University of South Carolina Libraries
IRY THURSDAY AT WBERRY, S. C. ewdrtfelt Smilsu. S Fom the Standard.) ' s e that made the dark world v-ig t,. Tove that made all duty-light." -Dean Stanley. alnumber among our acquaint some who are always sunny and: smiling ; to whom life has more sunshine than the most andhas spared them the sorrows cloud the brows of many. we know whose natures are-not heart the the troubles that may hto them, or who, blessed with nU1isU4 amoint of buoyancy of tro Woff easily all sorrow and a.nd 'find something bright and iA every possible situation. thers still we know who have > erible heart-crushing sorrows to -and yet, whose natures are so un that they have schooled them to carry their sorrows for the part in secret,- and to Interest es in others with sunny, ul. smiles and cheery woods. 'would it be were there more of as, In this world we do have ewith tribulationsof all sorts, t 1 hard for most of us while and ighting them to "be of " et true philosophy as he highest Christianity con - s that cheerfulness and a sun per lighten half the loads we great- the influence of cheery sand amiling faces we cannot es -Poets and biographers- have on 'suchthemes over and over we all cherish with peculiar memories ofthose who brought e and gladness into our lives, - simes while carrying sorrows of their own ; and yet we <continued prompting to increase l,_.. ofcheerfulness. The thought and helpful words of such as ideep-into our hearts, when esssmile of those who had iown sorrow or trouble made onupon us. Robertson makes this re his diary: "A lady just here o ethe deliht, the tears of grati hich she had witnessed in a to: whom, in passing, I gave Iook in going out of church on What a lesson ! How eheap ness can 'be given ! What op we:miss of doing an angel's ~i ! I-remember doing it, full of rieigs, thenpasingon snd think -about it ; and it gave an sunshine to a human life, and ed the- load of life to a human fra -time-!" That kind look dtated, it came from the heart. "h nstant the peacher allowed the ~ fthe poor girl to std#plant his * d feelings," and- the kind look ~ hartfelt expression of his in * her. -e believe that it gave her but *s leasure? No. Thatkind, thzng look from the pastor we -~-ntwas a joy, anda comfort, and 1~hrin;many, many hours, and batand hope were strengthened Smoethan they would have been na on submission to our con hbatever it might be, or acold, homily, from the text, "-In eoly shall have tribulation." - desniile must be an unselfish o'-oetr-uly appreciated. It is not - discern the difference be - facial smile and one that frmthe beart. Those who like eiselo kethemselves.and their for atinie, totakes real iothers,and to feel their N gethpes to their own * Ieanktifully portrays the love of Jean Valjean for whliving in the rude hut he '~-tovde&for her, which she irra ith- t snshine of her sweet He wrote:: "When she en it sleilled 'it with paradise. ~ 4V~eanexpanded and felt his grow with the happi -used Cosette." And he adds: jo hich we inspire has this * thing-about it, that far from wakened like ordinary refiec ~itreturns to us m'ore radiant utbwslow most of us are to learn iefi How salfishness tries to us into the belief that we are by-seeking our own happiness, og in our own griefs; and ythere are living thus sclfish ~h~are almost devoid of real hap >without understanding the s the poet right when she wrote : -<i' Aaredleave this smile, she said, taea moan upon my mouth, lea cypress round my head, h Iet my tears run smooth ~'eethe happier way, she said." Sotths happier way ; the easier, -but better to choke back the tears, ~~bt and strive to lift the burdens of who are heavier laden, to carry newshne of a sympathetic heart Fih ill bring a return and prove ~bpirway." Eliot, in. one of her storie% &t iemphasizes, the importance of San influence : "We do not hear Nht-emnon's statne gave forth its -5 at all under the rushing of the ~htesV wind, or in response to any -erifuence, divine or human, than short-lived sunbeams of morn adwe must learn to accommo si -orselves to the'discovery that be S hose ennningly-fashioned in ~'Tets~ called human souls have ~ery limited range of musie, and n~di ot vibrate in the least under the ~~~ehat fills others with tremulous ~~ quivering agony." Yet how > ~a~h<saits respond to a sunbeam from a loving-.oul. % ~"ws od3y a gad 'good-morning.' 2 she pasdalong the way, * ~j$ i speadthe morning's glory - ~~er te livelong day." - The- Ciates Little Things. "-~~4e"Ihe echoed. "Well, I don't -wa the adjective would have oc ta~ni4me ia-just that connection. * ~ut tyoz~-mean that they do their ~-~~~horly,et.mak nofussabout caelWa- or weakness; and, in. re shata pdf ought t~iveetan aboat the -utest ~ingmg~ The Next Secretary of State Casts LonglE 'yes on Cuba. WAsuGTON, -Feb. 11.-Recentl Congressman Milliken, of Maine, an his cousin, Seth Milliken, of Ne Yoik, who is a large manufacturer an has investments in the South, called c Mr. Blaine on private business. Durir the conversation the merchant, wb has known Mr. Blaine for years, aske him if he was in favor of the annex; tion of Canada. Mr. Millikeu says the Mr. Blaine replied that he was, but the he did not think that it would I brought about by agitation. In ti course of time, he thought, thd Domii ion would naturally gravitate into ti American Union. "Canda," said Mr. Blaine, "is like a apple on a treejust beyonp our reacl We may strive to grasp it, but tb bough rec4des from our hold jnst proportion to our effort, to catch c it. Let it alone and in due time it wi be our hands. "If we were reaching after territor to increase our wealth and strengt as well also to protect the health of ti nation, I should say ?hat Cuba is tb outlying island - which the interests < the United States would naturally seel First, as to its relation to health, Cub is the natural home of pestilential di eases, especially yellow fever. UndE the direction of our eminent sanitarian I have not the slightest doubt that ti existing cause of this, dreaded diseas could be exterminated from every po: of the territory of Cuba. "The knowledge which science makE as to the propagation of the germs e yellow fever has put it in the power c health officers well provided wit means to remove the breeding spo from the face of the earth, and I has not the least doubt but what it could I done were the island under our contro "In point of economy it would b cheaper for the United States to bu the island from Spain at almost an cost rather than it should be a constar menace to the'health and prosperity ( the Southern States. The cost directl and indirectly to the business of th I country during the last yellow feve epedimic in the Mississippi Valley wa greater than the value of Cuba, even : you put it on a mere money basis. Bu when you consider the peril to lif which the fever constantly. brings il purchase would not be dear at an price. "The next object which makes valuable is its relation to The Unite States as a strategic point. It lies closE very close, to the southern extremit of Florida, and its western end is sti nearer Yucatan. In this way it pract cally controls the Gulf of Mexico. I atually commands position which w ught iin the natural order of things t possess and control. "In regard to its contributing to ou wealth, Cuba in the hands of the ,Yar kee people, and by that I mean th thrifty, energetic, inventive America race, would add immensely to our prod erity. It is.a fertile island, and undt te control of skilled labor its, produt ive resources would doubtless be it reased ahbundred fold." EICHXOND TERMIN(AL PL.ANS. The Gigantle Deal With Jay Gould Near' Consnmmated. NEW YORK, February 12.-Messr Dow & Jones say : "We hear that th inancial plai of the Richmond Te: inal contemplates the authorizatio f an issue of S2.5,000,000 blanket bonds ut that of this amount only enoug iill be issued to take up the S4,500,0C loating debt incurred by the purchal f the Georgia Company, the preferre stock and the collateral trust beyonc The bonds needed to tr@e care of th loating debt are said to have been so] ast week." Au officer of tshe Ricd nond Terminal is quoted as saying The negotiations between the Missox i Pacific .Railroad and the Richmon erminal Company have been pract ally- completed, although the papex ave not been signed. As soon as thi one work will be begun upon the lin rom Birmingham to Huntingdor where the Iron Mountamn road wi onnect with the Missouri Pacific. Tb oney for completing this line hi een provided." HE ATTEMPT TO HAVE ITS CHARTE FORFEITED F AITS THROUGH. Ricsxocm, Va., Feb. 13-SomI eeks ago a petition was presented t State Attorney General Ayres by San el Dickson of Philadelphia and Charlk . D)e Costa of New York in behalf < mknow stockholders '(presumably th orfolk and Western Railroad) beg ing that proceedings be institutedi he Circuit Court of this city again2 the Richmond and WVest Point Term al and Warehouse Company for foi feiture of its charter. The grounds a egd by counsel were that the con any had exceeded the provisions< its charter. The Attorney General, i long letter to-day, declines to app], for a writ of quo war-ranto, without es ressing an opinion upon the merits < the case, but simply upon the groun hat action should be taken in Kin William County, where the principt ofie of the company is located. Counterfeiter Conv'icted. GREENvILLE, Feb. 13--Ig1 the Unite States Court to-day Calvin Nelson, white man from Laurens County, wa tried and convicted of counterfeitin nd sentenced to two years in the Co unbus, Ohio, penitentiary and S10 (ne. A man who has practiced medicin for forty years, ought to know salt froi sugar; read what he says: TOLEDO, 0., Jan. 10, 18S7. Messrs. F. J. Cheney & Co.-Gentl< ren:-I have been in the general pra< tice of medicine for most forty year nd would say that in all my practic nd experience, have never seen a pr< paration that I could prescribe with 2 much confidence of success as I ca Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured bi ou. Have prescribed it a great man times and its effect is wonderful, an would say in conclusion tha,t I have yi te find a case of Catarrh that it wou] not cure, if they would take it accor< ig to directions.'* Yours truly, L. L. GORSUCH, Mi. D. Office, 215 Summit St. We will give $100 for any case < Catarh that cannot be- cured wit Hall'sCatarrh Cure. Taken mnter.nall: F. J. UISENEY & C.P .0 & Sold~ byDruggists ,5c. -'-~ D. A "REBEL" IN THE "CAEINET. Inside Facts About Alger's Little Scheme Blaine's Acceptance. [Telegram to the New York Herald.] Y DETROIT, Mich., Eebruary 12,1889. d 'A Confederate general will be in H1ar 0 rison's Cabinet," was the sensational d statement made to-day by one of the n leading republicans in the State, and it g stirred up considerable, feeling, es ,0 pecially among the Grand Army men. d The inside history of the Alger busi ness has just come to light, and it ap it pears that General Alger wrote to Gen !t eral Harrison some time ago that Sher e man das circulating false stories about e him. The visit of Senator McMillan - was simply for Harrison to explain e why he could not give Alger a place in the Cabinet, and it is said that he told n McMillan that a Confederate officer 1- must be given a place in order to break e up the "solid South." n The mention of such a thing has n aroused the Grand Army of the Re 11 public, and if the scheme is carried out there will be a vigorous kick made by Y this society. No names are, given, but 1, it is said to. be decided on. e GIVING A SOUTHERNER TAFFY. BALTIMORE, February 13, 1889. Colonel Julian Allen, of Statesville, N. C., who has been in this city for several days, said to-day that in a recent inter view he had with Mr. Blaine in Wash i ington, the latter told him that when e he took his seat in President Harrison's Cabinet he would prove asgood a friend t of the South as that portion' of the country ever had. Mr. Blaine also spoke with freedom about his accept ance of the position of Secretary of State in the Cabinet, and said that President Harrison tendered him the position a very few days after the elec e tion, and did it in such a cordial way e that he at once accepted it in the same spirit. A Talent fdr Wretchedness. There are fortunate people who have what'may be talent for happiness Theirs is the habit of looking on the e bright side. However perplexed the e situation, however hedged about with r embarrassments and obstructed by hindrances, they either see beyond it t halcyon skies and a smooth pathway, or they manage to extract the present sweetness from its bitterness. In read sing two books of recent travel, one the record of a solitary.woman's adventures in the East, the other of another woman's ravels by herself in tie West, I was struck by the contrast in the two experiences. The pages of one are sprinkled with sunshine, and her ink has a golden sparkle. Those of the other are acerb, complaining and solemnly cynical. But we need not e go to booke for our illustrations. " Cheerfulness is in part dependent on health and temperament, as well as on grace and a Christian conscience. It ~s almost impossible to wear a radiant. e - ace when one has a deranged digestion, or to be equal and tranquil when the nervous fountains are in a state of ex r haustion. Yet who does not know in valids whose rooms of suffering are full of a divine peace ? and who can not think of some who out of great tribulation have entered into a hal lowed region which no storms invade? AMd on the other hand, there are those who, regarded as to outward circum stances, appear to have euerything in their favor, yet who manage to be so euniformly miserablp that it may be as sumed that they have a talent for wretchedness. S Pimnples, Aches, Sores and Pains. When a hundred bottles of sarsapa 0rilla or other pretentious specifics Zi e, -t eradicate in-born scrofula or conta giou blood poison, remember that B. ~.1LB (Botanic Blood Balm) has gained emany thousand victories, in as many eseemingly~incurable instances. Send to I the Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga., for -"Book of Wonders," and be convinced. .It is the only true blood purifier. ~G. W. Messer, HowellPs X Roads,Ga., ~writes: "I was afflicted nine years with i sores. All the medicine I could take did t- me no good. I then tried B. B. B., and s 8 bottles cured me sound." -Mrs. S. M.Wilson, Round Mountain, sTexas, writes: "A lady friend of mine e was troubled with bumps and pimples t, on her face and neck. She took three ti bottles of B. B. B., and her skin got esoft and smooth, pimples disappeared, eand her health improved greatly." s Jas. L. Bosworth, Atlanta, Ga., writes: "Some years ago I contracted blood poison. I had no appetite, my di gestion was ruined, rheumatism drew up my limbs so I could hardly walk, e my throat was cautdrized five times. Hot Springs gave me no benefit, and Smy life was one of torture until I gave SB. B. B. a trial, and, surprising as it s may seem, the use of five bottles cured ,fme." 1m A CURIOUS NEGRO. tHe Sings in His Sleep and Preaches a serinon. [Lexington D)ispattch, 14th.] Last night we heard the negro who Spreaches apparently in his sleep,, and who has been in the southern part of 2our county several times. He is from the eastern part of this State. After re Stiring about fifteen minutes he gave out a hymn and lined it off and sang it, prayed and took his text, and preached for about three quarters of an hour in the general style of the colored minis ters. We are informed he has been preaching every night on his retiring Isince 1881, -,d it is stated cannot be Sawakoned while thus engaged, but a s jfew minutes after he compietes his ser mons can be awakened from his stupor. Dr. Hendrix examined hirn while he was preaching an1d gave as his opinion thait he was unconcious of himself and e his doings. he "Cigarette Eye."' [ N. Y. Timnes.] Henry P. Hatcher, son of Florist J. sC. Hatcher, of Amsterdam, is afficted nl by the excessive use of cigarettes. The 7smoke has affected the left eye to such San extent as to cause a serious inflam t mation. The eye is so iniflamed that d he cannot see out of it. Dr'. McMartin, Sthe well-known oculis, says that tc? ef feet a cure the eye wvill have to be taken out and the back of it scraped to re >fmove.a dark and blinding substance a that has formed there. The disease is~ technically known as "cigarette .eye." jThis case is a warning toalljyouDg men' 1-uAtmoke the deadly cigarette. JEFFERSON DAVIS ON RACE RIOTS. He Declares thazthe Trouble in Mississilipi has been Exaggerated. -[From the New York World.] ATLANTA, GA., February 9.-In a personal letter to Park Commissioner Root, of this city, Mr. Jefferson Davis writes concerning the race riots i Mississippi: "The tendency to change seems to grow upon the negroes with the indul gence of their right to leave at will. The accounts of riots in this State have been greatly exaggerated. Though it may seem singular, it is true that race conflicts generally occur where the negroes are few compared to the whites and the personal association much closer than on the plantations. On our island we have live hundred or sx hundred blacks and say ten or a dozen whites. There has never been a disturbance among them. We for sev eral years had a negro magistrate. He has now gone away, but before his de parture a well behaved, sober young man defeated the rbgro in the last election contest, which at least shows that the negroes to a large extent are willing to trust a white man." ve Frank Leslie's Sunday Magazine for March. m Just now Africa is a prime subject of i interest, and Emma Raymond Pit- hi man's article on "Slavery and Missions on the East coast of Africa" will tell to the reader much about that part of the Dark Continent which is foremost in the mind. The Mohammedan women of ndia are described-by S. F. Norris, and P. T. Popoff contributes a valuable i article on. "Prjevaisk's Adventures in P1 Central Asia." Mary Titcomb's article on "Ways and Words of American Lawyers" is both amusing and instruc-t tive, and the article on "Lady Brassey," with its numerous illustrations, will be read with much interest by those who remember and admire that brilliant Fi woman. Oscanyan, our former Minis- th ter to Turkey, tells about "Anarchy in Turkey," and Dr. Talnage prea.hes a brilliant sermon on "Sin as a Taskmas ter." The serial story "Genevieve" is sntinued, and Fannie Aymar Mathews a contributes a tender short story, "Dorothy's Wooing." The usual de- U partments are full of interest, and Mr. Aessiter, organist of Trinity Church, New York, has a vigorous hynin-tune to Dean Plumptre's "Rejoice, ye Pure in Heart." There are many short rticles and poems, and some beautiful m ull-page illustrations.. T The output of coal in Tennessee dur- Tn ing 1888 is valued at $2,237,391. The Eiffel tower in. Paris is now to even hundred feet high. This is 150 m eet higher than our highest edifices. he tower will be 1,000 feet high when :ompleted. ' William M. Merriam, of Springs, L. [., bequeathed $80,000 to the United states Government. Perhaps he did sot want the surplus reduced. His ,ill will be contested. One hundred acres of oil land. five aundred acres of leases, and twenty oil ells, fiowing from ten to three thous mad barrels per day, have been sold at Findlay, 0., to the Standard Oil Comn any for $'100,000. A combination of Boston and Kansas jJ ity capitalists has purchased 32,000 eres of land in the vicinity of Fort Payne, Ala., fifty miles from Chatta ooga. The company wll at once be rn mining coal and iron. Fort Payne s at present a village of 300 inhabi :ants. It is reported that-f). W. Young, a belegraph operator in the employ of the W illwaukee & St. Pauf railroad at harles City, Iowa, has solved the scientific problem of making an augur that will bore a square hole. He made a pattern augur, and it is claimed by those who have seen it work that it will cut a square mortise rapidly and accurately. A company has been formed and applications filed for pa tents in this and foreign countries. The board of referees consisting of George Shattuck and1 R. S. Hopkins, to whom was left the~ matter of estab lishing the liability for the Somerville blachery fire of 1884, which was said to ave been caused by a spark from a locomotive, have decided against the Fitchburg railroad. The road is, there fore, liable for the damages, which, it is reported, may exceed $'250,000.~ The Pennsylvania Riailroad has in angurated a reform in running Sunday freight trains. At 10 o'clock lQst Sun Cay night all freight trains on the Penn- ha sylvania Railroad, except stock, and as those beaming perishable freight, were stopped, in order to allow the employ es the privilege of enjoying a-rest on a Sunday evening. Tihe same system se will be inaugurated on all tihe Pennsyl- a ania CoTnpany's lines west of Pitts-' , burg. The order will allow almost j w 3,000 men on the Pennsylvania Road ~ alone to enjoy the Sabbath at their1 o homes. tI The Reason Why Aye's Pills are so popular is, that _ while always reliable as a cathartic medicine, they never leave any ill effects. This is because they are purely vegetable, and entirely free from calo mel or any other dangerous drug. In all cases, therefore, whether the patient be old or young, they may be confi dently administered. In the Southern and Western States, where derangements of the liver are so an general, Ayer's Pills.shave proved an in- m estimable blessing. D. W. Baine, New Berne, N. C., writes: " I suffered a long time with stomachV and liver tronbles. I tried various rem edies, but received no benefit until I commenced taking Ayer's Pills. These pills benefited me at once. I took them regularly for a few months, and my T health was completely restpred." Throughout New England, next to C lung diseases, Stomach an -Bowel gc Complaints are the most prevalent. Dys pe psia and Constipation are almost universal. G Mr. Gallacher, a practical chemist, of y Robury, Mass., who was long troubled IM with Dyspepsia, writes: ,w "A friend induced me to try Ayer's Pills, and, after taking one box without much benefit, I was disposed to quit N them; but he urged perseverance, and, before I had finished the second box, I began to experience relief. I continued f taking them, at intervals, until I had used eleven boxes. Suflice it to say, that I am now a well man, and grateful to your chemistry, which outstrips mine."'f The head and stomach are always in sympathy ; hence the cause of most of those distressing headaches, to which so many, especially women, are subject. Mrs. Harriet A. Marble, of Poughkeep-F sie, N. Y., writes that for years she was a martyr to headache, and never found anything to give her more than tem porary relief, until she began taking Aer's Pills, since which she has been i the enjoyment of perfect health. Ayer's PiIls, c Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., .owell, Mau. i' SSaid by nlmegsts. AIY ONE o DAN DYE 4 Dress, or a Coat, Any ColI gibbons, Feathers, FOR rarns, Rags, etc. JTEN CENTS ad in many other ways SAVE Money, and make hings look like NEW, .by using DIAMOND DYES. The work is easy, simple, quick; the olors the BEST and FASTEST known. Ask for DIAMOND DYES and take no other. For Gilding or Bronzing Fancy Articles USE DIAMOND PAINTS. sold, Silver, Bronze, Copper. Only so Cents. Baby Portraits. A Portfolioof beautiful baby p - tires from life, vrinted on nne paepprby paten oto prcs.sent fre to N er o any Baby born witbin a year Every Mother wants these -. pictnres; send at once. Give Baby's name and age. WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., BURINGTON, VT. Cleveland May Locate in Brooklyn. [New York Herald, 1Nth.] Despite the fact that President Gro r Cleveland last week secured apart ants at the Victoria Hotel, this city, iere it was said he was going to make a home upon his retirement from the hite House, some indications point Brooklyn as his future place of habi :1011. President Cleveland, in company th a friend, drove over to Brooklyn t week while he was on from Wash ton, and inspected a house at Lincoln ice and Eighth avenue, one block re >ved from the plaza entrance to ospect Park. The house has eigh m rooms and is valued at $36,000. Thousands for Horses. LEXINGTOI, Ky., Feb. 13, 1889. illy seven hundred people attended e Brasfield & Co., horse sale here to y, although the weather was cold d snow was falling. Sevel.ty-five ad were disposed of for $53,795, an erage of $451. Futt'S Pills care ostiveness the medicine must more than a purgative. To be per. anent, it muss contain onic, Alterative and 3athartic Properties. ti's Pills possess these qualities in eminent degree, and Speedily Restore the bowels their'natual peristaltie Aion, so essential to regularity. Sold Everywhere. Jewelry, Cloeks, SILVER PLATED WARE, cket and Tabi Cutlery, iUSIE AL INBTRUIMTS, atch Reparing a-* Specialty. EDUARD S0HOLTZ, Newberry, S. C. II ( MERCURY, NO -POTASH, b: any other Mineral Poison. It isNature's Remedy, made exclusively from Dots ad Herbs. It Is perfectly harmless. It Is the only remedy- known to the world that is ever yet Cured contagious Blood Poison -a i is slages. It cures Mdercurial Rheumatism, Cancer, Scro land other blood d' eacheretofore consid spre blood. Itl o rescribed by thou ads of the best phscasl te Umte States, ehae a book Mivng a history of this won-. rrful remedy, and its cures, from all over the orld, which will convince youx that all wecsay is n, and which we will mail free on applieation. 'o family shonld b-o wi honnQt. We have an hcr on Contagious lood Poi.-on, e:t on same We us a histo'ry of y o'r care. and ouir y an will advise wi.i y 1..::ar, i ::: Rtic:est :Gdence. We will at deceive y.u knowingy. For erJeu by ildruiata. now ii.L M YI R IT{.PPOIIINITY WE ARE RECEIVING DAIl The Celebrated d Buggies and Carriages of other mu factories. Ond, two, three and four-horse hite Hickory Wagons. We alicarry a full line of GGY AND WAGON HARNESS, WHIPS AND LAP-ROBES. i above goods cheap for cash, or part sh and the balance on time, with od security. We Solicit a Call, and uarantee Satisfaction. m will alwvays find .John P. Fant,and .M. Buford ready to welcome and ut on you. FANT & BUFORD, lxt door to Smith's Livery Stable. And if you wanIt some pure Whiskey r your Hoi lay Dramn call Onl H. C. SU MMEEF, 'lEA LER IN Fancy Groceries, ONFETWNERS, ETC. A neat store rooma, good- order and ,lite attention Give- me .aILb ~ s- ~ inuuiu Cleanse the System With that most reliable D O meiiePtesClr Compound. It purifies the [ T blood, cures Constipation, and regulates the liver and O N kdneys,effectllyCleans Lnghthesystemof allwaste and4aad matters. Paine's Celery Compound combines true nerve tonic and strengthing qualities, reviving the energies and spirits. a "I have been troubled for some years with a complication of diff!culties. After trying va rious remedies, and not finding relief, I tried Paine's Celery Compound. Before taking one full bottle the long troublesome symptoms be gan to subside, and I can truly say now, that I fel like a new man. Digestion has Improved. ad I have gandtnpud nweight sinceI hae commenced takng the Compound." Ho*ETUs STEAEys, Felchville, Vt. $1.00. Six for $5.00. At Druggists. Wr.Ls, RICKARDSoY & Co., Rurlington. Vt. EMPOIIUM. My fall stock for men youths and boys will be fcund to reach the 'very acme of perfec tion in their neat and stylish patterns and elegance of shapes; these are very tempting garments, Indeed, and to see them is to covet their possession at once. I Am showing all the favorite fall patterns, and I can give qual ity and fabric In thegrade that best suits the buyer's use and means. For truly neat and ha:idsome suits this line has never been ex celled, and if any other Inducement to pur chase is offered it will be found in the price, which is low for this first-class and fashion able clothing. I recognize that fit and style are very im portant elements in first-class garments, and observe due caution and care to secure these quaiLties in all my goods. It is no idle boast to say that my stock of clot hing will be found as perfect in these nec esairy qualities as the custom-made gar ments. .The time was when ready-nade clothing betrayed in its make the fact that it was not made to measure, but that time is ong past, and customers who have tried my garments have found It so; they find that the fit s nd style will compare with custom work; that makes a great saving on the tailor's bill. It. furnishing goods nothing marks the gentleman more than the appearance of his linen. Untidiness or sh'abbiness in this re gard is one of the least pardonable offences. While a due regard to the propriety and neat ness 'n the matter of linen-wear often goes far tc, cover deficiencies, the trade Is a stesdy one and is not limited by the seasons. I carry, therefore, a full and heavy line in this department which I have replenished with new styles and new goods for the fall and winter. To those who admire neatness and bril liancy in furnishings, my large exhibit will be a great pleasure. fats for the fall and winter are ready for your Inspection My immense line of new styles for the present season of stif, soft,silk and cassimeres are the correct shapes, and a credit to the house, and a satisfaction to the' buyers. If you will call and see them there is no doubt but what you will purchase here, My line of Gent's fine shoes is complete in all the leading styles and ua.es, in line and medium grades. Trunks, Satchels. Val isee nd Tourists Bags, in all qualities and prices. This line is large and well assorted. Call and see this large attraction of fall and winter ciothiM. L. KINARD. Columbia, S. C. irany dealer says he has the 'W. L.. Dofau oboes without name and price sapdo the bottom, put him down a a a W. L. DOUCLAS $3 SHOE .i*E. Best in the world. Examine his 80 GNULEWWAD-EW EHOE. 83.50 POLICE AND FARMERS' SHOE. 82.2 EOB liER W SE. 82.00 an 81.75 BOYS' SCHOOL SHOES. W. L.-DOUCLAS $3 SHOE L.AIRES. Best Material. Best Style Best Pitting. . W not sodbDOUGLA,'BBOCKTON, MASS. FOR SALE BY MIN'TER &i JAMIESON, MAIN STREET, NEW .ERRY, SI .C. SETTLE UP. All perso s inaet3d to me will please call and settle at once as 1 must have money. Very respectfully, ILEY W. FA!N.T. Fine Whiskeys a Specialty Luytie's Rye Whiskey. Gibson's Rye Whiskey. Redmond Corn Whiskey. Old N. C. Corn Whiskey. Kentucky Corn Whiskey. Satisfaction_Guaranteed. CALL AND SEE MlE. ILEY W. FANT, (Successor to JINO. F. WHEELER.) soloC [RICDSUMPTIDN Piso's Cure is our best selling medi cine. I have a personal knowledge of its beneficial effects, and recommend it. -S. L&mY; Druggist, Allegheny, Pa. 195 Sewing-MachilTIfTT -the wedd.wihalseaicnfa 4SIIamaMUtes ~.t. 1-7.. or either a visiting card or a nammoth poster. We have acilities for printing [sawyers' Briefs, School Catalogues, Minutes of Meetings, Legal Blanks, By-Laws, - .Circulars Letter Heads, Note Heads, Bill Heads, Business Uards, Visiting Cards, Envelopes, Shipping Tags, Price Lists, Programs, Wedding Invitations, Checks, Receipts SAV & mn "WE LOVE IT FOR THE ENEMIES IT HAS MADE" Is what the enlightened South says of BalIoi's Ilgaz1ne. It became the favorite 1fagazine of the South from the- start.. W$IY:! Because the educated South is DEMOCRATIC.and wants an honest Government; becauise Doan Piatt, the editor, j.s aggressive y fride pendent and a true patriot of a. united country; Because its plicy is that of all honest and edcated persons: FR EE TRADE,esgovernmetal interference in .personal matters, and good wholesome fiction; because the editor heartily welcomes SQUTH4* ERN WRITERS, to ite ags e. g., the best literary production byan American writer since the war is Ol Man Gilbert, by a Southern lady, Mrs. Elizabeth Bellamy, in the June num ber; because the editor gives quality and quantity and not big names for your money; because' the ablest- per sons of the country contribute ,to the pages of Belford's; such as HonJ. 0. Carlisle, Hen?y WVatterson,James Whit comb Riley, David A. Welles, Profese sor W. G. Sumner, Julian Hawthorne, Edgar Fawcett, Edgar Saltus,'Sarah,B. M. Pia4t, -Henry George, W. J. Florence; Roger Q. Mills, and hun dreds-of others; because the long novel in each number is alone worth twice t~he prg "The Lion's Share,~" in the J'anuary number, by a Southern lady, Mrs. Clark Waring, of Columbia, s. C., is a charming one. Subscribe .0W, only $2.50 a year. BELFORD, CLARK & CO., Publishers, New York, Chicago and San Francisco. POIDlA HLL E 1'IWO and a halt miles west of Greenisboro, IN. C. The main ite.O the R. daD. B.E. passes through the grunds and :within -190 feet of the office. Saem trains make regular Tose interestedi frui and ?ruit growing; a.re cordially invited to .inspect this, the Largest Nursery In the State, and one of -the Llagest ink the south. Stocktconsists of APPLES, PEACH., PEAR, CHERR PLU BS, JAPAN'ESE PERSiMO GEAPE,T~ . RASPBER GOOsE PECANs, ROSES, EVERGREENs, TREES, ETC., ETC., ETC. All the new and rare varieties, as well as the old ones; which my new Uatalogtue for L888 will show. Give your order to my authorized agent, or order direct from the --CORRESPONDENCE sOLICITED... asDescriptive-Catalogue free to applicants. Address J. VAN LINDLEY, Guliford County.. C. AGENTS HERE A Good Opportunity For a Few Active, Energetic Busi ness Men and Women To IEarin Some- Money. WTEWANTlvecanvassersin thisterritory for our books. We are the oldest house of the kind in the South. and have the most attractive and fas-test selling lLne of books to be found anywhere. Read tbis partial list and see what our agents are doing: "THE WR1L-PMlGS OF TRUTII, a large 800-page book 'illustraited. Sells very rapidly. Over 10J,00alreadysold in the South. One agent In southern Georgia nmade over $4400.00 profit in thirteen days work. Another in Tennessee in ?t) days sold $3,400 worth of books. Many others are doing equally -a. well. Send $:2.5 for agency and outft. "THE KIGO F GI.ORY,". hemnost charminig life of Christever wrtte~n, Sells at sIght. One agenthassord l,500Ocoples any otherlt selling bok to6umer. ons to mention..' Large aid4 elegant. line o1 Bibles and .Photo Alhu rns. "Exclusive terri tory. D)on't,delayv. If.youdG aome one else may get the territory you desire. Address 8087 ETR PUBL5Sili0 JOUS8, NASHVILLE, TENN. *~4~; 2.4~. -, 14 4 - - pm. am. * 43 7o L. Chrlesta" 635 822 .e . 743 92jpR. 747 923 umter.... "16 905 1030 '..Cbla... .i 7 pm.. 1 10 2 1 . " ...Wianslaoro.. E .217 32 " ...Chester........ " 245 ..... 4 38 '...Yeravie 0. ... 555 " Tn1 3 05 4 06 .-..oec " 2 '2 4 2D 5-1 P mn. pi:4 ......... 1239 Ar...ewberry ......... 22 "..Greewood. . 25 ...... "5. neso.5' ......... 65 4 Greenvlle 645.... 65 ...W aI ... 2...... 35 "..Abb uH.:K z - .. . .2.. . 6 1 0 H e d e t o v i l i e f 00 ...Newbe...L Sod Train d rbetween gC IesOon =. ^ lumb"a, . .n T. DL EMERSON. Ge'Pingt J. F. DIVINE, Gen'l-Supt WU.11N9181 .COLUNNA I DA= Juy .2th,185 -os . "v. W n... n.. C 3e Lv. Adve Florence..........122 am Columb.....W .."... ... " . TRAINS GOIMNORH lIv. Columbia... -t Leave Florence........ Lv. Marion.... rLv. L. Waene-aa...........I Y' Ar. Wilmington Train X q. 4?td s-t afl Btt~n <' Nos.4& asd- 4r2$tOom -lat ____ Ni.columba .. 'Nld, Camd en. e.a..a.... p3 LC.A rn.E...;.... . :... $.:,.6 Junetio!r,imd"sII poiats beyonaoi Lad. L.$l .on Lta1=....;Y;.;.., Tanmm.maplmmese. Whiteville a .&a8 m z 4ichoan,-q points Via Columbia.n A trai Ot rn i - Wimngton . - JOHN P D E - GeealprL T. M. mF ON, 1 fO South Caroin Rara T.A D PEo CH&z Tolcr EAST (DAILY. GfJtl'yi DepartColmnblg st6..6' a Due chaleton ..4.3. p - Depart C lesto n.......7Ja a Due Uolumbfa. .......1 46 a TO .AD ROXOaMna. an ao Depart Columbia....o g " Due Camden. ..3S...d*a1-]2 j Depart Camden,...:..,36 7:4b y Due Columzbia.. ..9 +1 To AID EOAUGUs L DepartCol b:a-- 46a m Due a stA . Made atMnTiotrDepiotaCoel bia and Greenvie BailrO ;); at1045 A.-. ad deps with Chaeoumi~~ both roeastoa&fo yond bytrain2 and C.oma M iruo~tGm.. Bach and ouTe6sad At Angusta Su.1an lese b: g al N6tBoUN - Lv, Chab ston............ Lv Counba. Ar AItO -- Lr ..ion ......... Ar .... . i. Flat20 -o -- -.. Bend?erson......... Asheve. Hotsprings....-... Pomai...?Z.. ' ~ - G~odvie Clinton.. - Ninety-Si e itla on . - -~ enua -8nec- - Hot ings - Flat Rock - ---- Tryon ~- -- - - . Sparta-in g - - rx Aiston..-.----.. Columbia -..-. - Augusta. *Main Liune Trains Not. tween Columbia and Aso Sunda between AlstaandG~! JAS. L. TAYLuu.t Ge{~ D. CARDWELCDivi - - OL- A Ao Js the oda nd anos in ee.and eiSTy eesor- uaga. NimernsIn* patents. - - nnannstrictlyoidtII - the~ one oface. - -.i.. - 2i..,r