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T ? . . r " 1 > SUNBEAMS. A matter of form?Fitting a dress. Soilkina' eood old ^nindmothcr wan' to know if Louisiana isn't in a state of "a.1 nica." "That be>f,5 awl!" exolaimed a shoi maker, as he looked at a shoe-making mi clune. It seems as if it would make composito: howl to discover that there is only one ci ..r j# a poora. \ ' "? There is a poor fellow at Bangor wl tars "it's working between meals that ' 2 killing him." -A#he young man who Wasted 1 o woul , yet'make a noise in the world, beats a gon for a hash mill. An Irish editor says lie can see no earthl reason why women should not be allowe to .become medical men. A .gecp l>ehiud the curtain ? "Mothe: don't .ijpt me mad now! Harry is comin and I shall be all of a flush." ""What arc you doing there?" said agrc cer to a follow who was stealing his Lire \ "1 am getting fat," was the reply. A .prisoner, while being examined ii court. contradicted himself. "Why do yoi lie so r" asked the judge, "Haven't you i lawyer?" A. Georgian editor h;is had his pistol s'ol ,en. Ho advertises to give the thief tin contents, and no questions asked, if he wil return it. Diedrich, lately married, s:tys, "It va yoost so easy os a needle cood valk oud mi a camel's eye, as to get der behint wor< mit a vomans." .Yaller Tup Landing is the name of a nev stopping-place on the Cumberland River and the Swiggles House is the name of th< principal hotel thereat. ..Mr. Mutton, of Oslikosh, has a complainl against a railway comptny for being pul ..off the cars at the wrong station. Mutton suet, why don't you? . Miss Addie Lake, of Hamilton, called il vcowcumbcr," and her enraged mother hil ier with "The History of Canada" and Lroke h?r collax-bone. The best defence of lying that we evei n?ad is the remark of Charles Lamb, related by Leigh Hunt, that, "truth is pre-cious, and not to be wjisted on everybody." : In Pembina, in Pembina, The people do not care a straw . Whether they freeze or whether thaw; But they will beat you till you're raw If you call it aught but I'embina. The Intcr-Oceaii calls Mrs. Jane Swiss >,helm "a woman with a rudder to her , name."?Pittsburg Commercial. Yes, but . what was her rudder mime before she was , married ? The vounc man who resolved to commit v suicide because his sweetheart married an . undertaker, owes his life to the second : thought that he might be furnishing hia j rival a job. Miss Bancroft, the voting lady who was : lately m irried to Count Tzocuzksi, has now ; got a name -which is the nearest approach to the phonetic spelling of a sneeze that ; has yet been made. Discernment. ? Voting lady (who has , missed "the meet"): "Do you know where , the hounds are, Robins ! " Old Keeper ((compassionately): "Y'are just too late, . Miss?the gentleuien be all gone." The proprietor of a forge, not remarkable for correctness of language, but who, by honest industry had realized a comfortable independence, being called on at a social meeting for a toast, gave "Success to forgery." Milwaukee boasts of the man with the chafnpion nose. We are not accurately posted ;is to the dimensions and geography of the article; but its main color is said to be violet iilite. Not, let the reader please underst;uid. violent blue. The only ease in which a girl jot the i mitten from her lover in reported in Terre ; H.mte. Lint who married him in spite of it. ; It is the case of Eve M. Slaughter, who : married Joseph \V. Mitten. Of course she drew him on. Hearsay and Battle are the e liters of the Shreveport Times. Whit is believed by Hearsay is decided by lJ.ittle. With a pa. per so conducted, it is vain to look for Juuthful statements or peaceful counsel in its columns. A young man asked for a copy of Homer's "Odyssey" at a book store in Norwich, Conn., the other diy, and the clerk, not finding it, remarked in a reflective way, "Well, Jwe k*rou't any of Homer's latest works in at present. Sliort Correspondence. ? "Mr. Brown's , compliments to Mr. Smith; thinks it unnecessary his piggs should go through his ground."?Reply.- "Mr. Smith's compliments to Mr. Brown; thinks it equally un, necessary to spell pigs with two jces." A dispute is going on in Fiji about the etiquette to be |followed at missionary cookings. One party claims that the men only . Should be allowed to dance round the tempting morsel, while the Fiji Woman's Eights Society urge that the women should be permitted to "join in. An Altoona man says that animals appre ciate the humorous from the fact that he saw a broad grin ripple over the visage of a hog at which he had thrown a huge boulder, only to have it graze the brute and smash a $140 plate-glass window beyond. Much depends on the w;iy in which things wo stated. For example, in one of our ' Western exchanges an account of a steam er accident is given, in wiich the reporter says: "xne omy. passengers were T, is. Nathan, who owned three-fourths of the cargo and the captain's wife," A Troy stove firm hits received a letter from tho West in relation t<> the purchase of a heater for a church, which concludes ?s follows: "The heater furnished l>y you . for tho church at ? works lmlly. Give us your rock bottom prices, as we are poor, but very pious." The teacher of a district school in Mans'fifeld is in the habit of asking his scholars to define tho words which they are given to spell. The boy who lud to wrestle with 1 the word "ulcer" stated with a good deal of i confidence that it was President Grant s first name. What, a grand vista of possibilities stretches out before that boy. "You know, madam, that you ean ia>t make a purse out of a sow's ear." "Oh, sir, please fan me. I have intima' toons of a swoon. When you use that odious specimen of vulgarity again, clothe it in refined pliraseology ! You should say it is impossible to fabricate a pecuniary receptacle from the auricular organ of the genus hog." To 'Raise Onions.?To raise onions im ground should be thoroughly plowed mad. very mellow, and rolled. It should be modi rich with well-retted, fine barn-yard manure,'and wood ashe? mak.* a good additional fertilizer. Thirty two-Lorse loads pel aero would not be too much manure for a good crop. Five pounds >>f seed per acr iinay be drilled in rows, nine inches apart with a light hand *cecl-dnli. The grouivi must be kept very clean from weeds ami .mellow with tlie hoe.. A hoe with a pronged blade is made speciully for tliis worV. ffbeoniohm maybe grown iw close in th .row as 'tbay will stand. They miy b grown year after y<ear upon the samegroun i if plenty of manure is given them, with in, creasing profit. .IVe would rather sell at a fair price at a home market, than risk thchances of a distant one. Onions take n< injury from freezing if they are kept frozen and not allowed.to freeze and .tfcaw al ternately. Appi.es slioukl l>e stored in cellars wlj. > tliero is a thorough circulation of air. \ i ?. AGRICULTURAL. | ' Cahe ov Houses ? G booming.-Honebreeding is a subject which of late occur pies considerable attention in France, her ' l>est horses arc rapidly bought up by o. foreigners, which compels in return a largo i- importation. It would be well to devote more attention to the care of horses, above rs all, to secure proper grooms. The horse, u | "the most noble conquest of man," according Jo Button, suffers, as a general rule in J? this country, from the absence of intelligent care. The master's eye is said to j make the horse tlirive, but unless he bo ? seconded by a. groom, his eye, however vigilant, will be deceived. It is not every y man who can make a good groom, however j well disposed and industrious ho may bo; . the business exacts special qualifications, r< and in addition on affection for horses. ? The latter is the weak point on the part or | 1 French stablciucjuT To groom a horse well, ? | and keep the stable?.: sweet, are much, but ' j not all the essentials; there is further doi mauded an attention to the animals' state n of health, noting when the horse's condi(l tion requires artificial aids, and regulating , his food according to his work. Ordinari _ i ly, haj, straw, and oats, form the regular e dietary; but as mail occasionally requires 1 tonics and a more generous nourishment, I . according to his work, so also does the s horse. Hunters gene rally receive a weekly [| warm mush, consisting either of bran, or i better perhaps, of barley flour, containing, ' according to the temperature of tho ani' j mal, some crushed beans or linseed. This 3 mush is very grateful after a hard run and 1 { when the animal is wet, but must not be k1 eiven till an hour or two after the horse ' ; j has entered the stable. Carrots cut and 1 ' mixed with the ration of oats morning and ' i I evening, are refreshing, but to feed horses * -1 constantly thus with carrots has been found ' ' | in France to effect the kidneys and enfec- 1 j ble the animal. Horses employed for ' speed receive their hay only in small por- 1 ', tion3 at a time, this prevents a greed for ' . drinking and distention of the stomach. 1 j Not a few practical men trace asthma and ' I wheezing to this eausc. In the matter of J drinking, well water is the most pernicious | for horses and the longer the period that 1 ; elapses between their drink and work the j better. Horses with a tendency to gorge ; themselves with hay or straw ought to be I muzzled. This will check plethora. The ! i flooring on the stable has much to do with j conditions of health. Asphalt flagging is . the favorite pavement for stables here, J which costs two and one-half frances the 1 square yard. Twenty-two horses belong1 ing to an artillery regiment, have ^ been poisoned from eating old musty | hay. Three of them died, and, on j dissection, the intestines displayed grave j, , I inflammatory lessons. Those saved had received sudorific drinks, diuretics, and ' purgatives, adding a little ether and opium j in the leverages, to calm the colics. Such poisoning is not at all rare among domestic animals, occasioned not only by moldy . | hay, but also from oats, pulp, Ac., in a ^ similar state. < Teees on Boundary Lines.?The JNew c York Court of Appeals not long since de- I cided that a man has no right to the fruit I I growing upon branches of a tree overhang- t j ing his Lmd where the trunk of the tree { stands wholly upon the land of hie neigh- c bor. But the law regards the overhanging i branches as a nuisance, and they may be | removed as such; or the owner of the land o shaded may remove them if he is careful j. not to commit any wanton or unnecessary j destruction in bo doing. Where the trunk c of a tree stands on the line, the owners of 8 the adjoining land have a joint ownership 0 in the tree and fruit, and neither one has ^ the right to remove it without the oonaent j i of the other. ~ g =?^ t A Good Lawn.?The first great requi- n site in making a lawn is to have good c drainage, after which prepare the ground s ' - > i 1?:i:? a. . by aoop plowing una iuau uy suuwumg, luu c 6oil requiring to be well pulverUed and on* r riched, to expect any success in our hot n cliiuute. A good lawn is on?. of the most pleasant if appendages to a house; but to make it so, s it requires to be well attended to, both in t the formation and by keeping it mown v every two weeks at farthest, using the moat c approved lawn mower. By doing so you n will soon have a lawn like a carpet. Inex- fi perience and neglect have been the causes of numerous failures. t Value of a Potato.?Prof. Tyndall iliua- * trates the value of a single potato by sup- p posing that every potato in the world but one was destroyed; that one would con- ^ tain in itself the possibility of again stock- . ing the world with an invaluable article of Tf nno ruifntn would nrfxluce. when I planted, only a crop of ten potatoes, in ten ^ years, the total product of the produce of this one potato would be equal to ten ^ thousand millions, which would be sufficient to stock tho whole world with seed. The ^ j real value of that single potato, then, would . I be such that it would be better that the city of London or Xew York should be to- ^ tally destroyed than that tuber should be Q lost to the world. 81 ti A COKKESI'OKDKNT of the Bangor Whin a] I affirms that cions should not be cut in the < i Spring us h:ig been the custom from time g| j immemorial, but in the Fall, after the c] j trees have shed their leaves, and when cut, they should be buried where it is dry, about six inches deep, and in the Spring y they will come out all right j ^ ? " ' 2On the plains of Texas is found a little ^ flower called the "compass flower,*1 which I h in all changes of wind and weather points n it.> leaves invariably to the north. jt Tub discovery is announced or tne lost ' secret in the art of granulated gold works, ; as pracucea aj me r.iruscans ana liroots. ' This secret has hitherto defied all the ef- a forts of the best English and Continental n professional experts; even the Castellanis \ of Kome, in whose family the subject has o been made a study for generations, found u the problem too difficult to solve. a NO IIKART. U i] What a thing it is for a man to have said ^ of him, that he has no heart! & No heart. Then he is hardly a human a being. He is like an oyster, a potato, a b) stick, a stone; liko a lump of ico, only ho o is never in tne memng mooa. n Such a man does not love his raci, nor d even his best friends. Hig love for his own c immediate family is a sort of selfish feeling m of possession. In reality he love3 nobod?! bat bimsolf?and that isn't love. c And a woman without heart: can there a be anything more abhorent? She seema <j only to like a milliner's stand, vitalized wood to hang dresses upon. We have no fancy for human incicluo ^ we like men of heart i in n^mmmmmrnrn 1 SCIENTIFIC. Vsncsab a. Luamous Bino.? Professor C. S. Lyman published in the American Journal eight years ago a brief notice of some observations made on Venus when i near her inferior conjunction in 1866. The , planet was then (for the first time, so far | as appears) seen as a very delicate lumin- . ous ring. , No opportunity has since occurred of re- | peating these observations until the day of | the recent transit. On Tuesday, December | 8, Venus was again in close proximity to j the sun, and the author had the satisfao- j tion of watching the delicate, silvery ring ] enclosing her disk, even when the planet was j only the sun's semi-diameter from his limb. \ This was at 4 p. M., or less than five hours 1 before the beginning of the transit. The ] ring was origntost on cne Bicie iowu.ru tuu i sun?the crescent proper. On the opposito side the thread of light was duller and of a slightly yellowish tinge. On the northern limb of the planet, some 60? or 80? from the point opposite the sun, the ring for a small space was fainter, and apparently narrower, than elsewhere. A similar appearance, but more marked, was observed on the same limb, in 18(50. These observations were made with a five foot Clark telescope of -l j inches aperture, by so placing the instrument as to have the sun cut off by a distant building while the planet was still visible. The ring was distinctly seen when the aperture was reduced to 14 inches. Tho 9 inch equatorial could nnf. hp iinr>(l. n.q there were no means of ex eluding the direct sun light. On the 10th the crescent, extending to more than three fourths of a circle, was seen with beautiful distinctness in the equatorial; and on this and two subsequent Jays, measurements were taken with the iilar micrometer for the purposo of determining the extent of the cusps, and consojuently the horizontal refraction of the atmosphere of the planet, on the assumption :hat the extension of the crescent and for- ' nation of the ring are due to this refrac- j ;ion. j Chalk in Artificial Fukl. ? "We have ] emarked paragraphs in sundry home and 1 oreign scientific journals relative to the j itilization of chalk, such sis is found in nat- 1 iral beds, as a source of heat. Various de- 3 icriptions of improved fuel have appeared, n which the above material luis been mixed c rith bituminous coal and various earthy ' lubstances, and the compound thus produc- s id is stated to have increased calorific prop- 1 irties. How this result can be directly as- * ;ribed to any active cffect of the chalk, we * ail clearly to comprehend. a Clialk is a body already the result of a ( :ombination of carbonic acid and lime. By t icating at a high temperature, the mate- * ial may be decomposed; and it absorbs an < .mount of heat equivalent to that produced \ ,t the moment of combination. Carbonic c tcid and lime result, and these themselves * ire alao burnt bodies, neither of which can t ndividually produce heat. If the carbonic I vcid, after contact with an incandescent i X>mbu8tible, is transformed into carbonic txide, it is simply through the absorption d if exactly the quantity of heat which would I >e produced by the transformation of car- t >onic oxide, in turn, iuto carbonic acid. So I hat, theoretically, and according to all I )resent chemical ideas, it is impossible to f onceive that lime, no matter in what form f t be utilizod, can bo a source of heat. It remains therefore to account for the dvantageous results which sire claimed to v tave been secured by the admixture. In c [omestic heating, the types of apparatus c ommonly employed are the grate and the t toye. A grato fire utilizes about one tenth j f the heat developed by the combustible, t hat in, about this fraction goes to warm s he room, while the remaining nine-tenths ( ies up the chimney. It is radiant heat hat warms onr apartments. Now if, by lixing chalk or limestone with the fuel the jj ombuBtion is retarded, the chalk, by ab- 0 orbing a portion of the heat which oth- ti rwise would bo lost, serves to increase the J1 adiating surface, it thus probably aug- ^ aents tbe quantity of heat utilized. ? In stoves an analogous state df affairs ex- " jt, and it is not impossible to conceive that * uch, in the instances noted, may be ad vanagcous. But for the production of steam, ~ rhere in active combustion is required, it is (J ertain that the addition of such foreign . latter to the fuel can exercise no useful ef- J set. A New Gaj.va.nic Batteet.?A now batery is manufactured by Messrs. C. & F. If ''ein, of Stuttgart, which is said to be re- G larkably cheap and to have a constant cur 7 CC ent, with high electromotive power. It onsists of a three-necked jar, similar to a T] Voolff bottle. In one of the side orifices is ^ oscrtcd a charcoal plate, and in the other strip of amalgamated zinc, the last coverd with cotton. By means of the center ube pieces of coke and preoxide of man anese are inserted until the bottle is about! ivo thirds full. The remaining space re- j T sives a concentrated solution of sal am-1L loniac. The center tube terminates above j 1 an inverted flask, the neck of which is j ttended down to the level of the liquid, lie flask is also filled with the sal ammo- j A lac solution, and, by affording a continual j upply, provides against loss by evapora- j Qt on. The contact between the eliarcoal j P< ad the copper conducting wire is made by t ^ latinumj plates. The b.ittory remains con- j ant for a year, and is said to bo easily ;ul leaned and renewed. ; te i j & Carbolic Acid a Prkmjuvative for ! a, [ides.?In South America; and Australia, i , is stated that tho immersion of hides for ! L< i hours in a two por cent solution of car-. olic acid, and subsequently drying them(! as been successfully substituted for the; ^ lore tedious and expensive process of salt- j ig. _________ L' HAN KILLED WHILE ATTEMPTING TO KISS UIS WIFE. A The Manchester (England) coroner held ' a inquest last week on the body of Benja- L? lin Brown, aged 40, a confectioner. On ' Wednesday, January 13, about twelve' pi 'clock at night, the deceased went home ! A nder the influence of liquor. His wife nd daughter were in the kitchen cutting ^ p some meat, the daughter vms sharpen, ler a carving knife on a steel. Tho 'anted to kiss his wife, and in trying to do j ha staggered and fell with his back L gainst the knifo which bis daughter was ^ barpening. The knife penetrated the back j [hischest, entering bis lungs,and caused \ is death. Martha Bradley, a married aughter of deceased, said that the de- w eased had been teetotal for three months *l tftil Sunday week, when ho got drunk, ad had been drinking heavily since. De- C< eased fell against the knife quite accident- M lly. The jury returned a verdict of acci- ^ ental death. q( B One mill in Ajaoka, Minn., ?awed nearly Ut ireo million feet of lumber in June. ' > fey#' - If&'it-H'r '. THIRST AT SKA. A correspondent calls our attention, says (he London Daily News, to the fact that while the survivors of the Cospatrick suffered agonies of thirst in their boats, the two men from the La Plato, who were actnlUy in the water up to their waists for aearly all the time of their three days exposure on their damaged raft, felt no thirst ind no hunger. Only when the sight of bhe Dutch vessel, their rcscurer, made them feverish with hope and excitement did they begin to find their throats grow parched. Docs not a plunge in tho sea relieve thirst, our correspondent asks, and tie gives his own experience as a swimmei in a sea-port town, when he was young, in testimony that it does produce that effectThe water entering Lho pores relieves the parched up palates, and perhaps, as he puts it, a filtration takes place in the proless which gets rid of the presence of the saline matter. The theory is affirmed with jreat precision, we romember, by one of Gteorge Sand's heros, not a high authority certainly on medical or scientific questions, out the experiences of a hero of romance, ii >nly thoy are adopted from anybody's actual life, are as good so far as those of PTir>rwv??i"/>? nf Hnrlov. Thft fmeation might to be easily settled, and tlie only wonderful thing about it is, that if the beief of our correspondent and the French romancist's hero be correct, there should jver have been any question at all. We fear that if so ready and simple a remedy were also sure, it could hardly have failed ong ago to find universal recognition, rhe thirst which is caused by mero heat would be naturally assauged by a plunge n water fresh or salt; but the thirst that a bom of exposure, exhaustion, and want >f food, is perhaps not so easily conquered >r cured. MEANS TO GET RICH. Ten or twelve years ago, says the Virginia [Nev.) Enterprise, there waa a miner workng in the upper levels of the Comstock at |4 per day. He lived in a little cabin down .he canyon, did his own cooking, and rhistled softly, "There a Good Time Comng Boys." To-day that miner walks about he streets of Virginia City, as cordial as n the old days; he dresses no better than my ordinary gentleman of Virginia and :ata no better food than a conscientious iditor ought to have. And yet, as his for,une ia rated in the .stock-list daily, ho is 10 rich that, were his stocks turned into aoney, he could lend Scott that $70,000,000 le wants and have enough left to lire comortable upon. He could, unaided, go down jid open at his own expense, the Darien ?&nal, or, should his fancy run that way, le could advertise to-morrow that the torernment, through him, had determined o resume specie payment, and pretty neary make the promise good. He could enlow a college in each Stato of the Uuion rith $2,000,000 each, or could build a double rack narrow giiugo railroad from San Francisco to New York, and solve at once he nroblem of cheaD transoortation. 3iera is no telliug indeed what be might lo, but what he will do is apparent enough, le was her6 when thirty feet of ore near be surfacc was a big mine. At 1,500 feet le has found it three or four times as wide, le believes at 4,000 he will strike it 500 eet wide, and get ricb, and he is going or it. Pbince Alfiikd, the Duke of Edinburgh, rill probably succee 1 the reigning Duke rf Saxc-Coburg-Gotliu, us the monarch is hildless and Alfred is heir-at-law. It is herofore possible tluit the little prince ust born may yet be a ruler, though a pety one, in Europe There is no telling how oon Bismarck may gobble Sixe-CoburgJotha, however. "How long have you Uvea in cuu couny ?" asked a lawyer of a deaf witness, who ad been allied to prove the old lxmndaries f a farin. "Iley?" said the witness, puting his hand l^chind his ear. "How long ave you lived in thi3 county roared the iwyer. "Oh, yes, that's it; about two xLj," said the witness, leaning forward. You may step down!" yelled the lawyer. Woll, it lliiight be a little inore," said tie. itnew, who JwftS then led off by an oflocc of ao ccurt, rreenville & Columbia E. Rt mmmmm CHANGE OF SCEDUL.E. On and after Wednesday February 10, 175, the Passenger trains over the reenville and Columbia Railroad will i run as follows, daily, Sundays ex ntod ; MAIN STEM. P TKIAN, >'0. 1?COL'A TO GH'NVILLE. cave Columbia 7:00 a.m " Alston 8:43 a.m. " Newberry 10:03 a.m. " Cokesbury 1:37 p.m. " Belton 3:20 p.m. rriveGreenville 4:55 p.m. RAIN NO 4?GREENVILLE TO COLUMBIA eave Greenville 6:00n.m. " Belton 7:55 a.m. " Cokesbury (J:35a.m. " Newberry 12:59 p.m. " Alston U:3o p.m. rriveColumbiu 4:20 p.m. Passengers by Night Train on South irolina Railroad connect with No. 1. issengers by No. 4 connect with Day ain on the South Carolina Railroad 1 r Charleston; Augusta, &c., and with ight Trains on the Wilmington, Colnbia and Augusta Railroad lor Sumr, Wilmington, Richmond, Baltimore, c., &c. S'DEKSON IIKANC'II <fc M.UE KIUOE DI V'N DOWN. save Walhalla 4:15 a.m. " Perryville 4:45 a.m. " PpiuTlptnn 5:00 a.m. " Anderson G:50a.m.| rrive Belton 7:35 a.m. UP. cave Belton 3:20 p.m. " Anderson 4:20 p.m. " Pendleton 5:20 p.m " Perryvllle 6:10 p.m. rrive Walhalla 6:45 p.m. Accommodation Train between Belli and Anderson Tri-Weekly, viz; uesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, o. 2 teave Belton at 9.30 A. M.; arve Anderson 10:30 A. M. No. 3 leave nderson at 2.00 P. M.; arrive at Belli 3 P. M. The Trains will run on onday# wlicu Court is in session at nderson. i ABBEVILLE BRANCH. DOWN. cave Abbeville,. 8:00 a. m. rrive Cokesbury 9:10 a. m. UP. eave Cokesbury..,..., 1:49 p. m. rrive Abbeville 2:35 p. m. Accommodation Train on this Branch ill be run on Mondays, Wednesdays id Frida3's. No. 2 leave Cokesbury at 35 a. m.; arrive at Abbeville 10:35 a. m. o. 3 leave Abbeville 12:30 p, m,; arrive akesbury 1:25 p. m. Train No, J, on ain Stem, Columbia to Greenville, ops twenty minutes at Cokesbury for iliner. Train No. 4, Greenville to rtlnmbia, stops twenty-five minutes at elton for Breakfast, and twenty mines at Alston for Dinner. THOS. DODAMEAD, Gen'l Superintendent * Jabf.7 Norton, Gen'l Tickct Ag?n - ' ' * "* - - - V >$ Clearing COST x FC TN order to dispose of the balan as will |have to be carried ovei sell the following GOODS at Cost f( BLANKETS, FLA HEAVY CAS!; JEi DRESS GOODS, Hi MILL.] READY-MAD rn < i , 1 it i riAArvn i rogetner wuq an sucn uuul/o t J. 1 Feb. 10, 1875 44-tf Quarles .ABE 01 GREAT INI r CASH 3 TB FALL AND V Are now being r< CHEAPEST THEY Hi Sept. 30,1874 25 tf mmnm THIS HIGH GRADE MANURT soils, will be found to cotitai Phosphate of Lime ami Ammonin sale in this market, (besides othe !i? tlioao two nonstitnents are the n any commercial fertilizer for ve? tains them in the greatest abun every planter to use. PBICfi, $55 Cash per too ANALYSIS OF ALBION ] Bone Phosphate of Lime, soluble ii " " " in weak Total Available. Bone Phosphate of Lime, insoluble Total Bone Phos Ammonia, (N. H. 3,) by decom]K>sit Potash This elegantly prepared Fei amount of Available Phosyhate c Respectfully sill vv Assist: BARNWELL & CO., A January 27, 1875-tf. WALLER <? MERCH. GREEN WO ARE now* offering to the public in I line of all the Goods generally ?< THEIR I have been selcctcd with grea RZADY MAI A FINE STOCK OF A good n Groceries, Hardware, C which the attention of purchasers is WALLEI Feb. 19, 1873, 45-tf Barnwell Are now prepared to exhibel AS CHEAP A STOCK C BROUGHT TO consi RTAPT/E TVRV GOODS. " CLOTH] PROVISIONS IN GEEAT o i nnm A \rn a k T/P UAViUil Al\jy unux, SYRUP AND 1 ] ALWAYS ON HAND A! Oct. 7, .1874 26-tf iR CASH! ^ p-r , ' " *?, :o: ?" ce of my WINTER STOCK; such until the next season. I propose to )r Cash, NNELS, SHAWLS, ?IMKRES AND k-pejs, [ GREAT YABHTY, EMERY, F* AT AmrTllTM t LLU1 nilNu, hat will soon pass out of season. r. Robertson. & Perrfn BERING 3UCEMENTS ro 3UYERS [EIR /INTER GOODS sceived, and are the LYE EVER OFFERED JION I Hit. 3, prepared specially for the Sothern u a larger per eentage of Available , than any other Featilizer offered for r valuable rnanurial ingredients,) and lost inportaut that can be supplied by -.. I I- i?. uiumu gruwiu, uiu muiiiuc uwi twudance, is the best and cheapest for of 2,000 Pooiis, or, $65 Time. ENGLISH COTTON MANURE. I'ER CENT. 1 water 18.49 solvents v 18.64 37.12 15.WJ iphate of Lime 52.18 Ion 4.01 0.12 tilizer contains an unusually largo >f Lime anil Ammonia, )mitted, D. WAMEK, ant to Prof. C. U. SIIEPARD, Jr. Lgfints, c BROTHER, A.NTS >0D, s. c., half hqiw (lull linllllEllDIO hlliMilll* ,'n fnl 2cded in this community. STOCK OF IrfBUM I t carc, and unusually attractive. DE CLOTHING. BOOTS AND SHOES. assortment of rockery, and Glassware. invited. Give us a call. * n irkiri aptittioy* I & JDJttUlJtlJCit*. I [ & Co. i : to their friends and the public IF GOODS AS WAS EVER THIS MARKET, sting of :NG & HATS, BOOTS & SHOES, [,SO & GROCERIES VARIETY. HOL ASSES, fLOUR, MEAL AND GRIST r THE LOWEST PICRES -tl-grfiniifii"miiiiiii -i n i DEALERS IN Groceries I - AND FARMERS' SUPPLIES,, Abbeville, S. U., J At Trowbridge^ Old Stand, ; WILL keep always on band a full supely of r CORN , BACON, i FLOUR, " ' J CIGARRS, COFFEES, &c., I Also a select stock of * *. Confectionaries and Fruits 1 CANNED GOODS, &c., frr ti i* _i. - l j. ifli. /*i ! T >ve sen ior casn at snon. prims. wive *us a call. CHRISTIAN & CO, Dec. 23, 1874 37-tf Nos. 3 Broad Street and 109 East Bay street, j CHARLESTON, S. C. P pml^g^-g,ers First-Class Work nun spppiai tv ? ? - - J YET, BY USING CHEAPER GRADES OF ST'CX, WE CAN FCRNISII WORK AT LOWEST LIVING PRICES. ( FINE FASHIONAiJsTAIiDHERY, ] Pines Paper and Envelopes. n Redding and (Ball Cavitations * ON THE BEST STOCK AND PRINTED IN THE * LATEST STYLE. c " Keep it Before the People! | ;] 1 J" ANVSON'S is the place to purchase! A yours'i'uvtts. ltememuer uucu | Stove has tlie following fixtures: i pots,1 1 haul boiler, 1 Tea kettle, 1 spider, 11 long gliddle, 1 waffle iron, 3 iron pans,)-. 1 bread pan, 2 pudding and 2 custard; I pans, 1 large fork, 1 spoon, 1 cake turn- -! er, 1 coffee pot,1 dipper and 15 feet pipe. ?; We name below some of the Stoves ! we sell: CHARTER OAK, FOREST ? CITY, FIRE SIDE, MARION COOK, I HELP. DIRECTOR. STONEWALL, r COTTON STATES, COLUMBIA if COOK, ALL RIGHT, REST and!1 ACORN COOK, warranted by the) . manufacturers to last 25 years. 1 1 We will send any of the above Stoves > |J with fixtures complete, freight paid to Donnaldsville, Relton, Honea Path, Hodges, Greenwood, New Market and Ninety Six, at the following prices: No. 7,"$31 ; No. 8, $36; No. 9, $41. j" u mj 1 Au/cnu 81 nn . fli IT i LMTTOUII 01/ UV.j i Abbeville, S. C. v Feb. 17, 1875, 45-tf THE ABBEVILLE HOTEL, BY JACOB MILLER. I THE subscriber directs the attention b of tlio traveling public to liis g commodious Hotel, located in the town- u of Abbeville, and solicits foi the same a . full share of tho public patronage. " With convenient rooms,, a well-kept u table, and attentive servants, no efforts b will be spared to give satisfaction. v JACOB MILLER, a Oct. 14, 1874 27-3m s J. H. BRYSON, I jG'reenwood, S. C , [J KEEPS constantly on hand a large f: assortment of ready made y] CofQns. 5 j REPAIRS FURNITURE OF ALL b i INSCRIPTIONS AT SHORT NOTICE. | Jan. 27,187o-3m. CUNNINGHAM & TEMPLETON1 IJavc just opened a nice lino of SEGrARS, \ Ql from S3 to Sli per box j a good Scgar tc at 5 cents. Give them a call. io1 Nov. 113i-tf ? IQ FRESH COUNRY MEAlJv ' I d? At ?1.40 per bushel, received ovory I^ week, by I n( I0' Cunningham & Templeton.\\i Nov. 11 31-tf J G n uta? yi nr r d. JO. JNUttJtlJbJbJU, Harness and Saddle Maker, M 4T his Old Stand over Parker & Per- j ^ rin'a Drugstore, has a supply off., them HARNESS LEATHER, and other material for Making and Repairing Saddles and Harness. D?5. 2, 1874, 34, tf BARTER'S CHERRY BITTERS.0 AND I ? IRON TONIC. IS Those are good preparations. . PARKER & PERRIN, July 38 16-tf * HMnrwiiiiiiTii ifrirtiBiMitiiBiiiii r mrrinir'-m F. B. Rogers, JRY GfoODS, GROCERIES, [ ed Stock of ghoSery, CALF SKIN SHOES, LADIES' BLEACHED GOODS, . iARD, RICE, - /? FLOUR, SUGAR, BACON, ? ' ' SPICE, . .. . ,. , r. COFFEE, STARCH, PEPPER, OYSTERS. PICKLES, SARDINE8, TOBACCO. MOLAS8ES, CIGARS, Irandy Peaches, Brandv Cherries. Concentrated Lye, Candy, French and Common, Crackers of every description.. I would respectfully invite all Who efire bargains, to call befifre '-they nrchase elsewhere.1 I will-sell as heap as the cheapest. ; > . J. B. 80GERS. Sept. 23 24-tf .. bakery j AND v nuccoTiny cd v U III L U I I U 111. II I T XI T TTT>TT1 W j. XX. LUJDlUiiXI : i . V 4 HAS established a first-class Bakery in this town. At twelve o'clock oon, EVERY DAY, the best fresh Bread, Crackers and Confectioneries an be had by applying to him at the Id Post Office, on Main Street. lay 20, 1874 6-tf CE BRUCE, 3oot and Shoe (Baker, Over Parte 4 Pern's Store. Abbeville, S. C. DESIRES to say that he in fully prepared to meet all detnauds tbe itiblic may make in his line. He keeps onstantly on hand a large lot of the iest material and employs only the finest pnrlrninn H? kpoiiti ft fnll Htock of ustom-made Boots and Shoes, and uarantees the most entire satisfaction n every instance. . S Sept. 1,1874,-21-tf rOHALMERS & CO. ] DEALERS I.X Hairs, Parlor Suits, Clamte Suits, 4 tfalnut & Mahogany Bareaus, j Vashstands, Tables, Bedsteads, 1 Window Shades, Ac. Looking j Glasses, Oil Chromos, Ac. | Abbeville, S. C. ,v. ] Also agents for the salo of the eclbrated Philadelphia Improved liusic Window Shade, which for drraility, .cheapness, convenience and eauty, eannot be surpassed. Each hado is furnished with all the fixtres complete, and only requires two ith nails or small screws to fasten it p with. Should they become soiled y flies, they can be spread on a table, 'ashed and made as bright as new, nd will last for years. This style of hado is much superior to cloth hades. In warm weather, when the ,-indow is raised, the shade admits Liu uir uui jjiuvuuia uiud auu ijjuouuidcs entering the room. The simplic,y of their fixtures is much in their ivor, as they require no rollers, each. Iiade being complete, and any one an drive two nails by which to hang bem. They nro low in price, durale, convenient, and never get oat ot rder. Call at store and see samples. Nov. 18, 1874 32-tf CITATION. 'he State of South Carolina, ABBEVILLE COUNTY. ,y T. B. MILFORD, Esq., Probate Judcre. [TJTHEREAS, Lewis D. Bowie, Clerk |f of the Court of Common Pleaae ' Abbeville County, made suit to me, i grant him Letters of Administration ? the derelict Estate $nd effects of Natan Ingraliam, late of Abbeville Coub' deceased, These are therefore to cite and admonh all and singular the kindred and reditors of the said Nathan Jngraham, jeeased, that they be and appear, before e, in the Court of Probate, to be held , Abbeville C. H. on the 20th of April D-xt after publication hereof, at 11 clcek in the forenoon, to show cause, anv thev have, whv the said Admin trntion should not be granted. iven under my hand and seal, this inth day of March in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and seventy five and iu the uinety ninth vear of American Independence. Published on the 10.17, 24 and 81 of arch and on the 7th 16th and 21 April, 75 in the Abbeville Press and Banner id on the Court House door for the me required by law. T. B. MILFORD, [Seal.] Judge of Probate. March 10, 1875, 48-flfc j_ R. JOHN S. THOMPSON, DENTIST, | >FFERS bis professional services to m the citizens of Abbeville, and the gj rrounding country. I Office over Citizens' Savings B ank, Abbeville, S. C. S Oct. 2, 1873,28tf I