The Camden journal. [volume] (Camden, S.C.) 1866-1891, February 05, 1874, Image 4
TO THE SOUTH WIND.
/
l.
Over the mountaius and snow-decked trees
That sunlit cheerily glisten,
You carol your mystical symphonies
While I pause and. spell-bound, listen:
And seem but to hear a melodious rhyme
Which your tuneful zephyrs are weaving.
~ In t ).o raid on tinip
OU IV IBliF 1>1 i? villus IX nil --
That knew naught of bitter grieviug.
II. .
As kindly free as the hearts yon have left.
You fondle the plushy tnosses
And enfold each shrub in the shadowy elcft
Which the sunlight seldom crossta.
The gentians look up when your coining they
hear,
And their tributes of perfume render,
As yeu rustle the dew-spangled ferns anear.
And the leaves in theire-usset apeftdor.
III.
Thon come over the lees, oh, then gentle
breexe,
With the odors of far-off ffowers;
My spirit enchant with your gladsome glees, I
As you murmur of ever-green howersJ
Come on through the trees in their garb of
death,
And eing of Spring to the leaves that are
pining;
Incirclt jnj brow with jour balmy breath.
And tall me of skies that are shining.
IV.
The tapering willows tremble to thee
Through each of their pensile trosses,
The poplar and oak in their tremulous glee
Ware to jour tender caresses;
Se ardently voe them with honeyed mouth.
In kisses so thrilling and tender,
Come, amorous wind, from the Sunny South,
Jtnd deepen the blushing wood's splendor.
V.
For yonr coming our maples plaintively sigh
Through the moonlight's frosty gleaming,;
Then enrap them as vision* of dave gone by
Oft gladden old age in its dreaming.
Cam* whisper of Hope to some lone little bird
That erouehesin withering grasses,
And shakes when the icicled braaches are
stirred
By the Northern gale as it ^*ses.
VI.
Oh, toll of the clime where magnolias wave
As they bend to your sweet embraces,
Art name the dear land of ths true and the
bravo
Where affliction has worn its traces.
Oh, bring to me oft the scent of the pine,
Which of old you were wont to borrow.
'Twil^still send a thrill through this heart of
mine
Though it comes with the Southland'* sorrow.
OUDEIS.
Farm, Garden and Household
Sarin? the Fat and the Flesh.
The flesh and fat of all kinds of domestic
animal* are made of grass and
graii, which cost money. In autumn,
when feed begins to fail, and the weather
becomes cold and stormy, animals
will lose flesh unless they are well fed
and properly protected from cold and
. wet storms. Every pound of flesh and
fct is worth, at a low figure, twelve and !
a half cents. Flesh or fat is actually
worth much more than that sum, in
feme localities, as there is no bone, no
hair, no hoofs, no horns, nor no waste
in those parts of the animals. The fat
if always wasted fir3t, the flesh next.
Now thun, every pound of fat and flesh
that is wasted is a dead loss of twenty
fire cents to the owner of the stock.?
When an animal consumes a pound of
fat in maintaining respiration and animal
heat, the waste is a dead loss, be
cause it can never be retrieved. The
substance that composed the fat and
/ flesh is gone. The grain and grass
consumed in making it, might just as
well, in one sense, have been pitched
into the Atlantic ocean. In another
sense it would have been better to cast
the grain and grass on the land as a
renovator of the soil. Now to reproflnee
the number of pounds of fat and
flesh lost will cost not less than another
twelve and a half cents worth of
Jkain. There you have twenty five
cents in cash for every pound of flesh
produced. Every person who has half
an eye cannot fail to see and appreciate
this fact. It needs no further elu'J
i \v 11 n
MUBIIOU. iuo poiauu, ?.v.,,.v.v,
Mm ten head of cattle, and allow* each
ne to fall away one hundred pound*
7eaeb, loses ten hundred quarters of
fellars, or $250! A hundred pounds
;ef fat or flesh would scarcely be missed
in the appearance of some animals.
Jftd the same rule holds good with
Krses, sheep, swine and all kind* of
domestic animals. Every pound of
flesh lost is equivalent to so much money
actually thrown away. There is
the loss. No one can deny it. And
there is the error in the management;
*rW the grand practical question is
how to save that which has heretofore
bean lost ??N. Y. Herald.
Roots as Manure.
It has been found that the roots of a
good crop of red clover left in an acre
f land after the removal of the crop
weigh 6,580 pounds, or from three to
three and a half tons. The same ex animation
gave the weight of an acre
f rye roots at 8,400 pounds. (A similar
experiment gave weight of the
roots of alfafa from an acre at over five
tons.) All of this matter is, of course,
Mluable for the use of such crops as
may be grown during or after its de
BMaHBHBnHMMBBi
composition. The well-known superiority
of clover a? a manuring crop, is
not, however, due alone to the great amount
of organic matter, taken mainly
from the atmosphere, which its roots
supply, but also to the position in
which this matter is deposited.
The roots reach deeply into the soil,
and on their decomposition they serve
to draw moisture from the lower soil,
and by the decomposition of fertilizing
matter to a considerable depth, they
induce the descent of the roots and
crops to a point where they are much
more sure of a supply of moisture during
the dry seasons than they could
be if near the surface. Then again,
these deeply penetrating roots traverse
parts of the subsoil not heretofore
open to vegetation, and in their
decomposition they produce a chemical
effect on the inorganic substances that
lie along their courses, and help to ren
der them, too, serviceable, for future
craps.?American Agriculturist.
Genuine Scotch Hotch-Potch.
An English paper gives the receipt
of an "unspassable hotch-potch," obtained
from a cook in Oban, Scotlaud,
It it as follows?Take the best part
of a neck of mutton, cut it small, bones
and all?and boil it until thoroughly
well done, or until the meat separates
fiom the bones. Then remove the
i - - J
uunes, UI1U put 111 * ijU.uiLUj ui pvas
and broad beans a discretion, not to
make the hotch-potch too thick; add
a flavor of onions and parsley, together
with a fair proportion of carrots,
turnips, and kail or other cabbage, taking
care to make the combination
thick enough, but not so thick as to
deprive it of the character of a soup
and convert it into a pottage, and boil
the whole for eight or nine hours. If
you boil it for twelve or even twenty
hours it will be none the worse, but all
the better. If there be any left, boil
it up again on the next day, and it
will be better than ou the first. The
writer adds that there is a winter as
.? ilia till.
well ild a suuiiuci xivivh-j/v; tvaa, wuv *?w
sence of peas and beaus and the substitution
of such other vegetables, potatoes
alone excepted, as may be got,
forming the difference between the
two.
Cattle Disease?The Swiss Times
#
i says that the cattle plague is extendi
ing to an alarming extent in some
parts of Switzerland. The latest inj
formation shows that it has broken out
! afresh in several cantons, more pnrtic!
ularly Berne, Neuchatel, and the Grisons.
In tit# canton of Friberg, where
it had disappeared, it has again attacked
several districts at once, and
in consequence of its virulence at Vaud
a large number ol cattle nave nave nau
to be destroyed. la the latter canton
all cattle fairs and markets had been
suppressed until further orders.
A Wonderful Cavk in Western
Xohtii Carolina.?In the range of
mountains in Western North Carolina,
known as the "Fork Range," a most
singular phenomenon exists. It is a
breathing cave. In the summer months
a current of air comes from it so strongly
that persons can't walk against it,
while in the winter tho suction is just
as great. The cool air from the mountains
in the summer is felt for miles, in
a direct line from the mouth of the
cave. At times a most unpleasant
odor is emitted from the dead carcasses
of animals sucked in and killed by
the violence. The loss of cattle and
stock in that section in winter is accounted
for in this way ; They range
too near the mouth of the cave, and
the current carries them in. At times,
when changes from inhaling to exhaling
begin, the air is filled with various
hairs of animals, and not unfrequently
whole carcasses are seen miles from
the place. The air has been known to
change materially in temperature during
exhalation, from cool to unpleasantly
hot, withering vegetation within
reach, and accompanied by a terrible
roaring, gurgling sound, as a pot boiling.
It is unaccounted for by scientific
men who have examined it, though
no exploration can take place. It is
feared by many that a volcanic erup
tion may break forth some time. Such
things have occurred in places as little
expected. We hope our friends in the
neighborhood will keep us thoroughly
posted as to the movements of the
strange motion.?Aiheville Citizen.
Trying to do business without advertising
is about as foolish as standing
on the front steps of 1874 and whistling
for the old year to comeback.
A dirty man, soliciting his friend's
advice how he should dress himsolf for
a masquerade, received the following
answer : Only just wash your hands
and face and put on a clean elirt, and
I'll be hanged if any one will know
you.
A CRACKED SATELITE
Tho Moon In Process of Disruption?
A Cheerful Outlook for Us.
From the Uticu Herald. _
C
The story of a cracked and 'disinte- 9
grated moon, which i9 made public i
through the woll known observatory at (
Marseilles, has points about it which, s
if fully assured as to their autl entici- ?
will ?i./nico a cr<wl of (litfeilS- ,
IV} 'I 1U Ut V ?UV %m ^wv*? V.VW. ? (
sion among astronomers. The story <
is of Luigi Cicciatore, a young loan ,
with an idea and a fortune of $6,000,
a student at the observatory of Mar- (
seilles. This young man was so devo
ted to his idea that he heaped his little
fortune upon it, and, with his telescope
and other instruments, set sail
alone for the solitudes of the Southern i
seas. Before embarking he handed to
his old instructor a roll of manuscript,
upon which was inscribed the idea
which the youth pursued, and his reasons
for entertaining it at the expense
of his time and fortune. He believed,
speaking unscientifically, that the moon
was altogether more crackod than modern
astronomers imagined, and he went
to the South seas alone, that, being
there in that region where passed the
deepest shadow, he might sec the sunlight
peeping through the cracked moon
at the time of the next eclipse. lie
went away to the South, even to Pitcairn's
Island, and erected hie rude
observatory, gained an old sailor to assist
him, ami they two, with eyes front
and instruments pointed, awaited the
shadow. It came. Straight through
the rugged rocks the rugged sunlight
shone as one sees a gleam through a
crack in the door. A cry of joy came
from beneath the telescope. The'sailor
turned photographer, caught three negatives
of the penetrating sunbeam.?
The youth with his idea possessed
now proof, to him sufficient that his
belief was not a vision, but a scientific
reality, and he writes to his old instructor
in France, with all the enthusiasm
of a boy who has stormed a snow fort,
with all the exclamation poims of the
successful lover. That young man saw
enough during his lonoly vigils at Pitcairn's
Island to make him declare that
our lovely satelite is not only a shell,and
not only a shell that is full of cracks,
but a shell that is crushed in upon
some portions of its periphery, a shell
that is now crumbling to ruin with a
constant, a savage, and a frightful velocity.
The old professor at Marseilles, commenting
upon the youth's observations
and records which accompanied his.
letter, says he has pushed his'discovery
very near the point of demonstration,
and then the old gentleman takes
a hand in running things with a cracking
moon, as follows:
"Tf tVifl /?rnmhlinor bp r?nnn*ptprl wifh
I ... v-. -?....e
I anil dependent upon any such intense
internal volcanic action as Luigi seems '
to suspect, the final disruption would
be so violent as to project some portions
of the moon sheer out of their orbits
| and down upon us with consequonces
of the most serious character. Such
an impact, if it were of sufficient force, |
might in turn dislodge the earth from
its orbit, send it grazing on a spiral (
into the sun, or flung on a hyperbole
out into freezing space. Or the same
resistless force might, in falling, crush
in the surface of our planet, break
through its crust and deluge us with 1
lava and steam, or suffocate us with !
eacaping gases from our own subter- |
ranean laboratory." (
Ta nnt that a beautiful naracu*anh?
" ~ r o~"i
The reader may think the moon is not ]
the only cracked thing in existence, but
restrain the thought, for the above occurs
just over the signature of Yvon f
De Pontecoulant, of the Observatory
of Marseilles.
The thought that the moon may be
thinking of sending a heavy shell hith
er to avenge the many insults which
men have heaped upon her, is the only
one which presses after the eager Marscil'lace
have done their wrn-st. While
we do not believe the moon or any part ^
of it is coming hither until the great
creative spring now regulating planetaiy
motions, and ruling their gradual
approaches, shall have wrought its
perfect work, still we protest against
giving the moon any farther ground
for even consequential damages: We
doubt not she is proud of her beauty
and jealous of tho adoration which it
commands. It is neither safe, nor polite,
nor wise, to call her a cracked and
suicidal termagant.
The man who told his wife that she
must retrench?cut down family expenses?on
account of the hard times, has ^
just sold his dog for twenty dollars
and taken a sharo in a billiard table. t
He will try, he says, to get along with- c
out a dog this winter, and buy a couple J
of pups next spring. C
From the Dnnberry Man.
First Sunday in a New House.
The first Sunday in a new house is
t notable day. There is an entire abence
of old landmarks, and a strange
ivcird newness on everything,"and you
?an't find your shaving soap. You
itart for a scuttle of coal, but you don't
ice the scuttle. It is in the bottom of
% barrel in the garret. You take the
dripping pan. When you change your
Bhirt, you look for it first. It is in
the bureau drawers which are piled
one upon another, in the parlor, and
you find you have got to lift a half
ton of carpets and leather bods before
you can get down to the drawers. After
you have lifted them down and
searchod them through, it is remembered
by your wife that the desired garments
is in one of the barrels?the one
in the shed she thinks, although it
may be the one in the garret, and yet
it would be just like the stupid carman
to have carried that barrel down the
cellar. You think so too. You attack
one of those barrels, and are surprised
at the result. A bed quilt comes out
first, then a pie tin, next a piece of
cold ham neatly done up in your vest
and packed away in the missing scuttle.
Below is an assortment of iron
ware and a length ot stove pipe, a half
loaf of bread, a couple of towels, and
a rolling pin. You begin to expect
you will eventually come upon a coal
mine and perhaps some dead friends.
Then you go down in that barrel
again and come up with ft pleasing assortment
of stockings and a half-emptied "
medicine bottle. The way you come
up this time leads you to consider the
barrel itself. It has caught in the '1
back of your vest and made the cloth
let go; it took off one half of one Bleeve
and created a sensation on the back
of your hand as if a bonfire had raged i
there. It is quite evident tho coopor ^
who built that barrel was called away
before he commenced to clinch the ^
nails. You involuntarily grasp the
rolling pin and look around as if you
half expeeted to see him. Then you ]
call the girl to repack the barrel, and ^
start up stairs to look for soinethiug
that is easier to find, but finally change
your uiind,and pass the balance of the
day in digging carpet tacks and worthless
wood from the palms of your feet^
and concocting lies about the wealth of
vour uncle ; and the moon look* through
the window at night* and touches up
with a glow of burnished silver, several
lengths of stove pipe, a half dozen 0
old chairs, a sh^ct of dingy zinc, and "
a barrel with bed quilts foaming over
the top.
Faith in His Wife.?During the trial
of a case, the witness persisted in
testifying to what bis wife told hitn.
To this, of course, the attorney objected.
He would proceed again to
tell "shust how it vas," when the attorney
would sing out, "How do you J
know that?"
"My wife told me," was the answer.
This was repeated several times.
Presently the judge, becomiug unablo
to contain himself longer, interupted : I
"Suppose your wife were to tell you
that the heavens bad fallen, what
tvnulil vnii thinlr?"
"Veil, I tink dey were down."
Your Conversation?Of what character
is it? Is it pure? Whatever it
may be, be assured it is an unerring
index to your heart. The tree is
known by its fruit. Out of the nbun- .
rlunce of the heart the mouth speaketh.
Let your words be words of truth and
purity.
rvi:w firm.
1)H E undersigned, Huccesnors to A. I). KEN.
NKDY ?2t CO., hnvo jwat opened tlieir
Fall and Winter Stock
OONS1STINU or
Staple Dry Goods,
CJJUO'X'Jtd.J.JN <^r,
BOOTS AM> SHOES,
d
Hats and taps, \
HARDWARE, K<
> Cll
Crockery and Glassware, nc
SAddlery, ttoc.
A I.AROk SI'PPLY OK
FANCY AND FAMILY
GROCERIES.
BaK^iug' and Ties. ,t
jg^y* The above Goods baring been |?i
inrchased with great care in the
Northern markets, since the decline in
trices, we are able to sell the same on
erms to suit purchasers. Give U9 a
all.
<ENNEDY & BOYKIN.
Ictober 10. if *?e
Dr. J. Walker's California
Vinoflmr Hitters are a purely Veg
etublo preparation, mauechietiy from
the native herbs found on the lower
ranges of the Sierra Nevada mountains
of California, the medicinal
properties of which are extracted
therefrom without the uso of Alcohol.
The question is almost daily asked,
" What is the cause of the unparalleled
SUCCC3S Of VlNKGAR BlTtkhsT"
Our answer is, that they
remove the cause of disease, and
the patient recovers his health. They
are the great blood pnrifier and a
life-giving principle, a perfect Renovator
and lnvigorutor of the system.
Nevsr before in the history of the world
has a medicine been compounded possessing
the remarkable qualities of Vixboar
Hitters in healing the sick of
every disease man is heir to. They are
a gentle Purgative as well as a Tonic,
relieving Congestion or Inflammation of
the Liver and Visceral Organs, in Bilious
Diseases
The properties of Dr. Walker's
VinegarBitters are Aperient, Diaphoretic,
Carminative, Nutritious, Laxative,
Diuretic, Sedative, CouDter-Irritant,
Sudorific, Alterative, and Anti-Bilious.
R. II. McDOVALD <Sc CO.,
Druggists & Gen. Agts., San Francisco, California,
<fc cor. of Washington and Charlton SU.,N. Y.
Void by all Druggist* and Dealers.
NEW
AND
ATTRACTIVE
.Mie attention of customers is called to m
LARGE
AXD
L'arcftilly Selected Stock o
)RY GOODS,
CLOTHING,
BOOTS and SHOES
IIATS and CAPS,
IARDWARE,
CROCKERY.
A Lar^o Stock of
GROCERIES.
I have also on hand an assortment
With a variety ??f other articles. A]
f which are offered upon the most reason
able terms.
J. W. McCURRY, Apt.
October (J. tf
Piedmont and Arlington
IA FE
INSURANCE COMPANY
OK
iieli iiioikI, Virginia.
ASSETS
$?,ooo,ooo.
W. C. CARRINGTON,
PRESIDENT.
dually paid in KershawCounty within
Three Years,
$28,000,00
I take pleasure in saying I have returnt
o the agency of this popular Company.
3 diflieultiesjwill exist in future, aslo
inewals of Policies, as I shall pay ospeil
attention'to that braucli of tho busi
BS.
firl will always be found at my Of
eon Broad Street, Camden, S. C.
W. CLYJSURN, Agent.
January 11>. 1873. tf
FOR SALF.
7000 feet of choice Rough Edge and
rfuse LUMBER for sale at the lowest
ices, lor cash.
H. K. DUBOSE.
ijeambor 4. tf
M.ltlNSELL,
DENTIST,
Hns returned to his office, in Cnm len. He
j?i*o|?aro<l to attend those friends who have
en expecting him.
South-Carolina Rail Road.
Charleston, S. C. Oct. 18, 1873.
On and after Sunday the 1 OtJ? inst., the
Passenger Trains of this Road will run as
follows?
Leave Columbia at 8 40 a. m.
Arrive at Charleston at 4.20 p. m.
Leave Charleston at 'J.OOa. in.
Arrivo at Columbia at 5. OOp. m.
NIOIIT EXPRESS.
(Sundays Excepted.)
Leave Columbia at 7-15 p. in.
Arrive at Charleston at 7.10 a. m.
Leave Charlestnnat 7.10 p. m.
Arrive at Columbia at 0.30a.m.
Camden Accommodation Train.
W'lirun through toOolnmhia, Monday, Wed
nesday and Saturday as follows:
Leave Camden at C 50 a. ru.
Arrive at Columbia at 11 50 a. in.
Leave olumbia at. 1 50 a. m.
Arrive at Camden at 6 35 p in.
yjyN'ight Trainsconnect at Augusta with
the Georgia Road, and the Macon und Augusta
Road. This i9 the quickest and most
direct route and as comfortable and as cheap
as any other route to Louisville, Cincinnati,
Chicago, St. Louis, and all other points West
and Northwest.
f$3?-Day Trains connect with the Charlotte
Road.
Through Tickets on sale, via this route, to
all points North.
gijjF'Caruden Train conuects at Kiugsville
daily (except Suuday) with Day Passenger
Train.
S. S. SOLOMONS,
Vice President.
S. B. Picke.ns, G. T. A.
SSbS :
Wilmington, Columbia and Augusta
Rail Road.
SUPERINTENDENT'S OFFICE,
w? ? ? /i.? fi or i orro
>V IIjMI fcUI Urt, \JISb. \SVI>~ -t, IOIO.
After this dat?, the following schedule wi
be run by trains on this Road?
J DAY EXPRESS TRAIN, (Daily.)
Leave Wilmington, (Union Depot) 4:50 a. m.
* Arrive at Florence * 10:40 a, m
Arrive at Columbia ' 3:10 r. m.
LeavcColumbia 11:00 a.m.
Arrive at rlorence 4:40 p. m.
Arrive at Wilmington 10:45 p.m.
y NIGHT EXPRESS TRAIN.
Leave Wilmington (Union Depot,) 0:10 P. m.
Arrivent Florence 11:37 p. m.
Arrive at Columbia 4:00 a. m.
Leave Columbia at 8:45 p. m.
Arrive at Florence 10:00 a.m.
f Arrive at Wilmington 7:w a. h.
JAMES ANDERSON, Gea'l. Superin't.
Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta
Rail Road.
OcXEnAI.Sfl'EP.lXTEXnANT'K OFFICE,
Columbia, October 26, 1872.
On and after this date the following schedule
will be run over this road?"
going south.
Train No. 1. Train No. 2.
Leave Charlotte, 7 <H) a m 8 30 p. m.
Leave Columbia 2 48 p tn 2 40 a, ui.
Arrive at Aitgu ta, 8 05 p in 845 a. m.
going north.
Train. No. 1. Train No. 2.
Leave Augusta, 1 50 am 4 15 p. ni.
Leave Columbia, 11 58 a m 0 37 p. m.
Arr. at Charlotte, 7 08 pra 6 15 a m.
Standard time, ten minutes slower than
Washington city time; six minutes abaad of
II Columbia;
Train No 1, daily; No 2, daily, Sundays
'* excepted.
ltoth trains make close connection tonll
points North, South and West.
Through tickets sold and baggage checked
to all principal points.
JAMES ANDERSON*
General Superintendant
11. K. Dorset. Gen. F. & T. Agent.
'oV IJ w"
Greenville and Columbia Railroad.
Daily, Sundays excepted, connecting with
Night Trains onthe South Curolina Railroad,
up and down; also with trains going North
and South on Charlotte, Columbia and Augusta
Railroad, and Wilmington, Columbia
aud Augusta Railroad.
UP.
Leave Columbia at 7.13 a m.
Leave Alston 0.05 a. m
Leave Newberry 10.40 a m.
Leave okesbury 2.00 p in.
L.eave netcon p m.
Arrive at Greenville at 5.30 p ra,
DOWN.
Leave Greenville at 7.30 a m.
Leave Belton 9.30 a tu.
Leave Cokesbury 11.15 am.
Leave Newberry 2.80. ptn.
Leave Alston 4.20 pm.
Arrive at Columbia 6.00 p m.
Anderson Branch and Blue Ridge Division
LEAVE
Walhalla 5 45 am. Arrive 7 15pm
Perryville 0 26 a m. ' Leave 0 35 p m
Pendleton 7 10 am. Leave 5 50pm
Anderson 8 10 a in. Leave 4 50 p m
An at Helton 9 00 a tu. Leave 3 50 p ra
Accommodation Trains on Abbeville
Brunch Mondays.W edensdays and Fridays.
On Anderson Branch, bet ween Belton and
Anderson, on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.
THOS. DODAMEAD, Geul. Supt.
J a b k7. Nobtos, Oenl. Ticket Apt,
Congaree Iron Works,
Columbia, gfi C. i
JOHN ALEXANDER. Proprietor
SUGAR CANE MILLS
LIST OF PRICES.
8 Rollers 14 inches diameter, $<!0 00
3 " 12 " bO 00
3 " 10 " 70 00
2 14 " 70 ?H> |
2 " 12 " 00 00
2 " 10 " SO CO
AboTC price? complete with frame. Without
frame, $10 less on each Mill.
Steam Engines, Koilers, Portable Grist
.Mills. Circular and Muley Saw Mills. Mill
Oenrjug of all kinds uiade to order, Iron
and llrnss Castings on short notice
Oin Gearing constantly on hand of the
ollowing sizos:
1) feet wheel and pinion, $35 00
10 " " 40 00
11 45 00
12 " 50 00
14" " 55 Ot) (
Irou and Brass Castings of all descriptions
made to order.
Anti friction Plates and Balls for Cotton
Press, $15 00 nnd $20 per set.
N. B.?Terms cash on delivery at Railroad
Depot here
lHjTWorks Foot of Lady Street, opposite
Greenville Freight Depot.
Columbia, Aug. 21. 10tt t
-1
' -v, . >. . J+M
R. R. Rr
RADWAY'S READY RELIEF
cubes the wobst pains
In from One to Twenty Minutes.
NOT ONE HOUR
* after readlogthli adrerquement ncjd any oae j
BUFBER WITH FAmS* r
BAD WATS BEADY RELIEF IS A CURB 70s
EVERY PAID. I
ItwuthaflratandU
The Only Pain Remedy
that iMUntly .top. (h. mart ?ternd?llDf pain., altera
Inflauimattotu andcoraa (Jongaatiooi, whether of a*
Lunc*. stomach, Bowtte, or othar (laadaor orcaaa, by
om application. '
IN FRO* OBI TO TWINTY MNUTE8,
Neuralgic, or proatratad with dlaaaae may aoEkr,
RADWAY'S READY RELIEF
will a770bd instant base.
infaiocatiow 07 thb kidneys.
I NFL All RATION OF Tflg BLADDER.
ib7laiquii0n of the B0W8EL
congestion otthb lunosSORE
THBOAT. DIFFICULT BREATHING.
'PALFITATION OF THB HEART.
hysterics, croup, diphtebia.
CATARRH, INFLUENZA.
headache, toothachb.
NRURALqjA. RHETTKATISE.
COLO CHILLS, AO UK CHILLS.
The application of the Ready Relief tothe pert cr
pim where the pain or difflculty exists will afibrdsaae
ad Comfort
Twenty drops in hslf a tumbler of water will tat few
momenta cure CHR AMP8.SP aBMJLSOUB 8TOMACH,
HEARTBURN, SICK HEADAtSR/ DIARRHOEA,
DY8ENTERY. COLIC. WIND IN THE BOWELS,
aadaUI NTKRNAL PAINS.
Tmrelere should always carry a bottle of ft adzway's
Ready Keller with them. A few drops In
water will pre rent sickness or pains from change of
water. I: la better than French brandy or Bitten as a
stimulant
FEVER AND AGUE.
FEVER AND AOCE cared for fifty cents. There' is
netareaedlslsgsntln this world that will eweFerer
and A sue. and all other Malsrtoqa, Blloos, Scarlet, J
Typhoid, Yallow, and other Ferea (aided by RAD- G
WAY'S PILLS] so quick aa RAD WAT'S RKADT RE- 1
LIEF, fifty cents per bottle. fl
HEALTH! BEAUTY!I i
STRONG AND PURE RICH BLOOD?INCREASE
OF FLESH AND WEItiHT?CLBAB SKIN AND
BEAUTIFUL CO MP LdSlON SECURED TO AAA.
DR. RADWAY'S;
Sarsaparillian Resolmt
THE GREAT BUOOD PURIFIER.
HAS HADE THE MOST ASTONISHING CURES : SO ^
OUICK.BO RAPID ARB THE CHANGES. THE
THAT
D?aa TaSaSASA { Ulftlll
fivtry uay ainuurw 10
and f eiflt is Seen and Felt
Erery drop of the 8 AR3 A P ARILLIA K RESOLVENT
coromunlcaie* throughthe Bipod, Sweat, Urine,
?ad other Fluid* and Juice* of the System the rigor of
life, for impairs the wsstes of the body with new and
sound material. Scrofula, Syphilis, Consumption,
Glandular dlaeaae, Ulcer* in the thro**, lloutb, Tumors.
Nodes 1 a the Oland* and otharpart* oftbe system,
Sort Kyss, Strumorouadiachargea from the Kara, and .
the worst forme of Skin diseases, j^mpOon*, rem
Sores, Seal d H ead. Ring Worm,hall KWim, hrysipeiaa.
Acne, Black Spots, Wormsln the Flesh, Tumors, Cancers
In the Womb, and all weakening and painful discharges,
Nights wests. Loss of Sperm andslt waste* of
the IBs principle, are within the curative eange of this
wonder of Modem Chemistry, and a few Aayi^uee will
prove to aay person using it for either offense forma of
disease its poUnt power toeure them.
lithe patient, daily becoming reduced by the wastes
and decomposition that is continually pswewtng, sueceedaIn
arresting these wastes. aDd Amass the aasin
with new material made from beattiy Blood?end this I
the 8ARSAP ARILLIAN will and doAs secure?a cure
li certain; for when ones this r?ttriflwromm*nc?e tie
workofpprtAeatlon. and succeeds InwBnlnUhlng the
lam of west**, its repairs will b? raphL anderery day
the patient wlUfeel hlmse If growtngMBr and stninge^
the food digesting better, appetttenproTiig, andflesh
and weight Increasing. ?
Not only does the Batter annua* Rootrar snals
all known remedial agent* In the euro of Chronic, hero- fe|
fulous, Constitutional, and Skin disseise ; but u is the
only posture cure for
Kidney & Bladder Complaints,
Urinary and Womb dtseasee.Grarel. Diabetes, Dropsy,
Ftcg>p*ie of Water, Incontinence of urine, Bright'sDiaipse,
Albuminuria, and in ail eases where tame are
ttdek-d ust deposits, or the water is thick, cloudy, mtsad
With substances like the white of an egg, or threads Iks
white silk, or there I* a morbid, dart, bUtous appearance,
and white boo*-dost deposits, and when inertia
Spricking, burning sensation whan passingwater, aid
pain in the Small of lbs Back and along thsLoine.
Tumor of 12 Years? Growth
Cured by Badway's Resolvent*
DR. RADWAY'S
Perfect fugitive & Segnlatog fi,
perfectly tasteless, elegantly coated with sweet run,
purge, regulate, purify, cleanse and strengthen. BadV?J
t Pills, for the cure of all disorder* efth* Stomach,
Llrar, Bowels, Kidneys, Bladder. Nerrovs Diseases,
Hsadacbe. Constipation. Coatireoeas, Indigestion, Dys
pepala, Vlllnmnaci. BLUouaKerer, luninumwa oiiw
Bowela, Pllee. and all Dcrangementa of the Internal
Vlacera. Warranted to effect a positive cure. Pureir
Vegetable, containing no mercury, minerals or deleteirlCUidruifi.
A ffcw doeea of RADWAVS PILLS wEl free the aye(am
Cram all the above named dlaordera. Price, 35 centa
per Box. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS.
BEAD * FALSE AND TRUE." Send ooe letter
etampto RADWAY A CO.. No. 32 Vim SL, Vtw
York. Information worth thousands arid be eent jou.
t
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^BuldrftBtrdtmaztfScpplksJlistfTff, ^
yBmbtsJ,, *nt Jiaitjb'uticv, * tre 6' J^l
'A SlaUapJMjrilejlitJh.i 7?^jauLDm\
X 7ilutpWhitrpit?, tftbrntRxtyLBJulfr} ft
o (tiiineiirAfiv/uirM'oodii.e, *
yj Ah V'rtrhW&rrsnted. 1
5 LOWtST PRICES.!
SendfirPrice Liet, ?
jj I. H. HALL & CO.|
iXtnufiefurfr.t ft Utilert. ^
^ 6, 8, TO, Market Street, A
>;! 225/2'?5, ?*stB?y>' 'J
X\ OH A kLESTON, S. C. fc J
This Cut entered arcording to Act of Congress"
in the year lh"S, bv I. H. Ham.&
Co., in the office of the Librarian of
Congress atWashington.
Miu-19 12m.
RICHMOND
BANKING AND INSURANCE
COMPANY.
?
Capital, - - ?500,000
%
PERSON'S wietain? to insure in afiret clasi
Company at low rates, will pleas* apply
o W,_CLYBCRS, Agsnt'