The People's Recorder (Columbia, S.C.), Vol. 7, No. 20, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 27, 1900 Page: 4 of 4
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Got Evan Wiih tne Government.
In the rank and file of the army nci
subject is more freauently commented
upon than General Otis extreme con-
scientiousness in matters of petty-detail,
say* the Chicago Tribune. During an
advance on the north line recently one
company had to lie down at the side of
the road for shelter from the well-direct-
ed volleys of the insurgents. One of the
privates had dropped his haversack in
the middle of the road away back. and.
after the company had laid down, he
calmlv stood up and walked down the
road "toward the lost haversack. He
made a fine target for the insurgents and
the bullets rattled around him pretty
"Here, come back here. O'Malley,"
yelled the Lieutenant of the company.
"Yorvll be killed. .
"Well," replied O Malley over his
shoulder. "I might jest as well be killed
a, have General Otis a runnin' me up
hill and down dale and comin' over to
me house ivery mornin' and a savin*.
'O'Malley. why don't you pay the Gov-
ernment for that haversack?
Then he calmly walked on and poi
the lost piece of property and. as he
came ba-k and sat down just in time to
escape a volley of Mausers, he threw
the"h;:versack on the ground and said:
"And when ht does come to-morrow
mornin' to me house I'll say. 'Otis, me
little man. you're dead wrong. I never
Io*t no havevsack. There's your bloody
old potato bag. Take it to the Govern
merit with me cotrttilimerits.'
A bushel of wheat, as an equivalent
amount of flour, can be shipped from
Minneapolis to almost any point in
Westi rn Europe for about 20 cents.
For Men Only !
YVhoarepufferinz *vi'h Coughs, Colds, A-tli-
ma or Br nehitis. King's Wild Cherry and
Tar, 25c. Pleasant and it cures. Bcbwei.l
& Co.. Charlotte, N. C., and all med-
icine dealers. No cure, no pay.
Kentucky was the first State to give
school suttrage to widows, granting it
in 1838.
—White hats are worn lor three years
as a sign of mourning by every grown
male in Kores after the death of a mem-
ber of the royal familv.
Dr.TALMAGE SERMON
THE OREAT DIVINE'S ELOQUENT
MESSAGE.
44
Take iime by
The Forelock/'
c.~Don'i wait until sickness overtakes you. !
Wher. that tired feeling, the first rheu-
matic pain, the first warnings of impure
blood are manifest. take Hood's Sarsapa- i
rills ar.d you will rescue your health and
probably save a serious sickness. <Be sure !
to gel Hood's, because
In a Coffee Grova.
You see all those bushes with red
berries strung along their branches?
That is coffee, and the taller tree among
which it is growing arc pimentos, from
which the world gets its "allspice." It
looks like jungle, does it not? Yet
many hundreds of pounds would not
buy that one hill slops. Amo/ig the
lovely flowers humming birds sparkle as
they fly and hover; butterflies as large
as birds dispute the honey with them.
As you turn around the corner you sur-
prise parties of tiny ground doves .and
every now and again the larger pea
QO'.'cs flit across the road. Up from
the valley below the sounds of voiccs
and laughter. Stop your carriage and
look down. Those are the works on a
coffee estate, aud those flat terraces par-
titioned^oft into squares arc the "bar-
becues" upon which the berries are
dried. You can see that some of the
squares are a different color to the rest.
The dark ones are those that are cov-
ered with coffee berries: the others are
those which have not yet been filled.—
Good Words.
Mfomon
fjS,- •* -
First — the medicine ths.fi
holds the record for the
largest number of abso-
lute Cures of female ills
is Lydia Em Pinkham 's
Vegetable Compound-
y Second Mrs m Pinkham
can show by her letter
files in Lynn that a mil-
Hon women have been
restored to health by her
medicine and advice*
Third-All letters to Mrsm
Pinkham are received,
opened, read and an-
swered by women only«
This fact is certified to by
the mayor and postmas-
ter of Lynn and others• of
Mrsm Pinkham's own citym
Write for free book con-
taining these certificatesm
Every ailing woman is
Invited to write to Mrsm
Pinkham and get her ad-
vice free of charge•
Lydia E. Pink ha in Med. Co., Lynn, Mas*.
I
NO crop can
grow with=
out Potash.
Every blade of
Grass, every* grain
of Corn, all Fruits
and Vegetables
must have it. If
enough is supplied
you can count 011 a full crop—
if too little, the growth will be
*' scru bby.
Sond for our books telling a!! about composition ot
fertilizers best adapted for ail crops. They cos: you
.bu.
"^-.^ORKS, 93 Nassau St., New York.
TTENTION is facilitated If yon mention
this p»per when writing advertisers. So. 4
Bnbjecf: of the Frcs—1The llarvels
of tlie Iluinnn Eye Prave the Infinite
Wisdom of the Creator^-Divinel.v Con-
structed Licittliousea oi tlie Soul,
[Copyright, Louis Klopsch, 1900.1
Washington,*!). C.—In tb.s discourse Dr.
Talinnge, in his own way, calls attention
to that part of tlio human body never
perhaps discoursed upon in the pulpit and
challenges us all to the atudv of omnis-
cience. Text, Psalm xctv., 9, "He that
formed the eye, shall He not see?"
The imperial organ of the human system
Is the eye. AM up and down the Bible God
honors it, extols it, illustrates it or ar- 1
raipns it. Five hundred and thirty-four
times is it mentioned in the Bible. Omni-
presence—"the eyes of the Lord are in
every placa." Divine care—"as the apple
of tlie eye." The clouds—"the eyelids of
the morning." Irreverence—"theeye that
mocketh at its Father." Pride—"oh, how
lortv are their eyes." Inattention—"the
fool's eye in the ends of the earth." Divine
inspection—"wheels fuli of eyes." Sad- i
denness—"in the twiukling of an eve at
the last tramp." Olivetic sermon—"the
light of the body is the eye." This morn-
ing's text, "He that formed the eye, shall
He not see?"
The surgeons, the doctors, the anato- j
mists and the physiologists understand i
much of the glories of the two great
lights of the human race, but the vast
multitudes go on from cradle to grave
without any appreciation of the two great
masterpieces of the Lord God Almighty.
If Gad had lacked anything of infinite
wisdom. He would have failed in creating
the human eye. We wander through the
oartli trying to see wonderful sights, but
the most wonderful sight we ever see is
not so wonderful as the instruments
through which we see it.
It has been a strange thing to me for
thirty years that some scientist with
enough eloquence and magnetism did not
go through tho country with illustrated
lecture on canvas thirty feet square to
startle and thrill and overwhelm Christen-
dom with the marvels of the human eve.
We want tho eye taken from all its tech-
nicalities and some one who shall lay aside
nil talk about the pterygomaxillary lis-
sures, the sclerotica and the chiasma of
the oj>tic nerve and in plain, common par-
lance which you and I and everybody can
understand present the subject. We have
learned men who have been telling us j
what our origin is and what we were. Oh, j
if some oue should come forth from the
dissecting table and from the classroom
of the university and take the platform
and asking the help of the Creator
demonstrate the wonders of what we are!
If I refer to the physiological facts sug- <
gested by the former part of my text, it is
ouly to bring out in plainer way the
theological lessons of the latter part of
iny text, "He that formed the eye, shall
He not see?"
I suppose my text referred to tlie human
eye since it excels all others in structure
and adaptation. The eyes of fish and rep-
tiles and moles and bats are very simple
things because they have not much to do.
There are insects with a hundred eyes, but
tho hundred eyes have less faculty than the
two human eyes. The blacic beetle swim-
ming the summer pond has two eyes under
the water and two eyes above the water,
but tho four insectile are not equal to the
two human. Man placed at the head of
all living creatures must have supreme
equipment, while the blind fish in tho Mam-
moth cavo of Kentucky have only an un-
developed organ of sight, an apo'.ogy for
the eye, which if through some crevice of
the mountain they should go into the sun-
light might be developed into positive eye-
sight.
In the first chapter of Genesis wo fiud
that God without any consultation created
the light, created the trees, created the iish, ;
created the fowl, but when He was about
to make man He called a convention of di-
vinity, as though to imply that all the
powers of Godhead were to be enlisted iu
the achievement. "Let us make man."
Put a whole ton of emphasis on that word
"us." "Let us make mail." . And il.Goil •
called a convention of divinity to create
man I think the two great questions in that
conference were iiow to creato a soul and
how to make an appropriate window for
that emperor to look out of.
See bow God honored the eye before He
created it. He cried until chaos was irrad-
iated with the utterance, "Let there be
light!" Iu other words, before He intro-
duced man into this temple of the world
He illumined it, prepared it for the eye-
sight. And so after the last human eye
hfvS been destroyed in the final demolitiou
ot the world stars are to fall, and the sun
is to eeaso it's shining, and the moon is to
turn into bjo_o^. Iu other words, after the
human eyes are no more to be profited by
their shining the chandeliers of heaven are
to bo turned out. God to educate and to
bless and to help the human eye set on the
lmiptcl of heave^i two lamps—a gold lamp
and a silver lamp—the one for the day and
the other for the night.
To show how God honors the eye look at
the two halls built for the residence of the
eyes. Seven bones making the wall for
each eye, the seven bones curiously wrought
together. Kingly palace of ivory is consid-
ered rich, but the halls for the residence of
the human eyes are richer by so much as
human bone is more sacred thau elephan-
tine tusk. See how God honored the eyes
when He made a roof for them, so that the
sweat of toil should not smart them and
the rain dashing against the forehead might
not drip into them; the eyebrows not bend-
ing over the eye, but reaching to the right
and to the left, so that the rain and the
sweat should be compelled to drop upon
the cheek instead of falling into this di-
vinely protected human eyesight.
See how God honored the eye in the fact i
presented by anatomists and physiologists
that there are 800 contrivances in every
eye. For window shatters, the eyelids j
opening and closing 30,000 times a day, the j
eyelashes so constructed that they have }
their selection as to what shall be admitted, j
sayiug to the dust, "Stay ont," and saying :
to the light, "Come in." For inside cur- t
tain the iris or pupil of the eye, according j
as the light is greater or less, contracting j
or dilating. The eye of the owl is blind In
tho day time, tho eyes of some creatures
are blind at night, but the liumau eye so
marvelously constructed it can see both by
day and by night.
Many of the other creatures of God can
move the eye only from side to side, but tbe
human eye, so marvelously constructed, ;
has one muscle to lift the eye, and another
muscle to lower the eye, and another mus-
cle to roll it to the right, and another mus- ;
elo to roll it to the left, and another mus-
cle passing through n pulley to turn it
round and round, an elaborate gearing of
six muscles as perfect as God could make
them.
There is also the retina gathering the
rays of light and passing the visual im- I
pression along tho optic nerve about the
thickness of the lainpwick, passing tiie
visual impression on to the sensorium and
on into the soul. What a delicate lens,
what an exquisite screeu, what soft
cushions, what wonderful chemistry of the
human eye. The eye washed by a slow
stream of moisture whether we sleep or j
wake, rolling imperceptibly over the pebble
of the eye and emptying into a bone of the i
nostril, a contrivance so wonderful that it ;
can see tho sun 95,000,000 of miles away
!iHd the point of a pin. Telescope and
microscope in tho same contrivance. The
astronomer swings and moves this way and
that aud adjusts and readjusts the tele-
scope nntii he gets it to the right focus.
The mieroseopist moves this way and that
and adjusts aad readjusts the magnifying
glass until it is prepared to do its work,
but the human eye without a touch be-
holds tho star and the smallest insect. The
traveler along the Alps with one glance
taking in Mont Blanc and tho faee of his
watch to see whether be has time to climb
it. Oh, this wonderful camera objeui:*. '
which you and I carry about with us, so
from the top of Mount Washington wo can
take in New England, so at night wo can
sweep into our vision the constellations
from horizon to horizon. So delicate, so :
semi-inllnite, and yet the light coming S5,-
000,000 miles at the rate of 200,000 miles a
second is obliged to halt at the gate of the
eye, waiting uutil the portcullis be lifted.
Something hurled 95,000,000 miles and
striking an instrument which has not the ;
agitation of even winking under the power
of the stroke. —
There also is the merciful arrangement
of the tear gland by which the eye is
washed and through whijh rolls the tide
which brings the relief that comes in tears
when some bereavement or greitt loss
: strikes us. The tear not an augmentation
of sorrow, but the breaking up of the arc-
tic of frozen grief in the warm gulf stream
of consolation. Incapacity to weep is
madness or death. Thank God for the tear
glands aud that the crystal gates are so
easily opened. Oil, tho wonderful hydrau-
lic apparatus of the human eye! Divinely
constructed vision. Two lighthouses at the
harbor of the immortal sotil under the
shining of which the world sails in and
drops anchor.
What an anthem of praise to God is the
iiuman eye! The tongue is speechless and
a clumsy instrument of expression as com-
pared with it. Have you not seen the eye
flash with indignation, or kindle with en-
thusiasm, or expand with devotion, or melt
with sympathy, or stare with fright, or
leer with villainy, or droop with sadness,
or pale with envy, or lire with revenge, or
twinkle with mirth, or beam with love? It
is tragedy and comedy and pastoral and
lyric in turn. Have you not seen its up-
lifted brow "of surprise, or its frown of
wrath, or its contraction of pain? If tho
eye say one thing and the lips said anoth-
er thing, you would believe the eye rather
than the lips. The eyes of Archibald Alex-
ander and Charles G. Finney were tho
mightiest part of their sermons. George
YVhitefleld enthralled great assemblages
with his eves, though they were crippled
with strabismus. Many a military cliief-
tain has with a look hurled a regiment to
victory or to death. Martin Luther turned
his great eye on an assassin who came to
take his life, aud the villain fled. Under
the glance of the human eye the tiger,
with five times a man's strength, snarls
bnck into the African jungle.
But those best appreciate the value of |
the eye who have lost it. The Emperor |
Adrian by accident put out the eye of his j
servant, and he said to his servant: "What |
shall I pay you, in money or in lands—any- i
thing you ask me?.- I am so sorry I put j
your eye out." But the servant refused to >
put any financial estimate on I:e value of ;
the eye, and when the emperor urged and !
urged again the matter he said: "Oh, em-
peror, I want nothing but my lost eye!" ;
Alas for those for whom a thick aid im- j
penetrable veil is drawn across the face of j
the heavens and the face of one's own J
kindred.
That was a patLetic scene when a blind i
man lighted a torch at night aad was j
found passing along the highway and some j
one said, "Why do you carry that toreh j
when you can see?" "Ah," said he. "I j
can see, but I carry this torch that others j
may see me and pity my helplessness and )
not run me down." Samson, tho giant, j
with his eyes put out by the Philistines, j
is more helpless than tho smallest dwarf j
with vision undamaged. All the sym- !
pathies of Christ were stirrol when He j
saw Bartimeus with darkened retina, and i
the only salve He ever made that we read j
of was a mixture of dust and saliva aud a !
prayer with which He cured the eyes of a j
blind man from His nativity. The value !
of the eye shows as much by its catas- i
trophe as by its healthful action. Ask tho |
man who for twenty years has not seen the !
sunrise. Ask the man who for half a century i
has not seen the face of a friend. Ask in j
tho hospatal the victim of ophthalmia. !
Ask the man whose eyesight perished in a !
powder blast. Ask the Bartimeus who j
never met a Christ or the man born blind j
who is to die blind. Ask him.
How it adds to John Milton's sublimity j
of character when we llnd him at the call J
of duty sacrificing his eyesight. Through I
studying at late hours and trying all kinds !
of medicament to preserve his sight he j
had for twelve years been coming toward I
blindness, aud after awhile one eye was 1
entirely gone. His physician warned him
that if he continued reading and writing
lie would lose the other eye. But he kept
on with his work and said after sitting in j
total darkness: "Tlie choice lay before me j
between dereliction of a supreme duty and j
loss of eyesight. In such a case I could not !
listen to the physicians, not if JEscuIapius !
himself had spoken from his sanctuary. I >
could not but obey that inward monitor. I
know not what spoke to me from heaven."
Who of us would have grace enough to sac-
rifice our eyes at the call of duty?
But, thank God, some have been enabled !
to see without very good eyes. General j
Havelock, tho son of the more famous
Geueral Havelock, told me this concern-
ing his father; iu India, while his father
and himself with tho army were encamped
one evening time after a long march, Gen-
eral Havelock called up his soldiers and
addressed them, saying In words as near
as I can reeolloil: "Soldiers are their 200 or
300 woinon, children and men at Cawnpur
at tho mercy of Nana Sahib, and his j
butchers. Those poor people may any hour !
bo sacrificed. How many of you wilt go j
with me for tho rescue of those women and j
children? I kuow you are all worn out, |
and so am I. But all those who will march j
with me to save those women and children ;
hold up your baud." Then Havelock j
said: "It is almost dark, and my eyesight 1
is very poor, and I cannot see your raised !
hands, but I know they are all up. !
Forward to Cawnpur!" That hero's eyes, !
though almost extinguished iu the service j
of God and his country, could see across I
India and across the centuries. But let |
anybody who has one good eye be thank- j
ful and all who have two good eyes be !
twice as thankful. Take care of your eyes 1
and thank God every morning when yon I
open them for capacity to see the light. I j
do not wonder at the behavior of a poor !
man iu France. He had been born blind,
but was a skillful groom in the stables.
The recoil of this question is tremen- j
dous. We stau 1 at the centre of a vastcir- 1
cuml'ereuce of observation. No privacy. I
On us, eyes of cherubim, eyes of seraphim, i
eyes of archangel, eyes of God. We may j
not be able to see the inhabitants of other
worlds, but perhaps they may be able to
.see us. We have not optical instruments
strong enough to descry them; perhaps
"Three years ago I was badly affiiot.
ed -with Eczema, and used Tetterine
with the most gratifying result. I
made a permanent cure after doctors
bad failed to relieve me. I have symp-
tons of it breaking ont on another part
-f my person, so you will please send me
one box Tetterine by return mail for j
the 50c. enclosed. W. L. Mounce, 124 :
St. Marks avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y." j
Sold by druggists or by mail for 50c. i
by J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga.
The rush of new postoffices to secure
the name of Dewey is still going on and
ittests in some measure to the continued
popularity of the Admiral. A Dewey
aostoftice was established the other day
in Wisconsin and on the heels of it
came an application from North Da-
kota.
Connecticut received from tbe inheri-
tance tax during the year ended Septem-
ber 30, 1899. $115,195.30, while the year
Dcfore the receipts from this source were
$133,037.37. The Treasurer says this de-
crease is only temporary.
potatoes:1^;
P0TATO CrowcM l« AnM-rlc* A
CLOVERJ
I O.. LA t KOSSB, HIS. A. «. J
ft m.%ri:
A SEED
V- JOII.N A. SALZKK SEED < <>•
earn S50 per fro. hanrtllrR
ou can write for
Agents Wanted Tur*portraits-""«'«»""Y»«iinV"i e\
terms. C. B. Anderson & Co.. *72 £.im St.. Dalla-. e- •
Putnam Fa.dfi.kss DvEsdonot spot, fctreak
or give your goods au unevenly dyed up-
pearance. Sold by all druggists.
A novelty has just been introduced by
the Waterworks Company in Dawson.
It consists of a wooden house 6x6x6,
which is placed over each hydrant in the
city. Each of these houses contains a
small stove, in which fire is kept day
and night. By the payment of $1 a week
patrons can secure water at any time.
More mushrooms are raised 111 the
vicinity of Paris than in any other place
in the world.
-A// except
bad ones I
Tlie re are hun-
drecls of cougK medi-
cines which relieve
coughs, all coughs9
except had ones!
The medicine which
has been curing the
worst of bad coughs
for6oyearsis Ayer's
Cherry Pectoral.
Here b cvidencc :
" My wife was troubled with a
decp-scated cough on her lungs for
three years. One day I thought
of how Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
saved the life of my sister after
the doctors had all given her up to
die. So I purchased two bottles,
and it cured my wife completely.
It took only one bottle to cure my
t ister. So you see that three bot-
tles (one dollar each) saved two
lives. We all send you our heart-
felt thanks for what you have done
for us.*'—J. H. Bukge, Macon,CoL,
Jan. 13, 1S99.
Now, for the first time you
can ^ct a trial bottle of Cherry
Pectoral for 25 cents. Ask
your druggist.
they have optical instruments strong
enough to descry us. The mole cannot see
the eagle midair, but the eagle midsky can
see the mole midgrass. We are able to see
mountains aud caverns of another world,
but perhaps the inhabitants of other worhls
can see the towers of our cities, tbe flash
of our seas, the marching of our proces-
sions, the white robes of our weddings,the
black scarfs of our obsequies. It passes
out frtim the guess into the posilive when
we are told in the Bible that the inhabit-
ants of other worlds do come to this.
Are they not all ministering spirits sent
forth to minister to those who shall be
heirs ol salvatiou?
But human inspection and angetie in-
spection and stellar inspection and lunar
inspection and solar inspection are tame
as compared with the thought of divine
inspection. "l'ou converted me twenty
years ago," said a colored man to my
father. "How so?" said my father.
"Twenty years ago," said the other, "in
the old school-house prayer-meeting at
Bound Brook you said in your prayer,
'Thou, God, seest me,' and I had no peace
under the eye of God until I became
a Christian." Hear it: "The €yes of the
Lord are in every place." "His eyelids try
the children of lire." His eyes were as a
llame of fire." "I will guide thee with Mine
eye." Oh, the eye of God, so full of pity,
so full Of power, so full ot love, so fml oC
indignation, so full of compassion, so full
uf iuere_ I iiow it peers through the dark-
ness!
j The Baptists of Brooklyn are going
to build a $150,000 church which will
have a roof garden where services may
be held during tbe summer evenings.
There will be four elevators to carry
people up and down. The pastor says
no drinks of any kind will be sold.
A series of measurements made at
Wellesley by a Yale scientist shows that
Western voting women have larger
heads and greater lung capacity than
their Eastern sisters.
*lu-vv's This1?
^>ofttrf>ne Hundred Dollars Reward for-
any ra.»e of Catarrh thai ran not be cured by
Hall's Catarrh < ;<ir»-.
F. J. L'HKVKV Ar Co.. Props.. Toledo* €k
We, the undersigned, have tnmvu K. J.
Cheney for the last IS yearn, and believe him
perfectly honorable in all business triDsac-
tions and financially ahlw to carry out anv
obligation made l>v the-r firm.
West & Tar AX, Wholesale UriiKKists, T®<-
ledo, Ohio.
WAi.rMNO. Kinxis & Marvin, Wholesale
I miirgristff. Ti ledo. On io.
Hnliv Catarrh Cnre is taken internally,
a- tint; directly upon the blocd auo mucous
surfaces of the s\ stem. Prire, Toe. per bottle.
Sold by all limfrufst"* Testimonials free.
Hall's Kami I v Pr'Js are the »iest_
I cnu recommend I'iso~s < ure for Consump-
tion to sufferers from Asthma.—E. I). lows-
sisp, Ft. Howard. Wis., May 4, 1894.
M r». W!nslow'eSoothir.fc Syraptor obililren
trfctbing,softens the Brums, reducing inflama-
tion. allays pain.curea wind colic iio a bottle
ODD ENGINEERING.
Wuter, Taken from the Pacific. Sent U
Atlantic Ocean.
It is a remarkable fact that • water j
which flows naturally into the Gulf of
California and thence into the Pacific
ocean has been virtually lifted across
the backbone of the Rocky mountains, j
and now. after being used for irriga- j
tion, finds its way into the Gulf of
Mexico. A number of small streams
on the other side of Long's peak,
which flow into Grand lake and thence
into the Colorado river, have been di-
verted by a ditch that finds its way
through 10.000 feet high into the head-
waters of the Pondre. Some 400 cubic
feet per second has thus been diverted
from the Pacific to the Atlantic elope,
where the water is used for irrigating
additional farms in Larimer county.
It is not strictly correct to say that
this wrater has been lifted across the
range. But a feat of sinuous engineer-
ing has diverted it, which amounts to
the same thing.
XteHnHs
ifN-.. Ift l, 'the best remedy for
vOUgll Consumption. Cures
C _ Coughs,Colds,Grippe,
SVrUP Bronchitis, Hoarse-
— ■ ness. Asthma, Whooping-
cough. Croup. Small do.scs : quick, sure results.
Hr. Hull'skills cure Constipahor, Trial, 20 Jor^c.
STOPPED FREE "
IS 19 Permanently Csr«d
ra an Insanity Prevented by
•S m SI 0P- XLiNE'S "REAT
m M ^ PERVE RESTORER
Po#iUre cnre Kemm*DUea*e*. Fit*. Epilrpry.
end. iit. Vitus' Dance. Fitter Ncrvctiei«»tJ
J£21 t\zl .Treaty and $S trial bottl®
tree *o tit P»uec^p tbej pajmgexpreu cnarjres on!f
*lfn r**ccire<i. Scad to f*r. Kline. Ltd. Bo'lero*
lost tute of lledl&irc. 931 Arch St.- Philadelphia- Pa.
rARTERSlNK
Have you tested it—
No other ink "just as good."'
"ROOK AGENTS WANTED FOR
the grandest acti test.-gelling book, ever pubii&hed*
Pulpit Echoes
l>R ! TVINO TKFTIIS FOR HEAD AND HEART.
Containing Mr. MOOIIY'S best Sermons, "with COO
X^irilUne Stories, Incident*. Personal Experiences .etc., as told
My D* L. Moody
msrjf. "With a cod plf-te history of his life by KcT.CHAP.r.
Pastor of Mr Moody s Chicago Cntsrch lor five year*,
and u \ Introduction hr ltcv. 1AMAX Ai*Bt>TT. H. 1*.
Hr&nd new, {UH*yp.ntf<TVfii'»71yiltiLs'rarr-d. 0^7*1,000 nrjor^
AOB.NT8 WAXTKII— Men nnd Women. (£7* Sale*
immense — a lime for Agents. Send for terms IQ
4, WOKTIlDiVTO>: 4: CO., li art ford. Conn-
V
/
OPIUM
«lORpH»\F HABITS 4'1 RED
1 4 T || o *1E--1*A
DH. MEbKEH CO.. t H1CAOO.
RICE'S
I600SEI
GREASE
RHEUMATISM. PAIS I* BACK. UGHIPPk,
CKOl'P nnd Crandmotljer used it. why
RLY NOW Mfl,
Machinery.*"5' °raitt ^
in our line, pay®^ket lor J
Headquarter" & CO.,
Supplies. j
804 Gervain Si . v.
< Ot l lHlv' v."'0"!
not
[fPtesesil
G8M
flAMi/
*r,te '
legue.
"M. A. |
COiun-.a-
Don't be in too big a hurry ? If you
can get the best at only a dollar or so
more, why not take it ?
cheaper in the end.
ROCK HILL Sock HILL.S.C.
See our Agent or write direct.
,u-
I
Ihe Smith Pneumatic sueUon rj
GinmnK and PnckinK Syst™ isL j
and ilost Efficient on th«
eight Complete Outfits in Smith t
Each One Giving absolute Satisiactio
BOILERS AXUEXGlj
- Slide Valve,
Automatic and Coriiss.1
t And Hffivv Log
Cannot be ©quailed in Design, E&^l
Price by any Dealer or Mauuf.vturerl
South. Write for Prices und CataloJ
V. C. BADHAM4
1326 Alain St.,
COLUMBIA.
DON'T
EJ XJ i 1 1 Xhey never prodll
j-uits but oltca iLlli?|
injury. U.-eonlvthi
and original 0Zl)!|
OX MAHKOW
safe. It never fit j Is to makeeuriy i
hair straight, pliable and beautifuLl
over forty ytars and us"'i by tfcol
War'/inted harmless. Only 50 eea
your dealer cannot supply you -fail
address with 50 cents and we will
first order for one bottl express [ai|
dress, Department H..
6 Wnb.ish A venue. < HICAGO,
Itching Burning Scaly
Blotchy Humors
Instantly Relieved
and Speedily Cured by
Qtlcura
The itcliiug aud burning I suffered in my feet and limbs for three years
•were terrible. At night they were worse and would keep me awake a
greater part of the night. I consulted doctor after doctor, as I was travel-
ling on the road most of my time, also one of our city doctors. None of the
doctors knew what the trouble was. 1 got a lot of the different samples of
the medicines I had been using. I found them of so many different kinds,
that I concluded I would have to go to a Cincinnati hospital before I would
get relief. I had frequently been urged to try CUTICURA .REMEDIES,
but I had no faith in them. My wife dually prevailed upon me to try them.
Presto! What a change! I am now cured, and it is a permanent cure. I
feel like kicking some dot-tor or myself for suffering three years when 1
■could have used CUTICURA remedies. H. JENKINS, Middleboro, Ky.
Complete Treatment $1.25,
Consists of Coticcra Soap (25c.), to cleanse the skin of crusts and scales and soften
tlie thickened cuticle, Cuticura Ointment (50e.), to instantly allay itching, irritation,
and inflammation, and soothe and lieal, and Cctictjra Resolvent (50c.), to cool and
cleanse tlie blood. A Sixglk Set is often sufficient to cure the most torturing, dis-
figuring skin, scalp, and blood humors, rashes, and irritations, with loss of hair, when
physicians, hospitals, and all else fail. Sold throughout the world. Pottek Drug
ani> Chkm. Corp., Sole Props., Boston. '• How to Cure Itching Humors," free.
Millions of Women Use Cuticura Soap
Exclusively for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of
crusts, scales, and dandrutf, and the stopping of failing hair, for softening, whitening, and
healing red, rough, and sore hands, iu the form of baths for annoying irritations, inflam-
mations, and chafings, or too free or oltensive perspiration, in the form of washes for
ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative antiseptic, purposes which readily suggest
themselves to women, and especially mothers, and for all the purposes of the toilet, bath,
and nursery. No amount of persuasio.i can induce those who have once used it to use any
other, especially for preserving and purifying the skin, scalp, and hair of iufants anil
children. toTlcuKA Soap combines delicate emollient properties derived from Cl'TI-
cura, tlie great skin cure, with tlie purest of cleansing ingredients and the most refresh-
ing of flower odors. No other medicated or toilet soap ever com pounded is to be compared
with it for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, scalp, hair, and hands. So
other foreign or domestic toilet soap, however expensive, is to be compared with it for all
the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it combines in One Soap at One
Price, viz., Twkntvmvk Cents, the best skin and complexion soap, and the best Unlet
%nd best baby soap in tlie world-
H
AVE YOU A 110.1
II' «o, yon want n (ilBJ
STOTSi to make voc h«PPI-|
If they are not s M i y >'
merchant, wiito to
SHEPHERD SUPPLY
«'I5 A KLi:sTO\< S, <.. I
— STATE AGENTS FORI
A I.» 0 ">s \M f A
GALVANIZED
Nalzrr*:; U»pe
gives Kit h/
>rrcrii
food,
at
liou I.uthcr. l .Ti
tic '..Yi butli'
liv gr „ ...
Mipliirolt. W ~ .
"inp. Mi:«n . ^
Red W
per r»«
Ml ? J J
iu-fc
r. If v< u «lcubt. *
f 200.000 Dfw eu^torc'T*. b'
IO DOLLARS WC3TH FOR w
.. pkr* of rare f»rm ».« =--• ;n
Cor i.—> : z. pro-iuciJ.S ^ • '.... 3tt. j,
perarre—abo^eoatuindlM.i ' mj
— the |rrcut« *t •*»< fll4. j
Rai'. Spring V. ■ a , Ac..
Mtk Plain. ■ raitw >^1..., jhlffi
ilK.iit sail, r - Croat |
Potato, all m.ue.1 <-■ £■-
po-itn. iv worth f10 to e »
heed Potato** S1-"*
Please ^
Kfnd this
adT. with
10c. to S»lzer.
bit wed». $1°^
MERCHANTS
Having shoes to bu> H
it to their advantage 1
respond with us. e j
ing many hneS u" 1
market. Now recei j
ders for our sample*
ed in rotation.
J. K. ORR SHOE
AT L. A/S TA, ^
TRAD£|_CURESJ
. LA GRI PPE^ Cgy
! V/.F HJAJLL , 6t
I SUCCESSFUL SHOOTERS SHOOT
WINCHESTER
Rifles, Repeating Shotguns, Ammunition and
Loaded Shotgun Shells. Winchester guns and
ammunition are the standard of the world, but
they do not cost any more than poorer makes.
AH reliable dealers sell SPtnchesler goods.
FREE: : Send najn^arid address on a postal for 156
page Illustrated Catalogue describing all the guns and
ammunition madefy the
WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO.,
176 WiNCHfSTER AVE.,
NEW HAVEN, CONN.
, DYSPEP!
|1 No Medicine
Jv
MA VMM'
SOi K AljT -•
f "'■'Vr.r. n
■f .ra I't"1
. <» 1
TSCO'.
: DR OPS Y g
i IKS,.
1 S »• i
•S «
y
J
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Nix, S. H. & Holmes, C. F. The People's Recorder (Columbia, S.C.), Vol. 7, No. 20, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 27, 1900, newspaper, January 27, 1900; Columbia, South Carolina. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth596137/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .