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ADVICE TO WOMEN If you would protect yourself ' ?r?rr? Painful^roTuse/Scr^r.v.. Suppressed or Irregubt'Me.n struation you must use BRADFIELD'S FEMALE REGULATOR CARTF.RSVILI.K. April 28, 1836. T"hi' will cerrilv that two members of mj finaaediat? family, after bavin? suffered.tor wars from Menstrual lrresularlty, vv .' - treated without benefit by physicians, wereat length:completely??curedb\ one ottle of liradtio:?*H Female Bcsu.aiorv Its e?lec: i* truly wonderful. J. W. &XRASGE. Book to " WOMAN " maU? FREE, whkb centaine valuable information vu oU female useascs. _ BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO... ATLANTA, GA. FOR SALE BY ?LL UliCrrGISTS. .orSides, strengthenstrle luv ?.ble, builds up ::?e whole system. It has cur? : thousands and will cure Tou. Druggists have it. Send etaii.o for l*>ok. LU. J. P. DBOMGOOLE ? CO.. Louisville, Ky. ANEW Y KA irs sui iv DR. TALMAGE'S DISCOURSE AT BROOKLYN TABERNACLE. - "Cowider tlio Years of >luny Genera tions*' WJM th? Text, and thc Sermon Was Regarding "The Chronology of :"i? Bible, or <;?.<! Among the Centuries." BROOKLYN. .Tan. 1.-Rev; Dr. Talma;-? this morning appropriately took for rb subject of his New Year's day sermon j "The Chronology of the Bible, or <. Among thc Centuries.*' Before rh< course th- great audience which fr.ll\ crowded the Tabernacle sang the hymn Our (io.!, n::r !;, in ases ?';ist. Our !m?>e for years ;<> come. The text chosen was Deuteronomy xxxii, ?. "Consider the years of mnny generations. " At 12 o'clock last night, while som .:.? good people were watching, an . >ld friei passed outof our homes and n stra _? r entered. The old friend making va tory was 189:"*; the stranger arriving is The old friend was garrulous wi; ' the occurrences of many days, but th stranger put iris finger over his lip and said-nothing and seemed charged wita many secrets and. mysteries. I did m. see either the departure Or the arrival but was sound :i-i'-;>. thinking that was for me the best way to bo wide.awake now. Croodoy. Kf9*i! Welcome, As an army is divided into' brigades and regiments and companies; and thej observe this order in their mlrfcb an : their tread is majestic, so the-time . world's existence is divided into an army divinely command* ':. tbeerasa" the brigades, th.. turi? ? the rog}- j monts, and the years are the companies-, j Forward into the eternity ?.as:, out of j the eternity to come' Forward is the j command, and nothing can halt them; even though theworld shohld-oie: While ! .rbeying my text .'Consider .;?:._. years-oi ! many generations;" 1 propose- to spealcoi : \he ^Chronology of the Bible, or God ? funong th? Centuries.'" ARRANGING 1'VKNTS. We-make a distinction between time-1 ?nd eternity, but time is only a piece . : ) eternity, and chrono!? gy luis been en . grged in the sublime work of div: ::; . op this portion of eternity that we cali tune into compartments and putting j events in their right compartment. !; | isas mu?:!: ac injustice again-: the ; asl to wrongly arrange its events as i; would be an injustice if, through neglect ol chronological accuracy, it .sin.ul,i in the '? fer distant future be said tiuit America was discovered rn IT?'", and the Dei lara : tiou of independence was signed in ; and Washington bom oh the 22d Marchi and the civil war of the United States was fought in ISslO As God puts al; the events of rime in the right place. Jet us becarefn' that we do not put them ihjthewrong place. Tho ' chronology,of the Bible takes six:.steps brit they are; steps so long it- makes ns hob! our breath as we watch the move ment From Adam to Abraham. ! : int Abraham to the exodus ont of Egypt From tile exodus* to th>- foundation o? Soioinon's temple. From the?oum?acion of Solomon's temple to the des' ?ction of that temple From the destruction bf the temple tb the return from Baby lonish captivity. From Babylctiish cap tiviry to th?a. birth of Christ. Chronology takes pen and pencil; and. calling 'astronomy and history to bel j says: "Let us fix ono event i ron! which to caleula;.-everything. Let it ijexstar; the BetMehem star, th-- Qiristmas star." And from that, we go back and see the world was created 4.003 years before C?tristituedeluge came ,'.:.;s years before .Christ: ?the . xodnsout bf Egypt occurral 1.-4^3 years before Cunst. and Soh>mon's temple was destroyed ">v,'> years before Christ. Chronology enters the first chapter of Genesis and says the day mentioned there is not a day of twenty-four hours but of ages, the word there translate ! as "day" in other places moaning ages and sb toe Bible account of ti:-- cr?.. >rj and the geologists* account of the crea rion axe completely harmouions. < Sro nolog}-enters the book of Daniel and says that the words "time and a half moan a year and a half. Chronology enters at another point j and shows us that the s*-as. .:?s of the year were then only two-summer and winter. We fin?: mat the Bible year was 360 days instead of '>'>.">: tfottthe'day was , calculated from 0 o'clock in the morning to 6 o'cl'X' at night; that the night was j divided into four watches-enamel}", th? , late watch, the midnight, the cock crow ; ing. the early watch. The clock and ! watch were invented so long after th? . world began their mission that the day .was not veryfsharply divided in Bible times. 'Abaz had a: sundial, or a Bight of stair? with a column at the top. and the shadow which that column threw on the steps beneath ind?cate-i the hour, the . shadow '?-'"gthciiing or withdrawing' ? . oro step to step. . But the events of life- and the events oljr the world moved so slowly for then most part in Bible .times that they had-j . no need of such timepieces as We stand on our mantels or carry-in our pockets in an age when a man may have a half j dozen or a dozen engagements f? >r one j day and needs to know the exact minute for each one of them. The earth itself j in Bible rimes was'the chief timepiece. ? and it turned once on its axis and that was a day. and once around tho sun and ? that was a year. THE ALMANAC. it was not until the Fourteenth century j that the almanac .was bora, the almanac j that wt tfJSs car.-:?.-*];.' *-<.">ut. n r-ai:.: ing that it took tho aoctrm ?fated inge; nuity of more than 5.000 years to make ' one. Chronology had . to bring into its service the monuments of Egypt, and the cylinders of Assyria, and the bricks of Babylon, and the pottery of Nineveh, and the medals Struck at An tioch for the battle of Actinrn. and all the hieroglyphics' that could bc de ciphered, and had to go into the ex tremely delicate business of asking the ages of Adam and Seth and Em ?ch and Methuselah, who after thei*/ 300th year wanted to be thought young. I think it must have been in recogni tiou of the stupendous work of n: an almanac that all the Jays of the acre named after the gods. Sunday the sun, wMch was of old worship a god. Monday, after the moon, was also worshiped as a gqd. Tm after Tuesco, the god of war. Wi day, after Woden, tw??rief god < Scandinavians. Thursday, after the god of thunder. Friday, after the goddess of marriage. And Sait after Saturn, The old Bible year with the 25th of March. Not un ri did the first of the month of Janua: the honor in legal documents in En of being called the first day of the Improvements all along have made in chronology until the cab and the almanac, and the clock, an watch seem to have reached perte and all the nations of Christendom similarity of time calculations and adopted what is called "new style ce^f Itussia, which keeps what is ( ti " "old style." and is twelve day ferent. so that, writing from the: you Tyish to be accurate, you date letter Jan. 1 and Jan. 13. or Dec. 1 Dec. 52. It is something to thank for tl?at the modes are so complet calculating the cycles, the centurie, decades, the years, the months, the the hours, the seconds. Think of making appointments the Cible days for the time of thc moon. Think of making one of watches of the night in Bible tin rooster crowing The Bible says, fore the cock crow thou shalt den thrice.* "If the Master cometh a cockcrowing." and that was the wa; midnight watch was indicated, crowing of that barnyitrd. bird h: ways been most uncertain. The c ing is at the lowest temperature oi nightiand the arnon nt of dew and tl rection of the wind may bring the est temperature at ll o'clock at nig 2 o'clock in the morning, and at ni:} of six hours. Just before a rain crowing of chanticleer in the night most perpetual BE THANK FTE. Compare these modes of marking with our modes of marking time, v 12 o'clock is 12 o'clock, and 0 o'clock o'clock, and 1<> o'clock is 10 o'clock, independent of all weathers, and thank God that you live now. But withstanding all the imperfect modi marking hours or years or centt Bible chronology never trips up. a falters, never contradicts itself, hore is one of the best arguments fbi authenticity of the Scriptures. If you can prove an alibi in the coi and yon can prove beyond doubt y tn wore in some particular {dace at time yon were, charged wirb dora; paying something in quite another pl you gain til? victory, and infidelity tried to prove an alibi by conten? that events and circumstances in Bible ascribed to certain times must 1 taken place at some other time, if t to..k place at all Butthis books?! nology has never been caught at fa It has been proved that when the brews went into Egypt there were c seventy of them, -and that when t cana- ont tli'-re were 3.000.000 of then "Now;" says infidelity with a gul: that it cannot snppress "what an sn nirry! They went down into ?._: seventy and came out 3.000.000. Th:i a falsehood on the face of it Nat; do not increase in that ratio." But. skeptical friend, hold a moment. ' Bible says the Jews were ?'JO year Egypt, and that explains the incre from seventy persons to 3.000.000. fo is no more, but rather less, than thc diuary increase <.!' nations. Tho Pili,': Fathers came to America in the M Sower one small shipload of passeng? less than 300 y.-;(rs ago. and now havea.natibn of CO.O?OJMK). Where, th is so called impo?ibih;v that the scvei Jews who w<-:;t into Egypt in -3't-o ye became 3.000.000? infidelity wrong ;< Bible chronology right. Sl'l.KNDU) REVIEW. Now -top and reflect Why is it tl this sublime subject bf Bible chron?d< has If-en so neglected, and that the m of you have never given ten minutes til- consideration of it. and that this the first sermon ever preached on t stupendous and overwhelming tlui; We have stood oy the half day or t whole day at grand reviews and st armies pass. Again and again and again on t Champs Elysees Frenchmen by the hi dreds of thousands have stood a watched the bannered armies go by. a the bmfta hus been three miles long a until til- populace were so hoarse th could huzza no longer. Again and aga and aga::: the Germans by hundreds thousands have stood on the paniced a: statued Unter den Linden; Berlin, ai strewn garlands under the feet of tn formed hosts led on by Von Moltke Blucher or Frederick the Great. When Wellington and Ponsonby ai the Scots d rays came back from Wat? loo. or Wolseley from" Egypt, or Maj borough from Blenheim, what milita processions t*ir<-ULT?I Regent street ai along by the palaces of London and ov fiie bridges of the Thames: What i most interminable lines of military the streets of our American capital while mayors and governors and pre? dents, with uncovered beads, looked o L'at put ali those grand reviews t get her. and they are tame compared wit the review which on this New Year Cay yon from the pew and I from ri pulpit witness. Hearthem pass in ehr? nologica! > trdetf all the years before the flood: all tl years since the f!.J: decades abreas ente, ries abreast: epochs abreast: mi lenninms abreast: Egyptian civilizatioi Babylonian popnlations, Assyrian di mimons: armies of Persian, Greciai Pelopmw?sian H::<1 lb-man wars: Byza: tine empire; Saracenic hosts, crusadei of the first, t'ne second, third and th last avalanche of men: Nark Aires i somber epaulets and brighter ages wit shields of silver and helmets of golc Italy. Spain. France. Russia. Germanj England and America, past and presem dyuastics. feudal domains, des:? tism? monarchies, republics, ages on age? ag--= on ages, passing today in a ci.rom logical review, until ' one hus no mor power to look upon the advancing co muns, now brilliant, now squalid, not garland"! with peace, now crimson wit slaughter, now. horrid with ghastliness now radiant with love and joy. THE GEOttlES OF TUT: PRESENT. This chronological study affords among.'other practical thomrUts. esp? < ia!ly two-trie oue encouraging tu til last degree and thc other startling. Th enc>::.-::_ring tboitghrt is that the niai; drift of the centuries has-been towart betterment, -with only ?ere and there ; stout reversal. Grecian civilization wa H vast improvement on-Egyptian civih .'zation, and Roman civilization a va ^improvenient on Greeta:: civilization and Christian civilization isa vast im provern- nt on Roman civilization. ?" What was the boasted age of Periclc .compared wath the age of Longfellow and Tennyson? What was Queen Eliza beth as ? specimen of moral womanhoo? compared with Queen 'victoria? What wereth? cruel warriors of olden ti: :?-. compar?e with the most distinguish.-; warri?*rs'of tiie last halfceottury, all ol them as much*distinguished forkindnes? and good moraLs as fqr prowess-tb? *\ 'o military leaders pf our civil war ou northern and souflier^sidecommunicant members of Christianchurches.and tin-ir 'borne life as pureas their public life? Nothing impresses me in this chrono logical review more than the ""feet that the regiments of years are 'better and better regiments tts the troops move on. 1 thank God that you and' I were not born any sooner , than we were bora. Bow could we have endured the disaster of being born in the Eighteenth of Sev enteehth or Sixteenth century? Glad'nm I that we are in the regiment noir pass ing the reviewing stand, and that our children wiii pass tho stand in astil] bet ter regiment. God did- not build thia worl? for a slaughter house, or a den of infaniy., ^A good deal pf cleaning house will be jfecessary before this world bicornes ?js. ^I&?#nd sweet as it -?B^0ilirt^btT'bni. iv-; * . > / --. * '4 the brooms, and - the scrubbing brusher and the upholsterers and plumbers are airead}- busy, and when the world gets fixed up. as it will be. if Adam and Eve i^ver visit it, as 1 Aspect they will, they will say to each other. 'fWeU, this beats paradise when we lived there, and the pears and the plums are tetter than we plucked from the first trees, and the wardrobes are more complete, and the climate is better." Since 1 settled in my own mind the fact that God was stronger than the devil ! have never lost faith in thc emparadisation of this planet. ? With the exception of a retrogression in the Dark .Ages, the movement of the world has been on and on. and up and up, and 1 have two jubilant hosannas-one for the closing year and the other for the new year. PUNCTUALITY. But the other thought coming out of this subject is that Biblical chronology, and indeed all chronology, is urging the world to more punctuality and immedi ateness. What an unsatisfactory and in definite thing it must have been for two business men in the time of Abaz to make an appointment, saying. "We will settle that business matter tomorrow when the shadow on the dial of A haz reaches the tenth step, from the top." or "1 will meet you in the street called Straight is Damascus in the time of the new moor/." or when asked in a court room what time an occurrence took place should answer. "It was during the time of the latter rain." or "It was a: the time of the third crowing of the barnyard!" Von and I remember when ministers of the Gospel' in thc country, giving - ?ut a notice of an evening service, instead of saying at C or ? or S o'clock, would say. "The service will begin at early candle fight." Thank God for chronological achievements which have ushered in cal endars and almanacs and clocks and watches. ....ii at so chea]) a rate all may possess them'. Chronology, beginning by appreciating the value of years and the value of'lays, has kept on until it cries out. "Man, immortal; woman, im mortal, look out for that minute: look out for .that second;*' * We talk a great deal about the value of time, but will never fully appreciate its value until the last fragment of it has passed out of our possession forever The greatest fraud a man can commit ii to rob another of his time. Hear it. ye laggards and repent! All the fingers of chronology point to punctuality as one of the graces. The minister or the lec turer or business man -who comes to Iiis ?dace ten minutes after the appointed time commits a crime the enormity of which can only bc estimated by multi plying the number of persons present by ten. If the engagement be made with five persons, be has stolen fifty minutes, for he is ten minutes too late, and he has robbed eactof/tbe fivevpersons pf ten minutes apiece, and ten times five are fifty. If there be 500 persons present and he be ten minutes too late, lie has commit ted a robber}' of 5.000 minutes, for ten time 500 are ">.< 00, and o.OOQ minutes are eighty-three hours, 'which make niore than three days. The thief of dry goods, the thief of bank bills, is not half so bad as the thief of time. SOME EXAMPLES. Dr. Rush, the greatest and busiest phy sician of his day. appreciatedthevalue of tim>.-. and when asked how he had been abie to gather so much information for his ho.,ks and lectures he replied: "1 have been able to doit by economizing my time. I have not spent one hour in amusement in thirty years." And tak ing a blankbook from his pocket he said. 'I till a book like this every week with thoughts that occur to me and facts col lected in th-- rooms of my patients.'* Napoleon appreciated the value of time when the sun was sinking upon Waterloo, and he thought that a little more time would retrieve his fortunes, and he pointed to the sinking sun and said; " What would I not give to be this day possessed of the power of Joshua and enabled to retard thy inarch for two hours!" The good old woman appreci ated the value of time when at ninety three years of age she said, "The Judge of all the earth does not mean that J shall have any excuse for not lx-ing pre pared to meet him." Voltaire, the blatant infidel, appreci ated Hie value of time when in his dy ing ??om? nts he said to ins doctor. "I will give you half of what I am worth if yon will jive niesixm? nths of life.**?ud when told that he could not live six weeks lie 'curst into tears and said, '?Then I shall go to hell:" John Wesley appreciated the valu..- of time when hie stood on 'nts st.'ps waiting for a delayed carriage- to take' him to an appointment, saying. "I ha.ve.lost ten minute? forever." Lord Nelson appreciated the value of fane when he said, "1 owe everything in the world to being alwaysa quarter of an ?lour beforehand." . ! A clockmaker in one of the old Eng- j li>h towns appreciated the value of time when he put on the front of the town, clock the words, "Now or when';" Mitch el, the astronomer, appreciated the value cf time when he said. "] have been in Th-- habit of calculating the value-of a til' tusandth part of a second.** That min ister of tHeGospel dui not appreciate the value of time who during a season of illness, instead of employing his time in useful reading or writing, wrote-asilly religions romance, which in some un known .way caine into the possessionbf the famous Joe Smith, who introduced The book as a divine revelation, which became th" foundation of Mormonism, the wost beastly abomination of all lime. Tiley best appreciate the value of time I whose Sabbaths have been wasted and wh< *e opportunities of repentance^ and usefuln?ss; jue all agone. and who have : nothing left but memories, baleful ami ?logiac. Tic-y stand in the bleak Sep tember, with bare feet, on the sharp ; stubble of a reaped wheat field, crying. "Tile harvest is past!" And the sou ich of an autumnal equinos moans forth in echo: "The harvest is past!" THE LAST OK ALI.. But do not h t cs get .an impression from chronology that because the years of time have been .so long in procession they are to go on forever. -Matter is not eternal. No. no! if you watch half a day. or a'whole day. or . two days, as I once di<l. to see. a military procession, you remember the last brigade; and the bist regiment, and the l?st com;ian'y-final ly passed on. au?l as we rose to go we said to each other. "It is all over." * So this mighty procession of earthly years will terminate. Just when 1 have no power to prognosticate, but science . confirms tho Bible prophecy that the ; earth cannot always last. Indeed there : na? been a fatality of worlds. The moon j is morely tito corpse of what it once was. i and scientists have again and again gone ? np in ?lu ir observatories to attend the ! dent hood of dying worlds and have seen them cremated. Sc* Lam certain, both from the Word of rod 'ami science, that the world's chronology will sooner or lat<-r conic t? its last chapter. Tlie final century will arrive and pas? on. and then will come the final decade and then the final year, and the fina, month, and the final day. The last spring will swing .Us cesser of apple blossoms and the i.-:>t winter bank its snows. Tte last sunset will burn bike Moscow and the last morning radiate tiie hills. The clocks will strike their last hour, and the wat'-m s will tick their last second. No incendiaries will be heeded to run hither : and you with torches to set the world i on fire. Chemistry teaches us that there is a ver}' in MA m mable element in water. While oxygen makes up a part of the water, the other part of the water is hy drogen, and that is very combustible. The oxygen drawTi out from the water, the inflammable hydrogen will put instantly into conflagration the Hudsons and Sa vannahjiand Mississippis and Rhines and Urals and ^Danubes,: and At. .ntic afhd Pacific and Indian and Mediterranean seas. And then the angel of God,' de scending from the ttttone, might put one foo ton the* surf of, the'sea and th?other ?"bn' ?*ie,b^cb,.a?d<3ry to the four winds of dieaveni VTime was^but time shall be " ? . no longer!1' Yet, found in Christ, par doned and sanctified, we shall welcome the day with more gladness than you ever welcomed a Christmas or New Year's morn. When wrapt in fire thc realms o' ether plow And ?leaven's !\st thunder shakes thc earth be low. Thou, undismayed, shalt o'er the ruin smile And light thy torch at nature's funeral pile. Physical Culture In Women's Colleges. The whole answer to the question. Is. the health of the average young woman equal to the successful prosecution of the work of a college course? may be given in the briefest terms as follows: The first duty of the college authorities is to give just as careful a physical ex amination for original entrance as their examination into the applicant's scholar ly proficiency, and their next duty, th ? applicant having been admitted, is to see that her advancement is symmetrical, and that she is led across the threshold of mature womanhood as well equipped by reason of bodily strength and devel opment as by that of intellectual ;md moral development for the full enjoy ment of life's pleasures, tasks and vari ous wholesome activities. In the future the question whether or not a young woman's health is quite safe at college will be absurd upon its face. It will be absurd because one of the definitions of a woman's college w^l be: A place where the health of young women is sedulously and scientifically guarded, and where her physical strength and well being are systematically devel oped. Tangible progress toward this ideal has been made within a very few. years, but as yet we have only a begin ning.-Review of Reviews. * The Totomato. "Potornato" is the name given a curi ous manufactured vegetable which owe* its origin to Dr. B. C. Culner, of Atchi son, Kan. For more than twenty years the doctor lias been experimenting with a view of crossing the potato and tomato vines. It is claimed that this has at last been accomplished and thai a species of vine has been thus literally manufactured, and that it wall produce both potatoes and tomatoes, both of which grow in their natural elements. St. L'.uis Republic, ODDS AND ENDv Rub soiled wall paper with pieces of light l.r-ad. The father of the historian Rollin was a knifemaker. The turning lathe was invented by T. Blanchard in 1S43. Marshal Suchet was a silk winder's boy anil enlisted in the ranks. Thrashing machines were invented by Menzies, a Scotchman, in IT:!'.'. An Egyptian scythe isreportedtoiave been discovered in the Nile valley. Tho temperate man is the greatest epi cure and the only true voluptuary. .; Great Britain has eighty miles of tun nel, their cost exceeding ?0,300,000. Faraday produced a spark by separat ing a keeper from a magnet in 1S31. With a man more money means more to eat: with-a woman more to wear. The output of the cigar factories at Reading, Pa., last vear was Over^lOO.000, 000. Plush is not used this season, but the fancy fur velvet luv.y again bring it into favor. New York has the greatest number of newspapers. 1.?5S: Nevada thc least, twenty-five. Gray's telephone, an improvement on Reis', was brought to comparative per fection in IS7& English judges of courts of assizes: j and nisi ? ruis get $3/75 a day for their services, time on Iv being counted while they are on circuit. Says a pronounced flirt. "Tin1 only man who ever forestalled me in breaking an engagement was the one who professed J to love me the most." The most certain sign of wisdom is a continual cheerfulness. Her state is like that of things in the regions above the moon, always clear and sor jue.-Mon taigne. Uncle Mose's Possum Prayer. Great consternation, followed by wild laughter, v&san innovation of thechapel exercises at "the penitentiary not long ago. It was occasioned by a possum j ?prayer from old Mose Allen, a South Carolina negro with one leg, who Was dreaming of Thanksgiving day. Chap lain Dtldley opened the prayer meeting as usual, and prisoners followed briefly. A'hen all headSTwere bowed m'reverence, old Mose jumped at the opportunity and delivered the following prayer: "Dear beloved brudderin and sister'n. : I t'ank de Loni forpermittin meto kum ter chu! A: dis y er beautiful Sabbot'morn. Vu all dunno that beautiful Thanksgiv ing day is near tit han. On dat dav some folks will eat turkey, some eat chicken, some eat ?luck, some eat lamb and some eat sheep. But us niggers, we won],nike dat good old poss. Koch 'im. bring un in. take all the ha'r of 'im,*put 'im out two nights and let 'irn fros". Dring 'im in. Parberl 'im. St uti''im like yo'would atur bey. an bas' 'im. Put'im in Nepali. Put sweeten taters all round dat pots. Put 'im in do stove and shet dat stove doab. . Go away t'inlong about Booregard, Jeff Davis. Lincoln and Grant. Let 'im stay in dele awhile. Open dat stove d. ah. Ol' "possy all turned brown and de gravy drippm in de pan declar dat poss am cooked. Bring dat poss out'n dat stov'e, put 'tm on de table. Doutent 'im while Vs 'ot. For Christ's sake, amenr Chaplain Dudley stood aghast at the! conclusion of the ??raver. A moment afterward the chapel re-echoed the wild and wicked shouts of the prisoners. For about rive minutes <.< ?nstematjon reigned, at the end of which time prayers were resumed, with no further expressions i from the colored brethren.-Columbas Cor. Cleveland Leader. Poisons in T?>y Candles. Tbje following letter on arsenical ?x.i j soiling through green candles was con tributed to The Times in March, 1889, by Major Leadbetter. chief constable of Denbighshire: A curious c ase came tinder my notice lately which. I think, is of public value. A children's party and Christmas tree resulted in most of the little people and many of the older ones b'.ing seized rn, . with symptoms of mineral poisoning. The fact of several who were present ?who had-not partaken of food or liquid of any kind b lng in the number of those affected directed my attention to the col ored candles on the tree. These I had examined by the county analyst. Mr. Lvwe, ^of Chester, whose I report is to thc effect that the green ean ! dies were colored with arsenical green I to the extent that .every eight candles would contain one grain of arsenious anhydrite. He further reports that the red candles were colored with vermilion. There is no doubt, therefore, that wu have not further tcseek for an explana tion of the symptoms-a crowded room with the atmosphere changed with ar- j senical and mercurial fumes sufficiently accounting for it. It is only fair to stare that I learn the candles were not of Eng lish manufacture and were bought with the toys. Burying an Kmpty Coffin. A most extraordinary occurrence is rei?orted from Wrexham. A child in- 1 mate of the workhouse died the other dey and a coffin was procured, as usual, from the contrae.-ng undertaker. In due time this coffin was conveyed from the workhouse to the cemetery and there interred, a clergyman of the ..Church of England officiating. Some time after ward the body of the child was discov ered at the workhouse/an empty coffin having been buried. .The cemetery au thorities were communicated frith, tne coffin dismtefretL'tbe body^of' the,phild, ! placed in "it, and it/was again consigned J to the grave.^Loodon Tit-Bits. THE LEAVING'OF MONEY. Why Jay Gould Wa?. Justified in Bequeath ing His-Fortune as He Did. ... Ja}- Gould left bis great estate to. Ids1! children, a? might reasonably have been expected of him. When men accumu late money, much or little, it is natur?l that "tfiey should hand it down to then children, if they have them, and gener ally the public sentiment commends them for so doing. The feeling that a man should rightfully look first after his own household prevails among the people. When the estate is as vast as Mr. Gould's, however, some newspapers'1 Uer exclamations of surprise and protest if some of it is not bequeathed for public purposes or for organized charities. They seem; to proceed on the assumption that the man i^Jjound to take away from his children money which he himself would not give up during his life. In other words, they would require him to force his children to make benefactions which he himself had not made. If a moral obligation to give away Iiis money thus rests on a man, it rests on him personally and during his own life. He does not discharge it by keeping the money wbHe he lives and ci cn pelling his children to give it away for him after his death. If his money or any part of it belongs to the public of right, it bo longs to them during the life of tho tuan, not merely at his death. He is respon sible for the stewardship and is account able for its performance; and he cannot transfer tb others the obligation. . Really it cannot l>e called noble gen erosity, high altruism, for a man to give away his money only after he is dead and he has no more use for lt. He should be his own almoner during his own life. If the methods by which he obtained his fortune were culpable in his own estima- I tion and ho wishes to make atonement for thom in departing from this life, he can do it only by returning to the indi ! vidnals the money which he took from ; tbein wrongfully. He does not whiten j bis offense by giving it to some-body else. | If it belongs rightfully to others besides ! himself, it belongs to those from whom j he got it by unjust means. It was made evident during .Mr Gould's life that he had no such consci j entions scruples as to the means by which be accumulated his great esta'te: j Death did not come to him unexpected ly. For years past he must have been forewarn?! that his life was approach- ; ing its end. The consciousness;that his I time on earth was likely to 1"' short probably induced bun to pay special at tention to his religious obligations as he understood them. He became a diligent attendant upon a Presbyterian church, anti he gave his open adherence to its s<- : vere doctrines.of future accountability ; for lus conduct in this life. He was not : an infidel'. He. was an orthodox believer, j He must hare, died thinking that bis for- j tune waa rightfully his own and had ; been obtained by means consistent with* the obligatioris.oX.relfgion. He-conl? notj have felt that Je was under (he'morpl compulsi?n of uiHkiflg restij?ripn to'any oodyX s f S '. In leaving his'fortune to his children he puf upon each of th? in the burden of his own moral responsibility to use his money. He made each of them hisowu almoner, with powerto use his own in come in his own way, as fie himself" had done and insisted On di.ing. That ii all. i - New York jun. An English Socialist. Morris is brusque and kind, most gen- i erous and largehearted. He is full of tho'most restless energy, and choleric. . one'would say. from his line face. Like ? many of the socialist leaders, Hynd- ? n an and Champion and Cunningham- ; Or?bame among theiir.-he ebmepof gen tle folk, was a pnoEc schoolboy and an i Oxford university man. It was his rest less energy^ sura^se, that drove lum. out of golden poeh????reamsintba fujln busy and ben eh" cen adit e. ? should not be a bit surprised to hear j of him some such story as I have heard of another social reformer, whose father ! was one of England's greatest soldiers and Ireland's noblest sons. ThS gentle man. like William .Morris, has estab- : fished a co-operative industry near Lon don. which is a practical socialism. He ' isa big, sinewy, bronzed person, [mag- I ine the surprise of a friend of mine stay ing in the house at seeing him the first \ evening draw out a workbasket and j proceed with the making, of a night i shirt, in which he took prodigious ! stitches? while sucking awtky placidly at a big pipe! , . . - J ."Uh," said his wife, when my friend laughed, "Henry is so energetic that his : hands must be.employed even when one would think he might rest, so he makes | all the flight shirts of the neighborhood.1 -Fatharine Tynan in Indianapolis Xews.^ I em (hine Perfect ion. The~people of Montana seem to have precipitated an unexpected discussion as to feminine perfection. Dr. Sargent, of the Harvard gymnasium, has measured nearly 10.000 women who were perfect as to health, strength and general devel opment, but his f*esuits were not such that he is willing to affirm that there is snell* thing as a."perfect feminine fig- j ure." He took as his standard the aver ags of each of the measurements made for the whole 10.000, and then compared thc lines of each with t-li.it. Each was-! found to-vary in some ways, some more than others, but al' in a marked degree. It was a Pennsylvania young woman who carried away the prize which was offered fer coming the nearest to phys ical perfection.-Boston .Journal. The ROM ?II Vrrnc. j Doubtless the immoderate use of roses "by the ancients led in after days to their being relegated to their proi^r sphere in the garden, for although we have had the "War of the Roses" in o;:r modern i times the Howers were only plucked as a symbol First and last the ros? has been the theme of countless poems: There is i no poet worthy of the name who has not I consecrated it in verse.-Philadelphia Times. Jason and He Found the (.olden Fleece. Jay Gould was one of several promi nent men not known to the public by l heir real nam--. His Christian name was really Jason Gould. He dropped the Jason and took up Jay because it was more euphonious. In this manner Grover Cleveland dropped ins first name which'was Stephen, and Whitelaw Reid stropped his. which was James.-New York World. A new way t ? extinguish oil tires has been disco- -red by the chief of the Charlotte (ire department. Fie says that water is powerless to sub due a llame that is feeding on kero sene. Thc thing to do when a lamp [explodes is to run to the ll our barrel, gather np a handful of (lour and throw it on the fire. The blaze will be instantly extinguished. CRATCHED TEN MONTHS. A troublesome skin disease caused me to scratch for ten "_months, and has been '^KSgljijl cured by a few days' use of JMWfeaB M. H. WOLFF, Upper Marlboro, Md? SWiFTWE??F?C r. was curoil several years ago of white swelling in myjeg by nsin^ S55?53i an<* have had 150 symptoms of re jr^g^y'ffl turn of the dis ease. Many prominent physicians attended me. and all failed. H*S. S. S. did the work. TA UL W. KraKTATniCK, Johnson City, Tenn. * Treatise on Bicbd and S?cin Disrl eases mailed free: SWIFT* S??CJFIC CoTJf. Atlanta,'' A_willow stake-set right end up in the ground in the' spring, and with*a few buds nt its top,* is almost certain to grow, In two or th re^ years more its trunk will beJarge enough to nail a board on, .aaidw^an thus bs used as a fence-post. Some' who do^ this let the tre*e grow as large as it will, but it will bear shortening by cutting off its top and becomingan indestruct ablc fence-post, taking little "more room than one that has no roots. A coffee-bean is now made of flour, and the imitation is so perfect as to deceive the eye o? even expert cof fee dealers. Of course the flavor exposes the fraud, but it is said that immense quantities are sold. In about one hundred of the syna gogues of this country Sunday meet ing are now hold, at which lectures are delivered by the rabbis who had conducted the regular Jewish ser vice on the previous day. Tte ama31e?t Pill in tho "World ! OmsB ?>* ?Pf_E*m_ . e luffs imf riles o ?aro verv ?mall, yet po??e??all tho vir tues of th? largor Tatt'* Pill? which rt have boen so pop? ur for thirty years. ^ ? Their ftlzo and ? sjar-eoatinir com- -. S meed them for t? * uno of children (Jg* and por?on? with weak stomachs. For ? Sick Headache ? _ thor aro invaluablo as they canso tho ? 3foodton,?t*lmilato. nourish tho bodyQ and passofTnaturally without nausea ?or ffriping. Both ni/.c? of Tutt's Tills ^ nro Hold hy all dru<;e?Hti?. Boso snail. ^ Price, 2."<c O ill ce, a? Pari Placo, >*. Y. QQQQQQ&GQQ KOUT. A. THOMPSON. | ROBT.T..TATXKS. J Attorneys and Counsellors at Lair, Wall,alla, S. C. Special Attention Given to all Business Entrusted to Our Care. Sept? mber 3. 1891. 3f.-a Auditor's Notice. Assessment of Real and Per sonal Property. rilli K Auditor'.!" Oconee Cotmty or bis JL Clerk will appear at the following ?places and timos for the purpose of tak ing TAX RETURNS ?or the year ls;?:'.: \V. H. Well>oni s. Mond.;.. January 1?;. fr.s to ll A. SL f). F. Carter's, Monday. January !?">. from l to ?; P. M. M. IL Lee's, Tuesday, January IT, from S to !. A. M. Jonas/Phillips'. Tuesday, January IT. from 12 M.^Q ?) P. M ALel?^hiris* jilace. Wednesday, Janu ary J S from 1? to IL A. M. Mountain L'est. Wednesday, January is. from ;! to 1'. M. - Toll Cate, Thursday, January 10. from ii n. Il A. M. Little Liver. Thursday. January 19, from 3 to <? P. M. Salem. Fridav. January 20, from S to ll A. M. . High Falls. Saturday. Jannary SI, ?rom * to II A. M. . " ? Westminster, Monday. January .ii. Oakway, Tuesday. January24. ^ South Union, Wednesday. Januaiy 23; Fair Play. Thursday. January 2G. i sittoii's Mills, Friday. January 27.from lp A. ?L. to 12 M. Friendship, Friday. January27, iron: :: to 5 P. M. Richland. Saturday. January 2N from IO A. M. to 12 M. . Mrs. Cherry's place, "Jonday, January 30, ? rom 1 to 3 P. M. Adams' Crossing, Monday, January .50, 4 lo f, P. M. Seneca, Tuesday an.l Wednesday. Jan uary :11 and February L. Cleveland, Friday. February 3. And at the Court House from the first ot* .["uuary to. the 20th of February. All returns not made, in the above time, fifty per cent penalty will he added thereto. All male persons from twenty-one to fifty years of age. exceptingthoseexempt by law, are required to return their polls. Merchants, manufacturers, hankers, guardians, administrators and executors must make their returns sfrlctly accord ing to law. All transfers of real estate since Janu ary, lvej. must be reported. Each tax-payer, except-when impossi ble to do-so, must- make his or her own return. All notes, mortgages, moneys and other [choses iu action are taxable. All "assessments of personal property must be the usual selling price of similar property on tin- usual terms at execu tors' ur administrators' sales, a't the ; places where Th<- return is made. All returns must be sworn to. W. T. G RUBES, . Auditor Oconee County. December 1. IS9? CITATION. ? I.N TttE COUKT'OF PKOBATE. STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, [ Cot'XTV OK Oro.VKK. J ?v J. W. IIMI.I.KM.W. ESQ., Probate Judge. WtrRRKA's, J. Milton Sanders hath made suit to me to grant him Letters' of , Admmistration of tUe Estate and Effects [of Wilburn Keaton, deceased These are, therefore, to cite and ad monish all and singular the kindred and creditors of the said Wilburn "Keaton, decease !, that they be and " appear before me, in the Court of Probate? to be held at Walhalla Court House. S. C.. on Friday, the 6th ?lay of Jan uary I-'.?::, next, after publication here of, at ll o'clock in the forenoon, to show cause, if any they have, why the said administration should not be grant ? cd. Ci ven under my hand and seal this the ._Mst dav of December, Anno Domini. '. I v.u. * ^ i..-..' J. W. IioLLKMAN'. > - \ Judge of Probate. Published on the 22d day of December, l-'.'-_\ in the KKOWKK Con:IKK. Walhalla. ' s. c. . WFHSTFR, S. C., Dec. 19. 189t. Sert: I wi>h 1 could let all who are surfer::!;? . .1 any .Verre tiinra.tr know )v.<i 1>"W ?pod ; r.\r remedy ts. My son use,l it one y-ar, and .-V : e jfoutest chikl 1 have. With nany thanks. ! remain yours, H A. I ATE. GENESIS, PA . IV- 1 ! have not had one of my bad spells since .' com menced taking your medicine, six months ago. THUF5Y ELMORE. Pmi.APn.nin, PA.. Jan. s.-i!'-oa. I personally /moir of two cases of. *.'>''.?, one case of .S7. Vitus' Dartre and one of Ser rons Prostration cured by this remedy. C. A. WOOD, Treasurer American Publishing House. If you are'afilicted with Tits, St. Titus' Danee, insomnia, or any other Nerve trouble, we will send you One .Bottle Tree, all charges prepaid by us. Give Age, Post-Office and State. Address HALL CHEMICAL C0.; West Pillia., fi tQB?CCO -SE?? FREE, "Ali?jUipift. Growing Tobacco. If yon w?hf to try this Money Maxing Crop, write* te- - * SOUTHERN. TOBACCO JOURNAL, >.. .. ' <?'? ". winston. N. e. Hi OaETilRirito. F, W. IIUIDEKOPKP AND BEUREN FOSTKP. RECEIVERS. CoIunibin,*A: Greenville Division. CONDENSKI) SCHEDULE, IN EFFECT M ?VE.MI!Ki: 2'), 1S92. Trains run by 75th Meridian Time. BETWEEN CHARLESTON, Con MU?A. SEN ECA AND W?W.HM.I.A. Daily. . Daily. Noil. Stations. .Noll'. 0 50 am Lv Charleston Ar 1" 30 pm 11 20 am' Lv Columbia Ar ?'? 05 pm 12 05 pm Alston 5 Pl pm 12 23 " Bomana 4 57 " 12 42 " Prosperity 4 4d " 12 57 " Newberry I 2T? " 1 Ol -'. Helena 4 20 " i 1 :?S " ?bappeils '?'> 38 " 2 17 " . Ninety-Six :? 15 " 2 37 " Greenwood 2 .. 2 55 " Dodges - 29 " 3 12 ' " Douala's i 11 " 3.23 " lloma Path 1 ".^ " 3 43 " Ar Pelton Lv I 40 " 4 05 " Lv Pelton Ar 1 35 " 4 35 Anderson 1 15 .. 5*18 " Pendleton 12 15 " <; 00 " Ar Seneca Lv-12 10 " tl :?2 " Lv Seneca Ar 12 ?o am 7 00 '' Ar Walhalla Lv ll 40 " 5 00 '" Ar Green\ille Lv 12 Wm CinvKKN Ax?'Ki:>o.\. BELTON AM? GREENVILLE. ?" Dailv. Dailv. Stations. No IL No [V S Lv Anderson 1 pm I 15 pm j Ar Pelton I 05 " 1 35 " ! Lv Belton 1 25 " 4;: . I Ar Williamston 1 (Ki " 4 02 " Pelzer V? 55 '. 4 US ." Piedmont ll 40 " ' 4 2?;' ' Greenville ll <Jo m 5 00 " BETWEEN CHARLESTON. COLUMBIA. ALSTON AM? SrAKTAXnUKOi Daily. Daily. No 13. Stations. No l i. ti 50 am Lv Charleston Ar 10 30pm 3 50pm Lv Columbia Ar 1 20pm 4 30 pm Alston 12 40 " 5 23 " Carlisle 11 44 am I 5 32 " Santuc 11 " 5 5o " [Inion I ! 17 " 0 23 Pacht io 44 - ! ?'> 50 " Ar Spartanburg Lv lo ?o .? j 1<> lo pm Ar Asheville Lv 7 on am BETWEEN SEWRERRV. CLINTON <vxr?i LAURENS. . Ex. Sun. Sun. Xo 15. Stations. No pi. ! ll 20am Lv Columbia Ar 6 05pm] 2 On pm Newberry ll On ' ? ? 3 04 " Goldvill? 10 5?; am j 3 34 .* Clint.?n io :?0 . 4 15 " Ar Laurens Lv '.< 5*1 " BETWEEN ffOIKrES AM? AKBEVII.L'E. j Daily. Daily, j Xo. il. Stations. No. ll. ! Mixed. . Mixed, i 3DO pm Lv [lodges Ar . io pm ; :: 211 " * Ar Iki!i"tnurh's Abbeville V.T. Sun. Ex. Sun. So. 457- Stations. No. j S 00am Ev Hollges * Ar 7 35 am 8 25 " - Darraugh's: 7 15 " S 40' " Ar Abbeville' Lv 7 < *> " CO*O?ECT*OXS VTA Soi in Botfyp It A IL ROAT?. Daily. .' Daily. ; No. Central Time. No. ss. J 6 45am Lv Columbia Ar _' 40 pm jil :10am Ar Savannah Lv lo 20am ' Daily. '? Daily, j No. :S). Central Time. No.. 10. 12 30 pm Lv Columbia AP 00j>m . 5 in pm Ar Savannah Lv 1 i.HVp?ri Parlor Cars between Columbia and Savannah. j__ Trains leave SpartanbuTg. s. C.. A. & < . Division. Northbound. !.'".> \. JL-? 3?4S i*, .M.. 6.00 i*, M."(Vestibuled Limited): .Southbound. 1.5?; A. M.. 3.:>? P. M.. U.37 ! .A- M. (Vestibuled Limit M); W. stbound. |W. X*. C. Division. 0.50 r. M. for Ilender SOnville. Asheville and [lot Springs. Trains leave Greenville. S. c.. A. A C. Division, Northbound, 3.07 A. M.. 2.20 :.. j M., 5.KS p. M. (Vestibuled Limited): Southbound. 3.07 A. M.. -?.ii v. M.. 12.28 j p. M. (Vestibuled Limited), j Trains leave Seneca, s. C.. A. A- C. : Division. Northbound. L3?j \. M.. I2.15VP. M.: Southbound. ! 3$ A. J*., 'i..." r\ M. : Trains Nos. ll ami Ii on thc ''. and <.. Division, and Trains I-'l an?! ! ! thc A. . and S. Division wi!! run >< .!i?? to and from ! Charleston over th.- S. ''. I.', li. PULLMAN CAR S?EVn Pullman Sleeper on !;'. and 11 between I Charleston and Asheville, via Colnmbia ' ami Spartaaburg. ; Pullman "Pala^esSIecping Car on-trains [0. lo. ll ami* ll. :;7 and :s on A. A .". Division. VV. A. TUJ?K. ^ GeaH Pass. Agt., Washington. D. ( . . S. IT. HARDVv*J< K. :? Ass't Gen! Pass. Agt.. . Atlanta, lia. V. L. iii BEE, . Columbia, s. i . SOL. HAAS. Traffic Manager. Washington.d>. i'. W. IL GREEN. v . General Mariagen Washington. D. C. Atlantic Coast I>in?' PaN^-n^-r Depart mont. Wilmington, A". C., .Jaroumj '.. LSi?3. Fast Linc Between Charleston and Columbia ?finI L'ppcr^outli Carolina, N<?ri !i Carolina, and Athens and Atlant?. fl ri TI A ri n rt n A CL No. W B8TWAKD Leave Charleston. " Lanes. " Sumter. Arrive ( 'olnmbia.. " Prosperity..... .. .. Newberry_ " flinton.!. " Greenwood... " Abbeville.... '. Athens. " Atlanta. " Winnsboi-o."... :. 10pm " Charlotte. 7 30 -'.' j " Anderson. r :?5.p m j " Greenville. 4 50 " j " Spartan burg. 6 50 " " HendersonviHe.v !* 05 " ; " Asheville.:i0 lo KAslWAtai. .No.:.::. ; Leave Asheville. 7 0"a m " HendersonviHe. S 02 " " Spartanburg....lo ic '. Greenville .. Il D. j? r?i " Anderson.,. 1.1:". " '* Charlotte. 1? 35 am Winiisboro.ll 54 " " Atlanta. S-*30 a m " Athens. Ho? " " Abbeville. ! 42j) ni " Greenwood.. ".. i 15 " " Clinton. ::<? " " Newberry. i is " " Prosperity. 4 a t " " Columbia. ?; :>) .. Arrive .Sumter. 7 25 " " Laues...*. . 8-40 " *' Charleston*. ?. 10 00 " ? Daily. X'os. 52 and Solid Trains between Charleston and ( linton. S. c. IL M. EMERSON, Ass'r Gen'l Passenger Agent. .L P. K KN I.V. General Manager. T. M. EMERSON, Traffic Manager. Surveyin LANDS SURVEYED in any part ol thc*court*ty. Prices' reasonable. .. ' -' "1. H. HARRISON. OctoherS, 1891. . 41-tf SURVEYING: w M. F. ERVIN , will be f?nrifl at Iiis " office, on South sfde'o? Main, street, when his Service.* are iesire4 on' Surveys. - May*5,189? E. W. HUroE?>PEE ANT) REUBEN FOST?K; K EOE J VERS. 'Atlanta & Charlotte Air Line ^ Djg^isioii. COXDENSED SCHEDt'LE OF PASS?ENOEK TRAINS. IN EFFECT SoVEM?EE.20. ?S.:2. S'?rthbon?ad. .?io. :<**. Mo. IO. >o. I'i. EASXEKS TIMK. Daily. I>aily. Dailv. I.v. Atlanta (E. T.. 12. !."> pw &2fl ;>m s.o."> am ?..' Ch?rold?tf. 9.52 .. 8.40 *l .. Xorcross. .'. 10.03 " S.52 " '<' 'Duluth. 10.13 " ?.04 " .. Snwaiiec. H>:23 " 9.15 ? '. Mnlord. . I0.3?*- 9.28" .. Plowerv Branch. MUH .. 9.42 .. Ca?ncs?iile. 2.1.1 nm ll.io 10.03 " .. Lula. pm ll.:?: " 10.T. u " Bcllton. U* " 10.30 " .. Cornelia. 12.05 am 10.51 " .. Mt. Airv. 12X9 .. 10.55 ? .. Toccoa ". .VIM: " ll.rj - *. Westminster. LIT " 11.56 'fe .. Seneca..*. 1.3* " 12.15pm .. Central. 'J. lo " l.ao " .. Etisk..-!-'.. 2.42 .. 1.55 " .. Greenville. .".<..? pin s.oT .* 2.2S *. .. Greer's. 3.1>j " 3.00 " WcUford.? . 3JM " 3.2ft " " Spartanbtirg.i_f~?00pni 1 :>.-?s " i "ii ton . 4.20 " 4..is " .. O.wpe.n.? . 4..'^? " 4.11 " .. Gaffneys. 4.32 " 4.42 *. .. Blacksburg. C4S.pm 5.09 .,.'.....3 " .. Grovei. 5. is 5.15 .? .. King's Mt. 5.34 .. 5.35 " .. G as tonia_,. 5.:.7 .* COU " .? Lowell. COS .. 6.20 H .' Bellement. ?'..t7 " 6.32 ** Ar. Charlotte. 8.05pm i:.40 .. T.eo ? >?. a? \? I i. .\o. f>. Sonthbouttd. ,, . , Dajiy. ^aily. LT. Charlotte. .mt Km-pin n.-jupm '.. Bellcmont. 1.25 .. 11.42 .* .. lowell. l-? 11.52 .. Gastonia. l.;?. " '12.02 am .. Kind's Mt. 2. ll " . 12.2S .. .. <Jr..vcr. 2.28 " 12.44 " .. Blacksburg. l".4s am -.37 ?. 12.54 " .'. Ga?lncj?. . 2..V. 1.11 .? .. C.wpeii?.. . 3?20 .' : .. vieil ford. 4.oo .. . 2.1s" *. .. Greer's. 4.::. " 2.35 1 .. Greenville. 12.2? pm 1.42 " 3.07 " .. EsSleys. . 5.14 " ; 3J5 - .. OentnJ. ?.05 " 4.10 " .. Seneca. &30 " 4.3s .. Westminster. 6.46 " 4.5S *. " Toccoa. .. 5.40 " j Mt. Airy. . S.H) .. i ?.15 .. .. Cornelia. 8-03 .. .;.:? .' .. Bdlton. s.-V. . .-,.41 ? .. Lula. Xl?pm *.2s .. | ?J.43 .. .. Gainesville. .. 833 .. 7.07 .. .. (-"lowery Branch. 9.12 " T.26 " .. Buford:. :>.24 7.3s u '. Suwanee. y"'> .. 7.52 " .. Duluth. ::?.!) .. s.03 " .. Norerosfc. .\V)M3 .. >.U " - Chaitthlee. 10.19 .. s.?~> ?. Ar. Ail.iiitu K. T .- i Jw pm-11.00 pn 9.00 pm Addilmtia! irani- N->-. 17.im? 1? Lula aeei.ni mmlation. dar';, except r*un?lay? i<-.iv. ? Atlanta ."."'?> p. m.. :r .v.- Lula -.J-> p. m. !{<.:..riling, leaves Lula '..00 a. m.. arri-..- Atlanta >.."?<> a. m. Uetween Lula and AXliens--X<r?. ll and ;.. daily; leave LnlaSJSOp m. and' WSS> a. arrive Ath ens 10.15 p. m. and I2?0 p. m. Returning leave Athens S'o>. I? and 12. daily. .;.:?'i p. m. an-i s.i/7 a m.. ar--..- fjila s.i."> p. m. and a. m. Uetwe^ii ?.M.:. and Kl ! ~-r-... 11 - X... ?13 and So. i laid j .-\i--p: Sunday. leave Tt>ccoa 7.4-'.a. m. and 11.2.'. a. m.. arriv." rltb?rton 11^5a. m. .and [ 2 20 p. m. Returning. No. 'Xi and N'o. 12. daily } except r-unday, leave Klls-rtou :>.o?i ?>. in. sad 7 3o ! a. m.. nrnvc To?.a 7 '?. p. III. aird 10.25 a. m. j Sos. S and 10 Pullman sleeper ??-tween Atlanta I and New V?>rk. N>.?. X and .>-Wa-hMiL't-.n and S<ii:: h western Vestibuled Limited, iietwee? Sew \--rk and Atlanta. Tbrongh Pullman Sleeper? between Sew Vorli and Sew <>r!':ni?. and .between Sew Vi.rk and Augusta: also betweeS) Washington nd Memphis, via Atlanta and Birmingham, uniting iHiTween Atlanta and Birmingham with l.*uUman Sleeper t" and fr.-m Sjtireveport, I.a.. v ia Mendi.tn ami Vicksburg. So. 3? connects at S|'.artanb'tug with I'uIIuuiu Sleep?r ?or A?ln ville. Sos. Il an<i 12- Putin an buffet Sleepcrberween? W aching:..n and Atlanta, uniiiii^ between Dan villeandtGreen?>boro witji Pnllman Sleeper t.? an?l fr<?m Portsmouth .in-l N?.rf..!k. For detailed ??forn?at:-)n as to local and I through time :..i-!i-?. rate? and Pullman Sleeping t Car reservations, confer with !.>.-ai agents, ?.r ! addre? \V. A Tl BK, Genera] I "assenter .\2enr. Washington. I>. Ci s II. II ticnu M K. Ass't ?iel, ? Pa?. Aft., Atlanta. Ga. [* .l.t. IHIDV?, Snpcrintende t, Atlanta. <la. ! \V. ll CREEN, General Manager. Washington, l>. C SUi. Il t A??. Trafhe Manager, Washington. l>. C. "i )LD RELIABLB SO?TH CAROLINA RAILWAY, i nn: CAKI>. < i.i ri i O il t.. Nut emin i '2<?. I . [Si.:i rUAIXS v I'.J-.N * KAELESTOS A N . - '.\ V-I>lKVLr.A VIA MM : i? < A ROI IN A RAILWAY A'.MI !:. A i>. liAtLKOAJX tr Sanxmerville . Branehv?lle'. i Ar Ne.. jerry;. < .! . l ?'A.Mili . Seneca .. .. Ar VValha?a ... 1.? pm .2 ?-tu 1" pm pm Nb. il. <> .".<? am 7 2> am s A'i am i) !*.. am fl '? am 11 2'? am 12 -VT pm 2 :;T pm l :;.'. pm l> AO ji?l Wal hal la .... Seneca. S?neca. Anderson. . (i ronwood ? \".-.v!-.-ri> ... < ;i>lum.Kia... C<rfifml?ia... ' wuagi iif.?i: Branchville !>rimn>? rville Cliariest?>n . ( iihiiii'-!;i.. Spartanhur> Asbjdville.-. 1 -. \ 111 v : ? . tun 5 pm .". pm i?pm >"':im pin '?' 12 am .". ?.:n !" :.<> am - ! : ;,!'' "pm MPm > 1 II \ II.' !.? i O\ iN". SLEEPER. i.. .Ar pia .. Ar ! pm 1 ?.ni .am Ar Ar. I.v Denmarl [Blackvij! Aiken. . A iigaSta Amrosta . Aiken ... Blackville Denmark . i?ranehvjl] Sanim?^rvi] '. "harlcstoii .. l ! ..I: *2 pm So. 2'".. 7 !-"i am s :S am ai .un am 1 All am [.rn ?. .?" am 7 2> am '? ts i am ?) U am I?) mi am I ! 02" am II Warn i i ii. . Not 14. ?! .".'i jim .". i.'i jim ''. ls j,m 7 "7 pm s 28 pm J7 pm ?>> pm JO am . IHI VXDEX HIV .. < liarlcstoa .. .Columbia. ...KilliTviile ..... < 'amden . !< -V. Ar . tv .Ar I.v '.Vf ?un 15 pm 55 pm I" pm ' . r < oNM-a Tl'iN at Cl aileston with < ly4c Steamship for N v York. Momlav??, Wednesdays and Fridays: for'JacksonvilI? Mondays Tlinrsiiays and Saturdays: atCohrmbia daily fc>r and from ' 'olumbia ,v Greenville Railroad: at..Vu-jn?'ia <i;'i?v with Ge&rgia !:. iv. Central K. R. and* V. R. ?fe W. C. Ry.: sst Camden daily with C C. & r'.K. .Ii!, rhroa^h train to and from MarL>u, N. C., at;'i Blaclcsbur?T. fui' farfber information apply to^. , lt L. I.KAV. Union Ticket . Agenf. * : Columbia. S. c. ? V.. r. WARING, , General Pass. Agent. C. M. WARI?. General Manager. Scientific American Agency fer Ks CAVCATS, TRAOE MARKS, DESICN PATENTS COPYRICHTS, etc For tnformaiion^d^jroc TTnnt?book write to 1 >tcxx. ft VX>_ 351 Bnoj?DWjiv. >"EW YORK.. Olde? hufoaj iorseenrins patenii la America. Kv^ry patent tai efl out by us ls brou ?tnvpe? oro ' the pobllc by a notlccjri ven free ol cajpg? la the f cajflf?la t >mmnu Largest o' r(*n!.it.:on.of any (identifie poper in the world, ?ptendldly illnsrtatcn. Xo lnteTikrent man sh on id be wit boat lt. WecMr.^3.00 s rear: $1^0 ?ix months. Addros* MtWITA CO? uisa?ES, 3S1 Broadway. Xew Yorfc. - ^ * r- ?]