, “I’ll take you rattling up the
Drive in the Pea Green Desperado and
we’ll scare all the old ladies out of
their -wits from here to the Monu
ment.”
The long and the short of it was.that
I climbed into his machine, standing
outside my house with a crowd around
it, watching it gurgle and tremble, and
all the neighbors hiding behind their
lace curtains and wondering who my
expensive friend was. I didn’t see
them—the neighbors—but I knew they
were there. Because I’ve done it my
self.
It was a pretty instrument—Bug-
gles’s automobile. As you might have
guessed from its sobriquet, it was a
fine bright green, except the waist of
it—as you might say—where you sit
and work it. That was red and oily.
There were a number of shiuy lauj,
terns and things stuck ovex ^
slope of It, and dow, 1 ' —
a shutter *’•
V—
’uinnicr house through the window,
'the laps of two persons already
there. They wore very angry, both of
them, and vanished down the hill
threatening to have the law on us.
I told Buggies that I didn’t blame
them, either—that I had been young
myself. He got mad at that and said
it was all because I'd put my bally
hand on the steering gear and switched
the machine off the road, and that
he’d “like to have been killed” in con
sequence. He wanted to know why
the deuce I should switch him up on
this hill—did I like the scenery so
much, and Avould I pay the fine?
What’s the use of arguing with a fel
low like Buggies when he’s mad, any
way? I just kept quiet and got into
the machine and sat still, while he
climbed in and backed her up rfnd
turned her around and tried to start
her. But she wouldn't start. He pulled
all of the levers and things in sight,
but she just stood still and shook. Then
he got out and crawled in underneath
among the works, to see what was the
matter. I sat in the waist effect, that
was all red and oily.
Presently I heard him say from
bowels of the machint^ "
“Are you touchin’ anj;
“No.” Buggle
of wr r ' A ’
In Harper’s, John It. Spears demon
strates that General Wayne, commonly
known as “Mad Anthony,” was in real
ity the sanest, coolest soldier in Wash
ington’s Army.
“They called the hero of Stony Point
and the Maumee Rapids ‘.Mad Anthony
Wayne,’ ” says Mr. Spears. “The title
was originated by an Irish soldier who
had been confined in the guardhouse
at the order of the General, and it was
taken up by the people because of the
wild enthusiasm and determination
with which Wayne led his men when
the supremo moment of battle came.
, But observe that when the War of the
Revolution impended he ‘ransacked his
tory’ for accounts of battles that he
might learn military tactics; and he
gave his days to the —'
neighbors. At Stony Point,
men in spite of his wound^
paring for the batt 1 - ’•
pride of his mei^
‘clean shaved ai
powdered,’ while,
included ^
fl -
—.aanthe;
^pnnstmas, the
^^fitne to assist in
vaiited, and the pur-
ative leisure for the
j articles proposed to
holiday shopper who
siness early, not only
the offerings, but is
e satisfied in the end,
d shopper must fret
hurry and crush of the
Christinas, must take
ore discriminatingper-
t inevitably comes out
sappointed. There are.
velties and better bar-
early in the season than
i to be gained and much
postponing the shopping
until the last possible
present is not a day too
vith the preparations for
-»
noney spent by per
;en each season for
i considerable. The
this money ought to
lation at home, by
liken merchants,
nerchants a chance to
i do. Let them have
filling your orders;
Consumption is a human
weed flourishing best in weak
lungs. Like other weeds it’s
easily destroyed while young;
when old, sometimes im
possible.
Strengthen the lungs as you
would weak land and the
weeds will disappear.
The best lung fertilizer is
Scott’s Emulsion. Salt pork
is good too, but it is very hard
to digest
The time to treat consump
tion is when you begin trying
to hide it from yourself.
Others see it, you won’t.
Don’t wait until you can’t
leceive yourself any longer.
Begin with the first thought
to take Scott’s Emulsion. If
It isn’t really consumption so
wuch the better; you will soon
iorget it and be better for the
Prison Visitor— — ,,
Burning that it was your'pmMa^^—
strong drink that brought you hereT
Prisoner—“I don’t think you can
I know this place, guv’nor. It’s the last
j place on earth I’d come to if I was look
* in’ for something to drink.”
9 lor goiiiw. o
Mias Sweetleigh—“Have you played
much golf, Mr. Snooks ?”
Mr. Snooks—“Well, no, I can’t say I
have played much; but I have been naU at Mr*
“/‘IT in atNoJaeBroad
my new golf clothes, and am just be- , hp io riro an( i verv ournetiv
f ginning to understand the language.” of ^ ! uld fe \ Vin ? er ij tg , bonnet
and general millinery she has just r<
-.h,i,jr tbe eeived and has on exhibition, and is o
* -....rMcedentedly low price
~ tl
Fall and Winter HatsTand
era! Millinery.
- •» V
Stylish
Vi ub
Visitors to Augusta will do well tl
call at Mrs C. Sanken’s millinery estat
lishment at No. 926 Broad street and exl
-"rtine the large, and very attractivl
n'lnter hats, bonnetl
ginning **.
A neighboring paper describing the
localities of three prominent institu-
1 tions of the town, says: “The medical
college is on the road to the cemetery,
the divinity college on the road to the
poorhouse, and the law school on the
road to the jail.”
First Farmer—“When are you going
to start ploughing ?”
I Second Farmer—“I don’t expect to
do any.”
First Farmer—“You don’t ? Why ?”
Second Farmer—“I won’t have to. I
have let a lot of amateur golfers use
my fields for practice since last month.”
Willie, a Chicago boy, after eating
two pieces of pie at dinner, asked for a
third. “Why. Willie,” said his father,
~ ■*MatotfQ^^^nucl^)i^)eople
Jb £11 I it IIV*
...... „ neral millinery she nas juo* ...
eeived and has on exhibition, and is ol
fering at unprecedentedly low price:
Attention is particularly called to thl
pretty white hats for Fall wear, whicl
are being sold very close ; and also hel
round or walking hats, which are soil
trimmed at 75?, and especially attraf
tive ones trimmed in pompons,
soft silk, or veil at $1.50. Herre»y-tcl
wear hats she reasonably camdoast t?
having all the newest shadpffind style
at only 75<>, $1.00 and $2.Qfeaeh.
The newest and prettiest styles a
children’s soft felt h#s that she is of
fering at only 5p^, the cheapest thinl
out. In childr en > 8 dress hats and in lal
dies and bal,y caps and sacmies,she ha|
the same go,d values with tow price*
Neglect to Call
Jand see her Stock
When in Augusta.
nal revenue, in his report for
al year ended June. 30, 1902,
at the internal revenue taxes
en reduced $100,000,000 by the
jf the war revenue tariff. He
es the total receipts from inter-
snue for the current fiscal year
$220,000,000.
AN EXECUTION POSTPONED.
ipreme Court of Georgia to Pass
Upon tht> Case of Henry Bryant.
John Henry Bryant, the negro sen-
peed to hang in Moultrie, Ga., did
»t pay the penalty on the gallows
■iday.
His case was carried to the supreme
iurt by his attorneys in Moultrie,
id will be given a hearing some time
ithin the next thirty days. For this
■ason the execution will not take
■e until passed upon by the sn-
ue court.
PURST/. yjpj|j
1| KENTUCKY RYE
HADE AT OUR KENTUCKY DISTILLERY FOR 43 YEARS,
Jjl and praised by thousands of consumers as the best
, whiskey in the world for the least money.
isS/A PYE OR BOURBOH
4 full quarts, 7 year old $1.98
4 “ “ 10 “ “ 2.49
4 “ « 12 “ “ 2.98
4 “ “ 14 “ “ 3.98
'Te Save You ONE DOLLAR on each gallon, and prove that
" WE ARE THE PEOPLE’S FRIEND.
“Stst C9NS8MBS DISTILLING COMPANY,
rn.. Irj 1 -; INCORPORATED.
242 to 250 Seventh St., LOUISVILLE, KY.
llEF22E^CES: German Insurance Bank, Bradstreet, or any Express Co.
gaapag—a—
We know the above company to be reliable.—Ed.
HORSE
•AND
CATTLE
POWDER
. A medicine which makes *
sick animals well, the diseased
whole, the weak strong and the
.thin fat. It will restore lost Appetite,
-.' expel Worms and cure Chronic Cough,
-‘Heaves, Influenza, Distemper, Hide
bound, Indigestion, Constipation, FTit-
^ulency ard all Stomach and Bowel
trouble.
The finest of all animal
vitalizers and tonics and
the only one which
increases the coeffi
cient of digestibil
ity of protein.
DAVID E.F0UTZ
BALTfMOffE. MD.
' ,
Get the Genuine or
•endlout. Pamphlet j
No Free.
kSM h All DejUn.
For sale by W. J. Platt & Co.
Seeks to List Its Bonds, j
The Tennessee Coal, Iron and Rail
road Company has applied to the New
York stock exchange to list 4.347,000
general mortgage 5 per cent bonds
due in 1951.