University of South Carolina Libraries
The Fort Mill Times. 0 ?MOCR ATIC p. W. BRADFORD, . Ed. and Prop. "* One yfrtv *1.00 . on upp.lc.'ition to the publisher. ndvertlclnK rute? are miule known to thuve interested. Eutered at. t-ho postofHceat Fort Mill, f$. (/.. as second class matter. THURSDAY APRIL 9. 1908. Petitions asking for signatures sufficient to warrant the calling of an election on the question of whether the voters of this, the 28th, school district were in favor of issuing $10,000 in bonds for the erec tion of a new graded scnooi ouuair.g in trusplace were circulated on the streets the past week. Many of our citizens attached their names, while .others .refused. It is the belief of some that should the bond issue for the school carry it would mean that other town improvements were dead for the next .fifteen or twenty years; hence their refusal to sign the petitions. It is a well known fact that council is in favor of permanent street improvements, while a few of our citizens are i'ust as anxious for a new school >uilding. So far as the publisher of this paper is concerned we would like to get both, but wc don't want to see the town sacrifice one for the olhcr. This we fear would result should we straddle a $10,000 school debt upon the town ar.d vicinity, and therefore we would suggest that council call an election upon a j$lb,00Q or $15,000 bond issue for town improvements, and use a certain per cent of the money for school purposes. We are of the opinion that with an expenditure of $1,000 the present school ^building could be repaired and enlarged to such an extent that it would in every sense meet the needs of the town for the next ten years. Then why should \se jump in and build this new building, ten years before it is nn actual necessity, and possible cause the streets of the town to remain in their present bad shape. We believe that a ^compromise in the matter would Joe best. A Word the Other Way. -Editor Times?Since you have published lengthy communications l'rom a preacher, an architect and a school principal advocating a new school building, I beg a few lines in the interest of the taxpayers before a contractor tabes a shot at it. I submit that our school building is as good as that of the average in the South in towns the size of Fort Mill. It is considerably better than the ones enjoyed by the parents of the children who are now paying for their education there. It was good enough for anybody until a fire occurred somewhere out west and burnt up a number of children be.a ise the <'o ) s were hung wrong and the children and teachers couldn't Ret out without using their brains. Out of several hundred thousand school houses in this country and during some three hundred years of its history, is one catastrophe of this -kind sufficient to demand a new building? The same trouble is likely to occur in a million dollar building, especially if they nail up the doors as well as you say they have the windows in the present house. I admit I have a selfish motive in this matter. For years the people have been praying for better streets and other conveniences and the town authorities were planning to put before the people a project to issue bonds and I believe the taxpayers would support it. Some delay has been accepted because of the stringency of the money market and the f err that the most favorable price .could not be realized for the bonds. I believe in face of the fact that the cotton mills are running on short time and the farmers straining every nerve to hold their cotton for the best jprjee and every other industry to some extent paralyzed thereby, and further added to the fact that the State tax levy has been increased over last year, there should be hesitation in asking for something not urgent ly needed. Let us first satisfy the complaints that have been long: standing. Give us streets to the scho l to pr<t:et the health of our children and more 1 teachers to accomodate them after they get there. Ci\ is. Mr. Finley at Home. Congressman Finley reached home on Saturday and will remain for possibly two weeks. , The Washington correspondent pf the News and Courier comments on this as follows: ?'If the reports which have reached Washington of the Congressional race in the 5th and other South Carolina districts this summer are reliable, some lively politics are ahead. While Mr. Finley did not say that he intended to get in any political work during his absence from Washington, it is assumed that he will do a considerable amount ?f hand-shaking while in South Jarolina." Killing al Ycikvii'o. The daily papers of Sunday : told of a shooting scrape in a 'barbershop at Yorkville Saturday afternoon the result of which is that John Warlick is dead, his brother, Jeff, .is painfully though not seriously wounded, and Lawrence Marley is in jail chartrcd with mnrdpiv All are young- white men. The exact facts connected with the occurrence were not available at that time, as statements secured from various persons supposed to know contlict, but the most generally repeated story follows: Lawrence Marley, John, James and Jeif Warlick were in the barber shop when Marley and John Warlick, between whom, it is said, bad blood previously existed, became involved in a quarrel when Warlick applied a vile epithet to Marley. The latter left the shop and shortly afterwards returned and asked Warlick if he meant to say he, Marley, was so and so. Warlick repeated the former epithet and made for Marley, using his fists freely, and at this juncture the latter drew a pistol and commenced to shoot. When he finished four shots had been fired and John Warlick lay dying and Jeff was ! supposed to be mortally wounded. John Warlick was shot either through or in t'.ie region ol' the I heart and through the bowels and was dead in less than fifj teen minutes after receiving the 1 wound. Jeif Warlick was shot in the side, the ball being subsequently extracted by Dr. Kcll, and through tiie fleshy part of the arm. I John Warlick. the dead man. recently finished serving a short J term in the penitentiary, having ' been convicted for beating an | old and comparatively helpless I Confederate soldier in a most 1 brutal manner. S The WarlU-k boys worked in : the cotton mills. Marley is a house painter by trade and a s n of a respectable and well thought of family living near town. It is said that Marley secured the pistol with which he did the shooting when he left Warlick j after the first quarrel. It is a 44-caibre si:;-shot Colt's. Will Sac iLt Slate. Chief J. A. Harris ol the tribe of Catawba Indians, whose reservation is situated about ten ! miles from this city, accompanied j by second Chief John Brown and Braves Sam Blue and Ben Harris, were in Cnarlotte Thursday on business connected with a ; suit which the tribe is to bring a:\ainst the State of South Carolin i for land, which the Indians claim, is theirs by right of a treaty with the United States. The land which the Indians claim ns their nwn e 144,000 acres lying in York and , Lancaster counties, and has several towns on it. among lb cm being Rock Hill. The value of these lands at the present day is 'several million dollars, j The Catawba tribe, which lays claim to this land numbers 2 ?0, about ICO of which live in South Carolina. The chief went before U. S. Commissioner Cobb and executed a contract with an attorney in Washington who is to prosecute the claim before the department for them. I Chief Harris, who is an intelligent man of about 35 years of age, said that in 18(50 the State 1 made a treaty with the tribe to buy land in North Carolina in place of the lands claimed in South Carolina or pay the tribe its value. "But," said the chief, "this treaty has never been carried out, and I am now trying to secure justice for my people." Will Chmcs Schedules. At a meeting in Columbia a few days ago of the railroad commission, representatives of the U. C. T. and T. P. A., Supt. Williams, of the Southern railway, a proposed change of schedules for the Columbia-Charlotte line was discussed at length and the following schedule to become effective next Sunday, the 12th, was finally adopted: The trains No. 33 and 34 will hereafter be known as Nos. 35 and 86. The "Chester Swing" will be (.discontinued, according to our miormation. No. 35, for Columbia,- will leave Charlotte at 6.30 a. m., arriving at Fort Mill at about 7 a. m. No. 27, for Columbia, will leave Charlotte at 4.45 p. m., arrive at Fort Mill at about 5.30 p. m., and continue through to Columbia. No. 20, for Columbia, will leave Charlotte at 3.25 a. m., and arrive at Fort Mill at 3. 71, as at present. No. 30, from Columbia will pass Fort Mill at about 0.2J a. rn, and will arrive at Charlotte at 'j rp No. 28. from Columbia, will pass Foi l Mi!! at about b.p. m.. and arrive at Charlotte at < p. ii. No. 3d, from Colum ?i t. v.'i i reacii rort Mill .il ahnai . # a. m., and arrive at Charlotte at 1J 5 a. m. wianrM** *#a - ^.-vt Saih!; Says Rest Easy. President E. D. Smith, of the cotton association, on Thursday ai issued the following' statement oi 011 the cotton situation: y> "1 iiave just returned from a \v rather hurried trip to the west, a: ! The serious decline in the price w j of cotton made it of the utmost \\ importance that I should get a I 1 better personal idea of the real ii situation. According to the d facts gleaned, I see no reason tl why those who have spot cotton 13 need be uneasy as to the final c< outcome of prices. India is prac- a tically 2,000,000 bales short, o America practically 2,000,000 a bales short; aggregating from o these two sections alone, 4,000,- , tl 000 bales le^s than one vpnr- i u , making a reduction of 25 per ti cent in the world's visible and v invisible supply. The spindle s< I capacity this year is far in excess p ! of that of last year. Therefore i a more cotton is needed. Itisesti- g mated that there are being con- s< sumed at the present rate, about v 1,000,000 bales per month. Ac- n cording to the figures of Mr. c Hester, there is available, for ii the balance of the season, a lit- d tic over 4,000,000. Therefore ii by the first of September the n stocks of raw cotton will be o practically exhausted, and no r reserve to carry over at all. y Confidence in trade is being "n rapidly restored, money is' get- F ting easier, the southern mills c aie reported as being practically , t1 without cotton, the northern a mills are short of stocks, and n from all indications and from o every standpoint, if the present j v holders of spot cotton are able If . to hold on, somebody will have s to pay the price. We have a learned a valuable lesson on ac- o count of the dependence of so h many producers on the stores ii and banks. Let's reduce that i q dependence this year by reduc- o i ing our obligations for home ; t supplies and fertilizer bills. 1 d was delighted with the spirit of i h cheer and dot rmination at h every point visited. We are be- a coming seasoned veterans in the S fight for southern prosperity, and v we arc learning to use the weap- p |on with skill and effectiveness; j h and in the proportion that we b demonstrate our ability, in that, o j proportion is the world Iearin.g r lo respect the one time despised u | producer." c C Fort r.dli's Slave fonuaicut. !o ! ii In last Monday's State there s appeared the following communi- ! c, cation, which will doubtless be j ti read with considerable interest b in this community: 1 ^ In To the Editor of The State: There appeared in today's tl State an inl?.ro.iing article sug- s gesting that a monument be v i reeled by the i e pie of the South o in memory of the faithful slaves i who in many ways proved their 1 loyalty to their masters during; the war. 1 agree that it would he a gracious and grateful thing 1 for oiu people to thus testify to : their appreciation of the devo-1 ^ lion to duty of these black peo- ; j pie, but to keep the record j( straight 1 wish to call attention;^ u> the fact that the proposition is r not only not a new one but has al- e ready been consummated on a somewhat smaller scale. It is' 0 in Joed surprising that it is not (j generally known, and especially j, in our own ^tite, that just such v a monument has stood for well p nigh 10 years in Confederate f, park, Fort Mill, S. C. This > monument was erected by Capt. < p Samuel E. White, a gallant sol- p dicr of the Confederacy, whose j home is now in I Lancaster. At a the time the monument was un- j1 veiled it attracted universal at-: tent ion throughout the country, p and many articles were published p in botii the Northern a.ul South- 0 ern press descriptive of the (J j monument and commending the p , generosity and broad-mindedness of Capt. White. The monument stands within GO feet of the Southern rail way tracks and may i be seen by all who pass through ' j Port i.iill and care to look out the east side of the cars. W. E. IJ. Columbia, Api il 5. j, Lancaster's Institutes Well Attended, d . j E In the eighteenth annual re- ^ , port of the Board of Trustees of 'y Clems m College to the general l; assembly we note the following s] at i l'!l( ! > n? < I P W n ii'l'mnr-' In f! >J tutvi held in Lsncasb r county 0! during the summer of 1907: Pleas- P ant Valley, 210; Antioch School- 01 house, 600; Lancaster, 90;. Elgin, P 1,300; Kershaw, 125. Elgin nad the largest attendance of any of a< the institutes hi Id in the State, ^ Sharon of York county be ing second with an attendance of 800. " hi discussing the farmers' insii- 1)( tutes of Lancaster county with F Prof. Harper sometime ago, he *y stated to your correspondent that il they were much better attended V1 in the summer of 1907 than in }r 1906, and that Lancaster county , \vi old be assured of several in-" stitutes next summer. S. Ik H. in Lancaster News. r~ Hi It is ne . 'u ' to kno.v that is you are riu'st b. re anyone will w take the trouble to porsuad 1 you tl that y u are wrong. , ci \ I??EM1PL., 1?^PS?? VW4r^?r . Jf ..- w^v%<v_-^r- vc sr^tvwr |-^ VV - v-r Henry F. Jc!i.:*,tc i'? Ir/ar ?.?corJ. Editor Times:?Here I co-no gain and I promised you in my, thcr letter that I would not tax our space soon agein, but I ish to put Bro. Splinter straight | 5 to my service in the army. I as only a little past 1'7 years old ; dien 1 left home for the army.' first joined a company organ- j ;ed at Fort Mill, but by some isagreement among the officers Kn /?Ano>\on\r fVkll i ? m/vU ^ IV vvuijjtiiijr IV11 l/liivuj;il. t urt Erwin was getting up a ompany at Randa'.ecburg store, nd myself and Randolph NichIs joined that. We left for the rmy some time in April. Some | ne 01* two men who had joined liat company came to me and ranted to hire me as. a subslint, but I told them no, that I rould go in my own place, so I erved in the Randalesburg comany until February '62, I think, nd about that Lime there was a eneral call for volunteers for ervice on the Merrimae, which ras about competed at Portslouth navy yard, and as my ompany officers had done me an ijustice shortly before that, I ecidedto leave the company and ifiuenced four others to go with le, making five in all to leave ur company and go to the Merimac. I was the leader, but the oungest. Those who wentwith ic were Scth Hotchkiss, Cal laker, Davis and Sheffield. The ' all was for 6 months, one and hree years service on the vessel, nd we five went on for only 6 lontlis' time, and I soon found ut I did not like the navy. I ras 011 the vessel only three or our weeks. There had been | omo desertions from the vessel i ml I had overheard some of the peers say that they would not other after those that were 1 for G months. Then came a uartermaster to pay us off for ur infantry service, and to give .. . '* -T 1.1. - a. ? - ' ? lcw. 'K.TS Hum uiut u> tne navy apartment, but by some mistake e made o :t the papers as an onorable discharge from the rmy of the Confederate States, o 1 went among the other State olunteers and asked to see their apcrs and found them to be onorably discharged from infanry to navy service. 1 went at nee to (ins Hotchkiss and aranged for us to leave for home pon our being honorably uisharged from the ar ny of the lonfodcracy. So you will see at j nee that 1 was a deserter, but, f you please, not to get rid of erving my country, but to hange serv ice. I stayed at home hree or four weeks and returned o Virginia and joined Co. B. at 'orktown. l>ro. Splinter is also listaken about my being with he company at Appomattox at he surrender, as i had been lightly wounded on April 2 and ,ras with a wagon train and taken n the 7th as prisoner. Henry F. Johnston. Rot k da! e, Texas. Oldest Veteran Applies For Pension. A special from Raleigh to the lharlotte Chronicle says that lenry W. Permenter, oi" Meckvnburg county, has applied for : rr* t pu:. >ion. me old man formeresid d in Fort Mill and at presnt has relatives in this vicinity. Mr. Permenter is now 104 years Id and is very feeble. His wife ; ied a short time aero after hav- j ig reached the century mark in ! ears. Mr. Permenter, who is he oldest veteran in North Car- ! lina, served with Co. K, 43rd1 J. C. Regiment, his company eing from Anson county. James ; loggan was captain and his son, ohn Boggan was second lieutennt. When Permenter enlisted e was 58 years old. The old man has never been on he pension rolls, but according 3 the roster, he was a member f the company he names and he ives the names of the officers of I lie company correctly. The Williamson Plan in Few Wort!*. Break land in winter one-fourth eeper than common; lay off in ix foot rows, leaving five inch alk. When time to plant break ut balk with scooter, following ; i same furrow on this ridge, lid.'v then with same plow, going eeper; run corn planter witn >ixio plow, with wing taken oil', lant as early as possible, usual-: r about the middle of March. >rop corn grains every five or ix inches. Use no fertilizer. ive first wnrlv'imr u !l'i U....--. .... - - -- rt " *?* "?"?? r any plow that will not cover lant. Second working with 20 r 12-ir.cli sweep on both f ides of lant. Thin after this working. Corn should rot he worked yea in until sufficiently stunted, > that it will never grow large, /hen it is about 10 to 12 inches igli put on fertilizer. Mix 200 ounds of cotton f eed meal, 2 () ounds acid phosphate, 2-j0 pound air.it. Put half in oKl sweep irrow, on both si les of every i iher middle. C >vcr by break;g mi Idle with plow. One week iter treat the oth.-r middle in io same way, l'crti.2:< r and all. i a few days side corn in first liddle with 16-ineh sweep. Put 1 your nitrate of soda in this irrow, if less than 250 pounds u d; if more, p >t half. Cover ith o . furrow t nxi plow, i icn sow peas in middle broadist, at a rate of a bushel to the < aero, and finish by breaking out. ? Lay 1 y early. More corn is ? ruined by late plowing than by r early plowing. No hoeing is necessary and middle may be kept ^ clean until time to break out by S harrowing. For fifty bushels to ? the acre leave stalks sixteen inch- ? es apart; for seventy-five bushels r twelve inches, for one hundred * bushels, eight inches apart. ; Do not pull fodder; do not cut V tops, let peas and pea yines die C on land. Value in fertilizer to ^ land is worth more than for- f age.?Charleston Post. A Joke on Cnpt. White. ^ 4 The Lancaster News of Satur- j ( day stated that the practical' ? joker was much in evidence there 4 Wednesday, All Fools' Day. I} Among those victimized was j ^ Capt. S. E. White, who received j \ a letter purporting to be from ( his business manager at Fort / Mill, Mr. McMurray, stating that a g'old nugget, estimated to be ; worth from $750 to $1000 had V been found on one of the Cap- ( tain's farms near Fort Mill. The ( genial captain very naturally got * busy and called up his manager / over the 'phone to get full par- ; J tieularS of the valuable find. It ' later developed that th6 letter ( was a hoax. The perpetrators 1 ( of the joke were Mayor Ilughes ( and Master Elliott Springs, the < captain's bright little grandson. |. No one enjoyed the fun occa- ' sioned by the incident more than ( Capt. White Himself. ( DeWitt s Little lCuvlj Risers, tho fa- * nunis little liver pills. Sold by Ar- ( drey's drag store. I , J The lines of eternal grace in ( any character have to be cut ( with extremely sharp tools. A biy cut or a little cut, small scratches ( or bruises biy ones are healed quickly / by DeWiit's Carbolized Witch Ha/.el * Salvo. It is especially good for piles. ( (let Di Witt's. Sold by Ardrey'a drug < store. * """ ( The longer a woman remains / a widow the more she compliments a dead man and the less i' a live one. j ( - . | The kidneys are delicate and sensitive . organs andaro very likely at any tune 1 to yet out of order. DoWitt's Kidnov i uiul liiadder Pills aro prompt ami ] thorough and will in a very short ' time strengthen the weakened kidneys ( und allay troubles arising from in- t rlainmation of tho bladder. Kold by t Ardrey's drug store. I < The sermons that do most cT- J fective work in this world are I those on two legs. j ( ? -??> - I To have perfect health we inns! have', perfect digestion, and it is very im- |' port ant not to permit of any delay the , i moment the stomach fee Is out of order. . Talc souiet h;ng at once that you know V will promptly and unfailingly assist i digestion. '1 here is not hiitg hetttr t lian ' Kodol for dyspepsia indigestion, sour stomach, belching of gas and nervous headache. Ivodol is a natural digestant and will digest what you eat. Sold by Ardrey's drugstore. Life is worth the living if the liver is worth the life. ] Kennedy's l axative Cough Syrup?the ( cough syrup that tastes nearly as good ( as maple sugar and which children ' like so well to take. Unlike nearly all ( other cough remedies, it does not eon- ' stipato, but on the other hand it acts * promptly yet gently on tho bowels, ( through which the cold is forced out of ( the system, and at the same time it til- ' lays inflammation. Always use lven- ( nedy's Laxative Cough Syrup. bold j ( by Ardrey's drug Htore. j( ^ j ^ A subsequent ratification is ( equivalent to a prior command, t PLENTY OF TROUBLE is caused by stagnation of the liver and ) bowels. To get rid of it and headache _ and billiousness and the jioison that j brings jaundice, take Dr. King's New 1 r i,ni! nils, tho roliablc puriflerf that ; ilo tho work without grinding or [; griping. 26c at all drug stores. - - ,j A lot of men look firm because a big bunch of whiskers hide a j receding- chin. ' ? ? 1 Kodol For Dyspepsia has helped t lions- , auds ol' pooplo who have had stomach , jtrouble. This is what ouo man says of jl it: "E. C- Do Witt it Co., Chicago, III. i ?t londeinen?In 1*1)7 I had a disease I r of tho stomach and bowels. I could I not digest anything I ato and in tho I spring of 11)02 I bought a bottle of Ko ! dol and tho benefit I received from that [ | bottle all tho gold in Georgia could not 1 \ buy. 1 still use a little occasionally as I fiiid.it a line blood purifier and a ' good tonic. May you live long and i prosper. Yours very truly. C. N. ' Cornell. Roding, Cia., Aug. 27, FJOd.'' 1 - It doesn't matter how cheap a tiling is if you have no earthly use for it. v.z aot what he itzsezd. : t "Nine years ago it looked as if my time had come, "says Mr. C. Farthing, if Mill t'r.ek, Ind. Ter. "I was so run i down tliat life hung on a very slender a thread, li was tin n iny druggist recom- . 1 mended Kleeiric liitlers. I bought a ' bottle and I g ?t what I needed? slrength. T had one foot in the grave, 1 h ;f hie.-trie Hitters put it back on the f turf again, and I've been well ever I in ," ,-nl i under giiarautte at all drug stores, ;">0e. ?? *- ?To have the approval of one's conscience is worth while. * A TV7317TY YEAR ShNTENCE. ' ' I hivo just emupleted a twenty year health sentence, ini]>osecl by Ihi kleu's Arnica Salvo, which cured IIII' < I 1# diiiu piles just twenty years a i," writes O, S. VVoolovc r, of Le- ^ I; a; ille, N Y. Ba-Ulon's Arnica rah h ais the worst sores, boils, burns, C w a a nds and <uits in the shortest time, at all drn.t stores. " " E Force without judgement falls of its own weight. i |SK9?8?0???0e ?i I MILLS a $ ? Our Furn I 9 Is filled to overHoY tiling necessary for J convciiienec of the tor liow nice or < ? Furniture, or entir want, we can furn ^ large store rooms, for House Furnish g niotli wareroom, ei g y all grades ol Furni j Our Furniture sal & creasing. The prii S is that we buy in li 9 goods at a much 1 g ^ the small dealer. ? fore able to offer bi We have exerci ^ in the selection & which you will lie 3 liual spring houses \V e invite you to our stocko ^ We wiil sell you l( | Mills & Y i>@@Q<S?<SQ??G2> C W. H. H SALISBU price list of whisk Oho gallon now Corn whiskoy $1 <50 ' )no k:iI. 1-year old l 0111 whiskoy... I >iio, jjal. 2 year old Corn whiskoy... 2 00 >ho jjul. 3-year old? oru whiskey... 2f>0 ' >in* gal. I -year old (.-urn whiskey... :??> ? )ne gallon New Hyo I <">0 >110 gallon X Kyo 1 7"> )ue gallon XX l\yi* 2 Oil )no gal. SunJiy South Hyo 5 00 )ia' gal. Old llonry Hyo 5 UO )uo t;al. Hoover's C'hoieo Hyo 2 .V) )no gal. Rooney's Malt 2(H) )no pal Kohotrpriiigs Rye 5 00 Tno gal. l'eacli ami Money 200 ?no pal. Apple Hrandv, new 2 50 illegal. Apple Bramly, very old... 1150 Pices on anv other goods wil rV. H. HOOVER, I SOUTHLRfN | I THE SOUTH'S GF a gjjl Cnexcelled Dining Car Sci Convenient Schedules on a Through Pullman Sleeping y Most direct route to the ? E ? S For full information as to rates ^ Southern Railway Ticket Ag | R. W. HUNT, -d! A G. P. A.. Atlanta. Ga. 2$i _ 5 SESidL fSISiBSOHiSHl ^ 1 For Weak I Kidneys Inflammation of the bladder, urinary troubles and backache use leWitt's Kidney and BJadder Pails A, Week's Freatment 25c j | 1. C. DoWITT &. CO., Cliicdsro, 111. Sold by Arclrey's Dru<y Store, j! * " ~ " 2 \\" 0 0 3?S?C???6OS so YOUNG I iture I lariment 1 ring with every- ? the comfort aiul g home. No mat- ? cheap a piece of g e outfit you may ? ish it. Our two g used exclusively g ings, and a mam- g uible us to carry g lure. ? es are steadily in- ^ lie reason for this g arge lots, and get g ower figure than ? AY e are there- g ctter prices. ? sed especial care ? of those articles g ed after the ail- g cleaning is over. call and inspect || >1* cash or credit. ? A 7k V_N> Qmg Co. I COVER, I RY, N. C. J HI'S AM) lilt AM) IKK. One gal. Poach Brandy 8 GO CASE GOODS: Four ?i's. Old Mountain Corn. $'2 50 Twelve qts. OM Mountain Corn... 750 Four <its. Old Bailey Corn ISli ) Four qts. Kooney's Malt 100 Four qts. Shaw's Malt 4 00 l''iiur((ls. Paul Jones Ryo 1 00 Four qts Rose Valley Ryo 4 00 Four <|ts. Monogram Ryo 4 00 Four qts Wilson Ryo 5 00 Four qU. Prontico Ryo 0 00 Four qts. Hoover's Choioo 3(H) Fourths. Apple Rrniidy, iu w S(K) Four qts. Apple Bran iy, old 3 50 Four quarts Poach Brandy 3 50 1 be mailed on application. SALISBURY, N. C. sTSL fin^llMrS. IMrS r^i SJI I RAILWAY. | m !EftT?ST SYSTEM. I | m rvice. glj II Local Trains. gjj Curs on Through Trains. jr. forth and East. ^ Eat , routes, etc., consult nearest g ent, or tdi J. C. LOSK, p D. P. A , Charleston, S C. _ _ ? LMUS iw K5LLthe"cOUCH and CURE the LjJNCS w,th fir. King's Urns Oaseovsry 'forc3i!bas j AND/tt THROAT ANnit'fjG TfiOUBLrsJa faTr f\ n am tbb :"f at is i^\gi o.uyfl 8 OR MOMEY UEFUNDED. . ?. .r .'i< . .'iysnEHEHsl HO LUSTER'S pt3?5'.y" iountaki Tsa HuggeJa A B. y Mf.iiclrw (or tJjcy Pc-'iiln. ^ P'ires Golden Heallh and Renewed Vigor, A ?<p^H He f ir Constipation. IniHi'i-staui. T.lvf*"* ind KiCnoy lronl?lt -. I'ini|>l<-x. Kc/i mn. linimri lino I, liuit Mrealh. Sliii'/Mi lloncl*, llroilacl) i in<l !.ur!i<\ lis ITix- v Mountain Ten In inl>' t form, I'") iciiis a i?'i\. Cinuine mailt; by lOM.IVI'KIt Jllil ii t'li.MI" \NV, Ma llson, wis. 50LDEN NUGGET lOit SALLOW PEORLfi