The Dillon herald. (Dillon, S.C.) 1894-????, November 25, 1909, Image 2

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

P WORK OF THE South Carolina is Saved Dollars by Scaling D Columbia, Special.?About a half iu million dollars represents the saving sf to the State of South Carolina by scalings from dispcsray claims ami ^ overjudgments against firms doing co business with the old State dispensary The work of the winding-up commission was practically concluded Wed- er needay night at a late hour and judg- sii meuts rendered in all claims before it co save that of the New York and Ken- el; tuckv company, the amount petitioned Hi for being about $22,000. Final action th was deferred, but it is possible that in the claim may be disallowed. However, this is not settled. w< There was a sigh of relief when it ar a as decided to adjourn Thursday be Ti oming. The members have been at so v >rk for weeks and have, with the pi assistance of the attorneys, investi- in gaced fully every claim. "We feel bi that we have earned our per diem." st remarked Chairman Murray, "and nv our report on the affairs of the old fn State dispensary shows how the bus-[fir The following are the claims and the i Fleischmann Sehlitz Brewing Company Big Spring's Company Roseneck Brewing Company John McSmyrie Lehman & Company Darley Park Brewing Company Moyse Bros E. A. Saunders & Company Geo. A. Dickel & Company Clark Bros. & Co Green River Distilling Company Richards & Co Be lair Distilling Company i Totals The Overchi The following over-judgments wore -Cook & Bernheimer William Lnnalien & Sons H. & H. W. Catherwood Acme Brewing Co.. Gallagher & Burton Rtrauss, Pritz & Co Wiedemann Brewing Co W. W. Johnson Co Savannah Brewing Co llllman & Co. (Anchor Co.) Jack Crainston Co Bbeinstorm Bros Borbee & Co Garrett & Co Wilson Distilling Co King & Co Total Four claimants escaped the scaling c ?f the claims. The commission states e n regard to these that these 44paries have no part in any of the fraudu- l? lent transactions connected with tilt* conduct of the business with the State .+ dispensary and the chairman of the $ The Sum The following is a summary showing Overcharges in list of firms to whom m to be paid by State.. Overjudgments Claims which come to the State along w overjudgments The 1008 overcharges "Conscience" money Total saved to the State and to be r Claims Pi The following elais were paid bv th Firms. J ' J*. Paul Jones & Co.... $ 21.1 Anheuser-Busch Brewing Co 19.5 Augusta Brewing Co 1.6 Frank G. Tullege Co 1.1 Live Oak Distilling Co 20.9 J. A. Magnus & Co 18,2 Old "76" Distilling Co '5.66 J. F. Bickman 2.77 Belrov Distilling Co 40.0 Big Four Distilling Co 4.5 H. A. Thierm^n 0.2 TV ^Saeks & Son 0.0 Marin, Hart & Co I .">.8 H. Rosenthal & Son 4.5' Total #170.1 Mcney in Hog Raising. Laurens, Special.?Some of Laurens county's farmers are making el pood money in raisins: hops; amonp bi these are P. B. Bailev and Dr. T. 3. a Weathers. A few days apo Mr. li Weathers sold on the loeal market st three hops that netted him over $96; el and on last Saturday Mr. Bailey sold t? 29 fine porkers, all under one year ti old, the lot britipinp $428. The price ai paid in Laurens is 8 cents the pound, tl (( To Double Track Line From Atlanta B Greenville, Special.?A iiersistcnt mn\pr is enrrent lure that t.tn- South- It em railway has within the last few s ?Uys let contracts for <louhle tracking ;.j its main lir.3 between Charlotte and or Atlanta. According to the rumor the ]( work of double tracking is to he start- Vi ro hi an cnny tiaie rrom the Atlanta ni end. It is proposed that bv the sum- ',f incr of 1910 work will have l>ecn com- ? plcted as far nort has Gainesville, a jj, distance of 55 miles. ; di Dies at the Result or a Fall. Greenville, Special.?Walter Smith, ^ an employe of the Poe mill, died FriL day as the result of an injury he re- s| waived Saturday night in falling off a wi afreet ear. He attempted to get off st S while the car was in motion and was he thrown heavily to the ground, sustain- er lag the injuries from whieh death re- w< - Waited. Smith was 28 years old and Ft leaves a wife, hot no children. His tfa , laxly was earned to lowell, N. C. en jCOMMISSIONl Nearly Half a Million ispensary Claims. ess was conducted. The State ha* ent very little on the work and we ive thought it best to assess those hiskey tirms carrying the matter to | e federal court, the amount of >sts." * < May Be Appealed. It was rumored Thursday- that seval of the decisions of the commis?n will be taken to the supreme >urt for settlement and that the < aim of Lanchan & Co. and the Caro- j la Glass company would be among < ose seeking a stay in the proceed- J gs. Chairman Murray said that notice , ould be sent out at once to all claim- 1 its allowed claims and cheks would i i sent out by December 1 unless j taiv m iuu u 1 uoc pic* i iic V lymont. The money will be placed i the National Loan and Exchange < ink of this city subject to check as ' ated in the letter, and when all payens are made there will be nothing irther for the commission expect the lal report to the general assembly, amouuts to be paid the claimants: Claim. Judgment. $ 70.88J.87 $ 35,045.30 24.C82.23 18,813.73 25.006.78 8,515.7!) *.>.119.04 919.00 34.829.43 33.881.91 14.623.51 12.004.01 640.00 235.00 9.990.00 8,176.00 40.883.23 35,806.83 2,500.00 1.700.00 08.383.71 53.780.93 .'i.048.42 3.153.42 1.175.00 1.112.45 0.380.41 1.423 00 , $103,555.03 $215,178.30 1 irges. ] found by the commission: ] Claim. Due tlie State ] $ 94.89 $ 36.553.03 , 5.910.54\ 23.563.40 4.227.95 24.070.00 , 074.80 14.965.20 \ 4.845.00 18.041.20 , 7,980.56 12,419.44 , 487.50 4.016.50 , 1.945.99 1.091.64 409.50 160.00 30.920.78 . 30.021.55 5.951.50 1.064.42 296.08 10.3.92 109.58 409.42 1.757.39 21.397.20 2.874.73 347.17 0.395.84 $ 80.594.09 $189,364.81 ommission is authorized under propr warrant to pay tlie caims: The four claimants are: C. P. Fishurn. $79.50; S. S. Pierce & Co., ' 022.13; Acker Merrell & Cod it Co., j 045.82; K. LnMoutuirue & Sons, I 457.50. I < 1 mary. ( : the amounts saved to the State: onev is .. * $ 88,377.17 189,364.81 it h the 80.594.69 1 25.356.24 ; 50.000.00 eeovered $433,692.91 ( lid. e commission on March 6, 1908: , \ mount Amount Amount | Claim Allowed. saved State ( 76.63 $ 14.9227.88 $ 6,248.75 51.00 9.504.09 10.047.00 \ 15 00 1,211.25 403.75 35.94 1,049.69 86.25 22.22 26.190.82 1.781.40 ( 04.24 16,648.76 1,555.48 2.83 3.208.33 454.50 j 4.70 22)61.22 163.48 08.33 38,004.17 2.004.16 09.51 4.238.94 207.57 28.30 8,674.60 553.70 21.33 8.480.05 541.28 , 47.44 152>06.34 341.10 , 24.11 3.619.29 904.82 81.67 $153,825.43 $ 25.356.24 ] Would Be On the Belt. Laurens, Special.-?Tlie Laurens lamber of commerce is going to get nay at once in reference to securing lease on the promised electric helt 1 ne in the Piedmont. It is under- i ood that the corporation that pur- 1 iased the Anderson-Relton line con- I mnlates a belt lino o. i?l-? c? - - ? ....v iw ?anc mi npnr- i anl)iir?r. Union, (.aureus. Anderson ( ml Greenville, or at least some of 1 le towns in this section. I adgett Sentenced to Ten Years in I the Penitentiary. Spartanburg, Special. ? Thomas adgett, white, who killed Brezina < iher, colored, about two weeks ago t id who was convicted of manslaught- < \ was Saturday sentenced to serv? ) years in the penitentiary. Stan- i irn Wilson gave notice of appeal id pending the nppeal applied for I lil which was granted in the sum I $5,000. Budget! claimed the killing < as accidental and the statement of e deceased to that effect was mtro- < iced in evidence. Horse With Buggy Leaps Wall Charleston, Special.?A horse took iglit on south Battery some days \ :o and wildly dashed through the i reet, carrying the unoccupied buggy I it h him. He bad a clear and raight run and through the street i went, never stopping at the eon- t ete quay wall, bat overboard he ent with the buggy behind him. < irtunately the tide was not high and * horse landed in hnf little wster id there he stopped, and c uled off. NplHEiisTi % No Zelaya Orders Two Americans 1 Summarily ShcL J ? . ?br LOUIS GROCE AND LEROY CANKCR 'J ? anr Captured in Revolutionary Army Are De< Denied Trial?Gunboat Sent to the e<l Scene?President Taft Enraged. S0S: apa ) con News has reached the depart- ji wa, ment that two American citisens, 1 Coi , . . ^ < Pes j L-eroy cannon ana ix>uis uroce i; wej ! caught by the Zelaya forces in j[ die Nicaragua from the insurgent S i con forces were summarily shot, has (? pre produced a disturbed condition i! ^01 ! the of things. j, ent Cai fro F Washington, Special.?Two Ameri- t& \ ;an vessels have been ordered to pro- and ;eed to Nicaraguan waters and Pres- *Sre dent Taft has postponed idefinitely lis meeting of Isidore Hasera, the ^ lew minister from Nicaragua to this 1 ountrv as t lie result of news receiv- Tin <d here to the effect that two Ameri- wit axis, Louis Groce and Leioy Can- ^or ion, captured while serving with the Pre evolutionist army in Nicaragua have rea jeen sentenced to death by President . 1 ?elaya*s orders and it is understood W1' hat sentence has already been<earried i*0 >ut. 1 Orders has been issued for the * iruiser Vickshurg to proceed in all '?? laste to Corinto and the gunboat Dcs J"8 Moines will proceed at once to Port 'iei1 Limon to observe events there and mei report the situation at that point by a P wireless. President Taft, upon receipt of the news of the execution was so incensed that he immediately announced he anf would have no communication what- ^ aver with the new Nicaraguan minis- "e ter. That official was promptly so informed. r,'<) Brooding quite settled down Friday t'1'1 on the strained situation this government finds itseif in with Nicaragua. on' But if everything was quiet on the ''ie surface, there was plenty stirring beneath. A communication was recciv- bee nd at the State Department from the ''ax Nicaraguan legation, the purport of **er which was not divulged, and the mill- ^ isters from Guatemala and Costa ''Ie Rica held a mysterious conference f')0 with Assistant Secretary Wilson in lr,b the afternoon. A significant develop- <'t>e mcnt of the day, inasmuch as it dis- Cf,a closed this government's unyielding ?,n determination not to interfere with the. Nicaraguan revolutionists, was con the reiterated announcement that the to State Department would not act to *',e insure the safety of any American nes vessels that might he held up or seiz- ('ca ed bv the insurrectionary war ves- bo? sels now blockading the government ?f forces at Greytown or elsewhere on ficr the Guatemalan coast.. The deepest Th; itnerest is apparent as to the conference between Assistant Secretary I Wilson. Sennr Cnlvo. minister from in' Costa Rica, and Dr. Herrarte, minis- sue tor from Guatemala. It is believed the that the instruction of the pan-Amer- wo iean treaty, signed here a little over Go two years aso, was the chief matter by discussed. The violation of the agree- da^ ment was committed bv General Tole- for do. in command of Jresident Zelaya's evi forces, when he invaded Costa Rican pre territory in his advance on Greytown, be where practically he is now besieged, for rn the threatened trouble between Sit Nicaragua and Venezuela, only a act short time ago, the United States ten stood ready to prevent bv force if ma necessary, tfie passage of the bellig- tril srents across the neutral territory of the Honduras. tre Zelaya Slay3 by Hundreds. New Orleans, Special.?A cable to < The Picayune from Panama says: da. Passengers arriving from Nicaragua are report that a reign of terror exists jJU| throughout the portion of that country controlled by President Zelaya. Qovernment troops are rounding up re^ every person sus|>ected of sympathy fai with the revolutionists and executing me them without trial. the Sheriff at Cairo Loses His Place Be- Th cause of Lynching. i Springfield, III., Special.?Governor tiv Charles 8. Deneen Thursday declared jn the office of sheriff of Alexander pr, county vacant because Sharff Frank rev E. Davis allowed William James, a " negro mnrderer, and Henry Salzncr. <en white, to ho taken from his eare and lynched at Cairo by a mob on Novem Lx>r 11. The Governor noted in obpervanre of a law thnt provides that fQl whenever n sheriff surrenders a pris- f()J oner to a mob bis ollice expires im- ffl wediaiely. la< Cleaning New York Custom House. Washington, Special.?The elimina- 1 Hon from the custoniH service of act- tin ing Deputy Collector James F. Vail, bei the abolition of that office in the New pot York customs house, the dismissal of ed 104 men and demotion of 1*23 other a i men at New York from March 4 up to a t Wednesday night with about a score to of other change* included in Collector Loeb's statement Friday from New of York were announced bv Secretary ni< MaeVea^h F.iday ni?!it j tun ( _ J ^ ii n^hi ' - -? ;:? -v .* .!. "P*,f *' ^ . .. .,?i??*?..,. -\ TUNTIG WATERWAYS rfolk Convention Opens Amid Enhusiasm For a Four-Days' DiJCU'ion. t\-iJ'olk, Va., Special.- ?With ov.<r 00 Ian aired delegates in attendance resenting practically every State the Atlantic Seaboard, the second lual convention of the Atlantic :per Waterways Association openhere Wednesday morning for a sion of four days with Friday set irt for a visit and address by the -sident of the United States. The vention, amid great enthusiasm, s called to order by its president, igressinan J. Hampton Moore ol tsvlvania, and the delegates were Icomed by Mayor James G. RidIt of Norfolk. ifayor Riddick's address of. welae was responded to by Conssman W. W. Cocks of New rk, on behalf of the delegates frou Northern States, and by Repressive Charles R. Thomas of Nortl: nolina on behalf of the delegate.m the Southern States, lepresentative Thomas, pointing the hazardous coasts of Capes Cod 1 Hatteras, called attention to tht at dangers to which Atlantic coaste shipping is subjected, with no altiate inland waterwavs for nrotec i to this class of commerce. 'We, of the South," declared Mr jmas. "are not only ready to unite h you of the North in unceasing efts for the consummation of this at inland waterway but we arc dy to unite with you in the dcopment of a great commerce thai 1 bind the sections so closely that tionalism will be forgotten as il lever existed." Resident Moore, in his address k the general ground that the dend for an equitable and compreisive plan of waterway developrat as it affected transportation was iroblem which, since the passage ol new tariff bill had taken rank as equal if not greater import thar i oi me establishment of a safe I stable currency, die speaker touched upon the bus and enterprise of the people ol West f\ securing congressiona for internal improvements, and ir s connection he said: 'We have pone on with our great erprises but we have not built foi future as our wide-awake friend* other sections of the country have n doinp. Our Eastern waterway* ;e remained much as their fouiv s left them." dr. Moore pointed out, however prepress that had been made Lm society and spoke of the decided eresL awakened in the project of s per waterway alonp the Atlantic ,st. Most of the work of the en eers in making the survey of the 00 miles alonp the const had beer npleted. He closed with an appea Eastern business men bringing tc ir notice the importance of ear it, persistent, self-sacrificing en tvor to obtain for the Atlantic sea trd that consideration at the hand* Congress which it so rightly de ved. anksgivmg Proclamation by Qover nor Kitckin. laleigh, Special.?Governor Kitch s Thanksgiving proclamation, is d Wednesday afternoon, is one ol ! briefest ou record. It is in thes< rds: "I, William W. Kitchin vernor of North Carolina, do here appoint Thursday. November 25. s ; of thanksgiving to Almighty Gor the good we have received ar.d tb< 1 we have escaped. A great an< isperous people to he happy mus grateiul and chari able. There e, let tlie people th.oughout th<. ite assemble on that day in thei< ustomed plaees and worship an< der thanks unto the Lord for Hii nifold blessings and let them con bute to the relief of the poor an< needy, the afflicted and the dis ssed the widow and the orphan." Can't Roach the Dead Miners. Cherry, 111.. Special.?After fom the St. Paul coal mine in whici i still entombed the bodies of threi ndred or more miners as a resul last Saturday's fire, Wednesday used to yield up the dead. Uttei lure to devise any satisfactory thod of recovering the bodies left ) sitation the same : s it was before e President Reverses His Action Washington, Special.?Represents e John M. Morehead has won ou' his fight at the White House. Tin isident Wednesday issued an ordci oking the appointment of Prof. J Glasson of Trinity College to 1>? isus supervisor in the fifth district 1 caused to be announced the ap< ntmcnt of I). II. Hlair. the raai ommended by Mr. Morehead. Ir ting this action the President alst ind it convenient to make a bcrti Professor Glaason, who is to bi [Minted an enumerator of manu 'turinsr statistics Student Poses as Black Hand. Philadelphia, Special. ? Alleging it he posed as an influential mem r of a "Black Hand" gang, thi ital inspectors Wednesday arrest in thia city Perry Ralph Minniek student of the Drexel Institute, 01 iharge of writing threatening letter D. T. Walker, a wealthy Philadel ian, demanding $560 under penalt; death. The authorities say Kin >k lonfeeeed that he demanded Hi noy t<i pay his way t'iroi.gb coiicgc 1 - -wrm m sTandardoil Grcuit Court Files Decree ol Dissolution. GOVERNMENT WINS A VICTORY Judges Sinborn, Vandeventer, Hoot and Adams Concur in Favor ol Every Jount Contended For?Ap peal to Supreme Court Will b? Taken. > ? ) [ St. Paul, Minn., Special.?In ar > opinion written by Judge Walter X Sanborn, of St. Paul and concurred in by Judges Vandeventer, Hook and Adams with a special concurring r opinion by Judge Hook, the United i States Circuit Court for the eastern district of Missouri Saturday handed ' down an opinion declaring th? 5 Standard Oil Company of New Jersey. an illegal combination operating in ' restraint of trade and orders its dissolution. The opinion of the court was filed simultaneously in St. Louis and in St. Po..l In this decision the government ol the United States wins a sweeping victory and according to Frank 15. f Kellog of this citv. who was tlie government's special prosecuting offieeri ' the government has wm every point ! for which it contended. The case will be appealed direct to the United States Supreme Court a? the judges who signed the decree, are in effect the judges of the United States circuit court of appeals, al1 though they were sitting for the pur pose of trying this case as the circuit ' court for the eastern district of Missouri. ? The decree of the court dissolving the Standard Oil trust becomes effec' tive in 30 days when t* doubt a stav 1 will be granted for the purpose^f an w When tlie decree takes effect unless a stay is granted, an injunction will issue restraining the Standard Oil I Company from a further continuance i of its business under its present formation. TWENTY LIVE MINERS. : Parties Searching For and Bringing i Cut tho Dead Find the Living. Cherry, 111., Special.?The gamut from deepest despair to an hysteria > of hope was run here Saturday when ' 20 miners, entombed in the St. Paul I mine for a week, almost to the hour, i were brought to the surface alive. ! The story of their sufferings and the heroism of their resourceful leadi ers is one of the most thrilling in all i the black history of mining disasters. I Dawn broke with the bearers of ? stretchers moving from the pit mouth to the tent which served as a morgue ' with bodies swollen and scorched al most beyond human semblance. Forty ' of them had been brought up and most of them identified when the marvelous report shot through the . prostrate community: "They've found them alive?they've found them alive." In a moment the morgue was de[ serted; scarcely to be revived while . the crowd, fairly insane with the t great hope which had sprung like a . miraculous flame from the ashes of 4 despair, rushed to the spot. \ All thought was of the men who ; were alive. It took six hours to bring \ the survivors to the surface. Meani, while a report spread that seventy or . more men were alive in a far reach . of the mine, cut off from escape bv r a bank of black damp between their 1 barricade and the main din ft 3 Searching parties on Sunday, liow. ever, found no more living and cor.] diticfl^ernsli all hope of further suc. cesfT at rescue. Thirty-seven corpses v*T*e removed and buried Sunday. Awful Auto Tragedy. Cuthbert, Ga., Special.?Three perr sons are dead and two prohablv fatally Tnjurcd as a result of an automobile accident here late Sunday. The 1 dead: t Curtis Wiliams, of Port Gaines. Ga. ; James Shepard, of Edison. Ga. Hor. ace Shepard, of Edison. Ga. The injured: Miss Helene Mattox. aged 20, ? Coleman, Ga. Shepard and Miss Matton were going to be married. Prominent Pennsylvania Politician Kills Himself Accidentally. , Franklin, Pa., Special.?"Aceiden# tal. slipped and " was the eonr tents of a note found Sunday night in a dense thicket beside the body of I. , B. Borland, aged 50 years, former county treasurer and a prominent politician, who had been missing front , home since Friday. A wound in the , left leg caused Borland to bleed to , death, according to the coroner. The , accident was the result of a hunting e trip. It was evident that Borland began to write the note but fell exhausted before be could finish it. Rockefeller Commission to Attend Atlanta Meeting in January. 5 Atlanta, fla.. Special.?The Roeke. feller commission for the eradication , of the hookworm disease is expected 11 to attend in a body the first national " conference for the study of this dis ease, to be held in Atlanta January ? 18 and 10. Already the ehairmau. * Dr. Wiliam H. Welch, and other a | rr>crrbcr~ r?f rrnrTrn^im. Vn**r '? i lfied their intention ol attending. * * ' ji PALMETTO HAPPfWINGS j , ffB 11 News Note* of General Interest From All Parts of toe State. GREAT DAY AT IOCK HILL. Interesting Add: easts?Di ^ Fair Ladies, and a Who] Rock Hill, Special?Sati an epoch making diy for .u:j tr" College, for Rock Kll and i-?.on county. On that cay was first of a series o meetin farmers, their wi^es, daug the rural school teachers county for the casideratic.. v, ...v great subjects ol agriculture in its fTffl relation to our mbhc school system and to the home f* ^flj In his remarks Dr. Johnson said in part: "Winthro> College stands for service to the jchools and to the home. In line tfith this spirit there was orgaiuzea rt inn eonege in iiiuz the South Caro.ina Kural School Improvement Assoeiati?n with one oi its graduates, Miss Maud Nance, at jEv ISH its head. In accorlance also with this purpose of servce, the call was ? a>^DI made to the farmers of York county, # their wives and daughter and to the rural school teaches to meet here and consider the .Teat subject of agriculture and its bearing on tlie Following this ddress came paper by Miss Hjie, the supcri \'11 tendent of Winthrp's model ho- ^':,x E Miss Hyde *8 subjet was '' Making Versus Haisekeeping," her treatment of it was masterly. She spoke of theiiome as the contral unit of the ntion and brought , IB out very forcibly the difference be- nM^H tween a house?a mere shelter, and Sfl a home, an abidig place, a retreat. of joy and comfort Miss Hyde spoke iQj interestingly of the work of the % model home and invited all over tc ; SM inspect it and seethe various demonst rations of hous work to be eiveix i flH in the afternoon. After this c-ane a splendid pupei on "The Spray :ig of Plants" by Prof. L. A. Nivn, head of the new J department o" eimentarv agriculture M at Winthrop. Irofessor Niven gave many helpful lints on the care o# crops, fruit tres and plants, and showed how tb progressive farmer } nude double ortreble his yield. The startling fact ras brought out that . insects alone <estroy every year itr . i the United Shtes $200,000,000 ir. crops. - Mpti "Hygiene in the Ilomc," was the yrsftg'1"' subject of the lext paper by Dr. M. ^ F. Jones of the department of biology. Dr. Jonts slowed tliar_bcahb ift)'*' is the natural rondhiog that good health depends upohrte ^ things, viz: Ventilation, ?ikiiv >5r, water and food, lie also .owc> T how worry will cause indigesti ant summed up with the telling stencet '9ft <4m| "There are four things the rther- , ance of which the governmenthould make one of its aims; prentablt death, preventable sicklies Pre" ventable physical inefflcie^y id preventable ignorance.". KflBI "Food and Our Meals"' us the Jfc" subject of a most interesting I \*!!r Miss Whittemore of the ftfe. science department. Miss \ ofn j more brought out clealv ar av. * vincingly that many of ovr |instaTnr^fc,4^1^ "meals" are not food,fc ?piiversit> u/ propriately the quotatift ckre con l ift what you eat, and ! wilw J Vive you are." K - tpot and ? QmJ* After dinner the rensft ?krd in tilt JftC ence was given a spiel fVcnt dircft by Mr. F. W. Howe, <F ^minnoy ivjTjBjCji cultural Department at ft A?vernor ft*^?^' Mr. Howe was invited dtft; ? had nt?: fiSSSk. ly to make this addrft ftl tent ion every remark was recei\* ft constant terest anil pleasure. He ftalch a ft**' that the study of agricl. ft ^WBBE the schools may give a a, , meaning to geology, geogft P*^ tfjffT languages and literature. ^ ft?'* ^ omin^gB Something Seen in the ft? ^een ?Ug Greenville, Special.?A * * ftoun)j ]{ a9-T loon or airship was seen ptK> ft (]ie tUwfeSethis city Tuesday evening ft; - lL estimu djKj o'clock. It was dimly lift Ujer] r.inS^ presented a very strange aft; ^fcsovemtcrret'. When observed the balltfi ft,rn no traveling in a southwesterly --^^5 tion. It is stated that anoft B? loon passed over the city . ft ftfRALJlJX^ Greenvine^C'. * Mo s'iotii of the li .uuii lo ville and Spartanburg. Capt. E. A jBj Smyth's name was omottec' BL? ; from the syndicate who boiglit the ^ft,ar,t^Qfty Anderson Traction Company, in con- K reitar^^Fi noction with tlie Messrs. Hukc nni> ^Reded wa.1 lie is the trnHtee and treasurer of the Hfv svndirntc mid will tnke the railroad Jcompany wlicn the payment ia made, and until the now company is formal' KF Fire in Spartanburg. tll-*Ligpl Spartanburg, Special.?The Spar- I ^ 'aiost^SwT tanburg Broom Works and severaP fcgiructed fK cottages owned by W. G. and Ver-^k resolunttft^ non Muckenfuss were totally destrrf^ ^3r ed by fire Wednesday night, nntaiMM apiMnil mMb a loss of more than $20,000; witT?>? (ion's insurance of about $15,000. nation The fire originated early in the I night in tba broom factory and 1 spread rapidly to cottages occupied 1 operatives. ' -kdfe j* ' i .ikJ.i} i> L ^AjFs ftlfc/ tfn . iiii ifi j Miimmmfo ir - - ' ***