University of South Carolina Libraries
LOVE THE UNLOVELY. "This is the doctrine, simple, ancient, trow; This is life's trial, as old earth smiles and knows; If you loved only what were worth your love, Love was clear gain, and wholly well for yon; Make the low nature better by your throes I Give earth yourself, go up for gain above!" ?Browning. THE PIGS AND THE WEATHER. The Habit of Gathering: Sticks and Grass? A Meaningless Couplet. Of pigs, I have heard it said, very fre quently: uWhen swine carry sticks, the clouds ?rill play tricks?" but that?"When they lie in the mud, no fears of a flood." The first of these couplets is of twofold interest. I have watched them for years, to see what purport this carrying of sticks and bunches of grass might have, and have only learned that it lias notling whatever to do with the weather, or at least with coming rain storms, The drouth of summer is so far a convenience as to throw light upon this habit, as it did upon the uneasy cows. Pigs carry sticks as frequently then as during wet weather, or just pre ceding a shower. Furthermore, -these gatherad twigs are not brought together " as tnough to make a nest, but are scat tered about in a perfectly aimless man ner. For some cause, the animal is un easy, and takes this curious method of relieving itself; The probabilities are that it is a survival of some habit com mon to swine in their feral condition, just as we see a dog turn about half a dozen timee*before lying down. In an interesting paper on local weather-lore, read by Mr. Amos W. But ler before the American Association for the Advancement of Science, during the PMladelphia meeting of 1884, the author has another version of this saying: "When hog6 gather up sticks and carry them about, expect cold weather." This is wholly at variance with what I liave observed, for my memoranda record tins habit almost wholly during the hot weathar, and this must necessarily be the rule with New Jersey swine, or the local weather-prophets would not have coined the verse as I have given it. AR to the other couplet, it is about as nesr meaningless as. any saying can well be. Some rustic rhymer, a century ago, may have added it as a piece of fun, but it lias stuck most persistently. As it stands now, it has stood for quite 100 years.~Dr. C. C. Abbott in Popular Science Monthly. Dinner a la Greeolan. There is a Philadelphia club called "The Gourmands," and it is said to be rightly named. Its last annual dinner was eaten on Saturday night, and was supposed to be served in the "Greek style." Everything was served whole and as natural as possible. Goldfish were passed around alive is glass globes and soon after served with their scales on. A young wild boar, cooked, but life-like, adorned the center of the, table. "Several 'possums, looking very life-like in their furry pelts, stood around until devoured. One of the novelties was a pie of baked blackbirds.?Exchange. A Flock of Sheep on Drill. Alma Hill, of Bronwood, has about 200 head of sheep on his place and a good many cockle burs. One day not .long ago he was in the field and saw fifteen sheep side by side, their heads all point ing the same way, looking as if out for a drill. He yelled at them to move, and the whole gang moved at once. It was some time before he ascertained that the burs bad got into their wool and they were stuck together.?Americus (Ga.) Recorder. Steady Growth of Southorn Industry. The south is now producing at the rate of $300,700.000 more of agricultural, manufacturing and mining products a year than in 1880, and is steadily increas ing even these stupendous figures. This is a little more than the average value of the entire cotton crop, and is $35,000,000 greater than the total value of the wheat crop of the whole country in 1885.? Philadelphia Call. The Great Sc wer of Ancient Home. The Cloaca Maxima is, well known as the great common sewer of ancient Rome. It is of Etruscan architecture, and still serving its original purpose, is as firm as when its foundations were laid. It was built at least 2,400 years ago, and it is one of the few monuments of Rome whose antiquity has never been assailed.?Texas Siftings. Largest Glass Window in America. Thia largest plate glass window in America was put up a fow days ago in a new Broadway store. The height was lo feet and 11 inches, and the breadth 8 feet and 4t inches, almost tall enough for a railroad coach to pass through.?Phila delphia Call. Tho .Monument a Great Disappointment. 'The Washington monument," writes a Potomac penciler in The Troy Times, "is a great disappointment to visitors. While the structure is in reality 555 feet high, it does not appear, in the eyes of the average mortal, to be over 250. Musical Tones by Eloctricity. A German investigator has. succeeded hi producing musical tones from metal plates by electrifying them intermit tently from an induction machine Chicago Herald. Money Uels of the Old Greeks. The Greeks wore a belt around their loins made double or hollow like our shot belts, for the purpose of carrying money deposited in it around their per sons. The Wealth of Harvard College. Harvard college now has $4,933,393, of which $1,903.770 is in real estate, $1,779, 851 in railroad bonds, and $840,987 in notes and mortgages. A lady remarked of a scholar noted for his taciturnity and arrogance: "He seems to ma an anomaly in natural philosophy; he is gravity without attrac tion."? Demorest's Monthly. KCVNOTE TO WCCEt? IN LtfE. It la Cfco Specialist VTho gtuxMcd?*-?**! of ? Boy's talenlt. President Riehe, in taking leave of the high school boys the other day, gave them the keynote to success in life when he bade them, first, to be true, genuine men, and, secondly, to acquire some special skill or craft. ? It is the specialist, the man who can do some one thing, however small, though it be only to make bread or button-hooks better tlian anybody else, who nowadays is secure of his living. And it is the man who sticks to his own .trade, who imitates and courts nobody, who Uvea simply and sincerely out from his own conscience, convictions and taste who is secure of his social position. John Burroughs studied birds, and birds only. He knows them as nobody else ever has done, and when he tells us of their'habits, their vices, their oddities and the meaning of their song, all the world stands stiel to listen. A man of wealth has a conviction that the sap of a certain Indian tree can be made useful to mankind. He gives up his life to experimenting with it; sacri fices two fortunes; reduces wife and children to want; fails again and again; is jeered at by scientific men, but never gives up his belief or changes his work. At last success comes. He has not only earned enormous wealth' for Iiis family, but he has given to mankind o.ie of the most useful appliances of life. It is useless to dwell on this point. The most careless lad beginning lifo now, in this modern crush and struggle, soon learns that it will never do to .scatter Ids 6hot. Only the specialist, and the thor ough, able specialist, has a chance in the professions, sciences or tradea. Parents are beginning to find that tin natural bent of a boy's talents or skill must be discovered, and his whole training be di rected to stregthen and develop it if suc cess is to be assured to him. Teachers, unfortunately, have not yet discovered this fact. Or, more proba bly, they find it impossible to detect any decided bent or talent in the great ma jority- of boys. So in they go, en masse, to the preparatory school, and after that to college, all toiling along together on a dozen different paths of knowl edge, on moat of which they will not advance a step after matriculation. So wide is the expanse of possible learning now opened before them that the text-books are in fact little better than indices to hint at what there is to learn.?Philadelphia Press. ' Crystallization of Fruits Id France* The- last volume of the reports from t ho consuls of the United States as to their respective districts contains several arti cles on the erystaliaation of fruits as practiced in France. In the opinion at our consuls stationed in France, this in dustry could be introduced into the United States to good advantage. They state that very large quantities of crys talized fruit are exported from southern France to almost every country in the world. Among the fruits preserved are oranges, pineapples, apricots, peaoheB. plums, cherries, prunes, pears, rigs and melons. The orystallizing process is in principle simple and nearly uniform for all kinds of fruit, but requires a certain* degree of skill, which can only be ob tained by experience. The essential thing tobe done is to ex tract the juice of the fruit and replace it in the pulp with liquid Sugar, which, upon hardening, not only preserves the fruit from decay and fermentation, but retains it in its original form and consist ency. The fruit to be preserved should bo freo from blemishes and of the correct degree of ripeness. Fruit long picked and transported considerable distance is unfit for preserving by this process. The "pits" of 6tone fruit are removed, and those that have thick skins, like poars and peaches, arc pared, quartered, and soaked in cold salt water for severol days. The Carp's Tenacity of Life. Certainly, the tenacity of life shown by pond animals is very remurkable. Our own English carp bury themselves deeply in the mud in winter, and there remain in a dormant condition many months entirely without food. During this long hibernating period they can be preserved alive for a considerable time out of water, especially if their gills are, from time to time, slightly moistened. They may then be sent to any address by parcels post, packed in wet moss, with out serious damage to their constitution; though, according to Dr. Gunther, these dissipated products of civilization pre fer to have a piece of bread steeped in brandy put into their mouths to sustain them beforehand. In Holland, where the carp are not so sophisticated, thoy are often kept the whole winter th.ough, hung up in a net to keep there from freezing. At first they require to be slightly wet from time to time, ^ust to acclimatize them gradu ally to so dry an existence; but after a while they adapt themselves cheerfully to their altered oiroumstances, and feed on an occasional frugal meal of bread and milk with Christian resignation.? Cornhill Mqgazino. Subdivisions of the I.ogal Profession. The tendency in this country is to the subdivision of professions. Lawyers are recogizing this tendency now more than ever before. Those who willingly take any business that offers are growing fewer every year. It will eventuate in attorneys skilled only in corporation law, others in insurance law, others in com mercial law, others In the law of patents, trade marks and copyrights, etc. And all those divisions are capable of almost infinite subdivision. The growth of law and the constantly increasing mass of decisions upon every conceivable point render this division necessary. I do not think a further division of the work of the courts will be neccessary, hut there will be one effect there?the judges will be appointed or elected for life.?C. G. B. Drummond in Globe-Democrat. The French have the highest meteoro logical station in Europe, and their two largest observatories aw the best equipped in the world. Some Taeta for "Wo old-Be Cowboy?. To any one who contemplates trying a season's riding I would say this: You will build up your constitution for life, you will meet rough fellows, hear hard swearing, and see some fighting, but you will hear fewer indecent stories on the range than you will in the average club smoking-room. "Your "outfit," or bed clothing, and equipments, will cost you about half your earnings, and if you smoke freely and do not try to save money the end of the season will leave you'neither richer nor poorer. You. will often have a wet bed, and thank heaven for getting to it wet as it is; you will always be up before daylight, and generally two hours out of the night as well; you will eat coarse food, every thing fried in lard; you will be in the saddle from twelve to eighteen hours every day; you will often suffer for the want of food and water during a long day's work in the hot sun; you will-ex pose yourself to some peril of life and more of limb; you will be for much of the time as absolutely cut off from the civilized world as if you were on a .vessel in mid ocean; you will vow three, times a day that when you strike the ranch again you will quit; you will be sore and bruised, cold at night and scorched by day, wet to the skin one hour and parched with thirst the next, auditor the rest of your life you will look back to your life on the range with longing thoughts of its charms. Very few men are rich enough to in dulge their taste for riding by keeping more than two saddle horses. A "puncher" often rides a dozen, and does much of his work at full run. "He breathes the finest air on earth, eats beef as freely as an ordinary working man eats cabbage and potatoes, and fancies the class* to wldch he belongs are the aris tocracy of labor. He is generous, al ways quick to appreciate pluck and kind liness in others, chivalrous to the few women he .sees, ever ready to help hang a horse-thief, and undergoes more hard ship and danger than a dozen soldiers. ?San Francisco Clironicle. Description of a Wonderful Machine. "When I was laying the foundation of my mechanical fame and fortune, a few years ago, I boarded in a house filled with locomotive engineers and firemen. A practice prevailed there of enlivening, the supper table with social conversation, and, the locomotive party being in the majority, the leading theme of talk was stupendous feats performed in railway runs, varied by minor incidents and rec- I ords of narrow escapes. George Dew hirst, who ran a lathe in the shop, Bat opposite to mo at the table, and he?got tired of being excluded from the conver sation. He became ambitious to hear himself talk in that crowd. "One evening, catching on in a lull in the conversation, he called out loudly to me, 'Well, I went over and saw the machine to-day, and it is astonishing the fine work it does!' 'How does it work? I inquired. 'Well,' said he, 'by means of a pedal attachment a fulcrumed lever converts a vertical reciprocating motion into circular movement. The P^jfi?jal part of the machine is a disk whloh re volves rapidly on a vertical plane. Power is applied tlirough the axis of the disk, and, when the speed of the driving arbor is moderate, the periphery of the ma chine is traveling at a great velocity. Work is done on this periphery. Pieces of the hardest steel are by mere impact reduced to any shape the skillful oper ator desires.' 'What on earth is the ma chine!' demanded a listener. 'Oh, it is a new grindstone,' replied George; and a silence that could be felt passed round the supper table."?Mechanical Progress. Celery as a Cure for Ithouinatism. In celery there must be some special virtue, if we only knew what it is. Noth ing is made in vain, and the powerful smell and the extraordin?r}' taste of cel ery are intimations from nature that it has some special mission. Mr. Ward, ofPerriston Towers, Ross, writes that rheumatism becomes impossible if celery is freely used as an article of diet. "Cut the celery," he says, "into inch dice. Boil in water until soft. No water must be poured away unless drank by the in valid. Then take new milk, very slightly thicken it with flour and flavor it with nutmeg; warm with the celery in the saucepan; serve with diamonds of toasted bread around the dish, and eat with potatoes. "Permit me . aay," he adds, "that cold nor damp never produces rheuma tism, but Bimply develops it. The acid blood iR the primary cause and the sus taining power of the evil. While the blood is alkaline there can be no rheu matism, and equally no gout. Let me fearlessly say that rheumatism is im possible on such diet, and yet our med ical men allowed rheumatism to kill over 3,000 human beings in 1676?every case as unnecessary as a dirty face."? Philadelphia Record. Takln? Micro-Photographs of Timber. Photography is employed to recognize good wood. Micro-photographs are taken of sections, longitudinal and trans verse, of standard pieces of timber bear ing a certain known maximum or mini mum strain. Theso are enlarged and serve as comparisons for other samples. Any piece which the educated eye de tects to have fewer rings per inch of di ameter, fewer fibres or fewer radial plates per square inch of section is re jected. The advantage of this method is that it allows all timber for important positions to be tested before being used. ?Ohio Lumber Journal. Tons of Coal for a Steamer. A correspondent asking how many tons of coal a steamer will bift-n in the run from New York to Liverpool, The New York Sun says: "The consumption varies with the steamer. The largest ocean greyhounds Burn from 17-1 to 1300 tons a day, and make the passage in six and three-quarters da}'. A consumption of 2,400 tons, or a good big ship-load, is not an unusual thing in a passage from New York to Liverpool."?Exchange. Swans five to the age of 110 years and wild geese to the ripe old age of 15C AFTER A TRIP ABROAD. vTondorlags of ?Floamre-Seeker-?Atlas* a Homo in Washington. Wealth in the United States has flown hither and thither, everywhere, to rind something to buy in the social and mat rimonial line, and has come home not contented, but cornered. The fearful fact has to be admitted that there is no country like the United States, no peo ple like the Americans, no homes like these, and no ruins such as we have. Our ruins are seen in the penitentiary, in ruptured families, in divorced wives, where, in the mad contest for a million, the human fabric has become paralyzed and fallen into decay, and nightshade in stead of ivy covers it. The fine widow or the fine daughter has been sent abroad, and has found how .hollow the old world is. The English man, she finds, considers her and his dog of about the same value. The French man she would otherwise marry expects to give her a littlo of his time and the re mainder to his faithful old mistress. The Italian she took a fancy to grovels in his superstitions for half an hour and in hii dirt for half a day. The Austrian she met*-expects to make her a feature of the camp, and the north Gorman prince aha would have died for looks at her some times as if he would lick her if he ever got her in his power. So she comes home with all her money, derived from dealing in scrap-iron and whalebone, and says: "Where can I go to be restless enough?" She tries Florida, and there sees nothing but invalids and speculators, healthy wives and invalid husbands. She tries. Fortress Monroe, and there if it is the height of the season she becomes the slave^of the waiter, who has it in his province either to starve her to death or to make her the envy of all the hungry women in the neighborhood. She tries Boston, and sits around gab bling about culture until her head swims. She tries New York, and it knows-nothing but stocks. She tries Philadelphia, and its heart is in fried oysters and chicken salad. She tries Baltimore, and it is always talking about some infernal nonsence called conserv atism. ( She hears of Washington, comes, and is carried away. "Here," Bhe says, "I will have a house or rent a house, and both sexes shall come and admire me." Hence, Washington has at last become a capital. No public question gets more than enough consideration to digest yes terday's terrapin. The man who rises in the senate to take up the most moment ous question he supposes to be on the dial sees everybody around him gapo, for they were up at the reception last night until 1 o'clock; and went home in a car riage with the widow and her daughter, and are thinking about that lunch they are to have to-morrow morning with the same interesting folks.?"Gath'a" Wash ington Letter. Why Low Ceilings Are Proferable. Low walls to rooms are being advocated in England as really affording better ventilation through not providing for an uppbr strata of aU but irremovable foul air, and tending to prevent draught. The suggestion has us artistic value. We have probably gone to the extreme in the height of apartments to the disad vantage of " appearance of furniture, which is thus dwarfed; also failing to secure the most pleasing proportions to all rooms not having large area. There is a cosiness, too, in a low-ceiling. room wliioh, under the reigning style, is sacri ficed to emptiness. Wo recall at this moment with pleasure the "hunting box" of Queen Elizabeth, formerly at the edge of a forest, with its low wainscoted rooms. In her days low ceilings were the rule, and comfortable interiors rather than imposing exteriors were studied.? Boston Transcript. One Thing Ho Learnod to Do. One good thing has come out of the imprisonment of Mr. Stead of Tho Pall Mall Gazette. Among other lessons he learned how to sleep on baro boards. "You will discover," he writes, "that the weight of your body rests almost entirely upon your shoulders and hip joints. To alleviate tho circumstances wrap a coat around your shoulders, another garment around your loins, put your waistcoat in your hat for a pillow, and you will be able to sleep without waking at midnight with aching bones." ?Chicago Journal. A Novel Form of Stimulant. The Canadian Pharmaceutical Journal describee a novel form of stimulant, con sisting of coca, tea, coffee, and cinchona put up in plugs hike tobacco. The un wise users of this compound are more considerate than tobacco chewers; they swallow the juice.?Exchange. Mot a Craatar? of Cirrnmitanco?. It would be difficult to find a man in the editorial chair of any leading paper who can be said to be tho creature of circumstances. He has fought his way to prominence in the "greatest of arts and sciences" by innate power.?Cor. Commercial Gazette. Zniomnla Frequent Among Children, A prominent citizen of Baltimore has been at work on the subject of nervous diseases in children. Ho finds that in somnia and neuralgia are f roquent among children, and traces them directly to mental overpressure.?Chicago Herald. The AVages of a Bull-Fighter. The chief espada of Madrid, Lartijo, is employed during the summer season for 6,000 pounds sterling, and last winter in the provinces he made 10,000 pounds sterling. He killed 340 bulls without a ' single accident to himself.?Exchange. Defacement of Irving'*Tomb. The tomb of Washington Irving in tho cemetery at Sleepy Hollow has been de faced by relic hunters for the second time. Some vandal has pried out the piece of I mosaic in the Spanish Alhambra on I which Irving wrote his name in 1843. There is nothing usoless to men of Bense; clever people turn everything to account.?Fontaine. The largest American cannon throws a 1,080 pound ball. . Big Stock DRY GOODS, CLOTHING, Boots, Soges ai Eats TO BE SOLD. BRUNSON & DIBBLE have their store packed with the cheapest and best goods you ever saw. Big bargains are being offered in every line. DRESS GOODS in all styles, (our specialty in this dcpnatincnt ' is Mourning Goods.) SILKS AND SATINS at the very lowest prices. LADIES NECKWEAR, LACES. EMBROIDERY AND TRIM MINGS in all the latest novelties. Our lines of GLOVES AND HO SIERY arc full to overflowing. Hav ing the largest assortment ever brought to this city. Our DOMESTIC DEPARTMENT is complete in every particular. Iu CLOTHING we offer you the newest and nobbiest styles made and the best fits, for men and boys. ' Be sure to examine our stock of SHOES, which has been bought with an eye to the needs of alL We lead the city with the best lines of Handsewed and Custom SHOES for Gents, Ladies and Children. The Heiser" Handsewed Shoes for gentle men and the Dixon Custom made Shoes for Ladies and Children are the best. Don't have any other. Every pair warranted. Remember the names, "HEISER" and "DIX ON." Mens and Boys HATS AND CAPS in all the newest styles. Our line of Ladies and Misses CLOAKS, CIRCULARS, JACK ETS, &c, are just superb. Iu Gents' FURNISHING GOODS we have everything for the comfort of this sex. BASKETS of all kinds. UM BRELLAS. TRUNKS AND VA LISES and a thousand other articles too numerous to begin to mention. Just give us a call and we will convince you that we are the cheap est house in the State. Goods showr. cheerfully Branson & Dibble. JOHN C. PIKE] ORANGEBURG) S C. DEALER IN CHOICE FAMILY AND Heavy Groceries. ALSO Willow Ware, Glass Ware, Crockery, &c, Call and examine my Goods before purchasing. They arc first class and my prices arc as low as the lowest. ? JOHN C. PIKE. .Wanted i ?) nan good cypress ii.UUU Shingles to be used for covering a Church. Shingles to he ;V inches thick bv4 or \M inches wide by 24 inches i hum, to be delivered at Fort Motte, S. c. Bids will be received until the 15th day of March, ISSi). Address S. A. JONES, St. Matthews, S. c. A Nowapapor supporting the Principles of a Democratic Administration* Published In the City of New York. WILLIAM DOKSHEIMEB, Editor and Proprio tor. Daily, Sunday, and Weekly Editions. THE WEEKLY STAR, A Sixteen-page Newspaper, Issued every Wednesday. A clean, pure, bright and Interesting FAMILY PAPER. It corMlm tho latent news, down to tho boar of going to press: Agricultural, Market, Fashion, Household, Political, Financial and Commercial, Poetical, Humorous and Editorial Deportment, all under tho direction of trained i journalists of tho highest ability. Its sixteen pages will bo found crowded with good things from beginning to und. Original stones by distinguished American and foreign writers of fiction. THE DAILY STAR, The Dailt Stak contains nil the news of tho day In an attractive form. Its special correspondence by cable from London. Tarns. Berlin, "Vienna and Dublin is a commendfiblu featuro. At Wasuiugum, Albany, mid other nevra centers, tho ableat corn-poiideiits. upeclally retained dy the T/irr. Stau, furtiNh the Intcrtncws by telegraph. Its literary f catiirrfl nr'- imMirpaased. The Financial mid Market Reviews arc nnosuaJIy full and complete. Special trrniH and extraordinary lnduce tuentH to agent* nn?l canvassers. Send for circular*. TERMS OF THE WEEKLY STAR to Sus BcninERd, tree of postage In the United States and Canada, outside tho limits of New York City: Per year.SI 25 Clubs of Ten.10 00 Clubs of Fifteen (and one estra to organizer)..15 00 TERMS OF THE DAILY STAR to Sub scribers : Every day for one year (includingSunday)....$7 00 Dally, without Sunday, ono year. 0 00 Everyday, six months.3 SO Daily, without Sunday, six months.3 09 Address, THE STAB, 16 and 38 Porth William St., New York. Insurance. COUTH CAROLINA BRANCH OF O THE VALLEY MUTUAL LIFE AS SOCIATION OF VIRGINIA, COLUM BIA, S. C, JANUARY 21, 1886.?I have been appointed State Agent of the Valley Mutual Life Association of Virginia ana Col. LEE HAGOOD has been appointed manager. The office of the South Carolina Department is at Columbia, No. ? Main street, (under City Hall.) I will make an active canvass of the State, and want the assistance of a number of live men to canvass every county in the State. Thi Company was organized eight (8> I years ago by some of the leading business men of Virginia, with the view of furnish ing our people with good sound insurance i at the lowest possible cost Its success has been unprecedented, and far exceeding that of any company organized In the South. Its liabilities from its organization to this date have been fully met, its Reserve Fund of ?108,000 securely invested, with an- j actual membership of about 8,000, aggro gating over 315,000,000 of insurance. Any communications addressed to nie or I the manager at Columbia will reeelve prompt attention. WAL M. BOSTICK, Js.,r,> Jan 28-1 mo_State Agent> Watcinoater mi Jewells Undek Times and Democrat Office, keeps on hand a fine Stock of Gold and Silver Watches, Clocks, Jetvclry, Silverware, Spectacles, Gold and Silver Headed Canes, &c. Also. Musical Instruments such as Violins, Accordions, Banjos and Guitars, And all other goods in this line. fSTA large assortment of 18 carat Plain I Gold Rings always in stock. 237"Goods warranted, and prices low. FOUND AT LAST. A Preparation* that will positively cure that most distressing malady Neuralgia. "CRUM'S NEURALGIA CURE" FOR EXTERNAL USE ONLY This is not a cure all but a Remedy, as its name indicates, for the cure of Neural gia in its mildest, as well as its severest form. It will also relievo Toothache, Head ache from cold and nervous headache, and bPes and stings of insects. This preparation has never been known to fail in curing Neuralgia, where the directions have been faithfully followed; having been used by Lr. Cram in his prac tice of Dentistry for several yg?f?- for sale b; DR. J. G. WANNAMAKER. IN MEDICINE QUALITY is of the FIRST IMPORTANCE. Pure Drugs and Medicines care fully prepared by experienced hands at Du. J. G. Wannamakek's Drug Stoke. I. S. Harley, R?ssel Street, ."\?rxl <<> Ten?, Okaxoei'.ukg, S. C, VXTlIliRE von will find always on t t hand, a line line of S KG ARS and TOBACCOS of all grades, GROCERIES, DRV GOODS, and GENERAL MER CHANDISE, at lowest CASH prices. "Remember well, and bear in lhiiid, To save two nickels, will make a dime."