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FULL UP! Floor to Ceiling with a line of Bran New Goods at BROWNLEE & VANDIVERS. f UR Stori. of DEY GOODS* SHOES, HATS, Etc., were carefully selected bought low, and we have marked them Jown at such very low prices tha: no one ord to buy before seeing us. ' Come. aiidBee our GREAT BARGAINS in Shoes, Hate and Jeans. ;V,Our. Grocery Department is complete, and we are still making great drives on ? WR, COFFEE and TOBACCO. ~ Come and see us. BROWNLEE & VANDIVERS. ?: -TP., 8.?We also carry a big stock of BAGGING and T fE3. NEW DEPARTURE f.E erenow adding to our LARGE IINEof Men and Boy Shoes a com e and attractive Stock of? Ladies, Misses and Children's Shoes. OUR MOTTO : E BEST GOODS FOB THE LEAST MONEY. -In order to keep our Stock clean and ne w we are selling all Shoes that have been flouie for twelve months at? ?tai NEW YORK COST ! Give our Stock an inspection before bu;ring?IT MEANS MONEY TO YOU. VTe areatill offering BIG CUTS In all SUMMER CLOTHING. TAYLOR & CRAYTON. ? FRESH ? TURNIP SEED ! E offcir our usual Premium of FIVE DOLLARS for tbe Largest Turnip Raised from our Seed. Turnips to be brought to our Store and weighed on or before ^NOVEMBER 15th. ? ? ?y\ . Rnmember, wo always keep a Cooler full of Ice Water for our friends, and they ?a? welcome to all they want. ir: I osja & sloait. It* V Wo still keep the Parlor Matches at 5c. per dozen Boxes. VAN WINKLE KlN AND MACHINERY COMPANY, ATLANTA, OA. ? MA.1STIJFA.OTUIIEB8.? Cotton Seed Oil Nil! Macihnery complete. Fertilizer Machinery complete. Ice Machinery complete. Cypress Tanks, Wind Mills, Pumps, E ;c. Cotton Gins, Feeders, Condensers, and. Presses. UT*HEJbe*t?sy8tem for Elevating Cotton and distributing fsme direct to Gins. Many v^T; goldimedals have been awarded to us. Wiite for Catalogue and for what you WANT. WecadSAVE YOU MONEY. VAN WINKLE GIN AND MACHINERY CO., Atlanta, 6a. . May 31.1893 S 48 , 4m f^gWii^ store! JOHN M. HUBBARD, m HIS NEW STORE.. -.>. .\H HOTEL BLOCK. LOTS OF IfEW GOODS. NOVELTIES IN PROFUSlONr JUST WHAT YOU WANT, lc. TO $100.00. ?SB* No Charge for Engraving. JHS* The Prettiest Goods in the Town, and it's a pleasure to show them. P. S.?If you have Accounts with J. M. HUBBARD & BRO. make settlement with me at above place. JOHN M. HUBBARD. ? jj t ? cutting high stubble. ? Next to F&rmres and Merchants Bank. WILL. R. HUBBARD, JEWELLER. -/ ? " Xp you want to sea the LARGEST STOCK and the BRIGHTEST PLACE in Town just drop In and see WILL. HUBBARD'S JEWELRY STORE 1 SOUVENIR SPOONS, LQVE CHAINS. DIAMONDS, GOLD and SILVER WATCHES, SILVERWARE anD NOVELTIES. 'ffi-;,;-?&; It will pay you to give me a call before buying. I don't sell at Cost* nor [ tihrbw in a Chromo, but make a living profit on every article. $?&~ Correct representation. Polite attention aud promptness. WILL. R. HUBBARD, Next to Farmers and Merchants Bank. FURNITURE at A-nsria prices ie Greatest Bargains in Fnrniture ever offered in South Carolina are offered at 1F. TOLLY & SON'S, depot street. ?.. . ? ? . v They have the Largest, Cheapest and Best Selected Stock in bhe State? and challenge any Furniture House in the State for a comparison of prices. ?|? WALNUT and OAK SUITS cheaper than they can he bought from any Factory. BUREAUS at prices unheard of before. PARLOR SUITS cheaper than any. AND EVERYTHING in the Furniture line. tts"f* Come sad see for yourselves and be convinced that what we say is true ?gT Come and look at our Stock, whether you want to buy or not. We wil) plsated to show you around. Caskets and Coffins furnished Day or Night. G. F. 'TOLLY & SON, Depot Street. Anderson. S. C. Jas. H. Carlisle, L. LB.,Pres. Two Full Course's. Necewiarv ejenensps for ntif yenr, Om* j ITnn<lred r k! Fifty Dolhtrs. For Catalogue, address J. A. O?MKWKLL, Secretary of Faculty. AFRAID TO GIN. Mississippi Planters Awake to Find Noti? ces Pabted on Their Doors. j Atlanta Constitution. Braitoon, Miss., Sept. 23.?The white cappers in eastern Mississippi and in western Alabama, have posted notices on the doors of every ginhouse that if a [ bale of cotton is. ginned before the price shall have reached 10 conts, that they, the pinners, will do so at the peril of having their property burned. In a section of country within a radius of a hundred miles of Brandon, it is esti? mated that there are nearly 1,000 gins, averaging an output of five bales each for seventy days in the year. There are not fifty of these gins now in operation. There have not been a hundred bales of cotton received at the railroads in east? ern Mississippi this season, and it is safe I to say that unless absolute protection is I assured the ginners by the officers of the i law, that none of them will steam up for [ some weeks to come. Mr. S. D. Hale, living in the southern part of this, Rankin county, received a notice two weeks ago to close down his gin. He paid no attention to the order, and last Sunday night his ginhonse was fired and burned dowu. There aro over a hundred gins in this county, each one of them having piles of seed cotton ready for the gin, but it will not be touched until the orders of the whiteoappers are revoked. The merchants are completely demoralized. Insurance companies are withdrawing their policies and this sec? tion is terror strioken. Judge Meyers, the criminal judge of this district,* in delivering his charge to the grand jury at Forest last Monday advised the people to shoot down any man prowling around their prem ises who could not give a good account of himself, and promised the people absolute im? munity from the law. The cotton fields are alive with pickers, and if the good, weather now prevailing should continue for a month longer, the crop will be gathered ; but when it will find its way to the market, is bard to even conjecture. Mississippi is distinctively an agricul? tural State. Beyond her wealth is tim? ber, much of which is unavailable ander existing circumstances, she has practi? cally no other resources than the cultiva? tion of the soil. Along the line of the Illinois Central railroad, fruit growing and truck farming have become a considerable and fairly profitable industry; but cotton is the money crop of tho great majority of the people. Cotton Is popularly associated in other sections of the country with, visions of big plantations, but in reality, a very large part of this crop is grown on farms which would be regarded as small even in New England. The planters of this State do not constitute a numerous class. They cultivate the rich alluvial lands of the Mississippi, Big Black, the Yazoo and the Sunflower, where they maintain a more or less amphibious ex? istence and are annually menaced with inundation and other ruin. They live in the "black" counties so called, because of the preponderance of the negro popu? lation, attracted thither by the prospects of high wages. But a vast deal of cotton is raised in the bill counties of central Mississippi on farms which produce from'one to ten bales. The cotton is planted in the early Spring. The bar vesting or picking and ginning begins by mid-snmmer and is continued sometimes as late as Christmas. Meanwhile, the farmer 1b dependent upon his merchant for supplies. The planter deals directly with a commission /merchant in New Orleans. He is supplied by a merchant who does business in some neighboring town, and who makes the necessary ad? vances secured by a deed of trust on the poor man's crop, stock and other prop? erty. In good times, that is to say, when prices rule nigh enough to cover more than the cost of production, the merchant is paid and there is a little something left to buy the womenfolk new calicoes and ribbon, and Sunday suits for the old man and bis boys. Otherwise, our horny-banded yeomanry have to face an outlook in which scarcely any element of despair is omitted. They have just now reached, very nearly, that gloomy end and a year's toil, privation tmd anxie? ty. The crop, so far as quantity is con- ! cerned, averages well enough, but prices are low and there is only a faint hope that they will rise to a much higher figure. A.situation like this involves political as well as material consequeuces. Men who live lives of unremitting hardship, and whose ways and meaus of living, such as they are, threaten to disappear altogether, are disposed to lay their trou bles at the door of some sinister influ? ence. They do not regard their condition as a natural one, nor do they believe that their lot would be so hard under a gov? ernment directed for the common people. The small farmers of Mississippi are not socialists in the ordinary sense. They are not conversant with socialistic litera? ture or journalism. They have as yet a strong sense of propriety, and, as the Ebrase goes, of the rights of property, at on the other hand, they believe that the government ought to take some part in the control of business in the interest of the masses. They suspect that the laws of the land are designed and administered in order to make the rich richer and the poor poorer and they are jealous ot all the seemingly more prosperous classes. The merchant and the professional man is tabooed by the Farmers' Alliance. At any cross roads store groups of men may be found at almost any time talking about the courthouse ring as of a conspiracy against the agrcultural classes. These grievan? ces and prejudices have given some strength to the populist movement and in a possible conjuncture of circumstan? ces might give it more. It is not unreasonable to expect that men holding these views and cherishing thcsoJ>e*lings would approve the notori? ous subtreasury scheme. Many of them did accord it a hearty support, but there is after all an invincible grain of conser? vatism in the southern character and after a prolonged discussion of the whole question on the stump in every quarter of the State, it was repudiated by a heavy majority. Still there is a painful degree of unrest in the minds of all the classes in regard to the financial situation. There is very little money in Mississippi, and in consequence of this fact there is comparatively little stimulus for now enterprises which might furnish work and wages for the unemployed. At this moment there is uneasiness that the movement of the cotton crop may be long delayed through a scarcity of Tunds. For this reason the people of Mississippi favor the free coinage of silver, or the people would favor any other scheme that would tend to increase the volume of ourrenoy actually in use. Should Congress adjourn without taking some perceptible step iu this direction their allegiance to the democratic party will be sorely tried, but would probably re? main alter all unshaken. The democrat? ic party bas never been a mere make? shift to the southern people, least of all to the people of Mississippi. It has stood between them and anarchism on the one hand and despotism on the other. They have, moreover, a feeling that they have nothing else to turn to. Therefore it is that, while Mississippi democrats grum? ble and groan from year to year, they come up with the ticket in their hands on every election day. But beyond the considerations already mentioned there is a growing conviction in the minds of the more thoughtful that it would be dangerous to the peaco of society to en? courage those third party movements (the republican party is simply out of the question) which appeal of agrarian ism and encourage the spirit of revolt against law and order. Close observers trace the origin of wbitecapism in this State to wild talk on the stump and to local journals in regard to the despotism maintained by the moneyed class and property holders generally. In some of the poorer and more ignorant counties in this State, as in Alabama, men have come to cherish a feeling of bitter enmity against their neighbors whose thrift has surrounded them with some evidoncesof prosperity. They have placed all tho well-to-do, all the comfortable under a common ban, and thoy have tried with all the sophistry of passion and prejudice to convince themselves that they were justifiable ia making ruthless war upon them. In every county in southeast Missis? sippi there are well organized and equip? ped whitecap bands. Neilher lifo nor property is safe in such neighborhoods. It is estimated that there has been no less than a hundred cold-bloodod assassi? nations committed in this State, directed by the whitecaps, within tho last twelve months. The criminal court calendars are crowded with cases, but a conviction is rare for the reason that there can be no witnosses found who-will testify against them. They havo forced all neighbors not in harmony with thorn to move out under the ponalty of (loath, and when a negro happens to incur their en? mity nothing short of death will satisfy thorn. Officers of tho law are poworloss. Tho jinlccs upon the bench aro compelled to have protection while engaged in tho hearing of other cases not iu connection with the whileeaps, for there is no toll? ing when -who of them might make an attack hi ??" !lio court itself. It was done two (UuplhN ago at Brookbayeu, iu the southern part of the State. Judge Chris man was presiding and it was his cool? ness that prevented a horrible mas? sacre, for- the whitecaps, one hun? dred in nucaber, went there for that pur? pose. The insurance companies are uot tak? ing any gin risks and the ginners are afraid to attempt to do any work under the circumstances. It is, therefore, safe to assort that it will be late n the season before the Mississippi ciop is marketed. Meantime the city merchants are crowding the country merchants and the result will be that there will be many suspensions in western Mississippi and eastern Alabama before the Christmas holidays. ? The name of the White House baby is Esther. ? Since 1SG6 the express companies of the county have lost over $2,500,000 by train robberies. The Government will have to stamp out this crimsor the rob? bers will soon have the railways practi? cally under their control. ? The Chicago Tribune, of September 3, has the following advertisement: "Personal Notice?Havine entertained all known relatives for World's Fair, relatives in future must he identified. Foreign papers please copy. Mr. and Mrs. S. W. McC. ? At Attalla, Ala., as Joe Moragne prepared to get in bed on one side a largo black snaka, a yard long, crawled off the other side. He succeeded in killing it, but excused himself from sleeping in that bed and also in that room that night. ? A single cj'linder portable steam engine is how manufactured which is fitted with a straw-burning apparatus. This engine should be found especially valuable in districts where straw, reeds, maize, cotton stalks and other vegetable products (ire abundant and cheap and wood orconlcan only be procured at very high priceiii. ? Two little girls, Gertrude and Ethel Hedger, who are wards iu chancery and heiresses to ?100,000 each, wero recently arraigned us vagrants in a London Police Court. Their fortunes are so securely locked up in chancery that by no pro? cess of law can any of the money be ob? tained un.il the children are of age. They are a t present practically destitute and unablo to procure decent surround? ings, clothing or education. ? Chattanooga Times: It is now a sure passport to mob vengeance to be suspected of rape in South Carolina; the white people of Jefferson parish, Louis? iana, hang the brothers and kick into eternity a cousin of the man charged with murder, simply because of the re? lationship. Meantime, bands of lawless scoundrels and lunatics terrorize half the cotton growers and owners of ginning plants in a great State, by notifying tbem they must not on pain of being burned oat, prepare any cotton for mar? ket until it shall bring ten cents a pound. ? One of the funny things connected with the recent floods on. the sea islands of South Carolina, was the response of | some benevolent New Yorkers to the appeal for clothing for the destitute negroes. These kind-hearted members of the 400 sent Paris mude dresses, cos? tumes from Moscovitz and Rodfem, suits from Fifth Avenue tailors, and patent leather shoes. The sea Island negroes dressed in the cast off finery of ] New York upper-tendom would be a spectacle for gods and men.?Springfield Republican, ? An extraordinary scene was wit? nessed in New York on Tuesday night in the desecration of the feast of Yom Kippur by the Anarchists, many of whom were Jews. While the hard? working Hebrews of the east side put away earthly things and prepared them? selves for the solemn hours of purification the Anarchistic four hundred straggled in squads to Clarendon Hall to dnnce in the Bay of Atonement. All night long the furious dance of the "reds" wore kept up, varied with bursts of wild laughter and curses at religion. The Ruler of the universe came in for his share of the Anarchistic ribaldry, and men with matted beards shouted their bold exploits to frowsy partners in soiled whhe dresses. ?*? No man's work is afailure unless he himself id a failure. ? A good German brother in one of the Chicago churches gives ten per cent, of his income for_ religious and benevolent purposes. One morning, after the close of the business year, he said in class-meeting: "I haf been settling up my acconnts for de year, and I thought I would see how it was between me and de Lord, and I found I was two hundred and eighty two dollars ahead." And he was very happy to discover that ho had given that much more than he had promised to give. ? Of the 14 huge masses of meteor? ic iron which fell on a spot less than 64 square miles in area near Fort Duncan, Mexico, the largest is bee? hive shaped and is buried five feet in the soil and rises four feet above the surface. The second mass in point of size has been moved to the Nation? al Museum at Washington. It weighs over 4,000 pounds. The other 12 pieces weigh from 97J- to 650 pounds. The whole mass of fragments as men? tioned above are scattered over an area of 64 square miles, with Fort Duncan at about the center of the point of dispersion. i ? In different times and in differ? ent countries there have been at least four separate- systems of regulating the civil day. The ancient Babyloni? ans reckoned from sunrise to sunrise, and a great division of the Persians even to this day reckon the day as beginning at noon. The Romans fin? ished one day and commenced another at midnight, and it is from them that we have inherited our -time-reckoning custom. The Athenians and the Jews (just prior to the crucifixion, at least,) finished the day with sunset. The scientists have their "sidreal" and solar, modes of keeping track of the flight of time, besides a variety of other systems. The Same Old Story. Prosperity, Sept. 24.?A painful and most probable fatal accident oc? curred near here 3'cstcrday. It is the old story of the unloaded pistol. The children of Mr. J. A. Baker were playing in the cotton field near where some negroes were picking cot? ton, and found a pistol which had been left or lost on the ground by one of the negroes. The children began play? ing with t|ie pistol, revolving and snapping it. They finally went to the house, taking their pistol with them, and still toying with it after they got into the house, and while in the pres? ence of the family and after continu? ous revolving and snapping, one cham? ber was discharged, the ball entering the head above the left car of a little five-year-old sister. The ball ranged upward, penetrating the brain. Drs. Langford and Julian were call? ed to attend the little sufferer. They found the ball lodged between the two tables of the skull, from where they extracted it. The pistol was in the hands of a fourteen-year-old brother when discharged. Upon examination it was found that one chamber was loaded when found. The little girl is in a critical condition, and will proba? bly die. LESSENS PAIN?INSURES SAFETY fa LIFE of MOTHER and CHILD. My wife, after having used Mother's Friend, passed through tho ordeal with little pain, was stronger in one hour than in a week after tho birth of her former child. J. J. MctJoLDRiCiT, Bcaus Sta., Tcnn. Mother's Friend robbed ptfn ?E its terror nn?l shortened labor. 1 Iku'u t;:o healthiest child lever on u*. Urs. L. At. Amuur, Cocbran, Ga. Pent bvcxprePR, ciihrge/iprcpnhl, ?n receipt of nrico,$1 .CO per bottle. ]*wk '.'To iloUiow' mailed free. j BRROFIELO REGULATOR co., For5alebyalll)ruggi8V;C ?tla?ta,.Ga. In the Oil Country. Probably few of the many to whom kerosene .is a household necessity have ever given a thought to its origin, and fewer still have ever seen the process by which petroleum is extracted from the ground and sent to the large re? fineries, there to be converted by re? fining and distillation into the many products which give to it such vast commercial importance. Petroleum has been found in many localities, both in this and other countries, and owing to the ingenuity and enterprise of the Standard Oil Company, which practically controls the industry, its development has attained a higher de? gree of perfection in the United States than elsewhere. As is well known, the most productive of nil fields, so far developed, is that lying in Western New York, Pennsylvania, and Eastern Ohio, while within the last few years the West Virginia field has attained considerable prominence, and bids fair to rival the old fields, both in produc? tiveness and in the quality of its oil. The oil field, or belt, as it is tech? nically called, of West Virginia, if plotted upon a map, would much re? semble a river, varying, as it does, in width from half a mile to three miles, but subject to bends and turns either to the East or West. It begins at the Pennsylvania State line in Green County, and runs thence Southwest? erly through the State of West Vir? ginia to the Ohio lliver. The oil is contained in the porous sandstone? locally known as the Big Injun Sand? which is regarded by geologists as the lowest number of the carboniferous series, and lies at an average depth in the valleys of about two thousand feet below the surface, or from eleven hundred to twelve hundred feet below sea level. As there is little or noth? ing of surface iudication to guide the oil operator in tracing the belt, the services of eminent geologists have from time to time been employed to aid in the search ; and to Prof. I. C. White, of the United States Geologi? cal Survey, belongs the credit of be? ing the first to enunciate and put in practical use what is known as the anticlinal theory of petroleum depos? its, and by its means to open up a territory which has proved to be most productive. The sight presented by an oil field, if viewed for the first time at night, is a strange and weird one. Standing upon the top of any of the high hills in the oil region of West Virginia, as far as the eye can reach the country is dotted by the burning natural gas used at the wells for heating and lighting purposes, and through the stilluess of the thinly inhabited hills comes the roar of the gas and the clank of the machinery which tells where men are busy night and day forcing their huge steel drills hundreds of feet down into the solid rock in search of the dirty, amber-colored fluid which has brought fortune to so many of its seekers. But it is daylight when, robbed of the poetry given by dark? ness, we can see the reality and nature of the work. The process of drilling an oil well, while simple, is one that requires long experience and the greatest care.? When the location of the proposed well has been determined upon, a der? rick some ninety feet high is erected on the spot, and adjoining it a shed containing the engine which is to fur? nish the necessary power. The first operation is that of "spudding in," as it isc ailed, which means boring a hole to solid rock, and some distance into it; but as the hole is but a few feet in depth, the operation need not be described. After the hole has been bored to solid rock a wooden lining, called a conductor, is inserted, and the real operation of drilling begins. The drill itself is an enormous affair of solid steel weighing hundreds of pounds, and drills a hole thirteen inches in diameter. It is attached to a long, heavy steel bar some thirty feet long and six inches in diameter, to give it weight, aud the whole is attached to a huge cable or rope, which runs through a pulley at the top of the derrick, and, returning, is wound around a shaft, by revolving which the rope can be coiled or uncoiled, thus raising or lowering the "string of tools," as the drill and bar are term? ed. When the drill is in position at the bottom of the hole, the cable is gripped at the proper height by iron jaws, which in turn are fastened to the end of a huge walking beam, which is run by the machinery, and has the same motion as the beam of our river steamers. The beam, as it rises and falls, gives the churning mo? tion to the drill' and constitutes the act of drilling. When once begun work is incessant and continues night and day. Dull drills have to be brought to the sur? face, unscrewed from the stem, a sharp one put on and lowered, and the dulled one heated and sharpened, or "dressed," as it is called, with a heavy sledge. This thirteen-inch hole is carried down to what is known as the Pittsburg coal?a coal scam found at a greater or less depth, just as the well is in a valley or on a hill, the average depth being perhaps about five hundred feet. The drill is then taken out and the whole lined or "cased" with ten-inch iron pipe, which is screwed tightly together and lowered to the bottom of the hole. This casing prevents the water encoun? tered from running into and filling up the hole. The water and the drillcd material are taken out of the hole from time to time during the process of work by means of a bailer. After the. insertion of this casing a ten-inch ! drill is used, and the hole drilled down through the various strata of limestone, coal and shale to a further depth of about eight hundred feet. This section is in turn cased, and au eight-inch drill used from thence un? til the top of the oil rock is reached. The entire hole is then cased with six and five-eight-inch casing, and the larger casing is withdrawn. From this point downward the drilling is with a yet smaller drill, and is done with great care. The first oil-bearing stratum, or "pay,r as it is termed by the oil men, is usually encountered at a depth of from sixty to seventy feet below the top of the Big Injun; the drilling, however, continues until it passes through the second "pay" at eighty five to one hundred feet, and the third at one hundred and twenty to one hundred and thirty-five feet. This completes the drilling of the well. If oil has been found, together with gas, the well at once begins to flow upward through the casing when the pay streak is pierced by the drill, and frequently with such force as to send the stream of oil to the top of the derrick. If little or no gas is mixed with the oil, the oil will grad? ually rise in the hole, in which case two-*inch iron tubings are inserted, and the well is pumped. If it be a flowing well, connections with a tank are at once made, and the oil led into the tank by iron pipes. When suf? ficient gas is not encountered to cause the oil to flow, a valve is placed at the bottom of the tubing, and wood? en rods screwed together?at the end of which is a working valve?are in? troduced, and pumped out by means of the same machinery with which the well was drilled. When the tanks? two of which with capacity of two hundred and fifty barrels each are us? ually erected at a well?are full, the quantity of oil is gunged by ascertain? ing the depth of the oil in the tank by menus of a gunge pole, a receipt is given for it by the gurtger of the Pipe Line Company to the owner, and it is then run off through iron pipes to the nearest pump station, whcreitisagaii measured, passed through the enor? mous pumps, and started on its long journey to the Atlantic seaboard. Ir very cold weather the oil is Usually steamed while it is in the tank, as it cougcals readily and would be liable the pipes. Great care is also taker to clog to allow the salt water?a little of which is produced by most wells?to settle and be drawn off, as otherwise freezing and a. broken pipe would br. the result. The Pipe Line Company takes all oil produced into its general stock, charging a fixed rate per barrel for its transportation, and also acts as selling agent for the producers. The owners of the land on which the wells arc drilled arc rarely owners of the wells themselves, and generally receive a rental from the oil operator for a lease until the first well is drill? ed, and after that a royalty of about one-eighth the total product. The life of a well, or its period of produc? tion, varies from one to ten or more years, while the production may be anything from one to one thousand barrels per diem. A well, drilled, cased and completed, usually repre? sents an outlay of from ten to thir? teen thousand dollars. The whole industry has so great a proportion of uncertainty in it that, even when using the best judgment, the suc? cess or failure of any well can never be known until its completion. Smothered to Death. Lynch'8, S. C, Sept. 23.?Johnnie* Matthews, son of Mr. Ben. Matthews, while hauling cotton to the gin of Mr. J. C. Lynch, met with a terible death yesterday. The young fellow was hauling heavy load of cotton and came to a place in the road where there is a steep hill with one side much higher than the other. The wagon over? turned going down this hill and it and all the cotton covered the boy. Two gentlemen were riding just behind him and immediately commenced to get the wagon and cotton off, but when they had succeeded they found that the young fellow was dead, having been smothered to death. Trial Justice Brown held an inquest and a verdict in accordance with the above facts was rendered. Young Matthews was only thirteen years old and his death caused a profound seu sation in the neighborhood. ? Missouri leads the world in lead production. ? He whp is not sometimes a fool is always one. ? If you are a gentleman you will never find it necessary to say so. ? When courtesy is set higher than integrity, reconstruction is necessary. ? When a man has a stitch in his back, it makes him feel sort of sew sew. ? California is the twenty-first State to extend the school suffrage to women. ? The fattest man ever known was Daniel Lambert, who weighed 739 pounds. ? The czar's throne is said tobe worth four times as much as Queen Victoria's. ? It is estimated that 90,000 piano? fortes are manufactured every year in London. ? "How do you distinguish an old fowl from a young one?" "By the teeth." "Come, no joking! Fowls have no teeth." "But I have." ? Many a bankrupt business man can testify to the impossibility of keeping one's head above water and above whiskey at same time. ? The sacred scriptures teach us the best way of living, the noblest way of suffering, and the most comfortable way of dying. ? Horace Grecly once said that whether woman was equal to man or not depended who the man was and who the woman was. . \ ulcers, sSX cancers, ^t^S scrofula, VsaltRHEUM, V rheumatism, BLQO? poison* there r>r-;l rwcry kindred rlir-caoe arising from i ?! ::r. l.icr>i successfully treated by thai v.r ;r-fa?Llsg r.nd. beet cf all tonics and T?lTl --/.es, Ur.cV.: i-i :.'\ rod .r.-kio v Di.vr -0\ Prl:;lcrl U? V v.-.ni-?J-:?WiJiou "S^t applkT.Uc*:. .'. ;i, "f^^Sh ATLANTA. CA. $ ? compound:; f} A rocont discovery by an old physician. Successfully used monthly by thousands of Lo %dles. Is tho only perfectly sara and reliable medic!no discov? ered. Bcwnroof xinprincipled druggists who offer Inferior modiclnos in plaoe of this. Ask for Cook's Corros ftOOT Costrou.VD, take no substitute, or Inclose 61 and 6 cents In postage In letter, and wo will send, scaled, by return mall. Full sealed particulars in plain envelope, to ladles only, 2 stamps. ^Address ~- , Fond Lily Company. - - ? No. S Fisher illock, Detroit, Mich.".. Sold in Anderson and everywhere by al responsible Druggists. May 10, 18f-3 45 ly NOTICE TO CREDITORS. All perso.is having demands against the Estate of W. F. Cartee, deceased, are hereby notified to present them, properly proven, to the undersigned within the time prescribed by law, and those in? debted to make payment. J. T; CARTEE, Adm'r. _Sept27, 1S93_13_3_ NOTICE FINAL SETTLEMENT. The undersigned, Executors of Estate of Mrs. Nancy Yeargin, deceased, hereby give notice that they will, on the 24th day of October, 1893, apply to the Judge of Probate for Anderson County for a Final Settlement ol said Estate, and a discharge from their office as Executors. T. J. DALRYMPLE. Ex'r. A. A. DALRYMPLE, Ex's. Sept 27, 1893_13_5_ VTOTICE FINAL SETTLEMENT. JJN The undersigned, Administrator of the Estate of Col. D. S. Taylor, deceased, herebv gives notice thai he will, on the 28th day of October, 1893, apply to the Judge of Probate for Anderson County for a Final Settlement of said Estate, and a discharge from his ollicoaa Administrator. E. W. TAYLOR, Adm'r. de bonis non. fippt 27. 1S03_13_5_ ARE YOU GOING TO THE World's7 Fair Chicago ? The L, & N. Offers Choice Several Routes. THREE TRAINS DAILY. LEAVi Atlanta-W. ?fc A.?1000 a. m., 2.15 p. m., 8 20 p. m. Arrive Chicago ti.oS a. ni., 4 30 p. in., 9 30 p. m. Through Cars?Low Rates. Less than 23 hours to Chicago via Nashville. It will pav you to write nie. FRED D. BUSH. D. r. A. L. & N. R. R , 36 Wall Street, Atlauta, Ga. MayllO, 1893_45_5m JOHN K. HOOD, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ANDERSON, - - S. C. FebfUKH 3* 8m rTSICn WE GUARANTEE A CURE | and invite the most 1 careful investigation as to our responMbil- 1 | lty and the merits of our Tablets. "J Doable Chloride of READ OUR j TESTIMONIALS Imijiijuuimiijmhu.i Will completely destroy the desire forTORACCO in from 3 to5 days. Perfectly harm? less; cause no sicknoas, and may bo given in a cup of tea or coffee without the knowl edge of the patient, who will voluntarily stop smoking or chewing in a few days DRDfflEHHESS aM MOHPBIHE HABIT the patient, by the nso of our SPECIAL FORMULA GOLD CURE TABLETS During treatment patients nro allowed the free use of Liquor or Mor? phine until auch timo as tney shall voluntarily {jivo tlicm up. We send particulars and pamphlet of tcatimonials free, and shall bo glad to place sufferers from auy of these habits in cotnmunk tion with persons who have been cured by the use of oar Tablets HILL'H TABLETS arc for sale by all fiest-class -dOTggists at $ 1.00 per package _ Ifyour druggist does not keep them, en closo us $ | ,00 and we will send you, by return mail, a package of our Tablets. Write your namo and address plainly, and stato whether Tablets aro for Tobacco, Morphine or Xiquor Habit. DO NOT BE DECEIVED into purchasing any of the various nostrums that uro being offered for sale. Ask for HILL'S X^A.BLETS and take uo other, Manufactured only by Block LIMA PARTICULARS Testimonials from persons who have been cured by the use of s Tablets? Thf. Ohio Chemical Co.: Dear Siu:?I have been nsing your ire for tobacco habit, and found It would what you claim for it. I used ten cents h of the.strongest chewing tobacco a day, r.r.d lrom one to five cigars; or I would smoke from ton to iorty pipes of tobacco. Have chewed and smoked for twenty-live years, and twopackages of your Tablets cured me so I have no desire for It. Ii. M. JAYLORD, Leslie, Mich. Dobbs Febrt, N. Y. TriE Onto Cir&arrCAl. Co.:?Gentlemen:?Some timo ago I sent for Sl.OU worth of vour Tablets for Tobacco Habit. I received them all right and, although 1 was both aheavy smoker and chewor, thev did the work in less than three days. I am cured. Truly yours, MATILEW JOHNSON,P. 0. Box?. PlTTSB?HGH, PA. The Ohio Chemical Co.:?Gentlemen:?It gives mo pleasure to speak a word of praise for your Tablets. My son was strongly addicted to the usoof liquor, and through a friend j I was led to try your Tablets. Ho was a heavy and constant drinker, but :. fter using yonr Tablets but three days ho quit drinxlng, and will not touch liquor of any kind. I have waited four month before writing the cure was permanent. Yours truly, MRS. HELEN MORRISON. Cincinnati, Ohio. _Onio Chemical Co :-Gextlf.men :?Your Tablets have performed a miracle In my case. have used morphine, hypodermically, for seven years, and have been cured by the use of two packages of your Tablets, and. without any effort on my part. W. L. Lu I?G A Y. Address all Orders to I RESPONSIBLE I {AGENTS WANTED: THE OHIO CHEMICAL CO.. (In writing pteoeo mention this paper.) 131, 53 and 55 Opera Block. LIMA, OHIO. LAND FOR SALE. WE offer for sale at auction to the high? est bidder at Pejzer, S. C, on Tues? day, November 2lst, 1893, at one o'clock, the following Tracts of Land, situated about four miles from Pelzer, in William ston Township, Anderson County, formal? ly belonging to John C. Rodgers, as follows: Tract No. 1, containing 473 acres, more or less. Tract No. 2, containing 413 acres, more or less. Tract No. 3, containing 56i acres, more or less. Tract No. 4, containing 59 3-10 acres, more or less. Tract No. 5, containing 59 8-10 acres, more or less. Plats of these lands can be seen at our office. Terms?One-fourth cash, balance in one. two and three years, secured by bond and mortgage, with interest at eight per cent, payable annually. Purchaser to pay us for papers. Possession given immediately. CHICORA SAVINGS BANK. ELLISON A. SMYTB, Pres., Pelzer, S. C Sept 20, 1893_12_9 Valuable Land for Sale. ONE Tract of Land, in Corner Town? ship, known as the Sam. Sherard place, containing 341 acres. Also, one Tract, known as the old Simpson place, containing 383 acres. A two-story dwell? ing and all necessary outbuildings on botb places. About fifty acres of good bottom on each place. Terms made easv. Apply to 0. C. SIMPSON, Anderson, S. C. Sept 20, 1893 12_3_ Valuable Land for Sale. THE undersigned desires to sell his Plan? tation in Rock Mills Township, con? taining 622 acres. Can be divided into four Tracts, or will sell to suit purchasers. Good improvements, and 60 acies of as good bottom land as any in the County. Terms reasonable and easy. For particu? lars call on T. C. SHEARER. Sept 13, 1893_11_4* LAND FOR SALE. WE have for sale, under the last Will and Testament of Lawson T. Ar? nold, deceased, the Tract of Land known as the Home Place of said Lawson T. Arnold, deceased, near Lowndessville.S.C, containing 2fi2 acres, more or less. For terms and full information apply to B. F. "Wilson, Anderson. S C. B. V. WILSON. Ex'r. GRACE G. COCEiRAN, Ex'x. _Sept 20, 1693_12 ? 3 BELT0N HI?H SCHOOL! FOR BOYS AND GlRLS. npHE next session of Bnlton High School X will commence Monday, Uie4Ui of September. 1893. Pupils prepared for higher classes in College. Tuition from on* lo ihree dollar* a month. Board with Principal $9 OO a month. For particulars apply i" .1. T .SMITH, A. >? Pri:?i:vc-al. Aug 23, WW J<_3m TUE NEW CATALOGL E OF THE Williamston Female College Is a real Gem in Form and Matter. -o EvERYBODY knows the merits of the Institution. Be sure that, your daughteria thereon Wednesday morning, September 13th, the opening of tbe Fall Session. REV. S. LANDER, Provident, Williaoistoii.S, C. Aug 2, 1893 _5_10 0RTMAN PAYS THE EXPRESS. -o-[ Send for Special deductions to my Country Patrons. -o Practical SlCun> l>yvi>?; and i'leHiiiit^ of ?*very ?<?*aU!ri|>tiou, Naptha, Piencti Dry and ''ht^icc*! ' " t-.m sing. WhitiH -.in I Gl< ??. "eM ?vnl fnmi (Jun tlenten'.s C.curing w-.thf>it lijiuy 'u the most delicate la'wic. Ladies' rire*?? dye t wilho it ripping. Price list tuid ein nlars cheerfully fur? nished on application. COLUMBIA STEAM DYS WORKS, 173 "MAIN iSTRPJET, Columbia, S. C. A. L. OPtTMAN, Proprietor. Ang 23, 1893 X 3iu The Most Convenient trunk ever devised. - * T/HE TRAY la arranged to roll back, leav? ing tho bottom of the Trunk easy of ac? cess. Nothing to break or get out of order. The Tray can be lifted out if desired, and to buy this style Is a guarantee that you will get the strongest Trunk made. If your Dealer cannot furnish you, notify tho manufacturers, v h. w. rountree Sl bro., _Richmond, Va._ B0TT0M_PRICES^ Buckeye Milk Churn! On the Concussion principle?a hoy S years old oan churn 8 to 10 gallons easily. Refrigerators, Water Coolers, Fly Fans, Fly Traps, At Cost. MASON'S FRUIT JARS Une quart 8f>c. per dozen, two quarts $1.10 per dozen. Lt H? SEEL. SUMMER SALE; BUY in July. August. September or October. Pay v/hon your cotton is turned into cash. Spot cash prices ! No Interest! Just a little cash down and the balance next No? vember 15th. That's the proposition. That's our spe? cial summer sale. Pianos $25 cash aad balance November 15th, 1893. Organs $10 cash and balance November 15th, 1893. Remember, lowes1; cash rates. No ad? vance- No interest. If you can't come in, talk It over and just drop us a line. JOHN L. EIAYNiE & DAUGHTERS, Greenville, 8. C, a. c. stbickland J. P. ANDERaON Strickland & Anderson, DENTISTS. OFFICE IN MASONIC TEMPLE. #^*One oof the firm will be at their Pendieton ffic? every Wednesday. S3 SHOE NOT Do you wear them 7 When next In need try a pair. Best In the world. MOO, 00 $2.50 $2.00 FOR LADIES $2.00 $1.75 FOR S0Y3 H.75 If you want a fine DRESS SHOE, made In the latest styles, don't pay $6 to $8, try my $3, $3.50, $4.00 or $5 Shoe. They fit equal to custom made and look and wear as well. If you wls h to economlzo In your footwear, do so by purchasing V, L. Douglas Shoes. Name and price stamped on tho bottom, look for It when you buy 17.L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. Sold by C. F. JONES ?fe CO., ANDERSON, S. C. f. e. McKenzie, sons & co., Piedmont, s. c. Wives and Daughters Often lose the benefit of life assurance, taken out for their protection, because of ill-ad? vised investments. Again, the intentions of the assured sometimes fail of ealization through the prodigality of a son to whom the sudden pos? session of so much money proves too great a temptation. The Equitable Life has provided against these contingencies by offering The Tontine Installment Policy. The premiums per thousand are much less tha-i under older forms of insurance, and theamount is payablein20,25 or 30 annual payments, thus securinga comfortable income for the beneficiary. Write to W. J. I*ODDEY, Manager, For the Coro 11aas, ^ ROCK MILL, S. C. FOR SALE! VACANT Lots on South Main and McDntlie Streets in quantities to suit the purchaser. Also the Bnusfi and Lot wbern I live is offered lor sale at a bnrgniu. It contains three itcr?????. 1 ni.-M offer for sale at low rate a fifty ;J.cre farm Uv.ir niih-s Ka-i. ol Anderson, near Ktircltn Church a::i1 school. 1 want to m?*tl for th>* p'irp is- of re-investing in tiie Wr..i, <'ali and -of inc. O W \ KI?LAW. Sfpt 13. 1??3. II MUST BE SOLD. i will sell below cost T88ES Shoe?, Hats. Hamburg Ed gings, Buttons. Hosiery, Ladies'and Gents' Collars, Blind Hinces and other Hardware, Crockery, Baragfl Veils, best Corsets. I will pc'1 for a small profit BEST TEA. Golden Rio Coffee, N. O. and Muscovado Molasses, Candles, Ac. I keep a splendid line of ^Vall Paper and Window Shades at low prices. Give me a call. If I have what you want you can got it cheaper than any? where else. 7 A. B. TOWERS, Next door to G. W. Fant <fc Son, No. IS.WbUner Street. Port Royal & Western Carolina Railway. J. B. CLEVELAND, Receive* IN EFFECT SEPT. 24. 1893. (Trains ran by 75th Merldaa time.) BETWEEN McCORMICK AND ANDERSON. Eastern Time. No. 6 Sunday, only No. 22 Mixed Daily ExSun. Lv Andersof. Lv Lowndesvlllp... Lv Calhoun Fallls. Ar McCormick....... Ar Augusta. 8 00 am 8 59 am 9 25 am 10 30 am I HO pm 7 50am 9 25am 10 OSam 14 .Warn 1 40pm ? NO. 5 |No.2l Lv Augusta.. Lv McCormick. Lv Calhoun Falls., Lv Lowndesvillov Ar Anderson. 1 15 pm 3 40 pm 5 15 pm 6 07 pm 7 40 pm 145 pm 8 30 pm 4 35 pm 5 01 pm ?|00pm BETWEEN AUGUSTA. GA , AND SPARTAN BURG, 8. C. Eastern Time. No. 1. Dally Lv Augusta.m. Lv McCormick......... Ar Greenwood.. 9 60 am 10 .15 am U ?? am Ar Lauieus. 12 47 pm Ar Spartanburg.I 2 40 |>m I45 pm 3 26 pm 4 20 pm 6 24 pm 6 43 pm INo. 4 lNo.2 Lv Spartanburg.. Lv Laurens. Lv Greenwood.... Ar McCormick... Ar Augusta.., 3 30 pm 5 00 pm 6 04 pm 7 02 pm 8 50 pm ' Past-engera leaving Anderson at 10 20 a m reach Charleston at 8 35 p m. and Savannah st G 20. Close connection made at Calhoun Falb with Seaboard Air Line going north. Through Palace Sleeping Cars on trains Nos. 3 and 4 between Augusta and Savannah, Ga. j Close connections at Augusta for all Florida points. For any other Information write or call on W. J. CBAIG, Gen. Pass. Agt, Augasta. Ga. R. L. Todd, Pass Act. J. R. FANT, Agent._'_ RICHMOND & DANVILLE R. R. CO. Samuel Sbeucer, F W. Huidekspee asd Be? beb Foster, Receives. COLUMBIA A GREENVILLE DIVISION. Condensed Schedule nr Effect AUG. 13, 1803. Trains run by 75th Meridian Time. i J - m BETWEEN CHARLESTON. COLMBIA, SENECA AND WALHALLA. Daily. No 11 7 30 am Lv 11 20 am' " 12 03 pm 12 18 pm 12 35 pm 12 50 pm 12 54 pm 1 30 pra 2 13 pra 2 37 pm 3 00 pm 3 20 pm 3 35 pm, 3 35 pm Ar 4 00pra'T 4 24 pm 4 58 pm 5 30 pmlAr 5 35 pm|Lv 6 05 pm' Ar STATIONS. Lv ...Charleston.Ar ...Columbia." .Alston-." ... Pomarla.'* ..Prosperity." ...Newberry." .Helepa.- " ...Cbappells." ..Ninety-Six...." -Greenwood...- " .Hodges-." ....Donald's." .Honea Path..... " .Belton.?....Lv .Belton_.Ar .. Anderson." ...Peudleton...- " .Seneca.Lv .Seneca ...... Ar .Walhalla.Lvi Dally. No. 12 8 45 pm 4 15 pm 3 30 pru 3 14 pm 2 55 pm 2 39 pm 2 35 pm I 1 50 pm j 132 pm j 12 55 pm 12:i5 pru > 12 16 pm! 12 03 pm 11 45 am 11 40 am 1118 am 10 36 am 10 00 am 10 00 am 9 30 a m 5 15 pm1 Ar.Greenville... Lv'IO 15 ami BETWEEN ANDERSON, BELTON AND GBEENNILLE. Dailv. No. II 3 8 pm 3 40 pm 4 00 pm 4 20 pm 4 26 pm 4 40 pm j 5 15 pm STATIONS. Lv.Anderson.Ar Ar.-Belton..-Lv Lv.... Belton.-A Ar...Wllliamstoa...." " ......... Pelze r..." ".Piedmont....- " Ar.Greenvllle...-Lv Dally, No. 12 12 07 pm 11 45 pm 11 30 pm 11 09 pm 1103 pm! 10 48 pm 10 15 am BETWEEN HODGES AND ABBEVILLE. Daily. No. 9. Dally. No. 11, STATIONS. Daily. No. 10. Mixed. Ex Sun >O.S4. l2 40pml 3 05pm 1 00pm 13 25pm 115pmI 3 40pm lv...Hodge?._ ar lvDarraugh'aar ar..Abbev>lle..lv 2 65pm f2 35j s 2 20pu 12 25pia-. 12 05pm 11 50am CONNE' TIONS VIA SOUTH BOUND RAIL ROAD. Dally. I No. 37 j CENTRAL TIME. Dally No 38 1 32>Jpiu|Lv."o'limbfa.Ar|10 20ain. I SOOpmiAr.!?avaonah.Lvi 600amI N08.13 anil 14 are s'ilid traius between Charles? ton rvnd Asheville. Through coach between Satannah aod Asheville on 14 and 13. Trains leave Spartanbure, S. C- A A C. Division Northbound, 1 43 a. m., 5.05 p. to., 6.12 p. nr. (Ve? bul. d Limited; Southbound. 12 25a. m., 2.?1 p. in., 11.37 a. 111. (Vestibuled Limited); Westbound, W. N. O. Division, 6.20 p. ni, and 8 10 p. m., for Henderionville, Asheville and Hot Springy. Traius leave Greenville. S. C, A. A C. Division, Northbound 12.42 a. m. 4 00 n. m., 5.23 p m (Ve? tibuled Li ?ltcd); .Southbou:id, 1 2)a. m., 4.C0p.?., 12.28 p. 01. (Vnstlbuled Limited). Trains leave Seneca, S. C-, A. A C. Division, Nortbbouiid, 11.30 p.m.. 2 37 p. m. and 4.10 p.m. Southbound. '1112 a. in.; 5 35 p. m. and 1.3Jp. in. PULDMAN CAR SERVICE. Pullman Sleeper on 13 aod 14 between Charles? ton and Asheville, viaColupibla and Spartaubuat. Pullman PaNce Sleeping Car on Trains 35 anTI 36, 37 and 3S on A A C. Division. W. A. TURK, 8. H. HABDWICK, Gen'l Pass. Agt., Ass'l. Gen'l. Pass. Agt., Washington, D. C. Atlanta, Ga. V. E. McBEE, SOL. HAAS, Gen'l Supu, Traffic Mzr., Columbia, S. C Washisoto?, D. C. W. H. GREEN, Gen'l Mg'r, Wahhimotos, D. C. SEABOARD AIR-LINE SCHEDULE. IN EFFECT AUG. 27, 1893. NORTHBOUND. _SOUTHBOUND No.38. Daily. 6 30am 10 05am 1113am 12 15pm 12 46pm 1 40pm No. 134. Daily. No. 117. Daily Eastern Time. Except Atlanta. 5 05pm! 1 v...Atlanta... ar] 7 3 am 8 13piniv...Athens....ar 6 16am 9 llpm!ar...Elberton-lv| 5 22am 5 00pm 1 8 05pm Ni.41. Daily. 6 45pm tip _ 5 08pm arXalhounF.lv .-..I 4 08pm 3 09pm -. 2 41pm 11 l2pmlar...Clinton ...lv! 3 iTarn^l 45pm 9 42an 6 45aut 10 00pm 10 25pm 12 23amiar...Chester ...lvi 2 00am. 1 50am|ar...Monroo... lv|12 50am| r. l5am|ar...Baleigh...lv 7 39am ar-Henders'n.lv 9 0t>am'ar...Weldon ...lv 11 0'amlar Petersburg lv II 45am ar Richmond lv 3 40pm ar Wash'gton lv 10 67am 5 24pm ar Baltimore lv 9 42am 7 4'Jpm ar I'hii'delp'a lv| 7 20am 10 35pmlar New York lv|1215am 8 15pm 6 53pm 5 35pm 3 43pm 3 10pm 5 00.1m ?ar..Char!otte..1 v j 10 00pm j. 9 (0amlar Wilmi'gt'n lvi 5 00pm|. :t 30pm j. 4 18[>m . 4 31pm . 5 55pm!. 7 ?5pmJ. 10 15pm . :v...Clinton... ar ar Newberry lv ar Prosperity lv ar Columbia lv ar~..Sumter....lv ar Charleston lv 1 30pm 12 43pm 12 29pra 1115am 9 50nm 7 15am +7 Mpm ar Darlington lv -f" 00am I UO.'ati) lv Weldon ar 5 35pm II 15.1111 arPortsm'th ar 3 20pm 11 anam ar Norfolk lv ? Oflpm Iff. 15pm lv Norfolk (b) ar 8 00am 7 Main ar Baltimore lv 5 30pm 'in47am'arPhil?derinlv 4 41pm 1 1 20pm |ar New York lv f2 10pm t~5 itfpm llvP tsmTth(n)arj 9 10am 5 10am lar I'hiladel'ialv 1116pm I 8 00i m;ar New York lvj 8 00pm fiOOpmllv P'm'th (w)arj 8 00ara| i C SOam'ar Waahlng'n Ivl 7 00pmi J t Daily pxcept Sunday. W Via Bar Lire, (n) Via New YorV, Philadel? phia ami Norfolk R. B. (wVVia Norfolk am' Wat,hiPCTon Steamboat Co. Trains Nos. 134 andj 117 run mm with Pullman Buffet sleeplnfrcarsbej tween Atlanta and Washington, and Pullcan Bam fei parlor cars between Washington and we York Parlor ear Wetdon and Portsmouth : flee ine car HamM and Wilmington. Trains No*, and 41 carry through coaches between Atlanta r Charleston, S. C. Tickets at P IUW. C. de 0 V Smith, Joww c- Winder, I Traffic Manager. General Manag? 11. W. B. Glovkb, IMv. Paw. ,airt.,>Atlanta, Gg Cbai. J. ?wi, 8. P. A., Augusta, G$. J