The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, April 11, 1901, Image 4
ff-?Y 1- ~~T. i .Till 1ft
saving op* Nations,
Dr. Talmaga Tells of the Sacrifices
of Our Savior.
He Speak* of tir(htcn?N? n? It Appeared
to III Ml?Sermon from tit*
Text t "Ve Are Iloaght
vrltti a Price."
[Copyright, 1901, by l,ouls Klopsch, N. T.J
Washington, March 31.
In this discourse Dr. Talmage shows
the Messianic sacrifices for the saving
of all nations and spenks of
Gcthsemau* as it appeared to him;
text, I. Corinthians 0:20: "Ye are
bought with a price."
Your friend takes you through his
valuable house. Y'ou examine the
archea, the frescoes, the grass plots,
the flsh ponds, the conservatories,
the pnrks of deer, and you say within
yourself or you say aloud: "What
did all this cost?" Yon n r>r?stlv
diamond flashing- in an earring, or
you hear a costly dress rustling
across the drawing-room, or you sec
n high mettled span of horses harnessed
with silver and gold, and you
begiu to make an estimate of the
Talue.
The man who owns a large estate
cannot Instantly tell you all It in
worth. He says: "I will estimate
o much for the house so much for
the furniture, so much for laying out
the grounds, so much for the stock,
so much for the barn, so much for
the equipage, adding up in all making
this aggregate."
Well, my friends, T hear so much
about our mansion in Heaven, about
its furniture and the grand surroundings,
that 1 want to know how much
it is all worth and what has actually
been paid for it. 1 cannot complete
in a month nor a year the magnificent
calculation, but before I get
through to-day I hope to give you
the figures. "Ye are bought with a
price."
The first installment pnid for the
clearance of our souls was the ignominious
birth of Christ in Bethlehem.
Though wo may never be carefully
looked after afterward, our adTent
into the world is carefully guarded.
We came into the world amid
kindly attentions. Privacy and silence
are afforded when God launches
an immortal soul Into tho world.
Even the roughest of men know
enough to Rtand buck. But I here to
tell you that in tho village on the
aide of the hill there was a very bedlam
of uproar when Jesus was born.
In a village capable of accommodating
only a few hundrod people many
thousand people were crowded, and
amid hostlers and muleteers and camel
drivers yelling at stupid beasts of
burden tha Messiah appeared. No silence.
No privacy. A better adapted
place hath the eaglet in the eyrie,
hath the whelp in the lions' lair. The
axilo of Heaven lieth down upon
straw. The first night out from the
palace of Heaven spent in an outbouse.
One hour nfter laying aside
the robes of Heaven dressed in a
wrapper of coarse linen. One would
have supposed that Christ would have
made a more gradual descent, comlug
from Heaven first to a half-way
world of great magnitude, then to
Caosar'a palace, then to a merchant's
palace in Galilee, then to a private
home In Bethany, then to a fisherman's
hut aud last of all fo n stable.
No! It was one leap from the top
to the bottom.
Let us open the door of the caravansary
in Bethlehem and drive away the
camels. Pass on through the group of
idlers and loungers. Whut, 0 Mary, no
light? " No light," she says, "save that
which comes through the door." What,
jKary, no food? "None," sho snys,
"only that which was brought In the
aofc on the journey." Lot the Bethlehem
woman who has come in hero with
kindly attentions put back the covering
from the babe that wo may look
upon it. Look! Look! Uncover your
head. Let us kneel. Let all voloes be
hnahed. Son of Mary! Son of GodI
Child of a day! Monarch of eternity!
In that eye the glance of a God. Omnipotence
sheathed in that Babe's
arm. That voico to be changed from
the feeble plaint to the tone that shall
wake the dead. Hosanual IXoHanna!
Glory to God that Jesus came from
throne to manger that we might rise
from manger to throne, and that ull
the gates are open, and that the door
of Heaven that once swung this way
to let Jo a us out now swings the other
evayt? let us in. Let all the bellmen
of Heaven lay hold the rope and ring
out the news: "Behold, I bring you
flad tidings of greut joy, which shall
ee to all people, for to-day is born In
the city of David a Saviour, which is
Christ the Lord!"
The second Installment paid for our
soul's clearance was the scene in Quarantania,
a mountainous region, full of
eaveras, where are to-day panthers
and wild beasts of all sorts, so thut
tou must now go there armed with
kmlfe or gun or pistol. It was there
that Jesus went to think and to pray,
and it was there that this monster of
hen?more sly, more terrible, than
anything that prowled in that country
?Satan himself, mot Christ.
The rose in the ekeck of Christ?
that Publius Lentullus, in his letter to
the Iloman senate, ascribed to Jesus?
that rose had scattered its petals. Ab
tinence from food had thrown him
Into emaciation. A loner
o
from food recorded in profane history
la that of the crew of the
hip Juno. For 23 day# they had nothing
to a&t. But this sufferer had fanted
a month and ten days before he broke
faat. Hunger mufct have agonized every
Ab?r of the body and gnawed on the
tomaoh with teeth of death. The
thought of a morsel of brea*l or meat
TiQot have thrilled the body with aomebififf
like ferocity Turn out a puck of
tnop hungry as Christ was a-hungercd,
0.nd if thev had ?tr/?nr?tV wMli ore
What It Would Do.
The Bom oolleoted by tho internal re
vente bureau under the provisioi 0 of
the war revonue aot, from Jono 13,
1898, when the aot, went into effoot, to
February 28 1901, was 1281,311,515.
This sum of mon< y would have built an
inter-oeeanic eanal, opened the arid
lands of tho west to cultivation by a b>b
tern of irrigation and made navigable
every desirable waterway in the oountry.
And who will deny that those investments
would have been better ones
than the war for whioh this money has
been spent in the far east??Atlanta
Journal.
y?ll they vrould detour you as ft kid.
It vra!i in that pang of hunger that
Jesus was accosted, and satan wild:
"Now, change these stones, which look
like bread, into an uctual supply of
bread." Had the temptation couie to
you and me under thoie oircumstances
we would hat? cried: "Bread it shall
be!" und been almost impatient at the
time taken for mastication, but Christ
with one hand beat bnck the hunger
ond with tho other hand beat back the
monarch of dftrkness. O ye tempted
ones! Christ was tempted. Wo are
told that Napoleou ordered a coat-ofmoll
made, but he was not quite certain
that it was impenetrable, so he
said to the manufacturer of tho coatof-mall:
"Put it on now yourself and
let us try it." And with shot after
shot tired from his own pistol the emperor
found that it was just what it
pretended to be, a good coat-of-mail.
Then the man received a large reward.
i mess uon umi tlio snutu ooai-oimail
that struck back the weapons of
temptation from the head of Christ
we may now all wear, for Jesus comes
anil says: "I have been tempted, and I
know what it is to lie tempted. Take
this robe that defended mo and wear
it for yourselves. I shall see you
through all trials, and I shall see you#
through all temptation."
"Rut," says Satan still further to
Jesus, "come, anil I will show you
something worth looking ut." And
after a half day's journey thfey came to
Jerusalem and to tho top of the temple.
Just as one might go up in the
fbwer of Antwerp and look ofT upon
Belgium, so Sutan brought Christ to
the top of the temple. Some people at
n great height feel dizzy and n strange
disposition to jump. So Satan comes
to Christ In that very crisis. Standing
there at the top of the temple, they
looked off. A magnificent reach of
country, drain fields, vineyards, olive
groves, forests and streams, cattle in
tho valley, flocks on the hills and vilages
and cities and realms. "Now,"
says Satan, "I'll make a bargain. Just
jump ofT. I know it is a great way
from the top of the temple to the valley,
but if you are Divine you can fly.
Jump otT. It won't hurt you. Angels
will catch you. Your Father will hold
you. Resides, I'll mnkc you a large
present if you will. I'll give you Asia
Minor, I'll give you China, I'll give you
Ethiopia, I'll give you Italy, I'll give
you Spain, I'll give you Germany, I'll
give you Britain, I'll give you all the
world." What n temptation it must
nave ueen:
The third installment paid for our
redemption was the agonizing prayer
in Gethsenianc. As 1 sat in that garden
nt the foot of an old gnarled and
twisted olive tree the historic scene
came upon me overwhelmingly. These
old olive trees are the lineal descendants
of those under wliioh Christ stood
and wept and knelt. Ilnve the leaves
of whole botanical generations told
the the story of our Lord's agony to
their successors? Next to Calvary the
solcmnest place in Palestine is Gethficmnne.
While sitting there it seemed
as if I could hear our Lord's prayer,
laden with sobs and groans. Can this
be the Jes\is who gathered fragrnnce
from the frankincense brought to His
cradle and from the lilies that flung
their sweetness into His sermons and
from the box of alabaster that broke
at his feet? Is this Jesus the comforter
of Bethany, the resurreotor at
Nain, the oculist at Hethsaida? Is
this the Christ whose frown is the
storm, whose smile is the sunlight, the
spring morning Ilis breath, the thunder
His voice, the occau a drop tin the
tip of His linger, Heaven a sparkle on
the bosom of nis love, the universe the
dust of His chariot wheel? Is this the
Christ who is able to heal a heartbreak
or hush a tempest or drown n
world or flood immensity with His
glory? Behold Him in prayer, the
globules of blood by sorrow pressed
through tho skin of His forehead!
What nn installment in part payment
of the greatest price that was ever
paid!
Ths fourth installment paid for our
redemption was the Saviour's sham
trial. I call it a sham trial?there has
uon uccu nu^' ij1111ku maecpiii or
unfair in any criminnl court ns was
witnessed at the trial of Christ. Why,
they hustled him into the courtroom
at two o'clock In the morning. They
gave I.I 1 m no tlin? for counsel. They
gave him no opportunity for subpoenaing
witnesses. The ruffians who
were wandering around through the
midnight, of course they saw the arrest
and went into the co\irtrooin. But
Jesus' friends were sober men, were
respect.'ible men, and at that honr, two
o'clock In tho morning, of course they
were at homo asleep. Consequently
Christ entered the courtroom with the
ruffians.
Oh, look at 111ml No one to speak a
word for Him. I lift the lantern \in*
til I can look Into His face, and as my
heart beats in sympathy for this, the
best friend the world ever had, Himself
now utterly friendless, an officer
of the courtroom comes up and smites
llim in the moiith, and I see the blood
stealing from gum and lip. Oh, it was
a farce of a trial, lasting only perhaps
an hour, and then the judge rises for
sentence! Stop! It is against the
law to give sentence unless there haH
been an adjournment of the court between
condemnation and sentence, but
what cares the judgo for the law ? "The
mun has no friends. Let Him die,"
says the judge. And the ruffinns outside
the rail cry: "Aha, aha, that'B
what we want! Pass Him out here to
us! Away with Him I Away with
Him!"
Oh, I bless Qod that amid all the injustice
that may have been inflicted
upon us in this world wc have a divine
sympathizer. The world cannot lie
- U i. *
unuuv you nor aousc you as much as
they did Christ, and Jeaus stands today
In every courtroom, in every
house, in every store, and says: "Courage!
By all my hours of maltreatment
and abuse I will protect those who are
trampled upon." And when Christ forgets
that two o'clock morning aoene
In Mark Hanna's Town.
Tom L. Johnson's suoooss in being
oleoted mayor of Mark Hanna's town
shows tho vsluo of a strong personality
and tho usefulness of oonviotions. The
Honorable Tom is a froo trador. and
singlo taxor in national politios and
advocates 3 cents fares on munioipal oar
linos. Ho has mado money out of street
railways, but now that ho is a millionaire
does not appear to bo averso to tho
peoplo profiting from munioipal railways.
His stand on this matter alono
is onough to explain his oleotion along
Itith tho defeat of all othor Demooratio i
candidates.?Tho Stato. I
and the stroke of the* hufiian on th?
luouth and the howling of tho unwashed
crowd then lie will forget you
and me in the injustices of life that
may be inflicted upon us.
Further 1 remark: The last great
installment puid for our redemption
was the demise of Christ. The world
lias seen many dark days. Many summers
ago there was n very dark day
when the sun was eclipsed. The fowl
at noonday went to their perch, and
we felt a gloom as we looked at tho
astronomical wonder. It was a dark
day in London when the plague was
at its height, and the dead with uncovered
faces were taken in open carta
and dumped in tho trenches. It was
a dark day when the earth opened und
Lisbon sank, but the darkest day siuco
the creation of the world was when the
carnage of Calvary wusenucted.
It was about noon when the curtain l
began to be drawn. It was the swing- t
ing of a great gloom all around tho
heavens. God hung it. As when there
is a dead one in the house you bow
the shutters or turn tho lattice, so
Qod in the afternoon shut the windows
of the world. As it is uppropriato to
throw n black pall upon the coffin ns
it passes along, so It was appropriate
that everything should be somber thftt
day as the great hearse of the earth
rolled on, bearing the corpse of tho
King. A man's last hours are ordinarily
kept sacred. However you may
linve hated or caricatured a roan, when
you hour he is dying- alienee puts its
hands on your lips, and you would
have a loathing for the man who could
st'wul by n deathbed making faces and
scoffing. Hut Christ in His last hour
cannot be left alone. What, pursuing
11 iin yet after so long n pursuit? You
have been drinking His tears. I)o you
want to drink His blood? They como
up closely, so that notwithstanding the
darkness they can glut their revenge
with the contortions of Ilis countenance.
They examine II8s feet. They
want to feel for themselves wh ther
those feet are really spiked. They put
out their hands and touch the spikes
and bring theiu back wet with blood
and wipe them on their gnrments.
Women stnml there and weep, hut can
do no good. It Is no place for the tender-hearted
women. It wants a heart
that crime has turned Into granite.
The waves of man's hatred and of hell's
vengeance dash up against the mungled
feet, and the hands of sin nnd
A.u..? uiiu lunuro ciuien lor nis noiy
heart. 11 ml lie not been thoroughly
fastened to the cross they would have
torn Him down and trampled Him
with both feot. How the cavalry
horses arched their necks and champed
their bits and reared and sniffed at
the blood! Had a Roman oflicer called
out for a light, his voieo would not
havo been heard in the tumult, but
louder than tho orash of spears, and
the wailing of womanhood, and tho
neighing of tho chargers, and the bellowing
of tho oruelfiers, there comes
u voice crashing through?loud, clear,
overwhelming, terrific. It is the groaning
of the dying Son of God! Look,
what a scene! Look, world, at what
you have done!
I lift the covering from tho maltreated
Christ to lot you count tho
wounds and cstlmato the cost. Oh,
when tho nails went through Christ's
right hand that bought your hands,
with all their power to work and lift
and write! When tho nails went
through Christ's right foot and
Christ's loft foot, that bought your
feet, with all their powor to walk or
run or climb. When the thorn went into
Christ's temple, that bought your
bruin, with all Its power to think and
plan. When the spear cleft Christ's
side, that bought, your heart, with all
its power to lovo and repent and prny.
When the Atlantic cable was lost in
180.1, do you remember that the Great
Eastern and the Mod way and tho Albany
went out to find It? Thirty times
they sank tho grapnel 2% miles deep
in water. Aftor awhile they found tho
cable and brought it to the surface.
No sooner had it been brought to the
surface than they lifted a shout of exultation,
but the aablo slipped hack
again into the water and was lost.
Then for t wo weeks more they swept
the sea with the grappling hooks, and
at last they found tho cable, and they
brought It up in silence. They fastened
it this time. Then with great excitement
they took one end of the cable
to the electrician's room to see If there
were really any life in it, and when j
they saw a spark and knew that a met- j
sage could bo sent then every hat was
lifted, and tho rockets flew and the
guns sounded, until all tho vessels on
tho expedition knew, and tho continents
were lashed together. Well, my j
friends, Sabbath after Sabbath Gospel j
messengers hare come searching down (
for your souls. We havo swept the sea r
with tho grappling hook of Christ's ^
Gospel. Again and again we have
thought that you were at the surface,
and we began to rejoice over your re- ?
demption, but at the moment of our .
gladness you sank back again into the
world and back again into sin. To-day
we come with the Gospel searching for
your aoul. We apply tho cross of (
Christ first to see whether there is any 1
life left in you, while all around the '
people stand, looking to see whether '
the work will be done, and the angels <
of God bend down and witness, and, J
oh, If now we could see only one spark t
of lore and hope and faith we would c
send up a shout that would be heard i
on the battlements of Heaven, and two
worlds would keep jubilee because
communication is open between Christ
and tho soul, and your nature that has
been sunken in sin has been lifted into f
the light and Joy of the Gospel. f
Hard on the Goat. t
"And, shure, they tell me your hooe* t
band's very litherary?" ]
"That he Is, indade." ^
"That he devours ivery thing in the
way of a book or a paper that oooma
to the house." t
"Bliure, he does." !
"Ana vot in tbe name of goodness
does the poor goat get to atef? !
Yonkers Statesman. *
Too Sonsitivo. j
A prominent oitizon of Wilmington,
N. 0.. had a fight a few days ago with
a Philadelphia man who objcotod to
tho Wilmington oitizen ousting admiring
glanoos at tho Philadelphia man's
pretty wifo and her glad clothe*. The
Wilmington oitizon says his wife called
his attention to the pretty waist worn :
by the Philadelphia lady, and the Phil- ?
adolphia man thought the Wilmington j
oitizon was staring impudently. An un- j
prejudioed judge would say that the
Philadelphian is too big a fool to de- t
servo to be the husband of an attrao- \
tide woman.?The State.
V
AN EXCITING SCENE
SftUtrd in a N?w Yo?k Th?>a*re
by ? Runt why
TWO HORSES MAKE A DASH
Th*y C >uld Not 8* K-pt on
1h? 8'ag? 8nd Plurgod
Into 1 bti Audi^nc*.
A Heroine.
Tho Now York Journal says a woman
?oalm and steady amid a panio?Wod
rosday night stopped two hoisos whioh
lashed ovor tho footlights from the
itago of tho Aoadomy of Musio, where
hry wcro us d in tho produotion of
1 UnoloTern's (Jabin." Tho struggling
tnimals p unged into tho audicnco
The horses were a magnifiocnt white
earn.
Tho animals oamo right over the
ootlights. Tho htroico who flopped
hem was Mrs. H I ward 8. 0 Fearing
>f Helena, Mont. Lt in duo to her that
his story is not tho story of a tragedy,
b'.vo porsonswero hurt during tho panic
n tho gonrral ru h for tho doorH. Two
women fainted.
David Poytterrf No 158 1Iudaon avciue,
tho drivor of tho tcaui, sustained
i fraoturo of throe ribi and aevcro iulurios
about tho hrad. Samuel Mioh
iclstn of No 137 Kldrigo street, had
lis arm broken. Threo other uaen
were injured Ooo of ihetn, a musician
latin d Mo*7. r, had a closo call for his
tfe, for ho was dir ootly ia tho path of
,ho uiaddor ed horses ?s they slid ovor
.ho footlights.
It was iu tho first focno of tho tl ird
ict tl at tho accident took place. Tho
^ctno represents St. Clair's houso and
rardtn. On tho atago w<ro HUrlo
IJrowno, playing tho oharaoU r of St.
Jlair, and Alice K ans, playing tho
part of Mrs St. Clair
From an entrance far lark on the
truth side of tho atago appeared a
prancing team of whito horses drawing
in open carriago, Poyscr was on tho
lriver's seat and seated in tho oarriago
wcro Q .John Kollered, as llnclo Tom,
ioorgio Fioronoo Olp, as Littlo Kva,
ind Mrs. Annio Voamans as Aunt
Jpholia.
Tho carriage should have stopped in
ho contro of tho stago to allow tho ao
ors to alight. It did not stop Wedncalay
night. Tho horses woro rostloBH,
jut Mr Kollcrd mauagod to got out
ind assist Mit-s 01 p <0 tho a*ago Mrs.
Voainans was unable to lcavo tho oar
iogo.
At a point prbably ten foot from
:ho t xit thr' ugu which tho loam was to
lavo pone, tho hornca became frighten
3d at tho flapping of tho traooa and bo
tan to plunge. In order that thoy
night rot harm tho atago they woro
ihod with smooth hIiocb, and it was but
v few aooonda until they were alating
kroued in dangerous proximity to tho
'ootlighta. Poyscr was powerless to
lold tho soon fr? niz d animals, aod it
Dooamo apparent then an aooideni w?a
novitablo. Tho musitina left their pit
n a rush. This alono precipitated a
panic.
With heads high in tho air and saw
tug from side to aido as Peyser yanked
yntheroinr, tho hoi a:a slid to tho footlights,
through tho footlight chain,
orcaking it at.d to Vera! of tho inoan
lohoont globca, then over the edgo of
tho at ago and into tho orohostra pit,
alighting partly in tho pit and partly in
tho sido aialo on tho routh side of tho
houto Tho oarriago toppled over, with
Mrs. Ycaruans in it, hut tho two hind
wheels nniiined on tho atogi, and tho
rotoran aotroaa was draged to safety by
Mario Browno. Peyat r was thrown on
iho stawgling horsea and thoy kicked
him vigorously.
4'1 havo hcou troubled with indigos*
lion for ton years, have tried many
things and spent much money to no
purpoto until 1 tried Kodol Dyspepsia
1i i i-i? -? ? -? ?
wuiu, i unvu ihkou iwo uoiuoM and
gotten moro roliof from them than all
rthor mcdioincs tnkon. I feel more
iiko a boy than 1 have felt in twonty
poars." AndcrBon ltiggs of Sunny
hkuo, Tex. Thousands havo testified
is did Mr. Kigge.
Dr. E Norton.
Veiy Serious Matter.
A second explosion of a 13-ineh sholl
n tho boro of a naval gun is having
ho effeot of oausicg Homo anxiety as to
ho safety of this typo of ammunition.
I'ho acoident occurrod aboard tho Kenucky
about six weeks ago. Tho ordlanoo
officers are vory reluotant to talk
tbout tho so mishaps, but assort that in
hisoaso tho projjotilo burst just as it
eft tho gun, doing littlo daraago
You will wasto timo if you try to
suro indigestiou or dyspopsia starving
,oursolf. That only makes it worso
vhen you do oat heartily. You always
>oed plonty of good foodprop:rly digest
dKodolDyspopsia Curo is tho result of
oars of soiontifio research for somohing
that would digost not only somo
dements of food but evory kind. And
t is the ono romcdy that will do it.
Dr. E. Norton.
"~Will Qo On.
Tho rcsprescntativo of tho Filipinos
it Madrid eaid rcoontly that whilo tho
. _ * - # A ! .11 ' ?
lapiuro oi /vguinaiao was a sovcro diow
,1 thorn it van not dcoiBivo. Ho added
,hat tho Filipinos would olcot a now
President and maintain thostrugglo for
dotory or death.
"Lust winter I was oonfinod to my
nd with a very bad oold on tho lungs.
Nothing gavo mo relief. Finally my
wife bought a bottlo of Ono Minute
Jough Curo that effootod a spoody cure.
I oannot speak too highly of that oxlellent
remedy."Mr. T. K. Houseman,
Vlanatawnoy, Pa.
Dr. ?. Norton.
A Ohurch Demolished.
A torrifio wind storm whioh swept
>vor Charleston Wednosday morning
lut a swath through Maryville. Just
ivcr tho river from hero, and aomolshod
Emanuel Methodist ohuroh,
rhore a Negro oongrogation was gatherng
for night sorvioe. The ohuroh oolapsod,
but by some miraolo the sexton
>nd the first members of tho oongregaion
to arrive were not hurt. No other
iamage has boon reported.
THE Bt
Grove's!
The formula is
know just what you
do not advertise thci
their medicine it yo<
Iron and Quinine put
form. The Iron i
malaria out of the s>
Grove's is the On/j
1 1 1
v_^nni l onics arc 11111
that Grove's is suj
arc not cx'pcrimentii
and excellence hav
only Chill Cure sol
the United States
A Royal Separation. -1
Whon tho King of Portugal wont to
London in connection with tho Q icon's t
funeral ho received a deputation of f
Protostants, to whom ho in ado a spoccb,
promising a continuaooo of tho cnlivht 11
rned policy of religious toleration in
his dominions. Tho speech was manly !
and oouragoous and waB widely reported. 1
It was commented upon in Portugal, H
and whilo it elicit* d tho enthusiastic *
approval of tho Liberals it sorved to j
aooontuatr, tho fucd hetweon tho King ''
and tho religious orders, which was u
originally caused by tho alleged intor- *
feronoo of the .Josuits in tho secular "
affairs of tho govornmcnt of that coun- 11
trv. The iinbkniiv rn&tile nf ?Kia f.J/. >
tion was Iroublo in tho royal housohold 11
itself, the Queen taking sidos with the r.
ohurch. Aooording to advices just re
ooived from Lisbon, this breach was
widened and thero is said to bo a profca '
bility of a separation of tho royal &
oouplo. 0
u
Thoro is moro Catarrh in this sootion n
of tho country than all othor diseases 8'
put togothor, and until tho last few ?
years was supposed to bo inourablo. T
For a groat many years doctors pronounood
it a looal disease, and proscrib- *
ed looal remedies, and hv constantly '
failing to ouro with ( r moot, 0
pronounocd it inourab 1 ' has v
proven oatarrh to bo s- :ienal l'
diseaso, and tlioroforo i = onstiiutional
treatmont. Han ? Catarrh Curo,
manufaoturod by F. .). Cheney & Co , 0
Toledo, Ohio, is tho only constitutional V
ouro on tho market. It is taken inter- o
nally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful.
It acts directly on tho blood and
muoous surfaces of tho system i
They offer ono hundrod dollars for any f
oaso it fails to ouro. Sond for circulars
and testimonials Address,
F. J CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. 11
Sold by Druggists. 75c.
Hall's Family Pills aro tho host.
You osnnotonjoy perfcctheaith, rosy
cheeks and sparkling eyes if your livor
is sluggish and your bowels clogged.
DoWitt's Littlo Early Users oleanso tho
wbolo svstem. They uover gripo. ['
Dr. E. Norton. ^
Can't Boat Him.
Carter H. Harrison has boon reelected
mayor of Chicago for tho second
tirno and will this weok commer ce ''
his third term as tho ohiof executive of
tho city. His official plurality cvor
.Judge Klbridgo Hanony, tho Kepubli- ^
can nominee, is 28 257 voted. Tho total
voto of tho city is: Harrison 15t>,852;
llanooy 128,(11)5. In tho last
mayoralty election tho voto was, Har L
rison, JDomonrat, 148,4!)(J; Carter, llo- A
publioan, 107,357; Harrison's plurality,
41,059, L
I had pilos so bad 1 oould g?t no rest ?
nor tind a ouro until I triod DeWitt's t,,
Witoh llazol Salvo. Aftor using it a
onoo, I forgot I ovor had anything liko
Pilos,"-E. J. Boioo, Somers Point, N.
Y. Look out for imitations. Hi sure ?i
you ask for DoWitt's. PJ)r.
K. Norton. .
bt
Express Robbery. Jj'
A paokago oontaining livo hundred ?
dollars was stolon from tho ozprtss "
offioo at Laurons Saturday last. Stewart l)
Miller, in ohargo, roooip'od for tho
paokaeo and plaood it in a dravor. Ho
was called (ff for a fow minutes and _
whon about to mako up his shipment a
fow minutes lator missod tho package.
It was to havo gono to Simpsonvillc A
nogro omplojcd at tho depot ii under
arrost.
Spring ooughs aro specially dangor
ous and unloss ourcd at onco, st rious ^
results ofton follow. Ono Minute l.
Cough Curo aots liko magio It is not a
a oommon mixture buk is a high grade L<
romody. L
Dr. E. Norton. k
U
Cant Keep Down Fight.
Tho London Daily Chronicle pub l<
lishcs tho following dispatch from Li
Berlin: "Count von Waldorsoo has A
sent an urgont telegram to Emperor
William, imploring him to ondcavor to
hasten tho negotiations for the with- l,<
drawals of tho allied troops on the lA
ground that it is impossible to provont f'*
quarrels betwoon the soldiors of differ- ^
ent nationalities, whioh might at [,?
any moment lead to aeriona " .
. ? ?lj\
A,
Those famous little pills, DoWitt's
Little Early llisors will rcmovo all im
purities from your system, oleanseyour _
bowel*. mako them regular. ~
Dr. E. Norton. ^
Takes the Oath.
The war department Thursday ro '
ooived information from Goo. Mao
Arthur that Aguinaldo has takon tho
oath of allegianoo to the United States
under tho tonm of .amnesty offered by
Gen. MaoArthur by direotion of the
president.
x\&* Chills
EST PRESCRIPT
asteless Ch
plainly printed on every
i arc taking when you take
ir formula knowing that y<
j knew what it contained,
up in correct proportions a
icts as a tonic while the
,'stcm. Any reliable tlruggis
linai and that all other
tations. An analysis of othc
)crior to all others in ev
ng when you take Grov
ing lo^g been cstablishe
d throughout the entire i
No Cure. No Pay. Price
Aft<'r the liuilroad Commission.
T. harry Gnntt, who if? now a con
ributor lo tho Spartanburg Herald,
ays: So far #h our frtato raihoad com
lirsion is conccrno it is n fraud of tho
ir*t water Union a ehiugo is inado
n its in inberships, the ooinmi?sion had
ottor bo abolished When I rati my
aw mill roar Ionian, I w?.s mado by
he commission to pay mere than one
bird iho money 1 received for a e\rD?d
of lu nber for simply hauiing u 11
ii 1 or. I furri-hed tho timber and cut
nd hauled the logs from tho woods to
ly mill 1 then carried tho lumber two
liles and a half to tho railroad on wagns
a-, d bad to both load and unload
t. on and from the cars. All tho 'ailr
ad did was to couple up that ear and
rag it II mile, and as I havo already
tated, iho road took more than onohird
of i he gross proceeds, of my lumor
for this slight porvico. I complaind
more than oneo to our boari of num.
ripsioncrn abcin th's ou'rag ; bit
othing was done, and I finally had to
oil my saw mill. Tho railroads not j
nly pay tho salaries of our board of
ailroad eomcuishioncrs, but thoy aro
urnished fico transportation; and I
in told tho members aro often givos
'alaoo carH stockod with liquid and
thor refrcsoraents with trained serants
to wait on them to oavcrt < ver
ho sta'o.
Skin trotihles, outs, burns, fcilds and
hafiDg quickly heal by tho utc of DaV'iit's
Witoh Hazil Salvo It is imitatd.
Ho sure you got Do Witt's.
Dr. E. Norton.
Vtlantic Coast Line
iai duo a d company op soutb
carolina.
CONOBNHKD SoiIKDUl.B.
Trains Going South.
iMte.l Nov. 19, 1899.
No.66* No.Sfc |
P. M. A. M l
cave Wilmington 8:46
eavo Marion 6:84
rrive Florenco 7:16
eave Florence *7:46 *15 8a '
rrivo 8umter 8:67 8 66
No. 6ii. I
A. M.
eave Sumter 8:67 *9 40
rrive Columbia 10:20 11 00
No. 62 runn through from Charleston vis J
initial H. H., leaving Ohnrleeton 7:00 a, m., !
ancs 8:34 a. ra., Manning 9:09 a. m.
Trains Going North.
No. 64* No.68 I
A.M. P. M
eave Columbia *6:40 *4 It
rrive Sumter 8:06 6 86
No. 82
P. M.
oave Suiuter *8:06 6 0
rrive Florence 9:20 7 2
envo Florence 9.60
eave Marion 10:80
rrivo Wilmington 1:16
*L>aily.
No. 63 rune through to Charleston, 8. C.,
a Central 11. H., arriving at Manning 6:04
m., Lanes 6:43 p. m., Charleston 8:30 p. m
Trains on Coi.wty Branch leave ^bad>urn
6 35 p m, arrive Conway 7 40 p m,
turning leavo Conway 8 30 a m, arrive j
aadbourn 11 20 am, loave Chadbourn 11 60
m, arrive Hub 12 25 p m, returning leave
ub 8 00 p m, arrive Chadbourn 8 86 p m.
aily exoopt Sunday.
J. R. Kenly, General Manager
T. M Emorson, Traffio Manager.
11. M. Emerson, General Passenger Agei t.
Wilmington and Cinwaj
Railroad.
Daily except Sunday.
Southbound.?No. 97.
mtve Flub 8 06 pm
MTl llions 8*10 p*
rrive Chadbeurn 8 86 pss
IftYA (yhtt#4hrmrr? * * '
V mo pm
a*T? Clarendon 8 00 paa
?:ivo Mi Tabor .. I 14 pat
tare Laris 6 ti pat
sava Sanford A 40 pat
iftte Bayboro 7 ## paa
j'wo Privetta 7 Of paa
nare Adrian 7 12 pat
rriTe Conway 7 40 paa
Northbound.?No. 98.
jftTt Conway 8 80 aaa
iayo Adrian I 44 aaa
?ava Privatta fOOaaa
tare Bayboro f 10 ant
sato Banford 9 90 aaa
?a*e Laria 984 paa
sato Mt Tabor 1010 an
sAva Clarendon 1140 aaa
rrira Chadbourn 1120 aaa
are Chad boom... 1140 aaa
>are llious 1114 paa
rrlva Hub 1214 pa
*7ACCA\<AW Lllfl BTBA14BRB.?Tka
rT Slaaaar will leara tka wkarf at Canty
trary Monday and Wadnaaday morning
r Georgetown at 4 o'oloak, tauahiag all la*
rmediata points; and will laata kar wkarf
Georgetown OYory Tuasday and Friday
trniog for Conway at 4 o'eloek, tauakiag
all intonaodiato points.
i>. T. Malfelll,
Oen'l Agi. and Traaa., Can way, B. 0.
Jaha B. Beaty,
Agant, Georgetown, 1,0.
1
rrher
% j
SON iS
ill Tonic.
bottle?hence you
Grove's. Imitators
on would not buy
Grove's contains
n<l is in a Tasteless
Quinine drives the
t will tell you that
so-called Tasteless
;r chill tonics shows
rery respect. You
c's?its superiority
d. Grove's is the
malarial sections of
COC.
Saw Mil In,
Corn Mill*,
Cane Mills,
Riee Hullcrs,
Pea IIuMors,
Engine*,
Boilers,
Planers ami
M ateliers,
Swing Saws,
Rip Saws,
: and all oilier kindu of wood
working machinery. My Sergeant
Log Beam Saw mill is
the heaviest, strongest, and
most efficient mill for the
money on the market, quick,
accurate. State Agent for H.
B. Smith Machine Company
wood working machinery.
For high grade engines, |)lain
slide valve?Automatic, and
Corliss, write me: Atlas,
Watertown, and Struthers
and Wells.
V. 0. BAI)HAM,
1326 Main St., Columbia, 8. C.
Ginning Machinery,
Saw Mill Machinery,
Planing Mill
Machinery,
Brick Machinery,
Engines, all Types;
Boilers, all Kinds.
These are our Speoia Hies
and we have the most
complete and best lines
to oiler.
tf. H. Gibbes & Co.,
MACHINKKYjtnd MILL SUPPLIES
OF EVERY DESCRIPTION.
COLUMBIA, 8. O
POSITIONS!
Pledge to secure our graduated positions
backed by $5000- Courao* unexcelled.
Good board cheap. Boter any
time. Open to both sexes. Send now for
free oala'ogue. Address,
COLUMBIA BUSINESS COLLEGE,
COLUMBIA, 8. C.
W. H. Newborry, Prcsidont.
TV ^
_ , JTJ.
Coaway Lodge, Wo. 90. Kniehts (
Pythian will meet regularly the flrst and
third Thursday nights of each month until
otherwise ordered.
D. A.Simtbt
Chnn. Com.
J. 0. 8riv*v
K. it. <fe N
May 14th. 96 ly
WANTED.
The address of a few INTKLLIQKNT
YOUNG TB VCtlfiRS whoso
Bohoolfl havo closed for the season.
Address, B. W. Gitsinoku,
Box 105, Spartanburg, 8. 0.
H. H. WOODWARD,
Attorney and Counsellor at Law,
CONWAY, S. 0.
MTOfioe up stairs over Herald efteu ^
apposite Bank. V
Dr. H. H. BURROUGHS,
LORIS, 8. C.
Calli promptly antwerad nigh
or day.
R. B. Scarboronflh,
COMWAT, s. o,
attorn it at law.