The Newberry herald and news. (Newberry, S.C.) 1884-1903, December 20, 1898, Image 4
THI IS
1899
\VA 11'.
Ahvwav's ahead Of
ESPECIALLY NOVK.
You will
Money.
do, but a
Sledge F
D KI
The sparks fly
A BIG A HING---IN
)
These are arw o our I
GROCERIES! ROCERI
N 1118, Conese,, i\ c k1rol, lit .,
AGATE WARE, TINW4
and Hi
We challengo tho wholt
Younig folksM nood not bo singlue any1 1,
you caniI go t.o hbous-1koopng pro,)
ovorybody will bet happy.
With a meirrv Cl
IIP8 I 8l I UCI'll I
S~THE
All uf our Energy, P
Pleasing Our Cus
CTrX. Ii
A Visit to The BE.
,...CON ST AN
Di THIS11 TI
find every De
We know "TI
.11 their quotat
[ammer---The
ett n
in every direc
DRY GOODS!
Ir'uI t h,i t h h'(tn l ,
ily n 1:.' of i, in - r
gi< f th ' I witah
O i ll1111d (or cml i:.iw. \\ (.
w ib h 111 Oii w I hll I.
sfe hini tu il t able,
60 1' ls.ite V( 3 , 1e thug.
II Vle l3 argaI (31 s. I l
S! GROERIES
coInpetiion. \\'W ARte
wr ld to fltch Otri <
) tg . A ill. ir 0.I O, itis e
ristill <rasl ad i
IEAT WI
TIIH-BUT
mIeI
THEUMTBED S1
THAN
BEEwHIVE OF
ush and Vim are constan
AM"...-the sole aim of.
tomers, Upon Whoni
~E-oIn sT .A.nm
HIVE Will Convince Y<
TLY ALIVE TI
1E HAPPY CHISTMAS
partment overflom
iERE ARE OTHEF
ions sink to naugV
knock-out quotat
r The
tion. You get th
We get the Mone
GREAT PLEASURE RE
y(mrN-01/Ch I 3ov
nias. ' -unIb r hliri' 4. toc11( k iso
Morr (( raik 111 olwy to pay our ind
MlI;N, Y()ijT i --I
I!k.\lnsS i from .0 upwad !
Voiti 's Sui from $2.50 iipwar
SHC
*I )omui I, whVi
ititl, woV~ 11ll'r I ur
ut ir4e line ut. IhMa
he th .0
ait S I.T5.
3-GOODS!
Bargains!
w to coo'e id
t happy New Year
ERLD V
That can' ServeY
BARGAINS
tly exercised and devoi
Our Success gep
)U How Thoroughly W
THIS FACT
SEAS O
ring with the Bes
S" claiming to s
t when you hea
ions of
Foir end S
e Goods
--perfect satis1
SULT SETS! T
Ilivo of Bar
icriCli C , ini
t ( 1ess.
in 1is linlo w W i
Nte or piievs, whi
> wiar<ls ! <Iiitote<l lwi o ItOt .
S- p~Ijrico, wich po rove s
atro ini Great. <10 I lvi to shioot -io
oh ititcatesi Shirtsi at, It .
I o ohr dr tO(i >O
creas ih . t tho[ se pri ces
~ wo will sill yu
T Jll!NKS
WVort bi $2 2.t
this department you v
oble Christmas presen
ingly low pr ices. Don'
Sufficient to say, we.*n
must go.
to one and all, v
The Fair a
VE KNO1
i Botter
ed to
,nds
e Are
t Goods for the least
ell as cheap as we
.r the crash of our
rinore oler.
action everywhere I
8IRTS! GENTJS FURNISHING GOODS!
lintaii l.n u rolnp taltion for lPriCO Cuting.
che i aways nioh lower than 1__i n iar gootl
S-uinali Iprofit n--< q ick nsalIes, tell t he story in ai
cho<l a lot of goorls fromt a facetory att hatlf
)Ili<l shot to anntihilato i c omptition--anld we
herei~ goos:
Pants att -10). 8HIpontlers att De. 1
hiefs at 4e. Nocke 'l'ues att 100.
1 ii
$2 0-O Wor,th $3.0 f) or $2. 25.
Ior~ $ I.f5. '11'h 15i your timo-e-not, ours.
iJ~
ORATED CHliNA,
CROGKERY,
and GLASS WARIE!
'ill find Thousands of .suit
ts for every body, at astonish-. a
t ask us why we slash prices. ii
eed money and the goods i
ti
rhite and black,
C:
C
nd Square Dealer. f
Social Gayetles
To be entertaining
when one ought to be
asleep. To eat sweets
and salads when the
stomach craves the
simplest food or none
at all. To laugh
when one wants to
cry. All this and
much moo
society de
muands of her
followers.
Whata
strain
on the
nerves
of deli.
cate
wo
nien ITh alr
IliCi IThe GreadfM
headaches. The
crushing pains in
the back and loins.
Tlie blues. All
such symptoms in.
dicate serious de.
rangements of the
isoit an delicate female or.
\anisin, and must
that they g>e overcome at
break . once. Remove the
down? cause. Strengthen
exhausted nature.
Bradfield's Female Regulator
Is the standard remedy for the weaknesses
and irregularities peculiar to women.
Bradfield's Regulator is not a mysterious
mixture of mythical origin, but a stanid.
ard remedy coinpounde in accordance
with scientific principles from approved
vegetable medical materials. Bradfield's
Regulator i endorsed by physicians who
have examined it, and has been i" suc
cessful use over a quarter of a century. It
is sold by druggists at one dollar a bott'e.
Perfect Health for Women " mailed
free upon application.
THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Qa
Artesian Wells In South Carolina.
(Thc Stylus.)
There is perhaps no other condi
tion so essential to the health and
comfort of a collimnlility as purc,
untainted water.
This need appeals more strongly,
doubtless, to people living in a see
tion of country where the natural
formiation furnishes water subject
to surface pollution, than to resi
dents in tile higher lainds where
pure Initainl strealls are fre
(tient ly t he source of tile water
stipply. NIuel of tile so-called mw
liria Common ill certainl localities,
hi, been lately shown to be more
correct Iy mauled ma1,l-a(ilad wvitli
ill Com pa rat i vely recent years the
question of obtaining pure water
has been strongly agitated. It is
ill response to Imalny inquiries on
th subject tlat this article is writ
ten. It is impossible at this time
lo give Illoc! t0han a few principles,
is the space limit here precludes
nytiing like an adequate or de
ailed treat lient of the subject.
iln lhe St. Lou is Christ ian Advocate
or Jainuar r' 9, 1898, ini an article
int it led" Artesian WellIs,'' >rof.
W . 11. WValhlace stateCs thIat airtesian
v~ellIs ha i'e sol ved thle quelstion of
>ure' water in South Cairolina, not
mly13 in tIle mlarshly, malarial sea
:oast country, but in the middle
11nd ulpper sections also, thlat rest
mi graii te f orma~t ionls. Thle state
uieni is doubltless tIle t ruth, for it
is been demiounst ratedl t hat an
libndaniIce of1 pure wvater' can be oh
ninedt' by Iboirng at cer't ai n p)laces in
oi ihe I .aiir'ent iin gneiss, whlich coy
ars thle gireater porltionl of' thle State
r'omi Cohlnmbia west ward. Thel
>robleim is, wheire shlall the rock be
iippjedl, foi' it is equially true that
vaitei cannot be obtaiiinedl by boring
iito t lhe roeck i ndiscriinna tely', i. c.,
uist at ainy p)oint.
Th'le conidit ioins of' secuiaiing water
ere ill thme P iedmaont regbin arie
ut ir'ely dliler'ent fraom t hose which
1)1a in ini thle Coastal Plaini, whea'e
is oinly necessary to bore through
lie uinconsol id(atedl st ratai of the
ior'e receint geological f ormalit ins
ut il thle driilu l)proaches thle unider'
v'inig gneciss, ovei' which thle perco
itinug watera find s its way to the
canl. As soon1 as t his r'ock, or
lime porou5st si'rat um1, is r'eachied thle
vateri rises ini thle well, it being ani
aSier pathI tha miui akinig its own
.'ay thIirough thle earit hi. Thle r'ock
01mpr~isinig thle cenit r'a aind western
or'tins (of the State is techniically
a lIed La,urIent ian gnleiss, popu11 airly
aIled granite. It is reckoned
mioing tihe oldest rocks of' lhe globe
nd( is of' unuknuown' thIickness, pr'ob
bly do, xx feet or imore. Althlouagh
I' sedimaenltary or'igin,i it is whlol ly
r'yst aIline in cha11racter', aind so vea'y
1hmpa)ic t t hiat waitear b eainig straiiIta
r'e nlot to beC found11( in it. No sIrait
ml is suflicient ly porouis to fur-'
ish any aidequate supply1) of waiter',
tould it be tapped. Fort unuately
iese anlcient rocks have ex perienuced
early13 all the vicissi tudi(es thrllough
'hiich thle eairthI huas passed. The
ver' aiccumiulat ing f orces of' the
matriact inrg cruLst (o fle eai'thI have
musedl them to be tilted, folded, I
'umaple(a, fissured, faulted mind
a.ctured. to such an e.x.te t'
there is scarcely a square mile of
strata ill-its origilal position.
It IS to tltse fissures and frac
tures thus formed that we must
look for any considerable supply of
Witter.
Baron Nordenskjold, of Sweden,
believed fro')m his researches in
Spitzbergeni, that at horizontal crack
would generally be foutd to exist
inl all solid rocks at an illsignuificant
depth beneath tihe earth's surface.
Ile further believes stich cracks to
be formed from variations in tem
perature, and finds them in granite
rocks fron 90 to 12, feet below the
surface. They yield from 6oo to
2,(x)( quarts of water ant hour with
moderate pulpinlf'g. It tle gnciss
of this State we neither look for,
nor do we find, anly such horizontal
cracks, but fissures and fractures int
every directiont through the rock,
and it any inclination to tile sur
face.
How to locate these fissures is
the oiie aid only problem to be
solved. This problem, while not
generally understood, if at all, evenl
by the professional well-borer, ad
mits of easy solution where the
rocks are exposed ; because their
character and position, the nature
and amoutil of the disturbance
which hats taken place in thei, can
readily be seen, even by the unl
trained observer. But where the
soil covers them to any con1id, r
ble depth, or where there are but
few rock exposures, as is frequently
tle case, it is often difiicult to de
termine whether or not to expect
to find fissures. It might appear
that a valley or hill side shall i
ways be chosen for the locatioi of
tile well. If all valleys atid hill
sides resulted from one and the
sate cause, viz., faulting, we
might reasonably expect fissures
and fractures to abound in the rocks
along tile line of tile fault, and that
a drill penetrating tie rock for a
fev hundred feet would, in all prob
ability, pass through one or more
fisGurcs carrying wvater. Valleys,
however, originate in several ways,
chiefly as follows: Valleys of ero
sion-formed by the softer parts of
the rock wearing awiay faster than
the harder; valleys formed by the
folding of the strala ; and valleys
resulting from dislocation of the
rocks, commonly known as fitilts.
Experience has showl that tile
margins of this last class of valleys
are good locations for artesian
wells. S. L. Powltm..
Case*~ of Poisoning
Hood's Barsaparila Drives the PoI
son from the System, Quiets
the Nerves, RelIeves Dyspepsa
and Catarrh.
" While in the army I was poisoned in
wardly with poison oak, and I did not get
well for 15 years. My blood bocame so
affected that I was taken with a hacking
cough, and I was thought to be going
into consumption. I took many different
medicines without avail, and finally re
solved to try Hood's Sarsaparilla. When
I had finished taking the first bottle the
pimples began to disappear from my
body, and after I had taken three bottles
I was well. I have also nuffered with ca
tarrh in the head and have been taking
Hood's Sarsaparilla for this trouble and
it helps me. Ini fact I take it for ali all
nmentst and believe it has no equal as a
blood purifier. It quiets the nerves and
gives refreshing sleep. It has relieved
me of dyspepsia and built me up." J. I.
HOLLIDAY, W illiamseton, South Oarolina.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Is the best-in fact the One True tBlood Purifier.
Bok(1 by all drggsti. $1; six for $5.
Hoods Pilscure Livr Inls easy to
Plstake, easy to oporate. 25e.
Remeniber
TPhat the Book Store is
theo phIicC to ge't your,
Chiristmas preseni)ts, Weo
lhave at full line of1
Pictures,
Dolls,
Musical Instru
ments,. and
Books,
For th'.o Chr'istmnas t.rad1e.
Fancy Goods
Of all kinds.
OGive us a call before buy
ing. We will tako pleas
urlO in showing you wvhat
we hayeO, whlethler you,
buy or' not.
J. K. GILDER
BOOK STORE,