University of South Carolina Libraries
AT OLD HOME. % President Roosevelt Visits the home of his Mother at ? TOWN OF R08 WJSLT, OA t The President Started on his Southern Tour on Last Wednesday From Washington, and is Koyallv Received Everywhere lie Has Stopped. Made Several Speeches. President Roosevelt be^an his Southern tour ou last Wednesday morning la the party were Mrs. Rx>sevelt, Secretary William Lueb, Jr., Dr. P. M ltlxey, burgeon general of toe navv. John A. M I henrv. ?.f Louisiana, a member of the President's regiment of U ugh Riders, John c. Greenway, of Michigan, John S. Elliott, commissioner of the luterlor for Porto Kici; M. C. Latta, and v John L, McGrew, stenographer*; Henry A. Slruhmaycr, plioti grapher; Col. L. S. Brown, general agent of the Southern liiilwa}; representa tlvei of the tbiee press associa Ions, two secret service cUlcers and a eorp.> of messsengds. The 11.st stop was made at .Fredericksburg, Ya., where the party was greeted by a large crowd. The next stop was at Ashland, Va , where again the president was heartily wel oomed by a rousing crowd. At both places the president made short speeches from the rear of his car. At ltlchmond, Va., he was received with great pomp and ceremony by the citizen*; the streets were literally crowded with people, who seemed determined that R.ehmond would do her full share towards entertaining the President and making him feel at * home in the South, lie made a speech complimenting the Confederate sold ier very highly. IN NOKTll CAROLINA. The llrnti sfcnn the President. nrmde in North Carolina was at Raleigh, where he was ro>ally entertained Thousands of people met the train and the greatest enthusiasm prevailed. At Charlotte an immense crowd were at the depot when the train arrived. The crowd was so great tt arlully 10,000 were denied the privilege ; of hearing him. lie created the wildest enthusiasm by referring to the i Mecklenburg Declar ition of lndepeu dence, Mrs. Stonewall Jackson, who lives here, and Lieut. William E Shlpp, a monument of whom he pas sed en route to the park. meets mlls. stonewall, jackson. 1 The feature of his stay here was his meeting with the widow of Stonewall Jackson. Mrs. Jackson lives id a stone's throw of the station and she was present there whm the train pui- ' led in as the head of a company of ladles appointed by Mayor McNinch to receive Mrs. Roosevelt. When he was introduced he took her hand and remained talking for fully live rainu tes. "Mrs JacUson, you do not know how glad 1 am to meet you. Wha ! the widow of the great Stonewall Jackson. Why it Is worth the wnoie trip down here to have the chance to shake your hand." He re* feritd to her grandson, Jaosson Christian, whim lie appointed to a cade.tsbip at West Poiut, lie is a mighty line fellow, Mrs. Jackson; a mighty tine feilow, by .Jove." reaches atlanta. The President's visit to Atlanta Friday was a marked event In the history of the Si&ie of Georgia. Jk? was greet* d on his arrival by her most distiti^'ulshud ch.zens ana thr< ugh the day ou every nand wern shouted words of we.c >r;ie that, left no room for diubr. of their sincerity, i Tn? city was in gala atti e ana bus! re.w was pr&'tctily suspended that nil mignt greco 1 e distinguished gutst. 8outu Carolina, in the person of Gov. Hey ward, added Its welcome to the south In no in certain touts Numerous extra trains brought their burdens of Georgians from the sur roundlr g country and cities, adding to the cit z n attendance and it was estimated that not lebs than 100,000 persons saw and welcomed the [resident. HIS MOTHER'S HOMffi. President Roosevelt Friday carried out his long cherished plan of visiting the home of h:s mother?Roswell, Ga One of his reasons for coming south was that he might see the old home steAd where his mother spent her girlhood and which sbe left a happy f hn uloiK tuao fvomrKi UflUC. JL UAU ?HC rtoiu una iiau^nv with maDy teniler recollections was evident, and as his o vrrlage drove away from tbe old Bulloch mansion where his mother liyed and married, the president murmured to Mrs Iloosevelt, "I can hardly leave here." The president reached Roswell at 7 30 O'clock Friday morning and was j jintd here by Senator and Mrs. Clay, w 10 were his guests at breakfast. He then entered a carriage and was driven to the mansion. This 11 oe old 1 omestead is now theproerty of J. D. Wing, a lumber merchant of this sec t >n, who lives in It with his sister, Mrw. Wood, the post master at R'jswell. WELCOMED 11Y A STUDENT. From the homestead the president was driven to the town park, where a stand had been erected from which be delivered an address. II was welcomed to Koswell by Churl*"* M. Iieed, a student of Mercer uni *?-r?ity, who In the course of a w? 11 - . n address, said the only ria?or b o/uldsee for the selection of b rr s f oo deliver this welcome was bfcaus of the presidents well kDown fondness for having young men identified with public liTiirs. Senator A. S. Clay introduced the president, who was enthusiastically greet ed as he arose to speak. He said: "Senator, ar dyou, my friends, whom It Is hard for uae not to call my uelgh bors, for 1 feel as If you were: "You can have no idea of how much it means to me to ome buck to ltos well, to the home of mv m ittier and my mother's people, and to see the ipot which 1 already know so well from what my mother and ray aunts told roe. It has been exactly as If 1 were rt-vlsltii g some old place i f my childhood It has meant very much to me to be Introduced by Senator Clay. Senator Clay has been altogether too kind iu what he said about, me. N jw i am going to say nothing whatever but the bare facts ab? ut Senator Clay, and these facts amount to this: If the average mm 1 had to deal with ? public life possessed Sena* or Clay 'stirn devotion to what he deeuos rig it, my task wou'd be sotasv that it would not be worth mentioning. 1 hive gone to Senator Clay for advice aud counsel and help ever since 1 have been in Washington. Just as I went to Senator Cockrell of Missouri while he was in the Nenate, with the certainty that all 1 had to do was to convince him that what he wanted d lie was right ?1 could not always convince him?but If I did convince him that was the end of it?he went that way. 1118 earliest recollections "O.i my friends, 1 hardly like to say how deeply my heart is moved by Coming back here among y? u. Among t.hft fturhpwt. rfi/wllont lniio 1 hm." ?- ?? .ww** *v vvmv,V'IW?JO L ut??o c*n (V child is hearing from my mother and my aunt, Miss Annie Bulloch as she was then, about liosweil; of how the Pratt s and K ngs and D uuwoodys aud Bullocbs came here br.ht to settle, about the old liomestead, the house on tne hill, about the Cnattahooche, about all kinds and sorts of incidents that would not interest \ou, but interested me a great deal when 1 was a child. "I wish I could spend hours here to look all through and see the different places about which I have heard all kinds of incidents. All those anecdotes looking back now. 1 oin see, taught me an enormous amount, perhaps all the more because they wero not in tended to teach anything. 1 think perhaps we are very apt to learin most when neither we nor the people talk lug to us intend to teach anything. If anybody starts to teach us something we are a little apt to resent it and assume a rather repellent altitude. All those stories of the life of those days taught me what 'a real heme life, a real neighbor life, was and snould be. Looking b.?ok now at what 1 learned onrcugh the stories of the cblidnood of my mother, my aunts, my uncles, 1 ^an understand why the hoys ana girth of Itjswe 11 of that time grew up to be men and women who weie go?d st r vants of the community, who wer?good husbands, g tod fathers, gooo wiv^s and mothers; how it was that Cbev learned to d t their rntv jtriuht, m peace and iu war also. "it has been my very great good fortune to have the right to claim that my blood, Is half southern and hill nortuern, an > I woul 1 deny trie right of any man In jo . o o?i o greaser pnde iu the deeds oi sr u norner than I foel. Of li.v. o hu e<(, ? iio brother* and sisters ui u j un"iner who were corn and brought up iu uiat house on the hill theie, my two uncles afterwards eutered the Confederate berVjCj and served Id toe Confederate navy. One, the younger man, served on tne Alabama as the youngest olli cor aboard her. lie was captain of one of her broadside 32 pounders in her dual light and when at the vary end the AJabama was sinking and the Kjarsarge passed under her stern and oaiiie up along tho side that had not been engaged hitherto, my unc.e, l v tng Buhocn, shlited nm gun from one side 10 the oiher aud br d tne two last sno.b liied from the Alabama. A l'ltOUD KINSHIP. 4<Jas. I'Uiiwcod Bullock was an sr' mhal In the Confederate seivlce. O ail the people 1 hive ever mst he wa.i the one tnat enure nearest to that beautiful creation of Thackery?Co). Newcome. Men and women don'L you think that I have the anc:slral rlgnt fr> ciaioi a proud kinship with those who showed their devotion to duty as they saw the duty, whether they wore the gray or whether they wore the blue? All Americans who are worthy the name feel an equal pride in trie valor of those who fought on one side or the other, provided only that each did with a'l his might and soul and mind his duty as it was given him to see his duty." rnu. ? ? J ^ - - aiie president mxt was driven to the old Presbyterian church In which his grandfather, James Bullock, was ouce a U>aou:K member. Mr Bulloch dropped ?eud in this church while te&cjing a Sunday school class in 1849, and among those present In tue church today were three membeis of that clasi who were present at the time. Toe venerable pastor of the church, ltey. Dr. W. E. Baker, offered prayer and the president and Mrs. Roosevelt then shook hands with a number of the townspeople, many of whom had known the president's mother. On the way to the train the president stopped for a moment at the home of Dr. Baker, where he met the pastor's wife, who was one of his mother's bridtBmaids. In the escort, which c inducted the president from his train to the different points he vJslted, was Warren E. Orookctt, who was a member of CjI. 1 I K wevelt's regiment during the Spanish war. The reception of the presl dent at fV>0 ' Id home of his mother was ?? - r \ A one. The people greeted ' in rnaa president aud as the oi.c t f their neighbors. Many . re the kind references to his moth- I er from those who knew her and many were the expressions of good will toward her distinguished son The presidents train left for Atlanta shortly Mefore 10 o'clock. puk tu clerical kkors. The People of DorclicHtrr llavo Kalth in Ihcir Tmtiuror.ni A dispatch from St. Georges to 1 he ( O* ~ 4. ~ A. t ft - k rntttu Mi>? ineirecenc suspension iy Gov. Heyward of County Treasuri r Whetsell and his refusal to reinstate Mr. Whetsell conies to the people (f Dorchester county like a clap of thunder frc m a cloudless sky. With very few eac ptlons if any, the people of the county be leve that Mr. WLiet?< >1 is rn honest m m and that he has been v tfioity of no criminating conduct dur- e in* i s incumbency as treasurer of the a vhm ' /, but' o the contrary, they feel o.ti tw?d ti at if there is any error in his ? nice it is due entirely to clerloil o mistakes. t Y< urcorrespondent asked Mr. Whet ^ seU Friday for a statement, buo Mr. Whetsell said that until a complete c and impartial examination of Ids books ' and accounts was hai he did not care ' to make any statement for publiea s tlon, for he felt that ids cmdeuce was clear and to prove that Uolsasser- 1 tion Is correct, and that his actions ? are characterized bv honesty through- d out, he put up the alleged shortage in u ore er that his constituents mi^lit not ^ even run the chance of losing a penny. u Mr. Whetsell did say, I owever, that ' tlie alleged shortage arises from annu (1 al settlements previous to four years c a^o, which annual settlements were v made by the then corptroller genera) for whom the present comptroller ( general was auditing clerk and made 8 the settlements himself and pronouc n ed the same all right at. the time. lj Mr. Whet sell's friends look upon the recent occurrences as very unjust to li Mr. Whetsell but Mr. Wuetsell being 0 a modest man, d >es not bimself use ^ such harsh expressions. Toe eonsm- c sus of opinion here is that Mr. Whet- s sell will obtain complete vindication * of the whole matter as soon as an im- s wtiruui uivtJSLitftti/ion as u> me couth v tiou of his off'ce is held. H ? e lit iUNca m itooiu. William S. Hrown, of Wakefield, (5 N, J., tiled In the United States clr* o cult court, at New York a suit for $ 10,- t ooo damages against William C. Mus* u chenhelm, proprietor of the New As* t tor hotel. Browns says that on ihe r night of August t> he attended the h theater in New York with his wife 1 and was delayed so that he missed his last train home. He went to the hotel f nid applied for a room, but It was re* a fused to him. The hotel clerk, he says, / intimated that Hrown was with a lady f; not his lawful wife and refused him c accommodations in the presence of a u lumber of guests in the hotel lobby in s such a manner as to cause him $10,* n 000 worth of damage to the feelings e of his wife and himself. v Olio*a lUti'N. The Atlantic Coast Line announces 0 rate of one fir. t Class fj.ro plu? tw- nty {j ive cents, plus admission to t.he Fair Grounds, fifty cents for adults and ' twenty live cents for children, to C ;1 c umbla S. C.. ai d return account the , o aio i'.ur, u-toner 24 27 h. Tickets uri sale O. iobcr 22 to 26 th and f >r " rains due to arrive in Columbia before v noon 27ob. Final limit O itober 29 ,ti. ^ There will also be a spfdal rate or one cent per mile per capita for Military a Companies and brass Bands In uni- t form t wenty (r more In each dlrec- c lion. F >r further information call on your ticket Agent or Communicate v vim W. J Craig, j( General Passenger Agent, Wilmington, N. C. , b ?iapkn'H l>t bt. Former Japanese Foreign Minister ^ Okuma, referring to the sudden ? x ? panslou ( f Japan's finance, said that when the wltbdnwal of the troops is 8 completed she will find h?'rsdf con- v fronted with a debt of $1.250,000,000 e the annual interest on which alone, p roughly speaking, whl be $75,000,000 A or marly twice the revenue of the i 0( unty ten years ago. The per t, capita rate of taxation bt fore uhe war ^ war $2. Now it Is $0. The per capita share In the national debt, before b the war was $0. It Is now $25. y, Where He Invert. J The idenPy of the Captain Rumill, S( who with four of her crew, wasmnrdered In a mutiny on hoard his *choo. ner, ITarry Berwind, In Southern waters was established as Capt'Edward R. Rumill, of Pretty Marsh, lj Mount Desert, Maine, ile was 40 ye- s ars old, and leaves a widow and two I umiuren aii I'retLy Marsh. They re- I 1 ceived the news of the trayef'y G through press dispatches today and p were prostrated with K^lef thereby. d e CorrectH Teddy. 0 The Columbia States takes cciasion / to correct Teddy as follows: "Mr. ^ Roosevelt claims to be an historian, s apd it is well known that he Is also a G literator. He should, then, be more r faithful to history and to literary tra 1 dttlon then he shows himself in his mlmloklrg of the s? utberners who have invited him to ride the best horse in the country, sir.' Acxnrdintf to his- c tory?as written in New England? \ and acc >rdln# to literary tradition? j as preserved in the same sacred region i ?this must neces arily be the best > hoss in the country, by #ad, sub." t V' / * a A SAD TALE [)f the Sea Told by Two Survi vors of a Shipwreck. BEATEN TO FLECKS )ff the Coast of South Carolina. Si x Members of a Schooners Crew Pound (iraves in the Deep, After Many Days of Most Terrible Suffering. A story of a North Atlantic ship /reck, iu which eight searuen sulTor d so fearfully from exposure, hung'.r tul thirst that six of thi 111 either led outright-, were washed away, or razed by their feArful experience, brew themselves into the sea, was old by the tw) survivors of the oasting schooner Van Name and ving, of New Ilaven, CJjnn, which /us boaten to pieces by a gale elf ttie iouth Carolina coast on October 0 >h. The two men w??o lived through hb tive days and were rescued by the ohooner Stlllman b\ Kelly, which .rrivod at Boston, Mass., on Tuesday if last week, are Wm. Thomas ana Vm, G. Warner, both about 2i) years Id, six feet three Inches tall, and lail from Antigua, British Wert In lies. Tnc six who, one Iby one, sue uraberi, were (Japt. Wm. A. iMax veil, of New Jersey, Mate E. A )hase, home unknown; enginir, a Herman. name iinirnnwn f ~ ) w uui cv teward, name unknown; colored sea acn, Wm. Grlzall and AUrtd Arthur, >oth of Jamaica. The Van Name and King, which las been plying up and down the oast since 18SG, left Charleston, S 3., for New York on Oct. 3, with a argo of hard pine. Two days later, he ran lino a heavy i^aic and aftei fallowing ao )ut In the great seas fo everal hours sprang a 1 ak. Toe turnps were started, but within a holt time the engine room was il >o 1 d and the pumps choked. At y o'clock on the morning of Oct. , with her hold nearly full of water, he Utile sehoeuer was hove down on ler beam ends. The crew clamored ip on the weather side and lashed hemselves to bulwarks. Tnere they ematned washed by the seas that ruke mercilessly over them all day Friday. That night the storm incrcas d iu ury and one groat wave crasi.ea b >ard, breaking bot'i legs of Seaman trlhur and sweeping Grizell from tils asteiiings. Arthur's c ?mpaiiioiis ould do nothing to ease his suller tigs, but when on Saturday tiie cnooner turned comp.etely over they aanaged to cut his lashings and drag iim or) J), nipnn lit * 1 ? , V,. uiiu3']. a i /as several hours before they were all luddltd together ou their little r.tf.. That night Arthur diei in the armf Capt. Maxwell and his bo ?v waLopped overboard. Survay brought , ray of hop woon a o/^to was nigui> d but the gloom shut iu again oho assort by wituout needing ihj lltih roup of seaman who were frantically igualling her. That night the wa/es i lidded and a little ram fell Widoi /as eagerly caught in a tarpaulin ann irought some slight relief. lo w.?s only to ternary and not long ,fte Male C.: :v' mlud gave way en Irely and the ci.if1 as t,gun light ned when he juic, u . ito the sea, Tne next victim oapt. Maxwell vho on Monday forenoon became vlo autly insane and followed his mate's x a in pie of ,sels -dtSiruction as a roliei o his sulTjrlngs. The spectacle of wo men throwing themselves Into he bea proved loo rnihin for toe GetQanenginett and a lew hours Jai&r ie, too, leaped to his death. Tne last victim was the colored teward, who died Monday night ami /hose body was consigned to the wat rs by the two remaining seaman. II> ief came 12 hours later when tue oiiooner btdlman F. Kelly, bm id up he coast from Gay Ion, G .orgia, to his port, sighted the little craft and iOve to alongside. Both Tnomas and Warner had to e taken olf iu slings, and for two days /ere unable to move. The r scua ook nlaee off Gao? IViftirnni-. 'i' - m - JL HU telly arr.v;d tins afternoon but the uarotn were btill too exhausted to ind. Gov, Hi ) w?rd in Aiuiiu, Gov' I ley ward was the tfiiest at At mtaof Gov. Terrell on Friday and aturday last upou the occasion of 'resident Roosevelts visit to Atlanta, le was presented to the president b> leortfia't* calef executive and had a irominent part in toe reception acjor ed the distinguished visitor. Gov rnor Heyward recently advised Govrnor Terrell of his purpose to visit Atlanta to confer about the disputed touudary line between Georgia and ljuth Carolina, and attlie invitation if Governor Terrell he agreed to renaln over in Atlanta and meet l'r^s di.nt It xisevelt. Hunted to Dt.aifi. A nctf ro cnild was burned to death >n Thursday in York county, havlu# )een left alone in the house while its urents were out cotton-plckins. Vnd two others in the saute county *ere burned to death urrn licuoQbtances on Saturdjfcj^y j f - - B$NK OF OO N W A CAPITAL STOCK, $20,000.00 TOTAL ASSKTJ OFFIO B. O. COLT,INS. PUFPWEST. C. P. QITATTLKBAUM, V-Prks. Our Punk, being a local instituti building of Horry County and for the suing this policy we take pleasure in accommodation when consistent with i With gratitude for the liberal p .cordially solicit your future business. Respectful D A SPIVE Robt. B. Scarborough, II. L. Pres'nh'iif. Vio?-Pl ( \>u \va> ( apital Stock . 1)1 R EC'! Robt. 1>. Scarborough, llal L. Buck, j George J. llolliday, We will pay you 5 per conffinteri ish savings banks to those wishing Try our plan for saving your nickles a these litile banks and ihe interest we help yon. THE "HUl \\V\ rl liis l>rrin<l on a slioc moans s I'll 10 BEST for your money call jjlj[2jvi 1 Take, 1 1 wineop i | at Home | |1 Are you a sufferer? Has your doctor been unsuc* Wouldn't you prefer to treat M yourself?AT HOWE? H 1 Nearly 1,500,000 women havo W a bought Wino of C&rdui from rag * their druggists and havo cured Cu - themselves at homo, of such IB 1 2 troubles as periodical, bearing jog iS down and ovarian pains, lcucor- Kg ? rhcea, barrenness, nervousness, H ^ dizziness, nausea and despond m> 1 K.llV.lf , * HUOV.A4 It J lUllllllU tvuiuiil'ffll* fr/J jn 'iWe arc not easy eases. W* Wino ?>f Card a i cures when the M doctor can't. Wine of Cardui does not irri- Rl j tate tho organs. There is no pain jm in the treatment. It is a soothing K tonic of healing herbs, free from [< strong and drastic drugs. It is H successful because it cures in a g natural way. Wino of Cardui can be bought W from your druggist at 61.00 a K bottle and you can begin this n treatnient today. Will you try it? gv> |f? canes requiringRpeclfil directions. Uu address, KiviiiK syiuiitouib. Tho I.iidlot; EQ Advisory Dept., Tho Chat tanooga 1W Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tonn. Oraying aii flnlinj . I have secured ;i 11 I lie BoaI'd ends at the Conway Lumber oinpttn , and 1 will fu< nish them cheap on short notice best cook wood you can get I have headquarters at the 1 store of the Hal L. Buck Ho., * an I oiders for dray in# and , hauling left witli rue will be promptly attended to. S. M. Tompkins. pAnuroir PAO { uuiiiiaj, uuo i and Western R. R. DAII V SCHEDULE. K AS r HOUND. Lv Conwav 9 00 8. rr Lv Pin*' m >n(l 9:30 ?. ro. Ar Myrtle Reach 9:45 a. m W \ ST HOUND. Lv Myrtle Reach 3:30 o. m Lv p no 1-1 ind .3:45 p in Ar Conway 4:15 p. ra Every enr,erpna?, onac u nedts the 1 town benefits every man iu It. If '/fur i neighbor at arte a new & * no ft tohelp | along, don't Jump or* \ bottv^fot just because yo' ,fco r.hlnk of tr," fir1*.. (o boeatftt. I It will help w j V S ' W " ? ; - " * ^ CONWAY^ ^Y, S. C. SUUllPLUS FUND, $20,000. S, $180,01)0.00. KIPS: D. A. spivKY, c asm KB." m. \v. co lp ins, a t. cashier. on, lias always striven for (lie ujh betterinent of lic?r citizens. In perextumling to our customers every Bound hanking. atronngo received in the past, we Iv yours :Y v ; ?, : ? lHtck, JfcilUA. Freeman, esident. / \ Cash in. IlQ^iUYV T.fS, C. % . .V.. $25,000 y^n. U Lewis, i \Y. A Johnson, Will A. Freeman est on yearly deposits. Will furnto (>j)0ii small accounts with us. ml dimes, and you will find that will pay you on your savings will ' f.\r ^ :v -*? ^ ETSHOE. s^\ omul hing! 1!' you want for "The Hub. For sale \*y y icliols .. i . i, . i . i, hi Professional Cards. McCord & McCord, SUltG EON DENTISTS, Conway, S. C. ttr^Ovor Hank of Ilorry. H- M< Burroughs, Physician and Surgeon, Conway, S- O R b7 scarbrougiT CONWAY, 8. C., VTTOIIN KY AT LAW ii. 11. WOODY/ABD, Attorney and Counsellor at Law, CONWAY. 8. O. G. Fit Hl\ ST A LAKY Attorney and Counsellor ap Law, CONWA Y. S. C T^Weffied Wi-itT" ATTORNKV AT LA\V, Conway, S. C. Office in S])ivoy Dr. C. IS. S)( itz, DENTIST <1- OPTICIAN. Conway, S. C. bo<>m No. 4, Sjiivoy Building. 0 niir A^r Pt /IaII /l opivcjf a luiiuib u .f Fire Insurance. ItKOKICl* AOK. I). A Sivey, President. M. \V Collins, Secretary, Conway Market Fresh bleats and Sausage always on hand. Orders are taken and promptly delivered every day. Geo. L. Marshy. Propretor. ingles! I have opened a . Shingle Yard and . ran fill your or-' .? ders promptly HBLL BUCK. * Livery and Drayage. 'Phone 36. Horry Tobacco Warehouse. J. E. Coles.