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MANY PALME' Railroad Va'uation. i ^ Columbia State, 13th. i The State board cf equalization cT railroad property held another session j ind practically completed its work. > though it has not adjourned and it is : possible that one or two other changes in assessments will be made. The board has carefully gone over all the returns made by the railroads and has nxea me ngures n i-uusiucis ui?u an equitable basis. Last year taxes were j rolleeted cn a valuation of $26,177,030, | the total mileage being 2,921.37. This year the total valuation will be con- j Bideraily higher, something over one ' million dollars, if the figures agreed j upon stand. I The changes made in last year's as- ' I lessments were as follows: Ashevllle and Spartanburg Railway i I ?Raised from $9,000 per mile to $10,000 ' ! per mile. I Blue Ridge Railway?Raised from j ft $2,300 per mile to $3,000. B Charleston and Western Carolina? " Raised from $7,300 to $9,000. (Carolina Midland (fram Allendale to Hardeeville, 50.97 miles)?Raised from $8,000 to $10,000. East Shore Terminal?Raised from $S,000 to $16,000. F. C. ? P.?Raised from $8,500 to ! $10,000. Hartsville Railway?Raised from 1 $2,500 to $2,750. T n r? rtf* f * 1 M 1-1 PL Af* T> O icn/1 1i~<auiaaici aim vucoui ? iva.ctu uvu. $2,500 to $2,750. * Manchester and Augusta?Raised from $10,000 to $11,000. Manchester and Augusta (Lucknow j Branch)?Raised from $2,000 to $2,500. j South Carolina and Georgia Exten- j Bion?Raised from $5,000 to $6,000. W. C. & A. (112.05 miles)?Raised , from $10,000 to $11.6u0. Walterboro and Western?Raised from $2,500 to $2,750. It will be noticed that all the changes made were in the nature of increases. The assessments per mile as fixed by the beard yesterday stand, for all railroad lines, as follows : Lines. Value per ; mile. Ashley River $11,000 Atlanta and Charlotte Air Line. 16,000 Asheville and Spartanburg .... 10.000 Berkeley 2,000 Brancheville and Bowman .. .. 1.500 Blue Ridge 3,000 Charleston and Western Carolina 9.000 Cheraw and Darlington 6,000 Cheraw and Darlington (Gibson division) 7,500 j Cheraw and Darlington tSalisburv division) 4,000 i Carolina and Northwestern .. .. 2.730 i Chesterlleld and Kershaw .. .. 10,000 . Columbia and Greenville 10,000 Columbia and Greenville (Abbeville branch) 4,000 ; Columbia, Newberry and Laurens 3.000 Carolina Midland 10,000 Carolina Midland (from Allendale to Hardeeville) 10,000 Central Railway of South Carolina 8,000 Charlotte. Columbia and Augusta Railway 13,000 Carolina and Cumberland Gap .. 2,30.0 Charleston and Savannah (SeaShore Branch) 5,000 < East Shore Terminal 16,000 Florida Central and Peninsular 10,000 Florence Railway 15,000 Florence Railway (Latta br.) .. 4.000 Georgia, Carolina and Northern 10,000 Green Pond, Waterboro and Branchville Railway 5.000 Georgetown and Western 4.000 Glenn Springs Railway 2,000 Hampton and Brancheville .... 1,000 Hartsville Railway 2,750 Lancaster and Chester 2.150 j Manchester and Augusta 11,000 j Manchester and Augusta (Luck- ! now branch) 2,500 Manchester and Augusta (Pregnall bratch) 5,000 . Manchester and Augusta (Dar1 t \ AAA i hhhl uugiuu ui aucu i o.vvu ^^^Northeastern Railway 16.000 ^^Northwestern Railway (branch) 1,850 i South Carolina and Georgia .. 15,000 ! W South Carolina and Georgia r (Camden branch) 10,000 I { South Bound Extension Railway 10,000 j | South Carolina and Georgia Extension Railway 6.000 ; Palmetto Railway 10,000 j Spartanburg, Union and Columbia 9,000 j Pacific Railway of South Carolina S.000 i Seivern and Knoxville Railway l,50u ; Wilmington. Columbia and Augusta Railway 11,000 > Wilmington. Columbia and Augusta Railway 15.000 ; Wilmington, Columbia and Augusta Ry. (Conway branch) .. 5.000 Waterboro and Western Railway 2.750 ! Carolina Midland Railway 5.000 ; Sumter and Wateree Railway .. 5,0'm) Pickens Railway 1,500 Conwav and Seashore 1.500 Lockbart Railway 1.500 The date of hearing of protests from the railroad officials has not yet been i fixed. Destructive Storm In Union. Union. Special.?Thi3 pjlace was visited Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock by a terrible tornado. The storm came from the north and it seems there was also one from the southwest, meeting in this vicinity. It played havoc, four deaths and considerably loss of property being ! the result. The storm from the north was preceded by a heavy rain and what appeared to be a dark mass about 100 yards wide. It traveled with great speed and people barely had time to get in doors before the storm was upon the town. A wing of the storm passed along Main street and blew several store doors open, doing more or less damage. Knitting Mill Hill, south of the town, caught the full force of the to'.nado, which blew down the school house and two residences, converting them literally into kindling wood. The occupants flew from one of the houses before it went to nieces and took refuge in an other near by. but this house was also crushed to splinters. In this house Misses Sallie Hart and Annie Lawt.cn were instantly killed. Mrs. Maxey Sims died in an hour and her little daughter. Vera, died about 0 o'clock. Maxey Sims escaped with a broken finger. Lee Sims received two bad cuts on the head from falling timbers and was internally injured. Mr. Mabrv sustained a fractured shoulder, his leg was badly burned by a stove falling on him and he was internally injured. His ease may prove fatal. ( Mrs. Lee Sims received a had but not fatal cut on the head. Mrs. Mabry and her two other children escaped with slight injuries. It took some time to get the victims from the debris. physician in town was soon upon the scene, also President Nichols and Manager Gault. of the Excelsior Knitting Mills, and willing hands assisted in relieving the sufferers as much as possible. The news spread rapidly and the hill was soon full of people from town, anxious to render every assistance possible. Everything that the families had was destroyed. Jcntsviilc reports in a telegram to Miss Lawson, the lady who was killed, that the storni was fearful at that point and that one of her family had been killed there. Mis Lawson was dead when the telegram arrived. The property damage will aggregate about $20.000, divided among a number of stores and residences and coton mills. Slatue to Rochambeau. Washington, Special.?Amid enthusiastic demonstrations of a great concourse of people, the superb statue of Count de Rochambeau, who brought the forces of Prance across the sea at the hour of greatest peril in the American Revolution, was unveiled Saturday. Seldom has an event presented so many brilliant features of military pageantiy and at the same time given occasion for the manifestation of the strong bonds of friendship existing between the French republic and the I'nited States. Relea-ed By Friends. Atlanta, Special.?A Constitution special from Jackson. Miss., says: "Oliver Lamar, recently convicted of murder and sentenced to fife imprisonment. was released from jail at Mendenha!!. early Sunday moring by a mob of his friends. Sheriff Magee sent out several posses in pursuit, but Lamar has not yet beoD apprehended. The bars were pried off the | jail fro mthe outside. It is not thought that more than six men were in the gang. Lamar was convicted of the assassination of Win. Sanders, a liveryman. Two men. supposed to have assisted in the escape, were arrested at Mendenhall tonight." Covered With L-'va. London. Bv Cable.?The Morning Post publishes a dispatch from the Island of St. Lucia, dated May 24, which says that ?>t. riere 13 now tornpletely covered with lava and that it will be dangerous to approach the place until the covering hardens. Ash showers and detonations continue, 1 | says the dispatch. Fortde-Fr&nce, according to The Post's correspondent, is safe, but the people are apprehensive lest the lightning flashes shall fire the hundreds of tons of explosives stored in the forts. The inhabitants are fleeing. Two hundred of them ar- I rived here Sunday and 1,700 are in \ the island of Guadaloupe. Most of ; them are destitute. I News of the Day. Miss Roosevelt is said by a writer tn Munsey's to have the distaste for oldfashioned domesticity which is mo:e or less characteristic of the modern girl. Mrs. Roosevelt is an exquisite needlewoman. Her daughter's utmost effort3 in that line are confined to the malting j of little gifts for her friends. Mrs.; Roosevelt is a notable housekeeper, as well as a brilliant hostess. Miss Roose- ! velt, although she cheerfully enough answered any ?all for house duties at the family s uysier nay uume, always preferred a free, outdoor life. She is. however, scrupulous in so; iu! matters, keeping her calling lists pos:- j ed with the exactness of a bank book and answering all invitations with her own hand. She is. moreover, an athletic young woman, with an inherited ; fondness for walking. One million five hundred thousand | Russian children every year receive . their education in elementary schools ! maintained by the orthodox Greek I Church. The sum of 200 rubles, or 1 about $105 a year, is the average i amount devoted to the maintenance of j a school. Ninety-four per cent of the teachers are themselves uneducated, and one-third receive less than $25 a year. The sechool houses are almost I invariably miserable huts, and many of the schools have neither hooks for the pupils to read nor pens and ink with which they can write. Nevertheless, the Russian Government favors the schools maintained by the orthodox Greek Church far more than the more efficient schools maintained by the local authorities. | HOSPITAL SECRETS. ! ft Nurse Says: "Pe-ru-na is a Tonic of Efficiency." | i| ] ' MRS. KATE TAYLOR. I J| J/rs. Kate Taylor, a praduatei.i ][?i urge of prom I tie nee, yltes her ex-f ; ]|perienec icith I'rruna in an opet.t ,J\lettcr. Her position in soviet 15 !]!an<I professional standing com-i \\hlne to give special jtrominenct\ i j|?o her utterames. \ CiH1CAGO, ILL. 427 Monroe St.?"As ) far as 1 .have observed l'eruna is the finest tonic any man or woman can use | who is weak from the after effects of any j serious illness. | "I have 6een it used in a number of eon| valescent cases, and have seen several | other tonics used, but 1 found that those \ who used l'eruna had the quickest relief. increase bodily vigor and renew health and strength in a wonderfully short time,"?MRS. KATE TAYLOR, In view of the great multitude of women fullering from 6ome form of female dig- | ease and yet unable to tind any cure, I)r. , 1 llartman, the renowned specialist on fe- i male catarrhal diseases, has announced his < j willingness to direct the treatment of as ! many cases as make application to him j during the summer months, without charge. Address The l'eruna Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio. i ssfK-JS*; j MlM Corn 1 : f ? ,1 ^ ? IfM removes from the soil m M /TSSl large quantities of Potash, i The fertilizer ap- I j i ^ plied, must furnish I j j ! j.) fQ enough Potash, or the I j * H \ \ *an(* ^ose 'ts Pro" E \ \ ducing power. Read carefully our boolcs I on crops?sent /ret. GERMAN KAI.I WORKS, I j 93 Nassau St., .New York. 5 gjf $5,000 Dejxjtit back of our Guaranty of Foaitlona. OPKS ALL THE YEAR. Endorsed by Bankers. Officials, Business Men. R. R. Ksro paid Board at cost. Write Quick to OA.-A LA. BUS. COLIiEGK, Macon. Go. Oh, my honey, Ua alma las loco IOf NT\ iiu umo iu luoi/f L3H0C COJ Save yo' money vy. .r7 _fer de Red Seal Shoes. innnnw'i KKDisM TO BH D?Y> I J111J V V 'or particulars and iO days' I 11! I 11 I treatment (ree. o. K. Coliuin J lul U I Prop?y Med. Co., Atlanta, tie. {'CTARTUNG Thousands of children an d> Worms. Svmntoms are seldon ^ child's temperament and upon the van Jjj tines. Lose no time! Adopt the safe a S DR. BOYKI.VS V * A SURE. SPEEDY AND SAFE DES ? IN USE OVER 30 YEARS- ACCI t* 25c- BEST VERMIFUGE KNO ?>v ? ? ? ? .1-1 J > ?- ? - J1 \ \ \ Hot Weather Cookery. "The Fruits of June" is the alluring title of one of many fine chapters in the J * ^ * - - - * i- .i *u* 1 June Delineator, uevuuu iu me tuus ui . the summer kitchen. There is also a j helpful article on stewing meats, with ! seme recipes, another on the uses of > asparagus, and one on dishes that may , be prepared from the emergency shelf. The usefulness of peanuts is indicated ' in an article giving a great number of recipes for sauces, scollops, salads, etc.. and a number of hints to housewives under the head of Frugalities completes a domestic section of unusual interest to housewves. Cure* Klootl 1'olnou,Cancer,Ulrera,Ecznma> Carbuncle*. Etc. Medicine Free. Robert Ward, Maxey's, Ga., says: "I suffered from blood-poison, my head, face and ehoulders were one mass of corruption. aches in bonc3 and joints, burning, itching, scabby skin, ulcers on leg, was all run down and discouraged, but Botanic Biood Balm cured mc perfectly, healed all the sores and gave my skin the rich glow of health. Blood Balm put new life into my blood andnewambition into my brain." Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) cures all malignant blood troubles, such as eczema, | scabs and scales, pimples, running sores, carbuncles, scrofula, etc. Especially advised for all obstinate cases of Bad Blood. Druggists, $1. To prove it cures, Blood Balm sent free and prepaid by writing Blood Bai.m Co.. 12 Mitchell Street, At- j lanta, Ga. Describe trouble and free med- J ical advice sent in sealed letter. Paradoxical as i? may seem, the man who ' is his own best friend may also be his own i worst enemy. A woman believes that a good story will bear repeating, especially if it was told to her as a secret. Chronic Tetter. Dr. James C. Lewis. Tip Top, Ky., writes: j , "1 have an invalid friend who has had great benefit from Tetterine in chronic tetter. Kend a box to above address." 50c. a box ly mail from J. T. Sbuptrine. Savannah, Ga., ] U your druggist don't keep it. Seaboard Special Ilatea. *5.r0 Cbarictte to Raleigh, N. C.. HDd return. account of Commencement Exercises | A. A M. College. Tickets od sale May 24th lo 27th, inclusive, good to return until May 29th. i "What's the matter with grand- J father?" "He's insulted. You see, he's near- i ly ninety, and he happened to hear \ you remark that the good die young." j ?Chicago Post. . | I Ifir'rfKily harm'riif vrprtable compound. 11 Ijvfly auil pei monently t lluiluxtos corpulency ai.d stip? rfluou* fit sh. It In a t I H I; A Kfdl.l'JI. aMl<i hai nilessas freeh air. I housandrof | atleiitabavr ua-il llil* treatm--nt. I'hyslclau-. endorse It. Write tousf>r Hit- KTItLATMK.Vr. send Ten C'riita to cover lonape. rtc. Correspondence strict v confidential. k*ery thlnifln plalnsealrd lackaftcs. \freaeud you the lortnula.lf you take our treatment, and you can make "lieducto' at honic if yon desire; knowing the fnitrrtl* lent* i.ei d have uo fear < I evil efitct*. Addrcaa, Uinimtt lirui.l o. .3701 b Jeff Ave ht Loula.Mo | SH I have been a sufferer from dyspepsia and sick headaches. I was many times compelled to leave work and go home. Our druggist told me to try Ripans. I am now in much better health, I can eat almost anything, have no headache and work steady. 1 also was greatly affected with constipation, and Ripans gave me relief from that. At drnffgifts. The Five-Cent packet Is enough for an ordinary occasion. The family bottle, tO cents, contains a supply for a ysar. FACTS. ! f e being gnawed to distraction by JjJ 1 reliable. They depend upon the J etv of worms present in the intes- ^ L. ma sure course by using . ^ VORM KILLER. J TROYER OF THESE MONSTERS. ? EPT NONE BUT DR. BOYXIN'S. trWN SOLD EVERYWHERE. ? lealthy Exercise * .Zs conducive io Good r: Health and Long Life. i H No woman can take proper I ? icercise unless she wears a cor ret corset. The - I Straight Front B p Royal Worcester I Bi and / I I ln Bon Ton Corsets ? ? inform to every movement of the I j ? Ask your dealer to order for you. I oyal Worcester Corset Co., I m| ... Worcester,Mass. I | n \ * ~ MISS LAURA HOWARD, President South End Iadie3* Golf Club, Chicago, Cured by Lydia E. Piukliam's Vegetable Compound After the Best Doctors Had Failed To Help Her. " Dear Mrs. Pinkiiam : ?lean thank vou for perfect health to-day. Lift . looked so dark to me a year or two ago. I had constant pains, my limbs swelled, I had dizzy spells, and never MISS LAURA HOWARD, CHICAGO, knew one day how I would feci ths next. I was nervous and had no appetite, neither could I sleep soundly nights. Lydia E. Pinklmm's Vegetable Compound, used in conjunction with your Sanative Wash, did more for me than all the medicines and the skill of the doctors. For eight months I have enjoyed perfect health. I verily believe that most of the doctors are guessing and experimenting when they tfy to cure a woman with an assortment of complications, such as mine ; but you do not guess. How I wish all suffering women could only know of your remedy ; there would be less suffering I know."?Laura Howard, 113 Newberry Ave., Chicago, 111. ?95000 forfeit if above testimonial Is net genuine. Mrs* Pinkham invites all women who are ill to write her for advice. Address Lynn, Mass., giving full particulars. (Enclose a-cent stamp for particulars. fl Address scon REMEDY CO., Louisville. Ky. I WHEN' WRITING MENTION THIS PAPER. B ^FWOHiS Preserve, Purify, and Beautify the Skin, Scalp, Hair, * ? - _*AL. ana nanas wiui Millions of Women nso Ci'ticura Soap, assisted by Cuticuka Ointment, for beautifying tlie skin, fur cleansing the scalp, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough, and sore hands, for bahy rashes, itcliings, and irritations, and for all tho Eurposesof the toilet, bath, and nursery, iillions of women use Ccticuea Soap in baths for annoying irritations, iuflammatious, and excoriations, or too free or offensive prespiration, in washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative, antiseptic purposes, which readily suggest themselves to womeu, especially mothers. Complete Treatment for Humour*, $|. Cuuet?t:ngofCuriCL'KASOAP(J5c.),tocleause the skin ot crust? anil scales, and soften Uie thickened cuticle, Cfict'KA Ointmknt(50c.). to instantly allay itching, inflammation, and lrrlt ition, and soothe and heal, and CUTICUltA Rksoi-vtST Rills (doc.), to coal and cleanse the blood. Cuticdba Kksolvest riLi.8 (Chocolate Coated) arc a new, taeteie**, odorless,economical substitute /or the celebrated liquid CUTlCClU Resolvent, as well as /or c'l other blood purltiers and humour cures. 60 doers, 25c. B?I<1 tfcrnoghotit the world. British Depott 57-28, Cbart?rhn\n? sq., 1/vidoa. Pnrris UtcOAiO CaJUL Co*r . Sole Trope., Bctloa, U. 8. A. 250 REE SCHOLARSHIPS. Apply at once to THE J.AN'IFR SOUTHERN JSINESS \ OLLEGE. Macon. Ua. Boikkeep. ( g, Banking. Penmanship. shorthand. TypePlug, Telegraphy. M ithemallct, Grammar d Business Correspondence thoroughly ught. Board $8 to 411 per month. So. 22. * ildkft CURtS WKtHt ALL ELSE FAILS. ?T Beet Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use 3 tn time, fold by druggie:*. H wasEEmxnkms^