University of South Carolina Libraries
* p g- M 01 fWnAiW. H*t7 (?# Artrnnwe Xothodlrt Cosf?r?nca,wi MfBlitoi ''TuTHtNA " Wawonde* how rr? h?i W oigclwfiwl lto>m?ata motl Qpportona tl MP MM* tin tot dav*. ml nothl n g that wa K*T? ka4 mo further ironble. Other a A <laalnt Examination, Silence, It appears, Is nn unknown quantity at a divinity examination lu Mnndalny. The cominencemcnt Is signaled by the clashing of cymbals and the beating of drums. While tho candidates are writing their answers tliey are surrounded by a Jabbering crowd, who pass audible remarks about what la being-done. The test lasts ten day*, nd tbe people make the examination the occasion for gaining merit by feeding the candidates, and cart loads of provisions of nil sorts find their way to the pagodn precincts, and Burmans from every qunrter go round collecting money to provide the competitors with the necessaries of life and InTtirloa > w?1t T> mi? ? UAU11V0 !? TT Vil. A%?llIgUlI JL lUltD. A Perfect Painless Pill. Ib tho one that will cleanse the system, set the liver to action, remove the bile, clear the complexion, cure the headache, and have a good taste in the mouth. The famous little pills for doing puch work pleasantly and effectually are DeWitt's Little Early ltisers. Bob Moore, of Lafayette, Ind., says: ' An other pills 1 have used gripe and siclten, while DoWitt's Little Early Utters are simply perfect. Sold by h. C.Duke. MI?m< a Train That Will n Day Lata. When the Swltz City division of the Illinois Central was built it was known as the Indiana and Illinois Southern. It was a usrtbw gauge road, the road- * bed was bad, the engines and cars were built oil a* tnlnlnture scale, and, while there was a schedule, had a train been on time the fact would have been regarded as a miracle!1 The road was known as the "Try-Weakly." On one occasion Joslah McConnoll ufjMmi 10 go xo nwuz tjiiy rrom Sullivan, but missed tlie train by n minute or two. The clock at tbc station allowed that the trnln had left Sullivan five minutes ahead of time, and McConncll sued the railroad company for $3,000 damages. On a trial of the case It was proved beyond a doubt that the trnln McConnell missed should have gone the day liefore and was really tifdrtyr-threc hours and fifty-five mlnlite In<liiin;u>oHft News, I Dieting Invites Disease. ' To cure Dyspepsia or Indigestion it is 1 no longer necessary to live on milk and toast. Starvation produces such weak- ' nesa that the whole system becomes an easy prey to disease. Kodol Dyspepsia , Cure enables the stomach and digestive organs to digest and assimilate all of the wholesome food that one cares to eat, and is a never failing cure for Indigestion, Dyspepsia, and all stomach troubles. Kodol digests what you eat? makes the stomach sweet. Sold by F. C. Duke. \V?|tdnwc.rtb"n Secret. And Wordsworth's secret V Any poc secret? Well, for :xit;;lit wo ? :;n see. i remains a secret. :i something as f beyond human subtlety lo explain as i fs beyond human Ingenuity to produc i 'The wind lilnwoili ii-li-rn tt 11 _-?-. l. "Genius," "Inspiration"?It Is hard t get on without tin* old words, vagu though they bo. Nay. It Is preciselj because they nro vague that they serve MA useful n purpose. IOven Professor Raleigh, after speaking almost contemptuously of "Impatient prltlea" who 1 aek to account for Wordsworth's : " mazing Inequality" by assuming thai , sometimes he was Inspired, at other ] times not, Is heard a little* afterward i lamenting that In Wordsworth's ease. t In Coleridge's, "the high tide of hi i plratlon whs followed by n long olid * wandering ebb." One feels like quoting Lowell, whose arrow In such competitions Is apt to J hit the white. Wordsworth, he says, j "was not an artist In the strletest sense ] of the word; neither was Isaiah, hut he had a rarer gift, the capability of being greatly Inspired."?Bradford Torrey In Atlantic. HAFPY RESULTS Have iMade Many Union Residents Enthusiastic. No wonder scores of Union citizens grow enthusiastic. It is enough to make anyone happy to find relief after yearn ot guttering. Public statements like the?following, are but faithful representations of the daily work done in Union by Doan's Kidney Fills. * E. L. Kingsmore, the well-known farmer, living two miles outside of Union, says: ' ?* have suffered for thirty-live years ? \ thy kidneys/ I first h*4 It whe*n, a boy, but bf late years tt hitf been Wotsd. MV kidneys paiitef} me so that I-thought'ft uK>uldvki11 nib. flight aAross the small of my hack, and through the hips I had such pains that I was obliged to get down on the floor V many and m.tny a time and as for dot ing my work when these attacks came on, that was simply out of the question, It was all I conlu do to draw my breath. 1 could not tell all the remedies I have used, but nothing did me muoh good until I procured Doan's Kidney Pills at " Holmes Pharmacy before getting them te I havo even had my hack ironed with a hot iron,Just af hot as I oould stand it, and mfrelblasflra, in fact, tried overythuia fmiwueaof uettine Hhib'. Kdne/TTflg'are fljo only remedy that ha* ever given mo any lasting hem-fit. <My boc't naa not ached as it formorly did, and is atronger to-day than it has k* been for twenty-five years. 1 give all the at edit to the rise of the pills," *.orsale by all dealers. Falco irfki per Loa, lSjetarvMiibnnvO^>.. Buffalo, N. Y., ? .m>V aaehw for the United Htatew Kefoamher the name?DOAN'S?and take no other. | ;' <1 >?>'< ?? i irir'" L~ ' itf- i am friatr FTnTSJFffl POWDERS)\J^ 1tHl) "Birlnnlf-I f**T --- -? fc?-wr? " ? IM ?klldz?mWllkMtIt. Tb?otk?r <J?T * Udy la Nl?Ml Olt tab* ?M III ? Ntlovi condition! h!? bowoU had Tamed the Tabled. An Irishman was called on to Rive evidence In a shooting alTrny. "Did yon see the shot fired?" asked the magistrate. "No," replied the witness, "but I heard It." Magistrate (sharply)?That Is not satisfactory. Go down. As the Irishman turned his back he commenced to laugh, but was rebuked by the magistrate, who added that It was contempt of court. Pat?Did you sec ine laugh? MngDtrnte?No. I hoard you. Pet -That's not satisfactory. And the court laughed. JUST WHAT YOU NEED. Chamberlain's Stomach and Jiirer Tablets. AN'hen you feel dull after eating. When you have iy> appetite. When you have n bad taste in the mouth. When your liver is torpid. When your bowels are constipated. When you have a headache. When you feel bilious. Thev will will imnrmro 1 - jv??ii U|qieute, cleanso anji Invito rate yonr stomach, and regulate your liver and bowels. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by F. C. Duko. ' il dw Lonx Moiqnltoci LItc. I It is not known Just how long mosquitoes can live, hut their average life Is mttcb longer than la ordinarily supposed. Thousands of them live through winter, hibernating or asleep In dark places In barns or house cellars. In sparsely settled localities, where they cannot find such places for shelter, they live through the winter In hollow trees, In caves and holes under upturned trees, and even though the tempernture may fall far below freezing they arc not winter killed, but on the approach of warm weather become active again. Mosquitoes are frequently seen flying about in the woods before the now lias wholly left the ground.?Willam Lyman Underwood in Popular Science Monthly. A hove Letter Wquld not interest you if you're looking for a guaranteed Salve for Sores, [turns or Piles. Otto I)qdd, of Ponder, Slo., writes: J?I suffered with an ugly sore fqr a year, but a box of Bucklen's \rnica Salve cured me. It's the l>est ialvo on earth, 25c at F. C. Duke's Drug Store. A Senalde Mayor. Tho fishing fleets on the coast of Newfoundland elect, on their return to land, one of their number to whom they give the title of "seaside mayor." His duty Is to preside over and control all the business connected with the distribution nnd curing of tho flsh that have been cauirlit. to hear nil enses nf dispute nnd to mete out punishment to offenders. This post Is much covete^ by the fishermen, ns it carries \ylth It absolute authority, nnd Implicit obedience is rendered by nil to the seaside mayor during his term of office. A Cure For Dyspepsia. I had Dyspepsia in its worst form, and felt miserable most all the time. Did not enjoy eating until after using Kodol Dyspepsia Cure, which has entirely cureu me.?Mrs. W. W. Haylor, Killiard, l'a, No appetite, lose of itrength, nervousness, headache, conitipation, bad breath, sour risings, indigestion, dyspepsia, and all stomach troubles are quickly cured by the use of Kodol. Kodol represents the natural juices of digestion, combined with the greatest known tonio, and reconstructive properties. It cleanses, purities, and jweetens the stomach, Sold by F. C. Duke. 'Startled For Hla Sonar. A friend of Edward MacDowell attended a recital given by a mediocre teacher's pupils, nnd when he met the American composer lie remarked, "I heard one of tlic pupils, a little girl of eight, piny vour 'To a Wild Rose.'" The composer sighed dejectedly. "I suppose," MncDowcll remarked, "that she pulled It up by the roots." A _ A J J . ? *mra wuu n|iiiMi>n. The following epltanh Is to be found In a cemetery within seven miles of New York's city ball: Reader, pass on; don't waste your time O'er bad biography and bitter rhyme; For what I am this crumbling clay Insures. And what I waa Is no affair of yours. A ' : * ! 4 flnrd to Tell. l<? that' yoii're "naklng there, iny dear," Inquired young Mr. Newllwed. "brond or some cake?" "I don't know. I havo not finished yet." replied the young h?'.ae.?Philadelphia rr^SS' Literary people should live a* near ns possible to nature without getting too far nway from the publishers.? ruck, The Salve That Heals without leaving % fear iB DeWitt's. mo name Witrti Hazel is applied to many Halves, hut DeWitt's Witen Hazol Halve is the only Witch Haul Halve made that containsa the pure unadulterated Witch Hazel. If any ether Wltoh Huge} Bftlypla utyared yon, it is a counterfeit. ?. C. PeWitt invented Wvtcli Hazel Halve and and Pe Witt's Witch Hazel Salvo is the best salve in the world tor outs, burue, bruises, tetter or blind, bleeding itching or protruding piles. Hold by I\ 0. Pi\ks, . - .. ^ R?t?br? off Grn?r Bond. i A young Hungarian gypsy who lint bptrnyml his party to tho nnthorltlei after n robbery bogged tho magistrate: at Magyar Egros for protection, as hli companions threatened to kill him. Th< man was given shelter, but the roon was found empty on the following day Eventually Ids body was discovered In a field. The eyes had been burned out. the tongue excised nnd the innr hanged by the feet on two acacia trees The body bad been cloven In two. Well Connected. Visitor?I hear I must congratulah you on the engagement of your son What an extremely nlco looking glr she Is! Mrs. Nolongor Itrown?Yes, and s< well connected too. In fact, I've beei told thnt her ancestors were relation! of the Spanish armada. o?vcs x wo f rom Death, "0u? little daughter had an almost fatal attack of whooping cough and bronchitis," writes Mrs. W. K. llavilam! of Armonk, N. Y., "hut when all othei remedies failed, we saved her life witli Dr. King's New Discovery. Our niece, who had consumption in an advanced stage, also used this wonderful medicine and to day she is perfectly well." Dcs {icrato throat and lung troubles yield tc )r. King's New Discovery as to nc other medicine on eaith. Infallible foi Coughs and Colds. 10c and $1.00 bottlef guaranteed by F. C. Duke. Trial bottles free. JnilircK' W'lw. The wig is only worn by English barristers to give tliein a stern, judicial appearance, and no one can say that It fails in tlds respect. The custom was originated by a French judge In the seventeenth century, when, happening to don a marquis' wig one day, ho found it gave him such a stern and dignified appearance that lie decided to get one for himself and wear it at 11 limes in court. This he did. and the result was so satisfactory from a legal point of view that not only Judges, hut barristers also, took up the custom throughout Europe. * Many Mothers of a Like Opinion. Mrs. l'ilmer, of Cordova, Iowa, says; "One of my children was subject to croup of a severe type, and the giving of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy promptly always brought relief. Many mothers in this neighborhood think the same as I do about this remedy and want no other for their children." For sale by F. C. Duke. 'Willing to Cull It Sqnnre. tfCaij me a linr, do you?" exclaimed the little mail With the red head. "You'll apologize fpr that or take a licking!'' The other man repeated the offense. Then there was a light. It was a tierce hatllo, but the other man whipped. "I didn't want to do It," he said, "hut nothlug else would satisfy you." The little mail picked himself up. brushed the dust off his clothes, removed the evidences of the conflict from his nose and turned to Ills nntag gnixi. "I necept your apology," he said stiffly.?Chicago Tribune. Cause of Lockjaw. Lockjaw, or tetanus, is caused by. a bacillus or germ which exists plentifully in street dirt. It is inactive so long as exposed to the air, but when carried beneath the skin, as in the wounds caused by percussion caps or rusty nails, and when the air is excluded, the germ is roused to activity and produces the most virulent poison known. These germs can be destroyed and all danger of lockjaw avoided by applying Chamberlain's I'ain ilalm freely as soon as the injury is received. Pain Balm is an antiseptic and pauses puts, bruises and like injuries to heal without maturation, and m one third the time required by the usual treatment. It is for sale F, C. Duke. Utnnrr V'tnhk Inspiration. Whistler's laxity In the matter of engagements was notorious. No one ever knew If be were coining or not to affairs. Itnt his point of view Is ex! plained in his answer to a friend of his who knew that he had an engagement to dine with some swells In a distant part of London and who felt that it was most Impolitic for Whistler to offend them. It was growing late and yet Whistler was painting rfwn.v. madly, intently. "My dear fellow." he said to him nt Inst. "It is fri&'litfullv late, and voti have to dine with Lady Stleh-n-one. Don't you think you'd hot top stop?" "Stop?" fairly shrieked Whistler. "Stop, v. hen everything Is koIiik beautifully? (io and stuff myself with disgusting food when I can pnlnt like this? Never! Never! Itesldes, they can't do anything until I yet there-they never do!" And the entire speech Is most characteristic of the man.?'Harper's Weekly. Easy PSii Easy to take and edsy to act Is A I that famous littls pill DeWltt's ] M Littls Early Risers. This la due to I the fact that they tonto the liver In- I 1 stead of purging It. They never gripe I I nor sicken, not even the meet tl?linta 1 I lady, and yet they are so certain In results that no one who uses them Is disappointed. They cure torpid liver, constipation, biliousness, Jaundice, headache, malaria and ward off pneumonia and fevers. rasrARSD ?r B. C. DtWITT A CO., CHICAGO ( Dtn't Forget the Name. ^ I EARLY RISERS I For sale by F. G. Duke. ! liVo Hair?\ > "My hair was failing out very fast and 1 was greatly alarmed. I ; then tried Ayer's Hair Vigor and my hair stopped falling atonce."? Mr3. G. A. McVay, Alexandria, O. The trouble is your hair * , does not have life enough. o Act promptly. Save your hair. Feed it with Ayer's u ? Hair Vigor. If the gray ! I hairs arc beginning to p I show, Aver's Hair Vianr 1 will restore color every 1 * | I time, si oo?Mil*, ah drau>*t*- | u I tt your druggist cannot iitimity yon, I seiul int ono UolUr ami tvo tt ill ox|uof- J .1 1 you a Ixittlo. lie sure anil gho llio tianio 9 1 H of your nearest exnresit ollice. Address, 3 Ol H J C. A Ylilt CO.. l-owoll, Mass rj n ? ~ ?^?-? = W * ni ? A judge of ono of the United States a, r circuit courts has n live-yoar-old niece | of whom lie is very proud. A few days ago site cntue to liim and said with n w very serious air: Q] "Uncle, there is n question about law n! I want to ask you." p "Well, dear, wliat is it?" patiently in- f) quired the judge. c, "Uncle, if n man had a peacock and it c, , Went into another man's yard and laid an egg who would the egg belong to?" The judge smiled Indulgently and replied: "Why, the egg- would belong to the r<; man who owned the peacock, but lie jj could be prosecuted for trespassing if he went on tli6 other's property to get n< it." ai The child seemed very much interest- I) ed in tire explanation and then observed innocently: "Uncle, did it over occur to yon that a pencock couldn't lay an egg?"?New ft ; York Times. w Confessions of a Priest. tl Rev. Jno. S. Cox, of Wake, Ark., " writes, "For 12 years I suffered from 1 Yellow Jaundice. I consulted a num- v ber of physicians and tried all sorts of medicines, but got no relief. Then 1 d began the use of Electric Hitters, and q (eel that I am now cured of a disease n that had me in its grasp for twelve _ years." if you want a reliable medi- 8, cine for Liver and Kidney trouble, stomach disorder, general deoility, get Electric Hitters. Its guaranteed by F. C. Duke, Only oOc. ?' ol Varnished Boohs. S< - " * tiiiw iw viiriiisii nil our oooks in u my country," said n Chinese. "Other- h wise they would soon be eaten Into n li pray powder by n little black Insect. It like a beetle, that takes to hooks as a p cat takes to ashes. Everybody In China A when he receives a consignment of hooks from Europe or America mixes a little pot of varnish at once and proceeds to go at Ids books with It This 01 fluid Is a perfect protection. It is made ^ of creosote, Canada balsam, resin, spirit w of wine and qiastic." Tt _____di Helatlveljr Poor. "Alas," said the jmliappy woman, "and wo were once considered wealthy!" "Hut, my dear." aald hor husband cl soothingly, "wo have as much money as over." 11 "Oh, yes, I know, but there are so P' many wljo have a lot more that nobody pays any attention to us any longer!"? Brooklyn Life. ~ . BRICK! BRICK!' BRICKI11 r For ?ale in any I quantity. The Rodger Brick Works. p< ca FTHR ftAT IT PUC A T3 oi ?' ? ?- xvw JL xjLyrvj. g One 15 H P. Boiler and Engine (de- ?e tached) one Brick Macbing, 20,000 , daily capacity. ^ The Rodger Brick Works. ? 25-tf t SOUTHERN 1 f RUNNING AT I S/f Oft Art. W DR. I. M. 1?i -DENT 3rown and Bridge < Work a Specialty. l'ropcrty FimiimI ou CrImluitla. I "TIk* question as to what tliml dls- ] osltion Is made of money anil jewelry j. mind in tin* possession of criminals I y rns frequently naked mo when 1 tviiH j n tin* force two years ago." s.iiil an x-cuptuin of the New York police ; , ( Dree. "As a rule, everything found ^ pon an arrested criminal which ohvl- j ;1J usly Is not his lawful property is held i A i trust, 11s it were, hy the police for ( u ossihle clainiants. If no elalman'.s | irn up the property is returned to the I rinilnnl on being released from his I *rm of imprisonment, provided the [ i Dmnilssloner of police is perfectly satifled that the property actually does ; elong to him. J k "If the coimnissioner has reasons to jj link otherwise, however, the articles. g ften valuable, are held indefinitely or u ntil It is certain that they will never gj c claimed hy their rightful owners, j3 lien tlie stuff is finally disposed of ml the proceeds handed over to bene- ; n t one or another of the various police i, lllUH. ' "" "There are certain tilings, however, p hlch the police never return to those 0 a whom they have been foun?l, such * burglarizing tools, firearms, gain* ling devices, begging letters?any- 0) ling, in fact, that might bo used by . w Imlnals again in their nefarious ocipatiQns." j ^ Broke Into If is 11 misc. i JJ S. Detjuinn, of Cavendish, Yt., was st ibbed of his customary lienlth by i?i- n ision of Chronic Consiijiation. When it r. King's New Life l'ills liroke into w is house, his trouble was arretted, am 1 tl 3W he s entirely cured. I hoy re guar- , rteed to cure. 2*ic at F. C. Duke's , ^ rug Store, | r< | A Her Dcarrot* of Coui-nsrc. j ]j Amie had been suflVring from tooth- > chc for several days. At last she con- 1 tl anted to go with her papa to the den- ' p 1st. When she was starting, her mam- jr in said: "Now, dearest, lie a lirave ' js ttle girl. Show fortitude, and mamma rill be proud of you." In due time Anile returned. "And Id you show fortitude'/" mamma in- tl ulred. Amie hesitated. "It liurted ^ wful, tnninmn. I guess"?reflectively r< -"I showed about twentytiule."?Kan- ^ is City Journal. jn Frewli Air. n, Fresh air Is a prophylactic. It wards p, T disease and kills iincterla. No per- p in who leads an outdoor life will ever to le of consumption. On the other to and, hundreds of consumptives have ved for years by keeping continually i tlie open, even sleeping on cots y laced in tents or ou piazzas.?Albany t) r*"*- : m I.fnrn From Your Rnemlen. Men of 8onso often learn from their ^ ucmles. It Is from their foes, not icir friends, that cities learn the les- M >n of building high walls and ships of ar. and this lesson saves their rhilren, their homes and their properties. ( Aristophanes. ! J,' Kirlllnff, The City Hoy?There Isn't much oxtement on a farm. Is there, uncle? Uncle III?Mml Ye never tcached ^ part weaned calf to drink out uv a nil, did ye??Houston I'ost. Appropriate. ? Mrs. IT en pen p? i ".-v Iways put a woman's head on coins? Mr. Ilenpeok?Oh, well, money talks, Ti du know.?Milwaukee Journal. A to ea Life and Accident Insurance. The Aetna Life Insurance writes [ dicies not only for Life Indemnity, it also policies that protect you in tse of accideut or sickness. The dy Old Line Company in the United QJ ;ates to do this. Rates are very asonable. This company is well aown and comment is unnecssary. am representing the above Oominy and will be pleased to cull od ly one wishing insurance. Write e at Carlisle, S. O. ft 46-tf W. F. Batks,Agent. ^ 5PEED SIXTY TOUR M -TO NEW YORK i lAIR,^ Office Bank Building Union, 8. O Cures Eczema, Itching Humors. Ksptei.tlly for.old, chronic cases take otai.ic Wood Halm. It gives a healthy itHxl supply to the affected parts, heels I the sores, eruptions scabs, scales: up the awful itching and burning or swellings, suppuiatiutr, watery > ts, tec. Druggists, $1. Sample free :?l piepuid by wiiting Wood Haltn Co., .Man a, Oh. Describe trouble end free i< d'Cal advice sent in sealed letter. KINGBIRD AND ORIOLE. 'he Difference In the lUrdn Show* ity Their Neat liniitllnn. The difference In the nature of the (n.rltlivl - 4 M unun: 10 strnungiy cxhlfeihI in tlir idylc of tlielr nests. Th* ingbird hnsn't n pnrtlrlc of imaglnaon. not nn atom of the artistic. His .ini*', dress and voice declare It. lie hard headed, straight forward and semis, somewhat overbearing, perhaps, mi testy, but businesslike and retlned i all bis tastes, llis nest is himself for again?strong, plain, adequate, but, ke its builder, retlned. Contrast ttas riole's. Komuncc, poetry and that In.'seribnblo touch?the light, easy, neglient touch of the artist?in every line f it! Why, the thing was actually oven of new mown hay?as if one lonld build his house of sandalwood? itli all the scent of the liny field bout It. I put my nose near and took deep, delicious breath. The birds hnd 'looted and cut the grass themselves ml worked It in wliilc green. Sonic of was still uncurod, still soft and sweet itli sap. One side, exposed to the sun trough a leaf rift, had gone a golden el low, hut the other side, deeply shad1 the day through, was yet green and taking more slowly untie* ml this nest wns woven, not built up ke the kingbird's: It was hung, not uldled upon the limb, suspended from to slenderest of forks so that every ttle breeze would rock It. And so tosely woven, so deftly, slightly tied!? [alionnl Magazine. Women on the Slugr. An attempt wns made at ltlnckfrlar* icuter in 1029 to introduce French omen on the stage, hut without suc ss, and the appearance of Mrs. Coletun in Davenant's "Siege of Rhode*" t 10.-0 was of a private character. n,, 1 O 1 __ ...v. o, jirw, jiii aciress, whon inie In not cortnlnly known, took tha irt of Dcsdcmonn at Killlgrew's thearo in Vore street, when a "prologue ?introduce the first woman" was writn by Jordan. Letters patent were granted by liarles II., dated Jan. 15, KkCi, to Sir rilllam Davennnt, and these recited int whereas women's parts hod foricrly been taken by men, to remedy lis abuse It was now "permitted nnd live given"' that all women's parts ion, and for the time to come, should ? performed by women. In Pepys' Diary, under date of Jan. Kifirt, we find the record, "To tha icater, where was acted 'Beggars* ash,' It being well done, nnd here the st time that ever I saw women come ion the stage."?London Standard. Still Ilnrdcr. "It's hard to have a lot of debts that on simply can't pay." "Oh, 1 don't know. It's worse to hnva lot that you simply have to pay."? liiladelphln Ledger. to cure a Cold In One Day she Laxative Rromo (Juinine Tablets. 11 druggists refund the money if it fails cure. E. W. Grove's signature on tch box. 25c. 6 ly c. i) m ? /I . IV. UU1 fcCy , Specialist \ diseases of the EYE and EAR ?and? OPTICIAN. Successor to II. It. Goodell. dexander's Music Hall, Spartan urg, S. 0. 47-lyr. -. -?~k? ? *- -? -4?-- - ? '***< *?