The weekly Union times. [volume] (Union C.H., South Carolina) 1871-1894, November 12, 1880, Image 4
TAKEN AWAY.
,'v Liles n^mertiory of B. C. Punning, 1VL P.,
fVurTH.. 18lfc\ "He^Wfts nol, ?r God^tbok
km ; for before bis translation he Itad this tesmooj
that ho pleased God."
TgAen mr at a blow t
rull well may Friendship weep
O'er stately form laid low,
And kindly eyes asleep;
And earnest accents stilled,
Which iu the House of l'raycr,
The lisl'ning eor oft thrilled
With tones of pious care.
Taken away nt a stroke,
When Life was in its prime !
Should a strong steadfast Oak.
. In the green sutiinmer-lime,
Fall, neath a cloudless sky?
Would not a shudder run
Through all beneath the sun,
To see it prostrate lie,
Its great life nil undone ?
Taken away In an hour !
Leaving a blank and void,
As though some noble Tow'r,
Jty secret foes destroyed,
Should sink, a ruined Fort,
An 1 in the dust recline ;
While clinging flower and vine
Which loved its firin support,
Lie round it, crushed and slain,
On the unguarded plain.
Wr
t? IL
Tims plaintively may gricvo,
The loved ones, now so lon? ;
Nor can we chide, nor hid thein leave
Their mournftil minor tone ;
Their Oak of strength, their Tower,
lias fallen at their feet,
No more to iiiunI
? ... O IIVUI,
Nor shield them From (he heat.
Yet friendship fain would try
To find some healing halm,
The mourner's hitter tear to dry,
The broken hca?-t to calm.
Say not, "Our Tree is dead.
Cut down in ripest years,"
Dut proudly think of one instead,
Which, amid its forest peers,
Has by an inward might,
So risen o'er the rest,
That in the heaven's purest light,
It wears its tranquil crest.
Think, rather, of a Tower,
Which lifts its brow Hitblime
Above the clouds that darkly lower
Above the sea of Time,
And sends its guiding ray
Afar through upper air :
Though hidden from our sight away,
We know it shincth there ;
And trust it yet may lead aright
Some sailor, struggling iu the uiglit.
III.
'Twos thus, in ancient days,
One who had "walked with God,"
Was taken from these earthly ways
Which he in faith had trod;
And those who missed him then,
Said, 'mid their tears of love,
"He served his Master while with men,
And serves llim now, above."
Aye, though no more on earth
He gladden all your gloom.
In heaven another soul lias birth,
Another son finds room ;
inougit hushed lus rev'rent voice,
Amid tlio cliurcli below,
Where llie celestial choirs rejoice
Mis songs of praise shall How.
Though minist'ring no inoro
To human paiu or ill,
His loving soul may gladly soar
To \jjorks of mejcry still. . . . /
"wcap not in despair,
Fond hearts by sorrow torn,
The Christian's hope, his hope and care,
Can comfort all who mourn ;
Yet, if ye neods must weep,
Still hear the soothing strain?
"They who in Jesus fall asleep,
With Mini shall come again
And He who said of old,
'Thy Brother shall arise,"
Shall him restore, when Tiirc is o'er,
Unto your longing eyes.
A Mkmdkr ok St. Ankrkw's Church.
Wilminuton, June 9th, 1880.
- HOUSEHOLD
RECIPES.
Fried Cakes.?l,cs,% 1, cup sugar, 1
of buttermilk, ] cup butter, 1 teaspuoti
of soda, 1 of salt, 1 of cianauioa, aud
flour to roll out, cut iu rings and
f.y.
Baked egos.?Beat up six eggs, one
tablespoonful flour, six of sweet milk ; melt
a piocc of butter in the frying pan ; when
hot turn the whole in aud bake iu a very
hot oveu ; to be served as soon as done.
OllAXOE PUDDING.?Four larg# oranges;
peel, seed aud cut into pieces; add otucup
sugar ; let it stand. One cup of nearly boiling
milk, stir; four tablespoonfuls of coru
starch mixed with a little water, aud y Iks
of four eggs; when done let it cool, and
then mix with the orange. Use the whites
of two eggs with one cup of sugar lor frost>
ing; spread over the top aud place iu the
oven to brown.
Apple Custard.?Pare and cover six
nnnles: snt. th,?ni in n n;in with 11m I,.
water, and stew them until tender; then put
them in a pudding-dish without breaking ;
fill the centers with sugar, and pour over
theui a custard made of a quart of milk,
five eggs, four ounces of sugar, and a very
> little nutmeg; set the pudding-dish in a baking-pan
half full of water, and bake it half
1. an hour. Serve it either hot or cold at the
dinner.
' %0ra noe Cakb.?Two cups sugar, yolks
of<five eggs, whites of two eggs, half cup of
O^ld water, two and a half cups of flour, two
td^Api min t ills of baking-powder, the juice and
grated rind of one orange and a pinch of
^ait ; bake in jelly cake tins : beat the
whites of two ogy:s to a stiff froth ; add seveh
large tablespoonfuls of powdered sugar
find the grated rind and juice of one orange;
shrcad this between the layers. If you
like the taste of orange you will like this
C-.il c.
IbtKKl) Bkkts?Beets retail) their sugary,
delicate flavor much better by baking
instead of boiling ; turn often in the pan
wtjile in the oven, using a knife, as a fork
wiH cause the juieo to flow ; when done remove
the skin, slice and season with hultcr,
pojyier and salt, or if for pickle slice into
good cold vinogar.
MtUt Toast.?Cut your bread rather
thick, abdfet three-quarters of uu inch, allowing
a slice for caoh person ; toast it
q iiekly before a bright fire to a rich brown;
dip lightly^nto boiling water ; butter eaeh i
slice and pil&tn the bowl it is to be served in ;
for five persons take a quart of milk, boil
with^Tteaspoonful of salt, and when at the
fuU boil add a heaping tablespoon fu I of butter,
creamed with a light one of flour ; stir i
the milk until it is as thick as cream >
pour cvorihe toast and serve immediately.
Brain Workers.?President Eliot} of
Harvard Uu i versity? 4ho> vindicates'-* tbe^
claim of the brain voider .to recognition*
among the sons of toil, Uciferriofc to the
noli iu that study and thinking ere uof physical
exertions, so that after prolonged study
a u:an may be just as fit for manual labor
as it he had not worked .with *hi? braiws,
ho rays : This isaprofouud mistake, which
has real danger for conscientious and ambitious
youth; such young persons utay easily
be betrayed by this false opinion into disastrous
overexertion. What is called mental
labor is really the most exhausting continuous
physical excrtiou which man can
make, although the sense of fntiguo from
an excess ol what is called brain work is
generally not so irrepressible aithe moment
as the fatigue caused by too uiuch hammering,
hoeing or walking." There is nosuiall
degreo ot encouragement to hard working
professional men in this opinion of Prof.
Eliot. No man likes to bo considered lazy
or to be counted as a social drone. In the
universal prevalence of this sentiment, at
least in the United States, is found an emphatic,
because spontaneous, testimony to the
dignity of labor. In all this broad laud
thero.is no worthier mission than that of
industry, and no nobler personage than lie
who bruvely accepts a life of toil. Courage
and fortitude combine to uiako up his character.
lie is tho true hero of our moderu
chivalry. In lubor there is mauhood, sacrifice,
worship. Tho toiler, whether with
hand or brain, illustrates the real greatuess
and glory of humanity. The more of a
drudge ho is while foregoing indolence and
ease, in obedience to the duty ho owes to
himself, and to thn&o dependeuton him, the
ampler should be his award of praise. Oue
of the best achievements of an advanced
and advancing civilization is the American
workinguiuu. His is the grandest figurcin
our history. A wonderful transformation
has been wrought ou this side of the Atlaufir?
within 11 uincr I.. \V n doo rrronl I
VIV IIIIIIIU M UIIIqIU VVUVUIJi ? ? V Ql vwv
cities with their happy homes, great railways
ami canals, immense ami widely diversified
industries--mechanical and agricultural ?
and all the material appliauces of a magnificent
national life. And at the bottom of it
all is work.
Ei'I/ooty.?Seeing one of our most
prominent city physicians riding on the
street cars wc asked him how this was
"why," he replied, 'the horses have their
turn of troublo now. Mine is down with
epizooty and no animals can be hired from
the stables, as nearly all of them arc sick."
We reproduce from an cxchuugo the following
valuable suggestions. It comes from a
police surgeon, who says : "When I was
a medical student in Dublin, in 1S3G, a
disease similar in every respect to this disease
now prevalent, nud that raged more
fiercely in 1872, broko out among the horses.
The distemper assumed a virulent
typo, so much so that if a particle of the
matter discharged from the hoik's nose
should come in contact with it human being
he would also catch the disease. I
know a dozuu men who were accustomed to
hni\d,!jg horses who took the disease and
ufed. Their symptoms were the same as those
of the horses which died of the disease. I
noticed that the disease was more prevalent
and more fatal iu those stables where
horses were hurdled together. First as to
the prevention of the disease : It consists
in separating the nuimals, putting them iu
stables completely ventilated and in keeping
tho horses clean. The mistake that people
make is in simply providing for complete
ventilation. The air that comes into the
stable can't drive out the ammoniacal gasses.
the odor of excrement and of rotten bed
ding. The best ordered stables are scarcely
ever so arranged that the perspiration
and the odor of the perspiratio.i is carried
from the horses and out of the stables.
Long-coutiuucd animal beat will produce
the disease. Now, as to the cure of the disease
: first, the horse must he. quarantined,
just as a child is quarantined when it is taken
with diphtheria. That was the way
the disease was cheeked in Ireland iu 183G.
The animals were fed on healthy food, and
kept thoroughly clean and dry. Then the
treatment was simple. It was a weak solution
of carbolic acid injected into the nos
trils. They must be kept absolutely clean.
Tho bou'ultj were moved once or trrico a
week, and every day a diuretic was administered.
With this tr3atment and prevention
the disease was not only eradicated in
18.T0, in Ireland, but it has not appeared
since that time."?Augusta Chronicle and
Constitutionalist.
Defective Cotton Seed.?Three was
a wide spread complaint last spring of bad
stands on account of damaged cotton seed
The trouble grows out of carelessness in
handling tho seed after ginning. The custom
of seeding cotton before ginning has
gone almost into disuse, and the result is
that the seed are green and frequently damp
when they fall from the gin. Allowed to
lie in a heap as is generally the case, they
are heated and damaged. This may be
obviated cither by thoroughly drying tho
cotton before ginning or by moving and stirring
the seed after they are ginned. This
precaution should always be taken
with those seed which arc intended for
planting. As a rule, first pickings should
not be taken for planting unless they are
selected. Diseased and injured bolls are the
first to open, lly taking pains, however,
to make selections of fully matured bolls
the seed inav be such improved if the first
opened bulls are picked by themselves.
The early maturing rjualities of the seed are
thus increased?an important consideration
in protecting it from tho worm.?N. V. Cutton
.
. .
In closing up his pastoral service, an African
divine thus sensibly extemporized :
''In scattoriu' dis meeting let me say to
you, dat some of do biggest un' bos' l.iokiu
\A' i for 111 i I fiuie in mosL'jit >> ?? ...1
....IVI MiKjuur (II IIIKI nv>b mil >1 1IUU". ? 11 (' 11
you come to sot down to enjoy 'cm. It's do '
same way will men. Doy look puty un'day
talk sijuar', but 'pit 'em down to the pineli
nu' dey go baek on you. Bet'o' you put ,
faith in n man watch if he ntn willin' to
crowd long in a street kyar?if he'll
sheer his umbrella in a rainy day?if
he kin wait two minits at the post office
winder uidont sw'arin'?if he wants all i
(le clothes in de fam'lv on his own back ? if i
he kin h'ar do cry of a lone chile as fjniek
us de voice of a man axin' him to drink.
I hit's all, an'we will now softly recede home ' !
wards." i i
'in iMJpp~Bmag^i*an--T-y
S ?kVANja*?tvery year the Southcruj
ftoopto fin Ute trouble gma'tor to obta$>scrfl
vants. It iB evident there is a growing disi
inclination with the uegroes to hindict scrt
vaiits Many ladies are doing theft ki^v^
eu work who are not only uuiJetHi to ilv^ajj
aro able and willing to pay competent lw]~
vanta. ha a feW^iustances, however, fauflP
lies aro to bo found who have nov$r had any
trouble in obtaining tho vory boat servants
and on tho most reasonable terms. Chronic
servant hunters should reflect on this.
Those who havo always good seiranis merit
them and those who huvo to shoulder their
own work?well, we by no inenns say that
tho converse of this proposition is true, for
thero be tncu and women in tho world so
constituted that they opuld no more fill a
servant's bosom with kindness for them than
could a wild Kangaroo discourse sweet uiu
sic irom a first class instrument. The hired
servant parts with liberty but out with natare
when he contracts. The sous and
daughters of servants are flesh and blood.
They have their wishes and whiriis as well
us their task-masters. No oue will deny
that their desires are often very unreasonable,
but a wise master or mistress will remember
that it is in their power to
grant or deny them aud often humor
them.
The appcaraucc, the dress, the manner!,,
the spirit of a servant indicate the manner
of women she has for a mistress. Wo have
a great admiration for the mistrens of a
house who can fijl the place of first-class
cook and is vigilant and paiustaking in administering
to the table comforts of a family.
No less highly do we rate that capacity in
a woman which will cuable her to gut ulong
with good servants and retain their services
for a life time. One or the other of these
capacities must be prevrved in some measure
by every mistress of a house, if happiness,
heulth or prosperity is expected of its
inmates.
Fallino From A Balloon.?Now
York, November 1.?A dispatch from Paris
says a frightful and probably unprecedented
balloon accident occurred last evening
at Courbcvoic, uear Paris. A large crowd
had assembled to witness the novel aud
perilous asceut of a gymnast called Augustc
Navarre, who, with inexplicable tool-hardiness,
had volunteered to perform a nuuibor
of athletic feats on a trapeze suspended
from a Moutgoificre balloon uamed the Vi
douvillaise. Rejecting the ad.vice of bystanders,
Navarro refused to allow himself to
be tied to the trapeze. There was no car
attached to the balloon. At about five
o'clock the Yidouvillaise was let loose from
us uiuui ui?o uiiu luau uiiijusiiuaii^ ill iuu
air. Navarro, hanging on the trapeze, appeared
quite confident, and repeatedly saluted
the spectators. When, however, the
balloon had reached a height of nearly one
thousand yards the crowd wus horrified to
see hiui suddenly let go the bar aud full.
The tragic dcsccut was watched in breathless
cxcitcuicut. At last the body reached
the ground, striking with such force that it
made a hole in the earth two feet deep and
rebounded four yards It was crushed and
mangled almost beyond recognition. Meanwhile
the balloon, freed from its human ballast,
shot up with lightning speed, and soon
disappeared from sight. Late in the evening
it burst and fell at Mcnilmontant, much
to the consternation of the inhabitants of
that busy Parisian quarter. *
IIow Gold Marks Wealth.?Gold
costs much more labor to extract it than
it can be exchanged for, and yet its diseovery
in any country is the surest means of
that country's sudden enrichment This
comes'from the fact that it attracts population
with an irresistible forjc, aud in this
way devclopcs every form of iudustry.
Thus, the Pritish colony of Victoria, iu
which gold was discovered abou* 1854, had
in 1850 a population of C7,GG2, exported
18,1)91,207 pounds of wool and had 52,.'Vll
acres of laud under cultivation. Iu 1855,
with a gold product of 2,793.005 ounces, it
exported 22,584,234 pouuds of wool, and
tilled 115,155 acres, while its population
had increased to 304,324. In 1878 the
population was 878,412, the wool exports
were 101,809,809 pouuds, and there were 1,009,277
acres under cultivation, while the
erold product had diminished to 775 272
ounces. These figures afford a plaiu proof
that tho gold attracted the population and
their labors created the wealth. Nothing
tends to people the wilderness so rapidly
as the discovery of gold or precious stones
in it, and when once populated the inhabitants
remain and naturally turn their attention
from the unproductive pursuit of goldhunting
into more certain and more profitable
channels.
Sixty mii.es a Minute on a Tin Pan.
?Arthur Fitzpatrick, who returned from
Colorado a short time ago, gives the following
glowing account of an occurrence in the
mining districts, of which he was an eyewitness
: "A miner and some companions
were crossing the Continental Divide when
it was covered with snow. Three miles below
them, down a decline of forty fivo degrees,
deeply covered with frozen snow, lay
the spot they desired to reach, while to go
around by trail was fifteen miles. The minor
took a tin pan, used for washing gold,
spro id his blanket over it, got in himself
in a squatting position on his haunches,
tucked the blanket around, bold his rifle
and other traps over his head and got
one of his companions to give hiui a
push, lie informed me ho went down at
the speed of sixty miles a minute, and shot
far out into the valley at the foot of the
mountain. When he stopped ho found the
soldering of the pan melted from friction,
his blanket on fire, and it was his impression
that had he gone much further he
would have been t urned up, together with
11 ? it:,i.i t / i
< ma utiin. 1 irisiinry m intjrnjm.
Soi.ii> Skn.sk.?A newspaper and a newspaper
man that people don't talk about and
sonntimes abuse, are rather poor concerns.
The man and business that an editor sometimes
feels it a duty to defend at a> risV of
making enemies of auother re often the
very first to show ingratitad02**Thc editor
who expects to recievo utiuh charity or
gratitude will soon find out la mistake ; but
ho should go on and do whAt he conscientiously
thinks right without rtgardto frowns
and smiles.?[ Kxehangyv'*
As a street-car conductor took a rural
passenger's money the other day. he called
it an agricultural fare.
*
3L" ?*** 2* A i>H,rv'KHH?The Ilostpn4
| i^^jg^ipgwor ? correspon3wy?
,K. ^^psWniliya of the rhyming ojd
"Tift?'if many a slip,
I ?r<? 'Turn the eupaod the Mp."
otfr sub.=cibers who have studied
A king of Thrace had planted a viqpyhrd,
when, one of hi* sluvis, whom he tftuTmuch
oppressed in that vory work, prophesied that
bo should never tasto of tho wino produced
in it. Tho monarch disregarded the prediction,
(fed when at an entcrtuiumcut he
held a glassful of his own wino, made from
the grasps of that vineyard, he sent for the
slave ana asked hiui what ho thought of
his prophecy now. To which tho ether replied
: . '
'Many things foil out bctwoen tho cup
and the lip," and he had scarcely delivered
the singular response, beforo the
ucn*# wua urougoc inai a UlODSCrOUS^f <
boar was laying waste the favorite vine- '
yard.
The King, in a rage, put down the cup
which he held in his hands, and hurried
out with his poople to attack the boar ; but
being too eager, tho boar rushed upon him
and killed his, without him having tasted
of tho wino.
| Josh Billings no Makkiaob.?By
awl moans, Joe, get married, if you hev a
a fair show Don't staud shivering on the
bunk, but pitch rite in and stick your head
undor and shiver it out. Thar ain't any
more trick in getting married than there is
in eating poanuts. Many a mnu has stood
shivcriug ou tho shore uutil the river has
run clcau out. Dou't expect to innrry an
augel?they have been picked up long ago.
Kcuiomber, Joe, you hain't a saint yourself.
Do not marry for beauty exclusively ; beauty
is like ice, awfully slippery and thaws
dreadfully cas-y. Don't marry for luv, neither
; luv is like a cooking-stove, good for
nothing wheu the fuel is out. But let the
mixture be, tome beauty, becomingly
dressed with about.$250 in her pocket, a
gud speller, handy and neat in her house,
plenty of good sense, tuff constitution and
by-laws, small feet, a light step; add to this
souud teeth nud n warm heart. The uiixturejvill
keep in any oliuiatc and will not
"evaporate. Don't marry for pedigree unless
it's backed by bankuotcs. A family with
nothing but pedigree geuerally lucks sense.
What Secretary Siieuman Will Do.
?A Washington dispatch to the Dostou
Aercild says; "Secretary shermau's doteruiiuatiou
to loave the treasury department
at the end of the present administration,
which is auuouuced iu the Herald correspondence,
is absolute, and is not likely to
be changed, lie wishes to leave Garfield
absolutely untrammelled in making up his
Cabinet, and believes that his remaining in
the Cabinet might embarrass Gaifield. lie
also believes that his own political future
should be in the Senate rather than in the
Cabiuct. As a Senator, alter the 4th of
March next, he will be restored to his old
place as chairuiau of the committee of finance.
The secretary of the treasury for
the next four years will be compelled to continue
the funding operations which he has
begun, but this cannot be done nutil Congress
passes the necessary law, which tho
Democrats refused to do last winter. Mr.
Sherman can render quito as valuable services
in the Scuatc as in tho treasury department."
Texas Tragedies.?Galveston, October
27.?A dispatch from Dallas to the News
CU'll ?<\v 1 ^ tnnt??n r? oon ^ ?
ii . * . X rvvdiaii, auu ui a Liiuiu UJUii
at Wcatherford, was shot and mortally
wounded near Arlington on Monday by a
man named Painter, whoso house he had
entered aud was engaged in pillaging.?
Freemau was drunk."
A special from Whitney, Texas, says : j
"In n quarrel in a bagnio (Jus lJuruoy was :
shot in the breast aud mortally wounded
by Fred. McClowu, who fled from his pursuers."
Apple Custard.?Two eggs, six tablespoonfuls
sugar, cream ; beat the mixture
thoroughly and flavor strongly with lcuiou,
uuless~Home other flavoring is preferred.
Then take a tcacupful of stored apples,
mash them, and add them to the other iugrodieuts
make crust and bake same as egg
custards. They are delicious.
llev.
Dr. Hall said every blade of grass
was asermon. The next day he was amusing
himself by clipping his lawn, when a parishioner
said : "That'sright, doctor. Cut
your sermons short."
A Texas nun said ho preferred to fight a
duel rather thuu act as judge of a baby show.
Ho saw a chance to dodge a bullet, but how
could ho escape from thirty nine indignant
mothers J
?
Hogs aro sometimes troubled by disordorod
stomachs. The best antidote is charcoal.
Aside from charcoal, charred cobs,
or charred corn have a good effect.
If you know a true by its fruits, bow are
you going to recognize an axle tree.
It is not whiskey that makes a man drunk
it is his inability to carry it.
1 (
Attention Houseekopers.
YOU will find ul J. C. HUNTER & GO'S
many articles in the Fancy Grocery and I
Canned Goods line, that will assist you very
materially in getting no a souare meal.
SUCH AS
Broiled Fresh Mackerel, in Tomatoes,
Mustard Sardines, (a rare delicacy,)
Imported Sardines, the best quality,
Salmon, Oysters, Bickles, Tomatoes,
Beaches, Bahama Eyeless Bine Apples,
<dral4'(l I?hu> .t for ice cream,
Baker's Chocolate, Cox s Gelatine,
Flavoring Extracts and many other things
tooy roiis. to mention, and
Altf! 11Iv\I>QI^ARTKBS ON
CofTecs, Sugars and Chpes$. (
Mr. J.\\ IIix and S. B. Sims nre.-mllr us who .
will be glad to sec their friends Sfcd wnl endeavor
to make thorn happy b* sealing them
good Hoods at
BOTTOM PRICES,
Oct 8 40 . ?f
ltlll>l?or Contls,
B,libber Coo ls for Gentlemen and CatuKt can
be found at 8BEAK8 k COLToN'S. |
JUST.iW
FOR THE FALL I
J. T. H I t
A FULL LINE 0
CONSIST
SILKS,
SILK POPLINS,
MUMMIE CLOTHS,
EMPRESS
Imported Brocaded Worsteds,
American Br
Together With all the Latest Styles o
ALSO A HAND
LADIES' CLOAKS, SHAWL!
OUR SI
WIUTE GOODS,
FLANNELS.
CO UNTERPANES,
BLANKETS.
WE CALL PARTICULAR ATT
MEM S' A
READY MAD
Furnisliing' Good
IS THIS USE WE CII
?* :c
?
WE IIAYE A FUL
LADIES' AND 1
MEN AJ
BOOTS A1
Deluding the BAY STATE BRAND, which we
? :o:
OUR SI
Hardware,
Groceries,
Tinwa
Arc full, and we are prepared to please our Cusi
QUICK SALES AN]
Ami you have only to call to be convinced thn
J.
Oct 8 40
Announcement Extraordinary!
I TAKE pleasure in informing my friends and
the public generally that I have a lull stock
of the very best quality of
FAMILY GROCERIES,
CONSISTING OF
Flour,
Meal,
Bacon,
Bard,
Hams,
Sugar,
offoo,
moiiiBBaa,
Pepper,
Spioe,
Ginger,
Starch,
Soda,
Pickles,
Canned Goods in Great Variety,
Soap,
undies,
rack era,
iKt'HO,
Soo<l Irisli Potatoes
Of the Finest t|ualities.
Nails,
Powder,
Shot,
Caps,
Prize Cigar*,
Pine Chewing- aiul Smoking Tobaccos,
J.W.VINSON.
Jan. 30 4 tf
NOTICE EXTRAORDINARY.
HAVING opened for the public nt Jor.esville
S. ('. a full assortment of
Wines, Liquors, Lager Itecr, Oysters,
Sardines, Salmon, Crnckors. Tickles.
Candies, l'owder, Shot, Cigars, Tobacco.
Coffee, Sugar, and Ice in nny rpianlity.
I would be pleased to meet nt all times rny
old friends ami the community at large.
Iced lemonade A Specialty,
Drummers will find my stock the Nc Plus Lira.
(live uic a call.
HUGHEY RENTLEY#
Jonesville, July 1st, 1880.
July it 27 funs.
Sewing Machines.
[AM Agent for the popular nnd serviceab
Weed and the New American Sewing M
diines. They are pronounced ci|tiaj to any na
n use aud are sold very cheap.
P. M. COHEN.
Oct. 8 40 tf
Ladies' Shoes.
LADIES' Paltimorc and Philadelphia made
Fine Shoes.
, Ladies Newport or Sandal Slippers. Just re
*Wed at RICE & M( LUKE'S.
Aprii 2S 16 tf-.
Canned Gooda.
We have a tine assortment of Canned Ooods,
?some never before brought to this market.
Cull and Sec Them.
J. C. HUNTER fi CO.
Pnt'td ti'itl TnHle tulle ry.
From the best Manufacturers. .?***
J. C. HUNT Ell * CO.
i tt T"j\jfr* |/>'"HB A
r '1 . y JM
. '^.ij^w i f JM ?f
ik^ . f 4 ? > At#. r^wPnlT ' MH^BI
UNU UF
OASHMERES, /* > Wjil \
MOHAIRS, * '"V >
**' ALPACA8,
\ CLOTHS. 1%
ocaded Worsteds, . I
Cotton and Worsted Plaids f
f TRIMMINGS, Silks and Laces. 1,
SOME LOT OF ' \ I
t, HATS, AND UNDERWEAR. V%
:ock. OF
I CASSIMERES,
.TV. A Ar.v
W ?S/J ' V # A. . '
COTTOMAOES, AC.,
IS COMPLETE ^
!* 1
K NT ION TO OUR STOCK OP
ND BOYS'
E CLOTHING,
s and Underwear.
ALLENGE COMPETITION. i
* + ,y
* ' *?
r. A SSOPTMff.MT nu
jua JL \?/X*
V1ISSES SHOES,
2D BOYS'
X I> SHOE 8,
WARRANT anil will sell Cheap as the Cheapest/
rOCKS OF
re.
Woodenware,
Hollow Ware,
tomcrs, both in Qualify anil Prices. Our motto Ii
D SMALL PROFITS.
.t we mean what Tie say.
T. HILL Ac CO.
tf
NOTICE
To Tourists and Health Seekers; SUMMER
SCHEDULE TO THE MOUNTAINS/
Spartanburg, Union & Columbia
.Spartanburg *V AnIicI'IIIc It. It.
BagasaiagB
Si'ABTANBfiio, S. C. May 17, 1880.
On nnd after the above ilatc (lie following
Scheilulc will be run over tbc.sc Ronils daily,
(Sundays excepted) :
UP TRAIN.
Lcuve Alston 1 :00 p. m.
Leave Union 2 : 50 p.m.
Leave Spartanburg 4 : 18 p. m.
Arrive at llendersonvillc 7 : 10 p. m.
1 Close connection is mmle at Alston witli train
from Columbia on Greenville & Columbia Road.
At Columbia, connection is made from Charleston,
Wilmington and Augusta.
At Spartanburg, connection is made at AirLine
Depot with trains from Atlanta and Charlotte,
also with Stage t.itic to Glenn Springs.
At Ilendersonville, connection is mado with
a first class Line of Stages to Ashevillc, arriving
there the same evening.
Parties desirous of visiting Ccosar's
Head or other points of interest can be provided
with first class conveyances from the Livery
Stables in Ilendersonville at reasonable rates.
THIN SOUTH.
Will leave Ilendersonville 8.35 a. nt
Spartanburg 12.30 p. in.
Union, ............. 1.50 p.m. .
Arrive nt Alston... 4.30 p. m? > i
These lloads are in excellent condition ; fur*
nished with first Class Coaches ; provided with
all necessary appliances for safely and condor*
of Passengers. A* Spartanburg and Ilendersonville
the Hotel accommodations are now ample
for a large increase of Iravol. They will bo
found well supplied with good Mountain faro
at reasonable rates.
P11K101IT TRIN8.
The Freight trains will rnn three times i*
week, viz : Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday.
JAMES AND Fit SON, Sup't.
May 20 20 If
SAMUEL S. STOKES,"
TllIAL .TUHTICE,
1'iiion CJ? II., s.
All business in the jurisdiction of a Trial Jut*
tice attended to with promptness.
Oflicc in new building, next door to Timk^
Office.
Jan 3 1 tf
ii. W. Hai.i., l.ftiiren*. 8. S. Stokes, Union,
1SALL Ac H ^ O Ii K H ,
ATTOItlVKY^ AT IA1V,
U NION a . H.. s. a.
WILL practice in aV, ihe Courts of tLL? Slate,
l'rompt attention given to the Collection of
Claims in nil parts -of the United States.
Dec 5 40 tf
Ladies' r. rrimmed Hats.
I
A large lot of ra?)gt tastily nnd fashionably
Triiiunod lln<s, at
C. HUNTKlt fi CO'S
Ol?l l'nj pr^pH lor Hnlv, ""
a! th is 'i nice.