The Barnwell people. (Barnwell, S.C.) 1884-1925, February 24, 1910, Image 1
«SE£
' i ' -I
■Hb ^ '
TV” r „^_
_3ff •*-Aw>5gr*{
VOL. XXXII1
BARNTTELlL. S. a, THimSDAT. FEBRUARY 24,19I0
V-*
VERY SICK MAN
»
* ^ N •
Seutor B. R. Tillau Lays at Death’s
Daar n Washingtoo City.
GAYE UP THEIR LIVES
IN AN EFFORT TO RESCUE SUR
VIVORS FROM A WRECK.
RECOVERY DOUBTFUL
H« if Suffering from Slight Progres
sive Paralysis Due to a Leakage
Of Blood in the Brain—The Crisis
Near at Hand and He May Die at
Any Time.
A special dispatch to The News
and Courier says Senator B. R. Till
man is laying at the Belfour hotel in
Washington in a dying condition suf-
>ring from paralysis and hardeing
oi the arteries leading to the heart.
He may survive several days, if the
paralysis can be checked and kept
away from the brain, or he may sue-
« ..rab at any hour. Physicians hold
out no hope.
Less than a week ago Senator Till-
r an was apparently in his usua’
health and attended to his every
day duties in the Senate. Almost
b:s last official act was to introduce a
nsolution calling upon the Secretary
gnf the Navy for information as to
|he purchase of oil, which would
.obably have led to interesting de
elopments connected with the oper-
rtions of the Standard Oil Company
A slight attack of dizziness on lauc
Wednesday was at first treated light
ly, and little was thought of it un
111 Thursday afternoon, when he be
came suddenly ill. During the night
it was apparent that he was a dan
gerously sick man, and at once tele
grams were sent out to all memberj
of the family, summoning them at
once to Washington.
Dr. Pickford, who was called <n
when Senator Tillman became ill,
had a conference with Dr. White,
supertetendent of St. Elizabeth’s hos
pital, Dr. White being one of the
best known nerve specialists in t^j)
country. Dr. Babcock of ColuifiTtia
was summoned and reached the Sen
ator’s bedside Saturday morning.
The dispatch says it is recognized
that the Senator is a dangerously ill
man and absolutely no hope is held
out to the members of his family.
.Thoroughout the entire day members
of both houses of Congress have been
seeking information as to the Sen
ator’s condition, and so frequent
fcrene the telephone caM's that very
earlly in the morning communication
was cut off. Close friends of the
family are giving out information to
thoee who call, and at the Balfour
many South Carolinians have left
cards of sympathy during the day.
Early Friday morning when the
news of Si^Thtor Tillman’s serious
Illness began to be scattered about
the Capital., a pall •settled every
where. Knots of SeiAors gathered
in different parts ofNli:-JEriatV
chamber and discussed the case,
while on the House side much the
same thing was done. House mem
bers who did not even have a speak
ing acquaintance with Senator Till
man, expressed the greatest sympa
thy for members of his family, as
frequent inquiries as to his condi
tion indicated.
Mrs. Tillman was the first to
reach the Senator after he became
ill. She had only been here a short
time when he became unconscious.
During the day Senator Tillman has
been able at time to articulate a lit
tie, but most of the daybeen
laying in a stupor, tak,'/
of those around him. J^ n ^
notice
.1 then,
ttnd
d nis
sure
nd> r
however, as different^d, h
members of the fam / and
.hand he would give Aturn.
An auaAW, indicate «ur jg<>
stood, but could not repfth " "
Condition Improves.
Friday and night Dr. White con
cluded his diagnosis of Senator Tin
man’s case with Dr. Pickford. After
a thorough examination it is now
stated that the trouble besides the
paralysis of the right side is cere
bral hemorrhage. The blood vessel
which allowed blood to spill and
form a clot on the tfrain, it is now
thought, been temporarily stopped
and the Senator is somewhat im
proved over UU condition earlier In
the night, though he is still in a
very precarious condition.
The latest bulletin issued states
that for four or five days perhaps it
cannot be said what the result will
be, should he survive that long. The
doctors have been* successful to the
extent of restoring partial consciou-
ness and Senator Tillman is now
able to articulate and has just taken
nourishment *
BISHOP IS IN JAIL.
Pastor **H<4y Chagch of the Living
God,” In the Tolls.
Denounced as a menace to society
and an Imposter, Jonas Samuel Stur-
devant, the negro bishop, of the
“Holy Church of the Living God, the
- Pillar and Ground of Truth,” was
-* sentenced at Baltimore Friday to
jail for three years. He was con
victed -of having assaulted find beat
en Mrs. Rose Demard, one of his
white “disciples.” She testified that
she was influenced by him to leave
her husband and children in Brook
lyn to follow the neiTO, under whose
ajpell she lived eight months. She
told a revolting story of her life In
the of the white women
Pour Brave Sailors Drowned Before
Efforts Were Abandoned to Save
Shipwrecked People.
A dispatch from Amond, Chile,
says the Chilean cruiser Minlstro and
five steamers on the Pacific Naviga
tion companys line are racing south
in the forlorn hope that they may
save the 88 persons who, when last
reported, were clinging to the stern
of the British steamer Lima as the
vessel was pounding herself to pieces
on a reef in the Stalls of Magel
lan.
Two hundred and five persons were
taken from the wreck by the Brit
ish steamer Hatumet and" four of the
Hatumets crew sacrificed their lives
before their captain commanded his
crew to cease their efforts. The Hat
umet has arrived at Amand, Chile,
and her captain said:
When we sighted the wreck we
put out our small boats, which close
ly approached the stern of the Lima,
where passengers and crew had gath
ered. We made a connection be
tween the two vessels with 500 fath
oms of cable and were successful in
lowering 105 persons into our small
boats, and in getting them upon the
Hatumet.
“Heavy seas made the work of
rescue perilous and finally the Lima’s
end of the cable slipped from her
sjffrn and became entangled in the
rocks. Without the aid of the cable
we could not reach the wreck. But
fo-r this accident all would have bven
rescued. In the increasing seas our
boats made futile efforts to reach the
wreck. The Lima threw out an
other line, whjch our chief mate
made a daring attempt to pick up.
“The second connection was event
ually made, but the line, suddenly
tightening upset one of our small
boats and our chief mate, ship’s car
penter, the fourth engineer and a
Spanish steward was drowned. My
boat rescued the others, of the small
boat’s crew.
“I signalled the captain of the
Lima that we had but one small
boat left and that as this was badly
strained we had better proceed to
Ancud for further assltance. We
were delayed off Ancud by a dense
fog.”
MAKES SERIOUS CHARGE.
Claims He Was Swindled by a Spec
ialist in Atlanta.
VOTED rr DOWN
Stale Scute Tables Resditiu Calling for
ResifiatiM of
THE ASYLUM OFFICIALS
Vote Reached latte Thursday After
noon and Resulted In Decisive Vic.
tory for the Friends of Dr. Bab
cock and the Board of Regent of
the State Hospital for the Insane.
A dispatch from McCall to the
Charlotte Observer says hearing of
the famous cures performed by Dr.
Hathway and Co., of Atlanta, Ga..
vfr. Tom Morrison hied to Atlanta
C;’yThnpsdjgr to place himself ln_ t he He"*
hands of this doctor—thoughtfully
tak lag his check book with him. The
rest of the story as told by Morrison
is:
“When T got to Atlanta I found
that Dr. Hathway had left the city,
but that an “eminent London spec
ialist" was In his office. I found two
men there who questioned me so fast,
and talked so much that I seemed
under a spell of some kind Th°y
agreed to make me a well man in a
few days for the sum of $800. I
was utterly unable, while with them,
tu doubt them or do otherwise than
.if they bid me. I made out the
check for $800. payable to the Bank
cf McColl. I became uneasy and dis-
prtisflod on Saturday and on Sunday
morning some one In their •nk’lMoy-
nient confirmed my doubts. I at
once wired the cashier of the Bank t><-
of McColll, to stop payment on checdMiber
-Vftff mm taaf.ias ?>"
put in theaands of pleading Alia
Kw>er, and I expe/ to recover *•
money, legs lawyer) fees. Vr Pnt-
~ x j^ faction
HOODOO nV;ho doctor, y w,1 °
The Senate of South Carolina by a
vote of 27 to 9 has tabled the res
olution calling for the resignation
of Dr. James W. Babcock, superin
tendent of the State Hospital for the
Insane,, aad the board of regents.
The vote came late Thursday after
uoon, after the matter had been dis
cussed pro and con for nearly three
legislative days.
By the Senate’s action Dr. Bab
cock and the members of the board
of regents are vindicated from the
charges of mismanagement brought
upon the floor of the Senate by those
yho favored the resolution. It was
an unconscious battle between the
kindness and humaneness of the
Hospital and the crying needs of that
institution on the one hand against
the conditions as pictured by the
legislative committee supporting an
indictment against those officials
touching methods in vogue at the
Asylum on the other hand.
That Dr. Babcock had given his
whole soul to the work of the un
fortunates of this State, that he had
made noble sacrifices in behalf of
the inmates of the Asylum, that on
luany occasions the needs k>f the
institution had been pointed out by
him and by others were contentloug
that had their weight in the Senate.
If the whole matter could be sum
med up in one sentence as ex
plaining the majority of the Senate’s
opinion it would read:
“We are as much to blame as any
one for the conditions at the Asy
lum; then why blame Dr. Babcock
and the regents?”
Of course, there was strong argu
ment supporting the contention of
the majority of the legislative com
mittee, and the Senators favoring
‘he resolution that the officials were
reppqnslble for certain matters.
Senator Clifton made a statement
for the judiciary committee. He
said the committee did not consider
that the superintendent or the board
of regents had the administrative or
executive ability to handle the in
stitution along business-like lines;
that the committee had no intention
jf bringing into the discussion the
I ersonal character of the superinten
dent or the board of regents •i^V.
"I would not s^^nything tru »t^*.
heTr worth secure the mo*i
but they were not oft, local board* ot
ness ability to carry*«k of th<> ,t ‘ booU
THEY COME HIGH
EXPENSE OF INVESTIGATING LU
NATIC ASYLUM.
According to the Report Filed With
the General Assembly It Oost just
9S.fll9.2e.
Following is the statement of ex
penses of the commission which in
vestigated affairs at the State Hos-
llCST far the Insane:
Per diem and mileage of commit
tee members:
N. Christensen . . ".T .TT . f 463.60
P. L. Hardin 158.00
Geo. H. Bates 126.40
Geo. W. Dick 286.70
J. P. Carey . . 287.75
W..C. Harrison 641.35
Olin Sawyer 262.65
$2,126.45
Expenses and per diem Dr.
F. H. Wines $ 95.65
Committee miscellaneous expenses:
Telephones and telQgrams..$ 20.09
Stationery 2.05
Stamps 6.07
Use of hotel room for com
mittee work 21.75
Stenographer—report, cor
respondence and affidavits 61.25
Express 2.68
Copy of Act 1.00
$ 104.89
7he State Company:
Letter heads and envelopes 8.00
Subpoena tickets and writs 7.50
Checks and warrants 11.50
Circular letters and blanks 15.25
Proofs and corrections. . . 7.39
To 49 etchings and halftones. 192.32
Mr. Blanchard, 41 plates..,, 61.50
Mr. Howje, six plates 9.00
Messrs. Gadsen & Shand—
architects 400.00
Mr. J. F. Grady, marshal 72.90
Mr. A. D. McFadden, steno
grapher, taking and tran
scribing testimony and min
utes 402.15
Witnesses 60.60
interest on loan from Colum
bia Savings Bank and
Trust Company 6.54
Miscellaneous 37.62
Amount appropriated.
$3,619,26
3,000.00
Balance .$ 616.26
Senator Neils Christensen is chair
man and Dr. Geo. W. Dick is sec-
retray of the committee.
SHUT OUTPLAY
lijw if Raleigh Band an Inwra
Dram frm the Stage.
CLOSED UP THE HOUSE
“The Girl from Rector’s” Waa Too
Smutty for Public Exhibition ani
Fifty Blue Coated Policemen Clear
ed the Theatre and Barred the
Door to All Comers.
Wednesday, after a conference
with the • City Attorney, Walter
Clark, Jr., the Mayor of Raleigh, N.
C., issued the following order to the
chief of police.
My dear sir: Taking notice of the
general reputation for Indecency and
immorality of the play known ai
The Girl from Rector's,” as reported
in the public press, and of the inde
cent and immoral character of the
advertising of said play, I on Feb
ruary 15, gave notice to the man
ager ot the Academy of Music at
Raleigh and the manager of the
said play that I would not permit
the said play to be given here. As
mayor and chief executive of the
city of Rallegh, I hereby order you
as chief of police to station sufficient
policemen at the opera house kpown
as the Academy of Music so as to
prevent the performance of the play
known as “The Girl From Rector’s,”
and I hereby authorize you to ar
rest any one who attempts to pro
cued with this preformance.
J. S. Wynne, Mayor.
All day most of the talk at Ra
leigh was about the show and the
positive attitude of the mayor to
wards it. The theater manager em
ployed three lawyer, among them ex-
Governor Ayecck.
The chte'f of police and a score of
patrolmen entered the Academy .,f
Mflsic nearly an hour before the
Line set for the performance and ixv
Tore the performers had arrived and
wkfen there were only a handful of
people in the seats, cleared
v ln< ’ ludl .BR»^* :—
aiN
TURNED ID STONE
BODY OF MAN BURIED THREE
YEARS AGO PETRIFIED
MM -
■ ■
Remains of 8. T. Blaskey, of George
town, When Taken Up, Was Found
W M * MM Maas.
A special to The ftato aaya aia
Incident which aroused considerable
curiosity in Georgetown came to
light Wednesday afternoon when the
remains of 8. T. Blaakey were dis
interred from his grave in Elmwood
cemetary, where he waa buried more
than three years ago. It was the
desire of relatives of the deceased
that his body be removed and r?-
Interred in another spot of the cem-
t tery.
Arrangements were made for th»
dlsenterment Wedneaday evening
when several of the friends and rel
atives of the deceased went to .ih^.
cemetery for the purpose. When an
attempt was ffilde to raise the can
ket from the grave it was found that
the combined strength of several men
could not raise it, and others were
called to aid In removing the cas-
Ket from the grave.
When the casket was taken from
the grave and Opened It was found
that the body of Mr. Blaskey had
completely petrified. It was fully
recognisable with the exception that
his face had turned rather dark. K
on the burial clothes appeared Intact.
Mr. Blaskey lived here several
years and was engaged In tailoring
and was of foreign nationality. The
!>ody was of solid stone and still had
the resemblance of Mr. Blaakey. The
petrification of the body it attributed
by many to stratification of th*
earth where the grave waa.
FIEND CHASED AND CAUGHT.
Entered a Lady’s Room and waa Raa
Down With Bloodhounds.
Henry Givens, a black fiend, Tues
day night entered the bed room of a
white lady at the Healing Sp-lng
wttlemeii' near Blaokvllle, but w-*s
frightened away when she screamed
Supervii'\a«MT. *
it Can,
a Cs
LADIES ON THE
Several ot the Infuriated <
Down by Officers of
The Oowd in Ugly
Friday Morning aad
tflric on JaU Expected.
At Calrd, Illinois, In a fight Thorn-
day between a mob Hat fltehe to
lynch a negro charged with part*
snatching aad fiva deputy sheriffs
who are guarding the JaU, sereral
members of the mob were shot down
In an attempt to raah the jail.
'The number of Injured Is uahmowu
the estimates varying between two
eleven. •
The mob waa still gathered about
the Jail at an early hovr and wan
constantly Increasing la slse. Sheriff
Nellis entrenched bto force of de^
nties behind shuttered windows aad
J* nt out word to the mob that he
would fight to a finish to protect hto
prisoner.
The mob worked itself into a free-* --> <
ty and another rush on the -Jail *
expected. The local militia comps:
waa ordered out Thursday night by
the Governor but the authorities hava
been unable to find the company’s
officers to lead the men. Sheriff Kell
is appealed to Gov. Donees for more
soldiers and outside companies are
hourly expected.
There are three negroes la the
JaU. One of them, John Pratt, waa
arrested on a charge of snatching
purses from women. He Inter con
fessed. He waa immediately Indict
ed by the grand Jury and It to hn-|
tiered the mob to after him
The mohw- Pj*
ootnlag By — doing the^ wHIJ
it
FLAT BOAT SINKS.
In Roanoke River and Two Me;
a Watery
A dispatch ^ -a w
c - FROM
aiw er- Automobile Repairing, Reborlng Cyllndy.
n eew Pliton Rings, new Plsions, and anything of that kind made here.
Our same old tine «« wh-m we were here before; Steam Engines. Boilers, Cot*
ron Gins, Gri.t Mills. Saw Mills, Etc.
Headquarters for Gasoline Engine Work, as we have an expert on same.
Call snd *ee our »hop», sod be convinced. Thanking my old customers for
past favors, and soliciting their Future Patronage. We remain.
Yours Faithfully,
BLACKVILLE MACHINE SHOPS.
Blackville, S. C.
let Is
appwintmen
inedtete
ntments.
sefrloe
tCMdieo i* an
an
not belter
i laws secure
e iniere-t in
ns throughout
rk is improving
Du are to keep
4hers, yon must
any
TRSA8UHERS KUtlC*.
Tbs Treasorsr’s Office Ifl
for the coDvctlo* of uses levied
the fiscal jeer eomtoinrieg Ji
1st IMO, from the kith day
1K» w. the ifith day of “
elusive.
From dm lei lo the IlM
i 1910 iMloslye a penalty of
cent will be added: ream the
fifitk of Fehreary 1910 to~*“
ally of two per cool will J
all taxes peid hi February
i the latfiotbelfithf
From the l.t to the IKhdcy of Mcr*
1910 indosieo * peoeliy of aoeeo pet
oeot wHI ho added la all —paid taasa.
EDMUND M. LAWTON.
w a-
bee n
(lot Fifteen T/busand IHdUrs from been
Union
/e Swopes. fations
* man,
Chase .Jor/an, a negro herb docto rlght-
'f Kansas /ity, Kaasas, who advefi and
(If as “Minister of
tifiea hinir
n Ft*
i’•fries, M^iral Doctor and Doctor ^
l.ver amygall stone,” obtained aotr
11 5,000,In eight years for doctor^ yon,
memlK'jk of the Swope family. Augusts,
was told by the “Doctor" oifVvn Wade
vvxmaeday. of Geor * l, ‘’
He gave a deposition in thr’"
der suit brought by Dr. B. C. UTCU
against John G. Paxton, execqan.of Cur-
Ibe estate of Col. Thos VV. k*g bad ! y, it
whose death is under invest salve- and
,le*s. Then
f»y the grand jury.
healed It
Jordans name was first «p rt> inptand
into the Swope case when Mrs. - BroUe*.
Hyde issued a statement expresfezema or
ron fidenefe^ Tn trer faosbsnd’s iflCI a? 1 ! R•
c r nm and saying that Chrtomi
Swope nsed Jordan’s:Temedies.
rlgn gave his disposition after mir IAJ ”
This is best shown by | r H
existing. We feel that^,i l 'i 1 ,
now in charge would
favor to not have char
we might now institu
Senator Weston r’
jesolution be laid o
vote resulted:
Yeas—Appelt, ItfCCuly aomany hour*
penter. Crosson, E^iFR ‘h” equipment
fin, Hamrick, Har^P hc,n
r . tv. Jluds are drawn from
Johnson Johnsjo^^ [hen thtj coulUy
t own, Mdyc^ g{ei | t , ( extent, ns we!
ker, Mucjripfjg; n i* poor economy to
Spivey, up teachers and buy hooks if the
— 27. {btc-lmnifticlert, or tti« de-k* so ar
~ tnnt the chi! Iren lay the foun-
ons for eve diseases it is poor
„o«omy to put in homemade seats, it
you make them «o far from the ground
that, the weight of the lower limbs
compresses the blood vessels so that
Ihe attention is dulled by poor circula
tion of the blood. (Uve the little fel
low s comfortable seats in the school as
lu the home, and they feel more like
study. Your school needs equipment,
»nch n« a globe, map* and chart*. Of
course, mai y of you don’t aee th* need
of it. But children w hose schools have
these helps have an advantage ove
your children. BeHde* this, it is poor
economy to put money into your pock
ets when you are taking it from your
child’s better education. If neither
you nor your teachers know your needs
on this line, your County Board will
eheerfullv render you any assistance
Ui*t will help your school.
The Patron*. These can help In
many ways; neighborhood fueses,
tamily differences, aad many little un
pleasant thing* in a school district can
hurt a school. Let everybody unite to
create a healthy sentiment. Talk up,
and not down. If things In your
school are not what they ought to be,
don’t make them any worse by your
talking about it. It doesn’t require
much sense to destroy and pull down,
bat it takes a wise person to build up
and broaden a work. Don’t make the
mistake of thinking that w<hen a school
suits you it ought to suit everybody
else too. Whet) it suits everybody tlse
It will come nearer suiting you too.
—gvirthat everyartuiil aLscbool age in
STEPHEN' S. FURbK, JR.
FURSE AND LAWTON.
Cotton Factors, bagging and Ties, Fertiizers,
4Iandiers of Upland, Sea Island and Florodora Cotton, j
NOTICE.
On and after thU date services will
Liben
Perficnxl, pr^
entrusted to us.
jade on consignments of cotton. s .
>t and careful attentipn to all businefifl
212 EastBay St.,
FUBSE & LAWTON,
v Savannah, Ga.
‘‘ECONOMY IS WEALTH”
FALSE ECONOMY means FAILURE,
Deal in GENUINE ECONOMY—Save nn the cost of producing »
.... — . cr0 p Don’t try to save on the cost o: SEED, t Don t waste fertil*
be held at .Seven 1’ine* Rantut uhnn-h 1 ’ , , . r c j economical by producing a large
li “op "r„e^r.;«hr r o„ s h punting the 1IEST CANTALOUPE
attend. * SEED in the market, and place your orders early lor
W. M. Cook.
Feb. 15th, 1910.
NOTICE.
To all law abiding citizens of Barn-
EDEN GEM CANTALOUPE SEED*
*
l or oar.i-i . c.,»>._iu/»r IAnr . from acres of the finest Cantaloupes
Tigerin'your mid*!', kindly write 'n£ g^wn at Rockv Ford, Colorado, and allowed to r, £ n ™ 1 j C
giving their name, vrhere^they before the seed saving was commeuccd, under tne personal fiuper-
vision of C. H. Mathis.
Eden and Holmes Melon and Davis Cuke Seed.
ItoTJ.
For State
«* OrdlMrp 1
Tr Ntw JaU P«
•• Ralntkxlng l
- OMMtlWttoMl fiehofll
Total
Thera win fie »■ **ua levy of
mil to In RamyM f fiUekvtltoi
listen towortnpa ffit PflMto
Commutation tax will fit
will ho raoarimf fl
Maruh l*t Ibl'J inciuaiw.
Special tebool Lavj.
Cfc&rWfiri
AUandala No 99,
Calvary. Double P
Friendship, Heelli
Kiln*, Mart to. Now 1
Old Columbia. Hardy Hi
IlngvHIa, Sevan Flxai
Craak (!) wllte-
Barton, IMff Fork,
Hickory BUI. Owtna Groan
8vcamera No. 91. Ultoara and
Rich Laod «) tottla.
Fairfax (fij) mllla.
Hercules and Laaa (4) XliDfi.
Barnwell (4D mlUa.
WllBaton (S|) mill*.
United State* Cnrreacj
Sliver Coin, Coanty xnd »
properly approved will fio
toft*
Chocks and drafts will nfik h*'
sd for taxes exeapt at tfifl ftok •*
P***- , g Mtm1i — g
County Treafiarsr.
Barnwell. B. C.. dept. Mat ltd*.
and about the tiinft they do the mo«t
business. What you say to me will be
in utrict confidence and 1 will do the
Frank U. Creech,
S. B. C.
C. F. Ulfeni, t.1L
L t«. IclU.
iSf
varmiesa yaroB. ne saia tn. gcellftlrt WetnVtTe vfour you wur tuuast conn- —y- ~ o( adm , nl0 , r . t i O n. &c.,
compounded from roots ar nd Kid- () enue and co operation. Wo ask ^ onr iTu» r .Gue(rTa. ^
obtained In foreign countri 'oae of nggiitaoce to he'p your children to get I*® John K . Snolling.
and In the woods near Kansas Cit
Bur ok'
DavW A. Hines of Llncolnton, inn pco-
waa found In the woods nor *•*”'*•
G»., robbed and with h J
or tubed la Tneaday died or
• iWfldaaadny^ i
C.. w
Ti
the district, i* enrolled and tliaUtTO
dattr «Uft*ulanc£ ia Ihe beat that eau .be
secured. It will meaa more m rimy to
the credit of the district next year
and a better school.
Your County Board stand* ready to
help you in every possible way. We
offer to you our heartiest aaristanoe.
protest, as he claimed his minlsttVe been
ings to the Swopes family had noth>‘ e Indus-
. , ,.v hcon.Ga
J ^ J 1*^0
Jordan testified that his medlcind',. „j ur ^ __
were harmless “yarbs.* “Herald tfii fccelleirt| We trittreIront yoiiypurflUton^cond
were
leaves „
earth ”
port fat
sa appe-
Mnrdered and Robbed. a p thin
FOR SALE ONLY BY
I Calhoun
FKOBATK COURT NOTICE.
All admlnletrators. executbra, gnar-
diana and trusteea are directed and re-
quired hy law to make annual return*
to the Judge of Probate before or on
the first day of July in each year Bee |
Jteviaed Htatutea, page* i>79, oection
A. F. YOUNG & CO,
308 Washington St.,
NEW YORK, N. Y.
C H. MATHIS!
BLACKVILLE]
S, C.
COST OK UNKINDNE?8.
2M6 and 207J
most and tbe b«*t pu«»ibie out of their
*ohooi privilege*. For the take of the
children of this generation and citiitenr
of the next, we are
Your* to serve. H. J. Crouch, Supt.,
B. Boyd Cola.
W, M. Jones.
County Board of education
If Ktrcta retnrn* are not made a* above 1 The.’e’s a womlefTurrrstem of
stated the Judge of Frobate U required t ^roment that <41 rente the affairs of bn
ami directed by law to Issue elutions 1 " - “ J “■* 1
for aueb delinquents and the penalty
for such neglect or refusal U a fine of
twenty dollar* for t*ch day during
conflnnance of said default, end revo-
John K. Snolling,
Judge of Probate, B. C.
mar. beittge. If you (Hr a act »
good act Will be done yon. H you dctl
out au Injustice vou will be afflicWto
with Mae punishment. None «*n af*
ford to be uohlod. for onMndoees el-
way* return*, and in greater measujw.
' —Record Herald.
The Japsneee are talking Very 8wee*-1
ly, but they ere busy ell the tle»e la
getting reedy for
they #m»ddXi
el reedy foraDdeble an
:JV
SEED RYE FOR SAL*
Bern well County relied; the kind
that never fells «r dl*eppol«U.
C, N. Uurckbelter, Beruwfiii,S. L,
iaf 1 :
far nr. mntoining '^4 scree
oeirv iiauiavitlo for .**-y t*'’ m **
Write H. M Giafiam. Attorney, Bam-
UifcB 0.’
" ^ ^ ’ | r i&L JL
Trespees Csrds, Rent Lteoe, IMatfese
VVarrauts, For tale et T*X l*»ow.f
Office.
h