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~BY CLINKSCALES & LANGSTON. ~~ ANDERSON, S. C., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER lt? 4901. ~ VOLUME XXXVII-NO. 12. It's the Man who Never wore ti a pair of : : THAT WE ABE CONTINUALLY AFTER. WE want you to drop in and see ns. Let ns tell yon of their merits and the advantages they have over other Shoes. The fact that these Shoes come direct from the factory to yon-with only one small profit radded.-makes it'possible for us to give you such a Shoe for $8.60. All the good leathers and all sizes are found heve. ANDERSON, S. C., The Spot Gash Clothiers asst. 1901. WM,: M, f GREENVILLE, S, C. A, P. MON HAGUE, PH.D., IL IL.BS., President. TWO Courses ara offered leading to the deg tees of Bachelor of Avia (85. A.) and Blaster ot *r|M (91. A.) Library and Heading Room. Chemical and Physical Laboratories New Judson Alumni Hui!, containing Auditorium and So oiety Jballa. Dormitories on caaopua. New Forty-Room Dormitory. Ex ponaos reduced to a minimum by meas system. Next session begins (September 25. Catalogues ana circulara of information on request. Address DR, A. P. MONTAGUE, Greenville, 8. C. For rooms apply to Prof. H. T. COOK, Greenville. S. O. _0-8 M. L. CARLISLE. L. H.' CARLISLE. DROP IN AND SEE US. WE aro not the^ largest dealers but you will find that we will givo you the best values in Anderson. Remember that we have the exclusive sale of the-r Walter A. Wood Mowing Machine^ Which is given up to bo the best Mower on the market and costs less for re pairs. Wc oan oitc you to one farmer in Andev>on County who has cut on an average of 100 acres per yoar for 10 years in succession with only 35o. cost foi repairs and machine, jt'll in good condition. Respectfully, CARLISLE BROS., Anderson, B.C. Deering Light Draft Idea! Mowers. THE ONLY MO>VER made with only two-piece pitman. Has adj attable drag bar and light draft We have the genuine thick centre Terrell Heel . Sweep that hw? just ine ngb* set Also, all sizes of the Victor Sireep Winga. If you will come to eoe us will melee it interesting te you and Will save yon some money. BROCK HARDWARE CO STATE MEWS. - John Griffin died in Spavtanburg County recently at the age of 104 years. * - An Oraogebnrg county farmer made 130 bushels of oats on one aoro this season. - Senator Tillman has had his eye lanced a second time, but he is get ting along very well. - The new basis of mill assessments han raised the tax valuation of lui? State nearly two million dollars. - R. B. Williamson, a mill opera tive, died at Columbia Thursday night from the effect of injuries received in I falling from ? iroiiey oar a few days ago. I. - Thor^ are no new developments I in the Columbia ootton mill strike, i The operatives are quietly leaving for otheg towna to -take places offered i them. - A wealthy northern syndicate has bought- up the swamps of the Big Salkahatchie in Barnwell county ana will develop the hard wood reso arces thereof. * \ - Marlboro reports a new ootton pestfcalied the Tesas sharpshooter whioh io - doing great damage. It bores into the boll and causes it to rot and drop. . - Tho Grand Army of the Repub lic will be invited to attend the South Carolina Inter-State and West Indian Exposition and it is understood that the invitation will be accepted. - At Abbeville last Friday night the furniture establishment of MoDill <& Lyon was almost totally destroyed by fire, caused by the explosion of a large lamp in the undertaking depart jnent. - Farmers, carry or send the fruits of your labors to the 3tate Fair at Co lumbia, Oct. 28th to Nov. 1st, aqd you need not exclaim, as many are heard to do every year, "I can beat that." - James Templeton, youngest son of W. A. Templeton, di' d in Abbe ville last Thursday r*i Ut. He fell from a tree a few dayi: preceding and , sustained injuries which caused blood poison. - While examining a pistol at his home near Gray Court, Clinton Owing8 was killed by the accidental discharge of tho weapon. He was a bright, promising youth of sixteen years. - Director general Averill of the Charleston exposition will go to Wash ington in a few days with Senator MoLaurin to arrange for the transfer of, the government exposition to Char leeton. - U. S. District Attorney Capers is after Lieut. Weam formerly of vol unteers from this State, for not turn ing over vouchers for the purchase of certain supplies for the troops. The amount is $1,068.83. - John Anderson, a Greenwood oounty farmer, sold a watermelon ic Greenwood that weighed 96 pounds. It brought $2.50 and will be sent to the Charleston exposition. It was the Girardeau Triumph variety. - When the Liberty Bell is brought to the Charleston Exposition in De cember extraordinary precautions will bo taken to protect it against fire. Independence Hall, in Philadelphia, where the hell is kept, is sacredly guarded. ^ * - A row occurred at a colored church at or near Wards on Sunday and two men and two women were Bhot, ono man and woman are expect ed to die, the other woman had two fingers shot off in attempting to es cape the hot lead that WPJJ flying through the air. - Brooks Harley and other wealthy sporting men of Richmond, Ya., bought the racing rights at the Char leston exposition for $35,000. There were a number of bidders. These people will put Wagcner park in fine shape and have all the finest horses that the country affords. . - The sudden . disappearance of Cashier Lechner. of the Bank of Tim nionsville, is no longera mystery. An investigation b?& disclosed a shortage of several thousand dollars. The de positors will lose nothing, as the cash ier was bonded by a security company to the amount of $10,000. - The Seoretary of State has grant ed a charter to the Liberty Bank, of Liberty, which proposes tq do a gen eral banking business on a capital stock of $25,000. The officers are Jno. Carter, president- W. H. Chap man, Vice President; H. Shirley cash ier, and J. H. Brown, seoretary. - Constables Cooley and Altom nrcre making a search for contraband liquor npqn the premises of John Q. Babb, near Greenville, when they Pound eight whiskey barrels buried ander the house occupied by Babb. The barrels were empty, but the scent sf corn whiskey was very strong, and the barrels were sunken from six to twelvo inches under the surface. - Tho . State Pension Board held a meeting Thursday at whioh the ao sountB wore finally, wound up and the report adoptad. The board distri buted the small balances returned oa account of deaths to applicate who did not get their claims in on time, or whose applications were belayed for some reason. .Ail avail able funds !Have now been distributed. - An unknown whit? <sts -?3 killed by a freight train near Langi/ one night last week.- It'is not knosn Bxaotly how the accident happened, but it is supposed that he attempted to board the freight that was passing it about 12:30 and missed his footing. His head was completely severed from bis.body, his left arm severed in. two Clacos, fais right leg in one place and -is body otherwise niultilated. GENERAL MEWS. - The Democrats ip Maryland have great hopes of success. - During ihe yoar ending Juno 30 last there were 4,200 eases of small pox in Tennessee - A negro was caught, shot and burned near Troy,' Alabama, for as sault on a school girl. - A thousand railway oars are needed to handle the peanh crop in one county in Southern Missouri. - By the last oensus Texas gains three congressmen and the Stat J has been redistricted, making sixteen dis trio ts.' - The government report shows that the general cotton crop is off three points, as compared with the past ten years. - Peter MoNally has begun his thirty days' swim from Boston to New York. He hopes to make about twen ty-five miles on favorable days. - The constitutional convention of Alabama has voted to adopt the now constitution with only 12 opposing votes, only one Domoor?t being in this number. - Eouador has sent an army of in vasion into Colombia whioh Kill bo supported by warships. This inva sion practically amounts tc a declara tion of war. - Elmore Stivers, a Bainbridge, 6a., boy was killed in a game of base ball at Quiney. Fla. He was at tho bat and was Btruck on the ear by a pitehed bali. - A murderer in a Mississippi jail, who is under sentence to be hanged, recently refused to take advantage of an opportunity to escape when other prisoners got away. - Two riots have taken place in Fairview park, in Indianapolis, be cause the white people objected to negroes in the pleasure grounds. In diana is not a Southern State. - The Southern Baptist home mis sion board at their meeting in Atlanta elected Rev. F. C. McConnell, ' D. D., of Lynohburg Va., corresponding sec retary, in the place of Dr. Kerfoot de ceased. - Two hundred and fifty soldiers are in Fort McPherson hospital, At lanta, as z result of poisoning, thought to be from eating a stew which was cooked all night. It i.s thought sev eral of the men will die. - The father of M. Santos-D union t, the famous aeronaut, is the wealthiest coffee grower in Brazil. He employs 6,000 laborers on his plantations. Of his ten children, the inventor of tho dirigible air ship is the youngest. - The Nebraskan State game war den has forbidden the farmers to fight the grass-hoppers longer with poison, saying that the loss of birds and game is too costly a price to pay for the de struction of comparatively few in sects. - The government Indian school whioh is under construction at River side, Cal., is to be known as Sherman Institute, in honor of J. S. Sherman of New York, chairman of the Con gressional committee on Indian af fairs. - G orman insurance statistics show that on the average a workman is seven times as liable to injurious ac cidents as a working woman, owing chiefly to the difference in' employ ments, but partly also to the greater recklessness of the men. - Prof. Atkinson, superintendent of the public schools in the Philip pine Islands, says that he will ask for another 100 Amsrioan school teachers, as he wants the inhabitants of every pacified town iu tue islands to have a chance to lea.j English. - Eugene Canfield and Miss Hattie L. Richmond arc to bc married on September 16 th. The unusual fea ture in this ceremony is that Miss Richmond and Mr. Canfield were mar ried once before in 1880f afterwards divorced, and now propose to marry again. - According to statistics published in a special to the New- York World from Chicago, there have been 3,130 lynchings in /the past twenty years, and up,to August 31st there have been over a hundred in 1901. Only live States in the Union are free from lynchiegt. - A special from Raleigh to the Atlanta Journal says that practically xii the newspapers of North Carolina tiave declared in favor of a compul sory education law, the cause being rfiat the negroes are applying them selves more than the whites to thc removal of illiteracy. - The latest census figure shows :hat Rhode Islandia thc most dense y populated State in tho Union, with 107 peoplo to thc square mile. Mas sachusetts is second, with V.)l. Ne rada is tho least crowded, with 10 iquaro miles for every four people, ind in Wyoming they nave one Square nile apiece. - A mabhiniat in the power plant >ftheNiw York and Staten Island Blectrir company was seated in a ?hair, .\nd while laughing heartily raked, lack until his head struck a ;?e wire by whieh he was instantly tilled. Death was so instantaneous hat his features showed the laughing aco after he was dead. - A special from New Decatur, ila., says: Aunt Leah Parker, aged IIB, is dead at Falkeville, this coun ,y. The record in the possession of tfr. P. J. Parker, of this city, shows hat she was brought from Africa in .he year 1803 and sold to the Parker amily, then residing in Virginia, aa a tiri If. DI* 1G years of age. She re named a SISTS in that ?V?-?y until reed by tho civil war. A TRAGIC EVENT. President McKinley Shot and Painfully Wounded by au Anarchist at the Pan-American Exposition-The As sailant Arrested-The President Will ItecoYcr. BUFFALO, September u1.-Just a brief twenty-four hours ago tho newspaper* of tho city blazoned forth in nil tho pomp of headline type: "The Proudest Day in Huflhlo's History." To-night in sombre type, surrounded by grewseme borders of black, tho same newspapers are telling in funeral tones to a horrified populace tho de plorable details of "Tho Blackest Day in the History of B?llalo." President McKinley, the idol of tho American people, the nation's Chief Executive, and tho city's honored guest, lies pros trate, suffering the pangs inflicted by tho bullets of a cowardly assassin, while his lifo hangs in the balance. Out on Delaware avenue, at the homo of John G. Milburn, president of tho Pan-Americau Exposition, with tear ful face and heart torn by conflicting hopes and team, sits the faithful wife, whose dovotion is kuown to all the nation. It was a few moments after 4 p. m., while President McKinley was holding a public reception in the great Templo I of Music on tho Pan-American grounds, that the cowtgfUy attack was made, I with what success time' alono can tell. Standing in the midst of crowds numbering thousands, surrounded by every evidence of good will, pressed by a motly throng of people, showered with expressions of love and loyalty, besieged by multitudes ull eager to clasp his hand, amid these surround ings and with the ever recurring plau dits of an admiring army of sight seers ringing in his ears, the blow of the assassin fell, and in an instant pleasure gave way to pain, admiration to agony, folly turned to fury and pandemonium followed. To-night a surging, swaying, eager multitude throngs the city's main thoroughfares, choking the streets in front of the principal newspapers, scanning the bulletins with anxious eyes ana groaning or cheering in turn each succeeding announcement as the nature of the message sinks or buoys their hopes. Down at police headquarters, sur rounded by stern-faced inquisitors of the law, sits a medium-sim! man, of commonplace appearance? with his f:a/.e directed on the floor, who presses ips firmly together and listens with an air of assumed indifference to tho per sistent stream of questions, arguments, objurgations and admonitions with which his captors seek to induce or compel him to talk. The daily organ recital in the splen did Temple of Music witnessed tho dastardly attempt. Planned with the diabolical ingenuity and finesse of which anarchy or Nihil ism is capable, the would-be assassin carried out the work without n hitch, and should his designs foil and the President survive only to Divine Providence can bo attributed that beneficent result. ^he President, though well guarded by United States ?q$ret service detec tives, was fully, exposed to such nn attack as occurred. He stood at the edge of the raised dnia, upon which utanda the great pipo organ, at the east side of the magnificent structure. Throngs of people crowded in, to gaze upon their Executive, 'perchance to clasp his hand, and then fight their way out in tho good-natured mob that every minute swelled and multiplied at the points of ingress and egress to tho building. Tho President was in a cheerful mood and was enjoying to the full the hearty evidences ot good will which everywhere met his gaze. Upon his right stood John G. Milburn, of Buffalo, president of the Pan-Ameri can Exposition, chatting with the President and introducing to uin especially persons of note vho ??T<: proa ched. Upon the President's 7 oft stood Mr. Cortelyou. ? It was shortly after 4 p. m. when ono of tho throng which surrounded the Prcsiuuminl party, a medium-sized man, of ordinary appearance and plain ly dresecd in black, approached us if to greet tho President . Both Secretary Cortelyou and President Milburn no ticed that the man's hand was swathed in a bandage or handkerchief. Reports Df bystanders ditter as to his li and. He worked bia way amid tho stream of Bcopie up to the edge of the dais until e was within two feet of the Presi dent. Mr. McKinley smiled, bowed and extended his band in that spirit of geniality the Americans so well know, when suddenly the sharp crack of a revolver rang out loud and clear above the hum of voices, the shuffling of myriad feet and vibrating waves of applause that ever and anon swept here and there over the assemblage. There was an instant of almost com plete silence. The President stood jtock stili, a look of hesitancy, almost 3f bewilderment, on his face. Then he retreated a st?p, while a pallor began to steal over his features. The multi tude? only partially aware that some thing serious had happened, paused in surprise, while necks were craned und Ul eyes turned as one toward the ros ;rum, where a great tragedy was being jnacted. Then came a commotion. With tho enp of a tiger three men threw them selves forward as with one impulso ind sprang toward the would-be assas sin. Two of them were United States secret service men. who were on the mtlook and whose duty it was to guard wreiuai. j sst such a calnmity as had ?ere befalltn the. President and the lation. The third was a bystander, a legro, who had on)/ an instant pre ciously grasped in UIB dusky prim the land ot the President? As one man ho trio hurled themselves upon, the President's assailant. In a twinkling ie was borne to the ground, his weapon ras wrested from his grasp and strong sr mo pinioned him down. Then the multitude which thronged he edifice began to come to a realizing mi QA of the aw?a?n^pf tho scene ot vhich thoy hau bvjn unwilling wit leases } - A murmur arosei^r-ead and swelled o a hum of conftHLu, then grow to a ?abel of aonnda and later to a pando uonium of noir -a. The crowds, that a moment before lad stood mute and motionless as in >ewildeted ignorance of the enormity >f the thing, now with a singlo impulse urged forward toward tho stage of tho torrid drama, while a hoarse cry welled ip from a thousand throats, and n thousand men charged forward to ' ly 4 hands upon the perpetrator of the das- , tardly crime. Fora moment confusion was terri- < ble. Tho crowd surged forward re gardless of consequences. Men shout- 1 ed and fought, women screamed and children cried. Somo of those nearest ? the doors lied from tho cditice in fear of a stampede, while hundreds of others from the outside struggled blindly forwnrd in the elfort to pcuotrato tho crowded huildiug, and solve the mys tery of excitement amt panic which every moment grow nnd swelled within tho congested interior of the cditice. Insido on tho slightly rnised dais was enacted within those few feverish mo ments a tragedy so dramatic in charac ! ter, so thrilling in itu ""tensity that few who looked on will ever bo able to give an account of what really did transpiro. Even tho actors who were playing tho principal rolo came, out of it with blanched faces, trembling limbs : and beating hearts, while their brains ! throbbed with n tumult of conflicting I emotions which could not be clarified into a lucid narrative of tho events ns they really transpired. But of the multitude which witness ed or bore part in the scene of turmoil and confusion there was but one mind which seemed to retain its equilibrium, one hand which remained steady, one oyo which gazed with uutliching calm ness, and ono voico which retained its even tenor and faltered not at the most critical juncture. Thoy were the mind and tho hand and tho eye and tho voice of President McKinley. After tho lirst shock of tho assassin's shots ho retreated a stop, then, as the detectives leaped upon his assailant, he turned, walked steadily to a chair and seated himself, at the same time removing his hat and bow ing his head in his hands. . In an instant Secretary Cortelyou and President Milburn were at hi? side. His waistcoat was hurriedly opened, the President meanwhile ad monishing those about him to remain calm and telling them not to be alarm ed. "But you are wounded/' cried his secretary, "let me examine." "No, I think not," answered the President. "1 nm uot badly hurt, ? assure yon." Nevertheless his outer gnrments were hastily loosened and when a trickling stream of crimson wns seen to wind, its way down his breast, spreading its telltale stains over the white surface of the linen, the worst of fears were confirmed. A force of Exposition guards were on tho scene by this time and nn effort was made to clear the building. Hy this time the crush was terrific. Spec tators crowded down tho stairway from the galleries, the crowd on thc floor surged forward toward tho ros trum while despite the strenuous efforts of police and gunrds the throng without struggled madly to obtain ad missior. Tho President's nsBailant in thc meantime had been hustled to tho reai of the building by Exposition guards, where he was held while the building i was cleaved and Inter ho was turnee over to Superintendent Bull, of thc Buffalo police department, who tool the prisoner to No. 10 police statior and afterward to police headquarters As soon as the crowd in tho Temple ol Music had been dispersed miitieientlj the President was removed in tin automobile ambulance and taken t< the Exposition hospital, where an ex ftmination was made. The beal medi cal skill was summoned and within i brief period several of Buffalo's bes known practitioners were nt the pa tien t'a sido. t The President retained the full exer eise of his faculties until placed on thi operating table and subjected to ai anaesthetic. Upon the first oxamina tion it was ascertained that one bulle had taken effect in tho right breas juBt below the nipple, causing a com parntively harmless wound. The other took effect in the abdomen about four inches below the left nipple four inches to tho left of thc naval am about on a level with it. Upon arrival at the Exposition h6s pita! tho second bullet wound wa probed. The walls of the abdomei were opened, but tho ball was no located. Tho incision was hastil; closed, and nftor a hasty consul tntio: it wns decided to remove tho patient t the home of President Milburn. Thi was done, tho automobile ambulanc being used for tho purpose. Arrivci nt tho Milburn residence all .person outside tho medical attendants, nurse and the ollicinls immediately concern ed were excluded, und the task of prob ing for the bullet which lind lodged i tho abdomen was begun by Dr. ltoswel Parka. At 8.?J0 tho representative of the A? sedated Press was admitted to th Milburn residence where Secretar Cortelyou gave him tho official bulle tin prepared by the physicians. While the wounded President wa being borne from the Exposition to th Milburn residence between rows c onlookers with bared heads, a far dit feront spectacle was being witnesse along the route of his assailant's joui ney from the scene of his crime t police headquarters. Tho trip wn made so quickly that tho prisoner wu safely landed within tho wide portal of the police station and tho dooi closed before any ono was aware of hi presence. The news of tho attempted assassi nation had in tho meanwhile bee spread broadcast by tho newspaper.' Eiko wildfire it spread from mouth t mouth. Then bulletins began to n] pear on the bonrds ulong Newspnp? Kow, nnd when tho announcement wii made that tho prisoner had.boon take to police headquarters, oniy two bloci distant from tho newspaper scctioi tho crowds surged down toward til terrace cager for a glimpse of tho prit oner. At police headquarters thc were met by a strong cordon of polio which was drawn up across the pav< ment on Pearl street, and admit tam wns denied to any but officials author zed to take part in the examination ( the prisoner. In a few minutes the crowd ha grown from tens to hundreds an these in turn quickly swelled to thom ands until tho street was complete! blocked with a mass of humanity, waa at this juncture that eoiue OI raised the cry of "Lynch him!" Lil s flash the cry was taken up and tl whole crowd, as if ignited by the sii gie match thus applied, re-echoed tl ory, "Lynch him!" "Hanghim!" Clo* the crowds surged forward. Den? the throng became as now arriva swelled each moment tho swayir. multitude. The situation waa becon ing critical when suddenly tho b doors wore flung open and a squad i reserves arrived with solid front, dnu the crowd back from the curb, thi across the street, and then gradual mecceded in dispersing them from il ?out tho entrance to the station. By this time thero was probably 50, XX) people assembled in the vicinity of '?earl, Seneca, Erie streets and the I errace. Tho ero vd was so great that t became necessary to rope off the intire street in front of police head luarters and a late hour to-night tho police were still patrolling in the itreets in the neighborhood in squads of three or four. Inside the station aouso wero assembled District Attor ney Penny, Superintendent of Polico [Juli, Capt Reagan, of tho 1st precinct, md other otlicials. Tho prisoner nt lirst proved quito communicative, so much in tact that little dependence could ho placed on tvhat he said. He ii rat gave his name is Fred Nieman, said his homo was in Detroit, and that he hud been in Buffa lo about a week. He said ho had been boarding nt a place in Broadway.' Later this pince was located aa John Nowark's saloon, a Kaines law hotel, No. 1,078 Broadway. Hero tho pris oner occupied Room 8. Nowark, the proprietor, said he knew very little about his guest. Ho carno there, he declared, last Saturday, saying he had come to see the Pan-American and that his homo was in Toledo. He had been alone at all times about Nowark's placo and had had no visitors. In his room was found a small traveling bag of cheap make. It contained an empty cartridge box and a few clothes. With the?o facts in hand the police went nt the prisoner with renewed vigor in the eliott to obtain either a full confession or a straight acount of his identity and movements prior to his arrival in Buf falo. He at first admitted that he was Ein Anarchist in sympathy at least, but ienied strenuously that tho attempt on the life of the President was tho result of a preconcerted design on the part of an Anarchist society. At times he was defiant and again indifferent. But at no time did he betray the re motest sign of remorse. He declared the deed was not premeditated, but in the same breath refused to say why it was prepetrated. When charged by the district attorney with being the in strument of an organized band of con spirators he protested vehemently that ho never even thought of perpetrating the crime until this morning.. After long and persistent questioning it was announced at police headquarters that the prisoner>had made a partial con fession, which he had signed. THE LATEST. BUFFALO, SEPT. 10, 7 p. m.-The President will live, but will probably carry tho bullet of tho would-be assas sin with him to the grave. This is the expressed opinion of Dr. McBurney, of Now York, in a statement to a repre sentative of tho Associated Press after the consultation of physicians this morning. ^ He announced that the president had passed the danger point and now only the possibility of complications remain - od. He also announced that unless the bullet embedded in tho muscles of the back caused trouble there would bo no necessity for extracting it. m In Memoriam. As the sun filled this dork earth with brightness on the morning of the 28th of August a haDnv home was filled with gloom and darkness almost to lespair as the quiet, gentle spirit of our beloved friend. Mrs. Matilda W. Lee, winged its flight to Him who loved her Detter thnn we. . This unexpected death caused even drangers to say, "how sad," made the icquaintance and friends say, "why iva? she taken, one who seemed to be seeded so much in this life,'! and her family to feel-this other break in their ranks as another falls-grief stricken, and then in that inner circle, lie home, what a shock, the devoted insband crushed and heart-broken .vith tho little motherless children who teem so utterly alone in the world, loving hands of her family adminis ;ered so tenderly to every want, striv ng iu vain to stay tho advance of the jr.im destroyer. To them in their jrent sorrow wo would offer these voids of consolation, she ie at rest, ibo was so well prepared to meet God hat it was only a short step from this ile to bo with Him. How iniinitoly mppier is she now with her Saviour, vhoni sho loved so well. Her mother, Mrs. Martha Watson, vho has lived tho. allotted three score 'ears and ten, never thought she would ie cnlled upon to bear this stroke, giv ug up a daughter of half her age. At sunset, 14 years before, their be oved pastor, Kev. J. R. Earle, had narrien her to Mr. Wilton E. Lee. L'hey entered upon their married ife so bright and happy. Tho ame pastor, who had buried her a baptism into membership of Salem lantisc Church, 18 years before, is now ailed upon to administer words of onsolntion at her funeral on the after loon of the :50th of August, 1001. Possessing a line mind, in youth sho ook advantage of nil opportunities to cvelop her mental powers, thus (itt ing er to bo a greater power in her phere in life. Mrs. Lee was a woman f strong convictions, quick to discern ight from wrong, and having decided >ns strong to stand hy them. A line onversatiounlist, always entering into he thoughts and plans of tho young or making life better and happier, laving become a diligent student of lod's Word, she had grown and de elopcd into all those graces which hnractcri/cs one lilied by tho Spirit, (ow it shone out in her life; generous o tho poor and needy, kind to tho rieudless, helping nuy who were strag ling from the paths of right, by her >ving words and acts she has helped lany; truly her life was one of unBcl Bhness. At peace with all mankind, having >rgiven all, her heart was full of love > every one. Carrying out to its full leaning the two great commandments hieb Christ gave: Love God suprerue ' and your neighbor ns yoursolf. Those prayer is that her family who ie-thus passing over will nil bo reim i - id on the other shore. To the dear children we would say easnre un every word and act which ou remembor of your devoted mother, ittern your life ny hers and you will J bright and shining lights in this orld, and on leaving this world it will ily bp a rejoining ncr whom you so sarly loved hero. To the husband, mother, sisters and x?there we would say with the song: Sot now, but in tho coming yenrs, ; may boin tho better land, VU read the meaning of our tears, nd there, oometime, we'll understand. >metime, spmo day, we'll nnder and."