Keowee courier. (Pickens Court House, S.C.) 1849-current, March 16, 1893, Image 7

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^'MOTHERS'i FRIEND" ! : To Young : Makes Child Birth Easy. : Shortens Labor, j . Lessens Pain, . . Endorsed by the Leading Physicians. J . Book to "Mothers" mailed FREE. . . BRADFIELD RECULATOR CO. | S ATLANTA. GA. J SOLD BY ALL. DRUGGISTS. J p female Bitters Cures cal Female Complaints and Monthly irregularity, Leucorrhceaor Whites, Pain in Bi.ck or Sides, strengthens the f ?ibis, builds up the whole system. It has cuwi thousands and will cure you. Druggists hu ve it. Send etsiinp for book. EB. J. P. DBOaGQOLE ? CO., LonlsTiUe, Ky. CROSSING JORDAN. DR. TALMAGE'S SUNDAY SERMON DE LIVERED AT DETROIT. He Compares tht Children of Israel Cross lng the .Joni.in With Washington Cross ing th?' Delaware ant! Xerxes Cr<>N?::.;; the Hellespont-lesson.* of tli<- Text. DETROIT. March 12.-Rev. Dr. Tal Piage. who is now visiting this city, {preached today to a large and intensely interested audience in the Fort Street Presbyterian church, of which Rev. Dr. Radcliffe is pastor, on the crossing of the Jordan by the children of Israel, the text bein;; from Joshua iii. 17. "And the priests that hare the ark of the covenanl of the Lord stood firm <>n dry ground in the midst of the Jordan, and all the Is- j raelites passed over on dry ground, until all the people were passed elvan over Jor dan." Washington crossed tho Delaware when crossing was pronounced impos sible, but he dill it hy boat; X.-rx.-s crossed the Hellespont with 2.000.000 men. but be did it by brid ;e. The Isra elites crossed the Red sea. but the S:P-?, orchestra that celebrated the deliv* _^ce I of the one army sounded t"^*' '!?angula- ! tion of tb*? ?.rli?r T?-: - ???unio p differs been ascertjv're was no sacrifice "r 'mitted s.e-not SD much as the loss 01 a unenpin. The vanguard of the '<:? -st. made ap of priests, advanced until they put their foot at the brim of the river, when immediately the streets of Jerusa lem were no more dry than the bed ol that river. It was as if all the water : .; been drawn off. and rh; .. :'.<? dampni ss had been soaked up with a sj ung .. ar; I then by a towel the road been wiped d;y. "Yonder goes a ?rreat army of Israelite -the hosts in uni fona. Following th -v.-. tte wives, tne children, the fl-...ks. the herds. The people look up at the crys tallme wall of the Jordan as they pas and think what an awful disaster would come to them if before they got to the opposite bank of that Ajalon wall thai wall should fall on them. And the thonght mak-ex tho mothers hug their children close to their hearts as they swiften their pace. C^uiek, now! Get them ali up cn the banks-the armai WHT.ors, tho wives and ?. : il Iren, flocks and herds, ?nd let this wonderful Jor iamc passage bo completed for? v. r. Sitting on the shelved limestone, 1 look 0:? upon that Jordan where Joshua crosse?i under the-triumphal arch of th.. rainbow woven out of the spray: the river which afterward became the baptistry wh'Te Christ was sprinkled or plunged: the river where theax-the borrowed ax -miraculously swam at thy prophet's order, the r.ver illustrious in the history of the world for heroic faith and omni:- \ otent deliverance and typical of scenes | yet t<> transpire in your life and mint- i scenes-enough to make us, from the sole of the toot to the crown of tho head, tin i gie with infinite gladness. Standing on the scene of that affright ed, fugitive riv.-r Jordan, I learn for my seif and for you. first, that obstacles, when they .?re touched, vanish. Ti.r- text says that when these priests came down and touched the water--the edge of tk> water with their f.-et-the water parted. They did not wade in chin deep or waist deep or knee deep or ankle deep, but as soon as their feet touched the water ir vanished. And it makes me think that almost all the obstacles of life need only be approached in order to be conquered Difficulties but touched vanish, lr i-: ?- j trouble, the difficulty, thc obstacle far in j the distance, that seems so huge and :re mendous. The apostles Paul and John seemed to ; dislike cross dogs, for ?he apostle Paul tells ns in Philippians, ""Bewareof dogs." and John seems to shut the gate of heav en against all the canine species when he says. "Without are dogs." But 1 nave b**>n told that when those animals are furious, if they come at yon. if yon will keep your eye on them and advanceup on them they will retreat. Whe her that be so or not 1 cannot tell, but I do know that the vast majority of the mis fortunes and trials and disasters oTyour hfe that hounds your steps, if you can only get your eye on them, and kee] your eye on them, ami advance upon them, and cry. "Begone." they will slink and cower. A BEAUTIFUL TRADITION. There is a beautiful tradition among the American Indians that Manitou v.-;.s traveling in the invisible world, and one day be came to a barrier of brambles and Sharp thorns, which forbade his uoing on. and there was a wild beast glarb ;.,: him from the thicket, but as he deter mined to go on his way he did pursue it. and those brambles were found to be only phantoms, and that beast was found to be a powerless ghost, and the impassable river that forbade him rushing to em brace the Yaratilda proved to be only a phantom river. WeU, my friends, the fact is there are a great marry things that look terrible across our pathway, which, when we ad vance apon them, are only the phar toms, only the aimantions, only the le .iusions of life. Difficulties touched are conquered. Put your feet into the brim of the water, and Jordan retreats. You sometimes see a great "du ty to perform. It is a ver}' disagreeable duty. You say. "I can't go through it: I haven't the courage, I haven't the intelli:i?nee. to go through it." Advance upon it. Jordan will vanish. I always sigh before I begin to preach at the greatness of the undertaking, but as soon as I start it becomes to me an exhilaration. And any duty undertaken with a confident spirit becomes a pleas ure, and .the higher the duty the higher the pleasure. Difficulties touched are conquered. There are a great many peo- | pie who are afraid of death in the future. Good "John Livingston once, on a sloop wming from Elizabethport to New .York. wa? dreadfully frightened because he j I ought he was going to be drowned as ' ndden gust came up. People -were . ri??? at hiT If any man in all the j ' was ready to die. it.was good John ! * . I nomu^tion, e ^ow p , . -T)V good yard, and they hardly dare tl Canaan because of the Jordan terrenes. But once the}' are don sick bed, then all their fears are ike waters of death dashing on th are like the mellow voice of oce? j -they smell of the blossoms of : i of life. The music of the heaven!; i comes stealing over the waters, cross now is only a pleasant sail, long the boat is coming! Con? Jesus, come quickly. Christ tl? advances ahead, and the dying O goes over dry shod on coral be flowers of heaven and paths ol pe Oh, could we make our doubts reen These K??oniy doubts that rise And view the Canaan that we lovo With unbeclouded eyes.' Could we but climb where Moses si And view the landscape oVr, Xot .Ionian's .stream nor death's co Could fright us from the shore. Again, this Jordanie passage 1 me the completeness of every thii God does. When God put an ir dam across Jordan, and it was ha would have been natural, you have supposed, for the water t< overflowed the region all around and that great devastation wouli taken place, but when God put tl in front of the river he put a dam other side of the river, so that, ace to the text, the water halted and and stood there and not overflow! surrounding country. Oh. the con ness of everything that God does! One would have thought that, waters of Jordan had dropped anti were only two or three feet deep, raelites might have marched tarot and have come np on tho other with their clothes saturated and garments like those of men conting ? from shipwreck, and that would j been as wonderful a deliverance, bu does something better than that. : the priests' feet touched th S wat Jordan and they were drawn might have thought there would been a bed of mud and slime th which the army should pass. Draw* off the waters of theHndi tho Ohio, and there would be a many days, and perhaps many v before the sediment would dry u] yet here in an instant, immediately provides a path through the den' Jordan. It is so dry the passeng? not even get their feet damp. < >1 completeness of everything that does! Do? s be make a universe? 1 i p-rf'-ct ck ck. running ever since i wound un, the fixed stars the pivot: const-llations the intermoving wi and ponderous laws the weights mighty swinging pendulum, the st: the great dome of night strikingthe night, and the sun, with brazen toi j tolling the hour of noon, j The wildest comet has a chain of j that it. cannot break. The tins:lei ; flying before the schoolboy's bre; controlled by the same law that con the sun and the planets. The rose in your window is governed by the : principle that governs tho tree of universe on which the stars are ripe fruits, and on which God will one put ms hand and shake down the fn ' ?, perfect universe. Xo astronomy -ever proposed an amendment. A COMPLETE BIBLE. If God makes .. Bible, it is a com] Bible. Standing amid the dreadful delightful truths, you seem to be ii. midst of an orchestra where the wail j over sins, and the rejoicings over par and the marrial strains of victory n the chorus like an anthem of eton This book seems to you the ocea: truth, on every wave of which Cl walks-sometimes in the darkness prophecy, again in the splendors " which he walks on Galilee, in thisT I apostle answers to prophet, Paul to iah. Revelation to Genesis-glor light, turning midnight sorrow into midnoon joy, dispersing every fog, hi ihg every tempest. Take this bool is the kiss of God on the soul of lost n Perfect Bible, complete Bilde! Xo r has ever proposed any improvement. God provided a Saviour. He is a o p?ete Saviour--God-man-divinity ; humanity united in the same per? He set np the starry pillars of the t I verse and the towers of light. He pla ed the cedars ami the heavenly Leban He.st rack out of the rock the rivers life, singing under the trees; singing der the thrones. He quarried the ..? donyx and crystal and the topaz <?f heavenly wall Ile put down the jas for the foundation and heaped up amethyst for the capita] and swung 10 gates which are 12 jK-arls. In one staut he thought out a universe, and ; he '...came a child crying fo: his moth feeling along the sides of the mang learning to walk. Omnipotence sheathed in the mus and. flesh of a chilli's arm: omnisciei strung in the optic nerve of a child's e; infinite love heating in a child's heart gr>-at God appearing in the form of child 1 year old, S years old. 15 yes old. While all the heavens were ; cribing to him glory and honor a power on earth, men said. "Who is t! fellow?" While all the heavenly hos with foided wing about their fac? bowed down before him crying "Hoi holy!" on earth, they denounced him a blasphemer and a sot. Rocked in t bc on Gennesarec and yet he it is that u , dirked the lightning from the stor cloud and dismasted Lebanon of its fi ests and holds the live- oceans on the t j of his finger as the leaf holds the rai ! drop. j Oh. the complete Saviour, rubbing h hand over the place where we have tl pain, yet the stars of heaven the ador j mg gems of his right hand. Holding t I in his arms when we take our last vie : of our dead. .Sitting down with us c ; the tombstone, and while we plant ros? I there he planting Consolation in o: heart. every chapter a stalk, every vcr a stem, every word a rose. A complet Saviour, a complete Bible, a complet universe, a complete Jordanie passag Everything that God does is complete OBST.V LES TO OVERCOME. Again. I 'earn froin this Jordanie pa: sage, that between us and every Canaa of success and prosperity there is a riv* that must be passed. "Oh. how I woul like some of those grapes on the otb? side!" said some of the Israelites t Joshua. "Well," says Joshua, "if yo want the grajos, why don't you ere* over and get them?" There is a river c difficulty between its and everything tba is worth having. That which costs notli mg is worth nothing. God didn't intend t ::is world for ai easy parlor, through which we are to b drawn in a rocking chair, 'out we are t wqrk our passage, climb masts, figh battle.?, scale mountains and ford rivers God makes everything valuable difficul to get at, for the same rea? >i: that L.e pu the gold down in the mine and the pear clear down in the sea-to make us dh and dive for them. We acknowledg this principle in worldly things: oh. tua we v^re only wise enough to acknow] edge it m religious things! . You have scores of illustrations undei your own observation where men hav< had the hardest lot and been troddei under foot, and yet after awhile bad i: easy. Xow their homes blossom am: bloom with pictures, and carpets thai made foreign looms laugh now embrace their feet: the summer winds lift liv tapestry about the window gorgeous enough for a Turkish sultan: impatient steeds paw and neigh at the door, their carriages moving through the sea of Xew York life a vcr}- wave of splendor. Who is it? Why, it is a boy whitanie to Xew York with a dollar in his pocket and all his estar? slung over his shoulder in a cotton handkerchief. All that silver on the dancing span is petrified sweat drops: that beau iful dress is the faded calico over which God put his hand of perfection, turning it to Turkish satin or Italian silk: those diamonds are the tears which suffering froze as they fell. Oh, there is a river of difficulty between us and every earthly achievement. You know that. You admit that. You know this is so v. ita regard to the I acquisition of knowledge. The ancients used to say that Vulcan struck Jupiter I on the head, and the goddess of wisdom j ont, illustrating the truth that C * * j*-* - - .wisdom comes by hard knocks, was a river of difficulty between S speare. the boy, holding the horses ; door of the London theater, and Shakespeare, the great dramatist, ning the applause of all av.diences 1 tragedies. There was a river bel Benjamin Franklin, with a loaf of under hi3 arm, walking the stre< Philadelphia, and that same Ben; Franklin, the philosopher, just ot of Boston flying a kite in the thu storm. An idler was cured of his bad hal loolnng through the window, night night, at a man who seemed sittb his desk turning off one sheet of wi after another until almost the dav the morniug. The man sitting writing until morning was in dust Walter Scott; the man who loob him through the window was Lock his illustrious biographer afterv Lord Mansfield, pursued by the pres by the populace, because of a certab of duty, went on to discharge the < and while the mob were^around hil manding the taking of his life he s his fist in the face of the mob and ; '.Sirs, when one's last end comes, it not come too soon if he falls in de; of law and the liberty of his countr And so there is. my friends, a ti tussle, a trial, a push, an aux through which every man must gc fore he corney to worldly success worldly achievement. You adnu Now be wise enough to apply it in gion. Eminent Christian charade only gained by the Jordanie passage man just happened to get good: Why does that mau know so u about the Scriptures? He was stud the Bible while you were readin novel. He was on fire with the subi ties of the Bible while yon were sc asleep; by tug, tussle, pushing and ningin the Christian lifo that mau so strong for God: in a hundred So inoshe learned how to fight: in al dred shipwrecks he learned howto sv Tears over sin, tears over Zion's de. tion, tears over the impenitent, t over the graves made, are the Joi which that uian had passed. Sor pales the check, and fades the eye. wrinkles the brow, and withers the ha There are mourning garments in wardrobe, and there are deaths in e\ family record; all around are the re of the dead. Tl IK JORDAN OF L) EA TH. The.Christian has passed the Red of trouble, and yet he thinks there Jordan of death between him and hi en. Be comes down to that Jordx death and thinks how many hav< 1 lost there. When Molynenx was exp ing the J 01 dan in Palestine, he had boats all knocked to pieces in the ra] of that river. And there are a gi many men who have gone down in river of death; the Atlantic and Pa? have not swallowed so many. It is awful thing to make shipwrecks on rock of ruin-masts falling1, barrica flying, death coming, groanings in water, moanings in the wind, thunde the sky, while God. with tho fingei lightning, writes all over the sky, "It tread them in my wrath, and 1 will tr; pie them in my fury." The Christian comes down to this r ing torrent, and he knows lie must p out. and as he comes toward the ti his breath gets shorter, and his 1 breath leaves him as he steps into t stream, and no sooner do- he touch : stream than it is parted, and he g through dry shod, while all the wat wave their plumes, crying: "O dca wh^-re is thy sting'' O grave, whore thy victory?" God shall wipe away tears from th'ir eyes, and there shall no more weeping, and there shall be more death. Some of your children have airca gone up the other bank. You let th? down on this side of the bank: they yt be on the other bank to help you up wi supernatural strength. Thc other moi ing at my table, all my family present thought to myself hov- pleasant it wou bo ii I could put all in a boat and th go in with them, and we could ??till acre the river to the next world and be the all together. No family, parting. : gloomy obsequies. It wouldn't take fi minutes to go from bank to bank, ai then in that better world to be togeth forever. Wouldn't it be pleasant for y?. to take all your family into that Mess? country if you could all go togeth? r? I remember my mother in h'-r d ing hour said to my father. "Fathe wouldn't i'. be pleasant if we could a go together?" B?twecannot aligo t get in-r. We must go ?me by one, .u we must be grateful if wo get there ; alL What a heaven it will be if v have all our families there to loi around and see all the children are pre em! You would rather bare them a there, and you go with bare brow fo ever, than that one should l)e niissin to complete the garlands <>f heaven f? your coronal. The Lord God ofJoshui give them a safo Jordanie passage! Even children will g< . through dry sin >. Those of us who were brought up in tl country remember, when the summ? was coming on in our boyhood days. \\ aTway9longed for the day when we wei to go barefooted, and after teasing ot mothers in regard to it for a good \vhil? and they consented, we remember thed< licious sensation of the cool grass whe we put our uncovered foot ou it. And the time will come when the* shoes we wear now. lest we be cut of ti: sharp places of this world, shall he take off. and with unsandaled foot we wi 6tep into the bed bf the ri\cr; with fe? untrammeled, free from pain and f: tigu'% we will gain that last journey when, with one foot in the bed of th river and the other foot on the othe bank, we struggle upward. Th :t wi] be heaven. Oh, I pray for all my doa people a safe Jordanie passage! That i what the ?lying Christian husband iel when In? said: "How the candle ii: :s rs Kellie! Purit out. I shall sleep well te night and wake iii the morning.*' COMFORT FOR THE BEREAVED. One word of comfort on thissubjee for all the bereaved. You see. nur ?le parted friends have not been submerged have not been swamped in the waters They have only crossed over. Thes Israelites were just as th? ?roughlyjdrre <">i the western banks of the Jordan as-the; had been on the eastern banks of th? Jordan, and our departed Christiai friends have only crossed'over-not sick not dead, not exhausted, not extin guished, not blotted*ont. but wit! healthier respiration, and stouter pulses andjeeener eyesight, and better prospect: -crossed over, their sins, the^r physical and mental disquiet, all left clear thi side, an eternally flowing, impassabh obstacle between them and all human and satanic pursuit. Crossed over! Oh, I shake hands of congratulation witi: all the bereaved in the consid?ration thal our departed Christian friends are safe! Why was there so much joy in certain circles i;i New York when people heard from the friends who were on board that belated steamer? It was feared tl*at ves sel had gone to tho bottom of *the sea, and when the friends on this side heard that the steamer had arrived safely in Liverpool, had we not a right to congrat ulate the people in New York, that their friends had got safely across? .And is it riot right this morning thatj congratu late you that your departed friends are . safe on the shore of heaven? Would you have them back again? Would you have those old parents back again? Yo a know how hard it^ \was sometimes for them'to get their breath* in thestifle?! atmosphere of the summer. Would you have them back in this weather? Didn't they use their "brain long enough? Would you have your children back again? Would you hav? them take the risks of tempta tion which throng every human pat way? Would yon have iliem cross the Jordan three times? In addition to cross ing it -.dy, cross it again^o greet you nov luemcross back afterward? For ccriainly you would not -want to keep them forever out of heaven. Panse and weep, not for the freed from pain. But that thc sigh of love would bring thcmiaclc again. I ask a question, and there seems to come back the answer in heavenly echo: "What, will you never be sick again?*' "Never-sick-again." "What, -willy?fc never he tired again?" "Xever-tired again." "What, -will you never weep again?" "Never-weep-again." "What, will you never die again?" "Never-die -again." Oh, ye army of departed kindred, we hail you from bank to bank! Wait for us when the Jordan of death shall part for us. Come down and meet us half way betwee n the willowed banks of earth and the palm groves of heaven. May our great High Priest gc ahead of us, and with bruised feet touch the -wa ter, and then shall be fulfilled the words of my text, "All Israel went over on dry ground until all the people were gone clear through Jordan." If I ask you what shall be the glad hymn of this morning, I think there would be a thousand voices that would choose the same hymn-the hymn that illumines so many death chambers-th< hymn that has been the parting hymn in many an instance-the old hymn: On Jordan's stormy banks 1 stand And cast a wist ful eye To Canaan's fair and happy land. Where my possessions lie. Oh, the transporting, rapturous scene Thut rises on my sight! Sweet fields arrayed in living green. And rivers of delight. Save Your Old Pen?. Joseph Gillott, a member of tho well known firm of makers of steel pens, says that a steel pen will last for months with careful use. "If your pen ?ets scratchy and doesn't write well." he further as serts, "don't cast it aside for a new one. That is folly. The pen is not worn out but simply tired. Give it a rest for a day or two. Then hold it in a gaslight for perhaps 15 seconds, not longer, and resume your writing. If you are not pleasantly surprised at the results. I'll set myself down as a poor prophet." Philadelphia Ledger. ODDS AND ENDS. If you would be as happy as a child, please one. A sister's watchful care-can anything be more tender? Don't overload your rooms with furni ture and bric-a-brac. The Argand lamp was the invention of Aime Argand in 178'J. Who boils his pot with chips makes his bri>;h smell of smoke. The father of Sir Robert Peel, the statesman, was a day laborer. The happiest husband always knows just a lillie less than his wife does. A southern Oregon farmer last year made ?2.?S0 from 10 acres raising prunes. Ten confederate stamps recently car ried a package from Granby, Mass., to Cost?n. An Illinois company is erecting works for the manufacture of aluminium cook ing utensils. The oily carp ever caught in the Mis sissippi river was taken the other day by a Wisconsin man. The origin of the geysers at Sonoma; Cal., is supposed to be a volcanic crater filled by a landslide. Nineteen of the pensioners of the war of 1*12 are over 100 years old. six of whom live in Vermont. It won't help your own crcp any to look over the fence and count tho weeds in your neighbor's garden. Cocaine is more insidious than mor phine, fastens more readily upon its vic tim and holds him in at least as tight a grasp. Let the world have whatever spores and recreations please them best, pro vided they he followed T? ?rh discretion. Burton. A traveling telephone, which can be taken to any room required in a large office building at a moment's notice, is a recent idea. A train on the Great Northern rail road ran into a large herd of antelopes near Blackfoot. Mon., recently. Seven were killed, and the e ngine was disabled so that another had to l>e obtained to J take the train on its journey. j Zola on >i:trria;rc. Emile Zola, in a curious article enti-1 tied "How Folks Marry," expresses ex treme disapproval and disgust of the French marriage system. He contrasts with a good deal of rough power the different lives led after the age of 10 years old of the boys and mrls who till that time had been playmates and lead ing practically the same existence. Aft er this happy natural sort of lifo the paths of the brother and sister widely diverge. The son goes to the lycee, which has been described as an "inky Styx," where some may swim, but many drown, while the daughter is either brought up in a tender sheltered home or sent to a good educational convent, where she is. if possible, even more pro tected from outside evil influences than when under her mother's wing. M. Zola makes it quite clear that he h ans to the American system of educa tion. It would be interesting to know what course he pursues with his own children, two bright faced little people who v.-erc much in evidence at thc mar riage of Leon Daudet to Jeanne Hugo. London Globe. Sympathy Tor Prominent Criminal*. The sentence of Ferdinand de Lesseps to five years' imprisonment as a common felon appears to have caused intense sur prise in the United States. Few seem to doubt his guilt, but many condemn the severity of his sentence. This is unfor tunately a trait which is too common here-synjpathy for criminals. In this country De Lesseps and his coconspira tors wouldjiever have been convicted, let alone imprisoned. When the rich and venerabl > directors of the swindling Glasgow bank were first mulcted of thfir fortunes and then imprisoned for life, a cry of horror went up from the United States. In this country we dislike to convict "prominent citizens." Our moral fiber s'fflfs to be gc. mg "flabby. Our pity for criminals is fast becoming maudlin. It will be a good thing for the country when wo cease to honor thieves because they are rich and stop shaking bands with rascals because they are "smart." -San Francisco Argonaut. IX i : H ; ; n tr Lp Old Trinkets. All sorts of odd and old fashioned trinkets aro coming into favor. Old fashioned pendent brooches that have been treasured up for years are now be ing brought out and worn with picture gowns. There is a perfect fhrore for buckles of every description, and every body is ransacking old boxes of heir looms and worrying their elderly rela-* ti ves for the old paste or silver buckles ' of former days. There is great faccina tion even in the new ones made now" in all the old patterns, for they smarten up old gowns, lend attraction to slender waists, give ^styie to quaint headgear and dressy daintiness to a plain slip*per. -New York Sun. Referred to thc Stakeholder. - " A girl in Wascohet a Itiss-against ? dol lar with the edjtOr* of the Wasco News that Harrison worild.be elected. The -stakeholder of the dollar was a homely n!fl maid, and when he claimed the kiss rrori? th? girl he was coolly informed that th'e stakeholder held both bets and would cheerfully debver them on demand. Portland Oregonian. No Harm If the Bride Made No Mistake. Twin brothers reside at Warsaw. They resemble eachrother closely. One was married a few days ago, a reception was given, and numerous young friends were present. Many young ladies in offering congratulations addressed. the wrong brother and showered him with kisses. Kendall Sun. Test ins: Tore. He-Do you love me, darling? She-Sometimes I think I do, and then again, when you have on that hideous, baggy, new overcoat, I doubt the strength cf my affection.-ETC.han ge. THE KRUPP OF ESSEN. Something About a Town Built Up by a Kind Hearted Capitalist. The last number of the Annals of the American Academy of Political and So cial Science gives an admirable sum mary of the work done at the Krupp foundries for the men employed there and their families. The .writer, says the j Philadelphia Ledger, Mr. S. M. Lindsay, furnishes an object lesson thai uuv well be commended to employers of labor in this country*. The Krupp works employ 16,000 men, and with their families, numbering over 50,000, constituting the bulk of the population of the town of. Essen, while over 3,000 are located at various branch works, and the 'total number benefited by their numerous charitable and philanthropic enterprises is estimated at 25.200 workmen, and with their families 87,900 persons. The Krupp works were started in a very humble way in 1810, and it was not until the fifties that cast steel, their spe cial product, attained such universal use and the works began their rapid growth and steady increase. The Krupps themselves say that their numerous in stitutions for their workmen and their families are based first on their own business interests. Would there were more such employers whose selfishness took the same direction! Their successful efforts to raise the condition of their workmen have been made in various ways-the building of dwellings rented at fair rates and sold on easy terms; co-operative stores: ac commodations for boarding and lodging unmarried workmen; their treatment in sickness and the prevention of disease: insurance against accident and sickness and pension funds, in anticipation and largely in excess of the severe require ments of recent German legislation on I the subject: savings banks, common and ! industrial schools, the education of ap- ' prentices, the training of young .girls in ! housekeeping, humanitarian rules in fac tory work, liberal help for religious ' teaching and charity. The Kmpps have built over 4,000 houses-from frame dwellings of two rooms, renting at fifteen dollars a year, up to six room houses, renting at eighty , dollars a year. They have expended over $3,000,000 on them, earning about 2 percent on the investment, but this, wi rh much more, has been spent in benefiting the working classes in other ways. The co-operative stores managed by the Krupps at their own risk include fifteen retail grocery stores, nine brunel stores, with ono main store for general merchandise, a shoe factory with three stores, a hardware store, a mill and bak ery with six bread stores, a slaughter house with seven retail meat stores, two clothing establishments, seven restau rants, a wine store, an ice company, a j coffee house, a brush factory, a laundry, a weekly market for fresh vegetables, a coffee roasting establishment-in them nearly 500 persons were employed, wid ows, or daughters of workmen. There is a boarding house for the un married workmen, where lodging and foo*i are supplied at twenty cents a day. In lbTO Alfred Krupp built a hospita! for sick and wound; d soldiers, and since the Franco-German war it has been used for their workmen and their families-^ they are cared for at the price of thirty eight cents a day for men. thirty cents a day for women and twenty-live cents for children. There is a large bathing establishment, where 6.000 free baths were given last year, and bath tickets are sold for 2i cents apiece. The insnr ance funds against accident and death and for pensions have been largely sup j plemented by the Krupps in addition to the strict requirements cf the German laws. Primary and advanced and tech nical schools are maintained, and the churched of all denominations are large ly supported by the Krupps. i She Fought n Burglar. A bold attempt at robbery was fra s trated by , the bravery of Mrs. A. FL Chapman. wife of the agent of the United States and Pacific Express com panics in Pueblo, Colo. Shortly after dark, but before her husband had re turned from his office. Mrs. Chapman had occasion to go into the kitchen, when she was startled to see a man standing in the middle of the floor, and upon ask ing what he wanted he replied, "Those earrings," pointing to a pair of veryvalu able solitaire diamonds which the lady wore. She fled to another room and armed herself with a revolver, but the fellow not following her she again ven tured auto the kitchen. He pounced u?>or !:?r frc n the pantry, where he had hidden, md . ' hand tolland struggle ensued, in which she repeatedly struck him over the head with The re volver, it unfortunately not being load ed. A well directed blow from his fist laid her upon the floor senseless, but when she recovered she was a!, rae anil her valuables undisturbed, the marauder having evidently been frightened away by her screams.-Cor. St. Louis Globe- . Democrat. Dressmaking For Pet Dogs. A new industry has lately ' een de veloped in Paris-that of do? s dress making. A clever woman ha. started an establishment whose handsome wait ing room is provided with soft nigs for the 4-footed patrons, as well as divans for their mistresses, and here she takes orders for the coats and blankets which Dot and Tiny and Joy must have to pro tect their tender frames from the blasts of winter. The venture has already proved suc cessful and may lead in time to the starting of a dog fashion publication, al though it cannot be said that tiie want of this has been keenly felt.-New York Times. r.ejrularl3- Appointed. Miss Marguerite Hume is deputy re corder of West Bay City. Mich. At a recent meeting of the common council, when the recorder was out of the city, she acted in his place. Some of the al dermen feared that this would invalidate the proceedings, and there was a little breeze, but on the discovery that Miss Hume was a regularly appointed officer and had taken the oath all objections were withdrawn.-Woman's Journal San Francisco Doctor* Against Advertising. : The following resolution was adopted at a recent meeting of the San Francisco County Medical society: "That an janiem ber of this society whose name shall ap pear in the daily press, describing hi-* professional p wers in an unprofessional manner-and who cannot give a satisfa tory explanarla of the same, shall, at the next mewug, be expelled from the ? society." Nainre should fee assisted to throw ; offimpurities of the ' blood. -Nothing does it so well, so promptly, or so safely as Swift's Specific. ? T.rmn SAD NO CHARMS. For three years Iwas troubled with mala riaL poison? winch caused my appetite to fail, and I wag gfeady reduced in nesh, and life lost all its. charms. * I tried mercurial and potash remedies, but to no effect. I could get no relief. I'tfien decided to try8?fK2K?fl A few bottles of this wonderful fftfy medicine made a complete and permanent cure, and I now enjoy better health than ever. J. A. RICE, Ottawa, Kan. Our book on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free. SWIFT SPECIFIO Co., Atlanta, Ga. ROBT. A. THOMPSON. I ROBT. T. JAYXES THOMPSON ft INES, Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, iValhalla, S. C. Special Attention Giren to all Business Untrusted to , Our Care. September 8,1891, 36-a Democrats Will Have a Clear Majority iu the Senate. W?smxoxox, March 0.-The present roll call of the Senate shows forty-four Democrats, thirty-eight Republicans and one Populist, one Independent and one Farmers' Alliance and three vacancies. The vacancies are one each in Montana," Washington and Wyoming. Appoint ments have been made by the Governor of Wyoming, of Beckwith, Democrat, and of Mantle. Republican, in Montana, but these are subject to be changed when the Legislatures of those States meet again and elect. Should Republicans eventually lill all of these vacancies it would give them forty-one. Should the Third Party Senators then all vote with the Republicans-a most unlikely sup position-the Senate would still be a tie with vice-President Stevenson holding the controlling vote. The composition- of the House, as shown by unofficial returns, is Demo crats.-.'IT: Republicans, 128; Third Party, s. and vacancies 2. Thc Democrats have a majority of eighty over all. <k Elixir of Cascara Sagrada. Dujardin-Beaumetz (Gaz. Gi/necolo ffiqv'e) recommends the billowing as a remedy for constipation: Fluid extract of cascara sagrada, 00 gm.; pure glyce rine.'.m gm.: alcohol of 90 per cent, 200 gm.: simple sirup, 400 gm.: oil of orange, Gdrops; oil of cinnamon. 'I drops, and sufficient distilled water for 1 liter. Dose -a wineglass! ul after meals.-Am. Pharm. J"">: Deserving Praise. Wc desire to say to our citizens, that for years we have been selling Dr. King's New Discovery for consumption. Dr. King's New Life Pills. Ducklen's Arnica Salve and Electric Bitters, and have never handled remedies that sell as well, or that have given such universal satisfac tion. Wc do not hesitate to guarantee them every lime, ami we stand ready to refund the purchase price, if satisfactory results do not follow their use. These remedies have won their great popularity purely on their merits. The Norman Tarroll Co., druggists. BOISE CITY, Ii>.\m?. .March 0. Gov. McKinney yesterday addressed a letter to thc District Attorney in this city, in which he says during the recent session of the Idaho Legisla ture the members of all parties were influenced in a corrupt manner. Ile says prosecution should be com menced and declares that the Statt; board will furnish information which will enable the District Attorney to begin proceedings against some of the guilty legislators. The Toccoa (?da.) News relates the following: UA tall mountaineer walked into a store the other day and said to the clerk: 'I want some of the thinnest syrup you uns is got.' AVhy ?lo y.>u want it thin?' inquired the clerk. 'Vcr see. there's nine chillun 5.1 my house, an' all of 'em eats hearty. I want some syrup that's thin ern uff ter be er good run ner an' er quick dodger,SO they can't hem it up an' sop it fa^t: Money is -can-.' aa' I want ter make it go cz far ez I kin.' '* An Illinois newspaper, in sum ming up the cyclone record of the past year, says : -They turned a well wrong side out in the State of Mis sissippi : turned a cellar apside down in Wisconsin; moved a township line in Nebraska ; blew all of the staves oia of a whiskey barrel in [ova and left nothing but the bung hole : changed the day of the week itt Ohio: killed an honest [ndian agent in the far West: blew the hair off a bald-headed man in Texas: killed a truthful lawyer in Illinois: blew the mortgage off a farm in Min nesota: scared a red-headed woman in Michigan ; blt x the cracks out of a fence in Dakota, and took all the wind ont of a political orator in Kansas." Oh tivoli Oirectory. APPOI NTMEXTS OF REV] R. W SEY Moi ?; i o?: I HK VEAK i$i)3.-First Sunday in the morning at 11 A. M. at Walhalla. First Sunday afternoon at 3.30 P. M. at Vevill.-'s School House. Second Sundav and Saturday before at New Bethet. Third sunday and Saturday before at Councross. Third Sunday night at 7.30 at Walhalla. Fourth Sunday and Saturday before .it South Unie... Prayer meeting every Thursday night in the Walhalla Baptist church at r.:><>. Sunda s Sci.i every Sunday morning at lu A. M. ll. A. H. Gibson, Superintend ent. Preaching in the West Union Baptist church every fourth Sunday ll o'clock A.M.. and "at night af 8 o'clock P.M. Sunday school every Sunday at LO o'clock A. M. Player meeting every Tuesday night at s <?'clock P. M. W. W. LEATIIERS, Pastor. Sei vi.o in the Lutheran church will be as follows: Every tirst. third xr,d fifth Sunday of the month in tho German lan guage; every second and fourth Sunday of thc month in English. Services com mence at fifteen minutes to ll o'clock A. M. Evening servi- es En English every tirst and third Sunday at half-past 7 o'clock. Sunday School every Sunday morning at ?30. S. C. /?ETTXEE, Pastor. AppoiiiMioii t> of Wiilhiillit ('hnrsc. .TI. - K. Church. South. I $93. Walhalla. 2d and 4th Sundays at ll A. M. Zion, 2d Sunday at '?>* P. M. Ocoiiee. Uh Sunday at P. M. Jocassee, 1st sunday at ll A. M. Whitmire, 1st Sunday at 3$ P. M. Double Springs, 3d Sunday af ll A. M. Laurel Spring. 3d Sunday at oj P. XI. The above is the pian f<>r the Walhalla Charge during the ?.resent conference year. H. < '. MOCZOX, P. C. Divine service in the Episcopal Church every third Sunday in the month, at ll A. M. and 5.00 P. M. Also, every Fridav at 5.00 P. M.. and all Holy Days at ll A. M. special services notified. J. i). M< CoiXOCGH, Minister. Ser.ic. s in the Walhalla Presbyterian church every first and third Sabbath of the month in the morning at ll o'clock. In the evening, on every second and fourth Sabbath, at o'clock. Sabbath school every Sabbath morning at 10 o'clock Prayer meeting every Wednes day afternoon at 4? o'clock. GEO". G. MAYES, Pastor. Services in Lethe! church every second and fourth Sabbath of the month in thc morning'at ll o'clock. Sabbath school on same days immediately after thc preaching service. GEO. G. MAYES, S. S. The following are the appointment.? of Kev. J. A. Wilson, pastor, at thc Seneca Presbyterian church and Keowec chapel : Preaching every first and third Sabbath at Seneca, both morning ami at night at 11.30 A. M. and s P. M. Also, every fin : S tbbatb afternoon at :).?>< o'clock ac Keowee chiped. Sabbati; school every sabbath at Seneca at 10 A. M.. and every Sabbath at Kcowee chape! at 2*20 P. M. The following are the appointments foi Townsville Circuit until .lune 1st: First Snnday- Asbury, 11A.M.; Zion :; P. M. Second Sundav-Jones' Chapel, ll A. M.: Bethlehem,3 P. M. Third Sunday--Smith's Chapel, ll A. M.: Cedar Grove, 3 P. M. Fourth and fiftv Sundays as annougced. J. C. SfAXX, P. C. The following is the plan of appoint men ts for the Westminster (Methodist,' Circuit for the present Conference year: Center church, first Sunday at ll A. M and Saturday before at 3 P. M. Westminster church, second Sunday al ll A. M. and fourth Sunday at 3.P. M. Rock Sprigg church, fourth Sunday al ll A. M. and second Sunday at 3 P. M. Nazareth charch, third Sunday at ll A. M. and Hopewell church at 3 P. M. W. B. JCSTCS, Pastor, ?&5? <-.' .-- - Richmond & D?iYiite Ratai Co. F. W. nUIDEKOPEK AND RE?BEN FOSTER, RECEIVERS. i Columbia & Greenville Division. CONDENSED SCHEDULE, IN EFFECT XOVEXBEK 20, 18S2. Trains run by 75th Meridian Time. BETWEEN CHARLESTON, GOLUMBLV, SEN ECA AND WALHALLA Daily. Daily. No ll. .Stations. No 12. 6 50 am Lv Charleston Ar h> 30pm 11 20 am Lv Columbia Ar ii 05 pm 12 05 pm Alston 5 13 pm 12*28 " Pomaria 4 57 .. 12 42 " Prosperity 4 40 " 12 57 " Newberry 4 25 " 1 01 44 Helena" 4 20 " 1 33 " Chappells 3 3$ " 2 17 '* Ninety-Six 3 15 " 2 37 Greenwood 2 53 " 2 55 " Hodges '_' 2'.' " 3 12 " Donald's 2 11 " 3 23 " IloneaPath 1 58 .. 4-') " Ar Belton Lv 1 4M 4 05 " Lv Belton Ar 1 33 " 4 35 " Anderson 1 !."- " 5 IS " Pendleton 12 45 " 0 00 " Ar Seneca Lv 12 1?; " 6 32 " Lv Seneca Ar 12 10 am 7 00 Ar Walhalla Lv ll 40 .. 5 00 44 Ar Greenville Lv 12 ?-o m BETWEEN ANDERSON, BELTON AND GREENVILLE; D?ilv. Dailv. Stations. No il. No ll. I Lv Anderson 4 35 pm I 15 prc ; Ar Relton 4 05 " 1 " ? Lv Relton 1 25 " 3 4:; " '' Ar Williamston I 02 44 4 o-? .. Pelzer 12 55 " 4 us ?. Piedmont 12 4o " 4 ?0 " Greenville 12 00 m 5 00 .' BETWEEN CHARLESTON^ COLUMBIA. ALSTON AND SPARTANBURG. Dailv. . Dailv. No 13. Stations. N.> H. (>."() am Lv Charleston Ar 10 30 pm 3 50 pm Lv Columbia Ar 1 20 pm j 4 30 pm Alston 12 4o *. j 5 23 " Carlisle 11 44 arc ! 5 :?2 " Sar.tuc ? 1 '.'><> " ? 5 50 " Union HIT " 23 *. Pacolet P> 44 " : 6 50 " Ar Spartanburg Lv LO 20 " 10 in ?ni Ar Asheville Lv 7 "o arc [BETWEEN NEWBERRV. CI.INION AND LAURENS. Ex. Sun. Ex. sun. No 15. Stations. No 10. ?ll 20-iin Lv Columbia Ar (J 05 pm ' 2 00pm Newberry ?2 00 ra 3 04 " Goldville 1" 56 an. i 34 *'. ( linton LO 30 " . 4 15 " Ar Laurens Lv 9 50 " BETWEEN HOI??,KS AND ABBEVILLE. 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 44 Ar Abbeville Lv 1 45 ~ Ex. Sun. K\. Sun. No. 45. Stations. No. ?'4. ? OOamLv Hodges Ar 7 35 am S 25 " Darraugh's 7 L5 "* S 40 " Ar Abbeville Lv 7 00 " CONNECTIONS VIA SOUTH BOUND RAIL li'iAI). Daily. Daily. Xo. Central Time. No. 3& : 6 45 am Lv Columbia Ar ? 4<kpm ; 12 :io um .vr savannah L>' !<? 20am Daily. Daily. No. 39. Central Time. No. .". 12 30pm Lv Columbia Ar 9 00pm 5 lo pm Ar Savannah Lv 4 "o pm Parlor Cars between Columbia and Savannah. Trains leave Spartanburg. S. C., A. ?fe j C. Division. Northbound. 4.1".' A. M.. ?'. lv p. M.. 5.00 r. M. (Vestibuled Limited): Southbound. 1.5?; A. M.. 3.36P.M.. 11.-7 A. M. (Vestibuled Limited); Westbound, W. X. C. Division. &30 P. M. for Hender sonville. Asheville and Hot Springs. Trains leave Greenville, S. C., A. ?fe C. Division. Northbound. 3.07 A. M.. 2.26 P. M.. 5.0S P. M. (\'e?>t i hu led Limited): Southbound, "..<>7 A. M.. 4.42 P. M.. L2.2S p. M. (Vestibuled Limited). Trains leave Seneca. S. C.. A. ?fe C. Division, Northbound, 1.36 A. M.. 12.15 :.. M.: Southbound, 4.:^ A. M.. 6.30 ... M. Trains Nos. ll an?! 12 <>n the C. and <.. Division, and Trains 13 and 11 >>n the A. ands. Division will run solid to and from Charleston over the S. C. R. R. PULLMAN CAR SERVICE. Pullman Sleeper on \'-'> and 14 between Charleston and Asheville, via Columbia and Spartanburg. Pullman Palace Sleeping Caron trains LO. llan.l 12. :;T and 38 on A. ?fe C. Division. W. A. TURK Gen*! Pass. Agt,, Washington, D. C. S. IL HARDWICK, .Wt Gen'l Pass. Agt.. Atlanta, < ia. V. E. M< BEE, Gen'l Supt. Columbia, s. ; SOL. HAAS. Traffic Manager. Washington, D. C. W. H. GREEN. < ?enera] Manage]. Washington, D. < '. Atlantic Coast Line. Passenger Depart ment, ^Wilmington, .V. c.. January' 29, LS93. Fast Linc Between Charleston and Columbia and Upper South Carolina, North Carolina, and Athens and Atlanta. WESTW Ai.O. ?NO. 52. Leave Chark ston. 6 85 a ra " Lanes. 8:32 44 " Sumter. 1* 43 Arrive Columbia.i(' 55 * " Prosperity.?2 22p m " Newherry.12 t?S " ?'linton. l ;:" " " Greenwood. 2*>! " Abbeville. 3 {?>. " " Athens. 5 52 * " " Atlanta. S 13 " " Winnsboro. .". l"pm " Charlotte. 7 :?" " " Anderson. 4 35 prc " Greenville. 4-50 44 '* Spartanburg. 6 50 '* 44 ?endersonville.9 05 '*' " Asheville.LO 1" 44 EASTW ARD Leave Asheville. 7n0am '* Hendersonville. S 02 " " Spartauburg.LO 20 44 Greenville.!2 LOp m 44 Anderson. I 15 44 44 Charlotte. 9 35 a ni " Winnsboro.ll 34 " Atlanta.S :'<> a m " Athens.ll <>4 - " Abbeville. ? 42 p m u Greenwood. 2 15 44 M Clinton. 30 -* .4 Newberry. 4 is " " Prosperity. 4 ::4 " 44 Columbia.610 Arrive Sumter. 7 25 41 44 Lanes. 8 40 44 Charleston.lo 40 " . Daily. Nos. 52 and 53 Solid Trains between Charleston and ( linton. S. C. H. M. EMERSON. Ass'r Gen'l Passern.'?'! Agent. J. K. KENLY, (-encrai Manager. T. M. EMERSON, Traffic Manager. Surveying. LANDS SURVEYED in any part ol thc county. Prices reasonable. L H. HARRISON. October 8, 1891. . 41-tf SURVEYING. W^M. F. ERVIN will be found at his office, on South side ol Main street, when Ms Services are desired on Surveys. May 5, 1892. F. W. IIU1DEK0PER AND REUBEN FOSTER, RECEIVERS.; Atlanta & Charlotte Air Line Division. CONDENSED SCOEDCXE OF PA.S8ENGEE TEAINS, Di EFFECT Nov EM HER 20. 1S'"'2. S?rth bound. EASTERN TULE. So. .'J.S. >o. IO. No. I?. Daily. Daily. I Dailv. I.v. Atlanta E. T.12.43 pm .? Coamblee. .. Norcross. " Duluth. " Suwanee.'.. buford. " Flowery Brauch. ?' Gainesville. 2.13pm " Lula. 2.:>- pm .. Bellton. " Corn? ' .: " Mt. ?j.y. " Titci'oa . " Westminster. " Seneca " .'..ntr.i! "? Di: :i: bon :> li. l.v. Charlotte. .? Bellemost. .. Lowell. " Gastonia. .. King's Mt. .. Grover. .. Blacksburg_ " Gaffneys. Cowpens. .. Clifton. " spartnnburg... Kenford. .. Greer's. " Greenville. " Earleys. .. Centra]. '. Seneca. .. Westminster... >o. So. ll. >o. 9. Daily. Daily. Daily. H.S.'. ai:- I.iv!{.ni 1X20pm Mt. Any. Cornelia. Beuton. Lula. <..iin?'>\ il!.-. t lowers Branch Boford.. Suwanee. Duluth. Sorcross. Cbamblee..:. Ar. Atlanta - E. T.) ata(E.T.)....| L55prmlLOOpn 9.00pm Additional trains Sos. li a:i>l IS-Lola acooni modatioru.daL'j except Sunday, leaves Atlanta 5.35p.m.. arrino Lula S.2? fi. m. Returning, leaves Lula ?...?' a. m.. arrives Atlanta S . ." a. m. Between Lola and Arl ?a-Nos. li an<l :.. daily, leave Lula >..v. p ?.i. and 1055 a. m., arrive Ath ens 10.15 p. m. and t*?20r>.ar. Ki-turning leave Athens. Nos. to and li. daily-. i?.3>p. m. and s.ot a m.. arrive Lula 8.15 p; m. and :..'*> a. m. Between Toccoa and El turton-Xo. C3 and Xo. >. daidy except Sunday, leave Toceoa 7.45a.m. and 11.25 a. in., arrive Elberton LL35a. no. an?! 220p.m. Returning. Xo. ?." and Xo. 12, daily except Stmdav. leave Elberton 3.?? j>. m. and 7 a. ra-, arriv?- Toccoa 7.?fi p. ra. and UVS> a. in. Nos. .iini io Pullman Sleeper between Atlanta and Sew i'orfc. S-.s. yr and :>-Washington and Southwestern Vestibuled Limited, between Sew York and Atlanta. Through Pullman bleepers between Sew York and. Sew Orleans, and between Sew Y"tl? and Augusta; also between Washington and Memphis, via Atlanta and Birmingham, uniting between Atlanta and Bira1 ingham with Pullman Sleeper to and from >lii'-\i-p<'rt. La., via Mendiai and Vicksburg. So. 3s connect? at Spartanburg with Pullman Sleeper for Asheville. So*, ll and 12-Pulln an Buffet Sleeper between Washington and Atlanta, uniting; between Dan ville and: Greensboro with Pullman Sleeper to and iroin Portsmouth md Norfolk. Por detailed information as *to local and through tia e cables, ates and .Pullman Sleeping Car IU*I nations, cot.ier with local agent?, or ? address er. A. TUSK, . <;. tera] PassengerAgent. Washington, .>. C.. M. 11. IIAECDW 14 K. ? A?s*t Geu'I Pas?. Agt.. Atlanta, Ga. J. A. DODSON, Superintendent, w. II ?.Ol. Atlanta, 'ia. UBB?7T, Genend Manager, Washington, D. C. HAAS, Traine Manager, Washington. D. C. i-f 'r-.. .;"-":vc""^f' . ; I). H. CHAMBERLAIN". Receiver. ( . M. WA ill?. General Manager. ?'. M. T! I; Ni-.!:. Superintendent. E. P. WARING. Genrl Pass. Ag't. In Eft'ecf February I, 1893. S. c. R*V <.< >IN<; S 'H?DTJLE. STATIONS. NoL Noll. NoSL A.M. A.M. P.M. i.v ( 'harleston ... 6 .*>" Summerville . . 7 2S PregualPs ... S Ar Branchville . . s 45 Lv Branchville . . 9 00 Sun ii B?d Cross-g 9 4;; Blackville . . . IO 00 Aiken . . . . 11 <c' S 00 Graniteville . . ll l-> s IT ?Air Augusta . . .11:49 S 50 Union Depot . .11 50 00 Lv Branchville . . 8 50 > 30 Orangeburg . . 9 19 :< 00 St. Matthews . 9 41 9 25 Fort Moir,-. . . 9 55 9."39 Ringville . . . LO 07 51 Ar ' ?lum bia ... Iii?? 10 4'J Lv Ringville ... I" 10 9 5a Boykin's ... ll 12 ll Ol Ar Camden . ... 1! '?>> ll .'" No 37. NO IO. PM P.M. Lv ( Charleston . . . .'? t5 12 "i Summerville . . 6 32 12 SS ? Pregnall-s ...Til ; \r Branchville . . v "" ? 45 i.v Branchville . . v 25 south BTd < ross'g 9 Blackville . . . 9 17 I Aiken . . . . 1" ?2 4 33 GramteviiJe . . l? ?T 4 55 Ar Augusta. . . . Il 05 5 S3 j Union !)<.;?o' . .Ii 13 ?> 4.". j Lv Branchville . . 147 Oraugeburg . . - l~> Kingvillc ... - Ar Columbia ... ?'. 4" >. C. I:'V RETURNING SCHEDULE. STATIONS. Noy. No?0. Noli. A.M. A.M. P.M. I.v Camden .... 7 20 Ar Ringville ... S 40 Lv i olumb?a ... S 00 >'. :,) Kin-ville ... S 4T f, 33 Fort Motte ... - 39 T . '. St. Matthew's. . 9 14 7 Orangeburg . . '-'42 ? Ar Branchville . . !" L3 - 20 A.M. P.M. P.M. Lv Union Dep Augusta. Grauitevill Aiken Blackville South B*d ? Ai Branch rill A.M. A.M. P.M. Lv Branchville . . i'? SO PregnaiTs . . .11 IS Sunni ol vi. ie . .11 02 AT ( barb ston P.M. P.M. P.M. No !!. No 14. P.M. P.M. i Lv Camdem ... 12 30 Ar Ringville ... '-' 10 I Lv C. .lum i lia ... 1 40 I Ringville ... 2 21 Orangeburg . . S ll I Ar Branchville . . 3 40 ! Lv Union Depot . . 4 50 Augusta . . . 500 Graniteville . . 5 25 S 43 Aiken .... 5 40 00 Blackville . . . 4S South I i ii Cross'g 7 05 Ar Branchville . . 7 .*.<> Lv Branchville . . ^ 25 ? 4-2 Summerville . . 4 32 Ar Charleston. . . ll o') 5 :lo TOBACCO SEED FREE, -AND AH About Growing Tobacco. If you want to try this Money Making Croi; Write to SOUTHERN TOBACCO JOURNAL, Winston. V C. THE EDWARDS* ESTATE. An heir to $300,000,000 was tonnd hy sending his>AMK and TEN CENTS to Aceat*' Krcoril. Hms ?r five 2c- ^tair'Ps will send your i.vO- name whirling all ov /thc wi, publish-rs, rr.annfSCK^'pat ? *.f* antees and those einplc* ?2*nt?. nid wiil bring you large mail of_?"*' n ^>&" zinos. papers, letters and sarnpl'-.^poUi. oner ing you bargair-. agencies, ".i^TT* ~. AGEXTS' D . JED. ATLANTA, GA.