The watchman and southron. (Sumter, S.C.) 1881-1930, March 21, 1900, Image 7
?rer Four and a Half
Milliobs in Cotton Milk
Investment in tbe Industry,
Bxo*ptio? Sundays, Almost
171*000 a Day 8inoe
Ntw Year's.
Tie record of Sooth Carolina, in the
Metier of tbe projection of new
??pile. Id eotton mills since Jen 1
ess do longer be eteeeed merely ee
vonderfu ; it it phenomenal, end
redtsd it te to be doubled if tbere bee
ever been suob a spun in any
industry during ibe en me length of
issue in tbn world
Sorely ibe cation mills ere coming
to tbe cotton fields Tbey arn being
eeoved from ibeir old ueete, bot tbe
people el bom** ere building them end
potting ibeir money into tb>m Tbe
rein si wbiob cotton mule eie being
eeeab<tebed in Booth Carolina joat oow
tJseejw? tbat tbe Stale ia in tbe midst
of an industrial revoluttoo tbe like of
which bee aot been koowo in tbe
wietoiy of tbe Slate Tbe cold
Sporne, ?ffi tally recorded in Ibe
eflJO of tbe secretary of Mate tell
the late m .re forcibly Iben it can be
- presented in any other way Tbey
?how tbat 80010 Carolina at ber
Cieeot break neck pace will oot be
g in ? ending at tbe fore front of
the) manufacturing duiricte of tbe
oewotry
Taking.into eoneiderr lion yeater
? day a new mills eud ibe fact tbat
there have been 10 Sundays amoe Jan
1, the daily average of capital put into
Cotton muis since the opening of Ibe
year ie veiy Dearly $71 000
0? J rdueed?y ?b?- papers filed in
the ? fBoe of the secretary ot elate
ewt?w?)o $300 000 pot iu new mills ;
y?eierd*y ibe iiU'p wee e greeiei
ewe b*4ng $460,0 0, making eery
?early a million dollars ot new cot
ton mill oepital iu 1 w . days
This drives up ibe total capitaiiz*
tino of new mil s sin. e Jan 2, tnc ud
ieg ibe E*?ley mill, chartered a few
e%y? ?gt*. 10 tbe aetooiebing iota) ot
$4 6*6 000. over four and one half
aatntoo dolla?s
V^sierdsy's official record was ae
follows :
A commission wee ieeued to tbe
leesaao mills of McColl Merlboro
?nwDiy, the capital of which ie to be
$*00 OoO Tbe corporators are F P
Taium, T B Oibeon, a W Morrison,
Obarlea loemec and A K Odom
Theo e charter waa granted to tho
Atpna ootloo mills of Jonesville,
U ion county capitalized at $100,
tOO Tbe offioere ere W L Little
juOo, pieeideui, end J J Littlejohn,
secretary and treasurer
Tbe Adereoo Yarn aod Knitting
?ilia filed with ibe secretary of slate
Donee of the increase of its capital
worn $50 000 to $200,000, aod tbe
Changing of ibe name of tbe concern
to tbe Riverside Manufacturing com
petty Tbta means $150 000 of new
capital If tbe company continues
in tbe knitting bosiueee it will per
hap* har? tbe largest knitting mill in
the south.
OTHER ENTERPRISE*
The secretary of slate also issued
commiasiona yesterday to several
otner fen.da of enterprises
Among tbeee waa e real eaiate and
insurance company which propoaea
to do business in this Slate Iis
headquarters are to be Hamburg
Aiken county, end tbe corporators
ere F M 3utt aod Meiner Braoob.
both of Augusta. Oa Tbe capital
dock ia to be $1 000
A coma iasion wae fssued to T C
Ketobiu, J E Matthews, * C Catocari
and F A Neill, all of Winnsboro as
corporators of tbe Winneboro Cream
ery company Tbe capital slock it
to be $1,000
A commtftsion waa also issued to
the Greenwood Grocery company of
Greenwood which propoaea to do a
wholesale grocery busineee on a Oap
ital of $2 000 Tbe corporators are
W R Cotbran and C G A aller
Then tbe 1 B Gordon Mercantile
company of Y ?ikville was chartered.
It ia capital / d at $4,000. Tbe 1 ffi
oera are VY 11 McCouneil pnsideut,
aod I B Gordon, vice president, sec
retary and treasurer.? Tbe State,
March 16
The World's Progress.
Cincnnaii. M?reh 17 ?\r rh bi*lYc.p
Kl't( r tn unable to h- a N n Orleans
tonight to Sellfaf hit a<idiess at th"
?pen in* ?f 'ho Oeibtlti wiotei soh tel
ie the Creseevii C?t? Hu delivered the
eddrMS at St >Jary*a ibonl<>rxieal lesii
tsry <<n I'noe flail, in 1I1 ; western
subu'b* el thm city. |f m? preteoej el
iha n'odrntA ard ?thefs, and m ?an
tran m itteo! t y lejofi Siaiecct lelephoas
10 N w 0 sees A abhebet < kaeelle
?aa ajee 10 ha?< ??ehea If, N ?
U l"*?>* t..i Ig v. B? f.?r0 leetieg for
tan I*btiip) it e? s taral met h< uk ?.
Aro. to-h ? Qoep>tM ittlitrred hi*
Spaeob in a i?> .c. k' ph ?1 <J SS It as*
givro i?v ii.e ebeeeefapk ie the sa it
snro ia N ? 0 leeei r ? irieeoMtti d
alto hy leiepb nc ?o S- Met f*?sesatOSjt j
in tbie etiy at d rt'irrt hy 1 ? ?? aaejis
aodienee that em addre???^ b? Arc'
bl?bnp Elder Tka trat.anii??ioo ffi m
ibe pkoeograpb by telrphu* n ?mm New
? least eas as dltllDOl tl ibe ?uman
e IfJ
Distress in Porto Rico.
Haif Starved Women Walk
loto 8an Jaun.
Sen Jsun, de Puerto Rico, Merob
It ? At e special meeting of tbe
chamber of commerce today it wee
decided to close ell business houses
on Monday afternoon to enable tbe
merchants to attend tbe open air
meeting on tbe place with the object
ot drawing up a petition to Got Gen
Davis demanding immediate congree
aiotial deoiaion on tbe tanffone way
or tbe other. Telegrams were sent
to ell town ? tbrouguoot Puerto Rioo
requesting like demonatrations
Tbe feeling of uncertainty regard
log tbe tariff holds busfnsss practi?
cally at a standstill, the merchant be
ing afraid to order gooda or to
advance funds ou the plentern'
accounts The meeting todsy wss
conducted in a calm and business-like
raanuner The merchants here will
be sstisfied to sccept any de
cision of congress either free trade,
tbe '25 or 15 per cent tariff but tbey
a*k for a settlement of the question
so tbst business activity may be re
resumed Tbey deeided to take tbis
unparalleled step only sfter msture
deliber stion
Sixty country women msrehed
from Nareojito, arriving last evening,
and p-thioeed Got Qeu Davis to save
them from stsrvatioo and to provide
work and food The women present
ed a most pitiable sight Tbey were
barefooted aod ragged, half naked,
dost covertd and weary from their
journey Home of them were lame ;
all were disooruaged
The petition which tbey presented
to the governor general tells tbo story
of the depressing times?no work
and the price of rice beans end
bresd beyond resch fruits destroyed
and tbe relief supply discontinued,
bringing them and otbera where tbey
OaiDf fr m almost to starvation.
Gnn Dtvie promised relief to the
party aud r?-qu?*eted the mayor to
provide transportation Hie reply
wae that there was not a peao in tbe
treasury snd tbst tbe police were yet
unpaid for tbeir lest two months'
woik Tne j arty of women dispers?
ed quietly, some retrscing tbeir
eieps atoot othere begging easier con?
veyance to Naranjito, which is 20
milee from Sen Jaun, a portion of
the road being almoat impaaaable
Similar partiee are ezpeoted from
other town
?i I? aw?
Georgia to Get a $500,000
Mill From 8outh Carolina.
The Spsrtanborg Herald of Mar oh
16 say*:
Tba direetors of tbe Paoolet Maou
fasturiog Company held a meeting on
Wedoeedey night. A good attendance
was oat on this oall meetiog.
It wae decided by the directors to
build a 50,000 spinale mill at some
plase in Georgia, tbe site not having
bacn deBnitely 6xed upoo. At tbis
'net ting tbe figures* of options on Itnds
in snd near Paoolet were fubmitted
By a glaoee at these 6gures, it was
dearly secu that the pnoes asked by
tbe property owoers were high, out of
reach of Eastern capitalists, who do not
oare to spend $30,000 for about two
hundred aeres of laod fourteen miles
'rom tbis oity. Some of the land oouid
n t be purebased at all.
S<> tbe direotors determined to build
s J.iOO.000 eottoo mill io Georgia
Cape John H Montgomery will be
president and treasurer, and Mr Viotor
M Moatgomery, assistsot treasurer
ai d manager.
Mr Vtolor Montgomery left for Geor?
gia yesterday to defioitely settle tho
a?te for the mill, after whton, work will
at oooe bt-gio.
T'h ? Paoolet mills of this county era
tbe best paying and most suooessfolly
conducted oottoo faotorios of an section
of tba South. Tbe stook bring* nv? r
double snd oinoot bo pnrobase^ at tbat
priee. Tbe management led Item -
bolders have reulitid good in..my from
th ir investments
Tr s people of tbis oily and oountv
regret bat tbe direotora bsro to task s
?poi bey -nd the Savaonsh river to ytace
a mill, which ia tbe natural offspring of
tbe prob a of tbe Paoolet mule ot bis
oounty. Spsrtanborg County has a
I no oiber of nig oottoo mill*, and Uad?
all ibe oouotiua io the 8>>u h in h
maoolaotore of iho fl?3oy staplo tut
sao wants more lo tact she war ts
srery coitno mill that cao bo hor.estly
U"d in her borders, aod It is a
diMppniottnrot when a good thtn(! s'ip
by her. winch, cho presumes, na ur A\y
bulonga here
Ihn tine mill in Qeefgia will he
bull by an additional ishseripiion of
eapitui stoak.
???a> ???? aa?>?
Dewey ou His Way South.
Wa^hwaton, March IS ?Admiral
and Mfl UsW< P left here loeigBt fjf n
trip South . They ripeet ie vi? it
S?vjnnah, MsfOS St AufcU-'ine, Jaok?
sonvii'e and l'tlrjj H ach Tne admiral
aid M's Jewry probably, will uot
re*urn to lbs cry until the Istier p?rt
nl r,t x' month, a' whw h lino* it is
-aid ihpy will 11 tor Kur. pa, Visilieg
he sapostttaSJ see*S limi during the
kii'itiioT y\f* I)e?v?y has been u>a<io
ibattmas <?' 'he battleship cemmit s?
? n >?nl of ihn Children's KtOfSf t? ativ? I
rev h^ t'tit.an otphai i^mm A meet
me of lb s mxo. iy was held during
Admiral and Mrs I) wcy'a stay at
fi kewnod at which time the latter
eoaseuted to beoome ebairmau.
Next Operations in Natal.
London, March 19. 4 30 a m ?
The news from South Afrioa today Ia
entirely eatiafaotory to tbe British
pohlio. Tbe relief of Marking ia
not yet announced bat it fa extreme
ly probable that tbie ie elready ao
oomplisbed by Gol Plumer's advance
Lady Gharlea Rautinok, at Cape
Town, haa received a telegram from
ber hatband in Mafeking Merob 12
ssyiug that be expected to join ber
ebortly.
Tbe actual relief movements have
not been publicly developed in detail
but it seems tbat Lord Methuen only
etarted very recently and is rather
engaged in diaperaing tbe Boers of
tbe district than aiming at actual
relief
Gol Peakman baa dispersed 500
Boers at Fourteen Streams Lord
Roberta probably ascertained from
Mr Fraaer. tbe new mayor of Bioem
fontein, before dispatching Gen Pole
Garew southward that, in all likeli
hood the railway waa clear The
next move will be to collect at Bloem
fontein by railway sufficient ttoree
tor the army Lord Roberts will have
when the Orange river forces have
joined him
Tbie will probably occupy from
two to three weeka Tneretnre tbe
next important operations may be
expected in Natal
Tbe eavalry brigede which L-?rH
Roberts bss ssnt to Thabaooho, 35
miles east of B'oemfontein, is destined
to out off some 2 000 Bjers Oo sre
escaping from tbe southward.
Tbe Boere are reported to have
destroyed the railway in the neighbor
boot! of Rroonstadt
Lord Kitoheoer is still quietly organ
?stag io tbo northeast of Cape Colony
Predictions aod be'tiag are beginning
here that tbe war will be ended by tbe
middle of May.
1 Dispatches from Durban, Pietcrmar
i'sborg aod other South A'noan point*
describe most enthusiastic celebratioos
on St Patrtok'e day.
A London newspaper oredi's to Lord
Roberts the suggestion to tbe qipeo
rhat the wearing of he shamrock bi
permitted Whether this be so or not
it has been a most advantageous
politieal move
Gathering in Rifl a.
Loodoo, Maroh 19 ?A dispatch to
tbe Daily Mail from Bloemlooteio
dated Friday, Marob 16, ssys : "We
are getliog rifles surrendered faster than
a faetory eould turn tbem out It is
quite oertain that if a British offieisl
oan reaob tbe northern Isagers witb
Lord Roberts' proclamation tbe whole
Boer population will deolsre for peace
Butler Will Attack
Biggarsberg Range.
London, March 20, 4am ?The
war office has bad no oews up to this
boor confirming the report of the relief
of Mafeking, but George Wyndham,
tarlismentary under secretary of war
replyiog to a private ieqntry in the
lobby of the house of commons to?
night about midnight, smilingly said :
??I think it is all right."
The Free Staters seemingly hsve
not quite nollapsed Tbey are in con?
siderable foroe around Smitbfield, al?
though much dispirited.
A British spy from Rouxville re?
ports tbat Commandant Oliver and a
oommando are going co Krooostsd.
Tbe agents ho loft behind are using
desperate means to raise recruits, oom
miodeering British Boers under pen?
alty of'death.
Krooostad, where tbo Boers are con?
centrating, is 137 miles from Blom
fonteio. It is surrounded by a ooootry
0? hills aod joogles.
Gen. Gataoro is now resting at
Springfontein preliminary to joining
Lord Roberts Gco Buller's bill work
before Ladysmith has given him an
ezperienee which is about to bo used
io forcing the Biggarsberg range. (?
is believed that 25 000 of his 40,000
sre about to eogage Gen Bjtha's foroe,
and the next news of fighting will
pro'aMy oome from Natal
Tbe leaders of the Afrikander tund
are circulating a petition io Capo Colo
ny asking tbe imperial government
not to take away tbe iuaepeodeooo of
the B ers
Thirty two thousand additional troops
for South Afrioa aro now at sea
THE PLAGUE.
- 5
vYsthiogtOD, Maiofc 10 ?Word was
received by iho Davy department today
that ibe Cbieago aod .lont^ mery i?f
Admiral fceoley's iquaJrou have left
Montevideo im Babtt, Brasil. Tbe
Wilmiogtoo will join ttm other chips
e. looo as she is out of quarantine
Tbt fchtps r.ro going to Babia to avoid
Ibe rubottio plague, wiiuh hat- sppear*
ed on t be Piaitu
General Miles and Btaff in
Ch arleeton.
Cherte?t"o, S C, . March IS -Msjo<
Quarrel N l?n? A Moes and s ail
nrriv?(i ill Ubarlevluo *r B WaabieglO'
na tho priva'n o>*r () :i amo lonignl
The p^t'y etil spene ioev*rr< w it
Charleston Iveadsj ii P??ri U'?j?t ? d
go to Savant ah Wmotsriay io be
presout at the D?.wey rcoep lun.
Wny P??aionera Muni be Pa
tieot.
Every year about thin time those
interested begin to write to the Slate
board of pensions asking when tbe
penaion money will become available,
uone understanding the complications
and vexatious delays tbat bave to be
encouutered by tbe board in getting
things in shape for tbe mouey to be
psid out
Alresdy such inquiries are being
received, and so thai some idea of the
woik might be obtained by the public,
tbe following atatemeut has been made
public :
"Seve.il petitions bave b?en re
oetved by the Stale pension b >ard,
ssking that the lond be distributed
as soon ss possible to tbe poor, needy
vetersns and widows The delay in
?be matter of paying out tbe penaions
is generally ?upp-eed to be the fault
of tbe Mate board aud tbis statement
ia made with a view to explaining a
few of the d ffi u'ties with which we
have to contend So far only 13
counties out of 40 bsve sent in their
rolls ; after the rolls are received
here, tbey bave to be checked over
with last year's rolls aud in nearly
every oaee many old pensioners are
left off. rVe then have to make a liat
of them and scud back to tbe county
boards asking for information, and
fr* quently wait several weeks before
we receive it, as the boards are
scattered ; besides tb s, we have to
return many applications which are
defeotive for correction lu many
counties pension township board*
bave bad no meetinge yet. ao we
Cftonot hope to receive the la?r rolls
before tho latter part of April, if
then In one county iher* were 45
old pensioners unaccounted for. and
it baa taken two we^ke einet the roli
wss checked over and the names sent
to get the proper information con
oeruing tbem. and this is one ol
many instances ; if we copied the
-oils in the condition in which they
are received we wou(d be doing
great injustice to the pensioner*, a*
by ii quiries regarding those It ft off
we invariably find they were over
looked and should have been report
ed When the roMi? are fi tally in,
aud after considerable w<?rk done on
them here in proper order, it is theo
necessary to m?ke ou the pay rolls
As there were over 7 000 pension* rs
lest year and likely to be 500 more
this year it is s matter of considera
ble time and work to wri e out ihe
pay rolls for tbe clerks of court We
theo send tbem to the chairman of
the county board to verify and then
only are we prepared to pay out tbe
pension fund "?State
A REUNION OP WOPPORD
ALUMNI
8partanburg viem. 19 ?The ?Inmni
association of \V"fforo Qu lege, of w t ch
fj.pt W E Burnett is p>e>td a , ha
determined to have a great r- uoion o
the alumni of this c 'Hege, ?o b<
held in June during o tnofoemetit
At a reoout meeting a numher ot com?
mittees vit ro appointed Io ki g to thin
ond These committees soum ot the
kind of genii* men who are c?pa Is,
willing, and ar xmua to make the reunion
a success This wnl be the tast
commencement io which present or
former students will so- I)r JH
Carlisle as president ol VV ffo d
College, aod it it f. fe to predict that 'h
attendance, will i/e larger ibio ever
bet?re at ihn well attended commence
moot exeroires of Woffird
A Cbeap Receipt For Soak?
ing Corn
Eiitors Journal anu H view :
In order that other (armors mal
profit by my expericnoo I ask that you
publish this receipt I out from the
Cotton Plant a few years ago nut did
not use it until last year. I planted
about 8 aores soaked a- uireoted in this
receipt The crow-, and worms oil not
bother it, but the crown picked up that
I did not soak, only a foot, path divtd
ing tho two fields. Brother farmers
try it. It will uot injure ibe stund I
feel assured that Mr Walke, will not
objeot to its being published
Jas. S KlSL
Mootmorenci, Marou 1.
1 uotioo in tho last issue of (he
Cotton Plant, a receipt lor snaktog sum
?10 keep bud w.iraiH from killing tb?
corn ? I will give you and your readers
a receipt I h*ve neon ytog tor twenty
I yesrs or more, (I gel a fi ur barrel,St d
till it three parts lull of cha'ey manure
fron the horse Btabto )
1st Potting straw in the bottom ol
it (suffioient) to keip tbe inanuro off ol
the bottom ol tbe barrel, :\ d then
filling i' ibree parts luil ol tin u ai ute,
aud then pour erntet in the barrel no
the manure oatil ibe waiei btend* on tbo
j top of tbe mauu o, aod let it h and
' twenty four bours, and thou lake
1 much oorn ;?s > u wish to plant the
next day, and put ihi oorn in a iub,
and born an med soger hole in ibt
barroi, near the bottom, and lot tbo
i (j iid if tu ;It ? barrel, rnu ooi t" ihi
4un ihai contain* the oorn, and lei tht
Bt.ro r? uiB n iti B'talt until ibe o x
morn ii g sou di aiu nfl ibr* u^h a banket,
I and it la read) io bt pu> to ire |l'iuu ,
! ?nd nenboi ibe bud worm, cui worm,
j oro* i i bud v it o n h it I did th b
1 iar?i i ai, *?' ti its I'U'i worm, of??wa sou
1 UwOr- ao up u.y iiilfcbboi'a e in wOOae
lai m at j m? me?
?I L. Walk Kit
Chester, 6. C.
A Very Poor Showing
For Gov Gen Otis.
Admits That Manila ia Moat
Troubte8ome Centre in
Luzon.
Manila, March 18 9 SO p m ?Gen
0 >a couBideia Manila tbe must trou
uit-awDje ceutre in tbe situation today
1 no tnnuigent junta here, io con
junction witfj ihai in Hong Hong is
giuwing acuve Tbe military au
ihoinita nave been forced to put a
eiop io Maoiui a intercourse witb tbe
public. Toe local and foreign preea
couaiders bia recent utierancea cal
cumied to incite tbe Filipinos to a
couiiuued revolt aud prejudicial to
Auiencau control.
Fiores, woo baa just arrived here,
sa>a ne uuuiea truanug to American
leniency, aud tual be would not have
dareu come to Manila if >pain were
>ct in ooutrol He cherishes tbe
Dopes aud aspirations which actuated
nun wiicii iu tbe fi.-id, and desires to
watcu concessional action upon tbe
question oi tue Priihpptnea Tbe in
auigeuis, no aa.a do not expect to
va qa au tue Americans.but are main
taiu.ng a reatsiaiioe with the idea of
torohig cougiesa to accoid them tbe
beat pwasib'c letms
A nuuiuei ot repreaentative insur
gem ie?d< ra from diffeieut parts of
Luzon nave tecpntly been in conter
tui.e iu Alaun* dome have been
plaOed uuuVr arrest, but the others
luue iar nave out been interfered
WliQ
Louie BpfisVl, head oi the fi m of
Lou.s &pi?Sja>| A (Jo, coutractoia In
tue Vybineae government and himself
a aucpecied fi ibuater, came fr? m
tloug rv >ug to Manila last week and
waa i< m^vjiaiiiy detained in custody
ou Scia^iCtou u is asserted up- n
g.n>Q ouioor ty that three, loads ot
?nun ai.d ammunition bave recently
b?-eu lau?ed on ibe east coast ot
Luz <n Uepi Taylor, of the Tntny
ninih regiment, recently captured 12
uew Aiuu-eitt near Lalamba
Kepous are current here of active
reoel reorganization io tbe province
ot St?rung where tbe insurgent
leaders aie said to be assisted by
or* mmeut Spanish residents In
baDiiante of ibis province who are
now iu Manna bave been adviaed
not to teiuru to their homes, but to
r# mam under tbe protection of the
Americans
it ia also reported tbat the rebels
are reoigan z ug iu tbe province of
Z mbalea under Mascardo, Brigands
aie commuting atrocities iu tbe pro
viu e ol Nueva E ;>ga, where tbey
have murdered 20 natives and China*
m? n. ? gbt other murders bave been
c tumiiied uear Tarlao Nueva
Ejtga itiHurgems are heavily taxi g
local traders and farmers with the
leeuit that business is paralyzed and
there is a general scarcity ot food
The funds for maintaining this
I
B
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1 Beautiful I
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3 There are few women as beau- ?
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? and paint and cosmetics don't ?
make good looks. Beauty is ?
simply an impossibility without m
health. Beautiful women are ?
few because healthy women are ?
few. The way to have a fair
face and a well-rounded figure
is to take
BradliekTs {
[Female Regulators
This is that old and time-tried J
medicine that cures all female ?
troubles and weaknesses and ?)
drains. It makes no difference J
what the doctors call the trou- ?
ble, if there is anything the ?
matter in the distinctly feminine {
organs, Bradfield's Fe* ?
male Regulator will help ?
and cure it. It is good fur IT- ?
regular or painful menstruation; ?
for leucorrnoBa, for tailing of the ?
^ womb, for nervousness, head- 2
? ache, backache and dizziness. ?
S Take it and get well. Then o
5 your old-time girlish features 9
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K Sold by JrtiorKists tor $1 a bottle. W
2 THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO. ?
^ ATLANTA, GA. JJ
aa?i*ae*tf3??aesy#BeceBeBOBu
ea
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I factory or thron^li ou jular ui
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? we can offer most liberal terms.
SITE StWINti H?CKiNf: COKP
guerrilla warfare are collected from
tbe various towoa of tbe island
wbetber occupied by tbe Americana
or oot, even including Manila
In tbe province of Albay, tbe in
surgents bave ceaaed barraeeing tbe
Americana owing it ia reported, to
a lack of ammunition, bnt tbey con?
tinue ravaging tbe countryside,
burning and looting, Tne natives
are tiring of tbie eort of tbiog and
threaten to turn against tbe marau?
ders. Tbe townspeople of Legaapi,
Albay and Donaol are alowly return?
ing to tbeir homes
Msj Allen, of tbe Forty third regi?
ment baa beeo appointed military
governor of tbe Island of Samar,
wbere Lnkban, tbe former leader of
tbe rebels in tbst iocsluy is still in
tbe mountains
Gen Kobbe bos opened 20 porte in
the south, ro psrt of Luzon snd in
the islsnds of Hamar and Leyte. tbe
reault of which ia to atimolate trade
there, altbougb only temporary as tbe
country opened ia non productive
and appaianlly non-consuming Ow?
ing to the political conditioos of the
last 12 months, products sccumulsted
during tbe blockage These will be
shipped to Manila and then the porte
will be empty
Evidence accumulatea of tbe trea?
son sud perfidy of tbe municipal
presidents in tbe provinces of Gen
Mac An bur's district Tbe presi?
dents of several tnwns in Lrpsnte
snd Union piovince bave declined to
continue io their positions, saying
tbat they do not desire any further
identification with tbe Americana
Travel between tbe towns garri
s >ned by the Americans ie becoming
mote dangerous All wagon trains
mom be escorted by besvy gusrds
in order to insure tbeir safety.
Two ambushes were narrowly
averted recently ; small traveling
parties w**re attacked ; single
travelers t tquently disappear or are
found dead
.-panlards and Filipinos who are
conversant wnh the Tagalo charac?
ter unite io asserting that Aguinal
do's c*p>uie would determinate tbe
revolution
Tb ee months bave passed since
he was actively pursued
South Cat uiioa Press in Cuba.
Grand Hotel Iogiaterra, Habana,
t'oba. March 16?Tbe party of Sooth
Carolinians arrived here iast night at
10 o'clock. Tbe sea trip was exceed?
ingly rough Tbe bsggage wss all
inspected by the customs officer, snd
the party theo went to tbe Hotel
Inglaterra, wbere rooms had beeo
engaged All are well and are having
a good time. There bave thus fsr beeo
no mishaps or incidents. It is warm,
very warm dowo here Everyone ie
wearing lomoer clothes. Tbe botele
are crowded with Northern aod East?
ern visitors. There is oot near as
mach Americanization as one might
bave expected. The city seems to be
in a bustle and business is apparently
aottve.
The party, at 10 o'clock tbis Friday
morning, is getting ready to go cot on
a sigbt-seeing expedition
?Maw* aw?
Old Maud S.t tbe Famous
Mare, j?ies at Age of 26.
New York. March 17 ?Maud 8.,
bo famous trotter, died at Sobql;s's
arm. Port Chester, N Y , this morn?
ing Sho was brought to rbe farm
from N-w V ?rk a week ago and it was
inicnoed to use ber for breediog pur?
pose She was sick when she arrived
ncre, and had been under tbe care of a
veterinary surgeon She gradually
oeoame worse noweter, aud all efforts
to save tbe life of tba valuable animal
were fruitless Mau? S was owned
by the Bonner estate and was 26 years
old Her trotting record of 2 08J was
made io 1885
Dr. Cady'a Condition Powders
are just what a horse ncedi when "Jin bad coa
lition Teaie, blood purifier and vermifuge.
They are not feed but medicine, and toe best
la use to put a horse hi prime condition. Prica
If pent? per package. For sale by Dr A. J
Cbina. D?c 30?o
Tetter, SaU-Khcuni aud Kceeraa.
The intens?: itching and smatiing incident t
these" diseases, is instantly allaved by applying
nhawbarlaia's Eye and Skin Ointment. V aay
very bad case* h ive been pcrmaneily cured by
ir If i< equally efficient for itching piles 8wd
a favorite remedy for sore nippte??, cbappet*
hands, chilblains, frost Sitae and ehr?.nie sore
ev?'s. SSetl per box. For sale \<y Dr A ?J.
I t'hinn. Dae 3??o
i ^. V%r%,%<%^h/w/%'w/v
mmtl
in Marketing Methods ?
p| ' to Sewing Machines! 5
? . p*i * under which you can obtain
"'!"\ ..' ter value in the purchase of
"Wlul hewing Machine than
offered.
!?>? ne aud detailed particulars. How
rclm.se of a high-grade sewing machine
; vre can offer, either direct fro:;:
"ltorized agents. This is an oppor
hi know ' ie ??White/* you know
Btai ! I cE-'v ri, lion of the iiiaclumTand
? ? ."ii old machine to exchange
Write to-day. Address in full.
OT, fDep't L) Cleveland Oil*.