The Florence daily times. [volume] (Florence, S.C.) 1894-1925, September 22, 1898, Image 3
wP'fi.
Bea«tr to B1m4 Deep,
Clean blood means a clean slrin. No
beauty without H. Cascarets, Candy CatW
tic clen your blood and keep it clean be
U f P the a2 y iiver and driving all’ im-
fro “ tb« bodv. Begm to-day Z
bwnsh pimples, boils, blotchy, blackheads
j*nd that sickly bilious complexion by taking
~ascarets,—beauty for ten cents. AJ1 drua*
guts, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 60c?*
trl^Hnnlh' r rd0 ^ ^ or railway postal cars
for South America has just been placed
with a uianulicturing a f m at bnringfleld.
bo-. «1
kfass.
To Cure nTold iVone^ Day.
y ' llnlQe TabUti. AU
druggists refund ^mmey if it bolstocare. 25c.
leiVhani'w^ iodu ^ r > 1 » st y««r not
consume T' 0 ? 0 . t , 0n9 , of cottonseed rere
product ’l 1 ^ 0 t0t i' 1 VH,ue of the resultant
product , aggregating *180.000,000.
f«t
, iro-To-B»c foe Fifty Cents.
habit cure, makes weak
men strong, Wood pure. Wo, »L Ail druggists
J^^OOOciUz^ot the United States
dents ' 10erm,4,iy ' i - 000 ar « matriculated stu-
’j*::*:*:- “ wck Lea?»«Hmokin* T«h« rfn
? ^ftke every nioutli aw sweet a-* a rose
but oomM ‘luighty nlgt/’ rinrs ^e cvcn’
win ft most dellgntful smoke. Try it. °
The Danish Bog is the oldest flag in ex
istence, dating hack to 1219 or thereabouts.
'* vefi bare been saved by PR.
i!wu5^U J X'‘ “TOiaa (TKK'I HlSU HOW.
than by all other renudirs combined,
i ,NA . 1 iBe*t!on, Regulates the
ooWcls and makes teething easy.
S ■! ■ ■■ II ■ I —■■■ -I- .. .1 ■ - -
In France there are 2,250,000 milch cows,
which nroduce annually 1,716,000,000 gallons
of milk.
tomn Tobacco Spit and Smoke Tour life Away.
To quit tobacco easily and foreyer, be mag
netic. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-
Bac. the wonder-worker, that makes weak men
strong. All druggists, COc or II. Cure guaran
teed Booklet and sample free. Address
Starling Remedy Ca, Chicago or New York.
Police court statistics show that Cornwall
is the best behaved county iu Englaud.
Mrs. Wlnslow’sSoothlngSyrup forchlldreh
teething, softens the gums, reducing Itflamv
Don.allays paln.cures wind colic, 2»c. abotti
When Hot
Doai’t sweat and fret, but keep cool and
take Hood’s Sursnparllla. This Is good
ndvloe, as you will find if you follow it.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla is a flrst-class sum
mer medicine, because it is so good for
the stomach, so cooling to the blood,
so helpful to the whole body. Make no
mistake, but gut only
HOOCi’S ^pmma
America’s Greatest Med clue.
Hnnifc Pillc curs Uver cos y ,0
nuuu o rillo ta g e< eHS y to operate.
A Wonderful Clock.
r In one of the town halls in a Japan
ese treaty port there is a remarkable
time-piece. It Is contained in a hand
some frame, three feet wide and five
feet long, it represents a noonday
landscape, very cieverly carried out.
In the foregrouna plum and cherry
trees appear in bloom, while in the
rear a hill Is to he seen, from which
flows a pretty cascade,
bto cascade fldws a tiny
n, which wends its way between
rocks and islands and flnaly loses itself
in a stretch of woodland. In a minia
ture sky a golden sun turns on a silver
wire, striking the hours on a silver
gong as it passes. Eacn hour is marked
by a creeping tortoise. A bird of rich
plumage warbles at the close of the
hour, and, as the warbling ceases, a
mouse suddenly makes its appearance,
and. scampering over the hill to the
garden, is soon lost to view Altogether
it la certainly a wonderful piece of
mechanism.—San Francisco Chronicle.
MRS. PINKHAM’S ADVICE
Jack’s I’olnt of View*
His little sister pouted:
"I think !: was a shame
For you to get the scolding
When you were not to blame.
Why didn't some one tell them
The truth about tho ball—
That Freddy Fearing threw it,
And it wasn't you at all?
Eut that's tho way it always Is;
It'* just the same old song
When auy mischief happens — '■
It's Jack who’s in the wrong!
And other boys, I’m sure oi it,
Are every bit as bad.
I’m sick of such injustice!
It makes me hopping mad!”
Jack kissed his Hitle sister:
‘•Oh, don’t you fret!” he said.
With a twinkle in his laughing eye*—
"And don't you peach on Fred.
I told the little beggar
("He was seared to death, you see.
When the ball wont through tho windjw)
To leave it all to me.
Kobody fibbed about it;
But the fellows ran away,
'T was just the Situation-
Somebody had to stay.
Of course I caught it heavy,
But bless you!—think what fun
For me to get a scolding _ —
For a thing I hadn't done!”
—Mary Bradley, in St. Nicholas.
A New Game With Holler Skates.
Tho latest juvenile sport is known
as roller-pulliug, ami is as amusing as
can be. It cons.sts in having two or
more boys or girls equipped and
mounted on roller skates and at least
an equal number of smaller ones, who
are harnessed with toy reins. The
game is played in many ways, but the
commonest form is for two of the
skaters, of about equal weight, to pick
out two of the haruessed pullers of
equal strength. Each skater seizes
tho reins of his puller and at a given
signal the puller starts off iu a mad
race upon the asphalt pavement. It
is wonderful how fast an urchin of
three or four years can pull or tug an
other one of eight or ten. When it
comes to a reversal of these conditions,
and tho puller is older and stronger
than the skater, the velocity* of the
turnout is unpleasantly great to people
crossing the street when the races are
going on.
What with the smooth pavement on
one side and the roller-skate on the
other, many new sports have been de
vised of late years by ingenious child
hood. Some are inexplicable to
adults, while others are only familiar
games modified to meet the conditions.
A lot of youngsters skating in a long
row which suddenly attempts to swing
and revolve around the boy who holds
one end is, of course, the old game of
“suau tho whip.” But out of this has
grown the modification of having
the two or three skaters at the end
keep on separately after the whip is
snapped. The winner being he or
who goes the farthest or straight-
est without striking oat, or taking
any movement after once starting.—
New York Mail and Express.
What Mrs. Nell Hurst has to Say
About It.
Dear Mrs. Pin ten am:—When I wrote
to you I had not been well for five years;
had doctored all tho time but got no
better. I had womb trouble very bad.
My womb pressed backward, causing
piles. I was in such misery I could
scarcely walk across the floor. Men
struation was irregular and too pro
fuse, was also
troubled with
leucorrhoea. I
had gi^cn up all
hopes of getting
well; everybody
thought I had
consumption.
After taking
five bottles of
Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegeta
ble Compound,
I felt very much better
and was able to do nearly all my own
work. I continued the use of your medi
cine, and feel that I owe my recovery to
you. I cannot thank you enough foryour
advice and your wonderful medicine.
Any one doubting my statement may
write to mo and I wl?I gladly answei
all inquiries.—Mrs. Nell Burst, Deep
water, Mo.
Letters like the foregoing, con
stantly being received, contribute not
a little to the satisfaction felt by Mrs.
Pinkham that her medicine and counsel
are assisting women to bear their heavy
burdens.
Mrs. Pinkham'saddressisLynn, Mass
All suffering women are invited to
write to her for advice, which will be
given without charge. It Is an ex
perienced woman's advice to women
Now Religion.—We do not need a new
religion as much as we do an applica
tion of the principles of the old to every
atrata of the social, business and politi
cal world.—Rev. T. E. Cramblett, Chris
tian, Pittsburg, Pa.
A Dog That Kill* Snake*. ■»
Mr. George F. Blackman of Andover,
Mass., is the owner of a dog, Dan,
that has made quite a record as a
snake killor. For some time past the
animal has spent all his time in the
fields and woods, hunting and killing
blacksnakes.
When Dan spies a snake he dashes
ronnd and round his prey, barking
furiously. When the snake coils and
raises its bead in a defensive attitude,
Dan dashes in with a side like move
ment and catches with his teeth that
portion of the snake just behind tho
head. Then a vigorous shake or two,
and the snake is tossed into the air,to
come down dead.
Then Dan takes the snake in his
mouth, and with tail np proudly trots
home with it. The snakes he catches
from day to day he carefully ranges
in a pile in the woodyard. No one
has counted the snakes, but from the
road the heap of snakes looks almost
like a cord of wood, so there must be
a good many of them. They range in
size from three feet to seven feet in
length.
A peculiar thing about Dan is that
be does not mutilate the snake,except
that in each instance ho bites a hole
in the skin and eats the liver of the
reptile^ He has become so expert in
this that he cau in an instant locate
the liver of a snake, no matter what
its size, big or little.
Dan is also quite a fisherman. Ho
has a long, shaggy tail, the end of
which is adorned with Santa Claus-
like whiskers. At dusk Dau will re
pair to the river side and drop his tail
into the water. When he has a “bite,”
which means that the hairs of his tail
have become tightly twisted about the
horns of a fat bullhead. Dan gives a
yelp and a jump, throws his tail over
his shoulder and lauds the fish in a
safe place. But fishing is a side issue
with Dan. He spends most of his
time snake hunting.—New York Tele
gram.
DON'T BE FOOLED
Tnto hurln* • »kl«* I
prolii wemwl*. Try » "*'VX BILL, " “A Lltil«l
ui.h.r In Prior, Bo' " m Itulo h!*h«r j« coo «iterd I
«»« 0.r U y«rIN «« kU
you at loom Bpireo. If uoiVlto w. W« II «* <k»l J»*
on tmio* rt(hi. ]
ROCK HILL BUGGY CO., Rock Hill,S. C.
Folly and the Itarrel.
Polly was always ready to try an
experiment. When she was abont
five years old she went to make a long
visit to Orandpa Higgins in the
country.
Tom and Mary, littio cousins who
lived near by, were very glad to have
I’olly so near. They came over very
often to play with her.
One day after the children had
played all the games they could think
of, they began to wonder ,if there
wasn’t something new they coaid do,
something they had never even
thought of doing before.
All at once Tom spied an empty
barrel, lying on its side in one corner
of the big barn, and an idea popped
into his head.
“I wonder how it would feel to roll
down hill in n barrel?” said this can-
} tions young man. For, like a good
many older people, be preferred to
see someone else try a thing before be
ventured.
“I’ll try it,” said Polly, who, as I
said before, was always ready for any
thing new.
This was just what Tom wanted, and
he didn’t wait for Polly to change her
mind. 1
So the children pushed the barrel
out into the floor, and into it crawled
poor, foolish Polly.
Now Grandpa Higgins’ barn was
bnilt on top of a small hill, and if
anything round started from the big
barn door it would roll quite a dis
tance.
The children gave the barrel n push
and away went Polly! She screamed,
bnt the barrel wouldn’t stop. Her
poor little head was bumped, first on
one side then on the other, as the
barrel rolled over.
When it finally stopped, at the foot
of the bill, and Polly crawled out, she
was so dizzy that she could not stand,
aud she fell down ou the grass. Her
pretty dress was all torn, for the in
side of the barrel was rough and nails
were sticking ont in some places.
Tom was frightened enough when
ho saw Polly lying there so white and
still, and he ran as fast as his legs
could carry him into the field where
grandpa was at work.
“Grandpa, grandpa,” he cried,
Polly’s killed herself in a barrel!”
Then grandpa was frightened, too,
and hurried after Tom. Ho picked
Polly up,and carried her to the nonse,
while Tom and Mary ran after, trying
to tell how it happened.
Grandma bathed Polly’s bruises,
and put her to bed iu the cool north
room.
Tom and Mary quietly took their
leave, for they didn’t feel like playing
any more. They didn’t say much as
they walked along,but they were both
very sure that they would never try
to roll down hill in a barrel.—Weekly
Bouquet.
Mr*. Injun’* Ice Creoin.
It happened at Geneva Newton’s
birthday party, and even today the
little folks laugh over the memory of
their happy time.
Geneva was six years old that day,
and bad a party, or picnic rather, in
the park near her home. It was in
July, when tho sky was as blue us
Geneva’s eyes, and there were plenty
of roses and singing birds. Thera
were hammocks and swings and long,
velvety grass under the shade trees,
where six little tables covered with
snowy linen and decorated with green
leaves were set with pretty dishes and
many good things. Each little gnest
brought a birthday gift for Geneva,
bnt above all the pretty presents she
valued most a lovely doll sent by her
uncle.
The children were having .a fins
time playing hide And seek amoqg thii
trees, when little Tommy Garnet
was swinging in ahamraock, sudt
rolled ont aud bnmped his nose so thi
it bled, at which he set np a tcrrittl
howl, bringing the little ones to hinr
from all directions. Mamma Newton
appeared on the scene qnickly, drying
Tommy’s tears by announcing supper.
There happened to be an Indian en
campment near by, and while the
children were eating, a squaw,passing
by, walked right into the grounds
with her papoose strapped ou her
back, and leading a little Indian girl
about Geueva’s age by the hand.
Borne of the children, who had
never seen an Indian, were frightened,
others laughed, but Geneva said po
litely:
“Did yon come to my party, Mrs.
Injun? I’se glad to see yon, sit right
down here,” pointing to a shady bit
of grass tinder a tree.
Tho squaw sat down with n grant.
Many of the children left their neats
and gathered around to catch a
glimpse of the cunning papooses with
their bright black eyes.
“Mercy on us, who is this?” cried
Mamma Newton, as she appeared with
a tray filled with dishes of ice cream.
“Mamma, this is Mrs. Injun, aud
she’s brought her little chilluns to
my party, so we must give her some
ice cream”—aud before mamma could
speak Geneva had two dishes of ice
cream, and was thrusting them into
the hands.of “Mrs. Injnn” and her
oldest papoose. The squaw looked
at it solemnly and took a generous
mouthful.
“Ugb! ugh! Heap coil!” aud
“Mrs. Injun” got up quickly, hand
ing the dish back to Geneva, placing
her hands over her stomach aud roll
ing np her eyes.
The cunning little papoose had
tilted her dish np to her mouth, fill
ing it and her throat full of the frozen
dainty, which so surprised her that
she jumped to her feet, dropping dish
and all, and gave an impromptu war
dance then and there.
The children shrieked with laugh
ter at the surprise and consternation
of the Indian mother and her child.
“Mrs. Injnn" wrapped her blanket
abont her, took her papooses and
would have sulked away greatly of
fended bad not kind-hearted Geneva
ran after her with cold chicken, rolls
and cake.
After more play the party came to
an end, bnt even Tommy Garnett de
clared it bad been tbe “bestest one ha
ever saw,” all on account of the little
papooses, and “Mrs. Injun’s” first
attempt at eating ice cream.—Jeanette
M. White, in Ladies’ Home Journal
+0+0 *0+0 <
Drugs,
Tobacco. - '
After r*i
arc* trytai
cures and cl
bo cured at,
V*«y HOT TUB
heti.tr cunt?
ioooec
i The Keeley Insl
Graenvilli, - - - S.
(The July Keeley In*tttuto la th*
DKBIBI
AND '
msmi
A PIANO
AN OHOJ
Money
i time la lo
YOUR
ACCOMPLISHED
0AU6HTER
muels
she is pr
with an instrument to keen up h*r prat
tice. 1 represent tho buiTdors of standai
makes of Vtsnxs and OrgaY* •«»“ ‘Aj
position to save you mousy v\d supply taj
most reliable instruimmis tws market as
ford*. Write me at once for price*, tenal
iilui catalogues, stating wbetnor y
for Piano or Organ. New Ore ana I
upward. New Plano* from InSi
drtisMr A. Malone, P?ano?A Organ.
MURRAY'S AROMATIC
MOUTH WASH.’
Use Murray's nitvjith Waal* and yoWT !
breath will be pure.
Your gums will be healthy and bright;
Your teeth, the gems you rnhst value In Ilf*
Will always be perfect an<F,whlte.
On a New Steed.
The wheelman monnted his horse.
He looked aronnd at his fellow cavalry
men. There was a helpless air to
his gaze.
“Trot!” roared the drillmaster.
The* wheelman fumbled wildly in
the air.
“What are yon doing there, No.
4?” roared the drillmaster.
“F-feeling for the 'handlebar,”
shrieked the unhappy man, as he
pitched head foremost on to the tan-
bark.—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Red and Yellow Snow.
An Interesting report has been Is
sued by the officials of the Grand
Ducal Observatory at Heidelberg con
cerning recent red and yellow snow
falls iu Germany. A fall of yellow
snow occurred In the Kngndlne on
March and red snow fell to the depth
of eight centimetres on the same day
at Kurd! in Knernleu province, also
all over the plateau on which tho
Hjouigsstuhl stands; on the Odenwald,
tqo, colored snow fell, the wind driv
ing it Into every nook and corner, so
tbdlt the drifts presented a color vary
ing from rosewood to that of brown.
Am examination showed that the tint
exUlbited was due to mineral dust,
and\ the latter has not been finally
ligated. It reveals the presence
dk elements—this, too, notwltb
ig the fact of there beta* no
in existence for a long distance
tho place where the snow fall
leepest. Of course, this phenom-
well known to naturalists,
of a really red color having been
id occasionally In polar and A)-
regions, some of the chemical
srlments revealing the presence of
•tain vegetable substance, like the
pollen of a plant.--The Pathfinder.
Looking Forward.
It was the year 3588, A. D. Present
ly it would he 3589. The Princess
Mnyme had no time to lose, and yet
she was forever exalting herself be
cause of her’birth. ”1 am descended
from pork-packers,” she would say
tauntingly, scorning the every-day
princes who sought her hand. As for
the othea princesses employ 1 in the
store, they laughed at her pretensions,
and maintained that any one might
trace a lineage ns distinguished, pro
vided one went back far enough.—De
troit Journal.
Baptist Sunday School Chautauqua,
Shelby, N.C., August 23, 1808.
On account of tbl* occasion, tho Seaboard
Air Line will sell tickets to Shelby, N. C.,
and return, at rate ol oce fare for the
round trip. Ticket* on sale August 22nd to
24th (and from points within a radius of 10)
miles of Shelby,) August 27th and 28th.
good to return until September 5tb. For
rates and schedule eee streamer* or eall on
ticket agente. T. J. Anderson, Gen’l Pas
senger Agent, Portsmouth, Va.
The Belgian government offers a prize of
•10,000 lor tbe Invention of a match paste
c< ntalnlngno phosphorus and not otherwise
dangerous to health in its manufacture.
YW Cura Constipation Forever.
ffhlro Cascarete Candv Cathartic. 10c or (Sc
Cl d a O. fall to cure, druggists refund money.
The school children in Germany are
largely using imitation India rubber slates.
I can recommend Plso’s Cure for Consump
tion to sufferers from As'bma.—K. 1). Town*
bend. Ft. Howard, Wle., May 4.181H.
Aberdeen terriers are driving out all other
fashionable pet dogs in London.
■ammo Tom Bowels With Caseareto.
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever.
Me. 29c: If G a C. fall, druggists refund money.
There is now building in England a cable
carrying steamer, with canying capacity of
6,000 tons of cable.
How’s This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
au y '"ate of Catarrh that can not be cured by
Hall’s C at irrh Cure.
F. J. cheney A Co., Props., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for tue la*t 15 year*, and believe him
S srfectly honorable in all business trtnsac-
ons and financially able to carry out any
obligation made bv the!r firm.
West A Thuax. Wholesale Druggist*. To
ledo. Ohio. , ,
Waluino, Kinnan A Marvin, Wholesale
Drncglet*.'uledo. Ohio.
Hall’* Catarrh Cure Is Ukcn Internally,
acting directly upon the blood ana mucous
surfaces of the system. Price, <5c. per bottle.
Sold by all Drugziete. Testimonials f
Hair* Fani"
“I have been using GAM'AHKTK for
Insomnia, with which 1 havo been afflicted for
over twenty year*, and I run say that Cuscaretn
have given mo more relief than any other reme
dy 1 have ever tried. I shall certainly recom
mend them to my friends ns being nil they arc
represented. ’ Tuoa Uili.aku, Elgin, 111.
CANDY
I m. ^ CATHARTIC ^
oiAaaeto
• •e PRICE 25\CEMTS. •••
Send tonr to
THE MURRAY ORUS COMPANY,
COLUMBIA, 8. C.
THE BWLEY-LEBBY CO. 3£|
{ #••+*••••
AV FS Engines' and Boilers,
AULTMAN A TAYLOR Threshers,
•’.MOM t OR" DusCleee Grain Separators,
(iins, Presse 0 , Corfi and Cane Mills,
F.NGLF-BITRO Rice Hullcr and Polish!
DK LOACH fc'aw Mills,
Leather A Rubber BelUng,
Packings, Pipe, Iron Fittings,
Joctors, Pufivys. Shafting, Hi
Pumps and Ueqcral Supplies.
CHARLESTON, - - S.
c.
Try onr B-L Co. Antl-Frlctlon Bsbbltt Mstsl
TRADE MASS RtSOTIRBO
where. 1 hsvs
mills of say
the South.
Pleassnt. Palatable.
Jotyd. Net
lever Sicken. \
t foa
uu^
Son. ...
, ■•alft.l, *tm Y.rk
St#
lO-TO.IAC™
gists I
XSDtJCA.’TIOMTA.X*.
VIRGINIA IUHINKS4 COU.KGK.
Commercial, Shorthand, Typewriting, Kugllah.
Sfto tuition admits to all departments for m-hsIou «f
forty two weeks. Open to both texes. riraditslos
assisted to positions. Eleventh session begins H«-y-
IrtuberCCh. Catalogue free. H. A. I>A VI.S. J K.,
Piesluent, lloxit, Itlrhinoiiii. V*.
TOttSITC Mltgt of Me m,
RICHMOND, VA. #•••«
Medicine; Dentistnr; Pharma-y.
56 Instructors; 284 Student*.
SAW MILLS.
11 you need a sow nilfi, »nj
me before buying eisawiiei
the most complete linAof I
dealer or maautactaierla
CORN MILLS.
Veryblghoet gratis fltinfll, at l
ly loffpflcMi.
WG0D-W0RKIN6 MACHINERY,
Planer*, Moulders, Edgars, Bs-Bav%
Bund Haws, Laths, eta
ENGINES AND BOILERS,
Talbott and Liddell.
Engleberg Rice HuUer .Instock, quid
delivery, low prices.
V. C. BADHAM,
No. 1820 Main St, Columbia, 8. 0.
MACHINERYS
RM) com
Richmond, Va.
Mngnlflont Library,
I-alKirntorles and Uen
oral Equipment. Ex
penses moderate 362
►Indents. For (*> page
eutaiogue. HddrcHS
C. H. HYLAND. Sec.
OSBORNE'S
’•udmedd
A»cusfa. Ca'U Acta*! buainMt. No Uxt ^
took*. Hhort tiiu*. Cheap board- fend for oat* I or**
C HARLOTTE COMMERCIAL
f ‘ “
I0LLEGE , CHARLOTTE, K. 0.
No Vacations- Positions Guaranteed Catalogue Free
Send 25 cents In sumps for pocket calculator.
Massey’s
J* Birmingham, Ala.
Maatgemery, Ala.
KugincH, Hoilur*. Gins, Klevatorg, Harvest
ing Machinery, Wood-working Machinery,
raw, Grist and Cane Mill*. Cotton and Hay
Prexses, Rice Hullera. Wind Mlllaand Tanke,
Leather and Rubber Belting, Packing!. Pips
and Pipe Fitting*, Shafting and Pulleya,
Euppllen of all kind*.
The 4'eleltralcd KagleCottonOln. Ths
Improved Murray (sinning System
Largo Stock. Prompt Shipment*. Reliablg
Goods at Low Price*.
VI. H. G1BBES 4 CO,
S C - COLUMBIA, S. C.
Co., Chariot
ally P1U* are the best.
4 A I'eelul Novelty.
A very useful and, by far, tbe mo»t novel
thing of It* kind 1# the Laundry Ll*t. gotten
out by tba Seaboard Air Line. Tbe upper
portion le «n artistic gem, beautifully execu-
ted, beviM ettacbed a damber of blank*,
one for eeeh week, containing a lint of all tbe
articles of the waeii, and padded in the form
"Of a calendar. These msy te procured, by
enclosing live cents io stamps to cover poet-
age. from My of the representatives of the
Seaboard Air Line, or from T. J. Anderson,
General Paaeenger Agent. Portsmouth, Va.
mahlac eaanlrle* of *(-
i|p h- M >»<r eivsniage ie m*n-
h*. 92
Celumbu*. Ga.
Jacksonville, Fig.
We pay ntudeut's railroad fare, and guarant**
•Ituatlouu. Write at one* (or catalogue No. ()
TRINITY G0LLE6E
I orters full couracii In English language and Llt-
: rrafitre. Ancient and Modem Languages. History,
Sociology. Mathematics, Philosophy. Mlble. Law and
Commerce. Women admitted to all courses of study.
The largest endowed Institution of learning In tbe
Mat*.
Board from 86.50 lo 6111.00 ner month.
Tuition ftftil.OO a Voir.
Next session opens September 7. fl«M. For Catalogue
address J4IHN V. HILOI). Durham. V C.
DAVIDSON COLLEGE,
*****9*9*919^9 ) Hi Ui
SIXTY SECOND YEAR BEGINS SBPT. 8, 1898.
Eleven Professors and Instructors.
Three Courses for Degree*.
Ample Cabinets and Laboratorioi.
Location Healthful and Beautiful.
Gymnasium Complete.
Term* Reasonable.
BEND FOK A CATALOGUE.
J. B. SHEARER, - - PRESIDENT.
CEED WHEAT FOR SALE!
V e e 0•••*••••e #
From the greatest crop eter grown in tbe
South. '1 hree varieties: Fulcaster, a bearded
wheat; Red May and White Clausen, both
smooth or beardless. Wheat Is now very free
from cockle seed and broken grain, being far
superior to tbe usual run of seed wheat, \Ve
will, however, reclean the wheat when de-
1 sired, taking out almost everv cockle seed and
I pieces of broken grain a* well as any Inferior
grain there mny he in it. Wheat as it now is
price $1.0(1 per bushel, recleaned wheat 91.16
per bushel. Them prices are both on can at
Chariot’s, including sacks. Each saok con
tain* two hnshels. Fend in your orders at
once .t yon wish to secure the best seed wheat
on the market Terms: Cash with order.
Charlotte Oil & Fertilizer Co.,
or Fred Oliver, CHARLOTTE, N. C.
THE
COLUMB!
(RAINLESS
MAKES
HILL
CLIMBING
EASY
Iaicu
ST4N0UD
FOR CH1IN
HARTFORDs’
Next Best.
Other Models at
Low Prion.
Catalogue Fro*.
SiANDARD OFM WORLD
POPE MFG ffi. HARTFORD. G0NN|
ART CATALOGUE OF COLUMBIA BICYCLES BY MAI.
TO^kNY ADDRESS FOR ONE TWO CENT STAMP.
TIT ANTED
v* will not
Co.. NwwYork. for lo samples »nd
Cm* of had health that RI P-A N S
" deal
will not liennftt Hend » eta to ILipnn* Chernl
looe trsdmonial*.
GIN REPAIRS
wN ■ ■ $»WS. ribs,
BRISTLE TWINE, BABBIT, *0.,
FOR ANY MA KB OF GIN.
ENGINES. BOILERS AND PRESSES
And Repairs for aarae. Hhaftlng. Pulleys,
Belting, injectors. Pipes, Valve* and Fittings.
lOIBARD M WORKS & SCPPL! CO,
AUGUSTA. OA.
Ammm aag *r. Tm
after Snteay'eaa*
fcgterasaM
-j.,
m,.: