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IP*-" p atiwaw*.!SSggSSMiS-r-'i|Wii" """* '* ? THE POWER OF A NAME.!* 8? " m y< DR. TALMAGE PREACHES DUR^3 IXG A DELAY OF t '? h? *luHirnn<! T? ,. r .~ytln- I Si Tousro^ in Kvcry JJi?- ti iSSKVbt:- Impocacce of Appropriate J ^^ n?Appellation*. ^ Qukenstown, Jan. 26.?While the c steamer Aurania, from Liverpool, was , * lying in this harbor a few hours today s waiting for the mails, manj' of the pas- Tk " Tk? sengers went asnore. me jvjv . . Witt Talmage, D. D., was the 1 number, and took advantage of the opportunity to preach. His subject : was, "What is in a. name?"and his text I Phillipians ii, 9: '"A name 1 above every name." Th** 5 preacher said: M BoW L3n(Ji ' On my way fr?5r lhe s!eamer to re. . and while America, I preach same h,?ura *^js .v h|ci? Wiis OIl6 rapturous and enthusiastic ^descriptions of the name of Jesus. By common proverb we have'come to be /r lieve that.there is nothing in a n?tne, and so parents sometimes present their children for baptism regardless cf the name given them, and not thinking that that particular title will be either a hindrance or a help. Strange in is take. You have no right to give to your child a name that i3 lacking either in euphony or iu moral meaning. It is a sin lor you to call your child Jehoiakim or Tiglatb-Piieser. Because you yourself may have an exasperating name is no reason why you should give it to those who come after. But how often we have seen some name, filled with jargon, rattling down from generation to generation, simply because someone a long while ago happened to be afflicted with it. Institutions and enterprises have sometimes without sufficient deliberation taken their nomenclature. Mighty destinies have been decided by the significance of a name. There are " * J men wno an tneir me long ton auu tussle to get over the influence of some unfortunate name. While we may, through right behavior and Christian demeanor, outlive the fact that we were baptized by the name of a de?pot, or an infidel, or.a cheat, how much bet_ __ * ter it would have been if we all could have started life without any such encumbrance. When I find ihe apostle, in my text and in other parts of his writing, breaking out in ascription? of admiratiou in regard to the name of Jesus, I want to inquire what are some of the characterist-cs of that appellation. And 0, that the Savior himself, vihi'.e I speak, might fiil me with his own presenec, for we never can tell to others that which we have not ourselves felt. First, this name of Jesus is an easy name. Sometimes we are introduced ; to people whose name is so long and unpronounceable that we have sharply to listen, and to hear the name given to us two or three times, before we venture to speas it. r.uu wiwua first two years the little child clasps its hands, and looks up, and says, "Jesus." Can it be, amid all the families represented here today, there is oue household where the little ones speak of 'father" and4'mother," aud "c rother," and "sister," and not of the name which is aoove every name?" Sometimes we forget the title of cur very Dest inenas, ana we uave iu pause and think before we call the name But can yon imagine any freak of intellect iu which yo.u could forget the Sa ior's designation? That word *''Jesus" seems to flr-the tongue in ,i|airrr When The'" voice n^-old ij|Wj|MidMKW^e -get* leeble, and tremulous, aud indistinct, still this regal word has potent utterance. Jesus, 1 love thy charming name; T s music to my ear, Falu woul t i sound it: utso !oud That heaven and earth mixht hear. |g, Still further: I remark it is a beau^ k tiful name. You have noticed that HP\ it is impossible to dissociate a name \ " Irom the person who has the nameBo there are names that are to me reualsive?I do not like to bear them? while those very Games :>re attractive to you. Why tho difference'? It is because I happen to know persons by those names v. ho are cross, and sour, and snappish, and queer, while the persons^you used to know by '.nose names were pleasant and attia;tive. As we cannot dissociate a name from the person who holds the name, that ( consideration makes Christ's name so unspeakably beautiful. No sooner is it pronounced in your presence than _ r "T* _ A. 1 _ 1 J /-N il you wans 01 jDetzuecem ana uetnsem ;. ane and Golgotha, and you see the loving face, hear the tender voice, and feel the gentle touch. You see Jesus,, the one who, though banqueting with heavenly hierarchs, came down to breakfast on the fish that rough men had just hauled out of Genessaret; Jesus, the one who. though the clouds are the dust of his feet, walked footsore on the road to Emmaus. Just as soon as that name is pronounced in your presence you iuidk oi.now me shining one gave back the centurion's daughter, aDd how he helped the l > blind man to sunlight, and how he Mfr made the cripple's crutches useless, asd4iow he looked down iuro the \ babe's laughing eyes, and, as the little one struggled to go to h;in. flung out his arms around it and impressed a < loving kiss on its brew, aud said: "Of ' such is the kingdom of heaven.1' Besiu- i tiful name?Jesus! It stan.s for Jove, : ^1 for patience, for kindness, for forbear- < ance, for self sacrilice, for xna&rniini:ni- i Ity. It is aromatic with, all odors ar,d ; accordant with all harmonies. Se-nae- < times I see that name., and the lotrers < seem to be made out of tears, and then 1 again th< y look like gleaming crowns, i Sometimes they seem to me as though < twisted out of the straw cn which he 1 lay, and then as though built out of i the thrones on which his people shall 11 reign. Sometimes I sound that wor>i t Jesus,1' and I hear coining through 1 m - sne &wosyuao;es me sign <>t Uethsem- {. HB ane and the groan of Calvary; and i again I sound it, and it is a ripple with |k giadrfess and a ring with hosanna- \ ?& Take all the glories of book bind fry \ and put them around the page where i that name is printed. On Christmas c morning wreaths it on the wall. c wr Let it trip from harp's string and c ' * thunder out in organ's diapason, e Sound it often, sound it well, until every star shall seem to suiue it, aud 0 every flower hall seem to bre.i'h^ ir., v and mountain and sea, ?u;d day a:ul y night, and earth and heaven acclaim v in full chant: ''Blessed be his glorious " name forever Th;- namotl'ot 4^ J. 1J L UJUJt, UUU, 1.' U.JU,!., a every name." Jesus the name high over all. e Mr soul, lo the ex- e h^hr Suij< ay scht.-ol s Sk.-" octogenarian, ti ^Kman comes in C Wk tremblingly b |jfc| his hat on sf Hace in the Bd a couch is H^granu j a; meg to in Khere l vr | w rc ly< ?-i? i i ?v3eh"ou your iapajiifc-SSy^ "31 am-J C a. I am $o sic^-?Tu^so =i?tc." Ai.fn t iii rhv- fevtii- fs iS&fyMJL'v.o:se, itaril ia sou-.;; mill '(1 ;;ht sne^oos- .'I> iajvo jour :uce :^u , i xy?: "Mamma. kiss mo good-by, I t soxds away from you." And you t ay: '* Jly dear, where are you going s c?" And she s^tys: "I am ?oing to 1 esus.'* Ami tbe rt-d cheek which you ' bought was the mark ot the fever 'l iuly turns out to be the carn?*""'a >loom of heaven! Oh, yes; 13 a s ;weet name spoken by the ?'yS' c. us., .-ightv name. J sua " name in tbe 1 Rothschild a P?vjuVier in the sci- 1 commerciala p0werfui name ^ entific woriry woridt Washington an in the name in the political world, J injtymgton a mighty name in the mil- f tary world; but tell me any name in < ill the earth so potent to awe, and i ift. and thrill, and rouse, and agitate, lL^ / r rru? 4. ma o;ess, as mis name oi .Jesus. mat j :>ne word unhorsed Saul, and flung Jsewton on his face on ship's deck, and today holds 400,000,00(3 of the race with omuinotent spell Thai name in England today means in on; Than Victoria; in Germany, means more thau Emperor William; in France, means more than Carnot; in Italy, means more than Humbert of the present or Garibaldi of the past. I have seen a man bound hand and foot in siu, Satan his hard task master, in a bondage from which no human power could deliver him, and yet at the i--* -c t? 4. j ~ pronunciation 01 txiau une woru no dashed down his chains and marched out forever free. I have seen a man overwhelmed with disaster, the last hope fled, the last lightgone out; that name pronounced in his hearing, the sea dropped, the clouds scattered, and a sunburst ol'eierual gladness poured into his soul. 1 have seen a man hardened in infidelity, defiant of God, full of scoff and jeer, jocose of the judgment, reckless of aa uueuding eternity, at the mere pronunciation of that name blanch, and cower, and quake, aud pray, and sob, and groan, 1 t -1? ? J ?: t \ ana ueueve, ?liu i?rjuiv;c. v, n, io ? mighty name! At its utterance tiie last wall of sin will fall, the last temple of superstition crumble, the last Juggernaut of cruelty crash to pieces That name will first make all rhe earth tremble, and then it will make all the nations siDg It is to be the password at every gate of honor, the iusigu.a on every flag, the battle shout in every conflict. All the millions of the earth o.rp to know it_ The re I horse of carua*;e seen in ap. caiyptic vision, and the black horse of death, are to fall K/-*y>lr tViair l?onr?r?V>t.hfi whit.A horse of victory will go forth, mounted by him who hat!> the moon under his feet, and the stars of heaven for his tiara ' Other dominions seem to be giving out; this seems to be enlarging. Spain has had to give up much of its dominion Austria i as been wonderfully depleted in power. France had to surrender some of her favorite provinces. Most of the thrones of tiie world are being lowere i, and most ol ths scepters of the world are being shortened; but even- Bible printed, every tx-act distributed, every Sunday school ciass taugnt, every scnooi ioun ded, every church established, is extending the power oi Christ's name. That name has already been spoken under the Chinese wall, and in Siberian snow castle, in Brazilian grove and in eastern pagoda. That nacne is to swallow up all other names That empire is to absorb all otht-r dooiiaa, tions. { a:i crimes shall c*?e, and ancient frauds [ shall fail, ( Returuine iistice lift aloft, her scale; Peace o'er the world ber oliva -wand extend, And white robed innocence from heaven descend. Still further: it is an enduring name. You clamber over the lence of Jih? graveyard and pull aside jJm weeds, and you see the faded Aiscripncn ou fcrie was the name of a man who once ruled all that town. The mightiest narr.ts ol the world have either perished or are perishing Gregory VI, Sancho of Spain, Gonrau I of Germany, Richard 1 of England, Louis XVI of France, Catharine cf Russia?mighty names once, that made the world trembie; but now, none so poor as to do them reverence, and to the great mass of the people Lhey mean absolutely nothing; they | never neara oi mem ?Sut the came of Christ is to endure forever. It will i be perpetuated in art, for there will he oth'.r Beliinis to depict the Madonna; there will be other Ghirlandjos to represent Christ's baptism; there will he other Brozinosto show us Christ visiting the spirits in prison; other Glottosto appall our sight with the cruci tixion. The name vvi'I be preserved in song, for there will be other Alexander JPopes to write the "Messiah." other Dr. Youngs to portray his triumph, other Cowpers to sing hi3 love. It wili be preserved ia costly aod magnificent architecture, for Protestantism as well as Catholicism is yet to have its St. Marks and its Stt Peters. The name will be preserved in the literature of ihe world, for already it is embalmed in the best books, and there will be other Dr, Paleys to write the ''Evdences of Christianity," and other Richard Baxters lo describe the Saviours comiog to judgment. But above all, and more than all, that, name will be embalmed in the memnrv <->f ? J V ail the good of earth and all the great ones of heaven. Will the delivered bondman of earth ever forget who freed him? Will the blind raau of earth forget- who gave him sight? Will the outcast of earth forget who brought him home? No! N-?! To destroy the memory of that name of Christ, you would have to burn up all the Bibles and all the churches on earth, and then in a spirit of universal arsou go through Ihe gate vf heaven, and put a torch to the temples and the towers and the palaces, and alter ill that city w<.s wrapped iu awful louflagratien, and the citizens came iat and gazed on the ruin?even then. ;hey would hear that name in the ,hunger ol falling tower and the crash of crumbling wall, and see it. inwrought in the flying banners of flame *ad the redeemed of the Lord on high vould be happy yet and cry out; ''Let he palaces aad the temples burn, we lave Jesus left!7' "Blessed be his riorious r.a'ue for ever and ever. The lame that is above every name." Have you ever ma-'<- up your mlr.d >y wli.it name you will call Christ PrtA.. m riof Z w> "\T yu;-i: ?yvu i-iilu ill V tJIi T X OU ^ :uo\v be has many names. Will you :all him Jesus, or the Anoiated One. ( >r .he Mess:ah, or will you take some j ftiie symbolical names which on :arlh you learned from your Bible? Wandering some day in the garden t f God on high, the plac?> a- bloom ] ii;h etf-rnal springtide, infinite lux- t riance of rose and lily and amaranth, t ou may look up into his face acd say: My Lord, thou art the rose of Sharon > nd the lily of the valley." > Someday, a? a soul comes u:> from I arth to take its place in the f:rma- I 3 lent and shine a* a star for evei and c ver, and the luster o' a usefu: life t iall beam forth tremulous and N?au- t ful, you may look up into the fact- of 1: hrist and say: "My Lord, thou art- a :: righter star?the morning star?a r ar forever." r. Wandering some day amid the foun- Sl tins of life that toss in th? sunlight S; id fall in crash ofp?arl and amethyst j v i golden and crvstalline urn, and vo? ! D j > ' , - . auuer up me rounu oaasea river to a here it first tingles its silver on the t] >ck, and out of the chalices of love ^ >u drink to honor- and everlasting v y, you may look up into the fe.cc of i Ik ? i rrnr j lirist and say: "My Lord, tb-?u art i ht? foundation of liviog wat"'-" Soro^ rt&v, wauderin^ amid the' ?nd f=heep i?? tb' bpaverdy jin* ; urc-s, feediosj bv t>-; rock, rej-#:oi:;^ 1.1 : be pre.secee of \ltI1 brought you | >uc or ihe v ;usn wilderness 10 ; iheep'oV' you may look up into , *,js ji g HQ'i watchful eye imd say: : Lord, thou art the shepherd {'! iie everlasting hills." ^ But there is another name you may :elcct. I will imagine that heaven is lone Every throne has its king. 3very harp has its harper. Heaven las gathered up everything that is ,vorth having. The treasures of the A'hole universe have poured into it. fhe song full. The ranks fuli. The mansions full. Heaven full. Thesuu >hall set afire with spiendor the domes Df toe temples, an I burnish the golden streets inu> a blaze, aud be reflected back from the solid p?arl of the twelve crates, and it shall be noon in heaven. nooa on the river, noon on the hills, noon in all the valleys?high uoou. Then the soul may look up, gradually accustoming itself to the vision, shading the eyes as from tbe almost insuflerable splendor of the noonday jitrht, until the visiou can endure ii, theu crying out: "Thou art the sun that never sets!" At this point I am staggered with the thought that notwithstanding ali the charm in the name of Jesus, and tne iact tnat id is so easy a name, ana so beautiful a name, and so potent a name, andso ^Dduiing a name, there are people who find no charm in those two syllables. O, oorae this day and see whether there is anything in Jesus. 1 challenge those of you who are farther from God to come at the ciose ol this service and test with me whether God is good anu Christ is giacious, and the Holy Spirit is omnipotent. I challenge you to come and kneel dowc with me at the altar of mercy. I will kneel on one side of tbe altar and yoi kneel on the other side of it, and neitb" er of us will xfee up until our sins art forgiven, and we ascribe, in ihe word* of the text, all honor <o the name ? Jesus?you pronouncing it Ipronounc ing it?the name that is above everj name. His worth if ali the nations knew. Sure the whole eurta would 1ov.j hirn to<. O that God today, by the power o his Holy Spirit, would roll over you j vision of that blessed Christ, and yoi would begin to weep aud pray and be lieve and rrjoi?-e. Youhayereard o the warrior who went out to iigb agains: Christ. He knew he was inth< wrong,and ' while waging an war ar row struck him aud he fell. Itpierce< him in the heart, and lying there, hi face to the sun, his iife blood runninj away, he caugat a handful of the blooi that was rushing out in his right hand and he! ; it up before the sun and criei out-: ,;0 Jesus, thou hast conquered! Ana if to-day tne arrow of Gou's spiri piercing your soul, you felt the trut ot what I havo been trying to proclaiir you would surrender now aod foreve to the Lord who bought you. Gloriou name! I know not whether you wl accept it or not; but I will tell you on thing here and now, in the presenc of ang-ds and men?I take him to b my Lord, my God, my pardon, m peoo.?, my life, my joy, my salvatior my beaven! "Blessed be his gloriou name forever. 'Ihe name that is abov every name." "Hallelujah! unto hie that, sitteth upon the throne aod unt the Lamb for ever and ever. Ame aman onrl o m an ^ auu u. auu auivu. ODDS AND ENDS. The beauty of Catherine of Russij it is said, consisted, ir jfcrgrgen* eyesT Eat on^Jlxre food, drink only pur' liftliHs, think only pure thoughts and keep your blood pure. The best whitewash for a cellar i made of lime and water only. Th. addition of other things hinders th purpose of keeping the cellar pure am healthful. An experimental train on a railroa* in Pennsylvania made a run of nine ty odd miles in about sixty .minutes some of the distance being ran at th rate of nearly two miles per minute. It is significant that tho winner o the mathematical prize of $300 at Bow doin is the best general athlete in th< Maine colleges and one of the bes baseball players. Fort Keogh, M. T., has the wides range of temperature of any place 03 earth. Last summer the thermomete ranged from 120 de<*s. to 130 degs above, while recently it marked 61 degs. below zero, a total range of 19; clegs. Candor is the seal of a noble mind the ornament and pride of man, th< sweetest charm of woman, the scori of rascals and the rarest virtue o sociability.?Bentzel Steman. That action is best which procure; the greatest happiness for the greates nnrr? Ko??c. Praise, to mean anything at all must be spontaneous and prompted bj real approval of character or admira tion of excellence; otherwise it is as futile as a bubble that floats a momeni XT -S " - in tne air ana is gone iorever. The twenty-third anniversary of th( Protestant Cnina inland missions ir London brought out the fact thai there are now 32S protestant missionaries at work on those missions; thai the number of Chinese who had been baptized during the rear on a profes swu i iuLc^uiiio iunu ?us ti#, making the number now in church fellowship ;u connection with the missions Mrs. W. M. Dills, of Springfield, Mo., is said to be the best judge of horseflesh ii2.that valley. Mrs. Dills is a southern woman, and comes from the blue grass region of Kentucky, famed for its horses, its pretty girls and its whisky. Mrs. Dilis has not neglected her household duties for her stock farm, and she has reared an interesting family. It is remarked by one who lias made some study of the subject that when southern women are thrown upon their own resources they show an energy that used to be attributed only to the daughters of New England. Miss Nellie Gould is an artist of no mean ability, and her collection of brica-brac, adorned by her own brush and pencil, is much admired. She is proba bly the richest heiress in America, and at her father's death will come in for twenty or thirty million dollars. Like her mother, she is not too proud to wait Dn herself. She does not mind riding in iiorse cars, and does not put on nearly as man}* airs as the wives of some of the men who serve her. Last spring she took T* A tlO"ntiV* cornro 1 <vr XSAWJ OV, ? V.1CU ^1X1^ 1.1 UULl ?L Sew York charity hospital and cared for ;hem -with gi-eat kindness and con'sidera;ion. M. Saloza, the young French tenor and prizeman of the Conservatoire, about vhose engagement the authorities of the /\iris Graud Opera and Opera Comique '.ave been wrangling, was two years ago >niy a humble shoemaker in a provincial own. One dny as he was going about he streets singing a passer by stopped iiui, and asked him to call at the former's house. This Saleza did, with tho esu.'t that he at once abandoned shoejakiiv forever and set to studying his cales. Later on he entered the Conervatoire. If the minister of fine arts, iih whom lies the final award in the latter. snou;a aecicie, as seems probble, in favor of the Grand Opera against lie Opera Comique. there will be some anger of Saleza unduly straining his oice, as it is as yet hardly powerful aough. for a large house. : " OF l'IFffi AND PUFFERS. j 30SSIP BY THE LATE DR. MOTT CON- ! CER:S!NC C-'Ci'IHG AND SMOKING. 5au^'e:'!i of the Weed, ami Some of til? I Public People V.'lio Tempt Them?Presidents. Statesmen, Authors ami Editors * 11 C.MY... fimul Advicp. H.L LIMT ? w ... [Special Correspoiuiaiice.J New York, >"- . T.?"It is a carious j thing," said the late Dr. Alexander Mott a short time before his fatal illness carried one of the best all round New Yorkers to tin.; ; her shore, "that we doctors rarely agree on the subject of tobacco. Because nicotine is the active principle of the weed, is poisonous in its isolated form, lilt; inference lias been broadly drawn that the man who smokes or chews must bo i:ijn riously aifected. The. experience of mankind, however, does not confirm the conclusion. Ask any consumer to state dir-iinctly what kind of pleasure ur kind of injury the daily use of tobacco produces, or why he continues the indulgence, and not one in a hundred can gi\e you a satisfactory answer. Who ever heard a man say he enjoyed smoking when he couldn't see the smoke, or attributed his 'shake' in the morning to the smoke of the night before? "Another point worth noting," continued the doctor, "istkatgeogra|.!.icallatitude and constitution have mud; to do with the oooular habit. In l-.'ew Eng land, for instance, there is a large and . conscientious body of men and women ' who would suppress the use of tobacco if they could by legislative enactment, [ while from the cosmopolitan city of New York southward, one ia brought in coni tact wU-L* tic1,1'* in it* most offensive t forms. Chief among these is the cigar1 ette. It is but a short time ago that s ' ^fcysician was suddenly summoned tc J attend one of the brightest young mer 3 in the metropolis. While saying good' by to lxis hosts one evening he droppec like a, ]U>or. followed a successior ' of spasms. &?d uncontrollable mus cular motions that lasted for nearly thre< weeks. The doctor had all he could d< to save the young man's life, and it wil * be months before he recovers anything 1 like his former V tilth. Inquiry devel 1 oped the fact that on the day of the at ^ tack he had smoked forty of the poison t ous pests. Now, if the nicotine stains * - often seen on the fingers of a cigarett $ smoker can so easily discolor the outside j what must be the effect on the more deli s cate membranes of the throat, lungs am v blood vessels. The truth is, more insidi i ous harm is done to the system by th , indiscriminate and habitual smoking o d cigarettes than by the use of bad liquoi " "This brings out another thoughl it There is danger in being miscellaneous! h polite. Among the patients of a frien of mine is a gentleman who is threal r ened witti tne loss 01 nis arm iror s poison which he is supposed to haT ^ absorbed by handling a cigar after i 6 had been returned to him by a strange :e who had borrowed it for a light. Th ? latter was probably engaged in som ^ business in which poisonous substance ^ are used, and, neglecting to wash hi ; fingers, had unconsciously left a trace c Q the poison that produced the disaster 0 If smokers could see the filth that su; n rounds nine-tenths of the men and w< men who manipulate the weed, the; careless and unclean habits, and observ the nasty fingers and sometimes lij that put on the finishing touches of a t y called Regalia, there would be a largf "^SemauaS* rTTi' ^.ijtfax holders, and instea of biting Hpfnrftl'i o-h ti n " t h A* ^SLQuld us a knife to clip the folded end. ' "There are, doubtless, cases," contin ued the doctor, "in which cancerous af s fections of the lips and malignant ais ? eases of the stomach are traceable to thi ^ abuse of tobacco, but I have found fev among the records, compared with th< ^ extraordinary number of people in pub .U.U uuu pxn ctte iixw wuu use me weeu |* that illustrate the idea of permanent in '' jury to persons in general good health any more than would result from the in troduction into the system of other dele _ terious substances. Fancy your Gerrnai philosopher working out his problems ? without his pipe!" Take some of the best known of ouj own people, especially those engaged ii * intellectual work; the majority aregreal a smokers. James Gordon Bennett is ad dieted to cigars and cigarettes, and ] happen to know, can use up a pile oi - them during a night. Charles A. Dans on +Vi/\ K>?^r\? "D' AO fclJ-L ftUUlU^X VI bUC UJ.1CJL. 1UVU J. U.1IL" zer, Joe Howard, Willie Winter and StilI son Hutchins are exceptionally abstem^ . ious, for most newspaper men smoke f pipes. The night editors Und in then] their chief solace. Senator ShermaD smokes the best Havanas, but his brotlia . 7 ^ er Tecumseh enjoys a dry smoke. Judge William D. Kelley, the pig iron protectionist of Pennsylvania, indulged \ in the habit for two generations. Gen. . Grant, as we all know, smoked inces5 santly, and is pointed out as au example t tof the evil; yet he says in his memoirs ;hat he tried for years after leaving West ; Point to acquire the habit before he was [ successful. > Cbauncey Depew formerly could get . away with twenty or thirty cigars a day; ; now, his after dinner cigar is a luxury, i Grover Cleveland enjoys smoking while at xvnrlr ?r?r] if -vnn Vinrmpri tn me>r*t Viim on his travels, ten chances to oue but it will be in a smoking car or on the smck' ers' side of a ferryboat. Bob Ingersoll is a famous patron of good cigars, but many of the reverend gentlemen who occasionally handle him without gloves could smoke him out of house and home, "Randolph, of Roanoke," when he went abroad, carried a barrelful of Powhatan clay pipes and corncob pipes with cane stems. Henry A. Wise was aif inveterate chewer of tobacco, and in hiS own home a devotee of the pipe. AlexflnrJAr T-T SvfrfvvhoriQ nf wAnlrl crr\ ~ ? "-X' ? ? to bed smoking, and his long stemmed pipe was his tirst companion in the morning. Andrew Jackson was famous for his corncob pipes, and Chief Justice Marshall for his snuff box and excellent Slaccabov: while the records *?... ui fclat the two Adamses, father and son, Clay and Webster. Calhoun. Benton, and in fact nearly all the early great lights of the republic, were addicted to the use of tobacco in ono form or another. Statistics show* that the majority of our present legislators, state and national, have the tobacco appetite, and that its increase during each succeeding generation is something for the consideration of the philosopher and philanthropist. Actors, as a rule, are great smokers of ~ T?J? r juuwuj .duulii prtuers a pipe. The late John OlcCullough possibly added, to his accumulation of brain trouble by the excessive use of tobacco. . Billy Florence, on his return from a European trip, is always sure to have a lot of handsomely carved pipes as eouvenirs for his friends. The late E. A. Sothirn (Lord Dundreary) smoked like a chimney, but John T. Raymond was exceptionally virtuous in this respect. The ladies of the dramatic profession principally affect cigarettes, but, on the sly, many of them do not disdain a frasrrant cigar. The habit is becoming prevalent among the fast young girls in the female colleges, and even fashionable Yassar might many a tale unfold if its solemn walls could reveal the secrets of the frolicsome inmates. We all know bow Isaac Nev^ton lost % ffpwr* ~Ti?i"wrirr'* * ?ai g * r.nT,w nia swretiiean. because in a nr or at> j straction iie u >od Iki finger to stop his j pipe: and whcever 1ms read "The Cricket j on the HeartY" w?H easily recognize a i , smoker in Charles Divkvns. when, sneak- j ! ing of Dot, lie says: "Si:.,- was out and ! * ' * r 14 I ! out the very ix-st ltiler or a pipe. 1 shuuiu j ! say, in the four quartet's of the globe. i To see her put that chubby little finger | in the bowl, and then blow down tii<3 pipe to clear the tube, and when she had done so, affect to think that there really was something in the tube, and blow a. dozen times and hold it to her eye like ~ telescope. with a most provoking twist in her capital little face, as sk looked down it, \""s quite a brilliant tiling. As to the tobacco, she was perfect mistress of the subject; and the lighting of the pipe with a wisp of paper, when the Carrier had it in his mouth?going bo very near his nose, and vet not scorching it?was Art, high Art." The habits of famous authors in respect to the use of tobacco are interesting. Milton never went to bed without his piuft J a o^lass of water. Shake' i-- .1: i speare aid not smuiie, nor am wuchjc, Shelley, Wordsworth, Keats. Addison had a pipe in his mouth at all hours. After his daily dinner, Hobbes smoked until after nightfall. Carlyle was a steady 6moker for years. Tennyson lias "pulled" at his pipe for nearly half & century. Sir Walter Scott smoked in his carriage and regularly after dinner and loved a short clay pipe. Byron * - " -v??? x-i I^,*. wrote aoout "sucuimo iouciwju, uud indulged in its use only moderately. Douglas Jerrold, Thackeray, Bayard Taylor, Lord Lytton, Lord Houghton and Campbell worked while puffing ci, gars or pipes. Neither Washington Irving nor Bryant used the weed in any way. Coleridge, when cured of his . opium habit, took to snuff, and Prescott, i the historian, when limited by his physi. cian to one cigar a day, drove all over i Paris to buy tlio biggest 0110 he could > find. i Pursing the subject further from a . profession..! point of view, the writer I asked Professor Mott what in his judg i merit were tlie best means of avoiding - injury from the excessive use of the 3 weed? > "I should urge the smoker," he re1 plied, ."to observe two conditions. First, r the quality of the tobacco, and second, if - pipes aro used, the quality of the pipe r and its stem. Nicotine takes its name - from Jean Nicot, who introduced tobacco > into France "in 1360, and in its poisonous ? - ? ?AA!rvrncci^ nr*\A 9 puwui 13 OUUJLUCAJ' lliiCiiUl" KV IW^AV WV*N*. , Some tobaccos contain about 2 per cent., [_ others 6, and some nearly 7. It is rare, i however, that a hundred pounds of the i- dry leaf yields more than seven pounds e of nicotine. In smoking a hundred f grains of tobacco, therefore, say a quar.. ter of an ounce, it is possibio to draw into the mouth two grains or more of the y most subtle of poisons, but the proportion ? will vary with the variety, the rapidity t- of smoking, the length of the pipe, th a material of which it is made, and other 0 circumstances. [t "In most oriental countries where ir smoking is a constant habit, the natives iiea Inner ctommwl riinP5 in tc-Viir'k fnr e r-i-? ? ? ,e leaf burns slowly, added to which is c jg bowl containing perfumed water, 01 is other liquid, through which the smoke )f passes, leaving behind a part of its poisr onous vapor. The reservoirs of some oi r. the German pipes are death traps, bey cause they retain the grosser portions o ir the tobacco, while the cigar discharge e directly into the mouth all that resulu )S from the combustion of the weed. Yot (Q will understand, therefore, that a gooc ir pip? should be porous, like the Powlia ^ tan clay or corncob, with an ampl< ;e bowl that permits frequent cleaning j ant with a long stem of absorbent quality ^J^hat will take up the gummy-like refua o^th^jumed tobacco and the wot# of thepois^ou^%5^5S^lp?^^l^ nicotine, a Besides, a short pipe V?fe"h (?^sc-:iax?>es 7 its fumes directly into the eyel an&nos" 2 trils is injurious to the sight. "As to the qualities of tobar00' *kese j depend on the honesty of the f^anufacturer. Turkish is of course recl*one<^ } best. The pure American, una. dulterated with sumac leaves, spav,*> tea> . mullein-and scores of other s^stances i that are employed to increase," Dulic 01 3 add to the flavor, will rank such a mass of filthy stuff is niow ^being r foisted on the community and\ SOi(^ ^y i the aid of chromos and other arfs i advertiser that it is well nigh impossible . to detect the false from the tru;?* ^ <^? [ not pretend to be a connoisseur'*11 ^hese j matters, however," concluded p10 ^oc" L tor, "and what I have menticne? ,afe . simply the facts familiar to all physicians . who have studied the subject." ? F. G. De Foxf*12?! Sir James Hector, New Zealand s *9rc' 1 most scientist, has been deplorirS.,%T ^ ' he describes as "tho perfect latni.Gno mania which lias arisen in tl?e .s" tralias." To be a hero in the ^?lonlf3 now, he says, you must excel,. n?t *n brain work, but in the training of tfae muscles of the arms and legs. ) CDDS AND ENDa. i Tho circus elephant Em pre#3 1 sold at auction in Philadelphia5- Sue brought $1,700. ' In a handful of clover pluil^e^^n 3iis yard, Edward Koehler, of P0 ,, liAm i frmnrl fiffv. f#YT7*? loo wStdlkS , ? Twenty-six thousand person*^ vrere present at the opening' perfor^0,1100 of Bantam's show in London. 1 The continual use of Persian ; powder will drive moths awal- f1'01?3 furniture. Its frequent rendwa' 1S necessary until all are killed. \ The widow of the late King lKVs Portugal will receive a 3*early j anee of SG-1,000. which will he rl;C'Uccu one-half if she lives abroad. j The electric bells of a. certain! I.10*6^ are accompanied by the printer 3n" struction. "Press the knob if yoii the waiter three times." I Evangelist Moody recently recf^*0^ a draft for ?2,500 for the ;~ove:?:rn^u| from a Canadian smuggler con\icr'?e" at one of his meeting. f a + 1 i i?.]fover | ^uumuiii ci uurac uao.uu. " the bank and fell down a declivity ?* 100 feet, dragging his cart and c/r.ner with him. The driver did not gef V1^' the water, but tlie horse j)lungeiV .in^c the river and swain across to (Jov '!J.-" ton, detaching tho vehicle from "un in midstream. Three men being unable to dri 'oor drag a 400 pound pig from its p511 Keinhold? Berks county. Pa.. ^ue-* called in the assistance of John I ley, a giant in strength. He del,10cr" ately picked (.lie kicking poi4cei" UF and carried it out unaided. Mrs. Bland, tin1 poet and novc^''f^ better known as 4,E. Nesbit." is' {.!<r" scribed as a very pretty woman i,vi, soft brown eyes, and a delicacy of 1.'??'^" dress and carriage which belong* tc the old aesthetic days, which, iii\iicj costumes at least, Mrs. Bland revires* Patti, the divine singer, receives! , largest wages ever paid an artist. riUr~ [ man or divine. She is paid everv nisrht she simrs in the 5 Hall, London. Even with this ^HU the expenditure of ?3.000 forcach cert, her managers are able to profit of from $2,000 to *?,000 Fifty years ago there %vers probalH.; not more tli:ni Of) OOrt tr> 1f)fl OHM ?/>! ??! of fruit land in Great Britain. 1S72, the date of the lirst reliable m^'r ord, it had incased to nearly 170, acres; and ilr. Whitehead, a vrc*' known authority, estimates the pres;cnl acreage at about 214,000 aci*es. Ia iiernory of Pre*ideJit JefferttoD Dnvis. liY ASnr.EY. The Chifcffjtiu of tbe Southland, All honors! in oti! H?s left behind a, record Well writ- o>u HisfiVs psigp. To the 1'itc Cou:'ea? ntcy liisduty now is done.. tie was once Its President? The rtrst And omy one. i The pines ol Carolina Sins sadly thro' their leaves; Her cypress winds us nu s.-es? Old Carolina grieves. And hark! I hear an echo Of Carolina's woe ? It comes from Alabama ' In cadence soft and low. Then up from Mississippi A note so strong aud deep Rolls slowly o'er her water*? h'pr rivers vAritlv \PA^rt The cotton fields of Georgia Take up the saddened strain And waft the softest treble. Tof lorida ugam. But hush! I hear u. footstep . l'otomac:s waters lave? 'Tis the grand old ilothcr now rfrings tribute to his grave Virginia oh! Virginia Deliberate aud slow? Your Kicbinona now is weeping .sincerely iu your woe. Kentucky's son is resting Neath Louisiana's sky; From Tennessee and Texas There comes a sobbing cry. And now I ?ee Missouri The twelfth and western star Fold soft the flag s*ill honored In Southland near and far. Each State can say m> truly \V hile weeDine o'er his irrava Its folds were ne'er dishonored By him so true sad brave. The pen ot coming ages With ink of justice too Will some day in the future Mete out to him his due. Winchester (Va.) Times. JSill Njc'm i.ove Form. There is nothing that soothes and hili.-> 10 rest the weary reader at the J C 1 1 , i. 4 _ ?* ll : 4. T_ enu oi a iong itn-er, mieu emeuy wim s^tistics, like a sweet line poem, that one can readily understand?a love poem?and so 1 give one here that I lound in au alouni?an albuminous poem, as it were?which I wrote many yearn ago, and found yesterday on the centre-table where I used to "spark" but where now, alas! she is another's. 0 my dariiag, 0 my darling, Wilt you ever think of me? For my darling, for my darling. I u iit. oitiimes think <;f thee. And my dar.iug, oh my darliug, When lofttimes thiuk of thee It, will be indeed a, pleasure If you erstwhile think of me. Thus my darling, oh my darling, Suould you erstwhile ihinkot me Wilst ray darling, oh my darling, I shall ofttimes think of thee, We will think about each other ' P5 1 1 t At Jft! JLAH IJUQ/ Uli^UO It is fun to write a poem While I pause to think of thee, For I know you'll not- forget me While you pause to think of me Thus ado\vn_ life's sunburnt patbwa; 1 Loiter I to think of thee, For I hops and tru>t that also * You may sometimes think of m It is not so very wearing ' Ou the thiuke-r, I can see, i Just to think of you,my darling, > As you doubtless thick of me, t So, my darling, as I stated, If your thoughts aie true ^to m< i I will do tome heavy thinking, [ Oh my darling, just for thee; i And we'll th:nk about each other Till the bright eternity. Bill Nye. > Worth $5,000,000 and only 10 yea: i old, says the New York I nal. This is the state oi-zg&lrs wit little 3Ia> shall Kobcrj^ the sou of th .. lat? unliiouamiJJaffshali O- JKobert: 1 He is the yodigest millionaire in towj 7 frecent interview Powderl t^Sus an enemy invented the story th* ' he was st candidate for Governor c Pennsylvania. He has no desire t i take par in politics, ^nd would n< uuder any fcircumstiace-s so long asl was at the heud ol the greatest- lab< , organization in the world. The Loquacity of Money. "Money talks." "Yc-s. If you doubt it go the oper 1 It "talks all through aod it's oaighty jitt ' music poverty gets." A Deadly Parallel. - idu ii-iag oi opaia remiuud me ? Ii?rrisuu in one: reaped." "What )s that?" "His grandfather's shoes are too b for hira." Hie "Altar Df HfeaVcu. China feels just now underthec!^-e< displeasure of heaven, manifested b the late fire at the naost-sacred buil< ing of the empire, the "Altar < Heaven," at Pekin, and the breach, b tween the emperor and empress. Ti young emperor w*is forced to maw the neice of the empress dowage: fhrmo-h bft wrvnlfl "Via?uri another wife; ai*d, as the unlnck young empress is scarcely equal to tb dignity of her position, kvrang-S refuses to see her, and has quarrele with the empress dowager. Accorc ingly the superstitious Chinose ix lieve that the temple was burnt dow as a judgment, although the fi.ro wa apparently caused by incendiaries. This sacred ' 'Altar of Heaven" wa a beautiful tripal circular terrace c white marble, with three roofs- of blu tiles, and close to the "Temple c Heaven," or "Temple of Prayer fg ^ T7-1.. 1* Ti. , *1 1 * i it uue z ciir. ii was erected sixmt to year 483, and vras used for tb-e annua imperial spring- sacrifice in February A bullock w;is then burnt before th altar, while the emperor prostrate* himself before the tablet of the su preme ruler of the universe, and p.fter wards beforo his ancestral tablets, an other bullock being- killed for eacl emperor commemorated. Finally- & prayer was read from a scroll, which was subsequently burnt upon the al tar, in order that the petition mighl ascend in flame to heaven. The emperor will perform the same ceremony next spring before the ruined altar.? London Graphic. A Lone Sentence. Whether Mr. Gladstone is quite sr good a manufacturer of sentences 9 Sir. William M. Evarts can be decidr perhaps from an examination of t1 opening sentence of a speech deliv ed at Birmingham. He said: " j Charles Forstcr and Gentlemen- is a great thing and a g: g praise to any constituency ' it is able to maintain thAt st- ta ardof judgment and approbation .tu attachment which W;afsafl has e 4?i tained for so long a period whiV 1 re resented by Sir Charles 'fcorsfe r, : whom I owe a debt of- grritiW .c. le fc what he has most truly calVfed^'an ui swerving support, but I /mag/ shy support that (lid not tier ^vo fcs ei$tir value even from its sing- jlarVy decide character in reference / to the Iffinci pies of liberalism, buJ i -likewise fron the entire character r a1i?] action of th* ZtfaiT \vho has been successful in maV '.ing liberal princip ^cs honored by t) whole house in as Relation with act? parliamentary s ,ryice rendered to' | 'houseof comxr onsassuch, withot^ c spect to party at the same ti: he has bee- /oneno doubt, as 1? el said hims' Qf the most inteV ug? upholder 4 of'the principles of p? .rty being r tv.micrh * s ? ?rv v ' *?*** j > ?--o" - - jci-wj , -' ~ astrument for promoty t it. and tlie work of the# ;mpir * ^ers]?Chicago Herald. -J Miiy-,,- i,r !.-.f nil I infill llg The Yalue oi" .Money. Men of unlimited means hardly ap-j preciate the value ? fjust one dollar, hilt with the poor every dollar meanso much toil" m l so much effort. It is a comforr to know that the poverty stricken invalid can derive so mucn good from so little expenditure, when they invest their dollars in B. B. B. {Botanic B'.ood Balm.) W. 0. McGauhev, Webb City, Arkansas, writes: 4'B. 3. B. has done me more good and for less money than any other blood purifier I ever used. I j owe the comfort of my life to it." ' * n U A a f?a TT?1?lfAC* A, i' J1 iicliU, Atiauuit ua^tc ltI had a running ulcer on my leg. Several doctors failed to do it goodThree bottiss of B. B. B. effected a cure. B. B. B. also cured mv brother j of a running sore." David Thurman,Atlanta, Ga.,writes: "I was a constant sunerer ior mauv many years with Scrofula and Eczema. A few bottles of B. B. B. entirely cured me." John M. Davis, Tyler, Texas, writes: "I was subject a number of years to spells of inflammatory rheumatism, which six bottles of B. B. B., thankheaven, has entirely cured. I bavc not felt the slightest pain since." Bradfield's Female Regulator will cure all irregularities or derangementf peculiar to women. Those suffering should use it. Sold by mI druggists A Ma mat teal Prodigy*. Cnmmnr* tJlft net'TO DrodiiTT'i was in town yesterday, and, as usual, entertained i'fttsge crowd, who were testing him with all'kinds of mathe j matical problems. Summers is a negro, j 34 year's ojd, w ithout the slightest ed ; j ucation. E&f cannot read or write, anc ,! does not know one figure from an other. He is a common, every daj farm han4. smd to look at him anc . watch his r?rticras he seeins to be abou L half-witted, but his quick and inva woKIt- *c*wpr to anv exami)l( 5 J in arithmetic, no'matter how difficult i is simply wonderful. With the hun ' dreds of teats thai he. has submitte< j to, not. a single time has he failed t< I give the c?s*?ct answer in every in | stance. : Some examples given him yesterda; were: How' w'uck gold can De bough for $792 in greenbacks if gold is wort; $1.G3? Multiply 5S7.312 by 13&. If i grain of produces 7 grains, an I these be the second year, eac i vieldinglha -sanae increase, Bow man I bushels wiR be produced at this rat | in twelve years i/ 1,000 grains make j pint? if th? velocity of sound is 1,14 j feet per second, the pulsation of tfc j heart 70 per minute, after seeing ! flash of lighting there -are 20. puis: I tinns rramted before vou hear it thui j der. what distance is the cloud froi 1 the earth, a?d what is the time aft< y i seeing the flash of lightning until yc j hear the thunder?. A eommissio | merchant received 70 bags of whea e | each coutaimng 3 bushels, 3 pecks an j 3 quarts; how many bushels did 1 j receive? And so ou. With Robinson's. Eay's and oth< higliei* arithmetics before them, tho: who have tested him as yet have bet s unable to find any example that wi'i a few- moments'thought on his pa he is not able to correctly answer.Louisville Commercial. A True Aboriginal. A remarkably interest]]} j ~ 1 the last . i James Barnard at t] 1 I meeting of the Tasmania Royal so< ety about two months a^o. It h , j hitherto bee*i. ffcneraily believed th 5* j the aboriginal Tasmaniansareexiinc J" j 'Mr. Barnard, however, as we leai y j from Nat?e,* contends that there | still one salvor?Fanny Cochrai ^ j Smith, of "Port Cygnet, the mother 0 six sons anil fire daughters, all )C i whom are fttiag. She is now abo ie 55 years of age. Fanny's claims to t] )r honor of being a pure representatr of the an crest race have been dispi ed, but ill*. Bsuawwd makes out a go< case iu her favor. He himself remei bers her as she was forty years ag when there were still about thirty < f* fortv natives at Orster Cave; "ai certainly at tnai time, ne says, never heart! a doubt expressed of h not bein^ a true aboriginal." Equity Had been gradually sh: ing itself into-a refined science, Tvhi no human faculties could masf.erwi out long and intense appli<jafcion Lord Maeaulav. Ig v Lord Charles Beresford, having t egraphed his inability to obef? a co maud to dine at Marlborough hou added to the "wire" tUfc laconic pc ^ onrixit '*T ia /A! l^w? Kxr nA?i< y How Lost! Kow Reg<?.'ine * irHE^mE^ |k t KNOWIHM Mk Q THE SCJEMC r OF LIFE S A Scientific and Standard 7 'opulnr Medical Trea on ihe Errors of YouthviY .-uiatare Di-cukc, Ken sl Rcsnltins froin Fa? ^Vice^^oXr^Zsc"^^ ;1 t overtaxation, E=* mating and unfitting the vie *or i*u7uajv g tiieMameuor^^'ni Kciat 0 Avoid unsklLiT j pretenders. Yoz .a this ?i Trork. It conri:' ig 500 paces, roval 6 . Beau; a hiding. embesr Cl^ fa;f pfice 7 51.00 . p mail, postpaid, concealed in plain * . per. I! rrativc Prospe' :;us Free, if vou j now. ' distinguished author. Win. H. Pane.-/. M. D., ccived the G' _)LD AM) JE\VEiLU> >IED from tuo> ? .ntioual IMedicnJ Association this PKI ?E ESSAY on NEJiVOUS 1 1 - PHYSIC AI^DEBIMTY.Dr.Purkcrnndacc . of Assists nt Physicians may be consnltcd, cc dentiallyv br mail or in person, at the office the r ?aboi>y medical rNSTiTL": I "No. Ac J ;?lfi;ich St.. JJoston. 31n_N*., to whon orders for books or letters for advice should direct' .dasabove. ?err-' rrp ? ?/ ' ti ifJBBSSSi hAsWsalsar Cleanses and beautifies the h I^AsSx^^'-JSEsNevcr Fci!s io Restore G '} Hairfo ii? Y'afhfal Color S 1 Pa:v;: -::r nnd hnir fall St-. MADE V/ITH SOILING WATER. | jfc Jf ^ '% tv-f ^ d- . ^F?ATEfU,--COMrORTlNG. i 0 OGQJ >*/ MADE WITH SOILING .MILK. * j HEM35BCG&&S. ? | Thronly snre Cusre for Corns. Stoj,s all pnin. F.ni | loiuforttothefect. J5c. .*vtI>ru8T!rists. ukcos&Co., J- su a fTavo you 1 i-<>n?-!ii:i"'. .,?sf!iin?c. liKiiiroi'vii 7 PAniCE?J'S C2?jr.~R TOBJCo it ha.s < ' j Sl?? v.-oix- . ??v.?aiii UK>tx-fivmtv:jr>"~ *11 ilU at ' '"tin io'.tcuve auif i >*- *X.ic?; iu u- '-:i ,uii Je ISTKjr-.sTATfi 1{S,1PV' PRIST. ^*? *>partniibare. C. ;he re- ?a?n " COMPLE' s mm mm *? BO"V rnrnn H115BDV MAW i A ELL! wan. liw fir?IBB iww ni a ?jagSfiPtBfiftBflBIMB Piano* ncd Orin:> s. N" w. Tfiorp, 134 Ma : Stn-et, Co \ | uuibii, S'.-Hs Pihpvs an 0 x t'js, <;ireot from factory. 2s > tooimi sioa*. The.ceifebraJc-f.ChicKW . Piano. vj* ii<ttjU-;nek .-.titd for i?s . i i . ? . . /.V. ?../) cieiruoss i.w ui IUUV^J >JU "^.c lastiog^uaiities. Masoo& Hnnilin L"i>?i.;rr i':a " '% Sterling Upright Pnii-.-t. from ?225 up. Arion Pianos, t'roai $200 up. Mason & Hamlin .Organs, snrjnsaed by none. Sterling Organs, $50 up. Every Instrument guaranteed ft r six vears. Fif (? . .lars' r-il. tMrcnses "i r - ., J. . ' ? botn ways. \i oot satistacrt-ry. Sold oh irsralraents. NOTICE. C NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 1 that W. a. GIBBES hits become interested in my business, which will herc after be conducted nad^r the firm name of W. h. GIBBES, Jr. & CO. i i W. H. GIBBES, Ja. i ? I To the Public: The undrsigned will ? < \ continue the heavy machine business j ot W. K. GIBBES, Jr., and will add | to that line as soon as it can be bought i and delivered to the best advantage a <? L complete stock of Mill and Machine > Supplies, Baiting, Oils, &o. jl We expect fo pn-9h the trade ener. j getiea'lj, to meet any competition in : price where value is considered, and , j to meri t ;i liberal aud increased patS ronage from consumers in oar iine. I j W. H. GIBBES, Jrt, & CO. f, 5 < Colombia. S. C. , FOR SIXTC DAYS. 1 l ! tt7k okfrr omr KO. i IIAND-MADJi . vv ROAD CART to responsible parties os, SIXTY 11 AYS' time for only slS.OO. k has besi , hickory w heels and shafts, steol tires and axle. i cushioned, seat and painted nicely. Not a cheat( made carl, but first class throughout. We also t ofi'er our our Xo 10 hand-mad* iugpy. put up ot> - any kind of spring, on SIXTY DAIS' time tc> ? the sma!! amount of 245.00. It has best patent wheels, st?el tires and asles. Trimmed up ana i painted ia good style. Hot by any means a - cheap vehicle, but is very substantial and is warj ranted, 1'or circulars and general descrjorisn. address TKttl ? 3 HOLLER & ANDERSON. Manufacturers,M P. 0. Box 110. ROCK HILL, S. C.H M In writing please mention this paper. X ? H J | VV i lui J JERSEY FLATS 9 j Oliill and Fever Cure. Large f1 bottles 50 cents-, and ?a.< raj teed to care any Q. of Chill's iin.i Fever. Ali^ial, Intermittent y and R^mitt'-nt Fevers, hv S THE B AEK.ETT DRCSCO, a Abgusta, Ga 2 THY JERSEY FLATS FchlSay t r> ARHAMVILLE a 1_ CTOn/ A WT\ DHITITDV CADIW ' l- o i uuxv mil/ ruuLini i nnw ii * HORSES, CATTLE, SWINE AND POUL* TRY FOR SALE.n ^ & Gold Medai Batter Herd of Jersey Cattle ie Tiie Imported Percheron Staliic Sr BICHE, (10.963) 7.&50 trill maku the reason aSO ?25. Choice youug Jersey Cattle, BKKKsH I Kir .Swine, Light Brnhioas. Wy.mdots, Li'ngshafcfe ^ Erowa Leghorns, Plymouth itocks and (jaw< ;h Fowls for ?alc. * Hergs in season. ertESION Proprietor, Co!u:Jibj>-^jg^^^ ] H. S '.BALDWIN. UirnFR^ f.U#^Tn,r re w Lr\ riLLd.the bile from tHe system, cure al )n ^ bilious troubles, and prevent malarial disea??*. l? For sale by all druggists and merchants -a Jl* cents a box. or mailed on receipt of price by as "THE BA?KETT DRUG CO.. AITOCSYA. .v> ^ TAKE GILI'EK'S PIIXN I The Tozer Engine of w 0? ' .(Successor to Dial Engine Works.) ? JOHN A. WILLIS PROPRIETOR ? 117 West Gekvats Street it<hi* CLZD o, NEAK ||j IWililW I 2" i.' ^ ?MANUFACTUBEIiS OF THE1 Tozer Steam Engines d u? AND ALL SIZES OF BOTH LOCOMCTIV t AND RETURN TUBULAR BOILERS. FOUNDRY WORK IN IEON AND B&A&r REPAIRING PROMPTLY EXECUTED. July23-cm PITTS' CARMINATIVE & T70R CORRECTING NAUSEA, DYS * 1. ectery, Diarrhoea aad Cholera Ir . ^ fantuin. A pleasant meaicme 01 mcaicui ble merit in the home circle for child c adult. It is popular, pleasant and efficier 253 Truly a mothers friend. It soothes a.1 heals the mucous membranes, and chec* |J| the mucous discharge from head, stoma1 and bowels. The mucous discharge fr? fel the head and lungs are as promptly * ? lieved by it as the mucoid discharge fr<JI?* the bowels. It is made 10 relieve t* ion. mucous system and cure nausea, audit reat does it. It makes the critical period i ^cl teething children safe and easy. It i!ns vigoratcs and builds up the system whie The it is relieving and curing the wasted tissiS. ,r?- It is recommended and used largeiy >y for physicians. For sale by Vv"annamaker& itid Murray Co., Columbia,*S. C., and triioe >rps alo by Howard ? Willett, Augusta, La. ran- ' _______ \tu H. H. C. GcAILOTT III SO C TJ be Sick Headache is.d Cocsrjpatioo in iuortime Pre veil r> >1':. Malstriai troubles. Jrric* ' St'tv .toars for s:>'c hy drujrsists au* uefi enanrs. >!*: future* >.air rv. S 8A RRTirr DiUJ'i 00 ray ??-h i.-Sai \CGSST . <i ? 5 ~LangIey Brotliers, ~ 74 KING ST., CHARLESTON, S. C sjv A fANUFACTURERS OF LADIES' ANL ZJ Jt GEXTS' Underwear. Fine Dress Shirts order a'specfoHy. Direction? for mcasuricg sea ?jg on application. scpl-Hxn "Mmms \ lilc EfeiFlrr -?i mt->n 0 0-uobtens - i .rhllu . s'- labor re ; lessens raimvrn jq upr n. m diminishes of ? i W"M07msjWM$ n IMIUDFZZE - }-. JUV tLU 1 IRABFiELD resulfitgs CO. atlaktan* SOLD BY ALL GfiL'&S-'SrS. ^ t*xn ottt^tptnns; -! l_U W Jt -FOS i Ml m F6W*?ft V OASES' FG GO., Nashville, Tain.