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THE NEWS AND HERALD. PYLISMD TI- WEEKLY NE W3.[,R ER LD COMPANY, -a Year, - - - c btoatkg. - - - - 1.50 t rRT!MN(G RA T&S. CASH: a I F'ifrty i i'tsr -, ue lsa!);unt inser in. .S)peci:,1 nt,t for c-itr-et adver Regular rates charged for obituaries. Orders for Job Work solicited. This newspaper is not responsible for ptnions and views expressed anywhere Ia than in the editorial column. All articles for publicatio-n must be ac aoupauied by the true name of the author -id written in respectful language and ritten on one side of the pal per The true a-me required as an evidence of good faith All communicatsons-editorial, buswvess local-should be addressed to THE .A EWS AND HERALD CO. W. D- DOUGLASS, Editor. Ja& Q. DAvIs, Treasurer. W. J. ELLIoTT, Business Manager. WINNSBORO, S. C. Tues-lay. May 14. : : :185 MEMORIAL DAY. A Touching Address, Beautiful Songs, Appropriate Ode. Tender Hands Gar land the Graves. Winnsboro has always kept alive the memory of the dead pa-riots who laid down their lives in their country's caue. In keeping with the occasion the court honse was tastily decorated by the fine women of our town and im pressive ceremonies were observed. Rev. C E McDonald opened the exer cises with prayer, and the song, "le is gone" was feelingly readersd by Misses Lila Beaty, Ella Doty, Mary Witherow, Alice Witherow, Nannie Thompson ann Laura Gerig and Mrs. M. W. Doty. The ladies were ably supported by Messrs. Seigler and Chand!er with-their cornets and Messrs. J. M. Beaty, W. A. Beaty, Jno. L. Beaty, Charley Stevenson, J. G. McCants and Prof. Witherow. Mr. W. D. Douglass presiding over the exercises stated in a few well chosen remarks the purpose of the occasion. Mr. J. G. McCants then delivered the following touching and appropriate address: ADDREss. Ladies and Gentlemen: I utter no words of vain and stereotyped excuse and apology, when I say to you that I have neither the ability or experience for this occasion. To report the cause, aright of which you are assembled in commemoration requires historical re search and paintaking gathering of facts, for which I have not had the *time, and for which I am not naturally - adanpted. And chief of all, I was not Io that terrible sti-uggle, which shook this continent with the meeting of armed men, which made widows and orphans all over this Southland, and which even to this day has left the empty sleeve and the crutch as sad re minders of the conflict. Thie sanctuary of a people's sorrow-who can touch - properly? who can comfort when a wh~ole people are sad? Goethe in bis school of life, when he brings his pupil to Calvary and the crucigxion, shuts the door, and refuses to parade the divine depths of sorrow. Siletice is worship; silence is sympathy. However much I am impressed with the foregoing considerations, I am called upon to -perf .rm a civic duty, anad I shall dische g-- it, knowing that your hearts and sad experience will fill out any imperfect detail, and that your taste of the bitterness of that struggle will lend eloquence to the most simple narration of facts. * I have often demurred in my own mind against the term "The Lost Cause," and have only tolerated it in my'form of speaking of the war be cause I thought that perhaps the adjec tive "loste' gave a kind of coronet to the sorrow which lay in the cause, ..and because I knew more immortal ity clung to the memorials of sorrow thain to anything else in this world. Disguise it as we may, my friends, '9.prinoiples are rained in blood.." Somehow, moral elevation is indisso lably connectedg with physical suffering. He who really wonld push his fellow spen up to a higher spiritual or moral elevation m,nst oftentimes make his dead body a highway over which his fellowmen may walk. To be in earnest, men require blo ,dy sweat the Gethsemanes and Calvarys. Men ery ount for the blood of their bene factors f.s a mark of their earnestness. So if the Southern cause was really a oainse for right and liberty, if the world needed it, if it was worth its place in the destiny of human affairs, it was necessary that men should bleed for it; it was necessary in the moral economy of things that its worth - should be preserved by suffering. It is not a lost cause; if so, why are you here this evening, why are you women standing at its sepulchre, why are you strewing the graves of its heroes with the most beautiful emblems of love and beauty God has given us? You are not waiting by it s tomb, with a hope of it s political resurrection, you are not thinking of the Southern Cross being placed among the flags of the nat ions. N.; your faith is greater, your hope reaches a more spiritrsl height; you are determined that ..ut of that sepulchre no foe to truth shal: carry the glory of righ', no stranger shall hide it away that you may not find it. You believe in the immortality of suffering for thxe right as your people saw it; you believe in the perennial life of virtue and valor as much as you believe that spring will again come after winter, and that for ~these dead heroes, in the Providence of God and in the judgment of man, an ex ceeding weight of glory awaits them. In my opmnion, and I remark that I have not time to develop th-' id. a, nor is this the occasion to discuss it, that the cause of the South was the cause of local self-governmarV. Of course it had other accessories, but they were only accessories. The mindt that refuses to see the cht-ar distitte jot, that slavery was the occasion and not the cause of the war, clearly manifests an incapacity to draw moral atia phil nesnhica1 distinctions. This incapah iY is the incapacity of the soldier iho thinks truth is erected by his )ayonet and that it may be shot to leath with musket and ball. Now I naintain that this cause will not die n these United States. The liberty oving peop!e of this land know that hey brought-th's sentiment and princi >le over with them from England, and ipon it they builled this goodly land if equal rights to all meui; no sla'e elgio--, no creed; this broad land for road minded men; this land of the vilderne-s for human ua ure to take a ew start i, and to push the canse of he individu I citiz n away from and rom under the sway of kings and aobles and to dress mi.n in the native obes of his manhood. But to do this, ,o accomplish this exaltation of man nd to realize this idea of citizenship, o men knew better than the P.ymoth fathers that you must let man alone is much as possible, that the principle f such a government was the self rovernment of the citizen, that the ondition of civil liberty, as they wanted it, was that man must be left to work out his own destiny in this land, unimpeded and unrestrained as little as possible by g. vernment. Again and in order that the liberty thus indicated might not degenerate into license'and to supply the place of a strong arm of government. they knew that the common law of England, which means the customs of the people, was strong enough to restrain the citizen and lax enough for him to grow and increase And new I am prepared to say without any fear of contradiction, that this government was built upon the idea of the local law of the towrship, the village, the pari-h, the muznicipality, and that out of such assem',lages of government this land has grown to is present greatness and out of these grups come the spirit and seitim-nt of all just ant necessarv laws. I again assert that most all the trouble in this country has proceeded from a violation of tbis principle of local self-government, and every time you trample on this principle the peop'e of these United States will take the alarm, and if you do not stop, the musket wi!l answer for their indig nation. Try it anywhere in these United States. I am~ not afraid of the test in any local:ty, and when yc-u or I or any other man atte:ipts to enter one of these States and seconds or proposes any legislation, which is not in keeping with the local customs of the people, we strike the genius of the American peop!e then and there, and will find it as intractable to our will as the simoon or c) lone, as heedless to our notions of reform as if we should speak to the trees of the forest and bid them not wave their tops when they are i retted with the gusts of heaven. And the trouble now around us, thickening aid perplexing us, is that the Government of these United States will not let the people alone. It made money for them, when they never asked it or authorized it to do it, and hence the perplexity of our financial troubles We wa'nt a little local cur rency and this government says: You people who were made out of the laws of the neighborhood, must have money according to the laws of a great national banking system Let s alone. Give us the right to manage our affairs in our own little village ways, our little community ways, that is what we builded this government fo; that we might help ourselves, and let us do t so long as we do not hurt our nei ~lrs. - -- Again when the magnificent party of this principle of local self-govern ment, the democratic party, was ushered into power with a unanimity f sentiment that showed that the people had spoken, that local self overnment was demanding instant ecognition and when this party turned its back on its principles, and under ti~e glamor of material greatness forgot the liberty of the citizen, when it hesitated before the teachings of the very horn book of its policy and prin ciples the people turned from it and refused to stop where its leaders had stopped, cast it out and sought a remedy and a promulgation of this principle in the consistent .policy of even their political enemies. And when this proud party forgot the creative principle of its existence, forot the rock from which it was dgged, and taxed the produce and in comes of a people, this liberty loving principle of local self-government was the key which unlocked the wrongful ness of'such undemocratic legislation and with it the income tax was found to be undemocratic, unrepublican, but above all un-Americanz. This Southern cause was and is the ca-e of man. It is struggling now all over the world for some kind of recognition, and the people are filling te thrones of power. 1 am not nar rowed by a sectional partialty, I can think out of antifartherthan South Caro lina. I can embrace in my mind and hold in my conception and before my imagination tihe-e several S ates, and, measuring my words, I pronounce this prophecy: that the Southern cause will never die until this republic dies, and this republic will lose its place among the beneficent governments of this earth, when it forgets the prinei pes for which the men who wore the grey died. Again I assert with some examina tion of the subject that the only plan upon which you can erect a stable and lasting republican government is upon the recognition of local self-govern ment as the chief corner stone When different people of dtfferent latitudes become the same or homogeneous, Government is ha-teniing to the form of Empire or Monarchy; when such a people are unlike or hete:ogenuos, it is almost impossible to establish or main tain any 'other kind of g overnment than a republican form of goivernment. The condition of difference is necassary for the health of nature, politics, society, morals andl religion; as soon as yoi reach uniformity, you are nearing the line of dissolu' ion and A civilizationi that is fill with the predominance of any one formna'ive influence to the exclusion of all other infiaencs is hastening to decav, is nhalthy and is rta.!y for the en roichent of deleteriouns p iucmples. n the we Id of nature alI r:atart.'8 dif b~rence keep; tIe peace of ntue. There is one glory. of the~ sun, sn~o: her glory of the mrc u ana itnother g'ory of the stars, for one star~ differath trorm ancher star in gdory. In th fi .wet s eneath our feet the ei- also one gi..ry f ':he fl.>wers, for oe flower d tf.-ra. ror another flower in: &rioun b -:uirr ud fashion; so it 14 in tle leiv 'f J Lhe trees; so jit is Iia n mae; s ia i ini olor of the me wonrs; so in tbe grain. ,f sand at our f. e ; a in: the ham-m tac un: h *ng, eI vre and sA rt, ai' y-ou n1i t;:..; . :t t he beant~y f le woD ld is :he 'osan 9 f-rmned b-. sC.ntine on 'Third Page. Wha A' Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher and Children. It contains neit other Narcotic substance. It for Paregoric, Drops, Soothin It is Pleasant. Its guarante4 ilions of Eothers. Castoria feverishness. Castoria preve cures Diarrh"a and Wind teething troubles, cures CoT Castoria asimiates the foo and bowels, giving healthy toria is the Children's Panac Castoria. "catoda isan ioel1entnwdline fe eil dren. Mothers ha repeatedly told e *V good efrect upon their cildre." Da. G. C. 01o6, Lowe, Nam -'camoriia the best~ redy for children of which I am acqainted Ihop tbe day Is not far distant whenmotherswloo eethi interest of their chidren, and use Castorla in steadofthevarious quack nosramwhichawe destroying their loved ones, byforcingopium, morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful agents down their throaM thereby sodn them to premaJt. grsescn DJI. F.. ][McSM603 Conway, Ark. %U Ceataul' Company, 17 m ANNUAL REPORT -OF Colgy TrOeSlor. I beg herewith to submit to the Jdge presiding at the ensuing June term of Court for Fairfield County the following list of vouchers of disburse ments by me of county and school finds from the 1st November, 1893, to st November, 1894. S-TE CASEs (County Funds), 1892. No. Name. Amount. 426 R HJenings $ 9260 30 TV G Patrick 80 00 665 W N Mason 7 20 66 7 20 7W DSharpe .810 18 J D Blair 85 9 " 8 50 12 U Y Milling 7 65 123 J D Palmer 5 00 124 R C Arnet te 2 00 128 H A Powell 1 00 129 R A Meares 100 130 J D Blair 1250 1 T M Cathcart 62 50 83 R AMearei 3125 is R D Bolick 318751 85 J B Ste.vensonf 18 75 86 ROCStevenson . 18 75 187 11 A Stevenson 18 75 133 J D Beniware 18 75 189 Joe McMeekin 18 75 190 R E Stewart187 1 P H1 Flanniganl 18 75 93 J D.Blair 8 50 194 R A Meares 8 50 195 W Bris Hogan 8 50 1~5 R H Jenningsl 6 27 97 H W Owens 2 00 19 J RStewart 20 0 R R Milling 20 00 1 The Advocate 20805 23 J A Stewart 18 75 5 E A Cloyde 18 75 6 A G Bookman 17 7 R DBolick .175 29 J D Blair 7 50 1 R AMeareS 75 W R Mood 500 3 Chas Rabb50 3 " 5 00 27 J R Coleman 50 31 Chas Rabb o0 29 The Advocate 3 50 0 V T Pettigrew 2 00 1 D Bolick 2 00 23 A L Edrington 2 00 22 J S Clowney 2 00 27 J B Stevenson 8 50 28 J E Flan nigan 5 20 29 A JMcGillI 4 50 20 R DBelick 4 20 21 E B Stevenson 2 00 2 S F Cooper 1 20 3 " 1 00 29 D H Stevenson 47 50 20 W Bris Hogan 18 75 21 J R Stewart 18 7h 2 VG Smith 18 75 9 RDJones 1875 24 Joe McMeekin 18 75 25 M H Moblevy 18 75 26 G S Hinnant 13 00 28 I T Smith 5 25 38 S R Johnston 150 00 30 T M Cathcart 62 5, 12 The Adivocate - 36 50 37 D ABroom 25 00 8 F Bueschell 18 75 39 A W Matheson: 18 75 20 IICStewart 18 75 31 Joe McMeekir' 13 75 22A M McMeekira 18 75 2S McCormick 8 00 26J V Lyles 775 37T P Mitchell 7 60 328Joe McMeekin, 7 60 329J W Robertsoin 7 35 0J RThomas 7 30I3 31 OSFord 7 20 g 32RYLemmon 680 333H B Refo 6 40 335J R McMaster ,Tr 5 00 36A JMcGill 2 00 37R DBolick ~300j 338J E Flannigan 2 00 339J R Harvey 20 51R TMatthews 61 352J B Stevenson 18 75, 33 i~C Stevenson 18 75' 354J D Blair 18 755 5 5W T Pe:tigrew 18 75 I 356R G Miller 18 75Ie 357J C Luis 18 75,a 358JW Moore 550 j 59T W Travlor 5 20 2 ) 60W F Mitchell e 5 03 2 362W M Marthers 5 00 2 90G V Brooks 18 75 2 391 EA Clode 18 75 2 IS s prescription for Infants her Opium, Morphine nor is a harmless substitute Syrups,-and Castor Oil. is thirty years' use by testroys Worms and allays ts vomiting Sour Curd, Colic. Castoria relieves LstipatiOn and flatulency. ., regulates the stomach and natural sleep. Cas ea-the Mother's Friend. Castoria. "cadoria is sowelladaptedto chldrentbat reommend it as superior toany prescription inown to me." g .AonM . H. A.. AuSIL D., 111 So. Oxford St., Brookyn, N. Y. "Our physicias in e ehldren's depat ment have spoken highly of their exMi nce in their outside practice with Castoria, and* although we only have among our medical supplies what is known as regular Products, yet we are free to confess that the merits of Castoria bas won us to look wih favor upon it." UIITuM HoSmAL AND DISMN Y, Boston, Mass. AUM C. r=N, Preu., ay Street, New York City. 95 The Advocate 60 96 J E Douglass 5 98 T G Douglass 5 4 120 J R McMaster Jr 8 0 334 T B Madden 50 61 "0 a 24 G W Biooks 18 7 6 S R Johnston 150 15 J A Stewart 41 16 R E 6tewart 41 17 W W Smith 50 18 11 A Stevenson 18 7 19 J 0 Boulware 18 7 29 W G Smith 18 130 R D Jones 13 7 31 R G Miller 13 7 32 J C Lewis 187 33 J D Blai'- 13 7 34 M HMobulev 139 J R McMaster Jr ? C 140 Dial & Fisher S 41 It UI Jennings 3 143 The Advocate3C 144 J B Stevenson 1 C 146 S F (Cooper1C 157 W B Hogan 1iS 159 A Ml McMeekin 183 158 Joe MicMeekin f - 1 i 185 S R Johnston ~. 150( 188 H F Uneschell . i1 195 J .A CDtm 503 Tr M Cathcaitt . 432 505 .1 11 Stevens'On -I1 506 Ri C Stevenson 18 507 ]IA Stevenscl 18~ 508 J O Bonl eare 28 509 A W Matheson 18 510 R C Stevenson 1S 511 WV R Mood2( 512 W F Mitchell -5 513 J 0 Bonlwarec 528 G S Hinnant 24 529 " 12 ( 553 R H Jennings 02 137 W JLemmon 1:3 138 T BMadden ( 550 R E Ellison 300 526 J T Smith ,.0 97 Who Drug Slore 9 74 H F Bueschell 1( 30 R1 E Ellison 9 66 " 1l ( 323 " 10: 24 " 9 93 " 1 135 " 174( .36 " . .13~ [62 J CiLewis i8 160 W J Cathcary 3 14 Joe McMeekiu 18' 15 A M MeMeekili 18 18 J B Stevenson 18 19 R C Stevenson 18 20 W BHogan IS 554 J C Buchanan 3 555 WG Smith 18' 556 RUDJones ~18 557 G W Brooks 18 559 H F Bueschell 18 60 J L Ratterree 15 561 J D...lair 18 562 W T Pettisterv lb 563 R G Miller 15 564 G S Hinnant 11 569 H F Bneschell1 99 L S Douglass 5' 8 S T Simpson 8 8 FCooper 3' 7 DE McDowell 37 l99 U G Desportes 3 .12 S S Linder 10 21 J C Bucbanan 3 " 5 24 T B Maddsc~ 97 News andi lerald' 04 98 TM Cathcatrt 6 99 R E E-ison 9 00 A WV Matiirson 18 ) 1 R CSewart38 02 Winsboro Drug Stor6- 14 4 .06 J C Buchanan7< ) 9 W J Lemmnon :29 14 J.FLles3 91 1M Cathcart .5( 1 . A Stevenson ~18 7 J OBnin are 18 3 22:M L Braswell 19 WMood 8 W IB Gilbert 2 5 5 U G Desportes -6: 47fHal & Crawf.)rd :3 6 JA Brice U 7 PBoomn T.OAD AND) BRlIDGEs, 1891-9i 37 Macanley & Turner- 3 9( ROAD AND BRIDGE S 1892-03 48 J F Mc',aster 20 7 85 " C6 0 01 F M Gladden 1 41 00 B Y Heron 30 5 6 R W ~VPhillips 2 7 1 1 R Hall 1 6 0 J UN11l 3 3 47 W J Johnmu 11 5 5 C L Smith 27 7 2 2 J B Brley 10 o 30y n D .....:s,, .62 2 145 J Caticart Jr 110 141 A J Mobley 1 75 140 J FT m m-on 2 20 138 A J ijuLi 278 136 J J Jackson 388 78 Wm McCarley 165 342 Ruff & Steele .13 33 in 341 " 1550 340 T J Rav 31 86 Sti 189 F R McMeekin 2 2.5 201 W M Wilks 1466 Wi 133 W J Leminon 6 94 cal 66 R Y Turner 99 40 s01 65 J G Wolling 193 00 277 T G Williamrs 1 50 465 T F Curlee 18 90 452 A S Whitener 1 SO i 451 W J Stevenson 2 50 450 Robt Ratteree 5 449 S W Ruf 6 00 1 411 11 S Wylie 4 44 410 Jake Smith 4 50 407 S C Broom 1100 448 R W Phillips 8 40 0. 376 Ed Henry 2 20 375 T J Richardson 2 45 374 M S Heron 3 00 C 373 W A Cook 330 372 W B Wright 3 33 371 C K Russell 3 33 370 S Meoe 3150 369 D A Broom 400 i 368 W J Johnson 7 25 367 J C Coleman 8 00 366 C B Bnev 860 3 365 T P Younginer 12 75 364 C L Brooks 17 75 468 J J Jackson 8 88 466 WW Smith 1000 464 J A Fant 2222 463 W S McDona!d 20 72 462 J M Edrington 27 77 409 D L S evenson 535 404 Sallie Benne:t 7 38 467 G B Hagood 10 00 408 J R Cur Je 5 55 345 Ruff & Steel 400 343 T F Smith 1000 1 249 J W Wl!ie 550 J 275 J M Pope 5 65 204 S T 1 iowner 5 55 1 93 J F McMaster . 5000 578 T P Younginer 6 251 519 Juo M Gavden 2 50 500 S W Ruff 250 469 J M Steele 880 499 R W Phillips 5 40 514 T J Williams 35 27 518 W( Craw ford 2 75 534 J T Garrick 550 )533 D G Gladden 5 55 535 M S Heron 355 M 570 Ruf & Steele 132 22 3 571 " 116 78 572 C J Stevenson 50 83 573 W P Jones - - 574 C D Chappell 18 25 575 C H Douglas- 6 66 577 W F Aiken 666 6 581 T R McMeekin 500 6 582 T F Curlee 360 497 D L Stevenson 10 20 9 470 P B Cornwell 5 75 9 580 T L J.>hnston 5 50 9 515 T J Richardson 10 00 5 143 C R Bryce 166 5 V41 Joe McMeekin 5 40 9 579 S W Raf 555 0 150 Thos Jordan 20 00 0 576 WV J Lemnmon 8 00 0520 W L Kirkpatrick 2 60 9498 Duniel Weir 10 00 S531 R B rrawford 22 38 0 596 W PRuff 20 75 0 59 J McGraw - 12 50 -471 11 F lHobetson 2 77 9 532 S G Wi-ms 21 11 .? 71 1 C Thoaiis 13 20 0' 117 0 Y' Langford 15 39 2 116 11 Y Tur'er 145 0 "8 G Y (ms ..rd 57 21, 0215 W~ L1 .el! 275 .593 W j kvno 7 50 0 205 8 U i): - 550 , 161 Sammn:1L-uhon 27 80 213 T W Brice 350 *2 29 Sim, mza~l Dunkas 31 63 .) 15 wwCms170 0 32i Rub~en Ha-rrison ll 56 0 49 E M Knom<! 2 60 ' 122 W G iieat 75 (0 79 W Crawf~rd 1 65 tO 21 J M li?gi..s 4 00 '"125 A R vuaokis 3 33 .0 27 ij Ira :eee 103 55 0 31 WV J John'on 12 20 31. T E larke 8 90 0 35 J F Lv ie. 6 60 0 36 T P~ Y.,:' ginar 6 15 0 37 'fh -pou5 55 0 38 J'B Paiekt~c 555 039 Jamf.-s ilavoid 5 55 0 V lW .s 11 4 95 0 1J B Bdr;;v 4 4 0 43 W Robinson 2 77 .69 R ff& S:eele 25 00 9 72 .9 55 9 73 J WV Bankhead 4 00 0 74 J B Ste:vens~on 3 00 .75 S PMartin 170 .| 76 R.A 0ibsonz 11i .9|118 S L Hiamiter 15 48 2 120 S Glluey 3 00 . 138 E B Carter 2 22 S139 O LBr..wa 1 10 )140 Tom Adger 55 5 77 James E'kin 2 20 S210 T J R i 4 44 92 70 W M Pa'riek 14 31 2 516 8 1) Cros~bv 5 90 2 119 J G Wollifw 3 40 2 68 " 27 40 9| 44 J B Morrison 2 50 344 J P Allen 8 00 )0 42 P C Broom 4 00 ) 30 Lewis S& arie 13 75 1301 8 TClow ne: 1.00 5206 T WV Brice 7 20 0 67 T G Pat.'ick 37 28 0137 R WIPhillps 455 S3:)4 " 5 75 0O 517 Pe.ter Lunkin 5 50 >0147 Abell & (:tirlee 22 07 50A S Wtnitenaer 20 55 0 5. JaslIseanho-xer 1 00 ) 33 WV G Ilinnat 8 40 )110 E Scott 4 00 S564 J Q Davis 75 0 roont nocs:, 1892 93. 139 T G Cameron 50 00 5 85 B G Tennant 27 25 168 T C Camak 66 66 0~ 166 H-enry Wylie 39 05 0o 281 J FMc\1 .ter 7581 0 280 " 77 11 0 146 D ADoitz 4166 5151 S lie Ba8 ett - 9 50 5 [Continued.] AGNETIC N~ERVIN E. 0 Is sold with written 0 guaratee to tAe S NervousProstra ~ \~.61 ~ nessEs edl and - q1eurli andWake fnines eausod byex cessiveuseefopium, - /~.Tobaceo and Alco hol; M!erdal Depres -57 ERE: - P R -sion, softening of ) e 2?ain, causing Misery, Insanity and Death; * Mren:.$s, Impotenlcy, Lost Power in either se . y .,"eratnulece Aaeexe'rtio o terain and i rrors of Youth. It gives to Weak Orastheir; co-rhura ior and doubles the :leys ofU~ cures Lcrhaand Female Weekases. A months a reat xcr~nt, in plain package by maH, to any address, $1 5 orbox, boxessa. With every$5sorder weEive a Written Cuarantee to cure or refund the money. 9 irculars free. Guarantee lssued onaly by our ex 0 C cai--e agent. W wJNNEs1(V) YRUG S'10RE "he Hot Weather Vill soon be on in fall for -e and you will need light goods. We have them rreat variety and beautifa; styles. hite Goods in plain India Linen, very sheer and pretty, Checked and iped Muslins, fancy effects, and Dotted Swiss. ;eautiful styles in colored Lawns and Jackonets, fine Dimities and Swiss i colored dots. Big variety in cheap Lawns from 3c. and up. Duck, Per s, Gingham, in variocty of styles and quality. Satteeas for waists, hand ne and new. Ve have the third order in of those Silk Shirt Waists. Take a look at them. ight weight Serges in b ne and black, just the thing for skirts. ast received, a second supply of Lace and Embroideries, Insertions to tch. Iri.-h I'vits are all the go; see them. W'e hlii b-n busy in th- :in -, but h:xve received new supplies and the k i s ; fu.. Th'e ruoods .re s yl;,h an. the prices rigid. We are endeav .- to p as.! and satisfy ev:ry cii tmer by polite attention and nice work. sH4ES. * SHOES. We can please von in ibis line, for we have the goode, and Ladies' Oxfords black and tan-all ;tv les and qus'ities. Gents, White and Negilgee Shirtv, Gnaze Underwear, Ties, &c. 'ULL LiNE STYLISH STRAW HATS. We want your trade and feel confident goods will never be cheaper than )w; so now is the time to buy. Come and see us. CALDWELL & RUFF. IHE Narrow in Tread. 3EST Light in Weight. BICYCLE Beautiful in Finish. EVER LVM ADE was christened as THE STEARNS W. D. GASH COMPANY, Equitable Building. Southern Representatives, Send for Catalogu Atlanta, Ga. Apply for agency. Headquarters for Millinery, TRIMMED AND UNTRIMMED LADIES', MISSES' AND CHILDREN'S Hats in all the latest shapes. A large stock of Ribbons, Fancy Feathers, Birds and Tips. Fancy Pins, Buckles, Velvets, Silks, Crepes and other goods per taining to this department. As we have a large stock of these goods which must be sold in season, we have marked our prices on them down. Now is your time to come and buy at J. 0. BOAG'S. MStaple Dry Goods.s< .'~Novelty and Solid Color Dress Goods of various stv es urid materiail. wirlb Trinziir~gs fo'r see TRADE--J. O, B()A G'S. MARK CROCKERY, GL ASSWA RE, Si >e-, 1l:usi and other goods usually fanund in a general muerc:handise it.>re to b~ f.>ind at J. 0. BOAG'S. Furnitunre, Sewiung Machines,. Cooking Stoves, Organs, Baggies, Surreys, RoVd iti(arts, and One and Two-horse Wagons. J. O. Boag. HEADQUARTERS FOR SiebyIpreWahntnPr handseigwisthbloc withwhitemoifts stylishgsstock, wed rhpoe markedl ou hay ite oos suc adeilsrealiie ubo ~'fl''1IIW -- I'IM Sired atby prte-Wasingel tockar IIIUU ~Farm." TERMS :$10 00 to insure (with foal ___________only). 7.00season without insurance payable in advance. As w wis tomakeroomfor5 00 singe .service, pay Sprig sockwe ave arkd Iable in advance. W. D. DAVIS, as 3-16 Monticello, S. C. WOLE PEC GODEXCHANGE FEED DRESS GOODS, AND HATS, way down out of sight. The - winter is not yet gone and YOU WILL NEED WARM WE AR. We will beat "between season" prices to death.AN)S L S BL . When times are hard and money________ ' scarce YOU W G T YOUR D9LLA R TO ISILHV NHN Go A LONG WAYS- Fl o ae We will give ycu more for ONE -lo DOLLAR than any one else. AFE GOO AR. AN FEALGGESABES save ou mney.A FE SE ON-HAEON AGAND : Checed Hmesun, t 3. pe yd-Also Whie Hmepunat c.perydA FEW BUIE oS, I will sell cheap for cash or exchanige Will beat the record on Flour them fou dry .cattle. Respectfully yours, A. WILLIFORD, - Wi i.-hor't, S. :'. 1k. ~LU~\AL & U.1,NOTICE. to V0. IGDO A N D bOLICI' Blackstock, S. C. EDGAR ?RAP e Jennings, B. U.