The Florence daily times. [volume] (Florence, S.C.) 1894-1925, November 14, 1896, Image 1
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Pat Yoar
Wants
DULY TIKES.
The f^L0RENeE D^ily Times.
Rim yova
Eyes
ow...
OUR ADS.
SB
Jt;
_
Vou III.
FLORENCE. 8 C.
LOCALSJN BRIEF.
iphs of Home Hap-
peoiais.
Mention of Hoi
Whom we oil
"The old.
grey.
Ill hoi
ang. the middle i
WUT ho
thli<
cloeka
YAP.
Farmers have about finished
planting oats.
Mr. W. F. Taylor,of Darlington,
is in the city to-day.
Mr. Irvin Burch, of Lake City,
is in the city to-day.
Mr. Charles Williams, has re
turned from Columbia.
Mr. 8. N. Davis, of Marion, was
registered at the Central yesterday.
What is the matter with the
wool hucksters. Fetch in your
wool.
Mr. H. A. Brunson who has
been at the State Fair returned
this morning.
Miss Sessoms, of Mars Bluff, is
visiting Miss Maud Morris, in
East Florence.
The old town clock is ticking
again after being interfered with
by the weather signal rope.
Our friend, Mr. Alex. McKenzie,
after spending three days in Co
lumbia, has returned to Florence.
Mr. J. H. Blackwell, a member
of the board of directors of the
State Penitentiary, is spending the
day in Florence on his return to
Lake City. * I ,
There will be Lutheran services
to-morrow evening at 8 o’clock ttn
"TTuter’s Hall. The services ^ill j
be conducted by Rev. J. C. Trau-
Mag Lowry,, arrested by order of
the Mayor for contempt of court,
was tried this morning and dis
missed with due warning as to her
conduct in the future.
George Macon, who was arrested
for gambling on Front street and
depoated $5.00, did not appear at
the Mayor’s court this morning to
be arraigned. The deposit was
.forfeited.
Miss Camilla King, after spend-
ng three days with college friends
in Colombia, returned to Florence
this morning. She is spending
e day with her sister, Mrs.
Charles Cole.
Mr. G. W. Pettigrew, of the
Ebenes , 'r section, was in the city
this morning. He says that Mrs.
Pettigrew who was taken ill some
days ago is very much improved.
This we are glad to hear.
Mr.'W. F. Clayton received a
dispatch from his son-in-law, J,
E. Scofield in Augusta, Ga., that
his (W. Clayton’s) brother-in-
law D. C. Townsend was found
dead in his bed at the Planters
Hotel, lit. Townsend was s com
mercial traveller and affected with
heart disease-
Selling Lowney’s Chocolate Bon
bons at Lake's Conner Drug Store,
Synopsl* of Weath >r.
The cold wave has reached the
central and western gulf and the
seaboard, and extends, at this
charting, as far southward along
the Atlantic as Charleston, having
reduced the temperatures general
ly some 12 to 22 degrees over the
Northeastern States and the South
ern . Appalachian region — the
greatest changes, 18 to 24 degrees,
being reported from 1 exas, Louis
iana Mississippi, Alabama, North
ern Georgia, Eastern Tenneaae,
Northwestern South Carolina and
North Carolina. Much cooler
dver this section Friday night;
alowly rising temperature Satur
day, Saturday night and Sunday.
Minimum temperatures 8 to 14 de
grees below zero continue over the
Dakotas, Colorado, Montana and
the Saekatohewan Valley.
Clearing conditions, with high
atmospheric pressure, cover the
Southwestern States and the lower
Mississippi Valley. Over this
section clear or partly cloudy
weather ia indicated for Friday
night and .Saturday; generally
fair Sunday.
Attention Farmer!.
According to previons notice,
President Craighead, of Clemson
College, accompanied by several
members of the faculty, will hold
a Farmers Institute at Darling
ton, on Saturday, November 28th,
commencing at 10 o’clock and
continuing until one o’clock and
returning again at 2 o’clock, at
meeting will be
over. ^ Tnese meetings are proving
of great interest and profit to the
farmers and they as well as all
other ol&sces of oitisens are oor-
fe
beam
the
to attend
of the
grei
28th.
opi
farming,
animala,
rater will
sussed at
those who fail
ive themselves
to acquire a
information.
November
BULLET-PROOF
'wi
SATURDAY
■AW-—
EVENING. NOVEMBER 14,1896
77.
The Shooting of V. R. Reese
at YorMle. |
.ii
At
Handkerchiefs 8
sket.,
cts., at Star
Insurance Agency
>RN CHASE,
Life & Accident Insurance.
Surety'Bonds Issued.
FLORENCE, 5. C
B= - —
THE WAR IN CUBA.
Weflcr Forcing the lighting-SerenU
Kngagemente.
Havana, Nov. 18.—A number of
engagements have taken place in
the provinces of Matanzas, Ha
vana and Pinar del Rio. The re
bels at Tenria were dispersed.
(The latter is a hamlet near Con-
solacion del Snr, in the province
of Pinar del Rio.)
General Arolos reports having
heard rifle and cannon firing near
Rabi and heavy firing near Loma,
probably from the division -under
General Weyler.
The hills of Rubi have been
captured after a serious engage
ment. The Spaniards had a gen
eral, six officers and 54 soldiers
wounded.
The colonels of the Spanish
army now in Havana have offered
to raise 2,000 volunteers to take
the field for Spain.
Committees have been organised
to go into the different districts of
the city and collect funds for the
popular subscription to increase
the navy.
An insurgent named Apolonio
Eaez will be (hot at the Cabanas
fortress to-morrow.
Ool. Arce was conveying sup
plies from Placetas to Fomentown
when he was attacked by insur
gents, all of whom were killed.
General Echague, who was
wounded during the operations
under Weyler in Pinar del Rio, is
better.
He IslNot Seriously Hurt.-The
Bullet, Instead of the Prison
er’s Skull, was Shattered—
He Wishes He Had
Been Killed.
Yorkville, S. C., Nov. 13.-De
puty Sheriff Scoggins shot last
night bat did not kill M. R. Reese
and there is now bat little
to believe that the man wi
bnt he had a close shave.
Reese and Lockie had
while been treated by the
with the utmost kindness,
time since their arrest had
been subjected to handouffs,
though under guard all the
they were detained at the j
most as guests. After the
Reese assured Sheriff C
that he could continue to
him as he had done previously.
The two prisoners came down
oat of the coart house, Reese in
charge of,Deputy R. L. Scoggins
and Lnckie in charge of the de
puty’s brother, F. B. Scoggins.
The shooting oocnrred as related
last night. The ballet struck the
right side of the occiptal protu
berance and was splintered to
pieces. It was 12 o’clock last
night before the doctors quit
probing for the shattered lead,
and they had to leave not less
than half of it in the man’s b
It could not be found.
The wounded man firmly
fused totaled
ulants, and,
while, stood the probing thr
out without a groan. His
to take stimulants or anything
th? kind is supposed to be a
that while under their in:
he might tell something that
does not desire to tell.
bnortly after the shoo
Reese said to Scoggins: “I wish
yon had killed me.”
The doctors say that the same
shot would have been sufficient to
have killed nine men out of ten.
In Reese’s case, however, the skull
at that particular p*n
thick’ and the mnsonla;
meat perfect. An inci
bullet wonld have pene
brain and produced ins
The man’s only danger
thought to be from the
concussion, or may be from
lect.
Mrs. Anderson now
quietly in her room, ref
see anybody. She is very
distressed over the probable oi
come of the habeas corpus p
ceedings that have been
by her husband for the p
of the little girl Foster,
as I have already reported, is to
be heard on the 19th instant.
BRIGHT DAY
during the coming year.
Cotton and cotton goods con-
X WWTMP t * nue fi rm R|1 d unchanged, but
UA H niUll,! P™ 068 ‘Hpriut cloth have an up-
ward tendency. Wool is higher,
Business Shows a Great Chanije^r^Z ^i:":
far thp Pfltfar cess of wants. Other advances in
a BCUGI. prices are for leather, shoes, white
lumber,' petroleum, lard,
ioui
Improvements in all Lines Ito-
ynml the Expectations of’ the
Most Sanguine—Hundreds
of Industrial Establish
ments Keopeiiing,
Giving Employ
ment to.Thmis-
ainis of Men.
New York, Nov. 13.—R. G. Dun
<fc Co.’s Weekly Review of Trade
,o-morrow will say: No one now
a that the brighter day is
and it is the common
rl^that never before has busi-
sbdwn so great a change for
9 better within a single week,
iip&tthes telling of about 500
blilhments which hvve opened
r have materially enlarged their
brcaaJfchough they fill many col
ons 11 *, give only part of the fact,
for throughout the country the
has been surprising, even to
most hopeful. It is not 'mere
lation or hope which lights
4res and starts the wheels, for
which have been accumu-
for mouths, with the neceS'
replenishment of dealers
, now greatly reduced, would
y the whole producing force
time, and the increase in the
of hacds at work means
in purchases forcousump
need of American wheat
an important factor,
has advanced to ,88
6 cents for-one
nte for two weeks and
early in June, 1892.
ipts were only 4,494,-
against 8,202,864 last
election cat off much
the days in which
were started to mar-
exports, in spite of
freight room, were for the
two weeks 2,717,231 bushels, flour
included, against 3,260,384 last
year, and Pacific shipments are
also heavy to India, South Africa
and Australia.
textile works have been
or increasing force, most-
ders booked weeks ago;
has not been much gain
mand as yet.
tton market is not yet ac-
liberal estimates of
are generally
J pine
sugar and for wheat, corn and
oats.
The conspicous decrease in
prices are those for coffee, perk
and turpentine.
Western jobbers report an in
crease in mail orders. Mercantile
collections throughout the Central,
Western and Southern States are
easier, but complaints are still
leard from the West.
war materials from the West to
Gulf ports. Some six weeks ago
the department in the ordinary
course of routine business called
on the transcontinental roads for
bids for the exchange of troops
between Florida and California.
This call is the only basis for the
absolutely unjustifiable and alarm
ing publication in the Chicago
newspapers.
TIif Colored ln*tttute.
Last Monday night, at the col
ored Baptist church, a successful
Preachers Institute was begun.
The church had been handsomely^
repaired on the inside and pro
sented quito a tasteful appearance!
|Rev. H. M. Raiford, D. b., was iul
charge. Many able addresses!
were made. These institutes are
supported in part by the Northern
and Southern white Baptist [socie
ties and will, no doubt, be pro
ductive of great good. The pur
pose is to give some opportunity
for instruction to those ministers
who may not have had many op
portunities for advancement. Rev.
H. L. Morehouse, B. D., Sec’y. of
the Home Mission Society, de
livered many interesting addresses
on various topics. His remarks
were indeed inspiring and help
ful.
Addresses were made by Rev. J.
W. Perry, of Hartsville, and Mr
L. P. Newman, a converted .Tew
of Florence, Rev. R. W.
of Florence, Prof. J. R. Wilson, of
Columbia, and Rev. Hartwell Ed
wards, of Palmetto. All of
gentlemen talked on
and mission work. The meeting
was not as largely attended as it
should have been bnt was an oc
casion of much good.—Darlington
News.
Hotr to Prevent Croup.
Soni<* rending that will prove inter-
eoting to young mothers. How to
guard against the disease,
Croup is a terror to youug mothers
and to post them roncerning the cause,
first symptoms and treatment ig the
object of this item. The origin of
crou’ t ) is a common cold. Children who
are f.uhject to it take cold very easily
and croup is almost sure to follow'.
The t.rst symptom is hoarseness; this
is soon followed by a peculiar rough
cough, which is easily recognized and
will never be forgotten by one who has
heard it. The time to act is when the
child first becomes hoarse. If Cham
berlain’s cough remedy Is freely given
all tendency to croup will soon disap
pear. Even after the croupy cough
has developed it will prevent the at
tack. There is no danger ia giving
this remedy for it contains nothing In
jurious. For sale by all druggists.
FOR TRAVELLERS.
BRADSTRl
street’
The
to-morrf
volume
60 inch Bleach Damask 39 cts.
at Star Racket.
^ost *!)<f
EMER LAPROBE. Find-
Iconter favor by leaving at
Drep5 Making.
The undersigned Is prepared to cut and fit
Fatroo
and make up dresses,
solicited.
stronage ot the public
-A HORSE. APPLY AT
ce Drug Store.
MRS. J. F. BARRINGER,
Opposite Central Hotel.
Reddick’s Boarding House.
Nov. 12, 4t.
Horses and
Mules.
S. D. Rodger’s
Livery Stable?.
Having just returned from the
stock markets with a well broken
lot of horses and mules, I am pre
pared to’offer bargains to purchas
ers.
S. D. RODGERS,
Covington’s Old Stand.
N-i9-3-t.
an eighth decline
e week have been
States, against
46 in Canada,
r.
BSEEVATIONS.
v. 13. — Brad-
will say:
of business im
proves alowly in nearly all lines.
The most active demand is among
jobbers iu dry goods, clothing,
millinery, shoes, leather and hard
ware, and iu leading industral
lines, neany 200 mills, factories
and foundaries having started up
this week,, one-half of them in
iron, steel, machinery tools, car-
rieges, lumber, glass, woolen and
cotton lines. About 130 other in
dustrial establishments have in
creased working forces or working
hoars, or both, among them being
nineteen iron and steel establish
ments, ten glass works and four
factories, each making lamps,
clocks,, woolen goods and cotton.
A partial record of the number of
men given employment in indus
trial lines since November 6 shows
an aggregate of nearly 30,000.
SUIT Talk of War With Spain.
Washington, November 13.—The
Cuban aituation remains exactly
as it stood when the Southern As
sociated Press sent out on October
27 the following dispatch :
“So fir as can be learned from
the best sources of information
the rumors put in circulation on
Wall street to-day as to the prob
ability of a warlike message from
the president on Cuban affairs and
a possible extra session of Con
gress have no foundation in
fact, and were set afloat for stock
jobbing purposes only. There
have been anticipations that
Spain, failing to negotiate the
loans she is trying to place on the
European market for the further
prosecution of the war in Cuba,
might seek to provoke some antag
onism short of actual war with the
United States in order to allay ex
citement at home, and to give
plausible reasons for the failure to
suppress the Cuban rebellion.
This possibility, it is understood,
was discussed in Cabinet meetings
ten days ago. There have been no
new or startling developments
since, and none expected.”
One of President Cleveland’s
Cabinet advisers remarked with a
smile when the published state
ments about imminent war were
shown him to-day: “The election
is over. I suppose the newspapers
must have something to talk
about, but I think the Cuban
question will be left for the Major
to settle.”
Officials of the war department
deny without qualification the
The demand for iron and steel has j story, published by a Chicago
IMFORTANT INFORMATION FOR THOBK
WHO RIDE THE RAILROADS.
The following is valuable informa
tion to paasengera traveling over the
Atlantic Coast Line System:
FOR PASSENGERS GOING NORTH.
No. 78 leaves Charleston at 4.66 a. in.,
arriving at Florence at 8.20 a. in. 20
minutes for breakfast. Connecting
with No. 64; leaving Columbia at 6.30
a. m., and arriving at Wiliningtou at
12.16 }>. in. With No. 02 for Darling-
Jtnn.Cheraw and Wadesboro. Arrives
1 Wt Fayetteville at 11.10 a. in., connec
ting with North Bound train on C. F.
,& Y. V. Railroad. Arrive at South
Rooky Ml., at 1.46 p. m. 20 minute^
for dinner. Connecting with No. 4H
from Wilmington with Nos. 10 and 48
for Norfolk and points on N. A C. H. K.
Arrives at Richmond at 6.40 p. m. 20
minutes for supper. Through coaches
to Washington. Pullman
iper Charleston to Wilmington and
luonviJIe to New York,
o. 82 leaves Charleston at 4 p. m.,
ves at Florence at 7.20 p. m. 20
mites for supper. Con nets with
No. 60 from Augusta and Aiken, S. C.,
via Denmark and Sumter coenectlng
atHumterwith No. 63 from Columbia.
No. 50 also has a Sleenper fromMacon
Ga., which No. 82 takes to New York.
No. 32 also connects at Florence with
No. 08 from Wadesboro. Cheraw and
Darlington. Through Coaches from
Charleston to Washington. In addi
tion to Pullman Bleeper from Macon
to New York, there are Sleepers from
Charleston to New York and Tampa to
New York. No. 82 also makes connec9
tion at South Rocky Mt. with No. 40
from Wilmington, and leaves South
Rocky Mt. at 12.0V a. m., and reaches
Richmond at 3.40 a. m.
FROM RICHMOND GOING SOUTH.
Leave Richmond on No. 23 at V.05 a
in. Reach South Rocky Mt., at 1.10 p.
m. 20 minutes for dinner. Arrive at
Wilson at 2.10 p. m. Change cars for
Goldsboro and Wilmington on No. 4V.
Arrive Fayetteville 4.33 p. m., connec
ting with southbound trains on C. F. A
Y. V. Railroad for Wilmington and
Bennettsville. Arrive Florence 7.26 p.
m. 20 minutes for supper. Change
oars for Sumter and Columbia, reach
ing Columbia by No. 66 at 10.00 p. ni.
AUo change to No. 24 for Darlington,
Hartsville and Bennettsville. Arrive
at Charleston at 10.63 p. m., oonneotin
with Plant System for Savannah an
all points south. Through coaches on
this train from Washington to Charles
ton. Pullman sleeper New York at
Jacksonville.
Also leave Richmmond by No. 36 p
7.30 p. m. South Rocky Mt. at 10.44 t«
m. Passengers for Wilmington take
No. 41, leaving South Rocky Mt. at 6.60
a. m. No. 86 arrive at Florence 8.14 a.
m., connecting with No. 61 for Sumter,
Columbia Denmark, Aiken, S. C., Aus-
ta and Macon, and Atlanta Pullman
Sleeping Car on this train, New York
to Macon. Passengers for Columbia
can go to Sumter and wait until 0.44
а. m M for No. 62 from Charleston, ar
riving at Calumbia at 11 a. m., or take
No. 16, a mixed train leaving Florence
at 4 a m., and arriving at Columbia at
10 a. m. No. 86 reaches Charleston at
б. 26 a. m., connecting at Ashley Junc
tion 7 miles from Charleston, with
Plant System for South. Through
coaches, Washington to Charleston
this train. Pullman sleepers N
3
sleepers
York to Tampa, Fla., New York f
Charleston, and New York to Macon. <
not increased after the activity of
a week ago, but prices are firm—iu
some instances advanced—and the
trade confident of a large business
Jmm
JA, , m
paper to-day, to the effect that the
war department had called on
railroad companies for rates for
the transportation of troops and
The wife of Mr. Leonard Wells,
East Brimfield, Ma<s., had been suj
ing from neuralgia for two dayp
being able to sleep or hardly kee ’
when Mr. Holden, the merchant,
sent her a bottle of Chamberlain
balm, and asked that she giv
thorough trial. On meeting Mrp.gf
the next day he was told that sr
all right, the pain had left her
two hours, and that the bottle c
Balm was worth |5.00 if it couk,
had for less. For sale at 60 ce
bottle by all druggists.
'.IW*
Uh Young
>ly to
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ntat i«»*
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