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THE CENTENNIAL. A GORGEOUS NATAL PAGEANT IN NEW YORK HARBOR. The Biggest Civic Parade Ever Witnessed in This or Any Other Country-The Military Demonstration Will Probably Take Place, Despite the Action of the W. L. I. NEW YOR, April 19.-The United States Navy will appear prominently in the Centennial celebration. Secretary Tracy has decided that all the available warships shall participate in the great naval review, which will be a leading feature. Commander F. M. Ramsey. commandant of- the Brooklyn Navy Yard, received orders yesterday from the Navy Department directing him to communicate with the Committee on the Navy. David B. Porter, Admiral of the Navy, will be the commander-in-chief afloat and RearAdmiral James E. Jouett will be the chief of staff. The warships which, are expected to escort the Presi dent and party to this port are the Dis patch, Boston. Atlanta, Chicago, York town and Vesuvius. The Dispatch is the government steam yacht and is now at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. Lient. W. S. Cowles, her commander, will take his vessel within a mile and a half of Eliza bqthport, where she will be boarded by the-si'ent and party. The steel cruiser Bosten is in commission at the naval station and the cruiser Chicago will receive a new complement of officers and crew during this week. The At lanta has been ordered to this port in time to fall in line. A crew of sailors and firemen left the Brooklyn Navy Yard yesterday for Phil adelphia, where they will join the new gunboat Yorktown. The dynamite crui ser Vesuvius is to be brought here at the same time. If the Vesuvius can be got in readiness the entire new navy of the Atlantic coast will be represented. It is also expected that the corvette Kearsarge will be ordered from Norfolk. The Navy Yard tugs Catalpa and Nina and a number of steam launches and, cutters will join the warships in the na sal proession. The ships will be dressed with flags, streamers and pennants, and national salutes will be fired from each of the warships. Commander Ramsey will also appoint an officer of high rank to command the battalions of marines and sailors who will participate in the shore parade. The official naval programme willnot be issnd for some days yet. The Committee on Organization of the Marine Parade for the Centennial week met yesterday at Pier No. 36, North River, to further the arrangements. Three hundred vessels have already been secured for the demonstration. The decision of the Washington Light Infantry of Charleston, S. C., to parade independently because its application to act as an escort to President Harrison had been declined bf the Army Commit tee was considered yesterday by the General Committee. Col. Cruger wrote to Major Gilchrist, Commander of the Washington Light Infantry, saying that the Army Committee had no desire to treat that organization disrespectfully. The arrangements were for the Presi dent, after the literary exercises at the Sub-Treasury, to be driven rapidly to the grand stand, at Worth's Monument, in order to be ready to review the troops, and therefore it would be out of the question for the President to have an escort. If the President had been as signed to a place in the marching col ne an escort might have been accepted for him. It is thought that this will ap pease the Charleston gentlemen. A communication was received from - the Governor's Foot Guard, of Bartford, ..''inn., saying that although that organ ization had fought in the Revolution and had on two occasions acted as an escort to Washington, it had no cause to complain at not being selected as an es cort to President Harrison in view of the arrangements made. General Daniel Butterfield, Chief Marshal of the Civic Parade, estimates that over fifty thousand people, exclu sive of those employed on the floats, will participate in the civic parade. There will bi sixty-six dre companies from Boston, Philadelphia, Washington and -V'rgimia. The Alexcandria Fire Com pany of Alexandria. Virginia, of which Washington in his young days was a member, will be in line. -A meeting of the Executive Commit tees of the different organizations of business men, without regard to politics, .w held at the office of Wilmerding, re&~is & Mitchell, No. 66 White street, yesterday afternoon, with a view to en listing the several organizations in the grand civic parade May 1. The meeting w~as called jointly by Joseph J. O'Dono hue, President of the Business Men's Democratic Conference Committee, and W. S. Strong, President of the Business Men's Republican Association. The out come of the meeting will probably be that a larger procession of business men .than paraded under eitjier Cleveland or Harrison banners last November will be found in the civic procession. They. - will march in one division, under Col. C. B. Mitchell, who was Marshal of the Republican parade last year. The Retail Grocers' Association has decided to turn out in the parade, and the members have invited their clerks to join with them. It is estimated that at least one thousand grocerymen will be in line. The officers of the Brooklyn Volksfest Association have invited all the German, societies in Kings County to co-operate in making the Brooklyn end of the cele bration a s~ccess. The publhcation of the names of the descendants of the Wash ington family who have been especially invited to come to the show has prodaced a grander "kick" than any that has pre ceded it. The committee is deluged . with letters from every part of the Union from Washington's relatives wan'ting re cognition. The members of the com mittee say that they now understand better than they ever did beore why Washington was called '"The Father of His Country." A letter has been received calling at tention to an old colored man, Uncle John Harrison, 114 years of age, who is, still living a little above Jamestown Island, on the James River, V irginia. who waited on Washington when he I visited at the Colonel William Allen estate while President. ALBAN, N. Y., April 17.--Permission to enter the State of New York. armed and equipped, is granted all troops of other States desiring to participate in the centennial celebration of the inau-, guration of the first President of the United States at New York city on the 30th'inst.,, by order of the Adjutant General. . Some Facts About the Great Military Demonstration. The list of Nationaal G uard organiiza tions which have signified their inlteni ebration, comprises State troops from all over the Union. The Southern militia especially will be here in force, coming from Delaware, Kentucky, Maryland, Georgia. North Carolina, South Caro lina, Florida and Virginia. Pennsyl vania, New Jersey and Vermiont will send their entire National Guard. and the whole National Guard of this State will be there. The military procession, therefore, will afford the observers an opportunity of viewing the best militia of many States, for the troops from a distance will, of course, be the crack organiza tions, and they are making every effort to come with full ranks and in their finest shape. Baltimore will send its famous Fifth Regiment, which in many respects is without a superior in the Union. It holds its own in drill and discipline with our Seventh, and is re cruited from the ranks of the very best young men in Baltimore. The Fourth Regiment of Connecticut will -present a fine appearance, and among other notable organizations in line will be the Fifth Regiment and the Cadet Corps of Boston, the Washington Light Infantry of Charleston, and the most highly drilled troops in the South ern States generally. The National Guard of Vermont is very nunerous, considering the population of the-State, and it is maintained in an admirable de gree of efficiency. The troops of Penn sylvania are coming to the number of nearly 9,000. Ohio will send between 3.000 and 4,000, and even from far away Michigan, Missouri and Kansas, militia willcome to join in the grand pro cession. From'many States the committee have not yet heard definitely, but it is probable that before the day of the cele bration the number of troops to come from a distance will be much increased. The brilliancy of the parade will also be enhanced by the appearance of the Gov ernors with their military staffs. Even if the mmbers in line do not reach 50,000, they will not be far from that total when the regular troops and the military and naval cadets are counted in. It will therefore be the greatest military procession ever seen here, and because of its composition it will be by all odds the most interesting. There will also come from every State large bodies of citizens who will increase the enthusiasm of the occasion, and from Brooklyn and the New Jersey and Con necticut towns people will pour into New York by the hundred thousand. The truth is. the proportions of the celebration have far outgrown the early estimates, and for that reason the com mittee were for a time somewhat over whelmed by the magnitude of the work they had undertaken. It has increased on their hands daily. They have been astonished at the interest awakened in all parts of the Union, and only recently have the newspapers begun to get any thing like an adequate conception of what the three days festival is going to be. The extension of the time covered by the excursion tickets on the railroads will, of course, tend to increase greatly the crowd of visitors from remote places, for the twelve days' allowance is enough to justify so long a journey, and the opening of May is usually a favora ble time for a visit to New York. If the weather is fair, the town will be appear ing at its best, and both those who march and those who are spectators merely will be able to enjoy themselves the more, because of the temperate spring air. In the parks the grass will be green and the sweetest and love liest verdure of the year will be all around. Nor need anybody hesitate to come because of fear that accommodatione will be lacking. New York is a greal place, and, hard by, Brooklyn, Coney Island, Jersey City, Hoboken and New ark will offer room enough for any over flow. Every-body will have a bed t< sleep in, no matter if a million come. Nw York Sun. BOLD BANK ROBBERS. Nearly Successful Attempt to Rob a Minneapolis Bank During Business Hours. MINNEAPOUs, Minn.. April 1.- A bold and nearly successful attempt was made at noon to-day to rob the Statec Bank. Two men went into the banki when only t wo employees were present. One covered the employees with a re volver, while the other vaulted over the railing and thrust about $800 on the teller's table into a valise. At this mo ment a depositor entered, and tbis forced the uncovering of the assistant cashier, who rushed to the safe to get his revolver. The robber threw tbe valise to his accomplice, who dashed into the President's room by mistake. He then jumped through a window and fled. Meanwhile the other man had also escaped. There was a wildI rush, in which three or four policemen joined. and finally the two robbers were caught and lodged in jaii. The names of the men are given as James Henry and Fred Douglas. Mail Facilities for Oklahoma. WASHING'rON, April 17.-The Postoffice Department officials are making active preparations for the immediate opening of two postoffices in Oklahoma-one at King Fisher, a stage station, and the otherat Guthrie, where the Unmted States Land Offices arc to be established. Seve ral Postoflice Insp.ectors~ are'ow on the ground, examining proposed mail routes into the country ind between all im portant points. ~}or tine present all nmail will enter the Territory from the North over the adopted ralroads to its South ern terminus, a-id from there it will be carried forw~ard by governmuent con tractors over regvularly established routes. D::owned Hmsnelf in Tyger River. UION, S. C., April 18.-[Special to the Register.[-Jasper Lawson, a white man, aged 60 years, committed suicide yesterday by drowvning himself in Tyger River, aibout eight miles from this place. No cause cani be giveii for the suicidle. He was a well-to-do farmer and was ap. parently perfectly sane. Judge' Munro is seriously ill at his home here, and fears are entertained for his recoveey-. Want to Interest the Farmers. The Southern Man ufacturers Associa t~ion wvill meet at Augusta. Ga., on May 1, 189, andl President Hickman has re qjuested 'he South Carolina Department of Agriculture to extend an invitation to the Farmers' Alliance and State Granges to attend that meeting and dis cuss the cotton bagging qjuestion wvithi the manufacturers. It is exp~ected that the Georgia Alliance will be well repre sented. The Department of Agriculture has forwarded the invitations to Gen. Stackhouse and Mr. Thompson, and urged these officers to have their organ izations representedl. -B. W. Nanee of Newberry has been appointe-d postal clerk to take his old THE GRAND LODGE. KNIGHTS OF HONOR. A Great Deal of Business Transacted in a Short Space of Time-The Present Grand Lodge Apparently Unfavorable to Changes - Officers Elected and Com mittees Appointed. (Fron the Columbia Daily Register.) It may perhaps be accepted as em phatic evidence of the mental stamina, or, possibly, the physical capacity, of the members of the Grand Lodge, Knights of Honor, that though kept up so late on the previous night by the hos pitable entertainment of their Columbia brethren, they were all on hand at the early hour of 9 o'clock yesterday morn ing when the session of the Grand Lodge was resumed. ('onsiderable discussion was evoked by a motion made to reduce the present niunber of the officers of the Grand Lodge and committeemen, by making four of the ten positions now elective appointive. Tie motion was tabled. The finance committee reported that bey had examined the books and ac ,ounts of the treasurer and found the m correct. The report was adopted. A resolution was offered and adopted, offering $20 to the subordinate lodge reporting the largest increase of mem hiership in the next year, and $10 to the lodge reporting the largest per centage of increase on its present membership. The reports to be made and the prizes awarded at the next session of the Grand Lodge. The committee on appeals made no re port, or no appeals were presented to the Grand Lodge. The election of officers for the ensu ing year was next gone into, and re sulted af follows: Grand Dietator-W. W. Simons of Charleston. Grand Vice Dictator-P. R. McCully of Anderson. Grand Assistant Dictator-W. H. Lockwood of Beaufort. - Grand Chaplain-N. N. Burton of Batesburg. Grand Guide-J. W. Moore of Hamp ton. Grand Reporter-G. W. Holland of Newberry. Grand Treasurer--J. T. Robertson of Abbeville. Grand Guardian-N. W. Trump of Columbia. Grand Sentinel-J. L. Addison of Edgefield. Grand Trustees-J. A. Henneman, Spartanburg; Harry Ryttenburg, Sum ter,and Fred H. London of Rock Hill. Supreme Representative for two years, W. W. Simons of Charleston; alternate, M. L. Bonham, Jr., of Columbia. The Suprene Lodge will meet on the second Tuesday in May next at Indian. apolis. Ind., and besides Representative elect Simons, W. R. Delgar of Sumter, who hlok- over from last year, will at tend. A proposition was made to change the time of meeting of the Grand Lodge from April to September, and those fa voring the idea vigorously supported it. The Grand Lodge however voted down the proposition by a large majority. On motion of Mr. Moses of Sumter, a resolution of thanks to the Columbia Lodge, for their hospitable entertain ment, was adopted, and later similar resolutions, thanking the railroads and hotels for courtesies extended, were also adopted. The installation of the officers elect then followed. It was decided that at the next session the Grand Trustees, the committee on credentials, mileage anid per diem, the Past Grand Dictator, and the Grand As sistant and Grand Vice Dictator, should constitute the committee of distribution. The Grand Dictator then announced the following standing committees: Laws and Supervision-J. C. Sheppard of Edgefield. E. Bacon of Spartanburg and M. B. McSweeney of Hampton. Finance-M. A. Carlisle of Newberry, B. M. Lebby of Charleston and L. N. Zealv of Columbia. After the transaction of some further routine business the Grand Lodge ad journed, to meet on the third Wednes day of April, 1890, at Columbia, this city having been determined on as the permanent place of meeting at the ses sion at Beaufort last year. KILLED HIM AFTER 25 YEARS. A Bullet Near a Veteran's Heart Does the Work It Was Intended to Do. PHILADELPHIA, Aprii 14.-A t o in Werck was a soldier in the late war. lie was shot in the breast three times, but tw;o of the bullets were extracted and the wound over the other healed, and although the man was ill, it was never thought that the little piece of lead was bound in the long run to kill him. Werek applied for a pension, and his injuries were of such a nature that he was given $12 a month by the govern ment as a panacea for his ills. H~e managed to tdo a little odd work here and there, but six years ago lie lost an arm. lHe lived with his wife at No. 156 Walnut street, Manayunk, and a short time ago celebrated his seventy second birthday. On the morning of March 25 he was found detad at the foot of a flight of stairs in his home. There were apparently no injuries on the body other than would naturally have. been received in a fall from such a height, and it was thought he had tripped at the head . of the stairs, fallen violent ly to the bottom and (lied fronm the shock. A short time after her husbanu was buried a pension claim agent, it is said. sugested to Mrs. Werek that it was possible her husband's death had been caused by his old wvound. At any rate, the idea that such might be the case took possession of the woman's mind. She thought it over constantly, and as she wvas uot well off and could not apply for a pension if her husband had diedi front an accidental fall, she dletermined to have the matter fully investigated. The last sleep of the old man wats dlis turhed, the body was taken upi, and haist Friday Dr. Formuad. the Coroner's phy sician, made a post inwrteme examination. The result wvas given out at the Coronier's ofice yesterday. The old scar wa found, the body opened and thte course taken by the bullet traced until the Minie ball was found imbedded in the tissues close to the heart, so close that thte workings of the organ of life were sadly inter fered with. The heart had gone ott, though at disadvantage, all these veats. and finally wore itself out sooner than it otherwvise would, and the man, it is clainted, dlropped deadl from~ heart disease- from the head of thte stairs, amnd it was only a lifeless body that rolled to the bottom. It is now prob~able that Mrs. WVerek will apply for a widow's pensiont. Death of a Prominent Virginian. ALExANDiIA, \a., April. iG.-Judgc C. E. Stunart of- the Corporat ion Court )f this city died to-day, after~ a pr~o tractedl illness, Hie was Speaker of the Bns of Dellgate two ter-m. ALL ABOUT THE STATE. -S. E. Smith, colored, who was the so-called Republican candidate for Con gress in the Second District last fall, has been reappointed mail agent on the Port loyal Railroad, from which position he was ousted four years ago. Smith sup plants M. C. Jones. -Farmer Ben Tillman of Edgefield is a Moses who believes in milk and meat. From twenty half Jersey cows he gath ers seventy-five pounds of butter a week, for which he readily gets thirty five cents a pound. He also sells annu ally in Charleston and Augusta six or eight thousand pounds of home cured hams at prices ranging up to fifteen cents. -Sam Nix, colored, ploughed up last week on his farm four miles from Barn well, on the Blackville road, an immense Indian stone pipe. The height of the bowl was four and its circumference ten inches. The stem was nearly five inches long. It weighed two or three pounds and would hold a quarter of a pound of tobacco. Several distinct and rude carvings were on the surface. It prob ably did service at many council fires in aboriginal days. -In the Aiken court, last week, the trial of John Harden for the killing of his uncle, Elbert Harden,- in June, 1873, resulted in a verdict of not guilty. The nephew and uncle were near neighbors. On the day of the killing Elbert went to John's house and began a quarrel wifh him. As Elbert went away John shot him in the back, and as he was lying helpless crushed his skull with the gun. John left the country and remained until he was arrested in Florida a few months ago. --Miss Jane Blackman of Lancaster County. a young girl just blooming into beautiful womanhood, was so seriously burned one day last week, by her clothes catching lire, that but little if any hopes ale entertained of her recovery. She was with her stepfather in the new grounds where brush-heaps were being burned, when her clothes caught fire, and before the flames could be extin guished, fanned by the brisk wind blow ing at the time, her person was blistered from foot to head. Her physician con siders her condition hopeless. -The new Town Council of Edgefield is confronted with a serious . problem, viz: the levying of a tax to pay a judg ment in favor of Moore & Sinnot, hold ers of certair. bonds issued by the town of Edgefield to aid in the construction of the Edgefield branch railroad, now known as the Cumberland Gap. The amount involved is $2,000. To pay this in one installment will require a levy of 20 mills on the dollar, exclusive of the regular State and County taxes, which amount to 11i mills, and the Chronic says there are scarcely a half dozen fam ilies in that municipality able to pay it. -In Newberry County, last Tuesday, John and James McCarley went to the plantation of T. V. Abrams to see a negro, Nathan Epps, who was under con tract with them for this year and had left, to get him to return. During the interview the negro made an assault on James McCarley, who was on his horse, with an axe, cutting his saddle and horse,whereupon Mr. McCarley drew his pistol and shot the negro in the leg. Alf Epps, the father of Nathan, came to the rescue and drew a hoe on John Mc Carley, and he also received a wound in the leg. The negroes are not seriously hurt, although the physician has been unable to get the balls. E ARLY CONNECTICUT LAWS. Curiosities of a Code That Was in Forc' for a Hundred Years. Nrw HAvEN, April 15.-The New Ha ven men who endeavored to have the Legislature prcerib~e by law the weight of bread made an unconscious effort tc revive sonme of the early laws of the colony. In the code of laws ordered printedl by the General Court at New Haven, in Octoner, 1665, it was ordered that each baker have a distinctive mark for his bread, and the weight of the loaves was defined. There is only one copy g these laws nowv in Connecticut. Thatis in the State Library. and nine teen times its weight in gold was paid for it. The code remainedl in force a hundred years. These early laws were founded on Scripture, and the little volume contains many references to the Bible. Death was the penalty for wit chrraft, worship of false gods, blasphemy, bestiality, adultlery, treason, Saiobat h breaking whein done in a willful spirit, and the striking of a parent unless proof could be given of neglect in tr-aining the offending ebild. A stubborn or rejbel lions son over the age of 16 years should be put to death when efforts at refornma tion failed. For the first offense at bur glary the r-igat hand should be branded with the letter B. for the second the left hand should he branded and the culprit whip>ped, and the third otfense was pun ish le by dleath. For burglary on Sun day there were additional puishments of thme pillory and the wearing of the halter. Restitution was dlemanded, and the convicted person being unable to give back the stolen property' or an equivalent, -he was sold as a servant to work out the value of the goods. Education of children and attendance at chmurch wer-e insured by rigorous p~en -alties foi- negligene-, and falsehood and the spreading of malicious stories were cosideredi seiouis crmnes. bnmmarried persons couldl boaird only in licensed boarding houses, and thme keepers of the boarding houses wei-e held responsible for the conduct of their boarders. Thme bans of marriage had to be announced three times in public meetings, or the engagement posted for fourteen days on a sign post at the meeting-house door. EVERYBODY WANTS A PENSION. Applications Being Received -by Corporal Tanner at the Rate of Eleven Thousand a Day. MAsINGTo., Api-il 10 -Commis sioner Tanner of the Pension Bureau r eeived during thme fir-st week in the pres et month 60,871 letters and other pieces of mail matter pertaining to the business of his office, and last week he received 69,000 pieces. The Comumis siner dlesires this fact miade public, as a general explanation of delays in an swering correspondence from Grand Army men aind oithers having pe-rsonal interest in pension cases now pending in the offiee. lie bespeaks the indul gence of correspondents until the pr-es nt burden of work shall have been dis posed of. The Commlissioner is making every effort in his power to expedite the work of his oflice and to bring it up to date at the earliest possible (lay. Assistant Medical Refer-ec Philip UI. Barton of the Pcusionl Oilice has been removed. Bar-ton was an appointee of the last administrationi. Theodore Smith f New York, Special Examiner in the Pension Office, who resigned last sum , hss been reinstated. New Bank Building at Anderson. ANDERSON, April 18.-[Special to The Register.]-Anderson is to have another beautiful structure on the public square. The Farmers' and Merchants' Bank of Anderson have decided to build, and have purchased a lot from Capt. P. K. McCully. Work will begin by the 1st of August. MACHINERY FOR SALE! To The People of Clarendon: I am the Agent for the Cel ebrated REVOLVING HEAD PRATT GIN, LIDDELL & Co.'s Engines and Boilers. I am sole agent in this couity for the BOSS COTTON PRESS. . :: Corn Mills, Pulleys, Shaft ing, etc. :o: >.. All this machinery is direct from the factory and will be sold at the Factory's Lowest Cash Prices. It will be to the advantage of purchasers to call on me before buying. W. SCOTT HARVIN, Mafruing, S. C. PAVILION HOTEL, CHARLESTON, S. C. First Class in all its Appointments, Supplied with all M1odern Improvements Excellent Cuisine, Large Airy Rooms, Otis Passenger Elevator, Elec tric Bells and Lights, Heat ed Rotunda. R A TES, $2.00, $250 'AND $3.00. Rooms Rlesereed by Mail or Telegraph CATARRH COLD MLBA CURJA?Bis IN HEAD. U TrytheCure - Ely's Cream Balm Cleanses theNasalPassages. Al lays Inflammation. Heals e Sores. Restores the Senses of Taste, Smell and Hearing. - A particle is applied into each nostril and Is agreeable. Price 50c. at Druggists or by tall. ELYBROTHERS,56WarrenSt.,NewYork L. W. FOLSOM, Successor to F. H. Folsom & Bro. SUMTER, S. C. DEALER IN WA TCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY. was nhad Rpirn prmpl an netl exctd ysile ormn 157e clbaed 19,l Est Johay, iin adhin mdoFnewibst Razors. Spmee-a ia attenon '.epairing shampt lad beatds.cte ysile oke Oevers b large itisan rntee sieflattean 3LiosnaTMs CIANNINGN S. C. Mnning WIShang, alr HARUTIGANINSTI.L XCU D an 3aIANglNoiNG. st Rar. Sp OIfers for saleon31iere e, iie buin potion of the ('itownr aro T\ xt dTorS wto Jntal ots: F. R1ig andR.Rsret roos Tad anmer AT VAATLT eaiis emsANsoal. C JShCrn. ILSYork Gro/I/and entra~slo HotL.' MRAT AN, PR.RIEoC s MANNmINa, Sout Crl. A T 1l1E.L EXT TEl A F HE IT whers sall Mi Street.Ca Li paUss toor mauitasl EoU reidnotceld bny in the R. C. Bnxz.r, President. C. BIssEI, JENEINS, Gen'1 Manager. EcanAD S. GxarrT, Sec. & Treas. The Cameron & Barkley Gompany. COMMISSION MERCHANTS, -AND AGENTS F')R Erie City Engine and Boilers, Atlas Engine and Boilers, the Famous Little Giant Hydraulic Cotton Press, Eagle Cotton Gins. We have in stock one each 60, 65, and 70 saw Eagle Gin, only shop worn, that we are offering way below cost. rSend for prices. Oils, Rubber and Leather Belting, and a complete line of Mill Supplies. MirWe Guarantee Lowest Prices for Best Quality of Goods.-OK CAMMERON & BARKLEY CO., Charleston, S. C. FURNITURE. 0 LARGEST AND CHEAPEST FURNITURE HOUSE IN CHARLESTON. ----0 J. F. NORRIS, 235 King Street. o A FEW PRICES QUOTED. A good Bureau at $5.50 A good Bedstead at $1.0 A good Washstand at $1.00 A good Cane Seat Chair at 75 cents A good Wood Seat Chair at 45 cents A good Wood Rocker at $1.25 A good Mattress at $3.50 A good Bed Spring at $1.50 A good Woven Wire Bed Spring at $2.75 A good Lounge at $4.50 A good Wire Safe at $3.00 A good Bed Room Suit at $20.00 to $30.00 A good Walnut Bed IPoom Suit, Marble top, for $45.00. 9f I have in store an immense stock from the cheapest to the tflnst to seiert from. Never, no, never buy, if you want to save money, till yon first see this stock and get prices. Mrs. A1Edwards Keeps always on hand at the MANNING BAKERY, a full supply, and choice assortment, of FAMILY AND FANCY GROCERIES. Bread, Cake, Candy, Fruit, Etc. I always give a full 100 cents worth of goods for the Dollar MRS. A. E)WARDS, Manning, S. C. ESTABLISHED 1844. Charleston Iron Works, Manufacturers and Dealers in Marine Stationary and Portable Engines and Boilers, Saw Mill Machinery. Cotton Presses, Gins, Railroad, Steam boat, Machinists', Engineers' and Mill Supplies. Repairs executed with pronplness and Di.spatch. Snd/tr price litsp. East Bay, Cor. Pritchard St., Charleston, S. C. [GEO. E. ToAI.E. HENRY OUVER.] Geo. E. Toale & Co.ICU .sayACUFACTUdoRnot mean mere.yAto Blinds, so hmfratmadte aete e Mouildinigs. Ihv aetedsaco Mantels,FISEIL SY r Grates, etc. FAL GSI NES Scroll Work, Turn~fing~ ~iadrtcss.Bcueotesh Inide(1 Finish. Builder's Hard- aldsnaofritnrce1nare Ware, and oGeneralLERMEY.GveEprs Buildlig M~aterial. H .ROMCI3ERS. EYR OFIC.ADCUREROM. 10ad1slan te t pte o ie ndte aete e Cuhaarledeton, AS.AL URE All \FIoS, EPITtPSYcor EMULSGIOCNESS OF PURE raCOt eIVER EOIL aAmmNFtLLsBLaReatablouaExMs aitriatdndnitaw'imilure you.tAddress sH.C.iROOTsM.m.,h,3PEAnLth.,NEainRo 10ann d 2ye toeSe; ytheet -cHELoH-RNNNG - RiEAR smCHAmrETO H~cOTELELDIS FVRIE Chmarkle st pon, . C.E OTO ODR asA orageniae yuroracestrimertean SCOT' 2TTLIOSi acnwegdypies.I o antfn u ~ rt DASEP.EYAPOPOSNTE ATms gra Palatabfle as Milk.a; ing teind ssien ltd by l tegie anoth sol mandurr oy this o 28 iaion ofdhel wth heve whipoho-t phi een ansmuch bylrte einent Rjetmsi ar a , a ., espdu r .Poit esns gdalerapidlys weaing scin SrtCtolEhohLIO ias ackowededsold Phsint to the te tinst nrshet prepa. rtinll ite wd or herso elif taand uel of ueCONSiUMtin.ItN, thCRsOULAc CEERA EBfiLavrid, toA3dtoINC, en dozen earhct toPecantsesrstoyoube(nsm W0 hve o Aent, ad nne NEYU WHOUSEG MACHIE O.AONECET CLDS and CH KRNIC , COU HES. .WO C.'haelba We arlestn .Ct A the solemanuactuersifnghsSdee$2, $hristr. -ic-ou-and ealth beeae whc after W~el' aia en toogl ha vingenbeend anelyzted bymall athe ewmynent foritracethof alchohol, was allowedcto be sold .re of tat and city le and s ons nsrasd nats tEeti M NInoercetya ter fute aayignF Lor- .:~l lc i Pl~;~ isdi l roomsItanilhallwaosg feltewant foraa stimulan peNtally ubwitdfo pessweal. and'1.del. 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