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THE CENTENN\IAL the School of the Col14giate Dutch Church; Ambrose Suow, 1'esident of the Marine Socir ty. The-address also contained the signa tures of many of the leading business men-of the city. The Mayor then took his place on the stand beside the President, and the big parade began to pass by. -. The large stands, although well filled, were, by no means. crowded, except in one ifr.t'o sections of the stand on the Wcs leof the avenue. The first or ganization in the parade Wyhich made its appearance was a body of Columbia Col lege hidetnts. It passed the Presidential stand at exactly 25 minutes past 10 o'clock. The boys created much amuse ment by repeating in Tunison the cry, "Whojcas Gen. George Washington ? and accompanying the answer by a breakdown. - Next followed the public school chil dren. They made an excellent appear -ance and' in rainy instances marched bettent de some of the rank and file in -yeste9day pageant. The children were welcomed by a tumult of applause, ac compafl9by waving of handkerchiefs and dipping- of. miniature flags in the hands of children and babies. Marked appFMirnd hearty greeting continued unto Adrn' were -welLpast the re vie sjnd and 'iade way for the nex - .g ; . _ ripstrnin,;as they passed the - - tand; were warmly greeted. One old veteran improved the opportunity afforded by the accessibility of the President to hand him a note. It w;s taken by President IHarrison tvith a - sile. As the Swiss contingent passed before the President,a bevy of handsome young girls on floats showered huge bunches of roses on the President. Some little excitement was caused by som che Tamnany braves refusing or nL ' f<salute the President as they Paby. At first shouts of "Hats off!" were heard, but when it was seen that this had no effect the balance of the files were loudly hissed, except in a few instances when the proper salnte was made. It is not thought that the Tammanyites were intentionally disre spectful, but that they did not know they were expected to salute. Shortly lUfore Gen. Butterfield and staff pa-se: before the President, Julius Seinberge; one of his aides, was thrown from his. -hse and suffered a broken leg. Quite a number of Gen. Butter field's aides were thrown from their horses, but this is the only case where serious injury resulted. RY PARADE. How Well It Was Managed-Notable Features of the Parade. NEw YORK, May 1.-There is e~ry where heard the highest possible praise for the successful manner in which the monster tglitn rjpageant. was handled yesterday. *Never in the history of the country, except on the occasion of the final review of the army in Washington at the close of the war, were so many men in rank. Nearly 50,000 uniformed troops were in line. Major General Scholield's orders were carried out with military exactness and every detail was bxecuted without error or day. Despite the large number of men and the immense crowds that thronged the streets, there was but one delay of any moment in passing the reviewing stand, and that brief resting spell was a wel come relief to thle reviewing party in the six hours imosedu~pon it.:. As President Harrison rode along the line of march up Broadway and Fifth avenue from Wall to Twenty-third street, the way was lined on both sides by solid walls of soldiery-a sight that impressed '. mre than any other fgte tion with a sense of the might of the country, of massive ness and strenkgth that could not be overthrown. It was expected that Yew York and Peng vapia would turn out a great num - of men, and they fulfilled that expectation. Yew Jersey and Connecti cut surprised all by doing more than bad been looked for. But the State of Ohio, considering everything, carried off the honors with her nearly 4,000 drilled men in line, under . command of the Governor of the State. South Carolina, Kentucky, Missouri, Michigan, Louisiana and Florida all received- high compli mente' 4erwAheir 'handsome displays.. -Governor gj~ry and Gen. Beauregard led the Loinaria troops, and were much observede AGoernor .Luce of Michigan - .was pesn~ ly complimented by the President. It was -an occasion for unfavorable comment that the great States- of In diana and Illinois were unrepresented in the military parade. Governor Hovey. accompanied by Colonel Fairbanks and Attorney General Michenor, were pres ent, but unaccompanied by a single company. The sole representative of Illinois 'was John B. Drake. "W~hy dlid not Chicago .send one of its splendid regiments oiilitia?" was asked. It wouani hen a. patriotic attention on the part of the weaith~ merchants to have paid the necessary 'epenses. Manv amusing'inicidents occurred in the crush, .but-.the people were good natured ;aaid -put up' with inconveni enees. There was no case of extortion, but, on thie contrary,. many .instances of generous accommodation: - The banquet received universal praise. The Tribune says itwasthe. -crowning glory of the celebfition. -ACCIDENT AT ANDERSON. The Wall of a New Building Fans, Burying Several Workmen. AN~DEESON, May 1.-[Special to the Register.]-A serious accident occurred this morning on the new Masonic build ing. One wall fell in while the hands were at work, covering up Alex. B. O'Keiton, Nish Emmerson (white). Henry Jones and Dick Chamblee, col ored. Emmeison has one thigh and leg broken, one hip d:slocated and a num ber of bruise's. Henry Jones has one leg broken. The others have bruises and internal injuries. It is hoped that no deaths will result. Mr. Jackson, the contractdr, was bruised up considerably, but kept on working. Dr. Ralph W. Brown 'is attenditig Mr. Emamerson. About forty hands were at work. Cotton Cotton Bagging. AUGL-sT, May 2.-The Georgia Alli ance has contracted with the mills for two million yards of cotton bagging to be delivered the first of August. The bagging is to be not less than thirty seven inches wide and to average twelve ounces to the yard, the manu facturer - agreeing to take cotton so covered at ten cents additional per hundred pounds to cover loss of weight in light covering. The bagging will be made by the Lane Mills, Yew Orleans, nd the West Point Mills, Georgia. WASHINGTON~ AND HABRISON. Bishop Howe's Remarkable Centennial Address at St. Philip's Church, Charles ton. CHARLESTON, April 30.-[Special to The Register.]-Centennial day was ob served here by a generous display of bunting and a general suspension of business. Religious services were held in all the Catholic Churches and in two of the Episcopal Churches. A decided sensation was caused by a sermon delivered at St. Philip's Church by Bishop Howe. In the course of his sermon he used the following remark able language : "I presume, my friends, that we are here to-day in obedience to that first les son which, as churchmen, we learned in our cateebism, to honor and obey the civil authority.' "A century ago. after his inaugura tion, General Washington walked down to join it prayer and hear the Te Deum sung at St. Paul's Church. New York. Washington was elected President and was first in the hearts of his country men, and all hailed his aceess to his high office with joy and thanksgiving. How different the aspect of things to day: If I can believe what I have read in the daily papers, without meaning any disrespect to the present incum bent, President Harrison; he is the choice of a party and not of the people. Washington was chosen with one con sent. 1 cannot but think that the pres ent incumbent has been chosen by the power of money. --The Bible tells us to be thankful in all things, not fir all things. St. Paul and Silas sung praises to God in the prison at midnight, scourged and with their feet set in the stocks. Paul and Silas did not thank God for the stocks and for the scourges; but they thanked God in. and under the stock. So our thanksgiving must be pitched on a minor key, when we remember the late war and what we have passed through. "'I remember, while preaching in this pulpit, a shell exploding in the neighboring street. That war has lett us as a legacy one of the greatest problems any nation of this world ever had to sole. Hence I repeat, though we must be thankful under all things, our thankfulness must be again on that minor key. Circum stances, or as it is phrased generally, our environment, expresses the will of God, and we bow to His decision. We thank Him for the preservation of life and property, and whilst the love of country may have become dimmed in our hearts, we pray it may arise in the hearts of our children. To be without love of coun try is next to being without God. May He enable our children, and our chil dren's children, to meet the grave future that is before them." Bishop Howe is a native of Vermont, and not of South Carolina. He came South early in life and has been Bishop of this diocese for twelve years. He has been fighting for the rights of the colored men in the Diocesan Conven tion for several years, and it was his ruling in the convention of 18S6 that caused the secession of many of the par ishes. Those Democrats who are looking to President Harrison to appoint them to office feel that the Bishop has not helped them out to any considerable extent, and are somewhat loud in their denun ciation of his sermon. There are other people. however, who think that it migb.t be as well for the Democratic party that there should be no dickering withthe enemy, and that the President, if he desires to conciliate the South, might do so very consistently by keeping the present officials in office, provided they nave discharged their duties hon estlyv and efficiently. -The idea of build ing'up of a new Republican party in the South by buying up discontented and sore-head Democrats can hardly meet with much success, at least in Carolina. WHITE RADICALS IN THE SOUTH. Congressman Houk Scouts the Idea of SFormin Such a Party Here. WASHINGTON, April 29.- Representa tive Houk of Tennessee, whose district embraces more whites than any other Republcan district in the South, and who has been very prominent among those who have frequented the Wnite House in the interest of the Republican party in the South since the accession of Harrison, pooh-poohs the idea of a white Republican party in the South, and only wants the Northern Republicans to keep their fingers out of the Southern pie. Commenting upon the white Southern Republican proposition to-day, he said: "That would be performing -Hamlot' with Hamlet left out, in most Southern States. No such nonsense will receive countenance among Ten nesseo . Repu bli cans. But we are fully convinced that the principles involved in a policy of a protective tariff will finally constitute the opening wedge with which to burst the solid South. [n other words, the material prosperity of the people is be coming of more importance, especially in the mineral belt, than the gloomy sentimentality and prejudices growing out of the war and its memories. The peole of the border States, at least, are beginning to look forward instead of backward. And by the border States, I mean Maryland, the. two Virginias, the Carolinas, Kentucky, Missouri, Ten nes see and Alabama. "The Southern Repiublicans are not disgruntled with the course of the ad - ministration," he said, '-although they would like to see the distribution of offices hastened. I will say in that con nection, however, that there is one thing of which a great many Southern Reublicans complain, and that is the infereddling of Northern Senators and Representaives in the matter of South ern appointments to local offices, and that in nearly every instance against the nativ-e element. I don't think there are many Northern Senators and Re presentatives who are in the habit of doing this, but there are some who are not satisfied with chokitng our people off from the general delhvery of important places, but think it their business to superintend the appointments to the local offices in the Sounth. "Why," said Mr. Honk, "I have found indorsements in the departments by Northern Senators and Representatives urging the appointment of Tennesseans to local places. The applicants were men of whom they could know nothing and from they lived at least from 500 to 3,000 miles. ~Now, we Southern Repub licans are vain enough to think we know more about the politic~s and people of our own State than do these Northern gentlemen, some of whom live beyond the Rocky Mountains." Large Grist:Will Burned. NASHvILLE, Tenn., May 2.-McLemore & Brother's grist mill at Columbia, Tenn., thirty miles from here, was burned last night. The mill plant was ompletely destroyed. Loss $30,000; AN ANGLO-SAXON LEAGUE. The Necessity for an Offensive and De fensive Alliance Between the United States and Great Britain. WASHINGTON, April 30.-The necessity for an Anglo-Saxon league, or, more properly, an offensive and defensive alliance between the two great English speaking nations, has been, according to a writer in a local newspaper, the subject of recent discussion in certain political circles here. A gentleman who has served with distinction as a Senator and a Cabinet Minister, and who has deservedly a national reputation as a constitutional lawyer and broad thinker on international affairs, says : -There are many reasons for such an understanding between the two great English sneaking nations. In the first place there is the powerful motive of common interest. Englishmeir own twenty-five hundred millions of Ameri can securities-United States bonds and railway bonds and shares. They own three million acres of land in great stock ianche companies. Our Pacific railroads furnish them with a route to their colonial possessions nearly twelve thousand miles more direct than the water route around Cape Horn. Any attack on our great cities would jeopar dize enormous British commercial in terests. "A blockade of Amerioan ports of three months' duration would starve all England, for her main food supply conies from us, and two hundred, thou sand souls would be out of employment if American cotton were prevented from reaching English factories. These things alone are enough to make it to Eng land's interest to prevent a close block ade of American ports. Then, there are other reasons. The confederation of Germany is complete, and the best continental thinkers be lieve that a similar confederation of the Latin races is near at hand. It would not disturb the integrity of any of the nations, but will only be a union for cer tain purposes in\-olving common inter ests. If this should be done, would not the coming together of the English speaking races become desirable ex ne cessitate rei We are very fortunately situated in many respects. Our country alone could furnish all Europe with bread." "3ut what emergency or ondition of things would make this close union of the United States and England neces saryv' the writer inquired. "Why, don't you see? Suppose war should suddenly come upon us, say with Germany, and New York was blockaded by a German fleet and an indemnity levied on that city. We have no fleet or other means of resisting their demands. Suppose England, with her navy of 282 ships of war, were to offer us her assist ance, would we not either be compelled to accept it or submit to the payment of such an enormous indemnity as would be a national humiliation for all time? And which do you think the American people would prefer to do? "I am 'amazed at the stupidity, or worse, of men-they are mostly in the lower douse of Congress-who owe a duty to their constituents and the coun try in furnishing means for the con struction of modern works and high power heavy guns that they do not seem to dream of. We have in all the States fit for military duty 6,797,000 men, but in what way could they keep off an iron clad fleet, or how would it be possible to mobilize them into effective soldiers in time to make them available? Modern wars take place quickly and are of short duration. "Remember, I am not arguing in favor of or against such a league. 1 am only pointing out the causes that would bring it about under the stress of necessity. We must have allies sometimes. But for the trained troops and the warships of France the American Revolution would have been prolonged indefinitely. "I will give you another reason why England would be our natural ally if we needed one. Public opinion here is un dergoing a great change. We are be ginning to understand that we have du ties touching the comity of nations that our dignity will not longer permit us to ignore or disregard. if we do not build the Nicaragua or some other mnteroccanmc canal England will, for that nation, in the light of recent events, must have a short water line for her ships of war to her colonies in the Pacific. We cannot prevent her constructing this canal i we wanted to, for we would deliberatel,' act the part of the dog in the manger who could not eat the hay and pre vented the cow from doing so. "It we conclude to build it, and it looks like we shall so decide, we will not be able to keep England from using it without creating a serious interna tional question, which would give Von Bismarck the chance he seeks of making the matter the subject of a European Congress. This would ho surely decided against us, the powers would be pledged to enforce their decision, and whbat could we do against the combined fleets of Germany, Firance, Spain, Portugal, Austria and F'ugland?' A MESSAGE FROM THE SEA. It Implores Succor for a Crew Lost on the Spanish Main. KEY WEST, Fla , April 29.-The city has been thrown into intense excitement by a letter written in Spanish which was picked up at sea a day or two ago by George H. Booker and Henry Canfield, and turned over to the Spanish Consul here, who immediately cabled the Cap tain General of Cuba in regard to it. The letter was in a beer bottle,.carefully corked and sealed. This is a translation of it: - We are on a key between Havana and Key West, towazc~s the East. We are the crev of the schooner Angelita. Succor us! If any one will succor u-s we will give themn $iO0000 for their paine. -igned) CAPT. EaIcsox and crew. Immediately after the letter had been made public groups of citizens gathered on every corner discussing the chances of rescuing the ci-ew. The letter is not dated and there is no way of determin in how long the crew may have been on this island. It is possible that they are all dead. It was finally decided that several search parties should be sent out in dif ferent directions. No ne'ts has reached this city or Havana of any vessel having picked them up. Disappointed Oklahoma Boomers. CHICAGO, May 2.-A special dispatch from Fort Reno, I. T., says that Capt Hall and a company of cavalry left King Fisher yesterday to eject settlers from the Cherokee Strip, and a company also left Guthrie for the same purpose. Several hundred settlers are now in the strip. They are determined men, who have staked everything on the Okla oma opening, and failing to get their claims have gone to the strilp. No~ organized resistance to the military is expected, but cases of individual resist aee and a large amount of hardships BLOODSHED IN MEXICO. AN INCIPIENT REVOLUTION NIPPED IN THE BUD. A Terrible Riot Incited by Jesuit Priests Stirring Up the Ignorant People Against the Government-Streets Sticky and Gutters Running With Blood-Over 250 Persons Slain. ST. Louis, May 2.-The following de scription of a mob and riot which oc curred at La Luz, near Guanajuato, Mexico, a few days ago, over the incar ceration of five Jesuit priests who were stirring up the ignorant people against the government is given by a prominent citizen of Guanajuato, who reached this place yesterday. It was nearly dark when the priests were imprisoned, but by the time the street ltghts were lighted. 12,000 men roared and surged against the walls of the jail. They attacked its heavy doors with pick-axes, stones, crow-bars and heavy beams of wood, and some of them, in their wild frenzy, dashed their bleeding hands and heads against the massive walls. Many of them were armed, and in a short while heavy fire was pouring into win dows. The Mayor of Granajuato, who was inside, was one of the first to fall. The policemen, who rushed in squads of twos and threes were remorselessly butchered, and in a short time more than twenty of them were lying dead on the pavement. The few scattered sol diers who were in town were treated in a like manner. The mob, which by this time was ut terly unmanageable either by the gov ernment or the priests who had incited it, now set fire to the jail doors, but just as the inmates were about to surrender two hundred regular soldiers arrived on the douible-quick and formed across the street. The mob answered the order to disperse with a yell and a discharge of firearms. The command to fire was at once given. Bullets at a fearfully short range swept through a mass of men, women and children like a scythe, mowing them down in rows. Still they came on, and volley after volley crashed into them, only to cause those behind to spurn the dead bodies with their feet as they pressed forward. The streets were sticky with blood and shallow gutters ran with it In the meantime a number of insur gents, armed with pistols and rifles, had climbed upon adjoining houses, and the soldiers began to drop one by one. After a half hour's continuous fight ing a charge with bayonets was ordered. When the front rank of the mob felt the steel the entire concourse broke and dis appeared through alleys and byways. Altogether more than 250 persons had been slain, by far the greater part of whom were miners and other Mexican laborers. The soldiers lost sixteen killed and wounded. Among the slain was a lieutenant. The fire in the jail was quenched, and the five badly frightened but determined priests were taken to Guanajuato for safe keeping. They are now confined in the Castello DeGrandeas, an immense pile in which the great Mexican revola tion had its birthday, and in which the patriot Hidalgo was subseqently hanged. It is thought that had the recent riot proved successful, had the priests been rescued and the local authority broken, a serious uprising might have developed. As it is the incipient revolution is ipped in the bud. THE ABOVE sTORY DENIED. CrrY OF MExICO (Via Galveston), May 2.-Dispatches sent out from Texas, pur porting to give details of rioting at Silao and Giuanajuato are gross exaggera tions. The prefect of Silao was assassi nated yesterday, and .his was the only life lost in the entire affair. The au torities have restored order, and to-day everything is quiet. THE CITY ON THE EDISTO. Annual Picnic of the Edisto Rifles-The Coming Term of Ccrt. ,. ORANGEBURG, May 2.-[Special to The Register. i-The annual picnie of the Edisto Rifles given yesterday at Oak Grove was a complete success, and the guests were loud in their praises of the gallant Edistoes and of this niost enjoy able occasion. At a meeting of the Orangeburg bar held to-day at the omfce of Izlar & Glaze, Major T. B. WXhaley was elected President, with P. T. Bildebrand Secre tary, and it was decided that owing to the feeble health of Judge Kershaw, who is to hold the court, that all the cases on Calendar 1 would be continued until the next term. None of these cases are of much importance, and it would be a useless tax upon the Judge's strength to hear them now. The busi nes of the General Sessions will be taken up on Monday morning, and after that the equity business will he heard, OCONEE GOES DRY. The Prohibitionists Carry the County by Several Hundred Majority. WALHALLA, May 2.-[Special to The Register.]-Yesterday the election on the question of '-license" or "no hi cens" for the sale of spirituous liquors in Oconee County was held. The elec tion was held under a special Act of the last Legislature, submitting the ques tion to the qualified electors of the County. As host as can be learned from the partial returns to-day, the majority in favor of "no license" is about 450. The law goes into effect January 1st, 190, anti then Waihalla,. the only town in the County which now grants license to saloons, will be "dry." sHE TOOK ROUGH ON RATs. Mrs. Lena Brock, living abc it four miles from here, committed suicide last Sunday night by taking "Rough on AFFAIRS AT ANDERSON. Progress of the Work on the Cotton Fac tory and Masonic Hall. ANDERsON, May 2.- [Special to The Register.] - The Anderson Cotton Mills project is goitg right ahead. It wvill not be long befole the work on the building will commence. JThe brick are being made very rapidly right where they will be needed. The building will be up by early fall.. Tie old Masonic building is about torn down, and the work of construct ing the new temple will be pushed to completion just as fast as possible. It is now prop~osedl to have the storerooms under it ready for use by 1st of Septem ber. Those who were hurt in the acci dent esterday are doing as well as could be ex1tctd. Emmerson is the worst injured. His mother was telegraphed: for and arrived yesterday afternoon. The Building and Loan Association is erecting some houses on a lot owned by i i the Northern part of the city. Yellow Fever on aBaltimore Steamer. LONDON, May 1.-Lloyd's agent at Bailin reports that the Steamer Weser has yellow fever on board, several offi cers and twenty-eight men being ill and three having died. The North German Lloyds Steamer Weser, Capt. Schuck mann, sailed from Baltimore April 17, for Bremen. MACHINERY FOR SALE ! To The People of Clarendon: I am the Agent for the Cel ebrated REVOLVING HEAD PRATT GIN, LIDDELL & Co. ' Engines and Boilers. I am sole agent in this county for the BOSS COTTON PRESS. Corn Mills, Pulleys, Shaft ing, etc. :0: 296. 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, Manning, S. C. PAVILION HOTEL, CHARLESTON, S. C. First Class in all its Appointments, Supplied with all Modern Improvements Excellent Cuisine, Large Airy Rooms, (tis Passenger Elevator, Elec tric Bells and Lights, Heat edl Rotunda. RIA TES, $2.00, $250 AND $3.00. Rooms Reserved by Mail or Telegraph CATAR RH COLD RAMBA IN if HEAD. Trythe Cure Ely's cream Bat m Cleanses theNasal.Passages. Al lays Inammation. Heals the Sores. Restores the Senses of Taste, Smell and Hearing. A particle is applied into each nostril and Is agreeable. Price,50. ar Druggists or by mal. ELYBROTH ES,56WarrenSt.,N.ew York. L. W. FOLSOMX, Successor to F. H. Folsom & Brj. SUMTER, S. C. DEALER IN WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY. tion. W ho~ cles oaleS on e n M 1c5 and 169,~ astr i Bnay, 1 ian hnd ieSaing Pror.tan neithaveng uedone wihest wors.en - ia tetion pi osapoig de W aehdoesealeexrinen 157t and cu6tomrs Earsrt doory t CHE.N . AIL. AIRCTTNEY ATTICLAW, XCU. and S.in deWItbStON r.Spc AIhrey antd Cunsi eor a t Lawei i MANNO ING, . C E. D. HAIILTO, ATURAXE AGELA, -MANNING, S. C. JOH. ILGON, RtEAL ESTATE AGENT, FORESTON, S. C. Offers for sale on Main Street, in business portion of the town, TWVO STORES, with suitabe lots; on Manning and RI. R. streets TrO COTTAGE RESIDENCES, 4 and C rooms; and a number of VACANT LOTS suitable for residences, and in different lo alities. Terms Reasonable. MAX G. Bryant, JAS. M. LELAND, South Carolina. New York, Grand Central Hotel. BRYANT & tELAND, PaoPRIEvonS. Columbia, South Carolina. The grand Central is the largest and best kept hotel ini Columbia, located in the EX ACT BUSINE S C'ENTER O F TIlE C1TY, where all Street Car Lines pass the door, d i,., mENUri not evcelled by anye in the R. C. BAnEx.Ev, President. C. BISSEL JENEINS, Gen'l Manager. RIcn.uAn S. GAxrr,"Sec. & Treas. The Cameron & Barkley Company, 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. 4liiSend for prices. Oils, Rubber and Leather Belting, and a complete line of Mill Supplies. dWe Guarantee Lowest Prices for Best Quality of Goods. CAMMERON & BARKLEY CO.. Charleston, S. C. FURNITURE. --o LARGEST ANDCHEAPEST 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 $1.60 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 Rocher 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 Room Suit, Marble top, for $45.00. pa-I have in store an immense stock from the cheapest to the finest to select from. Never, no, never buy, if you want to save money, till you first see this stock and get prices. Mrs. A.Edwards 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. EDWARDS. 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. .I-epairs ere~iuted with pronptniess and Di.pahi. Send for price lists. East Bay, Cor. Pritchard St., Charleston, S. C. GEo. E. TOALE. HENY OLIVER.] deo, E, Toale & Co.ICURE MAXUACTURERS AKD WIJOLESAL. Dors.ITS Blinds, tr gi.iMA AIA UE Mould ings. 1aemaetedeseo Matels,FISEIESYo Grates, etc. F LN IKES Scroll Work, Turning and Bcasoteshv Inside Finish. Builder's HarAcd- tncoara~en5jBTL ware. anld oGeyneralL RMEY Eprs Buildting Material. ...ROMC,13PALTNEYK WhenFIsaECANDI dSnotmeanmereySt 10sd1 an te topteo ie ndte aete e turnRaain.AIMEAN ARADICAOCURE CharlestPILEPS. Or C alhn\Xoirskaesrucaseaoueeeha Se d aonetf fortrestsemad aeE OFFURE AND LEROIL Alos as Palatayne sreetI Carestedonsmiae byS. mos enite fo stma thes. an phits ismhmoreeffiacios.THE ADES'FARUNIE EC''1MULSIkowledeb antfn u fet rt Amysas aathebFietd Bst Mika. ation o the ol wit the hypndcuopos- M EiG AHNEC.RNCAS S~T"EUSoi acknowledgedbER aratni the sol mfctreth oeif thd cure-o CioandSUMPTybeerN, whichOfULA, cEi nERAtla DE+.lT, WAST'roiNC DorStAcESco, EMalowedtIoN, sl rCof t.De and cNity neasooS Theorea reeyafe fohr Consumpzin indr icate constitutons.ire hto phethastase lagere beer f th finst favor;b*sies, o ainto* casesiog onc Cden. pnSod alt D25ruggests. Wien a t th e oze anufcurr in this ofe must aony eah orerge CopyriaftedrITE AS RA hang paten aalzed by al te m inent W HUESTREYUPY N ET t Won avn o fter t e n o ee ng cutiney t'J~ naet$5o 6.btsn a iclF uneorderetl direer furome analyzing inC Flor-h en~ ida. Itfills along flt wantfor a simulan ntAt the tase cotan norshen and__ _ _ Pp allysu ted forpesonofw eak an-dl cte rlostittons. Ct,a the tS. e la. ger eBn o ig Sret htls beerenovatedfihestastavor;ibesidndntolyddur it uianameicna qualtie, isspe ia- trugot aks~ :ccm oa TyVmade ofAour ceebate worl renoned~ sl~~.Iicd~~tE~e igt idEeti el r sdi l MrgnlANin , elwa. Put romupdhlwys in 5.I nd$.0 us otamy blcwh rder. G.opyrightedoiicor