The herald and news. (Newberry S.C.) 1903-1937, January 05, 1906, Page FIVE, Image 5

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1906 WILL BE A BLACK YEAR. An American Prophet Predicts Ugly Things for the Coming Year, Es pecially for Some Crowned Heads. Roosevelt, Man of the Hour. Lee Spanger. is an evangelist and B)ible student, who is known throughout southern Pennsylvania under his self-styled title as "the last of the prophets." As usual he has (lire things in store for some parts of the world and especially for that much perturbed and un fortunate country, Russia. Spangler first attracted atten tion as a prophet by announcing that according to -the scripture cer tain passages of which he quoted. he was ordained by God to be the last of the prophets, and predict the certain end of the world, the (late of which cataclvism he has been postponing fron time to time. and which. according to the latest pre diction. is to happen for a certainty in 1908. When Spangle prophesied the death of Queen Victoria, the as sassination of the Russians by the Japanese. the Chicago theatre fire, the North River steamboat disaster, the election of Theodore Roosevelt as president of the United States. and other events long prior to their occurrence, he gained a following especially among the country folk, many of whom read his annual forecasts with iiterest. Here are a few of the events that, according to Spangler, may be looked for in 1906. The' dissolution of Russia. The overthrow of Turkey. The assassination of the czar of Russia. The assassination of the sultan of Turkey. The prevention of three wars by President Roosevelt. A protracted race war in the south. Destructive spring floods in the United States. A destructive eruption of Mount Vesuvius. The activity in Mount Pelee and Popocatepetl. Volcanic eruption in all parts of the wvorld. . The eruption of many volcanoes now supposed to be extinct. Great loss of life at .sea by storms. Destruction of two WVestern cit ies l>y~2clones. Earthquakes in all parts of the world. Destructive earthquakes in Cali fornia and the Philippines. Rebellion in Spain. Great disturbance all over Eu rope. Spangler says further that the summer of 1906 will be hot and sul 'try throughout the.temperate zone with a high death rate. - That Chirst will make His Spirit felt among the people of the United States and England, in which coun tries there are to be fervent religi ous and political movements, which are to overcome in a great degree the present spirit of graft and com mercialism. That the United States will con tinue as a wvorld power and the leader of other nations. That Pennsylvania is to have an administration of the people and that discoveries of corruption will be made wvhich will drive some of the guilty to suicide. That God will wreck terrible vengeance upon the Russians for the massacre of the Jews. Using Brains on the Farm. Savannah News. The most productive farms of the country are those of the northwest This is not because the natural con ditions are more favorable in that section than in others-the South for instance-but because the north western farmer is a stickler for svs tern in his business. He dloes noth ing by guess work. He keeps books an(l takes a strick accounting of ex penses andl income. Hie knows what it cost him to grow his crops, andl when he has marketed them he knew what his profit or loss was. He knows the value of keeping up his machinery and his stock and taking advantage of newest meth odIs. He is a reader of newspapers andl magazines and keeps abreast of the progress of the world. Year after year the farmers are mixing more andl more brains with the brawn and1 guano they put on their fields, with most satisfactory results eeon .ti TftnFA SEMI=A] $10,000.00 Hats 4 To Be Soft THE .GRI I have had a goo( over winter goods i and unsaleable, no opportunity to buy spring. I have the a little earlier than sale of the year. A sold at our regular and other goods th shelves, and the sa posed of. My frier gains they carried C them than last yea carrying a twenty t or as clean a stock it again with the Bri The Suits I have been selling at $ The Suits I have been selling at $ The Suits I have been selling at $ The Suits I have been selling at $ The Suits I have been selling at $ Overcoats that were $15.00 now Overcoats that were $10.00 now~ Overcoats that were $7.50 now $ This is your opportunity. Con2e e everything spot cash. The earlier y Salesmen-W. F. Ewart, J. R. B( WED. BELOW STATION. ic wi 1 -..--vhos Morganatic Marriages on the Increase In poet Europe. He his w Pearson's Weekly. Torb It is wvell knowvn saying that "Cu- hi s pid laughs at la,and it appears to feetf1 be jstiiedin the case of royalties who marry for love rather than for ,and(c state reasons. Certain it is that of o moranic marriages are on the in- he is crease. - is Take for instance the Gran<dfun Duke of Russia, who was banished loveii by the czar toTashkent, in Turkes stan. because he fell in love witha Oan and married a daughter of the chiefwh of olice at Orenburg. wrc 1His sacrifice was a failure as far as happiness was concernled, for his lves. marriage wvas a disappointment. and the prinlce fretted after the full- C er life he had formerly had, andl lon~~~c his recall by the presen~t czarhs r mental health was found to have gl suffered severel'. The ( ;randl D)uke P aul of Russia who held the rank of lieutenant gen eral andl adljutant general to czar Ort was deplrived of his office and ban ishel for ten years on the occasion afc of his marriage with the baroness rank P~istolkoff, the beautiful but not al rhent together excellent wife oftli the ta G1rand D)uke \'ladimer's suite who ha divorced her. This prince has recently b)een par- peror Iond( an(l summlonedI back to re- the g port to the czar what Europe thinks Ihe w of the Russian situation, but his jAftei wife w as stolpped at the frontier andl Crou had to return. ationm Peraps one o f the happi est moi(r- mii 1 an unions is that of the ( ;rand and I uke .\1ichael uncle of the czar. who O rthi foillwed the dictates of his heart in love marryin g a dlaughter of Prince only v: c1las o asa y1 his morgan- it is NNUAL CL Worth of WI md Men'sFi i at 25 Per C LATEST SAL I season, but I don't wa >r accumulating stock t r do I want to wait until what they really need refore decided to have n a year ago, and will b il winter goods will be r low cash prices less twe at cannot find room on le will continue until all ids, remember the sale away daily from my stor r, because my stock is lC housand dollar stock in as I have and this is my ghtest and Best Things for 5 15.00 now $11.25 each. 12.50 now $9.38 each. 10.00 now $7.50 each. 7.50 now $5.63 each. 5.00 now $3.75 each.' $11.25. 7.50. 5.63. ~arIy and often, and bring your friends with yc u come the more you will have to select froi )ozer, Win. Garlington. fe, the Countess Meremberg, wife and crewv perisi Sfather was the great Russian Recent. comparatia Pushkin. cision of the Archdi is now restored to favor, and nie to abandon her ife has been created Countess in favor of her love I v ; but the grand duke clings to vav. Her father-in-li nglish home at Keele -Hall, jpe'ror of Austria, ga rdshire, where he lives in per- but her own father, t armony with his lovely wife Belgians, has never hildren, and has been the host daughter, and it will 1 it own king and queen, wvhile that at the deathbed beloved by the people in wvhose Oueen Louise of Be he lives and moves . passedI each other wvi e imperial house, of Austria tion. shes many examples of such matches. Following the miot .e of the most picturesque ro.. the Archduchess Ehi; es was that of Archdluke John, tria fell in love with; is sup)osed to have been ship- man of ancient but n( ed and dIrownedl in 1890 but Prince Windischgrar om report has it that he still sp)ite the protests grand(fatheCr. mnsisted xva ou liiiiin~oneda himi and renouncing was ot hutingone a)\ustrian emp)ire. he surrisedl a p)icnic p)arty . ofut rasipia1 \ Iilly Stubel was one. I he .:uti m)ra vas only an opera dancer, but pecrsont of the \rch n i unblemished rep)utation, and1( Ferdlinand. suiccumbil cply didl the arch duike fall in (dart. andl heir presun t first sight that he coturted( ,crowns ot :\u1sti i m (er the name of Johann th()ugh he was. marr a iennese engineer. -II behal Sofhi anhk ~ectig. .\Iilly returnled his h)em allii of ci .io andlyl dUiV scoveredl his te l ih fsc when she saw him reviewing There are three s as ant imperial fieldl mar-1 archdukes, since dea< tedI alliances with. coi n vain did he imlore the emi- The P rincess .\ar to sanction his marriage with Imost ancient house. irl: only a quarrel ensued and misalliance b)v weddi 'as disissed froni the army. Guagnoni, while the - the decath of his friend, the ab)eth of Bavaria los1 n rince Rudolph. a reconcili- gave her hand to a y< to ( k place. but he asked per-I in the Illavarian arm 01 re) CInunce all ioya righlts fr*ied( )y nme. . Then he married his ladyv hur de(scended-( low' anl sailed away with his lady of so cietv in search< to encounter a storm. in which. lie marrIedl his forr believed by most people. his know by* the title EARANCE SALE! nter Clothing, Shoes, irnishing Goods nt Discount for Cash! E OF THE SEASON. nt to take any chances about carrying hat after a while might become old stock winter is over before I give the trade an now to make them comfortable until iy semi-annual clearance sale this year egin Tuesday, January 9th, the greatest >laced on our five center counters and nty-five per cent discount. Shoes, Hats the center tables will be shown from the of our winter and surplus stock is dis I had last January, and the great bar e. This will be a greater opportunity for irger and practically all new. No house Newberry has so few old goods to show, way of keeping it clean, and then to fill pring. Overcoats that were $500 now $3.75. Shoes that were $5.00 now $3.75 pair. Shoes that were $4.00 now $3.00. Shoes that were $3.50 now $2.63. Shoes that were $3.00 nowi $2.25. .Shoes that were *2.50 now $1.88. Shoes that were $2.00 now $1.50. u. No goods sent on memoranda, nothing taken back or exchanged, and Newberry, S. C.5, January 4, 1906. ed. This is as true as gospel: If you TO BE elv. 1s th e make a visit longer than a couple of IFASH ION ABL E cess Stepha- clays, your left ear wvill burn you De o nyapyt tls royal position after you go home. cDotes, not nyapl od ctlish or then Lon~ One of the great wonders to'a Shave and an up-to-date Hair. w, hent man is the number of interruptions L Cut as well. In order to make eKing of the a woman can endure wvhile eating, your toilet complete call at my forgiven his Ia mieal without noticing it. Tonsorial Parlor. First-class e remembered WhenT~ a crime is committed, sus- 'wr urned o n of the late picion turns quicker to those who cold baths. Igium the two once loved the victim than to those thout recogni-I who once hated him.-Atchinson cH AS. P. .BE ECH E R Globe. Under Crotwell Hotel. hes example, :abeth of Aus-ST TEM N i young noble-STEM N >t royal lineage Of the condition of the Exchange Bank of Newberry, S. C., at the close of itz and. de- fbusiness, December 30, 190.5. Published in conformity with an Act of the >f her royal General Assembly. (U marrying IRESOURCES. OIABILITIES. 1l clai to the ILoans and discounts. .......$ 79,304 12 Capital Stock paid in......$ 31,380 00 aini . Furniture and fixtures...... 3,251 75 Profits less expenses paid.... 2,045 92 cet another at Due from Banks..... ....... 11,616 89 Deposits, viz: amily, in the Overdrafts.................. 462 63 Banks........$ 1,457 03 - I~*Lii Cash and cash items.......23,505 44 Individual ...... 3,307 88-$ 84,764 91 uke lrn i ed( t ( Cupid( $118,140 83 $118,140 8:3 1tive to the Personally appeared before me M. L. Spearman, Cashier of the above Bank, idIunaywho swears that the above statement is correct to th best of hi knowledge id the Count- Sworn to before me this 30th day of December, 1903.WRGT L. eonmonAttest: N. P. of S.~C. Iren horn to Geo. B Cromer, Edw. R. Hipp, C. J. Purcell. ng he lBaron 0 Which we use are without exception the purest grade.* Princess Ehiz- + We believe in PURITY. her hea rt anid ( We constantly preach PURI TY. I ~roi Sig-We always practice PURITY when preparing medi I cinies. ttil' (* (hkn ' PURITY counts, and counts for much, in medicines.6 t n tlr 5clden Ask your doctor.4 )fa~vf~ sne MAYES' DRUG STORE.