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THOS. J. ADAMS, PROPRIETOR. EDGEFIELD, S. C., THURSDAY MARCH 17, 1892. VOL. LVn. NO. IO. AJP?CRYFHAI? l>I8CpyER Great Interest in the Tiding1, the MSS. of the Apoerypt??l ; of Peter. - - . ~-. .. Great interest ,in the religio world attaches to the publicat* in Paris of a . translation of t recently discovered manuscript the Apocryphal Gospel ol Pet? lt is a document of tfce early - hi of the second', .century,.; and ti copy discovered in- tan . Egyptij tomb is judged to have- been ina? in the eighth century. :. .This nc account of the " resurrection given; "There was a great vbi ' from heaven, and the 'soldiers un the heavens open and two ra? descending thence wita a gm light and approaching the tom and the stone which; was put : the door roiled away of itself,.*! departed, on one sideband the tom WES opened and both the your men entiredit. When, therefor the soldiers saw it they awaken^ the centurion and the elders, f< they, toOj Vwere hard ?by keepi? watch, and as they declared whi tmngs theyshad seen, again thc soe coming forth, from the . tom three men, and the two supportin the one, and a cross followin V them. And* bf the two -the head reached unto the heavens^, but tb head of him that^as; led ovej passed the heavens, and they h?ar X;\ a voice from the heavens : saying "Hast thou preached tc^thet? sleep ?'' and an answet was . hear from the cross, "Yea/" v . There was also fouiid a copy ? - the lost Apocalpyse of- Peter. Thi ??a most valuable discovery, foi as the translator indicates, it .fur uishes the origin bf most ot>'th? early Christian ideas of hell. Macl of the later literature on the sub . ject is traceable to/thia now .re stored document. A single quota tion shows its nature : "And I 3a? alBo another place over: agains that other, and it Was a place o chastisement, '*$? those^ that. v?r< being cl?aatis?jcrX and angels that were ^ (AastiBing, ?hadi:"tliej - raiment dsrfcace^^ at. r. 'mo?phere of that place, and ther< were some there hanging by thei; tongues, and these were they tba blaspheme the way of righteous ness. And I saw the murderer! and them that had conspired wit! them -;ast into a certain narrov place, full of evil reptiles, and be ing smitten by those beasts an( wallowing there thus in that tor ment, and there were set upoi them, as it were, clouds of dark ness, and the souls of them thai had been murdered were standing and looking upon the punishment of those murderers and saying: "0 God, righteous is Thy judg ment.'" In the same strain th? ' ' \>\x?ltiLu?tiii\tr1)? adulterers^erse cutors, blasphemers, false wit? nesses and usurers are described. London Times. -: Two Important Traits. Last evening I was talking to a man of years and wisdom, who accumulated a fortune from hie business experience ; a man whose name is at the head of one of the greatest commercial houses in New York, and, having these editorial cnaments in mind, I said to him : "To what trait in a boy's char acter, which will be of most value to tim in after life, do you believe a mother should pay the most at tention?" "Honesty, first," said this mil lionaire merchant; "then, thoroug nessi" And the more one thinks of this simple statement, the more fraught with wisdom will it be found. The great value pf thoroughness is understood and appreciated by just about one or two young men out of every ten in business life to-day. The tendency with the average young man is to "rush" things, to get a thing through, no matter how it is done. It is the end he seeks, forgetting that -some people are apt to examine into the means by which some ends are attained. It is not ai all surprising to me why some young men do not suc cead in business when I see the methods they adopt to attain suc cess. They want to succeed, but they do not want to do the work necessary for success. They want large Malarios, good positions, but short hours and little to do, and even that little they will not do well. If there-are two Americanisms that have wrought more evil than .any other, I think it ie the one- of. "Oh, it is good enough !" and the other of "It will do," when a thing is about half or three-quarters done.-Ladies' Home Journal. Sam Jones-Is ms. The devil's crowd are getting mote disreputable every day. We have seen the day where a man conld go in a saloon and still be considered respectable; when a gentleman conld get drunk. and still not forfeit the opinion of the community that he iras a gentle man. But now nobody but a vaga bond goes into a ?alo in. Time^was when a man could sell liquor and be a gentleman, bufc now a saloon keeper in your city dares not lift his bend when there is anyb?Hdy^:deccrlf ?bout. The girls whn dani fe the germ ans were once looked upon as the bon ton, butXord bless you, that isn't so any more. Things are finding their level, that's all. We are sifting things.1 and everything that is littie enough to go through the. sifter we just let it go. The dancing business is getting more.disreputable, ? am thankful to say. A man or woman who now patronizes. the dance doesn't on joy any religious^resjpect. There,*injt* ^gg^^'t?^wli? b?lieveVtn^'^rkncing people bis any religion. What we want is .nutty. The devil's forces are bound together. You can't strike atone 'gambling plac^withotft affecting every gamb ling place <in-:the country. . . The dancers in church. Some of yon want to get 'em this way and some ^ani^to-g?l?'emrm I Some of: you 'sweefly-^aay^^oral j uasion ianthe best way to gel at i them. : "... ' . V ' " Moral, suasion ! You oan't; toll ? i hog .out 6? a cornfield. ...You have i got to set the dogs on him. As long as you preach against \ sin ,and the devil it is all right, hilt : when you begin t? preach against sinners" and devilment, you. raise Cain. The rich man in the church: who pays a big amount to the church, and expects to be let alone is sim ply paying a high license on devil -Tic?h?eV If a thing ought to be stopped I don't believe it ought to be licensed at all. It is said the blood of martyrs is the seed of the church. If that's so we are about out of seed. The Best Crop. The best crop of cotton reported at th i s office was made by H. A. Wingo near Inman. He planted 8 acres with Ihe Bahama seed. This is a large boll, early variety. He made 11,491 pounds of seed cotton. The weight of lint was 4,022 pounds. That wasaj^j-wun.oV baletpj?>e?nr?r"TT?ere were about -??tTpounds of the top crop to gather when his report-was made. He used 5 sacks of the Basin Com pany guano, 2 sacks of Granby acid phosphate and 250 bushels of cot ton seed. He put in the cottonseed with about half a saek of guano and beded on it. He ran in the balance of the commericial fertili zer with the seed when he planted. He cultivated rapidly,:, going over his cotton every week if possible. Putting the cotton seed at 15 cents a bushel the cost of the manure per acre was $6;72, Mr.'Wingo had a tenant, who is a good farmer, that used 23 sacks of guano on 23 acres of land that was in a fair condition. He worked his crop reasonably well and made only niue bales, one bale more than Mr. Wingo made on eight acres. The tenant's fertilizer cost him $2.91 an acre. If he had put the 23 sacks on ll acre and put a little work in the way of prepartion and cultivation, we believe he would have made as much as he gathered from tho 23 acres.-Spartanburg Herald. With many clergymen, public speakers, singers, and actors, Ayer'8 Cherry Pectoral is the fa vorite remedy for hoarseness and all affections.of the vocal organs, throat, and lungs. Its anodyne and expectorant effects are prompt ly realized. South Carolina brown consols were quoted in New York Monday at par-for the second time since the refunding act of 1878-both of which occurred under the Till man administration. 'Rah for Gov. Tillman-"the plowboy Governor." Plow on. Ben.-Lex ington Dispatch. Hall's Hair Renewer enjoys the confidence and patronage of people all over the civilized world who use it to restore and keep the hair a natural color. KILLING OF T. G. LAMAR. The following is the testimony taken before the coroners jury in j the matter of the death of T. G. La mar, of which we had an account last week : Dr. J. F. Wyman : I was at my dwelling housie -in Aiken, S. C., and heard four or five shots, and started toward place of shooting and was met by a man who said Tom ,Lamar was. shot, and come at once. Iran there and found. Mr., Mr. Lamar lying in street. He gasped twice after I 'got there, and died. Post mortem: The wound jn left-side just under left arm; supposed to be a pistol bullet) wound, wag in my opinion sufficient to produce death1 al hough there were some gashes on alp back ol head that might ?ave. caused death, from a club; :hat struck there, which might possibly cause death . from con cussion of the base of the brain. J. F. WHYMAN, Mi ? Kinloch Chufee, sworn, testified^ p/ijr?s standing in front of Hann* jife C?.'s grocery store door about fe o'clock this evening; I. hearrj some scuffling; at Blalock & jbsj^a^d immediately the deceased" fT. G. ?amalar Robert Gaston, and R. A. Ch afee came out of jsaid bar on sidewalk : Lamar was, gDfX^?trejjGaston on his:left and .ChafeeVpn right; Lamar drew back as if to resist, whereupon they [insisted on his going lo the guard ji&ig?. He again resisted, dragging j ^Chafee partiallyin front of h im ; f^iiojreupon, the firing- began by T. G. Lamar. The first, two ' shots! fired^' at R. A. Cham?,.' "tie. firs>| taking effe.otjn his* stomach, the second missing him completely; whereupon hie'[Lamar] was struck by Chief Gaston, with partial effect with a stick. He immediately fired upon Gaston. As soon as he had fired" on Gastou, Gaston steuok him again, when Lamar wheeled, with his-left side facing the bar room door. A pistol shot waB fired J by R. A. Chafee., He [Lamar] fell,-and I went to him and saw he wt?a?^^??'?i^d->i^^J my brother. The first shot -was fired in concealmemt, which struck R. A. Ch afee. Saw no pistol then. The last two shot I saw the weapon plainly. [Signed] GEO. K. CHAFEE. VERDICT OF JURY. We, the jury, find that the deceased, T. G. Lamar, came to his death by wounds in the head from a stick in the hands of Chief of Police Gaston and from a pistol shot in the left side, fired by Mayor R. A. Chafee..^ ^ ^jQnr-Taesaaymorning the fol lowing additional testimony was taken by the Coroner. John Blaylock, sworn, says : I j was standing at my door there when Lamar drovu up in front ; he asked a boy to hold his horse, and he got out and come and spoke to me and shook my hand ; he says to me: "I owe you a little ac count, and I have come here to- j night to settle it;" he says: "Come in and let mo have a drink; says: "I have a little business with D. S. Henderson ; I will get some money from him ; I owe one or two other little debts that I want to pay up, as I am going te leave Aiken" I went behind , the the counter- and waited on him gave him a bottle of whisky and soda and he poured out his drink, and was drinking when Chafee and Gaston stepped up to him at the counter,and Chafee said to him : UI will have to arrest you and lock you up." Before speaking to Lamar however, Chafee told me I had no right to sell Lamar a drink, and told me not to sell any more ; Lamar's answer to Chafee was : "I have not done anything to be arrested for ; I simply came here on business with D. S. Hendereon ; I am going to get some money,pay j up my debts,and leave town." Cha fee replied : ''I am going to lock you up." He 6ays: "No; 1 want to see Henderson, and I promise you I will leave town." Chafee : says : "No ; 1 am going to lock you up." Lamar says ; "I have not done any thing and I am not going to be locked. They then backed against the wall, and Chafee ran his hand behind Lamar to see if he had a pistol about him. They started out the door, and in a minute or two after they cleared the door in th dark I heard a pistol shoot. At that time I went to the door. an d aroui.d the corner, and I saw the flash of another pistol, I jumped back, as I didn't want -to get hit. After first shot Chafee came in and passed me and went back as far as the cooler. At the second fire I dodgedback, and seeing that La mar did not come in I looked again, and heard another snot: Then I heard one or two licks. La mar fell in front o? the door. When he did Chafee goes to the door and shoots him, and turns around and says: "He is dead." As. he made this remark he was walking back in the store, and I went for ward and looked, and said: "Yes, boys; he is dead." I went im mediately after Mr. Ch?fee spoke. While I was standing there Chafee pame io the door and says : "I am shot." He left then, and c?^i saw him any more. I do not know where Mr. Chafee got his pistol, but he did not get it in this tar; This is all I Tsnow about it. J. M. BLAYLOCK. , Mr. Lamar's body was taken charge of by the Knight of Pythias fp which order he belonged, dhortjy after the tragedy, and was borne porosa the way to their-hall tb await Corner Hardin's action. Yesterday afternoon the re mains o' the unfortunate man followed by a numerous ;and im posing concourse of mourners and jfrienda, were conveyed ta the new cemetery :and consigned to a last, resting-place. . The .unhappy, affair enshrouds: jthree'of the best families of Aiken in "gloom, and is unaffectedly^ lamented by every member of the; community. .. CONDITION OF THE W0U2?DED. . Oh Monday night it was feared^ that Mr. Chafee's ; wound WOuld. prove fatal, but there was a decidedly more i hopeful feeling last night. Drs. Glass and Wright .of Augusta and Drs. Croft ,andf McGahan, of Aiken, made an examination of the wound Tues day morning. They made an exploitory incision at the point o? entrance and cut down to the: i . .. ...... TP peritoneum, and found that thai rball had been ^deflected to the left by. the rectus muscle, and did nofrj jenter the rectus muscle, and l^idi {not enter the peritoneal cavity^ They expect to.find. the ball-kdg?cj.. |?n*tBs muscT? o?lhe back '?o1ttv4n$lf left side. Late last night h? was resting quietly, and now great hope is entertained for his speedy recovery.' Chief Gaston is not doing so well. He suffered intense pain all day Tuesday, and the chances all appear to be against him Great sympathy is felt for him and family. He was^a faithfu! officer, and neverJWriched when duty called hlm/b performance. "? (ii(^A<?KJ3C?&!JfjFTHE DECASED. Mr. Thomas G. Lamar was a son of the late Col Thoa G. Lamar the hero of Seccesson ville He was born and reared iu Beech Island and was about forty-four years old He was a man of great energy and possessed fine business qualities. He did as much to develop the kaolin industry in Aikeu County as any man living. He was well known in and ont of this County and had a great many fronds. Hil greatest curse|was the liquor habit, and when under its baneful in fluence he was wild and recklese, and at times overbearing, but during his sober moments he was gentle and gentlemanly. As a hus band, he was tender and affec- j tionate; as a father loving and kind as a friend tru e and stanch. Tom | Lamar when sober was a kind hearted, whole-souled man, and his sad ending is greatly to be regretted. He leaves a wife and three children who have the sympathy of a large cirr.U of friends in thpir Bore affliction Aiken Journal and Review Laughter. In his "problems of Health," Dr. Greene says that there is not the remotest corner or little inlet of the minute blood-vessels of the human body that does not feel some wavelet from the convulsions occasioned by good hearty laughter The life-principle of the central; man is shaken to the innermost depths, sending new tides of life and strength to the surface, thus materially tending to insure good health to the persons who indulge therein. The blood moves more rapidly and conveys a different impression to all the organs of the body, as it visits them on the particular mystic journey when man is laughing, from what it does at other times. For this reason every good hearty laugh in which a person indulges tends to lengthen his life conveying, as it does, a new and distinct stimulus to the vital forces. ? T.WAS NOT A GHOST. --- ' He Wa? Not Dead Though Pro nounced So By a Physician. ^^ Y?uKjl?dc. 15.-The Her ald says Thomas Hyland, an in mate of the Kings county hospital in- ^latbush, had a thrilling ex perience recently, which resulted irj spreading the report that the county buildings were haunted. Hyland, who is about fifty years olid, had been in the hospital about six/months, suffering from rheu ' ism and heart trouble. ilt has been, the custom of ySung'physicians from the tong Island college hospital, to give three days' service each week at ttjie Flatbush hospital. jOne of the young physicians, whose name Dr. Duryea, the med ical, superintendant, refused to cbvulgOr wascalled about, midnight ^ look at Hyland, who Richard ?furner, the attending nurse of | ward 5, thought was dead. # After investigating the case the cjoctor pronounced the- man dead, tod Tierney and Joseph Dobbs, pother nurse, were ordered to re move-the body to the morgue, which is in the rear of the hospital.-j #|pqbb8 and Tierney were Burn-! moned at two o'clock to remove! pother corpse. When thejr ar ^ed at the morgue and opened ih?'door they were terrified by the OT?den apparition of. Hyland gapped in a blanket. .He boltedj hy,?thera and ran toward the hos pital. The nurses dropped ;the ?ourden they were carrying, and springing "over the/ fence took to the road, ruining, in opposite directions. Tierney ran toward ifciast New York while Dobbs made fdr tue city. 1 -Hyland, in the meantime, who was not. at all dead, rushed to ' his cot in ward 5, and hiding himself in the blankets, slept peacefully until morning. At daylight an other comm?ti?n-t?ofc place when the patients, who are, nearly ,all Ripples, in that wardj woke and] jfew Hyland in that cot. They OTwidly dressed themselyes^pick !ew?p; x-h?ir ?rutches^udcaiiesiijd hobbled to Dr.' Duryea's office, where they demanded their certifi cates of discharge. The doctor, who was amazed at the action of | the cripples, asked for an explana tion. He was told by them that | they wanted to go home, as the place was haunted. They could prove it, they asserted, for Hyland's ghoBl was lying in his cot. Dr. Duryea was laughing heartily at what he supposed was their illubion. But on going co the ward himself however, he was astounded to find Hyland sleeping there. The fears of the other patients were soon set at rest on finding that it was Hyland himself, and not his ghost. The occurrence was explained as the result of suspended animation I asked Hyland yesterday to relate his experience. He said he could not remember how long he had been unconscious when he carno to himself on a marble slab with only a sheet for a covering. I The place was icy, and looking around he saw other bodies lying ? on slabs. Not fully realizing where he was he turned towards a man with a long beard on a slab near him, and "Say, where are we?" Night Watchman O'Connell, who was outside when he heard the voice, ran away. Hyland then got off the slab. After searching about the place he found a blanket, which he wrapped about his shivering body. Then he pounded at the door, and shouted for some one to let him out. It was not until Tierney and Dobbs, came at about I 2 o'clock that he was released from the place. Tierney, who returned to the hospital . a few days after the exciting episode, said yesterday to me that he was never so frightened in his life, and would never be the same again. Dobbs absolutely refuses to return to the hospital. WILL DIE IN A GLAbS JAR. ? Spiritualist Will Keep His Spirit a Prisoner. - MUSKEGON, Mich., Dec. 4.-Geo. Francis Dobson, a spiritualist of this city, has perfected a scheme, he thinks by which he hopes at death to be able to prove positively to those still in the material state that his spirit exists. He went to Pittsburg a shoit time ago and obtained a large glass cylinder so constructed that it can be sealed air tight quickly. In this cylinder lie has suspended with fine copper wires two pieces of metal so light that they may brought in contact with each ot by the slightest' motion of within the cylender. Wires p through the cylender, one be connected with a battery and other with a telegraphic inst ment. He has made arrangeme for his friend, just before spirit leaves, his body, to seal h in the cylender, so that his spi may be.kept from departing a at the same time be enabled a series of systematic disturban of the air within the cylender toc< mmunicate with hisfriends throu the telegraphic instrument. Ht dying with consumption, and 1 public probablyjwill not have lo to wait for the test, of his expe ment. If it should prove successi his friends are jpledged after thi days to unseal the cylinder a allow the spirit and then seal and bury the remains. Have you Learned* To appreciate that cheery, brig .neighbor? That some people are betti sweeter than they seem? That he who accepts mariy'gii pays dearly for them? To come in with ' pleas* thoughts aiid a cheery word? \ To defer the discussion of rvit questions*until after breakfast. * To make the best of Che dre?: .weather, the brown landscape ar gray sky ? , That to get something for not! ing is contrary' to the.; laws i nature ?and mankind? A new and. important leeson fro: the books you read, the work ye. du or the people you meet? I That you do not always sen .the greatest, ' highest ends b carrying out' your, own " pett plans? Not every woman, who arrive at middle age, retains the cole and beauty of her hair, but ever woman may do so by the occasioi al . application of Ayer's Hai Vigor.. It prevents baldness, re moves dandruff, and cures al scalp .diseases. .H'M mn i I II 'III rr" -v~ - -?- . ..... .. ',. . Th? Cruel ty ot War. An Incident related in the biograph; of Sir Provo Wallis, admiral of the Bril isa fleet, brings home to the reader th cruel nature of war. It occurred dui ing the war of 1812. Au American cap tain had taken a fine ship to Lisbon where she had sold her cargo forth' use of the British army under Welling ton, and received several thousands o dollars in return, which were on board Meantime war had been declared, an< on her homeward voyage she fell a vic tim to the British squadron. One of thi principal objects of her captors waa U obtain information. The American cap iain was sent on board the Shannon which afterward captured the famoui Chesapeake-but was kept in ignorar?a of the war and of the fact that he was i prisoner. He answered unreservedly all tile que? tions put to him, and Captain Broke who greatly disliked, the deception he ; had been obliged to practice, now felt il difficult to make the prisoner acquainted with the next step which must be taken. At length he forced himself to say: "Captain, I must burn your ship." The American, overcome by Burp rise, faltered, "Burn her?' "Indeed I must." "Burn her for what? Will not monej save her? She is all my own-and all the property I have in the world. Is il war, then?" '.'Yes," said Broke. Both parties were painfully moved, and the scene did'nbfend without a tear from each, but duty waa duty,-and the prize was destroyed. -Youth's. Com panion. Th? Story of.'*MkniLH Few people knew Tennyson and his peculiarities better than did his neigh bor Mrs. Cameron, the well known pho tographic artist, who made a fine series of character portraits by photography to illustrate. Tennyson's poems. The history of her search for and. selection of models for these characters is inter es ting. Maud was a starving Irish girl, who served her both as model and wait* lng maid. The sequel to the story of Mrs. Cam eron's Maudis tpo pretty not to be given When Mrs. Cameron held her exhibi tion in London, Maud was sent up with a chaperon to explain the pictures to the public. A gentleman came in one day, and after having asked several ques tions left. A year or two afterward he passed into the Indian civil* service, but before starting for the east he went down to Freshwater and knocked at Mrs. Cameron's door, begging for Maud's hand. The beautiful Maud was willing, and they were married.-New York Tribune. _' Cape Colony is the natural habitat cf the largest known species of earthworm. It is a soft, ncaleless thing between six and seven feat long, and much resembles our common angleworm. Some people say that it is very bad luck indeed for a baby to see itself in a mirror before it is a year old, though why this should be so considered it would be difficult to tell. Good mucilage may be made of dex trin two parts, acetic acid one part and water five parts. Dissolve all by heat ing and then add one part of alcohol. A remedy of great value for cats and dogs is sweet oiL Put two tablespoon fuls in their milk and they will rarely re fuse to take it Some people prefer to lino their stores with potters'clay instead of-bricky and it is said to answer the purpose very well. Undine Lost Baggage. It was on the Stormy division of the C. B. and Q. it happened, when Superin tendent Dugan's jurisdiction embraced that division. The east bound passen ger train, then called the Cannon Ball, had on board five corpses, through from Denver, in charge of the train baggage man. It was is June, and the weather was hot. The baggage man find ing tiie atmosphere in the baggage car be coming undesirable moved three boxes containing a corpse each to the plat form of his car outside, one on top of the other. . As the train waa nearing Ottumwa, the baggage man upon looking ont was horrified to discover one of the boxes miseing. Surmising that one of the boxes had slid off in rounding s curve, owing to the high rate of speed the train had been running, he wired Superintendent Dugan immediately upon arrival of the train at Ottumwa, apprising him cf the loas. Dugan wired the section foreman at Ottumwa as follows: "Patrick McGann-Look for corpse lost off Cannon Ball three miles west of Ottumwa and report condition of same when found." Patrick immediately started ont with the section gang, and found the box in tact and brought the same to Ottumwa. It was seldom that Patrick received or ders direct from the superintendent, the roadmaster being his immediate supe rior. Consequently Patrick concluded the time tb win promotion had arrived, and after reading Dugan's telegram over for the twentieth timo wired hit super intendent as follows: "Mlahter Popgun-I ber found th? koropsa, and the koropse was dod." The operator's expostulations wera in vain, and Patrick. would permit ' no change in the m??safeb; saying:1 "I musht obbSy the arder? of Boo gan."-Astoria Examiner. '. America's Natives Described. This description of the natives as they appeared to the' English colonists in Maryland was written in 1663: They are very proper tall men of per son; swarthy by nature, but much more by art; painting themselves with colours in oyle, like a darke red, which they doe to keep the gnat ts off. As for their faces they have other colours at times, as blew from the nose upward and red down ward; somewhat contrariwise, in great varietie and in very gastly manner. They haye no beards till they come to be very old, and therefore, draw from each side of their mouthes lines, to their eares to represent a beard. Their ap pareil generally is deere skyns and some f nrre, which they wear like loose man tels; and yet under this, about then middle, all vromen and men, at man's es tayte, were Younde ? aprons of skyns, which keeps them decently covered, so that, without any offense* to chast. eyes, we may converse with them. All tiie rest of their bodies are naked, and at times some cf the youngest sort of both men and women have just noth ing to cover them. The natural wit of this nation is veiryqrxlti and will con ceive a thing very readily,. They. exceJl in smell and' te^te-^d bav?-f ar. sharper: sight than we. If these people were once Christians (as by some signs we have reason to think nothing hinders it but want of language), it would be a right virtuous and renowned nation. Hew They Bobbed the Marquis. In the old range cattle boom days, when money from foreign lands was pouring into the wost hke water, there were a good many sharp tricks prac ticed in delivering cattle. It is recalled that the Marquis de Mores, who tried to cut such a conspicuous figure as a revo lutionizer of the American meat trade, and who later became notorious as a duelist, was badly sold. Wmfe in Da-, kota he bought 10,000 head of cattle from two Englishmen. They were first class cattle and cost forty dollars ahead. When these two Britons delivered the cowB they worked one of the neatest "skin" games that was ever heard'of. Medora, you know, sits in a valley, with table lands en each side. Well, the Englishmen ran 8,000 head of cattle in on the marquis and collected for 10,000. The way they did ifrwas-by running the same 5,000 twice around the mil. De Mores never "rom bl ed" an til he had paid his $400,000 and the mony cockneys were bound fer South Amer* ica. It was a dear steal of $300,000, but the marquis didn't xnalec much bones aboutit He had plenty of money and didn't care.-Chicago Drovers' Journal. Th? Sensations "bf Battle. A gentleman who ' was: distinguished in the war of the rebeffiac for his per sonal bravery, and who fought in Borne of ' the most "bloody battlea, 'weis" re cently asked just bow it'felt to bc nude i fire;' . "Shall I ten you Just how a battle affects me?" he asked, sminn-j. "It is not'elegant, bet it is at least true." . "Yes," was the reply, "tell us exactly what it is like." '.l ean only speak of my own feel ings," the old soldier said, "but as far as the effect on me personally goes, a battle is like a champagne drunk." "You mean that it is so exciting?" the questioner asked. "I mean," was the reply, "that there_ is first an intense and glorious excite-' ment, and that after that comes a most undignified, but inevitable nausea. I was never in battle in my life with out being seasick afterward."-Boston Courier. Great Moa and Their Pollelea. Suppose the Marquis of Salisbury or Mr. Gladstone were this night to become conscientiously convinced that the party of which he is the mouthpiece is the party of false doctrines, and had the courage to say so. What howls there would be from a hundred platforms! Does any one doubt that the men who deify today would crucify tomorrow? Each particular section of the British public likes to have its own particular piper, and it insists on calling the tune. Let the piper play a tune of his own, and there is a sudden change of pipers. -All tiie Year Bound. THE DICKS HOUSE Private & Transient Board. 603 Ellis Street, Corner Washington. AUGUSTA, - - OA Charges Reasonable* AYERS PILLS cure constipation, dyspepsia, jaundice, sick headache. THE BEST remedy for all disorders of the stomach, liver, and bowels. Every Dose Effective Fair Notice. IFOBBID any person hunting or otherwise trespassing on my lands. Any such trespassers will be dealt with according to law: ' j_LUKE CULBBEATH. Notice of Final Discharge and Settlement MOTICE is hereby given that the an il l dersigned will make a final settle ment in the Probate Oflicefor Edger field county on the estate of Bobert Jennings, deceased, on the 4th and 5th days of January, A. D.1893, and will, on-said day, apply for a final discharge from ss Td estate. W. D. JENNINGS, Sr- and J. H. JENNINGS, Executors of Boot Jennings, dec'd. Crayon, Pastelt aili Oil PORTRAITS made at prices to suit the times. Childrens' Photographs a specialty. . The Photographs now made WILL NOT TURN YELLOW.- . R. H. mm. J. M. COBB, Edgefield, S. C. Six Great Leaders ! $2.00, $2.50, $3.00 CENTS' 'SHOE. - $1.50, ' $2.00, $2.50 LADIES SHOES. ?Every Pair Warranted Sol Of 24 dozen pairs of these goods sold last season-only 2 pairs have been returned for repairs. This record cannot be beaten by any shoe dealer in the State. When you want a GOOD Shoe go to J. M. COBB. H. C. PHBKIN8, 7. A. HAUSER, President. Manager. Saw Mill Machinery, Engines, Boilers, Eilis aii 111 Supplies Founders & Machinists. Georgia Iron Mois, AUGUSTA, GA. Correspondence Solicited, THE Electric Saloon - AXD - All Night Restaurant - 18 LOCATED AT - 1102 Broad St., - AUGUSTA, GA* We specially call the attention of our Edgefield friends to the parity of our brands-all best Whiskeys con stantly on hand. North Carolin Whiskey at $1.60 per gallon-good. Give us a call. J. W. SMITH, Prop'r