University of South Carolina Libraries
Dm? Adjt Om Know? Does toy one knot" what's in jour heart and mine, The sorrow and song. The demon of tin and tho angel divine, The right and wiongi The dread of the darkgcss, the love of daj, The ebb and the (low Of hope and of doubt forever and aje Does nnj one kuowT Does anj one dream of the lore that is jours The heart that is mine; The depth and the width of the oup whiob each pours Of richest red winr; Of the hate that is dailc as .he midnight o! grief, . The anguish and woe, Tne doubt cloudB of hailing and blind unbe I Doea any one know'.' Does any one see what we have in the heart A To love and to hate; Of life's every motive an intricate part, Of chance uud of fate; HI The mem'ry of kisses, of starlight, of songs, j^H Of roses aud snow, Of women's sweet eyes, of prayers and o |H wrongs. Does any one know? ^B Does any ono hearken to mu6ic of bells, And the sigh of the sea, And the whisper of woodlands that mnrmuri and swells For you and for ine; The sound of foud voices that ever respond In tones soft and low, To the prayer we are breathing into the be P yond, Does any one know? TBE TALMAGE SERMON The Great Divine 8ounds thePraiwi of the Redeemer. In this discourse Dr. Talmago soundthe praises of the world's Redeemer anil puts before us Iho portraits of somo ol his great disciples and exponent*-; text, John iii, 31, "lie that comcth frou abovo is abovo all." The most conepicicus character ol history stops out upon tho platform, Tho finger whioh diamonded with iight, pointed down to him from the Bethlo sky was only a ratification of th< ^ finger ol propheov, the hngor of geno y alogy, tho finger of chronology, th< finger of events?all five fingers point ing in ono dircotion. Christ is th< overtopping figures of all tiuio. Ho ii tho vox humana in all musio, tho rnosi \ exquisite mingling of lights and shade: I in all painting, the acme of all climaxes I tho dome of all cathedralcd grandctr _ and tho peroration of all eplondic language. Tho Greek alphabet is inado up o 24 letters, and when Christ oomparoi himself to tho first letter and tho las letter, the alpha and the omega, ho ap s propriated to himself all tho splondori that you can spell out with those tw< letters and all tho letters between them ?- "I am the alpha and tho omega, tin beginning and tho end, tho first and thi last," or, if you prefer the words of thi text, "above all." It means, after you havo piled up al Alpine and Himalayan altitudes, tin f glory of Christ would havo to proad it wings and descend a thousand league to touoh those summits. Pelion, high mountain of Thcssaly; Ossa, i hieli mminlnin anil ( )lt mrnid a hinl mountain, but mythology icll us whoi tctt t he gods the; mountains am r o o a c wo? tlio ^^^flRHH^^Hpui, proliciio andapostoii giants; llaphafi and Miobacl Angelo giants; cherubim and aeraphin archangel ocloatial gianta?havefai o'A or the text and say, "TTo that oomct Bt from above ia abovo all." First, Christ must bo abovo all elf in our preaching. There aro so man books on homiletioa scattered throug the world that all laymen aa well aa a olorgymcn have mado up their mind what 6ctmona ought to be. That bci mon ia most tiieolual which moat poinl odly puts forth Christ aa the pardon c all sin and tho correction of all evil ' individual, social, political, national Thoro is no reason why we Bhould rin the endless changes on a few phrasef Thoro aro thoao who think that if a exhortation or a discourse have frcquun E mention of justification, eanotifiration oouvenant of works and covenant o graoo that thercforo it must bo pro foundly evangelical, while they are sua pioious of a discourse which present tho tamo truth, but under differcn phraseology. Now, I aay thcro is noth ing in all tho opulent realm of Anglo Saxonism or all tho world treasures tba wo inherited from tho Latin aed Orecl and the Indo-Kuropcan but we ha?-?s t right to marshall it iu religious ditcus sion. Christ sots the example. Hit illustrations were from the grass, the flowers, the spittle, tho salve, tho barnyard fow\ tho crystals of salt, as well as from tho soas and the stars, and wc do not propose in our Sunday school toaohing and in our pulpit address to be put on tho limits. I know that there is a greet deal said in our day against words, as though thoy were nothing. Thoy may be misused, but they havo an imperial power. They aro tho bridge between soul and soul, botwecn Almighty God and tho human race. What did God write upon tho tabled of stone? Words. What did Christ uttor on Mount Olivoi? Words. Out of what did Christ strike the spark for tho illumination of iho universe? Out of woiJh. "Lot there bo light," and light was. Of courso thought is the cargo, and words aro only tho ship, hut how fast would jour cargo got on without tho ship? What you Doed, my frionds, in all your work, iu your Sunday school class, iu your reformatory institution, and what wo ail need in to enlarge our vooabulary when wo oomo to speak about God and Christ and heaven. Wo rido a few old words to death when thoro is such illimitable ro sourco. Shakcspearo employed 15,000 different words for dratua'iu purposes, Milton emplovod 8,000 different words for pootio purposes, Kufus Choato employed over 11,000 diffomut words for legal purposes, but tho most of us have loss thau 1,000 words that we can manage, loss than 500, and that makes as no Btupid. When wo ocmo to set forth tho lovo of Christ, we aro going to take tho tondorcst phrasoology wherever, wc lind it, and if it has never been u-cd iu thai direction boforo all tho more shall wo aso it. Whon wo oomo to speak of tho glory of Christ, tho ootqueror, wc aro going to draw our simileslrcm trumphal aroh and oratorio and everything grand and stupendous. Tho French navy havo 18 (lags by whioh they give signal, but those 18 flags they can put into 66,000 diffcront combinations. And 1 have to tell you that theso standards of the cross may bo lifted into combinations infinito and varieties everlasting. And lot mo say to young men who are ^ after awhilo going to prcaoh .Jcsus n Christ, you will havo tho largest labor W ty and unlimited icsourco. You only P 1 a"o to present Christ in your own | way. Jonathan Kdwards picaohcd Christ mmaemmcar n i .ia.i,r<r>? n in m ia the referee! fcr^u coot erer rented, [ tod John Bun} so in ached Christ io tho Bublimctt a'legory over emposed. Edward P*}Son, s'ok sod exhausted, leaned up against tlio side of the pulpit rttd wepr out <-ut his oisocurse, while ' Ge< rgo Whitifijld, will* the manner at d the voioi and tho start of an aotor overvheliiod his auditory. It would havobjen a different thing if Jonathan Edwards had tried to write and dream abcut tho pilgrim's progress to the oolestial city or John Bunjan had attempted an es-ay on tho humauwill. f Brghtor thau tho light, frosher than tie fcui'aiis deeper than tho seas, are these gospel themes. Song has no melody, flrwtrs have no sweetness, tunset sky ha* no color, c mpared with tliPfii* ulrtrions ihpmm Tli.s.i hupvAnta L of grace spring up q lickcr than wo e?n sickle them Kn.il 1 ng pulps with thiir fire and producing revolutions with their power, lightirg up dying beds with their glory, they aro the f BWt etcst thought ft r the poet, and they aro the most thrilling illustration for tho orator, and they effort he most intense sjore for tho artist, and thoy aro to the embassador of the sky all tnthu siasiD. Complete pardon for the direst ' guilt. Sweetest comfort for ghastliest agony. Brightest hope for grimmest death. (J ar.t es'rcsurreotion for darkest sepuleher Uh what a gosp. l to preach I Chr'st over all in it. His birth, his suffering, his miracles, his parables, his sweat, his tea s, his blood, his atonement, bir inter o-sioo?what glorious themes! L)j wo exorcise faith? Christ is its ohj e . D> wo havj lov? ? It fastens on Josus. Have we a fond ' ncss for tho ehurob? It is because Christ dud for it. 11 ?vj wo a hope of hcaveo? It is beoauso Jesus went 4 ahead, tho herald and the forerunner ^ The royal robe of Demetrus was so F costly, so beautiful, that afur ho had put it off no one ever dared put it on. but this rob} of Christ, richer thau that, the poorest and the wannest and ^ tho wcr-t tuay wo*r. "Whoro sin abounded grace uny murh more abound." "Oh, mv sins, my Bins," said Martin 3 Luther to S aupitz "m^ sins, my simi!' ' Tho faot isthct tho brawny Gorman student had f.ucd a Latin Bib o that had mado liiui quake, and nothing else , over did make him q take, and when he ^ found how through Christ he was pardoned and save I ho wrote to a friend 3 saying: ' Come ever and join u", grcaand awful sinnora saved by tho graoo of of God You seem to be ouly a slender j sinner, and you don't muoh extol tho mercy of God, but wc who havo been # such very awful sinners prauc his graoo I the more now that wo havo beon rodeemed." Can it bo thatyouaroso dos pcrately egotistioal that you feel your^ self in first rate spiritual trim and that ( from the root of tho hair to the tip of J the toe you aro soarless and immaculate? g Whatyou needisa looking glass,and hero it is in tho Bible. 1'oor and wretohed and miserable and blind ar.d nak.d from the crown of the head to the solo of the fco*, full of wounds and putrefy iDg soreB. No health in us. And then 0 take the fact that Chri?t gathered up all D tho notes against us and pari them and 8 offered us tho rccoipt. a And how muoh wa need him in our h sorrows! Wo aro independent of o r ^ cumstanoes if w a havo his graoo. Why, a ho made Paul sing in tho dungeon, and y uudtr that grrcr St. John from desolate Patmos hoard tho blast of tha appoca c lyptio tiumpets. After all other oanI dies have been snuffed ou- this tho 0 light that gets brighter and brigh'cr ~ unto the perfrct dar, and after under 0 tho hard hoots of calamity all the ? pools of worldly enjoyment havo been II trampled into deep rniro at tho foot of ' tho eternal rook tho Christian, from witivv, |iuis uui uif tnmt of hi? soul. " Again, I remark that Christ i8 ahov. all in dying alleviations 1 have nol 10 any sympathy with tho morbidity y abroad about our demise, 'fhoemperoi h of Constantinople arranged that on the 11 day of his coronation tho stonemason Is should omo and oonsult with hi in r- about his tombstone that after awhile t ho would need And there aro men if who are monomaniac*! on tha suljaol I, of departure from this lifo by death, I. and tho more they think of it tl.o lots g prepared aro they to go. This is an I. unmanliness not worthy of you, not n worthy of mo. 1 iraladiu, the grctost oot queror of his * day, whilo dying, trdorcd tho lunio he ? had on him to be carried after his dca^ h on a spear at the head of bi: aroiy, and * then tho soldier ovor and anon should 8 stop and say: "Behold all that is left 1 of Saladin, tha emperor and oorqurror! * Of all tho stares ho corqueied. of all " tho wealth he aooumulated, nothing did t ho retain hut this shroud." 1 havo no L sympathy with suoh behavior or audi 1 absurd demonstration or with much that wo hear uttored in regard to do ? parluro from this lifo to tho next. > There is a oommonsen-doal id .a on this subjoot that you and I need to cmsi' dcr, that I hero aro only two btyles of | departure. A thousand fcot uudorgrouud, by light of torch to'-ling in a miner'a si aft, a lodge of rock may fall upon us, arid we may dio a miner's death Far out at sea, falling from tho ilippory rat.incs and broken on tho halyards, nu u:ay uiu a hHUCT S at 'AID. UO LUIS sion of oioroy in hospital amid broken bonoe and r joking leprotics and raging fcvors wo may dio a philan'ropist's death. On tho Gold of battle, serving God and our country, slugs through tho heart, tho gun oarriago uiay roll over ub, and w<i may dio a patriot's death. Gut after all thero aro only two styljH of departure, the death of the tightcius aid of tho wicked, and wo all want to die the former. Ood grant that when that houroom 8 you may be at home! You want the hand of your kindred in your hand You want your oluldrcn to surround you. You waut tho light on your p>l low from eye that have long ri-tl-rated your lovo. You vaot tho room still. You do not want any ouriuus strarg rs standing around watching jou You want your kitdred from afar to hoar your last prayer. 1 think that is the wish of all of us, Gut is that all? Can earthly friends hold us when tho bil lows of doath ooine up to the girdle? Can human voioo charm open hcavon's gate? Can human hands pilot uj through the narrows of doath into heaven's harbor? Can an tarthly friendship shield us from tho arrows of doath and in tho hour whan satan shall rraotio upon us his infernal arjhory? No, no! Alas, poor soul, if that is all! Getter dio in tho wildemoss, far from :rjo shadow and far from fountain, | alono, vultures oiroling through tho air waiting for our body, unknown to inon, and to havo no burial, if only Christ would say through tho solitudes: "1 will never leave thoo. I will never forsako thee." From that pillow of stono a ladder would soar hoavenward, angola ooming and going, and across i tho solitudo and tho harronuoHs would i oonio the swoot note of heavenly miu- < strelsy. i Gordon Hall, far from homo, dying i in tho door of a heathen towplo, said, \ "Glory to thee, O QodI" What did i dying Wilborforoo say to his wife? j "Como and sit bosido mo and lot us t Iia'k of hearen. I aetor knew what happiness was until I found Chris*.'' What did dying ll.nnah >lifjny? ''To got to heaven, thiuk what that ut To goto Chritt, who dio that I might 'iv< ! Oh, glcritui grav I Oi. woat a glorious thing it is to dut Oh, thi lovo of Christ, tho lovo of Orris ! ' What did Mr. Toplady, the great hymnrnakcr, bay in his liBt houi? Who o?" ni<-a<uro tho depth of the third btavrn? Oh, tho sunshine that fit's toy toull 1 bhi.ll soon bo gone, fortvrely no one oan liva hcrj after suoh glorios as God has manifested to mv soul " What did tho dyiog Jancwiy saj ? ' 1 oan as easily dio as close my eyes or turn tit/ head iu siccp. B .forj a few hours have pa sol I shall stand on Mjuit Z on with tho one hundred and forty aud four thousand and with the just uhu made perfect, and we shall aao'ibo riches and hocor and glory and uiajibty and dominion unto Ged aid tho Lauib," Dr. Tayler, oindouined to burn at tho stake, on his way thither broku away from the guudatneo and went bounding aid leaping and jumping toward the fire, glad to go to Jesus and to die for him. Sir Onarhs Bare in his last momint had auch rapturous vision that ho oried, ''Upward, upward, upwaro!' And so great was the ptacc of one of Christ's disciples that he pathia Sogers upon the pu'se in hia wrist and counted it and observed its halting beats until hialifehal endtd h< r; t > begin in heavea Butgraaler ti an that was the toalitu my of thn woroout firs; mis aionary, whuu in tho Main ursine dun gaon ho cried: "I am now ready to ho offered, and the time of my departure is at hand I have fought tho got d fight, 1 have finished my oousie, I have kept tho faith. H nocforih there is laid up fir mo a crown of rightoouBorsi, which tho Lord, the righteous Judge, will give mo i t that Oay, aad not to mo only hut to uJ ihern tl:a. love his appear log!" I)? you not see that Christ ia above all in dyiog aMcviaiioa.- ? Toward the last Jiou- of our earthly residenoe wo aro speeding. When I aec tho spring bV-soms scattered, I Fay, " Anotln r soanon gone forever." When L eloae the B.ble on Sabbath night, 1 say, 'Another Sabbath departtd" When I biiyafrioud, L aay, "Another eaithly aiir&etion gone forcvor." What nimble foot the years have! Tho roebucks and tho lightnings run uot ao fast. From deeaie todocade, from sky to sky, they go at a bound, '['hero is a place for us, whether marked or not, where you an 1 I will sleep tho last sleep and the men are now living who will with solemn tread, carry ua to our resting placo. Brighter than a banqueting hall through w inch the light loot of the datcersgo up and down to tho aound of trumpeters will bo tho Bopuloher through whoic rifts tho holy light of heaven strc&mcth. Cod will watch you. Ho will eoad hia augels to guard your slumbering ground until, at Christ's bohost, they shall roll away tho ttcne. So *.1 io C irist is anovo ail in hoaven. Tho Bible distinctly says that Christ ia tho etiiof themoof tho uehsiial samp tion, all the thrones lacing his throne, all iho palms waved before hia faoo, all the crowns do wn at his feet. Chtrubin to cherubim seraphim to soiaphim, redeemed spirit to r deemed spirit shali recite too Saviour's earthly sacrifice. Stand on at me high hill of hiaveD, and in ail the ridiatii swe-^p the most glorious cbj.ot will be Jesus Myriads guziogon t.ie scars of his suffering, in silence fir A afterward breaking forih into acclamation: The mart; rs, all the / _ . L XI il 1 . -* ? .1 purur on me uamj mruuBii wmon luey passed, will Bay, "laid is Josib, for whom vro died." The apos.los, a'l tho happier for ihe shipwreck aid tho fCOur*inir ibrinuli urhi?h' K "**"' w' Ui i. . nui/ku ?D*(JI WDIK cd at Corinth and. in Cappadocia and at > Aniioeli and at Jerma'em." Little t children clad in white will sa7, "This ' is tho Jcsub who took uh ia Lis ir.es and f blessed us and when tho storms cf the ! world were too oold and loud brought us 1 into th;H beautiful pla-o." Tho uiultt ' tudis of the boreft wili say, "This ia > tho Jesus who oouaforud u? whin our i heartlroke." Many who iiad wandered e'oar i ff from God and plunged into vagabondism, but were saved by grace, 1 will say: "This is the Jesus w?o par doncd us. We were lost on the moun tains, and ho brought us h,in\ We were guilty, and ho mado ua white as snow. Meroy boundless graco uu paralleled. And then, after each ono has recited hta peculiar deliverances and peculiar imroies, rooi ed thcoi as by solo, all the voices will olilo t >get! er in a great chorus which shall make tho arches reecho with t ho olerual reverberation of gladness and peace and trium ph. Klward I was so anxious to go to the Holy Ltnd thit when ho was annut to expire he bequeathed $ltit),()UO 10 hivo his heart afu r his decease taken and dep sued iu the Holy L tnd, and his ro quest was oompliod with. But there ?rc hundreds today whose hearts aro al.^..1 r. :. i. ~ l.-1 .. I 1 ri ,uou/ in niv uui? lauu ui ncavcn. w noro your treasur s arc, th< ro a-o your hi arts a!s) .John Dunyan, of whom L spoke at tho opening of the di c mrso, caught arl.rnp-.e of that plao, acd ia his quaint way lie said, '"And I hoard iD my dream, and !o, the bells of tho city rang again f r j >y, auJ as they opontd the gates to lei in tho tnca I looked iu afur thorn, ard lo, tho oily shone liko the sun and th<-ro Hero streets if gold, aud men walked on them, harps in their hands to sing praxes with a I, and after that they shut up tho gates, which when I had foe n I wished myself among them! ' Hud to Go. The hoard of public in-.truotiou of Ponsaoola, Fla , has demanded the resignation of C II. Dye, prinoipal of public school No. 1. They allege l)yj made hiimolf obn? xious to ho Uaohers and pupils by making insulting remark s about tli southern oourso when they wcro at work preparing a programme , for the pupilB to tako part in tho Confederate doooration day. Ho attempted , to chaigo tho i iogramin j by Hubsti'u'.- ( ing a song ia accordance with his owu t sentiment. Tho mattor retched tho ears of mombsrs of Camp Ward, Confederate veterans, and thev t .inad ?i?h tho teacher* and pupils in domsadmg that Dyc'a resignation be a*kid for. j Ho win notified by tho board that ho ( must resign at ouoo. l>yo id froui ] Massac hu-io us aud is bitter in hid f hatred for tho Confederacy, and *ai , outspokua in his opposition to t'n i ( pupils honoring tho dead heroes of tho ( south. H ' c A liravo Woman. ? Tho Charlotte Observer says: *"lf a our lluthcrfordion oorrespondent is 1 oorrootly informed, there would have * been a doublo auoidont at liuifalo crock trostlc on the South Carolina A. Georgia road Saturday and two trams would havo gone down in tho wrvok instead of h one. According to thid correspondent's p story in Wednesday's Observer an old s sclotud woman flagged down the pas- g longer train for Hlackshurg just be.lore s it roaohed tho trestle. It is to bo ro- fi ^retted that tho old woman's nam* was o lot learned, for her serf ioo in most " probably saving precious lives was a I ;rcat one." 1< BABY BURIED ALIVE 1 Ph; A Big S*ris*tinn in tha Cm? of Nr w Yoik. t I fro a ot THE WOMAN WATCHED of mo Ben While the M*n Oug the Qrav*. thf oal They Ran Away, But j*sl Was Followed and Ur< Sot Arrrs'ed bui bill An Italian who said ho was Givrio )at Huttavavallo, living on tbo lover Kast f(]jj Side of New Ytrlc citv, and a |>aio not faced firl of 18, who refused to pay any- wh thing about herself, wore committed to nothe Westchester county jail at White Spi Mi 11T I J * . ? ? iiaics Yveaoesaay nigai on * uhargo ol Kr> burying * live ohild booeath three feet h i of earth at the foot of a ravino border wo ing the village cf IlaslintrB on-tho-Hudson. A contractor's foreman, who dug upt the child from tho grave and saved its to life, caused tho wrrcit cf tin eouplo tra Tho child may die. to Huttaooavallo and his companion 0O, woro arrested on th"ir way from H*f>- trie tings to Yonkers. The arrest was made hfi on a Warburton avorui trolley car. 0.t Warburton avonuo is tho road that con or ncols Youkcrs with Hastings cn the Ul{ Hudson. It it about five mites in thi longhtli and extends through a hilly ai country where there are but few *?ous3s ,t , The road crosses a ravino near tho j)t Hastings village. A brook known ss ,?c< Howlcy's brook flows throu/h the ravine. It was on tho bank of "his n, brook Ha' lho ohild was buried. fCr Pa'rick MoAvoy, foreman over a gsrg th? of laborer, was at work building a rail a r road treetlo over this brook. They 'pn were a quarter of a m'lo from How'ej's ho bridge, which spans the brook at War jQ burton avenue. Tho men quit work at rc? 12 30 o'clock Wednesday. MoAvoy walked toward Warburton avenue to vo 0>tl to lunch at his homo in Hastings. H pa's>d throogh the raviuo along tne n-u bank of tho bronk. th, Ahout three hundred feet ahead of al him ho saw a man and wjaaan kDoelirv am on the ground The man appeared to trc be digging in tho ground. As MjAvoj aj approached tho woman beckoned to he r a<.( oompanion as if to tell him to hurry with tho work ho was doiuc. Tho tntn oej g'anoed up and seeing McAvoy ap t],j proaoh hurriedly filled in tho hole he WJ had dug Then as tho woman star.ed to 0f run toward the trolley road th? unn ]cs stopped and picked up a bush which be placed over tho nowly-turned ea-th. He hastened after the woman and they oroBsed Waiburton avenue and disap- rai pcarcd in aravicc on the other side of at the trrlley tracks. wl MoAvoy hurried after hitu Ho saw tb the inaD put a hatchet under his cov Tr and he believed that the strargir had ev u?fd it to bnry or dig up a tiorsure. aft When Mo \voy got to the crown ot tho wi bill on vVarhurtoa avenuo tho man and Tf woman wcrj not in eight. Then he bo hurried baok to iho Bpot where ho had oh seen the man digging. th As ho approio ted MoAvoy says ho to hrard the cries of a baby. He olimrd th over a hedge and throwing aside the hebush, began to dig up tho earth with ov his hands. After he bad removed about th three feet of earth he found a bundle of in whito clothes inside of whioh was a boy pit baby about thrco weeks old and ap th i i 1. i. 'pl. -L-.J . I jtaicuiij *i* guuu Ul an u. ll'C Ctl!|JU U*i had good lungs and rnado uso of them It had been saved from suffocation by Nvc h?T.ne its faoe covered wi.ih .? .-ov-" a v 1 ; ?1 V With the ohild in his arms McAvoy ran to Warburton averuo and bojrdci a trolley oar going toward Hastings. ?a Ho toll tho cinduotor and mortorman m all about his find. The oonduotor, Wil- nl liam Walsh, said he remembered an U Italian coup'o had been passcneers on w a previous trip Ho said the couple had ca vrt oo his car at Vonkers and left it at t.h Rowley's bridgo. or Ho thought it stracgo at the time for iu a wcmin to get off the oar at this poiDt, no for most of h*s passcngert rode ali the or way to the village. Mc.Yvoy rotd into th Hastings and turned the child over to re the first woman he met. This woman was pu M rs Barbara Bauer, the jiniiress of le; tho village sohool. McAvoy then ran th to the headquarters of the villacre police ph and reported tho case. 11 j de^cibtd th tho man and wo nan whom ho had seen tot burying the child acd the village po- Oi lico teloph mod tho description to the by police of Yockors. no Conductor Walsh started on his trip he baok to Yonk< th. About a mile and a th half out of Hastiogs a man an 1 woman signalled tho motoimau to stop. When Welsh saw tho couple ho maio up his mind that they wcro tho ones who had <]e buried tho baby -id told tho tno'or ha man to call the first policeman th?y met whon Yonkers was reached. At ori, that city tho motormao rhoutcd to po- a,j, lieeman Archer, and be put tho couple k under arrest |(8 A Kail rood Levied On. The Columbia Sta'e says a rather unusual case has just dt volopcd in Bar: - 'j'-1' well county. Thirteen miles of railrovl 1 track and right of way have bc.n levi w ' ed upon by tho shi riff that county ar.d V will bj advertised for sale on the ap ? ' proaohing saleaday. It will be reacall J0>< ed that Penitentiary Guird Watte "Jl fell info an unprotected out in J", this city aod was sovere'y injured. * t 1 ~ V. U. ?u muugdi HUH 1U liirtlW'll J'JUUly for damages and g)t a vordiot of $7,500. It soems that tho South 1 Bound Railroad company,agamst hiwhich the verdict was allowed, CPt has refused to pay the amount of . gat tho judgement, upon what grounds is shr. not yet known and tho Sheriff of tho Dv county has proceeded, fading 10 find her any personal property belonging to the j a w defendant company, to levy up.o its > reel traok. This levy was mado a few days oori agi, and complicates tho matter cor.-i ion; dcrably, as iho Seaboard trains arc run- lid ntng dail.s over 1 ho track " Fraudulent Healing. aX In iho Kcdiral Court hero Stopl en A. Woittnor and .Joseph M. Ivoily, presidont and secrotary rospeotively of .ho Woltmer Iustituto of Magnetic arn Healing in Uavada, Mo , pleaded 10 l, tuilty of indiotuunts charging t'ncrti *' * fith u.ing the mail to defraud. Th y wo^ hrcw themselves en tho mcray 'ftlio lourt. Sentence is reserved. The in won it it uto was advrdeci to heal "?11 lisoascn known to man or woman, 11 ;iviug ahs;ut treatment,' and did-uch i tremendous mail order business that tiut ho l'ostoffioj Department ordered *ns hoir mail stoppod on a fraud order. wha fron Ho Didn't Lose Him. A darky died and a treat crowd colooled at tho African Methodist Kpisco- A al ohurah to hoar the funeral sermon, says ays tho Atohison (ilobo. There was payr real curiosity to know what tho par- aud on would say, ?s tho dead man had .Japt ro'iuenlly been invited to join tho trou hurch and refused. Tho parson said: pani Is this uiio lost? 1 don't know but t.Japi do know that if ho is lost, 1 didn't it wi ,so him." pros ) MMIST HIS BILL WAS A WHOPPEK j -j Lladelphia Physician Attended a 1 Senator and Charged $190,000. It V dispatch to thn N w York Sun jj Philadelphia r/yn Thin city has Imui to c Hii.cli in in -.1 c p.s ?mion a physician who for twenty one athi' attcii'lenco on a siak tnau | reted ? bill for $190,000 lu h<s bill ro arc items ot iSO a vn it for st-vr ral Is a d one item calls f >r #17 000 for t mm in -r'a treatment at Atlantio y Jlio physic no is Dr. Wa'tar (J iw a ir g, and his patient was the lato l&tor Christopher L Magic, of Pitts:g, who died a short lime ago The I was sent 10 ihe rxocutiri of the is eof Senator Magee acd they aoknowl ;od itd receipt Thursday. They did 0 i say whether they would pry it or ether they thought the charges n c S'vc. Dr. Bro-vnicg li?oi at 1 325 I rucc street, but ho was not at home si day on i a nurse who was seen at the 0 no fa d she did not know when he uld got back ?s his labors with Senator . ,goe and othur patients had so acted ( an I is ni rvos that ho had bet n forced take a few da< s? r< 8*, and he was veling swiftly from oily to city so as h?vj rnis ant chituic of sccoc, she ild nt t toil wh rf a mlegiam ur ou or BSige would roach him. The m ui h of too medical fraternity of this y will say u tilting of Dr. Browning his bill except ti at thoy think it is ! largost that was ? v?.r rendered in a ootntry fir nitd'.cal attendance? any rate for the length of timo men ned. Un it one year aeo, or for a tiod cf eleven month s.Senator Ma \ who was living at the Stratfoid i> d at i ho offij,. of Dr. Browning. i'o t.o announced that ho would jrj to have the doc or call to see him at 3 hotel, and Dr Browning d d so for luin'nr of times, specified in the hill o dootcr's time is va'ued at $30 an ur and thiH name charge is continu id the reoird of several trips to health torts which the physician thought uld benefit his patient. Uco of these argot is lor $12,000 for accompany 5 tho Senator to Ho' Springs, Vr*. A rso at the doctors office said Friday vt b:s usual charges for treatment the offioo were $20 for an hour; *x lination at t'.i* office, $30 an hour; ft r atmont olsavl or- , $10 an hour. riiic inittsd that the charge of $30 made ainst the estate of the Utj donator s double what the doctor usually re ved. but said that it had been agreed at sliould bo the price the senator uld pay m ho r.rpiirei a groat deal tbo doctor's time and caused him to so other patient Held Up a Train. The po'ic> offioials of Memphis and lroaa and express deteotives are haid work trying to looate the six robbers to held up the midnight express or e Ch.cc a>v Railroad about midnight ic d-tic ives wo: king on the case have iry reason to believe that the bandits ;er t ie hoi 1 up and robbery made their ,y br.ck to Memphis with their bo^ty. it y t ecur< d t o uethir g in the te:gh r. odd of $1 000 tne express people um. Th? y admit that bnth the roukh aid locil safes wero rifl d and ban a people in Mempbis the Btcry of o srrail Joss seems absurd. Th?y beve the lois to bj gr at r Suffiiicnt iitucoh s hi jn "cor d to warrant e ?t> te Ji Lt tint vb-j uica h<*ve been 1 M j'nj hib for the past several days, ' tnr:iig ihc hold np Sidney Drew, J : regr.t porlei who was slut by the ' ndits was tak"n to St. Vinaent's tlos i*l ai Little Rock, Ark., where his 1 und was diesjvd. 11 is condition is v 1 ' . A I II I ' ? 1 * ' I ^i? Plot \V as Deep Laid. A f isi atch from Memphis, Tern., yn J VV.Sk.cno-, tho wealthy yadiry an who was arretted a few days ago, arired with the a?saisioation of I)r. at Scrubs, who wa-s shot in the back bi'o returning frvin a professional 1, was indicted by tho grand j try is a tcrnoon. Skinner, who was tut i bail, awaiting the action of the ry, was rcsrro^ted and jailled. Skia ir still c oaios a'l knowledge of the iuio. i'hc latest develop men's string- ] en the theory that the crime was toe < euA of a deeri laic p ot, foil owir g a litica'feud. -Vedncsuay the detectives , irn that several attempts wero made , 0 day before the oriim to lure the ] ij>ic*n to Binghampion, just outtiie . c town. Ho answend onu call totho ( sn, but fatitd to respond to a seoond. | 1 tho first trip he was accompanied < a f send natrcd Rtwlins. It is < ? believed that had ho been alone < wcu'.d 1 avc been assassinated on j is trip. Want to Raise Silk Worms. y i Any one in S >uth Carolina who c tires ti cagago in the tilk industry c s aa opportunity to got a start any \ y. lt is said tint the climato and c mitu-ns in this Sac are well >pted to sik worm culture, and Mrs f liey, of Charleston, wh> is now in c ily has wr t'ea 'he governor seto*al i tcrs on tko'iul jto". She has hiss j it a number of packages of mulberry p ds fe r tho purpose tf growing trees, g ?on the Raws of which tho hi)k s rin tl r.vos. INikages of th^so feeds I 1 bo sent to Winthrop, Clemson and o i C< lured Agricultu-al college and a '0 her paokag s ao for g no-a! 'lis r- c ion. Au; one who wants to engago n tho business may secure a package r application to the governor. 1< tl Goes Back to Adam. f> klfred Jitdson Fishrr, the Chicago J? torian, i woven the highly inter- a' ing rc-ults of s g-nealogical investi i q iu'o "A Daughter of Adam,-' a rt story w IrcS ho has written for Tho lies' li mo Journal. Ho iraoeH the H oinc of hi* roininoo t o real life ?' ell-known Philadelphia womat) Ji- ,( tly ha k to Ad mi. er< ib'.ishicg with Bl robrativo do aii every lick 10 tho 01 K gonealrgioal ol ain Ho 1 rings to B' it the f.: s that llier.; liavo been ono H ,drol atd twenty one genera ious of human family, h ginning with h< iuii bi Pitt's Answer. j There!'' eriel Jonathan to a Dewly l< ved i'aldy, as ho waved his hand b< ho direction of the llorsashoe falls dc S'iagara There! Now, isn't that or iderful?" Wonderful! ' replied Pat. ''What's 'I Ul 1 III i Wby, to 8co a'l that water o.irnc ? ndoring cvor :honr> rook*." ^ Faix, lb* !i, to tc.l yo tho honest 'k h," was tho response, "1 can't see V thing very wondcrfalin that. Why, 1 t tho <11 vil in thoro to hindor it Cv' i ooming aver?"?Baltimore Sun. U i A Financial Panic. ,1( dispatoh from Yokohoma, .Japan, over twenty banks havu suspended (,(| nont at Osaka and in tho southern central piovinoos. Tho Bank of m in has assisted thorn hut further bio is apprehended. A financial ^ o prevails. About four years ago in adopted tho gold standard, and ,\n is then prodiotod that her days of pority wore gono. * .1.1 , . - . m if.li ?rr?i 'BE B\D RATTIER ! I is Eff ct Uj^n <h?i Or Wi o Cr< p? f f ;h? f' ;h*. i RAIN PREVENTED FROST. < 1 "h? W-. k v B jt|*tin lstu?<1 La?t ] W-*k by SfC'i n D r c tor B <u?r, v f tho J W?aih?r Ruraau 1 Below is the regular weekly bulletin i f the ordi'ion of the weather and i rops of th? State issued last week by >inct ?r Bauer of the S u h Carolina rotioo of ?he climate and crop ret via* j f the Ujited Sates weather bureau: i The wetk ending Monday, April 22 ' ad nearly normal temperature until ho la-t two days wh;ch were between 0 and 25 degrees ootder than usual, nd had minimum t"U)j?era*ures low nough for severe frosts that wore verted ly the rainy nnd cloudy Feat In r tlat prevailed. There was much tuobhino and dr> reatber until Thursday tight, when , warui r?tn set in that continued hrougiout Friday and Saturday, but n the latter dty the falling tempt r sure in ido the rain c tilting, aud over ho west'in counties the jrcc ptainn ?*s at liuirs in the form of hail, snow ir sleet. Snow flu-rbsw. re observed ,s far eastward as the crntrtl counties. Pho preo pitation was heavy ov< r a rge portion of the State, amounting to tetween three aud four inohes in many ccalitiis. aid did uiuch dauiigo by uckir g p'o sed land a ,d washing gul iea in tcirares, wbi'c freshens occurred 1 n mat y streams, 11 jodin< belie in lands Ivor the s.iUthraa orn counties tdo rain vas modid and prove i beneficial Farm w-rkrapii (regress iv r the taster t por ions of tte S a*e, where ipland corn a'd cottoo planting is racticaliy fioi.-hed, and tobacco argtly transplanted under favorable tonditions, alihoug!: tho plants arc imall; rice planting also undo raj id ^regress, except in tho ticorgotown listrict, whTe freshets and high tides jrokc tlin livcf banks aud flooded tho iolds, preventing planting. In these t ctioi h, c rn and cottrn ore coming ip, but germination is slow and stands p-uerally poor, rrc-rskatirg much ro ?lanti;g, but with exceptions where itands arc good. Corn is roceiving its irst < ultiv&tion in the southeastern sounties, and oats arc heading There, ;oo, trick and gardens, aud minor ? ops geoera'ly, aro doing well, ana arm v ork is as far advanced as usual ii ents scasor. In t!io cential and wo?trrn c< unites, aid particularly in th; North Carolina jorder counties, tho conditions were ees favorable, t*nd although much upand cud tnl lomo cotton haa bec-o llante (, very little is up, as the ground as be in too wet and odd for favora :.lc germination, and btnnda of such stops that ar: up are por. The grouo 1 was fi. to plow, over the western half of the State, on from two :o four days only, and the reoent rains will s ill fu'thcr delay farm work on iplancs, while bottom lands will be too wet for a long time. Some plowed lands have been bo packed by the heavy raius that tb> y wilt have to be plowed again to fit them for planting. Tho hoavy rain* have seemingly im in places by tco much rain, although the o op as a wholo remains v ry promit ing Colorado beetles are widely provah nt ou white potato, s. Peaches promise lers than a full crop in L< * ingto and hMgifi.'ld counties, and in localities elsewhere, "btherwiao 'hey ar j very p-oaiislng Apple and ohcrry trees are in full bloc 111. Sunshine and warmer weather arc needed for all crops. CROPS IN OTHER STATES. The national weather bureau's weok [y summary of crop conditions saya ua dcr dae of April 20: This is the fourth consecutive week of abnormally cold weather over nearly Lhe v hole country, with tho most marked tempi ra it o d? fijiency of the :eisoo in the o. n ral valleys and southern State*, the heavy preoipita lion throughout tho Ohij valley an i >ver the greater portion of tho Atlantic soast and Gulf districts. These oou litions have been very unfavorable for 'arnm g operatioi s. Very slow progrofs hai been made with corn plautiug; none yet Las been ylantc 1 north of the Ohio river, and 'xtenrivo roplanting will bo necessary >ver a largo part of tho fouthcrn States there tho growth of the crop has been lecidtdiy cheeked The week Las been very unfavorable or cotton planiiug over* largo per. f *L -i ? - ii iiio union Deit, more particu'ari) n the central districts, whom anion re dan ting will he n< csst'try. The early >lautc<l in o mil g up to poor stand enrrallv, ncd in l\ xas and Go rg a onae damage has baen dono by frost u Teiueasco about one third of the rop has loon planted. Although freezing temperatures ?curred as far sium as eastern Ton- i es^ec and s?odtcrn North Carolina, tl.o 1 cport.s indicate that fruit has very irgoly escaped injury, lu portions of < ho centra! valleys and southern S'ates < ruit has sustained irjiry, but it is roba1 In that the daui.'go was not jriou >. In a Had Way. , After being "t flioially dead" for tbir [ ?-f?e?cn years Janus Koust, fmrucrly f Kokonia, lud., no* living on a faiiu ljoir.ing that of O:n. Fred Fun-ton, j Dar lola Kan ik in f.^r-? -i -- 1 , - ?MV iVilU'-I JMACP dleotioK evidence to prove hiu>Ho!f ivo. In tho civil war Fount had al s to haok pari of his skull tern of by n idl and was thrown on the "dead ?ap " Uo wis ruppPS' d ,n have h<-en v iriod with his iV?i o<- i.*a'rs, bu' 1? i'CVi red cotsiubuinuiii and puiiiug 1: uiself our < f the pile of dead, orept ;yoLd the lines in the darkness and o csimlost- Ho was listed with tho iaO and tho record "dead" still stands iposito his name oq tho military roll A Curious Epitaph. In Holly weed cemetery, Richmond, tl a , is a 'onibsiooe, which was crcottd p ' thei fel'.o v workers of a bravo rail- n ad engineer, who died at his post of t< ity. Tho epitaph ou the stouo is uohed in the language of tho craft, d runs as follows: v nil the brakes are put on time, ft Life's ihrottle-valve shut down, $ waits to pilot in the crew ^ That wears the martyr's crown. w i schedule time and upper grade ly Along the heavcuw rd rcction, > lands his (raiu in God's roundhouse The morn of resurrection. C ? time all full?no wages docked? 8i His name on God's pay roll id transportation through to Heaven, A free pass for his soul. " ?Equitable Record, J w? t E tit tried U~Coiti?<?a*alJ?l< Patience?Is that so that your engagement Is broker? Patrice?Yes, it is. "And tlie ring; that's gone too?" 'i? "Yes; the mean thing asked me to return it." *' "Why, you wouldn't want to keep " the ring if the engagement was 8 1 broken, would you?" "Certainly, I would. Why, he wore DUt four of my waists and nearly rraetureti my riDs in three weeks. u,; Isn't that worth some compensa- 0a lion?"?Yonkers Statesman. at Loyalty. (K, "Your wife," observed one of his friends, "says you are decidedly in aVj favor of amending the laws so,as to an ifive women e(|uui rights with men jj( in voting, holding ottice and disposing of property." jD "if my wife says so," said Mr y,r Meeker, "it's so. I have always been y,r?f the understanding that my mar- Ul riage vow bound me to love honot it id (). K. her in everything."?Chi;ago Tribune. lie Knew tbe Act. Vaudeville Manager?No, we cannot book you to act. You see, we do not allow any profanity in our house, tk Hudd (of Wrought en and Badd)? G< Why, sir, there is not a profane ex- fall pression?not even any slang?in out ii> turn. au< Manager?T know. But we do not nc allow the audience to swear, either. ? u ?Baltimore American. aA Cnse In I'olnt. "Money," remarked the man who is er given to trite remarks, "is the root o ^y all evil." ht "That's nonsense," answered tht commercial friend. "1 have read tin ^ histories treating of the subject witl great care, and i am convinced that the snake who made the trouble in tin garden of Kden didn't haw a dollat Lo his name."?Washington Star. u{ It's Wicked to Lie. "I'm surprised, dear, that youi friend. Miss Singleton, should encour age wickedness." "Why, Charles, she wouldn't. How can you say such a thing?" "Because she did. She asked me how old I thought she was, and she knew '! 1 was too much of a gentleman to tel . the truth."?I'hiladelphia Bulletin. in Prophecy Ktilfllled. "The late editor's wife is something < '. of a humorist." q. "Indeed?" "Yes. Took a line from his original salutatory and placed it on his tomb f, stone." ca "What was it?" at "We are here to stay!"?Atlanta ] Constitution. Slow to Kenllicc. "My dear," said Mr. Bickers to his ? wife, "I saw in the paper to-day a dc- ^ cision of a Virginia court that the k. wife may, in some cases, be the head of the family." "John Henry," replied Mrs. Bickers, "the courts are sometimes very slow about finding out things!"?Puck. Money Tlicht. Drug Clerk?I've been docked a week's salary for making a mistake and killing a man. Lend me live dol- I lars, won't you? Friendly Policeman?Couldn't possibly. I've just been sxispended a week for killing another one.?N. Y. Weekly. A Mural Lrctarr, Miss Upperten?They say there is a ] grent deal of misery among the poor. Miss Qotrox?Well, it's their fault. * i" with only $10,000 a year, trying to keep a yaelit and a stable of horses? no wonder he's miserable.?Puck. Then He UodgpR. Who says I cannot meet my bills? Of libels that's the worst! i Why, sirs, 1 meet them every day? ? Unless I see them first. ?Philadelphia Press. AOT I.IKE MOTHEH'S. n n ? l~1L a Mother lien?You're all right, my dear, but you can't lay eggs like mother used to lay.?Chips. The Exception to the ltule. "When a woman is telling anything T] she always adds a little to it." re- JE market! the observer of events ami things; "except it is her age which she happens to be telling."?Yonkers St atesmn n. Not Always Necessary, "1 tell you it takus a mighty smart , md shrewd man to accumulate a large fortune these (lays." "Oh, I don't know; not while heiresses are so easily satisfied as some >f them seem to be."?-Chicago Post. tiood Cause for Deduction. Doctor Why huve you deducted a fll juurter from my bill? Patient?That is for the six cigar* von broke when you thumped my hest.?Philadelphia Record. I'nrailnxlcnl. "Is love blind?" "So they say." "Well. i. -XV can they say love at first light?" ("hie. 70 Daily News. Cnn't inr All. St. Peter?Did you ver do anything j ery bad? i Fair Arrival?I?I smuggled a few ices through the customhouse. St. Peter?Oh, well, come in. We an't pet along without women.?N. '. Weekly. Another Opinion. "Do you think bachelors ought to ] e taxed?" asked Willie Wishington. (ie, "No," answered Miss Cayenne. "I set; hink the girls ought to make up pai urses and pay them bounties for not taking homes unhappy."?Washing- ? an Star. Too Xtnch of n Good Thlnir, Jiinson-?What became of that man 1 ho had 27 medals for saving people Col poni drowning? Dock Worker?lie fell in one day inft rlien he had them nil on, nnd the eight of 'cm suuk him.?N. Y. Week- r r. Just IIIm n>-. Mabel?I sometimes think that harlie doesn't love me?he acts so ?y. c h Agnes?Nonsense! When he acts M f illy that shows he's in earnest.? udge. * J ?' m alMaMai ??Wp?MH A Marr^illg Man. fl tfl'tho arrest of Coiol Leopold D( IH eiyifje, otherwise ko*>*n ae Leo Fraill, ?V o fa hold by the New Yo k po- H ;e 03 aN charge of b.^uui>, sword to by ito 'or'o' "iu nf In, Uhieafi wivr#, H ere ? as'bf j?ivbt to li-b'. i j that ony HB run im width rtlttyii the C nat as H e htro of ii ore ()>ku oV^f u dr--d loio a r <. He is deplete i loTie^tbe hue- H ,'io of ao asetrlw at of wives whose ia>btr a recently dc.ser ? d wife in Chi- H 150 (btimated last ni^ht at n?t less |fl an bf<y or ?o " VYuon pltcd under H reel 10 N- * Y ??k tbo Couot war re>r*?d o Uvc to'd Doteotiv: ltu ke be d t o O-any wives that he had cot been >lo o ke> p t r a - 0' e en their nam "8 H d oouid lornj no id' a as to tbeir namr. With fifty vivos to Mb 0 edit the H a 1-1 L r _ ? * a ;ui.i wuuiu 01' I' ll a to ntve thrown H (o tM bUlo ih.) rein rlt of the o -le?<od Chics o bigamists, Hates ar d rub^orin, sinoo Hates was able to uHtir only five at his trial aod Ker-s- |H >rth ai o it t be sa uo i umber, al< h ugh H :rusv orih toio the puluo ihv the i am* r of nis living wives ? as fori / two. H Ho Talks Out. fl AtO' rdinit to a ""av&nnah di*p??o'i to H 0 New York Sun, Gov. Chaadb r of H corgit ts about the most uorccon* fl ruc-cd . ffioial in tin- s u h. Sp? ak- H K of the trip lir.ugh Ms S a v i f the I 1 myed oducato s, he Georgia g iver- fl r S '|U. to 1 i at i be sou' h uh> to tot al'Tit better withont the H d or ' tii' Be dan nrd t i - aod at he l- u ?l tut p-lsed a A laota lioc- H IDft tie e pcojl.aa ' all urw coiners H 0 h;rots to their t>?s. You know fl sy made a hero out of Sueruiiu when s caiuo there." Wuat is there ia r ant ah air or io her thirst killing :Vtia Ci t at c uli have 1 OS d the K'i. i f the "ti'i'ut k.ov.ra/r- ?.f the rack r is -t? ? Tfr a p. '"here is inor.- '* sr'tt to t -.in scot:on the ooUeir> thsu a I. ether di,ca-es it ?orc hrr ri-'* u-it.l th- 1%'t f-w ars was sotipoa o to h? ieourahle or a i real iu < > j?<rs doctors pro)unc? d it a local disc *?e, at d prof crib1 loosl remdii s sod by c nstantly ilirg to c?ire wi-h U-oal treatment, ouot ocfd it ir.oer.b e. Scieooe has 'over Ci-aira to tio ft C0Ls i<utienai 3ta.-c, and tv erefor. requires oousti'.ni La rcatuiuot. H i.l p Ca arrh Cure, *nu':.o' urci b, K. J Cheney & Co , olede, Oi.io i- the only ooeatituiional ire on th*1 o.a:k t It is iakeo intcrilly i i coses from 10 dr>ps to a tcas>onfut. It ao's dirtcily i n li e blo< d id u u :< in surfaces of the t-ysic-ui I cj c ff. r one < un.'rcd dollars fcr any ise it fails to cure He: d fir oireulaBr d let trmnrmV Address, ?. J CHENEY & CO , Toledo, O. jld by D.Up'giptp. 75c Hall's Kaimly Pills are the bnst. ?aw Miils, Corn Mills, Cane Mills, Rice Htillers, L*ea 11 tillers, Engines, Boilers, Planers ami 1 Mutohm, 7 Swing Saws, Kip Saws, lid all other kinds of wood forking machinery. My Serjeant 1 og Beam Saw mill is he heaviest, strongest, and aost efficient mill for the loney on the market, quick, ccurate. State Agent for H. 5. Smith Machine Company rood working machinery, 'or high grade engines, plain lide valve?Automatic, and Corliss, write me: Atlas, Vatertown, and Struthers nd Wells V C. BADHAM, 32(5 Main St., Columbia, S. C linning Machinery, Saw Mill Machinery, Planing Mill Machinery, > Irick Machinery, Engines, all Types; Boilers, all Kinds. These ar^ onr Specia lties and we have the most complete and best lin^a to otfer. If. H. Sibhes & Co., A MIINERY and MILL SUPPLIES )F EVERY DESCRIPTION. OOhUMBlA, S. O Yt F ashes. Ant& - f' . i . CPOTONDUGS. : . ? -.: <?)p!D?Rfc, FLIE6.FLEAS, ' - - AND ALL INSECT LlFt. -vVd*aHARMuti3T0pt0PLt r? r ' ? * CML J QEATH TO INSECTS ' ...-. i-j IOAND25 CENTS '*? ' ' *~"3 ALL DEALERS S?> _ - jmTMzCAoeoitrox CurvKti Co. 1 *- ? &.-'3 AAL7IMOBE-, MO ' ... '~SL - I I. ... ??? If Death Duet is not for s?1?j by your a'er, we will upon receipt of 25 ?tnUi id you tSe large pacin^e ty mail poetId. April-10. 8t "wanted. ~ The columbia business college, umbia 8 want* the addresses of all ool teacher* who would like to ei her ke eome money during their rac?lion or manent aud better paying position, ite at once. Address, W. II. Newborry, President. wanted. The address of a few INTKLLIINT YOLTNO TKACHKR9 whose ools have o'oaed for the n?Mcn. Addroas, B. W. Gitninukr, Sox 105, Spartanburg, S. (X S /