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BT CLINKSOALES & LANGSTON. ANDERSON, S. C., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER ll, 1901. VOLUME XXXYH-NO. 25. UIIVUL**/- UH l THAT no other Store h:.d Clothing but us, or that you could not get as choice an assortment any where else as heri? and after we had told you BO, you should find out different, you'd never have any faith in our "ads"-but we are very careful what we say. We do say that a great majority of our Goods are bought fer less and sold enough less for you to come and look over what we have ; then if you fail to be pleased it's our fault. But if you fail to come here, but go elsewhere and pay more than we ask)'then it's your fault. From $5 00 io $20.00! From $5 00 to $20.00 ! ANDERSON; a c., The Spot Cash Clothiers ' We have just rec % iyed one Car Load of 3Fancy Winter Grazing Oats. Come quick and secure some of them before they are all sold* O. p. AI?DER8?N ? BISO. IF YOU ARE A PURCHASER OP ?flSt^&i?Wkidnt?Bti Our Prices an?l Woods will Miivly Tempt You. ?.-??vi.?,y ' 'J-y . ? . !......>.. ... . . . - . . ;? :....-.>,:?. We have alway* given good valu?lo this- line, a>r?d then? U no reason why we should not d?> the same for you. In buying Shoes you want to look & at the quality as well as the price. Ours stand the closest inspection and are weil made and durable. We use the ntmest caution And buy only thean Shoes which we absolutely know to he of the very best quality. We do not experiment with various lines but stick to those which have tho manufacturera aa well aa our guarantee behind them, and should by chance any imperfection in workmanship or leather occur,, yon will always fiad us ready te satisfy you. . TEE mm SHOE poa MEN. This U the moat re&eenably priced K<gh Grade Shoe on the'market. We have them in all the various leathers and styles. JKcCULLY ?BROS STATS! MEWS. - The Darlington flour mill, valued at $5,000, was burned last Friday night. 1 ->? The Baptist State Convention will meet in Greenville next year. - The South Carolina . Legislature will oonvene ou January 15tb. - ? young man named Stewart had his leg broken io a football game at Winnsboro. ' - Thora were~22.000 admission* tn the exposition grounds in Charleston the first day. - Paul Preachor, a nogro root doc tor, \vas_ recently found, dead in the woods oh tho outskirts of Columbia. The man had starved to death. - Tho matter of the postraastership at Newberry, baa! not been settled yot. There is quite a fight and there aro many applicants for tho position. - Mrs. S. T.. Burch,' au aged lady of Florence, was burned to death on Thursday. Her clothing oaught from a coal of fire that popped out upon her dress. - If straws show the way the winds blow, there will be mightily near a full tioket in the field for State offices com posed of State House office holders and attaohes. - In the Spartanburg exhibit at the exposition, Mrs. F. E. Anderson .contributes some interesting articles. In thc oollecton will bo a fauoy quilt over a century old. - John Bolin and Dr. Lanier of Hiokory Grove, York county, got into a dispute at a shooting match and Lanier shot and killed Bolin, a young man of 25. Both were drinking. - Wm. Crane a well known farmer of Greenville county, died suddenly on Sunday night in Pleasant Hill church. Ho was seated in the church and died without a struggle. Ho was 45 years old. - Oliver Eaves, a farmer near Jonesville, was attacked and robbed of $6 on returning to his home from Union on Monday. Ho had sold a lot of cotton, but. had deposited tho mon ey in the bank. - J. Fuller Lyon, of Abbeville, former probate judge of that, county, has been appointed to a clerical posi tion in tho office of the State Treas urer. The appointment becomes effec tive on January 1. - The general program of the Southern Educational Association, wb'tm meets in Columbia, S. C., De cember 25. has . beeb issued. Ad dresses will be delivered, by many prominent southern educators. - The members of the negro Bap tist ohuroh in Spartanburg got into a general fight and so badly used the preaoher that he bad to be carried home in a carriage. The mayor' fined Twenty of tho leaders cf tho fight from $5 to|$20. - Rev. J. G. Huggins, a native of Cherokee, but for tho last two years a member of the Mississippi Methodist Conference, has been transferred to the South Carolina Conference and assigned to Belmont, in the Spartan burg district. . - The Comptroller General has got ten up a blank to bo seht all cotton mills and another to-be sent all tho cotton seed oil mills of the State, in tended to supply his office with in formation and statistics about these enterprises as required by law. - A few days ago a man who had a mortgage on a cow belonging to J. M. Clinton, colored, ex-republica? county chairman for York county, sent for the cow and it developed that there were ten other mortgages oh the same cow, eaoh one for all she was worth. - On account of ill health Bev. G. H. Waddell /resigned as superintend ent of the Epworth Orphanage. Rev. W. B. Wharton, who has been at Prosperity this year, will succeed him. Mr. Waddell will for the pres ent be eonnected with tho orphanage as financial manager. - Mrs. M. R. Tupper, the matron of the State hospital for tho insane, was attacked just af tor dark Thurs day evening near thc hospital entrance by a negro footpad, who took her purse, containing $3, from her. The fellow escaped, but the police are making a thorough search for bim. . nr?i.?_/__, -i_?>-.? - Liiiii/jr . JfUUllg EDIivio UCDCI ICU fron the training ship Lancaster last week in Charleston harbor. TJio boys were paid off and given six hours leave to visit tho city. They sold their sailor clothes, purchased citizens clothing and took leg hail. These ?boys did not f?nd,a sailor's lifo to thoir liking. -r Too recent big fire which do siroyed a good, part of Pillion has ?aused some one to note the faot thr.t billion became a town thirteen years ago, and on the 13th day of November she had her first fire of consequence, in which thirteen business houses were destroyed, and .bc loss amounted to thirteen thousand dollars. That unlucky number 13 again! -. Tho trial committee of tb? S. C. M. E. Conference, in session at Col umbia, ou th? 29th ult., made a re port to the oonferenc? on the chargea preferred against Rev. It. C. Molloy, who was charged with gross immoral ity. The committee recommended that ho be expelled from tho minis try and thc church, cad the con ference endorsed the report. The committee stated that it was a most unwelcome duty to perform, still the ohuroh required that the character of its ministers bo irreproachable, and the disagreeable duty was met with out fear or favor, A memorial was also presented signed by several min isters not to admit preachers to the eonferenee who used, tobacco ant*, aro requesting those who are now mem bers to quit thc us* of thc weed. GENERAL NEWS. Foot Ball season is about over sod a few warda in the College Hos pitals are empty. - Dun'a Review for December says the c at of living is one-third more now than in 1897. i -r In Michigan, in a terrible rail road disaster, eighty wero killed out- : right and as many injured, - Barney Conway, who voted for j1 Gnncrnj .Tanl?s?n fer ??r?S?dcTt, d?cd at , New Albany, Ind., Friday aged 106 j years. > - Fire at the North Carolina Agri cultural and Meehauioal college, near Raleigh, destroyed the dining hali a;.d j dormitory. ^ - Attorney General Knox has is sued circulars to U. S. marshals and district attorneys forbidding their tak ing too much interese in politics. - Mrs. Mary Burke and four chil dren were burned to death in their own house at Akoona, Pa. The house caught fire while they were asleep. - Smallpox is so prevalent in Bos ton that the medical authorities admit that it is beyond control.. The pest bou so is full and they uso Gallup's Island in Boston harbor. . - That^ Paris leads tho world in dress-making can be readily under stood when it is stated that 140,000 persons arc -engaged in tho dressmak ing establishments of that oity. - A man secreted himself in a box io the hold of the Hamburg-American \ steamer Palatiaand crossed the ocean. Notwithstanding he was in the hold for fifteen days, he is able to talk and may recover. - Tho Chinese exclusion aot ex pires by limitation next May, and a strong fight will bo made before con gress over the ru-enaotment cf tho law, the west particularly being anxious for it on account of "Chinese cheap labor." I - The First National Bask, of j Ballston, N. Y., ir, found tobe out! $100,000 by tho defalcation of teller j Charles E. Fitoham. The bank has j temporarily closed and is in the hands of a receiver. The defalcation began | as far baek as 1865. , - A resolution has been introduced in both branches of the Georgia legis lature asking congress to pay tho southern states proportionately $105, 000,000 from the salo of captured and abandoned property during tho war and to refund the cotton trix. - George M. Pullman, eldest son of the palaoe oar builder, died at Menlo i\ rk, Cala., last week. Much drink ing hastened his death. At bis death he was receiving $3,0Q0 a year- as His allowance from his father's estate, and 812,000 from his mother's. - .Mrs. C. N. Whitman owns tho largest ranch of any woman in the ' world. It is located in Texas, near Tasoosa, and is called tho L. S. Ranch, after its first owner. The ran >*h is 30 miles square and there are hundreds of cowboy s employed upon it. - In one day reoently there were reporta of a postoffice robbery at Bris tol, Ind., a bank robbery at Plymouth, Ia., and another bank robbery at Tren ton, Ky. .In each caso the robbers secured considerable sums of money, while several persons were injured, two being shot; - A divorce was granted to David Nation io the Kansas City court fr MU his wife, Carrie Nation. He charged that she called him a "hell-bound hypocrite" and that sho did not at tend to his wantB. The divorce was granted on tho grounds of gross neg lact of duty. - The committee of twenty ap pointed by the last General Assembly to revise the creed of the Presby terian ohuroh mst in Washington last week and began ^ork. Their object is not to change it in any respect, but if possible, to put it in language that will bc- more easily understood. - Mrs. J. Fred Meyers, living near Sioux City, Iowa, wrapped her 5, months old baby ina blanket, and put it in the oven of the kitchen stove to warm, and went out in the yard to gather fuel, when, a half hour later she carno back, the baby was dead, its arms and legs being burned to a crisp. - Mason and Dixon's line, tho fa tootts cid historic boundary of thc South, is being resurveyed and will not be permitted to drop out of exis tence. oTbc old stone markers or posts which marked thc lino aro. being reset in solid oeraont bases and iron posts are being substituted in places where the old posts have disappeared. - A woman in .Chicago has been married twelve years, and in that time has given birth to uineteen children, and she is not yet thirty year.- old. Tho latest addition to thc family was quadruplets, and occurred while the husband was away from home. He has not returned, and the wifo has . asked for a diyoroo on the ground of I desertion. - The Isthmian canal commission bao sont in its report to Congress. Tho commission favors the Nicaragua route rather than the Panama. The cost of building is estimated at $190 000,000, and will take eight years to complete.'';. Sonator Morgan has in troduced a hill giving the president Sower to acquire needed territory from fioaragua. - J. S. Lytlo, a Kansas pioneer, died at Hiawatha, Kan., last Friday. During the past three years he slept most of the time. While, in Santa Ana, Cal., he slept from May "28 last to Aug. 20. Thon he awoke and was conscious until Sent. 2, during which interval ho waa brough tv home. On Sept. 2 he again went to sleep and slept continuously until to-day, when he awoke and a few minutes later died. FROM THE NATION'S CAPITAL. From Our Own Correspondent. > _ WASHINGTON, D. C., Dec. l>, 1001. j With nil il s cutting of red tape, j Binashing of precedents and verbosity Mr. Roosevelt's message to Congress ( Bquarely dodged tho important ques- | tiou of whether tho reciprocity treaties sent to/thu Senato by Mr. McKinley' during thc last Congress should bo ratitlcd or not. Ho enid n lot alumt re ciprocity, which ho declared ihust bo tho "handmaiden ot* protection," what ever that moy mean, but all lie said about tho sort of reciprocity represent ed by those, left-over McKinley treaties was, "I ask tho attention of:the Senate to the reciprocity treaties laid boforo it by my predecessor," and neither Con gress nor the public know to-day whether Mr. Roosevelt favors or op poses those treaties. If Mr. Roosevelt makes a few moro dodges as opou as this ono, thu claim that he is afraid of nothing, so frequently made by his friends, will have to be dropped. It phau H that he is afraid of the Senate, which has during two sessions of Con gress refused to ratify those trencics. If it be fair to judge from the num ber of visits Mr. Low has made to Mr. Roosevelt to ask advice about tho municipal affairs of New York-his last ono was this week-Mr. Roosevelt is expected tobe deputy mayor of New York, as well as President of the U. S., although if the signs of early and hard factional lighting among tho Republi cans in Congress aro not deceptive tho latter job is likely to keep him quite busy. Whether Mr. Roopovelt's treatment of tho railroad question in his ciessago had anything to do with tho announce ment that tho Interstate Commerce Commission is now willing for the law to bo- amended so as to make pooling of freight rates legal is a question that would be answered both ways, accord ing to tho man who spoke, but the fact remains that the commission which has fought railroad pooling for years is now willing to sanction it. It is, of course, no crime for mon to change their minds, but the causes for such changes have been known to approach dangerously near to tho criminal line. Senator Hoar evidently beliuvoB that Mr. Roosevelt indulged in a little word-juggling in his message. He said of that . portion of it relating to tho Philippines: "When he soys that wo are extremely anxious that the natives of tho Philippine Islands should govern themselves for their sake, and because it relieves us of a great burden, and that there is not the slightest fear of our not giving them all the liberty for which they % aro Ht, and that wo slull help to make them fit for self-govern ment after the fashion Of really free nations-I think he should stat? clearly and emphatically that he means by self-government, what tho people of the United States have always UK "nt by self government-the right to na tional independence, if they desire it. I think he .?hould say in terms that when they have a government fairly representing their people, able to maintain itself, and that government expresses its desires for absolute no tional independence, the United States will not bo in their way." Booker Washington was at tho Whito House again this week. He wasn't in vited to dinner, biu it is said on good authority that he did considerable talking about tho appointment of a U. S. District Attorney for tho North ern District of Alabama, and that as a consequence several of the applicants would savo time and humiliation by withdrawing their papers. Booker was asked whether he had a candidate for the office, after he left Mr. Roosevelt, but he declined io say a word about it. Representative Williams, Of Miss., has introduced a resolution tor the in vestigation by a House committee of the claims of Maclay that the proof sheets of his naval history, which calls Scaley a liar and a coward, were read and approved by Sauvpacu and Crown in shield, and several similar bills and resolutions havo been prepared. Tho friends of Schley ore trying to arrange things to secure a general investigation ! af the entire naval conduct of the war i with Spain, which would bring out everything, instead of investigation of any special phases of it. Tho gentlemen who aro drawing $5,000 a year and expenses na members af tho Industrial Commission aro loth to turn loose tho public teat at tho be ginning i>f winter. Tfea time of the CouiuiiBsion has n'uoidj bwu once ex tanded and will expiro December 15, if not again exte?<kd. Ts.j Commission [IBM asked Congress for an extension of two months, and as many Representa tives and Senators have a fellow-feel ing of sympathy for all lame ducks in the political pond, the chancet aro that the request will bo granted, although the country would sailer no appreciable oas if the Industrial Commission never completed what it ls pleased to call ita, tvork. Ex-Senator Chandler is believed to JO indulging in a bit of the sarcasm for nrhich he is well known, at the expense >f the Republican party, in presenting Senator Lodge with a cigar box com posed of sixteen parts of eil ver and ono >f gold, as a souvenir of Lodge's au thorship of the bimetallic plank of the Etopublican platform of 1800, which pledged the party to the promotion of bimetallism. The presentation grows mt of an offer of Mr. Chandler to pay $100 to the man who wrote that clause in the Republican platform. It WP? Anally fastened on Secretary Lodge, who refused to accept tlio money; hence the souvenir. Ou the top of tho box, conspicuously .engraved, is this quota tion from'the bimetallic plank of the Republican platform : "Which we pledge ourselves to promote." A prominent New York Democrat, who was in Washington to seo tho Congressional machine started, said of polities in tho big city : "Those people who think Tammany is dead want, to revise their opinion. I?vo seen Tam many buried mid beard tho service read too many timos to bo fooled. I want to tell you that Hie reorganiza tion pf Tammany has already begun, and il is only a question of time until it will again control. The Tammany people are tlio best losors I know any thing about. I have talked with a great many sin co election and havo yet ; to lind a sorehead. They are like a j mau who bas au accident with his au ; tomobilo in tho evening. In the morn I ing ho gets up and says: 'I wonder ! what could havo been tho matter with j that machine.' Ile proceeds to lind : out what tho matter was, and effects j ropnirs and tho next day is riding about ; again." I The House did no business of im : portnnce this week, and will not unti ! after Speaker Henderson announces ! tho committee assignments, but a suf j ileieut number of bills have already I boon introduced to occupy tho entire ' life of tho Fifty-seventh Congress, if ? all of them were considered. Tho Sen ato received the new treaty with Eng ' land nud referred if to tho committco 1 on Foreign Relations w5 thout commout. ! Senator Morgan introduced a bill for ! tho construction of the Nicnraugua I Canal; Senator Tillman got through a , resolution, previously adoptod hy thc i House, adrdtting freo of duty all for I eign exhibits at tito Charleston exposi : tion; and Among the hundreds o? bilis I introduced was one for tho laying of a j Pacific Cable, and one for the admis sion of Oklahoma as a State, with tho ' town of McKinley as tho capital, i Senator Morgan bas civen notice , that private pension bills aro to bo ? moro carefully examined in the Senate. It was in connection with* his objection I to advancing tho consideration of some , of these bills, ?asked for by Senator , Hoar, that Mr. TMorgan said: "There ': is too much slack on pensions, and I I would like to tighten it up a little." Roosevelt to Congress. '. Tno president's messnge is] about ' 28,000 words in longth, dealing with all tho questiouB of vital importance now ; in the public eye. j In tho beginning Mr. Roosevelt pays j a glowing tribate to the memory of ; the lamented William McKinley and . denounces anarchy. He not only de plored the existence of the anarchist, but beseeches congress to make it im possible in the future for the chief ex ? ecutive of the nation to be shot down. He calla atteutiou to tho great pros , peri ty of the nation.' I He deals at length with industrial i conditions and problems. j He declares that trusts must be con trolled; otherwise, trusts will control. A new cabinet officer is suggested, who shall be known as th') secretary of commerce and industry. Mr. "Roosevelt urges that congress see to it that the United States secure the greatest service from its employes. Mnch stress is laid upon 'bo brother I hood of men. j Retter immigration laws are asked forby the president. The message declares that reciproc ity is no enemy of protection. . An encouraging word is said for the benefit of our merchant marine. Mr. Roosevelt declares that tho American merchant marino should be restored to ? the ocean. "Maintain the gold stannard," says Mr. Roosevelt. It is suggested that congress amend tho interstate commerce law. Much attention in given to the agri cultural interests of the country. Intelligent forestry is urged by the president. The message urges the importance of the reclamation of arid lands. Mr.-Roosevelt declares that Hawaii should .by all means be developed, pointing out in detail the immense ad vantaged to bo gained from tho new country. The {rrent problem of the government of tho Philippines is given much apace in the message, and the president sug gests that a sterner policy is demand ed by conditions in the Orient. In no uncertain words tho president declares that the Monroe doctrine should bo the cardinal lea tu re of for eign policies of nil nation of the two Americas, as it is of tho United States. ! Congress is directed to the fact that I a greater American navy is demanded. I He declares that tho work of upbuild ? ing tho navy must not be neglected, \ but pushed forward with all possible 'speed. . He reviews the situation in China at length. Ho advises that closer relations ex ist between tho United States and the Sooth American countries. Tho p*. 3sident takes a bold stand for tho educational interests of the people. The postal service and rural mail de livery is given the support of the pres ident in his message. Attention is called to the opportuni ty of the United States that now exists in the trade with China. The consular service, says the pres ident, is in need of reform. Expositions as npbuilders of a coun try are endorsed, and attention is di rected to their good. Congress ia es pecially urged to . pay the expenses in connection with the removal of the government exhibit to Charleston. The message calls attention to the good resulting from che army reorgan ization. A liberal pension policy is urged. A strong plea is made for the civil service. Tho president says there is np need now for an increase in the United ?totes army. In closing, tho president refers to the death of Queen Victorin, of England, and the death of tho Empress Dowager Frederick, of Germany. The Baptist Convention, Tho recent session ot the Baptist Stato Convention at Florence waa one of tho largest attended and most in teresting held in years. Tho reports of tho ollicers and committees in ?bargo of tho several departments of tho church work wero very encouraging. In tho last your thcro have been twelve now Baptist Churches organ ized in this Shit? jvtiit ?i not increase in membership of about :},000. There aro now moro than 100,000 white Baptists in South Carolina. This is thc largest I body of Christinns in this State, the i ! Methodists ranking second with 70,059 j members. ? Tho Baptists now maintain three colleges in South Carolina, Punnah University, Greenville Female Col lege and Limestone Female College, besides a large humber of high schools, fitting schools and institutes. Furmau University, under tho leadership of Dr. A. P. Montague, and Limestone Col J a with Di-, L. D. Lodge ns president, ? ?port that this is tho best year with them since tho war of 1801. Greenville Female Col lego is prospering and tho now president, Dr. E. C. James, is making a good record. Recently tho Baptists of the State have put $50,000 into now buildings for these thrco col leges, and Limestone College is soon to havo a $12,000 building added to its plant. Tho Con vention put tho Baptists of tho Statu on record in no ambiguous language us to tho manufacture, Bale and uso of intoxicating drinks. Fol- . lowing aro tho resolutions on temper- _ ance which wero enthusiastically adop ted: Resolved, 1. That wo aro opposed to the mauufneturo and salo of intoxi cants except for mechanical and medi cinal purposes and under the severest legal restrictions. 2. That wo aro opposed to tho use of any intoxicant UB a beverage, whether wh i or punch served in fashionable socioty, beer drunk at tho dispensary or whiskey taken from the bottle in tho usual vulgar fashion. 8. That the Christian who is a habit ual but moderato drinker is walking in disorder and should bo brought to disciplino. 4. That it is tho duty of pastor, r teacher and parent to tench total absti I nonce as the only safe rule. Advertised Letters and Packages. - Ida Andrews, -KHz* Agnew, W. M. Axam, Luther Bell, Lawrence Boyde, A. B. Brock, B. P. Bradford, W. H. Jiell, J. E. Brown, Clara Babb, Rosa rn a BuVlngame, G. P. Bamburg, Warren Beaty, L. Back er.-* John B. Campbell, (not Rev. John B.) Addle Cobb. Calvin Chandler, Eliot Clinksoales, Lela Cola, William Calbon. Nora Doutblt. Joo, Banes. Ola Evana, E. H. Ellison. Arch Freeman, Dr. Davis Freeman, KHz* Forsten, Fannie Fleming. Anna Gadsden, John Glenn, John Guyton, Winiam Grav, Nolon H. Gaines, Bettie Gurley, L. E. Geer, W. ?. Goree, Ida H. Griggs, Nannie Glover. J. J. Hamilton, Wade Hampton, Sandy Humphreys, Annie Harris, Josephine Hill, Luther Howard, Sally nammon, Oils Howard, L. Hanks, S. S. Hale, E. Huesev. R. H. Jones. Lilla Jenkin?, Mama Jen kins, Lizzie Jones, A. L. Jayne*, Allon Jones B. B. King, Amanda King, Pearl Klb ler, Otis KeoBO. iwr Lester, Ella Lewis, Willie Loatly, Warren Laurice. . L. L. MoDanle), Jnale McGrath, Dr. Jno. H. Maxwell, Ira Myers, Jane Peter McC illa, Emnv MoCranv, V. E. May field, W. A. Mu 111 kin, Chas. McNaron, hf as?lete Masters. y Virale Norrie, W. Hard Newell. Ida Purlight, Alloe-Phillips, Alice Pin son, E. L. Palmer, Minnie Patterson, Minnie Price. Marv Pool, Lillie Payton. Luther Rice, J. J, Rice, J. C. Robinson, M. R Richey, James Richey, Mr. Ratter, J. C. Rogers, Laurence.Russell, Dan'l. G. Rome, J. A. S. Rice. John Stone, C. simmons, W. B. San? ders, Mattie St mo, W. W. Scott, Rev. Smith, Mrs. 8berrllis, Mrs. Levla Swin ton, Luther Shaw, Jennie Spumley. W. F. Strickland, Geneva A. Stone, F. F. Spencer. Hector Taber, L. Templin & Son, R. Henry Tenam?. Carrie Varrls. ' timllv Watson, Nallie Walker, T. L. West. Pate Will I?. Corene Wilson, Asia Walker. Emma Warren. Irane Young. Lois Zimmerman. PACKAGES. Obie Browning, E. J. C->x, Dora Car son, Chan. Eirle, Robt. Earle, ^harley Ellison, W. < .- Hirrlnon, A.P. Hodges, C. M. Hlokereon, N. A. Johnson, L. L? latitnor, Mrs. Lawrence Mnyard, Mr?. N. MoAUter. J?HH?B 0. Piokehs, Minnie PAtters^n, F*nnio Tho nj pk i UR, Ernest Webb, Lucy Williams. Wh?n calling at tn? gnnoral delivery for any of the above names kladly men tion the fact that it wits an advertised let ter or package a? the cann tnay be, other wise you will fall tr. get them, astbey aro no 1<> igor In th? gouer.il delivery ewe. Very respectful! v, JOHN R." COCHRAN, Postmaster. ?ailroad Rates For the Christmas Holi days. Tho Southern Railway announces Christmas Holiday rates botween all 8oints on ita lines one and one-third rat-class standard one-way faro for the round trip. Tickets to be sold De cember 28rd, 24th, 25th. 80th, 81st. 1001, and January 1st, 1002, Anal limit Janu ary 3rd, 1902. To students of schools and colleges, upon presentation and surrender of certificates signed by Superintendents, Principals or Presidents of tho various institutions, tickets at these rates wil bo sold December 16th to 22nd, lOOl.in clusive, with final limit January 8th, 1902. For detailed information cali on any agent of the of the Sonthern Railway, or apply W. H. Tayloe, A. G. P. A., Atlanta, Ga.: R. W. Hunt, D. P. A., Charleston, 8. C.. or J. C. Bean, Jr., D. P. A., Atlanta, Ga.