The Horry herald. (Conway, S.C.) 1886-1923, March 26, 1903, Image 4
|0trj> HetaW. ?
.? Locomotion.
UUL18HKD ? OlAtMKD /on A VAIVB, <
? - 1 "?
?
>vla 4?l?l to l><* .\lilo to ICft'oct
t> MiivIiik ol at liOntil ono. |
tilth n|' ilw* t'nnl I'sotl !
|\?r I'tu'ltl. |
The Oolumhla State says "The j
Jtrooks Improved Steam Valve coin-!,
pany" of that city has teen untitled i
that the patent olllce has granted an 1
"allowance" on the contrivance which
this company lias sought to have pat- '
en ted. The allowance * means that ]
tlie authorities have acted favorably '
and that the latfers patent will lie is- J
sued in a few days.
The valve which this company has |
in its possession is said to be one of |
the greatest inventions of recent <
years. The inventor is a machinist
Who spent IN years in the Southern's (
shops in Columbia, but for tome reason ;
ids name is withheld on the ground ;
tliat lie himself does not for the present
want his identity made public.
The inventor put Ids contrivance ,
into the hands of a friend, Col. (!. it.
Itrooks, who is the clerk of the supreme
court, and the latter, with the
advice of ("ion. M. C. Holler, lias been
able to get, it patented. The object
of the valve is to economize the use of
coal and to increase, the speed of a
locomotive. Colonel 1 trunks believes
tlrmly in its practicability.
To a reporter of The State he said
Wednesday: "We claim for it that
we can save from 20 to .'to per cent, of
Die fuel used on locomotives. We
claim that, we can increase the speed
from 2o to .'to percent. This invention
will get rid of the 'used steam' which
is called 'hack pressure' and retards
till' IW< ur rosx lit 1 III' Oilir i I II'V !l Si 1 11<> v urii
working today. The valvo is very
simple in its construction, so simple
that every machinist who lias examined
it is struck immediately with its
practicability, and many have wondered
why they never thought of it."
When the application for a patent
had been tiled some time ago there
was a protest from the attorneys of
several inventors who were endeavoring
to perfect something of the same
kind and claimed 1 he right of priority.
Colonel Itrooks went to Washington
and was accompanied by Mr. .1.
It. ICd wards, a practical machinist.
The latter explained the valve to the
satisfaction of the patent oillcc and,
u(Kin his showing, the "allowance:"
was issued. At the suggestion of
General 1 tutier, patents under the
laws of all foreign countries have been
applied for by the company.
A practical tost of the valve will
be made in a few days. "We have obtained
permission from the superintendent
of motive power of one of the
largest railroad systems to have an
engine tittcd with this appliance in
order to make calculations," said
Colonel Itrooks. "When we went
Into bis oil Ice this superintendent
glanced at t he model and said, indifferently,
1 have seen a great, many
valves like tills.' Mr. Klwards interjected,
'You never saw anything like
this In your life.' That caused the
railroad ollicial to make a minute ineno/d
i, ,11 o iwl 1 w\ unu e/? **?<? I 1 e.? t J. il.v.l
n|/(.VUlVMI? dill* I IV 11 (4tl f>\? 11 v.: I I r??| LI nuru
thai he ordered an engine placed at
our disposal when the patent shall
have been secured. 4lt It will save us
one per cent, of coal it is valuable,
but if it will save us 20 per cent, it is
the greatest thing we could get hold
of.' the superintendent said to us.
''The engine will lie examined and
tested as to speed, coal consuming
capacity, etc., before the appliances
iire attached," continued Colonel
brooks, "and the other tests will be
made to show the merits of the valve."
The practicability of the valve
must be settled before any plans for
the future will be made, but Colonel
brooks would like to have the contrivance
manufactured in Columbia.
The Human Itody.
A French chemist, of a particularly
Inquiring turn, says the Medical
Journal, has determined by cxpori- ;
ment that the body of an average 1
man, of about so kilos, has all the
chemical elements represented in the ?
yolk and white of twelve hundred or- .
dinary sized eggs of the common hen.
broperly reduced, such a body would |
furnish UH cubic metres of gas and sullicient
hydrogen to till a balloon
with an ascensional force of 70 kilos. <
Normally, the human body contains
iron sullicient to make seven large |
nails, fat for thirteen candles, car- |
bon for sixty-live gross of pencils, |
phosphorus to tip eight hundred and .
and twenty thousand matches, together
with the constituents of salt. ,
lifty-nine lumps of sugar and t'ortytwo
litres of water. Would it not be ,
well to use some of our surplus popu
laiion to these ends. Let us diver-1(
sity our industries.
A Terrible DIhhhKt.
The steamer Mariposa, which arrived
at San Francisco one day last
week from Samoa, brings news of the
disastrous hurricane which swept over
the 1'oumotu group of islands in January.
In all over <?(>(> lives were lost
and the financial loss will exceed $f>()0,ooo.
The I'omoutu ({roup of islands
number alsait 100. ltelicf measures
have been instituted and every tiling
possible is being done at Apia and
other places in the Samoan group to
relieve the sufferings of the I'omoutu
Islanders. ~
< >11 it Natl .MiHNioit.
The State says Gov. ileyward was
called to Savannah Thursday by the
news of the death of ids grandmother,
Mrs. Duncan L. Clinch, and of his
aunt, Mrs. J. 11. M. Clinch. The
former, who Is the widow of Gen.
Clinch of Georgia, a general in tlx;
Indian war, died in Charleston, hut
her remains were taken to Savannah
for interment. It is a sad singular
circumstance that she and her daughter-in-law
died on the same day. Gov i
Ileyward hopes to )>e in his oilie !
Saturday. i
Ill I II
^lL ARP WRITES HISTORY t
. r
|*>i< the ilonolliM o| (ho Young I'onpio I
oft ho Count ey. i
u<\ many young pooplo who urn i
ihlrotlntf for historical knowlodgo l
vrlto in mo fur help that l fool em (
touraged and will ansdfer their In- .
julrlos uk far as I oan. Those young [
ic<?plo in tho country towns liavo |
ichools to goto, I hi t they lack IsKiks <
reading hooks, oyclopcdias, biographies.
and it 1 was as rich as Carnegie
I would plan a library of suoh books
n every community. I would have a
nillion sets of some standard cyclopelia
printed for every school, even it
ihey cost fifty million dollars. That
would dill use knowledge among the
fouiig people and do inoic good than t
ill he is doing In the hig cities, lint i
what we most need in the South are l
dstorical books t hat will he standard I
with us and relate the truth about
t?he South and secession and the (,'onfedcraey
and slavery and the war and
reconstruction. I ha I a cyclopedia
I hat gave a whole column of apology
for old John lirnwn and the pedigree
if every Northern race horse, and no
mention ot' John It. (iordon or Forrest
nr any of our Southern poets or
authors or orators. 1 swapped it. oil"
at. half price for the International by
hofid, Meade $ Co. Tho tributes In
that work to I?r. Davis and Lee and
Jackson arc all that, could he desired
and more than was expected.
I wonder what has become of that
great Southern publishing house that
was projected in Atlanta some time
ago. That is what, we want and must
have, to perpetual,e Southern history
and defend our fathers and grandfathers
troin t lie slanders of Nort hern
Iocs. 11 Is Northern histories, Northern
novels and Northern plays that
have already poisoned the minds of
thousands of our young people. < >111y
vest.el'dav 1 I'lanrerl a! a vm-ia! .l.-v..
in ;im At lata paper and the lirst tiling
I saw was a verse which read:
".lolm Hrown's body lies mouldering in
t lie ground,
I'ut his soul keeps inarching on."
in a Missouri paper I saw where a
Yankee troupe were playing "Uncle
Tom's Cahin." And now a fool fellow
from Wisconsin wants to got our
(Governors to appoint delegates to a
convention in Atlanta to determine
the race problem, and it is said thai
that man Spooner is at. the hotfoot ot
it. to net up a Presidental boom lor
himself. I suspected there was a
ntggor in the woodpile, for these
Northern politicians never do anything
from patriotic, unsellish motives.
Manna's scheme fell through
and Spooner thought lie could patch
it. up. lint, the South never was more
aroused and united on t he negro question
and will resent all interference,
whether it comes from Washington or
Wisconsin. Wisconsin! What impudence!
A State whose foreign popula
tion is (?2 per cent, of flic whole, and
of these there are ss,ooo who can't
s|>eak ICnglish, and only 7(10 negroes
in the State and three times as many
Indians. What does Wisconsin know
or care ahont our race problem?
In the last few days I have received
three letters from young people wanting
to know some! Iiing ahont I he < 'onlederate
llags, what were the designs
and who designed them. I wish that,
I could sketch them and paint tlieiu
in lliiv: IiOIoi- lull -ill I -1,.
scribe them ami give their history.
There were four in all, but only two
lived to sec the end at A ppomattox.
No. I, or the "Stars and liars,"
was adopted by the Confederate Congress
at Montgomery. Its stars were <
on a blue tield and its red and white
bars made it- look somewhat like the
Stars and Stripes, and sometimes was (
mistaken for the United States llag,
and so Ceneral I lean regard designed.
No. 2, "The Battle flag," and
Ceneral Joe 10. Johnson adopted it. ,
and it was never changed, it was a ,
blue cross, or rather an X studded ,
with stars and set on a red Held.
No. .'1. in May, isti.'t. tlie Uoufeder- (
ate Congress adopted a national llag. (
It was a miniature battle llag set on
a white Held that had a white border
at the side and at the bottom. But
it proved to lie a mistake, for it had
too much white and afar oil' was mistaken
for a llag of truce.
And so on March, IS(i.">, Congress,
adopted No. I as the national llag.
Thisjhad the same battle llag on a
blue Held, but the white border was
smaller and a red one put on the outside
of that. This llag did not wave
very long, only about a month, but
nevertheless it remains as the national
llag of the Confederate States.
But. the dear old battle llag No. 2 1
was the lighting banner of every company.
Our wives and our daughters
made them for the boys in gray, and
many of them were smuggled back
borne again after the surrender and
still kept as household treasures. Our |
boys, the Koine Litflit Guards, h;i?l
Line, and nne night the young people
gave a tableaux performance in the
city hall to raise a little money to put
some benches in the desecrated
churches, for all the pews had been
taken out and converted into horse
troughs for the stall" horses. One
scene in the tableaux represented a
battle lield where women were ministering
to the wounded and the dying,
and one dying soldier, the ensign, had
this old tattered and war-stained llag
grasped in his hand just as lie held it
when ho fell.
The Spanish commandant of the
post was there with his wife, and
when lie discovered the llag, got, furiously
mad. lie jumped up on his
seat and yelled: "Takedat fin# avay,
dat is treason dat is an insult to me
and de United States. I send for my
soldiers and I arrest t he whole party."
lie ran wildly down the stairs and
across the street to his quarters and
came back quickly with half a dozen
Dutchmen in arms to make t he arrest,
lie inarched the young men over to
1)is olllcc, but paroled the young ladies
until he could hear from General
Thomas, whose headquarters were in
Louisville. 1 was mayor then and we
had some hot words. He said linally
lie would release the young men until
he could hear from General Thomas.
So I wrote to General Thomas by the
same mail. He very graciously forgave
us, but warned us not to do so ;
any more, for the display of a Con fed
twii i i. i \im
rate Hag wnR treason and the punish*
tient of treason was death.
This Is enough about llaifR. There
s no treason In dDplayhw one now.
rime U a tfnod doctor and Time keeps
oliinw on My wife end .1 hud unothei
vpddliu last Saturday and good
rlonda wore culling ail the afternoon
i say good words and congratulate us
m our long and happy married lire.
Uarly In the morning, whllo my wife
ind the family were at breakfast,, 1
mmo in late and slipping up hohind
ler planted a venerable kiss upon her
lassjo brow.
'"She half enclosed me In her arms.
She clasped njo in a meek embrace;
(No she didn't, eiiher.)
And bending back her head, looked
up
And gazed into my face."
Yes, she did that, for it took her by
unprise. I hadn't kissed her since
L,he llrst day ??l last, June which was
tier birthday. Twice, a year satlsiics
Iter now. Hii.l A hp.
'I'lie Sloimieli Is the Man.
A weak stomneli weakens the man,
because it cannot transform (he food
lie eats into nourishment. llealth
and st ren^t h cannot tie restored to any
sick mail or weak woman without
llrst restoring health and st rcnglith to
l lie stomach. A weak stomach cannot
digest enough food to Iced the tissues
and revive ihe tired and run down
limits and organs of the body. Kodol
Dyspepsia dure cleanses, purities,
sweetens i*till st relight ens I he glands
and menihranes of the. stomach, and
cures Indigestion, dyspepsia and all
st omaeh I roubles.
Dr. 10 Norton.
THREE MEN KILLED
Citnl Curs mi it lie uli Trip ill it <'<>;il
Mine.
The breaking of a coupling, followed
by the runaway of a string of loaded
coal ears in the Sunshine mine al
South Dork. I'a., late Thursday afterI,
iiw.xl I I... .1.... I. ?.r ,i
v 1111.11 M UMl Ml Hill Wl l-IIM'C illl'll,
I Ik1 fili al injury of one, unci more en
less serious injuries lo mine others.
The dead:
Tony Border, of South Fork, a^cd
10 years.
Joseph S. St rank, South Fork a^ed
JO yciirs.
frank MoC'lain, of fhcnlicld.
The injured:
(ioolhau^h, of South fork,
spine Injured and breast erushed, will
die.
Albert l'aul, c?f South fork, arm,
le^ and collar hone broken, serious.
William Barker. South fork, crushed
about head and body, will recover.
A half doy.cn others whose names
could not he ascertained were badly
bruised.
The accident occurred about 5 p. m.
as the men were leaving the mine. A
trip of about 25 loaded cars was beintf
hauled to the surface by an cndliSN
chain. When the ears left tin; centre
of the mine lift ecu ore men climbed
aboard. All went well until the trip
reached a "dip" about, too yards from
the mouth of the mine. The train
climbed three-fourths of the steep
tirade in safety, hut a short distance
from the level truck t he hitching between
the second and third curs broke.
Instantly the mine slope was tilled
with shouts of the men as all ot t he
ears with the exception of the lirst
two commenced to hack down the
Kiade. Slowly at lirst hut with gradually
increasing speed the cars sp.d
downwards, pivin^ the men scarcely
an opportunity to jump and save
themselves. When about 200 yards
from where the hitching broke the
fiiromrvct ivir i 1??* * ? .?*.!*
. ..vmiv/.u; ill i u I u I I II I I <11 IV <11 Kl lilt
remainder of the train pilled up hack
at' It.
II KM' KOK Til K I N.I I' It Kl).
Those who had been fortunate
enough to Jump from the runaway
cars (piiekly ran to the outside and
told of the aeeideot. Help was quickly
brought to the men buried lieueath
Hie pile ol wreckage, whieh tilled the
six-foot heading for a distanee of
twenty yards. At a late hour Tlnirslay
ni^rht the wreckage had been
dcared away and the injured till taken
:>ut.
liausdale says you can tret a kood
iiiility uiiitfham at (?Je if you hurry.
The 1 icst pill' ncath the stars and
si ripes;
it cletiuses tlie system and never
k ripes.
Little Karly Misers of worldly repute?
Ask for I>eWilt's titid take no
suI>st.iI ute.
A small pill," easy to buy, easy to
lake and easy to act, hut never failing
in results, i >e Wit t's Lit t le Karly His
prs arouse t lie secret ions and act as a
tonic to t lie liver, euriiik permanent ly.
1 ?r. K. Norton.
An Honor Well Itestowoil.
The president Thursday announced
the id em hers of the hoard of visitors
to the West I'oint Military academy
as follows: lion. I >. It. Henderson of
Iowa, Hon. (Joortfe K. Maxtor of Colorado,
('ol. Ashury Coward, superintendent
of the Smith Carolina Military
academy; Joseph (J. Darlington of
Philadelphia, Win. A. Pew, Jr., of
Itoston; the Itcv. Krncst M. Stiers,
I). I)., St. Tlioinas cliurch, New
York, and J. (J. Sohmidlappof Cincinnati.
A Keiiia rk n Me < 'use.
(>110 of l lie most remarkable cases of
a cold, deep-seated on the lungs, causing
pneumonia, is that of Mrs. Uert
rude 10. Ken nor, Marion, hid., who
was entirely cured by the use of One
Minute Cough (Jure. She says: "The
coughing and straining so weakened
me that I rundown in weight from
148 to l?2 pounds. 4 tried a number of
remedies to no avail until 1 used One
>1 in i lie (lough (hire, hour hottlesof
this wonderful remedy cured me entirely
of t he cough, st rengt lienod my
lungs and restored me to my normal
weight, liealt h and st rengt h."
I>r' K. Norton.
A < 'lose < 'nil.
h\ l'?. Collins, an attorney of Niles,
Mich., who had I wen seriously ill,
went into a trance Wednesday and
his relatives supposing him dead,
summoned an undertaker. When he
placed the remains in a casket several
hours later t he undertaker discovered
perceptible indications of returning
life: Medical aid was summoned and
the patient now bids fair to recover.
?? v ' I ' ?1
JffHEDrORB^V
|f SiACKDRAUGttTj|
|Q|
Constipation is nothing more
t listvi a t-iogping of tlio bowels wR
and nothing less than vital stag11*
nation or (loath if not relieved, r.
Ir9 If every constipated sufferer j
i, could realize Unit ho is allowing ?
* poisonous tilth to remain in his rg
\ s\stein, he would soon pet relief, ?
('oust ipat ion invites all kind of |
| contagion. Headaches, bilious- r
ness, colds and many other nil- I
meats disappear when" consti- t
pated bowels are relieved. Thod- C
I. lord s Hlack-I >raught thoroughly g
cleans out the bowels in an easy fc
I and natural manner without the I
w purging of calomel or other vio- fa
ft lent cathartics. m
B Me sure that you pet the origi- Jft
Epv nal Thedford's Mack-Draught, AJ
n made by The Chattanooga Medi- M
W cine Co. Sold by all druppists in I
fl '25 cent and $1.00 pack apes. n
Uortooi, Ark., Mnjr 25. 11101.
H I rnnnot roooinmcnil Tli?ufor<rH lllnrkBjjj
lirmivlit too liluhl). I keep II In iiiv house H
nil llii' 111.ii' mill Iinip iiii'il II for the Inst n
72 ton jonrH. I never (rave mv children ftfl
19 .in) other laxative. I think I could NB
j never he nhlo to work ulthnut ll
J9 on nroount of bclnv trouhloit with
?*-' ?& i.iustlputlol.. tour iiii'illt'lnn I*
nil that keep* mo up.
C. It. McPAItLAMl.
* I?urn i
Sonatoi* Tillman <>ut West.
I nil.od Sirfes Senator Tillinan delivered
an address on "The Nogio
l.llieSl ion t'l'lllll a Southern Sliiiwl
point," before an audience of 1,800
university students, citizens and lawmakers
at Madison, Wis., Thursday
night, lie was greeted with the stirring
university yell. A rather sensational
incident oceured while Senator
' 'I iihnan was discussing the Indianola
pus toll ice ease. After stating the
' soutliern view of the all'air, he asked
whether the audience approved of
I'resident 1 loose velt's action and there
was applause. Itcing uncertain whet Iter
t lie applause was intended as an indorsement.
of the president's action,
the senator asked how it. was meant,
lie was told that it was meant as an
endorsement of the president. This
aroused lite senator, lie went into
the details of the Indianola all'air
1 and when he concluded asked his hearers
whether it would not have been
better for the president to have kept
the otlleeopened and punished the few
hot-heads that caused the trouble
than to have punished the entire com1
inunity by closing the otllee. requesting
those to raise their bands who
supported the president's action. (>nly
a few raised their hands. In the
main his address was much like h s
ot her recent utterances on the san e
subject. 1 le condemned the negro to
eternal inferiority to the white man.
\Vton's In a Name*.'
Kverylhing is in the name when it
comes to \? itch llazle Salve. K. <'.
|)e\Vilt \ (to., of (Ihicago, discovered,
some years ago, how to make a salve
from Witch Hazel that isa specific I'm
riles, for blind, bleeding, itching and
proi nullum riles, eczema, nils, burns,
bruises a n< I all skin diseases, I ?e\Y il I's
Salve has no equal. This has given
rise to numerous worthless eouuler
lei Is Ask for I >e NY ill's I lie genuine.
Dr. 10. Norton.
A Cranky Tcuclirr.
Prof. A. T. Weaver, of Ashville, N.
C., at the head of a leading e locutional
institution has hcen sent to jail hecause
he refused to be vaccinated and
also because of his refusal to pay a
line of $2."? for t he same. The vaccination
was ordered as a precaution
afcainst smallpox. Prof. Weaver, it.
is said, may institute legal proceedings
against the authorities, and may
take the case before the Supreme
Court of North Carolina.
Tjik Czar of Russia has issued a
decree providing for the freedom of
religion throughout his dominions and
establishing to some degree a local self
government, and making other eoncesslot
s to village committees.
Cypress
Shingles.
If you will haul them, we will
sell at the following low prices,
as long as t hey last.
<> x 20 $.1.7") per thousand,
t x IS Hand Drawn Heart Cypress
at $:i.2a per thousand.
Now if you want a good roof,
Iv*unr i aiuu^.
Slianfl Builders Supply Co.,
(115 Plain St., Columbia, S. ('.
Conway & Seashore
Railroad.
Pally Except Sunday.
1 n elYcct Sept. 2, 1001.
L.'.... 4 1.1... ? -
nun i/i i in Ml IIU IX). I.).
Loaves Conway s 00 am
Leave l'ine Island 8 ;io am
Arrive Myrtle ltcacli 8 1 r? am
Northbound No. 11.
Leave Myrtle lleach 5 80 pm
Leave Line Island f? 1 "> pm
Arrive Conway (I 15 pm
l>. T. McNeil, (Jen. M^rr.
Attorney and < ounselor at La^
conwav s 0
OfKICK ?n 8o'V?r Unildine
I)ii. II. II. BURROUGHS,
LOItlS. 8 0.
Calls pvompily answored night
or day.
R. B. Scarborough,
Conway, 8 0.
attoknky at law.
I i ?
Lot the Sunshine In.
TiiO room should bo sunny In all all*,
incut* cxcopt u very few affections of |
i he eye. for sunshloo U the liest germ
do?troyer we have, and will muke n
room moro wiioluHomo and sweot thru
any disinfectant, ttnyii Ihn Root* hum. .
N wdays it. U not. oontldorod nones. j
Kttry to darken ovory sick room au It
ti??od to lie. It Is moro fnshlunahlo and
much moro houlthy to let In sunshine
.nl over the house than It is to cIojo
ihe blinds so that the furniture may
not lade. it. is choapcr and much
pleasatiter to have a faded carpet than
it Is to have a case of sickness, and
the doctor's and the nurse's hill to pay
The dark. stulTy room, whispering
voices and tiptoe tread have passi d
away, fortunately for the patient.
Accounts Sliorl. 1
A shortage of over $">,000 has boon
found in the accounts of the laic .1. S.
Campbell, county treasurer for Rich-:
land. It is a year since the death of
Capt. Campbell, and the estate has
made no settlement with the county.
Mr. It. M. Splgenor, the treasurer
I elected, has declined to take the office
I from Mr. 10. J. Ilrcnner, who succeeded
Capt.. Campbell, until the cloud
can he cleared. The late treasurer;
was in feeble health and had a great
deal of sorrow the last two years of '1
his life. Ills mental condition is < ?
advanced charitably as the cause of
the deficiency. No oilicial statement '
can tic obtained. i 'I
If you uro not w? . vmit to kt.o.v tlio .
(r >ul)le, soiin fnr mv
? xaliilJlftjl|?ij ^hlftnka.
',f ^<>nif1"'No"fl<
-'imh ,,i ho i n tho hands
. 4 $ \thnrity nn?l expert in
"* the rnltoil KlatOS nil
PR i ITIIAWU tItfwpdNoaspB. Write
ir ?p*m ,'.?r lln !> ..!< y -u want lo-day, and il
. .: ?Mii vn.i ' o. -o'i'o.l AddrpxH J. Novy
' i a -v . v. \| I >
88 lnmun Puildinu 22' S\ I (road St, |
At.lanta, (ia.
Wilmi gton and Conway
Railroad.
Soul hliound. No. 07. I >aily except
Sunday. a.in.
Lv (diadliourne 7 lf>
44 Clarendon 8 in
44 Ml. Tabor 8 :io
44 Lor is 8 5.7
44 Sanford o In
4' liayliorn tt 20
44 Privet ts 020 >
44 Adrian 0 Tt> am
A i t 'now ay I" on a m
Nnrl hliound. No. lis. I)ai'" cxecpt
Sunday.
IiV Conway i : in
41 Adrian i > M am
44 Privet is in 42 air
41 I lay I moo in ii. in
44 Sanford !( I " am
" I i ni< ii e
" mi. taik>t 1 ,\! ,i n") j
44 (M.iroiidon i i 1 am
Ar. (Munlhourno I. 50r.in
Soul 111>?11111<I. No. "17. I>a11v cxrpt
Sunday. 1
Lv Chudbournc 11 10 pm
" < Marciidon 12 lo pin
Ml. Ta I >or 12 In pin
44 I.oris 12 55 [>iu |
44 San lord Id") pm <
" I lay ho ro I II pm ^
44 I'rivol Is 121 pm \
44 Adrian 1 In pn; y\
A r Conway 140 pm
iNorl IiImhiikI. No. 2d. Daily cxccp
Sunday. j
Lv (Joiiway 2 .'Id pm <
Adllan 2 55 pm
44 Privet Is 3 00 pm |
" Ilayboro a 16 pm
" Sanford 3 25 pm
44 Loris 5 45 pm
" Mi. Tabor 4 20 pm
44 Clarendon 4 50 pm
A r Chad hour no 5 20 pm j
A Weak
Stomach ,
Indigostlon Is often caused by over- 1
eating. An eminent authority says
the harm done thus exceeds that from J
tho excessive use of alcohol. Eat all
the good foodyou want but don't overload
tho stomach. A weak stomach
may refuse to digest what you eat. (
Then you need a good dlgestant liko
Kodol, which digests your food with- il
out tho stomach's aid. This rest and '
the wholcsomo tonics Kodol contains
soon restore health. Dlctingunnecessary.
Kodol quickly relieves the feel- ''
ing of fulness and bloating from 51
which some people suffer after meals.
Absolutely cures indigestion. 1
Kodol Naturo's Tonlo. \ I
Prepared only by K.O. D*WiTTdcOo.,Ohleafa, (,
Too fl. bottle contalnaSVi ttmoa theGoc. alee. , |
u;a(;oamaw unb htea uekh.?Th 1
V V Steamer will leave (he wharf at Con r
way every Monuay nmt tvodnes-'ay morning
for Georgetown al 4 o'clock, toocomg all io
ermcdiate pointM; anil will leave her wharf
at Georgetown every Tuesday and Frid y j
morning for f'onway at 7 o'clock, touching ()
at all intermediate pointa. ,
I) T McNeill, J
flen'l Agl and Treaa., Coeway, H (5
John N. Beaty,
Agent, Georgetown. H.G
Conway |jo<lga, No. tK). Knights ot
Pythias will moot regularly the first ano | v?
intni Thursday nights of each month until
otherwise ordered.
I>. A.Snvkv
Chan. Com
.1 (J. Himvkv
K. It. & S C
Mny 14th. t??
I The Old Standa
I Grove's 1
I has st*ood t?he t*es
I over One and -a Hi
I of merit* appeal t?c
"r1 Enclosed wit*h every bottle is
~
Wfieiw
j Continues to make
READ THIS
ALMOST A
y Gentlemen :?In Peptembor, 1899, I
h In i mouth after the disease started
H bed. It continued to grow worse until
J so much so that I could not use then
9 feet touched my hips. I was as helplei
?m Tho muscles of my aims and legs were
y many times over. Was treated by sit 11
?t Marion, hut none of them could do me ui
r eaino to see mo. He told me to try your
^ of the medicine and I began to tako it ai
y began to Ret better. I used five and a
b That was t wo years afro, and my heaJt h h
y no symptoms of rheumatistn. I re if a r
?* remedy for rheumatism on tho market*
^ recommended it to others since and It ha
W||| sav further, that I began to wall
7 " RnnniiAOlDB!," with the aid of crutch!
to take it, I could walk as good as auybod
J All Druggists, or sent express
7 Bohbltt Chemical Co.,
ik^vit^r>isB^r?asii^i\ns!fM
'A\Ij()KS Swop!
/liHrokee Remedy ot
"ures OougliP, Coklj, Wlioopi
I'll rout :unl liiing TrouMt'S Mi
eiii unci Honey. Your Dniggi:
TAKE^p
A LOOK*}
II" r full lint' of llanlwiire is not
<>11 r sitles'iicii art' out.
Coleman-Warner Ha
vJ
:io:i KIN (J St.
J" 8 s < > C ;i?I > 1 o
I I I I. | A l.fi |..ST M A :
Ilfgh Ox ale Pia
liN 11 J IC i
Factories, Chieauu a rl Sr. (.'liar
Oaoit .L TW > M
to uieh House, 2W2 Kuif St. ( Mil
1IANOS ANI) OFGANS S? I I
\v Hi ,or our natal ijuc ai Iter^s
A fuUluu of Sheet Ma .in an '
THE "AHLE
( II \ln. US
COLUMBIA LUM
8ASM, DOORS, DDIMDS, IT
ING AINDLUMD5K, ANY ()l
Golu iTibi
CONih:nskm S<-iikim'I.K.
Trains (iointf Soulli. haled April
lili. iai>2.
No 2.7 No 22 No 72
* * *
a in p in p in
V Florence 2 2d 7 .7.7
4 K intrst ree a 07
i r Lanes I 20 a 2* p m
iv I iunes I 20 o 2.s 7 27
r Charleston (too II 1,7 a 2a
No.71 No.7a
a in a in
iv Florence a 17
14 Kin?rstroe 10 7a ....
.r Lanes lion
,v Lanes 11 00 a Id
. r Charleston 110 11 15
TrainsKJointf North.
No 78 No 152 No 72
* * *
a m p 111 a 111 j
iV Charleston 7 no 5 20 0 in
, r Lanes 8 57 0 45 8 1;"> J
.v Lanes 8 57 0 4ft
,, Kingst ree 8 .71
1 r Florence 0 15 7 55
N 0 50 N (i 58
pin pm
<v Charleston 4 20 5 25
V r Lanes 0 on 7 2s
jV Lanes 0 00
" Kingst ree
\r Florence a 7 40
" l )ally.
{Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday
No. 52 runs t hrough to Columbia via
lent ral It It of S ().
Trains Nos. 78 and 52 run via Wilson
nd Fayottvllle Short Line and
lake close connection for all points
tort h.
Trains on C. & I >. It. It. leave
'lorenee daily except Sunday loo.*>a in
rrive Darlington 10 50am, llarlsville
55 pin, Che raw II 45 am., W ulesboro
2 5o pm. Leave Florence daily exept
Sunday 8 (K) p in, arrive Darling-',
u8 25 p in, Hennct lesville 0 22 p in, >
lihson lo 20 pm. Leave Florence Sunay
only lo 05 a in, arrive Darlington
0 50a in.
Leave Gibson daily except Sunday
5o a in, llennettsvillc o 50 a in, arrive
larlington 8 15 a in, leave Darlington I
.. ... i.... ?.M <> -
DV l| III, ill I I > U I' Ulll'lll'C 1 > il II) . !
ii'iivc Wadeslniro daily except. Sunday
10 p 111, Choraw 5 15 p in, ilartsville
15 a in, Darlington 0 20 p in, arrive
Morenee700 p in. Leave Darlington
50 a in, arrive Florence 015 a in.
I|. M. IOinerSon, (?en'l Pass. Agent, !
J. U.Kcnly, General Manager.
10. M. Emerson, Tratllc Manager.
Dr. C. J. 0LIVER0S,
EYE, LA li, NQS10 and THROAT.
! it ol Spectacles Guaranteed.
)kj. ick i i'24 and 1420 Marion Street
Columbia, S. C.
giaaaiififigr^
rd
asteless CI
25 years. Avei
alf Million bottles.
> you ? No Cure
. a Ten Cent Package of GROVE'S BLA
Dirxov, B. G., Aur. Iflth, 100*. fc JJ^ ^|
took rheumatism 'n * very bad form. ?JL^
1 bad to Rive up my work and ko to S | '
my arms and bauds wore badly drawn, ? I 'Z
n. My lean were drawn back until my g *N.
?s ns a baby for nearly twelve months. ^ ^ sy
hard and shriveled up. ( suffered death ? I
irercnt physicians in MeColl, Dillon and P I ^
iv good, until Mr. J. l\ Kwlnif. of Dillon, ?
ItiiKfMAoi iik." lie Kotino one bottlo y
nd before the tlrst bottlo was used up I C, <^^Hr
half bottles and was completely cured, 7
as tieon excellent ever since. iTave hnd b
d * ItiiF.ii.MAOini" as by far the best P
I cannot say too much for It. I have )
s cured them. y
It In about si x days after I began to take
s; in about three months after I began 7
l.v, and went back to work again.
ry truly, JAMKSWILKK8. \
i prepaid on receipt of fr.oo. ?
Baltimore, rid. \
:Gum vV Mulleiu
nix Cough, LaGi ij>|H ? ml all
hIm of I'uie Swei'i Gum. IS'ul
st. sells it '25 ;iiid f><>
bet tor l lian ot lior, don't buy il.
idware Company
CM A RLESTON, S. C.
C <MU pany,
stealth reus ok
nos and Organs
A < > l^k i v ! >Ios,
Illinois.
I LI JON DOLLARS, $2,000,000.
os ton, S. C.
on 10asy Terms. before buying
Factory prices made,
small Musical I nst rument.s in stock.
.1. V. NVA LLACE, Manager.
COMPAIMY,
l\)N, S. C.
I3L,U 3t MFG. GO.
STERIOR FINISH, MOULDI
ANT I TV.
jwii *u\ jukj i*. ?m jpmm
I lilTaWOOTO
Ia a i) !;iyivv'1 11
Roofing.
Inexponsi vc t<> lay.
Masy l?? keep in repair.
I dght and very durable.
Waierprcn I and ordnrless.
Not alTccted by change of temperature.
Ulast ie.
Acid and Alkali-proof.
l-'ire-resisting and oil-proof.
Vermin will not attack it.
All ready to lay.
Needs no painting or coating.
Will not deteriorate with age.
wuitu kok pmcus
SOUTHUASTI-RN '
ITMli & ClilHNT
COMPANY.
All classes building material,
Oil A HOUSTON, S. <\
. $ g ?1*
, ... * . u w ?
0=3 x, ^ ? 22 fi
.t=: g p v. . *> cz*.
P==s-? s -? * si s - H,/
ry?) ? -v ., ?! 2 3 y iS
. . r; M W ^ 5 0..W
.c==>. 3 , 5 Jh >. 9 f
f' T JT3 "J . H
f-t td ' r. r '? > W
72 . - r. 1 r* ^ Clj a .
T , /) Ht, >J1 H-I o PJ
(~1~> o CM ?2 w S 5woW
c_j=> ^ O C ,"> q 'F^ro i_)
*= =3 i: w >: <f' ^ 'q ? ^ ^ 3
frcrJ </i > T -5 w c 0 So
>?' N?' r-? y . kI
I H s ?s
f=< ? eg H _
^ S S o < 8^?
Jizn3 c H a ? ? o ? ?
cn=> rt & ? rs'^ ?.
?-? g < * s~j= "
Carolina Portland ?
( (MY1 Oilt ( Vl CHARLESTON.
V/V/lllLllt vaj*, south Carolina.
Gamer's White Lime, Cements, Eire
Rl icks, Terra Col t a Pipes.
27-1 v.
H. 11. WOODWARD,
Attorney anil Counsellor at '^?w,
Conway, S. C.
bill Tonic I
rage annual sales!
Does t?his record I
, No Pay. 50c. 1