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id The Kind You nave Always 1 in use for over JIO years, "Si All Counterfeits, Imitations Experiments that trille will infants and Children?lixpc What is C Cu&toria is a harmless subs goric, Drops and Soothing' contains neither Opium, M substunco. Its age is its gu and allays Fcverisluiess. It Colic. It relieves Teething ' and Flatulency. It assimih Stomncli and Bowels, givinj The Children's Panacea?1Tli GENUINE CASH Bears the Ss.sjO The Kind You Ha 8n Use For O TNf CINTAUR COMPANY. 7T Ml CHESTER MACHINE AMfl I MAIMER Ww < vf mff Em w * jk? Ska I P JMLaNY. Chester, s. o. T' f ' heater M H'hine ''o. and 1?, M. J?f>r;*I & <'<? , have oonsol Idjited the iwn p nuts, and now H H'iy to turoish anvthhn; tn the M)?< 11i11 and I.umher tine-, with a well equipped K -undrv and Machine .-hop, and I)oor, Hash HiMi }'. IimI Kac'or.v i ur facilities are ud ij.lulled ii; llii- purl ol the rotate UEAFKUS V.OW Klis, THUE-IlDh- GINS, ENGINE- - A >V MILL? I! A V AND CO ON I?I'SES b A KKO ?Vs. I As INGS. K ' C ALD SECOND HAN3 MACHINERY. < 2Y" Hills complete for Dwelli Hl* re K'inin*, etc -end iih list of your wauls, and we will answer by return mail lie- pert fully, CKcSTfcR MACHINE & LUMBiR COMPANY. a?? ? ~r I i = ~x ? T ? '"sar 3* 5 3 X ' ? 2. g x ? ^ o ^T" m r e. ?.* ? ~ ?-*5 - -PlijiC 1 g a, 5 ? * > < *?g.e.? -? ; ?? , ? ?3 ? ? s- & 1 I 5 32.5* s ? *.? :.g -y *. r * Z 11 O QD H CO 5 2 ? g" = a J ? tt *=*% 3' 3 ? c 3- rt a ~<:ns| 5- arffrg a ?" <r? ??*?*% 3 raiS-pSI 5^ CO ? J 5" = s * I rsi Is s * ?TL ? ? ?i. f? ?? P ? Q r* M'P ZT 3 r/3 o 3? 0 rr **T>1? / " ?* W S f.** Z 3 ft. ? 2 * r* I i ^ a ? CT5 ? ?!?2 C 3 <-f *! ! A Clmuce to Itny 1'ou a llomo. Any party or parties desiring to purchase any of the real estate of T VI Fitzpatrick & Bro., in the town or county, can get prices and terms by calling on the editor of The Ledger. The Messrs Fitzpatrick have so ne very desirable farms and valuable improved town property and their being on the market gives men of Moderate means a splendid opportunity to purchase a home. ? Bougliti and which has been has borne the signature of ins been made under his pcrsupervision ninoo its infancy. rno one to deceive you in this. 1 i c T 4- 1 ? * * aiiu iirr imo i ami endanger tho health of iricuce against Experiment, ASTORIA ?t itute l'or Castor Oil, PureSynips. It is Pleasant. It orphinc nor other Narcotic arantec. It destroys Worms cures Diarrhoea and Wind Troubles, cures Constipation ites the Food, regulates the X healthy and natural sleep. ie Mother's Friend. rORIA ALWAYS Signature of ve Always Bought ver 30 Years. JMRAY STKKKT, NIW VOft* CITY. i | LANCASTEK AND CUESrEE RAILWAY Schedule in effect April 23, 1900. (Duily except Huuda ) WKSTHOUND I KAHTBi UND. j Vm's 14 Slid 10 I No's. nn<l 15 I A M. 1? M. A 1' M I 7 ' 7 7 10 Ar ''hester l.v 9 4 ? 8 1( 7 'JI 8 31 Richburir lt?2' 4' 7 12 0 20 Haseomhville 10 40 0 57 6 00 Fori Lawn 1100 ! I* M 6 30 5 30 Ly Lancaster Aril 40 9 No. 14. l-avini? Lancaster 6*30 am m k**s clone connection at Chestei witli Southern Kail way No. 30 fo ; Chariolte and points north; and Sea \ hoard Air Line Atlanta Special' , for Atlanta and points west A'si J with Carolina nnd-Northwestern Kail | way No 10 for ermir N (' and in> 1 termcdiate points, and southern Kail I way No 33 for Columhi and point! south No. 17, lea vine: Chester 10.30 a m connects with Southern Railway No 30 from Columbia anil ??oints south S aboard Air Line "Atlanta Special' from northern and eastern points am Southern Ra Iway No 33 from North j ern and eastern points, an t a Lan canter with s V, A G E for Hlucksburg No. 10. leaving Lancaster 4.0<l p m J connects at Lancaster witli S C A, (1 1 from ( atnden and Marion, and South ; ern Railway No. 34 at (.'heater fo ! t harlotte and points north. No. 15, leaving Chester 8.10 p m i connects at ( heater with boutheri Railway No. 34 from "oluinbia ant j points south. JaS M. HK\TH, (len Pass. Agl LEROY SPRINGS. President.. I I I +"1 FOUR PAPERS A WEEK "' FOR ABOUT THE ; i* PRICE OF ONE. ; + + This paper and the Atlanta 1 + Twice-a-Week Journal for < + $1.75. news of j v >i;r local J nyiiiif . rv : i 1 Mi"r' ! 11 in o:j.< ( j I >:i l H . !' T* |?:;; *T J J I . i \ - ! ' III l?v > -3 -1 > ' -i ! .. : t V. t' II re l ji <mi!? LI. il tn i .ii: in I a it h of j 3 t: <?Iil, 5 .: l*i| ?i; J?< rs ft I i 'Vi'i k l'"1 I '. I - lull f>IU't?. Vou | ? '"M Ii hot ; :: 11 l!ii< nil y\\ hero J S ?' r>, ?i|d I'd- 'MMiliitiatioii i.s I 4 t licbjst premium t<>: tlx?-??? i ^ vi no want ii tXr?oit paper and ( * :i lionii' !?. j?i r. Take t lii'He i -$ and you will ^?m p up with | * t lir? t i mi'H. | I h general nows, the 9 Twice-a-Week Journal haw | much agricultural matter J and ollinr artii*Imw <?f ? % interest to fanners. It loin < \ regular contrilnitions by Sam ? * Jones, Mrs.* \V. H. Folton | -s John Totnple Graves. Hon. f % C. II. Jordan and other dis- * # tinguished writers. ? Call at this itliice anil Irava your ( subscriptions lor both papers. Yau can J I get a sample copy of ciUiar paper here an application. i y^ritu wmmcbtsBH KUMA< -i War on the Boxer. )) ens Hi BRITISH CHASE 2,000 OF THEM. Kill 40 ?n<l Clear Out Two Towns. I The International Column Takes l'p the Advance to Pokin. London, .June 13, 4:42 a m ? Sixtppn ltritish nmrinoo _ ...v.. H.vo A VV\Mi"* 1 noitering in advance of the international column marching to Pekin fought and chase*I 2,000 Boxers Momlay, killing twenty or thirty. ! \ correspondent accompanying the column, in a dispatch dated I Tien Tain, June 12, via Shanghai, I dune 12, says: j "While the working party, acIcompanicd by a patrol of sixteen i j British marines, commanded by | ; Major Johnson, were repairing the line Monday afternoon, eight! miles beyond Lota,they encounter- ! ed small parties of Boxers who | were destroying the line. The j Boxers moved away from the advancing marines and apparently | dispersed into the country, leavI mg the rails and the sleepers burn i,lg"The marines when two miles in advance of the first train, near I Lang Fang, suddenly perceived i Boxers streaming from a village on their left. It was estimated I that they numbered 2,000, some i I of them being mounted, and they I wore trying to get between the marines and the train. Most of i them were armed with spears and swords. A few had firearms 1 which they handled awkwardly, i . The marines retreated, keeping up i a running tight for over a mile > and killing between 20 and 30 Boxei s. {j "The Boxers pursued the Britiah | for some distance. Then, seeing more marines from the train coming to their assistance, Major r .Johnson's sixteen men halted and poured a heavy and continuous lire into the crowd, driving them a toss the front of the re enforce - : ing blue jackets, who punishod the Boxers severely with Maxims. * "The Boxers tied and the : Europeans, following up their |success, cleared out two villagos. : I The total loan of tho Boxers is j estimated at 40 killed nnd wounded. Seven of their wounded were ( . I attended by British surgeons. The British loss was nothing. "Unless their loss causes the [ . Boxers to lose heart, the interna- , r tional column will have much trouble before reaching Uekin. tj The?railway is so much damaged 1 that the column covered only 04 J miles Sunday and Monday, and there is reason to fear that the road beyond is more budly dam turpi\ I "Evidences of General Nich's operations wero found in headless * bodies. Tho whole country prot j scnts a desolato aspect, entire * Tillages having been deserted. * The expedition numbers 2,044, as * follows: British, 015; German ^ 250; Itussian, 300; French, 12*; will purify your blood and bring ^ W thebloornof health back into your k A cheeks. Each bottle contains a f_ quart. \ Painful and Supreaeed Mentea. Irregularl / tlon of the Uterua, chance of life In matron or /W JOHNSTON'S SAHSAPARII.I.A. It Is a r, ^ aide, indigestion, palpitation of the heart, cold wP muscular weakness, bearing-down pelna, beck ahortneas of breath, abnormal dischargee wl T ' swelling of feet, aorenees of the breaata, net \P aymptema which make the average woman's I \ health Information. Voa want it?Ita free A ' THE MlChlflAlT^L' Vp Uvarattaa ter Urw life. The F C rawfonl Bro*. LancMt?r,S."0 E JK. Mack?j A Co, Lancaster, H.C D . J Americans, 104; Japanese, 52; Italian, 40; and Austrians, 25;" The correspondents at .Tien Tsia, Shanghai, and other treaty ports, throw s do lights on the situation. According to one dispatch from Tien-Tain, it is understood that the foreign ministers will insist ns soon as fresh bayonets arrive at Pekin, upon the re.? moval of the anti-foreign advisers of the Empress Dowager and upon the substitution fot them to councillors friendly to Western civilization. The English at Shanghai are afraid that Great Britian has been deceived, and that the whole business will have to bo gone through again. Russia's aims, the argue, aro not understood and Russia and France aro 'apparently not working in the same spirit as the other powers. Five thousand Russians are ready to land at Taku. A telegram from lokohama dated Tuesday evening says that tho .Japanese government has ordered four more warships to proceed to Taku. The dispatch says the .Japanese government "trusts the powers will not misconstrue this action." The Japanese press is urging vigorous methods. The Shanghai correspondent of ine limes, telegraphing luosday, says: "The .Japanese minister is pressing for recognition of a .Japanor?e sphere of intluene? to include the provinces of Che Klang, Fo Kien anil Kiting Si. The Ilong Kong correspondent of I'he Times, wiring yesterday, j says: "The admiralty have en gaged a transport to take 1>00 ti oops to Takn. The sailing date j hu> not been tixcd " The only bit of information wldch the British War Oflioo has i mado public regarding the situation since it became important, was the admission yesterday that tin* summer residence of the British minister in Pekin, Sir Claude McDonald, had been burned. - Considerable contracts for tho Chinese have been placed with the ?u ? * - uii iiiiugiiiiti) arm* raciory, inongl) whether fof the Chinese government or for the Boxers is not (lis closed. PKKVKMTKI) A TKAGKl)V Timely information given Mrs. George Long, of Now Straitsvillo, Ohio, prevented a dreadful tragedy an I saved two lives. A frightful cough had long kept her awake every night. She had tried many remedies and doctors but steadily grew worse until urged to try Dr. King's New Discovery. One hot- i tie wholly cured her, and she | writes this marvelous medicine ~..?-.i %t- i * (ii.iii *^uiu<( ?i(. or 11 HOV6l'6 attack of Pneumonia Such cures j are positive proof of the match less merit of this grand remedy j for curing all throat, chest and lung troubles. Only 50c and $1.00. Kvery bottlo guaranteed. Trial bottles free at Crawford llros' I>rug Store. The One Day Cold Cure. Kermott's Chocolates Laxative Quinine for cold in the head and sore throat. Children take them like candy. MdiOIHWWB?iW?irr/uwtr ,? - ? k Word e rr. 3 Suffering y Women, j I No one but yourselves know of the | ffcring you go through. Why do y u burferr It isn't necessary. Don't \ >e your health and beauty, (for the is of ohe is speedily followed bv the >5 of the other.) Don't feel "weak " jK | d "woniout." Impure blood is St e bottom of all your trouble. y Johnstons j ?arsaparilla 1 QUART BOTTLES. J\ tf, Lmtorrhm, Whites. Sterility, Ulcer*- Mr meld, all find relief, help, benefit and cure In A ral panncen for headache, palna In tha left ' "S hands and feet, nervousness, sleepleaeaeM, sf ache, lee-ache, Inefulir action of the heart, V th painful menstruation, scaldioe of ertne, V uraifla, uterine displacement, end all those m\ life so miserable. We hare a book foil of Q CO.*' Detroit, Mich. T 'aasei Utile Lfrer Ptte. *n, ifoUl A Hicks, Fort Lawn. 8. C H Jordan, Fort Lawn, 8. C. tfxRI B / I St Lonis' Shame. The Reign of Assassination anil Terror Seems to bo Ended. St Louis, June 13.- To all ap^ pearancei today witnessed Iho beginning of the end of the riot?? ous demonstrations and scenes of bloodshed that hare characterized tl.a : I e? mo .nitoi i ?i nv U y l>ll IKO lOi uyer a month past. In many quarters it is thought the striko itself will soon ho settled. These opinions are hased upon statements of the chief of police and sheriff that tho critical stage has been passed and upon tho fact that tho St Louis Transit company is slowly hut surely approaching a complete resumption of business with the aid of non-union men. Th? imp ost over the bodies of tho victims of Sunday's riot began today. The testimony adduced was not of a character calculated to base a decision on as to which side was to blamo for beginning hostilities, the witnesses disagreeing on material points. Some placed the blame on the posse and others placed it on the strikers. Many contradictions have arisen in the accounts of Sunday's tragedy and these were emphasized in the testimony taken today. The Crisis Has Come. A High Authority Sayan World's War is Impending. Recent dispatches indicate that ihe trouble in China is believed by European statesmen to have been inspired by Russian agents. Russian diplomacy makes opportunities and the outbreak of the 4'Boxers" afford a convenient excuse for landing Russian troops. For this crisis Russia has long been preparing, and well informed authorities agree that armed con? - i)ici on a gigantic scale between the great powers cannot long he averted. The main antagonism is between Russia on the one side, with France as un ally, and Enland on the other, with .Japan as an ally. The authorities mentioned think that the natural position of tho United States is with England and some of them think>our government will not b? able to maintain an entirely neutral position. The interests of the United States in the Philippines have changed the attitude of this country toward Asiatic politics, and roiont uispatches tell us that the government of tho United States may demand largo slices of Chinese territory as indemnity for injury to American life and property in the event of a general break up of the Chineso empire. The United States government has become a world power, and in the Armageddon that is coining we shall bo fortunate if wo escape entangling alliances and war. Demetrius C Houlger, the ablest and fairest authority on Asiatic politics and the author of half li dozen books on that and kindred subjects, says the ill fated moment has arrived when the contest of the groat powers over the division of the crumbling empiro of China must begin, lie discussed the ?u??jec.t in two articleH in the North American Review, the second np* peering in tho .June number of this year, and they show that the seriousness of tho situation has not been exaggerated. SATIVDK HIN&EG 1* A Danforth, of LaGrango, Ga., suffered intensely for six months with a frightful running sore on his leg, hut writes that Bucklen's Arnica Salve wholly cured it in ten days. For Ulcers, Wounds, Burns, Boils, Pain or Piles it's the best salve in tho world. Cure guaranteed. Only 25c Sold by Crawford Bros' druggist. Weetly Crop Bulletin. Corn Doing Well, Cotton Sonic* what Retarded in Some Sections. Washington, June >12.?The weather bureau's weekly sum niary of crop conditions says: Heavy rains in the central and oast Gulf States, including por lions oi Kentucky and Tennessee have retarded cultivation, and in some sections caused injury to crops. The high average temperatures with generally sufficient moisture in the great corn States of the central valleys have been decidedly favorable to corn, which has tnade rapid growth, although needing cultivation in some sections. In Maryland, Virginia and portions of North Carolina and Texas corn is needing rain, while it has suffered from excessive rains in the central Gulf States. Winter wheat harvest is now in progress in Virginia and will hegin in Kentucky this week. Except some lodging in Kentucky and Tennessee the rennets irennr? ally indicate that tho crop lias made satisfactory advancement during the week. Ah a result of lijjht rains in D , Toxas, much of the State recoiv* ing no precipitation, cultivation has beon vigorously pushed and there has been a decided improvement in tho condition of cotton. Several duys of fair weather are still needed, however, to put the crop in a proper state of cultivation in some n:irts of Tovns While there is a general complaint of lice in cotton over the central and eastern portions of the cotton belt, the crop has made substantial progress, although quite generally in need of cultivation. The least favorable reports are received from Louisiana, where cotton has made but slow growth and is turning yellow. Dropped Eighty-Nine Feet. rallapooea, Ala, Juno 12 ? While nine men were crowing the Tallapoosa river at this plane yesterday afternoon in a basket buss ponded S5 feet above the water upon cables one of tho latter broke. One nan was killed and two will ?lio. Several others wore injured. The men wore working on the railroad and the basket on the cable lino was used to convey rock and other material across the river. HOW'S Til IS ! We lifter One Hundred Dollars Itewurii for any case of Catarrh that cannot he enrol hy Hub's Catarrh Cure. F J HKNEY A CO., Props Tole?l->, <). We (he undersigned, have known F J rtheusy f >r the last 15 years, and helieve him perfectly honorable in all | business transactions ?mi Hhuik Uiiu able <? carry oui any obligation* made bv their Arm. VVk?t a I'huax, Wholesale Druggist. Toledo, O. VVai.dino, Kinnan a . Marvin, Wholesale I>iu rgist*. Tolwlo, O, flail's Catarrh Cure is taken interna ly, acting dire -tly uix>n tlie nlood nnd mucous surfaces of the system. Price, 7Ac i?er bottle Hold by all Druggists, IVstimnnials free. Halt's Family Pill* are the heat State Sanitarium for Consumptives. A correspondent of the Lancastor ledger suggests that South Carolina establish a State Sanitarium for consumptives. Massachusetts and New York have such I institutions. It would cost about $50,000 to build and equip a suitable building. He rightly says that while the wealthy may go to private institutions, and pay for expert treatment, the poor are unable to do anything at all. The time is fast coming when public authorities will have to pay more attention to this dreadful scourge and take steps to stop its spread. ?Aiken Journal and Keview.