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I CONGRESSMEN ARE GRATIFIE Ten Other South Carolina Cities 1 Have Handsome Postoffice Buildings. News and Courier. Washington, April 30,?When eo gress during the next few days pass* the public building bill there wi have gone to the credit of South Ca i olina, to be used in the const rue tic of Federal buildings, more tht \ $400,000, as the result of the woi her representatives have done durit Die present session of congress f< their respective districts. While it is not yet possible to cor pare this amount with* that going oilier States; it is believed that win such a comparison is made and tl size of the different towns sharing this distribution is considered, it wi i be seen that excellent results ha1 s been achieved by each of the six eo gressmen making bids for a part < the appropriation. Every district the Stale is represented except tl 1st, and Mr. Legare, having no oth large places to look after, exec Charleston, asked for nothing, th city already having a maunilice Federal building. Orangeburg, Aiken, Newberr Darlington, CJaffney, Laurens and II ion each have a population of prob bly about 8,000 or 10,00 inhabitant . For that reason it is to tire credit < the South Carolina representativ that they should have been suceessf in securing $50,000 for each of thei Representative Finley, who as member of the house committee < postoffices and postroads, knows considerable amount about postolfi matters generally, was asked . tods what kind of buildings he thoug $50,000 would allow. He stated th in his opinion such an amount won appear to be ample for all purpos where only poslolllce business is to transacted, 'and where there will no necessity of providing quarters f i court officers, revenue officers ai others. He cited the case of Ro \ Hill, which has a fine building, whi cost, when completed, about $45,0t ami something more than $5,000 w paid for the site. While it is not possible to gi even an outline of what each of t ISouth Carolina representatives h , done towards securing these appr priations, it may be said that t items would not have been placed the appropriation bill without, t! most persistent and ceaseless effo on their part. AIKEN. Mr. Patterson secured the passa of an Act June 30, 1906, approprif ing $10,000, with which to purchase site for the Aiken building. Tl has been done, and with the additio al $50,000 available for the build): proper, Aiken will have both a go< j site and building, f ANDERSON. There lias already been approprif ed for the Anderson building ai site $50,000, the latter costing $ 514.58. The additional $10,01 which will go into the fund, will gi that town a total of $00,000. NEWBERRY. Although no delegations came Washington and had public heari on the Newberry proposition. Repr< entalive Aiken worked' faithful from the first, and was awarded sharing in the distribution i<> the c tent of $50,000. I'M ON AND LAEWEN'S. Enion and Laurens show up belt than any of the other Smith Cai linn towns litis year. Mr. .loluis< represents the 4th district jn coiigre: I has both Union and Laurens in 1 district. He gets $50,000 for each ^ them. In addition to this (Jrecnvi |P recently got $80,000 for enlarging h building, and Spartanburg, under i p cent Act, got $00,000, and now h P1 one of the best equipped and m< f commodious postoffice buildings tha south. GAEENEY. ffalYney, through hard work on t part, of Representative Einley, slir ed to the extent of $50,000, and tho is no reason, he thinks, why a fin i class building should not be bu I there ,just as quick as the necessa plane ^an be drawn. Resides t'nis Mr. Einley has recei ly gotten appropriations for Chest and Rock Hill?$50,000 for Chest i and $45,000 for Rock Hill. DAlRTil N (ITON. | When the question of passing ' public building bill began to he agit ted several months ago Represent five Ellerbe said that if there w any money to be distributed t-1 year he was going to have his sha for Darlington. He submitted to t committee Am buildings and groun photograi/is of many of the elega buildings Darlington has erected di ing the last few years, and besi x them he showed also poor little sha v/ known as th* Darlington poet, oft { J / / / D building. It did noi take but one sii?lit ot the j?ijoit?iiiai?h t*.? convince to (lu. committee that Darlington needed the money. Mr. Kile:be was successful in his efforts, and will get $f>0,000 tor a site and building there. SUMTER, ORANGEIfURO AND CODUMB.IA. HI The work of securing approprialions for Sumter, Orangcbnrg and Columbia fell to Representative Levin or. He began early in the session to rjc plan how he could get an increase on t'he amount already allowed for Sumjr tor, $50,000, have a new building erected at Orangebuig and either enlarge the present building at Columbia or erect a new one commensurate ? with the needs of the Columbia of "n today. He planned wisely. He was ,1C successful in all three undertakings, f!J nnd will get $">0,000 for Orangeburg 1 ( outright, an iu/:ease ?.f at least $lo!u 000, and possibly more for Sumter, and <!cts a complete investigation by ? the supervising architect of the treasury in!?? the needs of the Columbia ollice. Phis investigation will be made before the next session of conlit "r'S' ;,n'' 1 :(" ' "v,'r xv'll either have Columbia given a new building al a cost of several hundred thousand dollars or the pre-j^nt structure will' }> be so remodelled' and enlarged that ,l" it will lie useful and commodious for a~ many years to come. A word should be said for the splendid delegations of business men wlioj ej came to Washington at Mr. Tvever's | request and appeared before the com-1 n* mittee on buildings and grounds in I behalf of Sumter, Orangeburg and ,n Columbia. That they made an excellent impression on the committee is best shown in the success that their ^ congressman has achieved in securing something substantial for each of the ', places named. Id ? J liese new authorizations, with the lje tine buildings constructed at Florence, be ^'recn wood and the other places already named, speak i:i the best possi((| ble way for the successful efforts of c,j. South Carolina representatives ir. j ? congress to secure for their respecIQ live districts their proper share of i as public appropriations. P. II. M.cG. ^c DISPENSARY CASE TO BE ARGU I lie _ as Justice Fuller Will Sit at Richmond (l) ?A Hearing of the Controversy . Will Seen be Had, in Richmond, a V., Mav 2.?Chief Jus rt . lice Fuller will sii in the famous Sou'h Carolina dispensary case, whi.'-ii vill be jvard in this ?:;v at the "May go 'f ilie United Stri?. (ir"ni? . it- appeals, which convenes next Tuesa day. I lie case is, perhaps, as imporiiis ant sis any which has been before the! n- court here in recent years. Tlie quesng tion as to whether or not a commisml sion appointed by the sovereign State of South Carolina represents the State and is liable to suit under the. jj_ constitution of the United tates is 11(j involved. Judge Pritchard having sat in the )0 lower court, is barred from sitting vc again, and it is in his place that Chief Justice Puller will appear. The style of the case before the court here is W. J. Murray, John Melo Swcen, Avery a.Ptten et al.. appelhints, vs. Wilson Distilling company s" et al. and the Pleischmann company, appellees. The case was appealed from ,J.V the United States circuit court. South Carolina represented in the controversy by Attorney (Jeneral Fraser I.yoii, of Columbia: \V. p. (M Stv'venson. of C'neraw: Abney Miller. ? "I ( olun-bia. and l>. \\ , Wountree. of Atlanta. I he inieivst> of the vvhisss> key men are in the hands of T. M. 11S Mordecai, of Charleston, and 1?. Frank Carter nad Alf S. Barnard, of Ashc"e ville. 1 t is probable that the decis01 ion will be rendered early in the May "c'~ term. as 'f* No Date Fixed. 1,1 iColumhia, May 2.?No date has been fixed for hearing the appeal in the dispensary injunction case, so far as is known to the attorney general] ,l" and counsel for the dispensary com-j 10 mission. The court of appeals will meet in Richmond next week, but 'It whether or not the dispensary case *.V will be readied at this term of the court is not yet known here. The it- records were sent on only a few days or ago and the case is not at this time er ready for argument. It is certain that it will not be argued. Tuesday, as stated in Richmond Dispatches, a Attorney Oeneral Lyon returned toa day from Spartanburg and said toa night, that Ire had received no notice as as lo the date for hearing. J. IT. re SKYSCRAPER AND PYRAMID. he ds Comparison of thc Amount of Efnt fort Required to Build Them. ie Fngineering Magazine. ck No one has been able to decide ioo how tho enormous stonos in the Pyra mids wore handled; for, evei\ allow ing lor the v?ast army of men, som sort of mechanical contrivance nnia have been used. One theory *s thai as each coin's of stone was 1, sand embankinen was built round it with long eas slopes, so that the stones for th next course could be pushed up o rollers and slide into place withou any actual lifting, and so on, the p> ramid being in fact buried as fast a it was built, until th? top was roacli ed, when the stupendous job of r< moving the sand cnnbaukvwent wa commenced. This might account for the ra> amry of laborers used; for instanc< it is said that in building the greti pyramid of Cheops, 100,000 men wev employed for eighty years, althoug the quarry from which Hie stone wa obtained was only 3.000 feet from th pyramid. The City Investing Building, lii largest skyscraper in New York, ha| pens to he nearly lite same height ? I lie pyramids. If we required tli same number of days' labor for thi building, which taks a year to orec <?s the Egyptians took. we woul have thirty multiplied bv 100.000, <i :?.(?(?().000 men working every day I'd one year on this one building. Imagine a number of men equal t almost the entire population (incliui ing men, women and children) ( New York City, trying to reach tli corner of Broadway and Cortland street, every morning. Even if the got there, there would remain th impossibility of finding standin room. It alone workinf room for then or of providing a commissariat's c hygienic department. Against this 000,000 men working every day IV one year, the average number on tli City Investing Building would nc exceed 2,000 men a day, while tli maximum would probablv never reac :i,ooo. The Most Polite Englishman. Mr. Disraeli, after one of his be: speeches, left the house with M Montagu Corry. ''I was wondering," Mr. Corry a lerward confessed, "what a great on tor would talk about just offer a sin cessful speech. 'Corry,' said Mr. Di: raeli, 'do you know how to get into cab? Very few men know. I was i Vienna once when I was a young mm with Prince Gortschakoff and anothv Englishman, a military man who wj YOUR B THE NEWBERRY Capital $50,000 No Matter How Small, The Newberr vill give it careful a ipplies to the men an ias. Mcintosh. President. iraTyTm'iii'iiiniMiBniiM ?? ?a?WM r i ? rBuy t We provide easy ter We enable borrowei in Monthly Install men allowed to meet oblig; It is cheaper than pa to save money to buy ! Contract. If you want to save i take a Security Contn Call on A, J. Gibson, Treasurer, at office, c streets, next door to C -TEW3SS there on the same business, e " 4 A royal carriage was (hero to it conduct us. When we eaine to it, the bullish man walked straight up to it, e and got in with his hack to th? t horses. Gortschakoff said to me, y "That is the politest thing I have e ever seen an Englishman do." ' " n Life and letters of Sir Richard C. it Jehb. * FOR SALE. .. 1 10 II. P. horizontal engine; 1 20, s II. P. steel boiler; I laundry wagon; lot of old iron, piping, etc. Offered for sale as assets of the Newberry Steam , Laundry Co. Terms: cash. See the ? undersiged if you wish to purchase. II. C. Ilolloway, R?eceiver. ? 4-17-4t-st. h s ' * ? e Miloage Books. 500 Mile State Family Tickets $11.0 I ?900(1 ovor Uie Atlnntic Coast J Line in each State for the head or de;S j pendent members of a family. Limitv jed to one year from date of sale. ISI 1000 Mile Interchangeable Indivi1 jdual Picket $20.00.?Good over the ,1 Atlantic Coast Line and 30 other lines iii the Southeast aggregating 30,000 ir miles. Limited to one year from date ; of sale. 0 2000 Mile Finn Ticket $-10.00.? f Good over tlie Atlantic Coast Line ,f and 30 other lines in the Southeast ie aggregating 30,000 miles; for a manIt "Scr or head of firm and employee liy lines in the Southeast aggregating 41,e mited to five, but good for only one g of such persons at a time. Limited to i, one year from date of sale. >r 1000 Mile Southern Interchangeably Individual Ticket $25.00.?Good over >r the Atlantic Coast Line and 75 other i? 000 miles. Limited to one year from >t date of sale. e All mileage tickets sold on and afh ter April 1st, 100S, will not be honored" for passage on trains, nor in checking baggage (except from nonagencv stations and stations not .( open for the sal eof tickets) but must be presented at ticket oflices and there exchanged for continuous tickets. f_ 15 cents saved in passage fare by u purchasing local ticket from our ... agents. s- Atlantic Coast Line, a T. C. White, n General Passenger Agent, u, W. .T. Craig, ?r Paaenger Traffic Manager, is Wilmington, N. C. ANKING! SAVINGS BANK. Surplus $30,000 No Matter How Large, y Savings Bank ttention. This message d the women alike. J. E. NORWOOD, Caller. d Money ro -Homes! ms of payment, rs to accumulate a fund its, on which interest is ations at maturity. Lying rent. If you want a home take a Security money for any purpose act. It pays. ? Asstant Secretary and orner Boyce and Adams 3opeland Brothers. NO INVESTMENT SO. S.O, ???? il IlllIB II III ilijB ABC With a Bank . jAnd that account drawing bigger all the time, feels m< tfie boy who spends every n jfts it comes to him. The money when other boys ar< ^strengthening that will pov jliim as a man to be a sober, .while others become drunk; LOn Savings Deposits Semi-Ann The Bonk of Pi osperit DR. GKO. Y. IIUNTKR, President. J. K. HROWNK, Cashier. NATIONAL BANK OF ^ ? m ? g 3 S rjz sp| "AIN'T NO OSETBILL, II A repository in which y< posited, and maybe your va strong enough to resist th Entrust them to us. They With an account opened check, thereby insuring acci methods of keeping accour convenience and safeguard i ~?l. ZQ-A-ostik: DIRECT , M. A. Carlisle. H. C. M J. A. Blackwelder. Robt. N B. C. Matthews. S. B. Ai - ^ I offer you so corresponder When writing jwill find tha come more e use somethin of paper tha to be "correc J The First Cough Rven though not severe, has a t< ^ live membranes of the throat : ^ Coughs then come easy all wint ^ slightest cold. Cure the first co set up an Inflamation in the delic @ lungs. The best remedy is ^ SYRUP. It at once gets right ; moves the cause. It is free froi vP a child as for an adult. 25 cent: | J MAYES' DR! , TilUJHE 1 * 1 | 'i i m ) Y Account, interest and getting >re like a man than iekel he gets as soon boy who can save e spending theirs is ver which will enable steady, business man, mis and spendthrifts. we pay 4 pr. ct. ually. Prosperity, y, S. C. I I)R. J. S. WlIKKIylvR, 1 Y. President. B J. A. COUNTS, I Assistant Cashier. f| : NEWBERRY S. C=i, CTtJ 50 5 * "4 nf r H a KwtSyffl % X BHI * z h oh nS C/3 V) w^?SM?M ^ pFmy^\D?4crail rfSfiSSSi H-* rs BURGLAR PROOF." )u have your money deluablcs stored, should be te attacks of the burglar. will be absolutely safe. nth us you can pay by uracy and system in your its. There is no greater ior handling money than i-ccoTTnsriv TORS: oseley. T. B. Carlisle, orris. Geo. Johnstone, ill. Jos. H. Hunter. "-" "" a"-??a?m+tmmmmmmmi ? i?i^?m?t me excellent ice paper, f letters you t the words easily if you g in the way t you know t" iok Store. of the Reason, ; indency to Irritate the sensi- ^ and delicate bronchial tubas, M er, every time you take the ? ugh before it has a chance to :ate capillary air tubes of the A QUICK RJvUKK COUGII J nt tlx; seat of troublo and re- ^ i) Morphine and is as safe lor ?> JG STORE, *