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FAMOlfe EDITOR DIES ON YACHT i |< Joseph Pull tier's Body Being Csr- 1 rfced to New York for Funeral Service*. Joseph Pulitzer, proprietor of The New York World and the St. Louis Poet-Dispatch and one of the greatest journalists of the world. I died aboard his yacht Liberty yesterday afternoon in Charleston har- j bor, having arrived here several days ago from New York bound for Jekyl Island, near Brunswick, where Mr. Pulitzer had a winter home and was accustomed of spend-; ing a part of the season for his uroiin. a inp to me west inaes, had been planned. The stay of the LJberty In this port had been prolonged a few days on account of Mr. Pulitzer's condi- j tlon. She came in last Thursday1 and would have sailed sooner for Jenkyl Island, but Mr. Pulitzer was doing so poorly that the yacht remained in port. Early yesterday morning he had a sinking spell, restoratlves were applied and his condition Improved, but again became worse shortly after noon, and Mr. Pultizer died at 1.40 o'clock.' Hubert Pulitzer, who had accom-] panied his father with the party aboard the yacht and Mrs. Pulitzer who arrived yesterday morning, in response to r telegram, were with ether close 'ntimate friends at the bedside of the newspaper owner when he died. Dr. Robert Wilflo*,|l was called into consultation with ;' Dr. Guthmann, Mr. Pulitzer's phy- | sician, who accompanied his patiently on the trip, but the malady had far |' progressed and Mr. Pulitzer was 1 beyond medical aid. j j The body will be taken North IJ this afternoon, leaving on No. 86; 1 over the Atlantic Coast Line. The | body was prepared for interment by the J. M. Connelly Company and 1 one of the firm will accompany the jj body to New York, the funeral ser- ] vices taking place there and the burial following at Woodlawn ceme- < tery. The body will occupy a pri-1 vate Pullman car, and Mr. Pulitzer's car and probably another will be used in carrying the party to New i J York. The body will not be moved i from the yacht until train time. j? With the death of Mr. Pulitzer U plans which had been made for re-1| opening of the Pulitzer home at il Jekyl Island end. The yacht will, | iu ;i uajr i>r iwo sail ior rsew iotk. A number of relatives and friends of the family arrived here to-day, and will accompany the body to | New York. Others will meet the body en route. FAYETTF.VlliliK TBAUEDY. i Further Particulars of Hoiw J. It. (tiawm, of Parkton, Met His I>eath. The Fayetteville Observer of Thursday afternoon gave the following account of the three-sided traged in that town Wednesday afternoon in which J. R. Chason was shot and killed: "An awful tragedy occurred on' Gillespie street yesterday afternoon j about 5.15 o'clock, when Deputy Sheriff A. J. Pate, while trying to arrest a man and defending his own life, shot and almost instantly killed, J. R. Oha8on, of Parkton, Robe-1 son county. "From the evidence developed at j the coroner's inquest, which wasil held yesterday evening, it seems jl that Ohason was returning from 'I the Fair grounds at the north ap- I proach to Lakeview bridge, on Gil- jl lesple street, got into despute with | a lemonade vender, who had a stand on the street. Chason attacked the lemonade man, who is Oscar Josh- > * son of Pleasant Hill, Mo., and cut; him in the side with a pocket knife. e "At this juncture Deputy Sher-|? iff Pate came up and interferred as ' an officer of the law, whereupon 1 Chason attacked Pate with the knife, inflicting a long cut across J the forhead and face and another 1 from the back of the neck around ? the throat. Pate drew his pistol and j fired on Chason, killing him almost instantly, the ball entering the J right breast and ranging around, it! is supposed to the heart. I 1 "Pate and Johnson, the wounded men, were taken to Highsmith's Hospital, where this morning they are reported as doing well and i + V, ...... I. J ?ui/ugu lu uc uui ui uiujger. "The dead man was carried to the1 . undertaking establishment of Wil- j son & Rogers, where Dr. J. V. McOougan, coroner, held a jury of Inquest. "A. great crowd gathered around Che scene of the tragedy, where the dead man lay upon the ground. '*Chason leaves a wife and five children?three gilrs and two boys. The body was taken to Parkton on i the 6.30 train this morning. Chason was a brother of Chief of Ponce Ohason, who, some years since, with Policeman Lockamy, was kill-, ed here by Tom Walker, negro, in a blind tiger Joint. Policeman Fred Buckingham being badly wounded by Walker at the same time. It is said that Chason had another brother who was killed several years ago, and that his father was mixed up with a killon scrape lh Robeson county. "Oscar Johnson, who was first out* Is quite a young man and a < stranger here. Sheriff Pate is a married man with a family, and has always been accounted a splendid officer." WOIWK THAN LION'S DKN nvdsstal Man Sees RettJ&naken Crawl Over Him. Los Angeles,* October 28. ? "It seemed like a thousand pair of beady eyes were focussed on me alone, their forked tongues glisten-; lng beautifully in the sunlight. 11 was almost paralyzed with fear, yet I fascinated as they crawled over and about me." This was the statement of Roy Jonas day clerk at a local hotel, who on the previous day stumbled , headlong over an embankment into i a den of rattlesnakes at the mouth i of Eagle Rock canyon. "!! seemed as though I lay on my baclr for hours, 'there were score* f rattlers around me. 1 -was afraid to move or even breathe. I expect- j < ed some of them to coil up and strike me at any moment. "One big rattler wound itself1 around my camera, and then my friend Ben Johnson called to me. This brought me from my trance. He climbed down with two big sticks and I got up. "Wo killed four or five snakes, and then got out of the way in a hurry. Give me a den of lions to a den of rattlesnakes every time. The experience will always live with me. It was terrible." Balked at Cold Steel. "I wouldn't let a doctor cut my foot off," said H. D. Ely, Bantam. Ohio, "although a horrible ulcer had been the plague of my < life for four years. Instead I used < Bucklen'a Arnica Salve, and my 4 foot was soon completely cured." Heals Burns, Boils, Sores, Bruises, Eczema, Pimples, Corns, Surest ' Pile cure, 25c at Evans' Pharma- ' cy. < Saved Many From IK?ath. W. L. Mock, of Mock, Ark., be-j lleves he has saved many lives in his 25 years of experience in the|< drug business. "What I always! like to do," he writes, "is to re-! commend Dr. King's New Dlscov- 4 ery for weak, sore lungs, hard . coldc. hoarseness, obstinate coughs, ( la grippe, croup, asthma or other 4 bronchial affection, for I feel sure . that a number of my neighbors are alive and well to-day because < they took my advice to use it. I ^ honestly believe its the best throat i and lung medicine that's made." < Easy to prove he's right. Get a i ^ trial bottle free, or regular 50c >r $1.00 bottle. Guaranteed by < Evans' Pharmacy. < Colored State Fair, Columbia, S. C? * November 7th to 10th. 4 On account of the above occa- !' Ji-on the Atlantic Coast Line has! < announced the low round trip rate \ 3f $4.10 from Dillon, including ad-!' mission, to Fair. if land in county, s .v., io uj near Ef- ence, three miles ct No. 4. ham; fine clay road 1, can be land corners bet' worth of house and church even-room acres open land, an< lses, good about $400.00 wort! Iters, etc., ber on it; one hous rns, new This place is worth i r rooms. what I ask. Price < le a bale easy terms. last year. No. 12. 85 acres at ion, etc. county, S .C., one ?28.00 per miles from Bingham der cultivation, twc | timber in room houses, barns, near Ef- the houses is new a 3,5000,000 been lived in. This ] fifty per famous Reedy Cr nee short property and is onl !our miles hundred yards froi i; logging Price if taken at c on-thircl 000.00, easy terms, is cut. No. 13. 150 acres kand in 3 of Rocky Mount, 1 p, N. C. the finest roads knut, etc. runs from the fai Ken land. Mount; one house, fine white oaks Whereas, by an election, the own of Dillon voted a bond issue or the purpose of installing an lectric light plant, and whereas, the aid bonds provides that the said own council shall levy an annual ax to meet the interest thereon. < Now, be it ordained by the said I own council in meeting assembled hat a 2 mill levy be assessed gainst all the taxable property of he town of Dillon to meet the inerest to become due upon said >onds. Done and ratified in council this he 23r(D day of October, A. D. 911. ^ Attest: N. B. Hargrove, Mayor. J. M. Carmichael, Treasurer. jOHT ? IN THK TOWN OP DILT>on Wednesday afternoon Ort 25th, one locket shaped something like a heart and set with twentyone diamonds, one In the center and twenty around the edge. Finder will be liberally rewarded if same is returned to either of i the undersigned. Mrs. B. A. Beadenbaugh, Dillon, S. C., or B. A, Beadenbaugh, at office of Wheeler Hardware Co. I A Father's Vengeance. would have fallen on any one who attacked the son of Peter Bondy, of South Rockwood, Mich., but he; was powerless before attacks of Kidney trouble. "Doctors could ; not help him," he wrote, "so at ! last we gave him Electric Bitters and he improved wonderfully from j taking six bottles. It's the best kidney medicine 1 ever saw." Backache, Tired feeling, Nervousness, Loss of Appetite, warn of kidney trouble that may end in dropsy, diabetes or Brlght's disease. Beware: Take Electric Bitters and be safe. Every bottle guaranteed. 50c at Evans' Pharmacy. Southwest (Jeorgia Farm A Pecan hands For Bale. Any size tract desired. Our lands are fertile, and results are satisfactory. Flarmera are headed tills way to get in on the ground floor. Write for illustrated booklet to-day Flower-Parker Realty Oompany, Timmonsvllle, Qa. 1l-2-5t A BIX HORSB ?v? ? _? - r wrv n-MIT ? adjacent to the town of MoDon- ' aid, Robeson, N. C.t clay land; J present crop 1 bale of cotton per i acre and sixty bushels of corn. jj Address or see Wesley Thompson,; J MeDOnald, N. C. ll-2-*t; 4 ??? ? ?????? ? ? i I - 2 % [GKOCBRIBS] | I We Deliver Promptly ? J orders for Groceries when requested, and our Groceries are all of the first ? ^ class kind. Our stock is carefully selected because - -- -- -- -- -- -- -- A ^ ^ m ^ > Lfur irade is farticular J X v and it is our aim always to please. We ? want your business and as we offer the X. \ 6esf and freshest of Groceries, and ask V no more, and often less prices, we think toe ought to have it. ----- *|? VK W. OWEN | T [And Company ' es omr i>cr~ from Effing- land. Don't take my word for it, cash, balai all the way. go look at it yourself. There is No. 40. ween school three good big houses on the from townj ? ; about 45 place with barns, etc. Price on- er town, i balance has ly $40.00 per acre. three tenajc! i of nice tim- No. 28. 240 acres of land in ing, nicely* se with barn. Horry County, S .C., two and one large gro^ n almost double half miles from Loris; one small loam, witll ? )nly $3,000.00 house; one horse farm open. and outbtl Price $8.00 per acre. and in goJ11 in Marlboro No. 29. 570 acres land near nice pine < h and a half Loris, adjoining tract No. 28; road in 1 , 30 acres un- 65 acres open land; one house, per acre, ) good, three- barns, etc.; two and one-fourth land. , etc. One of miles to railroad. Price $8.00 No. 41. * aid has never per acre. Carolina, land joins the No. 30. 300 acres of land, none west of a eek Springs cleared, no house, but some of cleared; 3 y about three the best land in South Carolina. pine, will n the spring. One mile to Loris. Price $13.00 acre! Nic" mce only $3,- per acre. or four tM No. 31. 100 acres of land, tered by ? in five miles one mile from Loris; 60 acres in loam, wit_ r. C. One of the very highest state of cultiva- turnpike l" in the South tion. Price $30.00 per acre. No. 42. m to Rocky No. 32. 246 acres near Loris, Carolina, barns, etc. 11 one mile to railroad; two horse town; 50 i the yard and farm open, including a strawber- from tran >ut 110 acres ry farm that is paying a profit of painted, i balance has $250.00 per acre each year. Price telephone, I of timber on only $4,500.00. acres in the place this No. 33. 160 acres of land in sandy loa bree hundred Dillon county, S. C., near Little 75 per ct mder it and Rock; all except twenty acres in tered. 1 a bale of cot- high state of cultivation, bale of school hoi There is on cotton to the acre this year. In No. 43. county's garden Carolina, I in a long time, and cannot sa p^ce $150.00 per 40 acres TA F 11 pay 8 per cent. timber; n I f ^ . - _ uble that amount and outb fk IJ III tended. per acre. 9 ^ a Jift 1 M 1. I I * acres of land in No. 44 m f Florence county, ber land 1 I If you are one of those ailing nf station'mitn mile" fro1! I of the troubles so common totad; party will not road fron Cardui is a builder of \ ias never been any bales of 1 I of purely vegetable ingredie tation. Price only yearly on . I womanly system, building upm satisfied that a good, lar I the womanly nerves, and reg^ at auction sides sen I u - ,th of l?ts on one dozen or I Cardui has been in successful Nicely lo I Thousands of ladies have writg big farm in and by creeki I received from it Try it for yi on S. A. L. rail- has at 1? Writ* to: Ladic- Advisory Drpt. Chi Pembroke and Wil- saw mill | lor Special irutnuhon*. *nd book. "13. Fine farming original i IBiHHHIHIHie of the best places feet of s J a mercantile busi- one millic (xtremely low. You hiokory t ************************* * on application. ton gin i I ? acres of land in go with l Oxypathy 4= ? I / i jthem down so you won X M^CCLdS ? j! /i r u oiin South Carolina. Now j 71x6 | this thriving tovi I Way Elown is moving ahead j inl ) jit I A. K. PARHAM a XJ Dillon. S. C. jjA A A ?? ? ? ? >< ?44.?<..t.>^ jj | j I I ... , _ .... U$BEE$ 5AVEV V.v(#i WHY PONT W? nature ?i ^Cc ?u|giTEACHES US. " ymr to save ??? put IT # %= %sk :: intothf BANK Now So You'll have IT WHEN YOU NEED IT. ITS SAFE IN THE BANK -=? James J. Hill, tlie great rallroa ?1 king, made money slinging a i?i ;k rbt'ii a young man. He 'tanked ah <1 *a\'"tl hi; earnings. 51. bc-iame i contractor and multi-millionaire. Let us rent you a box in our safety vaults, then your valuables'" (vill be safe. Make our bank your bank. We j?ay lil?eral interest consis tent with safety. BANK of DILLON Dillon, S. C. r* * * MB??BBWBBKMBI HI '1 PI'MggBBgMM?B? I?Hi \H in II 1, il" I I.MHIIMI?? FOR SALE.' 250 acre farm; lOO acres in cultivation;; soil gray loam, clay suboil; naturally deraeined; now making bale cotton per acre; gopod Pliant houses and outbuildings; within three miles of Mullins, 8. C. 400 acres; lOO in cultivation; fine red soil; every acre can be I eared; good timber; good buildings; 5 1-2 miles R. R. depot. Price 25.OO per acre. 155 acres;; 75 in cultivation;soil gray loam with clay subsoil; six ooiii house, two tenant houses and necessary outbuildgin;s one tile school and church; 4 1-2 inilles from Mulllins or Marion. 220 acres; OO in cultivation; red clay land; good buildings Pine imber and cleare<l land in high state of cultivation. Price $0,000.00. Other farms, l?oth large and small. City property that are good i vestments. G. B. STACKHOUSE, SUCCESSOR TO c* P. D. Real Estate Agceny ' v Mullins, South Carolina local dealer or cortwright metal ROOFING COMPANY NO. 50 N.23RD ST PHI1.FDELPHI A PA. THERE'S NEATH AHEAQJ lf you allow yourself to get weak and listless, fagged out, debilitated and run down. -W[ Stop All Such Feelings I # SiHP BY TAKINQ ELECTRIC bmnd BITTERS AND GET BACK YOUR HEALTH, STRENGTH and VIGOR IT'8 THE WORLD'S BEST TONIC AND REGULATOR OF STOMACH, LIVER AND KIDNEYS Prloe 50c and $1.00 Per Bottle 4 mmmmmmmam sold and guaranteid by EVANS' PHARMACY