The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, December 29, 1898, Image 2

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agHAH^^3|j^MB^B^|iHnH^H^^ngi?icalBjj^jHBjBjwHWMiPM|j^^BHBHBrgton. He knowledge nttflnHUHMHffl^r ^ result of under bis direcHBBhHBh|HS&9H|^Kis conclusions will raRMHHHgBMot affront, the good o is solicitous that the ys should be "strictly ho is pleased wheu she chicken killed SO her s, the professor says, {J^eaten until they have game, and this process :o consume about three o the chicken he says, "Hang it out of a window, as the Germans do, head down, and when the head falls off the fowl is tipe for eating." A bit more appetizing is the further advice that fish and eggs should be eateu the day they are taken, although fish, if frozen on the day caught, will he good whenever takan from the ice. T>ut the notion that fish is a brain food is all wrong. ; The phosphorous needed by the brain comes from eggs and vegetables. This ano much more have beeu J learned by the professor during a year of investigation into the question of the dietetic values of meat from all fowls and animals. It is tne nrst systematic and complete effort made in this direction. Professor Wiley says, and it is to be continued through a term of years. It is difficult to say to what age man should live. Of course, there are many people who everlastingly give advice how to live to a good old age. There are some who claim that people do not live as long in the city as in the country, and there are others who think differently. Be it as it - ul)', "ah analysis of a death table which was printed in one of New York City's papers may prove inter" eating, <SV?ll 11 110 IliUtmUH stantiatcd. There we^^^MSEBHa deaths reported to th^fl^BEHHEj^S raent for one^y|^KBB8PaglBLSGB^ F'HuonsMBHnnKp H&Sg^^raBjn^HTook place of Dearly gjg JEons were serescape, show windows of Company. wholesale dry goods and nonot definitely known. HnSHHjH||^Kcd a live electric wire set MflHul^HKon with which the window B|^K9|^Pme blaze could be extinguished Ma - . . to the decorations of everfflR^Fin the store, and the building was gflH^>ed in flames in nn incredibly short ^Bnce of time. ^Tbe principal losses are: Havens A f Geddes, $800,000: Breinig A Miller, furni| ture, $25,000; Pixlev A Co., $100,000; Terre Haute Shoe Compauy. wholesale, $150,000; Albrecht A Co.. retail dry goods, $750,000; United States Baking Company, $80,000; Thorman A Schloss, clothiers, $50,000. | 3l A CONVENTION !N PORTO RICO. g Municipal Kepresematlvon Desire Statehood in the American Union. c' San* Juah, Porto Rico (By Cable). The n ?*! f f J, tnirna U I WU*"UUVilUl ivj/iwviuau * w> V* ???** ? vw of Porto Rico, which General Henry, tho jj I Military Governor, called together, met a c few days ago. Munoz Rivera, President of the former tl Autonomic Council, on behalf of seventy- P five delegates, of whom forty were Radicals, N delivered an address to General Henry, n declaring that the convention was enthusl- b astiaallv in favor of free trade with the 0' United States, compulsory education, the tl settlement of a rate of exchange, and of b modifications in the ourrency. though not b In favor of tho removal of the duty on H sugar, which would be a death blow to 0 Porto Rico. Senor Rivera declared also tl that the Porto Ricans were in favor of a e territorial organization, with a yiew to O early Statehood, on the same basis as that f< of the American States. b The convention, which was politically w harmonious, pronounced in favor of com- C mercial and religious liberty, and the u future limitation of the suffrage to males r< ano eon ?-a r\T trho TlfiV EC vy ci invui^-vuv jwca&o v* taxes and are able to read and write. General Henry is much pleased. rj DEADLY TRAP IN ALABAMA: Set by a Birmingham Man, It Has Killed Two Burglars. a Birmingham, Ala. (Special). Since the p I death of his mother two years ago, William w Penny, an eccentric old bachelor, has re- c sided by himself in the family home near ? Dolomete. He was a hard-working man s1 and daily absent from his home. His in- p dustry and thrift resulted in the belief by ^ many people that he kept a hoard of money v at home, and his house has been entered jt by burglars several times. a. Last spring, in order to catch any future sj intruders, Penny set a trap gun just inside p his door. In April, Gilbert Dorsey, col- p ored,broke into the SollBejDia W91BBOC WW "T killed by the gun. A few days ago. while j? Penny wa9 at church, Nelson Wright, also ? a negro, entered the house. The gun went ^ off and Wright died in the county jail from his wounds. Another was severely wounded in September in the same manner. Wright was a deserter from the Third Alabama itegiment, stationed at Anmston. a Penny's successful mode of protecting his property has not been criticised^il^y?|^j#| gun i9 ingeniously set self can enter the houj^HBBB^H?8^^BB| gun is set, but is da^^9HHBH|HHK to make the attempt. nomin tB* Senate. BK^ng^^it present United States Russia. He was appointed H^H^^^ussIa in August. 1897, and athigher rank of Ambassador H^KiAt station was raised to an em CORNELIUS X. ELISS. (Who has resigned from the Cabinet.) President McKiuley upset all politica1 lates when he sent Mr. Hitchcock's nomlation to the Senate, and he gave the enators and politicians a surprise suoh as iey rarely get. Nobody outside of the abinet knew, apparently, that Mr. Hitchock had been selected, and when the ame went to the Senute it took everybody nawares. Secretary Bliss, in reply to a request for lformation about his retirement from the abinet, said: j "It has been understood for some time lat it would be my wish to retire from tiKHn Ufa an Mm imnalnelnn of thA war. ow that the peacetreaty has been signed, ?y request to be relieved will be granted, ut I shall await the arrival of my sucBssor before severing my connection with tie department. I have been in most earty accord with the President in is policy through the trying days in 'hicn he sought to avoid war and while as ommander-in-Chief he was conducting be war that came, notwithstanding his fforts to prevent it. I believe most rhorughly in the course he is now pursuing jr maintaining the honor of the country y securing the just results of a successful ?ar. I shall leave my associates of the a hi n ?t nnd nf the denartment and mv lany friends in Washington with a great Bgret, but private and personal reasons lake my retirement a necessity." The new Secretary i3 not expected to arive here and take the oath of office before ebruary 10. The New Secretary's Career. Mr. Hitchcock, the new secretary, was ppointed early in 1897 Minister of the nited States at St. Petersburg, and when ussia sent her present representative hero 'ith the rank of Ambassador, Mr. Hitchock was also promoted to the higher rade. As his full name indicates, the new abinet officer is descended from Vermont :ock, being a great-grandson of Colonel than Allen, who captured Port Tlconeroga, though his father moved South efore the war, and he was himself born i Mobile. Ala. In St. Louis he is known s a business man of large wealth and high anding. For many years he has been resident of the Crystal Plate Glass Cornany, of Crystal City. Mo., an extensive ad important enterprise. Mr. Hitchcock known as a thorough business man, who as not been actively in politics, although e has always been a stanch Republican. A SERIOUS RAILROAD WRECK. I Kear-End Collision In New Jersey Kyis Two and Injuries Many. N. J. (Special). In the thick her to^ump. There rope within reach of ^Wr bandl^^Bo was killed instantly. Mrs. RayrrPMT fell from a window two flights up when the top. of a scaling ladder had reached her feet, and carried d<yn with her William Doerr, a street car conductor, who had mounted | ahead of the tlreoien. She sustained fractures of both legs, and died in Roosevelt Hospital. Doerr escaped with 3light in- , juries. * ! A list of the dead and injured follows: The dead: Mrs. Harriet Fee, forty-one years old, a cook, burned to death while attempting to alarm the family of her employer; Mrs. Victoria Raymond, fifty-nine 1 years old wife of Charles H. Underwood, ; Mrs. Ispno Newton, sixty-four years old, a J widow, of Georgetown, D. C.. Mrs. Raymond's sister; killed by jumping Into the < street. 1 The ininred: 3. F. Andreace. fireman, ( [cuts on face and hands; John Cahill, Are- i [man, finger almost severed; Frederick ] Deissoth, fireman, hand cut by glass; William Doerr, thirty years old, street car conductor; William" Ferguson, butler, injured by jumping and shock; Otto Fink, flre|man,cuton forehead while rescuing Mr. 'j Raymond; Margaret Mullarkey, servant; ! Charles II. Raymond, sixty-four years old, < slightly burned and suffering; Edward ' jSweeney. fireman, hand cut by glass. SAMUEL COMPERS RE-ELECTED. ] Retains tlie Post of President of the | j American Federation of Labor. j Kansas City, Mo. (Special). Samuel Gompers was re-elected President of J the American Federation of Labor by a | j ^practically unanimous vote at the closing J i session of the eighteenth annual convention of that organization. 8AMCEL OOHPER9. The American Federation of Labor went c'i record as strongly opposed to President , MeKinley's policy of expansion, when it , adopted, by a practically unanimous vote, the following resolution: "Whereas, As a result of the recent war with Spain, a new, far-reaching and dangerous policy, known as imperialism, or expansion, is about to be thrust upon us, together with the necessary and inevitable accompaniment of a large standing army and an autocratic navy; "Resolved, That this convention offers { its most emphatic protest against such a I policy and instructs its executive officers to use all honorable means to secure the defeat of legislation tending toward annexation and imperialism." Detroit was selected as the next place of meeting. , PRINCE CEORCE IN CRETE. * The New Ruler Receives a Cordial Wei- ( come to the Island. V Caxka, Island of Crete (By Cable). c Prince George of Greoce, the High Com- J raissloner of the Powers, arrived at Suda t Bay, a few days ago, escorted by the a British, French, Russian and Italian flag- * ships. He was saluted by the forts and was welcomed by immense crowds of peo- ? pie on landing. As soon as the Prince was 3 u3hore a procession was formed and he ^ Lcamo here. t ^The route was lined by the international ? ^wops. The Prince and his party stopped 3 |^kre the church, where a te deum was fc j^HB^He then proceeded to the GovernH^^^wlding. where the Cretan flag was c saluted by the warships. i: ^RBnC^^nrge has issued a proclamation / HHEa^^^eorern with justice nnd im- ? liberty to all without ^ ^1 Lalce* he S&UM|HH|^H^^f.".Y ^^HHBHn| The HPSH^B two HHDHH^L , were ;:tM07MjM|^^njHB|^H|^B9ff period o^RBH^H^HH|^^B^H^V The have ?ot . SwMM^h^^BHpWri the ^pringfleli^Wnory which \?feFS captured at Santiago only 2500 have been found to be c in serviceable condition. The unservicea- ^ jle guns will be sold at public auction. s The Yosemito and the Badger have been t< udered to the Pacific, the former to join S Admiral Dewey's fleet and the latter to Hawaii. , k Adjutant-General Corbin gave his views A an increase of the Army to the Honse Military Affairs Committee; he saiilthat twenty thousand men would bo needed in Cuba a! md twenty-flve thousand in the Philippines. G DomMtlc. tl Henry A. Chapin. the mulii-millionairo ~ nine owner and richest man in Michigan, | iied a few days ago at his home in Niies. Se was estimated to be worth at the least 8 *10,000,00#. The Methodist Church in the village of Slarlton, N. J., wa3 destroyed by Are and ^ two adjoining residences were badly dam- tl iged. The fire is believed to have been |c aused by a defective heater. The loss on the church is about $7500. It was insured for $2500. o The case of United States Senator Ken- w ley, charged nt Wilmington, Del., with a jonspiracv to defraud the First National I Bank at Dover, resulted in a second mis- I trial 1 Gonnaro Agnone. an Italian banker and rt rf nKvrt!'n? a t V n ttv Huron pAnn la m ioa P ng. It is said that he has fled with the -ieposits of hundreds of his fellow-country- H nen. It is believed to be over $10,000. ~ Grip is epidemic in Greater New York iue, physicians say, to the foul condition jf the streets. The disease also prevails in n Philadelphia, Albany and other cities. ^ Thieves entered the jewelry stores ol a Alexander Weed and Sigismund Kronholtz, 30th of Stamford, Conn., and secured upward worth of booty in each place, fc The^l^l militiamen who served oc joard the Yankee, Nahant and other ves- g; sels during the Spanish war, have begun a ^ xiovement for the formation of the Yankee Slab. B The Mormon Church in Salt Lake City, Utah, is badly in need of money and is try t] ng to borrow $500,000. Sl Lieutenant James H. Hosklnson, Adju- p :ant 01 me rirst uattauon 01 me rineemo Pennsylvania Regiment, was thrown vioently from his horse in front of the Post- p iffice at Athens. Ga. His head struck the f( ground with great force, and in two hours . le was dead. ' Private James Ellis, Third North Caroina Colored Regiment, shot and killed his fi entmate, Robert Thomas, at the regiment- g tl camp at Macon, Ga., a Jew days ago. a Dhe men had words over some money that ["homos owed Ellis, which brought on the a ihooting. Ellis was arrested and will be v ried before a court-martial for murder, Mrs. Roena Shelley, the oldest inhabi- ant of Cheshire County, N. H., died a few iays ago, at Keene, aged 102 years and line months. She was born at Springfield, rt., married Oren Shelley at Westmore- J and at twenty-four, was the mother of our children, and outlived her husband it? nirift vnorj hft4 f fill r (7 TP fit". granddaughter*. James J. Grogan, former Chief Clerk of he Department of Construction and Re- t tair in the League Island Navy Yard, at a 'hiladelphia, was arrested and placed unler $2000 ball by United States Coramisloner Craig to answer a charge of criminal lolation of the naval regulations. Edgar M. Crawford, sixty-three years tld, a tobacco merchant, and George Do'as. thirty-seven years old, an author, both if New York City, were knocked down by a unaway horse attached to a wagon a few lays ago. and the former's skull was fracured. He did not recover consciousness ind succumbed in less than an hour. The atter was slightly injured. Hilda Peterson, who was on trial In the lupreme Court of Queens County, New tork, for the murder of her child, at P.ockille Centre, on March 4, was acquitted on he ground of insanity. Judge Dickey ommitted her to the Insane asylum at Iatteawan until her mental condition can ?e determined. Thn Trior Rankin? Comnanv forivatel it Tyler. Texas, closed its doors owing, it s said, to heavy withdrawls of deposits, issets, $40,000; liabilities, $20,000. The oficials say all depositors will be paid. I Eight additional survivors of the lost I teamer Londonian were rescued by the I forth German Lloyd steamer Maria Rickaers. They arrived at Baltimore a few lays ago. Forelrn. The Spanish Peace Commissioners irrived at Madrid from Paris, and Senor lontero Rios held a conference with the i1 Jueen Regent. B The schooner Parisian was wrecked on n Vhitehead .Island, N. S., and an invalid lassenger, Miss Louisa Dowd, and a sailor 5' rere drowned. ^ A duel with pistols took place at Munich, h javaria, between Major Seitz and Lieuten- j] M^Pfeiffer, arising out of the former's ^^fess for the iattcr's wife, Major Seitz ^^^^^gpns were killed and many others i Rue des Apennins, Paris, -J International Conferwhich met in Rome, uniform action class. Havana, New to of k by taking BH^^^^ueauty fiHPrccnta. All drugX^^Hsfaction guaranteed. 10c, 25c,50c. BH Sewing company owns and controls 248 ? Boons In Milwaukee. So. 52. I To Core A Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Qniaine Tablets All ruggists refund money if it fails to care. 25c. The new glass works at Zoquiapan, Mex- ' :o, will soon begin operations. Doa't Tobacco Spit tad Smoke Tonr Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mac- * etlc. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- ] ao. ftoc wonder-worker, that makes weak men w irong. All druggists, coo or?. uureguaran- i :cd. Booklet and sample free. Address I tcrliDg Remedy Co,. Chicago or New York, J Germany now has four steamship lines j eeping up regular connection with Eastern sla- _ 1 Pico's Cure for Consumption has no equal * a Comrh medietas. f. M. Abbott, 338 Senna St., Buffalo. N. Y.. May 9, 1893. Mor? than 4,600 men are occupied in rnnd liapids in tho manufacture of furniire. Rheumatism i caused by acid in the blood. Hood's 'ircnnnMlIn nnntrnHrna thia Anfd And nilffifl ie aches and pains. Do not suffer any >nger wlien a remedy ts at hand. Take ie great medicine which has cared so many d thers, and you may confidently expect it ill give you the relief yon so much desire. blood's Darilln Her Troubles. Mrs. Madge Babcock, 176 Second It., Grand Rapids, Mich., had ovarian rouble with its attendant aches ad pains, now she is well. Here J her own words: Compound has le me feel like 1 was all run jjjjjS J| so had ovaria^^V, and since taking ? , b all troubleshave gone. My monthly icknessused to be so painful, but have nt had the slightest nain since taking m u - , . our medicine. I cannot praise .your Vegetable Compound too much. My iusband and friends see such a change a me. I look so much better and have ome color 5a my face." Mrs. Pinkham invites women who are [1 to write to her at Lynn, Mass., for dvire, which is freclv offered. _____ % ??! suffered the torture* of the damned ith uro'.ruding piles brought on by constipaon with which I was aftlicted for twenty jars. I ran across your CASCARKTS In the >vn of Newell, la., and never found anything ^ ) equal them. To-day 1 am entirely free from lies and (eel like a new maa" ^^B C H. Kbitz. 1411 Jones St., Sioux City, I&. /Brobb CANDY g catharticJ^^^^^^^^H H^L TRADE > America's Greatest Medicine. Price SI. repared by C. 1. Hood & Co., Lowell. Mass. lood's Pills cure sick headache. -*>e. vuicxea fcating Squirrels. "What are you shooting?" said & ian at the old Meeker tavern in Inion to a couple of Newark^gtinners few days ago. "We are out for gray squirrels," aid one of the Newarkers. "I wish you would kill them all," aid the hotel tnan. "They killed wenty-four of my young chickens bis season." "Are you sure of that," said one of be Newarkers, to whom the fact that luirrels are omniverous was a sur- . rise. sure as siiuowuj;, uie uuiuu man i eplied. "We climbed the trees and Dund parts of the youug chickens In be squirrels' nest" It is an undisputed and indisputable &ct that red squirrels eat flesh, and p 4MB rav squirrels have frequently been ecused of the eat-like habit of killing nd eating nestling birds, but this -as a ease where proof was found. 'ewark Sunday Call. COULD NOT SLEEPT /T c? IrVi a rv? 1 qttoH TTOf of AV