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BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM | ?IN W *tem South Carolina. O RATES REASONABLE. O SUBSCRIPTION SI PER ANNUM . ?o m PRI\TI\'fi * SPEPUITY. To the Farmers. For us to sit down and wisb and ? --"3 rfttn /lol nciAn ! II III II I 1 '1 B? ?*????????a?????mmmmm ??a?MM?waiwri?in* 'THE LEXINGTON DISPATCH. Beprcsentatioc newspaper. Gutters Lexington and the Borders ot the Surrounding Counties Lihc a Blanket. VOL. XXIX. LEXINGTON, S. 0., WEDNESDAY, MAY 24, 1899. NO. 28 . IM I..III. II. ..| Mill II ir??????i i II I Win MCW???S?M?a?????i^?aMMMMMMKIWIIM MZgT GLOBE BEY G08BS C0MPA1IY, Jt*f: "W. IE3I. ld:01TCKT01T, JEH fe V?V J 16SO MAIN STREET, COLUMBIA, S. C., ^ ' -nft^r Solicits a Share of Your Valued Patronage. Polite and Prompt Attention. jS fV I 1 <0i> " October 13?tf y __i uesire ituu cvcu uj cuuit <?iuu?.iue>uu expect the future to develop or turD up some freak that will give us ten or twelve cents for cotton and at the same time furnish us plow shovels, trace chains, plow stocks and mowers at greatly reduced piices from what we now get them is, at bear, an idle dream. The fact that farming is the most lucrative, safe and certain occupation is fully sustained by its continued life and ex istance under management and direc tion that would wreck any other business on earth carried on in the same hapless, slip-shod, improvident Wiy. We continue to do things that do other business men can effjrd to do, S, and we fail to do what every other business, successfully carried on, ? makes imperative in its conduction. , We strive and delve hard to put ' L I money mtopnospnaie mins ween we i have on our lands ten thousand little **gaiuo industries" that would pay <?s a heavier dividend than aDy fertilizer company ever incorporated under the laws of South Carolina. "We have banks of safer inve-'tment and paying higher interest than any such institution that ever opened its books for deposits in this en ire land Toe merchant and the bankers are i men of business and in most cases indifferent aod stiff in manners, h 'artless and cold blooded in execution but systematic and law abiding in action and iD working. They look on their banks as lecords of dealing, ' and on their accounts, claims and ! cash a3 the result of care aLd economy, and as a proof of tbeii business skill and enterprise. In this tbey see only business and through these they expect success or failure. Beyond this they have no I hope; without these they close their doors. Tney look on their avocation as a means of liviDg. In it tbey see only the material and the very nature of their position leads them usually to these conditions and the great f.w nf the business woild lose ! ^ thing turther on tne coru-i^cuiu- ui j hogs. ^ : r The hog commissioner of Misscuii j P made some experiments a year or j I two ago which tend to weaken our j rage on cornfed hogs. Several trials j ^ were made and with a like result ' I One pen of bogs were feed entirely L on corn and one on oats, wheat brand, j ^ ! c illard leaves, &c. When ready to ! kill, a boaid of experts were selected, i Tney used all the unproved instruments to examine the condition cf bone, muscle and blood. The hogs t bdaod lattened entirely on corn had by actual measure merit only about one-half the amount of blood to the hundred pounds cf net poife, and but little over tne half weight of actual bone to the hundred pounds of poik and the muscles were but little over half so well developed a* in the hogs fed on the nerve produc9 ing feeds, such as peas, wheat brand, I- o its, collard leaves, &c. They ton tained more fat meat than v h ra ftd on corn but the others were heavier . to the same age, but the flesh conE eight of the immaterial in their eager, anxious runuit cf what is material t 4 The architect without his square and compass is entirely lost in the busy world and is like a ship without a rudder. Beyond these ail life is dark and gloomy, and all the future hidden in a cloud of confusion and uncertanty. With us these things should not be. Continually we can be in communion, with nature in her beauty and in her unselfish home. We hourly tread the highways in nature's vast domain and meet her in our c business and in all our little transac ^tions on the farm and should learn to look up a little higer than the fields and forest around us. Our children see regularly the wild flowers blossom near our homes. They behold the lillies of the field ?" - u ' * ? ?? <-?inr>!nrp O'ravof] WlliUUUb tUiliUg \JI M? a tij v^ more gloriously than the Piince of Hebrew K?ngs. They see all the energy and power of the place arraigned against the little blades of grass which set at defiance all iflforts for their destruction and hold on to j life wiih a resolution that is inspir j ing to any faint heart. Our giils j and boys have then that free and un j trammeled latitude of thought and ! v action; that full and natural develop- ! ment cf bone and muscle which render them dangerous competitors to any antcgODist in the race for the prize in all the pursuits of life. But pleasant as are these thoughts and ^ elevating as are these privileges, they are to be left to view the practical points of farm life. In the last article I wrote some of i feeding and the different feeds. It may be proper here that I say scmev - t 3:? tained more leao rrnat Tbe ones corn-fed bad but little activity and were nice easily run down aEd exhausted by exercise than those fed on food cf neive production. The experience in the hog States has been th?t those that were fattened on blue grass, clover, <fcc, and had corn oDly as a ''fill in" were hardier and more exempt from cholera and all diseases, and when attacked had far more often the t;power to over come" tbe disease and hold on to life. All efforts so far at an entire grain fed bog have not been by a large per cent, as successful as one raised on mixed feed9 and the advantage ba9 been to those whose mixture was largely vegetable in kind. It is much better to grind up corn and cob for him than corn alone, and corn singly is a slow fattener after a few days fading, but is fed with good results when given with other feeds. Turned into a pindar patch, the hog will eat largely of the vine. Turned into a mutton corn field and he will -oon rat heartily cf ccb end stalk. He knows best bis Deeds and he is a wise owner wbo seeks earnestly to know and look for tbe poor hogs' desire. That is a good guide and by following it a man eaves money, for wasted corn is money lest, and poik saved is money made on tbe farm. If any one doubts the supreme dictation cf nature let him throw out egg shells to the chickens and observe which are anxious for them. He will quickly discover which are his lajing hens and which are not. Those hens that are fruitful and that are engaged in giving to their master a return in eggs for care and attention are the anxious ones for the shells. The growing fowls and the lazy hens and "those proud gentle men of the yard/' care but little about them, and oftentimes will not even eat them, and there is no reason they should. We often dog, tease and tantalize a poor hog for catching chickens when it is almost always the master's fault. It is an outcry of ihe same for something the hog has Lot in its system. It is generally the crime of brood sows to catch all this abuse, and she has been worn dowD aud exhausted from bringing and raising her o wner's other hogs in bis pens. Little chickens are too small to atiefy this need and flesh of some kind must meet the demand or she will pine and pine for weeks for its assistance. I have found that in kil.ing sheep, to put her to le-seif and give her the head and cffid is sufficient for most cases bat some times it will have to be repeated twice and your chicken eater has the cure, but will more easily take it up again when her needs require and wisdom will soon fill the place with j a new supply cf flesh of seme kind. Fur us to kill hogs and pour their j blood on the ground and th:ow the cffdl away when our chickens and other hogs so sorely stand in need of these things is but throwing away what it will take gold or silver to replace. Lit; lo drooping chickens can generally be raised in a short time by a few meals of animal food, and this is just the reason that tur kies always raise hardier and larger chickens than fowls; they get further from heme and catch more worms and bugs and grass hoppers. Actual experiment has shown that large hogs are kept at great loss. A hog weighin" 100 000 lltO TVllI oof f 11 J IL)^ ilUtJJ -L \* v/ VV taVV i '? ?*A ^ vv X. M pound heavier for every three to three aDd a half pounds of grain, with ODe weighing from 400 to 700 lbs. will require five to eight pounds grain to make him a pouud heavier So that when fed on grain a pound of bacon from large hogs is very cosily. We should never sell a bushel of grain from our firms. Our farmers take f >rty to fifty cents for corn. Ir be will take that bufhel of i corn and feed to a bog, yearling or ; sheep which has access to soma pas i ture privileges, he can safely ount f 1- C L . t j on twenty nve pounu3 01 u i some kind which will bring him a i round dollar, aud if he has properly ; housed that animal at night thecom1 post is worth very nearly what his neighbor gets for his bush* 1 of corn ! a ad has bi3 dollar besides for beef, ! poik or mutton. You need not ftar 1 of glutting the inaiket. Enough of ; us will not leave the old ruts to bjr the doors till we arc driven to do so i n are slow to quit "the gcod old | way '. Contined Nest Week. | Remarkable Reecae. ! - . ! Mrs. Michael Curtain, Piaiufield, j | 111., makes the statement, that she j i caught cold, which settled ou her . lungs; she was treated for a month j by her family physician, but grew i worse. He told her she was a hope- j less victim of consumption and that no medicine could cure her. Her druggist suggested Dr. King's Xew Discovery for Ccnsumptior; she bought a bottle aDd to her delight j found herself benefited from first j dose. She continued its use and after taking six bottles, found her- } ' self sound and well; now does her own j 1 hnnsewr.rlr. and is as well as she t ver i was.?Free tiia! bottlee of this Great ! D sjiovery at J. E Kaufcnann's Drug Store. Only 50 cents aod ?1.00, i everv bottle guaranteed. i ? i Carter's Monthly for May. . { Carter's Monthly Magazine, pub- : listed iD Chicago, and edited by i Opie Rfad, is making rapid ftridfs j in the public favor. It i3 the only ten cent magazine in Chicago devoted exclusively to American liters- j ture, and is certainly supplying the need for a western magazine pre-sents an interesting table of contents consisting of short stories, sketches of travel, and articles of general interest, all x profusely illustrated; sopbica), economic, or scientific nature. The leading article in tbe May number is "Weltmerism?the New Era in Healing." Tni3 is a capable review of the Weltmer Me*hod of Magnetic Healing, the new science that is creating so much interest in the United States and j Europe. The article takes up the j q-cus'ion from a scientific standpoint, and shows the fundamental principles upon which the science is ba^ed. The writer visited the Weltmer Institute, at Nevada, Ho., for the purpose of research, and ^ as astounded at the marvelous cures effected. Since Professor Weltmer discovered the j new science three years ago and j commenced its practice at Nevada, over 70,000 patients have been treat ed, and the halt, the lame, and the blind have been cured. The article aho describes how the sick may be cured at a distance by a system of treatment prescribed by Professor Weltmer, upon the patients sending to him a statement of their cases. The cures effected by this method are as remarkable as when personally treated. The new science has opened up another avenue of bus ness for young men and women, and hundreds are taking the course of instruction. The Weltmer Method of j Mrtgnectic Healing is winning the j admiration of the most noted pbvsiI cians, for nearly all the cures effected i had been given up by doctors as hopeless. The remarkable success attending his discoveries has stamped Pi of. S. A. Weltmer as one of the t great men of the age. After Six Years of Intense ro; Suffering, Promptly Cured Dy 0 0 0 entire circulation h I UJ 0? Oi Oi aro a severe drain stantly sapping away the vitality, be eliminated from the blood, and can have any effect. There is no uncertainty about lli made for it is backed up strongly testimony of those who have be and know of its virtues by experict Mr. L. J. Clark, of Orange Courtho " For six years T ii.v.l an obstinate, run ankle, which at times caused me intense so disabled for a long while that 1 wa< business. One of the best doctors treat* but did me no good. 1 then tried varioi without the least benefit. S. S. S. was *!.?< T t,, tn- if 11 i nicinicu iuav *. iv 4 , ,t. | wonderful. It seemed to get right at | disease r.ud force the poison out, and ' pletely cured." Swift's Specific? S0 S0 ?. FOR ! ?drives out every trace of impur , j cures permanently the most obstin , I is the only blood remedy guarai tains not a particle of potash, me cures Contagious Blood Poison. Kr Rheumatism, Sores. I" leers Boils, upon 8. 8. S.: nothing can take it; Valuable b'X>ks mailed free by S\\ Rseeipt for Poverty. Augusta Chronicle The- Canton 'Miss ) Times is edited by a man who is prominent in medicine and agriculture. Iu a recent number of his paper he tells his planting contemporaries l,how to get poor and stay poor." Here is the receipt: tkJust? keep on doing what you have been doing all your life. Don't raise much corn. Don't raise hogs: don't raise coltf; don't have but few cows: don't feed and care for them ? starve the calves. Don't have any sheep: don't have good gardens; don't raise many potatoes; don't raise any fowls, but a few chickens, and let them scratch for a living; have a good many dogs: don't work any mofe than you are absolutely forced to. Don't put up tiny lm- : provemcnts; don't circle your iar.d, and be sure not to fertilize it any. Don't have any shelter or hay for your little stock. Be sure to keep up with your neighbor in dress, style and equippage. Don't, take any papers, especially agricultural odgs. < Don't buy any improved stock. Don't miss town once a week or oftener, and always be on hand at every gathering, visit and have visitors often, hire all the labor you are able to get, growl about hard times, and envy the fellow who ha9 money and call him a Sbylock. Don't stay in the field any more than you can help, and don't work your crops too fast, nor gather so early. Sliufc the ! feed cf your plow sto k, to they wiil ; have a good appetite and eat all the I cobs and shucks. Spend every dol- j lar a9 fast as you get it. Don't take any interest iu public affairs, and be ! lieve all the office-seekers tell you. Lay all your misfoitune3 and poverty on the times and the other fellow; never think you can do wrong cr j possibly be at fault. Expafiateupon I what you would do if you only had a I? ? - ? - ? * ~ .I-. op /-I tvJiof vnn I Lie lliuuejr iU UW WU, nuu ?. ui*u JW.V. will do after a while. Berate all who have the means aod won't help you, and especially those who do, if they don't it all. Lastly, raise cotton and hire it hoed and picked. D.> all or most of these things, - and you will get poor and stay poor. Volc&ni-: Eruptisns j Are grand, but Skin Eruptions rob life of j >y. Buckler/a Arnica Salve cures them, aho Oid, Banning and j Fever Sorea, Ulcers, Boils, Felons, i Corns, "Warts, Cats. B. u-ses, Burns, Scalds, Chapped Hands, Caiiblains i Best Pile cure on earth. Drives out Pains and Aches. Only 25 cents, a i box. Cure guaranteed. Sold by J. i E. KaufmaDn, Druggist. Ho Ensw 2?r. Depe^. Here's one on Chauocey Depew. The genial doctor had dropped in to see a gentleman on soma business at his pi ivatc residence. Ac k quisi UUIlk Obstinate sores and ulcers which fuse to Ileal under ordinary 1: ?; eat s!X)ii become chronic and d<>cp_ uted, and are a sure sijrn tli.it liie > in a depraved condition. They upon the system, and are con- ; In every case the poison must 110 amount of external treatment c merits of S. S. S. ; every claim by convi nci im "yV.., write: M. uing nicer on my w $ 'suiTeriir*. I was m:.';.. )aLA ijt ; wliolly unlit for . jjij ?<1 mo constantly r. 1 'Jfc' us bit.*0(1 rern^ii <, C :fj '?L/*? Js&A so liijjhly recom1 was toon coin- 'A-* THE BLOOD ity in the Wood, and in this way ate, deep-seated :x>:m or lil'TT. 3t 1 itoed purely ve^e'nble. and eonreury. or other mineral. S. S S rofula. Cancer, Catarrh. Eczema, or any other blood trouble. Insist 5 place. 'ift ^pecitie Company. Atlanta. Ga-. , i ! live small boy was pluying in the extension room back of the parlor. He seemed to take a great interest in the visitor, and every now and then susp< nded his sport to reconcoiter him. When Mr. Depew left, the lad ran to the front window and looking out a^ked: "Who is that mm, pipa?" "He's the gentleman your mother and I were talking about at the breakfast table this morning, Mr. Depcw, the greatest story teller I ever heard." A few days after the visitor came j again The lad was standing on the J front stoop, aod as Mr. Depew rang the bell he said to him: "I know you." Mr Depew is fond of children, and -n* .1-- rut. f tl iU. paiiiog ma litue leuuw uu me jueau j observed encouregingly, "Come now, if you think you know who I am, who em If "You're the gentleman that tells the biggest whoppers papa ever j heard." Story of a Slave. i To be bound hand and foot for j years by the chains of disease is the j worst of slavery. George D. Wil- : liams, of Manchester, Mich , tells i how such a slave was made free, i He says: "My wife has been so j helpless for five years that she could j not turn over in bed alone. After using two bottles cf Electiic Bitters, j she is wonderfully improved and able to do her own work." This j supreme remedy for female diseases ! quickly cures nervousness, sleepless- j ne3?, melancholy, headache, faintiDg j and dizzy spells. This miracle work- j ing medicine is a godsend to weak, j > i - J 1_ T I??. I sicaiy, run ut.vli puupir. uuitle guaranteed. Only 50 cents. Sold by J E. Ivaufmann, Diuggidt. The Skyrcckst Brand. A man traveling, entered a taverr, and seeing no one present but the landlord ami a Negro, seated himself aud entered into a conversation with the Nvgro Shortly, he asked Sambo if he way. dry. Sambo said he was. Stranger told him to go to the bar and take something at his expense. Negro did so and shortly left. Landlord says to the stranger: 'Are you acquainted with that negro "No, never saw him before; but why do you ask?'' "I supposed so from your conversing with him and asking him to drink." "Oh !" said the stranger, "I was experimenting. The fact is, I was dry myself, and I thought that if your liquor didn't kill the Negro in 15 minutes, I would venture to take a drink myself.'; . Landlord's curiosity fully satisfied. "Whooping Caugh. j I bad a little boy who was nearly dead from an attack of whooping j cough. My neighbors recommended j Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. I did not think that any medicine would help him, but after giving him a few doses of that remedy I noticed au improvement, and one bottle cured him entirely. It is the D.arrhoea Remedy.?P. E. Grisham, Grars Mills, La. For sale by J. E. Kaufmann. Leaving Adeliads 2?hin&. A young man wbo bad recently j returned from the Australian colonies to wed the girl of Lis heart was reproached the other day by bis belr.v?-rl for his fudclpness. "" I "I know vou say you love me very j mucL," she exclaimed, "but I darisiy i you said just the same thing to the I other giil whom you have treated so j Heartlessly?poor thing!" "What other girl ?" grasped the as- j toni:-hed luver, who was conscious of I *u unswerving fidelity to the fair j being whom he had ever loved. "Why. the girl iu Australia," an- j ^wered the innocent. "I overheard them iay the other day that you left j A k-la'.de to come to me." And ii took sometime and a large j : m ip to convince her that he was net j i "gay Ljthaiio." Punplis, Bosls aud other Humors appear wtieu the blood gets impuie. i Tatj beet lemKly is l)r. M. A. Sim- | ' mons Live! Med c ne. i ; jteseuninrt Makes the food more de South ara Tsxtilo Intersst3. j ' The Rapid Development of Textile I Manufacturing Interests?A Rail- j | road's Liudable TVoik. The Textile Excelsior, a leading ! authority iu textile interests, has the | Southern cotton mill development | and of the work of Ibe Southern ' Riilway in connection with i!: "The rapid development of textile { manufacturing interests in the South- ! ern States has created a great deal of interest among writers for the j daily and trade papers. That devel- J opment has been so marked as to at- . tract not only the-attention of. men actively connected with the industry, but of economic and industrial stu- ! dents throughout the entire country. There must, of course, be certain : practical advantages for ruanufac turing, advantages of a most pronounced character, before such a development could be possible. The 1 South has these advantages. "The greater growth of the textile i industry in the South has naturally | been in the development of cotton manufacturing. And this development has been along the line of certain large railway system?, notably the Southern Railway. "In 1890, according to the returns made to the Census Bureau, there were in the States of Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Cirolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia 36,203 looms and 1,533,250 spindles. Ia these same States, am .Lnntrv 1 (Ku rcpr thrro wpt-p V/u y auum j j v?v* w >i w | 95,552 looms and 3.693,030 spindles. This shows an increase of lGi per cent in the former and 147 per cent in the latter. There are in these States now 410 cotton mills, of which 211 are located on the Southern Railway. "Judging from present indications the development of the textile industry in the South has just begun. Several new mills have been located aloDg the line of the Southern Railway to be constructed within the next twelve months, and on some of them wotk has already begun. In addition to these new mills a great many of those now in operation ere adding new machinery and in other ways making preparations to enlarge their output. "A word of praise is due the Southern Railway for the work it has done in promoting cotton spinning and other textile manufacturing in the South. It is doing Dotable and laudable work in developing the rich section of the South that it traverses. The many Dew mills that the people along its lines appreciate the railroad's (fl'jrts and are endeavoring to j assist it in utilizing the advantages j that nature has placed within their j reach. "The fact that the Southern has ! been able to equip and managr one j of the best railway systems of the j country shows conclusively that the j South is prospering, and under like ' conditions will continue to prosper." j Bisxnark's Ire a Narva i Was the result of his splendid I health. Indomitable will and tre- j mendous energy are not found where j , Stouncb, Liver, Kidneys and Bowels i are out of order. If you want these j , qualities and the success they bring, I r use Dr. King's Now Life Ihlis. They ; < develop every power of biaiu and j body. Ojly 2oc at J. E Kiufmann's i drug store. ? : ? Qiita a Difference t ! ; C Bink Director?Stole 25 cents, J _ did lie? The scoundrel. I'll arrest j ( him and have him sent to the peni- j ^ tentiary this very day. The idea cf j j a cashier of ours doiDg anything like } that is enough to?" ! Bank Examiner?Pardon me, bit; j ] but you seem to have misunderstood : y me." | I "Oj! Well, perhaps I did. I've i j been a little deaf for a good many j t years." I Baking i " Powder ore jj iicious and wholesome j ?en eo., hew von*. g "What I said, was that jour cash ier left only 25 cents in the safe. He stole all the rest." ' Great C;e*ar ! I must see him at once and get him to compromise the matter. ? 20cts. civen away Cut thi3 cut and take it to the druggist named below and you wiil receive a regular 25a size bottle of Dr. Sawyei's "Lkatine for 5c. Ukatine positively cures all forms of Kidney difficulties, Dyspepsia Cou- by stipation, Headache, lheumatisro, Putting of tbe Eyes Ukatinc cures < Pimples and blotches, and makes sallow and yellow skin white. Do not delay, but take advantage of this great offer, as thousands bear evidence to the won- , derful curative powers of Uka- , tine. j. e. kaufmann; Lexington, S. C. J Is thi Earth Hollow? i According to a queer belief in ex- j istence among the Icelanders, all i waters which flow towards tbe north are drawn thither-ward by a suction . created by the oceans tumbling downward through the hollow which ' they firmly believe penetrates our ( globe from pole to pole. Their authority for this curious belief is ( the "Utama Saga,"' a semi-sacred ; work, written early in the fourteen! h \ ceuiuiy. ? Mrny old soldiers dow feel the , effects of the hard service they tn- ( dured duriog the war. Mr. Geo. S. ( AudersoD, of Rossville, York county, PeDn., who saw the hardest kind of service at the front, is now frequently troubled with rheumatism. "I had a severe attack lately," he says, 1 "and procured a bottle of Chamber 1 Iain's Pain Balm. It did so inueL good that I would like to know what i you would charge me for one dozen : bottles." Mr. Anderson wanted i; both for his own use and to supply it to his friends and neighbors, as every family should have a bottle of it in their home, not only for lheu ( matism, but lame back, sprains, swellings, cuts, bruises and burns, for which it is uuequalled. For sale by J E Kaufmann. ?????? ? Then and Nov. Compare the luxurious habits of , the present legislators with those < known to have been in vogue not over a century ago among one of the most aristocratic bodies in America. It has not yet been 100 years since i the Pennsylvania legislature assem- : bled passed this law: "That in the | future no member of the house shall > come barefoot or eat his bread and cheese cn the steps !" I * Try Allen's Foot-Ease. A powder to be shaken into the shoes. At this scasou your feet feel swollen, uervous, hot, and get tired easily. If ycu have smaitling feet or tight shoes, try Alien s Foot Ease It cools the feet ana makes walking easy. Relieves corns ami bunions of all pain and gives rest and comfort. 1 Try it today. Sold by all druggists, | grocers, sboo stores an 1 gcuoia! storekeepers everywhere. Price 21c. rrial packages fiec. Address, Allen < - ^^1 *^,1 T? V V J. VIU191CU, i-iv 11V/J J j A Case cf Doubt. Doctor?"James, did that ladv in . , ] he waiting 100111 come 10 her owl 5 :oach or in a trolley caif1 Seivant < ?Trolley car, sir." Doctor?Thanks! Wouldn't tell from her dress whether i o prescribe three months at Xew ( )ort or sulphur and molassct!" ^ J. T. Iteese, Mudoc, S. C , write-: i Jave used Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Ddicine 12 years. C .r J me of t hdigpstion and my wife of Sid 1 ieadachs. Think it worth tou> 1 c imes as much as either Zeilin's cr ] Lack Draught I used. ] ADVERTISING RATES. Advertisements will bo inserted at tbe ruie ol 7> cents prr square of one inch s,tace for first inseiiiou and CO cents per inch for each subsequent insertion. Liberal contracts made aitb those wishing to advertise for three, six end twelve months. Notices in the local column 5 cent* pai . line each inserion. Obitnaries charged for at the rate of one cent a word, wt en they exceed 100 worda. ^ Marriage notices inserted free. v Address <5. II. HARMAN, Editor and Publisher. BcsaBKaHBaHMBBaannai The best day in the whole year for duty is today. A big cotton mill is being erected at Jiennetisville. The gentle quiver in a girl's voioe often holds her beau. A bad actor is sometimes the ham ssetved with antique eggs. But few men object to being treated by a physician?at a bar. Bu.Uoeks and clnins are not class<sj e.I as good f.eeuiity for loans. Ii' "Out cf Soitj," Cross and Peevish, take Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine. Cheerfulness will return and life acquires new zest. ~j3I The new military company at Greenville is now fully organized. * , *v3 Many a man iB compelled to take married life according to direction. One of Dewey's men has fallen heir to 850,003. It didn't hurt him much. The State of Texas is about 75,000 equare miles larger than the area of Spain. It makes do difference how bad the wound if you use DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve; it will quickly heal and leave no scar. J. E. Kaufmann. The great trouble with the world's idols are that they are all more less cracked. Probably Lota wife passed some other woman and turned to see what she hid on. # "My son follows the medical profession." "Where did he study medicine?" "Ob, he isn't a doctor; he's an undertaker." Health, Strength and Nerve Force follow the use of Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine, which insures good Dig' s'ion an 1 Assimilation. Gen. Joe Wheeler will resign from Congress if ho i3 sent to the Philippines for active service as u General ;u the regular army. ^ A company capitalized at $100,000 s being organized in this State for pressiug round cotton' bales. It is called the "S. C. Round Bale Co."' You cannot accomplish any work ir business unless you feel well. If you feel "Used Up?Tired Out," ako Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine. About twenty five million souls imong the population of Russia are in the brink of starvation as a result if the famine in European Russia. The farm on which Abraham Lincoln wa9 born, two miles south of Holgenville, Kentucky, has been sold to Divid Greer.'of New York. Pu<?umooi3, la grippe, coughs, !:]= , cronp nnd whooping cough ' oadily vif i 1 to Oae Minute Cough Cu:e. l*-e tliis remedy in time and 9ave a doctor's bill?or the undertaker's. J. E Kaufmann. The Agricultural Department's year book, which now takes the place of the annual report, will soon be ready for distribution by Congressmen. Don't think yon can cure that slight attack of Dyspepsia by dieting or that it will cure itself. Kodol Dyspepsia Care will cure it; it "digests what you eatr and restores the digestive organs to health. J. E. Kaufmann. While Gen. M. 0. Butler is an vocatc of free silver, he believes it will be unwise for theDemocra^ make that a leading plank ^ ^H Df 35 TwentyI. > >J . .St. 1>CLroit, Mio':., is one of the rnaoy thousand of re-ru-na's friends. Tins is what >he says to Dr. Hartiaan: We have used your Pe-ru-na with the most remarkable results and would iot be without it. We have always recommended it to our friends. A few rears ago I purchased a bottle of your Pe-ru-na and after seeing its results, recommended it to my grocer who was .roubied with dyspepsia, the earing of .vhich induced her to sell il iu her jtore. t>he liys sold large amounts of t. My (laughter lias just been cured ,>f jaundice with iVru-na. My pen ,vou!d prow wcarv were I to begin to ell you of the numerous cures I'e-ru-na las e heeled in our immediate vicinity >vithin the lus.t couple of years " Dr. Hartinan. President of the Snrgi al Hotel. Columbus, Ohio, will counsel md proscribe for fifty thousand women his year free of charge. Every sufferng woman should write for special question blank for women, and have )r Hartman's book, ' Health an<l kanty." All druggists sell Pe*ru-o?. i - ? A