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THE HORRY HERALDPublished Every Thursday. | E. W. NOLLEY, Editor. 1 p f ^ THURSDAY APltIL 15. 1897. ' UNO UN CEMENTS- ! MP* Local notices eight ceuts a line. i fM* Subccrlptlon ono dollar in advance ( MP Correspondents will please have their letters in by Tuesday's mall. j MP Anonymous communications will j f* will receive no attention. 1ST Tartles desiring Advertisements j changed will please hand them in not la- 1 > tor than Monthly. g The Editor of this paper will in no g wise he responsible for the views express . ed by correspondents. V ear t he red cross mark on your paper ' means that your subscription is due and * that we are anxious for you to renew. , rm>~ Advertl^amolltc inonrtniUOyvyy Inr per square of one Inch or less for the first insertion and fifty cents for each sub- ' sequent insertion. i 8?sr When writing to have your paper changed, please state the post-ofllce at \v hlcn you receive tiie paper, as well as I the one to which vou wish it changed. t The only negro in the Tennessee 1 legislature is named White. i * An evangelist with the peculiar c name of Knss is making a raid 011 1 iusers in New Orleans. ' William J. Bryan was precipita- ' ted to the ground from a platform ( twenty feet high at St. Augustine j 1 last week. No one was killed, though 5 numbers of people were shaken it]) ( and some badly bruised. Mr. Bryan was stunned by the fall and ' though somewhat sore from his ex- 1 perience went 011 to his next appoint- 1 ment. ! > When money is kept out of a po- 1 litical campaign the expressed will of the people is made manifest. Tho 1 recent elections out West has disturbed the administration and it is only the lavish expenditure of money 11 . 1 * - - - mat can keep the column in line. 1 It was not forthcoming last week, and the people left to themselves rolled up good democratic majorities at unexpected points. A northern firm has perfected arrangements by which it will publish ; a history of the South Carolina troops during the late war, written by James L. Strain, of Union county. | In twenty years Mr. Strain has been gathering historical data for this work, and now has ready for the press one of the finest compilations of southern history that can be. found anywhere. It is the fruit of years of indefatigable labor on the j part of Mr. Strain, lie has devoted all of his time and labor to this work. Mr. Strain was urged by Ins friends for the position of state historian at the time General II. L. Farley was appointed by Governor Evans to take charge of that work. Had he been appelated the work would no douh'v have been finished long ago. M ae State, being so slow to recog' nize his worth and ability, has miss* ed his services altogether. Ho is a poor, one-legged confederate soldier and is to he congratulated unon the success of his undertaking. The oldest rose-bush in the world is at Ilidclsheim, a small city in Hanover. Its roots are in the subsoil of a church in the cemetery, and although the primitive stem has been dead for a long time, the new stems have found their way through a crevice in the wall, and cover al most the whole church with their branches for a height and width of forty feet. According to tradition this rose.tree was planted by Charlemagne in 833, and the church hav ing been burnt down in the eleventh century, the root continued to grow in the subsoil* A book has been published recently giving the history of this venerable ro3e-tree, which, casting tradition aside, is known to beat least thrco hundred years olu, it having been mentioned in a book published in J 073. and *n a oo.-m bearing the date of 1G90. Familiar Quotations The web of our life is of a mingled yarn, good and ill together. Love sought is good, but given unsought iB better. If all the year were playing holi) .**> ?, } To sport would be as tedious as to ! work. One touch of nature makes the whole world kin. Wishing, of all employments, is the worst. Tin-: it tin-; nt i;i,ixtions. lillal I], Sti'vcuson ltitci i?< t* the ltesults as Indicating That the Democracy K (Jetting Together Again. Washington, April ?.?Ex-Vice President Stevenson arrived here last light, and for the next three days .v i 11 devote himself to winding up J private business n(Tatrs which he has Had no time to attend to previously. Mr. Stevenson is now living at his Illinois home and says he intends set tling down to i he practice of law for he present. Politics, h3 declares, will occupy little of his time or thought for the next few years. Mr. Stevenson is disposed to regard lie elections in Chicago yesterday and n Ohio the day before as indicative >f coalition of the democratic force; md says the party is gradually but inrcly getting back to the old itrength of four years ago. The Ben iinenfc for bimetallism, he said, is (rowing throughout the west and vill continue to advance, and the loinocratic party, lie predicts, will bo trongcr and in better condition for he campaign three years hence than low. He believes that there is a sentinent favorable to all elements of denoracy rallying around the old stanuird and that in time, and at no long loriod, the party will be more powerful than ever. 'i'he elections, in Mr. Stevenson's ipniion, should not be construed as m expression of the people on purey local matters, but shows that the larly is gradually getting together. Idle Ohio victory, he states is espo*. dally significant and to his mind is proof that the sound money and free nlver democrats are not irrevocably livided Mr. Stevenson will leave hero the ast of the week, and says he will not eturn to Washington again for some Lime unless business calls him. lie is staying at the Normandie, where he lived four years, and to-day saw many of his colleagues in the seinto tnd others who called at his apart llKMltP. A Society S1 out. It was at tlie Emerald ball, and the young such ty reporter . hnrpen3d her wits and her pencils, that full and satisfactory description of eat h costume might be presented. Surrounding her were those most desirous of seeing their names and gowns in print, and in the crowd stood a shop girl, gowned in lliinsy pink cheesecloth of indescribable cut. When her turn came for inspection, says the New York Times, it was with a hopeless eye that thu reporter surveyed the toilet. The artful question, however, was asked as usual: "And your name and gown?" "Miss Matilda Jenkins, attired in pink crepon and diamonds," was the studied and prompt reply. "Pink crepon," wrote the news paper woman, delighted with the new and elegant name for cheesecloth, but her pencil refused to add 'and diamonds" until Iter quick eyes had discovered on the girl's collar a tiny rhincstono as big its a pin head. Then "and diamonds" wa nt down ii the notebook as pto idly as if announcing tiaras and stomachers of _ i i j purest insicr. The next day all the girl's helm d a noti ?u counter exolained mvlo isiy over a well" worn newspaper clip-* ping, which read: "Miss .Matilda Jenkins, attired in pink crvpon and diamonds," and when the society reporter glanced over the printed words she felt never a pang as to the ac curacy of the information she had given to the public. Gardners have come to theconclu sion that the electric light will revolutionize flower growing, for they have discovered that its influence upon the color and production of blossoms is nothing less than extraordinary. For instance, tulips that have been exposed to thoclcctrie. light have deeper and richer tints, they flower more freely, and develop longer stems and bigger leaves than those grown in the ordinary way. Fiichsiustoo, under like condition, bloom much earlier, as do petunias also, growing taller and much more slender. In some greenhouses the use of electric light is being tried with ii view to forcing Ho.vcjb. ?* ? ami -Queen Victoria has sixty pianos at Osborne, Windsor and Bifokinghum palace. : r - u T I O f4 J A L S pal/.. : a " behalf of Hood's Sarsnparilla. are as reliable and worthy of confidence as if from your most trusted neighbor. in iiMafwn i wiimnil1 William Carnahuu a patient in the City Hospital at Alleghany* I'a., has ( moro gold in Ins head than unyoth Ji er living num. It is in a most peculiar place. It is in the form of a thhi shoot and it reposes between the membranes covering t he brain. Ournahun w is injured in a railway uccii dent. A large portion of his skull tvas crushed, and it was thought he would die. Trephining saved his life, but it left him subject to epi It'ptic lits. Treatment failed to effect a cure, and another operation was pet formed, This was onieacious for a time; then the fits returned. F< nally the doctors decided that the various coverings of the brain grew together and caused trouble. The wound was again opened, the outer covering raised and thin layers of : gold deposited r he outer covering' was then replaced and the edges stitched together. ?New York , World. <* 42 Iain mors. Hainniers are represented on the monuments of Kgypt "0 centuries before our ira. They greatly resembled the hammers now in use, save that there were no claws on the back for the extraction of nails. The lirst ; hammer was undoubtedly a stone held in the hand. Claw hammers were invented some time during the, middle ages. Illuminated muniu scripts of the eleventh century represent carpenters with claw hammers Hammers are of nil sizes, from the dainty instruments used by the jew cler, which weigh less than half an ounce, to the gigantic 50 ton ham mer <>f ship-huildingestablishments, bome of W 11iCii weirdi !1S much "Ml tons,mil have a falling force of from 00 to 100. Every trade Ims its own hammer and it- own way of using i'. Curious t n I urination. The private estates of the Czar cover 100,000 square miles In forty years the run across the Atlantic has been reduced by onehair. So dense, is the water in the dcopes' pans of the ocean, that an ironclad, if it were to .-ink, would never reach the hot loin. ' For a cold in the head,"' says a well-known physician, k'th< simphst 'vniedy, and one of the best that 1 know of, is to put a few drops of ainonia into the hands. Then make a cup w ilh the two hands and breathe the fumes." A wealthy Englishman, who ro cently died in Vienna, had a fad for collecting uniform buttons, the teeth of wild beasts, and the fans of beautiful women. His collections com pris1 352 fans, 20,000 buttons, and at.out t wo bushels of animals' teeth. In the public schools of Germany, the bright pupils aie separated from I tlio stupid ones. Medical men do the sorting. Ii is estimated that an ordinary individual will cut J7,000 lbs. of bread in 50 years, and drink 7,000 gallons of liquid. At a rcot nt fashionable wedding in Chicago, tlte bride, a widow, was given away at the altar by her son,i i whose age is ten years. There ian craze amongst ladies in At lerica just now for whist, and several professionul players are earning j a good deal of mom \ by going round urn. giving series of lessons in the) ' game. j ?f o *Longest in (lie CJ?j\ r.uiu al Ian ploy. Tho oldest ollicial in the employ of the .;ovoriiment is vVilljnm J'iiune Moral), wlio has spoilt the Biblical allotment of life's span, three scoro years and ten, in (he service of the government. Mr. Mm an was born in Norfolk on January 29, 18J1. Ueis therefore 80 years old. When not yet 10 years old, on January I, 1827, bo was appointed clerk to the captain of the port of Norfolk, and from that date to this he has served under the navy department, a period of more than seventy years, lie has occupied a desk in the bureau of ! navigation since October 28, 1834, and has had a personal acquaintance with every olllcer in the United ; States navy since that time.?Chicugo liecord C < - - - ? Two years ago i\. ?!. Warren, druggist at I'leasant Brook, N. Y., bought a Finn 11 supply of Chamberlain's Cough liemedy. lie sums up the result as follows: "At that time the goods wore unknown in this section, to day Chamberlain's Cough Uemedy is a household word." I t is the same in hundreds of communities. Where ever the good qualities of ('hnmberlain's Cough Remedy le CO)ii?? knowr. the people will have nothing else. For sale by Dr. K 'Norton, Druggist, L There arc thru; kisses in a world >f miscellaneous osculation which in iv be counted true?the Mss? the inotlu r lightly lays upon her baby's lips, the ki -1 the mother gives her boy as lie goes forth . ' world, nod tHe kiss we pre-.- upon the still, pale lips of the d ad. AH the rest are like strawberries in the bot'oin of ti c basket?to I-- regarded with suspicion. - ? . .vTiter i? \otliltiK So Good. There is nothing just .13 good as Dr. King':) New Discovery for Con sumption. Coughs and Golds, so demand it and do not perm if tin1 dealer to sell you Home substitute, lie will not ciiiun He re is anything better, hut in o.vLr to make more prolit he mav claim somothini/ pine to t>" inai !?a good. You want Dr. King's Now Discovery because you know it to bo safe it ml reliable, and guarante<d to do good or money refunded. For Coughs, Coida, Consumption and for all affections of Throat, Chest and Lungs, there is nothing so good as is Dr. King's New Discovery. Trial bottle free at Dr, E. Norton's Drug Store. Regular si/.o fiO cents and $1.1)0. It is a pity that good intentions are so largely used in snbterraneoi paving, if we may believe the timehonored axiom. It is to he hoped, however, that Theodore Darker proved the exception, for he wrote the following excellent resolutions in his pocketbook on the eve of his marri?gc: 1. Never, except for the best reasons, to oppose my wife's will. 2. To discharge till duties foi her sake freely. 3. Never to scold. 4. N inrr fil Innb cvftoo ? I. - - - IVVM v. I WOO til; lit*i . r>. Never to worry her with commands. ('?. To promote her pietv. 7. To bear her bunions. 8. To overlook her foibles. 1). To save, cherish, and for ever (lefeml her. 10. Toivmom* 'r her always in my prayers. Thus, (Jod willing, we shall be blessed The interior of Ireland corn-? ponds the most nruly <?f all phn.cf ou this plane! to t he appearance of the moon, as regards the scenery. The landscape of Iceland and th< lunar landscape accord in almostj every patticulu', and those who have traveled through Iceland, and who look through the wonderful telescope that is to bring us within good sight views of the moon at the great future Ercnch Exhibition, we1 lind a wonderful resemblance be tween tbe two vast solitudes. The Grandest Itcmeriy. Mr. H. If. Groove, merchant, of lyininowie; \ a., crtilies that he had consumption, was given up to die, sought all medical treatment that mono)' could procure, tried all cough reiuedic'3 he could hear of, but got no relief; spent many nights sitting up in a chair; was induced to try Dr. King's New Discovery, and was cured hy use of two bottles. For past three years has been attending to business, and 8iys Dr. King's X< w Discovery is the grandest rented ever made, . 5 it has don<* so tnuelt for It m and also for others in hit community. : *r. King's N- w Di fOverv is gaaranle 1 for Coughs, Colds and Consumption. It don't fail. Trial buttles free at Dr. 10. Norton's Drug store. THE NEW YORK WORLD. Til RICH A-WEEK EDITION. 18 Pages a Week. 156 Pago? a Year. A paper as useful lo you as a great vO daily for only one dol'ar a year. Better than ever. All the news of all the world all the time. Accurate and fair to everybody. Democratic and for the people. Against trusts and all monopolies. Ihilliunt illustrations. Stories by hu-an uni/jiura in ?. very number. Splendid rending for women and oilier special departments of unusu nl interest. It stands first 11110113 "weekly" pa pert in si55", frequenoy of publication and freshness, variety and reliability ot contents. It is practically a daily at the low price of a weekly; and its vast list of 8ubsoribeit?, extending to every state and territory of the Union and foreign countries, will vouch for the accurno) and fairness of its news columns, We offer this unequaled newspaper and the IIoruy 1 Ikhaid together one year for $1.75. The tegular subscription pr;c ; of jthe two papers ts $2.00. 1 1 * Ivtrl. i > \ o in anions th onag> cf !: i :. i 1; ;ciit oi n r wojk ? \ n o'clock mi the ii !t?g, aud t lie i'tnj>re8t> o! Austti fici ?>t four. 1 President Isaac Lowlr , of fiabl' ,lu Qh| jU highly respected all through th | section. lie hu> li\ ?cl in ( 1 in ton C > 7f? years, and hus been j -resident tho iNiljinu Hank i' o )?-&rs.. He glad j testifies to the im rit of blood's Sara | purilla, and %vlir .t he Kf.yg j* worti I attention. All brain workers tin i Hood s Savsapa? dlla peculiarly aduptc | to their in ed-. jt makes pure, riol I red blood, am j from (hi conies norv< mental, bodil j and dige live stren^rtl "I am glad k? nay that Jlood'u bnrnnpa rl'ln is a vrr v {r00(\ medicine, espccinll Ob a blood p' arlflcr. It lias dono tnc goo many nines. For several years I suffero greatly wit h pains of ' in one < yyc mul about my temples, os peclnlly al night when I hud been havlnj a hard flay of physical and mental labor I took ninny remedies, but found In lponlj in He od'n Sarsaparilln which cured n eo rheui oatimi, neuralgia and headache IloocVs Sarnaparilla lias proved itself r ! rue friend. I also take Hood's Pills to kecj my bowolH regular, nud like tho )>ill* very much." Isaac Lewjs, SaLhin, Ohio, e3 El S* Hooc^s Sarsapariila Istii'- One True Blood Purifier. All diuggists. 91. Prop iredonly by ('. 1. Ilood <!. Co.. Lowell, Mass. .. , ... are prompt, cfQclcnt and Mo Of) S * ' ills easy In effect. '?> cents. tfetv Model. .Merchants trfe 0?v?<. I -utllorlM,! Cor- I Bw I wet ! !' WjW' ihe 34 StyC.. J ^ money^ Short c'ji ic* s?.. j, ,.. ; 4 Lengthe. (^0 trial if not Be "f' Sstlsfw t0,!' - or-v' peatherbohe Corset Co.* Solo Kanulacturois. KALAMAZOO, MICHIGAN. FOn sale rr THIS LA 1)1 KS BAZAAlt, Conway, S. C. You G^nt the Profits Of Dealers, Agents, Jobbers and Middlemen by buying-direct from the manufacturer. w\ No better wheel made than the Acme Bicycle Built in our own factory by skilled workmen, usin^ th % best mate rial and the most improved machinery. IVo havo no ayents Sold direct from factory to the rider, fully warranted. Shipped anywhere for examination, write For? Our Interesting Offer Acmo Cyclo Co., Elkhart, Ind. D The intense ? inch (lent to < . , t It?i 1 thoi discasoo i . 1 by applying i ?. .. kin Uintmont Man r very bad c liavo boon permanently cured I , it. it is equally cflicicilt for i : 1 ! i . ;:t IT n?? edy for rote n! ; ; ' ' i lit'. , < liilhlnins, frost i . >1 i - vyca. For rale by di ti . cnta }>< i 1 Try Dr. Or. t o ' .11 Powders, tltey nrcjustwb; ? u in b.alcondi* t;?i\. t i ^ I f v v. . sv/.ns? ^ 1 C iMiRIENOB. If ^ \ 4 5? feUi ^'?al l7^dV Vt'.ADS MARKS, COPYRIGHTS &0. Anrono BrnrtlnR n isotoli and description may quickly ascertain, ! .-?h< r > n Invention In probably patentable. Ootnmunl. utlnnB trietly confidential. Olde-t n; oncy fort'ccurliiK patents In Amcrlcn. \V?? have n \Vn:-li!n?ton office. 1'ntonts taken through Munn Jt Co. rocolvo rpoolal notlee tn tie SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, beautifully illustrated. larpcst circulation oi any BOl entitle Journal, weekly, terms $8X0 a year; td.fiOsix months. specimen copies and Hand JJooii on I'atbnts eetu free. Addret>a MUNN & CO., SOI Hiotidwny, Sew Yotlt. RJOT WHAT w.:. SAY, but Avlmt Ilyotl's Sarstipurilllfi Does, Hint tells |ho lory of il- merit ami tto c-css.licincitthor HOOD'S OUSfU.S, ( Jno. u -r , K. folar. j. * 1 fi Tolar, H 149 and t.s'i I ly i Cor in j ;' jv y d d Jobbers of Liberal Advances on STORES i A W. JEHK ;! ^ LIYEKY I AKl) C p'iil ft S 1 A , pji, *Tv. -* A KINK LOT OK IIORSKS TOM i ;s. -,V TH>. <?) LOAD OAKTS, liUGOlKS A J-V 1 ) on:-; can > o sei to ftnv thi? 1lo pot. I " T 1 otirroiig] Gonw; .UI'IKV . This hohooTofft'r c\ioa|> rat s m class high schools, (t is a charicrei the decree of It. IS. The gnulu; tes el its of any college in I lie St.ite, or 1 ties of life, <i > A r P ' ' ts J "f > 13 < GRADE No. 1 GRADE No. 2 GRADE No. ? GRADE No. 4 GRADE No. 5 GRADE NO. 0 GRADE No, 7. GRADE No. 8 # Each scholar is charged a contin nine months. Hoard in good families can be hi For other information apply to I ! . "ft ! ' .-? 1; Js??oo,ai ' S |[ pay nn ug there are I Jf?l l v ' ,:ll<''1; I M*, - i he piano. tlint It Is heltor for its, a time a a article changes hands, someboc clerks and canvassers and rent and llgl money and their cost allgoes Into the prict ilus application of good hard common sen and our thousands of pleased patrons pro know US, link any hunk or commercial n remember tills, you need not pay us one s own home, ffit Isn't just exactly what yoi we pay freight both ways. That shows th handsome entalogjne?It's free. 'J lion lo that wo are thoroughly reliable and bono money and wo can prove It. Scml at one i CORNISH. & CO., | ii R-I-P A.-N-S ! r i l ! , icdern standi i Family Medico J rr cine: Cures the ivar^asm* ^ common cvery-day 2 ills of humanity, cn I When Bnby was stale, wo gnve her Castorta, When si 10 waa a Child, sho cried for Castorla, When sho 1> enme Miss, sho clung to Castorla, When sho hud Children, she gave them Costori*. '' """*"" uwm Hart. T. H. Blachl?y. <S? art & Co., FRONT Street, ( YORK. Kiflfl a^- a J& J& : AND: f'Javai Stores. Consignments of NAVAL and COTTON. Ins & son. " sale ffiffil feed il&fc b i e s. Si- ' &- ' **- ' v^>. A N I > M I 'I.MS ON II AN J) \ T A LL v ? ^ Us N I) JiALN IvSS K()K SAI.Ifi. ' :t i! (it. **i s i.oticv. \7fl?co near lie hs School, i.y, B. C. ail the brnnche; usually taught in first in.- ti'ntion, boiug/'mpow-ml (o grunt are prepared to .'liter the Sophomore to successfully engine in the iiotivo^du* ?O CU MONTH. ?o $t.t\ $1.25. ?*1.50, / $ 1.75. $2.00. $2.50 $3.00. o gent fee of fifty cents per sessioi. ul for, from $0.00 to $8.00 per month Wm. A. DAGNALL, Principal Our Most ^ ; pular Piano ii l.v hard to Bay wbi?h Is our most popular piano. JtUtXi it is the one we sotl most of. The price of it ul it is Just such an instrument as you would cut or dealer SloO for. Everybody knows that enormous profits in the retail piano business, tese profits and give thein to the aetunt user of \Yc eliminate (he middleman. Wo helievo nd we know that it is better for you. Every ly makes a profit. Somebody has to pay for it in the dealer's store. All these things cost iyou pay for your piano. Our system Is inerelj use to the business. Our fft) years of success, vet' I the system Is a good ono. If you don't gei c 'about im-nsk your oivn bank. And lng-o 'ont till you have tried tho piano In yoni 1 \\ , you may send It hack at our expense? at \ io in earnost, doesn't It? Send for our ok r up. l>on't deal with us tin loss you find st i all our transactions. Wo can pave you u t r our liook on PIANOS and OKOANS. V ashington, N. J., U.S.A. ESTABLISHED N EARLY 30 YEARS&* X Oh yes! I WILD DO IT ! 1 I will keep constantly on hand V ) >! M, O" I) g-s, Coconuts, (':ik<s, (^ackers, Bananas, Prunes, Turnips, Onions, Cabbages, Irish Potatoes, Cheese ami Dried Apples. , i to: EJ "J $ Polite attention will be given nty customers in my Uarbering establishment, all in the same building. M. B. WINEGLASS, /