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•mmm Awsta m AVHtnX, »«ctlTer, »* Honor Will FaMMl Konlo. itMlort, •TkT SovMtnak, ua»«to. Nor. i.-rPh# f>clMdnlo l» St H^d Ho Might. lo romorod 'to *h* Xbvnday bfrfor* It No A U • «# tM«« • «| lo*T» No t, DUhT \ •w»pt «M4a» x OTT TJHE r. ■ . 4ngo*0» Arrir* I 4a . Ail«P*o*r ..... Lear* II OT Vtitl Iroro Kalrf** — Lotro tlsM i |#:M Arrtri Tomoaaoo....... looro l#i» Mill Lmto Yemmwoo Arrtro 10.-0S It 04 ArriT* ..... NMafort........Lnro fi» , U4I Arrir* .....Port ItoToI, Lm*« ViOO iIm Artlro < mrlotlon. C.* H. flr.Ioaro e ;IS 1*41 Arrtvo S»rmn»li C. <T *• Ky tn»r* *4* *4?' l»*ro H&cannaU, C.% B. fiJ.Awiw^l til »4» A«-J4dmm*W«, V. Hr Lr v jX krnMn ii lorfRoy^ Bmofort, W t barlrotoii, H C ., tud S.v*»oiuh. ti». via y«m- mgr ip t C <Si W l<|r. 7»tb MUIttDUJf TIUE. No. a P ly. N". • I'a'.y •xeoptMinUay. r*«*pt BuiidAy on pm 1.** Lwro Pori Moral 4rr*00 « ! 44 I.UImio ifaaulon Arrlrr €.39 . A^rYr|p«»aaa | i mr- ». M *.4jt *mT»rCh*iU i*, xl. * B» JUV lAAT*” |TB t.aa ArriTO.Mivanlwo,Ac H.lty l«ar« f O 1 H. H. WltlGHT. Gm. Pa*. -V^out., GEO J- PRY AS. T. P. A. _ ^' ■r'..,. __ *v •*:. . • ' ' < Port Roytl led Wislern Carolina R- R* Augusta and Asheville Short Line. <J. 1!, CLEVELAND.. Baoaiwy.) Scliodulu in effect ('ciotnr '.'Mil, IS'.H. Ena'ern Tlmo. tar eonraftMCa. . (At to Od«MM irhre oomglatod today. Tha MlnMter of War baa onlarad tha Ouanti at Honor at tha raiioai poteta <aloag th« rout* from ta‘gt. PMtorabort gad alao to placa H JHto fatlaraya fibnt nrW 1m atraagaoMBta 4>r OOVggB ...” THBBK OBN’PLVMnN At BK Od aranad. hit traraiaadr travftrt''tt*oa ordaio tha more moot at troop# bogaa hurt Might. It la floa aaM ttnrt Prtoaoaa ANz, tha batnNhod of ] Oar Nleholaa rrtH not laanra Rnaala after tha fnnoralt gba ntlt go to Moaoonr on a vfaU to bar Mater, Orand (Dnchaaa gorglmi. HIT H’lVM MIST NOT BROOME JBAAOW/ — Benaty Not Noooaaoryr, hot Soaalble- naan Ahaolotely RrqnlreA Tha naccaaa of a aong eau norer be fora* told wim any degree of certainty, and tha •*tirce*i of w aong writer, both In fcla in and nnancca. la the rate, with few THE ORAav* ABANZTSMTOl haa lasued the 40'Jo wing montfeato. 'Today I oeptiona. Oat of the great aaaa of aonga occurred the onnonnooinmt rf our bride In j written but few erer reach popularity, and accord»noe iwkh the Orthodox church to j the author* of theao aeldom recelT# an te comfort of onr .aelrea and the whole of I adequate compenaatlon. The exception# only Ruaala, our bride receiving the name of I emphanlae the role. Pofclleher* and alngera Aiexnndria Foodoeama, with tha tltt# of I more' often make money than do tha Orand Duchoe* and Imperial IPgb Given at LAvadla <34# Jlat day of October (aid atyle) 18W. flfat j««, of pur r.^i (Mgiiaff) TUB .CZAR'S MiARMTAO'K. Berlin, Now. 3.—The Ixtkal Analeger «aya tint the funeral at the Caaf Alasander III., win take place between the l#tb and 20tli of Nevemligr and that tthe marnage of wrtter* Few aong writer* are entirely original, . buJL depend much upon other*, both for j »tiggo*rion«, word* *nd mualc. The anc- ee«»ful onea, per*on* Who ire quick to *ea •nd appreciate any acena or event that | hold* the Idea of a aong. Thla fact gtvea rl*e to much Intereating history in connec tion with aong writing. After the Idea, the iworde, and the melody, comes the great Nldhotaa II., with Prloceaa ANx will take trouble of getting the popular approval that place a few deya after the funeral. It la 1 galna anceeaa for the composition. Her# expected many pf the :ed that amn< polftl^I offer accewEOn of amaeaty will be granted' to Offender* In comment oration Nichols* JT. POLITICAL SENSATION. 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Lv Aii|tnsu. !• :20 11 in ■ Lv tirrenv 0 JI... tt rift p 11 Ar Atnvn* • *••• • ■ • ■ 1 . i"3 )»111 Ar Atlanta 4 Hill |> III Ar Jdiintgomety 0 .20 p III , *r New Orlesn*. 1 7 :.A a in Hepnhllmii* KnHorae a Demoerallr Caadldatr for Chief Jwatlee. lUlelglt, N. C., Notv. 2.— ria, one of the anoat prominont UppmIi- llcan lawyer# In the State and who waa one of the most prominent forces ’n the organisation of the Republican tuf/ve- ment tn North CaroRna and the nutting out of a Republican Fopuliat fusion Ju dicial ticket agalnat the Regular Derno- cratic ticket headed by Chief Ji.*1 ice Shepherd will pnblleh a enrd In tomor row’s Raleigh New# and Obser’er atrdngly endoralng Chief Juallce Shep pard. He nayn: Ilea the rock on which many ambitious au thora are wracked, and which eowe paa* onlj^ to find empty honors. ^ “M’CIINTY'S” HHfPOWT. Poor “MrOlntv" came near going, down without any notice from the world, for Ita „ , reu »unnir«iM»u uu me .oam ■» ou»u- author Jo*epto Flynn, carried It about for Hung end cut the wire*, thiw preventlnv six months on an unsuccessful search for a publisher, Even after ha started to sing it fne pifbllriiers thought there wa* nothing In It. iFlnslly Flynn went to a small Brook lyn publisher, and prevailed on him to tske ths eompoaltlon. The result was to cstsb- >1 the publisher in a pood bnstnesa. and HWnty^ bsea mg ths sags. — Mr. Flynn 1* now singing on the New Turk stage and makes the heart* of com posers artie by parodying their finest pro- dnctlons. He Is a careful business man and ha* succeeded In saving quits a sum from Itoe result# of hi* labor. It popouar ran that haa b after a favorable is ‘'Unger Longer, Introduced by iKuaa**. a Con wed re cog* 1 TjOdy.” snag by sign young play of "About Town. - The \ aad the sod g was Us oaly reds la their fail flat, loa, than tbo per- other forma sot. y The pathetic song “Picture *4,” by Chas. B. Ward, Is now at the senlth of Its popu larity. The music was written by Ousale Dari*. The subject of "Picture H” wa# •aggeated td* Mr. Wltfl wtrile waiting ths rogtft*' gallery la Bostoa In company with a young lady whose father's picture wgs there. Another of Wf. Ward’e songs for Gnssie Davis ftirnlfhed the music a Bowery Boy.” Tals la one of the ‘‘coster” aonga, that shows the good sMo of the Bomrery Coy, If was w rlltva safer prea- for which lo “OaTy ■ore Iq. tiwanty-ftve minutes. The origin Of the mualc of tbf sung to de*th ‘Ta-ra-ra , Boom-do-ay” has been «brooded in mystery. Henry J. Sayers, who wrote, ths words, picked up the melody somewhere in ft. Louie. Some say It Is of Indian origin, but nothing certalp U known of Jt. (tb popular was the long that Mr. flmnJhUL,received aa high royalty a* a month.-New York Herald. COLD WEATHER COMMENCES. Another Nnvnl Engngement I* Re ported. London. Nov. 4.—A dispatch to The Times from Tien TWn saya I'eng-Huang has been hairned. The Chinese defence of the Moukden road has collapaed. Cold weattuv has commenced and snow ha* fallen In Manchuria. The .Tajiftnese cleverly landed at -IMtxwo while me king a demonstration off the coast of 8han- NO WAR YTUT. Of the many soega written <by Charles . Graham, none ever reached-the wldespreaH ‘‘Chief .Tnstics Sheppard is the peer p(Tp , l1lirlt y tlie •rphe Two Uttle Girl# _ _ rrf -any mao wh^ eMr...fliJflp.l:bt.t..4f?t ln RIm*”. pie catchy melody became i. grtl . N ov . Temps says: “The on thb Supreme Court bench find is etl- t tagWn*. and the patnoalfPlSe~Hnes soon tlmf tlie goveHmnent ha* de-‘ cide<l to aak mill:# for a Madagascar ex Ofaaa connection at Greenwood for all poinfa on 8. A. X. and C7 and G. Rail way, and at Spartanburg with Southern Railway. For any information rela uva to ticksta. rates, achedulsa, etc., addreaa, R. L. TODD. Travelling Pas*. Agt.. TV Broad street. W. J. CRAIG. Oen. Paee. Aft. aiilJi L Awtnata, Ga. Supreme tirely devoted to the perfor since of the I found a flrm lodgment in the mind of the high duties pertaining to f.e 'highest public. • Judicial station of the State and in the «• "*** *** ’* d .posing «ff the duties is totaBy h nd to ^ ^ th(i of Mr „ * the fact that he is. n* chief jnsllte, a mark of appreciation of what the eompo- creature of nny political par*,v wortt b)l( j for 0,*^, aT1< i f r<>m , This card coming from the recognised I deeire to help the poor author, who was head of the fuaion movement iu “North | sadly In need of money. tbo news of their position reaching the Chinese. From Shanghai The Times hears Id Hung Chang will go to com mand the firet army. Lit Tal, Viceroy of .Nankin, will become Viceroy of Tien Tvin and Viceroy of Yuchang will buc- eeed him in Nankin. Huyoff, the judge uf Kuang Si and CV>1. Von Hanneker haw bi-on ordered 1 to enlist a new army on German lines ns a nucleus of the grand army of. China . The Time* prints also a dispatch from Tokio saying that Gen. Oyama n^xu-ts an Important naval l»at- tle on November 8. No details of the battle have been received. Carolina on the very eve of the election will doubtless create a political sensa tion throughout the State. JAPS TAKE PORT AHTHI R PATRIOTIC OOP. Hit* * Hrftlilcuee n HeprodnotLinMuf. WaablDwton'* nt Mt. A'ermon. Chicago, IK*., Nov. 2.—The Virginia State building at the World's Fair which wna a reproduction of George Washing ton’* Mount Vernon Mansion has been purchased and Is now occupied ns a re sidence by a Chicago policeman. W T . S. IfaChiUw, The house wGidi coMt 817,00 wise lioujdit by MrtJirire for 8400 ami moved to a lot on Stoney Island avenue, three miliw away, and now n Chicago police man nleei>s in the reproduction of the bedehember of the father of his country. T1»e officer Intend* to fnntlMi t«« pla.'e with furniture modeled after that of the Mount Vernon manarion. BIKE RBX'GRDS tOWERttO. ChtiKcothe, O.. Nov. 2.-TUla afteruoon John 8. Johnaoa aiuaahed the one-third and one-half racoyda at the Kite track John- non reduced the record for one-third of a mile from St 1-6 seconds to 33 2-5 second*, lowering the record one and four fifths *ec- ond*. He also cut the half mile from 52 1-6 To NT J-5 aeeoTWt*. doweetug the r**or4 fonr- fifth* of a second. Both the above record* were made by Harry Tyler, ftttantlon In the Orient I,o*ik* Raid for the Chinese.' Tx>ndon. Nov 2.—The .T w>«ne*o Icgn- flon has till* disnatcli datiwl at Tokio tndav: The fist and second command of Mamba] Yamnenta have taken pos- wvHion of Fang Chen and defeated the Olilnewe who are flying toward Natfien- T/ing. The second nrmv under Marshal Ovamn i* attacking Kiuehow. Roth ■Tnlien-Wen ami Fqrt Arthur are In a critical cweHtlon. London. Nor. 2.—The Central News says: The capture of Fang Chene h'dves the road to Moukden clear for the Japanese. jMnrsflinl Ynmagafa ia expected to be wkthitt striking dlwtanee of Monk'dew. on November 10. It la lielieved that the city 1* held by Hi very large Imt untraliiol bond and a poorly ertiitf>ped force. Shanghai. NoV. 2.—The native jiniu'rs .tonoiinee ftjkt the Chinese tronps* bhve After heavY teRAHlAaCS FIRST S1TCGBSS. Mr. Graham’s first successful song wa* -If the Wstevs Could Speak aa They Flow.” Tola wa* written wnen oe was with the Old California Quartette, and. as has been hi* fortnne. brought him little more.than fame. Thla was followed by ‘The Picture Turned AgalMt the Wall.” For thla be received 1000, and felt well paid, though the song was worth a fortnne. for Its *no- cees has eatijbllahed and been the ■making of two tlrms of publisher* Mr. Graham la about tTTtrty-ldx rear* «d, live* In Brook lyn and la still doing eong work. One of the besL.a11 around song writer# In the bnatntbs le Gaaste L,. Davla, and yet he has nothing fb Show for the good work he has done. Many of hi* sotttaa that have reached great popularity have been bonght for a few dollars, and while pub lisher* and singers have made money out of them. 4# ha* been nearly"forgotten. Mr. Davla t* a colored man. and is now with a mlnatrel tronpe. He Is « ready and versatile composer. Hla song# range from touching pathos to ridiculous humor. He wrote "The Fatal Wedding:” Light house by the Bea” and "Father of the Lit tle Black Coon." On* of hi# latest, which is now heard on hundreds of stages, le the refslraa PstiKen Oban* flighting. The Japanese are said ^ { cttrMfifTy tdurtilng *oag of “Ptetur* ■>«»” have hi'en driven ont of that p<ace with | t bl , nmelo of which he wrote for Mr. Charles B. Ward. He also wrote "Get On Yoor flneft Shoe*. Children.’' a catchy Ethiopian melodF. Mr. Davla haa the pecnllar faculty of using able at a moment’awtotlce to turn words and mualc iron* a title that'la ated to Mm. In this way he ha* wrlt- ten many of nJa popdlW aonf*. “ * PRY GOODS. New York, Nor. 2.—For current went* tbere we* an irregular demand for dry goods by spot purrtiaeens and a’rto by mail orders, but quantities were ns rafleble as the falq-kw required. For aprtng there was some advance bual- ireew done In printed- snecUIHes, xjresa goods, gingbmms. cotton dree* goods, donetts and cottonades. The printing cloth market was fairly eefive with ml eg for the week of over SOO.Offfl p(eel's at 2 11-10 cent* for (M square*. NOT ENOUGH SAIT/ORS. "Washington. D. 0., Nov. 2.—The Navy Department has countermanded the or der sent to the Mare Island navy yard a few days ago to put the Maine in commission. The vesael is in aervlcahle condition but oyflng to the Insufficient number of men in our navy, it wUl be necessary to let the «hip lie idle in order that her crew may be placed aboard the new armored .reiser Olympia, winch will l>e ('otnniissfoued • Immediately. 11 !•*» of 8.000 men. cci. rii RKPrftLICAN PLOT FOILED. Rnllot Box Keys In ronKressmnn Wilson’s Dlstrlet Were Stolen. tTiimhefTanS: " Mil". Nor. afterppon when eounty clerk. Foyd J. Trip let. of Randolph county, "VY. Va.. waa pre paring the ballot boxes for distribution la his county he dlsgovered that the key# to all the boxes had boon stolen from hla de*k where they have been kept elnee the last election The ballot boxes are not dt*tr!bn- fed nn(ll the day preceding the election, and had pot Mr Triolet discovered the loss nt the key* until that day it would have been too late to replace them and the vote of Rondo!oh county, which 1* a Democratic stronghold, would have been toat. A* the RICH COAL MINES. Marshall. M<*.. Nov. 4.—The immense coal mine*. 0 miles south of this city, have been tested and ‘he new owners nay that coal can be blasted and placed on the dump a* low as 25 cents a ton. The sup ply seems to be inexhaustible. An elec- trir lini* is ‘o In' hiiLlt (rum this the mines. r "MY PEARL. TH^ BOWIBRY GIRL” The popularity of the "Coater" eong. which is a new thin* In America, called for “Pearl, the Bowery Girl," and It la one of the great eucceseee of the day. It wa* writ ten by Andrew Mack and William Jerome, and sprang Into popularity In a night. Tt Is no* snng In a thousand theatres. For tunately the a a thora receive a royalty from It. _ ‘'Pearl” wa* put on at the Imperial In concert for on# nl»ht. bnt was received County la expected to give Mr Wilson not aacb « n thusla«n that Mr. Ward sang 4w._ eoo b.„. l for WMk# . I«« than fwvi n-ator'ty he would have been defeated had not flic loa* of the key* been dlacovered In time. ’ JAIL FOR AN 'ABDUCTOR, a thnrlen AVIlson Curried a Child From PhllMdelithls lo New York. Philadelphia. Pa., Nov. 2.--Char’s# A. Wilson was today sentenced by Judge Reed to ten years JmprDo-immt i<tr the abduction of Mamie Kies, aged seven years. Wilson a few weeks ago look the BURIAL OF MERCTER. Montreal. Quebec. Nov. 2.—The re ntal na of the late ex Premier Honore Morcior were hurtl'd today. Business was generally suspended. Prominent Libera’s, headed by the leader of op position in the Dominion Parliament Hon. Wilfred Laurter, walked in the procession. ■Mr, Jerome also wrote the comic song "He Never Came Back." On tbl* he get* a royalty, but a amall one. a* moat of snob prodnetfeifs go to-the Mage, and not to the numerous home*. "McGinty" wa* aa excep tion to this for It went everywhere. John F. Kelly’* ftrst great success was ‘Tommy Dobklne.” which wa* written for the late Harry Kernall. It la a Lancashire aong and dance, and Mr. Kelly felt that Kernall wonld make a hit In It: but the modest Harry lacked confidence and had to be nrged. ©ven when the stage was waiting for him be had To be pushed on. .... . _ . . , . Success esme with the flrst line snd the child to New York snd kept her Here aln ^ r K reputation that will ’ons a week. Upon reading in a nev-epaper t*» remembered. This aon» gave him a char, the annauncement that $500 reward wa# | acter ao dhrtlnctlre that tt ta Imitated to LOST AT SEA. 1' Portland. Oregon: Nov. 2,- -The ship Fannie Du'.ard has arrived at Port Blakely, bringing news that the Ivan ho-, which has been overdue for over a month, sunk wlrii all on board Si'p- tember t8th. offered for his capture he returned with the child and placed her rtn a street ear. ItlYlng the condiietor her parents’ address with the request that he leave her off there. Wilson was arrested the same day. MTRDKREt) HIM MOTHER. this day. Mr. Krtly also wrote ."The Girl I Left Behind Me." It waa written for ChaWicey Olcott. and the author got hie Idea from a situation la one of Air. Olcotfa rdava. When the Vbrda and mualc were submit ted to hla patrons they Were relene- and got no recognition nntH Raymond Moorf saw them. He made the aong popular. Mr Kelly haa merer made much money ont oT An Insnne Son Kill* Ills Mother <<»<1 I b ls «(mg work, though he receive# * small GEORGIANS TN COLUMBIA. Columbia. 8. C.. Nov. 2—(Special.)— The Georgia varsity footliall team. Cant. Hutler. arrived thin afternoon and will play the South Carolina college team tomorrow afternoon. This ia the first meeting of the teams. It seems that Memphis rauel have an A valets the. When the paper of that name was con soil do ted with The Appeal R became The Appeal-Avaknnehe. but when The CotnmeroSnl bought the latter It dropped The Avalahehe from the title. Now a riyal paper has h«>n started with the name of Avalnneho, and The Com mercial has carried the ea«c into court. If Memphis must have such th absurd name for a paper, why not try Tornado Cataract RarCiouake or LandoRde? LARGEST COTTON CARGO *New Orleans. Ta.. Nor. 2—The Hrit- wh.«teamsh!p Montexunva; "Captain Tay lor. cleared today for Liverpool by Elder Dempster & Co., had a cargo of 14,808 bales of eCtton. 32.000 bushels of wheat and other freight. This i* the large** eargo,of cotton ever carried from this or any other port. KILLED IN ,A FIST FIGHT. Richmond. .Va.. Nor. 2.—Maurice F. Ritter, a contractor, and Paul Grant, both white, got into a political diocua- sion on the street this afternoon which ended In Ritter striking Grant two blows la the face with hi* fist. Grant sank hr ^ —-'and died Ia a few vintoi. tj^linols His father. Buffalo. N. Y. Nor. 2 -WHlIani Olpp*. a car Inapector for the Lehigh Valley road, went home abont 1 o’clock thla morning. Hla old mother let him In and when the doftr opened he Shot and killed her In stantly. His father came down ataJrs and the son shot and probably fats’ly wounded Win. / ' Tlie eliots brought bis two brothers. Who tried to capture the murderer, but he es caped. This evening he waa found In a barn and captured, with much difficulty, when he was found to.be a raving maniac The only canse for h!a sudden Innacy that <\m be suggested isthat GIppa was engaged to maryy g girl whom his parents disliked P08T0FFTCB ROBBED. Perth Amboy, N. J.. Nov. 2.—The post office safe was blown open last night and $1,700 worth of stamps and royalty. RAYMOND MOOR&rs ‘•SWUET MARIE." Raymond Moore, who wrote “Sweet Marie." la one of the few successful com poser*. He la a good me-Ager and taring, and he ha* the faculty of recognising merit when be sees it. He has likely realised more from hla work Chan any one now ting ing on the New York Staar- Mr. Moore’s first composition waa 'The tiOre I Lost When a Boy." The sentiment la said to have grown ont of his own ex perience. This song has been published only two weeks: for. though the author Is an excellent Judge of the work of others he Is slow In accepting hfa own compos'- tlon*. The great success of "flweet Marie” has gtwu bhn confldene*. Many ot his production#, since published -were written before that, his most popular eompoaltlon. It Is said that Mr. Moore haa made 112.000 out of “flweet Maris’ a* his royalty la larger than that on any aong ever p»b .Shed. His latest eong I* "Dear Loatae" pedltion are altogether incorrect or pre mature. The government will await an other deapa'eh from I^e Minister de ViKers before taking the definite step for only then can It be known whether or not s rupture has-taken placa.” SAND BAR FERRY. A BOMB EXPLODED.' It Wa* Aa**- Intended for * Anarchist. Ixmdon. Nov. 5.—A bomb was ex ploded at midnight in front of No. 1 TUney street, corner of Park Lane, west London. Reginald Brett, son of I,ord Esher, five# in the house at this number. The door*, were xbxttered and the win dow's were blown to powder. The win dow’s for aome distance on the street wero wnashed, planter was loosened from the ceiling* and- the occupants fled l>anic-strieken to the street. Nobody was wounded. The neighborhood i« a fash ionable one. At No. 5 Is the house of Justice Hawkins, who fixed the law* against the anarchists and more recently condemned Stranas' Ppieti au4-Glnseppe Famaro. alia* BnHfe Carnot. It Is sur mised that the bomb was set by anar- obiste who mistook Brett’s house for (hat of Justice Hawkins. X:i8hvU>, TenD.,.N(>y. 4.—At 1 o’clock this morning fire destroyed the South Nashville cor shed* of the Nashville Elec tric RaiVny Co., containing electric car*. tvToty old mule ears, two building* and the machine shops of the Central Ten- hdS*W College, valued at $20,600. Total los* to the electric company and other*.- $50,000; all supposed to be insured. LIS8ALR WITHDRAWS. New York, Nov.. 3.—Mr. B. Franklin Idassur, the anti-Tammany candidate for Oongreas in (he 16th district, with drew from the race today. In a letter to Edward Regan, chairmen of the rori- vention which nominated him. Mr. Lle- Paur said that he withdrew on the ground of bki party as he did not want to be the means of splitting the Democratic party. • . LIGHT STATION DAMAGED. Wasbrngton, Nov. 3.—Notice is given by the light house board that Cane Sin Bias light station, Gulf cooot of Florida, ebs liadly damaged in the gale Oct. 7 and i) during which the light was dis continued, but has oiuee been exhibited aa usual. The cape, has been washed away so that the tower now s’ands in the water. The keeper's dwelling was completely wrecked and the other washed away. TRAGIC FATE OF TWO ► • y'-S"' --f-- —.^Uifl|p CHARLBFTONIANfl. DUEL BETWEEN HAMPDElf W1G- - FALL AND YOUNG COG8DALV- A Mntbnr'a Fateful Jnnrnsy From The Field of Honor The Charleston News of Sunday contained the following special story from Edgefield, of a ditel fought at Sand Bfir Ferry year# ago which 1* Intereet- Injf reading affd may be recalled by aohie gf The ftlSSTflttgrar “Mr, Jame* T. Bacon’#, lecture on “Anecdotes and Reminiscence* of Early Edgefield.’’ delivered in the Opera Houee here a f^w days ago, w«* a masterpiece of pat ho* and hnmor. wit and merriment,. Incident and accident, romance and hio- tory. "Among many other# ha told the “following pathetic story of a once famous duel. *0 ilinatrative of old-time Southern chivalry, and the consequent leath blojn to a mother’s heart. It ia reproduced in hlofown simple and eloquent words: In the year 1828 there waa, in the Sonth Carolina College a beautiful, brave noble gentle youth from Edgefield, of barelv 18 yen re. His name waa Hamp den WigfaJl. The Wigfall family hm* then lived in Edeefield only four years. They were rich Huguenot people of the Parish of St. Thomas and St. Dennis, tn Cha Heaton' dis'riet, where they bnfft nn Episcopal church of brick, which ia still standing, and around which they ar« buried. In 1820 old Durand Wigfall bought a summer home in Edgefield, where he died in 1825. HI# widow, a gentle, shrinking and devotedly pious woman, wa-s left with three eons and om* danghtor. Hampden b{;ing the eldeet. This' lady wna the paternal grandmother of nry stater. ~ At eoUeire a ra«underatanding arose be tween Hampden IVIgfall anil h>s Inti mate '.-ieud, young Cogodale. of Charles-, ton. anther very nob’.e young man. only 10 year# of age. The m'eunderstandin* turned out to be absolutely triyjfl, but, the lie hnd been passed and in those’dlay* , of ^xtremely strained chivalry and honor no peenneilinfon could be effeefed. The- code .duello reigned.in. ita. most ab- soJnto and jBtile«w nowor. The man who was ehaKenged to fight a duel and ev^p waYered one eecond in accenting tt vns forever socially damned, branded, os- traeired forever and ever. Young Wig- fall challenged young Co«r«dsle to meet him in mortal combat. The bov of 18 challenged the hoy of 10, “whom he loved jind who loved him. Thev met with all the fi’innlHee—the seconds, the doctors, and the Inevitable negro nt'erdant—at Sand Bar Ferre, near Augusta, before that and since, the most pnh'd duelling ground in America. Mr*. Wigfall, the widowed mother, and my old grandmother, who had also been a widow for two yon re. went to Angueto in Mrs Wigfrtll’s carriage to b<* near the scene and nwnit “be result. The mother was more dead than alive and bordered The duel v*s to. take place *at sun down of a summer day. At 5 o’clock in the afternoon, haring aent their eai^ riaee on before to orevent suspicion, my grnndmo*ber and Mrs. Wigfall crept ont of Gen. Glaoeook’e house In Augusta, trrrelled down the South Carolina shore of the river on foot, and tod themse’res in a thick wood not two lfnnde*d yjrttb- from the scene of the duel. Thry could bear the sound* bn*- could see nothing The carriage hnd been driven hr tnv grandmother’s old coachman. “Uncle Watt,” and bv his side, on the loftr old- fashioned dickey sent, ant Matilda, the negro waiting maid. The carriage eonld not outer the wood.^so It waited on the outskirts, one Hundred yards off. Hamnden Wigfall fell at the first fire, killed instantly. The mother ruehed frantically to the scene. The accords wcTe lerriWy anrnrieed. Sneh a thing waa nnhenrd ef ns n woman near a dud. .And when the mother threw herself upon the body of her child she threw herself also upon the bodv of hie nnhanpy slayer, for young Cogsdale. breaking nv«y from his second*, had ru*hed to the body, thrown himself pros trate upon the eart hy it. wound hi* arms around it snd DO ROT RECEIVE UNESCORTED LADIES AFTER DARH—WHAT TI MANAGERS SAT ABOUT ST. A Few Dlfflc-altlc* at the Ral* 0*4 San* Serloa* OReace*. Mortifying experience for ladies la to be refnaed admission to a cafe, but It t* one which la endured every day In learning the rule* that govern the first class New York restaurants. AH of the" irtlcpisriy thorn tsr* ftwr are oix-n very neighborhood of the theatre#, have a nrte not to adnfit unescorted women after dark. There la nearly always an effort made to enforce this rule in a quiet way that avoids offence, though manager* sometime* unfortunately overstep the bound* of politeness. In consequence of conrpJalnte against •ome of the working* of this rggu!«tkm & tour wa* made among the restaurants’ and the views of the proprietors obtained. “We do not admit ladles unaccom panied by gentlemen after 6 o’clock In mrmmer or after dark ht winter.” said the manager of Dehnonlco’e. “The rule 1* absolutely -neceaenry for the preserva tion of the respectability of the place. We seldom have annoyance from dis reputable women, for they know the regulation. Of course, it V< not pleasant to tell ladies, who come in In the eyen^ 1 —^ kOro -eteee Gu— that we cannot serve them, but the wWpn bp ,„ P a to write book-re- truer ladles they are the better they un derstand the reason for our action. Every Indy understmds that snch a regu lation ia really for hfV protection, for If she come* alone in the day time, or with a gentleman In the evening, she realises that our strictness has firoTlded her with respectable surroundings. As we close about 1 oV.o-'k In the morning we avoid many of the annoyances to which some of the later restaurants are ret-w -y- . A $1,000,600 MILL SAVED. Portland. Ore.. Nov. 4.—This city was threatenflT with another deatmetive fiiv this afternoon by the burning of the engine house of WlJamatt steam mills, known os Wo Idler's mills, the largest In the Hty. and valued at It.000.000. An hour’s hard work by the fire department brought the flames under control with the destruction of the engine house; loss $75,000; insurance $25,000. FIRE IN HARTFORD. Hartford, Conn., Nov. 4.—Fire to night burned the building 428 Main street, the ground floor of which waa occupied by the Neal, Goff A Ingllsa Co., house furnishings, and the upper floor* by O. H. Mayer, as a boarding house. Ute occupants oUthe boarding house esoapsl with diflknilty. Lose $50,000; fully Insured. _ . THE AWNING FELL. 4erred. Texas, Now. 8.—The most 41#- a*trooe accident la the htetory of Terrel occurred here wt 10:90 o’clock 04a mora ine as the result at the ooTepoe ot an own ing crowded with people to •witness a dr-, cos parade. Four person* were fatally crashed tad one handled other* more or lew seriously Injured. $400 in money was stcflen. The safe Mo#n to piece*. The robbers made | ^ ‘I’t*yet haa a'reputatlon to make good their escape. Twenty dollaoa was all that Hattie flt*r received fordier beautifnl song. "Somebody Love* Me.” It la one of the be*t selling composition* on the market, snd Is making money for the publisher*. The song la so popular that It 1* one ttfat audience* Join )n after one* hearing It. Mist.Star has left the stage, and now devote*, herself to mu sic compositions •Henry - Deoxer, an Englishman, wrote - —» _ r_ _ :- his “Dafsv Bell” In this country, and after tr"iwfeiTed^ ™ ^ ** It wa* published he bad the morflflcatlon WRECK IN T/WI8IANA. Houeton. Texas. Nov. 2.—The South ern Pacific train No. 18. wa* wrecked near Lake Charles. La. A Jtory large cy pres# tree hnd Mown across the trestle, the engine struclplt and was derailed to gether vffith the baggage and mail car. The fireman wa# iwalded. but no other KILLED TN A STORM. Navaaota. Tex., Nov. ,3.—Last night during a atomi « white woman named StribHng was killed and two children hadly hurt hy the house on M*Alpin*a farm being Wqwn down. of seeing It lay on the ahelf for nine montM. No one noticed It. When he went home he Introdnced It la London, and It waa a pal pable hit. London sncee*# make* It a *ue- eeea hi America, aad it caone back to be on* of the most popalar son** of the day. Mr. Decker wae fortunate In hla pdhllsher. aad recdlvea a fair remoaeratloa from hla ' 11*5- A SCAMP HONORED. Covington, G., Nov. 8.—(Spedal.V—On October SMHh, 1894. the Board of Trus tees of Rutger’s College. New Jersey, unanimously conferred upon Prof. H. A. Scamp, late of Emory College, the hon orary degree of Doctor of Laws (L. L. D.) Thin ia a very rich college, 100 years old or more, and number* among ita graduates such men aa Rev. Dr. Tai nt edge, Hon. Theodore Frelinghuyun, others of dietingtiiahed name and char- sot eh, and it ia a high power worthily bestowed upon Professor Scamp. WAR DECLARED. Pari*, Nov. 3.—A cabinet council was held at the Palace of Elysee today at which it was decided to submit to the chamber of deputies resolution* di"clov ing war agalnat Madagascar, and de mantling creit* to carry it ont. Ihe Moon (to the sun): Can't yon stay ont with me for a while tortgibt? The Son: I’d Oke te very mneb, hat really I mast decRha—Sonth Boston News /, , ,-•>! . .V' ■ j; subjected-* AFTER THEATRE HOUR* — - The husieet hour of the day *t many of the larre re*tanrants.~1V)th shove and below Herald square, is Immediately after the theatre* close, and then le the time that the rule of excluding imescort- -ed women ha* to be mosT freqnently en forced. Often Indies who have attended some place of amitvement to small croup* without a gentleman, will go to some of th^se restaurants for refreshment?, and have to he told that they cannot be served. Thi* Is paftlcnlariv true with retmrd to etraueer* In- the city, and they are the ones who are most annoyed by the rule. “We have no rule against serving Indie* who come alone at nieht.” said the head wnifer at the Normandie. “We use our judeme-nf ns to who are proper ueraons to admit, and as we are very oartieulnr we hnve no trouble A great leal of our businees 1* with onr resrular natrons, who are all well known. Tt I* an easr matter to teH whether or not a truest at ynnr table Is a lady. After the theatre people are served we dose our restaurant, and have nothing to do with the late neonle who nre on the street afterward. We hare a rnle not to yietve llqnor to a woman who come* in her? alone, and we enforce It. Ifm* woman 1* accompanied bv a mitleman <*he gets what she asks for. for her es cort relieves ns of all resnonelhllitr.” The Marlborouxh. like the Normandie, has no rule cxrindlng nnaccomijnnled women, but the head waiter uses his judmuent as to the admission of gneets. “We admit no unescorted ladies to the restaurant after 5 o’clock.” mid the manatrer at the Metropole. “We have to be particular for the protection of onr vnesta and the maintenance of onr repu tation. If women are a com os n fed bv sren- tlemen we receive them, if they are well behaved. If all is not right, we hold the man reapoolbie.” TWO GLASSES OF LIQUOR. “Ledie* without gentlemen are not *d-m< fted after Q o'clock," - *a*d Mr O'Ni«11. proprietor of the restaurant that bears his name. “This is a necessary rule. Outside of the danger of receiving imdeefrahle characfefs. no manager wants the responsibility of having ladim under,his care after night. for if there *# fainting of other sickness, he must perform the duties that should devolve a tittle child, and in tones of unutterable » male es^o I :~It U nl^i onr rule — — not to serve liquor to ladies who come alone, and if under escort we never give them more than two glasses of liquor.” “We have mx trouble.” said the head waiter at the Oriental. “We have no rule or exclusion, and as we close after our theatre patrons have gone we don’t come in contact with the late people. It is often better to use gobd Judgment In individual cases than to make strict rules that lead you Into trouble.” “Wo find rule* regarding the admis sion of ladles, who are alone absolutely necessary,” said the manager at Rouke’s. “As we keep open nntll 3 In the morning and deeire only respectable trade, we enforce the rnle of not admitting ladies unaccompanied by gentlemen after 9 o’clock.” “At Stanley's oyster rooms,” Mr. Stanley said, “we don’t sefve women At all after 2 o’clock. A gentleman being with them- makes no difference. We only want gentlemen after that hour, and the presence of a lady ia a restraint on them, for they usually want to fc%e a good time in an easy way. We keep open until 4 or 5 In the morning.” The investigation made shows that nearly all the restaurants, including those attached to hotels, do not serve hdies unaecompanied by gentlemen after hours that vary"from 5 to 9 o’clock; but all, excepting Shanley’s, receive ladies with gentlemen during the hours that their doors are open.”—New York Herald. anguish. “Oh. Hamrnie. Hamnre Ham mie!" as if trying to awake the dead boy. My grandmo'TietJifls often told me that the cry of the slayer was ten thou sand times more heartrending than even the cry of the mother. And then fol lowed a scene of Ohri*iian fortitude and Christians pirit perhaps unexampled In all history. The hitherto u'id mother calmly unwound the arms of young Cogsdale. and lifting him up, kissed him tenderly on the forehead and said, with com mingled pity and fervor: “God he with you. my child; God be with you! Yon will need him more than I will, for 1 Vll soon be with Him, T will soon he with my God and my child.” And as the seconds led the weeping hoy away she cried ont to him, wringing her hands, “God he with you. my child. In Heaven Hammie aifd I will pray for you.” It wae now quite nightfall and the twiKght. lingered upon the saddest picture that wa* ever seen op sea or shore. • ‘ In the meantime the wretched wother had overheard the words. "We must wait for the coroner.” Creeping op to my grandmother she atiiapered in tones of terrible agony. “No coroner mu*»t touch the body of my child.” and then, with whnt was seen afterwards to be a wo man's and a mother’s cunning, she went twenty paces, whither the seconds, the doctors. Gen. Glascock and Jhe negroes hnd all withdrawn to tenve her somewhat alone with her dead, and begged them all to retire for one hour to the ferry, a halt mile awav. that she might pray beside the body of her child. Knowing her to" he a woman of deepest and purest piety they quickly departed, every one of them, to the ferry. As soon a* they were fairly out of sight, although a frail and slender wo man. she lifted the body of her dead hoy in her arms and bore if without shaking or staggering or resting a moment to the carriage at the skirt of the wood. _ The carriage wais a;i immense old-fnehioned ronnd-bodied coach. My grandmother and Matilda followed her elospjy. pressing up in fact tn her very shoulders to catch her. If she should fall. But she did not waver a moment, and as the carriage came in view, she ran vigorously to ward it This was a mother hearing her dead, child away from wlhflt she consid ered the profaning touch of the coroner. Delivering tie dead body into the arms of Matilda and the coachman she en tered the carriage and seated herself in a corner of the hack seat; my grandmother followed her and took the oblique front corner. Then Uncle Watt and Matilda lifted In the dead body. .The mother re ceived the bend upon her bosom, while the legs rested upon, my grandmother’* hip. and through the fifteen miles home in the warm, black summer night, thus thev travelled. Horae ivas reached at miflnlght. and the bereaved mother laid herself upon her lied with her dead boy on hbr bosom. • On the morrow the coroner did oomnly with the legal formalities, bnt the mothflr never knew it. She buried her boy, standing at his grave without uttering a cry, and then she went back to her bed only to leave it «« «he had said, on the fgtal field, to go home to her God and her boy. Young Cogsdale, 19 years of age, left college and left the State. In hla, 30th year, unmarried, with enow^white hair, he died in Newark. K Z. never, If is Mid. havirig smiled since the hour ot the duel.. David B. Hill says the oebple of New* York regard Chauncey Depriw’e cam paigning tour In a palace ear aa a huge Thai iaVy 'The lit H* oMgnoa epos pea to papir. he talked the I the editor .at the raetanlae. J for It* pnb'Jeatloa. He MM write better tt he knew Just srhet hi* aa- dlence waf t* be. Die rtory hoa keen de scribed to me by on* who haa read It a* "a Ml-blooded rnaagtlo tragedy.” The scene J* laid ia Italy, aad «h# character* ^ are American aad Italian. Whea MY. Craw ford sailed, he took the proof akeet# of th* novel with Mm. to gift them tb* lart tondhe*. Mr. CrawYoOd ta a 'luoat Indefattgatola : ■ th* worker. HT rftrange part rtf tt 1* that the quality «f his work «nffen« nothing from It* qwsntl- ♦y. When be write* at alb he write* con stantly. Very few people knew that he waa ia New York for ewer*] month* iart winter. <He k*pt out of aadetr. and bnried htmsrif amonai hi* •m»nu*erfrit». I d»- covered him by the merest accident. 1 have a *0*4 of mania iflor Cooking oyer new hnlldCng*. end one day T r*n wrwtatr* fn the iMscmllian place Ip Fifth avenne. to *** what the Me rooms wp there looked H»e. t enonoeed that the uwoer portion wa* unoccupied »* vet. end. eeetne a door lesdtng to the frortt office. I owned tt and rnslked tq.. Imagine, my enroriae to find U fitted m> a* a (literary worfcehop, and my greater ennptloe when a tail form arose ‘rom a eh*1r. T w*» tort about to retire with apologies, when I reeogifxed Marlon early d*y* - T - - . rlnw* end nortnr fnr,.'I%$ .Critfc-before “Mr. l«**n” wa* written. -Gf course, we talked over old time* and were very gl*d. 4u ope each n#her again—at least 1 em sure that I wa* *tod to see hipt. "nd he seemed to trS glad to roe me. In that big front rowm. af an encroon* table fitted ont with oen*. Ink. paper and ctmrotte*. he wrote tbo foot noyeta I bare mentioned. •! wond- nr if eh® tab.’® P n»-Hh , >v* to do wfth the InnTfpattnBriiwhftihffr f* h « <l plot* In It* -woodwork or * nT seietrnnc of writing them ont wtthont the *ld r«f hand**? I wond®r wh®th®r anv other n-wellrt. If Mr. Brett ehonld lock him nn to th*t room, stone with tMt teHle. could do erf much and a* well?—Lounger tn The Gittto FIRE IN JFRISCO. ...... , B-h Frnnclroo. Cel.. Nov. 4.—F : re •farted tbl* mnrnlng in tb» re<""* of the twn-etnrv brtoh etnjetore No*. to J3fl P ! ne *treet. the groood fleo" of wblohj w®a occnniwl bv Goldberg. Tebeobaum, Bowen A (V. wholesale snd retail gro cer*. The flame* "were confioed to the nremlec* of the groror’* bau«e and a *mn!l brick structure adjokn'n'? on tbe west. Tbe total To** i* nbout $3116.000: In surance. $250,000, Two firemen were In jured by falling timber*. RAILROAD SOLD. Natitoehe*. Lx.. Nov. S.—Th" Natl- tochee and Re<l River Valley Railroad wa* ao’.d today under fnrecloaure pro- oefylTlnpr irmt wa* purehawd by Gen. J. W. Behan, and Mr. Bertram Beer, of N'w Orleans. ' ’ * OUDIN DEAD. r London. Nov. 4.—Eaperano Ondin. the noted singer, who woe stricken with p*« rairwis two vpcck* ago, died today. W A N T E 0-Special e-fverntmg canvKM«r>, familiar with mercantile trade; money maker of 1S94, Al»o clever general canvaeaere on greatest «eller of the day STANLEY BRADLEY. 5 E. 16th St., New York ri You can pt chiapsr than crer this jear Hyaciatks Tilips, Lilies. and other bulbs. Sand for ow CataticM aid rrsf. Our Premium Pansy Seed llantert now »il! uutl ® l e’isica of Koor- njona Size anti of Every Color. Price 3a Cents Packet. Crimson Clover hrxry graze du 1 hay In itv crop hay In Spiring. Best of all the Clovers, great K irh her of the Soil. Price l lb. JOc ; a Iba. «i OO jH*t- paid See <lcsrri|itlon In Catalogue which gttea *’ SufftilioM for Or.us Culturt" IT IB SENT FRER. v i Alexander Drug and Seed Co., ^ AUGUSTA, QA. ^ Meniloa thi* ?zper wh'B yoa Writ*. CHINBBE TO VOTE. Sea Fran deco, M*r. 1.—The unusual sight of voting Chrneee will be preteotod at the poll* Tuesday next. The fact boa been kept very quiet but tt i* known that 67 Chinese have registered and Intend to vote. They have organised as a olnb sod wKl vote tor candidates who are friendly to Chinese Interert*. The number at prep ent le On a fraction of those who are eligi ble. It l* said that there are at least 900 CMdete In tbl* city who could have regis tered - > PIHNOS. •ORGANS 1 MID-SUMMER BARGAINS. Special Sale *On»m*r 1S94. The' - - , •»* fere that beat tt# EMBEZZLER ARRESTED. Columbia. 8. C., Nov. 4.—(Spedal.)—* W. J. Shelton, for the past two years travelling agent fof the Columbia Reg ister, was arrested today at tha ina auee of Poet office Inspector Pear for embex- zlement. Shelton was portmaoter at Shelton, Fairfield county, S. C., in 1891, when he i* accused of misappropriating funds. He was placed und?r a $560 bond to await a preliminary hearing tomorrow morning. THE PRINCESS RECEIVED. Livndia. Nov. 3.—Prinoeae AHx wa# received formally Into the Orthodox ilmrch yesterday. After the ceremony she exchanged rings with her betroth-\ ed. the Emperor Nicholas. latarart. Only a 1 Small Cash Payment required, $» on a time to boy Cheap and Easy. 1 Speelal Sommer Offer* that bei 1 record. $$o saved every Piano purchaser. $10 to $20 on every Organ, , Ml Special Offer* on cor Popular Mid summer Plan. Buy In August, Sept and October, aad pay whan Cotton 1 Itt* „ V - Spot Cash Price*, mall Oasb Payment m. . . Plano, $10 oo Organ, balance next Novem ber ism. Longer time If wanted Paymeata to suit all. Plaoaa $6 to $10 monthly. Organ* $> to $6. Our Mld-Sumaier Offer* mvt Mg 1 1 on all plane of payment. New Fall Leader* ready. Beawtf- 1 ’al and Cheap. Tempting Bargains. 1 Write at one# ter Mid-Hummer Ot-1 •re. Good ealy antU Xev >en*t wait. I UDDEN 4 BATES Southern music house,; SAVANNAH, AA. A TERRIFIC STORM. - Buffalo; N. Y., Nov.—A lerifte atorm raged on iJtke Erie today. The high win<te began early thi* morning and reached a maximttm velocity of sixty tn fieri an hour. The storm name up no suddenly that many vessels were caught in it and had « bard time. The wind to night haa abated considerably, bnt tbe oiffnal office oonooooea f* * wifl reach here d(?Lumid@c$eaC' .. . akin -- 6 AHO owd Tetegro^by, «. «*. No theoty. No text books. Aetv.*i > rntnees tram Jay of rntetfam OeUesefooSe, hShhkSS^a M, - - i&jLI