The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, June 26, 1901, Image 1
t m
BY CLINKSCALES & LANGSTON.
ANDERSON, S. C., WEDNESDAY^ JUNE 26,1901.
-----1- - ? _:_:_' .
VOLUME XXXVH--NO. 1
h or A MUI
H I1LH0UI1
IT!
THE kind of CLOTHING wc sell, coupl? wiih the
MODERATE PRICES asked for thom, io the reason this
Store is succeeding.
Our success was not attained in a day or night, and if we
didn't give a full dollar's worth of Goods for a dollar we
would have been snowed under long ago.
Most people don't like to pull the Cash ont each time
they buy Clothing, and if we didn't give more for the Cash
dollar than others g? ve oh Credit, we wouldn't get the trade.
Not only do we tell yon we can SAVE YOU MONET
on your
Clothing,
Hats and
Furnishigs,
(the good kind, mind you,)
But we do it, and we can easily prove it to yon.
The proof of the pudding ie the eating.
Where our Goods are not satisfactory we cheerfully
refund your money.
B
ANDERSON, S. C.,
The Spot Cash Clothiers
A Tip to the IToung Men !
WHEN IN NEED
OF AN UP-TO-b?TE HAT
Or, in fact, any thing in the way of
And especially my beautiful line of UNDERWEAR, for HOT
weather is coming. Call?n
C. ?- R<E?-SE9 THE FURNISHER.
Opposite the Post Office, No fl li Main Street, Anderson, ?. V.
Deering Light Draft Ideal Mowers.
THE ONLY MOWER made with only two-piece
pitman. Ha? adjustable ding bar and light draft
We have the genuine, tbicfc centre Terrell ?feel
Sw*sp thai bas jus. toe right ser. ??so, all sizes pf
the Victor Sweep Wings.
If you will come to see us will make it interesting
to yon and will ESTA yo? ?ome mor,c-y.
BROCK HARDWARE C0.
Andereon, S. C.
I..
FROM THE NATION'S CAPITAL.
From Our Own Correspondent.
WASHINGTON, D. C., June 22,1001.
There ie little doubt that another
perversion of justice is to be added to
the long list of thoso that have been
perpetrated iu the course of our deal
ings with the Indian tri?es. The lost
Congress surreptitiously passed, as a
rider on a bill ratifying a treaty with
one tribe of Indians, a clause ratifying
another with th? Apaches, Comanches
and Kiowas, by which these tribes
agreed to accept landa in severalty on
their reservation in Oklahoma and to
allow the rest to be thrown open to
settlement. Later, after Congress und
adjourned, it developed that this treaty
had never been accepted by the Indians
under the terms of the existing treaty
made in 1808, and "Lone Wolf and
other Indians brought suit in the Dis
trict here to have tho new law set
aside. Now, however, Justice Bradley
has denied the prayor, holding in effect
-what has often been held before
that no treaty made by the United
States is bindiug if Congress chooses
to negative it by a later act of legisla
tion. The Constitution says that
treaties and acts of Congress shall be
the supreme law of the land-one
equally with the other. Hence Justice
Bradley held that if the act were vio
lative of the treaty of 1808 the remedy
rested with Congress, not with the ju
diciary. He said that the right of the
Indians to the reservation was a pos
sessory one only; that the wrong threat
ened by the execution of the act is a
wrong to the tribe as a tribe, and that
the suit cannot be maintained by mem
bers of the tribe as individuals. Now
that the case is decided it is believed
thnt the President, in ahont 10 days,
will issue his proclamation opening to
settlement the Kiowa, Comanche,
Apache and Wichita lands.
Not content with attacking Russia
with a causeless imposition of a coun
tervailing duty on sugar-in direct
opposition, it is said, to an official
opinion handed down by the Attorney
General of tho United States, Secretary
Gage has recently gone farther nnd
forced retaliation by imposing duties
on Russian petroleum coming by way
of Great Britain. Naturally Russia
has taken fresh umbrage at what seems
to be a premeditated assault on her
trade and has taken, and will take,
f nrther steps to get even, lt is a most
significant fact that the laws under
which Secretary Gage assumes to act
including that under which he has just
barred italian sugar-have been in
force for over three years, and have
never been enforced against either
Russia or Italy. Their sudden enforce
ment provokes inquiry into the cause
thereof and it appears that Russian
sugar has just begun to menace the
profits of the Sugar trust, and that the
Standard Oil Company and the Rust i au
oil people, who had an agreement to
divide the world between them, have
just fallen out and are now fighting
each other tooth and nail. Poss!; My
Secretary Gage knew nothing of these
facts and then again possibly he did. .
Scandals in connection with the work
of Fred W. Peck, at the Paris Exposit
tiou, will, it seems, never cease. The
latest arises out of the attempt of A. S.
Capehart, who drew a salary of $400 a
month from the Government for edit
ing the report on the Exposition, to
extort about four times its value by
peddling copies of it. Mr. Capehart
hos sent out a circular about these in
which he Bays: "In ordering this report
to be printed Congress did not pr?vido
copies for general public distribution.
Under tho law which permits a citizen
to purchase not to exceed 250 copies of
any public document from the Public
Printer by ordering in advance of
printing and paying cost of production
pins 10 per cent., I have secured this
number of fall sets of the Paris Expo
sition report. These copies I am hav
ing bound in silk cloth, gilt lettered,
appropriate for library purposes.
Owing fr> the limited number of im
pressions of this six-volume, highly
illustrated publication, the cost of pro
duction has been considerably above
the average." He then offers the set
of six volumes at $20 a set, although it
is stated at the Government Printing
Office here that the cost of printing is
only $3.00 a sot. This seems to be an
unusually bungling a*, erupt to sell at
an extortionate prie a very stupid
report.
Senator Jones, of Arkansas, has
given out an in tor vi? rv in which he
outlines what he believes will be the
issues of th ? nexf- Congress and then:
bearing on the next election. He
thinks that, the chief issue will be the
Philippine question, which he says the
Supreme Court bas by no means set
tled. "The Supreme Court," he says,
"simply declared that Congress will
have to deal with the Philippines. As
soon as Congress meeta it must take
np the whole problem, and therein will
bethe opening skirmish of the cam
paign. Until tbs Supreme CO?H ooiou,
?the question was : 4D? ea the Constitu
tion follow the flagf The question
now is : 'Ought the Constitution to
follow the flag V If the Republican
majority in Congress, which will be
responsible for all that is done, shall
by ita action declare that the Constitu
tion ought not to follow tho flag, I
think that there will be a day of reckon
ing at the polls which will surprise the
Republican leaders. I cannot assume
to speak for the Democratic party, but
for myself, I do not believe that we
have the right to hold any people ns
vassal** and subjects. I believe Jbh$?
any people coming under the control
of the United States have tho protec
tion of the Constitution and caa enjoy
all the rights and privileges which that
document a iib vd e. Unless they have
these rights and privileges we have no
right to bring them under our' s-abjec
ticn. I tu?uk, therefore, we ought to
give the Filipinos our eavneBt, sympa
thetic, and material support in their
effort to establish ?* government
their own, and should then set them
free and stand up for them against the
whole world.
Are the people of the United States
more imperial as ? whole than they
used to bo 7 It would seem so from
tho calm acceptance of things that a
few years ago created great excite
ment. It will be remembered how
that when President Cleveland took a
trip down tho Potomac upon a Govern
ment vessel, he was savagely criticised
by the Republican press, which de
nounced him for such flagrant use of
Government property for 'Iiis personal
pleasure. A few weeks ago the Presi
dent of the United States tva voled all
the way across the continent .and buck
at the expense of the transcontinental
railways, whieh spent some $40,000 in
order to give the President proper
facilities and entertainment. Without
a penny oE cost to himself the Presi
dent and his party were taken across
the continent and back in regal style.
Yet no one hos offered any criticism.
Appalling Disaster in West Virginia/
BLUEFIELD, W. VA., June 23.-This
entire section has just been visited by
a flood, the extent of which in all prob
ability will equal or exceed that; of
Johnstown in 1809 so far as the lot a of
property is concerned. Early yesterday
morning, shortly afte*3aifetaight, a
heavy downpour of raifcn||B, accom
panied by a severe elecHflnHbiTO, ana
steadily increased in violence until 10
o'clock in the morning, then ceasing for
several hours and beginning again with
renewed violence. This^continued
throughout the entire day and . night,
and at 10 o'clock this morning, while
the storm had abated the'lowering
clouds indicated another terrific down
pour at any moment. Many n>lles of
the Norfolk and Western railroad
track, bridges and telegraph, li^?s are
entirely destroyed and communication
is entirely cut off west of Elkhorn sq
that it is impossible to dearin the f uji
extent of tho loss of life and' property,
but officials of the coal operation?;,
located in the stricken district have
sent out messengers to Elkhorn, the
terminus of both telegraphic and rail
road communications, and have,receiv
ed a report that a conservative esti
mate of the loss of life will easily reach
200. Some of the drowned are among
the most prominent citizens of the
coal fields. -
The Pocahontas field is located in a
basin with high mountain ranges on
either side. Tho Elkhorn creek -Sows
through the centre of the basin which
ranges from one-fourth io'one milo iu
width. Prom Ennis, V7. Va., to Vivian
yard, W. Va., a distance of .? iO^rotlee,
miners1 cabins, coal company 'commis
saries and coke plants line this basin.
Elkhorn creek being fed by numerous
small streams coming from the moun
tain sides rises very rapidly and this
water spout came so suddenly, that the
entire basin between the two mountain
ranges was flooded, and before the ter
ror stricken people realized what was
upon them they were carried down by
the flood, which swept everything in its
path. The little town pf Keystone,
with a population of about 2,000 seems
the greatest sufferer, practically the
entire town jeing washed away. This
town is the principal one in the Poca
hontas coal fields and is located near
its centre. It was to a great extent
headquarters from which the mining
population purchased supplies and was
also the only place in the field where,
whiskey could be purchased. " At this
place there were some 12 or 15 saloons,
all of which washed away. The report
comes that the mining population are
sow occupying the banks of the streams
below, catching the merchandise and
barrels of whiskey and beer as they
float down. A great number of the
coal and coho throughout the' Poca
hontas field ato reported practically de
stroyed and sn stonie instances entirely
washed away. On acco H of the very
high water which lins ? odod the re
gion and p?-evented c^mm?nication,
anything lis&a correct estimate of the
loss of property is impossible, but from
the best information obtainable at 2
p.m. Sunday the lo RS to property will
reach easily $2,000,000.
. -, --,
A Bloody Duel With Knives to the Death.
BRAIDBH, FLA., Jurf? 2tf.-News
reaches here of a bloody duel to the
death near Miakka, in Manatee county?
Judge Seth E. Stevens, a county justice
anda wealthy farmer, and John A.
Webb, a neighbor? also prominent in
county affairs* met O? th? ro*ii tbr??
miles from Miakka and renewed an old
feud that existed botween them. Webb
was riding when overtaken and asked
by Stevens to stop and settle then and
there, the dispute between them. Ho
did so, telling his driver to go ahead.
When the driver proceeded several
hundred yards he looked back co see
both men grappling in the road. (?He
returned to find Stevens dead with $
bloody i oifo in his hand and Webb
seriouttly ntabbed in several, places.
Webb is y et alive and may recover.
Troubte with th? Striking ?Anchin?sts in
Columbia.
COLUMBI*, S. C.? June 28.-The
Southern railway shops in this city
were attacked about 8:80 this morning
by a mob ot several score men. No
damage to property was attempted ox- j
cept to break through tho high fe?co
QurrouncUng the yarda. The strikers
were after the uo J -union laborers and
made for a car in which twenty wore
sleeping, A man. -r/hese naaa^jus sa?d
;to be Meyers was on guard. Ho fired
both barrels of his gun into the crowd,
receiving himself a 82-caliber bullet
in his forehead, but the skull was sot
penetrated. > : '
The mob iired a great many bullets
into the car in which the men wore
sleeping. None of che non-unionists
wire wounded, but after they had been
dragged out of the car were pretty
roughly treated. They were marched
up the railroad track soveral miles and
ordered to travel on north.
Later in the day al) but one of these
men were brought back to tho city by
on expedition sent out from tho shops.
. It was not nntil this afternoon that it
w.aa known any of the rioters had been
wounded. Close inquiry developed
tho fact that the wounds of four* men,
at least one serious, had been dressed
thia morning by two physicians. Tho
doctors said they did not know the
names of the men.
The strike leaders and the head men
in the labor bnionsthat have supported
the striking machinists, regard the at
tack this morning as most unfortunate
from the standpoint of the strikers.
A number ol' the most influential
strikers did not know, so it ?B said? of
the contemplated attack. A half dozen
police are stationed at the shops to
night, ont no farther trouble is antici
pated, for the present nt least.
Cotton Seed Trust.
PHILADELPHIA, PA., Juno 23.-The
North American 'to-morrow will, pub
lish a story to the effect that a syndi
cate of capitalists ?B planning a combi
nation with $100,000,000 capital to con
trol the eht? reproduction n?'.?-)u|e with-r
in tho'UniteJl Slates of the v?rio?s pro
ducts and by-products of cotton seed.
;Theroaro!00 cotton oil plantain the
? United States, of which tho American
t Cotton ; Oil Company, with a capital of
$80,000,000, owns 45, and the Southern
Cotton Oil Company,-, with bend offices
in this city, owns 10, The others ore
; operated largely by cotton planters.
Tho North American says tho syndicate
} f?mowj^ tho
V stock of'the; Southern1 Cotton Oil
I Company. Tho negotiations uro being
j conducted fot the Southern Company
' by Henry C. Butcher, president of the
! company. : To pl nco "Him in position to
not, tho ar??lo. Bay's, tho holders of
about three-quartern of the $3,000,000
stock nave given Mr. Butcher options
to sell their holdings at a figure close
to the present market quotation.
'?. --; nm ia. if*.' i v. ^ .
A Boy Preacher.
A boy only nine jenrs of ? ago ia ae
< Histing Key. J. E. Pounds in a series pf
?v^vivul,meetings being held at the B?p
' t&t church at Flo villa, Ga,
' Tho boy preacher is Metz Joyner, of
Denison, Texas. Ho preached his first
sermon at that place Monday night 17th
? instand has delivered sermons every
\ day- and night since. Despite tho in
clement weathor, large crowds have
". ^attended . each service, coming from
i tmfUfl to.bear this wonderful boy.
When ho rises to speak a death-like
stillness pervades tho vost audience,
who are eager to catch every word that
falls from his lips of this Christ-like
child. His thought is wonderful, his
language correct and his oratory is ex
? collent. His manner is tho essence of
politeness* and his voice is cl ear and
?distinct. He has strengthened the
> hearts of thc Christiano.
Border Miseries.
KANSAS CITY, June 21.- Thousands
bf people, mon, women and children,
camping on the border of the Kiowa?
Apacbe-Comanche; reservations in
Oklahoma, awaiting the opening of
that land,to settlement, are in destitute
circumstances, according to Dr. J. X
McKenna, who has just returned from
the scene. Twenty thousand, men,
women and children ure massed on the
border, and half ot ?hem aro utterly
destitute. Said Dr. McKenna :
"Only a small percentage have even
tents to sleep in, but huddle under
wagons and trees. At least 5,000 of
them* nave- been there a year and a
half. They went with possibly $200 or
$800, and have mada nothing since
they arrived. Simply waiting-wait
ing.
"There aro hundreds of desperadoes
on the border, who ? have picked out
claims and will not scruple to kill the
successful ones in the drawing, in case
they have a lottery.'.'
-:-' * ?. -..-~
Kitted by Lightning.
-T
W:;?T2tSArr, A?.A., Juno ^J.-After
a diligent search for four days the
bodies, of Abner Thompson, son of one
of the wealthiest stockmen In Florido,
his hone and do|f-were found to-day
in the woods on tho Thompson ranch
hore, having been killed instantly by
lightning during. the electric storm
Wednesday afternoon. The storm
came op white he waa out Not re
turning tho family begnu a search and
had covered nearly every foot of the
7,000 aereaTwhen they came upon the"
dead bodies.
?TATE HEWS.
- Greenville ha? just floated $31,
000 four per cent, thirty year bonds at
par.
- The ladies of Marion have begun
to raise funds to erect a monument to
Confederate soldiers in the court house
square.
- "ion i wi.-ni Moutague, of Kurraan,
has just received and declined a call
to the hoad of one of the large t univer
sities in the southwest.
- Tho annual meeting of thc Wo
man's Foreign Missionary society of
th" South Carolina conference will bc
hold in Newberry commencing July 14.
- Tho Insurance Press, published
in Now York, says that thc sum of
$1,124,543 was paid out to beneficia
ries of life insurance policies in South
Carolina in 1U0O. .?
- it is said there are (53 cotton
seed oil mills in the State. Of these
50 aro independent and the others are
under thc control of the Southern Cot
ton Oil Company,
Thc State Teachers Association
was in session last week at Spartan
burg, and resolutions were adopted in
favor of compulsory education and ex
ert supervision of the public Bohools.
On the third Sunday in July
Rev. A. A. James will oelebratc the
fifteenth anniversary of his pastorate
of the Fair Forest Presbyterian Church
in Union County.
. A passing train'set fire to a ware
house at Liberty last Friday aud de
stroyed the building and 175 bales of
cotton, entailing a loss of about $7,000,
partly covered by insurance.
- The reports of tho condition of
the crops throughout thc State are
gloomy. Cotton is in a very critical
condition, while the corn crop has
een injured, some of it, beyood hope
of recovery.
-J. C. Simms, formerly of Lancas
ter county, in this State, is prominent
ly spoken of as the next Democratic
candidate for the governor-ship of
California. He was private secretary
to Gov. Hampton.
-Tho Southern Railroad, since
January 1, bas built or contracted for
$27,600 worth of side tracks in Colum
bia. The growth of tho wholesale
business in Columbia has a great deal
to do with this demand for increased
trackage.
- Lollio. the 10-ycar-o!d son of W.
F. Stubbs, had his leg severely crush
ed while trying to board a swiftly
moving train in the Seaboard Air Lino
yards at Abbeville Monday. Doctors
were called and the leg amputated just
below the knee.
- Two negro farm hands near St.
Matthews, got into a dispute about
ten days ago and ono out the other to
death in the presence of a B nuibor of
other negroes, none of whom made any
effort to prevent the tragedy or to pre
vent the escape of the murderer;
- Governor MoSweonoy haB recent
ly received sn invitation to deliver ah
address in Tammany hall, New York,
July 4, in celebration of the one hun
dred and twenty-fifth anniversary of
American independence. Governor
McSweeney findf it impossible to at
tend.
~ A serious wreck occurred on the
C. it W. C. nine milos below Spartan?
burg last Thursday afternoon. As a
result six mon were injured, one prob
ably fatally and two others seriously.
The damage to the property on the
road was extensive..
- "Walsh's new city directory for
Columbia has been issued. The pub
lishers state in their preface that the
directory, based upon a careful can
vass of the oity and immediate su
burbs, shows the population to bo not
less1 thsn 32,000.
- ? matter of gratification to Meth
odists is the Consent of Dr. Jumes H.
Carlisle, who has been president of
Wofford College for twenty-five years
and is seventy-five years old, to serve
in that capaoity for one year. more'.
He had decided to resign* hut was per
suaded not to do so.
Mr. N. H. Williams oaya lie has a
curiosity St hie house in the shape of
an animal which io half rabbit and
half oat. Tho fore part is like a oat
and the hind part looka like a rabbit.
It is about sixwoeks old, and he sup
poses it to be the result of tame rab
bits and cats breeding together.-liam
herg Herald.
..- Floyd Burnett, six year old son
of Mr. James Burnett, of Greenwood
County, was accidentally shot with a
pistol last Thursday afternoon by his
uncle, Maxwell Barnett. The ball en
tered the left breast just below the
heart, passed through tho body and
lodged under tho skin. Dr. Neel cut
the ball out, and the child is likely to
recove: from his dangerous wound.
- Governor MoSweeney announced
Some days sgo thst it was his inten
tion to call a "Good Roads" conven
tion to meet some time during August.
The correspondence with oounty su
pervisors has been favorable to the
convention idea. The State geologist
and his assistants, who ar? familiar
with the aspect of economical devel
opment'', will be consulted before a date
for the convention is made.
.^-Little Voinon, the two year old
son of Mrs. E. D, Humphries
Union, passed through an experinoe
reoently which caused his parents con- .
siderable uneasiness for the time
being. He was playing with a four
penny wire nail and his mother notic
ed him gagging and trying to got some
thing from, his throat. Sho know h?
h?d'swallowed the tail, but she could
do nothing. The nail passed down
and the parents were very uneasy for
the four di ya it remained in the oh?ld.
j They were over joyed *hen they k ne w
the child w&s relieved of the danger.
It was sharp pointed, and the child
had a narrow escspc. ,
?
Portman Letter.
-
If women of the West and Northwest,
>fwhom we've been reading this week,
Lfaveso mach need or "Rights," there
must be something wrong with the
men.
Wherever a woman has need-to shout
for her right.-, tbsre ii maui ines?; lacking
somewhere, as a Behool boy who ?nda it
necessary to contend fer hie eohool satch
el would find something wrong in his
parents.
? womanly woman riooa ont ask
for rights at all; they are Riven ta her or
Hbo does without them. When they aro.
given to her, she sets up in her heart a'
certain hero; and it would just make him
blush-what she thinks about him; he
does not feel worthy of it. When ?ho does
not get her rights there ls some man who
has boen knocked on"his pedestal so low
it would hurt him ir he know it.
A. man cannot live all his life without
grafting or allowing a woman har rights '
ancrfeel happy. She looks ii, she alums
it, she throws it in his ovos and In his
teeth with every motion of her bead and
every turn ol* her eyo. I lo does not know
what is the matter with her or himself,
but he 1B not happy. Ile think perhaps
lt ia a way of her's-he does not think it
is a way of bis-and goes ou thinking and
thinking till some ?no morning she bas
everything so truly her own way the
novelty overcomes her so that Bhe Hes
down and dies; then be thinks If Bhe j ust
hrid a littloof this way long ago sho might
have lived and be boon happier.
Some men think they are giving their
wives "rights" when they knook and
abuse them, and the women, if they were
sensible ar. the man is, then would take
the abuse without * murmur aa their
rights for ever marrying him.
Women feel belittled if they must ask
for their rights as a rose would should it
be compelled to ask for its oolor, and
man feels BO belittled If be has that sort
of a wife. Men are proud of a proud
wife-that 1B gentlemen are-and when
they resent being belittled, the men
scratch their chook foolishly looking for
something to say a, * reproo', bot can't
find it and go on the more proud and
more loving of her.
There are two great rights which are
wronga when women don't receive them.
One has reference to an unjuot govern
ment and one to an unjust husband-the
right to vote and the right to speak. A '
country who does not know what a fair
and beautiful thing lt is to see a woman
vote misses half Its life, anda man who
has never heard tho clatter and babble of
a woman's tongue misses half his know
ledge of life.
:.A woman, when she arrives on the ros
trum, now that we expect , hoop skirts,
and six women would AU a stage, when
she reaches her snowy atm but and lota
ber angel sleeve droop on the desk close
to the water pitcher and says : "Ladies
and gentlemen: Ahem, I, I, I'm so glad
to see you-O, slr, please, you down
there with the handsome mustache, will
you please bring me my handkerchief I
dropped in the lobby?" Why the coun
try would go wild over the unsophistica
ted eloquence, the oratory, the gesture.
It would veto that she stay there forever
-stay while they had gone out to supper,.
and be there when they came back; there
never was or could be such enthusiasm,.
and woman would be the crowning ef
fect of a Nation.
A Senator, or some Senators, would
net misa this for, say 96,000 a year. This
is the great Kiralfy spectacular which
the country misses to-day through un
just government. And, of course, wo
men loses her vote
Then the man who has never per min
ted a woman to unclasp the fastenings of
her brain, to deport the burden of har
wronga on the sliding gangway of her
tongue and watch that member lowered
and adjusted on its ropes till on the prop
er level to discharge the freight of ita
cargo, watch the ease and pleasure of its
unloading and the joy of every animated
thing that skips or rolla off it into the airy
woi'd. A man who ha? never seen this
baa missed half tho development of his
own brain and she-her right to free
speech.
It is said that a gentleman visiting
President Lincoln one day, while con
versing with him in private, noticed a
peculiar twinkle in his eye, and the door
of th? apartment opened when in walked
bis wife. She stepped sprightly over to
Mr. Lincoln and putting his head within
ber hondo gave it the most agitating
shaking, bobbing up and downland side
to side the visitor had ever seen. Mr.
Lincoln was toussled and wooled in a
grievouB manner, and Mrs. Lincoln,
when she had thns beat the burden of her
nerves upon the capillaries of tba Presi
dent's uialn, retired in high spirits. The
visitor was abashed at being present dur
ing the connubial demonstration, but the
President said calmly,: "If you just
knew bow mnch g">od that did my wife,
you would wish lt was yourself Instead
of me."
Now, there was a great man with a
great mind and, a great woman with a
Sreat purpose, both of whom together
ved beautifully-bo had hi? pleasure
and she had her rights. ? ? . >
A woman ?B easily pleased i f tho ra an
learns how, and adds t" this "patience',
long suffering, gentleness*; goodness,
faith, meekness," ?^c.
This letter Issn Innovation oh Portmau,
bat as one beeoro?? ti rei -cf sake sad
sweet?, a little bitter pickle stimulates
the palate. lt.-II. L.
Fourth of Joly Excursions.
Southern Railway announces rate of
one and one-third first-class fares for the
Sund trip from all points on ita linea to
l points east of the Mississippi river
and South of the Ohio and Potomac river,,
account Fourth of July excursions.
Dates ?fnate Jnly 2, 3 and 4, good to re
turn until July 8.
For detailed information oell on or ad
dress an < Agent of-ibo Southern Railway
or connection. ' '
W. H. TAYLOE,
A. G. P. A., Atlanta, Ga.
& %\ : ? ' ' 'fr'-'"IM-,,