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ESTrABLISHED 1865. NEWBERRY, S. C., T1UE SD AY, AUGUS ,19) TWC2fEK .0AYA ,U -I MI I QTPA IPI briQi n innnnr f r"I T.nn mun y n a n n A ntI n f 5. u sinn n . . lull uVillltl1Vit u ulARn'. CHIEF EXECUTIVE MAKEsl KNOWN HIS SELECTIONS. Young Men Chosen as at Rute-Several of Thom Have Been Connectedl With the State Militia or Were in the Ar.ny. (Special to News and Courier.) Governor McSweeney today an nounced the appointment of his per. sonal staff. The members of the staff are as follows: Columbia, S. C., August 23, 1899. General Order No. 5: By direc tion of his Excellency, M. B. Me Sweeney, Governor and Commander in-chief of the military forces of the State of South Car,lina, the follow ing officers are hereby appointed members of his staff, and will be obeyed and respected accordingly: Adjutant and Inspector General, Gen. J. W. Floyn, of Kershaw Coun ty. Assistant Adjutant and Inspector General, Col. John D. Frost, of Rich land County. Quartermaster General, Col. W. C. Mauldin, of Hampton County. Commissary General, Col. W. B. Wilson, of Charloston County. Engineer-in-chief, Col. J. F. Folk, of Bamburg County. Surgeon General, Col. E. J. Wan namaker, of Richland County. Paymaster General, Col. George D. Tillman, Jr., of Edgefield County. Judge Advocate General, Col. U. X. Gunter, of Spartanburg County. Chief of Ordinance, Col. L. J. Bris. tow, of Darlington County. Aids-de.caml)--Lieut. Col. H. Fay Gaffney, of Cherokee County; Lieut.. Col. Jas. A. Hoyt, Jr., of Gr3eenville County; Lieut. Col. James S. Mc Carley, of Newberry (ounty; Lieut. Col. A. H. Moss, of Orangeburg County; Lieut. Col. W. C. Hough, of Lancaster County; Liout. Col. G. C. Sullivan, of Anderson County; Lieut, Col. Willis J. Duncan, of Barnwell County; Lieut. Col Julius Redding, of Charleston County. By order of the Commander-in chief. J. W. FLOYD, Adjutant and Inspector General. ALL YOUNG MEN. It will be noted that Governor Mc Sweeney has selected all young men on his personal staff. A line about each would show the staff to be made up as follows: Gen. Floyd, Adjutant General. Gen. John D. Frost, As-sistant Ad jutant General. Col. W. C. Mauldin is a son of Senator Mauldin, of Hampton, and is engaged in the lumber and rail road business. Col. WV. B. Wilson, of Charleston, ident of the Carolina Grocery f Charleston, and is a etive business man. I'ok is an enterprising ngaged in the mer surance biusiness. . Wannamaker, of Colum romising young physician bia, and was surgeon of the uth Carolina volunteer infan C.al. George D. Tillmnan, Jr., of Edgefield, is a son of Col. George D, Tillman, of Clark's lill, and is a court stenographer. Col. U. X. Gunter, Jr., is the well kncwn& Assistant Attorney General of the State. Col. L. B. Bristow was an officer in the 2nd South Carolina volunteer infantry, and is in active journalism, being in charge of the Darlingtonian, which he is making a first-class pa per. Lieut. Col. H. Fay Gaffney is con nected with the carpet mill and other enterprises in Gaffney. Lieut. James A Hoyt, Jr., is the son of Col. Hoyt, of the Mountain oor, and the new lieutenant colonel is himself engaged in newspaper wvork, being on the editorial staff of the State, on which he is doing splen did work. Lieut. Col. James S. McCarley is a well known young farmer in New berry County. Lieut. Col. A. HI. Moss is a promi. nent lawyer in Orangeburg, and was an officer in the 2nd South Carolina volunteer infantry. Lioeut. Col. W. C. Huma i8 the ter County. Lieut. Col. G. Cullen Sullivan is a son of Senator Sullivan, of Anderson. He was quartermaster of the 2nd South Carolina volunteer infantry, and repol ted the Senate for the News and Courier during one session. Lieut. Col. Willis J. Duncan is a large farmer in Barnwell C unty. He was an officer in the 2nd South Carolina volunteer infantry. Lieut. Col. Julius Redding is a son of Capt. James F. Redding, of Char leston, and is a young lawyer in Char leston. THINKS jr Is A SClIEHE. The Goyernor of Washington Talks of the Te ustp, The Governor of the State of Washington smells a mouse in the convention of Governors to discuss the question of trusts. He writes to Governor McSweeney, from Oly mpia, August 18th, as follows: My Dear Sir: I regard the present attempt, by the calling of the Gov ernor's conference, to concentrate public thought upon State, legisla tion as a remedy for the trust evil, as a very adroit attempt upon the part of the Republican managers to temporarily ovado a great issue. In this scheme, it appears to me, Gov ernor Sayers of Texas is being used as a catspaw to remove Republican chestnuts from the fire. Clearly and plainly trusts, or great corporations, will continue as long as the cause whicl' produce them remains in full force and effect. These are: First, private control of public money or what is known as "the money quos tion." Secondly, railroad rebates and special privileges granted, or the railroad question. Thirdly, the pro tective tariff, or the tariff question, and fourthly, in some instances, our patent laws. No trust can exist un loss based upon one of these, and each and all are absolutely and solely dependent upon national legislation. Now, to conclude that these primary and fundamental causes can be reached by State legislation is a re duction to an absurdity which I cor tainly hope our people will not be guilty of. It is self-evidently a very shrewd attempt to take the questions I have enumerated out of the next national campaign. Will our people be caught in this trap? Sincerely yours, J. It. Rogers. Bear,, the Ihe Kind You Have Always Bought Bignaturo of TRtOUIILE FOR TILLMAN. oolonel Youmnans of Harnwelil Will Op. i,ose Him for the senate. (Greenville Daily News.) Abbeville, S. C., Aug. 25.-Relia ble information received here from an undoubted source says that Col onel Lawrence WV. Youmans, of Barnwell county, will positively op. pose Senetor Tillmnan for the Senate next year. No Mlore "Rtound-the-Worldi" ILet toe. "Though niot so numerous as form erly, 'roun d the- world' letter-s continue to crop up at intervals," says the September Ladies' Home Journal. "They always have a request to re turn to the writer, after they have made the tour of the wvorld, a list of the principal cities through which they are desired to pass being also given, coupled with a modest request to each postmaster to stamp careful ly the (late of arrival at his office. Many years ago letters of this sort did occasionally make the circuit, and curious- looking specimens they were, indeed, but postmasters in the United States are now prohibited from forwarding such matter." 'Tie premiums offered this year at the State Fair have been greatly in creased; and competition will be sharp. Be sure to get a premium list at once. Farmers! Bring or send the fruits of your labors to the State Fair at Columbia, Nov. 6th to 10th, and you need not exclaim, as many are heard to do every year. "I can bat that." HOW THE SOUTH WOUlD SUFRirIt IL' ANNEXATION. A Uubau 'o'icy of Annoxalion which Finde Supporters InI thile County-An lnva. Slon of Millions of MAiluiy w4u1e' Make Labor Condlnlonm I(uro an Had as those In Cuh,. (Now Orloans Times-Democrat.) The following passage from the Suffragio Universel, of Havana, which contains reasoning guod enough for a casuist, represents a Cuban policy of annexation of the most advan(ed typo: "When the Unled States Gov ornment," says this organ of absorp tion, "makes Cuba a State of the American Union, then will l o fulfill ed the solemn promise that the Cu ban people ought to be froo and in dependent. This would bo in ac cordance with the American Consti tution, under which each State of the Union is, with respect to its own affairs. inlepenlent of the others." It would hardly bo nocessary to waste time in showing that when the United States registered "a solemn promise" that it would grant indo pendence to Cuba, it did not mean the kind of indopondenco which each State of the Union has in man aging its own domestic affairs; it meant total and complete political separation of Cuba from the United States, Cuba managing her own af fairs, domestic and foreign, just as the United States manages its own affairs, domestic and foreign. But, from the pass-ago quoted, it will be soon that the annexationist is at work, as well in Cuba as in the United States; and that ho is, there as here, not very particular an to the nature and character of the argument which he uses with a view to furth Dring the absorption of the island by the United States. Labor throughout the United States, and more, especially hero in the South, will oppose annexation by all means in its power; for everybody will see that, if ever Cuba be annex. ad to the United States, then Cubans will become American citizens and will be free to come and go as they please. The great. labor market of this country will be a far more invit ing field to the Cuban workers than their own island will be; and what we are sure to find, as a sequel to an nexation, is that there will be a near ly general exodus of the inferior grades of Cuban labor into this coun try. On the supposition that the population of Cuba amounts to I, 200,000, and that one-half of these are negroes, there wvill be, almost certainly, an influx of 300,000) or 400,000 negroes from Cuba into this country. It is equally certain that they will locate in greater numubersi here in the South; for it is in the South that they will most probably set foot on American soil, in the South they will strike the semi trop ical climate to which they have been accustommed, and in the South they wvill meet with people of their own race, with whom they wvill ready frat ernize. The labor market of the United States is already overstacked; and it would be to undersell or to take the bread out of the mouths of our own laborers to allow the importation of several hundreds of thousands of laborers from the near-by island. The South has an especial reason of its own for opposing such an im portation. We have more of the in ferior race now on our hainds thtan we knowv what to do with ; and it would be oppression on the p)art. of the Government to saddlo us with nearly half a million more of the same race-to plhease the annoxationaist crowd who merely want to carpetbag and otherwise exploit the island for their own adlvantage. An article in the ecurrent number of Harper's Weekly, wvritten appar ently with President McKinleym sanction, lets us into the secret which had not previously been dis closed-that the President is strong. ly in favor of retaining the Philip pines. "The P.resident," says thc article, "believes that we should kooi the islands. This to him is moevitab)le. lie does nor wvant us to leave th< islands. Ho thinks that we nsnnih uo t.nore so as not only not to t)aan don our responsibilities, but that our action would be a confession of weak unoss, which would make us an ob jtct of derision among Europeans," etc. There would bo no confession of weakness, but rat her an admission of justice, in our abandonment of the Philippin(s; and 1as to the )Ossibtlity of our being derided among .l'uro pulns, what Alerican worthy of the namo caresi a red cent for oithor the approval or disapproval of Euro poans when our own ideas of doing what is right and avoidlilg what. is wrong are concerned Y But, this aside, the anuioxation of the Philip pines would be an immoasurably greator blow to labor in this country than the annexation of Cuba would be. The inllabitatnts of the Philip pines would hocomno American citi zon8 ipso facto of the annexation of their archipelago. A1(1 as thero are supposed to be S01110 10,000,000 of them, the possibility of anl invasion of the United States, then their own country, by several millions of them would bo anything but an attractive prospect. They would reduce ho la bor conditions in t he United States to the conditions that prevail in Cuba, where men labor for less than ton cents at (lay. It seems to us that the laboring Olomonts in this country are not keen Jy enough alive to the ruin tl.t would accompany an invasion of several millions of Maylays, or they would be more vigorously outspoken against the suggested annoxation. Charleston (ets CMiefH. Syracuse, Aug. 2b.---At the con vention of lire chiefs this morning several constitutional amendments were considered. It was decided that at the beginning of next year to elect a president and two vice proei dents, irrespective of the vice prosi dents from the various States, by a majority of the delegates. Charleston was chosen its the place of the next meeting. Chief J. P. Quigley, of syracuse, was chosen plou et o? thn associa tion, while Secretary Hills and Treasurer Larkin were re electe(, after which the convention ad journed. If you have anything to oxhibit at the State Fair sond to Secretary iol loway, at Pomaria, S. 0., for prom ium list. Do not delay to do so. Prizes of S2541 for Photographs, Amateur phlotograp)hors haivo an easy chance to win somne handsome prizes by taking advantage of a tempting offer aIlnnounced mi thie Sep tember Ladies' Home Journal. TIhat magazine wishes to use some pict ures of rural churches and1 .iuburban club houses, and therefore offers twenty prizes, amouniting to $250), for the bost pictuires submlfitted. Thle com-1 p)etition wyill b)0 opnJ unmt il NovembeI)r Ist. Secret ary H o1llowaiy in forms us t hat the prospet for a line exh1ibit and1( large attendance is very flatte ring. Anui Th'ley T<.ok hlim hlomto in a Eugzgy. Sing a song of swelledh head, a followv full of ginl, coming 1home1 at -I a. nm., hlis wife wvon't lot him iln. His feet are full of tangle-foot, his head is full of wheOels; tile key hole runs11 aroulnd thle knob; lhe a funny foolinlg feels. lHe puts his feet upon1 thie p,orch, his head1( upon tile ground(, and( aill tile timil wVitin his "'mutg" thie wvhools are goin1g roundI(. lie thinks t hat h1e is sober antd every 011o is tight, and( lio thinks he's ini his bod( room, instondl of out all night. Hoe thinks theO miooni's a dollar and1 will bJUy a dlozen dIriniks, and1( various other minor t houghts he thinks and1( thinks and1( thinks. But when the morning comneth. and it comneth soon at that, he looks aroundl andl murmers, "Great snakes; where am I at?" Sandl W h skey I'abit i)Jj tinal at h'om.e with 3115 ~i'Nouti pa:n, l.ok of .ar being hO Oi IiM WOOtL UN Ic 1O1.111l:) It U 1311,N V vill i o ltrcrutt i fot 'tao Vo luulicr Armuy in the EIaNt-"l-irut. (ol. D)uvall, 11. y. A , will Cunmonnnnel, atid kill Ilehtl nta ll ginmtl Olincr t iill bIm White Meln. (Special to News at d (Courier.) Wnshington, ). C., August 2>. As at result. of the recont consultatlont bet.veenl the P'residont and Secretarv Hoot. orders wero issuod today pro viding for the estalblishmn)t of an adlitionlal regilont of voluntoers, to be ColuposedI of !olorv(i recriuit '. Iiiut. ('ol. Dluvall, now on duty at the Plltsbuhrg barracks, is to b inado colonel of tho now regimont, and the fioldl and regiitaoital ollicors will 1)o whito mon. Thte headquar1 tArs of tihe regiment will bo Mc'her )1 bariracks, Atlanta, and the work of recruiting will begin at once. Tho regimeit is to ho organi'zed for duly inl the 'hilipp)ines. Colnn.-nding (Gon. M11ile4 recomlil oended th estth lishmenlt, of fivt colorod regilleilts, but it was not, doenmed advisible to onlist such a large num111ber of color od troops it the prsent t"ime. It is probable that other colored regiments will bo or. ni"zed if tho demand for more troops hocoInos trgelt. The regiment, provided for is no(t included in the tenl regimenits created under the recent call of tho President, but is ilt independet organization cro ated inl resionso to the appoals made to the P.'resident tnd the Secretary of War from leading colored m11en in the South, backed ulp by Domocratic leaders ill (leorgia, Florida and Ala bama. It is understood the new regimont will bo recruited largely in the throo States nlamled. Judson io'nI)S anud other promi not colored ten )+tve been urging recognition for colored troops with the greatest persistoncy during the past two months, aund they are grati fied at the success of their efforts. .In addition to the desire, on the part, of the colored troops to display thekr military zeal, it is elaiied that the sontling of colore.1 troops to (he Philippinlos will have I beneficial of feet upon the general situation there. In the far Eastt the impression lpro vails among Ithe unenlightened an. tives that. the negro or brow. skinned races air treated ats slaves iii the United States. That is given as one of the reasons why tho Filipinos are so stubbornly resil-ing American dolinationt in the Piilippines. it, goes a long way towards an oarly set tlement of th1, PhIilippino robellioin if the natives art iaught by experience that the negro i8 a cit izen of the United States 0 lad trentedi as suich in the organ izat ion of ou r il it ary es taldishmen lit. Whether or not tis argoinent land aniy eficct upon01 the P'rosidenit is not knowni. 1-1 has, however, yiejlded to what seemed to be a popu11lar re quest fromi representative colored menr, rein forced b~y proi1 miet wvhiito mena, withlout regardl to party, andii therimen' iijt will be waitched't withI un1iversal inateresi. c.A.L T O rg.2A.. Soars iho ~ Iheo Kinil You UnavaAMways iloughl Bignaturo. of' Elii-EiTRi U STOil m1i IN A'ii TI.N 1.. 1,igi ing mm. lesi r.,yn ii(iamch m anmi '1 wvo at thule3 (o4o Atlantal, Gai., August 2. -By a stroke of lightning duiring a thunder storm1 thIiis atfternoon thle E'pworth Met hodist i~scop:dl church, a Edge wood, a suburb of t his city, and two residenjces In adji oi ninag lots wor*o set oin fire andru completely de(st royed. NIthin rg wats satvedl fronm t he church organ waus d est royed. hFurniiture n from ih le residen'I os was suavod . Thel loss is ostimaiited at $20, 0001, partly covered by inrsuratnce. Aranigo you r planus arily to attend( thie .11st Annual St ate Famir at Colum bin Nov. 6th to I1I t hi. CASTOR IA For Infante and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Boars the Slinaturo of Cva J7c? 2fZ2 T i1: I10 111 1W , aU i tN I;i) ISg li g1 g 1 .. Jtlgl, uuttatacutt's to Mielctto C. F, 11ltItHewN, but ifII Six Allegei At' complict.N Allowedi to I,wavo .hul iu (ivinog 1141:41 for ,Sp 0 i vis. (Special to Nows and Courior.) Saludit, S. C., August 23.--M<s rs, Ilirdl and1 Mutller yester(lay ltlornI ilg mlallo a motion beforo Judge Bluchanan for bail for C. S. Mat hows, J. J. 1: kc, I onnett Frick, Charloy '. (anniion, John Caunon, Dan Do. Hart, aned John i" ulmer, the I.xing tonl nlen chargedI with tho mnurdor of Ilowe''rs. Col. Johlstono, of Nowberry, ill) plarel ill connection Wit tho solicci. tor to 01)1)0so th motion. Froml thi' ailidavits subllittod and other iat. torsi brought out at tho heatring it appeoarotd tL.s 13owers had hoon inl lawsuits with his neighbors auld his noigIIors with him for (the% past tenl yeatrs of (il'(. To tho casual listc'ner it aII)ppoars aat a I terriblo statt' of a111fakirs iats ex. iste(l inl tho homet commultnity of Bowers for a numbtuer of yoars. Bce foro argumnot could he 1 ward the hour for conveniiig court arrived and Iho matter Was postloned until last nighlt. ('ol. Johlstono soemdiol to 1e ait his ost, atndl mado at most atdmir1abhe sho0wing; in at two hours' spvech inl opposition to tho motion for bail. Mr. Iullor gavo a resulno of the testiiiony. ('ol. Jolmilstono was fot lowod 1by Solicitor Iliuriont. 11r. i'',Iirdi mado the closing sp eechl, a( just as the hiumdsof tho clock pointtetd to t ho hour of I i. it., t ho J utgle's (locisiotn wats rendt't' I as follows: "Upon the showing iialo I shall r fuso Mat.hews bail; the other p orties nuay bo rolaed as up on etterinig in a good inl(d sullcicit bond inl th sumu of .,001( eachl. V414)41 uu A rmiy NuiriN1'. At, t h prosent limo (horo art-( 320 wom0l0e nurs0si in th1o servic0, and theso aro scattred from Puorto Rico to Manila. A liurso nlow receives under contract forty dollars a1 luoniIt, an.d fifty dollars if serving out of the States. An aumy uniforiii hats not yet. boen adolpted, but. is inl contemt p atioll. Stops a') being Iaken to p laco tho wolmai ilursing corps of tIhe armyll) On at permanent atnd saltIsfitc. 'ory basis. IBil, it is very truo, as .1)r. Mc(ioo says: "''his is a thiaat which it s isimpossibl to do emp1 iri catlly, or lit, on stroke." With i our inlcreasiig rosponlsitili t's ini ot her lanlds, respns.ibilitio-, force of our1 solieris illn)11 cou tis lt (I limtes) gealy (' te ain o 11 hem,ii i the141 11o1 1088 than1 a huniiiumo niecessit y. Thle womnii nurso du~ring iho recer4.1 camiOhgn pr0~oed horse1lf caplle)t o is1ing abtovo) thet miost t ry ing and1t unusua111 lodit ions. She 1111 bee :tti su(cess ; mioro thanll that, shie has1 1)0er aIcknowledge~td a ni'eesity. Nuiirsitig is d ist incet iv~ely at~01 l woma's vo cation It is a1 priofess8ion which, under01 al' ceuust aInce0, athouhlt beloniig to women.o Ask aniy (Jf the( soliersi wilo laly ill 01 wottld inl the hiospitats dlurtig ti 1 ito war what, they tin k of tIhe wo man11 nursio8. T1horo will be but11 01m aiswl iMto I0oery (1111ery, a111(1 it will h). Moon'[ Ithat thle moralil at ren gthing lt a111( sIIJpjpo.rt, or a1 gout 1 Syo)l1in1's Ipres enco is, ini time of wilr o11n1 ln(TorinIg, a1s g reatl as8 tha t of h er' pro fessiono 'kitI.-A nna Northend11( injunin, ill F'iitn J Jfslitl's p'otpuht' .\onthlly for September)01. A'.4-rie'a, Pre's't'ie1 (4)24 t"y 114 m s A page of pictulre's of I weinty fouri of "Th1e Pirettiost C ountry1)' I')bnies in Amer1c i's shatowin ini te Sep tembtt t the tu(ndecy' o)f th da1~i~'y is to rtemme~ ( froim thle o ntra'l parts1 of our citin to the subu111rbs, lineh aI pag is bo8 b11I of subu)rbn house. Select specimensli of your chioie I. gralin, vo(getabl)os1, finiely tbro1 stock, ic 1ludig poltry, for (exhi bitioun aIt the Sutt I-'air. A little eff ort on your part will secutr(i one or 12oro of hanldsomfl' n)romIiunmi SOU 1'11 UARIOIlNA TOitAUO. No Iteugon wihy it httiuld not bOItaintd Ia tha P'lcdn ont 'nm In the lI.trly uuys of tih Contntry. (Anderson 'oples Advocate.)] Tv enty I,lillion pounds of anything is it large atount, but in t,his instance it refefs to tobacco, and represents the tlnount. of tobtcco raised and mtarkctcd in this State this year, and the price has Jantged all the way from 4 to 26 rents. It not only represents a largo ,ulnount of tobacco, but it also repre sellts a huge a:ihoutnt, of money thati has 'ome Itlto the puekets of the fiarmers at it t I Ile of yer' wte Iiuoney is scarce. If the Itvelagc 1'. ice has been 10 cents i tii it has t urued loose in this State in midstlnmet' $2,000,000 of clean cash. In )rangebur Pg county, where the farmers went into it as aln experuient and con 11ined to hire an expert lln its cultiva Iion and curing It, is estiunated they will have I,100,00J pounis for sale, WhichI mcauls somuetling like $100,000 nrned loose there. I t, is time for the fartmers here to be thlinkin;g about this matter, ats colton has ceased to be a Iprolitable 'rop to the ill. The lands in he lower part of tlhis oun lily tre ee' tinly well adapted to tobacco, and in he early settlenient of t,h is count.y to at'co was raised and hauled to :'htar ,stoli fromn tile upper portion of it,. IOttLII )5 l , 10 u 11 . CuI Or l'thi's ECar" anud Inon Rol"teud thu infant to Duath 'l'a l lalhassee, I''la., A ug. I7. ---1'arties 'roul I. on 'oulnty tell of the horrible Ib'eds of Carrie Simpson, on the planta ion of I,ucius It. I"ainey. Ca'rrie was lur:in Ia baby boy for hter aunt. Ite 'ently she sawed oil his ears with idul ini fe antl otherwise tultilated portions ,f the body. When questioned tbolit ht' Ial,tt'r shte saidl that the dlo;s had1t ounl tihe child atleep and cite wed olf ts ears tn one dog was killed for ml lilation of the 'hild. (nly a few dltys since she deliberatte ly covered the child with ashes, left in the lire place. which were inixed with ive coals, and ook a seat on the door ,teps, where she could heat' the scraems f the roasting Cbild, and when they 'eased she t'an' seamning to a nearby ied and told the ilother t,hat the Ieigiihot''s boy Iad burned the child to heat,b. No legal steps have been taken o have the nutse pnished, s. A. La. FAs4T FRl{'II s'It CIE.. r't4n1t lCheltngo t- Chnt'lotto in Four Days, Thr. O Shlpnuent14 of Fouur D3ays 19neh. 'I'he Sabtola'd Ait' Inile is givitig "tIne surprisir.gly fast, freight Service recently. 'Ihe following from the Augusta, Ga., I'lankington I'ateking Co , shipped mun Chic..;(), night of Mlay 1:4th, viai anIt Ilamdlt', and Neaboatrd Air. Line, . . L. et- No. 2350 with provisions uu.i;;red to C'oel .ane . Mcl.aulghllinl, luhttlotte, N. C. This eat' left Atlanta \lay L h, ;t ra in No. 22, 11md( arr'i'ved in liat'lotte I p. tm., Mlay 17th, tmtklng he tip ft'otm Chicago) to Chiarlotte itn Swv~ift, & ( 'o. , siIpped fromn Chiicago, Ta,loaded wiLt, mnett fotr NI. C. IIleatht, I lumbtial, S. (:., which wais rout,ed Il'ant anduole and Seaboard Air ,Line. 'T.'is lily 1thil, beitng only foil) days in lan1.it. A\ thbitrd intanc)tue was, A\. It. L. citr -o .,Sl I, f'riomt Armtour I' CVo., Cica As deliv~'eedI 'ttYottgblood & Coch.. on, (.leen)woold, S. (C. July 19th, malik-. nI the saute goodi timte as S. it. L. :7,0, bavi na heetn handledl via 1'ant landile and Seaboardi Air ILine. Thee nbitnes are tetinly wort,hy of note, t e ontly a few of L,he itntnetnse v'oi tprcented fast, titme by3 the Sea, toard A it' Line. in of ti hio M1,'t P'opultar Members' of the P .utt y oft Ol)~andont , Collge' succumtbi I ows allil Coti'ior.) I'ondllet on, A ugtust 25.-Int (th ['at h of J. F". C. D)uPro, of Clemsoni h-g , wich lol ccurr1od this mUorn-t ng att .8, aftor a short illnoess of thatt dreadl( Iful dt.isns, aippenfdicit,1 li'tmsont lo)s's one of the most pop-. i r tund ac(cotmmiodtmg genItlemlotn in isq hiistot'y. Prof. Durowsi charge'~ of the( htorticultur'o dopart n-t for' sover'al yours, andtt his wvork in t his hn1o will be1 ai lasting mlomnory 'o )! hitno. ILlo was born at Pon. I 1(ton, S. C., aind wats in his~ 69th~ year. T1hio romins will be intorred at A* bovillho to-morrow afternoon. Boars te T,~heKnd YotHIave Aways Bougiht Signaturo. Of Lin?VZ4 .