University of South Carolina Libraries
' Eighteen iced drinking fountains are maintained through the summer In Providence. R. I. The first was estalvlished in 1804 by the Young Woman's Christian Temperance Union, and later the city authorities took hold of the work. About forty tons of ice is required for each fountain during the season. It is placed in an ice chamber containing coils of pipe. The Millionaire's Reerct. Dismal Dawson?Funny* isn't it. that a millionaire ain't happy? Everett Wrest?I see norhin' strange about it. I; is the time they have wasted that makes 'em sore when they think of it. "Time wasted?" "Sure. Don't you know that most of 'em has spent their lives in hard work'.'?lnuiannoons Journal. If you jmy your delfts promptly, you are entitled to more credit than a nun who is charitable, or a woman who is literary. i-rayer ana I'roranity are all ri'.'lit in their proper places, hut if y<>u have Tetter or Kczcma. or Salt-Rheum, or Ringworm, better save your breath ami buy "Tetterine " "??ccnn a box atilrug stores, or by mail from J. T. Sliuptrine. Savannah. U#. Catarrh Cannot be Cured With local applications, as t'nev cannot reach the sea. of the disease. t'atirrn is a blood or constitution il di*ea*e, and in order to runit you must take interna', remedies. Half's j Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and a? t> directly on the blood and mucous surface. Hall's Catarrh Cur*' is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physician* in this country for years, and is a regular prescription. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with thebesi blood purifiers, acting directly ou the mucous surface*. The perfect combination of the two ingredient- is what pr.?d 11 -es such wonderful result-- in cueins cat irrh. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. Cheney 6c Co.. Props., Toledo. o. Sold by Druggist*, price. Toe. Hall's Family Pills are the besu . 'its permanently cured. No fii* or n i oust . after first day's us" of Dr. K'ine's Dreat l.-rveR- sJ. rer.Sitrial b .ttleaud trc rtisefrec i,.- R. 1!. Kline. Lt 1..1W1 Ar hSt.. Phila.. l'a. Mrs. Winslow'sSoothincSyrup forchiidren ^thing, softens the ifums, mlucir.it inflnma.'on.allays j>ain,ourcs wind colic. '?* . a bottle. Piso's Cure is the medicine to break uj> children's Coughs and Colds. Mrs. G. Blunt, Spraifue. Wash.. March !*, l^i. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. I. Thorarsons Eye water. Drmrsrists 9ell at '.So. a bottle SCROFULOUS HUMOR Sores Healed by Hood's Saraaparilla and Have Never Returned. "I was a sufferer with scrofulous humor, and had a very large sore under my ohin. It caused me much pain. I also felt tired and despondent, hnt after taking a few bottles of Hood's Saraaparilla my sores wepAhnAlnH and have never returned." Mrs. jO. K. Rockwell, White's 8tore, N. Y. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the best?in fact the One True Blood Purifier. I Dill* assist ingestion sod cure flOOw 9 r III# Conetlpecon. Scents. ?2^JT 3ooyiciquES -JPA f uMV Sundard Wl S-4.1,, fnarsni'd, /OMfiv\su i&JSssitt I\B 1 yifu l |tc Sit. Shipprd to anyone J i^p^W~Jen approral without ad?ince ^Tm A '? deposit 0r*atftct?nelearl?,>a). m//T^ # JCjiifyj* BICTCLK W^/f l\ 'JFJ belflaf e4r?ttss ia Wi will gle* oos ogeat b**cb www ruirsc of a UBph *wh?wl to introduce tb?n Wrll# at oatt IW eerieacUl Ofw. Mead Cycle Co. 136 A \cuue F., I Chicago, III. nmi dii# ir.DS r?!i be mtcsI with- | I B II I I 1U W Anti-J*z' the"mar\?Iou# I I % I Ik |l rur? for tbednnk bablt. II |V |l Wnt? Renova Chemical ^ ^ " m Co.. W Broadway. N. Y. fail information (In plain wrapper) mailed :rt I DR. BAKER'S FEMALE REGULATOR Cun*>* Suffering Women. Absolutely Vegetable and Guaranteed. Manufacture*! by Lookout Mountain Medicine Company. GREE\E\ ILLB. - TEW s?. Joseph j u!a imm The Best on the Market. All Druggists and Merchants. Mnfd by L. GER*TLE A CO-. Chattanooca. Tenn SfiudiheM Q?eMae Anemia, (la. Actual bnai?Miv Sou r V boo*-. Short tune. Chaap board- Send for catalcene. RPAIRF 10 m*kf' lb*- bard white boap fltljll t for I5cti lnatrurtion 10 eta auup. CI??AVT. C? G. GONONO. The Famous Medium will answer questions for anyoar and guarantee correct answer*. Thousands testify he can reveal all secreu and my sterle*. past and future. By letter 50c and $l.iw. A few days only. Pumice Stone in America. Heretofore our supply of pumice stone has coine almost exclusively from Italy. Now an American product is forcing its way into the market. This material has been found of excellent quality tn Western Nebraska, and in a pulverized form. There are seven different deposits, these comprising in all about 400 acres. According to a report made by Prof. R. G. Salisbury of the University of Chicago, there are approximately 800.000 tons In sight. The deposits, with adjoining lands, have been acquired by the Chicago Pumice Company. They, however, desired also a lump pumice stone. After much search such a deposit was found In Utah, 245 miles south of Salt Lake City. This property comprises 120 acres, and it Is virtually &n entire mountain of the material of all degrees of purity.?Manufacturer. luTv I TC Vegetable " I IflALLi^ Sicilian HAIR RENEWERl V Prevents the hair from fall- I III ingf out, and makes a new ml growth come in. You 3j\ save what you have ^^and get more. No^^' & N. U.?No. 43?'97. IS AtI ELSE FAILS. _ 33 mm Be?* Con?h Syrup. Taaic GoSa. t7?? H E2 to ttai'i. so.d ^ dyMiWL an CEORCE M. PULLMAN FOUND DEAD. Millionaire Palace Car Man Suddenly Expire* In Chicago. George M. PullmaD.the man who made It possible to travel in comfort,and who bears the distinction of having precipitated the greatest strike on record in America, and who has succeeded where others failed in establishing a communal town, died suddenly of heart disease in Chicago at 5 c'clocka. m. Mr. Pullman's death occurred I in his magniiieent brownstone home at ] the corner of Prairie avenue and Eighteenth street, where he lived for many yea -s. Mr. Pullman, while in apparently good > health recently, formerly had some stomach i trouble, which he attributed largely to the : condition of his eyes. It was not known that he was ill. and the llrst knowledge : that the end had come was reported when the lifeless body was found. Mr. Pullman ; retired to his room as usual, not complaining of any ailment. No one was present when the end came, and death, it is supposed, was due to a,'Oi>!exy or heart disease. i George Mortimer Pullman, head of the j great palace car company that bears his name, was born in a small town in Chauj tauqua County. New York.on March 3.1831. ; His chief inheritance poverty, he struggled , during his early boyhood to acquire an education, but at fourteen was forced to | ! irive tliis ui>. enterinsr lh? emidov of a I I country merchant, an.I finally at seventeen i joining his ehler brother in a cabinet-making business at Albion, N. Y. In isr>;> I h? moved to Chicago anil engaged in the then novel business of raising 1 entire blocks of sion<* or brick buildings. I In the same year his att ention being directed ' to the great di<con:fii':ts of long-distance | railway traveling, lie remodeled two old I day coaches of the Chicago and Alton into ! sleeping cars, and, these proving aceeptI able to travelers, he, in 1803. built the "I'io| ncer" at a cost of i?18,000. This car, alj though crude as compared with those of the present day. was built on practically I tue same plan. Front this small beginning has growu the great Pullman Company, which, organized in 1807, now operates about 2o00 palace cars on more than a hundred thousand miles of railroad. Besides forming the car company. Mr. Pullman in 1880 founded the town of Pullman, III., in which are the Pullman car shops. Mr. Pullman's fortune has been estimated at *40.000,000. Mr. Pullman was a brother of Rev. br. J. M. Pullman, former editor of the Christian Leader. Hi* leaves two s ets. Sanger and George M.. Jr.. and two daughters. Mrs. Carolan, of San Francisco, and Mrs. Frank O. Louden, of Chicago. BISMARCK ON MONROE DOCTRINE. lie Think* It a Piece of Insolence on tl?c Part of the United States. The Neueste Xachrichten, of Leipsio, publishes a report of a conversation which Prince Bismarck is said to have had with a recent visitor, in the course of which the ex-Chancellor is quoted as saying that the Monroe Doctrine is "uncommon insolence toward the rest of the world, and does violence to the other American and JEuropean States with American Interests." It would be analogous, the Prince is said to have added, if Russia and France combined to disallow frontier changes in Europe, or the preponderating Powers in Asia, Russia and Great Britain arrogated the right not to change the political status without their consent. Continuing Prince Bismarck is reported to have remarked: "Their great wealth, due to the soil of America, has led the American legislators to over-estimate their own rights and underestimate the rights of the other American and the European States." TRIED SUICIDE SIX TIMES. A Wealthy Farmer Who Feared Poverty Hinted Hiimclf Successfully. Thomas H. Hooper, a wealthy farmer who lived near Trenton, N. J., after six attempts at suicide, succeeded in hanging himself from the rafter of a barn. Hooper imagined that he was becoming poor, because he did not receive large returns from his farm, which he had leased on shares. He was afraid of ending his days in an alms-house, and so determined on death. He tried paris green twice, he cut his throat once, he threw himself in a lake, and twice put the rope around his neck. He had been closely watched by the members of his family, On the day of his death ho chatted cheerfully, and then went to the barn and hanged himself. He leaves a large estate. FIGHTING IN INDIA. British Fall Into an Ambuscade and Have Fifteen Killed. Two squadrons of the British Ninth Bengal Lancers fell into an ambuscade in the hills between Bara and Mamannt In India. A natiye officer and fourteen sowo vkj wom Ull fx/1 cavnrt an ware tpopa VOIinH. ed and twenty-seven horses were killed. In the fighting between the brigade of troops commanded by General Sir Yeatman Biggs and the insurgent tribesmen from Chagru, on the Samaua Range, Major Jennings Bramlev and two privates of tne Gordon Highlanders wore killed, Lieutenant Pears and fourteen privates of the King's Own Borderers were wounded, seven native soldiers were killed, and thirty-eight native soldiers were wounded. The loss of the neiny was severe. Suicide Follow* Fire. Rather than face her brothers, for whom she kept house, fearing that they would blame her because the house caught fire during her absence, seventeen-year-old Mamie Lvnch. of New York City, went to her sister's house to sleep, and during the night committed suicide by poison. Since her sister Josephine's marriage, several years ago, Mamie had been housekeeper tor the two brothers, Jerry, who is a paver, and Cornelius, who is a lithographer, their mother and father being long dead. Pretended to Lynch Theiu. After dragging John Hazelrig and Jim Penn, two colored men, through a forest and swinging them up on trees until they were nearly unconscious, a mob at Summervllle, G-a., decided that they were Innocent and released them. The men had been accused of firing the barn of a prominent farmer, and the mock lynching was an effort to extort a confession. Steamboat lloiler Kxploeion. Tho explosion at Charleroi, Penn., of the boiler of the steamboat G. TV Force, owned I by the P ttsburg Plate Glass Company, killed tho captain, James llyan, and the cook, William Patterson. The body of Patterson was found six hundred yards across tho river buried in tho saud and mutilated. The body of tho captain has not yet been recovered. All the Students Walk Out. All of the students of the Baptist University at Sioux Falls, South ^Dakota, walked out of the institution, and demand tho removal of the President before they will re- j turn. The ari/itrary rulings of the President and the slight provocation on which [ ho inflicted punishment were the causes. ' It Is likely that he will have to go. A Shart Australian Wool Clip. A considerable shortage in the Australian wool clip is inevitable, owing to the drought, which has caused the death of large numbers of sheep. The Argus estimates the total deficiency at 175,000 bales. J ' BRITISH CABINET AND SILVER. The Mission of the Ignited State* Commissioners Apparently a Failure. The United States Monetary Commissioners have received no official informa1 tlon regarding the action taken by the British Cabinet. Private advices, however, convince them that the Cabinet has dealt the deathblow to their mission. It is expected that the Commissioners will shortly be informed that Her Majesty's Government regrets being unable to accede to their proposals, but is willing to listen to any other plan they may suggest. But both parties to the conference know that no other practical scheme can be advanced. 1 In the event of the expected reply being i received the United States Commissioners (s??ntnr Fdward O. Woleott. of Colorado: ex-Vice-President Adlai E. Stevenson, c>f , Illinois. arnl General Charles Jackson Paine, of Massachusetts) will return to the Unite.1 States. It is learne 1 that t!ie only thin? the Cnhltv't officially dis Missed in connection with the currency question on Saturday was Sir James Westlaml's report. Sir James is head of the Financial Department of India, and his voluminous report took the strongest grounds against reopening the mints. The United States Commissioners believe their failure means that no furtlfer effort in behalf of bimetallism will be made for many years to <*o:nc. They attribute their failure to the opposition of the bankers and of the London Times. Until these forces were aroused all signs pointed to the cooperation of the British Government. The afternoon newspapers echo the opinions of the morning newspapers in congratulating the Government on "finally disposing of the bimetallic scare" and o\- ! pressing regret that It should "ever even have seemed to receive support in high qnarters." Hugh C. Smith. Governor of the Bank of England, said to a representative of the Associated Press: "The bank is a private ; company.withou' any Government control, and is not responsible to the Government, except in the termsof its charter. The Gov- i eminent cannot issue any orders relative to the bank's reserves. At the same time the Government is the bank's best customer.and I the Council of Governors being composed ' of la\f-abiding citizens, whenever the Gov- , 1 eminent makes a request we do our best to comply. The Government must be pre- i sumed to know what is best for the country, j The press has been filled with misstate- ; men!- The Government wrote asking if , the bank was willing to renew its offer made at the Paris Monetary Conference . in 1881 regarding the reserve. I replied ! in the same tenor ns the memoran * . ' it-- 1 I- .1 i- ttw.i I uum WniCU lUt" IJUUiv ?'-ui iu mm. conference, though more guardedly. 1 That Is all that happened. The statement that the bank has been coquetting with the , , American Commissioners is pure rubbish. I Excepting whnt I have read in the papers . I have never heard of those gentlemen." ? ADMIRAL WORDEN DEAD. ! i Hero of the Monitor and Merrlraac Fight i Expire*, Aged Eighty. j ] Admiral John L. Worden, retired, the 1 J hero of the battle between the Monitor and Merrimac during the Civil War died at J Washington. Pneumonia was the lmme> dlate cause of the old hero's death. He was eighty years of age. , ^^ j o REAR 4DMIKAI, J. L. WORDEX, XT. S. X. j . ?.?j , .!.? , _if ' 1 A'uuir.u ??uruc-Ji was uuc ui mc ten xw? maining heroes of the glorious old regime i of the United States Nary, which began with its foundation and ended with the close of the Civil War. Born in Sing Sing, Westchester County, N. Y.t on March 12, 1818, he entered the"navy as midshipman in 1835. He was promoted to a lieutenancy November 30, 1846, and served his country ; in all quarters of the globe. He was sent to superintend the construe- | tion of Ericsson's Monitor, and left New j York in command cf her when she started ; for Hampton Roads to meet and check, if J possible, the Confederate ram Merrimac. . The victory won there revolutionised the building of the navies of the world. Congress gave Worden a vote of thanks, and recommended his promotion. Ho becamo a Captuin and commanded several of the ] other monitors during the closing opera- ] tions of the war. In 1886 he was retired ( with the full rank and pay of an Admiral, 1 the only instance of the kind in the history ! . of the navy. I j MASSACRED BY CHINESE REBELS, j i The City of Kuang Vang Captured and j .] Many Thousands Put to the Sword. The city of Kuang Yang, in Hunan Fro- | vince, has been captured and its inhabitants ! . massacred by n ba ad of rebels forming ( part of a rebel army which Is devastating ?. Huan and Kuang Provinces, in Southern i c China. I \ The bandits scaied the walis of Kuang ^ Yang, with the intention of capturing the . provincial prison and releasing three of , their members. One band tore down the * prison, setting free several hundred mur- : a derers, thieves and imprisoned debtors.' t Another gang attacked the central part i of the city, first murdering the magis- j trate who had sent three of the bandits i f to prison. His entire family, num-1 j bering thirty-two, including servants, was ^ killed. The night was spent in slaying and | plundering. All mandarins and every i 1 civil and military officer in the city were ? beaten. The number killed and injured : f exceeded 14,000. The Insurgents numbered C 15,000 men, half of them armed. Their j t avowed object was to destroy the existing ^ government in Southern China. The Government is greatly alarmed, but has no adequate means of suppressing the lnsur- ^ rection. I tx White Man Lynched. | t A lynching, in which the victim was a t white man Darned Cole, occurred near Wll- j mot. Mich. Cole had eotnmitted a cold . ^ blooded murder, and was pursued, cap- j 1 tured nnd hanged by a posse composed of ^ the murdered man's friends. Cole had a j bad reputation. Levering: to Be Court-Martlaled. Secretary Alger has instructed General ^ Brooke to order a court-martial for the c trial of Captain Lovering, of the United j States Army, in case the captain does not j ask for a court of inquiry. Captain Lov- , ering, it is alleged, brutally maltreuted a private named Hammond at Fort Sherl- c dan, Chicago, recently. I Advocate Seth Low. b The Executive Committee of the National J. Municipal League issued an address in ad- s vocacy of the election of Seth Low to the Mayoralty of Greater New York. / ?? sum m Items of People and Things in the Palmetto State. A MISSIONARY TO MARRY. Norton Had No Opposition?The Temperance Movement?Marked Improvement In the Public Schools. The prospects for a strikingly successful fair this year are brightening. Almost every (lay some new an 1 attractive feature is developed. Secretary Holloway last week came to the front with a suggestion of a kind of farmers institute during the festival. He gave but the following in regard to the matter: "fu addition to the various attractions already noticed for fair week it is I (lint an?)> ni.rlit d ll rill fir tVi? ! fair ?. combination meeting of farmers be called to meet at some convenient place, a sort of cross between a farmers institute ami an experience meeting. j "The people from all sections of the ' State will be in tiie city with nothing 1 specially to do, and these meetings.it is | thought, will not only be well attended J but profitable to thos who attend. An ;| hour or more each night devoted to an J address upon some agricultural subject, then a discussion to follow, and short : talks by farmers giving their practical experience. A general invitation should : be extended not only to all men. but to the ladies also. j "The professors of Clemson College are able and will lead oft' in addresses. ' Make the occasion a regular love feast j for our people." < The Carolina Spartan of last week contains the following: "Ja a recent issue of the New York Sun there is au interesting interview with the (iilbert ' Reid, a missionary just returned from China. For several years he worked ' under the direction of the I'resbytorian Board, but he is now preparing to open 111 institution of learning for the higher classes of the Chinese. He thinks the time has come wnen something can be ione in that field. Mr. Reid, and Miss 3allie Reynolds, who went from South r'n,^l;?? ,.cara v. ?iunua iv vuiua cifiuv vi wu |T v*mw igo, aader the direction of thewomana t>oaui of the Southern Methodist :hunih, will be married in Columbia, November 10th. She will have charga >f the woman's department in that in- ; ititution. A through freight and passenger ser- , rice has been inaugurated between Charleston, points and on the South Carolina and Georgia road and all [mints on the Ohio River and Charleston railroad. The schedule arranged ind which is now in effect fnrnishes >ne of the quickest and most convenient -outes for Blacksburg, Gaffney, York- . rille, Rock Hill, Camden, Shelby, Marion and Rutherfordton in North Carolina. The distance from Charleston to Blacksburg and all points south if Blacksburg has been shortened fully two hours and a half. j The Superintendent of Education has ' received a great many of the annual re- 1 ports from the various counties of the 3tate giving the statistics for the present year as to the public schools. All :he reports so far received indicate a jonsiderable increase in the enrollment . in the public schools, and a handsome increase so far as the length of the session is concerned. This year the schools I ire getting the income from a three xiill instead of a two mill tax. The State organizer of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union is now ; naking a determined effort to increase ts membership and further the field of ts usefulness, and with this end in j new the president has issued an appeal j :o the women of the State to ally them- i selves with the organizations. The ; president calls upon the women of the ; State to join the various branches and : ivhere none exist to join the great ternperance movement. The will of the late ex-Senator T. J. \ Robertson, of Columbia, has been pro- . ?ated. The ex-senator left a fortune , >' about SI,000,000. He leaves to his i vidow the handsome home on Arsenal I dill and 8100,000 in United States j jonds at 4 per cent, with accrued J ntereBt. The rest of the property is ? squally divided between his two sons, < lohn Caldwell and Edwin Wales 1 Robertson. With the exception of Marion and j -lorry counties, the returns of the gen- ' >rai election tor congressman irom me Sixth district are complete. The five I ouuties which have sent in their re- ' urns give Mr. Norton 1,425, the total e rote cast. The other two counties will <j ncrease the vote to probably 2,000. * There was no opposition to Mr. Norton i ind the election was merely rerfuuc- ~ ory. I ? The population at the State hospital J or the insane is increasing at an alarmng rate. For the past year the increase las been steady and marked. Just at iresent the population is greater than [ it any time since the institution was ounded. There are now 923 patients lonfined there. The physicians say _ hat the most of the new patients are ? vornen. J The South Carolina State Holiness I Association closed its series of meetings | it Leesville last week. The meetings vere attended by a very large number luring the entire session. Columbia is to have a new ice factory, t. will cut prices and the consumers vill get the benefit. The statements of the several railoads of the State for the month of June ast compare with those of the same nonth of the preceeding j ear. The net arnings were $27,790.81; per cent, inrease of net earnings 5.17; tonnage, 800, 317,815 tons; 1807, 372,942 tons? ncrease 55,127 tons; passenger earnings 806, 3166,754.30; 1807, $103,920.95?derease 32,827.41. Jas. Elkins, dispenser at Ridgeway, ias been discharged for disregarding he closing hours and selling liquor to j Irunkards. rl - jr.* '?' ?. , ... ' t " ; i - 7 - . - . ' \ Woolen Ingrain Carpet, 31e. Imported Velvet Carper, Stic. Our en*ire force is working d: v and nl*ut tilling orders. You, c . can save fiO to 60 per cent, on 11 ca t by writing for our now Colored < .rpet Ciifril. Km* which fhowj nil j?o ds in lithorrnplied colors aud with exret distinctness. The hook coats you nothinjr. It you wish quality samples, send Re. :n j stamps. Our pew 112 paye general U catalogue of Furniture. Draperies. I I B Crockery, Stove*, etc.. will be ready I r after Nov. M. Write for it then. h j! JULIUS MINES & SOU, i BALTIXOBF. M1). ? I Please mention this paper. ISXKHHBBBBRCERBBnr mi li b IWV !r MMtl'lffl ' liCTWWMroM ?Mothers! 1 rp?E discom- a I forts and r^/vjlk -< A-dangers of { a & chil'd-birthcan ft be almost en~^ relieves ex- 1 I pats them in ^ cor.'lition to do their wort B perfectly. That makes preg- ij nancy less painful, shortens * labor and hastens recovery after BL child-birth. It helps a woman Hi bear strong healthy children. Win?i! has also brought happiness to thousands of homes barren for years. A few doses often brings joy to loving hearts that long lor a darling baby. No woman should neglect to try it for this trouble. It cures nine cases out of ten. All druggists sell Wine of Cardui. $1.00 per bottle. For advice in cases requirinr special directions, address, rivine symptoms, H th# "Ladles' Advisory Department,'* jjj The Chetunoota Medicine UO.. tutu- n aooet. Tcan. Mrs. LOUISA HALT I of Jefferson, Ga., says: fl " When I first took Wine of Cardul n we had been married three years, but n eould not hare any children. Nine months later I had a fine girl baby." n CORRESPONDENCE INVITED. )ld Dominion Iron & Sail Wit* Richmond. V* Seattle FREE INFORMATION tlondike Seattle. wash.. ia . Chamber or Commerce llaska Seattle, Klondike. Alaska. AVash'ngton i'ate. Seattle, B&.0M) population; Railroad. 2oninierclal, .Mining and Agricult ural Centre; k'st OtHtt.V; Lowest Prices; Longest Kxperinc?; Largest City; Safest Routes: Add. See. * TttTJlB. W | lice'sGooseGrease Liniment s >ways sold under a guarantee to cure all idies and pains, rheumatism, neuralgia, prains, bruises and burns, if isalso warrantd to cure colds, croup.coughs and la grippe luicker than any known remedy. No cure 10 pay. ?"vmi u> HII : iu Kciicrai i tores. Mnde only by i.OOS GREASE 4 ilNlMFNT CO.. Grkknsijoko. C. 'OMDl CTC COTTON, 8A\f, CRIST, /UlTlr LL I L Oil and Fertilizer ICIIiIj outfits Alao Gin, Preaa, Cane Mill and Shingle Outfit*. $3" Cast every day; work ISO hands. iOMBARD IRON WORKS AND SUPPLY COMPANY. AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. mUYER'S COLLEGE Huml. Typewriting, ! iootteeping. Beet. Cheapest. Situation guaranteed. I IWM A Ore.t Roe.), Dl--o?rtsi. Send for a KKEE i | L m uoo.a|ru A' let it Mx-ak lor!t.?eit. Postage oc. I I I Q 1>K. S. PERKEY. Chicago. 111a. 1 GET THE GC:>HWalter Bal tBreakfa Pure, De Costs Less than 02 Walter B (Established 2 780 ) 1 Trade-Mark. S V \ ' # i '. / " ' ' SAW MILLS. If you need a saw mill, any size, writeme before buyiiiK elsewhere. I have , the most complete line of mills of ?Dy dealer or manufacturer in the South. CORN MILLS. Very highest grade Stones, at unusually low prices. WOOD-WORKING MACHINERY, Planers. Moulders, Edger-, Bo-Saws Band Saws, Laths, etc. ENGINES AND BOILERS, Talbott and Liddell. Engleberg Bice Huller, in stock, quick delivery, low prices. V. C BADH Atcl, No. 1320 Main St., Columbia, S. C. MAPUIWEDV mftimmuiii RICK HULLING ANI) THRESHING UY I3IPROVKD METHODS. Engleburg Rice Hujlerand Polisher. Rico Fi-ld Drainage Pumps. Cano Mills, Evap r.itor* and Sugar Kettles. Engine* and Boilers. Saw Mills. Grist Mills, Ac. A full stock always ?.n hand of Belting, Packing, Pipe nnd Fittings, Pulleys and Shafting. Drilling outfits for Artesian Wells. THE BAILEY-LEBBY CO. CHARLESTON, - S, C; Try B.-L. Co's Anti-Friction Babbitt Metal. PIANOS. For Catalogues, Prlcej, etc., of -ho Choicest Pianos on the market, writ- ' > 31. A. Malone. Columbia, 8. C. t lenge any house in America to su , iy better P.anos and for less money. M. A. MALOAE, Columbia, S. C. ORGANS. If you are looking for the best Organ. an?? .. for the least money, write for catalogue, etc., to M. A. Malone, Columbia. 8. C. Those who desire to inspect my stock, I cordially invite to visit my salesrooms while attending the State Fair, Nov. 8th to 13th, 1897. 31. A. 31 ALONE, COLUMBIA, S. C. A FARMLANDS FOR sale IN SOUTH CAROLINA. IN LARGE OR SMALL TRACTR TERMS EASY. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION ADDRESS E. K, PALMER, COLUMBIA, 8. C. THE UNITED STATES GOVMRNMBNT has I adopted the Keeley Treatment in the Soldier's Homes and in an Institution for we exclusive ase of the Regular Armr. ALCoflOL, OPIUM, t Produce each a dlsaada TOBACCO UftINO I having definite pathelogy. The disease yields easily to the Double Chloride of Qold Treatment as administered at The Keeley Institute, Greenville, 8.0. Detailed information mailed on application to THE KEELEY INSTITUTE, (OR BOX 87) OREKNVILLK* ------ The ONLY Keeley InadtnteliM. C. Alabama Marries Mississippi 1 Oxford, Abu, writes: Hara used Dr. M. A. Slmmona Liver Medicine 25 year*, jml , I know It cures DUxinese ) \ eH fm Mr of Head, Soar Stomach, X J Slck Headache, and wE "w/ monyother diseases. I tried iNt# "Thedford's Black Draught," but did not find be naif as good as the I euoorrhcea?"Whltea," ' This is a disorder from which few womea escape at some period of their lives. It iM in the nature of nasal catarrh. In a healthy ^ condition the llnlnginembraneof the genital organs secretes eomcient mucus to moisten them, but If the mucus membrane is congested or Inflamed, the secretion becomes profuse, Irritating and offensive. The beet results will follow the use of our Mexican Vernal# Remedy as an injection, and a dose twice a day for some time of that, great uterine tonic, Dr. Simmons Squaw via* Wine, will cure the complaint. jj&t sss&KMBSkji: , P * 1 cine has been used 20 yeaie { in my Pathsr"? family for ' K JL Nervouanea*,8iek Headff M ache. DtiimmU. BU> O , V ion?WMr81stir ml IM / confined to bed for months tfCPs J from Enluxemeot of -J \S vtL Llrer. Onr Doctor gave /V ber np to die. She began rt ^SlLv^ taking M. A. S. L 91. and IL^ategalWwas soon entirely well. There is no init comparison between M. A. 8. L. M. and Zeiiln's Liver Regulator. The latter by careful test bar- ' ing been found not so reliable has been discarded. 'I Menstrua! Irregularities. Puberty Is the period when menstruation is established. It is the time when the girl becomes a woman, and also the time from which many female diseases date. The menstrual flow usually continues from three to six days and oomcs on about every twenty-eight days. The quantity exuded varies from two to eight ounces, but tbe amount consistent with the health of one person may be excessive and weakening in another. The function is regarded as being , regular when its effect upon tbe system ia favorable. Tbe departures from healthy menstruation are numerous and should be corrected by using Dr. Simmons Squaw Tine Wins. _ - PATENT CLUSTER SCARF Pllf Heavy Gold Plate. Kaby Centre. Surrounded by 8 Fine Brilliants. Sample 15c. D. M. Watxlvi t C<K, CataLoon Fku. Providence, B. I. -? . 8. N. U. No. 43.?97. __ ^ -.V'j JNE ARTICLE ? ) cpr ?? Co.'s i A vjiea. NUT w aw > .st COCOA j iicious, Nutritious. 1 VE CENT a cup. f hat the package bears our Trade-Mark. ^ aker & Co. Limited, } Dorchester, Moss. ' ? - ... >/i -js