The Darlington herald. (Darlington, S.C.) 1890-1895, January 11, 1893, Image 2
W, DABLIBSTOS IBiLD
Extalilished July 16th, 1890.
Destroyed by Fire DereBiher 15th. 1890
Re-Kstablished February llth, 1891.
be accepted unless the Legislature him $2 to the County dispenser for
and the people who appiove of tins'$3, who in tern would tell it to the
measure are prepared to admit that 1 coiisumer for $4.f>0. The lonsmm i
W. D. WOODS, Editor.
One Dollar a Year.
DAULINOTON, S. C.
Wednesday, January 11, 1893.
As there has been no objection to
the nomination of Mr. Jehu Gary
E\i I is State Dispenser, wo hope
that ho will get the appointment.
• *
*
Mr.j. M. Waddell was a candi
date for the position of Electoral
messenger. He Is a citizen of the
State and was more entitled to the
position than Mr. Gantt.
V
We take the liberty of suggesting
to the railroads that they might pla
cate the commissioners by naming a
big locomotive after each one of
them. This would flatter their van'
ity and wnnid be sufficient to prs
vent them from imposing Oh the
railroads.
* *
*
Comptroller General KllerWe
seems determined to fight the bunks
and make tbctn pay more than their
proportion of the taSss. The cor
porations are perfectly willing to pay
their part, but. what they object to is
being assessed too high; that is that
they are made to bear more than
their share of the burden. It is
possible that Mr. Ellerbee would like
to have commissioners appointed' to
manage the hanks just as has been
doao with the railroads,
they aid and abet a business that
they know to be immoral and illegiti
mate. If the Legislature hud passed
a prohibilion bill they would have,
at least, maintained the respect of
those who were opposed to the meas
ure, but in what they did do, they
hare laid themselves open to the
yravest censure, and have assumed
a position that is both inconsistent
and indefensible-
FUTURE LAWS.
At the next session of the Legis
lature we may look for the following
bills to be introduced:
Bill to appoint a commission to
manufacture fertilizer for the farm*
ers and forbidding any private cor*
(oration from selling any within the
limits of the State.
Bill appointing u commission to
visit the Western markets for the
purpose of purehashing horses and
mules, to be sold exclusively to onr
own people, and prohibiting anyone
from purchasing a horse or mule ex*
cept from the State Livery
Stable. The commissioners shall
receive a salary of one thousand dol*
lars and travelling expenses and be
allowed the use of one horse. They
will only be allowed to charge a
profit of fifty per cent on cost, all
profits to go into Ihe State Treasury.
Farmers Will be allowed to raise
horses for their own Use dr to sell
outside of the State, but Innst not
come in competition with the State
by selling any animal Witbiu its
borders,
Bill to establish a general m«r-
chaudise store, making a specialty of
dealing in meat, corn and hay, for
the benefit of the farmers and re
quiring them to purchase all their
supplie* from said store. The man
agers of said store shall receive a
, salary of one tlimniund dollars each,
Sorns of ottr exchanges are going | including rations) consisting of three
into spasms of indignation, and Want | ot meat, one peck of meal
the Governor to call ont the militia i ' lI 'd 0"ewhiskey, the latter
in order to enforce tile law. They
are going a little too fust as no one
as.yet, us the law is not to take effect
until July, has had an opportunity
of violating the law. It ii more
than probable that the constitution
ality of the law will lie tested before!
that time, uml the towns and saloon
keepers will act in accordance with
the decision of the Supreme Court.
iben, 1ms paid u profit of $2.50 on n
a $2 jug of w hiskey. Ami the con
sumer is coi»i|>elled to buy from the
State at Ihe fancy price, for whii»
he might order Ids whiskey from
some cheaper market w 1 ere there is
no immense monoeoly to extort high
prices, the railroads would not haul
his jug to him lest they incur the
$500 penally prescrilwd by the law
for doing so.
But as Ihe la-sf evidence of the real
dangers and monstrous follusmul
“mad paternalism” of that kind of
legislation we refer you to the care
ful investigation of the law itself as
it appears elsewhere in these columns.
The more closely it is read and stud
ied the more dearly will Its obnox
ious features appear.—Anderson In
telligencer.
Sham Reform,
Three years ago under the “axtra-
vagau‘, corrupt and imbecile rule of
the old ring of oppressors” the phos
phate royally was paying $225,000 a
oeur into the State treasury, there
vere about 200 students in the South
Carolina College utld the State tax
levy was, We believe, five miles on an
assessment ef $150,000,000, with
^75,000 a year luing spent for finish
ing the State house.
Today the phosphate royalty ha-
Iwindled to $125,000, ttfe South Car
diuu Col'ege has 75 students am!
the tux levy is oi mills on an assess
ment of $US8,U0t),00<). Of this $50.
'•00 goes to ClenisoM College which
the present “business like and pro
^ressive” Andrew Jackson adniinis
iration was to build without cost ti
lie tux payers.—Greenville News.
Dtteellng DImbm by ths ttys.
It Is perfectly possible, by means of
Hie instruments of the Nineteenth cen
tury, to exactly leant the optical condb
Unit of an eye, to decide fuel What
WOMIN AT ENGLISH RACES.
The? Ar.- lYnrly Air ny* Wealthy and
Attl-nd L» <■; HT They Lovu rt.
The Women one fees tit the ir.ecs hero
arc the worn, u i.f the fiitJitoimble world,
beiintifnll.v ullired, escort ed l y gallants.
They move nbotit ou the l ivvn, or pre
side ut lh< ir Ir.nthron tables under Iho
trees or over their hampers in their car
riages; they t hat mid promenade, take a
light interest in the races, walk nbont
the pnddork and look ut the horses, do
the honors in a Imi or rest in their seats
ut the grand stand; bnt one doesn't see
them lianling ont money to pnt on a
horse or chasing uround to find ont
“what's good in this race." One doesn't
see them eonsnlting the lips in the morn
ing puiKTs. or Jack's tips, or anybody's
tips, or in my way tbowing that they
are afflicted with a severe attack of
gambling fever.
The English women are the moet
charming feature of the English races.
They, with their lovely toiiets and holi
day airs, give it the garden party flavor
that helps to keep It a sport instead of a
business.
Bnt it's not in nature for them to al
ways look on nnd never participate.
English women have a Unger in the
racing pie also. You'd hardly snspectit
to watch them at the races, bnt they do.
They are usually women who go racing
lor the love of the sport nnd who know
more or less nbont the horses. When
they want to l«t they ask a commis
sioner, some gentleman who is betting
for biinseif, or else some ono they can
Up for the trouble, to put a certain
amonht ou n kureo for them. No money
passes on the Course, The “fettling' 1 is
all done away from there, and Usually by
letter and checks,
Women who bet heavily nnd contin
ually—anti there ufo such—transact tlielr
bnshicre directly with a bookmaker,
just like a man, Bnt this again Isn't
evident ou the course. When such a
woman fancies a horse she sends n tel
egram from her home the morning of
the day he rnns, making her bet, or she
wires her bet—or “order"—from iho
fcohrse before the race. Usually, too,
fcbe's the sort of tt Woniart who can retail
the latest fashionable gossip hi piquant
style. While her eqiline “fancy" is add 1
ing to or subtracting from.hei‘ bank ac
count,
There aro a great many English woni'
en Who bet in this way, uml Who now
and then stand to win tidy sums in the
surly books on big races. Then there's
a lot of playful Itnprompm hotting ut
f daces Ilka Epsom and Ascot, I've seen
udies lean over tl>9 frob* of the boxes ut
Epsom and hand the shouting IwohleS
who stand In lino lit {rout of thimt soV- i
crcigns Hud half sovereigns and name |
The Abbeville Press anti Banner
says that “The Governor would de
serve the contempt of the world if
lie did not,exert every (lower at his
command to enforce the law.” And
so say wc. all of ns; but the Gover
nor should not try to exert any pow
er that is not at liis command; and
he has no more authority to “order
ont the militia,” as suggested by the
Press and Banner to enforce the
Evans whiskey law, than has the
warlike editor of our excited con
temporary. The Governor can “call
out the militia to execute the laws,
repel invasion, repress insurrection
and preserve the public peace,” but
the Evans whiskey law must first be
tested in the Courts and nobody is in
vading the State, nobody is iu a state
of insurrection and nobody is violat
ing the public peace. Besides, the
militia would not be strong enough to
enforce the Evans whiskey law if it
should be culled out, and it is by no
means certain that it would answer
if it should be called ont. Section
30, Article I, of the Constitution
provides that “no person who con
scientiously scruples to bear arms
shall be compelled so to do.” Upon
the whole we would suggest that the
Press and Banner withdraw its insur-
sectlonury remarks until the neces
sity arises for the conversion of the
State into an armed camp.—News
and Courier.
for Infants and Children.
“Castorla is so well adapted to children that
t recommend itos mperior to an j prescription
mown to xnc.” II. A. Ancnr.rt, II. D.,
* U Co. Oxford St, Erookljn, N. Y.
Cafttorfa cures Colic, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, tnictation.
Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promotes di*
a pest ion,
I Without injurious medication.
Tbb Centaur Company, 77 Murray Street, N. Y.
The condor soars higher than any
other bird, spending llillc-tonths of
its lime floating in the rarifled atmos
phere at a distance of three miles
above the sea level.
Woods and Woods.
Our prohibition friends, who tie
Cept the dispensary hill, remind us
of the irishman who was a groin
tmn|ieranee advocate. He was caught
just in the act of taking a drink by
one of his friends, who exclaimed in
surprise, “why Put I thought you
Were a teetotaler.” Quick us a flash
tame the r< ply, “faith! 1 is, hut I is
no bigoted one,” so it is presumed
that some folks are not bigoted pro-
h bitiouists, that is when it comes to
tbu tttute’s monopolizing the selling
of whiskey.
The modern Mnucliause i who or-
Iginutod that North Caroli iu ly Moil
ing story would make a valuable re
cruit for the unti-Tillinanit-’s in the
next camp ligu.—■Columbia Uogister.
if ho hat any regard for hi-i repu
tation he will not be open to an offer
to be obtained by a requisition on
tha State barkeeper. A Uniform
profit of fifty (>er cent must be
charged on all articles which, after
deducting expenses, must be paid
into the State Treasury.
If these measures are passed, the
profits arising from these enterprises,
with that from the whiskey
moiio|H)ly, will not only pay all the
! ex (lenses of the State Government
! but leave a considerable amount
over. Tnis will present the strange
spectacle of a state not only relieving
its citizens from the burdens of tax
ation, hut actually making money
by mei chandising.
If any one. doubts the ability
of the present adminis
tration to carry out these measures,
he is a very skeptical individual and
should be ashamed of his luck of
faith. If people wont obey the
militia can be called out.
ami it is also possible I
1,0!
An Obnnltis Law.
In this paper we publish in full
the law enacled by the late Leglsla
ture known as the “Evans Dispensa
ry Law,” hut which might more
comprehensively be entitled “An Act
to make the State of South Carolina
(mi th, CinnemitivM, ». be ...III » ''lW-"'’
«««- ! rsr.
a rival ou the other side. Of due
thing we may he surd, ami that is
th" Til I nan faction will lint iieed
Kim unless something Ktppem to tin-
editor of the Register before the next
campaign.
Mr. Larry Gantt, the editor of the
Columbia Register, bus boon selected
to hear the Electoral vote of tin*
State to Washington. It will pay
b n two hundred dollars for a few
d ys time, spent in making the trip
Of course anyone knows that the ap
pointment was made in recognition
of Mr. Gantt’s services in the lute
Campaign, hut we deem it disgrace
ful for him to have the place, and
don’t think think that a poorer se-
i 'Ctio'i could have heen made. The
Electoral vote of Sont.li Carolina
Should be taken by a South Carolin
ian and not by a citizen of miother
ItA'e.
As the editor of tjie Abbeville
Press and Banner seems so anxious
for th, Governor to order out the
iriilitiu to enforce the Dispensary
law, Mr. Tillman ought, just as a
mutter of gratitude, td niakc Bro.
Wilson a brigadier general and put
him in command of the up|>er coun
ties, with full power to enforce the
law. The portly form of Gen. Wil
son mounted on a fiery steed, dressed
in the gay trappings of his rank and
with a gleaming sword in his hand,
would strike terror to the breast of
tlie boldest barkeeper and the rebel
lion would he crushed almost' before
It hud time to lift up its head.
As far as tho legislative enact
ment dan do so, the iState lias m ule
the fclllNg of whiskey moral and re
spectable hv going into the bniln«*s er on a perusal of the qitixotin docn
the sfttne." We ask everyone to read
the letigthly document add then say
whether it is to any degree a jtftthl-
liltory measure, or whether it is ofiiy
tlie State arbitrarily assuming entire
control df the liquor business for the
profit of the sunie ntiddr the pretense
of endeavoring to uppress the dale
of whiskey, uml whether it would
not have been wiser to have let the
matter remain us it was lust year of
have passed a real prohibition law,
such as would hare mode the drink*
ing of whiskey as great a misdeniean*
or mb tho selling of jt. than to have
passed such u monstrosity of tlleKv*
uns law.
There are many serious objections
to the law, dome of the more promi
nent ones being US fwllowsl
The pro|*er functions df the f^ts'e
are tin* protection of the life, liberty
and property of her citizens, and In-
no sophistry can the selling by the
State of intoxicants to her citixens
be proven -j part of the State’s duty
towards her citizens.
The State robs a oloss of her peo
pie of tlidr business, not fortbepnr-
|H*e of suppressing that business,
but that she may tmtudpoiize it and
thereby gain whatever profits there
may arise from it.
If is a centralization of (rawer, for
It e Governor and the State Board of
Control is given much additional pa*
tronage, and is therefore undemocra
tic and dangerous in the precedent
it sets.
The State should not altenipt to
make money as a rumseller or by Ittt
dertaking any other business. The
j proper wav for her to raise a revenue
is by taxation.
Many minor objections might he
added which will appear to thereod-
H.iu {n*Wtwrf»nt their horses, td givo tlie Qdy zest hi 1
any, art ueedsd for its perfect ,, have )t w tlutf&w ou aj
Derby bV Oaks fuvorito.'
And I've seen ladies going to and from!
the paddock at Ascot stop to have a lock ;
at tho shouting ring, anil go up to some ;
bookie and make a bet “just to have tho :
experience," and the bookie wonl.l bo
''as polite as a basket of Chips, 1 ’ and tho
''experience’ 1 Would bo filed away with
those other Wonderful ones of hedged iu
lives, like a ride on Jumbo or a dash
into the slums.—Loudou Cor. Chicago
Inter Ocean.
I look
In tipon’lt; and the appeahtned of its
llrtiles imd its blood vessels to decide u«
id the existence of serious disease Wbeti
ihere are few bther syutptoms that point
lo tt. when thete iuuy be bond besides td
iw found in the body that positively
broVe it. |
1 may mention two classes of disease,
uoe constitutional and the other local,
which illustrate this statement. Tho
eye mirror opthulmoscope is the instru
ment by which such things are settled.
Bright'* disease, a name carrying dread
to many H household, ie the constitu
tional disease to which 1 refer. In not
s few fuses the diagnosis of It is made
by the examination of the retina With
the eye mirror.
The expert will make no mistake 11
the eye gives evidence of It, for its slgni
ere positive in minnte bleeding from the
blood vessels and peculiar fawn colored
spots bn the retina. The surgeon dreadi
to find them i because they are evidence
of an advanced stage of the malady
Which prematurely destroys so taany
lives. Bright'S disease is In fact a de
generation of many of tho tissues of the
body, tbe walls of the arteries being
among them. In no part of the body
can tills degeneration be so readily de
tected as in tbe retina of tbe eye.—Cos-
UiOpolitan,
HnrS Narrotle Death.
Under chloroform, ns under all antes-
tlietiu gases and vapors, there is 6 mods
of death which may be Called the final
or natural. It need never be produced,
nnd never could be except under ths
most unskillful management, and it is a
long time in Its progress. When deftth
does occur in this manner it is by ths
rlow extinction of tbe natural animal
zymosis, nnd is Illustrated, ae to method,
Kutlr* Wit lit a Street Gsmln.
Wit in ihe New York “young fellow."
if sometimes brutal, is usually roudy
and often imaginative. An unmistak
able oriental, in turban, baggy trouser*,
gay stockings aud tinseled coat, sat on
a bench in Madison square the other
day, an object of interest to all the boys,!
and apparently not displeased at the
attention ho attracted. There cam.*
along presently, however, two rough
looking young men. and one of them,
pausing in front of the stranger, looked
it him In Undisguised astonishment,
Bis first surprise over, ho called back
his fellow, who had passed on, and said,
pointing to the oriental. “Jimmy, git ou
to this." The eastern stranger’s splendor
seemed to call up some strange picture
in the rearward of Jimmy's imagination,
for his instant answer was, "Ob, Cm- ,
derella; pull his fringes."—New York 1
Sun. _
Fogg's Alarm Cloak)
Fogg Maid up very late yesterday
morning, or Very early, if you like that
expression b*tter-**at any rate it was
nearly 4 o'clock before ho had roughly
footed Up the amount he would have to
pay Iu hats and cigars and wine and
Oyster suppers and climbed into bed.
Be was to arise in good season, and set
for all it was
perfectly by the simple experiment oi w« «)an«e m goou
gradually extinguishing a candle in a • M jl. *
- loroform into the air that fill! tbs aWA " keil tl)<l who (, household he reached
It can be llluetrated also by the ex- “P'i tlTk'am dlTwn mm thl S t,lTtn
prriuient of stopping ordinary ferments- “!° th ®, b !!!
wii k . “I.,!, ii.
it was after 0.—Hartford Poet:
animal.issht* from decomposition. All the clock, which truthfully asserted that
(imrotheiicH are Open td kill lit this man-
tier. but that is the safest tmteStuctU
Which puts out life in no other manner,
which does not, that Is to iay, cause
-It her of the reflexes of spasmodic char
acter during administration.--Asclepiud.
Hliosophy front a Child,
Two of tbe Virginians who have comh
to the Pasteur institute to be vaccinated
against hydrophobia Were in grave Von-
Ihiltation; "1 am sorry yod told the doc 1 i
When day tumid Was a Hoy. tof that be inust hot hurt you." said tbe ,
••At one time," said Mr, Woolhiser, £*«;• BUr<) j
Who ns ft Itoy Worked in the same store ? i „r
with Jay Gould, -While Gould Was in ’ " tfed f 1 *’
the employ of Bnrnlmtt he fell aick. fOdld rather die ftnd he born again and.
My father. Who Was a general nurse and ”• b,,ten ,
something of ft doctor, attended him
uml brought l.tlrt around toll right.
Not long after he recovered he wet my
father nnd said, ‘Yori saved hty life, and
if at tiny time you tiro in nerd nnd 1 can
help you l shall do so with pleasure. 1
Fortune bus not t-miied ott tny poor old
father of late, and being in absolute
need be wrote to Mr. Gould, telling him
of his condition nnd asking for help.
No reply was CVer received. 1 think
t hat out- letters never reached Mr. Gould,
m- fie tvotild surely have lieli>e,l us. 1
Bavanti have tortured their brains for
(tehtnries and hot found truer philoso
phy, knd the infiOcent cay things that
toake the experienced turn pale,—New ;
York Times,
A Grateful Old Wntotoi, * !
A dean Was visiting his parishioners
when one of them, an old woman, tir-:
formed him that since they met "sbe'd •
gone through a sight o' trouble. Her ,
Meter Was dead, and there Wot a worse
job than that; tlie pig died all of a end-1
;;; iZ ^ ^ ord t0 tak ; h,n v.
-nth for the fourth or fifth time, Gould
wits always it good boy. i:nd for awhile *?? n ^. 5?°*.. judy brightened np
wc slept together In the same bed lo tuu
Then the
md said, “1
old lady
ut there’s one thing, Meste’r
Itself. Jttiw if it if ft legitimate 1ms* mstits, for instanoe, the State dis
I ness, Whsit right bin tbe State tt penser sells at profft of 50 per cent, thomwud petttde In tbTs country, ami \ ,i:
monopolise it) tiiitl thereby deprivd u ami Comity dispensers may itmkc J 1 *' 1 !*
large number of its citiwus of tno the sattic 'f.ifil titt lltclr snies. That wnudcrinti wh
ft*
old rloroin floftlmry. Jay never missed men'll
tavlng Ids li ghtlV prnVers before retir- Pf « U I M8t, Y ,a y tide
j U g."-NVw York Wwld, j ihiB winter for greensf 1 —Exchange.
The htmly of I’lilluti-ly. Frtateei ttnbir*.
Philately is a study. It is a pursuit
tit: t adds more to tbe life of tho young
collector limn any other of hie pleas
ures. Philately in the present genera
tion is HHxnming Vast proportions as an
instructive science and ie even now a
formidable rival of numismatics. No
Imi -er is it called a mania nr n craze,
bnt a science teaching the geography,
history, language and the morals of a
Country. Our philatelists are hot mere
M'hoollrays and girls, although they col
lect stamps, but lueu of WsUire Winds)
turn well established in business and
professions, men of toutid judgment.
Intellectual and thoughtful men. Ana
it Is this fact that gtVea the yoUhg col*
lector encouragement, the knowledge
that such men do exist In the ranks of
nluitftellsts.—Olito Btste Journal.
Only One,
Yes, my hoy, there ore thirty-seven
millions and seven humired and forty
large mttriber of iU cltixfui of tho the same pr.tilt Ott tlteirwifi. That Wouderittp what would happen to th#
jiro-r-rty t'tev havft invited A th->* -t-ms thu' l He Sfiite (li«jtfti«'r ton Id world tf you Aould tWBl-Ltmdoa Tit-
ir^f 'Xfto riff v/ to Vi Mltty -. . . • . * ,
The largest ruby known is one men
tiered by (Jhardin as having been hi
graved with the name of Hlieik Sejiliy
Another noble ruby is in possession of
the shah of Persia. Its weight fs pm at
175 carats. A third, belonging to lin
king of Usapar, Was cut Into a henif
spherical form and In !0M wag bonglit
for .|13,80(J. Amity po--Cased by Gtls-
tnvns Adolphus and (iresw-nted to the
czarina at the time of Ins journey to bt.
Petersburg was the size of a small hen's
egg,—Jewelers' IlavieW.
Piumlet Beeiitetl by the Paliee,
Id this city the i>olice in one year have
wised Over 13,U0D chijis, 110 packs of |
Sards, four lots of Chinese coin, 949 dice,
thirteen fantan brass ettps, thro# faro ■
layouu, 11,000 (tool tlclfeu, two ewuat
boards, eight poker tables, three roulette
tables, three Whist boards and one huo-
Oafat layout)—NaW York 8nn.
Insanity Was once looked on tta the
work of demons. It Is now regarded us
ft purely physical lufirtolty, perbatts tn-!
herited from those Who had somehow
Violated physisal law, W IftdUoed Uy onF
Own tratugrsMloA| . i
EDWARDS, NORMENT & CO.
A.i3.3rtlxln.8f yOu. wa,nt in
lew Fall aai Vioter Heels.
We keei» the BEST GOODS made and our
prices
AUK GTJAH ATVTKKI>
As low as the lowest.
Headquarters is The Place to
make your purchases at.
RESPECTFULLY,
Edwards, Norment & Company,
FIRE! FIRE!
I represent Twelve of the
most reliable Fire Insurance
Companies in the world—
among then), the Liverpool
and London and Globe, of
England, the largest tiro
company in the world; and
the ACtna, of Hartford, the
largest of all Ameriean firs
companies
Prompt attention to business and satis
faction guaranteed.
F. E. NORMENT.
DARLINGTON, S. C.
Office Itctween Edwards, Norment
Co., and Joy & Sanders’
THE DARLINGTON
SHOE STORE
luvites an inspection of their large and well selected stock for the fall and winter
trade which is complete in every particular,
SHOES
Artistic in Style,
Reliable in Ouality,
_ “ ‘ Price,
m rtV sli o e $.
Oar stock In this lino cannot be surpassed.
We have ihem in both Button and Lace, all widths, at from 73 cents to the cele
brated baud sewed goods of E. 0. Barts & Co’s M'f’g.
CHILDREN’S SHOES.
We have taken special care to make this lini attractive and complete ami can offer
them frotn 85 cents upward.
MEN’S SHOES.
To call special attention to any ono shoe in this lino would he an injustice to the
Others, nearly all of which are worthy of mention.
RubbGF goods for Ladies, Misses, Boys and Men, all prices.
Also a complete line Umbrellas, Trunks, Valises Satchels,
Shoe findings* Polish, Blacking and Brushes, Cork soles,
Ladies Woolen soles, &e.
Newest Styles in Hats.
WOODS & MILLING,
Proprietors Darlington Shoo Store.
GIBSON & WOODS
Take pleasure in announcing that they
are now prepared to issue
Fire and Life Insurance
Policies, and can place all business entrust
ed to them in some of the best companies
in the United States. In
= THE =
Sunday Sun
$2.00 a Year
Containing more reading
matter than any magazine
published in America.
Addroas
9—26—'92.
THE SUN,
New York
DARLINGTON
-All kinds of-
Murblo Monuments,
Tablets, ami
Grave Btoucn
furnished oh short hot Ice, and as cheap
u can bo purchased elsewhere)
BT Designs and prices furnished oil
application,
Al. work delivered Free on line of C. A
D. Railroad.
Darlington Marble Works,
DAULINOTON, S. C.
PERFECTED
CRYSTAL LFNSES
tH.eK MAR..
tout? nut ui Aim.
B. O. BRISTOW,
Book ■ Dealer - and - Optician
Has tho exclusive sale of these cele
brated goods iu Darlington, 8. C,
KELLAM & MOORE.
The only mnmifuettiring Opticians iu
the South, Atlanta, On.
Kjs- peddlers are not supplied with
these famous glasses.
KTevcr
Livery Stables.
I take pleasure In announcing to my
friends that I have just opened a large
Livery, Sale anil Feed Sialiles,
on Main street and will be pleased to
have ant^examlue my stock of
Horses and Mules,
The best care taken of stock put In
my charge,
D. S, McCullough,
waconsT
Two-' wagons are
at
now
DARLINGTON, S. C.
CALL AND SEE THEM
BEFORE PURCHASING
ELSEWHERE,
A COMPLETE STOCK OF
FIRE INSURANCE
they have such companies as THE HOME
of New York, and the H.illTFOIlD, ot
Hartford, Conn., two of the largest and
best managed companies in the country.
In LIFE INSURANC |
they invite examination into the plans ot|
the N. V. MUTUAL, offering, as they do, FURNITURE
very favorable terms to to those who wish! Always on Hand,
to insure. ii j a i i
They also conduct n general Brokerage ullQ8H8K6r $
.and commission business, OiwiiIIaa
WOODS wd WQQ»ai%»‘r .! . Slippli08i
Bugsies,
Carts,
Harness
Tht ftbovc dvilfns lu
Cloaks and Corsets
Safi be found st
-AND-
THIS PAGE CONTAINS FLAWS AND OTHER
DEFECTS WHICH MAY APPEAR ON THE FILM.
i