University of South Carolina Libraries
!? . .. . . ' ' ' . _ BY GIINKSC?LES & LANGSTON. ~ ANDERSON, S. C., WEDNESDAY, MAY 30. 1906. VOLUME XTJ~-NO *O i ii u JU t '/ Tr' That smart attire is dependent ur?on lavish expenditure, Exactly the same knowledge of exclusively correct fashions that goes into the making of high-priced custom j tailored garments has boen used in the productions of O. EY?NS & CO'S. CLOTHES For thia Spring and Summer, o nd our assort ment of Single and Double-Breasted Sack Suits for men and young mon contains models as stylish in deajgn, ai perfect in cut, as fault* ' lois lu flt and finish, as those for which many ?rakers charge double the price. : : : : ; If it'i? not the thought of the high cost of your garments, but their intrinsic character > ?and lochs that gives you satisfaction, don't fail to come and see our splendid selection of ?tyles in tm& Quality Grey Worsteds and CassimercB, Plain and Fancy Worsteds? Mixed Tweeds and Blue Serges-made with the care* ful attention to details cf refined fashion, 'Urbich nien of discrimination appreciate. TO ?HHH Our'Piano prices now from SITS upwards. Our Organ pri?es now. from 180 upwards. ^^ft'lC^cto'see O? write .cs. ^ Everything you may want Musical supplied. > v-*^^^ ; i ; ; ;; II -, - ; ,j cr' p . 'n ,, t*BED. 0. B??jf% P?esV %?d Treas. J B. F. M ATT&DIK, Vlei Preside*!. FA? UNION BORRAD". Conducted 07 S. C. ParmorsV Union jl&r* Address, all communications in tended for thia col oom to J. C. StrlblloK, Pendleton. S. C. - Local Union. No. 1115., of Leak County, Mm;., Union, E. B. Sasbee, Secretary, informa our bureau that many locals bave recommended the secret business burcuu as bet forth by tbe National Committee. - Before we go out iuto tbe mer cantile or manufactnring business wo must first make good in our selling business. Putting it plain, we mnst manage our own farming business first, and when we bave completed this great work of controlling our selves then wo can begiu to think about controlling other?. - In reply to D. F. Wigin, President of Lodge 274 La. Union, and ail othoro wno have recently called upon our bureau for cheap plana of cotton warehouses, that? just so soon as we csn get in answers from inquiries sent out that our Union column will pub lish in concentrated form about all the information needed on the warehouse matter. . - All County Unions should begin now to inaugurate a regular Farmers' Union campaign in each County to begin when farmers hare laved by crops. Lee this campaign be one of educating the farmer along the busi ness aide of his farming interest. Chief among these subjects is that as the farmer is the greatest produce? on earth he ia of conreo the biggest seller on earth, and that he needs clearing houses -or warehouses to concent int o his cotton and other imperishable pro ducts io. Fifteen determined, resolute farmers in any loeal Union Lodge can build a good one-section cotton warehouse if they will come together with the con viction that this thing mu?t be done for their mutual protection. If the actual cash to nay for all this warehouse cannot ba raised by the loeal Lodge and the members have the true, co-operative spirit among them that alt Union farmers should have, there ia nothing in the way of them clubbing together and making their own concrets blocks and patting sp their warehouses with their own la bor. The old-time co-operative plan of house-raising, loa-rolling and corn shucking may oe worked tn building warehouses to . considerable extent where the Uniona cannot raise only money enough to produce the mate rial. Ont Union bureau ia now getting up plans and specifications for the very cheapest and simplest warehouse pions and will publish the same as early aa possible. . . , Fanners1 Organizations. - Xu South Carolina we have had a deal eight of experience in organising farm era. The old lina of farmers' so cieties-tho Grange, the Alliance and Institut? Clubs-he? nil come and ?ene op in the smoke of tim? like the un<ssds?? ur the rotting away of old buildings ?bat have disappeared and better structures have tait en their 8lacea. 8o it ? ? wish the ' Farmers' inion. We have had a vaas amount of experience in farmers' organizations and know that toe Union Sa building np a structure upon a better plan and noon a firmer foundation than all the other organisations that have gone be We have learned many valuable lea Qonain cur mistakes heretofore, and ?boas jui these mistakee can be turn ed into good for the Union if we manage rightly. Wo want to impreca noon tb? minda of each and avery member of the Far mers' Union that he ia one of the stones in tue walu of the castle that the farmers are building, and that the vf hole structure can ba no better than the material of which the Union ia composed. Let every member ask of himself the one question, it every member of our Union did just aaI am doing what sort of a Union would we haver Andi then when all Union men have done this comparative lesson let the unorganized farmer ask himself thia same question, suppose all f>rmera though? themselves too wise, t JO good or too Bellah to organise, what won M we have gotten for oar two last crops of cotton? $?Mr* Ooe Crop W?I Not Pay, T This North Carolina man is right in th? middle of the progressive path for Southern farmers! : Charlotte, N. C., May 25. Mr. J. C. StribUng, Pendleton, 8. C. Dear Sir : it seems that my inquiry of Mr. Brabham as tb the way he de veloped bi? Cow pea so that it would not shed ita leaves baa developed some, little interest in this moat important subject. It has surprised me no little that nono of the farmers in Sont h Caro lina took enough ju terese in this sub ject to ask aboutthematter. Why waa this; because th?y had also developed thia; pea, and. therefore, had no neert t^.askT and if this is the casa why did, they not gi ve this information to their brother farmers na afr;; Brabham has done? Ifeartbat^it ii becausa the ma PT^^^??10^ ?bat*one orop Hi with tho cottou crop, and then with one-half to two-thirds of cotton raised that wo Pow have the price would be sufficiently high as to net the former as much as he is now getting for his cotton. This he would have ns cienr pro?t, as he has been "living at home." This thing narrows itself down to this question: which had you rather do, raiae a great deal of cotton, no home j svpplies, and take the price for your cotton that is offered you, or raise ! everything at home and have some thing all tho timo to sell aurichen raise one-half tho cotton you now raise and get as mu<*fl for it as you now get for it with tho probabilities much iu favor of getting more? lt seems to me that tho Inst would be the best ia every particular, for it seems that everything is in its favor and nothing in favor of the one-crop plan, if it IB possible to to get the same price for ono bale of cotton we ero now getting for two we save the expense ot raising and mar keting one -half, which would make tho pro?t nbout four time? as mucn as it now is. The things that to my mind will make tho South the garden spot of the world, will be diversified farming, till ing, well, a few aeres rather than many acres poorly, securing good and fertile seed and then improving them, raising cattle and saving their manure, using each farm machinery as will de crease the cost of producing a crop and taking care of this machinery alter it ?8 bought and then using judgment in marketing the crops, wnatever they maj be. Good roads may well be in cluded. If these things will make the South more prosp?rons are they not worth striving tor? Would it not be well to have Prof. Newman, of Clemson, give us an arti cle on the cow pea? Yours truly? R. E. Mason, M. D. STATE HEWS. - Erskine coll?ge will graduate 26 young men and 4 yoong women the 5th o? June. ' - The first shipment of peaches from Ridge Spring for the season was made Wednesday. - S. T. Carter, of Nashville, Tenn., dropped dead in Hunt Bros. restau rant, Columbia, Wednesday night. -- In Walhalla last ?reek five ware houses and their contents, including 25 wagons, were destroyed by fire. Only one building was insured. - W. C. Irby, jr., of Laurens, son of the late Senator Jno. L. M. Irby, has declared himself a oandidate foi Congress from the fourth distriot. - The Abbeville Press and Banner says it io very likely that the S jard Air Line will build a road fr - that town to Due West ia a short whllo. - Robert Tribble, who was actiog as fireman on the train that rons be tween Eogene! d and a rook quarry, fell from his engine and his left arm was out on by ?he wheels. / - Miss Marie Montgomery, daugh ter of Mr. Victor Montgomery, died at her home in Spartanbnrg on last Wednesday night from ap overdose of laudanum, which she had been taking nader prescription. - Dr. James Boyoe, president of the Due West Female College, says hs ?5 s es ??, wkh w??h o o cu ur ago to ont in bis canvass for funds for a new dormitory. It is remembered that Mr. Carnegie gave ?10,000 for this, provided the people gave a simi lar amount. - A little daughter of Mr. Allen Free, of thia county, was carried to Charleston last week and operated on. Sho had suffered for several years, and a hairpin was removed from the bled* der? ' She ls'now doing well, and the physicians say thia ia one of the strangest cases on record.-Bamberg HeralnV - One night last W?>*:; on a public road a few miles from Walterboro, lightning struck the front wheel pf Dr. Riddiok Ackerman's buggy and tore all the spokes in the wheel into splinters, except one, and stripped the horse of tho harness, leaving only tho hames and traces on the horse. Nei ther the Dootor or his horse were in jured. ": - Mrs. E: B. Wilson; wife of a well-known ferjaer'?ear Beech Island, Aiken county, was shot in bed through a window on Tuesday morning, 22nd ?bst., and mortally wounded! She was sleeping in the bed with htfr small baby, her husband and other children being in an adjoining room. Two ne groes are Under arrest, charged with the crime;' ?? ] '^'i - Elliot Bouso, a negro, committed an unusual atrocious murder near Greenwood lett w??k; He waa trying to maka bia wife, who had ; left bim, return to his home, and ?poa the *o man'p refusal he struck at her with an ese, graslBg the skull. She turned to rue and th*a ho smote har again, asking tte asa up to its eye[fm; tho wuicena. brain. Her. death wai in stantaneous. He fled bareheaded and baa not be?a seen since. - The Newe and Co-wier Columbia St?^n| saya: "Quita a^uii?S?r 'mmSmmii?-we*?hriou? ** knowVay Gen. M. C. Butter ul* not l^^'reubion.; Hie near! Was w**h the old soldier*, bul he could AQfc'noasib?yjet ?way to ?om? to Co lumbia. . ?S'o'tf-fifty years. he'bat been ?3./-?S fighting in the courts on thc Cherokee Indian Uni ni, and the Supreme Court has just rendered a verdict in favor of ihe Indians. As one of thc counsel io thc case Gen. Butler is very much interested iu tho collection cf tho money, out cf which lie in to reccivo a handsome iee-over ?75,DUO for his good solf." - Hou. ll C. Watts, thc presiding judge at tho court of general FCSC?OOCJ in Oraugeburg recently, in speaking to the grand jury coucerniug tho car rying of pistole, said that no person had a right to carry such a weapon but a peace officer, aud that they were only allowed to carry them in the dis charge of their duty. Tho question was then brought up, if rural mail carries or express agents and hank officers were allowed this privilege, and it was stated that they were not. The law distinctly says that peaoo offiocrs only are allowed to carry pis tola, and they only in the dieohargo of their duty. - The negroes at Sumter are wildly oxoited over a report that Colclough StukeB, who was hanged last week for the murder of Capt. E. E. Wells, did not die on the gallows, and is now alive at the home of his brother, in Privateer Township. . The story rune that whilo Stakes' brother was taking the body from tho jail to his home, whioh had been turned over to him by the Sheriff, be heard a noise in the coffin. Removing the coffin lid he found Stukea breathing and moving. A negro dootor was o ailed io, and un der his treatment Stukea has been kept alive, but has- not yet been able to speak. He ia, however, able to take L??1 nourishment. The report is not oredited by white people, aod no effort has been made to investigate the matter._ _ GENERAL NEWS. -The total number of deaths due to San Francisco earthquake and fire ?B 395. -All the San Francisco backs open ed for business, but there was no run on any of them. - The international postal oongress decided tc increase the weight of let tere to one ounce. -A woman, WM killed ?od five other persons were hurt in an automobile occident near Earie, Pa. -A IG-year-oid girl in Birmingham.; Ala., was caught felling whiakey from a lard can, and she was locked up. - 80 large a portion of the work of congress is atill unfinished that some believe the session will last into Joly. -It is 0 fa ci all y stated that while leprosy continues to spread in Loui siana, three oases have been abso lutely cured. - The Methodist Cooleran oe at its recent session ip Birmingham sus pended for six months a minister who kissed a woman. -Araoo riot ooenrred near Albany, N. Y., by Italian strikers attacking negroes that had been imported from tbe South to take their placea. -The Supremo Court Of the United States has reoently rendered a decis ion sustaining Georgia laws prohibit ing the running of freight trains on Sunday. - Edwin S. Greenfield,30 years old, and confidential clerk of. Harrison Snyder & Soo, bankers, Philadelphia, is under arrest 00 the oharge of hav ing embezzled $100,000. - It ia possible that insurance- com panies that dodge behind technicali ties to avoid paying their San Fran cisco risks may have their licenses revoked in some of the States. - Mrs. Mary Waters, the wife of a wealthy insurance broker in New York, shot her daughter dead "and then killed herself, having .become melancholy over the former's ill health. -The drivers of undertaker wagons are on a strike in New York, and they show no respect for the dead. Corpses have been left in ohurches and oh tho streets, while the drivers quitted their teams. - ... - A number of Pennsylvania Rail road offioifela were witnesses before tho interstate commerce commission and admitted getting coal stocks aa gifts, one. of thom securing as mach ad#307,000 worth. - By 00 explosion at Bridgeport? Conn., a rock weighing 3?0 pounds waa hurled a mile and a half, crush ing through ft hospital Wilding. There Wei!? no patients, bot the keeper and his wjfa ; had ? narrow e a - A dispatch from Cumberland, , under das? of the 24th inst., says: ?Mm ti?rsljr Vahpelt, of Mill Creek, W. Vt>, nod Barouma Larrison, 0? Charleston, ?1K, wera married at tb? Qtiftfln City hotel In Cumberland i ?day by BOT. % W. Barnes, pastor ?f Cent: ' oct Methodist Episcopal Church. h is 22 years old. They h ?ad never b., eaoh other until about a ?ne hour bcf* ro tho marriage, which tl vas the result of an advertisement tl ind ai agreement te meet hore, n Hioy viii reside at Mill Creek." V - Tho Rev. Harmon 1). King, of 1' inion County, N. C., who celebrated P 00th birthday on thc 17th of last v October, died on tho 15th inst. Ile C ?as the father of twenty-one children, a Irirtccn of whom Burvive him. c - Tom Jackson, a negro, who had c )een arrostod for holding up and rob- 1 )ing Haso Burnes, a white boy, of $1, < vaslynohed ut Blanohard, La. Tho 1 icgro's body riddled with bullets, 1 vas found in a field half a'milo from vhero ho had been oaptured. -Considerable attention has boen at :ractod to Hamblen County, Tenu., bcoaufloof tho wholesale charge of tho Smith family upon tho local officers. The only officer of tho county who in not named Smith has a Smith for a wife and a Smith for a mother. -Mr. Nein, of Yeagortown,PsM con cealed $110 in gold between the laths in his homo a short time ago, and a few nights later a tire burned tho building. The gold was not lost, however, for the next morning Nein sifted the ashes and found the melted coin, losing but little of the value of the money. - At Jefferson City, Mo., last Fri day the State Supremo Court npheld the death sontonoes imposed by the lower court in the case of Frank Hott man and Mrs. Aggie Myers, convicted of murdering the woman's husband, Clarence Myers, at Kansas City, on May ll, 1904, and set Jane 29 tiext no the, date of excoution in each oase. Hottman and Mrs. Myers killed My ers so they could marry. - People of the town of Charles town, W. Va., reoently discovered that thew was an immense cave nu der the main part of the town. It was found by some men who were blasting rooks, and they immediately explored it, finding a large lake whioh was found to be navigable. The crust of the earth over the eave ls so thin that some of the inhabitants haye beoome terrified and have left' the town. -Over in Glasspoit the authorities ave ootnmonccd. a campaign agaiuat aothcr claas of puhilo offenders ?ose who use profane language ott: io streets or io public places-and a ovel plau has been adopted, says thu Washington Observer. Tho offioera ave been furnished with tablets and enoiis to keep tab on all tho swear" ords and profanity they hear and a sod list of fines bas beon so arranged s to "make the punishment fit the rimo." For mild brands a fine of ?0 cnts has been fixed and xor stronger rands tho users will havo to pay 67 . cnts each. Whether the soheme . ' ".? rill havo thc desired effect remains to ' < ie proved. -Tho gross indebtedness of New* Cork ia greater than that of the Obi-* ?cse Empire. Thc coat of operating i ho city's government for ono year ilmost equals tho annual expenditures >f both London and Paris combined. Nrow York pays out in salaries alone he vast sum of $65,000,000 yearly, >r as muoh as London spends for its mtire administration. At tho proa mt time there are 45,000 men and . fomen on New York pay roll. Of ?very $100 that a New Yorker pays n rent it is estimated that $12.25 joes into the pockets of municipal 'servants." -Mrs. W. W. Collins, wife of a furniture man of Temp?, Fla., wes burned to death by the explosion of & kerosene can, with which she wsa kindling s fire. Help the Orphans. As sommer time comes on, the? thought of vacation fills every mind. We are apt in our seeking after leisure to forget that there are orphans to bo thought of and cared for. Ask tho Superintendente of oar orphan's hornee and without exception they will tell you that the hardest time in the whole year, is "the good old summer time.77 Provision gets scarce and money a great deal scarcer still. It is a splen did timo to remember the orphans then. When the wheat crop comes in, send "samples" to be tested by tho palates of the little pennie. The 300 pupils at the ThoraweU Orphanage could test several hundred bushelB of wheat, tor tho neighboring mill makes the gift of wheat as acceptable as flour. And as for money, only S5 will care for a little child for a whole month and there are 200 little children tobe cared for here. Provisions can be sent to Thornwoll Orphanage, Clin ton, 8. C., and money to Rev. Wm. P. Jacobs, at the same place._ T\TMTmr\ T\Tvr\T ililli SJ V i I BJ I ll AHT\ fi ON ?LL LINES TM ATTD CTrtpp t in Ul)IV 01U1VL ! Skirts, Waists, Kimanos gr "ft iv 1?. Hand Bags, AND rwo-Piece Wash Suits, A SAVING OF 25 TO SO PER CENT ta ss? article purchased l? vus Siez?. S?rth Si?e Capri ?nnape; Two door? East of Farmora ar?d Merchants Bani:, 0mmM ? Andero^*.,* ? . .....v..?':??. -..-vi..\v. : . ? ..... */v::. ; .? .. ?. {.*, ?... ?g? - m yip V--.'. .'. 4 .' . i?.';'?Vi : . ??'itj . ^ . ?* I. '-v'.-;