The Florence daily times. [volume] (Florence, S.C.) 1894-1925, August 03, 1989, Image 3
'ich!ey under Farragat.
Cominodoro Schley is described as
life feet nine inches in height, ,witt
blue eyes, a mustache and imperial,
both gray; his hair is growing thin or
top, but he artfully brushes it so as tc
hide the bald spot; he weighs about
170 pounds, is restless in manner, walk
ing up and down and ril around toe
person to whom he is talking; is mod
est in drees and democratic in all
things. In the Civil War Schley had
command of a gunboat under Admiral
Fp/ragut, and they tell this story to
illustrate how he fights:
Farragut summoned him one morn
ing, and, pointing to a Confederate fort
said:
"Do you see that place, Schley? Go
knock It to pieces.”
- Schley went, and was hammering
the forts to bits when his Quarter
master rushed up to him and said:
“Captain, the Admiral has signalled
us to stop and return to the fleet.”
“To thunder with the signal! I won’t
see it,” answered Schley.
He kept pounding away at the fort
until it was in ruins. Then he return
ed to the fleet. Farragut was angry
and summoned him. Before all the
officers of the flagship he gave Schley
a fierce dressing down for not obeying
the recall signal.
“I didn’t see it,” protested Schley.
“You must have shut the eye that
you put the glass to," said Farragut-
After again raking him fore and aft
for his disobedience the Admiral took
him into the cabin out of sight of the
other officers and gave him one of the
finest cigars in his locker.—Syracuse
Standard.
Careful measurements prove mat me
average curvature of the earth is &99
inches to the statute mile.
Beet Tobeeeo Spit and Smoke Toor l ife kt
To quit tobacco easily and forever be
0f 1 , ife ' ne,Te an<1 vi K° r . take N
T?i n, i er ' worl ‘ er ’ that makcs wea l<
atrong. All druggist* 50c or tl. Cure gu
a o d 8am P Ie free AUi
Sterling Komedy Co., Chicago or New 1
k Htt.e spirits «f camphor put in the water
wlii prevent the face from looking creasy in
hot weather* 97
I Have
No Stomach
Said a jolly man of 40, of almost alder-
manic rotundity, “since taking Hood’s
Sarsaparilla.” What he meant was that
this grand digestive tonic had so com
pletely cured all distress and disagreeable
dyeneptio symptoms that he lived, ate
and slept in comfort. You may be put into
this delightful condition if you will take
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
America’s Greatest Medicine.
DYSPEPSIA
*»Fpr sto year* 1 was a victim of dys
pepsia in its worst form. I could eat nothini
nut iftilk toast, and at ilmesjmLairjmch-aitn
-WMMMnHfMPM'VWrxnatri^st March i
began talcing CASCARETS and since then:
have steadily improved, until I am as w%ll us 1
ever was in my life."
David H. Mukphv, Newark. O.
CANDY
CATHARTIC
| 1 i tv-
wMmm.
TRAPS MARK RSOMTERCD
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do
good. Mover Slcaen, Weaken, or Gripe. 10c, 25c. 5tM.
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
•terllng Renerfy ftaapaa?, Ckteago, Moatrral. N«w York. $11
W -TA-RAP 8° ld ttn<1 ffiwranteed by all drug-
• I U*BAu gists to CV 1£E Tobacco UabitT
fi111 REPAIRS
m awi saws, ribs,
BRISTLE TWINE, BABBIT, &o.,
FOR ANY MAKE OF GIN.
ENGlie. B9!LERS AND PRESSES
And Uepalre for sa:ne. , Shafting, Pulleys,
Beltine. Injectors, Pipes, Valves and Klttlngs.
mafLii ik ims 4 supiw co,
ACGGSTA, GA.
PAYS
THE
FRAYV
RC3rsCkl.es. LEAST MONEY
JONES OF BINGHAMTON N. V.
EDUCATIONAL,
Aacusta. Gsn Aetosl bartn.M. No text ^
kosCi. Short tira*. ChMp hoard. Sand for catalog
c“
HARLOTTE COMMERCIAL
OLLEGE, WHIItlOTTB, M.G.
No Vaestlons— 1'o.ltlons Guaranteed—Cstaltwue Free
Send 25 cents In stamp* for pocket calculator.
TRINITY
I Offers full eo
ernture. Ancient
COLLEGE «***
Offers fuUeounes In English Language and Lit
Ancient and Modem Languages, History*
>phy. Bible. Law and
, Mathematics.
Commerce. Women admitted to nil courses of study.
The largest endowed institution of learning in the
rem M.SO to SIO.OO per month.
T^^n $50.00 n Year,
on ipens September 7,189s. For Catalogna
JOHN C. KILGO. Dnrhi “ ~
Board from
HMAUkvmm
am. N. C.
DAVIDSON hiube,
,1.0.
1(01 BEGINS UIT. 8,1898*
ictors.
ratorieg.
xatoops.
- PNISKHNV,
The Land of Make Believe.
[ know of a dear, delightful land,
Which in not so far away
That we may uot sail to its sunlit strand
No matter how short the day;
Ah, there the skies are always blue.
And hearts forget to grieve.
For there's never a dream but must oome
true
In the Land of Make Believe.
There every laddie becomes a knight,
And a fairy queen each lass;
And lips loarn laughter, and eyes grow
bright
As the dewdrops in the grass;
For there’s nothing beautiful, brave and
bold
That one may not achieve
If he once sets foot on the sands of gold
Of the Land of Make Believe!
Bo spread the sails and away we go
Light-winged through the fairy straits;
For the west winds steadily, swiftly blow
And the wonderful harbor waits.
On our prow the foam-ileoks glance and
gleam,
While we sail from tfforn till eve,
All bound for the shores of the children’s
dream
Of the Land of Make Believe.
— St. Nicholas.
Some Great Men.
Hana Holbein, the Swiss artist, who’
lived the early part of the sixteenth
century, was only sixteen years old
when engaged in painting altar pieces
for the churches of Basel, Switzer
land.
Benjamin Franklin first discovered
electricity by means of a kite made of
two cross sticks, a silk handkerchief
and a key.
David Rittenhonse, the American
scientist, born in 1732 and died in
1796, made the first calculation about
eclipses on his plow handle. His
name is handed down by Bittenhonse
square, oue of the aristocratic resi
dence places of Philadelphia.
Peter Paul Rubens, the great Flem
ish painter, was educated by his
mother, to whom he attributed all his
suooess.
Polly’s Mirrors.
Every Saturday Polly has to scour
the spoons. That is all that mamma
asks her to do, and it dodfe not take
much time, but Polly has always
dreaded it so long beforehand, and
grumbled so while she rubbed them
that it seemed like very hard work in
deed. Every week it was the same
old story, and you would think that
the little girl was asked to clean the
family plate in some old mansion.
But last Saturday mamma heard her
laughing all by herself in the kitchen,
and asked what she was doing.
“Making mirrors,mamma!" shouted
Polly, gleefully.
So mamma came to see. Polly was
rubbing away on a spoon, and when it
grew quite bright and shiny, sure
enough, there was a little mirror jn
the bond of the spoon, and such a
fnnny Polly reflected there, with very
fat cheeks and .very small eyes, and
no hair. When she moved her head
her cheeks grew thin, and her eyes*as
krge and round as an owl’s. How
Polly did laugh!
Then she sconred another spoon,
and soon there was another tiny
looking-glass, and another queer little
Poily, as funny as the first.
When she had twelve of these droll
little mirrors her work was done, and
she was surprised to find that it was
only play after all.—Youth’s Com
panion.
Playtime In Japan.
The afternoon in every Japanese
town or village is devoted to recrea
tion. The boys go out to sail their
kites, which are amazing creations of
bamboo and paper. A kite fight is an
amnsement sufficient to bring out the
entire adult population. Two kites,
sometimes five or six feet in diameter
and belonging to rival boys, are sent
up. The long tails of the kites have
been covered with powdered glass,
made to adhere to the tails by means
of glue or some sort of mucilage. The
fun consists in seeing which kite can
longest escape with string uncut by
the tail of its rival. As to handle
these kites requires a great deal of
skill and knowledge of aerial tactics
the game becomes a very interesting
one. The kite which is cut belongs
to the victor—that is, in case it does
not go floating off through space.
Mechanical toys are popular.
Almost every Japanese boy, provided i
he lives near a stream, is expert in
the manufacture of water wheels and
similar toys. Toy dealers abound,
and Ja] a tese parents are generous in
their gifts of rin, a coin equivalent to
the American cent, although only
worth about two mills.
The Japanese children have many
games. Most of these are quiet and
senate as compared with those of
European or American children. The
games are largely imitations of the
occupations and pastimes of their
elders. *
A True Story.
“Oh, if I were only a man!” ex
claimed Rebecca Bates, a girl of four
teen, as she looked from the window
of a lighthouse at Scitnate, Mass.,
during the war of 1812, and saw a
British warship anchor in the harbor.
“What could yon do?" asked Sarah
Winsor, a yonug visitor. “See what
a lot of them the boats contain, and
look at their guns!" And she pointed
to live large boats filled with soldiers
in scarlet uniforms, who were coming
to burn the vessels in the harbor and
destroy the town.
“I don’t care; I’d fight!" said
Rebecca. “I’d nse father’s old shot
gun —anything. How still it is in the
town! There is not a man to be
seen!"
“Oh, they are hiding till the sol
diers get nearer. Then we’ll hear the
shots and the drum."
“The dram!” exclaimed Rebecca.
“How can they nse it? It
Father brought it home last If pt to
mend. See! They are goinj
father’s sloop! Yv here is tha|Muin?
I’ve a mind to go down and IB'I it."
As flames began to arise Aa the
sloop the ardor of the girls iaFj
They found the drum and an K& fife,
and, slipping out of doors mil diced
by Mrs. Bates, soon stood bf tnd a
row of saud-hills.
“Rub-a-dub-dub! Rnb-a-dulJj'|ab!"
went the drum; and “Squeak^s{iieak,
squeak!’’ went the fife.
The Americans in the town tknght
that heh) had come from Bomim and
rnshed into boats to attack, t jl red
coats. The British paused*!, their
work of destruction, and, the
fife began to play “Yankee fyddle,*’
they scrambled into their bottf and
rowed in haste to the warship, which
sailed swiftly away.—Mail asd Ex
press.
An AffetUonate Cat.
There are many who wonld saf that
cats feel no genuine affection evan for
those who have treated them kndly.
But, in my judgment, says a wrier in
Our Animal Friends, this opiuen is
erroneous. An incident in im own
life proves to my own satisfactioi that
cats do love those who treat them
kindly, and that in no small digree.
At about six or seven years «f age
I came into the possession of i gray
kitten, which soon became a treasure
to me. I looked after “Tom* my
self, gave him his meals regahrly—
something, too, very often be'ween
meals—and lavished upon him al the
affection I conld. Very seoi he
showed an affection for me which he
bore to no other member cl the
family; in fact, on more than ote oc
casion he ran away from my brother,
who was rather given to teasing him,
and came to me for protection.
I used to smuggle Tom to bed ifith
me and hide him under the blankets
until I was satisfied no one vould
come near me again for the night
Then would I drag him forth in
triumph from his hiding place and hug
him closely to my breast, Tom show
ing his appreciation by purring loudly
and diligently rubbing my neck and
<jhiu with his sofir cheek. To ay sor
row it was only onco in a long while
that I was allowed this pleasure, as
very often my mother in her final look
at me for the night would spy my pet
or hear him purr, and then Tom
would be banished from the room.
Sometimes, when particularly anx
ious to be with me, he found a way to
manage it During the
window was not open, he for
way through a pane of glass,
awoke to find him nestling on
low beside my cheek. This may
incredible, but it is neverthelesi
and I think that Tom mast havi
deep love for me, or he won 1
have been so eager to be wii
Of conrse he did not do this
thing regularly, but I remember sev
eral occasions on which he dfl so.
Every morning he visited me before I
was oat of bed, and we gentrl
our breakfast together.
The school I attended was
about two miles. At first, thdhgh
loth to leave Tom behind, it nlver
occurred to me to take him withfie-
But after a time he sometimes ac<
panied me, either sitting on
shoulders or in my arms or runn|
along by my side. Dnring sc
hours he remained cloife by, out
in the woods. At intermissioa I
sought him out, and during the din
ner hour let him share my lunch.
When school was over he accompanied
me home. But he had not the oppor
tunity of doing this very loftg,because
when I was about ten years old I was
sent to a school about twenty miles
a way, and then I saw Tom only about
0 nce in three months.
A good deal has been sn!d about the
rainy season 1b Cuba, which extends
from June to September, but It is little
understood except by those who have
spent §ome time on the island. The
rainfall each day la almost torrential
and the mud Is so deep that it is nearly
impossible to get about. ’Ihe winter
mud on prairie roads 1» nothing com
pared with it Onco off et paved streets,
If a man Is on horseback, tho - horse
sinks to his belly la 8011 mu ^* * rolu
which It la almost Impossible to extri
cate him. When the sun shines, be
tween the showers, tho thermometer
marks 110 degrees, and as tho atmo
sphere Is humid the mugglness is some
thing Indescribable. The use of water-
proof garments is practically out of the
question, because of the high tempera
ture, but if a person who is not accli
mated is wet to the skit; fevers are al
most sure to follow. American soldiers
would go to almost certain death |in
Cuba, as the Spanish have done. Al
though Spain has lost moro than 100,-
OuO troops In Cuba very few of them
have fallen In battle, tho larger num
ber having died from . yellow fever,
which is horribly fatal under the care
that can be given the sick in tho field.
While the mud is not eo bod In the
towns as lu the country tho filth which
decays under the severe, warm rkliis
and the hot sun breeds disease that nei
ther American nor Spanish soldiers can
withstand. The soldiers are better off
in the country than In the towns and
villages. But from September to June
the climate is Ideal and residence In
Cuba iu those mouths is a constant do-
light.
Raisin-grape growers In San Joa
quin valley, California, have formed an
organization and pooled their crops.
A Guardsman's Trouble.
From (he Detroit (Mich.) Journal.
The promptness with which the National
Guard of the different states responded to
President McKinley’s call for troops at the
beginning of the war with Spain made the
whole country proud of its oitisen soldiers.
In Detroit there are few guardsmen more
popular and efficient
than Max R. Davies,
first sergeant of Co. B.
Ho has been a resi
dent of Detroit for the
past six years, and his
home is at 416 Third
Avenue, For four years
he was connected with
the well known whole
sale drug house of Far-
rand, Williams A Clark,
In the capacity of book
keeper.
"I have charged up
many thousand orders
for Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills for Pale People,”
said Mr. Davies, “but ~
never knew their worthFtrxf Sergeant.
until I used them for the cure of chronic
dyspepsia. For two years I suffered and
doctored for that aggravating trouble but
oould only be helped temporarily.
“I think dyspepsia is one of the most
stubborn of ailments, and there la scarcely
a clerk or office man but what is more or
leas a victim. Some days I could eat any
thing, while at other times I would bestarr-
ing. Those distressed pains wonld force
me to quit work.
“I tried the hot-water treatment thor
oughly, but it did not affect my case. I
have tried nany advertised remedies but
they would help only for a time. A friend
of mine recommended Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills for Pale People, but I did not think
much of them.
“I finally was induced to try tho pills and
commenced using them. After taking a
few doses I found much relief. I do not
temember how many boxes of tbs pills I
ssed, bat I used them until the old trouble
Mopped. I know they will cure dyspepsia
»f the worst form and I am pleased to re-
tommend them.”
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are sold by all
lealers, or will besent post paid on receipt
if price, 50 cents a box or six boxes tor
12.50, by addressing Dr. Williams' Medicine
Company, Schenectady, N. Y.
At sea level an object 100 feet high Is visi
ble a little over thirteen miles. If 500 feet
It Is visible nearly thirty miles.
Th« Coltiinhu* of the Skies.
Lacaill© lias been justly called the
true Columbus of the southern skies.
Born near Rheims in 1713, and left
destitute at an early age, be was ed
cated at the expense of the Duke
Bourbon ; having acquired proficien
in theology, like Laplace, he aba
doned that profession for the study of
science, and by the favor of Cassini
became one of the surveyors of thi
coast from Nantes to Bayoune, and it$
1730 took part in the remeasuremenl
of the French arc of the meridian.’,
The perfection with which this work
was done secured him admission to the
academy of sciences, and a professor
s' !p at the college Mazarin, where he
worked energetically in a small observ
atory fitted up for determining the
places of the fixed stars. While oc
cupied with this work he became im
pressed with the need of good obser
vations of the stars of the southern
hemisphere. Accordingly he proposed
an expedition to the Cape of Good
Hope, which was officially sanctioned
and carried out with marvelous rapid
ity and success. Landing in April,
1751, at the cape, which was then a
mere signal station for Indian vessels,
he secured a location in the wild coun
try near the great Table mountain.and
in fourteen months had observed the
positions of nearly ten thousand stars
with a degree of precision never be
fore attempted in that region of the
heavens. The great catalogue which
he formed from these observations
was published in ’ 763, and reprinted
in 1847 by the British Association for
the Advancement of Hcience, and until
within the last twenty years was the
chief source of our knowledge of
the sonthern hemisphere.—Atlantic
Monthly.
Memorial to Caedmon.
Caedmon, “the morning voice of
England," the monk who first sang ofL
the creation of the world’s growth, is
to have a memorial in the form of a
Gothic cross erected on the old abbey
heights on the chalk cliffs of Whitby.
The inscription will be lines from his
poem in Runic letters with a transla
tion in modern English.
mty Is Bleed Deep.
Clean blood means a clean skin. No
beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar
tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by
stirring upaJhe lazy liver and driving all im
purities from the body. Begin to-day to
banish pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads,
and that sickly bilious complexion by taking
Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents. All drug
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c.
The odor of onions may be removed by
eating a sprig of parsley.
Ho-To-Bae for fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
men strong, blood pure. b0c,|L Ail druggist*
A strong solution of borax, applied twice a
day will cure ringworms.
Blood Poison.
First, Second or Third Stages. Cured to stay
cured—no relapse—by using B. B. B. >11 drug-
gists, l arge bottle 51.«i. Cures Old Running
bores, M tv-oiis Patches. Copper Colored Spots.
PlmpUv Jlcersand Painful Swellings. Anold
well-trl* ,1 remedy, bend for book. Blood
Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga.
A lea.ting physician savs that pepper is
^deadly pomon to the system.
Bdaente Tour Bowels With Casearots.
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever.
% 3#s- If C. C. C. fall, druggists refund money.
TI& proportion of blind people in the
rorld la 800 to every 1,000.000, or one in
1,260.
YVhile Immigration from Ireland has
terially decreased in recent years—
> lee., desirable Latins having assum-
flret place in the numerical list-
re is shown in a late report of Con-
Daniel Swiney, at Queenstown, a
r.arl able and gratifying fact in con-
tion with the Irish seeking better-
at of their condition on this side
the Atlantic. In 1897, only 33,000
oe from the Emerald Isle to the
States, and about half of these
returning immigrants who had
Be home as visitors. The reduced
• s from the other side means that
iconditions of life for the masses in
sad have greatly improved, while
’ great percentage of returnirg vis-
_ indicates the favorable results at-
’ in* intelligent industry and thrill
la tonni- y.
-Darting, I wanted to take yon to
I theater to-night, but I felt that I
: :y’t afford It. She-Never mind.
We can go to-morrow night—
I CUT-PRICE CARPET SALE!
XV: (JffiS.' 1 ' djffife Owing to an
overproduction
OovcntiidrarcattEfe
r reductions for !—c
n short time
only- Q
, Our Carpet Catalogue ami Special
Bs ^Ppleincnt, both in baml-pamted HE;
colors, and all matter pertaining to
gjs rels extraordinary sale, will be mailed
wT- any on* free. Tbia Is an opportunity
not to ho negleotsd. Dur
ing thu sale, wo sew Car*
pet* free, furnish wadded
W lining free and pay freight
® TL?!! order* of $9 k over.
«d-M»w lAO-pnge Cata-
^ logue of Furniture atui
everything necessary for
houseturnishing is now
^ ready to bo mailed—it’s
S’™ _
ft S*7.45
fia fiaresroadtMo-yourtnes*-
gl uroAll-Wool Chcvlotbult,
expresaage prepaid to
i your *tatlon. Catalogue
and samples free. Ad-
i drees (exactly as below).
S . i. BS IK'lUWf.
JULIUS HINES & SON,
“fcOept 310 BALTIMORE, MD
UkMkMkMOUkMki
The Spanish Pretender's Opportunity.
It is an interesting bit of history
that Don Carlos, the Spanish pretend
er, might have been King of Spain If
he had been willing to abate his claim
to rule as an absolute monarch. The
present Prime Minister, Sagasta, went
to him in 1868 and offered him the
crown on the condition that he would
sign a constitution and be a limited
monarch. He was then but nineteen
years of ago, but he replied like a true
Bourbon: “I will sign nothing. When
I oome to my throne I will rule my
land as I and tho ministers I choose
see fit.” He still holds tho some rigid
notions of what true kingship Is. For
that reason he is likely to die un
crowned—Baltimore Sun.
To Cure a Cold in One Day.
Take Laxative Uromo quinine Tablet*. AU
Druggist*refund money If it fallutocure. Z5c.
Italy produces annually 70,000,000 gallons
of olive oil. the market value of which is
about 8120,000,000.
‘‘‘w 011 Lp , a l f ” Twbacro
“ "«<i made Cigarette
)1wSld. R Try It 1 *^ fra *rent: Beite
of oil of cloves on a piece of cot-
■* to the tooth will cure tooth-
Toledn. Ohio, says: “Hall’s Ca-
cured my wife of catarrh fifteen
,d she has bad no return of it. It’s
Sold by Druggists, 75.
measurements prove that the
even curvature of the earth is 6.99
inch) > the statute mile,
nauently cured. Ho fits or nervous-
i Iter first day's use of Dr. Kline’s Great
terveReetorer, 92 trial bottle and treatise free
>». K. H. Kuno. Ltd., U1 irch St.. Fblla, Fa.
CRKKXVILLK, S. C.
ALCOHOLIC A VACHlIonandal
MORFiilNB Private, Bcelfwl,
TOBACCO Homelike.
IISI NO if nr ,t yourself an habltuW
have you not a friend who needs the treat- 1
mem? This treatment Is poritlvely a Specif
ic. I he Diseased Nervous System Is restor
ed. The will power U re-estubtlsbed. Pri
vate accommodations for ladles Don’t let
false pride keep you away. Write or caU
The Keeley Institute, Greenville, S. O.
The only Keeley Institute In South Carolina-
The highest price ever .
6,000 golden crowns, pale
the citizens of Vooloe ter .
city—a^oem of six lines.
I for a poem wa
azaro by
rooSIMr
THE EXCELLENCE OF SYHUP OF FIGS
is due not only to the originality and
simplicity of the combination, but also
to the care and skill with which it is
manufactured by scientific processes
known to the California Fig 8 v it up
Co. only, and we wish to impress upon
all the importance of purchasing the
true and original remedy. As the
genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured
by the California Fig Syrup Co.
only, a knowledge of that fact will
assist one in avoiding the worthless
imitations manufactured by other par
ties. The high standing of the Cali
fornia Fig Syrup Co. with the medi
cal profession, and the satisfaction
which the genuine Syrup of Figs has
gn en to millions of families, makes
the name of the Company a guaranty
of the excellence of its remedy. It is
far in advance of all other laxatives,
as it acts on the kidneys, liver and
I towels without irritating or weaken
ing them, and it does not gripe nor
nauseate. In order to get its beneficial
effects, please remember the name of
the Company —
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
F* AN CISCO, Cl.
LOUISVILLE, K,. NKW YORK. N. Y.
j/n . Bevel-Gear
Chain less
Bicycles
MAKE HILL CLIMBING EASY.
Columbia .
Stt 1 ”. *11 a&SISS.
Vedettoa, $40*38 ©7T“
POPE MFC. CO.,
Hertford,
000+0+00000404000000040004
0
YOUR
ACCOMPLISHED
DAUGHTER
DKSIRI
AM
Money anC
1 time is lost <
music unle
sho is provid
\\ ith an instrument to keep up bar pri
tlce. I represent the builders of standard
makes of Pianos and Organs and am in a
position to save you money and supply the
most reliable instruments the market af
fords. Write me at once for prices, terms
and catalogues, stating whsther you pre-
Now Orgsns from |BJ8
upward. New llanos from $175 upwa:
Ad- si s ss I * oiuuiuiw, w.
dyes* IY1. n, Malone, Pianos* Organs.
Golumbla, 9. C.
MURRAY’S
MOUTH WASH.
Use Itlurray’M Mouth Wash and your
breath will be pure.
Your gums will be healthy and bright;
Your teeth, tho gems you most value in lifs.
Will always be perfect and white.
fBU
• •• PRICE 25 CENTS. •••
Send Your Orders to
THE MURRAY DRUG COMPANY;
COLUMBIA, 8. C.
YOU KNOW THAT WK SELL
MACHINERY AND MILL SUPPLII
Then when yon need anything in this
*3^ fine get our prices before you order.
We Make n Specialty of Kqulpplng
Modern Ginneries with the Cele
brated Murray System, the
htmplest and ’’est.
Engines, Boiler*. Saw, Gris, nd Cane Mills,
Gins, Elevator*, Presses, Pumps, Kice Hull*
ers. Thresher*. Harvesting .Machinery, Wind
Mills, v*ood Working Machinery, Belting;
Pipe and Pipe Fitting. Packing, Etc.
LOW PRICES. FAIR DEALING. RELIABLE GOODS.
W. H. 6IBBES & GO,
8. 0. Agency Liddell pm Hllfcl A 9 P*
Co.. Charlotte, N. C. OULUMWA, Oi Us
k
'H, Hi
IT
Xi
SAW MILLS
Corning.
He
If you need a saw ml’'
me before buying eh, of Timmons-
SSXtlSSS"^ »“■> !>«
ae Branson.
CORN Mr*
evathan and child,
1 Fladger, left this
Very highest gr'tdesboro. After 8
woQo-¥oRKi t 4 at .r lut ’ the5
Planers, Mot
Band f
ENGINES AND BOILERS,
^ Talbott and Llddsll.
V. C. QADHAM,
No. 1826 Mnln 8L, polambia, S. 0.
THE BAILEY-LEBBY CO. £
*********
AMES Engines and Boilers, •v
AULTMAN & TAYLOR Threshenk v ■
“MONIlOR" Dustlcss Grain Sspsi^tors,
Gins, Presses Corn and Cano mJK,*.
ENGLEBURQ Rice Holler and Polisher,
DE LOACH Saw Mills
Leather & Rubber Belting, Lacing,
Packings, Pipe, Iron Fittings In
jectors Pulleys, Shafting, Hani
Pumps and General Supplies.
CHARLESTON, • - S. C.
Try our B.L Co. Antl-Frlction Babbitt Metal
GRDVE5
TASTELESS
CHILL
TDNIC
18 JUST A8 GOOD FOR ADULTS.
WARRANTED. PRICE 60 ots.
Galatia, Ills, Nov. M, UN.
Paris Medicine Co., St. Loots Mo.
Gentlemen.—Ws sold isst Toar. eSO bottles of
GROVE’S TA9TKLKSS CHILL TONIC aad have
bousbt three rro** already this year. In all oar e»
pert.nce of II years in the drug bmtoOM. have
never told an art lei* that gave roc
never iold an
faction as your Tonic.
ter
Your* mdy.
universal •aiia>
CAU A CO.
um \ Thompson*! Eyi Watir
I X ordering food* or msktns easulriro of a A*
vrrtlver* it will he to your a J van taco to ■*■•
Hon thl* paper. Oa. 9T
I Yew and Quirk Method for niakfnc your owa
l mattrra*. try 1L Bax SOO. Franklin Oror*. in.
v .