The herald and news. (Newberry S.C.) 1903-1937, February 14, 1908, Page SEVEN, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

!! BIG TOM WILSON. Mountaineer Guide Splendid 'Combination <tf Tenderness and Bravery?Finding Mitchell's Body. Columbia State. Tire death of "Big Tom" Wilson at the age of 85 years, which occurred last week at his home in Yancey county, marks the passing of ono of the relics of the mountaineers who have been made the type of heroic (fiction and romance. As so often happens in the case of recognized "types" that appear in books, the "typo" is in reality fc'no exception. "Big Tom", as hundreds can testify was during the whole of , his long life both the ideal mountain j type and the practical exception to the rule. Of great stature, of Herculean strength, lixed with the homely philosophy of a rough life and the gently .sarcastic humor of one who has lived close to nature toward those who i come upon her with the condescension of the city, "Big Tom" was as much one of the sights?and in sonic manner as really one of the inspirations? as anything alVorded by the mountains among which he lived. Through three generations lie'has been made j>. famous throughout the country, the r, great magazines devoting pages to his character and publishing studies of his great and picturesque frame; V& hundreds of tourists have made painful pilgrimage to his home to se<! liifh; and yet there was always the f" same story that came back?the story of a great primal man, with the gen^ tlen'ess of his strength, the wisdom of clear-eyed associations with the brooding mountains and the humor which those who live large acquire in the amused contemplation of those .who live small. Even as a young man "Big Tom" was staled to know I he then unknown mountains better than any other. Tie was in large demand as guide and nti party that he took out into the solitudes but that came back to the cities with his memory in their hearts. He was hunter and trapper by profes* sion, knowing to the detail that would ,. put to shame the most successful nature fakers the hah its and characteristics of every creature that went the ways of the mountains. With it all he bore about him a deep seated reverence for the (tod of the Mountains that robbed him of the faults while it brought out in him the virtues of the men the mountains breed. Tn times of danger, ami they were many in his life. "Big Tom" acted with the direct simplicity of the rare breed that has heard of fear but does not recognize it by experience: when .the cnll was for humanity he wa< as gentle as a woman. It is narrated of "Big Tom" that on a time he was -persuaded by friends to go to,Wilmington and sec the ocean, lie was distressed with its flatness and perturbed by th'3 .motion. The smug and unbroken horizon irritated him. lie chafed and cut his visit short that he might return to the great hills that he loved ?that, almost personally, seemed to love him. ft was as the discoverer of the dead body of Dr. Klislia Mitchell that *' I?i u' Tom" will be chiefly remembered. Alter a week's search in which hundreds participated it was "Big Toiu " who, bv a process o| deduction learned from intimate association with the great scientist and explorer, knew where in the mountains to search for and Kind his trail. A d it was. the party led by "Bip Tom" that late at night discovered where Dr. Mitchell had slipped upon the ledge and afterwards came upon his body lying at the bottom of a clear pool of mountain water many feet below. The details of the search and finding of Dr. Mitchell's body made a story that "Big Tom" was accustomed to tell wi'th unvarying graphic detail to the day of his death, Now that "Big Tom" is dead, the story of the finding of the body as narrated by Zeb Vance, who happened to be in tiie mountains as a student on vacation at the time and who was of the searching party, gains renewed interest al this time. It was to visit "Dig Tom" that Dr. Mitchell had turned aside from his party on the day that he was lost, The findingoftho body is told by Gov. ^ ance, in the Asheville Spectator, as follows: "About I o'clock in the night just as the writer was about closing his eyes in troubled and uneasy slumlrei (at the Steep cabin on Mt. Michell), a haul haloo was heard from the high bluff that looms over the cabin. It was answered from within, and in a moment every sleeper was upon his feet. M}r. Jesse Sleep, Capt. Robert 'Vat I on and others llren came down and told us that the body was found. 'Mournfully' then indeed those hardy sons of the mountains seated them selves around tlie smouldering cabii lire and on the trunks of the falle llrs, and then, in the light of a glor ous full moon, whoso rays pencile the dark damp forest wibh liqjui silver, 7,000 feet abovo the tide-was! ed sands of the Atlantic, the melat 'choly tale was told. Many a heai was stilled with sadness as the anvfi truth was disclosed, and many rough face glittered with a tear in tli refulgent moonlight as it looked upo the marble pallor and statuc-stillnes of tiie stricken and bereaved son, an thought of those far away whom th sudden evil would so deeply afflict. "Tt was as they expected. The d eaased had undertaken to go tl same route to the settlements whic lie iiad formerly gone. They tracc him rapidly down the precipices < the mountain until they readied tl stream, (the Cat-tail fork), foun traces going down it?following on hundred yards pr so, they came to rushing cataract some *10 feel big saw his footprints trying to dim around the edge of the yawning pre ipice. saw the moss torn up by tl outstretched hand, and then?tl solid Impression less granite refuse to toll more of his late. But clambc -i 11 vr hastily to the bottom of the ro ing abyss, they found a basin woi out <?(' the solid rock by the fren/.ic torrent, at least 14 feet deep, fiih with clear and crystal waters co and pure as the winter snow tin generates them. At the bottom < this basin, quietly reposing, with on slrelched arms, lay the mortal r mains of the Rev. TCIisha Mitche 1). 1)., the good, the great, the wis the simple-minded, the pure of heai ilie i.istructor of flic youth, the di . eiple of knowledge and the preach of Christianity! Oh, what a friend science and virtue, what youth amoi all the thousands that have listen) to his teachings, what friend that h ever taken him by the hand, cj 111i ik of this wild and awful scei unmoved by the humanity of tear can think of those gigantie pyramid firs, whose interlocking branches, sin out the light of heaven, the man lined rhododendrons that freight tl air with their perfume and lean wee inglv over the waters, that cryst stream leaping down the great gra ites and hastening from the niajest presence of the mighty peak abov whilst in the deep pool below, wlie 1 lie weary waters rest but a sing moment, lies the inanimate body his dear friend and preceptor, appa enlly listening to the mighty requie of (lie cataract ! Truly 'Man knowe not his lime..and (lie sons of men a entrapped in the evil, when it come suddenly upon them.' " Dr. Mitchell met his death .Till '.17. 1S."i7. and was buried in Ashevil the 10th of duly following. A,bo :i year later on the Kith of .Tu:i 1 S."?S, his body was rein I erred up? the top of Ml. Mitchell, the height which he was engaged in measurii at the time his Iragic fate ovcrtoi him. Kiflv-one years later it were a propriatc thai the old mountaine< who was the friend an.! guide at who brought aboil! Mve discovery his body, should likewise he burn in honor on the top of the niounta lie knew so well and so greatly rcvo e<l for the memory that was hound i in it of the great scientist who can among the moountains md their pe . pie as friend and guide?' > learn at In leach. NO FATIGUE GERM. . Doctors Have 'Come to the Conclusi< That Theory is a Myth. Nearly 1,000 persons at the Ila vard Medical School yesterday iiea Dr. (}. A. Waterman lecture on "F tigue; Its FdVeels and Treatment." Dr. Watornvan declared that fati ; ue is not a germ nor a microbe, b that it is a condition that develop in the muscles of the body when , person works too hard, thinks t< ; hard, worries loo hard, and loses l< . much sleep. "If there is loo much falimie. the doctor declared, "with none i i the necessary substance for the r plenishmenl of the muscle's su]>)i , of energy, that little muscle ju > naturally breaks up, and then a pe , son becomes a nervous wreck." There were not many students ' the gateliering but many men and w men whose hair is gray attentive ; listened us Dr. "Waterman traced 11 i entire, energy in a person's body t he sun. , "The carrying on plant and ai i mal life is entirely different." sn , the doctor. "IManls are reared fro the soil and wafer and form substan > es which we use. II is a law of ph . sics tliiit energy itself once started i is either being se| free or has a le , dencv to be set free under cert a conditions, and these plants, whi< make use of the heat of the sun ai l- [ make use of the carbon and itrogon u of the soil, are the animal kingdom i- and are taken into the system and d there are broken doAvn through vard ions processes. They are then taken l- by digestion, and stored up, that 1- when they are called upon these subi*t stances can be liberated at the comil nvnnd and give rise to the eneregy in a various>rms, whether of emotion, to thought or reason." in *s CHARLESTON NAVY YARD. d is House (Committee Endorses Appropriation for Torpedo Boats to Be s. Constructed There. ic ,|j News and Courier. (t| Washington, February 12.?-The house naval all'airs committee today ,e voted to pass an item of$o0,000 pro1(j viding for the construction of torpea do ships at the Charleston naval staa | tiou. It also voted to appropriate ^ $140,000 for the purpose of further ^ carrying on the public works at I he c_ station for the next fiscal year. ie I'he voting (>|' the $.">(),000 for the le construelion of torpedo ships is of >d more than ordinary importance and r- means that the first step in a verv r. important undertaking has been tak ;i en with success. 'd 'Several months ago Capt. William ?d Mol'fott, of the navy, with Commanld der Marsh, undertook the matter of nt making Charleston a basis for the i>f torpedo squadron. The original plans t- were worked out in detail and Repe resenIlive I.ctrnre and Senator Til 1II. man gave their assistance to the proie, jed in congress. At the earnest re t, quest of Cap!. Moflfetl, Mr. Legare s- and others interested in the matter, ei the Nofws and Courier correspondent to | said nothing of what was likely to lg happen, and it would not be made id public in this correspondence now exas copt for the fact that the item has ui been voted upon bv the naval all'airs ie i 4'i)nitiii'ttee and the news is open to s! i Ine public. I'lie voting of the apal propria!ion means that provision is nl to be made at the Charleston naval y- station immediately for taking care ie of many o| the ships now forming p- the torpedo squadron, the headqnaral tcrs of which are at Norfolk. ic LYNCHING IN MISSISSIPPI. ra Mob Overpowers Militia and Deputy le Sheriffs and Hangs Negro. of r- Brook ha ven. Miss.. February 10 ? in I'di I -'-it. I he negro who criminally 111 assaulted Miss Williams, a yoiint* re while won ? . near several lb weeks a:o. was ;ake:i from the cus!ody ol the dacksou military coiniio pany and a posse of deputies and Ie . hanged t<> a telephone pole within a ut hundred yards of the court house. He ie, was to have been tried for his crime. >ii I he military and the police were ovi,| crpowered by a mob of more than ig thousand citizens. Several sliots >k were tired during the melee and two members of the mob were wounded. !r. Medicine That is Medicine. id '*1 have suffered a good deal with of malaria and stomach complaints, but L.' ' have now found a remedy that r keeps nie well, and that, remedy is Kleetr>c Bitters: a medicine that is I1C. medicine for stomach and liver I rouo liles, and tor run down conditions," 'J says W. C. Kiestler. of TIalliday, Ark. Klectric Bitters purify and enrich the blood, tone up the nerves i , . . ' and impart vigor and energy to lire N"ak. ^ oui' money will be refunded if it fails to help von. f?0e. at W.?E. Belli a i n and Son's drug store. ^ j A Dangerous Operation is the removal of the appendix by a surgeon. Njo on/T who takes Dr. <r king's New Life Bills is ever sub^ jected to this frightful ordea! They work so quietly you don't, feel tlrsni. * They cm.e constipation, headache, billiousness and malaria. 2oc at W. ? F. Pelliam and Son's drug store. )o AVALUABLE PLANTATION FOR RENT. 1)f' We will rent for the year 1908, the farm of 338 acres of land situated l.v about one mile east of Silver Street sl ?nd owned by the estate of Wm. W. 1 Spearman. There is open upon the place about a four horse contract and in made this year 50 bales of cotton, o- The place will be rented either foilv money n* bales of cotton. Apply to lie the undersigned, in M. A. Carlisle, John C. floggans, ii- Kxeculors of Wm. W. Spearman, id Newberry, S. C., Dec. 31, 1007. m 01 Pi tJliCIwhiskey" J Ilaliitq cured nt my Hnnutnrium In n j fo\* works. Von o(*n roturri to your liomo In 30 doyo wall, froo and liniipy, 'In1*0 inndo those linhita i\ Rpooliilly for ~yoaraandcured tiinufmmifi. pnr*r Book on HomoTreatmentcent rntfc AddroAB I?R? 11. 311. WOOUXY, 102 N. Pryop stroot, Atlanta, (Ia. At Wholesale Prices Bananas, Oranges, Apples, and all sorts of Fruits. ALSO Homemade Candy. CHARLESTON & WESTERN CAROLINA RY. Schedule in effect Noveinber.-3rd, 1907 Lv. Newberry(C N & L.) 12:46 p. m. Ac. Laurens 1 :52 p. in. J Lv. Laurens (C. & W. C.) 2:15 p. in. Ar. Greenville 3:40 p. m. Lv. Laurens 2:07 p. it.. Ar. Spnrtn:iburg 3.35 p. m. Lv. Spartanburg (So. Ry.) 3:40 p. m. Ar. Heiulersonville 0:25 p. m. A.r. Asheville 7:30 p. iu. Lv. Laurens (C. & W. C.) 2:00 p. m. Ar. Greenwood 2:56 p. m. Ar. McCorraick 3:55 p. in. Ar. Augusta 5:40 p. m. Note; The above arrivals and departures, as well as connections with other companies, are. given as information, and are not guaranteed. Ernest Williams, Cen. Pass. A?rt., Augusta, Qa. Geo. T. Bryan, Greenville, S. C. Gen. Agt. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF NEWBERRY. 1 ?v Frank M. Schunipcrt, Esquire, Probate Judge. WHEREAS, Lizzie J. Huff and Minnie L. Caldwell made suit, to me, to grant thVin letters of administration of tlie estate and affects of J. M. II. Huff. THESE ARE THEREFORE to cite and admonish all and singular tlin kindred and creditors of the said .7. M. If. Huff deceased, that they he and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, lo be held at Newberry on tlie 12th day of February next after publication thereof, at 11 o'clock in (lie forenoon, to show cause, if any they !ia*-o, why the said administration .-should not be granted. GIVEN under my hand, this 25th day of January, Anno Domini, 1008. ; F. M. Schumpert. J. P. N. C. THE STANDARD WAREHOUSE CO. BEGS TO ANNOUNCE: i. Its warehouse receipts nre regarded as the highest class of bankable collateral 2 If money can be borrowed on anything it can be borrowed on the receipt of The Standard Ware house Company. 3 Hanking instituiiois are familiar with the methods and strict business principles and financial standing of The Standard Warehouse Company, and seek its receipts as a basis of loans. . . vl 4. The identical cotton that you place in the warehouse is returned upon surrender of receipts. 5. In case of fire your cotton is paid for at market value, and you have no difficulty as to insurance, the full insurance being maintained by The Standard Warehouse Company. (> All insurance on cotton is maintained at full value in the highest class Knglisli and American Insurance Companies. 7 The Standard Warehouse Com painis absolute!v independent of a 113- otlw": ' organization ami conducts its affairs upon strict business methods. S. The paid up capital stock of The Standard Warehouse Company is $350,?ioi?, and the company is absolutely safe, and its warehouse receipts come ahead of the stockholders. 9. Hy having a number of Standard Warehouses constructed so as to comply with insurance regulations and economies in general management The Standard Warehouse Company offer the cheapest rate compatible with sound business methods, ample insurance and the fnll' est protection qf its receipts. 10. The Standard Warehouse Company is anxious to have all cotton of farmers and others storco, and offers the most cotnple te protection and encouragement for faviners desiruig to hold their cotton." 11. Kates will W furnished upon application to Mr. J. D. Whetfler, local manager Standard Warehouse Company, Newberry, S. C. THE EXGHA Newberr In looking for a Bankt you want to find a Safe Bank, an Accommodatii |to consider this Bank an [come in and open an ac We Pay Interest o J. D. Davenport, President. Edw. R. Hipp, V. President. G. B. Cron itT?. e ryv* m rp* ff *J ^ Prosperit Paid Up Capital I Surplus and Individual \ Stockholders' Liabilities For protection of deposi H. C. Mossley. President. M W. W. Wheeler, Cashier. G Better a conservative interes return when wanted, than a high about the principal. A National Bank Is a safe Dep makes it so. Likewise our Boai of Drudent conservative manager DIRECT G. W. Bowers. J. A. C. Klbler. R. L. Luther. M. A. Carlisle. J. H. Hunter. J. P. E We allow 4 per cent, pei Department, interest p Mosele1 Our 36th car of that Choic arrived, making 4,005 bbls., Best Patent Best Half Patent Every Barrel Choice Meal Choice Grits | We are maKing some cut pric land as a special inducement wil lO Cents on | on following goods, goods all ma ! tion or misleading. This is to u ; 1908, and to be carried out to t! All Ladies' Hats, Feathei Dress Goods, Flannels, all IV Youths' and Boys' Cloth inf. Blankets, Men's Pants Gooi Misses' Shoes, Trunks, Vali Ladies' and Misses Jackets, ing Machines. This make* the extremely low price of ! tic for $22.50 and is certainly We have an abundance of chc ments, and to reduce them are all along the line. Yours ti i Mosele] & The First Cough (?| Kven tbmtgh not severe, has a t a tive Aremhranes of the throat i ^ Coughs then come easy all vvint I ? slightest cold. Cure*the first cc: set up an inflaination in the delic fig lungs. The best remedy is | ^ SYRUP. It at once gets right ' moves the cause. It is free froi ? a child as for an adult. 25 cent: |J MAYES' DR1 NGE BANK y, S. C. o receive your money, Bank, a Convenient ig Bank, we want you d satisfy yourself and count with us. n Time Deposits. M. L. Spearman, Cashier. W. B. Wallace, Ass't Cashier. "ler, Atty. ??<<& Jsiionat Sssk y, C. ? - - $25,000 00 Profits $6,000 00 1 . $25,000 OO tors. !. A. Carlisle, Vice-President eo. Johnstone, Attorney, t on your deposit with its safe rate and a feeling of doubt osit. Government supervision 'd of Directors is a guarantee nent. fORS: W. P. Pugh. Jno. B. f ellers. W. A. Moseley. Geo. Johnstone. H. C. Moseley. towers. * annum in our Savings ayable semi-annually" y Bros. :e Tennessee Flour has just and while it lasts goes foi $5.50 bbl. $5.25 44 Guaranteed. 90c. bu. $1.85 sack. es to suit the "Panicky" times I make a clean cut of the Dollar iked in plain figures, no decepist until 1st day of January, ie letter, and includes s and Velvets, all Woo fen s Hats and Caps, Men's, Rugs and Art Squares, ds,{Ladies', Children's and ses, Satchels, Telescopes, Lap Robes, Domestic Sewi our $30.00 Machine for $27.00, our $25.00 Domesbest price in United States. >ice goods in all of our departmaking some inviting prices uly, / Bros. 1 of the Season, emlency to irritate the sensi- A and delicate bronchial tubus. er, every time you take the ? nigh before it has a chance to ^ :ate capillary air tubes of the a QUICK RJCI,IICK COUGH at the seat of ti ublo and re 11 Morphine and is as safe tor $ s at ^ UG STORE. *