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' ?' [} -w^the^^6" | advertising rates. best advertising medium W |g \ w w m? >^i fi |Lf "W y V m V & W *4 m T 9 \ W A ^ 4 / V W V Advertisements will be inserted at the - _iK- I LI F; I _} %/ IIV T /iTi 1 \ I 9 18 kZ II A 1 Y I I ?* .fw.?*p?. a* jp**?sou*_c*roii . I itl^tiyvIiNO 1OIN UloPA 1 vn#;5rSEi^ _ . m-oo nwioavmt V ^ ing to advertise for three, six and twelve bemism? RATES REASONABLE. months. ^ O ? ' 1 Notices in the local column 10 cents per ^ ??????????? ? 7TTJ line each inserion. i sxibsckiptioksitebakntjm ^ lexington, s. 0., april 24, 1896. no. 29. e^ws2sr-.? j ifeiftr pri\ti\t. 1 spft1alty. i ' ___^ ??m Itll/H 1 Illil 1 LIU IM. MB . GO TO PHILIP IPSTII f trustee, for I MI, !hats, ; mmm n A A TV n II llllllltt. TRUNKS AND VALISES, 180 MAIN STREET, COLUMBIA, S. CJ. \ SOUTHERN RAILWAY. * Central time betweeu Colombia and J?ffUionvIll?. Eastern time between Colombia and other point*. Northbound No. SSjN'u. 3D .No. 3S February 28, 1890. Daily., Daily.; Dally. Lv. Jacksonville 11 00 a! 8 50 p I *' Savannah - 52p| 11 20p j: Ar. Columbia 6 44 pi 8 50 a I Lv. Charleston ! 5 80 p 730a ' Ar. Columbia < j 10 lOp 110.") a Lv. Augusta 7 00 p 2Q5p " ttraniveville 7 48 p 2 83 p " Trenton 8 23p 2 58p " Johnstons 8 45 p 3 10 p Ar. Columbia Un. depoi 11 20 p 4 45 p Lv Columbia Bland'g St. 7 54p 5 00 a 505p " Wiunsboro 8 47p 8 03 a 6 05 p "-3* " Chester 934p 8 55 a 6 53 p " RockHill 10 07p 7 84 a 7 30p Ar. Charlotte 10 50p 8 25 a 8 20p ** Danville 2 80a 1 30 p 1200m At. Richmond 6 40 p 6 00a At. Washington 945a 940p 6 42 a " Baltimore 1105a 1125p 805a "" Philadelphia. 1 20p 3 00 a 10 25 a " New York 3 58 p 0 20a 12 53p fii.nfiii.nnnj No. 31 No. So No. 37 Southbound. Dully.I I>ally.! Dally. Lv. New York 3 20p!1215ntj 4 30p " Philadelphia. 5 57 p S 50 a| 6 55 p Baltimore S 37 p 6 22 a: 9 20 p Lv. Washington 10 05 p 11 15 aj 10 48 p Lv. Richmond 12 55 pi 2 00 a Lv. Danville 5 00 aj 6 05 p 550a C " Charlotte 8 40a llOOp1 9 35a " Rock Hill 9 22 a, 11 46 p| 10 20 a V " Chester !.. 9 58aj 1219ntj 10 55a I " Winnsboro 10 34 a 1 08 a 11 41 a Ar ColumbiaBland'gst. 1136a 2 10a; 12 50p Lv. Columbia Un. depot 4 30 aj 1 20 p i?;~ " Johnstons 6 32a; 3 lOp - *' Trenton 6 48 a! 3 23 p M <3ranitevill6 7 16 a) 3 45 p |gWJ- Ar. Augusta 8 00 a; 4 15 p Lv. Columbia | 7 00a 4 OOp Ar. Charleston ) 11 10oj 8 OOp Lv. Columbia.. 10 46a! 118 a; - Ar.Savannah ... 2 36pj 5 85a' ' Jacksonville 6 30 p' 9 45 a! . SLEETING CAR SERVICE. Nos. 37 and 38?"Washington and Southwestern Limited. Yestibuled Pullman cars, between J^jicusta and New York. Solid Yestibnled with dining cars and first class coaches f 3x0rlit of Charlotte. F j&Xi. 35 and 36?U. S. Fast Mail. Through '3Pu&*fefr$ drawing room buffet sleeping car beI . Itwecaa Jacksonville and New York and Char' Jtotie and Augusta- Also Pullman sleeping ' '-cars between Jacksonville and Cincinnati via Ashevillc. Nos. 31 and 32?"New York and Florida Short ff.fae Limited," comprises between New York ^and St. Augustine: Pullman compar Intent and library observation ears, Pullman drawing-roorn ears, vestibuled coaches with smoking .room and also dining cars serving meals, t Also drawing-room Pullman cars between New York ana Tampa. Southbound this train Vrill carry Pullman drawing-room sleeping oar t ' New York to Columbia, en route to Augusta by f 'Train No. 37: and northbound by train No. 33 f. ^ Augusta to New York. >V-H- GREE-V, J. M. CULP, ?* Supt., Washington, T. M.. Washington. "W. A. TUBK. S. H. HARD WICK, . J;"' ^ Xi. P. A.. Washington. A. G. P. A.. Atlanta. F. W. HUSEMANN, GXtXAND LOCKSMITH, ?and dealer in SMS, fism?* PISTOL CARTRIDGES FiSHINa TACKLE, and all kindsT of Sportsmen's Articles, which he has now on exhibition and for ale at his store. street, Near the Central Bank, Columbia, S, C. AGENT FOR HAZARD POWDER CO. Repairing done at short notice. Paper and envelopes of all kinds writing and pencil table's, pens, pencils, memorandum and pass I ,f> books, parses, banjo, violin and I gui'ar strings, and notions generally, TURNING GRAY AND THREATENED WITH BALDNESS The Sanger is Averted by Using AYER'S^vissb "Nearly forty years ago, after some weeks of sickness, my hair turned gray and began falling out so rapidly that I was threatened ?\.nl,l?APo XToovm? wii-ii iiiiuicuiaic uitiuucos. AVer's Hair Vigor highly spoken of, I commenced using this prepare. tion, and was so well satisfied with the result that I have never tried -At 'v' Tf cfAn uny oiuer miju ui uicoom^. xu ped the hair from falling out, stimulated a new growth of hair, and kept the scalp free from dandruff. Only an occasional application is now needed to keep my hair of good, natural color. 1 never hesitate to recommend any of Ayer's medicines to my friends.'*?Mrs. II. M. Haight, Avoca, Neb. Ayer's Hair Vigor PREPARED BY OR. J. C. AYER A CO., LOWELL, MASS., U. S. A. Ayer's Sarsaparilla Removes Pimples. CHRIST'S SAD EXILE. THE LONG EXPATRIATION WAS DR. TALMAGE'S SUNDAY THEME. When the Kins Went Forth end Tarried In a Place Which Was Far Off?Christ's Great Homesickness?From the Throneroom to the Sheep Pen. Washington, April 19.?It is wonderful to how many tunes the gospel may be set Dr. T aim age's sermon today shows another way in which the earthly experience of our Lord is set forth. His text was II Samuel xv, 17, "And the king went forth and tarried in a place which was far off." Far up and far back in the history of heaven there came a period when its most illustrious citizen was about to absent himself. He was not going to sail from beach to beach; we have often done that He was not going to pnt out from one hemisphere to -mother hemisphere ; many of us have done that But he was to sail from world to world, the spaces unexplored and the immensities untraveled. No world has ever hailed heaven, and heaven has never hailed any other world. I think that the windows and tho balconies were thronged, and that the pearly beach was crowded with those who had come to see him sail ont of the harbor of light into the ocean beyond. Out and out and out, and on and on and on, and down and down and down he sped, until one night, with only one to greet him when he arrived, his disembarkation so unpretending, so quiet that it was not known on earth until the excitement in the cloud gave intimation.to the Bethlehem rustics that nnn.Afl.infv nMnd o,ii1 r?r?i/iric liar! Vifiru OUUiCluui^ giauu mmu peiicd. Who comes there? From what port did he sail? Why was this the place of his destination? I question the shepherds. I question the camel drivers. I question the angels. I have found out He was an exile. But the world had plenty of exiles. Abraham, "an exile from Haran; John, an exile from Ephopt": Kosciusko, an exile from Poland; Mazzini, an exile from Rome; Emmet, an exile from Ireland; Victor Hugo, an exile from France; Kossuth, au exile from Hungary. But this cue of whom I speak today had such resounding farewell and came into such chilling reception?for not et en a hostler went out with his lantern to light him in?that ho is more to be celebrated than any oth er expatriated exile of earth or heaven. From Throne room to Sheep Fen. First, I remark that Christ was an imperial exile. He get down off a throne. He took off a tiara. He closed a palace gate behind him. His family were princes and princesses. Vashti was turned out of the throncrooni by Ahasuerus. David was dethroned by Absalom's infamy. The live kings were hurled into a cavern by Joshua's courage. Some of the Henrys of England and some cf the Louis cf France were jostled on their tlironcs by discontented subjects. But Christ was never more honored or mere popular cr more loved than the day he left heaven. Exiles have suffered severely, but Christ turned himself out from tlironeroom into sheep pen, and down from the top to the bottom. He was not pushed off. He was not manacled i'or foreign transportation. He was not put out because they no more wanted him in celestial domain, but by choice, departing and descending into an exile five times as long as that of Napoleon at St. Helena, and a thousand times worse?the one exile suffering for that he had destroyed nations, the other exile suffering because lie came to save a world. An imperial exile. King eternal. ' 'Blessing and honor and glory and power be unto him that sitteth upon the throne," But I go farther and tell you he was an exile on a barren island. This world is one of the smallest islands of light in the ocean of immensity. Other stellar kingdoms are many thousand tinns larger than this. Christ came to this small Patincs of a world. When exiles are sent out, they are generally sent to regions that are sandy or cold or hot? some Dry Tortugas of disagreeableness. Christ came as an exile to a world scorched with heat and bitten with cold, to deserts simoom swept, to a howling wilderness. It was the back dooryard seemingly of the universe. Yea, Christ came to the poorest part of this barren island of a world?Asia Minor, with its intense summers, unfit for the residence of a foreigner, and in the fttipy season unfit for the residence of a. native. Christ came not to such a land as America or England or France or Germany, but to a land one-third of the year drowned, another third of the year burned up, and only one-third of the year just tolerable. Oh, it was the barren island of a world 1 Barren enough for Christ, for it gave such, small worship and such inadequate affection, and such little gratitude. Imperial exile on the barren island of a world. The Earth A|alait Him. I go farther and tell you that he was an exile in a hostile country, Turkey was never so much against Russia, France was never so much against Germany, as this earth was against Christ It took him in through the door of a stable. It thrust him out at the point of a spear. The Roman government against him with every weapon of its arm, and every decision of its courts and every beak of its war eagles. For years after his arrival the only question was how best to nut him out Herod hated him, the high priests hated him, the Pharisees hated him, Judas Iscariot hated him. Gestas, the dying thief, hated him. The whole earth seemingly turned into a detective to watch his steps, ^jid yet he faced this ferocity. Notice that most of Christ's wounds were in front. Some scourging on the shoulders, but most of Christ's wounds in front He was not on retreat when he expired. Face to face with the world's ferocity. Face to face with the world's sin. Face to face with the world's woe. His eye on the raging countenances of his foaming antagonists when he expired. When the cavalry officer roweled his steed so that he might come nearer up and see the tortured visage of the suffering exile, Christ saw it When the spear was thrust at his side, and when the hammer was lifted for his feet, and when the reed was raised to strike deeper down the spikes of thorn, Christ watched the whole procedure. When his hands were fastened to the cross they were wide open still wirn benediction. Mind yqp, bis bead was not fastened He coold look to the rigbt and be could look to tbe left, and be could look up and he could look down. He saw when tbe spikes bad been driven home, and tbe bard, round, iron beads were in the palms of his bands. He saw them as plainly as you ever saw any-* thing in tbe palms of your hands. No ether, no chloroform, no merciful anaesthetic to dull or stupefy, but, wide awake, he saw the obscuration of the heavens, the unbalancing of the rocks, the countenances quivering with rage and tbe cachinnation diabolic. Ob, it was the hostile as well as tbe barren island of a world. Far From Heaven. I go farther and tell you that this exile was far from home. It is 95,000, - 000 miles from here to tne sun, ana au astronomers agree in saying that our solar system is only one of the smaller wheels of the great machinery cf the universe turning around some one great center, the center so far distant it is beyond all imagination and calculation, and if, as some think, that great center in the distance is heaven, Christ came far from home when he came here. Have you ever thought of the homesickness of Christ? Some of yon know what homesickness is when you have been only a few weeks absent from the domestic circle. Christ was 88 years away from home. Some of yon feel homesickness when you are a hundred or a thousand miles away from the domestic circle. Christ was more million miles away from home than you could count if all your life you did nothing but count. You know what it is to be homesick even amid pleasant surroundings, but Christ slept in huts, and he was athirst, and he was a-hungered, and he was on the way from being born in another man's barn to being buried in another man's grave. I have read how the Swiss, when they are far away from their native country, at the sound of their national air get so homesick that they fall into melancholy, and sometimes they die under the homesickness. But, oh, the homesickness of Christ ! Poverty homesick fcr celestial riches. Persecution homesick for hosanna. Weariness homesick for rest. Homesick for angelic and archangelic companionship. Homesick to o# +Ua v>irrVtf on/1 cf/trm VUl U1 IUU UUU VUV UW44U, and the world's execration. Homesickness will make a week seem as long as a month, and it seems to me that the three decades of Christ's residence on earth must have seemed to him almost interminable. You have often tried to measure the other pangs of Christ, but you have never tried to measure the magnitude and ponderosity of a Saviour's homesickness. I take a step farther and tell you that Christ was in an exile which he knew would end in assassination. Holrnan Hunt, the master painter, has a picture in which he represents Jesus Christ in the Nazarcne carpenter shop. Around him are the saws, the hammers, the axes, the drills of carpentry. The picture represents Christ as rising from the carpenter's working bench and wearily stretching out his arms as one will after being in contracted or uncomfortable posture, and the light of that picture is so arranged that the arms of Christ, wearily stretched forth, together with bis body, throw on the wall the shadow of the cross. Oh! my friends, that shadow was oil everything in Christ's lifetime. Shadow of a cross on the Bethlehem swaddling clothes. Shadow of a cross on the road over which the three fugitives fled into Egypt. Shadow of a cross on Lake Galilee as Christ walked its mosaic floor of opal and emerald and crystal. Shadow of a cross on the road to Enimaus. Shadow of a cross on the brook Kedron, and on the temple, and on the side of Olivet. Shadow of a cross on sunrise and sunset. Constantine, marching with his army, saw just once a cross in the sky, but Christ saw the cross all the time. The End Wm Death. On a rough journey we cheer ourselves with the fact that it will end in warm hospitality, but Christ knew that Superior to All Other. Gerexto, Miss , May 6th, 1892. Although 1 never used any secret remedies before, I prescribe St. Joseph's Sarsaparilla in my practice as I would any prescription of my own compounding, and any physician who' will do the same will be greatly pleased at the results achieved. In my opinion it is superior to all others and has been especially useful to me in Rheumatic and Scrofulous cases. R. M. KITTREL, M. D. For further information call at Julian E. Kauffmann's drug store and ask for a pamphlet entitled. "A Treatise on the Blood." 23, - A Life Saved. Jamestown, Tenn., October 15, 1891. My daughter tried physicians and I < nearly all remedies for Female irregularities, but received no relief or j benefit whatever. We had nearly despaired of her recovery when we were induced by our postmaster, Mr. A. A. Gooding, to try Gerstle's j Female Panacea, and after using four bottles she was entirely cured, for which I feel it my duty to let it be known to the world and suffering humanity, for I believe she owes her life to the Panacea. A. J. MACE, j Sheriff of Fentress County, Teun. j For further information call at I Julian ?. Kauffman's drug store and get free, a pamphlet entitled, "Ad- i t 4s\ \X7s\y*-\nn on OeVior TT?pfnl Tn- i formation." 23. I his rough path would end at a defoliagcd tree without one leaf and with only two branches, bearing fruit of sucli bitterness as no human lips had ever tasted. Oh, what an exile?starting in an in- ( fancy without any cradle and ending in . assassination! Thirst withou t any water. Day without any sunlight The doom of a desperado for more than angelic excellence. For what that expatriation and , ( that exile? Worldly good sometimes comes from worldly evil. The acciden- < tal glance of a sharp blade from a razor > ? grinder's wheel put out' the eye of Gam- ! \ betta and excited sympathies which ! i srained him an education and started ! < him on a career that made his name j < more majestic among Frenchmen than any other name in the last 20 yeara 1 Hawthorne, tnrned out of tho office 1 of collector at Salem, went home in de- * spair. His wife touched him on the shoulder and said, "Now is the time to i write your book," and his famous 1 "Scarlet Letter" was the brilliant consequence. Worldly good sometimes j I comes from worldly evil. Then be not unbelieving when I tell you that from the greatest crime of all eternity and of j the whole universe, the murder of the j Son of God, there shall come results j I which shall eclipse all the grandeurs of J eternity past and eternity to come, j \ Christ, an exile from heaven opening j j the way for the deportation toward j i heaven and to heaven cf all those who ' t will accept the proffer. Atonement, a i ship large enough to take all the passen- f gers that will come aboard it. ' ( The Open Gates. j For this royal exile I bespeak the love and service of all the exiles here present. nnfl in fine sense or the other that I * includes *11 of us. The gates of this j | continent have been so widely opened I ? that there are here many voluntary ex- i r iles from other lands. Seme of you are Scotchmen. I sec it in your high cheek ; / bones and in the color that illumines | your face when I mention the land of j your nativity. Bonny Scotland! Dear j * old kirk! Some of your ancestors sleep- ! ing in Greyfriars churchyard, or by the i deep lochs filled out of tho pitchers of j heaven, or under the heather, sometimes ' so deep of color it makes one think of j the blood of the Covenanters who signed : c their names for Christ, dipping their i x pens into the veins of their own arms : opened for that purpose. How every | ? fiber of your nature thrills as I mention i t the names of Robert Bruce and the t Campbells and Cochrane! I bespeak for ; this royal exile of my text the love and I \ the service of all Scotch exiles. Some of < you are. ihigiisnmen. i our ancestry i served the Lord. Have I not read of the nfferings of the Haymarket, and have j i not seen in Oxford the very spot where Ridley and Latimer mounted the red chariot? Some of your ancestors heard George Whitefield thunder, or heard Charles Wesley sing, cr heard John Bunyan tell his dream of the celestial city, and the cathedrals under the shad- j ow of which some of you were horn had i in their grandest organ roll the name of the Messiah. X bespeak for the royal exile cf my sermon the love and the service of all English exiles. Yes, some of you came from the island of distress over which hunger, on a throne of human skeletons, ' *at queen. All efforts at amelioration baited by massacre. Procession of fain- : ines, precession of martyrdoms march- ! Ing from northern channel to Cai>e Clear and from the Irish sea across to j s the Atlantic. An island not bounded as j t geographers tell us, but, as every philo?>+V,w\T\iof l-n^Tco lionTirlrrl nil tinrtll ICIUUUVyiOV AAAV1TO) V* VM W1V MW* j and the scrith and the east and the west j j by woe which no human politics can al- } leviate and only Almighty God can as- j ] mage. Land of Goldsmith's rhythm, ; j and Sheridan's wit, and O'CcnneH's : j eloquence, and Edmund Burke's states- ! ^ manship, and O'Brien's sacrifice. An- j . other Patmos with its apocalypse of j blood. Yet you cannot think of it today , without having your eyes blinded with emotion, for there your anceslbrs sleep ! in graves, some of which they entered ' for lack of bread. For this royal exile of my sermon I bespeak the love and the < service of all Irish exiles. Yes, some of rou are from Germany, the land of Lu- , ] tber, and some of you are from Italy, the hind of Garibaldi, and some of yon arc from France, the land of Joliu Calvin, j one of the three miglitics of the glorious j reformation. Some of you are descend- j ants of the Puritans, and they were j exiles, and some of yon arc dc sceudants ; > of the Huguenots, and they were exiles, { 1 and some of you arc descendants of the j Holland refugees, and they were exiles, j ] "Goinc Home." Some of you were born on the hanks : ot the 1 uzoo or cue eavanna.ii, aiiu yuu ; arc now living. in this latitude. Some ; , of you on the banks of the Kennebec, or , at the foot of the Green Mountains, and i , you are here now. Some of you on the ! prairies of the west, or the tablelands, | and yon are here now. Oh, how many ! j of us far away from home. All of us ; exiles. This is not our heme. Heaven ! ; is our home. Oh, I am so glad when J the royal exile went back he loft the ; gate ajar, or left it wide open. ''Going ; home!" That is the dying exclamation i ' of the majority of Christians. I have ! ] seen many Christians die. I think nine ! j out of ten of them in the last moment j say, "Going home." Going home out of i banishment and sin and sorrow and sad- i uess. Going home to join in the hilari- j 1 ties of our parents and our dear children , ( who have already departed. Going home ; ^ to Christ. Going home to God. Going j < home to stay. Where are your loved : 1 ones that died in Christ? You pity j them. Ah, they ought to pity you! You j ] are an exile far from home. They are i j home! Oh, what a time it will be for you when the gatekeeper of heaven , shall say: "Take off that rough sandal, the journey's ended. Put down that ' saber, the battle's won. Put off that iron coat of mail and put on the robe of ] conqueror." that gate of triumph I 1 ... - _ leave you today, only reading three tender cantos translated from the Italian. If you ever heard anything sweeter, I never did, although I cannot adopt all its theology: Twas whispered one moraine in heaven How the little ehild angel May, In the shade of the great white portal, Sat sorrowing night and day; How she said to the stately warden. He of the key and bar: "Oh, angel, sweet angel, I pray you Set the beautiful gates ajar, Only a little, I pray you. Set the beautiful gates ajar. "I can hear my mother weeping. She is lonely: she cannot see A glimmer of light in the darkness When the gates shut after me. Oh. turn me the key, sweet angel; The splttidor will shine so far." But the warden answered, "I dare not Set the beautiful gates ajar," Spoke low and answered, "I dare not Set the beautiful gates ajar." Then up rose Mary, the blessed, ' Sweet Mary, the mother of Christ. Her hand on the hand of the angel She laid, and her touch sufficed. Turned was the key in the portal, Fell ringing the golden bar. And, lo, in the little child's fingers Stood the beautiful gates ajar, In tho little child's angel fingers Stood the beautiful gates ajar. Elevated Back Yards. Some of the second floor dwellers ot rreniont enjoy advantages of which the xxupants of the first floors are deprived. In many parts of that district the Iweliing houses are built adjoining. Some of these houses are erected after he cheapest plans possible, and in many instances the owners refuse to bear tho jxpenses of having hills behind them ;ut down. By this fact the occupants of the first 3oor are deprived of yard advantages, ivhile those on the second and often on he third and fourth floors have them. It is not an uncommon thing there 'or an occupant of the first floor to ask :he occupant of the second or third, 'May I hang my clothes in your back rard?"?New York Herald. $100 Howard $100. The readers of this paper will be >lease to learn that there is at least >ae dreaded disease that sciense has )eeo able to cure in all its stages, and hat is Citarrb. Hull's Catarrh Care s the only positive core known to he medical fraternity. Citarrb beog a constitutional disease, requires t constitutional treatment. Hall's Uitarrh Cure is taken internally, actog directly npon the blood and maions sarfaces of the system, thereby iestroying the foundation of the dissase, and giving the patient strength >y building np the constitntion and listing natnre in dcicg its work The proprietors have so mncb faith n its curative powers, that they offer )ne Hundred Dol'ars for any case hat it Mils to core. Sand for list of estimonials. 25 THE FASHION PLATE. White satin and silk are made into hilars, collarettes and cuffs to wear vith thin dresses. Collarettes and fronts of. green taffeta ire much admired and will be worn vith dresses of almost all summer ma crials. Heliotrope and orange is a new com>inatioiL It is just tolerable if theprop:r shades are placed together. If not, it a atrocious. Skirts of lawn and dimity and orjandie are made up with ruffles trimned with narrow valenciennes lace, ivith a scalloped edge. A girl's hat has a wide brim, peaked >ver the front and faced with velvet. The Tarn O'Shanter crown is of velvet, md there are loops and quill feathers at he side. Bright green is to be one of the popuar colors of the season. It is specially iked, with the newr linens and dimities, ivhicli are among the most desi^ible of ;he coming warm weather dresses. A dreasy afternoon costume is made of vhito Irish poplin. It has the usual full jored skirt and a waist fitted at the iides and buck, and with entire front md very full sleeves of crepon. The 5ollar, shoulder scams, front and division between the puffs of the sleeves arc . rimmed with gold galloon. rT"lf? ?1 ~4l*>v rlrnococ J. lit! Mt_'t!\ t'i3 UJ. lli'J UlWlOlt1iIOUlu<.tuvu Iroop from the shoulders and have more !ullness at the elbows than at any point ibove. To let us down very gradually, 20wever, from the shoulder fullness, [here arc full ruffles, like the eaves of a liouse, that project out over tho tops of ;he collapsed sleeves. ?New York Ledger. TURF TOPICS. Mulalt, 2:21, will be trained this pear again. Jockey Joe Chocn can no longer get iwn to 107 puuds. Santiago, owned by Lucky Baldwin, has been retired to the stud. Abdullah Mambrino, one of the ino6t noted sons of Almoin, is dead. The pacing mare Effie Powers, 2:103,, will be campaigned again this season. Miss Nelson, 2:123-4, is being jogged on the roads around Lexington, Ky., by her trainer, Richard Curtis. Eugene Leigh is quoted as saying that he will ship all cf liis big string of horses east at the close of the Louisville meeting. Race track correspondents of English papers state that Mr. Croker's Montauk is going on well in his preparation for the Derby. The great pacing stallion Direct, 2 :05 is now housed in a $o,000 barn. The barn contains but three stalls and is isolated from the others. Vacation Time [s at Land and is gladly welcomed by all, especially those whose duties in life Lave caused them to greatly run down I heir system to meet the ran nir^mpntQ. rdivsieal and mental, ! X" J _ forced upon them. With these and Dthers, it is important, whether at borne, at the seashore or in the country, that some thought be given to diet, and as fuither assistance to Nature, a good building-up medicine like Hood's Sarsaparilla had best be resorted to. If the digestion is poor, liver deranged and frequent headaches seem to be the rule. Hood's will change all this and enable everyone to return to their home and business in a refreshed state of mind and bodily health. 24 . - -. - Liver Ills Like biliousness, dyspepsia, headache, constipation, sour stomach, indigestion are promptly cured by Hood's rills. They do their work Hood's easily and thorouehlv. I I _ Best after dinner pills. WfJ III 25 cents. All druggists. I III Prepared by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. The only Pill to take with Hood's Sarsaparilla. PERSONAL GOSSIP. Vincent Ray, a Chippewa Indian who died the other day in Superior, Wis., left an estate of $75,000. The Prince cf Wales has taken up cycling in a very mild way, as so far he has confined his attentions to the tricycle. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shade of Kendallville, Ind., arc the smallest people in the state. They are both under 3 feet in height. When Thomas B. Reed graduated from Bowdoin college, his oration took the iirst Jbngiish prize. ii#s subject was "The Fear of Death-" Lewis G. Stevenson, son of Vice President Stevenson, arrived in San Francisco the other d^y from the east, whither he went several mouths ago to regain his health. He is entirely recovered. Professor Albert Koebele of California has made a three years' contract with the Hawaiian government to destroy the insect pests of the islands. His method is to get insects harmless to man to kill noxious insects. Rev. Dr. J. IL C. Roentgen, pastor of the First Reformed church of Cleveland and superintendent of the German hospital there, is a cousin of the famous Professor Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen, the discoverer of the X rays. W. G. McDonald, the millionaire tobacco manufacturer of Montreal, has just given $50,000 to McGill university to provide a building for the study of chemistry, mining and architecture. This brings McDonald's donations to McGill up to $2,000,000. Jack Chinn, who was so.prominent 111 the recent Kentucky senatorial deadlock, mvs "Mv father taucrht me not to look for trouble. 'My son,' ho said, 'if I ever hear of your provoking a difficulty, I'll give you 1,000 lashes, and if you get into one and quit I'll kill you.' " According to a London correspondent, up to the present time Mr. Justin McCarthy has received something like ?20, 000 as his share of ihe proceeds of the sale of his "History of Our Own Time." It is said that nearly the whole of this ?20,000 profit has been devoted to the cause of Ireland. The secretary of war has appointed Major General A. McD. MeCook, retired, and Major George P. Scriven, signal corps, to represent the United States at the coronation of the czar. Major Scriven is military attache of the United States legation at Rome. General McCook is in Paris at present The Rev. Charles M. Bowen (Methodist) of Chicago, who was 90 years old the other day, has been for years a conspicuous figure in the great Methodist camp meetings, where his vigorous and old fashioned responses have gained for him the affectionate appellation of "Halleluiah" and "Amen" Bowen. Letters so addressed have repeatedly reached him. SOME MODERN BIG THINGS. A redwood plank exhibited at the Kansas City exposition was 16 feet long, 7 feet 9 inches wide and 5 inches thick. The great hammer at the Woolwich Gun works, Woolwich, England, weighs 40 tons, and its drop is a sheer fall of 44 feet 3 inches. The 5,000 horsepower pumping engine in the mines at Freidensville, Pa., raises 17,500 gallons of water at each revolution of its gigantic flywheeL The English royal navy architect says that a "perfect" modern man-of-war should weigh not less than 25,000 tons and cost at least ?2,000,000, or $10,000, 000. Tho largest bronze casting ever made in America is the buffalo's head which hangs at tiio eastern entrance 01 ine Union Pacific bridge between Omaha and Conncil Bluffs. The highest building in the world, monuments and towers not considered, is the Cologne cathedral. The height of this building from the pavement to the copper tip 011 the spire is oil feet. The pavement in front of the William H. Vauderbilt residence in New York city cost over $40,000. The single stone lying directly in front is the largest known paving stone, and cost, transportation and all, $D, 000. The largest statue in the United States is Bartboldi's "Liberty Enlight eniug the World," wmcn stanas 011 Bedloe's island, New York harbor. The statue alone, without base or pedestal, weighs 440,000 pounds. One of the largest checks ever drawn in this country was for $10,000,000, by President Iloberts of the Pennsylvania railroad, in payment of 200,000 shares of Philadelphia, Wilmington and Baltimore railroad stock. NOVELTIES. Bread forks of antique shape show pierced tints and heavy chased handles. Bonbon spoons show openwork silver gilt bowls and long, heavy and elaborately carved handles. A new addition to the already varied line of belts is the elastic belt, a combination of silk webbing and leather. Vernis-Afartin cabinets, with their union of Sevres porcelain and metal mounted woodwork, are sumptuous affairs. A novelty among connoisseurs, designed especially for women and made in sterling silver, is a combination purseand glovfe hook. Silver mounted flowerpots, whichwere brought out in large variety for Easter, have come to stay. These fill a long felt want in the house beautiful? i Jewelers' Circular. ' ORGANIZE! In accordance with a resolution adopted by the State Democratic Executive Committee, the President of the various Township Clubs in Lexington county, is hereby ordeied to call a meeting of his respective club on May 2, for the purpose of re-organizing the club; the election of one Executive Committeeman; the election of delegates to a County Convention to be held on the first Monday in May, to elect delegates to the State Convention to be held in Columbia on the third Wednesday in May next. By order H. J. Skibi.es, County Cnairman. April 8, 189G. Democratic Club Meetings Saluda Club. The members of Saluda Democratic club will meet at HiltoD, May 2,189G, at 3 o'clock p. in., for the purpose of reorganizing the club, and to elect a Member of the County Executive Committee, also to elect delegates to the County Convention, to meet at at Lexington C. H., the l*t Mouday in May. G. A. Derrick, Pres. Lexington Club. There will be a meeting of Lexington Township Democratic club, in the court house, at this place, on the 2d day of May, at 3 o'clock p. m., for the purpose of reorganizing the club and to elect a member of the County Executive Committee, also to elect delegates to the County Convention which assembles on the 1st Monday of May next. ?5y order Jr. JtL. Uauohman, President. M. D. Harman, Secretary. April 15,1896. Peak Club. The Democratic club will meet in the Town Hall, at Peak, on the 2d day of May next, at 3 o'clock p. m. A full attendance is desired, as business ofimportance will be transacted. The election of officers for the next two years, and the election of delegates to the County Convention, and other business of interest to all Democrats. By order of J. D. Fake, President. Jas. B. Addy, Secretary. pine 1udgk club. Pine Kidge Club Democratic will meet the 2d day May, at 3 o'clock, at the Alliance hall to re-organ j dize, elect delegates to the county convention and a committee man for j the club. |D. I. Eptixg. 1rmo CLtrb. Irmo Democratic Club will meet at , the usual place of meeting, on Sat! urday, May 2d, for the purpose of re-organizing, electing delegates to the county convention and a committee mac. J. H. Counts, President. J. L. Shclek, Secretary. conga re 2 ci.ub. This Democratic Club is called to meet at Brookland on the second day of May, 189G, at 3 o'clock p. m., for the purpose of re-organizing and to elect delegates to the county convention which is to meet on the first i Monday in May. J. D. Senn, President. I G. A. Guingnard, Secretary. chinquepin club. This club will met at LongB.anch I Schooi house, May 2d, 189G, u.t3 p. m. R. B. Barb, President. swansea club. Pursuant to an order of the County I Chairman, this club will met at Swansea on May 2d, at half past 3 p. ra. W. H. F. Rast, President. F. B. Harm an, Se'cretay. boiling springs club. There will be a meeting of Boiling I Springs Democratic Club No. 2, at I Irene, in front of the company store, | on Saturday, May 2d, at 2 o'clock p. i m., for the purpose of re-organizing | the club, electing delegates to the j county convention and an executive I committee man. J. P. L. Wilson, President. George T. Taylor, Secretary. bull swamp club. The Bull Swamp Democratic club | will meet at Uriah Jefcoat's Mill, oit May 2d, for the purpose of transacting I the business pursuant to the order of ! the County ChairmaD. ; T. "W. Craft. j boiling springs club, no. 2. | I This Democratic club will meet at \ Bev. S. P. Shumpeit's old place, j May 2d, to re-orga oize and to elect I delegates. All members are requested to attend promptly at 3 p. m. f John A. Siiealy, President. I | elice creek club. In obedience to the call of the County Chairman, there will be u meeting of Black Creek Democratic club at Bishton on May 2d, at 3 o'clock p. m., for the purpose of reorganizing, and the election of an executive committee man and delegates to a county convention. The voters of the township are earnestly [ requested to be- present. | By order of the President. \ J. P. Lyles, Secretary. - , . . cedar grove club. .xThe members of the Cedar Grove Democratic Club will meet at Cedar Grove May 2d, 1896, at 3 o'clock p. m., for the purpose of re-organizing the club, and to elect a member of the county executive committee and also to elect delegates to the county convention to meet at Lexington C. the first Monday in May. G. A. Derrick, President hollow creek club. tlin mom tiara nf ftnllnot flrwil' . s Democratic club will meet at Boylston Academy, May 2d, 1896, at 3 o'clock p. m., for the purpose of reorganizing the club, and to elect a -3 member of the county executive committee, also to elect delegates to the county convention to meet at Lexington C. H., the first Monday in Miy. By order D. T. Baku, President TEACHING BLIND DEAF MUTES. ~ * Surprising Progress Made With ft Number of Pupils. - ^ Three blind deaf mutes, whose facul- ' ^ ties have been developed from a completely latent condition, are subjects of special notice in the report of the Perkins Institution For the Blind, Boston. Edith Thomas is described as furnishing convincing testimony to the efficacy of the system which is pursued in training such children. She has a good share of common sense, but is a little averse to intellectual exertion. Yet she is improv- iug fast, gaining knowledge regularly .%$} and systematically and is ''steadily becoming more skillful, attentive, thoughtful, logical and earnest, and the stream of her thoughts grows broader, deeper and richer." She is fond of letter writ- P iiig and docs it with increasing facility of expression, while her letters show i-j+jjmI that she appreciates the pleasures at life and despite her privations enjoys them highly. She likes reading and be- -VM ing read to, but wants hex books true to life and will not listen to fairy or highly imaginative stories. She is able to appreciate the rhythm of poetry, and '3$ Whit tier and Tennyson are among her favorites. She dislikes arithmetic and is backward in it, but is proficient in geographv. She has learned to mold maps in clay and is able to repeat accurately the details of the surface of the regions she | has studied. At the school commence- |||| ment of 1894 she modeled the map of V&iSj. Massachusetts, divided it into counties in the presence of the audience and pointed cut the natural features and toe towns with her left hand, while with her right hand she spelled the names into the hand of a blind classmate, who | announced them. She has become a _v^ skillful doll's dressmaker without the aid of nattems, and in teaching the use cf the Braille typewriter to her oompaa* ions she has exhibited die qualities at a strict disciplinarian. Willie Elizabeth Robin, now 10 yean '% old, came to the institution four yean : ago, totally blind and deaf and ignorant ; >> of language. She has became proficient \ in reading, writing, elementary zoology, A"' articulation and knitting and sewing by the Sloyd method. She has even > learned to use her tongue rather than AjgH talk with her fingers. She is specially m interested in studying animal forms vg and searches out the minute details of their structure. She is expected to tell > all 'she xan discover of each specimen | given her, to represent it in clay and J afterward write down what she has j learned. Of a crayfish studied thus 4 reported: "It has eight arms and two legs and a tail and two eyes; it has a body; it lives in the water. The body is ; hard, and the arms and the legs axe not j strong; they are soft" ? ;^|f| I Tommy Stringer came to the kinder- j garten department feeble, inert exhib- ; j iting few signs of intelligence and seem- j ingly devoid of most of the impulses of j children. He is now full of eager cnri- j osity concerning the world about hint enjoys life and is bright, affectionate and extremely fond of fun. He is at the 1 head of his class in some -of his studies. > He is remarkably interested in matter* J of housekeeping and domestic economy. I He has a strong bent toward zoological Jj|j9| j stndy. In a talk about fish his attention j was drawn to the backbone. He felt it -?&?] carefully from end to end and then 'i j passed his fingers up and down his own 1 backbone to show the correspondence; j "On discovering the eyes, month, aoe- . -Jh trils, etc., of the frog, he pointed to j similar features of his oxyx, and when J l^e found joints in the frog's hind leg* j he immediately began looking for the j Joints of his own body and found near- j ly all." No seeing boy's portrait is ^ more animated in expression than his. ?Popular Science Monthly. At New Orleans recently Juliua^Haymau sold his well known geldings? Chattanooga to C. Yonng for $850 and Longdale to S. Levy for $150. Frank Cxug, the colored pugilist, * '%>. stands godfather for one of the yearlings in the Baron Hirscli stable, the youngeter having received the najpp ot "Coffee Cooler." GEMS OF THOUGHT. ' : -V It is by studying little things that we attain the great art of having as little misery and as much happiness as possi- ? 'i ble.?-Johnson. ' O-rtain thoughts are prayers. There :are moments when, whatever be the attitude of the body, the soul is on its knees.?Hugo. Those whose whole minds feed upon xM riches recede in general from real hap- . ? * piuess in proportion as their stores in: crease.?Burton. I Trust God for great things. With . 1 your five loaves and two fishes be will ] show you a way to feed thousand*I Horace BushnelL I Bucklen's Arnica Salve. J The Best Salve in the world for I Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt j Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hauds, Chilblains, Corns, and Skin ; Eruptions, and positively cures Piles or no pay required. It is guaranteed . to give perfect satisfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cents j er box. For sale at the Bazaar.. , The County Lecturers' Board Will meet at Lexington C. H., May 10, at 10 o'clock p. m. All Sub Lec- . turers are requested to be present. D. F. Efird. April 10, 1896. "V v * '