University of South Carolina Libraries
taw??a???n????ani BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM ?IN? Western South Carolina. 0 HATES REASONABLE. O SUBSCRIPTION Si PER ANNUM JOB PRINTING A SPECIALTY. <?BEBBM *t ?BE?Bfl?IW ????BW H?3??? ?8IJLJ ? ??????ga? ?-> The Lexington Dispatch. $ Bcprcsentativc newspaper. Covers Lexington and the Borders of the Surrounding Counties Like a Blanket. VOL. XXIX. LEXIXOTOX, S. C., WEDXESDAV, JULY 5, 1899. XO. U ,5?iuai GLOBE DRY GOODS COMPANY, IH^4p%r^^0 TXT. S3:. l^OSTCKITOST, T23., S^AJiT^.a-BS3, I 1?S<> MAIN STREET, COMTMBIA, ?. C? jjk 4 HOT "fesddl Solicits a Share of Your Valued Patronage. Polite and Prompt Attention. m |i | s I \ /c\ if iX irV I I October 13?tf ^ , > . . __ _ __ "Sweet Bells Jangled Out of Tune and Harsh." j Shakespeare'3 description fits then sands o? women. They are cross, des- 1 pondent, sickly, nervous?a burden to' themselves and their families. Their |j sweet dispositions are gone, and they, like [j the bells, seem sadly out of tune. But j there is a remedy. They can use McELREE'S Wine of Cardisi i It brings health to the womanly organism, and health there means well poised nerves, calmness, strength. It restores womanly vigor and power. B : ? It tones up the nerves which suffer- y j ling and disease have shattered. It ism j I the most perfect remedy ever devised [j : I to restore weak women to perfect! j j health, and to make them attractive 8 j ana nappy. ?i.oo at an druggists. r j For advice in cases requiring spec-1 ial directions, address, giving symp-E j tonis,?," The Ladies' Advisory De-[ : partment," The Chattanooga Medi-F cine Co., Chattanooga, Teen. | j REV. J. TV. SMITH, Camden, S. C., j j says"My wife used Wine of Cardui at home j for falling of the womb and it entirely cured j ! her." JUftB '.? r BBMH 1?ggPBWEBBS) Tho Sfrntnclsy Platform, The Democrats of the Blue Grass State Favor 1G to 1 The Principles and Policies of the Chicago Platfoim Are Endorsed Without Qualification. The Democratic Convention of Kentucky has adcpled the following platform: 4,Tbe Democrats cf Kentucky, in convention assembled, re-affirm without the slightest qualification, the principles and policies declared in the Democratic national platform adopted at Chicago in 1S3G. "Our faith in bimetallism is vindicated by events The necessity for the restoration of the double standard was acknowledged by the President and Congress in 1S97, when a commission was sent to Europe to entreat other Dations to aid in establishing bimetallism, and tbe failure cf the commission to secure European co-operation confirms the friends 0* free coinage in their belief that relief can only come by the independent action of the United States. The present legal ration of 16 to 1 is the only ratio by which bimetalism can be restored and opposition to it is confined to"those who oppose bimetallism at any ratio, and to those who misapprehend or ignore the reasons which led three national conventions to adopt it. " We denounce the present Republican national administration for its reckless extravagance in public affairs: for its cruel and inhuman neglect in its treatment of our soldiers and sailors during tbe late war; for its ccm nlf-fp snhnrdinalinn to the interest of i r organized wealth; for its protection and encouragement of trusts and j combinations; and especially for its J appointment and retention in office ! of an Attorney General devoted to the interest cf trusts and combina tiens "We call attention to the incom- j petency of the present Republican i administration in Kentucky, the j abuses and scandals in the management of the penitentiary and asylums while under Republican control, and we commend the wisdom of the last General Assembly cf 'Kentucky in the enactment cf laws which secure the wise and economical^ administration of the penitentiary and other public institutions of the State un- J der Democratic control; to the j increase in the" rate of taxation; to the vetoing cf all Democratic j legislation favorable to the interests of the people and hostile to the op- I pression and extortion of organized i wealth. "We believe that trust is the result, in a large measure, of tie policies j adopted and pursued by the R-pub j lican parly, chief among which is the | demonetization of silver, by which the j volume of currency has been kept be- ; low the demands of business, aod the j enactment and enforcement of vicious, unwise and unpatriotic legislation, such as the protective tariff laws, known as tho McKiuley and DiDgley bills, whereby there is a dislinn in f.t Vnr f,f CftmOfiifc? wealth and against individual enterprise. We favor the destruction ( f the result as well as the removal of the causes. The re establishment of bimetallism at 10 to 1 and the repeal of all protective tariff laws would do more to cripple and destroy the or | ganizution and operation of the i trusts than any other laws. "We believe the law in Kentucky known as the anli trust law, should be so amended as to make unlawful any agreement, combination or arrangement by corporations or individuals under which, in the carrying on of any business, the price charged ! should thereby be fixed, controlled or i regulated And we believe that | said law should be further so amended as to provide that all contracts made by any combination generally known as trusts, in any kiod of busiuess, shall be void and not enforceable by o?w?V> tvn r-f av /?r\rv>kino tmn on/1 w O ! oulu uuou ui v/uuiuiucvuui;) auu u t | especially demand that all trust controlled articles be placed on the free list. "We hereby express'our continued coi fi 7eoce in William Je nnings Bryan, and favor bis nomination for the Presidency of the United States by the Democratic national convention of 1900 ' We recommend to the Democracy of Kentucky J C S. Blackburn as the successor of yVilliam Lindsay in the Uuited States Senate. "We endorse the war carried to success for the freedom of the enslaved Cubans, and we appreciate and honor the courage and heroism of our soldiers and sailors therein en gsged. But we declare the conduct of the present administration as to the Philippines to be repugnant to every line of the bill of rights, the constitution and the declaration of independence.'' ?? -w Bexnarkabls Bescue. Mrs. Michael CurtaiD, Plainfield, 111, makes the statement, that she caught cold, which settled on her lungs; she was treated for a month hv hf-r familv nhvsiciam but /?rew ~ J J I v' 7 ? o worse. He told her she was a hopeless victim of consumption and that no medicine could cure her. Her druggist suggested Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption; she bought a bottle and to her delight found herself benefited from first dose. She continued its use and after taking six bottles, found herself sound and well; now does her own housework, and is as well as she ever was. Free trial bottles of this Great Discovery at J. E. Kaufmann's Drug Store. Only 50 cents and 81 00; every bottle guaranteed. It is a lonesome college that hasn't elected a new president this year. DeWitt's Littlo Early Risers benefit permanently. They lend gentle assistanca to nature, causing no pains or weakness, permanently curing constipation and liver ailments. J. E. Kaufmann. Ilayti wants to borrow $5,000,000 from us. She 13 fixing a way to get herself annexed. Sick Headache, "Wind on the Stomach, Biliousness, Nausea, are quickly cured by a few doses of Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine. Ilcosevelt has furnished a day that makes Milwaukee famous. AN UNFAILING SIGN THAT , NATURE IS APPEALING !le!pi the s l-HP UP! P must ,)e gotten rid of ; f Jll flLLr i ?a warning that can 1 To nezlect to purib time means more than the annoyance unsightly pimples. If these impuril remain, the system succumbs to any or unable to withstand the many ailm prevalent during spring and summer. Mrs. L. Gentile, 2004 Second Ave says: " I was afflicted for a long time were very annoying, as they disfigure* After using many other remedies in vn end thoroughly cleansed my b'ood. a ft good complexion, which I never had ?a riotous conditio s. s. s. and is the only one that is absolut promptly purities the blood and th* the general health and strength. It tism. Tetter, Boils. Sores, etc., by goii forcing out all impure blood. Books free to any address by the Sw Story of a Slavs. I ! To bo bound band and foot for j years by the chains of disease is the i worst form of slavery. George D. j Williams, of Manchester, Mich., tells j how such a slave was made free. He i says: ''My wife has been so helpless ! for five years that she could not turn I over in bed alone. After using two i j bottles of Electric Bitters, she is j wonderfully improved and able to do her own work." This supreme remedy for femal9 diseases quickly cures nervousness, sleeplessness, melancholy, headache, backache, fainting and dizzy spells. This miracle working medicine is a godsend to weak, sickly, run down people. Every bottle guaranteed. Only 50 cents. Sold by J E Katfmann, Druggist. M. C. Butler Out for German. He Thinks the Maryland Ex Senator the Strongest Candidate and that Silvc-r is a Secondary Issue. The Xew York . World says that General and ex United States Senator Matthew C. Butler, of South Carolina, was in the city a few days ago. He gave to a reporter some interesting opinions on Democratic national politics. In bis eighteen years in the Senate General Butler was always classed as a free-silver man. He advised the executive committee of the Democratic silver conference of 1895 to demand "the admission of silver to coinage with gold at 16 to 1." At the Chicago convention he said: "I am a free coinage maD, but I have become slarmed at the extreme radicalism of the silver people. General Butler was asked for his opinion of the statement made by Senator GormaD, of Maryland, which has attracted- such wide comment, and he replied: "I 8gree with Mr. Gorman in the opinion that the 16 to 1 question should not be made its chief issue by the Democratic party next year. "The people of this country have a way of submitting and determining national questions?that is, by fairly presenting them in a Presidential canvass and then taking a vote on them. That process has been complied with in the matter of silver, and the 1G to 1 advocates were defeated. To my mind that is a determination of the question. "As to the assertion of the Republican press that Mr. Gorman is a stalking horse in this efiort to induce j the Democratic national committee j to modify the silver plank in 1000, i you may quote me as sayiDg that in i my judgmtnt Mr. Gorman would i make tie strongest candidate tLe i pirty could nominate for the Presidency. "I say this from my knowledge of i him gained from sixteen year's serj vice with him in the Senate. I have j net always agreed with him; we had J opposite views on the question of the j ratification of the treaty of Paris; Pimnloo - i impiuu "When Nature is overtaxed, she has ler own way of giving notice that assistluee is needed. She does not ask for antil it is impossible to get along without .oils and pimples are an indication that ystein is accumulating impurities which they are an urgent appeal for assistance lot safely be ignored. i' the blood at this of painful boils and :ies are allowed to dinary iilness. and is / lents which are so rag nue. Seattle. Wash , ^ with pimples, which sgM -%ij ^ 1 my face fearfully. ^ tin. S S. S. promptly ,nd now I rejoice in 5yT pj before." $g4 0 " k inlap, of the A. G S. ga. Tenn . writes: 1 carbuncles broke cut upon me. causing inoyance. My blood seemed to be in in. and nothing I took seemed to do ottlcg cf S S. S. cured me completely _ > ? 3 UVfll ^ ?\ri FOR THE BLOOD remedy, because it is purely vegetable ely free front potash and mercury. It; roughly cleanses the system, builds up cures Scrofula, Eczema, Cancer. Rheumang direct to the cause of the trouble and ift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ca. ! but I recognize in him a strong. | I conservative man with biiiliant qual ! j ities as a political leafier. I speak i with absolute absence of personal i partiality, for I am out of politics." "Then you do not believe that the party is practically unanimous in its j demand for the reassertion of the 10 ! to 1 plank of the Chicago platform V : i "I see in the papers that such i3 ; the demand, but where do they llnd ; the proof of it ? I believe it is not i | so. I believe there is a large element j I in the party today which accepts the | ! rpRult nf tho vote in 1896 as conclu- j sive on Ibat question?that other ; issues have arisen which should be j j put forward as the chief articles of ! faith of the party. ''I was a free coinage man net so ! much for the sake of silver as for the i | sake of a larger currency. It seems ! ! to me unreasonable, certainly unwar- j j ranted, to claim that the whole party j ! is so wedded to silver as that j i there can be no modification of the j Chicago platform, even though ccn- ! ditions caliing for that platform have i altered." ! -? Volcanic Eruptions Are grand, but Skin Eruptions rob j life of joy. Bncklen's Arnica Salve, j cures them, also Old, Running and ; Fever Scrc-s, Ulcers, Boils, Felons, j Corns, Warts, Cuts, Bruises, Burns, j Scalds, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, i j Best Pile cure on earlh. Drives out ! j Pains and Aches. Only 25 cts. a j I rini-n Sir.]/I J I VUiO g uctiauwv.v v*. ~j v E. Kaufmann, Druggist. Jonas Had Hard Work. "When Mr. Jonas Howard, aD j , esteemed citizen of Jefiersonville, j Ind , went to "Washington from his I . congressional district several years J . ago, says the Detroit Free Press, he I ] left behind him a devoted and sffec- ( tionate body of constituents in town | ( and county, who fancied that great ! personal benefits would come to | j them through Mr. Howard's power- | ( ful presence in the halls cf national j wisdom. Oue of these rural ad- j herents, a small farmer, with seme j ' momentous political design on his j . mind, followed Mr. Howard to j , Washington, in eager pursuance cf ; . that mysterious object. He returned in about five days, seemingly not much elated. "Well, Bill," a town acquaintance saluted him, "did you see Washing- 1 ( ton and Mr. Howard, and did you j get what you went after?"' ( "Ya as, I seen Washington/' he replied grumpily, "and I seen Jonas; . but Jonas couldn't do nothin' fer me; j he was a bavin" bard work to keep | j from gcttin' tromped on his self."' | . Our baby has been continual'y j troubled with colic and cholera in! ua. i. I idULUIJJ MUUC Li 1 o k/II I LI, ULiU till lUi L I . we could do for him did not seem to j , give more than temporary relief, un- ) , til we tiied Chamberlain's Colic, j . Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. I '3 i Since giving that remedy he has net ; been troubled. We want to give ! ( you this testimonial as an evidence j of our gratitude, not that you need ' it to advertise vour meritorious rem- ; I 1 edy.?G M. Law, Keokuk, Iowa. | For sale bv J. E. Kaufmann. |] ; Ptople who live in glas3 houses j should not be located near the base j ^ ball grounds. | A country editor says: kiAn un- , j kuown man died near town yesterday | without medical attendance." There , i is a whole sermon in that paragraph, i ^ j Mr. and Mrs. B. Lackamp, Eiston, { < j Mo., writes: '"One Minute Cjugh j ( j Cure savtd the life of our litt'e b< y | when nearly dead with croup." J. i i E Kaufmann. [ 1 I . i , The wise man seeks a woman with i j cn independent fortune rather than I 1 ; a fortune with an independent wo i ' | man attacLed. Dinner in a State piison is usually j ! seived in three courses?coarse bread, | coarse meat and coarse vegetables. i . | I Gun shot wounds and powder- ! i j burns, cuts, bruises, sprains, wounds j j from rusty nails, insect stings and : ! ivy poisoning,?quickly healed by j | De Witt's Witch H-:zvl Salve. Pcsi- I j tivtly prevents blood poisoning, ilajwareof ccuriteifeits. 4*DeWitt's" i ; is safe and sure. J. E. Kaufurauu. j Newberry country reports a line ! wheat crop this year. Yolk county . ' has about half a crop. Sill Atp's Letter. Bill Gives an IuteresliDg Talk on Trusts. Atlanta Constitution. Divid saitb "Put not your trust in prince?," and if be had lived in our day be would have added nor in million iires or oil trusts or sugar or whiskey or tobacco or even in cbewing gutn trusts. "Trust in the Lord and do good'' is the only trust he commended. I wonder why these combines are called trust?. I reckon it is because the combiners know it is ;i rascally business and they will have to trust one another to lote fair and divide square, for they can't enforce it by law. These trusts seem to be a modern invention?a North American idea?an idea of our northern brethren to make the rich richer and the poor poorer. The consumers of oil and sugar and such things are not complaining of the price? nor would they complain if they got them for nothing, but these combines are fouuded on selfishness and greed. They disturb the general' welfare, destroy the equilibrium and put the public in constant peril. They can raise the price when they wish to and there is do competition to keep it down. If competition dares to build up against them they can destroy it in a week or a month. They have no heait or pity or kind consideration for their employees, but can reduce their wages or discharge them at their pleasure. They defy the law and biibe courts and lawmakers. Now, it may be possible that the oil trust or the sugar trust sell us those commodities a3 cheap or cheaper than if there were no trust?, but we would rather pay more and have a free fight. It is all a one-sided business and the old maxim that "competition is the life of trade" has been viitually destroyed. We old men have not ceased to lament the destruction of the hundreds of small industries that before the war enriched our State aDd made cur people happy and contented. The time was when there was a wagon shop and* a blacksmith shop at every cross roads?a hatter's shop and two or three shocshops in every village?a tanyard in every settlement and little mills on every creek. But big fhb have swallowed up the little ones. Their products may be cheaper now, but the producers have had to move away or go to planting cotton. Northern capital takes our irou and timber and bides and wool and after paying freight both ways sell back to us what we had been makiDg at home. Time was when I wore shoes that were made in our village?made from leather that was tanned not far away. Time was when I was proud of the wool hat that Ben South made?made while I was looking on. I remember that the whipping post was planted not far from the batter's sbop and bow I ran bcms 012 one occasion to keep from seeiDg a wbite man whipped. "I will meet you at tbe batter's," was a time-bonorcd maxim, but is not now. Time was wben once a week I rode tbe little bay mare to mill tbree miles away and left my ^rist so as to bave a race back with ?ome other boy. And there was a country school on tbe road and tbe boys waylaid us because we bad drred to cry "school butter." This reminds me to say in passing I received a letter the other day from some Alabama school-boys wanting to kcow the origin and meaning of school butter. My father was an old-time school teacher and said that in Lis boybocd the expression was "school better" and signified that "our school is better than jour ?chool," and it always provoked a collision. Some very hungry boys corrupted it into "school butter." But the town boys never go the mill nowadays: the mill comes to them. Home-made shoes and hats aie things of the past?everything comes from the north, and is now made by a trust? and on almost everything we use cr consume there i= a duty or taiifT, and we pay our pait of it to keep up the pensions and fight the Filipinos. Talk about the trusts? that pension trust is the biggest trust of all, and the most corrupt. Hjw the north stands it I cannot understand. Over $2,000,000,000 have already gone that way, tnd John Brown's soul keeps marching KmmmaBmuKm?mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm $tow v Absolutely Makes the food more < ROYAL BAKIVO I I _ ' on. Ohio gets 813,000,0)0 this year, : and Georgia bas to pay l.er quota of ! the 100,000,000 and gets nothing. | Yes, Georgia pays about S-3,000,000 annually through the operations of the tariff. I bought a pocket knife i today for 50 cents that I could have , bougLt in London for half the money. Just think of it, my brethren, ?6,000,j 000 in tariff taxes annually to sup| port a million pensioners, one-tenth j of whom are entitled to it under the i law and nineteenths are irauds. This scandalous trust is backed by the G. A. Rs, and they are backed | by the Republican party, and that party is backed by the cohesive power of public plunder. If this wa9 811 that Georgia paid we would ! be happy, but our State has to pay her part of $890,000,000 more than ! it takes to run the national machine. ' I Altogether we pay not less than j $40,000,000 annually for the privl ilege of remaining in the union? | How is that for oppression? I tell you, it takes a vast amount of patriot! ism for a southern man to love his | government and fight for it. The ! only way to be a patriot is to shut one's eyes and go it blind. It would j not do to think about our grievances, j for they interfere with our digestion. Besides all these troubles there is a long, dry drought upon us, and | our gardens have dried up and the ! mnridv Via?j aivpn r.nfc. and Mia <?nnk ! is sick, and I have to hunt up kindling : wood and fire up the stove before ' sun-up and go to market, and there is a picnic on band tomorrow and ; one of the littTte grand-children got j hurt on the juggling board. It tore the flesh from her ankle, and I al| moat cried: and our dog and another ! dog got to fighting right over an! other little one and knocked her I ! down and scared her into fit?, and I j couldn't run to her as fast as I i wanted to, for my corporosity inter| feres with my alacrity. Besides all ; this, the town is kept in commotion ! about the jug business, and it has got into the courts and into the churchep, and folks have taken sides and friends are alienated, aDd a man i don't dare to go town hardly for j fear of being drawn into it. "A soft j answer turneth away wratb," but i they are not soft in these parts. ! "When a man's ways please the Lord He naaketh even his enemies to be at peace with him," but his ways don't seem to pleaso tbo Lord in Cartersville, for his enemies aro not ; at peace with him. The great question here is not about diinking or selling whiskey, but is about the - right of a man to older a bottle or a jug from Atlanta for his private use | or for medicinal purposes; and its ; agitation and denunciation has made as much talk as the magna charta, and both sides declare they will take it to the supreme court of the United i Sta!e3 o: North America and the i Philippines. Then, again, Hon. Pope Brown, ; the zealous president of the State Agricultural Society, says the State j will not prosper any mere until the ! negroes are sent away or colonized; | but if they won't go, what is to be i done abcut it? He says that education has ruined the negro as a laborer, but how is it to be stopped? The | rich foob at the north keep on dying and leaving money to negro sclools, J -- i 1 i ciDU CUT ja>v-LUUhe:& Attp uu uaaiu^ appropriations for thc-m and taxing us to educate them to oppose our people and to take sides with our j political enemies, who are killing nej groes in Indiana because they want ! work. i i And now the war party want negroes to go to the Phi ippines and fight other negroes. That would be a good deliverance all round, but I i don't delieve they will go to any extent. The nigger is in the wood pile 1 and he is here to stay. Let him stay . as long as he behaves, and if they j won't behave and be good citizens they will suflVr in the fi-r-sh. Our i people are tired food g with them, and are desperately iu earnest. I 1 reckon we can get up excursions and j ta'ie all the bad onts to Indiana and ' drop them. They will go on an exI cursiou. Li Baking Powder Pure Jelicious and wholesome ?OWOER CO., NEW YORK. ?? Mss'.ors Mads Slaves. ' j I Edward W. Eok, Editor Ladies' Home Jour. al. One thing which led me to make I up my mind never to touch liquor j was the ruin I saw it bring to some J of the fiuest minds with which I have I r>.r?me in rnntnnh. T have aeon. oven , J in my few years of prcfestional life, i some of the smartest literary men > dethroned from splendid positions, .owing to nothing else but their indulgence in wine. I have known men with salaries of thousands of dollars a year come to beggary from drink. Only recently there applied to me for any position I could offer him, one of the most brilliant editorial writers in the newspaper profession ?a man who two years ago easily commanded one hundred dollars for a single editorial in his special field. The man became so unreliable from drink that editors are now afraid of his articles, and, although today he can write as forcible editorials as at j any time during his life, he sits in a _11 # r ? !i! ceiiar in one 01 our cuiea wrurag newspaper wrappers at one dollar a thousand. That is one instance of several that I could relate. I do not hold ray fiiend up as a "terrible example". He is but one of a type of men who convinced me, and may convince others, that a clear mind and liquor do not go together. I know it is said when one brings up such an instance as this: "0, well, that man drank to excess. One glass will not hurt any one." How do i these people know that it will not? One drop of kerosene has been known to throw into flame an almost hopeless fire, and one glass of liquor may fan into flame a smoldering spark hidden away wbere~we never thought it existed. The spark may be there, and it may not bo. "Why take the risk? Liquor will never do a healthy boy or young man the least particle of good: it may do him harm. A man who wili wittingly tempt a youDg man whom he knows has a principle against liquor is a man for whom the halter is too good. TbeD, as I looked around and came 4a 1 * %?. a m a A /-. f ^ /> A ? /I t 1 . l * ? ry n tu nuun luuiu ui ptrupit: tiuu luiu^r, I found the always unanswerable argument in favor of the young man s absteueucc?that is, the most successj ful men in America today are those ; who never lift a wine glass to their lips. Becoming interested in this fact, I had the curiosity to inquire into it; I found that of the twentyeight leading business men in the country, whose name I selected at random, twenty two never touched a drop of wine. I made, up my mind that there was some reason for this. If liquor brought safe pleasure, why did these men abstain from u? If, as some say, it is a stimulant to a busy man, wby'do not these men, directing the largest business interests in this country, resort to it? And when I say that these were the men whose opinions in great business matters were accepted by the leading concerns of the woild, I concluded that their judgment in the use of liquor would satisfy me. If their judgment in business matters could command the respect and attention of the leaders of trade on both sides r\f fVio coa fVit.ii- tVopiainn <?<; fn flip I use of liquor was not apt to be wrong. Ladies Can Wear Sho9s 1 ? ^ : j One size smaller after using Allen's j j Foot-Eise, a powder to be shaken ] | into the shoes. It makes tight or ( j new shoesfeel ea6j; gives instant re| lief to corns and bunions. It's the , | greatest comfort discovery. Allen's f Foot-Ease is a certain cure for in- , growing nails, sweating, hot, aching feet. Trial package free. Sold by | druggists, grocers, shoe stores and | general storekeepers everywhere. ; By mail for 25 cts. in stamps. Ad; diess Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, ; New York. Advice is about the only thing that ! you can offer some people that they I won't take. f ADVERTISING RATES. Advertisements will bo inserted at the rate ol 7"> cents per square of one inch s; ace for first insertion, and 50 cents per inch for each subsequent insertion. Liberal contracts made with those wishing to advertise for three, six and twelve months. Notices in the local column 5 cents per line each insertion. Obitnaries charged for at the rate of one cent a word, wten they exoeed 100 words. Marriage notices inserted free. Address G. M. BARMAN, Editor and Publisher. A Trade Getter. We have lost trade by being out of Ramon's Liver Pills and Tonic Pellets. We /tin coMnm offlv e aisc rv- 4a 4<*1?a . tJUVUi C ? VA 1UUUI V Cfc tUOlUUiCl iu UkAU % any other us a substitute for them when they have once tiicd Ramon's.?Justice ?t F?eteher, Crossville. Ala. For sale by G. M. Ilarman and J E. Kaul'mann. Th? clycl.ne can raise anything on a farm except a mortgege. A diamond of the first water is one that has never be in "soak." Sour Stomach is one of the first symptoms of a coming Bilious attack. Cure it with a few doses of I)r. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine. Nothing goes as far with a woman as a little masculine remorse. Every man is more or less of a gossip but he hates to admit it. A steak is not the more costly for beiDg rare. The Dangers of a Malarial Atmosphere may bs averted by occasionally taking Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine. Some men have such happy dispositions that they never amount to much. Its a poor poultry yard that doesn't contain more than three feet. To arouse a Dormant Liver and secure permanent regularity of the Bowels, use Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine. The secret of success is constancy of purpose. Silence is doubly golden when you can't think of a satisfactory answer. E. F. Kenemur, Pickens, S. C., write*: Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine has for 10 years greatly benefited me and many others. I think it a better medicine than Black Draught; use it in preference as it is * milder, yet more efficient. Fools never rush in where theatrical angels fear to tread. The man who breaks a law of nature mocks God. ? Few persons have courage to appear as good as they really are. The world would be gloomy indeed were there do light in the dark picture of ill health. Get rid of your kidney trouble by using Dr. Sawyer's Ukatine. J. E. Kaufmann. Its a poor base ball player that doesn't make a chaDge of base occasionally. Its some consolation to find yourQolf of Ilia linttnm r\f (ha lurldflp Ovii c*u IUV WVblVUJ V* *|WV when it breaks. The popularity of Dr. Sawyer's Ukatine as a Kidney cure is far reaching, a9 it permanently cures all Kidney disorders and brings you back to the realm of perfect health that insures true happiness. J. E. Kaufmann. The child is wiser in his simplicity than tho philosopher in his wisdom. Many a man has lost a lot of money through the whole in the top of his pocket. Cooling and spotbing in its effects you will find Dr. Sawyer's Arnica and "Witch Hazel Sake for eczema, piles, hivc-e, burns and cuts. J. E. Kaufmann. When the drop curtain goes down men go out aud put on auother clrop. A tired, sleepy, bilious ill is cured by Dr. Sawyer's Little Wide Awake Pills. Little Wide Awake Pills regulate the stomach and liver and fill the bill. J. E Kaufmaun. The swallow has a larger mouth in proportion to its size than any other bird. You can't cure dyspepsia by dieting. Eat good, wholesome food, and plenty of it.?Kodol Dyspepsia Cure digests food without aid from the stomach, and is made to cure. J E. Kaufmann. About the only difference between a doctor and a physician is in the size of their bills. A man either gives according to his means or according to his meanness. k Thomas Rhoads, Centerfield, O.j writes: "I suffered from piles seven or eight years. No remedy gave me relief until DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve, less than a box of which permanently cured me." Soothing, iipfllinf. nerfectlv harmless. Beware 0 7 L jf counterfeits. J. E. Kaufmann. A cynical bachelor says Adam's wife was called Eve because when she appeared his day of happiness was at an end. It is an easy matter for some real sstats dealers to make mountains of mole hills. k I have used Chamberlain's Cough Remedy in my family for years end always with good results," says Mr. \Y. 13. Cooper of El Rio, Cal. "Fur email children we find it especially effective." For sale by J. E. Kaufmann.