University of South Carolina Libraries
_ POETICAL. _ Fruni the Mobile Register. Ku-Klux You Scare "Em So. j .. - P AIR?"SHOO FLY. \ The bottom rail is now on top; The niggers madly prance; . The Committee up at Washington I Play for them to dance! 1 To magnify the Ku-' . \ They'd drain " \ Make? A1U4 UVv . ?.ne oceai\ dry I roBt1btff <wrt o< honest , . <<?, toWin ih.'t f... ' CBOM.-K.rilr , in Ku-V , ^!ux on every tree; . i-klux, your ghastly face Seems to frighten U. S. G. Domingo now is all the rage ; The ku-klux bill is passed; Ben Butler's smile is silvery sweet! His play is made at last! They steal, they steal, they steal; That's what the people say. Instead of legislating? The outrage bill to pny. Chorcs?Ku-klux away down South; Ku-klux don't pester me! Ku-klux in the people's month Hurrah, for U. S. G. i The people all throughout the land, They blush for very shamo, That such a mighty nation j Should play so small a game. { They feel, they feel, they feel, And with them all agree, 'Tis a very little matter To rile U-lys-scs G. Chorus?Ku-klux don't scare 'em so; Ku-klux let 'em be; Ku klux,'tis a joke you know To scare little U. S. G.! The Dignity of ?nbor. In a nation of workers labor ought cer tainly to command, respect. And among I right thinking people everywhere in this country it does so. Supercilious dandies of cities and towns North and South may form an exception to the rule which accords respects to the laborer, but their number, greater in the North than in the South, is not sufficient to give either weight or respectability to their opinions. Certain leaders of Northern opinion, have in times past arrogated the championship of labor, and laborers. This was done upon pure grounds of denrtgogism for political purposes, and was without foundation, as we know by observation and experience. In the moral code t>f a certain class of men "a lie well "Stuck* to is as good as the truth," and this prejudice against us, has been propagated with an industry which can only be accounted for by reference to the axiom quoted. ? Labor has never been deemed disgraceful at the South. It is true, that the-people have as everywhere else in the world, the Northern States of the Union net excepted, have always tried to get along with the smallest amouutgof labor, and thus to live as easily as practicable. Before the circumstances of a large class of our people were .....i naco&difr for labor was not ur J <IUU IUO UVVVWW**^ gent on them as upon the people of less favored sections, such for instance as the dwellers among the granite hills of Now England. Moreover field work under the warm sun during a long summer is to the white man somewhat harder to endure, than the same kind of labor during the short summers in Vermont or New Yark. And this fact may have developed an apparently greater repugnance to labor on the part of the Southern people. All these concessions we are ready to make. But when it is said that we are dcspisers of labor and laborers per $e, we deny the charge. All over the South in times of slavery was scattered a large class of small farmers, each of whom owned a few slaves with whom he "worked, personally superintending their labor.. This was a highly respected class among us, and constituted what our political orators were accustomed to call in the language of eulogy "the bone and sinew of the country." Among our wealthiest people there were besides a great many who had amassccl property by personal industry.? These men as a class took a real pleasure in reoountiiig . to the rising generation, the i story of their early toils and successes. TVe have known men in good circumstances sent to College "after having served a few years at the plow handles for the purpose of acquiring physical vigor, and a practical knowledge of the pursuits they were expected to follow. The idea that labor was degrading never oecurred to these men. Not only are we accused of dishonoring labor but.are represented as being in a state bordering on anarchy. Yet the people of this lawless region produced 3,800,000 bales of cotton last year and an increased corn crop over the production of the year previous?all this in spite of the decrease and deterioration of our black labor. How are with the hwnothe OUVU 1VOIUM A vw*iv..Mw.v. - ^ sis that we are dcspisers of labor ? Away with such pernicuous falsehood. The surest passport to the respect of Southern society is a course of honest industry. A dcspiser of labor here would be regarded as nearly akin to an idiot.? Carolina Farmer. Lucerne. Lucerne makes the earliest green feed that can be had, and happy is lie who has a little lot of it from which to cut for his cattle and working stock. Few persons in this section have ever sown it, but for all that, it is richly worth it cost. From tho middle of March to the first of July it yields bountifully the sweetest and richest green, and may be cut over, close to the ground, four or bix times. Once established iq good soil I Jeast possible atto^ v"*?or more with the Don't try i* I ,ati^x nenty f.* ? unless you have ricli-ground, u'v .1 manure, aud will plow deep and < orim Its roots are large* go deep, Drill' ^ne'soed shalloWj ten pounds pop aere, co**-^ lightly-, and' keep' it? reasons^^^'^r weeds and'grass, free from i Sow ap^^*-**^Twlaily while young. time from middle of January vO middle of March. No plant or grass can grow repeated crops of luxuriant green, without rich and deep soil to draw from. Lucerne conies earlier, and is most grateful and beneficial to all sorts of stock that have passed the winter on dry forage. For horses and mules it is a capital alterative, and brings on a new coat of hair very finely. For milch cows and brood sows it pays in the abudancc of rich milk. Lucerne is of the clover tribe, and likes lime soils, but proper manuring will secure a profit from it on even very light soils. Banner of the South. How to Grow Big Crops of Strawberries. Give room; do not plant too close together; 2 feet apart is better than 1 foot; 2J by 1J to 2 feet is just right for field culture; put in a good shovelful of manure under each hill at time of setting. Put out no more plants than you have manure for. We are satisfied that the big crops depend only on the liberality of the food. One strawberry grower plants 2 feet by 1, and gets 2,00(L quarts per acre, another plants 2J.by2feet, keeps the runners cut, and.gets 4.000 quarts per acre. The former cannot understand it, why with twice as mar> j plants ho gets only half the crop # We assure our readers, strawberries are like the colossal asparagus, biggest, when they have the most room and best I feed: a croD of 1.000 ciuarts rer acre will \* ' r / a a prove a failing business to any grower. It is better to reduce plantations one-half and manure double.?Horticulturist. Crops in Georgia. The Macon Telegraph says: If a cotton crop is to be grown this year in Georgia we may say that the work is, to a very large extent, to be commenced. Much of what is up is in so sickly and perishing a condition, and so obstructed by grass and weeds that it will have to be plowed up.? This is particularly true on low and level lands. On dryer localities it is badly washed, and the stand everywhere is exccedingly poor. We have never known a more unpromising prospect at this season of the year, and have come to the conclusion that 1871 will probably witness enough of a cotton failure to produce, in connection with the great cotton years of 1869 and 1870, a general average. With so poor a start and so much of the growing season lost, the deficit, as compared with last year, must necesarily be great. A million bales will hardly cover it. Corn is better, but nil plantation work is sadly behind hand. In the past fortnight more than half the working time has been lost. Rum and Tobacco.?One hundred and twenty millions of pounds of tobacco, costing eighty-six million of dollars, are consumed annually in the United States. Five hundred thousand tons of tobacco are supposed to be consumed annually in all the world. Not less than two hundred thousand persons, principals and clerks, in the United States, are engaged in selling intoxicating drinks; and a million of people get their wealth or living from selling liquors, or from raising or selling articles from which beverages are made. It has been estimated that the enormous sum of six hundred and eighty million of dollars is annually paid by the people of this country for intoxicating liquors. CAROLINA m mmm. company Ill I * ! UIVVAUAA1VM VV*I** MUbl * OF MEMPHIS, TENN. | OFFICE: NO 291, MAIN STREET CAPITAL, $200,000 ASSETS, $800,000 aarall interested at the south.-^s This is a Southern Company, chartered by the Legislature of Tennessee, with a CAPITAL snfficient to make her raliable beyond a question and doing a strictly LIFE INSURANCE Business and none other. Profiting by the experience of older Companies^and havitg adopted the most liberal plans together with rigid aconomy in our management, our success has exceeded our greatest expectations and has placed the COMPANY in a permanent and reliable position. In the first two years we have issued between THREE THOUSAND and THREE THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED POLICIES, and our accumulations amounted to EIGHT HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS. Pres'dt, M. J. Wicks, President Memphis & Charleston R. R. Vice-Presd't, J. T. Pettit. Sec'y, W. F. Boyle. References: Hon. G. A. Trenholm. James H. Wilson, and W. J. Magrath, of Charleston; Hon. J. P. King, of Augusta. R. J. MAGILL. General Agent for S. C. Dr. C. J. Shannon Med. Examiner. Axle Grease, $ the Box or Keg. HODGSON & DUNLAP. GENERAL FK ij ~ LtEE " ^^uRANCE AGENCY, ^<LAMDEN, S- C. Piedmont & Arlington Iiifc Insurance Company, RICHMOND, Va, The most Successful and Wealthiest Insurance Company in the South. ASSETS to 10th Sept., 1870, $2,011,096:70 ANNUAL INCOME 1,600,000.00 NO. POLICIES ISSUED to 15th Dec., 1870, 13.211 Fire Companies Pacific Insurance Company of San Francisco, Atlantic Branch New York Capital One Million DolGold. Policies Issued Payable in Gold or Currency, Richmond Banking and Inrance Company, CAPITAL $500,000. For every description of insurance apply to W. CLYBURN, AgouL. Fislt's Patent OCTAGON ROSEWOOD FINISH MF.TAL1C BURIAL CASES, AIR-TIGHT and INDESTRUCTABLE for PROTECTING AND PRESERVING THE DEAD. The subscriber keeps the above celebrated eisBS nn lmtul which, for durability, neat ness and finish connot be surpassed. Tliese arc nir and water tight., therefore will preserve tho body for a long time, which have been proven by a number of Undertakers North and South. They cost but little, if any more than well made Walnut or Mahogany Coflins. ALSO On hand, a complete assortment of WOODEN COFFINS, Lined and Unlincd, Stained and Varnished, or covered. Handles and Trimmings to suit and at prices to suit the circumstances of all K. J. McCJtEIGIIT, Undertaker. March 10. 12m. S1000, KEVVAKD. For any case of Blind Bleeding, Itching or Ulcerated Piles that De Eing's Pile Bemedy fails to cure. It is prepared expressjy to cure the Piles and nothing else, and has cured cases of over 20 years standing. Sold by all Druggists. TIA FUGA. DeBing's Via Fuga is the pure juices of Barks, Herbs, ltoots, and Berries, for CONSUMPTION. Inflammation of the Lungs; all Liver, Kid ncy, and madder diseases, organic wcnicness Female Affictions, General Debility, and all complaints of the Urinary Organs in Mail and Female, propucing Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Gravel, Dropsy and Scrofula, which most generally terminate in Consumptive Decline. It purifies and enriches tho Blood, the miliary, Glandular Secretive system; Corrects and Strengthens the nervous and Muscular forces; it acts like a charm on weak nervous and debilitated females, both young and old. None should be without it. Sold everywhere. Laboratory?142 Franklin St. Bait., Md. Aug. 1?ly. Paints and Tarnish. Pure English White Lead. Chrome, Green and Other Colors. Da mar, Coach, Copal Varnishes &c. Linseed, Ennn?rs and Miolrnnrv Oils. For Sale by HODGSON & DUNDAP. Ayer's Cathartic Pills, For all tho purposes of a Laxative Medicine. ^ Perhaps no one medh /Sm cine is so universally yjr required by evciyyy bouy as a cathartic, m \f'" _ nor waa 6VCr any be* fore so universally ~Seal adopted into use, In I /\ _9^/ every country and Iamong all classes, as lr "J ? **&/ this nuld but efficient %Jl purgative PUl. The obvious reason is, ^that it is a more rclia* ^bio and far more effectual remedy than any other. Those who have * ? ' * * fa ? 1 ?Wa?? thnua who hllfA tricu it, Know uiui> it ourcu wcuii ..? ?.. not, know that it cures their neighbors and friends; and nil know that what it does once it does always ? that it never fails through any fault or negglcut of its composition. We have thousands upon thousands of certillcatcs of their remarkable cures of the following complaints, but such cures are known in every neighborhood, and we need not publish them Adapted to all ages and conditions In all climates; containing neither calomel nor any deleterious drug, they may be taken with safety by anvbody. Their sugar-coating preserves them ever fresh, and makes them pleasant to take, while being purely vegetable, no harm can arise from their use in any quantity. They operate by their powerful Influence on the Internal viscera to purify the blood and stimulate it into healthy action?remove the obstructions of tho stomach, bowels, liver, nnd other organs of the body, restoring their irregular action to health, and by correcting, wherever they exist, such derangements as are the flrst origin of disease. Hiiuutc directions are given in the wrapper on the box, for the following complaints, which these PHls rnpidly euro:? For Dyi]tepila or Indlgfition, Listlessboss, Languor and JLoas of Appetite, they shotdd be taken moderately to stimulate the stomach, and restore its healthy tone and action. For Liver Complaint nnd its various symptoms, Billons Ileailnchr>, flick Heaaache, Juuntllce or Green Sickness, Bilious Colic nnd Bilious Fevers, they should be Judiciously taken for euch case, to correct the diseased action or remove the obstructions which cause it. For Bysentery or Diarrhoea, but one mild dose is generally remiired. For nhcumutlam, Gout, Gravel, Palpitation of the Heart, Pain In the nrwl TaIiu fhftr should he contln nously taken, as required, to change the diseased action of the system. With such change those complaints disappear. For Dropsy and Dropsical Swelling* they should be taken In largo and frequent dose* to produce the effect of a drastic purge. For Suppression a large aose should be taken as it produces the desired effect by sympathy. As a Dinner Pill, take one or two Pitt* to promote digestion and relieve the stomach. An occasional dose stimulates the stomach and bowels into healthy action, restores the appetite, and invigorates the system. Hence it is often advantageous where no serious derangement exists. One who feels tolerably well, often finds that a dose of these Fill* makes him feel decidedly better, from their cleansing and renovating effect on the digestive apparatus. Dr. J. C. AYEIIA CO., Practical Chemist*, LOWELL. MASS., V. S. A. Sold in Camden, by Nov. 8.?ly. IIODGSON & DUNLAP. Toys For the Little ones. A great variety new and novel in design. IIODGSON & DUNLAP. REMOVAL. On and after March the 1st., the undersigned can be found at his residence, on MONUMENTAL SQUARE. Patients waited upon at their residences at any time if solicited. I. H. ALEXANDER, Feb. 23. ; tf: -a- Dentist. i NEHRYT. HELMBOLD'S, COMPOUND FLUID Extract Catawba GRAPE PIJLLS. Component Parts?Fluid Extract Rhubarb and Fluid Extract Catawba Grape Juice. For Liver Complaints, Jaundice, Billious Affections, Sick or Nervous Headache, Costivenes, eto., Purely Vegetable, containing no Mercury, Minerals or Deleterious Drugs. EC These Pills are the most delightfully pleasant purgative, superseding castor oil; salts, magnesia, etc. There is nothing more ncceptible to the stomach.- They give tone, and cause neither nausfa nor griping pains. They are composed of the finest ingredients. After a few days' use of them, such an invigoration of the entire system takes place nsto appear mirnculo'us to the weak and enervated whether arising from imprudence j? tr m TY.. 11 i.ii- t\ j n_i a or uiseuse. ii. i. ucimnoiu s uonipounu axiraci Catawba Grape Pills are not sugar-coated, from . the fact that sugar-coated PillB do not dissolve, but pass through the stomach without dissolving, consequently do not produce the desired effect. The Catawba Grape Pills, being pleasant in taste and odor, do not necessitate their being sugarcoated. Price Fifty Cents per box. IE Henry T. Helmbold's HIGHLY CONCENTRATED COMPOUND Fluid Extract Sarsaparila Will radically exterminate from the system Scrofula, Syphilis, Fever Sores, Ulcers, Sore Eyes, Sore Legs, Sore Mouth, Sore Head, Bronchitis, Skin'"Diseases, Salt Rheum, Cankers, Runnings from the Ear, White Swellings, Tumors, Cancerous Affections, Nodes, Rickets, Glandular Swellings, Night Sweats, Rash, Tetter, Humors of all kinds, Chronic Rheumatism, Dyspepsia, and all diseases that have been established in the system for years. Xj Being prepared expressly for the above complaints its Blood-puritying properties are greater than any other preparation of Sarsaparilla. It gives the thb complexion a clear and healthy color, and restores the patient to a siJite of health and purity. For purifying the blood, removing all chronic constitutional diseases, arising from an impure state of tiie blood and the only reliable and effectual known remedy for the cure of pains and the swelling of the bones, ulcerations of the Throat and Legs, Blotches, Pimples on the Face, Erysipelas and all scnly Eruptions of the Bkin and beautifying the Complexion. .Price $1 50 per bottle. im: HEHKY T. HELMBOLD'S CONCESTBATED Fluid Extract Buchu THE GREAT PIRUETIC, Has cured every case of Diabetes in which it has been given, Irritation of the Neck of the Bladder and Intlamation of the Kidneys, Ulceration of the Kidneys and Bladder, Betention of Urine, Diseases of the Prostrate Gland, Stone in the Bladder, Culculus, Gravel, Brickdust Deposit, nnd Mucus or Milky Discharges, and for Enfeebled nnd Dclitcnded with the following symptoms: Indisposition to exertion, loss of power, loss of Memory, Dithcvlty of Breathing, weak Nerves, Trembling, llorror of Disease, Wakefulness, Dirtiness of Vision, Pain in the Back, Hot Hnnds, Flushing of the Body, Dryness of the Skin Eruption on the Face, Pallid Countcuauce, Universal Lassitude of the Muscular System, etc. Used by persons from the ages of eighteen to twenty-five, and from thirty-five to filty-fivc or in the decline or change os life; after the confinement or labor pains; bed-wetting in children. 33 Helrabold's Extract Buchti is Diuretic and blood-purifying, and cures all diseases arising from habits of dissipation, and excesses nlid*imprudences in life, impurities of the blood, etc., superseding Copaiba in affections for which it is used, nnd syphilitic affections?in these diseases used in connection*with Hclmbold's llose Wash. LADIES. Tn ninny affections peculiar to ladies, the F.xtrr.rt lluchu is unequalled l>y nny other Remedy?as in#Clorosis or Retention, Irregularity, painfulness or suppression of customary evacuations. ulcerated or Scliirrus state of the uterus. Lcucorrhcea or whites, St crility and all complaints incident to the sex, whether arising from indiscretion or dissipation. It is prescribed extensively by the most eminent physicians and midwives for enfeebled and delicate constitutions, of both sexes and all ages (attended with any of the above discuses or symptoms.) O n. T. HEI.MBOLD S EXTRACT EUCTID cure, discuses arising from imprudences, habits of dissipation, etc., in all their stages, at little expense, little or no change in diet, no inconvenience and exposure. It causes a frequent desire to Urinate, thereby removing Obstructions, preventing and curing Strictures of the Urotha, allaying pain and inflammation, so frequent in this class of diseases and expelling all Poisnous matter. Xj H. T. HELMBOLD'S Improved Rose Wash cannot be surpassed as a Face Wnsh, and will be found the only specific remedy in every species of Cutaneous Affection. It speedily eradicates pimples, spots, scorbutic dryness, indurations of the cutaneous membrane, etc., dispels redness and incipient inflammation, hives, rash, moth patches, dryness of the scalp or skin, frostbites, and all purposes for whiclf salves or ointments are used; restores the skin to a state of purity and softness, and insures continued healthy action to the tissue of its vessels, on which depends the agreeable clearness and vivacity of complexion so much sought and admired. But however valuable ns a remedy for .existing defects of the skin, H. T. Helmbold's Rose Wash has long sustained its principle claim to unbounded patronage, by possessing qualities which render it a Toilet Appendage of the most Superlative and Congenial character, combining in an elegant formula those prominent requisites, Safety and Efficacy?the invariable accompaniments of its use?as a Preservative and Refresher of the Complexion. It is an excellent Lotion for Syphiloid Nature, and as an injection for diseases of the Urinary Organs, arising from dissipation, used in connection with the Extract Buchu, Sarsapajilla and Catawba Grape Pills, in such diseases ns recommended, cannot be surpassed.? Price ?1 00 per bottle. ID Full and explicit directions aocompaDy the' medicines. Evidence of the most responsible and reliable character furnished on application, with hundreds of thousands living witnesses, and upward of 30,000 unsolicited certificates andrecommcndary letters, many of which are from the highest sources, including eminent physicians, Clergyman, Statesmen, etc. The proprietor has never resorted to thoir publication in the newspapers; he does not do this from the fact that his articles rank as Standard Preparations, and do not need to be propped up by certificates. Henry T. Helmbold's Genuine Preparation, Delivered to any address. Secure from observation. ESTABLISHED UPWARDS OF TWENTY YEARS. Sold by Druggists everywhere. Address letters for information, in confidence to H. T. HELMBOLD, Druggist, and Chemist. Only Depots: H. T. Helmbold's Drug and Chemical Warehouse, No. 594 Broadway, New York, or H. T. Helmbold's Medical Depot, 104 South Tenth Street, Philadelphia. Beware of COUNTERFEITS! Ask for nENRY T. HELMBOLD'S. Tnko no other.. Feb. 23.? 8m.H f . 1 (i f PIEDMONT & ARLINGTON | I Life Insurance Company, OF \ RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, L j ASSETS, over . $2,000,00# IS ET SURPLUS, over 700,000* POLICIES ISSUED, over W. C. CARRINGTOtf, President. :rr 3. E. EDWARDS, Vice-President. > ' T u a piKMnir a x/ %j jiiiivAuvv/uj u&Utbfil'AUI* \ *r' A J. J. HOPKINS, Assistant1 Secretary. J; E. WOLF, Superintendent op Agencies;- .i*!? i ' :0: ? " SOUTH CAROLINA BRANCH OFFICE, AT COLUMBIA S. ? ;' ? Li South Carolina National Bank Building^ J. P. THOMAS. President: S. L. LEAPHAitT, Secretary. Dr. ISAAC BRANCH, Superintendent op AaiNcirm- ' . Board op Directors.?John McKenzie, John S. Preston, F. W. McMu* ter, W. B. Gulick, John T. Sloan, Sr., Dr. R. W. Gibbet, R. C. Shnrer, Thorny son Earle. __ .. State at Large.?Ex-Governor M. L. Bonhotn, General M. CL. Butler^ General J. D..Kennedy, Colonel T. C. Perrin, Dr. Isaac Branefy.Dc. tt- BL Cook. ' f _____ f; -17 WE OFFER IN THE PIEDMONT AND ARLINGTON, A1 80EID, RELIABLE: LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY, thoroughly Southern, in ttfe Hands of men of the high-- * est integrity, with nbundnnt assets, recent risks, the most' aeeare of all investment*,* pledged to retain within the State of South Carolina all funds accruing; therein, and. indeed, presenting every advantage that can be desired. We confidently appeal to every one interested in Southern prosperity to look to their ?wu? interest, by sustaining their own institutions, and thereby establish that self-confidenec* ; without which there can be no permanent prosperity. Bear in mind that, already, over ? $10,01)0,000 are annually sent North for Life Iusurance, taking so much lh>ar our strength, and thereby giving additional power to our competitors. * '.<.*? -i . Rights of party to non-forfeituro in all its policies. Rights of party to reinstatement paid up policy, and surrender vnluo where "intervention of armies" or any other cause ehts the " r insured off from home office. This feature, omitted in policies of Northern companies, cost the Southern people very heavily in the lute war, and should make them seek the only com* pany that provide against such contingency in future. ? . From an official exhibit, it is shown that the Piedmont and Arlington bad a greater is* crease of business in 1869 over 1868 thnn any company on this continent. It shows ttwt there were only three companies in the United States that issued larger amount of risks l? v ;? 18(59 than it did, and only nine oompnnies that issued more policies; also, that, with their accumulated risks of fifteen or twenty years all combined, this company, though young, stands twentieth in amount of risks in force. , This exhibit, among over a hundred companies, makes the Piedmont and Arlington the leadinc Life Insurance Company, at least of this country. It shows, uot only progress, hut " cautiou and economy?its losses being light, its expenses small. PLAN MU T.UAL. Dividend paid on whole life policies, forty per cent. . . -lv. Dividends given at end of first year, when all cosh is paid. v * , . ^"-s"' All policies non-forfcitablo. > LEArMAICT, JEFFEKSOS' A BMSOK, O-EITEK/^-Xj AGE1TTS, . ? wm. OLTBUHIT, Agent, t ; > 1/ 1*'{ ' For Kershaw and Lancaster Counties. May 12, 1870 If , i ' V WE INVITE THE ATTENTION OF OUR CUSTOMERS AND THB PUBLIC GENERALLY, TO OUR NEW STOCK OF Drugs, Medicines, Chemical, AND now being received from tho Northern Markets, where all have been care fully selected. Our Stock is varied and complete, and will bo found to contain every arti cle usually kept in our liuo of business, together wi6h a great variety of FANCY OOOI>?, and ARTICLES SUITABLE for the # , HOLIDAYS. We purchase for Cash, and can and'will Sell as LOtT a?e?e/ion Ko fnitnil in nnu AT*irlrnf in fli/t VJUUUO V/UU v U 1UUUU >11 U.J J JI1U1?V,U JU ?UD UfcUlO. We invito an inspection, feeliBg assumed we can give satisfaction. HODGSON & DUNLAP. THE POLICY HOLDERS, LIFE AND TONTINE ASSURANCE CO., OP1 THII3 south: No. 29 BROAD ST., CHARLESTON, C. :o: WM. McBURNEY, President. GEO. E. B0GG8. Secretary. ^ , E. P. ALEXANDER. V. P. and Actuary. JOHN T. DARBY. M. D.. Medioal Adviser \ J. F. GILMER, Vice Pres. res. in Geo. AUGUSTINE T. SMYTHE, 8oUcitor. E. NYE HUTCHISON, Vice Pres. res. JAMES CONNER. Counsel. ia Georgia. R. A. KINLOCH.M. D. Local Medical r. lerby, Jr., M. D., ) Examiners^ FIFTY THOUSAND DOLLARS deposited with Comptroller-Genoral for protectism -.q.-.: of Policy Holders. , ' ;> More "than ONE MILLION DOLLARS of Assurance applied for. { This Company, huving complied with all the conditions of Charter, is now prepare* issue the usual forms of Life and Endowment Policies on the Cash system. CASH PREMIUMS! CASH DIVIDENDS ! CASH PQLICIE81 T' All policies non-forfeitable after the payment ofONE Annual Premium. Puid-up Policies issued on surrender of the original for nn equitable amount. Purely MUTUAL ! No Stockoolders! All profits DIVIDE!) anion# the Policy-Hold era. Dividends declared Annually. Dividends once declnred are non forfeitable, and may bo used to reduce the Preaiem to increase.the amount ofAsBumnoe, or to make the Policy self-sustaining. DividendsJeft with the Company, however npplicd. may beTised, in case of need, to pay Premiums. Investments confined by Charter to the most solid and reliable Securities. Patronize the only Life Assurance in the State, and keep your MONEY AT HOME. ? WARREN R. MARSHALL, 4gent. Dr C. J. Shannon. Medioal Examiner, Camden,S. C.