The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, April 02, 1902, Image 1

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miran k T tia s. T A ?etf? amrvXT ~ . ATtfTYWTOS?YNI ? n WTO^mP?TiAV A PT?TT, 9 IQ?O VOTiTTMR YYYVTT_Wi J.1 Do Pay FOR If so, this is tho Store for YOU V All of the Clothing Stores In this town, except this one, sell Clothing on credit. This is the only Clothing Store) where credit is unknown, and it is therefore the ono Store where no losses by debts have to be made up. Here you pay for only what you get. At other Stores you not only pay for what you get, but help pay some of those losses by bad debts. No credit here. Ho losses to be made up. We CAN and we DO sell good Clothing at a smaller profit than any Credit Store can afford to. All we want is for you to come in and compare our Goods and Prices with what you have been paying at Credit Stores. You will quickly see that this is the Store for YOU. Our MEW SPRING CLOTHING-Hats, Furnishings and Shoes-are now ready for your inspection. N p;l Men's Suits from $5.00 to $20.00. Boys' Suits from $3.50 to $15.00. Children's Suits from $1 no to $3.00. It will certainly pay you to bring your Cash here. It pays other people and it'll pay you. . ANDERSON, S. C. The Spot Gash Clothiers OUR OFFERS ARE ~ ~~ m Q m TO YOU WHO IGNORE THEM ! Those who come here daily are reaping daily benefits. ...... If you know how much you cu save by dealing at THE MAGNET and aiiU deal elsewhere you are actually throwing money away every day. It's easy to save money as lt ls to spend lt when you learn vt here to buy. Dress Chambrays and Ginghams, solid colors, Stripes, Checks and Plaids, sold as a bargain in other Stores at 10c per yardi our price 6, i\d and 80 per yard. Lot ICc yard T>rcEa Gioghorua, now designe, all you want while lt !a3io at 5c r>ir yard. Fine Silk Cord Ginghams for Waists, very stylish, fancy stripes, special prloe 10c per yard. French Percales, yard wide, this season's best patterns, everybody knows the- price is 12%c per yard, you cap buy the? here at 7 ]/? and 10c per yard. White and Colored Wash Materials. Ask for the articles We have.lt-only a great deal cheaper than you may pay elsewhere. India Linens from Cc to 25c per yard. French and White Organdies ot 20c and 25o per yard, woith 3 >o and 50o in any Store. Fancy Colored Fecllle De Sole, tan, linen and other effective ?hades-big Talus at 25c per yard our special price 16%o per yard. Stylish Black, White and Cream Mercerized Mousselines, imitation Looa Designs, 8stln Strips, Silk Dots, de,, from 10o to.SSo per yard. . A fine showing ol Colored Lawns, Fine Sheer Batiste, all new styles, new pitterns and colorings, from 6c to 20c per yard. Juat received a hi? lot of VALLEN?EHNES LACE3, EDGINGS and IN3EBT1NG3 to match extra fine-from Se to lOo per yard. We have Just closed a large contract ?Uh a large Kew York Millinery House tot the exelnslre sole of their lino of FLO WE BB. Wo can furnish you Flowers for trimming your Easter Hats 10c per bunch that will cost you 26c to Me per bunch at Millinery Stores Como and look at them before yon buy. JOHN A. AUSTIN AND? THE MAGNET, ?mt to Post Office. High Prioo Breakers and Low Price Makers. F. G. Bnc-wo, E. A. SMYTH, Pres. & Treas. Vice Free. CA. GAHBEX&IV Secretary. F. A. BURBRIDGE, Supt. Chemical Dept. AMMONIA TED FERTILIZERS, ACID PHOSPHATE, COTTON SEED MEAL AND HULLS. We are prepared to sell our customers Fertilizers of all kinds and in any quantities. We wish to call your special attention to oat" 16 per cent Petrified Dissolved Bone, Manufactured from Tennessee Phosphate Rock, also our Standard Blood Ammoniated Guano. All of our goods run Li;h in the different ingredients, which are selected with care, and are of the best quality. Our principal source of Ammonia is derived from Blood and Tankage. o are abo prepared to ecll you Cotton Seei Meal, Kainit and Acid Phosphate ibr fertilizing purposee. ' . ^ Wo ar? import?is of German Kaimt, Muriate of Potash, Nitrate of Soda, a full stock of which we have on hand at all times We will make you a fair exchange of any of tho above named articles, also Meal and Hulls for feeding purposee,.,for Cotton Seed at our varions mill points. Please call and see us and secure our prices before placing your orders. Ths?ikmff you for your past liberal patronage and encouraging wordr of praise for the high quality and excellence of our goods, and wishing you a prosperous New Year, we remain, Yours truly, ANDERSON PHOSPHATE AND OIL GO., Anderson, S. C. ?-YOU to know that I am offering PIANOS, OR GANS ?nd SEWING MACHINES, COST- I have in stock the very best that money can buy* A limited number of Standard Vibrator Sewing Machines for $21.00 each. Pianos from ?.14?.00 to $260.00. Remember.'this is Cash., and remember, *?scv tha* it is COST. No such opportunity has been offered tho people of Anderson. You can eave fifty per cent by taking advantage of this sale. Come to sea me il you aie looking ibr the BEST. WI, li* WIL&.?8, Nexl. doorPeopletBank. ??r? S?me$?taDW^iid^ for sfle. Isss STATE NEWS. - Mise Annie Good of York county died on Friday of lockjaw brought on by vaccination. - Spartanburg will use the $1,000 won as a prize at Charleston as the nucleus of a monument fund. - Scott Wib'.oa, a white man, died in the guard house at Spartanburg last week from the effects of a big drunk. - It is estimated that there will bo au increase of forty per cent, io the tobacco acreage of the eastern section of tho State. - One feature of President's day in Charleston will be a prize drill be* tween the Citadel cadets and tho Vir ginia Polytechnic - A 13-year old negro girl w aa kill ed in Columbia by a negro boy who was pointing a pistol st her to frighten her when it went off. - An extra term . of the oourt of general sessions for Greenville county will begin the 14th of April, Jamas P. Cary or the Piokens bar presiding. - In the last five years there have been six murders inside the town lim its of Abbeville and in every csse the murder was attributed to dispensary liquor. - W. P. Hankinson of Ellenton killed himself in a hotel in Savannah by taking morphine and turning on the gas in his room. He was found dead in his bed. - In, a hotly contested primary eleotion at Abbeville Thursday, J. L. McMillan .was elected mayor over the present mayor, Dr. S. G. Thom son, by a vote of 210 to 145. - The State, Federation of women's Clubs will hold their annual meeting in Spartanburg from May 20th to the 24th. The delegates will be enter tained by the local club women. - Miss May Folk, who lives at Wil li st.nn in m Ty? ri frosT S train ~?i?ch was running 40 miles an hoar near Blackville, injuring herself danger ously. Her action is unexplained. - President Roosevelt and party will arrive at Charleston, Tuesday, April 8, and will remain through Wednesday. Wednesday will- be "President's Day" at the Exposition. - The governor has upon the filing of strong petitions reduced to a fine of $50 tho fine of $126 imposed uponB. P. Masters, convicted of the violation of the dispensary law in Piokens County, a short time ago. - Henry Leitner, a nonagenarian Fairfield farmer, has a bale of cotton which was ginned before the Civil war. It escaped Sherman's raid and the old gentleman will not part with it at any price. - 143 employees, about 20 of whom are white men, are thrown out of work by the shutting down of the Coosaw Phosphate Company at Beaufort. There is no prospect of an early re sumption of work. - A horse at York ville was attack ed with rabies last week aftT having been bitten by a mad dog. After suffering for several days and trying to bite everything in reaoh, it was shot to end its misery. -: One of the duelling pistols of Jefferson Davis has been put on exhi bition Thursday in?he otate Build ing at the Exposition by D. T. Mc Neill of Conway. The olio is genuine and is attracting much attention. - Miss Maude Odell, . whoso home is at Beaufort and who is a famous actress, was roported to be engaged to a certain wealthy gentleman of New York. She says she is engaged, but the papers have engaged her to the wrong man. - Florence has an .enterprising oook who carries an extra pair of shoes under her arm evory morning = as she goes to' the kitchen. The mistress, thinking that the shoo had r. sort of dropsical appearance,; made an exami nation, and found a piece of bacon stuffed in one shoe. and a package of sugar in the other. - The safe in the county treasurer's office at Hampton waB blown open early Tuesday morning of last week and its contents, $200 and some oheoks, 1 were stolen. The explosion awakened several people living near and they gave oh" i to the robbers, but they escaped - Representative Lever, of South Carolina, left at th? white house an invitation for the president to visit Rev. James Bullock Dunwody, of Walterboro, S. C. Mr. Dunwody joined in marriage the president's father abd mother, if possible, the visit will bc made during the trip to Charleston next month..-Washington Post. - J. E. .Kneccc of Montmorency, Aiken County, has sworn out a war rant against Bunyan Chapman, Doo. Redd and Levy Fox,'who ho said sur prised him while asleep, and whipped him until the blood came. Knccco is suspected of informing the revenue officers of the existenco of a still on Edisto river. . . - Tho womep are coming to the front in public life in South Carolina. Recently Miss Withers was appointed assistant Stats Superintendent of Edu cation, and. now Mies/ Mcclintock has . been elected president of the Presbyterian College for women in Columbia. The faculty is also com posed of women. - A little girl of Seotion Master Flowers, six years old, died at her home near Palmetto Thursday from the effect of severe Lams sustained thc day befor?. Sup W&5 D lauding by tho* fire when her clothing caught, and in a moment tho flames rushed over her. When assistance reached the little ono it was too lato. Her body had been burned from the hip? Co thc neck, not a portion escaping. GENERAL NEWS. I - The Democrats and Populists of Nebraska will fuse again this year. 1 - Governor Beckham, of Kentucky, has vetoed a bill prohibiting the dock ing of horses' tails. - Tho senate has passed a bill ap Sropriating $100,000 for a public uilding at Georgetown. - $25,000 has been put up by the sporting characters of Charleston to secure the Jef-ries-Fitzsimmons fight. -- A negro sleeping car porter waa ! yucked in Colorado for criminally as saulting a lady passenger 67 years old. ; - There is a good deal of oholera in Manila, but it has not attacked any of the United States soldiers yet. - The French ohamber has adopted a ship subsidy bill. The navigation bountios is limited to 200,000,000 francs. :- Signor Marconi has made a new wireless telegraph record by the trans mission of a message at a distance of 2,000 miles. - The representatives of tho North ern and Southern Methodist churches have agreed upon various matters of interest to the two churches. - New York has subscribed nearly $80,000 for tho McKinley monument at Canton, most of it being given in New York city. - Ex-Gov. Northern, of Ga. has announced that he will not stand for re-election as president of tho South ern Baptist Convention. - A train on '-he Pennsylvania railroad broke the record on Monday between Philadelphia and Jersey City, making 90 miles in just 80.minutes. - A dog? in New York that had beet drugged with liquor mangled a little girl most horribly the other day. This shows what even a dog will como t< when he takes on too much liquor. - ? person near Petersburg. Va. who for the past thirty-eight yoan posed as a married man died reoently when the discovery was made tba the aforesaid person was a woman. - A train on the Southern railroad was wrecked by a landslide in Yir ginia, by whioh two were killed, ni m injured and six coaches Completel; destroyed by fire. - The Bucker cotton press an< 2,100 bales of cotton were burned a Athens, Ga., recently, a loss of $155, 000 partly insured. ' - Representative Rhea, a Demo erat from Kentucky, bas beon unseat ed and his plaoe given to J. M. Mose a Republican. - The war department is alarmei at the rapid increase of drunkennes and immorality among the Unite States soldiers in the Philippines. - May 20 is the day fixed for tum ing over Cuba to the civil government and on that day the United State soldiers will be ?withdrawn. -- Miss Blannohe Boise, a proteg of Carrie Nation, horsewhipped tu mayor of Topeka, Kansas. She say she will give the governor a dose o the same kind. - John L. Mason, the inventor o theSsoreW'top glass fruit jar, died re ocntly in New York city at the age c 76. His invention brought fortune t him. His first patent was taken oi in 1857 and the only improvement wa made last year. ----.The commission appointed b the marine hospital service to invest gate the origin and prevalence c leprosy in the United oStates has sui mitted its report. . It uproars tbi there ave 278 oases of leprosy in thi country. - The oensus bureau reports 39 937,573 sheep one year old and 21 668,238 Iambs under one year in tl United State?. From the year ole 276,000,000 pounds of wool was shot? in the fall of 1899 and spring of 1901 - Tho Virginia constitutional coi vention has adopted the grandfathi suffrage o?anse. Persons who ai oth?iw?D? '???uu?d muse own $z? worth of property unless they ai Confederate soldiers, their sons < their grandsons. - A. L. Schaeffer of Edgar count; Ul., last year harvested the large crop of popoorn ever gathered in tt world.. From his 102 aores he ht 1,800 bushels, a yield of a little ov< seventeen bushels to the acre. \ cost him $17 an aore to raise, sor shell and pay ground rent. - Hanna is said to be the ohoice I the southern Republicans for ne: president. And it must be adroittc says the Atlanta Journal, that ti average southern Republican oom pretty near knowing where the p counter is located. - Thousands of dollars worth cash, checks, drafts, money order stocks and negotiable securities a dress '1 to Baltimore banks and fin were destroyed in the' wreck of tl Fast Mail train on the Southern rai way near Charlottesville, Va., on Su day morning, 23rd ult. The total f ai value of the paper destroyed is esl mated as near $100,000. - A New York woman sued a ho pitnl the other day for having perfori ed an autopsy on the body of her hu band without her permission. S! asked $25,000 damages, and the ju awarded her $500. The subject of tl autopsy had a very large and peoulit ly shaped head, and th? hospitals thorities could not resist the tempt tion to investigate. i- Kentucky's highest court b just decided that in oaso of total d siruotion by fire the foil amount the insurance policy must be pal regardless of any stipulation in t policy contrary to this rule, and' tl tho actual loss must be paid whf the property is damaged to an" bx tc less thav tho amount of the policy. COL. JIM AND THE SENATE. Hitherto Unpublished Story of his Con duct and Rulings. Columbia llecord, March 27. Tho Statu this morning makes pub lic Bomo correspondence between its editor and Spenker Henderson and Senator Frye in roferonco to their opinion as to a certain parliamentary ruling and what they said about it when requested to give nu opinion by Lieutenant Governor Tillman. That tho lieutenant governor had made a false statement a? to the pur port of the two gentlemen's opinions was known of all Senators just before tue adjournment. Tho question was as to -whether a motion to indetlnitely postpone was debatable. Col. Tillman decided that it was not. Tho practico of the Senate had always been to de bate this motion, and tho ruling of the chair waa evidently 6o arbitrary and of eo far reaching an effect that the Senators felt that they could no longer stand the constant interference with tho proper conduct of business of thu Senate by these almost hourly im proper rulings on tho part of tho chair. Tho conduct of tho lieutenant gover nor was often most disrespectful to Senators, and ho treated them moro like a sot of behool boys rnther than mon, and men some of whom were adepta in parliamentary usages bofore tho lieutenant governor was out of , knee breeches. Tho Senators, with unexampled moderation, silently boro , all this, until ono of his rulings made almost any motion that could bo mndo ! non-debatable, and business of tho . Senate might have been brought to a standstill. j A question coming up, Senator Gray don moved to indefinitely postp cse ii, and proceeded to debate the motion. ; He was called to order. Thia brought things to a ci isis, and, with his feel inga illy concealed, Senator Graydon appealed from the decision of the chair ' After some little delay, the motion waa , put, and the ayes voted, not loudly but unmistakably, against subtaining the chair. Before the nays were called for , the chair went into a long explanation, I after which Senator Graydon withdrew j hie motion. This action was explained I afterwards privately on the ground i that there waa already a deep feeling I on tho part of Senators, but that they , didn't want an opon rupture with the I lieutenant governor; that they would ' rather bear in silence the wroDgs and insults constantly heaped upon them j than create a scene or bring about a 1 condition which would reflect no credit 1 upon the State in calling to general publio attention the conditions which ; led to auch conduct on the part of the chair. It waa considered, too, that this waa the last time that Col. Tillman would preside over the Senate, and Sonntora felt that they, for the sake of the State, would bear the conditions under which they were laboring fora ahort while longer. For some reason the lieutenant gov ernor believed, or pretended to believe, that the Senate would have sustained him if Senator Graydon had not with drawn tho appeal, when to everybody else it was quito evident that the viva voce vote was nearly unanimous against him. But Col. Tillman an nounced that he would get theopinions of Speaker Henderson, President of the Senate Frye and ex-Speaker Thom as B. Reed. He reported lat^rthat the two first named had sustained him. But he never showed their replies. Heed decided against him, and this he did show, at least to a Record repre sentative.' However, he did have spread on the journal of the Senate a statement to the effect that Speaker Henderson and Senator Frye had sus tained him. Some of the Senators thought their decision as reported very strange, and one member of the committee asked the lieutenant governor to be allowed to see their replies. Colonel Tillman showed him the Reed reply, which was against him, but stated that he had left the other replies in his room. That was tho end of that incident and tho Senator never saw the replies. Senator Blakeney, chairman of the committee on rules, wrote a letter to Messrs. Henderson and Frye, stating the question at ?BSUO, and also sending them a copy of rule 14, which covered the point. He also told them what the lieutenant governor *- .vt reported as their opinion. He got a reply in writ ing, in which they said their opinion had been stated directly opposite to what it really was by the lieutenant governor. Officially Senator Blakeney made no use of the correspondence, bnt all the Senators were made aware of it, as well as newspaper men. As it was the close of the session, and as it was considered that no immediate good could be accomplished by giving publicity to the facts, nothing was done along that line. But every Sena tor, und perhaps every representative, knew of the circumstances. These facts are published simply to show that Senators were cognizant of the facts, and also to odd that had they not developed BO near the close of the session some official action almost cer tainly -would have been taken, for tho forbearance of the Senators had been exhausted; but in larder to save the State a scandal ?hey went home carry ing their open secret with them. mum Bnv your Poultry Ketting from Sulli van fid w. Co. Enrcka News. Tho fanners have mado good uso of lie pretty weather they havo liad for lio past week, aud a great deal of work os been done. Tho school is progressing nicely with lisa Cora Shirley na teacher. Tho pa ils and patrons aro very much devoted D her. Lawrence Hall was in our vicinity nat fourth Sunday. Among those whoatteuded tho Union leeting at Dorchester Suudav wore lissoB Cora Shirley, Nellie Brown, .annio Harper, Daisy Oentry. Lillie irowu, Mr. and Mrs. Harper, Richard Jrown, Robert Harper aud Logan Rob >ius. All reported u very pleasant imo. Claud and Clemson Harris, of Leba non, visited in our community last Sat ?rday and Sunday. Como nimip, boys, rou aro always welcome visitors. Miss Annio Provost, ot Anderson, visited Mrs. Hailey Broazealo tho fourth Saturday and Sunday. The health of our community is not very good. Nobody's Darling. ? Cherokee Items. ti Si Our farmers aro very buBy putting in I tc guano nud planting corn. c] G. W. Haynio is doing a rushing bus- I * iness with his dairy. Our old friend, li. S. Davis, is suffer ing with a sovoro attack ot rheuma tism. We wish him a speedy recovcrj*. I h Miss Ollie Hall, who has been visiting 11 fricndB and relatives here, have return ed home. Miss Mattie Davis, of Anderson, vis ited her sister, Mrs. A. P. Kant, re cently. Miss Hr ulah Major, of Relton, visited relatives here last Saturday and Sun day. Some of our fanners say they aro \ going to plant more corn than cotton ] this year. Wo trust they will stick to it. ] Sweet potatoes aro in demand in this < section at fancy prices. ] Tho ronds aro in very good shape in I < this section, considering tho recent bad weather wo have had. Unelo (ieorgo. Iola Dots. Mrs. Nora McClellan visited her mother, Hrs. Lawrence Kay, at Six and Twenty. J. C. Holder has returned from El berton, Ga., whore ho has been on a business trip. Misses Rosa and Carrie Wolborn, wo are glad to say, aro in their UBUUI health. * Mrs. Carrie Holder and little daugh ter, Savannah, visited Mrs. Martha Holder, at Williamston, last week. J. D. Huutor, of Bolton, was tho wol como visitor of his aunt, Mrs. James Wilson. Miss Mattie Holder was mingling with friends and loved ones at Six-awl Twenty last week. The farmers aro in a great ruell while the pretty days last. Mr. and Mrs. William Mitchell, of Denver, spent Saturday and Sunday with their mother, Mrs. Wilson and Mrs. Mitchell. Mrs. Adelia Wolborn visited her mother, Mrs. Mary B?rrigs. Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Wilson, of Oconee, spent last week with relatives here. Allen Browne, of SeptuB, attended the oyster supper at Oscar Harris'. The young men of this community gave the young ladies an oyster stew at Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Harris' last Tuesday night. Prof. G-. T. Baker proved Hinsel ? an expert cook, ns ho was boss of the stow pot. Mr. and Mrs. Harris mado all feel that it was well to be present. Mr. J. O. Harris furnished the music on bis violin, ac companied by Prof. Baker on tho or gan. The young ladies appreciated the kindness of the young men and feel very grateful to Mr. and Mrs. Har ris for their kindness. Pleasure is worth the world of gold, and some day in the near future the ladies will give the young folks a cake party. We owe. the kind gents many obligations for their nice basket of cake. Guss. Wolborn, of Williamston, ac companied by his sister-in-law, Miss Lilly Burrisa, who is attending the Williamston Female College, is on a j visit to her home. A Maiden. March 29, 1002. Johnnie Greene andSamuel Buchan an spent Saturday and: Sunday in Oconee County with friends and rela tives. Good Friday was rather a bad doy, but many littio hearts were made glad in Iola with an egg hunt, which Miss Gussie Welborn nrranged for her pu pils. Miss Gussie knows how to make her children instructive in all things. Hor school will close in two weeks. This is the second term she has taught. She isa good, kind-hearted girl, and the people aro well satisfied in having secured her as teacher. The farmers aro greatly pushed with their work, and gardens will be late also. Tho young people aro carrying on a flourishing prayer meeting at Iola. Miss Dillie Hurries has returned to her studies at Williamston Female Col lege. Wish Tho Intelligencer a bright and happy Spring. Pot. -- Evangelist W. P. Fife is in Texas and has met with great success in his work. At Marlin between 450 and 500 persons have professed religion. Among tho number is one member of tho legislature. At the conclusion of the meeting a purse or $1900 was pre sented to him. - Fifty men recently disappeared from Beaumont, Texas, and it is now supposed ?.hay were murdered. The bodies cf five men have been discover ed. A negro woman has oonfessed to drugging the men, at the instance of whites. . Bobbery was the objeot of this blaok crime. TILLMAMA. Who waa lt In tho P?nate rose, . / nd ttteppod upon M o Lau ri n's toes, Aud woko h'm from his calm repose? Ben Tillman. And when bold Me , with flashing oyo An d shaking Hit did loudly cry, "A willful and m&ltcloua li?, Ben Tillman'." Who hit Mclaurin on tho jaw, And mad? him rip and rear ard paw, lu such a way you tievor ?aw? lieu Tlllmau. Who not lt hack upon tho nose. And got ml blood all o'er lils clotho?, Heilder thau tho rod, red rose'.' Bon Tlllmau. Who'fuilod to ?U at the tablo ro?dy. With the royal Prince and his friend Toddy. And "didn't oaro a--," that's what said he'.' Ben Tillman. Who heat B?u Tillman acting goose, And talked too much and rather loss?, All on account of "too much juice?" Jim Tillman. -J. il. Magill, In Hartwell Sun. iluda Baptist Sunday School Institute. The following ls the programme of the vonty-elghth annual session of the aluda Baptist Sunday school Institute, ) be hold with the Cross Roads Baptist lunch at Starr, Tuesday and Wodnes ay, April 29-30, 11)02: TUESDAY. 1st- Introduotory Hermon at ll n. m. y Hov. T. P. Lide; altornale, Kev. W. T. 'at?. 2d-Enrollment of dologatos and the lection of oflloera 3rd-Recesa for ono hour. 4th-Appointment of usual committees. lilli-Report from schools, three min ite* talk from ouo delegate from eaoh chool. Cth-"Tho Ideal Sunday School Super ntendont and Teacher." Speakers: W. 1. West, B. Frank Mauldln, Rev. G. W. [luaaoy. followed by general discussion. 7th-"Best Method of Teaching the 3lblp." Illustrated hy a Bible reading, .onducted by Rev. J. D. Chapman, fol iowod by general discussion. Miscellan eous business. Adjourn at ploasure. WEDNESDAY. Moot at 0 a. m. Devotional exorcises 20 minutes. Conducted by Rev, E. C. Shirley. 8ih-"The Sunday School Teaobera' Opportunity as a Sotil Winner for Jesus." Bpoakers: J. W. McMahon, Rev. W. P. Wright, Rev. G. E. ' Spmlli, Geo. T. BaUor, followed by general diaousalon. 9th-"The Claims of the Sunday Behool Work Upon Christian Sin General, and Parents in Particular." Speakers: John Prcitt, T. T. Wakefield, Rev. M. McGee, followed by genoral dlsouBslon. 10th-"Importance of Teachers Under standing the Doctrines of the Bible, as Taught by the Church and Teaching Them to Their Classes." Speakers: Rev. R. W. Burts. Rev. W. B. ECawklns. Rev. W. T. Tate, Rev. O. J. Copeland, followed by genoral discussion. 11th-"Claims of Missions Upon Sun day School Workers."--Speakers: Rev. H. C. Martin, Dr. Jno. A. Robinson, Rev. L. E.Campbell. Rev. J. B. Herron.fol lowed by general dlscunslon. 12th-Teachers' and Superintendents' Experienoe meeting as to the encourage ment and success of Sunday school work for the past year. 13th-Adjourn. Appointed speakers will be limited to 15 minutes, and all other speakers 5 min utes. Prof. John T. Milford will have charge of the music, In connection with choir of Cross Roads church. W. W. Leathers, Chairman of Committee. Confederate Veterans and Their Friends. The round trip ticket from Anderson to Dallas, Texas, will be $20.50. Stop overs will be allowed at all pointa both going and returning. We have ar ranged for cars to run through without chango via the Blue Ridge Railroad, through Atlanta, Birmingham and Jl/emphis, leaving Anderson April 18th, at 10 a. m., and arriving in Dallis April 30th, at 0.25 a. m. Thobe who desire to go and have not yet handed their names to the under stood, should do so at once. Full information as to procuring tickets, stop overs, side trips, etc., upon application to J. F. Glinkscales, M. P. Tribble, or R. T. Thornton, Ticket Agent. -ta m -? One Cent a Mlle to Texas. On account of the Confederate Veteran Reunion, April 22nd to 25th ronnd trip tickets will be sold to Dallas, via the Cot ton Belt at a very low rate of one cent a mlle. This rate ls open to everybody. Tloketa will be sold April 18th, 10th and 20th and will be limited to May 2nd for return, but will be extended to May 15th If desired. Stop overs will be allowed at any points In Arkansas or Texas on either going or returning trip. Low rate side trip tickets will be sold from Dallas to all parts of Texas, Oklahoma and In dian Territory. The round trip rate from Anderson will be $20.60. If you ever ex pect to visit Texas this will be the ohanoe of your life to do so. For rate and sohed uie from your home town and for hand somely illustrated pamphlets describing Arkansas and Texas write to N. B. Baird, T. P. A., Atlanta, Ga. Special Tuesday Rates to the Exposition. Commencing Tuesday, April lat, and on everr .Tuesday thereafter dorine tho mouth of April, the Charleston and West ern Carolina Railway will sell rou nd trip tickets from all stations atone half the regalar ?rst-olaas fare one way. This ls a considerable reduction from tho rates ?lr?t authorized, and will enable every body to take lu the ExpoBltion at a nomi nal cost. Tickets sold at these low rates will be limited to throe days from dato of aale. Cali on Aaronts for full Informa tion. W. J. Uralg, G. P. A. ?rn * <m Pendleton Items. Mrs. J. E. Byrd, nee Miss Minnie Gibson, formerly of thia place, died at her homo in Abbeville at 2 o'clock a. m. on Saturday, 20th of March. Sho loaves a husband and ono little boy, two years old. . * Camp Tally Simpson mot last Satur day and olocted aa delegates to the Re union at Dallas, Texas, Messrs. W. J. Martin and N. T. J/artin; alternates, Rev. T. P. Lide and E. H. Gambroll. Jirs. J. W. Simpson has returned home after several weeks visit to her daughter. Afro. Wright, at Chatta nooga, Tenn., very much improved in health. 2fr. J. W- Simpson ia not well at this time. " . ._. " Oar old friend, Col. Carver Randell, is quito feeble. Tell Tale. We offer this week hundreds of palra >f 8am plo 8hoes at prloes to please. Coma jnlok while wo have your number. Pr? tes on tbeae Shoos too cheap to quote. Vandlvor Bros.