The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, July 21, 1875, Image 3
| vSUMLMMS.
Why is a mouse lik?S a load of hriy ? Because
the cat'll eat it.
Matchless misery?having a cigar and
nothing to light it with.
While witnessing a game of base ball
out West a boy was struck on the buck of
his head, the bawl coming out of his mouth.
*- .. ?%on?
wny IS a siunuuer iv
Because he makes peoule steel pens and
then says they do write. What
did the spider do when he came
out of the ark ? He took a fly and went
borne.
"The Sweet Summer Land of the Soul,"
is the title of a song just published. Wonder
|if there arc any mosquito bars to the
music.
A boy who will yell like a tartar if a drop
, of water gets on his shirt baud when his
nnMr is Vainer washed, can crawl through a
sewer after a ball, and think nothing of it.
JV "Oh! I've loved before," said a Detroit
r woman to her fourth husband, as she took
a handful of hair from Iris head because
\ he objected to hang out the week's washing.
A Green. Bay couple walked four miles
, on snowshoe6 to get married, and it- probably
won't be over a month before he will
?eil heir to split her own wood if slm wants
"Idiot !'* exclaimed a lady comiilg c>ut
of the theatre recently as a gentleman ac
; _ cidently stepped on her trailing skirt.
"Which one of us ?" blandly responded the
~*i', man. *.
sy ^ x" ^ ' ' ..a
A good rhinosceros costs $5,600, and unless
there's a great decline in tbo market
most of us must be satisfied with a five dolr.
lar parlor mat having a colored tiger atamp'.
cd on it.
if'- A Boston [antiquarian says jliis eighteen;
. year-old wife is very affectionate, Jbut Jit
*puzzles him to understand why she
> .'4 should insist daily on ,his getting his life
insured.
It cost Great Britain two thousand dollars
to make the Shah a Knight of the
Gtrter, but forty cent* worth of London
- * gin mado him so drunk that he couldn't
stand.
. * A -wealthy Philadelphia!! wlio died re^ntly,
stipulated in his will that his nearest
relative should assassinate the obituary
jditor of the daily Ledger if he made any
poetical remarks on the subject.
A boy found a poclcut-book, and returned
.t to its owner, who gave him a five cent
liece. The boy looku 1 at the coin an inttant,
and then hau<li..g it reluctantly back,
audibly sighed, as ho said, "I can't change
it."
"From what you know of him, would
> you believe him under oath ?" "That depends
on circumstances. If he was s<
much intoxicated that he did not know
what he was saying, I would; if not, i
wouldn't."
A Baltimore young woman skated herself
through the ice; but as the water was onlj
(our feet deep, and she was five feet long, sh<
stood up and informed a young man of wha
had happened, and he courageously passed
her a board.
The Columbia (Tenn.) Herald and Mail
tells of a negro man at that place who
weighs 228 pounds and wears a No. 17 bro
gan. If that negro should determine u>
make a tour of New England, Khode Island
would find her only safety in crawling under
a fifty gallon sugar kettle.
It i3 now reported that Eingtown is tc
havo a newspaper. To run a paper profitably
at that place, it would require a mar.
who coidd eat dried apples for breakfast,
drink warm water for dinner, and swell up
for supper. No other sustenance would bi
afforded him.?Shenandoah Herald.
"May I leave a few tracts?" asked a
medical missionary of a lady who responded
to his knock. "Leave some tracts:
Certainly you may," said she, looking at
him most benignly over her specks. " Leave
them with your heels toward the house, if
you please."
"Yes, sir," yelled a preacher in a Dakota
church one Sunday morning, "there's more
lying and swearing and stealing and general
deviltry to the square inch is this here
town than all the rest of the American
country," and then the congregation got
up and dumped the preacher out of the
window.
A gentleman who had been indulging the
great Korth American privilege of getting
drunk, says he was holding to a lamp-post,
and as soon as he let go the post fell down.
That's the last thing he remembers. The
truth is, this man has been "bowed under
??r. tho penalties of genius.
A Minnesota judge, in pronouncing the
death sentence, tenderly observes: ? "ii
guilty, you richly deserve the fate that
awaits you; if innocent, it will be a gratification
for you to feci that you were hanged
without. Such a crime on your conscience;
in either case you will be delivered from a
world of care."
Phenia Epps, of Hamilton, Ohio, asked
her mother to take a note for her to a friend
of the family living in a near street. The
note when opened was found to read; "This
is a little ruse of mine to get mother out
of the house. Before she can get back I
will be on the cars with dear Lorenzo, and
before night will be married."
A Texas steer, animated with Cincinnati
whiskey, visited a rolling mill in that city
a few days. ago, and after nosing around a
bit, concluded that a gigantic fly-wheel
was the only thing about the place worthy
of his attention. So he pranced into the
fly-wheel, ard his owner says that if he can
recover a piece of one of his horns he will
- ?J
De BaUSUt'U.
The Newburyport Hcrall relates that recently
a benevolent gentleman from Vermont
applied to a Boston gedtleman for aid
in sending a Vermont missionary to Turkey.
The reply was as follows:?"I have
invested much in Vermont securities and
lost many thousands by the acts of your
railroad men, sustained by the people and
the courts. I have also lived in Turkey,
and had much intercourse with her people.
I would far rather give my money to send
Turks aa missionaries to Vermont."
Robert Collyer says the children must
have less study and more fun. He is right.
There is the boy in the family across the
way. Last Thursday afternoon he put a ,
dead mouse in his mother's work-basket,
attached a split stick to the tail of tho next
door cat, set the vinegar faucet up in busi- '
ness, palmed himself off as a ghost oil the
hired girl when she went down cellar after
the butter, besmeared his father's choice
* white bantam rooster with blue ink, and
finally wound up the entertainment by tying
the boiler to a strange dog's tail, and
slipping down in the slash, hurting his back.
His exasperated father hardly knows which
to hunt up first?the strauge dog with th? <
boiler, or Robert Collyer. I
Eugene Crabtree, brother of the spright- 1
ly and otherwise fascinating Lotta, is a
bar-tender of a St. Joseph (Mo) saloon.
Evidently his sister absorbed all tho talent
v.^1 r.,
Ui^ I.V UiO liUUUJf* |
China has a very singular plant called J1
the camelon flower, a kind of creeper of I
the convelvuli tribe, which, in the morning,!'
is deep blue, at noon pink, while at night j1
it become quite white, and soon afterwards j
fades away.
Bochester, Mass., has a professor of me3
znerisin, who, trying 10 mesmerise a duu, <
recently, by gazing intently at the beast, j
* . was tossed some distance into the air, and 1
now has his doubts about the power of the j
human eye over the brute creation, though J i
he explains that this particular bull may j
be near-sighted.
1 An order has boon issued stopping the <
pay of Cap t. L.C. Forsyth, A. Q. M., until it'
amounts to $4,678.52, on account of a deficiency
in a quantity of oats at Fort Ellis, ,
Montana territory, found to have occurred
< while he was on duty there as post quar- '
termaster, and for which he is reaponsi- ,
ble. t
sciiu^na
TRANSMISSION OF ty.-VSV TftROUOTT Foo. '
?On December ? . u memorable fog settled |
down on London. 1 atklressed a telegram
to the Trinity Housa suggesting some
gun*obsevvatiou9. With characteristic
promptness came tin* reply that they would j
be made in the afternoon at Blackwall. I ]
uent to Greenwich iu the hope of hearing J
the guns across the river; but the delay
of the train by the fog rendered iny arrival
too late. Over the river the
fog was very dense, and through it
came various sounds of great distinctness.
The signal bell of an unseen barge
rang clearly out at intervals, and I could
plainly hear the hammering at Cubitt's
Town, half a mils away, on the opposite
side of the river. No deadening of the
sound by the fog was apparent.
J Through tliis fog and various local
noises, Captain Atkins and Mr. Edwards
heard the report of a 12-pounder cannonado
with a 1-pound charge distinctly better
than the Impounder with a 3-pound
charge, and optically clear atmosphere, and
-all noise absent, or July 3d<
jjhcnomefloh for which we had Waited so
long, I tried to grapple with the problem by
experiments on a snmil scale. On the 10th
I stationed my assistant with a whistle
and an organ pipe oa the walk below the '
Southeast end of the bridge dividing Hyde
Park from Kensington Gardens. From
the Eastern end of the Surpentine I l.ourd
distinctly both the whistle and the pipe,
which produced threo hundred and eighty
waves a second. On changing places with
my assistant, I heard for a time the distinct
blast of the whistle only. The deeper
notes of the organ-pipe at length reached
me, rising sometimes to great di?tinctnes3,
and sometimes falling to inaudibility. The
whistle showed the same intermittence as
J ' ? 'vrvriAsifa fnF
x<o penuu, uui ui au u^voiw uvuw ; .v.
when the whistle wiis faint, the pipe was
strong1, and vice versa. >To ol-tain the fundamental
note of tlie pipe, it had to be
blown gently, and on the whole the whistle
proved the most efficient in piercing
the fog.?Professor Tyndall.
Fbekch Experiments with Steel.?
M. Ponsard's apparatus for producing
steel direct from the iron ore, as described
in La Met allurgic, appears to be characterized
by great symplicity, and, if the accounts
of its operation be reliable, by peculiar
efficiency. It consists principally of
an arrangement for transforming the fuel
in a series of large chambers, and of an
apparatus in brick, called the recuperator
wVij/.ii ranrivpR the flames from the
ui uvav> i? w-?
furnace, and restores the caloric in the I
form of hot hair. The compartments of
the chamber serve successfully for the redaction
of the ore, for the reactions which
are effec ted, and, finally, for the fusion of
the whole charge in such a manner that
the separation of the component parts is
effected by the difference of density. These
various phrases of the operation require
very different temperatures, and the pro-1
duetion of these is the special object of the
apparatus. On the side of the furnace
doors the temperature is only that of red
heat, while beyond the heat is so great that
the eye is unable to support the intensity i
of the glow ; this extraordinary heat being
estimated in fact at not less than 3,632
.i^~vn~>o VnVironhoit. The result obtained! t
by means of this process is considered to
demonstrate the possibility of producing
steel direct from the ore, without any of
the transformations necessary under existing
systems.
CHOICE 1> l.r IKUATUKE,
It has been truly observed that as a man
:nay be judged by the company he keopa
so he may be by the books he reads. Every
book carries with it its own peculiar |
atmosphere, just as does every perscn, and j
it is no more possible for one to take equal j j
pleasure in all books than it is to enjoy the J j
society of every person one meets. There J ,
are some authoi-s whom, by a law of selcc- (
tion that is as commanding as instinct, wo
take at once to our hearts, and delight in
their companionship. There are others
whom we find it pleasant to read occasion- <
ally, just as we have a good many acquain
tanees who are agreeable, but with whom
ntimacy is neither possible nor desirable;!
ami there are still others whom we would
always pass by on the other side. There is
no one so peculiar in his mental constitu- j
1*^ *^^4- I-.** cinr* in rr inttf. I
LiUU tllibb IXC llliXJ L1\/\J IJ J UMM j MUW |
tlie author to sympathize with him; to go j i
with him in those trains of thought and of j '
feeling that predominate in his mind. Not j
only hate wo authors for our prevailing,
moods, but for every varying phase of sen- {
timent and thought and aspiration we may, I
if we know where to seek it, find an inter- j
preter. The fact that an author is the
fashion is no reason why one should keep i
his company if it is found uncongenial. I
There are great numbers of people who
think Dickens tedious and have little relish j
for Thackeray, yet who are by no means ;
destitute of literary culture. To some j
Ruskin is severe and harsh in his style, J
while others delight in every syllable he :
utters. Any one who indorses heartily the j
morality of the New Testament? may be j
trusted to read what ho enjoys, and rest in J
the conviction that this course will educate j
him up continually to higher standards. I
I'he fact that we do not enjoy an author is j
?i? ?1,1 i,;? I
LIU icunuu WC BJI\.?U1V1 JkiCVCl icau 'UIO I
works, any n:ore than tho fact that we do ! '
not fancy certain individuals should pre-! vent
lis from availing ourselves of the, '
knowledge, useful to us, that they may1 :
posses?. Ap the bee seeks honey in every j 1
opening flower far and near, so should we 1
gather from near and far whatever may be j '
of use to U3. '
MECHANIC A I. GENIUS.
I know at least a score of men who,
though intelligent enough in other respects. I
:lo not know how to drive a naQ in a work-j
manlike manner. As boys, they were edu-; J
cated with a view to practicing certain vo- i
cations or professions, and mechanical arts j
were completely ignored by their unwise ;
parents or guardians. Now it is essential j
to every man?lawyer, preacher, physician, j ;
merchant?to know some of the principles j
of mechanical art, and how to apply them, j
for no man leadR in industrious life withcraC
very pminjf the use of such'
knowledge. There are cetluiu nicchauical
rules that apply to almost every piece of j ,
work that man .attempts to perform, from {
the folding of a paper to the matching to- j
S*ctlier of two hoards, aud the bungling
[Manner in which these things are generally
3one, show how little idea men have of
mechanism. Then, fathers, whether city
men or country men, fit up a workshop for cpour
boys. A small set of tools, of the <
best material, will not cost much?notj j
more than ten or twelve dollars at most? j
md they'll soou ndiuu to you thrico their L
Cahie in the good accomplished. Where
there is a comfortable workshop supplied
with good tools, the hoys are seldom knowr
to leave it upon leisure days to loaf in the
streets. If nothing else is given them tc
do, they will he manufacturing wind-miTls
sleds, weather-cocks, hand-carts, etc., and
every hour thus employed udds to thoii
skill as workmen. Very soon they will b<
able to make rainy days as profitable as
others, repairing or making very manj
important fixtures about the house. W<
know boy mechanics who have supplied
homes with brackets, flower-stands
step-ladders, and a hundred and one othei
things convenient, and valuable.
THE E.UPUUS9 EUGKNIK.
An interviewer recently visited the Empress
Eugenie for the purpose of learning
something of her ideas concerning the status
of Imperialism in France. Her Majesty,
it appears, was slightly indisposed wher
the interviewer called. Her Majesty reclined
among pillows, decked with a daintj
little white lace cap, with blue ribbons, anc
a handsome white dress rich with lace anc
and embroidery and tied at the threat witl
a blue tie. A tiny table held a cup of chocolate
and a silver tray of bonbons, while
another Stile'table held a draught board
with the men in position, which showec
that she had been playing. Her Majesty
we are told, smiled on seeing the interview
er, and after a talk about the political sit
nation, the interviewer "was permitted t<
retire/' "On going out," concludes th<
writer, "I turned to take a last look of th<
beautiful empress, who had carried al
hearts by etarzn, be they of kings or peasants.
She lay back there, her rich golder
V.01V 1,-vwlv raucht under the tiny, coquet
tish bit of laco and ribbon, the fair fulness
of shoulders and bast half revealed throng!
the embroidery on her dress, and tho tow.
er-like strength of her round, -white neck
made more marked by the blue tie. JTh<
soft, white hands, are as plump and dim.
pled as those of ababy, and her complexior
is still delightfully clear and fine. Th<
profile is clear cut and of ft high cast oi
beauty, and her mouth is a marvel of sweefc
ness?and sadness, except when she smiles
She bade me au rcvoir instead of "good,
bye," and some day I hope to pass anothei
hour with the quecnlieat quean of all, th<
ex-Empress of France.
NATIVE CRUELTY IN INDIA.
A Baroda correspondent of the Bombay
Oasdtc furnishes the following remarkable,
and, if true, atrocious particulars of a case
of cruelty, which, he says, has created a
profound sensation, as well it might. "It
appears," say3 this authority, "that one of
Muthor Rao's courtiers, who was in great
favor with his highness, was looked upon
with jealousy by some of his fellow-courtiers.
So to get him into trouble with the
Maharajah, they reported to his highness
that the favorite had been casting amorous
glances at the Queen. The poor man
was then seized under?as I hear it will be
satisfactorily proved?the order of the Maharajah,
and cast into prison. Special fetters
and manacles were forged for hiin. I
have seen them. A great iron bar, nearly
as thick aa your wrist and about eighteen
inches long, with thick heavy rings fitting
rings fitting on it for the lianas to go in to
Becure his arms. These things alone
weighed twenty-five pounds.
An iron ring of great weight was put
around his neck, and a cliain was, I believe,
attached to it. Huge iron bars witff rings
attached, altogether weighing thirty-five
pounds, were fastened to his legs, so that
it must have been impossible for the poor
fellow even to walk a yard. He could neither
stand, sit nor lie down. I am told the
weight of the iron attached to his hands
must have been almost always on his chest,
tnd the iron around liis neck must have
bent his body down so that his sufferings
must have been terrible.
"But they discovered a way of adding to
ffr.r olinuk sixteen davs thev fed
LiiVJill. v* ? ? ? ?
him on chutney made of chillies, and gave
him salt water to drink. Atthoend of this
time he died. Every one who has seen
these fetters feels sick at the very thought
of what this poor wretch must have suffered.
All this time there was no charge
made against him, and there is no reason
to suppose that any notice would ever have
been taken of the circumstance if it hud
not been for the inquiry which haa been
ordered to be held."
MAKING MONEY OUT OF PANCAKES.
The Belfast (Me.) Journal tolls how an
enterprising woman is makiug money there:
"It ia not on that article of diet made by
our grandmothers that we are to speak, but
a. pancake of a less digestible nature manufactured
at the Belfast shoe factory. Nothing
in tho shape cf leather is allowed to
jo to waste in that institution. Even the
3havings from the sole leather have their
use, and from tliem tho puncakes are made,
rhese shavings are placed upon a table before
the operatives, who separate and care:ully
spread them out witbin a small casting
with {paste, in layers, like raisins in a
uox ? first leather, then paste, and tha
ivhole patted down compactly. When a
:ake is completed, it is about one foot in
length, four inches wide, and half an inch
in thickness. They are then laid away to
3ry, and in {three or four days are ready for
use, which is to be cut up into inner heel
Lifts. Their manufacture is not a very
pleasant job, as the girls who mako them
ire up to their elbows iu piiste. When the
'actory first started, this work was given to
i.bna House at four cents per cake. She
jeeame so expert that she could easily make
LOO per day. Being an enterprising woman,
uid seeing money ahead, she closed a con
xact with the proprietors for the sole manifacture,
at four cents apiece, and then
lireii help. To-day she has an apartment
.ff the saleroom, and employs six women,
,vho turn out from 300 t j 100 a day.
Al'FLK.S.
The Parisians devour 100,000,000 of apples
every Winter. An eminent French
physician thinks t'tat the decrease of dyspepsia
and bilious affections in Paris ia
owing to the increased consumption of this
fruit, which he maintains, is an admirable
prophylactic and tonic, as well as a very
uourihliing and easily digested article of
food.
Pnooiflti (MwoMuunnf ia nVifmf. f/>
commence work on a Government railroad
to extend from Perm, near the Eastern
border of European Russia, about 1,000
miles into Siberia, the general course being
near that of the fifty-sixth parallel of North
latitude. The limit of time for completing
the work is fixed at five years.
.. . 1 . J
Cincinnati is, with one exception, the most
lensely populated city in the United
States. New York averages 14.72 persona
o each dwelling house ; Cincinnati, 8.81;
ioston, 8.46; Jersey City, 8.37, and Chicago.
6.70. J
r - ' r . s
NEW FIRM!"
t 1
; Christian & Co.'
! DEAJLERS IS
; Grrooeries
[ AND*"
FARMERS' SUPPLIES.
I Abbeville. S. C..
1 *
At Trowbridge's Old Stand, .
WILL keep always on hand a full
supely of
; CORN,
BACON,
; FLOUR, )
i * CIGARRS, )
COFFEES, &c., f
5 Also a selcct stock of
; Confectionarics and Fruits
; CANNED GOODS, &c.,
We sell for cash at short prifits. Give 1
> us a call.
: RHRISTIAN & CO.
- William ? ii ^ ? ? 1
Dcc. 23, 1874 37-tf
I??t. 1 " U
; i
Nos. 3 Broad Street and 109 East Bay Street,
I CHARLESTON, S. C. j
; STATIONERS
I
T7mcnr Pt a ce\KTr\T>v
r lXYOl-UljiiOO yruru\
OUR SPECIALTY, i
YET, BY VSINO CHEAPER GRADES OF 8T9CK,
WE CAS Fl'ItNLslI WOHK AT
| LOWEST HYING PRICES.
pine fashionablFstatidnery,
Piries Paper and Envelopes.
Redding and ?all invitations
ON THE BEST STOCK PRINTED IN THE
* * T*i?c?Tn CTVF O
| W?4 tVHi
A BATCHLLEY'S '
I | Av V\
LJ (o T? k\ ImProved CueumLlj?^*
?]bcr Wood Pump is
?? Vo. Vy theacknowlged
<P|> STANDARD of the
2?j53' market, by popular verdict, the (
best pump for least money. At- '
tent ion id invited to Batchley's
y<;fg, Improved Bracket, the Droy
5:jg|y Check Valve, which can be
withdrawn without disturbing
the joints, and the copper chamber
which never cracks, scales or rusts, and
will last a Jife time. For sale by dealers
and the trade generally. In order to be
sure that you get Blatchley's Pump, be
careful and see that it has my trademark
as above. If you do not know ,
where to buy, discriptive circulars, to- j
pfther with the name and address of
the agent nearest you, will he promptly
furnished by addressing with stamp.
CHAS. C. BATCHLiFY, Man'r,
500 Commerce St., Philadelphia.
April 14th, 1875?9m.
Greenville & Columbia R. R.
flB-WMBail HHM
CHANGE OF SCEDULE.
On and after Wednesday February 10, 5
1875, the Passenger trains over the .
Greenville and Columbia Railroad will
be run as follows, daily, Sundays excepted
:
MAIN STEM. J
TP TRIAN, NO. 1?COL'A TO OREILLE. .
Leave Columbia 7:00 a.m <
" Alston 8:45 a m. "
Newberry 10:03 a.m.
" Cokesbury 1:37 p.m. '
" Belton 3:20 p.m. J
Arrive Greenville 4:55 p.m. .
j TRAIN NO 4?GREENVILLE TO COLUMBIA '
' J
i T,oilve Greenville 6:00 a.m.
" lielton 7:55 a.m.
" Cokesbury 9:35 a.m.
" Newberry 12:59 p.m. I
" Alston 2:35 p.m. |
Arrive Columbia 4:20p.m.
Passengers by Night Train on South
' Carolina Itailroad connect with No. 1.
! Passengers by No. 4 connect with Day
|Train on the South Carolina Railroad
! for Charleston. Augusta, &c., and with
; Night Trains on tlie Wilmington, Col- <
: umbia and Augusta Railroad lor Sum'
ter, Wilmington, Richmond, Baltimore,
: &c., &c.
! ANDERSON BRANCH <fe BLUE RIDGE DIV'N
DOWN.
; Leave Walhalla 4:15 a.m.
" Perryville 4:4-5 a.m.
j " Pendletou 5:00 a.m.
u Anderson 0:50 a.m.
' Arrive Belton 7:35 a.m.
UP.
Leave Belton 3:20 p.m.
" Anderson 4:20 p.m.
" Pendleton 5:20 p.m *
" Perryville 6:10 p.m. '
Arrive Walhalla 0:45 p.m.
| Accommodation Train between Beljton
und Anderson Tri-Weekly, viz;
Tuesdays, Thursdays und Saturdays. (
No. 2 teave Belton at 9.30 A. M.; arrive
Anderson 10:30 A. M. No. 3 leuve
Anderson at 2.00 P. M.; arrive at Bel- /
I ton 3 P. M. The Trains will run on I
Mondays when Court is in session at
Anderson.
ABBEVILLE BRANCH.
DOWN.
,Leave Abbeville 8:00 a. m.
Arrive Cukes bury u:r? u. iu.
UP. f
Leave Cokesbury 1:40 p. m. N
Arrive Abbeville 2:35 p. m.
Accommodation Train on this Branch
will bo run on Mondays, Wednesdays
and Fridays. No. 2 leave Cokesbury at
9:35a.m.; arrive at Abbeville 10:35 a. m.
[No. 3 leave Abbeville 12:30 p. m.: arrive
Cokesbury 1:25 p. m. Train No. 1, on
I Main Stem, Columbia to Greenville,
stops twenty minutes at Cokesbury for J
Diliner. Train No. 4, Greenville to *
Columbia, stops twenty-five minutes at *
Belton for Breakfast, and twenty mill- J
utes at Alston for Dinner.
THOS. DODAMEAD,
Gen'l Superintendent
Jabf7 Norton, Gen'l Ticket Apen
RUBBER CLOTH
INCHES WIDE, now on hand J
OD at the EMPORIUM OF *
FASHION. (May 12,1675.
* J
PAINT AND 01
53 Jackson Street, Aug
The BEST of ARTICLES?All
WAITE LEAD, ZINC, -PAINTS, [^BRUS
COLORS, LINSEED OIL, -|#IN]
MACHINE OIL; GIN'OIL, - iaSk.
Terms: CASH ON DELIVERY; or approvec
Augusta, March 31, 1875, 51?6 m
i -?' : ,
THE E4STH
ATLANTA BtJSffiK
ATLAIfTk, Oj
IS AN INSTITUTION FOR ?
YOUNG- MEN.^pTOT
The best mode of Instruction everadbmed in tl
* -?! Uiiainc
jourse or 9tuay eDrapnswcvtij >01^ --^,^...
(junking Operations, by the great systeSfi^Bf Actu
Keeping in all its various methods, Bu&& bs Fort
Writing, Correspondence, Co m mercialrfthme t i
Settlements, Detecting Counterfeit ^cEhey, Bi
Taught at The Eastmak - ^tlant
THE ONLY SCHOOL, IN
Actual Busin
No Vacatiions. Students can enter any tiui
neus 01 jrenmaDsuip, <xu., auuicoo,
DETt
Box 398, Corner Peaektree and'Dec.
23, 1874 37-tf
WALLER & B
MERCHANT
GREENWOOE
4RE now offering to the public in their new
line of all the Goods generally needed in th
THEIR STOCK
UMlf.Ix?
have been selected with great care, anc
READY - MADE
1 FINE SXUUii UJ)' jbuu
A good assortment
Groceries, Hardware, Crockery
which the attention of purchasers is Invited.
WALLER &
Feb. 19, 1873, 45-tf
Barnwell
Are now prepared to exhibet to their f
(VS CHEAP A STOCK OF GOO
BROUGHT TO THIS
consisting of
3TAPLE DRY GOODS,
CLOTHING &
ALSO
PROVISIONS & G
IN GREAT YAI
BACON Ai\D SALT,
SYRUP AND MOLAS
FLOUR
ALWAYS ON HAND AT THI
Oct. 7, 1874 26-tf
Masonic Directory. MflTI
Clinton Mp No. 3. A. F. K
W. H. PARKER, W.\ M.\
J. C. WOSMANSKY, Secretary. _
? , , ? , mnntl, _ T
MCCtS Zll MO 11Uay in evuij uivmu,
ffesperian Chapter No. 17. E. A. M.
I. F. C. DuPRE, M.\ E.\ H.\ P.*. ff^HE
J. I). CHALMERS, Recorder. C.
Meets 3d Friday night in every month, hereby i
to the ui
DeSaosssre Council Jo. 1614 S. M.before a
J. T. ROBERTSON, T.\ 111.-. M.\ Bf
JNO. G. EDWARDS, Recorder.
Meets 1st Tuesday night in every month.
May 5, 1875-ly
May l!
CUNNINGHAM ^
& TEMPLETON
Will re
Have on hand
SALMON, SPB
OYSTERS,
TOMATOES,
CRANBERRIES,
PEACHES, TAWl
PINEAPPLE, XJXXW
C. C. PICKLE, . ,
SARDINES, is now b
SEAFOAM, [cheaper
EXT. LEMON, EMP(
and DESSICATED COCOANUT ,,
May l:
A splendid article of 1WIT T1
rEA, (Green and Black)1U1LU
A rp
X
Cunningham & Templeton's.
* J HA\
* J. MI J
j'anningham & Tcmpletoii KieSfw'
styles ar(
ARE SELLING AT ??<! all I
purchasi
0 4T^ -? HUB "Customer
S3 JL eontinua
a beautiful stocl^of
Iwiss Eton. InsertiDff anfl PolndM
CALL AND EXAMINE.
April 28, 1875, 3-tf March
Miles' Gaiters,
A LL sizes, just made to order and for
JL sale, at the EMPORIUM OF n ,
"ASHIONS. [April 28, 1875. (j 0UI11
rames A. Richardson, rwinE
A ers
Attorney at Law, the thir<
month fo
AND of teache
m i -r 0f each 1
Trial Justice, other bus
mmmmn c, h? s. g.
June 30, 1875, 12-4qi June 2,
L STORE!] 2
;hes*varnish, putty, 0T1T
DOW GLASS, &e., Ac., &c. \P J
I City acceptance.
GEO, ?. CONNOR, .0
son Street,. Near Bell Tower.
[AN
5S COLLEGE jjgg
1D-UCATIXG To Owl
I BUSINESS. l0"ea'?t
lis or any other country. Th
sssand Finance, from Retail to
al Business Instruction. Book '4hk
ns. Termfl and LTsacres. Business /. :i ?
e, Commercial Law" Partnership
isiness Biography, thoroughly
a Business College,
condueted on the
oss Plan
''or College Journal, SpeciL
inrt??lMi?m "iff.
Line Streets .'Atlanta. Ga.
... j -a -v
ROTHER,
a Am preparec
0 atbove gc
^ inducem
'j U# v?j
and handsome building, [a^ful
euuiuiunitj* -
ggg j "El
[ unusually attractive.
CLOTHING.
TS AND SHOES.
of
, and Glassware. TADA
Give us a call. tJalli
BROTHER. *
Is now cr
price and
riends and the public
DS AS WAS EVER
MARKET, 1S/L:
who can
is ready t
HATS,
BOOTS & SHOES, _Aprii7
ROCERIES a
3IETY. ^
iFES, T\m
,, MEAL AND GRIST
2 LOWEST PICEES
ICE TO CREDITORS Wcl
OF furnish
can offej
mm & Lindsay.
Creditors of the late firm of
ANNON & LINDSAY are
equired to present tbeir claims "VfTT
udersigned, properly approved,
le 15th day of June next.
jnj. S. Barnwell,
Assignee.
a, 1875. Call e;
'he Ladies^ Ql
April
member our elegant stock of
1ING MILLINERY U
AND rp HE i
Si ticc
CY BUY 600BS buildi;
eing offered at cash prices and COTTOJ
than ever before, at the
DRIUM OF FASHION.
~> 1H7S A^fun^i
**? *v.v.
ttinajouu
WERY! MILLINERY! S3'
MILLINERY!
rE now a well selected Stock o
jLTNEKY which I will be ?
o exhibit to my friends, custoid
the public generally. The July 15,
-- ' ?'mi/I irarv nrptf.V.
? UIlVi I Uiy ucn ??uv? J-. ,
ask is to give me a call before tj A P'j'fl'f
ng elsewhere. Thanking my linlLilii
s for j>ast favors, and asking a
nee of the same.
m, very respectfully, IR
D M ifiiiTr TS
i III I Jill if 111 I Ui J?'y 2i
" is7-'. 5i-tf New Natj
Meetings TkURA
OF B ? the
never wet
y Commissioners. it so ar
tension cai
Board of County Commission- uVITi For
will meet from this date on bed knowi
I and fourth Saturdays of each can "e ma<
r the especial accommodation T T\
rs, and on the second Saturday
nonth for the transaction pf May 26,
iness. ~~
ROBERT JONES,
Chairman. nau<
1875, 8-^f
ifcr
|S?^|!|
-# 'viitf m&mm
T?? .11. II i ill
millin:
IN CHARGE Ol
[SS JANE
-,o:
friends ancf fibs public generally are r<
amine our stock of MILLINERY AI
i this season to offer tike largest a
>ods at the lowest prices. To cash bu
ente. Consult your interest and look
jr. T. FLo
7,1875, 52-tf
HFORIDM OF
SPR.IMG,
OUE SPRING STO(
millinery, Dre*
rn>i V flTT.lTS WHITE
UJUkJJU UAAIUIJj VIIU?1J
;arfs, Ruches, Neck Bib1
PARASOLS, TRIMMINGS, AND LADIE
iraplete in every department, and we w<
numerous friends and the public genera
stylish goods. Special attention is dire
MILLINE]
SELECTED BY
ESS KATE
assure her numerous lady friends, has al
o please the most fastidious. Iiespectl
JAS.
Proprietor
1875, 52-tf
0ARIES &=
vf. ' ' *
HAVE RECEIVED THEIR N1
i (40!UN; niIT
L V-J \J V_/ JLJ \*/ JL*A \^s JLShoes,
Notio]
)Cg leave to inform our friends
onr Goods at the YERY LOW.
r special iuduoemeuts to purchaser:
CLOTHI
ALSO A NEW LO
ES SHOES,
LADIES WALKIIS
A.ISTD LAD.
arly with the cash and get supplied
iarles &
7,1875, 52-tf
RPENTRY. w!
N
indersigned hereby gives no- -AU
that lie is prepared to do all
CARPENTER'S WORK aud MM *
S*G. He algo repairs - el ling
N GINS, THRESHERS
* n a utc? p j
iil\ U X AiY o.
ipply of GIN MATERIAL Tca'cf'
hand. Farmers are requested
leirGins up early in the seao\v
time to have them properly
ent for the Taylor Cotton Gin,
s Cotton Press, and all kinds (
aud leathei belting.
D. B. SMITH,
Lbbeville c. h? s. c. pr"nj;'?,
1874 14-Gm <
t'S CHERRY BITTERS. &#?
AND Sugc
oisr tojstic.
are good preparations. q}
reek & perrin.
3 lG-tf FI]STE C
I
ATTAM 11/"I nO 1/Tft
iwiiii r?uvcu mrcMiirsss. ALSOi
BLE, Elastic, Noiseless, and PL?y
most perfect Spring Bee),
irs out or gets out of order. , p
ranged with bolts that the (1
n be let out or taken up at V.?,
sick persons they are the best '
l. Cooler than any other and At LOV
ie soft or hard. For sale at jjec jg
Chalmers & Co. JJj<j
1875, 7-tf
)R BRACKETS ? new and *
Isome styles, just to hand. /
J. D. CHALMERS & CO. /poo.-3
' * ". * v.*"/* *
"V ' " FV*
? ^ ^ .f: ,*v. Tp
pS, CLOTHING, 1
WoOtoS, AC. 1
pose to offfer our gooda at the
an-sr a
RAMET! fl
aspectfully invited to call and ?9H
W FANCY GOODS. We am H
nd most eoarptete etoekofthe
yorfr we propose to offer great
before parcbwimg elsewhere*. JH|
berts on. ifl
FASHION."!
18751 j
ss Goods, .1
goods, muslins,
bons, Jet Goods, fl
S GOODS GENERALLY, 111
juld respectfully solictlt a call^jKBB
illy, assuring satisfaction aa to ? H
cted to our elegant stook of
1 the latest styles in marke&HH^|jS|
A. BOWIE, m
Emporium of FashiolM
II ?i\ u, iiii i MjM jg
as, &c. 9
'0m
tliaf we are now prepared to E|!i
EST CASH PRICES. We "W
5 Of |
jsrc3rm
TG SHOES, I
IES' GAITERS. 3 !
' ' ciH
Perrin. j
A. LIMBECKER,
INETY SIX,
>-1. 1L . /~kT Tl
movea into uie kjxjxj vu*vr r\,; a
'ER STORE,; where he ia now ' \
n, Lard, Corn Meal
our, Bice, Siifar, Cofee,
classes, Syrup,
'se, Mackerel,
Macaroni, Mince Meat,
Family Soaps,
Toilet Soaps,
~ated Lye, Pickles,
lines, Salmon,
Canned Oysters,
Potted Meats,
Canned lYuits,
Brandied Fruits,
Jellies, Citron, Jjf
Raisins, Figs,
hjc8, Apples, Cocoanuts,
Confectioneries of every des~. . jjr
cription,
OE AJSD VARIED LOT OF <
Sugar Fruits, and
ir Toys, Almonds, Peacan Nuis, W.
Brazil Jtfuts, Filberts, . V5;
tfoda, Starch for the Laundry.
D?f/7/7iMiyo
VW/ /* Uiw/ U? JL UUU((?^Q|
IACKERS, of all Kinds,
FIREWORKS,
,'pEWING AND SMOKING'
TOBACCO,
Segars and Pipes.
D Kentucky RYE and Bourbon
HISKY, Pure Mountain CORN
Y, Wheat WHISKY, Apple
ch BRANDY, Holland GIN,
BRANDY, WINES, of all
t Prices, for Cash Only,
1S74 tr
\
1 Cottage Bedsteads
eoeived, at the lowest prices ^
J. D. CHALMERS & CO, Jg