The Aiken recorder. [volume] (Aiken, S.C.) 1881-1910, July 08, 1892, Image 9
FEMININE FANCIES.
Miss Leclerc, of Paris, has taken a first
class degree in the School of Pharmacy.
Dr. Jennie McGowan has been re-elected
for a third term as secretary of the Acad
emy of Natoral Sciences at Davenport, la.
Two ladies only have obtained the de
gree of Mus. Doc., namely, the Princess of
Wales and Miss Annie Patterson, of Dub
lin.
Mrs. Harrison, who was at one time
president of the National League of Min
eral Painters, has withdrawn from mem
bership.
Miss EL Jean Nelson, who won first
honors in the recent interstate oratorical
contest at Minneapolis, is nineteen years
of age, and a member of the junior class
of De Pauw university at Greencastle, Ind.
Mrs. Bryan, the wife of the brilliant
young orator from Nebraska, who made
such a sensation by his tariff speech in
congress, is a graduate of a law school and
has been admitted to practice in the courts
of her state.
The Duchess of San Felici recently
walked arourd the streets of Rome wear
ing a $50,000 ; 3cklace of pearls, the string
of which broke, allowing all the gems to
roll into the gutter and down the sewer,
from which they were afterward fished
after considerable trouble.
Miss Kate Field describes Mrs. Amelia
Rives Chanler as “a Psyche in appear
ance and as charming in manner as in
face. Th* modem woman writer,” says
Miss Field, "quite upsets the old picture
of fright and slatternly dressing which a
E ast generation religiously believed went
and in hand with alleged female intel
lect.”
CROWN AND SCEPTER.
The emperor of Austria is learning short
hand. Since his son’s tragic death he finds
time passes with unsupportable slowness.
The Grand Duchess Alexandrine of Mech-
lenburg-Schwerin, who recently celebrated
her ninetieth birthday, is the oldest of Eu
ropean princesses.
King Alexander of Servia, who is a lad
at school, had his diary stolen by the re
gents of his little kingdom, who wanted
to see if he had written anything about
them.
The rajah of India, who likes showy
things, -has had made a furniture set all of
glass—glass bedsteads and chairs, huge
glass sideboards and other articles of do
mestic use.
The empress of Germany is a very skill
ful violinist, and often plays at the after
dinner concerts at the palace. Her hus
band, the emperor, possesses a very pleas
ant baritone voice, which he is fond of
raising in song when the empress wields
the bow.
SLAVES TO THE CIGARETTE.
Professor Elliott Coues, the American
theosophical high priest, smokes cigarettes
to extravagant excess.
The late Lord Lytton was so fond of
cigarettes that he smoked them incessant
ly, even between the courses of his dinners.
Two of the most conspicuous of British
public men, Balfour and Lord Randolph
Churchill, consume large quantities of
cigarettes.
The great pianists, Rubinstein and Pa
derewski, use cigarettes without stint—
the former, as was recorded recently, mak
ing his breakfast of tea and cigarettes
while in the Caucasus last summer.
All the leading theosophists, excepting
Annie Besant, draw inspiration from ciga
rettes. Mme. Blavatsky was notorious for
the number of them she smoked, while her
successor, the Countess of Caithness, has
followed her example in that respect.
PHILOSOPHICAL COGITATIONS.
A man’s destiny depends on the way he
does little things.
If a thief should hire a man, he would
demand an honest man.
Every man who has money is abused for
not buying the things other people want
to get rid of.
Too many make their friendship for a
man a burden on his back instead of a
staff in his hand.
Most of us excuse idleness and shiftless
ness today in thinking of the great amount
of work we will do tomorrow.
For every foolish, useless extravagance
a man indulges in, the wolf licks his lips
and creeps up a little nearer to the door.—
Atchison Globe.
Compulsory Insurance In Germany.
In Germany the law of compulsory
Insurance against old age and infirmity,
passed in June, 1889, completes the pro
gramme of legislation for improving the
condition of the working classes which
was set forth in the imperial rescript of
1881. It affects more than 13,000,000
people, giving them an inalienable legal
claim to support in cases of infirmity
and in old age.
The insurance is compulsory in all in
dustrial occupations upon persons over
sixteen years of age of both sexes.
Clerks and tradesmen’s apprentices who
do not earn more than $500 a year also
participa*, but assistants and appren
tices in druggists’ shops are excluded.
Exemption from compulsory insurance
is granted to persons who work for
food, clothes and lodging only, and who
receive no pay, or who are only in tem
porary employment.
The pension for old age varies from
about twenty-five dollars to fifty dollars
a year, and is granted to every insured
person who has completed his seventieth
year, irrespective of his ability to earn a
livelihood, provided he does not already
draw a pension for infirmity. The in
firmity pension varies from about twen
ty-seven dollars to over a hundred dol
lars, and is given, irrespective of age, to
persons who are permanently incapaci
tated from earning a living.
In order to establish a claim to a pen
sion under the German law, contribu
tions, regulated by the amount of earn
ings, must be paid for a prescribed
period. The means of paying pensions
are obtained by fixed contributions from
the imperial treasury, added to regular
payments on the part of the employers
and employed.—Youth’s Companion.
The Blood Circalates Rapidly.
Medical workers have made many cu
rious experiments, but none more won
derful than that by which they ascer
tained the exact time required for the
blood to make one entire trip through
the system, which all students of physi
ology know means a complete circula
tion through the lungs, veins, arteries
and general capillary arrangements.
Professors Dalton, Hering, Poissenille,
Matteucd and Blake have been the chief
investigators in this line, the first named
having become more eminent in this
particular branch of research from
having the experience of the others to
fortify himself with. All the old school
anatomists believed that a considerable
time elapsed, say from three to nine
minutes, from the time when the blood
left the right side of the heart, traversed
the whole system and then again re
turned to the starting point; Dalton has
shown that the time is much shorter
than was formerly generally supposed.
H9 gays; "Dozens of carefully tabu-
lated tests of this somewhat extraordi
nary subject shows that the blood of
man makes a complete circulation once
every fifteen to twenty-five seconds, ac
cording to the physical conditions of the
subject experimented upon.”—St Louis
Republic.
Two Epitaphs.
Remarkable are two epitaphs, the first
of which is said to be upon a tombstone
in the city of Sacramento: “Here is laid
Daniel Borrow, who was born in Sorrow,
and Borrowed little from Nature except
his name and his love to mankind and
hatred to redskins; who was neverthe
less a gentleman and a dead shot; who,
through a long life, never killed his
man except in self defense or by acci
dent, and who, when he at last went
under, beneath the bullets of his cow
ardly enemies in the saloon of Jeff Mor
ris, did so in the sure and certain hope
of a glorious and everlasting Morrow.’’
The other, which belongs to a Nevada
burying place, is a noteworthy achieve
ment in this line. "Sacred to the
Memory of Hank Monk—the Whitest,
Biggest-hearted, and Best-known Stage-
driver of the West; who was kind to All
and Thought 111 of None. He Lived in
a Strange Era, and was a Hero, and the
Wheels of his Coach are now Ringing en
Golden Streets.”—Chambers’ Journal
Philadelphia Pretzels.
Philadelphia pretzels are a thing by
themselves; that is, the genuine Phila
delphia pretzel is, but unscrupulous
manufacturers have been making imi
tations with machinery which have
served to lessen the high standard raised
by the reputation of the homemade
pretzel. The pretzel came over with
the Dutch, and it is still found in its
original purity in Lancaster and Berks
counties, the inhabitants of which have
been so many generations in this coun
try that they are unable to speak their
mother tongue. They have not been
here long enough to learn English, so
they make their pretzels as they were
taught, and talk the language which
they have manufactured.—New York
Sun.
The MAguiflcent Colors of the Toucan.
People who have only seen stuffed
toucans in a museum can have no
proper idea of the astonishing mag
nificence and beauty of their rain
bow coloring in a state of nature.
For the most delicate and most irri-
descent of all their hues are those of
the big beak and the soft, naked
parts of the face and body. Here
blue and green, crimson, orange and
yellow pass quickly into one another
by dainty gradations. Unhappily,
the tints of the soft parts are so very
evanescent that they disappear alto
gether within a few hours after
death, and without them to harmo
nize the general effect of the -whole
the gaudy coloring of the permanent
plumage is apt to strike one, in a
museum, as positively garish in its
crude reds and yellows.
A living toucan, on the contrary,
though almost barbaric in its mag
nificence, can never be accused of
vulgar, bad taste; it is like St. Mark’s
at Venice, or the Moorish decora
tions of the Alhambra at Granada,
polychromatic to the last degree, yet
always beautifully harmonious.—
Coruhill Magazine.
A Jurist Played Marbles.
A gentleman, long a resident of
this capital, used to relate that his
father, a practitioner at the bar of
the supreme court, once sent him
when a small boy to the house of the
chief justice for some legal papers.
He appeared before Marshall with
something like that feeling of rever
ence with which the Ibo prostrates
himself before his fetish, with some
thing of that awe with which the
barbarian Gaul approached the Ro
man senate, sitting amid the ruins of
the Forum. He presented the note,
and the chief justice was not. slow to
detect the bashfulness of the lad.
He read the note, selected the papers,
tied them up in a bundle and then
said, "Billy, I believe I can beat yoi
playing marbles; come into the yard
and we will have a game. ’’ The boy
assented, and soon he was engaged
in that childish play with the fore
most intellect of the western hemi
sphere. All his embarrassment was
gone, and the game proved to be ex
citing and closely contested, both
being skillful players. — Louisville
Cornier-Journal.
Wonders of Modoc County.
Probably no other part of the
world excepting, perhaps, the Yel
lowstone park, contains so many nat
ural curiosities as Modoc county
The first, from a historical point o
view, is the famous lava beds, scene
of the Modoc war, a country of rocks
so full of caves that lakes and rivers
are swallowed up, leaving nothing
but a faint murmur to show their
course through the bowels of th
earth. In many of the caverns an
army of men coidd hide, and in some
places the intense heat of the rocks
is evidence that internal fires are
raging. In all parts of the county
can be found mammoth hot springs
belching forth water strongly im
pregnated with minerals, and often
close by will be caves of the purest
ice.—Potter Four Corners.
Influence of the Moon.
One of the "old sea dogs” of the
American steamship line was inter
esting an eager crowd of listeners
the other day at one of the piers of
the company upon the wonderful ef
fects of the moon "You will never
find an experienced sailor,” said he,
"who will sleep out o’ nights exposed
to the baneful light of the moon, nor
will he under any circumstances al
low its mellow rays of light to shine
direct upon his face, for it is the the
ory and shiplore that the influence
of the moon will twist and distort
the face entirely out of shape.”—
Philadelphia Press.
Bright people are the quickest to
recognize a good thing and buy it
We sell lots of bright people the Lit
tle Early Kisers. If you are not
bright these pills will make you so.
W. J. Platt.
We defy anybody to show where
Tillman’s administration has econo-
mixed, reduced a salary, abolished an
office or saved the tax payers a dollar.
vrillia m Lohr
Of Free;
z. t. I:!., oegaii to fail rapidly, lost all
aypoU'O;
... . kilo a serious condition from
by--
•-vein Slie coulJ not eat ve 8 e -
.. pbtd tables or meat, and even
t r!. ■!
•wed her. Usd to give up house-
Wj.'!.. i.
... '..oca :'.-ier taking
Pica
rVs Sarsaparilla
C s a ■ * -
ble i.eUer. Could keep more food
O.; . * ! t
..i h a;.-.! grew stronger. She took
; i ijnincd Zii lbs.,
i vi.sily, ii now in perfect health.
I • > F : LL3 are tho beat aftsr-dinuex
p .lion .ml cure headache.
LIPPMAN BROS.. Proprietors,
Druggists, Lippman’s Block, SAVANNAH, GA.
For sale by W. J. PLATT,
Aiken, S. C.
SPECIAL RUN No. 19.
GREATEST VALUE ON EARTH.
Tyler’* Famous Antique Oak Roll Car*
tula Desk complete, see special circulars.
No. 4004,3 ft. 6 in. long, net $16.00
No. 4009,4 ft. 6 in. “ $21.00
No. 4010,5 ft. long, - • <* $23.00
Also see new ISO page catalogue for
1892. Great cut of about 40 per cent from
former list. BOOKS FREE, postage lOo.
Shipped from 8t. Louis, No., or Indianapolis, Ind.
BANK COUNTERS A SPECIALTY.
We refer to every Bank In Thirty States.
TYLER DESK CO M St. Louis, Mo.
CHILD birth • • •
• • • MADE EASY!
“ Mothers’ Friend r is a scientific
ally prepared Liniment, every ingre
dient of recognized value and in
constant use by the medical pro
fession. These ingredients are com
bined in a manner hitherto unknown
“MOTHERS*
• FRIEND” •
WILL DO all that is claimed for
,4 it AND MORE. It Shortens Labor,
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to
Life of Mother and Child. Book
to " Mothers ” mailed FREE, con
taining valuable information and
voluntary testimonials.
Sent by express on receipt of price fl.50 per bottle
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta. Ga.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
FOR MEN ONLY!
VIGOR- 0
STRENGTH
For LOST or FAILING MANHOOD,
General and NERVOUS DEBILITY,
Weakness of Body and Mind, Effeeta
of Errors or Excesses in Old or Young,
Robust, Noble MANHOOD full/ Restored. How to (College and
Strenetben WKA K,l NI>KVKLOrM> OKOANS Sc PARTS of BODY
Absolute!/ unfalllns HUMIC TKKATMKNT—Benefits la a da/,
■en testlf/ from 60 States and Koreign Countries. Write them.
Descriptive Book, explanation and proofs mailed (sealed)free.
Address ERIE MEDICAL CO., BUFFALO,Na V.
Unlike the Dutch Process
No Alkalies
— OR —
Other Chemicals
are used in the
preparation of
W. BAKER & CO.’S
which is absolutely
pure and soluble.
, It has more than three times
I the strength of Cocoa mixed
i with Starch, Arrowroot or
_ ' Sugar, and i9 far more eco
nomical, costing less than one cent a cup.
It is delicious, nourishing, and easily
DIGESTED.
Sold by Grocers every where.
W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass.
PROF. P. M. WHITMAN.
SCIENTIFIC OPTICIAN,
Office in the Chronicle Building,
Broad Street, Augusta, Georgia,
KEEPS a full line of popular pricid
glasses, in addition to his fine ones; gives
free eye tests for Presbyopia--old sight,—
Myopia-near sight-,Hyperopia-far sight-,
Simple, Compound and Mixed Astigma
tism—irregular curve of the cornea--, Anis
ometropia-unequal refrac tion of two eyes-,
and Asthenopia-weak sight. Broken lenses
replaced whue you wait. Repairing of all
kinds. Oculists’ prescriptions filled.
NEAR TEST FOR ASTIGMATISM.
To be held at reading distance. If one
set of lines appear ve^y black and the
other very dim the greater the necessity
for the peculiar glasses required to cor
rect it.
Ophthalmic writers say “No ocular mal
formation demands assistance so impera
tive! j T as Astigmatism, as none involves
complex conditions or imperils vision to an
qual degree,”
“OLD RELIABLE” LINE.
South Carolina Eailway & Leased Lines~D. H. Chamberlain, Receiver.
Passenger Department—Condensed Schedule, in effect Jan. 17, 1892.
West Bound Daily.
PM PM AM AM
Main Line.
Daily East Bound.
AM PM PM PM
6:15
5:00
6:50
6:00
Lv.
Charleston ....
.. Ar
11-05
1:15
9:50 10:20
6:54
5:57
7:28
6:50
it
II
10:25
12:27
9:07
9:36
7:2.5
6:39
7:58
7:30
H
• 1
9:52
11:45
8:28
8:58
6:53
....
7:45
It
14
9:40 11:31
8:15
*
1*8:00
7:25
8:30 ?8:15
Ar.
Branchville...
it
9:15
11:00
7:40
8:15
8:15
• . • •
8:35
9:00
Lv.
Branchville ...
.. Ar
10:59
7:30
8:44
....
....
9:28
Lv
....
10:31
7:00
8:56
....
9:41
ti
Grahams
II
10:20
6:48
9:15
10:00
l«
.... Blackvilie .
l(
10:00
6:28
10:23
....
....
11:02
ti
41
• • •
8:50
5:25
10:37
11:15
it
Graniteville ...
1 1
8:36
5:05
11:15
....
....
11:50
Ar.
Augusta
Columbia Division.
14
....
8:00
4:30
....
7.35
8:35
Lv.
Branchville....
.. Ar
8:55
8:10
....
8:10
9:11
....
1 •
. . . Orangeburg ....
II
8:20
....
....
7-36
8:34
9:32
....
il
... St Matthews. ..
II
7:58
7:10
....
9:00 10:00
....
il
Kingville
Camden Branch.
4 1
7:33
....
....
6:43
10:05
«!
Kingville
.. Ar
6:19
10:30
....
Il
Camden Junction.
.. Lv
5:46
10:45
li
Claremont. ..
14
5:33
11:25
Ar.
Camden
14
5:00
PM
9:45
PM
10:50
AM
AM
Il
Columbia
14
Tf6:5C
AM
A M
PM
6:00
PM
If Meal station. * Will stop to let off passengers,
Additional trains daily leave Columbia 9:00 a. m., arrive Kingville 9:50 a.
m.; leave Kingville 6:43 p. in., arrive Columbia 7:35 p. m.
C., C. G. & C. R. R.
Daily Except Sunday’.
PM
6:10 Lv...
6:49 Lv...
7:05 Ar.. .
.. Graniteville ..
Aiken
A M
. .. .Ar9:15
.. Lv 9:15
... ’* 9:00
7:15 Lv. ..
8:00 " ...
Trenton ...
. ...Lv8:00
8:15 Ar ..
... " 7:45
PM
A M
THROUGH TRAIN SERVICE AND CONNNECTIONS.
Through trains daily between Charleston and Augusta; between Charles
ton and Columbia; and between Columbia and Camden.
Through sleepers daily between Charleston and Atlanta; leave Charles
ton 6:15 p m; anive Atlanta 6:30 a m; leave Atlanta 11:15 p m; arrive Char
leston 1:15 p m.
Pullman Buffett Chair car daily between Charleston and Columbia;
leave Charleston 6:50 a m; arrive Columbia 10:50 a m ; leave Columbia 6 p
m; arrive Charleston 10:20 p m.
Connections at Charleston with Clyde Steamship Co. for New York
Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays; for Jacksonville Mondays, Thursdays
and Saturdays; at Columbia daily witii R. & D. Railway to and from Wash
ington, New York and points east and north; at Columbia daily, except
Sunday, w’lth R. & D. Railway (C. &G. Div.) to and from Greenville and
Walhalla; at Augusta daily with Georgia R. R., Central R. R., and P. R. &
W. C. Railway ; at Camden daily with C., C. & C. R. R. (through train) to
and from Marion, N. C., and Blacksburg. For further information apply to
G. G. DuBOSE, Ticket Agent, Aiken, S. C.
C.M.WARD, Gen’l Manager. E. P WARING, Gen’l Pass. Agent.
MAUD I 3324.
A Milo in 225; 1-2 in 1.10.
AWNINGS AND SHADES
FOR STORES AND RESIDENCES,
Made to order promptly in all sizes at Fargo’s.
WALL PAPERING
In the best style, at Reasonable Rates, at Fargo’s.
OIL CLOTH AND LINOLEUMS
Laid in Best Manner at Fargo’s.
Carpets Taken Up, Cleaned and
Packed Away, at Fargo’s
Big Bargains in Battings, at
GEORGE J. FARGO’S,
630 Broad Street, - - - - - - - AUGUSTA, GA.
H. C. PERKINS, President. J. A. HA USER, Manager.
INCORPORATED.
GEORGIA IRON WORKS,
IRON AND BRASS
CASTINGS,
BUILDING
FRONTS,
ENGINES, BOILERS,
AND
MILL SUPPLIES.
LOCOMOTIVE REPAIRS
A SPECIALTY.
KOLLOCK STREET,
Between Fenwick & D’Antignao.
AUGUSTA - - GA.
Watches and Jewelry.
Dimondas, Fine Gold Jewelry!
Bridal Presents in Silverware!
FANCY GOODS OF EVERY VARIETY.
B AY STALLION will stand the season at Rhett’s Farm, near Montmo-
renci, 8. C., at Thirty-flve Dollars ($35) Cash, with return privilege.
For particulars apply to
J. M. RHETT.
MINERAL WATERS,
AP0LLINARIS, HUNGARIAN APERIENT, FRIED-
RICHSHALL, HARTZ MOUNTAIN AND
SELTZER WATERS.
OIG- -A_ IR, £>.
The Finest Havanna, Key West and Domestic.
E. R. SCHNEIDER,
601 and 602 Broad St. - - - - AUGUSTA. GEORGIA.
Clyde’s New Yorl, ”
and Florida Steamship Lines.
WM. P. CLYDE & CO., Gen. Agents,
5 Bowling Green, New York.
12 South Wharves, Philadelphia.
T. G. EGER, Traffic Manager, '
5 Bowling Green, New York.
The Fleet is composed of the fol
lowing Elegant Steamers:
S S ALGONQUIN (new),
S S IROQUOIS (new), Capt Kemble.
S S CHEROKEE, Capt Bearse.
S S SEMINOLE, Capt Platt,
S S YEMASSEE, Capt MeKee.
S S DELAWARE, Capt Chichester.
These splendid passenger steamers
form an unequaled tri-weekly line
to New York and the Florida Ports,
with state-rooms all on deck, thor
oughly ventilated and separated from
the dining saloon.
There is no pleasanter travelling on
the Atlantic Coast, and the trip to
Florida consumes only 12 to 15 hours.
^'or passenger engagements address
RICHMOND & DANVILLE,
—operating—
Port Royal, & Augusta
—ard—
Port Royal & Western Carolina
m
rn
m
Railway.
Between Augusta and Port Royal
South * f
Lv Augusta *6’50 am 8:00 p n
Lv Allendale .. .8:55 a m ll:55pn
Lv Campbellton 9:13 a m 12:24 an
Lv Brunson’s.. .9:24 a m 12:40 a n
Ar Yemarsee . .10:15 a m 2:30 a n
Ar Beaufort 11:10 a
Ar Port Royal. 11:25 p
North * f
Lv Port Royal.. 2:35 p m
Lv Beaufort 2:50 p m
Ar Yemassee... 3:45 p m
Lv Yemassee... 4:00 p m 2:40 a n
Lv Brunson’s.. .4:56 p m 4:35 an
Lv Campbellton5:08 p m 4:53 a n
Lv Allendale... 5:25 p m 5:23 a n
Ar Augusta 7:35 p m 9:40 a n
Connections made at Yemasse
from and to Charleston, and at Camp
bellton from and to points on Soutl
Bouud R. R.
Between Augusta and Spartanburg.'
(Eastern Time.)
North *
Lv Augusta 7:00 a m
Lv McCormick. 9:02 a m.
Ar Greenwood. 10:05 a m
Lv Laurens 11:13 a m
Ar Spartanburg 1:25 p m
South *
Lv Spartanburg 3:20 p m
Lv Laurens 4:59 p m
Lv Greenwood. .6:30 y m
Lv McCormick. 7:35 p m
Ar Augusta . . .12:15 p rn
t
4:00 p m
6:06 p m
7:15 p m
7:00 a m
8:06 a m
10:10 a m
J. E. EDGERTON,
Gen. Freight and Pass. Agent,
Charleston, S. C.
Carolina Midland.
A.
M.
P.M.
p
M.
P.
M.
8
00
3
00 Lv Allendale Ar
12
37
10
38
8
09
3
18
Seigling
12
19
10
29
8
18
3
36
Caves
12
01
10
20
8
24
3
48
Brownell
11
49
10
14
8
36
4
12
Morrises
11
25
10
12
8
51
4
42
Barnwell
10
55
9
42
9
00
5
00
Woodward
10
44
9
33
9
06
5
12
Ashleigh
10
36
9
27
9
18
5
36 Ar Blackvilie Lv
10
20
9
15
10
20
7
00 Lv Blackvilie Ar 8
57
5
54
10
45
7
15
Walkers
8
42
5
24
10
55
7
21
Whaleys
8
36
5
12
11
15
7
33
Springfield
8
24
4
48
11
40
7
48
Sally
8
09
4
18
12
00
8
00
Perry
7
57
3
54
12
20
8
12
Wagener
7
46
3
30
12
45
8
27 A
r Seivern Lv
7
30
3
00
p.:
\I P.NI
.
A
M.
P.
M.
On Sundays leave Allendale 4.45
and 8.20 a. m.; arrive Barnwell 5.36
and 9.11a.m.; arrive Blackvilie 6 03
and 9.38 a. m.;; leave Blackvilie 10.15
a. m.; arrive Seivern 11.42 a. m. Re
turning leave Seivern 8.15 a. m.; ar
rive Blackvilie 9.42 a. m.; leave
Blackvilie 10.15 a. m. and 9.15 p. m.;
arrive Allendale 11.33 a. m. and 10.38
p. m.
J. C. KEYS, Superintendent.
Between McCormick and Andejsou.
North ]f +
Lv McCormick. 9:10 a m 9:15 a m
Ar Anderson.. .12:00 N 1:40 pm
South .
Lv Anderson .. .4:35 p m 3:00 p m
Ar McCormick. 7:25 p m 7:25 pm
•Daily. fDaily except Sunday.
TfSunday only.
Trains on A. and C. Division leave
Spartanburg for points north and
east 3:54 a m, 6:52 p m and 6:57 p m,
(Veslibuled Limited). For points
south 5:00 a m, 4:27 p m, aud 11:43 a
m, (Vestibuled Limited). For points
west, W. N. C Division, Henderson-
viile, Asheville, Hot Springs, Knox
ville and Cincinnati leave Spartan
burg 1:35 p m daily.
Through Pullman Palace Sleeping
Carson train Nos. 13 aud 14 between
Spartauburg and Augusta and Sa
vannah, Ga.
For rates or information apply to
any agent of the company, or to
B. C. Epperson, W. A. 1’urk
Superintendent, A. G. P. Agt,
Augusta, Ga. Charlotte N C.
Song Birds for Sale.
M OCKING BIRD, (a very fine
singer,) and a Piue Breasted
Cardinal Grosbeak.
Closing out, and will sell the lot at
a reduction.
WM. TURNBULL.
83r*Speclal Attention given to Watch and Jewelry Repairing.
jSF“All work warranted.
J, H. PROMT,
626 Broad Street, AUGUSTA, GA.9I
OH 1 g
C^PLEASE DON’T FORGET^
That in addition to our Foundry,
Machine and Boiler Works, we
have a Gin Department, where
first-class men and materials are
employed for the manufacture of
the “Augusta Gin,” and repairs to
any kind of gin made. Saws sharp
ened or put on new, New Ribs
Brushes, etc., or Materials for Re
pairs for sale. Send your work to
us, where it will be done under
the care of a competent foreman
and workman. Send early, before
we get crowded.
We gave best of satisfaction last
year,
George 1C. Lombard &, Co.,
Foundry, Machine, Boiler and Gin Works, and Mill, Engine and Gin Sup
ply House, above Passenger Depot,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
5£gTIf you expect to buy any kind of machinery for yourself or friend this
year, write us for prices. Prices Low, and Goods First-Class.
AUGUSTA BREWINCrCOMPANY,
AUGUSTA. - - - GEOEGIA.
BREWERS AND BOTTLERS OF UNEXCELLED MGER BEER.
AUGUSTA CARPET CO.,
846 Email Street, Dp-stairs, Aipsta, Ga.
tot
JUST RECEIVED:
Wall Papers, Borders, Carpets,
Floor Oil Cloths, Hearth Rugs,
Door Mats, Lace Curtains, Window Shades and Poles,
Ingrain and Brussels Carpets,
AND HOUSE-FURNISHING GOODS GENERALLY.
£^*A FULL AND FRESH STOCK RECEIVED.
T. C. BAILIE, MANAGER,