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The People's Journal. PICKENS S C. ..A Maid of Old Dom11111001 Daiys... .Over the young grass of the long avenue, the branching oaks flung slaiting shaiidows. The sweetness of Banksia roses dwelt in the Virginia sunshine, where the trailing vines crept up the grey walls, antld around the jewel-like panes of the nwIllioned winl dlows, winding about the sta.ely' col uniis that guarded the portals of (Oordou Hall. The peace of the coun try Sabbath had laid its hand upon the quiet daily comIe and go; a quiet that brought every far off moving thing very near, in the rustle of a mighty silence. Mistress Esther (ordon came slowly down the broad winding stairs. The light from the great oriel window above her head, shafting dowin into the gloom below, played at quivering jullo of golden motes about the fair young head. In the dark setting of the old hall the dainty figure shown out as some royal dume stepped down from a Rominey pictml e, tle blue brocade cut away from the firm white throat, where the pearls rose anl fell amid the foam of lace, anl the sinall feet, clad inl the hiIgh-leeled satin shoes. " Four," booms the clock that towers abiove her head, and ats if ill answer, the thud of galloping hoofs came up the avenue. Lansing had been true to his t ryst, although jtl~t across the river lay the army of Corn wallis and the hall of the pickets could be helarl ill the clear evening air. There was scarce an~ iiistant's pause, ere the rider's spurred heel rang on the stone step and I.ansing strode down the length of the long hall. A goodIly man, this young Con tine ntal, albeit the buff and blue were a trille tattered and faded, the eyes were bright, and tl stalwart form cirried a lithe grace, thai betrayed even more than the tinged cheek, the good red blood of I'owhatan. The Ioinney pictu re awoke, and Mis tress Esther the sweet face all aglow, held out her two white hands. " YoU foolish boy," but there is no chiding in the lovely eyes--and then his grave face brought tile question to her lips. Before she could voice it the faint sound of a distant bugle rang across the river. Lansing sprang to his feet. "( There they ire! Hlite me Esther, for the love of the sweet saints, hile iet! it is the King's troopers i, Over Esther odonll's face a1 white. ness went. Between lover and King lay the choice of a moment, but before that tribunal where a woman's verdict is fore-ordained. A moment later and Mistress tlEther's own little page was speeding ie great red roan to a iding place in the swamp, and lis tress Esther', herself, was fitting a key to the high car'ved clock that towered on the stair. To anid frio swung the great round dise of' the penidulumn, and tihe hands were pointing to ten ininutes past four, when a laugh, anid a ciattem of accoultrements ini the avenue warned them of the daunger close at hand. M isti'ess Esather closed the Case andt bid the key among the laces about bem white throat. One little foot, was poised on the last, step of the stair, am the Captoin entered t~he door, his glitter of gold lame on the King 's scar. let lighting up the gloom wher'e tin sun rays failed to penetrate, lie bow. edl low, as Mistress Esther advanced t,< meet him, and the ungloved hand half-doubtingly held out, to her, was white as a woman's for Capt. Jolin Wih loughby, of My I ord Cornwalbis' favor ite regiment., was versedl fiar bette in the lore of couirts than ini the tactic of these wild! colonists, who fought a Indians, from tree tco tree, rather thai as well-trained troopis, standjinj up~ to be killed in the op~en. There wa an instant,'s enmbari'assment, as lie halt edl and situmbled through the unwel come duty of announcing his errand " Mistress Esthibi', I am forceed t( commniit the indligmity of asking you, permission to search the II'ilh. Belieyo mle tile loyally of your house is un quiestionedf by my Lordl Cornwallis, as wvell as your humbilest admirer," and here lhe bowed very low, " but we have tracked! one of the r'ebels straight, to this mansionl, and~ to satisfy evil tongumes it were well to snarch, though it b~e a mere matter' of form.'' Mistress Esther courtesmed low. "Capt. Willoughby, there need be uto apology, no hesitation mi this mattei' of your duty. A Gordlon is evei' a Kingh man, and1( it weire well to set an ex ample of moral as well as physical sac. rifice in these times o f dlisaffection, if so be it beue'it, the cause. My doors are open to your men, bid them as'arch seai'ch well, tha.t Gordon's i'oof hide no traitor' to his Majesty.'' Up the stairs. and down other stairs, through the rambling garr'ets, and into holes where scarce a mouse could hide, deep into the cavernous cellars went king George's meni, but, never so muchl as ii coat-tail oh' the hiated blue and! buff could the nmost dilhgent spy. Mistress Esther herself peered dlowni the cellam stairs and bade them search well, lest the rebl should disturb her hiousehold in the midnimighit hour. it was well done. Noteo'fth soft white hands thla o tiremorhefrare led wIne for the Cap>tan aoured te r shadows grew soft. and ti'ad asite stole over thle lad Mistgrsy un. log hll while ie soke fhshm over the sea, and the old mother tme wrote suchi pitiful, loving letters to hie boy in this far-off savage land. H told her of the wide moors, where the puLrple heather' bloomed, of the gi old castle that frowned across th smilinig land, fromi the (lay of ''Bhf hal," and all the goodly heritage that but wailed to claim hei' mlistl'ess. There was good cheer in the kitchens of Gordon Ifall, whlere t~he servants feast ed thle troop~ers, aiid the Troy songs rang loudl above the ale cups, ando there was sometlhilg more in the long hall, where thie shiadows touched with velvet fingers the gold of Mistress Esthler's curls andl veiled the passionate ~lances of the Tor -atain ... ewsee I only 1,200 were French. Just think ) of it. Our county is about 25 miles i square and Is quite thickly settled and L has 25,000 people, whilr Martinique has seven times as inany and most of them are negroes. These negroes were o all slaves until 1848. They live chiefly o on fruit and anything they can pick up or steal. My boys atused themselves throwing dimes into the water that was from 20 to 30 foot deep and the i little negro boys would plunge in and I dive to the bottom for the money and I always got it. I Then I got to ruminating about Vesuvius and Pompeii and Ilercu laneutn. I used to speak a speech about ancient Greece and tome and Thebes and I always said Pompyeye and The bece, for that was right then, and so was Sisero for Cicero, but they have I got new ways now and i don't know - where I am at. Vesuvius has been cutting up for more than two thousand years. It has had nine bad eruptions but there are still Ieople living on its slopes and cultivating them,. Its en ormous crater Is 2 miles around and 1 2,000 feet deep, and the accumulate( P lava sometimes raises its brink 800 feot i during an eruption, When Spartacus, the gladiator, was besieged by the Itomans he with his little army of seventy men took refuge in that crater, for it was quiet then, and killed 3,000 Itomuans who attacked them on its brink. The great orator, I Cicero, had a beautiful villa at its base, L bu i the year 75 A. D. old Vulcan r fired up his furnace and belched forth I ire and smoke and lava and ashes and I buried those two cities sixty-five feet deep and changed the sea shore and the river so that their sites could not 3 be found and when found by accident r they were two miles inland. For three - centuries excavations have been going I on and of late with great energy and the veritable homies of the cultured 3 People have been found tilled with t ashes anti cinders that have preserved ) them all these centuries. These homes I andi halls and churches and temples have been cleaned out and even the 3 paintings on tle walls have been re I stored and the beautiful marble sculp r tured llgures of Laocoon and his solls g strangled by a aerpent was found there a in perfect condition. In sone of these f beautiful homes of the wealthy the s tables were set for a feast and in the temple were found the gold and silver adornments that are usual in such r places. In the Temple of .Juno there were the corpses of 300 people who - had fled there for safety, but .Juno was a powerless and they all perished just as e did the 3,000 at St. Pierre who tied B into the Itoman Catholic cathedral. b The fate of all these cities was very , similar, for it was not lava that de a stroyed them, nor at St. Pierre, but a I shower of cinder and ashes, and these t are preservatives of anything that they U encase. When we consider all such cala , nities a grateful and thoughtful 1)00 , ple will be thankful to our lleavenly ,t Father that we live in a land remark 3 ably free froin calamity or aniliction. a No volcanoes hang their threatening t peaks over us or near us, no cyclones visit, us. TIhe noisome pestilence does v not visit us by day or b~y night. Ca I tdaveroua famine dioes not, tdarken our a households with its awful distress, but I we live in poace and in plenty and the - lines have fallen unto us in pleasant, e places. ti It is a itting time now for those ,who like to read romance that, is ai founded on fact to take up that gootd y old book of Buiwer's, " The Last, Days of Pompeii,'' and read it, again. r Biul Aur . r I have just receivedi a pleasant letter . from a North Carolina friend asking me what I think of Carroll's book, "The Negro a Beast," antI he asks, ." D~o you believe the nigger is a beast?" I answered at the bottom of his letter, " Which nigger?" B .A. The .Japanese (10 not use milk, cows being almost, unknown in Japan, tMilk, an animal product, falls untder i the condlemnation which excludes a everything that has pertained to life a f rom the list of articles used for food. s Animals taken in the chase are ex a cepted, as are fish. The Japanese Smother nurses her own child, continu a ing sometimes up to the sixth year. a though other food is given ini additioi after the fIrst or secondl year. The main food1 of the Japanese miother consists of rice, fish, shellfish and sea weed. Wine or alcoholic prodlucts are never used. AUTR MANY V[ARS Of suffering fromu kidney disease, Mis Minnie Ryan, of St. Louis, Mo., found a complete cure result from the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. It is such cures as this which es tablish the sound ness of Dr. Pierce's theory: "Diseases which originate ini the stomach must be cured through . th e st omach." Every other organ depends on the . atocanach for its vitality and vigor. For by the stom-. ach amnd its asso ciated organs of ( digestion and nlu tritioni the food which is eaten is converted into nu trimnent, which, in the formj of blood, is the sustaining power of the body and each organ of . *' it. When the I stomnach is tia-. cased the fopd sup ply of the body is cut down, the or.. gans are starved, and the weakness of starvation shows itself In lungs, heart, liver, kidneys or some other orga' Dr. Pierce's Golden MedicalrDisecovery cur-es diseases of the stomach antI other organs of digestioni anid nutrition, anud so cures disease of other organs which have originated through deficient nutri tion or impure blood. tw tbadee u r eri, with in e troub~i 3, Louislana Avenue, St. ILouts, Mo.. "and I doqored with a nuwiber of the beat phiysl * oden Medla i se~r er and I Pavot - re scription ' anda took also several vials of Doctor Pieree's Pellets. I took elght bottles (f,r of each), and I feel now perfectly cured.." * I Dr. Pierce's I'elleta cure bilouea.~ MORE COTTON to the acre at less cost, means more money. More Potash in the Cotton fertilizer improves the soil ; increases yield-larger profits. Sei for comr book (free) explainig how to get these results GERNAN KAI.I WORKS, 9j Nassau St., New York. TH i STAT'C D10MO CRATIC CONVICNTION. (CoTr NTI ED nOM FInST 1 'MI.) favorably and recommend that it do not 1)388. Second: ltesolulion by Mr. W. J. Johnson proposing that the primary be held two weeks sooner, report un favorably aid recommend that it do not pass. Third: In reference to the proposed amendment of Mr. (. W. E. Sharpe, your connittee recommend as follows: After the word 44 masters " on next to the last line, page 2, insert 1 but not I for members of the county board of control of the dispensaries, nor for I county dispensers," 8o that it will read I as follows: " Provided, That the county executive .comuittee of any countiy shall be at liberty to order a piimary election for magistrates and masters, but not for members of the county board of control of the dispen. saries, nor for county dispensers." The various resolutions offered by Messrs. It. 1. Manning, J. W. (aines and 1). 11. Magill in regard to changes im article 6, we have considered them all carefully as well as the whole sub ject of a change in the pledge to be iiven by candidates and we recom mend an amendmient to said article as follows: After tbo word 'nomination" near the end of said ( article, insert the following: "and each candidate for the United States Senate and for tie United States I louse of Rtepresent atives shall file an addition.d Illdge that lie will support the political prin ciples and policies of the party during the term of office for which he may be elected, and avo, k in accord with his Democratic associates in Congress on all party questions." All pledges shall be filed on or before 12 o'clock in. of the day preceding that day fixed by the State executive committee for the first campaign meeting. Senator Tillman also presented the following, which likewise was adopted without a wor(1 of instruction or a vote against, it. Thus was one of the mat ters supposed to be loaded udisposed of: Ai ticle XtI of the constitution be stricken out and the following insertedl in lien thereof: Article XI. Before the election in 1902, and each election t~hereafter ex cept, as herein providled, the State Democratic executive comimittee shall app~oint and arrange for the campaign mecetinmgs to be held ini each county, not less thani two weeks apart, oiie of which meetings shall be addressed only by candidates for State othices and the other oiily by candlidates for United Stat-es Senator, Umntedl States House of Representatives anid circuit olicitors. In addition to such campaign meet ings the county chairman of the re. spective Congressional districts and ju dicial circuits shall, when there is more than one candidlate for either of said oflices, arrange for and appoint sep arate campaign meetmngs for tlhbir re. spective districts or juidicial circuit, the timie and place of such meetings to be published in each county, at, which only the candlidates for said of fices shalh be invited to address the people. Provided, That, in any year in which no candidate for linited States Senator is to be voted for, the State executive commiittee may dis. pense with the accond campaign meet img it is authoriz'ed to appoint undler this article. Senator Trilnlmn movedl the adoption of the resolutions as he finished read ing. Therei* was nothing said b~y any one and3( the vote was taken. Then it was moved that the con vention aejourin. Senator May Iield( mahnagled to get in a resolution thank- 2 ing the~ oflicers of thle conventioni. Col. .Jones aunnncedf a meeting of the State committee afterwards, and then the convention anijournied sine die a lhttle before II o'clock. F"ROM A BACHIlIL)If's VI EW. Auburn hir is what, you marry; red hair what you inherit. Widows are clever enough just, be fore they get too ripe to put,1,hemselves r, in cold storage. Whether men1 (10 anything to please5 a woman depends not on whait they (do, b~ut who dhoes it. Theli fastest thing ini the world is E&ttinig into trouble; tile slowest, got- 8 tmg out,. Ini these (lays a man can take out ini tiriance against ruaost anyi risk, except -r being a fool. l Give a man13 the right kind of wvomarn o" itd lie will take care of half a dIoz/en f34 f the wrong kind of men. dai If anybody wants aii hour1 of cirushi- w nig badness, let, him sit dlown ando read iis he letters lie saved twenity years he. da cre, p Some people are so slow thiey can't, 15 aveni compete with (dead3 men0. ii, The mlarriage habit is easier for a nan to break himself of than for a wo.-d nan. i A waywardi son says it is a case of die ove's labor lost wheni hie fails to work reC hie 01(1 man- Mc It is easier for a woman to stay ling 'ounlg after forty than to mlake other 110 ' ecople believe she is. Ito It Is true the oat, donot m makthe *3 C words that for the first tine Mistresi Esther had hearkened to, and yet sh4 said no word, but let the white lidi flutter down over the tell-tale browr eyes. Would the end never come? Verily she was becoming an arch-traitor t< self, to all maidenhood, as well as t( her King. And though the old clock kepi its secret well, it could not shut oul from the ears of the man hidden with, in the low musical voice telling thi newest version of the very oldest stor3 on earth. At last, when the voices hat] sunk to an indistinct murmur, aul there had come a little silence to be translated as he would, jealousy got the better of pritdence. lie scorned tc owe his life to her, this Tory Light-o'. love that but held him there to tortur the very heart from his bosom. St little a time, and the glorious head had lain on his breast, and now the dark. ness hid what must be a repetitior with her Tory lover. Oh! The jade, ilis hand was lifted to make knowi1 his presence when again, the blare o the bugles sounded across the river instantly there was a stir in the hal below, while Lansing held his breath the mere force of habit rendering hin quiet, although the passion of rage wai shaking him from head to foot. Ther was a whispered farewell, and thei the Captain's voice right beneath him " The clock has stopped." Mlistress E.sther went white to thi roots of her hair, and all the bloo rushed to her heart, leaving her fain and sick, but the darkness hid he agitation, and the gay laugh ripples lightly as she replied: " Oh, Captain You are a sad flatterer, 1 do protest That was a very pretty compliment but the clock is not to blame. It ha given good notice that it no longe guards the hour. I am this day ex pecting the smith, but he has faileo me, and 'twere well, as that mischiev ous page of mine must needs meddli with the )endulum, and to keep froim his lngers I have locked it si well that I have lost the key. Yo1 will judge me a careless housewife ii very truth, but there are many thing in this vast house to burden the mini of one poor maid," and Mistress Esthe sent a glance from under her lou lashes that rendered the Captain mor fain than ever to lift the burden o Gordon Hall from the shoulders of it fair owner. His men had formed in the i venue and there was no excuse for a longe delay, so the Captain backed lingei ingly down the steps, his sword a jiu gle, and the handsome head bared ii the gloaming. With deliberate ease h mounted, andi away down the avenu turning in the saddle as long as th blue brocade trailed over the stoneE and Mistress Esther took car, to us 10 unseemly haste, but waited unti the red was blended gray, and the las lilt of song had (lied away ere sh mounted the stairs and turned the key Lansing stepped forth from the case his eyes blazing with pent up wrath but ere he could say the words tha must have been fatal to that loyi loving heart, two white arms wer ilung about his neck, and the swee race nestled against, his shoulder. "For you, for you, I did it, and nos may God forgive me the lies that have told this dlay, and the making shuttle cock of a good muan's heart. anm traitor to all b~ut you, traitor to my self, and my king, for the sake of th sweetest, love that e'er a maid hat. known. Tkhy country be my country tiy Washington my king, or what yo will make of him, so long as Gu; Lansiing's good right arm is mine." With a prayer of thankfulness fo the words left unsaid, lie held he close and there was silence where n wordl avails. 1111 ARtP ANi) VOL-CA NOES fcHe aualnates on Catastropi, ait St. Pierre and( Tells of HI A thanlia Constitutioni. sIt is a litting time to think about vo I cantoes, earthqrakes and othber interma and infernal things that are going o in the bowels of the earth. We ca see up~ward and outward to the star > and pllanets for millions and billion of miles, but the inside of this litti world is all unknown. We live upoi its crust and eat and sleep and danc and prance andl fight, and talk war an politics and~ trusts with no thought o how near we are to the fires that ar burning uinder us nor when they wil break out, andl consume us all, as the certainly will some time according t< Scripture. Those infernal fires havi been burning for thousands of years and the mystery is, why they have noi burnedl to the surface long before this, Where dhoes the heat all go, and where 'are the escapes-the chimneys--or. the ~moke andl the ashes and lava? Surel3 these few volcanoes can't discharge ii ill. T'he word volcano, or vulcano, as it, usedl to be called, comes from Vul can, the god of fIre, and the ancients believed that the 0old fellow had hisi shops and furnaces (Iowa there, andl sometimes when he blowed the bellows too hard the fIre bursted out through a hole in some mountain and the melted rock spouted up and run over the tank and washed down in the for~n of lava, which is another Latin word and means to wash. Volcanoes are Vuhcan's chim-n neys, andl as far back as we have his tory sacredl or profane these chimneys have had their perlodic dlischarges. Siome writers believe that t~here was one of these not, far from Sodom and Gomorrah, aiid those cities were de. stroyedl just like Pompeii and Hercu ianeumn, or more recently like St. Pierre im Martinique. A few years ago two of my boys took .a sea voyage from New York to Trini .ad and stopped at all of those little islands and historic points. They told us of Martimique, where the Empress .Josephine was born and lived until she was 15 years old and whose beautiful ,monunment they saw. Unhappy lady! 'I'he world is st~ill weeping for lier. Tlhey climbed the heights of this same volcano and looked (town into its crater, for it, was quiet, and peaceful and1( had not had an eruption for lIfty years, The lslandl Is small, very small, no qthate as large as iBaitow County, tiona of 180,000 people ~.h fly Indians, negroes and Chinese. The. whites numbered lss ta 10,00,o wo man, but it haa much to do with hi standing In society. Some women are so fair minded thi when they know they were in tb wrong they will accept an apology froi you for it. A foolish sower of wild oats maki a wise reaper of tame oats. E.,very woman believes the nic things she thinks she roads about hei self in her mirror. A woman can be happy withoi mathematics and logic, but she slinm into despair without sentimient an poetry. A woman who could sit ovi her ha when she was a girl is the same o who had wavy curls till sle was sie wiLh fe-er. Bring a girl up to think she shoul marry a rich man and you will L lucky if s*he doesn't run 'away with poor one who is a bigamist. Neglect is a great factor in preven ing the (levelopment of trees, Tiin hardly realizoel till careful compar sons are matio. In an orchar(d tha had been carefully handled a part wt allowed to lie for a number of yeai without care, allowing the grass t grow around the trees, decreasing Lit the leaf surface 44 per cent. Thi means that only 50 per cent. as inuc rood could be elaborated for the prc luction of fruit and wood as woul tave been the case had tite orchar )eon kept free from grass. In a grow ng orchard the grass being allowed t, ,row diminished the growth over : ior cent.-Fu(rmer's Recview. " George," the sweet girl plendot you simply must (lye your hair.'' " Itidiculousl" exclainmic-l Mr. To% load, her liance. " No, it isn't. A fortune teller tolt tie today I'd marry a dark-haire Bronchitis "I have kept Ayer's Cherry Pec toral in my house for a great many years. It is the best medicine in the world for coughs and colds." ,1. C. Williams, Attica, N. Y. All serious lung troubles begin with a tickling in the throat. You can stop this at first in a single night with Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. Use it also for bronchitis, consumption, hard colds, and for coughs of all kinds. Three sites: 2Sc., Soc., Si. All drugglsts. Consult your 10octor. It Ie says tako it. tal k t. t ti . fn t tak it telo ktno t Southern Railway, areatest Southern System Wnt:'iKIt1.E OF TRIAINS AT 'iREENVILIMt 5, C (In etfect J1anuary 1th, 19)02) Tlrains leave Greeniville, A & C lDepot: I 25 a mn, No 35, (daily) linIted States F'ai Mall. F'or Atlanta, IBirminighan M emphis, Montgomery, New Orleani Chattanooga, Macon, etc. Throug Pllman Stleepera for A tlanta, Hit minighamn, Montgomery, Mobile, ati New Orleans, connectinig at A tlani with through!t Pullrr ana sleepers it C hicago, Ilhattanxoogat, Cintci nnfat and Katnsas City. 1 a mn, No 36 (daily) t'nited States Fat Mall, for Charlotte, Richmont Washtinigton, New York, and th IEast. TJhrough Pitllman sleepera Rtichmond, WVashin gton, Haltimnori .Philad elpuhia, anid New York. it tng cars. S00 a m, No 618 (except Sunday), mixed lc cal train for Hodges, arriving 11od ges 2 0 pim. I 40 a m, No 12 (daily), for(Columibla, Chat leston, and1 intermediate pointls. I 3(0 a m, No 39 (daily). A tlanta and Nes York Exprese, for Atlanta, Macon: Birmingham, etc. Clone connection at Atlanita for all pointn South~ an< West. Pullman sleeper to Atlanta Also, each TVuesday, Thursday an; Saturday through Pullman Touris car to 8an Francisco without change via Atlanta, Montgomiery andc Nevi Orleans. .2 30 p m, No 37, (daily) Washin gioni 3 Southwestern Limited. Solid Pullhl man tralin of finest equipment. Con nections at Atlainta for all p)oinlt. Tlhrough seepers for Macon, Mont gemery, Mobile, New Orleans, itir muinghiam, Memphis. Also eiach uda.Wedriesday and F"riday Pullman compartment car throughi to New Orleans, via Atlanta and Montgomery. D)ining care. 35 p m, No 12 (daIly), Local Ex press for Spartainburg, Charlotte. lianville, Richmond and intermedliat e ponts. 30 p m, No 11 ((daity), Local Express for Atlanta. with cilose con nectionsa at Atlanta for all points South anid West ; Chattanooga, etc. 20) p in. No :18 (daily). Washingtoin & Souithwesterin Limited. Bolid I'ull. main train to Washington, Baltimore, Piilad elphui ia and New York. Through Pullman sleepers to New York via lDanvill, Lynchblurg, Wash ington, etc. P'ullmant (?omnpari menlt car to New York each 'ITesday, F'ri clay and Bunday. Iting cars. hr>5 p mn, No 410 ((daity), A tlanta and New York Express, for Charlotte, iDan ville, Norfolk, Rtichmond, Washing ton and the E~ast. Through Pul I man slee iers. Greenville to Wash inigton ; Charlotte to Norfolk and Richmond. 20 p mn, No 10 (daily), The IExposition Flyer, for Cohtmin ua, Charleston, etc. T1hrougut Pullmn sleeping cars, Green yfIle to Charleston. A INS AiRIivE uttRENylie. ( A A C lDepot ) md, D~anville, Charlotte. 8p artanburig, 3. o 315, fast mal, daily, 120)a m ; No ex press, daIly, II 25 a m; No 37, limited, ity,12 5 pm ;No hi, local, daily, 41 25 lim, rmAtlan ta anud pointts l'outh amid est, No .'0, fast mall, (daily. 5 35 a am ; No. local, daily, 2 40 n mn, N4o :38.1 mited. Ily, 5 15 p m ; Ni) 40, ex press, dlaity, 5 50 Ii. 4'rom Charleston, (Columbnia, etc. Ni) l'xpositioni Flyer, daily, 11 20 a mn; Nio local. (tally, 4 25 > am. ''rom flodges.8 S , mixed, except 8un. 7.3 00 p m. fery low rates to (Charleston. Trhrouagh eper to Charlestoni. WIter tourIst <ets now oii sale to all tourist pinlts at, uced rates, 'or further Information apply to J I) [lee, P'assenger and Tick et Agen t, W ash tonSt,(Greenville,8 0 ; Frank H Gait i, 3rd V P' & U MI, Washington, I) C; S Elardwlck, (O P A, Washington, O) C; t W Huift, Dilv Pass Agt, Charleston, :W H Taylee, A 0 1? A, Atlanta, nI. it 0 1- 71- For I I. ~ 5~7)~~h The_ ir AVegetablePreparationror As simfilating lihe Food andRegula - ting he Stomachs aBowels of -Bea 141 Promotes Digeslion.Cheerful - ness and Rest.Contains neither A , Opiumorpine nor Minral. () - NO Nr NA c c)TxC. s -avv aeouald.witamfmm A/x..tenna., 8 diAke &vd, FM&r .Jred - A perfecl Renmedy for Constipa tion , Sour StomachDiarhiea ) Woris ,C on vulsionis,Feveish - iess md LOSS OF SLIEP. FacSimite Sigiature or SNEW YOIK. LXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. THE Cl Southeastern Lime and Cement Company, 276 Eitt Bay, Chavrston. S C. Hleautiarters for Liine. ('etetl, Plaster, I'aint, OiNl and Varnishes. Dealers in Hair, Terra Cotta Pipe, lloofing, Sheathing Papers, and all classes of Building Material. Se ing at Everyt i t 4,-a Cari' ''""e' " Owaigus o iit mak of) n o I leI ( .Ia Ctdeakrand ebe, Suorrads, Bhuthrn part, proantAbrsnluproSic Thel p ekon b i.liese and '(aI~ i iossi r ty4u~ weg do urown wok. e id sel any hiiIin 4. haviie4'i aInInreasen of all ii1t.Wheni int m-enii (Ii bIid t saee the peope; whethr.i ihey wr~ilie ).i Corne o r, 14 i4' i v er V andI i. Ilck4on SteiIeii(;s. lii Wt Aii i/'l-:i W~n. Will I s~l:~ ig'iI:v.f WHITE- & MAR BLE AND G kniown tol the tradte aniel (iruploy 1no14 ii 1.4 fii. lth tihe work. )4)4urs for Ii'Irole, 1fI'ITE & O IVY M. MAULDIN, A A ttortny at Law Pickens.8,. 0, Practico in all thetoujrts. Om(ico over Earle's D~rug Store _ DR. J. P. CARLISLE ~I ' GIroenville, S. C. Office over Addiseons Drug store.iP 't(. a n1 0 na 'i-atl ice STORIA nfants and Children. Kind You Have ways Bought% rs the Lature f In ' In Use For Over. hirty Years STORIA NTAUR COMPANY. HEW VOnR CITY. Cost! ies, ns and Wagonis rifice! r it, bu t eouo ia i Bee b'yJi Stii, iligh (radle Wao6 h boro, k 'l& alori aini Chatttaitooga. da ald we ~igoi ngtse iir biii. we hiave a few bit rgkins le noiil seer us. W are-aay k McBRAY$R, wil, x. WHflT 4 CO hiEI tldress w || bring at niu a lo n l, vea the lowest DESNBABB~~ wtor deq Nul er'' I,! bUN. -)II,~t ORtEENVJLLE, N.* c in al l9 QCOlrte: Sunta a.,.a