University of South Carolina Libraries
"A young man need not be a young man in business if he studies himself, and finds out where he can improve himself and gain knowledge." VALUABLE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE 71 acres of land just north of business centre of ( it) o? 1.au reus, witllln corporate Hunts, short distance from CM) School prop* ert>. One tenant house and Stuhle. 25 acres in cultivation, bal ance splendid original forest exceptionally line land?susceptible of development into residence lots. Price very reasonable. ('. I). Ihirksdnlc, as Kxceiitor, X\ acres of laud adjoining thai described in above ad., but nearer to CM) School propert) and business portion of City.. Same char acter of laud 15 acres in cultivation, most of balance line original forest. One .'l-rnoin tenant house, Clirriligc bouse and barn. Well of line water. This is the llnesl property in Hie ( it) limits. Trice such as to make it. us well as the properl) described in nbovc ad., Hie hesi Investment on (he market. Als? residence lot luo feet front on (luircli sired between the residence of V. C. Hella Iiis lind K, Illllkclcy. This lot cannot be duplicated ttliywlicrc in to n at the price, 1'coplc who wish bargains in real estate or to invest for prolits >\ill do well to confer wllli me promptly, C. D. Barkselale LAURENS, S. C. DRY CLEANING -zrr= AND- -~g PRESSING OF THE EXPERT KIND Have your Clothes Cleaned and Pressed by men who know how. You'll find them here at this shop. E. V. FERGUSON Over H. Terry's Store Laurens, South Carolina T \ THOUSANDS MOURN FOR DEAD MAYOR Louie Lines uf People Pass in Silent Procession llrsiile llod) of Deceased Muj or of Neu \ 01K. New York, SopL 21.- In a double line that uover seemed to diminish as tho day v>otv on. thousands of per sons today llled through tho llower 111 led rotunda of the city hall and past the body of Win. .<. Qnynor, ly ing In stale. Unmindful of a heavy downpour of rain In tho morning, frequent showers during the after noon ami threatening skies tonight, tho people came In a continuous stream silently to flud places in tho long slow-moving procession that ox tended for half a mile along lower Broadway and through city hall park j to the city hall. It was New York's spontaneous tribute to its dead mayor. In the long line were street clean-j <-rs in their white uniforms, police men, 11 re me n ami men high in the of ficial life of the city ami state, but for the most par: the procession was made up from ttie .meat socnllcd mid dle ciass. About a fifth of the crowd was made up of women and children, and many of the latter carrb d s nail wreaths which thoy placed m ir the coflln. A: '.' o'clock the police on duty at the city hall cstintrt^vl that more than 7."?,000 persi 1 I viewed the body. The line was st'."' :'. lining at a late hour tonight and Mayor Kline issued an order to kee 1 I ? rotunda open until I o'clock V i; necessary, so that all who c: i mig'.lt pay tribute to the me! or.> oi the dead mayo:-. Fully inn.i.. sons, it is believed, will have ' a.,; the body before the door. e (lost I. A lleniarkahli' Tribute. "It is a remarkable tribute," Mayoi Kline said as he vtowc 1 the great silent crowd. "No king, no emperor ever had a tribute paid to him like this great outpouring of citizens to day. It is a tribute from the hearts of tile people." All last night tlie police kept guard around city hall park ami had dlfll eulty in keeping the crowds moving, as many tried oven at an inordinately early hour to >:et in line to view the body. Three policemen and three firemen in reliefs of half hour stood rigidly at attention during the night beside the colllll, which was draped in the stars ami stripes and the mayor's flag, wltile beneath could be seen the colors of tho union jack, placed there ;>t the request of Iho Qnynor family In recognition of the courtesy extended by the city of I/Ivor pool upon the arrival of the mayor's body In thni city after his death ?I sea. Crossed branches of palms of victory were the only Moral decora tions on the < over of the collin. Those branches were sent by the family. Behind the bier hung the draped pic lure of Mayor Gnyuor. The bier rest ed on the sumo spot where the bodies of many famous men have laid in slate. The last was thai of Governor Ceo. Clinton, whoso body nfter resting in the grave for many years was re movi '. to another Community ami re mained for a few hour* in the city hall. Other noted men v.'. o e have rested beneath t'1" . 1,1 '-:' hall were Abraham Lincoln, Genera U. S. Cr.mi. Horace Creely and Gel) .los. A. Paozo, president of Venezm la Pnfhcfic Incidents. Pathetic Incidents were nunieroii during tli" r.dy, as men and womct whom tho late mayor had befriend' looked upon iiis face. Among tae was a Itrooklyn youth whose pai Mayor Caynor took when it y leged he was being prosecuted police and which resulted in an in vestigation and also the retnov.il i the boy's picture from the rogue's gal lory. While the thousands journeyed l< town to pay their respects in i thousands of others attended moaio services in many churches in all purl of the city. Tonight the rotunda of the city was almost filled with floral offering from individuals and orgnnizatloi from all parts of the United States an from foreign countries. On" of I was seilt by the lord mayor ol Live pool, w ho cabh d t hat he would ! p ?. ?.?im hi ti e funeral fomorro . At ?:?. Grace Methodist eh ire Rev, c F. Uolsiicr, (he pastor, read letter from former President Taft which lie s.iid: "I count it n honor that Mayor Gaynor rcgardi 1 ti as his. friend. There was no place nation, stale or city. Judicial, l< ? I live or executive which Iiis qualiti did not (it him admlrally to fill. K erything he did and said had the II or of an nltnctlvo aggressive a broadly liberal personality that W he anil ought to be. lom; romcm 1 Funeral Services Today. Tho public funeral services of Mi or Gnynov will bo held from Trill church of it o'clock tomorrow moi Ing and will he conducted by Hisli Greer. Services for tho ov.crfli corwd vvi'l l"' held nl St. Pinl's Chi ol, a few blocks distant, Tro ftmo proeess'oti will move from the City hall at 10:80 o'clock down Broadway to Trinity church. \. regiment of pol' jo will lead the procession in which also win be 200 firemen ami delegations from every city department. At noon the funeral profession will move from Trinity church to Brook lyn bridge ami thoucc to Greenwood cemetery, the place of Interment. Judge tinge's Charge. The following is the charge of Judge Gage to the Jury In the Will Fair ease at SpartUllbUI'g, where Will Fair was tried and acquitted of the charge of criminal assault upon a white woman of that vicinity: "Gentlemen of the Jury: "As I stated to the grand Jury on Monday, so I state to you now that a case like this not only tries the pris oner at the Par but it even tries the very integrity of our institutions. " Mob cried out in his despair, 'Oh; that 1 had a day between Tin e and me.' You. gentlemen of the jury, ate Hi day that stands between the bar and the penalty of the law. Von know what rape is the carnal knowledge of a woman by force against her will. "The defend:; tit does not deny, 0 I should Bn> ..ore properly, his coun sel do not deny, that on the day nam ed at the time of the assault defendant was} in that vicinity; but the conten tion is bold and strong that it there was any wrong done to her this de fendant t'.iu n<>; do it. ?"The jury may take one of three views in this ruse: (n) Thal de ml an: did it. (b) That some other ue gro did it. let Thai it was not done at all. "The human mind is a wonderful thing. The most of us stand Jusl on ! I the bolder line between COllsclounsess and unconsciousness, and sometimes 11 just one step carries us beyond the veil from what we sec and hear ami know to that which we do not see, do not hear, and do not know. We are wonderfully made, and woman is more wonderfully made than man. ( ??'I'll.- object of this trial is not to | ( ascertain who did this thin;:, or. If It was done at all. The object is to llnd whether this defonadnt did it. and the law requires that you must be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that he did it. The testimony ought to bad you to ?ertain conviction, and stand your feet on the- rook of truth, and cause thorn to be llriuly llNod ihoro. If Hie testimony so levels you. so declare. It the testimony leaves you uncertain if it leaves you in do ibl Iben it i your duty to write a vordiel of Not guilty.' Such a Verdict. I will say. does not mean Hint this woman hits ftilsllicd; it do. no: mean that she has sworn utitfUlhfully thai, I say, is net necessarily implied. I have tried cases like this before, m. than om of ih. in. It is not Improper to slate in this connection that I Irled it ease In Columbia again -t n very i es pi c la.ble doctor at the Instance of a very respectable patient of bis. Sb< SWOI'0 0 i,1 blank that be raped her v\ bile e v.;as under his care In pb? . i i:111. The I ? timoii.v of Hie doctors, ami lbe preponderating testimony In the case was that she thought she b id been ib alt with w role:I'u! 1 v . bill had not been touched, fthe swore In abso lutely good faith. I loll ybu now what 1 ibid the jury M,:'' c-i*'*- i told them if ihoy believed the woman, and If they believed what she said Was1 lino, and believed that under all Hie clreunii 11 nee? she had t he pow er to ?, ;. . ?nth, Iben the y should bud ;, verdict of guilty, it i'. on the other, hand, l'i :t t'i? m in doubt, tin > ought pot to c on\ let, This Is your on r\ 11 is not my ease. It is not the ease of counsel. H i not the en.-- of |bo con gregated and vvait'.iig public. It Is the. case of these twelve men and in tin dglu of (h d ! under your oath i1 is your duty to write a verdict as von ? ? ???p... inn ?? I pr'osijie as Judge; aip miri ? more I <?? ! like crying out an ? lilt Of HIV one that oil to be exercised ill a spirit of di .oMon with uncovered ends. "Vou may say '(Sillily'.' You may kiiv 'Tlullty with recoirimendatlop to m-r ey.' You may say 'Not guilty.' Take tlie record, gentlemen, and write your verdict!" f'ainrlif a Bad Cob'. "I.ar t v in:er my son caught a very I bn 1 e id and the way he eoutfhe 1 was Rcn'.rlblns dreadful." vi r- Mi s ?arah \:. Duncan, of Tlplon, Iowa. "Wo though I sure be wa t going into con !?umr>tlon. We bought lust one bo'H-i of Chamberlain's C'oueV. Ib med.v and that or><. bottle stooped hj cough and cured hi* cold completely." For s:-le| by all dealer!. | BIRTHDAY, WEDDING, ^ ? ANNIVERSARY AND HOLIDAY >; _PRESENTS_| ^ The "Little Jewelry Store" where the crowd goes, where 3^ you g\?t .1 hundtcd cr.ts value foi .1 Hollar. The place where your patronage foi tiyteu cv^Mt repnii job is appre ciated as much .is it you purchased hundreds of dollars ^ worth of goods. My exprfiisireiare sin.ill aud Vor reap the benefit in the v.d>rc of I he goods purchased, > William Solomon 5 V Reliable Jeweler Graduate Optition \J $ Fall Millinery Opening ^ ^ CROSS HILL, S. C. ^ J Wednesday and Thursday, J; $ September 25th and 26th. $ Fascinating in form and deversity of stylo V are the new models by tho?e famous favorites. JV S nail hats are numerous in every favored mode. Trimmings are of every lovely variety from the ^ small Nose-gays of Flowers to,-the up-right pos ^ ing of Ostrich Fancies ami F"eatr)er "Stick-ups." V 1 wish you Lo accept this as a personal invila- ^ \ tion to visit and inspect my Fall Display. SZ > Misses Lilly Mae Rudd and Bessie Mill will X ^ assist me in showin?; you through. A ^ MISS LYDA RUDD ^ Saved Girl's Life S "I want to tell yon what wonderful benefit I have re ceived from the use of Thedford's Black Draught," writes Mrs. Sylvania Woods, of Clifton Mills, Ky. "It certainly has no equal for la grippe, bad colds, JT liver and stomach (roubles. 1 firmly believe Black Draught J saved my little girl's life. When she had the measles, (hey went in on her, hut one good dose of Thedford's J Black-Draught made (hem break out, and she has had no jjr more trouble. I shall never he without jj^ B THEDFORD'S a aMtfa L?CK-DiMOGHT tt # J in my home." Por constipation, indigestion, headache, dizzi ncss, malaria, chills ,and fever, biliousness, and all similar ^ ailments, Thedford's Black-Draught has proved itself a safe, reliable, gentle and valuable remedy. (|| 1Q1 If you suffer from any of the c complaints, try Black- # 4fc Draught. It is a medicine of known merit. Seventy five Jj J years of splendid success proves ils value Good for Z young and old. Tor sale everywhere. Price 25 cents. jm. ???????????????????????? ? ft ft ?????>???-?-?-*^-?-<y~ M?-fr+-?+? Panama in Pictures - at SCHOOL AUDITORIUM Friday, Sept. 26th, 8 P. ML ACCOMPANIED BY A I Graphic Description in Detail J Of the Work the Country and the People tt |J Illustrated to Life-size by Powerful % Light on a First-class i Machine. I ? ? It NOTE:?This Lecture is of a highly ;;J educational character, of value to the old, Z" ?; j and young, to the merchants, the farmer, |;; !!i and in fact every citizen in every walk of 11 nfe. It tt