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I .< ?#! ? ire Z ITT ?_1 HWoman H^BGIQDY METROPl |^BN ' AND DESCRIBED BY ^ iliAMSBUSG VISITOR?AK H INTERESTING NARRATIVE HH ^S^Hitor County Record:? HWWe reached New York at 11 p. n H Iter a very pleasant trip, with th ^^^Bception of a little sea-sickness, o HHe steamer "Huron." We were o two days and nights and me very pleasant companion Bpong them Rev Mr H. who kindl CD irttliCC , ailU U1C paowio nvui B^Kiake hands with us. We were an? I l^sto hear Dr Parkhurst preach, i brown marble Presbyteria I Kj-ch on Madison avenue, of whic! II the pastor, but he had not n ^9^?Hed from his vacation. HHSBe Wednesday night we went t I P&ise meeting" at a Methodis church, of which Dr Hill, a moa I charitable, large-hearted man, is p&< Bt tor. After the services we were ii . vited to join in their social gathei ^B ing in the church reception hall. R< freshments were handed around, an BB ye were treated as if we were ol I 1 cquaintances. On Sunday nights D BB 'ill and some of the other preacher and in front of their churches an B^B*eak to the passing crowd. D | Barce, pastor of the Mission Baptis I B lurch on Second avenue, is one wh ^^^Bces a great deal of good among th ^^^^^igners. One night iisted us with our trunks. W re apprehensive of a storm as w Bed Cape Hatteras, tut. much t relief, the sea was as smooth i i Coney Island,on one side, a Bntly lit; up, looked like Fain Kb we steamed up East rivei She passengers all went on dec piew the beautiful scene. Th tue of Liberty,and the river aliv i boats of every kind, would tak ;tter writer than I to do justic henj. r until ne> Irnornind then took a horse-ca If or a Vays, which reminded on iof f^ime horse-cars in Charlei linll' "ima moc mnstlv snpnt i nWW"1^ churches, museums, ai |n^^^n^vierie.];()raries Trinity chure I^^HflR^L 0 and richest Episcops HHKh 'V York and it seems s Jj^fljBran^^fei this grand old edifice Wwith rs quiet grave-yard filled wit old totnb-stones engraved in quain I I old English letters,should be so ver Hi near to busy, noisy Wall street. S H BJohn the Divine is m gnificent, an HSt Mary the Virgin, with its statue BflBand pictures of the Virgin and Saints the chorister boys swingin; around, would mak he was in a Roman Cath ^^^blic church. I could never tire o B. telling of the churches in New Yorl and of the very kind welcome we rt ceived. We were requested in se\ era^ ?* ^em *? reP8ter in a b?ok 8 *% A?- -4-V*^ nactAro tuAlll Y c-"i ^ ? r t man ? AKE 8 tDUl M f I 110 S i # i's Tonic | EL 1 41 HMIHIdeHN I passing- that church there was a , gnreat crowd collected and we stopped P to listen to Dr Pearce explaining the J Story of the Cross. The people, most of whom were Italians, listened < I respectfully to him. I We had the pleasure of hearing a Polish missionary preach to the crowd in the Polish language,though we did not understand one word he said. He is employed by the Baptist church I have just mentioned to go ie to Ellis Island every day to see after D the immigrants as they come in from ] n the Old Country. There are between three and four hundred Italian chil9 I ' dren who go to that church to Sun- ] y day-school. The teachers found it 0 I hard at first to induce them to come, for. as you may know, the most of ? the Italians are Roman Catholics. 1 18 Moving pictures of scenes from the 1 ^ Bible,and other useful pictures, such r~ as "Ten Nights in a Bar Room", etc. r* are used. It was quite interesting to ' k hear these little foreign children, at ( e whose homes, as one of the teachers 1 p said, they hear nothing good, behave e and sing so well. ,! p ' < It is quite refreshing, amid all the , bustle of the streets as you pass the i ' churches, to see on a good many of ; r tft?m on large sign boards the words:; [0 4( Welcome, come in, rest and pray." j 5" We attended a Quaker, or Friends', n meeting on First day,as they call the * Sabbath. We sat in perfect silence!1 for at least a half-hour, then one of j1 the members rose up and made a'1 0 sort of lecture; then silence, and af- \! ter a while the congregation left in!1 perfect silence their meeting house.! * as they call their church. f We had the pleasure of hearing | i \ William Jennings Bryan lecture one j 1 d Sunday night at a Madison Avenue ] s Methodist church. We were glad for < ' standing room, as the church was 1 " filled to its utmost capacity and a i great many were refused admit- 1 tance. f One night we went to the Cooper i Union building to hear the Govern- i ors of the five woman-suffrage States I ^ speak. They were highly in favor of ^ women voting and among other < ^ things one of them said that fifty < years from today the whole country < will look back with surprise that ' ^ there ever was a time that women did not vote. I must not forget to mention the 1 0 Labor temple. It was once a Presby- ( terian church, but its members 1 1 moved up town, and it is now used 1 j_ for free lectures, sermons and mov. I j. ing pictures for the improvement 1 r. and pleasure of the laboring people. We went several nignts ana iouna n i d quite interesting listening to the < d talented young speaker and manager, ir who, though he had had few advan- i a tages and worked seven years in a coal i mine,is quite an orator, and the way T he answered some of the difficult ,t questions asked by those in the auo dience was certainly fine. e We went over to Ellis Island in e the boat which plies between that / I place and New York and were mu pleased to meet the Polish miRsic ary of whom ! sj?oke : i the first this artic'e.h". i to .. ho"i wo v:erfro-<:rO'i at f La; fist :*hvs? h. veiy kindly showed us over the w mense building in which the imr grants are carried through all t formalities of landing by the difft ent officials. About three thousai immigrants landed that day frc the northern part of Europe. Th were uicturesquely dressed in th< different costumes and most of the wore bright-colored handkerchie on their heads. Our informant to us that in most places in Europe tl lower classes never wear hats. T missionaries went among them se ing and giving them Kihles in the different languages.and they seem* pleased to get them. The Bank of New York, on Wi street.is a magnificent marble buil ing. and as we were anxious to i through it. we went in and a gui? carried us through, and as we we leaving we were given some souv nirs. We also went to the Stock E change. After getting our pass we were shown into a gallery, fro which we looked upon the very e citing scene of men and boysrunnii around with telegrams in their han and shouting at the top of the voices. We next took in the Tombs. T old guide who showed us over t prison said that some people imagi the Tombs to be dark and dun gee like,but when they see it they find quite different. He took us into c ery part, from the chapels to t kitchen. The cells were very stron of course, but light and airy, a] most of them contained two prise era. It was sad to see the young m behind the bars, and there were se eral old women, seemingly about or 70 years of age. They did not li our looking at them, and a go many turned away their faces. T juide showed us the cell from whi< a young man had just been sent toe electrocuted for the murder of Pfirl. We visited Chinatowa, which is part of New York on the East Sid and inhabited by the Chinese, i whom there are a gntat numbe There are several mission houses Chinatown, supported by the diffe ?nt churches,and they do much go< among them. We went there 01 morning and saw some interestii sights among them. We went in several stores and one especially sv filled with all kinds of curios ma in China. They were beautiful ai very high-priced, but we were mo pleaded with the women and litl babies than with anything else Chinatown. Notwithstanding t Christianizing influence of the m sions they still have "Joss Houses as their places of worship are calle and as you enter you are met by i old man shuffling along who shak his own hand in greeting vou. We were impressed with the chs ities of New York, as on every hai there was a memorial to 6ome on< literality and generosity. We s companied one of the young lady t tendants to a free library down > the East Side, given by Carnegie the city. East Side is that part New York in which the foreigne mostly live, and the libaary is conv nient for the people whom it meant to improve. When we reach the place there was a crowd of ch dren waiting for the doors to 1 opened. Many of the foreign ch dren, one of the attendants told t would stay in the building all di reading and eating maybe a bisct or two. There are departments f men and also for women. Literatu of all kinds is provided for their i struction and pleasure, and even tl daily papers and magazines a placed there for anyone whochoos to go in and read. I will try to tell a few thin; about one or two of the Catho! churches. The Cathedral is one the grandest edifices in New Yor and it would be beyond rre to pro erly describe it. St Leo is a smi but very wealthy church in a ve fashionable part of New York. . we were walking by the door a la< went in and we followed her. S dipped her fingers in the recepta< which contained "holy water" at t t ch door and made the sipn of the cross in* on her forehead and bosom. There of vere so vera] persons c ^ their knees : in- in silent. v. rship, and u.fo e the a!-i ?e: t;?.r clo:h( and veiled ;n spotless! n- white ke-,' two r uns in perpetual I ni. aHnrMi'.H i nl the It wiil be! he remembered that a few years ago a ?r- number of priests and nuns left ad France when church and State sep?ni arated and many came to America, ey These were some of the nuns we ?ir saw. m Well.Mr Editor,if this piece is not 'fa flung into the waste basket the reild maincer of our experiences in the he city of New York may be sent later, he A Visitor. >jr JOSEPH PULITZER DEAD. ?d World's Greatest Journalist Passed Away at Charleston. I ill j jj. Joseph Pulitzer, proprietor of the New York World and thp St. Louis <o Post-Dispatch, and one of the most re commanding figures in modern jour,e_ nalism, died at 1:40 o'clock Sunday ;x_ afternoon aboard his yacht, the es Liberty, in Charleston harbor. The )m immediate cause of Mr Pulitzer's ,x_ death was heart failure. Qg. Mr Pulitzer's body will be taken jg North at 4:35 o'clock this afternoon ;jr on a special Pullman car. Special arrangements have been made for 1 ke transportation of the remains by Traveling Passenger Agent T E ? ? i /-< a. T: I ne i Myers, 01 tne Atlantic coasi uue. )n_ The coach will be dr aped with black. The funeral will be held at Woodlawn cemetery in New York, prob- ( ably towards the end of this week. g Mr. Pulitzer's son, Joseph, is now Q(j on his way from St Louis with his 1 in_ wife, and one of his daughters will en come from Colorado. Ralph Pulit,v_ zer, the eldest son, is on his way to gQ Charleston and will meet the train ke en route. ( 0(j Up to an hour and a half before he his death Mr Pulitzer's mind remained perfectly clear. His Ger- f to man secretary had tieen reading to a him an account of the reign of Louis XI, of France, in whose career Mr f Pulitzer had always taken the live- 1 8 liest interest. As the secretary I ' neared the end of his chapter and , came to the death of the French ,r* King, Mr. Pulitzer said to him in 1D Herman "Leise. cranz leise." (Soft r" ly, quite softly). These were the xl last words which he spoke on earth. n6 Mr Pulitzer was born in BudaPesth, Hungary, April 10, 1847. He 0 received a classical education in liis ^ native city, and in 1863 came to the 1 6 United States, where, until 1865, he served as a private soldier in the Federal army. in! Saved Many from Death. he i W L Mock, of Mock,Ark., believes is* . he has saved many I ves in his 25 years of experience in the drug busid, ness. "What 1 always like to do," an he writes, "is to recommend Dr es King's New Discovery for weak, sore lungs, hard colds, hoarseness, obstinate coughs, la grippe, croup, ir- asthma or other bronchial affection, nd for I feel sure that a number of my ??g neighbors are alive and well today because they took my advice to use lc" it. I honestly believe it's the best lt" throat and lung medicine that's on made." Easy to prove he's right, to Get a trial bottle free, or regular r! 50c or $1.00 bottle. Guaranteed by L Allen. e" In Meraorlam. is In fond remembrance of our loved one, Henry Bess Johnson, who departed this life November 2,1910. jj. He has gone beyond the River; |S He has left this world of care; He has laid aside his burdens, ^ And is resting "Over There." lit Oh, the days are sad and lonely, or Since we saw our dear one die: re But our Father dealeth wisely, n- And we wjll not fret and sigh. "He shall sleep, but not forever; re There will be a glorious dawn;" ? es And we hope to part?no, never? j On the Resurrection morn. Wife and Children. .. Cades, November, 2. lie m m of Balked at Cold Steel. 'K "I wouldn't let a doctor cut my ; foot off," said H D Ely, Bantam, a11 Ohio, "although a horrible ulcer w i i l ? mir lifn fnr naa Deeii uie pm&uc ui m; m?. \b four years. Instead I used Bucklen's jy Arnica Salve and my foot was soon ? completely cured." Heals Burns, . , Boils, Sores, Bruises, Eczoma. Pime pies, Corns. Surest Pile cure 25c at he M L Allen's. I | $ I For oi? i For 5 I We give you four pairs Bus i Boys- and give you a writte: \ last four months without da J FOR I We give you tour pairs busi Girls with a written guarai months without darning. FOR We give you four pairs La guarantee that they will darning. FOR We give you four pairs M guarantee that they will lasl ing. (FON We give you 2 pairs of Bo: best ever shown for the moi FOR ^Ve give you 2 pairs Misses' ever put on the market for t FOR (We offer you 2 pairs Ladies' seamless, for only 25c, the money, 25c. FOR Wo ofFor 9nnir? Mpn'fi Hose the money. it ______ i Five thousand yards of Se wide, only 5c the yard, i? Two thousand yards splei only 5c the yard. 1 Two thousand yards sple Chambrays, only 5c the yar j > Full stock of Men's, iiwiii very close prices. Splendid values in Boys' t i [ kinds, from $1.50 to $6.00 p Don't Miss Jenkinson , j good values Jenkinson I 5a I DON'T SUFFER WITH Cuts, Bruises Strains and Sprains, but apply Noah's Liniment. It is antiseptic and will take the poison and soreness out quickly, when all else fails. ; Noah's Liniment will save any amount of pain and can be taken internally for Colic. * Cramps, etc. Nothing better for Toothache. Noah's Liniment Is the best remedy for Rheumatism. Sciatica, Lame Back, Still Joints and Muscles, Sore Throat, Colds, Strains, 8pra!nr, Cuts, Bruises, ColJc, Cramps, Neuralgia, Toothache, ESSsT^ and all Nerve, Bone ^SBBk V. (9m and Muscle Aches and KlJjCjfci: Hm| Pains. The genuine has MB Noah's Ark on every / HJ package and looks liko VF.VeIk*. this cut, but has RED ' |VjV|M kUR band on front of pack- I / JlEJ flgmj age and " Noah'a Lini- I tTfrljiji ?8*1 meat" always in RED j iiijUaiil] Ink. Beware of Imlta- ""z^zzz? gSjj Hons. Large Dome, s> mm cents, and sold by all WE dealers fn medl cine. ~r5~r Guaranteed or money ?p? refunded by Noah mamUfimm Mb Remedy Co., Inc., ? R Ictmond, Va. Egggg ^ Sold and Guaranteed by Kingstree Drug Co. Notice to TeachersAll tha teachers in the county are revested to meet in the school audi toriim, Kingstree.at 11:30 a. m., Saturday, November 11. J G McCullocgh, 10-26-2t Supt Education. Kingstree 1 v rs 3r^ iSJI VlsitiDg choppers cor ^ d tally invited to con* up and sit on a stum; or hang about on tb? ^^ llmba. Philip H. Stoll, 17 12m. Con. Com. Tetter. Saft Hmm km mnd ky Cfc??beridta One ?ppU?r Kom MlieTM the iMk?? tad tmrwiag tmmtion. ! Dollar ill $1.00 ? ter Brown Ribbed Hose for | n guarantee that they will ? ,rning. T $1.00 J r? -n'l f i TT i* m cer crown WDQea nose ior ^ itee that they will iast four T si.oo i dies' - Hose with a written | last four months without I $1.00 ? en's Hose with a written ; four monchs without darn- i ! 25c X /s' heavy Ribbed Hose, the T riey. f 25c A fine Ribbed Hose, the best T he money. f 25c A fine gauze Hose, absolutely l best ever shown for the I 25c 1 i, no better ever shown for t ?! a Island Homespun 40 inches \ ldid value Dress uutmgs, * ndid value Ginghams and ; es' and Children's Shoes at i [ wo-piece Knee Suits of all er suit ^ I Bros., when you want i in all lines. . 1 Bros. Go. v * i "Mr* **W"' wj| jfik -WebsterS l| IflNTERNAriONALW m Dictionary 1 THE MERRIAM WEBSTER? I Became !ir^.? NEW cbea. afl S . ? TION, covering every B field of the world'* thought, *3j Action and culture. The only H 1 1-1 ..J JiMtAni w h> now uiliiunu?su wwm'?h?i # mm h many years. 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