University of South Carolina Libraries
To Lamnli-r Dflimln CHrineot*. Many of the expensive aixl beautiful summer garments whlcli will uot stand ordinary washing itiuv. with ?-nre. be successfully laundered. I'm) Ivory 8->ap. If water will not cause ?,?>h?rs to run. Ivory Soup will not, and avoid e.tlrunely ho. weather, hot sun, and u too hot iron. Ks.I.ANOB It. l'jlckkr. Kjrj-pt hn exported .S'J1,000 worth of coi ton from tint season's crop, lia't 01 which went to Kngluud. Court Sustains l"oot- J-..Trmle-tj Hitl' aio, N. V.Inly nth. Justice LauithHn In Su;<re!ite t ouri U granted a perinanont Injunction with costs .rmlns. certain New York ( 1:y <1 alert. reutrainlng them from making or selling ? powder which h an Itnlt at ion tui I infr nifviu'iit <>u Foot-Ease," now so l. rg-ly advertised mid sold. The vwno of Foot-Kase" is Allen S. Olmsted, of J.e Hoy, X. Y., itnd t ho decision upholds his tradu-marh uni tuakes liable those attempting to prollt. by " Fo it-Easo" advertising by market Lug a 3i'milnr-np| caring preparation. The matt v. ho know* it a!l is general'v ivoumg tor Mime idie to try and convince uim liuit ho doesn't. Virginia negroes ar?- trying to raise JL'0,000, with which to pay for the services of John S. Wise and John (?. Carlisle in tlieir contest over the validity of the suftrakc sections of vlie new Virginia Constitution. A (ircal Southern Unity. The Atlanta (' institution grows in interest whli every Is.-:;.-. The Sunday edition Is timely su| i-rii, including the Miunv South, botli tuple e with matter of great Interest to every member of the household. The Weekly Constitution ha* stood (or yearn as the''(treat Southern Weekly." always up to the highest stundaid ?.f excellence. A postal to the Constitution (Jo., Atluntu, (In., will bring a sample copy of any edition. In Norway drunkenness is punished by imprisonment. As soon as a man is Incarcerated the delinquent lias a loaf and wine morning and evening. The bread is served in a wooden bowl full of wine, in which It has been snaking for an hour. The first day the drunkard swallows his allowance willingly enough. The second day it seems less pleasant. At the end of eight or ten days prisoners have been known to onsiain altogether from the food thus pitilessly presented. This course of treatment finished, the drunkard, except in rare Instances, is radically cur d. At least, so if is said. A I*rojerr??l* e Daily I'm per. The Columbia Slate continuea to improve. The Sunday etuela of e.-peciai lutotoal, ooutainiug much valuable matter for each rnombur of the family. The stale l* easily taking runk ua uuu of the ablest of Southern diiliea. Mrs. Laura L.Barnes, Washington, I). C., Ladies Auxiliary to Burnside Post, No. 4, G. A. R., recommends Lydia E. Pinkham's tv^wiauK vuiii|)UUIIU. ' " In diseases that ccrac to women only, as a rule, the doctor is railed in. sometimes sevcrul doctors, but still matters go from bad to worse; but 1 lia\o never known of a case of female weakness which was not helped when Lydia K. Vlukhum's Vegetable Compound was used faithfully. For young women who are subject to headaches, backache, irregular or painful periods, and nervous attacks due to the severe strain cm the system by some organic trouble, and for women of advanced years in the most trying time of life, it serves to correct every trouble and restore a healthy action of all organs of the body. " Lydln K.lMiikhiitn's Vegetable Compound is a household reliunco in my home, nnd I would not he without it. In nil my experience with thia medicine, which covers years, I havo found nothing to equal it and always recommend it."?Mr.s. I.ai ha L. Bahneh, 007 Second St.. N. E., Washington. I). C. ? $6000 forfait If original of above latter proving genuine/.its:, cannot be produced. Such testimony should he accented 1?V nil women tiu \ inv iuK oviticncc that li.vdia ! '. Pink ham's Coni]iound stands without a jM'^r as u remedy for all the dhtrcMlni; ill* of *vcn:ci!. Dizzu? Appetite poor?*/ Bowels constipated? Tongue coated? Head ache? It's your liver! Ayer's Pills arc liver pills, all Solifbr 3. C. Avar Co.. _!? _ 1 J?7t>?rk. Lowtlf, Mars. I w-?" ' i ?I Want your moustache or beard ! * beautiful brown or rich black? (J6e BUCKINGHAM'S DYE wm rr<^n?mxf'g."T> ?nr hm.i. ? r-n<wr>, s. n. O0*0^C*0*0K>t0*0f0?04040 j CAPUDINE cures j I v COLDS and | J Ft.VKRIStl CONDITIONS. Q Y 1?. Mlcrutd, nt Drugftto e*. Z 0*040?04CH<HCH04CHC, I Biidf # I ? x" ?<??nliln* olia Wrlta mot < ??? full r ?n* ?* ui" i<i>lni'<n -ml trio# ' for a cure. Dr. Ho?li Maaon.lloi 10, i-rjr Hrtilfta.Va., T? S W I! t S * HI* t? 11 |L* tf*l U." K| U Boat Cowah My rap. Taitoa Ooud. U#o M C2 ! < Haw. 9oM hy drufiltu- t*l ^jpH?K h-vM w gyp *********** ********** | BILL ARP. S S Some flftj* years ago there was a dogmatic old squire in the seventeenth district of this, Cass county, whose name was Jim McGinnis. He had plenty of what is called good horse sense, a determined will and abundance of prejudice. He won the J. I*. machine in that district for about twenty years, and his final judgment in a case was the law of the ucttlement. Nobody dared to appeal of carry the cane up far fear of offending him and losing the next case they had in his court. One time a fellow sued another fel. low for the hire of a negro. Judge I'arrott was on one side, and Colonel Alula Johnson on the other, and when the judge started to read his law from Green leaf on "Evidence," Colonel Johnson stopped him and made the point that Mr. Gremleuf was a very smart man and had writ a power of good law, but that he was a yankeo and lived In Boston and knew no more about hiiing negroes than a beaten knows about Sunday. The old squire asked for the book, and looked over the title page, saw that It was printed in Boston and so ho ruled it out of h's court, and Parrott lost his case. The squire said that Mr. Greenleal' lived a little too fur off to ho familiar with the business. I've seen a good many pieces of late about the negro and the great southern problem. The people up north begin to admit that they can't see through it. We are tired of all this nonsense about slavery. It was no blot. It was nature. There are heap of people now in the south who look upon slavery like it was Aehan's wedge of gold and perished under the condemnation of God and man. but I don't yant anybody vo teach my children any such slanders, for I know it waa In the main a humane in- titptlon. and if the nigger is any better off now than he used to be, I can't see. The whites are better off. a long ways, but the qigger ain't. I've great respect for the old time darkies. I know lots of 'cm I would light for. If 1 was to see a man imjjosing on my good old faithful friend. Tip. I would fight for him like i would fight for my children. I love these good old darkies. I am willing to live with "cm and die with 'em, and be buried with 'em in the same grave yard, and when Gabriel blows his horn I can rise from the dead with 'em without any fear that it will destroy the hilarity of the occasion, as General Tcombs said. 1 love these old darkles, not as my equals, but as 1 love my children. 1 love them because they love me and are dependent upon me. The relation between the white and black race is by nature one of protection on the one side and dependence upon the other, and when it ceases to be that I have no use f?r the nigger. it is always a pleasure to me to befriend 'em when they want my friendship and my help, but when they aspire to be my equal und put on Independent airs, I've got no further sympathy. I have been raised to look upon negroes as children, children in youth and children in manhood and old age. I didn't have any hand in making 'em that way. It is their human nature utul they can't help it. and 1 have a sovereign contempt for any effort their people are making to change t> eir relation to us, for it can t be done. The prtllfVTlt Inn nf thn < humbug, so far as to make him a good citizen. It has been tried already, and has proved a failure. Hia host education is one of contact, close contact with the white race. If we will let the negro alone and keep him out of polities he will get along very well and there will bo m problem to solve. There never would have been any problem if he hud been let alone, lie has no business with oflice or in the jury box or in the legislature, and ho never will have. This is a white man's government and the white man must govern it. The negro loves to depend upon the white man and the white man loves the homage of the negro. It suits and tits both races and I hope it will stay ho. I hoard an old physician say that ho had never seen a great-grandchild that descended from mulatto parents in a mulatto succession. Tl.e crossing of races has never improved them. Not even will the Jew and the Gentile mix with harmony. John Randolph boasted of his Pocahontas blood, but I reckon it run out In John, for that was the last of it. History makes no record of two races living together in peace unless one was in u slate of de pendence upon the other. Our modern philanthropists are deceiving the negro when they flatter him with a capacity equal to the whites in iltncss to invent or to govern, or to rise to the heroic or the sublime. I reckon if one of our millionaires was to die and leave his money for the education of poor white children it would be a violation of some of the constitutional amendments. We want to help the neECO hut wo want hl?? V,l ? v-' '* ..... uitu UVIJJ UlIUM'il first. Ho has pot to work out his own advancement by industry and by saving what he makes before education will do him any good. Dr. Mayo, of Boston, was the superintendent of education In that state, and he said: "The negroes must be told that no people in any land was ever so marvelously led by Providence as they have been for 250 years. Indeed all the good there was in a slavery was for them. It was that severe school of regular work, and that drill in the primeval virtues which every race must get at the start and their slarery was a charity school., compared with the desolation and tyranuy by which the European nations came up to tnelr present civilized life. If the Southern freedmen now lie down in stolid indifference to their future they will doserve all that their most contemptuous critics say of them." This is sensible talk. There is no foul blot, in that, view of slavery and it la good talk to the negro. What the bad negro wants is less cnulngang and more whipping and the bad white man should be punished the same way.? Bill Arp In Atlanta Constitution. | DRAGGED DOWN BY A WARSHIP. Hew It Feels to Be Suited Under Water by a Foundered Steamer. In the Edinburgh Medt?l Journal JamPB A. Lawson gives an nteresting description of bis thrllltug experience when he was dragged unde. water by a sinking ship. Y^Tien ht was far down In the swirling >atora he strnck out for the surface, but only went further down. This exertion was a serious waste of brath. and . after what appeared to he .Vn or fifteen seconds the effort of hsplratlon i could no longer be restrnhed. and i pressure of the chest began t? deve'op. j The most striking thing h< reniern- J he red was the great pain in tie chest. which increased at every,efftrl to expiration and Inspiration. It Beamed ss if he were In a vise, wllch was gardually being screwed tip. until it felt the sternum and spinal column must break. The "gulping" process became more irennpnt tor !?? ?1 efforts and hope was thc? exxinguished. ? The pressure after those gulps seemed unbearable, but gradually the pain seemed to ease up. as the carbonic acid was accumulating in the blood. At the same time the e fforts at. inspiration, with their accompanying gulps of water, occurt^tT at longer and longer intervals. The writer's mental eondition was then Buc.a that ho ni)poared to lie in a pleasant dream, but still had enough will powor to think of friend? at home, ete. Before finally losing consciousness the chest pain had completely disappeared. and sensation was actually pleasant. When consciousness returned he found himself on the surface of the water (probably from the action of the life bplt), and tinally managed to reach shore. Since the introduction of the J?eriUlon system in France 2Q.U00 persons who have committed crimes and who were concealing their identity have, by means of the system, been Identified and brought to Justice, and um.jn{? these not one mistake i3 linowa tcj have ueen made. i FITS permanently cured.No fits or nervousness after first day's u?o of I)r. Kline's Great NervcIIestorer. 2trla\ t ttlc and treatisefree Dr. R. II. Hunk. Ltd. .1 Ar.-hHt,, PhiU.,Pa The fellow who is ?l?av? Hino- umaJ body else to nut in ? K?'o"d word lor hi'^ i.v seldom worth tlio trouble. , AIImi'i i hoi-kmh. c It the f nly cure tor Swollen. Pmnrtli '| Tired, Aching, Hot, Siren t ing Feet .Corns *1 lbtnlons. Ask for Allen's Foot-Ease n pnw?'? ? to t?> shaken into the show. Cures while vowalk. At all Druggists and Shoe Stores, 25< Pon't accept any sukditnte. Sample sen Frkk. Address,Allen Olmathd, Lettoy, N.V It's all right to he softhearted :.I 5?\iv arc not also soft-headed. J* _ Mrs. Wlaslow's Soothing Srrtip for children taetldng,soften the gums, reduces inflanrmation, allays pain,cures wind colic. 25c. a bo ttle A girl's mvn brother is never as nice as other girls' brothers. - k : riso'sCure for Consumptionan Infallible medicine for com;hi and Colds.?N'. \V. hixuKL, Ocean Grove, X.J., Feb. 17, l'JOJ. Genius doesn't always look wcil in evening clothes. 1 Hair Splits 1 urz^-cggxracmnr rr-^zaacxl .*?xirna_sMMr.**^ 2 " I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor g for thirty years. It ir. elegant for a a Iiair dressingand for keeping the ] 5 hair from splitting at the ends."? a a J. A. Gruen^nfcldcr, Grantfork, 111. I ! Hair-splitting splits J friendships. If the hairsplitting is done on your own head, it loses friends for you, for every hair of your head is a friend. Ayer's Hair Vigor in advance will prevent the splitting. If the splitting has begun, it will stop it. $1.00 a bottle. All drag(lMs. If your druggist osnnnt supply you, send us oho dollar and we will express you a bott!(?. Bo mire anil ijivo the name of your nearest express ofllro. Address, J. ('. A Yi:U CO., Ixiwell, Maes. ? The carnation industry has risen to considerable. Importance during the I tint, ten year:. A? ? .500.000 of young carnation plants are sold each year and florists produce an equal number which are not sold, the entire production of young carnation plants approximates 5.000,000 per annum. These plants are grown under glass during the winter time for cut flower purposes. producing an annual averag? of more than 100,000 blooms. It is- calculated by an engineer that 630,000.000 tons of coal are used annually throughout the vvorld. Of this amount 148,000000 an- burnt in the United States. Great Britain comes In second with an annual consumption of 140,0(0.000. ? -U. r'ur.Rur t? a eiwd time j&IDNr-v 1 BlaJJcr. arM Uri-j.-, irouM they conquer tire .mi: stub! Aching bach* aro rased, r- ? | Hip, hack, ai l loin pains | _ , ? . . ! overcome. BwrHiri,* of the | /S'. '/] limb .-.nrt dropsy si.,t- 1 i /."T vanish. Ml Thry correct nrinn with r,4j C r brtclc dust sediment, high TVy t. r colored, nni" In passing, e*?c?. so c dribbling, fl^siiieney, bed u K wetting. Doan - Kidtiev Till* . ^WwTOnWt VC remove calculi and gravel. Relieve heart palpitation, sleeplessness, headache, i p _ uoTTonin?i diwiness. y j ST.VTt West Wwethno Blrort, rnSrr.MOui!nOn'Ttiu wya:^ "I tbos ?pM?t^taoaek?l, * FOR TWENTY YEARS MAJOR SUFFEREB FROM CI BMGEaOUS KlfJNEY BiSEflSI Pc-ru-na Ccatmr; a Ka i?nal Sensation Of Ch-snic Ailments of the Ilidr .Major T. H. Marx, of the First Wiaeon-i v sin ('ava!r\ Kegimcut. writes from 142ft ;? Dunning street, t'hicago. 111., the following i letter: la "i'fir years I snfj'-reil with catarrh of the let iicy* i on retried In (h? [ v army. Mrilicltio aid not help ?m? 1 an jf tint II a comrade who had been helped hi/ i'oruna advised me to try it. I h tight Motnoa' once, and moon ' found blessed relief. 1 Kept taking ; it four months, and um note well j 1 I and strong and feeL better than 11( have dome / or I he past twenty years, thanks to I'crttna. >'?T. II. Mars ' At tlic appearance of (lie Hrst symptom ' of kidney trouble I'erutin should be taken. This remedy strikes at once the very mot 1 of the disease. It at once relieves the ra- j N larrhal kidneys of the stagnant blood, pre- * venting the escape of serum from the! I blood. J'eruna stimulates the kidneys to j t trot any slin-p. i ii.'lti'voiisuiiip- lf| on so Imdlha' ii' I walked a blink would coti^jli ft jo|||l'idl v ttiid sj?it ('( loot], luit. win n nil other inedi- t itn's failed. I nree SI .00 liotllsof )r. Kind's N. w Discovery wholly nrrd in** unci 1 gained ?s p >11 it*Is. ' [ ~" t's absolutely j^uarautei'd t*? i nrc ' f oiikIis, Dolds, i .a (iripjif. Proii. ? hit is and all Throat and Limn' B 'roubles. Price r.Oc and $1.1*0 'rial hottles free at all 1 )ru^ Slut * -. It is Raid that the tirst halo of >tt*>11 of the 11MK5 crop arrived at ; ! OUARANTEfcD CURE for all bow/el troul i blood, wiod on the stomach, bloated bowelr* * pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin ?' regularly you ore aick. Constipation kills n l starts chronic uilmenta and Ions years of lui i CA3CARET3 today, for you will never get I ? | right Take our advice, start with Cascnr money refunded. The genuine tablet starr booklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Co it 4 Natural Flavor it, ==Cottage= " Corned Beef } 1 - = p Keep it in the house (or rmei?cncics?1< ' yon want something good and want it quid f,|> ppetizin;.' lunch is leady in an instant. wl Libby, McNeill Sl Libby, ? la i i , ,i \v i INTELLIGENCE, FIDELI ? _ ... .......-..in.* yinu<i|>U"? w ill rncully ' Ik (fool.. ??i?vne?bi>r??. Virginia, a tlie South Write fo ratal J/%.' be Johnnon Before Boswell. It must not bo forgotten that t qt r.f?-tnro of Johnson that Boswoll gl*. in ! us is a picture of Johnson m his ? 1,1 j cllnlng yoars. his churaotor formi his work for the most part done. T te Johnson whom we ail know in t ta famous biography, the "Great Chni of literature, tlie founder of t famous club, the rovered phllosiph tti j whose grotesque antics moved h xv friends to alternate awe and lung ' v ter, the tender-hearted and roug sli j mannered man who bullied the stror| <*? and bowed humbly to the weak, wi A; the product of a long life amid a j environment unknown to Boswell o in cent by report, and of an heredl I which, had he known, ho could m ' 1 have appreciated.?T. M. Parrott, ' , Bookiovers Magazine. or ??-1- ;;; fo rreat Ttirorlc KM"'T. ... iri'i Dia'i UJney Pals; COMFORT, i , win cises. _ i r much pain In my back; > js i time went on I could hard , x- enilur.* it; 1 could n>t riui )Q3nS ra \ I i koopt fur a few moment. f /f&tvA a time; I grew wetik ai 'UflGV exhausted ; I could not ei Ml y? <?t-' X ?lo light housework ; 1 cou ' ju iliS, not noopor bend; my he lr \*ts. ached severely Iwns in p:> to*. \ from my head down to 1?.n. t-iirt-kV -y heel*: centering in the W " nevs it wna a heavy, stead i . |? sickening ache ; I could 1* al ' 111? real nights, and got 1,'T morning* weak and tired i r ......... "i thought I was about <!< ! , for. when I saw Doan's K* * ?? ney 1111m advertised. Wit tt ,f mall thta Oregon to a week after commenet t\ ift.Uo. N. Y. If above their use I began to tmproo n, nto address on arpa? and from that time on rapid a, grow better, I. used fl , ? ? ?- botes In all and wta cured. |l? I MARS iTTASH OF THE KIDNEYS. I if the kid?? > ? Hiinply because it cures catarrah wher \ er located. If you <lo tiot derive prompt and *atis actory results from the use of Pcruna, .vrite at ouee to Dr. Hartm.in. giving a full .tuiciuent of your ca*c, and lie will be ...? ?- ? ... nciwu iu k?v^ you niK vuiuai>:c lavicc tratin. i;>\ liars, r^noes or aij >mc at onee, as t hese \ e water and jmlni lea J id - Keliai Tr B. BELK^ j l\ S: Wo havo a fo iits that wo arc &?oin&>'i hat Ihoy cost, t'alil ml wo arc now sollim The Times will do > cw Scholarships for Men Teachers at the South (Carolina dnllecre. * iuso from Appropriation Act of Gen ral Assembly, li?03: That one thousand six hundred and I "ty dollars be appropriated to bo used j provide forty-one scholarships in the >rmal Department, one from each unty. of the value of forty dollars. g sides the remission of tuition and fl itriculation fees, the beneficiaries to selected under regulations to be pre- ? ribed by the Hoard of Trustees." j'his means $10 in cash to the student, 1 sides remission of $-10 tuition and ot j I 5 matriculation term fee. Thus the .1 holarship student will receive from 'a e < 'olloge $f> a month for eight months , assist him in his necessary living : penses. It INSULATIONS BY Till: HOARD. I. Applicants shall be young men at - 1st nineteen yciurH of age. The pur- J se of the General Assembly being to courage men teachers, preference , ill be given to those who furnish sat'autory evidence of having already light for at least one session, and J itli success; but if from any county ere lie no suitable applicants who ive taught, the scholarship of that unty may be awarded to a young an who only intends to teach. -. Applications shall bo made to th< esident of the College, at Columbia, i ^ fore July 1st. upon prescribed blank.: rnishel by the President or by County j iperintendents of J'ldueatlon, upon se- j lest. These blanks shall provide for | formation and referenees as to the i jn *i'Ih .1 id's ago, physb-ai condition, genal character and ability, educational I vantages, financial circumstances, Ul lulling experience, and purpose in king the special normal course. The formation tlius submitted will be reirded as a preliminary examination. P id those who receive permits to stand 9 e later examination will be credited 8 ilh the combined results of tliese two 8 :a mi nations. 3. The later anil formal examination H mil hi> 11nnn Ii'no-lleV? f!,.., m....... - ?1 " imposition. History and Geography, rith luetic and Elementary Algebra. Hgc-bra. however, is not indlspens>lo.) The Normal Scholarship CoinIttee of the Faculty shall prepare the ' lestlons and mark the papers. The lunty Hoard of Education of each . mnty is requested to conduct this ex- j nlnatlon at the same time with the itrance and other scholarship examatious of the South Carolina College id of Winthrop College (which this sir will he on Friday. July 10th). The aunty Hoard will receive the quo-Momoni the President of the College. and ? requested to return the answers to in, at Columbia, forthwith, by mail ^ express. 5 4. A standing1 Committee on Scholar- > dps. appointed from the Hoard. In con- , inction with a standing Committee \ run the Faculty, shall select the schol- y -ship students for eaeh county upon i le results of the examinations re- j a irted by the Faculty Committee, and j ? I the other information submitted, c he proper announcements shall be ado through the President. j y (j. After the tlrst year the incumbent / ay be reappointed, provided that, in | > le judgment of the Faculty, his apt- ^ ?ss to teach, hi* progress in study, 1 ? id his general character indicate that \ e is a suitable person to fulflll the \ jrpose of the scholarship as provJd? U > tr by the General Assembly. ^ 4 f; ?? R>>an*T*hn|esare the iM'si dyspepsia A^U^HRau>di<<'nff f>vv,: inn'^'* f -C?/A. b^ud-ed lntHious them have been sold Jiu the United ^"5EStQtes iu a single year, livery Illness arising from a disordered stomach is relieved or cured by tlnir use. So common isr-it that diseases originate from the stomach It may be safely asserted there is no condition of ill health that will not he benefited or cured hy the occasional tse of ltipana Tobnles. rhyslclana know them and spf ^k highly of them. All druggists sellf them. The five-cent package is enough for an ordinary occasion, and tli# Family Ilottle, aisty cents, contains a household supply for a year, tine -enernily gives relief within twenty minutes. ? *! i. MB WtPk, >* fa JU>cg uays I to keep the stomach clean, brain J clear ami liver active. It cools M the blood, cures heat eruptions, I relieves constipation, aids diges1 tion. EfferI'esccnt; Agreeable: M- Eel table. W* by Anifi.ran I'h)sivimis \ ^ ^'1 lot nearly to yrais. .Hie. nn? 81.OO. V At I)EUg>;i.as cr by mail from / TKe T*knt Co., % 1 uuiogia otn'.'i ml.<st U*t. _ Endowed Colleges ami Correlated Schools _K<tnr*Iaa Biin aud wonwn, bora ami jrirl* not tovr:h*+ Wt U> Kl?? iM>itoralo I m-' ltut Ions u*<irr rn? itatmur?"*/. Tie combination enables u? to offer .lie W?t advantages and to Save Time end Money ' Tor particulars,addrcar,stating ago ami jcx of rtudmu Chancellor WM. W. SMITH, A.M., LI_D Collcso Park. Lynohburc, Vn. vuw 1 v Tu,0(MM.;?o%TIIS.t Piedmont High School, i One of the l>e*t Preparatorr Solw ol* in North ! Carol ? ?. A'lc Fai ul'y. Mouutaln >cenerjr. Healthful Climate r,Minn npauo .\ur. lOih. I Wilte to W D. B(IICN<*. .nwiidulc.N.O. Medical courcE op Virginia. KaiablUhe.l IS.1H. | ? De\ artmanti of NIeilirin \ Di-nt'strjr and Hharmaej-. The Sixty?lath , slon will commence sepu-niiier :ill. liW.1. Tut' t on feea and living' i-X'mii-ts nro moderate. For a?noanc?m< nt noil further Inforuta! Mon. addrenit, ClirUleplirr T'onipklna, 1TI. X)., Oeaan, lllt-li inuiid, Virginia. i in aniM lit I n oni I rnr ; ElKbt miles from A?hevil < . We wnut you to ! have our catalog. A<1t1re-s, >1A It V IN A. YOST. cdcc a blauiiful tiirp souvenir of ! 1 , .V 101'I BUUG COLLEGE arid a Pic* tie (ireeu Mill House where til ()i,|,.r:y^Couf rence of the M. E.Ch Veld in 1785. tddreaa 1 ( nry* or siiiiKu. ?f. ? WAotte, n, elf Blinrr in l, to so ? j _ Irir.tMicitt cure 4 ^ar' A Brinltreatment . U.w^aywick MIealersin I! i Q r I kJH,IQ {] o H S lfc?B?0 1th I-i^x larhlnery nt?d >ucana "\T I \ "\ T I "V ||>ltal invented, hoy are*- ? * ' * I X^l V- mont ofTeo va and Ik Marhii??? Aoaciy Jast Tratlu St. \ harWE. ___ ^iffin, oHia } l.ntf-'t im-l Cirru-B ll'M-TT^^inr ;, M Mu W UK | iHsftbtlva li.W I It. Manufactured by th<-l IRqN WORK.S.U ill-tun aalani.N.C.B w.rvbus ; Ne i . Fo^IIPgWS^ 7u.cuw.w -idaclies Iv^f^NGTONO ,''"") _ ~ / ? i .