University of South Carolina Libraries
> . r The Thine He Forgot. The absent-minded German professor ' ^continues to contribute to the gaiety of : the nations. Lately he had. late at j night in his chamber, disrobed himself. ; /when be sat down with his head lu his hands. "Donnerwetter!" he said. "There was something I was to do. What was it, J now ?" He sat and pondered Intensely for i hall an hour, growing colder and colder. "vPlnally he sprang up. "Ah. I have it!" he exclaimed. "I Intended to go to bed!" \ A <ioo<l Honest Doubter -~-v in* person we like to meet. Wc like to have ' nucha raati try Tetterine. He will be inore ' enthusiastic tb*u anvlxxly el-e once lie's rtired and convinced. Tvtt riac is for Tetter. Vj-v.n. i Rinirwurm mid all skin dise ?se<. .V) I ceul a box at drug store or by ruail from J. T. Shuptriue, Savannah. tia. SIOO Keward. #100. The readers of this paper will be pleased tc ! learn that there is .it least one dreaded disease I that science has been able to cure iu all its stages, and that is atarrb. Hall's <. at.errh Cure ts the oalv positive care known i<> the I medical fraternity. atarrh being a corivtrtu- i tlonal disease. r-nuircsa constitutional treat- j merit. Hall's Catarrh* ure is taken internally. | acting directly ou the blood and mucous *uri faces of the svstern. thereby destroying the foundation of tlie disease. and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution andassistiug nature iu doing its work. Vho proprietors have so much fa th in its curative powers thst they offer One Hundred Hollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. Cheney A- > o..* Toledo, 0. Sold bv Druggists. 15c. Hall's Family Fills arc the best. We liave not been without Piso's Cure for Consumption for 00 years.?Lizzie Kukkel, Camp St., Harrisburg, Pa., May 1, l&ll. Mrs. Wins'.ow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reducing inftamation,allays pain,cures wind colic, tic.a bottle. Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervousness alter first tD.v's us- of Dr. Kline's fireat Nerve Kt store . fcJ trial bottle and treatise free Dr. R. H. KncsE. LU..W! Arch St.. Phila., Pa. '? If afllic -d with sore eve* use Dr. T. Thome- ] fcnsEi i* ?ater. Druggists sell at liSc. a bwttlo ! ITS WORST FORM _____ All SjunUttna of Catarrh Have Disappeared Since Takw; Hood's. " "My daugnter has had catarrh ia its worst form since she was four years old. She obtaiued only temporary relief from medicines until she began taking Hood's Sarsaparilla. Since using this medicine t^e disagreeable symptoms of the disease hare entirely disappeared." II. W. Silsby, Hartland. N. T. remember i Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the best?in fart the One True Blood Purifier. assist Digestion and cure nOOU S rllio Constipatioa. Scents. The Cilina: of Machinery. An investigator who likes to get ?ojni to fine points has been figuring J^~ out the Uiiic.cUve ia the oiling ei watches and locomotives. A good watch B ntCUli UlUUo VUtC IU a JCOl iv a jv<u f x and a half. A locomotive oiled in the same way should run sixty miles an hour day and night for (J4S days, or . nearly forty times the circumference of the earth. He says that as locomotives have to be oiled every day the watchmaker must have brought his art to a much higher degree of perfection than the man who has built the locomotive. As a matter of fact the cases are not parallel. The watch is most carefully protected from the air, dust and foreign substances. The lo '/ comotive runs through dirt, dust, cint. ders and debrts of all sorts, .much of 'which, as a matter of course. work3 Into the machinery. If this man could keep a locomotive in a glass case and oil it and care for it as completely as ho does his watch, he might be able to make some figures, but under the circumstances he can scarcely be said to have proven anything. ? ^Ball's 1 Vegetable Sicilian M fcRpi/WJI |\Vl??n*?U|y I^X, It is a rcnc&cr, because My it malrrs new again. IrK^ Old hair is made new; the gray changed to the foyM YELLOW FEVER PKEVEATKD BT TAKING "OurNativeHerbs" the p Great Blood Purifier and Lirer Regulator. 20O DAYS' TREATMENT $ I .OO Containing a Registered Guarantee. 32 page Book and Testimonials, FREE. Sent by mail, postage paid. Sold only by TEftOXZO 0. BUSS CO..Wasl)ingtoD, B.C. $12 3000 BICYCLES V"^LX #V\ must he rlnteti out at omcr. J DRW Stnodaru "? fuarsnt'd. ?\ 9I\ to SM 93 Ruxfel*- #|0 Jvv Hfl\ llf\ IfcW* td hand wheel! $4 fit Wt\ vfTi I*0111- Shipped to anyone 1-y? H^-l mUlHrfM, ion nprrowal without advance m / KRa ' iderail t Cmt faetero tlrarlaf tate ? *y, TV# 'V EARS A BICYCLE Mf/ f[ y#J_. MLiJEljy IvIrK- *dwrtbi u. *? wiji (to?M! ML '.J <ark tow* ntl? CSS !f? caapk fMWP_ ?to !?tro4ie! ihoa. Write at oat* fat aartwaataTwar. Mead Cycle Co. 136 Avenue F.. Ckicaco. 111. ' HQ Q A If CD'? female regulator 11II DftftLn 0 Cures Suffering Women. II Absolutely Vegetable and Guaranteed. 1# ?Manufactured by? IiMkont Mountain Medicine Company, GRJBKNEVILLK. - TE.W STN. U.?No. 45? 97. TO CURK A COLD IN ONK DAY. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund the cash if it fails tocureJJSc. Frj In time, sold by flntggiifa. W . "7^ M A EEPflET ON THE PENSIONS Ccrnmiss'oner Evans G'ves th: Showing For the Yer.r. NO DIMINUTION IN NUMBER, 1 Nearly SI40,000.OOO Was I'alil Ont During the rast Fiscal Term?'The ltoll Exhibits Losses of 41.1*.!'.* anil a Total oi r,4.01*! Added?The Total Number oi Pensions Is til 0.014, an Increase. Washington*. P. C. (Special).?The first annual report of Commissioner of Tensions I n. titty x,Vitus (u<? orirrriai v vt iuv j terior has been made public. He says: j ''There were added to the rolls during the I vear the names of 50,101 new pensioners j ] ^^ I COMMISSIONED or PEXSIOX3 ZVANS. mil tiiore were restored to the rolls 3'JT1 i pensioners, who hal been previously dropped, a total of 31.072. I "During the same period the losses to the I roll were 31.900 by death; 1071 by remnr- I riage of widows and mothers; 1813 by legal | limitation, ^minors;) 2G83 for failure to , | eliiim pension for three years, and 3500 for i other cau?es. an aggregate of 11,122. "The whole number of pensioners on the j I rolls June 30, 1897. was 970,014. The Det ! j gain over the previous year was 5336. It | j will thus beseen that the pension roll has j [ not yet begun to show any diminution, though It has been anticipated by my predeeessors in offlee that such woyid he tlie j fact. Seven widows of Revolutionary soldiers and nine daughters of Revolution- ; arv soldiers are still on th-? rolis. During j j tho year 94,434 pension certificates were j issued, of which number 50.101 were orig- . innl allowauees. and the balance were re- j | issues, increases, restorations, renewals. ! 4". "Of tha number. 14,071 cert ideates of I j various classes were held in this bureau | until July 1. 1897. and are accordingly aot , credited to the past fiscal year. "During the same period. 70,234 claims of various classes were disallowed. This ! i number, however, uoes not mciuue cimuu j which were made for higher rates of pen- | sion. "The amount disbursed for pensions by J the pension agents during the vear was 8139.79J.242.12, and the amount disbursed bv Treasury settlement was 8150 475.23, a total of $1S9,949,717.35." TRAIN HELD_UP AND BURNED. Desperate 'Work of Four Kobber* Near Albuquerque, New Mexico. Atlantic and Pacific passenger train No. 2, from the West, was held up by four men aear Grant's station, ninety-five miles west of Albuquerque, New Mexico, at 7.30 p. m. After blowing open the express company's safe, the robbers wrecked tne train, which caught fire, the express, baggage and smoking cars being destroyed. It is not kDown whether they were successful In obtaining booty, but it is thought * large amount of money was carried by the train. The coaches were cut off and left at the dockyards. The rest of the train was then taken out n mile and a halt from tno station, where the express safe was rifled. The engine and baggago car ran at a terrific rate until they struck the coaches, which were standing near the stockyards. The cars were wrecked and caught fire. The passengers had all left the coaches before the collision and none was injured. Fireman Henry Ablo, who was compelled by the robbers to run the engine when the coaches were left, was killed by the explosion when the safe was blown open. NINETEEN MEN DROWNED. The Steamer Idaho Founders in a Gale , on Lake Erie. The steamer Idaho, caught in the llerce i southwester which swept over Lake Eriei J foundered in eight fathoms of water, twelve | miles above Long Point, which juts into i Lake Erie from the Canadian shore, sixty- J five miles west of Buffalo. Of her crew of , twenty-one men two were saved. Eight J hours after the disaster the steamer Mariposa sighted the single spar which marked j the grave of the Idaho. Clinging to that J spar, hardly out of the reach of the fierce \ sea, were the two survivors of the i wreck, almost frozen from the long ex- j posure in their wet garments. One of them had been made Insane temporarily [ by his sufferings. It was no light task to I rescue them from the spar. The Captain | of the Mariposa ordered his small boats i down, but they could not live in the sea. Then he tried throwing lines to the men. but the men wer?? too stiiT and cold to hold onto mem. AUer ;wu Hours ixniueuvrmg he worked the Mariposa around to the spar and dragged the 'sailors aboard. The rescued mon were William Gill, a deok hand, whose borne is in Rochester, and Louis La Force, Jr., the second mate. Mob Law fn Rio Janeiro. Rio Janeiro. Brazil, was under mob rule j for a time. The mob looted the office or the Republican, a newspaper hostile to the Moraes Government. President Horaes hAs issued a proclamation declaring that he will perform his constitutional mission in spite o* the attempt upon his life. Bering Sea Treaty Signed. The delegates of the United States, Rus?iaf and Japan signed the new Bering Sea treaty, to stop relagic sealing, in Washingj ton. It will require the ratification of the Senate to become effective. Dice Decide Tied Votes. In. the local elections in Kansas ties are decided by chance. Usually the contestants draw straws. This year, however, six : ties were settled by throwing dice. Four of these were in Bourbon County, and in aver}- case the Fopuiists won. Killed Ills Son and Himself. F.alph Van Horn, a farmer living near UnadiIJa, Xeb., jshot and killed his son, five ! ,-ears old, and then killed himself in the same way. Van Horn's brain was affected. He lost a snit for slander which he had bought against his father-in-law. THE NEWS EPITOMIZED. Wnliinjton Items. Tt is said that the Administration will give a fair trial to General Planeo's policy before taking any further notion on the Cuban oue-tioH. Consnl-General Leo left! Washington to return to his post in Ilav-' ana. Secretary of t'10 Nave Long savs there is { absolutely no foundation for the talk of war withSnain over the Cuban question. A social cable despatch from Jlangkok says t hat Siam has formally apologized to I'nited states Minister Uarrett forthe Kel"Tett outrage. Commissioner of Pensions H. Ciay F.vans has made his first nnnunl report to the Secretary of the Interior. It shows that 54.072 names were added to the roll and 41.12*2 lost by death. The disbursements for the year were nearly $140.000.030. The President has ordered a eourt-marti.al to try Captain Loveringon the charges of cruelty to Private Hammond, at Fort Sheridan. Chicago, recently investigated by a court of inquiry. It is expected that negotiations foe an arbitration treaty with England will be reopened in Washington soon. Dr. W. H. Evans and Benton Ki'lin. Commissioners appointed to Investigate the agricultural eonditions of Ala?ka. have submitted their reports to the Secretary of Agriculture. President MeKioley returned to Washington from his visit to Ohio. Domestic. There was a large decrease jn the number of new yellow fever eases in Xew Orleans. William Archibald Tliomnson, a Yale law student, arrested at New H iven. Conn., for stealing a diamond ring from another Yale man. is known to the police of four States. Southern business men predict a ?jiiick and general revival of*raJein that section as soon as the frost stops the fever nnd puts an end to vexatious quarantines. Three court officers wero arrested in Philadelphia. Penn.. for issuing fraudulent naturalization certificates. Edward Maekin died from iniuries received by n fall at a dan ?o in New York City. Ilis oartner, a woman weighing 200 pouno.e. ie i on mm. The war scare in Wall street. Xow York Ciry, disappeared, and securities were strong. Colonel John S. For 1. known throughout Texas as Colonel "Rip" Ford, tbe Tndian fighter. is dead in San Antonio. He was eighty-two vears of ugo and a native of South Carolina. Mrs. Wallace, a rich Chicago widow, offered to adopt Evangelina Cossio y Cisneros, who recently escaned from a Cuban prison, aud make her her heir. William P. Howarth. fl'tv years old. of Springfield. Mass., was accidentally strnek by Charles X. Robeson, a bicyclist, on Main street. Hartford. Conn., and so badly injure! by hitting his head on the curb that he died. seconds and roc trad buildings wns felt in Helen*. Batte and'Anaconda. .Montana. E. \Y. Lighthon.se. on^ of the best known young men in Dover. N. H.. shot hirns<*lf dead. He was thirtv-one years old. His motive is unknown. He was to have married a you as woman who lives in Boston in about three weeks. H. X. Haskell, asrod eiglity-fonr. and Emma Stevenson, eighteen, were married at Dallas. Texas. Mr. Haskell is worth S^OO.OOO.nud up ton few years agohad he^n prominent in municipal and political affairs. The most fashionable avenue in the city is named after bim. Captain W. H. Briggs. n well-known citizen of Fmnoria. Va., put tlm muzzle of a shotgun to his right eye, and using his wt.lking stick to press the trigger, killed himself instantly. Business troubles ore the alleged cause. W. R. Bremen, who took $3,000,000 from the mines at Sliver City. X. M., ten years ago. bnt lost his fortune through business reverses recently, committed suicide In a hospital in Silver Citv. Stephen O. Russell, aged seventeen, of Xewark. N. J., has been melancholy since the death of his mother, a month ago, committed suicide. { The Chamber or Commerce unanimously adopted resolutions urging immediate steps for the adequate defense of New York Harbor. Domintck Caboy and James Hennessy were killed by a "freight train at Asbury Park. N. J. Late returns from Maryland indicated that the Republicans will have a majority of seventeen on joint ballot in the Legislature. Complete unofficial returns froin lows on Governor give Shaw, Republican, a plurality of His vote is the largest ever east for a Republican candidate for Governor, being 16,000 greater than the highest before. i William J. Lebigh. manager of the Mer- , chants Exchange Association. Portland, Oregon, committed suicide on the floor by shooting himself in the head. It was stated that business reverses caused him to i take bis life. For many fears be was em- I ployed as an operator bv the Western Union Telegraph Company at various points on the Pacific Coast. Ralph A. Mavdeld. of Chicago, died ar the home of his parents, ex-Senator and Mrs. A. Mavfleld, in Lincoln, III., after taking morphine w;th suicidal intent. He left a letter to his mother, assigning as the principal reason for taking his life the death of a young woman to whom he was engaged to"be married, i The winter acreage in wheat in Oklahoma is nearly donble that of last year. At this time it is certain that the Territory has produced 25,000,000 bushels this year, nnd if the yield per aero next year equals that of this year the crop will reach 50,000,000. The business section of Warren, Mass., was partly wiped out by a *75,000 lire. The Are started in a paint shoo, and got good headway before it was discovered. Aid was called from surrounding town*. The Town Hall was damaged and several blocks mined. Five of the largest flour mills at St. Louis, Mo., have suspended operations. As a resuit several hundred men have been rendered idle. The concerns are the Standard, Plant, Meramec. Regina, and Jefferson pilling companies. Flour manufacturers declare tho closing of the mills is due to | the high price of wheat. There was an improvement in the yellow fever situation in the South. Foreign. The houso of George Tullock, about three miles from Halifax, Nova Scotia, was burned to the ground. Miss Mary Walker, i ciafar nt Vn TdIImF and a four-vear-old child of the Tullocks, who were sleeping together, were burned to death. ! | The Canadian Minister of the Interior said that all the Canadian routes to the ; Klondike would be opened. At the meeting of the Budget Committee I of the Austrian Reicbsrath, the Minister of I Finance pronounced agrave warning of the , danger Involved in a suspension of the constitution unless the provisional compromise bill were adopted. ! The German Minister to China and the captain of a German gunboat were at! tacked by a mob at Wu-Chang. The at- i | taok upon the German mission a: Yen- j I Chufu resulted in the killing of Xies und j J Hennle. two Rhenish Missionaries. The Spanish Cabinet Council has ap' proved the proposal of political amnesty for Cuba aud the Philippines. The leaders of the Autonomist party in Cuba have accepted the appointments tendered them on the nomination of Marshal Blanco. ATTEMPT TO KILL MORAES. Brazilian Soldier Fires on the President and Stabs the Minister of War. A dispatch from Rio Janeiro, Brazil, says: "At 1 o'clock Friday afternoon a" soldier of the Tenth Battalion, which constitutes part of the local garrison, attempted to shoot President Mornos of Brazil with a pistol. The President was just landing at rr.ssiDE"r oiocaes. the Marino Arsenal a'tor visiting the I steamer on which General Barbosa, Minister of Marino, li.vl returned to Bahia. "Thebystanders frustrated the attempt; but Colonel Moraes, the President's nephew, was slightly wounded in disarming the soldier. General Bjiancouri. Minister of War. then interfer-'l* and was himself stabbed. The wound was so serious that he died soon afterward. The attack has eaus-d the greatest agitation throughout the city." LIKE A WESTERN LYNCHING. Mark Twain Describes the Austrian Kcichsrath's Sitting. The last all-night sitting of the Austrian r.dihsrath in Vienna was the mo3t disor derly ever witnessed in any Parliament. Some of the anti-Semite expressions were of such an improper character as to defy reproduction. The mo3t frequent insult bandied about was the charge of drunkenness. Three-fourths of the members appeare 1 to have gone raving mad. "Liar," "Disgraceful scamp," "Drunken clown," "Ginshop hog" and similar villainous expletives and suggestions were common remarks. H?rr Wolff called Dr. I.upger (Burgomaster of Vienna) "The Vienna Thimble-rigger." M. Verestchagin. the Russian painter, and Samuel L. Clemens (Mark Twain) were in the visitors' gaibry. The former made sketches of va* s scenes and said he regarded them as : substitutes for street fighting and the :i "ades of former days. Mark Twain sai l it reminde 1 him of "'an American ivn^mcg in'-'-iin^ iu jmui^u .1 horse stealer," adding, "I suppose somebody had been hanged, but 1 was not there long enough to make sure os it." He asked H?rr Lcck?*r to give notice of liis next twelve hoars' sposcb, and said he would be there and sit it out. Herr Lecfcer took the observation seriously ami replied that ho hoped next week to rcpt \t the performance and, perhaps, irapro- c upoa it. MURDERED TWO. KILLED HIMSELF. Jealousy Caused a Man in Te.ia* to Slay His Itival and the Wo in n In tlie Case. James B. Bos well shot sad killed William Barton and Lizzie Meic.m%n, and then killed himself at Dallas, Texas. Boswell, according to bis written story, lived at Temple, Texas, several years, having gone there from Holly Springs, Miss. He had a wife whom he married under a different name, but left her to love the Meidman woman. Barton alienated the woman's affections and he followed them to Dallas. Ho spent the day writing the story of his life. After dark he went to the home of Lizzie Meidman and found Barton there. Without saying a word he commenced firing. Boswell immediately turned his weapon upon himself, the bulletploughing a frightful hole through bi3 chest. A REJECTED SUITOR'S" REVENGE. De Murders the Girl and Her Father After Ktiiin~ Ttrenlr Sheen. Manual Garcia, of Durango, Mexico, killed upward of twenty sheep ilnd two dogs on the sheep ranch of Pedro Lopez, and in the evening entered the home of Lopez and killed him and his daughter nineteen years old. For several months Garcia has professed to be deeply in love with the girl, tut she and her father refused to recognize his suit. On Tuesdny he was told that he must offer no further attention to the girl and must keep away from the Lopez home. This was the cause of bi3 crime. He cut the throats of both his victims. TO RESCUE ANDREE. Steamer Victoria Will Search For the Explorer. The steamer Victoria, fitted out by the Governor of Tromsoe, under instructions from King Oscar, of Sweden, has left Tromsoe Island in search of Andree. She carries a crow of fifteen men, including Taul Bjoervig, the explorer. Tho Victoria is provistonea ior cigui months and will search Daucnendsoeren. Advent Bay, Cap) Thordsen, Prinz Karl Foreland, and possibly Danes Island, from which point Andree's balloon ascended in July last. On her return tri]> she will explore the southwest coast of Daumandsoeren. Money "--ora the U. P. Sale. Tho Treasury Department has arranged to deposit the money received from the sale of the Union Pacific Railroad in several New York banks in order to balance the heavy withdrawals of tho Reorganization Committee and prevent disturbance of the money market. The Government's share of "the purchase money is $53,449,223. Yonng Girl a Suicide. Cieile Guimaraes, tho sixteen-year-old daughter of a wealthy man of East Orange, N. J., committed suicide with a revolver because her father had reproved her for her fondness for young companions. Her body was found near her home. Tarlclsh Consul Guilty. The Superior Court jury at Boston, Mass., which has been trying the case against Joseph A. Iasigi, ex-Turkish Consul, charged with embezzling $140,000 from tho French estate, reported a verdict of guilty. ?] Conl Gas Kills Three Persons. Peter Cliewper, his infant daughter Anna, and John ptohlma were asphyxiated by coal gas near Lancaster, Penn. Mrs. Chewper and a boarder named Simon were found unconscious. ' .""V Wrw. " Woolen Ingrain Carpet, 33c. Imported Velvet Cnrpct, 89c. Our entire force Is working day and night Ailing orders. You. also, can save 50 to M per cent, on a carpet by writing for our new Colored Carpet Catalogue which show3 ail p> da in lithographed colors and wi.h exact distinctness. The hook cos?8 you notbiDg. If you wish qualify samples, send 8c. tn stamps. Cur new 112 page general catalogue of Furniture, Drupries, Crockery. Stoves, etc.. will be ready after Nov. 1-t. Write for it then. JULIUS H'.HES Sl SON, BALTIMORE, KD. Please mention this paper. MONTHLY SUFFERING. |j *Trhousanus women are troubled at * monthly inter- \^\ ijjib > vals with pains in the head, W h i o t- Vir^octc ft1 shoulders,sides jjgfl 8 hips and limbs. 8 But they need 9 not suffer. A$M ^ These pains are symptoms of dangerous derangements that Q can be corrected. The men- I strual function should operate Q painlessly. h Wij?i makes menstruation painl >ss, and regular. It puts the delicate menstrual organs in condition to do their work properly. And that stops all this pain. Why will any woman suffer H moutli after month when Wine H H of Cardui will relieve her? It B ff costs ?i.oo at the drug store. B H Why don't you get a bottle L B For advice, in cases requiring I jjp special directions, address, giv- H ?| ing symptoms, "The Ladies' H j| Advisory Department," The fl gj CLatmnooga Medicine Co., H ?j Chattanooga, Tenn. jJ S *o99oe<? 2J 3 Mrs. ROZENA LEWIS. U ff ct Oenavllle. Texas, says: i " I rraa troubled et monthly Intervals t U B with terrible pains in my head and back, n * but have been entirely relieves by Wlas [j of Cardui." a Seattle FREETNFOflMATION Klondike Seattle. Wash., a a Coauukk or (Duxercz Alaska Seattle, Klondike, Alaska, Washington S ate. Seattle, population; Railroad, Commercial, Mining and Agricultural Onrre; Best Outfits; Lcve-t Prices; Longest Experience; Largest City; Safest Route?; Add. bee. LJG inc. vnnKkwi i m, _ llifflgi Hi. PRIVATE HOSPITAL f CHARLOTTE. X.C.. .Vo.lO V Tryon !8BB * TIRTCTIE. * Rice's Goose Grease Liniment Is lways sold under a guarantee to cure all aches and pains, rheumatism, neuralgia, sprains, bruises and burns. It. Is also warranted to car* colds, croup,coughs and la grippe quicker than any known remedy. No cure no pay. Sold by all druggists snd general tores. Made only by i^OOSK GREASE LINTMKNT CO., Gkkx.nsbobo, N. C. Bulldlne, Brldffe, A 1 O T 111 f| A "r^zruASIINliS Railroad, Mill, Machinists' and Factory Supplies, Belting, Packing, Injectors, Pipe Fittings. Saws. Files, Oilers, etc. arcast every day; work ISO hands. LOMBARD IRON WORKS AND SUPPLY COMPANY, AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. - BUY vniiR RINKS OF THE MAKERS. iiPIH" li II I I I I III I II I | Ring sent WKfiW on receipt of 10c. Stamps taken. U. M. W* ATKINS A CO. Catalog cx Fbzz. Mfg. Jewelers. Pr.ov, Ii. L ST. JOSEPH'S LIVER REGULATOR THK RKST ON THK MARKET. All Drogarlste aud Merchants. Mnfd by L. GKRuTLE A Co-, Chattanooca, Tenn. m am || II ARCS can be saved with& 1 (I I H HI Im ont their knowledge by I I V B I Hi If Anti-Jag the marvelous I I F% I I KW am cure for the drink habit. 11 I I m Write Kenova Chemical " Co, 66 Broad war. N. T. full Information (in plain wrapper; mailed free. CHEW STAR TOBACCO-THE BEST. SMOKE SLEDGE CIGARETTES. 8. N. U. No. 45.-97. GET THE GEN Walter Ba tBreakfi Pure, D Costs Less than ( Walter I (Established 1780.) v ' ' id' JM! SAWMILLS. . I If you need a saw mill, any size, write- r .3 me before buyiDg elsewhere, I have . ,J1 the most complete line of mills of any ,'jjHH dealer or manufacturer in the South. '-$1 CORN MILLS. Very highest trade Stones, at unusually low prices. "V<3|B WOOD-WORKING MACHINERY, Planers. Moulders, Edger*, Be-8aws, Band Saws, Laths, etc. EN6INES AND BOILERS, Tolbott and Liddell. Entleberg Rice Huller, in stock, quick delivery, low prices. V. C. BADHAM, | No. 1326 Main St., Columbia, S. C. MACHINERY. RICK HULLING AND THRESHING BY 1311'ROVKD 31ETHODS. Fngleburg Rice Huller and Polisher. I Rice Field Drainage Pumps. Cane Mills, Kvnp .rators and Sugar Kettle*;Engines and Roller*. Saw M ils (irist Mills ' t; <Vc. A full stock always on lian-l or Belting. . -VSB Packing. Pip* and Fittings, Pulleys ana laB Shafting. Drilling outiitsfcr Artesian Welb^. THE BAILEY-LEBBY CO. CHARLESTON, - - - S. C. Try B.-L. Co's Anti-Friction Babbitt MetaL PIANOS. ~ '1 For Catalogues, Prlco3, * ?, of the ;,1 Choicest Pianos on the market, write to M. A. Malone. Columbia, 8. C. I chel- 3 leage any house In America to supply eg better Pianos and for less money. M. A. MALONE, Columbia, & C. "31 ORGANS. I If yon are looking for tho be.st Organ, and . ?3j for the least money, write for catalogue, etc., to 11 A. Muione, Columbia, 8. C. ijfl Those who desire to inspect my stock, I ' *u cordially Invite to visit my salesroom* - ?" g while attending tb > state Fair, Nor. Bib to ? !$ 13th, 1837. M. A. MALONE, COLUMBIA, S. C ^ fmlm IN SOUTH CAROLINA. 1 II LARGE OR SMALL TRACTS. TERMS ty-.M 18Y. FOB FURTHER 1NFOR1UUQII ADDRESS E. K, PALMER, COLUMBIA, w. C. % TIIK VillTEO NTl'i'fc!) uuiisnninEi4i UM rOM adopted the Kceley Treatment in the Sol- ; ' dier's Homes and in an Institution (or the -T-.jB exclusive use of the Kepnlar \rmy. ALCOHOL, OPIUM, I Prodn ach a disease -gH loHHCCO USING t having definite pthol- . 'A ogy. Thediseaco yieldseasily to tuo Doublo .?Jfl Chloride of Gold Treatment as administered 'SB at The Kecley Institute, Groenvfllo, S. C. Detailed informiition mailed on application to Jjr THE KEELEY 'NSTiTUTE, (OR BOX 37) CREENVII.LE, - - - 8. C, .$m The ONLY Heeler Institute is 8. O. ' !? MISSISSIPPI GIRLS Crape, Mian,say*: t hM '*> ^ ^ used Dr. X. A, SlK#aoa? ^^^^^Lhrer Mediate* ttjaufc , rj W It 1* the be* of allther - aH' W ^ ?r R?^hUon Itcnrns Side V (JT Eoodaehe, and is a fie* i <?/ dsal mote popular tbea ^ - 1 "Black DraoKbt" or *01 I other Uver wxWntni tm ?? MSCWAi-w this country. anaatodetoets or from ^ai^maloOTHuSa of the blood or nervous system. As thethaw asnouhes there an duit snastoini ,j<i no old be apparent to aa in tolfigent mother. When they are tardy, the attempt to em* lishthisfunction Is attended with paints . ? the bead, loins and back, chilliness, BSBSeO and bloating of tba abdomen. The treat* -..a meat necessary is moderate out-door CM f, else, the use of Dr. M. A.8taainoaa?ieaa? Medicine to oorroct the aettoa at thn fllgae tire organs and a does twtaa a day far <o? f. weeks of that great uterine irtlaatraW \? Dr. Simmons Squaw Tine Wins. XW&t 'm pt^dp? n', biro a NonnaTnlgh School . Sg W ?r Fuller, Minn, wxtteet fTTI ;sac-jess , 1 when he was 75 jroarw : I 4d. had been tnl2l? 11 J^/ nd selling Dr. M. A* E Simmons Liver i ,^L/\ Medicine ever dron > I could remember. It does ell that is claimed for It, end is ea staple as Safer. Floor end J Bacon. I consider it much Superior i? "Zeilia's Medicine," which I daot OH eh , any price. Girls Approaching fibertf Freqnentlr snfl er from irritability, restlessness, smothering sensations, palpitation of heart, depression of spirits, naneee-eoeeti- .4 nation and sometimes fainting spells. Br.; J-M Simmons Squaw Vine Wine, taken Witt the originel I>r. M. A. Simmons Ursr Medicine, quickly relieves these and other distressing symptoms and assists nation In . performing its natnrel functions St th* proper time. Look Out.?Dont let the prepsnMaw rm called "Black Draught** come into-year ,1 house on the fraadalent pretension of being "lust the same" as M. A. S. L. M. It m "sst" the same. If the component pari* were the same there is as much dUterenCf \2 between them as between day and night Bowaro of cjl imitations. 1 I August a. Actual bavtneev Notext j/ I boot-.. Short time. Cheep board- Send far nullum ACr?t R?MyWMiwnt Send far* 7BSK m p?.'k*trr.v let iiM*aic lorifc?.li. Komntt. ill V DK. 8. P?KKKY, CUJca^oTllUker & Co.'s t | ast COCOA ( ' delicious* Nutritious. I JNE CENT a cup. f t that the package bears our Trade-Mark. \ Baker & Co. Limited* f ? ^ J^rchester* Mass^' '4