The Darlington news. (Darlington, S.C.) 1875-1909, March 01, 1894, Image 2
Hhe Darlington Deo.
PCBLISHKD EVKRT THURSDAY
UORBINO.
fiENRV J, JHOMPSOR,
PROPRIETOR.
TERMS—$1 Per Annum in Advance;
SO cents for # months; 25 cents for
3 months.
Advertising Rates:
One Square first insertion..
One Squai^sdri^dd
Every subsequent insertion
Contract advertisements inserted
upon the most reasonable terms.
NIGHTINGAU9. '
AN AUTOMATIC LIGHTHOUSE.
i There Is No 1
A remark)
i which shsdl
tuary ofJ^
stands upon ai
er, bat tb* Bright Light
rrpstMUjr.
Jc lighthouse is the one
]Nf|frtdng rgy* from an es-
Je.Tn France, where It
rhek lift he midst
ItoaolKul must be Hie mounlalnt whence ye
a naac* oa tv% m vam i
And bright In ilreame
whfrefroui
Vo learn your pong.
Where ere llioee elerry woudst Oh, might I ,
e-wklHtSV there — 1 ..((rtV* 11
Among ihA'kowgts, wltkjU.hh.thst.Sieaveiib'
air.
Bloom theteir
"Nsth hariten »n- tleae.yiouatalns yt<; tlxvg
the strtsamH.
Oiiri»!i|f iattlfcj vWc «f itanJriillM l»*«iii»our
Ureams- . . » .. , .
®* o o. iAWmeWAe*HMC , ‘‘ oo.^ i
Whew pli^iig dlm.LqSi(i^>'i* lioiit^iiro-,
No diiHgatdi'WW ner.lqngslgl <»n muMA. »o
■ For all our art ,
* T\*j, . ._
rot tr
Wo )ioun aarldtfink Uie»>
Aunlght i»j»Ulitlrawn
Frr»» HWMliWlMflfcirH
DiVsrti'whfhftheInthhii.-iilMli. tidfr>ofVlsy'
\t) »>s ’Trrrrrr—ptTrrrrH^^ril »vl *
( A Blir leoWpr,round.
T&H*T* a Towf/r I’Aniiy Or V»oafn1, aait
l« t'alU'tlv ltt«cr#n iu< ®(jSiin%hfMii4 f “ 1
Me.
nu the coast, whence 1,000,000 lohsteys
are sliippAd each 1 'tVilfi ThW< potihd'i^
Joysaeil by lmil(Ujig a^HAflam,atros-v*.
tidewater cove. This'qam doegjmt quite
risd to hlfeh tVaWr’tnifrlt.' md 'iUToss ni'e
topis placed a fence -of liron! wm1s( psi>- '
miUimra du^ychjwmj.ol waArc pro-,
venting the lobsters from esc'^pm^. (
m a uiujyciunqjc > c w au-c pre-,
itina the lobsters fro.n esc^piu(a
) spring ami full business is most brisk.
Wlietitfid fisherilit'n'bi'in'K the Itftfiiten
to. the ixmirtr the" ,i fi8h‘ , «* tHeynfcfe
called, are hoisted tethe daiu.'ineisnred.
iuclms liingl the legal liitnt.are lbroHij.in.
If a lobster is clever, IbA life yi |l|cpHVml
may taking junl full of Lv-Jltijr
tttipid,he will 1hi finned, ant with a dr^ir
scioOsinfl pa<*ky(lTil al>Arr'c1,'wltdrd'mec'e
of ice fbr a piiitiit.intff‘seht''tA , HWt<lA , .'
The admits made' of MAut kAdite ahll hi
weighted at the botU.mkviUi wticavy
< liain. Along the Lop is a rovysrflcorks,
which spstailt itiig.wiUHlvll btfUte seino
while the clutii^ |og, bottom of
the potiiwl, , ,, ; (
A stogie cast or'this 'seine will bring
np lobsters enMigti t6'f!Tl 1V barrels. The
chain ns it sweeps alorw the liottom stirs
np the lobster*, whidhiimmeiliately shoot
backward..into tlikslack twine. In tak
ing tbtim ontr Uhi' iiicn wear heavy mit-
tegs, tbuugh .eytfi then they are often
nipped, fu ^he ponml the lobsters are
fe<l on salt herring, men rowing about
in skiff* Atid' pitching the herring over
board. Ibis is called “feeding tile chick-
eue,” and it takes about six barrels to
inaloe.a light luncheon for the flock.—
UoHtou Globe.
of a treacherous reef. The peculiarity of
this lighthouse is that it is unoccupied,
and yet its lamp is burning perjieMially.
The famous Eddystone light on the coast
of .England, rishig from a rock that is
only large enough to afford a foundation
f,f the struct pi", is remarkable because
tifeiigAi bawrigst in charge are able to
leave their confined quarters only once
in three months, when a veaael comes to
them with aappliea, letters, papers and a
new .detachment of watchers.
It WM to do away with this exacting
and iopesume life that the French engi-
iteers'set’ VlieifVielyes about the task of
ilevistog a fnethdd by which the useful-
iteSa: bf' the' Ifgiithonse could be main
tained without so much personal atten-
ItthiM happened that a lamp was
vented that would burn coutmoonsly
fpr two months wij'uont being trimmed
oj: replenished.
1 Tpc burping fluid used in this lamp is
aii ordinary mineral oil. The tube in the
infStlbi'bf'tl|e lamp is furnished with a
Wii’V having a thickness three times as
an'those employed generally iu
rhtbotwes. Around the burning sur
face of the wick:it a cake made of a pat-
»<< ><I1 tfeiilediprepsratioii ronsiatiag largely of
••Alone aloud In.the rapt.j».l ear of men f ThU protection assures
‘ le duratipn and the uniformity of the
me.. A chimney made of mica is
f aiplitid the flame, and this in-
'Aii llicri’ase in the power of the
The supply of oil is assured by
insau* <of a reservoir containing 100
qiuurts, Alia lamp consuming 50 grams
each hour. To provide always for the
H'Wyoir furnished with sufficient
fned q gangs is.fixed at its side that gov
erns tbe supply flowing in from another
reservoir At a distance, and this gauge
Jiertofts just ne grams per hour to perco
late throngh tlm little supply pipe into
ihe i *ujppVyrewrvoir. 1
1 : The diameter of the lantern is 56 inches
•iid R ('rtgt $1,400. The intensity of the
(iglft keeps editable nntil the expiration
.pf ,(wp W.pnths, when it is necessary to
yiqik t|m Tight house and replenish the
'mgkn. The light can be seen more than
Tt miles at sea. The wick is cleansed
and UioSe whnth . are. more than Iff)"Anddrawn np gradually by the action
bt 'the -ter cake at its month. The French
’‘government U arranging to put upothers
of these houses, and It is also perfecting
pn Invention by which a perpetual elec
tric light can be controlled by wires run
ning through a submarine cable to tue
the land.—Excliange.
The Cut In AnHent Timed.
The cat waa so very highly regarded to
England at one time, both as a rat and
mouse catcher, and as au ornament to
society, that we find the following sain
tary law passed by one of the princes
of Wales:
“If any one steal or kill a Cat that
guards tho Prince’s Granary, he is to
forfeit a milch Ewe, its Fleece and
Lamb. Or, as much Wheat as, when
poured npoij tho cat suspended from its
tail, with the head tonrhing the floor,
would forma heap highenouglit touover
the tip of the former."
Though the Welsh hud a high opinion
of the cat, the ancient Egyptians hail a
still higher. Tliese intelligent aqd civ-
ilixed ivtuple treated cats with great dis
tinction. It was a crimp io kill them,
and when they filed they reieive^n pub
lic burial, at which the people mourned,
having first shaved off their eyebrows as
a token of sorrow. The most prominent
cats were upou death embalmed in drugs
and spices, and cat mummies hare been
found Hide by side with thoae of kiugs.
Wlien Cambyses, the Parian, attacked
the Egyptian city of Pelusia, be cunning
ly provided his soldiers with cats in
stead of shields. When the host ad
vanced, the-Egyptians retired in confu
sion upon discovering that they would be
nuable to do damage to their enemy
without seriously iniperiMng the live* of
vast numbers of cats. And so the city
was taken easily and without tho loss of
blood or of a cat. It cannot lie disputed
that the ancient Egyptian cats intikt liave
enjoyed life very unioh.'*-8t. tonis Poet-
Dispatch.
“Yanks* lloudle.”
The tune of “Yankee Doodle" has had
seven or eight treatises written npon it
in't he last Bo years, ascribing it to vari
ous dates and origins, even back to The
Netherlands and the days of Cromwell
and the Charleses. Dr. Georgs Grove of
London, author of the "Dictionary of
Music and Musicians,” has investigated
thoroughly the various (nnsical libraries
Hurd Depoalta In Stettin Hoi ten
A very simple method of preventing
hard deposits m steam boilers is men
tioned by M. Schmidt, a French en
gineer. There are two boilers in nse at
the same time, one being at rest, and
the water in use is very bad, being very
calcareous and magnesic, with organic
matter, chlorides and a little sulphate of
of lime. Each boiler is allowed to go on
working for about 500 hours before
tieing cleaned, when it is stopped,
with the water in it, and allowed to cool
down for about a week. The masonry
is allowed to become cold, and then the
tap is opened, also the safety valve, so
that the water runs naturally out of the
boiler, the latter, when empty, being en
tered and simply swept. The deposit,
being in the form of damp mud, is easily
swept away, leaving the boil-ir as clean
Inside as if it were new.
This method has been in nse some five
years and seems to show that the ordi
nary hardening of deposits in boilers is
duo to the absence of water in them
while the mnd and the iron are being
heated by the brickwork when the boiler
has been emptied by the ordinary meth
od under pressure. It is necessary, how
ever, under this system, to be able to do
without the particular boilei for some
eight days.—New York Sun.
The Seuee of Sight.
Like every other sense, that of sight
improves by nse under healthy condi
tions, and therefore the people who have
the greatest exercise of their vision in
the open air under the light of the snn
have the best eyesight. Generally speak
ing, savage tribes possess the keenest eye
sight, acquired through hunting. Natives
of the Solomon islands are very quick at
perceiving distant objects, such as ships
at sea, and will pick out birds concealed
in dense foliage some 00 or 70 feet high.
Shepherds and sailors are blessed with
good sight.
Eskimos will detect a white fox in the
snow a great distance away, while the
Aral* of the deserts of Arabia have such
extreme powers of vision that on the
vast plains of the desert they will pick
out objects invisible to the ordinary eye,
at ranges from one to ten miles distant.
Among civilised peoplee the Norwegians
have better eyesight than most if not all
others, as they more generally fnlfill the
necessary conditions. The reason why
defective eyes are so mnch on the in
crease in this country, and in Europe
lies, in too mnch study of books in early
life and in badly lighted rooms.—Brook
lyn Eagle.
InprOYleg an Opportunity.
A man who was somewhat the worse
for frequent libations boarded a Market
street car the other day, and while he
and the 'British innkefimla BngUndL ro, ' e he ke l >t the other <*>“•
finding no traces of it whatever, thus ex vuU " d - Aftw he 1 ‘*' 1 comfortably seat-
ploding all the mystical, traditional and I* 3 biuM ® lf two y onn * ladi "* K°‘ on -
apochryphal accounts tliereof. ’ rhere was n0 room for theul 40 <lown .
But “Yankee Doodle” had an origin | »o the inebriated man remarked to two
and has a 1’story. It was written by ■ T 0UI1 * ,u,-n m * t him ' " wh y yon
Dr. Richard Sclmciibnrg. whose c<m ;. : fcUoshsgesh up and givesh ladies sheatf”
Seeing that they did not move, the
I man addressed himself to the two young
! ladies in about this style, “Girlsh, 'f I
j conld shtand, yon could have my sheat.”
Here the conductor thought it time to
interfere and admonished the well mean
ing fellow to be quiet under pain of be
ing put off. This seemed to have the de-
| sired effect, for he kept still after he had
‘ said: “Conductor, I’m married man.
Have to talk n >w. for after I get home
my wife won’t give me a chance. ”—Phil-
A LI* Told In School.
rt has always been father’s purpui? to
give bis children a fair education, but aa
the family increased to size and numbers
and father's salary would not grow in tbs
same proportion, he found it necessary
to cut down Dome of the aVenndl of ex
penditure One of his first thoughts was
that of the shoe bill for the family. Bald
he, “I'll be the cobbler when any shoes
need repairing after this.” Unfortunate
ly my shoes gave out first, and tho next
day was set for repair day. Father
brought from the shop where he w-as
working soma of the old belting that liad
been laid by. This leather was thorough
ly saturated with oil, and as I entered
the schoolroom next day with new ta|»
on my shoes the oil would form a mark
on the floor, just like a footprint on the
newly fallen snow, and what good ex-
ense to tell I couldn't think of.
It liecame an eyesore to the whole
school, and I was wishing soumhow I
might take a vacation. Finally the
teacher noticed it I was called np to
the desk, leaving my track all the way,
and asked to explain. .Shaking like a
leaf, I told the story. My-hrother Jack
and I bad got to fighting the other day
in the cellar, and he threw me in a pan
of grease that was aear by cooling.
That lie settled the teacher, but the other
element of the school were not satisfied
nntil ttiey stood me on my head and
looked at idy shoes.—Cor. New York
Recorder.
In m City Restaurant.
A trifling incident noted not long ago
to a city restaurant tells its own story
and needs no spoken moral. Two girls,
possibly attendants in a shop, were sit
ting together eating their luncheon, and
one was holding forth io her companion
on an experience which had just befallen
her.
“I came in here,” said she, “and got
this seat, but wan't long before an old
lady came in and sat next to me. She
took off one pair of glasses and put on
another. Then she stared and stared at
the hill of fare and laid it down. 1
thought first she couldn't read a word
Then she turned around to me.
“ 'Will yon let me sit next to the win
dow? says she.
“I didn't take any notice, and in a min
ute she said it again. Then I answered
her:
“ ‘No,’ says I, ‘this is my seat, and Pm
going to keep it.'
“She turned 'way round iu her chair
then and looked me all over. Then she
looked away. But I guess she knew I'd
got the best of her, for she did have the
manners to say:
•„ ,j your pardon.’
“She spoke real low, and I noticed she
looked kind of surprised.”—Youth’s Com
panion.
Sticks In Mercantile Life.
Many young men choose a mercantile
position for the present only without
thought or intention of making it a per
manent business. The result is that of
tentimes we find these men at.80 years
receiving' no more pay than they did
when only 18.
There is an army of til.' class of young
men behind counters today. They are
an aimless, pitiable class. They stand
listlessly iu their departments and areas
unobservant of what’s going on around
them as are the inanimate figures which
one sees at the entrance of clothing estab
lishments.
Many of them let slip grand opportu
nities of becoming great business fac'.ors
in the commercial world and have
doomed themselves to the treadmill of
common drudgery. Singleness of pur
pose implies self reliance, without which
a young business man is not thoronghh
furnished for a successful business career.
—Dry Goods Economist.
mission dates 1737, in the French and
Indian war of 1755 under General Jef
frey Amherst and was intended as a
“take off” on the “rag, tag and bobtail”
recruits of the colonies that came into
the army. It “took" so well, however,
that tho Americans liave ever adopted it
and would not part with it for anything.
The first words,
. Father and I went down to camp,
were in the Boston Journal in 1768, and
the first record of the tnne is in Arnold’s , , ,, « „
“Two to One,” 1780, so tbal “Yankee a ' M pbia Call
Doodle,” although written by a British
surgeon, is really American.—Boston
Transcript.
Pleasure In the Heavens.
There is a satisfaction in learning the
names and positions of the stars that
does not belong to the study of the
planets. The stars apparently never
change so fsr as their position relative
to each other is concerned. The planets
are always moving, and to those who do
not watch the heavens with particular
attention it is a cause of surprise very
often to find a "new star” adorning a
certain section of the heavens. If, how
ever, this newcomer be carefully ob
served from night to night, it will he
found to change its distance from the
fixed stars, and the observer will discover
that it is a planet and at liberty to wan
der about from place to place under the
sole condition that it obeys certain rules
of motion. When the bright stars that
grace the lieavens become familiar to ob
servers, they will know just what to ex
pect on each, succeeding season.—New
York Times.
Maerlsc* Prop,.*.! Rrfurm.
A suggestion is made for a legal re
form which, while retaining breach of
The of Hotel Keeping. j promise action*, would deprive them of
Borne idea of the enormous proportions ' all their ornamental trimmings in the
of the business of hotel keeping has as- shape of love Liters aiffl tbeother nsnal
sumed in this country may he gained : incidents of courtship. It is proposed
from the fuel that there are in the 1 that no promise of marriage should be
United Sti.tcs upward cf 50,000 hotels, held valid uni ss it is made in writing
exclusive of what may properly be npon properly stamped paper. Young
termed inns and tavern* and what are , ladles might -ffix a sixpenny stamp to
commonly known as apartment bowes, ’ the letter in which the swain declares
although the latter are in many instances , his »(lections and ask him to be so good
conducted as hotels in that they have a as to cancel it with his antograph.—
1 London Tit-Bits.
l?' ‘ Qur customers and friends kjn'ouglfobt $he eOounty C6 know
that we ha*e-iti8t opened the
Largest Stock of Goods
We have ever had the pleasure of offering to the public, and
that thesa goods were bought with a view to the present hard
times, which means that in order to sell this large stock, wo pro
pose
TO WORK OK SMALLER PROFITS.
We ask the people of Darlington and adjoining counties* to
sustain us by giving us their patronage and we will not disap
point them.
Remember, our stock embraces everything in the way of
Dry Goods, Clothing,
Shoes, Hats, Hardware,
And Groceries.
Respectfully,
BRUNSON, LUNN & CO.
Cu.tomers Too Particular.
Some years ago the proprietors of a so
called “ulster house” in London placed
in their windows a placard setting forth
a new rule of their establishment, name
ly, that no orders given by Americans
would be executed unless the orders
were paid for beforehand. The proprie
tor on being interviewed declared that
American ladies were much too hard to
please—infinitely more so than English
ones. Tliey insisted upon having their
things made to fit or they refused to take
them. “I had an ulster sent back to me
the other day, for instance,” he re
marked, “by an American customer
merely liecause it was longer in front
than it was at the back.” Only that and
nothing more!—Lucy Hoojier in Home
Journal.
Economy In Foot Wear.
The neatest and most economical jios-
sible foot wear is a low cut shoe of a
special pattern to bo worn with gaiter*
to match each dress. This style of foot
clothing has many advantages. The low
shoe is easily aired, and the inner sole
j will retain the odors of the feet with the
neatest of persons if not properly aired,
: especially when one walks mnch. The
gaiter breaks the apparent size of a large
i foot and forms a very attractive finish
when matched to costumes.
Skirts rubbing against the front of
high kid boots will wear theeeam, while
the lower part remains in perfect condi
tion. t Gaiters, npon the other hand, can
be changed as soon as defaced and worn
with the same boot. Many pretty gaiters
are possible for different occasions and
styles of dre-s.—Jennets Miller Monthly. !
| The gold mines of Pern vere so rich
that Atchnallpa, to buy bis ransom, I
filled a room 2> by 17 feet to a height of
9 with golden vessels. When melted
j they produced #15,480,710 of gold.
j The Yezidees, a peculiar Turkish sect, I
cut off the head of any one who inad-1
I vertently speaks the word “devil,” “g*.
. tan” or anything with a similar mean
ing _ I
IF NOT YOU SHOULD!
Come in and see the BEST SPRING FOR COMFORT, DURA
BILITY AND CLEANLINESS in the world. They have 12Q oil-
tempered spiral elliptical springs and each of these is braced in
such ji way that they will last a lifetime. We will make a
Special Price of 85
On these beds for the next 30 days only and you should not fail to
get the width of your bed the next time you come to town and get
one. Remember,
One-Third of Your Life is Spenf in Bed!
and if you buy one of these beds you will never regret it.
J.D. BAIRD
“The Furniture Man”
Jan 4—
Eftahli/hed 1S58.
Re Established 1880.
Insure Your Property
-WITH-
IF 1 . E. II^OIRIb/EIElNrT,
Who represents the
ii m mi!
Satisfaction Guaranteed. Represents Twelve First-
class Companies.
September 11,1890
Watches Repaired
AND WARRANTED.
AT-
M1S0N S JEWELRT STORE.
Feblfl—tf
Is Your Life
Worth Anything
to others? 'Are there not
persons dependent on
your earnings for their
support? Are they pro
vided for in case of your
death? The simplest and
safest way of assuring
their protection is life in
surance. Business, pro
fessional, and working
.men generally, should in
sure, for their brains or
their muscles, are their
capital and income too.
’ Death stops them both.
Insure in the
Equitable Life
and death cannot stop your
salary or steal your capi
tal, and your loved ones
will be safe from want
w. j. roddey;
O—iral Agsatfertlu Carolina*,
ROCK HILL, South Carolina.
_CAUTIOX.—If a dealer offers W. L.
ttoegle* shoe* at a rad used prior, or •*,*
without name slamped on
bottom, pnt him down ns n fraud.
THE “CALIGRAPH.”
+**
It is now
Thirteen years since the
“Caligraph” Typbwritkb
jvvas first put upon themar-
"ket and in all that time has
responded faithfully to
what is required of a first-class writing machine.
The Caligraph-is recognized everywhere as the
most simple and most durable typewriter. It is
easily learned, does beautiful work, and will last a
decade, if properly cared for. In speed contests it
has repeatedly taken first place and in telegraphic
work has nevei been excelled. For manifold work
it has no superior. With intercbangable parts the
Caligraph is well nigh indestructible. The expe
rience of business men, ministers, telegraphers,
short hand schools and government departments all
go to prove that the Caligraph is without a peer.
SOI-.XI) OUST E-A.STT TIDIilAS
which can be ascertained'by applying at Thk Dar
lington News Office. *
C. Irvine Walker, Jr.,<fcCo. t
GENERAL AGENTS.
6 BROAD STREET, - • CHARLESTON, S. C.
What is
Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher’s prescription for InCaats
and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor
other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute
for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor OIL
It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years’ use by
Millions of Mothers. Castoria is the Children’s Panacea
—the Mother’s Friend.
Castoria.
“Castoria Ls so well adapted to children that
I recommend it os superior to any prescription
known to me.” H. A. Archer, M. D.,
Ill Bo. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. T.
“ Tho uso of ‘ Castoria * is so universal and
its merits so well known that it seems a work
of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the
intelligent families who do not keep Castoria
within easy x-each.”
Carlos Martyr, D. D.,
New York City.
Castoria.
Cas tort* curt* Colic, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation,
Ell), Worms, five* deep, and promoto* dt
Zrtdion,
Without Injurious medication.
“For several years I have recommended
your * Castoria,’ and shall always continue to
do so as it has iavariably produced -e^t.1
results."
Envm F. Parukz, K. D,
HSLh Street and 7th Ave., New York City.
Tbs Ckntach Conp/ vr, 77 MuaaAT Snucwr, New Toax @itt
LAW CARDS.
R. W. BOYD.
GKO. W. BROWN
BOYD dt BROWN-
Attorneys and Counselors at Law
Office in brick building south of
the Bank of Darlington.
DARLINGTON C. B., & C.
Pr.OMPT PERSON A I, ATTENTION TO
AL1, BUSINESS
d. W. DAROAN.
H. T. THOMPSON.
DARGAN & THOMPSON,
Attorneys at Law,
Office in Darlington OuaKis'
Armory building, lower floor!
Darlin/ftun. S. C •
B. o WOODS. T- H. SPAIh
WOODS&SP v IN,
(Successors to Wai J & Woods,)
Attorneys & Counsellors at Law.
Offices formerly occupied by
Ward & Woods, over B ink of
Darlington.
Practise in State and Federal
Courts.. Prompt personal atten
tion to all business.
W. L. Douglas
S3 SHOE THE E WORLD.
W. J*, DOUGLAS Shoes are atvlish, ea^y f t-
trig, a id give better aalisfaction st the pricci«J.
▼ortisec than any other make. Try one pair and
be coa' iaced. The stamping of W. L. Douglas’
name s-td price on the bottom, which gunr mice*
their w-iue, saves thousands of dollnrs annually
to those who wear them. Dealers w ho push the
"ft ' V * pouelas Shoes gnin customers^
which »ielps to increase the sales on their full lint
C^o^ic free upon appHcaU^ AddPt ,^
W* L* DOUGLAS, Brockton, Maas, bold by
A- J- BROOIMI,
Darlington, S. C.
Fcbl—5m
I Invited,
Darlington Lodge
No 7, Knigh< ofPythlJ
ns, mwtson 1st ami ;)rd
ITuksdaT EvcdIiiks In
each month, at I astle
Hall, Florence, street,
opposite Broad. Visit
ing brothers fraternally
To Our Customers of the Pee
Dee Section:
W e have decided h« re
after to cenduct our
business in your terri
tory direct with buyers.
We can thus better as-'
sure you of prompt at
tention, low prices, and
clear agreements not
liable to misunderstand
ing and confusion as in
past under a different
system.
To responsible and
honorable buyers we
will make it an object
to correspond with uS,
and we want to deal
with no other class.
Write us for prices on
any make or kind of
machinery you want,
and we wiil make an
honest effort to serve
your best interests. c
AN AFFECTIONATE FAREWELL
SC WE FROM OUR NEW SERIAL
BY
GBffiQDfto GDDd&hpOos DXSoogo
A Story of Love #
% and Adventure
ON Th£ PLAINS OF ARIZONA
W. H. GIBBES, JR., &
COLUMBU, 8, C.
Dec28—ly
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