University of South Carolina Libraries
P' BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM ?IN Western South Carolina. 0 RATES REASONABLE. J 0 SUBSCRIPTION $1 PER ANNUM JOB PRINTING A SPECIALTY, Ccafcdorata Se-Uaion. The Colombia State. Charleston, May 11.?The Confederate veterans held but one session THE LEX INGTON DISPATCH J jV Bepresentatiue ftetuspaper. Cooers Eexingtori and the Borders of the Surrounding Counties Lihc a Blanket. i < VOL. XXIX. LEXIXGTOX, S. C., WEDXESDAY, MAY 17, 1899. XO. 27 mlT GLOBE DRY GOODS GOMPAHY, J?#i "W- S- IL^OlSrCISC'TOILT, TIES., a^-A-ZLT-A-O-IEIEe, ' I ffesjl^ioao MAIIV STREET, COLUMBIA, S. C., U2i ' ih r Q Solicits a Share of Your Yalued Patronage. Polite and Prompt Attention. IP I J> I 'A w ] OK pf I \ ^cr u October 13?tf ^ ( : I today which shortly after noon gave way to the Winnie Davis memoiial exercises at the conclusion of which an adjournment until 10 o'clock tomorrow was taken. The announcement that Gen. Joe Wheeler was to speak filled the auditorium and the hero of two wars was given a rousiDg reception by the immense audience. The delegates and visitors devoted the afternoon to excursions to nearby resoits, tiips down the bay and social functions, and tonight a concert was given at the auditorium where a superb choir and orchertra rendered a programme of southern war songs Perfect weather conditions con tinue and the reunion is pronounced one of the most ei j >yable and successful of its eight predecessors. Iu spite of the crowd there have been no disorders or accidents and the police arrangements are in keeping with other preparations made by the city for the reception and entertainment of tLe veterans. After same further general buei ness the feature of today's session took place. It was Gjq. Wheeler's address and the scene that attended his introduction was one of frantic enthusiasm. Advancing to the front of the platform Gen. Gordon held up bis hand end absolute silence fell upon the vast audience as he said: i Comrades, I have a real treat for you. If I should tell this convention there is here the hero cf Santiago?" Gen GordoD could get do further. A wild burst of applause thundered forth, rebel yells split the air and hats, canes and handkerchiefs were waved as the great audience rose to its feet. Finally, securing quiet, Gen. Gjrdon spoke of Gen. Wheeler as "the man who at Santiago held to the front place the army and fhg of America." Again the applause thundered out and n?ing the assemblage continued cheering until the scene was one of the wildest that has ever marked a reunion. ProccdingGen. Gordon described Wheeler as one cf "the wiliest wizards of the Confederacy" and then repeated apocryphal story of the famous little cavalryman when at Santiago he excVmed as the Spanish lines brcke ' 'Forward boys, the Yankees are running," and again the applause broke out. The audience rose as Gen. Whec-ler stepped forward, apparently much affected. He wore a black Prince Albeit suit with badges on each lapel of his coat. One was yellow by chance and the other was red. He spoke deliberately, calmly and clearly, the audience giving him close attention. His referance to the geneial sorrow caused by the death cf Win^ nie Davis effected many to tears. f Gen. Whe^?' sai-d in part: "The history of our country, when compared with that cf all the eras that have preceded us, shows that our civilizilioD has produced the highest class of men and the noblest type of soldiers. The very idea cf liberty Derves the soul and fires the heart. Defeat but exasperate?, add ing desperation to vigor and energy to determined resolve. "It was the teaching of fathers and mothers who fltd from the oppression of caste and class, braved the i i unfaithomed ocean and landed upon j these shores, confronted by wild I beasts and savage Iudian that the i highest honor and greatest privilege j was to fight for country, its safety I and its honor. "If the people of the north excel in some qualities, it is also true that those of the south excel in others. It has been said that tenacity of pur- j pose, thrift and perseverance pre- j dominated in the noitbern character. This may probably be so, but it is also true that other characteristics are s, more noticeable among the people cf ^ the south. Gen. Wheeler declared that the j military history of the southern peo- I * pie had been a prominent feature in l history from the first settlement of i "this country Ke cited Washington | ^and the other southern commanders j of the revolution, Windfieid Scott j and Andre* Jackson and the other j heroes of the war with Mexico, and i ihon nflssirrf to the war between the ! v. r r, -States he said: j "The battle-scarred veterans, who duriDg four years of bloody warfare j dazzled the world with the splendor of their heroism are fast passing away. The few who remain gather annually to renew the friendship which, formed among such scenes, is the warmest and most enduring. X \ greater heroes were in the legions led by Alexander, Hannibal, Char$1? A Thousand Tongues Could not express the rapture of Annie E. Springer, of 1125 Howard st., Philadelphia, Pa, when she found that Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption had completely cured her of a hacking cough that for many years had made life a burden. All other remedies and doctors could give her no help, but she says of Royal Cure?$'it soon removed the pain in my chest and I can now sleep soundly, something I can scarcely remember doing before. I feel like sounding its praises throughout the Universe." So will every * 4 mi a. r% T""\ m It ? /v *?-> \J/\ m "i ? n ULlt; VY LiU LI if B O XYCVT JOUScovery for any trouble of tbe Throat, Chest or Lungs. Price 50 cents and $1.00. Trial bottles at J. E. Kaufmanns Drug Store; every bottle guaranteed. lemage, or Napoleon, for your achievements excelled all theirs. "In the greatest battles of the civil war you contended with men of endurance, fortitude and courage, men with the same birthright of freedom, imbued with the same spirit of liberty, men who were as comcientiouely contending for what they deemed the right of the Federal government, as you for what you just as firmly held to be your rights. "While our civil war, I may truthfully assert, was the most sanguinary recorded in history, it was also the most remarkable, as in it there was no element of personal hostility, and the soldiers as individuals could not in tbe nature of things have entertained feelings cf hatred for each other. They fought not from re? # i J # veDge, Dot irom mance, not irom aesire to shed blood, bat simply because they felt that there lay the i path of duty. 'It was a war fought to settle questions that for more than half a century had teen matters of the most earnest, and I might say, bitter con- 1 tentions, increasing in intensity until an appeal to the God of battles was ! rendered inevitable, so that no arbi- j trament save that of the sword was possible. When the south yielded, J it was to numbers, battalions artil- | lery, to the unlimited resources of the Federal government. The armies of the south laid down j their arms, but not one iota of their belief in the truth and justice of their cause did they surrender. With ene:gy and determination they met the new problems confronting them. ! Above the carnage, above the wall j of widows and the cry of orphans, above the desolated homes, above the ! fields overgrown with now forests, there arose a new civilization and a new union, one niche in whose temple holds a figure whose name shall be honored throught the ages, Lee, whose matchless skil), whose soldierly spirit, whose wonderful endurance, was only equalled by the grandeur of soul which accepting the fiat Gi war, lived out to its lull close, toe noblest life recorded in all history for the admiration of posterity. "As between the 3uldiers on either side, there was no real enmity. Mutual admiration for each other's prowess is the sentiment of all brave men, and with admiration, respect naturally increase. "The lifetime of a generation has softened the memories of that conflict, and side by side, both north and south have stood together in battle against a foreign foe. "We meet here to cherish and intensify the memory of the great struggle in which }ou were actors. Your devotion to duty, your courage in battle and your unmurmuring endurance was your heritage fit m your ancestors. Gen. Wheeler touched upon the question of expansion by declaiing that southern statesmen had ever taken a prominent part in ail movements looking to the enlargement of our territory. "History for all time," he said, j "will record that it was under southern Presidents that we Lave wrested I from the wild Indians the greater ! pait of the 822,38S square miles I which lay between our thin lines of j settlement on the ocean and theMisj sissippi river; and under southern ! Presidents that we Lave added to { this domain an area nine times as ! great as the present arena of the j original thirteen States. "While the various negotiations were being had, and our dominions ' were being enlarged, adding to the glory of the country chiefly through the influence of the southern element most bitter opposition wa9 developed in other paits of the Union. "It is a matter of which the southern people may well take pride that during all the great progress and ad vancement of our country, including the armed contest of last year, and which, I am glad to say, now ap pears to be happily ended, no section of our land has been more devoted to the cause of our country and to upholding its honor and prestige than the people of the southern States. Those upon whom rests the cares, flntipn And burdens of government j have encountered no embarrassment or complaints or criticism from | southern States. None of their brave volunteer regiments have asked to be returned from fields cf active duty, and when the request has come from governors of other commonwealths, volunteers from the southern State s have promptly begged for the honor of filling their places in the front of battle. ''The position in which the American people find themselves today was not sought by them, but is the logical result cf conditions thrust upon the the country by a course of events beyond our control. If it be said they were foreseen and predicted, it must also be admitted that no power in our grasp could have stayed the tide, and now we stand before the gaze of civilization confronted by grave responsibilities. The supreme test of American iustitutions is involved, and the American system of government is on trial. "It is said by some that while England, Holland, France and other nations may extend a protecting hand to peoples and lands separated from the home country, benefiting both the protector and the protected, that we shall be utterly unable to accomplish such a purpose. To admit this proposition is to aamn mat, our system of government is lacking in the essential qualifications which every sovereign power should possess. In one year we have risen to the first place in the family of nations; to make the smallest retrograde step would be at the expense of the prestige we have won. To return to the starting point of a year ago would be to lose what it would take a century to regain. In answer to those who say that the policy of our forefathers forbade the extension of territory, I would point to Jefferson and the Louisiana purchase; Monroe and Florida: Polk and Texas, and the vast territory auquired from Mexico, and later to Andiew Johnson and the acquisition of Alaska. If there be any who contend that we should not pemit the Island of Cuba to become a part of the United States, and it3 people, if they desire it, to enjoy all the rights of American citizenship, I have only to point to the official declarations of our great ^Hfl I MUM I No Torture Equal to the first sj before ! Itching 2nd Burning of durabl I This Fearful Disease. sjssi tion o Eczema?which is more than skin-deep, cations of ointments, salves, etc., appli ! the real cause of the trouble, is in the bl through the skin ; the only way to rea< the blood. Mr. Phil T. Jones, of Mixersville, In "I had Eczema thirty years, and afi e? treatment my log was so raw and sor< i constant pain. It finally broke into a ri ; began to spread and grow worse. For ' six years I have suffered untold agony a | all hope of ever being free from the di: been treated by some of the best phys i taken many blood medicines, all in v | faith left I began to take S. S. S., ar ! made the Eczema worse, but I knew th ! way the remedy got rid of the pois S. t?. S., the sore healed up entirely, 1 clear and smooth, and I was cured perf Eczema is an obstinate disease and < only a tonic. Swift's Specific? S. S. S. FOR j ?is superior to other blood remedies be i not reach. It goes to the bottom?to tl ! the worst case of Eczema, no matter wl 1 1 1 3 onrT +/\ } I j tne Otliy UIOOU remfuj fjuaioiimu k/v. k : other mineral, and never fails to cure I Poison, Cancer, Tetter, Rheumatism, 0 ! upon S. S. S.; nothing can take its plac j 9 Books jn these diseases will be mai ciric Company, Atlanta, Georgia. ^ { statesmen, commencing with Thomas Jtfferson and lunniDg through almost the entire peiiod of the first half of this century. During all that period our honored statesmen and Presidents from Jtfferson to Buchanan laid down in their messages and state documents the imperative necessity of making the Pearl of the A-ntillies a part of the United States. In concluding his address Gen. Wheeler paid an eloquent tribute to the women of the south and the part they bore in the war and the dark years that followed, sayiDg: "Although some of those blessed women are still with us, many more have loDg since gone to their reward, but they have rocked in cradles the principles, minds and characters which are to control the future of their beloved land. The thought which I witsh to impress upon the minds of the generation to whom we must soon intiust a sacred charge, for the Confederate soldier race is nearly run, and the injunction which I would leave with your sons and daughters, for the daugters have the nobler part, and I know they will faithfully perform it?is tbn: See to it that the women of the Confederacy have, in their posterity, a monument more lasting than any that could be built of stone.1' He closed amid much applause and the orchestra played "America." Then occurred one of the most picturesque incidents of the session. Gen. Gordon arose and advanced to the front cf the stage followed by Gen. Wade HamptoD, escorted by Col. Holmes and Maj. Barker, the former bearing a beautiful silk flag, one side of which was the battle flag of the Confederacy aDd the reverse State flag of South Carolina. Ia a few well chosen words Col. Holmes presented the banner to Gen. Hampton as the gift of the Daughters of the Confederacy of Charleston, to the United Confederate Veterans. Turning Gen. Hampton presented the flag to Gen. GordoD, who accepted it with a graceful little address. Here, as on all occasions when he appears, Gen. Hampton was greeted with tremendous applause, the old veteran of the famous legion that his name being the idol not only of his State, but the whole south. Id presenting the fl?g Gen. Hampton also resigned as commander of the army of Northern Virginia, sayiDg he would serve in the ranks as a private. He gave as a reason that his declining years and physical weakness rendered him unable to give to the office the attention and energy it de mand?. Many of the veterans were visibly affected at the General's words, and for an instant absolute silence prevailed. TheD, as if by cnmnmn imnuhe. they ro3e and cheered lustily. Bowing his thanks Gen. Hampton stepped back and soon afterward left the rostrum. Gen. Gordon then announced that the business of the convention would be suspended for the Winnie Davis Memorial exerCisesmuch attention is often paid to the 'mptoms of Eczema, but it is not long the little redness begins to itch and This is but the beginning, and will ) suffering and torture almost unene. It is a common mistake to regard i jhness and redness of the skin as J r a local irritation ; it is but an indica- I f a humor in the blood?of terrible and can not be reached by local applied to the surface. The disease itself, ood, although all suffering is produced ?h the disease, therefore, is through id., writes: ter a great deal ?/***&! $& 5 that it gave me VL I | inning sore, and .nd had given up sease, as I have ? -M^vst ician? and have ain. With little id it apparently i at this was the ?Sn on. Continuing ; jg ^g^jSliflP' the skin became can not be cured by a remedy which is THE BLOOD cause it cures diseases which they oan le cause of the disease?and will cure lat other treatment has failed.. It is )e free from potash, mercury or any Eczema, Scrofula, Contagious Blood pen Sores, Ulcers, Boils, etc. Insist e. ; led free to any addrpgs >>v Swift Spev . y ^, .. .y / '/ | Robbed the Grave. A startliog incident, of which Mr. ' John Oliver of Philadelphia, was the j subject, is narrated by him as follows: "I was in a mo9t dreadful con- I dition. My Ekin was almost yellow, J eyes sunken, tongue coated, pain continually in back and sides, no ap- j petite?gradually growing weaker j day by day. Three physicians bad J given me up. Fortunately, a friend advised trjing 'Electric Bitters;1 and : to my great joy and surprise, the first bottle made a decided improve- j ment. I continued their use for ; three weeks, and am now a well man. ; I know they saved my life, and robbed the grave of another victim.'' , No one should fail to try them. Only 50 cts., guaranteed, at J. E. { Kaufmann's Drug Store. * Made Th?m Drunk. I ? j The Filipino General Pours Wine in j His Men Before a Charge. i I The Attack on San Fernando Fails, j Philippine Commission Preparing a Constitution for the Islands?lie- ! ported Meeting of the Pilipino ' I Congress. Manila, May 10.?The Philipino j i General Maecardo's army, inspired by wine taken from the storehouses i of Barcolor and by the General's ora- ! tory, on Monday evening attacked San Fernando. There was tremen- I i dous yelling and a great expenditure j of cartridges by the rebels, but with j very little result. Gen. Mascardo holds the outskirts of Bacolor west of the railroad. In front of his positions are the Kansas and Montana regiment, which occupy trenches that the Filipinos built in anticipation of an attack from the direction of the sea. During the afternoon of Monday, Gen. Mascardo with a large retinue j of officers rode along the line, fre- j quc-ntly stopping to harangue his j warriors. At dusk a detachment of ! rebels rushed towards tne ouiposis 1 of the Montana regiment, but were | met by a hot fire from the Montana I regiment's line. Insurgents, in trenches three miles long, responded. Af- j ter an hour's firing, during which one j private soldier of the Montana regi- j ment was wounded, the insurgents j subsided, although they kept up a scattering fire throughout the night. J Prisoners who were brought into the ! American lines, said that Gen. Mas- j cardo distributed barrels of wine among his soldiers, telling them that | he expected them to capture the city j of San Fernando. The trenches un- | doubtedly saved the Americans from i heavy losses, bullets falling thick ! about them during the engagement, j Gen. Luha i3 massing his army j east of the railway, bringing up ' troops by the train loads in sight of ; the American lines. The country between San Fer- : nando and Calumpit is filling up with | natives, who profess great friendship 1 toward the Americans, but who are j suspected by many of sympathy with j the insurrection. i The United States Philippine com- ' ! mission has been considering a proI vincial constitution for the island of Negro?, which was framed by C>1. Smith and leading natives. It is ' largely modeled after the constitution of California. While it has many good points, ! the commission will probably recom- : mend a uoiform government for all \ ' the provinces. This constitution, it is intended, will give the natives self j government, cooperating with the j military regime. Work upon the 1 constitution has been apportointed to ! ( the several members of the Philip- i 1 pine commission. Tne report of j 1 President Schurman will give special ' attention to national, provincial and 1 municipal government. C >1. Charles | J Denby will cousider the organic ition uf courts, and Prof. D. C. Worces- 1 . ter will investigate tribal, physical ' < and commercial features of the is- j lands. All the members of the com- ! ? o..nonU!nr# TTTifVi re*cir?onK l ILUSS1UU UlC UUUSUtllUg uuu avuhx-u. j experts. ( Reports received from the insur- 1 ( gent line, which, however, have not I been confirmed say that a meeting of the Filipino congress his bjen j ( held at San Isidro. There wa3 no j quorum present, but in spite of this j j fact some business was transacted. J ! * absolutely t Makes the food more de RQvAl BAKING QQW1 Tbe reports add that although these ' who attended were mostly prrtisins ! of Aguinaldo a strong desire for peace was expressed. M?j Gen. MicArthur will proba- ' bly remain at S.tn Fernando until j fresh troops can be forwarded him j from this city to replace some of the volunteers, who have become ex- j hausted from the long campaign. F.lipino rill=men to the number of | 8,000 are entrenched on three sides ' ' . i of iucolor. lbe American?, however, j are fully able to hold the city, if i Monday's attack was a specimen cf j the enemy's fightiDg ability. The army '-tiuclad" gunboats Li- ' gunadelliy and Civedoga, under: command of Captain Grant, steamed up the Rio Grande to Calumpit today, clearing the entire country of rebels from the bay upward. When the vessel reached Macabebe about i 1,000 of the inhabitants of the place j assembled on the banks of the river, cheering the expedition lustily. Capt. Grant was given an ovation when he went ashore. Many of the M*cabebes expressed themselves as being anxious to enter the American service for the campaign against the Tagals. The United States transports Puebla and Pennsylvania sailed forborne today by way of Nagasaki. The transports Charles Nelson and Cleveland will leave on Thursday-and Friday. Washington, May 10 ?The following dispatch has been received at the war department: Manila, May 10. Adjutant General, Washington: Transport Pennsylvania left for San Francisco today. Nelson leaves 1 ltb: Cleveland 1*2; St. Paul 13th inst. Otis. It is not known at the war department what troops are beiDg brought home on these transports, and owing to the general interest on this point in all parts of the country, the Adjutant General sent a cablegram to Gen. Ods asking to be informed as to what troops on each of the transports scheduled to sail for the United States as mentioned in the telegram of today. To Solvs tlis Racs Problem. As a solution of the race problem some of the colored leaders of Kanf ao tMichin/-* a o/-? Vi /-* rr\ d f r\ CQO aiu ^UCLttUg C4 OWU^IUV^ IV/ WlVUiCiV the colored people.in this country in Cuba .and the Philippine islands. The movement was started as a result of the race troubles in the South, over which there is much feeliDg manifested amoDg the Kansas colored people. As a part of the colonization scheme, President McKinley will be urged to recruit 35,000 colored men for military service in the islands. Including the families of the soldiers, it is argued this would take about 200,000 colored people out of the country at oncc. Then would start an exodus of colored people, which, it is said, would eventally result in i practically alll the negroes leaving ! this country." President McKinley } has been asked what he thinks of the j plaD, but his not yet replied. Whooping Cough. I had a little boy who was nearly J deal from an attack of whooping I sough. My neighbors recommended Chamberlains Cough Remedy. I did not think that auy medicine i ' would help him, but after giving j him a few doses of that remedy I I noticed an improvement, and one i bjttle cured him entirely. Ii is the j ( Diarrhoea Remedy.?P. E. Grisham, ' I i jriars Mills, Li. For sale by J. E. ; ( Kaufmann. Tae bwtr ho 1^0 of tue Tennessee eg'slation ii creased the appropria- i ;ion for pensions for Confederate sol- j i Jiers from ?<>00,000 to Si00,000 for j i the next two years. , You cannot accomplish any work I < er business unless you feel well. If jrou feel ''Used Up?Tired Out," J i take Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver ! i Medicine. ' i i baking : Powder ; >VRE I i licious and wholesome I | }ER CO.. HEW YORK. | - t He who reads the Bible constantly will absoib into his character even if he does not retain much of it in his memory. A man becomes like the j company he keeps. ] Health, Strength and Nerve Force < follow the use of Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine, which insures pood f Digestion and Assimilation. i There has been another incendiary * fire at Bamberg. The loser was T. c J. Countz, who has suffered so greatly * Tf from incendiary fires. This time it 1 was a large boarding house. I A Dei by, Couuecticut, Sunday * school teacher, aged 30, wooed and c <1 won one of her scholars, a chap of . 1G, and married him. He can attend Sunday school at homo now. v It makes no difTerenco how bad the wound if you use De Witts Witch Hazel Salve; it will quickly heal and ^ leave no scar. J. E Kaufmann. c A Kansas woman, who achieved c fame by taming lions, found one u brute that she couldn't biing under S control. It was her husband, and now she wants a divorce from him. j, "Father Guun," of Dickiuson 1 county, is believed to be the oldest e person in Kansas. He has passed tl his 114 birthday, and still able to c walk two miles to the polls to vote. h If "Out of SoitV Cross and Pee- a vish, take Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver u Medicine. Cheerfulness will return and life acquires new zest. d The life of .an editor in Servia is u not a delightful one. Within the A past two years one weekly paper has b had sixteen editors. Fifteen of them C are in jail for commenting upon gov- b ernment affairs. t' The largest tree in Kistern hemis J phere, if not in the world, is a mon- ^ ster chestnut standing at the foot of Mount iE.na. The circumference 1 of the main trunk at GO feet from d the ground is 212 feet. a Pimples, Boils and other Humors 11 appear when the blood gets impure. a The best remedy is Dr. M. A. Sim- 13 mons Liver Medicine. ^ The State board of medical exami ^ ners began the examination of caLdidates in Columbia yesterday. It s will not finish its work until tomorrow as there are about fifty or sixty 0 candidates. 8 Jones asked bis wife why is a bus- ^ band like dough,'' and be expected ] she would give it up and was going to tell her it was because a woman needs him; but she said because it j was bard to get i ft' ber hand?. Ramon's American Stock Powders, i one of the best preparations on the j< market for cattle, hogs and poultry h 15 and 25 cents packages, at the s Bazaar. Use this powder once and j, you will have no other. r The Confederate Home at Atlanta, which was built by the ift'jrts of Heury W. Grady at the cost of *10,000, and which the Georgia Legisla ture refused to provide for, has been sold at auction for *8,000. Lieutenant Wood worth of the Ninth Illinois, now at quarantine be low Sauannab, says 75 per cent of of the enlisted meu are anxious to go the Philippines. All they dtsire before going is a 30 day furlough. J. T. Reese, Modoc, S. C , writes: Have used Dr. M. A Simmons Liver J Medicine 12 years. C ired me of l> Iudigestion and my wife of Sick " P Headache. Think it worth fuitr ,, times as much as either X aim's or {| Black Draught I used. P ' You often hear of the self made i man?" 'Yes.'' "But you never hear af the self made woman?*' That's ^ so. Rither strange isn't it.'" "What's c the reason, do you think?" "Well, s when a woman is self made she dosen't ^ what anybody to know it." If you have piles, cure them. X > h use undergoing honible operations t( that simply remove the results of the '1 disease without distuibicg the uis- " ?ase itself. Place your cor fidtnee in a DeWitt's Witch H^z<-1 Salve. Iihas \ never failed to cure others: it w it ? not fail to cure you. J. L. Kauf- r in tnn. I *5 ADVERTISING RATES. Advertiseiucnts will be inserted at the rate ?>t 7 > cents p?r square of one inch i. iice for first insertion and 50 cents per inch for each subsequent insertion. Liberal contract made with those wishing to advertise for tLree, Bix and twelve months. Notices in the local column 5 cents pe* line each insertion. \ Obituaries charged for at the rate of oat :ent a word, when they exceed 100 words. Marriage notices inserted free. * Addres8 3. II. HARMAN, Editor and Pr.blisher. ' Dr. Byrd, of Ashevill, N. C., will preach the commencement sermon of WofTord College. Senator John L. MeLaurin will deliver the address before the literary societies. Pneumonia, la grippe, coughs, sold?, croup and whooping cough icadily yield to One Minute Coueh Care. Use this remedy in time and save a doctors bill?or the undertaker's. J. E. Kaufmann. The American Historical Association has written to Governor Ellerbe lsking for copies of letters of John C. Cilhoun written to Governors of :he State. The association wants to aclude them in a history of Calhoun, svhicb will be prepared under its direction. The Greenville News has been inerviewing Collector Webster, who is considered boss of "de party11 on the ensus appointments. He is not inclined to concede anything to the [democrats?at least he says that the [{'. publicans are going to get all they can cut of it. If ycu suffer from tenderness or ullness on the light side, pains roder shoulder-blade, constipation, )iliousnes8, sick headache and feel lull, heavy and sleepy your liver is orpid and congested. DeWitt's L,ittle Early Risers will cure you nornptly, pleasantly and permanenty by removing the congestion and ausing the bile ducts to open and low naturally. They are good pills. r. E. Kaufinann. Things that some of us hear: The i-histle of a locomotive can b9 heard 1,300 yards, the noise of a train 3,800 ards, the report of a musket and he bark of a dog 1,800 yards, the roak of a frog 000 yards, a cricket's hirp 800 yards, a dinner bell two liles and a request for the loan of 15 dollars not au inch. Congressman Charles Curtis, of Kansas, is au Indian of the Ivaw tribe, le is a Republican from the district mbraciog Toptka, and has served hree terms in Congress and holds a erlificate for the fourth. He is a iwyer by profession, an earnest and ccomplished speaker, and a conspicous friend of his race. I have been a sufferer from chronic iarkoea ever since the war and have sed all kinds of medicines for it. it last I found one remedy that has een a success as a cure, and that is Ihamberlain's Colic, Cholera and e3t cough medicine I ever had in be house.?J. L. Moore, South Jurgettstown, Pa. For sale by J. I. Kaufmann. _ J There is more benefit in a good augh than in all the hot water reme? ie9, faith cures, cold water, electric nd all other new fangled treatments i the world, and it does not cost nythiDg. Laugh. If you know of othing else to laugh at, laugh at our neighbor. He is probably im>roving his health by laughing at cu. Don't think yon can cure that light attack of Dyspepsia by dieting r that it will cure itself. Kodol )yspepsia Cure wril cure it; it *'di;est? what you eat" and restores the igestive organs to health. J. E. vaufmann. Caarles P. Birret, who was conicted in Charleston last July for vioiting the postal laws, and sentenced o eighteen months in the Ohio penientiary, has been pardoned by Present McKinlcy on account of the ill ealth of the prisoner. It is preumed that he will return to his ome in Spartanburg. I[ INCURABLE DISEASES Mr. ay diseases considered in- " cut able ore catarrh under other names. V bfc Simple ealnrrli ia ? t}io head is called Wf " J) ' "\ incurable. C'tmdon bt. pa st help jPP^^ in the more ad- 1 / ' ' ^ but great num-J? 1 ~ .1* ors ot ppfipit; uif* i'i ecdlcssly. It is certain that every base ?.f catarrh, including- many cases f consumption, arc en rod by the right reatsnent. I'e-ru-na, I>r. ITartman's Teat prescription, attacks catarrhal iscascs scientifically ami euros them. )r. Ilartinan explains it fully in his ooks which are mailed on application, [ere is a lctler from Mrs. Hartr.ening, lazo Manic. Wis., who is one of many urcd of consumption by To-ru-na. lie says: > "r,r.i n (.- r W tin i ti C V. ami'Mj, v? I)r.Air Siks:? I cannot praise your cmedy too high!y. Last winter 1 had \ grippe and hemorrhage of the lungs dI lowed. All the doctors around here old me I had to die of consumption, hen 1 thought 1 would ask l)r. Martian for advice, which I did. He prccrihed IV-ru-na for me. and I took it ccording to his directions and was ured. L advise every body that is rouh'.ed with lung disease to take Dr. Iartman's treatment. I am sure they .ill not regret it if they do. 1 ain now njoying good health, and can thank 'e-ru-ua for it.*' ^ ^ k