University of South Carolina Libraries
M';. gpl Z-s.k "REVISION OF CREEDS."! THE SUBJECT OF DR TALLAGE 6 DISCOURSE. Thoughts Impreeaed Upon the Divine by ?. TlsiC to the 8?ot Where Laztrns Lived and Died. At the Tabernacle Sunday morning the Rev. T. De Witt Talmage, D. D., o?;^ thrtBoht the new Brookifn taber oaiu ? ? m nacle wouli be dedicated in September. The subject of hi3 discourse was "Revision of Creed3,'; and he took for his text John xi., 44: "Loose him, and let bin go." Dr. Talmage said: My Bible is, at the place of this text, written all orer with the lead pencil mark made last December at Bethaoy on the ruins of the house of Mary aad Martha aad Lazarus. Ws dismounted from our horses on the way up from Jordan to the Dead Sea. BathanT was the summer evening retreat of Jesus. After spending the day in the hot city of Jsrusalem he would come out there almost every evening to the homse of his three friends I think the occupants of the ho*se were orphans, for the father and mother were sot mentioned. But the son and two daughters must have inherited property for it must have beei), judging from what I saw of the foundations and the size of the rooms, an opulent home. Lazarus, the brother, was now the head of the household, and his sisters depended on him and were proud of'him, for he was very popular and everybody liked him, snd thesa girls were splendid girls. Martha, afirs:-rate housekeeper, and Mary, a spirituelle, somewhat dream? but affectionate, and as good a girl as couid be feund ia ail Palestine. But one day Lazarus got sick. The sisters . were in consternation. Father gone and mother gone, they feel very nervous lest th?ji lose their brother also. Disease did ?/\?v ?nr<\nr th? orirl? hlino 1W> Uiivii nviA. MVif MUV D over his pillow! Not much sleep about thas bouse, no sleep at all. From the characteristics otherwise developed, I judge that Martha prepared the medi cines and made tempting dishes of food for the poor appetite of the sufferer, but Mary prayed and sobbed. Worse ana worse gets Lazarus, until the doctor announces that he can do no more. The shriek that went up from that household ' -? wkoo th? lash breath had bsen drawn and'tee two sisters were being led by sympathizers into tbe adjoining room, all those of ua can imagine who have had our own hearts broken. But why was not Jesas there as he >o often had been? Far away in the country districts preaching,'healing other sick. How unfortunate that this omnipoteut doctor had not been at that domestic crisis in Bethany. When at last Jesus arrived ia Bethany Lazarus had been buried four days and dissolution had taken place. ? In that climate the breathless body disintegrates more rapid'y than in ours If, imuaediately after decease, that oody had been awakened into life, unl>el'.<-7ers might have said that he was only in a comatose state, or in a ?ors of tf*nc?. and by s?me rigorous manipulation ov powerful stimulant vitalitT baa been renewed. No! Four days dead. At the door of the sepulchre is a crowd of people, but the three mu3t memorable t are Jesus, who was the family friend, 'and the two bereft sisters. We went into the traditional tomb in December, and it is deep down and dark, and with torches we explored it. We found it ali quiet that afternoon of our visit, but the day talked of in the Bible there was present an excited multitude. I wonder what Jesus will do. He orders the door of the grave removed, and then he begins to descend the steps, Mary and Martha close after them. Deeper down into the shadows and deeper! The hot tears of J<isus roll over his eheeks and sptash upon the backs of his hands. Were ever so many sorrows compressed into ? ? so small a place as in that group pressing on down after Christ, all ~the time bemoaning that he had not come before? Now all ihe whispering and all the crying and all the sounds of shuffling feet are stopped. It is the silence of expectancy. Death had conquered, but now the vanquisher of death confronted the scene. Amid the awful hush of the tomb the familiar name which Christ had oftea hud upon his lips in the hospitalities of the village home came back to hi3 tongue and with a pathos and aa olmightiness of which the resurrection of the last day shall be only an echo, he - ?HT t til s Mtivai ' ij3iaiusi v;vuic iuuui J. kit eyes of the slumberer open and with grratjdifficulty he begins to ascend for the cerements of the tomb are yet on him aa?l his fe?t are fast and his hands are fast and the impediments to all his movements are so great that Jesus commands: "Take off these ceremeats; remove thise hindrances; uafasten these grave clothes: loose him and let him gol" Oh, I am so glad thac after the Lord raietd Laza ras? he went on and commanded the loosening of the cords thac bound his art that hft nrmld walk. and the breaking off the cerement that bound his hands so that he could stretch out hit arms in salutation, and the tearing off the bandage from around his jaws so that he could speak. What would resurrected life have been to Lazarus if b? had not been freed from all those crip_ piements of his body? I am glad that ^ Christ commanded his complete emancipation, saying: "Loose him, and iet him go." Tne unfortunate thing now is that so many Christians are only half liberated. They have been raised from the death and burial of tin into spiritual life, but they yet have the grave clothes on them. They are like Lazarus, hobbling up the stairs of the tomb, bound hand and foot, and the object of this sermon is to help free their body and free their soul, and I shall try to obey the Master's command that comes to me and comes to every minister of religion. "Loose him, aud let him 20." First, maay are bound band and foot by religious creeds. no man misinterpret uie as antagjn.z <)g reeds. I hare eight or ten of thea: a creed abous religion, a creed abou^ art, a creed about social life, a creed about government, and so on. A creed is something that a man believes, whether it be written or unwritten. The Presbyter'an church is now agitated about its creed. S">me good men in it are for keeping it W. no fr-a f T?/-vrV* A P WwWwas liaUiwVA ttvu* vuv ivv*?v? V? John Calvin. Other good men iu it want revision. I am with neither party. Instead of revision I want substitution. I was sorry to have the question disturbed at all. The creed did not hinder us from offering the pjirdon and the comfort of the Gospel to all men, and the "Westminster Confessiou has not interfered with me one minute. But now that the electric lights have been turned on the imperfections of that creed?and everything that man far-hions ii imperfect?let us put the old creed respectfully aside and get a brand new oue. It is impossible that people who liTed hundreds of years ago should fashion an appropriate creed for our times. John O.ivin was a great and good man, but he died three huadred and twenty-six years acta. The best centuries of Bible study bare come since then, and explorers have done their work, and you might as well have the world go back and stick to wnat Robert Fulton knew about steamboats and reject the subsequent improvements in navigation; and go back to J'jhn Gutteoberg, the inventor of the art of printing, and reject all modern newspaper prewes, and go back to the time when telegraph was the elevating of signals or the burning of boiifirc? on the hilltops and reject the magnetic wire which is the tongue of nations, as ignore alljtne exegetists and the philolo gists ana the theologians of tne last t> l : \ . W m inptimL ,HI.WW>I,Mj.mw3..ui_jj M J??I VS3;3 aD-J vet your head r'?. fri-vve ! I. ? c VO Of ii!)'X 'iCr'l C*>Tj:U*J" d- ft- j tor. I CvU!.? cali to? of tweity l:v:c^ p-'-r.^y nsriiic ;a:ais:ers o; .on i who coiitd ixukc a hst creed '.jau ! Joha Calvin. The nioc ecuta Cfsnia;} j OUjJIlt Hut to tK) C&iied to Sic ht vile IvCt 01 I the sixteenth "But," you say, '-it is the stole old Bible, acd John Calyici had that as well as the present student of the scriptures." Yea, so it is the eacae old sua in the i heaveas. but ia our time3 it has g<.as to mating daguerreotypes and paocographs. It is the same old water, but ia ou: century it baa gone to runaiag steau engines. It is the same old electricity, but in our time it has bscosae a lig'tciag footed errand boy. So it is the old Bibl?, but new application*, new uses, ne^ interpretations. You must remember that during the iast th ee hundred years words hare changed their meaning and some of them now meat more and some lesa. I do not think that John Calvia believed, as some say he did, in the damnatioo of infants, although some of the resent hot disputes would soem to imply that there is such a thinj as the damnation of infants. A man who believes in the damnation of infact? hioueif deserves to lose neaven. I do not think any good man could admit ?och a possibility. What Christ will do with all the babies in the next world I coaclude from what be did with the babies in Pales'ine when he huggei them and kissed them. When i some of you grown pe.'pl# go out of thi* world your doubtfnl desMcy will be aa embarrassment to ministers o-Sciating at your obsequies, who will ca-s-e to be cautious so as not to hurt surviving friends. But wheo the darling chi:dreu ? 4'* "ifc" nr "hnta" or /?ues JJU lUClo cut uv ~- _ aes. We must remember that good John Calvin was a logician and a metaphysician and bj the proclivities ?f his nature put some things in aa unfortunate way. Logic baeits use and metsphycics has its use, but they are not good at. making creeds. A ?arder.er baada you a blooming rose, dewy fresh, but a severe botanist comes to you with a rose and says: "T will show you the structure of this rose. And he proceed? to take it apart and pulls oil the leaTes and ha says: "There are the petals," and he takes out the anthers, and be say6: "Just i?ok at the wonderful structure of these floral pillars," and then he cnta the stem to show you the juices of the plant. So logic or metaphysics takes the aromatic roee of the Christian religion and *sjs: tit ? :m *mi how this rose of J Will JU34/ suun j \s** religion was fashionedand it pulls off of it a piece and says: "Tnat is tbe hu man will," and aaother piece and says: "This is God's will," and another piece and says: "T^is ii eavereiwnty," &nd another piece and says: "This is free agency," this is this and that is tha:. And while I stand looking at the fragments of the rose pulled apart, one whom the Marys took for a gardener comes in and presents me with a crimson rose, red as blood, and says: "Ichalethe sweetness of this, wear it on your heart and wear it forever." I must confess that I prefer the roie in full bloom to tbe ros? pulled apart, vvuat aumw we wtc bad vrith the dogmatics, the apologetics and the hermeceutics. The defect in some of the creeds is that they try to tell us all about the decrees of God. Kow, the only human being that-was ever competent to handle that subj?ct was Pau', and he would aot hate been competent had he not been inspired. I believe in the sovereignty of God and I believe in man's free agency, but no oae can harmonize the two. It is not necessary that ne harmonize them. Ev^ry sermon that I bave ever heard that attempted such harmonization was to m: t.s clear as a London fog. as clear as mud. My brother of the nineteenth century, my I rh? cirr?^ntli eenturv. trive u* Vit/kUWl W4. WUV Paui'a statement and leave out yowrown. Better one chapter of Paul on that subject than all of Calvin's institutes, able aod honest and mifahtj as thej are. D-> cot try to measure either the throne of God or the thunderbolts of God with your little steel pen. "What do ?ou know about the decrees? You cannot piy open the doer of God's eternal councils. You cannot explain the mysteries of God's government now, much less chc mysteries of his government five hucdred quintillion of years ago. I mnve for a creed for all our denominations made out of Scripture quotations pure and simple. That would take the earth for God. That v. : ? ?K1 ^ rr?ino? infidelitv WOU1U yc iUipivguaun. ~S? w and Apollyonic aasault. Tnat would be beyond human criticism. The denomi nation, whatever its name be, that can rise up to that will be the church of the millennium, will swallow up all other denominations and be the one that, will be the bride when the Bridegroom cometh. Let us make it simpler and plainer for people to get into the kingdom of God. Do not hinder people oj. the idea that they may Dot ha7e bees elected. Do not tag on to the essentia! of faith in Christ any of the iacumerabie ? ? A Ko-irtil wepS-i a^opnt? U(JUC3bCULiaiO. .Ck Blku UM4?.J -~r Christ is a Christian and the man who j does cot accept Him is not a Christian, j and that is all there is of it. He need not believe in election or reprobation. He ne-d not believe in the eternal generate n of tbe Son. He need not believe I in rerlasting punishment. He need not believe in plenary inspiration. Faith in Christ is the criterion, i? the test, is the pivot, is the indispensable. But there are those who would add unto the tests rather than subtract from them. There ar? thousands who would not accept persons imo church membership if tiiej ciriak wine, or if thej smoke cigars, or it they attend the theatre, or if they pity cards, or if tbey drive a fast horse. Now, I do not drink wine or 9moke or attend the theatre, never played a game of cards and do not drive a fa*t horse, although I would if I owned one. Bu; do net substitute tests wh'.ch the Bible does not establish. There hone passage of scripture wide enough to let all in who ought to enter and to Keep out all who ought to be kept out: "Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt- be saved." Get a man's heart right and his life will be right. But tow that the old creeds ban been put under public scrutiny I >mething radical must be done. Some would split them, use would carve them, some would elongata tnsra, so'ne *.ouiu abbreviate them. At the present moment and in the present shape they are a hindrance. Lazarus is alive, but hampered with the old grave elothes. If you want o e glorious church free and unencumbered take off the cerements of old ecclesiastical vocabulary. Loose her, and und let her go! Again there are Christians wuo are under sepulchral shadows ana hindered and hobbled by doubts r.nd fears and sins long ago repentoi of. What ihej need is to understand the liberty of the sons of G^d. They spend more time under the shadow of Sinai than at the base of OalrarT. The? have been sing :ug the only poor hymn that Newton crcr wrote: 'Tis a point I long to know, Oft it causes roc anxious thought ? Do I iove the Lord or no, Am I his or am I not? Long to know, do you? Why do yon not find out? Go to work for God end you will very soon find out. The man vrho,all the time feeling of his pulse and : looking at his tongue to see whether it is coated, is morbid, and cannot be ' nhrsinallv well. The doctors willsav: 1 r-~ ? j . - # w . ' Go out into fresh air and into active ' life, ana stop thinking of you-self. and you will get well arid strong." So there are oeople watching their spiritual symptomi, and they call it self-exarnioation, and they get weaker *nd sicklier in > their faith aU the time. 3o out and do j something nobly Chriiiian. Take holy j1 > t \ / iiin?ii , amm exercise ar.o yourself. r-<? i;w?<.cS. 1 Oi '-"'ii's .^LUI'i'Ckij fti'.ll t-i: ? ? - - * J 11: iloui tiis* i e:-'-qa""?a. jtj wjm eiu^ Ne?rto-'s f:*Lfer u.y<r:n: Amazing grave, how -swcot the souitd Thai saved a wretch like cae! Once I wsa lost, but now I'm found; Was blind; Lut now I see. What many of you Christians uted is to g*t yuur grave clothes off. I rejoice thai you have been brought from the deata of sin to tho iife of the gospel, but you zee J to get your hands loose and your fee: iuose and your toogue -loose and uA!ir ci-oi! Innsf Thf-rs is no ?in that the Bible so arraigns and punctures and flagellates as the siu of unbelief, and thai is what is thv matter with you. "Oa," ycu say, "if you ktiew what I once was and bow many ti:a.s I have grievously strayed, you would understand why I do not come out brighter." Then I think you will cail yourself the c'-iief of sinneiB. I am glad you hit upon chat term, for I have & prompt that li'.s into your case a# the cogs in one wheel between the cogs ?f another wheel or as the key nta into iue i&oyrjiuu ut a A mail who was once called Saul but afterwards Paul declared: 4kTbis is a faithful saying aud worth? of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into thworid to save sinners, of whom I am chief." Murk that?"of whom I am chief."' ''Puc down your overcoats and hats ar.d I will take care of them while you kill Stephen"?so Saul eaid to the doners of the first martyr?"I do not car? tv exert myself much, bur I will guard your surplus aopurei while you do the murder." T^.ej^aw Testameo: acconot says: "The witness i?ii?3 d'>w:i their clothes at *, young man'? fee: whose Dame was Saul." Xo wonder he said: "Sinner*, of whom lam chief." Carist is used to climbing. Hs climbed t i the ?op of the temple. He climbed to the top of Mount Olivet. He climbed to the top c f the cliff* about JSTazaretb. Ha climbed to the ton of Golgotha. And to the top of the hills and the mountains of yvur transgressions and be is ready to ciimb with pardon for every ' -e ?" AfA?n t\f !nr*rr is UUS Ui YUU. XUC ^lvuu vri. mightier than the thunder of Sinai. Fail receipt is offered f^r all jour indebtedness. It' one throrrs a atone at miduigfet into a bush where the hedgebird roosts, it immediately begina to sing; acd into the midnight hedges of your despondency these words I hurl, hoping it? awaken you to anthem. Drop the tunes in the min:>r key and take the maj-T. Do you think it pleases the Lord for you to be ejirying around with you the debris and carcasses of old transgressions? You make m? think oi some ship that has had ii te.npestuuu; time at sea, unti now thut, it propose? another voyage, keeps on its davit* the damaged iifeooats, aed ihe . punters 01 a shivered mast, and the broken glass oi a smashed skjlig'at. My ad7iee is: Clear the decks, oyerboard with all the damaged rigging, brighten up the saltec smokestacks, opeu a new log book, hau: in the pUuks, lay out a uetr course, and set sail for heavea. You have had th> spiritual dumps Lng eQOU?h. You wiii please the Lord more by beiag uapp: thaa by being miserable. Hive you no: some.imes started out ia the -air. with your umbrella and wert> busy think5n?j and 30U did not notice that the rain had -tnr.ri^rl unfl ihs.-uch it had cleared oh -? o you still had your urabreliu up, anri ^ ben j=discovered what jmi were do ir-g you feic silly enough? That is what someof you are doing ia religious thing:-. You h:i7e got so used to saduesa tha; though the rain has stopped you stil have y-.)ur unabreHa up. (.'oiae out of the -.ii&d-jYv. Asceud thy stairs of you> sepulchre. Step nut ijto the broaa iight of noonday. >Ve coine urouad you to help yt>u remote your grave cloth ea. and a voice irom me nearcue, hc-juiuuc bat omnipotent, cjmmacuis "L-JO.-e him, and let him go." Heaven is ninety-Sve per cent, bettoi than tuis wc-rld, a thousand per cent, better, a million per cent. Letter. Takt the gladdest, brightest, most jubi!atj' day# you ever had on earth so i compress tfcera intoon? hour, and that hou: vould be a requiem, a fa3t d^y, a gloom, a horror, as compared with the poDreshour they have had ia heaven since us first tourer was built, or its firs: ?aif aotnrtc. nr it's first SOBW Caroled. '*Ob,' you say, "that may be true, but I aai safraid of crosfcins: over front this woric? to the next, and I fear the snapping ol the ccrd between eoul and body." Well, all the surgeons and physicians aud 'CieotJ3t3 declare that there is n;> pant hi toe parting of the body and soul, ant: all the seetnic^ restlessness at the c!os ia^ hour of life is involuntary and no distress at all. Aud I agree with the doctors, for what they s*y is confirmec by the fact that persons' who Ver* ---? ?-w .ill drowned or were suum^i^cu uuut an oonp'-'iousaes* departed r.ud ire re after ?*ai'ds resuscitated,declare that the sensation of passing io:^ uncon:c3ou?ness w.-c pleasurable rather than distressful. The cage of the body ha9 a door on easy hinges, and when that door of the physical i cage openi the soul simi-ly puts out it, wings and soars. "But." you sB.y, fear to go because the future is so full oJ mystery." Well, I will tell you how tf. treat the mystenes. The mysteries ha?f ceased bothering me, for I d > as the iudees of vour courts often do. The) dear all the argument in the case ano then say: "I will take these paperi and gire you my decision next week." So I nave heard all the argument in regard to the nest world, and sopjc things are uoMcrtain and full of mjatery, and so I fold up the papers aod rsserro until the next world my decision about teem. 1 can there study all the mysteries to better adTr.ntajje, for the ii ;ht *?ill be bef tcr and my faculties stronger, and I will ask the Christian philosopher, r?nohave oad ali the advantages of h&avsa for centuries, to Lelp me, a:;d X may be par caitted myself to humoly ask the Lord, and I think there wili be oaly one uivstcry left, aad that will be hot? oua*o unworthy a3 myself got into such as enraptured place. Come up out o? the sepulchral shadows. If you arc uct Cnrisil?.53 by faith i* Christ come up into the !:ght; and if you are already like L^za-1 rus, reanimated, but stili have your! grate clothes ou, get rid of iliem Tse j command is "Loose him, and let him go." The only part of rr? recent journc7 that 1 realiy drc;iuc- -though I aid not say much about i: Ui-jrohand. was the landing Jjppa. Th* t io ths port of entrance to the llulv Land, and there are many rocks, and ?u rorgh weather people caar.oi laud at all. The boats takiog the people from the steamer to the docks must rua between reefs that looked to me to be abou:. li:'Ly feet apart, and oue aiiistroke of aa oarsman or unexpected wxve has sometime*} b-en fa-, ia!, and huudreda h'i~c perished alvng.^ chose reefs Besides that, as we ief Port Said the evening before an traveler said: ''The wind is just^ight to give you a rough lauding a: v>oppa; indeed i think you will not b?~"able to land a: all." The fact was ^ that when our Mediterranean steamer/dropped anchor near Joppa and w?r" put out for shore in the small boa^tbe water was as stiii as though it had been sound asleep a hundred years, and we landed as easily as I came on tnis platform. Well, jour fears have pictured for you an appalling arrival at thfi end of your vcy3ge of lift*, and they say that the seas will run b'>h and that *he breausrs w:ll swallow you up, or tnat if you reach Canaan at ail it will be a very rough landing. Toe very Dpposite will be true if you have the sternal God for your portion Tour iijembarkatioa fcr the premised land will be.as smooth as wa9 ours at Pilestine las? December. Christ will meet A. . I you *ar out v- sc(; :*.nd pilot jou into j ! cc^ol. u^ >: ;: :% a a y-.n: will Ian*' vfita i | a Lc; - :. use>?:os jvd aud a h?I- j ietujia li.?s eifcer. 'Lsr.d ahead!" i s flairs are wavlag O'er lae hil.s < fikwviejw {irecrij, And tLe living w*ters .wviiig Shores where heavenly forms are seeu. Rooks And s.orms I'll fear no m>re, When on that eternal short; Drop the anchor! furl the sail! I am safe within the veil! THE FASHIONS. Some 5civ Uuts and Wraps for s>trett a??i Eresins Wear. As the spring opens the Thibet-lined opera cloak *vi:l ^ive tv.-.v to fancy wraps, "home of which ar.j trcc^ingly piquant nrd graceful tbisseaion, as well a? gorgeous of tone garniture," as tfce fashion writer in an exchange expresses it. Some are tr>r.de of delicate plush, or or sou orocaaea c oin, naa are eitr;er li ietl with satin or erminer, or with Nur we^iaa eider?duck fur?borders nf Magyar ?a!lnoa, or CHr.e^e lamb, with Yiioia collar of th? ?a.<r>e, being much favored. All kiad* of trimming made of ostrich feathers arr also fashionable for wraps as ihf j bavj- been for evening gowns. insso wraps are appealing more gea erwllv upon the street as fcpring advan ces, anrl very refreshing change they present ro the ever-present sbouldei cape. Shoulder c*p? au>J havf bad a long reign, a-id it sureiy cannot be because t*ith r one m*? he rilled a thing of beauty or ; j >y forever. Tiis toque ie a r-iayeU;*? f.umof headgear, aud must u iin p.-pul.iritv to tlr t*ct that it is a hybrid between a bonnet ?nd a hat. The former alway* seemed f !igb:iv abrupt in the an<jlc formed jusi above the ear, which is roup ]cd oC in tiie toque and 'rives the e&'Ct of a cap a: the nack. Toe shape of a bonnet is jaurtier, however, and the toque is only [jiquu'jt when trimmed effectively. Oae of black Frecc'a lace, for example, edged vith a vine of buttercups or jc-ssamine, interspersed with green leaves, witb qaellings of the la:e standing high 5.bove a cluster of flowers, is pretty. Another, with high jet coronct, is attractive. Those nruae of folds of veivet h-">ut the coronet are called the "liuv Bias." Uae of the prettiest hats of the season is broad-h-irnmed, low-crowned? ilthough cro.vr-.s are taller than the} nave beon?with one s:?o?>t*nly curve')cad over tbe left brow, as it bang >ver the face. High triicmi3g finisbet ?h? crown, lud wirhio the curve tb aair shows artistically. T? return t? . -,b? toque?there is one made with th< front upraised above the bar and dent : cd in two pliers. With suitable triirning this is graceful, for it has the broad r - llect of t!?e round bonnet shape. Tb( flrst n:eur.iou we iiad in past annals con. csrainf tl-e fcoue w:;a ia the earlv oar' )f this ceotury, when fashionable lad-i" referred to to ibis w.rtic!e of headdress in i the-'r correspondence, One ot the prettiest evenis? b->natui *=} an e:hfr-?fsi affiir. a!m;?i a raerwreath of flower9, for ia lieu of crown the coiffure is revealed. Coronets are worn over the front cf evening bonnet?, r iad the pre?e:;t vl-nie t>:ua: r bonnet Jt [ very hi^olj arched. and the curvinp i brims faced with rich Oriental passelaeoterie and oblique. The bandsaux for coronets are frequently made ia tbt ' Greek patterr;. Tbe Spanish hat, or tor- j caador, is quiie th-'< ia<je it present, a-t j ia facr, are m-ivy features of ibis pictur; esque costuui'j. . A cap?a slight, departure from thr I Tars O'Shantir, jef ak<?j to it?i; worn nacl very jaunty n i*. It is made of vol [ I Tet or Sdtio, pulie-l sugax.'y ltr.o a rope, like a band of large, globular Deads. D:reetly in fro-U the flat, puffed crown is raised by a ftu bo9? aud aigrette, j After all the bit; pokes and the Gains- j borough of a few yearn since were the occs which garea picturesque tone to; oar street costumes. Doea cot every : one recall the many bright faces which peered lorth from taose quaint, big - t The headgear which forma a circle > around the f.ice has always had a cer t&iu charm, teeming, as it does, to frame aed smooih our contours. Tbe little bocnei worn by little children some timo nws.j ha/?lr rinrincr t.Hfi 1iiOd (Tachion plates show them to us), which formed a complete circlet to below tee ears, and which w>is wreathed between the hair asd the brim with rosebuds and s>uch delicate fl jwers, served to dcck their roseate little facts as with an aureole, and, though quaint in the back, '.va3 not so cumbrous as arc many of these clunky articles of dre=s worn by children today. Th-j dainty dress gathered in at tbe waist with a sash, the fulled skirts, fjave a child an cilia appearance quite lost in :he Mjthtr Hubbard construction of today. With the coming of spring wo see again the circular cloak of li^ht clotb called last y?ar the connemara, lattc-r]j ? - a . _ ? -i. - cee tiHguenot. k or iiie picuicsi j cloaks ot the ssason?one wbich has j^iven that kind of a garment bat littie show?is tbat of Russian design, trimmed with jagged fur, and wora with one end fluog across the opposite shoulder, Spanish fa?hion. The princess red ingote, with Valois collar, high sleeves, aad rever3 aud cuffs heavily trimmed with applique?th-j collar aad cuffs of ca3tor hed ben.ver fur, which trimming usually aU? finisbe; the long front?is quite lashion&ble. GENERAL NEWS ITEMS. fncts of Interest Gatuored from Yari ?Lord Tecnysoa continue* to improve. ?United States Minister Lincoln'* son died at Looiion oa Wednesday morning. ?The Rc?. Sam Small "will be crdiiacd fo the Episcopal ministry in Atlanta, oo the 15th of Juue. ?Several ZSiihilists have been arrested t.6:ir the Aiiiichuod: palace, where the czt and his family are staving. ?The Seo:i*? has confirmed the nomi i nation of cz-Q-.iV. tl.nry W. Wnrraouth of Louisiana, to b;: collector of customs. ?William tf. Allison has Dcen reelected "Coined States senator from Iowa, , receiving every Republican vote in both Houses. ?Featherotoue. tbc Republican cod- 1 tea act tor the seal of Mr. Gate, of Ar- J Isaim*, has besa seated by ? rote of 145 < to 135. " J --D. G. Peach, a shoemaker, com- J fitted suicide a; Kershaw, S C., Tues- ! /lay by taking an overdose of morphine. \ No reason is assigned. ?It is said tba t 2Jr. Cleveland's 2u*r" anteed income from the lavr hrm -with ( which he is connected a? special coan ol S/l/i 000 s. veir. - ? -?J v | n ?A fire in New York on Tuesday \ destroyed several wholesale dry goods 1 s-.orcs, involving a 'o*s of $350,000. T^n i firemeu were seriously hurt, and several t narrowly escaped death. t ?Willie Pharr, the four-year-old sou 1 of Cbaltner3 Pharr, >vho live? near 2 Mooresville, X. (X, wa9 i>urced to death 2 several days ago, by hi cl'.v.biog catcbiag * oa fire wkile his mother was '>ut of the ? raom. 8 ?Keely, of motor fame, who wa? s sent to jail six Months ago for con- t tempt of court because he refused to c reveal his stcrec in compliance wLh r 4-1- *- / - / fVv/\ V> . o VvAAri >?A lilic ViUCI VI WUIll, i-i 64O iJ\TX*k* leased, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania refusing to sustain the lower court. WI. 'WjL? SOUTH OAROLLwA THE PLACE.; r*7I- r 1J1. ?... ? ?.1 r.? n?.. f> rU. i w .??ia ?uu iu Palmetto State. ixorace Greeiey sjiid, ,:Go West, youcg io?n," acd that s&yitigltas been taken literally by thousand::. This father of journalism in America spoke figuratively when he used that expression and meant, have confidence in yourself; go where you must aave the conliaence, and go, too, where there is room r.ad opportunity to develop yourself. Thousand* of young men, and eld mftc, too, have gone West, where many nave lariven, out wnere many more have succumbed to the too rough iiis. Of the former we have heard, of the latter we hare not. Success comes to those who deserve it, and hard work and strict attention Jo business will bring its fruit. There is such a thing as luck, but it seldom comes, and he who waits for it will be rsdly disappointed. We must exert ourselves wherever we may be to gain the golden fruit. Many young men feel that South Carolina is a poor Stat? to live in. All admit the abuudance of her reiources, but deny the ability to develop them. Now, we wish to tell of a man who haa ?nade a fortune here, with disadvantages to overcome which few have. It ie simply of bis success in the business world and what he has done in it that we will write. John L. Mimnaugh landed in New York in 1873. He came from the north of Ireland, -where his folks are well-todo. But he came to this country with only a nominal sum in his pocket and with the hope of fortune?making in his mind. He had no friends in this country save an uncle, Mr. James A. Gray, in Augusta, Ga., one of the noted merchants of that city. With him Mr. Mimnaugh spent th? succeeding fire years and got his first idea* of mercantile life. In 1878, with less than $1,000 to hi3 credit, he went to Winnsboro and b?gan business alone. Investing his money judiciously, he went to work and toon bui't up a large business. He kept his eye op*n for bargains and made several good trades, from which he realized much, while in the town among tne reu ciay mus. i In 1883 he sold out his business in | WinnVooro and came to Columbia All i of us know the rest. From a business ! conducted in one store room, he has t built up a mercantile business second to none in the whole State. He recently bought the Agnew block, which j he haa had completely renovated. ; Both floors of this building are now taxed to their limit to accommodate the trade that is conducted therein, and the hale, hearty, jovial, energetic man whom you see watching every part of that business, has built it up jnMrftWhv his own r?luf>fc and rmsli. No help has he received from outside sources, and many are the difficulties he has overcome, but he has looked them all in the face and been discouraged at nothing. Now he can say he owes no man, and to the writer's personal knowledge his ledgers show a alance in bis favor over the amount of $125,000. In 1S78 he was worth $1,000, and in 1890, $125,000. Is that making money last enough? For the Agnew block he paid over $25,000, and every dollar he ha<< paid in rash. From tint showing can ore say there is no life in our State, that no money can be made nerei we give this as an example of what can be done in one of the most hazardous trades known, one in which over 95 per cent, of those who engage in it cunnot succeed. There are many others that have done as woll as Mr. Mimnaugh, but there are few who have done as much with as little extraneous aid. What he has done should be a great stimului and encouragement to the young men of our State. That they can l:v? in this beautiful, God-blessed land among those who have kindred sympathies and yet feel that the chances for success are as great here as anywhere else in this land.?Columbia I Record. TO JOIN THEIR FORCE:?. Tbo Pbm of Union Between the Independent Kuti the Kopabllcaaa ofSontk Ca.ro Una. The following address has been issued by the independents of South Carolina: Headquarters Indipmdjent- | Sbpublican State Committee, Co- v lumbia, C. February 28, 1890. J To Mr, E. M. Brayton, Chairman, and the Officers and Members of the Ke pujnuttu vuiuiuib'^. Gentlemen?It being deiirable that all the elements in South Carolina which are opposed to bourbon Democracy should be united, and working harmoniously together in an effort to make one effective and reliable Republican party in the State, therefore it is proposed that the chairman of the ludepcndent-RepublioaH State oommittce and chairman of the Republican State central committee confer with each other for the purpose of trying to euect a uniuu ui lucit strength for future efforts, upon the following basis: That each chairman call a meeting of his commutes, to take place on day , 1890, in Columbia and that as fairuesa and honetty, prompted by patriotism and loyalty to Republican principles should prevail, it is proposed ihat eaah oommittee, whea assembled as above suggested, shall choose three of its own members, or other suitable person?, who shall from the time of their election constitute for two years an executive oommittee of the Espublican party of the State. That this committee shall be enlarated into a State central committee as provided for below. That the chairman and secretary of this new oommitte be cho3en by the Independent Republican committee, and that the vice chairman of thecommittee and members of the national committee be chosen by the preaent Republican committee, or vice versa. That to eomplete this State committee it shall be the duty of the chairman to appoint as speedily as possible ane good and true man in each county? tnd that such selection shall be- made subject to the approval of the majority ?fthe ezeoutive committee, and 1he ength of time their service shall con,imi!5 shall be two years from the formation of the ezeeutive committee. It shall further be the duty of the chairman to appoint a county cbair ilXU III C&Cil VUUUfcJ, >YUUBC SCJCUUUJLl shsll also be subject to the approval of >he executive committee, and it shall >? the duty of the county chairmen to, a turn, appoint township chair me.7.; .hat the time of service of county and owaship chairmen is not to continue liter the county acd torn ship organi;ations are effected, the object of their ipnointurent being for the purpose >nly of effecting ruorganizatioa of the >arty in all parts of State, and it shall . - xV- ~ ,3 Jd I-HO UUt) uiauuu iasuuvj ajau iuwubip chairman to effect as fast as posible ceunty and township organic ion, under such rules as may he pretrib^d by the State executive comailtee. Very respectfully. Hbndmx MoLanb. Chairman. T. P. Clayton, Secretary. V \ \ gauge? ; Brl^fctfs Disease. This insidi:ou? pi'msn?, if tr.o ir-rg Wlii tilti felt I i.'iJi5Cof c^uiM'.uiiea nod briu^ tn* viciisa J<> a I pryranrure gravo. Hen'i rte tic^'-v wiri.iuO<l rtr^v-n h.-iitli a: ono* t>y * use ;? t .r proper r?;c ?rM!?*\ ?L? ?* 6trcuy ?.f :bo ur:o>.iv us-1 orgtir.s, B. B. B. (Botanic Biood B*lm). Dtvid Runkel, Culiman, Ga., writes: ' I used a hundred dollars worth of medicine for Bright'? disease, bur. it did me no good. I then took B B B., which relieved me. My appetite is restored and I urinate without pain." J. A. Maddux, Atlanta, Ga , writes: "I had great trouble iu passing urine which wai filled with sediments. My back and loins gare me much pain and I lost my appetite, strength and flpflh T nup^nno flr>H nnoKlfl tA 1 sleep soundly. T?f> bottles of B. B. B. gave me entire relief." | Thomas Williams, Sjddy, Teaa, writes: i {'I was troubled with severe kidney complaint a;:d confined to my bed. Six hottles of B. B. B. made a well man of ?e." * Chicago Bering for Money. At least $15,000,000 will be needed. A third thereof may be said to be in eight. The subscription list may be increased and perhaps another $5,000,000 may be raised by bonds, but the problem would be greatly simplified if the goyernment of the United States would advance $10,000,000 conditioned upon repayment im full. The bill as reported contemplates no appropriation other than 11,500,000 to cover the cost ?f a government exhibit, and the tur h? . sum of $100,000 to be expendt?Lf? all purposes coQaected with th?. nisaion of foreign goods for tht expUBltion. There is no clause providing for other government aid to the project. Whether or not any will be maie will develop presently. The prospect i* that it will be greatly ndim the orenaratorv stages. If it must be bad the time to ask ~for it ia now.?Chicago Times. The Mother's Friend, used a few week3 before confinement, lessens the pain and makes labor quick and comparatively easy. Sold by all druggists. * The Mississippi College. Cal. Bowen, of Pickens, a member of the board of trustees of the Clemson Agricultural College of South Carolina, has just returned from Starkville, and says tnat tnere are Know at t.ne juississippi Agricultural College 250 students. From what be saw of the institution md from his conversation with President Lee, he was conrioced that there was no doubt of the college being a success. It had bsen seriously ham pered in the past by opposition in the State and its operations had in late years been pinched by small appropriations. Last year, however, the appropriation had been liberal enough i to put the college on a better footing than ever before. Another serio'ii drawback had been destruction by fire of a number of the college buildings a /\ uahwo wr? ofO!\1AD iwnrr y Cttl JlliU ?/OiUO auu iSUAVitO TT VI V i burned, which had necessitated the sale of a number of the cattle and the temporary limitation of some of the practical farm operations included in i the college course. Temporary build; ings were now occupied in place oi those burned. -Greenville News A Breathing Cave. In the range of mountains in th? ' western portion of Horih Carolins ' known as the "Fork Range," a mosi singular -phenomenon exists It is th? ' "Breathing Cavt>" In the surnmej months a current oI air comes from ii ' so strongly that a person cannot walk ' against it, while in winter the rush o air iaward i3 just as great. The cool ' air from the cave in summer is fell J sometimes for miles in a dire it lint i from the mouth of the cave. At times ! j a most unpleasant odor is emitted upor the current from animals sucked ic | and killed by coming in violent con' tact with the walls. The loss of cattle onrJ At.ftAi* m t.hjit, spflinn dnrinc ' the winter months is always great and i3 accounted for it in this way: They range too near theme nth of the cave and the current carries them in. At times when the change from inhalation to exhalation begins the air is filled with hairs of the various animals. , Not infrequently small dry bones have been carried for over a mile from the mauth of the cave, as though shot froco aa air-gun. The air has been known to change quite suddenly during exhalation from cold to quite hot, accompanied by a terrific roaring and gurgling sound Many scientific men h^ve visited the place, but the phenomenon still remain's unexplained. The president of that section fear a volcanic eruption. Determined to Find Them Out. The youdg men of this city will bo doubt be sadly grieved to Icara that our young laaies are sccreuy urgnuiziug ? society which is to be conducted on this principle: It shall be the duty of every member to ascertain the conduct of the opposite sex, and any member guilty of treating any joung man the least addicted to dissipation with even common civility will be subject to dismissal from the organization. Any young man who has heretofore been in good standing iu the estimation of the society, and who shall commit an act unbecoming morality, shall be placed upon the black list and not accorded any further courtesies or recognition by any member of the society. Auy member of the society who shall continue to display regard or affection to any DiacK-nstea mase snau be dishonorably discharged and considered eteroallo disgraced by the organization?Roanoke (Va.) Evening World. ?George Francis Train left Boston at midnight Sunday eight for his trip around the ?yor!d, which be expects to complete in sixty days. New York was his first stopping place. From there he will go directly to Tacom3, and thence across the Pacific Ocean to China. ?Tki P.ev. San Jonw prea?hed at Dalfrtr. n.? s\n ffnrx-loTr 1/M-ilr no/?n?:inr> VVU, Uli j VU <.vv?? / VMVO'U *0 deny thnt he intended to more to Kentucky and farm. Said h?.: "I am makiDg more money than any ten bishops id the Methodist Church, acd it would be foolish for me to iolo aoythiDg Hire aD experiment." ?At the evening session of the Florida Chautauqua, Tuesday, Dr. J. V. Lee, of Atlanta, delivered a lecture on Henry W. Grady as editor, orator aud man. The amphitheatre fas filied to its utmost capacity and the a-idieic-- was hold spell bDunfi while Dr. Lee delivered bij. oration. -Press repo. U emanating from Topeka concercing an alleged scheme to colonize Oklahoma and make it a negro State, have greatly aroused the settUrs at Downs. A secret organization there has decided to drive out the few cegroea, and allow no more of that race to beeome settlers. ?Fire broke out in South Wilkesbarre mine Monday night, ^hich out off the escape of eight miners. It was at first supposed that they could be easily rescued through the Stanton mice adjoining, but this hope is now abandoned, i. rescuing party from the Stanton mine Tuesday found the tools of the men whom they sought to save, Out cj trace of the men. Tney became bewildered and wandered directly ioto danger, and were burned to death. A A d inrni 1 FACTS WOBTH 1 I-THK - MUTUAL . LIFE - i of ? w * 11)*?*!c<ji v ur ij!> < t:r?c t-'i"-Li'f iuc?u?*#DCO <.f tt>c ?, is ill! flu; fri?lUf:S<i! foU">l.i?r>W 1. Ii :? ihe O'los? *rt;v* L:fe lusutauet: (J < 2. I: is :tJS Li'X'lsl L=t<- t nit C-tOlpH i 3. 15 'a Iuj?*it?u<?u i tn'ifr. O -r ITjg J?\>1 a;id i'v-?j*y-?i: 4 I i- y !: Jvfj'.ca 'O J' 5. ! l- i-C* -t ?J 'fliptr?4 iu v<sio? j.; 1 liea! ti-'iai C?f ? :a?Urf?:iCK 0?;?f v G Toi- GREAT CORPORATION l??- va-i?? :u twenty- cty-Hs-. la near y i.* * i?j<t iti> n- x '"WO r'i&auN Or:ra!:?. ; f . V i'scMP lt-54. 6-? *< , Co <; ;> > j. .?::! J*. r\* O';. nr:?, direct :;: r?ii : ' >,. N 0 :??!?; siofls. Tilt' i'i<vr..?r iiU'KHrUi^ P? a'e-'l f '?' iff Ci?:nT**' t? ! '>x'tTi:c-z i : *!ch JHJ= iasts g qu-v::ij?*-. tt-irlll?li U{)iW?Ji iJ:~ ?> ??rl'-sg C.jr P * : -. 5torn $2>? P:&::-s, : ?! $200 u:; M*s>?i5 & Lir%::i<;o O.yA.1*, siirpi*-*e<. . by S.: < ; : s? O = ^ *50 i: >/. E*/:tv 1 : ??uj7?'KCrfd t r si* ?= ? v P ' f sutnsfji *)> i; A ^ uj . 1 * ' * t'r*l*'4 . rf { { : :a<aj?*if's Talbott & Sons, ' RICHMOSB, VA., I Manufacturers. . Will furoiah lowest estimates ?>o all t kinsa of MACHINERY. ENGINES AND BOILERS. SAW MILLS AND GRIST MILLS, I COTTON GINS, PRESSES AND ELE- ( VATORS, ] BRICK AND TILING MACHINERY, ' PLANERS AND WOOD - WORKING MACHINERY, I Write to me for pri ces b<rfo; buying. V. C. BADHA.il, Gen'i A^eot, Columbia, S. C. i F ~ AIlliAMVILLK STOCK AND POULTRY FARM: HORSES, Ca77i>. $7vj. a:* D PJULGtvi &c-:. a-itd. iiiz* of Jersey Cattle l Tea ii; i.':inc Perclieroii Staliic ?!' i" aj^e tbf. it . &??l(US 5 .,V:::r" 'v-!-. \VyattdoU, Lsagsba&a, :"i>-/j-iutfi Rocbfl arid lianae I i'<;w-v .'or AT.lt). i?; unison. I > ';K.vk<?.S UMKUO.S ( ' ^Jvprieccr, Columbia. 8. C. ' - } . i ! ' N, Zfauuewr. I 3?^ IF3 M F???-S8 & HEAD R3JSSS KSTflbr **? ga IN VISIBLE TH8BLA1 IA1 B#?iFaE CaSHiOaS.'^Tjispors hoard. Com. , Jbrtikle. Sucee?rfaiwhfr?*ll Ue:nMle?f?ll. 8oMb?F. HISCOX# ' tnlj, 8iS BrMiraj, J?w York. Write tor book of proofli WUXM. Agents wanted to It Is a p?rtect ell Pinions Clothes j?S s J winter line. SamLines; no more pie line sent by cioines pms neearu. ?? uuu iui >wu., tximj ( ! Ittaoldstii?beavest*|y'j|lT?i 50ft. line by | and finest fabrics f*| fa ^ mail $1.25 prewithout pi'ia. & *** M paid. For circai Clothes do not fraeze to | lars,price 'tst, terms , it and cannot blow off. | addres?the PIXLESS CLOTHES LINE CO., 17 Hereon St, Worcester, Mass. MADE WITH BOILING WATES. EPPS'S GRATEFUL-COMFORTING. COCOA MADE WITH BOILING MIlK. How LosiPtw Regained, \ I THE SCIENCE OF LIFE t A Scientific and Standard Popnlar Medical Treatise ? on the Errors of Youth, Pre aiatare Decliae, Nervoni a and PLjsicd Debility, Impnrities of tie Biool " Resulting from Folly, Vice, Ignorance, Excesses or jj Overtaxation, Enervating and unfitting the victim " for Work, Business, the Married or S^nal Relation. c Avoid unskillful pretenders. Posocsa this great n vrorlc. It contains 300 pa^es, roval 8*.: a. Beautiful 0 '. inding, embossed, full gilt. Price <-j!y ?1.00 by J mail, postpaid, concealed in plain \rx;?per. Bios- " ; rathe Prospectus Free, if you cpply now. The * distinguished 3uthor, "Wm. H. Parka'. M. D., re- * ceived the GOLD AND JEWELLED Munir. a from the National Medical Association for '? this PRIZE ESSAY on NXRVOPS and * PHYSICAL DEBILIT Y.Dr. Parker aad a corps of Assistant Physicians may be consulted, confidentially, by mail or in persom, at the office of THE PEA BODY MEDICAL INSTITUTE, No. 4 Bnlftnch St., Boston, Mass., to whom aU orders for books or letters for advice should be ~ directed as above. mm ^OTHERS s * LESSEKSfWM^g T0 LIFE ?. J DlM!fiiSH?S"^4inTHFR *? ^JSBE&SSt CHILD 1RADFIEL0 REBUtfifOR Ca ATLANTA^ B3LO BY ALL ORUGOS7S. ^ ^ ' 3BB I lEMSMBBEING i f: , : 10^. NsUJiAiWS - C0.8PA5Y, Tt?rJt,~? -i' noi.:s ibe j^rc-h ? ?? j. ;? ? hc? -bg ; Opd. H!??J offni'S <Utw*r: ,T S.-'V.r.tS^f I h icucq .Aiie i ft *?* !??* &<cur :v. i:t ir.s C ?< ?}. Y Hi he W ifi J. ; 'ft-: W >t:.t ?*r? S!5?}'j c'll*'* ' * 1 w I.); ?t'j? l?-U v. . i ill ! ?' :? .1 !?;-r : ' ( <r X ?? ; ] < ?; . * ? ? -i i-' ?'i? ?f?i? i->? ?11 r; * jTiJ.OOO 0(>'K i'i *f%* {.' i S IJ| ,-h ?*" ' * EDWAtiO L ^ARMANI). Gexeual AWE.\T. V'lr!< '? >. s . lllCitfjOi L : . ?C a r> * | I0BN A. WiLLiS r'RUPKi. ; 117 W Eii" USiiV :t b'iKtr> f ? 1 .f<C i* .'? - v is r;*t * 'i ?* t> :*;?l " > i ?& JSCT, i Sg V- & ^ ?MANUFACTURERS OF THKfezer Steaia Engr? AXl> ALL SIZJS OF BOTfl""LOCQV^- ' AND KETUsS TcBULAE BOILEKS ^ FOUNDRY WORK IN IRON AND F-h - ? REPAIRING PROMPTLY E2UtCUTJ5i. Jnly23-en I^O ^LJMTEKS JJTO auuin n. For Eatinuit-e* on STEAM SAW HILLS, G" -kg. Harvesting ^nd ohter Mi* i-.binery write to the undersigned, wbe 9 ill guarantee the gooos utey u>?v offer iir"all respects, and make matters iutcresting both to consumers and competitors' We will also famish everything needed in the line cf supplies: Boil ing, Oils, Piping, Fittings,r Valves, Idspirators Injectors, Pumps, <fcc, &c. i W. H. GIEBES, J*, & CO. Columbia.?. u H. H. P. GUARANTEED TO CU&JBick Headache and Constipation is & sh'or Hbil Prevents all Malarial troubles, trioiitir ctnts. For sale by druggists and mer Manuiaetnred by THE BARRETT DRUG 00. MISv kvevrt . 9i t Lasgky Bwtte; | W KI3fG ST.. CHAHUE STO>y&.-e__J \f ANUPACTUBBB8 OP LADIES' ANl OjitfTS'Underwear. Fin? Drese Shim . i>raer * sjreeialty. Directions for measo*inc si i?n application. seplCHa ' i mm in . -v.aft > 1STICR-ATATF KF.4DT PRINT, ipariMubutc. *. C. " | w. a. Clark, Pres. T. C. Rcszkxsoh, ? . "I ?THE? Colombia Phespbaie Cc ( ?Offeri to the trade? u HIGH GRADE ACID PHOSPHATE, V SIGH GB4.DE AXMOXIATED FESTIK7.E ? GERMAN ? A IN IT, A NITRATE SODA, And all Fertilizing Chezalcala 2-5:14 PITTS' CARMINATIVE T?OR CORRECTING NAUSEA, DV> L enteiy, Diarrhoea asti Cholera I :aniam. A pleasant medicine of inca]*--1 ale merit In the home circle for cbil<; tdult. It is popular, pleasant and eflidrrnjy a mother's friend. It soothes ' <m leab the mucous membnuses, and el?* - jfl he mucous discharge from head, sto; fl md bowels. The mucous discharge f - ? \ he head and lungs are as prompt] feved by it as the mucous discharge "t i n he bowels. It is made to relieve ? pqcous system and care nausea, aa- : toesit. It makes the critical perirx. eething children safe and easy It irontes and builds up the system wii . ^ t Is scliering and curing the wasted tiss<- fl t is recommended and used largely -* -H ihysicians. For sale by Wannamalte. o iunay Co., Columbia, S. C., and who.,le by Howard & WiDett, Augusta, G? ^ FOR SIXTY DAYS. 1 SITE OrfER OUR NO. 2 iiAND-MADI J * * KO VD CAB i to responsible parties cn ' iB IIXTY DAYS' time for only SIS-CO. It hm ickory wheel* and shafts^ iteel tires sad JB ujEoned scat asd paintca nicely. Not idrnTS uR??art, bat :i first class throat ho a u We UK 7? ffer oar oar No 10 hand-ma^w Buggy, put ap OS SB n5 kind Of spring on SIXTY DAYS' fet J le saaII amount of $15.00. It hat beat fetW 99 heels, steel tires and axles. Trimmed n* ainted in food style. Not by any means ,^" 1 keqp vehicle, bat is-rery wfcstintisl and is-tfar- jC ieted, For circulars aad general description. ?H idrta " m fiOLLKB & AKDSBSOH, 1 p. o. ?01110. 1 pleuemention thisyaper. JERSEY FLATS / ] OUUaiOA Fever Cure. Laxcf x m Hkt oft Motts, and gnaracteod to core a-;* <5. gP5fCiuS*9 y?rar. MaUHal. Interact*-.a'. THB BARRETT DRCGE CO. ASOTSTA. "T? CRT JH88Y FLATS. * ? '* OJ&R'S LIVER PILLS 1 I MM f? the bile fro as tie ?yrtem. on re * V i<nu trwble*, ?ad praTen.t malarial dis^-r^t \y all drcrS'JtJ and ccrchaatf . . jAHfl itaaSfci. or mailed en receipt c'price b* THB BARRETT DRU<J CO jfl Acsccta. 3. > j EAjOLgRPEP'SPILES ?? . 4S-AsJc for catalopnc. iRRY M'PG CO.. Nashville. Te: ml