University of South Carolina Libraries
fjfr 7 .. .. .,-v. Kf~' HMwh - *. ff >' % \ v ?r'ra !UJ CiUnij K.C Our Fall Stock is now ready and : u.iy a suit every day for various rem y?>u come to us. We can prove it b W with us. (tiveus an eye-sight tt ' .. Ms':, Troths' d CI No one in the Carolinas can un< That's an i in possibility. We bought law went into effect, and ourcuston and price we me?'t your wish at eve ? Men's good, serviceable suits at Mcu'h axtra good, all-wool suits, in : Men's fine black diagonal suits at Men's suit* in imported and selects ^ t Children's stylish, serviceable schoo Hats and Caps. I Howard hat, which is eqna! t? anyt jfc ^ thin? worth having" in the head-gea: fe FURNISHING ( ?ftom a pair of suspenders to a col i- / " lerwear to a pair of kid gloves, y I at prices to meet your approval. Boots and Shoes. celebrated He%* & Um.'s tine shoes, where. They'n? all right in materin Want a pair of shoes, remember us. FINECLDTHI] Extra room and extra hands hai Ifft Wonderful growth demanded thi rlenced tailors are now prepared to Trade. And when you'll note our s| attrely he satisfied that this is the pi mlt of cloths. The satisfaction we j IBANOV & Oor. King and Calhoui * Point* to Remember. in qualities Witt it No room for the unsatisfac Cirpwrr p Fashion's latest tji 1 i^Li* itigs. When a tl You cftn aI wa3 A IVIvy further here tli jhwalii-ttot if we know it, and that ^ IliL IRDERS prom Wo have in our employ MR. W. I awftoof the largest Northery houses poMed, and keps in touch with the d mrasted to Mm will receive promp Ro knur as one eniovs Dos tion I tod distinction; so long as one has Veal to; so long as one is snccess\il in a worldly sense, so long do bote who claim to be friends fl<?ck 'bout the individual. They eanV* do too much for him. They *eken him with protectations of ' dying affection. They declare hat come adversity or stay pros lerity they will never be false. ?itat as the summer "insects gather ?boat in electric light on a sum met night, so do oirr friends sur *und nc so Jong as we are prosper 09a tad happy. But lei the true tail of friendship come; let the men be tried ty tribulations and engulfed by misfortune; then? What is the experience of most men and women? Do the friends who bestbe^ us with adulation, and a tare win again and again of their everlasting fidelity, stay with ns or depart from us? Even if there are some to whom we have extended help and comfort, do they always prove trne to | their duty? We have all of us felt the surpent's tooth of ingratitude. We have every one learned arhat ft is to be sacrified by those whotn we supposed were our f f friends, and from whom, in times I . of adversity, we deserved the very b??at they could give.?Es. f. JOHNSON'S CHILL AND | FEVER JON1C Cures Fever In One Day. Lynching is one ot the painful and even homiliting features of our current history. It is a blot on onr civilisation, a reproach to oor system of self government. And the worst of it is that we ' have thus far given no evidence of onr ability to suppjess it or -awsn to ch*;ck its growth.?New Sort World. - W - ' I ill fiji i\waits vour inspection. Yon don't V . . I sons, ii<it easy or economical uim-? y your neighbor if ho has never traded sometime. baft Rialy-Mais Clothing. lersell us on Ready-Made Clothing. : our entire stoek before the tariff lers reap the benefit; in quality, style rv iK)int. * 2.48 selected patterns, at fr> and <>.no - fi.851 I fabrics from $7.-VI to - lo.OO 1 suits from 7ac up. >ou lit less you know we are the sole 'harleston agents fir the celebrated hing on the market. We have everyr line at prices most reasonable. ^ AnnC From a natty neck LJ&? tie to a dress shirt kir-hutton?from a suit of woolen ou will find our line complete, at This department is flourishing. We are sole Charleston agents for the You can't find letter shoes any i- ~ u, siyie, snapr uuu pi u c. m urn jum MG TO ORDER re been secured by this department, is. An extra cutter and extra expemeet increased demands for Fall plendid assortment of fabrics, you'll ace to teave your measure for a fine jive is in far advance of our prices. VOLASKL i Sts., Charleston, S C. We aim to-keep only the l>est?the kind that retain trade, as well as tory in our stork. fancies And fall swing in our showling is new and guod, we have it. rs count on your dollars traveling inn anywhere else; we are never un;'s one of the secrets of our success. mi man r 5. LOGAN, who, having represente<l , in this section, for years, is well lemauds of this section. Anything t attention. I The old frigate Consiellation celebrated her 100'h birthday 01 Tuesday last at Newport, at which peaceful port she lies tied up. With the Constitution she shared, through in minor meas | ure the perils and glories of American navel hislory op to and through the war of 1815; and her preservation as a memoral of that brilliant era of American seaman ship .8 creditable alike to piftriotic sentiment and national spirit. May the old federal frigate see many more birthdays before her colors are lowered finanllv and her sea soned timbers are consignedtothe the naval scrap heap or the do. mestic wood pile. To Car* Coaotlpatton Fortrtr. Take Caacarew Cacdy Cathartic. 10c ur Ba If C. C- C. fall to cure. druggists refund money It is said that the State farms wi^l pay into the State treasury about $10,000 this year. The crops are estimated atone thousand bales of cotton and 200,000 bushels of corn, besides 14,000 bushels of oats already threshed. and 200 head of fine hogs. v Quinine and other fever medicines take from 5 a to 10 days to cure fever. Johnson's Chill and Fever Tonic cures in ONE DAY. The Philadelphia Press thinks that the election of McLaurin means that South Carolina is "rejurning to the earlier and better days of John C Calhoun." At any rate the State is returning to its sober senses, Resource4 Screven Co^Ga.?I have been subject to attacks of hillious colic for several years. Chamber Iain's Collie, Cholera and Pirrahoe Remedy is the only sure relief. It acts like a charm. One dose of it gives relief when all other remedies fail.?O. P. Sharp. For sale by Pr W. L. Wallace. .? - ~r.-- .. SHOOTING FLYING FISH. A Novel P|?ort Ctrrlid on In Soutlim California Water*. The visitor to the island of Bnnta CntaliDa or he who gees out on the launches from Long Beach or ban Pedro is always entertained by the remarkable flights of flying fish, which in these waters attain n length of IS inches and a weight of 2 pounds. Alarmed by tho boot nr steamer, they dash out of the j water by a vigorous movement of the screwlike tail and do.sh away in headlong flight, skimming over the waves like birds, presenting so remarkable an appearance that the ! tourist who has never seen so exi traordinary a performance takes i them for birds. The flying fish is not j flying, but it has four very winglike j fins which serve it a similar purpose j ?that is, it hurls itself out of the water by the aid of its toil, and 1 f/Mntivirinlibf, fina au parachutes, goes soaring awuy, covering a distance of an eighth of a mile. When the inertia fiils, the tail of the fish drops, and the moment it strikes the water it logins a violent twisting, which sends the fish into the air again, and by repeating this the fish is enabled to cover the long distance. The wings or fins are not flapped, the o aly motion beiDg a tremulous one iraparted to them when the tail is twisted in the water. As the boat glides along these fish dart from the water and go soaring away on either side, and it is then that the sportsman, sitting in the bow, has an opportunity for some novel sport. The fish move like some quail, very low, not moro than two feet from Ihe surface* and are not the easy shots one might imagine. They move rapidly and appear to rise and fall over the waves and go sweeping away in grooeful curves. Sometimes four 01 five are in the air at the same tin e, and the good shot can bring them down to the right and left. All that is needed to carry out the idea of quail shooting would be to have a dog, but there is n sta dog tbat flushes this attractive game, the agile tuna. The flying fish is its legitimate prey, and big schools come sweeping in from the deep sea, driving the schools of flying fish be? ? A W V*? icre iLit:jlii, i;uutiu(( iiitui wiu wo air six, eight and ten feet, giving marvelous exhibitions of lofty tumbling. At such times the flying fishes are crazed with terror and leave the water by scores and hundreds. They fly into boats, out upon the dry beaches, strike boatmen who happen to be in the way cf their headlong flight and present a most attractive appearance to those who have never seen a flock of ocean fliers in the air with fieh 6 or 7 feet long pursuing in a Benes 01 jcnj>? or jumps. Sometimes the tuna chases the flier along just below the surtace, catching it as it drops. a cloud of foaui alone telling the story.? Santa Catalina. Globe Llghtatac. On July 1, 1691, a fireball entered a carpenter's cabin near Scblieben. The carpenter was sitting on the edge of a bed on which a child was sleeping. A ball of fire sprang suddenly and with a loud noit>6 from the fireplace to the bed, wbich was immediately shattered. Then the ball rolled very slowly to the opposite wall of the room, through which, or the floor, it apjmrently ranislied with another fearful crash without setting fire to anything. The man's wife and another child were sleeping in a second l>ed and the baby in a cradle, all in the same room, but none of the'five persons was wounded or even stunned. All complained of headache ai d deafness on account of the heavy sulphurous vapor which filled the room, but they soon recovered. Some fractures were dieoovered about the stove and chimney. Lew fortunate were the children in a scboolbouse in Bouin, France, who were visited by a firebs 11 while at their afternoon prayers. It was preceded by a shower of lime, wood and stones. The ball, which was small, rolled along under tho benches, killing three of the children, and I went oat through a window pane, in which it merely made a round hole, whereas all the other panes were shattered.? M. Hagenau in Popular Science Monthly. A Merited Rebuke. "And you are the gentleman who was saying that a woman knows | nothing of economy 1" exclaimed | the business man's wife as she sur: veyed the scene of the burglary, i "Why, this loss is one that I couldn't have foreseen. I locked ' everything up with scrupulous care." "Of course you did. Nobody but a man would have thought of com' celling burglars to ruin a $250 safe In order to get $11 in money and a I bundle of promissory notes."? ; Washington Star. Judla dea FUntea. The Paris Jardin des Plantesowes its origin to a florist who in the time of Henry IV grew all sorts of native and imported plants to sell flowers as models to the manufacturers of embroideries and laces. - - ... :r - ' 1 * ' I Aii exchange lids off The l'??l-1 . 1 lowing: A new fail is to phic^j on the bottom of wedd Cards' [these words: No children ex I pet-ted." An old citizen read-' in?; one of these cards for the first time, exclaimed: "Well,; they may not expect Vm, hut dollars to dimes they have Vm!" That's no joke. _ ! Woman's Diseases Are as peculiar as ^ unavoidable, and cannot be discussed or treated as we do those to which the entire human l family are subject. t yffigprr . Menstruation sus- \ tains such import- jbJPj! -y h ant relations to her jusSff'' I \||fl health, that when **jfi ' ;r^ Suppressed,Irregu- - jf| I A I lar or Painful, fgj \ 1 U I she soon becomes :gg|{| \\ \Y | languid, nervous j and irritable, the bloom leaves her i cheek and very grave complications arise unless Regularity and Vigor are restored to these orgsins. Biadfidds S on/:rt& i|"*t f most noted remale physicians of the South, Regulator ^ sort prevail more extensiv ely than in any other section, and has never failed to correct disordered Menstruation. It restores health and 1 strength to the suffering woman. *Wi q?t? for tlM put thirty yean hi idled Bradfleld's TAmale Regulator, both at whole ale and retail, and in no instance has it tailed to glee satisfaction. We sell more of it ttutn ail other similar remedies combined." Lamjjl, Rasaut A Lamar, Atlanta, Macon and Albany, Ga. Tmc naortKLo ruuutor Co., Atvaxta. a*. SoM by nil Dreggist* at Si. 00 per Settle Notice IMf I Ml FnrSneeial Eieclion lo be holden October 12tb, 1897, for a Representative to Represent the 6th Congressional District of South Carolina in Congress for the Unexpired Term of the 65th Congress. An election will be held on Tuesday, the 12th day of October, IS97, at the legally established polling precincts in Williamsburg county, for a representative of the 6th Congressional District of South Carolina, in the unexpired term of the 55th Congress of the United States. The polls will he ojtenea ai < o'clock, a. m., and kept open without intermission or adjournment until 4 o'clock, p. m. At the close of the election the Managers shall immediately proceed to publicly count the ballots. Within three days thereafter the Chairman V>f the Board of Managers, or one of them, to he designated in writing by the Board, shall! deliver to the Comnrissioners oir election the poll list, the boxes containing the ballots, ahd a written statement of the result of the election at his precinct. The Managers of election shall! require ot every elector offering to vote, in addition to the production of his registration certificate, proof of the payment of poll tax six months before said election of any poll tax then duednd payable. The Managers' shall administer I to each person offering ,to .vote an : oath that he is qualified to vote at J said election, according to the con stitution of the State, and that he has not already voted in saia elec tion. The following named persons have been appointed to manage I said election by the board of ComI missioners of election for WilliamsI burg county, t<Avit: ! Lake City?M M Rodgers, J D Singletary, ? T Moody. Scranton?A M Cook,' R E MeKnight, W J Willoughby. Kingstree? F H Arrowsmith, 1J J Steele, H O Britton. Hebron?J C Christmas, H A Kennedy, D H Smith. Prospect Church?J M Eaddy, A B Lawrence, J .T Eaddy. Muddy Creek?H E Eaddy, J 1) I Haselden, L L Ard. McAllisters Mill?H L Whi^lock H M Thomas,H P Baldwin. Altmans Store?J B Thompson, J P Stone, J M Carter. Managers will call for boxes and instructions Saturday before election, Oct. 9th. Commisioners iW W Kennedy, of Election }\V M Hasklden. \ "" -V - f 5 1 NOTICE. I I will be in my nlFiet- in the Court | house, kiniistrec. Monday and Sat- i unlay of eaeh week, Those liav in?r business with the County Sup i erintedent of Education will gev-! em themselves accordingly. NjBOR 1). LtStSNK, L'oimty Sn^t. Ed. =T| JHTIHEW8 i BRO.? O 0 o Ccxmmiwion Merchants. Domestic Fruits, Pooltrv, Eggs, Butter and Vegetables. All Klndx of I'Malry Produce. 04 Market Street, Charleston, S. C. Write for Prices. Steerling silver. Silver Plated Ware, Gold Jewelrv, Wedding and Engagement Kings, Gold, Stiver, or Nickle Watches, or Whenever you wish to give a Present, we will be glad to moke suggestions. We will also repair your Watch if it stops, and guarantee our work. JAMES ALLAN & Co., Jewelers, 2S5 King St., Charleston. S. C THE COLUMBIAN ENCYCLPiEDIA, 35 Volumes, 28,600 pages, 7500 Illustrations. Contains an Unabridged Dictionary, gives pronuciation of every word, the volumes are of handy size, has the largest and latest maps?is better adapted to popular use than any Cyelopediaever published? IT CONTAINS LATER INFOftmATION Than any omer, an? more 01 u; is the only Cyclopedia which i?, or can be, really lip to date. It H. THE BEST FAmlLY LIBRARY. Because it is clear and simple In language, can be understood by a by a child?absolutely impartial and reliable and thoroughly American. For terms ami description write "n umimn % 31 Whitehall St.. Atlanta, (la. W.T.Williams, Manufacturer of SHINGLES, KINGSTREE. S. C. cm tiimi Xo 1 Heart Shingles pw 1,000 $4.50 2nd Hand Urartu, ,.. .. 3.50 4s. All Heart*. .. .. 3.00 &. AH Heart)*, .. .. 2.50 Sap Shingles, 2.50 Jlyl5?ly GROVES 'tasteless CHILL TUNIC IS JUST AS COOD FOR ADULTS* WARRANTED. PRICE 60 cts. Gaj.atta, Itxs., Not. IS, 18B. Parla Medicine Co., 81. Lou la, Mo. Gentlemen:?We aold last year, 000 bottle* of GROVB'8 TASTKLKSS C1I1LL TONIC and bare bouubt three jrroa* already thla year. In all oar ex.perionce of 14 yenrs, la the drug buatneM, have never aold an article that gave ancn unlveraal aatieIhrttnn aa your Tonic. Iwura truly, . Aam.Ciu AO* ill '/.j| BltllllM'3 CASK DRY-GOODS STORE, 1 'M ('orarr King aad CaalMltKtfc, Charleston, 16. ; . x3| ? . . . i Since the opening or our enlarge establishment it has been the talk of the town. Our Immense assortment of strictly up-to-date Fabric# the beautiful and artistic novelties continnally displayed on our counters, are conceded by all to eclipse Vany former exhibit of Dry-Goods here, and the mast important factor, the prices, always and on every occasion emphatically the lowest. Here are Seme ef our Interesting Prices: 15 pieces Poplin, all colors^lOc yd. .*% 20 u Figured Suiting 12)^c yd. 1 Plain and figured Cashmere, Brilliantines, Ac., 15,20,25 and 90c. Stamped Shams 15c a pair. * Bureau scarfs 20c 10 dozen Damask Towels 20c. 25 M tt 14 25c. Furniture J department This store has come to stay, w kick is evident from the fact that We are again enlarging oar capacity. 10-piece Solid Oak Suits $17 Oh 10-piece Elm Suits 19Oh , 5-piece Silk Tapestry Parlor 28 Oh 6-piece * ? ?0h 5-foot Smyrna Rugs 2 6t> -j ti-foot Jute Rugs 9ft jja Window Shows 10 Buell & Roberts I 573 & 573 NT/S SL j Charleston, - 8. C, | .HYR PRTNTINfi. f W V/ -M. * -M. JIV&4> A -a ? -w. J ? all Styles, Neatly Done at % The Csut; Record Job Oflau ATLANTIC COAST LINE. ; North-Eastern R. R. of S. C. CONDENSED SCHEDULE. Datetl May 16. 1807. V"' S TRAINS GOING SOUTH. JCo. 35.? Loitve Florence 3:39a. m. Leave Kingstree Arrive Lanes 4:48a. in T uoru 1 .mnpa 4:48 a. in .-g Arrive Charleston g:tii)a.m No. 23* Leave Florence 7:35 p. m Leave Kingstree 8:59 p. m^>! Arrive Lanes 9:15 p. nf Leave Lanes 9:15 p. m Arrive Charleston p. m No. 53* Leave Florence Leave Kingstree Arrive Lanes Leave Lanes 7:52 p. m Arrive Charleston 925 p. m TRAINS GOING NORTH. No. 78* Leave Charleston 5:30 a. m. Arrive Lanes 7:05 a.m. Leave Lines 7:05 a.m. Leave Kingstree 7:23 a. ra. Araive Florence 835 a. a. No. 32* v Leave Charleston 5:00 p. n>. Arrive Lanes 8:36 p.m. Leave Lanes 6:36 p. m. Leave Kihgstree Arrive Florence 7:55 p. m. >'o. 53.* ' $ Leave Charleston 7:00 a. m. < Arrive Lanes 8:26 a. m. Leave Lanes , Leave Kingstree Arrive Florence No. 52 runs through to Columbia via Central R. R. of S. <\ Train." No?. 78 and 32 rtm via Wilson :i and Fcyettevllle?Short F.irw?and make close connection for alt point* North. Trains on C. & I>. R. R. leave Florence daily excejrt Sunday 8 55 a, m? ar- :J rive Darlington 9 28 a. nr.. Cheravr 10 40 a. nr., Wadesboro 2 25 p. n* Leave Florence daily except Sunday 8 W p. nr.. arrive Darlington 840 p. ni., Hartsvllle 9 j 35 p. nr., Bennetrsvlne 9 35 p. m.? Gibson 10 00 p. n . Leave Florence Sunday only 9 QO a. nr., arrive Darlington 9 '.ii a ui.,#U8rtsrillelO 10 a. m. J. F. DIVINE, Geu'l Sup's.. %