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THE NEWS AND HERALD. PVBUISNED TRI- WEEKLY NEWSAND HERALD COMPANY, TERMS, IN ADVANCE: 'e ear, - - - 63.00 X Meths. - - -1.50 I D V I'fISI-VU .-t THS. CASH: I I -,t I, ,-s iaii c :- -, i i i ertionA & I A t. 0 --,t r t. ,Lru -l int inser i,. - iiS i rt e .-s f->r eoitr-Let adver i ios :Iegn'.r rates charged for obituaeies. Orders for Job Work solicited. This newspaper is not responsible for PInions and views exptessed anywhere I se than in the editorial column. All articles for pubitcation must be ac. aumpanied by the true naine of the author - 1d written in respectful language and ritten on one side of the pa;.r The true .vt requiredas an evidence of good faith All cowmunicatsons-editorial, business local-should be addressed to THE .1 EWS AND HERALD Co. W. D. DOUGLAss, Editor. JAS. Q. DAVis, Treasurer. W. J. ELLIo-rr. Business Manager. WINNSBORO, S. C. Saturda, September 7, :814 THE Cutton Mills are going sto be built, and you need have no fears aboat it. Our bsiness men are i:: dead earnest. This will be great help not only to the town, but to the surround ing country. The installment plan will make payments easy. The farm ers sh.u'd take stock. They make the cotton, and they should h:ave a hand in nanufaicturing. Ex-'-uInF JUSTICE BLECKL.EY, of Georgia, has annou'aced ithat lie cannot m ike a support for his family in the practice of law, and he will try some thing else. He ought to ha e come to South Carolina and joined 'the move ment." All the -lawyers, who got in on the ground fipor, are doing a very profitable business. One is Governor, two got on the Supreme Bench, six or seven got on the Circuit. beuch, two or three got in Congress, oke Superin tendent of education, and, in fact, pretty much all of them are right com fortably situated. Besides, "the move ment" has had some very profitable litigation for its attorneys. :DEATH OF MUS. R. G. MILLER. Other Items of News'from Bnackstock. BLACK~S~oCK, .Sept.. 5.-Mrs. R. G. Miller died at her home, near Wood ward, tbis morning:.at 8 o'clock, and was buried at Concord Church this evening. The funeral iervices were conducted by Rev. James Douglass. Mrs. Miller's death was not unexpect edy as she-Wis a-victim of that dreaded SA .onreWhiCtrd~e3dt work slowly bjzt surely. *he leaves a haabanad, four ebirdrenI, and alhost of friends to mourn her loss. The first bale of new cotton was brought to this market yesterday- by Mr. S. B. Clowney, who is usually ahead in farming matters, and was bought by the firm of G. L. Kennedy & Co. The price paid was 81 cents, which is the higbbst price paid for the first bale on any market in this State, except Andel son, where the first bale brought 9 cents :d weighed 1,044 pounds. Dr. and Mrs. L. S. Douglass left yesterday for the Sparkling Catawba Springs, near Hickory, TN. C., where they will spend a few weeks in quest of health and pleasure. Rev. Al.. U. Kirkpatfick! has been. given. a purse andt a: mionth's-vacation by..his congregationi. .He will spena both in the mountains of North Caro lina.*.n Mr*. and'Mrs. B.S Strauss, of York ville, are visiting at Mr. R. B. Mills'. Fodder pulling is now the order of the day. it is. .said that Mr. B. E. Kell has ten stheusand bundles pulled, and is not thritghjet. If any Echool teacher is at a loss to know how. t5 begin a school right, and keep it the'-same way, they should come and take a peep at the Blackstock high school,'and go and- do likewise. Just keep an eye on this school, if you want -to see one that is to soon grow too.bi for its - and will have to cill on the trustees for a new and lareer pair. Mr. R. B. Caldwel1 left this evening for North Carolina. where h3 goes in - search of heart's ease. Mr. T. W. Ross, of Rock Hill, is in town on mischief bent, and our boys o.luld keep a clot watch on him dur ing h'es-stay, and not let him s:eal the ffirls' hearts away. -The meeting in progress at the Bap tist Church is increasing daily in inter est and attendance. Rey. H. F. Oliver is a preacher oi power and will long be remembered by the people here for his works and marks so full of zeal and love. u- E K OUR COTTON MILL. The business men of Fairfield County are determined to have a big cotton mill at Winnsboro and ha.ve hit upon a plan of raising the capital stock which will allow people of small means to invest as well as men of large capital. They will succeed. Winnsboro is just the place in which to) operate a snacessfl cottotn mill. The ice once broken, other mills will foUkw the initialone.-Colunbia RegiS terr For Over FIfty Years .Ma. WiNsLow's SooTHING Smnce has been u- forover fifty years by millions of mo Ltheir children while teeth ine,..w efe-success. It soothes the child, softenis the gums, allays all pain. cures win~colic, and Is the best remedy for Diarrhea. It will relieve the poor lit tle sufferer immediately, -Sold by Drug. ~its in every part of the world. - Twenti fiv,-* eents a bottle. Be sure and ask fo'r .lrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup," and ake no *ther kind. 3-:Mijx11 renIdren Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. BETHEL PARAGRAPHS. BETHEL, Sept. 5.-Everythiug is quiet in our little town at present, the weather fle, and all hands are hust ling to get their fodder housed so as to be ready to gather the feecy staple, of which there will not be over half a crop made. The pea crop is fine and being gath ered. The grindiig of sorghum cane has commenced, and from the quantity planted there will be a large yield, and all can "sop" to their satisfaction for months to come. Miss Sue Stoll, of Ninety-Six. is visiting the family of Mr. U. C. Trapp. Miss Eva Bowen, of Kershaw Coun ty, is visiting the family of Mr. G. W. Smith. Mr. D. N. Main has returned to Florida after a pleasant visit to his parents. Miss Bessie Glcn, of Jenkinsville, has been elected to teach the BetheJ school. C. 6100 Reward 8100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity.. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a con stitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting direct ly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strenirth by building up the ounstitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they off:r One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address, F. J. CBENEY & Co.. -Toledo, 0. zir old by druggists, 75z. IT WON'T GO. Cru ade Against Kissing Started by a Chicago Doctor. From the ew York Horning Journal. Dr. Reilly, of the Chicago board of health, has perpetrated an outrage which calls for the fiercest denuncia tion of which any language is capable. Not having the fear of God before him, and being instigated thereto by the devil, he has issued a circular in behalf of ibe board denouncing the practice of kissing. We de not know Dr. Reilly and therefore cannot speculate as to his-motives. If he is an old fenleman hemay have lost his memory, There may be here and there an old man who delights not in kissing the girls, and he may be one of them. This, however, would not be a suf ficient explanation unless it can be shown that be has lost his memory. If.be could look back to the -days of his outh and of his robust manhood he would be thrilled by the recollections which cluster around those days. Poor Dr. Reilly. He is so far re moved from the sensations and from the delicious. memories of the sensa tions which are related to kissing that he now goes. into a cold-blooded cata logue of all the diseases which flesh is eiro~SUd- undertakerAwsb~o9s snd husbands,' that this delightful method of,closing the electric current may bring, with it tuberculosis and no iud of bacilli diseases. His scheme will not work ; the kissing will go on. It will gather momemtum from the discussion. Dr. Reilly has taken refge from the storm of ridicule which has burst upon him by publish ig opinions of certain other doctors of renown upholding bis teachings. Who cares? The doctors who endorse him simply write themselves down as fossils and dred remains of the man ood lof an earlier age. Until they can abolish human nature and take the roses from the cheeks and lips of fair maidens youth and manhood will still be ready to sing, with Tom Moore's ero, to the fair objects of their de votion: "There's one, win but to *kiss thy cheek, Would climb the untrodden solitude of Ararat's tremendous peak. And think its steeps, though da'-k, Heaven's pathway, if to the they led." An eery old man and old woman whose memory is greeni will applaud this sentiment. In Poor Health means so much more than yo'u imagine-serious and fatal diseases result from trifling ailments neglected. Don't play with Nature's greatest gift-health. If you are feeling out of sorts, weak ad generally ex Browas ave no appetite ad can't work, beginatocak I m~g the mostre ble strengthening 11311medicine.whichli Brown's Iron Bit ters. A few bot ti comes from the woe'y fstaiose-ur teth,~ and it's pleasant to take. It Cures Dyspepsla, Kidney and LUver Neuralgia, Troubles, Costgation, Bad Blood Malaria, Nervous ailments Women's complaints. -Get only the genuine-it has crossed red -lines on the wrapper. - All others are sub stitutes. Onreceipt of to c. stamps w FaIr views and book--free. - BROWN CH4EMiCAL Co. BALTIMORE. MD. NOTICE. I wharTvery man and woman in the Usd eates interested in the Opium and Whisky habita to have one of my books on these dis ases. Address B. M. Woonley, Atlanta, Ga. -o Was ad on wil be sent ---.e. THE STRANCI STORY Allan QlatermaiR'sWife BY B. RIDER HAGGARD, AUTuo OF "SHE," "KING SoLoMox'S C MIrEs," ".TZSS," "CLEO E rATnA," ETc. A NEW AFRICAN ROMANCE, We k'ent up the valley, following the c ourse of the stream for-about a mile; then Indaba-zimbi made a sudden turn to the right, along another kloof, of which there were countless numbers in the base of the great hill. On we went through kloof after kloof. Indaba-zimbi, who led us, was never at a loss; he turned up gullies and struck across necks of hills with the certainty of a hound on a hot scent. At length, after about three hours' march, we came to a big, silent valley on the northern slope of the great peak. On one side of this valley was a series of stony koppies; on the other rose a sheer wall of rock. We marched along the wall for a dis tance of some two wiles. Then sudden ly Indaba-zimbi halted. "There is the place," he said, point ing to an opening in the cliff. This opening was "'about forty feet from the' ground and ellipse-shaped. It could not have been more that twenty feet high by ten wide and was partially hidden by ferns and bushes that grow about it in the surface of the cliff. Keen as my eyes were I -doubt if I should ever have noticed it, for there were many such crags and crannies in the rocky face of the great motintain. We drew near and looked carefully at - the place. The first thing I noticed was that the rock, which was not quite perpendicular, had been worn by the continual passage of baboons; the sec ond, that something white was hanging on a bush near the top of the ascent. It was a pocket handkerchief. Now there was no more doubt about the matter. With a beating heart I be gan the ascent. For the first twenty feet it was comparatively easy, for the rock shelved; the next ten feet was very difficult, but still possible for an active man, and I achieved it, followed by Indaba-zimbi. But the last twelve or fifteen feet could only be scaled by " THE BRUTES sTREAMIED ON TOWAnD ME." throwing a rope over the trunk of a. easy. A foot or two above z y head the handkerchief fluttered in the wind. Hanging to the rope, I grasped it. It was my wife's. As I did so I noticed the face of a baboon peering at me over the edge of the eleft, the first baboon we had seen th~at moraing. The brute gave a bark and vantished. Thrusting the handkerchief into my breast, I set my feet against the cliff and scrambled up as hard as I cogild go. I knew that we had ggp time to lose, for the baboon would quickly alarm the others. I gained the cleft. It was a mere arched passage cut by water, ending in a gully, which led to a wide open space of some sort I looked through the passage and gaw that the gully was black with baboons. On they came by the hundreds. I unslung my elephant gun from my shoulders and waited, call ing to the men below to .come up with all possible speed. The brutes streamed on down the -gloomy gulf towards me, barking, grunting and show ing their huge teeth. I waited till they were within fifteen yards. Then I fired the elephant gun, which was loaded with slugs,right into the thick of them. In that narrow place the report echoed like a cannon shot, but its sound was quickly swallowed in the volley of piercing' hman-soundinlg groans and screams that followed. The charge of heavy lugs had plowed thr-ugh a number of the baboons, of which at least a1 dozen lay dead or dying in the passage. For a moment they hesitated, '.hen they] came on again with a hideous clamor.] Foitunately by this time Indaba-zimbi, who also had a gun, was standing by my ide, otherwise 1 should have been torn1 to pieces before I could reload. He fired both barrels into them, and again Ihecked the rush. . But they came on again, and notwithstanding the appear ance of two other natives with guns, which] ey let off with mere or less success, we should have been overwhelmed by the eat and ferocious apes had I not by ,this time succeeded in reloading the elenhant run. When they were right on to us I-fired, with -even more deadly i effect than before, for at that distance I every slug told on tlheir long line. The howls and screams of rage and fury were now something inconceivable. One might have thought we were doing < battle with a host of demons: indeed in < that light-for the overhanging arch of 1 rock made it very dark-the gnashing I nouts and somber, glowing eyes of, the apes looked like those of devils as 1 they are re;pesented by monkish fancy. < But the last shotwas too much for them; I they withdrew, dragging sonme of their wounded with them, and thus gave us t time to get our men up the cliff. In a I few minutes all were there, and we ad- C anced down the passage, which pres- o mntly opened into a rocky gully with fl shelving sides. This gully had a water- i way at the bottom of it; it was about a 1 hundred yards long, and the slopes on l; either side were topped by precipitous t. cliffs. I looked at these slopes; they S iterally swarmed with baboons, grunt- t< ing, barking, screaming and beating their breasts with their long arms in I fury. I looked up the water-way; along ' It, accompanied by a mob, or, as it were, b aguard of baboons, came Hendrika, her 0 long hair flying, madness written on her e face, and in her arms was the senseless ce form of little Tota. She .saw us, and a foam of rage burst t from her lips. She screamed aloud. To me the sound was a mere articulate cry, jb but the baboons clearly understood it, b us. One bowider leap: Ua1p Ie a tuck down a. a licr.lz-blu;uother -11 from' the roof" t1%d:ch 6n to a ian's head and killed ..imi. indaha .mbi lifted his gun to shoot. llciidrika; knocked it up, so that'the shot went ver her, crying that.he wiould kill the ild. Then I shouted to the men to pen out and form a line from side to ide of the shelving gully.. Frious at he loss of -their two- con-'ades, they beyed me, and keeping in the water ay myself, together with intaba-zimbi nd the other guns, I gave the word to arge. Then the real batle began. It is ifficult to saf' who foight the most ercely, the natives. or th b aboons. 'he Kaffirs charged along the slopes, nd as they came, encourag1d by the creams of Hendrika, who rushd to and ro holding the wretched Tot"a before Ler as a shield, the apes b-bounded at hem in fury. Scores were killed by the ssegais, and many more -fell beneath ur gdri-shots; bift still thby came on. for did we go scatheless. Occasionally man would slip, or be pulled over in he grip of a babon. Then-'the others rould fling themselves upon him like ogs on a rat 'nd worry.li'fi to death. Ve lost fivOen i'this .s% and I my elf received a bite. through the fleshy art of the left arm, but fdrtunately a .ative near me essegaied tho. animal be ?ro I was pulled down. 'At length, ind all of a "sudden, the aboons gate up' A ptanic' see'med to eize them, Notwi*thstanding the cries f Hendrika they thought~no more of ght, but only of escapd; .some ee'Vn did ot attempt to get away fr.Qm the as egais of the Kaffirs, th(y "imply hid heir horrible faces in their paiWs, and, oaning piteously, waited to be slain. Hendrika saw that ~thd 'battle was ost. Dropping .the child from her arms, 5he rushed straight at us, a very picture >f horrible insanity.' I lifted my gun, ut could not bear to shoot. After all he was but a mad thing, half ape, half woman. 'So I sprang to: one side, and fhe landed full on Indaba-zimbi, knock ng him do'/ But she did not stay to lo any more. Wailing terribly, she rushed down the gully and through the rch, followed by many of. the surviving baboons, andvinished from our sight. CHAPTER XIII. WUAT HAEPPENED TO STELLA. The fight was over. In all we had Lost seven men killed, and several more were severely bitten, while but few had scaped without some tokens whereby be might remember what a baboon's teeth and claws are like. How many of the brutes we killed I never knew, be ause we did not count, but it was a vast umber. I should think that the stock must have been low about Babyan's Peak for many years afterwards. From bhat day to this, however, I have always ivoided baboons, feeling more afraid of hem than any beast that lives.' The path was clear, and we rushed rorward up the water-course. But first e picked up little Tota. The child was not in a swoon, as I had thought, ut paralyzed by terror., so that she ould scarcely speak. Otherwise she was unhurt, though it took her many a week to recover her nerve. Had she been dder, and had she not remembered endrika, I doubt if she would have re ~overed it. She knew me again, and lung her .li~tle arms, about my neck, et on with her in my ars SThe ears that pierced my heart may well be Lmagined. Should I find Stella alive or lead? Well, we should soon know now. We stumbled on up the stony water ourse; notwithstanding the weight of rota I led the way, for suspense lent n wings. Now we were through, and n extraordinary scene lay before us. e were in a great natural amphithea er, only it was three timcs the size of y amphitheater ever shaped by man, nd the walls were formed of precip tous cliffs, ranging frem one to two undred f.eet in height. For the rest, the space thus inclosed was level, stud ed with park-like trees, brilliant with lowers, and having a stream running through the center of it, that, as I after wards discovered, welled up from the round at the head of the open space. We spread sourselves out in a line, 3earhing everywhere. for Tota vwas too ivercome to Ue able to tell ..is where tella was hidden away. For nearly alf an hour we searched and zearched, icaning the walls of rock for any pos lble opening to a cave. In vairn. we ould fiud nonoY I applie tN ol In aba-zimbi, but his foresight wa~s at Eault here. All he eculd say wa that this was the place. and that the Star was hidden somewhere in a cave, but here the cave .was he could not tell. & t last we came to the top of the amphi heater. There before us was a wall of ck, of wvhich the lower parts vwere Lere and there clothed in grasses, ichens andi creepers. I walked along t, calling at-thie top of my voice. Presently mf' heart stood still, for I bought I heard a faint answer. I drew earer to the place from which the ound seemed to comec. and again. ralled. es, there wasian- answer in myVwife's oie It seemed. to come from the' rock. went up to it and -searehed amuong~ the reepers, hut still could find no-' nig "Move thle stone.7 eriodi SteLla's voice, 'the cave is shut with a store. I took a sp ri and prodded at the i whece the sorand camen aol he spear suni -in through U :s of chn. I swept-the lich:-n asI a ng a bovlder that h'dhbeen.r..k :110 nn opening in the rcxk.wvhich it fit ted so curately that,ecovered as it was by the verhanging lichen, it m'ight well ha've soaped the keenest eye. . We dragged he bowlder oug; was two men's work o do it. Beyondvls- a 'narrow, w-ater rrn passage,.- 1lich I followed v~t a eating heart. .Presently the pas-.:ae pened into a sia11- cave,-5 shsed like a ikl. bottle, and comitg to a ncek at 1 top end. We passed throagh- andi )Ud ousevsin a~secon-d. much larger ie, that I at .one.e recogize7d as the' noof which 1niaha-zirmbi had shown e a vision in the water. Light reached from above-how I knowv not-and by I could see a form half sitting, half ing on some skins, at the top end of tccave. I rushed to it. It was Stel~la! tea bound with-strip; of hidef, bruised, rn but st~ill Stella, and ali-:". Sh saw me. she gave one c:-., the&n as caught her in my armas she fainted. It as happy indeed that she did not faiint ~ore, for had it not been for the sound - her oc I do not believe we should -r have found the t eunningrly-hiddlenJ ve, unless, indeed. I ndah a-z imbi's agic on whichl be blessings) had come We ore l:-r t~o the open air. laid 1;5 neat tIm sh:'de of a tree, and ecf'u i 'id )fds lose froin her anikr-i. X?'we act]y as i sha n it in th. i - Tieit:re burnt t;-e ire. there vere the ru-. wooden v e-m of then still half full of t i.. -.:hich I had seen the baboon brinz. I felt awed as I looked. and marveled at the power wielded by a savage who could not even read and write. Now I could see Stelila ulearly. Ier face was scratched and hagard with fear and w1epin', her clothes wero al most torn off her, and her beautiful hair was loose and tangled. I sent for water, and we sprinkled her face. Then I forced a little of the brandy which we distilled from paeahes at the kraals be tween her li-ps, and she opened her eyes, and throwing he.r arms about me clung I to me as little Tuta had don,, sobbing: "Thank God! thank God:' After awhile sho grew quiete'r, and 1 made her and Tota cat a little food from the store that we had brought -with us. I. too, ate.-and was thankful, for with the exception of the mealic cobs I had tasted nothing for nearly four-and twenty hours. Then she washed her face and hands, and tidied her rags of dress as well as she was able. As she did so, by degrees I drew her story from her. It seemed that on the previous after noon, being wearied with packing, she went out to visit her father's grave, taking Tota N;ith her, and was followed there by 'ho two dogs. She wishcd to lay some flowers on the grave and take farewell of the du,: it covered, for, as we had expected to trek early. on the morrow, she did not know if she would find a-later opportunity. They passed up the garden, and, gathering scme flowers from the orange trees and else where, went tn to the little grave yard. Here she laid t'n on tho -rnve as we had fo : - sit tmng down, f,] 1n-'o r ' '-" reverie, suc : th ' .7so "'111 t urally ic. ~ h a husI Tota, who was a lvel cid- ' as a kitten, stra.a . . y : Stella obsor-i i:. ' ith -er v .- - dogs, whohad alo hd , -- action; a while awe, an she heard the do.- 'bring furoIsly about a hundred and fifty yards v - Then she i:ard Tota scream and tho dogs also yellnr .ith for and pain. She rose and r-n as tly as she could toward the spot enc the cound came. Presently s:o xr-s there. Be fore her i t , holdih g th screaming To .- in he a : -s a tlgure in wh ich, r.. :tandir.' the rolIgh disguise of -: cue" '-- ' i oring matter. she h nc ro difclty in recognizing i eni, "-d la her were numbero bct on-, or -:-g i over an'd o-er in t-.o hiacous .1.F, c! hich the centers w wo t a"nor unate dgs nwv i- b0. e Lin3 I rent to fra . .Hendrik ' St. : this mean? - - - Tots and th 1: - 'Th e weon--:an up. Then sh- - ness st^.r -p the hto Stella for v tr only to bei:a She gruaered no use-the Unb::t~a t: strength f ten. She lif!ted. fl7* -m ~ Tt- as with themn, fuo-vrTte:do !str'eam in order to avoi- l":",:In' a spoor. Only the ua'I' v"h caI)me withermnuse-.ona.-e3dos hab kept paLI ,' l 1' -2 a ' 3 follo:ed wa ::v lh a hiuleeas night mare than a relit. Sie was never able to tell mn al that..L ee'urred in it. She haid a vacuoe rec:*keten of being borne over rock.s .e nlong klcofs, while around he c.:h.>ed t':.e horrible grunts and clik of the batoons. She spoke to Ienrika in Engin-h and Kainr, imploring her to let t:he~n go; b)ut the womn , if I may cll her so, seemed in hr madn'e- to havo entirely forgotten the toge.When Stella spoke she would ' ki c;her arl stroke her hair, but she did~ nt. see to undcerstand what it was sh ..id. On the othr'i hand, sho could. and did. talk to the baboons, that seemeid to obeyv her im-. plicitly. Moreover. she would not allow them to touch either Stella or the child in her arms. Oinee erne of themn tried to do so, and sihoe s:ized a dead stick and st'uck ir, so heavily on the head that it .fell senseless. T1hrice Stella made an attempt to escape, for sometimes even Ilendrika's giant strength waned and she had to set them down. But on eachi occasion she caught them, and it was in th 'se struggles that Stellasclothes v:'co so torn-. At length before daylight they rear'hed the cliif, and with tihe Iir:; bzreak~ of light the as cent beganr. i k.drikadragd them upD the first stag;, ha~t xxlhen they came to the precipitous place she tied the strips of hide, of wh ich shw had a supply wound round her waist, hen -;th Stella's arms. Steep as the place' *.., the baboons as cended. it easily en :gir..springing from a knob of reck to the trunk of the tree that grew on the edge of the crevasse. Iendrika foP!,wd them, holding the Iend of the 1:14e inl h:r toth. one of the baboons hinen'::v uxor:n J the tree to assist her ascn. t as while she was asendingt that se'13 ' thu;;ht her of letting fWIl 1:I ha:.:erch if in the lv this ti2 !n~i:a wa:3 on the :-'. an.1 vn :: :u order1s to the, bhoris win ei: 1 ab out Stella Vl)w. Sudn; r:- s:ized her and Xite To:e. w' asi her a'" s." .1d lifted her fro t :m. Te lion drika abo)V. i b trbaor.put out all her grea st~ nm p'lld th to of them upter::1TicSel sx'ung heavih Igan 'tth e!L f the scondl bbI sefit1" ne o ing. and wais' 'On'' Iwit ter she shme:l drop T B:. H. she' aa aired to cling to, hIer. :'n.l 'together they reahe th II e ilid. enn e -'- ' * tsfctor F'orur I;'iK(uce's". v'aIe 11-.:od Illt I at---a i fi1 tima fill - i 'rteri, the grieat r emedy. for LiIiver, >'omiieh; an'i Iidneys:" U.uckle:'s Arruica alve. .ii th I est in the worl,. and Dr. *e i~ ~i!I . wienare alperfect I's wha iitse caimued for t hem and n aeer-whose oitam ]'is a' ttach'Ied here hi W~il ll' etgld to, tell 7011i more of themi. n S i ., Arisvter ,i: Co. '1)rue Store- * N EW YORK. e+ Our Mr. Caldwell and Miss Lilla Ketchin are now in the Northern markets purchasing ou Fall and Winter goo iis. Every effort will - L1 qnlet get good tha will please your tf.,- :11n:1suit :our purse. Be sure you come on CalIdwell & Ruff. RID A STEARNS. Ask any STEA RNS ridher what be thinks of his YELLOW FELLOW4 STEARNS riders are satisfied riders. Join the ranks of STEARNS enthusiasts. E. C. STEARNS & CO., Syracuse, N. Y. SOUJTIIERN AGENTS: W. D. GALSHI CO * .aze .?'n..~& Aihz Macdonl&, Winnsboro Drug- Store~ FALL OF 1895. __ n fj A rlBuist's Turnip Seed, Mason Fruit U~Ju 1111(h)IIII(1U Jars and Jelly Tum~blers. PA I(CULAllLY TO T HOSE who w be wise enough to seek genuine ...- . bmatuin, ai~d I ci imn to have such .~ batrtnius to offer~ my friends this Fall, '~tOl 'en: ire my reasonswhyv . proposet to.janshs, . 1st.-Our entire-stock of GSeneral Mer- Bs c.C~rnteMre.: chal!kise MLST be converted into r.'ady enlh in order to windup - the business of A. Macdonald & 2nd.-I pefer to give my friends and :.eighibors the benefit of the. .-eeping reduc ion in pri-es' LmsadGasae r~ thr than sell ont in a lump, :bat all miight have an opportu.: e aints, OilsgVbrrishes 3rd.- .u hent the advance came on S ows, 1Iardware, and other ~ Soods in our line,'we fortunate- w ff9~ iy had a big supply on-hand,Z adthe profit wh'ch the advance in prices legitimately gave us, will be thrown to our customers,IFY U W N toKe ti.ereby setting their goods al mostat frst ost.Abreast of the Times 4 b.-I n ill be in the cotton market from start to linish, paying full READ nrices-don't forget this. Will als o pae highest cash price for . SOUTHLAND. Bie sure and consult my prices on_________ Baing and Ties before ton buy. I bought these several months. ago when It contains all the latest improve they were at rock bottom prices, and ments up to dae will give you great advantage in your wants here. Subscription One Dollar a Year The Charleston edition-of Ale5 ~ad~nadTHlE HJME SEEKER SURT1VOR, B3L AGKST OCK, S. c.cnanadecitvsetho ans e and n ho nSwrttet n nc Pricho hOnd earllar. orslt wi ro h 01e1y1e o hLp ic ith Ces I OBAI ry number? Fo nbe ar2t se r a a conte s toi writ to tions strictlyncnindeatial.cAiptdboeksketcn-of tamthm entfre.Als acaaloueofaseball21 th coas rein fSot tionialnftaclintteelowenandsAmefianhean tarestcicultio o an sienifi wrk~t e a fo tim plates In colorMand photraphsmofnew O.fer houes.wit plnsenalin buldes t chw fershis profesicnal services to the latet dsigs ad scur ootrats.Addess people ot Fairfield. Mt.~N . CO. Kz Yon, 61 Be~aDw~. Postoffice adtdress Jenkinsville. S. C. 9.4-1y RIDJGEWAY HIGiH SCHOOL, - _ _ RIDGEWAY, S. C. 3iot10e* . T E ARE AG~AIN PREPARED '1O . .s-rItosI-:, <rniver.ity of V irginia) ynegotiate long tin'e loans on faim - s'rincipal- mortgages Ad Iress 0:Tf.rs cours--s in Latin, Greek, Mathe J. E. McON(AD, o atrea. GermlIan. Elocultionl, and tne Comn-jW -DUL~,o op $chiool branches. J- Q. DA iS, Thotrouigh oeg pre-piation. Terms I 6-6tf W innsooro, S. C, odelraIte. Next asio hegins Septem., A. tEl . D .8 . P5 3m .22-1muMnielon.C