BUELL & ROBERTS CASH DRY GOODS STORE. Onr country trade is constantly greying and it is because we are pleasa ing onr customers. When you oome to the city come and see us, and make our establishment your headquarters. T# wan ?*??U *tt ?i f a f a f a f nr o a m XI J VU UBU C UVLUCi ??u?0 kw uo iwi dcm* pies: Our prices are low as you will see by the following quotations: DOMESTIC GOODS. Long cloth 5, C, 7, 8, to 12 l-2o. Brown homespun 4, 5, 6, to 8c. Brown twill 5, 6, 7 to 10c. Bleaohed twill 8, lOand 12 l-2o. Check homespun 4, 5, 6 to 8c. Check einghams 5 and 6c. Bed ticking 5, 6, 7, 8. to 15c, *etons6, 7, 8, to 12 l-2c. WHITE GOODS. Whi e piques 8, 10, 12 1-2 to 25c. White auck 10, 12 1-2 to 25c. White check nainsook 5,6, to 12jc. White check dimities 7,8, 10,to 12 l"2c. Plain white nainsook 12 1-2 to 25c, India lawns 5, 6, 7, 8, to 25c. Persian lawns 12 1-2, 15, 18 to 25c. Whi te law6 40 ins. wide 5c. White organdies 8, 10, 121-2 to35o. WASH GOODS. Calicoes 4, 5 and 6o per yard. Percales yd. wide 6 to 12 l-2o. Black Calicoes 5 and 6c per yd. Drapery Calicoes 5, 6. 7, to 8o. Zephyr ginghams 7, Band 10c. Qolored piques 8, 10 and 12 l-2c. Colored lawns 3 1-2, 5, 8, to 16 2-3a Colored dimities 8, to 12 l-2c. Colored crashes 5 and 8c. MILLINERY DEPARTMENT. Black sailors 10 to 98c. White sailors 15o to $1.50. Mixed straw sailors 34 to 48c. Mixed straw Tam-O-Shanters 75c to 81.50. Fancy chip straws 48o. Fancy straw shapes 35 to 98c. Leghorn hats 35cto SI.00. Childrena tailors 15 to 75c. Fanoy flowerB 10 to 83c per bunch. Forget-me-not3 and violets 10c per bunch. Mourning flowers 25 to 50o per bunch. Jet ornaments 10c per bunch. Rhinestone, Steel and Pearl Ruckles 10 to 25c each. , Chiffons from 10 to 00o per yard. FURNITURE HOUSE NEXT DOOR TO CASH DRY GOOD STORE. Low Prices for Spot Cash Ill YT.'i.i r ~ _ t>n A A jvitcnen b?ioh qo.vv. Kitchen chairs 30. Oak chairs, split seata 75. Oak chairs, oane 6eate,dinicg 90&1.00. Reed rockers 1.75 to 6.50. Children high chairs 50c to 2.50. 10 piece solid oak suits 18.00. 10 piece solid walnut suits, marble tops 70.00. Solid oak sideboards 10.00 Imt. walnut sideboards 7.00 to 8.00. Bed Lounges 10.00. Conches 8.00 to 10.00. Parlor Suits 35.00. ExiSnsion Tables 5.00. Kitchen Tables 2.25. Bed Springe 2.25. Jfattr&sses 2.25. Stoves,Lamps,Easels, Window Shades, Certain Poles. Chamber Sets, 10 pieces, 2.11, 4.00, 4.50, 5.00, 5.50. 12 pieces, 7,00. O tRFETS. 4-4 Jute Carpet, fancy stripe. 20c. 4-4 Cotton Carpet, Ingrain 28c. 4-4 Ingrain Carpet, wool, 30 aui 35c. a a CrtAr, KohIk.. a r ...j ra. TL--X VVVU .UBillUK. auu VVC. STAIR OARrET. 18 inch Jute 18c, 23 inch Jute 20c. 28 inch Ingrain 30c. 9TAIR OIL CLOTH. % yard wide 30o ituoa Jute, 30x60 inches 75. Jute, 86x72 inches 98. 8myrria, 18x34 68. " 26x54 1.25. ' 30x60 1.37. " 30x72 2.25 Beet quality heavy Smyrna 18x34 75. " " " 21x46 1.25. " " 26x54 2.26. " " " 30x60 3 00. " 36x72 5.00. ? " 41 48x84 7 fifl 18x36 Moqftet 1.00. 27x60 Moquet 2.CO. Jap Matt, Bamboo Filling, 36x72 1,50, 'iSfr sQcages. 11 Wool, 9x9Feet 15.60. " 9x12 Feet 7.00. " 12x12 Feet 10. Cp/ Tapeetry rugs 27x60 L60. MATTINGS. $4.00 per roll Good quality China, at 12 and 150. Heavy ohlna 18 and. 20o. Extra heavy'chioa 22, 23 and 25o. Beet china 27, 28 nod 30c, Good Ji.pane.-e Matting 23c. Fine ' ,^ 26, 27 and SOo. JCTE 45iD CpCA DOOR MATS. Jute, \27 inches^Jc. Cocoa. 16x27 inchee^?0- / Flexible Wire Matts. * '* BUELL & ROBERTS, , 573 & 575 KING STKKKtj . CHARLESTON, - S. 6. THROIGHOIT THE COUNTRY. The iouth. D. H. Johnson. 1'nited States pension agent a: Memphis. Tenn.. was arrested on a 1'nited States warrant, charging him with unlawfully obtaining $.">00 from an aged colored woman. Johnson claims that he borrowed the money. A cyclone passed over Eutaw. Ala., Monday and did a great deal of (lamage. The Baptist church was demolished and the Presbyterian church and Female Academy were badly wrecked. Jack Thomas, a negro who attempted an assault upon Mrs. Keene. a widow lady living in Suwanee county. Fla.. Friday night, was taken front the sheriff by a mob at Live Oak Monday, hanged to a tree and riddled with bullets. He made a full confession. McKinley has de lined the invitation to visit Atlanta on July 20th. The North. Congressman Robert J. Gamble is dying of meningitis at Yankton. S. D. Sheriff W. V. Malloy was sentenced to jail for contempt of court at Westchester. N. Y., and will have to lock himself up. " 5 ?ttrilT liovernor ineouurt* iwubvick ..... leave New York city next Friday for Chicago, arriving in that city Saturday. and leaving the same night for Oklahoma City, where he will attend the re-union of his old regiment, the Rough Riders. The revised list of those killed in Monday's wreck on the Chicago and Northwestern places the number at seven. Martin J. Russell, one of the proprietors and editor of the Chicago Chronicle. and for many years identified with the management of Chicago newspapers. died Sunday night at Mackinac Island, from a complication of dis eases. In the United States Circuit Court in St. Louis. Judge Elmer B. Adams issued a temporary >njunction restraining Wm. D. Mahon. president of the Amalgamated Order of Street Car Employes of America and others from in terfering with the operation of the mails over the lines of the St. Louis Transit Company. This injunction nam^s over 100 men. most of whom are members of the association over which Mr. Mahon presides. It is announced that Judge James P. Tarvin. president of the Ohio Bi-Metllic League, will be a candidate for the gubernatorial nomination beiofe the Kentucky Democratic convention at Lexington. July 19th. W. Bourke Cockran addressed the graduating class of the Yale Law School at New Haven Monday. A convention to organize the Illinois Tnion Kerorm party, on uie iwsis ui direct legislation, will be held- at Chicago on June 27. Thomas S. Jackson, while ill with scarlet fever, fell in love with his pretty nurse. Mrs. Millicent Mayeng, at Stamford, Conn., and married her. Finding her in the company of a number of boys at Brooklyn, N". Y.. fifteen-year-old Lizzie Mc-Donald's father ordered her home, and was promptly thrashed by his daughter's beaux. Foreign. The Viceroy of India cables that frequent showers have faalen in the Deccan and elsewhere, but that heavy rains are wanted in order to enable the natives to engage in plowing and sowing the autumn crops. The Paris correspondent of the Lon^ M " D aon uauy txpress suys. ruu; x\uasian ambassadors are here, by accident or design?Count Cassini. ambassador ;o the Cnited States: Count De Nelldoff. ambassador to Italy: Count Kap. niv. ambassador to Austria-Hungary, and Prince Oouroussoff. ambassador to France. It is said that Count Muravieff's successor at the Russian Foreign Office will be one of these, and I am informed that Count Cassini stands the best chance." The British government has received dispatches from Ashanti indicating that the relief of Kumassi should be accomplished this week. Generals Buller and Hamilton are seeking to occupy the railroad from Volksrust to Johannesburg, in ihe Transvaal, and cut oft" the Orange river colony Boers. Heavy rains in Cuba have caused yellow fever to spread. Dispatches from Ecundor say that war is threatened between that country and Colombia. The rainy season, which has commenced in the Philippines, is interfering with millitary operations there. The Secretary of the British Legation in Washington. Reginald. T. Tower. has sailed to accept appointment ?:s British Minister at Pekin. "Miscellaneous. The sen: -millenial celebration of the birth of John"Guttenberg. the inventor of printing, be^n. on a grand scale at Mayence. GeriJany, recently. Americans overrun the London hotels. POPULAR SCIENCE. Liquid hydrogen is transparent, and the lightest as well as the coldest liquid known, a cork sinking in it like lead. A whitish substance seen at the bottom of the vessel on Professor Dewar's tirst exhibition was really solid air or air ice. Flowering plants are not certainly known to reach a greater height than 17,000 feet in the Alps. At least half a dozen species, iucluding a saxifrage, a mallow, a valerian and several composite?have been brought by Sir Martin Conway from heights of 18,000 to IS.500 feet in the Bolivian . mountains. Before a meeting of the Biological Society of Washington Mr. W. A. Orton described the result of experiments made to determine the cause of , the flow of maple sap in the early spring. His conclusion was that the : flow has a mechauical cause, being ' due to the increasing heat which expands the gases in the wood cells, ' and thus forcibly expels the sap. 1 This contradicts the view that the flow of sap is due only to physiological action in the plant. The peculiar condition of the at- J mosphere'over southern England and " western France on January 11th gave rise to extraordinary exhibitions of solar halos, or sun dogs, described in the scientific journals of both countries. The phenomena were very beautiful, the sun being surrounded | wijli concentric circles and inverted I arches, showing rainbow colors, while ' mock suns appeared among the halos. They were caused by clouds of minute ice crystals floating at a great elevation. 3 C Recent observations tending to show a that ants possess a sense of hearing c have recently been described. Pro- g fessor Metcalf of the Woman's Col- 1 lege, Baltimore, adds some interest- 1 ' i-i-1- a. I.:-? i?*_ f lag testimony OH llitf auLijett IU a letter to Science. One of his studeuts 3 discovered that a colony of black ants was thrown into a state of great excitement by sounds of one particular fj pitch. Other sounds did not affect |1 them, but when the peculiar note was struck, either on a violin or with a whistle, the ants would become excited, and if the sounds were continued would grow frantic, some of them falling into a water moat surroundiug their nest. Ants of other species paid no attention to the sounds. On a summer evening you may see Arcturus high up in the south or southwest in June or July, and further down in the west in August or September. You will know it by its red color. That star has been flying straight ahead ever since astronomers [ began to observe it at such a speed that it would run from New York to Chicago in a small fraction of a minpte. You would have to be spry to irise from your chair, put on your hat land overcoat and gloves and go out on ( jt'ie street while it was crossiug the Atlantic Ocean from New York to Liverpool. And yet if you should iwatch that star all your life, and live 9 as long as Methuselah, you would not a be able to see that it moved at all. The t journey that it would make in a thou sand years would be as nothing along side its distance. Labrador'* Wealth of Iron. Under the nresent conditions the ores of the interior and Uugava Bay V are useles3 owing to the lack of railway or other commuaication. The deposits on the islands of Hudson Bay lie immediately alongside of deep water, and so there wonld be no difficulty in loading on shipboad, but the long carriage through Hudson Strait Sl and the shortness of the season of navi- | j gation, three and one-half months, are ? serious considerations ir connection | I. with the profitable working of these : J' deposits.' No coal exists about Hudson Bay or a in Labrador, and the wood for char- j,coal would have to be transported from the southern part of Hudson Bay. The only supply of fuel in the ' j neighborhood is found in the great ? masses of driftwood on the islands and Ishores of the bay, and it is doubtful j -- * ?i _# I A: it tins would answer tue purposes ot smelting. There are excellent water powers in Fi the neighborhood, which might be cc used if a cheap method of electric smelting were discovered,?Engineer* ing Magazine. Worked by Electricity. Canada boasts of one of the most js wonderful farms in the world. Its \ peculiarity lies in the fact that every- p, thing is worked by electricity. Two w waterfalls within the bounds of the farm, some sixty feet, and one hundred and eighty feet high, furnish the C( motive power, a central power being p, erected near, and the current is trans- V( mitted by wires to every availablo place on the farm. ai Siberian Trolley. Sf In the line of general improvement si planned in connection with the ol Trans-Siberian Railway, terminating o' at Yladivostock, the Russian Govern- d inent will establish an electric railway tl and an electric light plant. The rail- d< way is to bo twelve mUes lonar. , x^x O/ V?5- \f6\ (00/ # ^ ^ Y?) jXiS hp) .!?* . .r Our fee returned if we fail. Any 0 my invention will promptly receive 01 ibility of same. "How to Obtain a ] secured through us advertised for sale Patent taken out through us receiv rne Patent Record, an illustrated an by Manufacturers and Investors. Send for sample copy FREE. A< VICTOR J. E' {Patent A Evans Building, KodoTj Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. Itartlficially digests the food and aids Mature in strengthening and recon-1 tructing the exhausted digestive or- : ans. It is the latest discovered digest,nt and tonic. No other preparation an approach it in efficiency. It intantly relieves and permanently cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion. Heartburn, flatulence. Pour .Stomach, Nausea, lick HeadachtM 1 ast ralgia, Cramps, and ill other resu lts of i m tvrfect digestion. Prepared bv E- C PeWIt*. A Co- Chicago. e. i. ran i sos MANUFACTURERS OF IOORS, SASH, BLINDS, MOULDINGS AND Building Haterial. GnnU \A/ alnrVifa ! L/CfllUIS ILL uasu ?? I 2ord, Hardware, Window glass, j ?tc. We guarautee our work uperior to any sold in this city, ill beinfc of our own manufacure. E.HL HACKER, ProprietorCHARLESTON. - S. C. Atlantic Coast Line. 'jrti-Eista Siiiroii jfSoitlCiroiiai., Condensed Scheiule. Dated April 15th, 1900. Ol'THBOUND. No.33* No.23* No.53* No.51* A M P M P M A M v. Fiorence 2 34 715 9 40 ! v. Scrau'.on 8 21 10 27 j v. Lake City 8 si 10 33 ; v. Kintfstree 8 ."4 10 5'J v. Lanes 3 38 9 14 6 45 11 20 P 31 r. Charleston 5 04 10 33 8 30 1 00 OUTHBOUND. No.78* No.32* No.52* No.50* A M P M A 31 P 31 v. < harlesfon 6 33 4 04 7 00 4 00 r. Lanes 8 32 v. Lanes 8 05 6 15 5 39 I v. Kinpstree 8 23 5 56 v. Lake Cily 8 46 6 23 ! v. Scranton 8 51 6 29 | r. Florence 9 25 7 25 7 05 i AM PM AM PM | Trains Nos. 78 and 32 run via Wiison and lyetteville?short Line?and make close innection for all points North. JXO. F. DIVINE. G-n'l. -Sap t Registration Notice. Theoflice of the Supervisor of Reg- , tration Will be opened oil the tirat | [cnday in every month for the pnr- j use of the registering of any person hois qualified as follows: Who shall have been a resident of I le State for two years, and of the >UDty one year and of the polling recint in which the elector offers to jte fonr months before theday ofelecon, and shall have paid, six months be>re any poll tax then due and payable, id who can both read and write any iction of the Constitution of 1893 lbmitted to him by the supervisors, I registration, or can show that ho wns, and has paid all taxes collectable uring the present year on property in lis State assessed at three hundred , ollars or more. J. J. EADDY, Clerk of Board. 1 % BETTER for some, BEST for everybody. ! Send for Your Neighbor's Endorsement ' KJHTURNtR. GENL SOU A CENT. 18 WALL ST. ATLANTA CAT % JMBALL HOUSE ENTRANCE' '- \ ne sending sketch and description of ir opinion free concerning the patentPatent" sent upon request. Patents at our expense. ? ? -i.*.- ?.M i e special notice, wimuut cuarge, hi id widely circulated journal, consulted Idress, /ANS & CO., ttorneys,) WASHINGTON, P. C. Skin Diseases. Fit the speedy and permanent cure o% tetter, salt rheum and eczema, Chamberlain's Eye and Skin Ointment is t without an equal. It relieves the itching and smarting almost instantly and >ts continued use effects a permanent nure. It also cures itch, barber's itch, ccald head, sore nipples, itching piles, chapped hands, chronic sore eyes and granulated lids. Dr. Cady's Condition Powders for horses are the best tonic, blood purifier and vermifuge Price. ? "? cents. Sold by The Drug Store Kind but price the same as ordinary brands. Druggists buy Anvil Soda in bulk and sell it a? five cents an ounce. Grocers sell it in packages at 10c. a pound or 3 pounds for 25c. It is Exactly the Same Soda To get the best you must insist on packages put u;> by the manufacturer wfth the ANVIL BRAND TRADEMARK. Probably you use it? Nearly everyone does, and if so you know all about how far superior it is to either baking soda or baking powder. Leaven is the latest advance in baking preparations, and if you don't use it you should. It la Better Than Soda ^BL because it will make biscuit Just right every time. No more yellow s-pots or soda taste. Tt la Better Than Baking Powder because it is half as strong again and one heaping teaspoonful will do the work of two rounded teaspoonfuls of the best baking powder ever made. It Don't Spoil but is so prepared that with ordinary care it will retain its fell strength for years. We do not have to pack it in tin cans like baking powder, and this saving enables us to give you better value for your money than you ever had before. "A Uuif leaven leave net h the whole lumf." e ounces for ten cent*.?6 oences for five cents. auwfc WTtjltWU HflMntSSt This mattress depends largely upon air?the moot resilient force known to science?foe it* luxurious comfort in me, having a hollow oealral air *p?ce the length and width of the mattre* containing spring section with 88 steel spring* interaoUed into wo ran wire fabric* at top and bottom. Ar-mod thin is placed the filling, non-absorbent uetL. septic pure white esttoo Colt. The air under pressure h? uooibiuutkm with the spring* sesatt in a most rasserlrable elasticity. sod wftii tbe oilier ftntenes make the mattress hygienic, pneumatic, selt-van tii airing and of downy softnam Better than any ether ecu Wish a* sty price. CDCC"^11 ?s trod use oar m ~ If t KjlS4? "ACME" S >.Hygdmjho Melees* we will for 1 Vrf'IVX limited ttpre fuel nde wrtfc every I I order a one Brass Trimmed. car White Kiiameled /X si ^ Metal Bed Keen. I ,,7>y.VjKVr -a. a Ifke oot 'your ?S ' ? (\ *) ^~30 choice of widths? IVS. M?-7 8, 8*. 4 and \% IWy" * "... N feet), and one o< our nv>?? jJSis^ H ceMhrabd patent ^^41 "APMK" Bed 1 llfTl DJC' Serin**, same ae Lllr 1 V ~"|1! by the 0.8. tii \" I . 1 ? Army after three w a I l . I V HI months of the moet ^-Jif t ill I 1 1 I ' till rigid test* as best A* Tr*conJbiirt?vg tbe 3 W W groat virtues s>Mfi.rl,? la sent with order we prunay freight fa (Ml from thin end. Further, we will make aniproewt afth tha express understandinxthat if. in yoar Jodsmant. the mattaeesaloaa i* no* worth more than llvli end batter than any other matt rem, no matter how costly. you can haow your money back. The price of thin mattress dear not basin to represent ita value, the real nolid comfoat found In ita use. Nearly d everybody Who has uaed tt tha* far hoe reported fall ' fto.OU value received In the fimt month's use. The premium# offered la connection with the mattrem ate a tree gift from at for Che advexffarinc which we eipeot we will obtain from the use on ycmr pen of this mattrem. It is by use alone that Ita foil me*Its can be appreciated On rvqwuat we will send ifaiilaater ofpemoual letters ei emhyrsement irom the eetstmaed Cn irnan earyeon. Dr. J/B. Murphy; WaafajrurWr. Htjfrw. late poaimaatmr of Ghicaso; Mr. Joseph Hiecai. of Kmtl, Ooop*r & Co of Chlcasot Judge B. W. Otinowa of Cbioaso, and rnsnr other Well known people, of the merits or this mattress. .Vat fur Booklet "A." P ?% C CTSamples of cover* and Illustrated cata IsmC low** tbowin- more than ho sir If* of A -me Courhra tU all eri pdeea, A emu bowing SfnoWnei, I)r?kfcffll?*T(S? Amik- Rnis?-Trimmed Metal Uefle, Sfiiuii- i. J ,V; end Cpdghi Fold log Beds, Chalet. Koch- MS*-".**, utr- f ACME SPRINC W. 43d 8U. * 2C0 CO-. CHICAGO*