University of South Carolina Libraries
NOTICE!*U- SICK WOMEN STANFORD INQUEST FINISHED. ATE 85 POUNDS OF BEEF. I carry in stock Shoes of all grades, Hats and Caps, Groceries, such as Flour. Meal, Meat, Lard, Sugar, Cof fee, Teas, Spices, Horse and Cattle Powders, S>da, Soaps. Seed and Hat ing Potatoes. Cabbage, Dried Keans, &c., Light Hardware, such as Pocket- kinves, Table Cutlery, Scissors, Locks, Shot* Nails, Axes, Shovels, Nails &c., Notions such as Hosiery, Suspenders. Men’s Underwear, Pants, Overalls, Handkerchiefs, &c., Tobac co’s of all kinds. Many things too numerous to mention. AU cheap tor cash. : : : : SHOULD HUD MRS. FOX'S LETTER In All Parts of the United States Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Has Effected Similar Cures. Ittorney General Had an Idea She Committed Suicide. Honolulu, March 8.—The testimony *f the chemists in the inquest on Mrs he Fatal Result of a Wager in Gorging. (New York Press.) Dubuque, la.—His stomach distend- Many wonderful cures of female ilia are continually coming to light which have been brought about by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and I.M. The Builders Supply Co. Successors to L. Baker. Will furnish you Building Material of the best that the markets afford ami at the lowest living prices. No. i heart pine Shingles and Laths, and Devo’s cele brated Paints—guaranteed to go further and last longer than any other in the market. When in need of anything in the building line, call and see us; we’ll treat you courteously and mave your es timates for nothing. T_v. Baker, MANAGER. Jl/lrs. Fannie D.Fox West End Bargains I have purchased the stock of Staple and Fancy Groceries, Confection eries, Cigars. Tobacco, Dry Goods and Notions formerly belonging to J. A. Graves, in “West Knd.” I bought the goods at JV 15ilite<lnotion From first prices, and will sell just as I bought—Low Down. Call and in spect my stock and you will find I can save you money. B. F. Gibbs, Graves’,Old Stand—West End. through the advice of Mrs. Pinkham, | of Lynn, Mass., which is given to sick women absolutely free of charge. Mrs. Pinkham has for many years made a study of the ills of her sex ; she has consulted with and advised thousands of suffering women, who to-day owe not only their health but even life to her helpful advice. Mrs. Fannie D. Fox, of 7 Chestnut Street, Bradford, Pa., writes: Dear Mi's. Pinkham :— “ I suffered for a long time with womb trouble, and finally was told by ray physician that I had a tumor on the womb. I aid not want to submit to an operation, so wrote you for advice. I received your letter and did as you told me, and to-day I am completely cured. My doctor says the tumor has disap peared, and I am once more a well woman. I believe Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Com pound is the best medicine in the world for women.” The testimonials which we are con- stantlypublishingfrom grateful women establish beyond a doubt the power of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound to conquer female diseases. Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to promptly communicate with Mrs. Pinkham. at Lynn, Mass. She asks nothing in return for her advice. It is absolutely free, and to thousands of women has proved to be more precioua than gold. Stanford’s death practically completes 0( j p, three times its normal size af- the case for the Jury and tonight wit u . r i, e had ea ten 85 pounds of raw nesses will sign the tianscripts o! “Phir* Melloy, who posed as the ! their testimony in the presence of the vvorld , 8 champion ea ter, died in terri-! A bh* agony here today. He was found: Attorney General Andrews Is said to un f| (M)r n f | ds i, ed room by his have been directing his actions with ir., with his hand on his stomach, the idea of bringing out the prolabil- md his lace distorted as if intense l ity of the suicide of Mrs. Stanford, -suffering had preceded death. An au- using as the basis of such theory the ^°P s y wa s performed by six doctors, , . , . £. md they found the walls of the stem-, fact that Mrs. Stanford in ban Fran- . , .u « • „ , ^ ach literally permeated by the juices cisco became acquainted with the ex- (> j t j le mea t treme bitterness of strychnine, yet \ we ek ago Melloy issued a chal- made no remark on the night of her knge to any man in the world to eat death that she had experienced the against him for a wager of $500. He same taste in the medicine which is was Intensely proud of his gastronom- said to have caused the end of her ‘ c ft * ats > a » d the Renting ot a. ... dozen youths that drove him to death. l^re • On Sunday afternoon Melloy met the; youths in a resort in the heart of the 'Frisco Police Deny Rumor. city. Talk turned to his wonderful San Francisco, March 8.—The police performances in eating, and Melloy authorities have deemed it necessary boasted he could eat 85 pounds of beef to deny the persistent rumors afloat ' n twent y hours. One of the young men in the party then offered to bet that they found strychnine in Mrs. Melloy $ 100 that he could not eat the Stanford’s residence here. Acting amonn t. Melloy hesitated in accept-; Chief of Police Sprague has given out j n g the bet, and was laughed at for a, a statement that no strychnine Was “quitter.” He was called “fakir” and found in Mrs. Stanford’s residence. “four-flusher,” and was told that any one in the party could equal him at eating when at his best. Unable to bear the derision, Melloy finally said he would make the bet. The money was staked and fresh beef was obtained from a packing house. Two doctors pronounced It of excel-1 m B OI Xv S PYRAMIDS OF PAIN Boils show the blood is in a riotous, feverish ^ condition, or that it has grown too weak and slug gish to throw off the bodily impurities, which then concentrate at some spot, and a carbuncle or boil is the result. To one already enfeebled by disease, boils seem to come with more frequency, . -*«**-- causing the intensest pain and greatest danger to the already w«mk and debilitated sufferer. All skin eruptions, from the sometimes fatal car buncle to the spiteful little cat-boil, are caused by bad blood, and the only way to avoid or get permanently rid of them is to purify and build up the deteriorated, polluted blood, and counteract the humors and poisons; and nothing will do this so quickly and thoroughly as S. S. S., whiph is the acknowledged king of blood purifiers and great- est of all tonics. Where the blood has become impoverished and ii poor and thin, no medicine acts so promptly in building up and restor ing its richness, purity and AUaaheny, Pa., Juno 11,1903. Prom tn j age of twenty or thirty I was sorely afflicted with large, awful boils oumy face and body. As soon as they would heal up in one plsos they would break out in another part of the body, and this continued for ten years. I tried every thing I could hear of to get relief, but nothing FOUR MINERS DASHED TO DEATH. strength. The time to cure a boil is before it devel ops, when it is in a state of incubation or formation in the blood; for boils are, _ _ __ _ after all, only the imouri- did me any good. Ihad bit little faith ins. s.'i , .- , .Jf.. doing me good when I began it, but after taking ties and poisons bubbling itfor a short while the boils began to disappear, up through the skin, and f^o^^donwiththemedicine.takingsixbot- sMa nrill : •. tle ** * n d all the boils entirely diaappeared. Five tniS Will Continue in spite years have elapsed since that time, and I have never been bothered since, showing that the cu.e was permanent. I had some thirty or forty o| the most painful boila one ever bad, and to be entirely rid of them by your great purifley. S. S. s., puts me under a debt of gratitude t4 you. HENRY ZINN. Were Going Down Incline When Car Got Beyond Control. Charleston, W. Va., March 8.—At Shrewsbury, a minnig village 1C miles ,ent Quabty. an d Melloy was locked , . . i j j -.u with it in a room. A guard was placed above here, a mine car loaded with oyer the room( and at the end of 19 coal and carrying teji workmen who j, olirs Melloy knocked to be released, were coming from the mine, dashed The door was opened and only a few 1,000 feet down an incline, kiling four small bones were found in the room, of the miners and injuring four others. Ordinarily Melloy was trim in figure, Embroidery Sale! I have now on sale the largest and best se lected stock of Embroideries to be found in town, at all prices, from 1c to 25c per yard. The ladies have a special invitation to call and inspect these goods whether they buy or not. Just received, lot of A. F. C. Ginghams, Toile, du Nordsand Per cales at way down prices. I have some great bargains in Ladies’ Underskirts. Big lot Negligee Shirts from 25c to $1.00. Clothing, Hats and Shoes lor everybody at all prices. I have a few pairs of Blank ets left; also a few Quilts, and now is the time to get them at bargain prices. : : See me for Seed Irish Potatoes and Onion The dead are: Andrew Hunt, aged 35, married. William McSurley, aged 18. John McSurley, aged 17. Ed McGlothian, 19. but he came out of the room bloated. So elated was ho with his prodigious capacity that he went to a restaurant and ate three large cans of salmon and four apple pies. Melloy was hardly able to walk The men were riding down to their home. He gave his wife the $100 he: homes when the rope pulled out of the ^ ad won am l t* 1011 staggered to his | dead eje end, of the drawhead and found his , )ody g rowin g co i d H e had the car descended like lightning to a pp a rently slipped from bed to the the bottom of the incline 1,000 feet floor His head was slightly lower below. Two of the ten men Jumped as soon as the car was released, and were un hurt. Others jumped later and were injured more or less severely. Four stayed until the car smashed into the tipple demolishing it and being itself destroyed. THREATENED WITH REVOLUTION Several Central American Republics On Verge of Uprisings. San Francisco, March 8.—According to a report brought from Central American by the steamer Acapulco, just arrived at this port, revolutions f^Ttlny bTlhiin, and he had a7pec“- than Ms body and some of the beef which had got into his throat pre vented him from making an outcry. Two weeks ago Melloy ate 180 raw eggs in 20 minutes and wound up by devouring five large porterhouse steaks in quick succession. At * his regular meals he ate sparingly, but when he set himself down for a con test he seemingly could conusme an unlimited quantity of food. Five weeks ago Melloy went into a restaurant here and ordered all the steaks, chops, chickens, fish, oysters and vegetables in the place to be prepared and set before him. He cleared the restau rant of everything eatable and then said he wished he had something more to eat. Melloy’s stomach stretched are threatened in Guatemala, and also j a j su jj 0 f clothes to wear at his eat- in Nicaragua. ing contests. President Cabrera of Guatemala, and President Zelaya of Nicaragua are said to he very unpopular with the masses in their respective countries. Some Humor Left in Old John L. (Cincinnati Despatch.) Whatever may be said about the once mighty John L. Sullivan, reports Sets. Kl( n n fflilEff M B J1 5 From The Factory To The Bank. The] Gaffney Savings Bank should receive part of the contents of the wage earner’s envelope each pay day. No mat- / H tcl w ^ at ^ ie income may $ — / he, a certain amount can and should be set aside for. emergencies or use in old age. :::::: THE GAFFNEY SAVINGS BANK Will accept amounts from $1.00 and upwards and pays! FOUR PER CENT. INTEREST on all deposits. The Gaffney Savings Bank. Office in The National Bank of Gaffney. I Cabrera is trying to avoid trouble by ] iav r e r that his lectures are really opening up the new railroad to the interesting. In his second public gulf coast, which is expected to stim- talk before a crowded house the old ulate trade. In Nacaragua the situa- ] Hon of the prize ring is reported to tion is said to he greatly strained over ,ia y® said ’ araon S other things: i ,,, „ “Good evening, ladies and gentle- the new law compelling priests to ap- men p*‘ar in citizen s clothes instead of in «j n s t ar tj n p; ou t with you this even- Cassocks. The church party is very ing I am going to take Boston as a strong throughout the country, and starting point. Boston was the start- the law dictating the style of garb ing point of the glorious of the free. for the church leaders has from the B° s ton waa a l so the place that I first met with strenuous opposition. sta r ted frorn ’ So we wil1 a11 start to gether. j “I have heard a great many dis- CONTEST BUCKET SHOP BILL, missions as to what I did In my early life. Some say that I was a cabman, Measure Will Be Fought—Divorce Law others say that I was a plumber, oth- of North State Please Many. ers a bricklayer. Well, now, the last Raleigh, N. C., March 8.-The anti- vocatlo ° J s ^ Now Just to tell bucket shop bill, passed by the le^isla- j d i RCOVered that I had any supe- ture, allows cotton mill men to deal in riority in the pugulistlc line over the futures, this amendment having been secured by Senator Eller in the inter est of the mill men. The bucket shop people, as they are popularly known, say the new law is worthless, because it is class legisla tion and hence unconstitutional and other men. I was working on a wall with a brother union man. He wished to stretch a chalk line from corner to corner to meet In the center. “He was invariably trying to show the boss that he could lay more brick than I could, but on one bright par- ticuclar morning he would not wait say they will continue business and let for the chalk line to be stretched a test, case he made. from corner to corner, and he ran up The divorce law which has been en- ! die . end 5^ the wall three or four tiers i.. higher than mine. When the whistle acted b> the legislature ghes more , )](nv siKnifyinff lt wag 12 o’clock— satistaction than anything in that line we jj t j wa ]ked over to his corner and which has been done in a score of pushed several rows down, evening years, and it annuls a long string of his end up with mine, special laws, enacted to cover particu- "That, was a signal for a combat. I lar cases in the interest of people who showed that fellow there and then wished to take another husband or | hat “‘f 1 * ]a * brick faster than I could, but he could not remain In w *to- good health and do it. ^ , "When I returned from dinner he Actress Seriously Burned. had two brothers who were carpen- Chicago, March 8.—According to a tors working on the same building, dispatch to the Chronicle from Ed- who were laying for me with a ham- wardsville, 111., Victory Bateman, the "« >r ln each hand To make a long „ , . u , story short I put the whole family in well known actress who has appeared thp fl OS pjt a i •• v j before the public frequently as a mem ber of a stock company, lias been se- Sullivan then displayed upon the screen a number of pictures of for- All kinds of Job Work done at The Ledger office neatly and at prices commensurate with high grade work Try us, “ " for Die Lednr, $1.00 a year riously burned In a hotel fire there, mer shining lights In pugullsm. In- The dispatch gives no details. eluding Joe Goss, Steve Taylor, John Flood, Paddy Ryan, Charlie Mitchell, ,,,,, , Doctrwin.H • Iako Kilrain and a number of others, G llesp.e Murder Case Postponed. raany of whom are unknown the Rising Sun, Ind., Mai oh 8. The trial p rese nt generation. He then contln- of Myron Bancourt, his wife and Mrs. ,jed: Belle Seward, charged with complicl- "Now, of course you know that ty In the murder of Elizabeth GUles- Part 3 > 3 the home of singing, music, pie by her twin brother, has been post- ! f rt ’ Plating and sculpture. I was ... . i Introduced to a professor of music poned until the supreme court passes , one who i nv j ted me h j g gtudio, upon the motion of James Gillespie and there I saw several of the grand est pianos that I ever saw In my life.- I always knew that I had a good ear for music; also that I had & good voice, but I didn’t know what you would call my voice—a basso, falset to, or what—but I knew that you wouldn’t call It a tenor—so while In the professor’s studio I walked over to one of the pianos and struck a scale, and I asked, “Ob, oh, professor, what would you call my voice?’* “He said: ’Monsieur Sullivan, don’t call It; don’t call it; let it sleep!’” for a new trial. Financial Troubles Cause Suicide. Chicago, March 8.—Dr. Ivan C. Am- ilon, of this city, 33 years old, commit ted suicide today as a result of exces sive brooding over difficulties in the management of a life insurance com pany. He was an employe of the com pany. of poulticing and lancing till the blood gets rid of its accumulated poison. The way to stop boils is to attack them in thejblood, and this is what S. S. S. does. All danger of boils is past when tht blood has been thoroughly purified and the system cleansed of all mor* bid, impure matter. If you are subject to boils, then the same cause* that produced them last season will do so this, and the sooner you begin to put your blood and system in good order the better the chance of going through the spring and summer season without boils or other painful and irri tating skin eruptions. S. S. S. is guar anteed purely vegetable, and can ba taken with perfect safety by old and young, and without harm to the most delicate constitution. It it mild and pleasant in its action, and unequaled as a cure for boils andj kindred eruntinn® Wrif» kindred eruptions. Write us if you would like medical advice or othtn Information. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, CM The Cotton Planter with a habit is detormlnefl to.ijet the best possible results from bis labor—therefore, he sees that his lauds are well provided with Virginia=Carolina Fertilizers! This Is a mighty good habit, too, by the way-for they enrich the soil, vreaily Increase the acreage, and make certain the largest crop of ht r nest grade cotton. Made of the very best ammoniates money can buy and of the highest grade phosphate rock the earth produces, as well as the finest potash salts of whic h Europe cau boast. They always come up tc or exceed our guaranteed analyses. If your dealer cannot, supply you with these brands of fertilizers, drop us a postal or letter, and you will bo equipped with the best fertilizers at the least possible cost. VIRGINIA-CAROLItfA CHEMICAL CO., at any one of these cities: Savannah, Ga. Montgomery, Ala. Memphis, Tenn. Richmond, Va. Norfolk, Va. Durham, N. C. Charleston, S, C. Atlanta, Ga. Cabbage Plants and Sea Island Cotton Seed. Cabbage Planta for sale, and now ready for delivery. “Early Jersey Wakefield” and “Charleston Large Type Wakefield," two earliest sharphead varieties and head In rotation as named. ••Succession, “Augusta Trucker," and “Short Stem Flat Dutch,” the three best flat- head varieties and head In rotation as named. Prices: single thousand, 11.50; 5,0fX>and over $1.^5 per 1,000; 10,000 and over, |1 per 1,000. Terms: Cash with order, or plants sent C. (>. D.. purchaser paying return charges oa money. Our plant beds occupy .15 acres on South Caro lina Sea Coast, and we understand growing them in the open air; tough and hardy; they will stand severe cold without Injury. Plants crated for shipment weigh ^0 lbs. iier 1,000, and we have special low rates for prompt transportation by Southern Express Co. Wo know of other plants you can buy cheaper than ours. Ours are good plants. No cheap "cut-rate" plants shipped from our farm. We guarantee those that we ship to lie true to type and name, and grown from high ^trade seeds purchased from two of the most reliable seed houses In the United States. 'Ve will refund purchase price to any dissatisfied customer at end of season. eed. Lint of Long Staple vai ton, on Dec. 2, at 32c per pound. Seed. $1.25 . . . r Our specialty: Prompt Shipments. True Varieties, and Satisfied Customers. We have been In the plant business for thlrty-ilve years. Our Cotton Seed. Lint of Long Staple variety Sea Island Cotton sold last year in Charles- ".25 per hu-, lots of 10 bus. and over, $1 per bu. Win, C. 6ERATY, Jan 13-law-3mo “The Cabbage Plant nan.” Post and Telegraph Ottice, YOUNGS ISLAND, S. C. Have Your Homegrown Cabbage Cabbage Plants, All Varieties, Prices: iooo at $1.50, 5000 at $1.25 per iooo, 10000 at $1.00 per 1000. Shipped C. O. D. if desired. Plants arrive at your Express Office in good condition. : Write for Merchants , Prices. Cabbage, Beans, Sweet Potatoes and Turnips in Season. Orders for shipment of To mato Plants, Sea Island Cotton Seed and Sweet Potato Draws should be booked in advance. Jas. Ray Geraty, Youngs Island. 5 0. Enterprise, S, C. Fep. 3-St For Rates and other Information regarding fin, Liii, Accid«nts, and Hpallli Insurance anil Sicurili BonUs. I will give you any information free of charge that I have learned in six year’s study of this important subject.|Don’t put off giving your application for insurance for delays are dangerous. See trte before placing your insur ance. All busines entrusted to my care will have prompt attentention. JONES J. DARBY, Agent.