The Florence daily times. [volume] (Florence, S.C.) 1894-1925, August 08, 1989, Image 3

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Schley under Farragut. Commodore Schley is described as five feet nine inches in height, with 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 to manner, walk ing up and down and nil around the person to whom he is talking; is mod est in dress and democratic in all things. In the Civil War Schley had command cf a gunboat under Admiral Fr/ragut, and they tell this story to illustrate how he fights: Farragut erranioned ]iim one morn ing. and, pointing to a Confederate fort said: “Do you see that place, Schley? Uc 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.—Syracuso Standard. Careful measurements prove tnat tee average curvature of the earth Is 6.99 inches to the statute mile. — " ■ck^: . Bob’! Tefcaeeo Spit and Smoke Toor l ife Away. To Quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag- netlc. full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To* Bac. the wonder-worker, that makes weak men wrong. AH druggists, 60o or *1. Cureguaran* toed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Kemedy Oa, Chicago or Now York, A little spirits of camphor put in the water will prevent the face from looking greaey in hot weather- s 0 . 27. I Have No Stomach Bald 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 s£ com pletely cured all distress and disagreeable dyspeptio symptoms that he lived, ate and slept in comfort. You may be pat into this delightful condition if you will take Hood’s Sarsaparilla America’s Greatest Medicine. —DYSPEPSIA “ For elx years I was a victim of dys pepsia in its worst form. X could eat nothing but milk toast, and at times my stomach would not retain and digest even that Last March I began taMng CASCARETS and since then I have steadily improved, until I am os well as I ever was in my life.” David H. Mcrpht, Newark. O. CANDY CATHARTIC v xy. mpr n/Ar* i iw trade mark rsowtirso Pleasant. Palatable. Potent, Taste Good. Do good. Sever fllcton. Weaten, or Gripe. 10c, 25c. SUo. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Btrrlliif taapioT, t'bleagn, Mo.trrmJ, Ntw York. Sll Tfl-OAP Kold and aunranteed by all drug- Is.'* IU gists to CalKE Tobacco Xlabit GIH REPAIRS m&WfASM saws. RIBS, BRISTLE TWINE, BABBIT, &c., FOR AXY MAKE OF GIN. ENGINES, BOILERS AND PRESSES And Repairs for same. Shafting. Pulleys, Beltyig, Injectors, Pipes, Valves and Fittings. AUGUSTA. GA. PAYS THE FiRAYT HliST SCALES- LEAST MONEY JONES OF aiNGHAMTON N. Y. EDUCATIONAL. Augusta, G«. Aetna! bwinsst. No text .. •Mb. Short time. Cheap board. Sand for catalrwus. C HARLOTTE COMMERCIAL m. OLLEGE, CiMLOTTl, fl. G. No Vacations—Positions Guaranteed—Catalogue Free Send 25 cents In stamps forgtockct calculator. TRINITY I Offers full courses Id E] lent COLLEGE**** English Language and Lit odern Languages, history' Philosophy, lllble. Law ami pglDh Language and Lit erature. Ancient and Mo Sociology, Mathematics. P , . . Commerce. Women admitted toall courses of study. The largest endowed Institution of learning In the State. Board from gfi.SO to SIG.OO per month Tuition glUt.OO a ledr. „ , Next session opens September 7. For Catalogus address JOHN C. KILGO. Durham. N. C. DAVIDSON ctuK , N. 0. SIXTr SECOND 7ENR BEGINS SBFT. 8,1898. Eleven Professors and Instructors. Three Courses for Degrees. Ample Cabinets and Laboratories. Location Healthful and Beautiful. Gymnasium Complete. Terms Reasonable. SEND FOK A CATALOG! E. I. B. SHEARER. - • PRESIDENT. RULES FOR WAGING WAR INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE GOVERN MENT OF OUR ARMIES. The Same Itegnlatlons That Were Adopt ed by France and Prussia in the War Be tween Those Countries-Notice uf Bom bardment Not Neeeaaary—Martial Law. General orders No. 100, of April 24, 1863, comprising instructions for the government of armies of the United States in the field, have been reissued and are being sent to the various com manders for their guidance during the conflict with Spain. These instruc tions were adopted by France and Prussia in the war between those coun tries, and upon them a general Euro pean conference afterward based an agreement on this subject. The instructions define martial law as military authority exercised in ac cordance with the laws and usages of war. A place, district or country oc cupied by an enemy stands in conse quence of the occupation under the martial law of the invading or occupy ing army. It extends to property and to persons, whether subjects of the enemy or aliens. Whenever feasible martial law is carried out in cases of individual of fenders by military courts, hut sen tence of death must be executed only with the approval of the chief execu tive, providing the urgency of the case does not require a speedier execution, and then only w ith the approval of the chief commander. Martial law should be less stringent in places fully occu pied and fairly conquered. Military necessity admits of all direct destruction of life or limb of “armed” enemies, and of other per sons whose destruction is incidentally “unavoidable,” in armed contests. Military necessity does not admit of the infliction of suffering for the sake of suffering or for revenge, nor of maiming or wounding except in fight, nor of torture to extort confes sions. It admits of deception, but disclaims acts of perfidy. It is lawful to starve the hostile be- ligerents, armed or unarmed, as it leads to the speedier subjection of the enemy. Wheu the commander of a besieged place expels the non-cora- batauts in order to lesson the number of those who consume his stock of provisions it is lawful, though an ex treme measure, to drive them back so as to hasten on the surrender. Commanders, whenever admissible, inform the enemy of their intention to bombard a place, but it is no in fraction of the common law of war to omit thus to inform them. Surprise may be a necessity. Retaliation will never be resorte4 to as a measure of mere revenge, imiT only as a means of protective retribu tion ; and, moreover, cautiously Mad unavoidably—that is to say, retalia tion shall only be resorted tp after, careful inquiry into the real occur rence and the character of the misdeeds that may demand retribution. The more vigorously war is pur sued the better it is for humanity. Sharp wars are brief. A victorious Army ’ appropriates all public money, seizes all public mova ble property until further directed by its government and sequesters for its own benefit or that of its government all the revenues of real property be longing to the hostile government or nation. The title to such real prop erty remains in abeyance during mili tary occupation and until the conquest is made complete. The United States acknowledge and protect, iu hostile countries occupied by them, religion and morality, strictly private property, the persons of the inhabitants—especially those of women —and the sacredness of domestic re lations. ^ Deserters from the American army snfl'er death if they fall into the hands ef the United States. It is against the usage of modern war to resolve in hatred and revenge to give no quarter. Outposts, sentinels or pickets are not to be fired upon except to drive them in or when a positive order, special or general, bus been issued to that effect. Whoever intentionally inflicts addi tional wounds on an enemy already wholly disabled, or kills him or ord ers that this shall be done, shall suf fer death if convicted. Animal “Famine Fund*,'’ If we examine the stores made by most of the vegetable-eating animals that lay by a “famine fund,” we shall find a rather curious similarity in the food comyionly usod by them. They nearly all lire on vegetable substances in a coucentrated form—natural food lozenges, which are very easily stored away. There is a great difference, for example, between the bulk of nutri ment eaten iu the form of grass by a rabbit and the same amount of sub stance in the “special preparation” in the kernel of a nut, or the stone of a peach, or the bulb of a crqcus, off which a squirrel makes a meal. Nearly all the storing animals eat “concen trated food,” whether it be beans or grain, hoarded by the hamster, or nuts and hard fruits by the squirrel, nuthatch uud possibly some of the jays. But there is one vegetable-eat ing animal whose food is neither con centrated nor easy to move. On the contrary, it is obtained with great labor iu the first instance, and stored with no less toil after it is procured. The beaver lives during the winter on the bark of trees. As it is not safe, and is often impossible, for the ani mal to leave the water when the ice has formed, it stores these branches under water, catting them into lengths, dragging them below the surface, and fixing them down to the bottom with stones and mud. This is more diffi cult work than gathering hay.—Lon don Spectator. THE BUMBLE-feu, Ho Don Not Foot tho and I* Kvon in tho Arctic 15' ~lon». In the St. , Nicholas there is an article on “TheBumble Bee,” written by Barney Hoskin Statulish. Mr. S'.andish says: This chnnky, hairy, npisy fellow is king of the oold. He stays with us summer and winter, apd is said to prefer the Arctic region tithe tropics. I do not doubt this, for he will sleep out of doors any cold tight of the spring or fall without asking for an extra blanket. Indeed, he is home less for nine or ten months of the year, lodging wherever night over takes him, on a blossom, a leaf, and even upon the ground. If he has any choice in the matter I think he pre fers the thistle, where the spines are thickest. Perhaps he is aware that these stingers will guard him from the skuuk and the suake while his own are in a body stiffened with cold aud drowsy with sleep. There are three kinds of bumble bees reared in a nest, queens, drones, and workers. The queens alone sur vive the winter. They apparently spend the first few weeks of spring waiting for red-clover to bloom, the first blossom of which is the signal for nest building. Before this they visit the willows, hnm a soft bass about the lilacs, thrust their long tongues into the honeysuckles and grow fat at the exhaustless honey-jars of the waterleaf, and then the play-day ends and labor begins. Nest building with them does not mean nest construction. One bee alone could not well do that, besides, she is in a big, bustling hurry now ; she has actually seen a clover blossom. Out and in among the dead matted grasses of last year’s growth she goes, hunting perhaps for the aban doned nest of a field-mouse. It will be remembered that these little ani mals build upon the surface of the ground soft nests of grasses in which they winter. From these they have runways leading in different direc tions. The bee goes down into the dead grass, scrambling on as best she may, until she finds one of these run ways, following it up to the nest. If it is occupied she goes elsewhere, if not, the mouse nest straightway be comes a bee’s nest and the little crea ture begins her preparationsforhouse keeping. She uow collects a mass of pollen in which to deposit an egg. As the egg hatches and the baby-bee grows she keeps this mass moistened with honey and he helps himself, eating out a cavity larger than a white bean. In this he spins a complete icocoon. When this is done he takev a long nap, in which he changes frofn a grub into,. 4^ bumble-bee with lagst Meantime the parent!rembves the thiu coating of pollanAy^ tin upper ently spreads’ a yellow seofljtion, or varnish, upon it, as if to Keep out moisture. She is also now fmsy col lecting more pollen aud layijug eggs in it, aud constructing a rude cell or two in which to place honey, as if for a raiuy day. The first bees that hatch are worker bees, and at this time are downy, pale and baby-like'in appear ance aud behavior. In later summer queens and drones are hatched. “Who Struck Oilly Patterson?" About forty years ago William Pat terson entered a medical college In this country. At that time hazing In col leges was accepted as Inevitable, and often went beyond the borders of good sense or humanity. At this Institution the favorite meth od was to capture a new student, bind him hand and foot and carry him be fore a mock court, where be v. ns tried on some charge. The time came when William Fatter- son was obliged to submit to the ordeal. Ha was accordingly blindfolded and led to the block and bis neck placed iu proper position. The executioner swung his nx and burled It deeply lu the wood, of course taking care that it did not go near Pat* tersou's head. But at the same moment the nx met the block another student struck across the victim's neck with a cord which had been wet with ice water. The students laughed and shouted as the Joke ended, but Paterson did not moveL He was dead. The doctors said that he had died from shock, but the affair caused an immense amount of excitement. All the students concerned were arrested and the question was everywhere ask ed, “Who struck Billy Patterson?’* It Is announced that a St Louis man named Reedy Is to become the succes sor of Mr. llrann ns editor of the Waco Iconoclast If Mr. Reedy Is wise he will restrict his double-leaded jierform- ances to the editorial columns. ‘What Intensely red hair that young man has!” exclaimed Maud; “I’m sur prised that you seem to like him so well.” “Oh,” replied Mamie, “I don't like him very well. I never Invite him to anything put pink teas.”—Washing ton Star. ^ A Guardsman’* Trouble. From the Detroit (Mich.) Journal. The promptness with which the Natfonaj Guard of the different states responded to President McKinley’s call for troops at the beginning of the war with ftpain made the whole country proud of Its citizen soldiers. In Detroit there are few guardsmen more popular and efficient than Max R. Davies, first sergeant of Co. B. Be has been a resi dent of Detroit for the post six years, and his home is at 416 Third Avenue. For four years he was connected with tho well known whole sale drug house of Var- rand, Williams A Clark, In the capacity of book keeper. "1 have charged up many thousand orders for Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People,” said Mr. Davies, “but - never knew their ^orthT^ ^ir»t Sergeant. tmtll I used them tbr the cure of ohronic dyspepsia. For two years I suffered and doetored for that aggravating troubls but NMMlMkNkNkm g CUT-PRICE CARPET SAlE.g Owing to an ^ overproduction 1=? of Carpels, wo bave made great redactions for a abort time !||\ oaly. Our Carpet Catalogue and .Special “ Supplement, both in hand-paime.! ?P} or *’ l ' u< l matter pcrtniniriK to thta extraordinary sale, win beraailAl |BSs any one free. This is an opportunity not to tie neglected. Dur- ~ lag this sale, wo sew Car- FEa Fet* free, furnish wadded lining free and pnv freight '•u orders of fa A over. *d*«ew ino-paae i*ta loguc of Furniture ami everything necessary for Mg housefurnishlng is now •T* ready to be malled-it's gg| free. S7.45 buys a made-to-your meas ure All-Wool Cheviot Milt, expressage prepaid to your station. Catalogue and samples free. Ad dries (exactly as below). JULIUS HINES & SON, Oepi. sio BALTIMORE, MD fe The Spanish Pretender's Opportunity. It te an Interesting bit of history that Don Curios, the Spanish pretend er, might have been King of Spain If he had been willing to abate his claim to rule aa an absolute monarch. The present Prime Minister, Sagasta, went to him in 186b 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 age, bm he replied like a true Bourbon: “I W'ill sign nothing. When I come to my throne I will rule my land aa I and the ministers I choose see fit.” He still holds the same rigid notions of what true kingship Is. For that reason he is likely to die un crowned.—Baltimore Sun. ♦©♦oeoeoeoeoi ! i mi«. GllUKWim.f:, s. c. NICOtiOLIC A Vnrnlloit and aCnre, MORFrlNB Private, Healtul, TOBACCO Homelike, U6IN6 If not yonradf nn habitue, nave you not a frleud who need* tho trout nient? This treatment Is poalltvelv a Specif ic. I he Diseased Nervous System t\restor- ed. Tho will power Is re-established. Pits vale accommiHlattons for ladles Pont let false prlda keep you away. Writ* or call Tho Keeley Institute, Greenville, 8.C, The only Keeley Institute In South Carolina- ©♦©♦©♦©♦©♦©♦©♦©♦©♦©♦©♦©♦o* YOUR ACCOMPLISHED DAUGHTER loooooo< DICNIHKN AND MlvHlTS A PIANO or AM OHOAIV. Money and time Is lost inualo uni she Is provided with an instrument to keep up her prac tice. 1 represent the builder* of etandara makes of Pianos and Organs and am In a ixisition to save you money and supply the most reliable instruments the market M~ ford*. Write me at once for prioea, t and catalogues, stating whether you . fer 1’tano or Organ. New Organs from upward. New Plano* from $175 upwi Ad- ss * ss i Columbia,». vs dress IVh A, mfllORfl, Pianos dk Organs. MURRAY'S AROMATIC MOUTH WASH.****' Use fflurray’a Vluutli Wash and yo breath will lie pure. Your gums will be healthy and bright; Your teeth, tho gems you moat value In 11 Will always be perfeut and white. To Cure n Cold in One Day. Taky Laxative Uromo quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money If It falls tocaro, 25c. Italy produces annually 70,000,000 gallons of olive oil, tho market value of which Is about #120,000,000 Lrem*CV#“Pick Leaf” NmolUas Tobacco Is the best for Hpe and hand-mode Cigarette g^o n r1d. T^lt Pt% n,ell ° W ' tragT * at A drop of oil of cloves on s piece of cot- ton applied to the tooth ache. will cure tooth- E. A. Rood, Toledo, Ohio, says: “Hall's Ca tarrh Cure cured my wife of catarrh fifteen years ago and she has had no return of it It’s a sure care.’’ Bold by Druggist*, 7^. Careful measurements prove that the average curvature of the earth Is A 99 Inches Id the atatuto mile, n* neea a permanently cured. No fits or narvout- atter first day’s use of Dr. Kline's Great • •• PRICE 25 CENTS. ••• *■ • ".-y - Kend Your Orders to THE MURRAY DRUG COMPANY, COLUMBIA, 8. C. YOU KNOW THAT WE ffELL MACHINERY AND MILL SUPPLIES. Then when you need'anything In this *3* Una get our prices before you order. We Make a Specialty of Kqnlpplng Modevu Ginneries with tit# Cele brated Murray System, the Simplest and ’’est. Engines, Boilers Saw. Oris, .ml Cane Mills, Gins. Elevators, I'retaes, Pumps, Rice Hull* ers. Threshers, Harvesting .Machinery, Wind Mills, immI Working Machinery, Belting, Pipe and Pipe Fitting, Pocking, Etc. LOW PRICES. FAIR DEALING. RELIABLE GOODS. W. H. GIBBES & CO, 8.0. Agency Liddell pm llliniA Q P Co., Charlotte, N. C. uULUIn0IA| Wi Ui SAW MILLS. If you need a saw mill, any slas. wrl* me before buying elsewhere. I b the most complete line of mills c* dealer or manufacturer in the Bo CORN MILLS. Very highest grade Stonea. at ly low prices. •w. livuiM* uui um. uret uay B use oi UT. ivuno S ureat , 7* — — » —, helped temporarily. ’ •—idlst frr~ )y low prices, rdyipepsfa Is one of the most iTgonra,EW,MLlMi at, Uffinfl |i/niiM||in UipUl of ailments, and there Is scarcely The highest urlce ever oald for a ooem wa "•UUll TTUlllVlllw nmlllil QUAINT AND CURIOUS* Iron horseshoes have been found dating back to the year 481. The capital letter “Q” will be found but twice iu the Old Testament, and three times in the New. At the Strozzi palace, in Borne, there is a book made of marble, the leaves being of marvelous thinness. Munster, in Westphalia, has apublic school which has just celebrated the 1100th anniversary of its foundation. There is a clock in Brussels which has never been wound up by human bauds. It is kept going by the wind. The Chinese dress in white at fun erals and in black at weddings, and old women always serve us brides maids. Among the Anglo-Saxons in* the seventh century men wore gloves, while women covered their hands with their sleeves. The codfish over the speaker’s desk in the Massachusetts IJouse of Repre sentatives was first placed iu position Jan. 11, 1708. Over the 2,000,000 bottles, of the value of $35,000, are recovered each year from the dust yards in London and returned to their owners. Vienna has a bicycling female mon key at the Zoological gardens in the Prater. It is a trick rider, and has learned everything by watching men. The elephant does not smell with his trunk. His olfactory nerves are contained in a single nostril, which is in the roof of the mouth, near the front. Porous glass is one of the latest novelties. The holes are so small that neither dust nor draught follow its use, and yet the ventilation is said to be excellent. “Fiasco” originally meant a bottle or a flask. When the Italian glass- blowers detected flaws in the vases they were blowing, they made an or dinary bottle of the failure, and hence the name. A shoemaker says we wear away quite two inches of shoe leath«r in a year. A pair of boota that would “last a lifetime” would consequently have to be provided with sole# from eight to nine feet thick. Direr**. “See those two fellows over at the third table? I’ll bet you might search the city and not find two men of more opposite vocations t “One is a maker of small arms and the other makes fillers for bicycle stockings. ”—Cincinnati Enquirer. stubborn , a clerk or office man but what is more or lees a victim. Some dayj^i', coirid eat any thing, while at other times I tfpalu be starv ing. Those distressed pains would force me to quit work. “I tried the hot-water treatment thor oughly, but It did not affect my case, I have tried many 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 remember how many boxes of the pills I used, but I used them until the old trouble Hopped. I know they will cure dyspepsia >f the worst form and I am pleased to re- somraeud tbom." Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are sold by all lealers, or will be sent post pal<l on receipt Jf price, 50 cents a box or six boxes tor 12 50, by addressing Dr. Williams’ Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y. The highest price ever paid for a poem wa 6,000 golden crowns, paid to Haunazaro by for r the citizens of Venice for bis eulogy on their | city—a poem of six lines. At sen level an object 100 feet high is visi ble a little over thirteen miles. If 500 feet It is visible nearly thirty miles. Beauty Is Blood Deep. Clean blood means a clean skin. No beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the l>ody. 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 oating a sprig of parsley. Ho-To-Bac for Fifty Cento. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, luoou pure- 50c, |L All druggiato. A stiong eolation of borax, applied twice a day will cure ringworms. Blood Poison. First, Second or Third Stages. Cured to stay curoj n , relapse—by using B. F. B. AH drug gists. I irge bottle $1.00. < tares Old Running Sores, V ic.mg Patches. Copper Colored Spots, Ptmplet lloersand PalnfulSwellings. Anold well-trlt 1 remedy. Scud for book. Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, (>a. A len iing physician says that pepper is deadly i olson to the System. ■dur at* Your Bowels TVItti Case*rets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. Uo.SSc It C. C. C. fall, druggists refund money. The proportion of blind people in the world Is 903 to every 1,000,000, or one in 1,250. Hct Weather Cautions for Bathers. Never enter the water when over heated; rest a little first, and cool off, but not enough to feel cold. Bathers should enter the water when the body la at n glow, not when it is in active or vklent perspiration. Never enter the w^ter with a headache; never do eo with a full stomach. Nothing can be mo e dangerous to the system than to ooiuravene these rules, and many have lost their lives by neglecting them. No one should enter the water imrr -diately after dinner; none who wish to avoid, the swimmer’s bugbear, cramps, should enter It when suffering from acidity of the stomach. The best tim ’ for bathing Is either before break fast or between eleven and twelve In. the forenoon. All who saffer from del ate constitutions should avoid batWng in the early morning.—Wom an's Ho:ue Companion. ri..mado hat a mining town named Wall Street. THE EXCELLENCE OF SYBUP OF FIGS is dne not only to the originality and simplicity of the combi nation, but also to the care and skill with which it is manufactured by scientific processes known to the California Fio Svrup Co. only, and wc 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 Fro 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 Fro Syrup Co. with the medi cal profession, and the satisfaction which the genuine Syrup of Figs has given 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 bowels 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. •AN FKAX0(0041, Cal. LOUISVILLE. Kj. NKW YORK, K. y. Planers, Moulders, Edger«, Be Bond Saws, Laths, eta ENGINES AND BOILERS, Talbott and Liddell. Engleberg Rice Huller, In stock, quick delivery, low prices. V. C. BADHAM, No. 1820 Main 8t., Columbia, S. 0. THE BAILEY-LEBBY CO. -g AVES Engines and Boilers, AULTMAN & TAYLOR Threshers, ^tMONI I OR” Dustlese Grain Separators, Gins, Presses, Corn aud Cane Mills, ENOLEHURO Rice Huller and Polisher, DE LOACH Saw Mills, Leather & Rubber Belting, Lacing, Packings, IMpc, Iron FittiKs, In jectors, Pulleys, ShafWng; Hand Pumps and General Supplies. CHARLESTON, - - S. 0. Try our B.L Co. Anti-Friction’Babbitt Metal GROVES j K fat, Bevel-Gear Bicycles MAKE HILL CLIMBING EASY. Columbia . A1 *_ Chain Wheels, $75 #4OR tlartfords, . . 50 IflvvlLU. Vedette#, $40«35 POPE MFG. CO., ‘ Hartford, Com. te*? ^ 4 I Ti »M TASTELESS CHILL TONIC IS J.U8T AS GOOD FOR ADULTS. WARRANTED. PRICE OOcts. Galatia, Ills., Not. N, INS. Port* Itodlcto* Co., St Looia, Mo. GaoUtmea:—We aold loot year, $00 bottlae ot GHOVE’S TASTELESS CHILI. TONIC and havs bought three grow already thi* year. In all oer e» pertonce of 14 yeare, la (M drug baataao*. have •ever aold an article that gave men universal aotl* fnotkin aa your Tonic. CA« AGO. "mta.'ym. i TboitiptoiTs Efi Watw I \ ordering good* or making enquiries of a d- v rtloer* ll will be te year advantage te men* Hon tbli paper. Bo. »T I New aed Quick Method for making yovown I mattrea*. try 1L Bex SOB. Franklin Grove, UL .URE r< \ ' \