The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, February 20, 1902, Image 5

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vlr THE GRAYiON BILL. A Substitute Measure Against Chemical Campany. In the Senate Monday Mr. Henderson, for the majority of the committee on judiciary, made a report on Senator Graydon's bill to debar the VirginiaCarolina Chemical company from doing business in this Sitate. The report recommends the passage of a substitute bill, which is as follows: A bill withdrawing permission from the Virginia-Carolina Chemical company to do business in this State except upon the conditions herein stated. Whereas. the Virginia-Carolina Chemical company, a corporation formed under the laws of the State of New Jersey, did on the 22nd day of January, 1900, file with the secretary of State of this State the papers neces ti. ? _ 3 - sacy ID t'ilitDit) It IU UU uusiui-Ba jji ius State as a foreign corporation, and Whereas, the said foreign corporation previous to the filing of said paper did violate the laws of this State and has in other respects violated the tews of this State and Whereas, ever)7 corporation chartered under the laws of this State is subject to the right of amendment, alteration, cr repeal by the general assembly of the State, therefore. Be it enacted by the general assembly of the State of South Carolina: Section 1. That the permit or permission to do business in this State by the Virginia-Carolina Chemical company be, and it is hereby, revoked, to take effect on the 1st day of May, 1902. Provided, however, That this abolition of said permit shall not take effect if before sad date the said company or its stockholders shall either take out a charter from the secretary of State under the laws of this State as a domestic corporation, or file a stipulation with the secretary of State, to the effect that said corporation will abide hv all lavvc ami regulations nf this 9:ate now existing or hereafter enacted relating to domestic corporations of like charter, and a bond in the penal sum of $50,000, with sureties to be approved by the secretary of State, conditioned to pay said sum absolutely if said company shall in any way fail to pay any fines and penalties new due to the State or observe any of its laws applicable to domestic corporation, or attempt to'question the jurisdiction of the State courts. Senator Barnwell, for a minority of the committee, made an unfavorable report on Senator Graydon's bill and declined to recommend the substitute bill, holding that neither plan was applicable to the circumstances. State Sundav Sfhnnl Crmvf-ntlnn The following official announcement has been made, dated at Newberry: To Pastors and Superintendents. Tne South Carolina Sunday School association will be convened in annual session in Greenwood, Su C., March 25-27. A very interesting convention is promised. In addition to prominent and forceful speakers and Sunday school workers of our own State, we will have with us, as the representative of the International executive committee. Mr. Chas. D. Meigs of Indianapolis, Ind one of the foremost Sunday school workers of the great West Mr. Meigs will discuss topics of great interest to the Sunday ?chool3. Art this forthcoming convention delegates will be elected to the 10th Internfltionnl Minv?nfinn Vo held In Denver, Col., next June. We appeal to the Christian people of our bejpved commonwealth who are specially interested in this great cause to . Identify themselves with this organ-' ized movement to the end that the! convention may be an assured success. Let pastors ard superintendents take up this matter at once, with their teachers, presenting the great need of larger equipment and the benefits to be derived by attendance upon all the sessions of the convention. The railroads will extend the usual courtesy of reduced rates. The good people of Greenwood will entertain all delegates. For programmes address Wm. E. Pelham, chairman executive committee. A Suicide. Greenwood, (Special)?News has reacnea nere 01 a suiciae in me lower section of the county. Mrs. Seaborn Rush, a married lady about 30 years old, committed suicide last Wednesday by shooting herself in the head. She had been in bad health for some time. Last year a little child of hers was burned to death, and four years ago accidentally shot himself while hunting. Durham, (Special.)?Senator Simmons has engineered through the Senate a bill appropriating $135,000 for a public building for Durham, and $25,000 additional for improvements. A favorable has also been received on a Bill appropriating $100,000 for a similar building for Winston. Family differences caused Heater Turner and his brother James tn kill each other, at Alexander, xvy., yesterday. Last year the Pennsylvania Railroad Company paid out in pensions tc its old servants $292,290. The pension appropriation for this year is $300,000. Since 1899 it has paid $536,310 to 1,574 pensions. "The pension fund," explains a contemporary, "must not be confounded with the voluntary relief system which has been established by the company for the benefit of its employes, and which pays out large sums of money every month to disabled men or their families. The two are wholly distinct." United States Consul O. J. D. Hughes reached New York from his post at Coburg. Quarreling over cards, Ernest Hall killed Walter Bryan and fatally wound- j ?d Lennie Gunn, at Cincinnati, O. \ Tiey tboiibiesT Mrs. Ionise M. Gibson Says That This Fatal Disease is Easily Cured by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. ' Deau Mf.s. Pixkuam : ? I felt very discouraged tv.*o years ago, I had suffered so long with kidney troubles and other eornnlications. and had talccn so much medicine -without relief that I I began to think there was no liopo for | me. Life looked so good to me, but . what is life without health ? I wanted to be well. rasmW MRS. LOUISE M. GIBSON. "Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound cured mc and made me well, and that is why I gladly write you this, and gladly ihank you ; six bottles was all I took, together with your Pills. My headache and backache and kidney trouble went, never to return ; the burning sensation I had left altogether; my general health was so improved I felt as young and light and happy as at twenty." ?Mrs. Louise Orison, 4813 Langley Ave., Chicago. 111.?f5000 forfeit If above tettimonlal Is not genuine. If j-ou feel that there is anything at all unusual or puzzling about your case, or if you wish confidential advice of the most experienced, write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., and you will be advised free of charge. Lydia E. Pinklmm's Vegetable tonipouuu has cured and is curing thousands of cases of female trouble. NOTE AND COMMENT. Owen Wister's "The Virginian." which the Macmillan Company is preparing for publication, is the story of a young Virginian of exceptional gifts, who is living as a cowboy in the far West, and falls in love with a Vermont girl of education superior to his own, the first woman of refinement with whom he has ever been thrown. The life in the cattle country is familiar to Mr. Wister, and in this book he has united several chapters that have appeared formerly as separate stories, but that were originally written with the intention of including them in this book. A nnonnpomflnt \ c m a Ho of f!nllimhnS_ Ga., that the Columbus Manufacturing Co. will at once install the necessary machinery to bring its completement up to the maximum of 25,000 spindles and 800 looms, as originally planned. This step is taken now because of an enforced idleness of several months that is caused by the damage recently sustained at the dam of the Columbus Power Co. While the dam is being repaired the mill's additional machinery will be put in position. The company has awarded contract for the 7500 6pindles and 225 looms needed to make the number. Governor Taft, of the Philippines, gets $20,000 and each of his four assistants $15,000, while there are twenty-six other officials who draw from $4,000 to $7,500 a year, in all there are 4,606 employes, not quite half of whom are Americans. The salary roll runs to over $3,000,000, of which over two-thirds goes to the Americans. It must be borne in mind however, that the cost of living is very high. In a recent case the Supreme Court of Georgia decided that "dry" counties cannot shut out liquor "in the original package." Whereupon the teetotalers of Cartersville?where Sam Jones lives?got together in mass meeting and served public notice that they'll "make an original package" of any man attempting to bring liquor there. Madison Spinning Co. of Huntsville, Ala., is rapidly preparing its new plant for operations, to have 5000 spindles and manufacture thread. A 1500horse-power engine has just been installed, and the textile machinery will be in position soon. About 100 opera tives will be employed. Company la capitalized at $100,000. Nell?"What made you think George had been drinking at the dance last night?" Belle?"He proposed to me and I accepted him." Nell?"I admit that does look suspicious." Belle? "You horrid thing! What I was going to say is that ten minutes later he came up to me and proposed again." Rushton Cotton Mills, Griffin, Ga., has completed the installation of 600 spindles and 128 looms to double its equipment, and is about to commence production from the new machinery. Probably $100,000 has been expended for the improvements. One man was killed and two hurt in a train collision at Alworth, 111., on the Illinois Central road. The men who give up their seats to women in street cars have a long standing grievance. The things we do best are often the things that are not worth doing. John D. Rockfeller will give $10,000 to Hiram House, a settlement institution at Cleveland, O., provided the management raises $15,000. Truth and error are the two great opposing forces in the world. The first is from God; the second from Sa*an Truths will triumph Seaboard Special Rate*. 87.75 Charlotte to Wilmington, X. C.. and return, account of meeliog State Council Junior 0. U. A.M.. February 18th to 20th, Tickets on sale February 16tb. 17th and lt>th final limit February 25th, 1002. S5.C5 Charlotte to IJaleigh, X. C? and return. account of "Good Koads Convontion. * Ticket* on sale February 8th to 14th. inclusive; final limit February 17th, 1002. For further information call on A. V. Harrill.P. and T. A., 23 South Tryon St., Charlotte, X. C. Best For the Bowel*. No matter what ails you. headache to a cancer. you will never get well until your bowels are put right. Cascaeets heip nature, cure you without a gripe or pain, produce easy natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to start getting your health back. Cascaeets Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped on it. Beware of imitations. A farmer near Lenox, 5. D., shot a pelican that measured ei;ht feet and tour inches from tip to tip of its wings. Brooklyn, N.Y.,Feb.20.?The activity at the laboratory of the Garfield Tea Co. is further evidence 'of the popularity of their preparations; over Three Million families used Garfield Remedies last year! This vast public approval speaks well for the remedies. They are: Garfield Tea, Garfield Headache Powders,Garfleld-Tea Syrup,Garfield Relief Plasters, Garfield Belladonna Plasters, Garfield Digestive Tablets and Garfield Cold Cure. British America is about 300,000 square miles greater than the United States. FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervousness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great NerveRestoror. *'2 trial bottle and treatisefree Dr. R. H. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Chronic Tetter. Dr. James C. Lewis, Tip Top, Ky., writes: "I have an invalid friend who has "had trreat benefit from Tetterine in chronic tetter. Send a box to above address.'' 50c. f. box by mail from J. T. Shuptrine. Savannah, Ga., if your druggist don't keep it. If poverty is not a crime, why is it punished with starvation? Tyner's Dyspepsia Remedy is a liquid preparation and knocks all tablets out. It cures Indigestion. Dyspepsia, Vertigo, Fullness of Stomach, Headache. 50c. Druggists. Mrs.Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, soften the gums, reduces inflammation, abays pain^cureswind^olic. 25c a bottle. Piso's Cure for Consu mption is an infallible medicine for coughs and colds.?N. W. Samcel. Ocean Grove. N. J.. Feb. 17 Puts am Fadeless Dyes do not spot, streak or give your goods an unevenly dyed appearance. Sold by all druggists. It's better to be a back number tnan not to be numbered at all. If anything we must ha 'e winning power?in winning souls us well as fame. ' ?/ Delicately forme find, in all the season ^ Aj AM vnA^AMO flinf fkrt jT\^ ui iuviuciOf iuai tuc m\, y") which acts gently an UvS^i which may be used w ' any conditions, when i SyrnpofFigs. It is bination of the laxati plants with pleasai agreeable and refres to the system when i i*?W* ^auy ?* mMM a transient nature ai ; trouble and it is plet wjfci promptly to the ben< ;VL ^ but when anything n . is best to consult the gap' / the old-time cathart trums of the present 0, | remove the strain, similar ills, which ai ||) hi'*" tion of the system, ui WLr~\ Syrup of Figs?and i sioii, the aches and pi lyll'- are due to inactivity Only those who [iSiil; can hope to get its I jt i j-y! antee of the excellen ; w/f of the company?i iM/t'-, printed on the front yigfcb it any preparation ot uient ana snouia ne c |Cj| ; quality of this exce tfjffi' substitute, when Sy ffi always resented by a first-class drug est* i my recommend, nor sel remedies. Thegenui reliable druggists ev j|UF?RN Biota Mao'a Idea of Revenue. J. M. Longyear of Marquette, Mich., who built himself a palatial home at a cost of 5500,000 in that city, has become so embittered against the city for allowing a railroad to run so near his property that he will move the house, stone by stone, to Boston, which project will almost reach the original cost of the structure.?Chicago Chronicle. The average run of people are vastly pleased when their friends elope. It saves a wedding present. ho 8. ? *^Salzoi*s IHanrol Whea | roni wtcai, jleUlloj on ?mr fumi. <3 butt ere lh? largaat growera tod oar acock < ruorniouj, ^mtNASALZER&t d and gently reared, women will aofthplr livpfl. as maids or wIvph one simple, wholesome remedy d pleasantly and naturally, and ith truly beneficial effects, under Xs the system needs a laxative?is? well known to be a simple comve and carminative principles of ?^<5/ it, aromatic liquids, which are l& ffj ihing to the taste and acceptable ts gentle cleansing is desired. ^ \ kl from which women suffer are of Vy id do not come from any organic A* isant to know that they yield so :i\ c iflcial effects of Syrup of Figs, lore than a laxative is needed It ! family physician and to avoid !?v! :ics and loudly advertised nost day. When one needs only to jSp?jj the torpor, the congestion, or tteml upon a constipated condi- 1^0 se the true and gentle remedy? enjoy freedom from the depreslins, colds and headaches, which vKjfl of the bowels. buy the genuine Syrup of Figs sjk leneflcial effects and as a guarce of the remedy the full name ^5 California Fig Syrup Co.?is of every package and without V Tered as Syrup of Figs is fraudlecliued. To those who know the llent laxative, the offer of any rup of Figs is called for, is t transfer of patronage to some iblishment, where they do not 1 false brands, nor imitation ine article may be bought of all ery where at BO cents per bottle. iaJT(?yrvi [ClAKILINb ? Thousands of children arc * Worms. Symptoms are seldon III child's temperament and upon the vari< J tines. Lose no time! Adopt the safe a I DR. BOYKIN'S V Or * A SURE. SPEEDY AND SAFE DES" J IN USEflVER 30 YEARS- ACCE ? 25o J3EST VERMIFUGE KNO< u iety Women.. U will find a vast improvement In ?3 their different gowns if thev wear H ? the proper corset. The gg val iOorccstcr I and Bon Ton fa aiabt front Corsets 1 combine every grace h and elegance. fl mr dealer for them. K , Worcester Corset Co., Worcester. Mast. M 600 buabcia per sera. Trie* la r ills stricty thli spring Is >*11 to B i1?42 bus. per Acre Hmyiji /laid a pajtug crop north ml. ?outh. Ml/ jf Ik "V^B We alto late tit celebrated Maeo*i eartl, prodadac frsa 60 to 80 boafcsla if earliest Peu. Boast, Svoet oors aad ^I Pricei art sery Is*. Oaloa toed 60 Mdr# j-iptloDOf oar Beardless Barley, mSt* per acre; oar grass and closer ' . HHHHHIHHMHHflBflHHiHHHHHlB ^Jp ' .M<\<<w<rctcrrrlr?rrvr? FACTS. I V X ^ being gnawed to distraction by )jj i reliable. They depend upon the j :ty of worms present in the intes- * nd sure course by using ? /ORM KILLER. f rROYER OF THESE MONSTERS, 2 EFT NONE BUT DR. BOYKIN'S. * i/VN- SOLD EVERYWHERE. * lifii in i? fnwawr . ;ja ...jJ