University of South Carolina Libraries
BY CLINKSCALES & LANGSTON. ANDERSON, S. C.. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 1906. ~~ VOLUME XL?---NO. 42. KCL Copyright 1905 by Hart Schaffner fc? Mant Do You Like It ? Somo men prefer the double-breasted Sack Suit. The illustration here shows why BO man* of them prefer our double-breasted Sack, IVs different from the ordinary in ntyie, workmanship andfit. Add to the good looks the good quality, the style, the tailoring, and you'll understand why so many men prefer our Clothes. \ IL Bi fe M. Snits $15.00 np. Other good Snits $7.50, $10.00 and $12.50. Ono.Pxiee -to ?1L The Spot Cash Clothier*. m I ABE it APE m AU THE i* un neu i ^?fcCIoats, iBIll^B^k. Overcoalis? G3f?EAT;C??TS. 'T?'C??ts^Btc. H yon wish to :*^.a/t?&^ 5ou eann?i do better, $&|hfpri^ wiU suit yen. .->... ? .** ? ?BS MM Farmers' Union Bureau of Information. - Conducted by the - South Carolina Farmers' Educational and Co-Operative Ualon. p?S~ Communications intended for this departcneot should be addressed to J. C. Strlbllng, Pei dleton, 8. C. T? ? Way We Size lt Up. The prices for yonr cotton next Fall is just what cotton producera make it. Yon;- work now ia abont all directed, indirectly or directly, towards making the conditions that are to rule or con trol the pi i ceo of your cotton for thia crop and to some extent tho next crop, too. If you help do a thing youraolf then don't go about blaming some other fel low for doing it. If you can boy your grain, bay and other farm producta cheaper than yon can raise these products, then you are not as good a farmer aa the other man that doea thia for you, and you can also bny yonr cotton cheaper than you can grow it, too. Few people can realize how sick they have boen until they begin to get over it; few farmers realize what a fool they are about cotton until they begin to boy high priced farm products with low priced cotton. If? takes a wise man to act wise, and afoot to act a fool, then it is a nat ural thing to expeot none but good business men to succeed in buying many farm products with which to grow the one product, cotton. How many of these so-called "busi ness" farmers do you know of that have been been up against a business proposition like this fur many years that now have nothing to show np their business qualifications in any form of accumulations excepting, per haps, a family of ragged and ignor ant children and a mortgaged mole or two!. No doubt you"vo heard of the "buai neas woman" that borrowed a sitting of eggs from one neighbor and a brooding hen from another-abe said she had the nest. Well, now, weare betting on t'aie woman coming but ahead of the man that boys everything on credit that he uses in growing his crop of cotton. . Now, this is the class of cotton pro ducers that control the early cotton market. TheBeare the real dumpers, and the men that furnish the. supplies of all sorts to snch nnbnsinesa like, in comp?tent managers of snob an im portant industry as cotton growing. arr? the real responsible parties. These nevcr-do-welle could never mle the cotton business unless the supply men and the landowners put his important business in the hands ot sueh incom petent parties. I These business men and the land owners are LOW coming, together to control this matter; th**y are requiring each of this elass ol cotton producera to diversify his, crops, which is tho only way to enforce the necessary fun damental jninciplo or system upon which tho South can ever maka ber pri?es for her cotton and maintain profitable prices. Now is the ???ss to prepare SOT har vesting the small grain crop. Of all the busy month? in the, cotton States the harvest times are the times of the moat work and the shortest time to do it in. Cotton and corn crops and small 8rain all need attention about the same ima. ?'. y ??' ; Farmers'' Unions can aid each ether thron gb these extremely busy: weeks by clubbing together ana boy fog bind* era, threshing machinery and other costly farm machiner y, that perhaps may.be too much on May for oho farmer to foot up; and if the Union does not see fit to buy this machinery they can combine and contract with some mem ber that will do all this harvesting machine wo?*, for'them at the proper tigs?; sr,d MRU? m ase it possible to guarantee sufficient work to justify a progressive yoong man to invest in an up-to-date outfit. - This kind of work la right along the straight road with the true principles of the Farmers' Unless Furs labor is now too high to nae only behlod the best farm ma chinery; .tools? teams and implements. If one farmer cannot a?ord to get the beat of alt these, the farmers uriat eombliu. ffetir;. wS?gti ?uni h?lp caen other, so as to obtain thia important help inst at the time when improved machinery is moat needed' upon the farm. Union men. take hold ot thia harvest question now and get ready for bot times ahead, ' ::.-V. ::^'m Cheap Hoir. If you wore to maka a cheap ?bal you should havo cheap material to be gin with. But when ft cornea to hogs, a cheap, ill-bred animal ia not toe * to ?ar t with! -Yo o should faa ve a bred animal, cheap food &sd. a smart chance of good hog sense ^jrit?i in order to grow cheap We can show a fiats thrifty, ? lot of hog* that has eaten ' .but a food of one wound cot & to four pounds rota bsga tur tled together, from first of Nc mm l0>i?ru;.the i, spring turnips, fcarloy. with good berm ada and stores, with a little bran jlo* garden t*oek, ur Ul ?sows and pigs growing no - ; when ear^Ftownee* and o? wiircotne&. tYottah?oid _thees beans with cheap hog wire fence, moving ic about to suit, as m Bummer to gather potatoes, pinda;?, &o" as their rooting op the soil in wet planned to plant 13 acres of soga beana and will ?raze these with hogs, aa well WMl*etty:^ fin idhi og Off on a tittie; corn. 8omo farmers do hot Beera to kno^r that tho days of "rods hog or die" baa go oo, and we c*nnjrtexpee*#^ out ot fue ground unless fiiere le some thing { in the ground io root fort < A iiom^su?rt.to^?? kCPt^ ?Tw,n^ asj?^^ ?e^?fe? ?$|m^?^ )fMi0l C.8Wbtibg, Po^dIeti>o, 8. C,, -Deal' 8ir: Referring to your inquiry ?concerning the \ ioedinfr' ot>cotton seed and ruta baga turnips to bogs, wi I say that assisted by Mr. Burgers, I bavo looked up tho nutritivo ratio ol theso two feeds and find that oBinj them in the proportion that you have practiced, that ie H bushels of cotton seed in a sixty gallon boiler, tho boilei lilied with turnios and thon tho whole mass boiled, makes an excellent feed for either brood aowa or young pigs I do not know whether you compound ed this ration for tho especial purpose for which it is used of not, but yoi have hit upon the exact nutritivo rutic for brood sows and pigs, which ie ] and yon could not well improve 'ipou it. For brood aowa without pigs, thc cotton seed meal should be decreased and tho tnrnipa increased, since it if not necessary under such condition.' to UKO feed so rich in protein. Trusting that this may answer iti purpose, I am Very truly yours. C. L. Newman. GEN Eil AL NEWS. - Four firemen wore killed by fall iog walls at a fire in New York. - A 3 year-old boy of ?Ikin, N 0., waa drowned in a tub of water into which ho felf, Wednesday. - Trade betweou Ganada and th? United States bsa inoreased to 9202, 939,213, more than 100 per cont, in 1( years. - Six feet ten inchco io height uric weighing 560 pounds, BOBB Skeggs the largest man in Kentuoky,. is dea< at Blaine, and a special coffin ka been built for him. - An earthquake visited Oxford Ala., a few nights ago. Many person were aroused from sleep by tho shook but no.damage was done. - Five srreats karo been mado ii connection with thu failure last Oe tober of tb'* Enterprise Nations Bank of Allegheny, Pa. - A Missouri man has spent twen ty thousand dollars trying to recove the value of six steers worth on hundred and fifty dollars. - In one of the largest votes eve polled in the city, Wooster, Ohio, ha v ?ted out seventeen saloons and thi placo will be dry this yeer. - The latest returns from the is land of Formosa give the number kill ed by the reoent earthquske as 10,08! and the injured at 6,163, - Joseph P. Townsend, a native o Baltimore, shot and killed his daugh ter. Pansy, to prevent her marriage and then committed suioide, - Kassian prisoners are being hor ribly tortured. They sro cruelly beat cu, their heir pulled out by the roots and, the soles of their feet slashei with sharp knives. -- A wcrkmss slipped from the roo of a tall ohuroh in New York, soi for some time clung to the gutter, i finally fall and bo dashed to pieees oi the pavement below? > - Tom Onaooe, a young man o Carrol ton. Ga., aged 19, shot and kill ed himself because he loved two girls and could not make up his mind as ti whioh he preferred. -Seven peifeotly formed eslve were born to one Durham cow, oi March 24th, at the farm of Martin S Hill, in Pleasant Valley, Mass. Al the calves died soon siter birth. - Brodie L. Duke, the millionaire tobeoao manufacturer of Durham, N C., has beon granted a divorce fron his wife, Ailee Webb Duke, whom hi married- ia Nsw York oity iu Deoem W. 1904. : - Last week,in Atlanta, veteran i who wore both the blue and the g ra: met and did honor to the memory o Geo. Wheeler. His daughters ant sister were both present, as also Co? poral Tanner, of the Federal army. - Generous Americana have sen over a hundred thousand dollars ti save the lives of the thousand* of panoso Buffering the panga of hanger Tho Japanese government at the ssmi time continues building th? mos powerful warships in the world, - W$U T. Walker, of Ardmors, Ia dian Territory, ?hoi Grover He euri and Miss Myrtle Smith at Pallas Texas, Wednesday nigh t as th&y tren returning from a skating rink. H< then shot and killed himself? Jeal onay was the cause of the shooting Useord and the young lady will re cover. ' '.' ~r The Comptroller of the Treason ha? rendered a decision Sn the matte) of tho oiaim of the State of Virgin!, fdr reimbursement of funds disbursed by the State in aiding the govern me ni to raise a volunteer army la, the wai with / Spain. The Comptroller al lowe a total payment to the 8&ate ol 361,363. * ? - The Ohio legislature has passed a MU providing tot a saloon license o! of $1,000. Tho liquor tax is no? 1300 a year and the increase to $1,<XX will drive thousands of saloons in thc State ont of business. Itis expected that at least hslf of the saloons will bo forced to dose whon the new lav goes Into effect. , Criminal proceeding* neve b>eia started in New York against Geo. W Perkins, untii recently first vies preel dent of the New. York Lifef In sur&nci company. : Tho charge against him Kand larceny-grows oat of the giv g of the company's funds to the He publican Notional committee in tin campaign of 1904. {??& In prison, at WUHameporti Pa. it$ a poor sick follow, with shatterac mind? .who is being tenderly nursei S?k:v|o;}healtlu>;&^^'''a irs.ao* n?ree, and a doctor bills on'him sev eral times a day; The care he is re is *?|d to bis b cari z g fru? i sod ho is improving. But as soon at they get bim into fairly good ?hapi they are going to kill him. He ie i condemned mur4tw*<>^?tf?f '? againa thc law to hang a eras* man, so, thej are trying to restore bis mind in an tic?pat?ou of a * saooeaa? ult and legs 8TA?E NEWS. - Dogs got in a flock of sheep in Kershaw County and killed twenty in ono night. - Spartanburg has lot tho oontraot for paving the streets. Tho work will oost $100,000. - Thoro are only 03 dogs in the city of Columbia; at least that is thc number on tho city tes books. - W. B. Cooper has put in a suit , for $15,000 against Richland couu [ I ty for damages from a defeotive bridge. - Kev. L. M. Rice has tendored bia resignation as pastor of the First Baptist Church at Union, to take eifeot June 1. - The county ofliocrs in Spartan burg aro to be investigated. The money has beon advanced from the general county fuud. - The executive committee of tho Republican party in this State has de oided to call a State convention in Columbia on the second Wednesday in August. - Mr. A. S. Courtney, an aged oitizen of Aiken-75 years old-shot and killed a negro named West Boler, after the negro had twice knocked him dowu. , - Rev. Henry A. White, D. D., of the Columbia Theological Seminary has wriit?? & eoacol history of South Carolina whioh will bo pualiahtd by a Boston firm. * - The franchisa tas returns show that there are thirty-eight more State banks in this State this year to pay franchise tax than there were last year at the same time. - A negro womau, 75 years of agc, and a negro boy of nine years are among thoso indioted for murder and who will he triod at the present term of the oourt at Chester. - The body of a negro infant was found in a well at the negro school in Spartanburg ono day last week. One of the musio teachers, Georgia Irwin, confessed that she threw it in the ?ell. 8ho is in jail. - Alex Gilliao, colored, an old of fender, plead guilty to an indiotmeot at Chester for housebreaking and laroeny, stealing a church commun ion service. Judge Kiugh gave him ten years and a day in tho peniten tiary, - < %pt. Charles. Ingleso/, gallant ConTedereto VG teran, distinguished lawyer and for 85 years seoretary of the grand lodge of Masons in South Carolina, died at the residenoe of his son-is ?aw, Dr. E. Mikel! w haley, in Columbia. - Two of the leading white oiti sens of Greenwood bad a fist fight last week. The difficulty Arose when *hsy were disoussiog a church matter. They are regarded as sober men. Expla nations were made and the parties have become reconciled. - A freight train on the Atlantic Coast Lino, going 30 miles an hour, ran into a burned bridge between Green Pond and Yemasooo. The en gine was demolished and ten ears wrecked. The bridge had oaught from a fire in the woona. - At *4 mooting of the committee on preliminary arrangements for the coming reunion nf Confederate vete* ranB in Columbia, it was decided to ux ino dates for the gathering for May 23, 24 and 25, whioh are Wed nesday, Thursday and Friday of that week. . ' '. / -- Senator Tillman has received an invitation*from Dr. Goo. H. Douay, ?resident of the Virginia Military ns ti tu to, of Lexington, Va., to de liver the commencement oration be foro the ? Hte?a;y societies cf that in stitution on June 26. fie could Dot eoeept. ?- Tberd is being quite a kick throughout tba State from auditors and boards of control in regard to using request bianka as requested by law. Tba auditor of Lee County bss flatly refused iso comply with the low, and says that if the law is en forced it will drig Lee County into the prohibition rank. - The traok farmers io the vicin . i ty of Charleston have boen bit severe ly by tho oold wave. It was the most dea tr uotiv* spell of cold weather io five years, sud tbs losses of the far mers ron high into the thousands. Beans and cucumbers will have to be replanted. . Potatoes and strawberries have also boen kort, jj Cabbages will be delayed two weeks* The farmers bad anticipated a very successful sea son, ?od tho blow is a bard one. - A. W. Holloway, employed by the Comptroller General to investi gate incendiary fires, oki ms that he has received confessions from some ignorant negro members of colored Odd Follow lodges that io Abbeville, Laurens and Or?ngeburg several re o?pt incendiary fires were concocted at lodge meetings Aeoording to that story some of these lodges arc en gaged principally Se devising schemes of revenge for real or fan o i ed wrongs perpetrated on negroes by white men.' - Sylvia Ounotoghsm, an old col ored woman y met with a horrible death a day or two ago at the home of her soo, Anderson Cunningham, in the south western section of Lancaster CJounty. ; When last seen alive she was' sitting by the fire in her own ?vOm in tho building. A few hours later other members of her family de tected a peculiar odor coming from the direction of tho old woman's apart ment and wont to tho rooT to see what was the matter. They found old Abut Sylvia lying in the fireplace and r the flames slowly consuming her body. ? | The head and arm had been burned .fbfrV It is thought tr*t thc old wo 1' man dropped,.asleep and fell forward IN SEASON. Immense Stock, Varied Selection, Latest Shapes, IN TRIMMED AND READY-TO-WEAR For Ladies, Misses and Children, AT Very Lowest Prices, \fcs Dora Geisben? JLfJLM.YJ\J JU \J JL Xk, VA \Jk\JV\JL Wa O' North Sid? Court Square. Two doors East of Farmers ard Merchants Bank, Anderson, 8.C# BARR'S HORSE AND CATTLE POWDERS ? rsKs SELS fi . Now is the time your S? o ck need ft. P. L. BARR & GO., 110 Nerta Main Street* i ns. Farmers Loan & Trust Co,, ANDERSON, 8. C., IS authorized to act aa Executor or Administrator of Estates and as Guar dian for minor children. We have quito ? number of Estates ia hand now? We will bo glad to talk the matter over with you. SST Office at FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BANK, Anderson, a a FRED. G. BROWN, Pres. and Treas. 1 B. F. If ATJLDIN, Vice President A. 8. FARM EB, Socrotory. The Anderson Real Estate and Investment Co., BUYERS AND SELLERS OF ? fy.'.??si REAL ESTATE, STOCKS & BONDS. J. C. C?BEBOTGS, Sales Bep't. Our facilities for handling your property are perfecta as we are large advertisers all ever the country. Bight now we are having considerable inquiry for farms in this and ad orning Counties, and owners of farm lands in the Piedmont section who wish to dispose of their property will find that we are in a position to sinke ?suick and satisfactory sales. Now ia the time to list your property with us, and we will proceed at once to give attention to all properties en* trusted to us. Address all communications to ?J. C. Cummings, Sales Department. s