The Laurens advertiser. (Laurens, S.C.) 1885-1973, August 05, 1908, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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fcHAPTE? TW?LVL i v ' t w?K for rofugo that (ho ?/iffl/' princess Heil in h?r own /// S room, ,/ //i\ A bouiloir shared by ' / // / ? Iho graml duchess nd *-Joined Ii, and, entering llidl'o, to her dismay Ilm girl saw her mother lying on n sofa, at tended by . l a-nest me, tho French maid. Virginia's heart sank. She had sup posed iht> grand duchess to ho In the while drawing room with tho baroness und (he other guests of (ho house. \ Now Micro was no hopu that sho mlghl he loft ahum and llll(|Ues(toued, And Iho Kirl had longed to bo alone. "At last!-' exclaimed a faint voice, from Iho sofa. "I though I you would novcr come." Tho princess stared, half dazed, nn? ablo to (car her lullld from her private ! griefs. "Are you in, mother'/" sin? stammered. "Had you sent for mo?" "I camo very near fainting In tho drawing room," tho grand duchess an swered, "l'.rnesllne, you may leave us now." The Frenchwoman went out noise lessly. still Virginia did not speak. Could It l>e dial there ha,i been another spy j besides Fgou von Ul'eltstolu an.I thai her mother already knew how the cits tie of cards had fallen? Was It Iho | news of ?lefc.it which had prostrated ; her? "Have you did any one loll you?" tho girl faltored. "I've hail ii telegram a horrible tele gram. Oh, Virginia, l am not young, as you are! I am loo Old to endure all this. 1 think you should liol have sub joctod mo to p." The grand duchess' voice was plain tive ami pried among the girl's sick nerves like hoi wire. "What do you mean, dear? 1 do not understand,silo said dully. "I'm SO sorry you are ill. If It's my fault In any way I"? Her mother pointed toward a writing table. "The telegram Is there," sins murmured, "it is too distressing- t<?p humiliating." g v? ,-._? ? ? ? "*le- j ??nrginnfiucked up a crto* .. \ graph form and began (o read the Hies BAgC, which was dated London ami written In Kuglish: Some ono making Inipihio? horo about tli.- MovvhrtiyH. ii. t; to nilvluo you lo ex plain nil at at nnco <t lenvo Kronbury t.> nvoUl almost ccrluln conipllcnltonn. HAM IST'.KT. I.a.iy Lambert was Iho wife of Iho ex-ambassador i<> (ho court of tthaella from Great Britain. Tho princess llulslied in silence. "Isn't il IddeOUS?" asked the grand dllcllCSS, "Tu think that you and J should have deliberately placed our selves in such a position! Wo are to run away, like detected adventuresses, unless -unless you are now ready b> loll the emperor nil." "NO," said Virginia hopelessly. "WhatI Not yet v Oh, my dear, then yoil must bring hinders Io a crisis ? Instantly - (Olllgllt ev en. It's ev ident that BOino Otiemy perhaps home jeal ous person, has been at work hell bid our backs, it is for von to (urn the tallies upon him, and (hero Isn't an hour to waste. From iho llrsl you iiu-ant to make some dramatic revela tion. Now the (lino liltM eolne." "All, I IllOllIII I meant !'* echoed Vir ginia, with a soli breaking (he ice in her voice. "Nothing has turned out as I mean;. Voll were right, dear: I was wrong. We ought never to have conic (o lthaetia." The grand duchess mew paler than before. She bad been VagUOly dis tressed. Now she was sharply alarm ed. ,If Virginia admitted that this great Adventure should never have been undertaken, then indeed the earth must he quaking under their feet. "Ought |)0t to have come?'* (he re pented plteonsly, "What dreadful thing has happened?" The princess stood with bent head. "It's hard to tell," PhO .hi. "harder Almost than Anything I ever had to do. Hut it must bo done. Dverylhing's at an end. dear." "What you've told him, and he has refused to forglvo?" "ilo knows nothing." "For heaven's BlikO, don't keep me ,v\ stisponse!" Virginia's lips were dry. "ITo ask ed mo tO be his wife," she said. ",0ll, wait-wail! Pon'l look hippy. Von don't understand, and I didn't at first, lie had to explain, and he put the thing as little offensively as lie could. Oh, mother, he thinks 1110 only good enough to i.e his morganatic wife!" The storm had burst at last, and the primes* foil Oll her knees by Ihe sola. Whore, burying her frioo In her moth er's lap, she sobbed AS If pAI'llllg with her v OUtll. There had always been menial ami temperamental barriers between I in Dresden china lady And her dlltlglllor, but they lOVod each Other, and never had the girl been so dear to her moth 01' as nOW, The grand duchess thought of tllO summer day when Virginia had knell beside hoi. saying. "We are go big to have mi adventure, yon ami I." Alas, tho adventure was over, and summer ami hope were dead! Tear. trembled in tlio mother's eyes. Poor Ittllo Virginia, so young, so Inexpert eiu'e*J " . di Bplto of lier s*eir will niul recklessness, so sweet and loving with nil "Hut, dear, .von me making the worst of things," the grand duchess sniil soothingly, her kind on th? gllTfl bright hair. "Why, Instead of crying you ought to he smiling, 1 think. I.eo pold must love you desperately or he would never have proposed marriage, wen morganatic marriage, .lust at Urs I the idea must hare shocked you, knowing who you are. Mut, remember, il* you were Miss Mowbray It would have boon a triumph, Many women of hi:!' position have married royalty .'gtl Hit Ideally, and every one has re speeded lliein. You seem to forget that Ihe emperor Knows you only as Helen ' .Mow I)ray." "He ought to have known that Helen ' Mowbrny was not the girl to consent no, not more easily than Virginia of Hau Ulenburg-Drlppe. He should have understood without telling that to a riii with Anglo-Saxon blood in hor veins such nn offer would he like n I Mow over the heart." "How should he understand it 7 lie is [Ihiicthtn. His point of view" "His point of view to mo is terrible. Oil, mother, It's useless to argue! Kv cry thing Is spoiled. Of course If he knew i was Princess Virginia he would bo sorry for what he had proposed, even II* Ik> thought I d brought It o*n myself. But then it would be too lute. I'mi l you understand? 1 valued his love because It was given to me, not j the princess. IT he said, 'Now 1 know you I can oiler my right hand instead i f my left to you ns my wife,' that ?a aid not be the same thing at all. No; there's nothing left tail to go home, and (he emperor of Itbnethi must be told thai Virginia of Hnumenburg 1 ?rippe has decided not to marry. That will bo our one revenge, but a pitiful one. since he'll never know that the princess who refuses his right hand it lid the Helen Mowbray who wouldn't ke Ills left are one and the sumo. Oh, mother, 1 did love him so! Let us ^ot oiu of this hateful bouse ns soon its WO can." The grand duchess knew her daugh ter and abandoned hope. "Yes, if you will not ,'orglvo him we i""' ^ ?Q ^ j oneo ami SttVu Ju?* dignity If we can," : she said. "The telegram will give us our excuse. I told the baroness I had i received bad news, and she asked per mission to knock at my door before going to bed and luqulro how I was feeling. She may come at any mo IlielVL Wo must say that the telegram recalls us Immediately to ESnglnnd." "Listen'." whispered Virginia. "I think there's sonic one lit the door now." [turonoHS von Lyudnl stood aghast on healing that she was to be deserted j early fa the morning by the bright particular star of her house party? ? after the emperor. She Itoggcd that ! Lady Mowbray would reconsider; that she would wire to Kngland Instead of I going, or, at all events, that she would wait for one day more until Leopold's ; visit to Sell (OSS Lymlalberg should be ! o\ er. In her anxiety she even faded In tnet when she found arguments useless. "Hilt Hie wnporor?" she objected. "If yon go off early la the morning before he or any 0110 comes down, what will ho think? What will he say at being cheated out of his an revoirV" The grand duchess hesitated. Hut Virginia answered (irmly: "I said good by to him tonight. The emperor?will linderst ii ml." Case After Case. Plenty More Like This in Laurens. Scores of Laurens people can tell you about Dean's Kidney Pills. Many a happy citizen makes a public statement >f his experience. Here isacase of it. What belter proof of merit can be hud than such endorsement? Mrs. Georgia Pitta. 189 Mill St., Lau rens, 8, ('., says: "'I cannot say too much in praise of Dean's Kidney Pills, I suffered a great deal from dizzy head* aches and constant pains through my back and loins. The kidneys were very irregular in action. I was weak and nervous and at times felt so run down thai I could not do my work. None of i ho many remedies I tried helped me and when f h arried of Doan's Kidney Tills I procured a supply at the Palmetto Drug Co. F took them as directed and as a result 1 am now free from any of ihe above named annoyances." I or sale by all dealers. Price 60 cents. Poster-Milbum Co., Buffalo. New York, sole agents for the United Staler lb-member the name Doan's and lake no other. Mr. Newly wed--But, my love, why are you weeping? Mrs. Nowlywed? (Hi, John, .lohn! I just peeped Into the kitchen mill saw that cooR has On her traveling gown. ? Harper's I Weekly, (Continued.) The Omen. CLIMBING AN ICE -SLOPE. Vain and Perilous Effort to Scale Mount McKinley. The long trail to the north brings out tho host In men and the worst, declares Mr. Robert Dunn In "Tho Shameless Diary of an Explorer." As n member of n party which made a vain attempt to renjch Ihe top of Mount McKinley lie tells something of the hardships of one day's travel: Furtively, imperceptibly, (lie steep ness had stolen a march on us. As one line of footholds gave out we had to slide dexterously to another. The steelier slope was swept clear and hard Stops had to be cut. Wo have only three ice axes. As 1 never gave them a thought Hub morn ing, all of them were gobbled up when WO started, and I was left with only one long willow teilt pole. It was never meant to balance you in half cut steps that may or may not hold your toe. As IIa; steps changed from a stair way to a stepladder the other threw betrayed no excitement, no uneasiness. Neither did f at llrst, but I felt both. It was not dizziness, not vertigo, but simply that as I looked down the sheer 2,000 feet from where we clung by our toes imagination rcslsllcssly told over how It would feel, how long It would last, what the climax In sen sation Would be, Were I to fall. As hour succeeded hour I lived each minute only to make iho false step. Courage Is only a matter of self con trol anyway. Climbing the highest mountain on the continent with a tent pol?! Some times I boiled in those dizzy, anxious places that I had put myself in such a position with such men. Yet I must reap my own sowing. Once I asked If it wasn't customary to ropo on such steep slopes, hut no one but Fred an swered, and he said: "V ain't goin' to ketch me tied up (o anybody. A man don't want lo lake chances with any j one hut himself, haulin' him down from these places." One requisite of explorers besides aversion to soap and water is insensi tiveness. They can't see; they can't feel. They couldn't do these stunts if they did. THE HUMAN BRAIN. It Is the Most Marvelous Machine In the World. The human brain Is tho most mar- < volous machine in (ho world. It oecu- I pies less space in proportion to its capabilities than any machine it ever invented. It sends a special nervo to every ultimate fiber of some 500 mus cles, to many thousand branching twigs of arteries, to every plnhead area of the numerous glands which keep tho machine properly oiled, heat ed or cooled, to some sixteen Square 1 feet of skin, -which Is the, , outpost I guard of its c'nstle, with such com/ 1 news that (he point of a pin cannot find an area unguarded. It possesses special quarters for (he reception and translation of a constant stream of vi brations that are (he product of all things movable or still In the outer world. On tho retina of every open eye is a picture of the outer view, a focused imprint of every ray of light and color, and in (lit* visual chamber of the mental palace stands a vlbra scope, a magic; lantern that receives (ho retinal picture In its billion speed ing series of li^ht waves and throws (hem upon Iis menial screen as a liv ing moving picture of light and shaJe and color. In the chamber of sound Is a Vibraphone, over whose active wires passes every wave of sound from the I dripping of Iho dew to tho orchestral i fortissimo, from (he raucous screech i of (ho locomotive (0 (lie sighing of the . wind through the meadow giyiss. In [ (ho chambers set apart for scent and ' taste and touch are the secret service guards to report upon tllO air and food which give sustenance to (he palneo and upon (he solid qualities of Iho lac [ tllo world. And, wonder of all won \ dors, this complex human brain can think in all languages or in no lan guage ami even conceive its own phys ical mortality.- Edward A. Ayres In Harper's Magazine. PET ANIMALS IN WILLS. Fortune to "My Red Horse"?Parrot Bequeathed to Queen Victoria. A. T. NoVbold, tho Salford brewer, who has left his greyhound, Wildfire II. , an annuity of f'2.*i, Is one of ninny testators who have remembered their pet animals in their wills. A farmer near Toulouse who died a short time ago left his entire estate to "my red horse." One John Spoonor of Chicago bequeathed ?ioo to his dog "In recognition of his sympathy find tender nursing when I was seriously III, " and the will of a Mr. fiarlnnd contained (his clause: "1 bequeath to my monkey, .laeko, (he sum of ?100 per annum nnd to my faithful dog, Shock and my well beloved cat, Tib, a pension of 15." Dr. ('Iirlst ia as of Venice left 00,000 florins for the maintenance of his threo dogs, a Mr. Harper settled ?100 on his "young black cat," and a Frenchman named Houeliat left his entire fortune to his (ortolso. A good many years ago an old lady bequeathed her pet parrot to Queen Victoria, with 100 guineas a year for Its keep, on the amusing condition Unit "her majesty publicly exhibits It before her court twice a year to prove that the person Intrusted with Its care has not wrung its neck."?West minster Gazette. In Nineteen Something Ose. The dead man found on tho fifty live slory building is believed to havo fallen from a neighboring roof. Ho was terribly crushed.-Success Maga 7.I110. BURIED HSR VOICE. Why Paulina Luooa Never Sang After Her Huaband's Death. Great Bingo nrtists die twice?the first time, when they take leave of the stage and set aside the harp; the sec ond time, when, like ordinary mortals, they go tln> way of all Mesh?and who knows hut this last act Is not more bearable, not loss dreadful, than the first, w hen, after nil the blinding glory, i the shadowy curtain of oblivion de scends? Vor Pauline LllCCH this first act was of long duration -nearly twen- ' ty years. She had time to outlive her glory and to become acquainted with the bad memory of mankind. Ilka Horwiz-Barnny tolls this story In con nection with n visit which she made to the Lucca home In Vienna: "I ask-| ed, 'Do you ever sing?' 'No! No! \ Never!' she almost shouted. '1 never I sliisc. for I lost my voice, lost It sud denly, by suggestion, through the will j Of another.' After being urged to ex- | plain she exacted a promise of secrecy 'until she was no more* mnl said: 'You know, my husband, the Baron von Wallhofen, was sick for a long time and heard little singing. When I did sing for him it had to be an old song which I disliked, but he was fond of it lK?cause of Its words. One evening we had a few friends hory. He was feeling so mew V.'.'u Wttor and , had his chair whtfled Into the draw ing room. To pleftse Ulm I sang his ; favorite song. Hdfwept with pleasure. , Then he took ifcy two hands and caressed them, s (Yoked my hair and my face and whiskered to me: "Thank you! Thank you! \ You are an angel!" And, still caressing) me, lie said, "So I , shall take your voice with me to tho grave!" I laughei] and snld, "You Will outlive my voice and me." But he repeated, "I slniii take your voice with mo to the gravel" Two days later the baron dledl and I was never able after his death [to sing a note.' "? Vienna Neuo Freie lj'resso. HER FACE WAfe NOT FAIR. But There Was On<L to Whom 8he Would Alwaya tie Beautiful. The blind buy ralse^l a rapt face to the, light. "And my mother?"' *c said question Ingly. "Toll me how Ahe looks again. I shall soon be able to Isee, and I know I shall find ono more beautiful than nil (be rest and cry: 'Mother^ mother! Why do you not speak?' " Ills sensltivo face wlas turned re proachfully toward hlsl father. "You have always, told me ho\lv lovely she is. She Is little?not taller t|hnn my shoul der?I know that." The old man laid bis<\ arm over the lad's shoulders. \ "You must know no|\v what your blindness would have kq*pt you from knowing," he sold. "Yojur mother Is not raU-_r^i iieAP4\lf*<.L>n^' v In face, but i.or soul Is what God innuk for a moth er. When you can see, Bpk for the face which holds tho gHatest love. You will not lie mlstnketnft It will be your mother's." The great surgeon lookeS for a mo ment 01" two Into tho slghthls eyes and then turned and laid his lRnd on the father's trembling arm. "Only God can make hlli see, my friend," he said kindly. WYotir hoy w as horn blind, and humai?j skill can n.it help him." The blind boy was the lirsl to speak, and he laid his arm around the sud denly aged form of his fntheV. "Come," he snld, "let us gt? bock to mother. She will always belbcautlful to me now," and they turned V'Hl gave place to the others.?Exehanj Caustic Whistler. ; Whistler's caustic wit Is BBOWn by Ihe following anecdote: i "<>f one who was held to be Eng : land's most brilliant young artist, 'Yes,' he snld thoughtfully, 'he's clever, but j there's something common In every thing he does, so what's the use of It?'" I.Ike many great men, lie laid but little time for any but Iis own work. "He told me a story demonstrating this most clearly. Ills "Nocturne Ii, Blue ami Gold, Valparaiso," was in the mil collection In Brighton. Mr. Hill had two galleries and a well known collec tion, eventually sold at Christie's, Whistler went down to see Mr. Hill, and said he: " 'I was show n Into the galleries and of course took a chair and snt looking at my beautiful "Nocturne." Then, as there was nothing else to do, 1 vent to sleep.' "?Sidney Starr's "Personal Recollections of Whistler" In Atlantic. A Chinese Delioaey. The tips from tho topmost shoots of tho bamboo treo oro culled when they are not more than three Inches long, peeled and preserved much ns pine apple is, though tho tips ore cut In quarters, This fruit has n remarkably delicate and pleasant taste and is large ly used ns a Havering for meat, though It can be eaten In tlie raw slate, being rich and Juicy. The edible Is expen sive on Account of the ditllculty In se curing It from the tops of tho tall, slender trees nt Juat tho right time. Art Uncomfortable Answer. In one of Sir Georgo Colley's lotters he says: "I.ord Lytton had a good story nbout poor I.ord Ixdtrlm, who shortly before his murder, talking with a countryman about some cases of landlord shooting, asked, 'Why don't the rascals shoot me?' 'Ah, thin, yer homier,' snld tho man, 'It's Just this what's everybody's business in no body's business!' " The Real Genius. "They any It's hard to Ilvo with a genius." "Bosh! Wore not nil women gen In ten bow would most families exist?" Louisville Courier Journal. recipe for DIXIE ICE CREAM (Can be made and frozen In 10 ? minutes at cost of One Cent a Plate. Stir contents of one 13c. package Jell-0 ICE CREBJH Powder into a quart of milk and freeze. No cooking, no heating, nothing else to add. Everything but tho ice and milk in the package. Sat is fact ion gua r.i a 169(1 ? ' This makes 2 quarts of the r OSt delicious ice cream you over ate. Five Kindsl Chocolate, Vanilla. Straw berry, Lemon an,/ Unfiavorea. 2 packages 25c. at your grocers, or by mail if he does not keep it. Illustrated It?m-ipo Hook ?'reo. The Genosre Pure Foo<l Co., tc Boy, N. Y. Robt. C. Davis Contributes Si.mi. The Bryan campaign land Ik ing raised in this county is slowly hill gradually growing, The Lauren Ad vcrtiser, a Democratic paper to llic core, issued a call last week for sub scriptions to this fund, starling the good work with its s| contribution. Last Thursday Mr. Kohcrl C. Davis, of Clinton, route 1, sends in his cheek for Si to he added to the fund. Laurons is one of tho strongest Ih'yati counties in the Stale and before the date closes she will come up with her part right along with the best of ihcin in spite of the imputations and m in Iii tions of that "vicious" newspaper, The News and Courier, that the fund was started in this county by an "un holy corporation." namely The Adver tiser. Just watch Laurons; her Dry; enthusiasm will not stop with the shout ing. What is Best for Indigestion ? Mr. A. Robinson, of Drumquin, On tario, has been troubled for years wit!, indigestion, and recommends Chamber Iain's Stomach and Liver Tablets "Hiebest medicine 1 ever used." If troubled with indigestion or constipa tion give them a trial. They are cer tain to prove beneficial. Th'cv are . ;, . to take and pleasant in effect Price 25 cents Samples free at I.aureus Drug ( o. s drug store. Mr. J. E. Qoddard Visiis I aureus. Among the visitors in Laurens last Thursday was Mr. J. E. Goddard, now of Coronaca, but a native of Laurens county, having been born and reared four miles south of Ware Shouts, Mr. Goddard is a veteran td* tlx- civil war, GS years old and well preserved. H is. call at The Advertiser ollico, ami his reminiscent talk, especially thai par.l in reference to his close friendship t<> Col. 11. W. Boll, was fully appreciated. Mr. Goddard will always bo a welcome visitor here. Chronic Diarrhoea Relieved. Mr. Edward E. Henry, will) the United States Express t o.. Chics writes, "Dur General Superintend.-in . ? Mr. Quick,handed me a bottle of Cham berlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy some time ago to check an at tack of the old chronic diarrhoea. I have used it since that lime and cured i many on our trains who have been I am an old soldier who served with Rutherford B. Hayes and William Mc Kinley four years in the 23rd < Ihio K iment, and have no nilmenl excepl chronic, diarrhoea, which this remedy stops at once. For sale by Lauren; Drug Co. Weak Women To weak and ailing women, there, is nt least 011? way to help. Bot with Unit way, two treatment.. , must be combined. One Is local, ono Is constitu tional, but both are important, both OS&eaUnl, Dr. Shoop'fi Night Cure is Iho Local. Dr. Shoop's Restorative, tho Constitutional. Tlie former?Dr. snoop's Night Cure?is n topical mucous membrane supposltoi y remedy, \\ hilo Dr. Bhoop'l RestOtattve Is wholly an internal treat ment. Tin. Restorativo reaches throughout tie> entire, system, seeking Un> repair oi all nervo, all tissue, and all Mood Ailments. The Night Curo", as Its name implies, does its work while you sloop, it soothos sore and Inllam. e<i mucous surfaces, heals local weaknesses and discharges, while the itestorative, eases nervous excitement, gives renewed vigor ami ambition, 1 builds up wasted tissues, bringing about rcaowi (I 1 strength, vigor, and energy. Take Dr. Snoop's 1 Restorative?Tabletsor Liquid?asa general tonic. 1 to tho system. For positive local help. USO BS well Dr. iSKoop's Night Cure PALMETTO DRUG CO. Due West Female College. With the best modern conven iences and equipment) aad high standards of teaching and living this is an ideal place for prepare tion for the grout responsibilities of womanhood. TERMS REASONABLE, For attractive catalog write REV. JAMES BOYCE, Due West, S. ( . J. L. M. 1RBY CIVIL BNIMN K K 11 Office over l.aurcns Drug Co. Chamberlain's Cough Remeil Cures ColdH, Croup ami Wnoontog I ough, CHARLESTON AND WESTERN CARO LINA RAILROAD. Arrival and Departure <?i Trains, Lam ens, South Carolina, KIT KCriV'ti JUNJi 1(5, IU08. \\ i:st lioUNO, \,,. l. I,i nve Augu ia.10:10 it in No. I. Leave Laut'? na. 2M2 p in i. Arrive Spnrtnnburg.. 4:05pm Xo. ... Leave Greenwood.... 6:50 a m No. ... Leave Laiirens. 7:.r>f> a m No. 5. Arrive Sparlanburg.. 0.00 a in No, ?>": Leave Greenville.12:20 p m No. ?<">. Arrive Latin ns. I MG p m X'o.'S'.. Leave (Jroenvillo . .. 1:80pm No. SO. Arrive Laurens. ii:L'? p m smith HOONI). No. 2 Leave Sparhinhurg . .12:20 p in No. 2. Leave Laiirens. 2:82 p in X?'. L'. Arrive Augusta. ti:b*> p in No. G. Leave |>arli nburg . . ;?:uo p in No. G. i.oavo Lai.t?:."!.'> p m No. <?. Arrivi <liven.v...! . .. 7:50 p hi No.'.v i\ Iii .8:it) a in No. '87. An... (Ire? iiyiil ? |o;20 a in No. LeiiVt Luur . 2:.'IG p in No. 52. Arriv (In He_ -1:00 p in Trains '8<i an I i daily except Sunday. Tri-wee ,i\ ilu 11 .i Puilimin Parlor 1 'Ii' ervhv lietv \ igu du and Ashc yille on Irn its No.?. I ami :.': North? bouii 1,'i m tsdu; itiii ilays; Southbound Mondays. Wciine.nlay.H and r'ridnyu. C. IL UASQUE, Agent. I .aureus, s. (J. u. T. ?RYAN, Geh. Agt., Greenville, 8. t'. A.W. AN I) KU Hi IN, tioil. Sunt l'JUNKST WILLIAM i, C.P.A.. Augusta, tin. Ironing Made Easy. Manufactured by SMOOTHING IKON HEATER CO., I? / Y \ Slim,pr. S. G. ^M^SM^plSavcs rue|. \</ljL?\ Time a n d Mu: honor. 1 O Only $2 senj orders to JNO. i. BRYANT, Level Land, s.c. CO| \n A..i ST. The ist Comp'y Insurance AN\) Real Estate. If you have Heal Es tate lor sale, let us sell itioryou. If you waul to buy sec us. We have some alee property, city and county to olfor. ?'?Art I he Laurens c W?mnsonsf MaUhless Vfc Mineral Water MM i Nutui ...me, insuring . rapid cnnvulu concc front any ?!? I* illw ss which lias weakened or ?ii X lowered 111 vitality. WhUq thi 11 medicinal wu- *yr ?j? lor. ii 11 a' lelightful drink, ;i; ami one drink will frequently 7j? 1 cure a severe hondaehd, heart ?A; I turn, In11.'! .- ? ami o^ne ???.sum <>i' tno stomach, (ollovylnR a hearty meal. I'or sale at IS Dr.Posey'sDrugstore Vw '"TZZ'ZZZ The Prlncoaa RubberGloves \ Pine ami Seamless. Vot Konornl household uflO, iX SiiVRoona, Physicians, Under t?Kor?, I'naluKrnphorM.lTndloa' ??uel, Klcctnclans, ??><?. TfV a \>;\iv ami keep your hands In good condition, I'Otl SAU. AT \ , Drug stove