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L N IS Ml What docs your mirror say? Docs it tell you of some little streaks i.f gray? Are you pleased? Do your friends cf the same age show this loss of power also? Just remember that gray hair never becomes darker without he'p, while dark hair rapidly becomes gray when once the change begins. will bring back to your hair the color of youth. It never fails. It is just as sure as that heat melts snow, or that water quenches fire. It cleanses the scalp also and prevents the formation of dandruff. It feeds and nour ishes the bulbs of the hair making them produce a luxu riant growth. It stops the hair from falling out and gives a fine soft finish to the hair as well. We have a book on the Hair awl Scalp which you may obtain Iruo upon request. , If you do not obtain all the ocnotlts you expected from the u»o of tho ViHor, write the Doctor about it. Address, DK. J. <). AVKIt Lowell, iiiass. J. E. WEBSTER, jjVttornejr-JVt- Oiflce iu Ooui t House. (Probate Judge'soffice Gaffney City, S. C. Practices in all the courts. Collec- lions a specialty. C. JEFFERIES*- GAFFNEY, S. C. Attorney md Counsellor at Law. Practices in All the Courts. Collections a Specialty. D.U.Dum’an. (M’.Sand. rs. W.S. Hull.Jr. DUNCAN, SANDERS 4 HALL, Attorney s-at-Lav/. Office tvv») <!<xus ul><>>’<• LgcI^it f >ni4M*. All business b» i'anMully und promptly. Spt*ci;il uttfMitiongiven tocollec- 1 inns. Tlie Peari Steam Lauadry Js oporaMnf? on lull time and turning out lirst-elafl3 work. Kemiunlwr us wtien you want work done. We will call for your package. We also have In operation A First-Glass Giist Mill. We respectfully solicit your patronage and ask the people out of tow n to bring their corn along w ben they come in to do their shopping. VV ill make your meal while you are husihere and you will lose no time. *•* Corn ground .lust as soon as received every day In tin* week. Richardson Bros., Props. Sale of Bankrupt Stock. Having purchased the bankrupt ntock of I). L. Drown, of Blacksburg, 3 have decided to give my customers 1 lie benefit of the low price at which these goods were purchased. I can ; nd will sell these goods at less than 1 he merchant can purchase from the w holesale dealer at this time. This flock embraces Flour, ColTee, Sugar, 2iolusses, Uice, Soap, Crockery ware, «tc. This is no fake sale. Hvery- thing guaranteed to be as represent ed. Don’t, fail to call on mo before buying elsewhere. r. s. COOK. I*iV15Y must litiv* :i t>l»oto£r;i|>h * li.’ive :t new carai-nt, MTisrs ami bai'k^rounffs. My XMO'I l WI of buildlngti. l;ilidsc:i|«.Mind crunp wink can'l In In al :il I lie pr ices. Hid you«*vcr Hec a ll.i'b light picture at flight V It is jolly fun; try our. .Snap-slnt fvtirk ^iioiilil lw iiiatir : a i'\vsci c.x iiiiM* a. in r< aills. I four p. in to I br Im'sI l worry iKfausA * 1 * * 4 * * 7 tin- baby li is natural b ? ttuiu* |>M*|»b* t«* kick i hoiit ttu ir |ib'l tn I kitaranttM* woik- maiisiitp uimI llnish. Yours to i»l% asi*. JOHN GREEN. At the tent, ucil door to \S . I . ’I'liii/ny». TAKE A BIHLE ALONG. DR. TALMAGE DISCOURSES ON SUM MER VACATIONS. AdinoniMlu'N the j’lenNiire Seeker. Itot to Leave iteliKiou Uelilnd. 'I'enitititlioiiN Altoiind lit Waterlntf riacen. [(.'opyrlght, Louis Klopsch, 1S99.] Washinoton, Aug. 20.-—At tlds sea son of the year, when all who can get a vacation are taking it, this discourse of Dr. Talmngc Is suggestive and ap propriate. The text is John v, 2, 3: "A pool, which is called iu the Hebrew tongue Dethesda, having live porches. In these lay a great multitude of Im potent folk, of blind, halt, withered, waiting for the moving of the water.” Outside the city of Jerusalem there was a sanative watering place, the popular resort for invalids. To this duy there is a dry basin of rock which shows that there may have been a pool there 300 feet long, 130 feet wide ami To feet deep. This pool was sur rounded by five piazzas, or porelies, or bathing houses, where the patients tar ried until the time when they were to slop into the water. So far as reiu- vlgoratiou was concerned it must have been a Saratoga and a Long Branch on a small scale, a Leamington and a Brighton combi nod—mod leal and thera peutic. Tradition says that at a cer tain season of the year there was nu otlioer of the government who would go <lown to that water and pour in it some healing quality, and after that the people would come and get the medication, but I prefer the plain statement of Scripture that at a cer tain season an angel came down and stirred up or troubled the water, and then the people came and got the heal ing. That angel of Hod that stirred up the Judaean watering place had ids counterpart in the angel of healing who in our day steps into the mineral waters of Congress, or Sharon, or Sul phur Springs, or into the salt sea at Cape May ami Nahaut, where multi tudes who are worn out with commer cial and professional anxieties, ns well as those who are afllicted with rheu matic, neuralgic and splenetic dis eases, go and are cured by the thou sands. These blessed Bethosdas are scattered all up and down our country. The Vacation Season. We are at a season of the year when rail trains are laden with passengers and baggage on their way to the moun tains and the lakes and the seashore. Multitudes of our citizens are away for a restorative absence. The city heats are pursuing the people with torch and fear of sunstroke. The long, silent halls of sumptuous hotels are all abuzz with excited arrivals. The antlers of Adirondack deer rattle un der the snot of city sportsmen. The trout make fatal snap at the hook of adroit sportsmen, who toss their spot ted brilliance into the game basket. The baton of the orchestral leader taps the music stand on the hotel green, and Amerfean life lias put on festal array, and the rumbling of the ten pin alley, and the crack of the ivory balis on the green itaized billiard ta bles, and the Jolting of the barroom goblets, and the explosive uncorking of the champagne bottles, and the whirl and the rustle of the ballroom dance, and the clattering hoofs of the race course and other signs of social dis sipation tit test that t lie season for the great American watering places Is in full play. Music! Flute and drum and cornet-a-piston and slapping cym bals wake tiie echoes of the mountains. Clad am 1 that fagged out American life for the most part lias an oppor tunity to rest and that nerves racked and destroyed will find a Rethesda. I believe in watering places. They recuperate for active service many who were worn out with trouble or overwork. They are national rcstora- stives. Let not the commercial firm be grudge the clerk, or the employer the journeyman, or the patient the physi cian, or the church its pastor, a season of inoccupation. Luther used to sport with his children; Edmund Burke used to caress Ids favorite horse; Thomas Chalmers, iu the dark hour of the church’s disruption, played kite for recreation—so 1 was told by his own daughter—and tin* busy Christ said to the busy apostles, "Come ye apart awhile into the desert and rest your selves.” And I have observed that they who do not know how to rest do not know how to work. But 1 have to declare this truth today that some of our fashionable watering places are the temporal and eternal destruction of "a multitude tiiat no man can num ber,” and amid the congratulations of this season and the prospect of the de parture of many of you for the country 1 must utter a warning, plain, earnest and unmistakable. Take Piety Atonic. The first temptation that Is apt to hover iu tlds direction is to leave your piety at home. You will send the dog and cat and canary bird to be well cared for somewhere else, but the temptation will he to leave your re ligion in the room with the blinds down and the door boiled, and then you will come hack in flie autumn to find that It Is starved and suffocated, lying stretched on the rug stark dead. There is no surplus of piety at the wa tering places. I never knew any one to grow very r nidly in grace at the Catskill Mountain House, or Sharon Springs, or the Falls of Montmorency. It is generally the case that the Sab bath is more of a carousal than any other day, and there are Sunday walks and Sunday rides and Sunday excur sions. Elders ami deacons and minis- ters of religion who are entirely con sistent at home, sometimes when the Sabbath dawns on them at Niagara Falls or the White mountains, take a day to themselves. If they go to the ehureh, it is apt to be a sacred pamdu, i and the discourse. Instead of being a | plain talk about the soul, is apt to be \\ hat is culled a crack sermon that Is, ; some discourse piekod out of the ef- i fusions of the year as the one most 1 adapted to excite admiration, and iu i those churches, from the way the | ladies hold tliejr fans, you know that they are not so much impressed with i the heat its with the picttiresqueuess : of half disclosed Icalures. Four puny | souls stand in the organ loft amt squall ' a turn- that uohody knows, and wor shipers with $2,Ono worth of diamonds , on the right lian I drop a cent Into the uoor box, ami then the benediction Is pronounced, and the farce Is ended. The toughest tiling ) ever tried to do was to he good at a watering place. The air Is bewitched with the “world, the flesh and the devil.” There are Christinas who in three or four weeks In such a place have had such terrible rents made in their Christian robe that they had to keep darning It until Christmas to get it mended. The health of a great many people makes an annual visit to some mineral spring nu absolute necessity, hut take your Bible along with you aud take nn hour for secret prayer every day, though you be surrounded by guffaw and saturnalia. Keep holy the Sab bath, though they deride you as a bigoted Puritan. Stand oiT from gam bling hells uuA those other institutions which propose to imitate on tills side the water the Iniquities of Baden Baden. Let your moral and your im mortal health keep pace with your physical recuperation and remember that all the sulphur and chalybeate springs cannot do you so much good us j the healing, perennial flood that breaks , forth from the “Bock of Ages.” This | may be your last summer. If so. make ' it a lit vestibule of heaven. Turf AlioiiiinatIon. Another temptation hovering around j nearly all our watering places is the horse racing business. We all admire the horse, lint we do not think that its beauty or speed ought to lie cultured at the expense of human degradation. The horse race is not of such impor tance as the human race. The Bible intimates that a man is better than a sheep, and I suppose he is better than a horse, though, like Job’s stallion, ills neck tie clothed with thunder. Horse races in olden times were under the ban of Christian people, and in our day the same institution lias come up under fictitious names. And it is call ed a ‘‘summer meeting,” almost sug gestive of positive religious exercises. And it is called an “agrfculturul fair,” suggestive of everything that is im proving In the art of farming. But under these deceptive titles are the same cheating, and the same betting, ami the same drunkenness, and the same vagabondage, ami the same abomination that were to he found under the old horse racing system. 1 never knew a man yet who could give himself to the pleasures of the turf for a long reach of time and not lie battered in morals. They hook up their spanking team and put on t’.ieir sporting cap and light their cigar and take the reins and dash down on the road to perdition! The great day at Saratoga and Brighton Beach and Cape May and nearly all the other wa tering places is the day of the races. The hotels are thronged, every kind of equipage is taken up at au almost fab ulous price, and there are many re spectable people mingling with jock eys and gamblers and libertines and foul mouthed men and flashy women. The bartender stirs up the brandy smash. The bets run high. The greenhorns, supposing all Is fair, put in their money soon enough to lose it. Three weeks before the race takes place the struggle is decided, and the men iu the secret know on which steed to bet their money. The men on the horses riding around long ago arrang ed who shall win. Leaning from the stand or from the carriage are men and women so absorbed in the struggle of bone and muscle and mettle that they make a grand harvest D>r the pick pockets, who carry off the poeketbooks and the portemouuales. Men looking on see only a string of horses with their riders flying around the ring, but there is many a man on that stand whose honor and domestic happiness and fort tine—white mane, white foot, white flank—are In the ring, racing with Inebriety and with fraud and with profanity and with ruin—black neck, black foot, black flank. Neck and neck go the leaders in that moral Epsom. White horse of honor, black horse of ruin. Death says, "I will bet on the black horse.” Spectator says, "I will bet on the white horse.” The white horse of honor a little way ahead. The black horse of ruin, Satan mounted, all the time gaining on him. Spectator breathless. They put on the lash, dig iu the spurs. There! They are past the stand. Sure. Just as I expected it. The black iiorse of ruin lias won the race, and the galleries of darkness “Huzza, huzza!” and the devils come in to pick up their wagers. Ah, my friends, have nothing to do with horse racing dissipations this summer! A Timely WurnliiK. Long ago the English government pot through looking to the turf for tlia dragoon and the light cavalry horse. They found out that the turf depre ciates the stock, and it is worse yet for men. Thomas Hughes, the mem ber of parliament and the author known all the world over, hearing that a new turf enterprise was being start ed in this country, wrote a letter in which he said, “Heaven help you, then, for of all the cankers of our old civ ilization there Is nothing in this coun try approaching in unblushing mean ness, in rascality holding its head high, to tills belauded institution of the British turf.” Another famous sports man writes, “How many tine domains have been shared among these hosts of rapacious sharks during the last 200 years, and, unless the system he altered, how many more are doomed to fall into the same gulf’/” With the bullflghts of Spain and the bear bait ings of the pit may the Lord Hod an nihilate the infamous aud accursed Iiorse racing of England and AmcricaJ I go further aud speak of another temptation tkiU hovers over the water ing place, and that is the temptation to sacrifice physical strength. The modern Rethesda, just like tills Rcthes- du of the text, was intended to re cuperate the physical health, and yet how many come from the watering places their health absolutely destroy ed! City simpletons boasting of hav ing imbibed 20 glasses of Congress wa ter la-fore breakfast. Families accus tomed to go to bed at to o'clock at night gossiping until 1 or 2 o’clock in the morning. Dyspeptic*, usually very cautious alMiut their health, mingling Ice creams and lemons ami lobster salads ami cocoanuts until the gastric Juices lift up all their voices of lamen tation and protest. Delicate women and brainless young men dancing themselves into vertigo aud catalepsy. Thousands of men and women coming back ffoiq our watering places in the autumn \Gtli the foundations laid fop Ailments that will last them ail ttieiv life long. You know as well as I do that this Is the simple truth. In the summer you say to your good health: "Hoodby. 1 am going to have a gay time now for a little while. I will be very glad to see you again iu the au tumn.” Then Iu the aiitumn, when you are hard at work In your office or store or shop or counting room, Good Health will come in and say: “(Joodby. 1 am going.” .Y<m say, “Where are you goingV" •‘Oh,” says Hood Health, “1 am going to take a vacation!” It Is a poor rule that will not work both ways, and your good health will leave you choleric and splenetic and ex hausted. You coquetted with your good health in the summer time, and your good health is coquetting with you in the winter time. A fragment of Paul’s charge to the jailer would be nn appropriate Inscription for the hotel register in every watering place, "Do thyself no harm.” Society Artificial. Another temptation hovering around the watering place is the formation, of hasty and lifelong alliances. The wa tering places are responsible for more of the domestic Infelicities of this country than nearly all other things combined. Society is so artificial there that no sure judgment of character can be formed. They who form com panionships amid such circumstances go Into a lottery where there are 20 blanks to onw prize. In the severe tug of life you want more than glitter and splash. Life is not a ballroom, where the music decides the step and how and prance and graceful swing of long train can make up for strong common sense. You might ns well go among the gayly painted yachts of a summer regatta to find war vessels as to go among the light spray of the summer watering plitee to find character that can stand the test of the great strug gle of human life. In the battle of life you want a stronger weapon than a lace fun or a croquet mallet. The load of life is so heavy that iu order to draw it you want a team stronger than that made up of a masculine grasshopper and a feminine butterfly. If there is any man in the communi ty who excites my contempt and who ought to excite the contempt of every man and woman it is the soft handed, soft headed dude, who, perfumed until the air is actually sick, spends his summer iu striking killing attitudes and waving sentimental adieux and talking infinitesimal nothings aud find ing Ills heaven iu the set of a lavender kill glove. Boots as tight as an inquisi tion. Two hours of consummate skill exhibited In Hie tie of a flashing era- vat. His conversation made up of "Alls!” and “Uhs!” and “He lies!” There is only one counterpart to such a man as that, ami that Is the frothy young woman at the watering place; her conversation made up of French moonshine; what she lias in her head only equaled by what she has on her hack; useless ever since she was horn and to be useless until she is dead un less she becomes nn Intelligent Chris tian. \Ve may admire music ami fair faces ami graceful step, but amid the heartlessness and the inflation mid the fantastic influences of our modern wa tering places beware how you make lifelong covenants. Ilitncfiil liiterntnre. Another temptation that hovers over the watering place is that of baneful literature. Almost every one starting off for the Hummer takes some reading matter. It is a book out of the libra ry or off the bookstand or bought of Hie hoy hawking books through the cars. 1 really believe there Is more pestiferous trash read among the in telligent classes In July aud August than in all the other ten months of the year. Men and women who at home would not lie satisfied with a book that was not really sensible I find sitting on hotel piazza or under the trees reading hooks the index of which would make them blush if they knew that you knew what the hook was. “Oh,” they say. “you must have intellectual recreation!” Yes. There is no need that you take along to a watering place “Hamilton's Metaphys ics” or some ponderous discourse ou the eternal decrees or “Faraday’s Philosophy.” There are many easy books that are good. You might as well say. "1 propose now to give a lit tle rest to my digestive organs, and in stead of eating heavy meat and vege tables 1 will for a little while take lighter food, a little strychnine and a few grains of ratsbane.” Literary poison in August Is as had as literary poison iu December. Mark that. Do not let the frogs of a corrupt printing press jump into your Saratoga trunk or White mountain valise. Are there not good books that are easy to road books of entertaining travel, books of congenial history, hooks of pure fun. hooks of poetry, ringing with merry canto; books of fine engravings, books that will rest the mind as well as puri fy the heart aud elevate the whole life! There will not be an hour between this and your death when .\oii can afford to read a hook lacking iu moral prin ciple. Another temptation hovering all around our watering places is intoxi cating beverages. 1 am told that it is becoming more and more fashionablo for women to drink. I care not how well a woman may dress, if she lias taken enough of wine to flush tier cheek and put a glnsshioss on her eye she is drunk. She may he banded into a $2,r>i>0 carriage aud have diamonds enough to astound the Tiffanys she is drunk. She may be a graduate of the best young ladies’ seminary and the daughter of some man in danger of being iio!|iinated for the presidency— she is druuK. You may have u larger vocabulary than I have, ami you may any in rcgjrd to her that Hhe is “con vivial,” or she is “merry,” or she Is “festive,’’ or she Is “exhilarated,” but you cannot with all your garlands of verbiage cover up the plain fact that it is au old fashioned case of drunk. DuiiKern of Now, the watering places are full of temptations to men and women to tip ple. At the close of the tenpin or bil liard game they tipple. At the close of (lie cotillon they tipple. Seated on the piazza cooling themselves off they tip ple. The tinged glasses come around with Iii'IkIiI straws and they tipple. First they take ‘‘light wines,” as they call them, tmt "light wines” are heavy enough to debase the appetite. There Is not a very long road between eham- pague at $.*> a bottle and whisky at 10 cents a glass. Hntnn has three or four grades down whleli lie takes men to destruction. One man lie takes up and through one spree pitches him into eternal darkness. This is a rare case. Very seldom. Indeed, can you lind a mao who will lie such a fool ns unit. Satan will take another man to a grade, to a descent at an angle about like the Pennsylvania coal shoot or the Mount Washington rail truck, and shove him off. But that Is very rare. When h man goes down to destruction, Satan brings him to a plane. It Is al most u level. The depression Is so light Hint you can hardly see It. The man does not actually know that he Is on the down grade, and it tips only a little toward darkness—just a little. And the first mile It is claret, and the second mile it Is sherry, and the third mile it Is punch, and the fourth mile it is ale. and the fifth mile It is whis ky, and Hie sixth mile it is brandy, and then it gets steeper aud steeper and steeper until it Is Impossible to stop. “Look not thou upon the wine when It is red, when it glveth its color in the cup, when it moveth itself aright. At the last it biteth like a ser pent and stingeth like nn adder.” Tlie Safe Shelter. Whether you tarry at home—which will he quite as safe and perhaps quite as comfortable—or go into the coun try, arm yourself against temptation. The grace of God.is Hie only safe shel ter, whether in town or country. There are watering places accessible to all of us. You cannot open a hook of tiie Bible without finding out some such watering place. Fountains open for sin and • ncleanness. Wells of salva tion. Streams from Lebanon. A flood struck out of tho rock by Moses. Fountains In Hie wilderness discover ed by Hagar. Water to drink and wa ter to bathe in. The river of God, which Is full of water. Water of which If a man drink he shall never thirst. Wells of water Iu tlie valley of Baca. Living fountains of water. A pure river of water as clear as crys tal from under the throne of God. These are watering places accessible to all of us. We do not have a labori ous packing up before start—only the throwing away of our transgres sions. No expensive hotel bills to pay. It Is “without money and without price.” No long and dusty travel be fore we get there. It is only one step away. In California in five minutes I walk ed around and saw ten fountains all bubbling up, and they woce all dif ferent, and in five minutes I can go through tills Bilile parterre and find you no bright, sparkling fountains bub bling up into eternal lift*—healing and therapeutic. A chemist will go to on-' of these summer watering places and take Hie water, and analyze it, and tell you It contains so much of iron, and so much of soda, and so much of lime, and so much of magnesia. 1 come to this gospel well, tlds living fountain, and analyze Hie water, and 1 find that Its ingredients are peace, pardon, for giveness, hope, comfort, life, heaven. “Ho, every one that thirsteth, come ye” to this watering place! Crowd around tlds Hethesda. Oh, you sick, you lame, you troubled, you dying, crowd around tlds Rethesda! Step iu it, oh. step in it! Tho angel of the covenant today stirs the water. Why do you not step In It? Some of you are too weak to take a step in that direction. Then we take you up in the arms of prayer and plunge you clear under the wave, hop ing that the cure may be as sudden and as radical as with Captain Nan- man, who. blotched and carhunclcd, stepped into Hie Jordan and after the seventh dive came up, Ids skin roseate eomploxioncd as Hie flesh of a little child. Velveteen ICIxiveN. “Walking along the sidewalk In a business street the other day,” said Mr. Glimhy, “1 read on one of those A shaped signs standing on Hie edge of the walk this inscription, done in chalk: “ ‘Special Velveteen Kisses, li) Cents a Found.’ “I didn't look up to see, but 1 sup pose Hie sign must have been in front of some candy store, and that velve teen kisses are candy. I found as I wont along that the sign had impressed mo agreeably. The idea of kisses was good, of velveteen kisses better still and of velveteen kisses at lit cents a pound best of all.'—New York Sun. "I suiTered from piles for twenty- live years, and after all so-called cures bad failed was permanently cured by one box of DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve,” says Eli Hilo, of Lum ber City, Fa. Be sure you get "De- Witt’s.” There are injurious and dishonest counterfeits. Cherokee Drug Company, Gaffney. S. C., and R. S. Withers, Blacksburg, S. C. Four men were injured, twenty, two cars were burned and two tramps v.ere killed in a wreck in tunnel So. I on the Cincinnati Southern Krilroad near Louisville, Ivy. One Minute Cough Cure quickly cures ohst inate summer coughs and colds. "I consider it a most wonder ful medicine,—quick and safe.”— W. W. Merton, Mayhew, Wis. Cher okee Drug Company. Gaffney, S (!., and It. S. Withers, Blacksburg, S. C. Itresta with you whether yon continue th* nerve-killing lohuvo liahit. NO-TO-llA<“ remove* the Orsire for tobiceo, outnervoui.ilisutun, exin tine, purine* the blood, uteri'll Ion miifihood, Rixkri you ktronif In health, ner»c etui pocket- book. DS.. A FrlKlitrut r.liiiiilor Will often cause a horrible Burn, Scald. Cut or Bruise. Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, the best in the world, will kill tho pain and promptly heal it. Cures Old Sores, Fever Sores, Fleers, Boils, Felons, Corns, all Skin Eruptions. Best Pile euro on enrtli. Only 2f> cents a box. Cure guaran- tecd. Sold by Cherokee Drug Co. Edwin Heidler was hanged in I lie county jail at Erie, Penn., for the killing of his brother-in-law, Levi Kreider, on May 1,18%. "Our baby was sick for a month j with severe cough and catarrhal j fever. Although we tried many ! remedies she kept getting worse un- I til we used One Minute Cough Cure, —it relieved at once and cured her in a few days.”—B. L. Nance, Prin. High School, ' Bluffdale, Texas Cherokee Drug Company, Gaffney, S. C., and li. S. Withers, Blacksburg, 8. C. D.iii't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your l ife Away. 'lo quit tobacco cosily nnd force^r, be mag netic, lull of life, tierve and vigor, tube No-To- Buc, tho wonder- worker, that malics weak men strong. All druggists, COc or *1. Cure Ruaruti- tecil Booklht und h.implc free. Address Sterling Remedy Co , Chicago or New York. W. T. THOMPSON, Blacksmith and Wood Shop. All kin ds of work done on uort notice. Shoeing. Tire Stating. Wheels in boiling Oil n Specialty. Wool t feet long. Hickory. Ouk. l‘o|ilar find Pine Lumber und all kinds of market able produce taken tu payment for ivoik. Come lei us reason together. I or my representative always at shop. 1Z0 feet w< st of (lummy line on Rutledge street. Horseshoeing a Spcialty Having secure I the services nf one of'the most practical horioshoers in this part of the country, one v.ho has but recently been in the employ of J. W. Wadcaworth Sons of Charlotte. I am now better prepared thun ever to render tlie beet practical service to my customers. All kinds of black- smithing promptly executed; Horee- ! shoeing a specialty. Give me a call. J. J. WARREN. 8-.i-l mo OOP tioxttfl ^ 400,000 cake (cuiril liujr ^ TO-UAC frt.in yuiir own driiggi'-t. wbo nil voin li for us. Tiik.' it with .patl. ntl;, porniricntly (■ne . (I. usually i-urc-s 3 bnx< «. f? IiO, ,-uir utlt-rd lo rurr. or we rvfunii mom y. i*r BriarVy Co., lkici.ro, noMn-al, tier fork. Real Estate For Sale. For sale, on lihcrul terms, five traelsjof lund adjoining Limestone property. Trucis vary in acreage from lub. to Til Z-tn. Arso eight lots of the hotel property at Limestone. Kxccllcni building siti s und cIm up. Tint old liottd and lot is also for sale. I Apply to If. O. Sams. Thos. B. Buti.kk. IIkniiv K. Oshoknb BUTLER & OSBORNE, ATTOW IMKV*-A'r-I.A\V. Gaffney, S. C. Very careful and prompt attention given to all husDiess entrusted to us. I’nieilee In all tlie courts. DR. J. F. GARRETT, Dentist, Gaffney, - - - S. C. Office over J. R. Tolloson’a new store In office from 1st lo 2<ith of each month ; T. CboroH wam.Ai k. .1. roiuiKi.msotts. WALLACE & OTTS, LAWYERS. All ImkIncHH Intrusted to us. given prompt and vlgoru* attention. Office up stairs, next to U. A. June* tit Co. ‘Phone s'. Everything New and Fresh Toniado insurance. I am prepared to furnish Tho longer we do business tho more we learn about our business. It did not ta ke us a great while to learn that our eus- t(liners demanded fresh goods. We soon learned not t > overstock ourselves in anything. We would rather buy insinull ipi.unt it ics and have t hings fresh t ban to buy iu large quantities and have a lot of si ale goods on hand. We received. .Mon day. a I'd oi fresh chocolate candy direct from the factory by express. Ail staple and fancy groceries, confect', ncries. ci gars ;;ml I ihai o that we seli are guar anteed to he as we represent them and if not found to lie so we teftiud money. Our drinks are as eoid as the coldest and as big as the biggest. Hive us a call. J. R. Sparks & Co. LOOK HERE! CLARY & KENDRICK’S Is t he place to get your meats always on ice. Also we will pay the highest cash price for Hides, Green or Dry. Wc are going’ lo make Hides a Specialty. S OUTH CAROLINA AND GEORGIA EXTENSION R. R. COMPANY. Schedule No. 2. In tilfect 12:01 A. M., Sunday, June i8th, 1859 Between Camden, S. G., and Siieiby, N. C. West. ;;:t. Kii't. Ist CFes. L AVI FIFN TT >1 1st ( lass. Passcngt 1 1 *ii‘sSFll-tT Daily. E\< ept STATIONS. Dally. Except Sunday. Sn inlay. »\ 'f.l A. M. 13 f., < AMDEN II 15 13 2 ') 1 tK K A Lit 11 13 13 8.1 W ESTYH.LE 11 (X) 1: 7>ll KFfl.'HAW ID 47. 1 F> 1IKA I II SPfllXGS : ID ho 1 2D PLEASANT II1 Li. ill) 35 1 ID LA NC '.STEM ID <I7> 1 .V# fl 1 \ EKSIDE I it 50 <»;>| SPUINGDI EL ; li Jti *20 CATAWBA .U NCTION j it :k» ;*o| LESLIE 0 20 3 .V'j DOCK 111 El. j i» 10 3 D7. NEW Pol Ft' 1 ^ nn 3 13| TTB/.AH ! H ii.-J YOUK i'll.EE r* ^0 3 1" SHAflON 1 h on -'»r II KTxOKY GBOVE 17 45 4 <I3| S.M 5'UNA 1 7 3D t 35 it LACK SIH flti 7 It) 5 ‘Ml EAfll.S 1 ti ;»n r> nd PATT’EflSON SPflINGS li to 5 15 SHELBY 1 t> irO 1*. M.l 1A. M. Between Blacksburg,S.C., and Marion,N.C. w. «t 11 J I last. 12. 2d Class. EASTERN TIME. 3d Class. Mixed. Mixed. Daily. Daily, Except STATIONS. Except Sunday. L 1 Sunday. A. M.l ! »». M. 8 10 Bl.At 'KSItt'ilG tt ID s :m KABLS K 50 H 41V PAT’TEUSON SPBiNGS ' H IJS «) rjol Sll El.ltY ! h :to lit cel 1 .ATT 1 MOfl K ! 7 :a) 10 ID MooBT'ltOBO 1 7 nd ID 37. II EM! 1 ETT \ ; In 5D| Tol.T-ST (TTY ! 0 :jf> II I'. Ul TTIEBI OBDTON j ti Oi) li :j:.! 'll l.l.WOOD 1 7, .VI II T. GOLDEN YAEEEY 5 13 n.V TH KAMA I. CITY ;»;to 13 3* i.en Wood 5 u> I'i •!<' MAI! ION 4 15 I’. M. Gaffney Division. i:.\stlkn timi;. STATIONS. F.LACIvSIiriUi t iii;i;oKi:i: falls OAt I NKY Ti anis No :rj aud Ft connect at Blacks burg with trains on the (ialfiicy Fivision. Train No. leaving Shelby at tikifl a. m., connects al Itlaekshuig withlraln No. till on 1 he .'outliern Hy.. going North, with twiniy minutes margin lor trunsferring. etc. Pas sengers leaving any points on t hi-, line be tween Shelby and Blacksburg can go to < harlotte. V and return the same day. having three hours and twenty-live tnimilcs for t lie t ran'act ion of I nisi ness iu Chariot tc. N. F. It eoniieel s a Iso wit h the Vest I hide on the Southern going South, and eonneetsat York vide. S. with the North bound train on the ('. .V N. W. IF I! . witb tidily minutes margin for tninsforrlug. and connects at Buck Hill with train No.ilk on I tic Soul hern fly., going South, with ample margin of tl’mc for transf, rring. etc. The best connec tion t his • rain makes at. Catawba Junction with • he S. A L.. going North gives eleven liours lay over; going South, twelve* hours mid forty-1 htee minutes, hut nearly all the lay-oyer Is in daylight. Connects at Lan caster. S. ('.. with trains on the L. \ it. B. IF. for Chester, with a lay-over of a little over t hree hours, mid connects at Camden, S. ( .. with the Charleston Division of the Southern fly., for ail point s Soul h. Trains No. J-t leaving Camden at 1^:05p.m. going North makes close coiiin ction at Lan caster, S. C., with tin* I. A C. fl IF, for Chea ter. S. C. Connects with the S. A. I... at 1 ‘at aw hu .1 net ion. both Nor'h and South, wlih a lay over ol alxati six hours. Con- liccts at flock Hill w.t h 11 *i 11 No. :t-l «,11 1 he Southern fly., going North. This gives a lav ovcrol live hou,' in daylight at flock Hill, w liich w ill prove a plea-air** 10 nassengeis, .Makes connect h*n a I York villi' w it h train ou 1 he c. A N. \\ fl It . going South, nnd makes c lose connect Inn at lilacKshurg with trail. No. p.’ on the Si,iiih* in fly., going North. Also with lla’ V *si dnilc I lain on the Sotiih- ern tty., going North. Train No. 11, Icav I tig a. III.. Will yet pl'sillg' from train No, zu on tin for all point' Im-i wecu I» Ion. N. c,, amt w HI conn with the Seulhcru flail Black burg at s |a is from the South I s ait hern Hallway j lacl.shurg and Mar- ! eel at Marion, N. (’., way. l>oih 1 a»! and ' Mari' *u at t: la. ill hern fly.. 11 aiu id connection at in 111 fly., in both West. Tt aiu No. Ik lea till lifter the ai rival of the s* from the West, makes gn P.Mfkshurg with the Sou d i reel tons. SAMI I I. Ill NT. President. A. I KIPP, NlijMTliitendc lit. S. It l.l >1 I’ll I N, (ien l. pH»iicin;rr Agent. Tornado Insurance in lirst-class companies. Avoid possible danger !>y securing a policy before Hie cy- elcne eomes. Can also furnish the most at tractive 11 welling' House Policy or oilier lire insurance. Consult me before Insuring. My agency represents ftn.nto.cia in capital and surplus. F. G. STACY. A. N. WOOD, BANKER, does a general Banking and Exchange business. Well secured with Burglar- Proof safe and Automatic Time Lock. Safety Deposit Boxes at moderate rent. Buys and sells Stocks and Bonds, j Buys County and School Claims. Your business solicited. THE OLD RELIABLE III GET YOITK SAHH, tiOOlFS. BLINDS AND ALL KINDS OF lU ILDING MATERIALS Eiio.M ME. Polished Oak Cabinet Mantels ToSuit Ai! Classes, , . , , I INEST BEAUT PINE -HIINGLES IN THE MARKET. CALL AND SEE THEM. Very Uespct., L. BAKER. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Condensed Schedule of Pavxenycr Tralnv In Effect June 11th, ISLiy. Northbound. Lv. Atlanta, C. T. ‘ Atlanta, E. T. “ Norcrosn “ Oxford “ Gainesville. “ Lttln “ Cornelia Ar. Mt. Airy Lv. Toceoa ‘* Westminster “ Seneca ** Cent rat “ Greenville... Spnr'utibu rg. GatTnevs. ... “ Llack-lurg “ King’s Mt.... “ Gastonia Lv. Charlotte .... A r. Greensboro M No. 12 1 Gaily I I ' 7 50 tt! i x 50 a’ LKiO a I 10 05 a 10 T) a' 105S a! Ill a n It ao a’ II 53 a i 11231 in 1> 1 4»i pi 2:tf p 3 37 p; 4 ~0 p 4 38 p kUOP; .»p, (> 30 p I "3 p Ves. No. 38 Bally. i2 00 in! 1 00 p, 3 3s p 3 40 p 3 00 p 5 k’O p tl 13 p! « 4*1 p 7 ui p! No 18 tut.Ml Ex. No. 30 Sun. | Baily. 4 LapiH 50 p 0 85p 12 50 m G Zap! 1 80 a 7 OSp 1 7 43pi 2 25 a tt lop! 2 ao n 8 35 p! .. .... 8 10 p I 0 uo p; 3 42 a Lv. G; (-eusboro. Ar. Norfolk ti IS p . 10 47 P . jll 4i pi. 1 3 20 n Ar. Danville .. Ar Richmond H p H 74) pi. j 0 00 a 0 00 a . Ar.Washington .I. •‘ Un'tinV EKU. . “ 1 hilajelpiita. 1 * New York ..I. . I 0 42 a . . 8 OJ a . Ill) 15 a;. 12 43 in «.» 03 Hi 35 .) 2 58 i 6 23 1st. M I Ve*. ; No. 1 1 Southbound. No. 33 No. 37 Daily! Daily. Datlv. | Lv. 7T7 Y.. p. k. It! ITT! « T;io f! ... Philadelphia. { 3 74) a| G 55 p! I. “ Baltimore. “ Wanlilngton. Lv. Kichtnoml ... Lv. Danville . .. Lv. Norfolk At Greensboro.. t) 23 a t* 2J jll 15 a ID 45 1 i Olnn 11 to G 02 p a 6 10 A 5 15 u! Lv Gieeitwlxtro Ar. (/'tiarlotte ... Lv. Gastonia ... “ King's Mt... M Blacksburg . " Gaffneys ... 7 24 pi 7 (|5 a 7 37 a . lluuo ]> 8 25 a l2 0.>m! 10 48 p lO 07 a| 1 12 n! 1 138 F. 11 31 p 10 45 al 2 03 [»|. 11 40 p 10 58 u ! '2 24 p . trpai taulmrg .;12 20 a 11 34 a, 3 15 p G; eenville.. “ (.'4*111 rat I “ M-iieea . .. 2 28 “ Wes!minster “ Tocemv till “ Mt. Airy .... 1 " Co, uel.a | ... " Lula 4 os “ Gainesville.'. .1 4 30 “ Buford 4 50 " Note loss ....! 5 23 Ar. Atlanta, E. T. 0 10 Ar. A, In nn, C. T. 5 to “A" a. in. C" p. m. 3 00 p 3 IS p 3 37 1' 4 30 P Ex. ons};! *■■■■- *! :io p (• e. a 7 1! p! G ik) • 7 1 i 11 fl :(7> a 7 38 t>; 0 57 a 8 2S j) 1 7 3) a '. I 8 40 p 7 4-i 8 1 U I 'i l> 8 27 a 4 .55 p 10 00 p‘ V 3J a 3 .V> p 9 00 p 8 !10 • *M” noon. *‘N" night. Chesapeake Line .'steamers tu daily service between Not folk and Iht.limore. Nos. :;i and 88—Daily- Washington and South- western Vestibule Limited Through Pullman •deeping c;*rs tielw 1 0:1 New York und New Or- hi*: via Washington, Atlanta and Montgom •rv. jitid alao between New York and Meinjdii'tx via\\ iislu’igton.Atlantaund Birmingham. A!wi elrcant PCLL.MAN LIRKAHY OB.SKKVA- TIoN CABS between Atlanta and New York. First ■ hiss thoroughfare coaches between Wash ington and Atlanta. Dining ears serve ul! tneall cn route, i'nllimtn drawing-room s.teplngcarf bet w, on Urcenslsiro and Norfolk. Close enn Utrition at Norfolk for OLD POINT COMFORT. Not*. 87) and 30 United States F'ast Mail runs solid lH*‘weou Washington and New Or* leans, via Southern Hallway, A. tt \V. P. K. ft. •mt I., A: N. K. K , ts-mg eoin*s>s«vi of tiaggage car and coaches, through witnout chaugti fof l-asM-ngcr* of all eluvses. Pullman drawing room sleeping ears between New York ana New Orleans, via Atlantunitd Montgomery an 1 between Charlotte anil Birmingham Also Pullman l>ra .ring Boom Buffet Sleeping Car* ts'iweeu Atlanta amt Asheville. N.G. Leavtus Washington each Tuesday and Friday, a V-urist sleeping ear will run through between Washington aud Sun Francisco without •hang* Dining ears servo all meals enrouto No». 11,38, 31 and 12- Pullman sl,<enh>g eats between flu-hmond nnd Chariot to, vt 1 DanvlIBg MiuthlHiuml Nus. It and 43. northbound Nos, 1*4 and 12 Fit AN K S. GANNON. J M. CULP, Third V t*. St Get,. Mgr., Traffic M'p'r. Washington, D. V. Washington, D. Oi W A TT UK, 8. H. HARDWICK. U< 11T r.igs. Ag’t , Ass'tUvuT Pass. Ag't.. V, ssUingUiu. U CL AUMtUh