University of South Carolina Libraries
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A square consists of the space occupied by ten lines of tliis type, equivalent to one inch. No adver? tisement counted less than a square. -liberal contracts will lue made with those wishing to advertise for three, six or twelve months. Advertising by <?ntract must be con? fined to the immediate business of tho firm or individual contracting. Obituary Notices exceeding five lines, Trib? utes of Respect, and all ?personal communica? tions or matters of individual interest, will be charged for at advertising rates. Announce? ments of marriages and deaths, and notices of a, religions character, are respectfully solicited, and- will be inserted gratis. Under no circumstances will an advertise? ment be received for insertion in our reading columns. An nndeviating rule is to require Five Dol? lars in advance for the announcement of every candidate for office. TBIED AND TRUE. It was the Carnival season in Paris, and Colonel Eugene Merville, an attache of the great Napoleon's staff, who had won his way to distinction with his own sabre, found him? self at the masked ball in the French opera house. Better adapted in his tastes to the field than the lwudoir, he flirts but little with the gay figures that cover the floor, and joins but seldom in the waltz. But at last, while stand? ing thoughtfully and regarding the assembled throng with a vacant eye, his attention was ruddenly aroused by the appearance of a per? son in a white satin domino, the universal ele? gance of whose figure, manner and bearing, convinced all that her face and mind must be equal to her person in grace and loveliness. ?Though in so mixed an assembly, still there was a dignity and reserve in the manner of the white domino that rather repulsed the idea of .a familiar address, and it was some time before the young soldier found courage to speak to her. Some alarm being given, there was a violent rush of the ^throng towards the door, where, unless assisted, the lady would have materially suffered. Eugene Merville offers his arm, and with his broad shoulders and stout frame wards off the danger. It was a delightful moment; the lady spoke the purest French, was witty, fanciful ai.d captivating. "Ah I lady, pray raise that mask, and reveal to me the charms of feature that must accom? pany bo sweet a voice and so graceful a form as you possess ?" **Yoa would, perhaps, be disappointed." "No,. I am sure hot." "Are you so very confident ?" "Yes. I feel thac you are ber.utiful?it can? not be otherwise." "Don't be too sure of that," said the domino. "Have yon never heard of the Irish poet Moore's story of }he veiled prophet of Kho tassan?how, when he disclosed his counte? nance; its hideous aspect killed his beloved one. How do yoa know that I shall not tarn oat a veiled prophet of Khorassan ?" ."Ah, lady, your every word convinces me to t?io^contr?ry/. replied the enraptured soldier, whose heart had begun to feel as it never felt, before?he was in love. She eludes his efforts at discovery, but per? mits him to hand her to her carriage, which drives off in the darkness, and though he throws himself upon his fleetest horse, he is unable to overtake her. The young French Colonel becomes moody, he has lost his heart, and knows not what to do. He wanders hither and thither, shuns his former $jhwesx>f-amusement, avoids his milita? ry companions, and, in short, is miserable as a lover can well-be thus disappointed. One night, just after he had left his hotel on foot, a figure, muffled up to the very ears, stopped him. . "Well, moneieur, what would you with me?" asked the soldier. "You would know the name of the white domino ?" was the reply. "I would, indeed ?" replied the officer hasti? ly. "How can it be done ?" "Follow me." "To the end of the earth If it will bring me to her." "Bat you must be blindfolded." "Very well." . "Step in the vehicle." "I am at your command." And away rattled the youthful soldier and his strange companion. "This may be a trick," reasoned Eugene Merville, "but I have no fear of personal violence. I am armed with this trusty sabre, and can take care of myself." But there was no cause for fear since he soon found the vehicle stop; and he was led, blindfolded, into the house. When the bandage was re? moved from his eyes, he found himself in a richly furnished bondoir, and before him stood the white domino Just as he met her at the masked ball. To fall upon his knees and tell her how much he had thought of her since their separation, that hi3 thoughts had never left her, that he loved her devotedly, was as natural as to breathe, and he did so gallantly and. sincerely. "Shall I believe all you say?" . "Lady, let me prove it by any test you may put upon me." ".Know, then, that the feelings you avow are mutual. Nay, unloose your arm from my waist. I have something more to say." "Talk on forever, lady ! Your voice is mu? sic to my heart and ears." "Would you marry mo, knowing no more of mo than you now do V? "Yes, if you were to go to the very altar masked!" he replied. " "Then I tfill test you." "How lady?" "For one year be faithful to the love you have professed, and I will be yours?as true as heaven shall spare my life." "Oh, cruel suspense I" % "You demur?" "Nay, lady, I shall fulfill your injunctions as I promised." "If at the expiration of a year you do not hear from me, then the contract shall be null and void. Take this half ring," she continued, "and when I supply the broken portion I will be yours." He kissed the little emblem, swore again and again to be faithful, and pressing her hand to his lips bade her adieu. He was conducted away as mysteriously as he had been brought thither; nor could he by any means discover where he had been, his companion rejecting all bribes, and oven re? fusing to answer the simplest questions. Months roll on. Colonel Melville is true to his vow, and happy in the anticipations of love. Suddenly he was ordered on an embassy to Vi? enna, the gayest of all the European capitals, about the time that Napoleon wns planning to marry the Archduchess Maria Louisa. The young colouel is handsome, manly, and already j distinguished in arms, and becomes at once a great favorite at court, every effort being made ' by the women to captivate bim?but in vain ; he is constant and true to his vow But his heart is not made of stone; the very fact that he had entertained such tender feel? ings for the white domino had doubtless made him more susceptible than before. At last he met the young Baroness Caroline Von Waldroff, and in spite of his *ows she captivates him, and be secretly curSes the en? gagement he had so blindly made at Paris. She seems to wonder at what she believes to be his devotion?and the distance he main? tains ! The truth was, that hisLsense of honor was so great that,;though. he ftlt he loved the young baroness, and even she returned his af? fection^ still he. had given his word and it was sacred. The satin domino is no longer the ideal of his heart, but asstvnes the most repulsive form in his imagination, and becomes in place of his good angel, his evil genius ! Well, time rolls on ; he is to return in a few days?it is once more the carnival season ; and in Vienna, too, that gay city. He joins in the festivities of the masked ball, and wonder fills his brain when, about the middle of the even? ing, the white domrao steals before him in the same white satin dress he had seen her wear a year before at the French Opera House in Paris. Was it not a fancy ? "I come, Colonel Eugene Merville, to hold ?rou to your promise," she said, laying her band ightly upon his arm. "Is this a reality, or a dream V asked the amazed soldier. "Come, follow me, and you shall see that it is a reality," continued the mask, pleasantly. "I will." "Have you been faithful to your promise?" asked the white domino as they retired into a saloon. "Most truly in act; but, alas, I fear not in heart I" "Indeed!" "It is true, lady, that I have seeu and loved another; though my vow to you has kept me from sayiug so to her." "And who is it that you love 7" "I will be frank with you, and you will keep my secret ?" "Most religiously." "It is the Baroness Von Waldroff," he said with a sigh. "And you really love her ?" "Alas! only too dearly," said the soldier, sadly. "Nevertheless, I must hold you to. your promise. Here is the other half of the ring; can you produce its mate ?" "Here it is," said Eugene Merville. "Then I, too, keep my promise," said the domino, raising her mask, and showing to his astonished view the face of the Baroness Von Waldroff! She had seen and loved him for his manly "spirit and character, and having found by in? quiry that he was worthy of her love, she had managed this delicate intrigue, and had tested him, and now gave him her wealth, title and everything. They were married with great pomp, and ac? companied the arch-duchess to Paris. Napo? leon, to crown the happiness of his favorite, made him at once a general of a division. A Lady Worthy'of Her Name?From the Edgefield correspoudence of the August. Constitutionalist we clip the following para? graph concerning a young lady of an oloand honored South Carolina name, a daughter of the late Eev. Arthur Wigfall, and a niece of the Hou. Louis T. Wigfall, late Senator from Texas, both in the United States and Confed? erate Congress: "And another thing which has pleasantly broken our summer monotony lately, was a dramatic entertainment, gotten up in behalf of the Methodist Church by a lady whose dramat? ic gift, both as acting herself and teaching others to act, 4s quite remarkable for private life?Miss Charlotte Wigfall, by birth, manners and intellect, a queen of society. Miss Wigfall, though a devoted and energetic Episcopalian, is ever ready to exercise her talent and taste for any church, or for any good cause whatso? ever; in fact, Edgefiela churches, Edgefield soldiers and Edgefield society ajl owe her a heavy debt of gratitude. The plays on this occasion were the beauti? ful comedy, "All That Glitters is Not Gold," with the old and popular farce, "Bamboozle" ; and many a New York actor or actress would have started with admiration at beholding either the setting or acting of these pieces. The sum realized for the church was, for so dull a season and so small a community, quite handsome?considerably over one hundred dol? lars." Editorial Chills.?The editor of this mighty sheet has been shaking with a spell of chills during a portion of the week. He shook nearly all the hair off his head and shook so hard that the neighbors thought the town had caught an earthquake. He shook out what little sense he had left after editing a paper for more than two years, and he shook out some of the poorest editorials ever printed. He is gradually recovering from his shaking and says he intends to lead a better life, for he thought he would shake lflmself to death and he was somewhat- alarmed at the prospect ahead. If he continues in his present frame of mind, the readers of the Gazette may expect to see a large portion of its space devotea to to religious subjects, and to find sermons in the place of editorials. What peculiar faith will be adopted^io one can tell, out it will probably be rather a promiscuous, miscellaneous and general one. But he is greatly chz.nged in appearance, his ponderous proportions have dwindled to those of a walking skeleton and the rich, ruddy hue of his countenance has turned to the sickly color of the ripe pumpkin, and the blossoms on his nose, which so closely resembled the full blown rose, have all faded and gone. He is, indeed, a miserable looking specimen, and it is a good time for all those who feel offended at anything he has ever done or said to come in and get satisfaction, as ho can't fight and don't want to.? Washington (Ga.) Gazette, Important for Ladies.?A writer in the Baltimore Sun alludes to the efforts of invent? ive genius to discover a feasible motive power for the sewing machine, ro that it may prove an unqualified blessing, and not, as in some instances, a physical curse. Referring to the disastrous effects the machine, as ordinarily used, has produced upon the health of females, he says: "Scientific investigation has revealed the fact that all, or nearly all, the evils produced by the sewing machine are in consequence of running it with both limbs at once, the opera? tor sitting with both feet raised upon tlie trea? dle, which necessarily compels her to seat her? self at quite a distance from the machine, occasioning a great loss of power, by its indi? rect application, whilst tho position produces an enfeebling effect upon or curvature of the spine, as well as an injurious compression and frequently a displacement of the delicate inter? nal organs of the female structure. We would, therefore, advise ladies, until something better than foot power is discovered, to run their sewing machines with one foot only, as in this way a more natural position of "the body is preserved, a more direct application of power attained, less fatigue produced, and the deli? cate abdominal viscera relieved from unnatural pressure." ? . How to be Safe.?"Doctor," said a patient, about five years ago, after reading over the prescription of a distinguished friend of tem? perance, whom ill-health had obliged him to consult?"doctor, do you thinJc that a little spirits, now and then, would hurt me very much ?" "Why, no, sir," auswered tho doctor, deliberately; "I do not know that a little? now and Mien?would hurt you very much; but, sir, if you don't take any, it won't hurt you at all." Singular Story, of a Wealthy Lady. Yesterday morning a widow woman named Mrs. M. E. Crockett died at her residence, southwest corner of First and College streets. Mrs. Crockett had been living the life of a re? cluse during the past fifteen years, with the ex? ception of about one year, when one of her sisters, Mrs. Hughes, now of Chicago, kept house for her. Her . retirement during that time has been so exclusive that the front door of the house was never opened except to admit a servant girl from next door who carried food. The house?of which she was the sole occu? pant and owner?is a large two-story brick, containing about ten rooms, all of which were comfortably and some of them elegantly fur? nished. There were no servants employed to keep things in order, and the rooms yesterday presented a scene of decay and mustiness. The velvet carpets in one or two of the less fre? quented rooms were literally riddled and ruin? ed with moths. Spiders had spread webs un? disturbed in -almost every part of the house. The mould' and decay were plainly visible in the bottom of the window shutters and the window sills; when they opened on their rusty hinges yesterday morning for the first time in many years; The kitchen, with the table ware, stove and cooking utensils, and also the room in which Mrs. Crockettr slept, were in much better order. In an old shed in the rear of the house stands the dilapidated remains of Mrs. Crockett's private carriage. It was for? merly an elegant vehicle, but now it is covered with dust, rubbish and ru3t, and is ready to fall to pieces from age and decay, not having turned a wheel for years. Mrs. Crockett was apparently between seven? ty and eighty years of age, and was possessed of a considerable estate, and has numerous relatives living in this city. About six years ago a niece of Mr. Warren's named Laura Vir den, at the solicitation of Mrs. Crockett, would come every day and read the Bible an hour or so for her. One day Miss Virden, with the kfndest intentions, purchased a bottle of min? eral water, preseuted it to Mrs. Crockett, and proposed to uncork and pour it out when.it suited her to drink it, whereupon Mrs. Crock? ett flew into a passion, accused the girl of at? tempting to poison her, and immediately as? saulted her, and beat her with a poker. Per? sons from the outside heard the screams, and came to her assistance. As to the cause of her seclusion, it is said that at the wedding of her sisters, about thirty-five or forty years ago, eve? ry one who partook of the feast was poisoned, and Mrs. Crockett narrowly escaped death. Since that time she has been gloomy and un? sociable. We heard that her. kins-people ar? rived in this city yesterday from Chicago and other places, and that the deceased will be buried to-day. The gloom of the grave can scarcely be more dreary to her than was the solitude of her earthly abode.?Louisville Com? mercial. Baying a Horse. The genuine Southern man dearly loves a fine horse. No Arab of the desert is so com? pletely enamored of a gallant steed, when he gets one. But, while we have excellent judges among us, the large majority of men are easily deceived in the merits and demerits of the no? ble beast. A new light on the subject of horse selection has arisen in the North, the Rev. W. H. Murray. He seems to be as much rapt up on the subject as General Grant.- and really to possess an intimate knowledge of the points of a perfect animal. As his Reverence is more celebrated for his muscular Christianity than for pulpit eloquence, we quote confidently from his horse talk, as follows: Be sure that the horse you purchase has sym? metry?viz: is well proportioned throughout. Never purchase a horse because he has a splen? did development of one part of his organization, if he be lacking in any other. Above all, keep well in mind what you are buying for, aud buy the horse best adapted :o the^work you wii! re? quire of him; and when such an animal is yours be content. Never jockey. An occa? sional exchange may be allowable:; but this j daily "swapping" of horses advertises a man's incompetencv for anything higher. Another caution is thi3 : Never purchase a horse until you have seen him move, and under the same j conditions to which he will be exposed in the service you will expect of him. If for a draught, see him draw, back and turn round in both di? rections ; if for the road, see how lie handles himself, not merely on level ground, but going up sharp declivities; and, above all, in de? scending them. In this way you will ascertain the faults or excellencies of both his temper and structure. In these exercises drive him yourself. The reins in a skillful hand, aided by the whip or mouth, can be made to conceal grave defects. Let him move with a loose rein, so that he may take his natural gait and not his artificial; for by so doing, you will detect any mistake of judgment yon may have made when looking him over in a state of activity. Many a time unsoundness will appear in motion which no inspection of the eye and finger, however close, can ascertain. When you have walked him and jogged him, if he is to serve any other than mere draught purposes, put him to his speed and keep him at it for a sufficient dis? tance to test his breathing capacity; then pull him up ; jump from the wagon and look at his flanks; inspect his nostrils and put your ear close to the side of his chest in order to ascer? tain if the action of the heart is normal. .If this exercise has caused him to perspire freely, all the better: for you can then see, when you take him back to the stable, whether he dries off quickly, as all horses do in perfect health. ? One who knows tells how pleasant it is to freeze to death in Minnesota. He says the bit? ter cold does not chill and shake a person as in damper climates. It stealthily creeps within all defences, and nips at the bones without warning. Riding along with busy thoughts, a quiet, pleasurable drowsiness takes possession of the body, and, in mind, the fences grow in? distinct, the thoughts wander, weird fancies come trooping about with fantastic forms, the memory fails, and in a confused dream of wife aud home, the soul steps out into oblivion without a pang of regret. ? Precautions against cholera are very nu? merous at present. Taking all the advice given, we learn that if a man Bubscribes and pays for his newspaper, eats nothing, drinks no liquors, drinks no ice water, drinks no warm water, drinks nothing else, wears flannels, bathes three times a day, keeps his back-yard clean, pays his taxes, avoids water, drinks brandy, eats ripe fruit, wears nothing, does not smoke, and follows such other methods of prevention as his common-sense may dictate, he need have no fears of cholera. ? A Southern gentleman who was at Green? ville, Tenn., a short time since, tells the follow? ing : "A countryman came into town last week wjtn a bundle of jeans to have a suit of clothes made for his negro. He saw President John? son standing on the corner, and said: "Well, Andy, you used to bo the best tailor in these parts, and I wish you'd cut out this suit of clothes for my boy Jim, here." "All right," Bays^ndy, and they stepped into a shop near by, and In five minutes an ex-President might have been seen measuring the boy for his suit of clothes." ? There is a Rabbinical tradition that when Noah planted the vine, Satan attended and sacrificed a sheep, a lion, an ape and a hog. These animals were to symbplize'the gradation of ebriety. When a man begins to drink, he is meek and innocent as the lamb; then be? comes bold as the lion; his courage is soon transformed into the foolishness ol the ape; and at last he wallows in the mire like the hog. ? An ignorant old lady was asked by a min? ister visiting her if she had religion. She re? plied : "1 have slight touches of it occasion? ally." All Sorts of Paragraphs. ? Sweetening one's coffee is generally the first stirring event of the day. ? An exchange says the best way for a lady to get the fashionable "tangle" on her hair is to fill it full of corn-meal and set a lot of spring chickens to scratching the meal out. ? It is stated at the internal revenue bureau, by one who is conversant with the matter, that a determined effort will be made at the next session of Congress to secure the passage o:f a law providing for the refund of cotton tax paid into the treasury. ? A correspondent of the Country Gentleman has discovered that, as a law of nature, every spotted dog has the end of his tail white, and every spotted cat the end of the tail black. He says he has examined many dogs and cats in France, England and America, and always no? ticed the same result. ? If geranium branches, taken from luxuri? ant and healthy trees just before the winter sets in, be cut as for slips and immersed in soap water they will, after drooping for a few days, shed their leaves, put forth fresh ones and con? tinue in the finest vigor all the winter. ? The Masonic fraternity have under way at least $4,000,000 worth of new halls, most of which will be completed this year. The one in Philadelphia is the most magnificent structure of the kind in the country, and when furnished and entirely completed will be worth at least one million of dollars. ? An old negro woman in Georgia gives her. views on making cotton : "De way dey use to make cotton in my day was wid a plenty o' hick'ry. Dey didn't need no juauner den. An if you will des gib me a few niggers and a good hick'ry now, I kin make any of dis land about here fetch good cotton dat will beat any of yer juanner." t ? A lady was stopping with her little son at a Chicago hotel, and he was fretful at the din? ner table until she became exasperated and said to him in an undertoue: "Come with me up stairs and I will attend to your case." Pulling back, he blubbered out, in a voice loud enough to be heard over most of the well-filled dining room: "Say, Mother, are you going to take your hand or your slipper ?" ? The statistics of the Connecticut Insane Hospital, at Middletown, furnishes many inter? esting facts concerning the causes and cure for various types of mental aberation. Of the causes of insanity, ill health is more potent than any other; intemperauce comes next, re? ligious excitement next. Men patients are more easily cured than women, and out of twenty-two patients sent to the hospital for in? sanity resulting from the affections, four were men and eighteen were women. ? One of the best ways to test a spider's ability to get himself out of a scrape, is to fill an ordinary wash-bowl with water, take a stick and place it in the centre of the bowl, and reaching some distance above the water, put a spider on the top of the stick. The in? sect will get himself away from his isolated quarters in less than ten minutes, if undis? turbed, and he won't wet hi3 feet in the transit. Try and see how it's done. ? A three-rail passenger road has been con? structed from the base to the summit of the Rigi, one of the highest mountains in Switzer? land,- by which cars by steam power are taken up and down several times every day. This road is not by a zigzag course, but as direct as most railroads are on the level, and is a most wonderful piece of engineering. The trips, it is said, are made with great regularity, with many hundred passengers every day during the summer season. D. C. Cunningiicim. L. L. Gaillard. ANDERSON 9 LIVERY AND SALE BY CUNNDiGHAM & GAILLAKB. I July 31,1873 4 oko. W. WILLIAMS, ") f JAMES BRIDGE, Jr., WTLLIAM IHK NIK, V -l FRANK K. TAYLOK, JOS. b. bobkbtsos.) (bOU'T. 8. CATIICAKT. ??fr??l co, FACTORS COMMISSION^MERCHANTS, Charleston, S. C, ? and WILLIAMS, BIENIE & CO., Commission Merchants,. 65 BeaTcr Street and 20 Exchange Place, - NEW YOEK. ?z)~ Liberal Advances made on Cotton dud Troduce shipped to us at eithor point. July 10, 1H73 - 1 5m Dr. January and Cancer! THE celebrity of tho january Infirmary, established in Murphtfecsboro, Tenn., in 1848, associated tho abovo name with tho troat meut of Cancer uutil thoy becamo synony? mous, both passed away with the war. But great discoveries, like truths, live tbrover. Dr. j. O. January, inheriting his father's talents and improving on his experience, has achieved a success in advance of their former history, owing to his incroasod patronage he has perma? nently located in St. Louis; tho numerous let tors he is receiving, and largo arrival of pa tionts, justify his movo to this central point. We would advise all ".fllicted with Cancer, Scrofula, Fistula, Pile."., djo., to apply to him, as he possesses peribc*. control of those diseases, without pain or tho knife. Address, JANUARY tfe MADISON, 715 Chestnut St., St. Louis, Mo. July 10.1873 1 ly White & Featherston, DEALERS IN MARBLE, AVE ALWAYS ON HAND A GOOD , Assortment of TOMB STONES, And are proparod at all times to rnako them to order in tho BEST OF STYLE. MARBLE YARD UNDER TOLLY'S FUR? NITURE STORE, Anderson, S. C. August 14, 1S73 0 IN PRICES AT TUE ANDERSON EMPORIUM OF 9 Waverly Hold Building. Calicoes from 10 to 12?c. Grenadine, 15 to 60. Piques, 25 to 40. Dress Linens, 25 to 40, AND ALL OTHER Dress Goods proportionally Cheap This is no Humbug ! We mean what we Say! GALL and examine our Goods and Prices, and you will be convinced that you can save at least 25 per cent, by purchasing your Goods from us. Our stock in Dress.Goods is well assorted from the cheapest to the finest fabrics, and our stock in all its branches will be replenished from time to time -with everything new and desirable. As it is not always convenient to pay cash for goods, we propose to charge goods to prompt paying customers at cash prices, to be paid for in the fall. TO ARRIVE. In a few.days we will receive still another invoico of Ladies' and Misses' HATS and MILLINERY GOODS, of the very latest styles; and those who have not yet bought would do well to examine our stock before purchasing. C. A. REED & CO. June 12, 1873 40 GEO. S. HACKER Door, Sash and Blind Factory, Charleston, S- C. THIS is as LARGE and COMPLETE a Factory as there is in*the South. All work manufactured at the Factory in this city. The only Jlouse owned and managed by a Caroli? nian m this city. Send for price list. Address GEO; S. HACKER, Post Office Box 170, Charleston, S. C. Factoiy and Warorooms on King street, op? posite Cannon street, on the lino of City Rail? way. Nov 7, 1872 18 ly DOORS, SASH and BLINDS, MOULDINGS, BRACKETS, STAIR FIXTURES, Builders' Furnishing Hardware, Drain Pipe, Floor Tiles, Wire Guards, Terra Cotta Ware,""Mar? ble and Slate Mantle Pieces. WINDOW GLASS A SPECIALITY. Circulars and Prico List sent free on application by White Pine Lumber for Sale. P. P. TO A IiE, 20 Hayno and 33 Pinckney Sts., Charleston, S. C. Oct 3,1S72 13 ly NEW FIRM, NEW BUSINESS! For Anderson, though sho has long since merited it?yea, more. FTlIIE undersigned havo this day entered into X partnership in the name of WATSON & SON, for the express purpose of conducting a General Commission Business. We tender our sincere thanks to our friends and a generous public for liberal patronage the past seventeen years, and we do hope to act in such a way, in this our now business, as to merit a continuance of the same. Liberal advancements made on everything consigned us on sale. Office with Lewis & Co., No. 9 Granite Row Anderson, S. C. JOHN B. WATSON, ,r L- lU:El) WATSON March 4, 1^73 " 35 v AUWorAW?rrsm'ed, I LOWEST PRICES. B r SewlfbtPriceLUfr LH HALL8. CO, d,1D.Kartet Streif CHARLESTONi S? C* g This Cut entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1S73, by I. II. HALL & Co., in the office of tbo Librarian of Congress, at Washington. June 2G, 1873 51 ly Alter 30 Tears of trial has proved to be* the best healing and pain lubdu lng Linixucnt in. the World. It is recommended ^rith unbounded assurance la nil cases of Cut*, limits, Bums, Sprains, Bteuma tlfim. Hard Swelling. Bites, Chilblains, Stiffnesn of the Joints, Frozen Feet, l.arp, &c, fcc. among all Ssrsons, and for Sprains, Founders, Einghone, Poll vil, Scratches, Wiiid-Galls, Hoof-alu, Spavins, Spring? halt, Saddle, ColHr and JiamjL33 Galla? also disease* of the Eye and Lu in Horses, Mules or. Cattle. ?KILL .ALSO Jure'Neuralgia, Tthcnmatinn, Gent, Lame Bact. Bait Rheum, Poisonous Bites, External Lone and Muscle Affections, Sore Nipples, tic, and may bo Justly termed the panacea for all EXTERNAL 'WOUNDS ?2-Remember, this Liniment did not spring u p in a day or a year, producing thb most abst7bd a no ttxnatubal cubes claimed BT Few-Bobn and Mcsimooii LnroiENTS. But vro have the experience of over ?hirty years of trial, with the moat, substantial results, and by a multitude of yitneMoa. If the Liniment is not as recommended, tha Money will be Eefnnded. Do not be Imposed upon by using any other Lini? ment claiming the samo properties or results. They are a cheat and a fraud. Bo euro and get nothing but jaySom bt all Dbcggists and CorarBT Stobw ax 25c, 50c. and $1.00 per Settle. Jxoncx Siza or Bottli:, Stxli, && _LYON MFG. CO. A FEW APPLICATIONS MAKE A Pure Blooming Complexion. It is Purely Ye?retAh!i\ and its operation in seen n---1 foltatouco. It docs aw?y with tha Flushed A/.,- r anco caused by iicat, FatigUO, and Excite nicut. Hvals and removes all Blotches and Pimplos, dispelling dark oud unsightly spots. Drives away Tan, Freckles, and SuDburn, and by Its gentle tut powerful Influence mantles the faded cheek with . YOUTHFUL BLOOM AO BEAUTY. .Sold by all Dru^Rt and Fancy Stores. DenoL 03 Park Place; N?w YoiU. T. Juno 19, 1873 GORE'S SOUTHERN BUSINESS UNIVERSITY, ATLANTA, GA. Estab? lished 15 years. A Standard Institution. The Largest, Cheapest, and B?st Practical Business School in the South. "One of the best Business Schools in the Country." [Christian Index. For Terms, &c, address B. F.MOORE, A. M? Pres. 50 M. GOLDSMITH. p. Eixn GOLDSMITH & KIND, FOUNDERS & MACHINISTS. (PIICKNIX 1B0.V W0BK8,) COLUMBIA,, S. C, MANUFACTURERS of Steam Engines, of all sizes : Horse Powers, Circular and Muley Saw Mills, Flour Mills, Gri$t and Sugar Cane Mills, Ornamental House and Store Fronts, Cast Iron Railings of every sort, including graveyards, residences, .Sec. Agricultural Implements\Braia and Iren Castings of all kinds made to order en short notice, and on the most reasonable Urrng. Also, manufacturers of Cotton Presses &c May 18, 1871 -16 ' Jy