, ••-Wf *• 4 THE LEDGER: GAFFNEY, S. C., SEPTE3IBER 8, 1898. r Vlll C 1^ 1C l > 01^ 1<. 5i.oo per Year. rum.ISHKI) KVKKY THURSDAY BY Ed. 11. DeCami*. i'Hn Lbdgek is not responsible for the viiiWS of correspondents. Correspondents who do not contri bute regular nows letters must fur nish their name, not for publication, but for idontification. Write short letters and to tho point to insure publication ; also endeavor to get them to the office by Tuesday. 4.11 correspondence should he ad dressed to Ed. H. DeCamp, Manager. Obituaries will be published at live cents a line. Curds of thanks will be published ft one cent a word. . Reading notices will be published it ten cents a line each insertion. IMPORTANT. VV'atth the date on your label and it you are in arrears call in and settle up, thus saving us the unpleasant duty of mailing you a notice inform ing you of that fact. IVumtks wishing the address of their paper changed to another po‘t- ofiice must give the name of the office where they have been getting it as well as (he one where they want it changed to. AFTER THE BATTLE. The battle of the ballots has been feught, and while the smoke is clear ing away, we naturally look around for results and begin to adjust our selves to the new conditions which tho battle has imposed upon us. The results are not, of course pleasing to all. They are not what many desired and expected, i’er- haps not a single voter in Cherokee county or in the State has the satis faction of knowing that his whole ticket was elected. So then, hardly any voter is exactly satisfied, because hardly any one got ail that he wanted. Vet upon the whole the people have done well. The campaign was tho cleanest one that we have had in eight years, notwithstanding the fact that it ought to have been a little cleaner; and a much larger propor tion of dean men have been elected than could have been before any time since the advent of the present de cade. This fact testifies to the growth of intelligence and subsidence of pas sion. The people have done some thinking of late years, and the re sults have been manifest all over the state In a dominant desire to elect the best men to oflice. The people make mistakes sometimes, even when their heads are not turned nor their hearts inflamed, by wily demagogues and time-serving tricksters; but their hearts in the main beat true to the country’s interest, and usually after the most egregious blunders, they will readjust their bearings and come around all right. So far as we are informed, the elec tion throughout the State was a clean one. We have not heard of a single case of dishonesty on the part of managers, nor fraud, or intimidation on the part of voters. The seventy odd thousand voters of .the State went to tho polls in the proud con sciousness of a free manhood and quietly deposited their ballots for the men of their choice, and the man who kicks against that choice had as well be butting his head against a stone wall or disputing the right of way with a tornado. The will of the majority is the corner-stone of Democracy, and Vox Populi Vox Dei is its watch-cry. Now, after that will has been regis tered and that voice has been beard, the sensible man of whatever creed or opinions will bow gracefully to the enevitable, fall cheerfully into line, and march forward shoulder to shoulder with his fellow-countrymen to the accomplishment of higher and better things than any that have been accomplished in the past. This is a country in which the right of every man to express his opinion is unquestioned; and he who would cherish hard feelings to wards a neighbor for not thinking and voting with him is withholding from that neighbor what he demands for himself, and is showing a spirit which is mean, narrow, selfish, and unfair. His neighbor will not lose much by forfeiting the friendship of such a man. Of course the de feated candidates are disappointed, but there is no reason why they should feel chagrined and humili ated—far less that they should re sent the verdict as a personal wrong. It is very unfortunate for a man of small caliber to cherish aspirations for high oflice. It is more unfortu nate still for him, If he is elected to such un office. He never doubts but that his election Is a just tribute to his abilities; he is soon filled with conceit, and can no more live out of office than a fish can live out of wa ter. It has never occured to him that oflice of Itselfconfers no honor on a man, but * 0 ( * ii grace a man who can con(er no honor on it; and when the people turn their backs upon him a^ sooner or later they surely will, then he feels that ho is the most outrageously wronged man in the world, and ho broods over his imaginary wrongs until he becomes the most miserable man in his com munity—a burden to himself and u mortification to his friends. For the honor of South Carolina manhood we hope there are few such miserable soreheads among our de feated candidates to Say. There is no earthly reason why there should be. Popular favor bus ofter been com pared to the sea with its hidden i rocks, treacherous depths, and de ceitful smiles. Wooed by its placid J bosom and tempted by its smiles whole fleets of political craft every i year put forth upon its surface with > crowded canvas and streaming ban ners only to be caught in squalls and ! engulfed in the depths or wrecked j and stranded on the rocky coast. I Staunch indeed,und more lucky than staunch, must he the ship that weathers those squalls and makes the port of public approval in safety. But we (-liouIJ prefer to personify popular favor as a coquettish mai den. whose head has been turned by I flattery and whose heart has grown callous under oft-repeated tales of love. She bestows her smiles upon a!! alike, and each suitor fully be- I lieves that he is the favored one and i fairly revels in anticipations of the happy fortune that awaits him. But the maiden dallies and hesitates, becomes coy and whimsical; in the glare of the admiration bestowed upon her, she becomes blind to merit, and when at last she is forced to make a decision, she often selects the least worthy man of all her suitors. So it sometimes goes in popular elections. In times of peace and quiet, when no danger threatens and no vital interests are at stake, the public taste becomes fastidious and its favors are bestowed with u ca pricious hand. Some of our purest and ablest men could not in ordinary times bo elected to office, and no man on earth could tell why, further than that they lack some undefinable something necessary to strike the public fancy. Let none of our de feated candidates then feel discour aged or humiliated. It is no refiec- tion upon their character or ability as citizens and gentlemen that they have been defeated. One self-ap proving hour—one hour of conscious, untainted, uncompromised manhood is worth more than all the honors the public can give. but truly declared it to be. Neither is it prepared to accept the fact that in all wars the mortality from dis ease is from five to ten times greater than that of actual battle. Hence this silly cry of impotent horror over the announcement that our sol diers are dying by scores in the camps. Hence the violent and ; re * ar y war granted abusive charges of neglect and inur- [ an( ^ issued the necessary order, derand of every crime known to the * stung by the taunts of out- Gaffney. Don’t trust the stars any longer. Their lucky cycles are nearly completed. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ It seems that the First Regiment of South Carolina Volunteers pati- tioned to be mustered out after hos tilities had ceased, and that the see the petition FOUR-CENT COTTON. Now, the|farmers are gloomy over the prospect of four-cent cotton. But there is no use of moping. The out-look for cotton is not altogether bad. A killing frost by the middle of this month would materially di minish the crop and change the whole aspect. If that should not happen and the enormous crop now growing should come to maturity, there are other compensations that ought, in a measure, to diminish the effects of over-production. There are new countries being opened up to trade and commerce and the demand for cotton and cotton goods is greater than ever before, and is on the con stant increase. The trade with China is just fairly beginning ; sowith Ja pan and Corea; and the Philippines with their ten millions of people will soon be ready to exchange the rich products of their fields, mines and forests for our cotton goods. These countries named contain nearly one half of the entire popula- toin of the earth, and our cotton goods are just beginning to find their way into their markets. The possi bility is that in a few years at most, there will be a demand for all the * cotton’that the world can raise, and that, too, at prices renumerative to the producers. In case the present crop, however, should be what it now promises to be, and should be sold at four-cents, the prospect is not so bad after all. The enormous quantity produced will go far towards compensating Jthe fall in price, and the amount of money brought into the country will not be greatly diminished. Then cotton seed have become a money crop and will bring millions of dollars. Then better than all, enormous food crops have been produced, aud the money brought in by cotton is largely sur plus money. There is no just cause for complaint. The farmers have never been in better all-around con dition than they are at present. * MORTALITY IN THE CAMPS. This generation Itsows little of ac tual war. It cannot believe that war is what General Sherm|n roughly, criminal code on the part of govern ment officials. No doubt there was i much bud management in alfuirs per- 1 taining to the army. No doubt there were many incompetent and dishon est officials who feathered their own nests without regard to the welfare of the soldiers. Such conditions were to be expected in an army of *200,000 men raised, armed, equipped, and sent to the field in less than ninety days. But u..der the best of mug- agement, the transition from civil to army life will always severely test the physical powers of men, and dur ing the first six months of life in the camp the mortality is sure to be great. When a man volunteers for war he goes into a business in which the life of a man is no more regarded than that of a wolf, and he need not j expect un easy chair, a feather bed, and delicate food. The battle-scarred veteran who | marched bare-foot through the snow ' over the mountains and valleys of I i Virginia, or who ragged and half- I starved lay through u whole winter j in the trenches at Petersburg, often a ! foot deep in mud and water, has only j a smile of sickly contempt for all this j tint3and * shadt . 8 of pinki purp , 0 brown and blue. On close inspection siders, the officers made strenuous efforts to have tho order counter manded. Finally the whole matter has been submitted to Governor Ki- lerbe. U is simply foolish to charge the Regiment with want of courage or patriotism for wishing to disband when the purposes for which ic en listed, have been accomplished. It is made up of volunteers from civil life, and it is natural that the men should wish to return to their homes and business, now that the war is over, and it is no reflection upon their honor for them to do so. ♦ ♦♦ ♦ \Yk were'shown, the other day, a package of sample goods munufaetur- j ed by the Spartan mills and finished : upby the bleuchingjand dyeing estab- ! lishments of the North. Without oc- cular demonstation, we should have been slow to believe that the plain white goods manufactured by the Spartan mills could be so manipu lated as to be converted into such a variety of cotton goods. Some cf these samples were soft like wool and ■ others were slick and shiny like silk, ! while there were many varieties of color ranging through the different- Star Farm Statements. (Correspondence of The Ledger.) Star Farm. Aug 29.—The Associa- tlon at Cowpenfc was one of greU success. Such men as Dr. Montague and Rev. F. 0. Hickson spoke and great benefits werederived^therefr im. It is a mistake that Rev. Tate is detained at El bethel another year. We are having some very gloomy waether now. The races are passing on very nice and calm among the candidates. I guess we will soon know which ones are glad. The fodder is beginning to get ready to gather. The cotton is also opening. Those that don’t get elected can have something to do. Mr. Oland Mucomson’s school at this section will lie out to day. The school has been going on five weeks. Your correspondent has been visiting on the Smith Ford side. He notices the crops are fine. Mr. Morgan Byers of your city passed hero some days ago. Miss Eva Howey’s only child died Friday and was buried Saturday. Mr. S. C. Pridmore and daughter and Mr. Will Jones and family have been visiting this section. The Hustler. — -*•*- — \\ hen a man is a bore ho is always the last to discover it. As soon as the poor barber begins to scrape acquaintances he cuts them. A tailor says that ready-made clothing will cure a man of having fits. talk about the “sanitary conditions’’ ofthecamps. In his day, suffering, some of the samples seemed actually enduring, daring, and dying were the : t0 beof d i tfmnt texture from others, accepted “conditions” of war. ENTRIES FROM OUR DAY BOOK. To err is human -Pope. to forgive divine. A foot, must now and then be right by chance.—Cow per. A babe in a house is a well-spring of pleasure.—Tupper. lx the day of prosperity bo joyful, but in the day of adversity consider. —Ibid. If thou faint sity, thy Testament. strength in the day of adver- is small.—Old I have found you an argument; I am not obliged to find you an under standing.—Johnson. Oitr dissatisfaction with any other solution is the blazing evidence of immortality.—Emerson. lx many parts of the South, floods and wind storms have been or. the rampage. The city of Savannah suf fered severely, and the Georgia and South Carolina coasts, with the Sea Islands, were swept by the most de structive storm known for years. £i*artaxburg county elected only one member to the Legislature in the first primary. Eight of the candi dates have to try their fortunes in a second primary. The probability is that it will take a third primary to settle it. The voters of Spartanburg must be hard to please. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ The heated term has been unpre cedented. Since the middle of June there has hardly been a day off from heat and rain. In the great cities of the north and west,sunstrokes and deaths have been numerous. If the average yearly temperature is to be maintained, we may look for a long cold winter. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Notwithstanding the almost in cessant rains for nearly three months, the water in the wells is low. We were told recently by an eminent manufacturer whose mills are run by water poaer, that the river sup ply is increased only temporarily by the summer rains. It would seem that in summer, the evaporation is too rapid for the earth to absorb enough of the rain-fall to supply the wells and streams. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ The town of Gaffney is at last moving for water-works, and the authorities should receive the help and hearty co-operation of every man, woman, and child within the limits of the incorporation. No mat ter what they may cost, they will be cheaper than doctor's bllls.coffins, hearses, and conflagrations. Better spend one-half of the resources of the town than continae to hold out a standing invitation to pestilence and flame. Such an Invitation has stood too long, and that it has not been accepted, is owing rather to the lucky stars then to any foresight or provision on the part of the people of though we were informed that they were ail the products of one grade of goods manufactured by tho Spartan mills. We used to wonder what be came of all the white cloth turned out by the cotton mills. It is a mys tery no longer. The war with irpain terminated so soon that our people’s stock of com bativeness which had been accumu lating for a third of a century, was to no appreciable extent depleted The result is that there is still an enormous stock on hand, which must find some outlet for investment. Gen. Miles, the head of the army and secretary Alger, the head of the war department, are said to be at daggers’ points, except that their daggers’ points are separated by a matter of about a thousand mil< s of intervening land and sea. It is thought that when this distance is annihilated, other annihilations will be strictly in order, unless the Presi dent prove strong enough to stay the tide of events. Sampson is sour aud sullen, Shatter is indignant and de fiant, and a good sized army of office: s and attaches are worked up over reid or imaginary wrongs and are about ready for a general row. In the meantime, grand old Joe Wheel*r with the remnant of his division, ’s resting at Montauk, L. I., caring for the sick and wounded, chatting pleasantly with visitors, with no com plaints to make of any body, and with many excuses and apologies to urge in behalf of all who have ap parently failed to do their full duty. Honor the grand old big-hearted hero of two wars, without a stain on his blade or a withered leaf among his laurels. A Fleshy Consumptive Did you ever see one? Did you ever hear of one ? Most certainly not. Con sumption is a disease that invariably causes loss of flesh. If you are light in weight, . even if your cough is only a slight one, you should certainly take Scott’s Emuslion of cod liver oil e witk hypo- phosphites. No remedy is such a perfect prevent ive to consumption. Just the moment your throat begins to weaken and you find you are losing flesh, you should begin to take it. And no other remedy has cured so many cases of consumption. Unless you are far advanced with this disease, Scott’s Emul sion will hold every in ducement to you for a perfect cure. All Druggists, roc. and $t. Scott & Bownk, Chemists. N. Y. fA. K. HAWKES RECEIVED A GOLD MEDAL “Papers Not Read,” An exchange says: “Ask some men for an advertisement or a few locals and they will say they don’t believe in advertising—paper is nev er read. Let one of them be caught kissing his neighbor’s wife, or trying to hold up the side of a building sometime, and his tune changes in stantly, and if the printing office is in a garret or in a 17-story building, he will climb up to the top and beg the editor to keep quite—not to pub lish it in the paper. The paper is not read —oh no!” Highest Award Diploma af Honor For Superior T^ns Grinding snd Excellency In the Manufacture of Spectacles and Kvo UlaxaeA. Sold in 11.000 Citu** and Townti in the 17. S. Moat I opular Glasses in the U. 8. ESTABLISHED 1B7Q. Tiikhk Famous Glasses AKK NKVEK I'IDPLKD. “These famous jrlussos for sale by S. B Crawley & Co. CAUTION Our 18-inch peace-makers. guns are certainly There Is more Catarrh In this section of thecountrv than all other (IIhchscs put to- Rethur. and until the lust few years was sup posed to Ik) tiicurahle. For a (treat many years dtictors pronounced It a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and hy con stantly fallltiK to cure with local treatment, pronounced It Incurable. Science has proven catarrh tol>eu constitutional disease, and therefore require* constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured hy F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo. Ohio. Is the only con stitutional care on the market. It Is taken Internally In doses from 10 drops to a tea- spoonful. It acts directly on the hlood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case It falls to cure. Send for circulars nd testimonials. Address F. 3. Ohenky & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by druitirlsts. 75c. Hall's Family Fills are the best. | •( Ui« Blood and NervM. No ope need eulTer with neuralgia. Thlt dieeaee is quickly and permanently cured by Browne* Iron Bitten. Every disease of the blood, nerve* and stomach, chronic or otherwise, succumbs to Browns’ Iron Bitten. Known and nsed for nearly a quarter of a eentury, it stands to-day fore- most among our most valued remedies. Browns' Iron Bitten is sold by all dealem Buy your spectacles In Spartanburg from H. U. Uoodell, scientific optician. Exami nations of the eye free. Obio River and Charleston Railway Co., “J"I M ETA BLR of the (Milo River and < 'harles conjunctly with ririu Kallro Schkdclk In effect May IHth. IStw, Railway Company. Georgia Railroad. ton Railway the South Carolina and NOHTH BOUND. Eastern Time. SOUTH HOUND. 33 82 A. 11. (S. ('. Si. G.) P. M. Lv. 7 10 CHARLESTON Ar. h 00 •• 0 00 BRANCHVILLE " 5 47 “ 10 10 KINGSVILLE " 4 28 l>. M. (O. R. Sc C.) P. M. “ 12 05 CAMDEN •• 2 35 •• i or. KERSHAW •* 1 50 •• 1 50 LANCASTER• 12 50 “ 2:«) CATAWBA .IFNCTION •' 12 05 ** *J .M ROCK HILL “ 11 45 :t :ui YORK VILLE “ 11 05 •• 4 36 HLACKSUriUl •• to 00 “ 5 to EARLS •' 0 30 •' 5 20 PATTERSON SPRINGS “ » 25 6 00 SHEI*MY •• 0 |0 •• « 40 LATTIMOKF. •• * 20 •' « 55 MOORES BOKO 8 in “ 7 10 HENRIETTA •• 7 no '• 7 35 FOR ESI' CITY ** 7 St " 8 10 RlTIIEKKORDToN « 55 “ 8 :«i Mll.WOOI) « 35 “ 8 55 GOLDEN VALLEY. •• « 10 " 0 00 THERMAL CITY •• rt 05 •' 0 25 GLEN WOOD •• 5 40 Ar. 0 50 MARION Lv. 5 20 P. *t. A. M. GArrNuv Hham:it. NORTH SOUTH BOUND. BOUND P. M. P. M. Ar. 7 .Vi BLACKSHIKG Lv. 5 on - 7 36 CHEROKEE FALLS " 5 15 Lv. 7 15 GAFFNEY A r. 5 35 P. M. .i.. —— . - -• P M Trains north of Camden run dally except Sunday. Trains lad ween Charleston and Kingsville run dally. For Information as to rates. Clyde Line Hulling, etc., call on lis al contracting and traveling agents of both roads, or A. EMERSON. T. S. C. A O. It. It.. Charleston, S. C. M.. E. F.GItAY. Traffic Manager. Cincinnati. Ohio S. B LUMPKIN, Gen'I. Freight and Pass. Agent. Blacksbarg, S. 0. Koyal makes the food pure, wholesome and delicious. POWDER Absolutely Pure I'O'V*!. BAKiNG POWDER CO . SEW YOEK In a Good Cause. “Ethel. 1 was shocked to learn that you permitted a young man to you at tho church fair the other evening.” “Mamma, he picked out worth of goods at my table aud said be d buy them if I would throw in a kiss, and if I didn’t he wouldn’t buy a cent’s wortffi, and what else could 1 do?”—Chicago Tribune. URE rheumatism by taking 11 nod's Sarsaparilla,which by neu tralizing tho acid in tho blood perma nently relieves aches and PAINS. A. N. WOOD, BANKER, j does a general Banking and Exchange business. Well secured with Burglar- Proof safe and Automatic Time Lock. I Safety Deposit Boxes at moderate rent. Buys and sells Stocks ardBonds. Buys County and School Claims. Your business solicited. SOUTHERN RAILWAY* IFtx CoTwAuzAAod ■ehadnle of Faa»eac* r Tralofc In iEflfect Augrot 7, 1803. Northbound. li x fv I Atlanta, Q. T. Atlanta, E. T. Nororow .... Buford GairvrrUla... LuU Com oil a. Mt. Airy Toocoa W est m Latter Seneca Central ftf .ttOL villa ... bpartanburg. Ax. Aahecflie Ve*. Na.lSTdt.Ml No.l* No. SH kb. .Xa. 8d n aHy, Dally. Sun. DaUy. 7 au n ia oo H & a 1 (A) Via) a ,10 03 a ho aj a t M VJ M *iti u 11 B5 ajfj 0) 11 3u • 11 L! a 12 81m FI 5d pi 140 p Sis ^ 8 87 p 4 bo pill 50 p 5 86p 12 50 • ” Gaffney*.. “ Bladuiurg. “ K)ni;‘*Mt .. “ Gam tonla.... 1,7. Ojvrlotta... Ax. Greoattbora Lv. Graeuaboro. Ar. Norfolk Aj DnnvlUo Ar. Riohmond.. Ar TVndhington.. •• BnltroePRR. " Philadelphia. " New York... S 3) 4 is o asp 7 (Ap 7 ■Mp 8 08? 8 85 p 8 40p 1 37 a 6 22 6 10 800 p 4 Ai p 4 38 p f.OL p (85 p 8 00 p 068 p 0 44 7 00 2 20 2 40 6 i5 a 4 06 4 21 4 53 3 45 0 87 0 43 a 822 10 40 .110 60 .' 7 M 11 25 p 11 61 If ST a 7 15 7 26 7 58 8 20 0 25 12 10 i as p nr* j a 36 p Ttf a] f 35 p 8 03 a! Ill 85 p South bo and. j Pit. *11 iKo. an | Dali v. mrTmnrTmr Philadelphia - boitimore.. " Wmthlngton. Cv. Richmond Lv. Dwivilla Lv if. 8 SO 6 81 11 15 10 15 aj | 2 66 12 43 ml....... 0 20 Va*. |fco.ll| No. 87 Dully Dally. I TUT 6 65 0 20 10 43 li 01 m l2 Olnt lJTont 605 a 6 15 -folk. Ar Gri’aiidhoro . Lv Gre«n4f5uro AT- Charlotte Lv. Gaetonia. “ King'* Mt *• Blncxtb j> 5 60 a 10 OU p| 6 50 a! 7 26 10 00 10 40 7 06 0 26 urg .. j 11 31 Gaffneys . ...11146 a ; 82 a a 12 U5rn 112 p 138 p p 10 45 a 2 03 p, p 1U 68 a 2 24 p Lv. Asheville | 9 00 p 1 ! 8 20 a St>nrtanburg.'12 26 Greenville.. 1 25 “ Central * Seneca *• Westminster " Toccoa " Mt. Airy *■ Cornelia “ Lula “ Gainesville - Buford “ NorcroM Ar. Atlanta, E. T Ar. Atlanta. C. a 11 .84 a 12 30 T. 2 30 i 8 26 4 15 4 86 6 25 6 10 6 10 a' 1 83 a 2 18 .1 ... fs on a f.5 18 a 8 37 8 15 p 4 3U p 5 25 p 6 56 p 6 10 p 060 p 7 36 p 7 40 p 8 14 p 17. Sun. Wa 686 a 667 a 8 40 p 7 30 a 9 12 p ! 7 48 a 9 48 p ' 8 27 • 4 65 p 10 80 p WiD* '* “ - 9 30 pi 8 80 q 8 56 Cv. Ar UoRdkoSa Roon rkxisr Dallj Except Sunday S tlanta, central time orcroas. eastern time iTTT 1 15 O 2 20 p 2 20 f Cv. Rororo#*, eastern time Ar. Atlanta, central lime.. “A*’ a. m. ~"£' r p. non*. “N" night. Chesapeake Line SteamerK ta daily servlet between Norfolk and Holttm»i«. Noa.V7aud8S—Daily. Waahji.gUm andboatle w*-*tern Vestibule Limited. Through Palin an sleeping car* between New Turk and New u,.- leans, m Washington, Atlanta and Montgom ery ,*mii alee between New fork and Memphis, vtawashbigtoa,Atlanta and Birmingham. First class thoroughfare coaches between Washing U mea.i ton and Atlanta. Dining C routa. Pullman drawfarruem tween Oreousboro and Norfol) •action at Forfolk for OLD POLN' arriving there In time for breakfast Noa. Iff and »-United Matas Fast ■ ‘ i ws all i dagpan Mall run* solid between Washington sad New Or leani, via Southern Baltway. A. A w. P. R. R . A N. M. B . being composed of baggage I coaches, through without change for sere of all oJaseea. Pullman dr*win I York aaJ room sleeping cars between New New Or lease, via Atlanta aad Montgomery. Lsavtag Washington eevh Wedaeaday. a tounil I oar will run through between Weak- af,y lias Pranctayi without chance, a Drawing-Hot.m Sleeping Os re bed le sad Atlanta. 1, W, 88 and 12—Pullman Meeting _ BlchmoadandCharloite, vu Uaip ithbnuad Noa. II and M. nortbbouai Washington, D. C. _ WoshUu rt IK