University of South Carolina Libraries
HAVE HOFE. 11V FATII Kit IIV AX. Tlic shadow of tlio mouutuiu lulls athwart tiic lowly plain, And the shadow of the cloudlet hangs above the mountain's head? And the highest hearts and lowest, wear tkc shadow of some pain, And tlio smile is scarcely flitted ere the anguished tear is shed. For no eyes have there been ever without a weary tear, And that breast cannot bo human that never heaved a sijjli ; For without the dreary winter there has never been a year, And the tempests* hide their terrors in the calmest summer day. So this dreary life is passing?and we move amid its maze, And We grope along together, half in darkness. half in light: And our hearts are often hardened by the mys- ' teries of our ways, Which are never all in shadows aud never wholly bright. And our dim eyes ask a beacon and our weary feet a guide, And our hearts of all life's mysteries seek the meaning and the key ; And a cross gleams o'er our pathway, on it hangs the crucified, And He answers all our yearnings ty the whisper, "Follow Me." SUMMER'S GOING. Leaves are shrinking on the trees ll.n IIKCU nra lit.1, Inn There's a hush among the bees, Now to run hi forbidden ; There's tlie silk of corn tluit shows I-'udcd tangles blowiug ? So tbat everybody knows Darling Summer's going. There's the mist that haunts the night Into morning sailing, Leaving liltny webs of light On the grasses trailing ; There's the tierce red sun that glows, Through the vapor showing ; So that everybody knows Darling Summer's going. There arc insects' wings that gleam, Locusts shrilly calling: There are silences that seem Into sadness falling ; There is not another rose lint the sweet-brier blowing ; So tbat everybody knows Darling Summer's going. Dreatlic but softest littlo sigh, Child, for vanished roses? For each season, going by, Something sweet discloses : ahu ii m your neari nas grown Truth to fairer blowing, Summer then will be your own, Spite of Summer's going. DOMESTIC RECIPES. 'I'd Dakk I'ni'A fiiiis.?To bake potatoes quickly, pour boiling water over them and let stand a minute or so before putting into the oven. Marmalade.?One peck of quiuces and two peeks of apples; pare and stew! separately; take a pound of sugar to a ! pound of fruit. Mix well and cook for j one hour, stirring all the time. Corn am> Tomatoes.? Ifcorn is boiled ' on the cob, and then cut off and canned with tomatoes, in the usual maimer of can tiing tomatoes, it will keep well and be an excellent dish. Have twice as much tomatoes as corn. Sweet 1'icicle.?For seven pounds of fruit lake three pounds of sugar, ono pint of vinegar, half an ounce each of unground j cloves and cinnamon. JJoil the fruit till I soft, then put it in a svrup made up of the other ingredients; boil all together five j minutes and pour into jars. Spanish Picivi.KD Onion.?Cut onions 1 into slices, put a'.layer of them into a jar, ! sprinkle with salt and cayenne pepper.? ! Then add a layer of onions and season as i before. Proceed in this way until the jar j is full, and pour cold vinegar over all till ! covered. Will bo lit to use in a mouth. Pirivt.KH Caiiuahe.?Take two gallons of cider vinegar; of ground cinnamon, cloves and allspice, each a teaspoon fill ; put them in a thin cloth, tie tiieui in with the cabbage, and just, let it come to a boiling h -at in a porcelain p it. Then put it in a jar, cover tightly, and set it away in a cool place. t.'i.i rmiikr Catsi p.?(irate large cu cumber# before they begin to turn yellow ; I drain out the juiee and put the pulp through | a sieve to rcniorc the seed ; iill a bottle halt' | lull of the pulp, discarding the juice, and j add the same quantity of good vinegar; ; cork tightly ; when used add salt and pep per. but salt kills the vinegar if put in when j making. This is alino.-t like fresh sliced j cucumber when opened. Haw CrsTAitn.? for diseases of the; stomach when very delicate food is required this custard is excellent. Ileal up an egg I with sugar to taste; add a cup of milk and i whatever flavoring liked. Ql IN<T. AMI AlTI.K JkI.I.Y.?Take | equal quantities ofquinc 's and apples, stew th.-m separately till tender (the quinc s I will take the longest;, strain the juice, mix it, and to every p >und of juiee allow three(juartcrs pound of pounded sugar ; proceed as for quince jelly. W.U'Klts.?()ne pound flour, two tabic- : spoons butter, a little salt; mix with sweet j milk into a stiff dough ; roll out very thin ; cut into round cakes, and ag ain roll these as thin as they can bo handled ; lift carefully ; lay iu a pan ; bake quickly ; (1 our the baking pin instead of greasing. Nice I for invalids. Indian Loak.?-Tike one pint of sour milk, one toaeupful of molasses, one-half i tcacuplul of butter, two teaspoon fills of saleratus, one largo tcnspoonful ofvdt. three eggs, ono pint of wheat flour, one quart of; ycllov; Indian men!; la ke in n i] -q> tin 1 l a. a i in .a a i . ) he it a lor > a>? for oiie-.um ,? C"i.::am.jxk^8 and liKAi/rii.?Wo arc desired to rcuiiud housekeepers that when they commence the periodical renovation of their domiciles, especial attention should be given to cellars. They should not only have the benefit of thorough ventilation, but they should be whitewashed, and any particle of decaying vegetable matter or other objectionable substaneo removed.? Scrupulous care in these particulate may prevent sickness. CTjOUDS of Mosqi itok.s.- Tho other day a group of longshoremen stood on the pier ia Lewes, Del., waving their hats and handkerchiefs around their heads as though filled with enthusiasm awakened by some cause that was not then nppireut. Rut when the passengers in the Old Dominion steamer landed they began waving hats and handkerchiefs vigorously. The cause of these demonstrations was a cloud of tnosipiitoes. At the railway station in Lewes there were (ires of pennyroyal and other weeds burning in front of the windows to drive out the insects, and the passengers were glad to get into the smoke and enjoy a moment's immunity from the annoyance. At Kchokuth .Station, on the Junction and Dreakwater .Railway, the uiosijuitocs were more numerous than in Lewes. The negroes in the pencil orchards had their heads covered with old sheets, with holes eui uirougu ior laoir eyes. one men around the do pot and the passengers in waiting had their heads covered wit It mosquito nets like veils. It was impossible to purchase a piece of mosquito netting in the neighborhood. While the stages were waiting a man was stationed at the head of each horse to hold the nearly frautic animals. At llehoboth Beach the mosquitoes were thicker than at that station. There were at the beginning of the week over four hundred guests at the Bright House, and 011 Friday not twenty-live remained.? They had been driven away by the mosquitoes. i'crsous walking iti the streets were nearly obscured by the clouds of mosquitoes around them. By bringing the hands together a handful of mosquitoes could be caught at a single sweep. The ladies' light dresses were almost black, so thickly were they covered, i he hotel proprietors Were so pestered by the insects that they seemed not to care whether their guests remained or nut. Double nets on the windows and darkened rooms gave partial relief, but the mosquitoes made their way everywhere.? it was only by having a negro over each person at the table that the guests could partake of their meals. * It is said that the winds and muggy Weather brought them from the 8011th .Jersey and Dataware swamps, and that the pe.-.t would probably be ended with a strong wind from the ocean. Sailors say that they met tiro mosquitoes many miles out at sea? something they never before experienced. Nearly all the places along the coast weie similarly infested, but none of them to the same extent as the northern i>art ol Delaware.?A'. J'. Kcmluj T< fry rain. 1 jisr 1:mn<!.?To listen 11 is a most rare accomplishment. indeed, it is a tiling beyond au aee< tiiplislmiotit. It takes a great man t>? make a good listener. The ordinary liin Ira noes to good listening are Very considerable, such as the desire to talk one's sell, the prononcss to interrupt, the inaccuracy?if one may use .-median expression?of most uien in listening. l>ut there is something which prevents good listening in n much more subtle way. an 1 to a much more dangerous extent, than any of the above named hindrances, it is this : As soon as you begin to give utterance to some sentiment or opinion, narrate souie story, declare some fact, you will lind that your hearer, in nine cases out of ten, strikes at once a mental attitude in reference to what you say. lie receives it as a friend, or as a loe, or as a critic, or as au advocate, or as a judge. Now. all these characters may afterward bo fairly taken up; but the first thing is to listen, if L may say so, out of character?to ba a buna jidc listener, and nothing more. This requires some of the simplicity of greatness, it indicates the existence, too, of that respect which really groat men have lbr other men, and for truth. In short, I maintain that it takas a great man to make a good listener. How to IIkcomk (lu.vrkki r..?The Yuun-j \V>iMim's Journal thinks a refilled, graceful manner can be acquired by any woman. It says : l,Tho best grace is per bet naturalness. Still, you must stilly yourself and form your manners by the rule of that art which is but carrying out tho law of nature, liut if It is your naturj to be lbrever assuming some unpicturoqu?, ungraceful altitude, pray help nature with a little art. If you are stout, avoid the smallest chair in the room, and bo sure you sit on it, not to lean back in it with your bauds in front of you just below your waist, especially while the present fashion lasts. If you are thin, do not carry yourself with your chin protuding and your spinal column curving like the bowl of a spoon. lb) not wear lliinsy materials made up without a rutlle, or puft", or ilouuce, to till up the hard outlines of your bad figure, so cm dly dciiued by the tightly pulled back draperies. Study the art of dress. Wc once knew a very plain woman who dressed so tastefully that it was an absolute pleasure to look at her. if you have boon mopin:; until you are sick with the thought of your own hopeless ugliness, lie up and doin^. h'orjjet your disappointments, forget the past and the so is of your own In oily over toe mistakes tii.it you have made." -V Y.'c h^ar of ncm sow ik; wild oa?*j. let . ..d o. a ' ( it in ,v.o ..n^. _, ' / /..t i a SAcaza TatreT ror. tk330LDI32:s op th2 south. The following loiter is addressed to Gcu. llandall L. Gibson, of Louisiana, to whose care Gey. Hood, when dying, commeuded his orphan children : Kow Ubbgans, Aug. 30, 1370. Dear General r Knowing your love and esteem for Gen. Hood aud his family, 1 thought atirj' particulars of the sad eveut would' not ITly uninteresting to you. Mrs. Hood, alter her last confinement, was better, aud had an easier tiuio than ou any former occasion. Friday week, feeling so well, she imprudently took a bath, immediately after she was taken with a chill. Dr. Richardson having left on the 1st ol this month, Dr. Remiss was called in. 1 heard him say Mrs. Hood's caso was the most remarkable one ho had ever seen in his practice; that there was was not a single symptom of yel i low lover, and they dul not kiiow tliat she hail it until the black vomit appeared. .kMio died at half-past 'J o'clock, I'. M., Sunday night, and was buried at 10 o'clock, Monday morning. L never in uiy life saw a man so completely crushed as Gfu. Hood was. I was with him Monday morning till the funeral, lie said he'd rather lied should have taken everyone of his children in one day than to have lost his wife; that he was completely ruined, and now, without his wile, he had nothing to live for. The precious little lambs who had gone to bed Sunday night, knowng nothing of their mother's death, begau to come in one by one, until nine cauie in, and such a scene 1 never wish to witness agaiu. After the children left, he said, "Major, I have never had the fever, but if 1 should have it, and it is Cod's will, I am ready to go. 1 have requested Col Flowers to take charge of my children and appeal to the Confederate soldiers to support them." lie was takeu 'Tuesday morning at 3 o'clock, ami died Friday morning at half-past 3, perfectly in his miud to within ten minutes of his death. At about - o'clock be asked the doctor if bis time to die was not near at hand. The doctor said, "Yes, General."? i hen a minister was sent for at bis request to give him the last communion. As his death was announced and uo hour fixed for the funerai, very few were present. A detachment of "Coiitincutuls" fired a salute over his grave, and the last sad tribute was paid to our brave, generous and Chrisi i ..an mi ml. L hear his house Is mortgaged to lis full j value and he left but little insurance on his ; iil'e, not being able to keep up b;s policies. I lie tol l mo bis book was finished, aud he was just about starting to Fhiladclphia to make arrangements for its publication. 1 i ...i.. .. ?i,.? .... i i .i ...ti. i Ill I 11 IV U I.1 llliw- V^illV I tliu .TV VI .11.1 1 have over known. Old Mrs. Ueiinon cms I live but a low mouths; and hero arc eleven ! little lambs left fatherless and Motherless.? Oil, l?o\v much better if CJjd in His provi: deueo would take them all. Walter V. Couch. The Lo:m;e. r l>K.v:t:>.?A citizen oi' I (laflheys, .S. who saw a statement published some days ayo c n corn in a; the tna i in Miehi.ron who has a l> -aid seven leet loiitr. comes ;'?iw id with a story almost as ;.'Ood. The p ; Aet ,v of an xiraoidinarv Ion:; hirsute app.-ndi^e is Mr. A. 1>. Hay. r ...... \T .. I> . '. very modest, unassuming man, so much so with a reference to this matter of heard 1 that even his neighbors do not know that ' that he can justly claim such distinction. i! heard uie.tsu. es !?vo loot lour niches. 21 <v. docs he Conceal it..*' I !e ko p- it j 1 lit'd, r ,1V I : in oil silk, ami under his shirt collar, with the upper beard .so arranged s to cone d llic plaits. Only a low persons have V n permitted to lock upon this Won lei I' ll b ud but our ini'/iinant once hud that j.i ire, ' and lie assures us that it was a womh rial si ;ht to see a man six feet high with hcirl I t?) his very toes. it is his habit to unfurl it, j every Sunday morning, carefully cotnh and i plait and return it to its nestling place-I 1 ho owner of tiiis wonderful heard say.lie has not shaved since the war. ami that | his hoard just keeps on growing.? Cinitio! tc Observer. a Tin: W.viti:tt Cai:?;iit Him.?When they servo you brandy in I'aris it is brought in a little candle marked o!V on the sides so as to show exactly how many glasses are taken out. When you come to pay, the garcon has only to look at the candle, and the ; amount remaining tolls Imw much has b en J used. This gave an ingenious gentleman ' an idea. ilo Would drink thru: pel its verves and then pour in water so that it would i appear ho had hut one. lie thought nobody "hscrved the trick. Alter two or three days this customer found the brandy very feeble, an 1 iio called the g.areon. ' < iarcoii," lie said, 'wvliat is the matter with this brandy?" It is the same, sir " '' i 11 ?r P'limiit I )uv I'.iwItMnlnw 7 . * ;v it was delicious, to-day it is hardly stronger than water." ' ] have '.he honor to inform Monsieur tiiat it is not only the same hrandy. hut that 1 I have carefully given Monsieur every day j the same bottle. ?- "Wild Hill," the frontiersman, who in his day was as notorious as Kit I'arson, and i who was killed three years :i?o. has turned ' to stone from sculp to toe. His remains. I which were buried at Head Wood, in the IJliek Hills, were taken from the grave for ! re interment at another place, when they were lunu'l to l:ave heeoino petrified. ' he 1 features arc as natural as life, save that a t whiteness overspreading all givies to the face the appearance of chiseled marble. j Costi,y Camimhininm.?The Portland ' 1 M . A< ,. .. mentions as a rumor that nia; >r ninitie *j> ?iit 2) 0 )0 of I \A ; rivato :"-r; tae to c rrv .It . tat'? f th? ' ib? "f 'i * Ilow UK 'IiiVENKD it Up."?There was a oouipositor not only discharged from tho San Joso (Cul.) Herald tho other day, but also Grod down four flights of 6tairs by the infuriated foreman of that admirable journal. It secuis that tho typo was rc quested to uliven up" a certain spocch delivered at tho WorkiagmouVStato Convention, held in thuttown, with th6 usual marks in parenthe is. The '-jour," -j|ho carrying a little more bocr than was noces*ary,? just then got hold of the wrong proceedings, causing tho eloquent resolutions of Mr. Van Annan, referring to the death of a member, to read something like this: "Whereas, it has pleased Divine Providence to remove from our midst our beloved comrade, Azariah MeMuck, (loud applause,) who has been cut off in tho flower of. his usefulness (laughter) and promise,' it is lkftsolved, That we tender to his bereaved fumilv fcdieersi and j ; / friends our sincere sympathy in their hour of afllietion (cries cf 'I'ut hiui out' ami 'order*), and assure them while we humbly bow to the will of (a voice, 'Three cheers for Kearney') Heaven, lament our departed brother (roars of laughtor,) a fellow-citizen of enlightened mind, statesman-like views (cries of 'Oh ! shut up! Let's adjourn') and broad aud generous sympathy for his kind. (Tcrritic cheers.) lie is not lost but gone before (derisive cries of'Oh ! cheese it,' and contiuucd laughter)" &e. In fact, tho .MeMuck widow is hunting for that uuibrtu. nate primer yet, and cherishes tho conviction that lie is still hiding in the hills. The Camkoknia Election'.?"Judge Ord, of San Francisco, now stopping in ttiis fit", says tho California election is likely to be satisfactory to tho conservatives of all parties, and may lead to the practical disbandnient of the Workiugmcn's party, whose success was essential to its continued existence. The Kepublieans, he said, sccuicd to have elected the greater part of the State olliccrs, while the judiciary will bo Democratic. There will, therefore, be two checks tlnown upon the Legislature, should it attempt to pass laws which arc uceossary to carry uut ilio extreme measures proposal by the new Constitution and the iullicrents of the parties who supported it. The (lovernor will have the veto power, and a conservative Supreme Court have the interpretation of the new laws. It will be found that there are two possible ways of ini wproliisg almost everything under the new ('onstitut ion, and between the Coventor and the Courts the new party v.ill find its progress stopped."?\nc York J'uper. 'Landlady.' said he, 'this cofi'ce isn't settled.' 'No,' sin* ropli d, "but it comes as near it as your last month's boatd bill does;' and that uian never spoke again during the meal. ? Xo hotel porter ever tried to smash an elephant's trunk.?\cw York lY'icx. M . \V . JL* 10 li <J 1 V A , HAST KN11 OF COl.LMIJL'ri STilHHT, CHAitr.Ksrcx, s. c. ^OOSSS, SABHIXH AX? I55.I\!>S. I'll A MI'S, .MOUI.IMN'flS. liKAt'K KTS, MANTKI.S, kc: ' C01TPLTITI0N Di:J IT ') A3 10 WORKMAN.-il.I', MAM.HI A I. AND micii. aum.T:' i-'f I V/oil 's Magic Blind Hinge and I" anion cr, I i'.'i WI! I " 5! <>ni Me Window 11 i 11 I s or Shut, tt; can ho Dj ened or el*, ft IVnin ihe iusMe of ; ll.e lo an \v!111 >mt raising llie S'a.dt, tlins avoidii / ( '. I druu rlits or exposure to rain. The j | .dotiicv> an: nut only opened, hut arc fanned i ! back by llit- ime motion, and they are unf.istcned, closed and fastened in bvt'nc same method. W. A. Nil IKII.SON, Ajjent, III t'llioll, (If. Alio _?> ;:i ::m ' !>. A. TOWN ! NO. s. SI'oKl.S TOWNSEND & STOKES, ATTOSS.S'l-JYrt >V'r LAW, UNION, S. 0. Will practice in the State and United States ("onus. , .January 1st, Isy.t, I if Lemons ! Lemons!! * I ST rn.ci vcl, ami as sour as I.onions ouglit : tf lo I.e. at ,\1 IIS. SCIlOPl'AI ITS. Aug 'JJ ill if timbTtakiTk of thJT Spartanburg; Cc Ashcviilc R. H AND S. r. i\ KA31Li:E?A3>. To cro i-ilo r.llccl, Motnlasy, .Jimr 'J, ls7l>. DOW N TUAIN. LP TP A IN. Arivo. | I .raw. ! STATIONS. ! Arivi\ J Draw. ' > ;l III 11 'I:.I tlIViIiI I'. 'JO ! I'l |l| I I II l.'ork. I ' OA | ? I'"! mails . lA i'i On in, ">"? iini-i i .*? :;n 7 in M I. : I " 7 I'l I v.ni l ily I 17 I 7 i. siit.iiins i ::i i s i; I -; in|. i | .i it; I s ::i I ilia., n i ii i s : > i hi;.'mi : :: .',<i|im ! h i *'. I 'ii" .Iiiiic'ii a i : !a it in 1 i il l a i.lull's ' ! ' in IV. ..I i i i. 'in -.'I .II.II i!!o , : Mi r.rt 11 no i Hi,,ii 2 I'iJ ' 2 II "7 Stiii. I | :o II 17 I -'i 11mi I I I .1 *'i ! . n I I I to I.' I > I I - i I > | u'l I .* 'o !- 17 ..Hi .. 12 i" ) i.I i: ,; ! I I i'i ' At I'-n I II ' |i in Iliaiikl'ioi. t Dinner I- I'i. n "ii S. ?\ A. I.'- .1 u i I 11. run lij \. I,. I iinJA'J. AKDT.IViOir. Si.'; rri,a* n<l' i*t. ' o Clf;' -ii v.; ^ i , i in., .i jut'...H,.!' ' v, .' ? ' W T*. ii Ml-i.r Ii I.'s' J i* if ' James H. Rodger ?DEALER IN? GROCERIES, HARDWARE HOOTS AM) SHOES. MANUFACTURER OF TIX WAKE, STOVE PIPE AND SHEET lltON PANS. ROOFING, GUTTERING AND REPAIRING l)OXK AT SHORT XOTI K. :o: J1I.WK just received a large lot of Groceries . consisting of Sugars, Cofleo, Tea, Molasses ami Syrups, I'.aeon. Lard ami Salt, l'lour, Itiee ami Grists. Cheese and Canned Goods. ALSO A COMPLETE STOCK OF BOOTS, SHOES AND HATS. II A It i> W AltE, Tn tltis line 1 have everything you may want, from a Cambric Needle to a Ilroad Axe. Cooking and Heating Stoves, NEVER SO CHEAP BEFORE. I invite mi examination of my Stock, knowing that I can please in qualify, quantity nu<i price. Do You Want Tin Ware? 1 ma u fact u re my own Tin Ware, Stove I'ipo ami Sin ot Iron l'ans, which 1 \varrant to bo of tln> very best quality, IIOOFi.\(?, CiUTTKUIXU nut! KEi'AIKIXU DON 13 PROMPTLY AND WELL. Castings for Stoves furnished at the Shortest Notice. IHJ.X'T SUGLECT TO CALL OS J. 19. KOlHjKlt. Nov 'JO IS if Greenville and Columbia R. It, C11A NO 13 O F SC11K1> U I.E. Passenger Trains run daily, Sundays excepted, connecting with Night Trains on South Carolina llailrnad up and down. On and j? ft or MONPAV, May 120th, the following wijl he the schedule: ui*. i.eavo Columbia at T. 1 "> a nt heave Alston a m heave Newberry lll.iifl a m heave Cokesbury J.17 pin heave Helton *1.(10 p m Arrive at (Jrccnvillc G.iifi p tu now x. I.eave (Ireonville at K.O"> a m Leave Helton 0.i?.r> a m Leave ('okeshury 11 .SSIS a m Leave N'ewherry 2.40 j> iu Leave Athlon 4.20 p ir. \rrivo at ('otiiiiiLia fi.oo |> m AM)i:i;S(i.N HI5.\N( It AND ULl'H U1DUK DIVISION, nows*. rr. r.eave Wathallu 0.1 " a in Arrive 7.D"> p m Leave I,erryville...7.tl0 a in Arrive 0.40 p rn Leave 1 Vndleloii...7.aO a in Arrive (LOO p in Leave Amlerson...8.0(1 a in Arrive fi.OO p ni Arrive at Helton...0.40 a in Leave 4.00 pm TlloMAS DOHAMKAl>, (ieneral Siiperiiiteii<lcnt, .1 vii!Norms, Jit., (Jeneral 't icket Agent. .lnnc 0, 1K70. 28 tf I ioiiccr I'apcr Ma 11 niacin ring Company. 1" A N I* FACT I' li LltS of Hook, News ami i.Tl wrapping I'AI'F.U. ."Vi<'Il<?Isoi?, Agent, Alliens, Ca For sample of News, sec tliis sheet. Nov 22 45 tf SAMUEL S. STOKES, T IMA r. .T IT S T I C E , iiJ ni on . nr., s . . ^ All Lii'inc-'s in (he jurisdiction of a Trial Justice attended to with promptness. Ollice over Slccdninn .N Howls' law oflice. J an o I tf LUBRICATING CASTOR OIL7 FOR (J R F.ASI N(1 CARRIVLiiS, Ac. For Sale l?y li. F. IIAWLS No. 1, Last 1'nion. May 2:; 21 tf Fans! Fans! I \,ror can ' raise a hree/e" at my Store that will keep you cool all summer, Ly haying a fan from my large stock. I've got them of all qualities and at all prices S. W. rOIlTFIl. May 0 10 tf I?4*;iiilaf?*? DJrosM <nO???ls! Mill K largest it ^iMliiiont, ilip prettiest i'alfcrtis X. nitil olios pe- t piiicil Dross (iotols lit l.o foiui'l nt any market nliovo I'liarlestoii, cnu liu scon at llli'l! .'i Mcl.l'liK'H. May t? 1* If Apple ViTJCftar. \rr.l^ Snjicrior, f??ur years ??1?!. nt \ KICK \ Mt'l.l'KK'S. An? "I if n % v i' o b: s a l i: z 1M iI' )A 'Timothy, Hover ami 4'MI' '? I lor?N Irass- i!io finest ever otrpre'l in M N't. ! I .i t ir >n f?< 1*? - inii>-jC i|io i'll II 1 . .. . . ill ' . ?*t" S.?S JC. i I. 'rt,, ? neap t'asli Mere \l ?.V -'1 ff