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THE SECOND S. C. REGIMENT. Col. Thompson Says it Will ba Mastered Oat on 19th. Lt. Col. Henry T. Thompson, of the Second South Carolina regiment, was in the city to day for a short while. He was returning from a visit to bis home in Darlington, and was on his way to camp at Augusta. He says the regiment will be mus tered out on Wednesday, April 19th. He remarked that although the boys were anxious to get out of the service, still they enjoyed the visit to Coba and would not take anything for their experience. Th health of the camp is perfect audi the men are in ne spirits. The pee pie of Augusta are showing them every attention. Their camp is an ideal one, being the one recently occupied by the Tenth Ohio.-Colombia Record, 5th. A Millionaire's Family Burn ed in His House. New York, April 7 -The coroner this morning announced that thirteen ' people were killed by the burciog of millionaire Andrew's bouse, sud one in the Adams house which was set afire by sparks from the Andrew's house. Besides these, Kate Downing and Marie Roth, Mrs. St. John's maids, are missiog The bodies may be found ic the ruins of the Andrews house. The fire began early this morning in j the mansion of Wallace C. Andrews, I the millionaire president of the New York steam heating company, oo east j Sixty-Seventh Street The flames spread so rapidly that the fa^HHb cat off in the upper stories. M be o awakened from sleep they were unable to reach the street The entire family of Andrews, also the family of his son-in-law, Gamaliel St. John, perished. Mr. St. John wenc to Wilmington yesterday and escaped. The dead are: Wallace C. Andrews and wife, Mrs. Georgie St. John and daughter, Oreen, Wallace and Frederick, children of St. John. The servants. Nellie Beiden, Mary Flan agan, Eva Paterson, Kate Downing, Masie Ross, Annie Neary and Jennie Burns, the laundress, died at the hospital. The bodies of Mrs. St. Jobo and her children have been identified. Six others have been found sod two are believed to be those of Mr. and Mrs Wallace and the rest of tba servants Aiiee White, the cook, is io the hospital, in a critical condition from the shook. The flames skipped two . blocks, catching tbe residence of Al. Adams, a sportsman, on Sixty-Ninth Street. A camber of the inmates jumped from the windows. Mrs. Adam was injured io the back aod is suffering from the shook. Nellie Q oo, a servant, jumped from the fourth floor to the extension and was severely bruised. Mrs. Mary Lac g ran, the housekeeper, died at the hospital aod four others were injured. WILL BE MORE CAREFUL. The penitentiary directors, profit ing by the developments of the in vestigating committee, have taken step? to prevent a repetition of irregularities in the future The power of the superintendent in financial matters is to be restricted and be will not be allowed to official ly endorse any notes, and the board proposes to examine his monthly reports-item by item. All accounts are to be so scrutinized and nothing is to be taken for granted. The board will select the bank of deposit and will require it, in consideration of getting the business, to make monthly statements of all deposits made and of other financial transaction it may have bad with the superintendent.-Columbia Record. Paris, April 6 -The Voltaire, which yesterday published an install ment of tbe evidence given before the court of cassation by M Paleulogue, one of tbe permanent officials of the foreign office, regarding the repudiation by the italian govern meut aod by Col. Scbwarizkoppeo, former German mili tary attaohe here, of relations with Dreyfus, publishes to-day a further installment, showing that tbe so called secret dossier is not eonoected with Dreyfus, except as regards a single document, a letter mentioning him, which is dated after bis condemnation aod is, therefore unimportant. To Our Subscribers-Important. The Quaker Valley Mfg. Co. of Chicago have requested cs to announce that they have esferal thousand sets of the finest coin silver plated War Memorial Spoons, made to retail at $3 a sst. They will mail, postpaid, a full Bes of six cf tbese spoons to every subscriber ro the Watchman and Southron, who will send came end addres-a postal card will do. If, on receipt of tbe spoons, jon find them the most exquisitely beautiful specimeD3 of the silversmith's ari you evsr saw, and worth S3, remit 78 centp, as payment io full, within 30 dajs ; if not pleased, return spoons im mediately Each spooo is of a d:fferent de sign-after-dinner coffee siz?--showing sol diera in camp in Cuba, Morro Castle and four U S. Battleships. They are imperishable mementoes of tbe late rar, and every sub scriber should accept this most remarkable o5er, and obtain a set before it 3 too late. All that's necessary is to say you're a sub scriber to the Watchman and Southron (this is important) and that you accept Meacorial Spcon Offer. Address Quaker V&l!ey Mfg. Co., 357 W. Harrison St., Caicago. Dec 21 True Bilis Against Thirteen of Them. The Lake City Lynching Case in the . S. Court. Charleston, April 7 -In ihe Uoited States circuit court hore today Jodge W. H. Brawley, preeidiog, a true bill wa found by the grand jury against 18 of the men accused of lyncbiog Fraser B. Baker, at Lake City. S C , Feb. 22, 1898. Fifteen men are under arrest, bot DO explanation of the dropping of two eames from the indictment was given. Before giving the case out Judge Brawley deiiverd tn impressive charge ; be did so, be said, owing to the unusualness and gravity of &he case. He sketched io on t ne the cffeoses of wbioh the prisoners were accused and defined the duties of the jurors in the premises The crime was one of the blackest ever perpetrated in Sooth Carolina, be said, and it WB9 the defy of the government to prosecute to the fullest extent any or ali of the men who might have been implicated in its commission. The jury retired and brought in the bill after being out less than an hour. The indictment they signed was, of course, prepared ia the United States district attorneys office. It fi'ls fifty typewritten pages and sets forth at great length the incidents of the Lako City lynching It will be remembered that on the night of February 22, 1898, a mob went to the house of Postmaster Fraser B. Baker, a Degro who was obnoxious to the people of the town. Oil was poured oo shavings piled against the house and fire set to it. When Bak r, bis wife and bis children tried to escape he and his infant daughter wera killed, while his wife and two other ohildren were seriously wounded by meo shooting at them from the woods. The meo oo triai now are : Martin Ward, W. A Webster, Ezra Mc Knight, Henry Stokes, Henry Godwin, Moultrie Epps, Charles D. Joyner, j Oscar Kelly, Marico Clark, Alonzo Rodgers, Edwin M. Rodgers, Joseph P. Newham and Early P. Lee, merchante and farmers of Lake City and vicinity. The last two men meLtiooed have torced State's evidence The trial will take place beginning Monday. Ex Attorney General W. A. Barber and J. P. Kennedy Bryan, cf the Charleston bar, will assist the prosecu tion. ---?-? - - The Grand Jury and the Pinckney Murder CaSe. The grand jury bas made its present -j meot to the Court cf Sessions aod ad jouroed io a manner. The jury's work so far as is relates to the general busi ness of the couoty is Sobbed and a re port of the same bas been made to Jodge Klugb, but the investigation of tbe Piookoey murder will be cootioued under a special arrangement, which bas the sanction of the oourt. Concerning the progress made by the jury io the Pinokney casa there is no mention in the presentment; io fact, the case is cot specifically camed at eli, but comes under the general head of oofio shed busioess. This, however, will oct affect the thoroughness of future inquiry as the cass will be looked after by a committee of four that has been selected from the roster of the jury This com mittee will have tho assistance of Lieut McMaous, whose detail has been con* tinned by Mayor Smyth, at the request of Mr. C T. Halsey, the foreman of the grand jory.-News and Courier. Malaria cannot find a lodgment io tbe system while the Liver is in perfect ordtr. Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine is the best Regulator. Menstruation made Regular and Paiolesp, aod Paios io Sides, Hips and Limbs cored by Simmons Squaw Vloe Wine or Tablets. ^<-? The Vaoderbilts stand nobly by the Mebodist University at Nashville. It was founded by .,Commodoro,, Cornelius Vanderbilt, who gave it $1.000,000. William H. Vanderbilt left a handsome bequest to the university and W liao K. Vanderbilt, bis soo. bas just anooooced that bo will give it $100,000 to be used in tbe erection of a dormitory. A great record of southern pro gress is presented in the compilation of the Manufacturers' Record which we print to day. The south has turned the corner at last, and hence forward will march up Che highway of progress io the van of the national procession. We agree with The Record that there is daoger in the "over-capitalization of consolidations of many enterprises." Tne water will 6ome time have to be squeezed out of these new 6tccks and bonds Fortunately for us, however, South Carolina has not yet been suffused with this speculative water. We hope it wiil uot be-for the people will have to pay, aa they are abie, dividends on the water, and when they cease to do so innocent 6tock j holders will have to bear the io ss - ! Columbia State ! MISBEHAVIOR OF VOL NTEERS. j Laurens, April 6 -Complaint is I m de of first i stalJojpots of riiscb3r fd soldiers paesicg bery from Granville to d y. Volunteers are not expected to be pinks of propriety, but there should be a limit to patriotic liccosc if trouble is to be avoided. Albert L Moise in Court, Attorney For Belligerents Pbila 'delphia Baptists Who Fight in Church and Appeal to the Courts. The fellowing report of ? sensa tional and unusual case now I'D the Philadelphia courts will be read with interest by the friends of Albert L Moise, Esq : Voices pitched high in anger sounded in Court- of Common Pleas No 4 yesterday morning The fight of the old Spruce Street Baptist Church against consolidation j with the Chester Avenue Church had reached the courts, and two legal gladiators were locked in a combat of words. Occasionally Judges Arnold and Audenried would have to caution the lawyers against showing too much feeling. H. J. Scott was champion of the Chester Avenue Church cause, and he moved that the Court opprove petition to consolidate the two churches "There will be som'* objection offered/'* said he ' "but I don't think your Honor will see fit to entertain it This movement to consolidate was carried on in the regular way. Both churches apppinted committees with power to act ; the committees reported favorably, and now, when everything has been duly arranged, with the exception of your signature, your j-jonor, some of these people decided that they do not wish to abide by their action, and want the whole thing declared off. I never heard of such a thing. It's too late for them to draw out Why acting in good faith, the Chester Avenue Church has already incurred a deb: of 9,000 " Albert L Moi*e, one of the lawyers for Spruce Street Church, bobbed excitedly in his chair whilG Lawyer Scott talked IT WAS NO LOVE FEAST. '.This Court," began Mr Moise with great solemnity, "has been grievously deceived." "0, it hasn't," said Judge Arnold. '.You will see, sir," and young Moise looked ominously at Scott. "Now, the facts are that this commit tee, elected by Spruce Street Church, was chosen by a majority of fifty six members, when there are 253 mern hers in the church Besides, that committee was enpowered merely to report Their action had first to be ratified, and that brings me to ihe meeting of Friday last I would like to read the minutes of that meeting, to show that" "Well," said Judge Arnold, "we know it wasn't a love feast." POLICE CALLED IN. "Ah, your honor, that's just it. Mr. Scott would have you believe that only a minority of the members of the church are against the consol idation. When a vote was taken to discharge royseif and my partner in the prosecution of this case-and that was Scott's resolution- what happened ? The resolution was lost The members were split half in two, sir, and great confusion prevdled. And Rev Mr Moore tried to make a motion for adjournment to go through, but it didn't, and then there was confusion, sir, of the wildest kind, and this mau Scott was there, sir, and then he was not there, for the police were called in" "Wait a minute," said Judge Arnold, "for here COMPS the sheriff now " But the sheriff's visit was made j merely io deliver some papers '.o the ! court clerk "Well, sir, after Scott and his crowd left-ignominiously left, sir the meeting went on, and the action of the committee consolidating the old Spruce Street Church was revok ed. And I've a hundred affidavits here-affidavits that were breathless ly drawn up on the Sabbath by gray haired women, sir, who weepingly wait to hear your honor's decision " LAWYER SCOTT ANGRY. Then Lawyer Scott had his inning "I've heard great stories," cried he, "of that Friday night meeting I've heard that I was punched be tween the eyes. Your honor, it's ! false ! I wasn't ! If anybody had struck me, your honor, I wouldn't have been the only one with the marks of a fist upon him. "As for that meeting-why, your honor, I've been to political conven tions-pretty tough ones at that-but I never witnessed such scenes of c! 6order as were committed by these men who are now fighting this con solidation It was a disgrace and a desecration They struck their pas ter, but it isn't true when anybody says that anybody struck me. A policeman did come in. but instead of his putting me out, I told him lo get out, and he did '*' The court decided to reserve decis | ion in the matter o * ratifying the petition of consolidation Judge ! Arnold said he thought he might j appoint a referee to settle thc quarrel ! -Philadelphia North American. i Dr. Samuel Kobo, chief Rabbi ai ! Budapest's for thirty yean?, bas been I reade a motabes of the Hungarian j House of Manato, being thc first ra'oDi ever appoirtcd to the Upper House of Parliament in the Austro Hungarian Empire. " -- -.*?. -mimm* Paper Doiis, drtesed or otherwise at H. G Osteen & Co's. AN APRIL SNOW STORM. I Chester, April 4 --It snowed here I this morning for about one hour, aad is very cold and disagreeable here to uigbt. Charlotte, N, C , April 4 -The April snow storm squall struen Char lotte at 8 30 this m>i liing and prevail ed off aod until 2 30 io the afternoon Toe weather to night is oold, but damp to a degree that there is no danger of frost That beiog the ease, fruit and truck are comparatively safe. Toe cold soap, however, has added to the troubles of the farmer, who are already weeks behind in their woik Raleigh, N. C. April 4 -Snow began falling this moroing at 4 o'clock and continued steadily until 2 30 in the afternoon This is tbs heaviest April snow, beiog aboat'four or five ioobes dcep, since the weather bureau was established here, 13 years ago. Cold weather is general throughout the State. Norfolk, Va , April 4.-It begao snowing heavily here at ll a. m. to day aod continued until 4 p. m , when it was succeeded by raio. The Tennis Construction company waa to have broken ground to day for the new elec tric street railway from this oity to Seweii's Point, where piers and a fioe hotel wili be erected, but the weather prevented. It is very cold here to night. Petersburg, Va., April 4.-A furi ous nnow storm began here about 10 o'clock th 3 morning and lasted several hours, bat the flakes melted as fast as they fell. As far a3 can he learned there is no damage to fruits or vegeta bles. The thermometer was 40 above zero DREYFUS EVIDENCE. Paris, April 5 -The Voltaire, emu lating the Figaro, to day publishes an instalment of Dreyfus evidence in the frhape of some foreign office documents in which it is set forth that the foreign office received eev eral of the d niais from Col SchwarizkoppeD, the former German military attache here, and from the Italian government, emphatically de nying that they had had any relations with Dreyfus. The documents published by the Voltaire also show that the French foreign office intercepted a coded telegram addressed by Col. P nnis sardi, the former Italian military attache to Paris, to his government showing that he did not know Dreyfus. Reed's Proposed Reform. j It is'said that, the Hon. B Reed bas become convinced that the bouse of representatives would get aloog a great deal better without desks in the hall where it transacts its business. Mr. Reed wiii endeavor to have these desks removed and benches sub stituted for them He believes that better atteotioo to business aod its more prompt transaction could be thus secur ed. Io several of the New England states there are no desks for members in legislative balls. They sit, a the British hoo?e of commons do, oo beeches Wheo they wish to attend to their oorrespoodeoce they retire to the writing rooms, which are near at hand. These apartments are better ! uited, for letter writing or toe prepara I tioo of speeches than the halls where I the rush of legislation or the excitement of debate prevails. Our Federel house of representatives has grown tc be a very unwieldlj body, so much so that Speaker Reed's srbi tiary methods find many apologists who would condemn them if 'be house had a smaller membership. It already has 357 members, and the probability is that the number will be increased by the apportionment to bc made under the census to be taken nezt year. There is much to be said in favor of Mr. Reed's plan for benches instead of desks. It would relieve the present crowded condition of the ball of the bouse aod would have a tendency to make the members pr tent more attent ive to what goes on. The st^teneBt bas been made that Mr. Reed, if cleated speaker of the bouse of representatives already chosen but not jet organized,* will order the removal of the desks and tue substitu tion of benches Of course he could not put any such decree ioto effect. The proposed chaDge will be a matter for the house to aot ! upon, but the speaker's influence will have great weight in determining i'. j Mr Reed in used to having his own way as speaker, and be f j carry j through his scheme to put the members j of the house cn benches -Atlanta Journal T.ieie is a chance for somebody to make 30,GOO by proving property. I It is lying in the State Treasury of Montana without a 'claimant The State lays no claim io it. nor does any one else. It was turned over to j the investigating committee by a j Senator, who says it was given to j him to vote for Senator elect (nark, '' and Claik r.aye it isn't his money and ; he doesn't know anything tbout it Tue Curative Pro;>er;ife, Strength asd Effect of Dr. M. A. Si rr mons Liver Medicine are ai wa* s tbe same. It cannot be equalled, j Paper novels, TOO new title?, reany of then: ntver before issued ia cheap form. H. ! G. Uitecn & Co Tbe happiest ladies are these using the White sewing machine j ^-^^^^ PmmP C T LOOUE FREE I S L THIS BSC CATALOGUE C NTAINS M20 PAGES is 9x12x2 inches in size,: Bgip^y-r^--- "^"-^.-^ contains o ver ou.uco quotations, 10,000 illustrations, the largest, most J s <o . "?'r\' zZrTxri ' xi ' "a complete and lowest priced catalogue ever published. NAMES THE \ ( \> I LOWEST WHOLESALE CHICAGO PRICES OM EYESYTKIKG, incising ru h^XfiSi r,W^ " 305 VV' 9 fcverything in tiroe -rIes, Drug , Dry Goods, Notiocs, Clothing, Cloaks,', ?i I- i^Ss&^ o^oNy. S Dresses, Boots and Shoe , Watcliss, Jewelry, Boobs, Hardware, Stores,j j i^EIBMHffl bHOUS '^ I A?ricaIi3r;l) Implement, furniture. Harness, Saddles, Bessies, Scw!ng: P -|K^^I^ffm'*"___.*"" I 3IachlDP . Crockery, Orgies, Pianos, 2u-ica! Instruments, FarnUcin-tiocd , j S !( SS ^^BS^^WLJSTT" 1 <inn, ReTo'T r3, Ki>h!nir Tackle, Kicjclos, Photographic Gooda, etc. Teils' g Vn-1^.^^ J fef 2?^?^-^-^ "o I just-.That your storekeeper a: home must pay or everything he bu vs ? l^'^^^^cii^^-r^^^'^JST," S and will prerer.t him rcm overchar;rinfr you on anything you buy: ; l^^^i^f ^li^^g^^e^ ^ explains just hovr to order, bow murh the freight, eipreti or mall will ' si^^ w^r-T^iDKj^l beonanythmgtoyourtown, THE BIG 3C0K COSTS US HEASL SI, %t^.-cja^L*1.-KJ VJ~ L is thepos:a^ea!or:ei;:30cer.ts. 1 ^^^Kt^^S^^'^yl O OR FR F F OP PPP Cut thia advertisement out ^^^v&^^sP^^^js/? V_V_r*_r raEG. V^r r CK. and aendto us with 15 eenuin i'^^^^OS^*^^^:^^4^^? itarnV} t0 help pay thc 30 cents postarre and the Big Book will be sent 15^^ PafeC^! i.>i^'' 'J^if. to you FHE2 by mai! postpaid, and if you don't say it is worth 108 f j^ixf^^TvaiCte^-' Jw^ZZS times the 13 cents you send, as a key to the lowest wholesale prices i S5jgs5 o everything, say so, ar.i we w:.I amediateiy retern your 15 eeau. life 3fr.lE^^K^gSgffa WHAT THE PRESS SAYS ABOUT 7H S CATALOCUE: B^g^S^^^^ffi^^^^HBgj (Minn' I"3 . * ,_IIlo:ili::ieilt' * b;:si:lcs3 iniormation."-ilinneapo ^& 3rT^^^^7'*-:^^i^ "A won<lerrui pj^ce of work."-V/ash:ngton National Tribune, l^. ?^-^-- -" T> >S3o 'Thecatalogue is a wonder."-Manchester (N. H.) Union, ^ SSS Ife.-^y . ' CK iCAGO "Sears, Roebuck & Co. is cue or the large.it houses o us kind ir. .imu V - 1 r 1 V"^-0T"" "^" Chicago."-Chicago Inter Ocean. The tig catalogue forms one of the finest shopping mediums that could possibly be sent i*to a district.* -BC7ce s Monthly, Chicago. " uelr ^^O TU is * vast department store boiled down."-Atlanta Constitution. "The catalogue in certainly orchandi3e encyclcpasdia."-Chicago Epworth Herald. ) "AIaw8hould be passed compelling the use of thia catalogue in all public schools."-The Hon. G. A. Sou'jhtosa. We eonld qnote thousands vi slmllir estraeU. SE3D15 CENTS AT ONCE and yon will recelre the 4-Ib. book by relnra nuB. Mdress, SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO.(Inc.', CHICAGO,ILL., . S. A . 1 African Limbless Cotton Seed Free.... m as HS (is Anyone who ends one dollar for a year's subscription to thc At lanta Semi-Weekly Journal can get postpaid one pound of the cele brated African Limbless Cotton Seed without charge. A pound of these seed will plant one-fifth of an acre, and with proper attention should j'ield enough to plant a crop. The seed were tested in a list of thirty varieties by the Georgia Experiment Station and a bulletin recently issued by Director Red ding shows that the African Limbless Cotton produced 70 pounds more per acre than any other variety, and 161 pounds more per acre than the average of thirty leading varieties. The African Limbless Cotton produced 780 pounds' of lint per acre, which is neariy four times the average on the farms of the South. This shows what high fertilization and thorough culture will do with these excellent Seed. The value of the product, counting cotton at 5 cents and seed at 13 cents a bushel, was over $45 per acre. The cost of fertilizers used was $4.77 per acre. The Journal does not guarantee results, but the result of the test at the Experiment Station makes it worth a farmer's while to test these seed when he can get them for nothing. The Journal brings you the NEWS OF THE WORLD TWICE A WEEK with hundreds of articles of special interest about the farm, the household, juvenile topics, etc., and every southern farmer should have the paper. You don't have to wait a week for the news, but get it twice as often as you do in the weeklies, which charge the same price. AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE. Send for a sample copy. Address, & THE JOURNAL, Atlanta, Qa. 'bV^. >g- > - >g- ^ > . <Z & < ? >f > . Z 2; * v X- . >v >*-> i: m (IS SOUTH CAROLINA AND GEORGIA R. B. CO. TIME TABLET NO. 15. In effect 12.01 a. rn,, Sunday October 2d, 1898. West-First Class Daily. Leaves, am 7 10 Leaves, am 6 20 Leaves, am 9 20 Leaves, ara 1010 CbarlestoD, Augusta, Columbia, Ringville East-First Class Daily. 8 00 arriv e p m 10 45 arrives p m 5 20 arrives p m 4 28 arrives D m West. North Carolka Division. East si 2i Class. A. M. 75 77 21 Class A. M lat Class STATIONS. A.M. Leave. 7 40 8 00 8 10 9 00 9 3 9 48 10 10 10 3: 11 00 11 45 12 10 12 35 8 20 8 50 9 06 10 IC IO 30 10 40 11 5C 12 15 1 50 3 10 3 eo 4 40 5 io! 5 30i 5 45 6 20 P. M. i P. VT 11 40 12 00 12 12 12 40 12 55 1 00 1 20 1 35 1 50 2 15 35 48 03 18 30 IC 15 25; 4 45j 4 52: 5 02| 5 19 5 34 5 59 6 14 6 30 Arrive. Camden DeKalb Westville, Kershaw Heath Springs Pleasant Bill Lancaster Riverside Catawba Junction Rock Hill Tirzih Yorkvilie Sharon Hickory Grove Smyrna Blarksburo; Earles Patterson Springs Shelby Ldttimore Mooresboro Hennena Forest City Roiherfordton Thermal City Glenwood Marion 82 p.a. 1 451 2 00 1 20 12 15 ll 20! ll 52: ll 3 ; 10 45! io so; 10 25: 10 15: P. M. 30! A.M. A.M. P.M WEST. GAFFNEY BRANCH. EAST, j 85 Mixed. P. M. 4 10 4 35 5 00 33 Mixed. A M. S 30 5 50 6 20 Leave STATIONS. Biaekaburg Cherokee Falls Gaffney Arrive 34 Mixed. .A.M. 7 30 7 03 6 40 36 Sixed. P. M. 6 30 6 05 S 40 Train No. 77, goinz ^est sakes daylight connection at Lancaster with the L & C. R. R., at Rock Hill with the Southern R. R. goiog north, at B^acksburg with ihe South ern. Tiain No. 78, going east make3 connection st Marion, N. C., with the Southern R.j R., at BUcksburg ivitb Southern ard at Lancaster with L. & C. R. R. Train No. 81,1 going east mikes connection at Shelby, N. C. wi b the S. A. L R. R , going east. 'All locil freight traine will carry passengers if provided with tickets j S. B. LUMPKIN, Division Passenger Agent. L. A. EMERSON, Traffic Manager. J. N. ROBSON & SON, Commission Merchants, And dealers in Consignments of Eggs, Poultry and Farm Produce Solicited. i j Weights aai 8 (woods Ciiaran^ed. . Robson & Feb 16-x Charleston, S. C.