University of South Carolina Libraries
A 3000 WORD From a South Carolina College Professor for the STATE MSRfcNSAJBY. He Says No Student Has "Been Up" for Intoxication Since the Dispensary Began Contrast With Conditions Under Barrooms. EifwCt Beneficial. The Columbia 11 ;oord says at time the sentiment of Richland c un ty and especially Columbia was overwhelmingly against the dispensary, * ' uuu uy year inero nan been a steady change until now few people doubt that a majority of the people of Columbia aw well as of Richland ooun ty fivor ti e dispensary. This was evidenced by this county's election of delegates to the slate Democratic convention. This change of s? utlmeut has been brought about gradually by a growing ouLvletlon that conditions In this town as far as sobriety Is con ceri.cd have been greatly improved by the operation of the dispensary system Not only is it true that thos" who had already acquired the drink habit drink les3 than they did In the old barroom days, but It Is also true that those who have come to manhood during the thirteen years < f the dispensary's operation In this city are remarkably free from i lis drink habit. Advocates of the dlsp* n?ary have always held ti ls out as one of the great, eat advantages and blessings of that, institution, that It d< creased the Inducements to drink ai d that therefore the longer It was operated the fewer would be the young men of esc 1 gen eratlon who acq ilred ti e drink habit. That this has been the case In 0"lumbia It would be Idle to deny. A steadily increasing realization of fchla f>ir?? has ot en responsible (or the tqually steady obange of felliDg here as i-o t.>?e dispensary. It. is true that the revenue to both city and couuty from the die sary is very large and gr*atlv helps in permitting large publlo improvement without increase of the tax levy, hut this fact is by no means responsib't. for the onanire of sentiment, though it has undoubtedly helped. But many former enemies of the dlopenary have been converted and among them are bcores whoso opinions could not be changed by mere monetary considerations. A striking instance of the Jmpr vc meut of conditions in Columbia as a result of the operation cf the dispen fcary la* was stated in conversation Monday by one of the pr.jfe sors of the South Carolina uuivcrslty, which for more than a hundred years has been engaged in Columbia in the grea'i work of educating the young men of South Carolina. It Is a well known fact that the graduates of that Institution have taken a remarkably pro mineot part in the politics and government of this state. Therefore it cannot be denied that what benefits them morally, or physically, that tends to make them better men n.nrl citizens, nan bent tibial results for scoiesof years p.fter tuey leave the college The professor was discussing the al legation tuac the dispensary was a governmental novelty, practically without precedent. He laughed at tills theory and quoted a number of precedents of governmental control of business, even where there was not. that chief reason f*?r the dispensary, that Is a beneficial txeroiso cf the police po?*er of the state. Continuing he said In substance. I A remarkable tribute to tbe dispen- , sary Is the taot that in ten j ears the faculty of the South Carolina university has not had occssionod to try a student for Intoxication. It is un ortunately true that smong the more than three hundred students at the university there are some who drink but the conditions have beeD so changed by the operation of tbe dispensary that none of them drink so that it Is necessary for tbe faculty to take cognizance of their Indiscretions. It was not so in the days prior to the dispensary, when there were so many temptations and inducements to young men to drink. Then many a young student, without Intending to do so, drtbk to the point of Intoxication, lie would come up street for one reason or another, meet friends, stop In a dar lo taKe a nrlnk or two, get Into a crowd of good fellows, each of whom 1lsistcd he must have his turn at treating, and take a half diz3n or more drinks where he had only intended taking one. The t lf-jct of the operation of the dispensary upon stu dent life In Columbia has been so ben tficlal as to have made Its substitution for the barrooms a real blessing. Cut |)?? lor 1'illow* ' At Jackson, Ky., Bill Griffin, a negro, shot Dr. Strong, another negro, and deliberately went to Bleep with the corpse for a pillow. Griffin was beating his wife, and Dr. Strong answered her cries for help. As he entered the door Griffin shot him with a 44 caliber revolver, the bullet entering bis forehead directly between the eyes. When the officers reached the sc? ne Griffin was lying on the floor fast asleep, with his head resting on the corpse of his vlotlm. WO USE THAN PRISON. MAN UELEAHEI) FHOM WORK UOUiE THOU OUT HK WAS Fred But Finds That Every Move He EakesWill bdWatched by Detectives. Hourded by sp'es who will shadow him for life, Alexander Bjrkmai] boarded a train for St. L u s recently following Ma release from the workhouse at Pittsburg, Pa., where he has beer cor lined for nearly fourteen years Two police (Ulcers In the milBonaire's? mv h^?rd?d the same train. U ger Mara, former (Ji.ief of Police ad 1) tec Ives of Pittsburg, whe work d up the iase against Barkraan fr Mr. Krlck, has heen emplovea by Mr. Fr.ck t*? keep Ub on B rkhsm jw lo? g wS he is alive. It will co?t uiuu $' 0 000 a year to maintain tire watch but lie considers it the same as a life insurance policy. As he walked into the fseealr Berkman's Joy was almost hysterical. ' Hjw oeautiful Is nature!" he ex claimed, stretching his arms as if rousing himself from the lethargic sIp'-d of 'ourteen years Imprisonment. Toe man thought he was frer. In fact he is condemned to a punishment the like of which this free ouuntry never saw. From this moment until either Mr Frick or Berk man dies, tw< detective* will watch Berkmnn ana report to Mr. Frlck every movement Berkman makes, every word he utters as far as posnible. The former anarchist will not know it, always, but. wherever lie goes he will be under sur veibance; his i uture life will be a tor k '-he detectives will hold opju for Mr. Frlck to read. Deputy Police Superintendent J Vinson, of Allegheny, and a score r t aetectivcs met Berkman at the workhouse door and told him that he would have to rodkke his s:ay in tint city abet. Berkman replied: "1 will gladly do as you wish. I have already remained in tl.is v cinity much longer than 1 wishui to." There is an old State law which allows a sulo of cloths to every prisoner discharged from the penitentiary who has over tifiy miles to go l-c reach his destination. Birkham applied for his allowance, but was refu* ed on the ground that his workhouse ?euter.ce came after his discharge from the penitentiary, fie had very little money. About $30 was his stock and 85 of this he left at tilt workhouse for the beneiit of poor prisoners who were obout to be dis charged penniless. lu response to a question as to why he shot II. C. Frick he said: "Mr. rue* was toe irean or a system and hlb removal at that time would have been a blessing to humanity. Timet have changed; It would rut be sorrow. The system he represented Is dying of its own corruption. It doc# nor ueedjmy bullets to help it die. "There is orre thiug 1 wa rt to deny," said Berkman, "and that is that 1 am to become a leader of the a arcbints in this country and take lleer Moat's place. There is nuthing in that." Private detectives arrested Berkman at the workhouse door. It was a strange birthday p rrty, for Berkman coming into the world again called this his "birthday." Again arrd again In his joy Berkman apostrophized nature until a disgusted Allegheny detective declared oostlvely "the fellow has gone mad." He complained greatly cf the treatment prisoners abovr to depart receive from the (tibials, saying; "In effect, the clhcials encourayH CJ * them to go out and commit a^aln the same crime. When Berkman .bearded the 4 p, m. Pittsburg, Fort Wayne andCbica go train at the Union station a turn her of persons were there to bid him good-by. Of them some were "Reds," some Socialists, some only Americans. Berkman will remaiu in Chicago for a few days. Ilorrthiy ittutllatod. According to a report that has reached oillcers at Spartanburg a hor rible fate was meted out to a fruit tree salesman by moonaLilners in ihe Dirk Corner. According to tne story the unfortunate man, who was selling trees in that territory, was suspected of being a revenue clb ;3r in disguise, and one night last week be was enticed from a house where he boarded and taken Into the woods by a party c f c dozen or more mountaineers. After tying the man to a log a sharp knife in the hands of one of the number was used in inflicting Injuries too horrible for publication. It is learned that the victim of the moonshiners' wrath hasslnce died. It later developed that the man was an agent of a fruit tree concern, as he claimed, and that he had no purpose to spy on the business of the residents of the mountainous section. Almoin 4'rozdn. C. D. Boyle of Chester, Pa., arrived in Atlanta Thursday in a refrigerator oar from Perry, Fla., comlpettly numbed and almost frozen to death. He was rescued by pOHoe officers and sent to the Grady Hospital where he was worked on to bring him from his stupor. He stated to the dootors that he was In Perry and crawled into a car to take a nap. While hidden in a dark corner half of the oar was loaded with fruit and vegetables iced, the doors looked and it was shipped to Btlanta. He Is a "Gentleman os Leisure" and claims to bo a pal of "Buffalo Bill." AWFU L MSKASE HIK WHITE PLAQUE GREATEST , OF ALiL, CALAMITIES. The I oss of Lift by Consumption Greater Than by Quakes Flood and fire. "The irrrat calamities that have befallen oart of our country within the memory of those fastmirdle hfe," h a id he, "lu.onely. tho Gh'oag ) ti?e, the s Ctiarlent n earti quake, the Johns- t town tlood, and the San Franolso > i earthquake and our 11 aeration, brought ( the world to lis f^et with i firings of ' ' money and relief. Everybody gave, 1 ! and wea thy men gave most gener- f i ously. Everybody gave on faith, v moreover, without personal knowledge t of the conditions existing in those * places or of the in which the c ? money wt uld be expenred Every- Y i b 'dy ngreed thist h Ip was needed, 1 and evvr^body was willing to help. f ? ' A 1 cf these calamities c?mnlned 14 i lire not as rroat as is the calamity ol t tuberculosis to our c >uuiry cvory >ear. I i The loss of life in a single year by tubercu.osls Is ttfty times greater than t it was in all those calamities. The d amount of suffering from tuberculosis ? for a single year la greater than was s tie total suttcring in those calami- \ ties. There was not a form of human b suffering or misery precipitated by ? those calami ties which is not dupli- 8 cated rrany Mmes over every year by n tuberculosis " The unly item smaller is the money K valuation, and that loss from tuber- f culosia was stated by Dr. Flick to be b ui! re than *50 000 000 annually. h i Continuing, Dr. Flick said: t ' Could the disastrous influence of b , tuberculoma upon any community bo d presented to tbe publio in a concrete U form in the manner in which, for In- o stance, the San Francisco earthquake v was presented; could sll the consump- c oives be marshalled into line and tneir t utfHrlng thus be presentei to the v world at a glance, the response for the amelioration of that sufferiUM a vould be as generous as that widen t the world has just witnessed for Cal.- v fornta " t Dr. F.lck asserted that the strength a of the association lay in the fact that 8 its ambition to eradicate consump b Mon c? uld he gratified. He advo^at- 11 ed tiro establishment of hospitals, o i sanatoria, oonvalescant farms, public d dispensaries, where the poor could be d sprvtd, and the sclentitio care of the > allltcted in th6ir own homes. He c i criticised the medical schools that v turned out graduates unacquainted 8 i with the best methods of combating t i the disease. a In referring to tbe great interna J Mortal conference of the associations a of the world engaged in the crusade j f <?k?iudu ciUUBU Hi pitlUM, wuicn Will t)C *' held In Wasnington in 1908, I)r. t I Fitck recommended that the national s association should establish perrnan- I1 i ent headquarters in Washington, and P that its invitations to the associations c ' of other countries shculd bear the seal 6 of the approval of the United States a government. The governments of r France and Germany, said he, active- * ly participate in the work of the ass*>- t ciaiions in their respective countries s In commenting ou the membership * i of tho assi elation, I)r. Flick cepre- ^ oated the fact that so few clergymen, w professional or business men were & taking an active interest in the work. d To create more widespread interest () he advocated the establishment of a lecture bureau, providing speakers t * visit every part of the country ar-d U disseminate knowledge of how to sue- & cesafully combat the disease. tl The report of the executive ccm- o mh tee told of the growth of the 11 association and of the methods that ol hau been employed in spreading P knowledge of the manner to tight con- o< sumption. Exhibitions plcoorlally b depicting the nature of the disease h unci outlining methods to be followed by thObe suffering from It, which w have teen given In several cities, tl were attended by over 160,000 people b in the last year. The committee recommended that smaller exhibits be b< arranged that will visit the smaller b< cities and towns during the ensuing *1 year. The committee a'so reported K upon Its success iu securing the co- tl oDeratlon of tne Y. M (J. A., the tl National Federation of Libor, and S' otlu r aascciations in the crusadt at The emolem of membership to the (>| natio al, state, and local association d was declared to be a double red cross. *1 NcAruiK the Mud. Terrible predictions concerning w what will happen to this poor old earth during the next twenty live k years were made at a prophetic acid ai S ;co?d Advent conierenco last week ^ in London and while they differed b somewhat in details, they all agreed j, that the end of the world is at i, hand, they were not quite sure *\ whetuer the final catastrophe will ty ome on May 2 or April 9, 193L, but p bucy am qune bura uiaioneof these j] d tes will prove to bo the r.ght one. Tnere can be no doubt that the world has nearly outlived its usefulness, the prophets declared. The wars and ^ earthquakes wnicu have a filleted it bi recently are p^oof positive and all Q' that Is required to fultill the prophe- h cies is the joining of autl-Ohrlst, who it is somewhat unkindly Identified with J1 Napoleon. F sc HuiiK Him, n{ A Columbus, Miss., dispatch says ji George Younger, a negro, who sh >t w and ki'led William E.itor, a well hi known white citizen last Saturday rt while the latter was a member of posse ra endeavoring to effect the negro's ar- w rest, was taken from jail at that place ai Wednesday night by a mob and is lynched. ai ZSAL OF OOxNVFKTS. 'OltMKR HKN \TOIt RMPT1KS HIS WINK OEL.Ii\H. nvited Friends to Bis Fopie to issist in the I estruction of Costly I rinkables. Wine llow? (1 freely Wednesday night it Henderson Castle, the handsome icme of tx benator John B Htnderion, Burm ?unti.g Sixteenth street and iverlooking the city at Washington. Hie very gutter outside the splendid nansion ran redolent with the cholc!8t Juices of the grape. There was vine, wlneeverywhere, butnotadron o drink, not. one goblet of the stuff vas usuit) slake the thurst of the nmp'pv, ruxbering more than one >undied pe'Sons, who saw the sparking beverages gurgling along the mvement into the open sewer. It was och a hc? ne as would have m de )uiar Khajyam weep and auy biuu ous man crv out with sorrow. Mr. and Mrs. Henderson, who some ime ago beoame members of the lnleperd::nt O-r'sr of It c: abites, were mpting their spacious wine cellar, tocked with every drlDkable thattbe >alate could wish for. They were ireaking the bottle and the jugr and Uowlng their contents to run into the treets and tind the?r way into the Qiirky wa'ers of the Potomac. For years iItnderso> Castle, the orgeous brownslone residence of the nrmer senator from Missouri, has ieeu known as the most hospitable iorr:e in Washington. It has been be scene of many receptions and many ountiful repasts, where gathered the lstlngulshed of political and social ife In Washington. Always on tfcuse ccaslons the cnolcest proouct of the lne>ard was served, and gltTve^ lick a merrily as the guest diarsk to he healt h nf f.ho unnhi on.i oti. /t'a. Mr. Henderson came to Washington a one of Missouri senators during he ptriod following the civil war. lie /as the last it puollcxn senator from oat state prior to the election of Sen tor Warner, one of Missouri's present enatjrs. He was wealthy, and after lis term of < thoe expired concluded to n ike his homo 1 ti Washington, and reated one of the hands* mest resiences in the city. Mr. and Mrs Henlerson hLve entertained lavishly. About three years ago a c lange ame over them. They became Guninced thnt wins Is a m.cker aud that troDg drink Is raging. Hot.il joined he Independent Order of liectftbiiles, ,nd an organ;?, ui-in kno*n ai the oho H. II. ndeisou Tent was named fter t.?ie distinguished convert to emperance. After chat the win? cl nr whs iOCK' Q, hut It V, LIS UOt brown in the well. Mr. Henderson kept wondering what ie wouul do wltn the elaborate sup>ly of wires and bqunrs which tne ellar contained. 11 tt> c >nscienoe d*catod that he shouM not giye It away nd he scorned to sell tt, and yet he esolved that, heoculd not keep it. Anally the decision w<*ti reached that he cosily be vers ges should be destroyd. Accordingly ho invited more than hundred members of JohD B Henerson Tent and of Onward Tent, of fhlch Mrs Henderson Is a member, ocon e to Henderson Castle Wednes- 1 ay night and assist in the destruction f these costly dilukab'es. As a orelude of fie wo. k there was [ meeting of the two tents In the parns of the Henderson home, and a ; jmnolt'ee war, appoln ed to go luio ' he cellar and brmg out every drop f IlI ixloating beverage and pcur it lfco ihe street. Oasr ?.fter cue of bftmpa.gne, bottle after bottle t f lui- \ nrlsd whiskey, brandies, CO' dials, yektalls, burbon, sherry, port, ciaret, : urguudy and liquors of all sorts were 1 r<?ughfc tprth. Some of the d^mlJohns ' nd bottles were covered with cob- J ebs and the dust, of many years, tea- 1 f/lng to the age of their contents, ( ut none of t^ese was spared. ( A stalwart Rjchablte selzid the tirst ( ottle and crashed It against a huge 1 aulder on the sparl us lawn. Its ' jarkling contents Unwed outnpon the reensward. Another and another bo e was broken, the destroyers not iking the trouble to pull the corks, oon there was a puddle of wine, and i the breaking of bottles and jugs beline faster & uny stream of mixed ririKs iv gaii 10 now out Into the ireet. In a little while it became allost a torrent as It gurgled down the ill past the mansion and found Its av Into a sewer opening. Still the enemies of strong drink e.pt at their work of dtatruotlon, and ) they did so a rich, tantalizing aro1a arose from the surging rivulet, ut there was no halt in the prooeed^gs until the last decanter had been roken and Its contents aided to the iream of royal booza. Tae Itecha Ites wer^ getting rt?venue good and lenty upon John Barleycorn and all r his relation Fmimt to Work. A car on the electric line between 1 fblte Stone hotel and the station 1 cuaiuu uinjuaiJtK^uuiB r nuay alter j [ion and made a wild run down an .cline half a mile long, arid crushing , ito a bottling hous?> resulted In in j lrlngsix men. two of them seriously, oreman of Plant Donald was most irlously Injured and may die. A nero, L^e Roolnson, also sustained In tries that may result fatally. Others i hose names oannot be learned were j rutsed. The men were on a oar en i mte to their homes when the brakes j .i.'ed to work, the car running back- < ard down grade with terrific foroe j id crashed into the struoturo which < situated at the foot of the grade, j id end of the traok. i r i TiUS CAMPAIGN ITIHBBAEY. I I Will Start at St. Oiwrge on tho ltfth of June. The special committee of the State executive oommitte to map out campaign Itinerary for the Democratic primary met lu Columbia on Wednesday night aud made out the schedule The folio wing was adopted as the itinerary: St George, Tuesday, June 19th. Charleston, Wednesday, June 20th. Walterboro. Thursday, June 2Ut. .Beaufort, Friday, June 22ad Hampton, Saturday. June 23rd. Barnwell, Monday, June 2fti;,h. Bamberg, Tuesday, June 26r?h. Aiken, Wedue-iday, J une 27-h. Edgffield, Thursday, June 28uh. Saluda, Friday, June 29th. Lexington. Saturday, Jure 30th. Columbia, Monday, Jul* 9?h. O'angnburg, Tuesday, J uiy 10th. Sumter, Wednesday, July 1 Uh. Manning, Thursday, Ju'v l2 h. Monks Corner, Friday. July 13th. Gjnrgetowu, Saturday, Ju y 14th. Kirgstree, Monday. Ju'y 16 a. Florence, Tuesday. J uly 17 ,n. iiiailnu, Weunesd ?.y, July 18th. C'-nway. Friday, J uiy 20th. Darlington, Saturday, July 2lst. Blshopvllle, Tuesday, July 24th. Beunettsvi le, Wednesday, July 25th Chesterfield, T iursday, July 26wn. Camden, Friday, July 27th. Lancaster. Safciirriav .1 .iv 9H-.H C ie<.b? r, Monday, July 30 Oh Winnsboro, Tuesday, July 31st. Yorkvllle, Wednesday, August 1st. Gaffney, Thursday, August 21. Spartanburg, Friday, August 3rd. Uulon, Saturday August 4th. \ Newberry, Tuesday, AukuhC 7ih. Greenwood, Widaesda/, August 8th. Abbeville, Thursday, August 9th. Anderson. Friday, August 10th. Wslhalla, Saturday, August- 11th. Pickens, Monday, August 13oh Grteuvllie, Tuesday, AugUf>t 14 h. Liurens, WMpp^'rv, August 15:h. Our Tne family magizinesaro calling attention co the faoo chat It Isbeeom lng a mirked feature of our young men to consider It toe ''right thing1' to be, as one writer expresses it, "sporty, even to toughness," In de meanor In the home as wed as socie t/. Too many young men, It is said earrv "the manners of the foot ball Held" Into the home, where they pride themselves on b-.dug "neavy ou their feet, noisy In their movements, lumbering In their actions and bordering on boorlsimcas' in their manners Many of them are decidedly slangly I In their choice of language, rough in their speech, and none too careful of the leelings of others. This Is to be deplored, and a remedy nought for It. It is well to be athlet.U ; to be sound tu body ard strong id limb; but res pect for the amenities of Me should snows, and podteness, urbanity, gentleness In speech arid action, should hy no means be bespled. Ojr boys should, above all things seek to be gentium'n, In the best seDse of the word , and to cultivate a habit of courtesy toward tnelr associates, and consideration, and respect toward womer, either young or old. It will n< ver make a boy think less uf him?elf to treat a girl, whethnts sister, or the sister of some other bjy, according to the gentler Instlncs of Ills hotter nature, while, to si ow a defereocc and a tender respect toward a woman who Is "somebody's mother," whether hisor Another s is one of the lovlleso things a boy can do. Chlnofo Doiih, An nadergr >im1 C doeso odonv, ilmil'-r to that which exited In San ETranctJ ->, h*s been discovered at Seattle b ' the city rtllclals. Hy burrowirg nd"!* buildings, sidewalks, ind al ys, the Uh'n^se hav* excavated passageways to rooms <u wbioa gamolinir and opium snooklntr is carried >n. Many of the rooms arp lighted hy jleotrlclty. Some of the passagewtys ;xtend for half a Wock or irore, and tre many feet below subcellars and ind si'e'valk?. I, rr^r^ Chronic Dise t L Successful ^ ^ Ef I s In suffering froi Nervcus Kxhaustl Vftricocele, Strict ^ A I.iver, Stomach, H Disorders, Kidney i "t0-.ca + 20 years Kxperier C"d"';.f",lmr,th.'"l Cl0 Reputation firmly lege 1S81. Fx,Pres,N. Mich. ' . J Med.Society, h. Member our books "Brain i State Med. So., Board and "Men's Disoa J of Health, etc, advised. Address ? ' Ionian Building, A We Have F One 25 horse power Talbott, secopd ha ly boon overhauled. This Engine is \ great bargain for anyone who is in t Wo are headquarters for anything ir prompt attention will bo given to all ii mre. Write us when you are in the i to get our prices before placing your < Columbia Supply .Co-. - > , I The Guinard I a COIvUMBI t Manufacturers Brick, Fire Proof T Z Flue linings and Drain Tile. Props i or millions. ? "?WL XT t ?lTt) L?rt>WiiOi'. Five persons, all connected with one of the prominent families of James county, Tennessee, were drowned Saturday afternoon in the Tennessee river. The oatastrophe occurred near Norman, a village about 12 miles north of Chattanooga. Tne dead are: Mrs. Eigsr Miles of Chattanooga. Mrs. Sim E dridge, M?y K.drldge, Dowitt E'drtdge. Abel Mod 11. All but Mrs. Edgar Miles are of N >ranan. Jpksb E'drldge, a lad of 19 years escaped oy clinging to the overturned boat. Tiik Japanese strictly enforce a law fo-bidding boys under twenty years of age to use tobacco. Americans should not be behind Japan. Every state should enact laws prohibiting the sale of cigarettes and tobacco as well as for liquor to minors. FOR SALE. One 50 II. P. Lidell Automatic Engine. One 00 II. P. Erie City Boiler. (tne Dr.tg Saw. One ( ut OiT Saw. Or e Self Feed Kip Saw. One Broom Handle Lathe. One Hoe Handle Lathe. Two Polish.ng Drums. One Hand Lathe. One Large Grind Ktfjoue and Stand. Two Car Loads short lengths of Ash,Walnut, lVrsimmon and Drgwood. One hundred feet of Shafting. One lot Shafting Hangers. One lot Volleys* 125 Do/.. Base Ball Bats. The above is sit uated in a two-story factory building, dimensions 50xl00fb., witli eil attached 30x50ft, two stories. Lot measuring 200 feet frontage and 524 feet in depth. Rail Road into the yard. In a desirable part of the city of Orangeburg, S. O. This property will be sold in part or in whole. It can be utilized for mos_t any kind of enterprise* For full particulars,apply to J as. L. Sims, Orangeburg, S. C. Kidney adder W Ailments. Murray's Huchu, Gin and Juniper has a direct curative action on the kidneys4and bladde. -Q,?eving at once D e distressing symptom*, pa'n in the ileadachc, datk colored, scanty, burn mg urine, cn/./.teness. bloating, etc., and promptly restoring those important organs to a normal, healthy condit ion. MURRAY'S lUJHIUJ, GIN, AND J UN I RE R is not a "quack nostrum," hut a combination of drugs endorsed, recommended by a multitude of leading phytitude of leading physicians. Itilushes and cleans the kidneys of all poisonous clogging impurities, and by rendering the urine bland, soothing and antiseptic, is aspeci!!c in painful bladder ailments. Of unquestionable virturc in all Kidney rnd Bladder disorders, Dropsy, Gravel, Jaundice and Scanty or Painful Urination, tr ee $1.00. Guaranteed satisfactory to every pu rohaser. AT DRUG STORES. Prepared by the Murray Drug Co., Columbia. 8. 0 A Pianor or An Organ For You. To tho head of every f unity who is Ambitious for the future and education of his children. wo have a Sneoial Pmnnoifi/... ? ? , - . v|/x/Mt wt VIA IAJ llliint), No article in tho home shows the evidence of culture tlint doos a Piano or Organ. No accomplishment gives as much pleasure or 1h of as great valuo iti after life as the knowledge of music and the ability to play well. Our Small Payment Plai ? makes owiiership of a high grade Piano or Organ easy. .Just a few dollars down and a small payment onch month or quarterly or semi-annually and the instrument is yours, Write us t"day for Catalogues and on? Speoial Proposition of Easy Payments. Afifirtv iftaione b MeuIo Oo., Columbia., 8 0 cr AAA BANK DEPOSIT R. R. Fare Paid. Notes Takes ^ " 500 I-KFR COURSES { aHBBOBHHBfl Board at Cost. Write Oulck GEORGIA-ALABAMA BUSINESS COLLEGE. ases Of Men anlS Women lly Treated. rp | n Rheumatism, Specific Blood Poison, + 011, Debility, Break Down, ete., Catarrh X uro, Gleet, any disease of the Heart, towels or Lungs; Skin Diseases, Blood or Bladder diseases, Diseases peculiar . V 11 on or write ua. Wo have had ovor ^ ice in the treatment df these diseases. + established. Examination 1 lank and tind Nerve Exhaustion" and "Health" + soh" sent free, Personal examination DR. HATHAWAY & CO., Suite 88-D Z .t lunta, Georgia. T ? * ?? or Sale ml engine in stock which has recentin first-class condition and will be he market for such a size engine, i the way of machinery supplies, and iquiries and orders entrusted to our narket for anvt.hinr* on,i i? _ ?j uuu uo Hurt) :>rdera elaewhore. Columbia. S. C. i *rick Works, i Af O. ii arra Ootfca Bullllgtf'Blor |L ired to fill orders For thou suds '; 11 < NMUNMIiNII IIIIN ( &