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tumorous department. THE SMART LAWYER. This is so blamed true that it is interesting?very much so: A wellknowu Maine attorney is especially noted for keenness in looking out for the best end of every bargaiu and his ability in getting hold of that end. It has made him unpopular in some circles? has that trait of his ! On one deal not long ago he was in with a couple of friends, men of wealth and standing. Business was good the first year. There was a generous division of profits. But the lawyer wasn't satisfied with what was coming to him, share and share alike with the others. After receiving his proper whack as a partner, he exacted $500 more for "counsel fees." He said that as a lawyer he was worth that much more to the deal. This was a new way of looking at the matter; but the bill was resignedly allowed by the friends. They were pretty good business men, understand. In a little while they saw that the venture wasn't panniug out very well. So the shrewd men of affairs quietly unloaded without saying anything to their partner. Then a little later came the crash. The lawyer hurried around to hold a consolation meeting with the other two. "Gracious! Isn't this too bad?" mourned he. "I lost so-and-so. How much did you fellows drop? You must have been hit pretty hard." "You're wrong, old boy," came the cheerful duet. "We never lost a dollar ; no we never lost a cent. Tra la !" "Wha-t-t-t?" "Never lost a dollar. We saw it coming two months ago. Had a tip. Unloaded. All out." "Well, then, why in the name of all that's square and above board didn't you tell me?" "Well, we would have had you allowed us $500 counsel fees when you took yours. See ?"?Lewiston Journal. Playing Poker.?There is a man in Washington, who is a shining light in one of the prominent churches, who nearly lost his reputation the other night, all because of a child's innocent prattle. He called upon a friend who is handsomely "fixed" as to this world's goods, and who has a tiny, golden-haired daughter of whom he is very fond. The friends adjourned to the smoking room for a chat, and shortly afterward the daughter went to hunt them. She came down to her mother in the reception room a little later and found her entertaining callers. In a lull in the conversation the child volunteered the information that "papa and Mr. Blank were having lots of fun." "What are they doing, dear ?" asked one of the callers, idly. "Playing poker," was the astounding answer. "Poker !" exclaimed the astonished mother, "why Jennie, your father never played a game of poker in his life." "Well, mamma, they are in the room with the big green table, and papa pokes a little ball at Mr. Blank, and he pokes it back again. Isn't that poker?"?Washington Star. The Biters Bit.?"See that party with the jag sitting in the corner of the car?" said a conductor who was riding to the car barns in a Zoo and Eden park car to the conductor in charge of the car. "Yep. He's got a heavy bundle," was the answer. "Well, take this counterfeit halfdollar with you when you collect his fare. A passenger passed it on me a month ago. If he gives you a dollar, . you can shove it on him." The conductor of the car took the lead half-dollar, entered the car, and the man with the jag held out a dollar and received the counterfeit half and 45 cents in change. "Worked like a charm," said the ? conductor, as he reached the platform. "Here he comes now. He wants to get off." The drunken man wabbled to the door and unsteadily descended from the car. "Mnw cnlit. un " rpmnrlrpH thp conductor of the car as he drew the dollar from his pocket. And as both of the conductors gazed at the dollar, they grasped in unison : "We're up ag'in it! It's a counterfeit dollar."?Cincinnati Enquirer. Turned the Tables On Reed.? They tell a good story in West Virginia about the first meeting between two congressmen from that state and the gigantic speaker of the house, Thomas B. Reed. The two West Virginians are Hon. Blackburn B. Dovener and Hon. Romeo Hoyt Freer. Both are small in stature and wonderfully alike in their general appearance. Together they went up to the ponderous Maine man to be introduced. "Humph !" said Mr. Reed. "Is that the best tbe Persimmon state can do ?" "What do you mean ?" asked Mr. Freer. "Nothing," drawled the elephantine speaker. "I was only wondering at the uniformity of things down your way. I suppose tbe horses are all ponies, and the persimmons are all dwarfs" "Well," interrupted Mr. Freer, "there is one thing in our favor. The persimmon has more taste than the pumpkin." The laugh was on the speaker, and he acknowledged it by cordially grasping the hands of the liliputiaus and joining in the merriment.?Success. What Is a Furlough??"What is a furlough?" asked a teacher. "It means a horse," was the reply of Mary. "Oh, no," replied the teacher, "It doesn't mean a horse." "Indeed, it does," said Mary. "I have a hook at home that says so." "Well," said the teacher, now thoroughly interested, "you may bring the book to school, and we'll see about it." The next day Mary brought the book, and in some triumph opened to a page where there was a picture of a soldier riding a horse. Below the picture were the words : "Going home on his furlough.?Pearson's Weekly. Waystdr Sathmngs. When a man takes a crooked step he leads some boy astray. VST People get wisdom by experience. J A man never wakes up his second I baby to see it laugh. d A baby was held in pawn for several days in New York for the u payment of a debt of $35. a WST A philologist of high repute is ? authority for the statement that there are 72 languages spoken iu Russia. 8S?" There are about 100,000 inlands, a large and small, scattered over the oceans. America alone has 5,500 ? around its coasts. It is the Transcript that says of a a certain woman that she carries her j, age well because she has been doing w it for a long time. c tGF The most cautious man we ever n knew was the one who was afraid to it buy a lead pencil for fear the lead wouldn't reach clean through it. b A horse can travel safer and is better with his head hanging down, or 1 free, than it can when it is checked up. o By all means let your horse have its si head. ' tl Boys, remember that you grow older every day, and if you have bad a habits, they grow older too, and the g older both get, the harder they are to c separate. fiST A Philadelphia occulist who has Cl been studying the human eye for 30 ^ years, declares that all great men of a! the past and present bad or have blue 81 or gray eyes. #6T There are two kinds of unhappy * people in the world?those who are ^ sad because they are not known, and those who are miserable because they are known too well. ^ The custom of shaking or giving hands can be traced to the days of the 5 ancient Israelites, and was intended to ^ signify peace, to swear friendship, ^ promise alliance, or give security. 0 t&T We cannot remember a day so it dark as to have hindered the approach c of coming day, nor a storm so furious c or dreadful as to prevent the return of e warm sunshine and a cloudless sky. ii "I would have you to know," ti said Pomponious, "that I am a selfmade man." "Well," said young p Rasper, "there's one thing certain, you 0 needn't waste any money securing a patent." w Everytime Miss Amanda, whose w understanding is somewhat large, stops at a hotel, she cleans her own shoes, e and sets outside her door a small pair, which she carries with her expressly w for that purpose. tl I?** If you want a pair of boots to last four years, melt and mix four ? ounces of mutton tallow ; apply the 1 mixture while warm, and rub it in P well; and then put the boots in some closet and?go barefoot. Wof* A young woman of Butte, Montana, applied to court there the other day for permission to kill her lover, e who had jilted her. She thought she c had a right so to do, but wanted to go h about it legally and decorously. C t@F "Did you take much pressing before you accepted Jack ?" asked a K young lady of her friend, who had just ^ got engaged. "Oh, a lot. And then Jack is so strong, you know. He K nearly squeezed the breath out of my S body." e t&F When an Armenian maiden at- ? tains her 17th year, and is not engag- * ed to be married, she must undergo a strange punishment. She is forced to fast three days, then for 24 hours her ? food is salt fish, and she is not permitted to quench her thirst. t( tfatr Mrs. Weedle?My dear, the J? Dingles want to rent their cottage at j the seaside next season, and Mrs. Dingle told me yesterday that we might have it for the summer for $500. What do you think ? Wheedle?We ^ might take it for a few minutes. tj. The largest Masonic library in the world, and the only one occupying e a building of its own, is in Cedar Rap- p ids, la. It contains 12,000 volumes, c and is in charge of Theodore S. Parvin, p who for nearly fifty years has been p grand secretary and librarian of Iowa. ^ ?6T* "And you don't find it tiresome, b dear, all alone with me? You are quite d sure that you don't wish to go back to p your bachelor life again. He (earnest- o ly)?Quite, my darling. Indeed mar- h ried life is so awfully jolly that, you n know, if you were to die tonight I'd v get married again tomorrow. "Literature certainly runs in the Green-Smith family. The two daugh- a ters write poetry that nobody will v print, the son writes plays that nobody j, will act, and the mother writes novels t,] that nobody will read." "And what 0 does she father write?" "Ob, he p writes checks that nobody will cash." p If you wish to know whether s: you are a Christian inquire of yourself v whether, in and for the love of God, b you seek to make happy those about b you by smiles and pleasant sayings, p Are you a comfortable person to live with. Are you pleasant to have about. s 16?" The Chinese have many queer ti notions. They believe the water from ti melted hailstones is poisonous, and a that the rain that falls on certain feast days is a sure cure for ague and ma- n larial fever. They once believed that g they could whip the Japanese, but this notion has been thrashed out of k them. e 16T "Here is some money, my love," n said the husband. "I don't want any,' . replied the wife. "Come, now, dar- 11 ling, take this $25 and go out shop- P ping." "Thank you, dearest; but I a 11 " - U ? -I VI really aon t care 10. 1 wouia rainer . stay at home and see to the housework." Then the husband awoke and }' fouud, as the reader has already sus- 11 pected, that he had been dreaming. ??- Through a London paper it is learned that an American woman has 0 lately received what must be termed . the most original of wedding presents. J' It is a musical dinner service, of which ^ each plate begins to play a tune when * put upon the table. The soup plates 8 are accredited with marches, as suit- P ing the temper of the guests at that moment of solemnity ; but as dinner progresses, and the wine and courses si do their enlivening work, the harmo- g nies brighten accordingly, til at desert fi the covers are ringing out the maddest tl of polkas and gallops. d 4jam and fireside. CHECKED PERSPIRATION. It has been said that Hon. Edward Cverett, one of the very brightest of $ American names in law and literature, lied of checked perspiration. He spoke in a crowded court room . intil he was hot and fatigued, went to ; meeting afterward at Faneuil hall nd bad to sit in the draught until his ^ ime came to speak. Then he return- . d to the court room with cold hands . nd feet and his "lungs on fire." 1 In less than a week he died with ! neumonia, which began with checked erspiration. Prof. Mitchell, the great American 1 stronomer, took fever ; but it changed ? n orpnt.le nftrsniration. Because he i ' vv ? O I x I ras rather warm he insisted on a bange to a cool bed. The checked [ erspiration brought back a fever, and ; killed him. Only yesterday I went to a neigh- * or's house to see their two fine promting boys?very sick with pneumonia, 'hey overheated themselves in a game 1 f ball after recovering from the mea- .v es. The checked perspiration threw 1 iem into serious illness. In my bumble opinion, half the ail- 7 tents of mankind can be traced to etting too warm and getting too hilled afterward. What is called bold hives" in infants has the same ause. Stout, vigorous men work hard, f et tired, sit down in the shade, fall ^ 3leep, wake up hoarse and stiff and j* art an incurable lung trouble. Young ladies dance in thin dresses J; nd go out into verandas and balconies, et chilled and wake up next day with 3 sore throat, high fever and a pro acted spell of sickness. A great many housekeepers get over- . eated in the stove room and bring on ifluenza and sometimes fatal diseases y getting chilled too soon. Mothers urry to town sometimes in their best ress to attend to shopping, come home verheated, pull off their frock to save * ;, while they sit down to nurse the rying babies, get chilled, and it is the ( ommencement, perhaps, of a long,' xpensive illness, much suffering and t npairmeut of hitherto strong consti- v itions. c Dress warmly in cold weather and s rotect the lungs and throat in all sorts g f weather. c Never sit down with your back to a e 'indow or open door when you are 'arm and fatigued. e Cool off slowly if you are hot from c xercise. g If you find yourself growing chilly, a rork or walk steadily until you restore t be perspiration. c I find a big tumbler of hot water a t reat comfort to restore perspiration, f t seems to warm up the system and t romote circulation. c This "checked perspiration" is a ?arful promoter of serious diseases. Cotton Plant By-product.?Othr by-products of cotton plant besides otton-seed oil, oilcake for feed, and ulls for fertilizer are being developed. >ue of these is the use of the fiber of be stalk for the manufacture of baging. According to The Scientific Lmericau, a machine has been perfecsd for working the stalks into baging. Some of this cotton stalk baging has been tested and pronounced xcelleut for the purpose. It is strong nd clean, and does not readily ignite, 'ive tons of good stalk will yield ubout ,500 pounds of first-class fiber. At bis rate the annual crop will produce 11 the bagging needed to wrap the nt and leave a surplus to be devoted [> other purposes. It is predicted that lachinery for making coarse matting s -om the fibre will be produced shortly, 'he Scientific American expresses the pinion that if the experiments which re now being made with the fiber are , uccessful, "it will not be many years , efore the industry will assume gigan- j ic proportions." t The root of the cotton plant is being , xperimented with ior its chemical { roperties. The root of the Egyptian , otton plant yields a drug that has the < roperties of ergot; and the American \ lant. under a chemical manipulation, f as yielded a similar product. This as not yet been fully developed. A ifference has been detected in the roperties of the roots of diflent kinds f cotton, long staple and short staple, ence it is probable that maDy drugs lay be extracted from the different arieties of roots.?Tradesman. Antidotes For Poison.?Prompt ction in cases of accidental poisoning .'ill frequently save life, and it is very nportant to have some knowledge of he best methods of treatment in cases f emergencies. The first thing is to roduce vomiting, so as to eject the oison from the stomach. Mustard, alt and water, a cup of lukewarm ^ater with a little soda or powdered orax added, or an active emetic may e giveu. The following table of simle antidotes will be found useful: Acids?Milk, chalk, borax water. Copper, verdigris, zinc, corrosive ublimate and creosote poisons may be reated by producing vomiting and " hen administering white of an egg nd sweet milk. For poisons from alkalies, lead or iiishroom, vinegar and oil should be 1 iven freely. * For cases where the cause is not 1 uown it will be found safe to give an * metic, followed by a stimulant in 1 lillr 1 For external poisons, such as poison /y or other plants, bathe the affected arts with strong borax water, apply poultice of tansy leaves, moistened nth sweet cream, and keep the system j good condition by taking some coolig simple mediciue.?Eliza P. Parker i Farmers' Voice. Vinegar Recipe.?Three-quarters f a gallon of good cider apples, slice hem up; put them in a two-gallon jg and till it up with sweetened fater, and it will soon become vinegar. \fhen it is used up, refill the jug with weetened water, and so on. The aples will last two or three years. Ground Feed.?The experiment tations declare that 100 pounds of round corn aud cob meal go just as ?r as 100 pounds of pure corn meal, lie cob giving it more bulk aud renering it easier of digestion. c Ptettllanfous parting. IN COUNTIES ADJOINING. Summary of the News That Is Being Published by Exchanges. CLEVELAND ? King's Mountain )racle, July 4 : Plonk & McAllister lave the contract for the brick work >f the new cotton mill at Blacksburg. VIr. McAllister goes over tomorrow to )egin operations. They are deliverng lumber to the railroad to be ship>ed there. The wife of W. 0. ^alls, who lives in the western part of own, died very suddenly Monday light. She was in her usual health md had supper all ready on the table, md feeling a little tired said she would lot eat just then and started for her oom to lie down for a few minutes; >ut before she reached the bed she fell lead without any warning. Capain Dilling expressed himself quite orcibly upon the labor question the ither day, saying we needed a law to nake people work. With a piece of vork on hand which he was very anxous to have done, he couldn't find any me to do it, remarking that there were everal Negroes on the street idle ; but te couldn't get one of them to do his vork. It is unquestionably a fact bat towns will have to pass and enorce an ordinance compelling idle peotie who have no visible means of suptort and are found loitering on the treets to the inconvenience of every fusy man, that they give satisfactory easons for their being here or be aught bow to labor on the public treets. Towns will be the gainer in wo ways : By getting rid of a dan;erous class and getting its streets vorked. The attention of our city athers is respectfully called to this natter. J THE NEW SUN SPOT. Vhlle It Ih In Hlant, Charleston Is a Good Place to Keep Cool. Charleston News and Courier. A new sun spot, it is reported, is atracting attention in the scientific vorld. It was discovered by means >f the big telescope at Paris, though it hould be visible through a smoked ;lass, as its diameter is 25,000 miles, or ore than three times that of the arth. Just what a sun spot is has not been stablished ; but it is noted in many iases as the "internal energy" of the ;reat globe bursting forth, as the fire md lava of a submarine volcano someimes bursts through the waters of the icean. During the recent eclipse of he sun one of the most remarkable eatures observed was "a gigantic fiery ongue of red flame projecting bunIreds of thousands of miles above the he solar surface, and undoubtedly inlicatingthe location iu the sun of just uch an explosion." It may well have teen associated with the present outburst of sun spots, and it should be re embered, of course, that the fiery ongue was not at all connected with he eelinse. and did not deDend on it. tut was merely made visible to us by t, and is still in existence. Iu our climate, it is noted finally, told years, rains aud inundations aptear to correspond with periods when he sun is quiet, without eruption and vitbout spots, while the dry and warm rears appear to correspond with the spochs of greatest solar activity. American astronomers have noticed a iimilar relation in the matter of cytlone seasons. Experiments on the iolar heat also show that it varies in troportion to the sun spots?the more ipots the hotter the sun. VARYING EFFECTS OF ACCIDENTS. "Years ago," said a Maine man, "I ivas standing beside a gun at a state nuster at Augusta when a salute to :he governor, who had just come on he field, was being fired. The cannon ised was of the old fashioned kind, tud it was prematurely discharged, ivlth the result that the Index finger of :he right hand of the man ramming die load home was blown off. The n-ith flm In/lrrmnnt r\f )IIUL'K, lU^VUIVI ? llll IUV iUV?g Uiv.uv w* lying particlos of powder, had the ef!cct of driving the blood back from the vound, during which fragment of time he injured man calmly examined his naugled hand, but when the blood did jome back it came with a rush and 'aicly bubbled out in a torrent The nan's calmness left him as if by magic it the sight of the blood, and, with a oud scream, he keeled over in a dead !aint. "They used to tell a story of two men vho were working on opposite sides of i buzzsaw. The attention of one beaming momentarily distracted, he ran lis linger against the saw, and the severed piece dropped on the other side, where his partner was working. That worthy picked it up and, with the ;asual remark, 'Bill, you've dropped something,' handed it back to its own>r. Bill didn't faint, but it is only owng to the superior burst of speed developed by his partner that he is not loing time for homicide."?New York L'ribune. CABS NOT ADMITTED. Americans visiting London for the Irst time are more than likely to hail i hansom the day they arrive and start iromptly to see the row. Half the looks, stories, newspaper articles, etc., :reating of English life make promllent mention of this the smartest Iriveway in the world. London so;iety circles largely about Hyde park, ind naturally enough tourists regard t as a good starting place from which o study isritisli manners ana peoples. Imagine, then, the indignation and :he disgust of a pair of pretty girls, accustomed to traverse home drives in iny fashion they like, warned back !rom Hyde park entrance by a dx foot arm of the law. No tips, no emonstrance, no pleading, has the slightest effect upon the stern "bobby," tvho simply orders cabby to depart ind tells his fares to get a more cor-ect equipage if they desire to take jart in the row parade. Jt is livery or nothing, and if the rlsitor continues to long for a glimpse >f the Hyde park show she must have joots and breeches to drive her, tberejy having at least the semblance of a jrivate establishment No admittance s the standing rule for the ostensible :ab.?Boston Globe. THE WRETCHEDrNEWSPAPER MAN. In every city of tlie land the news' paper man is an outcast. He knows more people to be a stranger to thar any other being in the world. He has no holidays. His Christmas is the rec ord of other men's Joys. His Thanks giving is a restaurant. Even the Fourtt of July and Sunday, servants of thf commonest man, refuse him theii cheer. The Fourth of July is the duj he must be in every place at once, be cause everything is happening, anc Sunday Is#he day he must make things up, because nothiug is happening. His labors are our pleasures. H< gets his vacation by doing anothei man's work and earns his living bj watching other people live. The verj days and the nights turn their natura backs upon him. The lamp is his sur by night, and the curtain is his nighi by day, and he eats his supper In th< morning. His business is the reflec tlon of life. He is the spirit behind the mirror. What is left to us is righ to him, and right is left. Sometime! right side up is upside down. The world is all awry to the newspa per man. It whirls across the houri in columns, now in one edition ant now in another, but it heeds him nevei In return. He is a spectator. Th< show passes before his face?a shu out, unsharing face. He lives as th< years go on, a notebook under tin stars, and when the notebook is scrlb bled out he dies.?Gerald Stanley Lei in Atlantic. THE EMERGENCY CLERK "I ran across a clerk here who it worth his weight in gold, or, at least In gold bricks," said a guest at one ol the hotels. "If I was in business ii New Orleans, 1 would get that man II I had to chloroform and abduct him The way I discovered his merits was this: I was standing In a store dowi the street, waiting for my wife to de cide what she didn't want, when t tailor made girl walked up and askec to see some golf clubs. The younf man behind the counter showed hei several, and in a few moments sh< found one that suited her and wen away with It under her arm. " 'Are there many players In Nev Orleans?' I asked after she had gone. " 'Oh, yes; quite a number!' repliet the clerk affably. " 'Have you golf links here?' I con tinued, getting Interested. "A look of real pain crossed thi young man's face. *1 am sorry,' hi said, 'very sorry, but the fact is wi sold our last golf links this morning However, we have ordered a nev stock,' he added, brightening up, 'ant they will be here In a few days. Whlcl did you wish, the plain or the?er?fan cy links?' "A clerk like that Is beyond price sir, perfectly invaluable. Ten yeari hence I expect to find him a merchan prince." ? New Orleans Times-Demo crat. TWO VIEWS OP THE SAME MAN. "Why did you take that man's case?' the fresh graduate of the law schoo asked after his father, the old attor ney, had bowed a client out of the of flee. "There Is no possibility that yov can win It for him. One glance at nn face shows that he is the briber anc all around rascal be is accused of be ing." "Is that so?" the old man replied "I'm sorry to hear it?really sorry. ] wish I had known it" "Why, you must have been able t< see for yourself if you are any judge 01 character at all." "I am usually pretty good at sucl things, but I must confess that I dldn' notice it in this case. In fact, I dldn' see his face at all." "Didn't see his face!" "No. He had a wallet in his hant that took my eye. Now you go to worl and copy off that brief, and after thii if you want to learn the business watcl me, not the other fellow's face."?Chi cago Times-Herald. TORRENT CUTAWAY. WE have just closed a contract witl the manufacturers of the celehrate< TORRENT CUTAWAY, to handle th TORRENT and other Harrows of thei manufacture, including the CLARF riTTTAWAV r? Vnrlr r-mintv W have made a practical test of the Torren Cutaway in the field, and find that whei drawn by three mules, it will cut a furrov 8 inches deep and 24 inches wide, whici is equivalent to at least four mules, fou hands and four ordinary one-horse plows with the advantage that the Torrent goe at least twice as deep as the plow, an< does not turn the sub-soil up to the sun It is an ideal labor-saver, and is just th tool needed to .sow pease on stubble lam and also to break land for wheat and oats It is immensely popular wherever intro trod need, and wo hope its merits will bi investigated by the farmers of Yorl county. 4 York? Implement 4 Company. ? L. R. WILLIAMS, Manager. ? How rv | | About / ? I Your ( I# Watch IH Does it keep the correct time? Or d< you have to set it every twenty-fou hours? Do you know what is the matte with it? Bring it to mo and let me put i in correct-time-keeping order. It may b< dirty and need cleaning. It may have i cot? broken. It mav have a screw loose or it may only need'regulating. Rring i to me and no matter what ailn it, I cai put it in first-class condition. My charge: are very moderate and the work will hi done promptly. I also repair Jewelr: and Clocks. For anything in my line seo me. I cai and do meet all competition. See my lim of Spectacles and Eyeglasses. I can sui anyone with Glasses or Frames. THOS. W. SPECK, Jeweler and Optician, wanted: A FILE of the YORKVILLE ENQUI RER from January 3, 1884, to May 8 1884, containing the "REMINISCENCES OF YORK." For a complete file we wil send THE ENQUIRER for one year t< any person who will furnish us the paper we want. L. M. GRIST & SONS. i : ; King's Mountain Mili YOEKVILL] 3 r A High Grade Military and I I * ? Classical, Scientific, Commercial an< session begins september 5th. COL. BEVERLY A. DA' COL. W. G. STEPHENS r r)OCK HILL" B I in Price, But? J I above all, kee( 1 P ) a dollar or so higher tfc L them when this is the caj 1 I sTl S*a our **ant or ?rlto direct |^0( ; S?-i?ii ? SOLD BY GLENN & t ^?_ r STUTH CAROLINA & GEORGIA QRG } EXTENSION EAI1E0AD CO. ^ J TIME TABLE NO. 4. Sched 7 In Effect 12.01 a. m., Sontlay, Dec. 24,1899. 1 . North I ; between ,^vec CAMDEN AND BLACKSBURG. KSt LvLinc west. east. LvNew I ~3Z. 33. EASTERN 32. 34. Arrive! - 2nd 1st TIME. 1st 2nd ? . Class. Class. Class. Class. south I Daily Dally LeaveL Except Dally. Daily. Except LvHiek STATIONS. ?y Kgjs i p.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. LvGasP LvYork 8 20 12 50 Camden 12 25 5 30 ArriveC 8 50 1 15 DeKalb 12 02 4 50 *20 11 9 20 1 27 .....Westville..... 11 60 4 30 Nn , 1 10 50 1 40 Kershaw 11 35 4 10 ... a 11 20 2 10 Heath Springs. 1120 3 15 J>lin a : 11 35 2 15 ..Pleasant Hill.. 11 15 3 00 Lancas ? 12 30 2 35 ....Lancaster.... 10 55 2 b5 south ; 1 00 2 50 ....Riverside 10 40 1 00 and G( 1 20 3 00 ...JSprlngdell.... 10 30 12 40 gouthe 2 30 3 10 Catawba J'c'n. 10 20 12 20 Knar(j . 2 50 3 20 Leslie 10 10 11 00 , 3 10 3 40 ....Rock Hill... 10 00 8 40 WUP s ' 4 10 3 55 Newport 9 35 8 20 makes 4 45 4 02 Tirzah 9 30 8 00 points. 5 80 4 20 Yorkvllle.... 9 15 7 30 J. } 0 00 4 35 Sharon 9 00 6 50. f 6 25 4 50 Hickory Grove 8 45 0 20 ? -p 6 35 5 00 Smyrna 8 35 0 00 E. r. 7 00 5 20 ...Blacksburg... 8 15 5 30 ? p. m. p. m. a.m. a.m. yjj t BETWEEN BliACKSBURG, S. C., AND MARION, N. C. WEST EAST. P/ | 11. 33^ EASTERN 32^ 12. 3 2nd 1st TIME. 1st 2nd j Class. Class. Class. Class. - Daily Daily Daily Daily f^r Except Except Except Except UI Sunday Sunday Su?1(lV Sunday a.m. p. 51. a. 51. p.m. 8 10 5 30 ...Blacksburg... 7 48 6 40 8 30 5 45 Earls 7 32 0 20 and Lei 8 40 5 50 Patterson Spr'g 7 25 6 12 Lodger! 9 20 0 00 Shelby 7 15 6 00 and We 10 00 6 20 ....Lattimore 6 .55 4 50 materia 10 10 6 28 ...Mooresboro.. 6 48 4 40 be desli 10 25 6.38 Henrietta.... 6:18 4 20 n, 10 50 6 55 ....Forest City... 6 20 3 50 other th k 11 15 7 10 Rutherfordton 6 05 3 25 j 11 35 7 22 Millwood... 5 53 3 05 J 11 45 7 35 .Golden Valley 5 40 2 50 e 12 05 7 40 .Thermal City. 5 37 2 45 Satisfce r 12 25 7 58 ... Glenwood.... 5 17 2 20 I 12 50 8 15 Marlon 5 00 2 00 Cfv' ? p. m. p.m. a.m. p.m. j I GAFFNEY BRANCH. Pre ti WEST. EAST. r First Class. EASTERN First Class. H If - ???-? s ' 15. | 13. TIME. 14. | 16. Call a 3 i. Daily Except Dally Except a Sunday. Sunday. ; STATIONS. 100 G 00 ...Blacksburg... 7 50 3 00 A.T 9 1 20 G 20 Cherokee Falls 7 30 2 10 t 1 40 0 40 Gaffhey 7 10 2 20 i all P. Jf. A. M. A. M. P. M. gj' = off: Trains Nos. 32 and 33 connect at Blacks- THE ] burg with trains on the Gaffney Division. STORJ Train No. 32 connects at Camden with the Charleston Division of the Southern t Railway for all points South. * Train No. 33 leaving Camden at 12.40 p. A1 m., going West, makes connection at Lancaster, S. C., with the L. &. C. R. R., at Catawba Junction with the S. A. L., going - North; at Rock Hill with the Southern OFF Railway going North. Train No. 11 connects at Blacksburg with the Southern Railway from the n. South. At Marion, N. C., with the Southern Railway going West. "ysen SAMUEL HUNT, President, ~~ ~ A. TRIPP, Superintendent, TftlU S. B. LUMPKIN, Gen. F. and P. Agt. , Publisl To Gret a Good [PHOTOGRAPH"' a T i. Come tg my Gallery on West single < t One co[ I Liberty street. Come, rain or Forthr e Two co r shine, and you will receive the Tencoj J And an b best attention. A1 t Insert? Very Respectfully, !o?Vad . consist* JT. R. SCHORB, ofjSr! ?... ? ^ three, s lorKvnie, s. u. Ion reas in all < , busines I PHOTOGRAPHY. trading 1 TT^OR PHOTOS?in any style and of t lie the oili > JC best finish?please call at my (Jal- tended a lery, on Cleveland avenue. Weduei S. W. WATSON, Yorkville, S. C. issue. tary Academy, 3, S. C. ' , Preparatory School. 3 Stenographic Courses. WRITE FOR CATALOGUE. | Superintendents. ^"THESHOPj iUGOIGS Are " A Little Higher S " they stand op, look well, and jfl i away from tho shop Only H an cheap work. Why not use J ? 96? | GKHIU.J8?K&i n?? ALLISON. ILINA& NORTH-WESTERN AILWAY COMPANY. nle Effective April 1st, 1900. s Bound. Passenger. Mixed. Mixed. AO. 10. AO. 60. AO. 69. Jhester... 8 10 am 7 50 am LVllle 9 15 am 9 52 am t. onla 10 13 am 12 35 pin olnton.,.11 03 am 2 15 pin ton 11 52 am 3 32 pm :ory 12 15 pm 5 50 pm 9 00am jenolr.... 1 10 pm 7 50 pm 11 25am Bound. Passenger. Mixed. Mixed. AO. 9. AO. 61. AO. 63. ^ enolr_.... 4 30 pm 5 30 am 1 30 pm :ory 5 35 pm 8 30 am 4 25 pm ton 0 05 pm 9 18 am olnton.... 7 00 pm 11 10 am :>niu* 8 15 pm 1 12 pm ;ville 9 21 pm 3 20 pm Chester...10 31 pm 5 15 pm linutes for supper at Gastonia. 0, north bound, connects at Chester outhern Ry., Seaboard Air Line, ter and Chester Ry. from all poiuts at Yorkville with South Carolina ;orgia Ex. Ry.; at Gastonia with -? of T.innrilntnn u/ith. .Qaa. \ir Line; at Newton and Hickory outliern Ry. No. 9, south bound, close connection at all junction NICHOLS, General Manager, Chester, South Carolina. REID, Auditor, Chester, South Carolina. I ARE PREPARED TO DO Dmmercial * <^??-Printing Every Description. ive the material on hand for Bookwork Iter, Note and Billheads, Posters and <, Business and Visiting Cards, Checks ? ading Invitations. Well, we have the 1 for any ordinary Printing that may red, and wlil secure material on very otice, for any kind of Job Printing lan ordinary. WE GUANANTEE tion in every instance'and you will get le, Quality, Neatness, )mpt Service and the ri est Grade of Work. nd see us and let us fill your wants. THE ENQUIRER. PINLEY & BRICE, TORNEY8 AT LAW, ^ Yorkville, S. C. business entrusted to us will be yen prompt attention. [CE IN THE BUILDING AT BEAK OF H. C. STRAUSS'S 5. iEO. W. S. HART, ?TOilNEY A.T LAW, Yorkville, S. C. ICE: NO. 2 LAW RANGE. ONE G8. kberry Balsam, 25 Cts., for tery. YORK DRUG STOKE. ; ^(orkrilk (Enquirer. tied Wednesday and Saturday PUBLISHERS : IRIST, W. D. GRIST, 0. E. GRIST. EHMS OF SUHSCRIPT/ON: !opy for one year, f 2 OO >y for two years, 3 50 months, I 00 ee months, SO pies for one year, 3 50 )ies one year, IT 50 extra copy for aolub of ten. )VEHTIHE MENTH ' (,1 at One Dollar per square for the tertion, and Fitly Cents per square li subsequent insertion. A square i of the space occupied by ten lines size type. _ i ^ I'entrants lor auverusini; spow ix, or twelve months will be made ouable terms. The contracts must cases bo confined to the regular is of the firm or individual conf, and the manuscript must bo in ce by Monday at noon when infer Wednesday's issue, and on sday when intended for Saturday's