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-??TH E??<BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM ? IN ? Western South Carolina. 0 RATES REASONABLE. 0 SUBSCRIPTION SI PER ANNUM JOB PRIMING A SPECIALTY I nHI I in ?iiiiiiiiini?iiiwwnMWiiiii-iirt?Tiiirnin-fir-iiii->nnrii>iiiiimiri(ii >?! ill m r-11 ?-? ?? ^ . - .? ir m--? i -r , , i\ Ucprescntatiuc Heu'spapcr. Covers I>cxinion ami thr rrs of the Surrouiulnnj Countirs Like a Blanket. VOL XXIX. LEXIXOTON, S. C., WI-OMISDAV. AH.l'ST HI. 1SOO. AO, 10 |t<T77-. SI- SvCOSTCSZIolr, TS3-. S^-^T-^GrZESS. I lilcr-^Mr^L > 1 MA IX STIJKET, <;<>! >1 >11II A, S. ikvr"Yi^ll'i W-T 1;/; Solicits a Share of Your Valued Patronage. Polite and Prompt Attention. w ' k \ /X ~|; J LA; I i c"^ u o.-r 1..t i??rf 4 Woman OnSy Knows what suffering from falling of the womb, whites, painful or irregular menses, or any disease of the distinctly feminine organs is. A man may sympa- : thize or pity hat he can r.<>t know t'.te B agonies she goes through?the terrible S suffering, so patiently tome, which robs her of beauty, hope an J happiness. Vet this sutler: rg really is needless. McELREE'S Wine oi CM will banish it. This medicine cures all " female diseases " quick: lv and permanently. It does away I j with humiliating physical examinations. The treatment may be taken at home. There is not con- I ] tinual expense and trouble. The sufferer is cured and stays cured. Wine of Cardui is becoming the leading remedy for all troubles of this class. It costs but -5i from any , druggist. For advice in cases requiring special directions, address, the I "Ladies Advisory Department,*' The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn. x r J MRS.C. J. WEST, Nashville, Tenn., ; I writer: ? ' This wonderful medicine ought I to be In every house where there are girls I i 1 and women.'' ^ finwi in ii iiiiii ii? ii iiff Bill Arp's Lettar. Bill Sa^s He Can't Fool His Wife. Atlanta Constitution. Mr. Lincoln said, '-You may fool some of the people all the time?you may fool all the people some of the time, but you can't fool all the people all the time." That's so, I reckon, but I will add that a man can't fool his wife at ail. She catches up with him by instinct. My wife has been away to Koine and so I took advantage of her absence and had two trees cut down. One was dying at the top and the other was crowding two other trees and doing no good. But she is utterly hos-tile to cutting down a tree and so I have ? to do it while she is away. One of them was cut down low to the ground and after every chip and twig was cleaied up I had grass put over the place where the tree was. I was going to do the other the same way but I got sick and she came home prematurely ana mere was me stump grinning with its fresh cut edges. I was getting better, but when I saw her coming I took a horizontal attitude on the couch and tried to look sick and sad and melancholy. It was too days before she noticed that stump and when she called my attention to it I told her that it was an old stump and had been there for years. She never said anything, but there was a doubtful expression on her tranquil countenance. If there were no grandchildren around here I could get along, but they let the cat out of the bag every tirm and I am the victim. 'I don't remember ever seeing that stump before," said she, but I persuaded her that the late rains had colored it. When she found me out, I assured her that the tree was hallow and was bound to die soon and that its proximity to the other trees prevented their ex^ pansion and that expansion was now the policy of the country. "Yes," said she, "I suppose we must cut down the smaller trees so that the larger ones can have more room. We must kill tfT ihe Filipinos for the same reason. I wonder how many of the poor creatures they have killed. If our people kill a black I brute down here, they make an awful fuss about it, but they are killing ^thousands because they are defending their native land. It is all very t straDge to me." I don't like some of our governor s e utterances. The daily paper jB^fcp.ints in big lines that he said the H^^^nnan or men who lynched a negro ^^^^Krere as guilty in the sight of God as negro they lynched. Surely he didn't say that. The reporter must have mis<1 mted him again. It does ^ not sound like him. There is no . such theology in the books. If Gjd | had not have put a mark upon Ctiu f anybody might have slain him [ Moses had to provide cities of refuge f for those w ho accidentally killed any body, lest the avengers of bloc t! ^ should pursue and overtake and skn ^ them. The avenge r-of blood wer< p recognized factors in the administra ^ tion of the law. What would havi been the punishment of those bluel brutes in Moses s time for their out ^ rages we cannot imagine, for wi 1 the Jews no such crimes were know: and to this day no such erima i known among them. As a race the; I are the purest people iu then dome L I _ i tic rtlaiions. Husbands aro loyal ; and true and kind to tbeir wives to their bu.-b.ind>; children are obedient to tbeir parents and affectionate to j one another. But here among us j are a numerous people who seem ! utteily devoid of those family virtues that are the safeguards of all good government. Within the last thirty years they have grown from childhood to manhood and have become infinitely worse than their fathers and mothers were while in slavery. There are more bastard negroes in and around this city than those born in wedlock. They are not mulattoes, but they are negroes of full blood. ***' * * r 11. . ;, j Xlie moral degeneracy 01 me race i? alarming. The State convicts and County convicts now aggregate over four thousand, and all of them have come to maturity since the close of the civil war. The morals of these negroes gets worse and worse and their outrages upon white women more frequent and more brutal. Our people are shocked and whisper to j oue another, who will be the next I victim. When the savage Indians l i burned the homes and tomahawked J the women and children our forej fathers pursued them by day and by j night and had their revenge. We I have a people among us many of I whom are worse than savages, and | eveiy man among us who is loyal to | his wife or mother or sister or daugh! ter is an avenger of blood and should | never stop until the brute is caught I and slain. For such there are no j cities of refuge and no horns of the j altar for him to lay hold of. This is I one crime that makes a man an outlaw and the people have no moie I feai of provoking the vengeance of j God than did Governor Candler | when he was leading bis brave men ! against the enemy and crying at the j top of his voice, "Shoot 'em, boys ! I oo, boys; Come on and follow me !" I He never thought of giving them a ; trial by jury nor of being guilty of I "Mii-zlni- T.tf ?i m in j Lli U1 UC1 UV I I Vi UVI C WlMtUU u I their perfunctory fashion?let preach! ers and judges speak excathedia | from the pulpit and the bench, our i people will lynch a brute as soon as | they can catch him, and it is no sign j of lawlessness either. You cannot | hud in any State better citizenship j than in Early County and my letters ! from friends who live there defend ' them most heartily from all their ! ' slanderers. If you wish to hear the | truth, just sound the common people : ?the country people, the working I people, who live in the peril of these i outrages?the people who are too poor to move to towns or cities?the ! people who are ol an people ine j most obedient to law?the people j who serve on our juries and work ; the roads, and nurse their sickneighj bors and bury their dead, and who ! gather at the humble church on the ; Sabbath day and worship God. These are the lynchers for this particular crime and always will be. If a thoughtless, reckless element j j jins them it cannot be helped. The people of our county of Bartow, I : i iaiu nr ! MOST VIOLENT GASES HAVE , | APPEARED AT FIRST AS ^ So m: | MERE PIMPLES. and arc fore, operation? the only treatment which th? promptly returns, however, and i- e\ }.ef<>re. Cancer is a deadly poison in ' other external treatment can have n<? e Come from within?tilt* la>t vestige of p rfiTIti Mr. Wm Walp eye gradually ^'rat intervals ran ir fra V and consulted a l *' a,i<l advised that v< tit t". I read , ' " v S S. S.. and dec it 1 / - V* a 7?B . 1 , jf' N ; ( at.c< r becoming F ; jm Nsfe^jL v/r-v Til " *-?* ' tinned altogether - f? {.-.I <.if an<l in?\v . j u "rfrft \\*4j?WrZ. what thr.ntonM ' ! -Sw?.. .?*; \ Cad^lJ Vi '"9S I'<i<itiv?'l v t ho o I S. S. 3. FOR - because it is t*! ? <>nlv p-me-I" which < , the Mi'! t >r ?* it <?:st ?>f t *-vs iT!i- U'0<! tli*- r?*.? 1 'J nut !> '"'if irii-.ll/ I!;sl>t S S. S : S. S. S cin'i'-. ;tI- . ;i:?( .!>. < !' > I?!o< <11 *' i-on. l i' - r-. S.>? <. i-r any y Ori * an* ' r ?r. 1 I'.lc. i ])iseus*s Swift ' "!n|i:iiiv. \tlanta <'? <> !~ i suppose, are a fair sample of the pe ople of (leoigia. There has been but ; ono banging in t.vent) two years. i ; We Lave no white citizens in the ! chaiugmg, nobody ever shoots or j lights in our streets. Sometimes at ! long iutervitls there is a small light j o o | between lawyers in the courthouse. i while court is in session, and the | judge on hand to stop it, but 110th- i ing more. But nine out of ten of j our grand and petit juries would j lynch a negro for this crime as soon j i as they could catch him. Kx-Gov- ! j ernor Joues, of Arkansas, has got j | sense?common sense?and he says: j ! "All this stuff about the law's delay j | provoking lynchings is the merest j I nonsense. When this crime is com- i ! mitted no man stops to think or to j I care whether the brute will be tried I next week or next year. They want j vcngence right now and they aie j going to have it, and that is human , nature in all civilized countries and j is to be commended rather than con- j : damned. Ami so let Governor Candler reconsider and take back, if be said it. He can with propriety teach us j patriotism and the purity of politic?, ' but his *'obier dictu," as the lawyers j call it, on our guilt or innocence beI fore God is ''ultra vires"?it is beyond his jurisdiction and hence goes j for nothing. But we are all getting along pretty j well. Two weeks ago it looked like j I starvation was staring us in the face, j j The garden had dried up, the corn j ! was perishing away: everything save j cotton had withered, but the rains j came in with the dog days, which j this year began on the 20th, and the j i change is wonderful. It looks like ; I a miracle of grace. Yerilv, God i | r> v . j moves in a mysterious way and, as j the poet says: **I>etkiUU 11 yi\j 1-ivavv He hides a smiling face/1 Oar second crop of garden vegeta- | j bles is better than the first. We did j | not count on any more beans or j | squashes or cucumbers and the to- j j rnatoes were nearly dead, but every- J thing is on a boom. Our roses are ! . i more beautiful than ever before and I ! every morning I fill the vases with a j i j fresh supply, and my wife smiles | j her sweet rewards. Verily, we can- j | not forsee what a kind Providence j ; has in store for us. Now, if the j | Philippine war will be honorably ; , closed and our northern brethren | i I will apologize and be reconciled to I ! us, and our negroes will behave and i r> ! vote the Democratic ticket, we will : i all be happy. Bill Arp. | - i ; 1U lii- ?~UUUO. Having recently purchased a full : set of the latest improved surveyor's i instruments, I take this method of j informing the public that I am prei pared to do all kinds of surveying at i the shortest notice and ou the most 1 j liberal terms. All who have survey- j ; ing can save money by addressing ; me at this place. Sam. J. Leaphart, Lexington, S. C. The greatest care should 1>6 given to anv little sore, piuiple or scratch winch show s no disposition to heal under ordiueatment. No one can tell how soon these k'veloj) into Cancer of the worst type, any people die from Cancer simply bcnot know just what the disease is; .* turn themselves over to tie* doctors, <i t<> submit to a cruel and dangerous e do -tors know for Cance r The (lipase en more violent and destructive than the hlood. and an operation, plaster, or li'ect whatever upon it The cure must oi.son must be eradicated. iole. of Walsh town, S. says; "A t the size of a pea came under my left wing larger, from which shooting pains i all directions 1 became great !y alarmed ooi] doctor, who pronounced it Cancer. 't he cut out. but this I could Hot Coll .r ... .1 !,v in my local paper <>i a run- i ]? < 1 to try it. It artel Iik? a cliann. tlx* at first, irritate!, and then ?ii>?*h:iri:iii^r i- ^ra<iiia!!y ?r?-w less and then dwonIr-iviai; a small seah which soon droponly a healthy little scar remains wla-ro to <1<mmy my life one.- hel l fall >\vay." nly cure for Cancer is Swift - Specific? THE BLOOD can c<) ilci-p enough to r- ach the root of tem permanently. A surjrieal operation it of the disease?hecau.-e //',< ./ r./u nothin.: ''an tak" its pi tee. >fuia. Iv7"iiii, Kheumatism. Contagious other form of 1 ?S..?. ! dis. ase \*;iIi::iI.' * will 1-e mailed fr-e to any address l>v r^ia. R:markabl3 Rescue. Mrs. Michael Curtain. Plairfuld. J!! . makes the statement. that she caught (N.hl, which settle?1 on her lungs: she was treated for a month by her family physician, but grew worse. Ife told her she was a hopeless victim of consumption and that no medicine could cure her. Her druggist suggested Dr. King's New DO O O O Discovery for Consumption: -sbe bought a bottle and to her delight found hf-rsflf benefited from fi;.-t dose. She continued its use and after taking six bottles, found herself sound and well: now does her owu housework, and is as well as she ever was?Free trial bottles of this Great Discovery at J. E. Iviuf mann's Drug Store Only do cents and ?1 00, every bottle guaranteed. Fcddsr Curing. Farmer Knotts Tells Ifis Fellow Farmers the Best "Way. To the Editor of the Dispatch: The time for fodder pulling will soon be on hand and a bit of cxpciience from your fillow farmer may be helpful to some one. The practice of pulling fodder I have for the past sc-veral }eais seen very alearly did not pay me, and I am fully con\iuced that our farmers will soon see that there is actual loss to any one that continues the practice. In the first place it is a very costly way of procuring forage for horses. Iu the second place, it is very damaging to the ear of corn and iu the third place it is getting a very inferior forage out of what would if differently treated make a first class feed. AVe have farmers who think it a sin to do different from our venerable progenitors, aod in whose eyes it is criminal to change the condition of the fathers. These men's pr< judicts are too steep a grade for the engines of progresss and around whose minds there is an armor of steel too thick to be penetrated by the balls of this revolutionary movement. To such of course ideas appeal in vain and the reasons for a change can never break through the s'uill in which they live contented with the petrified orthodoxy of the past. I am glad to believe and do rejoice that I have genuine, well grounded reasons for the belief that the great majority of Lexington's farmers do not breathe this stagnated air, and do not live in a region whose nativity generates and fosters such idle dreams and where the citizens will enternaiJy hug such a deluding phantom to their besoms. "With the most of us the curtains of the past have dreams and with the associations of former days there will linger a recollection of respect and the responsibilities of the future should reconcile with our duty , to ourselves and families and to our i country. Let us lay aside all weights which may beset us in our journey [ and press forward to the mark t f a greater remuneration for our labor | and a higher and nobler success in our undertakiug. Corn fodder, when properly cured, is a good feed for stock but sun dried for several hours and exposed to both dew and rain renders it only a second rate forage. I find that about one hundred pounds of fodder for each ten bushels of corn is a very fair average yield in an average year. That will usually cost one da\'.> work and the rLk of losing from rain 1 1 1. . 1 ? . , 1 , r 10 fellll eLiiULlCfc* IUU UULIgei iii-vi <. ai pen sc. i If you will strip several rows alternately leaving each alternate row unshipped, then weigh carefully the corn and fodder from the rows shipI ed and also from the rows not molested you will tiud that the corn <11 the rows not stripped will weigh as much as the corn and fodder on the shipped rows That will tell to any reasoner that it i-= a costly forage th it robs the corn pile of as much in pounds as the fodder weighs. I: is giving up a pound of coin lor a 1 pound of fodder, besides throwing away the woik of one hand for a day to accomplish this destructive end lie will see that the grain uf c<,m > 1, one stalk is full and the o.n; grain on the other has perisht 1 away somewhat, or as we farmers say gen eially "it has swivelled somewhat. I have f u!!11 that there is stiil ;i be way than leaving on the stai When ab.ait roudy for the strip] in process. cut down the entire stalk i the ground with a hoe and stack i goo 1 large stacks and let it cure wt before hauling in. Tbe higher tl stalks the larger the stacks cm 1 made, leaving them always sharp i | the top. Stuck as fast as you cut c within a shoit time afterwards befot any chance of wilting. A man ca cut awhile and then go back an you netd not fear for rain, but rain conns anil should run you out < the lie Id and a large amount of cor /.n f I * r> nriYMiriil mil Crtn fnllilW lii'l 4,1 w" 1 **v r>* J " - o" behind the shu\v< r with your stud ; ing with perfect safety. Cloudy an rainy weather need cause you nofet i nor alarm, for the water will dii | down and go into the ground au not injure in any way your fecdin , value. A laiu immediately afl( stacking will have a like result wit! out any danger to your interest i any way. What dampness remair j in the stack will be driven out by th heat as soon as the wilting and cur ing process sets in, and that will m start till the water has most droppc off to the ground. If a few hour 1 come t-n the stack of good warm sur shine the wilting sets in and you ca see a decided lessening of the size ( stack. Tie a rope around one a tight as you and another person can i in the morning and by night you ca take up a couple of feet of slac rope. That process condenses an solidifies the stack and renders i entirely impressible for the hardes showers to enter more than two c three inches deep, and that will evaj i orate as soon as the "sun comes out, j and each successive showc-r will fin your forage heep still better fortifie ; against its entrance and in a ver few days will Lid defiance to its fur; At first you and your hands wi be grtui and will make some ba I stacks, but I find that the most ord nary field hand will soon catch th idea and move on successfully. A ; first it will be well to use a gree ! corn or roll up a rope of grass an j tuft and tie around the top of th ! stack two or three feet from the to] ! That will help il to stand alone fc I awhile till the solidifying can make i compact so as to stand the assaul 1 of lain and wind. But never put c ; the ground or in little stacks till tl | blades half cure and then place in 1 larger stack. It will never be con i n I pact, will never solidify but will coi tinue to be poms and will admit tl i rain and dew to its ruin and wi : be surely a dead loss if any rait ! fall on it before housing. I A still better way if you ba^ j bouse room is to cut and baulstraigl j to tbe shelter and stack upright, ta j scls upwards. Just keep it erect ar j yen cau stait at back side of tbe lo I and "fill plum to tbe door" witboi . any ri.-k of its injury. It will evap rate upward and will continue to i I so till dry. Then you can throw i high and pack as you choose witboi harm and refill this space with mo: green coin. Never throw dov lengthwise while in green state on ai size pile. That is simply to give . over to mould, blight and ruin: tb is but to give up your mastery ar surrender your possession. If yc are featful of committing violence your best interest, try an acre i two in stacks tbis year and be cji viaced that you persist in doing fooli>b, unremunerative and non pr gres.-ive thing from which you a the loser and voi r family are the su - -t.- r .... :? i . n Itrt'l'fi. li VO'J icai lltlilg IU SUl'H on a large scale put a few loads u right in a ft nee corner and place few boaids over it to prevent tl lavages of the rainfall and let vol reason have a fair, even chance wil your Lid*, bound pujutliccs aud tin tl i the act of a good husbandman, kind companion and generous fatht to say nothing of the righteous pa of a merciful owner to provide a n tl ilious, palable food for the pot faithful horse v.'ho is ever ready do its master s bidding. 'I'll'- f. rage thus cured is a iiatui gr< t-n color, much stronger in tic ing }ewer and far mole s-atisfaeto to }< '! ' .-lock. When you have p. tialiy tried this experiment, just ! M)ur hoi>e di cide the c t.-f for y< ! and i'liu'c iu bis uacli folate cm i in thi;-way and the old sou dri beautiful "valid" bundle of f-.d 1 an ) ><.v wbicli L<- will use up lir and K-t Sob in n:'s ad\iec, "^o to t t -w? Absolutely1 * Makes the food more d< ir G ant, thou sluggard, have its proper n corrective iilluence on vour future. * 1 1 lnul that corn thus cured weighs J several pounds more on the bushel } and much fuller and more even grain ^ than when .-tupped in our old way. ^ With me the question is a settled one for all time to come, and with me : (J there is no further doubt nor hesitation. Iu 1897 I tried enough to conP I viuce mo and in Is98 I thus treated i the entire crop on the place except j (f ? the contract farms. I will not use i force and power to compell them to ! come to my wavs in this, as these ! u . i iiniiiic nciinttv .'#11 tlif-ir nnrtinn r.f is " J 1 7 the corn ami fodder to personsiu the e i ! j neighborhood, and on the stalk as 1 use mine it is, yet not salt able. In >t . ' j this way a large portion of mine j stood in the field this year till iu i February and March. Care and vigHence should be kept and as soon as 1 ^ a stack begins to show signs of falling it should be hauled iu. It is ! is n better if any one has house room to 1 haul in as soon as convenient after 1 u being dried, but that is a (juestioD ] j for each fanner's capacity. The corn ' can be broken c IV in the field, placed i .j. in the bin and thus stalks and forage can be secured from loss by a rude ' shelter uf lough boards if the farmer 1 hus no shelter in reach of him. j The feeding power of this forage ' ^ is much better and the capacity is j * y about doubled or thribbled by the ^ addition of the tassel and small end 11 from the ear up, and any one will be 1 (] surprised tu see how much ef the j. stalk the stuck will eat, and wbat is ] e nut eaten becomes trampelUd up into j f a fast class fertilizer for another i u crop, besides assisting in making a j j comfortable bed fur the hoise in the j e stable. By using a shredder and ;) teiring the stalks and blades into ir tine pieces, the entire lot becomes firm forage and it well pays any one ?g who can pay twenty-five to forty dollars to buy one for such a use. The blades of fodder fill the place 1G . in the corn crop that the luDgs fill in t :e human system. When you tear i out a man's lungs, breathing ceases | and death takes hold. Tear away i le i the blades of fodder and the nu- I '11 trition, that is in the stalk can have I is no further circulation and the corn ! "rains perish to that extent but cut I ;e ? 1 j ^ it all down and the good work gees j on for several hours and nature cong j tinues to carry on the separation of ^ mateiials by the pores in the blades j of fodder and the restoration of what ! q is needed when the useless and pois- I j enous gasses are set at liberty and j released so that thev can escape ip ' 1 ^ through the tops of these stacks. Nature in her wisdom Las placed rc i this work on the blades of corn and . *n ! to remove them when so much needed i iv I ^ by the ear is a violation of natures j laws and must meet with a refusal \ at , ; j on her part to fulhll her obligations; I to "feed me till I want no more. , )U 1 Nature knows best when the ear has ' to I no longer a need for its feeders and 1 or n ! when this time arrives the little Q- 1 ^ blades beginning at the ground com- j mence to give up their life, to fade j and to die. till ail hav* surrendered re j, their living green and in death part with all. We should decide when i er we plant if we want grain or forage, i if grain be our aim then it will be i a well to remember that there is doubt- 1 re ful wisdom in interferences with na- : tare's decrees that are more unalter- I tli able and more unchangeable than -U , , the bcasUd laws of the Modes and i a i, 1 orsims. If forage be our aim we cm get it ! I without such a sacrifice, and it will II be better to olaitt with that end in } ' view. It^Hes getting ;i better corn 1 *u grain ami better h rage, we run but little lisk of l'^s from ram. ami a a' man can cut ami stack two or three u- times as much a- he can strip in ry acreage per ilay. llesi.lcs this it rc11 moves the stalks t'roi.i the tichl ami a grass blaiie <>v mower can l?o ureal on jU peavines or glass that may be on the hm 1. I). -J. Ivnctts. Lv' .Swansea. August, U. !S'. ier The churches of the I'.iitcJ Stat.'S : he i claim "J 'J> ' h'tu ' communicants. . Dakino ^ Powder Pure elicious and wholesome WPEP CO.. NEW VC9K. We're Agin It. Tbe Stat<: Tho Batesbur<j people, it is reported, are almost uuan imously in favor of tbe proposition to consolidate Lexington and Richland counties, believing tbat after this shall be done it will be easier to form a new couuty witu r.atesourg as tne county seat. They are shrewd folks and argue logically, and if they want to support the Congaree county scheme with that ulterior object let them go ahead. We doubt whether there would be objection on this side to their plan if western Lexington should prefer it, as there is uo hunger here for mere bigness of ten itory. Batesburg is in truth well situated to be the seat of a new county, em bracing western Lexington, northern Aiken and bits of southern Edgefield and Saluda. If the Lexingtouians Dver that way shall work on the lines proposed Congaree county will have its only serious obstacle removed. We ask the State to reconsider its Greater Richland or as it calls it "Congaree County" scheme. We're agin it. We joiu bauds with the Lex ingtou Dispatch to fight it to the last ditch. The Ivlgefield ami Saluda papers will be ou baud in the fight and the Johuston Monitor will make a noble defence for its section. Batesburg may be ever so ambilious to become a county scat but Aiken has no teriitory to spare. Let the State let well enough alone, and keep to its own side of the river. Instead of making two blades of grass growwhere one grew before it is trying to reverse the order of things and wants one big blade in place of two lloiiiish ing ones now growing. We do not believe the State is sincere in its do sire to annex Lexington to Kichlund but anyway, we're agin it.?Aiken Journal and Review. About one month ago my child, which is fifteen months old, had an attack of diarrhoea accompanied by vomiting. I gave it such remedies as are usually given in such cases, but as nothing gave relief, we sent for a physician and it was under his care for a week. At this time the child had been sick for about ten days and was having about twentyfive operations of the bowels every twelve hours, and we were convinced that unless it soon obtained relief it would not live. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Itemed)' was recommended, and I decided to tiy it. I soon noticed a change for the better; by its continued use a complete cure was brought about and it is now perfectly healthy.?C. L. Boggs, Stumptown, Gilmer Co , W. Ya. For sale by J. K. Ivaufmann. 2To, Thank You. The Saluda and Newberry telephone line, is being rapidly put up between the couit houses of Saluda and Newberry. By the by, would it not be betUr for the two counties to consolidate. The Saluda river only divides them and that could be free bridged, electic car put on the extension which would be v e-r-y c o-nv-e-n-i e-n t for the whole country. It is open for discussion.?Lexington Dispatch, j Not a bit of it. Saluda wants no consolidation where she will lose tier identity. If she finds she can't take care of herself. She will go back to her old mother, Edgefield. If on the other baud, little slices of i an adjoining county would find it more ! convenient to be made a part of us, I will try to make room for them and make them welcome ?Saluda Advo- j cate, August 'Jib, 1ST.). - ? Story of a Slave. To be bound hand and foot for years by the chains of disease is the worst form of slavery. George 1> Williams, of Manchester, Mich , tells i t. .. , 1..,.., f,, LIUW LlJULIl a Ciau* n luuvtv. til v He sajt- "My wife ha- been so l:t! >less for five years that she oui-i fi? ! torn over in bed alone. Aftei using two ljjtties of Electiie Hitter-., sin- is wonderfully improved and able f.< ! .< Ler own work. Tins supn me rem e-dy for female diseases |>ji?*kl\ cuus U'.i vuusncss, sleeplessness, melancholy. headache, backache. f.ini.ng a Lid di/.zy spells. This miracle woik ing midicir.e is a God s-ti.d t ? weak, sickly, run down people. Evan bottle guaranteed. Only .'< cents. Sold by J E Kaufmann. Druggist. ADVERTISING RATES. Adv. r*tNi !:n-!its will he inserted at the rtt.oi 7? o iits p. r square of oue inch >. .:co 1 r Jir-t insertion, and Go cents per ii.rl* t r ouch subsequent insertion. Liberal contracts made with those wishing to advertise for three, 8ix and twelve ? niom.is. fl Notices in the local column 5 cents per S line each insertion. * ^ Obituaries charged for at the rate of cne M cent a word, wt en they exceed 100 words. iMarriago notices inserted free. Add resH (?. M. HAKMAN, Editor and Publisher. The Best Kemedy for Flux. Mi .Joliii Mnthias a well known stock dealer of Pulaski, Ky., says: i. t n iv r .. ~ ^ l. .?!iu AiU'I SUIieilllg iur OH'I a Wt't-hi ttllU !lux, and my physiciau Laving failed to relieve me, I was advised to try Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera aDd Diarrhoea Remedy, aud have the pleasure of stating that the half of one bottle cured me." For sale by J E Kaufmann. The Christian Scientists have organized a Church in Cbsileston. No man can worry about how he lot ks and keep his bank account growing. For Headache canard mrs.,t likelv ~ ~ by a Disordered Stomach, accompanied by Constipation, use Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine. No man will ever be celebrated for his piety whose religion is all in his head. The girl who cau speak seven lauguages is less sought after than the girl who cau hold her tongue in cue. Keep the Stomach and Bowels in good condition, the Waste Avenues open and free by an occasional dose of Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine. Haller says that a single female house fly lays '20,080,320 eggs in one season. The "insiders' in the stock market are the "lambs" after the "beais" take them in. Quickly cure constipation and rebuild and invigorate the entire system ?never gripe or nauseate?DeWitt's Little Early Risers. J. E. Kaufmanu. The suit a tailor makes a man seldom lasts as long as his suit against him. Any girl who refuses a sparklirg diamond engagement ring must be atone blind. In Diarrhoea Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine is invaluable. It gives Tone to the Stomach, Aids Digestion and Assists Nature in carrying oil all Impurities. If the wages of siu is death some people are slow in collecting what is due them. There is hope for any young man who is willing to unlearn what he thinks he knows. If you feel sleepy, ill and bilious and wish to feel well, bright and wide awake use Dr. Sawyers Little Wide Awake Pills. They are tl e best. J. K. Kaufmanu. Recruits for the Chinese army are not accepted unless they can jump a ditch six feet wide. It is estimated that on an average each penny in circulation changes hands 11 times in a week. Let disease come as they will, T ? f/\ a T nri/1 1 J.U1VC JJUC IUC U1TC1 uuv.4 MV healthy still; Pleasant to take, unlike a pill, Regulates the system and cures every ill. Five times more cotton is said to be needed by the mills of Spartanburg than the county raises. Simple health rules demand that you check your present kidney trouble by giving Dr. Sawyer's Ukatine a trial. You will find your investment good. J. E. Kaufmann. The man who never tries to do anything and the man who tries to do everything are both foolish. Ledgers, journals records, counter books, memorandum books, school books, pads, pencils, ink of all colors, mucilage, &c., for sale at the Bazaar. A horse is never sick at the stomach, because that animal is not pro vided with a gall bladder. Congressman Ketcham, of New York, bas seived in 13 congresses, and hss never made a speech. Persistent Pride?"Will you love i.3 just as much when I am dead V Piidegroom ibsenth ) "More, darling, more. * I ? I Congressman Talbeit says that he I will not oppose Senator Tillman; that he is entirely content with a place in the lower house. < > ltlaw is the name of a man in Mississippi who has recently aniidiiikm d himself as a candidate for . ,.f ti... J 1-1 IT I W. 1,1, J -, ..V V,. King i i. :>rgC. of (i'.'CHC. getJ, tbfi j Mtiii!lest salary <?f ;suy European tiov' errign. 11?- has to rock along, poor, j fellow, < !! SJilil.Oltd }l y? ur J >) . Siwy?! n Arnica an 1 Witch Hazel Salw heals ami soothes in!l on*?! >kin. :i!.< 1 i- especially recommends .1 {< . lien! cots, burns, bruises aiu 1 *? r< s. .1 II. K infiuaiin. A-'j lii.u (icneial E.oyd announces j that tLirly c. tupaires iu the militia set vice of the State have been comj pht ly and entirely ((piipped.