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THE DARLINGTON NEWS, PUBLISH II> SVSETTHUMDAY MOKNINQ HENRY f. THOMPSON. PROPRIETOR. rEItl§»$3 Per Ananiu in Ad ranee. One Square, first insertion.... $1.00 One Square, second insertion 60 grery subeeqent insertion .50 Contract adrertisementsinserted upon the m-'si reaaonab'c terms. Marriage Notices and Obilnaries, not »en ding six lines, inserted free. THE DARLINGTON “FOR US PRINCIPLE IS PRINCIPLE—RIGHT IS RIGHT—YESTERDAY, TO-DAY. TO MORROW, FOREVER. VOL. XV. NO L9. DARLINGTON, S. 0., THURSDAY, MAY 9. 1889. WHOLE NO 747. JOB OMR. Onr job department is snpplitd with ever facility necessary to enable us to compete both as topriee and quality ef work, with ever those sf the citiea, and we guarantee tat : e faction in every particular or aharge not bhig for our work. We are always prepared te fill onlers at short notice for Blanks, Oil Heads, Letter Heads. Cards, Hand bills Posters. Circulars, Pamphlets, Ac. All job w ork must be paid for Cash on Delivery s of great peril, a questionings dilate Uttkegtri. THE DAUGHTfel. My little daughter grows apace: Her doUs are now quite out of date; (t soetns that I must take their place. We hare become each friends of lata We might be ministers of state, DixcuHalng projects of great i Such strange i The beauty of my I How tall shogrowsl What subtto grace lush every movement animate; With garments gathered for the race i'he stands, a god dear atlm and straight, Young Artemis, when she was eight Among the myrtle bloom and laurel— I doubt if she could more than mate The beauty of my UtUa girt. The baby passes from her face, leaving the lines more delicate, Till in her features I can trace Her mother's smile, serene, sedate. Tta something at the hands of fate To watch the coward years unfurl Each line which goes to consecrate The beauty of my little gtrL sjrvor. Lord: hear me, as In prayer I watt. Thou givest all; guard Thou my pearl; And. when Thou countest at the Gate Thy Jewels, count my little gill —Chambers' Journal A NIGHTS LODGING oppressed me. and I began to fancy qaeci Gimps, i knew that dwellings were at a E rcuiium in Leadville, and this was far I'tter than the average. Why should >1 be left at the mercy of the first prowling vagabond? There roust be some reason —sonic history connected with it. I felt a creeping in my veins, and then I ro- 1 meniliered, with a shock, that there was no lock on the door. Then I recollected . the clothing up stairs. Was it possible that any sane man would leave his prop erty unprotected in such a fashion? Perhaps the house was haunted. I had Unto This Day. If one loves a half hour of quirg qptd- itation, a withdrawal from tne pomps, and vanities of life, an awakening of the higher thoughts, he should visit tRe great picture of Mdnkacsy, “Christ Kpfare Pilato.” Every face and figure is tin pas sive, the rabble thirsting for • Imnian life, the military, sympathetic woman, the scheming, vindictive high priests, the stern and pitiless Pontius Pilate. Jesus of Nazareth, friendless, forsaken a supreme dignity in his attitude, a di vine resignation u|xm his noble brow. Wo see at the first glance that it is . , , . i ,, . ...... | useless to hope for justice or mercy from laughed at such things but the idea ap- tUat t r i!, lma f, and this feeling increases palled me now. Then by a natural tran- 1 j n lutensitv the longer We gaze into tlie sit ion it occurred to my mind that some horrible crime might have been cotn- It is no disgrace for a prospector to be poor, to have no bed except the blanket on his back, no friendly boarding house where his credit is good, no fortune favored comrade to lend him a helping hand and $5, It carries no suggestion ol dissipation, wild oats, or extravagance, and implies nothing worse than a run of bad luck. So I may say without shame that in the fall of ’80 I was broke. Star tistics show that one out of every 750 prospectors strike “it” I occupied a prominent position among the 740. Like many a better man, my claims had panned out badly, and my assays never climbed above two figures. I had pur- sued the silver ignis fatuus all over the Red Cliff district until my shoes were dropping off, and acquired nothing ex cept a stone bruise on each heel. Any one who has ever ffcx>d by a gambling table recollects the man who first loses a quarter, more in jest than anything else; then a dollar, then flushes and nervously pulls out a hill; then sits down and loses everything in a desperate effort to get even. TTiat is the prospector on a small scale. He plays at the faro table of fate and loses health, home, years, strength—every thing except hope, and all the while smiling at his dreams, until death takes the chips out of his fingers and closes up the game. I had mad • pretty fair progress on this road. I niitted there. One thought that sprang out of nothingness and laid hold of me wiili sickening iteration was that a dead man was under the bed in a back room, and by some curious process that we have ail experienced, but nobody can ex plain, I was aware that Dixon also was awake and frightened. Finally he spoke up: “I feel wakeful," he said. “I believe IT1 take a turn outside.” Meantime the moon had risen and Hooded everything with a white glare. I got up and leaned against the open door, while he, lighting his pipe, began to pace the slope. At last he turned and glanced toward the front of the house. The moon fell full on his face, and, on the instant, lit up such a look of inhu man terror as 1 have never seen before and trust I may never see again. He stopped not a second, but ran, ran with all the clumsy fleetness of abject fear, hard, cruel faces surrounding the Christ. Away with him, condemned l>efore lie is heard bv that voice of the people which is not tfie voice of God. Sublime sacri fice for an unworthv world! As wo leave this wonderful picture, looking backward a^ain and again, and find our selves by tlio closing of a door trans planted from the First to the Nineteenth century, we«re haunted by a conscious ness that the spirit of the crucifixion has come down with us through all these centuries. There is not a year, there is scarcely a day, but that some innocent soul is hounded to the death by the voice of the people. Circumstances furnish the vic tim, public opinion usurps the place of judge, accuser and witnesses, the thoughtless people take up the cry, “Away with him," the cr<j»a Is laid upon his shoulders, it is finished, and the mul titude goes its way. This is the fact to bo remembered, that the spirit of per secution still lives; that by our careless words, our lack of sympathy, our blind adoption of current ideas, our failure to 8i>cak out bodly for the right, we en- Call For Bids. Orrics INu m* Comhosu.mits, D’HLIMITOS I'ci'KTT. Dnrlingt'n.R. C., April 30ib, 1K80. Srntnl piopodris will hi 1 rvciived at Ibis tfficc uili! i lie o'cbck P. M., May 3(>lb. 1189, fertile er'ctiiiii wti'l com | leimn ->f a Drh k Jui will* all tbe moilera Improvt- n elite (or tbe (lounly of 1'arlingl oo. Plan n*uJ S'erificadnu* la be aren »l (lie (thee of Cooi ly C' n inUrior>erM nt D-irliogion. S C. The Hoard of County Coii.uiisaionei* ie«ei»e die liglii to reject ; ny or all lud«. HENRY E. P. SAM'tP.I*. Ctctk ol Hoard. May 7, 1880 -41. BRICK! BRICK! Wc now have on bnn.l nod ready for rale (lice bis ilk stumbling, falling down, sera: Ming up courage and support this spirit. “Christ again, always faster, until he d ; appeared Before Pilate’ carries this lesson, that over the hill. While this uappened, I , thou G!‘ he dled for th ® stood transfixed, and then I backed slow- j “helYpersonally remission of our for which wo our- ly oat of the house. I have read of peo ple Itackiug away from a wild animal or a lunatic—that is the way 1 retreated, and, I will be honest, when I reached the slope I ran, too. The remainder of my experience can bo briefly told. I never saw or heard of Dixon again, but very fortunately I found a friend In Leadville who put me on my feet. I stayed there, and cowardly but perfectly natural fear of D ° l purlieu sins, there are man selves shall be held personally responsi ble.—Ida Harper in Indianapolis Journal The Hatlcas Lady. A young woman made her way to her teat past all the people in the orchestra scuts of the Lyceum theatre a night or iwo ago, attracting unusual attention, because she liad left her hat in the ladies’ room. She was young and plump, and had raven black hair mat fell in a clus- a ’ ter of tight ringlets over her brow. She ilqrly good looking. Her Iv marked and full of being laughed at kept mv mouth scaled fiw ' 0 to ° 6iro “Sty r y arked a, . lJ . fu11 ( of »•» -"-r •“"V- i srnsrys txs. best fellows in the world, who shared my enthusiasm and thoroughly participated in my bad luck. His namo was Joe Dixon. A gentleman in Golden had “grub staked" us—giving us enough provisions to Kail for three months—with the un derstanding that he was to have a third of any discoveries. We discovered nothing, and devoured the provisions down to tho last bean in the last can. Our elbows were sticking out of our sleeves, a quarter of a year’s beard bris- tlcd on our chins, and we had not a five cent piece between us. This was exactly the state of our affairs when we came in sight of Leadville on our return. Wo approached the camp from the southwest, and it was evening when we paused on the foothills, a mile or so' away, looked down on the glimmering lights and held a council of war. Neither of us was acquainted in the place, and, although we hail some hopes of finding friends in the daytime, tho prospects of spending tho night in a strange town were unpleasant. We were not exactly accident came in sight of tho house on tho slope. Instantly my curiosity was ii* Tvvi‘'?rmn*r*r^rnn miner revived, and I determined to have a had witli mo a veteran miner, one of the , , , , ,, ,, , . ,. .. close look at It, the bright sunlight having dissipated what fears remained. I approached it from the rear, and the j place presented very much the same ap pearance that it did on that eventful I night. Slowly i drove around, survey ing it rather contemptuously until I Dixon saw I did not care to speculate i determined to find out what the other upon. t ladies had said of her in tho buzz that One day, m arly a year afterward, greeted her appearance, so between the when 1 had quit prospecting and turned acts he asked every man he knew what my attention to something more rctaun- the Lnly he liad wilh him had said when erative, l was out riding, and quito by K De saw the bare 1 ' ’ 1 " 1 r 1 Ful'y equal to (hose made in Colu-ubla OF elsewhere in the State. Our pice ia $8 a Th:usand» AT THE KILN, which is situated about half a mile west of the Tuwtt of Darlington. Those desiring to purchase should give r.s a call, ns we gunraiilt-e that our brick will give perfect satisfaction. A. C. SPAIN & CO. May 3, ’»8—tf TO THE PUBLIC! Do not buy an Engine, Boiler, Saw mill, Corn mill, Colton Ciu, oi Cotton Press, nut I you write to me (or ptioee. I AM GENERAL AGENT in tlii' State lor tbe uell known fiiin ol TALBOTT# SOXS, Richmond Va., and offer to you the best machinery lor'he notify that is sold in this market. Agents for HALL, EAGLE, ami LUMMUS GINS at popular prices. Write to m be fore jo.; buy V. t\ BA DU AM, Columbia, S. C. or Talbott k Sons, Kicbirot.d, Va. .May 17.’88- CALL FOR TAXES Nome is hereby ghititliAt tin Taxi s f't ibecunent ye r s re ca 1 fd for, payable to tbe Cleik at b:s i flice, 11out April 18ib to May 20, 1880, ’ue, usive. A1 pet sons f ailing to pat witbimhat Line will be sub jected to the usual penalty. By eider of Ouneil. J. C. X\ ILIA OX, Mayor, S S. Burch, Ch rk. IF. ISTORnyCEITT, i R E ip<rsxjn.«,KroB AGE3STT. REPRESENTS TEN OF THE LARGEST AND OLDEST COMPA- NIES IN THE WORLD. Insure* all Hueses of property, inciodinj; Gin Heores, in any part ol tbe County. Office mer DARLINGTON NEWS building. Dcceininhcr 0. 1888. BOOTS AND SHOES, HATS *7* du d CAPS. i‘ April 18, *89. reached the front, when one startled glance revealed to me what Dixon saw, ttiid 1 took flight as precipitately and as speedily as he. Lettered over the door was the simple legend: LAKE COUNTY SMALLPOX HOSPITAL, London's Growth of Population. When the population 1801 was under 0,000,000 that was 958,883. The capital and the king dom have grown together, but the for mer lias always grown faster, so that while England (including London) mounted from nearly 9,000,000 in 1801 to nearly 20.000,000 in 1881, London grew from 958,803 to 3,810,483 in 1881. G n- don more than quadrupled its people, while England (including liondon) did not quite triple it; England (excluding London) advanced in a still smaller pro portion, and it will be seen 1'iut England, headed leader of that fashion which all men dream of, but scarcely hope to nee established. These are the comments he got: “My wife says she must be fast.” “ 'She looks like a baboon,’ my girl • My companion says, ‘If she wants to attract attention so badly, why doc; n't she weal trousers, like Dr Mary Walker?’ ” ••She's got pretty hair; that's why she does it.” • Well, she must want to make a show of herst If.’’ • Deep in tin ir hearts every woman in the house envies her her pluck for com ing l.i \J:at way. for it's right, and if only s.ome swells would do it wc would all bo glad to leave »>ur huts off.” The u'.tercr of this sentiment, so dia metrically opposite to all the others, was the wife of r. n the theatre goer iicura uns, no ions the publisher over to the hotel across the way and said, "l want to drink your health. You'vo got tho best woman ia that Misses McCullough k Garvly Beg O announce that they l ave rented the MIIaXallsrER-Y DEIPAIVr^ElSrT of Edwtuda A Normeui’s Ntore ami Lave opened an entirely t ew line oi Nck(sI Styles Hats, Bonnets, Ribbons, Flow ers ana Feathers. HATri TRIMMED TO ORDER and SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. OUR GOODS ARE NEW AND STYLISH—OUR PRICES PlEASOlNrafVBEE, We Mobcil Hit early call and will always be pleumd to show our goods. Respectfully, MISSES MoCULLOUGH & GARVEY, of B.iltimoic. April 18, 1889. A FULL LINE OF EACH Hew Goods, LOWEST PRICES Population. ^ - , a young married woman, l of England m j i publisher. When :hat of l-or.don ! 1k .! ;) J thK ho t0 ok t Dog;s to remind the public that he is better prepared than ever before to n eet the demands of the present promises to be the most active that season, which Dariington i as ire. ’—New York Sun. ■_ excluding all its big towns, exhibits a tramps, but it would have taken an ex- , ,. , told the difference. The , jj ut notu about London: its l>ert to have spot where we stopped was a desolate looking slope, strewn with bowlders, and bare of vegetation, and presently Dixon called my attention to a largo, square house that stood some little distance A New t.t.-Lt. A new and promising light lies liecn iuvt nted and patented, whLIi i., likely to come into extensive use for contractors and others who have ni^bl work on their hands, 'i’he principle is something like (hat of the famous Lucigen, in which a seen for yettrs. Ilis stock, which embraces every line, almost, one can think of, taken as a whole, is probably the largest ev r carried bv any single firm in Dari ngton ; has been carefully selected with a view to meeting the wants of the multitude v. ho favor him with their patronage. crude petro dci* :n, 3 riven in rpray limits increase. If we had a series of maps shaded so as to show the popula tion wo should see tho black central spot of London getting bigger and bigger— the wen which C’obbett detest eel and de nounced—growing more and more wr- bfaek awav. quite by Itself, and seemed, from e*Y” *“v ““'N" “jr-s s.Li . If its empty, he said, suppose wo |pJ(,( or ant ] and by the center is sleep all night there, and in the morning 1 mcan t fliat strictly limited arc? we can go Into camp and rustle.” j ^/icd the city, but something more like We acted upon the suggestion, and what London was when tho century lie- proceeded to reconnoiter the premises. ' pan. Take, in fact, the area occupied Tho house was a two story frame, well h? the mass of those 9.>8,8C3 who con^.i- cntly os empty as a drum. No response u iti while around it lies a widening came to our knocks, so finally we pushed Rowing blacker as the center open the door and walked In. Dixon whitens. While, however, London lias struck a match, and we looked around grown so enormously in population and and found ourselves in a large apart- in so great a proportion compared with ment, which, with another of the same tho rest of tho kingdom, Its rate of whole lower floor, increase has not been at all commen- is P r ' size, occupied the Doth wore furnished sparsely but well. The front room had a number of chairs, a table, and several little conveniences in It, and the rear contained a couple of beds and a washstantL On the table were a lamp, a number of papers and periodicals, all of them dated several months back, and a large Inkstand in ... which the writing fluid had caked from . hi disuse. The air was rather stifling, from all the windows being down, and the .dust on the sills indicated that they liad not been raised for some time. We lit the lamp, and to make sur( that there had been no recent occupancy of the place, went up stairs. Here were two bedrooms and a sitting room, all well furnished, and in one of the bed rooms hung a quantity of excellent clothing. The windows of this floor were also down, and everything was as silent and lonesome as the grave. We went back to the front room, opened up tlie doors and windows, and proceeded to make ourselves at home, a little nuz zled, but satisfied that we had stumbled into clover. To show that we were en tircly open and honest sat in the front while we yvqre thus 1*9*4. tgtray. ally, and surato with that of many f provincial _ to that cf the towns of England us a whole.—Nine teenth Century. towns, nor lias it been equal to tlict cf Hr. Astor'a Kxpenalv* Yacht. Within a stone's throw of a South Brooklyn pier recently were fifteen achts, sloops and schooners, little and Tliey represented $1,000,000 of capi tal. The highest priced was Mr. Astor’s big 273 foot king steam yacht Nounnalial, w-hlch by looming up like an ocean steamer. The Nourmahal cost $o00,000, and Mr. William Astor, her owner, uses her for about three months in the year; tho other nine months she lies Idle. Tlie expense of running this leviathan toy is $8,000 ikt month. By the necessary ex pense is meant tlie cost of fuel and tho wages and keep of her crew. What Mr. Astor spends in entertainments, etc., on ol co™» noted, known but him. ^ The etpenec. therefore, of koepinn tho !£ i Noumialial for a ^ c ' a L’ outsl 1 d0 I ^r‘ < T 6 t(K) j With this e>;u-llence of figure gen- owner s personal expenditures,is. Interest “ u corrw ,, M)I „|i„ K excellcnso of on money invested, $18,000; exrK'nscs for carr ^.^ m this tesiwct the skill with time she L in commission. $1K0W, re which the Louis Quinze heel iscircum- —Ire, etc., each spring, alwut $5,000 ; ; , . on( i And with re- i>y compn ssed air, is made t;> give a light rivaling in intensity an electric ere light, but steam i.i used instead of com- pri-.iood air to drive tho jet of oil spray, i'he apparatus, ready for use, con sists of two cylinder:!, olio contain ing oil and the other water. They are tilled from the bottom, eo that the air in the cylinders is com- ircstted in the upper portion, or air may forced In by a small condensing pump. When the lamp is to be used, tho condensed air from the top of the cvlinders is’allowed to begin to escape through the jet. and tho oil is then turned on. The spray of oil and air is lighted, and burns with a light equiva lent to that of 2,500 caudles. Just above the flame is a coil of pit**, communicat ing with the water cylinder. As soon ns tliis ceil is hot, the water is turned on, and passing through the hot coil is vajwrizeu. and enters tho jet in place of the compressed air, which is then turned off. The steam serves to maintain tho blast begun with com pressed air, while it greatly increases the light, through its combustion into oxy- g en and hydrogen, which assist the com- ustion of’llit oil. As there is no wick, no choking can take place with any kind of oil, and crude or reflate petroleum, or creosote from gas wastes, can be burned, while the apparatus U portabl-, and the lamp can bo lighted in a moment. American Architect. Womcn'a Klgiirw In France. In anv asrembbge of French women, from a ball in tho Faubourg St. Germain to a bal de l'oi>era, tho number of ad mirable figures is very striking; tho face may be positively common, but the figure is nearly sure to lie superb. 1 ho wasp waist so much affected across the Chan nel Is apparently confined to fashion plates designed for exportation. The un wisdom of tight lacing is evidently not more perfectly ap preciated than its un- Ilere are a few of the man}' 13 J\. IFl Ci- I TST tits STOLE 1 Fin ED WITH 36 inch Wool Cashmere at 25 cents pci* yard, vvonh 35 »•> 36 inch Henrietta (’loth at 50 cents per yard, worth 65 centt A full line oi Black Cashmeres from 15 cents to $1 per yard A full line of Braided £ets and Velvets at various prices and shades to match the lar»;e line of DU ESS GOODS. A. E, ID "W K, E •4IT CH'ST! Groce its A Specialty AT 0 Enterprise Groces y. A S WHITE, Manager, FeptemtuT 13, ’89 i.vtv oil >i OKO. W DAIKJAN hen by t. Tiioarsos DARGAN & THOMPSON, Attorneys at Law, fttfth'-Xnilhya I ai'Jv ot liic Public Square _ Darlington, N. (\ J. J WAR 11. V. O. WOOD, WARD & WOODS. Attorneys & Counselors at Law, DA HUS OWN, 8. C. Wil practice in all State uitd Fvlerul Courts.I Bpeei <1 utteiiii: u jMttl to ail ti al- lei* pci'am i.'jf t>"> the liu.ving, . ell- mg. r< nt tig ot 'easing of te -1 e>tatc. Any par t ii.it mg bu>iue-s mi tins Inn* would do well to cal! on the firm, who have oouliolot i-oitie of tha most desirable preperty iutb j Town at <1 C'-nidv. CHEAP STATIONERY. 5 eents each J. K N STTLItS. C. ». KKTTtXA A ETJLE El*IE OE GENTS’, L\DIE’S, AND CHILDREN’ SIK ES. 12000 yards Plaids, bought below the market, and will be sold accordingly. 500 suits Men’s, Boys’ and Children’s ready-made clolhing, at Sweeping Bargains. Hats and shirts in proportion. 200 Barrels Flour bought direct from the Mills before ad vance in the market, and being sold at less than icgular price •Nettles & Nettles, Attorneys fc Counselors at Law, ])arliugt«i» f. II., ,H. C'. Will ptvti-tik'e iii all the State ami Federal Contis. Prompt personal attention given to collection oi claims. Sep. 2, ’80 ly. TH. SPAIN Attorney at J . w. DARLINGTON, C. H., S C. Will practice in Circuit Courts and Supreme Court of South Carolina. Prompt attention given to all bu- pines*, mid special attention given All heavy Groceries bought in Car Load quantities, and all to collections, ia bulk at prices that compare favorably with CharlesUn. Lead pencil.-’, State p, ucils, Faicoti p ns, Pea holders, Ink, Mucilage, Lelfer paper, Enveh pc, Phofi'gr-pb album Tes aui' uis, All ol the above ti e ver> be*t qnulity, bad at 1 uk Book Stork, D.irling'on News Bni'd'iig March 28, ’89. (rose ch. 5 c s each. 1 cent each. 5 ets 4 hoi lie. acts a bottle. 5 els a qt he. a cts a pack. , la cts each. 5ct* ••a«:h. art idea and ate of can l« Flme M lorn. J B. KILLOUGII haa niove<l to tb* Mioco Ituihlinf, on DarcHii Slrvel. an<l has in .lock Pianos and Organa, Shr.t Mu-ic timl iniiaionl Merctinn>ti-o. lie ia |>re|>arH to <Iut)licute aujr nfl r niailr, be- ine Eiicle'l up l>y eouu ol tlie beat mu.io iiouae. in the eountri. He ia now pra- pnreil to nine and n pair I’imioa and Of* tans Juaepli Leixcli is lii« w iikmoii an I baa served hia t ne in a manufactory of Pianos ami Organs. I’h.I »r write to J. B. Kil'.ntigli, 1'raw-r l), Fiort nee, 8 0, He will not l.e iiD'lersol I. Jan 31, ’89. a w. BUTII. G*o w. asowN BOYD dt BROWN- attorneys and Counselors at Law drove by op >bvi hundred j pulled up, out “Good et •ponse, hut 1c very 1 St whipped up his hone, icident did n< called no re us, and scarcely afford IhLi, and so tho Nour tnahal 1} u little ly — _ inahnl lies idle most of the time.—Brook- Tills inci not disturb us m l Tlio CbIvmwI Solvent. . . , L. . ra C t ia (he universal •olvent. But it presently we turned ia, rolling in our Ht e ex traordimirv memory, or blank'd. «-i the floor. BtA | did not a BcnriUve musical ear, or a quick and fclcep. An i lay there iq th$ stlllncfis and 1 true f or color. Without it there is ipess in thij m ‘ dark, lire 8on*i enipty house stance of it of ;ij noinngiccf carnuT, b».t v. itl. itucharm- circuui- mg in rcw'niii*' uU’iimiphont.--Harper s uu tenanted. Magazine. exorable way nn-rieiit republic cim pretend to. rranoe L still, if not tire only country In the world where dress is an art, at least the only one where the dressmaker and tbe milliner are artistn-W. C. Brownell w Scribner’s. A diamond trust Is the next and most magnificent combination to be femed by a consolidation of tho four greut South African diamond fields. _ Office in rear of Dai itigiou Xulion- al Bank. DA HUSO TON C. II, 8 C. Pi.OMPT I’KKSONaL ATIKNTIO.N TO ALL BL>IM88. Feb 3, , '»7 -ly. Uur Hardware Department, in charge of Mr. J. H. Early* has in stock the largest, as well as the best, assortment of Stoves and Stove Furniture ever exhabited in Eastern South Carolina. Having bought by Car Load ent rely, we are pre pared to make figures that defy competition. In Sewing Machines we handle the White, Am erican. House hold and Hartford, all strickly first-class ; also machine need les, oils and attachments tor all machines. We carry a large line of Engines and Mill supplies, such as Darlington, Belting, Packing, Lacing, and all kinds of Steam Fittings in Office up stuns, ovt-r .h iron and brass; Lubricating and Cylinder Oils Tallow, etc. Machine Bolts in every size. Agricultural machinery, such as Colton Gins, Feeders and Condensers, Presses, Mowers, Horse Rakes, Grain Drills, etc. Pumps for driven wells, a specialty. We are agents for several first class Steam Engines and Mills and would be pleased to give bottom figures to those desiring to purchase a ginning or saw mill outfit. September 13, 1888. ffprAg lii* T / o H r j 'WiltIf corrscT ■ ->AND<. PRESERVE THE SIGHT | • SOLO ONLY BY * . J. H. MASON Optician, i’ubiic Square, Dail ngton, 8. G* HKNMV OUVCR W F. DARGAN, Attorney at Law, * S.C- l\i*t uffii-e Mail'll 28. 89 Iv. C. P. DARGAN, Attorney at Law and Trial Justice. Praoii>'fs in (be Uni(e<l Stairs Court sn'i ia lbs fib suJ 6th oiro-lts froaipl sl'sn- (Imi («al bna(n«ss eatruale«i la bioi. Office is Bsehsuxe Street, nex*. (hs Dae- sotos N»»* Office. ill M to ‘ CKO. K.TOALE, HKNNV Ol Geo. E. Tome & Co, MAM’FAOTVKKUa —AND— WilOLKkSALK DKALERS IN Doors, Sash, Blinds, Builders' Hardware, AND Bml Siiig UilmL OPFICK AND SALESROOMS 10 anil 12 Hnjue Street, OHARLB3TON. • - aO Write fer Estimates. M ij 81,1888. ' • :