The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, November 12, 1902, Image 1
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Thc Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been
ia use for otfor 30 years, has horne the signature of
^-/9 m- and has been mode under his per
C? sonal supervision since its infancy.
''CcACsuat Allow no one to deceive yon in this.
AU Counterfeits, Imitations and ?? Just-as-good" aro hut
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children-Experience against Experiment?
What is CASTOR I A
Castoria is a harmless substituto for Castor Oil, Pare
goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups* . It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Jits age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates tho
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep?
The Children's Panacea-The Mother's Friend.
GENUINE CASTOR IA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
The Kind You Have Always Bought
in Use For Over 30 Years.
THC CENTAUR COMPANY. TT MUMMY HTMKCT. nrtV YORK CITY.
Thanksgiving Proclamation.
Governor Mcsweeney has issued tho
following Thanksgiving proclamation: 1
It is an old and honored custom by
which the chief magistrate of the State
sets apart one day os a day of thanks
givin and praise to tho Source of all
lifo for His manifold blessing and fos
tering care. When in tho enjoyment
of health and happiness and prosperity
we are prone to forget the sustaining
hand through which these blessings
come.
Asa people who have had ocr trials
and hardships, our days of adversity
and of bitter strife, and through them
all we have triumphed because of our
trust iu und reliance on an AU Wise
Providence.
During the past year we have enjoy
ed peace and prosperity. The labor
of tue husbandmen has been awarded
by abundant harvests and all business
has prospered. We have been spared
pestilence and plague, drought and
Mood. In this day of prosperity we
should not forget the source of pros
perity whence it comes. We should as
a people render thanks to Ged for the
blessings which wo enjoy and in the
midst of material prosperity strive for
moral and spiritual uplifting, for it is
not in material progress and prosperity
that a people can claim to be truly
great, or hope to obtain lasting happi
ness. The greatness of a people rests
in the character of the individual citi
zen, and this character is built upon
deeds which glorifly God and help lift
up and bless our fellow-men. In no
way can we better show our apprecia
tion of the kindness and the forbear
ance of our Heavenly Frther than by
1 doing our duty to Him, to ourselves,
! and to our fellow man.
Now, therefore, I, M. B. Mcsweeney,
{rovernor of the State of South Caro
ma, do set apart Thursday, the 27th
? day of the present month, os a day of
general thanksgiving1; and do recom
mend that public offices be closed and
that the people cease from their ordi
nary vocations and in their homes and
several places of worship render thanks
to God for the blessings which they
have enjoyed during the paBt year, and
on this occasion they remember the
poor and the sorrowing by their gifts
i and their prayers of sympathy,
i M. H. McSweeney.
Most-?or-.ttie-Money-Clotties !
If you're a sensible Clothes-MoneySpender you're going to get Most-For-Your-Monc
Clothes ; which is only another way of saying you're coming here to fret 'em. Whate\
you need to make you as well dressed as you ought to be, and as comfortable in body, mi
and pooket as you ought to he, you will buy here if you buy right.
We make a point of having tho best Clothes made ; whatever your Clothes-Appropi
tion may be, you'll find the Goods here to fit it. In Suits and Overcoats you'll find nothi
to compare with the famous HABT SCHAFFNER & MAKX GOODS. For excellence
styles, for perfection of tailoring, and fitting quality? they are unequalled. No man is
Particular of his cJothes-lovks that we cannot satisfy him in these H. S. & M. Goods. Bet
eeo and try on soma ot tam Suits and Overcoats.
H. S. & K. Suits from $10.00 to $20.00. H.S. & M. Overcoats $10.00 to 120.00.
Other good Suits and Overcoats $5.00 to $8.60.
B. 0. EVANS & CO.
?STATE MEWS.
- Miss Ida Craig, aged 20, of Lan
caster County, committed suicide by
drinking carbolic acid. ,
- U. X. Gunter, the new attorney
general, has appointed W. H. Town
send of Barnwell as his assistant.
- Camden had a six thousand dollar
fire a few nights ago. The fire started
by tho explosion of a kerosene lamp.
- The contract for the Confederate
monument at Greenwood has been t
awarded to John R. Leayell of that
city.
- A $60,000 rice company, which
might be called a rice trust, has been
organized in Charleston. It will raise
and sell rice.
- It is probable that the Columbia
and Georgetown Boat company will
have at least two steamers in opera
tion by January 1.
- Fino kaolin bods have boen found
in Richland county, 14 miles south of
Columbia, and a joint stock company
is forming fur working the beds.
- The colored State fair will be
held in Columbia from the 13th to the
21st of this month. A. E. Hampton,
general manager, says they will have a
fine exhibit.
- Sheriff R. E. Ellison of Winns
boro had his pocket picked of $220
cash and cheoks amounting to $115 on
the capital grounds in Columbia dur
ing the State Fair.
- J. L. Riser, the mail clerk who
was injured in a wreok on thc South
ern railway last September, has been
given a verdict by a Newberry jury
for $8,000 damages.
- The Atlantic Coast Lumber com
pany, which has been doing an im
mense business in Georgetown and
Williamsburg counties, has gone into
the hands of a receiver.
- Dr. E. H. Goldberg, a jew, and
Miss Maggie Cobb, a gentile, both of
Bennettsville, ran away on Monday
and were married by Kev. C. B.
Smith, a Methodist minister.
- Darlington County has the honor
of having the first namesake of the
popular South Carolinian, Gov. Hey
ward, who has just been eleoted ohief
magistrate by a flattering vote.
- On last Sunday at a colored
campmeetiog, four miles north of St.
Matthews, Bill Key was shot and
instantly killed by Bill Keith. Both
the killed and the killer are colored.
- The dead body of R. B. Kline, a
white man, was found in a ditch at
Elko last Thursday. Benjamin and
Arthur MuCurley afterwards telephon
ed the sheriff that they killed Kline
and offered to surrender.
- Herman A. Meyer, a Charleston
boy 19 years old, fell under tho cars
at Ringville while stealing a ride from
Columbia to Charleston and had both
legs cut off. He died before reaching
his widowed mother in Charleston.
- Aman named Rhodes is in the
Walhalla jail charged with bigamy.
He married a daughter of Dr. Brown
ing, of Seneoa, having eloped with her
into the State of Georgia. He is said
to have a wife and severa! children.
- Isaac McGee of Florence County
is a young land renter farmer, but he
will soon own a placo of his own?
This year he planted his first tobaoco
crop-five acres-and after paying all
expenses he had $530 left clear profit.
- The negroes in Georgetown and
Beaufort counties in this State were
completely shut out in the reoent
election for the first time since the
war. Full Democratic tickets for
county offices were eleoted in both
oounties.
- Little Furman, the eleven-year
old son of Mr. Frank Ulmer, who lives
near Cameron, accidentally ran a nail
in his foot on Friday, October 24, and
died on the following Tuesday from
look jaw. Blood poison set in almost
immediately, and nothing could stop
it.
- Who would have thought fifteen
years ago that the farmers of Darling
ton oounty oould have raised any other
orop than cotton for which they would
reoeive about $800,000. ' It is estimat
ed that they will reoeive about that
amount this season for their tobaoco
crop.-Darlington News.
- Nathan Weiss, vice president of
the American Cigar Company, was in
Greenville a short time ago and sub
mitted a proposition for the establish
ment of a cigar factory. The board
cf trade accepted his oiler and details
are now being arranged. This faotory
will employ about 1,000 people.
- The Cheswell Cotton Company
has just let the contract for a big
three-story addition to their mill at
Westminister. The Cheswell Mill
was organized three years ago with
$100,000 capital. W. E. Cheswell is
president of the mill. The present
equipment is 11.000 ring spindle** and
35G looms. The work on the new
addition will be started at once.
- Mrs. J. Staff Halford had a very
narrow esoape from ?fire at Barnwell a
few days ago. Sho had just lighted a
lamp with a bit of burning paper which
she threw down. It fell on the fringe
of a rag which blazed up, setting her
dress on fire. Fortunately servants
standing near by had the presence of
mind to throw a bnoket of water on
her. Sh' escaped without, sorious in
jury, although her hands were pain
fully burned.
CASTORIA
Tor Infants and Children.
Tba Kind Yeo Haw Always Bought
Bears the /^.^tfA+^jU*
Signature of {?u&/Z7%cZ?Jbf?
GENERAL NEWS.
- Georgia peach growers claim that
their crops yields moro money than
does tho cotton crop.
- Cholera is said to be raging in
tho Philippines and soldiers and teach
ers are among thc victims.
- Tho census bureau at Washing
ton says that 5,i?25,872 bales of cotton
had been ginucd up to October 18lh.
-? Hon. Hale Johnson, tho vice
proBidcntal candidate on flin prohi
bition ticket, was shot and killed at
Eflinchiim. 111.
- Elon college, m North Carolina,
has received $3,000,000 as a bequest
from thc estate uf Francis Asbury
Palmer, of New York.
- A fiend in Chicago blow up a
houso with dynamite, killing a father
and mother and one child and slightly
injuring several others.
- Augusta, Ga., is discussing tho
project of building levees to protcot
the city from the ovcrllow of tho
Savannah river during freshets.
- Treasurer Roberts, of the United
States, has made his aunual report.
It shows that thc avcrago per capita
of money in circulation has increased
45 cents in the past year.
- Australia has more churches in
proportion to its population than any
other oountry. It has 0,013, which
is 210 to every 100,000 of its people.
England has 144 to every 100,01)0.
- The number of tho theological
students graduated.from semi narioalast
spring was 3352. This was 700 below
normal, and it is predicted that next
year the failing off will bc still greater.
- Mrs. W. S. McLean of Coving
ton, Va., shot and killed her 13-year
old BOU Saturday night, having mis
taken him for a burglar trying to enter
the houRo. He was returning home
from a frolio in Halloween disguise.
- The Crown Prince of Siam, who
is now visiting this country, will Boon
be joined by his royal father, tho
King of Siam. He will be the first
reigning sovereign to visit this ooun
try, and he will be the guest of thc
nation,
- Dr. Robert F. Wier has just sold
three lots on West 33d streot, Nevi
York city, for $325,000. Three yeare
ago he paid $153,000 for this property.
The lots were only 69 feet nine inchef
deep. The price was nearly $5,000 s
front foot.
- Edmund Berech, former member
of the Louse of delegates of St. Louis,
Mo., was convicted of perjury and sen
tenced to five soars in the penitenti
ary. Thc perjury was in his testi
mony before the grand jury in regard
to the $75,000 boodle fund.
- The horses of the famous Belle
Meade stock farm wero auctioned ofi
on Thursday. The cream of the lot
were bid off by W. H. Jackson, Jr.,
who will horeafte** be the manager of
this historic farm. The 273 head
were auctioned off at a total of
$172,655.
- Clasped in eaoh other's arms,
lying on the floor of the pastor's study
in the German Baptist church in Oma
ha, Neb., the dead bodies of . Rev. W.
O. Babe, pastor, and Augusta Busch,
a missionary and assistant to the pas
tor, were found. It is supposed the
taking off was ccoidental.
- Boys of Oxford, Miss., had a
mock hanging on Wednesday and
strung up one of their number, Eman
uel Crump, aged 13, with a plowline
and choked him to death. He stood
on a milk jar and stuck his head
through the noose, and in some way
the jar was knocked away by acoident.
- The State of Mississippi had an
extreme rare specimen of a state treas
urer. Because there were ono million
dollars looked up in the vault he felt
so much responsibility for its safety
that he resigned. The State refused
to allow him to loan it cut, and rather
than be worried by having that much
money on his hands he threw up his
job.
- Governor Terrell, of Georgia, has
Just signed an order by which he has
made one hundred Georgia Colonels.
They are members of his personal
staff. Several members of Gov. Can
dler's staff hold over and will be part
of the new staff. It is stated
that at ono time Gov. Stephens, of
Georgia, had three hundred colonels
on his personal staff.
- Sam Harris, a negro, entered the
home of Geo. Meadows a prominent
Slanter, near Salem, Ala., and struck
Irs. Meadows and her 18-year-old
daughter on the hoad with an axe, giv
ing the former a mortal wound and
fracturing tho skull of tho latter. The
negro WIB arrested, but was taken
from tho officers by 125 mon and his
body riddled with bullets.
- Elizabeth City, N. C., is a town
of about 6,000 inhabitants. In tho
town is a newspaper called the Eliza
beth City Tar Heel and its editor, W.
O. Saunders, is a minor who is a
cigarette smoker. The board of alder
men recently passed an ordinance mak
ing oigarette smoking by a minor an
offense. Editor Saunders violated the
ordinance and is in prison. He re
fuses to pay the fine and will not allow
his friends to get him out nf jail on
bond.
- An exchange states that one of
the most remarkable oases ever tried
was recently settled at Decatur. A
young man bought 2,000 cigars anu
had them insured for their full value,
smoked them np and demanded his
insurance, claiming that they had
been destroyed by fire. Tho case was
taken to court and the judge decided
in favor of the man. The company
then had the young man arrested for
setting fire to his own property and
i the same judge ordered that he pay a
fine or go to jail for three months.
-?.?XA ? xil-iW. ?li
OFFICE OF
JOS. J. FRETW?LL,
Successor to Bleckley Sc Fret well,
- DEALER IX -
HORSES AND MULES,
BUGGIES. WAGONS,
HARNESS, ETC,
ANDERSON, S. C., October 21,1902.
)EAR SIR:
Our recent advertisement, m which we offered FREE TICKETS to the
CIRCUS, was highly appreciated, as has boen fullv demonstrated by the
payments that we have received since October 1st.
NOW we propose lo go further, and GIVE AWAY more than $200.00
worth of VALUABLE PRESENTS, to those of our Customers who have
paid their indebtedness in full since September 1st, last, or those who make
payments on their indebtedness lo the amount of $25.00, or who purchase
from us from October 15th, up to and including the 22nd of Dscembar next,
and make Cash payments on panie, in like amounts.
Read carefully our proposition printed below this letter,, aud do not
neglect to avail yourself of this LIBERAL OFFER.
These Handsome Presents will b? on exhibition at our Stables after
November 1st.
Yours very truly,
JOS. J. FRET WE LL.
LIBERAL OFFER.
ALL parties who have paid their indebtedness in full, since September
1st, or who pay us 825.00 on their iudebtedness from October 15th, to and
including December 22nd, uext, will be entitled to a chance to obtain oue o?
tho following VALUABLE PRESENTS.
The same applies to all of our Customers who purchase Goods from us
within dates named, and who pay us $25.00 in Cash thereon.
This applies only to indebtedness and purchases for STOCK aud
VEHICLES.
Following is a list of cur Valuable Presents :
One Nice Driving Horse, worth. $100.00
One Nice Buggy, woith. 65.00
One Set Double Harness, worth. 25.00
One Set Single Buggy Harness, worth - - - 20.00
One.Riding Saddle, worth. 10.00
One Riding Bridle, worth.. - 5.00
One Saddle Blanket, worth - -. 2.50
Numbered Tickets will ba gi\ on you at time of payment or purchase,
and a Committee of disinterested per./nn will be appointed to conduct the
distribution of Presents.
JOS. J. FRETWELL.
^^^^^^^^^ ?%B
i 5 i 5 i 5 I 5 i 5 |f~)5 ?
4 8 FREE BOOKS. S>
4 The holder of this Ticket is entitled to any one of a Large ?
u - Selection of Books from- - ?
< ? MOODY'S COLPORTAGE LIBRARY, M ?
J _After having purchasedlgoods to tho amount of $3.00. ~ ?
1 "WILHITJBT^W'I'?IITEP " _ ?
^_ DRUGGISTS, t
4 _ _ ANDERSON, - - - SOUTH CAROLINA. ( . ^
We tako no risks aud handle no poisons, O
Ar* Every Coupon brought to the Store is worth 5c._ ?
4 5 I 5 I 25 I 25 I 25 I 25 ?
POSSIBLY
YOU have delayed ^making your purchases
of HEAVY WINTER GOODS until the
cold weather begins. November weather
usually reminds us of the?e necessities, so we
would advise you not to put off buying long
er, as it is cheaper to buy from us than to pay
doctor bills. You "will find our Stock of-.
PES,
JACKETS,
COATS,
FURS,
BLANKETS,
UNDERWEAR,
HOSIERY,
FLANNELS,
ETC., ETC.,
Complete in every detail, and, never Cheaper
than now. We promise you this : That if
you como to our place and want any of the
above mentioned Goods we will sell you. No
where in the city will be found u better select
ted Stock of
DRESS GOODS.
TRIMMINGS or
MILLINERY,
Than we are showing. So we ask again that
you visit our Store when you aro in the city.
You will always find something NEW.
Agents McCall Bazar Patterns and Royal Worcester Corsets.
Moore, Acker&Co.