The ledger. [volume] (Gaffney City, S.C.) 1896-1907, February 02, 1899, Image 5
4
THE LEimKR: OAFFNFT, S. C.. PRBRtTAlTY 2, 1809.
BEAUEIiSOFJUltDEXS
THE REV. DR. TALMAGE PREACHES
AGAINST SELFISHNESS.
Speak I'neonrnuln;; nni] Helpful
Word** lo Tlioi.e Willi Wlioni Yon
Meet In the Daily YVnlkn of kite l«
the Drencher'*. A.ltnonition.
ICopyrlglit. 1^59, by American Press Asso
ciation.)
Wakhinotox. Jan. I’D.- In this «lis-
conrso Dr. Talniagu shows how it is pos
sible to help others who are nnder the
pressing load of fatigue and care and
responsibility. The text is Galatians vi,
‘2. ‘‘Boar yo one another's burdens and
so fulfill the law of Christ. ”
Every man for himself I If there be
room for only one more passenger in the
lifeboat get in yourself. If there Ik* a
burden to lift, yon supervise while oth
ers shoulder it. Yon be the digit while
others are tho ciphers on the right hand
side—nothing in themselves, but aug
menting you. In opposition to that
theory of selfishness Paul advances in
my text the gospel theory. “Bear ye one
another’s burdens and so fulfill the law
of Christ. ’’
Everybody has burdens. Sometimes
they come down upon the shoulders,
aometimes they come down upon the
head, sometimes they come down upon
the heart Looking over any assembly,
they all seem well and bright and easy,
bnt each one has a burden to lift, and
some of them have more than they can
lift. Paul proposes to split up these
burdens into fragments. You take part
of mine, and I must take part of yours,
and each one will take part of the oth
er's. and so we will fulfill the law of
Christ.
Mrs. Appleton of Boston, tho daugh
ter of Daniel Webster, was dying after
long illness. The great lawyer after
pleading an important case in the court
room on his way home stopped at the
honso of his daughter and went into her
sickroom. She said to him. “Father,
why are yon out today in this cold
weather without an overcoat?” The
great lawyer went into the next room
and was in a flood of tears, saying.
“Dying herself, yet thinking only of
me.” Oh, how much more beautiful is
care for others than this everlasting
taking care of ourselves! High up in
the wall of tho temple of Baalbec there
are three stones, each weighing 1,100
tons. They were lifted up by a style of
machinery that is now among tho lost
arts. But in my text is the gospel ma
chinery, by which the vaster and the
heavier tonnage of the world's burden
is to be lifted from the crushed heart of
the human race. What you and I most
need to learn is the spirit of helpful
ness.
Speak Word* of Encoarufrcment.
Encourage the merchant, if he have
a superior stvle of g(K>ds. tell him so.
If ho have with his clerks adorned the
show windows and the shelves, compli
ment his taste. If he have a good busi
ness locality, if he have had great suc
cess. if ho have brilliant prospects for
the future, recognize all this. Be not
afraid that ho will become arrogant and
puffed up by your approval. Before
night some diopgoing person will come
in and tell him that his prices are ex
orbitant and that his goods are of an
inferior quality and that his show win
dow gave promise of far better things
than ho found inside. Before the night
of the day in which you say encourag
ing words to that merchant there will
be some crank, male or female, who
will como into tho store end depreciate
everything and haul down enough goods
from the shelves to fit out a family for
a whole winter without buying a cent’s
worth If the merchant be a grocer,
there will be some one before r ight who
will como into his establishment and
taste of this and taste of that and taste
of everything else, in that way stealing
all the profits of anything that he may
purchase—buying three apples while he
is eating one orange!
Before tho night of the day when yon
approve that merchant ho will have a
bad debt which he will have to erase, a
bad debt made by some one who has
moved away from tho neighborhood
without giving any hint of the place of
destination. Before tho night of the day
when you have uttered encouraging
words to the merchant there will be
some woman who will return to his
store and say sho has lost her purse;
she left it therein tho store, she brought
it there, sho did not take it away, she
knows it is there, leaving you to make
any delicate and complimentary infer
ence that you wish to make. Before
night that merchant will hear that
some stylo of goods of which he has a
largo supply is going out of fashion,
ami there will bo some one who will
come into the store and pay a bill un
der protest, saying he has paid it before,
but the receipt has been lost. Now, en
courage that merchant. not fearing that
he will become arrogant or puffed up.
for there will bo before night enough
unpleasant things said to keep him
from becoming apoplectic with plethora
of praise.
Encourage newspaper men. If you
knew how many annoyances they have,
if you understood that their most elabo
rate article is sometimes flung out be
cause there is such great pressure jn
the* columns, and that an accurate re
port of a speech is expected although
the utterance be so indistinct the dis
course is one long stenographic guess,
and that the midnight which finds you
asleep demands that they be awake, and
that they are sometimes ground be
tween the wheels of our great brain
manufactories; sickened at the often
approach of men who want complimen
tary newspaper notices or who want
newspaper retraction: one day sent to
report a burial, the next day to report a
pugilistic encounter; shifted from place
to place by sudden revolution which is
liable to take place any day in our great
journalistic establishments; precarious
life becoming more and more precarious
—if yon understood it, you wonld be
move sympathetic. Be affable when yon
have uut an ax to be sharpened on tbsii
grindstone. Discuss in your mind what
the nineteenth century would be with
out the newspaper and give encouraging
words to all who are engaged in this
interest, from the c hief of editorial de
partment down to the boy that throws
the morning or evening newspaper into
your basement window.
Do .Vjt FI till Fault.
Encourage v'cchunics. They will
plumb the pipes, or they will calcimine
the ceilings, or they will put down the
carpets, or they will grain the doors, or
they will fashion the wardrobe. Be not
among those who never say anything
to a mechanic except to find fault. If
he has done a job well, toll him it is
splendidly done. The hook is well
Inmnd, the door is well grained, tho
chandelier is well swung, the* work is
grandly accomplished. Bo not among
those employers who never say any
thing to their employees except to swear
at them. Do not bo afraid you will
make that mechanic so pnffeei up and
arrogant he w’ill never again want to
be seen with working apron or in shirt
sleeves, for before the night comes of
that day when yon praise him there
will be a lawsuit brought against him
because he did not finish his work as
soon as he promised it. forgetful of the
fact that his wife has been sick and two
of his children have died of scarlet fever
and he has had a felon on a finger of
the right hand. Denonncwd perhaps be
cause the paint is so very faint in color,
not recognizing the fact that the me
chanic himself has been cheated out of
the right ingredients, and that ho did
not find out the trouble in time, or
scolded at because he seems to have
lamed a horse by unskillful shoeing,
when the horse has' for months had
spavin or ringbone or springhalt. You
feel you have the right to find fault
with a mechanic when he does ill. Do
you ever praise a mechanic when he
does well 1
Encourage the farmers. They come
into your stores, yon meet them in the
city markets, you often associate with
them in the summer months. Office
seekers go through the land and they
stand on political platfvrms, and they
tell the farmers the story about the in
dependent life of a farmer, giving flat
tery where they ought to give sympa
thy. Independent of what? I was
brought up on a farm, I worked on a
farm. I know all about it. I hardly
saw’ a city until I was grown, and I
tell you that there are ro class of peo
ple in this country who have it harder
and who more need your sympathy than
farmers. Independent of what? Of the
cnrcnlio that stings th# peach trees, of
the rust in the wheat, of the long rain
with the rye down? Independent of the
grasshopper, of the locust, of the army
worm, of the potato bug? Independent
of the drought that barns np the har
vest ? Independent of the cow with the
hollow horn, or the sheep with the foot
rot. or the pet horse with a nail in his
hoof? Independent of the cold that
freezes out the winter grain? Independ
ent of the snow bank out of which he
must shovel himself? Independent of
the cold weather when he stands thrash
ing his numbed fingers around his body
to keep them from being frosted? Inde
pendent of the frozen ears and the
frozen feet? Independent of what?
Fancy farmers who havj made their
fortunes in the city and go out in the
country to build houses with all the
modern improvements and make farm
ing a luxury may not need any solace,
but the yeomanry who got their living
out of the soil and who that way have
to clothe their families and educate
their children and pay their taxes and
meet the interest on mortgaged farms—
such men find a terrific struggle. I de
mand that office seekers and politicians
fold up their gaseous and imbecile
speeches about the independent life of
a farmer and substitute some word of
comfort drawn from the fact that they
are free from city conventionalities and
city epidemics and city temptations.
Need Sympathy, Xot Flattery.
My most vivid remembrance of boy
hood is of my father coming in on a
very hot day from tho harvest field and
seating himself on the doorsill because
he was too faint to get into the house,
the perspiration streaming from fore
head and from chin, and my mother
trying to resuscitate him with a cup of
cold water, which he was too faint to
hold to his own lips, while saying tons
“Don't be frightened. There’s nothing
the matter: a little tired, that's all: a
little tired. ” Ever since that day, when
I hear people talking about the inde
pendent life of a farmer I see through
the sham. Farmers want not yonr flat
teries. but yonr sympathies.
Encourage the doctors. You praise
the doctor when he brings yon up from
an awful crisis of%diseuse. hut do you
praise the doctor when, through skill
ful treatment of the incipient stages of
disease, he keeps you from sinking
down to the awful crisis? There is a
great deal of cheap and heartless wit
abont doctors, but I notice that the
people who get off that wit an? the first
to send for a doctor when there is any
thing the matter. There are those who
undertake to say in our day that doc
tors are really useless. One man has
written a book entitled. “Every Man
His Own Doctor. " That author ought
to write one more book entitled. “Ev
ery Man His Own Undertaker. " “Oh.
says some one. “physicians in constant
prese nce of pain get hard hearted!” Do
they? The most celebrated surgeon of
the last generation stood in a clinical
department of one of the New York
medical colleges, the studi uts gathered
in the amphitheater to see a very pain
ful operation on a little child. The old
surgeon said: “Gentlemen, excuse me
if I retire. Tl:<*se surgeons run (hi this
is well as 1 can. and as 1 get older it
(fives me iuor< and more distress to see
pain.”
Physicians have so many hardships,
o many interruptions, so many annoy-
inces. I am glad they have so many on-
ouragements. All doors open to thmu
They are welcome to mansion and,to
•ot Littlechildien shout when they sea
hem coining down the road, and the
(g«'d. recognizing the s? p. look np and
say. “Doctor, is that you?” They stand
between our fiunilhs and the grave,
fighting back the troops of di order that
come up from tie ir encampment by the
cold river. No one hears such thanks rs
the doctor In ars. Th y are eyes to the
blind, they are feet to the lame, their
path is strewn with the benedictions of
those whom they have befriended.
In tin* Hour of Anxiety.
One* day there was a dreadful fore
boding in our house. All hope was gone.
The doctor came four times that day.
Tho children put away their toys and
all walked on tiptoe, and at the least
sound said, “Hush!” How loudly the
clock did tick, and how the banister
creaked, though we tried to keep it so
still! That night the doctor staid all
night He concentrated all his skill
upon the sufferer. At last tho restless
ness of the sufferer subsided into a calm,
sweet slumber, and the doctor looked up
and smiled and said, “The crisis is
past. ” When, propped up with pillows
in the easy chair, she sat. and tho south
W’ind tried to blow a rose leaf into the
faded cheek, and the children brought
flow’ers—the one a r(*d clover top, tho
other a violet from the lawn—to the lap
of the convalescent, and Bertha stood on
a high chair with a brush smoothing
her mother’s hair, and we were told in
a day or two she might ride out, joy
came back to our house. And as we
helped the old country doctor into his
gig. wo noticed not that the step was
broken or the horse stiff in the knees,
and we all realized for the first time in
our life what doctors were worth. En
courage them.
Encourage the lawyers. They are
often cheated out of their fees, and so
often have to breathe the villainous air
of courtrooms, and they so often have
to bear ponderous responsibility, and
they have to maintain against the
sharks in their profession tho dignity of
that calling which was honored by the
fact that the only man allowed to stand
on Monnt Sinai beside the Lord was
Moses, the lawyer, and that the Bible
speaks of Christ as lbs advocate. En
courage lawyers in their profession of
transcendent importance—a profession
honored by having on the bench a Chief
Justice Story and at tho bar a Rufus
Choate.
Encourage the teachers in our public
schools—occupation arduous and poorly
compensated. In all the cities when
there comes a fit of economy on the part
of officials the first thing to do is al
ways to cut down teachers’ salaries.
To take 40 or 50 boys whose parents
suppose them precocious and keep the
parents from finding out their mistake;
to take an empty head and fill it; to
meet the expectation of parents who
think their children at 15 years of age
onght to be mathematicians and meta
physicians and rhetoricians: to work
successfully that groat stuffing ma
chine the modern school system, is a
very arduous work. Encourage them by
the usefulness and the everlastingness
and the magnitude of their occupation,
and when yonr children do well com
pliment the instructor, praise tho teach
er, thank tho educator.
Encourage all invalids by telling them
how many you have known with the
same ailments who got well, and not by
telling them of their sunken eye or ask
ing them whether the color of their
cheek is really hectic or mentioning
cases in which that stylo of disease end
ed fatally or telling them how badly
they look. Cheerful words are more
soothing than chloral, more stimulating
than cognac, more tonic than hitters.
Many an invalid has recovered through
the influence of cheerful surroundings.
Kindly to tin* Yutinjc*
Encourage all starting in life by your
self becoming reminiscent. Established
merchants, by telling these young mer
chants when you got yonr first custom
er, and how you sat behind tho eounter
eating your luncheon with one eye on
the door. Established lawyers, encour
age young lawyers by telling of tho
time when yon broke down in yonr first
speech. Established ministers of the
gospel, encourage young ministers by
merciful examination of theological
candidates, not walking around with a
profundity and overwhehniugness of
manner as though you were one of the
eternal decrees. Doctors established, by
telling young doctors how you yourself
once mistook the measles for scarlatina.
And if you have nothing to say that is
encouraging, O man. put your teeth
tightly together and cover them with
the curtain of your lip: compress your
lips and put your hand over your mouth
and keep still.
A genih man was pmsing along, cropp
ing a bridge in Germany, and a lad cane
along with a cage of birds for sale. Tho
stranger said. “How much for those
birds and the cage?" The price was an
nounced, the purchase was made, and
the first thing the stranger did was to
opt n the door of the cage, and tho birds
flew cut into the sunlight and tho forest.
Homo one who saw the purchase and the
liberation said. “What did you do that
for?” “Ah.” said tho stranger. “1 was
a captive myself cnee, and I know how
good it is to he free." O yo who re
member hardships in early life, hut
have come beyond those hardships, sym-
pathi/.*-with those who are in tho (drug
gie ! Free yourself, help others to get
free.
(iovi rnor Alexander Stephens persist
ed in having business matters brought
to his Is Isido. Tin re was on the table
a pctitimi for the pardon of a distin
guished criminal, the ix tition signed
by distinguished nun. There was also
on that table a letter from a poor wom
an in the penitentiary, written and
signed by her:' If alone. Dying Alexan
der Stephens said “Yon think that be
cause 1 have been ill so many times
and got wc 11 I shall get well now, hut
you are mistaken. I shall not recover.
Where is that letter by that woman in
the penitentiary ? 1 think she has suf
fered enough. As near as 1 can tell she
has no tri' ude Bring me that |taper
that I may sign her pardon. ” A gentle
man standing by. thinking this too
great a rospuu dbilit) for the sick man,
■aid: "Governor, you are very sick
now*. Perhaps yon had better wait till
tomorrow. You may feel stronger, and
you may feel lietter." Then the eye of
the old governor flashed, and he said,
"I know what I am about.” Putting
his signature to that pardon, he wrote
the last word he ever wrote, for thou
the pen fell from his pale and rheu
matic and dying hand forever. O my
soul, how beautiful that tho closing
hours of life should bo spent in helping
one who bad no helper!
lOncourHKC Hie Ak<*«I.
Encourage the troubled by thoughts
of release and rcassociation. Encourage
the aged by thoughts of eternal jnve-
nescence. Encourage the herdsman amid
the troughs of sin to go back to the
banquet at the father’s homestead. Give
us tones in the major key instead of the
minor. Give ns “Coronation” instead
of "Naomi.” Yon have seen cars so ar
ranged that one car going down the hill
rolled another car np the hill. They
nearly balanced each other. And every
man that finds life up hill onght to be
helped by those who have passed the
heights and are descending to the vale.
Ob, let us bear one another’s burdens!
A gentleman in England died leaving
his fortune by will to two sons. The
son that staid at home destroyed the
father's will and pretended that the
brother who was absent was dead and
buried. The absent brother after awhile
returned and claimed bis part of the
property. Judges and jurors were to be
bribed to say that the returned brother
and eon was no son at all, but only an
impostor. The trial came on. Sir Mat
thew Hale, the pride of the English
courtroom and for 20 years the pride of
jurisprudence, beard that that injustice
was about to be practiced. He put off
his official robe. He put on tho garb of
a miller. He went to the village where
that trial was to take place. He entered
the courtroom. He somehow’ got em
paneled as one of the jurors. The bribes
came around, and the man gave ten
pieces of gold to the other jurors, but
as this was only a poor miller the
briber gave to him only live pieces of
gold. A verdict was brought in reject
ing the rights of this returned brother.
He was to have no share in the inherit
ance. “Hold, my lord!” said the miller.
“Hold; wo are not all agreed on this
verdict. These other men have received
ten pieces of gold in bribery, and I
have received only five.” “Who are
you? Where do yon come from?” said
the judge on tho bench. Tho response
was: “I am from Westminster hall;
my name is Matthew Hale, lord chief
justice of the king's bench. Off of that
place, thou villain:” And so the injus
tice was balked, and so the young man
got his inheritance. It was all for an
other that Sir Matthew Hale took off
his robe and put on the garb of a mill
er. And so Christ took off his robe of
royalty and put on the attire of onr hu
manity. and in that disguise lie won
our eternal portion. Now’ are we tho
sons of God I Joint heirs! Wo went
off from home sure enough, but we got
back in time to receive our eternal in
heritance. And if Christ boro onr bur
den. surely we can afford to bear each
other’s burdens.
A Xow Portrait of Christ.
A Frenchman named Boyer d’Agen,
who is tin author of a work on Lourdes,
discovered a curious bronze medal
among a number of old coins for sale
in a curiosity shop at Rome. He bought
it for 10 centimes because he thought
ho discovered on it Hebrew characters
dating back to tho primitive times of
the Christian era. On dose examination
it has been declared that it bears tho
effigy of Jesus.
The portrait is a profile, w’ith the
head slightly inclined forward. The
forehead is high, tho nose rather long,
slightly pointed at the tip, the mus
taches are slightly marked, and the
beard is pointed. As for the hair, it is
long and curly. The physiognomy, tak
en as a whole, cannot bo called regular,
but it is extremely fascinating.
On returning to Paris with his pur
chase M. Boyer d’Agen showed the
medal to numerous numismatists, who
pronounced it to be at least of the
greatest antiquity, though, of course, it
would have been too much to expect
they should guarantee its authenticity.
The Hebrew inscription it bears on ihe
reverse translated into English is: “Tho
Messiah, the King, will come in peace.
He is the light of men. incarnate and
living. ”
Replicas of this medal in bronze and
silver are being struck.—Paris Letter
in London Standard.
Itami’M With th* Tot*.
The other day. it is related, a well
known literary man went up to the
nursery of a friend's children in Brigh
ton. The sound of his step on the stairs
was hailed with a shriek of delight, and
the children tumbled over each other
in their eagerness to meet him. Then
they stopped shoi „ in dismay.
“What’s the matter?” he asked.
“We fought it was £Ir. Kipling.”
said tho youngest, w’ith tears in her
voice.
It appeared that Mr. Kipling wuis in
the habit of telling them stories, and
they couldn’t appreciate any one else’s
visits. Mr. Kipling is very sympathet
ic with childhood and is often to be
found romping with his own children.
—London Letter.
Mothers!
T;
'he discom
forts and
dangers of
child-birth can
be almost en
tirely avoided.
WineofCardui'
relieves ex
pectant moth
ers. It gives
toncto the gen
ital organs, and
puts them in
condition to do their work
perfectly. That makes preg
nancy less painful, shortens
labor and hastens recovery alter
child-birth. It helps a woman
bear strong healthy children.
MEEIRECJ
»oi
Mr. S. A. Fackler. Editor of the
Micanopy (F!,i.) llii-lb-r will) his
w ife mid children. Mi)I» r* <l terribly
from La Grippe. One M mut** Cough
Cure was the only remedy that
I A^ed thfin. It. acted quickly,
l iiVisands of ntlu rs u*e this remedy
as a specific for J,'i Grppe. and its
exhausting after elT*-ets. Cherokee
Drug Co.. Call.uy. K H Witlurs i
Co., Blacksburg.
has also brought happiness to
thousands of homes barren for
years. A few doses often brings
joy to loving hearts that long
for a darling baby. No woman
should neglect to try it for this
trouble. It cures nine cases out
of ten. All druggists sell Wine
of Cardui. £i .co per bottle.
For advice tn csoea requfrlrir spectal
directions, address, e'vine symptoms,
the "Ladies’ Advisory Dep.rtmcnt,
The Ch-ttar.ccc* Medicine Co., Ch&:u-
nooca. Term.
■rs. LOUISA HALE.
of Jefferson, G*., *ay«s
••When ! first took Wine of Cardui
we had bean married three Y'ilri, but
eould not have any children. Nine
months later 1 bad a fine girl baby."
1 ■
CLINE BROS. & CO.,
Livery Feed and Sale Stables.
Opposite National Bank.
Kirst-elcss turnouts; prompt attention-
and cotirtt'iiiis attendants.
IV Wo solicit yonr patrorinpe.
FOR $20 GASH
You call dry one of M.
Favorlti
I,. Alexanders
Patti to I n 1 a h
at her wed img. Hhc
A fc v Joses f Dr M. A
Liver Modtoit*** «i!l (lo u
Weak Stoitro h lloin a
course of :iii\ ot In r turdu
band
huv-*
Sttumor.s
for a
Silent and Light Running Sewing Machines
j And Tlic l.cdr’cr for one year. Full de-
scr.oti* u of tiuK-ldnc can be* had ui
th!:; ofilc \
USE
PiBCKlY
■ ASH
BITTERS
.FOR KIDNEY DISEASE, STOM
ACH TROUBLE, INDIQE8
CHON LIVER DISORDER OR.,
CONSTIPATION,
nCURES.
A Rotharlilld ZoolnKist.
Walter Rothschild, tho eldest son of
Lord Rothschild of Tring Park, now 80
years old and the successor in parlia
ment of Baron Ferdinand de Rothschild,
recently dead, is keenly interested in
zoology. He has written extensively on
this snbject, among his publications be
ing a work on the avifanna of Laysan.
He is joint editor of the Novitates
Zoologies*, which is published at the
Zoological mnsenm at Tring, where he
has carried ont in his father’s park
some interesting experiments in the ac
climation of foreign animals, including
the zebra and the kangaroo. He was
educated at Bonn and at Magdalene
college. Cambridge. He is not married.
These are dangerous times for the
health. Croup, colds and throat
troubles lead rapidly to Consumption
A bottle of One Minute Cough Cure
used at the right time will preserve
life, health and a large amount of
money. Pleasant to take; children
like it. Cherokee Drug Co.. Gaffney.
R. S. Withers & Co., Blacksburg.
■— —
The legislature ot Texas, Arkansas
and California are discussing anti-
cigarette bills.
If Gloomy a id Nervous, and looking
on the dark .ide of things, take a
few doses Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver
Medicine, an 1 the gloom will disap
pear.
Deaths ir Santa Clara, Cuba, dur
ing the pus three years have equaled
80 per eeut of the population.
If Irritable, Out of Scrts, De
pressed in Spirits, have a Dull
Headache, take a few doses Dr. M.
A. Simmons Liver Medicine for quick
relief.
Itreit* with you whether yon pnntinoe th#*
nervc.kllliutf tohhcco habit. N«-Tt>-UAC
remove- the desire tor tobae<o. with-,
out Dervou.dUlrer*. expelcnico^,
tine, purihe* the hlood, mk.
stores lost manhood.
makes von siroug
In health, nerve
and pocket-
book.
sold. |
„ <-a*e» cured. Buy
XO-TO-B AC front
„ . your own druyirl*i*ho
will vouch for us. Take ilwtth
p--a will,patiently, peralsteiitlj. Bn*
w- box. •!. usually <-uies: l haxaa.BI.tt,
„ (ruaramerd to cure, or we refund money.
BttrtlagBuMdyCa., Ckleac*. - -- ill. ■■rFsif.
Letters of Administration.
State of South Cabomha, I
County or Cherokee. \
Office of Probate Judir**. )
By J. E. Webster. Esq., Probat? Jndgv*.
Whkheas, J. Kb Jefferies, as Clerk of tho
Court of Common Pleas, lias made suit *o mo
to trrant him letters of uciminiHlrntinn of tho
esrute of arid effects of William itrbfht.
These are therefore to cite and admonish
all and sinifular the kindred and creditor* of
the suid William Bright, deceased, that they
be and appear before me. In thee»,artofpro
bate. to be held at Gaffney., pity, N. U* on
Tuesday. Uth day of February, next.-after
publicallon thereof, at 11 o'clock in Ibetoro-
noon. to show cause. If any they have, why
the said Administration should not bo
granted.
Given under my hand, this 4th day ©• Jan
uary, A. I).. ISW.
J. E. Wvbsteh.
l-S-et Frotiitu Jvugo.
A. K. HAWKES
RECEIVED
Highest Award Diploma af ffenor
For Superior Tens Grindini* and F.v-crf
the Manufacture of Speef.^clea an.! I.vnl
Sold in 11.000 Cities and Towns in the If. I
Popular Glasses la the U. S.
ESTABLISHED 7870.
These Famous <2Lii
EDPLKI
CAUTION Auk Nkveii P.iuTSLko.
’’These tamous glasses for sale by -8*. X
Crawley &. Co.
SOUTHERN >R AILWi
Condensed Keliedale of Passenger CnlMh
In Effect Oct. lit, !S»f. _
Ves 'lNo ItJ&NMi
Northbound.
Lv. Atlanta, C. T.
" Atlanta. E. T.
** Norcross
" EuforU
M Otdaeaville...
" Lula
Ar. CerneMa
Lv.Mt. Airy
" Voceoa
" Went minster
“ Feiieea
“ Central
“ Greenville. .
“ hparlanburg.
*• Gisffncrs
“ Blacksburg ..
" King'sMt ...
“ ^nstonin
Lv. enariotto ...
Ar. Giv-easburo
No.l?ljfss. 3.1 Ka.
Daily j Gully. ,s un .
Lv. Greensboro..
Ar.Norio.k .
Ar. Danville . ...
Ar. Itii'hiiKuid ...
Ar.Washington
“ Jtnltin'ePRR.
" Philadelphia.
** New York ...
• W * 12
8 oJ a 1
y;«) a
10 05 u
10 aj at 3
10 53 af J
11 25 ajfa
11 UJ a>
1! M a | 3
12.11m 1
12 52 p 4
1 4') pi
2 54 p| 5
3 37 p! (I
4-‘l P 0
4;.-* pi 7
5 03 p|..
5 ?5 |J .
ti 30 p| 3
y 52 p!io
00 in
00 p
4 35 p
5 <13 p
It 23p
7 03 p
7 43 p
H OKp
8 35 p
! I 25 p
C 40 a
10 5. * p
7 50 a
11 61
0 40'
Sontlibnund.
rv.. 1 -:. n ;t. imr
*• Philadelphia.
” ) nilimore
“ Washington.
Lv. Richmond ...
0 42 a
8 03 a
JO 15 a
12 43 m
{rat. 3( 11 i'es.
| No. 35 No. 37
Dailv. 'DalDr^
1>
P
P
irs*
1 S7 •
.••s••Oo
**> a
»40 a
»••••*«•
••••••••
3 15-a
4-ML*
4.2 JJB
4 5240
6- 45*0
0 87m
7’;15va
7 85sa
7- 58*0
820 sa
#•25*0
12. N-9
95
U 25
Lv. Danville
Lv Norfolk
Ar. Ui eeashorn..
Lv. Greensboro
Ar. Charlotte ....
Lv. Gastonia
“ King’s Alt
“ Blacksburg ..
' Gaffneya
“ Kpurtanburg.
" Greenville....
“ Central
“ f-cccoa
** Westminster.
“ Toecoft
" Ml. Any
M Cornelia
“ Lula
'* Gainesville...
** Buford
“ Norcross
Ar. Atlanta, E. T.
Ar. At mum, O. T
a' 4 *JO
a 6 55
a! !) 20
a 10 43
No. 11
Daily
9 85.
11 -354
JJL
10 U IV V
oTin iToi'ut 1 limit
0 15 p
7 20
10 00
10 40
5 50 a
0 35 "p
0 45 o
7 05
y 20
p 13 45
p 10 58
a 11 !4
a 12 30
.. f3 00
n f3 18
a, 3 87
610 a
I 57
12 Uiiu
1 12 p
158 p
2Wip
'2 24 p
3 15 p
4 30 p
5 25 p
*55 p
0 10 p
0 50
7 5* p
7 40 p
811 p
3 40 p
!) 12 p
5 23 s
0 10 aj 4 S5 p ill
5 10 ab8 53 pi li: Jjr
NORCROSS Ndfljf TKaIW.
Daily Kucpt Nnnday
6 IS
6 57 )
|?a;
w 4.5 p| 6 ar •
moo P #80 a
n::o pUWa
Lv. Atlanta, :d ilru
Ar. N- r • <«(, e.rde.'n (five
flTT’.
• ill HI'
f * t • 4 I **X -a**. J- V .ANn
V*ifr*Y ' Yf-**
m
' ’ •. ■ •c. J .
1 nj
2 2# P
JtfLe
night
About (io
Ifl < 'llllll, 11 »*
Rico.
:> American
i’hilippi.'H s
{•«»:«• gvti j l
r * . •*.*. -r* ——— * ti's
:o . ! ^ .
i
r root
Htni .
(V.ughii g it*
lungs. Oi.e
loosens I*’e col
bon!* quickh .
for chiulren.
tinny. 11 tlfoey.
Blnckabiirg.
juri s ur.tl ini!:nu s fore
.Minute Lough Giro
<i ullpy 4 cot ghiog alii!
Tin best 1 oil 1 Ii etiro
Cherokee Drug < !• in •
U. >. Wither? A-
f H !/
; H S A
1 D /. K’-v
It is rumnrcil that Alger, '■lilos n*
Kagan \GII all he aoitteuccil lo civil
die. n
1 !
t
Mornln
Pregnancy,
Fquuw V r itu
S.Cr, I t “e. Of
it* dirpclled
Wine or
N.ilist a from
hy Simmons
Tablets.
This m icb ne N gunriinleed fur llv< years
by M. I, Ah '.under C.c dialer in i none.
. ml 1 >1 .11 ns. i,rt« nv'lh . S. C.
semi iiioney to tin le dger by Exptcss nr
Money Onh r nnd tbe ll.l.rbim "id be
.hipped on leu days Ill'll. If inioditm Is
not satisfactory we will pay return freight
’iiid refund the money.
Lv. Noivirms, ens.em iboo .
Ar. At lauin. e'"itral tiMr
"A" a. m. ’’B'’p. m. ”11''iio-m.
Ci:cs:i| cuko L’.’ie StfiuiHia ui dally Mcrvio*
between Norfolk sad i u.timi.ro
Nos.3. cndOs—D.tiiy. u ii,..;ua 'i.i mi 1 Soutb*
vres'ern \ estlbuie l.'.ll i** I. To.- i i.;’i PiilnnOB
sleeping ears i .•(ween New Yni I; 1.. .1 N*« Or-
leans, via’.Vii.d,.i.gt.m, Ada m mid Meiug Ha
rry..-ti-d also letv.ee.qNe" York Ol I Monn.hiw
vmW ashiaglou.Ai luiitanmi Birmingham. FI raft
eliiss tliorougld'aro • •el es l.ei w« , «(:i Wnulnup-
ton and Atla ila. Diuiqg cant waive all iumU**
en route. Funui'inurin.'ijw r< oui mewniifOM**
between GrcotislM.rn A id Nor o Ic Ch.se (S>u
tection id Find.i.k for OLD I’< * .s f t biHilfUICV
arriving there tn time lor lireakfnsi
Nos 55 umi llrt-l in ted stales Fast Mai)
runs solid is.Mveen \Vii-;.ing:on nn l N* v Or
leans, via Southern Railway. A. .‘J R I*. K. H.,
• ml 1,. 2c N. K 11., bom* coMpos<*| >| lutgiptya
rnr ii:id eoacl.' s, through without . na.i^* for
passcngerV o,- all classes, t-u. .n.-m drawing
rooi.i sleeping cars Uuw.uii Nsiv York uad
New Or <via Atlanta and Monigginory
I.caving nshington each Wevlnotua.i. a to.ms
■leepiug ear will run D roitgn i.diwsmi Wash
Lugtou ami liau Francisco w 11 him,', cluing*
Nos. 11,37, .8 and 12—Fulhnau sleeping ear
between tOcu.'iiutirt and Chariots, vi v t/*nvilt«
•outhboun 1 Nos. 11 umi 37, nv>. Un. 1 tad N«
fc? and 12
FRANKS. GANNON J >f.C'. I.P.
'lhir.1 V i*. ,v Gen Ygr., up' ■■ M'tfr.
\> ushiuglou. D C. V. .■0.'.' O. ii
W A. TT KK, S. H. HaITai b%
Gen'l I’avs. Ag't . y.ss 1G1 n*l F ■ Af'L.
Was