The Florence daily times. [volume] (Florence, S.C.) 1894-1925, September 12, 1898, Image 3

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Clean blood meani a dean akin. No beauty without it. Casoareta, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by atirring up the lazy liver and driving all im- C ities from the body. Begin to-day to ish pimples, boila, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly bilious complexion by taking Cascarets,—beauty tor ten cents. All drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed. 10c, 25c, 50c. Itaa may believe in the divine right of others to fight for their country. Bo. 34 Among the foreign sailors in the British merchant marine 9,000 are Scandinavians 5,000 Germans and 2,000 Russians. i To Cure a Cold In One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablet*. All Druggletsrefund money If it fails tocura. 25c. Many a man is compelled to take married life according to directions. Ko-To-Bac for fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak SMa strong, blood pure. Me, |L All druggist* According to court etiquette the prisoner always comes before the judge. Plao’s Cure for Consumption Is an A Xo. 1 Asthma medicine.—W. K. Williams. An* tiocb. Ilia, April tl. 1894. Nervous People Are groat sufferers and they deserve sym pathy rather than censure. Their blood Is poor and thin and their nerves are con sequently weak. Such people find relief and cure in Hood’s Harsaparilla because it purifies and enriches the blood and gives It power to feed, strengthen and snstain the nerves. If you are nervous and can not, sleep, take Hood’s Sarsaparilla and realize its nerve strengthening power. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Medicine. $1; six for $o Hood’s Pills cure all liver ills. 35 cents. First Cotton Clotft. The first piece of cotton cloth made In America was presented to the wife of Gen. Nathaniel Greene, who had a dress made of It. DID YOU KNOW THIS? At Rock Hill, 8. C., there la a huffy factory coverln* riVK Ai m s of ground, tod making more buggie* than mv three factories in the South. “A Little Higher In Trice. Bat ” not too taleh—JVST A FRACTION AROVF. THE WESTERN TRASH—so that good whorls, good paint, good l«other. Ac. can be used. See our agent in Tour town or write us. We'll see that you get the best at living prices. ROCK HILL BUGGY CO., Rock HHI.S.C. Sour Stomach “After I was Induced te try CASCA* RETU. 1 will never be without tbem In tbe bouse. Ur liver was in a very bad ahape. and my bead ached and I had stomach trouble. Now. since tak ing Cascarets. I feel line. Uy wife has also used them with beneficial results tor sour stomach " Jos. Kbcbuno, nei Congress 8t., 8t. Louis, Mo. CANOV CATHARTIC ^ djl h THAOS MASH „ Pleasant. Palatable, iPotent. Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 25c. 50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... StsrMsa Kw^y Cm^say, tMsws. U—*r»»l, fcw iKk. _ Ml vo-to-bac He Didn’t Mind. Andrew Lang relates an anecdote of iDean Stanley’s amiable simplicity. The dean was dining out, and was very late. (When he came his collar was unfasten ed, and the ends vibrated like little White wings upon the head of a cherub. People could not look at hirfi with curiosity during the dinner, and at length, with due precautions, his host- ventured to ask him If he knew ; his collar bad broken adrift. “Oh, yes,” said the dean; “do you inind?” ; “Not at all,” said the lady. “Then I don’t mind, either," answer ed the dean. “The button dropped off while I was dressing.” And he contin ued his conversation. “It was not,” says Mr. Lang, “ab sence of mind, but unrivalled presence of mind, that Stanley displayed. Any other human being would have been at the point of changing his shirt.”—Peo ple’s Friend. AIDED BY MRS. PINKHAM. ' Mrs. W. E. Paxton, Youngtown, North Dakota, writes about her strug gle to regain health after the birth of her little girl: “ Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—It is with pleasure that I add my testimony to your list, hoping that it may induce others to avail themselves of your val uable medicine. “After the birth of my little girl, three years ago, my health was very poor. I had leucorrhcea badly, and a terrible bearing-down pain which gradually grew worse, until I could do no work. Also had headache nearly all the time, and dizzy feelings. Men struations were very profuse, appear ing every two weeks. “ I took medicine from a good doctor, but it seemed to do no good. I was becoming alarmed over my condition, when I read your advertisement in a paper. I sent at once for a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- ponnd, and after taking two-thirds of the bottle I felt so much better that I send for two more. After using three bottles I felt as strong and well as any one. . “ I think it is the best medicine for female weakness ever advertised, and recommend it to every lady I meet suf fering from this trouble.” Maternity is a wonderful experience and many women approach it wholly unprepared. Childbirth under right conditions need not terrify women. ■The advice of Mrs. Pinkham is freely offered to all expectant raothers, and her advice is beyond question the most valuable to be obtained. If Mrs. Pax ton had written to Mrs. Pinkham be fore confinement she would have been saved much suffering. Mrs. Pinkham’s address is Lvnn. Mass. CHILDREN’S COLUMN. The Rival Hoppers. Beneath a tree with spreading boughs, On margin ot a pool, A bloated (rog croaked merrily, Fanned by the breezes cooL His vis-a-vis a grasshopper Upon the other shore, Whose famous leaps are chronicled In books of childish lore. Now both were hoppers of renown; The one that was so thin Sent a swift challenge to the frog To jump—and see who’d win. A twinkle shone in froggie’s eye, He answered with a wink: Then both shot upward in tbe air, And then—what do you think? Why, froggie settled down again Beneath a toadstool gray, Beady for other bits os sweet That chanced along his way. For crafty was the heart that beat Beneath that mottled coat; He timed his leap so grasshopper Jumped right dowa froggie’s throat. —Mary Whitney Morrison, in Youth's Com panion. Monkey on » Wheel. There is a very popular monkey at the zoological gardens of the Prater at Vienna, and she is mnch admired. Miss Maja has an exquisite bicycle, which she rides to perfection, imitating to a nicety all the movements of cyclists. She jumps into the saddle without touching the pedals, kisses her baud to everybody, while she waits for the signal, then flits ofi' at a splendid pace. From the wheel she jumps on a trapeze and then on the wheel again before it can fall. When she has shown all her arts and graces she claps her hands, calling upon the public to applaud. She thanks prettily for applause by bowing aud putting her hand to her heart. The monkey has not been trained at all—only made to look on while men aud women cycled. She has taught herself everything without any one’s help. When money is given to her she runs to her nurse, takes her purse *nd puts it in. It has been proposed to let her have one of the many cycling medals distributed iu Vienna, but the societies refuse to give it to her.— New York Tribune. How Rees Find Their Dinners. Learned men who are interested in the study of plants and insects have been long trying to find out how bees know just what flowers will afford them honey. It has been thought that the colors guided tbem to the honey bearers. A foreign professor who has been watching the bees in his own garden contradicts this idea very strongly. He says that the bees are gnided to the flowers largely by their sense of smell. To discover whether the colors of flowers exerted any attraction the bright petals of some single dahlias, lobelias, evening primroses, foxgloves and other flowers were covered with bits q£.gt*en .loaf.**- removed altogether; bat in every case the flowers were found to be freely visited. No special distinction was made by the insects between the muti lated flowers and those that were whole. When, however, the nectary or honey bearing parts of flowers were removed, while the colored petals re gained, the insects neglected these flowers. On tbe other hand,the scarlet geranium and other scentless flowers, which are seldom if ever visited by insects on account of the absence of honey, immediately became centres of attraction when a little honey or nectar was placed upon them. The young readers of this column can verify or disprove this by their own experi- litlf ■ Where Horses Nerve After Death. When we see a dead horse in the street we either do not think of him at all, or we say “Poor horse,” aud pass on and forget nil about him a minute later. Then after awhile the movers come along and cart the animal away to the dumping ground, and that is the last of him. But this simple pro cess would not end his career if he were a Parisian horse. As is to bo expected, the wily Parisian, who is noted for his economical habits,knows better than to let dead horses turn to dnst without any profit accruing to him. This is how they are utilized. First, the hair of the maue and tail, which amounts to about one quarter of a pound, is cut off aud used in brushes, switches, whips, and so on. The skin is then removed and sold to tanners. The shoes are sold to the “ole-rngs-ole-iron” man. The feet are cut off, dried and beaten in order to make the hoofs come away, which are then sold to combmakers or mana* facturers of ammonia and prussian blue. Every particle of fat is cut out aud melted and used by makers of enamel and glass toys, for greasing shoe leather aud harness, and in the manufacture of soap and gas. The wirkmen eat the best pitces of the flesh and give the poorer pieces to dogs, cats, hogs and jultry, or use them for manufacturing prussian blue. The bones are sold to faumakers or cntlers, or are made into ivory-black. Sometimes they serve as fuel for melting the fat. The sinews and ten dons are sold to glnemakers. The small intestines are made into coarse strings. And by the time all that is clipped off there isn't mnch of a horse left.—Chicago Times-Herald. How the Czar Flayed With Dolls. As every one knows, M. Faure was bearer of some extraordinary dolls to the little Grand Duchess Olga when he went to St. Petersburg recently; but now comes the story of the recep- • tion given them by the czar himself. The baby grand duchess, it seems, was not more entranced than her angnst father with these sweet dollies, who carried on a squeaky dialogue as nt, after nurse princess then left rrtilicial the em- !ies aud talking, l iise, like a heard. between mother and child. | an hour passed in their socii was obliged to take the littl to bed, and the emperor w alone with the two cleve: ladies. In an adjoining roo press, M. Faure, aud some i gentlemen of the court wer when suddenly a strange _ that of an infernal machine, w 1 followed by a lond exclamatio! Everybody rnshed to seo what it was. There was the czar, safe and sound, but with a dismal face, looking at the dolls, which he had partly un- | dressed to find out the secret hiddeu in their bosoms, while the dolls were chattering away as though they would never stop! Ihe gentle empress quite lost her temper. Snatching up the carpeted board on which the ladies were stand ing, she gave it to a gentleman uear her. “Please take it away,” she cried. “It is too bad, indeed; the emperor spoils everything he touches. ” But as “Nicky” looked very jienitcnt and the situation was so funny she could not help laughing. ‘Ton see how it is,” said the emperor. “I am not even permitted to talk with my own daughter’s dolls.” At this sally from the emperor the company laughed heartily, and peace was at ouce re stored.—Philadelphia Post. -t L-. .1 ) > <! L7/V ; I V ) » * J * t Put to Shame by an Klephant. The newspapers of Brussels relate a curious incident which is not with out a moral. Not long ago au ele phant, passing from one foological garden to another, was lunching through Anderlecht.a subuflM Brus sels, iu charge of its cornac or driver. Passing an alehouse, the cortie, who was of drinking habits, pan*], dis mounted, left the elephant altae out side the door, and went intethe ale house. There he must have found the en tertainment to his diking, fo. ho did not return promptly. A cro<d gath ered about the elephant. Tb people were more or less afraid of tie crea ture, but he had no dispositiocto hurt any one. He was, indeed, muh more humane aud worthy of praise jan his driver. He soon began to swing touirt fro in a nervous manner, and to mk un easily at the door of the nrhouse. Thus he waited, his uneasiess in creasing, and still his driveidid not appear. It happened'that he ale house was an old building wit a large frontdoor. The elephant, altewatch ing the door for some time.apai ently made np his mind that he cold get through it, and with one rush seeing the door opened by some piser, he made for it. His head and neck and pnt of his shoulders he managed to get trough, but then he stuck fast. He pushed and squeezed, but only stek the faster. The whole building egan to tremble. AUwas consternation withiithe ale house. The occnpants uni guests fancied that their last hour toa^ome. 3>of» wh« go* ■—r ami « er Btity tins t poor animal’s head and triib thrust in and his little eyes gving aud bulging, and all hands coul^heur his trumpetings and groanings. The crowd outside keAat a re spectful distance, for it seled as if the elephant, like Sampson Hold be tween the colmnns of thlemple, must tamble down the w» struc ture. Perhaps some of Aie who I had witnessed the elephant’f-uuble, aud reflected on the cause ofl would j have been half glad to see f build ing crumble if the elephant §1 been likely to escape unhurt. But the building did nolll and the elephant remained fastk the door. Meantime the cornac,leal lee to his senses by the alarif the crowd and the danger of thnimal, which was now beating itself flush-’ came to the rescue, aud a| word from him the fnithfnl beast ceL] i,j<, struggles. Then a carpenter 4 gent for. Still under. the cornalcom mand,the animal remained quav]ij| e the door jam was cut away.auf last he was delivered. With demonstrations of jo ceived his deliverance and hi —who deserved no such welco the patient elephant—and were aoon on their way. Iftb did not profit by his rebuke fi „ animal for his drinking habitslp e . cially when he had to pay the c4 8es which the extraction of the ellint had entailed—he must have l dull a man to be fitted to have of au elephant. $ V. Men who are always in a hurry, and most men are, want a soap for the toilet that will lather quickly and freely in hot or cold water. Other soaps than ivory may have this quality, but will likely contain alkali, which is injurious to the skin. Ivory Soap is made of pure vegetable oils, no alkali; produces a white, foamy lather, that cleanses thoroughly and rinses easily and quickly. Money cannof buy a better soap for the toilet. Sierra Leone, Africa. The settlement of Sierra Lcono nt one time consisted only of the penin sula terminating in Cape Sierra Leone, with an area of about 300 square miles. The colony, with Its protectorate, now Includes a largo extent of country, es timated at 4,000 square miles. The capital, Freetown, possesses the best harbor In West Africa. The scenery of Sierra Leone Is said to be very simi lar to that of the West Indies. The soli Is fertile and there Is an abund ance of pure fresh water. Tropical fruits grow luxuriantly. Pineapples especially are produced very abund antly, while bananas, plantains, avoca do pears, mangoes, limes and oranges are not only cohsumed locally, but are also exported to Gambia Gorec and Senegal. 150110 ATIOIVAl*. Don’t ToWco Spit tnd task* Year MIS Away. To quit tobacco vastly and forever, be ma*> netle. full ot Ufa, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bee, tbe wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. AU druggists, lOo or II. .Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample tree. Address Sterling Bemody 0*. Oktsngn or Mew York, roe great. thnt they are ait OSBORNE’S -j, udmeddOfyo-utt ■la. Ga. Aitiutl bntlna* Short tune. Cheap board. p. No tail Band for p TRINITY COLLEGE I I offer* lull eouraea In KnglUh Ijuuuase and Ut- r - 1 ■ . | ( rapin'. Ancient and Modern Lanntumes. Iiutpur. - with HW werwrg Wbft Ul Mathematic*. PhllppoopUr, UlTdr I aw anil nm nr look nroclrad I Onarstwie Wnmen admitted to all coune* of prtiidr. oro or less cracked. I , h ^ Ur|( », t endowed institution of learning In tbr State. Board from RH.SO lo ftlO.OO permonih Tuition *.10.AO a t ear. Nett *e*alon piuenpp September 7,1H9K. Ki>r Catalogue addreos JOH\ C. KIMJO. Durham, ft. , *fo- Wln »b>w s Soothing Syrup forohlitlren teething, soften* the gums, reducing inflama- tion.allays pain.curea wind colic. 35o. abotts . But few uen object to being treated by physicians—nt a bar. Core Constipation Forever, Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or IB* If C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money. The gentle quiver in a girl’s voice often bolds her beau. LyondtCo’s “Pick Leaf’’Rmoktoa Tobacco does not make every mouth as sweet as a rose, but comes “mighty nigh”- does give every one a most delightful smoke. Try it. Padlocks aud chains are not classed as good ecurities for loans. Rdaemte Toor Bowels With CaseereSs. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever, j 100.35c. U Q O. C. fall, druggists refund moae*. , Place Your Money ■ a Bank until we secure you a paying situation. Ve pay railroad fare. Tire largest, bent and cheap* it buotM-os schools in the South. ' Massey’s Columbus, Ga. Birmingham, Ala* Montgomery, Ala. Jacksonvtllo t Via* Write at once for catalogue No. 8 [ oo ge Lang Gymnastics. One of the most important iU health culture is to keep the and heart in good condition, possible to breathe sufficient air oxygenate the blood that it will same the waste and poisonous m of the system as fire burns up| or tinder. People who feel dull, hi stupid, unwilling to exert themsc indeed often unable to do so, wilL that a regular course of breathinj ercises will be more benefit to than all the medicine iu creation. ' are many times when the use of cines merely aggravates the exit' ill. It is simply a further accnm| tion of undesirable material that be carried about until nature is I sisted to cast it out or burn it ui Self-Culture. The Age of Niagara. The truth of the adage about c etant dripping wearing away a st is strikingly illustrated in the fact the Niagara river has been 3tf, years catting its channel 200 f deep, 2000 feet wide and seven mi long through solid rock. Evidenct conclusive that the falls were forme at Qneen»w>ne, seven miles below 1 present situation. It has been prov that they have not receded more tb one foot a year for the last half ce tury. The wrongs of other people are continual ly getting mixed up with our rights. Fits permsnrntly cured. No ills or nervou*. lies* after first day’s use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Hestorer. $2 trial hottleand treatise free Dll. It. 11. Kl.l.nb. Ltd..931 *rch8t. Phlla. Pa. For Nausea, Vomiting nnd the weak irri table Stomachs of Children, nothing rqualt, l»K. MOFJfKTl’S 1 kkthika (TEETlUNO POWDERS). Colic, Hives and Thrush in Infants relieved and prevented by DR. MOFFETTS Txzthi- na (IKKTHING POWDERS). AU drug gists keep it. Ever Have a Dog Bother You When riding a wheel, making you wonder f(*ra few minutes whether or not you are to get a fall snu a broken neck ? Wouldn't you have given a small farm Just then for some means of driving off the beast? A few drops of ammonia shot from a liquid pistol would do It effectually and still not permanently iniuro the animal. Such pistols rent postpaid for ,Wcents in stamps by New York Union Rupply Co., 135 Leonard Ft, New York City. Every bicyclist at times wishes he had one. State or Ohio, City or Toledo, I „ Lucar Countt, f Frank J. Cheney makes oath that bets the senior partner of tne firm of J. F. Cheney A (•o..doinv business in the City of 7 oiedo.Coun- ty aud Htate aloresaid, and that said firm will pav tbe sum of one hundred dollars for rich and every case of catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Frank J. Chenet. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my i —) presence, tbi* *th day of : ecember, - seal /- A. D. 1888. A, W. Gleason. ( —v— ) Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mneous sur faces ot the system. Send for testimonials free. F. J.cheney A Co.. Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall’s Family Pills arc the best At this season ot the year when people are peering over iailroad maps and steumboat guides to decide where to spend their vaca tion, a glance over ;be illustrated folder of the "Old Bay Line" shows at once that one of the most delightful trips to Baltimore, via Cheapeake Bay .Is on the steamers •’Georgia” and "AlabaaR.” These steamers afford a most pleasant means of reaching tbe East. West and farther North, as tbe invigorating sail on these magnificent and commodious steamers prepares the tourist for the jour- yon the rati road,, whether tbe traveler is .und for New York, which city is reached jon afternoon by the regular railroad con- iactions of the Bay Line steamers, or Philn- Iphis ut 10:45. A trip across Chesapeake iy to Colon Dock, where Iho “Georgia’’ d “Alabama” lands its passengers at 6:45 tbe morning, covers 170 miles, and affords , excellent ronte for distant points, as the purist alights in Baltimore refreehed after ihaiing the balmy air of this inland sea. A rrlutive folder of this interesting route _ he had of all ticket offices and atationa the Seaboard Air Line, N. A W. Railway, 0. A L.. c. 4 O. R. B., Norfolk A South- JL &, etc. v Strayer’s COLLEGE*! 815 E. Baltimore Ml., Baltimore, ,Yld f r> ■» ■— I For Bright Stiiduutii. Other w Ff Cl Ka I NrhoUmhlpM for *nr- vlcow All Hooka Free. KeK'iUr tuition tws low. Thorou'fh Ourae* Hhort- J T.V|>«*wrlilnK, VookktiAuinK* Kto. Situation for ever^ Oradottte or Tuition Kefumti-d. Ala 11 SCHOLARSHIPS hand, for t»v«rv _ Couraca Cheap 7th Year. Writ* ua to day. THIN %f> wq I Ills %n. ML DAVIDSON COLLEGE, DAVIDSON, N. G. 81X17 SECOND TEAR BEGINS SBPT. 8, 1893. Eleven Professors and Instructors. Throe curses for Degrees. Ample Cabinets and Laboratiriev Location Healthful aud Beautiful. Gymnasium Complete. Terms Reasonable. SEND FOB A CATALOG IE. j. B. SHEARER, - - PRESIDENT, Hand joar addriwa and wa will msproas M • nr 4r. flftra. Whma auld. remit ts.AUaad mm will wall ymm free* a handaoaM* ulrw-wind •all*. Wllirro* rlbAK < 0.0 *tiwUa.%.C. FREE . --PATENTS-- Procured on rash, or easy lnatalmpntH.VOWI.E8 fe BVKN8, Patent Attorney*. 217 Droadway, N. Y. TIT ANTED—t’aae of had health that RIPANB »V will iu>t benefit Heed Seta to Ul pan* Chemical Co.. New York, for Hi »amplea and iwm teollmonlal*. Drugs, Alcohol, Tobacco. WRY NOT TUB hSBLEY CURE? After repeated fail ures trying so-called cures and cheap cure* be cured at.... [aeoro+oroeS The Keeley Institute, firMmrllU, - - - S. C. (The only Kroley Institute in (he State.) V IHt;lM V RI HINKM COLLEGK. . Vomiuerclal. Mit*rih«n*l, ry|*pn’rlltng. Kngllpph. t.(i tultlppii ipiIiiiIim to all departim'UU for ncpmIipii p*f forty tw° 0|h*ii to both (irH'tuatuH aaalated to poNlllonR. F love nth suaMon Im’kIiin Sen- U’lUbor tith. v Nlnl'*K'U»* fro* 1 . R A. DA VlH, JH. § ________________ rroaldont, KoxK, lilcliiiioiiti, Ya BAILEY-LEBBY CO. £ ********* AMES Engines end Boilers, AULTMAN * TAYLOR Thresher., "MONO OR” Dustless Grain Separator* Gins, Presses, Corn and Cane Milla, ENOLEBUKO Rice Duller and Polisher, DE LOACH Saw Milla Leather A Rubber Belting, Lacing. Packings, Pipe, Iron Fittings, In jectors, Pulleys. Shafting, Hand Pumps and General Supplies. CHARLESTON, - • S. C. Try our B-L Co. Anti-Friction Babbitt Metal saw mills! If you need a saw mill, any alea write me before buying elsewhere. 1 have tbe most complete line of mills of any dealer or manufacturer io the South. CORN MILLS. Very highest grade Stones, at unnsnat- h low prices. WOOD-WORKING MACHINERY, Planers, Moulders, Kdger% Re-Bawa, Band Saws, Laths, eta ENGINES AND BOILERS, Talbott nnd Liddell. Fngleberg Rice Duller .in atook, quick delivery, low prices. V. C. BADHAM. No. 1826 Main SL, Columbia, 8. 0. MACHINERY^ msiff Ctllegi of Ktiiciii, 84 Page Catalog. SmOHD COLLtSL Rictoond, Va. C HARLOTTE COMMERCIAL OLLEGE, CHARLOTTE, N. G, ho Vacations—Position* Guamnteed- Catalogue Free Send ‘IS ceuts Iu •tanitw tor pppeket calculator. lug Engine*,'Roller*. Gin*. Elevatois, Harvest >g Machinery, Wood-working Machinery RICHMOND, VA. ••ee* Medicine: Dentistry; Pharmacy, fill Instructors; 381 Student*. Magnlflop-nt Library. IjilpornlorW-pp ami tlcn- cral Kiiulpnient. Jix l>cn*CH impdcrate. '.’•ri •Indent*. For HO page rula’ptcup-. adptres* C. H.HYLAND.Met. —„ ty. Wood-working Machinery saw, Grl*tand Cane Mill*. Cotton end He] Presses, Rice liuller*. ind Mills and Tanks Leather nnd Rubber Helling, Packings, Plat and Pipe Fittings, Shafting and Pulleys Supplies of all kinds. The Celebrated Fagle Cotton Gin. TTu Improved Murray Ginning System Large Stock. Prompt Shipments. Reltabb Goods at Low Prices. W. H. 6IBBES & GO.. COLUMBIA, s. c, AT FACTORY PRICES IfiRt Pianos & Organs Can be obtained dirept from the factor and freight paid. I represent the builders o the most roputaole maxes of both Pianos an Organs, hence will save you money. Ffl terms, prices, etc., address Mai. PIANOS and ORGANS. N. B. i^‘~ n,p * ri,on ,n M. A. MAI.ON Largest Pat., age and full Eqv* *’ mMN Fac'd tv, W: Student*. IKMj three Acsdemlc Ooers. three Elective Course*: three Profewdppna' School* law Medicine ami Pharmacy. Advanced Clam open to Women. Tuition, euu.lk) a yea.': Board, ,nre*> r.iecuve course*; three Pi I.uw, Medicine and Pharmacy. Advanc open Up Women. Tuition, goe.iw a yea.'; l ippcpoth. Ample opportunltle* for *elf-help. remxa khlpe and lean* for the needy. Summer School f YeacherviM Instructor*. 1(3 student*. Total enro moat. *15. For CataUpgue, addresa, PHESIDBN tl.llKHMAN. Chapel hlll.W.C. Chickens Earn Money oa» For 35c, in stamps we send a 100 PAGE BOO! giving the experience of a practial Fv-iitr Raiser—not an amature, but a man workta for dollars and ce> dt ring 16 yean. I teaches how to Detect and Cure Diseases Feed for Eggs also for Fattening, wbicl Fowls to Have for Breeding; everything re quiulte for profitable Poultry raising. BOOI PUBLISHING CO, 184 Leonard Btrtet New York- SEED WHEAT FOR SALE! V, ^ ••••**♦•••••• From the greatest orop ever grown in tl i,l!7 0 „ v "r , ? t ‘S 8: ..^ u A ca »t? r .» beard* [wheat; Red May and White Clausen, smooth or beardless. Wheat Is now verv frt, 'from cockle eeed and broken grain, being f| I superior to the usual run of seed wheal, W will, however, reclean the wheat when d« I si red, taking out almost every cockle seed aw pieces of broken grain as well as any luferto grain there msyne in It. Wheat as It now 1 Ie 1 1 —’ ■ i price 11.00 per bushel, recleaned wheat fi tier bushel. These prices are both on care Charlotte, Including sacks. Each sack eu, tains two bushels. Fend in your orders i ouce if you wish to secure the best seed wbei on the market. Terms: Cash with order. Charlotte Oil & Fertilizer Co., or Fred Oliver, CHARLOTTE, N. C REPAIRS C-IWS. RIBS. BRISTLE TWINE, BABBIT, Oo. FOR ANY MAKE OF GIN. NGINES, BOILERS AND PRESSE! And Repairs for sams. Shafting, Pulleys Betting, Injectors, Pipes, Valves and Fltttnia LOIMU IRON MS & SUPPLY CO, AUGUSTA. GA. W .IQ V*»h with <>Her buys fhl ■*w Auto. Self Cocking Mcfcsi Ml “ ^ GgffJPV*** 11 sl »ot K#v.. ver.M or 8* c. r. or send UUc. a wi •hlj L- 6. D. $2.99and allow sxstnl n&tloo. Fir* Anniii'o. WlnfttoOaFf.t S ' ' "“hfag enquiries of i YrrlUrr* ,t vv.. non this nape . j >our navnuiage te mea non D C V N£w discovery: >iw Iw C O ■ quicktwlief and car** war* i-*om. fWnd or book of taaliiaonial* aad IO daya tiratrarot Free. nr.K H.eKXin'S son*. Atteste.es mMesottbe. Addrern UNION WATCH CO.. Winston. H. G