University of South Carolina Libraries
Iff 8?MP&?6N MEET1K8S. libere and When the Candidates Will Meet the People. schedules of the remaining meetings for the State and Senatorial campaigns are herewith republished, by ^equesfc, as a matter of information dfor the public generally: SENATORIAL. 11. Edgeheld, "Wednesday, July 2. 12. Saluda, Friday, July 4. IS. Lexington, Saturday, July 5. 14. Newberry, Tuesday, July 8. 15. Greenwood, Wednesday, July 9. 16. Abbeville, Thursday, July 10. IT. Anderson, Friday, July ?L 18. Walhalla, Monday, July 14.. 19. Pickens,. Wednesday, July 16. 20. Greenville, Thursday, July 17. 2L Laurens, Friday, Judy 18.^; : 22. IBnion, Monday,- July 21. 23. Spartanburg, ^Tuesday, July 22. 2L Gaffney, Wednesday, July 23. 25. YorkviHe, Friday, July 25. 26. Chester, Saturday. July 2& 2L Winnsboro; Tuesday, July 29. 28. Lancaster, Wednesday, July 30. 59. <&mden, Thursday, July 3L 30. Chesterfield, Saturday, Aug. 2. 3L -Bennettsville, . Tuesday, Aug. 5. 32. Bishopvilk', Wednesday, Aug. 6. ' 33. Darlington, Thursday, Aug-. 7. 34. Florence, Friday, Aug. S. 35. Marion, Saturday, Aug. 9. 36. Con way, Tuesday, Aug. 12. 37. Georgetown, Thursday, Aug.. 14. 38. Kingstreei Saturday, Aug. 16. ' 39. Monck's Corner, Tuesday, Aug. . 4& Manning, Wednesday, Aug. 20. 4L Columbia, Thursday Aug. 21. STATE. 10. Georgetown, Wednesday, July 2. IL Kingstree, Friday, July 4. 12. M?nck^s Corner, Monday/July 7. 23. Manning, Tuesday, July 8. 14. Sumter; Wednesday, July .9. 15. Orangeburg, Thursday, July 10. 16. Bamberg, Friday, Jnly IL 17. George's,. Saturday, July 12. IS. Charleston, Tuesday, July 15. . j 19. Walterboro, Wednesday, July 16. 20. Beaufort, Friday, July 18. 2L Hampton, Saturday, July 19. '22. Barn well? Tuesday, Juif 22. | 23. Aiken, Wednesday, July 23. M^ Mge&M, Iharsday, July 24. 25. Saluda, Saturday, July 26. 26. Lexington, Monday, July 28. ^.'-^?ewberryj Tuesday, July 29. 28. Lanrens, Thursday, July 3L 29. Greenville, Friday," August 1. 30. Pickens, Saturday, August 2. 3L Walhalla, Monday, August 4. 32. Anderson, Tuesday, August 5. 33. Abbeville, Friday, August 8. JS4. Greenwood, Saturday, August 9. '25?. Union, Tuea?av, August 12. 36. Sr^rtanburg;, Wednesday, Aug 13. 37. Gaffney, Thursday, August 14. 38. Yorkville, Saturday, August 16. 39. Lancaster, Tuesday, August 19. 40. Chester, Wednesday, August 20. - 4L Winnsboro, Thursday, Aug. 2L ODD FRUITS OF JAVA, The Most Common One, the Pariait? I? t'Jie Strangest of All. ^The fruits of Java," writes a corre spondent of the Pittsburg Dispatch? "form an interesting study in them selves, there are so many and of such strange varieties. The most common Is the strangest of all It is called the durian and grows like a huge excres cence .from tue trunk of a tree some what similar to onr pear tree. The f .fruit, which is pear shaped, grows to a great size, often several feet in length, and has a-yellow skin, rough "like a pineapple. ' The most remarkable thing about the durian, however, is its -odor. *&> say yon .can smell 'it block or? is t putting it mfddly. A combination of aged eggs and the ripest cheese could not be compared vdth it. When you break open the hull to find what can be the cause of all this disturbance to your olfactory nerves and ?nd a great cluster of snow white kernels which taste like some strangely delicious cus tard, your amazement is greater stilL . Another strange fruit is the serpent trnit so called from the fact that its akin is the exact counterpart of that of a snake. There are the pomoJoe, like a great orange; the potato fruit, which resembles that vegetable in ail but its fine flavor; the custard apple, with a yellow custardlike pulp, having a rath er decided taste of turpentine; the pop pa?, like a melon growing on a tree; the great jack fruit of rather a coarse fla vor; a small yellow fruit, with an un pronounceable native name, incased in a great bur like a chestnut and a hun dred other varieties, with none but na tive and scientific names, some good, some indifferent and some entirely un palatable to any but a native. The or ange is rather a scarce fruit, but the pineapple and banana are abundant and delicious, especially the former. There are more than twenty different varieties of bananas native to Java." Ran Without Leas. ? certain congressman has a smart granddaughter, whose clever sayings are the delight of her parents. The oth er day. she came to her grandfather with ber face all smiles. "Grandpa." she said. "I saw some thing this morning running across the kitchen floor without any legs. What do think it was?" Mr. Congressman studied for awhile and gave up. "What was it?** he asked. "Water/* said the youngster trium phantly.?Sl Louis Post-Dispatch. ' Proceeding With Caution. "Are you sure that your arguments are calculated to impress people with your punctilious principles?" "I don't want to impress too strongly with my punctiliousness." an swered" Senator Sorghum. "If any body is willing to sell out I don't want him to feel scared nbout maliing a proposition."?Washington Star. Jost a Way She Had. Softleigh?That howid Miss Giggles weally laughed at me lawst evening, doucher know. Miss Cutting?Oh. well, you shouldn't notice. She often laughs at nothing.? Chicago News. Walls have ears, and the paper ban?- j <r d(i<?srft rpv<er tbeu? either. -Phila'*?-? ! phlM *! ?? :. : LOUK LIKE FLATIRONS. Curious Stone Implements of Our Aborigines Puzzle Scientists. Among thousands of curious objects of utility, weapons, etc., of the races that peopled North America in prehis toric times that one sees in the cases and .cabinets in the Smithsonian insti i tution are. some'five or more curiously wrought stone objects from mounds in Tennessee bearing such a close re semblance to modern fiatirons that many people have thought that such might have been their use among their ! prehistoric makers, although it would j be hard to imagine what the primitive aborigines of this continent had to iron. The shape and appearance of these objects in every way correspond with a modern , fiatirom handle and all, and thus far scientific men. have been un able to discover what they were used for. It is, however, just a little singu lar that wrought stones, similar to the ones from the Tennessee mounds, have been found in Peru among the tombs of the Incas and at the necropolis- of An c?n. The old Spanish writers, men who accompanied Pizzaro in the con quest of that country, state that the ancient Peruvians, who were1 great ' builders, used these wrought stones, or so called natirons, as trowels in plas tering walls with mortar. The objects found in one of the Ten nessee mounds are the only ones that were ever found in the United States, and- the only way to account for their presence in that locality is to-suppose that in pre-Columbian times a great 'deal of ' Peruvian material reached countries far to the, north of the isth mus by means of intertribal trade.? Washington Post . NATURAL HISTORY. Some of the caterpillars found in the vicinity of the Darling river. Austra lia, are over six inches in length. The leaders of a flock of migrating wiloV'geese become tired sooner than others and are frequently relieved by their fellows. The gray buzzard is said to be the .heaviest bird that flies, the .young males, when food is plentiful, weighing nearly forty pounds. The bird is near ly erti net. The terrapin lives iargely upon crabs. ,He never eats his* food, but bolts it His favorite tidbit Is the crab's claw, which he swallows whole with the greatest relish. The glowworm lays eggs which, it is said, are themselves luminous. How ever, the young hatched from them are not possessed of those peculiar proper ties until after the first transformation. A whistling moth Is an Australian rarity. There is a glassy space on the wings crossed with ribs. When the moth wants to whistle, it strikes these ribs with its antennae, which have a knob at the end. The sound is a love call from the male to the female. A Very Old Role. The oldest mathematic. book in the world is believed to be the "Papyrus Rhind" in the British museum, pro fessed to have been written by "Annies, a scribe of King Ra-a-us, about the pe riod between 2000 and 1700 B. C. This "Papyrus Rhind" was translated by Eisenlohr of Leipsic', and it was found to contain a rule for making a square equal.in area to a given circle. It was not put forth as an original discovery, but as the transcript of a treatise 500 years older still, which sends us back to. ? approximately, 2500 B. C, when Egyptian mathematicians solved, or thought they had solved, the problem of squaring the circle. Proved Her Claim. "I wanted to show/' she said, "that woman is maligned, that brevity is quite as much her attribute as it is man's, and so when he proposed I had to say 'Yes.' " "You might have said 'No,'" It was suggested. "Not at all/* she protested. "When you say 4No/ you have to explain why you say it and tell how sorry you are, and it would have, spoiled everything/-* ?Chicago Post Sugrjcestinc: a Remedy. With sarcastic fingers the deaf and dumb lady curtain lectured her hus band for bet iing on the races. "Either talk slower," he spelled out on his band, "or else put hopples on your finger* They interfere when you strike this gait"?Judge. Detail teaoirln? Attention. If every crin is the architect of his own destinj he should pay particular attention to th*> fire escapes.?Phila delphia Record. Electric Centipede. Least attractive among the insects which give light are the so called "elec tric centipede," black crawlers with many legs which have been likened to J serpents' skeletons in miniature. They ! move in a snakelike fashion, forward or backward, leaving behind them a i bright track of phosphoric light How- i ever, they are most accustomed to ap- I penr in the daytime, when the illumi- ' nation they afford is not visible.?Lon- ! don Times. | - I Xot Red need to That. Gottlieb Schneider?I hear you haf a new bicycle got Do you get much on it? Louie Pilt2heimer?I haf neffer had it to a pawnshop a lrentty.?Columbus (O.)'State Journal. The Parrot. She?Isn't that a beautiful parrot? He?Well. 1 like the cage better than ! I do the parrot "Pshaw! The cage can't talk." "That's the reason I like it"?Yon- j kers Statesman. So long as one loves one forgives.? ! La Rochefoucauld A WAV OF ESCAPE. Jakewoy. the Wido-w Barato tv and tbe Preaeher's Text. "Talking: about widow?." said the man with the stogy, "did I ever tell you about Jakeway and the Widow Barstow?" Now. there hadn't been a word said about widows. ?ut one of the party re plied, "No, sir; you never did." "Well." said the man with the stogy. "Jakeway was a character, one of these you read about He'd lived alone for years. When he was a young man. he had been disa ppointed in love or some thing, and from that time he'd been sour?a reg'lar woman hater?and the particular object of his dislike was the Widow Barstow, aggressive from her head to her heels. The very sight of her to old Jakeway was like the wav ing of a red Sag to a bull. "They useter go to the same church, but the ushers knew the situation well enough fco put a goodly portion of the sanctuary between them. Unfortunate ly on one Sunday there was a new usher. The opening service was well under way, and Jakeway was in a pew by himself we? down toward the front, when down the aisle came the new usher with the widow tailing along in his wake, and he handed her into Jake way's pew. "The old man gave one look as the figure rustled in; then he gathered up his umbrella, his hat, his bandana and his prayer book and cleared the back of the pew in front with the agility of a boy, and just as he landed on the front seat the preacher gave out his text: " There hath no evil befallen you such as is common to man but God will with, the temptation also make a way of escape.' "?New York Mail and Express. The Canary Is a Little Piar. The canary is always regarded as a small eater, just as the pig is notorious for its gluttony. People with small ap petites are often twitted for not eating more than enough to feed a canary, and this led a man who was a tiny eat er to watch the yellow bird and report He found that a canary that weighed 247 grains ate just thirty-two ^imes its own weight in a month; that is. it at? rather more than its own weight on an average every day. Anyone who watch es the little bird will notice that it is al ways eating. Now. says the investiga tor, a pig doesn't eat its own weight ev ery day. glutton as it is. Hence he thinks that the canary deserves to be classed as a little pig.?London An swers. JLSeking- Thumbs to Bind a Contract. Goths and Iberians completed an agreement by licking and joining their thumbs, as Scotsmen once did and Moors still do, and rustic lovers once betrothed themselves by licking their respective master fingers and then pressing them together as they vowed to r?main faithful to each other for ever and a day. Even now an Ulster man signifies his assent to a preposi tion with. "We may lick thooms upo' thatr if he does not suit the action to the word like the lieutenant who in 1G42. on being challenged to mortal combat by his own sergeant accepted the duel by licking his thumb, saying, "There is my parole for it"?Cham bers' .Tourna L CoinN of Early Days. The early Biblical references to pieces of silver do not in the original convey the idea of coins, but of weighis. shekels. The Mosaic "oblation to God" was a half shekel, and the shekel is ex plained by .Josephus as equal to four Athenian drachma? of a value of about S 1/^ cents in American money. The first Jewish coinage under authority was, it is believed, struck by Simon the Maccabee, abou" the year 140 B. C. It consisted of shekels and half shekels. This coinage had its value signified upon it "Shekel Israel." in Samaritan characters. Tbe Oreas Is the Thins. "She's going in for athletics, she says." "What particular kind of athletics?" "Oh. she won't settle that until she has studied up the various costumes." ?Chicago Post Pass It Off Gleefully. If at a dinner party you happen to upset a glass of claret over your fair neighbor's white, satin dress, smile pleasantly and say "Ah, it is always a sign of wet when the glass falls." You will be forgiven and in all prob ability invited by her papa to dine with him on Sunday. Doomed. Flannery?Shure. Oi hovn't been able to elape the lasht few noights, an' 'tis just worry that's doin' it. Flaherty?Phwot are ye worryin* about? Flannery?Fur fear Oi'll git insom nia: 'tis hereditary in our family.?Ex change. His Weakness. Albert?Why. don't you recollect that girl? That's the girl you used to rave over last summer?call her a "poem" and all that Edward?By Jove, so it is! I never could commit a "poem" to memory.? Harper's Bazar. A Severe Condition. "What did Naigkbob say when yon told him you wanted to marry his daughter?" "He didn't absolutely refuse, but ho Imposed a very severe condition." -What was it?" "He said he would see me hanged first"_ Their Ardnoo* Tank. First Lawyer?Tbe lawyers had a hard struggle over the Moneybags es tate. Second Lawyer? Did they? First Lawyer?Yes. They had all they could do to keep the heirs from coming to au agreement.?Pock. POWERFUL VOICES' Some Historic Shriekers Wlio Ante dated the Famous Stentor. The question has often been asked. "Who was the most loud voiced man cf history?" The answer usually is that it was Stentor, of whom Homer says his voice was as loud as that of fifty other men combined and from which we get the phrase "stentorian voiced." But we have record of two historic "shriekers" anterior to Homer. We read where Simeon and Levi fought against the twelve men of the city of Sarton and that Levi beheaded one man with his own sword. In chapter 3S. verse 41, of the book referred to the story is related in the following words: I "And the sons of Jacob seeing that they could not prevail over the twelve, Simeon gav? a loud and tremendous shriek, and the eleven remaining men were stunned by the awful shriek." In chapter 39, same book, verse 19, we find the following account of the battles of the sons, of Jacob with the inhabitants of the city of Gaash. It seems as though the battle was both in the front and in the rear and that the warriors on the wall were throwing spears and hurling stones upon the sons of Jacob. What nest occurred, as related in chapter and verse above cited, is recorded in these words: "And .Tudah, seeing that the men of Gaash were getting too heavy for them, gave a piercing and tremendous shriek, and all the men of Gaash were terrified at Judah's cry, and men fell from the wall at the sound of his pow erful shriek,, and all those that were without as well as tbose within the city were greatly afraid of their lives." Consolation. Edith?Yale is my favorite. They turn out the best men at New Haven. Jack?That's what I said when they fired me at the end of the junior year.? New York Times. The man who is suspicious lives in a constant state of unhappiness. Bettei for his peace of mind to be too trustfu! than too guarded. The Monocle Is Harmful. No sensible person will ever wear a single eyeglass unless he is blind of one eye. Its use means that one eye is neither employed nor unemployed, but is engaged in ceaseless though no doubt unconscious efforts to see as much as its more favored fellow. This straining is as harmful as anything could well be and cannot fail to lead to the gravest resulta The White Honse Mistress. There is probably no situation easier to fill, as far as mere technical observ ance goes, than that of the wife of the president of the United States. She has a set of simple official duties as bostesd of the White House to perform. If she is ill or feels unable to perform them, she is readily excused. The Responsible One. "Who is the responsible man in this firm?" asked the brusque visitor. "I dont know who the responsible party is." answered the sad. cynical of fice boy. "but am the one who is al ways to blame."?Washington Star. Tlie '; ?; ^ :: r?v<?r. so called from the rvpuWFr of the saint? haine >is its l?a;:i:s. is i.V;:> m'?es in isnsih. ? [K? uis iv, it-- lower- ? ours?* it Is frw. ?;? ?? Tie Laust aft Most Colpiste Geo. S. Hacker & Son, j -MANUFACTURERS OF BOORS, SASti, BUNDS, Moulding & Building Material. office and Warerooras, King, opposite Ca non Street, CHARLESTON, S. C, ?St' Pnrfibaec our make, wbich we guarani superior anj sold South, and ?herebj *ave money. Window'and Fancy Glass a Specialty October 16 -o TURNIP SEED, Onion Sets-leading varieties. Also assortment of Garden Seeds Havana Sesars. ! Large line of fine Havana Segare. i Toilet Articles. A choice line of Toilet and i Fancy Goods to which atten-1 tion is invited at DeLorme's Drug Store. ! CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH Orijrfrtui and Only Genuine. .SAFE. Alwmr?re?UWc. Ladle*. ?>i> Urneeist ! fur CHIC II ESTE K\S ENGLISH I in KEI> ari-l Gold metallic boxe?, it-a'cl ; with Mue ribbon. Tnkc no other. Kcfaito | Dangcrou* Substitution* and Imita, tion*. r.tj of yonr Iin.cgi.t. or ?en<i 4c. io tunpt for I'a'rtlcnlnr*. Testimonial* ! ? ?1 "Keller for Ladle*," in Utter, br rv. turn y.ttU. 1?.0<K> TV.iimoniaM. Sold by | U I>n.Rri?i?. Chfeh??ter Chemie*! C?., ? Ue&lioc tait paper. MitdLton i-yunri;, ?'KiLA.. l'A. I Small crops, unsalable veg etables, result from want of Potash. Vegetables are especially fond of Potash. Write for our free pamphlets. GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau St., New York. Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. This preparation contains all of the digestants and digests all kinds of food. It gives instant relief and never fails to cure. It allows you to eat all the food you want. The most sensitive stomachs can take it. By its use many ^thousands of dyspeptics have been cured after everything else failed. It prevents formation of gas on the stom ach, relieving ail distress after eating. Dietingunnecessary. Pleasant to take. It can't help bat do yon good Prepared only by E.O. DeWitt & Co., Chicago Tbe Si. bottle contains VA times the 50c siz? J S HUGHSON & CO 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Trade Marks Designs Copyrights &c. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an, invention is probably patentable. Communica tions strictly conndentiaL Hand book on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patente. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. largest cir culation of any sdentine Journal: Terms, $3 a rear : four months, $L Sold by nil newsdealers. MUKN?Co.361B^ New York Branch Office. 625 F St? Washington, D. c 'Send model, sketch or photo of invention fori free report on patentability. For free book, < s-?STTRAOE-MARKS *t y ow? ^Opposite U. S. Patent Office WASHINGTON D.O. \ of %mm> SUMTER, S. C City and County Depositary Capital stock paid io . $75.000 OC Undivided surplus. 16,000 OC Individual liability of stockholders in excess of their sJock, 75,000 00 Transacts gen*r?l hanking na^inefs: also bas a Savinge B?nk Department Deposits ci $1 and upward receiv??d interest allowed ?t the rate of 4 \ er cen;. per acosa*, payable eemi-annualiy. W. F. B. BaYNSWO?TH, President Mario* iioiSB, W P. Rhakb, Vice President Caab?er. Jan 31 Seil Carolila aid Ma ft teasion R. E. Ciiai?. Schedule Ko. 4?In effect 12.01 a. m , San June 15, 1901. Between Camden 8, C, and Blacksborg, S C Bead down Eaa7d~cp. 35 33 Eastern time. 32 ?34 am m STATIONS. m s 8 20 12 50 Camden 12 25 3e 8 60 1 15 Dekalb 12 02 4 50 9 20 1 27 Westville 11 60 4 30 10 60 2 00 ?Eerehaw H 35 4 15 11 20 2 12 Heath Springs 11 20 310 12 20 2 37 Lancaster 10 55 2 37 12 40 2 50 Riverside 10 40 2 OO 2 30 3 10 Catawba Jonction 10 20 1 30 4 00 3 40 Rock Hill 10 00 12 4 45 4 02 Tirrab 9 30 9 55 5 20 4 18 Yorkville 9 15 8 10 45 4 34 Sharon 9 00 8 50 6 05 4 60 Hickory &rcve 8 4 7 30 6 20 00 Smyrna ; ? 35 ' 7 Co 6 50 5 26 Blacksborg, 8 16 7 CO m m arnau Between Blaoksbnrg, 8. C. and Marion, C Kead down Read cp ?11 33 Eastern time. 32 12 6 45 57 32 7 45 8 20 9 CO 9 10 9 25 9 55 10 30 12 00 12 25 I 00 r? m m STATIONS. 5 25 Blacksborg 5 49 Earls 5 49 Paferson Spring? 6 00 5 21 6 30 6 41 6 59 7 15 7 50 8 10 8 30 m Sbeihy Lattimele Moore? cor? Henrietta Forest City Ratherford ten jTherraal City Glenwood Marion a m 7 48 7 32 7 25 715 6 55 6 48 6 3 6 20 6 05 5 36 15 500 a m 6 4C 6 2 6 12 6 OC 4 SC 4 4C 4 SC 3 5C 3 2: 2 43 2 20 2 00 ps Rene? down Gaffney Division. Read up 16 j 13 EASTERN TIME. STATIONS. 14 16 p CD 1 00 1 20 1 40 P ZD a m 6 00 6 20 640 a m Blacksborg Cherokee Falle Gaffney am 7 50 730 TIO am m 3 0: 2 40 2 20 9 Daijy except Sunday % 20 minutes for dinner Trains Nos 32 and S3 are operated dailv. Trains Nos 23, 35, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 and 1? are c pera ted daily except Sunday. CONNECTIONS. - At Camden with Southern Ry; SAL ssd A C Line. At Lancaster with L A C R R. At Catawba Jet with Seaboard Air Line. A* Rock Hill with Southern Railway. At Yorkville with Carolina ? > orth W ? era R R. At Blacksburg with Southern Railway. At Shelby and Rutherfordton with S A At Marion with Southern Railway. SAMUEL HUNT, Presides a 8. TRIPP,'Superintendent. E H. SHAW. ? ' Pawen^r Ar??t ATLANTIC COAST LIKE Sort?i-Eastern E. R. of S CONDENSED SCHEDULE _TRAINS GOING SOUTB Dated No. No. Nj. s-; Jan 14,1901 35? 23? 53* Kg a m id Le Florence 2 34 7 45 <S 4?; Le Kingetree 8 46 Ar Lanes 3 38 9 04 m 11 30 Le Lanes 3 38 9 30 6 45 11/26 Ar Oharlaston S 04 10 65 8 30 ''< TRAINS GOING N?&T?. No. No Nt? ._78? 32? 52* Co* am a ta ???a <. Gbarl?dtcs S S3 4 49 St VU ir Lsne? S 16 615 2 ?y 5 3S .e Las? 216 6 15 : Si ? Kispctre: 3 32 ? r Floreruv-'- ? 25 Y 25 3p. 52 t2?? .hienda to Oc?cnsr.ia j .:?. Gs. .. ., or S C. Vraiu? SOb. 72 aro" 32 ran v.? Witecs ?-* .-.TcrtcTil?:?Sbort Lies?w? esse c'r-r - *etica fer ali points ^orrt"-. '-f ;rs cr? C. & "?>. R. E. Icare Ffcrss?s . ? ? cxtc;-t Ben?ay 9 30 1 , arr"?** Dar?.^T :u ? 15 ? Z'l Hgrtevinc'S ?2 0. m, Cfeer?w I 3?:? a m, Y?siczb?rc 'j 5 , m. \.>?ve ;oreii% d?iiij escept Suucey 53 r.', ar ?: Darliagtoa S ?O m, cannettsviiic ? : * r?, G?bs*o 9 45 m Lea7 F?orscee Sunday only 9 30 fem. errive Da;hn?:.cs <j ob t? m Leave Giosoa ?aiij except ^^ 3 m, Benoensvillf 7 00 a m, arrive Parsisi r.3 8 00 a 10, leave Darlington ? 0 & : ir its Florence. S l? am. Leave Wadesborj :aily except Sunday 3 00 po, Gheraw 4 *5 . ?n, Bartsville 7 CO a ? Darlirgton S 29 y m, arrive Flor ance 7 00 Leave 'Car iegton Sunday only 8 50 a to, arrivp ? ..? nee 9 11 a m ;. R. HENLEY, JNO ?. DIVINE Gers'l Manajzer. ?en'i Ser R M EMERSON, Traffic Manager T. W EMERSON r.?n:| Pang. Ayr* SOUTHERN RAILWAY THE GREAT HIGHWAY OF TRADE A# TRAV^ Uniting the Principal Commercial Centers and lealth and Pleasure Resorts of the ?outh with the & * NORTH, EAST and WEST. High-Class Vestibule Trains, Through Sleeping-Cars between New YorK end New Orleans? vie Atiente. Cincinnati and Florida Points via Atlante enei vie A ? he vili?. New YorK and Florida, either via Lrncbbar^ Danville end Savnnnahi or via Richmond, Danville end Savannah. Superior Diaing-Car Service on all Through Traine* ?KceHont Service end Low Rates to Charleston ac count South Carolina Inter-State end West Indien Katposition* Winter Tourist TicKets to all Resorts now on sale at reduced rates. For detailed Information, lite, ature, time table*, rates, et?., apply to nearest ticket?agent, or address S. 11. HARDWICK, General Passenger Agent, Washington, D. C. R. W. HUNT, Die. Passenger Agent, Charleston, S. C. FEBRUARY IO, (80S. W. H. TAYL3E, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agent, Atlanta, Oe. C. B?AM| District Pass. Agent, Atlanta, Ge. m. m J