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person JiMtpceL TERM S: TWO DOLLARS AND A HALF PER ANNTJM, is exited states currency. RATES OF ADVERTISING. Advertisements inserted ?t the rates of One Dol? lar per square of twelve lines for t'ae first insertion and Fifty Cents for each subsequent insertion. Liberal deductions made to. those who advertise by the year. 3gf For announcing a candidate, Five Dollars in advance. LAW REGARDING NEWSPAPERS. Some persons, imagine that they ean subscribe for a newspaper and in a whimsical mood cease to take it from the post-office, and there their respon? sibility ends; the reverse is tho case, as will be seen by the following :. Decision of the Courts.?Any person who takes a paper regularly from the Post Office? whether directed to his name or another, or whether he has subscribed or not, is responsible for the pay. If a person orders his paper discon? tinued, he must pay all arrearages, or the publish? er may continue to send it until payment is made, and collect the whole amount, whether it is taken from the'office or not. The courts have decided that refusing to take newspapers and periodicals from the post-office, or removing and leaving them uncalled for, is prima facie evidence of intentional fraud. "Work for the Month. October is usually a beautiful montlt for cotton picking, and the work should be pushed forward vigorously. When cot? ton is higb priced, as at present, quality is a veiy important matter?nice bandling in picking, ginning and packing will pay handsomely. The corn crop, in most parts of the South, will be short?let it be housed, as soon as dry, that none may rot in the fields. To make up for defi? ciency of vom crop, wo would urge upon our readers to sow largely of small grain. Oats would do better sown in September, but they may still succeed well if sown v at once. Break the ground well and cover with turning shovel; a little guano will make a very great difference in the yield. We pray, also, that ample breadth be given to the wheat crop; or, rather, we should have said, let an ample quanti? ty of manure be given to it; for a few acres, well manured and well prepared, can be relied on with more certainty than a large number poorly prepared and man? ured. Plow deep, but have a care espe? cially that tho upper layer ot the soil be thoroughly pulverized. As all know, the wheat plant sends out numerous small fibrous roots?these slender fibres cannot force their way through tho hard, cloddy masses, whereas, the object of nature, in this arrangement of roots, is to make eve rypart of the soil tributary to tho growth ot the plant. The manure ought, there? fore, for a like reason, to be thoroughlj' incorporated with tho soil, particularly the upper layers, for it is in these that the roots especially ramify. In this vicinity the largest yield have followed tho appli? cation of cotton seed with guano and dis? solved bones. The wheat plant delights "in nitrogenous manures, : nd, growing in the raiuy season of the year, is less apt than other crops to suffer from tho free application of such manures. Experiments have quite shown that, with a given quan? tity of manure, it is best to make two ap? plications of it, onoin the fall?another in fchc spring in form of a top dressing. An? other point, which may now be regarded as well established by experiment, is, that drilled wheat, highly manured, and of rank growth, will not JjiJl' down like the broad casled under similar circumstances ?the stem of the former, from better ex? posure to light air, is not so soft and suc? culent as that of the latter:. Experiments have not yet - determined; what the width of the. drill should be. Ono thing we feel quite assured of, that a sufficient Vcidth to permit workings to destroy the weeds, would be of very great advantage to the crop. Every one knows, how muck o;r wheat fields are infested with weeds in early spring, and there is no reason why the wheat plant should not suffer from these disputing the soil with it. as well as corn oKCObton under like circumstances. Except along the coasts and warmer parts of the South, the grain should be in the ground before the last of October. We hope our agricultural societies will under? take experiments to decide tho best time for sowing in different latitudes. Get the best seed, with a coarse sieve get out all the cockle, cheat and defective grains, put tkty>? baki.ii.ee in a pretty strong solution of blnestone, ami skim qjS" every thing that floats, and after soaking, sow in faith, that the giver of all things ma}' bestow upon us a bountiful harvest.?Southern Cultiva? tor. Georgia Dramatics.?Away down ^outh during the war there was a stroll? ing company of actors doing a certain bipod and thunder drama in one of the lit? tle dead towns to be found on the lino of a main railroad in Georgia. In one of the scenes of a little comedy which preceded tho tragedy the lover pulled a rose bud out of the pocket of his trowsers and showed it to his hated rival, saying: "I tuck her out of the kerridge, 1 hoped her in and she gin me this as a momento."? The effect on a parly who heard it was very convulsive. Afterward though, in the tragedy, this gifted Knight of the Buskin had occasion, as the Duke, to be approached by a certain "Lord'' and in? formed of the death of the father of the heroine of the tragedy. Upon being told of his friend's death, he gulped down a sob and said, "i know it, my lord, and when he died / was appintcd her gar deen." The effect may be better imag? ined than -described. An old play-goer who was present swore it was the richest thing bo had ever heard in his life.?Lou? isville Courier. ? A grotesque simile is something very expressive. Wo may mention tho com? parison of an American engine-driver who, in a discussion as to speeed, said he ran his train so fast "that the telegraph poleson the side track looked like a fine tooth comb." ? The peach stones*cast aside by the armies at Petersburg, Va., have shot up into a grove of trees forty-five miles long, J Which are now loaded with fruit. J From the Buffalo .Express. Last. Words of Great Menr-Failure of the System. Marshal Neil's last words wero: M VarmccFran caise.'"?(The French Army.)?Exchange. What a sad thing it is to see a man close a grand career with a plagiarism iu his mouth. Napoleon's last words were " Tete d'armee." (Head of the army.) Neither of these remarks amount to anything a? "last words," and reflect little credit upon the utterers. A distinguished man should be as particular about his last words as he is about, his last breath. He should write them cut on a slip of paper and take the judgment of his friends on them. He should never leave such a thing to the last hour ot his life, and trust to an in? tellectual spurt at the last moment to ena? ble him co say something smart with his latest gasp, and launch into eternity with grandeur. No?a man is too much fagged and exhausted both in body arid mind, at such a time, to be reliable; and may be,, the very thing he wants to say he cannot think of to save him ; and besides, there are his weeping friends bothering around; and worse than all, as likely as not he may have to deliver his last gasp when he is not expecting to. A man cannot always ex? pect to think of a natty thing to say under such circumstances, and so it is pure ego? tistic ostentation to put it off. There is hardly a case on record where a man came to his last moment unprepared and said a good thing?hardly a case where a man trusted to that last moment and did not make a solemn botch of it, and go out of the world feeling absurd. Now there was Daniel Webster. No? body could tell him anything. "He was not afraid. He could do something neat when the time came. And how did it turn out ? Why, his will had to be fixed over; and then all bis relations came; and first one thing and then another interfered, till at last, he only had a chance to say " I still live," and up he went. Of course, he didn't still live, because he died?and so he might as well have kept his last words to himself as to have gone and made such a failure of it at that. A week before that, fifteen minutes of calm reflection would have enabled that man to contrive some last words that would have been a credit to himself and a comfort to his family for generations to come. And there was John Quincy Adams. Relying on his splendid abilities and his coolness in emergencies, he trusted to a happy hit at the last moment to carry him through, and what was the result ? Death smote him in the House of Representatives, and he observed, casually, " This is the last of earth." The last of earth ! Why the " last of earth," when there was so much left ? If he had said it was the last rose of summer, or the last run of shad, it would have had just as much point to it. What he meant to say, was, " Adam was the first, and Adams is the last of earth," but he put it off too long, and so he had to go with that unmeaning observation on his lips. And there we havo Napoleon. " Tete d'armee.''''- That don't mean anything.? Taken by itself, " Head of the army " is no more important than "Head of the po? lice." And yet that was a man who could have said a good thinglf he had barred out the doctor and studied over it awhile. And this Marshal Neil, with half a centu? ry at his disposal, couldn't dash oil' any? thing better in his last moments than a poor plagiarism of another man's last words, which were not worth plagiarizing in the first place. " The French Army." Perfectly irrelavent?perfectly flat?at ! terly pointless. But if he had closed one eye significantly and said, " The subscri? ber has made it lively for the French Ar? my," and then thrown a little of the com? ic into his last gasp, it would have been a thing to remember with satisfaction the rest of his life. I do wish our great men would quit saying these flat things just at the moment they die. Let us have their next to their-last words for a while, and see if we cannot patch up something from them that will be a little more satisfactory. The public does not wish to be outraged iu thus way all the time. But when we come to call to mind the last words of parties who took the trouble 1 to make proper preparation for trie occa? sion, we immediately notice a happy dif? ference iu tho result. There was Chesterfield. Lord Chester? field had. labored all his life to build up the most shining reputation for affability and elegance of speech and manners the world has ever seen. And could you suppose he failed to appreciate the efSciency of char? acteristic " last words " in the matter of seizing the successfully driven nail ol such a reputation and clinching it on the other side forever ? Not he. He prepared him? self. He kept his eye on the cloek and his finger on his pulse. He awaited his chance. And at last, when he knew his time was come, he pretended to think a new visitor had entered, and so, with the rattle in his throat emphasized for dramat? ic effect, he said to the servant: " Shin around, John,, and get the gentleman a chair." Aud then he died, amid thunders of applause. Next we hare Benjamin Franklin. Frank i i, the author of Poor Richard's quaint sayings; Franklin the immortal axiom builder, who used to sit up nights reducing the rankest old threadbare plati? tudes to crisp and snappy maxims that had a nice, varnished original look in their new regimentals; who said " Virtue is its own reward ;" who said "Procrastination is the thief of time ;" who said "Time and tide wait for no man ;" and " Necessity is the mother of invention ;" good old Frank? lin, the Josh Billings of the eighteenth cen? tury?though sootli to say, the latter trans? cends him in proverbial originality as much as he falls short ot him in correctness of orthography. What sort of tactics did Franklin pursue ? He pondered over his last woids fur as much as two weeks, and then when the time came he said " None but the bra*, e deserve the fair," and died happy. He could not have said a sweeter thing if he had lived till he was an idiot. Byron made a poor business of it, and could, not think of anything to say, at the : last moment^ but "Augusta?sister?Lady j Byron?tell Harriet Beecher Stowc"? I etc,v'etc ; but Shakespeare was ready and j said, " England expects every man to do his duty!" and went off with splendid eclat. And there arc other instances of saga? cious preparation for a felicttious closing remark. For instance : Joan of Arc said?" Tramp, tramp, the boys are marching." Alexander the Great said?"Another of those Santa Cruz punches, if you please." The Empress Josephine said?"Not for Jo-," and could get no further. Cleopatra said?"The Old Guard dies, but never surrenders 1" fcir Walter Raleigh said?"Executioner, can I take your whetstone a moment, please?" John Smith said?"Alas, I am the last of my race!" Queen Elizabeth said?"Oh, I would give ray kingdom for one moment more?I have forgotten my last words." And Red Jacket, the noblest Indian brave that ever wielded a tomahawk in de? fense of a friendless and persecuted race, expired with these touching words upon his lips : "Wawkawampanoosac wiuneba gowalawallasagamoresaekatchewan." There was not a dry eye in the wigwam. Let not this lesson be lost upon our pub? lic men. Let them take a healthy moment lor preparation, and contrive some last words that shall be neat and to the point. Let Louis Napoleon say: "I am content to follow my uncle, still, I do not desire to improve on his last words. Put me down for tete d'armee." And Garret Davis: "Let me recite the unabridged dictionary." And H. G.: "I desire now to say a few words on political economy." And Mr. Bergh : "Only take a part ot me at a time, if the load will be fatiguing to the hearse horses." And Andrew Johnson: "I have been an alderman, member of Congress Governor, Senator, Pres-adieu, you know the rest." And Seward: "Alas!?ka." And Grant: "0." The Tobacco Question. This question is one of the hardest to deal with. When the Arctic voyager de? scribes his little parfy travelling over the iceborgs, and pictures them as thoy rest at evening, when their freezing days jour? ney is over, who can grudgo them the pipe of tobacco they take with such calm enjoyment alter their coffee ? Who would have robbed Napoleon of tho snuff-box at Waterloo ? Who would deny the sailor on his midnight watch, or tho sentry on his round, the solace which he finds in his acrid nepenthe ? The plain truth about tobacco isthat it is not a strong poi.-on enough to produce any very palpable ef? fects on the health when used in small quantities by people of average constitu? tions. Yet I remember seeing a famous athlete decline a cigar offered him, on the ground that it would be enough to unfit him for his performance, which required perfectly 6toady nervoa and muscles. A danger to which smokers are exposed is injury to the temper, through the increas? ed irritability which thopractico is apt to produce, and to tho will, which it is pow? erful to subjugate. This habit introduces into the conduct of lifo one of tho most imperious forms of self-indulgence known to human experience. Our State prison convicts are said to pine for their tobacco more than for any other luxury of free? dom. The amount of duty unperformed or postponed or slighted in obedience to the craving for the narcotic stimulant must form a large item in the list of tho many things left undone that ought to havo been done. Cany the use of the 6trango herb a lit? tle further, and tho partial palsy of the will extends to other functions. The sense of vision is ono of the first points where the further encroachment of tho drug shows itself. Many cases of amaurosis, or ioss of power in tho nerve of tho eye, arc traced to tho free use of tobacco. Some hard smokers are great workers, as we all know, but few who have watched the ef? fects of nicotization on will and character would deny that it handicaps a man, and often pretty heavily, in the race for dis? tinction. It encourages revcry?the con? templation of tho possible, which is a charming but unwholesome substitute for the performance of the duty next at hand. If we divide our friends into tho "if things were so" and "as things are so" sections, tho nicotizors will probably bo found most numerous among tho former. But it must be remembered that all habits of this kind, liko insanity, aro more apt to fasten them? selves on natures originally defective and ill-balanced than on thoso in which the poise of all the faculties is well adjusted, and tho self-determining power too vigo? rous to become enslaved. If one comes to tho conclusion that he will be better for leaving off the use of tobacco he must expect to find that it costs him a hard struggle It is a second wearing, almost as trying as tho first; but a few days will put an end to tho conflict.? Oliver Wendel . Uolnue. IlArrY Rejoinder.?At Oxford, some I twenty years ago a tutor, of one of the ! colleges limped in his walk. Stopping ono day last summer at a railway station, he was accosted by a well known politi? cian, who recognized him, and asked him if ho was not tho chaplain of tho college i at such a time naming the year. Tho Doctor replied that ho was. "I was there," said tho interrogator, "and knew you by your limp." "Well," said the doctor, "it seems my limping made a deeper impression than my proachin/-.'' 'Ah, doctor,'' was the reply with ready wit, "it is tho highest compliment we can pay a minister, to say that he is known by his walk rather than by hia conversation." ? A member of a fashionable church in New York electrified a music dealer the other day b}' inquiring for 'Solomon's Songs.' His rector had spoken of it as a production of great genius and beauty, and he wanted his daughter to learn it. ? What is tho diflerenco between the Prince of Wales, a bald-headed man, an orphan or a gorilla? Tho Prince is an heir apparent, tho bald man has no hair apparent, tho orphan has nary parent, and the gorilla has a hair}7 parent. ? This is tho way they libel honest folks out West: "A littlo boy who was asked if ho knew whero liars went, an Bwcred yea?they wont to New York to. write for tho papers." ? It is a curious fact in tho grammar of politics that, when statcs?ncn get into place thoy ofton become oblivious of their antecedents, but aro Boldom forgetful of their relatives. ? Mariying a woman for her beauty is like eating a bird for its sweet Ringing. Tue Power of Music.?Thalberg, on a trip to Niagara, shortly after his arrival in this country stopped at a temperance house in Albany, and upon demanding some champagne, what was- his astonish? ment on seeing the round eyes of an Irish wai'.er open in astonishment. "I want some champagne," wildly re^ iterated the great instrumentalist. "Faith ! and it is champagne you are aflhcr asking for ?" stammered forth the Hibernian. "Cortainly I" "By my sowl then, ye ean't have it." "And why?" inquired Thalberg, in much astonishment. "The likesof it, including whisky punch, is not to be had in this hotel." For a moment the thhsty musician was aghast. "What can I have, then ?" "Wathor, tay and coffee." "Go and send mc the proprietor," said Thalberg; "I will speak with him." "Ye may speak till the day of doom, but yo'll find it of no use," was Pat's mut? tered observation, as lie quitted the room. In a few minutes the landlord entered the apartment. His lips were closely set together, and a frown was on his brow. He was evidently astonished that tho foreigner should persist in his wish to contravene the rules of the establish? ment. Meanwhile, Thalbcrg had occu? pied himself in opening a piano that stood in the room. It was not of the newest class, but was tolerably in tune. As the proprietor of the temperance hotel enter? ed he began to play. First tho frown gradually vanished from tho brow of the landlord?then his lips unclosed, and finally relaxed into a smile. When the artist had concluded, he waited for a word, but none came. Without turningaround, "The man is obstinate, I must try him with something else." He accordingly began his "Tarantella." Ere it was half finished he heard the rattling of bottles and glasses on the tables, and wheeled round. Pat had entered the apartment with bottles of champagne. "I thought it was not allowed," said Thalberg. "Faith ! and ho'll give ye a dozen, if ye like it. Ho says a man who can knock music out of a piano in yerway, may get dhrunk every night if he chooses to. So there it is for }'e." ? A man, whose wife hung herself in his presence, on being askod why bo did not prevent the tragedy, replied : "I cut her down three times last week, and I can't be always cutting her down." ? "The blessed man that preached for us last Sunday," said Mrs. Partington, "served the Lord for thirty years?first as a circus rider, then as a locust preach? er, and last as an exhauster." ? In Indiana a local paper attributes a scarcity of small change to its boing sent to the heathen through church col? lections. ? Every young couple who desire to make a good start in lite must keep two bears in the house, and feed them well? boar and forbear. ? A man in Manchester has got so deep into debt Lhat not one of his credi? tors has been able to see him for months. ? How poor were our first parents, when they ate themselves out of house and homo by devouring an apple? ? Trust him liltlo who praises ail ; him less who censures all; and him leaat who is indifferent about all. Schedule on Slue Ridge Railroad. ON nnd after Saturday, the 5ih instant, the Trains on this Road will run every day, Sunday's excepted, connecting with the Greenville and Co? lumbia Railroad at Anderson: Up Trais.?Leave Anderson 5.20 o'clock p.m.; leave Pendicton 0.20 p. m. Down Train.?Leave Walhalla, 4 o'clock a. m.; leave Pendleton, 6.40 a m. Up Train.?Arrive at Pendicton, 6.20 p. m.; arrive at Walhalla, 8 o'clock p. ni. Down Train.?Arrive at Anderson, 6.40 a.m. Waiting one hour after usual time for arrival of the G. & C. train. An accommodation train will leave Anderson on Mondays and Fridays: Up Train.?Leave Anderson at 7.30 a.m.; leave Pendleton, 8.20; leave Perryville, 9.10; arrive at Walhalla, 10. Down Train.?Leave Walhalla on Mondays at 11 a.m.; and en Fridays at 1.30 p.m. W. II. D. GAILLARD, Sup't, June 3, I860 49 CONTINENTAL HOTEL, Laurens C. H., S. C. THE subscriber lakes pleasure in announcing to his friends and public generally, that he has opened a Public Mouse in the building known as the Smith Building. Having repaired, refitted nnd furnished the House anew, the subscriber feels confident that he is prepared to give satisfaction to all who may favor him with their patronage. The Table will at all limes be supplied with the very best the market affords, and attentive ser? vants will be in readiness to serve all guests. In connection with the Htt.-lwill be found a first class Sample Room, where all the favorite brands of Ales, Wuxes, Liquors, Cigars, &c, may be found. The patronage of the public respectfully solici? ted. J. Y. II. WILLIAMS. July 8,1809 2 3m* Tutt's Vegetable Liver P?ls ! For Liver Complaint, Billiousncss, &c. Tutt's Sarsaparilla and Queen's Delight, For purifying the blood. Tutt's Expectorant, For Cough's, Cold's, Consumption, &c, &c. Tutt's Improved Hair Dye, The best in the world, Arc for sale in Anderson by Walters & Baker, Druggists, and Druggists and Merchants generally throughout the United States. July 29, 18?9 5 ]y GUXSMITHOG! THE undersigned informs his friends and tho public generally lhat he is prepared to do nil kinds of Repairing of Guns, Pistols, &c, on the shortest notice and in the "ery best manner. He will bo found at No. 2 Granite Row, up stairs, front, room over M. Lessor's Store, where he will be pleased to receive the orders of those needing work in his lino. My terms aro CASH on delive? ry of the work, and I will make no exceptions. B. F. WILSON, Gunsmith. July 1, 1869 1 3m LAST NOTICE., ALL persons indebted to Bcwlcy, Keese & Cn. on open account arc requested to come forward and settle the snmc.hy Note or Cash, on or before the 1st of October, after which time the Books will be placed in the hands of an officer for settle? ment. REUSE & McCULLY, Survivors. August 2?, I860 3 6 Charleston Advertisements. PUN'S HEPATIC BITTERS. THEY CURE DYSPEPSIA, and all diseases or ins STOMACH AND LIVER. t?iy are recommended bt tub medical PAOU1TY. HEGEMAN & CO., AGENTS, NEW TORE. - Mannfactnred by C. F. PANKUIN, CHZUZST AOT APQTHZCAB7, CHARLESTON, S. C M&~For Sale by Druggists Everyic}iere.~&> Feb 25, 1869 35 , ly J. N. KOBSON, Commission Merc Haut, Nos. 1 & 2 Atlantic Wharf, CHARLESTON, S. C. HAVING ample means for advances, a business experience of twenty years, and confining himself strictly to a Commission Business, without opera? ting on his own account, respectfully solicits con? signments of Cotton, Flour, Wheat, Corn, &c. Shippers of Produce to bim may, at their option, have their consignments sold either in Charleston or New York ; thus having the advantage of two markets, without extra commission. befebences. Bishop W H Wigbtman, SC; Col Wm John? ston, Charlotte, N C; Rev T 0 Sommers, Tenn; Hon John King, Augusta, Ga; Messrs George W Williams & Co, Charleston; Messrs Williams. Taylor 6s Co, New York. April 29, 18G9 44 ly HAVING the largest and most complete Facto? ry in the Southern State3, and keeping always on hand a large and most complete stock of DOORS, SASHES, BLINDS, Sash Doors, Store Doors, Shutters, Mouldings, &c, &c, I am enabled to sell low and at Manufacturers' prices. N. B.?Strict attention paid to shipping in good order. July 22, 1GG9 4 9m COTTON TIES. BEARD'S PATENT LOCK TIES, unsurpassod by any Tie yet manufactured. For neatness, strength and durability this Tie has no equal. Having sold them for the last three years, we can cordially recommend them to all planters as the article they want. For sale bv GEO. W. WILLIAMS & CO., Factors, Charleston, S. C. August 19, 1869 8 3m ?ulietfs Steel Brush Cotton Gins. Hall's Patent Cotton Gin Feeder. S&" Send for circular. C. GRAVELEY, Agent for the State, 52 East Bay, South of old Post Office, Charleston, S. C. SULLIVAN, MATTISON & CO., Sub Agents, Anderson C. H. August 19, 18G9 8 8m Columbia Advertisements. CITIZEN'S SAYINGS BANK, of SOUTH CAROLINA. ' AUTHORIZED CAPITAL-$GOO,000. INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS ! Deposits of $1 and Upwards Received. -o MECHANICS, Laborers, Clerks, Planters, Pro? fessional Men and Trustees can deposit their Funds and receive ic erest compounded every six months. officers : Gen. WADE HAMPTON, President. Coi.. J. B. PALMER, Vice President. THOMAS E. GREGG, Cashier. J, C. B. SMITH, Assistant Cashier. Persons at a distance may send money by Ex? press or Exchange. April 1,18G9 40 ly WIDOWS AND OKPHANS Benefit Life Insurance Company, Of ISew Yoi-lc. ALL THE PROFITS TO POLICY HOLDERS. No Restriction upon Travel or Residence. POLICIES issued upon all modern and ap? proved plans of insurance, including children's endowments. Dividends annually to Policy holders. GREGG, PALMER & CO.. General Agents for South Carolina. WM. LEE, Special Agent, Anderson C. II., S. C. Dr. T. A. EVTNS, Medical Examiner April 1, 18G9 40 ly Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York. The Largest in the World ASSETS OVER THIRTY MILLIONS. Policies Self-Sustaining: in Thirteen Years. All Profits Paid to Policy Holders^ DIVIDENDS PAID ANNUALLY. GREGG, PALMER & CO., General Agents for South Carolina. WM. LEE. Specijil Agent, AjidersoaC. B., S: Dr. T. A. EY1NS, Medical Examiner. April 1, 18G9 40 ly IICKEKSON HOUSE, Columbia, C, THE undersigned having renewed his lease up? on the above popular House, will endeavor to make it one of the most ngrccabto Hotels in the South. A call from the public is respectfully so? licited. Bigy Free Omnibus to and from the Hotel. WM. A. WRIGHT, Proprietor. July 15, 18G9 3 3in Walters & Baker's Column. DRUGS! DRUGS I WALTERS & BAKER, WHOLESALE AJiD RETAIL DRUGGISTS, At ike Sign of the Golden Mortar. North Side Public Square, Anderson, S. ft, WHERE customers will find an ASSORTMENT of GENUINE ARTICLES, unequalled by any interior Drug House in the State. PATENT MEDICINES I Such as? Hostetter's Bitters, Fanknin'8 Hepati? Bitters, Southern Bittersy Old Carolina Bitters, Hooffland's German Bitters', Wolfe's genuine Schnapps, All of Dr. Ayer's Preparations, Tarrant's Aperient, Citrate Magnesia, Hegeman's Elixir of Bark and Iron, Brown's Ess. Jamaica Ginger, Cooking Extracts, large quantities, Dr. Hurley's Preparations, Dr. Badway's Preparations, All of Jayne's Medicines, San ford's Liver Invigorator, Heinitsh's Queen's Delight, Stafford's Olive Tar, Eureka Cul, Rowan's Tonic Mixture, Darby's Prophylactic Fluid. Hygienic Wine, for delicate females, And many other articles which we propose to sell at proprietors' prices. Call on WALTERS & BAKER, Druggists. FANCY GOODS, Of Every Style and Quality. WE quote a few? Burnett's Cocaine, Lyon's Kathairon, Barry's Tricopherus, ReeTe's Ambrosia, Sterling's Ambrosia, Leon's Electric Hair Renewer, Chevalier's Life for the Hair, Hall's Hair Renewer, Bay Rum, in bottles or by the gallon, Soaps of every description, A handsome stock of Gents' Pocket Flasks, Tooth Brushes, Nail Brushes, Hair Brushes. Shaving Brushes, Ladies' fine Puff Boxes, A large stock Toilet Powders, Toilet Setts* Pocket, Coarse and Fine Combs, Cork Screws, Lead Pencils, Cologne, in great variety. And many other articles of the same class, for sale at short profit j by WALTERS & BAKER, Druggists. OILS, OILS! Including varieties of the following? Linseed, Train, Strait's Tanners, Machine, Vacuum Oil for leather and harness, rendering: the same entirely water-proof,, Best 110 degrees Kerosine Oil, Oil Spike, Oil Castor, by the bottle or gallon,. Sweet Oil, Salad Oil, Spls. Turpentine, &c., Cheap by WALTERS & BAKER, Druggist*. VARNISHES! CONSTANTLY on hand?No. 1 Coach Body, Imperial Wearing Body, No. 1 Polishing Furni? ture, No. 1 Oopal, Extra White Damar, Black As phaltum and Black Leather Varnishes, low for cash by WALTERS & BAKER, Druggists. PAINTS, COLORS, &C. J>ry ftanct in OU? WHITE LEAD, assorted, fron? 1 i? 23 poua? cans, Drop Black, Lamp Blaek, Chinese. Blue,. Prussian Blue, Ultramarine Blue. Spanish Brown, Vandyke Brown, Chrome G*ecn, Paris Gieen, Ver^ digr"is, Red Lead, Venetian Red?. .Vermelionfc Chrome Yellow. Yellow Ochre,. Whito Zinc, Raw Sienna, Burnt Sienna, Raw Umber, Burnt Umber? &c. kept always on hand by. WALTERS & BAKER, Druggist*. Lamps and Lamp Goods! A FULL stock of Lamps, Lamp Wicks, &c.? with all the late styles of fixtures, which enables* us at a very short notice to uake a new lamp out of an old one. Don't forget the place. WALTERS & BAKER, Druggists. SUMMER BEVERAGES t INCLUDING Soda Winter? Ooiierress Water, Cfttrate Magrnesia.&cv OUR Soda Water we guarantee to bb up to the. best, manufactured, well iced, at the uniform price, of Five Cents per glass. Call in and cool off WALTERS & BAKER May 20,1869 ? ??W*t*.