University of South Carolina Libraries
BY W. W. & W. R. BRADLEY. ABBEVILLE, S. C., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 27 1905. ESTABLISHED 1844 WAltHINC ThE OLD YEAR OUT. j The CBfitom Once Common In New Emc land Has X??j!y Panned Away. { An old f;>shioned "watch night" in j New England or the middle states was nntil recently one of the institutions of I u this country. The keen, frosty air of the j a early evening bore upon its crystalline ; and twinkling depths the sound of nu- I " merous strings of sleighbells converging ' M at the church. The well loaded cutters j j1 ' and the crowded sleighs hissed through ' the creaking snow, that stamped off ' with loud emphasis at the porch door, | announced the arrival of each load. The j interior of the church, heated to al :ost \ n a point of discomfort by big stoves, still J h retains the decorations put up when the j ^ Christmas tree did service before its re- j *movaL The usual chatter and gossip j E soon subside. A solemn hush falls over , tl the assembly, and when the first hymn j n is given out it is sung with more hearty j '' uplift of tone than usual The prayer is : I' more fervent than usual, and the an- g them that follows it is more like a dirga j o The young elder, who is presern. [ tl preaches an address, the tones of which i " fall on all hearts with a sadness that be- j " gets repentunce. No such theme as this si finds expression at any other portion of j V the year, "We all do fade as a leaf." u and then he closes with Longfellow'* k mournful words: t< . Howl, howl, and from the forest Q Strip the red leaves away. is , Would the Bias that thou abhorest, O soul, could thus decay And be swept away I " Eyrie eleison! Christie eleison! C< More singing, more prayers, all isstinct | b with earnestness, and then a shril,: C voiced girl recites Prentice's "Dying C( r,ear," n 'Tis midnight's holy hour, etc. tl Another Tennyson's "Old Year," ther a comes a breathless waiting, and the bell ^ ? o -lATT^tio u A mon !" k fnl. ? QUJACO) TTUQU U JVJVUO *1 HIV** -w. lowed by a burst of song that every one tl . joiiw in.?Chicago Tribune. a ^ . - si New Year Fairjes In Wales. Among the Welsh people fairies are kno..n by the name of "y tylwyfli teg," which means the fair folk cr family, c j\nd are believed to have remarkable j privileges on New Year's eve, at which | time they are said to be rampant and to P possess unusual power. They are thought, e' to have a great fondness for children, | G and woe.betide the fond mother who |d has in any way offended the tylwytli teg 01 daring the now dying year. Lot such a ^ mdthfcr watch carefully and unceasinglv: b pt the cradle where her darling lies b sleeping on New Year's eve, for if she tl fails to do so the malicious fairies will fi come in her absence and steal away the to child and susbetitute for it a "plentyn j ? neuid," or changling, who, though itj ei " " * * ? - X a. I ri may at nrst De too exact eoumerpars uj j u 9 the stolen little one, will scon alter in- j n. to a frightful looking, shrunken, paling ^ 9 brat, not nnfrequently becoming idiotic, tl ?New York World. e I Debts Settled on New Tear's. 1] 9 ' On New Year's eve in Japan handfnla! g I of beans are thrown about the rooms and ! It 9 over the threshold to exorcise evil spirits ' r< H vho may be about. b S Before the new year the merchants ti I endeavor to get in all the mcney that is j n 9 owed to them and to pay or settle their j b own debts. As a conscquence man; ; fi things can be bought very cheaply at th? j a Bend of the year, for ready money is the h Kgreat desideratum. Men carrying trays j Kef something looking like white worms gBd through the streets crying, "Soba. ; < Httoba 1" the Japanese form of macaroni, j S jRvhich, eaten with soy sauce, is a fa- I < |9 \)rite delicacy with the coolies and j & juriksha men. For their little customers | ^Kgt.ese men make all sorts of figures of, "1 ^Bd'vils, gods and animals from this SHp^te. ?Exchange. 88 ? | French Canadian Jour de I/an. C fl| * child prostrate before its father ask-, B- ingfor his blessing on a New Year's te am mmiinn TWio i a a trmipnl pnotnm 1 t? 4.U4D ++ VJ | amcog the French Canadians of the1 v< provuce of Quebec, and nndoubtedly t retailed by French Canadians now resident a New England and other parts uf this republic. The head of the fumily rises early New Year's morning, renews the ftrt on the hearth and in the stoves, and, stating himself in an armchair within the shadows of the Yule log, watches the embers and awaits the first of his ofspring to ask for the paternal blessing cn the glorious "jour de l'an." ?Boston GHoba Bead the Bible New Tear's Moraine. ' In many ? Welsh household the first thing that is done by each member of the family an rising on New Year's morning is to consult the family Bible with a view to learning from it what the coming year hae in store for the person seeking the information. This is done by reading the first verse upon which the eye falls, and the verse in Auestion is believed to foretell in some way the good or ill fortune, the happiH uess or unhappiness, during the just beHgun new year of the person making th? B trial ?Exchange. V ?w Tear Bells. V Of all Bounds, of all bells most sol emu and touching is the peal which Brings out the old year. 1 never hear it ^Kvithont a gathering np of iny mind to concentration of all the images that ^fcavobeen diffused o^er the past f.vslveSgflkinth. I begin to know the worth ol ffiEHat regretted time, as when a person p ?Charles Lamb. p a g?jg Tbe Haglo Boll. G old year 1? ciead, and hoary haired time BK High in the belfry Is tolling his knell nS^frram the phantom rim of a magic bell, n SflK&nd the world la swayed by its mystic chime d ooj-t h in the Donderous tongue that swings f fflBfcp-the tower of time. The cathedra] dim fl the universe, aud the bell's huge rim (] the ether blue as It rings and rings. ^ ehirnes are the passions that sway men'a tJ gK souls? ' 0 ^ That tempt and inspire them. The thought, ,, the deed, this New Tear's eve from the earth dros> 6 freed, Ms^kaiiiighty vibration upward rolls, ? BgHHPVoshed are the voioes around ths throne H^KScht) Great Creator receives his own. e Hfflf ? Petroit Free Preea. (j wmi CHRISTMAS IN JAMAICA. Tropical Celebration With Sani "Chidm Left' Oat. , The white people of Jamaica ccl rate Christmas in spirit rather than etlve observance. Of course San iaus is unknown here, for wnat wou [ris Kringle do in his fur raiment ar itli his reindeers in a laud where fe ideed of the people know what sno ; and fewer still ever saw it Outdo* port is out of the question, and ev< iwn tennis cannot be substituted f ie skating and tobogganing of tl ortu. The white people sit or swii 1 hammocks under the cool shade < lie palm trees and look with curioi iterest over the holiday numbers i InRlish and American magazines, wii lieir strange pictures of snow scenf nd read the stories of Christmastii 1 the land of Kris Kringle and Jac 'rest. After sundown there are soci atherings. at which the guests sit o n the verandas, eat ice cream, fa aemselves and while away the eve ]g with conversation and in th; sweet doing nothing" way that uch a feature of life in the tropic ery many of the white people of J laica were born in the island and i now nothing of the Christmas cu jms of the north. But there are al: uite a number of Americans and Bri ihers here, and these try various wa; > get up a semblance of Christmas, b : is like the crew of a polar expedite elebrating Fourth of July while ic ound In the Arctic circle, and the hristmas is mostly one of remini ence. Still wintering in the tropics ot without its compensating advai iges. and although Christmas here pt to be a pretty lonesome time .mericans, they are very apt to fir ause for congratulation after the fe ye season is' over in the fact that th< re safe from the cold, the snow, tl lush and the blizzards of the north. YULETIDE IN AUSTRIA. utoma and Legenda of the Noi German Population. Yuletide as kept by the non-Germs opulation of Austria is very pictu sque. On Christmas day the Poles : falicia first attend mass and then e ov/n to family supper. The chief dis a the table contains consecrated egg "hlsii the father distributes. After ea lg, all eyes are closed and all hea< owed dotvn to the table in the beli jat Jacob's ladder is then deseendir :om heaven to ?artb and down tl idder angels are coming to bless tl -orshiperj and to carry away the arthly troubles to heaven. Among tl zechs the legend runs that he wl inst strii'tlv fnsta nn Christmas ei rill see the holy Christ in his drean iat night. In the evening the real c< bration begins. All lights are th( languished in the house; no fire, i ght is visible. The children crowd t ether in fear and remain perfectly ? int. as otherwise they know they w! iceive none of the presents broqgl y the Christ Child and laid at the e: ance of the house. The older f lales amuse themselves by throwiD eated lead into water and gatberic om the forms it assumes some hii s to the appearance of their futui usbands.?Pittsburg Dispatch. CHRISTMAS MENUS WVWWVWWVVVVVWWVW rHE housewife will find no bett< suggestions for the Christine spread than are contained in tt following. The menus have hristmas flavor and are cosmopolita i their makeup. They are planned fc in nr mnrp npnnlp hut fnr n smfl imilj7 the fish course and some of tl egetables and sweets could be omi (d: MENU NO. L Oyster Cocktails. Julienne Soup. Olives. Celery. Salted Almonda. Broiled Smelts, Tartar Sauce. Parisienne Potatoes. Roast Turkey, Stuffed with Truffles. Oyster Brochettes. Spinach. Macaroni Croquettes. Lettuce Salad. Plum Pudding Glace. Mince Tarts. Small Cakes. Bonbona Nuts. Coffee. MENU NO. 2. Oysters on the Half Shell Clear Tomato Soup. Celery. Olives. Salted Pecans. Boiled Rock, Egg Sauce. Potato Cakes. Roast Turkey, Stuffed with Chestnut* Cranberry Jelly. Glblet Sauce. Brussels Sprouts. Sweet Potato Croquettea Grape Fruit Salad. Crackers. Cheese. English Plum Pudding. Frozen Fruit Cup. Bonbons. Cakes. Nuts. Coffee. menu no. 3. Oysters on the Half ShelL Consomme. T>? Jl.U/vn On1tA/) T7<<1V. ivautsuco. Daiicu ftiuciio. Jalibut Cutlets on Toast, Lemon Sauw Roast Goose, Savory Stuffing. Giblet Gravy. Jellied Apples. Hashed Browned Potatoes. Lemon Ginger Sherbet. Celery Salad. Crackers. Cheese. Pium Pudding, Rum Sauce. Fruits. Nuts. Bonbons. Coffee. All of these dinners are easily pr ared. The soups are light and sic le, but must be perfectly seasons nd perfectly free from grease. Nearl very. one now prefers the Christmj jrkey stuffed with truffles or cbes uts and has a favorite recipe for th elicaey, so it is unnecessary to sa nything on this subject If this nob ird is to appear on the table, put ouble row of nut meats down h reast, to button up his brown coat ! *ue military fashion, and let him re n a bed of celery and parsley leave; 'be Christmas goose, eelebfated ! ong aud story, is not very well know n this side of the water. The turk< ired palate will welcome the appea nee of the goose, cooked by this re pe, on the board.?Cincinnati Enquire . * BKt.AS.> i Xo Opium in chamberlain's Cony ? ta K?mnly. There is not the least datger in vi eling Chamberlain's Cough Remedy in small children as it contains no opiu ta or other tjarmfu'l drug. Jt has au e Id tablis-hed reputation of more than til id ty yeare as ihe most successful med w cme in use for colds, croup and who< itig con<;h. It always cures ?nd pleasant to take. Children like i or Sold hv C. A. Milford and H. 5 Young, Due Weal, or mtm le ig Our store will be open ui of til 10 o'clock p. m. throug Jjj Xmas Holidays. P. Roser th burg & Co. !S, . . , , ie ;k Furiuii* Klghtine. a! "Eor seven years," writes Geo. V ut JHoffinad, of Harper, Wash., "I had in hitter buttle, with chronic stooiacli au n- liver trouble, but at last I won. an at cured uiy diseases, by the use of Elec is ric Bitters. I unhesitatingly recon >g mend them to all, and don't inteE a> in the future to be without them i the house. They are certain'y a woi derful medicine, to have cured such ls bad case as mine." Sold under gua 30 antee to do the same for you, by P. 1 it; Sp<ed, druggist, at 50c a bottle. Tr ?s tlJem today. nf : . jn ' e It will be well worth you gr time to investigate our lin ia of men's $10 suits, a- We claim to save you $2.5< 19 ou these goods. P. Eoser ,2 berg & Co/ . :S ? : J- In Mad Ch?He. ' je Millions rus-h in mad cha^e afn health, from ono stream of faddism I another, when, if they would only fi s?ood food; nnd keep their bowls reg lar with Dr. Kings New Life Pill their troubles would all pa*s awa; Prompt relief and quick cure for liv< in and stomach trouble. 25c at P. 1 r- Speed drug store ; guaranteed. in - - m m m . lit >b A. M. Smlta'H Locals. Christmas Is most here. Don't forest th t- wn tire headquarters for holiday goods of a Jg tlD.lfi. Rf Cbolee line of Drummer's samplesJnst i celved and opened up. C?ll and *aye tuone '6 Nothlnz* better for Christmas than 01 ie line of aiter-dlnner crflVe cups. ie Get our prices on hour, meal, corn and he beloreyou buy. Shoes, shoes to wear. See our line of Drei ie shoes before yon buy. 1C See our line of China for Wedding ai 7e CbrNtmas presents. North Carolina Blankets all prices. il >n 10 You Get the B 5- E.M.HA1 q. Our Holiday Equipment is ] ig are Rtady for the Final Rush. '? Recent addition to our 8toc it ' offer new v?ritiea all over the st MILLINERY. Midwinte coming Hats of tne season. H Special Pric > DRESS OOODS. All kin< S ious taste. Special prices on goc I SILKS FOR CHRISTMAS n shades. Special, an odd lot of [a 2oc. yd. ie NEW FURS just in by Exp a prices up to $12.50. A Dice line D Special Christmas Rug Sale U from, All prices. : R. M. HAI Notice to' For the Purpose of A< lie in the matter < Returns, I Wil Mcni inn^rl i.TJLVJll 1V1IVU Dates in Sc ALL RETURNS MUST BE Ml t> both Person&l and Real letumed a Persons not making their returns 20tb. 19dC, are liable to.a penalty of 5 against delinquents; ft.r the fuiluie ou neghct of the.law. Theleiurns of 1 fore the Township and CVunty Boarc in after the meeting of the Board-* an mentofthis 50 percent, penalty wil Employers are lequet-ted to retur and geuir g abatement of their propi Re urns will uol be laken by ma nvfiimr a. o This being the year for the assc 1(j quested to refer to thejr piats or titles ? My Appointments ar< Calhonu Fulls, Tuesday and Wt< iy Lowudesville, Thuisda.v and Fri< le Mt. Carmel, Tuesday, January h a Willirgton, Wednoday, Jauuarj *8 Bordeaux, Thursday, January IS McConnick, Friday and Saturda Donalds, Mouday and Tuesday,. [D Due West, Wednesday at:(l Thur n OlTice open fiom Jauuary 1st to I r RIC o-j * .4 ;h Land ior Sale. 5G0 acres of the best land in the Flat woods. Apply to v- J. S. Norwood, Dresden, S. C. to . m " "" " ' lExecutor'sSale i. Of Valuable L Valuable Real iEstate - / By authority conferred in and by the . a st will and testament of the late T. k L. Haddon, deceased, we will sell to * the highest bidder.at the late resi'U dence of deceased, his entire real estate, consisting of about eight hunij" dred acres of valuahle lands on Wedj nesday, the 27th day of December, lU 1905. These lands are located about ten a miles west of Abbeville and Ave or r- six.miles south west of Due West, S. i. C. v They will be subdivided into three or more tracts, plats of which willjbe exhibited on day ot sale. Terms cash. Purchaser to pay for papers. . Mrs. E. A. Haddon, Extx. P. P. Carwile, Executor, e December 5, 1905. 0 Master's Sale. I-1STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, County of Abbeville. Court of Cpmmon Pleas. Walter K. Ellis, et al againsft Paul B. Ellis, ei al?Partition &c. ' /? ,? <'j . to By authotity of-a .Decree of Sale by at the,Court of Common Pleas for Abbeu ville County, in said State, made in a, the above stated case, I wtljl offer for y. nale, at Public Outcry, at Abbeville C). er H., S.C., on T^uee-i, Sal.esday iu Jan. 2, 3. A.D. 1906, withui the legal hours of sale the following described land, to'wit: All that tract or pafCt4 ol land situate, lyiugand being in Abbeville County, in the K'ate .aforesaid, containing ONE HUNDRED AND NINETY at SEVEN ACRES,- -more or Je*H, and ill bounded by lands of/D. H. Baldwin, B. L. Lipford, W. R, Duuu, John M. T" Rodgers and other*. Terms of Sale-^-One-halr' Ca*h, balance on credit of twelve months securiy ed by bond of purchaser pud and mortgage of the premises, with interest 88 from day of sale?with leave to purchaser to pay all Cash, purchaser tr ld pay for papers and Recording. L. W. PERRIN, Dec. 12, '05. ' Master A. C , 8. C. est Values From m & co. Sxteusive aud Attractive and We k of Holiday Goods enables us to ore. r fashions portrayed in the most teres This Week Is and prices to suit the most fa&tid)ds for evening wear. ,'in all that is new and stylish, all Silks that were $1.50 aud $1, now ivsa and they are haudaome ones of Fur Sets for young folks. and some pretty patterns to select >DON & CO. rax-Payers. t. scommodatingthe Pab>f making Their Tax 1 Visit the Places Below on the Indicated jhedule. ^DE UNDER OATH, AND ALL proper .t its true market value. 3 between January 1st, 1A06, and February 0 percent. This pen'.ity will be enforcec to i ufoice it heretofore lias put a premiun. hose who conform to the law are placed be 1?-, while those who disregard the law com* d return to suit themselves. Theenforce1 correct this evil. n all their employees after notifying then: erty. ii unlesp they are sworn to before somt ssment of Real Estate, Tax-Payers are re i and feet correct number of uerea. e as follows: inesday, January 9 ard 10. day, January 11 aud 12. B. r 17. y, January 19 and 20. January 22 and 23. sday, January 24 and 2o. February 20th inclusive. "HARD SONDLEY, County Auditor. - . THE DAY'S EYtz. . ?1 C O marguerites! ; ^ Virginal marguerites! |s How your hillside home, from the sky to tte nrer, Shone in the summer heats, ? With each of your silver selves a*quiver, Beautiful marguerites! A hundred thousand hearts of gold To greet the opening day, ^ A hundred thousand at night to fold . Vj In silver leaves away. O marguerites! Delicate marguerite*! Opal hued petals, fringed and fine, Umber hearts with the scent of pine, You tangle across the autumn's path, r You nod at her from the limestone ledg?; A part of her beautiful aftermath You leave to the brown brook's edge, Or, lost in the heart of the cedar wood* You scatter intangible sweets To woo her steps to your solitudes, Beautiful marguerites! ?Fannv K. Johnson in Youth's Companion. , LOGICAL ARRANGEMENT OF THOUGHT p A Couple of Illustrative Incidents In a Preacher's Experience. The appended anecdotes concerning the late President Robidson are given to the public as too characteristic and too good to he lost. They are from the recollections of the Rev. Dr. A. J. Sage: "Once in the classroom Dr. Robinson was expatiating on the importance of careful logical arrangement of thought in disconrse, when he drew the following illus- i tration from hiff own experience: 'Once, ] i when I was preaching, a peouliar inoident i occurred. I had gone through m/lntroi duction and first division, when my memory failed me. I could not recall my second division, but instead of it came up the , . first point of the application. After vainly m trying to recall the missing head, I stated m to the congregation that for a special reason I would pass at onoe to the application. I did so, aud when I had discussed the first point, the missing part of my dis- A 1 course camo ba$k to me and I went ^ 1 " * ' -?? *--1 A inrougn 11) ail WlbllUUU luruuot ualuuuivj. On reaohing home I set myself down to inquire the meaning of this inoldent, when I discovered that that which I had planned as the first point of my application should have been really the second division of the '"sermon. The mind in the activity of ' speaking had boen more loyal to its own principles than I had permitted it to be in the.toll of preparation.' "The doctor was speaking to the class on the importance .of keeping the mind ! free from preoccupying and disturbing : thoughts when about to speak extempore. He 6aid: 'I was on my way to preach one Sanday morning, absorbed in my discourse, when a gentleman met me who said. "Have you heard that is going ] to marry Miss P" mentioning two per- rr sons In whom I was Interested, whose marriage would be particularly unsuit- rr atjle. The suggestion took possession of A my mind, and In spite of my best efforts * I could not get rid. of It. All through my l*sermon my thoughts were full of the ^ i / haunting idea of that unfortunate mlsal- U llanoe. My discourse was a failure. You may imagine that my feeling toward the source of tills ill timed information was not exceedingly amiuble. I oould have helped him over a tall fenoe.'"?New ( York Examiner. ? Sabftltntes For H?y. It is not an unusual occurrence that tlx weather in the spring is so dry that the bay crop is short or an almost total failure. It is strange that some way cannot be devised for irrigating at least a sufficient amount of tillable land to insure the farmer a good hay crop. There is no ration that will take the place of this, and the facilities for making sure of it are anything but satisfactory. Every farmer should set apart a certain portion of bis yy low land for hay. * In wet weather he ie f likely to have a good crop anyway, and in dry times a well cared for field of low land will do much to bridge over the time between late autumn and early spring, when there Is nothing whatever out of M doors for stock to eat. The practice of sowing millet, sorghum, cowpeas or crimson clover late in the season, when the Indications are that fall pasture will be poor, and that the hay crop is altogether unsatisfactory, is becoming .general. Cornstalks may be cut as soon as the ears B are ripe. The earlier they are cut the more nutritious they are and the more valuable for feeding. As a rule, farmers give too little attention to cornstalks, which, when nroDerly cured, are among the most useful ? of food products for stock, especially so in the absence of an abandanoe of good hay. Rye makes a good crop, but rtiacid never ? be fed to cows that are giving milk, as it Imparts an unpleasant Savor to the milk and is by many persons considered un- j wholesome.?New York Ledger. The Mind anil Action. I once asked a class of 16 girls to think Intently wh<\t it would feel like to lift the right hand and touch the left shoulder. After a few tnlnutes bad elapsed nine of , them confessed having felt a desire to do it. I then dropped the subjeot and spoke of something else. In a few moments six aotually did it. Most persons when oon* centrating attention upon the thought of what a given movement would feel like, find themselves becoming possessed of a desire to do it, and this desire marks the tendency of the thought to produce the movement. But as we not only feel but also see our movements, we find that tlio thought of what a movement looks like . has also motor value and tends to produce it. This is also true of touohes and ideas of touch?indeed all or nearly all mental | ' states produce some motor chnngos in the I body, but the motor effeots of sensations and ideas of sound, taste and smell are rel' atively slight.?Professor W. R. New bold In Popular Scienoe Monthly, j , London Restaurant*. In London we are now in advance of Paris in the 'matter of restaurants. To 1 cite only one, the Savoy, not only Is the cooking better, but the comfort and the > surroundings are superior to anything ig Paris. Wonderful is the progress that has been made. When I was a young man, ihere were literally no restaurants in London?nothing but the Blue Posts, or the Hummums in Covont Garden, and similar places, where the dinner was of the old fashioned British inn type.?London Truth. A man nevor realizes the superiority of WUIUUU 5JU J1JUUM US YViJUIJ X1U 10 SOVV4U5 Ul4 a button without a thimble, pushing the needlo against the wall to get it half way through and pulling it through the other half by hanging on to it with his teeth. Nothing is rich but the Inexhaustible wealth of nature. She shows us only sur- j I faces, but she is million fathoms deep.? Emerson. The Egyptians used pcncils of colored J chalk, and several of these ancient orayons ' have been found in their tombs, ~ ;/> - - Samples, Samples, Samples W. D. BARKSDALE. rreat Big Bargains opening up now- Two : lines of Drummers5 Samples at prime Bal-: ' ^ timor9 Cost, consisting of OR MEN: 4 Suspenders, Handkerchiefs, Gloves, both knit jw> kid, Work Shirts, Dress Shirts, Ties, Cravats,Underwear, Woolen Socks, Shirts and Sweaters, at Baltimore Cost. * ^ or indies ana Uliilclren: Underwear, Skirts, Knit Goods, Combs, Handket^ -, chiefs, Krl Gloves, Woolen Gloves, Hoois, ShaKrl*;. Woolen and Silk Belts, Fancy Collars, Hose both woolen and cotton, Baby Caps, Waists, Union Suits, &c., at Baltimore Cost; w. d. barksiMlb 3ret the Best^? "The Chattanooga.*' 'his is the time to use the Middle Breaker, 'he Chattanooga is the only Sub-soil and liddle Breaker combined. Two plows tie price of one. Abbeville Hardware Co. SOUTHERN RAILWAY, The South's Greatest System. . nexcelled Dining Car Service. ^ . . ; ' ' Through Pullman Sleeping Cars on all Through Trains. Convenient Schedules on all Local Trains. 'M J inter Tourist Hates are now in effect on all Florida Points , " fy For full information as to rates, routes, etc., consult nearest Southern , ; ailway Ticket Agent, or nAATro ^ifADP A AT T? W TTTTN'T ' vi luc u^ol iuubvw ?? j>- ? est you. i M. HILL & SONS. Phones 36 and 126. Main and Trinity Streets. t i v IWWXYO iu.vsxv\jr.Axi, xv. ^ w r i > Asst. Gen. Pass. Agent, / Division Pass. Agent, % . f4^|: Atlanta, Ga. Charleston, ?f. C. , -" ?/ * ?y|< ? f 'ft HAVE YOU LEARNED ' TO BUY THE BEST? _____? IT PAYS. The school pf experience will teach you, as it has taught us. that the best goodfe are the cheapest. . Our store house is new, Our goods are new, Our reputation is well known, Our motto is "THE BEST." - '7^ Delicious Fruits, ? imw??i?i?? ,?l' Fancy Groceries To fit the taste of an epicure. Confections of all kinds. Buggies and Wagons f\a nuiroo at nrioea that will inter