University of South Carolina Libraries
f* off ON is ana wilf continue to be the money crop of the South. The N planter who gets the most cotton from a given area at the least cost, is the one who makes the most money. Good culti, vation, suitable rotation, and 1 liberal use of fertilizers con taining at least 3% actual Potash .a?!11 M.aMA 4 U 1 A**/VAnf 1 M fil /4 win insure me luijjtai. j iv-tv*. We will send Free, upon npplicatior, pamphlets thaw will interest every cotton planter in the South. OERflAN KALI WORKS. ' 03 Numu St., New York. BEWARE OF "CHEAP CLOD INUS." Three Nests ot Disease Discovered in Second Hand Clothing Stores in New York. New York, April 10.?The board J of keaith inspectors have found two second-hand clothing facto ries that they claim are hotbeds! of disease. {Sanitary Superintend- j ent Roberts has issued orders to ? > ? * t li 0011 ril-i one '1 u ro uf ' tiunii II 1/ ? IH. ^ |7? ??v^n. ? ?i?J " "V No. 01 Kldridge street ;*11<i 901 j Hester street. At the tenement house in Kid j ridge street there was found in . the apartments of liatsehold Katz large piles ?>t east-oil'clothing. Some of it w >s wet, and all was filthy and foul smelling. "Many articles," the report, to the board of health says, "presented the same appearance as clothing taken from dead persons at the morgue, after they have been res cued from the river." Conditions were found just as bad in David Cohen's place, llis daughter said that the clothing was procured from peddlers at the second-hand clothing exchanges in Elizabeth and Bayard streets. Her father mane no inquiries as I to whether the clothing handled had been worn by u rsons suffering from contagious ..r infectious * diseases. She further stated that after her father had remade clothing he disposed of it to merchants in the West and South, where it was sold in stores. She stated that her father's protits were from $000 to $1,200 a year, and reckoning on 10 per cent would make the total sales from $0,000 to 12,000 per year. Miss Cohen admitted having had a severe attack of typhoid fever two years ago. She rrhI Cohen had followed the business for eighteen years. At No. 100 Hester street, kept by Isaac Cohen, conditions similar were discovered. The large front room of the second floor, which is used every dav of the ! week except Saturday as a shop,! is occupied on Saturday and other .Jewish holidays as a synagogue, i President Murphy directed the, closing of the synagogue and also ' the disinfection of the clothing. ('aught it in His Hand. It has developed that the shoot j ing of Iiamp Mobley by Guard T. \V. Davinnev. in the stockade, | last Thursday evening was not at 1 all serious. It seems that Mobley "caught the bullet in his hand." The shooting was about as de ^ scribed last Saturday. It seems ft.af 1... .. .o .tw.t .....i _ tin* i ?* i i v ? nv; v? u ?- t i \j t it iiu wyl'I powdered, Mobloy refused to talk or giv? auy satisfaction as to the nature of his wound : but later lie , showed the l>ullot to other convicts and stated that he had caught it in his hand. On the road to Yorkville, with Deputy Serif!" Ilarshaw, however, the true facts came out. It seems that the bullet, which was of 32calibre, struck a brass button and lodged in Mobley's clothing. Mobley found it when he put up his hand to discover where he had beeu hit. lie was not hurt either in the stomach or in the hand, 0 % and the inference ia that either F Guard Daviuney's pistol was a A very poor one, or the quality of tl the powder in the cartridge had d deteriorated. a Mobley will remain in jail un- r til Jhe next term of the court of " general sessions, when he will be c called upon a second time to au- w swer to the charge of assault and L battery with intent to kill. The < term he has just served grew out w of his assault on Mr. and Mrs. White, at Leslie station, sometime ago, and the new charge is based on the same offense.?Yorkville Enquirer, April 12. Anglo-American Force Ambushed on the Plantation ot a Uer- ( man Near Apia by Mataatans. tl Auckland, N. /., April 12.? Dispatches received from Aoia, sl Samoa, April 1. say that, a party n of 105 Americansand British sail- ii ors were forced to retreat to the si heach, after having been caught a in an ambush on a German plant- i' ation that day. The expedition a was led bv Lieutenant. A. H. Freeman of the I?ritish third-class j cruiser Tauranga. Lieutenant ^ Freeman and Lieutenant P. L Landsdnle and Fnsign .1. K Man " aglian, both of the United States ,l cruiser Philadelphia, were left 8I dead on t he tield. ' Fnsign Monaghan remained to b assist Lieutenant Landsdale, and w was shot in retiring. ti Two British and two American v sailors were also kil ed. The natives engaged were some of Mataafa's warriors, estimated . i ti at 800. They severed the heads of the British and American ollicers killed. Priests of the French mis- f( sion afterward brought the heads into Apia. h I lie manager or tne lierman plantation has been arrested and detained on hoard the Tauranga, on aftidavitR declaring thathe was seen urging the rebels to fight. . In a previous engagement 27 of Mataafa's warriors were killed; n there were no casualties among European forces. * o ANOTHER PROCLAMATION. C Further advices from Apia say that on the arrival of the British cruiser Tauranga at Apia the British and American consuls issued a proclamation to give Ma- 0 taafa a last chance and that the n NEVER TO TOB s. s. s. is a ureal blessing io Old People. It Gives Them ;i!: but New Blood and Life. from which the remedy which will keep their syst ? thoroughly removing ing new strength and the appetite. Duilds giving Dlood througho Mrs. Sarah Pike, " I am seventy years for twenty years. J addition, hail Eczem; " doctor said that on i | well again. 1 took a <1 completely, and I am * 1 feel as well as 1 eve Mr. J. W. Loving, of Colquitt, Gu.t n; sen yeure I Buffered tortures from a I my Bltin. I tried almost every known failed 0110 by oao, und I was told that sixty nix. was against me, and tlmt T to be well again. I finally took 8. 8. H. my blood thoroughly, and now I am ii 8. 8. 8. FOR THE i# the only remedy which can build t old people, because it is the only one wh free from Dotaah, mercury, arsenic and minerals.# It is made from roots and ! In it. S. 8 8. cures the worst cases of 8 Tetter, Open Sores. Chronic Ulcers, Bolls Books on these diseases will be sent fre 'rench priests also used their inuence, btu all efforts failed and be rebels continued their depre ations. Property was destroyed nd bridges and roads were baricaded. On March 29 the enemy ras sighted at Maguigi and mahine guns and a seven-pounder rere used. The friendlies also atacked the enemy during the latsr's retreat anil several rebels rere killed or wounded. Nil AFTER ENJOYED IT. Ic Ate the Whiskered Beef and Found it "Not Disagreeable." Washington, April 11.?Major leu. Shatter, who conducted the ampaigti against Santiago, was lie principal witness before the eef inquiry board today. His tatement differed but little from is testimony before the war ivestigating commission. He aid he ato canned roast beef cold nd found it not disagreeable, lie refrigerator beef was as fine s any he ever ate. The men ho suffered for the lack of food ad only themselves to blame. I there had been mistakes, con ress, which provides the rations nd clothing of soldiers, was reponsible. He admitted that he ad never heard of canned roast eel' before the war While it as not very palatable in the ropics, he thought it would be cry good in the cold climate. ?oine of the Pennsylvania volnteers gave direct testimony as s the tainted character of the rerigerated beef and the canned oast beet. One of them testified hat beef aboard the Mississippi ad magots in it. A Month's Liquor Supply. The State board of control, on jst Friday, made purchases of a lonth's supply of liquor for the ispensary. The purchases inluded 955 barrels and 420 cases f whiskey, 100 cases of wine, 4 ar lnjldq nf 1fl naaaa nf malt r>nic, 5 barrels of ale and 5 barels of porter. Of the 955 barels of whisky, 550 barrels are orn, 275 rye and the balance liscellaneous. 0 OLD E CURED. Age does not necessarily mean feebleness and ill health, and nearly all of tho sickness anions *r people can be avoided Most elderly pie are very susceptible to illness, it is wholly unnecessary. I5v keepx?d pure they can fortify themselves >capo three fourths of the ailments they suffer so generally. X S S. is ems young, by purifying the blood, all waste accumulations, and impartlife to the whole IkkIv It increases up the energies, and s< nds new lite ui ine enure system 477 liroudway, South Jlostt 11. writes: old. ?><< had not enjoyed good health [ was sick in different vmijs, and in i terribly on one of my I< g* The jccount of my age, I would never he u/.en Ixitlles of S. S. S. and it cured tnu happy to say that liery emotion on remedy, but they my age, which is jfcjfcr itS F could never hope <?) , and it cleansed dM* /ytg BLOOD Jmt ip and strengthen r ifoh is guaranteed L other damaging herbs, and has do chemioals whatever kirofula, Cancer, Ecxema, Rheumatism, i, or any other disease of the blood, e by Swift Specific Co., Atlanta. Oa. " V >' *.. AN OPEN To MO' WE ARE ASSERTING IN Til THE EXCLUSIVE USE OF TM PITCHER'S CASTORIA," AS /, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, was the originator of " C/ has borne and does now beer the fac-simile signature of This is the original "CAST0 the homes of the Mothers cf A LOOK CAREFULLY at th the hind you have always bough and has the signature o, per. No one has authority fr The Centaur Company, of which March 24,189S.^ /? Do Not Be Do not endanger the life a cheap substitute which sc (because he makes a few r gredients of which even h "The Kind You Ea BEARS THE S 64^ Insist on The Kind That hi THt CINTAUN COMPANY. TT MO SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Central Time Hot ween Colnmhln and .Tackaonvllle. Ijvttprn I lino Itetweuu CoIilinlilA Mini Other Point*. Effective January 16, 1890. " TJ ~ ! >u. isn.TT 30 No. a J Northbound. .. ? .. i. Dully. Duily. fc,XBUn Lt. J'vllle, F.C.&P.Ity.. HllOa 8 00p 12 10p " Havnnnah 12 01 p 12 (Ktp 8 67 p Ar. Columbia . 4 < & p 4 45 a 7 80 p Lv. Char'ton.SCAOKlt. 7 0U a 5 3l)p Ar. Columbia.. 11 00n 10 10p Lv. AufruMta, So. ity.... 2 lOp 9 3Up 6 40p " Draniteville 2 89p 10 lftp 6 08p " Aiken 2 20 p 10 10 p 6 65p * Treuton 8u8p llOOp 6 84 p " Johnston*. UlUp 11 20 p 0 46 p Ar- ColumbinUn. dep't. 4 51 p 2 10 a 8 20 p Lv Col'bia Hlaud'g at... 6 15p 6 55 a 8 40 p " Wlnnaboro 6 07 j> 700a OHOp " Cheater 6 54 p 7 45a 10 17 p " Bock Hill 7 2?lp 8 17a 10 45p Ar. Charlotte I 8 15 p U15a 11 04 p " Danville. 1161p 1 22 p 8 10p Ar. Richmond 6 40 a 6 25 p Ar. WatihiiiRton 6 42 a 9 06 p 945a " Baltimore Pa. R. K.. 8 00a 1126p 11 05a " Philadelphia........ 10 15 a 2 56 u i 08p " New York 12 43p 628a 363p NTr% 11 v?- ?ar _ oar Southbound. K^Hn| ?>iry; lly. Lv. Now York. Pa. It.R. 12 U)i? 4 80p 1215nt " Philadelphia 2 28 p 8 55 p SMlt " Hnltiinorc 4 27 p 9 16p 0 22 a Lv. Wnah'ton, So. Ry.. 5 5<i j> lo 42 p 11 15 a Lv. Richmond 12 lout 12 01m Lv. Danville 12 10 a 5 60 a 0 02p " Charlotte 8 44 a 0 85 a 10 20 p " Rook Hill 4 2f> a 10 20 a 11 14 p " Chester 4 54 a 10 58 a ll48p " WinmtUiro 5 84 a 11 41 a 12 82 a Ar Col'bia Kland'g at ... 8 80 a 12 45nn 1 87 a Lv. Columbia Uu. ilep't. 0 50a 1 15p 4 00 a " Johnstons 8 27 a 2 53p OOOu " Trenton. 8 40 a 8 08p 0 25 a Ar. Aiken 0 20a 8 45p 7 80 a " Hrnnitevllle 9 02 a 8 88 p 7 07 a " Augusta 9 40 a 4 15 p 8 00 a Iiv. Col'bia, S.C.&O.Ry. .... 8 56 p 0 45 a Ar. Charleston 8 17 p 11 00 a Lv. Onl'hia, F.C.&P.Ry. 6 40 a 11 65 a 12 47 a " Savannah 9 25 a 4 47 p 6 08 a Ar. Jacksonville 100p 9 25p 9 00 a SLEKl'lSO CAll SKIlVM K Noa 81 and 32-NEW YORK AN1) FLOKIDA LIMITED. Solid Vestihnled Tiuin of I Pullman Drawing-Kooin Sleeping Cars. Ol>I aervation anil ('oinpartinenl I ai .--, and Dining [ Curs running through witliout change laitweea Bt. AuRUMtine Fin f and New York, via Jacksonville, Savannah, Columbia. Charlotte und Washington Pullman Drawing-Hi sun Sleepj ing Cars liotwevn Aiken anil Now York, conBactingwith this train at Columbia, for the accommodation of Augusta and Aiken travel. Excellent daily passenger service between > Florida and New York. Nom. 27 anil 2t>?Washington ami Southwestern Limited. Drawing-Room Buffet Bleeping Cat s between Augusts and New York. Solid Vete tibuled train with dining nils and tirat class Coaches north of ('harlotlo. i llinium draw ing room sleeping carslietweeu Tampa. Jacksonville, .Savannah, Washington and New York. Pullman SVeping Cnrs Istweon Cliarlotto an.) Iti.-l.i.io.wl Pullman driiwinij-room atoojiin!? mm bo: twii tirwnsl-irii anil Norftnk. Close connecHon lit Norfolk for OLD POINT COMFOBT, I arriving there in time for breakfast. No*. :ir> and tWV? U. 8. Fn?t Wail. Through Pullniun drawing room huftot sleeping t urn lx?tween .laokHonville and New York and Pull| man sleeping cara between Auguata and Chan ' lotto. Ihntng oars servo all tneala enronte. I Puliinnn sleeping cars l-etweeu Jacksonville and Columbia, on rout a dally between Jacksonville and Cincinnati, via AaheviUe. KKANK H. OANNON. J.m.CULP, Third V-I*. & Gen. Mgr. T. M.. Washington. W. A. TUHh 8. H. HARD WICK, " ' Washington. O. P. A., Atlanta. ?0F Have YOU'paid your subscription account to tho Enprihk ? 4 11'*Ui y 7 Z' ' '-WWiliidtflBk::' I iMM : . ^, a. ,..*' v . \ j < ? LETTER THERS. 12 COL"-ITS OUR EIGHT TO j IE WORI) "CASTORIA," AND OUR TRADEMARK. , of Hyannis, Massachusetts, ^STORIA," the same that , F&F wrapper. RIA" which has been used in mcrica for over thirty years. ie wrapper and see that it is f wrap, mi me to use my name except > Chas. U. Fletcher is President ^ . JD ? ! Deceived. of your child by accepting >mc druggist may offer you nore pennies on it), the inc does not know. ve Always Bought" ilGNATURE OF l Having p.vnr Failed Ynn. South Carolina A. Georgia ltll Co. TIM K TAItLK NO. 15. In ElTcol 12.01, u. in., Sunday. Oct. 2nd, 1898. West-First Class Dally. Rust-First Class Daiy Lve. a.m.. 7 10 Charleston, x.oo arrives p, m " a.m., <1.211 Augusta. 10.45 * ' a.m., ft.20Columbia. 5.20 S' " ' a. in., 10. 10 Klngsville, 4.28 " " West. | North Carolina Division | Kant. 81 I 75 | 77 79 74 I 82 STATIONS ?-V 2d Cj 2CjlslC IstO 2d C 2d C A MiA MA M Lv! Ar I'MPM Fm | 8 20 1140 CAMDEN 3 00 4 30 . I 8 50 12 00 DeKalb 2 40 4 00 | 0 Oft112 12 Westvllle. 2 28 3 40 110 10 12 40 Kershaw 2 15 3 15 I0 3U 12 55 lleath Spring* 1 45 2 10 10 40 1 00 Pleasant Hill 1 40 2 00 [II 50 J 20 Lancaster 1 20 J! at / - ? ' i tw mvt'ntiut' i tra is in I 50 I 60 Catawba Junc'n. 12 30 II 20 3 10 2 1* Kock Hill 12 23 0 30 3 60 2 33 Ttrzah 12 06 8 13 I 4 40 'i 48 Yorkvllle 11 32 7 60 1 3 10 3 03 Sharon 11 37 7 13 3 30 3 18 Hickory Grove 11 22 6 30 3 13 3 3d Smyrna 11 10 6 30 7 40 6 20 3 53 HlnckMiurt? 10 43 6 00 7 25 8 00; 4 10 Earls 10 30 7 00 8 10 4 13 Patterson Sp'gs (0 23 6 45 9 00 , 4 25 Shelby 10 15 I 6 30 9 33 1 4 45 Latllmore 9 35 5 10 9 J8i | 4 52 Moorsboru 9 48 j ( 52 0 101 I 5 02 Henrietta 9 38 1 4 25 033 1 5 19 Forest City. 9 21 4 00 10''1 1 5 34 Rutherfordton 9 06 3 30 11145, 1 5 30 Thermal City 8 41 1 2 30 1121(1 6 14 Glenwood 8 24 2 25 112331 16 301 Marlon 8 10 1 2 00 V M ! P M I I'M 1 I A M 1 AM 1 r.M West. | UafTney Branch. | East. ^~86 I 83 t.~. 84 86 Mixed J Mixed Mixed Mixed P M I A M InV. Ar. AM P M 4 10 ' 5 30 H'.ucksbgri; 7 80 6 30 4 83 5 60 Che'kee F. 7 03 0 05 3 (HI | 6 20 ' GalTney li 40 3 40 Train No. 77. itnfntr ?est makes duyllchl connection at Lancaster with the I*. & C. It. R, ui hock 11111 wnn mo sonmorn ic.it .. going north, ut ltlackshurg with the Southern Train, No 7H, going Ksihi makes connection at Marlon. N. C. with the Southern K. It,, ut ltlackshurg * Jc with Southern and at Lancaster with the L. ? ? C. K. K. Train No. HI. goto? Kant makes con- T neetlon ut Shelby, N. O., with the S. A. L , RK., going ea.it. All local freight trains will carry passengers if provided with tickets. S. II. LUMPKIN. ?, Division Passenger Agent. L. A. KMKUSON. Truffle Manager. AFRICAN ; Limbless Cotton Seed. I will offer for sale a limited amount of these seed nl the extremely low price of $10.00 per Bushel, $3.00 44 Peck, or 60 cts 44 Pound. i raised on my larm 3085 pounds or lint from one bushel of seed, purchased by rue last year, at a cost of / I luo.no. ompetent experts have pronounced the African Limbless Cotton the best ever grown in the South. The lint is so much better than the ordinary cotton that it will bring a much better price. The stalk grows from 8 to 12 feet high. Address, T. K. CUNNINGHAM, Lancaster, 8 C. Jan. 18 1890. r * -djEwl