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FR-SEND 99 To-YOUR? ?Mothers . i Makes Child Birth Easy. : ? Shortens Labor, S Lessens Pain, ? . Endorsed by the Leading Physicians. J o BookU>tt3?oth+r**'maUedTIOE. J S BRADFIELD KhCULATCR .CO. . S ATLANTA, GA. J SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. J Curesa:i Female Complaints and Monthly irregnlarity, I^ucorThoaorWhites, Pain ir. Back or Si les, strengt hen? the feeble, builJs ? up the whole system, lt has cu red thousands und will cure you. Druggists have it. Send Etan.]? for hook. DIL*J. P. ?KOHGOOLE i CO., Louisville. Ky. T?SL? a>.\V?iOI,U?;\.~ DR. TALMAGE CONTINUES HIS SER MONS ON GOD IN NATURE. "Sn oct Splo-s. st..<.:<? and Onvt 'n"-Won derful l on e ?in! Variety ol the ??il?K-"> Inlayer;. From Nature-How the Divine Care 5s shown In ! lt.- (Kean's shell?. BROOKLYN. Feb li?. -In the Tabernacle this forenoon Rev Pr. Talniage contra ned hts Course of sermons on (iud every where: His subject was the "Cpachology of the Bible, or. < 'od Among tte Shells.' the text being takeu from Exodus. SOih chapter. Sith verse. "And the Lord said onto Moses; Take anto theesvyec t spices; stricte ami onycha.'" i Yon may not have noticed the shells | of the Bibi?, although in this early part : of the sacred book ??od calls j ou to con- | sider and employ them as ho called Moses to cousiderand employ them. TLv onycha of my text is a >.:..:! found on the banks of the Red sea. and Moses and ids j army must have crushed many of t: em underfoot as they crossed the bisected ? waters, onycha cu the beach and ony tba in the unfolded bed of the deep. I shall speak of this sholl as a beautiful and ; practical r?v?lation of God. an 1 as true as the first chapter of Genesis and the; bust chapter of Revelation or everything between Not only is this she'd, the onycha; found at the Red -Sen. but tn the waters of India. It cot only del?ctate? thtreye-i with its corra ferions of beauty, white j and lustrous and serrated; but blesses: the nostril wiri; a pungent aroma, "i his shellfish; accustomed to feet] oh spike \ nani, is redolent with that odorous j plant--redolent when aliv? o?d redolent j when dead Its shelis when bumed bo- I witch tit" air with fragrance. In my test God con.mauds Moses to; mix this onchya with the perfumes of the altar in the ancient tabernacle^and 1 propose to mix some of rs perfumes at the altrrr of Brooklyn Tabernacle, for. i having spoken to you on the "Astronomy | Of the Bibi*'; or. < ?od Among rh- Stars:' the "Chronology of the Bible: br. God j Among the Centuries:** the "Ornithology Ot the Bible: or. God Amor:- the Birds, the "Mineralosy of the Bible: or. ''od Among the Amethysts;"" the "Ichthyol? gy of Hie Bible; or God Among the Fishes." 1 now come to speak of the 'Conchology of the Bible; or"G< d Among the Sh.-lls. "' ni' liss of TITI: <? ::.\N. It is a secret ti;-:t you may keep for me. for ? have uever 1 . for.- told it to any one thar m ail tin- realms of the natural world there is nothing to mo so fas elat ing so completely absorbing; so full of . suggestiveness, as a shell What: More entertaining than a bird..which causing when a shell cannot sing? Wi ii. there yon nave made a great mistake. 1 ick up theonycha from the hauksoi the-Sed sea or pick upa bivalve from .. beach of the Atlantic- ocean and listen, and you bear a whole choir of m.-;riue voices bass alto soprano-in an unknown tongue, bat seeming to chant, as J ?.ut them to my ear. "The sea is ins. and '::-. matle it." others singing. "Thy way. 0 God ts in the seai* others hymning. "He ruleth tiie raging of the seaJ j What.'" says some ono . ! .-. 'does the i abell impress you-more than the starr' in some resp? els. yes. rs cause 1 can han dle the shel! and closely study the shelL while 1 cannot liandle thc star, and if I study itutusFstudy it a? a distance of millions and millions of miles 'What.** says some one else, ".-'.re you more impressed fy the shed thauthe| flower'-' Yes. for it has far greater va rieties and far greater richi* ss of color. a? 1 co?fd show you is thousands of specimens, and because the Shell does not fade as does the rose leaf; hut maintains tts beauty century after century, so that theonycha which the hoof ol pharaoh's horse knocked aside ::; the cna^e of:the Israelites across the Red sea may have kept its luster to tins huir Yes. ?hey ar* so particolored and many colored that you might pile them up until you would haven wail with all the colors of t'ae wall of beaven: from the jasper at i toe bottom to the amethyst at lb- top. j Oh. the shells! The petrified foamrof the sea. Oh. the shells! The hardened bubbles of the deep Oh. the shells, which are the diadems thrown by the ocean to the feet ol die continents. How the sh?-lls are ribbed grooved, cylin dered mottled, iridescent! They were used as coin Ly son.- of the nations They wer- fastened m belts by others, and made in handles of woollen imple ments by still others. Mollusks uotoxdy of the sea. but mollusks of th- land. Do you know how much they have had to do with ti.?* worlds history": They saved the church of < ?od from extinguishment The Israelites marched ont of Egypt 2.000:000 strong, besides Bocks and herds. Th" Bible says -"the people took their dough before it was leavened: their kneading troughs being bound orrin the clothes on their should, rs. Tl w-re thrust forth out of Egypt and could not tarry, neither had they prepared for themselves any viet mis."' Just think of it! Forty years in the wilderness. In fidelity triumphantly asks How could they live 40 years m the wilderness with out food? Yon say manna fell. Oh, that was after a long while. They-would have-starved 50 times before the m inna j fell Tire fact is. they were chiefly kept j alive by the mollusks of the land or shelled cr?atures Mr. Fronton.and'Mr. Sicard took the same route from Egypt toward Cannan that the Israelites took and they give this as their testimony ISRAEL S ROUTE T'J CANAAN -Although the children of Israel must have consisted of about 2.000.000 souls, with baggage and innumerable flocks and herds, they were not likely to ex perience any inconvenience in their march. Several thousand persons might walk abreast with the gr--n'est ease in the very narrowest part of the valley in which they first began to file off. It soon afterward expands to above three leagues in width. With respect to forage they would bo at no loss. The ground is cov ered with tamarisk, broom, clover and saint foin, of which latter e* pec?ally camels are passionately '"^nd, besides al -!-^? most everj- variety of cdoriferoui and herb propel for pasturage. "The whole sides of the valley t which the children of Israel marc -?till tufted ' with brushwood, doubtless afforded food for their together with many drier sorts fo ing fire, on which the Israelites with the greatest ease bake the they brought with them on sm; plates, which form 3*constant app to the baggage of an oriental ?tr Lastly, the herbage underneath trees and shrubs is completely c with snails of a prodigious size 'the best sort, and, however unii such a repast might appear to u ? are hero esteemed a great delicacy, are so plentiful in thisrvalley that j be literally said that it is difficult t one step without treading on then So tire shelled creatures saved tl of israelites on the march to the ised land, and the attack of infide this point is defeated by the facts, fidelity is always defeated by facts it is founded on ignorance. In w and printing our interrogation poi at the bottom a mark like a perk over it a flourish like the swim teamster's whip, and we put this rogation point at the end of a qu< but in the Spanish language the ir ! gation point is twice used for each j tion. At the beginning of the qu j the interrogation point is present? side down, and at the close of the don right side up. When infidelity a question about the Scriptures, j always indicates ignorance, tho cpi ought to be printed with two inte; i rion points, one at the beginnin; ! O:?O at the close, but both upside < j THE ROYAL FAMILIES OF NATUR] I Thank God tor the wealth of mo i all np and down the earth, whether j ing tba Israelites on their way t !a:nl flowing with milk and honey,' we are better acquainted with the lusks, when flung to tho beach of or sea. There aro three great famil them. If i should ask you to name of the gre?t royal families of the c perhaps yon would respond, the I of Stuart, the house of Hapsburg house of Bourbon, but tho three families of mollusks are thc unival shell in one part; the bivalve, or sh I two patts, and the multivalve, or :TI many ??arts, and I see God in the: er . hinge, in their every tooth, in j every cartilage, in their every ligar in their every spind ridge, and in every color, prism on prism, and adaptation of thin shell for still j: and thick coatings for boisterous j They all ?last: upon me the thought o ; providential care of God. What is the use of all thia arohitec of ti: . shell, and why is it pictured : he outside lip clear down into its 1 i linthsof construction? Why the inf of skill and radiance in a shell? Wh the use of the color and exquisite c of a tiling so insignificant as a sholl \ Why. when the conchologist by dr j or rake fetches the crust?ceo us s; mens to the shore, does ho find at his whoie al ham bras and coliseums Parthenons and crystal palaces of be; I in miniature, and these bring to 1 j only an infinitesimal part of the < ! lenee in the great subaqueous wc : Linnaeus counted 2.000 species of sh but conchology had then only begin : achievements. While exploring the bed of the At tic ocean in preparation for!;-.ing cable shelled animals wore brought from depths of 1.900 fathoms. W ! lifting the telegraph wire from the Iv iterranean and Ucd seas, shelled c tur - were brought up from depths 2..fathoms. The English admira exploring in behalf of science, fo m Husks at a depth of 2.43.") fathoms 14,210 feet deep What a realm av j for vastness! As the shell is only the house and j wardrobe of insignificant animals of ! deep, why all that wonder and beaut; construction? God'scare forthem is j only reason. And if God provide ; munificently for them, will he not that yon have wardrobe and shel' Wardrobe and shelter for a peri wini Shall there not be wardrobe and shel for a man? Would God give a coat mail f<>r the defense of a nautilus ? leave you no defense against the sto' Does he build a stone house for a cr ture that lasts a season and leave wi oct home a soul that takes hold on c turies and eons? Hugh Miller found "the Footprit of the Creator in tho old red sai stone." and I hear the harmonies of G in the tinkle of the sea shells when 1 tides come in. The same Christ w drew a lesson of providential care fr the fact that God clothes with gn the field instructs me to draw the sa: less.-a from the shells. THE O ?RAL INSECT TEACHES FAITH. In almost every man's life, howc\ w.-il i ? .rn and prosperous for years, a in almost every woman's life, there con. a very dark time, at least once. A c< junction of circumstances will threat bankruptcy and homelessness and stan rion It may be that these words w meet the ear or will meet the eye of thc who are in such state of forebodin Come. then, and see how God gives ; ivory palace to a water animal that y< could co\er with a 10-cent piece ai clot iies in armor against all attack coral no bigger than a snowflake. I < n< t think that God will take better ca of a bivalve than of one of his own ch: dren. 1 rake to your feet with the gosp rake the most thorongh evidences < G d's care for his creatures. I pile aron r, y?u great mounds of shells that thc may teach you a most comforting theo Ogy Oh. ye of little faith, walk arnon these arbors of coraline and look at thes bouquets of shell Ut to bo handed queen on her coronation day, and s?. these fallen rainbows of color, and e: amine these lilies in sion*4, these prin rctses in stone, these heliotr pcs in 8ton< these cowslips in stone, these geranium in stone*, these jap?nicas in stone. ? ye who have your telescopes read looking out on clear nights, trying to se u!;nt i- transpiring in Mars. Jupiter an Mercury, know that within a few hours walk or ride of where you now are ther are whole worlds that you might explore but of which you aro unconscious, anc among the most beautiful and suggest ive .;: so worlds is the conchologica worl L Take this lesson of a providen tia! care. How does that old hymn go? w<- may, like ships, hy tempest be tossed On ;>er.;,>.:> deeps, but cannot be lost. 'I hough satan enragea the w ind and the lido. The promise assures us the Lord will provide, '? ?P'S CARE AND MAN'S FREEDOM. But while you get this pointed lesson of providential care from the sheiied creatures of the deep, notice in their construction that God helps them to help themselves. This house of stone in which they live is not dropped on them and. is cot be.ilt around them. The material f r it exudes from their own bodies and ts adorned with a colored fluid from the pores of their own neck. It is a most interesting thing to see these crustacean animals fashion their own homes out of carbonate of lime and membrane. And all of this is a mighty lesson to those who are waiting for others to build their fortunes when they ought to go to work and. like the mollusks, build ihcir own fortunes out ot their own brain, out of their own sweat, out of their own industries. Not a mollusk on all tho beaches of all the seas would have a house of shell if it had not its. f built one. Do not wait for others to shelter yon or prosper you. All the crustaceous creatures of the earth from every flake of their covering and from every ridge of their tiny castles on Atlantic and Pa cific and Mediterranean coasts say, "Help yourself, while God helps you to help yourself." Those jieople who are waiting for their father or rich old uncle to die and leave j them a fortune are as silly as a mollusk j would be to wait for some other mollusk to drop on it a shell equipment It would kill the mollusk as in most cases it de stroys a man. Not one person ont of a hundred ever was strong enough to stand a large estate by inheritance.dropped on him in a chunk. Have great expecta tions from only two" .persons-G< yourself. Let theXnycha of ruy t come your preceptor. But tho more 1 examine the ?hi more I am impressed that God is of emotion' Many scoff at emoti seem to think that God is a God c geometry and iron laws and < apathy andr enthroned stoicism. No! The shells with overpower"] phasis delly it. While law and reign in the universe, you have see the ?avishness of cole* on th< tacea, all shades of crimson from est blush to blood of battlefie! shades of blue, all shades ?f gre shades of all colors from deepest to whitest light, just called out shells with no more order than a u premeditates or, calculates^ how kisses and hugs she shall give he: waking up in the morning sunligh Yes, my God is an emotional and he says, "We must have colo: let the sun paint all of theinon'fhe of that shell, and we must have i and here is a carol for the robin, psalm for man, and a doxology. fe seraphim, and a resurrection call f archangel." Aye, he showed hiir. God of sublime emotion when he himself on this world in the perso of Christ to save it, without reg; the tears it would take, or the bl would exhaust, or the agonies it y crush out. When I see the Louvres and the embonrgs and the Yaticans of I painting strewn along the 8,000 mi coast, and I hear in a forest on a su; morning musical academies and del's societies of full orchestras, God is a God of emotion, and if h serves mathematics it Ls mathen set to music, and his figures are w: not in white chalk on blackboard; written by a ringer of sunlight on of jasmine and trumpet creeper. WE HAVE A CLEAN RELIGION. In my study of the conchology o Bible this onycha of the text als? presses me with the fact that religi perfumed. What else could God meant when he said tc Moses, " unto thee sweet spices, stacte and cha?" Moses took that shell of the cha, put it over the tire, and as it c bled into ashes it exhaled an odor hung in every curtain and filled th< cient tabernacle, and its sweet smoli caped from the sacred precincts anc crated the outside air. Perfume! That is what religioi But instead of that some make it a odor. They serve God in a rough acerb way. They box their child's because he does not properly keep day instead of making Sunday so att ive the child could nut help but ke< They make him learn by heart a dift chapter in the book of Exodus, wit the hard uames, because he has naughty. How many disagreeable \ people there are! No one doubts t piety, and they will reach heaven, they will have to get fixed up bc they go there or they will make tro by calling out to us: "Keep off grass!" "What do yon mean by pl Lng that flower?" "Show your ticket Oh. how many Christian people i to obey my text and take into their \ 6hip and their behavior and their co dations and presbyteries and genera semblies und conferences more onyi I have sometimes gone in a very gal spirit into the presence cf smile disag able Christ inns and in five minutes wretched, and at some other time I h gone depressed into the company suave and genial souls, and in a f< ; ments 1 felt exhilarant. What was difference? It was the difference in w they burned on their censers. The burned onycha; the other burned i f?tida. TIi? ROYAL PURPLE. In this conchologica] study of the ble I also notice that the mollusks shelled animals furnish the purple t you see richly darkening so many Sc: ture chapters. The purple stuff in ancient tabernacle, the purplegirdlt the priests, the purple mantle of Ron emperors, the apparel of Dives in pur and fine linen-aye, the purple r< which in mockery was thrown nj Christ-were colored hythe purpleof I shells on the shores of the M?diter noan. It was discovered by a shepher dog having stained his mouth by brcs Lng one of <be shells, and the pur; aroused admiration. Costly purple! Six pounds of the pt pie liquor extracted from the shellfish were used to prepare on?> pound of wo Purple was also used on the pages books. Bibles and prayer books a peared in purple vellum, v, dich mayst be found in someof the national li brari of Europe. Pintare!; speaks of some pt pit which kept its beaury for I?0 ycai But after awhile the purple beear easier to get, ano that which had been sign of imperial authority when worn robes was adopted by many people, ai so an emperor, jealous of this appropri tion of the purple, made a law that ar one except royalty wearing purple shou be put to death. Then, as if to punish the world f< that outrage of exclusiveness, (iud o' literated the color from the earth, : much as to say. "If all cannot have i none shall have it." But though Gc has deprived the race of that shellfis which afforded the purple there ai shells enough left to make us glad an worshipful. Oh, the entrancement <. hue and shape still left al! up and dow the beaches uf all the continents: Th? creatures of the sea have what roofs t enameled porcelain! They dwell unde what pavilions blue as tiie sky and tier as a sunset and mysterious as an aurora And am 1 not right in leading you for few moments through this mighty reals of God so neglected by human eye am human f< otstep? It is said that the hart' and ?ute wer invented from the fact that in Egy-p the Nile overflowed its banks, and whei the waters retreated tortoises were lef by the million on all the lands, and th -. tortoises died, and soon nothing w;.s 1 but the cartilages and.gristle of thes< creatures, which tightened under th< heat into musical strings that wh< r touched by the wind or foot of man vi brated, making sweet sounds, and so thc world took the hint and fashioned thc harp, anil am I not right in trying tc make music out of the sh?. '.] ?. and lifting them as a harp, from which to thrum the jubilant praises of tue Lord und the pathetic strains of human condolence? THE PEA KL OF GREAT PRICE But I lind the climax of this conchol ogy of the Bible in the pearl, which has this distinction above all other gems that it rea cires no human hand to bring out its beauties, dob speaks of it. and its sheen is in Christ's sermon, and the Bible, which opens with the onycha of my text, closes with the j*;arl. Of such value is this crustaceous product J do not wonder that for the exclusive right of fishing for it on the shores of Ceylon a man paid to the English government $600.000 for one season. So exquisite is the r>earl I do not won der that Pliny thought it was made out of a drop of dew. tho creature rising to the surface to take it and the chemistry of nature turning the liquid into a solid. You will see why the Bible makes so much of the pearl in its similitudes if yon know how much it costs to get it. Boats with divers sail ont from the island of Ceylon. 10 divers to each boat. Thir teen men guide and manage the boat. Down into the dangerous depths, amid sharks that 6wirl around them, plunge the divers, while 60.000 people anxiously gaze on. After three or four minutes' absence from the air the diver ascends, nine-tenths strangulated and blood rush ing from ears and nostrils, and flinging his pearly treasure on the sand falls into unconsciousness. Oh. it is an awful exposure and strain and peril to fish for pearls, and yet they do so, and is it not a wonder that to get that which the Bible calls the pearl of great price, worth more than all other pearls put together, there should be 'so little anxiety, so little struggle, so little enthusiasm? Would God that we were all as wise as the merchantman Christ commended, "who, when he had found one pearl of great price, went and sold all that he bad and bought it" . . But what thrills me "with guggesti ve ness is the material ont of which all pearls are made. They are fashioned from the wound of the shellfish. The exudation from that wound - is fixed and hardened and enlarged into a pearl. The ruptured vessels of the water animal fashioned the gem that now adorns finger or earring or sword hilt or king's crown. So ont of the wounds of earth will come the pearls of heaven. Out of the wound of conviction the pearl of pardon. Out of the wound of bereavement the pearl of solace. . Out of the wound of loss the pearl of gain. Out of the deep wound of tho grave the pearl of resurrection joy. Out of tho wounds of a Saviour's life and a Saviour's death the rich, the radiant, the everlasting pearl of heaven ly gladness. "And the 12 gates were 12 pearls." Take the consolation, all ye who have been hurt, whether hurt in body, or hurt in mind, or hurt in soul. Get your trou bles sanctified. If you suffer with Christ on earth, you will reign with him in glory? The tears of earth are the crys tals of heaven. "Every several gate was of one pearl." Cannot Catch Gladstone. One hears various stories of the clever ness displayed by Mr. Gladstone in elud ing inconvenient questioners, but the following, which is perfectly authentic, strikes a London correspondent as being quite the best of the bunch. The other evening some earnest young Radicals were invited to meet the prime minister. They naturally longed to discuss the po litical situation with him and to receive some advice for their guidance. Mr. Gladstone, however.descanted with great eloquence on the proper place in the church for the organ. . Then there was a short lull, and the boldest of them pulled himself together and propounded a somewhat hesitating question on home rule, or about it. The old parliamentary hand either did not ' hear or affected a conveniwt deafness. Before the sentence could be repeated Mr. Gladstone was deep in a learned ar gument with a clergyman present upon j hymns, ancient and modern. The re- j mainder of the company sat in silence,! with feelings that can be easier imagined than d:.scribed.-Philadelphia Press A Cur? For Insomnia. Old Captain Billison and his wife Han nah of Nantucket had lived in peace _nd comfort together for 20 years, the cap tain haring ?eft off going to sea early in life and adopted a home staying pur suit, but at the end of all these years, in which he and Hannah had not been sep arated for a single day, he was unexpect edly called to Boston on necessary busi ness, to be gone a month. One of the neighbors called a few days afterward. "Well, well, Hanner." said she. "I sh"d think 't'd be putty lonesome livin here without the cap'n.'" .'Lonesome!" exclaimed Hannah. T c'd stand that, but laws a-massyl How wus 1 to go to sleep nights without hearin El nathan sn orin? Fust two nights 1 couldn't sleep, nohow I c'd fix it." "Go to sleep now all right?" "Yes." "How'd ye manage it?" "Well, you see. A'aria Folger she keeps boarders next door, an I got her to come in an rig up her coffee mill't the foot o' the bed, au every night she comes in an grinds her coffee jest after I've gone to bed. Mercy! You couldn't tell it from Elnathan's >uorin. an of conrso I go right off to sleep." Hannah's eyes twinkled, and we fear she loved a joke more than she loved the truth. -Youth's Companion. Tho ?'?lent Hawaiian Pick-me-up. Poi is made from the root of the tago plant. The tago grows in the water, and its broad leaves float upon the surface It has a root very similar to the turnip but of more elongated form. It is pre pared by grating it u?>on a slightly hol lowed volcanic stone upon which water is poured from time to time. The wdiole eventually forms a paste, which under goes a slight fermentation and is pleas ant to the taste. There is a drink on tin islands known as a "poi cocktail." It is made by stirring the paste into a glass of milk. Its virtHes were discerned many years ago by Euro?)eans. For the "head" which follows a night's debauch there is nothing like it. When the stomach absolutely refuses anything known to civilization: when the throat is dry and burning, the voice husky, the temple throbbing and the hands shaking, the poi cocktail is swal lowed. It is almost instantly assimilated. A delicious feeling of calm and rest steals over the patient. The paste cov ers the inflamed walls of the stomach and protects them. The throat becomes once more of flesh, not fire, and tho head ceases to ache in !o minutes.-Pittsburg Dispatch. Form* of Snow Crystals. The pure white luster of snow is due to the fact that all the elementary colors of light are blended together in the ra diance that is thrown off from the sur face of the various crystals. More than, a thousand distinct and perfect forms of snow crystals have been enumerated and figured by tiie various investigators in that line. One hundred an?, fifty-one different forms were once observed by the English scientist Glashier, who care fully made engravings of each and print ed them in a pap< r attached to the re port of the Bri ash Meteorological so ciety for the year lts??.-St. Louis Re public. A Card From Mrs. Blaine. The following is published by request: WASHINGTON, Feb. 1. The public adverti>ements of many "Biog raphies of .lames Ci. Blaine" pretending to be "authentic" ariel "authoritative" compel me to state that no biography or "Life and Work o' Mr. Ulair.e" isauthi.; ?7"d or approved by my self or by any mciul?: of Mr. Maine's family: that no mnn.is<T?pt by Mr. Blaine, or. any pri vate letter or paper of Mr. Blaine's, or any ma terial for biography, hus been given out to any one. If in the future any "authentic" or "au thorized" biography should be prepared by competent authors, it will bo authenticated and authorized by myself. HARRIETS. BLAINE. Alexr.iioer Ill's Courage. Tiie czar has l een frequently accused of cowardice-an indictment to which, it must be admitted, many undeniable facts lend a strong coloring of pro'oabil tty. Thus it bas been alleged in supjwrt of the charge that he seldom tiri ves about tho city alone, and when not escorted by a body of Cossacks is invariably accom panied by her majesty the empress. His profound seclusion at Gatchino, where for a considerable period he hid himself even from the bulk of his own officers ? likewise created a most unfavorable im j pression, which is bj' no means yet re- j moved Again, the sight of the armies that guard the railway lines along which he I hapi>en.s to be traveling, the elaborate system of espionage, ami the practice of employing agents provocateurs, who sometimes organize the crime which they discover, have contributed to impart con sistency to a charge which his creditable career as an officer should have amply sufficed to refute.-Contemporary Re view She Injured Her Pride. "Are you hurt?" said a gentleman to a j young woman who had just fallen down in a most ungraceful heap on the side- j walk on Chestnut street the other day "No. thank you; only my pride." and she brushed off her gown aud got out of sight as quickly as possible, lt is wom an's nature to really wish if she has to fall that she will hurt herself rather than to havo all the ignominy for nothing When a man tumbles down, he is up again in a minute, his clothes intact, and no one gives more than a passing thought* to the occurrence. But the poor woman usually drops her purse, knocks her hat awry, is never certain how much lingerie she has exposed and is helped up a mis erable wreck that will take several pins and 10 minutes before the mirror to make presentable again, to say nothing of the humbling her pride undergoes by th? operation.-Philadelphia Times. THE GIRL OP THE PERIOa 5bc HM Fortitncie Unbounded, Tot 'S ow Inclines to Pensive Ways. There seems to be a mode in maladies as well as in mantles, styles in suffering as novelties in dress. Just at the present 'time it isn't fashionable to have any phys ical ailment unless it is something vague and peculiar under the general name o! "nerves," and the odd thing about it is only the more robust and vigorous worn en, so far as looks are an indication of virility, ?hat have this .nervous prostra tion perpetually on hand. ' If a woman loots pale and delicate, she never will ad mit that she is uot strong. The tin de si?cle girl glories in bearing physical pam without a complaint Site will seat bersel! in the dentist's or ocu list's chair a- era Ticernedly as if posing for the photographer and submit to the most painfu? operations without a'grean. in fact, assuring the operator "that it really was less painful than she expect ed.*' A car driver would cry like a baby if subjected to half as much suffering. But we are returning to the days of sloping shoulders, of parted pensive tresses, of fullness and frivolity in dress. The up to d .te girl is sweetly submissive, not smart and self reliant. She wears flowers in her hair and occasionally even ventures in what the girl in the old nov els is always doing, putting a rose in her bosom, your rose that you have given her. And she does it with such a shy and modest little blush. Now the ques tion is. Will the "vapors'" and'"swoons" and "sobbings" of that period come in again? The Amelias and Delias and Caro lines of that day were always in a dead faint over something. They fainted for joy and fainted for sorrow. A girl of that time swooned off when her lover proposed, and when she came to she was always lying in his arms, and of course it was all over and no use trying to tell a fellow about being a sister to him after 1 that. There was another feature about this swooning fit of the old time heroine, and that was that her dearest friend was al ways within call with the scissors to cut her corset laces. How is any one in thia time of hidden hooks ever to loosen a bodice before the heroine passes over the border line in her faint? It will be rather difficult for the modern girl, who bas traine?! herself to smile when her heart breaks, to die rather than reveal her heart to conceal her joy and preserve her se renity alike through death or divorce, to learn this graceful art of collapsing at just the proper time to bring a wary suitor to his knees. There's something dangerous to a chivalrous man's theories against mar riage to find himself suddenly with his arms full of limp, sighing, pale faced girl hood. He is more apt to call her pretty names than he would be if she stood radi ant and d?liant before him. apparently ready to laugh at bis endearuieuta. -New York Sun. Pathetic Flerolum. A pathetic heroism waa that shown by a woman, a devoted wife and mother whose life, after months of invalidism, went out in this first month of the new year. It had been the intention of her self and husband to redecorate the home <d>out the time her illness declared itself, and when last autumn it became evident that not much more time among the things of this world would be accorded to the sufferer 6he decided that the work should be carried forward under her su pervision. Her illness was of a nature to permit ber to be up and about a few hours every day, and during these strong er moments arlisis and decorators con sulted with her. carrying out her wishes in every detail. From garret to cellar tne home was gone over, and the family spent their last united Christmas in their beautifully ren ovated home. ' x'ou will be glad by and by." said this wise and loving woman, whose artistic soul must have painfully appreciated the loveliness she had creat ed only to leave; "glad that I did it all. and it will be a comfort to live surround ed by my fancies and my taste." And so it will undoubtedly prove to the husband and sons and daughters, who now f?el only their deep bereavement. Her Point of View in New York Times. ODDS ANC ENDS. Hot water is good for sprains. A work of real merit finds favor at last. The microscopist*, say that a mosquito has 22 teeth. Demosthenes was the son of a sword maker and blacksmith. If you heat your knife, you can cut hot bread as smoothly as cold. Londoners pay an average each of 21 shillings ?K;r annum for gas. If you would civilize man, begin with his grandmother.- Victor Hugo. Eighteen hundred girls were gradu ated from the Boston cooking school last year The fact that a man wants moro knowledge is proof that he has some al ready. Don't have a big Chinese porcelain jar in a room only four times the width of the jar. The Duke of Portland is the largest subscriber to newspapers and ??criodicals bl England. ( The sad face speaks much more loudly cf a heartfelt grief than a. heavy crape veil and laughing eyes. The first cable betveen Calais and Dover was a failure; tba cable was cut on s rocky ridge in 1S"A Chili is said to number among her pop ulation more p<?ets per capita than any other nation in the world April 12 next will be the 2(X)th anni versary of the introduction of the art of printing in New York city. The horse lias no eyebrows. The ap pearance of much white in the eye of a horse indicates a vicious nature. In the 12th century a hook was at tached to a footman's spear to enable him to drag a knight from the saddle. On the bank of the river Rhine be tween Bingen and Coblentz there is an icho capable of repeating a sentence 17 times. The stork is partial to kittens as an ar ticle of food and finds them an easy and wholesome prey, and cats reciprocate by a love for young storks. Cards and note paper are bordered with black, but are not as wide as for merly, such a display being regarded as ostentatious and therefore in bad taste. They all Testify WorU-Renovoed Swift's Sp?cifie. o old-tlmo slmpl? ly from the Georgia ips and fields bas th to tho antipodes, lag tho skeptical and ' tho theories of spend solely on Us? . There ls no blood ._oesnot Immediately eradicate. Poisons outwardly absorbed or tho result of vite diseases from within ?ll yield to this potent but simple remedy. It ls an unequaled tonic builds np tb? old and feeble, cur? all diseases arising from Impure blood or weakened vitality, fiend for a treatise. Examine tho proof. Booka on ** Blood and Skin Diseases "mailed free. Druggists Sell lt. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 3. Atlanta, Ga. ROBT. A. THOMPSON. | ROBT. T. JATXES. & JAY J Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, Walhalla, S. C. Special Attention-Giren to ail Business Entrusted to Our Care. September 3,1891. 36-a 'A HUSBAND'S TEtALS. [George WT Shipman.] I've been doing woman's work for at least a week or more, And I'll own it isn't anything like fun; For when you .try to think that your labor's nearly o'er, You will often find you've only just begun. There is boiling, and there's baking, There is sweeping, and bed making, And a thousand other things not under stood . By a novice such as I, And so I won't deny That I would not be a woman if I could. This is how it came about : My wife was taken sick; No help was to be had, so, like a dunce, I thought I'd try my hand, but I found out very quick That I couldn't think of everything at once. The fire was slowly dying When I put the steak a-frying, And the cat was making havoc with thc bread 1 had prepared for toasting, While the apple that was roasting Was a plaything for the pug upon the bed. When I went to wash the dishes I fonnd the kettle dry; The spout was melted off, and on the floor It lay a perfect wreck, that awoke a pen sive sigh, As I thought upon the happy days of yore. 1 reflected on the bliss Of domestic scenes like this. And I couldn't bit on any other plan. It might be called bewitching, But the work done in a kitchen Is not within the scope of common man. So I'd like to mention this to every friend and neighbor, That woman's work is never overdrawn ; My respect is something greater for the housewife's daily labor Since the trials I have lately undergone. Their woes are not misstated. For I've been initiated, And I'm bound to help every time I can. There's a recompense in doing What alone is worth pursuing, And woman's loving labor is a blessing unto man. "It is not my fault that my chil dren have gone wrong. As long as they were at home I held a tight rein on them; but when they grew up and got away from me they fell into vicious ways." Thus spoke a well-meaning but unwise mother. Family training that does not look beyond present results is fatally de fective. The end of all discipline is self-control. We ought to govern our children so that they will natu rally fail into right lines of conduct when they are thrown upon their own resources. Tnis is no easy task; but it is a thing of supreme import ance.- Christian Advocate. We make a serious blunder when we forget that the promise of the Holy Spirit to re-enforce our efforts in behalf of our children is* not a mere figure pf speech, but the state ment of a most blessed fact. We are not alone in what we do for our boys and girls. God comes to our help. Ile moves unseen on the hearts of our children. When we are perhaps thinking least about it, he is present, with them, reproving them for their misdeeds, quickening their consciences, kindling their as pirations, and leading them to a bet ter life. Blessed be God for such a thought !-Christian Advocate. A religious contemporary, speak ing of the sharp competition of mod ern life, especially in the cities, where there are at least twenty applicants for every position, advises young men to first get the best general edu cation within their reach, ana then learn to do some one thing better than anybody else can do it. The main secret of success is to be found in this pithy piece of advice. The well-educated young man, who is able to do something that the world wants done, better than anybody else can do it, has a fortune within his grasp. ? BUOYANCY OF BODY $ can ne*or bo realized when the bow jr* els do not act as nature Intends they ?av should. Instead, there is headache, V ?walsht In tho stomach after eating;, ?acidityand belching pp of wind, lo?- A .pirlta, lo?? of energy, unsociability W .and foreboding, of eril. An unhappy - oondltloD, but ? . TUTT'S . .Tiny Liver Pills; A will relier? it and give hcMth and@ happiness. They are worth ? trial. ? as?meseos ! NAMES! 200,000 SCSS IBERS THE Wily. Constitution Published at Atlanta, Ga. THE FARMER'S FRIEND, i A HOME COMPANION. Das .Already .1^0,000 Suhscril. o Tlie Largest Circulation of any * . Weekly Newspaper ix Tit?: WORLD. THE GREAT SOUTHERN WEEKLY. Its Agricultural Department is t ie best in the land. Its Women's and Children's cob.mns are of unusual domestic interest. Its Special Features cost morr money than is paid by AXY TEN Southern pa pers combined for general r^ . ling mat ter. Its ?>vs Columns '.over the World. Bill Arp writes for it. Dr. Talmage preaches for it. Joel Chandler Harris (Uncle Remus.) Wallace P. Reed and Frank L. Stanton are regularly employed by it. A. M. Weir (Sarge Plunkett) has a weekly letter. Mark Twain, Robert Louis Stevensons Rudyard Kipling. Frank Stockston, Rich ard Malcolm Johnston, and the best lit erary genius pf the world contribute to its columns. It is a Magazine ! AND EV KR Y ISSt'E IS AX EDUCATOR '. 0n,y$ix>baVear' Agents wanted in every locality. Money for agents in working for it. NEXD FOR NA.HPLE COPIE*. Giving the address?* ry T A7" | of yourself and fire ' neighbors xcho~ xcant free copies. Write for agent's terms. Clubs of six for Five Dollars a year. SEND SIX NAMES L Address CONSTITUTION, ATLANTA, GA. Notice to Administrators, Executors, Guardians and Trustees. THE attention of Administrators and Executors is called to Sections 1,942 and 1,943 of the Revised Statutes of South Carolina, which require ANNUAL RE TURNS to be made to the Judge or Pro bate during the months of JANUARY and FEBRUARY in each year of all estates in their charge, and prescribes heavy penalties for refusal or neglect to make said returns. Guardians, Trustees, Ac, are cited to Section 2,(Ml, which prescribes the pen alty for their neglect or refusal to do the same. They will find by reference to said Sec tions that if said returns are not made in the time prescribed, the Judge of Pro bate is REQUIRED to cite them so to do. J. W. HOLLEMAN, Judge of Probate. January 12,1893. 2-4t F. W. HUIDEKOPER AND REUDEN FOSTER, RECEIVERS. Columbia & Greenville Division. CONDENSED SCHEDULE, IN EFFECT NOVEMBER 2.1, IS? Trains run by 75tb Meridian 1 ime. BETWEEN CHARLESTON, COLUMBIA, SEN ECA AND WALHALLA. Dailv. -. Da?y. No IL Stations. No 12. 6 30 am Lv Chariest.ia Ar 10 30 pm 11 20 am Lv Columbia Ar 0 03 pm 12 05 pm Alston 5 13 pm 12 -Li " Pomaria 4 57 '. 12 42 " Prosperitv 4 40 " 12 57 " Newbern 4 25 - 1 01 " Helena' 4 20 " 1 38 " Chappells " 2 17 " Nnety-Sb? :) 15 " 2 ?il '" Greenwood 2 ?>'?) " 2 55 '* Hodges 2 2'.' " 3 12 " Donald's 2 11 - 3 23 II?.nea Path 1 5S '* 3 4tJ " Ar Relton Lv 1 40 " 4 05 " Lv Relton Ar 1 35 " 4 35 " Anderson I [5 " 5 IS " Pendleton 12 ?5 " 6 00 " Ar Seneca Lv 12 !6 " 0 32 " Lv Seneca Ar 12 .0 am 7 00 " Ar Walhalla Lv ll 40 " 5 00 *" Ar Greenville Lv ?2 oo ni BETWEEN ANDERSON, BELTON A.M> GREENVILLE. Dailv. Daily. Stations. No ii. No 12. Lv Anderson 4 35 pm 1 13 pm Ar Relton 4 05 " 1 ::."> " j Lv Belton I ?* :j ?:; " j Ar Williamston 1 02 " 4 02 " Pelzer J 2 55 *' 4 os ?. I Piedmont 12 4'i " 4 20 " Greenville 12 00 m ." 00 '. j BETWEEN CHARLESTON, COLUMBIA. ALSTON A.M.- SPAETANBUKO. I Daily. Daily. No 1*3. Stations. No l t. ! 0 50 am Lv Charleston Ar 10 30pm 50 pm Lv Columbia Ar I ?0 ?.III ! 4 :jo pm Alston 12 40 " j 5 23 " Carlisle Ii i? nm j 5 32 " . Santuc 11 36 " j 5 50 " Chibo 1117 " 0 23 - Pacolel ?o 44 " j t? 50 " Ar Spartan burg Lv lo 20 ?. ! 10 10 pm Ar Asheville Lv 7 am : BETWEEN NEWBERRY, CLINTON AND LAURENS. Ex. Sun. Ex. Sun. I No 15. Stations. Nb LG. ?ll 20 am Lv Columbia Ar 6 05 pm : 2 00 pm New heriy 12 00 m ? 3 04 " Goldvill? 10 ."<; ara ! 3 34 Clinton 10 j 4 15 '* Ar Lam ens Lv 0 50 *" " BETWEEN HODGES AM? ABBEVILI E. , Daily. . Daily. : No. Ll. Stations. No. 12. Mixed. Mixed. 3 00 pm Lv Hodges Ar 2 20 pm 3 20 '* Darraugh's 2 00 " 3 35 " Ar Abbeville Lv 1 4.*? " Ex. Sun. Ex. Sim. No. 4">. Stations. No. >>1. j $ 0o .mi Lv Hedges Ar 7 35 am I S 25 " Dana:?gh's 7 15 " I S 40 " Ar Abbeville Lv 7 00 " CONNECTIONS VIA SOETJJ BOUND \:A::. KOAD. Daily. Daily. . No.!'. Central Time. .No; 38. 6 45 am Lv Columbiaj Ar. 2 SO pm II -io am Ar Savannah Lv 10 2" am Daily. " Daily. [No. 39. Central Time. No. 10. , 12 30 pm Lv Columbia Ar 0 00 pm I 1*5 10 pm Ar Savannah Lv 4 00 pm Parlor Cars between ( olumbia and 1 Savannah. Trains leave Spartanburg. S. C.. A. ?fe ; C. Division, Northbound. 4.09 A. M., 3.48 p. M., ?.00 P. M.;(Vestibuled Limited):! Southbound, 1.50 A. M., 3.3G P. M.. II.:J7? A. M. (Vestibuled Limit?"!): W?rs:lH>uud. ! W. N. C. Division. 6.50 P. M. for Hender- ! sonville. Asheville and 11.?t Springs. Trains leave Greenville. S. C., A. ? C. I Division. Northbound, 3j 7 \. M., 2.26 P. [ I M.. 5;08 P. M. (Vestibuled Limited):! Southbound, A. M., 4.42 !.. M.. l2._x : p. M. (Vestibuled Limited). Trains leave Seneca. S. C.. A. & C Division. Northbound. 1.-36 A. M., 12.15 p. M.: Southbound. 4;38 A. M.. 6.30 p. M. Trains Nos. ll and 12 on thc C. and Division, and Trains \:\ and II <.)> the A. and S. Division will run solid to and tro m Charleston over the S. < . R. R. PULLMAN CAR SEK\ ICE. Pullman Sleeper on L3 and I ! between Charleston and Asheville, via Columbia and Spartanburg. Pullman Palace Sleeping Caron trains] 10. ll and 12. 37 and 38 on A. A: C Division. W. A. TULL'. Gen"] Pass. Agt.. Washington. D. C. i S. EL HARDWH K. Asst Genr'l Pass. Agt.. Atlanta, I V. E. M? BEE, ] < M-II"I Supt.. Columbia, S. C. SOL. HAAS. Traffic Manager; Washington, I>. C. W. H. GREEN. General Manager. Washington, D. C. Atlantic O oasit Line Passenger Depart ment, Wilmington, A', c.. Junvar^ 29, iS93. I Fast Lino Between Charleston and Columbia and Upper 'South Carolina. Korth Carolina, and Athens and Atlanta. Condensed Sct?nle. WES rv. .\ ur?, i "4 ?No. 52. Leave Charleston.? S3 a m " Lanes. s " " Sumter. '.'43 *' Arrive Columbia. ?0 " ; " Prosperity.12 22 p m j " Newberry.12 38 " " Clinton. 1 SO " " Greenwood. 2 51 -* " Abbeville. 5'Si " " Athens...'.."> 52 " " Atlanta. 8 13 1 " Winnsboro. 5 10 p m j " Charlotte. 7 " \ j " Anderson. 4 3" p m j " Greenville. 4 50 " : " Spartanburg. 6 50 " j ** Hendersonville.9-05 " j " Asheville..10 10 " EAST? ARD. ?No. .Leave Asheville. 7 00a ni " Hendersonville.S 02 - " Spartanburg.10 20 ** " Greenville.12 10 p m " Anderson. : 15 " " Charlotte. 9 35 a m u Winnsboro.1154 *' " Atlanta. 8 30 a m " Athens.M of .? " Abbeville. 1 42p m " Greenwood. 2 l"> '* " Clinton. "I 30 " " "Newberry. 4 Is " " Pros?)er?Ty. 4 :t4 " " Columbia. 0 b? " Arrive Sumter. 7 2"? " " Lanes.s 40 .? " Charleston.10 40 " . Daily. Nos. 52 and 53 Solid Trains between Charleston and Clint? n. s. C. IL .M. EMERSON, Ass'r Geni Passenger Agent. .1. lt. KENLY, General Manager. T. M. EMERSON, Traffic Manager. Surveying. LANDS SURVEYED in any part of the county. Pri'-es reasonable. I. IL HARRISON. October 8. 1891. 41-tf SURVEYING. M. F. ERVIN will b*e found at his oflSee,'on South side of j Main street, when his Services] are desired on Surveys. , May 5, 1892. Picteii-? M? Batel ?. VT. HU?DEKCPER AND REUBEN FOSTER, RECEIVERS. Atlanta & Charlotte Air Line Division. .'ONDKNSKD .'CHEDULK OF PASSENOEE TRAINS. IX EFFECT SOVEXBEB20, 1802. .Vol thboi: lld. EASTERN TIME. No. :?>. No. IO. No. 12. Daily. Daily. , Daily. Lv. Atlant.. \.T.).... 12.45 pm " Chambie*. " Norcross. .' Duluth. " Suwanee. .. Buforu. . .* Flowery Branch. .. Gainesville. 2.1.3 pm " hula. ZXi pm " Beuton. . " CornHia.;. " Mt. Airy. " Toccoa. .' Westminster. " Seneca. .' Central. " < ; renville ... .. Greer's. .. Well f.,ni. .* Spartanburg. .. Clifton. '. Cow]?ens .... " Gaffneys. .. Blacksburg .. .. Grover. .? Kiap's Mt.... .. f?as tonia. .. Lowell. " Bellemont - Ar. ' harlotte:... 51QS pm CM pm 6.48 pm Lv. Southbound. Charlotte. i:. ?:.-i..-.iit.... Lowell . Gastonia. King's Mt.... Grover. Bia. ksburg. .. Gaffneys. Cowpens. Clift? . Span, nbnrg. YVellfoid . Greer's. Greenville.... .>o. ti?. NO. II. Xo.fr Daily. Daily. Daily. 9.35 aui 12.2s pm Central. s. neca. Westminster? T..? e. .a. Mt. Airy. Cornelia. i.ijii pm L25 " 1.33 " 1.40 " -'.ll " 2..S .. 2.37 " ?5S " 3J?n " 3.-J3 " 3.36 ' 4.1? " 4.15 " 4.12 '. 5.14 " 6.05 &3Q " : 6.48 .' ? Lula.1 3.15 nm Gainesville. 3.33 ?. Flowery Branch. Buford.... Suwanee.,. Duluth.,. < liamblee. Atlanta . E. T.).. , i.r>r, pm 8.00 " Mia .. 8J6 " s.'.'S " s.:')3 " 9.12 " 9*4 " :>.38 " .JJ/) " 10.03 " 50.1'J " ll.i?>pn 11.20 pm 11.42 " 11.52 .' 12.02 am 12228 " 12.44 " 12.54 " 1.11 " L36 " 1.3'J .' L56 " 2.18 .. 2.35 " 3.07 3.35 " 4.10 " 4.3* " 4.58 " 5.40 " 6.W " 0.18 " ti.41 C.43 7.07 8.03 " 8.14 " 8.25 " :?.<<) pm Additional tr ims Sos. 17 ami ls-Lula accom modation, daily except Sunday, leaves Atlanta .'..:c p. m.. arrive? Lula s.2" p. m. Keturning, ?eaves Lula <<..?>> a. m.. arrives Atlanta8.50a. m. Between Lula and Athens-Xos. ll ami :.. daily, leave I.uIaSUSOp m. and 10.33 a. ni.i arrive Ath ens lc.15 p. m. and i*.'.".i> p. m. Returning li-ave A th' H?. Nus. l" and 12. daily, <SJo p.m. and 8.07 a m.. arrive Lula s.l? p. m. and 9J5? a. m. Ki tween Toccoa am! Elberton-No. 63 and No. ?, dai< ly except Sunday, leave Toccoa 7.45 a. m. and \ \.S< a m., arrive Elberton 1 !.. .'> a. m. and 220 p. m. Returning, No. 62anti Nu. ?2, daily execj : Sundae. leave l.il>?-rt> n 3.?K> p. m. and 7 30 a. arrive toceos 7.00 p. m. and !o.25 a. m. No?, '.'and i" Pullman Sleeper between Atlanta ..ml New York. Nos. 37 ami 3?-W;vhinpt<>n and Southwestern Vestibuled Limited, between New York and Atlanta. Through Pullman r>!.'ejnTs between New York andXew Orleans, and between New York and Augusta; also between Washington and Men plus, via Atlanta ami P.irn ingham, uniting between Atlanta ami Btrn'inghan. with Pul ?.an Sleeper tn and tri m Shreveport IA., \i.i Mertdiaitai .'. Vicksburg. No.3sconnect?at Spartanburg with Pullman Sleeper for Asheville. Ne?, ll ami ls- lulln an Buffet Sleeper between Washington and Atlanta, uniting between dan ville and Greensboro w.tii Pullman sleeper to .ind i : "in Portsmouth and Norfolk. For detailed information at? to local and through tn; i- taiiii s, rates and Pullman Sleeping Car reservations, eonfer with local agents, or address er. A. TI BK, General pass, oger Agent, WasJnnirtor. D. C. fi. II. II A RDM ICK, Asst Geni Pass. Agt.. Atlania, Ga. J. A. DOD?0.\, Supering nd^nt. Atlanta. Ga. W. u <-;:KI:>, Genend Manaor. * Washington, D. '*. fOI.. 3? AAV Trartic- Manager. Washington. D. C. _iggy 1). Ii. ( Il Y.MBERLAIN. Receiver. C. M. WARD. General Manager. .1. .M. TURNER, Superintendent. E. I'. W.MUNG. Gen! l'as-. Ag't. hi Effect Februarj 1, 1803. S. C. K'V GOLNG SCHEDULE. Lv Ar Lv Ar Lv STATIONS. ( 'harleston . Summerville Pregnall's . Branch? ?He Branchville South P'dCwi Blackville . Aiken . . < ?ranitevi?e Augusta Union Depot Branchville ? irangeburg >t. Matthew's Kurt Motte. Ringville . Columbia . Ringville Boykiu's < "amden . . < liai teston . . Summerville . 1 'i i gnall's . . Branchville; Bninchville >><>i?ih B'd Cross' Blackville . -. Aiken . . . Gramtcville Augusta. . . Union Depot . Branchville Ontngeburg . Ringvdle . . Columbia . . No 1. A.M. No ILTNo A.M. V. ?; .">o 7 2S S 4 "> ;> no |o oo ll 02 li 15 1! 40 i 1 ">0 No P.M. . 4.*> . TH !T 50 :< oo s ? 19 :? 41 ;? .Vi 10 "7 11 oo pi pl il 12 11 30 No [3. P.M. 12 Ol 1 43 io :io 40 55 ol 20 s. CT. i:"V RETI STATIONS Lv ' lamden . . Ar KiugyiXie . Lv ' 'olumhia . Ki!.-ville . Fori M.dre . M. Matthew's s ?rangeburg Ar Branchville Lv Union Depot Augusta. . <-rangeville Aiken . . Blackville . . South B'd Cres Ar Branchville Lv Branchville . Pregnall's . . Summerville . Ar < lharieston . . Lv Ta: h m . . Ar Ringville . . ( i olumhia . . K ingviiio . . Orangeburg . Ar Branchville Lv Union Depot . I Augusta . . Orangeville . Aiken . . . Blackville . . South B'dCn s Ar Branchville Lv Branchville Summerville . Ar Charleston . . KNING SCHEDULE. No-.;. No20. No ?2. A.M. A.M. P.M. s (?i <; pi s 47 >. S 59 7 07 :> J4 7 21 42 7 4:: lo 15 s 20 A.M. P.M. P.M. io :: oo 20 *; 49 7 05 lo -j:, A.M. A.M. 10 30 lo 30 11 13 ll ."?2 P.M. 12 40 12 40 S'o4J. N.- 14. P.3I. 12 50 2 lo 1 4o 2 21 3 ll 3 40 4 no .*> 00 40 1 0.. 7 50 ll 30 S 4.*? :< 00 3 42 4 52 ."? 30 pi 4 05 P.M. ;i os 47 P.M. P.M. P.M. lo 30 TOBACCO SEED FREE. -AND All About Growing Tobacco. II you want to try this Monty Making Crto. write to SOUTHERN TOBACCO JOURNAL, Winston. N. C. THE EDWARDS' ESTATE'. . An heir to $300,000.000 was lound by sending his NAME and TEN CENTS to Agent?' Record. i Or-flve 2c. Stamps wilt ?-oed your rKWTW I n.-me whirling all over the world, ?*it vi"? ? to prWishers, manufacturers, pat I er.tees and those employing agents, and will bring you. large mail of books, maga zines, papy?, letters"and samples'of goods. oner lng you bargains, agenci'-s.^tc. Address AUEXTS' R?COUD, BOX 42, ATOOTA, GA.