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WEEK'S NEWS BY | TICK MO FLASH Whet Interests the World Chronicled by Telegraph and Cable. GLANCE AT FOREIGN AFFAIRS i Washington Looms Large as a Center of Interest?Legislatures Busy In 1* Many States?The .Lights and I Shadows of the News. miiiiiiiiiiiiiiimniiiiinitiiHiiniiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiMiiiiiiiiiiiHig Washington :dwuuiuiiiiiiiiii:iii.iiiiiuuiitiunuwii:iii.iiiuuiiiuiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiii!iiiiiii^ Mrs. Wilson, wife ol' the President, has brought suit for SO acres of date iand in the Coachelia Valley, California, alleging fraud in transference of title. The Senate foreign relations com uittee ordered reported favorable the i i.omination of H. M. Pindell, of Peoria, ; ill., to be ambassador to Russia. Secretary Garrison directed that' ristols aud articles taken from .Teller-1 1 . on Davis, when he was captured, be j urrendered to Joseph A. llayes, of olorado Springs, as representative if the estate of Jefferson Davis. Representative Dale introduced a 1 ill, providing for $3,500,000 for a I ' .istofllra near the plaza of the < Williamsburg Bridge, Brooklyn. ? ] :'"?nniiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:i!iiiiiiiiiiiiiinii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!uiiiiiii^ | Persona! .UlHIHllil(!illi:ilU!il!llI!tlUiIUIUIlllil<illllllltllllUiiUtllllllllliiU;itl!lllll!li{c ' ] Dr. Charles W. Elliot, president I r -neritus of Harvard, ha3 been elected . trustee for Uie Rockefeller Founda- ' i >n, to serve three years. Mrs. John D. Rockefeller gave $30,- 1 i 0 to the Euclid Baptist Church, in < eveland. Mrs. Finley J. Shepard, formerly 1 I alen Gould, celebrated her wedding ' 1 inlversary by providing dinners in >w York for 500 Bowery homeless. 1 JB_rcvtw<ooth, Salvation Army com- 1 J^TaffSe^cotiaVsed"while addressing a 1 1. :*e meeting at Jamestown, N. Y. She t L~s been suffering from bronchitis. | r ^uranttuuiJiiiiiiiJiiiiiiHiiiiitttiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiii'miiiiiiiitii^ / General f umniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii^ r .Mew England cities have begun a J \ ir on the tango. The American Company's mills at < aseville, Mass., employing about . . 00 persons, has reopened. A gain of 100,000 pupils was made 2 ./ the Methodist Episcopal Sunday . : .tools of the United States in 1912. A gift of $350,000 for a divinity . ? tool at Yale University was aifj unced by the trustees. ( Flections Committee , ued unanimously to seat J. M. C. , : iith of the Third Michigan District. 3wift & Co., and Armour & Co., j 1 ; meat packers, were fined $500 ich for selling eggs unfit for use. ( The battleship Michigan arrived in ; w York from Vera Cruz after being .ir months in Mexican waters. The Lockney State Bank at Lock- 1 : y, Texas, was closed because of the 1 tbezzlement of $10,000 by an official. Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Shepard were 11 rned to death when their homo at i < " ckerton, N. J., was destroyed. j 1 President Wilson pressed a tele- | ; lph key at Washington, opening the ! i ;nicipal filtration plant at Flint, ; ; ch. i The authorities of the army Y. M. | ? A., at Fort Monroe, Va., announced ; cift of $33,000 for enlarging that as: iation. The twenty-fourth convention of the 1 ited Mine Workers of America met' i Indianapolis in its first biennial . _ j' i nering. irover Smith and Louis Hendricks,! .ers," who escaped from the undsville Penitentiary in Wheeling, ' Va., were captured, ohn J. McBrlde, cashier of tho : te Bank of Pittsburgh, Okla., was 1 up and robbed by masked ban- ; < who escaped with thousands. irs. Constnntla Benerowicz, of Ken- j a, Wis., who shot and killed John ne, a farmer, when he attempted 1 : break into her house, was ac- j tted. .ssemblyman Sulzer, former Gover- i , \ takes boxing lessons from A1 j 7' dick, an Albany trainer, who de- ! es the ex-executive is becoming j ; .icient with the gloves. he widow of Collis B. Huntington, j 1 > is the founder of the city in j "V it Virginia hearing his name, will j ent the city with a statute of Mr. .tington at a cost of $200,000. , :ghty-year-old William Eberwein, r \eteran of the Civil War, pleaded I -i.ty In Philadelphia to the murder ite wife last October. He did It t ;nd her sufferings. He was sen1 ed to not less than seven years i. .iaonment. - foe" Calaaky, a miner, was awarder x rjdct of $10,050 against the Le Ihigh Valley Coal Company, for the J loss of an eye in a mine explosion. J The tango will be prohibited at the Junior Promenade of Yale. Judge William W. Wiltbank, of Philadelphia, is dead, aged 74 years. Henry Builfeld, a carpenter, was fined S10 for stealing a 14-cent loaf of bread in New York. Defective electric wiring caused a I fire in the New York State Capitol, the i third fire in two weeks. The New York Public Service Commission ordered effective February 1 the new express rates. Charles Matfawog, a Siwash Indian, was sentenced to from IS to .10 months in Sing Sing for carrying a revolver. Governor Fielder appointed John V\r. Wescott as attorney-general lor New j Jersey. Charles I\. Hamilton, the aviator, died "in bed" at his home iu New York. A bill Yeas introduced in the New , York State Assembly against oral-bet-1 ting. Lieut. Gowrnor Wagner, of New , York, announced he would retire from ! politics. Tho 7,000 employes of the United Kainvay or si. c.ouis were oruereu vaccinated. The Cleveland Telephone Company announced a wage increase of 10 per cent, to its 1,000 employes. Henry Phipps denied lie had set aside $150,000,000 for the purchase of 100 grains oi radium. The cotton W arehouse of E. W. j Trout k Co., at .Memphis, was de- | stroyed by a fire at a loss of $j?00.000. i Judge Sanders ruled in Cleveland j that an egg is not an egg when an ambryo chicken Is inside. Colonel Goethals intends to send a Panama Itailroad steamer through the , lanal in April. The Illinois Steel plants at Joliet, j 111., resumed full operations. About i 1,000 men are employed. Senator Torborg, of Brooklyn, introiuced a bill in the New York Legisature making Good Friday a legal loliday. Edwin Ginn, book publisher of New ITork, left $1,000,000 to the School of i nternatlonal Peace, which he 'ounded. W. E. Kelly, president of the Nationil Association of Letter Carriers, 1p ;o be appointed postmaster of Brookyn. The State Department ordered th. | ^avy Department to send the gun>oat Nashville to Hayti to protect American Interests. New York State Controller Sohmer eceived $2,584,000 as the transfer tax in the estate of the late Anthony N. Jrady. Lieutenant Tailiaferro, U. S. Army i iviator, flew from San Diego to Pasa- I lena, establishing an American dis- ! ance record. Live stock on farms increased $443, 55,000 in value in twelve monms, ac- i lording to the report of the Orange : fudd Farmer. The Maryland House of Delegates ' idopted a resolution. commending I President Wilson's stand taken in the \ Mexican question. Edward Beardsley, who shot G. W. Putnam, overseer of the poor at May- 1 /ille, N. Y., and held a posse at bay j !or eight days, surrendered. Edward Morgan, cashier of the First . National Bank of Jamestown, N. Y.? , vas arrested at Cleveland, charged | vith embezzling $114.0U0. The Niagara Falls- (N. Y.) Board of ! f-lealth ordered every theatre in the j :ity closed because of prevailing small- \ pox. The South Carolina Legislature fa- | vors the repeal of the fifteenth amendment, which gives the negro the right to vote. A. S. Rosenthal; silk importer of New York, was fined $10,000 for cus- | toms frauds on an indictment found ^ nnorlir 1 *> vnorw' ncrn 11 V^tl A IJ Aw A sub-committee of the House Dis- j trict Committee indorsed the passage of a bill, which would wipe out the j "red light" district of Washington. Judge Willard in the Federal Court a*. Sioux City, Iowa, held as uncoa- j stitutional the two-cent passenger law ! on the ground that it would be confiscatory. ^IlllillllllllllllltllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUlllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllg ' Sporting F.iiijiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii::iiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiu><!iiiiii!iui:iiiiiiiiiii:iiiiii Deacon Pliillipe, who managed the Pittsburgh Feds last year, says he intends to sue for $1,700 back salary. In the scramble for new talent the Feds are turning down the old-timers who helped them worry through the 1013 campaign. Neal Snow, the famous football referee and former University of Michigan star, died at Detroit. He was known as the greatest end the West ever saw. Jimmy Sheckard, former Cub, is now a full fledged manager. He signed a contract to manage the Toledo Club of the American Association during the 1914 season. Charles Ebbets, owner and president of the Brooklyn baseball club of the National League, visited Atlanta and sif&ed Nap Rucker for three year*. "Backache! Me?--! Oh No,-NotNow." No Backache or Kidney Trouble or [ Rheumatism for ROOT JUICE Users?Guaranteed. "Olory! what relief. I could scream with Joy and happiness to think that ( j now Ret up every morning and go about 1 all day without a sign of that aching | soreness." That's what people are saying who have suffered from weak kidneys, i backache and rheumatism for years. No f wonder. You'll feel like screaming with joy yourself. You've suffered with your j aching kidneys anil back, for so long it j has become almost a part of your life, j Hut, oh, wait till you experience the glori- ' Mj j$B> i /Sj oThiM Glorious MOOT .H U E Entirely ilclicu'il It." ous relief of K ins completely and entirely iiii of it. * List.-n! You've waited time and money J enough trying uncertain things, you've suffered ali'eady l< tiger than tin re is any j need j. ' Slop, stop. ROOT JUJC15, pure, > vegetable. harmless, safe, guaranteed IP iOT JUICE is going to give you tho ] grandest surprise you ever experienced in nil the days of your life, of course, I joti'll have to do your part and take it. Even UOOT JUICE can't help you until it gets into your system, hut if you havo . any ideti what real relief will be like. , you'll waste no time getting it. You're j, missing a lot of comfort, yes, real joy , and happiness every minute you delay i using tt and you're tnduring a lot of needless suffering. You'll see. At any first class .ling store you can pel a large bottle of IP a >T JUICE for a 1 dollar. That dollar buvs relief that i3 j worth a hundred dollars to anybody who I knows what rheumatism, backache and i kidney misery is. Remember that dollar not only pays lor ROOT JUICE but it i pays for relief. You've got to get relief , or ret your dollar back. That's how good i ROOT JUICE is. No relief no pay, that's the understanding. '* This time get ROOT JUICE and relief. Don't put off and don't 1ft anybody tell you of something else that's better. Nothing i vtr made is any better, mark these words and see. Try ROOT JUICE for ten days and save yourself any more suf- j fering. If you are so fortunate as to have l< escaped these life-darkening miseries, for j goodness sake tell some suffering friend | or nofiualtitnneo what this grand medicine i will do. You'll surely earn his or her I everlasting gratitude. , . ^iiiiniiiiiitniiiuiitiittiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiinittiinitiittiiYitiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiita , Foreign fiiiiiiniiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiuiuHiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimil An attempt to attack Crown Prince ; Frederick William at Berlin was frustrated by a sen-try. ] * 1.111 KiniAnfKl? now Ulil piU*lUiU5 LKJA umiuuun^ ya/ on railroads, was reintroduced in the ' Canadian Parliament. There were t?43 persona killed and < 2,231 injured on Canadian railways , during 1913. At a secret meeting of the Japanese ' Imperial Diet an appropriation of $150,- ] 000,000 was made for immediate naval , increases. The Spanish Premier announced < that the strikers and Ilio Tinto Company agreed to arbitrate. Many persons were reported injured in riots attending the miner's strike at Rio Tinto, Spain. ! Lord Howard de Walden has offered prizes for Welsh drama and seeks a traveling theatre, with accommodations for l.OuO, to tour Wales. The body of Lord Strathcona will not be placed in Westminster Abbey, but will be buried in liighgate Cemetery, beside that of his wife. A bill was introduced before the French Chamber asking for an ap- < propriatlou of *4u0,u00 lor representu- i tiou at the Panama-Pacific Fair in Jblo. ? ' 1 Big Sunday School Meet. Anderson.?Never before in the history of the Sunday school work in this , ofnto such snlendid nlans been laid for a state convention as are being laid for the convention at Ander- ' son February 11-13. Fair For Georgetown. Georgetown. ? Georgetown county will fall in line with the other counties of the state and have a county I fair this fall. This matter has been I under consideration for the past sev*eral months, but no definite steps were taken until recently. A mass meeting of the citizens of the county was held a few drys ago for the purpose of organizing and completing ' definite arrangements. The idea of a ?' county fair for Georgetown has aroused a great amount of enthusiasm , among the citizens. I Study of Pellagra at Spartanburg. Spartanburg.?Dr. J. L. JefTeries of . this city has received definite information that the Thompson-McFadden commission for the study of pellagra | will return in the spring for continued research into the causes of the disease. A letter was written to the Spar tanburg physician by Capt. Siler, chairman of the commission, containing the information when he return- ' ed to New York . from Washington, where he made arrangements with < Col. Thompso nfor the continuation of tb? work. I TAX N< The books will be open for the < day of October, 11)13 to December 31 Tax levy for State Special school Constitutional School Ordinary Co. ( Past indebtedness Int. on 11. K. Bonds Road and bridges . . Total levy __ ? Cheraw Graded School, . Si Marburg Orange Hill Pats Branch Pee Dee SlalTord Mill Bethel Center Point / ii )) < lu'sierneiu Parker ?? Sliiioli >> Snow Ilijj '? Rnby ?? Wamble Hill . ?? VVJiit-e Oak ' ?? Center >> I roas Roads ' Kiizabeth " Mt. Croghan " Xew I Tope ** Wexford " ' Buffalo ?? Five Forks " Fageland " Plains ' ?> Dudley ?? Friendship ?> TetFerson ? Cong Branch " Green Hill ?? ^\fiddendorf " McBee ?? Sandy Knn ' ?? - ? ^ Fnion ?? Pay Springs " Bethesda " Bear Creek " Juniper ?? Patrick ?? Pat Pond m Lewis >> Ousley ?? Palmetto " Wallace ** Plieraw special Road Commutation Road Tax is *2 an '' iou ? i I .y Ul -'IIIHII, ........ September 15, 1913. AUDITOR'S NOTICE. , Ca o'< . r The Auditor's office will he opened for the assessment of both j Peal Estate and Personal prop- ?i( [?rtv from January 1st, 1914. to February 20th, 1904. Pli All male citizens between the n?:es of 21 and t>0 years are deemed Taxable Polls, except those 1 ivho are maimed or for other pi( pauses are incapable of earing a ?), support. The law requires 50 per cent Mi penally added to taxes on proper- i tv subject to taxes and not re- Mv turned for assessment, onor be- Ch Lore t'ne 20th of February, 1914. Od I will be in the Auditor's office ' January 1, 2. 3, 5, JO, 16, 17, 24, rind 31; February 2, 7, 12, 14, 16, 17, IS, 10, and 20, and at the following places on the dates named: ^ Grant's Mill, .January 6th. from I Chi 1 to 4 o'clock. lett West field Creek Church, January 7, from 1 to J o'clock. Cross Roads, January 8, from 11 in to J o'clock. J*ei 3111 Ruby, January 0, from 11 to 3 yea o'clock. sel) cur sbPatrick, January 12, from 10 to Chi 3 o'clock. ?iv Of i Cedar Creek Church, January 13, edy from 10 to 3 o'clock. cin John C. Wallace's, January 14, foi DTICE lollection of taxes from the 15 , 1913. 5*/4 mills 1 3 . " 3 VL> " ^ l'/I " li/, " 2 ' " 1 >jjj ?.. II Y'2 >e<;iiil 3 mills , Bonds 1% milla "8 " " 8 " " 4 " j y o " 4 " Bonds 2V4 uiilla ,i ?> . ). M I " 9 " Bonds 3 uiilla 9 9 ? 9 > 7 >> 4 ?? " 8 " 9 9 > 11 " 4 ? " 9 " 6 " ' " 3 " " 8 " Bonds 4 inilla ?i rj }1 *' 2 " " 2' " " 2, " " 6 " Bonds 5 mills* - , ? 2 " v " 3 " " 3 " ' ' " 2 Bonds 4 mill&^9 4 8 Bonds 4% ?t?f ~ ? M 3 6 "* 9 " 6 ( ,r I " 5 I ? 4 ?? 1 '' 3 '' I " 2 " * '< v id must be paid by the firs" i i ' V \V. A. DOUGLASS, f County Tronsurer ?? i from 11 to 3 o'clock. ,.i, ?c r i- 11 < ?<>. 9 ) < I I I I I < I I \ itJy l iUIil J. J lock. igelus, January ID, from 11 tc? 3 o'clock. (for.son. January 20 and 21. tarrh. January 22, i'rom 1 to 4 o'clock. "w?^ ains, January 23, from 0 to 12? o'clock. . Croghan, January 26, from 10* to 4 o'clock. gel and, January 28 and 20. itlley, January 30, froru 10 to12 o'clock. ddendorf, February 3, from 10' to 4 o'clock. Roe, February 4 and f>. . * craw, February 0, 10 and 11. loin's Mill, February 13, from II to 3 o'clock. T. W. EDDTNS, County Auditor. Prison Mission's Good Work. 'he English prison mission ever? ristmas sends out 40,000 personal' era to inmates of English jails. ?st fontrh Medicine for Children 1 am very glad to say a few words: praise of Chamberlain's Cough, liedy" writes Mrs. Lida Dewey,. \ waukee, Wis. "I have' used it for rs both for my children and myf and it never falls to relieve and e a cough or cold. No family with ldren should be without it as it . es most Immediate relief n cases " croup." Chamberlain's Cough Rem- j is pleasant and safe to take, which af great importance when a medi- i e must be given to young children. I " :j