University of South Carolina Libraries
You will often Mk nave the cost of a I #1 years' subtfcrip- I tion to the B extkkpkihk Jkm^m A. b y consulting its ^ advertisements. Vol. X. ???? ??-- - - ? -?-? THE CENSUS And Persons Away From Homo During June. The count of the people in the United States will begin in all parts of the country June 1, and end in the cities two weeks later and in the rest of the country before the close of the monthThe people are to be counted at their places of residence, but as many persons and families will be ^ away from their homes during June there is some danger that such persons will not be counted. If they are not counted, the locality in which they live will be misrepresented to that extent, and in some cases this misropre sentation may be enough to affect the representation in congress of the state from which they come Loca! pride and state pride, therefore, should influence all- such absentees to take reasonable precautions against being omitted from enumeration in their places of residence. Such omissions are most likely to occur in the large cities where families-close their homes and go elsewhere for the summer. The occurrence of the Paris exposition this year is likely to increase the number absent from the country. In all cases of contemplated | absence the head of the family is requested by the census of fice to communicate with the sn pervisor of the district'in which Y' he lives. He is also requested to leave information regarding his answers to the questions which are to be asked with some responsible neighbor who will agree to see that it reaches the enumerator on his rounds. Such information might better be left as a memorandum in writing, as in that case it is less likelv to be overlooked. The questions to which answers are desired apply primarily to the population, but also to all farms and manufacturing establishments. * They are being published from time to time in the press of the country. By taking this trouble the II lid rv % f AltlOAlk mill /I /\ 1 not I/1A t / \ tlirnnill* Jll'loril ?? llf ?!?? JUO* ll/C Mf his locality and his state, and materially aid-the census otlice in the performance of its duties. The census schedule will include inquiries about, age, color or race, date of birth, conjugal condition, n u in be r of y 8?rs insr ried, place of birth, year of immigration to the United States, naturalization, occupation, nura ber of months not employed, school attendance, and ability to read or write of all persons to whom those questions are ap plicable. In addition, inquiries will be maoe about the ownership of homes and farms, farm acre * age, value and quantity of farm products, amount of livestock, etc* etc. j This is the 5th district of /South Carolina, 246th Supervisor's district, and is made up of the counties of Chester, Chesterfield, Fairfield, Kershaw, Lancas ter, Union and Yora. Supervisor, T. J. Cunningham, Chester, S. O ? Kditor Lantkkn. i t He Fooled The Surgeons. All doctors told Kenick Hamilton, of West Jefferson, (>., after suffering 18 months from Itectal Fistula, he would die unless a \ costly operation was performed ; but he cured himself with five boxe"? of Bucklen's Arnica Salve, the surest File cure on Farth, and the best Salve in the World. 25c. a box. Sold Jby Crawford Bros. Druggist. 4 Germany'h New .Meat Law. Berlin, May 23.?The Iteicli stag today, voting by roll call, adopted the moat bill by 163 to 123. In addition to prohibiting the importation of canned goods . or sausage meat the bill provides thai until December 31, 1903, the \ importation of fresh meat shall only be allowed in the whole or. in certain canes, in half carcasses, and that the importation of prepared meat shall only be permit i . iNBAS - .* i Tl L- - - L - ted when it is proved to be innocuous, which is regarded as being impossible of proof in the ^ case of consignments of salt meat tinder four kilograms in weight. The bill also provides that after 1903 the importation of meat shall either be regulated by fresh g legislation or the above men tioned provision remain in force. The bill in the compromise form (J is regarded by United States Am bassador White as worse, in its 1 bearing upon the United States, 1 than it was originally. lie par- ' ticularly referred to the virtual " exclusion of our corned beef. I Glorious News f Comes from Dr. D. B. Cargile, of Washita, 1. T. lie writes: * "Four bottles of Electic Bitters d has cured Mrs. Brewer of scrofula, e which had caused her great suf- . fering for years. Terrible sores would break cut on her head and <1 face, and the best doctors could 'l give no help ; but her cure is com- ^ plete and her health is excellent." Thi shows what thousands have proved,?that Electric Bitters is t the be? blood purifier known. It's the supreme remedy C' r eczema, tetter, salt rheum, ulcers, boils 1 and running Rores. It stimulates c li.vor, kidno.vsuinl bowels, expels K poisons, helps digestion and builds j up the strength. Only 50c. Sold by Crawford Bros. Druggist t Guaranteed. 4 l The Potato Beetle. Those who are enough inter eBted to exainiue will tiud tout ' the potato beetle has double rows '] of dots along the sides, and the (| 3d and 4th black stripes lrom the lower edge are joined at the ends, 11 while the beetle found on the t nettle has single rows ol dots, and the '2d and 3d stripes are joined instead of the 3d and 4th. The bogus beetle also has a black c spot on the thigh that is not found a on the potato beetle. The legs, as (1 I wull am lllrt niiDH Aitri Mm vrtnnur ? -rr" ?? are also a little on color. It is a skillfully executed counterfeit. The difference is not apparent to ordinary observation^ut is quite distinct on close examination. The bogus beetle is never found ? on the cultivated potato. The potato beetle is said to be . worse the first few years after it's appearance, but has never been * known to abandon any territory 1 it has once invaded. r Johnson's cyclopedia says this k pest was first described by Thos. ^ JSay, who found it feeding on a wild plant of the potato family on the upper Missouri, in 1824 It wa-> scarcely heard of again till 1850, when it wan found feeding on the cultivated potato, 100 ( miles west of Omaha, Nebrask 4. ' Its course was eastward, crofting ' the Mississippi about 1864. it t reached the Atlantic Seaboard in :( 1874, and in 1875 was common c from Virginia to Maine, having s , traveled about 1,500 miles in 10 c years. Its progress from Virginia ^ southward was slower, doubtless because its favorite diet was less plentiful in the south, potato a patches being less extensive and -s more widely separated. The longer the pest remains in ( a locality the more its natural enemies increase, which accouuts for its becoming less numerous. It is said that chickens have been known to acquire a taste for f them. Some of our poultry rais ( ers might make money bre*ding ' 1 and training chickens for this ' 1 work. VVe have never seen chick I ens eat them, but we have not ' seen a potato patch in which * chickens run freely molested by I the bugs. No doubt they eat the < young bugs and eggs. By the way, entomologist say they are not "bugs." Paris green is,considered the f most effectual artificial remedy,j( but we would not recommend it ( f.k la. akani , I. , kaa.a ' i i?u uitv ill jmiiiiirn niiuu t iiir iiuunn. The buga come in "crop*," and in ' ?ma!l patche* the ecrga and the 1 young mav be destroyed by hand i when they appear.?Cheater Lan, tern. (luring Kipnctaney. Hlmmnnt S<pinw j Vln<? Wtnc or Tablets cheer ami Strengthen | Mother. Shorten l.ubor ami Kob (Huiflnement of Its Terrors. i - ? ?* - ( Mother* wishing stout healthy girls should rive them Simmons S<junw Vino Wine*or Tab- I Iota a" they approach puberty. TEH BEMI-M j AN CASTER, S. C., Si TAYLOR A FUGITIVE. Lit Indictment is Itcally Found Against Him as an Accessory in Uoebcl's Murder. Louisville, Ky., May 22.?A elegram from a trustworthy ource in Indianapolis this mornng says Governor Taylor of Kenucky, has reached that city for a onsul ration with his friends. The noment the supreme court issued ts decision, a detective was sent o Indianapolis for ex Secretary f State Finley or any other lie: i:_ i l.. 1 "iwiutui muuunu uy me rraiiKin county grand jury. A bench warrant was issued or Taylor and a detective sent o find him. Taylor eluded the [elective in a closed carriage and scaped into Indiana. i'liis thus irought out the fact that an in lictment was really found against 'aylor and held up by Judge lantrell. The feeling today is very bit er The Republican minor state officers refuse to surrender to the )emocrats and will carry their ases up to the United States tipreme court, and until that >o<ly acts on their writ of error hey will hold their offices. The )emocrats admit that Taylor was ;overnor legally until yesterday's lecision. Five Republican state officers ndicted as accessories in the (Joe>el murder were pardoned by fay lor. Under the supreme court lecision, these pardons will serve s a bar to any prosecution of he indictments. Taylor will not return to Ken ueky until the Republican state on tranl ion Into I trt/t ?t /?.?!! /t/1 ? ? o I ui? ? uui iuii unn ucc 11 jiiai Iter the Republican national ouvention. The Appetite of a Goat. Is envied by all poor dyspep ics whose Stomach and Livei ;re out of order. All such should ;n<>w that Dr. King's New Life *ilif, the wondeful Stomach and jiver Remedy, gives a splendid ippetite. Round digestion and n pgular bodily habit that insure* lerfect health and great energy )n?y 25c.at Crawford Broa. Drugitore. 4 Lost Gold. It is now admitted by Secretary Jage that the gold supply of the Jnited States is short #400,000, 100. This deficiency ol the "orimates" added to the error ol 150,000,000 made by Mr. Gage in omputing the surplus in the U 5. treasury, leads to the con ilusion that our national book ceeping is of the "fancy" variety M-rmttruatlon made Kexulur and Pntnlean nit I'ltina in Side*. Mips and Otnitm cured l)j itni uons 8i|uaw Vint Wmaor 'ialiiota. Inching the Power of the Pa taw ha. Mr. W. Harry Wylie who hat or several years been tn charge )f >be mechanical department ol he State Hospital for the insaue eaves today for Rock llill, whert le will take charge of the mam nc-th power plant to tie built or Ja-Rwba river, Mr. Wylie is vie* >r< sideut and general managei >f lie company. Ilia brothers. Drs. Gill and Hot W/lie of Bellevue Hospital, New i'ork, ate officers of the company is are Mr. VV. J. lloddey, presi lent of the First National bant >f flock Hill and Mr. YVm. C VV ntner, who erected Anderson'i t)i> water plant. The preparatory work inciden to <he building of this plant hai neon under way for some time Mr. W. H. Stewart obtained op dons on the river bottoms foi mi>es above the river where tin proposed dam is to be located, sr flirt no alien's property will b? la-najied by back water. The organization of the com pnny is due to the efforts to Mr Ente fEEKLY. ^TURDAY, MAY 86, 1 Wliituer who will be the ongineer in charge of the construe tion. A dam of masonry and stone 20 feet high will be thrown across the Catawba at a shoals about five miles north of Rock Hill. This will supply power to drive the big electric dynamos which will cable the power to Foit Mill and Rock Hill. In this way Rock Hill's five cotton mills, and Fort Mill's two will be in touch with a power which will outlast coal and wood, Yorkville, Clover, Chester and even Charlotte are not too far away to tap this power for their many mills and for driving cars and lighting streets. Chester herself, however, has never given up the hope of utilizing the shoals above Catawba Falls, the finest water power in the south. If the new railroad line projected from Chester to Camden be built, it will pass the headwaters of these shoals and will assure the completion of a big electric depot at quite distance below Rock Hill and nearer to Chester and to Lancaster than that of the Catawba Power com pony near Rock Hill.?The State. When you ask for I)r. \1. A Simmons t.lvnr Medicine, see that you get it and not some > worthless imitation. ^2 Noely's Embezzlement. New York, May 23.? Papers are today en route from Washing: ton to New York which charge Neely. the alleged defaulting pos tal employe, with the embezzlement of a sum approximating $400,000 through conversion into cash of the $400,000 worth of "surcharged" Cuban postage stamps which were ordered de stroyed and so certified by Neelv. i * A l.lfo And Dentil Klnrlit. Mr. W. A. Hines of Manchester, la., writing of his almost miraculous es, cape from death, says: Exposure after measles induced lung trouble, which ended in Consumption. I had , fre<|ii< nt hemorrhages and cou^h-id night and day. All my doctors said I must soon die. Then I began to use 1?r. King's New Discovery for Consumption, which completely cured tne. I would not be without it even if it I cost n bottle. Hundreds have i used it on my recommendation and i all say it never fails to cure 1 hroat, Chi*st and Rung troubles." Regular I size fiOo anil $1.00. Trial bottles free > at Crawford Bros, drug store. 4. Arrested Railroad President. i I i Augusta, (Ja , May 23.?I). B. ' Dyer, as president of the Augusta Railway and Electric company and E. C. .Jefferson, theconductor in charge of the car upon which Alex Whitney, a young white , man, was killed by a Negro ten days ago and tor which the Negro was subsequently lynched, have been indicted by the grand jury ' of Richmond county for alleged violation of the state law requiring ttie separation of races on . public carriers. Mttlaotrlnn can t!n<1 a lodgement in the xys ' teni while the Liver In in jwrfect order. Dr M. A. Simmons' Liver Medicine fa the best Regulator. A feature of the American neelion of the Paris exposition is the i corn kitchen, in which are being ' cooked all sorts of dishes made f ' from Indian corn, or maize. The j Europeans are said to be delight i i ed with their first taste of corn 1 j muffins, cakes, etc. Many of the r restaurants have already put corn dishes on their bills of fare. > _ r ' 'i'u? i 1.1\r:_ f| i liti ^uucrai annt'iuuiv tu * n ginia has recently passed a hill t appropriating a sulliciont sum of i money for the purchase of tho * homestead of Chief Justice MarI shall in Richmond, Va. The ^ house is now owned and occupied by two grand daughters o! the great jourist and is little changed r from what it was when it was v built in 17D5. It will he pre > served as a memorial. ^ i |)r M A Simmon* I.Ivor Medicine Clears . the r.omplexlon, ijlvos llotivancy to the Mind. t| curt .? Headache.. Regulate* Stomach, Hon els ' and Liver :rpri: 900. TWO MEN KILLED IN WRECK NEAR LAUREN*. Engineer Mr Kinney and a Colored Trainman Lost Their Lives on Chariest on and Western Carolina Road. Liuruns, May 23?A through freight from Augusta due here at 0 a. m. over the Charleston and Western Carolina road was wrecked three miles south of here early this morning. Engineer Wm. McKiuney of Augusta and Counts Gaiues, a colored train hand, were killed, being fearfully mangled and scalded, and the engine and five chth are a mass of wreckage. The fireman jumped from the engine ami escaped with slight injuries. A broken truck of the engine is supposed to have been the cause, a? there are evidences of a broken Mange on the rail intact. The track is torn up for some distance and it will he a day or two before trains will get through. Meantime passengers and mail will he transferred. Hundreds of people from the city visited the scene of destruc t.ion during the day. Engineer MoKinnev was 35 years old and has a wife to whom the body will be sent in Augusta this afternoon.?The State. Beware of a Cough. A cough is not a disease but a symptom Consumption ami bronchitis, which are the most, dangerous and fatal disease, have for their first indication a persistent cough, and if pr perly treated as soon as this cough appears are easily cured. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy has proven wonder fully successful, and gained its wido | reputation and extensive sale by its success in curing: the disease which cause coughing. If it is not beneficial it will not cost you a rent. For sale by J. F. Mackey it Co. A Juried Constitution. When a man who steals #400, 000 of government money can Ing in the United States Constitution to support the defense of uncon stitutionality in the method o' his trial, it is evident that the Constitution has indeed become an effete instrument. There ic something in the legal point that 1 f V> / % t O % n 4 I f I < 4 f> ? l? ? ( MM U -? i uu vyvtiintiiiiiuuii lira v I Ouril atiolished there is no way to pun ish imperial thieves. Apropos ol (lowers, there is a charming passage in Baden I'owells's book <>n the Matabele war of 1896, wherein he describes the wooded hills of (he Selukwe (lis trict of Mashonaland. *?A lot ol the trees are still in their autumn tints, while the others are just budding out, (for it is'spring here), the young grass is green il'ying the low-lying land, and even the black burnt veldt is now brightened up with a great varie ty of wild llowers?these are what I call bluebells, cowslips, dan delions, snowdrops, sweet peas, sweet williams, convolvulus and poppies, and many more. Not that they are these llowers actually, but as they have some faint resemblance. I like to be reminded by them of the English llowers." There is a decided undercurrent of sentiment in the man of Mafeking. South Carolina Intel-State and West Indian Exposition. When the project was first agitated 111 January, very few peo pie thought it would ever rnateri alize; that as exposition on a large scale was too big a job for (he staid old city of Charleston to undertake, and it will be re mouibered that when the project received the endorsement of the governor and legislature as was then presented to the people through the medium of the press, ! the universal opinion was, that it . would be a good thing for the state, and for Charleston; if the money could ne raised, out, rnut the Charleston people would not no down in their pockets and put up the necessary amount. Those who held that vi^w have j been mistaken ; Charleston has shown its hand and the subscription now exceeds $1 10,0(10 and is ; daily being added to. The exposition is projected for ! the benelit of the people of the | entire state, and the projectors If you have anything to well r*1 ^ j|^ advertise It in *>8?mr1 ? the enterprise Kates reasonable. No. 16 have decided that wherever the people wish to join with them' and sibscribe to the capital stock, they should have the opportunity to do so. To this end the executive committee have appointed citizens of each county on the committe and have seut thorp hooks of subscription to be opened at convenient, places within the county, where those desiring to subscribe for one or more shares of the stock, can do so. . Subscription books have been sent Col. li?roy Springs, a member of the executive Committee for this county who will take pleasure in receiving subscriptions and giving all desired information. Sensational Itreak in Cotton Market/ New York, May 24.?The cotton market was one great sensation today. No official record of the transactions was kept, but conservative estimates placed the aggregate of the day's dealings at considerably ..n!,,-,. fiw, k?i? u UIU HIIIIIWH I'nn; 111(11 IV From the start to finish of this most extraordinary session there was one enormous outpour of long cotton supplemented by the most aggressive conduct on the part of'the bears, who added largely to their short interest. While the primary cause of of the decline might lie traced to the brilliant character of the crop advices from the cotton belt, the immediate reason for today's collapse was the tremendous selling for the account of a banking firm, originally very successful on the long side of the account ami for months quoted as the leading factor in the ups and downs of the market. This concern, Price, McOormick (Jo., tailed today. The announcement of their inability to respond to calls for margins reached the exchange at 12:37 p. m. and iin mediately the market became a vortex of excitement. This firm had lor months dictated the price of cotton, the world over, with attention directed chiefly to the summer positions and more especially to May and August eontracts. Today May contracts I I TO * i_ . 4 1 I 1 1 nroKO 10 points; i ney soiu uown lo 8 48. This was a decline of 120 points from the high water mark. 1 i r* or - 4. .. aumihi' immt; iu o.ot>, a uecnue of 125 points from the best prices current when the firm that failed today appeared to be in absolute Control of the market. The decline on other positions was generally 10<n>43 points. There were rumors pointing to other suspensions. The close was at the lowest. The Now England Connection*. Boston, May 2-1 ?1'rice, McCormick & Co. have several ? branches in New England. At one time they had a wire agency in this city, but of late the local business has been transacted by I and through the various brokers' houses, including firms of George I A. Fernald it (Jo., iiavden, Sloan i A Co., Towle & Fitzgerald, Lee, lliggings A Co., and others. The j Fernald firm stated this afternoon that I'rice, McCormick & Co's ac count with them was very small. Inter state rights to water are to he. determined by the Federal supreme court. The attorney j general of Kansas has applied for ! leave to file in the court a bill of equity on behalf of his state against Colorado to enjoin the Matte: from diverting the waters of the Arkansas river and its tributaries for irrigation and other purposes. California and Nevada have a joint interest in the waters j of bake Tahoe and Truckee river, j and the decision in the Kansas I Colorado suit may settle their respective rights to the same, and detine how far they can be exercised by one independently of the j ot her.