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-T~IF ~R C C2v TUF'*' Xv NoVE BRl~ ~ ~ 2T IEAWF.I4OAYA buy Goods I any market Dress Gioo, The Stock is entirely to( Dress Goods and Silks in I a your opportunity to buy All our 30e., 40c. and 49 24e. yard. 10 pes. 54 in. Socking, a 10 pcs 54 in. Broad Clo Mimnaugh's price 75c. yar, Our entire line Black DY Our entire line of fine W . ALL K and profits on or business. doz. n at half price. Ar F THE STATE BOARD OF ~ 1~Rabmoj tM Board, Treasurer Jen-. Ex~c5%~MIdaled to Come 2 y ,peeMEachone Ladles to Tabu n . sIate the R turns, :2-:. ~ (ns and Courier.]. 07 - ,Nov. 14.-The State e ~sird of canvassers met today, every illmsber having come in except Sec idea~y of State Cooper, who is under MtoOd to be sick. Lieutenant Gov eIo Tillman, who was telegraphed d, was also oa hand, and members of the board present, a meeting in accordance with law, when the board does not m ueet at-the proper time. The board did nothing special beyond provid ing for the tabulationl of the returns, which, thsgb small' in numbers comparatively, will take some time to handle. ssp Dwight, of the attorney gen ~eraN offce, arnd Miss Walker, .o te Secretary of State's offce, 'ere 'apointed clerks to tabu a1t. the vote. The reason for the nmembers not being on band yester day was one that is aptly illustrated by the sagie what is everybody's thesiness is nobody'". Each of the aniembers thought that every other uneimber would be on band and that his presence would be unnecessary the consequence being that no one, excepting the State treasurer, was there. The board adjourned for two weeks to await the tabulation. NO MEETING ON APPOINTED DAY. Columbia, Nov. 13.-The evils of offiial .absenteeism were never miore positively shown than they were to day, when the State board of can vassers could r,ot me&et to declare the result of tbe recent election because only one memiber was present. Snehi neglect of a most im)pcrtant dnty is inexplicable. Ord itzari ly the aver age citizen hardly knows of any other election except the primary and probably offcials are just as apt;i to forget othe.r elections also, but in thia case the.re is no such excuse, for on the 11th instant Clerk Me Coan, of tbe secretary of State's offie, offiially notified each member of the board that a meeting would ,ha held today at noon and for what iocU Talk Noi ou know like to , Bright New Stu rom headquarte in the world. C cis and Silk Secti large. For the next few days evei be house the price will be cut and cul Dress Goods and Silks for a Little M e. Colored Dress Goods placed on cer 11 shades worth 75c. for this sale 40c. th, all shades, the kind other stores se L ess Goods to go at actual first cost. aistings worth 75c. and $1.00, yourel [NDS9OF e ine alone. urexp ath to be closed out at< iy reasonale offer on ar Come T MAUI purpose. Today is the time required by law for the vote to be canvassed. fhe members of the board are the secttry olE Stage, the comptroller general, the attorney general, the adjutant general, the State tres rer, and chairman of the committee on elections of the house, who is this instance ia Mr..R. 0. Patterson, of Batwell. When the time came for the board o ipeet oply one mapber appeared State Treasurer Jennings. The law provides that four members shall ontitute a quorum, but even these ould not be obtained today. The Act further provides that in-ease a qorum is Dot present then the lieu tnant governor shall be summoned ad he with the members present hall proceed to declare the vote. ieutenant Governor Tillman was oday, therefore, duly notified by elegraph that his presence was eeded in Columbia and it is ex eted that he will arrive tomorrow. It is said, though, that it will ake no particular difference wheth r he gets her~e - tomorrow or next ay or two weeks, so he does come n a reasonable time, provision being ade for his possible absence from the State. When he does come he nd Treasurer JeDnings will form lly declare the vote. While it is certain that this neg et on the part of the State officials will result in no harm to those State officers who have been recently eeted, they having no opposition; nd while the same thing may be said as to those etngressmen who will have no contests on hand, it is onceivable that such an outcome will do those congressmen or those ounty officers who had opposition~ o good, to say the least of it, and it can be easily understood how such ongressmen may be embarrassed in holding their seats when the case is shown up in a Republican congress. No explanation is given here why these officials were away. Attorney General Bellinger went to Barnwell to attend court in the Free case, but it is held that he should have come back for the more important duty. If the others were away on official busi ness no one here knows anything of it. A Kansas man boasts of running the only strictly third-class hotel in the country. It is JIp to somne Ch~icago landlords indignantly to reny this assertion. Rounded Per trade where they ff for the least m rs with a good b ,et right into the 1 on. The M ry piece of The Liveliest C< deep. Now is my motto and a] oney. tre table at Come Direct I the Work It for $1.00, Thousands of ya Thousands of yi ice 50c. Thousands of ya Excer S-HOESHOE nses are divided among ost. 50 dozen Men's, E y article in the house wi o The Pool The PRESS ROOM AT WHITE HOUSE. President Sees to it that Newspaper Men are Not Ignored. Washington, November 17.-For the first time in history the President of the United States has set apart a room adjoining his own offices for the exclusive use of the press. In the new office building, west of the White House, the correspondents have a separate room, provided with a huge oak table, chairs and three telephones for their convenience. The room adjoins the big central waitipg room, where all callers gath er before they are admitted to the office of the President or Secretary Cortelyou. The door of the press room stands open, and the man of consequence in politics, business or rank who escapes without being interviewed is fleet of foot indeed. In the White House, before it underwent its remodelling process, when the President and his clerical force were all quartered on the second floor, the newspaper men 'those duty took them there had to content themselves with a table placed at the eastern end of the gen eral waiting room. They had no telephones at their disposal, and when they wished to call up their respective offices were obliged to go into the "war room" and ask Col. Montgomery's permission to use the wire. Col. Montgomery's telephone was often busy at the very time the newspaper men wished to use it. Now, with the three telephones at hand, Col. Montgomery's dignity will no be so frequ-ntly disturbed, and the business of sending important "items'' to the uttermost ends of the! earth will be greatly facilitated. President Roosevelt holds, perhaps, more than any of his predecessors, a warm place in his heart for the newspaper fraternity. He has ap pointed several of his newspaper friends to g.'od positions in the pub lie service. He is exc.-edingly ap proachable a:nd often favors the cor respondents with his political conti deuces. Whben thbe new office buiLd .igwas planned it was quite natu ral, therefore, that the President sould order a "press room" in the most convenient location and of the most commodions arrangement possi ble with the appropiiation at hand. Any small boy in his first pair of troue feels sorry for his mother. ods But Price, can buy the Che4 >ney. That's who isiness record an< >ush at once. Fif illinery Depar rner in the store. "Small Profits and I low no man to undersell me. o Headquarters where One of Two. Don't Miss a Singl( You May Miss, a Dollar. rds of Indaigo Blue Calicoes at 4c. yar rds of Outings, the 8c. kind at 5c. yard rds of Sea Island to go at 4e. yard. t the poor kind. We doi STORE, MILLINERY 4 DRY GOODS, MILLINE oys' and Children's Cap I be accepted. ie's Favori Cheapest Stoi he Carolinas A REMARKABLE CASE. Young Girl Dies in New York Hospital After Continuous Sleep of Twenty Days. [Augusta Chronlcle.] Some days ago was published an account of the mysterious case of Nellie Corcoran in St. Vin cent's hos pital, New 'York. For days she had lain in a sound sleep and no effort to arouse her had succeeded. The girl fell into her state of un consciousuess October 18 at the house where she was employed as a servant. At the hospital where she was taken eroic efforts to determine the ause of her condition met with little success. Hundreds of physi ians examined her, and every known method was tried to awaken her, but with little success. Two or three times she was aroused and spoke a few words, saying she was sleeping and again became unconscious. Electricity was applied and in se vere applications, but ineffectively. Neurologists and pathologists tried to diagnose the girl's condition, but ould not. Specialists of nearly every medical field were called in, but they arrived at no conclusions as to the cause of the coma or its proper diagnosis. It was even suggested 1 that someone had hy pnotized her and1 efforts to throw off such a spell were made, but to no purpose. Her temperature increased rapidly, she became emaciated and finally stopped ~ breathing, after having slept 20 days. There was an autopsy, but nothing was discovered in the condition of the organs to account for the strange sleep. The brain was kept for ex-1 mination by specialists on that or an and it is believed the secret will >e discovered there. Pointed Paragrphs. [Chicago Daily News.] An early crop-the small boy's first hair cut.c With some 5 cent cigars you get ~ at least six scents. C The eight day clock is a hard t worker and a chronic striker. Sometimes it is his lie-abilities a that increase a man's assets. t Much of the charity that begins at t home is too feeble to get ntext door. The skiu deep beauty of the rhi- 4 noceross isn't calculated to make him I vain.] When it comes to a question of stayhig qualities the undertaker can s to Catch a Ipest and get th( it the people war i capital and cre< teen salespeople Thousan( ftnent 200 doz. 4uick Turnovers" 200 doz. Take a d Dollar Does make your Line or 50 Mon's 50 Men's 50 Men's 100 pairs 50 bales Vt keep them Did yc TORE OR CLOTHING RY, SHOES, CLOTHI s at half price. A big 1c to Tradinl e in EDGEHELD FIREBUG CAPTURED. rhe Man Who T.led to Burn the Town Now in the Penitentiary-Lynching Narrowly Avoided. [News 'and Courier.] The negro, Bostick, arrested in Edgefield, charged with incendiar sm., was brought here and is now ~afely lodged within the penitentiary.. 'ho story that his captors brought, ere is, however, considerably differ at from the one published. One of he captors said that the sheriff in-! ended to board the train at Trenton ith the negro, but hearing that a ob was coming aftor him, he took 0 t:he woods and made a long, tedi-' rnus, circuitous route, coming to Co abia via Branchville. One of the' ~aptors said this route was taken in rder to "avoid Jim Tillman and his ob," asserting that they had heard, n what they believed to be reliable uhority, that the lieutenant gov ~rnor was leading a crowd bent on ynhingthe negro. Whether there as anything in the story or not, the egro's captors believed it, else they* ould not have taken such precan ions to elude the lynceuing party. INNES' TROUBLES. bey are of Two Kind, Domestic and In ternal. Innes, the bandmaster, appears to iave other troubles besides appen icitis as the following from the New cork Sun will show: "Lawyer George A Flaacke, of ersey City, received word from ~upreme Court Justice Gilbert Col ins yesterday that he had dismissed fe order issued by ~supreme Court ommissioner Charles J. Roe, under hich Frederic N. Innes, the band laster, was taken into custody in ersey City on the affidavit of his vife, Georgia Frances Innes, that he wed her $500 alimony. "Mrs. Innes obtained a decree of ivorce in this city. The bandmas r did not obey a-l order of the ourt to pay her $25 a week and went Jersey City, where he was foud iy his former wife. She said that e had reason to believe that he ini ended to leave the State anid se ured his arrest for debt. "In dismissing the case, Jnstice Jollins said that sunficient evidence iad not been adduced to show thati :nnes was leaving the State perma-. tently or intended to dlefraudl Mrs. Low d Hold the Cr( . Biggest and Bes it. We are in a lit sufficient to bt to take care of t Is of yards of Canton Flannel worth 10, Ladies' Black Heavy Rose worth.10c. t Men's Unndershirts and Drawers, the 5( q off and bring your family. It will F bill bere. Overcoats to go6 $4.00 worth $6.00. Overcoats to go at $5.50 worth $9.00. Overcoats to go at $8.00 worth $12.00. Men's Odd Pants at half price. )f Jeans slightly soiled at half price. iu ever think about ho STORE has to make a 4G, that's why we have t of Boy's Knee Suits to ]Place. INAUG AN IMPOSSIBLE BARBER. The Men Who Shaved Eighteen Men in it Eight Minutes and Seven Seconds. r The conductors, engineers, firemen ~ and flagmen of the Southern rail- ~ way are all much exercisedi over th1e ~ recent order requiring them to have watches thbat measure up to certain ~ requirements, which is the out growth of the time convention of the railroad people held some tim~e since. The following is a copy of the cir-1 clar issued by the Southern rail- ~ way in regard to timepieces: C "This company will inaugurate a system of clock and watch inspee- I ion and employees designated below C are required on and after the above date to submit their watches for quarterly examination between the ~ 1st and 15th days of each Novem- ~ er, February, May and August, and ~ weekly comparison with standard ~ time, to the various local inspectors t who have been appointed for this 6 purpose, and who will be under the general supervision of J. W. For singer, Chicago, who has been ap- B pointed general inspector. "Names and location of local in spectors and location of standard locks on the respective divisions $ ill be shown in the current time ti abes as issued. "Train masters, train dispatchers, ard masters, assistant yard mas ers, switchmen, station masters, en a ~ineers, foremen of engines, firemen, ~onductors, baggagemen, flagmen, y remen, brakemen and switch ten- In ers must submit; their watches for si~ uarterly examination and weekly d ~omparison as required by the rules, nd telegraph operators, station ~gents, section foremen, bridge fore- ' nen and towermen must submit their P atches for quarterly examination.U "The minimum standard of excel- Ic lence adopted by this company fora vatches is a grade equal to what is mown among American movements s 'nickel 17-jewel, patent regulator, tdjnsted to heat and cold, and three y >ositions,' the variation of whicht nust not exceed thirty seconds per veek; rno key winder will be accepted. "The grade name and numbers re berein plainly specified; no mod fications will be permitted. "All new watches in service must e lever set. "No watch specially made and p amed by or for any jeweler will be b acceted on this companyv's lines. fi iwds. t selections position to ly Goods-in he crowds. . to go at 7c. o go at 5c. pair. )e. kild to go at 25c. each. ay you to ride miles to w an exclusive ii its expenses a walkover in be closed out' Phe intention of j!wolers in offering vatches specially made is gejerally indrsto-d to be for the purpose of emoviog tbe regular fa~ctory grade nd name, thus enabling them to barge employees higher price for ame. "Any watch now in service up to he specified grades will be accepted.", The topic of the watch discussion a the fact. that there are few men io, he railway service who now have, or ad prior to the expiration of the ae limit, watches 'that met all the equirements of the new rule. Many f theeugi neers and conductors have een carrying~ watches 'which they 'aid large amounts for, but which o not in some particilar measure p to the standard. In several cases be instance is cited where fine ratches are owned by the railroad 2en which do not measure up to the tandard, because they have brass rorks where nickel is regqired, hough the class and number of jew. Is is fully up. ANYTHING ANYWHERE. rief Paragraphs Giving Some of the Happenings of the World of Men. General Molinea~ux spent just 100,000 or a third of his fortune in 2e defense of his son in the famous folineaux case just concluded. The finishing last week of the jetty ork in Georgetowa, a piece of work hich has been going on for several ears, and which has involved ove~r a ililion dollars, was made the occa on of a regular Four th of July ay celebration. In a hard fought game of football layed in Greenville on Friday Fnr. ian defeated Carolina and won the iampionship of the State. The sore was 10 to 0. If it is true that the good die Dung, it is up to the oldest inhabi tot to offer an explaoation. A cynic is a man whose disappoint ient is due to the fact that the rorld was made without his advice. It sometimes hapens that a man uts both money and confidence in a ank-and later draws out his con rdence.