Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, March 19, 1908, Image 4
V
HOW ABOUT THE WELL
What Sort of Water Are You
Drinking This Year.
Is it Pure, Use Plenty of it Inside
and Out and You Will Feel and
liOok Better.
"What sort of water are we going
to drink this year," is a question that
concerns every reader of this paper,
for upon tho water we are going to
drink depend the health and even
the lives of very many of us. We
comuH-nd the following extracts from
a letter written to tho Progressive
Farmer by Dr. H. F. Freeman on the
aubjec t of drinking ^ater:
"The water we drink goes to make
more than two-thirds of the blood
which Hows through our veins. The
blood has about four functions to
perforin. This stream of blood Is
the medium which receives from the
outer world the different matters
which go to make us well or sick.
As it passes through overy part of
the body, tho various tissues of the
body take out of this ruddy stream
the materials necessary for their
nutrition and health, it is the medium
whicu takes up or asorbs the
dead or refuse matters from the various
tissues and carries this poisonous
o| dead matter to the various organs
whose business it is to throw
off and out of the body this dead material.
It warms, moistens and in
vigorates the whole body when
healthy.
"Now you see the need of pure
water, for the water you drink is
making two-thirds of the blood from
which so many fever and ague germs
come. IIow about your driuking
water? Is it pure? Many hundreds
of cases of sickness and death have
been traced directly to contaminated
water. Are you concerned about it?
Do you know that this water you
drink is carrying into your blood
the germs which it contains? That
is Just what is being done. And if
it were not for nature's forces while
strong and vigorous, you would soon
be sick. But let some of these natural
forces get wrong, a screw loose
or a tap off, and you are sick at
once and the doctor has to come and
tighten things up and set these forces
to going ngain. This costs more,
though, than it does for you to clean
out your well.
"Tho iimn /% - n * -
. * uiiiu iu viitrail u IIL il WtJII 1H
not when the water ts lowest, hut
when tlie well Is full to overflowing
When the water Is low in the well It
then should he the purest, as it all
conies from deep down in the ground.
Hut when the well is full of water it
has run in from all the little water
drains and especially through those
nearest the top of the ground, and
many times it gets in from the top
. of the ground. Now this rush of
water front the top and through the
oarth's pores carries along with it
all the impurities in reach. Many
times the death germ is taken into
the well this way. Now when you
draw all this water from the well
when it is full, you bring out the
germs carried in by this rush of water.
We drew all ours out a few
days ago and left a pure stream of
water rushing in near the bottom.
Clean up .about your well and raise
the earth around it so the water will
run off. Don't have pig holes and
chicken holes about the well.
"I know of an incident or two
which happened not so far front here.
A tenant had a nice horse when he
moved to a place where the well
water was bad. This norse soon after
began to look bad and to get
in bad condition generally. This
couuuueu during the year, and the
niun moved to a place where the water
was wholesome and good. The
horse soon got hack to his old self
and remained so afterwards. This
was true also of the family.
"My friends, when your cow,
horse, pigs, or chickens are not doing
well, examine your water supply, and
make sure that is is all right. I was
called to see a sick member of a
large family. I at once advised the
man to clenn up around his home
and fill up the puddle holes. Ho paid
no attention to this advise. Several
of the family were sick and one died
during that summer and fall.
"If you feel bad and look bad, ask
yourself what kind of water you are
drinking. Have you doue anything
for tho last three or five years to
supply your family and stock with
pure, sweet water? There are a
groat many families who look pale
and bad all the time. Much of this
is caused by bad. germ-laden drinking
water. All of you readers who
havo not been in tho best of health
now for sometime, just look into the
condition of your drinking water.
Then after you know it is pure, use
a plenty of it inside and out and you
will feel and look better."
GRANTED TIMK TO WRITE
His Biography by the Governor Be"
r,in> it..;...- II.,.,..
Cov. Claude A. Swanson, of Virginia,
telephoned Sheriff Lawler that
Leo C. Thurninn, under sentence to
be hanged today at Norfolk for the
murder of W. P. Dolsen, had been
respited to the 27th inst. The respite
was granted on the plea of Thurman
asking for a fortnight more in which
to complete a history of his life,
which he is writing.
Longest and Shortest Days.
At I^oiulon and Bremen the longest
day lias sixteen and one-half
hours. At. Stockholm it is eighteen
and one-half hours in length. At
Hamburg and Dantsig the longest
day has seventeen hours. At St.
Petersburg and Tobolsk. Siberia, the
longest day is nineteen hours and the
shortest five hours. At Tornea, Finland,
June 21 brings a day nearly 22
hours long and Dec. 2ft one less than
throe hours in length. At Wardhury,
Norway, the longest day lasts from
May 21 to July 22 without interruption
and in Spitzbergen the longest
day is three and one-half months.
LOSE THEIR LHTS,
The Sad Fate of Three Little Boys
Over in Sumter..
A dispatch from Sumter to Tho
State say? net ween 6 and 6 o'clock
Tuesday tue dead body of Welley
Wedekind, a young white boy between
8 and 9 years of age, son of
Mr. Henry C. Wedoklnd of that city,
was found floating on the water of
a clay hole at the Sumter brick works
Just outside of the city limits. Mr.
Tom Roland being called, wont in
and brought the body out.
The caps of two other boys were
also found, nnd Dnrroll T.M? o/".n
Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Llde, and Archie
Ledlngham, two boys about 9 yoarB
each, are inissng and there is little
doubt but that they were also drowned
In he aBino hole. All three of the
boys have been missing all day.
Mr. Irvin A. Ryttenberg, proprietor
of the Sumter brick works. Bays that
the three boys above named were at
the brick hole that morning, when he
ran them away.
An old boat In the clay hole has
been used by somo of the boys around
the town and the supposition Is that
theso three boys went out In this
boat, which overturned or they fell
out of it and were drowned.
A searching party has been dragging
the clay hole for the two missing
drowned Is unknown,
drowned s unknown.
At 9:15 Information was brought to
the city that the body of Archie Ledingham
had been recovered.
The deplorable tragedy has cast a
gloom over the entire community and
the afillcted parents havo the sympathy
of all tlio people In Sumter.
THE DISPENSARY MESS.
What Senator Tillman Thinks of the |
Whole Matter.
In speaking of the dispensary raees
In Columbia Senator Tillman expresses
himself in his usual plain manner:
"The trouble never would have occurred,"
said the senator to The
State's correspondent, "If the legislature
had never placed the funds Into
tlio hands of a commission which
could take the money out of the State
treasury. Do you suppose that If the
money had been In the State treasury
and the regular officers of the
Stato in charge of it, any federal
judge whould have dared to touch It?
Judgo Prltchard's action had for Its
i,mtinil lha l).nt ll,o
^iwunw ? uv iu?a I IIIII i lie VA/llUUlOOIVU
was acting merely as trustees for
the State, and ho holdB that this
places them In the same position as
trustees or agents for any business
concern. There Is something peculiar
.about this commission business
anyway. 1 have been tryng to find
out who was the author of tho bill to
creato it.
It looks to mo like at the bottom
of it there was some attempt to play
underhand politics, and while I don't
like to say thero is something crooked
about it, It certainly seetns that
the banks which have had all that
money on deposit all the time have
been greatly favored. Why hasn't
tho commission paid out the money,
or at least those claims which they
have approved? They hadn't paid
any of it out until a little over a week
ago. All the time it has remained in
the banks and tho banks have been
getting tho benefit of It."
TIIKKE DROWNED.
Boat Capsized With l'orty of Ten
Persons In It.
Mrs. Augusta Keller, two of her
children, Mr. and Mrs. Clack, Mr. W.
K. Hone, Mr. and Mrs. James Queen,
W. 11. Bright and Charles Green, all
operatives of the Appalachee mills,
were in a small canoe on tho pond
near Greer Sunday afternoon for a
pleasure ride. The load in tho boat
caused it to dip and when some water
came into the boat, Mrs. Keller and
her two children Jumped overboard.
The other persons in tho boat became
Tianlc KtrtcUon o a ^
into tho water.
Mr. J. R White, who was strolling
along tho hank of tho pond witnessed
ilie accident, lie quickly secured another
canoe and paddled to where
the victims wero doing their best to
save their lives.
Mr. White succeeded in getting his
hands on tho clothes of the two children
of Mrs. Keller and they wero
drawn into the boat. White then at onipted
to catch Mrs. Keller, but she
.-.ink to tho bottom. Whlto then
turned his attention to the other porons
in the water and succeeded in
rescuing them. Tho first one to be
rescued after the children wns Mrs.
Queen, then Mr. Queen and then
Bright, Green and Clack.
The victims who could not be
reached, were Mrs. Clack, Mrs. Keller
and Mr. W. F. Bone. Tho bodies
of those sank to the bottom, and
since the pond is several feet deep it
was necessary to dredge for them.
All three of the bodies were recovered.
ONE GIRL. SHOT ANOTHER.
About a Young Man Who Was At*
tentive to ller.
A special from Asheville, N. C.,
ives tho particulars of a sensational
shooting there last week of a young
woman. Miss Ida Franklin by Miss
Ol-oswlr. G ?. ~1 ?
It seems that the shooting is the
result of enmity arising between the
two former friends over tho love of
a young man with whom both wore
infat anted.
Miss Shelton, hearing that that
Miss Frnnkln had been "tnlkiug
about her,"" went to the latter
with the purpose of securinR a
personal interview about the matter.
When she appeared she was refused
admittance to the Franklin home and
the door "was slammed" in Miss
Shelton's fare.
The former thereupon drew a pistol
and tired through the door, the
bullet striking Miss Franklin in the
breast, making a dangerous wound.
#
CIRCUS MAN KILLED.
Meets Instant Death in Railroad Accident
in Augusta.
W. B. Btinnlngton, In charge of the
first advertising car of the Sparks'
Circus.* was killed in the C. end W.
C. Railroad yard lu AukuhIh mte |
Wednesday afternoon. liunnhi:
was standing on the rear watching I
the trucks of bis oar to see if they
were running hot and leaned too tnr
out over an adjoining track. In
passing a switch the eteel disc on the
top of the switch rod struck him in
the face, completely severing the
whole right side of his head.
(Jen. Lee at tho Wilderness.
There he stood, the grand old hero, '
great Virginia's god-like son,
Second unto none in glory?equal to
her Washington;
Casing on his line of battle, as it
wavered to and fro;
'Neath the front and flank advances
of the almost conquering foe.
Calm as was that clear May morning.
ere the furoua death-roar broke
From the iron-thronted war lions
crouching 'neath the cloudy
smoke:
Cool, as tho' the battle raging was
but mimicry of fight,
Each brigade an ivory castle, and
each regiment a knight;
Chafing In reservo beside him, two
brlgados of Texana lay,
.mil impatient for their portion In ;
the fortunes of the day.
Shot and shell are 'mong them fall- 1
lng, yet unmoved they silent
stand,
Looking, eager for the battle, but awaitlng
bis command.
Suddenly he rodo bofore them, as the
forward line gave way,
Raised his hut with courtly gesture,
"Follow me and save the day!"
Dut ns tho' by terror stricken, still
and silent stood that troop.
Who wero wont to rush in battle with
a fierce avenging whoop.
It was but a single moment, then a
murmur thru' thera ran.
Heard above tbe cannon's roarng aa
It passed from man to man.
"You go back and we'll go forward!" 1
now the waiting loader hears.
Mixed with deep Impatient sobbing
as of strong men moved to tears
Once again he gives the order, "I'll J
lead you on the foe!"
Then thru' all the line of battle rang
a loud determined "No!"
Quick as thought a gallant major,
with a firm and vise-like grasp, '
Seized the general's bridle, shouting
"Forward, boys!. I'll hold him
fast!"
Then agan the hnt was lifted, "Sir I
the older man;
Loose my bridle, I will lead them," In
a measured tone and calm.
Trembling with suppressed emotion, 1
with Intense excitement hot
In a quivering voice tho Texan. "No !
by God, sir, you shall not!"
By them swept the charging squadron
with a loud exultant cheer; |
"We'll tako the 6allent, General, it
you watch us from the rear.
And thoy kept tbolr word right nobly,
sweeping every foe away,
With that grand groy head uncovered
watching how they aaved tho
day.
But the calm was shaken, which no
battle shock could move
By this truo spontaneous token of his
soldiers child-like lovo!
To Probe for Graft.
Chairman Wanger of the House
Committee on Expenditures in the
Post-office Department proposed to
investigate that department on the
ground that "Some of the expenditures
appear to have been made in
contravention of law." No doubt
he has in mind the payment of the
salary and expenses of Assistant
Postmaster General Frank Hitchcock
while engaged in influencing
Southern postmasters to work for
Taft's presidential boon. The Com-!
mittee on Expenditures in the war !
Department would do well to follow i
Mr. Wanger's example, and inquire!
into the payment of Taft's own salary
and expenses out of the Treasury,
while he it engaged in traveling
and speaking in the advancement of j
his own boom. Such grafting ought!
to be exposed aud punished, even
though it is countenanced by President
Roosevelt.
The Republican Supreme Court'
of Ohio has decided that the conviction
of the Bridge Trust magnates
is unconstitutional and turned them ;
lose. Of course these gentlemen j
are expected to contribute liberally !
towards the Republican campaign
fund.
The House Committee on coinage,
weights and measures has reported
in favor of the bill to restore to certain
coins the motto "In God we
Trust," which was removed some !
months ago by order of the President.
Teddy will have to use his big
stick.
The Boston Transcript says: "The
old South may be counted for Bryan.
in spite of the screams againt
his nomination of the Charleston
News and Courier." That is right.
Bryan has the South for him now j
and in November he will have the
entire country for him.
Gov. Johnson has declared that
he is for Bryan and want him nominated.
He knows that Bryan
is the strongest candidate the Democrats
can nominate, and will do all
he can for him.
"The Kentucky Sonatorship."
The Springfield Republican says
"the outcome of the Kentucky senatorship
contest furnishes another
telling argument for the election of
United States senators directly by
the people. The legislature was Democratic
on joint ballot by eight vol
es, and, acc rd-ng to the ordinary
rules of the political game, the Democratic
party was entitled to the senatorship.
Four Democratic members,
however, refused to be bound
by the verdict of the Democratic
primaries of the State in favor of
Former Gov. Beckham, and thus a
deadlock was created.
"The final election of a Republican,
Mr. Bradley, was brought about
under circumstances that do not
reflect favorably upon the present
system. Two Democratic members
fell ill and were absent without
pairs, while another had died. The
four Democratic bolters then voted
for the Republican candidate although,
when their purpose was fi
nally disclosed, Beckham released all
of his followers from their primary
pledges ?md offered to support the
releection of Senator McCreary or
any other Democrat upon whom the
party could agree. For the Democratic
bolters to persist in voting for
the Republican candidate, under such
conditions, was, from a party point
of view no doubt, political treachery
of an exceptional nature.
"No such action was ever taken in
Delaware by the Republican opon
ents of Addicks even, in the years of
his malodorous struggle for a place
in the United States senate, although
there were many occasions w hen a
combination would easily have sent a
decent Democrat to Washington.
'The fact that these four Kentucky
Democrats were willing to deprive
their own party of a senator, and at
the same time increase the Republican
majority in the United States
senate, reveals again the progressive
demoralization of the Democratic
party and the extreme bitterness of
its factional feuds.
inese legislative contests over
senatorships are vicious to an exceptional
degree if tl ey result in a
State being rnhrc piaenti d. \V1 tth
er Kentucky is Republican ore
Democratic on national issues, at the
present time, may be a mooted ques
lion. On State issues last Novem
ber, it elected a Republican gover
nor. the legislature remaining Dcm
ocratic, but the same voters might
have chosen a Democrat to the sen
ate had they been given the chance
of voting directly i n the senatorshq
question. However the elector.might
have decided as between
Bradley and Beckham and other can
didates, they would at least havesettled
the issue beyond further dis
pute. And the popular choice
would have been made clear. But
now Kentucky has a senator elected
through an extraordinaay complica
tion of accidents, feuds and deals;
and no one knows whether or not he
8 the real choice of the people."
Blames the President.
Some Republican papers, especially
those of the independent kind,
are giving their readers information
of the sorry pass the Republican
party has brought the countrv to.
Thus the New York Sun declares we
are now indebted to President
Roosevelt for:
"Private confidence and credit
shattered; decreasing business; empty
freight cars and empty pay envelopes;
railroad employees and industrial
workers laid off by the hundred
thousand; disaster made entirely Republican;
the Constitution kicked one
side like a broken teddy bear; thi
courts insulted; capital persecuted
and frightened; suspicion and hatred
sown sedulosly among classes whose
prosperity or adversity is insepar
ably mutual; half veiled, sinister
prophecies of riot; the army demoralized
by favoritism, the navy embarked
upon a mysterious and dangerous
adventure; currency reform
unachieved, civil service reform
made a byword."
The Sun might have added that
Trusts have been fined but no trust
magnate, however guilty, is yet in
stripes. Harriman, that malefactor
of great wealth, is at large and is
said to be again likely to be a delegate
to the Republican national convention.
The Trusts are still selling
abroad cheaper than at home and
the margin is larger than ever
against the American people. Ser
ious scandals in Congress, to say
nothincr of frauds hnintr iuirJoonmo.1
? vau.
Such and more is the Pandora box
of evils that the people inherit from
Republican rule.
Another Sounds I.
Another scandal is brewing in
Congress, but that is nothing new
for a Republican Congress. It generally
has one or more on its hand-.
In 1902 there were charges made
and evidence produced that the
same Holland-Electric Boat Company
that is now under charges was
mixed up in dubious transactions,
and those eminent Republican
statesmen Lemuel E. Quigg and
Congressman Lossler were toasted
over the fires of investigation, but
were whitewashed by a considerate
| MONEY CHANGERS KNOW A LOT
Indeed They Have To, to Keep TracM B
of European Coins ar.d Coun- v
terfeits.
"1 never realized until today," said
a man who had just returned from c
Buri;.', "v. l.at ;;n undertaking it 1? {
to be p. money changer,
j "I came hack with about $20 iu
forcig.i n.oii ... priuc.pawy i'rem'a J
and Italian. This I took to a money {
changer's to cash in. j
"He looktK. over the coins rapidly,
throwing them into little piles and
putting down notes on a slip of pap- ?
er. When ho hud cleared up the lot
' ho said I had % 10.25 com tug to rae. 3
"At first 1 thought he was doing 6
mo. But he was not. lie showed me 1
a dozeu or bo Italian coins that had
been demonetized und wero wortn
about 40 cents on the dollar. There I
was a nice little pile of counterfeits t
that were not worth a cent, and $
| altogether only about a third of tho
coins that I brought home were worth
their full value.
"The only consolation I had was
that I thanked by stars 1 am in the
insurance business and not in the ex- *
| change business for my poor little e
brain could not carry half the things ,
that those fellows have to reuieinher."
The man with the coins did not exaggerate.
There are thousands of
different coins floating aoout that a
money changer has to know. He '
has to keep in mind every demonetlz- <
ed coin made within the lust hundred j
years. i
In addition to that there are counterfeits.
The immigrants bring over
heaps of had coins. Many of them {
buy up counterfeits cheap with tho
hope of exchanging theui at Ellis Island.
|
Then there are the coins of the
' South American countries. They are '
worse than those of the European '
countries. Brazil for instance has a I
i scheme nil its own. Certuiu notes ,
are good for ten years, atter that :
' tiuie for every year they lose 10 per
cent, of their face value until tho '
whole value is used up und they are 1
worth only the paper they are printed
ou.
As one man expressed it you have
to know the history of the world to
be a money changer. A peculiar part
of the business is the reshiptuent of
j coins back to the countries whence
! they came. Often during the rush
. season one firm sends hack a million
i coins, while it is estimated that in
the course of a year $10,000,000 in >nreign
money i* reshipped to Euiope
, and a million to tlie rest of ttie
; world.
Money changing is a business jus*
like any other. They do not exchange
money. They buy it. When
you go there with foreign coins they
buy them from you at a stated price.
When you go there to get foreign
| coins you buy them from them at a
| certain price just as you buy eggs
j and cigars.
i CLOTH I'hOM IRON AND STONE.
A Wool Made in Electrical Furnace?
Fabric From old Popes.
C'.oth of gold the fairy books deseribo;
cloth of iron is a real product
of the mills. Iron cloth is usbd
largely today by tailors for making
the collars of coats set fasnionablv. It
Is manufactured from steel wool by a
new process and has the appearance
of having been woven from horsehair.
Wool which never saw the back
| of a sheep is being largolj,
utilized on the Coutinent for
i making men's suits. It is
known by tiic name of limestone
wool and is made in an electric furnace.
Powdered limestone mixed
with a certain chemical is thrown
! into the furnace and after passing
under a furious blast of air is tossed
out as fluffy, white wool. After coming
from the furnace, the wool is
dyod and finally made into lengths of
i cloth. A pair of trousers or a coat
! made from this material can he burned
or damaged by grease and is as
flexible as cloth made from tfce
sheep's wool.
Some time ago an English clothing
manufacturer succeeded in makiue a
( fabric from old ropes. He obtained a
quantity of old rope and cordage air'
unravelled them by a secret process
into a kind of rough cloth. A suit of
clothes made from it and worn by thi
manufacturer himself proved sir ing
in the extreme and kept its color well
It Is said that a number of goods sold
I by some of the best l.ondon tailors at
'low prices are made of old ropes.
Goose on Michaelmas Day.
The origin of eating goose on
Michaelmas Day dates from the time
of Queen Klizabeth On her way to
: Tilbury Fort on Sept. 20. she
| dined on roast goose and Burgundy
i wine. With the last glass she drank
| "Destruction to tho. Spanish Armada."
\s she drained the glass news cante "
j of the destruction of the Spanish ;
; ileet by a storm. Thereupon she ordered
that .roast goose should be
served for her every year on that
day, and the custom soon became
general among the people.
Quite True.
"The best laid plans?"
"Yes, go an."
"I was going to say that the best
j laid plans of grafters are sometimes
I discovered."
Tall persons live longer than short < '
ones, ami those born in the spring
have sounder constitutions than those
born at any other season.
Congress. At that time Congressman
Lossler .'aid he would not trust
>ut one of the Republican members j
f the committee on Naval Atfairs
ind now Congressman Li 1 ley says he
nas evidence against five of them.
This time they have Ex-Senator M.
C. Cutler, ol this State, mixed up in
the soaadal, and that gentleman immediately
went to Washington to
face his accusers when he heard of
his name being connected with a
i shady trausactionin com ection w:th
the Holland-Electric Coi.ti j.i.y i'<ui
is now under invention. The ExSenator
was rea) mad. * (1
The State says: "If you do not
ee the name of the candidate you
vant, ask f or him."
The State should fight the receiv
irship of the dispensary to the last
lit Ji.
The public had better get ready to
oM its rose. as the Thaws arc al>out
,o ventilate their matrimonial infuicities
in the divorce courts.
The News and Courier savs the
Republicans are not worrying themelves
about Nebraska. Neither
ire they worrying themselves about
Minnesota.
_________
The New York Sun predicts that3ryan
as the Democratic presidenial
candidate will carry that State
igainst any candidate the Republics
can nominate.
A Dispatch from Los Angeles
ays a plan for defeating Kryan by
)ringing out candidates from nmny
lections of the country is being
vorked by the so-called Democrats
vho really want a Republican eleet?d
President.
The Milwaukee Free Press renarks
that the New York World's.
?Torts have resulted in preccnting
;o the country sixteen "desirable
democratic candidates" for presilent,
but not ip raising a ripple
igainst the Bryan wave.
SlNCF.Gov. Johnson has declared
.hat he is in favor of the nomination
>f Pryan a ro-called Democratic
>ureau in Washington has declared
for Ex-Gov. Douglass, of Massa:hussetts.
Anybody to beat Bryan
s theory of the plutccratie D?.mo:rats,
Write us Tor i let
u i. pat, orricc.
PLANTS FOS
? Wakefield and Sufcemia.)
LktlirLOWl^^r tuce. and lanje type Cauli'.ov
*>cs' *,0*cf1 *n ',u' wor'J- w<
Uiilvua.# atock for 20 years, and il Ls safe to i
lainahle. They have succoss'ully ate
I i " drouth and arc relied on by the moat pre
L ~South. We guarantee full count and salv
' 40 i'RICES- Cabbage and lettuce I. o. h. Yot
per thouaand. 5 to 0,000 at $1 25 per thous
;H Cauliflower. J* 00 per thousand, quantities t
Write your name and express
Hf W. K IIAR r. Eh
References: Enterprise Tank. Chariest
Ihogle
|| The one ant
A pure cooking-fa
0 plete satisfactic
f| inary condition
cleaner than t
r|) and always goes
0 as butter for all
v) liom bread-bak
n Made by Natu
K of natural puri
K' THE - SOUTHERN
York. iavaiwihMtl
GIBBES Guars
INCIXDRS GASOL1XK AXI> 8TKAJ
A It I J? AM) STATIONARY I toil,]
RI'ORItH, FLAXKR8, SIIIXOLH, I,
CORN' MIM.S, COTTOX CJIXS, I
MAKINtl OUTFITS AND KIXDllF
Our stork in the most varied ni
Southern States, prompt sliipment
t?. A nnctnl rnnl ..111 1.
I . -- ?- " "? ?
| GIRnEH MACHINERY COMI'AN"
I ?ould advjM
/fp r*jt~S A personal )lt< niiun. W!.
' ?UM*nte? MtllflCllMh Ad
m
now Cure Hheuiuutlsm.
The cju<i> of k . ura.itism anJ kindred d si
easei is aa ex? ?s of uric no id. in the blood:
To cur?> this ible d bom tho acid mutt
be expelled ami i .e system so regulated that
do more i ci?l i1 he formed iu excet sive qttantitiea.
Rhei.tn t'*tu is an internal disease and
require nti i e ml reined*'. Rubbing with
riVnndlic; . : will c V-euro,affords ouly g
t?mp ?ra-y r. I r at l>cst csus -s you to de'
v lb* > t- ri.i.Mil. ill ?.. j?t> the malady
to get a >i .ar bold iu you. Liuimouts
may ease the ; ui.bnt thoy will no more cure
Ithemu' ism th p.iint will change the flbre o f
rotten wood.
Sjiouje ht< .t Ust discovered a perfect
nd comploU> i-ii < , whirti ij called Rheuuia i
do. Tes'< d in hundreds of cases. it hai efected
the m ?' ma-velous cures: wo believe
t will cure v >1. Itlinnmiicifta "unlii at the
obits from ?Ve inside," sweeps tho poisons
o\itof the ?vst. ?? up the Ftnnxch, regu'at.'S
the liv > ' ! hi (neve and nnkes you
well all over II i?umaoid "s'riko* the roo?.
of the disease nid remove" its cause" This
snlcndid ren? <1 is soid liy druggists mid
dedor* generm'v at 50c*. and I a bottle. In
to'det forms* ? >c. su i 50c, a pveknge. Oet
a bettlo tod* t lelajs are dmigerods
Thirty-Two Cent Cotton.
FOR 8A : .! >?WaUon'a celebrated
Improved "hjinmer Snow" upland lone
at&ple cotton need. Makes b&Je and
more per acic ordinary land under fair
conditions; * Us for 17 t4 to $2 cent* Per
pound. Gasi')- picked. Olnned dry
on ordinary saw gin. staples 1% to
IS Indies. Price: 1 bushel, $2.00; 1
bushels. $1.00; $ bushels and over at
$1.00 per bushel. W. W. Watson. Proprietor.
Bummer Laud JTann. Bateebur^
815 DOLL \ US KAVpl) TO OHO AN
Ct'STOMEKS For Next 40 !>ay?.
We will sell our excellent $S0 Organs
at only *05. our $'.i0 Organs
j for lily 875. Special Terms: OnoI
third now. nne-thtrd Nov. IPOS, bnl.
ance Nov. t*.?09. If interested, clip
I this nd. nnd enclose It with your lottor,
asking -or catalog and j^sdke list.
If you whim the best orga- on earth,
| don't dela> hut write us at once and
1 save $15 end make nome harmonious.
Add ess: MA I.O.N ITS Mt'SIO
llOl'SE, Colitinliiu, S. ('. I'i.iuos .?ii l
Organs.
si*: in coi.nuiia carry inc. the
1.1. FN! INI CANDY llliLT."
Rubber and Leather Hell.
oil any-thin*- in Machinery Supply Line.
.MIR \ St IVIA COMPANY.
Jtreet. (MLl'MIHA. S
wm
l THE SOliTil
vguD icr, OIK 1. sron Lft- y?^TlEIUf.V
rer Crown from --reds ol the >A^'?KF.J'|FAP
: have worked vl?>i^t-ntIy on our Bk<ST
lay thai fo-day llirs arr the hest oh. w' ^r
?oJ the moat severe loti of cold /nit 0.rjJ
iiuinent grosser' every section ol tlie I
arrival of all goods shipped hy express wTJ
log's Island, $00 for H 00. I to $.000 at J1.S0 V9
land; 10.000 and over at f 1.00 per thousand. W.i
n proportion. YQ
oflioe plainly ami mail orders to
; ri uritisi.. s. <.
fs LAR.p1
1 only absolutely (A
it that gives com- Q>
>11 tinder all ctil- V
is. Far Fetter and M
he best hog-lard, a|
i farther. As good |)
kinds of cooking, y)
ing to fish-frying.
re, and, therefore, )a
ty. X
!* r i.? :? jar. ??x
COTTON OIL CO A
anta AcwOt !ciu\< Chicanoyl
mteed Machinery.
i I:\gi\KS, I'OiiT- &$?&&&*
Kits, 8A\V>i 11<LS,
ATII, STAYK AM) 2p/ F V?.
imckssks, kkick
ad complete in the
lieing our r
RaleHmao.
kT, ; : R<i* KO, Coliiintiia, H. C.
1 ^ u ' U M w T A ! ' III * 7 4 K"
aUEtijKU/MS w'^VntMl/ ' f *1 Saifc i 1JB
? experience in gross-intr Cabbage plant* and alL
tants for (lie trade, via: Beet plants. Union plants,
plants. .
ipment Beet plsnt, I f thhare plants n* follow*:
rlcston l-arge I'yp t'akcflfl.l* ^len-'fson Surest
known reliubh vaiicii(S1u Kiown
out in t . open sir oe
>ut injury.
its. la lots *' fiO to 5.0>"O at ft.Si |.r il.tiu>e-r
thousand, ' > and over at $l.0<) p, r thousand.
ss rates on s <ah> plan's from this point. Atl
O. unless j , re.'.r sending money with otdert.
ney s ith t .a. You will save the charge* for
y in Tebru Your orders will have my prompt
rn iii need Vegetable plants give u # * trial order;
dress all i . dcrs to