University of South Carolina Libraries
SO ITU CAROMS A COLLKOE Expansion ?if Hs Work and its Splendid Facilities. For three generations of men thc South Carolina College lias wrought its great work for the uni ti oat ion and prosperity of the State. For three generations her HODS have honored their alma mater by useful live? and splendid citizenship, and to day, in the character and strength of the members of its faculty and in the variety and thoroughness of its literary, scientific, and law courses, it stands eminent: in the quality of its work it is the peer of any university of the South. A variety of courses leading tu the several baccalaureate degrees in Arts, Science, haw. Engineering (Civil and [electrical), and I'edagogy, is offered, with the most liberal choice of studies and the widest possible elective opportunity. Thc faculty has recently enlarged and increased thc facilities for post graduate w irk, and haB placed thc opportunity for such advanced university study with in reach of all who may desire it. and who cannot go out of the .^tatc to ob tain it. livery year the College has a number of students working for post graduate degrees. Its chemical, biological, and physi cal laboratories are well equipped and have each a master teacher at its head; and thc College library, with its 35,000 volumes, is the delight of a student's heart. Tho College offers special induce ments to ambitious young men and women in its generous provision for tho conferring of scholarships on meritorious students at the close of each session. Five of these scholar ships aro conferred upon distinguish ed members of the Freshman Class; four in thc Sophomore Class, and three in the Junior Class. In addi tion to theso scholarships, by an Act of thc General Assembly in 1001, two Special Nfrmal Scholarships, for men teachers, are given to each coun ty in tho State, thc value of each being equivalent to S'JS. This gift cannot be regarded asa charity-far from it. The money will bc paid back to the State a thousand fold in the betterment of the common schools of the State, which aro established and maintained solely for the purpose (or should bc) of rearing good citizens men and women whoso lives shall bc devoted to the common weal. The men who honestly accept these scholarships are not accepting charity, but are simply being partly paid in advance for the hard work, the self aaeri?ce, the grind to which they sub ject themselves for tho good of the State. The teaching force of the faculty numbers seventeen professors, adjunct professors, and instructors, each of ??^whom is a specialist in his own de partment, and has enjoyed the finest advaptages offered in tho great uni versities of thia poultry or Europe. Tue president, faculty sud stmjonta are working together harmoniously jind as a unit for tho good of tho Col legs. On the loth day of last March Prof: R. MeanB Davis, Professor of History and Political Science, thc great teach er, the big-hearted man, the model oitizen, died. His loss to the College and to the State is incalculable. At the meeting in June the Board of Trustees elected as his successor Prof. Gordon B. Moore, a Virginian by birth and a South Carolinian by years of service. Professor Moore is a gentleman and a soholar, a nfan of high charaeter, ot great mental strength and vigor, and of long experi ence in successful teaching. He also has a worthy reputation as a great Baptist preacher. The Chair of Adjutant Professor of English has also been established, and Mr. H. C. Davis, a South Carolinian and a graduate of the South Carolina College, and last session a teaoher of English in the University of Wash ington, at Seattle, was in June elect ed to fill this ohair. The College is to be congratulated upon securing his services. His success as a teacher is assured. The advantages offered to the young men of the State by such an institu tion are invaluable. The Barber's Retort. "Big Tim" Sullivan, w. J likes a clear., close shave every day, tolls of his ezperienoe with a barber in Penn sylvania avenue while he was attend ing congress. Mr. Sullivan went into the shop one morning and reposed comfortably in the ohair. For two or three mornings he had noticed the barber had been drinking, but he hesitated to speak to him about it. Finally the blades of the razor slipped under the surface of the congressman's chubby chain. "There you idiot!"'. he shouted, jumping from the ohair. "Now you see what liquor doeB." .'Yes," replied the barber, calm ly, "it is apt to make the1 skin ten? - Liberal mind 1 women can't keep ,13 core ts. f - Truth Estranger than, fiction to the chronio liar. lf?sJf*'iiZ(t. ??V.V;?}. -: ?-VI .?'.'?}..?>'' J-vViy^ '"'.;R'V? Largo Hear !\ill? ?I itv Trudi. - Bonaire, Ga., Aug. ll.- Vesterday j morning Ihc southbond Georgia South: j ern passenger train ran over what the ? engineer supposed to be a man at San- | dy Hun trestle, near lion aire in II0U8- I ton county. Engineer Vales left Mu 0 m Kcveral minutes late, and as his first stoj'is 1 nadilla, ll miles below Macon, lie was running at a Ililli rate of speed, when an object which he supposed to be a man stood erect and was knocked headlong on the ground several feet below. The train was stopped as quickly as possible and a flagman was dispatched to stop the northbound train, if it should come along before the man was reached and either carried to the near est physician or otherwise cared for. The tram was in charge of Capt. li. I'lourney and Trainmaster Scott wa> in the bleeper. W hen the supposed man had been found the engineer blew for the llag man to return. Th?; loud blowing of thc whistle and thc train being still aroused .Mr. Scott from his slumbers and he eagerly asked ('apt. ('lourney why the train had Stopped. The ne gro porter was the lir-t who reached the supposed dead mau, and imagine his horror when he found instead of a dead man a half dead black bear, weighing nearly three hundred pounds, offering fight. The bear died before day, and the next train brought it to Bonaire, where it was on exhibition from the depot platform all day Tuesday. Engineer Vates, Conductor Klour ney and Trainmaster Scott arc all de lighted at thc killing of a bear instead of a man, as they first supposed. Monumeut to tien. Beauregard. Charleston, Aug. 23.-A movement has been started herc to erect a hand some granite arch on Washington Square to the memory of Gen. Pierre G ustav Toutant Beauregard. A move ment was inaugurated some years ago and voluntary donations were made for the purpose, but the sum was not sufficiently large to undertake the work and the money was deposited in bank. It was iccentli' decided to erecta mon ument on a smaller scale than origi nally planned and now this is to be done. It is especially appropriate that Charleston should honor the memory of one of thc ablest soldiers of thc South, for the reason that Gen. Beau regard had a warm place in his heart for CharlcBtou, as evidenced in the bequest of his Bword which now occu pies a case in oity council chamber, while the best thoughts of his milita ry career wi^p directed towards the harbor defense cf Charleston. The programme of tho exercises attending the unveiling of tho monument, in scriptions, etc., will bo announced later. _ Punishing A Shopper. JJ?nry McBride, the Governor of Washington, was talking about depart ment stores. MA department storekeeper in Seal tie," he said, "complained to me one 1 day about tho people, in outlying sec tions of the oity, who were always having delivered to their homes pa pers of pins, thimbles, finger rings, and similar infinitesimal packages. He said that sometimes a two-horse team would travel a mile to carry home a half dozen shoe battons or a skein of silk. "Then he desoribed a trick that an old employer of bia in New York had once played on a woman. She was a chronic offender. Two or three times a week she would harass a half dozen salesgirls an hour or more, and finally buy, and order delivered, a pa per of needles, or a quarter of a yard of ribbon. "So the man deoided to make an example of her. "One afternoon, after her usual shopping excursion, there drove up to her door a huge dray, drawn by four horses, and oontaing six brawny, bare armed laborers. "A crowd oolleoted. It was thought an enormous safe was to be moved. "The womao stood at her front door. The laborers laid a heavy plank from the wagon to tho sidewalk, an i then, with many loud grunts of effort, they rolled, barrel fashion, on to the plank and thence down to the street a tiny spool of cotton thread. They oarried the thread painfully to the woman's doorstep, and there, after a desperate straggle, they up-ended it. "Then they departid. The woman kioked the spool into :he gutter im mediately, but this action on her part only made more pleasing to the neigh bors the little joke that had been played on her." - The department of agriculture has detailed Mr. Carleton R. Ball, assistant agrostologist of the depart ment of plant industry, at Washington to visit South Carolina and make a special examination and report upon the meadow and grazing lands of South ? Carolina with especial ferenoe to the adaptability of such lauds to cattle raising. j - The useful thing about going on a pionie is it limbers up all the sweat ing muscles. DECLINE OF COURTESY. 6 Deference tj Woman Becoming a Thing ot th a P.n.l? Tho familiar toilet> vjjvre's to r.'ontan, once our MI pc rio r, now our io. un I," i- nitk'li more than a clever i.ii of liatiq\K't fooling, ii iva? :i jeM when lir.-t spoken, lt i.- taken ns fact :!'?w. \Vo have seen' in re cent voa rs ;i steady diminution of tl?c defeivnco t?> woman which in the |'.-i-t century was ;i part of ev er v doy's education, liven thc how, oiicn a genullccti??n of real compli ment, has ileteriorated int?? a fa.-h iomihlc shrug. The kiss i> unmen tionable except as a microbe exhi'nt, ano*, us for surrendering comforts from :i ti.ve "t' duty, here is tin- very latest authority from the very latest book "t cti?piette? '-Tho old custom of a man iriying lu's seat in a street <;:r t-> ii woman iii being gradually done away with. This is due largely to tho fa et that women are now <-'> extensively engage?! in commercial business that they are constant rid er- ?it busy hour.- and thus come in to dire? t e< nu pet it ?on wit li the men/' And we lind this delicious passage in the further elaboration <?t* tho rul<-: "A woman should not l?>'?k with a pained and injured air at th?' men pa.rMMSgers because no ono of them has oitered her ;i seat." lie-al ly it como;; as a balm t?? the soul ?o I??- i??l?i that "a mau should never ( p*.--- his legs or k?.'cp 'his feet ex tended in the passageway." Custom nil?--, ami ii does little good to sigh for tho good old days. Still, wo shall cling to the belief that good manners cannot go wholly out of fashion, that deference to women is exc ellent, not only for tho woman, but for the man, and that tho gen tleman who is guided by tho better promptings of his nature and thc higher teachings* of his youth will get more abiding satisfaction out of lifo than by ignoring woman simply because she dares to try the only way <?f becoming independent by making lier own living.-Saturday Evening Post. Thought Little Frank Foll Down. A young local lawyer tells a story upon a certain prominent, Absent minded jurist of Louisville on whom tho years ?lo not now sit lightly ami who is prone to forget things lie should know best. "At a ?lintier 1 recently attended,' said thc young lawyer, "thc older lawyer of whom I speak saul to thc hostess: "'My tho way, Mrs. II., have you peen your little hov, Franlc, within the last few hours?' " 'Xo, judge,' replied thc hostess; 'I haven't seen him since 10 a. m., einco 1 como to think of it, and 1 can't imagino where ho is/ " 'Well,' replied tho attorney, 'see ing you pour out that water just now reminded mo of something I had on my mind to tell you some time ag?-?, but which unfortunately escaped by mind. It was just about 10 o'clock, I think, that 1 saw little Frank fall down the cistern in your yard/ "-Louisville Herald. As lt Was Intended. A certain clergyman reports tho lo^yil^ jn3?oj^ us ^curring just inside thc? entrance to one of the largest and most ^popular New York :h\irches during a crowded service : It ?v?s during the reading of a prayer, and the e^ntir^ cQ?L^Te^iiTTon was kneeling. *A man of rough ap pearance, evidently unused to ec clesiastical surroundings, strolled through the open doors and stared in apparent wonderment at the si lent and kneeling congregation. He looked a moment> then turning to the sexton, who stood near by, re marked br??ny: "Well, tins beats the old boy!" The sexton turned a serene eye on him. "That is the intention," he re plied.-Harper's Weekly. Kept Her Word. Two young ladies were walking in the woods one day when they were accosted by on old and much shriv eled gypsy, who politely offered to show them their husbands' faces in a brook which ran near by for a slight renumeration. So, paying the sum, they followed the hag to see how she could do so wonderful a thing and also anxious to see their future husbands. But instead of beholding the faces of the men they so fondly hoped for they saw their own. "We can seo nothing but our own faces," said one. "Very true, mern," replied the sagacious fortune teller, ''but these will be your hus bands' faces when you are married/* Hint For Home Workers. . "George, we aro talking of organ izing a home mending society." "What's the object?" "We propose to make a specialty of arbitrating family disputes." "Do you call that home mend ing?? "Yes, dear." "Well, you'd better enlarge your purpose sufficiently to include my socks and the plates Della broke." Cleveland Plain Dealer. Benita? yyTha Kind You Hara Mwjfs Botigtrt ?Signatare - An English farmer has had sev eral oats killed, stuffed and placed in threatening attitudes among the branches of bia fruit trees. Not a bird will ooma anywhere near the orohard. * - Money is always a satisfactory traveling companion. SAW A CHANCE AT LAST. Jut Jed Blundered and Discovered His Mictake Too Late. Ii ha<i lon;; been a'tnost a proverb (n tho village that J? iodiah Perkins "didn't Know a char >. when he saw on.-."' The public di.-ci.. -i<>n of this failing had oftcu 'WUK; io Uncle *f?-<!'.- ears <md had ?. tided loudly iti them. Worst cd' ul) had to ad mit that he was pliage of hi.s neighbors, "ca jut iii the most for what ht nd got the least for ? A any ma ii uit Ilia a u But Uncle Jed a chance at last. A railway n..is close to his house, and in the middle of winter during a tremendous snowstorm a passenger train was stalled in t h ti . .ut th roi i j.'h his south pasture and was unahlc to go forward <?r back. After it had been there about half a day Uncle Jed saw his chance. There wen- a hundred or two hun gry ] assengers cager to buy food. J le had a large store <>f hain and bacon. Jh.- would have Aunt Sarah make it up into sandwiches, and they would clear a small fortune. "So that's what we done," said Unele .Jed, telling of it afterward. ''We made- up every hit of ham in thc house into sandwiches, and I took 'VIII down there and offered'em for sule for a quarter apiece. ".Now 1 cal'lated a man 's hungry 's them folks would he willing to pay a quarter for a good, big home made' sandwich, hut they held hack. They was plenty would pay a dime. 1 could 'a' sold out twicct over at a dime each, but I only sold live at a quarter. "'I'll wait till lliey git hungrier/ s's I. 1 went outside and set on a snow pile and watched them fellers shoveling out that train. Seemed to mc they wa'n't like to git the train out before next summer, so I didn't hurry about going aboard again with them sandwiches. Jcs* as I made up my mind it was time, tiny ugh, along in front come one of them rotating whirligig plows they sent up from thc other way, and be fore you could say 'Jack Kohinson' away went the train behind it through the cut it made. "Well, sir, as I sat there watching that train hadn't gone more'n 200 yards before I see I had made n great mistake not to sell them sand wiches fer 10 cents. I see it plain as could he. And I'm seeing it yet, for Aunt Sarah and me has hcen living on ham sandwiches fer throe weeks, and they ain't half used up." -Youth's Companion. Almost Called Him a Hog. "The late Paul Joseph Blanc, the French artist, studied in Borne in his youth," said an American paint er, "and he was noted in those days for his truculence. "Blanc dined at a students' cafe one evening in Borne, and a young German who sat near him said: " 'It is easy enough to see, sir, that you are a Frenchman.' " 'How so ?' said Blakoe, frowning. " 'Because you eat so much bread/ "Blanc did not like this, lie re torted : " 'It is easy to see that you are a German.* ?..^ " 'Why ?' asked the other. " 'Because/ said Blanc, 'you eat so much of everything.' " Cupid's Retreat. The old gentleman was down'in the furniture shop. "By the way/ he said, just before leaving, "my daughter has just started to have a young man calling, and I ?uppose I should buy them a pretty sofa to make love on." "Yes, sir," responded the suave salesman, "and here is tho very kind you need. It is called Cupid's Re treat." "H'm! What are the good points?" "Why, in just one year the cover wears off, displaying a card, lt's time to get married. Plain Language. Colonel (inspecting the hospital) -What's wrong with this man? Surgeon-Phthisis, sir. "What in the world's that?" "Consumption, sir." "Why can't you say so without any of your confounded medical terms? By the way, surgeon, I'm not feeling fit myself this morning. Can you tell mo what*s the matter f* Surgeon (after a brief investiga tion)--Brandy, sir. "What?" "Well, you see, sir, you want it in Slain language, don't you?**-Lon on Telegraph. Jaok'a Fatal Overnight. "I like you well enough, Mr. TJa? mal," said the perplexed young wo man, "or at least Pm not sure I like ?o? as well as I do Jack Cawdrey. Te says he thinks of me 365 days in the year." "He wants one day off every four ?ears, does he?" exclaimed young Finial, with indignant scorn. "That kind of devotion doesn't commend itself to yon, does it, Clarice?" Jack's doom was sealed from that moment.--Chicago Tribune. - If remorse were the advanoe ?gent of temptation (here would prob ably be less sin in the world, f f -A man gets a lot of things ho doesn't want in this world, and a wo man wants a lot of thinga she doesn't get - A blooming idiot isn't necessari ly the fiower of the family. - The maa who thinks twioobefore i speikinj seldom says anything. boflcitut?e. What it is io be a genuine single minded egotist ii illustrated in a French volume by a story of Mme. du D?liant, a celebrity of the eight eenth century. Mme. du Defiant was- a great invalid and spent most of her time in bed, but this fact did not prevent lier from receiving a great deal of company. One day when she was thus in bed several guests arrived and were admitted. They all began to shiver and pull their cloaks around them. "What!" exclaimed the invalid. "Is it cold here?" "lt is simply freezing," answered a guest. "Thank you for telling inc," said Mme. du Defiant. She rang a bell. The guests sup posed she waa sending for a maid to build a lire, but when the servant came in Mme. du D?liant said: "Amelie, bring me in my down coverlet." Having given this order, she be gan a conversation about other mat ters. A Hospitable Heart. Mr. Frederick Goodall of tho Royal academy tells in Iiis "Rem iniscences" a good story of Jenny Lind. The Swedish finger never quito mustered our language, and her habits ol' thinking and feeling remained just what they had been in her childhood. Her ideas in English wore perfect ly charming, although they were ex pressed1 with a foreign accent. Tho naivete in many of lier remarks was captivating. Once when the talk turned on tho subject of mice, an animal for which ladies are believed to entertain feel ings akin to terror-why I have never been able to understand Jenny Lind contributed to the dis cussion of the quaint phrase: "I have a hole in my heart for ze leetle mouse." - A prudent man never butts into danger for the purpose of advertising his bravery. - Never look for trouble, but when you meet it put up your most strenu ous fleht._ WOFFORD COLLEGE, SPARTANBURG, S. C. HEotfRY N. SNYDER, Litt. D., M. A , President. Four full College courses. Favor able surroundings. Cleveland 8cience Hall. Qymnasium. Athletic grounds. Lecture course. Library facilities. 61st year begins Sept. 21st, 1904. For catalogue applv to J. A. GA ME WELL, Sec. Woffbrd College Fitting School, Spartanburg, S. C. Elegant new buildings. Careful attention to individual Students. Board and tuition for year 8110. All information given by \. M. Du PRE, Head Master. Blue Ridge Railroad. Effective Nov 29,1903. WESTBOUND. No. ll (daily)-Leave Belton 3.50 p, m. ; Audersm 41 * p. ie. ; Pendleton 4.47 p. m. ; Cherry ? oi p. m. ; 8eneca 5.31 p. ui ; arrive Walhalla 5.55 p. m. No. 9 (daily except bundey)-Leave Belton 10.49 n, m.; Anderson 11.07 9. m.; Pendleton 11.32 a.. m.; Cherry 11.89a. m.; arrive at Seneca 11.57 a. m. No. 5 (Sunday only)-Leave Bolton 11.45 a.m.; Anderson 11.07 a. m.; Pen dleton 11.32 a. m.; Cherry 11.39 a. m.; Seneca 1.05 p. m.; arrive Walhalla 1.25 p. m. No. 7 (dailv except Monday)-Lsave Anderson 10.30 a. m.; Pendleton 10.59 a. m.; Cherry 11.09 a. m.; Seneca 1.05 p. m.; arrive Walhalla 1.40 p m. No. 3 (daily)-Leave Belton 9.15 p. m.; ar* Ive Anderson 9.42 p. m. No. 23 (dally except 8unday)-Leave Beiton 9.00 a. m ; arrive Anderson 9.30 a. m. EA8B0UND. No. 12 (daily)-Leave Walhalla 8 35 a. m.; Seneca 8 58 a. m ; Cheri y 9.17 a. m.; Pendleton 9.25 a. m.; Anderson 10.00 a. m.; arrive Belton 10.25 a. m. No. 15 (dally except Sundaj )-Loavo Seneca 2 00 p. m ; Cherry 2.19 p. m.; Pen dleton 2.20 p. m.; Anderson 3 10 p. m.; arrive Belton 8.85 p. m. No. 8 (Sunday only)-Leave Anderson 3.10 p m.; arrive Belton 8 35 p. m. ? Wo? (daily)-Leairf Walhalla S.1G p. m.; Seneca 5.31 p. m.; Cherry 5.59 p. m.; Pendleton 6.12 p. m.; Anderson 7.30 p. m.; arrive Bolton 7 58 p. m. No. 24 (daily except Sundav)-Leave Anderson 7.50 a. m.: arrive Belton 8.20 a. m. H. C. BEATTIE, Pre?., Greenville, 8. C. J. B. ANDERSON, Supt., Anderson, 8. C. C. & W. Carolina Railway. Schedule in effect July 6. 1904 Lv Anderson. " Calhoun Fabe... " McCormick. Ar Augusto;... Lv Augusta. Ar Allendale?. .! Temassee. " Charleston.: " Savannah b (cen t) Beaufort b. " Port Royal .. 7.25 a ml 8.50 a to 9.50 a CD 11.40 a m 2 35 p m 4.80 p m 5.40 p m 7.40 p m 6.80 p m 6.80 p m 0.40 p Ut 2.10 pm 4.10 p m 6.05 pm 0 7.00 am 8.55 am 10.05 a m ll.55pm oll.lSam 01 1.05 am ll 10 a m Lv Port Hoy ol b. 7.25 a m cfl.uO p m " Beaufort...... 7.40 2 m 9.10 pm " Savannah b (cen t) 5.40 a m o7.l5 p m " Charleston b. 7.10 a m c8.20 p m " Yemassee. 9.15 a m 10.20 p m ** Allendale..10.25 a m 11.81 p m Ar August*. 12420 p m 1,80 a m Lv Augusta. 2.55 p m. Lv McCormick. 4.40 p m 6,00 a m Ar Calhoun Sails. 5.45 p m 7.37 a m " Anderdon-. 7.10 p m 10.00 a m Lv ADdorsou...........il...... 7.25 a OB Ar Greenwood...12.44 p m " Waterloo (Barris Springs) " 1.17 p m " Laurene. 1.45pm " Greenville....?.ii 8.25pm " Sparenburg ?. 3.80 p m ^Gf?rm Bprtnrvi b..................i 5*25 pi m Lv Glenp SprtngslG. M. R.B.).,} 9.00 a m Lv Spartanborjc (u. & W. V. Lv Greenville......... ..... Lv Laurens.....................v.....,*.. ?Lv Waterloo. Lv Greenwood...... Ar Andersen............7,,..^..; 12.01pm 12,15 pm X 55 p m 2.20 p m 2.51 p m 7.10 p m <(b, dally except Sunday; ft Sunday only). Taranah train . servloe between Au gusta and Ch ar lesion. For Infor meelon relative to rates, etc., apply toW? B. Steele, U. T. A ., And or ri, c., 3eo. T. Bryan, O. A., Greenville. 8. C., Ernes'* Williams, Gea. Pass. Agtr Augusta, G3., T. M. Emerson, Trafflo Manager. Some of the most stubborn diseases enter into the system through the pores of the fkin. Like a sponge, it absorbs poisons of various kinds, winch are taken up by the little blood vessels beneath the surface of the body, and emptied into the great current of the blood. The juices of poison oak and other noxious wild plants percolate through the skin like water through a sponge, aro taken into the circulation, breaking out afresh each season, and linger ing on for years unless antidoted and driven out of the system. Dye Poisoning among the employes of dye houses, and from wear? ing colored under-clothing and hosiery, is of frequent occurrence and dangerous to health, causing boils and sores and POISON OAK AND ITS EFFECTS, other eruptions Over fifteen years ago I was poisoned with Pol? ... , . m.-^" son Oak. I tried remedy after remedy without Workers lil lena, DraSS setting relief. Sores broke out over my body and and ^tfior metals ars often OQ mV tongue, affecting the lining of my month. **.,'.. , . , Finally, about a year aero my dortok* told me to poisoned by the chemicals try s. S. s., which I did. After taking three and acids used in polish- bottles all the sores disappeared, and I have not : , ? , J ri been bothered since, and I feel much indebted to lng, and the oust ana lil- your valuable medicine for so prompt and com ings settling Upon the skin, Plete a cure. I am certain that S. B..B. will do ali , , . , n i ii . that is claimed for it in blood diseases, and winch find their way Danvine, Ky. CON. O'BEYAK. through the pores into the blood, followed by inflammation, swelling and the most obstinate sores* Blood Poison, the vilest of ali human diseases, is often con tracted through shaking the hand or handling the clothing or other arti cles used by one infected with this dangerous poison. The deadly virus finding its way through the pores of the skin,contaminates the blood and produces fearful ulcers, eruptions and blotches. - J The diseases that enter the system by absorption or through the pores are as deep-seated and dangerous as any brought on by internal causes, and cannot be reached l?TT we Kbes. salves, soaps or other external remedies. The blood must be purified and a healthy circulation established before getting permanently rid of the disease. S. S. S. acts upon the blood, ridding it of the original poison and restoring it to a healthy, normal condition.? S. S. S. is guaranteed entirely vegetable, an unrivaled blood pur> fier and the best of all tonics. With all impurities removed from the blood, the sores and eruptions disappear from the skin. Write us should you de?ire medical advice or any information about your case ; this wi| cost you nothing. TH? s Wi HT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA* To Stove Special attention is invited to a new shipment of ACORN STOVES AND RANGES Which we have just received, and which includes the very latest natteras, both coal or wood, adapted to the requirements of this market. If you require anything in the Stove or Jiange line we solicit an oppor tunity to explain the merits of THE ACORN We also carry a complete and up-to date line of TINWARE, WOOD EN WARE and HOU8E FURNISHINGS. ?6U Guttering, Plumbing and Electric Wiring executed on short notice Y ours truly, ARCHER & NORRIS. AFTER THIS DATE fr We Will Not Retail Fertilizers And Acid Phosphate to Any One. We do this for the reason that we are represented here hy Merchants., and it will be much better for all of the retail business to pass through then? hands, thereby saving a lot of confusion. We therefore respectfully|a?k GUS friends to call on OSBORN? & PEARSON. OR . DEAN & RATUFFE? Or any other one of our representatives here or any adjacent town. We ar* represented at every Town in the up-country, and hope to merit your eos* inued liberal patronage. . OUR GOODS ARE FIRST CLASS IN EVERY RESPECT And the results show that there is none superior in quality. IHDERSQH PHOSPHITE IUD OIL CO. WESTERN & ATLANTIC ill AMD Nashville, Chattanoona & St Louis Ry. . ; . . .... .... .; \ ... ?...'.''!' '' ?*./." V-' \ 'V ? ' ~-* ~0 ?=T ST. LOUIS and all points West and Northwests Three 8ohd Trains Daily, with Pullman Palaee^Sleeping Oars, Atlanta to St. Louis, without change. Only through car service, Atlanta to Chicago, without change. V, Close connections made at Atlanta with the Seaboard Air Une Railway Central of georgia Railway and tho Southern Railway trains. Foi map folders or other Information write vJo Thoa, R. Jones, T. P. A., No. l.North Pryor St., Atlanta, Ga* Chas.^E. Harman, Gen. Pass. Agent. t H.F. Smith, Traffic Manager,