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-??T H BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM ?IN? Western South Carolina. 0 RATES REASONABLE. f - 0 SUBSCRIPTION 81 PER ANNUM I \ 0 JOB PR1MIXG A SPECIALTY. 1 imwriww^r vwnrw-MTWire.Mbfc*?w,f S " GO TO 1 II mil ?? bmh BaBaBBgaMMBBmBaaagaBng?BB?BH r I'TTIY TIT"? MMWBMMaMMMMMMPlWMMBi tBBSafcMMMMM II III i?~~~? The Lexington Dispatch. VOL, XXVI. LEXINGTON, S. C,. DECEMBER 4, 1895. NO. 3. j ;3r fc. ^ philip mm, TRUSTEE, FOR * FII I . it ATTJIYf1 J. Ju .. lllxi Jft / SIuXTS, SHI'S FljRMIG GOODS,! TRUNKS AND VALISES, ISO MAIX STREET, COLUMBIA, S. O. I Nov. 7-lv. * SOUTHERN RAILWAY CO. Central Time shown between Jacksonville and Columbia. Eastern Time at other points. >orltibouii?l. ' X0.36 XolO Xo3? Oct. 8tb, 1S95. Daily Daily Daily Lv. Jacksonville .. j ! 6 20p 7 30a L''. Savannah. ... 10 41 p 1160 a A r. Columbia | 3 30 a 4 90p I.v. Charleston | i 6 00p 7 30a Ar. Columbia- : 1015 p 1105 a Lv. Augusta ! j 7 00 p 2 05 p " Graniteville .. ! '....'-t* 7 46 p 234 p - , 44 Treuton ....' ~rJfc23p 2 5Sp 44 Johnstons ... 846 a 3 10 p Ar. Columbia ? : j '1120 p 4 44 p Lv. Columbia j : 4 50 a| 4 50 a 5P5p 44 Winnsboro -; G 01 a 6 01a 6Q6p 44 Chester j 6 68 a 6 58 a 653 p 44 Rock Hill I 7 32 a 7 32 a 7 30 p Ar. Charlotte .... ! 8 25 a 8 25 a: 8 20 p " Danville ! 1 SO p 130p !2 00nt 44 Richmond ...j ! 640 p 640 p; G 00 a 44 Washington...! 9 40 p y 10 p 6 42 a 44 Baltimore ... J 11 25 p 11 25 pi 8 05 a 44 Philadelphia \ 3 CO a ; 3 00 a 110 15 a 44 New York ? | j G'JOii 6'JO a; 1253 p Southbound, j ^ T,?:i ? Daily Daily Daily Lv. New York ' 12 Ion: 12 15nt 1 30 p " Philadelphia 1 j 3 50 a 3 50 n 6 55 p 44 Baltimore....! I 6 22 a 6 22 a i?20p Lv. Washington .. 1115 a 111 15 a 10 43 p 44 Richmond 12 55 pj 12 55 p 2 CO a 44 Danville j 6 05 p! 605 p 550 a 44 Charlotte ....! UOOpUOOp 93">a 44 Rock Hill 11 48 j) 11 4S j> 10 27 a 44 Chester 12'25n 12 25ut 11 03 a 44 Winnsboro.... ! 1 It a 114 a 1154 a ar. Columbia j j 2 20 a 2 20 a 1 02 p Lv. Columbia 4 30 a 1 2' p 44 Johnston 6 32 a 310 p ** Trenton t 6 48 a 3 23 p 44 Graniteville j 716 a 3 45 p Ar. Augusta S Co a 4 15 p Lv. Columbia I 7G0a: 400p Ar. Charleston Ill 10 a' 800 p Lv. Columbia j 130 a I [ 12 10 p Ar. Savannah 5 45 a 1 4 50 p 44 Jacksonville.. j 10 SO a ] j 9 40 p sleeping car servic e. Nos. 37 and 3S Washington & Southwestern Limited,Pullman cars Tampa to New York. Solid Pullman train with Din;ng care north ot Charlotte. No. 35 and 36 U. S. Fast Mail. Through Pullman Buffet Sleeping car and first class coach Jacksonville and New York ; also Pullman car Augusta and Charlotte. N. B.?Nos. 35 and 36 do not enter Union Station Columbia, but discharge and take on passengers and baggage at Blanding St. Station. w.a.turk. s. d. hardwick. g. p. a., Washington, a. g. p. a., Atlanta. p. l welles, Supt, Columbia, S. c. w. h. green. j. m. ( uj.p. G. Supt.. washington. t. m.. Wasuinctos. F. W. HUSEMANN, g-ttlt and loceskith, and dealer in CONS. PISTOLS, PISTOL CARTRIDGES FISHING TACKLE, and all kinds of Sportsmen's Articles, which he has now on exhibition and for ale at his store. Main Street, Near the Central Bank, Columbia, S. C. AGENT FOR HAZARD POWDER CO. j Repairing dono at short notice. J. WALTER MITCHELL ATTORNEY AT LAW, BATESBCRG, - - S. Cj "TTTILD PRACTICE IN ALL THE VV State Courts. ofL-r his professional | k services to the citizens of Lexington and Edgefield counties. Special attention given to claims and set- . tlement of estates. Januarj 30?3m. j Mr. and Z?rs> Ss*rscr. Mr. Bowser Makes an Effort to Clean i Out His Stove Pipe and Fails. Detroit Free Pi ess. "What is it now?" queried Mrs. | Bowser as Mr. Bowser finished his | after dinner smoke and started up j stairs. ' Going to save a'hundred dollars in cash and indulge in a little bene i ficial exercise at the same time," he replied. ' You are not going to?to tear any of the walls down or remove the roof of the house?'' "No, ma'am. Our house is heated by a furnace. That furnace naturally has a smoke-pipe. That smoke-pipe must be cleaned cut before we staT a fire this fall." "But, why don't you get a man to do it?" "For several reasons. First, I need the physical exercise. Second, I don't propose to pay no stove man a hundred dollars to come up here and fool around for four weeks over what will take me about twenty minutes. Thirdly and lastly, I am a domestic man and like to be doing little odd jobs around my own house." "Mr. Bowser, please don't do it!" gasped Airs. Bowser as she turned pale. "You'll get the pipe apart and then?and then?!" "And then clean out a barrel or two of soot, and put it together again," he finished. "I'm going to slip on my old clothes and have the job over in half an hour. You just sit down with the newspaper and you won't hear a sound." uTf wm'll lf>t. if, nlnne TT1 fet a man ? - j ~ ? ? 7" - -w o pay him out of my weekly allowance!" she called to him as he was half way up stairs. "Half an hour?easy as rolling off w O a log?save a hundred dollars?sit right down!" he replied as he disappeared. Ten minutes later he came down with an old suit on, and he had in his hands a gimlet, a screw driver, a monkey wrench, a hammer, a cold chisel, a pot of glue, a glass cutter and a coil of wire. "Why not let it go until December?'' she asked as he was ready to go, and j planning to get some one next day. ; "And let a cold wave catch us and i freeze all the water pipes!" he" exj claimed in answer. "Mrs. Bowser, i i vou sit right down and -don't worrv. I / O J I I was cleaning out smoke pipes be| fore you were born, and there's nothl ing in this job to get excited over." He had scarcely disappeared down I cellar when Mrs. Bowser went to her I | room up stairs and locked the door, i Mr. Bowser lighted up the cellar and i took a goccl Iook at tne stove pipe, it | ! was twenty feet long, with one end ! at the furnace and the other end in ! the chimney, and was supported at j intervals by wires attached to the i ceiling. "Save Just a hundred dollars and have all the physical exercise to boot/' he muttered as he began at the wires,*. "There are men who run ! to the glazier, the plumber and the stove man whenever a little job wants to be done, and there are other men who save time and money by taking a hand themselves. The idea of my getting a man to patter around here for a month or six weeks!" "When the wires had been loosened ; Mr. Bowser knew just what to do i-next, and he did it. He palled thci end of the pipe out of the chimney, j As soon as that had been done the J five or six joints fell apart with a ?reat clatter and he was instantly ino > * j veloped in a cloud of soot and ashes. I As the joints fell one of them struck j his foot and as he made jump to evade the soot he stumbled over ani other and came down on the hard I ! | bottom of the cellar and rolled over j on his back. j "Woman! I see how it is!" he yelled ! out in his first surprise, but the words J were hardly uttered before be got up and rubbed bis knees and the back j of bis bead and whispered to himself: "It's all right?all right! I inO O I tended to take the joints apart anyj way. and this has saved me a let of | j trouble. It would have taken a stove j i man just two weeks to do what I Lave ! ; done iu ten minutes. It's a wonder : | the old lady isn't down here to ask j if there has been an earthquake." Mr. Bowser cautiously picked each j I joint of the pipe and played a tattoo j on it with a hammer. That is the I proper way to clean 'em, and he did it j j as well as a stove man could have done. When a smoke pipe has been | taken a part it must be put together again to be made useful. Fully re- I alizing this fact, Mr. Bowser began j work. He picked up two joints and fitted them together. Xo, he didn't. To his surprise they wouldn't fit. They were made to fit, had fitted and ought by natural philosophy to fit again, but he turned thein over and over and end for end aud failed to make a go of it. He suddenly made a discovery. "One wants pounding out and the other pounding in!" he chuckled, as he reached for his hammer. ;T don't claim to be the smartest man in America, but if I can't put two joints of pipe together?" He couldn't. The hammering had not improved them. He took two other joints, but they were just as obstinate. All of a sudden Mr. Bowser got mad and jumped for the ax, but his feet slipped in the sool and he wert down and saw millions of stars as the back of his head whacked the cement. "Some cno shall suffer for this!" he * / 11 i -...11.. said as lie nnany sat up; ana ue was on the point of going up stairs and bringing Mrs. Bowser's perfidious conduct home to her when the resolution came to have one more hid. Only an hour before he had read in his newspaper the saving "What man has done can be done again," and he picked up all the joints, stood them on end in a row and surveyed them in a critical way. None were missing. The end of each and every joint had b3ea mile to fit into another. All he had to do was exercise patience and press and squeeze and tap with the hammer. Mr. Bowser pressed. He also squeezed. He likewise tapped. He was just on the point of success when the joints fell apart and banged around over his feet and rolled away. "With a wild war whoop he grabbed the ax and began to pound and batter and destroy, but as he raised his weapon for a fell swoop it hit the ceiling and rebounded on his head and Mr. Bowser knew no more for ten minutes. Then he realized that Mrs. Bowser and the cook were bending over him with camphor, brandy, porous plasters, Jamaica ginger, ammonia, porous sticking salve, and in a far away voice he heard the cook asking: "Is it a naygur, Mrs. Bowser, who was sent up here to clean the pipe, and if so, why didn't I see him?*' And in far away tones, as the camphor bottle was placed to his nose he heard Mrs. Bowser reply: "No?it's Mr. Bowser himself. He wanted to save a hundred dollars and Lave the benefit of the physical exercise besides, and I guess he's done it. While you are going for a doctor you'd better stop four or five men and ask 'em to come in and help get him up stairs, and you can stop at the grocery and order six bars of soap sent down at once." "Woman?" began Mr. Bowser, but then the-lights went out and he could not finish by announcing that his lawyer would see her lawyer in the morning. ?? It May Do s Much for You Mr. Fred Miller, of Irving, 111., writes that he had a Severe Kidney trouble for many years, with severe pains in his back and also that his bladder was affected. He tried many so called Kidney cures but without any good result. About a year ago he began use of Electric Bitters and found relief at once. Electric Bitters is especially adapted to cure of all Kidney and Liver troubles often gives almost instant relief. One trial will prove our statement. Price only 50 cents for large bottle, at the Bazaar. The Colored Stats Fair. Columbia Register. The railroads have granted the one cent mile rate to the Colored State Fair and the managers of that association are hard at work getting everything ready for the opening. The merchants in this city are taking much interest in the fair, and many of them will make exhibits from their establishments. The agents at work in the various sectious of the State are sending in very encouraging reO o o ports and a large number oi exhibits will be 011 band when tbe fair opens. The aunr.al conferences of colored churches will be in session during the week, and the negroes will swarm here from all sections of the State, the occasion bids fair to be both a pleasant and profitable one, better than has ever been held in the city. You Cau Sslieve The testimonials published in behalf of Hood's Sarsaparilla. They are written by honest people, who have actually found in their own experience that Hood's Sarsaparilla purifies the blood, creates an appe' ' ' i 1 l t me, strengthens me system anu ;iusolutely ami permanently cures all disease? caused by impure or deficient blood. Hood's Pills for the liver and bowels, act promptly, easily and effectively. BBBBBnnnHHBB An Alp:na Miracle. M is. Jas. M. Todd, of Long Rapids, Discards Her Crutches. Iu an Interview with a Reporter She Reviews Her Experience and Tells the Real Cause of the Miracle. i (From tbe Argus, Alj e:.a Mich.) We have long known Mrs. Jas. M. j Todd, of Long Rapids, Alpena Co., I Mich. She has been a sad cripple. ! Many of her friends kuow the story : of her recovery: for the benefit of i those who do not we publish is to! day. Kirrhf. rpfivc arm sdir? WAR ffikpn ?O"" J ~~ j with nervous prostration, and in a : few months with muscular and in; Hammatory rheumatism. It affected j her heart, then her head. Her feet j became so swollen she could wear I nothing on then; her hands were J drawn all out of shape. Her eyes ! were swollen shut more than half J the lime, her knee joints terribly ' swollen and for eighteen months she ? ! had to be held up to be dressed. J One limb became entirely helpless, and the skin was so dry and cracked that it would bleed. During these eight years she had been treated by a score of physicians, and has also spent much time at Ann Arbor under best medical advice. All said her trouble was brought on by hard j work and that medicine would not cure, aud that rest was the only thing which would ease her. After going to live with her daughter she became entirely helpless and could not even raise her arms to cover herself at night. The interesting part of the story follows in her own words: "I was urged to try Dr. "Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People and at last did so. In three days after I commenced taking Pink Pills I could sit up and dress myself, and after ! using them six weeks I went home j and commenced working. I contin! ued taking the pills, until now I bej gin to forget my crutches, and can j go up and down steps without aid. j I am truly a living wonder, walking out of doors without assistance.'' "Now, if I can say anything to ic| duce those who have suffered a3 I j have, to try Pink Pills, I shall gladly I do so. If other like sufferers will j try Pink Pills according to directions, | they will have reason to thank God i for creating men who are able toconI quer that terrible disease, lhc-umai tism. I have in my own neighbor| hood recommended Pink Pills for the after effects of la grippe, 'and weak women with impure blood, and ._e\yitb good results." I Mrs. Todd is very strong in her | faith in the curative powers of Pink Pills, and say they have brought a poor, helpless cripple back to do her own milking, churning, washing, sewing, knitting, and in fact about | all of her household duties, thanks I to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain all the elements necessary to give : ncw? life and richness to the blood I and restore shattered nerves. They ! are for sale by all druggists, or may ! be had by mail from Dr. Williams' i ! Medicine Company, Schenctady, N. i Y , for 50c. per box, or six boxes for | $2.50. | If the Baby isCuttingTeeth* Be sure and use that old and welltried remedy, Mrs. Winslow's Sooth| ing Syrup for children teething. It soothes the child, softens the gums, j allays all pain, cures wind colic and is the best remedy for diarrhoea. Twenty-five cents a bo't'e. It is the best of all. The Woman's Favorite. The December' number of The I Delineator is called the Christmas J number, and is filled with holiday ! good things. The * exposition of ! Winter styles is complete, and the ! season's Millinery is attractively pre! sented. There is a special holiday ! article on Dolls and their Dressing, j and another on Novel Home made j Christmas Gifts, a theme pleasantly ' supplemented by the conclusion of Tillie lioome Littell's account of how to make Crepe Paper Brownies, and by a chatty glance at current novelties in Around The Tea table. The practical side of the Christmas Dinj ner has an exposition all its own, i 4?.~ rr?,i-QTT \> UliC tlJU VUi iOlUJUO ^.iULtxs^y 11 OV.1I I figures in an amusing sketch of Cabin o o ; Life in the Soutb, by Lucia M. Bob| bins. Floral Work for the month, a | look into the newest books and a rej view of novelties in Knitting, Tatting j and Lace Making are among the j other features. ! The Delineator is the Woman's I ! Favorite Magazine, and is issued by : the Famous Fashion Publishers, The j Butterick Publishing Co. (Limited), I at 7 to 17 West 13th St, New York, j at the remarkably low rate of $1 for i a years subscription, or loc per copy. ! Of all family magazines it is the Great Caterer to Domestic Needs, j and can be recommended for its | cheapness, usefulness, beauty, freshj ness and utility. Few people know that all plants j contain digestive principles. They I cannot absorb their food until it is i digested any more than animals can. | The Mount Lebanon Shakers have ! learned the art of extracting and utilj izing these digestive principles, and j it is for this reason that their Shaker | Digestive Cordial is meeting w;'th such phenomenal success in the treatment ot dyspepsia. The Shaker Digestive Cordial not only contains food already digested, but it also contains digestive principles which aid the digestion of other foods that may be eaten with it. A single 10 cent sample bottle will be sufficient to demonstrate its value, and we suggest that every suffering dyspeptic make a trial of it. Any druggist can supply it. LAXOL is the best medicine for children. Doctors recommend it in ! rdaee of Castor Oil. * ^ D:-ntistry in Oregon. "When I was traveling through I Southeastern Oregan last month," said Attorney TV. TV. NcNair, to a San Francisco Post writer, '"I found myself in a village and with a large toothache. I found the local dentist, with his whirligig eDgine that resembled a small lathe, at the livery stable clipping a horse. " 'Do you treat teeth?' I asked. "'Course; what do you suppose I'm here for?' he replied, iu a nettled tone. "'Well, I have one that needs attention.' "'Want it pulled or plugged?' he ! asked. " 'I want it treated. How do you treat a tooth that is aching?' "'Pull it or plug it.' "'I think this could be saved if it had proper treatment.' "'Want it nlue^ed then? What is J. oo it?jaw tooth or gnawer"?' and he tried to force a finger that was covered with dirt and horsehair into my mouth. I had grown a tritie suspicious of him, so thought I would find out what sort of work he did. "'Do you do bridge work?' I asked. " Not since I been practicin'. I did build a bridge across Cow creek when I was reachin', but I mostly confine myself to dreggin'fangs, doctorin' horses and barberin'.' " 'Do you ever transplant teeth'?' " 'Say, I tried that ouct; but she didn't work. 01' Bill Eobi'son had a j tooth that was achin', and he wanted | it pulled. I got the wrong tooth. I tried to put her back; but Bill hollered and cut up so that I thought I'd try to transplant it. " ;I sawed off the snags and riveted it to Bill's plate o' false teeth, but she wouldn't work. The first time Bill bit a bone with it the tooth swung around on the rivet, an' he bit a hole in the roof of his mouth as big as a hazel nut.' "I concluded not to have my tootb + >-nofr(l Tho rloriHef \rri? snrrr nnrl told me that 'if it was holler, to heat a knittin' needle hot an' poke it in the tooth, or hold a chaw o' terbackei i in my mouth.' ? Major C. T. Picton is manager oi j the State Hotel, at Denison, Texas, j which the traveling men say is one of the best hotels in that section. In speaking of Chamberlain's Colic Cholera and Diarrhoea Ilemedy Major Picton says: "I have used it myself and in my family for several years, | and take pleasure in saying that I J consider it an infallible cure for i diarrhoea and dysentery. I always ; recommend it, and have frequently | administered it to my guests in the 1 uoiei. aiau 111 every ease iuaaspru\eu i itself worthy of unqualified endorse| ment. For sale by Julian E. Kauff| man. G. At tie Penitentiary. The 800 convicts at the Peniteni itentiary enjoyed Thanksgiving day. I All of the inmates were given a day | oft", which they spent in merrymaking I from morning until night. The health of the convicts with a few exceptions has been remarkably good, | and there is little cause for sickness as all of them are given good food and not crowded to any great extent. | Dan Murphy, the slayer of Treasurer j Copes of Orangeburg, has recovered | from his recent sick spell and is i waiting for the Supreme Court to decide his fate. A fresh arrival of fine French candies, just received at the Bazaar. CROWAEI) HV CAROLINA,! i i j | Esr Day by Far The Greatest. cf the International Exposition. The Military Display Surpasses Any- | thing of the Kind Ever Seen in i the Gate City?Evans and Tillman speak. j ! Special to The State. . j Atlanta, Nov. 28?"Carolina day" ! has proven to be by far the biggest j day of the Exposition thus far. It i i has been a red letter day in every j : sense of the word. Carolinians, and | . particularly Columbians, could be | seen at every crook and turn today. | i It looked this morning as if the whole ! ? of Columbia had been turned loose in the Gate" City. Being Thanks giving day also, the people came j here by the thousands from everyj where and the streets were jammed j with moving masses of humanity, i The day was an ideal one, mildly cold and delightfully pleasant. The ! crowd was so great that it was with | difficulty that the 2,000 or more j South Carolina troops could be ' gotten into line. Ihe formation was i slow and the parade did not move ' until about noon. But when it did ; it was a parade worthy of the Palmetto State, and reflected credit upon Adjutant General AVatts. The day has been a continual round of pleasure, with absolutely nothing to mar its symmetry. The ! speeches were listened to by a crowd ! that jammed the auditorium to its utmost capacity, aiiu it was uu cii- | ! tbusiastic crowd. Subsequently the | reception held by the executive party under the direction of Commissioner j Roche and Major Wilkes at the : Illinois buildiDg was an enjoyable , affair. Then came the reception ! ! tendered the leading Carolinians at i | rr? i the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Til- j I linghast and the finale was the re I ception tendered the South Carolinians at the executive mansion tonight by Governor and Mrs. Atkino 0 son. The first thing on the programme | was the great military parade. The I troops made a lovely show, the Columbia companies making a striking appearance. One near the head of the procession could not begin to see the end in the far distance. Both j : sides of Peachtree street were lined j : with thousands of spectators, and j the piazzas of the handsome resi- j dences were filled with the fairest of j , i Georgians who waved flags and kerj chiefs at the passing boys in grey nvrl VilnA Thr> nrdpr nf the oarade ; was as follows: Col. Chandlier of tlie Fifth Georgia ! ; Regiment and stuff. ^ i Governor Atkinson and stall, . j mounted. . The Fifth Georgia Regiment band, j , | The Fifth Georgia Regiment. The Atlanta Artillery, with four ! pieces. Gov. John Gary Evans, mounted ' j on a white horse, with Adjutant General "Watts and Assistant General Bruce on his light, and the govern- i ^ or's staff. j 'I The following carriages with guests ; ! of the day: t ! First?Senator Tillman, Dr. A. j Toomer Porter, Commissioner E. L. j Roche. 1 i , ! , | Second?Mrs. Evans the mother of j the governor, Mr. George Evans, f ! Mrs. "Willie Jones, Miss Fioride Cald well of Memphis. Third?Misses Mary Evans, Lidie j Caldwell of Memphis, Messrs. A. H. I Patterson and W. Evans, j Fourth?Mrs. B. R. Tillmau, Mrs. , j E. L. Roche, Capt. "W. A. Courtenay, J , | Gen. Hugh L. Farley. Fifth?Thomas Martin of Bluffton, j i Mr. A. J. Martin, formerly of Edge- | field, now of Atlanta, a Mexican war | veteran; Dr. F. L. Parker, dean of j Charleston Medical college, i Sixth?Col. ltobt. W. Hunt, travel- i ing passeDger agent of the Southern j railway, Geo. IL jmith, Jr., of The \ i News and Courier, W. B. Davie, Jr., j 1 and E. J. Watson of the State. Seventh?Maj. Marshall of the "W. j L. L., and Mrs. Marshall and Capt. ; i Burns of Beaufort. Fourth brigad band. Gen. Anderson and staff. The Citadel Cadet corps, com- j manded bv' Lieut. Jenkins, U. S. A. Porter Academy Cadet ckorps. "Washington Light Infantry. Carolina Rifles, Capt. Allen. Sumter Guards, Lieut. Thompson. Moultrie Guards, Capt. "Ward. ! Palmetto Guards. ; German Artillery, Lieut. Blumeni thai. i Naval Reserves, Capt. DuBose. i C'lemson College brass baud. . i Gen. Richbourg and staff. Clemson College brass band. Clemson College corps of Cadets, i commanded by Capt. Fuller, U. S. A. \ Palmetto Regiment baud,Columbia, j Mexican war veterans, Mr. Henry | Beard of Columbia, bearing a tattered | Mexican battle Hag, with Col. James D. Blanding on his right. Sons of Mexican war veterans. Col. Wilie Jones and Adjutant Brennen. Richland Volunteers. Gordan Light Infantry. Greenbrier Rifles. Governor's Guards. Pomaria Rifles. Peak Rifles. Tillman Volunteers. j ntnn cr rt.lOv/la Sally Rilles. Edisto Guards. Bamberg Guards. General Stopplebin and staff. First Cavalry on foot. Patrick Institute Corps. Mauldin Rilles. Edgefield Hussars dismounted. Troops A and E dismounted. Jonesville Rides. Morgan Rilles. Laurens R:fl2s. Maxwell Guards, Greenville. The Governor's Guards made a splendid show with their grey uniforms and white crossed belt straps. The M'ashington Light Infantry and the Sumter Guards made a particularly fiue appeararce. The Citadel corps of course excited great admiration. The men marched beautifully. The Clemson corps made a particularly good appearance. Arrived at the grounds the troops : l 1 l? n. wt'ie isvieweu uu iuc uv uw?ernors Atkinson and Evans. Then the troop3 were dismissed and all repaired to the Auditorium, where the two Governors and Senator Tillman were to speak. There w s a rush for seats in the great Auditorium, and in a short time it was filled to over flowing. Among those on the stand were those who occupied the carriages in the parade: W. Gibbes Whaley, Dr. E. L Patten and wife, GeneraHVatts, General Farley, CAonel Bruce, Maj. Henry W. Cipers, Lieut. Gov. Timmerman, D. II. Behre, B. B. Evans, S. M. Inmau of Atlanta, Commis sioner Roche, H. B. Buist and wife and others. At 1:50 p. m., Governors Evans and Atkinson came upon the stand amid vociferous applause. At 2 o'clock the exercises began with a beautiful prayer by Dr. Porter. He thanked the divine ruler for the genius and energy by which this great exposition had been made. He prayed that iising generations should obtain knowledge from it. Senator Tillmau came out then, wearing a palmetto tree in miniature on his coat lapel and was vigorously cheered. Commissioner Roche then introduced Governor AtkinsoD, who delivered a 20 minute address of welcome. He referred to the relations of the States in the past, and twitted Governor Evans for not showing a greater appreciation of the women of his State. Continuing, he said: "I am glad also to say to you that on this occasion the people, I know not whenceJUey come, have paid a high tribute to the governor of South Carolina despite his shortcomings, and to their distinguished Senator, and to their presence testified a higher appreciation of their worth and of their presence than they gave to the President of the United States. And why should they not? Why j should Georgia not stand by South Carolina?'' He told the Carolinians they were welcome to all they could eat and if there was anything else they wanted all they had to do was to ask for it. He feared they would feel the need of it. In the course of his speech, he said, after relatiug Carolina's past: ' When Georgia, Laving redeemed herself from degradation, looked around her, she looked across the line and saw engaged in a mighty conflict the man who had been heroic in war. yet who has done nothing to I .. immortalize his name such as was j done by him in this mighty struggle for the supremacy of the moral and ; intellectual forces of South Carolina, and I allude to General Wade Hampton. (Great cheeiing.) She went to his aid and to the aid of South Caro- j lina, God bless her. The chivalric and patriotic John B. Gordon went to stand by him. He said South Carolina now bad lrtniTaro olio tvoc u*ill mrr 1*/\ fvncf OTiil itauti o cuv ??uc ii iuiuq cv/ u uci'^ uuu . she should take her place iu the first rank of the States. He denied that northern capital had built up the south. Mr. S. M. Inman, in the absence I of president of the exposition com- ! panv. welcomed the Carolinians on ] behalf of the organization. He said j he had never seen such a military | I display. He was highly complimen- j tary to the South Carolina exhibit. j Governor Evans made a speech in i response, which took well. He ' siBaBBBaa*B2jee**romeeK2*Ba ADVERTISING RATES. Advertisements will be inserted at the rate of 75 cents per square oi one inch space for first insertion, and 50 cents per inch tor each subsequent insertion. Liberal contracts made with those wishing to advertise for three. six and twelve months Notices in the local column 10 cents per bne each iuser ion Marriage notices inserted free. Obituaries charged for at the rate ol one cent a word. Address G. M. HARMAN, Editor. claimed that Georgia was Carolina's daughter, and he thanked them for the opportunity to show South Caro lica's superiority. South Carolina had a past. She never had to go out of the conllict for repairs. Carolinians were not a prople with much brass. They had ilways had brains. (Applause.) He then said the solid south was solid no longer. The north was solid against her. We are told to divide while the shylocks consolidate. We are told that we are fanatics. They were now cherishing an ideal form of government, which could only be obtained in one way, but can never be perpetuated but by the paen who own and till the soil. The only hope for us is in the west. Carolina realizes that the foundation of all wealth is in the country'. Unless you go to congress and make this tight and follow the crankyism of South Carolina and Ben Tillman you will never succeed. "When he closed there were cries of ''Hurrah for South Carolina." There were loud cries then lor Senator Tillman and he came forwrjrd . * S slowly. The crowd had been waiting to hear the man they had read about so much and it was curious to note the expression of expectancy on every face. Wtien the applause died away, he began. All through his s speech he was interrupted by alternative laughter and applause. He * regarded Georgia as Carolina's big and handsome sister. He was in a joking mood and made Governor Evans and his bachelor's state the object of it for some moments, much to the amusement of the crowd. He said the governor was young and green, but had a reasonable amount of brains and a pretty fair character. He concluded with some impressive United States pension figures. He maintained that the south had since the war paid to the north four hundred millions of dollars pension . mi- f it iL. triDute. l uis was iar more luau me north had ever invested in the south. It this money had been left in the south she would be the most advanced country on earth today. Someone asked him about Grover Cleveland. He said: ''There are people who beliere that Wall street knows a'l about finance, and nobody can teach them anything and they must 6ay 'm4 too' every time the New York World or Grover Cleveland grunts.. I wouldn't have said anything about old Grover if your governor hadn't alluded to him, because I will have a better opportunity to use my pitchfork on him when I go to Washington. But it does my soul good to hear the governor of Georgia say that two little bobtailed Reformers attracted more attention and drew more applause than the Presi dent of the United States." Tomorrow the Carolinians who came on the executive special will devote their attention to seeing the great show in detail, leaving for home on a vestibuled special at 11:15 Saturday night. The reception at the executive ; manison was largely attended tonight. The Southern railway got in its last section loaded with Carolinians early this morning. The service i given has excited universal favorable comment from those who came to Atlanta. E. J. Watson. ! Eats Poison and Crockory. I Now York WoiM. Cipt. Yetrio, know as the man with the iron stomach, gave an exhibition of his gastric powers before a small party of newspaper and medical men at the Sinclair House recently. Illustrative of the non-effect of nnisnn nnnn the lininf? of his store r ~c ? ?-> acb, be swallowed several concoctions whieb were certainly poisonous looking, and while the spectators were gaping with amazement he meditatively cbewed a flower pot. Between whiles be told stories of occasions when he subsisted for fourteen consecutive days upon poisons and crockery. He seemed ti relish ordinary poison, but strenuously objected to any mixture containing an acid, for fear of corroding the iron lining of his stomach. Towards the end of the exhibition Captain Yetrio evidently became hungry, for he took a luncheon of tallow candle, plain bread and morphine mixture, and then smilingly bowed the spectators from the room. There are two reasonable things which everybody should do: take good care of one's health; and if lost, regain it quickly, and to this everybody will agree. And there are a great multitude of people who are agreed that for both purposes Simmons Liver Regulator is the best helper. "I am troubled with torpid liver and nothing gives relief so quick like Simmons Liver Regulator"?R. R. Strange, Lake City, Fla.