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MOST OF ATHENS COMING
TO SEE SATURDAY’S GAME
GEORGIA’S KICKER IN ACTION
’Special to The Cieorglsn.
University of Georgia. Athens. Go.. Nor.
7.—At u groat mau meeting of the student
body held In the university chapel Tuesday
. afternoon, 200 students signified that it
eras their iutention to go over on the great
Special train which is to In* run over the
Seaboard Air Line railroad Saturday tuoru-
, ing, reaching Atlanta about 9:9) a. m. Two
hundred have already decided to go over,
and there will probably be many more.
The game promises to Imj the greatest
fought in this part of the country this
year, end with the large number of Geor*
gia rooters coming over there will lie some
tail things doing ut Tech park Saturday.
While the odds slightly favor Tech, the
; Georgia men are not despairing, and are
determined to win out. if. by any way,
1 the trick can 1** turned, or. at any rate,
sire them the hardest light of their
lives.
The wrubs have been lining up against
•vanity every afternoon, and. although the
sera’* have a very heavy line, they seem
totally unable to atny on their fret against
the heavy line plunges of the 'varsity Imck-
Weld.
The team seeins to be In a good eondJ-
lion, and every man is determined to put
up the greatest footlmll he has in him.
Judging from dope, Tech has a shade the
better of the contest on paper, but If fhera
is any gnttie of the year where dope la val
ueless, It’s n Georgia-Tech football game.
Tech’s defeat of Auburn came as a sur
prise to everybody, while the red and
black fared better than even their most
sanguine supporters had hoped, piling up
f«r» points against 0 for the hard-working:
Baptists In Macon.
The famous Cannon, whose advertised ap
pearance last spring at the Georgia-Tech
baseball games in Atlanta, caused such a
furore ami disappointed everybody when ii
did not show, will positively not be brougt
oil this trip. However, the university band
will be there in full force with a new reper
toire.
MERE EXPENDITURE OF MONEY
NEVER MADE BALL TEAM GREAT
Baseball writers are flying In the
face of facts when they pdvocate the
expenditure of money to make teams
great. Money can no more buy great-
neas In baseball than It can a place in
heaven, says J. B. Sheridan In The
Post-Dispatch.
Although the integers of the great
| baseball teams of the past and present
were annealed into a perfect whole
without the aid of money, and while In
many cases the teams on which vast
sums have been spent proved gross and
dismal failures, we are ever being told
that money makes teams great.
What money, may we usk, was spent
to make the White Box great? What
priceless players have been purchased
! for that team? What did Jones, Davis,
White, Altrock and Welsh cost It?
I What fabulous sum was given for the
lucky ftohe, who hit In many games?
What untold wealth was laid out for
Donohue, who saved so many? What
was bald for Hahn? How much for
Dougherty?
Davis and Jones are scarce fair
rosea to cite, as they come to Chicago
in time of inter-league warfare. But
Walsh and White and Altrock and
Hahn and Dougherty did not. The last
two were castoffs from the New York
club.
Upon the other hand, where wax the
Cincinnati club, on which untold sums-
had be*n spent? Where the Cleveland
Blues, another money-made team? If
spending money would moke teams
great, surely Cincinnati would be the
champion of champions.
What honor comes from buying a
baseball team as you would buy a lot
of sheep? Any man can buy some kind
of a pennant just as he can buy some
kind of »v home and some kind of a
wife, If he has the money to do It
with.
In not any way of money cun true
happiness or success be bought. There
are many things which money will not
buy, illy as the young and old baseball
writers may tinderstsnd It. The way
to get a baseball winner Is to “man
age” to get 4t.
The work of the White Sox and the
Athletics, teams on which very little
money has been spenti when contrasted
with that of New York and Cincin
nati. upon which endless sums have
beon dissipated, should have taught us
this. But there are some things In the
world which are very hard to do. The
hardest of them, I find. Is to make
baseball writers think. Even Main-
man. the idol, cannot do this.
V
■ ;WHEN CANTILLION j
j * bluffed boston|
peeking of Joe Cantlllou, the new mstm
ger of the Washington*, a Boston follower
•of the game has this story to tell of Joe
during hla days with the Indicator:
“Joe Cantillon was umpiring in tbs Na
tional league at the same time that llar-
raan Long was managing the Boston club.
t *000 day a drlssle set In and ns the lloatons
^'wem behind Ismg was very anxious to have
Al*ba game called. Again and again ho called
attention of Csutillon to the weather,
oe ordered hliu to go on nml play.
Vn v ~->kept on naggiu^ and Anally, goaded
all endurance. Joe told L»ng to go
and play bis game, and If he again
trhed him he would forfeit the gnino
the other side. Ctmtlllon went on with
'the game, and things progressed smoothly
enough until It tiegau to rain harder, and
some of the bteacherltes began to leave.
Long ut ones rnshed In front of Cantillon
and aald: 'Now you have got to call the
gime; now you have got to call It,* ami
Cantillon said: ’Yes, and I do, 9 to u In
favor of the other side.’ Long was fulrly
astounded, and It was some time Indore
the spectators caught on to tlio state of
thlpgs and slowly filed off the field. There
» was a lively scene In the dressing room aft
er the game. The triumvirs were all there,
1 and Billings, the most Iraselhle member of
the trio, let himself out in no uncertain
way. Joo sat quietly, controlling himself
admirably, and made no answer to the
tirade that was going on. 'I wish he had
.vmasbed you in the face,' said Bllliugs. nl-
[ lading to Long and speaking to Joe, That
' waa too much for the latter, und he aald:
! 'You haven’t got n mau on fhe team that
| can aiussh me in the face, and If you think
you have Just let him come buck of the
stand and try it on.* There was nothing
doing, bnt there was the utmost respect
i lor Joe, and It was shown very plnlnly that
h# was not n man to lie trifled with.”
BRIEF NOTE8 OF SPORTS.
With association football organization* ut
Tala and Harvard In the East and the Cal
ifornia universities in the West, we may
look for quite a little “soccer" next
Five n»*w Itoxlug clubs lit various New
, England elilt-s hIII ho doing business hi the
•near future.
Tomorrow night. nt lanraater, Pa., is the
time and place set for the six-round tight to
1 « ome off between the two big fellows. Jack
I Johnson and Jtm Jeffords. In the opinion
| of most follow t-r* of the game, Johnson
should be ii bit* to put It all over Ills op
l»onent.
The annual fall golf tournament of the
Coon try Club of Atlantic City opens to
morrow. to continue thrdugh the remainder,
of the week. A large and high claim list
of entries Is reported for the tournament.
j jVERY LATEST DOPE j
i| ON FOOTBALL RULESj
There ure many-Interpretations of certain
fnotball rules given by officials, says the
Boston Journal, and Walter Camp,
great Tala loader and cbalrtpau of the
rules'committee, made known many things
regarding the rules that were not generally
known at the dlnntr of the Hartford
Alumni Club held recently.
In the course of his remurks bn said
tnsuy things, the most Imported of which
were: A fluid goal ia not necessarily a drop
|dck or place kick, for If a player should
kick the l»a|l when It waa rolilug along the
Held nnd It should cross over the bar It
would count. If the hall should bit a
player, or the goal posts, aud Imuml over
the bur It would nlso count. "The differ
ence l>etweeii u safety and a touch-back,"
Mr. Camp said, "always bothered the spec
tators dud a good many officials besides,
and he endeavored to explain It.* If thu Im
petus that takes tho bull neroas the goal
line Is from itn opponent and a defending
Player then touches It down. It Is a touch-
buck. Hut If the Impel us comes from one
of the defending side and oue of that sldn
then touches It down It Is a safety and
•omits against the defenders. It Is not a
safety If a ball Isninds from the arms of a
defender endeavoring to catch It close to
ic mid then g«H*s back of the line
und Is touched down by h defender.
In tin* mutter of the fulr catch, there has
been a return to the old rules of slguullng
with the raised hand. But any player who
was Nick of the mau who kicked the hall
hss nn equal right to try for the ball with
his opponent pud cau run into him. even
though he has signaled for n fulr catch.
This the crowds have not realised yet.
Heretofore It has often happened that the
ends have got dowu the Held nml been
ready to pouuca on the opponent cutchtng
. ball, tint have had to let .him get It,
but uow. with quarterback kicks allowable,
the ends, by being behind the quarter
when he kicks, may be able to get a chance
k * the old way
POPULAR OFFICIAL.
HEISMAN THINKS GEORGIA
WILL PUT UP HARD FIGHT
If the work which the Tech football team
did in preparation for the other games
of the year could Justly be termed stren
uous—nnd it could, nil light—then one hes
itates to write the adjective which applies
to what the Techitea are doing this week
In their effort to get ready for Georgia.
For beyoud a shadow of n doubt, the
Yellow Jackid are working nbbut twice as
hard as ever before.
The feeling nmong the Tech followers Ir
that Georgia is. to lie an easy victim.
But down on Tect* field ther* is no such
delusion.
"It is going to lie one of our hardest
S mes.” said Coach Helsmnn. . “We shall
ve to vvork harder than ever before If we
V* m n * i dd JL ot know "'by
any feeling of confidence aliout this gain*-.
I must say that I dont* share It. If we
can squeak through with any kind of a
victory I shall be satisfied."
Just wTiy the Tech backers are so brim
med full of confidence is hard- for any
student of dope, weights, measures and
football to understand.
Tech has a good team, of course. That
fact has been amptly demonstrated. Last
Saturday's game would have proved It, If
any proof was ueceunrv.
On the other hatid, the team la not In
vincible, ns the Sewnnec game indi.,.
It Is entirely susceptible or
that sutue defeat may ooiuo Sntur,| )X ,
Georgia- is coming up with n b-an,'ui.i I
is no slouch. It has weight. 1
knowledge of football and n grim
uation t-> ilefont TecU, no man,,
cost,. * <■
If Tech outclasses Geoi-tfii „ B ,„ h
will he on speed. Graves, the v ,
who does most of the' kl<1i!nc. *,
right along with Bruwn. so Georgi,
say. and the Athena team has ti„.
ttonal advautage of having '
who can- hick If Graves la laid
Tech's hlg advantage over most .
nullified. ™ -
Undoubtedly the betting on the
l-e lively owing to the cflntMemv. „ n V ‘
stile,. Also, there may bo odd. R u .
la doubtful If they will be Justified
most of the dope artists will look ii, ...
gaoid to prove tins fact,
Any way, the btggeat crowd of ti„. ....
Ill turn out If the weather Is .'
the Georgia-Tech game la the big ultair „.
the sea eon. nud It will ba a contest v/orth
traveling half across the coutluent to
Neal Ball’s Old Manager
Says This Man Is a Wonder
If any new assurances were needed
that Billy Smith haa landed a great
man in Neal Ball, the outfielder he
drafted from Cedar Rapids, they have
come In the shape of a letter from Bel-
den HIII, the manager of the Cedar
Rapid* team.
Here la what Hill aaya of the man:
“I guess you got Ball just In time, a*
the Portland club waa after him.
“I have no dope to give you' on him
except to say that if we could have
paid him the salary I would not have
flold him and you know what that
means. I consider him a fine player
“He will go after everything In sight
covers all the ground ’between second
and third and hit* and runs bases lih*
any good winner.
“He la a corking good mun on base*
as he la not only fast btft uses g (MM i
judgment. He has no bad habits, u
married and Im always ready for work.”
>••••••••••••••<
! WHEN IS A FOUL NOT A FOUL?
MAKERS OF RULES MUST DECIDE!
PUNTER GRAVES.
The anapahot reproduced abovo shown Qravea, tha man who doea the kicking for Georgia these daya.
ills work la aald to rank with the best being done In the South, und on Saturday he will match hln skill against
that of Lobster Brown, the pride of the Jech team.
Vanderbilt Alumnus Tells How MichiganWon
frated tho Commode.„
the affair looked from .. . ... ,
Folk, a Nusbvillo man, now doing star work wit..
ItfHti kicked ^ie, ball,
"it happened In
You're not the idgiest team they've met.
Vquderhllt. old Vanderbilt;
But Michigan will not forgot
Vanderbilt. Old Vauderfdlt;
Up from your home In Dixieland
You cauie. a lonely little band,
Aud played ’em till they couldn't atnud;
Vanderbilt, old Vunderbllt.
FOOTBALL TEAMS
ARE ENTERTAINED
Special to The Georgian.
Dthloncgn, Un., Nov. 7.—Saturday even
ing at the girls* annex, the co-ed* of the
North Georgia Agricultural college tender
ed the 'vanity football team n Halloween
party. Miss Ellen* Glenn, head of the
'girls’ department, did the honors of the **_•-
: t-aoioo.
At the tame time, the Iniys of ('umpniiy
K. with the aojd*tjiH'-e of rrof**«or |W
■ell, entertained Company A nnd the f»<-
»ulty at a *tag oyster supper, nt the club
‘house. The table* were decorated In Hal
loweeu ntyle, and a number of toa*t* were
rraponded to moat happily by metulicr* «»f
i»h# faculty nnd the student body, and the
cadet* exhausted their rejH-rtotre of col
lege yell*. The uffair gave it happy M*nd
off to the M*cond team on their departure
Ilo plsy a Gftinc*\|II* rievra.
HAT0L0GY.
Have your old »M»ft or etiflf
cleaned and reshaped. ilurtH
Boat you good,
Hadn't figured out at all
How you’ll hustle with the hall.
Didn't think you'd have the gall -
But you had It, Vanderbilt.
•Beat you. but they had to go,
Go like HeCk, old Vnuderbllt.
Bunt und run aud line--buck low.
Htlll you held, game Vanderbilt,
ast. a fellow got away,
Hprlnted hard nnd wived the day,
But you wasn't licked that day.
Though you lost, old Vuiiderhilt.
“How you cheered for Michigan! »
Plucky-hearted Vanderbilt.
Che red ’em hearty, every man.
Like, you tueaut it, Vnuderbllt.
laughed and said you’d come iigaiu,
Maybe ehange things round home, then,
You're the clean, game Moutl)ern men!
Shake! We’re for you, Vuiiderhilt."
“You should have ueeii It! It would
have nmde you proud of old Vundy. Play
ed Michigan to a frar/Hng finish. Hon
est, they outplayed a buneh of Hurry I’p's
men, after conceding them between 10 nud
)& pounds to the toan. I have not seen it
figured out, yet, hut I’ll l»et Vnuderbllt ear
rled the ball a third farther than Michi
gan, at least. They bnd It nearly nil the
time.
"We went through their line, time and
again. They could Imrdly tnak» an Impre*
•Ion ou our*.
"We did moderately well around ends,
hut Hammond was a terror at breaking up
Interference. Ou Interference only I thought
they had us lien tea.
“After the first half. Hurry t v p called
'em In and talked. Score, was 4 to 0.
" 'Watch 'em pile up the score.' said a
cheerful youth beside rt»e.
" 'All light,’ I answered, remembering
what Virginia failed to do In it seeond half
“Bing! They were off. Lot of kicking,
we gaining on every punt. Our ball. Biff!
Biffl Home more biffs, with Craig, Ma
uler and Bob Blake |H*rf«»rntlng that hefty
line. Then a try Tor place kick. Failed.
“Three times they tried, aud Blake final
ly made it. Score 4 to 4. Charity forbid
comment on uiy part. But did I yell?
hay!
It was horrible,
he last hulf—nhout
nilnutea to pjny. Garre!* got around
right end (not Blake's) hud rati 05 ynrds to
q touchdown. IIhike threw him Just a
foot over tho- line. It was a umgulflccut
run. But see the difference In luck.
“Vanderbilt outplayed that hunch If
they ever outplayed anybody. It was plain
nervousness Cost them a touchdown.
“Nearly every one Is saying Vanderbilt
outplayed them.
” 'Mighty lucky’ Is the comment,
“Say, but you would have been proud of
the bunch.
“After the game they goMn an open txl-
tyhn nud rode lti procession through tb*
streets giving the Michigan yell! It made
a horrible hit. and tuny be it was not
game."
I
IHmHHOMHMtOIttMMHHI
DOPE OF THE BASEBALLISTS
The Boston Journal nays It in. Chic
Stulil or Lou t’rlffcr for. manager of the
Boston American's.
Does “Cholly" Murphy, owner of the
Chicago Cubs, get an emblem ns Frank
Farrell, owner of the New York High
lander* did last year? 1
That i« a question that in tearing the
heart* of Chicago baseball people, and
evidently "Oholiy" himself !« not with
out worry, for he wrote to August
Herrmann to find out about it.
When Pitcher Lindoman of the Bos
ton National* played baseball with the
Logan Hquaren of Chicago last sum
mer under the name of “Evans,’’ he
charged the team Slot! for hla services.
“The National Commission will fine
me $50 If they hear about It,’’ said
Linde man, “and I want some profit."
The i ommlssion did hear about It’,
and lined “Llndy" the whole $100.
Now the loud ha-ha is on the Bos
tonian.
The Chicago Nationals gave It up
after two’ attempts to get Into condi
tion in California. Wonder if the Giant*
will have any better luck.
New Orleans papers state that Maxle!
Manuel and his bride are going to New
Orleans to make their home there.
ured-in five shut-outs and was victo
rious in four. He pitched one one-
hit game, one two-hit game, three
three Gift games and one five-hit game.
His ihowing was such as to promise
Hliiglug loud nml clear above all the otbe
demands of the ball players Is the cry for
eeplng m«>dlflontlon of the foul strike
rule. There Is no possible chance of the
rule Itself being rescinded. It has come
to be accepted as much a port and parcel
»f baseball law ns are the three-strike and
four-ball clause*. In fact, the general pr!u-
•Iple of the rule is admitted to be fair and
just to ait eoiieerned. But that there nhould
great distinction between the fouls
that fall close to the dlnmoiid and the long,
hard drives Just outside of fair territory Is
now admitted by pitchers, batters, mag
nates sad spectators.
Modified, as the rules committee will he
asked to modify It. the foul strike rule'will
be pre-eiuinently Just. There Is apparently
no other way to stop the tedious, tiresome
practice of expert batters in "fouling off
the good ours" in order to get a tsuw ou
balls.
Moreover, when the pitcher enn so esti
mate a hatter’s weakness that ihe can make
him hit the little fouls that In the old days
prolonged the game and counted for noth
ing, he is eutitled to have them called
strikes. Legislation ngulnst the pitcher bin
gone quite fur enough.
In one game In Philadelphia last *ra*.n
Larry hit the first ball pitched far over th-
right field screen, it scant foot outside fair
territory. One strike. The next ball
driven a way over left field fence. It wm
fopl by less than n yard. Two strikes. Th-
next bail pitched was over the piste, hot
very low. The batter let. It go. The umpli>
called It the third strike, nud Larry wm
out.
It is against such n pnlpnhle Injustice t«
the batter ns this—the calling of strike*
on near home runs—that the rules commit
tee will lie Importuned to legislate this
winter.
The eminently wise’ and proper thins to
do is to fix a chalk-marked territory within
which fouls are strikes nnd outside «*f
which they are simply fouls. Thus altered,
the foul strike rule would lie antagonized
no more, but would In* accepted by everyone
ns wise legislation, well calculated to nr-
celemte the sjKM-d of the game without dn-
much for the season of 1907.”
Joe Vila has piped it off that Miller
Huggins will be with the Newr York
Nationals next year. Cincinnati papers
reply by tjie statement that it Is a!
ways safe to “copper” anything Vila
says, and insist that Huggins will stay
in Cincinnati.
“I look for very ordinary unnual
meetings this winter for the major
leagues, with Bun Johnson and Harry
Pulliam currying pff the blue ribbons."
writes Tim Murnane. “The great army
of minor leagues will meet with all
serene, at least on the surface. The
major* and minors have no differences
to settle, and with 6,000 professional
ball players ready for work the player
question Is settled for the first time
since opposition came to the Nationul
League. There is not so much differ*
cnee In tlie players. The directors 1 studied irlr.
count for much, und the team without .......
a real genius at the head has just about. JJVjjj . "»>*»• J you down in Washingt
TitfSaaS** 8 11 man drawln * t0 "WGT'M WlAT " r g,',sp.Ml Kit.
H "“ h 1 “Your nn Klttmh£f, lun'l II?
‘ a fellow '
;WHY “KIT” WENT OUT;
Bill Coughlin luis tin* reputation In lb.*
West of using Ids head on all occasion*,
lie Is also it keen judge of human na
ture, nud he useg that faculty on the bn.***-
ball field.
This same knowjedge of liumnii nature
allowed him to “put It on” Mai Kit-
tredge one day in mueli a he same wnr.
"Kit" aud Bill were roommates when they
ployed on the Washington tenm.
Bill went to Detroit nud "Kit" remain
ed near the Potomac. One dify "Kit''
Mt the ball a mighty crack nnd went t"
third on it. It whs uiiiisnnl for the *>V
catcher to land on them that way, and h*-
like Burkett, pretty well Mithtlcd wit'*
blu*K-lf.
’’Peach, wasn’t It, Bill?"
(.’oegliliii never answered, but looked hi*
old roommate over from head to foot with
to know ye
a bob-tHil flush.”
MEN WHO HELP COACH GEORGIA
Wise, you look like i
by that mime."
"I lav
used to know
i gibls-riug
^ gone nutty,
I Idiot?" growled "Kit," Idli .
It is you. Kit. old boy,"
"By go<
ilff Blankenship, the Columbus, Ga.,
player, who figured on the Atlanta team
In prehistoric day A will be with Wash.
Button In the spring.
The Boston Herald hands t the fol- j
lowing bunch of verbal violets to Jim- !
my Dygert. once of Southern League-
fame; i
"One of the successful young pitch-
? the past •
wL.aSt hioLi: •.
Hlbley. tile football and ba-elwll
player who won athletic renown
on Valid* vbtll team* and who Is
now i* aching ;u Stole Mountain.
Is \«*»> |»opulur these tlu>s a* an
tHcfat. !!•• has solved in many
big ga
oumi Atlanta.
“iu the first half they let ns do most of
tip* playing for n little time, and
played. Twelve thousand people there.
They ohered Vnuderbllt some. tNot too
blamed much. They got seared esrly.)
“Ulake trletl four or five kirks for goal, 0 f the American league
uni failed. season was James Dygert. who
“Then Michigan went to work. They’ve | with New Orleans last season, having
get stnrs In Gttrreis and t’urtlee. aud tb.^e j been farmed to that team by ‘Connie’ J
made a few pretty run*. • Muck. Dygert first attracted attention '
’*01111* they were within .'4 yard* of Van-j by his excellent work with the Pougli- j
derbilt's g.sd. Vsndy didn't «fn a thing but! koepsle club. «>f the Hudson River I
hold them and lake III - bait. They finally { League. He was victorious fu || „ u t
IkiII from in-ar tlie ♦■enter «>f t*h»- it«-!d i ’‘ ,an n *>uld have been the case!
Mralahi Iwki! *n<l rl. bi.nl . j b»il IIip , ra. k > plli h.ni of tho Athlot-
tgnn’s 2ysni Itne. First down. Me*—Plank ami Waddell—tint been out’
“Then the qunrtertmuk fucdih-*|. Mb h- of the game considerably. Dygert tig*
^ .. . . ; ^
•nglilln. utterly •llsregsnling till hi-*
old chum said. “I haven't seen you »lit* far
oti the basis in so long I bs»k you f» ,f
ii stranger."
s the crowning shot. “KIT'
good mituml, was dsnclu;
I'.suuliy
Jiy _
down in Ids rage. Bill mulntal
lie* same cold, distant air. “KIT
olf the I at *e. The catcher shot tin
down, and he fare the old enteher
recover himself he was out.
f --
BURNS IS TRAINING.
! Los Angeles, UaL, Nov. 7.—Tommy
' Bums has started in training for hN
coming heavy weight flght with Jack
I O’Brien in his training quarter* her*
i He is confident of defeating o’Brit-n
and Is willing to take two to one l»ct-<
that Jock cannot beat him. Burn*
(now weigh* 184 pounds, but will enter
the ring at 174 pounds, if possible.
GEORGE COX AND TOMMY STOUCH.
Here is a smipslmt or «%»\ and Htoucb. who help Coach Whitney look
after tl»«- i»et>rgi« tenm. MtoUcfe acts as trainer und,f'ot ns general util
ity ttmn. The plpdogruph was snapped nt Macon fektturday.
■) -
SALVATION ARMY
I TO FURNISH LA BOH
FOR COTTON MILLS
Hpeelal to The Georgian. ,
Greenville. S. C.. Nov. *7.—John W**hi.
secretary of the board of trade, i.-' «>■
i <*orresiM)iidence with <’ol. Holland. » ■*
; the colonisation department of the Bai-
vatlon Army, with reference to getting
‘some emigrants front New York Ht>
: There are quite n large number of l«*‘ H
•people in that city who are said t*» o*
! anxious to get away, and who worn*
. make good laborer* If brought to tm*
section. Heveral car load* will proba
bly be brought tiere.
A number of emigrant* who cam
over on the Wittektnd. which arrive,
at Charleston Sunday, have cast tho
i«»t In Greenville, nnd express them
selves a* well pleased.
NAT KAISER & CO
. Bargnirs in unredeemed Dia
monds. Confidential loons on vr.i
uables.
15 Decatur St. Kimball