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DR. TALMAGE DISCOURSES ON THE I BENEFICENCE OF PROVIDENCE; MtoTttirmi i UMfall of Mmw la tli* WltdinMM ud . a v fntomli His H??urtn. At Long Branch, N. J., on Sunday, the great Brooklyn preacher, dis coursed on the gospel provision for ordinary and extraordinary needs. His text was Joshua v, 18: "And the land.' Only those who have had something to do with the commissariat of an army known what a job it is to feed and clothe five or six hundred thousand men. Well, there is such a host aa that marching across the deaort. They are out off from all army supplies. There are no rail trains bringing down food or blankets. Shall ' ttoey all perish? No. The Lord comes from heaven to rescue, and he touches the shoes and the coats which in a year or two would have been worn to rags and tatters, and they become storm-proof and time-proof, so that, after forty years of wearing, the coats and shoes are as good as new. Besides that, eveiy morning there is a shower of bread, not sour and soggy, for the rising-of that bread is made aud celestial fingers have 1 luiAciuit, and rolled it into balls, light, J flaky, and sweet, as though they were 1 crumbs thrown out from a heavenly bonquet. Two batches of bread made every day in the upper mansion?one for those why sit at the table with the king, and the other for the marching Israelites in the wilderness. I do not very much pity the Israelites for the fact that they had only manna to eat. It was, I suppose, the best food ever provided. I know that the ravens brought food to hungry Elijah; but I should not so well have liked those black waiters. Rather would I have the face that came down every morning in the buckets of dew clean, sweet, God-provided edible. But now the Israelites have taken the lost bit of it in their fingers and put the last delicate morsel of it to thenlips, They look out, and there is no Itn iLi- i!? ? \ uitiuim. if iiy mm ceHHKHUU OI IieaVly supply? It teas because the Israelites nail arrived in Canaan, and they sraelled the breath of the harvest fields, and the crowded barns of the country were thrown open to them. All tho inhabitants had fled, and in the name of the Lord of Hosts the Israelites took posession of everything. Well, the threshing-floor is cleared, tho corn is scattered over it, the oxen are brought arouud in lazy and perpetual circuit until the corn is trampled loose; then it is winnowed with a fan, and it is ground and it is baked, and, lo! there is enough bread for all the worn-out host. "And the manna ceased on the morrow after they had oaten of the old cofn of the the munfinio# of sure which kind of gram my text refers to, but all the same iwthq mean- ! ing. The bisection of- thi^jmbyect leads ) me, ffrst, to speak of eSpecim-o-llldf. L for ospecial emergency; and, secondly, ] pf the old com of the gospel fof br- , dinary circumstances. ^ v ? \ If these Israelites crOMflaiff 4W ? wilderness had not receiveanynehtV '< from the heavenly bakerie<? iOlare | would, first, have been a long *ne q6 ] dead children half buried in thowiv^ ) then, there would have been a icttrpr 1 lino of dead women waiting for the, , jackals; then, there would have been . a long line of dead men udburiejl, becauso there would have 1|eei\ '4? j ooo bury them. I would have been , told in the history of the wodd that If ; great company of good people started j out from Egypt for Canaan, and.were , never heard of, as thoroughly doat in the wilderness of sand as the City" of Boston and tho President went VjHt j in the wilderasss of waters. Wpat use was it to them, there was nlentv of oorn in Cannon, or plenty of corn i in Egypt! , What they wanted was Bomething ( to eat right there, where thero was , not so much au a grass-blade. In ] other words, on especial supply for an \ eBpecial emergency. That is what ( some of you want. The ordinary j comfort, tho ordinary counsel, do not ' seem to meet your case. There are , those who feel that they must have an j omnipotent and immediate supply, ; and you shall have it. i It a pain and physical distress , through which you must goT Does , not Jesus know all about pain! Did < he not suffer it in the most sensitive j part of head and hand and foot! He has a mixture of comfort, one drop of which shall cure the worst j paroxysm. It is the same grace that < soothed llobert Hall when, after ] writhing on the carpet in physical ] tor tures, he cried out: "Oh! I suffer- \ ed terribly, but I didn't cry out j while I was suffering, did I! Did I j cry out!'' There is no such nurse j Jesus?his hand the gentlest, his ffitiL the lightest, Ids arm the strougw^ i For especial pang especial help. Ih it approaching sorrow! long, shadowing bereavemeutaflflH you know is coming, beagppnraB* breath is short, and the * " and the cheek is nale! HiwiTBtti! lx>?<n calculating your cap&fljl^HBlffi capacity to endure childlessness or a and cried, V'l cannot enawW^^^ph, , worried bouI, you will wake ' up j amidHfc all your troubles, fl/uk ftnd \ around about you the swoel cOTsola-j tion of tho gospel as thickly strewed as was the manna around about the <j Israelitifh encampftent! f fl^pqpiat t solace for especial distress., . ... * Or is it a trouble past, yet prfcrfent? ^ AJsilent nursery? A vacant chair op- 1 posite you at the tablet A musing 1 "Upon a broken familv circle never < again to be reunited? A choking \ sense of loneliness? A blot of grief 1 - so large that it extinguishes the light t of sun, and puts out bloom of flowor, t and mates you reckless as to whether < you live or die? Espooial comfort for jj that espocial trial. Your appetite < -%^jgs failed for everything els*. Oh, j /wilLucrer teave thee# will never i iurttlr.tf Amfil Vt*<i? * father ? ritieth his children, so the Lord i uticth them that fear iiim." "Car. i k woman .forget her sucking child, < hat she should not have compassion < ?n the son of her womb? Yea, thoy nay forget, yet wili I not forget 1 hee." < Or is it the grief of a dissipated ? 'ompanionf There are those here < vho have it, so I am not speaking in i he abstract, but to the point You i lave not whispered it, perhaps, to 1 rour most intimate friend j bat you i M?e your home going away gradually i rom you, and unless things change < toon it will be entirely destroyed. ] if our grief was well depicted by a 1 Yoman, presiding at a woman's meet- < ng in Ohio, when her intoxicated j lusband staggered up to the plat- j orm, to her overwhelming mortifica- i ion and the disturbance of the i tudionce, and she pulled a protrud- < nor luiffln ?*,?*? liof 1,nal,?n^V ? n mm W?? MMDMWMU V j locket, and held it up before the ] tudience, and cried out, "There is ; he cAuse of my woe! There are the ' ears and the life-blood of a drunk- 1 ird's wife!" And then, looking up to 1 leaven, she said, "How long, O Lord! \ low long?" and then, looking down i o the Audience, cried, "Do you won- < ler I feel strongly on this subject? j listers, will you help me?" and hun- j Ireds of voices responded, "Yes, yes, < we will help you." After fourteen thousand six hunlred consecutive days of falling nanna?Sundays excepted?the mania ceased. Some of them were glad if it You know they had complained to their leader, and wondered that lhat they had to eat manna instead if onions. Now the fare is changed. Those people in that army upder forty years of age never seen a corn field, and now, when they hear the leaves rustling and see the tassels waving and the billows of green lowing over the plain as a wind touched them, it must have been a new and lively sensation. 4<Corn!" iried the old man as he opened an ear. "Corn!" cried the children as they oounted the shinning grains. 'Corn!" shouted the vanguard of the tiost, as they burst open the graneries if the affrighted population, the graneries that had been left in the possession of tbo victorious Isrealites. Then the tire was kindled, and the ears of corn were thrust in it, uid, fresh and crisp and tender, vere ievoured of the hungry victors and bread was prepared, aud many things that can be made out of flour regaled the appetites that had been sharpened by the long march. "And the manna ceased on the morrow after they had eaten of the old corn of the land." The infidel scientists of this day ire offering us a different kind of ioul food; but they are, of all men, the most miserable. I have known many of them, but I never knew one )f them Who came within a thousand miles of ^being happy. The great Itflin Stuart Mill provided for himself a new Jcind of porridge; but yet, when he comes to die, he acknowledges thai his philosophy never gave iihu alfy uoURtn-t in days of bereavement, and in a roundabout way he ulmits.tliat his life was a failure. So it is with all scientists. They are trying to live 011 telescopes and crucible^ fifad protoplasms, and they charge l^jJth cant, not realizing that there a. no fucn intolerable cant in all the cvorhl as this perpetual talk we ore Hearing about "positive philosophy1' ind the "absolute," nud the "great Lo.be." and "the everlasting no," and higher unity," and "the latent ^tentiolities," and "the cathedral of immensities." I have been translating what these men have been jfriting, and I have been translating what these men have been doing, ind I will tell you wlint it all means ?it means that they want to kill God! And my only wonder is that God lias not killed them. I have, in other inys, tasted of their confections, and [ come back to-day and tell vou there is no nutriment of life or health in anything but the bread made out of the old corn of the gospel. What do I mean by thatf I mean that Christ is the bread of life, and taking him you live and live forever. But, you say, corn is of but little practical use unloss it is threshed and ground and baked. I answer, this gospel com has gone through that process. When on Calvary all the hoofs of human scorn came down on Llie heart of Christ, and all the flails of satanic fury beat Him long and m A ?? rast, was not tne corn threshed? When the mills of God's indignation against sin caught Christ between the upper and neither rollers, was not the corn ground? When Jesus descended into hell, and the flames of thejout world wrapped Him all al>out,Twas not the corn baked? Oh yes! Christ is ready. His pardon all ready; everything ready in Christ. Are you ready for Him ? You say, "That is such a simple gospel 1" I know it is. You say you thought religion was a strange mixture of elaborate compounds. So ; it is so plain hat any abecedarian may understand it. In its simplicity is its power. If you could, this morning, realize that Christ died to save from sin and hell, not only pour minister and your neighbor and ri>ur father and your child, but you, | would make this hour like the lUfJtanmt day for agitations, and, UMh| ubleto keep your seat, you IgpmXdjjtap up, crying, "For me ! for grant that you, my brother, this gospel with your own iJHfc' afcd heirr it with your own ears, <Mh your own heart that UbW ttJkt SOul. but that Hhrial extricatiou. Can you I iot take that truth and digest it, and oitkio it a partof your immortal lifet ft is only bread. You fyave noticed that invalids canlot take all kinds of food. The food hat will do for one will not do for mother. There are kinds of food ivnich will produce in cases of invaidiiun, very speedy death. But you mvo noticed that all persons, however weak they may be, can take u-ead. Oh, soul, sick with sin, invald in your transgressions, I think bis gospel will |agree with you! I .hink if you cannot take anything dse, you can take this. Lost?found Sunken?raised! Condemned?parlouod! Cast out?invited in! That s the old com of the gospel. i 4 lul when, iu boyhood, tlieir mother I out A alien of it dear around the 1 Mif. I Xpu have not got tired of broad, and * that is a characteristic of the goApot i Old Christian man, are you tired of i Jesus Y If so, let us take His name' < ?ut of our Bible, and let us with pec 1 sad ink erase that name wherever we j ee it. Let us oaat it out bf our 1 tiywnology, and let "There is a Foun- 3 bain" and "Rock of Ages" go into * forgetfulness. Let us tear down the \ jommunion table where we celebrate, " His love. Let us dash down thq 4 baptismal bowl where we were conse- ] orated to Him. Let us hurl Jesus < from our heart, and ask some other j hero to come in. Let us say, "Go < sway, Jesus; I want another friend. 1 another companion than thou art. < Could you do it t The years of your ? past life, aped man, would utter a 1 protest against it, and the graves of < your Christian diad would charge 1 vou with being an ingrate, and your i Little grandchildren would say. "Grandfather don't do that, Jesus is the one to whom we say our prayers ?t night, and who is to open heaven ] when we die. Grandfather, don't do that" Tired of Jesus Y The Bur- < gundy rose you pluck from the gar- j uen is not so fresh and fair and beautiful. Tiled of JesusY Ah well get " weary of the spring morning, and the voices of the mountain runnel, and the quiet of your own home, and the gladness of your own childaen. Jesus is bread, and the appetite for that is never obliterated. I notic*, in regard to this article of food, you take it three times a day It is on your table morning, noon and night 1 and if it is forgotten, you say, "Where is the bread Y Just so; certainly you need Jesus three times a day. Oh, do not start out without Him; do not dare go out the front door ; do not dare go off the front 1L ^ J! L -1 Ht 1 * ~ tut) li'Ullb HWipB, WllllOUl DAVUlg ItlHt communed with Him! Before noon there may be perils that will destroy body, mind and soul forever. You cannot afford to do without Him. You will, during the day, l>e amidst sharp hoofs and swift wheols and dangerous scaffoldings threatening the body, and traps for the soul that have taken some who are more wily than you. When they launch a ship they break against it a bottle of wine. Thot is a sort of superstition among sailors. But oh, on tue launching of every day, that we might; strike against it at least one earnest prayer for divine protection! That would not be superstion; that would be Christian. Then at the apex of the day, at the tiptop of thejhours, equidistant from morning and night, look three ways. Look backwaid to the forenoon; look ahead to the afternoon; look up to that Savior who presides over all. You want bread at noon. You may And no place in which to kneel amidst the cotton bales and the tierces of rice; but if Jonah could find room to pray in the whale's belly, most certainly vqjtj will ne\^r crowded plao*anat yoil "ftot pr^H Bread at noon! When the evoifiiljP hour comes, and your head is buzzing with the day's engagements, and your whole nature is sore from the abrasion of rough life, and you see a great many duties you have neglected, then commune with Christ, asking His pardon, thanking Hun for His love. That would be a queer evening repast at which there was no bread. This is the nutriment and life of the plain gospel that I recommend1 you. I do not know how some of ' our ministers make it so intricate and elaborate and mystifying a thing. It seems as if they had a sort of mongrelism in religion?part humanitarianisin, part spiritualism, part nothingnriaMism; and sometimes you think they arc building their temple out of the "Rock of Ages,'' but you find there is no rock in it at all. It is stucco. The gospel is plain. It is bread. There are no fogs hovering over the marsh of human speculation. If you cannot tell when you hear a man preach, whether or not ho believes in the plenary inspiration of the scriptures, it is because he does not believe in it. If, when you hear a man preach, you can not tell whether or not he belioves that sin is inborn, it is because he does not think it con genital. If, when you hear a man talk in pulpit or prayer-meeting, you cannot make up your mind whether or not he believes in regeneration, it is because he does not believe in it. If, when you hear a man speak on religious themes, you cannot make up your mind whether or not he thinks the righteous and the wicked will come out at the same place, then it is because he really believes their destinies are conterminous. Do not talk to me about a man being doubtful about the doctrines of TT? * - - ' giww. axv; :o uui UUUU11U1 U) 1116 til all. Bread is bread, and I know it the moment I see it. I had a cornfield which I cultured with my own hand. I did not ask once in all the summer, "Is tliiB corn?" I did not hunt up the Agriculturalist to get a picture of com. 1 wan born in Bight of a corn-held, and 1 know all about it. When these Israelites came to Cauaau and looked off upon the helds, the cry^ras "Corn! corn!" And if a man has once tasted of this heavenly bread, he knows it right away. He can tell this com of the gospel Canaan from "the chaff which the wind driveth away." I bless God so many have found this gospel com. It is the bread of which if a man eat he shall never hunger. I set the gladness of your soul to the tunes of "Ariel" and "Antioch." I ring the wedding bells, for Christ and your souls are married, and there is no power on earth or in h 11 to get out letters of raent. Bui, alas for Die famine-struck! Enough com, yet it seems you have n* mckle to cut it, no mill t? grind it, no fire to bi^ce it, no appetite to eat it Starving to death when the plain is golden with a magnificent harvest. [ rode some thirteen miles to seo the Alexander, a large steamship that was beached near Southampton, Long Island. It was a splendid vessel. As I walked up and down the decks and in the cabins, I said: "What a pity that this vessel should go to pieces, or lie lying here idle!" The coaat. I ridpjiwe, ear, cerning tome dljfof fl^BR^^and 3 complexion, amjage, aim name, that 1 le waa invited ib be saved, but refus- F )d the offer, starved to deatjL j wituin Riant of fie fields and granar- J ies full of the ofe corn of Canaan. ^ U.^ CU GfOftOy TALKS ENGLISH. Plain Aiwwm l?A QuMllom Asked by MUUIsnce. y Wasuinotois J>. C., Aug. 11.? I Representative[Tillman. of South r Oorolina^hae^g^ten 1 vieWMS^a3Eat^OTGOTq?r$? in t the Second Sdutk Carolina dnttot on certain nfeasures of proposed legislation, indratedin five interro^ . gat ions. UndraMflHt from your t cominunicatioa^^^Huflng the hi- , terrogations t^^Ko not want a long letter, but^^^^Bgorical replies, ? I shall be as brj^^^nsible^in order to define my p^HHRKthout equivocation, by lnrr^CTwfinr each inter J rogatory RepnrriWCaftd making an ^ absolute answcraflffe|p. # "Question-?WiTyixi^ninfluenced by party caucis or ooierwise, sup- ' port the following proposition in the ^ national Congms: e' 0 First interrotf^orv?The abojRmn ( ntitutionrCpfilKltelider treasury y notes in lieu offmtional bank notes f issued in suftW&nt volume to do the business of the country on a cash i basis. Answer?Yes. Second interrpgatory?The froe and J unlimited coitrtgo of silver? I Answer?Yea Third interrogatory?That Con-1 ] gress issue fractional paper currency I in sufficient quantity to facilitate ex-1 nltotum Al?" -1-^ V?IU1HV UIIIUU^U l/UK LUIU1SI Answer?Yes. Fourth interrogatory?Do you approve and will#,ou support the finan- , cial system knlws as tho 'sub-treasury' plan, adorned by the National Alliance and Industrial Union at St. Louis on 7, 1889? Answor^j^^ Aft ? enact*. 1887**1 Permit n^Vndd that for thirty years I have hall no industrial occupation but cotton planting, which ought to identify rae zealously with the welfare of the cotton planters, who not only constitute the bulk of my constituents, but have repeatedly honored me with high commission, and that, if re-elected to Congress, I shall continue in the future as I liave in the past, to support what-1 ever I believe to be best for the in-1 terest of my class and section. I "I myself am a member of the Farmers' Alliance and deeply sympathize with the purposes ana efforts of the organization to relieve the widespread and coutinual agricultural depression. BuDthe South alone can not fiscal and financial whffRj^noV^uK^nasheen dominated by the Eastern States ever since the war. Tho West must cooi>cnite with the South heforo success can be achieved "In conclusion, let me take the liberty of advising the Southern wing of the Alliance to move a little more cautiously till it shall have been demonstrated that the Western wing arc in earnest about taking the proposed new departure of abandoning sectionalism and uniting with the South n - vi < icvuyBa ui luuiuiu grievances. "Very respectfully, Okorok D. Tillman." Killed iii Bed by a Snjke. ^.-^Jasper found his wife and' fffionths'-old babe dead in his bed by his side. Their bodies wore badly swollen, and coiled in*on#*craer of the bed was a xuoccasiu snake, whose bite is as fatal as that of a rattlesnake. During the night the snake had crawled into the bed. and had bitten Mrs. Keith and the child. Keith was so overcome with grief and horror that he fell prostrate acsoss the dead, bodies of his wife and babe. This aroussd the snake and it struck at Keith; but its fangs caught in his night shirt and ho escaped the fatal sting, ltealizing his peril,Keith caught the snake in his hand and hurled it ty the floor before it could strike again on. There is littl^^^^^^^HH Demoand 40,0$^thu i? *0 ? A* ling decided gs.ins y umita h Jfl State, even in flow* Vui?? *fcre disaffection was rytyepublican strongholds, bmItu-. i^utiiAy and Ijaurel countieV, there are large Democratic gains, t%e reduced Kepubli-. can majoritie^i being accepted as equivalent to vciuocratic victories. It was ip these toA'H that Republicans Q|Pe<det^^^hl a very large vote. M^^Mj^^Vthe Louisville 1 Conri^H^^^^^^Lps Kentucky^^^^^^^^^H|M^Repobli can and - . ' Wahhinoton, August la.?William toss, au employe.) of the United ifcauH Eleetrie Lipid Coin pun v, while barging carbon* in one of the city leetrie lights tonight, received a j hock of a,000 volte. He was almost ustantly rendered insensible, bat soon II ?covered, alt hough the flesh on the , ight hand where the current entered, J nd on his left arm where it passed r ft, was badly bnrned. He said that / or four or. five seconds before he ' ecamo insensibl^^^. suffered great ^ Jefferson fi Wut lf9 RRe has oonsented to miL^tUMxt June before marrying, ^pfrrlone for the reason that Miss Vmnie doss not want to marry until ne year after her father's death, rhich occurred on the 6th of last )ecomber. Mrs. Davis and her daughtr ate busy making a fish-scale neckice, which will be set with diamonds. Ihe necklace is to be worn at the redding, which has been fixed for une 25, 1891. Boy Breaks His Neck. Charlkstow, 8. C., Aug If.?A nine ear old son of Samuel Easterly at to. 183 St Phillip street broke his leek this morning. He was flying a ate from a kitchen root and fell a istance of twenty-five feet to the rround below. . Death was instantaleous.*' The father was In Havfcnnah it the time and was telegraphed for. The family came from Branchville in lj|s State. -I v?inwr* To B. B. B. (Botanic Blood Balm) las been given the credit of curing hat terrible symptom pi hereditary >lood poison called canier. a Allan Grant, Sparta, Ga., .Writes: 4 A painful sore came on my li# which vas pronounced epithelial cancer by rrominent physicians. I Also bad nuch pain and great weakness in the >ack. Eight bottles of B. B. B. heal- ? >d the sore, gave me strength and pade me well." G. F. Kellar, Whrightsvil^,-Ga., vrites: B. is curing an ulcer >11 by all to be a uuicaa^^HHb # 3 nnMVurter, Athens, Go* ivrites: ten years I have been a mfferer from a cancer on my face, ' vhieli discharged offensive matter. Nothing I tried gave relief. Finally [ gave B. B. B. a trial. The discharge gradually decreased and the oaftcer yrew less until now there is nothing left except a scar/' Malaria and Broken-l>own Constitution. Waycrohs, Ga. Dr. W H. Whitehead: Dear Sir:?At your request I will state my case. Some years ago I contracted malaria its most vio-1 | lent form while living, at Newark, N. . J. I consulted varmus physicians and took nuinberlem preparations recommended as "sure cures, but it stuck to mo like a brother?or more like a mother-in-law. ^1 finals cams i South, and while me# Bales, Skid to always trarw i^itrin, and ft still stuck to me, and you ( know the broken-down condition I 1 was in when I came to ygp. You put me to taking your P. P. P. (Prickly, , Ash, Poko Root and Potassium), and i I improved rapidly, and am to-day in as good health as I ever was?in fact, better. As a remedy for a broken 5 down const tution, it has no equal. Yours, itc., T. P. Cotti.k. ( Piano* and Organs. N. W. Trump, 134 Vain Street, Columbia, S. C., sells Pianos and Organs, direct from factory. No agents' commissions. The celebrated Chickering Piano. Mathushek Piano, celebrated for its clearness of tone, light- j ness of touch and lasting qualities, ? Mason A Hamlin Upright Piano. ] Sterling Upright Pianos, from $22 up. i Afion Pianos, from $200 up. Mason & Hamlin Organs, surpassed by none. Sterling Organs, $60 up. Every Instrument guaranteed for six years. Fifteen days' trial, expenses both ways, if not satisfactory. Sold on i Instalments. It is expected in Kentucky thattho constitutional convention which is to . assemble in September will incorporate the Australian ballot system in the new constitution which it is to make. It worked like a charm in Chattanooga. A course of P. P. P. will banish all bail feeling's and restore your health to - rw>rfwt emu I it int i Tin nnroliwo powers are marvelous. If out of Borts and in bad humor with yourself " andfthe world, take P. P. P., and become healthy and rational. > Diseases peculiar to woioeu, es pecially monthly disorders, are cured by the timely use of Brudfield's Female Regulator. Sold by all J druggists. For corns, warts and bunions, use only Abbott's East Indian Corn ? Plant. 9 PITT'S CARMINATIVE! < I?OR CORRECTING NAUSEA DYHSMTKHY DltrrhoM and Cholera Infantum. A pleasant medicine of Inoalcuable merit In the home clrele for child or adult. It la popular, pleasant and efficient. Truly a mother's nrlen . it soothes and heals the mueons mtmbran en; and ohecka the mucous discharge from head, toinsch and bowels. The mucous . dim-bar^ e from the head and Innga are as 1 lirwuifMijr reueveu i>y 11 M tn?? mucous discharge from lbs b woln. It Is made to relieve the mucous system and cure nausea, and It ^It. It makes the Orialcsl period of teeth* hlldren-aft and easy, it Invigorates and builds up the svstem while It Is relieving and eui tag the wasted tissue. It Is reeominended and used largsly by pbyatolans. For sale by Wannamaker A Murray Co,, Columbia, S. 0., a and wholesale by Howard A Vllieti. Aagusta, 1 For Estimates on . STEAM SAW;MItLS, Ginning, Harvesting and other Machinery write to the undersigned, who will guarantee the goods they may offer in all respects, and make matters interesting both to consumers and competitors. We will also furnish everything needed in the line of supplies: Belting, Oils, Pining, Fittings, Valves, Inspirators, Injectors, Pumps, Etc W. H. GIBBES, Je., A CJ<X, Columbia, H. C. jy^ygmkislwi Tlr*' Mb . i|p|| A (ireat Offer that majr not bal repeated, ao do not delay. "Strike I while the Iron le llot." ' I Write (or Catalogue now, and wy what I paper you aaw tbla Advertlaement lu. Remember that 1 sell everything that I goea tolurnlahluga bome-iuanufeoturlngm tome lb logs and buying other* lu the! Ilnrgeat possible lot*, which cuaolea me tol wipe out all competition. I But an a for of ay Suiting Bugik I I A Mo. T Flat top Cooking Htove, full elee.l lift X 17 Inch oven, lltted with XI pleeea offl ware; delivered at your own depot, all! ITWELVEIX) LLiljtil by m*' only! I Again, I will aell yon a 6 hole Cooklagl I Range BX 13 Inch ot n, 18 x A looh t op, fitted with XI plocea of ware, for TH1K-I rKK^DO)ht,AKS, afptkpey the freight toU Do art ptj two pita for Ttur grnk I wltl aond you a nice ploah Parlor aau,mfl walnut frame either In combination #11 banded, the moat at.yltah colore, for $33JSl 1 to jour Uallroad atatlon, freight all pnl4tB I 1 will also aell you a nice Bedroom auttl oouNlHtlug of Burean with glaaa, 1 hlgkm | bead Hadataad. 1 Waaliatand, 1 Centre I I leKU A a - a e ^ 1 MMTIWI w D??I triiaua, I vmilC* r?C?l BIJU beck rocker, all for *10.00, and pay freight to vour d?pot. Or I will send you an elegant Bedroom suit with large glaaa, full marble top, for S3?, and pay freight. Nice window shade on spring roller f .40 Elegant large walnnt 8 Uaj clock, 4 00 Walnut lounge, 7.00 Lace curtains per window, 1.00 I cannot describe everything In a m>il ad vertlsement, bnt have an lmmeaae store containing 22,000 ft. of floor room, wtth ware house* and fltotory buildings in other parts of AutuiU, making In all (he largest business of this kind under one mauagarnent in the Southern States. Tbeae stores land Warehouses are crowded wth (be khoktSft productions of the best factories. containing illastrations of IniqflwlU be mailed Ifyon will kindly say PM yon saw this advertisement. I way freight. Address, Jfj,. F PADGETT, Piipil'i ruraitanjtmlbrpst Set 1110-1113 BROAD BTKIET, AUGUSTA. OA. I)K. GROBVENOR'8? Bell-caMtfc Plasters VBl^ll^lKSlSroOUa PLAHTKR8 119 n^i(?ra ? every sir fta he tiulek relief of L.A1IK ItACK. FAIN IN TUK CHK8T. RHEUMATISM. NKI KALGIA. Unlike all other plasters, these are Purely t'egetnble and Harmless. Relieve Instantly inu never fail to cure, SAKE. UI'ICK AND Sl'UE. Bold by druggist* or mailed on receipt of 15c. by OKuHVENOR A RICHARD*. _ Boston. Maaa Arrrnnn ^ Tlsnoe*?). Catalogue iree urcans D. p. Beaty, Washington, S. J Hindercorns. The only eure Care for Oocns. Stops nil pain nsnred comfort to the feet. 15c. at druggist* leoox A Co., .V Y. ayou Consumptive. lla\e you Cough. Bronchitis, Asthma, Initteetloii? Use PAltKKK'H G1NGKH TONIC. It hae cured the worst ranee and la the beet eniedy for all Ills arielnc from detective lntritfon Take In time. 50c. and tt. for catalogue. TERRY M'F'G CO.. Nashville. Ten* TALBERT & SON'S , KKQINEB AND lillLEIW, HAW M1LL*? AND (JUST M1LLH Are acknowledged to be the beet ewer sold i in thla estate. When yon buy one oflbem you are Nullified hut you have made no mistake. Write for our price*. 30TT0N WINS AND COTTON PRESSES AT BorTOII VIGOURS. I nan save you tuoney. V. C. BADIIAM, Gen. Agt., COLUMBIA. B. C. A*-Homo office and Factory; > Rlunmond Vo. ^ '' ' ' ^ * UrriAN BBM., Wklluali Brtghta/ ^ lOlMl ' -W^fl * vV, >vh*A117 Www ??**? :*qM$ , ^V'~. TmB#* - - > T^E^ytSR P?f [J^f^ M ANur lOTUBBKa OP V -*. . . Tozer Steam Engines, f And all iImi of bo Lb Uwm?M1?w u return Tnblar Boiler*. arPonodrx work la Iron aod Braes He* pairing promptly uteolwl. CHABl-OTTB FEMALE IN 8T1TUT Idio g ^ia n riwro^ej n i / o< 1 statement tbabest teacher of Mosio who haw ewtaaght in Charlotte. As^ director d* his repauio^^^Bed throughout the South. bAtkinson, j Principal. IA Spring Medicine I FOR TIRED I mIB wowiun. I P. P. P. wffl purifjr and rttattw poor I ^ Mood, create a food appetite and give your whole uyatem tone and atrength. A prominent railroad nuperiateodeatah I 8? vonnab. suffering with Malaria, Dnpep. ata, and RheumaUara aa; s 'nar'SSw K PP.P.be mwfeltaoweUIn hiadfte, and feels aa if beoould UveCcTOvar.lf he oould B always get P. P. P.** B If you are tired out ft ?? ? raaaafl B close couflnesteut, take H ~ P. P. Pjf I r p. p; I JUSrSSmSmI p. p. p. I P. P. P. I ^o,gtojjE&rt^S^iT>S55? I P. P. P. I Prickly Ash, Poke Root | and Potassium. 1 The beat Mood purttteekt thw weald. B a? KJPPMAB BROa, Whnlaaala Druggist*, I 8<>lti Proprietor!, " >* H>& DETECTIVES VlttrflKWyONlV. IkltWM ? Mt (WlM lltUHtbM whMNMn. InahMWMMWi. r>ntc?lii?INb Snuuui DtlMtlfiBamaC*. MAntte.Ctsdauti.a CVmwm urf btaatlfW* (ft* hair. j |J??a)tw a luuttent^owttL f mIT' wsrsfiy ^ ha*rftUU% WRITK TO / HOLLER & ANDERSON { nuoo\ c4?., < ItOCK HILIi, - / . . ac, For their Catalogue giving Prices, Terms and Beferences of Buggies, Carriages, Wagons, Road and Phaeton Carts, Harness, etc. All first-class work made by nand and warranted. Prices lower than ary other of same grade. Our Vehicles are running in every county in South Carolina, and in many counties of North Carolina, Georgia and Florida. All inquiries promptly answered. In writing please mention this paper and don't forget to give your I'ostoffioe address and sign your name plainly. Heller Anderson Boggy fe?, ?MAM'K.u Tl lU'.Us,? RJJSgtiHILL. - - - - S C. DEPOSIT^ ^ YOUR SURPLUS MONEY IN TliL COMMERCIAL BANK, -OF COLUMBIA. S*C. One dollar and upwards received interest at the rate of 4 per cent pel annum, paid quarterly, on the iirsw m days of February, May, August anc November. Married women anc minors can keep account in their owi.v name. Higher rates of interest a, lowed by special arrangement. C. J. Imsrhsi.T., President.