Lancaster enterprise. [volume] (Lancaster, S.C.) 1891-1905, July 14, 1897, Page 7, Image 7
Scott's
Emulsion
of Cod-liver Oil with Hyoophosphites,
can be taken as easily in
summer as in winter. Unlike the
^ plain oil it is palatable, and the
hypophosphites that are in it aid in
digestion and at the same time tone
up the system.
For sickly, delicate children, and
for those whose lungs arc affected,
it is a mistake to leave it off in the
sun^ner months. The dose may be
reduced if necessary.
We recommend the small size
especially for summer use, and for
children, where a smaller dose is required.
It should be kept in a cool
place after it is once opened.
Pot *aIq by all <lruK<ist? at an J Js.oo
THE STATE CAMPAIGN.
A Long And Tiresome Itinerary
Decided I pott, to ltcgiu at Sumter.
The sub-committee of the State
Democratic Executive Committee,
appointed to arrange a schedule
for the Senatorial primary,
have decided upon the following
'Si order:
Edgefield, Thursday, .1 ulv 15th.
Saluda, Friday. July ldth.
Lexington, Saturday. July 17th.
Winnsboro, Monday, July 18tli.
Coumbia, Tuesday, July 20th.
Orangeburg, Wednesday, July
21st.
Dorchester, Thursday, July
22nd.
Bamberg, Friday, July 23rd
Union, Monday, July 20th.
Spartanburg, Tuesday, July
27th.
Cherokee, Thursday, July 20th.
Greenville, Friday, July 30th.
l'iekens, Saturday, July 31st.
Oconee, Monday, August 2nd.
Anderson, Wednesday, August
4th.
Greenwood, Thursday, August
5th.
Abbeville, Friday, August 7th.
Laurens, Saturday, August 8th.
( Newberry, Monday, August 9th.
Chester, Wednesday. Aumist
11th.
York, Thursday, August 12th.
Lancaster, Friday, August l.'HIi.
Kershaw, Saturday, August
14th.
Chesterfield. Monday, August
1?th.
Morlhoro, Wednesday, August
18th.
Darlington, Thursday, August
]!>th.
Marion, Sat unlay, August 2 1st.
Horry. Monday, August 23rd.
< ioorgot'ov . Wedut lay. A u
gust 2"?th.
Williamshurg. Thurrdav. An
gust 2??th.
Manning. Irs !.... Au.- ' :'7lh.
Florence. Situj'dav August
28th.
OABTOI1IA.
Well Equipped.
Corn pt toller (lenernl Norton
has publicly announced bis can
didacy for Congress from t li?*
?Sixtli District, and lie stands an J
^ excellent chance of success. Mr. J
Norton is amply equipped for the!
DOSt of honor at stake, and would
represent flu- I'eo Deo section
perhaps better than any other
man vet named.? Ue"ister.
1
lMiiritto Your lliiwrl* Willi fiinriirot*.
Cnnily f'nthiirtlc, cure rnnMtipatlnn f??r*\er.
10c, it c. c. V. full, (IruitKlsts refund money.
DEVELOPMENT OF THE
SOUTH.
Resources of That Section Are
lleing More Thoroughly Placed
Ketore The People ot The
Whole Country.
W. W. Finley, of Washington,
I). C., Second Vice President of
the Southern Railway Company,
recently made the following statement
to a correspondent of the
New York Times with regard to
the industrial development of the
South :
,lWe are, in the South, in an J
era of practical and successful
development of our great natural
advantages. There is a unanimity
among the people upon the sub
ject of development, and a gen
eral disposition to foster industrial
growth. The plans and methods
of placing the resources of
the Southern country before the
outside world are systematically
arranged,and are bound to be ben
elicial to that section.
' Cotton manufacturers have
largely increased, and have proved
to be more profitable than in
any other section. Many now
mills have been erected, and
many more greatly enlarged, as
well s's provided with the most
modern machinery and appliances.
It should not be surprising
to see within a short time the
cotton produced in ihe ('arolinas
and Northern (leorgia taken en
tirelv by local mills.
*i\ splendid beginning has also
been made in wood-working, and
there are many of these establishments
in onr territory in successful
operation. The abundance of
valuable timber, suitable for every
branch of building materials, as
well as the manufacture of wagon,
carriages, railway cars, furniture
and, indeed, about everything of
which wood is a raw material, not
only makes wood-working in all
of its branches profitable as well.
At no distant day the South will
occupy the first rank in this im- i
portant industry.
"Iron manufacturing in the
South is forging ahead at a ranid
A
rate. All the conditions are favorable
for success in this line of
industry. It has been demon- <
strated that iron can be manufac- :
lured more cheaply and of equal (
lv good quality in the South than i
in any other section. The South
I is already engaged in the export
! ing of iron, and the prospects are
| most encouraging for a largely in
i creased foreign business from that '
I section. It is not to be wondered
at that this should be so. for
jail the natural advantages are on
the side of the South, the only
remarkable thing al>r?ut it being
that this foreign business was'
not developed sooner.
I uThe cultivation of tobacco and
1 its manufacture into the various
'forms in wliich the world 15k? ? to
use it is making commendable
advancement. lietter grades are
being cultivated, enlarged areas
are being planted, and the condition
of this industry are exceed
inglv promising.
' The raising of that fruit is nl
so commanding a good deal of at
tention. That the South is well .
adapted to fruit raisinir has been
proven by actual experience, and
all who have engaged in this
branch of industry have been sue
cessful. The South has no fears t
of competition in this respect.
The South is convenient to the
best markets, and can produce in
abundance the best fruits.
uThe railroads can justly lay
great claim in the progress of the
Southern deveopment. They have
opened up rich and new territo
ry to settlement and added largely
to the facilities for growth and
development. They recognize the
fact that the prosperity of the
territory through which their lines
run means their success, and
so even from a purely selfish mo
tive, if for no other, they desire
to foster and encourage all legitimate
enterprises.
"The particular railway with
which I am connected is no exception
to this rule, as it is main
tabling an effective ?1 ; artinent.
whose work is directed to the de
velopmcnt of the agricultural and
industrial interests of the section
ot the country tributary, to its
lines. It is also expending large
sums of money for betterments of
its properties and in increasing
the facilities necessary to give the
public superior, advantages for
transporting the products of the
mill and the farm/'
HOW TO FIND OUT.
Fill a bottle or common water
glass with urine and let it Rtand
twenty-four hours; a sedimeutor
settling indicates a diseased condition
of the kidneys. When
urine stains linen it is positive
evidence of kidney trouble. Too
frequent desire to urinate or pain
in the back, is also convincing
proof that the kidneys and bladder
are out of order.
WHAT TO 1)0.
There is comfort in the knowledge
so often expressed, that I)r.
Kilmer's Swamp-Koot, the kidney
remedy fulfills every wish in relieving
pain in the back, kidneys,
l,'nA. Il-O ? -
iiici, uiauuer una every part oi
the urinary passages. It corrects
inability to hold urine and scalding
pain in passing it, or bad
effects following use of liquor,
wine or beer, and overcomes that
unpleasant necessity of being
compelled to get up many times
during the night to urinate. The
mild and the extraordinary effect
of Swamp-Root is soon realized.
It utandn the highest for its wonderful
cures of the most distress-.
ing cases. If you need a medicine
vou should have the best. Sold '
by druggists price fifty cents and ;
one dollar. For a sample bottle
and pamphlet, both cent free by'
mail, mention the Kntkrprisk and '
send your full post-ollice address j
to Dr. Kilmer & Co.,'P>inghaniton,
N. Y. The proprietors of this
paper guarantee th? genuineness'
nf this ofl'er.
MA to Stcttl*"
Tluit must havo V-. n embarrassing
information to tin- T'nin d States senate
which Statistician (Carroll 1) Wright furnished
dial body la i week concerning,
the latior cost of hintlx r in this country
and in Canada. 1 lis figures showed that, |
while the average wages in Canadian
sawmills is $1 1! and 1*1.71 per day |
here, tho average labor cost of 1,0001
lei t of lumber is in Camula and
only '.'1 emits here. The <! 'creased cost
of production in this country is attrih I
utcd to the superior machinery used.
Of course the figures prove the free
trade contention that the rate of wages
paid does not indicate the cost of pro- :
duction?that low wagi s are very often '
more expensive to employers, and vice
versa, liut these hard facts furnished
iij .in iiiiii-i i hi un nuvi'i'iiinciu will not
dissuade tli?* liiinbiT barons from their I
purixisn to ^i t a taritY on Canadian luin- .
ber so that they call the morn idTectually J
rob American consnmi rs. Protectionists '
care nothing for facts. What they want |
is a license to steal.?National Hiiitflo
Tuxer.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
Tin tie- ^ 1
| NOW FOR NEW FINANCIAL
LAWS.
McKinley Will Push the Currency
Question to the Front. Message
to Congress.
Washington, .Inly 7.?Alter a
discussion lasting over an hour,
the Cabinet to-day decided that
the President should send to Congress
a message recommending
legislation providing for a commission
to adjust the currency
questions ol the country. It was
resolved that this message should
he sent to Congress tomorrow,
providing that the TarilV bill is
by that time passed by the Senate.
It is the expectation of the
i President that the subject will
i receive the attention of Congress
[during the present extra session.
The message was framed by the
! President himself, and, like his
other special messages to Con
I cress, si !ll?K (hi? nnii?ctiit if 'f- f
I ^ . ?..v- ..VVVCCJII J \H lilt"
I occasion tersely. It was prepared
by him alter a consultation
with one or two advisers,and submitted
to the Cabinet as a whole
only to-day, when it was read in
complete form. It recites the
fact that the Tariff bill has now
passed both the House and Senate,
and hopes that it will soon
be concurred in. by both houses.
With that acted upon, a subject
of equal 'mportance. he says, demands
i .mediateattention?that
of lefortn in our currency. The
message quotes from the I'resi
dent's inaugural address in which
he said :
' Our financial system needs
some revision; our money is all
good now, but its value must not
be further threatened. It should
^ all be put on an enduring basis,
i not subject to easy attack nor its
stability to doubt or dispute.
Therefore I believe it necessary
to devise a system, which without
diminishing the circulating medium,
or offering a premium for its
contraction, will put a remedy for
these arrangements, which, temporary
in their nature,might well
in the years of our prosperity
have been displaced oy wiser provisions
With adequate revenue
secured, but not until then, can
we enter upon such changes iiii
our tisc.il laws as will, whil*? Iti I
suriu? safety ami volume to onrj
money, no lonyer impose upon i
the (Jovernment tin* necessity ?>i
maintaining so lar?j;e a gold re
serve with it- attendant and in
evitahle temptations to specu
late."
It aNo cites the work and re
eomniendat ions of t he I ndianapoli>
('urrenev Convention, and savs
- I
it' the power is vested in the I'res
ident. it i> his purpose to appoint
a commission, non partisan, con
listing of nine prominent, well-in
formed citizens, who will com
mand public contidece.
I
The message closes with the
hope that Congress will enact
legislation at this session to an
thorize this commission to he
made up of representatives of
both parties so that the President
may be prepared to report to i
Congress when it re assembles in
the first term of the next regular
session.
The President, while believing
that Congress will respond to his
message,is not overconfident, and
there was some difference of opinion
expressed by the Cabinet as
to tiie fate the reeommendation j
would meet at this session.
Few Appreciate the
DANGER gt,
to which the Ex- ^
pectant Mother is _
exposed and the
foreboding withf*
which she looksV;I.
forward to the
hour of woman's Jr* ,11$.ir
severest trial. All
effort should be f
made to smooth / J 4F5jdS^'..t
these r u - ?ed J I nfl
| places in life's/ H f
I pathway for her. '
"Mother's Friend"
j allays Nervousness, and so assists
Nature that the change goes forward
in an easy manner, without
such violent protest in the way of
Nausea, Headache, Etc. Gloomy
forebodings, yield, to cheerful and
hopeful anticipations-?she passes
through the ordeal quickly and
without pain?is left strong and
vigorous and enabled to joyously
perform the high and holy duties
now devolved upon her. Safety
to life of both is assured by the
use of "Mother's Friend," and
the time of recovery shortened.
"1 know one lady, the mother of three children,
who Buffered ftreatly in the birth of each, who
obtained a bottle o'f 4 Mothor'n Friend' of ine
before her fourth confinement, and was relieved
quickly. All nttroo that their labor was shorter
and less painful." Jons G. Poluili., Macon,Ga.
Rent by Mail, on receipt of price. $l/>0 PER
BOTTLE. Book "TO EXPECTANT MOTHERS"
mailed free, containing valuable iuformation
and voluntary testimonials.
Thc BRADFIELD regulator co..Atlanta,Ga
bold bv all druggistb.
ir% '4
IL-/UI 1 L
I >A Y $50, $75 OR $100 FOR A
1 bicycle anil then pay $100,
$75 or $50 more for repairs to
Yourself 4>
and
Wheel, 4 4
Get a VIK ING and avoid
Second Costs.
Seven hundred VIKINGS sold
last year by one agent and repairs
on same during the season
only $.'{.75.
VIKING Bicycles are
Safe, Strong
anil
Handsome.
VI KING Riders are
Satisfied.
VIKING Agencies are
Profitable.
Complete line?V I KINGS, $75
and $ 1 no. Hero, a
V1KIKG QUAU1TY WHEEW
at $5o. Send for catalogue.
<?nou wanit'd for Lancaster
ami vicinity.
I \I0\ Mill. CO.,
TOLEDO. 0.
>1 lllllTN.
Anvnno semllne n sketch an.I .] ? rlptl n may
tjiiickly iiarrrtaln. free, whether an invention i*
( riil.jtlily (intent utile. f'oininiii.i. all. htrv lly
rnnflitcntlill. Ohlcat m.'1'IK'y t"i -. riirn.y |..ilciil*
In Aiticncn. We hare a \Vn*hlni[tiin nlllce.
Patent* taken through Mai.u >V<'. reeelv.
rix'clnl notice in tins
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN,
boMUtifiilly lnrv-f ?lr^*nl,itIon ?f
ATIv Hfiontltlr Journal. w?M?ltly, tonn* $-?.o u \ **nr ;
fl..m six ui 'iiths. >p(,riuiAH copl?*M ami IlAND
Book on Patkstm sent frot*. AddrcMi
MUNN A CO.,
3t>1 llrontlw uv. New York.
Registration Books Open.
iv i v< p *? i'*'i?
I i - .I . % * i, i i m i ii r,
1 Art of 1*98 providing for the registration
of ple<t ors, t ho hooks of the
Sopervisors of Kegistration will hp
opon nt t hp ('oiirt 11 nose on I ho lirst
Monday in each inonth for the regist
rat ion of electors entitled to regis! ration
and kept op??n 1 or three successive
days in each month until tin* ^onoral
election of 1898.
\V. (?. A. I'oKrxR, ) I'.oard of
I?. M. K IIIK,
R. J. Ki.ynn, S Registration.
I Nov. is. 1898, tf.
V