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j?? . '>1 - ? ? i jlj CRv,i ARMENIAN HORRORS, i ?? j REV. DR. TALMAGE TELLS THE STORY | OF MOHAMMEDAN CRUELTY. An Eloqcent and Fervid Appeal ? The ! Cowardly Saltan Excoriated?Has Amer- ; ica the Right to Be Heard??Clara Bar- : ' ten and the Red Ctosa, Washington, Jan. 12. ?It was appropriate that m the presence of the chief men of this nation and ether nations Dr. TaImage should tell the story of Armenian massacre. What will be the extent for good cf such u discourse none can tell. The text was II Kings xix, 87, "They escaped into the land of Armenia. " In Bible geography this is the first that nnnears. called then j Uu:^ vuuv x by the same name as now. Armenia is ! chiefly a tableland, 7,000 feet above the level of tho sea, and on one of its peaks Noah's ark landed, with its human family and fanna that were to fill the earth. That region was the birthplace of the rivers which fertilized the garden of Eden when Adam and Eve lived there, their only roof the crystal skies and their carpet the emerald of rich grass. It3 inhabitants, the ethnologist;? tell us, are a superior type of tho Caucasian race. Their religion is founded on the Bible. Their Saviour is our Christ. Their crime is that they will not | become followers of Mohammed, that Jupiter cf sensuality. To drive them from k the face of the earth is the ambition of all Mohammedans. To accomplish this, murder is no crime, and wholesale massacre is a matter of enthusiastic app?Q' bation and governmental reward. The prayer sanctioned by highest Mohammedan authority and recited every day throughout Turkey and Egypt, while styling all those not Mohammedans as infidels, is as follows: "O Lord % of all creatures I O Allah! Destroy the infidels and polytheists, thine enemies, I the enemies of the religion. O Allah, make their children orphans and defile their bodies, cause their feet to slip, give them and their families, their households and their women, their children and their relatives by marriage, their brothers and their friends, their possessions and the race, their wealth and their lands as booty to the Mos. lems, 0 Lord cf all creatures!" The Jife cf an Armenian in the presence of those who make that prayer is of no more value than the life of a summer insect. Statistics of Slaughter. I The sultan cf Turkey sits on a throne impersonating that brigandage and assassination. At this time all civilized nations are in horror at the attempts cf that Mohammedan government to destroy all the Christians of Armenia. I hear somebody talking as though some new thing were happening, and that the Turkish government had taken a new role cf tragedy on tho stage of nations. No, no! She is at the same old business. Overlooking her diabolism of other centuries, we come down to our century to find that in 18:32 the Turkish government slew 50,000 anti-Moslems, and in 1850 she slew 10,000, and in 1SG0 she slew 11,000 and in 1876 she slew 10,000. Auythingshorr of the slaughter of Thousands of human beings docs not put enough red wine into her cup of abomination to make it worth quafimg. Nor is this tho only time she has promised reform. In the presence of the warships at the mouth of the Dardanelles she has promised tho civilized nations cf the earth that she would stop her butcheries and the international and hemispheric farce has been enacted cf believing what she says, when all the past ought to persuade r?s that she is only pausing in licr atrocities to put nations off the track and then resume tho work cf death. In 1820 Turkey in treaty with Russia promised to alleviate the condition cf Christians, but the promise was broken. In 1839 the then sultan promised protection cf life and property without referenco to religion, and the promise was broken. In 184-1, at the demand cf an English minister plenipotentiary, the sultan declared after tho public execution of an Armenian at Constantinople that no such death penalty should again be inflicted, und tho promise was broken. In 1850, at the demand of foreign nations, the Turkish government promised protection to Protestants, but to this An-Ck-rsi C! O t". SlfilTll 1 1 nrfi Tldfi Cli^/ J. i. V/V-VCVUX^ > MW v?. v w ? allowed to build a church, although they have the fuuds ready, and the Greek Protestants, who have a church, are act permitted to worship in it. In 185G, after the Crimean war, Turkey promised that no one should be hindered in the exercise of the religion he professed.and that promise has been brokejj, In 1878, at the memorable treaty of Berlin, Turkey promised religious liberty to all her subjects in every part of the Ottoman empire, and the promise was broken. Not once in all the centuries has the Turkish government kept her promise of mercy. So far from any improvement, the condition of the Armenians has become worse and worse year by year, and all the promises the Turkish government now makes aro only a gaining of time by which she is roak ing preparation for the complete extermination of Christianity from her borThe Nuisance of the A^es. Why, after all the national and continental and hemispheric lying cn the part of the Turkish government, do not the warships of Europe ride up as close as is possible to the palaces of Constantinople and blow that accursed government to atoms? In the name of the eternal God, let the nuisance of the ages be wiped off the face of the earth! Down to tbo perdition from which it smoked up sink Mohammedanism ! Between these outbreaks of massacre the Armenians suffer in silence wrongs that are seldom if ever reported. They are taxed heavily for the mere privilege of living, and the tax is called "the humiliation tax." They aro compelled to give three days' entertainment to any Mohammedan tramp who may be passing that way. They must pay blackmail We offer One Hundred Dollars 5B| .Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh F. J. CHENEY & Co. Props., Toledo 0 |& We, the undersigned, have known 9 F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in ail business transactions and financially able to carry out any obliga9 tions made by their firm. West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, 0., Waldiug, Kinnan & Marvin, "Wholesale Druggist Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials to tho assessor, lest- h? report the valao j ot their property too b gblv. Their evidence in conrt is of r.o worth, and if 50 Armenians saw a wrong committed and one Mohammedan was present tho testimony of the one -Mohammedan would be taken and the testimony of the 50 Armenians rejected?in other words, the solemn oath of a thousand Armenians would not be strong enough to overthrow the perjury of one A1? 'hammedan. A profossor was eondeumo! to death for translating the English 4'Book of Common Prayer" into Turkish. Seventeen Armenians were sentenced to 15 years' imprisonment for rescuing a Christian bride from the baud its. Tiiis is tho way the Turkish government amuses itself in time of peace. These are the delights of Turkish civilization. Cut when the days of massacre come, then deeds are done which may not be unveiled in any refined assem| blage, and if one speaks of the horrors, j he must do so in well poised and cautious vocabulary. Hundreds of villages destroyed! Young men put in piles of ; brushwood, which are then saturated j j with kerosene and set on fire! Mothers, ! in the most solemn hour that ever cc-mcs in a woman's life, hurled out and bayoneted ! Eyes gouged out and dead and dying hurled into the same pit! The slaughter of Lucknow and Cawnpur, ; India, in 1837, eclipsed in ghastliuess J | The worst scenes cf the French revolution in Paris made, more tolerable in con trast! In many regions of Armenia tho only undertakers today are the jackals i and hyenas. Many cf the chiefs id the i massacres were sent straight from Con| stantiuople to do their work, and having returned were decorated by the sultan. To four of the worst murderers the sultan sent silk banners, iu delicate appro, j ciaticn cf their services. Five hundred I thousand Armenians put to death or dyI ing of starvation! This moment, whilo j I speak, all up and down Armenia sit | many people, freezing in the ashes of j their destroyed homes, bereft of mof i of their households and awaiting the I club of assassination to put them out cf [ their misery. "How L.opg, O Lord!" No wonder that the physicians cf ! that region declared that among all the J men and women that were down with I wnnnds and sickness and under tljeir care not one wanted to get well. Remember that nearly all the reports that have ccmo to us of the Turkish outrages have been manipulated and modified and softened by the Turks themselves. The story is not half told, or a hundredth part told, or a thousandth part told, j None but God and our suffering broth' ers and sisters in that farcff land knoty ! the whole story, and it will not bo i known until in the coronations of lieavi en Christ shall lift to a special throne of glory these heroes and heroines, sayj ing, "Tljese are they who camo out of ; great tribulation and had their robes washed and made white in the blood of j the lamb." My Lord and my God, thou ] didst on the cross suffer for them, but j thou, surely, O Christ, wilt not forget ; how much they have suffered for thee! | I dare not deal in imprecation, but I i never so much enjoyed the imprecatory songs of David as since I have heard i how those Turks are treating the .Armenians. The fact is, Turkey has got to be divided up among ether nations. Of course the European nations must take the chief part, but Turkey ought to bo compelled to pay America for tho American mission buildings and American schoolhouscs she has destroyed and to support the wives and children of tho Americans ruined by this wholesale butchery. When the English lion and tho Russian bear put their paws en that Turkey, the American eagle ought to put j in its bill. j Who are these American and English j and Scotch missionaries who are being j hounded among the mountains of Ar; meuia by the Mohammedans? The noj blest men and women this side c-f heaven. Some cf them men who took tho | highest honors at Yalo and Princeton i and Harvard and Oxford and Ediui burgh. Some of them women, gentlest i and most Christlike, who, to save peo| pie they never saw, turned their backs on luxurious homes to spend their days | in self expatriation, saying gcoaby to ! father and mother and afterward good' by to their own children as circum| stances compel them to send the little j ones to England, Scotland or America. i Lave seen tnese ioreign missionaries i in their hemes all around the world, ' and I stamp with indignation upon the i literary blackguardism of foreign corre! 6pondents who have deprecated these i heroes and heroines who are willing to j live aud die for Christ's sake. Thc-y ! will have the highest thrones in heaven, I while their defainers will not get near ! enough to the shining gates to seo tho . faintest glint of any one of the 12 | pearls which make up the 12 gates. The CoTT3rdlj Sultan. This defamation of missionaries is augmented by the dissolute English, i American and Scotch merchants who go j to foreign cities, leaving their families : behind thern. Those dissolute merchants ! in foreign cities lead a life of such gross ! immorals that the pure households of | the missionaries arc a perpetual rebuko. | Buzzards never did believe in doves, and [ if there is anything that nightshade hates it is the water lily. What the 550 j American missionaries have suffered in ' the Ottoman empire since 1S20 I leave J the archangel to announce on the day of judgment. You will see it reasonable i that I put so much emphasis on AmcriI canism in the Ottoman empire when I | tell you that America, notwithstanding i all the disadvantages named, has now | over 27,000 students in day schools in | that empire and 35,000 children in her i Sabbath schools, and that America has I expended in the Turkish empire for its j betterment over $10,000,000. Has not : America a right to be heard? Aye, it j will be heard ! I am glad that great iu| dignaiion meetings are being held all j over this countiy. That poor, weak, cowardly saltan, whom I saw a few j years ago ride to his mosque for worship, ! guarded by 7,000 armed men, many of I them mounted on prancing chargers, will hear of these sympathetic meetings for the Armenians, if not through American reporters, then through some of his 360 wives. What to do with him? There ought to be some St. Helena to which he could be exiled while the nations of Europe appoint a ruler of their own to clean out and take possession of the palaces of Constantinople. Tonight this august assemblage in the capital of the United States, in the name of the God of nations, indicts the Turkish government for the wholesale assassination I in Armenia and invokes the interference of Almighty God and the protest of eastern and western hemispheres. A Cobweb of Spiders. But what is the duty of the hour? ' Sympathy, deep, wide, tremendous, immediate! A religious paper, The Christian Herald of Mow York, has led the way with munificent contributions collected from its subscribers. But the Turkish government is opposed to any ! relief of the Armenian sufferers, as I ! personally know. Last August, before I had any idea of becoming a fellow cit-i| zeu with you Washingtonians, >'.70,000 for Armenian relief was offered me if I j would personally take that relief to j Armenia. My passage was to be engaged | on the City of Paris, but a telegram was j sent to Constantinople asking if the j Turkish government would grant- me protection on such an errand or' mere v. A cable;;rain said tho Turkish government wished to know to what points in Armenia I desired to go with that relief. In our reply four cities wore named, cue of them tho scene of what had been tho chief massacre. A cablegram came from Constantinople saying that I had better send the money to the Turkish government's mixed commission, and they would distribute it. So a cobweb of spiders proposed a relief committee for unfortunate files. Well, a man who would start up through tho mountains of Armenia with $50,000 and no governmental protection would bo guilty cf monumental foolhardiness. Tho Turkish government has in every possiblo way hindered Armenian relief. An Angel of Mercy. New where is that angel of mercy, ro r*or1 nn ilir* Ivif. V^iiUci iiv u^|;viutvi ?... tic-fields of Fredericksburg, Antietam, Falmouth and Cedar Mountain and under the blaze of French and German I guns at Metz and Paris and in Johnstown floods and Charleston earthquake | and Michigan fires and Russian famine? ! It was comparatively of little importance that the German emperor decorated her with the Iron Cross, for God hath decorated her in the sight of all nations with a glory that neither time nor eternity can dim. Born in a Massachusetts village, she c-amo in her girlhood to this city to serve our government in the patent office, but afterward wont forth from the doors of that patent office with a divine patent signed and sealed by God himself to heal all the wounds she could touch and make the horrors of the flood and tiro and plague and hospital fly her prosence. God bless Clara Burton! Just as I expected, she lifts the banner of the Red Cross, Turkey and all natiuus uro pledged to respect and defend that Red Cross, although that ec-lor of cress does not, in the opinion of many, stand for Christianity. In my opinion it does stand for Christianity, for was not the cross under which most of us worship red with the blood of the Son of God, red with the best blood that was over shed, red with the blood poured cut for the ransom of the world? Then lead on, oh, Red Cross, and let | Clara Barton carry it! The Turkish government is bound to protect her, and the chariots of God are 20,000 and their charioteers pro angels of deliverance, and they would all ride down at once to roll over and trample under the hoofs cf their white horses any of her assailants. May the $500,000 she seeks be laid at her feet! Then may the ships that carry her across Atlantic and Mediterranean seas bo guided safely by him who trod into sapphire pavement bestcrmed Galilee. Upon soil incarnadined with martyrdom let the Red Cross bo planted until every demolished village shall be rebrilded and every pang of hunger be fed and every wound of cruelty be healed and Armenia stand with as much liberty to serve God in itsowu way as in this the best laud of all the earth, we, the descendants of the Puritans and Hollanders and Huguenots, uro free to wcr1 1 1 ' -?1-.- rtll ?*'?_ I snip ii)o vjnrisc wuu u>uuq cj duv uu nation* free. The Cry of Duty. It lias been said that if W9 go over tbero to interfero en another continent that will imply tho right for other nations to interfere with affairs on this continent, and so the Monroe doctrine ho jeopardised. No, no! President Cleveland expressed the sentiment of every intelligent and patriotic American when lie thundered from the White House a warning to all nations that thero is not one acre or cno inch more of ground on this continent for any transatlantic government to occupy. And by that doctrine we stand now and shall forever stand. But there is a doctrine as much higher than the Monroe doctrine as the heavens aro higher than the earth, mid that is the doctrine of bumanitarianism and sympathy and Christian helpfulness which one cold December midnight, with loud and multitudinous chant, awakened tho shepherds. Wherever there is a wound it is our duty, whether as individuals or as nations, to balsam it. Wherever there is a knife of assassination lifted it is cur duty to -ward off the blade. Wherever men aro persecuted for their religion it is our duty to break that arm of power, whether it be thrust forth from a Protestant church, or a Catholic cathedral, or a Jewish synagogue, or a mcsque of Islam. We all recognize the right ca a small scale. If, going down tho road, we find a ruffian maltreating a child, or a human brute insulting a woman, we take a hand in the contest if we are not cowards, and though we be slight in personal presence, becauso of our indignation we come to weigh about 20 tons, and the harder we punish the villain the louder cur conscience applauds us. In such case we do not keep I cur hands in our pockets, arguing that j if we interfere with the brute the brute | might think he would have a right to I interfere with us, and s-; jeopardize the Monroe doctrine. The fact is that that persecution of tho Armenians by the Turks must be stopped, or God Almighty will curse all Christendom for its damnable indifference and apatny. But the trumpet cf resurrection is about to 60und for Armenia. American Sympathy. Did I say in opening that on one of j the peaks of Armenia, this very Aimej nia of which we speak, in Noah's time ; the ark landed, according to the myth, ! as some think, but according to God's | "say so," as I know, and that it was aft' er a long storm of 40 days and 40 nights, called the deluge, and that afterward a dovo wont forth from that ark and returned with an olive leaf in her beak? Even so now there is another ark being j launched, but this cue goes sailing not ! over a deluge cf water, but a deluge cf I blood?the ark of American sympathy ?and tint ark, landing on Ararat, from : its window shall fly the dovo of kind' ness and peace to find the olive leaf of I returning prosperity, while all the j mountains of Moslem prejudice, oppresj sion and cruelty shall stand 15 cubit3 under. Meanwhile we would liko to i _n ^ ? J ?: gauicr an uju ujriijg t$zruuua ui uix 500,000 victims of Mohammedan oppression and intone them into one prayer that would move the earth and the heavens, hundreds of millions of Christians' voices, American and European, crying out: "O C-Jod Most High, spare thy children ! With mandate from the throne hurl back upon their haunches the horses of the Kurdish cavalry. Stop the rivers of blood. With the eartliSpecimen Cases. S. Clifford, New Cassel, Wis., was troubled with Neuralgia and Rheumatism, his Stomach was disordered, his Liver was affected to an alarming degree, appetite fell away, and he was terribly reduced in fiesh and j strength. Three bottles of Electric I Bitters cured him. Edward Shepherd, Ilarrisburg, 111., had a running sore on his leg of i eight years' standing. Used three j bottles of Electric Bitters and seven i boxes of Bucklen's Arnica Salve, and j his leg is sound and well. John ! Speaker, Catawba, ()., had five large i Fever sores on his leg, doctors said he was incurable. One bottle Elec- 1 trie Litters and one box Bucklen's ! Arnica Salve cured hiin entirely. J 1 Sold at the Bazaar. j quakes of thy wrnfh shako the founda- ! lions of tl?o palaces of the sultan. I*iovo all tho nations of Europe to command cessation of cruelty. Ji' need be, Jet the warships of civilized nations boom their indignation. Let the crescent g-^ down before tho cross, and tho Mighty One, who hath on his vesture and on his i thigh a name written 'King of Kings j and Lord of Lords,' go forth, conquer- j ing and to conquer. Thine, O Lord, is J the kingdom ! Halleluiah ! Aincn !"' French Prisoners' Jtaiiway Carriaj;p?* These railway carriages, of which j there aro 40 in constant use, are tlie property of the government, who pay J one-half cf the price cf a third class j ticket for each prisoner conveyed. The [ repairs are executed in tiro yards of the 1 different railway companies at the c-x- ! pense of the state. They merit a tie- ' tailed description. Each carriage contains a double row I - I- ?-I- u? | oi ceii3, nine on eucn skr', uj : a passage running lengthwise, with a j solid door 011 each lateral face. At cao j extremity there is a desk and a table j that draws oat. These, as well as a i uumber of cupboards, are for the use of j the warders. The latter sleep ou fold- | ing bedsteads, which the passage i.s just j wido enough to accommodate. The cells | are GO centimeters (24 inches) wide, G."? I ccntimotcrs (20 inches) deep and 1.75 meters (5 feet 'J inches) high. The prisoners sit facing the door and are attached by leg irons, giving a certain amount of play to the legs. Should a prisoner misconduct himself it is possible to shorten the chains froru the passage without opening the dear of the cell. Their creature comforts, however, are pot altogether neglected, the carriage being lighted by windows at either cud | and warmed by a stove. At night it is brilliantly lighted by a special lamp. One cell i fitted upas a convenience for the prisoners. For intellectual recreation, it must bo admitted, small prevision is mad?. Tho articles of tho code relating to convicts are hung up inside the cell door, and that is all.?Fortnightly Review. When you conic to town don't forget to call and settle your subscrip1 3... 1L. 11011 Que lLIU JL/lspiUUU. 1 I PLANTESS OLD S-time Every household should have these well tried remedies so that iu ease of sickness your physician is ever at your command. Tbev are popular, because they give certain and quick relief, wherever used. PLAXTERS OLD TI1IE COUGH SYBL'P The Prince of Cough Syrups. The consumption preventive. For croup iu children and coughs of all kinds it has no equal. An excellent remedy for grippe or severe colds. 25 and 50 cents bottles. PLATERS FEMALE REGULAtor, the priceless boon for women. A special treatment f ,r all diseases pe- j culiar to her sex. Price $1. PLANTERS PILE OINTMENT, never fails to effect a cure. Why suffer from this troublesome disease, when a single package of this medicine may cure you. Price 50 cents. PLANTERS CATARRH BALM, for colds, catarrh, hoarseness, sore troat, loss of voice, loss of hearirg, hay fever, etc. etc. Price 50 cents. j THIS TWIN PAIN KILLERS, Cuban Oil for external use, Cuban Relief for internal use, for man and beast. Price 25 cents. PLANTERS SYRUP VERMI fuge, the Worm Destroyer. It is plesant and the children like to take it. Price 25 cents. PLANTERSTONIC TEETHING Syrup brings health to the baby; rest t to mothers. Price 25 cents. PLANTERS EYE WATER for inflamed and sore eyes of every description. Strengthens the eyes of the age. 25 cents per bottle. PLANTERS PiNK PILLS stimulate the liver, sweetens the breath, brightens dull e}es. Cures constipation. Twenty-five doses for 25 cents. PLANTERS HEADACHE POWders for sick and nervous headache and neuralgia. "Will cure in 20 min! utes. 10 cents per package. PLANTERS HORSE AND CATtle Powders, the finest medicine ever known for stock and poultry, l'uvest 25 cents and make your horse worth $50 more. PLANTERS NUBIAN TEA, the finest vegetable liver regulator in the woild. Docs not gripe. Cures biliousness, indigestion, sour stomach, dyspepsia and all liver complaints. 25 cents per package. For sale at the Bazaar's Medical Department, Lexington, S. C. January 1. 1800. ARE YOU SICK, SIWE1SINS, OR AFFLICTED IN ANY WAY, AND NEED MEDICHTS ? DO 10U WAST RELIEF! If so, you will find in the Drug and Medicine Department at the Bazaar, Standard Medicines for all Complaints, Diseases, Etc., which will give relief and cure you. AT THE BAZAAR, LEXINGTON, S. G. TiZtTT:> W^'ir^l H?1 ? ?- ? .i ? r? Do Yon Want PURE mm? _ | If *?[.>/! i ! I [I p I S^5 - - ^&!:. ] ! I ll5lf I I Ps-w ? s.,? |5 g&ft&i %Tri si IM^ \ 1 ,0 !f? j - J C*n <!?* * * SOt.D TTTsrnrn gu.-vkwntfc. p C"i>~ t f iW t : ""* r"e y r>? > r CA.L' M V V -+ * +> V?*Wv ^ + im"> \+ ia ! *< These who wish PAINTS, GRAINING COLORS, STAINS, VARNISHES, JAPANS, OILS, ETC. Will fin J a select stock at the Bazaar in packages to suit the demand. COLORS of all shades,in oil or dry. KALSOMINE in assorted colors, Turkey and Venitian Red, Spanish Brown, Vermillion, etc. FLOOR PAINT, for Piazza and Porch work, covering floors nicely and cemc-nting cracks. These paints arc manufactured and prepared by Longman & Martinez, the largest manufacturers in the United States, and their paints are guaranteed to show up as bright and pretty and last as long as any paints used. Those wishing to paint their dwellings, will save money by calling on or addressing, G. M. HARMAN, Sole Agent for Lexington. Mar 13?ly Most Modern and orccrressiva For catalogue or information write to THE MARLIN FIRE ARMS CO., New Haven, Conn. January 27?ly SircolM'-l I have been a MagCu.j-A.MEAl".a jxIT.TO'' friif c.ir.H rh. 1 &&tried Ely's Cream I'a'ra. Hr,it.d to j'd aj?:<e ratC'sam ^HAifTfcVfg ? jw 'u: ft.!. T^rriiiieihcadachrs SLl vhieh I had !o- rrsuf3? ** > <>^rfSE forftd aro gone.?W. J. H i Hi cock, laift Major ^U. CATARRH ELY'S CREAM BALM Opens and cleanses the N isa! P.t>sage, Allays Pain and Inflimmalion. lleals the Sore.; Protects the Membrane from colds, Extorts the Sense of Taste and S cell. The 15 vim is cpplied directly into the i.ostriis. is rpicklv absorbed and gives rrli.} at at once. ELY'S PINEOLA BALSAftl's a suie c:re f< r Cougns, Cold-, ?ta. r rice o* Cream Balm, 10cent--, a Druggists r>- by mail. ELY FEOTIIEIH, 50 Warren St., N Y. ^ PARSER'S 5$j$|d8SSH HAIR BALSAM BfesSgai^K .6?f C1ean;c? and bca'-tifics the hair. ' Q*S I'raniutes a Inniaiant growth. r"-i vJE5S!Ncvcr Fails to Bettor a Cray .Hair to its Youthful Color. I rsi^fi.'F^-^SWa C'urus scalp diseases U. hair labia?. rJ gQc.fc:id$1.0J at Prup;ista|M| i HiHD?RCORMS. The cat? jure Cure lor Corns. Stops ail pain. Ensures comfort to the t.ct. ilahco walking eery, litts. at Uruggisu. Grateful?Comforting. ^ COCOA Breakfast?Supper. ' By a thorough knowledge of the natural Jaws which govern the operations cf digestion and nutrition, and hy a careful application of line properties of well selected Cocoa, air. Epps has provided for our bre&keast and rupper a delicately ilavored beverage wh'ch may save u.s many heavy doctor's bil's. It is by the judicious use j oi such articles of diet that a constitution may he gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are dotting around us nady to attack whenever there is a v. o ik point. Wo may escape many a fatal shatt by keeping ourselves well tcrtified with pure blood and a property nourished frame.- C.v.i S- rvice Gizette. Mide simply w ith boiling water and milk. Sold only in half {onud tins, by Grocers, labelied tbos: JAMES EPPS ? CO., Ltd.. Ilomreopathic Chemists, London, Eug'and. rChJfhcxtcJ"'* EncMxh Dintsonu Brant. CNNVROYAL FiLLS Criminal ami Only Genuine- A r- sate, al^am reliable. ladies a-i ?T\ f.y. liNSft Pruegta r..r CMcUestcr* Eni/iUk /V'' - v '- -' ^yVrmmt I!"ft/: 1 la Ucti anil (' hi n-.?-t*:iic\%wy f-?. ?JrVivJ'U-MM. s.Ju1.! with blue ribhoa. Tnke \W S^vi\fn:? other. Kefr.se. dangerous subltitu- V 1/ ~ fVttoa* and imitations. At Mru;sii:?. or send 4 c. t^. in suaipa f..r particulars. testimonials >u 1 I \ t-i Ky " I{?!!?f for t OiiU-A," in letter. It return \ y> Mai!. 1 e.Of/f) Ti"-t:nir>i.l?li. .Vane Paper. ^<'M?')i<'?tprt'JicmK'alC'o.,M??l!hoiiS<iuui<-, Sol J tj all Local l).*a;glsu. PhlltUo., I'ft. PIHEQLfl COUGH B3LSAM is ox-'rol-ent for ail throat inflammation ar.d itilirs/s ^ for asthma. Conisumi'tives v. iIi inl'ivari ,j!y derive l" benefit fri?m its 'c Qnickly : ys>yY**A?A"a,vt^g;ibat -s?ihe cough. : [AhV renders expee*.^1?^ pdtoe easy, assist lairj' ier'vnta/?n I'ose their casps to LvWXsx S:' buT^i*. bo <\msurnpt io u who suv only suffering from a citron ie cold ordtM-o seated cough. often atrgrevntel by M. Ii I'm. nnl..t.i"li lte.i l'l *?j ( ' r. ? ?!? ? P. !1 \ y*\ ' 11 < I i I II* I'/l < lUhlill M.T i-l) g VIV...JU i/dim, ">ii per 1? Xt' ? il'iW'hi Jia's.-im. at Priu:k'i.-ts In iiics uf will tlelivor on rwipt >f unionnt, ELY LltOTIIiillSitf V.'.irrvn St . New York. If you have aching sides arid back or suffering from rheumatism of any form and want relief and permanent i cure, iLen try Spirittine Balsam, 25 and 50 cent bottles. For sale atthe Bazaar. ^ ^ Boot Beer, Cream Soda, Ginger j Ale, Pepsin Cherry Tonic,?all deli! cious fall and winter drinks, served ! at the Bazaar's fountain. 5 cents a I drink. Old type metal, as good if not better and cheaper than Babbit metal suitable for mill men, for sale at the Dispatch oflice. C otton/ With careful rotation of crops and liberal fertilizations, cotton lands will improve. The ' application of a proper fertilizer containing sufficient Potash often makes the difference between a profitable crop and failure. I'se fertilizers containing not less than 3 to 4% Actual Potash. Kainit is a complete specific against " Rust." o Our pamphlets are rot a<!vcrti*:n;r circular* loominjj special fertilizer^, hut are practical works, containing the results ft latest experiments in th:s line, livery cotton farmer shuuld have a copy. They arc ; sent free Or the ashintr. GERMAN KALI WORKS. i3 Nassau St., New Vork. Henry L. Cade, President. C. St. C. Kirk, Sec. & Tres CHARLESTON LIMBER AND MAN- = LFACTLBING CO,, SASH, DOORS AND BUNDS, LUMBER, GENERAL BUILDING MATERIALS, MILL WORK. HARDWARE. PAINTS AND / OILS. GLASS ETC. ETC. V xirW rite for estimate. Nos '21 to 47 / s'llev Avenue, CHARLESTON. S. C. December 5?1 v Endorsed by some of the Lea-ling Mrdiea Profession. No Quack or Patent Medicine, but NATURE'S PURE RE&ES1E?. ( Admitted into the World Columbian Exposition in 1S03. _ Use Spirittine Balsam for Rheumatism, * Colds, Lameness. Sprains Fore inroat Use Fpirittino Iahnlent for Consnmtion, a Consumptive Co igbs, Catarrh, Asthma and La ur-pp-i. 8 Spirittine Ointment is indispensable in tee treatment of Skia Listuscs, Cure Itch. Itching Piles. In consequence of the astonishing success in removing diseases, i's demand tow r come-; not alone from this vicinity but from everjwhe:e iu the United States fand Europe. SPiRiTTIrit CKTRSifA CO., WILMINGTON, N. C. I Wholesale and K-tail hv G H EALJIAX, I. exing'oi S C January 30?ly PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC mm OIL 1 fl For Barb Wire Cuts, Scratches, < Saddle and Collar Galis, Cracked Hce! Burns, Old Sores, Cuts, Boils, Bruises, < | Piles and all kinds of inflammation c:t < man or beast. Cures Itch and NEauge. ) Ko So:*, Cut cr 3'.r: rill a:r:r matter liter lis cii < ha: toea ;;pliad. Be prepared for accidents by keeping'it in your nr?'jh!r. AtiOrnnnUts&c!! iton accarantec. / i Ha Cure, Ho Psy. Price 25 cts. and ?,1.00. If your ^ Druggist docs net keep it send us 2$ cts. in pes- , tegc stamps and \vc will scud it to you by mail, 2 Paris, Tenn., Jan. 20th. JfDl. < Rcaritlr:! lir.v* rwi Poitvr'* AsiUcptlc limllart OtS / I f.ir iiiirncnaatl Sadiic (iali.'.Seratcneaand flirb Wire Ct:;. ) | wish perfect satisfaction, and I heartily recommend it u all Iu7cr7anu Ctuckmrn. \ C. B. IRVINE. Livery and t ccd Slide. < GADVSURNED. < Gentlemen .?I t:.i pieated to sikjV a word for Porter's < Antiseptic llocliac OH. My baby was burned a fetrmontl J a^o.and after trvljfc r.!l otiter rrt.icdie* I appiitd your'"Oil" and the first application give reiki. ar.d in a few day* tbe sore VMS well. I also uKsu tbe oil or. rnr stock ar.d find (but it Is the be.; remedy for 'bis purpose that t have ever used. Yours, C. T. LEWIS. Taris, Tenn . January 2?. I'01 Kdi.UrxCTvlEt) PT PARIS MEDICINE CO., GI. Z.OUI3, SIO For sile by G. M. HarmaD, Lexiegten C. II G Fr ?Lk Kcls!er, Friceville, December 20?Ij In these tlavs oX j jTALL |j' t j Actual Aohlpverr.cn's r-.ftt-n ssern to beat a dls- fl J () eou t.Uutafii-ral! Acre;*:. ach:i?V>:.v?\ts are A <> t;if only ill !.? > tis.ii c-'iiat. O Q It is euiv i:? tc-.ik ia Utncml Term* ab.wt the c) O merits of PIANOc, bat-be more speckle? <) THE MATHUSHEKji , i jj T^3 grsat Southsm psvsrita. 0 | O F.?tabii>he-1 30 years. .30,Oik) note in use. O \) Sold :>y us for 1~> years. Note these Valuable (> 1/ I'aientesl iniprureiueuts- p j I f? Patent Repeat!.'!* Action. i mter.l h.onnning board. y ; X Patent Tuning Pin Bushing. ;< I o Patent Improved Agraffes. O j Patent Soft Slop. s> 0 One of the only two Pianos tr.a<!e complete >) O (every part.) In irs ;/.vu Factory. One of the y y be?t made In the I*. S. Solu lower than any O v other Hijr'j (?r<eie Piano One prnai only f.om \) V aieier to furvhaser. Wllll'h. L's. O | pLUDDEN & BATES, H | SAVANNAH, GA. j NO MORE EYH-OLSSSESi |. No Weafe | aero Ej-csJ MITCHELL'S EYE-SALVi; A Ctrfain Sato and Effecliva Ronedy for SORE, WEAK and INFLAMED EYES. I Producing Lnng-Sightcdnoss% and Restoring the Sight of the old. Cures Tear Drops. Granulation, Sly? I Tumors, Ked Eyes, "Tint led Eye Lashes, AND PRODUCING QUICK RELIEr' AND PERMANENT CURS. Also, <Hjt?KlIy efficacious when tis?<1 in i ; other maladies, such as Ulcers, Fever I I fcores, Tmrntrs, Ha't Rlteiini, Etnrns, Piles, or wherever eiftBiiitnaiion exists, | MITt'UEI.L'S SALVE may be used to j (nivaBtase. i SOLD SY ALL DRUGGISTS AT 25 CEXTS, SSI" Boilers. J tfiTGet our prices. gS Atlas and Erie Engines Tanks. Stacks, |a Stand Pipes and Sheet-Iron Work; Shaft- MM ing, Pulleys, Gearing, Boxes, Hangers, etc. fig Complete Cotton, Saw, Grist, Oil and H Fertilizer Mill outfits; also Gin, Press, Cane Mill and Shingle outfits. Huiiding, "Bridge, Factory, Furnace and Railroad Castings; Railroad, Mill, Ma- ? chinists' and Factory Supplies. ; Belting, Packing, Injectors, Pipe Fittings, Saws, Files, Oilers, etc. #3" Cast every day; work 150 hands. Lombard Iron Works II and Supply Co., I Passenger Depot. AUGUSTA, CA. January 1?ly 9 Ofjglfc. CHILDREN J will never REFUS? to take Dr. Thacher's Worm Syrup ;VWH0 HAVE TAKEN ,T 0N3E{ Positively Removes Worms and their Causes. Regulate* '^rfp!^? ''' the Liver an(* Bowe,s* Re^ores the Appetite. i ~ ^ Mrs. Sarah Harvey, of Wnrrcnsbnrg,Tenn? says: ^"V.^gjaSgjara) "I happened to get hold of one bottle of Dr. H. '.--3ByE*" S. Thacher's Worm Syrup and gave it to my chil- | ~ jRER ^/.- dren by the directions. 11 is the beat worm deatroyer PRICE, 25 CEUTa !pp Dr. H. S. Thacher Medicine Co4 I CHATTANOOGA, TENN. S September 14?ly. Jj&H LORICK & LOWRANCE 1 COLUMBIA HOTEL BLOCK, COLUMBIA, S. C? f HEADQUARTERS FOIi JANE HILLS, EVAPORATORS, SHEET COPPER, nZEXiXD <3--A-PlIDEiT SEED3 j .-QTTQN GINS, FEEDEERS, CONDENSERS, PRESSES AND BELTING, < 1 'LAIN AND DECORATED GLASS, MARBLEIZED MANTLES, GLAZED TILES . GRATES, FENDERS, ETC., HARDWARE GROCERIES Come and see us or write to us when in need of anything in our line, Jan. 1.?ly. Wards off Malaria, Is a pleasant aDd invigorating medicine. Particularly effective 4 in the cure of Dyspepsia, Indigestion. Nausea, Sick Headache, Sour Stomach,etc. A valuable liver regulator. Corrects jM ^ BBS BB all disorders of the kidneys. Wonderfully eUS Kz/ fa beneficial in l'eu.ale complaints. Taken Si 0^^ ?lo):g with quinine, is an effectual cure for Kbr tagg Chills. A great appetizer when taken belore meals. After meals aids digestion. In jHfi FOR THE large 25c., ?0c. and $1 bottles. AH , Hold at the Bazaar and by W. P. Roof, * B LIVER AND KIDNEYS Who]esaleby ^ THE MURRY DR'UG CO., ] COLUMBIA, S. C. i March 14?ly. i ^ I i l STSRT O'CITOEITAELE COLOR | 1 < FOR I M s Wool, Cotton. Silk, Feathers, Etc I :< 7 II. ARM AN'S BAZAAR, CONFECTIONERIES, FltllTS, CAKES, CRACKERS, ZF-A-RTCST OROCEEIES, 1 CICiJAI??, CHEWING siiul .SMOKING TOBACCO t Toys, Fancy Goods, Notions, ZDZS-cra-S and. I^SDICIITZIS, -i MliHEM, STATlOXERt, SCHOOL BOOKS, ALBUMS, ETC, :! * / \ &ST A well selected stock of (he above Gocds tth'stantly on band* and* ilways at the very lowest prices. These Goods are lib fresh azid reliable.'