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^ T-TTrTtTT AL T A mn orriAxi ! ANDERSON. S. 0.. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 21. 1903. VOLUME XXXIX-NO. 18. OLD Who were induced by hard times to experiment in "Cheap Clothing/' are every day returning with the same old story-"it doesn't pay." It's hard .to improve on test-proof woollens, honest tailoring, a moderate profit, ample stock, polite service and -your money back if you want it. That Fall Suit most of you need is ready-whether you wish light colors cr dark, whether rough or smooth, whether $5.00, $10.00, $15.00 or $20.00. Every dealer claims to have the best in Boys' Clothing. Now can you prove it 1 Tour money back is the proof here. Suits from $1.00 to $6.00. Keith Konqueror $3.50 and $4.00 Shoes for men will give you as much style and as much service as most $5.00 Shoes. Fall styles just in. B. 0. Evans & Co, ANDERSON, S. C. The Spot Cash Clothiers We have just received nearly a solid train load of : FURNITURE. t 4 By buying a large shipment wo got it at a reasona- ? 4 ble price, and we are to sell it very cheap. Come to ? < see us and see how cheap we can sell you what you ? < want. v ? < PEOPLES FURNITURE GO. \ OUR SHOE STOCK 18 LARGE AND WELL ASSORTED, And we hive a good many styles that are sot regu lar in oar Stools, and tre have CUT THE PRICES On tfeo?i to ?lose out. They are good, reliable, all leather Shoes, but not our regular Unes, and they go out at ,1 M., ' if at WE have moved our ?hopand office below Peoples' Bank, in front of Mr. J. J. FrstwelTe Stables. We respectfully ask all our friends that need ?ny Roofing done, or any kind of Repair work, Engine Stacks, Evaporators, or any kind of ttin or Gravel Roofing to call on ns. as we are prepared to do . it promptly and in best manner. Soliciting y our patronage, we are, Bespectfolly, BURRIS0 * DIWER. STATE NEWS. - Dr. Geo. B. Cromer has resigned tho presidency of Newberry College. Ho will retire next July. - Richland county is in a bad way -not a cent in the treasury and tho expenses of the Tillman trial to pay. - A valuable deposit of fino mar ble ha? ocen found on Congressman Joe Johnston's place in Laurens coun ty. - A Greenville horse "Landrum" owned by T. J. Ilanuer won thc $250 purflo at Athens, Ga., last week. Time: 2:231. - There will be a horse swappers' convention at Walhalla court week, beginning ou Monday, November 9th, and continuo for thrco days. - The citizens and busiuess men of Spartanburg have declared a boy cott against the Southern Bell Tele phono Company because of poor ser vice. - 12,804,896 feet of pine and cy press lumber, 1,000,000 cypress shin gles and 300,000 plastering laths were Bhipped from Georgetown in Septem ber last. - The executor of J. L. Andrews, a Greenwood merchant, who was kill ed on the Southern recently, has brought suit against the road for $65,000 damages. - Again has Saluda oounty to add ono more to its list of murders. Joe Yarborough shot and killed his wife over a quarrel about a pieoo of soap. The parties to the tragedy were ne groes. - A special from Saluda to The News and Courier reports that town as being tired of thc dispensary and gives the further information that a petition, numerously signed, is being gotten up to get rid of it. - The handsome residences of Wal lace Wise and Mrs. Hendrix in Tren ton were burned down on Thursdc 7, the owners saving the contents. Wise had $4,000 insurance. Mrs. Hendrix was not insured. - Policeman Wm. F. O'Shields was convioted at Union of assault and battery of a high and aggravated na ture and was eent?pced by Presiding Judge Benet to three months on the ehaingang or a fine of $150. - Attorneys Legare & Holman, of Charleston, have entered suit against the Southern Railway for $75,000 damages for the death of Engineer Brockman in the recent Fishing Creek trestle accident near Yorkville. - A negro created quite a sensation at Blackville Saturday night by shoot ing his sweetheart. His name was Jim Walker and be shot and killed instantly Minnie Williams. She was talking to another darkey and Jim walked up and shot her down without a moment's warning. He then skip ped and has not been caught. - I. W. Haywood, a young white man, has been lodged in thc Spartan burg jail for attempting to pass a rais ed bank note at Cowpens. The com mitment, issued by Magistrate Potter, of that town, charges the defendant of forgery, but the case will come up iu Commissioner McGowan's court at Spartanburg as it is a violation of the United States statutes. Haywood "raised" a five-dullar note to $50 and attempted to pass it on L. N. Moore, a merchant at Cowpens. - An aged lady, Miss Nancy Rob ertson, living ten miles above Lau rens, was burned to death in her home Monday nigat, 12th inst. When the fire was discovered the building was almost destroyed and no rescue could be made. She was seventy-five years old. The fire is supposed to have orig inated from a lamp, a large quent.'ty of batting beooming ignited accord iogly while she was engaged in quilt ing. Miss Robertson lived alone. Her nearest neighbor lived r/oout 100 yards from her house. She was pour but highly respectable, belonging to a Srominent family of that oounty. [er bones were dug from the debris Tuesday. - A little bor Moses Dewitt, was drowned in a spring near his home, about three miles from Sooiety Hill in Chesterfield County last Wednesday. The little boy's mother and stop-fath er, Henry Tooker, were ousting hay and as has been their custom,they sent Moses to the spring for watar. The boy's long stay oaused the parents to investigate The little fellow was found bead foremost in the spring. Life was not eztinotbut the discovery was made too lato for resuscitation. When the boy left his parents he had s> stiok 'of candy in his band and it is thought he dropped it in the spring, which is five feet deop, and in trying to reoovor it, he lost his balanoe and fell in. - The high water on Keow?o river on Juno 6, uncovered the skeletons of two Indiana, presumably, in tho plan tation ol Mr. W. E. Mimmocs. Be tween Mr. Mimmons' residence and tba Keoweo river is a beautiful pieee of fertile, bottom land whereon tho once picturesque Indian village of Keowce stood. The river cut out a hole in th e land- about 75 yards * long and ton feet deep, on tho edge cur which was found tho two skeletons, one a chieftain, from the jewels which were found with the bones, and the other ? woman. Tho bones must be of a person buried there about two hundred years ago. Some of tho bones still retain their perfect shape but all aro soft and easily broken. Borne.teeth from the man are in good condition. No trace of manner of burial ora be deteoted, except that the feet were probably to the north. In the Colonial days Fort George was only a few hundred yards from this village on the Piokens side of the river.-Ooonee News. GENERAL NEWS. - J. W. Iloltz, democrat, was elected mayor of Indianapolis, Ind., on Tuesday. - Thc dispute between the Federal Government and the State of Louis iana over swamp lands will soon bc settled. - Snow, sleet and rain have dam aged crops within thc past week in Minnesota to the exteut of millions nf dollars. - Doctors assert that an attempt has been made to kill the soldiers on duty at Cripple Creek by poisoning their water. - China has at last signed the com mercial treaty with tho United States. This insures thc opening of additional ports in Manchuria. - The president will call an extra session of congress to begin the Oth of November. The oxtra session will run into the regular ono. - In a riot between drunken In dians on tho Blackfoot reservation in Montana 6even persons wero killed and two seriously wounded. - Four men drovo into Berwick, 111., on WodocsSay before daylight, entered the Farmers State bank, blew opon the safe and got $2,800. - The Americans at St. Andrews, Nioaragua, have appealed to the Unit ed States for protection, and a war ship will bo sent to the Boone. - Mrs. Dora Russell, of San Fran cisco, was shot and killed on Monday night by her husband, Hillard Rus sell, who mistook her for a burglar. - Mrs. Leland Stanford is said to carry a largor amount of insurance than any other woman in tho world. Her policies amount to moro than $1,000,000. - D. V. Miller, forme^y assistant attorney general for the postal depart ment, is on trial at Cincinnati on thc charge of accepting a bribe while in government service. - A girl in Norfolk, Va., was mar ried twice within twelve days. Her first husband committed suicide be cause of attentions she paid to the man who has become her second hus band. - The association of commissioners of agriculture for the Southern States at their meeting in Montgomery, Ala., gave their "stiraate of the ootton crop as 10,000,271. That was the average of all their estimates. - Announcement was made of a gift of $25,000 to tho University of North Carolina by Judge W. P. Sy num, of Charlotte, as a memorial to his grandson. The money will be used to erect a museum. - A man giving his home as New York has just been run out of Lum horton, N. C., at the point of pistols because he was trying to take orders for whiskey to be shipped to that town. The town recently went dry. - During a prolonged attack of hiccoughs Thomas MoDonald, of Ply mouth, Penn., was the victim of a peculiar injury. The paroxysms be came BO violent that two of his ribs snapped and wero seriously fractured. - The Japaneso government has issued an official statement denying the reports of imminence of war be tween that country and Russia, and states that there is no reason to an ticipate a rupture between the two countries. - Judge John H. Reagan, post master general of the Confederacy and the only surviving member of the cabi net, declares in an interview that the American republic is doomed and that he wishes Texas to remain intaot that it may onoe more become the republio of Texas. - The Presbyterian synod of Ohio has adopted resolutions dedaring that "all ministers are hereby enjoined to refuse to perform the marriage cere mony in the ease of divorced persons, except such persons as have been divorced upon grounds ?Dd for causes recognized as Scriptural ia the stan dards of our church." - By the action of the Federal grand jury in returning no bill against four Italians charged with passing Confederate bills, the United States courts of the Northern district of Ohio hare gone on record in dedaring the possession aod passing of Confed erate ourrenoy no violation of the Fed eral statutes whioh apply to counter feit money. - Fireman Thomas Callahan's goat ate the pocket off a pair of trousers belonging to another fireman that had been carelessly; thrown down in the engine house in Louisville, Ky., a few days ago. In the jpooket were twelve silver dollars. The goat did not have time to die of indigestion as, he was put to death with force and' violence, and th? twelve dollars were recovered. - A fight at Columbus, Texas, whioh started at a danoe between Wil liam Wink and Rhein hard Hildebrand, Wink was killed, Hildebrand was shot in the neck and probably fatally wound ed, Joe Becker, a spectator, was shot In the leg and Beno Hildebrand was badly beaten about the head. The shooting became general, but the bul lets went wild, exoept those fired by the principals. -- Gen. JMKOB Grant Wilson, of New York, and his daughter, Miss K. M. Wilson, have not exohanged a word in several years, though they oontinue to live under the same roof and eat at the same table. Father and daughter met in a railroad depot the other day and boarded the same train but neith- j Br gave the other even a look. The \ estrangement is said to date from the . time the general refused to allow ! Mies Wilson to marry the man of her choice. 1 OUR WASHINGTON LETTER. Special Corre?iH>Htlenvc of Intelligencer. Washington, 1). c., Oct. ll), li?0:?. Official Washington is amazed and astounded nt thu revelations wadu under oath by Leroy Dresser, lute President of thu Trust Company of the Republic, relative to tho thimble rigging ii? connection with tho ?nie of the Bethlehem steel plant to tho Ship building Trust. lt has shocked even Wall Street, hardened as it is, and ap palled the people. According to Mr. Dresser, J. Pierpont Morgan, Charles M. Schwab, and their partners in "high finance,'1 in return fora property worth j 97,300,000 received $?10,000,000 in the ' securities of thc trust, together with au agreement that none of the tock or bonds of th?' trust was to be marketed until the holdings of J/orgnn, Schwab et al. had been sold to the confiding public. What was this but a double intended cheat on a gigantic scale? A cheat on investors by taking their money for water, and a elieat on tho stockholders of tbo trust by depriving them of a market for their securities until tbo holdings of tho "captains11 had been transmuted into money. What is tho difference, in its moral quality, of tbo action of these "captains of industry"-these financiers who practice arts for tho pillaging of tho community, from those which land small swindling rogues in jail? Yet theso discredited men have held, and still hold, the I'm an ci ?il wol faro of multitudes throughout tho United States in the hollow of their hands. And among these are persons, who nosed as democrats dunug Mr. Cleveland's last tenn, and were con spicuous among tho bolters of 1890 and 1900. They are tho same smug hypo crites who have tho brazen, effrontery, the ineffable gall, to attack an Ameri can patriot like William Randolph Hearst. They aro tho same bandits who unctuously talk about protecting tho conservative business interests of tho country, who vraut to pass upon tho "safety" forsooth, of the demo cratic presidential candidate, and who, under cover of a sanctimonius demeanor want to put forward one of their tools as the standard bearer of J elle IBO n's party. /Tho Shipbuilding Trust's re cords show that. "Mv. Morgan got his first." Well, there doesn't seem to bo such a marked difference between Mr. Mor gan's methods in this instance and when President Cleveland handed over to Mr. Morgan an entire government bond issue to "iloat." Mr. Morgan took the bonds at a good deal ICBS than tho market price and two days later peddled them out at a profit of S5 or $(1 a bond. Again, "Mr. Morgan got his first." The Now York nowpnper head lines explain in their terse way: "Mor gan got 85,000,000 for a nod/' in tho shipbuilding swindle. What did ho have to givo for tho government bond lloatation inquisition? Remember that tho gentlemen who engineered the shipbuilding deni, the exposure of which has startled oven tho moral pachyderms of Wall Street, aro tho snmo who tell us thnt they must name the democratic presidential candidate. Will tho people stand it? Will they allow tho men who aro pil laging tho people, and who aro being helped in their game by tho President of the United States and the Secretary of tho Trou?ury, by loaning them the money in the United States Treasury, to name tho candidate of the demo cratic party for president? If they do they know what they will get. Tho republicans in Ohio aro getting scared. Hanna has lost his bend and is swearing and storming at Tom John son like a maniac. He answers logic and reason with curses and epithets. Verily, "Whom the gods would destroy they first make mad." The republicans are going to import about 1,800 spoil binders into the State to demolish Tom Johnson and John H. Chvrke. One of these spellbinders is Mr. Roosevelt's Secretary of the Treasury, Mr. Leslie M. Shaw. The voters in Ohio seem to be trying to arrive at an honest con clusion in this strenuous campaign and they are asking many questions. Tho republicans are trying to make tho campaign on national issues and endeavoring to dodge State issues. It is presumed, therefore, that the honorable Secretary of the Treasury will contine his speeches to national issues of finance and taxation. In that case suppose some good farmer should invite him to answer these qnestions: Is it just to continue taxing the peo ple $50,000,000 a year in excess of the needs of the government? Would it not be better as well as more equitable to leave the money not required for the expenses of the gov ernment in the pockets of the people who earn it. rather than to deposit it in favored banks without interest? Why should nc c Congress at the com ing session repeal or reduce the duties on steel and other trast-mndo producto that are manufactured cheaper here than they can be abroad, and are ac tually sold in foreign marketa at prices lower than to our own consum?is? When will the republicans repeal or reduce duties that are no longer need ed for either revenue or protection, but that, in the language ot the Iowa re publicans, "shelter monopoly?" Does the Secretary think the "day after never" a satisfactory tale? Cr is it his opinion that the time and the char acter tariff revision should be fixed by the monopolies that benefit by tho du ties? Candid answers to those questions without quibbling or shuffling will open the eyes of thousands of voters in this election. Let us have them. The question of how the farmers of the western States stand on the tariff and trust issues baa been strongly in dicated through the enterprise of the "Farm and Home," published in Chica go. That newspaper sent ont 50,000 postal cards requesting answers to seven questions, amongst which was "Should tariff be revised?" The vote on that proposition was yes, 27,108; no, 10.788. When lt is considered that the ma jority in most of the States from which this vote is gathered is largely repub lican, it marks the revolt in the ranks of that party against excessive protec tion. But another vote was taken on a kindred subject that shows how the extortions of the trusts are regarded by the farmers. The question asked was: "Should trusts be regulated or suppressed?" Thc answer was: Regu lated, 22,854; Suppressed, 14,440. This straw vote shows the drift for tariff reform and regulation of the trusts. | The standpatters have a job in front of : them next year. * Chas. A. Edwards. , Jbli Hua Changed Base on account of Need iris ?VIore ??OOIXL FOR OUR Grrowixig Business! From Now On Will bo Found At MAM TEMPLE Bill W!TH More Clothing, More Dry Goods, More Shoes, AT LESS PRICE than any Store in Upper South Carolina. WATCH US ! We are going to sell them CHEAP ! Your loss if you don't give us a look. Satisfaction guaranteed to everybody. Come to see us in our Xew Quarters and you will continue to come. Youri? to please, You Pay Us Nothing Like The Prices Others are Asking For the Very Same Goods. NO USE TALKING, these Prices are right, and it yon. need any Ooods you can't get around them. HEBE ABE SOME PULVERIZERS. 2 quart Coffee Pots, side spout. 9c each. 8 quart Coffee Pots, side spouts. Ile each 4 quart Coffee Pots, side spouts. 13c each 6 inch Pie Platee.lie each-4 for 5a 8 inch Pie Platee. 2o each 6 quart Plain Deep Padding Pana. 7c each 8 quart Plain Deep Pudding Pan.. 9o each 10 quait Plain Deep Pudding Pan. 12c each 8 quart plain Diah Pan. 12c each 10 quart plain Dish Pan. 16c each 14 quart plain Dish Pan.19c each 17 quart plain Dish Pan.22o each No. 7 Wash Pan,. 6o each No. 8 Wash Pan. 9o eacaT No. 16 Octagon Cake Pan, large aise. 20c each 2 quart Dippers. 7c each 4 quart Covered F .ckete.12c each 6 quart Covered Buckets. 15c each 6 quart Milk Buckets. 10o each 8 quart Milk Buckets.12c each 10 quart Milk Buckets. 15c each 12 quart Milk Buckets. 20c each Short handle Fire Shovels... 4c each. Long; handle Fire Shovels. 7o ;A>ch No. 31 Tube Cake Pana. 5c each Galvanized Water Buckets.. 19c each Good Luck Baking Powder. 4c can Good Luck Baking Powder, large size. 8o can Big pound package Arm & Hammer Brand Soda.4o pkgo 8afta and Sulphur. 5c lb 1 pound Smoking Tobacco, with pipe. 23o lb 1 pound Chewing Tobacco. 30c lb 1 pound Chewing Tobacco. 23c lb 11 Cakes of the beat and biggest two for nickel Soap for.'..25a 2 Hasps and Staples fer... 5c 2 packages Shoe Nails for.?. 5o Very beat Sole Leather.37c lb Parker's Coffee Mills, while they last, for..19c each 1 Gimlet Bit for. 6e A Handsaw for. 10c JOHN A. AUSTIN, THE MAGNET, The 5c. and 10c. STORE. The Man down next to the Postoffice that soils the Beat. Remember, Two Big Stores now. Visit Ko. 2 Magnet ( for Stoves, Crockery, Glassware, Hardware, &c.