The weekly Union times. [volume] (Union C.H., South Carolina) 1871-1894, March 22, 1878, Image 4
b.. i - - 1 ? . : * . 1 i. . - DOT
VOMAN OF MINE.
Dot vomnn of mi no ! dot votnan of ininc !
SSlic bodders mine life out nil der dime; 4
She slaps mine hair und pulls my face,
Uml knocks mine nose nil out of blacc ;
She drives me of tniue own house out,
Und makes me vander der night about.
Till ven morning comes init a dove-like smile,
I ant coaxed back to my domicile.
By dot voiuan of mine.
Dot votnan of mine ! dot votnan of mine !
My love for her isli most sublime;
1 vould go mil myself through thick and thin,
Of I never could sec dot voman again ;
Before I vas married I could midout fear
Kat my Liiiihurger or drink mine beer ;
Hut since 1 am married I'm all forlorn,
Because dose britches of mine are voru
Hy dot voinan of mine.
Dot votnan of mine! dot voman of mine !
rMic vokm nit* up m ucr miumgni tunc,
Und dells mo n pain in lier stomach she's got,
Und vauts me to mnke her a visky hot.
I goes ilown stnirs in my night shirt-dail,
I'm! skins my shins 011 dcr bucket pail,
I'nd seal Is myself milder coffee pot
In trying to make a visky hot
For dot votuau of mine.
Dot voman of mine! dot voinan of mine!
Veil 1 goes to der tavern in dcr evening dime
I sits tne down ill my easy chair
To shinoke mine pipe und drink my beer,
Yen in sho conies mit an old brootn-slitick,
Und hurries 111c off o? double quick ;
Fhe follows behind, vile dcr beeples stare,
Und vondcrs who vcars der britches ilere?
Me or dot vouian of mine.
Dot voman of mine ! dot voman of mine!
Yenevcr vill conic dcr hubby dime
Ven 011 this earth her mortal breath
Forever shall be ahtopped mit death?
Ven in der day 110 more I'll see
Der lectle stars she makes for 111c !
Von does dime gomes I'll zing mit glee,
For I shall be so liabhy, so free
From dot voman of mine.
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.
Hlack Fruit Cake.?One pouml butter
and one pound white sugar, beaten to a
cream : beat well the yolks of twelve eggs,
and stir all together; add half a pound cf
Hour; stir in well; then one tablespoonful
of cinnamon, two teaspoonfuls o*' nutmeg;
one tcaspoonful cloves ; stir well; then the
beaten whites of the eggs, with another
half pound of flour, one wineglassful of
brandy, one pound currants well washed
and drained, one pound of raisins seeded
and chopped, one-half pound of citron cut
in thin pieces; mix all together; this will
make two cakes; bake two hours or longer;
bake in deep tins lined with well-buttered
paper.
A Wholesome Duinic.?Oatmeal in
water, in the proportion of a quarter of a
pound of oattneal to three quarts of water,
is recommended as a refreshing drink.?
The meal must be well boiled, the mixture
cooled and water added to keep up the proportion.
With a lump of ice this is said
not only to quench thirst but to keep up
the strength, while without ice, when ice is
not to be had, it is still palatable when entirely
cool. It is said that it is used in
many iron-foundries and manufactories in
h'njrim,! 'fhe meal should bo \voll shaken
through the wafer before drinking.
Chilled Hands ott Feet.?If the
hauds arc very cold but not frozen, paddle
them in lukewarm water for a few moments.
The same may be said of the feet, gradully
adding warmer water, thus avoiding chilblains,
restoring the proper temperature
gradually, and imparting to the whole body
a surprising degree of comfortableness.
Pickled C add age.?Take two gallons
oi ciuer vinegar; ot grouua cinnamon, |
cloves, and allspice, each a teaspoon 1ul; put
them in a thin cloth, tic them in with the
cabbage and just lot it conic to a boiling
heat in a porcelain pot. Then put it in a
jar, cover tightly, and set it away in a cool
place.
Cooked Cahhaok.?Cut fine as for slaw;
put into u kettle and add water to cook
until tender; then add cue-half cup of
sweet cream ; one half cup of vinegar, in
which mix one tablespoonful of flour; season
With pepper and salt to suit the taste; let it
boil up and serve.
Hatter Pudiuno.?Three eggs, seven
tablespoonfuls of flour, one quart of milk,
boiled, preserving to wet the flour together,
and pour them into the boiling milk. Add
a little salt. If berries arc used, add onethird
flour. Pake and serve with sauce.
Kicii Soft Gingerbread.?One cupful
molasses, one egg, one teaspoonful ginger,
one teasponnful soda; stir rather thin.
Preserved Potatoes.?Potatoes have
been successfully preserved by simply scalding
them for two or three minutes, and
then well drying them.
IIow to Detect Married People.?
If you sec a lady and gentleman disagree
upon trifling occasions, or correct each other
iu company, you may be assured they
have tied the matrimonial uooso.
If you see a silent pair in a car or stage
lulling carelessly, one at each window, without
seeming to know they have a companion,
the sign is infallible.
If you see a lady drop her glove and a
gentlemen by the side of her, kindly telling
her to pick it up, you need not hesitate in
forming your opinion ; or,
If you sec a lady whose beauty and accomplishments
attract the attention of every
gentleman in the room but one, you have
no difficulty in determining the relationship
to each other? the one is her husband.
If you see a gentleman particularly courteous,
obliging iyul good-natured, relaxing
into smiles, saying sharp things and toying
with every pretty woman in the room excepting
one, to whom he appenrs particularly
cold and formal, and is unreasonably
cross?who that one is, nobody can bo at a
Joss to discover.
The rules above quoted are laid down as
infallible in just interpretation?they may
be resorted to with confidence, they are
npon uuerrinc principles, and deduced from ,
every day experience.? l>c<r hmlgr (Mouf<nui
J iVew Northern
- - ' ? 1
THE LAWS OF HEALTH.
Wc hardly realize how important a part
wator plays iu the lite of the globe, jio
water no vegetables, no vegetables no nmuials,
no animals no meu. Indeed water
forms a larpfconstitucut part of the whole
vegetable aim animal world. Nearly threefourths
of the human, body is water. The
relations of water to health, thereoic, must
be very important. It is the greutugeut of
chango within the system. It givetf fullness
and flexibility to the softer tissues. It
holds iu solution the nutritive substances,
and by its agency alone can they enter the
system; and by the same agency the waste of
the tissues must be borne away. Being perfectly
neutral itself, water becomes, by its
solvent power, sweet, sour, salt, astringent,
bitter or poisonous, according as the body
dissolved possesses these properties. It readily
takes up either gasses liquid, or solid
substances, and diffuses them wherever it
flows Wc not only drink water, but we
eat water in all our food, and it has been
estimated that a:i adult man consumes from
seventy to ninety ounces each twenty-four
hours. Of course water is constantly escaping
from tho system, and carrying with
it the worn out particles through the skin,
the lungs and other natural channels.?
ri,<1... o..i..?..? ........... ..r ? :?
never found entirely free from foreign iu-(
grcdifUts, which uiolify its character and
give it the names, soil-, Iiard, aud
sea-water. These qualities may be harmless,
and even useful in a hygenie point of view,
or they may be hurtful. tircat care should
be taken.to guard against organic and mineral
impurities in the wafer we use. These
may be cither mechanically suspended or
dissolved. Organic impurities are derived
from many sources, l'urc wrtcr brings
them down from the air, or roofs of houses;
cisterns receive them from the leaking of
sinks or waste pipes ; shallow and deep wells
are liable to become contaminated by means
of floods, or by their near proximity to
draius. cesspools and vaults. Here is a
source of special danger. Five children
from the same family, all the parents bad,
were laid in the grave yard within one
month. The cause of their death was the
drinking water from such a well. So said
the attcudiug physicians. Springs and
streams may also become impure through
discharges from large manufactories. Water
has also the power to corrode lead, forming
a compound which is highly poisonus.
llcuce great cure should be taken in the
use of lead pipes conveying water to the
house or barn, for tho use of man and
beast. Tho morbid effects of impure water
often result in diarrhoea, dysentery, cholera,
endemic and malarious fevers, and many
other forms of disease. Impurities iu water
cannot always be discovered by tho unaided
senses. Kvcu the taste, however delicate,
is entirely untrustworthy, as organic
manor, wncn uissoiveu, is oiton quite tasteless.
Fifty-five grains of carbonate of soda,
and seventy grains 6f carbonate of lime'
give HO UMC . truil ctotl t tt m ley lit O ^Mluil
of the sulphate of liuio is hardly perceptible.
But it would be very harmful to lake
so much of these poisons into the system.
We coul 1 hardly afford to wait for the
effects as a means of discovering their presence.
Distillation may be resorted to as a
means of purifying the water, but that is
als?i impracticable. Boiling and freezing
are more reliable as a means of killing or
removing the vegetable or animal poison.? j
Chemical means are sometimes employed
for neutralizing the effect of these poison >us
substances, but the effective and practicable
method of purifying water is by filtration.
Charcoal alone will remove cightyciglit
per cent, of organic matter and twenty
per cent, of mineral matter.?II. O., in
Western Farm Journal.
Tiik Man who Nevku Smii.ks.?Ciovcrnor
Bice is asked to pardon one O'Donnell,
of Millbury, from Charlcstown, and a
gentleman who recently visited the .State
Prison thus tells his story : 'Mjentlemcn,"
said the Warden, "I want to bring before
you otic of the most remarkable cases wo
have in the prison. We call him the man
who never smiles,' and I wish before bo
conies iu to tell you bis story, lie seems
to be a man of more than ordinay ability,
one of the better class of substantial, frugal
Irish citizens, who owned a small place in
one of our manufacturing villages, where
he resided with his family of grown up sons
and daughters, all permanently employed
and in comfortable circumstances. The
old man had a fine garden on which he bestowed
his leisure hours, in a part of which
was a fine lot of cabbages. It seems that
the boys in the neighborhood had a habit
of trespassing on the old man's garden, until
he had determined on getting rid of them
by firing his gun to frighten them away.?
One night, hearing some one in his garden,
he took down his gun, and, getting behind
the hedge, fired into the garden, as lie claims
without aim or seeing any one to aim at.?
Uut the report of the gun alarmed the
neighbors, who on rushing into the garden,
found the lifeless body of a young girl shot
through the heart. The old man, when
told what he had done, was struck dumb,
lie was arrested and sentenced to imprisonment
for life, lie has now been here for
ten years, and his face has become as marble
; there is no hope; nothing but the sad
rcmeinhranco of tint dreadful night. In
Ireland they have a superstition among the
young girls that whoever 011 Hallowe'en
shall place a cabbage over the door will
marry the first young man that enters the
door afterwards. And this it was proved,
was the errand of the youug girl in the old
inau's garden. Hut instead of a wedding |
she found a grave."?SprimjJultl Rrpulli<itn.
I o - ? - Sume
vldi'-airako f-llow should jump nt the chance
To build tip a fortune in selling ten plants:
Make hit tnru importations ill reel from llon^ Kong?
When n tea fever's sun. .I just wild it Oolong?
Very t.0011 ftiA young Indli* a Mngitig will he :
'Oh, what A fine rntMi--whAl A wplr ndlil Ii'dteo !"
A LEAF'OF CAROLINA HISTORY, WITH A
MORAL.
Editor Spartannuitu Herald :?Col.
Joseph Kershaw was one of two brothers
who cauib from England about the middle
of the l^st century. In 17GO he laid off a
few town lots, ou the banks of a beautiful
creek, which empties into Wateree liivcr
near thqAjmtre of our State, lie called
his Mnfuufc^nftwu Camden,., ju honor of
Lor^. whole conservative course
iu rt?o wT-jn&h Parliament, had wou the
contidence of the colonists. About the
same time he started a store at a point now
included in the town of Cheraw, and auother
at (Jrauby. lie bore a prominent part in
the war of the Revolution, suffering jt long
and painful imprisouuient at the hands of
the British. When peace returned, and
that portion of the Slate was divided into
. Districts, the one including the beautiful
and historic town of Canidcu, was called
Kershaw. One of his nieces married. Joseph
Brevard (from Noith Carolina,) who
in 1801 was elected one ol the Judges of
South Carolina. He held this office until
1815, when lie resigned on account of his
failing health, llis Digest of our Statutes
and his recorded opinions are the proofs of
his ability and zeal. In May 1811 he
signed at chambers the certificates of admission
to the bar, for two young lawyers,
-Jt.iltr fMi?u-call and George McDullie.
His colleagues then were Gritnkc, Bay,
ouiltu. Oolcock. His health reviving,
he was afterwards a member of
Congress, and died in 182i. A few j'caia
after his death, a descendant of Joseph Kershaw
received the honored combination of
uamcs, Joseph Buevahi. Kkksuaw.?
And this is the name which will be signed
to the official records of the court to be
hold in our town next week. The writer of
these lines lias no ease to come before J udge
Kershaw. But every citizen, however removed
I'reui the hustle of the Court house,
has more than a vague or theoretical interest
in the announcement at any time, that
the scales of justice will be held up l.y
bauds that are not only steady, but pure.?
There may be uo indelicacy or impropriety
in stating a lew items to our people about
tht??who will soon hold uis first
court a . ong us, though lie certainly needs
no introduction to any Carolina community.
When a boy, ho was the "only son of his
mother, and sue was a widow." lie was at
that time the only male representative of
his family name, lie was therefore, iu a
sense, the son of the county, which built
largely its hopes upon him. After passing
through the schools of his native town, he
went to Cokesbury, where he finished his
education about 1840. When his classmates
went to College, he went to a Count
ing llousc in Charleston lor a time. Returning
to Camden, ho studied law. The
District sent him.to the Legislature very
soon after lie became eligible, lor the young
lawyer, diad the full confidence of those who
had Mjfiwu hiui from boyhood. The Moxio^^^Lcame
on iji IS 17, and he went out
fn a fljhu company which old
Kers^r' sent to tiie field, lie gave lull
proof there of all the qualities, physical,
intellectual and moral, which make the
highest typo of the citizen soldier, but he
gladly laid aside the sword, and returned to
his professional duties. Of his achievements
on a later field, by which the Lieutenant
of the Mexican Campaign became
the Major General of another war, we do
not propose to speak. It is matter of public
rejoicing, that such a man, so well known,
so fully tried, is seated 011 the Hench at this
time. II is past history, and his earnest attention
to tile current duties of his high
office, combine to make his presence and his
official acts, an educating iuflucucc in any
community.
lie lias a sou who is l'aslorof the episcopal
Church at Abbeville. The judge
hiuiiH'VLis an active and consistent member
of this communion.
Wc have heard wishes expressed that he
may be able to deliver a public address to
our citizens on the subject of Temperance
during the session of his court in our town.
We are entering on a year which will try
our people in many respects. They need
all the restraints and helps which our leading
men can give them by precept and example.
It is said the Judge attributes to
a speech, which lie heard in early life, by
the late William McWillic, an influcticcc
which lias greatly controlled his own views
on this important subject. We are sure he
will led it. a duty and privilege to extend
this quickening impulse to another generation.
May South Carolina have always an
unfailing succession of men like these, who,
giving more dignity to ofHcc, than they receive
from it, use the highest positions as
means to benefit and bless their fellow men.
c.
A Brutal Father's Ckimr.?New
Haven, March 4.?A Coroner's jury to-day,
sitting on the body of a three years old
child of l'jdwnrd McGrcevy, rendered a
verdict that death was the result of meningitis,
from brutal beating by the father.?
McOrecvy has been arrested. Before the
jury the mother of the child, who had made
the complaint, testified that her husband
whipped the boy mercilessly four weeks ago
with a short, thick stick, and whipped it
every night for no good reason. A week
j ago last night he wanted the boy to walk
| from the bed to the window and back. The
little fellow was not able to, and the father
threw htm violently on the bed, the child's
head striking hard against the wall- A
wocJr-ngo Monday he whipped the hoj
again. Previous to this 011 one occasion
the father knocked the child violently on
the side of the head with his hand. After
the punishmcut Monday the. child was taken
with vomitting, which lasted until last Friday,
when he became unconscious, so remaining
until death supervened Saturday
night. Much indignation is manifested,
tud the ponalty of the eriino will probably
be sctefc.
FX PARTE ARGUMENTS.
No matter how silly the arguments of the ?
leader of a party uir.y be there are always
some newspapers aud followers who are t
sycophants enough to corroborate aud praise
their <xe parte reasouing. Wheu President
Hayes' message appeared iu the papers, declaring
that of ail citizens the laborer aud
the man receiving a salary wore the uiost interested
in having a money of a stable "
and unchanging value, hundreds of persons
repeated?parrot-like?the scntiuicut, and
i i__ J._I i /-* . i>- ? i
u puruuy ucciareu ureal is I'laua or me |
iKphesiaus. The truth is, his argument was
very futile, aud I believe was not prompted
by a desire for the best interests of the class ]
named, but by that of purchased praise.?
I cannot think that he was so silly as not to
know that the most important consideration |
with the class named, was to get a salary or j
chance to work for something which he j
can procure the means of life with. Hut
tho idea of making the money or couipcn- t
sation of this class so precious that the em- 'i
p'oymeut of it becomes accidental, it ought ?
to be clear to a mind of average acumen, 1
that to <-ush 11 such a basis while industry 1
is in debt, is playing into tho hand of the
money power. To all but the willfully
Tilind it is plain that the channels of trad;,
which is our money, should be made as easy
as possible, by making money cheap and .
plenty.
If it is desirable to haveTaTTor employed
and remunerated, aud the couutry made
| better by our living, we must couvcrt all
tramps uiid unemployed persons into laborers
by making money plenty enough to
biro them.
Every one who is nccquaiutcd with the
history of Illinois, knows that our prosperity
has been greatest when money was cheapest. '
This State never improved faster than during
1850 and IStJO, when ?c had plenty of
"wild cat money" which was established on
the gold basis theory, but was not worth on
an average more than two cents on the dollar,
but it served to exchange the products j
of unc citizeu of tho country for that of
another, which should be the only legitimate
use of money. And then immediately at.
close of the civil war our money was plenty
and cheap, and our prosperity began on a (
new lease which has terminated unhappily,
when we in our lethargy suffered capital to
get. possession of our law making power,
and dictate the r sumption of specie payments
and then destroy our silver as a legal
tender, and hv that menus inrrnnso ilu> villi..
of gold.
America nuglit to be free from all other
countries; anil not determine that we should
pay our president fifty thousand d .'liars a
year because some other country pays its
king more than that many pounds; and not
determine that we cannot use paper or iron
as a legal tender, because some other country
has determined to make gold its only
legal tender ; and above all, as it is one of
the products of our jurisprudence, that laws
arj made for the protection ot the weak
against t,he strong. '
The plopuincc often know their Interests
better than the Shyloeks are willing to
believe, and we are forced by the drift of
the President's message, to accredit him
with want of sympathy lbr industry or ignorance
of its need.?J. It. Pakks, in
./oitriml of A;/riruftiire and Farmer.
The llcv. Dr.McCosh, of Princeton College,
tells a story of a uegro who prayed
earnestly that he and his colored brethren
might be preserved from their "upsettin,
^sins." "llruddcr," said one of his friends
at the close of the meeting, "you ain't got
de hang of dat ar word." "It's besettiu',
not upsettin'." "ltrudder," replied the other,
"if dat's so it's so. Itut 1 was prayin' de
Lord to save us from de sin ob 'toxication,
an' ef dat ain't an upsettin' sin L dunno
what am."?I'rinccton Review.
M. Gcnin, in a communication to the
French Academy of Sciences, states that
he was able, after having carefully invcstL
gated the matter for several years, to say
that, all oi'ir-j cmit'iini mr !,,? ,r,n.?l..a
- r?*v v,,u svl Ul v,i u,ll,go
have wrinkles on I he small cud, while female
eggs arc smooth.
' The bright lexicon of youth," in which
"there is no such word as fail," docs not
seem to he a very popular dictionary in the
mercantile community just now
The State of South Carolina.
COUNTY OF UNION,
Iii the Court of Probate.
A valine Underwood, Lueinda )
Auuit, Nancy l'oscy and
Harriet Underwood. Summons for
Plaintiffs,
ai/ainst. Relief.
Nancy Leonard, Margaret
Undo wood, and June Un- J- Complaint
dcrwood, children of Wil- |
Main Underwood, deceased; not
the children of Jones Underwood,
whose names nrc Served,
unknown, Thomas Underwood,
Defendants.
To the Defendants above named.
YOU arc hereby summoned and required lo
answer the Petition in this notion, which
is tiled in the oftice of the Judge of Probate,
for the said County, and to serve a copy of your
answer to the said complaint on the subscribers
at their otlice, ut Spartanburg Court House,
within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive
of the day of such service ; and if you
fail to answer the complaint within tlio time
n 1'i.i.ad.!11 .k? .ir- .u:
- I ? '? ? ???? ? opp'J
lo tlio Court for the relief demanded in the
complaint.
Dated 'Jtli February A. 1>. 1M78.
BOBO & CARLISLK,
riaintiff"s Attorneys.
To the Defendants a/,ore named :
Take notice, that the summons in this action,
of which the foregoing is a copy, was filed in
tho ollice of the Judge of l'robate at Union
Court House, in the County of Union, and State
aforesaid, on the ninth day of February, A_ D.
1H7H. ROUO& CA It I,IS UK.
Spartanburg C. If,, S. C.
i Feb * IftTA 8 Of
I. ?. ADGER & CO./
137 AND 139 MEETING ST., I
Cli AKLE STON H . G.
JOltHKHS OF FOKIlIilN
AN1) DOMESTIC
H A K, DWARE ,
Cutlery, Guns, Saddlery,
3AR IRON AND PLOW STEEL,
CUCUMBER PUMPS,
EAIHBANKS' SCALES.
Agents for South Cnrolinn for the Patent Steel
Jar be Foucing, ami the celebrated Farmer's
'rieud Plow, one, two or threo horse, at reduced
>rices.
LIBERAL TERMS TO THE TRADE.
Large assortment of Agricultural Implements.
Igricultural Steels a specialty. Uull Tougues,
1'urn Shovels, Scooters, Sweeps, Heel lJolls,
usu ruugu . *( :ei oimpcs <xc. c^iaie ogenis ior
1'redegar Horse and Mule Shoes. Orders rc cive
prompt and careful attention.
J. K. ADG EK A CO.,
137 and 139 MEETING STREET,
CHAHLESTOBT, S.
Tan 11 .2 coin 3m
SAMUEL S. STOKES,
Attoriioy at Law
AND *
TRIAL JUSTICE, A
Villon (1. II., s.
WILL practice in the Circuit and Probate
Courts.
All business in the jurisdiction of a Trial Jusice
attended to with promptness.
Special attention given to collections, &c.
Otlice for the present, ovcrSteadman & ltawla
haw otlice.
March 2 8 tf
ti tii: taiile or fin:
Spartanburg & Asheville R. R.
ANl>
N . V. A C. RAILROAO.
To Go Into Effect, Monday, Oct. 22, 1877
DOWN TRAIN. UP TRAIN.
STATIONS.
|f Leave. Leave. Arrive
H
_ I
Tryon City*. 4 30p in 1 8 18a in*
I.andrums. 4 4 40 8 02
t'umpobella. f? fi 00 ,7 42
Innmn f. ft Or. 1 ')')
Air-Line .Tun'n 10| 0 06 .0 f>0
Spar! an burg J 2 0 (Mia m |0 16 a m 815p mj
l'acolette. 11 7 03 |7 28 718
Jonesville. 0 7 40 6 64 G 44
Union. 10 0 01 0 04 6 24
Santuc. 0 0 40 4 48 4 41i
Fish Dam. 0 10 13 4 19
She! I on. OjlO 47 8 65 3 60
I.ylcgfonl. 3jll 04 3 88
Strothcrs. 5111 32 3 18
Alston t. 12j 2 30 p ni
JSupper. fDinner * Breakfast.
JAS^OnJlESON,
Superintendent.
Nov 2 43 tf
Greenville and Columbia R. R.
CHANGE OF SCHEDULE.
Passenger Trains run daily, Sundays cxccptcd,
connecting with Night Trains on South Cor^
olina Itailrond up and down. On and afKy
MONDAY, May 20th, the following will be the
schedule :
UP.
Leave Columbia at 7.45 a m
Leave Alston 9.30 a m
Leave Newberry 10.60 a nv
Leave Cokcsbury 2.17 p n*
Leave Helton 4.00 p m
Arrivo at Grceuvillc 5.85 p m
DOWN.
I.eavc Greenville at 8.05 a m.
Leave Helton 9.55 a m
Leave Cokcsbury 11.33 a m
Leave Newberry 2.40 p ra
Leave Alston 4.20 p m
Arrive at Columbia 6.55 p m
ANDERSON BRANCH AND BLUE RIDGE
DIVISION.
DOWN. t'P.
Leave Walhalla....6.15 a m Arrive 7.15 p m
Leave Pcrryville...7.00 a m Arrive G.40 p m
Leave Pendleton...7.60 a m Arrive G.00 p m
Leave Anderson...8.50 a nt Arrive 5.00 p m
Arrive at Helton...9.40 a ni Leave 4.00 p m
THOMAS DODAMEAD,
General Superintendent.
.T.vnKZ Norton, General Ticket Agent.
June 9, 187G. ?2 If
ViCK'S
Flower nntl VpgcRihlp Gtirdpn
Is the most beautiful work of the kind in the
world. It contains nearly 150 pages, hundreds
of fine Illustrations, and six C/iromo l'lutes of
Flowers, bcnutifullv drawn and nalrvvml ?o
ture. l'rico 50 cents in paper covers; $1 00 in ^
elegant cloth. Printed in (icrninn and English.^^^?
Vick'x Illustrated Monthly Mat/mine.?32 pnge'j^^^fcW
fine lllustratration, and Colored Plate in every
number. Price $1 25 a year ; Five copies for
?5 00.
Vtc/.'s Catalogue.?300 Illustrations, only 2
cents.
TICK'S
Flower and Vegetable Seeds.
Address JAMES TICK, Rochester, N. Y.
Pioneer Paper Manufacturing Company.
AT AN U FA< 'TP It EltS of Rook, News and
lVl. wrapping PAPER.
Jollll W ftU'llolson, Agent, Athens, Ga.
For sample of News, see this sheet.
Nov 22 45 If
Ood Liver Oil
A NI> Lime, for sale at.
A R. F. RAWER k CO'R.
No. 1. East Unicn.
J u I v 20 2R
Paints and Oils,
PAINT Brushes, for sale at
B. F. BAWLS k CO'S.
No. 1, East Union.
.Inly 20 2R
I> . A. T O AV IN S 1-: N p ,
Attorney at Law,
V $ I O 3 ( , If.. N . C\ 4
Mnfcli 2 8