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AN ORIENTAL WEIL. fcv DR. T/LMAG? DRAWS ALLS3CN FROM A RUSTIC SCENE. H Ork Is Hocomblr, ?L(1 TLert. r> Olid B? ? - NO Idlcxr, ?ays fio Uie. I dreader. How sl jms Found His KfJde.?-I e ?ra Utefal ness Frcm '.he Ik's Damgtter. Washington, Vay S.?Frcm a rustic Bible scene Dr. Tako?ge in tbis sermon draws practical and inspiring lessons fcr all classcs of people. The text is Exodus iii, 1, 4*Now Moses kept the flock of Jetbro, his father in law, the priest cf Midian." In the southeastern part of Arabia a man is sitting by a well. It is an arid country and water is scarce, so that a well i3 of great value, and iiocss and herds are driven vast distances to have their thirst slaked. Jethro, a Midianite sheik and priest, wes so fortunate as to have seven daughters, and they are practical giris, and yonder they come driving the sheep and cattle and camels of thtir father to the watering. They lower the buckets and then pull them up, the water plashing on the > 1 t?i. ? stones ana cmiiing hjch koi, a^u wc troughs are filled. Who is that man out ihere sitting unconcerned and looking on? Why dees he not come and help the women in this hard work of drawing water? But no sooner hare the dry lips and panting ncstrils of the flccks begun to cool a little in the brimming trough of the well than some rough Bedouin siepherds break in upon the scene, and with clubs and shouts drive back th6 animals that were drinking and affright these girlo until thej ?17 in retreat, and the flocks of these ill mannered shepherds are driven to the troughs, taking the places of the other flocks. Now that man sitting by the well begins to color up, and his eye flashes with indignation, and all tile gallantry of his nature is aroused. It is Moses, who naturally had a quick temper any how, as he demonstrated on one occasion when he saw an Egyptian oppressing an Israelite and gave the Egyptian a sudden clip and buried him in the sand, and as he showed afterward when he broke all the Ten Commandments at once by shattering the two granite slabs on which the law was written. But the injustice of this treatment of the seven girls sets him on fire with wrath, and he takes this shepherd by the throat and pushes back another till he falls over the trough and Aims a stunning olow be_ twsen the eyes of another as he cries, "Begone, you villains!" and he hoots and roars at the sheep and cattle and camels o! these invaders and drives them back, and, having cleared the : place of the desperadoes, he told the seven girls of this Midianite sheik to gather their flocks together and bring them again to the watering. Oh, you ought to see a fight between the shepherds at a well in the orient I as I saw it in December, 1S90. There I were here a group 01 rougn men vmo kad driven the cattle many miles and here another group who had driven their cattle as many miles. Who should have precedence ? Such clash./ ing of buckets! Such hooking of horns 1 Such kicking of hoofs! Such vehemence in a language I fortunately could not understand! Now the sheep with a peculiar mark across their woolly back3 were at the trough and now the sheep of another mark. It*was one of the most exciting scenes I ever witnessed. An old book describes one of these cDntenticns at an eastern well when it says: "One day the poor men, the widows and the orphans met together and were driving their camels and their flacks to drink ? and were all standing by the water<L aide. Daji came up and stopped them J . all and took possession of the water for his master's cattle. Just then an old woman belonging to the tribe of Abs came up ana accostca mm in a suppliant manner, saying: 4'6s so good, Master Daji, as to let my cattle drink. They are all the property I possess, and I live by tiieir milk. Pity my flock; have compassion on me. Grant my request and let them drink." Then came another old woman and addressed, him: 'Oh, Master Daji, I am a poor, weak old woman, as you see. Time has dealt hardly with me. It has aimed its arrows at me, and its daily and nightly calamities have destroyed all my men* I have lost my children and my husband, and since then I have been in great distress. These are all that I possess. Let them drink, for I live on the milk'that they prcduce. Pity my forlorn state. I have no one to tend them. Therefore grant my supplication and of thy kindness-let them drink. * But in this ' ?- - * M. / case me oruuu siave, so iar jruiu granting this humble request, smote the woman to the ground." A like scrimmage has taken place at the well in the triangle of Arabia between the Bedouin shepherds and Moses championing the cause of the seven daughters who had driven their father's flocks to the watering. One of these girls, Zipporah, her name meaning "little bird," was captured by this heroic behavior of Moses, for, however timid woman herself may bs, she always admires. courage in a man. Zipporah became the bride of Moses, one of the mightiest men of all the centuries. Zippcrah . little thought that that morning as she helped drive her father's flocks to the well she was splendidly deciding her own destiny. Had she staid in the house while the other sis daughters of the sheik tended to their herds her life would probably have been a tame and uneventful life in the solitudes. Bat her industry, her fidelity to her father's interest, her spirit of helpfulness, brought her into league with one of the grandest characters of all history. They met at that famous well, and while she admired the courage of Mose3 he admired the filial behavior of Zirjporah. you will have to go down before you go up. From the pit into which his brothers threw him and the prison in which his incarcerated him Joseph rcse to be Egyptian prime minister. Elijah, who was to be the -^i A _a _tj A.i L. gre&i.esi ox an me ancient propneis; Elijah, who mada King Ahab's knees knock together with the prophecy that the dogs would be his only un? , dertakers; Elijah, whose one prayer brought more than threa years of drought, and whose other prayer brought drenching showers, the man c , who wrapped up Ms capa of sheepskin into a roll and with-it cut a path through raging Jordan for just two men to pass over, the man who with wheel of fire rode over deat and escaped into the skies without morluarv Hisint?orrftf Inn *Vio mon tttVi n thousands of years after was cilled out of the eternities to stand beside Jeasus Christ on Mount. Tabor when it was ablazs with the splendors of transfiguration- this man could lock back to the time when voracious and filthy ravens were his only caterers. See also in this call c! Moses that Gad has a great rremorv, Four hun" dred years befor*. ne had promised the the deliverance of the oppressgd Israelites of Egypt. The clock of time has struck the hour, and now Moses is called to the work of rescue. Four hundred years is a very long time, but JOU 5t50 VJtuu Ciiu rciiicuiucr a pi wiiiuc j 400 years as well as ycucan remember 400 minutes. Four hundred years includes aH vo\irsr ecs'rv that you know ' * J i I I f anjibicg about and all the promises ; made to them, and V7e may rxpeci 1 fulfillment in our heart ard life ' blessiDgs that <?ere predicted to our unrisuan ancestry centuries ago. iu? < hava a dim remembrance, if any re ' membrance at all, of ycur great grand < father, but God sees those -who were j on their knees in 1593 as well as these 1 on their knees in 1893, and the bless- * ings he promised the former ana their 1 descendants have arrived or wiil ar- ] rive. While piety is not hereditary it < is a grand thing to have had a pious j ancestry. So God in this chapter calls 1 up the pedigree of the peotle whom 1 Moses was to deliver, icd Moses is or- I dered to say to then?. "The Lord Gcd ] of your fathers, the Gcd of Abraham, i the Gcd of Isaac and the God of Jacob : hath sent me unto you." If that j thought b8 divinely accurate, let me . ask, what are we doing by prajer and < by a holy life for the redemption of ] the next 400 years? Our work is not only with the people of the latter part of the nineteenth* century, but with 1 those in the closing of the twentieth - ? --- > .1 ?: , century, ana me ciusmg u* mo mcu ty-first century, the closing cf the 1 twenty second century, and the clos i ing of the twenty-third century. For s 400 years, if the world continues to I swing until that time, or if it drops, .* then notwithstanding the influence ] will go on in other latitudes and long s itudes of God's universe. i No one realizes how great he is for J good or for evil. There are branch- < ings out and rebounds and reverbara- < tions and elaborations of influence ] that cannot be estimated. The 50 or I 100 jears of our earthly stay is only a 3 small part of our sphere. The flap of < the wing of the destroying angel that 1 smote the Egyptian oppressors, the < wash of the Red sea over the heads of j the drowned Egyptians, were all ful-> I fillments of promises four centuries 3 old. And things occur in your life < and in mine that we cannot account < for. They may be the echoes of what ; was promised in the sixteenth or sev- ] enteenth century. Oil, the prolonga- i tion of the divine memorj ! 3 Notice also that Mcses was 80 jears ' of age whfjn he got this^U to become < Israelitish d alive rar. Forty years Us ] had lived in palaces as a prince. ; Another 40 years he had lived in the wilderness of Arabia. I should not wonder if .he had said: ''Take a younger man for this work. Eighty winters have exposed my health. Eighty summers hava poured their heats upon my head. There are 40 years that I spent among the enervating luxuries of a palace, and then follow the 40 years of wilderness hard ship, I am too old. Lit me off. Better call a man in th3 forties or fifties and not one who has entered upon the eighties." Nevertheless he undertook the work, pud if wa want to know whether he succaeded ask the abandoned brick kilns of Egyptian taskmasters, and the splintered chariot wheels strewn on the beach of the Red sea, and the timbrels which Miriam clapped for the Israelites passed over and the Egyptians gone under. Do not retire too early. Like Moses ycu may have your chief work to do after 80. It may not be in the high places of the field. It may not be where a strong arm and an athletic foot and a clear vision are required, but there is something for you yet to fin Pflvharva if; mivbfltnrftund off the work you have already done, to i demonstrate the patience you have i been recommending all your lifetime. ] Perhaps to stand a lighthouse at the j mouth of the bay to light others into i I harbor. Perhaps to show how glori- j ! ous a sunset may come after a stormy i ! day. < If aged men do not feel strong i enough for anything else, let them sit around in our chu^hes and pray, and perhaps in that way they may accom - 1 plish more good than they ever did 1 in the meridan of their life. It make3 I us feel strong to see aged men and ' ; women all up and down the pews, ' ! their fac;s showing they have been on s the mountain of trans Sguratioa. "We 1 want in all our churches more men * like Moses, men who have been j through the deeps and climbed up the i ? ? * - "? il' -Jl - "I _ TTT * snenea oeacn on me omer siae, w e > want aged Jacobs, who have. seen < ladders which let dorcn heaven into i their dreams. We want aged Peters, who have been at Pentecosts, and aged t Pauls, who have made Felix tremble. I There are here and. there those who * feel like the woman of 90 years who 2 said to Fentenelle, who was 85 years 1 of age, "Death appears to have for: * gotten us." "Hush." said Fontenelle t the wit, putting his finger to his lip. I No, my friend, hou have not been t forgotten. You will be called at the I right time. Meantime be holily oc- 1 cupied. 1 Let the aged remembsr that by in- * creased longevity of the race men are e not as old at 60 as they used to be at * 50, not as old at 70 as they .used to be 60. not as old at 80 as they used to be i at 70. Sanitary precaution better un- a derstood; medical science further ad- c vanced; laws of health more thorough c ly adopted ;.-dentistry continuing' for ] longer time successful mastication; 1 homes and churches and court rooms 1 and places of business better ventilated i ?all these have prolonged life, and r men and women in the close of this 1 C3ntury ought no: to retire until at t least 15 years later than in the open- c ing of the century. Do not put the t harness off until you have fought a f few more battles. Think of Moses c starting out for his chief work an oc- c togenarian; 40 years of wilderness life t after 40 years of palace life, yet just ? beginning. 1 There lies dying at Hawarden, Eng* t land, one of the most wonderful men ^ that ever lived since the ages of time r oegan their roll. He is the chief citi- i z?n of the whole world, Three times s has he practically fcejn king of Great i Britain. Again and again coming t from the house of commons, which he e nad thrilled and overawed by his c eloquence, on Saturday, on Sunday t morning reading prayers for the peo- s pie with illumined countenance and s brimming eyes and resounding voice, t saying: "I believe in God the Father f Almighty, maker of heaven and earth c and in Jesus Christ, his only Son, our ^ Lord," s xne wona nas no omer suca man 10 1 lose as Gladstone. The church has no I other such champion to mourn over, s I shall never csase to thank God that t on Mr. Gladstone's invitation I visited t him at Eawarden and Heard from his i own lips his belief in the authenticity I of the Holy Scriptures, the divinity of s Jesus Christ and the grandeurs of the t world to come. At his table and in t the walk through his grounds I was ? impressed as I was never before, and f probably will never be again, with ^ the majesty of a nature alLconsecrated c to God and the world's betterment. In i the presenc? of such a man what have ^ those to say who profess-to think that c our religion is a pusilbnimouj and s weak and cowardly and unreasonable j affair? Matchless William E. Glad- t stone! j Still farther watch this spectacle o? [ genuine courage. No wonder when } Moses scattered the rude shepherds he < won Zipporah's heart. What matter- ] ed it to Mos(55 whether the cattle or the v| seven daughters of Jethro were driven , from the troughs by the rude herds- ] men? A ssnse of justice fired his courage, and the world wants more of the spirit that will dare almost any- i toing to see oiners ngntea. ah tne i time at wells of comfort, at welis of j->y, at wells of religion and at wells 1 k i 5? liltrVure I'i^re ar? O'i'.fJt^f.s p-'.c { Lieed, the wrong herds getting the first ?7ai( r. Three who have the previous riebt :ome in last, if tl ey come it; at ail rbatik God we have here atd tb^re a itrcng mai to set things right! 1 am , 4 lw? * mne.*. m**e\ h.-io on rcnApift i I <J fC CUO.W Vi XtlLi VJUU 11M ^ svork to co be has saaie one ready to 1 accomplish it. ! ? the>e a Bible to :rans!ate, there is a W.yclif to trans late it, if there is a literature to be energized, there is a Suakespfar to energize it; if there is an error tosrnite, iere s a Lutfcer to Jnii'e it; if there is to be a cation free, there is a Moses io free it. Bit course istetded ic religion, in literature, in statesmanship, in all spheres; heroics to defend Jethro*s seven daughters and their li:cks jna put to fiignt the insolent invader... A.nci those who do ?h? brave ko;1c will win somewhere high reward. The , loudest cheer of heaven is to be gkcn >lto him that overcoaioth." Still farther see in miscall cf Mores j ;hat if God has any especial work f jr i you to do he will ficd you. Taere I ] irroc. TTNtrrvt onr} A-oKio SiT\fi Pa IpSti r7 e I I with their crowded population, but the man the Lord wanted was at the southern point of the triangle of Arabia, and he picks him right out. the shepherd who kept the flock of Jeth ro, his father in law, ihe priest and J >hiek. So God will not find it hard to < ;ake you out from 1,600,000,000 of the i aumanrace if he wants for anything ] 'special. There was only just one man ] qualified. Other men had courage i like Moses, other men had scm^of ine i :alents of Moses, other men had ro- < saaneein their history, as had Moses; i 3ther men were impetous like Moses; ] but no other man had these different < jua^ities :'n :he essct proportion as had i Moses, and God, who makes no mis- ! :akes, found the right mas for the < right nlac?. Do not fear you will be j - 1__T _ i 1 3V6> iOOKCClOr iii&l wumj-yu Sid naui ?d Gad cannot find jou. He knows ; pour name, your features, ycur tem i oercment and jour characteristics, i md in what land or city or ward or aeighborhood or housa you live. He I will ne t have to send out scouts or ( explorers to ficd jour residence or < place of stopping, a ad when ha wants you he will make it as plain that he j means you as he made it plain thai he 1 needed Mose3. He called his name < twice, as afterward when he called ( tfoe great apostle to the gentiles he j jailed twice, saying "Saul, Saul," and j when he called ihe troubled house- ] deeper he called her twice, sayingy 1 "Martha, Martha," and when he called tlitvronhet to his mission he call j aim twice, saying ''Samuel, Samuel," jndnow when he wants a deliverer he calls twice, saying "Mosse, Moses." 2"es, if God has anything for us to do bte will call us twice by name. At the Eirst announcement of cur name we ; may think it possible that we misun- i iers'ocd the sound, but after fie calls 1 is twice by name we know he means is as certainly as when he twice spake j the names of Saul cr Martha or Samlei or Piloses. You see, religion is a tremendous personality. We all have the general :all of salvation. W6 hear it in ' songs, :in sermons, in prayers. We '< tiear it year after jear. But after < iwhile, through our own sudden and : ilarming illness, or the death o? a play- j mate, or a schoolmate, or a college mate, cr the decease of a business ] partner, or the demise of a nexi door < ?:~u- 1 *i"A UdgliUjr, ii CI IIIKJ uan LKJ repentencs and a new life and eternal * happiness, and vre know that God ] means us. You have noticed the way 2 in which God calls us twice? Two ' failures of investments, two sickness- j is, two persecutions, two bereavements, two disasters. Moses! Moses! J Still further, notice that the cill of \ Moses was written in. letters of fire, i On the Sinatic peninsula there is a < shorn bush calied the scacia, dry and J brittle, ana it easily goes down at the '< icuch of the flame. It crackles and < ;urns to ashes very quickly., Moses, 1 seeing one of these bushes on fire. goes i ;o look at it. At first no doubt it ] teemed to be a botanical curiosity, ] turning*, yet crumpling no leaf, part s ng no ?:tem, scattering no ashes, It i ivas a supernatural fire that did no 1 iamage to the vegetation. That burn- i ng bush was the call. 1 Your call will probably coma ia let- s ers of f :re. Ministers get their call to 1 jre&ch in letters on paper or parch- 1 nent or typewritten, but it does not 1 tmount to much until they get their i lext cali in letters of fire. You will i lot amount to much in usefulness unil somewhere near you find a burning 1 >ush. It may ba found fcu-ningin s he hetic flash of jour child's ch.ek. J 'X may be found buraicg in business ? nisforlu.ne. .Ii; may bs lound burn 1 ng in the fire of the world's scorn or late or misrepresentation. But hark 1 in to tho crackling of the burning t >ush! i Oh, what a fa-c'nating and inspir- ! ng character this Moses! How tame ^ ill other stories compared with the bi >graphy of Moses. From the lattice s >f her bathing house on the Nile, ' Dhermutis, daughter of Pharoah, sees t lim in the floating cradle cf papyrus 1 eaves made water tight by bitumen, lis infantile cry is heard among the 1 Qarble palaces, and princesses hush c lim with thfiir InllflhiAS* wnr]?m?Ti hv I he roadside drop their work to look/ >n him when as a boy he passed, so e >eautiful was he; two bawls put be c ore his infant eyes for choice to dem- I mstrate his wisdom, the one bowl ? antaining rubies and the other con- i aining coals of fire, sufficiently wise * ras he to take the gems; but, diviney^directed, he took the coals and put I hem to his mouth, and his toEgue e ?as burned, and h9 was kfs a stam- J nerer all his days, so that he declared, 1 n Exodous iv, 10,'i am slow of < peecb and of slo n tongu? ;von aud on c intil he set firm foot am:>ng thecrunrling bisalt, and his ear was not desf- 2 sned by thunderous "Ihcu shalt noi" ? if Mount Sinai, the man who want to i he relief of the Israelites who were I courgei because without chopped wfM ?vrriir.'d fn rriairft firm t >rick?, the story ol their oppression i ound chiseled on the tomb of Eos- c :here at Thates, and when his armies a vera impeded by venomous serpents i ent crates cf ibises, the snake destroy- a ng bird?, to clear the way so that his i lost could march straight ahead, thus c ;urprising the enemy, who thought s hey must take another route to avoid t he reptiles; the whole sky an aquari- c im to drop quails for him and the 1 losts foJlowiag; the only man in all c igeswhem Christ likens to himself; he man of whom it is wri-. en. "Jehovah spoke unto Moses face o fice as a man speaketh to his ? riend;" the man who fcai the most ? vondrous funeral of all time, the Lord J :oming_down out of heaven to bury lien. Iso humin lips to lead the ser ' ric9. No choir to chant a psalm. No t >rgan to roll a requiem. No angel t iligjhling upor. ths seen?, bat G-d ? ayicg Mm out for the last sleep, God * lpturning the earth to rcc^ive the 1 laint, God smoothing or banking the ? lust above the sacred form, Gad, with * areweli and beaedictioa, closing the ublime obscq lies of la ?/ giver, poit . tnd warricr. "And no man knovrelh ) )f his sepulcher unto this day." Get 1 four eye on him instead of trying to * mitate some smaller example. ? Senators Tillman and iicLaarin < ire urging ths President to appoint ' 3-an. 21. C. Bailer a Us j jr-General of i Volunteers in the United States army, i 5e would make a gcod one. i /' / CCNCiT.O.N C r C^CPS. S?l a t 6 (ib jt wars v.i Ov/r I ie la'? Ue- I i port to H?s('fjaart?r?. The following weekly crop bulletin was issued Wednesday from Columbia J oy Director J. W. Biuer: J The warmest weather of the current ; season occurred durisg the week with ! i maximum temperature cf S9 on the 1 llh at Giliisonviile, while over tne Slate generally tbe ttmperatuie rose . ibove 93 on the 3J, -1'h, 5ih, with cor- ; "espondingly high night temperatures, 1 out durirg the afternoon and night of ; ^he C:h the temperature fell rapidly, ( rescuing a miaimua 01 ou cm tue i of the 7th at Spar'anburg < Ehe reit cf the week remained cocl. j The average lemperaiuje deduced from -11 weekly means 70 aca the normal for the same period is approxi j nately 69. Light frost was noted on ;he morning of the 7th arid 8;h at va- 1 rious places in the northern and west- < ?rn counties, but in no instance wss i ;He frost heavy enough to destroy veg- , station. \ . The rainfall for the week was con- j fined to tne 5th, oa which date tbuu- j ier showers occurred over the entire < State, having been the heaviest to the : northward ol the Santee river. The i rainfall was light, and in many placcs i she' e was Eose, over the northern ard : western counties and in the southeast j ;rn sroup of counties. Ia tbe latter j section the ground is very dry aid i raia would prove bectiisial, while ( sver the upper counties rain is needed ; to soften the surface, as the ground is badly crusted, making it difficult for sprouting p'ants to come up. Foriyfour places reported rainfall measure mints of which 31 were less than half i m inch. The average of ail measure- i ments v?as 0 42 and the normal for the same period is about 0.78 inch. i Tnere was a large percentage of bright sunshine averaging S3 per cent, j 3f the possible, and on two days only ; lid any cloudiness prevail. ( High winds, attaining to almost tor- ( aadic fores in Orangeburg, Florence, 1 Dlarendon, Lexington and Horry ; counties, prevailed on the 6Lb, doing j considerable injury to fruit trees, J; fences, and in some imtinces to build ! ings, and the cold, high winds cn the following days had a damaging effect 3n cotton, corn and tobacco. The first portion of the week with its high temperature, light winds and bright sunshine, was extremely favor- . able to crop growth and made a ? noticeable improvement in the appearance of field crops generally, ; During this time farm work made : rapid progress. The latter portion o; the week, however, was balow the ac- < Live growing temperature for soaae ci i the principal crop3 cultivated in ihis j State, for instance cotton which wiil not grow or thrive uader 55 degrees. Corn has imnroved gene rail v ai- ; though its condition is extremely varied and in cut few places entirely satisfactory. Stands in many phases ire very irregular owing to replanting and cut worms have destroyed stands ' in many places. Early corn on sandy lands is dciag fairly well. In the western counties a considerable area remains to be planted, while in York :ounty fields planted ia cotton and j which failed to come up to satisfactory | stands have been plowed over and ' planted in corn. Corn that is up has : received its hr3t and second cultiva lion. The cool weather recently na3 , given it a yellow cast. Coiton did fairly well during the arst of the week, especially on sandy ' soils, where it is up to fine stands and J ;n tne mere easterly counties is.being ' lultivaied and chopped out On stilf ' lands tie surface is so crusted ; ind baked tha. cotton cannot : 3ome up readily. Tne rec;nt cool \ weather gave cotton a severe sst back mi a numbar of correspondents re- ' ported plants dying. Fields are re- ' sorted grassy in Edgefield and Ktr- ; ihaw. Probably more than the usual imount of replanting is necassary as ' i7hole fields are being replowed and i replanted. Planting is not entirely j inished but the area yet to plant is \ mall and confined principally" to the J ipper portions of the State, although 1 slanting Sea Island cotton still contmles. Tne region devoted to this va- ] iety has besn too dry for its best de- j relopment. Reports on wheat continue favora- ] )le except that rust has developed to a < ilight extent in Anderson, GreenvillP, ] Li.xington, Na^barry, Liiireui ana * Spartanburg counties. Wiieat ls heai- \ ng but the straw is short. As oats mar maturity the prospects 'or a full crop diminisn in many secions, although over the northeastern, j lorthern and western counties its c jn- ' lition C}ntinue3 very promiaing. In Bamberg and Barnwell counties a fly las attackel oat*-, while over t&e ' southeastern counties generally it lias >sen too dry. Oats are heading with he straw short. Spring oats are lookng fine. - ^ Some rice is still being planted and 3 he ^tand, color and general condition >f this crop has shown marked imjrovement during the we^k. Transplanting tobacco is being rush- c >d to completion. The weather nas, 1 >n the whole, been too cool for young ( l - - - T1 u , uanis 10 grow wen, uui> ima urujj uw v eceived no serious set back, al.hough i n some places cut 'worms and grits t loppers damaged it more or less. . ? Sweet potato sets are being trans ? )lanted, but not as yet to any great c ixtent. " Draws are not very pJeniiful. i 'rish potatoes appear to be doing fine- s y, except in Charleston and Beau fori t :ounties, where they will not yield me fourth of a crop. t Melons have not shown much, if ( my, improvement and have made f iatisfactory growth, except in Will- j amsburg county, where the viaes are i growing nicely. f Fruit prospects vary greatly t hrougbout the State, bring exceed- ? ngly promisirg in places, while in t >ther places there will be none. Pears i moear ta be dropping badly and do- i ng pDorly. Peaches give promise of x t fair average crop generally, ani up I n Greenwood county tl e trees are t >verloaded. The winds of the weik I hook much fruit eft' the trees, al- { hough it is thought t3 the advantage ?f the fruit remainiag on tbe trees. Dhe crop of wild berries promise to be luite plentiful. 1 I Wn U 9i-rA nn 'Pnn Tee decision of the United States t 5aprem8 Court in the dispensary case : rives great satisfaction in Columbia, i Che Governor gave the original pack- i ige men until last Monday to get tags c rom the Siate dispensary and ship \ heir liquors out of the State, which i hay have dons, and now there is not ( in origira! package store doing busi- ( icssin title Slate. Gv>v. E'lerbe is i nuch pleased with the decision, and i laysitLsa glorious victory for the 1 Slate. ( A GLORIOUS victory was won in the South Pacific O^ean about 6,500 miles 'rom America. Oar fleet under Daw* c *y met the Spanish fleet and destroy- ! >r! if Thfl Snanish Hatr chin i Maria Christina was sel on fire and i iestrojed 2nd her commander kii'ed. i Che three largest ships were destroyed, 2 ,wo more were crippled, six gunboats 1 were sunk and the rest of the Spatr'sh i 3eet sought safety inflight. c Si. .'.jr-V*'-'_ - a rn?m p-tt r il. two aac icab<i>d>i bp?turi)< u ca b*u si.p. Ii!antU';rt to 1 -*r ii c< rnpa.fcits E . ^ j n 4.1 ~ in i t_:4. .3 to.a -i./. iEU 'J, U. t. c r.rM tlilLfu |o:a ca fantry. on the shore of I'inar del Rio, Dub.-t. Thursday afurnoon, with 500 ritbs, C,0l;0 rounds of ammunition irid some focd supplies for ihe insurmerits, theh;sL land Seht of the war lock place. Each side may claim a riotorr, for if the Spaniards frustrated the ttforts tococatct with the insurgents, the Americass aot decided the tetter of the battie, killing twelve or cno)c of the enemy, snd on thtir own pari suffering no. a wound. Afier iark Wtdntida.v tveirin^ the eld fashion ad s.de ^hetl sieamer Gassie, if the Morgan Line, with the tiojp^ and cargo mentioned, s:arled fcr the 3uban coast. At sunrise she fell in with the gunboat Y;cksburg on the Diocxacetc Havana, u.ner DiocKaaipg vessels came up aiso. Tiie converted revenue cutter Manning, Captain W. !?. Munger, was detai.'ed to convoy the Gussi?, and, three abreast, the steamers moved along the coast. J list wist of PortCabannas harbor tne 3-ussie anchored, the Mannirg covering the landing place with her guns, and the torpedo Dcat Wasp came up, jager to assist. Tne firs: American soldier to step on the Cuban shore from ibis expedition was Lieut. Crofton? Captain O'Connor, with the first battery, lnviog gone a longer rcu'.e. A rttf mar ine oesch threw the men out and tney s'.umbled through the water up to tneir breasts. When they reach :d dry land ILey immediately went imo ih<3 tujh to form a picket line. !?#o horses iiau b;en led to swim to Land, when sudieniy arifllie shot fol lowed by continuous snarp firing, wa.-ned me men that the enemy had b-.e.'i in wailing. The captain of the iranspori s.'gnail;d tne Wasp and the Mi;immg, and sharpnel nisSed through the air like to: iron plunged in water. The vVusp opened Yfith htr saiall guns, i'lse cannonade began at 3.15 HLd lasted a quarter of an iacur. Then Dur pickets appeared. Ihe ships cir2kd arcucd, and bjing told by Caplain O'Connor, who nad come from shore with the.clothing torn from cna leg where the. Spaniards were. 100 shots more were liredia that direction. '"Anybody hurt, captain?"' "None of oar men, bat we shot twelve Spaniards,1' he shouted back. The soldiers on bosrd the Gussie beard the news without a word, bat hearing where the enemy was sitaated gathered aft on the upper deck and stnt several vclleysinto the spot. The pickets returned to the baah. Several crept along the beach, bat the ^Daniards had drawn back. 'li was decided that the soldiers should re-embark on tin Gussie, and that the guides should take the horses and seek the insurgents aud make a uew appointment. They roie olf to the W est ward aod disappeared around a point, A CONFEDERATE CflUIS-R. im;ui; Cap.urid b/ Oaa Friv-t e; in Si* Month*. Jiut what one little privateer can do has been revealed bytne s&ort career of the Confederate cruiser Snenandoah dhe was aciually cruising for the destruction of Union property but eight months, aad during tnat time she captured and destroyed vessels to tne value of $1,200,000, and tne United States had never been able to direct a blow against her. She had visited 3very ccian except the Antarctic, cov sring a distanced 58,000 statute miles. iie destrojca micj wnaiers in tne Arctic Ovwan. Is wa3 there that the Last guii for the Southern cau3e was Hred. It was fired from tne d;ck oi the privateer cruissr SnenandOAh, by Commander James Iredell Watideli, 3nJune 22, 1865, just seventy four iajs after tne surrender of Lseat Ap nomattcx. Commander Waddell could pot persuade himself to enter an SLinerican port, and, for some time, lirniessly scoured the seas. In August, however, hsspok3 tne English snip Biiricouta, bound from dan bVincisco to JL<.vcrpjjl, and from ner ficjived conclusive evidence of the jnd of the war between the States. He resolved to seek an English porf, and >0, on Nove nber 5. the S1" nandoah jntered St. George's Channel, hav .ng, sailed 22.UUU miles witiiout seeing land 0a November 6 she r.eameu up the Mersey, and the Conedtrjite dig iiavicg Deen cauJed dowa )j Uomoiancur WacUi;li, ne sent a ;omn.ualcai.iunto Exrl Russell, Eag iish Minister of Foreign Atfairs, placing his ship at tne d ^posai of tne Bntidn government.' Inrough E^rl tiusseil tne vessel was transferred to ;ne jurisdiction of tne American Minster, Cnarles Erancij A lams, wi.o aused her to bj conveyed to this iountry to be dismantledNE.WS FROM MA\I_A- V'.v. __ rte Oitj ou ?rvAt 1021-Cap:uie ol a Span ish Qaiiboj t. The Navy D/p&rtment received a iispatch from Admiral Dawer Sunday. 3a reports that the Spanish gunboat Jallao, from the Caroline Islands, rejently entered the por; of Manila, >eing ignorant of the outbreak of hosilities between Spain and the. United States. An American warship fired icrcs3 her bows and signalled her a lemand f jr her surrender. The denand being disregarded, the American ;hip fired direct at the Spanish gun>oat which then surrendered. The populace of Manila is reduced o eating horseflesh, and the prospects it relief seems far distant. [The telegrams indicate that Djwey has lost jone of the prestige gained in his remorable fight of two weeks ago, ind that while heiefrtias from taking lie city of Manila, he has it pradically it his mercy. The admiral expresses he belief that the rebels are hemming n the city by land, but the fact that le says explicitly that they have made 10 demonstrations seems to disprove .horoughly the published reports that hey had already entered Manila and )eguu a career cf bloodshed and ra)ine. The Expedition Failed. The steamer G-ussie, which left Camps, Fla., May 10, with two comjanies of the First infantry on board, n charge of seven thousand rifle 3 and wo hundred thousand rounds of amnunition intended for the insurgents n the proxies of Pinar del Rio, renained off the coast of Cuba TaursIsy, Friday and Saturday, convoyed )y the Auxiliary gunboat Manning, d a vain attempt to land her cargo. ^Jjptain J. H Dcrst, of the staff of Ueneral Miles and formerly United S.ates miliiary attache at Vienna, leaded the expedition, which returned icre. Sunday morning. He says the 3n;sipi will ootn Tames.. Fla. A Flax o! Tinea. S. c:etary Long made public Sanlay a message which had fcesn received rom Key West, telling of the depar,ure of the United Sla'.es vessel Uncas, a command of Capt Brainard. She s bound for some point in Cuba, wi.I4 vie^v to securing the release of two American prisoners under a fla: of ;ruce, in exchange for Spanish pri3on i- - i J i? ii.: ? irs nsiu oy mis ^uvcrumom. A S- 'J22CRN F.?fiT. ru* >.j2.n a da S paUed W t"? lo?? A'ttr ? I) rp*r% The TTiiitpd Slates r.ruiser Mm-hte b'ad, trie gu&boat Nashville and tbe auxiliary cruiser Windom steamed up to the harbor of Cienfi?egas early Wednesday morning with orders to cat the cable connecting: Havana with Santiago de Cubs. This task was accomplished, but obIv after a ?errific fight between cur warships and several thousand Spanish troops, wbicb lined the shore and lay concealed behind improvised breastwork*. One man, a seaman named R agan, of the Marblehesd, was killed in one of tha working small boa's, ana six other men 9rere sfverelv wounded. In addition, a large number on Doard the ship received minor weunds. Soon after the arrival of ft e warships cif Cieniuegcs, fcur boats were launched and proceeded in shore for the purpose of grappiiijg for the cable in order to cut it. The warships lay-to aK/vit 1 nnn r?r moTftnflFthr bar? bor. It was observed that the Spanish troops had assembled ashore, but it was not known that heavy guns had been placed in a masked battery and that the old lighthouse, far cut cn a neck of land, had been transformed into a formidable fcrt. When the commanders of the Marblebead and the Nashville calied for volunteers to man the boats and cu+ the cab>, the men respo:dtd with a j utp Lieut C. McR Wius'ow, of the Nashville, took cDmmand of the Nashville's roa's. The shore surrounding the entrancs of the harbor was firat shelled and then the "boats prcceedi-d in. The work of Aiding the cable was slowly and cautiously prcczeded with. T^e cable was, deep in the channel and was iour.d witn difficulty. One of the relays of the cable had bcea severed when the Spaniards opened fire. The marines ia the boats replied a: orce, and a macbine gun from ilie forward launch stnt .in a stream of ballets, while heavy shells from the worships drove the Spaniards from the r 11-i pits at the shore, many of them seeking refuge in. the lighthouse fcrt, which was afterward torn, to pieces by a shell from the Windom. As there were great numbers of Spaniards in and behind the fort at the time, there is no doub:; tin; many of them were killed. 1 With desperate courage the Ameri can sailors remained calmly at their posts and succeeded in dragging up the second relay of the cible and severing it. Seven men badly wounded was the count, and one of them, Rea1 gan, died while on the way back to the ship. Lieuteuant Winslow was ; shot in the hand, a number cf others were mcra or less is jured. Ua the iNashviiie uaptain Maynara was standing forward, with an ensigu, when a gpinish bullet passed through the en3ign:s shoulder and struck Maynard on the chest, near the heart, wounding him only slightly. The Marblehead was struck scores of timts by bullets from machine guns, and the Nashville suffered to about the same extent. The Windom also bad many marks of the fray. Her shell, i blowing up the lighthouse and scatter . ing th8 Spaniards in all directions, ended the battle. GUM3FOROU3S.LD ?R5. The Kind CjcIo Sam Will Arm Hu Volanteen Wltlu It is stated by the offi ;ers of the quartermaster general's bureau that six weeks from now the government will be able to cloihe and equip 100,000 men for the field. Tae most im I portant difficulty lies in the matter of 1 r.flis. At present Uncle Sam has barely more than a sufficent number ? . 3 n _ m 4.1 l 01 mcaern rinss lur me regular army. The militia of the states are armed with the old-fashioned Springfields and similar out of date weapons. When ' it is 62'd that a Springfield "rill 3 shoots 25 buiiets a minute with a range of 4,000 yards, against 40 shots a minute at 6,000 yards for the new regulation Krag-Jorg n59na very imperfect notion i3 gived of the difference of effectiveness between the two weapons. The deference lies miiniy in the increased "danger space" where the Krag Jorgensenis used. The velocity of the projectile fired by the KvagJorgensen is so great that its caurse is through the air is nearly horizoLtil, so that it would kill a man who stood anywhere between the muzzle of the r*lid and a distance of tiiree miles. A Springfield bullet, on the other hand migh; kill at two miles, but if properly aimed for such a range, ^would go over the he&d of a man standing a mils away. The war department nas already ordered 100,000? Krag-Jorgensens and it is believed that these weapons can be turned out at the rate of 1,0C0 a day when all the resources of the small arm. factories are fully utilized. Time must el&pse, however, bsfore this ratecf produclion is attained. and meanwhile a large part of our troops vrill have to get along with back number guns. Neurly alt of the infantry of the militia are armed with Springfield* of 45 caliber, while the cavalry are provided witu Sprinfield Remington, Spencer, and Sharge car bines of 45 and 50 caliber. The supply of ammunition for the rifles will be.plentif ul, the Frankford arsenal ia Pniladelphiais now turning out 150 000 cartridgesa day for the KragJorgensen and the output will presently reach 300,000 per diem. Many I of the Springfield rifies and carbines, I ' i j ?:IL T7-?^ wnen repmueu mm xviag uuigcu?;uo will probably pass into the hands -of the Cub in auxiliaries. The field artillery used by troops will consist mainly of 3 2 inch breech loading rifles, which throw projectiles weighicg 16 pounds a dis'.anca of four miie3. Most of the states possess some of these cannons and 31 states have one cr more Gatling guns. Killed bj Lightning. A lightning bolt dealt death to a crowd of negro gamblers Sunday ?ft rnocna1; Columtia. Aft2rwards at the base of a large and handsome tree could be seen the bodies of two of the jcuag negroes stretched out upon the ground cold and stiff. In the band of nna aroo tityhflv ^lasnpri a deck of uuv " "* "b J s playing cards. It was a dreadful picture to gazg upon and many negro women stood about and talked to each otter, taking the position that it was a manifestation of Divine veDgeance upon those who disregarded tbe Sabbath day and plajei cards onSuaday. The crowd, it was said, had been "dhoolin' craps" some distance away when the rain came up and they adj turned under the big tree to get shelter intending to play a game of cards while waiting. Cardinal Rampolia, the Paual secretary of state, declares the Vatican will observe strictest neutrality. Tbe Pope desires prayers for the speedy conclusion of peace, but in the event of continued war he will ask the blessings of h?aven on the Spanish arms. Tttc n^mmadnrfi DSWRT has utterly destroyed the Spanish fleet in the Pacific Osean, and has ta-kea the Phillipine Islands from Spain. The3e islands over which the stars and-stripes no* float are richer than Cuba. I aik C# ^ a . *"i # ? C ? | Thtj arehbrshoss of lie CVholic] chuich in the United Slates have is | sued ai address eid jrstd by Monsijr nor Mariibtlli, the }&p:-i legate iu ! iLis country. The addrtss bxtaibts j ihe spirit cf tac loftiest patriotism and I is entente mcst ticqucnt appeals that has been made tocilizins of this country since war with Spain was declared. The archbishops say to the Catholics in :heUaited Stiles: "We are no; now ecga^ed in a war of section agaissi section, or s.ate against; state, but we are united as tne man assies-. & foreign eiitrny and a common fee. If, as we a:e taught by our holy ci.ureh, iove of couuir? is next to love ot (icd, a duty imposed on us by ail laws human atd divine, then is cur duty to labor and to prav for the ttmpoial a_d spiritual wellbeing of iha brave who are battling for 1 W* toll T.C*t MC foitftflll UUL U^l^YvU wvaumj. XJ.I? MI iy btg the God of fcaiilts to crown tneir arms on land aid s;a wilii viclorj and triumph, and to s:aj unnecessary tffusion ot biood ana spteaily to restore peace to our teioved J and atd peopie." This is a noble sentiment ncbly tx pressed. We are it war with a Catnolic county, but cur Ibg willjhave no more devoted followers,, lo more valiant de'erders than curfeJicw ci'.Iz i s ot the C&tnoiic f-iib. A:a great Giin oiic gsuhericg in New Yuri; hut *tek j Bishop McQiaid m&de a timing uadx'tss, in wnich he Saiu: "Tnis ta lion is 110 <v at war, ui_d witn a Caihoiic countrj. i?n:s ;s cur country, and wt will sianu with ir, leadj to shed cur hiocd. The Caiiieiics of tne U. lttd Stales will be the first iu iLc siju^gle." These words wtre ap piauded 10 the echo by tt.e 1-rge assemble cf Cdih.'lics to ?h:e'a they wtre spoken. Tncy express Ihe feeling and determination cf the millions el Catholic citizens of the United States. I"lia at BambsrjcA special dispatch /rem Bambergto the State says a destructive fire-occurred there Thursday nighi. It originated in the "livery staoie of D. H. -Counts & Co., and was discovered at 8.30 o'clock. The duelling house ef Mr. W. F. Patrick and a small house belon?ine to Mary Quignard, a colored woman, were also burned. Several stores narrowly es^-ap2d burning, and the gocds in them wera badly damaged by water and removal. The losses are covered bv insurance. Mrs. W. F. Patrick died at 9 o'clock Thursday ni^ht. The circumstances' of her death wera peculiarly sad. Sne has been ia a dying state for weeks. She had to be carried cut of her burn ing house and died a short while afterwards. Great sympathy is felt by the whola town for the dcubJy fce reaved family. Expired In Churcb. IA special dispatch from Roc* Eiil to The State says services at the First ?a.?Ai u ci : I-rreay^ieriau cuuruu ou-uuay muruixig were suddenly closed by a sad calamity. Mr. Andy R. Saiitb, president of the Telephone company and presi dent and treasurer of tjie E'ectric Light company, and one cf Reek Hill's prominent business men, suddenly threw up his hand, gasped, fell! back over the seat ana was dead be | , fore he'could be carried cut of the | door near whici he was sitting. Two | physicians were by him and he hsd tvery attention, but to no a7ail. He never spoke or made any noise. Mr. Smith was as well as ever when com j icg to church and conversed cheerful-1 ly with friends on tin way. He was j .bout 41 jears old and married. Spanish Fleet Located. The Spanish fleet has been located at Curacao, which is about twelve hundred miles east of Cuba. Honor Rear Admiral Simpson for releasing the Soanish lieutenant! who was captured while trying to reach his wife and a baby heiiad never seen! We can afford to let such prisoner i go. A foul breath is one of the greatest iffllctions that a man or wonnn can have. An s ffilction not only to themselves, but to those with whom they come in contact. A foul breath is a great discourager of affection. It would probably be more so it people only realizid just what bid"oreath means. Bad breath is one of the symptoms of constipaton. Some of the other symptoms are sour stomach, loss of appetite, sick snd bilious headache, d'zzlness, heartburn anddiitress after eating.These things msan indigestion, they lead to dyspepsia and : - Ai.,* mu? ?ii :<L wurso uuugs. jmejr hi: aiart. wicxi constipation, and consfipation'is inexv' cusable because item bs cared?cured; easily, q iickly and/ permanently by tin use or Dr. Pierce's Pleas in I Pellets.. They give to nature just the little help that she needs. Tnere is no case of biliousness, constipation, indigestion, "heartburn," or ady of the rest of the night mare breeding brood, thai these little "Pellets" will not cure. Sand 21 cents in one cent stamps to World's Dispensary Medical Associa tion, Buffalo, N. Y., and receive Dr. Pierce's 10C8 page Common Sense jaeaicai ^.aviser, uiusiraiea. .. i; ' <*<%, and Reverse!" W5*.r? - ^covered rushing on to a frightful col ?- lision, it is a , - . thrilling inI ' v <**'& the 0"! i \X j : whistles If! 1 J Y" j^lStr vN/ " Down 8iT f'H ?|p? ? II l WrgJL Tit '".rt.Tr! m &^/fu\}israk^,,oas l s I frir 'J I are not L , ) i.H?- r-OVv enough , '.?e ft /\ whole pro// J j pellira pow! / M -I '? the cn/ A \) t's mast be if j (\ ^ ""reversed and ! ( I Lsssf made to work I ) f+S\ \\W ^ the oppo1 f / V \\___ site direc [$ J[ / / """N.'i \ # tion. That is py*/ w< how M is 'f-~?zLzZ? r ; / sometime3 r j with disease. /Kf There-are trnes when the system is flying along the tTaok of disease at such a frightful pace that n. ordinary j methods will prevent disaster There are plenty of medicines which aci rely as ?rakes to "'slow up" the diseast ..- d put >2" disaster for a little while; but tii.ii t^n't enough. What is needed is a medicine, ih;*t will instantly reverse the entire wasting, degenerating oroce<^. When yr.?ii!r '1?<L -"Trv n<rtb md vitality, with the life <> ?; the:* day after day, they need Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, which acts directly upon the vital forces, completely transforms the entire nutritive orgai ism and totally reverses the wasting, debilitating process \c of rr\r\+ r\f nil di<C?aseS. It enables the digestive and blood-making organs to supply the circulation with an abundance of pure, healthy, red blood. It stops the wasting of tissue, builds up solid muscular flesh and healthy nerve-force. Miss Mary Whitman, of K-1't Dickinson, Franklin Co., K. Y., writes: "For nearly ten months I have had a bad cough, and instead of getting better, it frt-.v worse, until I was advised by a friend to try Or. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. I L Stated at nrst, for it seemed to me nothing wcuid sive relief only death. My parents w -e anxious about me, and I was said to hav? usuraptioa. I tried your medicines, and * I bad u '-en many doses there was a ? til** w-i-oad bottle was empty |f?d co cough ai:<! was a. great deal stronger. " J MB ^11 liilion'a Iodoform Liniment is the "nr- p)<?- . ultra" of all such preparations m *?-tno'/in^ soreness, and quickly h h!v' ? V fr^sh cuts and wounds, no matti * h<^ . It will promptly heal oh" sorw 3 of long standing Will kill thi v orx from *'Poiso?> Ivr" or 4*]>.?fv n Os k" ud cure "Dew Poison." ^ ill counteract the poison from fciu-s of 3nakes and stings of insects. It is a sure cure for sore throat Wii -cure J any case of sore mouth, and is z supe nor renteay lor aji pains ana acnes. Sold by druggists and dealers 2.r> o-iits a bottle. A Happy Home . Is increased tea-fold by good Music. Make the most of life by procuring a good ell ' s< ?m PiA^OOBUBGAl. Jjj Music has a refining influence, and keepi your children at home. IlisS REMEMBER ^gjj Fou only invest omce i1 a pr- - < ed you select a go... >u .1 ...on ' I CHALLENGE M Anyhouse in America to beat my prices. quality and responsibility considered. I TERM. To those not prepared to pay cash, I wilJ " -? give reasonable time, at a slight difference -J Tir ?:i? , I w arraiiiy,J'fully guarantee my Instruments told a* represented. ' DON'T FAIL 11 To write for prices and terms, and for illos trated catalogues. YOURS FOR PI AN"4>-5 &.)$O ORG lM 25f, A.. M ALONE, \ 1509 MATN STREET, nnLTTTVTRTA. 8. (V. , pnHMi "I From Meier Direct to Purchaser. SI | A Good | ^ Hie ^^ BRwaatton. ?| ^ & t aivtys ?< ??.,- ? tlaiiabla H | M - -^ rs 3?t:siaotory ^&ya Laat- MB f?M w? ri(- You .ao chancer in boy- 0*" roew jnore than a 91 ~ J &i m<tp,pw pianc. but '.f tench th? M| ;^$?S 9f? -^.jp^st tn ibe?in<2 ' " M ^' ;-Vtisjl <*\ Vootber Hlgi Grade I?lano boW *o M *. ' .-xiHocstie Factory ortoes tqretu t). j? Js/. -;- -J3gSj fti ooy~r* Eady payment*. Write na SfijA - ~~P'M LUOOEW & BATES, V* S?T?Mfc*a 'rfc. V-s* *{* ?orfc Ctty SSnf -J Address: D. A. PRES8LEY, Agent . jj COLUMBIA, a C. m THE THOMAS - % is the moft complete ty*tem nt elevatiru J handling, cleaning and p&crin* cottonImproves staple, saves labor* makes 700 money Write for catalosaes. ao rth-jr equals it A I handle the most improved COTTON SINS *a*SSS8 *I,*VATOKS. KN&INSS AND BOILKKfi , ^ to oe found on Q*e market. Uy Sergeant Log Beaoo ia? ?n <%, fo idmpUdty and eHdenev ? wonder . COKr *llLL8.-. * P LA N K&3,. ~" " *AV? ?rv. ?1! wood work-ln/ Tuu^htnArv ^ VJDD ?LL AND TALB ?T?' *> w ^ ??n etimebrfknv ^,14f V. Ct Hniih t rn :OI|jVi^-4 j , |f fl LIlTifi FOR THE LIVSR AND^Bf I KIDNEYS, as Its nam" imparts, Is a stimiiator and re dilator to I these orgaas. Istae beat after .; .'J H meals medicine to aid digestion HH -'-'I H Prevents Headaches. OuresMJI A^<? <>n toe Kid- KJ i '^jj |Mg| iJilUOOSUtaa I neys.withiu Thirty mtaukM after I taking, relieving ac t? in the I back from disorder cf tties eor-^H I gans. Relieved ail stomach fSB troubles. Is entirely vetfdtADie, gfl 25c, 50- and *1 0J a bottle. djid H SMB ly dealers generally, ana b, i'fteH h9b Hurray Drug Co, Columbia, S, . >J ]jr.. H Bear, Charle ton, m' 'Pgjj 1 old by cetierf CftfrsHj, ,nd bj. rHF MUKRAY DWG CO if OLCTMBU s <> ' Jg " 111 J SEELEY INSTITUTE M tJEiSENVILbS, s. o. ALCOHOL; OPIUM, TOBACCO USING. Make no Mistake nor delay. This treatment restores the Diseased Nervous System to its Normal condition. Result?a perfect cure of the Lienor or the Mcrphine habit and re-establishment of the will power. Have yon a friend whc needs the cur*;? - Detailed information mailed oa application. THE KEELEY INSTITUTE, . (or Bos 37) Greenville, S. C. (In writing mention this paper.) Mudmedd(-&<^ a6 M liniu,Ct, Artul Mbm. Rttot / v>? bMllm Am# k?tri 1-ri 'w tifiiTf?