Edgefield advertiser. (Edgefield, S.C.) 1836-current, September 24, 1885, Image 2
THOS. J. ADAMS, PROP'R. J EDGEFIELD, S. C~ iipSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1:885- _ i VOL L.-NO. 42.
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PRINTER'S INK IS KING.
There is a host of men who boast
Of powder, cotton, steam ;
Bat every hour the mighty power
Of printer's ink is seen.
It moves tho world as easily
Aa does some mighty thing,
And reen proclaim in despots' ears
That printer's ink is king !
Tho man of gold, of wealth untold,
Printer's ink may scorn,
Or knit his brow, nor deign to bow
To one so lowly born ;
But printer's ink has built its throne
Where minds their tributes bring,
And Clod's most gifted intellects
Shout printer's ink is king I
King of thc world of thought, relined,
No abject slave it claims ;
Where superstition's victims pine,
It bursts their servile chains.
In every clime, in coming years,
Will mon proud anthems sing,
And round the world the echoes float,
That printer's ink is king !
Sam Jones' Tent.
Cloth to Cover Vive Thousand People
to be Spread on Greene Street
Preparing tor the National
Holiness Campuieetlng.
Augusta Evening News.
The.Sam Jones tent will be brought
to Augusta in a few weeks and spread
in the vacant lot in front of St John's
Methodist Church fer the great Octo
ber meeting.
This tent will hold five thousand
people, and its dimensions are 100 by
ISO feet. It will be floored and filled i
with seats, and the tent itself is wa
ter-proof. Sam Jones eays he never
knew rain to interfere with religion,
and he has preached to as big crowds
under that tent in the rain as when
the sun was shining. The tent was
constructed while he conducted the
big Nashville revival, and he is now
using it at his old home in Carters
ville.
ThiB tent will be used for the Na
tional Holiness Camp Meeting, which
will open in Augusta on the 3d of
October, and remain in 6ef sion ten
days and perhaps longer People
will come from all over the Union, and
the preparat.ons are about complete
for the session. Visitors wi?l pay their
way, and all who will take boarders
during the meeting should leave their
names at Pendleton's book store. It
in utterly impossible for th? hotels to
accommodate the crowd for there will
be several thousand visitors. It is
hoped, therefore, by those in charge
of the meeting, that ali citizens and
housekeep ?i s who aro willing to board
visitors for a few days will make the
fact known.
The great tent will ba centrally lo
caled near St. Join/.- church, in which
lhove?wbo cannot get seat*, eau ad
journ for special services. The tent
itself is too laige for the space in the
vacant lot, and will extend out in the
street about fifty feet or to the park.
Tho authorities have granted this
permission, and thc immense nfl'dir
and the coming lo the city will be the
centre of interest in the early days of
October.
Pensions.
South Carolina has never we think
been accused of the proverbial in
gratitude of Republics. But it seems
to us sho might wit.h some show of
truth be accused of a degree of negli
gence in that nhe has not made pro
visions for thc care of her disabled
and maimed Confederate soldiers. It
is true that the number is not very
large of this class, who cannot obtain
a livelihood of some sort in this favor
id country. It is true also, that
within a few years thc political condi
tion of the State made it out of the
question, to do more than save the
?State from the clutches of the thieves
and vandals that then bad her in con
trol. It is furthermore true, that not
until quite rcceDtly has the State been
in a financial condition to warrant
her iu assuming the burden of a pen
sion list. But there is PO doubt now
of her prosperity. Our observations
confirm the report ol the statistics
that the State is on the high road of
prosperity.
Daily we eee tome veteran of the
war with an empty sleeve, or a wood
en leg, or who is suffering from the
effects of exposure and wounds, and
we are impressed with the fact that
the State that called upon them for,
and accepted their aid in her hour of
need, should not forget nor neglect
them in her day ot prosperity and
plenty. The widows and orphans of
dead Confederate soldiers need help
that they cannot and will not ask for.
Surely the State will come to their
aid. She owes it to those who gave
their lives and limbs in her defense -
AlbcviUc Messenger.
Such speeches as that of Senator
Sherman a few days ago cannot do
any harm when the antidote of truth
is piomptly applied by newspapers of
his own section. Senator She: man
labored very hard to convince the
people of Ohio that the colored peo
pie in the South are denied the right
to vote, but the Springfield Republi
can reminds him that in the eleven
States which seceded, Mr. Blaine re
ceived 775,000 votes, against Mr.
Cleveland's 1,040,000. "There was
probably some suppression or intimi
dation of tho colored vote in South
Carolina and Mississippi," says the
Republican, "but elsewhere theSouth
never had a fairer election," and Mr.
Cleveland "could have spared both
those States and still have been elect
ed." So it is-at. the Republican says
-"fake and wicked to charge that
he owes his election to crime or
climes."-IVaos and Courier.
The tenacity with which people abide
by their early faith in Ayer's Sarsa
parilla can only be explained by tho
fact that it is the best blood medi
cine ever used, and is not approached
in excellence by any new candidate
for public favor.
The time when it is lawful to shoot
partridges and other game birds be
gins the l d of October.
Prohibition and the Presidency.
CINCINNATI, September 14-The
Prohibitionists are making thia year
the strongest canvass that they have
ever managed in Ohio. Dr. Leonard,
their candidate for Governor, has ad
dressed Borne very large meetings.
The main point of his speeches is that
prohibition ib the foremost issue in
American politics, that it is to destroy
one of the two great parties by ab
sorbing the best men in both of them,
and that the consequence will be the
breaking up of the solid South. This
is in harmony with the private con
versation of the leading Prohibition
ists here, who express the belief that
the South i? ripe for just PU ch a move
ment, and who have even goue so far
as to name Colquitt of Georgia aa
their probable next candidate for
President.
ST. THOMAS, Ont., September 10.
Jumbo, the $300,000 elephant, was
killed on the Grand Trunk Air Line
tmck, half a mile East of here, last
night. Iiis keeper waa leading him
along the track, when a freight train
came up behind unnoticed and ran
him down. He was injured so badly
that he died in 30 minutes. The
trick elephant Tom Thumb is alac
ie] ur ed, his leg being broken.
A Boy Should nave a Trade.
What about the boy who does not
take up with a trade or profession?
Look around you, the question is
speedily answered. He must cast bia
j hook into any sert of pond, and take
such fiah as may be easily caught. He
is a sort of tramp. He may work in
a brick-yard to-day and in the har
vest field to morrow. He does the
drudgery and gets the pay of the
drudge. His wages are so small that
he finds it impossible to lay up a dol
lar, and a fortnight of idleness will
see him dead broke.
And now, my boy, if men tell you
that the trades are crowded, and that
so many carpenters, and blacksmiths,
and painters, and shoemakers, and
other trades keep wages down, pay
no attention to such talk.. Compare
the wages of common and skilled
workmen. Take the trade which you
seem fitted for. Begin with a deter
mination to learn it thoroughly, and
to become the best workman in the
shop. Don't be satisfied to skin along
from one week to another without be
in'4 discharged, bul ranko your ser
vices valuable by being such a thor
ough workman that your employer
cannot afford to let you go.
The Now Fontal Card, which will
be furnished to all the postofficea in
a few days, is to be a model of neat
ness in style and quality. Nearly all
the postoffices in the country have
their supply of cards exhausted, and
it wil! not bo long befo.e the old post
al card, so to speak, will be a dead
letter. The cards should have been
in the hands of the postmasters some
time ago, but their appearance has
been delayed by the failure of the
company which had the contract for
their manufacturo to get them out as
per agreement. The paper in the
new caids is much superior in quality,
texture and finish to that in the old
cards, and in color ia a light cream. The
design, printed in dark brown, is as
follows : On the upper right hand
corner of the card, in an oval frame,
ia the head of Thomas Jefferson. The
face of the vignette is three quarters
full, looking to the left, and ia sur
rounded by a wreath of laurel and
oak, tied with a ribbon bearing the
words, "One Cent ' and the number
.? 1." On the left, at the top of the
card, are the words, M United States
Postal Card," the words, "United
States" being in plain white letters
on a curved and partly folded scroll,
and the words "Postal Card" being
in dark, ornamental letters, enclosed
in straight, unshaded linea, with a
rosette at each end. Immediately
under the scroll is a email white star,
below which is a long tablet contain
ing thirteen atara. Below the whole
design are the words, " Nothing but
the address to be written on this eide."
The total cotton crop of the United
State? for last season waa 5,669,021
bales; exports 3,639,945; spinners'
takings 1,685,689 of which 266,000
balea were kept south. Stock on hand
129,539.
The town council of Charlotte has
enacted an* ordinance forbidding cot*
ton buyers to be solicitous or impor
tunate with farmers who have cotton to
sell, and forbidding them to go more
than half the width of the sidewalk
from their front doore.
An Enterprising, Reliable House.
W. E. Lynch, Edgefield, and S. T.
Hughes, Trenton can alwayB bo relied
upon, not only to carry in stock the
best of everything, but to secure
the Agency for such articles as have
well-known merit, and are popular
with the people, thetby sustaining
the reputation of being always entet
prising, and ever reliable. Having
secured the Agency for the celebrated
: Dr. King's New Discovery for Con*
sumption, will Hell it on a positive
guarantee. It will surely cure any
and every affection of Throat, LongB,
and Chest, and to show our confidence,
we invite you to cali and get a Trial
Bottle Free.
Died of Fright at a Voodoo.
Four Colored People Give Up The
Lives Because ol' n Conjurer.
HKNDERSONVILLE, N. C. Sept. 8.
At Brevard lived Henry MeOorkl
colored, with his wife and four chi
dren, aged respectively, nine, Hevei
five and two years. Three or for
days ago a colored woman name
Carver came there, Baying she wno
Voodoo doctrees. They gave h<
shelter and she remained there tint
yesterday when she and McCorkl
became involved in a quarrel and L
ordered her to leave the house. Sh
left in a rage, saying she would cor
jure the whole family. Thie frighter
ed McCorkle, who offered to let he
come back again, but she refused. Sh
went to a stream near by and gathej
ed some mud which she made into
ball, placed in it several hairs froi
her head and six crooked pins. Sh
then returned to McCorkle's houp
and after pronouncing some gibbons
she fell on her knees and th ew th
"conjure ball" against the door c
the bouse, where it adhered. Mc
Corkle was half crazed with fear am
begged the woman to remove th
"conj are ball," but she refused an<
left the place.
In a few hourBMcCorkle complain
ed of feeling ill, and soon afterward,
his wife was compelled to take he
bed. Before nightfall all the childrei
were ill and complained of griping
pains in the back and stomach. I
neighbor who happened to be pass
ing came to Hendersonville and se
cured the services of two physician!
who repaired to the spot. They founc
McCorkle dead and his wife dying
and before assistance could be render
ed she was dead. Emetics were ad
ministered to the children, the phy
sicians suspecting poison. Two chil
dren died before midnight. The othei
two recovered. An autopsy reveah
that no trace of poison could be found.
Local Option in Georgia.
The Result Achieved by a Long Prohi
bition Campaign.
ATLANTA, GA., September 10.
The Local Option bill has been pass
ed by the HOUBO as it came from the
Senate, and is now a law. The bill
provides that upon tho application for
prohibition signed by one tenth of tho
voters in any County, the Ordinary
Bhall hold an election to determine
whether or not spirituous liquors
shall be sold in that County. All
persons qualified to vote for members
of the General Assembly are qualified
to vote in this election. The tickets
shall be written '* For Sale" and
" Against S.tle." If the result of the
election should be against the sale
the Ordinary Bhall give notice once a
week for four weeks and the Act
shall take effect as soon as the rc
Bult is ascertained, [except as to tho
vested rights of persons whose an
nual license lins not expired, if
the result of the election should be
for sale," no other election on the
question Bhall be held in that Com ty
within less than two years. When
any County goes "against the sale"
no person shall sell or barter, direct
ly or indirectly, or give away at his
place of business, or furnish at any
other publio place, any alcoholic, spir
ituous, or malt liquors, or any other
drinks which produce intoxication.
Nothing in the bill is to prevent the
manufacture, sale and use of domes
tic wines or cider, or the sale ol wines
for sacramental purposes, provided
they are not sold by bar rooms at re
tail.
Licensed druggists will not be pre
vented from selling or furnishingpure
alcohol for medicinal or scientific pur
poses. No election can be held m any
place where the sale of spirituous
liquors is directly prohibited either by
high license, local option, or other
legislation, BO long as these local laws
remain in force. This is the Local
Option bill, which represents the
climax'of a long prohibition campaign.
It is probable that under its provi
sions nearly 100 elections will bo
held in this State between now and
the end of the year.
The Rev. S. A. Gary, of Pickers
county, certainly did some good work
during the months of July and Au
gust for the church, the Baptist. Ile
commenced 21th of July at Enon
church, the result of which wan 2 by
letter and 9 by baptism-ll, White
Plains, Anderson county, 4 by letter
and 9 by baptism-13; Flat R .ck
church, by baptism 3 ; Mountain
Springs, Anderson county, 4 by lefter,
3 restored and 10 by baptism-17.
Whole number 44. Whito Plains ami
Flat Rock have each nearly completed
good new churches this year.- ifvmen
Path Plamdcaler.
An Answer Wanted.
Can any one bring us a case ol
Kidney or Liver Complaint that Elec
tric Bitters will not speedily cur?; V
We say Ihey can not, as thousands of
".ases already permanently cured and
who are daily recommending Electric
Bitters, will prove. Bright's Diseace,
Diabetes, Weak Back, or any urinary
complaint quickly cured. They purify
1 the blood, regulate the bowels, and
1 act directly on the diseased ?taris.
Every bottle guaranteed. For sale at
25c. a bottle by W. E. Lynch, Eden
field, and S. T. Hughes, Treuton.
Tho Farmers.
The farmer is now hunting around
lo Imy seed oats, seed barley, seed
wheat and everything else he needs
to put into the ground. This is a
pretty state of affairs for a coinnlG
nilv that protends to have fannerafas
the dominant and controlling element
and who pay the taxes and run thitgs
generally. We have a good climate
and soil. Labor is all that ia need sd
but it must be wisely directed. Tie
owner of the land must take char'
of it. Ile cannot afford to let a,
ant with a lean ox take the
mont of his affairs. He ransC
hand and must have a small amou?
of common sense.
Farming is the beBt and surest cad
ing. The man who follows it is nev||
in danger of starving. He can
ways have something to eaVand somij
thing to clothe himself and familj
He can have it with light work ar
small expense. A good living isa
dead sure thing.
But the farmers of the country will
not write on anything 'intended for
their good. They will find fault kt??
split up into adverse factiona.without
the alighteat excuse. If one has
found out how to save money by a
new way of ploughing he would not
tell another the secret for all the
world. In many other like instances^
they are secretive and do not commu- j
nicate to each other mattera of the |
most vital importance to the prosper
ity and success of the occupation.
All other occupations have leagues,
unions and associations but the farm
ers will have none of it unless it isa
kind of secret organiz ition like the'
Grange which made more money for |
the man who got it up than for every
man, woman and child who waa ad
mitted to it.
The inspiration of the thing was
wrong. In fact it was an attempt to
kill out the merchants by force and
arin* as if they were all a thieving, op
pressive and unconscionable set. No
man made any [hing out of the Grange
except to get an insignificant office
aud wear a brown linet, apron at a
country barbecue. Of course the
farmers furnished the barbpcuo and
were at Hie expense. The town crowd
and thu boys sud girls om th? coun
try had the fan and profit. Tho fann
ers didn't get their goods any cheaper
and went on in the same obi wav
raising cotton Mini lui vint' everything
needed.
Thing/, will be no better however
uni i I the fanners luke I hi tigs into
their own haudn. As long as they
come to town and allow three or four
lawyers to conduct their meetings
they will never be any belter than
th ry are now.-Abbeville Medium.
Sou if karolina's Colton ('ron.
We insist upon it, notwithstanding
tho natural demoralise ilion among our
planters, that South Carolina will
nuke 700,000 bales of 100 pounds
weight this year.
We reach these figures by a system
of averages from period to period,
which will be lound far more reliable
than this or that man's demoralized
view of things. South Carolina near "|
ly always undervalues her crop in her
estimates, whilst Georgia overvalues
hers.
This crop in South Carolina would
call for something over 7,000,000 bales
of 400 pounds for the country. Such
a crop ought to command good fair
prices, with anything like a reasona
ble revival of business. It positive
ly does no good to understate the
crop. The result is always a veiy
hurtful revulsion as the honest truth
comes to light. And there are too
many people watching the facta to
escape the truth of things long -
Register.
Il Made a Difference.
"That's exactly what I'm going tb
do myseli !" she said as she looked
up Irom the novel she was reading op
th) ferryboat the other afternoon.
"What?" languidly queried GcavgK
"Eloje. I'm going to let myaejlf
down by a rope ladder."
" Aw !"
" And you'll bc on hand to recela
rae."
"Aw!"
"And we Will fly together and |i<
married."
"Aw!"
" And return and fall upon dpr
knees and be forgiven."
" Aw !"
" O Geawge, promise me that we
will do so !"
" Cawu't do it."
" But why ?"
" lt will cost. $o for a rope ladder.
To llee in a hack would cost $12 more.
The preacher's fee won bl be $3, and
it would cont something to ride back
home. Cawu't do it, my dear, livery
thing must be. in tho regular wtiy,
even to your father lipping ihe clergy
man."
"' But, Geawge, ray dear, if I
should furnish Hie boodle."
" Oh-aw-but that aiters tim c-tse,
you know. Under those circumstances
no true gentleman could refuse to
elope with hii affianced. Begin lo
practice rope-ladder gymnastics al
one?."-Def roil Free Pirna.
t?JT* Til E A DVERTI3KB one year and
a Waterbury Watch for $4 50.
Thea? Waldies ar? guaranteed.
Princely Poker.
Thc National Came In All IIB Glory on
tile Pacific Slope.
Every afternoon a half dozen or
moro j .illy old lioyH, each with a
handsome hank account, assemble in
a club room at the Palace Hotel.
Lucky Baldwin, when in town, some
times takes a hand. Sharon, ol' Sarah
Althea fame ia one of the coterie. Gen.
Barnes sometimes drops in. Schmie
loll, the rich broker, Dr. Bowie Fill
rmore, of the Centul Pacific, and a
Lot of others are also memhfrs of the
ghib. > The aim is to mlay poker
[^."gentlemen.'' Eightof the (jo) ly!
old boys usually sit down together.
They use no chips, and nothing less
than a $5 bill passes current. The
ante is $5, and it ia a j ick pot game
exclusively. Say there are eight
players ; the play begins with $40 in
.the pot. Nothing less than a pair ol
jacks can open the pot. Frequently
there is $120 or more in the pot be
fore anybody can open it. If any
body holds anything better than a
single pair it is incumbent upon him
to raise the pot-he must do it or
pass out. Blinds, straddles and
raises are unlimited, and bats are
limited only to $1,000. The most fun
in the game, however, is in the pre
liminaries before the draw. Fre
quently the jick-pot is up to $2,000
bdfore the momentous event, and then
it is a great sport to watch the jolly
old boysBtudy over the relative value
of their hand* Sharon is usually
the luckiest player of tho set, but he
sometimes 'gets nipped. O.ie after j
J noon they got a jack pot worked up
1 to $4,000. Sharon drew to an ace
and ten and got two other aces and
another ten, giving him an ace full.
! He bet the limit and got raised an
other thousand. Thon the jolly old
i boys laid down their hands, face to
the cloth, and Sharon bet two bottles
of chr.mpagno^thathe would take the
pot. The wine was brought and the
j. o. b.'s knocked oil' the herks
Tuen two others saw Sharon'?? bet
and stood tba raise, but the rest ran.
This made $10,000 in the [wt. The
Sharon threw down his check for j
.$3,000 ami said he'd go another thou*
and. The three other j. o. b.'s stood
in and called. Agaiust Sharon's a-e
lull there was a king full, thron queens,
jami one ol tim j. o. D.'H carel ul ly
skinned out foilr little bitsol douces
tfcj.n;vid he Iwlievod b*\l h ind down
he paper. There was not a woid ol
protest. Mr. Sharon said " he'd be
d-d," and that wai all. And then
:the j illy old boys started in lo build
another j u:k. It is a very dignified
game, this Palace Hotel poker, and
the jolly old boys fumage to extrae!,
from it a deal ol dignified fun.
Chicayo Herald.
A Voice ol U'aruing.
As you walk our streets you will
see almost every man and boy yon
meet with a pipe, a quid or a cigarette
in their mouths. How often are they
pale, and complaining, and often unfit
for business. A change of climate
will be suggested for their health,
when indeed it is unly necessary for
them to leave off the use of tobacco.
It will of a certainly cause nervous
ness, weakness, disease ol' chest and
stomach, and weaken their mn.nie
and powei of thought. It dwnrls
their bodies and undei mines their
health, and destroys their mental
vision. It produces indigestion and
low Bpirita, and ends in a shipwreck
of the general health, and finally an
early death. Figures ehow that near
ly two million men ami boys are on
this road to destruction, and nothing
else will res'oro them to their wonted
health but to abstain from this useless
practice.
An old negro went into a book
store to buy a picture for his wife,
ile looked at a lot of Christmas cards,
and singling out one asked the price.
" One dollar," said the clerk.
The cid fellow moved on around
and finding the same kind of picture
in another lot, stealthily let a mouth
ful of tobacco spit fall on it, and then
wiping it olT on his sleeves, he called
jhe clerk and said :
"Look heah, bos*, what'll yer ax
me fur di.i heah damaged ono?"
" Twenty-five cents."
" Date too much, boss, fur it's dun
mint."
" Well, take it along for len cents."
" Look heah, manlier, yer couldn't
get no Len cents fur dis. JI-H' es wei'
gin it. 1er me, ms ruler.
Take it. along then."
Thal!kee, sah. Mi>s' bligin' folks
in dis town 1 eher seed. Man kain'
stan' mun' de nto's lessen da shoves
p'lileness on him. Hood day, sib. I
wish yer miglay well."
A Fasting 1.1 ri.
In Cincinnati u sixteen-year old
girl recently died after n fast, ol
fifty-two days. She Lad been attack'
eil by something like paralysis which
rendered it impossible for her to take
nourishment. The human system can
not thrive without, good foot 1 and
good ability tn digest, it. Weak and
impaired digestion is rectified by
Brown's iron Bitters-heller (han
any other tonic in the world. Mr. J.
E Freeberg, Pomeroy, Iowa, says :
" I used Brown's Iron Ritt ers for dys
pepsia end pnornppetile ; completely
cured me." It will cure you.
What is Not .'.earned in the Public
Schools.
From "The Public School.) of
Brooklyn," by Joesph C. Hendrix,
in the Brouklyn Magazine: It ie a
cui iouH fact that many city boya reach
the end of the school course without
being able to tell what a un-ukey
wrench is, or describe across cut HHW,
or define the uses of turning lathe,
while a piston, a steam hoi, or a th rot
tin valve are all far beyond their ken.
They can, however, tell tl:e number
of elementary sounds il th? whole
cluster of diacritical raarks.j all ... J
which anon fadeout nf Iheir^naiudV.
* * In the limited time that the
State has the privilege of teaching
children in the Twelfth ward, it seems
absurd to proceed with them with the
circumstance that marks the work in
the schools on the Hill, where the
children will stay twice as long. Yet
this is the present system. To change
it means the rink of a demagogic cry
of one school for the rich and anotlur
for the poor. Accordingly, the poor
suffer. Some liberty should be allow
ed to a principal to suit the educa
tion he direct? to the necessities of
those under bis care, that the boy
who must, be bread-winning at twelve
shall not be despoiled of valuable
time in ascertaining to a shade tho
fourteen sounds of the vowel A.
TueTreasurei of the State informed
a reporter of the Register a low days
ago that there is now in the Treanuiy,
after paying all the interest up to
date, a cash balance of over $1.00,000.
This is certainly a most gratifying in
dication ol the financial solidity of
Sjuth Carolina.
The corn yield is estimated at 2,?
000,000,000 bushels, worth $400.000,
000. The TrU.-ane says that "lastj
I year, with unusually large crop:-, the ]
Bureau estimate of thu value tu plO
ducers was about $2.05.000 000 for,
cotton, $330.000.000 for wheat, aid
$040,000,000 lor corn." So, CV rn is
Kmg in money value, bat it is the
cotton crop, after ail, that helpfi mott
to pay tb? National debt HUI! pre Live
the balance ol Ira le.
On September 12, 1814, the battle
ol Nutlh Point was fought bel >v m
ll!,0?0 American militia, chi?-fly c i
z-na ol B .Mitihjrt', and the Bi dish
troops, th'.- latt-r being repulsed. In
1812 the Bill i inore survivors ui the
buttle*lorin.-.1 ah unsocialitu m.dir
the name ol Il>e 1 0?>l Defenders," tie
constitution providing that when 1 ve
of the members could not attend the
annual reunion lbs association f>h> uld
be dissolved. The numbera dwi nd ed
year by year, the survivors couth.u
ing to assemble, parade and hav. a
dinner together. Lint year the five
foiled to appear. Ou Saturday, the
day of tho reunion, one feeble old
man-James Chamberlain Morford,
DO years old-appeared and was dined
by a company of gentlemen at. a In -
tel. Four of his comrades yet liv ,
aged respectively 91, 90, 88 and t8
years, but they are too feeble to I?, ve
their homes.
Senator William Mtbone under:ook
to horsewhip Alexander Donnait, jr.,
and Thomas Hunter, young mon of
Petersburg, V.l., in that eily .>n Sat
urday, charging them with h ading
his Sun Butler into bad habits He
abused and threatened them until
Mr. Donnan seized him by the h-i.nl,
held a pocket knife al bia throat, and
attempted to stab him. Mahone's
friends rushed in and stopped the row.
There is a Strangs c?so of ?dory in
Rmdolpb county, N. C. About five
miles from Trinity college thorn lives
a man by the name of Jehu H ',
who is about G5 years old anil wea
born an idiot. He has Iwen chained
to a staple driven in Ihe floor nearly
the whole of bis life. At times he ia
very violent, and were he to g"t loone
he would doubtless kill any perron
willi whom he came in contact. It ia
said that he takes large hickory slicks
of wood out. of the fireplace and tears
them into shreds with his teeth and
lingerH. Ile can drink cnii'fA boiling
hot and eat food HS hot. as fire can
make it., apparently without suffering
any pain. Property enough was left
him by his father for his support.
The Stock Law ought to be amend
ed at the next S"ssion of the legisla
ture. As it now stands, a cow or a
hog may trespass upon the growing
crops of a farmer and commit much
injury thereto, and leave the hold be
fore the owner of the crop is aware
of lbs depredation. Under such cir
cumatances, it. strikes us that no pro
vision is made for the recover) ol
damages hy the person sustaining the
loss, except by snit instituted to re
cover damages ; whereas, it top plain
tiff bad been so fortunate as to c*p
ture the offending stock, tb" amount,
ol costaud ila mages sustained could
be recovered by the sale ol the animal
or animals. Some remedy for this de
feet should be applied -Kcrshnio Ga.
?rite. _
lt shall Put Staleness ami sa Hering
ITndcr Kooli
It udall euro nil tho people and mit
sickness and sn flori mr, under fool! We
moan Penn's Mttns, the comfort, th?
refuge ibo salvation of millions. Add
disease upon disease, mu! lot tho worst
como, we aro safo if wn use Penn's Mtier*.
Though Ihou fliest with dyspepsia, torpid
liver, biliousness and headache yet sha!I
thou liv? il' thou tatest Penn'* Mtier*
What woman ls there, weak, feeble and
Hick, who nseth Penn'* Bittere, and is not
made strong and oheerfnl by it? Indoed
all ?ur paina and aches and diseases fpi
like chati' before the wind whenever we
wisely bave recourse to Penn's Bitters.'
JAS. L OUI
SUCCKSS
J&,&m ISL
Have jnsfc received awl btu
ceedini'lv large and well select*
at prices low euough to satisfy ?
Print*?,
Iirrsa ii-?oda,
Flannels,
lti?|?-l|:CllM,
< ?iv?iiii'ir'iM,
Jean*,
UniiirwiUrai,
Notions,
Clothing,
Hats,
Shoes,
Genie' Furnia
Hosiery,
Neck Wear,
Umbrellas,
Trunks,
Wu make a aprrinll.y of HU OKS, ami (
jSfr Our WAGON YAItD is opon and fr
jdr pull I*HM|J value paid for cotton and
JAS.
SILVER and FLATED
I bavo reeaiveti arni arn receiving <la
<vor bronchi to thin nity, wt PRICKS I
he BRAZILIAN SPEWACLE. Vi J
yarranted.
I Oct. 18, '82. ly I
?roail SI
A SPECIAL OFFER,
Ti
HIE WATERBURY WATCH h antem-wind
? er. ami will rmi tU honra. Tin- caw is NICKEL.
SILVER, and will always remain ns bright as a
DOW silver dollar. The Watch lins u heavy beveled
edge, ami crystal face. Thu works o? the Watti;
ara mada willi tin? Oneal automatic machinery
Every Watch is TKSTEOIn carylng positions nn<l
Isperfect before Icavhigthe factory. Each Watet
. is nut nj) in a haiul.-'iiiiB ne** ImprOTM bATjPN.
l.lNKDoi-r, for r.ilL 11 a!i>|>< >rlu(ioii tlirOiit,'a*tlii'
malla.
ito well-known harii these Watches become
thousand are Ian/ins them in preference tobi: ':< i
priced Watches. 'I lie Company arc now mal.Ii:?
1,000 Watches each day. an average of ir
Watches pei minute, l'on would maurine, tlrt
whole country BiiptilU-d hy i his time, bynomeaas,
This is tire merchant's W uti li, ibo fanner's Watch,
tho miner's Watch, the laborer's Walch, the boy*?
Watch, thc school-girl's Watch-In fact, every
body's Watch. <TQ rn
On recclpl of 4>J.0U Wi ??-in! thin celrl-rated
Walch am) n bandamun KlrkcUI'laled Chain,
with Diann iillm lnil, l>y registered
muli, prc|iniit, nm) (tua ra aten ll
tu mich yan aatirly.
TheVfaturhury Walch Cu, has n nati.,iml n-nm
talion for making Ibo M>T ci in At* WATCH Ul
TIM. WOK Ul
Wo luve received from them IhelrNRW Vatch.
a great hunco vernen t overtho first ones mnuV.atw
a'marvel of simplicity omi oeennicy. containing
more tii^Ktinitv titan tiny olin r tttlMe placed ln
fore the iiiiblin f??r immy years. The nit show*
EXACT MI'/.K cl Walch.
A Watch made by ha tal tr? ul?! <--.>st. BS muchas
a cottage by lim wandu ?re ?r a small yacht, ami
toke aa loni? In imii.i Si?i?crf<s t ls ihn machinery
used In makins; this Walch, ami >.> t ure nil its
parts, that if ii. lin ds wimira, I? wiri direct to Hie
factory, ila? chargu for ni-liial r?-|<iirs (fnchidine.
parts us-iil) iwvcr? ?ict-iilafi?i is. 'i bis will evphdu
why they arc so rbiaiii and s > easily rcfiulivd.
i:M uv WATCH LS WAUUA.Vrtttl Til 0!VB
BATISFACTIOV.
If You Are Going*
NORTH, EAST,
OR TO ANY POINT IN TEE
G HEAT WEST,
-AND WANT
Cheap Tickets & Quick Time,
WRITS TO OE CALL CN
CHAS. B. WALKER, I
Trav ling Passenger Agent,
mnmw nm,
(Western ami Atlantic Railroad,)
ATLANTA, - tn B?OfiC WI A.
NoTB -When yon arrive in Atlanta
cal 1 nu um. You will lind it to your in
terest to soo me before purchasing tick
ets IV'un any one else.
ASK FOR WALKER.
ARTHUR S. TOMPKINS,
AI tor ney-a l-i.a w.
F,,l?re?ield C. l-l M S-C.
Noy.' 6,1884.
TIMES !
J PRICES !
NBY & CO.,
ORS TO
Cools..
re now on exhibition, an ex
id of goods, which they offer
ill:
. Jiardware,
Crockery,
< j ?uss ware,
Tinware,
Wood en ware;
Staple and Facey
Orne?riep.
Bagging and Ilea.
nrry the largest stock outside of a city,
en for tho uso of our euslomeis.
other country produco.
L. QUINBY & CO.,
CHA NI it v n.i.i:. H. ?'.
louds, Jewelry
WARE, CLOCKS, icc.
ily, the finest line of lite above goods
.OWER THAN EVER. Agent for
ITCHES and CLOCKS repaired and
WITT. SS 'BE W12 fi G li RT,
1., I in!? r Central Hotel, Augusta.
This Watch will be sent
to Subscribers who pay
one year in advance, for
$2.50.
Or will be given as a
[Premium for Five New
Subscribers.
i
! Address :
"TLo Adv il teer,"
! Edgefield, S. 0.
Gr. H. TT.
il. ().
IN & CO,,
NANOS & mum9
BEST IN TKt WORIDI
Tin- (in nt Savings Institution
$10 TO IsiOOSAVED!
L. PTQ. S.
/.V/VVM ?otee/- and Nt-.t,i.7XiCost\ Than
Elsewhere.
K I. O. M.
Pinitos and Organs, Selected
(mm Twelve of the JS-'st Malers, are
urknowlcdyed lo be Superior by the
(Iren) Artiste of the World.
Wt Dclivei our Pianos and Organs,
Etejoht Paid., to any point in the
0K1.U, with Music Pool, Revolving
Mool, and Instruction Book. Also, a
Good Cover with event P?Xfi9r~*'
P.A.S.M.A.T.H.
Our long experience of over Forty
Y i ors enubhs us lo pince in every
Home thc Finest Musical Instrument
in thi'. World, guaranteeing Satisfac
tion and our Price to be the Lowest.
Musical Merchandise and Instru
ments of every description Sheet Mu
sic and Music Pooh. The latest
Publicolicns. ~
0>'d' i's filled on day of reception.
Write for Catalogues, Prices. Pis?
counts, ?n?! Ea-<i/ Terns of Payment.
T. M. H. 0. T. S.
G. 0. ROBINSON & CO.
831 BROAD ST., AUGUSTA.
Jan. 27, 1883.
"FOR SALE.
MY FARM of about Fifty Acres, ly.
i og. nearly all, in the incorporate
limits of Trenton, S. C. The tract con
tains a good dwelling, all uecesaary out
buildings, and also a fine orchard of
choice fruit trees. For further particu
lars, apply to tho undersigned at Tren*
ton, S. C.*
J. \ C J'^XBS.
Nov 2. 1884 -ifi