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MVARRIE Mr. and Mrs. Adam Livingood, of l Whiskey has prolonged the wi an ag D1 i W qu do /a , a di ea It -ne IMR. ADAX LIVINS0OD, 91 years old. DUFFY'S P IS Ti It lias prolonged many thousand lives as it has Mr. and Mrs. Livingood, and there is no other medicine in the world whiah .will keep the system in normal conclition, prevent the decay of the tissues, strength en the heart action and enrich the blood like Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey. it is an bsolutely pure stimulant and tonic, free from fusel oil and other dangerous Ingre dients so common in most whiskies. It cures grip. consumption, bronchitis, ca tarrh, asthma, malaria and all low fevers, dyspepsia, and invigorates the brain. It makes the old young: keeps the young strong. Do not fill your body full of drugs and medicines which poison the sys tem. Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey is the only whiskey recognized by the Government as a medicine. This is a guarantee. It is absolutely pure and contains no fusel oil. R is prescribed by over 7,000 doctors and used exclusively in over 2,000 hospitals. It is the only reliable and absolutely pure stimulant and tonic. It has saved the Hees of millions of people the past fifty years who- have used it as their only viedlcine. ]DAMES AND DAUGHTERS. Mrs. Margaret E. Armour has given g $40,000 to the Kansas City Woman's I A Christian association to establish a a home for worthy old people. ' f Miss Fay Leonard of Idaho, who has. t been in the census bureau at Washing- I ton three years, has been promoted to the plant and seed department. Miss Helen Gould has sent Dr. Tol man to Europe, with a photographer, s to study social conditions and report e features that America might do well tl to adopt Mrs. Rose Fanning, one o known women in St. Louis ,elS was principal of the r since 1874, 1 =uozzi school t .. One of her early I - 4 Sol -4mith Russell, the ac - ~ deceased. - Mrs. Maria Bartholomew, promoter and leading spirit of the Old Colored - ~Veterans' World's Fair association, or ganized to promote the interests of the exposition among negroes, is the direct descendant of King Hennilok, a South *African monarch. Mrs. Margaret Nave, King Edward's oldest subjfect, has lately died at her f home in Guernsey. For 110 years she t preserved her health, strength and even her eyesight. She was an old friend of 1 Queen Victoria and was known throughout the United Kingdom. Mrs. Charles King of Corpus Christi, Tcx., owns more land than any other woman in the world. Her husband, I one of the famous cattle barons. left I her 1,300,000 acres in Nueces, Hidalgo, Starr and Cameron counties, and there are now about 65,000 cattle on her ranges. This vast estate must be kept C Intact until her oldest grandchild comes ' e bf age. ________ SPORTING NOTES. The Cleveland baseball club has re leased Outfielder Weed to the San C Francisco club of the racific North- 2 west league. *Constance S. Titus, the American sin gle sculls chaimp a, who will row at the Henley regatta in July, sails for ~ London early in June. Larry Waterbury, the international polo player, is in the market for good racing material. He will make a -num ber of additions to his string. Professor Milan will try for the big stakes on the grand circuit with that sterling young trotter, John Mc. (3), 2:17%,, by Rex Americus, 2.1%. Mrs. Julius Fleischmann, wife of the recently re-elected mayor of Cincin nati, has fourteen race horses in train ing under the care of Tom Welch. The Cleveland Automobile club's new yearbook gives the names of the 500 registered automobile owners of that city, with the style and make of their .vehicles. The New England league baseball I clubs will be called upon in a couple of weeks to (how all contracts with theirC players. The salary limit is being ig nored in some quarters. Senator Horace White of Syracuse. N. Y., has expressed the intention of starting his new mare, Miss Whitney, 2:07%,. in all the big challenge cup races for amateurs this year. How to Clean Hats. Cover a soiled white felt hat with a -- cake of magnesia and let It remain inj that condition over night. Unless theA case is an extreme one, the grime will ff go with the magnesia when it is brush- _ ed off. Pulverized French chalk left for several hours over a blemish made by milk on a wool fabric will usually ~ restore the cloth to its original color. 1 -If the stain is not a stubborn one, it will yield to a sponging in diluted al cohol. How to Keep Bath Tubs Bright. Zinc bath tubs may be kept bright by periodical scrubbings with hot vinegar in which coarse salt has been dis solved. A Fat Field makes a fat purse. A fertilizer without is not complete. our bookcs are complete treatises on fertilizers, written by men who know. KALI :D 65 Verson, Pa., who have been snarrii ir happy union many years beyon Air. Livingood is 91 years old and his fe Is 84. They are both hale and hearty d feel vigorous as a couple 50 years of e. Reading, Pa., Feb. 15, 1902. IFFY MALT WHISKEY CO., Rochester, N. Y. jentlemen-I take great pleasure in iting to you telling the benefit I am de ring from the use of Duffy's Pure Malt hiskey. I have been taking It In small antities every morning and evening for umber of years. I am 91 years old and excellent health, good appetite, and am ing all my own farm work. I know your hiskey is giving me renewed strength d prolonging my life. I feel as well to ,y as ten years ago and I feel as if I 11 yet pass the century mark. I would rnestly rccommend it to all old people. was recommended to me, and has prov a blessing. M1y wife is 84 years old and ver fails to take a dose of this Whiskey retiring. She is also in perfect health. ADAM LIVINGOOD, Elverson, Chester County, Pa. URE MALT E TRUE ELIXIR OF I ~I11 The Goat. Originally the common or domestic oat was a native of the highlands of sia.- Naturalists generally regaid it s having descended from an animal )und in- the Caucasus mountains and le hill country of Persia, called in the ersian language the pesang. Boiled Fish. There Is nothing mor difficult to rve neatly than a r it the portio ed plain l jagobert's Throne. The throne of King Dagobert, who eigned in the seventh century, is in e cabinet des Madailles at the French sational library. Dagobert's throne, rhich is ofr brass work, was forged nd chiseled by St. Eloi for King Dag bert Snakes. Of the 165 kinds of snakes found in he 'nited States but twenty are ven mous. They are the copperhead and rater moccasin, which are closely re ted; the coral snakes of the south rest, the two species of sistrurus and be fifteen species of rattlesnake. The ost dangerous of them, the water noccasin, is not seen north of Tennes Lava. Lava expands in passing from a [quid to a solid state, the gas ir'. the quid mass being violently' expelled. Goose Legislation. Under Henry V. an act of parliament rdered all the geese in England to be. ounted, and the sheriffs of the coun les were required to furnish six arrow eathers from each goose. The Spitz Dog. The rather dangerous breed of dogs alled Spitz or Pomeranian dogs, a va iety of Eskimo, were first bred In omeranla, Prussia, but the popular tame of Spitz was probably derived rom the erroneous notion that they riginated In Spitzbergen. Greek Suicides. Ajax killed himself with his spear. ~ocasta, Antigone, Hiemon, Eurydice, Edipus and 'many other Greek heroes .nd heroines died by their own hands. A Poplar That Does Not Seed. It does not seem to be generally :nown that the Lombardy poplar nev r seeds. It is simply a variety of an ther poplar and ha,s to be Increased rholly from cuttings. The pollen earing form, so far as known, is not this country. The plant Is wholly istillate. A Matter of Temperature. Speaking generally, wild creatures nhabiting hot countries are more say Lge than those of cold or temperate ountries. CASTOR IA For Tnfants and Children. he Kind You Hare Always Bought ;gaur. of ~oey's Honey nnd Tar r children,safeslJre. No opiates. c A.S 'IOR~Z A. emete Ihe Kind You flEAINiwaS B052A * Jim E B Tis It"s ma~es oecum with good sles wouidnt Blze....t Jis. "Iwouldn't believe it till I tried it, So cu'i acre for insouma. I use nighafe ngt. NowI beadsleep and 1 have become finsagain. 'L. L. Eva YEARS A 65 years, say Duffy's Pure Malt d their golden wedding. MMS. ADAM LIVING00D, 84 years old. WHISKEY LFE. Caution.-When you ask for Duffy'@ 31ure Malt 'Whiskey be sure you gelt he genuine. Unscrupulous dealer, mindful of the excellence of this preparation, will try to sell you :heap imitations, and so-called Malt Whiskey substitutes, which are put on the market for profit only, and which, far from relieving the sick, wre positively harmful. Demand 'Duffy's" and be sure you get it. It a the only absolutely pure malt whiskey which contains medicinal, aealth-giving qualities. Look for he trade-mark, "The Old Chemist," n the label. The genuine Duffy's Pure Malt Whis ey Is Sold At All Dispeasales, r direct at $1.00 a bottle. Refuse imita ons and substitutes, there is none just as ood -as "Duffy's." It is the only whiskey ecognized by the Government as a medi ne. Valuable medical booklet sent free. uffy Malt Whiskey Company, Rochester, RECENT INVENTIONS. In the automatic apparatus for mak Ing altitude and temperature tracings in balloons sent above the heights In whieh ink would be frozen Professor Ossman has Invented a pen which writes red with saltpeter Ink on lamp blacked paper. A nickel in the slot ray machine C:- The observer places a in the slot, moves a lever, puts his hand, or whatever he wishes to ex amine, into a box without any sides and looks down at it through a fluores cent screen which forms the top of the box. The latest explosive shell has ,the greater part of its interior filled with lead, which, when fired, Is melted by a burning composition, so that when the shell bursts the molten lead is scat tered to a considerable distance, and the smallest particle causes a nasty wound. GOWN GOSSIP. The reign of the stole fronted shoul der cape is likely to be prolonged In defnitely. Length is given to the front of the bodice this season by means of girdle pints in place of the long popular "dip" front The small French postillon, consider ably wider at the bottom than at the top, Is attached to most of the full length Eton jackets and blouses. New weaves in nuns' veiling have the effect of fine silk cords set at rath er close intervals. The material be tween the cords is almost as thin and transparent as India silk. Sashes of plaited, striped or flowered taffeta, soft, flexible liberty silk, chif fon, mull or other transparent mate rial are one of the special features of "dress" gowns for the summer.-New York Post TALES OF CITIES. St. Louis is twenty miles long on the river front. The small tenement is the rule In Chicago. Sixty-two per cent of the front tenements and 90 per cent of rear tenements are two stories or un der. . The Washington city post office em ploys 462 clerks, while Cleveland, 0., with greater cash revenues, employs only 185. The franking, privilege. ac counts for the excess. The population of New York Is 3,732, 903, divided as follows: Manhattan, 1,917,676; Brooklyn, 1,291,597; the Bronx,' 268.341; Queens, 183,681, and Richmond, 72.60c, geu th T1heKind YoeAlaBon4 The Cutty. It Is not generally known that the word cutty as applied to a species of clay pipe very much used is a corrup tion of Kutaich, a city In Asia Minor, where a species of soft white stone is found which is exported by the Turks to Germany for the manufacture of tobacco pipes. Mexico. Mexico has been estimated to con tan 479 square leagues of forests, 18, 134 square leagues of mountain land and 4,822 square leagues of unculti vated land. umps had scarcely slept a wink, ight he'd toss about and think. ut that's all past-he'll ne'er endure isomnia. He's found a cure I " Force." At night, when lights are dim, othes the nerves of " Sunny Jim." ~p '* P- - . ONION GROWING. Methods of Propagating From Seed. The fewer Culture. In propagating from seed two meth ode are practiced, (1 sowing fhe seed in the open field without transplanting and (2) sowing the seed out. of doors in the full and transplanting to the perma nent plantation the following spring. or sowing under glass in January, Feb ruary or March, depending upon the latitude, and transplanting to the field as early as the season will permit. Experiments have demonstrated that the transplanting system has the ad vantage of increasing size and yield. PRIZE TARER ONIONS. The plants receive a good start under glass before they are set in the field and thus have the full advantage of the cool spring weather, which is most favorable to rapid growth. When sown in the field, a month or more is con sumed before the plants are fairly started. The large kind of globe onions are used for this "new onion culture," as it Is called, and Prize faker is a fa vorite for both commercial ai private use. It is of a pale straw colored exte rior, but clear -white inside. It attains Immense size, is of mild flavor and good keeping qualities. AMERICAN FORESTRY. New Career With Promising Pros pects For Young Men. The young forester has prospects of salary that equals or slightly exceeds hat of the college professor, and the o__. '-f his home will usually make is necessa livin ses less than those of the teacher. Within a decade e may be in the employ of a railroad ompany and have charge of many pieces of woodland which he will be ble to reach easily by rail. He may ecure a position as a state forester or is a member of a state corps. This is a promising field. Several of our forested itates are coming into the possession f -abandoned stump lands. and the are of them requires a forester who an supervise the work, look after the public interests and disseminate infor ation among the p~eople. The state'of ew York is even buying up hundreds f square miles of woodland to add to Its forest reserve. The United States government has a constantly increas ng need for men. The public holdings ire tremendous. For each of the last hree years the forestry appropriation has been doubled and the work that is being done for the private citizens Is growing as rapidly as are the appro priations. These government foresters re in attendance in the department at Washington during the winter, but with the coming of spring they are scattered throughout the United States. They go to the woods of Newv England, of the south and of the west and return an the fall to make out their reports in the office. Eventually a large part of our government force will be stationed a various parts of the west nearer to the center of the greatest activity in public forestry. Lumber and Paper Company. Another class of positions will be with the lumber and paper companIes. From all sections of the country these rompanies are inquiring into the meth d of conservative forestry and, as has been shown, some are already em ploying foresters, while others will probably follow their example. The men so employed will spend a large part of the time in the forests under their care, but in the winter season some of them, busy with their office work, will be located for a few months in the town or city headquarters of their corporation. This will enable their children to have the advantage of bet ter schooling than that afforded by a paper factory town or a sawmill town. The American Forenter's Future. Wherever he may be, the average American forester during the next thir ty years will have a very different task from that of his European counterpart. In Europe everything is carefully worked out and reduced to system. The forests are cropped as regularly and as methodically as a farm. One forest rop is followed by another in regulas rotation, and every phase of the ques ion is definitely known and recorded in a forester's manual. In America the feld still lies open for original work. 3. Russell Smith in Forum. Preserving Fruit For show. The following is given by W. D. Car lle in his work on cider and vinegal making as a solution for the preserva tion of apples in glass for exhibition: Hposuphite of soda, one ounce; dis tlled water, six pints; alcohol, twc Skimmilk as Pig Food. The value of skim-milk as a pig feed does not seem to be generally appreci ated by Arizona dairymen. During the spring we have realized on skimmili fed to pigs from 18 to 28 cents per hua drdweiglt.-G. H. True. Your Tongue If it's coated, your stomach is bad, your liver is out of order. Ayer's Pills will clean your tongue, cure your dys ppesia, make your liver right. Easy to take, easy to operate. nt,a vaur 1~:stattlCe or hear .a beautiful brown or richa 1':et The: 1se ius Pi~, L * ~hskers HAIR BALSAM Cleanse soad beautifies the hafr. Promotes a luxuniaut Gray To Ci -akeLaxative Bro e. unnain boxe sod 'n post 12 -II A'egetable PreparalionforAs similating rhefood anideguia Uig thetomacis and BowCls of Promotes Digestion.CheerfLi ness andRest.Conitains neither Opium,Morphine nor Mie.cral. NOT NARCOTIC. Aprfeteed frCn~a H Aperfeci Remedy for Consipa Rion, Sour Stomnach,Dkarrhoca WormsConvulsions,Feverjsh ness and LOSS OF SLuEP. FacSimile Signature of NEWV YORKf EXACTr COPY OF WRAPPER. Horticultural Brevities. The Montana State Horticultural so ciety has adopted as the standard package for apples a box 12 by 10 by 22%. Growing peonies from seed is a thankless job. There is now an early summer flow ering cosmos. There Is a variety of lantana which trails like ivy. It has pinkish lavender flowers and Is useful as a ground cover mr-arger-plants& --- It Is claimed that the Mammoth Black Twg apple is now .'cognized by the best authorities as a dlifferent apple from the Paragon. The Ohio experiment station reports the Garro apple as much like the Ben Davis in quality, but more highly col ored. Give the peonies plenty of water dur ing the blooming season of May and June. Hardy perennials of every descrip tion are coming into fashion again. There is a return to the old style of gardening. Governor Roosevelt is claimed to bej one of the finest crimson carnations on the market. Malaria! Ever have it? Want to get rid Mialaria and Aguo.4C Ii6 THE SUCCESS! FERTILIZES i The Vfrgin~ia-Carol "M"'ufs-the best I Virginia.-Carolna Chemical Com CKARLESTON,.$ C This is all it will cost you to ente1 began Wednesday, May 6th, and July, 7th 1903-. The object of those trying for the possible on the regular government Ely a Griflo1 Razor O! Easlv The one who succeeds in writing number of times on a postal card w RAZOR, the selling price of whichi These razors are fully guaranteed ish.- We carry a complete lineC prices running from $1.50 to $2.50 are many varieties of handles. This competition is open to all of your card when you fill it out, but d in an envelope, writing your aame o he card. When this contest is over, we mia) To ladies contesting a pair of fin' EASLEY RAll FARM BELLS.-A large farm b for only 83.50 completed. ire a Cold in On m onths. I Fo Infants and Child-en. rhe Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the I Signature of In 4 Use y For Over Thirty Years BAS ORIA ?HC CCRTAUR COMPANY. MrW YORK CIY. How to Make the Lips Red. To make your lips red wet the finge' with scent and rub it on the lips. This makes them a lovely red. After the perfume has dried touch them with cold cream. Don't do this except for very special occasions. If done often, it makes the lips hard and dry. How to Make a Rose Jar. Spread the rose leaves on a tray and expose them to the sun or warm air until dry; then lightly crumble them up- small between the hands. Add other dry odorous ingredients to suit the taste, such as gum benzoin, root of calamus, cassia buds, musk seed, orris root, vanilla and sandalwood. Add a little of the essential oil of roses. The continental perfumer usually makes a basis of reindeer moss. This powder will give out a delightful odor for a ong time in a jar and is also delicious for sachets. How to Make Gasoline Soft Soap. Into eight gallons of boiling water shave half a pound of white soap, stir ntil this is dissolved, then remove from the fire and add a pint of gass ine. I'se hot, but do not take the gas line near the fire. t? Know all about of it? Take Ayer's .I . ""* C . ~vC. An'*llDggst.. UL PLANTER S LANDS...., nahemical Con Fet~ilia0oar&, - our Postal Card competition, which ~ontinue sixty days-i. e., Mon day prize is to write as many times as postal card: SHaillWar Co., Easloy, S. . the above sentence the greatest 11 receive a Handsome GRiFFON S$2.50. and are of the finest make and fin f them in stock at all times, with Any style may be had, and there our realers. Either bring or send mn't direct it. If you send, enclose 2 a slip of paper and pinning it to have another scmewhat similar. scissors; to a boy a knife. ~DWARE00O., Easley, S, C. I that can be heard a long distance ein -rosas McAlister THE OLDEST, L DRY GOODS HOI MONT SECTIOI To Our Friends and I We can supply your wants it from the finest to the cheapest Oar buyers have just returne counters and shelves are loaded Dress Goods and Novelties. It the most complete stock in the yoa. When in Greenville call and befo-e making your pifrchases. more than satisfied. In Carpets, Mattings,Rugs, S< and Mats we have a complete Thanking our friends and cu, in the past and hoping to meri Very 1 McALISTE GREENVILLE, Store Full ol To Show You We have never before tried so ha wants as we have this time. We want Dress Goods. 25 inch double fold Worsted, nice for Skirts or Children's Dresses 10 & 124 42 inch Mohair at ......... ... ... 2r '0 inch Mohair at. .............4c 50 Cecilian. (not Mohair) worth $1.00, Special price..... .......5m Something Grand in Sill 36 inch Tiffeta at ..................7 36 inch all silk Tiffetta at...... ....9 Wash Tiffetta 28 inch s wide just the thing for a waist ....4 Smplete it th new and toD a good values for waihts. j4 inch P. K. White. .............14 34 inch P. K. White .............. The [itt 10o6 N. Main Street.s SPECIAL H. 'K. STl BIG BE This Big Store, the Bigg is rapidly filling with all class Spring and S No pains nor expense will be spare our history. Our merchandise offerini ever; every stock has been greatly enla satisfy is so greatly intensified thlat no trader shall have just cause to comuplai of doing business. Your money back friends. Owing to the advance in col but these prices hold good for 10 days SPECIAL 10 DAY PRICES. Good Calicoes, all colors 4i- cent Yard-wide Sheeting 4* cents. Yard-wi< Bleaching 5 cents. Black and red Ca cets. Best A. C. A.d feateres T 1k cents. Best Skirt Linings 4 cent Good Cotton Checks 4 cents. The H. K. S Greenville's Anld Well Si Always on hand, at figures tc Just returned frorn the r ~MY s now Complete. Don't fai: L. ROT Oct2tf. d Oak, Wannde As S.BYERS( Will pay SPOT ( lar, Ash or Walni man to receive th point. They will market price. WV you have in the wi A. S.BYERS COll S&Beelle IRGEST AND BEST ISE IN THE PIEB I OF S. C. : : : Patrons: anything in the Dry Goods line lualities from Northern markets and our down with all the 'latest Spripg Gents Furnishing Goods we have . State at prices that will astonish examine our goods and get prices Your money back if you are not reens, Window Shadefs, Art Squares stock. tomers for their liberal patronage t a continuance of the same we are espectfully & BEAWTTE. SOUTH CAROLINA. rd to buy things tihat will fili everybodys to tell you of a few spe cial things. 36 inch percal good styles worth 8 and 10c to make it pay you to come and see us, will sell at 6c the yd. ei len's Headwear. e Full line of Men's Headwear, both in Fmz and Straw. All pncesin straw c hats from 5c up to $3.0 Men's pants and overalls can't be ,matched in Greenville that we sell. ;e Men's suit full size, good black...$2,50. All wool suit at ................. .49 - SHOES erI lo fLde ipesala e n c 3cet the pair I.T et te ll thew Pialothntgsecin ummnh er Goyeorts Sad to0 toi maea t pER yoNE of comeilldbeeereaterilldsell atned thand rged l a nd ou deteiainoea e an o ulne, nof en he.,db bot in Fon allknd Sftraw. All srce inm stra fro at rm cup. 3.C. g.Bacort d black.. Wi le caDpres ou w en w eto 5 sdCioes 4 ens 1 ghat of Laens Coliprsed s~ n sies the prcents. -i ar k 93 cents thecpair lecenes.HNae. Gea e est, .C defy i all thmetPidftioi~n orthl b rate 4oe aidta t seter/rmehnd n or u ehd s., tlac anrted Dr Gaodi 0 U it. Bluey rels Gos en a Se Clbe4ats oadingi3~ r.inch wde nstain what~ l~eV Calicoes Atlaents. Ga