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PRESIDENT SPEAKS NEED OE KINDNESS SELF-POSSESSION IS THE SUPREME TEST OF A NATION'8 METAL. OPENING SESSION OF D. A. R. Mr. Wilson Urges The Congress of Daughters to Rally to the Cause of Righteousness. Washington.?The need of self-possession. calmness and a judicial temperament by the United States in the present world crisis was urged by President Wilson in a speech before 1"" lyt tho twpntv lilt? vycuiug ocoovvu vi va?v . .. ^ fourth Continental Congress of the Daughters of the American Revolution. The president said seW-possession was the supreme test of a nation's mettle, and urged the Congress to rally to the cause of righteousness, as ministered hy those who hold their minds quiet and Judge upon principle. Following the president's speech Ambassador Jusserand of France told the Congress that the United States had behaved in he European crisis so as to command the gratitude and thankfulness of the world. "We in France," he said, "have learned to know what the American heart is made of?the pure American gold that is in it. I am glad that I may affirm the thanks of France for the generosity of America?the neutral United States." The ambassador said the "chief question in the European Struggle." was the same problem that confronted America in revolutionary times. "We thought we had solved the problem of human liberty," he | said. "But it again confronts us. It will be solved now just as it was solved in former times, as it was solved in the trenches at Yorktown." The president in his speech declared that he could speak only in general terms and that ft was "indiscreet" for him to speak even in that way. John Hays Hammond. R. C. B. Thurston, president-general of the Sons of the Revolution and John Barrett, director-general of the Pan-Amenlcan Union also spoke. Jury For $50,000 Libel Suit ia Completed. Syracuse. N. Y.?The Jury which will try William Barnes' $50,000 suit for alleged libel, against Theodore Roosevelt was completed in Supreme court here. It comprises seven Republicans. three Progressives and two Democrats. Twenty-two talesmen were examined before both sides announced that they were satisfied with the 12 men in tht> box. The Jurymen are: Henry Hoag. clerk, Republican (foreman); Irving J. Mills, woodworker, Republican; Walter J. Zuill, manager, Republican; Franklin S. Rhoades, farmer. Progressive; Leonard K. Hungerford, painter. Progress ^ DAn.tK ive; r. w. fierce, caipcuici, lirpuulican; Warren H. Somers. grocer; Republican; Ray Tanner, farm hand, Democrat; John W. Brown, farmer, Republican; George Boschert, manufacturer. Progressive; Edward Burns, motorman. Republican; Peter Bencke, coal dealer. Democrat. Immediately after the jury had been completed, counsel for Colonel Roosevelt made a motion to dismiss the complaint against their client on the ground that allegations made in the statement on which the suit is based Mr. Barnes and Charles F. Murphy as were privileged and that in naming the controllers of "rotten government i n the state of New York, ho did not mean anything personal or to imply that either of the two men named had in any way profited by the alleged "rottenness." Abarno and Carbane Sentenced. New York.?Frank Abarno and Carmine Carbone, the anarchists who set a bomb in St. Patrick's Cathedral March 2, were sentenced to not less than six years nor more than 12 in Sing Sing. Abarno and Carbone were found guilty by a jury last week. Sharp Fighting Occurs. T A 1/-vr% rr V\ /-v OTVSNnt iiuuuuii.?ntiMU/ aiuuf, uic wcoi* ern battle line seems to partake of the nature of isolated engagements rather than a general offensive. Artillery duels have taken the place of hand-to-hand fighting, which has been the feature of the recent struggle along the Meuse and near the Lorraine border, but the latter type of combat continues in the Vosges, where the official statements agree sharp fighting is taking place on German territory. The French and Germans both claim success. Lifting Sunken Suomarine. Honolulu.?Efforts to raise the sunken submarine F-4 were delayed again to strengthen a minor defect of the drumholder of one of the scow pontoons. In a lifting test the other scow to be used was found in perfect condition. The result of the test con\ineed Rear Admiral Moore and the other naval authorities in charge of the operations of the feasibility of the plan to remove the cr?ft to shallow water bv alternate lifting by the ecows a?1 tov/ing with tuc= CERTAIN NO COTTON I REACHES GERMANY ?S KEPT FROM GERMANY AND ( AUSTRIA SAYS ATTORNEY GENERAL. BLOCKADE IS UNNECESSARY I Attorney General Simon Replies to / the Conference of Chemiet ar.d Engineers. London.?That cotton is kept from iermany and Austria just as effectively as if it were declared absolute ' contraband, is the tenor of a reply addressed by Attorney General Simon to a conference of chemists and engi- s neers who asked whether the Government's action was sufficient to make T it certain that no cotton reaches ] those countries. "The Attorney General ventures to ? suggest that those for whom you write may be under some misapprehension either as to the law of con- 1 traband or as to the steps which in fact are being taken under the order in council of March 11. The steps being taken under authority of that * order in council have been extremely effective in stopping cotton from reaching Germany and the declaration of cotton as contraband would not alter the result in the very least so far as preventing cotton reaching J Germany is concerned. "If an article is declared absolute contraband, it can be stopped from going to a German port and can be c stopped even from going to an adjoining neutral port, if it is in course of transit through that neutral port to an enemy country. These are exactly the circumstances in which, under the order in council any article can be stopped, whether it is contraband or not, and of course, this order in ? council is being p?t into force in all proper cases. > . "To imagine that since March 11 ^ anything can be gained so far as stopping the entrance of cotton into Germany is concerned by calling it * contraband is, in effect, to suppose that a blockade is rendered more ef- ^ fective if you add that specified contraband articles will not be allowed to break that blockade. A blockade j stops all articles whether they are f contraband or not, therefore any adwiiUM*. imMLJMrf A? afct practical consequences. What is true of Germany of course, is equally true of Austria. 1 "Your memorialists no doubt will ' readily believe that there may be good reasons of quite a different kind 5 for not making cotton contraband in 1 view of the precendent which- would ( thereby be created, but as a practical 1 matter in the present war any stoppage of cotton secured by calling it j contraband is equally secured by the order in council." GENERAL HERRERA KILLED. 1 f Killed by Own Men Who Mistook * Them For Villa Troops. 1 Laredo, Tex.?Gen. Maclovia Her- 1 rera, Carranza commander at Nuevo * Laredo, opposite here, was killed by f his own men, who mistook him and I his for Villa troops, according to information received here by Gen. R. K. Evans, in command or unuea ruaies troops here. r General Herrera and members of < his staff had taken a position on a ( hill near Neuvo Laredo when, It is t said, they were fired upon from a f Carranza military train, the soldiers s mistaking the party for Villa troops. Besides Herrera his aide and several t other members of his staff were ^ killed. l SERIOUS MOTOR ACCIDENTS. I Lake Hopatcongo, N. J..?An auto- j mobile plunged down an embankment near here, killing Mr. and Mrs. Albert Terhune, of Passaic, N. J. New York.?Mme. Margarete Matzenhaur. of the Metropolitan Opera t Company was badly cut and bruised * when she was thrown from an automo- 1 bile in colllssion with another ma- 8 chine in Long Island City. Her hus- 8 band, Edocardo Ferrari-Fontana. a * tenor of the Boston Opera Company, * also was cut and bruised. * Kalamazoo, Mich.?Mr. and Mrs. Paul Pare were killed here when an automobile collided with a street car. Two others in the automobile were in- a Jured. ( Egg Harbor. N. J.?Benjamin L. c Stratt, a Philadelphia underwear man- j ufacturer. was killed and his business ? partner, Meyer Myerson, was Injured e when their automobile overturned. l Tyrone, Pa.?Dr. C. E. Shaffer, of 1 Windber, Pa., was killed and five per- I sons were injured in an automobile t accident near here. All the injured a will recover. 1 Sixteen Begin Prison Term. Idianapolis, Ind.?Headed by Mayor p Oonn M. Roberts, 15 prisoners convict- t ed in the Terre Haute election conspir- i acy cases and sentenced to the Leav- s enworth penitentiary started on the ( trip to prison. f The timo for the departure was not ( made public here and only a small d crowd was at the station as the pris- 1 oners, each accompanied by a special J deputy United States marshal, board- I ed a special car attached to a passen? J ger train. t HOSTILE AIRCRAFT ANNOYS ENOLANE ' ; 3** 5ERMANS MAKE THREE ZEPPE LIN RAIDS WITHIN FORTY-. EIGHT HOURS. iO LOSE OF LIFE OR DAMAGI \t Least 50 Bombs are Sent Downr Raiders Keep Away From All Large Cities. Aisj London.?England experienced it hlrd hostile air raid within 48 hoar: )ut the last, like the others resulte n no loss of life and no serious dan ige to property. _ Taking advantage of fine weathe vhlch enabled Zeppelins to icinity of the Tyne and the coasts < sufTolk and Essex early, a Genua] leroplane flew over the county 4 s.eni, dropping doihub. m an, wi nissiles were dropped in the vicittU >f the towns of Faversham and Si ingbourne, the latter just across t! Bugle from the Isle of Sheppey, whi4 s the birthplace of the British Rojf faval Flying Corps. All the bombs Ml in fields. 7; From Slttlngbourne the aeroglai lew over the Isle of Sheppey and e thought probable the raider mi 00k the towns attacked for Shoe less, the British naval base, whii s on the other side of the island., C lis way the airman passed over Ca erbury and other towns in Kent b lid not drop any explosives upon | Zeppelins, for it is believed ij rislted East Anglia during the eaM lours dropped some 25 Incendiary ml jxplosive bombs on Lowestoft^ Soul void, Maldon, Burnham-on-the-Croua leybridge and Tllllngham, but 111 he raid of the previous night on tl rynemouth district, there was oil ilight damage, although many persoi lad narrow escapes. In LowestOfti >omb dropped in a garden, shatter# 1 row of small housee and pers<m ileeping in them were^H^^^tocM During the three raU8 h >ombs were sent dow y tIie tt nans. The raiders k|pt away rM he larger towns. ThJfre lave been discovered ind come Date for Hearlna in the Case Set for May Washington.?With almostVfmolt n which to prepare for* the next It] ^earanee In court, counsel for the w< ;rnment in the Injunction proceedllg igalnst treasury officials brought ) he Riggs National Bank laid plana t nake full answer to all charges I? 'orth in the complaint. Justice McCoy in the District of < !< umbia Supreme Court set May 12 a he date when the government mi t inswer charges that Secretary Mi ^doo and Comptroller of the Carre dc iVilliams have conspired to wreck th >ank. Counsel for the governraec tsked for a postponement and conn it or the bank said they were ready t iroceed at any time. Gorgas Can't Go. Washington. ? Secretary Garrii y, nade it plain he would oppose-^M^ o General Gorgas* going to Serbia o he Rockefeller Foundation to fight i h yphus scourge unless the surge o: general resigns his commission in th Lrmy. Mr. Garrison takes the positio: hat should General Gorgae go to Sjej iin ns a rpMrprt nfflrpr In whfnh jm >acity he still would be under $h urlsdlction of the war departmenl iltuation would be created which eta y might lead to trouble. Villa Troops Leave Matamoros. Brownsville, Texas.?A report ths he 5,000 Villa troops which have b? a: tesleging Matamoros for more ti a: wo weeks had started for Celaya t Lssist General Villa in his campal f igainst General Obregon was receive >y Major General Frederick Funs^> n command of the United Stat; roops hera - fy f \ Army Wants Prohibition. ( Washington.?A delegation from th mti-saloon league called on Secretar, Jarrison, causing comment which "ir Teased when he declined to ma*c >ublic the reason for the call. TTh Secretary afterwards explained how iver, that the delegation had not etei n its own judgment sifflciently estAt ished the facts it wished to present tumor had it that there was an effor o introduce in the army regulation imilar to thnsp whioh Sprrptarv Tlir eh has applied to the Navy. , ( New Officers Are Elected, j Atlanta, Ga.?J. G. Belding of ^11 :usta, Ga., was elected president) o he Southern Supply & Machin^r; )ealers' Association at the closini ession of its annual convention h^rt )ther officers elected included Mrst vice president, Ernest Howjell "harleston. W. Va.; second vice prfesi lent, George H. Manning, Knoxvijllf "enn.; secretary and treasurer, Afyii >f. Smith, Richmond, Va.; W. iH Janks, Huntington, W. Va., and !\V i. Ray. Pensacola, Fla., were electei o the executive committee. > { ( i MS MEXICO CM NOT BE CONQUER! J 8IXTEEN MILLION WILL HA [ TO BE KILLED BEFORE MIX CO COULD BE INVADED. i VIEW OF GENERAL HUEF " He Declares the Heada of Washint Adminiatratlon Have Not Beer ' i Fair to Mexico. New York.?Asserting that he * .nothing to do with the death of F: olsco Madero, General Vlctori Huerta, former Provisional Presk leaned a lengthy signed statement ' latlng to the question. ' General Euerta declared he ki '.who wae responsible for Made ' death, but that he %?aa keeping 11 p " professional secret." ^ . General Huerta's statement rev , Od the history of the Madero rev '* tlon, his own accession to the Pi * eional Presidency r 'd concluded ^ . the aJHertoln that 'my country 'Dsit he conquered." Sixteen millions of men, women children Would have to be killed ? fore Mexico would submit to an vader, Huerta asserted. The heads of the Washington ' ministration, Huerta declared, "hot been fair to Mexico, had b misled by false statements and if t had been In Mexico for thirty ( v "they would have changed their orettpal, erroneous ideas." Had it :< been for the embargo on the expc ? tion of arms from this country ( ? eral Htierta Indicated that ?is a would have prevailed over those %' posed io It / The former Provisional Presi< reiterated the assertion made wbei left Mexioo last year that he had J signed from his position only bees I ha hoped to bring peace to his c< d try. He pointed out that in the e months elapsed since that date the a, nation in Mexico had become "too , for me to analyze deeply." 1 " "Anarchy is too soft a word to it," he said. Mexico eventually w< n be saved, but by a Mexican, he a P^^Katii a professional secret. L , yeBq^.have secrets, doctors h secrets?I am a soldier?why sh< not -a soldier have secrets? It is T' thorough friendship for any one i 8 I am withholding the informat y The time will soon come when ? name will be vindicated and, as ( eral Lee said of General Jackson, world will say of me, I stood Ilk ? stonewall submitting to the ignor and the insults heaped upon me." " > :' * y NETHERLANDS STEAMER SU e it Anchored Off Her Home Coasts jl Is Torpedoed, o London.?The Netherlands stea Katwyk, Baltimore for Rotterd was torpedoed while anchored se miles west of the Hinder Lightshl] rt>o W/irth Spa. I a The crdw of 23 was saved r taken to Flushing, according to r Renter dispatch. The dispatch qu< 6 the men as saying that as they ro D away they saw the periscope o 6 submarine, which quickly disappea The Katwyk sank 15 minutes a n the explosion. r* neuter's Amsterdam correspond l" says the Katwyk had been lying 6 anchor for 15 minutes when tor] * oed. The correspondent says a r sage from the Hook of Holland clares that all the ship's lights v burning at the time of the atti t Zeppelins Visit England, o London.?Two Zeppelin airsi o visited the east coast of Engli o dropping bombs on several towns o doing considerable damage to p d erty. As far as has been ascertaii a only one person, a woman, was in 8 ed. It is said she was only slig' hurt. Taft Speaks to Legislature. e Harrisburg.?William H. Taft y Pennsylvania legislators to cons( the people's money and not to spen before they know how much the s e has to spend. "The growing dar e in this country." Mr. Taft said, r" the waste of the people's money." a former president declared the i ernment should not go into bush - in competition with private enterpi * "The people's money should not 8 put into private business where l* vate enterprise can do the work ter," Mr. Taft said. Britain Apologizes to Chile. London.?Great Britain has off< ' a "full and ample apology" to y Chilean government for the sinl 5 March 14 in Chilean territorial wa of the German cruiser uresuen, internment of which already has li ' ordered by the maritime governoi '* Cumberland Bay wiien the Bri 5? squadron attacked and sank the ( Q man. This fact was made publir a White Paper giving the texts the Chilean note protesting against A sinking of the Dresden and the Bri reply. A GERMANS BAR THE !D ROAD TO HUNGARY iVE AUSTRI ANa GREATLY CHEERED I. BY NUMBER OF GERMAN REINFORCEMENTS. HA RUSSIAN PLANS PROLONGED |ton French Ar? Satisfied With Successes , in West Between Muae and Loraine Frontier. London.?Two gateways into Hunhad ?ary still remain barred, despite the ran" tremendous Russian hammering and as the Beskid Pass is the less importI,ant .... . ~ , ani or tne two strategically, a runner re" advance Into Hungary hangs on the possession of Uzok Pass, where the Invaders are meeting with stubborn ,r0 8 opposition. Several days ago the Rusas sians captured a position which gave them command of a road leading to ew" tho rear of Ussok Pass, but since 0 n' then the Teutonic Allies have checked ' the movement. The Importance of w the Carpathian operations Is lndicatcan ed by the half-hearted actions along the rest of the long eastern front. The people of the Dual Monarchy e" are said to be greatly cheered by the n" number of German reinforcements passing through Budapest on the way to the Carpathian front to take part in the operations, which are now be,?en lieved to be in charge of the German : ey General Staff. lays The whole situation in the East fVjn. pivots on Uzok Pass where the Aus? tro-German forces are In such great } ' strength that the efforts of the Russians to reach the Hungarian -Plains rmy are likely to be prolonged. op In the west the French apparently are satisfied with their recent sue ep cesses between the Meuse and the 1 Lorraine frontier and claim only to re" have come In contact with the GerLU8e man entanglements In this region. j)U?" Official German- reports assert that g. determined attacks by the French re8 . ports assert that determined attacks 6a by the French have been repulsed .. along this section. ca.. Probably no session of the British ,u Parliament since the opening of the * ' war has been awaited with keener interest than the sitting which will begin soon. . A "dry" England is not beyond the possibilities but the Government has | "IliniH****** ji II LIl_LLLmj_uj_ tlon may be expected. J#. -*r i GOVERNMENT BACKS OFFICIAL8. iave )ul<J Department of Justice Will Aid WilHams and McAdoo. Jon Washington. ? Developments indi' cated that the Government intends my _ , ^ to do its utmost to back up Secretary 'the McAdo? of the Treasury, and Comptroller of the Currency Williams in e. a the legal fight precipitated by the n y Riggs National Bank, complainant in equity proceedings to enjoin these officials from alleged attempts to drive NK. that institution out of business through systematic and long-continuShe ed persecution. Attorney General Gregory announcmer ed that the Department of Justice am, had employed Louis D. Brandeis ol ven Boston, to defend Messrs. Williams P in and McAdoo in the injunction pro' ceedings. He deolared his depart* and ment and the treasury were co-oper a ating in these proceedings. It beJtes came known also that Jesse C. Ad> wed kins, former Assistant Attorney Fenf a eral also had been retained in the red. case. , fter Prohibition m Florida. " 1 ^1'- TKo Intrnr V) AllftP lent rauanassee, VJltt-"*" X UC IV (TV* -w? ; at of the state legislature by a vote of ped- 55 to 14 passed a resolution calling nes- for submission to the voters at the de- general election of 1916 a constitutionrere al amendment for statewide prohibt ack. tlon. The amendment, if adopted, will become effective October 1, 1917. alps Governor Fielder Vetoes Bills. and, Trenton, N. J.?Governor Fielder and vetoed bills to amend seven-sister r0p- anti-trust laws. The Governor said aed, the amendments would take the teeth jur- out of the incorporation laws of the btly state that were put in by the sevensister measure. German Captain Would Fight told Newport News, Va. ? Lieut. Capt. ;rVe Thlerfelder, commander of the Ger1(j it man converted cruiser Kronprinz Wlltate helm, delivered to Collector of Custer toms Hamilton his formal request of ?is the Washington government for time to remain in this neutral port for l ne ? sov. temporary repairs to his ship. The reless Que8t was made In tw? letters, one .jge amplifying the other, which were forl,e warded to the secretary of the treasury prj. and their contents not divulged. It is bet. understood that the German commander asked for three weeks' time. Carranza Garrison Licks Villa. ;re(J Bronwsville. Texas.?In a sortie the Carranza garrison defending Matamoros inflicted a heavy blow upon the ters army besieging the town. General t])0 Saulo Navarre, second in command ippn c' the Villa troops, was brought to . of Brownsville dangerously wounded and tjj-jj ibe Carranza consulate here claimed jer. the Villa dead numbered 300. The jn sortie drew from the Villa forces of their long-promised shelling of Matathe moroe but the shelling stopped when tish the ^arraDza division returned to the trench. 1 STATE ITEMS OF INTEREST TO ALL 80UTH CAROLINA PEOPLk. The ne^ school building at Barnwell was formally opened and the children transferred a few days ago. The grounds at the Seaboard Air Line passenger and freight station ere being beautified with flowers and vines and will soon be a veritable flower garden. The Civic Improvement association is co-operating with the railroad. Oscar Plazioo will represent the University of South Carolina in the University of Pennsylvania relay carnival to he held on Friday and Saturday of this week in Philadelphia. This will be the first time that Carolina has been in this meet. The outlook for the opening of a tobacco warehouse at Mayesville this Beason is more encouraging and those in charge of warking up the necessary founds to secure the market here report that subscriptions are nearly enough for the rentfcl and advertising purposes. A meeting of the farmers and business men in ten counties of Qeorgla and a like number of South Carolina counties in the Augusta territory will be held at Augusta Saturday, May 15. Morning and afternoon sessions will be held and the discussion will be on the marketing and financing of food crops. Work was started on the new hydroelectric power plant at Fishing creek, Chester county. This plant will generate 30,000 horsepower. It is said that over 1,000 people will be given employment. The work will be pushed through as rapidly as possible, and it will be finished by September 1, 1916. Buyers from Jersey City and Baltimore purchased 337 head of South Carolina fed and bred cattle for approximtely $15,000. 100 head were bought at Greenwood and 65 head at Newberry. 172 head were bought at Rock Hill. The average price paid at Rock Hill was 4 1-2 to 6 3-4 cents per pound. The average price at Greenwood was 4 1-2 to 6 cents per pound. John Catlett Robbins, state executioner, who was shot near Pinewood in Clarendon county, by a negro, Joel Green, a fugitive from justice, whom he was pursuing, died at a hospital f?i Apliiwhlo Pman HimBfilf WAS shflt " a/iJlLTJ 'yutUU? after an all nJght search in a swamp near Pinewood. MARKET REPORT. Prices paid for cotton, cotton seed, corn, wheat, oats, peas, etc., on the different markets in South Carolina during the past week: Charleston?Cotton 914c; cotton seed, $25 ton; corn, 90c bu; oats, 65c bu; peas, |1.60 bu; butter, 25c lb; eggs, 19c doz. Belton?Cotton, 9%c; cotton seed, $20 ton; corn, $1 bu; wheat, $1.50 bu: oats, 75c bu; rye, $1 bu; peas, $1.70 bu; butter, 25c lb; eggs. 20c doz. Conway?Cotton, 8%c; corn, $1.15 bu; oats, 75c bu; peas, $2 bu; butter, 40c lb; eggs, 15c doz. Jone8vllle?Cotton. 914c; cotton s^d, $25 ton; corn, $1.10 bu; oats, 85c bu; peas, $2.25 bu; butter, 20c lb; eggs, 20c dozen, i Florence?Cotton, 8%c; cotton seed, $20 i ton; corn, $1 bu; oats, 70c bu; peas, $2 bu. I Fort Mill?Cotton, 914c; cotton seed, $16 , ton; corn, $1 bu; wheat, $1.25 bu; oats, 75c bu; rye, $1.25 bu; peas, $2 bu; butter, 20c lb; eggs. 20c doz. Union?Cotton, 914c; cotton seed, $26 ton; corn, 95c bu; wheat. $1.50 bu; oats, 70c bu; peas, $2.50 bu; butter, 20c lb; , eggs. 20c doz. Lancaster?Cotton. 9c; cotton seed, $19 ton; corn, $1.05 bu; wheat, $1.65 bu; ! oats, 75c; rye, $1.40 bu; peas, $2 bu; butter. 25c lb.; eggs, 20c doz. Wlnnsboro?Cotton, 914c; cotton seed, $20 ton; corn, $1 bu; oats. 75c bu; peas, $1.50 bu; butter, 25c lb; eggs, 20c doz. Camden?Cotton. 9c; cotton seed. $25 i ton; corn, $1.10 bu; oats. 80c bu; peas, $1.50 bu; butter, 30c lb; eggs. 18c doz. Greenville?Cotton, 914c; cotton seed, $20 ton; butter. 30c lb; eggs. 17c doz. Dillon?Cotton. 8%c; cotton seed. $20 ton; corn, $1.10 bu; wheat, $1.60 bu: oats, 80c bu; rye, $1.25 bu; peas. $2.75 bu; , butter, 30c lb; eggs. 20c doz. Chesterfield?Cotton. S\c; cotton seed, $25 ton; butter. 25c lb; eggs. 15c doz. " ?? Qiy.r.' ^nttnn seed. riaiii|;iun?uv/uvui ? /g*-, $30 ton; butter, 25c lb; eggs. 20c doz. Abbeville?Cotton. 9c; corn, $1.10 bu; oats, 70c bu; peas, $2 bu; butter, 25c lb; , eggs, 20c dozen. Manning?Cotton, 9c; cotton seed, $24 ton; corn, $1 bu; oats, 85c bu; peas, $2 bu; butter. 25c lb; eggs. 20c doz. Rock Hill?Cotton, 9%c; cotton seed, i $28 ton; butter. 25c lb; eggs. 15c doz. Anderson?Cotton. 9c; cotton seed. $25 ton; corn. $1 bu; wheat. $1.65 bu: oats, 73c bu; rye, $1.35 bu; peas. $-1.75 bu; butter. 25c lb; eggs. 20c doz. Edgefield?Cotton. 9Hc; cotton seed, $22 ton; corn, $1.10 bu; wheat, $2 bu; oats, 75c bu; rye. $1.50 bu; peas. $1.75 bu. Cheraw?Cotton. 894c; cotton seed, $25 ton: corn, $1.05 bu; oats. 75c bu; peas, , $2 bu; butter, 30c lb; eggs, 18c doz. Chester?Cotton, 9%c; cotton seed, $18 ton; corn. $1 bu; wheat. $1.50 bu; oats, 70c; rye, $1.40 bu; peas, $2 bu; butter, 25c bu; eggs, 20c dozen. St. Matthews?Cotton, 9c; cotton seed;. $30 ton; corn, $1 bu; oats. 70c bu; peas, $1.75 bu; butter, 35c lb; eggs, 15c bu. ' Easley?Butter, 20c lb; eggs, 20c doz. Gaffney?Corn, $1.10 bu; wheat. $1.35 bu; oats, 75c bu; peas, $2 bu; butter, 20c * lb; eggs, 20c doz. Darlington?Corn. $1 bu; wheat. $1.50 bu; oats. 75c bu; peas. $2 bu; rye. $1.50 bu; butter, 40c lb; eggs. 25c doz. Laurens?Corn. $1.05 bu; wheat. $1.40 bu; oats. 75c bu; peas, $2 bu; butter, 25c lb; eggs, 18c doz. SOUTH CAROLINA NEWS ITEMS. Beaufort has adopted the commls eion form of government. Spartanburg's annual music festival was an unparalleled success. Ninety per cent of the foundation of the Southern railway's new coal pier at Charleston is completed. Dr. Anna Howard Shaw delivered an address on Woman's Suffrage at Charleston recently. The parcel post terminal station at Columbia will be discontinued June 30. The poscofP.ce at Scranton was robbed of about $750 one night recently.