Edgefield advertiser. (Edgefield, S.C.) 1836-current, March 07, 1900, Image 3

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EdeefieM Advertiser WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7. giii])iuiimiiiimiuiiiiuiuninuiiiiiiiiiiiii!iii!iii!? ILOCAL AND PEKSOML. f ^iiiiMiiiiiiiiiimiiiuiiuiiiimniuiiininiiiflmiiiii Its better to be a "bas been"; than a "never was." Mrs. Nannie Griffin has returned to Washington, D. C. Govereor John Gary Evans has 1< ca ted in Spar tanbu ry. At the S. C. C. I. are three students from the State of Florida. Cotton, is higher now than it has been since January, 1893. Gold prospectors near McCormick claim to have struck it rich. j The newootton seed oil mill at Mc-1 Cormick runs night and day. Prof. T. E. Dorn, of the-Red Hill / High School, was in town on Satur-j day. Miss Effie Sheppard is visiting her j friend Miss Covington in Pensacola, Fla. :>-V -, Under the new law State constables must now give bond in the sum of j 1500. Mr. Jess Hobbs, of Horns Creek, is being spoken of for the office of coro ner. Mr. John Kemp, of the Kirkseys sec- ] tion, spent Saturday and Sunday in Edgefleld. The Hon. W.J. Talbert announoes this week for Congress. He will have j a walk ovei. Clerk of Court John B. Hill has ad ministered on the es rate of the late Mrs. Pickena. . Mr Lewis D. Landrum, of Batesburg, was in town on Monday and gave this office a pleasant call. Mr. Jule Hart has moved from John ston to Sylvania, Ga., where he goes into the mercantile business. Mr. C. Dozier Mobley, of Saluda county, was in town on Monday. Do zier has many friends in Edgefieid. Mr. K. W. Fowell, of Johnston, was in town on Monday. Bob has just re covered from a severe spell of the grip. Bright outlook for a fruit crop in Edgefieid county. Blackberries are out of sight and will be as big as goose eggs It is rumored that Col. Jim Tillman r will be a candidate in the next btate primary for the office of Lieuteiant Governor.* Miss Lizzie Eubanks, principal of j the Olive Branch school, Kirkseys, spent Saturday and Sunday with the" home folks in cur town. a The Be?. John Lake, at present of i .Louisville, Ky., will be in attendance j ' on the B. Y. P. U. convention which ? meets here in April, prox. A 7 fer cent, annual dividend haj been declared hythe Bank or Edge-j Held, and the old board of directors bas j been elected for another year. The man who sold his cotton at S)?is mad because -he did not wait for 9)?, and the man who sold at 9J? is mad be cause be didn't wait and get 10}L Guy. Sheppard's elegant mansion on the hill came very near destruction by fire on Saturday last. The fire was caused by a defective chimney or stove flue. Some folks say that if the plums fail to bloom in February, there will be no plums that year. There were certainly no plum blooms in February of this year. Mr. W. E. Waddell is the new editor of the Saluda Advocate, vice Mr. Cu n ningham, who has removed to the up country. We welcome Mr. Waddell to j the fraternity. Columbia has four candidates for mayor, twenty-one for aldermen, and five for school commissioner. This shows that our capital is on a boom and rushing things. It is getting about the time of year to think of planting Irish potatoes. You can get the best varieties from Mr J. D. Holstein, Lynch's drug store, and at O Sheppard's, Jr. Mr. Geo. W. Timmerman has been elected President of the Travellers Protective Association, Augusta, Ga., j Of course Mr. Timmerman was origi nally from Edgefieid. Dr. E. A. Marsh, who has been tak ing a special course in medicine and surgery in Baltimore, bas returned home, much to the delight of his pa tients present and prospective. We have heard it rumored that the school teachers of Edgefieid county are to be paid in full this year at the end of each and every month, without dis count or knock-off. So mote it be. The State B. Y. P. U. meets in our town from April 4th to Sth inclusive. We hope to publish the programme of exercises next week. The place of meeting will be the Opera House. Mr. Lafayette, Sheppjvrd will be a candidatVfor sheritf~"in Greenwood connty. Mr. Sheppard is a son of the late.Gfo. Sheppard, of j?dgerteld, and, like bis rather bei ore bim, is a mighty good man. -, The people of TrentonWe talking strongly of a cotton factory. Trenton is most advantageously situated for a number of up-to-date projects, among ?others a tourists hotel, ap artesian -well, a cotton factorv, etc. Persimmon wood is brinjging $4 s .cord in this market, and iur horny handed friends are hauling ?if ii: by the car-load, for shipment ;o ttje Sumtei :-golf factory and elsewhere. I So gres! ?a the .destruction of this Aarticulai .tree, that our old friend'Ab? Broad water reports that the 'poesuAs held i convention I'D the negro s hoo\|-h( us< *tr Harmony recently and dt-cidjed *"t< jf ?ve tbesb diggings." THE NATIONAL BANK OF fliJ??STA L. C. HAYNE, Pree't. P. G.FOBJD, Cashier. Capita^ $250,000. Undivided Froflts }$110,000. Facilities of our magnificent Kew Vault contaiuing 410 t-afety-Loci Boxes. Differ ent Sizes are offered to oar patrons and the public at $3.00 to 810.00 per annum. THOS. J. ADAMS PROPRIETOR. EDGEFIELD, S. Cf THE PLANTERS LOAN AND SAVINGS BANK. AUGUSTA, GA. Pay 8 Interest on Deposits, Account Solicited. L. P. HAYN-E, President. W. 0. WiJlDLAW, Cashier. NE8DAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1900. VOL. LXV. NO. 8. rtiiiiiiiiiiiri?iiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHitL^ /.v.4 :ved our supply of LAN- 1 .I SEED foi 1900. Now I : FLAT DUTCH CABBAGE s DRUM HEAD BROWN MUSTARD * S D WHITE ONION SETTS o. S tISH POTATOES = EAS = G PEAS I LYNCH'S J DRUG- STORE. I iiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiimii!iii>iiiiiiiiiiimiiiU'>,|*im[iHiiif Court nest Monday. Remember ! We pubJisb this week the jury for the third week. Married, Sunday March 4th, 1900, by Rev. P. P. Blalock, Mr. C. W.Bryant to Miss C. L. Smith. The plows are now moving, and the festive panie has already taken the gait that is to last him all the year. Cotton sold in Edgefieid to-day, Tuesday, for 9$c, and with a little higgling and haggling yon could have gotten 9?c. The stockholders of the Farmers Bank will hold their annual meet ing on Thursday, March 15th inst., in the bank building. Mrs. Mary Lewis and her son j John, have removed to Coffee County Ga., to live with Mrs. Lewis's brother, John Lewis. : Mr. Jeff Lewis, one of Johnston' merchant princes was iu town on Monday and gave this office a pleasant and much appreciated call. Mr. Hugh C. Anderson, son of Maj. Dick Anderson, announces this week for coroner of Edg?field county. Hugh would make au excellent official. Merchant L. E. Jackson was too busy this week to write out his ad vertisement. Look out for it next week ; in the meantime he and his efficient head clerk Mr. R. C. Pad gett, will be pleased to see and wait on yovi. On yesterday a farmer nun ex hibited to us a check for $824.00, which check he had just received for seventeen bales of cotton, This was nearly $50 a bale, and such a sum of money for that many bales I has not been realized since 1893. "The present high price of cot ton has induced a good many far mers to believe that tupir oats have been badly, very badly, in jjnred by the cold weather and that they would better plow them up and plant cotton on the same ground." These are the words of that good farmer Mr. S. M. Smith I oi Harmony, and no doubt have a great deal of truth in them, and he adds "don't do it." eld where you can buy the agents, you pay no jobbers ie pair and you will always State Shoes as hundreds of N & M IMS. tion in a New York college, and after his graduation be practiced a long time in the hospitals of the citv." A Letter From Mr. Lincoln Elam. MR. EDITOR : A sense of duty impel?s me to publicly report to the Grand Jury a fact that is de rogatory to our public records from any standpoint from which it may be viewed. About the first of November 1898 the County Su perintendent of Education con tracted with a number of citizens to lay out a school idistrict which they did in due time, employing a surveyor as they were instructed to do to survey same. After some ten flays the surveyor had com pleted the work Mr. A. R. Nichol son through some ill-will to that surveyor sought to defraud him of his pay for the work, made a con tract with another man to survey the same district without any oth ei excuse than that he had not au thorized the first one to do the same. His man going to survey same was informed by the citizens ol that district that tbny would uot have anything to do with him because of having had the survey legally and properly done. So hf? returned and reported same to the School Board who insisted that be go aud make the 6ur7ey as par contract that he migbt get his money. In the mean time tbr first surveyor had placed in Mr. A. R. Nicholson's possession u map of the district made from IT IS T] BEGIN GA And I have a LANDRETH'S -which are t market Also a Fresh Irish Potatoes. O. SHEPI notes of actual survey charging for the whole work the sum of twenty dollars. He kept the map and allowed his surveyor to use it as he saw proper, and then returned same to maker with a refusal to pay. Now occurs what I would havp the wise discretion of a grand jury consider. That surveyor took the map of first surveyor and copied one which he presented to County Board as one made from notes of survey made by himself and made account of charges in the sum of more than twenty-three dollars, which map and account was ac cepted by Mr. A. R. Nicholson as the true one and paid for out of county school fund. Thus there exist to-d?iy on public records a forged account known to be Buch and one in excess of the true ac count, taken out of the county school fund. That forgery is there today as an evid?nce of official misrule of those citizens contract ed with as au evidanceof attempt ed fraud and swindle towards the first surveyor, and as an outrage to the profession, of the surveyor and of our fellowcitizens who have to have surveying done. Official approval of a forged map and in creased pay for the forgery. TheRe racts I state for the public benefit' and denounce the fraud as one that should be expunged from the cruuty records as soon as seen there; and I do this as a citizen of the county coovinced that the wise discretion of any one or. any authority should be for the right and against the wrong, I resent any insinuation that I si?y these things because I am the first sur veyor who was imposed upon, and any assertion that I ought to bo satisfied after getting my pay for the work even if we did have to serve Nicholson with summons to court before he would pay on 30th" Oct. 1800. Knowing the records carrj' fraud of any kind I feel it my du ty to do what "I can to correct them, therefore I would urge the wise discretion of a grand jury to expunge from the records . this fraud, have the more than three dollars excess in charge for same restored to school fund, and thus show by their works trat they are above the sickly sympathy for the wrong done however much he may be somebody's favorite. -1 repeat that the wise discretion of a grai.d jury is a pcwer in our form of government against evil doings and evil doers, and should be especially exercised against those evil doers that pose before the public in any public capacity or profession. LINCOLN P. ELAM. Feb. 25th, 1900. Weather for February. Weather Observer C. A. Long, of Trenton, sends us the following data of the weather for the month just ended: Latitude 33.45 ; Longitude 81.45 608 leet above mean sea-leve!. Max. Temp. 70; date 8th. Min. Temp. 12 ; date 18th. Mean Temp. 45.8. PRECIPITATION 9.74 inch, which is 2.53 inches more than the 7 year average for February, and .66 inches more than the 7 year average for the first 2 months of the year. Hail storm 21st and a light snow the 26th. The Eminent Kidney and Bladder Specialist, Bis Laboratory. There ls a disease prevailing In ihl3 country most dangerous because so decep tive. Many sudden deaths are caused by it-heart disease, pneumonia, heart failure or apoplexy are often the result of kidney disease. If kidney trouble is allowed to ad vance the kidney-poisoned blood will attack the vital organs, or the kidneys themselves break down and waste away cell by cell. Then the richness of the blood-the albumen -leaks out and the sufferer has Bright's Disease, the worst form of kidney trouble. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root the new dis covery ls the true specific for kidney, bladder and urinary troubles, lt has cured thousands of apparently hopeless cases, after all other efforts have failed. At druggists in fifty-cent and dollar sizes. A sample bottle sent free by mail, also a book telling about Swamp Root and its wonderful cures. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y, and meatlon this paper, .RDENING! fresh variety of GARDEN SEEDS he BEST on the lot Eastern Seed 3AED,JE. CLE, S. C. Jurors, March Term, 1900. SECOND WEEK. J B Abney, J P Ouzts, S A HolsteiD, J Cartledge, L M 'Clark, I S Bush, H C Watson, W J Horn, W J Huiet, M C Jackson, W A Cartledge, M Herrin, C M Glanton, J L.Bryant, P Markert, W Harliug, Mise Hair, J M Denny, J A Clark, A E Padgett, J A Collins, Thos Gray, J W Peak, S A Ouzts, R F Percival, M K Loivrey, S R Warren, J A Gibson, G A Adams, S G Seigier, J J Garrett, H E Mealing, J N Griffie, T C Carver, D T Mathis, J C Wells. THIRD WEEK. j Jordan G Byrd, W L Bolton, J F Payne, J W Hester, J P Harling, W P Sharptou, WE Eubanks, j J R Reece, Peter H Dorn, B B Jones, . J W Marsh, W L Dunovant, A Horne, C L Crouch, Ossamus Hull, J Timinerman, H E Bunch, B S Hoiland, Jas C Low rey, J H A Williams, Butler P Bryant, J T McManus, Jae Padgett, S T Williams, T R Denny, J L Hart, Butler Gray, T M Glover, G P Howard; John G Hoard, S D Byrd, WLRiddlehoover J N Harmon, A C Yonce. JHP Roper, L R Hammond. w&fflgtiS It has no equal. It strengthens the delicate female organs and builds a worn fi' an up. All smTerintr and lrregularltleo at i S "monthly" periods can be avoided by ita i 5 use. lt la for young girls maturing, fon i ?^:ith?'i,s, and fov women at Change of Life. > Shoul.1 bs used before child-birth. j S Sold by all clniggi3ts, or sent post-paid i Li on receipt of price?1.00. < 7) . Lao i es B?U?. ?eok isaB?F?EEE to any one i > on application. Address, ..WOMAN'S OE-.i v r.^RTM?KT-.flcw^rcuccrMediclrie Co., Chat ? tanooc". Tenn. Muniicni-ikia papen For sale by G. L. Penn & Son. Engines amblers, Gigs BOO Presses. GET OUR PRICES. Complete Cotton, Saw, Grist, Oil and Fertilizer Mill Outfits, Gin, Press, Cane Mill, and Shingle Outfits. Building,Bridge, Factory, Fur c apd Railroad Castings, Railroad, Mill Machinists'and Factory Supplies. Belting, Packing, Injectors, Pipe Fittings, Saws, Files, Oilers, etc. We cast every day. Work 150 Hands. Lomiiaril Iron Woris & Supply Co A?GUSTA, GA 1 Foundry, 1 hine, Boiler, Press and Gin Works Repa is Promptly Done Insurance Agency -O? s & G We respectfully solicit the patron age of the insuring public. Ouly the most reputable and Solvent Compa nion, both Life aud Fire. Sc" All outside business will receive ? our prompt and person al attention. OFFICE : BURNETT BUILDING See Our Life Insnrnnce Contracts before v u In-iure DIVIDENDS PAYABLE ANNUALLY ELASTIC GOODS S AT HALF P??ICE. ^3 If roo want u* to uiako to ?our ICASCtR and OUDKR (UnC CiilOim for Hie V.l. Ll KY ?ND <:t'KE OY VARICOHK VKIXS, wKAK, SWOLLEN on n.cKK - ATV? MJIBS, OMrm?MKi I" Z ABBOJOIAL WKAKNKS8 OR H-1 TCHOU, Btnto voar h.lrht, M wflftit ?ad ayr, fXa* number ot tuche? tr^und tody or i ilrab et eae'n letter thown in .."PH-* cut Mid Hand to u?i-ltUoar SMC19 rrRCI>l PKH'K. Wcwillmalio fl rho frxxlf nricr from the " ?/ ,ery "hunt ?xnti rntiber ?lojlle ra . i ?rial, jruni an'CL A yrrirel flt and t,-OK von ?Jo not Qnd lt perfectly ?_r MtlsitaetO y nnd equal to gooaa . otheis K*t double tho price for. *D return *t our expend and we will rv fund your money. OUR SPECIAL PRICE gj?JJ .>ltii(e ll I" li ?loci lof. A lo I, 17.50; tfclih In- -i? --. C lo I, id.00) thigh ,;"., Oin ?, i- 11 ? ?eura .tocLlsR, ? loll, ?3.001 tnt!" ir.mni,-, C tod, il. 00; krro Mp, X io 0, S2.00; nun i r aUirLInp, A to >:, ?J. Ul); girier l'ffjt'nni (' '- T.. ?:...>?. anklat, A toC, 09.00; ihdoahul brit. K to Z, J{?:?*..iJS*T*.5*^5 ,00 Di, OVE-TliinDM??!*. Hprrin! Coif rfd Untie Abdealaal Mfr mudo o? coil lh-lo thread, inturwoven with ted rubber thruaaJHicbfa wide, ?2.00; lOlnehw, itt ia lochfi, ?2.50. wrlto for Birnen Caulopue. .? ROEBUCK & CO., (InoO, CHICAGO, (U. THE NATIONAL BANK OF fliJ??STA L. C. HAYNE, Pree't. P. G.FOBJD, Cashier. Capita^ $250,000. Undivided Froflts }$110,000. Facilities of our magnificent Kew Vault contaiuing 410 t-afety-Loci Boxes. Differ ent Sizes are offered to oar patrons and the public at $3.00 to 810.00 per annum. THOS. J. ADAMS PROPRIETOR. EDGEFIELD, S. Cf THE PLANTERS LOAN AND SAVINGS BANK. AUGUSTA, GA. Pay 8 Interest on Deposits, Account Solicited. L. P. HAYN-E, President. W. 0. WiJlDLAW, Cashier. NE8DAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1900. VOL. LXV. NO. 8. ' W. J. RUTHERFORD. R. B. MORRIS. W. J. R?THERF JRD & CO, MANUFACTURER s OF AND BALERS IN LIME, CEMENT, pLASJEIf, HAIR, FIRE BRICK, FIRE CL/?R, READY ROOFING, 4/l/D OJHER MATERIAL. WRITE US FOR PRICES. COR. REYNOLDS AND WASHINGTON STS., AUG! STA, GcA. SEMP?US oagg DOLLAR Cot (hit ad. '.ot and arnd to M with yl.UO, uJ IN "iii trod jou thia NEU riPaOrKD PARLOR GKJI 0RGA3, br freight C. 0. 1)., subject to examina tion. Toa can examino it atyour ncurcut freight depot, and ll' you Und lt exactly a? represented, the greatest Taine 70a errr aaw ?ad far batter than Organa advertised hy others at more loone, pa. the freight ?cent OUR PRICE S35.5C. lesa the ?1.C0 deposit, or ?131.50 ud freight euanree. THE PARLOR CEM Inonu of the meat DOUBLE A.ND SWEETEST TON?D instrument) ereriaade. F?om the llluatration shown, which ls engraved direct from a pbotoffraph you can form some Idea, of Its beautiful appearance. Made frome olid quarter ?awed oak or walnut aa desired, perferaled key slip, full panel body, beautiful marquetry dealgn panela ud rneaj other hasdaome decoradona and Ornaments, nuking lt the YKRY LATEST STILT. TUE PAltLOIi GEM ls S feet high, 18 IncbeB long, S3 Inches wide and weighs 350 poonda. Contains 5 octaves, ll stop?, as follows: Diapason, Principal, Dulciana. Helodla, OIe.tr, Cremona, BsssCoopIer, Treble Coupler, Diapason Forte sad Tox nomans; ?1 OtlaisCoupler*, 1 TODr Barril, 1 Grand Orean 8weD, 4 Sets of Orchestral Toned Ketonatorj Pipe quality Reeds, 1 S?. it ?7 Pure Sweet Hr lodi 3 Reeds, 18ttofS7 Charmingly Brill lan. ellette Reeds, 1 Set of Iii Rich Bellow Smooth Dlapssoa Reeds, 1 Set of Pleasing Sett XelocTocs Principal Reeds. THE PARLOR GEM action concbjtsof the Celebrated Sewell Reed?, which are only used in the high est grade Instruments; fitted with Hammond Coanlers sad Toa Humana, also best boise Wt* leathers, cc, bellowh of th? best rubber cloth, S-p!v bellows sloe's and finest leather in Taires. THE PARLOR CEM is furnished with a 10x14 beveled plate French mirror, nickel plated pedal frames, and every modern improvement. We rare Uh free a h ta J .CEO organ stool sad the best organ lat true tlon book pu bil?, cd. GUARANTEED 25 YEARS. WSSfff** Issue a written binding ??-vcar guarantee, by the terms and conditions of which If any part gives out we repair lt free of charge. Try lt one month and we will refund your money if you are no: perfectly satisfied. 506 of these organs will be sold at $35.50. OltDElt AT OXCE. DON'T DELAY. OUR RELIABILITY IS ESTABLISHED gjg deal t with us ask y our LC i:.'-bo rubout ut), write thc publisher of this paper or Metropolitan National Bank, or Corn Vu:. Bank, of Chicago; ?gm or German Exchango BaiiU, Kew York; or any , l$jy?? railroad or express company in Chicago, ne y^r* bare a capital of oter (700,000.00, occupy entire one of the largest burinet* blocks in Chicago, and employ nearly ?.000 people in our own building. WE 6ELL 0KGA5S AT 322.00 ijid np; PIAS'IB, #tlS.00?ndop;a!so everything in munica] instruments at lowest wholesale prices. V'rito for free spec*. . or;,-an, pluuo and musical instrument catalogue. Address, (Soarc, tteetachCo. cte thorsogbly roIlaUe.-Jt?ito".i SEARS. ROESUCK & CO. (Inc.), Fulton, Despiaineaand Waymar. SI?., CHICACO, ILL. E0RBE P. 0OBB, Furniture and Household Goods J Wagons, Buggies, Harness, Saddles. -HAVE PURCHUSED A NEW AND- , BEAUFIFUL HEARSE. Calls by Telephone promptly answered and attended to. I.OWGST JPRIC?:@m Soutliern Itiail^e&v. SCHEDULE IN EFFECT JONE ll, 1899.] . No. 33 Daily P.M. 10 40 15 2 45 5 20 ?. M. No. 15 Daily Ex. Suu'y A. M. 6 30 6 50 7 30 8 00 A. M. STATIONS. d Edge?eld a d Trenton a a Aiken d a Augusta d a Columbia d No. 60 Daily El. Sun'y A. M. ll 30 ll Ol 9 30 A. M. No. 34 Sun'y Only P. M. 4 00 3 40 2 50 2 40 ll 45 P. M. W. A. TURK, G. P. A., J. B. HEYWARD, T. P. A. Washington, D. C. Augusta, Ga. S. H. HARDWICK, A. G. P. A., Atlanta, Ga. To Our Friends and Patrons GREETINGS. Appreciating your k.ndness in the psst we solicit your patronage for the future. Our stock of clothing is indeed handsome, stylish auc serviceable. Our prices are lower than ever and will please you. MEN'S SUITS $6.50 to $23.00.; BOY'S SUITS from $3.00 to $12.00. The Hat and Furnishing Departments are complete. Our Children's Department h is been refurnidhing and the stock of clothing is better than ever. We extend a speoial invitation to the ladies. CHILDREN'S SUITS $1.75. SPECIAL SCHOOL SUIT $3.00. If you cannot come write us, prompt attention to all orders. We pay the expressage to you. tlC. LEVY'S SON ? CO., TAlLOR-FITJCLOTHIERS J[UGUSTA, GA SEMD'V.O MOMEY WITH TOUR MDER,cut thia ad. out and send to us.nna _ we will sendyou OUR HIGH EVER HEARD OF, pay Special Ofter Price $15.50^ ?!7h?ieUol!?im "Machino weighs S3 poundsondttpfrelght will Eer?iMceutsXeact600 milos. GIVE IT THREE MONTHS' THAL g t^d^ home, and we will return youri 15.5U any day you are not 12?S?*SZ .different make.and grade.of Sewing Haehlaesat ?8.S0, ?ll OOV ?12.00 and np. all fully described in our Fra? Sewing Sle^e'"tal?ue, but?li.50 for this DROP DKSE CABI.NET Bl REICK la ? iTi^rr ?test value over offered by any h ou.c. OF IMITATIONS ^"^!^5???"r3. SSSSSSo* nnknown msehlnea under various names, with Tarions la nsemeny,?^",^,. w d u ?nieago and 1er-n who are reliable and who are not. d.eementk "n????S..?" h OJ ?ry S?DERS IHPKOTEBRST. ETI GOOD POLSTOP ETE RT HIGH GRADE HACH1SE HABE, WITH TUE DEFECTS OP NOSE. Made by the, beat maker* In America, fafromthe beat material money THE BURPIQK cnn buy. SOLID QUARTER SAWED OAK ^!mrVSr^^?SL\ . .rftr?'SS fulffc?.e MM ?aaaasl Mwing. 4 fancy drawers, Istesl 10OO skeleton frame, (?r^PMMMy?; bossed and decorated cabinet finish, flne.t -iictel drawer pulls, r^ on four cartera, adjustable treadle, genuine Smy*li iron ?Und. RwEl'"^???55 Sad?posruve four motion feed, self threading vibrating ?boJUe,?^K*T bobblTwinder. adjustable bearings, patent tension ll^rator,lrnprov^looa? whe "?tablepreS?urefoot, improved?^"lecarter^pa^r^n?^ebM. patent dress Kuara, head lt hsndtomely d/eorated sad ornament?is^ WantUaHy BtSuSSTl' GUARANTEED Ae"jht^^^.U'J^d our^Tlr? nolaelessmaahlnemsde. E?ry known attaehatcat U rnrnhthed and OUT 2T?? atructlon Book tells Just how anyone can run it and d^tterpjainor any SSef?SiqrwWk. AtO.Tears'Bl.dli^Gni^teelSBentwItbeTeryma^a. IT onCTC Villi NflTUINn to are and examine this maei^ Comp*r? Itwitb. IT COSTS T?U NUIHIrsU th e your gtorckecper sells at ?40.00 to _ ?- . ll WOiq m? nuiniinu those TOnr gtorckecper sells at f40.00jw ^^^^U^9?S^SSS^?iW^^^^ Chicago, ?IL.