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•A*?'. • * Jf . : J -j ; ^ v ^T^.- T r ^~r- ^ ^ QPPTTTNr 1 TIP K T r PT-T ! nian was eatiug nothing but oatnienl, | **» nie <> ,*uid. women, in till atagM.of I was not espeftinllf dark, but her JOJClJUJlillJb-t.-f-dyiojher only toast, another was decay and destruction, with ail they sav, was of raven black ’ ’ j iiiih hinx water-crackcrs and washing nmnner of diseasesouexhibition, and Above the temples there were a »1 . 4- •f • n fl •j. -• »«• JV,, THEY ft« SPLICISE IN SOCIETY AND LOSE THE1U HEAL1IU Now They arc Bathing in the Warm Springs of« Colorado -The Old ' Nan is Shocked at the Sights. [From Pennsylvania Grit ] GoiiOntuo SrutNo.s, Cot. I just thought it w ould come to this. I just knew this tiling of keeping late hours and dancing around at fashionable balls, like im- . becile turkeys on a hoi griddle, 411 d eating late "slippers ail'd drinking wine, would sooner or later break down this celluloid constitution of mine, and likewise undermine Betsy’s cast iron nerve force, and turn us both into chronic grinders and back a'ihers and liver groaners. Good lauds of cowbufikles 011 a bull calf, the way I suffered with my nerves and digestion*and gizzard is a caution; and 1 lost my cud and all interest in public life, and couldn’t sleep. I would he down and shut my eyes and try to sleep, but all the bad deeds I ever did, or thought of doing would crawl through my .mind like a big snake crawling through dry grass and when I did for a moment sew up my mind in slunjber, I would waken up with a start and rip my mind open in the old place, and the same horrors would start up in a regular procession and go’marching on like the soul of John Brown crawling up Jacob’s ladder. And I begun to lose flesh, too. And Betsy’s caso was even worse than mine. The doctor said she was run down at the heels, like a tripe boot Without a subgtausial counter. And she complained of having symptom’s of chronic hots and grease heel or scratches, poll evil or catarrh, paw ing in stable, riugbene, blood spavin, and stone bruise on the heel of 'her moral courage. T4e doctor advise4 us both to go pp tp Colorado Springs aud drink pud bathe in the medical water there pud get up every morning and thank God that we were still alive,- aud pay our subsorption regularly to the Christian Advocate and be. prepared •At aiiy moment to land in the general roundup wral where dead men tell no titles. In other words, thank ' God we Were in Colorado Springs, in tend of paradise. Well) we packed up a few clothes, and wrapped out complaints up carefully in woolen yarn and red flannel and started for the warm S rings, where we - arrived; in due ne and mingled our tches aud pains and diseased organs with aches and pains and grunts and groans and lore liven and decayed lungs ‘afla irritated* flowels aild' sorrowful . hearts of the hundreds of other poor human creatures who had came here to get well, or die, as the case might be. * . ' , - • Well, good lands .of mangy dogs ‘and’ murrain amongst the cattle, When I got up In the morning and nW tie dilapidated crowd of suffer- , tig humanity, snji .triad to thank God that 1 was at Colorado Springs instead of paradise, the thanks stuck r i r in my,throut- like hot mush to the ) mouth, v. . .. , When we,went down stairs and y \ *• . yi^parpdf.the.parlor of the hotel, there WAN »long, lean, lank, red. whiskered • man inbne'oorder'cdughmg up his left Jong, and a baldheaded, crooked- T r-M: , • : ’ ’ '.fnosed pm ov.erin the opposite corner I P*■ '• ^ coughing up his right lung, aud a fat man’feeling his bospm, to, see iij Mr- ''ih' < Hs liver pad w& on Straighti and a i%8peptie woaau sitting on the sofa belching up sour wind, and a womr.n tritii Ijo#*!! covered o^uvikl) “fcrofnloiis softs, and' a turuv'd-up- nosa map with ,a,tumor on .bis cheek, ' .rf6d' atithdy-woman ’ over' by the wiudow spitting dp blood, aud a J3tfe'#rl.with.scaldhoad,'mid-sf little) boy crying with beily-ucheVtind a big fat man groimiug over his gout, and a Baptist minister in the lust stage of consumptiptt.Jtu0 tt^faBJc man in. ffie iftrst stages Of brrghbs disease,' and every one in the town seemed to - i Sf^dbiRig here to r^- vet health? Why, two days in 1 grouting, groaning, ghostly, «t Aim isemenshty, * gloom, !^i^Ee‘rinwlo^6n1tf gizzard of ,a ;>// W}*' Iting I hem down with mineral water; s«m$ were eating nothing, but simply drinking'mediouted water with a slight blessing added. Says I, as 1 looked all over the room with the air of-a man who had gotten into hades by accident nfidliB wanted to get out—says I: .“Waiter, I guess, since everythiog lias Keen eaten up about the raueh, I’ll take a mess of cut feed and a few ears of corn, and you can bring my wife a bran mash and two quarts of oats.”- Well, good lands of cat hair in the coffee, you’d just ought,to have seen the looks lired at me from all that gang of grnuters, and even Betsey burst into tears and held one hand over her heart, as though it was in that spot she felt the most hunger, instead of in her stomach. But we tinally did get something to cat, and had a horrible time getting it rolled up into wads and balls of the usual size for swallow ing, but we had to stop twice during the meal to lead a poor man out on the porch where ho could spit up a portion of his lung, alter which, he came back and resumed his cod-liver bil and beef tea, talking all the time about hunting elephant’s in Africa along with Livingston aud Stanley, aud assuring us that he was going back as soon us his cold got better. Aud the-dyspeptic woman bad to get up and go out in the air several times to prevent herself from vomit ing, aud the yellow skinned man ad justed his liver pad several times, and the man with a running sore on his leg insisted on talking about bis ail ment all tkc'tini(y umbone old lady was busy eulogizing the young iuan thqverv hea^t and soul of the health- h-tmunis Saddened by such grue- !ome sigbis, nnd nothing lint a brnte can find pleasure with such miserable surroundings. iere in _ the morning. thSt we must try the science cure, but I have my doubts whether it will reach my case, ily forjdly hide is so thick, and I have so little faith in spreading Christianity on an old sore, like n court plaster, thatJ’m afraid it won’t have haft the good effect dn me as 11 dose of Bob Burk’s liver pills would have. M However, there is an old lady in Blue Squaw Gulch who makes- Christian science pills, and when we get back there I mean to try a dose, and'then lay low and see what comes of it. If aloes and Christian faith operates on the liver as sleek as a certain Christian once operated on my confidence and skinned me out of a tract of jack-pine land, it will make such an evolution in medicine that even cat tle powders will be perfumed with a gob of it. . Fak.vway Moses. ■ m • ‘ A ROMANCE OF THE TOMBS. Carlyle Harris, While Awaiting Death, the Hero. The New York Herald prints the following: Carlyle W. Harris was tlje hero of a romance while he was awaiting death in the Tombs prison. ‘A girl who met him by chance one Sunday in one of the gloomy corri dors fell in love with him, visited him daily and fondly awaited the moment of his release, when she ex- who had died during the night with pected that he would marry. Her ,.V I - » consumption. And the bottle-nosed woman who sat next to Betsey told the uwfulcst of all awful stories. It ran thus: “ W hen my mother was first married some 45 years ago, to a sea captain, he took her for a wedding tour to the South Sea island—” Betsey said: “Ah, is that so?” and I cleared up my throat with a vociferous “Ilem-m-m!” and she con tinued: “Indeedit is true—and they ran short of meat on board the ship, and they had to stop at one of the islands —a cannibal island it was, too—and order a ton of meat—” Betsey said “Ah!" again, but 1 simply blew my nose on the napkin and didn’t say uuuthjr word. ‘ “ ‘yes; and, judge my mother’s surprise, when the governor of the island drove 16 fat niggers down to the landing for the captain to exa mine before they were butchered—”. Betsey exclaimed “oh!” and I blew my nose agajn. “——aud salted down in barrel*. There was one nice little fat nigger girl in the crowd that was to be butchered” tslie said all this with a shudder too)”—and my-mother ..took a fancy to her and .begged the governor to give the girl to--her alive, aud she brought ,her home with her; and, what do yon thiuk! Jshe graduated at Vassal- college .ouly last week, at the age ofTI’-'. “How nice!” exclaimed Betsey, but I had to pick that story by asking: “How long ago did this happen?” “Fortynive years ago.” “And the. nigger girl graduate'! last week at the age of 18?” “Indeed she did; with the highest honor, too!” * ’ j ’ 1 gave her one of my severest looks—one of my two-edged corn- cutt'.f looks,, and says—says I: “‘Xwhim; if you are doctoring for too much lie on the brain, you may a- well go home and prepare to die; for you are the ded dur 11 dis!t-VlTPevuilicu - 'tar—the most perfect UB#eaaon*ble liar I ever sawl” .. ^ ■ ... ,- 'Betsey threw up hel;hands in holy horror at this bold at tack of mine, vins^lm othjMi^wAman woujd have, iahired and fell in’ it only. tile -fed-; ■JjUtflXKj* fe’t 1 burst the gall aud % imi^^ask S4 «s. abtamld rticfke ffom the countty.” “Let 'em!”' sajfs 1, with a snap, for it had set my teeth on edge to hear that red-whiskered man rasping - abtl IN I (ri sl}( whiskered man began to ion.gh itp a -would-be charmed to receive her as portion of his lung again’ and'the despeptic woman ran out to vomit, and Betsey aud 1 escaped from the house of living horrors, and went 0111 tq the wtuiu -aprings to take a bath; ®g*Tlfa. ; batpiiVg is lovely uyid very ‘pAueCnitMigi* -T foumlTVo did'cotton undershirts imbedded in my last winter hide, and a few other articles of uaderw^re nbout my person, and out I felt so sleek aud clean that'1 was half tempted^ to utilize my ^leekpcsi by slipping out w towh withdu( haying my tf&rii bill. T v , Vfc Vc gbiiHf to ’Jcave here ou the early morning train. Hjftiire getting sicker all th^we* vjlt is Impossible for any sick person to get Well in a place like this, where every man, woman and child is a walking drug .shop, and death aud hellhres the chief topjes of conversation. 1.. mease le-hyy iWefftwrc w4ic4!fi a trifle easy—you know ear gain for paradise, hpp Ujelyeal^Mthdlfangi iVerit into the dining room t at .theiabie, here make a livelihood by skinning |rt$;’tff(iie : u'ii(I*’d)i¥rable, and charge wCFfoftb' privilege of^gniut- ing ana groaning their miserable lives away, under the delusion that f well aad strong, , last bit of advice to kv* seat tta ,LUu jatne, . ovci ont^thdh' fittl and took*a dose of medicine, , paused- tljpm,to,-iniali6.fitces- se J terrtWe that tha hillk curdled r the pltchefa aud the cat darted out Of t|m ( d#qr with, a -jiwk .that make a stranger tliihk she had been shof in the tail with a brick. was completely eaten out of every thing eatabla, and they had made a ImtjiyftIffast cot of the differ tm )u ^ 6r - emit Qw Besides all this, the healtli^pedpie* every day. 1.. „ i... ... devotion to him was us great as his mqther’s, aud she is believed to be Uje “young woman dressed in deep mourning” who accompanied Carlyle Harris’ “cousin, E. M. Hill,” alias “Edward Morrill,” from New York to Albany, and attended the funeral of the executed criminal. At the “Tombs” the girl called herself “Carrie Jones.” That was not her real name. Nina Van Zandt’s mad marriage to August Spies, one of the condemned Chicago anarchists, was not nearly as “peculiar”as “Carrie Jones,” infatua tion for the convicted murderer. Miss Van Zandt’s was not promised in marriage to any man when she fas cinated the anarchist leader and married him in his cell beneath the very shadow of the gallows. Yet the girl who offered herself in mar riage to Harris deliberately broke an engagement of marriage with a worthy and estimable young man in order to become the sUlanced bride of a man who had b:en indicted for stealthily administering poison to his school-girl wife so that she died. Her only excise was that in him she had found her affinity. As nearly as anyone about the Tombs cau remember, the gruesome love affair began some time curly iu December, UJkl. “Carrie Jones” had visited the gloomy old-prison with a baud of young women and a few jouug men’ who had volunteered to cheer the inmates by staging hjmns to the accompaniment of u small organ. Miss Jones was apparently fascinated by the handsome, plausi ble, soft voiced young prisoner. She lingered longer than any of her companions and Harris’ protes tations of iuuocence aroused her to enthusiasm in his behalf. She re turned to the Tombs with the bands of singers on the following Sunday. Somehow with the helpof that, diplo macy which women only understand, she managed to enjoy teu minutes ebu£crsatiuu with Harris alone. bhrfuvd and clever as be was it did .not’take him long to 'discover ’ that she was infatuated with him. IVhen ^asdted whether he would see her she, called some' time, before tl#e ext Sunday, Be answered that ho hair, blackness. temples there were a few strands of white among the black locks, those premature marks of age that occasionally fall upon the heads of young women. Her age was somewhere between twenty-three and twenty-seven. She had apparently enjoyed good surroundings all her life. She was intellectual without priggisliness, and her manners were •refined and charming. In the pres ence of Harris, however, all reserve forsook her. She seemed to forget all about straugere. “Carrie Jones” paid her last visit to Harris after ■Recorder Smyth hud refused to grant him a new trial. Prison discipline forbade hisseeing any stranger after that, and under the rules “Miss Jones” was a stranger. Up to the last moment she never lost hope that Harris’ life would be saved. She was one of the hardest workers iu bringing forward new evidence to help him to a new trial. Mrs. Harris was equally sanguine. “Just as soon as Carlyle comes out of prison,” she told a friend one day, “he will marry Miss Jones. She has an irfeome of $2,000 d year, and they can live nicely on that while Carlyle is making a career for himself. Carrie Jones is not her real name.” But Monday’s execution ended the love story, and the widowed maiden was one of the few mourners around the convict’s grave. SIIILO’S CURE, the great Cough and ' Croup Cure, is in great demand. Pocket size contains twenty five doses only 25c. Children love it. "Sold by Druggists. SHI LG’S CUKE is sold 011 a guarantee. It cures incipieut Con sumption. It is the best Cough Cure. Only one cent a dose. 25 cts, 50 cts., and $1.00. Savannah, Ga., April 14, ’92. Office of McDonough & Ballantyne. Messks. Lippman Bros., Savannah, Ga.: Gentlemen:—I beg to add my testimonial of the great- virtue of P. P. P. I have suffered for years with rheumatism and could get no relief from any source. I took a couple of courses of your P. P. P., and it has cured me entirely. I most heartily recommend it to all sufferers, Yours truly, T. Ballantyne, of McDonough & Ballantyne. A Leader. Since its first introduction, Electric Bitters has gained rapidly in popular favor, until now it is clearly in the lead among pure medicinal tonics ami altera- Uvea—contain Ing nothing which per- mils its use as a beverage or intoxicant, if is recognized as the best and purest medicine for »11 ailments of Stomach, Liver or Kidneys.—If will euro Sick headache, indigestion, constipation, and drive malaiia from the system. Satisfac tion guaranteed with cacii bottle or the money will be refunded. Price only 50c. per bottle. Sold at Willcox’s drug store. (2) THE HVL.U. t GTG ! V TfT j ■’ When Baby was sick, we gave her Castor la. - When she was a Child, the cried tor Castoria, When she became Ma, she clung to Geatorta, When shebad OhOdren, she gave them CMterit EXPRESS IT TO best be could amid his puor, wretched surrouudiugs. ‘•Alisa Jones” called on the. cob demtifd wife poisoner the next, day. She no longer wore the diamond set him stip’ot' gold that marked her as the affianced bride of another man. She had told her promised husband very plainly that she could never marry him because she loved another. Perhaps the strangest part of JtGarrie Jonea’ ”strange love for Han'is was her blind belief in hi’s iundCeuce M She attended nearly every day of his trial. She heard most of the evidence upon yrhiuji .twelve -un prejudiced jhfybien founded their verdict of guilty of ffh'i’drt'fh the first degree, yet she only clung to Earns all the firmer. When he was removed from tjie upper tier of cells' Chief Inspectors Vfcttm- to tlie “condemned row” iu the Tombs she;begun to' call upon him .Li m f mi 285 King St,, Charleston, S, C., And have it pu! in thorough order. Fine Vttcli Wort a Specialty and Warranted One Year. nf Watches for Atlantic CoasOLine, South Carolina Railway,. Plant System Railways. Headquarters for g’ve tp a Biifferigg world, it would be: Ndver’.’go’‘fo ? a hcami resort to get health—it’s about like going to a ■gnivo-,yard ; forrccryuiUm and Sunday 'pleasure'. If 'Vqu ownedtoue. yourself, and naif’.fto'tfmrAlf coinage to Onto'all the sick and afflicted awa^utU you, got wall, it ipigfat do you some good; •mit firik fhtag of going to a place where the very air is filled with decay and death and tlje perfume of.-cad .liver dl and dead-shot for worms— this tiling of going tqauoh a place for health and long life aud cow usturc for a world-sick soul is all m »i Color ttdo 1 boro Tney talked-in whispers for hours. Whether she proposed marriage to him, or whether he, with unbounded faith in his good fortune, asked her to be his wife, is a secret which now | rests in her keeping alone. But it is certain that the pair became engaged, to be married. Airs. Hams-frequently saw her! son iu the “coutsel room” of the prison daring Walden Osborne’s ml-' ministration. “Currie Jones” bad, it is said, the same privilege occasion ally. But when Wunletj Fallon took .charge of the city prison he chunged A Trn , mn am umtllinr all that. Harris was never taken to | $J[RL SIIIIlM. the “counsel room except to consult | with his counsel. From this time! ^lie Jove re. uuft in the corridor of “condemned row,” w here they were still happy in each other's company. Those who have seen the girl scores of times describe her us of more th«n nmV inu height, slender form wUum uouipii miN6 PRESENTS, , JEWELRY, WITCHES, FINE LUMPS, ttad flwUum vbaipleziwb , IIw tklu Orders from the i'ountry receive prompt attention. Efliablo Good*. Reasonable Prices. 4 Iwffl stock dwqfi on hug, 4 Something About One in the Central Park, of New York. One of the most despised of wild animals’ says Harper's Young People, is that unprepossessing beast with a cheerful name, the laughing hyena. One would think from his name that he would be a jolly-looking fellow, with a good-natured disposition and a whole-souled manner that would se cure his election to the Board of Al dermen in the forest ward in which he lived. On the contrary, he is one of the most repulsive of animals, and his best friend (if he had any friend) could hardly say a good word for him. There lias lately come to the mena gerie iu Central Park, New York, however, a little fellow of his species he has been named by his keeper “Tummy,” and who seems to have some redeeming traits of character. A correspondent of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, who lately interviewed Master Tummy, says: “He is now- five mouths old, and a stout, hearty young fellow, who has come through the dangers of the winter un hurt. His twin-brother was eaten by his mother at a very tender age. Tummy is now an animal of mark in the menagerie, as he possesses the most remarkable voice of any inmate of the carnivora house, notwithstand ing the fact the roaring lion is among his neighbors. Everybody has heard of the laughing hyena, but how many have heard him laugh. It is safe to say that few persons have had the experience until Tummy acquired this pleasant accomplish meut. His parents aud the other members of his race in. the menagerie are not much given to laughing, to the sad dening effects of a life of captivity, But Tummy has never kuown what it is to be free. The elder animals, however, are in the habit is said, of laughing among themeslves at night, when they believe no human being is about to listen to them. “The hyena’s laugh is a combina tion of a shout and a chuckle. It is louder than the ordiuary human chuckle, aud not so boisterous as a laugh. You.will be most certain of hearing Tummy laugh if you ap proach him at dinner-time. W hen a piece of meat is held in front of the bars, he will laugli continuously until it is given to him. Under these circumstances it is doubtful if his laugh means exactly the same thing as an outburst of human mirth. It may, however, be an expression of pleasurable anticipation. It is such a loud and startling sound that those who hem- it for the first time jump us if uu explosion had occurred in their neighborhood. Send twelve cents in postage stamps to i{9 Corcoran Building, Washington, D,C.,and you will re ceive four copies of Kate Field’s Washington, containing matter ot special interest. Give name and address, and say where you saw this advertisement. Deserving 1’ralae. We desire to sqy our citizens, that for years we have been selling Dr King’s New Discovery for Consumption, Dr. King’s New Life Pills, Bucklcn’s Arnic Salve anti Electric Bitters, and l.v, never handled remedies Lint sell as we.;, or that have given such universal siv.is- faction. Wc do not hesitate to guaraii.et tuitn tvUry time, and wc stand ready refund vuc puroiia.-.? price; if saiufaetc relhlts do not follow Uieir use. ihc-.x remedies have won their great popt.h .rty purely on men merits. For sals at Wil cox’s drug store. J Watches repaired and war* ranted at Mason’s Jewelry Store. DO YOU EXPECT TO BECOME A . MOTHER? “Mothers* Friend* MAKES CHIP BIRTH m,. fiaUie, Lessens Danger, and Shorten: Laboir. ■■ My wife suffered more to ten minute; with her other children than she did air together with her last, after having used four bottles of MOTHER’S FRIENAY’ ■ays a customer. Henuerson Dale, Druggist, Carmi, IU. Sent by express on receipt of price, $1.60 per bet lie. Hook “To Mothers Iw pHADNtL* EMULATOR CO., «■ tea »v ail onvcsim. Atlanta. Oa li told w!iJ; vr.t f wranten *o JvQUrLltfU \ . xulac.v;,cp.uf ? \* ctMtvr-uci'OfOu'e Tcufttto and hoi; Mental Dc.. rton, SoftoniD;. -Imlnlgenoe, «r« -..-..lot Youth* tt iflve** to W^ok Orson:* t Naturalfind doubles the Joyo of iTfo; cu. LucorfhtDa and FemuJe Weakness. A month’s trc-;. rceut, in plain packafro, by mall, to ary address. D per box, 0 boxes fA. With every Ml order *e Rive i Written Guarantee to core or refund tbo money. Circulars bee* Quaronteo Usued only by oar ex- riuilre a rent. For Sale by Dr. J. A. Boyd, Darlington, S, C, 1 represent Twelve of the must reliable Fire Insurance Companies in the world— among them, the Liverpool and London and Ulohe, of England, the largest Are company in the world) and the ^Etna, of Hartford, the largest of all American fire companies. Prompt attention to business and ratlv faction guaranteed. F*E. WRMMT. ARLINGTON, 1 b. O. ^OWSOetwcra LXtWwjU, OOqWUdYifcMWY for Infants and Children. " Ca&tpvla is so well adapted to children that I Castoria curee Colic, Constipation, frocom:r.c>Dd it aa superior to any prescription K Sour Stomach, ])iarrh®n. Eruetation v mown to r.;e.” li!! Ancm R, M. D„ I KiU “ V fP ruu - * ,vu * ^ ““ 1 «««*«*" * "U So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. .cestion, r itho I Without injurious medication. Tub Ccxtaur Company, 77 Murray Street, N. Y. “ 3J[ O IX nr E ra JE Y." v ■ * ft -It,' 1 Monterey as made by the Mission Fathers of California A. D. 17C0 to 1845. A purely vegetable extract. It cures all forms of Indigestion, Biliousness, Nervous Affections, Malaria and Dysentery. It regulates the bqwels, purifies the blood, tonet the stomach. A great restorative after any form of wasting sickness. Invaluable in the cure of excesses in drink Or nar cotics. An appetizer and a digestive. A full wine glass thrice daily. Ask Your Dealer For It. MONTEREY COMPANY; Proprietors and Manufacturers, FLORENCE, 8. C. GIBSON & WOODS Take pleasure iu announcing that they are now pepared to issue Policies, and can place all bnsi- j ness entrusted to them in some I of the best companies in the | United States. > Buckleu’s Arnica Salve. The best salve in the world for cuts bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains, corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi tively cures piles, or no pay required-, It is guarau t eesdtogive perfect smisfac lion, or money refunded. Price 25, cents per bottle. For sale at Wilcox’s drug store. ’They have such companies as Tho Home, of New York, and The Hartford, of Hartford, Conn., two of the largest aud best managed companies iu the country. .. They invite examination into the plans of the New York Mutual, offering, as they do, very favora ble terms to those who wish to insure. m team .... I.., They also conduct a gene Brokerage and Commission i, in ess, and solicit a share.oj patronage. A % < •-->. 3 MS 'H Manufactured by E. 0. Burt A, Co., Drew, belby & Co., Williams, Hoyt « Co. Exauuue our $3 Glove l ittiug Good Yea; Welt Bnoe for Men. , An elegant lino of ali styles and prices. We carry the best line Hand-Sewed i ’ Goods ever brought to Darlington. . Immense Stock of Oxfords : For Ladies, Misses and Children; widths B to E. We have in the newest lasts and colors, Trunks, Valises, Traveling Bags, Etc. . . • U- . >''• : r* We have on hand a complete stpek of the above goods at astonishing iirices. ” DARLINGTON SHOE STORE, WOODS MILLING, Propuifitor^