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r ==?== pumotous ?cjjartiue?t. THE WIPE'S STRIKE. The walking delegate never tired of talking of the strike. He held that it was justifiable if ever a strike was, and he was prepared to demonstrate that it was perfectly proper to strike to secure any desired result. He so told his wife, and she seemed to agree with him. She said it seemed to be the easiest way of enforcing a demand. And that night when he came home he found that the table was not set. "I want a new dress," she said,- when he asked what the trouble was. "I know. You've been bothering me for that dress for a month," he said, "hut how about supper ?" "There isn't any," she replied. "This is a strike." "A strike ?" "Yes, a general tie-up. I've been trying to secure a peaceable settlement of this trouble for some time, but now I mean to enforce my rights." "Mary do you dare" ? "Oh, don't talk to me that way! If I can't get you to arbitrate, why, I've got to strike. I don't care if it does block the wheels of trade." "But, Mary, you don't understand." "Oh, yes, I do. I've made my demands, and they've been refused. I've asked arbitration with a view to compromise and that has also been refused. A strike is all that there is left, and I've struck." "But your demands are unreasonable." "I don't think they are." "You're no judge." "You're the judge of your own demands when you strike, and I'm just as good a judge ' as you are when I want something. It's no use talking. The strike is on." She folded her arms in a determined way, and he subsided. It was perhaps half an hour later when he looked up and said : "Mary, is the strike still on ?" "It is still on," she replied. "Aren't you hungry ?" "No. I saw that I had something in the treasury before the strike was ordered." "Meaning .the pantry ?" he asked. "Meaning the pantry," she returned. "I believe I'll get a bite," he said. "It's locked," she replied. "The reserve is to be used simply to keep the strike going. You can't touch the strike's resources." "Be careful, Mary," he said warningly. "If I shut off the cash" She laughed and nodded towards the pantry. "I can stick it out a week," she returned. Five or ten minutes later he proposed that they compromise on the basis of $10. "Twenty," she replied, firmly. "But that means ruin," he protested. "I cant afford it." "That's your business," she answered. "I offered to arbitrate once." It was 10 o'clock that night when he finally gave in, and somehow he felt that he had experienced a new phase of the strike business. It looked different from the other side of the fence.?Detroit Free Press. - He Was Thinking.?a zealous advocate of missions was pleading his cause before the inmates of a large lunatic asylum, says The Churchman. The patients heard him with great interest. He told how sad heathenism was in many ways?how sometimes parents cast their little children into the river to be eaten by crocodiles, and sometimes children cast out their aged parents. ??As he spoke, one man was moved to a flood of tears. The function over, the speaker expressed a desire to see this person, and he was brought. "You seemed much interested in my address." "Yes, very much interested." "And even a little touched by what I Raid." "Very deeply touched," said the patient, sobbing. "May I ask what it was that so came home to you, my friend ?" "I was thinking"?then the patient's utterance was arrested by violent emotion?"I was thinking" again he sobbed heavily? "what ajpky it was that your parents had notAbr&wn you out to be eaten by a crocodile when you were an infant." The "Green Hand."?An Eastern captain of a coasting vessel tells a remarkable story of a "green hand," an Irishman whom, he employed at a pinch. "We were under way," said the captain, "I had a mind to try him on the lookout, after we struck clear water, as he couldn't tell a halliard from a sheet line. 'Long about dark I staid on deck, the mate at the wheel. Pretty soon he comes aft and says: " 'There's something forenist this boat, sorr.' " 'What is it?' I says. " 'I don't know, sorr,' says the man. " 'Well, go back and find out and report,' I says then ; and back he goes. m?^ "A few minutes and back he comes aft. <1 don't know what it is yet,' he says, 'but it's coming this way, and we can find out for sure in a little while.' " 'You go for'ard, and don't come back till you know what it is,' said I, getting mad. "He goes up again, but is back again in a minute and all smiling. '"Well?" says I. ?' " 'If you please, sorr, I don't know for sure what it is,' says he, 'but whatever it is, it has a red light and a green light, and I think it must be drug-sthore.'" An actor now famous made his first appearance on the stage in a provincial city. He was young and nervous, and failed dismallv in the Dart he was trying: to present, and soon found himself the target for an assortment of disagreeable bric-a-brac. One of his disgusted auditors flung a cabbagehead at him. As it fell on the stage the actor picket i( up, and stepped forward to the footlights. He raised his hand to command silence, and pointing to the cabbage-head, said : "Ladies and gentlemen, I expected to please you with my acting, but I confess I did not expect any one in the audience would lose his head over it." He was allowed to proceed without further molestation. An English clergyman recently officiated for a brother clergyman. Being anxious i to know what impression he had made, he asked the clerk: "Was my discourse pitched too-high a key ? I hope I did not shoot over the heads of the people." "No, you ?1a J -> 'J ilWoD if o cuif qKId UlUll L UU lllutj 911. II OJ iv u uu.vuv.v theme?" asked the clergyman. "Yesit was about right." "Was it too long?" "No; but it was long enough." "I am glad of that, for, to tell you the truth, the other day, as I was getting this sermon ready, my dog destroyed four or five pages, and that made it much shorter." "Oh, sir," said the clerk, "could you let our vicar have a pup o' that 'ere dog ?" \ t6T Bride (after the return from their bridal tour)?I see by this medical work that a man requires eight hours sleep and a woman ten. Bridegroom?Yes, I've read that some _ where myself. Bride?How nice! You can get up every morning and have the fire made and the breakfast ready before it is time for me to get up. 1ST "Your sweetheart is rather pretty, Jones, but I think her nose rather detracts j from her beauty. It is characterless and has perhaps too large a bridge to be attractive." "H'm ! You may be right. There is one j excellent feature about her nose that yours j doesn't possess." "Indeed! What is that ?" "It never pokes itself into other people's! business." t&~ An ignorant old gentleman who lives! near the coast of Maine would pretend that! he knew every person whom any of his j neighbors ever chanced to mention. One j time a number of men in a country store j wished to have some fun with him, so they i said : "Metduseian was ratner an uiu man, i wasn't he ?" "0, yes," answered the man, "I chopped | wood with him all last winter." The Regular Programme.?Little Ma- j bel?If you don't stop, I'll tell mamma, and she'll tell papa, and then papa will whip you. Little Johnny ?Then I'll cry, and then i grandma will give me some candy, and I won't give you any. IpsccHatjeons ?caHiug. HOW A GERMAN TRAIN IS STARTED. According to The Railroad Review, an official of the Pittsburg and Lake Erie railroad recently returned from Europe, referring to railway practice in Germany, says: "The roadbeds are about perfect, while the stations are simply magnificent, even in the most insignificant places being very fine. The roadbeds are quite rigid, but this is mainly due to the iron and steel cross-ties that are used. The locomotives are fine pieces of mechanism, but their capacity is scarcely equal to those on this side of the Atlantic. The entire passenger equipment is always behind that in use here. Their trains, however, run like clockwork, and the connections are perfect. The method of starting trains is altogether unique and peculiar, and will cause local agents and trainmen to smile. The agent is an imposing, dignified and solemn-looking official, attired in elaborate uniform, literally gilt-edged, and he acts as master of ceremonies on the imposing occasion. When the train arrives at a station he is standing bolt upright in almost military position, and he is on dress parade. One minute before the train starts he reaches up and taps a gong three times. Then a strange scene takes place, and it would seem that he had pressed a button, for at the last tap the conductor, wno nas been at the rear car, comes galloping along the entire length of the platform, shouting in German the name of every station the train will stop at. When the engine is reached he wheels about, and on his return closes and locks the car doors, darts back to the van to his perch on the rear car, whistles thrice on a tin or metal whistle, which is instantly repeated by the brakeman at the front end, and the train starts. The Country Boy.?We have spent much of the last thirty-four years in farmers' homes, and have seen that boy?the country lad as he is. He rises early; he is acquainted with and interested in all the stock and poultry; he knows all the country round; he is acquainted with every bug and worm, bird and animal, tree and flower, weed and cereal on the farm. He has a good appetite and good digestion, and his sleep is sweet and refreshing. He read* thoughtfully the great book of nature, whose leaves open before him day by day. He loves his father and mother and calls them such, and he loves his sweetheart as no town boy does, and is loved in turn by her as no town boy is. He works hard all day and when night comes he enjoys a frolic with a healthful zest, and then lies down to peaceful dreams. "He grows to man's estate with the rich heritage of good health, a clean, pure character, industrial habits, a mind well stored with practical knowledge, gained by the fireside and the reading of good books and newspapers, affectionate and trusting in his disposition, polite and courteous though perhaps somewhat awkward in his manners, and every way well equipped for the battle of life. He knows nothing of the follies and vices, the mockery and hollowness so often seen in city life. He is a grown up man, and the chief places in business iu the city and in the nation come into his possession. He has the stuff in him that qualifies him under guidance for eminent statesmanship, for military renown, for professional success, for judicial distinction and for the grandest citizenship. The grandest men of our nation have been, and the grandest of the future will be found among the country hnvc nf nnr land. He mav at times think his country home plain and unattractive, his life one of drudgery and hum-drum, and may at times envy the town boy and his more exciting life and opportunities, but let him not worry. He has a far richer heritage, and the future will be a satisfactory revelation to him. God bless the country boy! He is the hope of the nation.?Dr. Kennedy. Baby and Collie.?A gentlemen in southern Connecticut not along ago brought home a collie dog, which after the fashion of its kind, soon made itself one of the family, and assumed special responsibilities in connec- j tion with the youngest child, a little girl j three years of age. One day the gentleman, returning from a I drive, as he neared his house noticed the dog in a pasture separated from the road by a stone wall. From behind this wall the collie would spring up, bark, and then jump down again, constantly repeating the performance. The man left his horse and went to the spot. There he found his little girl seated on a stone, with the collie keeping guard beside her. The intelligent animal wagged his tail and barked bis delight at seeing his master. In the light snow the path taken by the i child and dog could be plainly seen, and as i the father traced it back he saw where the little girl had walked several times around an open well in the pasture. Close to the brink were prints of the baby shoes, but still closer, on the very -edge of the well, were the tracks of the collie, which had evidently kept between her and the well. The faithful creature seemed to know that; upon lum lay tne responsiDiniy 01 Keepiug the child from a terrible death. Animals in the Rain.?Horses and cattle never look so miserable as when standing exposed to cold and driving rain. Every field in which cattle are turned loose should have some rude shelter provided, however rough and hardy the stock. If left to themselves in a state of nature they would travel miles to some well-known bank or thicket, i which would at least give cover against the I wind. Shut up between four hedges, they : are denied alike the aid of human fore-: thought and of their own instinct. Bewick's vignettes of old horses or unhappy donkeys, huddled together in driving 1 showers on some bleak common, express a , vast amount of animal misery in au iuch of i woodcut. It seems strange that no animal, | unless it be the squirrel, seems to build itself i a shelter with the express object of keeping off the rain, which they all so much dis- J like. Monkeys are miserable in wet, and could easily build shelters if they had the sense to do so. "As the creatures hop disconsolate-! ly along in the rain," writes Mr. Kippling, | in his "Beast and Man in India," "or crouch j on branches, with dripping back set against j the tree trunk as shelter from a driving: storm, they have the air of being very sorry for themselves." But even the orang-outang,1 which builds a small platform in the trees on ; which to sleep at night, never seems to think 1 of a roof, though the Dyaks say that when it is verv wet it covers itself with the leaves 1 of the pandanus, a large fern. t ^ t Sleepng Her Life Away.?The German ' village of Grambe is greatly excited over j a case of persistent somnolency in the person : of the daughter of one of the town officials. The girl, a pretty, slender child of some 13 ' years of age, has been in a continual sleep ! ever since the second week in May?over 1 nine months?and even now does not show ! the least trace of arousing from her protract- j ed slumber. During the first week of her enforced sleep the family seemed grieved to j the verge of distraction and all was mourn-! ing in the house where the child lay in the j embrance of "death's twin brother." After i a while, however, when it was noticed that I she would swallow liquid nourishment, their I fears for her safety seemed to abate to a cer-1 tain degree, and now, after a lapse of more j than half a year, the family go about their j daily labors as if the little maid was really ! dead and half forgotten. Highest medical authorities have been consulted, but all ef- j forts to keep her awake have resulted in to-1 tal failures. Some Misnamed Drugs.?Some misnom-' ers of the drug store : Oil of vitrol is not an oil. Copperas is an iron salt ana contains 110 copper. Salts of lemon has nothing to i do with a lemon, but it is a salt of extremely poisonous oxalic acid. Soda water contains j no soda. Sulphuric ether contains 110 sul- j pliur. Sugar of lead has nothing to do with i lead, nor has cream of tarter anything to do with cream. Oxygen means the "acid gen-! erator," but hydrogen is really the essential j element, and many acids contain oxygen.! German silver contains 110 silver, and black lead contains 110 lead. Berbine is usually i made from hodrastis canadensis. Wormseed ! is unexpanded Mower buds. Milk of lime has J no milk. Quicksilver is purely mercury. Oil of origanum is made from thyme, and j not from origanum.?St. Louis I'ost-Dis- j patch. t?iF Along a stretch of four hundred miles; of one railroad in Texas not a drop of intox-1 icating liquor can be obtained. ^austtfc (gathering*. 8ST The four great ocean routes employ i 1,100 steamships. BST The French still fight an average of ' 4,000 duels a year. 9@T It never takes a fool but a few minutes to tell all he knows. j BST Furnished flats, with pianos built into the walls, are the latest. ( t@t Every State in Mexico will be repre- ] sented at the World's Fair. 86T" Rosin and tallow make a good cover- < ing for wounds in the trees. j 8&~ A revolver has been invented that shoots seven times in a second. i 8?* The leaf of the banana is usually six * feet long by two feet wide. \ 8?" The city of London has 14,000 policemen and 14,000 grog-shops. fl?"The most expensive thing that can happen to you is to be wrong. J6T North Dakota has a newspaper published in the Sioux language. &8T Lord Alfred Tennyson is the 1173rd person buried in Westminster Abbey. 8S?" Too much pruning is as bad as too little, and both extremes should be avoided. Some of Kansas' empty jails are at present being used to store the surplus wheat. 88T" Every president of the United States so far has either been a lawyer, a soldier, or both. fiST" No man has any right to wish he had never been born. Let other people do that for him. SST One of the best remedies for the moulding or rotting of grapes is to make the trellises higher. B6T* A distinguished writer says, "It is not how long but how much we live which gives life its true value. Some people are never satisfied. The man who finds fault with August heat will complain of cold in February. 8ST Paul B. DuChaillu says that while he * was in Africa he had 22,000 opportunities to t marry, and declined them all. I 8ST If the cat had wings, no birds would J be left in the air. If everyone had what he ' is wishing, who would have anything? 1 fi?" The Revised German Bible has been ? completed. For nearly thirty years critics 1 and scholars have been at work on it. j 8?" School teacher?Why were the prison- t ers who were executed called "poor sinners ?" Scholar?Because rich sinners get otr. ; 8@~ It is estimated that the cemeteries of London cover an aggregate area of 2,000 ? acres, the value of which is not less than ; $10,000,000. e JV8T To do much good and make but little t noise is a singular thing. Some say much t but do nothing; but Christians should do f much and say nothing. f WGT When Shakespeare wrote his plays there i were not in all the world as many English J speaking people as there are now in New ] York and New Jersey. i 8?* There are some large families in Media, 1 Penn. Samuel Field has twenty-eight ciiu- * dren ; Joseph Chandler twenty-five; James Barrett sixteen, and William Wright fifteen. AST A recent court decision in England gives a man a right to sue the preacher when he makes the man's wife go to church instead of staying at home and cooking his dinner. 8?* The finest quality of Gautemala coffee is consumed by England and Germany, the inferior kinds and what may be called the "sweepings" being exported to the United States. 86?" Notwithstanding the fact that the Western Union Telegraph company has over 739,000 miles of wire and nearly 21,000 offices, it opens an average of GOO new offices annually. 8? "I wish I was a little fish," said Jack. "Papa says the ocean is full of currents, an' I like currauts better than any other kind of fruit 'cept bananas, apples, oranges and sweet potatoes." S&F At Stockton-in-the-Forest, Yorkshire England, is apiece of land called "Petticoat Hole," and it is held on the condition of providing a poor woman of the place every year with a new petticoat. 8?* It is said that banana juice makes a first-class indelible ink. A spot on a white shirt from a dead-ripe banana is marked forever, and the juice from bananas thoroughly decayed is a bright, clear carmine. 8?" Fond Mother?Well, Harold, how are you succeeding at college? Harold?The professor says I'm getting up in figures. "Indeed." "Yes; I used to be seventh in my class, and now I stand sixteenth. I'm pushing on." 8?" The estimated worth of the United States?that is, the value of all lands, ? buildings, railways, etc.?is put at $64,000,000,000. The amount of money of all kinds jr is estimated by the secretary of the treasury I ct to be $2,108,130,092. ' B?y Little Dot?I wish I was a boy. Little Dick?Why? Little Dot?'Cause a girl ? always feels so wicked when she does anything wrong, an' a boy don't. Boys just goes right along and has a good time. ?6y There will be 142 new faces in the c next congress to greet Speaker Crisp when he calls them to order. Of this number | seventy will he Democrats, and sixty-nine j will be Republicans, while three will be from 9 the Third party. S&- Visitor?What bright eyes you have, i my little man. You have plenty of sleep I! i presume. "Yes'in. Mamma makes me go 11 to bed every night at eight o'clock." "So j t you will keep strong and healthy ?" "No'm.; i So she can mend my pants." i ^ 8&~ The cities that claim to be the birth- j t place of Columbus outnumber those ancient j * cities that claimed Homer?Italy, England, c Ireland and Spain all having their advo- j 1 cates. Only two or three, however, insist | <1 that they have his remains. 8ST The Arabs claim that Eve's tomb is at j Jiddah, the seaport of Mecca. The temple, J1 with a palm growing out of the solid stone j e roof (a curiosity which is of itself a wonder j1 the of Orient) is supposed to mark the last, resting place of the lirst woman. ! * Bay According to the census report, the s whole number of males in the United States j j is 32,(K57,8S0 and the whole number of fe- c males 30,554,370. For the United States as : a a whole, therefore, there were for every 100,- J j, 000 males 95,280 females in 1890. ( BSy Small Son?I know what I'll be when [ c 1 grow up, I'm going to be a great inventor, i s Papa?That's encourageing, certainly, what a makes you think you have inventive genius? j c Small Son?Why, I wanted to take a screw J i out, and I couldn't find any screwdriver, and u so I unscrewed it out with your razor. j a Boy An ill-paid minister went to his deacon j J to solicit an increase of salary. "Salary!" j j said the deacon ; "I thought you worked for;1 souls?" "Soldo," replied the poor man, r "but I cannot eat souls. And, if I could it j would take a good many souls of your size J to make a dish !" 1 BST The other day a hugging bee was giv-1 en for the benefit of a church in Arizona,! ^ and it was 15 cents a hug. A man, while j blindfolded, hugged his own wife for several j' minutes. When he found out who she was ?; * 1 1 .1 1^,1 LL, 1- i ne goi mau ami ueuiunueu ma ? # ktinoi back. 8&" The Russians call the "grip" Chinese j t catarrh, the Germans call it the Russian i pest, the Italians name it the German (lis-jt ease, the French call it the Italian fever, anil the Spanish catarrh. The Italians in- J vented the term "influenza" in the seven-: teenth century, and attributed the disease to 1 the influence of certain planets. i " ?aF* The telephone has appeared at Rou-1 mania, but it is not yet a success, because of an oflicial order that, when a person desires J to telephone to another city, he must arrange with his correspondent to be at the in- j strument at a fixed hour and minute. The j rule is said to be strictly enforced. 8*2?" A surprising answer was elicited at a recent examination at a board school in Ron- j don. "Who was David ?" asked the inspee-' tor. "King of Israel, and the son of Jesse," j replied a bright boy. "Who was Jesse?"! continued the inspector. "The Flower of Dunblane," said the scholar after a slight pause. ?aTA "jungle man" was recently caught! in China and is now being exhibited in Cey- 1 Ion. The creature stands two feet in height,1 has a head and a face like a monkey and a body which, but for its diininuitivc size, ap- j pears to be similar to that of a human being., The hands and feet are perfect. The missing j link is about four years old, and is attract- b ing a great deal of attention. ?hc (fiivnt audi fireside. Keep Down the Acreage.?If the cotton planters of the South can he so fortunate this year as not to produce more than seven million bales of cotton, they will he on the high road to fortune. The crop of last year fell short of year before over two million hales. While this may be regarded as a misfortune by some people, we have no loubt that it will prove a blessing. Hud last year's crop approximated that of the pear before, cotton would now be selling at six cents. This price would have impovershed the South and ruined our people. We have had a narrow escape from bank*upty. Our planters?forced by the starvation prices that prevailed last season?were compelled to curtail the cotton acreage. They planted more grain and other food ;rops. The harvests were good. The en"orced cotton acreage and the larger yield )f other crops have resulted advantageously, [f the same wise policy is pursued this year, he price of cotton will be ten cents and our armers will be free from debt. Like the grain growers of the West, the :otton farmers of the South have been impoverished by over-production. Thisshould ie avoided. We know that our Alliance riends maintain that it is not over-producion but under-consumption that has caused die decline in the price of wheat and corn and cotton. But the fact that a nine million bale crop sold as low as Gi cents, and that a possible seven million bale crop has sold as high as ;en cents would seem to conclude the argument in favor of the theory that over-proluction brings starvation prices. In any event, the cotton producer will make no mistake next spring, if he does not 1 i / 1:? ? lepan iroin HJC puney [nmucu at uic w.- j jinning of last year. The more grain and j bod crops the South produces this year, | he more independent will our farmers be lext fall.?Augusta Chronicle. Treatment ok Rheumatism.?It seems is if everybody is complaining of rheumaism nowadays, young and old, rich and ioor. Science, ever ready with something iew to alleviate the sufferings of mankind, las not failed in this direction, and salol is low the remedy extensively used for heumatism. The Medical Times and Regsler says: "Therapeutically the anodyne iroperty of salol is exhibited in the cases hat are rheumatic in source." The first ridmphs of salol were won in the treatment if acute rheumatism, excelling as it apparmtly does, all other remedies in its power to ibate and lessen fever. If all the conditions be propitious, by the md of the second and third day fever and oint pain and swelling will have disappear;d. Salol has a further use, in that it is aniseptic, and excellent results have been obained from it when used as a disinfectant or the bowels in case of cholera, typhoid ever, etc. In connection with the cure of heumatism, it may be stated that of late :ears massage treatment has found great avor with rheumatic patients. In praeticng massage, the fingers are usually moistcn:d with some sort of oily preparation, and or this purpose nothing better can be used han lanoline. Many physicians consider his vastly preferable to vaseline, or any >ther preparation, and its use has invaiably been attended with the greatest suc;ess. Intensive Farming.?By request, says he Eufaula Bulletin, we publish the followng extract from a letter from Mr. Jno. H. )ent, formerly of this county, but now of ?ave Spring, Ga., to Mr. B. B. Fields: "Last year I rented out my farm, except tO acres to a man in this neighbornood. ie cultivated 110 acres, I 30 acres; Ion he intensive system, he on the extensive; le ran five plows, I two, and I made more in 30 acres than lie did on 110; in fact it | iroke him. He liad to sell all his mules ind crop, which did not pay him out of debt. >Ve both worked a splendid set of hands; all vhite men and boys. He paid his hands ifteen dollars per month and boarded hem, and had to buy all his corn, meat and lay. I paid my hands a part of the crop, hey boarded themselves, and I selling them heir provisions of ray own raising. Now Tou see the difference where one had to buy ill the provisions he used and pay money vages, and the other farmed on the share ystem and had not to pay anything out for bod supplies. My hands and myself both lid well at it. So you see the results of the yo systems practically demonstrated. We loth had the same quality of land and the ame seasons. I manured my 30 acres with aanure of my own making, out of my own ot, while he bought commercial manures or his 110 acres." Salt as Fertilizer.?The Massachuetts Agricultural society has arrived at the ollowing conclusions in regard to the manuial value of salt: That salt has the property >f hastening the maturing of all grain crops; hat wheat on salted land will ripen six to en days earlier than on unsaltcd land, all ither conditions being equal, that it increases j he yield from twenty-five to fifty per cent.; hat it stiffens the straw and preyents rust j ind smut; that it checks, if it does not enirely prevent the ravages of the chinch bug, ind that there is no danger of a man's locket permitting him to put too much salt j ipon his land, as two barrels per acre will I njure no grain crop. The best time to sow ; alt is in the spring, and it ought to be the i irst thing done on either fall or spring plow- j ng, as all after stirring of the land assists in j ts equal distribution through the soil. The' >est and easiest method of sowing salt, in he absence of a machine for that purpose, s to sow it from out the rear end of aj vagon, the sower using both hands while ' he team is moving at a slow walk. In this j vay thirty to forty acres can be sowed in me day. The quantity used may be from oO to 300 pounds per acre, but the larger ! |uantity is the better. Wkaiuxc Shoes Alternately.?It is i rue economy for every person to have sev- j ral pairs of shoes, and to wear them alter-, lately. In the first place, by so doing, lorns and other soreness of the members nay be to a considerable degree avoided. These come from continuous friction or prosure at a certain point, and, as no two pair ?f shoes "bear" 011 the feet quite alike, the ihange breaks up the community and obviites or prevents the unpleasant result. It is tlso better for the shoes themselves, says Jood Housekeeping. Do not wear them in irdinary weather, if the best service is de-1 ired, more than three or four days, or> i week at most, before giving them a: :hance to become thoroughly dry. Many,, f not most feet emit sufficient moisture to ill'ect the shoe, giving it the sticky, unpleas-1 int feeling which is so familiar, but to which j ve not often give a second thought. Con-, rast this feeling with that of a shoe which ; las been standing unused for a week or a 1011th. and notice how grateful the feeling , )f thorough dryness in the last named, j 'erlmprS the reader never thought of that be are. EttF" It is a mistake to think tluit peach j rees will do best on a thin soil; if the trees' ire to make a vigorous growth and bear ;ood fruit, the soil must he reasonably ich. Jfeif The daily use of fruit helps materially 0 make the people independent of the doctor, tut the cheapest and best fruit is that grown n the farm. fifeZf Keep all dead or faulty limbs out of he fruit trees. Ifflt m i &AKIN6 ! POWDER I Absolutely Pure. A cream of tartar linking powder. Highest of all 1 leavening strength.?Latest I'. S. Government, 'ood Report. Koyai. 1!akisci l'owntit Co., lllii Wall St.. N. Y. j Best Cere For J All disorders of the Throat and Lungs is Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. It has no equal as a cough-cure. Bronchitis "When I was a boy, I had a bronchial trouble of such a persistent and stubborn character, that the doctor pronounced it incurable with ordinary remedies, but recommended me to try Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. I did so, and one bottle cured me. For the last fifteen years, I have used this preparation with good effect whenever I take a bad cold, and I know of numbers of people who keep it in the house all the time, not considering Jt safe to be without it."? J. C. Woodson, P. M., Forest Hill,W.Va. Cough "For more than twenty-five years, I was a sufferer from lung trouble, at tended with coughing so severe at times as to cause hemorrhage, the paroxysms frequently lasting three or four hours. 1 was induced to try Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and after taking four bottles, was thoroughly cured." ?Franz Hoffman, Clay Centre, Kans. La Grippe "Last spring I was taken down with la grippe. At times I was completely prostrated, and so difficult was my breathing that my breast seemed as if confined in an iron cage. I procured a bottle of Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, and no sooner had I began taking it than relief followed. I could not believe that the effect would be so rapid and the cure so complete."?W. H. Williams, Cook City, S. Dak. AYER'S Cherry Pectoral Prepared by Dr. J. C. Aver & Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all Druggists. Price $1; six bottles, $5. Promptto act, sureto cure YOU CAN SAVE FROM S20.00 TO $35.00. DURING the past two years we have sold more than one hundred sewing machines. To the best of our knowledge and belief every one of these machines are giving satisfaction. The person who buys a machine from us does not have to pay for the services and expenses of a manager of agencies, general agents, traveling salesmen, office rent, clerk hire, etc., but gets a machine just as good in every particular as those sold through agents, shipped direct from the factory to the purchaser at a price that leaves all j of the extra expenses off". Every machine we j sell is guaranteed for five years, and if it is not sat-' isfactory after TWENTY days' trial, it can be returned to the manufacturers and they will pay the freight both ways, and every cent paid, including postage, will be refunded. If you want to save from $20 to $.15 you should buy your j machine, if you need one, from Tin-: Knquirkr. We sell four different styles. We could print two columns or more of testimonials from those who have bought machines of us, but the following will show what our friends think of our "cheap" machines: IIoiiNsnoito, S. ('., April 11, 1H92. Mit. L. M. Grist, Yorkvillc, S. U.: Dear Sir? I received Machine all right the 2nd day of February. Am well pleased with both the Machine and Thk Enquirer, and don't i tunic i coum uo i without tlicm. Respectfully, Mas. Ci.ara A. I,o\vry. Eliott'n, S. March 21,1892. Mr. L. M. Grist, Yorkville, S. C: Rear Sir? The Sewing Machine ordered from you arrived on New Year's Day, and we are entirely pleased with it. It is everything that is claimed for it. Tin-: Enquirer arrives promptly every week and its visits are heartily enjoyed. Yours Truly, J. R. Parnell. G rover, N. t'., March 2'!, 1892. Mr. L. M. Grist, Yorkville, S. C.: Dear Sir? I take pleasure in adding my testimony as to the value of the Chicago Singer Sewing Machine which I bought of you last September, alter a thorough test. It gives perfect satisfaction and I would advise all who want a machine to buy the Chicago Singer. Mrs. E. 11. McSwain. Send for illustrated circular giving a detailed description of each style of machine, and other information that will interest those who contemplate buying. L. M. GRIST, Yorkville, S. C'. RICHMOND AND^MNVILLE R. R. CO. ?s F. W. Huidekoper and Reuben Foster, Receivers. SOUTH CAROLINA DIVISION, ClONDENSEDScliedule in effect. November 20th, 1892. > Trains run by 75th Meridian time: south bound. | No. 9. | No. 87* | No. 11. stations. Daily, i Daily, i Daily. LvNew York 12 15ngt 4 80pm 4 80 pm Lv Philadelphia It 50 am (i 55 pm 0 55 pin Lv Baltimore (J 50am 9 20 pm' 9 20 pin Lv Washington 8 :50 am 10 48 pin 11 00 pin Lv Richmond 12 45 pm 12 50am 12 50 am Lv Greensboro K 10 pin 0 59am 9 80 am Lv Salisbury 9 .55pm 8 Dam 11 14am Ar at Charlotte 11 10 pm 9 25 am 12 40 pm Lv Charlotte 11 80 pin 9 85am, Lv Plneville 12 00am 9 50am Lv Fort Mill 12 28am 10 OS am Lv Rock Hill. 12 58am 10 2:1am! Lv Chester 2 02 am 11 00am Lv Wlnnsboro 8 40am 11 54 am Ar at Columbia 0 00 am 1 20 pin Lv Columbia 0 10am 140pm Lv Johnston's 8 81am 8 Oil pin Lv Trenton 8 47 am 8 20 pin Lv Graniteville 9 18 am 8 42pm j Ar Augusta 10 00 am 4 25 pin Ar Charleston 11 05am 10 80pm Ar Savannah (K. B. It. It.).... 11 45am 10 15 pin north bound. | No. 12. | No. 88* | No. 10. stations. Daily. | Daily. Daily. Lv Savannah (S. B. It. R.) 0 00am 8 00 pin Lv Charleston 0 50 am 5 80 pm! Lv Augusta 12 80 pm if 00 pin Lv Graniteville 1 (ci pin 7 00 pin Lv Trenton I lis pin 7 42 pm Lv Johnston's I 12 pin K 02 pin Ar Columbia 0 05 pin 10 00 pm Lv Columbia .1 50 pin 10 50 pm Lv Winnsboro 5 10 pin 1 25am Lv Chester. II (M> pm it 05 am Lv Itock Hill 0 07pin I 20am Lv Fort-Mill (i 'VI pm -I is am Lv I'ineville 7 07 jini 5 10am Ar Charlotte 7 00 pin 0 00 am Lv Charlotte 7 -15 pm s 15 pm 0 55 am Lv Salisbury 0 52 pin 0 20 jnn s 27 am Lv Greensboro II 05pm 10 -17 j>m 10 20am Ar Iticlunond 7 00am 5 00 pm Ar Washington 10 lOain 0 45am 0 20 pin Ar Baltimore 12 00pm s (ftam II 05piu Ar Philadelphia 2 20 pm 10 Oil am 0(H) am Ar New York 1 50 pm 12 50pm 0 20am Vestibuled limited. SLURPING CAR SKKVICK. On trains Hand 10 Pullman sleeping ears between New York and Atlanta, Danville, Va., and Salisbury and Augusta, (la. On Trains II and 12 Pullman Sleeping ('til's between Washington and Atlanta, New York ami Ashevllle. On trains07 and OS Pullman Sleeper between New York and Augusta. Dining Car between New York and Montgomery. For detailed information as to local and through time tables, rates, and Pullman sleeping-ear reservation, confer with local agents, or address? W. A. TUKK, (Jen'l Pass. Agt., Washington. P. ('. S. II. IfAKliwirK, Ass't (Jen'l Pass. Ag't., Atlanta (la. V. K. McIIkk, (Jen'l Supl., Columbia, S. c. W. II. (Sukkn, General Manager, Washington, p. ('. i Sol.. 11 ass, Tratllc Manager, Washington, P. c. ('. & L. NARROW (iAl'GE RAILROAD. SCHKimr.K of Mail and Passenger trains from Lc-1 noir, X. to Chester, S. and from Chester to Lancaster, daily except Sunday,tnkingeUeet November -1>, 1?>-'. south hound. | No. II. Leave Lenoir 7 OOnni Leave 11 iekory s a"i am Leave Newton ! (Htani ; Leave Llncolnlon to loam j I,cave Dallas II ffiatn Arrive at (iastonia, II .Viam Leave (iastonia I- lupin Leave Clover I -)pni : Leave Kilbert, I Vijnn 1 Arrive at Vorkville, - 17 pin Leave Vorkville - -l- pin Leave (iutliriesville tt'ijim I.eave MeConnellsville '! I'd pin Leave Lowrysville li.'iOpin Arrive at Chester I K'|>m NOIU'll llOUNI>. | No. 12. Leave Chester !' ijani j Leave Lowrysville Id Cjain j Leave MeConnellsville !< a in . Leave (iutliriesville 10 .Vlatn ! Arrive Vorkville II JOam I.eave Vorkville II ijjam j Leave filbert, II Via in Leave Clover 1- a'pin A *>i*tv<>iif l.tisfimbi I oil pill Leave (Jaslonin 1 "ill pin I,pave I >aHas - IOj>in I,pavc Lineolnton "? JOpin i I,pave Newton J jojaii ! Leave llirkory .1 .">0 jun Arrive at Lenoir 7 OOjiin , No. 0. | ClieraM' ?fc <| No. 10. (i no pin Leave CIIKSTKR Arrive 0 1-ain j li :fjpm KNOX'S s loam j li.lOpm KI< 11 HI IC?; s Mam 1 7 OS pin HASl'O.M VILLK s 00am 7 |>m I-'OKT LAWN 7 .' "mm S l.'tjtiii Arrive LANCASTKK Leave 7 (Hlain j W. A. Tl'KIC. (ion. l'ass. Ant., Washington, 1>. ('. I S. II. IIAKDWICK, Ass t (ion, l'ass. A?l., Atlanta. Ooornia. K. McHKK. < Jen. Superintendent, Colmnliia, S. ('. W. II. (JKKKN. (ieneral Manager, Washington, 1), ('.; SOL II ASS, Tratlie Manager, Washington, ! .('. | THE Mm ENQUIRER For 1893. Handsomely Printed on Strong White Paper, THE LOCAL NEWS A SPECIALTY. NOV 13 TEE TIME TO SUBSCRIBE! A $100 Wilcox & White Organ to be Awarded to the Club-Maker who Secures the Largest Nam- ? Iter of NEW SUBSCRIBERS by 3 o'clock p. in. on the Second Monday in March, 1893. A $125 TOP Bl'GGY, A $75 GOLD WATCH AND A C0RB1X DISK HARROW FOR THE THREE LARGEST (TABS. Premiums for Other Clubs Ranging In Size from Sixty Down to Five Subscribers. COMPENSATION FOR ALL WORKERS FOR THE EXQITRER. IN making our annual announcement we avail ourselves of this opportunity to return thanks to our lriends and patrons for the generous sup port that has been extended to THE ENQUI HER for the past year, ana to say tnai aurmg 1803, we do not intend to take any steps backward, but will endeavor to make the paper more and more entitled to the support of the people of York county. ri THE ENQUIRER having intelligent, trust- ? worthy and wide awake special correspondents in York and adjoining counties, but little transpires in which the people generally are interested, that is not promptly made known through its columns. Besides this, it shall continue to be our aim to watch carefully after ever.v thing that is calculated to make known to the outside world the business advantages and natural resources possessed by York county?agricultural, mineral and climatic?and when we say York county, we do not mean any particular section of it, or anv particular class of penpe; but THE WHOLE COUNTY AND ALL THE PEOPLE. While the local and general news departments of the paper will be carefully looked after, all the features which have given THEENQUIRER ' a distinctive character from the first day of its j publication will bo maintained. From time to ] time itl will contain short stories and serial sto- j ries from the best writers; every week a column of fun and humor; carefully selected and season- j able articles intended for the benefit of the farmer and housewife; articles for the young people, the object of which is to assist them in becoming good men and women and ornaments to society; besides articles, by the publication of which, it is hoped, the men, women and children who | read THE ENQUIRER will be belt r, happier and wiser. To recapitulate : It is our aim to print a hightoned, clean, newsy family paper; one that is RELIABLE, and one whose weekly visits will always be looked forward to with pleasure by its patrons. Terms of Subscription?Postage f ree. Single Copy, one year, $2 00 Two Copies, one year, 3 50 One Copy, two years, . 3 50 One Copy, six months, 1 00 ' One Copy, three months, 50 Ten Copies, one year, 17 50 J And one copy, one year, to tiie person making a S club of TEN at 81.75 for each subscriber. 2 Payment required to be made in advance. ^ PREMIUMS TO CLUB-MAKERS. * For the three largest clubs of yearly subscrib- \ crs, at ?1.75 for each subscriber, weoffer the three li articles mentioned below, the aggregate value of ^ the three being TWO HUNDRED ANDTWI5N- > TY-FIVE DOLLARS, as follows: L For the largest club, a 8125 TOP BUGGY. * Particulars in regard to this premium will be ' found elsewhere. r For the second largest club, one 875.00 Watch. The movement we have selected for this Watch 5 is manufactured by the Columbus Watch Co., i of Columbus. Ohio, and is called the "Railway : King." It has 111 jewels, in gold settings, extra center hole jewel, patent regulator, adjusted to heat and cold; gold linish. It isono ofthe finest movements made in the United States and is > used exclusively on a number of the great rail- v road systems by reason of its reliability as a time keeper. The movement will be fitted to a Boss j filled gold case. These cases are made of 14 a karat gold and are warranted to wear 20 years. The price ofthe movement is ?10 and that of the case ?35, making the value of the watch 875. t For the third largest club, a No. 7 12 disk ? latest improved Corbin Disk Harrow, worth 830. j To EVERY person who may obtain a club of jf sixty or more names, but who may fail to secure 1 one of three premiums already mentioned, we ? will give as compensation, one Chicago Singer j Sewing Machine, or if the person entitled to the ^ machine does not want it, we will give one Fifty i Tooth Evans Steel Frame Smoothing Harrow; ' or if the Harrow is not wanted, we will give one ! 11 jewel Elgin Watch in a Fahy's dust proof open face silver case. Tho retail price of the watcli is j 824.00. Either the Sewing Machine, Harrow or Watch will be delivered free of expense for transportation. To EVERY person who may obtain n a club of FORTY and less than sixty, but who J fails to win one of the three leading premiums, we will give one 7 jewel Elgin Watch in a Fahy's dust proof open face case. This watch usually retails at about 813. To every person who may obtain a club of THIRTY and less than forty subscribers, but who may fail to obtain the Buggy, the 875 Watch or the Disk Harrow, we will give as compensation for securing the subscribers, one 7 jewel, open faced American Standard Watch in a Fahy's dust proof case. This Watch > would be considered a bargain at 810. [Offers for clubs of TWENTY and TEN will be found i i,v?. ? ,-,f i'ive mid less than ten subscribers, wo wiil give as compensation for | securing the names, one 30 hour Nickle Alarm , Clock, the retail price of which is 81.75. To persons who make up clubs of TEX and j less than twenty names, we will send THE EX*-1 QUIRKR one year free of charge; and to those j who may secure a club of TWENTY and less I than thirty names, we will forward THE EXQUIRER one year free of charge, and a cony, | one year, of any weekly newspaper or monthly j magazine published in the I nitcd States, the publication to he selected by the person entitled I to receive it. The time fixed for completing clubs under the above otters is limited to :{ o'clock p. in., on i MONDAY, the 13th dav of MARCH, 1?>3. NEW SUBSCRIBERS. { Hy X'RVV subscribers we mean persons whose J j names are not now on our subscription list and : have not been within THREE MONTHS of this j date (October 21>). A change of address from one 1 j member of a family to another member of th'i ' j same family, WILL NOT be considered as a new subscriber. Every new subscriber must be For the Largest Club of New Subscribers. | j To the person who may obtain ami pay for the largest eluh of NEW SL" HSCKI HEMS between the first of November and the second Monday in I Mareh, 1N!C{, at "> o'clock j). in., we will give as compensation one WILCOX iV WHITE OH| (JAN, valued at $100. [For full description of the Organ see advertisement printed elsewhere]. The Organ is offered independent of all other | premiums, and the person who receives it will j lie entitled to have his names counted in competition for either of the other premiums offered. For example: If the person who secures the Organ shall have returned and paid for the largest list of names by the second Monday in ; March, 1S1K1, including those which entitled him to the Organ, he will be entitled to the $1:?> Muggy ; if the second largest, including those I which entitled him to the Organ, he will be j entitled to the $7o.(M) (Sold Watch; if the third ' largest, including those which entitled him to the Organ, he will bo awarded the Corbin Disk i Harrow. If it is found that the person whose\ cured the Organ has a suflicient number of i names on the second Mondavin March, 1MM, including those which entitled him to the Organ, j to entitle him to a premium offered for sixty, i forty, thirty, twenty, ten or five names, and has ! failed to secure one of the three first premiums, [ he will lie awarded either premium he may sei lect to which the number of names returned j entitles him. MEN EWA LS count just the same as new subj scribers in competition for all premiums except the Organ. i CONDITIONS. j] No name will be counted in competition forajn premium, and no premium delivered, until the j subscription price has been paid. i It is not necessary that the names of a club:' should all be at the same postofliee. Names ( may be taken at any number of places. One s name for two years will be equivalent to two names for one year each. ' 'ii.i. .n-i? ivifiiinstiif] in send in names i , | as rapid Iv as they secure thein. j All subscriptions nisiit be forwarded to us at t ; the expense of those sending them. j, We will he responsible for the safe transmission of money only when sent by draft, regis tered letter or money order drawn on the York- | ville postollice. j,. | In sending names, write plainly, give post- s olliee, county and State. v All subscriptions will be discontinued at the | expiration of the time paid for. n A separate list will be keiit for each clubmaker, who will be credited with each name 1 ( sent, so that the number sent by any one person t may be ascertained at a moment's notice. n In case of a tie for either premium, two weeks j willlie allowed in which to "untie.*' , Pci-sons who commence making clubs, will j not be permitted, after the names have been en- (l tered on our books, to transfer the names to s another dub-maker's list. The time in which additions may lie made '| to clubs under our propositions will expire on the SKt '< >X I > MONDAY (H' MARCH, 1??, at ."{o'clock p. in., therefore, persons who desire the benefit of club rates, must subscribe and pay for 1 the paper before that day, as after the cxpiration of that time, it will not be furnished for less v than Sl.tHt unless new clubs are formed. " All letters should be addressed to L. 31. < i list, York ville, S. ('. j. THE PARISH HOTEL, 'j;; "yy II KX you come to York ville, you are in J vitcd to stop at Til K PARISH HoTKL. Yof WILL 15 K ROYALLY TRKATKD. 1" The building is located in the business portion i of town. The rooms are large and provided i with every comfort and convenience. Til K TAHLKS are supplied with Til K I5KST c the season aftbrds, prepared by experienced cooks, and served by polite and lively waiters. LAROKSAMPLK ROOMS for commercial! men. We study to please. Mrs. ('. (i. PARISH, Manager, j for Infants a 44 Caatoria is so well adapted to children that I recommend it as superior to any prescription known to me." IT. A. Archer, M. D., Ill So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. "Tho uro of 'C'astoria is so universal and i:s merits so well known that it seems a work c f supererogation to endorse it. Few are the intelligent families who do not keepCastoria within easy reach." Carlos Martyn, D. d., New York City. The Centaur Co TO BE CIV ."'o the Person Who Secures the L ENQUIRER, Old and New PIE ABOVE CUT REPRESENTS A *12 ? ? nu ii v TIM," l' A RflT.TV A HTirRJY iARGEST AND BEST EQUIPPED BUGC lOUTH?AND NO BETTER OR MORE STY LMERICAN CONTINENT FOR THE SAME ] ay, and our assertion is sustained and hacked by fA BUGGY COMPANY'S VEHICLES IN rEORGIA. It is our purpose to GIVE THIS BUGGY AW VHO WILL GET IT, hut we know one thing, at ie THE PERSON WHO MAY SECURE AN! 'EARLY SUBSCRIBERS between NOV EM I: IARCH, MM, at :l O'CLOCK P. M?, at 81.75 e iuggy will go to the party NEO SECUKES AND PAYS Fl 1Y THE TIME MENTIONED, whether the nui nother thing, both OLD AND NEW SUBSCJ CONTEST. GO TO WORK TODAY and keep ?HE MOST VALUABLE EVER OFEERED ver oll'ered by a county paper in South Carolina. SURE TO BE WELL PA ts you will see by reading OUR ANNUAL P rill pay each one for all work done. Now wo desire to say something more about th he first place we will say again what we said al ny 8125 Buggy sold anywhere. THE REFUTATION OF THE C s something of which a much older concern c ?HEIR MERITS in the face of the most bitter i tS LEADERS IN THEIR CHOSEN FIELD, estimonials furnished to the company but lack ver, be pleased to send copies of some of these te he value of the vehicle we propose to award to th o present above. If you want the buggy go to v donday in March at !3 o'clock p. m., and you ms VORLD. 01 Hill DOLLARS 1 - ? * /XI 1 -1 1 Co be (riven to tne uiuD-maxer wnc Number of New Subscribers betwi 13,1893, at 3 o'clock p. m., at $ B rojB W^m Ifl r^'hi'm^UM iB HI r'm&M g| ivjjCTwKiBi 'fl B9 [T will lio remembered by the readers of T111 LAll Hl'< < Y was ottered as a premium to urgest number of NEW SI' HSt 'I!1It Kits within ;oes hack ward, nor stands still, wo prnposo to oil s* K W srnscitlHKKS at SI.7o each, rot mi km I a aid MA lit'11 1*1. 1 S!?:5. at.'! o'clock p. in., which i: We have just made an arrangement with tin *<>iiii., through their general agent for this soot listly celebrated and popular parlor organs, as a nd pay for the largest number of NEW Sl'llSi Our reason for selecting the Wilcox A* While oi re know there is no better organ on the niarke or clubs, to use only such articles as we are sure hem. HIE WILCOX A WHI' las the largest factory in the I'liitcd States; it ha atalogued styles than any other Anieriean maim iipcrioritv, we mention that it received an order ras the largest foreign order ever received by landled by the leading dealers throughout the wo nusicians everywhere. The cut shown above WILL tJIYK A FAN MltSAX. The retail price is SltXl, and the folh horoiighly first-class instrument: The ease wit ua.v 1110 preferred. Ft is ii feet 1 inches high; inely finished and hand rubbed. It is adorned v niisie receptacle. It lias 11 stops, and none of tl liing. If a more extended description is desired if the company's illustrated catalogues, giving a trninent itself may he seen at any time by ealliny We are authorized bv Mr. Sehorb to sav I ! ' Tl (> 1'ltKSKNT HIS i'lM/K To A t III*IK 11, A CHURCH ORCAA 'or the one shown above. With the organ will ITooL worth So.nti; and a copy of l>r. .1. O. It. rorth t&no, and by tin-use of which a person nia\ 'ther teacher. The Organ is guaranteed by the Wilcox A* \ >y Mr. Sehorb for not less than TWKNTY YKA reeof expense to the owner. Now this organ will be awarded to the person u f NKW YKAHI.VSritM'HIKKliS at si.7oe.ael t.'{ o'clock )>. in., and we would advise every oie leetus and learn all the conditions, and then go t< lub of XKW Si' ItSt'I, I ItKI?S, whether it be IIIi LEW (lAHKV IH(>.\ ]{<)< Manufactures all kinds of IKON KOOI'I NO, It 1311'KI> AMI ColtKI UATiai SI lUNi;, Iron Tile or Shingle. iuk I'Hook noous, siirrnais, .tr? I ~ THE LAKH EST MAX1 F ACTIHKHS 0 Orders received by l? M. OR 1ST. nd Children. Castorla cures Colic, Constipation, 'Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation, Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes digestion, Without injurious medication, "For several years I have recommended your ' Castorla,' and shall always continue to do so as it has invariably produced beneficial results." Edwin F. Pardee, 31. D., 125th Street and 7th Ave., New York City. mpant, 77 Murray Street, New Yore Cm. EN AWAY argest Club of Subscribers to THE ' counting Just the Same. HR >.00 BREWSTER SIDE-BAR TOP BUGGY COMPANY, OF YORKVILLE, S. C.-THE ry manufacturing plant in the LISII BUGGY CAN BE BOUGHT ON THE NUMBER OF DOLLARS. We mean what we scores of dealers in and users of the CAROLITIIIS STATE, NORTH CAROLINA AND AY. We do not have the remotest idea as to id that is that the individual who doesjret it will ) PAY FOR THE LARGEST NUMBER OF fER 1, 1892, and the SECOND MONDAY IN aeh. We mean exactly what we say and the 3R THE MOST SUBSCRIBERS rnber is ten,.twenty, tiftv or one hundred. And, IIEKS COUNT JUST THE SAME IN THIS at it and you may win this valuable premium? BY TIIE ENQUIRER, and the most valuable If you should fail to get the Buggy you will be 3D FOR YOUR WORK, ltOSPECTUS. We want lots of workers and ic buggy we propose to give as a premium. In >ove, that it will lie in every particular equal to AROLINA BUGGY COMPANY oil Id well feel proud. ITS GOODS SELL ON competition, and today they are RECOGNIZED We should be pleased to print several of the ; of space forbids at present. We shall, howstimonials to any who want stronger proof as to iC successful club-maker thaii we have been able rork today and KEEP AT IT until the second ly win it. THIS OFFER IS OPEN TO THE LEWIS M. GRIST, Yorkvllle, S. C. mm in orgm i Returns and Pays for the Largest sen November 1,1892, and March 1.75 Each. Go to Work Now. jRjN^HNK^H^S mmMV/MBtl^^^fm ^ pH ; 12 EN<H*IRElt that l:ist year a NINETY DOLi the < 'lull-maker who returned and paid for the a specified time. And as Tim Kn<*l*iukr never era premium this vear for the largest club of ml paid for BETWEEN NOVEMBER 1, 18ft.\ s valued at .SliNi.no. . Wti.cox ?v Wiiitk Ouoax Co., of Meridan, ion, Mr.OEo. T. SOI loll B, to use one of their premium to the club-maker who may secure rltlBERS in the time specilied above, rgan in preference toothers, was simply because t. and it is always our aim in ottering premiums will give satisfaction to those who may receive IE ORGAN COMPANY s received more diplomas and medals on regular I'acturor of organs. As another evidence of its for 2lu Organs at one time from Australia, which an American organ company. Its organs are rid, and last but not least, they are endorsed by { IDEA OK THE APPEARANCE OF THE >wing brief description will show that it is a 1 be either Black Walnut or (Quartered Oak, as 4 feet in length; 2 feet in depth, and the ease is l itha French plate mirror, and has a convenient iciii arc "dummies"?every one meaning soine, we shall be pleased to mail to any address one minute description of the instrument, or the in: at Mr. Sehorb's place of business in Yorkville. IE SUCCESSFUL CU B-MAKER DESIRES HE Wild, SCBST1TCTE I WORTH $100.00, go, without extra expense, one PLUSH TOP MSNE'lT'S ECLECTIC oROAN TEACHER, become a skillful performer, not needing any A'liite Organ company, for SIX YEARS, and , RS. He proposes to keep it in thorough order ho may seen re ami pay for the largest number i iii.) \v i.i'ii ViivciiiIii'I- i lS!f mil \l'i|.,.|i la l^tia who expects to nitor the nice, to read our pros> work without delay and keep at it. The largest or Iihi or more, takes the or^ati. IS 31. GRIST, YorkviIks S. t\ >IMXi COMl'ANY, IKON' OKi: PAINT YM&MAfiL A lid C'omcnt. 1">2TC) 15S M KUWIN ST.. Cleveland, O. , (son,| j-or circular "" ami Price List No. 75. F IKON ROOFING IN THK WORLD.