The county record. [volume] (Kingstree, S.C.) 1885-1975, April 03, 1902, Image 2
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Br.lTlSH CAPTUSE_FiVE CUNS. !|
The lle?ult of a Combined Movement ! ^
Ai;jiust General lislarey.
London.?imports of tile result of i
. the combined movement 01 British col- [
nun: against (tenerai Delarey enable
Cen.rai Kitchener to anucunee the ]
capture ci i:;d prisoners, thrte lifieenpouiK.vis,
two pompous anti quantities i
of stock, wagons, etc. Delarey success!
r.iiy craned tleiicral Kitchener's
cordon at the offset.
Kit:?>l White Handling Kxj?losivos.
\\ 1:hi loading: nitroglycerine into his
wai.ou at - iinllay. Oaio, John Bui an
k Teller .-steals SiO/JOO.
Harry 0. 11 .'11. twcmy-.wo years old.
a i. lay idler iu the Riverside
Bai..:. ... New York t.'ky, has <i<fauL
. resiiliiug iu a loss to the instill...'.::
of sj'.i.o'JJ. Ueii was a strict
chu: member and was regarded as
a lit'-u-. 1 young in..!:. He was engaged
to married to an estimable young
won:., a.
1
llrlicf For Irish XcuaEis.
The new lisii land bill provides for
the ttae of ^lu.OPU.oi'l) to aid tenants
iu put chasing. hut there is uo compulsory
sale provision.
Two Lite-.Savinc Sledttls Awarded.
The Secretary of the Treasury, at
Washington, nas awarded a gold litesaving
rncual iu Elmer Mayo for his <
heroic services iu rescuing Scth L.
Ellis at the recent Monotnoy (Mass.)
disaster, in which the em ire life-saving
crew of the Mououioy station, with ,
one exception, were lost. The Secre- i
tary aiso awarded a gold medal tc
Setli Eiiis. the survivor of the crew.
Perished In a Prairie Fire.
In a prairie lire near Auadarko, Ind
Ter.. Mrs. Hattie Haud and lier twe |
children were burned to death.
Sundry Civil Bill Completed.
The Sundry Civil Appropriation bill,
the most important of the Government
supply measures, was completed by
the Committee on Appropriations, of
the House of Representatives, at Washington.
The bill appropriates $49,310,393.
being $12,379,012 'os3 than the ap- ,
propriutlous for the current fiscal year.
General Miles a Grandfather.
Mrs. Samuel Ileber. wife of Colonel
Reber, U. S. A., and only daughter o!
General and Mrs. Nelson A. Miles,
gave birth to a sou at her parents'
Lome in Washington.
Ereathes Ttirorsjih Its Tnll.
Insects that breathe through their
tails are rare, but the state geologist
received two specimens from Prof. 0. '
F. Fidiar of Vincennes. Ind., who deeired
t* know what manner of creat- 1
mres they are. Professor Blatchley |
'says the insect is known as the rat- i
talled-maggot. It is the young of a j
sweat bee or fly, the eristalis, a genus
o? svrphid flies. Tail and all, it is about
an inch long, but the body is between I
fin eighth and a quarter of an inch :
long. It moves from place to place ,
something like a snake. In answering
Professor Fidlar's inquiry. Professor
Blatchley wrote of t-.e tail:
"This is a respiratory tube wnieh
enables the insect to obtain air when j
its body is submerged beneath several j
inches of water or decaying matter. !
This tube is telescopic in nature, and ,
can be lengthened or shortened as the j
insect may need it. At its tip there j
is a rosette of minute hairs, which, j
floating on the surface of the water,
keep the top from being submerged."
i
Women distrust men too much in :
general, and not enough In particular.
ATLANTIC COAST LINE K. R. CO.
CONDENSED SCHEDULE. 1
TRAINS GOING SOUTH.
Dated Jap. 15.1902 No 55. No. 35. Xo.51
P. M. A. M.
Leave Wilmington *3 45 t6 00
Leave Marion 6 40 8 45 I
Arrive Florence. 7 25 0 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 j
Central R. R., leaving Charleston 6 00 a. m. : 1
Lanes 7.50 a. m__ Manning 8 39 a. m. I '
TRAIN8 GOING NOETH.
No. 54. No. 53. No.50
A. M. r. M. P. M.
Leave Columbia *6 55 *4 40
Arrive Sumter 8 20 G 13 '
' No. 32
A. M. P. M.
Leave Sumter 8 20 *6 19
Arrive Florenoe 9 35 7 35 f7 4.0
A. M.
Leave Florence 10 10 .... 8 15
Leave Marion 10 53 .... 8 54 J
Arrive Wilmington 1 40 .... 11 30 j
Art o IK.
No. 53 runs through to Charleston, S, C., j
via Central ft ft,arriving Manning 6 53 p. <
m.. Lanes 7 36 p. m., Charleston 9 20 p. in. :
Train No. 53 malay close connection at j i
Sumter with train No. 59, arriving Lanes j (
9 45 a. in., Charleston 11 35 a. m., Tuesdays '
Thursdays and Saturdays. j .
Trains on Conway Branch leave Chad- [ 1
bourn 12 01 p. m., arrive Conway 2 20 p. m., : ,
returning leave Conway 2 55 p. m., arrive 1
Chadbourn 5 20 p. tn., leave Chudbourn 5 S3 ,
p. m.. arrive Elrod 8 10 p. m., returning j
leave Elrod 8 40 .a. m., arrive Chadbourn (
11 25 a in, DaRy except Sunday.
H. M. EMERSON,
Gen. Passenger Agent. ,
J. B. KENLY, T. M. EMERSON. J
Gen'l Manager. Traffic^ Manager.
OPINION OF DEATH li
)7. TALMAGl'S wtfkly sermon ;
Jisc-jsscs the Christian View of the J
'ir'm Destroyer?Religion Removes <
death's Sting.
W.'.skixoto.v, 3). C. ? The Christian
ritu of death : < the entrance to a fuller j
lire i< prevented in ihis Eisu-r d scourse <
by Dr. Talmags from the text 1 Cor. xv, .
"Civ?".:: is wallowed up in victory.''
hdt Easter mornings have wakened
the i '. h. in J-'r.iine for three centuries i
lite airn 'ji.'.es Made the year begin at Er.stir
until ( buries iX. made lie year be-in .
if. .iratt.ry 1. In the Tower oi London
there . a royal pay i oil oi Edward 1., on J
which there is a:i entry oi eighteen peine ,
for -1>') colored and pictured eggs, with
which i he people sported. In Russia slaves
were ed and ..'..as were distributed on (
Easter. Ecclesiastical (councils met in ,
iV.n.us, i:i Gaul, in Rome, in Achaia. to ,
d hie the particular day and alter a eon- j
fovvr-y more animated than gracious detided
it, and now through all Christen- '
d. a: in some way the lirst Sunday after ,
the fad moon which happsus upon or next ]
r.iui ilarcn 111 is tilled with Raster rejoicing.
,
The royal court of the Sabbaths is made ,
up of idty-two. l'ifty-one are princes in j
tlic royal household, but Easter is queen, j
She wears richer diadem, she sways a (
more jeweled scepter, and in her smile r.n- ,
lions are irradiated. How welcome she is ,
when, after a harsh winter and late spring, ]
she seems t.o step out of the snowbank I
rather than the conservatory, to come out ,
of the north instead of the south, out of |
the arctic rather than the tropics, dis- J
mounting from the icy equinox, but wcl- ]
come this queenly day, holding high in her |
right hand the wreuciieu o.t ooit 01 cans* s i
stpulchcr, and holding high in her left ,
hand tlie key to all the cemeteries in Chris- j
teniom. j
JJy text is an ejaculation. It is spun out ?
of halleluiahs. Paul wrote right on in his .
argument about the resurrection, and ob- ]
served all the laws of logic, but when he j
came to write the words of the text his i
fingers and his pen and the parchment on j
which he wrote took tire, and he cried out, ,
'"Death is swallowed up in victory!" It ,
is an exciting thing to see an army routed ,
and Hying. They run each other down. (
They scatter everything valuable in the i
track. Unwheelcd artillery; hoof of horse i
on breast of wounded and dying man.
You have read of the French falling back j
from Sedan, of Napoleon's track of 90,030 corpses
in the snowbanks of Russia, of the ,
r.*lrcat of our armies from Manassas or of ;
the live kings tumbling over the rocks of
Beth horan with their armies while the \
hailstorms of heaven and the swords of <
Joshua's host struck them with their furv. j
in my text is a worse discomfiture. It 1
seems that a black giant proposed to conquer
the earth. He gathered for hi3 host
all the aches and pains and malarias and i
cancers and distempers and epidemics of (
the ages. He marched them down, drill- ;
ing them in the northwest wind and amid ;
the slush of tempests. He threw up barri- ,
cades of grave mound. He pitched tent of
charnal house. Some of the troops
inarched with slow tread commanded by >
consumptions, some in double quick com- j
manded by pneumonias. Some he took by j
long fcesiegement of evil habit and some i
by one stroke of the battleaxe of casualty. ;
With bony hand he pounded at the back ;
door of hospitals ana sickrooms and won i
all the victories in ail the great battlelields ;
of all the five continents. Forward, <
march! ordered the conqueror of conquc-r- i
or--, and all the generals and commandersin-chief
and all presidents and kings and <
sultans and czars dropped under the feet i
of his war charger. But one Christmas i
night his antagonist was born. i
As most of the plagues and sicknesses
and despotisms come out of the cast, it <
was appropriate that the new conqueror i
should come out of the same quarter, i
Power i? given Him to awaken all the fallen <
of all the centuries and of all lands and
marshal them against the black giant. .
Fields have already been won, but the last
day of the world's existence will see the
decisive battle. When Christ shall lead
forth His two brigades, the brigade of the ]
risen dead and the brigade of the celestial .
host, the black giant will fall back, and !
the brigade from the riven sepulchers will (
take him from beneath, and the brigade of .
descending immortals will take him from \
above, and death shall be swallowed up in .
victory. <
The old braggart that threatened the .
conquest and demolition of the planet has
lost h>s throne, has lost his scepter, has J
lest his palace, has lost his prestige, and (
the one word written over all the gates of ]
mausoleum and catacomb and necropolis. ,
on cenotaph and sarcophagus, on the lonely
khan of the arctic explorer and on the ,
catafa'que of great cathedra1, written in |
capitals of azalia and calla lilly. written in
musical cadence, written in doxology of
great assemblages, written on the sculp- .
tured door of the family vault, is "Vic- i
tory." Coronal word, cmbannered word. J
apocalyntic word, chief word of triumphal ,
arch under which conquerors return. ,
Victory! Word shouted at Culloden and
Balaklava and Blenheim, at Megiddo and
Solferino, at Marathon, where the Athen- <
ians drove back the Medea; at Poitiers. ,
where Charles Martel broke the ranks of
the Saracens; at Salamis, where Themis- ,
tocles in the great sea fight confounded the
Persians, and at the door of the eastern '
cavern of chiseled rock, where Christ came 1
out through a recess and throttled the king (
of terrors and put him back in the niche 1
from which the celestial Conqueror had J
just emerged. Aha! When the jaws of
'he eastern mausoleum took down the
black giant "death was swallowed up in
victory." I proclaim the abolition of }
death.
'the old antagonist is driven back into 1
mythology with all the lore about Stygian c
ferry anil Charon with oar and boat. Mel- }
rose abbey and Kenilworth castle are no ,
more in ruins than is the sepulcher. We
shall have no more to do with death than c
wo have with the cloakroom at a governor's
or a president's levee. We stop at f
such cloakroom and leave in charge of a
servant our overcoat, our overshoes, our 1
outward apparel, that we may not bo im
pcried in the brilliant round of the draw- 1
ing room. Well, my friends, when we go c
out of this world we are going to a King s ^
banquet and to a reception of monarchs, 1
and at the door of the tomb we leave the J
cloak of flesh and the wrappings with
which we meet the storms of this world. c
At the close of an earthly reception, under J
the brush and broom of the porter, the ;
coat or hat may be handed to us better 1
than when we resigned it, and the cloak c
of humanity will finally be returned to us j
improved and brightened and purified and 1
glorified. A
You and I do not want our bodies re- "
turned a? they are now. We want to get f
rid of all their weaknesses and all their
susceptibilities to fatigue and all their
$Iowncs3 of locomotion. We want tliem
r *1 1 I -
put through a chemistry 01 sou aim nesi,
ind cold and changing seasons, out of
which God will reconstruct them as much
better than they are now as the body of
the rosiest and healthiest child that bounds
over the lawn in Central Talk is better
than ilic sickest patient in lteilcvue hospital.
lint as 50 our soul, we will cross right
over, not waiting for obsequies, indejicuciEnt
of obituary, into a state in every way
better, with wider room and velocities beyond
computation, the dullest or us into
roropanionshio wi.li the very best spirits
in their very best mood, in the very parlor
>i the universe.the four walls burnished and
paneled and pictured and glorified with all
the splendors that the infinite God in all
the r.ges has been able to invent. Victory!
Jv.er and anon thcrs are instances of men
i:ul women entranced. A trance is death
followed by resurrection after a lev/ days;
total suspension of mental power and vo'imtary
action. Iter. William Tcnr.ent, a
rrrat evangelist of (he last generation, of
whom Dr. Archibald Alexander, a nan
far from being sentimental, wrote in most
eulogistic term ?l'.cv. William Tcnnent
seemed to die. His spirit apparently left
the hofiy. People came in day after flay
and said, '"He is dead, he is dead." Hut
the soul that fled returned, and Will Tclitter,
t lived to write what he had seen while
bis soul was gone.
Tt may be found some tunc that what is
railed suspended animation or comatose
state is brief death, giving the soul an ex
cursion into t lie next won a, trorn wir.cn
it comes back, a furlough of a few hours
granted from the conflict of life to which
it must return. Do not this waking uj> of
men from trance and this waking up of injects
from winter lifciessness. and this
waking up of grains buried 3000 years ago
make it easier for you to believe that your
body and mine after the vacation of the
grave shall rouse and rally, though there
be 3000 years between our last breath and
the sounding of the archangciic reveille?
Physiologists tell us that while the most
of our bodies are built with such wonderful
economy that we can spare nothing,
end the loss of a finger is a hinderment,
md the injury of a toe joint makes us lame,
'till that we have two or three useless
physical apparatuses, and no anatomist or
physiologist has ever been able to tell what
they are good for. They may be the
foundation of the resurrection body, worth
nothing to us in this state to be indispensably
valuable in the next state. The
Jewish rabbis and the scientists of cur
day have found out that there are two or
three superfluities of body that are something
gloriously suggestive of another state.
I called at my friend's nouse one summer
day. I found the yard all piled up
with the rubbish of carpenter's and mason's
work. The door was off. The
plumbers had torn up the floor. The root
was being lifted in cupola. All the pictures
were gone, and the paper hangers
were doing their work. All the modem
improvements were being introduced into
that dwelling. There was not a room in j
tnc house lit to live in at that time, al* i
though a month before when I visited
that house everything was so beautiful 1
could not have suggested an improvement.
My friend had gone with his family to the
Holy Land, expecting to come back at the
end of six months, when the building was
to be done. And, oh, what was his joy
when at the end of six months he returned
and found the old house had been enlarged
and improved and glorified. That
is your body. It looks well now?all the
rooms tilled with health, and we couid
hardly make a suggestion. But after
awhile your soul will go to the Holy Land,
and while you are gone the old house ot
your tabernacle will be entirely reconstructed
front cellar to attic, and every
nerve, muscle and bone and tissue and artery
must be hauled over, and the old
structure will be burnished and adorned
and raised and cupolaed and enlarged, and
ail the improvements of heaven introduced,
and you will move into ft on resurrection
day. "For we know that if our
earthly house of this tabernacle were dissolved
we have a building of God, a house
not made with hands, eternal in the heavens."
Oh, what a day when body and soul meet
agaiu! They are very fond of each other.
Did your body ever have a pain and your
soul not pity it, or your body have a joy
and your soul not re-echo it, or, changing
the question, did your sou! ever have
any trouble and your body not sympathize
with it, growing wan and weak under
the depressing influence? Or did your
soul ever have a gladness but your body
celebrated it with kindled eye and cheek
in/1 olnetin eton *' Rnrnlv flml iifvor lrfpttrl.
:d two such good friends to be veiy long
separated.
And so when the world's last Easter
Homing shall come the soul will descend,
crying, "Where is my body?" And the
body will ascend, saying, "Where is my
soui?" And the Lord of the resurrection
will bring them together, and it will be a
perfect soul in a perfect body, introduced
by a perfect Christ into a perfect heaven.
Victory!
Do you wonder that on Easter day we
swathe our churches with garlands? Do
you wonder we celebrate it with the most
consecrated voice of song that we can invite,
with the deftest lingers on organ and
cornet and with doxologies that beat these
trches with the biilows of sound as the
;ea smites the basalt at Giant's Causeway?
)nly the bad disapprove of the resurrection.
A cruel heathen warrior heard Mr. Mofatt,
the missionary, preach about the
esurrection, and he said to the mission\ry,
"Will my father rise in the last
lay?" "Yes," said the missionary. "Will
ill the dead in battle rise?" said the cruel
thieftain. "Yes," said, the missionary,
rhen said the warrior: "Let me hear no
rtnro ahmifr. tho roeiivrprrinn Thorp ran
)e no resurrection; there shall be no resjrrection.
I have slain thousands in bat;lc.
Will they rise?" Ah, there will be
uorc to rise on that clay than those whose
:rimes have never been repented of will
vant to see! I>ut for all others who alowed
Christ to be their pardon and their
ife and their resurrection it will be a day
>f victory.
The thunders of the last day will be the
;alvo that greets you into harbor. The
ightnings will be only the torches of trinnphal
procession marching down to es:ort
you home. The burning worlds flashng
through immensity will be tfee rockets
:elebrating your coronation on thrones
vhcre you Mill reign forever and forever
md forever. Where is death ' What have
ve to do with death? As your reunited
)ody and soul swing off from this planet
>n that last day you will see deep gashes
ill up and down the hills, deep gashes all
hrough the valleys, and they will be
he emptied graves, they will be the abanloned
sepulchers, with rough ground
ossed on each side of them, and slabs will
ie uneven on the rent hillocks, and there
vill be fallen monuments and cenotaphs,
md then for the first time you will appreiate
the full exhilaration of the test,
'Death is swallowed up in victory."[Copyright,
1W2, L. Klopsch.]
J. H. l/t/EDDSP
HT^iRO!
29 L Trade. Street
We are leaders in our business,
prepared to supply the rcquircn
We sell Syracuse Steel Beam
I Ami
THE AMERICAN MONTHI
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Itation of current events in their just
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want to know what the world is doinj
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comprehensive, and labor saving t<
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^ These letters will enable all tbo
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PRESIDENT
"I know that through its col- '
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I EX-PRESIDENT ^
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Massachusetts. '
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1)C fccbieto of
IBBBSSgBSBBDHBnn
SHE
yob mm
deaf?
ALL CA
DEAFNESS OR
ARE NOW
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HEAD NOISES m
F. A. WERMAN, OF
Genilcmtr.: ? Being entirety cured of deafne
a full history of my case, to be used at your disci
About five years ago my right ear began to
tny hearing in this ear entirely.
I underwent a treatment for catarrh, for thr<
berot physicians, among others, the most cmi
only an operation could help me, and even th
then cease, but the hearing in the affected car w
I then saw your advertisement accidentally
ment. After I had used it only a few days accc
to^iay, after five weeks, my hearing in the disea
heartily and beg to remain ?Very truly "o
F. si.
Our treatment does not tnterfe
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ASTOR PLACE. NEW YORK ?
f&p any
|j? head
wm*- noises?
cttq c,rr
HARD HEARING
CURABLE
those born deaf are incurable. "%?l1
.SE'IMMEDIATELY.
BALTIMORE, SAYS:
Baltimore. Md., March 30. 1901.
ss, thanks to your treatment, I will now give yoa
ction. .
sing, and this kept on getting worse, until I lost
;e months, without any success, consulted a nnmnent
ear specialist of this city, who told me that
int only temporarily, that the head noises would
ould be lost forever.
in a New York paper, and ordered your treat*
>rdingtoyour directions, the noises ceased, and
sed ear has been entirely restored. I thank you
urs,
WERU'AN, 7309. Broadway, Baltimore, Md.
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TJ at leu thin wholesale prices ^3,\ iW^Ei\
scr 50 RK3TEICTI05S! KTE3T ffY^T\ \ V(^^\
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ncnt and ease. host timekeeper or. J V hfLfSSJ a
ifctino. 1 extra fine Vienna Meer- J, W ?I3|
?r Holder, 1 pencine SeersehasB || / (
ceo roach. 1 clrnnt extra heavy aU/ |K?Ei
ons. 1 nail top cellar butter.. 1 neck- 1lw #/V h|mnI
lo chain and one beatrtifnl charra. y\rjT' I | ng I
these 14 pieccn with one box of onrj I
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for the entire lot. Our nhBt*7 VjKSy
1 our Cl?ari reeriae Cubea haa4aetorr.
These cijars u? far betteT
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