The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, February 20, 1902, Image 7
Skin Diseases,
For the speedy and permanent core of
" tetter, salt rheum and eczema, Chamberlain's
Eye and Skin Ointment "i$
without an equal, it re'ieves the itching
and smarting almost instantly and
:ts continued use effects a permanent
cure. It also cures itch, barber's itch,
scald head, sore nipples, itching piles,
chapped hands, chronic sore eyes and
granulated lids.
Dr. Cady'e Condition Powders for
horses are the best tonic, blood purifier
and vermifuge Price. P'c^nts Soldbj'
Dyspepsia Cure
Digests what you eat.
It artificially digests the food and aids
Nature in strengthening and reconstructing
the exhausted digestive orcans.
It is the latest discovered digest
ant and tonic. No other preparation
can approach it in efficiency. It in?
6tan tly re) ie ves a nd perma ne ri t)y cures
Dvspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn,
Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea.
fiickHeadacIi^Gastralgia, Cramps, ana
all other result sot' imperfectdigestion
Prepared by E. C. Dawitt A Co., CblcaaoATL
ANTIC COAST LINE R. R. CO.
CONDENSED SCHEDULE.
TRAINS GOING SOUTH.
Dated Jan. 15.1902 No 55. No. 85. No. 51
P. M. A. M.
Leave Wilmington *3 45 t6 00
Leave Marion 6 40 8 45
Arrive Florence. 7 25 9 25
P.M. A.M.
Leave Florence *8 00 *3 30
Arrive Sumter 9 15 4 33
No. 52
*P. M. A. M
Leave Sumter 9 15 *9 25
Arrive Columbia 10 40 11 05
No. 52 runs through from Charleston via
Central R. R., leaving Charleston 6 00 a. m.
Lanes 7.50 a. in., Manning 8 39 a. m.
TRAINS GOING NORTH.
^ No 53 No M
A. M. P. M. P. M.
Leave Columbia *6 55 *4 40
Arrive Sumter 8 20 6 18
No. 32
A. M. P. M.
Leave Sumter 8 20 *6 19
Arrive Florence 9 35 7 35 |7 40
A. XL
Leave Florence 10 10 .... 8 15
Leave Marion 10 53 .... 8 54
Arrive Wilmington 1 40 .... 11 30
Daily. fDaily except Sunday.
No. 53 runs through to Charleston. S, C.f
via Central R. R. .arriving Manniog 6 53 p.
tn-. Lanes T 35 p. m., Charleston 9 20 p. m.
Train No. 53 makes close connection at
Sumter with train No. 59, arriving Lanes
9 45 a. m., Charleston 11 35 a. m., Tuesdays
Thursdays and Saturdays.
Trains on Conway Branch leave Chadbourn
12 01 p. m., arrive Conway 2 20 p. m..
returning leave Conway 2 55 p. in., arrive
Chadbourn 520 p. m., leave Chadboum 5 35
p. m.. arrive Elrod 8 10 p. m., returning
leave Elrod 8 40 a. m., arrive Chadbourn
11 25 a m. Daily except Sunday.
H. XI. EMERSON.
Gen. Passenger Agent.
J. R. KENLY, T. M. EMERSON.
Gen'l Manager. Traffic Manager.
t hi i >in'l Must complete
i btnbli.-hmeiit 5<outii,
^0^ & SON,
?manufacturers OF?
Sash. Doors. Blinds.
Moulding nml Bulldlos: Material,
Sash Weights and Cord I
CHARLESTON, S. C.
Purchase cur make, which we guarantee
superior to any sold South, and
thereby *uve money. /
Window and Fancy Glass a Specialty. |
Registration Notice,
The office of the Supervisor of Registration
Will bo opened on the first
Monday in every month for the purpose
of the registering of any person
who is qualified as follows:
Who shall iftive been a resident 01
tbo Stale for two years, and of tha
county one year and of the polling
preeiut in which the elector offers to
oto four months before theday ofeleotion.aod
shall have paid, six months belore
any poll tax then duo and payable,
and who can both read and write any
section of the Constitution of 1895
euomitted to him by the supervisors,
of registration, or can show that ha
owns, and has paid all taxes oolleotabla
during the present year on property in
tnis State assessed at three haudred
dollar* or more. J. J. EADDY,
Clerk of Board. J
SOUTH SNOW-CLAD.
Heaviest Snowfall Recorded in Recent
I Years.
.
RAILWAY TRAFFIC WAS DLCCKEii
Maximum Depth of Snow Was Reported
From Charlotte, N. C., At
iA
Atlanta, Ga. Special.?The storm
which was central Saturday morning
near Vieksburg has moved eastward,
giving the section of the country over
which it passed a variety of weather.
The disturbance caused rain, snow and
ileet, and thunderstorms occurred at
Vieksburg, Montgomery and Charleston.
The snow is the heaviest of the
winter in many places, Charlotte reporting
15 inches; Nashville 12; Knoxville
10; Chattanooga 10, and Atlanta 3.
Freezing temperature extended south
to a lino running southwest from Wilmington,
N. C? through the central
portion of the cotton belt.
In Atlanta street car traffic was
seriously interfered with, many of the
suburban lines temporarily abandoning
their schedules. Sleighing was indulged
in on many of the residence
streets.
Train service from the east was not
seriously interrupted.
Asheville, N. C.?Special?Ten inches
of snow has fallen here within 36
hours. Street car and railroad traffic
was affected but not to any serious
extent.
Chattanooga.?Special.?One of the
most severe snow storms in years has
covered the ground with eight inches
of snow here. A number of factories
were unable to start their machinery
owing to the inability of employes to
reach the city from their suburban
homes on account of the street cars
being blocked. Street cars and traffic
of all kinds is greatly impeded in
Knoxville and many wires are down.
Norfolk, Va.?Special.?A- heavy fall
of snow began here Saturday morning
shortly after 5 o'clock and continued
during the greater part of the day.
Over three inches foil according to the
weather bureau measurmeni, out a suu
wind made the drifts much deeper.
Blacksburg, S. C.?Special.?The
snowfall here amounted to 13 inches.
No trains moved in any direction for
several hours.
Saluda, N. C.?Special.?The heaviest
snow in 20 years. 13 inches on the
level. Drif in places four feet deep.
Hock Hill.?Special.?Snow began
falling here at 4 o'clock.Friday afternoon
and continued until late in the
night and as a consequence we have
about 10 inches of the beautiful. Already
the sleigh bells are jingling. So
seldom is it that we have a good snow
that the young people do not allow
II to get good settled before getting out
the selighs.
Ninety-Six. S. C.?Special?The snow
is' five to six inches deep and caught
many people short of wood.
Laurens, S. C.?Special?Fight inches
of snow fell here. This makes six or
seven snows this season. All except
this one has been light, however, i
Small grain win De greauy UCUCUUCii I
by it
i
| Clemson College.?Special.?Nature
has put on her white organdie. Eleven
inches of snow at 7 a. m. Saturday, and
cloud indications are that more will
fall. It began snowing at 2 p. m. Friday
and was snowing heavily at 11
p. m. The heaviest snow storm here
in years.
Charleston. ? Special. ? Charleston
maintains its record for unusual weather.
Early Saturday morning in the
space of seven hours. .92 of an inch
of rain fell, which is the heaviest rainfall
since last August. Charleston has
been undergoing a vej-y severe drought
and the rainfall was sufficient to end
the drouAt if it was caught in the cis
terns. The rain was accompanied t>y
a 30 mile wind and a thunderstorm,
'which was the worst that has passed
over Charleston in a long time. In a
few house the temperature jumped
from 38 degrees to 54 degrees and then
j fell down to 3G degrees. Altogether it
J was a night of peculiar weather and
; furnishes interesting statistics for the
I weather bureau to compile.
Miss Stone's Ransom Paid.
" utr Co hip?The ran
| uonsianiuiuMic,
! som of Miss Ellen !. Stone and her
companion. Madame Tsilka, has been
paid. The limit o* time for the release
of the captives has not yet expired,
but their delivery to the American
agents is hourly expected.
Washington.?Special?The State department
has received cable advices
I confirming the report that the ransom
money for Miss Stone has been pai<^
I to the brigand captors. It is not known
when her release will occur, but it is
understood that the brigands have
made a condition that they shall have
a period of a week or ten days in
which to make sure their safe retreat
before the prisoner is delivered up.
/
?
THE NEW DISTRICTS.
The Counties Stand About as They
Will Remain.
HOUSE.
Twenty-second Day?The House had
the Trust bill under discussicn during
the entire day. both morning and evening
sessions; being devoted to its eonsi
deration without accomplishing anv
tangible results. The amendments of
lereii were an voieu aown ana a mouun
to strike out the enacting words was
lost by a good majority.
Twenty-third Day?The House did
but little business outside of routine
business. There was much discussion
over the matters of re-districting the
state, but the senate bill finally passed
as given in these columns.
Twenty-fourth Day?When the appropriation
bill came up for third
reading Mr. Harvey Wilson, chairman
offered an amendment to increase the
appropriation for printing from $12,000
to $20,COO. The code must be printed
this year, he explained, andf that 'will
make the difference. The amendment
was agreed to.
The Louse further agreed to the
amendment to provide $995 additional
to have the code printed on stronger
paper on which the acts are now
printed.
There were no other amendments
offered and the bill passed third reading
and was sent to the senate.
A night session was held, but nothing
of general interest was dis
patched. The house adjourned till b"riday,
10 a. m.
Twenty-fifth Day?Both the "supply
bills" were given second reading in the
House. The proposed drainage law
was killed as was Mr. DeBruhl's bill to
require all foreign corporations locating
to do business in this State to take
out charters in this State. The House
also passed the bill to require county
boards of education to name the teachers
in the county summer schools and
the several bills to give'relief to certain
townships which voted bonds in aid of
the Greenville and Port Royal road?
which was never built.
The House was in session nearly
eight hours and began to get the heavy
bills out of the way. There will be
many bills to die on the calendar, however,
because they cannot be taken up
in time.
SENATE.
Twenty-second Day?There was a
long and at times exciting debate in
the Senate over tne reaistricting diu.
The measure, as It passed the House,
finally passed its second reading in the
Senate, with the single amendment
that Clarendon is taken from the
Seventh district and placed in the First
district It is thought that this amendment
will be agreed to by the House
and that the till will be ratified in this
shape.
Senator Gruber offered an amend
which would have materially
changed the First, Second and
Seventh districts, but after a long debate
the amendment was lost. When
Senator Mayfleld undertook to have
Edgefield and Saluda placed in separate
districts. This brought forth a spirited
protest from Senator Shc^pard, who
carried his point, and Edgefield and
Saluda remain side by side in the Second
district.
The redisricting bill, as it passed
the Senate yesterday, arranges the Congressional
districts as follows:
First District?Charleston, Berkeley,
Colleton. Clarendon and Dorchester.
Second District?Aiken. Bamberg,
Barnwell. Beaufort, Edgefield, Saluda
and Hampton.
Third District?Pickens, Oconee, Anderson,
Abbeville, Greenwood and Newberry.
Fourth District?Laurens, Spartan
UUIT?, viretjuvine auu uuiuu.
Fifth District?Cherokee, Chester,
York, Fairfield, Kershaw, Chesterfield
and Lancaster.
Sixth District?Marlboro, Marion,
Horry, Darlington, Florence, Williamsburg
and Georgetown.
Seventh Disti let?Richmond, Sumter,,
Orangeburg and Lexington.
Twenty-third Lay ? The Senate
spent the day on the question of appropriations.
The bill as given elsewhere
in these columns was passed
without material change.
Twenty - fourth Day ? The Senate
was in session more than six hours,
but during that time no great number
of matters was acted upon?debate being
the order of the day. Nearly all
of the morning was consumed in the
consideration of the bill to provide for
a commission to settle the boundary
line dispute between Greenville and
Spartanburg. The bill was killed.
At the night session Senator Mayfield's
bill to provide for the establishment
of a state fertilizer plant was
a inint' resolution.
m IR'U.flo nao v ,
which had before passed the house, for
the appointment of a committee to investigate
the feasibility of such a
scheme.
The bill to make domestic fowls subject
to the provisions of the general
stock law was also killed by a refusal
to adopt the report cf the free conference
committee, which had the bill in
hand.
The free conference committee reported
on the house on the "chicken
bill." The committee reported in favor
of the bill as it left the house, rejecting
the senate amendment. The
senate, had proposed to make the provision
> of the bill apply to chickens as
well as other domestic fowls. The
house wanted to exempt chickens.
There was a lot of good natured discussion
of the report and the vote on the
committee's repore was about to be
taken when the -senate sent over word
that it had rejected the free conference
committee's report The house
followed suit, and the bill is dead.
The following new bills were introt
duced:
By Senator Mayfield, to amend the
set regulating the rate of interest upon
contracts arising in this state for tho
other commodity.
By the committee on drainage, to
provide for cleaning out the streams
and draining the swamps and bottom
lands cf this state.
The cammittee to which was referred
the bill to establish Lee county reported
favorably on its passage. The
objections which were urged against
the bill, end which at one time threatened
to defeat it. have been found to be
not sunstannatea, ana ine dim win now
be passed without further interefernce.
Twenty-fifth Day.?When the Senate
met an agreement was made to consider
only uncontentested matters. By
this arrangement a great many bills
that have been on the calendar for days
were advanced. A few bills only got
their third reading, but 37 second reading
bills were acted upon.
Three Killed In Wreck.
Altoona. Pa.. Special?Three men
killed, four probably fatally wounded
and two seciou3ly injured, one freight
train a complete wreck, and another
nearly so, are the results of an accident
this morning on the Pennsylvania
TJaiirmU nn thp stppn eradp. a few
miles above the Horse Shoe curve.
Control of the second section of :?i
east-bound freight train was lost soon
after emerging from Gallitzin tunnel
and two miles west of Allegrippus it
crasned into the rear of the first section.
Ten cars, the caboose and two
engines were completely wrecked.
Great Uu Combine.
A few days ago a gentleman was
showing a Bingham lady some of the
sights of London, and, among other
places, pointed out the houses of parliament
"Well, now," she exclaimed,
"what a fine building! It ain't the
gas works, is it?" "It is, madam," he
replied?"of the whole British nation."
y For many yeon we bsr* sold oar VHii
and oar brands trt prof erred bythe-n.
1 order to give use (consumer sne ouueui
Middleman, we have decided to bow i
j Popular Brtail* of Whlakiee and Clr
14 BEAUTIFUL PRIZES F
With every quirt bottle of oar famoae 1
K Puree cm tuH M and one box of oor Justly celebrated gei
Hat ana Cabaa Specials. we will fire A!
Q^ag|ufl somest open face, extra heavy nickel G
ftj,*- wind and let, genuine American move:
^\V".LV * earth, doea not tarnish and will last a I
kMjBBCSM ichaum Pipe. 1 genuine Meerschaum CI
Cigarette Bolder, 1 pretty leather Tobi
nickel match box, 1 pair poarl caff bnti
nTa|T3rl7fl tie holder, 1 pair ileevebuttons. 1 dont
Ulllgjit^J All Jewelry heavfly lik gold plated. A1
By - '' -y^tSgfe.B famous Cuban Specials and ona quart be
r ,' .vfibfij? City Club Pure Bye cannot be bought f<
-'vi'.) tWifl Whiskey and CIgart In-AIII W
eluding the 14 prixee for V lit I
and Cigars alone cost more than we aal
<i_S: .""Xp-? an Absolutely Pure 10 year old Bye an
made.elear Hat jaa. ma le In oar own I
L . a than anything ever advertised before.
the money ir sot CDCC I An Extra Premium of an elegant 1
aa represented. 1.11 hC t glssa cotter, If 13 97 is sent In ad'
wholesale Price List* of Liquors and Cigars. Bcspot
V. 8. 1>18TILLER'S UI8XKIBCI1NQ COv
Ant
YOU fc#
DEAF?
ALL CA
DEAFNESS 05?
ARE MOW
by our new invention. Only
HEAD NOISES GEA
F. A. WERMAN, OF
Gentlemen: ? Being entirely cured of deafne
a full history of my case, to be used at your disci
About five years ago tny right ear began to
my hearing in this car entirely.
I underwent a treatment for catarrh, for thri
berof physicians, among others, the most emi
only an operation could help me, and even tt
then cease, but the hearing in the affected ear w
I then saw vour advertisement accidentally
ment. After I had used it only a few days acxx
to-day. after five weeks, my hearing in tne aise:
heartily and beg to remain > Very trubr yc
Our treatment does not intorfe
"SfflBr* YOU CAM CURE Yt
INTERNATIONAL AURAL CLINIC, j
Labor Savin]
Busy Men ar
$3.00 a year I LJT7 f 1
A cent a day JL X 1 ?i
A Weekly Newspaper and an Illustra
1 of world-happenings every week in br
is the Editor-in-chief, and Harailf
JACOB A. RMS
The author of "How the Other Half Lives" will
give in Thb Outlook an intensely human and vivid
account of his experiences as a child in Denmark,
an immigrant in America, a workman, a traveller,
a reporter, and finally a student of tenement house
problems, and an efficient aid to Theodore Roosevelt
in reorganizing the New York police. Mr. Riis
writes with simplicity, humor and vigor.
1*
LY"MAN ABBOTT
win contlbute a aerie* of important papers on ftmdamenul
political principles as applied to twentieth
century problems. It will be called "Ths Rights
os Man, sndVrfddefin* industrial, educational and
religious, as well at political, rights and duties.
?4
As to the NextwoItL"
Marmaduke writes in the London
Graphic: What will eventually be the
limit of individual- wealth Half a
century back "ten thousand a year"
was considered to be a vast fortune.
Then "fifty thousand a'year" was the ,
phrase commonly used to describe
the income of fabulously rich men or
women. Later we took to speaking of
"millionaires." In quite recent times
the "multi-millionaire" with twenty
millions had reached the limit of pri'
vate weaitn; men iony millions; non.
the limit has risen to a hundred mil*
lions, and already the word "billionaire"
has come into use in the United
States. Will the multi-billionaire ever
replace the multi-millionaire''
Killed on the Stage.
Newport News, Special.?Eva Gil- . .
bert, a trapeze performer at the Powhattan
Theatre, broke her neck Tuesday
night during the performance. In
her aerial act she swung from a trapeze
catching her foot in a loop about 35
feet from the floor. Her foot slipped
from the loop and she fell head-long to
the floor almost among the horrified
audience. She died In ten minutes. * '
The woman came here about six weeks
ago. Her home is in New York. Shs
was a widow.
300,000 Bales Destroyed.
Washington, Special.?In presenting
a petition for congressional relief of
cotton-growers from the cotton weevil
i_ Gana+a \Tr fhilherBon. of Texas.
Ill I lie kjcuutv. ma..
said that the boll weevil had destroyed
300,000 bales of cotton in Texas alone
during the past year, and on account
of the ravages of the pest grave apprehension
is felt for the cultivation of
cotton in central and southern Texas. \
\
w
?* ViTW^RTL^^
iskl w tod Cln? to Tholwkrsooly
uihtj xn inp?rior to ill othon. Ia
of to. Urf. profit* of Dntor tod
11 diract to tfa* Conjumor our bod /
'J.1' J?? th?nwhol?*?I* ericn. #9Hea\
US* oki will arr thib n i/i|\rCT\
10 jrt .Id <) *? CBrCtob Partly* tk-J~ l\ p3 \
to* Cab** Btad.Bad* 10* <t?wi Bf\ 11 fcJSJ I
B80LCTBLT reiloMof th* htod- B.K II Q9 I
nl'? Witohe* midt.'M l*dri) ?*n> H' \ 11 MM 1
1 11 *'
men! and on. beet timekeeper oni \ ^gg
lifetime, 1 extra One Vienna Hear- HP ffl
Ifor Bolder, 1 pneiae leereebaom II r I UBMaadfl
iccopooeh. 1 elegant extra heiTy 1^/ | MCSfjD Ml
lone, 1 ball top eeiiarbatton, 1 seek- BWV ? I HI
>le chain and one beentifol charm. Hi '/TVI gj|v H
1 there 11 placet with one box of crar IIA. II lajM I HI
ttleof car fircone 10 yeirold Oueen IVlI/jL fZSBJ IB
or lata than 113.00. Te tell the ?T.I YJa.h>^SSM 9C
I 07 C O D, with pririlepofex- IVWlMn
I ?J I amlnatioa, while Whltkey ^H
[for the entire lot. Ooi Wktekry it gOHeS^r Hi
d oar Ctgare panlae Cibee head- Hi
factory. Theae dprt a* far better * \3r If
We Ooaraatee the pet tad refaat
Pocket knifewhh two bladee, 1 cork-ecrew, 1 etpr raereraadl
ranee with order. Ooodt tent In plain package. Write te
leible apnta aranted. Order to-day.
Liept. On 431 North CI irk At* Chicago, EEL
fl? ANY 1
HEAD
HP* NOISES?
cpc r>tr
HARD HEARING
CURABLE
those born deaf are incurable.
iSE IMMEDIATELY.
BALTIMORE, SAYS: *
Baltivore, Md., March 30, 1901.
ss, thanks to your treatment, i w:n uow give yvm
etion.
sing, and this kept, on getting worse, until I lost ' .
re months, without any success, consulted a numuent
ear specialist of this city, who told me that
lat only tcmporari y, that the head noises would /
ould be lost forever.
in a New York paper, and ordered your treatardingtoyour
directions, the noises ceased, and
ised ear has been entirely restored. I thank yoa
iurs,
WERMAN, 730 S. Broadway, Baltimore, Md.
re with your usual occupation.
IURSELF AT HOME
596 U SALLE AVE., CHICAGO, ILL ' .
"j *
frvrl
g JllWUUlllg XVJk
id Women, in
utlook r;:r:
ted Magazine in one. Tells the story
ief. dear-cut paragraphs. Lyman Ahbott
:on W. Mabie the Ass^r'ate Editor.
' ?' ~ ^ m.M tk. i a n
j RALPH uunnvn ,
Under this pseudonym were written two of the
most striking of recent novels, " Black Rock "and
' The Sky Pilot." A new novel of Carudlxa and
Western life by this author will appear in Th?
Outlook during the year. In spirit, humor, pathos
and strong character-drawing it is even superior to
its predecessors.
SPECIAL ^rT !ruraducc^7^!^,"|
OFFER Outlook lo new readmaaJI
ers wc will send it for
two months' trial for 35 cents provi^od
this paper is mentioned. Address ~~T\i
THE OUTLOOK, NEW YORK V
I