University of South Carolina Libraries
4? You will often I "TJ J aave the cost of a I I m years' subscrip- I H tion to the I B ^ ENTERPRISE I by consulting its I ^ advertisements. Vol. X. MURES] ^ou can cou?h f lv^L% 'Vyourself into k bronchitis,pneumonia, and con^ P^^(\ Bandaging jf u aX>Aand bundling ^ wi & \jy?ur throat wi" no r ft You must give ' KnBDr your throat and lungs rest and r< allow the cough v' HnraS wounds to heal. There Is noth- * 'n2 80 ^or a > 'P^fYvf cough as cough'?^\ ^t0P '* ^ i- Even the cough of early * J consumption is cured. ? 1 And, later on, when the ^ 4 disease is firmly fixed, Sy you can bring rest and k i comfort in every case. ? ^ A 25 cent bottle will y 4 cute new coughs and f ^ coids ; the 50 cent size is T I better for settled coughs % of bronchitis and weak L lungs; the one dollar size F i is more economical for ! chronic cases and con- L sumption. It's the size i * you should keepon hand. F . " All famlltha ought Id l>r on tli? ? watch for sudden attacks of eroup f or acute lung troubles. Every conn- L ^ try homo In the land should keep T Cherry 1'ectnral constantly on luuiu L 4 to provide against an emergency." p k JOSIAU O. WllLH, M.l>., * m, :,;;v'u. ? W V y ^ Menstruation made Regular and Palnlos anl Pains ra Sides, Hips and Hmtw cured t tflxntnous Squaw Vino Wlno or Tublets. Found 06 zfUa. 5mi "Sing their own praise.' i During the Past 58 Years, SttefF T Pianos Have fulfilled every roquiri ment of tlie most exactin pianists and amateurs all ov< the world, and today stan Without a Superior ^ In either tone, action or worl manship. Sold direct from tl factory saves the middleman profit. and this ? ' ' Saving Pays v For Many IifMBons under tho finest teachf to be procured. Write f< terms and prices. CHAS. M. STEBFF i'iuno Manufacturer, Haltimor Maryland. North and fiouth Carolina Fa tory Brauoh Wareroomf, 818 ^ N. Tryon 8t., Charlotte, N.C. C. H. W1LMOTH, Mgr. ^ VtiM Toning anfl INflirtng If*ll FkntM If JVranjron tint* of Menstrual KuncSonn p M Ucurt n?K? StmmAOS Sfiuuw Vtj}0 Wl or Tubl?u oorr*> t tho Uoranfftmoois ?TEf^ LANCASTER, 8. C., SAT yamen and the devolution of il functions upon one minister < )r foreign affairs makes a wholosom a8 change. Heretofore there hn p, been a many-headed administr; tion of the foreign ollice an hence a division of responsibilit which has made it difficult, if nc ^ impossible, to ascertain the chit culprits in the anti-foreign oui e rages. By combining these powei and responsibilities in one ind n8 vidual it is hoped to inspii n moderation and circumspectnef I in that officer, and this will prol ^ ably be the result. J of such outbreaks as that o! tl last summer. The monument 1 the murdered German rnipiet ^ in the heart of the city of I'eki ^ will serve as a warning to tl ? millions of that region, and tl >y dispatch of an imporial prince make humble apology to Gcrmar - will likewise become wide! known and have its influence. The next provision is that Chii I shall intlict the death penal! upon eleven princess and officin for encouraging crimes again foreigners and that she shall sn pend examinations for five yea ' in provinces where outrages o enrred. We have held from tl first that nothing short of tl signal example of high officia undergoing execution won suffice to meet the necessities the case. Such an object lessc is necessary to inspire the prop< respect for foreign nations hi to teach China's officials that th*. will condone or encourage mc outrages at their peril. The pr vision for the suspension of pr vincial examinations in oflondii territories has the same purposeto punish and to warn. Throuj these examinations selections a mado for the civil service of tl e" empire and their prohibition t< a term of years means '*hat tl ir consequences of the massacr id are to he brought home to tl aspiring young men of populoi areas. Another requirement is th hereafter all officials failing prevent anti-foreign outrag within their jurisdiction shall I dismissed and punished. Th anlnila 1111 n n 11 n 11 n no in o 111 frn 'rt the throne which should ha' good ?fleet as a deterrent of crim The provision that indemni shall he paid 'o the States, cc porations and individuals whi< have suffered from tho Boxer or rapes carries in its terms its ov 3r .justification. 3r The aholition of the tsunp HOW'S this t Wd offer Ons Hundred Dollars It > ward for any case of Catarrh that ca not he cured by Hall's Catarrh Oui e, I F. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo. We, the undersigned, have knov F. J. Cheney for the tast IB years, ai believe him perfeotly honorable C- all business transactions and flnaiu ally able to carry out any obligatio made by their Arm. West A Truax, Wholesale Dru srists, Toledo, O. W aiding, Kinnan A Marvin, Who! ale Druggista, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure la taken lnt? * nally, acting directly upon the bio """ and iniiooiis surfaces of the sysfe ro. Price 7Be. per bottle. Sold by all dru bus gists. Testimonials free. Hull's Family Pills ara t?st ? I m 1mm mm vn eAi 3 n Terms of Peace for China. Through its able and well i formed Pokin correspondent, I Morrison, the London Times h i made one of its famous "scoopet i in securing the first informati< of the terms of the joint no * which the foreign envoys in CI i na have agreed upon, and whic ^ if accepted, "will be press* upon China as the basis of a pr < liminary treaty." A summary of the conditio imposed upon China as guara fees of peace was printed in tl State yesterday. We are boin to say that we regard theso co ditions as moderate, and ev< necessary considering the pro j ocation given by China and tl j tendencies chronic in that ei ^ pi re. It is first provided that Cliii ^ shall erect a monument to Bar< a von Ketteler, the German mini ter to Pekin, on the spot whe; r he was murdered, and shall sei San imperial prince to Germai to convey an apology. These a w are unquestionably great humi ations, but they appear to 1 1 needed to promote the safety } diplomatic officers and other fo ^ eignerR in China hereafter. T1 Chinese are intensely self-sati i fied and believe their nation J be the greatest and most aw " inspiring in the world. Only select few have any conceptic of its ungainly helplessness win brought into contact with wes ern powers. It is necessary I impress them generally with tl conviction, heretofore unente tained, that humiliation and pui ishment are the inevitable frui n~ Additional approximation t >n tho usages of other nations is rt v_ quired by the insistauce thr ''rational intercourse shall b permitted with the emperor, r in civilized countries." This wi ia end such sequestrations of th u imperial person as China hj 8 lately witnessed, and will enabl re foreign governments to comnn Kj nicate directly with tho source < ly authority without subjection t re the restraints and deceptioc j- which have attended intercoure through intermediary officials. _r It is rennired lliaf. tlio forts t OI f , A r_ Taku and elsewhere on the coa.' ,e of Chi Li province shall be raze< H_ and the importation of war nit terial is prohibited ; and it : e, provided that permanent legatio a guards shall be maintained c )n Pekin and also between Peki >n and the sea. The experiences < i the last few months furnish suff to cient justification for these exnt 10 tions. r- The final requirement that fc n- two years imperial proclamation ts shall be posted throughout til le empire for the suppressi ?n of th to Boxers also seems to be ?ecessar no o ilctcrrCui. in Were China, both as a natio 16 and a government irore civilize and less arrogant were it on th ? same plane as any nation, how iy ever feeble, ol lie western worh I IT ' . - these condmou.j ot peace woul appear oxhorbitant and eve ia monstrous. But we have to eoi y sidor that China's case stand 's alone and requires special treai merit. The western powers hav 3 to deal with an immense mult ra tude, swollen with pride and pit c* judico and without any rei 10 knowledge of tlieir obligations t 10 humanity or to international lav 'H Time and again a breach has bee made in the closed gates of Chin and foreign forces have en tens )n made their mild exactions an er retired, having behind them n memorial of the discipline t }y which they had srbjected Ih government, weak in itself bi powerful in the imaginings ot it ?* people. They have come an gone and even the small fractio of China's 400,000.000 who sa1 ' them enter and depart have ha re no true conception of the cor 10 ditions they imposed nor of thoi l>r power to enforce those condition! ie It is necessary now to give P8 more impressive lesson and thi; K> to insure regard for the usage*. c 11P civilized nations and the prote< tion of their citizens in China. The terms may seem harsh, he *? when it is remembered that ,<s was in the power of these aver >e ging nations to end the dynast? to overthrow the imperial thron m and to divide the territory an 1 people of China among then e* selves, it will be seen that tli fv conditions imposed are relativel ^ very mild and have the whoh 3 some object of securing life an property to those whom Chin rn has already accorded free re idence in her territory. Analys ' ! tm Afr/\a 4 Iwk f f li/k Ann/1WiA>r a l n pn/tun tiint i<iir v\miui iiwun hi posed aro designed to be prove? tive even more than punitive, an if they shall accomplish that pu n- pose and end the horrors whir (*' have shocked civilization the ne rn peace will he glorious in histor ?The State. in >i ns """" " * K- If you have ever seen a chil iu the agony of croup you ca realize how grateful mothers ai >r_ for One Minute Cough Cure whic od gives relief as soon as it is admii m- isterod. It quickly cures cough colds and all throat ar.d lur troubles. Crawford Bros, d w a ENTE <VR.R.KLaY. ^URDAY, NOVEMBER ts Foreign Ministers Making Pro>1 greHN and May Soon Submit e Proposition to Chiua. I ^ i'okin, Nov. 12, via Shanghai, Nov. 14 ?A protracted coufer | ence 01 the foreign ministers waa held today, at the conclusion ol J which there was a general oxt ! pression of gratification at the I pi ogress made toward reaching a j jsettlement. It was stated that j must, ui im* minor points naci been disposed of and that an ^ agreement had been reached | upon several essential questions. ' The meeting disclosed lower dif' j ferences over important points . j than was expected, which is largoI ly due to the lact that the minis ! ters have definite instructions jj ! from their homo governments. The United States ministei lO j said he was encouraged to believe 'that propositions would be ready i to be submitted to the Chinese *i plenipotentiaries at an earliei date than ho had heretofore | hoped. The ministers will meet {again tomorrow, i Reliable information from Niu ^jChwang indicates a disturbed j condition of affairs there. Rob j bers and pirates are harrying the '(region and paralyzing commerce. [8 The Russians are making no efn fort to sujijiress the troubles ex. cept along the railway. The weather is becoming colder, f with nightly frosts, but the sup - ply of fuel is good and the troops , are not suffering. >r You can't afford to risk your life by allowing a cough or a cold 13 to develop into pneumonia or 10 consumption. One Minute Cough 10 Cure will cure throat and lunp y trdobles quicker than any other preparation known. Many doc tors use it as a specific for grippe , It is an infallible remedy for 1 croup. Children like it and moth 10 er* endorse it. Crawford Bros r' d w-s i ^ Republicans Will Not Contest the Vote. i la j Louisville, Ivy., Nov. 12.?Af L- ter n, meeting of the Republican ej campaign committee, Chairman i- Leslie (tombs to day gave out a i- [statement in which, alter reiteriljating his charges of wholesale o | frauds on the part of the Doino v. erat8, he said: n | "There will bo no contest ovei a the gubernatorial vote. There if 1,1 no tribunal to which we can ap (1 peal with any hope of an imparo tiul hearing. o "It is not within the province e of this committee to decide foi it'the party or congressional candi Ls! dates what is advisable with re d gard to the contests for the n electoral vote or congressional iv Feats.11 )" ; Many people worry because ir | they belieye they have heart die ? j ease. Tho chances aro that theii a hearts are all right but theii ik ! stomachs are unable to digest >f!food. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure di , i pests what you eat and prevent' the formation of gas which maksi ^ ! the stomach press against th< . ; heart. It will cure every form ol 1 ! indigestion. Crawford Bros. d-w-s h 10 <1 The Woman and the Editor. The Baltimore America! 10 . . i gives tins : ?. | She wept. "Oh, you editor id j are horrid 1" she sobbed. ,ai "What is the trouble, ma dam?" inquired the editor. "Why, I?boo?boo?I sen y. in an obituary of my husband id and?boo?boo?and said in i r- that lie had heen married fo I twenty years, and you?oo?o< w ?boo?hoo?your printers so ' it up 'worried for over twenty years.' " She wept. But the edito d grinned. Perhaps it was al n right. Who knows? re . , i* DeWitt'a Little Karly Riser s, are the best liver pills ever wade ig Kaay to take and nevor gripe Crawford Bros, d-w-s sRPRI 17.1900. JR..gJL" 1 ' 'Mug r^xai From Hickory Sun. 1 J. B. Martin visited Ruthor fordton this week oil business 1 Prof. E. Warth made a bus ' I mess trip to Gastonia recently \\r. H. Elder of Cowpens, S 10., was in town Wednesday oi j business. J. 0. Mitchell and family o i King's Creek have moved t< ! Sedalia in Union county. * Miss Nellie Mitelmll and ho j brother Sam, of King* creek visited relatives at Sharon tlii week. ( W. C. Whitesides, who is on gageil in railroading at Gaines > ville, Ga., has been at home 01 ^ a visit. i S. W. Mitchell expects t I open a hotel, near the depot, 01 the first of December for th 1 accommodation of the travclin men and local patronage. Misslva Whisnant, of Blacks burg, accompanied by her bos 1 fellow, visited here last Sat urday. Her many friends ar always glad to see her coming. Misses Mario Carroll and Ad ' die Russell two beautiful younj 1 ladies, of Blairsville, attende* the Drennon-Marion marring ; in Hickory Wednesday aftei noon. Section master, .1. P. Man ney, has employed a new set 0 hands, all white men,?Nortl Carolinians. lie dismissed th colored men who had been wit' jjliim for disobedience to orders J. N. and T. N. Patrick, tw J of Cherokee's best citizens, wcr 1 i lion* this week to receive* soin 1J marble work made by Fran Happerfield of Yorkville. Se , his advertisement in the Sin 1 j Rev Preston Marion arrive. i in Hickory last Saturday fror the Theological Seminary o ! Columbia and by invitatio ; preached in the A. R. P. eliurc jiit II o'clock Sabbath niornin and at 7 in the evening. II remained for the marriage c j his sister, > | A Raid Kmjlc, R. M. Allison reported th;i ! Sam, a colored boy, living wit * Mrs. Amanda Byers killed . I k r j bald eagle a few days ago thr r I measured six feet from tip t t tip of its wings. Ram thougl he was shooting at a hawk thr j r"> s had boon catching chickens i s that vicinity. Minlnf/ Operation*. R. H. Beard, of the Magnoli Mine, left Wednesday afternoc on a business trip of a few day: t lie says he has a largo quantit of rich ore the production < j this mine. He remarked fu S ' ther that there was more su face ore in Western York tin showed gold than at Crippl ('reek, N. C., or any other plat that ho has seen. lie predici ' that this section will be mine ^ i.vf Anai n n. 1 tlinrmifflil V ,A" - tho ore continues to ma e a sa isfaetory show as tho veins ai further devolopod. L. Tnmbe ^ lain who represents an Euglh syndicate who aro operating r j the Darwin, and other proport; that they have bought contig ous to it on Broad river ai Kings creek expect to cro g Broad river with their work av I* take in the Flint Ilill properi and other mining property a If ycni have anything to nell advortlHO it in .Aari/ # the Knterpriw Kates reiMooftble. No. 06 joining it. They expect to . place machinery at tlireo points j 011 the whole of this mining {land. Franks and Dover, of the Brown Mine, also continued i *| their work of development at their mine near Hickory. It I appears that this section is to become a regular "Klondyke" f mining region in the near j future. Everybody should encourage all such enterpri os in our midst. r | Tli?> l*r?'*cri|?tloii for Malnrla s I Chills arid Over is a bottlt of (drove's Tasteless Chill Tonic. It is simply iron and quinine in a tasteless form. _ Xo cure, no pay. Price 50 cents The Young Southerners. II some advice to young Southerners was given by Prof. Fran! j cis H. Smith of the University of Virginia to the lasi graduating class of the Virginia Military Institute. He traced to the early South the things which are best in the South of today, 1 dwelt upon the outlook for " youth generally, and coming 0 down to his own people, said : "I would impress on the I- young men of the South that ? we live in the choicest of all 1 the centuries and in the choicest e of all the lands of this century. America is the best country iu the world, and the South is the i. best part of America for a young ,f man. Our favored land has no h! titled aristocracy to pre empt e the best places, no grooves of h | custom to direct and confine his t i energies. In our own happy I section the same industry and 01 talent are more quickly and more generouslv rewarded than el , |in the more crowded and 'nustling' communities of the North 0: land West. I have often thought " that half the push and effort Cl necessarily put forth by the 11 young Southerner who settles ' in the West, with slow returns I often for his toil, would have ~made him a rich man in his o J native State. Young man, go >f not North (that may be excusable in a young married couple jon their bridal tour); go not West?that advice was meant for New England boys. Stay d where you are, and begin life hiwith the capital of good-will a left you by your parents and ltjthe heritage of their honored i names." o i lt; There is a heap of truth in ltj these words. In the wreck that n followed the war young South ern men couici naraiy ne oiamea I for seeking a competence in other parts of the country. But 1 I times have changed. Now tho South, emerging from her tres' j mendous difficulties, is not only N demanding that its young men 1 shall abide at home, but is beckcloning with attractive finger to 1 * those who have grown up afar 1 and also to the men not to the |n manner born. There is work e to be done in tho South?work of building or developing towns and cities, of extending railroad lines, of uncovering rich minerals, of utilizing lumber resources and of diversifying and j advancing agricultural interests. This work should he done hy >n Southerners. They ought to ho ^' host qualified to reap its honifill" cent rewards. nl < [ m < $3 Ntop?? the Coush And Works off id the Cold. I y Laxative Rronio-Quinine Tablets rurs a cold in one (lay. .Nocure, no pay. d- Trice 25 cents.