University of South Carolina Libraries
Hs Will Not Drown Himself. From the Troy, N. Y., Times. R. \Y. Edwards, of Lansingburgh, was prostrated by sunstroke during the war and it has c-ntailed on l.im peculiar and serious consequences. At present writing Mr. E, is a prominent officer of Post Lyon, G. A. P., Cohoes and a past aid de camp on the staff of the commander in-chief of Albany Co. In the interview with a reporter, be said: "I was wounded and sent to the hospital at Winchester. They sent me togeiher with ethers to Washington?a ride of about 100 miles. Having no room in the box cars we were placed face up on the bottom of flat cars. The sun beat down upon our unprotected heads. "When I reached Washington I was insensible and was unconscious for ten days while in the hospital. An abscess gathered in my ear and broke; it has b en gathering and breaking ever since. The result of this 100 mile ride and sunstroke, was, heart disease, nervous prostration, insomnia and iheumatism; A completely shattered system which gave me no rest night or dcry. As a last resort I took some Pink Piil^etnd they helped me to a wonderful degree?" -AJLy-iheumatism is gone, my heait failure, dys pepsia, and constipation are about gone and the abscess in my ear has stopped discharging and my head feels as clear as a bell when before it felt as though it would burst and my once shattered nervous system is now nearly sound. Look at those fingers,'' Mr. Edwards said, udo they Jo^k as if there was any rheumatism there?" He moved his fingers rapidly and freely and strode about the room like a young boy. "A year ago those fingers were guarled at the Taints nnd sn stiff that I COUid not hold a pen. My knees would swell up and I could not straighten my leg out. My joints would squeak when I moved them. That is the living truth. ' When I came to think that I was going to be crippled with rheuma tism, together with the rest of my ailments I tell you life seemed not worth living. I suffered from despondency. I cannot begin to tell you,'* said Mr. Edwards, as he drew a long breath, "what my feelings is at present. I think if you lifted ten years light oft my life and left me prime and vigorous at forty seven I could feel no better. I was an old man and could only drag myself painfully about the house. Xow I can walk off without aDy trouble. That in itself,' continued Mr. Edwards, "would be sufficient to give me cause for rejoicing. but when you came to consider that I am no longer what you might call nervous and that my heart is apparently nearly healthy and that I can sleep nights you may realize why I may appear to speak in extravagant praise of Pink Pills. These pills quiet my nerves, take that awful pressure from ruy head and at the same time enlich my blood. There seemed to be no circulation in my lower limbs a year ago, my legs being cold and clammy at times. Now the circula-, tion there is as full and as brisk as at aDy other part of my body. I used to be so lightheaded and dizzy from my nervous disorder that I frequently fell while crossing the floor of my house. Spring is coming and I never felt better in my life, and I am looking forward to a busy season of work." Condemns Bond Issnes. Congressman Stokes Talks I'pon the .Financial Question. Washington, D. C , Jan. 21.?Congressman Stokes of South Carolina has some ideas strictly his own on the financial situation, and in an interview with a Pegister reporter ex pressed himself fully and freely. In answer to a question as to what he thought of the President's recent emergency message, he said: "I could see no emergency that did not exist when his regular annual message was sent in. The information at the President's disposal then was just as full as it was on the day fixed for adjournment before the holidays. Had the emergency been v O J urged the first day of the session more mature deliberation and dis cussicn might have been had. The message and the manner of precipi tating it, however, are in line with the previous policy of the administration. By a series of encroachments upon the legislative branch of the government, under the discretionary powers conferred by previous legislation, the executive branch of the government has committed the people in a measure to policies that were entirely foreign to the intent of the fraraers o." the law, and to the plain phraseology in which it is couched. Now, baviug thus by indirection forced the people into a false attitude we are told that it is more disastrous to attempt a return to our original position, from which we were shifted by unwarranted assumptions on the part of the executive branch of the government, than it would be to continue upon the ruinous tack along which the ship of State is now buf feted. In fact, the newspaper and other supporters of the administration policy hold over us the scarcely j veiled threat of another object lesson in panic, wreck and disaster if we do not validate what has been dine in so wrongful and highhanded a manner. It remains to be seen whether | ihe Congress will silently submit to such usurpation of its prerogative." ""What about the remedy proposed hv flip "Rpimhlioan leaders in resnouse to the President's message?'' "It does Dot touch the real source of trouble. It, like the admiuistra lion policy, views the matter wholly from the contract rights ol debtor are entirely ignored. The interests of the people are apparently of no consequence. The people, who have to foot the bil's by taxation, groaning under their burdens^ demand relief from tin's burdensome taxation, imposed by department-made law to give a bonus to the people's creditors, and the swift response of the Repub lican majority is more taxation. The people engaged in productive indus tries, who are concerned in creating new values rather than in absorbiug values already created; the people who are engaged in feeding and cloth ing the masses rath'i tnan in rob ulug and stripping and starving them demand relief from the dwarfing, shrinking, paralyzing-elfects of a contracting circulating medium. This bill makes response in a still further contraction of the currency by the confessed intention of the framers that under it greenbacks will be im pounded in the Treasury?temporarily it may be?but none the less contraction of our currency to th t extent. The people have.demanded fewer bonds. This bill provides more bonds in time of peace, thus multipl}ing almost indefinitely the burdens of the people. The only thiDg that can be said for the pending bond bill is that it is better than the existing practice in the Treasury Department. The majority is to be commended, too, for refusing to issue a gold bond as suggested and urged by the executive branch." "What, then, is your plan for a solution of the trouble1?' "In the first place the Treasurer of the United States should be required to supply no gold for expoit. "All coin obligations of the country should be paid in that coin which is m/icf wnv^rnont to the <rnveinaienlj but in no case should more than half gold be paid on any coin obligation Coin, under the constitution of the United States, is defined to be gold and silver. The courts and the Congress have time and again defined the term with special reference to these very contracts which the Treasury Department persists in paving wholly and exclusively in gold. ''The act of 1S75 should be so j amended as to restrict the Secretary j in issuiug bonds for redemption pur; pose11, both as to the amount and j rate of interest, and requiring that j the proceeds of such bonds be kept | in a separate account. "Then, w order to restore the j equities between debtor and creditor, i already destroyed by previous legis | lalion and practice of the department, i all outstanding obligations should be j adjusted when paid upon the basis 1 of the purchasing power of the dol j lar when the contract ?vas made. "I should have proposed amendj ments along these lines had not the ] outrageous rule cutting off amendI ment and discussion precluded it." ^ ^ . The man who eats because he is j hungry is, thus far. on a level with i the brutes. The man who stops | eating the moment his hunger is api peased is the wise man. Nature | needs no more food than she calls for. Continued excess brings about indigestion or dyspepcia, with loss of i flesh, strength, sleep, ambition and | mental power; and an accumulation i of aches, pains and many dangerous local maladies. The stomach now can do nothing alone. We must appeal to some artificially digested food which can also digest other foods. That is to i say, we must use the Shaker Digesj tive Cordial. The effect is prompt i aud cheering. The chronic pain and distress ceases. Appetite presently revives. Flesh and vigor gradually come back, and the sufferer recovers, j But he must be careful in future, j A trial bottle for 10 cents. LAXOL is the best medicine for I children. Doctors recommend it in ; place of Castor Oil. r> 1 ? _ ! A O _ f tsucKien s arnica oaive. ! The Best Salve in the world for Cats, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt j Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped ! Hauds, Chilblains, Corns, and Skin ; Eruptions, and positively cures Piles i or no pay required. It is guaranteed j to give perfect satisfaction or money I refunded. Price 25 cents per bos. j For sale at the Bazaar. Root Beer Cream Soda, Ginger i Ale, Pepsin Cherry Tonic,?all delicious fall and winter drinks, served j at the Bazaar's fountain. 5 cents a ! drink. Old type metal, as good if not better and cheaper than Babbit metal | suitable for mill men, for sale at the I Dispatch office. The little daughter of Mr. Fred Webber, Holland, Mass., had a very bad cold aud cough which he had not been able to cure with anything. I gave him a 25 cent bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, says W. P. Holdeu, merchant and postmaster at West Biimtield, and the next time I saw him he said it worked like a charm. This remedy is intended especially for acute throat and lung diseases such as colds, croup and whooping cough, and it is famous for its cures. There is no danger in giving it to children for it contains nothing injuiious. For sale by Julian E. Kaufman. 15 Our people are growing more and more in the habit of looking to Julian E. Kauffman, for the latest and best of everything in the drug line. He sells Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, famous for its cures of bad colds, croup and whooping cough. "When in need of such a medicine give this remedy a trial and you will be more than pleased with the result. 15 Weather Almanacs. Some of these almanacs rose tc a great popularity 011 the strength of one lucky guess. and I think it is told of ParHdge's almanac, or some other of the ciass, that it owed its reputation to a curious prophecy of extraordinary weather for July 31, when hail, rain, snow, thunder, etc., were freely indicated. Forgetting that tho month had 31 days, the almanac maker had omitted to insert the weather prediction for the last day, and a boy was sent from the printing oftlce to kDow how the space was to be filled up. The weather prophet was too busy to attend to him, but at last in a passion said, "Put down hail, rain, snow, thunder, anything," and the boy, ;t- HfovnlV + ft-io /^nmnrici or JO aiCiUJU, lOiVI twv VVMijyvuAW*.) whodulyset into type the extraordinary prediction, and which by a freak cf nature came true and made the fame and fortune of the almanac maker. This slory, if not true, is at ie^t ben trovato and shows the force of ifie bard's statement : Our indiscretion sometimes serves us well When our deep plots do pall. Patrick Murphy published a popular weather almanac, and his fame is said to have commenced by a lucky hit in one cf the earlier issues by which he indicated which would be the coldest day cf the year. There is a copy of this almanac for 133S in the library of the society, and some former owner has evidently taken the trouble to pencil in the actual weather opposite to that predicted. There were, according to this annotation, 39 incorrect forecasts, 91 doubtful and the rest correct. This Patrick Murphy was not a mere charlatan. He had a system, and. though he differed from Sir Isaac Newton and the Royal Astronomical society, he gave much study and research to the subject of meteorology, as shown by his various books. Theicwus an Astro-Meteorolog ical society as late as 18G1.?Nature. Not Pope Leo's Book. Mgr. Merry Del Val, private chamberlain to Pope Leo XIII, writes to the London Standard denying the widely published statement that a book written by the pope when he was Cardinal Pecoi was placed on tho Index Expuragtorius by Pius IX, where it now is. He says that the book in question, a treatise advocating devotion to the blood of the Virgin Mary, was written by the Rev. Carlo Pasletti, a pious, but eccentric priest of the diocese of Perugia. Electric Bitters. i This remedy is becoming so well j known and so popular as to need no I special mention. Al! who have used Elcctiic Bitters sing the same song of praise. A purer medicine dors not exist and it is guaranteed to do all that is claimed. Electric Bitters will cure all diseases of the Liver and Kidneys, will remove Pimples, Boils, Salt Bheum and other affections caused by impure blood.?"Will drive Malaria from the system and prevent as well as cure all Malaria fevers.?For cure of Headache1, Constipatiou and Indigestion try Electric Bitters?Entire satisfaction guaranteed, or money refunded.? Price 50 ets. and ?1 00 per bottle at the Bazaar. J ! TH3 Q-rgat jramuy A^eaicme, Is Spirittine Balsam. This valuable preparation is the puie extract of certain pine trees, and manutactured with great care, and in consequence of the astonishing success in removing diseases, has become very popular and is being called for again and again until it is a necessity in every household. This great family medicine has proven to possess the most safe and efficient properties for the cure of Colds, Bheumatism, Lameness, Sprains, Bruises Neuralgia, Sore Throat, Soreness in the ! Bones, Ringworm, and is very use; ful in all cases where an externa | remedy is applicable. For Earache, j and Toothache there is no better j remedy. Sufferers from Lung and i Bronchial Affections will obtain great relief, and for general use there is no better medicine for the household. : For sale wholesale and retail at the | Bazaar. Ail Free. { Those who have used Dr. King's ! New Discovery know its value, and j those who have not, have now the j opportunity to try it Free. Call on the advertised Druggist and get a j Trial Bottle, Free. Send your name ; and address to H. E. Bucklen & Co., ! Chicago, and get a sample box of ; Dr. King's New Life, Bills Free, as ; well as a copy of Guide to Health I and Household Instructor, Free. All I of which is guaranteed to do you i good and cost you nothing. For ' sale at the Bazaar. Fiiends, are you afflicted in any ! way. Then try nature's own remedy, j It affords all the benefits, is simple, | safe and reliable; can do no harm, and j has never been known to fail to do | good. Spirit tine Balsam. For sale i at the Bazaar. taammKmmmmmmmmaa*Eaaata ?ma Hcv a Tree G'rews. If you wish to become thoroughly j acquainted with the tree's mode of ] growth the tirst thing of importance j is to keep in view the function of the j "cambian layer"?the soft, spongy j substance lying between the wood | proper and the bark. The pulpy, j porous substance is really a tissue of \ miuute cells, visible only under the j microscope, and apparently all of the j same size and shape in any given vaj liety of tree. The cells lying near- J { est the bark contribute a permanent j accretion to the tree's covering, while those which lie nearest the wood slowly change from "eambian layer" I to real tree fiber. In this way the bark becomes thicker each year, and at the same time the tree itself is permanently enlarged. In the spring and early summer the baik on all trees is, to a ceit iin extent, loosened to permit of the ..ambian layer exercising its functions, and when this wholy ceases the result is manifect in the "hug* ef new wood and the thin layer of newly formed inner bark. The ends of each limb have also grown perceptibly?from two inches to two j feet, according to the species?but knots, marks, forks, etc. on the tree ! j trunks are r o higher from the ground .1 it J1 T? man mey were me je<ir ueiuic. jli | | someone tells you that a limb which is now but three or four feet from the ground "will be high enough to J walk under when the tree gets its growth" put him or her down as a person knowing but little about the natural history of trees. Do net take substitute when you ask for the one true blood purifier, Hood's Sar: aparilla. Insist upon Hood's and only Hood's. Hair and Ears. Midway in the seventies, when Bulow conducted in Glasgow, the local musicians and friends of the art gave him a grand banquet. Toward the end of the evening, when everybody was in high spirits, ?su low arose ana 111 iue tuuiwi possible manner administered the following damper: "Gentlemen, I have the greatest admiration for your concerts and all your musical conductors. I only regret to say that they resemble too much the omnibus conductors. You ask why? Because they are always behind ?omnibus conductors behind on the vehicle, musical conductors behind in time." Is or did he spare even his friends when ho was in the sarcastic mood. On a certain occasion he was conducting a concert in Hamburg, and cue of the pieces to be performed was Rubinstein's "Ocean Symphony.M What did he do? He sniffed at the score, turned itupside down on the desk, and then, throwing it aside, said, "To conduct music like this, one must, have long hair; I have not got it." This story, by the way, was told to Rubinstein shortly after, aixl he at once wroto to BuJow. "I wrote him,'' he says, "that his opinions were never the same two days running, and, inasmuch as that which he abused today lis praised tomorrow there was still hope for my poor music. Also, if ho had taken Ihe tronble to measure my hair, I regretted not having had leisure to measure his ears."?Chambers' Journal. The Drawing Power of Eorac. The drawing power of Rome itself is proverbial among travelers, taking form in tho belief that whoever drinks of the water of Trevi by moonlight and throws a coin-into tho fountain will some day come back. The name Trevi is sometimes derived from "trivium," "crossroads, " and all crossroads belonged to Hecate, goddess of enchantment, so that the superstition probably had its faraway origin in a spell of bygone days. But it is neither the moonlight, nor the water, nor the offering of tho obolos to the infernal gods, whereby the wanderer is sooner or later brought again to Rome. The center seeking force which once drew all the world to Rome's feet is not yet quire spent. In Rienzi's day there were not 20,"000 souls, all told, within the city. Things have changed i again since that time, and there has probably never been a time when so many people of all nations have been at least once in their lives within Rome's walls.?Marion Crawford in Century. When you come to town don't forget to call and settle your subserip- j fi/rn /^no tbo T~)i cria f /-?! 1 ARE YOU SICK, 7 j SlFFEItlXG, ! OR ; AFFLICTED IN ANY WAY, AND NEED DO VOUIVACT RELIEF!! | If so, you will find in the Drug | and Medicine Department at | the Bazaar, Standard Medi- ! cines for all Complaints,! Diseases, Etc, which will I give relief and cure you. AT THE BAZAAR, j LEXINGTON, S. C. I Do Yoii Want PURE PAINTS? FT"' -I \ v R*.-> 1 I | MfafclfijfllRS ^ , fis^f I I iSiM I mmmmm rr\ ; ? ""a "2v tit L - ii J^Mll i J SOI-D UNDKR GUARAKTFE. ACTUAL CCiT LZ~ > TIILI: U AO PIS QaL, Those who wish PAINTS, GRAINi>.'J tJUl^UlXd, STAINS, VARNISHES, JAPANS, OILS, ETC. Will find a select stock at the Bazaar in packages to suit the demand. COLORS of all shades,in oil or dry. KALSOMIXE in assorted colors, Turkey and Yenitian Red, Spanish Brown, Vermillion, etc. FLOOR PAINT, for Piazza and Porch work, covering floors nicely and cementing cracks. These paints are manufactured and prepared by Longman A 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 DO YOU GO HUNTING? - 1m * -! BOURSE You will buy a MARL1N. BECAUSE It his a solid top?Protection. It ejects at the side?Convenience. It Is light -weight?Comfort. It has the Ballaho Barrel?Accuracy. It has fewest parts-Simplicity. Send for complete catalogue, free. Special pack 0-" cards for 15 cents. THE MARL1N FIRE ARMS CO., New Haven, Conn. January 27?6iu Sir.ee isci I have hecn a -1 ff'Tc* fr.v catarrh. I Ely's Cream Ta rn. HFI,. ">"?Ao* l: (1 11 fl'i?e nine sum ^HA3f-FEV?fj Sj)? ^ & me 1. Terrihlejheadaehes rps, !roni which I had lo- c s ufWf j> *?&?Sk fen d are gone.?W. .1. Hit-licoek, late Major U. |||pL- ^Vol. ^t' d A. A. Gen CATARRH ELY'S CREAM BALM Opens and cleanses the N isa! Passage, Allays Pain and It fl immation. Heals the Sores Protects the Membrane Irom colds, Restores the Sense of Taste and S uell. The 33 dm is applied dir.ctlv i r:tn tli^ rrvslrils is neictklv absorbed and give.-', relief at at once. ELY'S PINEOLA BALSAM."*a sure eire t< r Cougus, Colds, & ;. i rife o Cream Balm, 10 cents, a Druggists or hv mail. ELY BROTHER CO Warren St., N Y. ?111 HA! R RB A LS A W C!can?rs and becirtifs'a the hair. KK^"!"''.a a luxuiiant tl*.. viSSI If ever Pails to Kcatoro Gray Hair to its Youthful Color. Cures. ccalp^iiiseasci /V^h-.ir Hlt^OERCORfis. The or.lv sure Cure lor Conn. Stops a.! pn:n. Ensure eomiuzi to lie icct, it ikes walking < itsy. at Druggisu. Grateful?Comforting. Breakfast?Supper. "By a thorough knowledge of the natural laws which govern the operations of digestion and nutrition, and by a careful application of tine properties of well selected Cocoa, Mr. Epps has provided for our breakeast and supper a delicately flavored beverage which may save us many heavy doctor's bil s. It is by the judicious use of such articles of diet that a constitution may be gradually built up until strong enough to resist every tendency to disease. Hundreds of subtle maladies are floating around us ri ady to attack whenever there is a we ik point. We may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping ourselves well fortified with pure blood and a p:op.rly nourished frame.- Civ.l .S- rviee GizAte. M ide simply with boiling water and milk. Sjld only in half j ouud tins, by Grocers, labelled thus: JAMES Ei PS & CO . Ltd., Homa.-cp ithic Chemists, London, England. P1NE0LA COUGH BALSAM is excerent for all throat inflammation and |i i: i. ^ for asthma. ConI(if?' sunu'tives \vi 1 inart!?*;J*'1 ts .ibat^t h ocou^li. who ;ire only sulTerintr from ;i chronic cold or deer> s uitod e. ujjii. often iurirrevated by catnri i). For ?*:i?s?rrli us<* Fly's Cream Bairn, 50 per !>"tt e; Pim-ola Balsam. at Drus:t'ists. In quantities of S-50 will deliver on receipt of amount. FLY BHOfllEBSsC Warren St . New York. jjTALL | TALK || Actual Achlcvorren's oft?m seem to beat a <ils- r| <) conot. bat after ail Aotl'.w. acii:>:v>:u>:nts are Q Q tbe only Hi mr* that count. f j f) Ii is c:isv to talk ia fieneral Term* about the O O merits of 1'IANOs, but - be more specific? O THE MATHUSHEK }{ fgrsat geathefn Fav6rit?. s! 0 Established 30 years. 30,000 now in use. O 0 So':l by us for i'< years. Note thfse Valuable O (y Patented Improvements? ti o Patent Repeating Action. o Q Patent Sounding Board. s? /( Patent Tuning Pin Bushing, a o Patent Improved Agraffes. O j? Patent Sort Stop. s> Q one of ih- only two Pianos made complete \) O ievvrv nan in its own Factory, fine of the Sr O tvst made in the L*. S. Sold lower than any ty <> other Hl;r:i Grade I'iano One profit only from Q v uiaker to purchaser. WHITE US. O LUDDEN & BATES,! 8 SAVANNAH, GA. j) Vvvvvwvvvvwwvvvvvvwvvv 4 ???a a ? Bapgaan?BB? i? "Blight costs cotton planters more than five million dollars annually. This is an enormous waste, and can be prevented. Practical experiments at Alabama Experiment Station show conclusively that the use of "Kainit" will prevent that dreaded plant i disease. Our pamphlets arc not advertising circulars Imnmia< special fertilizers, but arc practical works, containing the results of latest experiments in this line. Every cotton farmer should have a copy. They are sent fee for the asking. GERMAN KALI WORKS. >/3 Nassau St.. New York. . ~tisf7? ~ Jfi VJF SPIRITTIXE REMEDIES Endorsed by some of Ihe Leading M< dica Profession. No Quack or Patent Medicine, but ! NATURE'S PURE REMEDIES. ' Admitted into the World Columbian Exposition in 1803. Use Spirittine Ralsam for Rheumatism, Colds, Lameness. Sprains Sore Threat Use Spirittino InhHlent for Cor.sumtion. Consumptive Coughs, Catarrh, Asthma and I.a urippr Spirittine Ointment is indispensable in the treatment of Skin Diseases, Cure Itch, Itching Piles. In consequence of the astonishing success in removing diseases, i's demand now comes not alone Irom this vicinity but from everywheie in the United States and Europe. SPIRITTINE CH[MICA CC., WILMINGTON, N. C. Wholesale ami Retail by G. M IIARMAN, i.exir.g'oa, S 0 January 30 ly ?=Z_. ^w^STuT ZEIEB S OLl) Every household should have these wdl tried remedies so that in case of sickness your physician is ever at your command. They are popular, because they give ceitain and quick relief, wherever used. PLASTERS OLDliiE COCGIi SVRtP The Prince of Cough Syrups. The consumption preventive. For croup in children and coughs of all kiuds 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 for all diseases pe culiar to nor sex. rnee ?i. PLANTERS PILE OINTMENT, never fails t) 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, catanb, hoarseness, sore tioat, loss of von e, loss of. hcaiirg, Lay fever, etc. etc. Price 50 cents. THE TWIN PAIN KILLERS, Cuban Oil for extemrl use, Cuban Relief f< r internal use, for man and beast. Price 25 cents. PLANTERS SYRUP YERMIfuge, the Worm Destroyer. It is plesaut and the children like to take it. Price 25 cents. PLANTERSTONHC TEETHING Syrup brings health to the baby: rest to mothers. Price 25 cents. PLANTERS EYE WATER for inflamed and sore eyes of every dei scription. Strengthens the eyes of the age. 25 cents per bottle. PLANTERS PiNK PILLS stimi uhite the liver, sweetens the breath. brightens dull ejes. Cures constipation. Twenty-five doses for 25 cents. PLANTERS HEADACHE POW| deis for sick and nervous headache J and neuralgia. Will cure in 20 minutes. 10 cents per package. PLANTERS HORSE AND CATtle Powders, the finest medicine eur known for stock and poultry, luvest 25 cents and make your horse worth $50 more. PLANTERS NUBIAN TEA, the finest vegetable liver regulator in the woild. Does not gtipe. Cures bili iousness, indigestion, sour stomach, dyspepsia and all liver complaints. 25 cents per package. For sale at the Bazaar's Medj ical Department, Lexington, S. C. i -? 1 January r, jlouu. Chlrlic*ter'? EnjjlUh I>inmon:l I>r#ni. ITENNYROYAL FILLS I B Original nnd Only Genuine. A i SAr,:, always rvliablu. laoics ask &\ ? Dru^gfot for CMchftttr s Enrjink twin A Ilr>iti'l in Ke<i aijrt (*<> > I toetAliic^Xjj?' ' >-v ?scaled with M?ic riWion. Tutc \y W <9^ ^S-jno other. /.''/ /<> ilanyrou* mkstitu- v ' ' ? fjf timuaml imitation*. At lirujasism. or.?cnd 4e. Jgr in htai::;^ f.r pai'ieuUir*. totimoolali mil AC ?7 " Itrllef for I.ail led." "i I'tt'r, l.v return fr Mull. lO.OOrt T.-timoninls. S.iutf I'lj-r. ?'? / ('hicht-?t or Chemical <.'o.,Ma<ll??ii Sijuuio, 50!; lj ?:i Lw;il Iirujgists. i'biliidu., I'a. j NOlORE Fosses; I More Ejesi SHTCHFXLS EYE-SALVI A C'rtain Safe and Effective Remedy for | SORE, WEAK and INFLAMED EYES, Procuring Lonff-Strjhtetlncfis, and Restoring the Sight of the old. Cures Tear Drops, Granulation, Styo ! Tumors, Red Eyes, Matted Eye Lushes, AND PRODUCING QUICK RELIEF AND PERMANENT CURE. Also, equally cfliracSons wlion us<h1 In other maladies, snela as I'leers, Fever Sores, Tumors. Salt itheimi. Horns, I Flies, or wherever inflaimnasinn exi.ts, ; MITC'HKIiL'S SALVE may be used to advantage. I SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AT 25 CENTS, i irmmnw nn~wmr ?ttmmt t\um i mm n i mi mimimi >? i i i ? Boilers. CuTde' ur prices. Atlas and Erie Engines Tanks, Stacks, Stand Pipes and Sheet-Iron Work; ^halting, Pulleys, Hearing, Boxes, Hangers, etc. Complete Cotton, Saw, Crist, Oil and Fertilizer Mill outfits; also (Jin, Press, Cane Mill and Shingle outfits. ^ Building, Bridge, Factory, Furnace and Railroad Castings; Railroad, Mill, Machinists' and Factory Supplies.^ Belting, Packing, injectors, Pipe Fitting?, Saws, Files, Oilers, etc. Bij" Cast every day; work 150 hands. Lombard Iron Works and Supply Co., I'assenjjer Depot. AUGUSTA, GA. January1?lv UHILDBEN /%?/?'-J\WILL NEVER REFUSE TO TAKE - ^r' Thacher's Worm Syrup / WHO HAVE TAKEN IT ONCE. ^,' i Positively Removes Worms and their Causes. Regulates t^53??3| * *he *"'ver an<* Rowe,s* Restores the Appetite. * Mrs.SarahITarvey,of Warrensbnrg,Tenn?says: '/ * ** happened to get hold of one bottle of Dr. IL ' '! S. Thacher's Worm Syrup and gave it to my chil' drcn by the directional It is the best worm destroyer I PRICE, 25 CEUTTS: Dr. H. S. Thacher Medicine Co., CHATTANOOGA, TEh N. September 14?lv. Ilorick&lowrance COLUMBIA HOTEL BLOCK, COLUMBIA, S. C., HEADQCAKTEBS FOB CASE MIIIS. EVAPORATORS, MET COPPER, FIEXjID -A.2STID GLA-IRDDIEST SEEDS COTTON GiNS, FEEDEERS, CONDENSERS, PIJESSES AND BELTING, PLAIN AND DECORATED GLASS, MARBLEIZED MANTLES, GLAZED TILES GRATES, PEiSDERS, ETC., HAE.D77ARB ... 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 and invigorating medicine. Particularly effective in the cnre of Dyspepsia, Indigestion. Nausea, Sick Headache, Sour Stomach, etc. A valuable liver regulator. Corrects Fk! all disorders of thekidneys. Wonderfully - 5La? beneficial in female complaints Taken i^23 along with quinine, is an effectual cure for gj-ej^sa !?| 3 y^g73 Chills. A great appetizer when taken before meals. After meals aids digestion. In FOR THE large 25c., 50c. and $1 bottles, i a .u-n Bt.ar* wentioif ? S0l(J Ut the BaZiiar aU(1 *>7 ilIVERANO KIONE/S LfcIin,oa Wholesaleby THE MURRY DRUG CO., COLUMBIA, S. C. March 14?ly. i v s c k Half lb. 25 cts., quarter lb. 15 cts. J iJLMi Ncwonly Double Sweet Pea, .Bride of Niagara f Wrf, 1 K0viiii:ES... pang hock, aa True to Name, (0 > Lfif I SSfitJSS,. b! I 3 hw 111 P?P^et25c.(ft I Hgyii> LS.,, r LUnHL? I l 5- IeJjf / *otato*s. ctc- i ry a pacKec. / i Thc WcHdcrfui Crimson Rambler Rose only 15c. 5 Vicks Floral Guidb for 1896 contains Iitho- aC*!* g <& p MBS W graphs of Double Sweet! Pea. Roses, I'lack- g ? 1 ? 3 berry, Raspberry, New leader Tomato, etc. I n fi ? 8 5 n S? 7/ Mailed on receipt of to cents, which may be deducted from first order, RJ? M B Je 8L_ /: really free?or free with an order for any of the above. var xi y/ JAMES Y!CK'S SONS, Rochester, N. Y.^tsxsss><sxs^<s^<s:<s><s?/|c DIAMOND DYES! a I | or | ETEE7 SOWGSITASLE CCLCIt ? x x> v FOR |. Wool, Cotton, Silk, Feathers, Etc I o< 7 7 x> jILARMAN'S BAZAAR, i i j MTiOIRIi, FRUITS, CAKES, CRACKERS, E\A.:tTC"2" &ECCEEIES, I CIGAIIS, CHEWING a nil SMOKING TOBACCO Tovs, Fancy Goods, Notions, ?/ 7 ?/ * j IZ>:ES"CJGrS and. 2^E3DICI3STE:S, FERFLMERV, STATIOXEBV, SCHOOL BOOKS, ALBLMS, ETC, fiST" A well selected stock of the above Goods constantly on hand and I always at the very lowest prices. These Goods are all fresh and reliable. LEXINWTON U. II. , 8.C.