University of South Carolina Libraries
I'd ic $1.00 pei Year. rintl.ISlIEI) I'IM.SIIW' ASM KIMMAY BY Kd. H. DeCamp. ' Slate pride enougli to make this :lo- I mam! until now. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ I Now the Cubans want us to send j them more farming tools so that they ! may cultivate the lields and make \ their own living. Some of their lead- ' ing men advise that the supply of The Lkmukk is not responsible for | ration8 Hbnt to the islands the views of correspondents. | ^ i „ mid Correspondents who do not contri- ^ ^> r government be stopped, and letters must fur- the Cubans be supplied with the jponc \)ute regular news nish their name, not for publication, i means of making their own rations, but for identification. | | ^ tlie meantime, during the trunsi* Write short letters and to the point | tion from free ration8 t o the products to insure publication; also endeavor , W eet thorn U. the office by .Monday | of their own labor the mere enter- ' ' ones will live by robbing by Monday and Thursday mornings. All correspondence should be ad dressed to Ed. H. DeCamp, Manager. Obituaries will be published at live cents a line. Cards of thanks will be published at one cent a word. Heading notices will be published at ten cents a line each insertion. prising those who happen to have something to live on. The Cubans remind us of an old negro song, the refrain of which is, “it takes a mighty heap of scrouging to git dis nigger through.” imKY its. The French othcer Dreyfus is likely to become as interesting a character in history as “the Man with the Iron Mask.” His persecutors have cre ated a world-wide interest in him and give his name a place in history which he never could have gained for himself however brilliant or pa- t riot ic lie might have been. He was an obscure Captinn in the Fiench army, of Jewish descent, and seems to have been the victim of race prejudice than a proper object of ioyal i If we u: iler-tsunl the mor. puni was at pet I j oflicial. of t rt THE FALL ELECT'ONS. (aovernortt to In- <'1»<>mcii in SI* Stilted I’rolmlc Iti'diiltd. lliuttiDiore Sun.l The November election this year ! 8ul, i ect of free advertising, brought "Simp Talk." IKctshaw Era.] The newspapers are indulging in a little‘’shop talk” just now on the r prof ntner.t. If we he was accused first by some i achery in dealing in state secrets witli the (icrmans —a likely case indeed, when wc con sider how many state secrets an obscure captain in the army would likely know; then higher oflici rs In- g'lii to tell skillfully concocted sto ries about iiis t rensoi able machim- t ions; and finally the great illhcis of state took up the trade of wit ness-hearing against him, and the further it went the worse it grew un til the foolish French nation ran wild anil there was almost nnotlnr revolution. Some'prominentjfriends, among them the eminent author, /•do, who ventured to speak a word j in his behalf, wire seizv-c I k wK. had full charge of the waters ( of the earth we should take a large j part of the water that is destroying ^ the crops nod drowning the people of Texas, and spread it out evenly over the fields of South Carolina. We would give tlicuii a general soakim: about every ten days until the mid dle of September, and in so doing wo should very probab'y be lynched by a mob of enraged farmers or at least become involved in numberless law suits for damages which we should be utterly unable to pay. A lawyer would not want a bettor case than one against us for bringing ra.n on a farnur who wasn’t quite ready for it, ur for dampening the air and giving his wifi a cold. It is far better as ii is. “All partial evil is universal good.” ♦ * ^ ♦ Tne War Department has an nounced that it will not receive bat talions or regiments of volunteers from any state, hut that the recruit ing must be done in the usual way. 1 his mean- that the men received at the recruiting stations will be sent on to till up decimated regiments already in existence, or formed into new regi ments under regular army odicers. This is hard on those who would like to go to the Philippines as otiicers, | will occur on the 7th of the month. There will he elections in 11 States and (iovernors w ill be chosen in six, namely, Maryland, Ohio, Iowa, Mas sachusetts, Kentuckey and Missis sippi. In two of those six there will be no semblance of a contest. Mas sachusetts will elect a Republican Governor as usual, and Mississippi will be still more decisively Demo cratic. In Iowa the size of the Re publican majority is always an inter esting indication of the Middle West. Twice in recent years the State has given a Democratic majority. The other three of tbe six States to elect Governors are in doubt. These are Maryland, Ohio and Kentucky, with the chances favoring the Republicans in Ohio and the Democrats in Ken tucky. All of the six States men tioned have Republican Governors txcept Mississippi. Iowa elects the Governor biennially, the pnseit executive having received a mnjmity of 30,000 in 1897. Last year the Slate went Republican by 03 000 and McKinley carried it by do,000. Mc Kinley carried Kentucky' by 200 majority, with o,000 votes cast by the gold Democrats. Last year the Democrats had a plurality of IS 000 The present Governor, Bradley, is the first Republican Governor ever elected in Kentucky. It is eon- about by the News and Courier re ceiving a card of thanks from a col lege president j for a “write up” of the commencement exercises of his institution/ It is doubtless the ex perience of every paper that they publish “piles” of legitimate adver tising for which they receive no thanks, much less pay, and which the public thinks should be published as news “because.” they say, “it doesn’t cost the newspaper man any thing.” They do not stop to think they have Die same' grounds upon which to apply to a physician for his service, the lawyer, the dentist or the mechanic. They do not stop to con sider that a professional man’s knowledge of his ow’n profession is as much his stock in trade as a mer chant's goods and cost him as much in elTort and preparation. An adver tising dead beat rarely ever stops to consider that whatever brings re turns that helps him personally or in his business is legitimate advertising for w hich In* should pay. Our short experience in tile newspaper business lias taught us this thing too: that (he man who does not think, it pays to advertise labors the most assidu ously' to dead beat all the advertising be can get. And lie can usually hit upon more ingenious devices to ob tain it than the average newspaper man can successfully surround with who do Royal Absolutely'Pure Tlie Nurtlii'm Hr, ll< n I r The Sunday School t '.io’i of the Northern Section of the Broi l River Association will inc< t with the Pied mont Church at 10:30 a, m., Friday before the fifth Sunday in July, In'J'J Ifd.—Services opened by tin* mod erator in song and praise. 2d.—Services by G. F. (juinn. 3d.—11 o’clock. Introductory ser mon by G. I*. Hamrick, W. G. P. Ezell alt. Ith.—Organization interii'i-Hion Ih minutes. AKTKKXOON SEKVICES iilst.—Devotional exercises, 10 min utes, by the moderator. 2d.—Query: Is it scriptural for any man except an or lained minister to administer the ordinance of Bap tism or the Lord’s supper? Speak-| pile t hut was being burner ers, J. J. C. Ezell and M.J. Hicks. BAKIN6 Powder Absolutely toRE Makes the food more delicious and wholesome OOVH niKINO ECWOEO CO., NEW VOBK. IV The saw Thompson Mount tiiii stroyed by noon. Tie Sun Mill lltirnetl. 11<vlile Kii<|Ulrer. July 51 lij mill plant of Mr. W, Jackson, near King’s ’attic ground, was de li rc hist Sunday after fire spread from a slab us a imit- in The NewHjmper. lltochesti r (N. Y.).Chronicle. An advertisement in a newspaper \ finds access to the homes Of the peo- ' pie. It is not thrown into the waste paper basKr t or the fire as soon ae its character is know n, as a majority of of handbills and advertising pam phlets are. It is not ignored, or rr- 31. (>uery. Why is it that some ; j| u , u . av< There was no one about of our churches are so slow to invite n 10 mill at the time, and tlie llanies the union to meet with them or to [ j, a ,| made ter of convenience to get, it out of! £ ur ded with either aversion or con tempt, ns poolers generally are. It send any' delegates as speakers? W. J. Henderson and R. G.Tate. Ques tion box. Dismission. considerable headway sidered to bo almost assured that the ordinary labor. The people Democrats will carry the election. ! not !ove advert.smg are rare; indeed In Ohio the situation is interesting I " v ‘••■o from the fact that there is bitter dis cord in the ranks of tlie I’epublican j we might say that the person who I does not is rani avis. And the man who does not want his profession or when they were discovered. Almost everything of value about the premi ses was either destroyed or badly in- SATL’RDAY. jured. The mule teams had a very 10 a. in.—Devotional exorcises, 1C i narrow excape. I he loss, included in minutes, by the moderator. j which was u large pile of valuable Query •What is the Sunday School J lumber, is estimated at about $2,1)00. Union worth to our Sunday Schools? There was no insurance Speakers. E. 1’. Richards and A. D. Davidson. Query : Why should church mem bers attend conference meetings? Speakers, R. E. Porter anil L. II. Davis. Intermission 15 minutes. party, which is absolutely dominated * I1S bu.-dness udieitiactl by Senator Hanna. Tlie !!■ publican nominations have heen made and | there is a lively contest for the D<-uio- j is long ago extinct. Now w hen it comes to pay- i ing for the advertising that is a dill- ! 1 erent tiling. There are few men who. ! • when they sir down and reason i | calnPy, hut that must in candor ac- | been unsonnd on the financial ques- I knowledge that advertising pays, tion. They went wild about green- ! V'?! 1 -’ 1 lh / y T y n0t ! qu !‘ can : I backs when that craze was upon us, j ,lidl >' confess that it should be paid ; carrying along with the tide even so | 10 .nin- W. Ooopi r and A. J. tnd K. amt t he cratic nomination for Governor. Democratic party in Ohio has usually | 'Ur: isncu ns pai'tieapants in his guilt, a n ,1 !t-« r.iivtuMnimts in his w hile Dreyfus himself, after suffering nil sorts of indignities, was banished for life to Devil’s Island, where, for a year or more, it is said, he was sub jected to the most cruel treatment that could well he devised. Now the reaction has com*' and the pendulum is swinging towards the other end of the arc. Dreyfus has been brought back to France for a new trial; the whole story of his treason is about to explode; and many of his prominent persecutors are trembling for their own safety. It begins to look now like many of them will become the objects of French vengance, and Dreyfus will be. for a time at least, the hero and idol of the nation. Such are some of 1 ho wild freaks and fancies of this ver satile and Impulsive people. NOTES AM) COMMENTS. and not very encouraging to those who are inclined to enlist as privates. wise a statesman ns Judge riuirrnan. j The Govi rnor in Ohio is elected every two years and in 30 years since the , war the Democrats have elected four, namely, William Allen in 1873, R. M. Bishop in 1877, George 1 loudly in | 18N3 and James E. Campbell in 1889. j In JS9I> the Bryan ticket polled about ! 10 per <$*nt. of the vote of the State I ami in the State outside the big cities | over 50 per cent. j Mary land elects a full State ticket, ! : and each of the counties elects nearly Balt i- In this big country, however, there j u f u |j ticket of local officer will always be found a sufficient j more eity also elects a fuil local ticket number of reckless and adventurous j excc ‘I )t otayor, eity council and cunip- , , , , , I (roller. Officers to be clectid are a men oatmg about loose to beep Die I , , t .t <. , 1 i Judge of the Court of Appeals, clerk army full enough for all ordinary purposes. A free uniform with glit tering buttons, free rations, sixteen j dollars a month, and a chance for I | •luMige and adventure, are things which appeal to some men with a force not to be resisted. « ♦ ♦ « A wiMtKiiin tin: Baptist Cornier suggots that the name of Furman i i vers; i y he changed to that of Furman College. That is a good suggestion, for Furman University is not a university and never has heen. It is a college of high grade, but not a university, and probably never will b* one. While the above mentioned | of tlie city court, judges ef the nr- i phuns’court, State sattorney, sheriff, surveyor, two Senators and IS nieiii- b/rs of the House of Delegates. The Maryland election will have no politi cal significance of a national charac ter except its general bearing upon the presidential election next year, and 13 of the Senators to be elected will lake part in the election of a j Federal Senator at the session of 1902. I So doubtful is election in this State | that the result, it is generally assum ed, will depend upon the character of the nominations and the method of making them. New York and New Jetsey will elect Legislatures. In Virginia and Mississppi the Legisia- tun s to be elected will appoint each a Federal Senator. Nebraska will for. Of course it is the duty of the ' newspaper to publish all the news, j II it the Jpubiic is fully able to | distinguish between newsand adver-| advertising matter and therefore i concious of when it presents an ad- | vertisiment :*> the paper for puhliea- j tion. It is also the duty of the pa- j per to do all it legitimately ean to ad- | vance the interests of the town in which it chances to be published, i and the county in which it finds cir- j eulation,-just as it is the duty of j every citizen to do the same thing, ■ and t lu re is not a citizen who docs ; more titan an editor, nor an agency that contributes more than (lie news- paper it the up building of their sur- i ; roundings. Editors as a general rule . freely expend liberal efforts in be- j half, of I heir tow ns and every inter- i jest in them, and encouraged by | ! words and other manifestations of ’ appreciation are always ready to put ; forth even greater exertions in that | j direction. Hut, while this is the case ! ; they also desire to ho fed with the , material things of this world, as they | are human just like other folks, and ! manifestations of appreciations along j J this line, we think, would find a coi- resp indingly increased exertion of I effort. AKTEKNOOX HE!!VICES 1 st.—Devotional exercises, utes. by the moderator. 2d.—Missions. 1st.—Foreign, D A. S. Jones. 21.—Home, M. Teal Bonner. 3 1.—shale, J. M. W illiams D Edwards. 1th.—Orphanage, C. M. Teal and \Y. Y. Horton. Question box. Dismission. St'N !)A Y, 9 :30 A. M. Sunday School mass meeting, con- ducted by K. I). Edwards. Essays by MUscs Hattie Turner and Bettie 1’orter. Missionary sermon by A. J. Bonner, J. M. Bridges alt. ('ollei^ion for missions. Respect fully submitted, J. M. Bridges, | B. U. Camp, ( v Con mittee. S Northey. ) J. F. Quinn, Sec comes to readers w ith the authority behind it of tlie journal in which it appears, and it confronts many of them when they have the leisure to consider its terms. H umors, boils, pimples and all eruptions are due to impure blood, and by purifying (lie blood with II >od’s Sarsaparilla they ar e CURED. ^ FOUNDED IN 1845, LIMESTONE COLLEGE, GAFFNEY, S. C. 't'liis Institiilion. famous in tin- lii-t n-y >if clnc.'iI >n in S.nitli ( irollna, lias recently lie< n ttioroiif'lily reorfmii/eii and n iw. wdli a larire ai.U utiir I uenll.v. U |iienared In do e 11II eye work of t In- very liiyliesl u-nde. Nea 11 v t vt ent \ t Immi-:iii<I ilollniM I, \ in en apiim- priated for iinprcver.K'nts. A - pleiidhl new linlliliiu; js l>eiir: eria-ieil wli eli will contain a iarye Auditoi itun. a l.ifrary. a i;''.iillie:-i;iioni. a 'lum am nf \atnril ■-•ience. a lieautiful hall for the l.itcrary Sm-iely. and - du nr,- led otllci s. I lie lm idln.- will In* I nrif-died with tew hetitiny upimra I us t Ii riinyle 111 . all tin n h ini', w , 11 I • ■ mi ppl h I wil Ii new fn rn i i n re. new p ; anos will Ire purchased. n<-• physical, cle inica i and i it-ial •i. 11 l-i I i na P n i- will he "(tuiptied in short everyt hiny t Irit I-. neci-.-ai v In ttie vv..> •, id a lit si-el-:-s weniati's col lege will he provided, flic sil e ;s 111 o 11 ale I in s, mt h ' 11 • , e i lm- Ii ml v ami I ur heult li- fll I ness. I.ilnestone Culleye m 11. ,-s n - a p pea I tulh' 1 p iph - si i-li-t l> mi it s on n n,. rlls. I.it- erary, Sclent I lie and < 'ommerc ;a I * un i - The i-. yula r eoll. 0i ri-i-s a m y I \ en l,y t ho :m t liorit y of t in' SI at e of S 1 ud h I a 1 uK ia \ n ** -• pm .alt» tin. < unr a In l‘eilai;oyy is o tie red to t In>se desirlus' to Im-cione te:: .• hers. Th .si 111 r < 1 • ;i 11 1 ■ ■ n l •. t 1 e t i dl«-t;i . Mie Sionl- uar.v and t h; I'l-limiry. Lei Limeslun fi ie. and i'urm t .i s I. It I lie new s all ov«‘r t lie SniitIi. Tlie revered 4'a|)t. II. i*. (•ritilto is t he S .id. >r in .p ss n I 'm furt tier luforniit- tior. address t he I’resldoiit, I EE l> W Is Mlt»i;i:. A. M„ |'h. |>. The Monarch of Strength is 4'lnTok«-e Tounstiip X. S. ('oniciition. Hie Interdenominational Sunday School Convention of Cherokee Town ship will convene with the Mountain View Church on Saturday, July 2Ut, tit 10 a. m. 1st. D-votional exercises 15 min- j Utes. 2d. Organization. 1 t. (jury: W ho is responsible for j the failure of the Sunday Schools in 1 our churches? Speakers. \V. J. Hen- J deivon and Dr. J. L. Woltord. 2d. Query: Is it Die Sunday School to elect iendent ; if so, whv ? duty of the j the superin- | Speakers. B. j Williams ami Rev. \V. R. Horton. ; Li mitiiites intermission. A New A.n: rlcan Novvdist. A new figure in American Litera ture is Cyrus Townsend Brady. He AKTERNOON’ sEKVirt::'-. 3 1. (juery : The relationship be- 1 tween Die superiuti mh-nt, teachers] ! and pupils. Speakers, R v. \V. G. I’. | a"™ (AMiSOLUTELiY Pt’RE.) its rtrength comes from its purity. It is r.i! puro coffee, freshly roasted, and is sold only in one-oound sealed oackagcs. Each packaefo will make 40 cups. The pack age S3 scaled at the Mills so that the aroma is never weakened. It has a delicious flavor, incomparable Strength. !t Is a luxury within the roach cf all. Premium List in every package. Cut out your Lion’s, Head and get valuable premiums free. does not haro T.ton a.-,Coo tn his store, n nj ns his naiiiv a! .1 addjvss that wo laiiy jilace it ou Bale there. l)n not accept tny siilistitiiti'. WOOI.SuN SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio. If your Grocer “AI.I/S WELL THAT ENDS V\ EE!,. writer is about it, if he can succeed | ele t throe judges and a State 'frost 11 is asserted and denied that Sec retary Alger has resigned. It is fur ther given out that the President has Ids tomahawk sharpened for General Miles’s scalp. We, for one, are not interested in either the one case or Die other. If Alger go hack to his banking house and Miles be relegated to obscurity, tlmy will probably both only be in their natural sphere. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ A NiYsiriAs in Ithaca, N. Y., made ten visits to a patient and charged him $10,090, or $1,000 a visit. The patient refused to pay the hill on the ground that it was exorbitant, and the physician has sued him on the claim. The result of the trial will be interesting to both doctors and patients. It appears to this deponent at this distance that $i.UHifor an ordinary visit from an ordinary doctor is just a “Ice-tie” too tight, and we should he rejected as a juror in the case, by the prosecuting attorney on the ground of previously expressed opinion. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ The Attorney General has decided that when a man is once fined by the courts, no matter how wrongfully, he can never get his money back. A negro in Anderson County was con victed and lined for not working the in having some other things called by their right names, he will deserve the gratitude of a suffering public. Th* rage for high-sounding,bombastic names would he ridiculous if it did not in many cases involve downright ! fraud. This rage is especially to be I regretted in educational m: t t rs. j Every school toucher is a IVuVssor; a 1 most any sort of school is dignified with the name of College; almost any sort of preacher is a Doctor of Divin er. It is believed that Senator Quay 8 j j n g the Revolutionary and the suf fer tunes are bound up in the elec- j cce( ji n j, W ars, two of them being offi- Ez ‘II and R> v. W. J. Snyder. ith. (juery: How can our Sunday was horn in Allgheiiy City, I’ennsyl- i St’hoois ace onpli-h what they huve vania, in 1801. Mis ancestors ! l ' ,,,! 1 l ; rt;lk 1 ; r ' ? fP^rs, '1. <’• , , . , , , , , Lzel! and li v. J. J-. lL>rd, fought in the armv and Die mivv dur S.nq (Me; Dr. I*, j,. Marlin. tion in his State. IgnonttHf of City 4'l»ilt!r«*n. [<'olumMii Slate.| There is a standing joke, appearing annually, relating to ignorance con cerning country affairs on the part of j city visitors to tlie rural districts, i Recent experiments show a founda- it ■ while we have hosts of Colonels who never performed any military duty in their lives. The whole prac tice is abominable, and renders mean- ninglcss and valueless names and titles one prized and honored, for all that they represented. taion for this humor. The school ! and graduated in the class of 1883 urs, cers of the Continental line. One commanded a regiment unfit r Cen- cral Scott in the War of 1S12, and died a Major-General. 0..e was killed at Antietam. Young Brady thus inherited from his Seoteh-Irish stock t he st urdiest courage and pa trol ion. At seventeen he entered the United States Naval Academy service t ion lit x. K. D. Eit.VAuns, Chairman of Committee. 1 All Sunday Schools arc requested Io send representatives. children of Boston, Kansas City and Syracuse were interrogated as to their ’ifty percent. <iou th y v ilh* iiussip. (Corrosi»ondem!e of The Leilper.) Guw key\ ii.i.e, July 12—As we haven’t seen any news in the paper j were to Ten years ago he entered the min istry of the I’rotestant Church. For knowledge of nut ure. Fifty per cent, i three and one-half years he was of the Boston pupils from six to seven j Archdeacon ol Kansas, and for four years old hud no idea of a i eehive, I years he has been Archdeacon of seventy-seven per cent, had never j Pennsylvania. In the recent war he set ii a crow or knew what an ant j went to the front as Chaplain of the looked like. The majority of liitm ] First Pennsylvania Regiment, hail no idea of a squirrel, robin, j D ictor Brady bus written a newro- sheep, bee, hog or pig. Nearly half had | manco of the War of 1812, following no idt-a of a chicken and few luul a no- | tlio fortunes “Old Ironsides,” and in tion of what growing wheat, oak, pine | it liis luilliant genius has produced Ml oil Ail\ irt*. I Hates. 1 If you can only advertise in a small way pick out tlie best paper in your ter ritory and spend all of your advert ising money in that Don’t scatter. Win n your husines The Southern Well Fixture, ““wl.K'iJ"’" The Safety Wei! Future Ce-, of Blacksburg, $. 0- i A Soutlici-n in vi'iil ion anil niaiiufa-turc. U\<r lii.iu n in iis'siiua- 'ley witc iilaccd on tlio ‘ ! ncii-kct. ami ai-c^ieiie! iMiiiic satist':icti«>n. Asa wal<r elevator it lias tin- lollowinv nier- j its: It i-. liitior savinjr. and is t lie simplest slrueUire for raisinir wali-r on tlie uiiirkot. It is l ,. a ,'jiy ad iu-t« tl to any well or eistei n. Vn.v i>erson ean put up om- in Tlilrty MiuuteH, as It j !i:ts no atta< Imient toan.v part of tin- \.« tl In-low tlie platronn. Ii is tlie most (Iambic Fixture for tlie purpose in use. It is sulist.inlially constructed, ] and tlie liueUets never eouie in eontaet wi 1 !i eaeli otln-r or tlie sides o! the well, and tliu } (noove tirovi*i<-d in the wheel is so airanjpd as to produee hut little friction on the rope I and none on I he pulley. Ii Works Easy. The huekets ha'.ance e mh other, so the only resistaneo to overcome is ‘ tlie wa igiit of tiie water in one hueket: lienee it is I he only st i-nct ure thtil w ill rtiise water i i'roin t In- deep v.i I Is wit lion I a coi responding inerease of I riel ion. and that reuuires no more I power to opei-iitt* in a welt ot 1(0 than in one of "o feet deep. ^ It Is Always iicatly for l se and Always at its l'.< -t. Mu r maiiy years of service the j same nuniherof turns of the erank brings tlie same amount of water as wlien new. It lias None of the Ohjeet ions Coiiiinoii to I'umps. It will in \ er free /.(•has u ) wooden 1 tuiiiiijrlo wear out. decay and pollute tlie water, no iron tiihin;r to rust, never has to tie rrutVtf, and you ca:i '< l> lined, paeked or thawa d oat. and you do not have to pump or maple t r£es looked like. Only about j the most thrilling novel of sea life in twenty-two per cent, would know j American literature. It is called ] strawberries, moss or dew if they ! For the Freedom of the Hea, and its see them. A cow, chicken, J serial publication will begin in The ui a pail of water to net a , , I fresh, cold drink. spend more money, buy more space in , ' .. . ii is Eutlrelx Free from Dancer. Hein" provided with a sett-net in;.' break, governed tile Same pafa'., Uli.ll \ ou are sureyou l i,y an iceentric. it is imp essilde. should tile hand aecioeiii illy slip from I he cr.ink, for the are Using all you p rofitably cai). Then I bucket to run down, lienee any child ean h indle il w ii ti perfeel safety. The Entire Struc- •1.1,1 mi it,.,, r..,.,..- I n-ontrl inn- Consists of Well ('mb. Wheel with Ci-ank. t wo Huckcl s and one Spout for each Hueket. add Hll d.lt. pup(l- I w ,l..d I.ltlier ftiose spouts are attuched to inside of euri, or li-aine. and are opcratci. I>y rod pressure have one good ad t h.uil half a (1 izen 1 from I Ie- outside, hrinciipr tlmm up under and raising t lie vulxe in i he hot lorn of the imeket i,-i ,. j , , , ,, ! , ml i-onvev in" t iie water lo a nroiier r. eept a.-le. Hence It will he s"cn that the unpleasant poor ones. When hunting for bear handliny of ropes and buckets will he done away with, and tlie umdeaiilincss attcndliig- 1 would rather lake the best gtm I j such operation avoided. ^ bad and loud it properly, than to | ni.At'i:si»rm; S. (k. July»ik ts!)T. So. Well KivtureCo..Centlemeii: The wet scatter my powder in half a dozen i Jiut on for tne more than a year ago lias Kiven entire satisfaction ill every respe n-st well fixture I have ever seen. poor guns, the pan.” and so make a “Hash in IS IT RIGHT Ii x t u re you t. Ir is tlie J. G. Ki.ack. M. I). (j AtTNEX’, S.C. Nov. hi. Is'.:?. Se. Well Fi x t ui e Co., fi ent lenien: “'Die Safely" well fixture I lioualit for Cooper Limestone ImMltule iii July. Ir'.'ii. h;is iriven perfect .satisfaeMomaud we find it a cleanly and sate way of gett in^: water out of our well. Jonx H. Mack. 1’res. Cooper-Limestone Instl. from our little town of late thought I would give a few dots. | only about one-half of tin The farmers have commenced to chiidten hud ewrsecn. lay-by. Farms arc looking well con- ! The Syracuse children were found sidering the excctdingly drought, hut to he not so igm rant and the Kansas we hope it won t continue long. ; City pupils I.new more than those of The chain-gang has completed j the two other cities. Here we have a some nice work on the roads in our tendency of city life it seems won- s ‘/lion. \ derful and deplorable that u child We understand that Mr. W. M. I Junes is very ill. Mrs. In 1 ward Tate, of Vermont, is ! visiting Mr. ami Mrs J. A. Haines. Mrs. Elizabeth Tracy and her ' charming granddaughter, Miss Lilli/ butt'-rlly or worm was something ' Saturday Evening Bust, of ton ^ pliia, in September, A Itoy’i* IH;; Siiiary. jAtlauta Journal.J A most beyond belief is the earn ing capacity of little George Odom, i 'ad just on the threshold of his teens. This mite of humanity, not more than il j cars old, and weigh ing not more than 75 pounds, has Ji‘Utley, left on Saturday for Spiii- roads. He. paid the line and it after- j tanburg, where they are to spend wards was established beyond all Home time visiting friends and rolu- doubt that he is past the age by sev- ] *‘ v< s - 1 8 } ' Mrs should grow up without ever experi encing t he dt light of chasing a butter fly, being stung by a bee in t he clover upon which the little foot trod, feed ing t lie chicki ns, or watching no cow in half fear and half joy. What good ! is a boy who lias never made a frog I hop or who has not destroyed hun dreds of ant hills? Is life worth signed a contract to ride horses for oral years which exempts him fr< Garner. ufL r severu 1 of sickness, is improving, road duty. The authorities pardoned ] him for the misdemeanor, and now lie is called upon to pardon the uu- 1 wteks c. i>. living to the child who has never , j W. G. WhitnejJJ in 1900, 1901 and 1902 at u sulaiv of $10 (TO a \ t ur. That makes $30 000 for tlie throe years, and with anything like good ! luck—of which lie now seems to ! have an abundence—he should earn t*or <11) h'ditor Ktu'oiiintrml I'atont fintH? IFiom Svl*.:m*Vallt k y Nuw-, Hrovunl. r.] ll may lm a question whether the : editor of a newspaper has the right lo | publicly recommend any of the va- 1 rious proprietary medieinos which j flood the market, yet as a preventive of suffering, we feel it a duty to say a ; good word for Ghuiiiberiuin’s Colie, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. We have known and used this medicine iti our family for twenty years and have always found it reliable. In many cases a do^e of this remedy would save hours of suff< ring while a physician is awaited. We do not be lieve in depending implicitly on any SARRATT BLOOD CURE SENT FREE. thorities for keeping the money. This looks more like high-handed robbery than even-handed justice. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Till! State press seems to be al most unanimously in favor of finish ing the state house in Columbia in accordance with tlio original design, ‘ , i ' • : $30 0<i(> more. Before incrutBing his played will) a June hug on a siring? 1 . . , , . 0 l he best of nat ure training in Die , * .. . • . , . . ■ . . , , , destroy his usefulness as a jockey lim-st of schools cannot compensate J ^ , i this bxy should earn not less than for these things. I *200.001) \y t,y tt,«* Mouth i» i*«>or. i (V| 0in belongs to Georgia. He A pound of raw cotton is worth |j rs t was heard of ns a jockey at the about u cents. W hen it is spun and \ew Orleans meeting of last winter, ny, 233 Mitchell Street, Atlanta, Ga., woven into fabrics it is worth from jj e was one of the best jockeys at the any of the Ledger readers may obtain 95 cents to $1, according to Die fig- mcetim'. When the New Orleans \ < iu « for Itlood uixi skin DisiGiHi*, I’N'/t iiiii, rimplt », Srroiuhi, ltloo«l By addressing Blood Balm Compa- an I we ttiro wi dem.im propria is a lieu self-rus he mu huildin that v\ been n Dun !l he I to tion. dy 1> pect i tliat the next Legisla- compelhul by tlio public make the necessary up- It is true that tlie .State irdened with taxes, liut lemaml-i that Die burden little heavier and the linished. 11 is surprising so many tnilliocs sly and foolishly s<juun- gislatures during tlie last a -ample buttle of tin ir famous B. B. II.— Botanic Blood Balm, t he greatest, grandest, best and most wonderful Blood purifier made. (Hires when all ilso fails, pimples, ulcers, scofulu. eczema, boils, blood poison, eating suits, distressing skin erupt ions, can cer, catarrh, rlieumulism. Free medical udvicT included, when de scription of your trouble ii given. This generous off. r is worth while accepting. Sample bottle sent all charges prepaid. I.urge bottles, (containing nearly U quart of incdl* uivs of a Boston correspondent of the tr,,^ w UH dosed he went North. New Orleans I ieayuue, Massachutts There lie signed as sceond jockey in has 8,000 spindles and annually man- : the stable of William H. Clark, ufactures 1,250^ lit to Imics of cotton. | This cotton she huvs from tlie South .... ... I Statkokoiiio, ('ityok Ini.RiHi, i l.rr\rt < 'oi nty. » N ’ I 'it A N k .1. < n im v hid krsoat Ii I hat ho is I In* at 5 cents a pound. After site lias spun and woven this cotton she sells a very large part of it b'tck to us at 25 cents to a $1 u pound. That is why Massachusetts is rich and Geor gia is poor. “U he Soulh,” say s the Picayune, “hews the wood mid draws the water; it does the drudgery of producing raw material for the North to manufacture and get rich thirty-five years, thoro has never been ; Remedy. cinejfor sale by all druggists at $1 huve l ur bottle. B. II. B. is away ahead 1 upon. It is this which keeps the of all other Blood Ut medics for per- South poor and always will, until tho manently curing Blood Humors. Try Southern people shall manufacture B. B. B. next lime you buy a Blood i their own products—fine as well as coarse sruior |iarl iii-i- ol ilic (it-iii of F. .1. I'iikney .Y ( il.iiiur t.iisiih - in 11..- t 'ity i>l'T..l(-(|i>. < uiinty anil State afi.r. saiU. ami that sai'l IIiiii Mill |iny lln- ■.iiiii i 1 ! <»NF III NlUiFI* I)' *1.1 .A liS nu- i-ai-li ami cvry .-as.- ul Ca i A 1(101 lliat caimut he i'iii'ciI liy the usoof II \i i.’s < vi Aitim n ee. TANK J. ('ll KN LY. Smni'ii to iH-fiir. 1 nit anti suhsfrllM tl In my |iri‘M'iit-t'. I Iii-. til It tiny nf |it'ci<inlii-i-. A. I). Issti. A. \V. Gl.EASON. Notary I’ulillc. Il.ill'hrnliirrltCurt' lstnk#n Internully ami ; lifts |||M 1-t |y till tilt- hlnuil ami rnueoils sur- I fnfl s of ttil) HVstt-lll. Sfml foi - 1n#ttmoiiiuls I free. F. J. i 'll F.NF.Y \ <'<)., Toteilo. (>. Suhl hy Hi uiorisl ■ Hall's t-uuiliy I’illi. are till- bt-M. lit-ve tliat if a bottle of.Chaniberbiin’s Diurrlioea Remedy wire kept on hand and administered at the incep tion of an attact much suffering might he avoided and in very many cases the presence of a physician would not be required. A( least this has been our experience during the past twenty years. For sale by Cher okee Drug Co. W. T THOMPSON, Blacksmith and Wood Shop. All gintis of work tluiif mi short tiotlro. Shooin','. Tire S.-tlili).'. V\ lioel- in Hoilinv Oil u S|M-t'ially. Woti.-i I f. ;-l long. Hickory. Oal., I’oiilar iiml Hiitt* Lnttihnr iintl all Uimls ol mark- table protluct-liiki-n in payim-iil lor work, i'onit let us rciison io^ r t-lhi-p. I or my rfOl-fst-nlalivc always at shon. Igo font wc.jt of liuinmy line on Hntletige -ir. « t. C'sir I To tlu' front with ;i irons just received. Call and se(‘ mv wagons and j'et niy prices hefore luiyin^. Will sell cheap lor cash, or on time with 'good paper. This line of wagons is miinufuctured hy the liirdsell Wagon Co., of South Bend, Ind., which is one of the finest timber regions in America. My lino of *9 Groceries, Hardware, Dry Goods, Notions, Hats, Shoes, &c.7 is complete here nnd at the Goforth Store. Don’t fail to give me a call when you want :i wagon from the lightest to the heaviest, or any goods usually kept in a General Store. A big lot of Fruit 1‘efD or (train. Jars on hand. Also Fertilizers for vour j. 1. SARRATT, WATCH The Gainey City Land and Improvement Company mi.I sri' if my wuli'ti. t-loi '.. ami jt'ivt Iry work I-. ulvIn;: -.a* i-.fat-l imt; if so. I lien l.i lii'r mi 1 your work, iiml half il piupirty aini promptly repairi'il. J 11. COOPTIt, Al (Tu roll euipciiU-i'A. OlT< rs for salt- Huiltliny Lots in tiiis llourlsli l^ mid in rt-aeli ol the S - bools of I.u:.t --loi liii to lie at-ri s oiililM-rul liim* r-il.-s; nist poses. For full purtlfulars apply to if town, GafTimy t'ity; Also Farms nr*r ;t' >;.riri‘.'s amt of this p!;u-i*, in lots of frotc i A j'l ii-ult nral Lands to re-ni for Karin pur- J. V. tlfss hunting, are foiblddtTi umlt-r iifimlt v «>( law. A ji'ent. N. H -All tit'sspiusiui; on lands of this i-ompany, vul ting and re-mov ing tiuiiK'r, tlshlng’; r Id'' ■ H