Lancaster enterprise. [volume] (Lancaster, S.C.) 1891-1905, November 24, 1900, Image 2
Only Known
whkt idSntai from falling o{ thd
womb, white#, painful or Irregular
menses, or toy dlitui of the distinctly
feminine organs is. A nun ra?y ijrmp*thixe
or pity but he can not know the
agonies She goes through?the terrible
suffering, so patiently borne, which
robs her of beauty, hope and happiness.
Yet this suffering really in
needless
McELREE'S
Wine oi Cartful
will banish it. This medicine I
cures all " female diseases " quicklj
and permanently. It does away
with humiliating physical examinations.
The treatment may be
taken at home. There is not continual
expense and trouble. The
sufferer is cured and stays curtd.
Wine of Cardni is becoming the
loading remedy for all troubles of
this clasa. It costs but fx from any
druggist.
For advice in cases requiring
special directions, address, the
' Ladies Advisory Department,"
Tho Chattanooga Mecliciue Co.,
Chattanooga, Tonn. (T~
* MRS. C. J. Vfi:ST. Nashville, Texm.,
write# i?"This wonderful medlcLno ought I
to b? In ?v?ry house where there are girls
gad women,'*
IwwMmMM-rdMMBnnRn
LANCASTER ENTERPRISE
Published hvery Wednesday and Saturday
BY
flw Enterprise - Pnbllshlig Company
A. J. CLARK. Kdltor,
One Year, || .00
Si* Months, 50 cts
Three Months. 25 cts
In Advance.
Saturday, Nov. 24, 1900.
Columbia's municipal tax delinqucnces
amount to $20,000
besides costs.
Mr, Neill, the cotton statistician,
came out yesterday with
his revised estimate of the cotton
crop. He reduced his previous
estimate from 0,750,000 to
9,600,000 The market advanced
a few points only upon the esti
mate, its effect having been
largely discounted in the market
before it was posted. If the esti
mate that 10,000,000 bales will
be needed this year is correct,
thero may be scrambling for cot
ton next Summer, and there is no
telling what the price will be.
Great Need of the South in Men
Who Know How.
Harry Stlllwell F'.dwardw in A tluMta Hmi
News.
In 1881, when I became the
associate owner oi the Macon
Telegraph, with Major J. F. Han
son, the two interests controlling
the policy of the paper, he came
to me with a suggestion to open
an editorial campaign in behalf
of a technological institute in
this state, and from time to time
we both contributed additional
articles. The institute took de
finite shape through Hon. N. 1?.
Harris, a legislative representative
from Bibb, who, at the re
quest of Major Hanson, introduced,
and after a continued
effort, succeeded in establishing
in the cites of Atlanta, tho school
of which the whole state is justly
proud.
Hon. John T. Boifeuillet, fol
lowing in the steps of Mr. Har
ris, has given conspicuous sup
port to its maintenance and de
velopment, and other public spirited
men have combined to bring
<1 f 11\ A V\i of /% /? " " ? "**
ASJ bliD lll?il Dlrtic in euiuivuujr
which now characterizes it. So
much for history.
In the original discussion of
this great work, had in the edi
torial rooms of the Telegraph,
one striking proposition from the
lips of Major Hanson remains
clear in my memory : "The time
will come, in the near future,
when Georgia will need skilled
superintendents in many branches
of her industries, and they will
have to be imported." Never
has a prophecy been so nearly
fulfilled. There is, today, in all
branches of the manufacturing in
dustries of this state, a demand
for the men "who know how,"
and as a rule they are only obtainable
by importation. It seems
to me that this one fact, easily
I
L
substantiated, should promptly
determine the action of the
Georgia legislature in its consideration
of the bill granting
$18,000 to enlarge the scope and
efficiency of the state's Technological
Institute.
The state of Georgia has but
two things to sell?one is the product
of its so'l; the other the skill
of its labor. Vast as may be the
agricultural or mineral product
of any country, it is never rich
except through toe sale of its
skill in labor, for at last, after
centuries of debate, we know
that not natural resources, not
accident of soil and climate, not
combinations of capital even, is
the source of a country's wealth.
The man who raises cotton at 7
cents per pound is a valuable
factor in the creation of wealth
in this state, but the man who
makes a pound of cotton bring
18 cents as yarn, is greater; and
he w ho makes it produce .'10 cents
as cloth is greater still. So of
iron ; so of coke and iron combined
; so of kaolin ; so of tiraoer.
With this in mind, while we recognize
the importance of making
our agricultural lands, mines,
forests and animals moreproducfina
if oKaii 111 V\A nvtvAfl Art
tl VC) iu DUUUIU UC Ultf^QU UU C* TI J
intelligent legislator that the
most important thing at last is to
make our labor more efFective by
skilling it in all the branches of
industry through which we utilize
natural advantages.
in the second, third and fourth
values of a product we sell our
best labor.
Georgia cannot alTord to sit
down and wait for skilled labor
to come into her borders. Skilled
labor is the last to emigrate, and
can only be induced by a premium
which lessens the ability
to compete. While waiting, we
lose opportunities, and we lose
that capital which only skilled
labor can command. The mar
"who knows how" can alwayt
find money to back him.
There is a social side to thit
question which should appeal tc
every parent in Georgia. The
young men springing up about \it
demand to be placed on an equa!
footing with those of their owr
generation throughout the world
If they cannot got aa good a tech
nical education in Georgia an in
Boaton, it is an injustice to keep
them at school in Georgia. I have
placed my son in the Atlanta
school because I believe that
wheu he comes out with a diploma
ho will know as much of
textile manufacturing as any
graduate of any school in America,
and because I wish him to
locate and expend his skill and
energy in sight of his home and
surrounded by home inlluences.
When convinced that he is not
getting the best that modern
mothods of instruction afford I
shall remove him to the most
favorable spot to be found, and I
take it that every reasonable
patron of the Georgia school will
do likewise. Hold every son of
our grand old state at home by
arivinir them all the best that
money can purchase, and depend
on it, every one of them will in
time, by raising the efficiency of
labor, assist to swell the volume
of the state's income. Let the
"Tech" have all the money it
needs. There is no better investment
for Georgia money than in
the education of its younger
members along technical lines.
IllNtiiarrk'M Iron ]%erve
Wan the result of his splendid health,
Indomitable will and tremendous energy
are not found where Stomach,
Liver, Kidneys and Bowels are out of
order. If you want these qualities and
'he success they bring, use I>r. King's
.*sw Life Pills. They develop every
power of brain and body. Only 25c. at
Crawford Bros, drug store. 6.
' Old Sailor's Thrilling Story of n
Storm at Sea.
ROBERT E. GOLDEN IN ATLANTA
DAILY NKWH.
It was tho schooner Sue F
Mooro, up from the Texas coast
that came into dry dock here
torn into slats almost. The
skipper wore a haggard look
and the boatswain's face wat
pale, the crew all hollow-eyec
and dumb. Whereof tho fir.si
mate's tale.
" 'Twas out in latitudelO anc
longitude >!, or p'raps tho oth
or way around?but that don'i
matter none. At auy rate, 'twas
out upon the wild gul's heaving
breast. Tho wind, I think, was
north-northeast,or maybe south
southeast.
"We'd sailed a day or two 01
three before from New Orleans
No cloud flecked the cerulear
dome?whatever that thinf
means. But, as I started out
to say, without a warning sign,
tho skies grew suddenly ink.
DcBull's
{ACOUGH SYRUP/0
a cures nocking Concha, 1
m Sore Lungs, BronehltlH. m
M Grippe, Pneumonia ami
Jl nil Bevere lung affections. M
fcj Why then risk conmimp- H?K
t ion, n Blow, sure death ? 9&
Take warning I Act at
once I Buy a bottle of
black and rough tho rolling
brine.
"The cap'n comos on deck and
says: 'Why, blarst me bloody
eyes, there's goiu' to be the biggobt
storm you ever see arise.'
And sure enough before we'd
went another blooaniu' knot, tho
wind and waves were roarin' like
the place that's always hot.
"I never see the air so thick
with clouds of spray, I think.
Say, every time you'd to draw a
breath you'd take a drink. Tho
ship was lifted bodily from out
the ocean's trough a dozen times
and dropped at?say, a hundred
full yards off.
"The wind strats blowin' east,
and west in simultaneous gales
and fills the air with wreckage
flying spray and dying whales.
"It boat most anything I ever
see. 1 was that blue 1 says, '1
wisht I hadn't left my happy
home for you.'
" 'Twas to the Sue F. Moore I
spoke. I'd wrote it in her log if
at the time tho bo's'n hadn't
piped the ship to grog. I tell
you, friend, I never want to see
such sights again as them that
whirled around us there upon
the ragin' main, or hear them
weird, uncanny sounds that rolled
out from the shore. I know now
'twas the muililed beat of (Jheron's
busy oar
" 'Twas on that night Galveston
fell, and while the storm was
rife, I tell you on the 8uo F.
Moore we led the strenuous life
for fair. The cap'n comes to me
i A l,.. A .1
^ UUU ?IillJ3 illU DU UUU ^lUUUS. 1
guess it isn't up to us to pay a
call on Davy Jones.'
, "He hadn't hardly said it when
> a strango thing come to pass. We
I glided into waters smoother than
i a pane of glass. The ship was
J totally becalmed. If any breath
of wind was left a blowin' over
1 us then Adam never sinned.
"Hut 50 yards away on every
* side the din and roar was just as
| wild and loud and as saveage as
it was before. The sea was boilin'
1 to our left and seethin' to our
right. The storm was howliu'
fore and aft, all plain within our
1 Sight, while tueie we lay hd steady
1 as a stake dove in the ground,
' with hell upon the ocean roarin
overy where around.
"iSurprisin? Well, it might
, seem so to you that lives ashore,
but it was just a phenomena that
we had met before. In every
hurricane at eea there is a central
spot around which all the
tempest's force revolves. llut
jhere is not a safer harbor?ev
ery seaman knows it?on the
chart than that the hurricane
nrnvih aq in mKof tt q ooll
, ... ? wo, "v. %? ?
heart.
"The heart of that there hurricane
we'd hit it just in time.
"That's all. Say, I'm as thirsty
as a kiln of burning lime."
Prevented a Tragedy.
Timely information Riven Mrs. Geo.
Long, of New Str&itsville, Ohio, prevented
a dreadful tragedy and saved
two lives. A frightful cough had long
( kept her awake every uight. She had
tried many remedies and doctors but
steadily grew worse until urged to try
I>r. King's New Discovery. One bott le
wholly cured her, and she writes this
marvelous medicine also cured Mr.
Long of a severe attack of Pneumonia.
Such cures are positive proof of the
matchless merit of this grand remedy
for curing all throat, chest and lung
troubles. Only fiOc. and $1.00. Every
hott le guaranteed. Trial bottles free
at Crawford Bros, drug store. <V
?Mr. R. B. Purdue haw rented
| Mr. II. G. Mclhvain's plantation
and moved t?> same. His father,
Rev. J. M. Pfirduo, is in copartnership
with him and moved
i 011 the place sometime ago
?If you want a sewing mtik
chine come to the Entkri'Hjsk
office before you buy.
Slop* the Cough an?1 Work* off
the Cold.
Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablet* cure
> a cold in one day. No cure, no pay.
^ Price JCj cents.
1
t
ASJUTOU^RTCE^OR^^
The 5 Minute Breakfast fool
Purina, Health Flour
of M a
r "BRAIN BREAD."
PURINA MILLS. St. D"'IS. Mo.
L ,
[ The best Proscription for Malaria
t Chill* and fever i* a bott.N of Grove's
Tasteleri* Chill Tonic. It. i* simply
' iron and quinine in a tasteless form.
Vo cure, no pay. I'rice 00 cents
I nr. Mull's Cough Syrup, Bfl
a doctor's prescription,
used over 50 years. Price, M
only 25 cents. Insist on tj
having it. Don't be imposed
npon. Re Aibs the - '
dealer's substitute: it is i' *
not as good as Dr. Bull's.
Salvation Oil cure* Rheumatism I
Aches and Pains. ISdciScts.
"freeT
Chinaware,
AT
Mathis d
Company.
Wo arc giving away coupons
now for every casli purchase
from our customers. The coupons
run from 5c up to $5. The
prizes run from one piece worth
10c to $8. Anyone can save up
1 worth or $5 as you "like. You
will get something for every $1
purchase. We will have the
chinaware on exhibition next
week ; call on lis.
Our Light Bread
And Cinnamon Rolls are going
like hot cakes. The people know
a good thing when they try it
A fresh lot on hand now. We
have ? complete line of Lang
don's package crackers; also
loose ones.
~ n j:
XT lilt? V>CtilU.ltJO.
Our assortment of Chocolates
and Hon Hons is as fine as can
be nought in the city. In pound
package* all C'locoiate or Hon
lion and Chocolate fiOc. We
h.' v'ft a line lac package Choc?>.
la e : also loose candy at from
60c down to 10c ; -^o you see wo
can please any and all.
Groceries
1 .verybody knows we ban lie
In. vy an 1 fancy groceries.
Yours, to serve,
S. M. Mathis & Co,
Try and be
Convinced !
Make a purchase at
n. j cc vrs a co s
STORE
and yon will he so well pleased
that you will become one of theii
manv customers. We handle i
nic 1 lis of Groceries and Oonfec
tioneries, and make a specialty o
Fruits and Vegetables, the best
the market h fiord*. Wo havt
Tobaccos, Cigars, Cigarettes and
SnufT that will please the sruok
ers. chewers and dippers.
TRY OUR PURE CREAM
CHEESE
They are so nice ! New fresl
Dates, up to-date, 10c for a pounc
package. Our French and Sticl
Candies, Chocolates, Cakes anc
Crackers will please the most ex
acting.
DO YOU KNOW WHO
KEEPS
Nice fresh Mackerel, pickled Pigi
Foot, Pickles in kegs, Dried Frtiil
Bologna Sausage, Dried Beef am
ft hundred nllipr fhtnnm
- ? &?
to the appetite ?
YES; GO TO COATS A COS.
STORE
Ami never bay that you can't ge
what you want until you hav<
pone there. Remember, that wt
don't keep goods on our shelvei
until.they are old and not fit to
use ; and bear in mind, too, tha
WE WILL TREAT YOU
POLITELY
honowtly and sparely when yoi
deal with us. Get on our list o
regular customer* and you won'
be loneflome. Your*, to please,
R. J. Goats 5 Go.
I HEATH
| a:
f Mercantil
4.
CIEIR fl
*
GUV I
Fridav Mnrn
A A 1UUJ JLVAV1 11
We will throw on
with a vengeance the
Norfolk Jew ($2i,oc
and dollars worth at
?>8 30 C
: on the dollar. Not
best in the land?bo
| is the finest snap yet
like a house afire. 1
i hard earned dollar.
>
: Stop, Loo
I
Stop at our storej
listen to the ridiculoi
the chance of a life 1
bargains, bv no meat
o ' J
misses and children
weight and latest st>
Lowenberg's price ij
ladies' Jackets, Lo
ours is $4 ; i i o miss<
Lowenberg's price is
are no bargains like
: 600 R. &
t
1
The ?1 corset for 75c
I 50c corset for 25c. Ta]
these abound. Lack c
1 this stock of bargains.
. worth of ladies', misses
\ only 30c on the dollar
* suits, some as handsom
and at far less than tl
Gloves and hosiery by
thousands.
s
t
AL
9 3600 pairs of Men's
r Shoes. Watch the
It begins Friday
bargain sale ever knc
1
Heath Bkg
BANKING :
e Company, ?
b men
DUT OF T 9
CHE WAY
ing,Next,r *"
the market, and rush
: bankrupt stock of a
>o). Twenty-one thousENTS
S<~
*
common goods; but the
ught for city trade. This _
The goods will go
ifou will save many a
)k, Listen!
>, look at our goods and
lsly low prices. This is
time. We quote a few
is our best; 350 ladies'
's Jackets, the proper ^
des ; 10 ladies' Jackets,
5 $50, ours is $15 ; 38
wenberg's price is $12, V
ss and children's Jackets,
ji.50, our is 55c. There
i.1 1
iiicsc uargains.
6. Corsets.
?
the 75c corset for 35c, the
Ik is idle when bargains like
>f space forbids mention of
In the lot we have $1,600 ^
and children's underwear at
Sixty ladies' ready-made
e garments as can be foundle
bare price- of the cloththe
million, and belts by the
-SO
1, Ladies and Childrens
ff \ 1 s \ c- C *. 1? ? -L- ?
VIUWU3, iJtC LI1C blir.
morning, the greatest M
)wn in Lancaster.
I. & Mer. Co.