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Edenfield Advertiser TH OS. J. ADAMS, .... . EDITOR THURSDAY, AUG. 31,1893. Iowa Democrats have renomi nated Boise for governor-this be ing the third nomination. President* Cleveland's brother, pastor of the Presbyterian Church atChanmont, N. Y., is light of Hbufld and of spare figure. Lawson E. Brown, of Rozier, Ga., has a wonderful cow. He claims that, its milk turns into butter without churning. Senator Butler has introduced a bill in the United States Senate appropriating $60,000 for a new postomce building at Spartanburg. A fire in Chicago on Friday de stroyed two hundred and fifty houses, and made 7,000 people homeless. The property loss is estimated at $1,000,000. Among some of the curiosities exhibited at the World's Fair are a hen that walks backward, and a Shetland pony so small that he: shoes are made from $20 gold pieces. Statistics show that the world has 80,000,000 cotton spindles, one half of which are in Great Britain alone. This country has about 15,000,000, and the South has one sixth of these, or 2,500,000. The South Carolina Holiness Association will hold its fall meet ing at Leesville, commencing Sep tember 12. Persons intending go will write to Revf^T. C. Ligon that homes may be provided. Greenville's share of the profit of the dispensary for the month of July were $32.42. The Green ville News says that under the barroom regime Greenville re ceived $1200 per month as license. An appeal has been made to the government for aid for Brunswick, Ga. Five thousand people who had not the means to leave the city are utterly destitute, the yel low fever panic having paralyzed all business. The Legislature which meets in Nove"mber will be called upon to elect several new judges. Th? terms of Associate Justice Mc Gowan, Judges Wallace, Izlar, Witherspoon-, and A-ldrich will ex ^^m^mm ... ?up?rmiTOTManfe:^f'^^?^aS^iok Mayfield ?a making an effort to have State and county school book depositories established. Should he succeed the school children of the State will obtain their text / books at the lowest price possible. ===== The people of Charleston are petitioning for late hours for their dispensaries. They want them open until 9 o'clock at night. But 'Our State Board of Control has very properly set down on the peti tioners and told them they must do their drinking like the country people. A heavy gale, accompanied by torrents of rain, struck the coasFs of New York and New Jersey on Thursday occasioning great de struction of seaside hotels, bath houses, pleasure boats, etc. Two schooners went down with all on board, and the captain, mate, steward, and one sailor of another schooner were drowned. Forty dispensaries have already been supplied with their stock of liquor as follows : Sumter, St. Stephens, Walterboro, Mount Pleasant, ^lonck's Corner, Eutawville, rtjerg, Blackvillej Manning, -^^Colnmbia, (3) Winnsboro, "Wacksburg, Chester, Mou??rreville, St. Matthews, Allendale, Pleasant Hill, Kershaw, Williston, Ridgeway, Fort Motte, Denmark, Charleston, (2) Branchville, ' Aiken, Abbeville, Barnwell, Beaufort, Camden, Darlington, Edgefield, Florence, Georgetown, Greenville, Lexington, Lewiedale. Newberry. The Columbia Register says that Col. Watts, of Laurens, is to move \ to Chesterfield county, and will be an aspirant forejudge Hudson's place. We have not the slighest objection to Col. Watts's election, and to Judge Hudson's defeat, for the latter is a notorious partisan. We don't think any sane man will controvert that assertion. But, ?ving where he does now, in Judge Wallace's circuit, we should dis like to see Col. Watts antagonize that gentleman. In fact, we hope that Judge Wallace will be re elected. Upright and able, he has never been a partisan in judical matters that we know of, as has the first named. The fact is, if we fill all these vacancies in the judge ships that are to occur next year with Tillmanite lawyers we won't have any lawyers left on our side of tho house. UNDER WHICH KIN .'Our government cannot its fiat equivalent to int value."-President Clevelanc "I undertake to affirm, wi fear that I can be answered, paper issued by the govern with the simple promise to r< it for all its dues, would be a form in its value as the n th?ms?elves~"-^0h? C. C?Th? DOWN WRONG. The McCormick News re the Hon. W. H. Yeldell as s? in a speech at McCormick rect that "they must stand to thal who stood with them on their form, whether he be Dem< Republican, or Populist, it tered not, just so""he imbibed platform." This is rather fo talk for a Democrat, and we believe the News has Mr. Ye down wrong. We cannot be that he made any such utter; SIMONTON/S DEcisiOl Judge Simonton has decided the 25th section of the diaper law is unconstitutional. Hes "The liquors to be seized J be intended for sale. No pri carrier or other person can ol against this section if he doet know that the liquor is brougl for sale. The liquor cann< seized in transit, un less i intended sale. "More than this : No crimiut is attached to the person recei from the common carrier liquors mentioned:" RORT ROYAL SHIP LIN The following appears in Augusta Chronicle of Monday "The Johnston Steamship C pany S. S. Lochmore will be berth September ' 25th, at 1 Royal, S. C., for Liverpool, pacity 7,000 bales. Shippers siring to engage room for cottoi other freights, will receive proi information bv communical direct with Mr. H. C. Betts, L< Manager of the Port Royal SI ping Company, Limited, I Royal, S. C., or R. H. Wright, F. A. Port Royal & Augusta R way, Augusta, Ga. THE COLLECTORSHIP. Reports from Washington ii: cate thaf the time is near at hf for the appointment of a revel collector for this State. The r; is. between Ben Perry, D. H. Ton kins, Lucas, of Darlington, a Gen. Bratton. * Senator Irby backing Tompkins, Gen. Hamp! is for Bratton or Lucas, wh Senator Butler is for Perry. Perr protest against his appointme Should Perry be appointed, it w be the means of giving Senat Butler 150 votes, at least, in tl county tEat he otherwise won J not have obtained. How this is I be accomplished will develop lat lon; and whether this appoii ! ment may not prove a dead fly I the ointment in counties other thi I Edgefield will also develop later c Bill Nye makes the financi I situation as clear as the noondi j sun. Here is what he says : "The engorgement of the chai j nels of trade with over-productic I of unearned increment over tl I percentage of former years, an j making the bimetalic and basi I metals subservient to gold and tl I reserve of gold and paper mone I the general funeral currency an I noticeable hesitation of goods t I go out during the season of mouri ling, together with shrinkage c lvalues of things you have go I while things that you want rei I bad become suddenly ot' g rei I value, causes what you might ca! I a stagnation of satisfaction and I general revival of sadness in th I realms of trade." j No married man in Illinois ca j get his "tod" without tha followin I permit from his wife : "Permit I sion ?B hereby granted by me, th I lawful wife of-, and I declar l.and witness^ by my own Signatur? I that my husband, has the perfec [right and liberty to drink, and a I often as he chooses to drink, am I what he chooses to drink and '. I hereby relinquinsh all the claim I arising therefrom." j Two excursion trains returning Ito New York from Maahattai I Beach and Rockaway on Saturday I night collided. Fourteen passen I gers were killed, and a large num I ber seriously injured. The scenef j at the wreck were heart-rending. I There is one Chinese, one Por I tugese, and one Cherokee newspa I per printed in the United States. I The boys injured in the recent I accident at Clemson aro reported I to be rapidly recovering. I Maid, Wife, and Widow. : James W. Jackson, a young man I of Greenbrier county, W. Va., was I married at 1 p. m. to-day to Miss I Bettie S. Echard. Just after the J wedding feast, the groom boca me lill, and. in.a. few moments lost consciousness. He remained in this stupor for eight hours, aili I recovering consciousness, for a I few moments, only before death. J In less than ten hours the; bride was maid, wife; and widow. FEARFUL STORM. IT IS SAID TO BE WOESE THAN H 1885. MANY STREETS UNDER WATER THREE FEET OR HORE. KOOFS OFF IS TBE E?IE. Plate Glass Smashed-Signs Scat tered to the Four "Wings and Broken Up-No Gars Bun ning-Trains Delayed. Charle?ton San. Charleston has had anothej blow from the hand of fate and | this last one is heavy indeed. It is idle to tell Charlestonians that the storm began at about noon yesterday and still contiues they all know it only too well. It was predicted and people were somewhat apprehensive but they never expected what came. The gale, which was accompanied J by a terrific downpour of rain began at noon and increased in fury until after midnight. At one .time the indicator at the weather baureau marked. 100 MILELS AN HOUR Great panes of plate glass were forced in, tin roofs rolled up like a scroll and crashed to tho ground, signs, slates, bricks, and tiles flew every direction. Great trees that had stood the.storms for years came to earth, and electric poles snapped off here and there all over the city. WATER ON THE STREETS, Water rose high in the lower streets, flooding the houses and with a current that seemed in Tesistable carried everything loose to higher ground. ?.ITTLE BUSINESS DONE. There was little business done this morning, merchauts were rescuing their stock and putting it higher, or trying to get a patch on a broken roof. KINO STREET. Looks demoralized. Roofs are off in every direction. . It is im possible at this time to .stimate all Of the buildings that have been unroofed. * . . M. Mark's & son shoe store, the the east tower the dry goods store is down. Tha Academy of Music has lost about one third of its roof-and so the story goes. MEETING STREET. is also full of tin, slate bricks and signs. The St. Charleshas lost its ornamental cornice and a part of the roof. Welsh & Eason roof is off and the Market Hall roof lies on one side of street. THE NEW BRIDGE. to St. Andrews is a wreck, a schooner went through it last night. The damage is very great. CAR STABLES DOWN. The car stables of the Enterprise road are down, both roads are blocked on every street by debris. There are no cars running. The bottling : works of the Pametto Brewery are unroofed. ON THE CAUSEWAY The steamer Kiwah is stranded on Chislolm Causeway. The damage isveiy heavy. ON EAST BAY. It looks as though there had beena bombardment, tin, slates, brick, tiles, signs and mis cellaneous lumber, fairly fill the street. At Commercial wharf the large j warehouse building that was once occupied by Dan Talmage Sons & Co. is down. East Shore Terminal Compress j on lower East Bay is minus a roof and cornices. The Post Office has lost its I cornices. < THE WHARVES are one, and all dismantled. The planking is gone and nearly every shnd has no roof and many sheds are down flat The offices along the wharves have their windows blown in and the shutters and roof blown off. THE BATTERY. That pride of the city and boast of the State is a perfect scene of desolation. Huge breakers dash over the south wall and roll away up to the middle walk. East Battery walk is no more. The whole masonry is undermined ind the great flagstones have fallen. There is hardly a trace of the railings. The Battery promenade is eight j )r ten feet under water. Water street and all the lower streets are still under water. ON THE WEST 8IDE. Trees, fences, and poles are dowm Some houses are unroofed and al most every house leaks. Chimneys ire down, cornices and paraptes crumbling. NOT EVEN YOUE NEIGHBORS. - The telephone, telegraph, elec tric light, police phone, and fire ilarm wires were all in a tangle: you couldn't even know how your neighbors fared, unless you went to them. The telephone was not in use. THE SAPPHO SIGHTED. As the Wisteria was preparing to make a trip to the Island there was a brightening up in the horizon and with a powerful glass the Sappho waa sighted lying at her wharf apperently all right. ; The island appears to be in good shape-as seen by telescope. TRINITY CHURCH has sustained severe damage. The roof is about all off and the win dow cornices blown down, smash ing the windows. THE SAILORS BETHEL on Market street tho water came in to a height of five feet ou the ground floor. Considerable dam age is done. HIBERNIAN HALL has lost part of its "roof, and some ot its frescoes. NO WEATHER NEWS. There is nothing to be learned at the weather bureau to-day-for the wires being down there is nothing to work. CAR8 OUT. The city railway managed to get a line clear and have a few cars out. CLYCIONE AT CHARLESTON Great Damage Done In -The Earthquake City. rhe SUte Aug, 38. isaumed the proportions of a cyclone in and around Charleston. Mr. H. M. Evans of Charleston arrived here at ll o'clock last night, and reported that at the time he left Charleston a cyclone had just passed over that vicinity, loing much damage-how much he could not tell accurately. He lid that the Charleston rolling mills were blown down, and were far as he could see, a totel ?vreck. The side walls were blown in and the roof had fallen in on the wreck. Only the tall smoke stack was left standing. The Berkeley Phosphate Com pany had one large warehouse blown down and partially away leaving their guano exposed to the weather. On the railroad, about three miles out from Charleston, he said he saw six or seven box cars that had been blown from the track and turned bottom side up at least twenty-five feet away. In another place there were two more cars treated likewise. The first named lot were blown to the west side of the track and the last two to the east side, showing that the wind was blowing in a whirl .as it passed. The trucke of some the cars were thrown to one side of the track, and the wood work was Meal Departnpt A-T AUGUST The Sixty-second Annual Ses 2nd, 1893, and continues until 1st FACI GEO. W. RAINS, Itf.D.,LL.D., DESAUSSURE FORD, M. D., P Surgery and Dean. THOS. R. WRIGHT, M. D., Pr gery and Secretary. THEODORE LAMB, M. D., Pr? Diseases of the Chest. W. H. DOUGHTY, Jr., M. D., P GEO. A. WILCOX, M. D., Prof< JAS. M. HULL. M. D., Professo EUGENE FOSTER, M. D., Prt tary Science. R. B. GLASS, M. D., Professor I THOS. D. COLEMAN, M. D., P JOS. F. WILLET, M. I>., LL.D Chemistry and Pharmacy. A. S. TINSLEY, Al. D., Demons L. C. SPENCE, M. DY, and H. C. moii8trators. IF IE Matriculation, $5.00. Lecture 1 The College han boon reorgan DlTer unexcelled advantages for Me Faculty have under thnr control th ilTord ahundantmater'ml foi cliuici tion or Catalogues, addrnss. TI-IO^. I3L. "WK. blown almost entirely away. The train had much difficulty in getting through the wreckage, hading to clear away much of it before they could pass. The telegraph wires were all down along the road, and the North eastern train became so entangled among them at one time that they had to stop to keep from having the smokestack torn from the engine. ' Mr. Evans said that when the train reached Branchville a gentle? man there told him that the ber man Lutheran Church in Charles ton had been blown down and had fallen on the police station, but what the extent of the damage done to the latter building was he could not say. Ho 6aid that he saw the church steeple awaying in the wind as the train pulled out for Columbia, but did not see it fall., - The wires were all down between this city and Charleston last night so that nothing could be heard from there directly, but it is feared that bad reports will be heard to day. The Western-Union could not get communication with Charleston from any point, which means that the wires out of that city were all down in every direc tion. The storm here increased in severity as the night advanced. For hotirs there was a perfect downpour of rain, accompanied by the most continuous and severest wind storms known here in years. It blew big guns and made trame houses tremble. Great damage must have b>.en done to both corn and cotton. At two o'clock there was no sign of the storm's abatement-jt seemed rather to be gathering strengh. They Paid their Debt?! Yes they Did! At. a. revival meeting the evangelist requested every man who had paid debts to stand up. They rose in in mass. Then he said: "Sit down and every man |*in this mi??teng who has not paid his debts hold up his hand." One individual raised bis ann sloft. |J'My good man," said the evengelist "have you not paid your debts?" "No," said he. "I have not paid them and I cannot pay them. 1 am an editor and nearly every inember of this congregation owe/' me for ray paper."-Ex. ERADICATES BLOOD POI* SQMJLNO-WLOQD TA1NTL._ -Sj I. CEVKRAL bottles of Swift's Specific (S.S. S.) : ? entirely cleansed my system of contagious blood poison of the very worst type. WK. S. LOOK.5, Shreveport, La. sss. CURES SCROFULA EVEN IN ITS WORST FORMS. T HAS SCROFULA in 1884. and cleansed my 1 system entirely from lt by taking seven bottles of S. S. S. I hare not nad any iym? toms since. CW. WILCOX, Spartanbuirg, S. C HHR9 HAS CURED HUNDREDS OF ESSES CASES OF SKIN CANCER. Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed irte. SWIFT SPECIFIC Co, Atlanta. Gs. _ COMPOUND; A recent discovery by ss old physician. Suocusf\iUy ?sed monthly oy thousands of La dies. Ia the only perfectly safe and reliable medicine dlacov 8 rod. Beware of unprincipled druggist* Wno offer Inferior medicines In plane of tMa. Aak for COOK'S COTTOX KOOT COMPOUND, to*e no rubrtUure, or InolOM SI end fl cents to postage In letter, and we will send, sealed, by return mail. Full sealed particulars in plain envelope, to ladles only, % stamps. ^Address_. ? Pond Mir Companr. Ko. S Haber Btook, Petrol^ Kick, Fm- Sold in Edgefield by G. L. Penn & Son aaadruggisU everywhere. GEO. B, LAKE RE>?L EST/ITE - AND' INSURAN6EA6T, Office over Bani of Ebenem, Opersiiy 'of Georgia, A, sion Opens MONDAY, OCTOBER of April, 1894. \ FLTY: V Emaritus Professor of Chemistry. rofe8sor Principles and Practice of ofessor Anatomy and Clinical Sm ofessor Institutes, Medicines, and : ' \ Tofos8or Pathology. 38sor Obstetrics and Gynecology, r Diseases Eye, Ear, and Throat. )fessor Practico Medicine and Surii kiateria Medica and Therapeutic!, rofessor Physiology. ., Professor General and Medical - - . : ti itrator. [ DOUGHTY, M. D , Assistant lb ' 1 i ES: \ 'icket, .$70.00. Diploma, $30.01 ized und equipped, and is able ti] dical and Surgical Teaching. Th*\? 10 City Freedman's Hospitals, which 5 11 instruction. For further informsHi ? -.. . ICrHOT;, Secretary. 1 Subscribers to the ADVERTISER, new or old, can obtain any of the following books at the prices given. Send your name, postoffice, and the amount to the ADVERTISER office and tho order will be filled, and the book or books forwarded to you, postage paid : OUR STANDARD SERIES, 35CTS. GEORGIE SHELDON. Brownie's Triumph. The Forsaken Bride. Earl Wayne's Nobility. CEUA E. GARDNER. A Woman's Wiles. Stolen Waters. Tested. Rich Medway's Two Loves. JULIE W. SMITH. Chris and Otho. Ten Old Maids. The Widower. Widow Goldsmith's Daughter. M. T. WALWORTH. Warwick. Hotspur. Lulu. Stormcliff. Delaplaine. Beverly. CAPTAIN MAYNE REID <j;he Hine Rangers. he Wood Rangers. Osceola, the Seminole. The Headless Horseman. The Wild Huntress. Rangers and Regulators. The White Gauntlet. The White Chief. The Hunter's Feast. The War Trail. The Quadron. The Tiger Hunter. Lost Lenore. The Mareon. Wild Life. The Scalp Hunter. MARY J. HOLMES. Tempest and Sunshine. Lena Rivers. The English Orphans. Marian Grey. Darkness and Daylight. Cameron Pride. MAR'6\ HARLAND. ? Alone. Nemesis. True as Steel. Sunnybank. The Hidden Path. Moss Side. Ruby's Husband. At Lr st. Miriam. MAY AGNES FLEMING.? Guy Earlscourt's Wife. A Wonderful Woman. A Tenible Secret. A Mad Marriage. A Wife's Tragedy. One Night's Mystery. Sharing Her Crime. Silent and True. A Wronged Wife. Kate Danton. BERTHA M. CLAY. h rown on the World. Lady Damar's Secret. t A Bitter Atonement. Love Works Wonders. Evelyn's Folly. A Struggle for a Ring. OUR CRESCENT SERIES, 35CTS. Twenty Years After.Alexander Dumas The Three Guardsmen *? " Stephen ullicott's Daughter . Mrs J H Needel The Story of Philip Methuen . " " " The Count of Monte Cristo . Alexander Dumai Edmond Dantes - Alexander Dumas Queen's Whim..Rosa Nouchette Carej When a Man's Single.J M Barri? The Duchess of Powysland .... Grant Aller Amethyst.Christabel R Coleridge ?My Lady Nicotine-James M Barri? Auld Licht Idylls. - u > A. Window in Thrums, " " My Guardian.Ada Cambridge Hidden Away.JEtta W Piere? The Three Miss Kings. Ada Cambridge Averil... .Rosa N Carej Our Bessie. " " " -T^^?Sr???f? ?yier.^w am 'I. J^wtbor n? Giraldi...Ross G Deering Marooned.W Clark Russell Th?Pennycomequicks.S Baring Goul?3 Mistress Beatrice Cope...M E LeClerc Merle's Crusade.Rosa N Carey A Lost Wife.Mrs H L Cameron Birch Dene.Wm Westall Phantom Future.H S Meriman Derrick Vaughan.Edna Lyall In the Golden Days. - " A Troublesome Girl.The Duchess Won by waiting.Edna Lyall A Crooked Path.Mrs Alexander The Search for Basil Lyndhurst... Rosa Carey ' Cleopatra.H Rider Haggard Donovan.Edna Lyall Guilderoy.Onida Knight Errand.Edna Lyall ! We Two. " The Man-Hunter.DickDunovan Little Mrs Murray.F C Phillips Be Quick and Be Dead..Ophelia Hives Undercurrents.The Duchess Miss Brethertohn. .Mrs Murphy Ward Will.GeorgeiOhnet Str3iZnK*rm.i" j <01ive Schreiner) Ralph Iron Col. Qusritch, V. CH Rider Haggard Dora Thorne.Charlotte M Braeme A Mere Child.L B Walford Sylvia Arden.Oswald Crawford Madame Midas.Fergus W Hume Diana Barrington.. .Mrs John Croker T P?7k?f 1 . . J"6- MooafeUe Burton Address THE ADVERTISER, Edgefield, S. C. Richnioiiil & Danville Rairoad Co. -3 ?SOUTH CAROLINA DIVISION. Condensed Schedule, in effect January 17,1S92. Trains run by 75th Meridian Time. SOUTHBOUND. Ves.Ltm NO. 27. Daily No. 9. Dnily. No. II. Daily. Lv New York.. 4.30PM 12.15nt 4.30PM " Philadelphia 6.57 '* Baltimore... 9.45 " Washington.12.00 u Richmond.. " Greensboro " Salisbury.. Ar Lv " Rock Hill. " Chester.... 3.20AM 7.09 " 8.28 u Charlotte X 9.35 " 3.50AM 6.57 " 6.50 " 9.45 " 11.10 " 11.20 " 3.00PM 3.00AM 10.25 " 10.20 12.28AM 12.05PM 2.00 " 1.30 1 2.10 " 3.03 " 3.44" " Winnsbcro. 4.40" ft Columbia j ??2? " Johnston. 8.12 " "Trenton. 8.28" " Graniteville . 8.55 ? Ar Augusta. 9.30" " Charieston. 11.20" " Savannah. 6.30 " 1.50 2.43 3.28 4.20 5.50 6.05 7.53 8.08 8.36 9.15 10.05 6.30 MORTIinOUND. No. 12. Daily. No. io. Daily. Ves.Lim. No. 38. Daily. Lv Savannah.. I" Charieston. " Augusta.. . " Graniteville " Trenton - *. Johnston... ^Columbia.. " Winiidboro. " Chester.... ? Rock nill.. H Charlotte.. " Salisbury... " Greensboro. ir Riel'mond.. u Washington " Baltimore.. " Philacelphia " New York.. 8.00AM 6.00 " 1.00PM 1.32 " 2.00 " 2.13 " ) 4.00 " J 4.10 " 5.37 " 6.30 " 8.07 " (8.00 ? {8.20 " 9.55 ** 11.38AM 7.40 " 10.25 " 12.05PM 2.20AM 4.50 " 6.40PM 6.00 " 7.00 ? 7.55 " 8.38 " 8.52 " 10.40 " 10 50 " 12.26AM 1.23 " 2.03 " 8.05 7.00 8.36 "10.34 " 10.30 "12 00 " 5.30PM. 9.46 " 8.38AM 11.35 " 10.08" 3.00 " 12.35" G.20 " 3.20PM 9.20rM ??ow is Your Time! f HAVE been instructed by Mr. Fox [ to announce to the public that our landsoma assortment of Watches, Mocks, Jewelry, and Silverware must ;o, regardless of price, to make room or a large fall stock, as we do not care 0 move stock now on hand into new luartera, Norris building. GEO. F. MIMS. SRARTANBURG,S. C. JAMES H. CARLISLE, LL. D., President. Two Full Cour?es. Necessary expenses for one year, One Hundred and Fifty Dollars For Catalogue address, J. A. GAMEWELL, Secretary of Faculty. GREENVILLE, S. C. Tbe next session will begin September ?7, 1893. The climate is salubrious. The course of study ls extensive and thorough, the expenses moderate. For Catalogue and full infermation, write to the President. C. MANLY. D.D. CHI?AG? ?gsa CHICAGO. CHICAGO. The QUIEN & CBMCXNT ROUTS alfords the Quickest Schedules, the Finest Equipment, and the ONLY THROUGH CAR UNE TO 0HIGA60. From A* he ville, Paint Bode, Hot Springs and Knoxville, via R. & D., E. T. V. & G., Q. & C, L. 8. R. R., Louisville and the Penna, Lines to Chicago without change. Another esr nm* fron Asherflle to CincinattL Both oats Bake dose connection erith ali Chicago Uaw. Ask for your tickets via QUEEN & CRESCENT ROUTE. Any Agent of the R. A D.. E. T. V. A O. cr Queen A Crescent wal giro you Information as to route?, zatos, aohodules, ?to. Stop-oTcrs ?vilowed at ClnfllnnaU, XAVIS* Tin? cr Indianapolis._( V. Q, EDWARDS, Q. P. A., CIKCfiQfATZ, Q, "The New York World" One Year, WEEKLY EDITION, The "COLUMBIA" WATCH, AND "The Edgefield Advertiser" ALL FOR JJJ3.50. $1.00 $3,00 m THE NEW YORK WEEKLY WORLD is the Leading American paper, and is the largest and best weekly printed. THE COLUMBIA WATCH is an ex cellent time-keeper, with clock move ment, spring in a barrel, steel pinion, clean free train and a good timekeeper. It is 2f inches in diameter, ij2 inches thick, and requires no key . to wind. is the best 'and strongssHe^cal paper 'in this vicinity. We thus furnish the Time and . Il the news up to time for one year for $3.50. Send your order with above price to the ADVER TISER office and the watch and papers will be forward ed at once - T HE - Billilli Bill Un WIM OF wxL^nsra-Tonsr, SPARTANBURG BRANCH, Central Hotel, Main Street. Established for the scientific treatment and cure of Alcoholic Poisoning, and the various diseases caused by the excessive or moderate use of whiskey, opium, morphine, etc. This Institute is now opened and ready for the recep tion of patients. The treatment is the very latest improvement in this field of medicine. Experiments have been conducted on this line for tbe past sev eral years, with varied success. It has now reached the point by this Institute, where a cure is a positive certainty. The National Gold Cure Institute is in a position to give anyone a cure, or refund the money to the patient. They sim ply do what they promise, or no charge. Prices are very moderate and ac commodations good. Any one wishing to investigate, will do well to call on or address National Gold Cure Institute, Central Hotel Building, Spartanburg, So. Ca. DR. FRANK BRIuHT, Physician in Charge. ALWAYS IN THE LEAD. /. C. LEVY & CO., TAI!OR-FIT CLOTHIERS, AUGUSTA, - GEORG IJ{. I lav s now in store their entire FALL AND WINTER STOCK OF CLOTHING. The largest stock ever shown in Augusta. We aim to carry goods whic.i are not only intrinsically good, but which also, in pattern, style, and finish, gratify a cultivated and discriminating taste, and at the same time, we aim to make our prices so low the closest buyers will be our steadiest customers Polite attention to all. A call will be appreciated. I. C. LEVY & CO., TAILOR-FIT CLOTHIERS, AUGUSTA, GA. E. R. Schneider, IMPORTERS OF FINK Wines, Liquors and Cigars, AKD DEALERS IN] Bourbon Rve and Corn Whiskey. 601 and"?o3 Broad ?Street, AUGUSTA, G-A,