Lancaster enterprise. [volume] (Lancaster, S.C.) 1891-1905, September 17, 1902, Image 1
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LAN
i ^ ^
Vol. XII.
' iimhiiiwhi ii !' ' ;\rrc
This space is n
Funderburk
Corner Main ar
T. Eugei
Sept. 10, 1902; 3m.
ANOTHER H EA It ST PAl'ER
Reported That Philadelphia
American Will Appear i*ocembca*
1.
The Philadelphia Item f>nvs:
It has leaked out thai the New
York Journal has bought the
plant of the Philadelphia Times
and will issue a morning and
Sunday newspaper i" Philadelphia,
beginning Dec. 1.
The paper will he called the
Philadelphia American and will
be built on the lines of the New
York and Chicago issues of Mr.
Hearst's papers
About a month ago in Now
York a mysterious person from
Philadelphia bought an opflon or.
the morning news service ot the
Publishers' Press, the rival ot 'he
Associated Press. It, was subsequently
learned that this gentle
man was acting for Mr. Hearst,
and the Philadelphia American
will use this service in conjunc
tion with news sent by private
t wire from its New York and
Chicago offices.
Mr. Hearst's Philadelphia American
may meet with an injunction
? suit from Wanamaker's North
A m f--rin.fl II hrw'U null nl tlto otti-ilivi. I
ty.of nameB, in which case (here
will he some spicy legal warfare.
The Philadelphia American
will occupy, temporary, the old
Times office at Eighth an I Chest
nut and the printing building at
Eighth and Senson, but it i*^ Mr.
Hearst's intention to build a magnificent
structure in the heart, ol
the city, and it is rumored fbat
the recent real estate deals on
Chestnut above Twelfth are to be
reckoned with in the matter.?
American Press.
Summer Complaint
N not alw ays brought show* Uy change I
of nir ami water. The "stay-arhnmes"
are i hie to!
diarrhoea; due, generally, to over j
* paiing as unripe iruiis, pre ; anil,
drinking ice water; all accompanied
by painful bowel discharges; and, if
UOt checked, result* nwrio?pl/. Perry
I>avi*' Painkiller i? the oolj purely
reliable remedy. 2">atnl50c.
American Molasses Ompatiy.
Trenton, X. J., Sept. i?>.?The
American Molasses com pay, was
incorporated today with a capital
of *3,000.000, divided into $1,
500,000 bearing 7 per cent, non
cumulative divided, and $1,500,
000 common stock. The company
is t ideal in sugajr, syrups,
glucose, molasses and similar
prOtJIKMR.
Josh Went hater, of Ixrojjootee,
Ind,. is h poor man, bub he says
he would not be witnout Chamberlain's
Pain Calm it it cost
five dollars a bottle, for it saved
him from being a cripple. No
external applicatio is equal to
| this liniment for still and
swollen joints, contracted muscles,
pains and rheumatic and
muscular pains. It has alao cured
r numerous cases of partial paralysis.
It is for sale by J. F. Mack
oy 6i Co.
LANCASTER,
TEST
j
jservccl tor the
Pharmacy. j;
id Gay Streets.
I
ae Funderburk, I
Druggist. j
Importance ol Milking Cows Dry., I
y
An inexperienced or careless L
milker can easily dry up and (
diminish the quanity of milk. \
Leave a little milk in the udder .
<
lor a lew times and you will .
. *
soon fiind that you are losing in (
hotli quantity and quality,
livery dairyman know that, the j
richest milk is that drawn last. (
Someone has calculated I he loss .
Irom such hurry in milking a* .
leaving a little of this b.st ol
the milk in the udder It may j
amount to one-half a pound ot ]
milk at evorv milking, as was ]
found to he the case by a farmer |
who tollowed his hired man and ]
milked ail the cows alter him ^
By this second milking ho got t
over n ponnrl from some cowsh
and less than one-half a pound I.
from others, but trom ten cows ,
he pot five pounds of stripping
at one milking. ,
This to some does not seem to J
l>e a very large amount of mila, |
hut if milking in general were 1
done so carelessv the total loss |
of milk iii the United States troin (
lazy milking would amount to .
sixteen million pounds per day. 1
One can easily calculate this, as (
the statistical reports give the
number of milch cows in the j
United States as 10.21)2.360, and |
i! makes plain that a great saving j
may be made by milking the cows ,
a-.* 1
WIT. |
OA.STOI1IA. 1
Boars the Hnvo Always Bought i
Dentil of u Millionaire. t
Colorado Springs.Colo, Septem .
her 14 ?Winfield Scolt Stralton. ^
I ho millionare mining man, died ^
at 9.30 o'clock to-ni^ht, alter an ^
illness of several months.
Mr. S;ration was born at Jelferflonville,
Ind, in 1848. lie
came to Colorado Spri..^s in 18 72
and has since been a resident ol
this city. For thirty years lie
has been interested in mining
and opened the famous Indopen
dvjice Honanza Mine, in April.
1891, lie went to Cripple Creek j
district to prospect. After
weeks .ol' iruitle-s prospecting
St i at ton decided to t ake out a
claim on his account and on the
morning of July -1, 1891, staked
out the Indepetidenee and Wachin^ton
claims. The Independenc.
yielded him millions of dollarand
in 1898 he sold if lor #! >,
009.009. retai ir.ir. however, a 1
very considerable interest.
Mr. Stratum's private charities 1
were l.sw^:e and bis interest' in
[)iil)iic vveil'aro was amlost without j1
almost without limit. His wealth
is estimated at lrom Jj?15.0')0,000.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Hava Always Bought
Boars tho y/ fT A
Signature of \ I
I
S. C, WEDNESDAY,
SILK CUM'UKK.
Experiment n ti> be Minis Down
in (Georgia.
New York Sun
The recent .address of Mr.
Louis Horns Mugid, in which
10 advocated the introduction
>f silk culture on a large scale
n the southern statos, and more
particularly in Georgia, has
1 rawn general attention to an
industry which was well estab
islied in this country during
ts colonial period and once gave
prominence of becoming tin important
source of American
vealth. Various causes, among
lie chief of which was the iuroduction
of negro,slave labor
11 the regions of the south best
uhiuted to the culture, brought
ibout the practical destruction
>f the industry.
Mr. Magid is convinced that
lie time has come when the
illfctire of silk can he revived
ind made tin exceedingly vnluible
addition to American rejources
He is proving his faith
py his works, or, in other words,
ic is hacking his opinion with
lis money. lie -is a German
py birth, who has familiarized
limself with the conditions favorable
to silk culture in the
:ountries of ilio world where it
s most largely and successfully
pursued, and a-> a eonsentienee
1
)f his studies luis lixecl 011 the
state of Georgia as the place
vhere the experiment of its
Ymerican introduction can best
>e made. Going from New
fork, he acquired in the neigh
lorhood of Tallula Falls, in
jeorgia, a tract of land 1,500
icres in extent, and there he
plans to develop the industry
3ii a large and systematic scale.
In that climate the mulberry
. t. - * - *
.rue inrives so greatly mat it
lias come to lie looked on by
die farmers as a nuisance ; and
generally in all that region of
the south, including besides
Georgia, the Carol inns, Alabama,
Florida, Mississippi, Louisana
and Texas, he describes
lie conditions as particularly
favorable to the growth of the
mulberry tree and consequently
o the production of silk.
Mr Magid proposes to divide
lis Tabula land into small
'arms and to invite thither
'armors from Piedmont and
fjombardy, so celebrated for its
jilk growing. The greatest vol11110
of immigration to this
jountry from any single Euroloan
state is now from Italy,
nit it is chiefly, almost wholly
rom the southern provinces of
he peninsular. Whether Mr
Magid can induce the emigra
ion from northern Italy which
ic needs will depend,of course.
?n his making !iis experiment
uicccssful, hut ho seems to have
no fears ou that score.
No Ami British lTopa^iunhi
\\ anted.
Amsterdam, Sept. 1 ! ?Mr.
Beit/, formerly State secretary
nf the Transvaal, will leave
Sept. for Ne.\ York to j{ive
i series of lectures both on he
half of his own finances and for
the benefit of the Boers.
This unexpectedly early tie
paruire 01 .nr. lieitz lor the
United States is said to ho duo
to the insistence of the Boer
generals. Botha, DoWet and Do
La Bey, that the anti-British
propaganda in Unripe inu-t he
moderated.
P>rrt 'ho Tte Kiprl Yoy Have Mw?ys Bo'^t
Wgr*
r v?* tt"?
j j] &U ^
9 t-L JL Kv
SEPT. 17, 1 ()02.
I MOGUL tiNUISK HUUSTS.
While Hauling Heavy Train Into
Jersey Oily.
Now York, Sept. H?George
; Lutz, engineer, James J. Deoley,
lirenian, and Walter Weber.)
1 conductor, were blown out of
the cab of a locomotive which
exploded on the Pennsylvania
j railroad just west of Jersey
City today. Lutz was killed
1 and the others seriously injured
No cause for the explosion has
been discovered The boiler
had been lilled, there was plenty
of wat r in the tender and the 1
locomotive had been wording
smoothly.
The engine was one of the
biggest on the road and ofj
mogui ly pe ii was drawing a
heavy freight, made up in the
west, into .Jersey City. The
wreck of the boiler indicates
that the crown sheet blew out
and the force of the explosion
lifted the boiler upward and for
ward oil' the bed plates on the
trucks and, with the cab, the
boiler dew into the air About
150 feet from the spot where |
the explosion occurred and)
when perhaps 15 feet in the air, |
the cab split in two, dropping
two parts to the track with
Dooley in one part and Weber
in the other. The boiler llew
onward and upward perhaps
100 feet more and then struck
the side of a cut, bounded oil
the rock and liew downward but
still forward to the tracks, land
ing about 75 feet beyond a point
in line with where the boiler j
struck the rocky side of the cut
The bursting of tlie boiler and
its flight had no effect upon the
train except to set the airbrakesA.
Certain Cure for Dysentery
and Diarrhoea.
".Soma years ago I was one of
a party that in tended making
a long bicycle trip," savs F. L.
Taylor, of New Albany, Bradford
County, L'a. "I was taken suddenly
with diarrhoea, and was
about to give up the trip, when
editor Ward, of the Laccyville
Messenger, suggested that I tako
a doso of Chamberlain's* Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy.
I purchased a bottle and took
two doses, one before starling
and one 011 the route. 1 made
the trip successfully and never
felt any iil affect Aglin IrrI
summer I was almost completely
! run down with an attack of dvs
entcry. I bought a bottln of this
same remedy and this time one
dose cured mo." Sold by J. F.
Machey ?fc Co.
The New Cycle C'lisiiiipion.
A art lord, Conn., Sept. 15.?
j Hurry Cuivell of ibis city won
i 1 he cvcle paced championship u!
j Anient;) io ui:J)t. defeating Hob'toe
YValthournl Atlanta in two
straight ten mile heats. The
first heat went to tho Il.irtlord
man by default After ridingr two
and one-hall miles Walthour's
j wheel was punctured and he re
Itisod to continue, although he
j had a spare wheel. The second
heart \V"nl to Caldwell l>v nearly
jn lan. the time being 15 03 1 5
I / 1 t \ i i i .
? ih:u?*;i mis won z.s races llns
i season ami lost but t liree. defeatI
itiir Walthonr, Kfkea, Freeman,
Nelson and all the bust riders in
llie county.
"I am ii.sins: a box of Chamberlain's
Stomach it I.iv?*r Tablets and tlnd
tin in ltie best thing for my stomach
I ever used," says \V. Robinson,
I .lustice of tlie 1'pac.p, at loomis,
Mich. These Tablets not only correct
disorders of tiic stomach but rc^ula'c
ill" liver and bowels, i'leasant to lake
I and pleasant in eirect. Trice 2.*?
cents per box. Tor sale by J. 1*.
I Maokey it (Jo.
#M??
t??? * t? <v
~T ,**** ir*^
|M S M
M V y C $ ; '< *
a^'.Ck. >Jf?. .V'^. "Vl^ffyjr
<* = *
No. 27
^' ricl 3^^
5 light loads.
UREASE
i ^tb^^ood for everything
that runs 011 wheels.
So!d Evorywhtre.
Vfatfe fty STAJJRAItl? OIL CO. j
Ta;rg:sKA
1*icli Fird.
The richest gold and silver
strike ever made in the f-'mous
Parrel district is: "VeXi- ?? has
been made in the Sir. .luanica
property of tn? Hidalgo Mining
Compoiiy. At a oet>th of 200
I feet an independent and unexplored
vein was discovered carrying
$500 a ton i?? irr, 14! am: her.
Fortune Favors A Texan
"liftviufc distressing pains in
head, back and ranch, sr.d
Oeilig Without (tppci.ir, i Oxgall
to use Dr. King's New Lit'*. 1'ilH."
writes Vv\ 1'. Whitehead, of K?nnedale,
Tex., "and soon felt like
a new man." InfnI'ible in stomach
and liver trouble?. Onlv 25c
at Crawford Bros, and .J. F. M*ckey
<Xr Co.
Take Care ? I flic Shhiipc
The man or woman whose digestI
ion is perfect and whose stomach
performs its every function is
never sick. Kodol cleati?efl, purities
and sweetens the stomach and
cures positively and permanently
all stomach troubles, indigestion
and dyspepsia. It Is the wonder
fill reconstructive tonic that is
making so many sick people well
and weak people strong by conveying
to their bodies all of lh*>
nourishment in the food they Qiit.
Rev. J. 11. llolladay, of llolladay,
Miss., writes: "Kodol has cured
me, I consider it the best remedy
I ever used for dyspepsia and
stomach troubles. 1 v\a-* gnen
u r\ Kv t>! i voi.'i o *n Kr /\ 1 /-vl ?? . a.1 --
?? J/ ^ ' |MIJOU/I?IIO. iH' +\J i 7>r vtrTl 111 y
lif Tako it after n)er>! . CrAwford
Bros.
Dr. E. S. fficDov/,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
Sontli Side Catawba House, /
Up-Stairs. t + - ?
. oxr
I Executor's Notice.
\r.L persons h tving claims against
. Hie estate of WH.EIAM < .A N
SI/N, deceits il, are hel1.' ! .? UoSil.fJ ' <i
present them, duly proven, to the
undersigned executors or to their
attorney, T V. Williams. Esq. : per\
sons indebted to said e-'afe * ill make
payment to the undersigned or to
! said Attorney
Maude Hanson.
Adam M. Hanson,
Executors.
Aug. li?, lH02-lm.
SISTERS! Free Offer.
fTli-Iiv. rorrON below ililei out with yi.ur
-i- n<Mre*s, tirvt s?nt with a two cent strtmn.
! to Mrs. M A. Hilton, Ker.sliuiv, a i . uiijitu
I the n rt thirty tlnvH, oniltlci you t > ? pa ka^e
j loi.tuitiliig a iiotn Treat!.. .to. , . red ....
I Mrn. M. aummers, Notre D li which
euros letu-orrhoou. ulceration, it -put menu
fulling of tho womb, Dotut tl <i - . r<, hot
flashes, tumorM, growth*, ana ill lemilt ttou*
ote- The iff package v tain- ten daes
treatment, nntl if you wish to continue. it will
cost you .toout tw?-lvo cents a week to guarau
tec u cure. fill out the spue s below, nd to
Mrs. Hilton, and you will receive u. fretreatment
by return mail.
COUPON.
j Name
j Town
| V OlfHtl/.
i .Stato
/. /