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Chamberlain's rr».:x^L‘
gays Pain Balm is the only
'f)f dy thj>t, affords her relief. Miss New-
man i« a much respected resident of the
village of Gray, New York, and makes this
statement for the benefit of others similar-
Iy afflicted. This liniment is for sale by
F. R Davis & Co.
' r
• , Westminster,
Mr. Hugh Terrell, son of Mr. M.
Ter re U, spent Sunday with hofne-
iolks. Hugh is now ^working in
Moiywt Airy, Ga.
Miss Jeanette Echols, a charm-
in k young lady of Mount Airy,Ga.,
was the guest of Miss Nannie Ter¬
rell last Sunday. Iler many friends
here are always glad to see her.
Hon. J. S. Carter spent last Fri¬
day in Walhalla.
We noticed the familiar face of
our old friend, J. Carter upon our
streets one day last week.
Ralph Carter is now clerking
for his brother, Frank at West
Union.
The colored Baptist Sunday
School will celebrate Children’s
Day on the fir.nt Sunday, in June at
3 P- m *
C^iiite a number of our citizens go
fishing these pretty warm days.
Some have good luck and others—
well they don’t have good luck.
Chief of Police Mitchell is hav¬
ing a quiet time of it. No lawless¬
ness here.
Mr. and Mrs. F. C. McConnell
passed through our city on last
Thursday, enroute to their home in
Lynchburg, Vu., after having at¬
tended die Southern Baptist Con¬
vention at New Orleans.
Dr. Mitchell has purchased the
lot of Fred Davis,near Mrs.Doyle’s
home and is erecting a neat little
cottage thereon. We are growing
all the time.
The little folks ot the city enjoy¬
ed a party given in honor of Mas¬
ter Roy Breazeale at t he hospitable
JMIiou.sue.Hs is a condition characterized
by a disturbance of the digestive organs.
The .stomach is debilitated, the liver tor¬
pid, the bowels constipated. There is a
loathing of food, pains in the bowels, diz¬
ziness, coated tongue and vomiting, first
of the undigested or partly digested food
and then of bile. Chamberlain’s Stomach
and Liver Tablets allj* the disturbances of
tin; stomach and create a healthy appetite.
They also tone up the liver to a healthy
action and regulate the bowels. Try them
and you are certain to be much pleased
with the result. For sale by E. it. Davis
& Co.
home of Mr. C). K. Breazeale last
Thursday evening, all the little
iokks were there and a real jolly
time they had too.
Miss Lola Jarrard left for her fu¬
ture home in Lynchburg, Va., on
last Thursday afternoon. It is our
wish that she may learn to love
home of her adoption and that hap-
py may be her lot.
Tom Clinkscales spent Sunday
at home, We are always glad to
sec you Tom.
Our friend, Walter Cannon, has
been suffering greatly with his
eye^. Measles settled in them and
caussd him much trouble. He is
better now, we are glad to know.
uJh t Mr. C. E. Gray has placed two
some u lonunients in front of
bishop. The work is of the best
ancDthe designs arc lovely indeed.
Uncle Tom Long, of Tugaloo,
was in town last Saturday siiaking
hands with Ins many friends.
Our hoys are tossing the^ ball
each evening and the team that
“It is with a good deal of pleasure and
satisfaction that 1 recommend t hamher-
iain’s Folic, Cholera and l>mrrl.oca lvem-
edy,” says Druggist A. W. Savvtelle, of
Hartford, tionn. “A lady customer see-
iag the reo.edy expose.! for saloon m, **>
case, sj.id to me; ‘l really believe tl.a
medicine save,! my life the past summer
while at tho Shore.’ and site became seen
tlmsiastic over its merits that 1 at once
uuul»* up my mind to reocomuienfl it in tIr>
future. Recently a ge.itleinan came int* 1
uiv store so overcome with colic juiins tli8t 4
sank at once to the floor. 1 g»we him a
OS6 i »f this remedy which helped him. I
peat ««i the dose and in fifteen minutes he
left mv Htore smiling informing me that ho
It*u US well HS ever,” Sold l*y E. li. Davis
!■«». *
downs , '; em T , ." do ; vn the cham -
p,ons * J U8t t,unk of that l *
We have been having some fear-
fully warm weather of late and
still there’s more to follow.
Born unto Mr. and Mrs. T. N.
Hall, a daughter, Our hat is off to
little Miss Hall.
Our people have begun fixing
up their cemetery lots, We are
glad to see this The people of
any coy can and will be judged by
their cemetery. Individual,by the
} ov j n jr care taken of the graves by
their loved ones.
Dr. Henry Stonecypher is con¬
tinually adding improvements to
Shudders at the Past.
“I recall now with horror,” says mail
carrier Burnett Mann, of Levanna.O, “my
three years of suffering from kidney trou¬
ble. I was hatdly ever free from aches or
acute pains in my back. To stoop or lift
mail sacks made mo groan, I was tired,
worn out, about ready to give up, when I
began to use Electric Bitters, but six bot¬
tles cured me and made me feel like a new
man,” They’re unrivaled to regulate
Stomach, Liver, Kidneys and bowels.
Perfect satisfaction guaranteed by E. R.
Davis & Co.
his drug store, lie now has one
of the prettiest in Oconee county.
The ice cream festival by the
ladies of the Presbyterian church
was a decided success, and was
well patronized and quite a neat
little sum was netted.
The many friends of George
Pitts, who is now night operator
at Suwanee, Ga., were glad to see
him here last Sunday.
Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin cures Con¬
stipation. Sold by all druggists.
A monument estimated to cost $100,-
000 will be erected at Montreal iu joint
commemoration of the fact that in
1899 Canada for the first time took a
hand in the wars of the British empire
and of Lord Strathcona’s patriotism in
equipping at his own expense a force
of rough riders for service in South
Africa. Separate memorials had been
planned, but it was deemed expedient
to unite them.
Santiago de Cuba has a population of
43,000. In .January, 1898, there were
516 deaths, which makes an annual
death rate of 137.6 per 1,000. In Jan¬
uary. 1899, under military rule, practi¬
cal sanitation was applied, and the
deaths were 215, making a rate of 60.
In January, 1900, the deaths numbered
120, at a rate of 33.48. Now, after two
years of sanitary work, the January
(1901) deaths numbered 80, a rate of
22.3.
The new bridge over the Mississippi
at St. Louis recently authorized by con¬
gress is to be finished in 1903 for the
World’s fair. The first bridge over the
river was begun in 1867, when St.
Louis had a population of 225,000, but
when the bridge was finished in 18T4
the population had risen to 325,000.
When the second bridge was opened to
traffic In 1890, the population was 451,
000, and it was evident that a third
bridge was needed owing to the city’s
greatly Increased business activity.
Try the new remedy for costiveness,
Chamberlain’s Stomach and Liver Tablets,
Every box guaranteed. Price 25 cts. For
sale by E. R. Davis & Co.
The number of suicides in Paris is
very large at present, and the chief
cause is thought to be the general re¬
trenchment following the exposition
which has thrown many people out of
work. Throughout France, however,
suicide seems to have been increasing
for some time. In the five years end¬
ed Jan. 1, 1901, tbe number of sui¬
cides was no less than 27,000.
There is in Paris a hotel which has
4,000 employees. The smallest kettle
In its kitchen contains 100 quarts and
the largest 500. Blach of 50 roasting
pans is big enough for 300 cutlets.
Each dish for baking potatoes holds
225 pounds. When omelets are on the
bill of fare, 7.800 eggs are used at once.
For cooking alone 60 cooks and 100 as¬
sistants are always at the ranges.
At Guilford, England, the quaint cus-
tom of throwing dice for the “maid’s
money” was observed recently. A sum
was imested by the mayor of the bor
ougb In the seventeenth century from
which 12 guineas are given annually
t0 , servaIlt gir , of good repute who
has bcen in the same service for over
tw0 years. There were two applicants,
The pi -i 2 e was won by Marti;-. Shin-
gler. who threw seven. The same dice
box has been used for 00 years.
After careful and patient investiga-
tion the historical committee of the So-
ciety of California Pioneers has learn-
that Jan. 24. 1S4S. was the exact
date of the discovery of gold In (all-
fornia by James W. Marshall. ihe
gold was fii'st found in the rock^ bed
0 f the tailrace of the Sutler sawmill at
Golona. on the south fork of the Arneri-
ca n river. Marshall himself made three
or four different statements of the date,
The committee was unanimous In it-
decision.
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Oepvriffht, 1900 . hr Pan-American Rrr>ocifioti Company
LIBERAL ARTS BUILDING, P4N-.VKERICAN EXPOSITION.
WITH THREE VOICES
DOES THE PAN-AMERICAN SPEAK TO
THE VISITOR.
Its Buildings Present a Valuable
Lesion In Architecture; Its Exhib¬
its Are a Materialized Encjelope-
din—Educational Amusements.
The true function of an exposition is
education. The purpose and the end
of all its ministrations should be the
development and the ripening of each
soul which comes within the scope of
its influence. Young or old, man or
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DR. SELIM H. PEABODY,
(Superintendent of Liberal Arts, Pan-American
Exposition.]
woman, gentle or simple, each visitor
should gain and should be conscious of
gaining an enlarged appreciation, sub
jeetively of himself as a living and
sentient being and objectively of the
world as bis sphere of living and know¬
ing, a realm fuller of sweetness and
light. His respirations should be quick¬
er, his inspirations deeper and Ids as-
piratlons loftier and nobler.
To this end the Exposition speaks to
its visitors with three voices—through
its architecture, its exhibits, its amuse
me*nts The Pan - American • Exposition
will address its expected throngs in
all these voices.
In Its architecture must be Included
the whole external equipment — its
buildings in their artistic and symmet-
their decoration*, breathing afresh the
genius of the Spaniard and the Moor in
graceful forms and gorgeous colorings;
the landscape effects, blending the har
monies of forest and lake, of fountain
and tower, of cascade and castle and
culmioating spire-of all that is lovely
in nature with all that is refined and
ennobling in art. Here, as at Chicago,
the architect holds high carnival. If at
the Columbian exposition we found the
chaste purity of the lily in a presenta
tion “unequaled since the days of Phid
las and lYasiteles.” the fairies who
join hands in the Pan-American clothe
themselves with the chaste hues of
Titian and of Murillo, unequaied since
the days of Venice and of the Alham-
bra. Another dream of beauty will
hang in the eastern skv, paralleling the
visions of delight that linger on the
western, horizon
Who can doubt the educative effect
of these architectural lessons withiu
the hearts of the American people?
It is. however not enough to have
evoked, like a mirage floating ovei tie
plains, these phantasmagonal delights
which fill our lives with joy and our
memories with dreams. The president
of the French republic in the decree
which laid the foundation of the expo-
sition of 1900 declared the purpose of
that great enterprise to be “a presents-
tion of the works of art and of nidus-
trial and agricultural products -an as-
semblage of exhibits That is without
doubt tbe central, the formativeidea
of the Pan-American Exposition.
Without exhibits taere can he no
position.
Each new and well arrangC’d ex]>osi*
tion is a new edition of a world's en-
cyclopedia constructed by a scientific
an d exhaustive arrangement of ma-
tertal thirds. It is also a landmark, a
milestone in the history of the world’s
putgress and t-^e eiop*Leii«. o. ui.iu*
kind. No one may expect, no one
should desire, to read through from
first to last the marvels presented in
a universal exposition. .Vs well expect
to memorize the Library of Congress
or i.r the British Mus mm. But, were
the exposition or the library truly uni¬
versal. every man should find therein
tlm latest utterance which the world
can give upon any subject within the
scope ol human inquiry. I nless this
b*» the fact the exposition is in some
degree deficient in the tulfilling of its
whole duty. Its duty may be express*
ed, less exhaustively, perhaps, but
with more practical truth, thus: It is a
place not in which anybody will learn
all it cam offer, but In which anybody
may enlarge the scope of his informa-
tion. IIow far the Pan-American Ex-
position can realize lb’s criterion of
completeness and of excellence will
depend upon Lie area of space at its
disposal and the skill of its officers in
the management of that space. It
looks now ar. if it will become not an
encyclopedia of all knowledge, but an
edition de luxe of the most excellent
selections.
In this phase of the Exposition will
be found its most instructs e value,
Whether it will also be the most edit-
cative will depend upon the individual
who is the recipient.
The Exposition has a third phase,
rendering another clement of education
through its power of amusement. Amid
the whirl of sounds and scenes in the
exhibit departments mind and body ac¬
quire intense fatigue which craves rest.
The toil of simple observation becomes
wearisome, Music becomes a restful
solace. The magician’s wand lends
new life to tired limbs. There was
some froth in the Chicago Midway.
But regarding the Midway after the
lapse of seven years one is convinced
that out of it came more enduring and
practical information and education
than there was of mere ephemeral
foam. Years of travel leading to some
of the remotest quarters of the earth
would have been required to give even
the casual observer so much insight
into the manners, customs and conduct
of peoples differing from us in race,
color, religion and habits of life and
thought as might have been gathered
in a single jourm y up and down the
purlieus of the Midway. An excellent
condition of the Midway was its con¬
centration. While it was of the expo¬
sition, it was v holly by itself. Some
things shown illustrated the processes
of important business methods, like the
making of glass or of lace, the culture
of ostriches, the work of the diver in
the depths of the sea. Some showed
r «— ■>;
« lar,,ey - ‘ T V,enna a “ d
°f f" <'onstontinople. 1 ” 1 bilantj li-.e Some t je were trees wholly 1
> o
<■«»•»• " :t!l f, '»- r, '^ e
■>»« repeated at the
im-American. hut others ot,natty m-
Iv< ‘ < y‘ u al, ' V " !,(wstin S- w ‘ ,lally
wdt , be shown. ,
Above all. around all, will be display¬
ed the effects of scientific inanifesta-
(Ions, particularly of electricity, with
such exuberance of force and such va-
f _ pflw lho
" ' A t !ls .' v rkl . hos
"
heretofore seen, , fho m picture may not
be overdrawn rhe most marvelous
anticipation will be realized.
Feltm H. Peabody,
Superintendent of Liberal Arts.
THE _ ._ BEAU Sir UL ORIENT. _
„ I« , t» One „ of , ,„“7,- <)>.- Midway ... . intereottmu „
‘ ™ ' ^“"wm’he rennired to
“ ' ran^merican ....., tl wonderful
at the E posl
J p rpvent anv approach toward the
„ f .. h tho v ^; tor nmv rest
a ^ u ,. 0 q V,; ho wiI i not h e submitted
to , ,. x ,ort;on so long as he re-
majns the ^position grounds. It
,, to 8inglo out anv attraction
tm Rection as more p roffiiD eut or
anotlmr. for ail have their
,„ wi; al!(1 noTrtty .
Tbo Bra ,orient will represent
„ fe aK , t cxlsted in tUe East Wore
>dT?nt o{ tho mois . rn tf „ lr , 8t .
f!aston Akoa0i director of this conces-
glotK } S arranging to have native repre-
ge^ntativ'e characters to convey proper
of oriental customs and
manners of living. He will have plenty
of room j n w ^ich to display the differ-
ent sn ]i t , nt features that would appeal
i{ , t », e - terms to people ac-
....-.--ortern civilization,
• , will tje tiie meeting place
or tired and worn pilgrims who will
constantly arrive, make their offer¬
ings in the various mosques or reli¬
gious temples and disperse. Eight
greets will diverge from this objective
point, each representing a distinctive
local section of the orient. A street
In Constantinople will be thoroughly
Turkish, even to the vagabond dogs.
Morocco will be represented by a
street which will illustrate the life and
habits of the Moors. Algerian life will
rece f V e attention, and a street will be
borrowed from Algiers for the pur-
pose. Typical Illustrations in a like
manner will be taken from Egypt,
Tunis, Persia, Tripoli and Turkey in
Asia. While looking through these
sections visitors could easily imagine
themselves in the midst of the ancient
city the counterpart of which they are
visiting,
A Bedouin Arab encampment will
lend variety, and Sahara Desert no¬
mads will live In their interesting char-
acteristic way. Natives from all coun¬
tries will live on the grounds with their
camels and different domestic oriental
animals, cabins, tents and huts. Res¬
taurants, tea houses, shops and fruit
stands for the sale of oriental goods of
great variety will be provided. The
Beautiful Orient is under the same
management as the Streets of Cairo,
which was so popular at the World’s
Fair, though it will be three times as
large. About 300 orientals will be em¬
ployed in different ways with this at¬
traction, a conglomerate eastern city
with distinct local features—a history
in a nutshell.
Lighting; the Exponttion.
When people read that over 300.006
incandescent lamps will be used to il¬
luminate the grounds of the Pan-Amer¬
ican Exposition, few will stop to con¬
sider that electric lighting lias made
About all its growth during the last 2'*
years. In 1881 an incandescent, light
machine that would supply 250 lamps
was considered wonderful.
Meet of American Wheelmen.
At the annual meeting of the Nation¬
al Assembly of the League of Ameri¬
can Wheelmen held recently in Phila¬
delphia the invitation of Mayor Diehl
to hold the annual summer meet of the
League in Buffalo was accepted unani¬
mously.
This action on tbe part of the gov¬
erning body of the L. A. W. meets
with the hearty approval of the entire
membership of that organization,
For this reason the biggest meet in
the tiistory of tbe League will be that
held in Buffalo during the week com¬
mencing Aug. 12.
Aside from the attractions of the L.
A W. meet there are many induce¬
ments which will cause cyclists to visit
Buffalo at that time, among others the
central location of the city, within easy
touring distance of all the principal
cities of the Eastern aDd Middle
States and Canada, the cheap railroad
fares, the desire on the part of all
wheelmen to visit the Pan-American
Exposition and Niagara Falls and the
fact that a week of International cycle
racing is to be given on the specially
constructed quarter mile track in tbe
maKnlfl( . ent sstadinm on tbe Exposition
ground*,
It is believed that there will be not
less than 10,000 visiting wheelmen in
Buffalo during the week of the meet.
Pan-American Minims Exhibit.
Mines and mluln S will be represented
at tlle Pan-American In a manner in-
tended *° Wustrate tte Importance and
);reat P ro K r( ‘ s * industry. • ™ -
T lmt,rove “T
tions that the tDe task is not an 1 easy one.
*
MlD w, ^f . build.ng is one of „ a group
have been arrs'u”.“Tin the generartonn
of l.m,' a horeeshoe noeffion The Mines building oc-
a of a heel calk in the
!!?,.„ cvnnwted with the Horti-
^nd Tthe ,o th' tmndsoie m c a Tk whfcIl by mean' woul(I oT^o mrro .
two conservatories
thar flank the Etorticnltere 1hu building
rSTfJtlX-e Th< Mines id Inc is
having To four coraerna
r «» ons rarh reachine a heicht of 100
f^et
_
The Joker Was Worn Oat Too.
Jiroson—That mother-iu-law joke has
been pretty well worn out.
Jester—Yes. She has been at our
bouse six weeks now.—Ohio 8tate Jour-
mil