Lancaster enterprise. [volume] (Lancaster, S.C.) 1891-1905, May 13, 1903, Image 4
ar
LftRSflSTER *J8TERPR!SE.|
Published Wednesdays by
Entkupmsk Publishing Co.
A. J. CLARK. Editor.
One Year, - - - *1.00
Six Months, - - .r?0
Three Mor lis, - - . .25
IN ADVANCE.
Wednesday, May 13, 1903.
Crum hasn't <xot a crumb.
| -
Cleveland and Bryan are both
back numbers, for that matter.
J * I
j After singing "God be With (
* You Till we Meet Again," the (
Southern Baptist Convention ad t
journed Monday night. ^ s
Tho pledges of tlie various '
States composing the Southern
Baptist, Convention aggregate '
over $280,000 for foreign mis
sions. t, *
If Mr. Carnegie is really in
earnest he might assist the peopiefby
agreeing to accept 110 1
..juore money wrung from them 1
-~4' tlirmirrh m^rinl lcirislation in
his owu interests.?The Com mono*.
.-T j c
i '. * "V VJ t
The cotton market went wild
Monday."" On the New York 1
market it advanced more than $1 n
\ a bale and in New Orleans from 1
\$1.50 to $2 a bale. It, went up ,
by leaps and bounds and closed i ^
at the top prices for the day, I
May at 11 20 and August at I
10.3? Hut yesterday it lost o
much of that gam.
?;?.1 c
Another sudden turn in the i
affairs of Kx-Senator John L. t
McLaurin occurred Monday- r
He went into a reorganization,
meeting of the ttrunswick and
-i .i i
uirmingnnm railroad company
slated for the presidency. He
came out without any interest a
in the company ur the Mohawk
Valley Steel Co. of which he
had recently been made vicepresident.
lie says he is coming
hack to South Carolina and
go to farming, for which he
jL ) thinks he is better litted than
for railroading.
The door of hope was opened
* to Dr. Crum, hut he found nothing
tor Itiin alter lie got, inside.
Crum cannot draw any salary mi
til hi-* nomination has been confirmed
by tlie Senate, according
to a decision of the treasury department.
This decision clear'y
*' shows that in the opinion ot
treasury officials ('ruin's appoint
.men* was not in accordance with
law, and the New- and Courier's <
contention that Crum could he t
disposed from his office by legal
process was not so far wrong,
after all A door of hope which
? hasivf got something behind it
mast be a most unsatisfactory
arrangement for the colored broth
er.?Columbia Record.
WILL nt LH> I I 7 | t
When President Roosevelt ar-l*
rive- in California on his huge v
swing around the circle and delivery
his speech at the llni-U
versity of California, ho will <
hay an inspiration to tell the
truth about the trusts of the 0
country. He will speak in a,c
building donated to the ITniver- v
sity of California by a man who c
has consistently fought the (j
' trusts and monopolies of the
country for the past eight years
: iU i.'-ii. ' "
wii/ii duui ouurage ana mteJiigence,
viz : William Randolph ('
Hearst. Mr. Hearst presented t
to the University an auditorium, t
It is a copy of an old Greek thea- s
tre and is a magnificent gift.
When Mr. Roosevelt makes his
speech there he will speak in *
this auditorium?in effect from r
'V- *
William R. Hearst's rostrum, viehte
It should bo at onco an incen- strugj
ive and an inspiration to toll tyrs_
he truth about the trusts, com
lines, monopolies and tariff "Renn
>arons who are waxing fat on Of the
he substance of the common Whot
people of the nation, and tell it Aof| u
i la Hearst as he tolls it in his Ju"
tapers, the Now York Amer- All<l
can. The .Journal and others. An
. _ ling:
MEMOHIAL EXERCISES. "Lord
Lent v
M<i j/or Iff/lie 's Excellent Ad- '*n
dress. when
Memorial exercises were held
Monday afternoon. A procession elr
>f old s< ldiers formed in the pi'hni
:ourt house square and marched gencr
hrough Main street followed by j$ t]ttn
t long line of citizens, men, wo w
nen and a host of little girls and
ioys, carrying beautiful wreaths ^ ins
>f llowers. Ati appropriate ad- what
Iress was delivered by Mayor that
A'ylie, after which the graves of impor
he soldiers were decorated. struct
ties, 1
By special request of the Paugh .
ers the addross of Mayor Wylie ,e^)t
s published below: South
both I
ADDUKSS OK MAYOR WYLIK.
terize
Ladies, old soldiers and fellow t() ^
:itizcns: { ' .
The gentleman, invited to make t
ho customary address, not being'
J ' e* us, g
ible to bo present with us, I have cu|ca#
icon requested to make some re- , ri .
Ill 1 ^ 111
narks suitable to the occasion. ? (
I tact, l
A liile 1 led inv inabililv to nrn
1 I Coni :l
terly discharge the duty required, I
et, heinir the son of a Confeder swo, j
ite soldier, now sleeping in thisLjie
emetery, and the cull comiag ?w LIM| w
t does from the Indies of my mi (jon c
ive town, I feel, that 1 would he e;ir^|jj
eoreant to my doty, ?f I failed to L r ^
espond, hut 1 will promise to he tjons
>t ief in what 1 have to suv. world
We have met to day, my friends ti|aw
nd fellow citizens, according to Ljie
nir yearly custom, to do honor to j (|s ;ii|
he memory of the Confederate LjU(j
lead of this county. The custom, | .)OWer
t this place, was inaugurated ^ jome
twelve years ago hy the somo(
aothers, wives, widows, sisters j L]10 C)(
nd daughters of some of those I jj1() ca
lead heroes. J t)ie w,
Kach year, we meet at the At tjH
lourt house square, and to the tap presj(
if mutiled drum, march, in pro Ilou?c
ession, to this place, where wo LJ1(j n)
isten to an appropriate address, Nvll^ ,
fter which flowers are strewn jml jft
ipon tlie unives of the sleeping 0(j (j()|
en?es. May this beautiful cus- L|avos
orn he always observed. In so u u
loing, wo honor, not only our
* | UtlH U
lend, but ourselves ns well. An tutiou
mpressive lesion i"> likewise atos
aught those children. They will tjmt f
vunt to know tho reason for these p js ^
olemn ceremonies, and they can tjie
>e told of the heroic resistance llJoatn
nadc by tho Southern States to -ureb
he persistent encroachments upon t.jai rt
ho rights secured to them under : jt)Mtiti
he Federal Constitution, which ^orih
ms a compact between the States ?jr0ug
?and though the cause for whidi h|,lvt.r
hey fought, was lost, when the war
Southern Cross went down before
verwhelming numbers?yet they pU^tj|
an he reminded, that it is not al- tho c
I'ays in tho power of mortals to , poliii
i minimi uii/'i'ixj l.iO ?!...? lii.till
? .imiv 11jiiii nmy
li<t more, they deserved it.
, . , alter
It is true, we now have a re |((> s
inited country, and live again un-1 liatl n
ler the old ling?hut God grunt, | Lincc
he day may never come, when orcise
lie children of this fair Southland
hall not he taught the truth, that U!
* was (I
lie South, in that great conflict, |)rou?
/as eternally and everlastingly force
ight ?and thnt our soldiers who coerc*
?, . " v'v " *
id up their lives in that I right of .a
2;le, died the (loath of mar- withdraw f
.Then: 110 longer a
been sett.le<
ember th?? Sacred dust force ; but
wuri is tried and tru"? ositioil, the
tore tin flag of a Nations trust, UIKlOSliOlial
?15 in a cause though lost siill {d ajj
the terms o
led for me and you." lmvo dwelt
(I in the language of Kip* this mattei
think it c
much, efcpe
God of Host be Willi us yet. of those W
re forget hat to,get." hayc nQt f
(1 in those utilitarian times, rious thoug
the majority of men are The war
ing more of themselves and uPj^n p
material interests, than of hep
pies for which a former bow nobl
..4.: C 1 A 1 i* * - ?
alum luugiii ami mod, more j for her defe
ger that we may forget, or ships, and
remember, wo may not ful- making of i
tract the rising generation, ?ov01 ll,U( nl
. , , . pared for i
principles were involved in a C0ll
great struggle. And how tion Unpar?
tout that they should be in- of the worh
ed, when the school histo- bent with
nainly written at the North, scai*CPbT i'1
of that great struggle as a
n ^ through pri
dlion" on the part of the evon death
orn States, and our soldiers, tion to thei
living and dead, are eharac-'long and 1)1
das "rebels'' and "trai- tinued the s
' No?children?such teach- W!ie^mV1^? C
when their
is erroneous?and the fact j)Ut annihil
he North prevailed r.gainst Coln remarl
ives them no right to in- of Gettysbu
e error. The truth is claim as c<
.y, and must prevail. The'^u* assail
...... , . And then,
that the South submitted the I vp|1 ^vlrit
ation, between it and the munition tl
i, to the arbitrament of the to their rti
I, and lost, does not settle tip thostruj
icstion as to who was right, *tud 1
, ,,,, tliem
ho was wrong. this (pies. j1Qn01
ould not be settled by anv soldiers \
y tribunal. M iglit and pow- dead !
is true, often decides (pies. Those liv
of light and wrong, in this away. At
familiar !ac(
<>i ours, coutrarv to the I .
, " " few more ye
and the evidence*' ? but at ()j them le
eat ami general review ??f old heroes, ;
, these questions will be set- safe keeping
and not by might or by ?* ''le South
? it, that the <
. . ... fought, ?tha
also impression prevails in sen(e<, ai)(, ,
ipiartcrs that slavery was rjos 0f that"<
use of the war. Such is not green. Am
so. It was connected with Have alread
ir, only as a mere incident, --siecp, sweetly,
... . . * i * Sleep, martyrs
3 beginning of hostilities, Though yot no m
lent Lincoln, himself, an Tho pilgrim he
ed, that the Northern States ''V'of laui!
'i h?i blossom ol
3 intention of interfering Ami somewhere,
. . .i 4 i Tho shnft Is in
slavery as it then existed,
. . "Meanwhile, bol
teron, when the issue seem- wnich keep in
nbtful for the North, the "<*oi,i: Your si,
Ami these men
were emancipated, purely trlbutCH:
ar measure. At the uilop- M?ro proudly c
... Then when some
1 the constitution, the msti- shall overlook
existed in all the Northern "Stoop, angels h
, i There is no hoi
, and was recognized in Than where rter?
undamental law. Later on, Hy mourning i?
rue, slavery was abolished As a litti
North, but not on senti- marks, I wil
.1 or moral ground*, but ?x^actlroni
c .. . terdav h Si a
) for climatic and couimer"
1 line is I
lusuns, And long utter the |||aj wrapj,
ition was abolished by the pets thai A|
ern States, their slave ships lias long sin
lit them to our shores. No,
4 .1 e .. lowered llr
y was not the cause of the ,
J Charleston
I gun's eehoei
vas brought on by the north | (iied upon \
ig a wrong construction on j Old Dominr
onstitution?and that for j member ol t
cal reasons. The south was sons con.-dru
to leave the Union, which to the arbi
ormed by the fathers; hut Fort Sumter
yielding, step by step, in poinatlox, ti
.pirit of compromise?she its couceptk
io other alternative, when j Baptist chui
till was but. ti? u v. i I '.a m l.i ?
the right which each sov capital. Th
l state had, to peaceably tervened ha
I raw. But even this right understandii
tenied her, and the north ciliation be
;ht on the war, when by The south h
of arms she sought to accept the d
i us into submission. The work out its
state to secede, or the republic which it onco sought
'rom the Union, is to sever. The soldiers who cornlive
qu stion,having posed the south's armies have
:1, for all time, by taken up life's stern, if peaceful,
as an abstract prop battles and therein have acquit
southern states were lei themselves as nobly us at
jly in the right, and Manassas and Chickuuiauga.
kept strictly within Their thin, grav lino is growing
f the constitution. 1 thinner and grayer. The comat
some length on rades of Lee and Jackson are
, because 1 do not joining their immortal leaders on
:an be stressed too the other shore where there is
cially for the benefit rest under the shade of the trees,
ho are vountr and One bv one thev are surrender
vu*. your Mu.rivu loniDH, j ry i^esae, wiio was ill the wagon,
?ter? brlntftheir tftir*. tile k I1CJC, rilUgillg UlUVai'lU.
lorial bloom*. t.ii mm
itiulcr the knee cap. 1 lie wound
j:;/:;:??v?.,T ,,,i?rui ??a ?m?<>
c:?nn n-tnoultlcd pllo doilht I11JI<\0 11 Cripple of tllO
thin buy. little sutferor for life. Mr. \V.
itherfrom me sutes! ^ Wilkerson and other trustees
iwdwtor' Hre?8Und' of th? seIlo<>l ;i,'? 1,e,'? t'jday COI1eauty
crowne<1. suiting legal counsel ami will
eg close to mv re- l??vo a warrent issued for the
II read the following lmrt>T who (,1(l ,ho scooting.
, an editorial in yes ey do not wish to give out
j . bin name at present, hut state
fleeting. The smoke that ,,l?y '"tend pushing the
l.V,r? <! it.i,? '? matter t.? tlw> full ?v -? *?
, ..U I III! 1JAICIII Ul lilt)
.ril day, 12 voara ago. >?w >">d se,? ,f 'I'? carrying of
ce cleared away ami and whiskey drinking
. was (.lion ami there cannot he stopped where there
.ata once more in 1,ru women and children gatherharbor.
The lant <-'d "or pleasure and tumisemont.
* at Appomattox have
rirgtnia's hills and the $100 If K A A It 1), $100.
t.ii in nirflin si Inval The roadt ?ol il* paper will bo bleaacd u?
till 13 "h"'" ?? .? learn It ill there |w ,il tent olti'ilr' idi'ddlm intint
union winch her iltui' c h.oi it i. iii'd' lu ittri In till ,tx
UUl union WHICH Iter un,( lr.lt ,, ,-llt rr*i. Hulls I'.tbirrh
icle<l The issues nut Curcia ilt< oni. j.o-..t.\. cure now k.iown i"
. tho medical fraternity Catarrh being a <
itrament ol arms iit Mtilutlnli.il tlie tae if.(iine- . lon.xtllotioual
... a . treatment Halla Catarrh Cure i-? utkra in*
were set!leu ai Ap- ternaii.. acting illrot t y ti|Miii the blond .nid
u ~ ...l.irtl, l,.wl niucom n'.n-'.n. w iit the sywt'm, thereby <le*
DO nauon wnicn Hall atroyltiK the foundation* a?r ilie dtxeaMi and
in licit old ersiv KtvlnK t? patient mrrnifth by butldln - up the
in III tunc uiu Ri",' constitution and ntuuHttnit nature in doing its
<?li on Plnin street work. The proprtet tr.w liavt so much I.nth in
CD on i i.uii Htreei , lt< cur;il,|HlA, , .. u lhoy 0?er One Htm.
tell Willi Virginia's dred Dollars for any ea*e that It (alls to euro,
. . . Set d for list of testimonials
ie years that nave in-i Addies*. k .i chknky &c:o,Toledo,o.
* . i_ . i. ? ?? I Sold b. Druggista, 7hc.
V0 brought a better Hull s Family I'illa are tho bosL j
tig, a complete recon- * ?*-.
it ween tho sections. TeCnre?C.iltl lii?n??ay
as been satisfied to Take Laxative ltromo Quinine
ivino decree and to I ablet*. All druggist refund t rie
money if it fails to rur?. IC. W.
destiny as a part ol (drove's signature is on each box J6cla
J 0 ' " , . . I
jiven tho matter se- ing to the last invincible enemy
lit of mankind, aiul soon, too soon,
', then, was forced there will he none remaining.
>utli. There is no lovlier passage in
ts being invaded,and all Fnglish literature than that
and firesides assailed inscription on yonder inonunient
y did her sons rally in the capitol grounds. We love
use. Without war- to recall it, and would have its
foundries for the words and its meaning impressirms,
without even a ed upon every child of Carolina,
t, at first, she pro- For it tells that this monument,
the unequal conflict erected by tho women of the
irage and determina- state, stands as a memorial to
illeled in the history those sons of fchePalmetto," who,
d. Gray-liaired men, true to the instincts of their
age, and youths birth, faithful to the teachings
their teens, bid fare of their fathers,constant in their
'os and mothers, and love for the state, died in the
ivation, sickness and performance of their duty ; who
, testified thejr devo- have glorified a fallen cause by
r country For four the simple manhood of their
oodv years they con- lives, the patient endurance of
itruggle against over- sutlering, and tho heroism of
xlds and only yielded death, and who, in the dark
armies had been all hours of imprisonment, in the
ated. .President Lin- hopelessness of the hospital, in
ted on the battlefield the short, sharp agony of tho
irg : "1 am proud to field, found support and conso
ountrymen tho men latiou in the belief that at homo
e<l those heights." they would not be forgotten."
after all was lost, , .
courage and deter- V FKEE.
te survivors returned
lined homes to take l4 dher Walser, the Catholic
g,rle tosunport them- pr'est who was charged with tho
h*ose dependent upon murder of Agatha Iteichlin, of
Klvria. Ohio, was set tree. '1 ho
: to the Confederate verdict of the coroner's jury was
vhether liviii" or that site "came to her death Irom
wounds inflicted by a stone in
ing are last passing 'ho hands of an unknown party."
each yearly reunion ?
?s are missing. In a IMlI Mt A HI) SHOO I N LTHLK
ars there will ho none ......
ft. Hut be assured,
pour lame is in lite Special to The State.
; of-the good women
i. They will see to Yorkville, May 8. At an excause
for which yon ldbition at the Wilkerson school
II not he mtsrepre "eat Hickory (iroycon Wodnesliat
'he sacred memo- night thcie was a very sad
cause are ever kept Ut-'cui t once. \\ hile the exercises
1 as to those whoi^'1'" progress a numher of
passed away : persons were outsideof the building
and amongst tlieni a party
?" your humble Brave*.- f c|,ildren we re seated in a
of a fullon ciiiiHe! *
iirblo column criivcs WUgOll. A yotlllg lliai) ill tllH
ro to to i>uu8c. crowd, under the inlluence of
ct in tho curth liquor was sliootiug his pistol
promiseoi.sly around. One hall
tuo stono. struck little Mary Hell Heslie, a
tun tho t?rtiy vfart, r-year-old dawghterof Mr. lien