The Abbeville messenger. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1884-1887, May 11, 1886, Image 1
p}.* . % iPi' < :
.
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VOL. 2. ABBEVILLE, S. C., TUESDAY, MAY 11 1886. NO. 36/
*v -
/"COLUMBIA AND
V.J ' GREENVILLE RAILROAD
On and after October 5, 1884, Passenger
Trains will run as herewith indicated upon
thin road and its branches. j ^
Daily, fxcepi Sundays.
No. 53. UP PASSENGER
Leave 6'oliunb ia S. . Junc'n 10 45 pm
" Columbia C. A G. D 11 10 pin 11
Arrice Alston 12 10 p in
w Newberry 1 13 p in
Ninety-Six... ^ 2 47 p m
Greenwood 3 09 p m
Hodges 3 33 p in
Relton 4 40 p in
at Greenville G 05 p m r<
No. 52. DOWN PASSENGER. r{
r.n.v. a^>nnnitl..? a r.n ~ ...
ArriveBelton Ill a ni
^ Hodges 12 2 in si
Greenwood 12 43 m ?Ninety-Six
- 1 32 pin
Newberry 3 02pm
Alston , 4.10 t) m ,,,
Columbia C. & G. I) 5 15 jun
Arrive Columbia 8 C. Juuc'n 5 30 p m bi
Bl'AKTANilUKQ, UNION dt COLCUDIA RAILROAD. ?.]
CONNECTIONS.
i
A. With Soutli Carolina railroad to and from
Charleston; with Wilmington, Columbia and
Augusta railroad from Wilmington and all
Ebints north thereof; with Charlotte, Columia
and Augusta railroad from Charlotte and
all points north thereof. R. With Asherille
and Spartanburg railroad from and for points
in Western N. Carolina. C. With Atlanta and
Charlotte div Richmond and Danville railway
for Atlanta and all points south and west. ?r
Standard Eastern Time. ?
G. B. TALCOTT, Superintendent. st
M. Slaughter, Gen'l Passenger Agt..
P. Cakdwkll, asa't Ge?M Pass. Agt.
th
?JOXDENSED TIMI5 CARD ot
\f i n VAT T a i) i oofvnpn TiATTmn
i ivpo i'j 4i u fj iv uu u a i*<
In effect March 15, 1885.
ooiko soutij. m
JLenve Laurens *5 20 a in + 50 a m sc
" Waterloo C 06 a m 9 55 a m sc
" Greenwood 704)am 2 15 p m
* Arrive Augusta 10 45 am 7 45pm
Leave " 10 50 am 10 00 pm at
Arrive Atlanta 540pm 6 40 am f
Leave Aucunta 1130 am
Arrive Beaufort C 20 p m
Arrive IWt Royal 6 86 pm
" Chaleston 5 50 pin P'
" Savannah 7 00 pm rc
14 Jacksonville 7 00 am
going vohtii.
Leave Jacksonville * 50 pm
4 Savunaah 0 55 am tr
Leave I'ort I loyal 7 35 h in
" Beaufort 7 47 am 8l
41 Charleston 7 50 am th
Arrive Aujrnsta 1 50 piu
Leave Atlanta t 20 pm
Arrive Anjruata 6 10 am hi
^ LeaveAujru8ta..v...,., *3wW pm fl,l5juaJiL.
jtfs" Arrive ureenwood.10 pm 11 40 am in
, " Waterloo 7 04 pin 3 30 pm
^ 1 " Lauicns 7 50 pm 4 40 pm
jLl ^Daily + Daily 'except Snnday. ft,s
|MP? Tickets on sale Ht Greenwood to nil points
at thimitfh rates?baggage checked to desti6&
nntion. Connections made at Greenwood .
with C. 1 G. H. U. E. T. On ahltok, G. 1*. A. ,n
Augusta, Ga,
-Ha -w?|pre*\M ^avoii *j;2 *OK 8,11
- * A TtiA#rfc COAST link, c '
PASSKNGER DEPARAMEXT, ^
Wilmington, X. C'M A iff/. ?</, 1SS5. nl
CONUKNSKl) 8CHKDULK.
c? v' 0oiso OOOIN
WIC8T. KAST
gl
4 20 nin Lv Charleston Ar. 9 05 pm
V:' | 134 " 44 Lnnea " 7 03 ?
0 83 44 " Sumter V 6 37 44 sv,
7 40 pm Ar Columbia IiV 5 27 '
3 0 2 44 . *4 .... Winnsboro.... 44 3 40 "
0 15 44 " ....Cheater " 2 44 44 Wl
760.% 14 14 ... .Yorlcvilln 4r 1 1 4"m m
7 01 44 44 .Lancaster " 7 0ft '
4 50 ? " ....Bock Hill " 2 02 pm ei,
0 00 " ... Charlotte " 1 00 "
. s>i
252pm Ar Newberrv Lv 3 10pm
2 50 " " Greenwood " 21 59 ' m
0 01 44 44 Laurens 44 0 10am cj|
' 5 01 ? " Anderson " 10 27 ?
6 45 " 44 Greenville " lu 00 44
'645 " " ....Walhalla " 8 30 "
4 20 " " ....Abbeville " 1125 " us
3 27 44 " Spartanburp " 12 25 pm th
7 15 44 44 Henderson ville.. " 7 00 "
, pi
Solid Trains between^harleston and Columl>ia.
R. C.
J. P. DIVINE. T. M. EMERSON. th
Gen'l ftup't. Gen'l Pas. Agent
w
? 3V
" CJOUTH CAROLINA pn
k> RAILWAY COMPANY.
Commencing Sundav, Jan. 3d, 1880. at or
-r< 6 85 a in Pa?aenper Trains will run as follows,
until further notice, "Eastern time:"
Columbia Division?Daily. V1
Leave Columbia 7 45 a m 5 27 pjn
Due at Charleston 12 32 a m 0 05 n m ftfi
WEST?DAILY. a
Leave Charleston 720 am 5 10pm n?
Due at Columbia 10 40 a m 10 00 p m
Camden Divition?Daily except Sundays.
P Leave Columbia 7 45 a ni 5 27 p n?
Due Camden ......12 59 pm 7 42 pm cc
WKflT DAILY, KXCIPT SUNDAY.
Leave Camden 7 06 am 3 15 p m cc
Due Columbia 9 25 n m 10 00 pm
fc. Avyutta Dtvithm ? Knst Pnilv. w
??? ' Le*Te Columbia 5 27pm
Due Augusta 10 30 pm w
, WEST DAILY. til
s. . Leave Augusta 4 45pm ^
^ Due Columbia 10 00 pm
Connection*
^ Hnl timKia nr i V* AnliimKia an/1 1*1 maam _ Ot
f ville railroad by train arriving at 10 40 a. m.
j?.l and departing at 6 27 p. m.; at Columbia
feV ' Junction with Charlotte, Columbia and Au- rc
ji'Vi gusta railroad by name train to and from all
^points on both road*.
At Charleston with steamers for New York
Pry. - mi Baturday; and on Tuesday and Saturdar to
?:> with steamer for Jacksonville and points on
p ; Bt.Jabn's river. Dally with Charleston and
Barannsb Railroad to and from Savannah ar
l and all points in Florida.
gg?-'.; 1 At Augusta with Georgia and Central rail tu
g?*Vr .. r-oafis to and from ?U points West and South ?
W%? at Blackville to ?nd from all points on Ham
v well railroad. Tkrongb tickets can be pur
wM elfesed to all points ffot?thend West bv apply ^
1 "V McQitkkn. Agent* Columbia, 8. C. v Ar
Bp John B. Piter, General Manager. P1
r Allen. Gen. l'ass. and Ticket Ag'i 0"
Teachers' Department.
Jond ucted by Goo. C. Hodges, School Com
missioncr of Abbeville County.]
:ems From a Superintendent's Notebook.
[J. M. Reed.]
#
Giving attention to pupils at noon and
jcess, and not permitting the school>om
to be used as a play-house.
Getting out of old tracks by using
ich new methods ns are based on the
.1 ? .
ue principles ot teaching.
Keeping pupils evenly in their work ;
at having them ahead in one or two
ranches and almost, if not entirely, neSecting
others.
Requiring pupils to do neat work at
1 times.
Making good use of blackboards, maps
larts, etc.
Keeping up the interest of school to
ic last day of the term.
Giving directions to the pupils in rcird
to how to increase their power of
udy. ^
Requiring so much of pupils that
ey will not have time for talk or an}'
her disorderly conduct.
Not forgetting that the dignity and
>nor of the profession depends as
uch on their conduct when out of
hool as on their teaching when in the
I100I.
Having a fixed time for commencing
id eding each recitation, also a time
.. *U.* ? -r X- 1
> uiu [Jic|mr<uiuil Ul UHUIl l^SOIl.
Making every effort possible to have
jpiis come on time each day and be
gular in their attendance.
Becoming acquainted with the parents
the pupils and citizens of the disict,
and having them visit the school ;
ving them special invitations to visit
e school on a certain day.
Many teachers prevent tardiness by
iving some very interestiug subject at
e'tfpphihg of school.
Conducting recitations in such a way
to make each pupil responsible for
e whole lesson.
Having something now and interestg
for each day's recitation.
Asking qrestions in the order of the
ibject, but not in the order of the
ass.
After the questions, naming the pupil
lio is required to answer, instead of
icstioning the class in general, and
ivin?? nnsverK froni but n fow nnnils
o *? r
Inquiring answers to questions to be
ven in complete sentences.
Having the pupil rise to give his anrer
when a long answer is required.
Avoiding leading questions such as
cmld indicate the answer required.
Xot prompting pupils, but requiring
ear, unhesitating answers without askance.
#
Xot allowing too many trials in a relation.
Condensing questions so as to avoid
ling so much time with the questions
at tllere will be but a short time for
ipils to answer.
In some subjects, teachers have had
io pupils to ask the questions with
ry good results. This Was done A'ithlt
any book in the hand of the pupil,
ich one asking two or three questions
A1 VwAAiannfl tVliu 111 Q
1 lilt? DUUJUUil 1' ICVJUCIIVIJ VIII^ art u
lick aqd good way to conduct reews:
Studying the "art of questioning," so
i to be able to question quickly and in
logical order, and completely test the
ipil's knowledge of the subject, lead
m to study, think, thoroughly underan/tl
and explain the subject under
msideration.
Training pupils to study quietly, retgnizing
the fact that pupils study
ith their brains, not with their lip*.
Teaching their pupils t? classify their
ork and recite from the?c' outlines,
iub laving time and giving the pupils a
iluable training.
Not permitting pupils to prompt an;her
while he is reciting.
Valrinir o?pK Mauu ororoian
^citing and teaching.
Having much reciting by the topical
ethod, thut?pupiU may have a chance
i cultivate the power of expression.
Making good use of the encyclopaedia
id dictionary in schools which are formate
enough to have a reference book.
Teachers's Assistant.
Large addition** have just been raada
' our already extensive stock of flow^rf
id feathers. The lino is complete at
ices lower than ever sold in this naf*
>t at Haddon's.
. ' \ .v* v - , ' > Vj
What the Papers say of Jefferson Davis.
TOO LATE.
[Boston Herald.]
It is too late to have the glorifying of
Jefferson Davis do any harm. Even
Logan and Boutelle car. get no '"issue"
out of it.
A CHANCE FOH GENERAL GORDON.
riJoston Record.]
1 General Gordon could do the South a
real service to-day by saying, in the
presence of the unreconciled leader of
I the Lost Cause, that the issue of the
1 struggle for secession was the best for
that section and for all concerned.
. The only harm that can result from
( glorifying Jeff. Davis, who was really
the most unheroic of the Southern Naders,
would be the impression it mizht
; create that the Southern people might
regret that they did not succeed. We do
, not believe this is their feeling, and some
of them should say so.
THE GREAT UNREPENTANT.
[N. Y. Tribune.]
Yesterday was a great day for Jefferson
Davis and for the first capital of the
Confederacy. The ex-Confederate President
was welcomed by admiring thousands.
Hands played, flags waved and (
crowds cheered themselves hoarse. The '
great unrepentant stood almost upon the i
spot where he took the oath of office <
twenty-five years ago and made a few
remarks which aroused unrestrained enthusiasm.
Short as his speech was, it
showed that he is as thoroughly unreconstructed
as ever. *'The spirit of
Southern liberty is not dead." The war
was 4,a holy war for defence." The
Southern people are now "wrapped in
the mantle of regret." These sentences
give the keynote of his brief address.
Assuredly nothing but death will ever ,
reconstruct this arch-conspirator and
traitor.
1
AI.Ij RIGHT, niJT DON'T DO IT AGAIN.
v [PhiUuUlpbia Times.}
Jefferson Davis is ore of the few surviving
figures of the late Confederacy. It
is very natural that the people of Montgomery,
the capital of the short-lived
attempt at a rival government on Ameri- ,
can soil, should feel kindly towards him ,
and give him an old-fashioned ovation
the occasion of his return to that city a
quarter of a century after his inauguration
at the same place as the President ;
of the Confederacy. The occasion of his
visit and the consequent out-pouring
to greet him was the dedication of a
monument to the Confederate dead, a
proceeding with which it is impossible to
find fault in while human nature remains
what it is. Monuments to the dead will i
be reared while living men and women (
remain on earth to mourn the dead.
The expediency of the demonstration is
very much to be doubted, however. The ,
bloody shirt politicians of the North will
usclthe extravagant speeches and editori- ,
als in praise of Davis on this occasion '
with telling effect in coining campaigns '
an evincing a determination on the part
of the people of the South
not to forget the past. The war is over
and the mass of the people both North
and South are loyal to Union. The fewer '
demonstrations that give occasion for '
reviving any of its bitterness the better
for all concerned.
A COMPLETE REUNION.
|N. Y. World.]
Jefferson Davis made a very brief 1
speech at Montgomery yesterday, and
the little he did say has done no harm
to anybody. Indeed it no doubt dis-1
appointed those politicians who were
waiting with some impatience to seize 1
upon his utterances and parade them
! J - _ A. 1 A. If 11 CI AL ? -
as nn eviuenuo mm n me ooum is not
in the saddle it has its riding-boots on
ajul is ready to mount at a moments
notice.
There is no lack or enthusiasm at
tho South when the memory of the
short-lived Confederacy is invoked, and 1
the people still shout themsel^e hc^se
when the deeds of their gallant but mistaken
soldiers are recalled. The enthu- 1
siasm which greeted Jefferson Davip
yesterday was greater and deeper than
i thai excited by his inauguration as
President of the Confederacy twenty
five years ago. But over the head of
the "unreconstructed" leader waved the
Federal flag, with its stars and stripes,
to tell the story of complete reunion.
HAIL AND FAKKWELL. (
1 ' [N. Y. Times.] '
If r? Jefferson Davis must have some- i
have disappointed the expectations,
through probably not the wishes, of h
hearers at Montgomery yesterday. J
made only a few brief remarks, and the
was in them only one reference, hard
more than incidental, to the motives
the men who made and sustained tl
rebellion. For the rest his speech w
confined to rhetoric, which, if not vei
polished or original, was naturally effe
tive. His words, in speaking of tho
who fell in tho Confederate cause, ft
on sympathetic hearts, and no one
the North, certainly no one who
opinion is worth attention, will obje
to the enthusiasm with which th<
were received. It is plain that, so f
as the future is concerned, and so far
regards his influence direct or indire
upon the couase of public affairs orpu
lie sentiment. Mr. Davis is looked upt
in the South very much as he is els
where?that is to pay. as a person of 1
consequence whatever. That he shou
bo received, probablv for the last tin
in public, in the South with demonstr
tions of affectionate admiration is na
ural and inevitable. He is the mo
conspicuous remaining meinento
events which stirred the Souttni
heart to its depths. But neither for tl
Southern people nor for their felloe
countrymen is there in the feeling th<
have for him a tinge of actual hostilii
toward our common Government ar
our common country.
A CONFEDERATE PROTEST. ?
[Ed. Louisville Post.]
The writer xwas one of the mere boj
referred to whose musket seemed hea
ier than himself, but he has grown som
what since, both in mind and bodysufficiently
at least to realize the fol
of spending his days brooding over tl
ashes of a dead controversy and tryir
to revive its extinguished ember
There is nothing to be gained by it, nr
much to be lost; and unless Mr. Dav
proposes to buckle on his sword and (
forth slaying the United States Goveri
rncnt, he should bridle bis tongue.
THE SIZE OK IT.
[Springfield (Mass.) Republican.]
Gen. Gordon is right in suggestii
that the valor of the South must be he
as a possession of the nation. Ten yea
ago the Republicans looked fo
ward to the time* when the dei
of both sides in that great w
would be honored together, as illustra
ing Americun manhood . when broug!
to the supreme test of cou
age, endurance and devotion. The tin
is at hand. Ours is one country ; a
that has been done in it to tho credit
the American heritage of the who
country, not solely of one section. Tl
hated Yankee and the hated Southrc
are phrases thai belong to the pa
whose last voice will be that of Je
ferson Davis at Montgomery and Atlai
ta.
As for Mr. Davis, ho stands a pathe
ically lonely figure in the midst of alic
days. "The vicarious sufferer for
vanquished people," as Gordon cal
him, he has no life save in the pas
The burden of the great sin of rebellic
tins rested on his shoulders for a scoi
of vears. To him alone of all the Coi
federates there was no future left wh?
the experiment he fathered failed. B
lore mm 111 uie uiriviiig uuiuiimiii&uun
Georgia and Alabama he sees the pro
perity of a new order of civilization,
progress far beyond that of the old ord
and rich with the a promise that tl
vanished system of society could nev
have attained. With all this he h;
nothing to do. He arises now, for
moment, to pronounce farewoll. He c?
Bay nothing that will harm the count)
to which he does not belong, and wou
refuse to belong if the choice we
his.
The Southern people regard him wii
different eyes, and in their exubera:
fashion they console the solitary mi
with a praise that would be excessive
applied to any save the greatest me
History will weigh him far more light]
If the failure of the Southern Confede
scy could have been due to any 01
man, that man was Jefferson Davis. H
jealousies, his petty spites, his obstina
will, his narrow nature, made him
b most incompetent head for so tremei
dous a venture. The oxtravagance
the laudation he now receives will com
Inront ifsolf U is ffiffen tn him at tl
bottom, not for himself, but as the re]
resentative and embodiment of tl
separate national life of the South'
now and foreror, fortunately for Soul
and North, 'Hhe baseless fabrio of
rision."
.. . .
is J.KT THE DKAI) BURY THE PKAP.
Io [N. Y. Herald ]
rc Whatever foolishness may have been
'y committed at the moetinc at MontgOmery,
Ala., at which Mr. Jefferson Davis
!,e has recently figured is more or less offas
sot by the folly of a gathering of two
ry hundred persons in the Assembly
c* Chamber at Albany last evening, which
se Speaker IIUKted and a few other
members of the T.-^'-is'tnro i;G:ured.
nndor tho mikitnL-HK
, ?.w JIUVIVU
30 that thoy were displaying a discreet
ct patriotism. The common sense of the
;y good people of Albany is attested by
ar the fact that the seating capacity of the
as floor and galleries is at least for a
thousand.
b
>n Honest Advice to Labor
e
10 Chief Arthur, of the Locomotive
Brotherhood, is a wiser and better man,
?e we suspect, than any of the oracles of
n- Labor. Here are his words of wisdtm
,t- in an address, at Hartford. Connecticut
st to his fellow workingmen:
of Let the men come together and discuss
rn their grievances, and then come to an
io understanding. 'Let the employer give
r- the men under him to understand that
jy he is interested} in their welfare and not
ty that he considers them mere senseless
id machines. Acting under this whcnver,
during the past twelve years, We have
been met by the officers of the roads,
there has been no strike. Every strike
by us has been caused by the blunt refusal
on the parfof the roads to recognize us
Now, who is to blame for the strikes we
have had ? Since the troubles on the
, Grand Trunk and Boston and Maine
[y
roads, where we were positively refused
recognition, oven for the purpose of
amicably adjusting the difficulties every
"8* j!/T
^ uiuurcucu nos ocen adjusted by our
Brotherhood. During the excitement
of the past few months we have had
? seven diffcrnt cases, and in every case
the policy of the Brotherhood has settled
' them all. As far aa I know tbe loctnotive
engineers and the railroad companies are
on excelleent terms.
ig No man has the right to say to another
Id "Thou shalt" on 4iThou shalt not," and
rs in the violation of this principle is where
r- the trouble lies among the workingnien
?d to-day. We have no buesiness to say
ar that an employer shall employ or shall
it- not employ this man. A man has the
ht right to belong to liny organization,
r- provided it is not contrary to the law.
ie We say no man has the right to say to
dl nnother man that he must not belong to
of an organization. And, too we have no
le right to go to the companies and say :
ie "You must not employ that man. We
>n oppose this way of doing things on
st principle. Unless a man is a rascal vou
f- have no right as superintendent or master
n- mechanic to prevent him from getting employment
elsewhere because he dues not
t- suit you for he might somebody else. The
?n great trouble is 1here has been too great
a a chasm between capital and labor
Is and we should strive to bring: them closer
it. together. There should be no anta>n
gonism. There is no occasion for it and
rc though I want every laboring man to
n- hold up his head and look his employer
;n squarely in the face 1 want him to ree
member that capital, as well as labor,
of has rights which we muta respect. We
g. cannot do without either: Both' are
a essential to the prosperity of the country.
cr There should be no clashing between
le them?there need be none.
cr When a man is looking up as tinas
leader of a labor oganization, just so soon
a as he begins to dabble in politics then it
in is time for you to ask him to resign and
>y put another man in his place, '/'hoy care
Id for themselves far more than they do
re for those who they represeut. What I
, did say about the eight hour law was
th this : "If the masses want eight hours
nt for a legal day's work give it to them
in for a fair trial, but I feor there aro a large
if number of men who will not profit by
n. it." Many of those sometimes called
y. workingmen do not make good use of
r- their time. I believe in working. Since
le I was twelve years old 1 have worked,
is And to that question 1 have never given
te any consideration further than to say :
a "Make the best use you can of the time
n- God gives you, and if you want an addiof
tional two hours for the purpose of imb
proving your mind then I hope the la*rle
givers of the land will give it to you
p- and that you will appreciate it, and not
loiter it away as many men do, I am
? obliged to acknowledge." - My advice is
th be sober, be frugal, be industrious and
a practice a little .>ulf-denial for the benefit
of those who m c dependent upon your.
' '' \ ' .* . V
V ' / .. . h w . :v
daily earnings. Above all, keep out of
whiskey shops, shun dens of infamy and
the gaming table and spend your time
with your wife.
ifrih
Southern Traits.
The South is not only noticeably gentle
and oourt^ous, but responds instantly
to gentleness and courtesy, however
promptly and passionately resentful of
rudeness, and even childishly sensitive.
It is a childlike race in some respects,
compared with the business-trained maturity
of the North, but with the charm
as well as the unreason of childhood.
Its women?I hardly know how to say
it without offense, and heaven forbid I
should in one jot offend my dear New
England, our royally rowdy west, or
any remotest section of the Great Republic
; nor can I perhaps, say it with
consistency, and there is no need of
saying it all ; yet I will hazard the suggestion
that Southern women aro nrpt
? *
I tier than Northern women ! It is not
that the withered wisp of ihi "tidewater
settlement" is more beautiful than
the perfect final fltever of Northern cul-.
ture, or the saxifrage of the New England
frontier farm a hardy plant, that
has as little time, as its Southern counterpart
has turn, for the aithetic of the
garden of God. But the ordinary
Southern woman on Columbia Heights,
I on the South Battery, in Forsythe Park
is pleasant to the eye. Neither men, _
1 nor women have the color and contour,
the rich costume, the aggressive prosperity
of the never-ending procession
I going down to the Everglades in search
of health?portly men, full bearded and
ruddy, close-buttoned to the chin; '
I buxom dames, every one with a sealskin
I sacque on her shoulders and a superogI
atory camel's-hair shawl over her arm?
1 weighted with money, beaming wit^
I satisfaction, eating and drinking the ,
1 best of everything and plenty of it.
J Southern women are fragile in flguer,
1 delicate of complexion, with soft,
bright, abundant hair, solt, melodious
voices in which a certain flatness of
enunciation beeomos far from disagreeable.
Their dress is of modest cost and
palpably home- made. Worth and IlcdI
fern?a plague of both their houses !
1 fpnfrhe%v> n???*- r ' *
.1.. ih;sim iroin tnese quiet birds.
The sombre blacks and heavy fabrics
which long winters drag even into our
short Bummers, count ill beside these
cheerful tndetas^ and fresh cpmbrics
whose lightness suit well the graceful
forms. And their wearers meet kindly
the stranger that is within their gates.
Brusquely acjosted, roughly touched
where their hearts are sore, and no
doubt these kiud eyes would. Hash with
angry tire?the pale ashtfs of secession
still a vital spark?but why approach
them brusquely ? They endure a suffering
nil their own. They have felt
the hand of the North ; let them feel
now only only its ministrations. As a
pathetic nnd lender prophecy, I cheerish
an Master gift of Easter lilies oi?
Master morn, and (he most precious
tribute of the rose-tree?from the?avowed
secession South, to the avowed antislavery
North?and fe"l thrt in deed
and in truth Christ the Lord is risen.?
Gail Hamilton in the Forum.
St. LouiR- I)w> yoa
ITo I)r. J. H. McLcan, St. Lftui}), Mo :
I have used Dr. J. H. McLean's Tar Wine
Lung balm, for five years in my family, and
, particularly for my wife, it is the only remedr
I that ever gave her relief for tho coughing
peculiar to catarrh. I have also used tho
catarrh powder together with it, and will not
be without the meaieiue in my hou?e.
Oxoxaa Thomas Hokptner,
Fro sale by all druggists. Market tlardtu?er.
Miraculous Escape.
W. W. Reed, drnggiat of Winchester, led.,
writes : "One of my customer*, Mrs. Louisa
Pike, Bartooia, Randolph Co., Ind., waa a
long suffurerwith Consumption, and was riven
up to die by by her physicians. 8hs beard
of Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption
land benn ? ?- -
-p? ??> we. AO bix monins'
time she walked to this city, t distance of
six miles, and is bow bo mock improved she
baa qait using it. She feels she owes her
life to it. Free Trial Bottles at T. C. Perrin's
Drag Store.
Persons who lead a life of exposure are subject
to rheumatism, neuralgia and lumbago
and wll find a valuable remendp in Dr. J. U.
McLean's Volcanic Oil Liniment, it will banish
pain and subdue all inftamation. Far sale
by all druggists.
Sickness cornea nnivited, sod strong men
and women are forced to employ means to reatore
tbeir health and strength; the moat
successful of all known remediea for weakness,
the origin of all disease, is Dr. J. H.
McLean's StrengthingCordial asdBloed Purifier.
For sale by all druggists.
500 pioefts ribbon, .all colors and
wiains ii jiaaaon's.
Mlueo corsets, that wilt not cfleet the
spine nor warp the body* sometbin& practical
at Haddon's.
' '0- ' *' ?''"A?. f
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