University of South Carolina Libraries
I take pleasure in ar successful buying trip with the Bowery side-s scrapers," I "hob-nobb order to get my goo The Wonderful Barg Be sure and come to IV you will then be glad t before the flood-tide of THE PICK OF THE q Our Prices Unmatched! No store in upper Caro lina will show such a collection of first-class goods and bought un der such favorable conditions. c0e0eeeeeeeeeeee 0 THE LE1 SHOT FRIEND FOR BURGLAR. IATT ANTA H Haddon Fired Revolver at Fleeing One Case De Figure, Which Happend to be Man From - Glenn, His Neighbor. I Has 15een --- Camp an, Spartanburg, Sept. 2.-WV. T. Glenn, Taken I an aged farmer living near Duncan's,1 was shot and killed by his neighbor, IAtlanta, Sep H. P. Haddon last night. Had- ers, arrived in don was arrested and lodged in jail from Pensacol tonight. The circumstances of the which was -dia case are somewhat peculiar. The here today. family of Mr. Glenn and 'the family detention hos: of Mr. Haddon attended a protract-; side of -the cit ed meeting at Wood's Chapel last tion is being night. On retu:ning home, members examined iby I of Mr. Haddon's family noticed some ter he arrived one peeping in at the window of the infected point. house. He was taken Mr. Haddon was immediately noti- and the case v fied. He went to the door with his' fever this mo: pistol in hand and observed a man Carruthers I running across the yard from the of the origina window. He fires a shot from the Pensacola. anc pistol and returned inside. This nature of the morning he was astonished and coming to Ath aghast to f'::d the dead body of his INo fear -s venerable friend and neighbor lying demonstrated in his yard about 15o feet from the that yellow f< house. Atlanta. He immediately no-tified the peo-I pie of the settlement and stbsequent- Mobile. Sept ly an inquest was held. Early this of informatior morning Sheriff Nicholls was notified low fever at. and he sent Depu-y White to the tine was ir place. Haddon was placed under at- against her b: rest.- authorities. The verdict of the jury at 'the. inquest, which was conducted by Pointe Magistrate Dean, was to the effect Chicago News, that Glenn came to his death from a Occasionally pistol wound, the same being inflict- her husband si ed by Haddon. *because it feel The tragedy is mos't deplorable. Iquits hurting. The men were near neighbors, their Students are lands adjoining, and there was no world over. ill will between them. Glenn was a bombs and in man comfortable circumstances, being 1their college ye a practical and successful farmer. I: A man may is estimated that he is worth $20,ooo. own satisfactio Teir children survive him. Haddon but he can se inouncing to the public that I have a that I have ever made. When I hit r hows nor spend any time counting t ed" with Mill and Factory Presiden ds so that I could continue to sel ains That I Secured Are Now Pili [IMNAUGH'S and hold your purse sti o loosen them. This big stock was s buyers reached New York. WHICI 'REAM, NO "SKIMMED MILK" IN A BIG BLANKET SALE. We have about two hundred pairs of sample blankets, some of them are all wool, some part wool and some of them have no wool at all. No matter what kind of blankets you may need for the coming season, we can supply them and save you at least one third on the price. Five cases fancy Dress Outing. A "juicy plum" fell our way in this lot of outings. Nice fall styles, worth 7 and 8 cents, special for one week only at 5 cents a yard. INA UG LDING STORE OF N AS YELLOW FEVER TOTALS OF COTTON, 1904-05- new cotton growth o: Actual g:-owth crop velops There In Sick The Figures of Col. Hester, of the United States census Pensacola-Patient New Orleans Exchange-13,- 127. Sent to Detention 768,0oo Bales were Produced______ d Physicians have in United States-New GTIGHR very Precaution. Cotton ISandled this GETN-HR Year. Corporations and Cit t. 2.-John C. Carruth- _-- Out of Millions E' Atlanta Thursday night New Orleans, La., September I.- Fakir's, and eloed ylo fee Secretary Hester, of the Cotton ex- - ge swasstaken tofteve change, has made public the follow- Pearson's Magazine. pital three miles out-- ing leading totals from his annual Annually, railroads y,weeeeypea-report, showing the cotton crop of 'cities and towns I :aen Cruhersr wreas he past season: United States are fle .ealth officials soon af- Receipts of new cotton handled at less than $i5,o00.ooo , n oigfo nSouthern outports to close of Au- of fradulent claims at asd cloming fomse and gust, 195: New Orleans, 596 bales; which the defendants; was thelospl obsrvdy Galveston, 47.862: Mobile, 934; Sa- erless. In fact, so he -as pronounced yellow anh,24,483; Charleston, 925; WVii- sued that up to now nig. mmngton. 469; Norfolk, 16o; Balti- have counselled to ive wihi on blckmore, -: New York, -; Newport lest the exposition o: I cases of fever in Nw,-uninitatedfaisno when he learned the Total new cotton growth of 1905- easy-to-work frauds. disease there he left o6 marketed in July and August this company, every trc Lnta. !year. 75,429 bales; new cotton nearly all- of our big :pressed, as it has been marketed July an.d August last year. and, without excepti in previous seasons 79,748 bales- big cities, are made aver cannot spread in American cotton crop for two years, this class of sharpe: year ending close of August: alone the annual crop Port receipts 1904-05, 1o,3I9,722 suits brought again bales; 1903-04, 7,252,222 bales. amountrs to a fortune. .2.-Upon the receipt | Overland to mills, 1904-05, 1,298,183:; rn Hskn,t that there was yel- 1903-04, 939,943 bales. Oa okn,t Atlanta today. quaren-| Southern consumption, 1904-05, youth of Fort Wort] aimediately instituted ' ,6,0:10-4 ,1,5.been awarded $35,00o y the state and local Totals 1904-05, 13,611,470; 1903-04, Hoskins verdict was 10,111417.yoked because an attc Paragrphs.s taken by Southern mills from ward acdetif the o idPrgah.ports 1904-05, 45,585; 1903-o4, Ioo,o43..hsacdntebo Total crops, 1904-05, 13.565,885; hadncoe troul be a a woman likes to have 1903-04, 10o-oI1,374-. hneteewudb ty mean things to her Secretary Hester makes the actual ;ages if an accident li1< s so good when it growth of cotton of 1904-05 (in thou- afterward occurred si sands of bales): Commercial crop of Iand because when a d much the same the 1904-05, 13,566. Less old crop of previously believe.d ii n Russia they throw 1903-04, 200. Total 13.366. tended to operate upo: this country they give Plus growth of this year marketed boy,wh.adse d I1s. in July and August, 1904,-80. altogether inert spri se able to prove to his Grown, not marketed. 1903-04. 322,-.oeam abeadc n that he isn't a fool, j402. There was the case idom prove it to the iTotal 13,768. woman who claimed t his neig-hbors. I TDe. July and Augutnce nipts of of a prominent lay Iw Y UNK ccomplished the most 4ew York I didn't dally he stores -in the "Sky ts and talked sassy in 1 "THEM FOR LESS."' ng in Case After Case. E4 . "EF -ings until you get here elected fiom first hands I MEANS THAT I HAD OURS. . . . . .x Shoe Bargains. Footwear of every shape and quality from the cheapest to( ihe best. If you've never trieck buying shoes at Dry Goods Store prices, you've lost money there is big savings right here for you. Keep both eyes on Mimnaugh and see who is go .ing to sell the goods this fall. I......@........... EWBERRY 1905, 75. ner is an ex-cabinet minister. She - of 1904-05, per was suing the street car company bureau, 13, 732,-- for many thousands of dollars with a good chance of recovering. There was the case of the man who stood. PROFESSION on tche platform of a Missouri Kan sas and Texas train, at Hilisboro, ies are Fleeced 1Texas, and saw another man crushed' reyYa y beneath the wheels. He was suing 'ery ear ~the railroad company'for $5,o00 bc cause of the "horror and mrentalk .anguish" he was subjected to. 'Eherer? was the Chicago woman of shady rep ,corporations, utation, who had injured her thumb hroughout the on a street car, who had blackmailedi eced out of no more than one .prominenc man, and' in the settling whose father was serving a life sen id suits against tence for murdering .her mother. She. tre utterly pow- was suing- for a big sum. Ipless are those legal advisers The public in general and the avoid publicity Chicago public in particular had come the fact trainl to regard baiting the' corporations these lucrative, as a purely defensive public meas Every railroad ,ure, in which at least there was no lley company,! sin. True, 'the city in itself is a cr manufacturers poration from which every citizem' n, all of our idraws large dividends in free police the victims of iprotection, in sewerage remnoval, in .In Chicago free sch'ooling, and if you ibait it you' of fake damage ;simply rob it of just so much of its st the city :capacity for giving you what belongs; ~to you. e "paralyzed" True, the street railway company 2, Texas, had is a corporation which gives you >. True, the more for your nickel than you could! afterward re- buy for a dollar in cab service, thre rney came for- railroad company more for a dollar at long before than you could buy for ten in stage mnd his mc her coach service, and if you bait them d asked wha~t you reduce by so much their capacity for good dam- for contributing to your comfort :e the one that For, as a pr6mninent railroad official ould take place, pointed out every excessive or un octor who had just judgment that a railroad is: Hoskins pre- called upon to pay increases its opera ai his !brain the ting expenses just that much, and to.. blind, deaf and that extent prevents a reduction, eit.h .ng from the er voluntary or enforced, of the ra'tes >nfessed- of fare and freight; so that in the end of the Chicago the general public, or those who use o be the sister the railroads, pay or contribute to er whose par-. ward the payment of such jugnt w