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THE LORD PRO VIDES. DR. TALMACE DISCOURSES ON TH BENEFICENCE OF PROVIDENCE. The EloquentDiviue;Takes His Text Froj the Fall of Manna In the Wildterness an Interests His Hearers. At Long Branch, N. J., on Sunda3 the great Brooklyn preacher, (iH coursed on tie gospel provision fo: ordinary and extraordinary needs His text was Joshua v, 13: "And thi manna ceased on the morrow aftei they had eaten of the old corn of th< land." Only those who have had some thing to do with the conunissariat o an army known what a job it is t( feed and clothe five or six lundre( thousand men. Wll, there is such r host I.s that marching across the des ert. Thoy are cut oil' from all arm, supplies. There aire no rail trainm bringing down food or blankets. Shal theyall perish? No. TheLord comet from heaven to rescue, and he toll(clep the shoes and the coats which in U year or two would have been worn t( rags and tatters, and they beecmt storiii-proof and time-proof. so tlwit after forty years of wearing, the V.cIt and shoes are as good as new. k sides that, eveiy morning there is :1 shower of bread, not sour and soggy, for the rising of that bread is iaic inheaven, and celestial fingers havc mixed it amid rolled it into halls. light. laky, anld swee. as ihough t hey werc crumbs throwu oti from a heavenl. bonquet. T wo bt ce of bread mad' every daY inl ihe up11per n11sionl-ol for those vhy, sit at the table Wit,l tho king, anld the ot her for the march iig Isnilif.es inl the wilderntless. I do nlot very 111meuh pity the Israe lites for the flct that they had onl. mnnalim to eat. It was, Isupposo, tl( best food ever provided. I know thal the raviis brougit food to hiungr1 Elijah; but I should not so well iavt( liked thiose black waiti-s. liatlhei would I have the face that :nei dowi vvery mornimg iml the buckets of (i clean, sweet, (od-proviuled edible But now the Israelites have takeni th< last bit of it in their finlgers aid lput the last delicate morsl 1ct' it to Ihceii lips, They look out. :1d there is h( maUlim. Wlv this cessation ()l h.e:v ly sup))ly? It \\-is ecaluse [1 Isie lites hiad arrivel inl Canaani, ac1 tihelv smelled tihe Ibrenth I of Ihe lut.rvest fiOlds, and the crowded barnls of tht( voiuitry were thrown opei to them. All the inhacflbitants had fled, and i] dih oine of tht Lord of Hosts thi( Israelites tcok posession of every thing. Well, the threshin1g-floor i, cleared, the cm-rn is senttere(l over it tle ox-n aric brought aronid in laz. and perpetial eircuit un1til thev corl is trainI'l loose; then it is wili,owcf with a fa., and it is ground andci it if baked, an1d. lo! there is enough breah for all the worn out host. "And i1h< 111011Ma (eased on the morrow afte1 they had (ite) of the old cori of ih< hand." From a1moig the m1iummi1i1ies o: Egypt, cuad Canaan have been brough grains of corn, exactly like our Indiai corn, and recently planted they hav produced the same kind of corn, wit1 which we are famniliar'. So I am11 no sure which kind of grain my text rt fers to, blut all the same is tihe mearu lng. The bisection of this sublject lead me, ffYrst, to speak of especial relie for especiail einer'gone(y:an d, seconidly of the old corn of the gospel for or dinary circumstances. if these Isr'aelites Ein1 tIc widerness li!l d no ''i''(lll'c heavenly ba)keries, thler rst, have bceeni a long linee dea (tohldrenc half buried ini ihe sando then, there would have beeni a lon; line of (lead women wait ing for th jackals: theic, thlec'e would have bee; a long line of dead men uniburied because thier'e wou(5ld have been n, one bury theum. I would have bee: told in the history of the world thati great companily of good pe'ople starte< out from Egypt for Canaan, and wer< neveri heard of, as thoroughly lost i1 the wilderness of sand as the City a Boston and the President were los in the wilderness of water's. Whai uso was it to them, thiere was plent of oorn in Canaan, or p)lenty of cor in EgyptU What they wanted was somlethcin to eat right there, whiere there wc not so much as a grass-blade. I other word(s, anl e'special supp)ly foi' a especial emer'gency. That is who some of you wanit. Tile ori'nar' comfort, tihe ordinary counisel, do nc seemI to meect youri case. There ar' those who feel that they imiust have a omniipotent and iniciediate CSupply)1 and you shall have it. It is a pcaini and phiysical distres through which you must go? Doe not Jesus know aill about pain? D)it ho not suffer it in the most sensitiv' art of hecad and hand and foot? H< has a mnixtureQ of comfort, onle drl'O of wvhichi shall curo the wors paroxysm. it is the smeuc graice t hal soothed Robert Hall when, aftoi writhing oil thme carpet in physical tor hures, hce cried out: "Oh! I suffer od terrill' but I didn't cry oul while I wa's suffring, did 1? Did] ory out?" There is no such nur'se am - "'Jesus-huis hand the gentlest, his foav ~the lightest, his carm the ati For espec'ial pang especial he Is it approaching sorro' long, shadowing bereaveir, you know is coming, bec breath is short, and the voi< and the cheek is pale? been calculating your ca capacity to endure abhildoss~ness 0or a disth and cried, 5"I cannot end worried soul, you wr amidst all your tv around about you the tion of the gospel as ' as 'was the manna arou Israelitish encampmen. solace for especial distress. Or is it a trouble past, yet pr' A$silent nursery? A vacant chair o] 'posite you at the 'table? A mus" 'upon a' broken fannly' circle non again to be reunited? A chokin iunse of loneliness? A blot of gri< 60s latge that it extinguishes the ligi suan, 4id puts out bloom of flowe: ai naiaes you reckless as to whethe Slive or die? Especial comfort fc T espitia trial. Your appetif p faped for everything olas. 01 try a little'of this wilderness manna; "I will never leave thee, I will never forsake thee." "Like as a father E 'pitieth his children, so the Lord pitieth then that fear Him." "Can a woman forgot her sucking child, that she should not have compassion ti on the son of her womb? Yea, they may forget, yet will I not forget thee.'" Or is it the grief of a dissipated companion? There are those here who have it, so I am not speaking in the abstract, but to the point. You have not whispered it, perhaps, to your most inbinato friend; but you see your home going away gradually from you, and unless things change soon it will be entirely destroyed. Your grief was well depicted by a woman, presiding at a woman's meet ing in Ohio, whenl her intoxicated husband staggered up to the plat form, to her overwhelming mortifica tion and the disturbance of the audience, and she pulled at protrud ng bottle from her husband's pocket. and held it up before the a1udienlce, and cried out, "There is the cause of my woe! There are the tears and the life-blood of a drunk ard's wife!" And then,looking up to hilven, she said, "How long, 0 Lord! how long?" and then, looking down to the audience, cried, "Do you von der I feel strongly on this subject? Sisters, will you help me?" and hun dreds of voices responded, -Yes, yes, we will help you.' After fourteen thousand six hun, dred (onsecutive days of falling manna---Sundays excepted-the man Ia ceased. SoIme of them were glad of it. You know they had eoniplain ed to their leader, and wondered that t!imt they had to eat. imianna instead of onions. Now the fare is changed. Those people in that arly under forty years of age never seen a corn field, and now, 'len they hear the leaves rustling aufnd see the tassels wIIviNg an(d the billows of green flowinlg OvNer the Plail as a wind touched theiml, it m1u'1t have beenl a Wew and lively sensation. "Corn!" Vried the old man as he opened an ear. -Corn!" (ried the children as theIy counted the shinning graiis. -oi-1!", shouted the vanguard of the host., as thy burst open thlk graneries ot t1m affrighited population, the nmeries that had belen left in the 1)()ssession of the victorious Isreal ites. Then the fire was kindled, and thw vars of corn were thrust in it, aInd. fresh and crisp and tender, wee devoured of the hungry victors and b jread was prepared, and many tiings that call be iade out of flour regaled the appet'ites that had been sharpen ed by the long march. "And the manna ceased on the morrow after they hal vaten of the old corn of the land. The infid-l scientists of this day are ofilrig us a different, kind of soul food: but, they are, of all mllenl, tlie ost mniserable. I have knowi mIlaiy of themil, but. I never know one of them who camne withii a thousaild miles of beiig hklappy. The great Johlnl Stuart Mill provided for himll selIf a new kind of porridge: but yet, when lIe collies to die, lie ackiowled ges that his philosophy never gave hiun any comfort in days of bereave ment, and in a roundih..,out way lie iadmits that his life wvas a failure. So t~ it is wvith all scientists. They are irying to live oni telescopes and en bles anid priotop)lasms, and t urn3ydharmge uswith cnt, niot gd1,ijig that there is no suelt 1Pd;Erable cant in all the w ~orl (.'s this perpetual talk we aire mi.J<1g about "positive philosophy" and thme "absolute," and the "great to be," and "the everlasting no," and e' "thle highier unity," and "the latent p1lotentiaities," andl "the cathedral of C thme inunenisities." I have been trans hat ing what these men have beeni writing, and I have beeni translating what these men have b)een doing, and I will tell you wh'lnt it all means 1-it means that they wvant to kill God! And myi only wconder is that God 3 has nmot killed thieni. I have, in other 1days, tasted of their confections, and( SI conic back to-day and tell you there Sis no nut.riment of life or' health in anything but the brieadI made out of Ithe old corn of the gosp)el. *What (do fI mean by that? I mean that Chr'ist t is the bread of life, and taking him t you live and live forever. V But, y'ou say, coirn is of but little It practical use unless it is threshed and ground and baiked. I answer', this g gospel corn has gone through that, a pr'ocess. Whleni on Calvary all the al hoofs of human scor'n came dowvn on a the heart of Christ, and all the flails IOf satanic fury beat Hlim long and >' last, was not the corn thmreshed l t When the mills of Ood's indignmation L' against sinl caughit Christ between thle upper and neither roller's, was -mnot the corn gr'oundl? 'When Jesus descended into hell, anid the flames of the lost wvorld wraPpedl Him all a about, wsas nmot the coirn baked ? Ohm 1 yes! Christ is ready. H is pardon all 3 reaidy; everything re'ady in Christ. Ai'e you ready for Him 1 You say, "T'[hat is suchi a simle gospel !" I know it is. You say you thought religionl was a stirange mixture of elaborate componds(1. No; it is so plain hat anmy ab)ecedari an mayv unmderstaind it. In its sim c:licity is its power. If y'ou could, this moring, realize thfat Chiritit died to save from sin and hell, not only * '''- er andl youri neighbor and child, but you, .nis hour like the Aor agitations, and1, >, keel) your seat, you crying, "For me ! for' .t that you, my brother, gospel with your owvn iwar it with your own ears, with your owvn heart that 'jst, soul, but that Christ youri extriciation. Can y'ou i that truth and digest it, and part of your immiortal life? v bread. -ve noticedl that invalids can '1 kinds of food. The food 'O for one wvill not do for ~here are kinds of food 'educe in cases of inva . Ieydeath. But you a notie ttall persons, how ir ever weak they may be can take g bread. Oh, soul, sick wvith sin, inva if lid im your transgressions, I think it this gospel willflagree with you I I r, think if you cannot take anything ir else, you can take this. Lost,-foundl r Sunken-raised! Condemned-par e doned I Cast outr-invited in I That , is the old corn of the gospel. There is another characteristi about bread, and that is, you neve got tired of it. There are people her, seventy years old who find it just a: appropriate for their appetite as the, did when, in boyhood, their mothe cut a slice of it clear around the I->at You have not got tired of bread, an( that is a characteristic of the gospel Old Christian man, are you tired o Jesus? If so, let us take His nam out of our Bible, and let us with per and ink erase that name wherever wt see it. Let us cast it out of oui hymnology, and lot "There is a Foun tam" and "Rock of Ages" go int forgetfulness. Lot us tear down th< co.mmunion table where we celebrat( His love. Let us dash down th< baptismal bowl where we were conse crated to Him. Lot us hurl Josmt from our heart, and ask some othei hero to come in. Let us say, "Gt away, Jesus; I want another friend another companion than thou art. Could you do it ? The years of you past life, aged mai, would utter f protest against it, and the graves oj your Christian dead would charg< you with being an ingrate, and youi little grandchildren would say "Grandfather don't do that, Jesus it the one to whoin we say our prayer at night, and who in to opett heavet w"'hen we die. Grandfather, don't d< that." Tired of Jesus ? The Bur gundy rose you pluck from the gar den is not so fresh and fair and beau tiful. Tired of Jesus? As well ge weary of the spring morning, and th< voices of the mountain runiiel, anu the quiet of your own home, and th< gladness of your own childaen. Je sis is bread, and the appetite foi that is never obliterated. I notice, in regard to this article o: food, you take it three times a day It is on your table morning, nooi and night; and if it is forgotten, yot say, "Where is the bread?" Just so certainly you need Jesus three time a day. Oh, do not start out withoul Hi ; do not dare go out the froni door ; do not dare go off the fron the front steps, without having firsi conununed with Him! Before noo there may be perils that will destro3 body, mind and soul forever. Yoi: cannot af'ord to do without Him You will, during the day, be amidsi sharp hoofs and swift wheels ai dangerous scaffoldings threateniin the body, and traps for the soul thai have taken somie who are more wil.i than you. Vhen they launch a shi' they break against it a bottle of wine, rhot is a sort of superstition amonp sailors. But oh, On t,e lauinehing of every day, that we might strike against it aLt least one earnest prayer for divine protection ! That would not be superstion; that would bc Christian. Then at the apex of the day, at th( tiptop of the0iours, equidistant fron:a morniog anid night, look three ways Look backward to ihe forenoon; look ahead to tile aftelIoonl: look lup t that Savior who presides over all. You wiant bread at noonl. You may3 flild no place ill wich to kneelamidst the cotton bales and the tierees of rice: but if Jonah could find room tc pray im the whale's belly, mIlost eer tamly you will never be in such a crowded place that you cannot llr:y Bread at noou, ' Evenn hour conm(..andl your heaid is buzzin: wk1b'.No day's engagements, and you wvhole nature is sore troml the aibra sion of rough life, and you see a grea miany duties you have nieglcCted1, tihei commune (with Christ, asking Hi p)ardon, thanking Him for His love Th'lat wvould be a queer evening re past at which there was no bread. This is the nutriment and life o the plain gospel that I reconmmemi ye i. I do not know how seome o our ministers make it so intricati and elaborate and mystifying a thing It seems as if they had a sort, of nmn grelism in religion-part humnanitari anism, part spiritualism, part noth mlgariamism:l anid:siometimnes you t*hinil they are building their temp1le out o the "Rock of Ages," but you lini there is no rock iln it at all. It,i stucco. Tihe gosp)el is plain. It i bread. There are no fogs hoverinj over the marsh of human speculation If you cannot tell when you hear man11 p)reach, whether or niot he he lieves in the plenary insp)iration o the scriptmires, it is because lhe does not believe in it. If, when you heni a man p)reach, you can not tell wh'leth er .or not lie believes that sin is inbon it is because he does not think it eon genital. Iff, whleni you hear a mnai talk in pulpit or p)rayer-meeting, yom cannot make up your mind whethel or not he beClieves in regeneration, i is because lie does~ not b)elieve ini it If, when you hearii a muan speak or religious themies, you cannimot make urj your miindi whethler or not lie t hiiks the righteous and1( the wi(cked will comec out at the same11 place, then it is because lhe really bielieves their dies tiunes are contermninous. D)o not talk to me about a man be ing doubtful about the doctrines of gra(ce. He is not ldabt fuli to me at all. Broad( is bread, andii I knowv it the moimnt I see it. I had a corn field which I cultured with my~ own hiand. I dlid nmot aisk onice in all the sulmlmer, "1s this corn?' I did niot hunt up tihe Agricutltuaralist to get ai p)ict ure of corn. 1 was born in sight of a corn field, and I knowv all about it. When these Israelites came to Canaan and looked off upontile fields, the cry was "Corn! corn!" And if ai man has once tasted of this heavenly bread, lie knowvs it right awvay. lHe can tell this corn of the gosp)el Canaan from "the chaff wvhich the wind driveth away." I bless God so many have found this gospel corn. It is the bread of which if a man eat he shall never hunger. I set tihe gladness of your soul to the tunes of "Ariel" and 'Antioch." I ring the wedding bell, for Chlrist and your souls are married, md there is no power on earthl 0r inl hc'll to get out letters of divorce mlenit. But, alas for the famine-struck! Enough corn, yet it seems you have no sickle to cut it, no mill to grind it, no fire to bake it, no appetite to eat it. Starving to death when the p lain is golden with a magnificent harvest. [ rode some thirteen miles to see the Alexander, a largo steamship that was beached near' Southampton, Long Island. It was a splendid vessel. Am J walked up and down the decks and in ti-e cabins, I said: "WThat a pit.y that this vessel should go to pieces or be lying he,.e midn The -oai o wreckers had spent $30,00o trying tj r got her o1t, an<? they succeeded onc 1 but she came back again to thb oh 9 glace. While I was walking on dee] e every part of the vessel trembled witi r the beating of the. surf on one side Since then I heard that that vessol 1 which was worth hundreds of thois and of dollaris, was sold for $3,500 f and knocked to pieces. They ka( given up the idea of getting hor t( sail again. How suggestivo all thal is to me! There aro those here wh< are aground in roligious things. Onc< you started for heaven, but you arc now aground. Several times it wac thought you had started again heaven. ward, but you soon got back to the old place, and there is not much pros. - poet you will ever roach the harbork of.tho blessed. God's wreckers, I fear, will pronounce you a hopeless case. Beached for eternity! And then it will be written in heaven con. cerning somec one of your size, and complexion, and age, and name, that he was invited to be saved, but refus ed the offer, and starved to death wit hin sight of the fields and granar ies full of the old corn of Canaan. lloy Breaks His Neck. Cji.%m.sroN, S. C., Aug. 1,.-A nine year old son of Samuel Easterly at No. 183 St. Phillip street broke his neck this morning. He was flying a - kite from a kitchen roof and fell a - distance of twenty-five feet to the ground below. Death was instanta neous. The father was in Savanuah I at the time and was telegraphed for. The family came from Branchville in - this State. ('ancer. To B. .B. B. (Botanic Blood Balm) has been given the credit of curing that terrible symptom of hereditary blood poison called cancer. Allan Grant, Sparta, Ga., writes: "A painful sore came on miy lip which was pronounced epitlielial cancer by prominent plhysiclins. I also had much pain and great weakness in the back. Eight bottles of B. 1. B. heal ed the sore, gave me strength and made me well." G. F. Kellar, Whrightsville, (i.. writes: "ll. 11. B. is curing an ulcer on my nose, said by all to bo a cancer. James A. Greer, Athens, Ga., writes: "For ten years I have been a sufferer from a cancer on my face, Which discharged offensivo matter. Nothing I tried gave relief. Finally I gave B13. B.. a trial. The discharge gradually decreased and the cancer grow less until now there is nothing left except ia scar." malaria atid Broken-)own Consti WCAvoss, GA. Dr. WV 1. Whitehead: -DI-.u SiC:-At your re<quest I will state mly case. Some years agoi contramcteld malaria iml its mosi, vio lent form while living at Newark, N. J. I consulted various physicians and took numberles,s preparations recommended as "t;ir cures," but it stuck to ine like a brother-or more like a mother-inl-law. I finally caie South. and AyVile here tried new rem VOJiV, sua to always cure malaria, and it -till stuck to ne, and you Iknow the broken-down condition I was in when I camne to you. You pul mae to taking your P. P. P. (Prickly. Ash,a Poke 1Root and Potassium), andi t' I improved rapidly, andl am to-day ii as good health as I ever was-in fact S better. As a remedy for a broken downt constitution, it has no equal. Yours. etc., T. P. Corra:. Pianos and organs. N. W. Tunn-~i, 134 .iMain Street Columbia, S. C., sells Pianos and Or gans, direct from factory. Nongents commissions. The celebrated Chick -oring Piano. Math ushek Piano, cele b 1rated for its clearness of tone, light ness of touch'l and1 lasting (lualities. Mason & H-amulin Upright Piano. Sterling Uprigh t Pianos, from $22 up. Arion Pianos, from 52001 up. Mason & Hamlin Organs, surpassed by inone. Sterling Organs, $50 up. Every In strument guaranteed for six years. Fifteen days' trial, expenses both ways, if not satisfactory. Sold 0on Instalments. It is expected in Kien tucky that the constitutional convention which is to -assembhle in September will incorpo rate the Austraiani ballot system in thme new onmstituttiona wvhich it is tc make. It worked like a charm ini Chattanooga. A course of P. P. P., will banish all baid feelings, amnd restore y-our health to perfect condition. Its curative powers aire marvelous. It out of sorts andi in bad humor with yourself anditlthe world, take P. P. P., and be ('0me1 honlthy and i-ational. Diseases peculiar to women, es pecially monthly disorders, aro curod by the timely use of Bradfield's Female Regulator. Sold by all druggists. For corns, wart.s and bunions, use only Abbott's East Indian Corn Plant. PITT'S CARM [NATIVE! ' ORotREoTI NG N AUSE~A IDYSUNTERY Dirr'a and cholera Infant.um. A pleasaant medicine of incalcuable meirit. in the home circle for child or adult. It Is popular, pleasaInt, atnd eflent. Truly a mtother's frent -. Ii soothes and hoals the mfucOusa mem brantes; andit checks the mucous dlischatrge from head, stomach and( bowels. The mucous (lisch1arge from the head rand lungs are as prompily relleyedi by it as the mucous dis charge fromn the h-wels. It. is made to relleva the mnucosas system and cure nauttsea, andi it tioca it. It, maken the (rilal period of teef h, .lng chIldren enfo and easy. It , ivborat.es andl builds uip it.h systemn while It is reIeving and cur Ing the twast ed ti ssue,. It is recommended atnd used largely by physicIaus. lFor halo by wannamaker & Muurraay Co., columnbia, 5. (., and whiolesaIle by f loward & Wilet, Augusta, Oa. For Estimates on STEAM SAWiMILLS, Glinnig, Harvesting and other Ma chinery write to the undersigned, wno will guarantee the goods they may offer in all respects, and make matters interesting both to conlsumers and competitors. 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CtLIo be are a few of My Startling Bargains, A No. 7 lit t ('4)king Mtov, ful) .At ' , ,) \ 17 iell oven, fitted with 21 pis of ite: delivered at yotir own depot, ali freight. viaro paV I by me, I ;Ily Again, I will sell you at 5 hol)1 (,,ookig 1ange 13 x 1:1 Inch oven, 18 x 26 itnch to fitted with 21 pleeps of wa, for TI111V ,RN 1, and pity the iregiht. to your depot.. Do not pay two prices for your goods, I wIll seid yot a ic le plush Parlor suill. wail Iut rmmo either In coblitalion or iainded, I ie mllt.t st.ylish colorS, for S:1:t.50 to 3 our Rail(road station, freight a lt pald. I will also sell yoll at nilee liedroomla sui1 consisting of itreau witti glatss. I high headt l1iisteid, I Wastand, 1 Ceiitr t able. I Cane seat chairs, I Cane Seat. mid back rocker, al! for Slj.50, and pay frei "hi to your (--pot. ()r I will scuti an elegant, l1edroom suit Wi i large glass, ftll nurbie top, for .030, and pay I'riht. Nfce Winidow siatle on spri na roller a I'i Milegat>t largo walmiut s di, clock, I INI W a1t1111, louir.-vi, ' 1.1Y Lace curtaiti7 per Witndow, I.t 0 I cannot describc evorything in a small advertIsemeit. bill. have an inmehts store co..taiing 22,i(X ft. of floor roolp, Wili ware houses antid factory buildings in other parts of Auglista, ntakllg ill all the largest buslness of this kilud uinler ono nmage. ment Ia the Southern Statei. Ticse storest and varehouses are crowded lwtli tie Cioleest rodtictions of the tst fiactores. My catalogue containting fiustrationts or goods will ie malltil ifyou wilt kindly say where you saw this advertisement. I ply freighit. Add ress, L. F. PADGETT, Fropri radgett's Furniture,Stoved Carpet Store, 1110-1112 "ROA1D S'iIT, AUGUSTA, CA. -DR. GROSVENOR'- - Bell-cap-sic Plasters A RE, T HE 11.liT.'10' STYO IN Till- WiOtLI. 1ltiy alt. the it nl plastv:-s inl overy . or thlt (lu.1k relIef cf LAMIE hACl, l'AIN IN Tilli- C(Ii <T, RIf I1:UMATiS'h, N IEL R A LC I A . I'nlikei alt ter pu:, ers, t' are i': ely Vegetir and( l1iarmle .eh'v''I:,,-; orn'3y nail nevera tail toi eur, SAIE, (2L10K! A NI) ,.1:311E. ol t-y drtaugsts or mallted ont re'' i of 250c. by (IRuMVIENolt & IIICH A IlilH, Istonb, .\am. Or22ns n.r iF.'aty, wn,anan. N. Hindercorns. Thec only sure Cure for Corits. Stops alff palin nattrorl comfort to the feet. 15('. alt dtruggi.'ts f"eOx\&Co., N. Y. u Consumptive. lini' i yaau (olugh. II oncitis, ft A st hmoa, In 1at giesttoat', Use l'Att,Ki it', G[N("It T1ONIC. It ha:s cuaredt the wiorst, ca5eH and ia the best rteedy for all llis uirlstn:r fronm defect ive .titraiton Takle In time. 50. 'ad S$. FINE SHOW OASES. 4,vAsk for cataloyue. TERRY M'F'G CO.. NASHVILLE. TENra TALBERT & SON'S iENGINIS AN D HIOILEIIS, MAW MlILi AND GIHIST MILLS Are ackrnowltedged tao be0 lhe best ('ver sl tit this "State.. Wh'fen you buly 011e of theti you1 Iae staife tha lLyou havet madeiI lt) in 1stake1(. Write for ouir ptrices (JOJTTON UiNS AND) CJOTTION PJM SSES AT HtlTOM IOU1(tt:-. I cOi an avI youtattoney.u V. V. JAIDH A M, Geni. A gt., 4o'ltuuioe ai1lI anl dFael,ory: ItlegnnIand Va. A 's 1NVay tiIUB3ULA -- CUSHIONS. whIsper. neard. comn ra Se sr. a rllf LUPPNAN BROS,, Wholesale Druggists, SolePreertetr,Jpeman'Block, Saysanah.GCa TheTozer Enghi, -s DIo -aual 11n,;lln Work;.) JOHN A. WILLIS, PROP11., c ---M ANUF ITURI-;Itsl Tozerl Steam EnginFs, .alcnbut o tivemsli retu'1 Tublar Boller. ti) Pt.ouIdrIyv work Iin iim tr u l 1d.1i I1 painm1g ; rotil .ixceuIyi. FEMALE IN STrruIT 'he biuilding is ro)w inodernized and improved as a boarding scIol utitil it is second to nonC in the Sout h in com fort and Convenieice.-. The Corps of Teachers engaged for the co ining .es sion is tho best the Institute has ever had. No other institute in the south can olier advantages superior to t.hoso of' fered here in the Literary, Mu.ic and Art Departments. Mr. Maclean continues to be the Ihrector of Music. The patrons of the Tust itute, .hose daughters were taught by Mr. Maeleau during the past ses sion, are refet red to in proof of the statemeti .ti.t he is tbe best teacher of Music who has ever tauight in Char- I lotte. As originator aml director o the Juno Musical Festival in this city, his reputation has extended throughout. the SoIth. WM. R. ATKINSON, ~Nincipal. . ""S ed kine T. aRED A AND WOMAN. 1 1 P. will Iurb'y l.:I vitalizo your 1reat.: ' n t e UN and givo your - r.-iir"adli - d. tqndent at '20'rhe mtxim i so . -i -, - oS Oe -- . I- n vlr felt so m-A il I l lifo, imi . *- . if he4 C(Pali live fcv.,,or, if lie could W ay t3gf-L 1'. 1'. P I f you art tired out fr . .. . and closo cowtnionment, tako P. P. P. If yolk are feeling hb'dly in tho spring ind out of sorts, tAko P hr diPstve orgmne.edtoningup dcilaitI nd w-luieots, tako If y ou aiTeYr with reruouse prostration, norvoas untrn g and a genoral let down of tht system,1 Ttke P.P.P.s For ulood Potion. Rhe.ixuatism, Scrof utla, oild Sires Malilaria, (Chronic Female.. Claitts, tako Pg PaP. Prickly Ash, Poke Root ' and Potassium. The heat blood purifIer In the world, p LIPPMAN BROS., *wholesalo Druggista, ~5tIo olz:orptor,I LTurr'a ltr.ocxt, Savarmah, Ga.L DETECTIVES Wantt in ercry County. Shrewd men to act undter instruetions fn our Secre t Seece. ix perienco not necessary. Paorticulars free. (Irannian Detective Biureau Co. 4lArcado,Cincinut,Q, - TEARK fR'S MASEt BALSAM Pt.7.~ vtin, an har. Nevr a' t.' restr'rn Gray H.dr to n hut oolor. IIOLLER lNDRO ROCK HILL, - - - - S. C., For their Catalogue giving Prices, - Terms andi References of I3uggies, Carriages, Wangons,RB oa<l and Phaeton ] Carts, Hiarne(ss. etIC. All first-class work matde by hand anld wvaranted. Prices lower Iha al'y other of HIamio gioule. Om' Yehlicles a'e runnring ini a (very cot't y inl South Cairolinai, and a mn umany coutieus of North Carolina,~ Georgia andt Ftloida&. All inq(uiries - pr'oiuptly aniswered. In writing pleaseo men~itioni this paper and don't forget to give your Postoflice atddlress anid sign your namue plainly. Holler Andierson Enggy ('o., --MANUFTUl'AJtEtis, ROCK HILL, - - -- S. C. n D)EP)OSr e YOUR SURPLUS MONEY IN Ti-: COMMERCIAL BANK, -OlF - COLU M B I.S. C. One dlollar and upIwards5 receivec Interest at IheC rate of 4 per cent. p2 q annum, ft( (1aid uartrly, ont the firs. (lays of Februtary, May, August ant eI November. 3Married women an< i minors enn k(eep account in thleir owk b< name. Hligheri rates of interest a. l lowed by sp)ecial arrangement. le C. J. IRIEDELL, President. F JNo. S. LEAPHIART, JAMEs IRIEDELA. T2 Vinn-Prnaidnaut. Cashin. a Mexican mustang Liniment for -A MAN and BEAST FOR Forty Years THE STANDARD. For Sale BY ALL DRUfrGX8'STS. PR 'ESSIONAL. 0. BOWEN, Attorniey at c I4aw, PICKENS C. 1., 8. C. 46y' Mfoney to 1)an Onl vasy-n' terms, 11 Well secured paper. Office in Court House. July 2'88. VELLi & Oilt, J. E. Bo;s, Greenville, S, C. Pickens. S. C. TELLS, ORR & BOCGS, At.l torny a t ' w, P cxEs . Hf., s. C. I. F. ANsEL, C. IL. HoLINGWVO1R olicitor 8th Circuit. Pickenis, S. C. Greenville. 8. C. ~NSEL & HIOLLINGSWO'RT H, LttornleyM an c11 ouni,,e1iors at Law PCKENs C. H., 8. C. P.racticc in nil the courts of tho tate, and attention given to all busi ess entrusted to them. mirh M4-88tf. jI L & WE b DON. 1>cu t Ist s, 22 iMaini 81, - - ORuEENvHL.E, S. C. a is giveli every Tllursday andl 'riday, alnd te(th1 extracted wit hout aln. )1R. FRANK SMiTH Is now permanently loco,ted at asley, S. C., and respectfulily offers is p)rofessional services to the public encrally. Jan 2 .90. )R. J. P. CARLISLE,. . I3)1t1st, GREENvILLE, S. C. Office over Westmnoreland Bros. & )uke's Drug Store. Jan. 1 '898. M. N ORWOO(D, D 1). N. EREENVILLE, -S. C., Corner Main and Coffee Strets. )R. J. B. CARPENTER, Denti1st, WVill be found at Liberty on and rter the 1st October. lie guarantees i1 his work to be first-clas,s. felb 13'90. P. 0. Eiuzgerald, PHO TOGRAPHER, A rconvi11c, - - .. ,. g YMT' Over WXestnoroldaniid Brmot.hers Ik ug Store. All work doneo by the istantaneouts prWocess. Also make alargements from ald( pictures to sy size in water colors, erayon, In in ink, oil and1( plain photographs. oct 24-tf. MANSION HOUSE! GREENVILLE, S. C. iHE MANSION HOUSE HAS been niewly refitted and excel itly furnished. It is first class in i its app)ointmlents, and is one of the est hotels in the South. Situated tho healthiest and most delightful ity in the country, it offers SUPE IOR ATTRACTIONS TO VISI ORS and tourists; and the cuisine annnot hn0 nxclledl in ny city.