The Lancaster ledger. (Lancaster, S.C.) 1852-1905, October 04, 1899, Image 4
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CARTER J
l^edger, ^flj
Lancaster, H. <J , ^I
i *
i l5F~Snbseribe to Tiiic Lkdgkk.
HBHTH CMBUW & BMRG1A
k mmm R. B. cum^IY.
8CHEDULK NO. 2.
In effect 1201 a m, Sunday, June 18th
BET W E E N
Camden, S. (!,, and Shelby, N. C.
? Daily. Except Sunday ?
West 33. 1st class paeseuger East 32.
| p.m. I eave Arrive a. m.
I 12 05 CVitmltn 1145
I 12 25 DeKath 11 12
12 37 NVeatvllle 11 (HI
12 50 Kershaw 10 45
1 15 Heath Spiings 10 30
1 20 Pleasant Hill 10 25
1 4o Lancaster 10 05
155 Riverside 9 50
2 05 Springdeli 9 40
2 20 Catawba J unction 9 30
2 50 R< ek Hill 9 10
3 12 Til sah 8 32
8 25 Yorkvilie 8 20
i 4 25 Hlacksburg 7 10
1 5 00 Earls 6 50
I 5 06 Patterson Springs 6 4"
5 15 Sft* I hi/ 6 30
[ l? M. AM
BETWEEN
Black-burg, rt. C , anu Marion, N. C.
? Daily, Except Sunday ?
i West 11. 2<i class, mixed. East 12
a. m. Leave Arrive p m
8 10 Blackehurg 9 10
8 30 Earis 8 60
8 40 Patterson Springs 8 38
9 20 Shelby 8 30
; In ^5 Henrietta 7 <H)
10 50 Forest t lty 6 35
11 15 Hutherfordton 6 05
; 12'WS Thermal t ity 5 30
\ 12 25 (lienwood (W5
| i2 50 Morii I) 4 4")
; I' m I'. M.
1 *GaFFNEY
division.
? Daily, Kxtwiit fumlay ?
[ West. 1st class, passenger. Kast
) 15 13 14 16
p in. a ill Leave Ar Ive am p in
4 30 5 Hi Blacksburg 7 00 6 30
4 50 6 20 ('lier?>b' e Fal>s 6 40 6 10
5 10 5 40 Gaffney 6 20 5 50
1? m a m a m p m
J
Trail s Now. 32 and 33 connect at
i HI -cksburg connect with trail son tn?
l Gsffney Division Train 32 leaving
! Shelby at 0 30a m counecia at Blacks
| burg with No. 30 on the ALuthern K\
* g .ing Nor li, with 20 minutes margin
or transferring, e c. Passengers leav.
j ing any points ?>n this line between
1 fshelby and Blaoksburg can g tc
I '. harlotte, N. C., spend 3 hours and 2."
minutes, and return the same day. Il
"j connects aieo with the Southern going
1 -outh, and connects at York villa with
1 ttie Northbound train on tne t: At N W
| H H with 3* minutes Qisigin for tram
j (erring; and connects at Rock Hill
j with A'o 33 on the Southern Ry going
1 South. The best connection this train
: makes at CViUwha Junction wiih the
i S A L going North gives 11 hours lay
over; going Heiith, 12 hours and 4?
minutes, nearly ail the ay over is in
1 daylight. Connects a* Lancaster with
trains on L A C It R forGhester with
; a lay over of 3 urs and connects al
I f amden with the 'liTleston Division
I of ilie Southern for all (>oitita South
Train No 33 connects at l.ancastei
with the L A ?' for ('heater ; with ?h?
1 s. a L at ('a aMlu Junction, both
Norili and "t?uth. with a lay over ol
aiout 6 hours; with No. 34 on tht
Southern ut Rock Hid going North,
giving 5 hours day-hgiit lav over ;
with No 12 a* Blcckshurg on !ht
, Southern Ry going North Also with
j the Vestibule on the Southern going
i North.
| Train No 11 leaving Biacssourg a<
8 10 a m will get passengers from the
South from thain 36 on the Southern
! for ad points betweeu Blackshurg and
Marion, N and will connect at Marion
with the Southern By, hoth Kast
| and West Train A'o 12 leaving Ma|
i ion at 4 45 makes good connection at
1 Blackshurg with the Southern Ry in
hoth directions.
1 Samuel Hunt, A. Tripp,
President Supt
S. B. Lumpkin, Hen. Pass. Agt.
LANCASTER AND CL1KS1ER
RAILWAY
BETWKEN CHESTER AND LANCASTER.
Schedule in effect Daily except Sunday
on ami after Sept 11. 1898.
VVKSTBOUND I KAHTBOUND.
. No's. 14 and 16. | No's. (7 and 16'
I A M. P M. A M. P M
j 9 6i 6 66 A r Chester Lv 11 00 7 0(
| 907 6 07 Rich burg 1138 7 4/;
8 66 4 66 Bascombville 11 62 7 6J
P M
8 33 4 33 Fort Lawn 12 12 8 lfl
8 00 4 00 Ly Lancaster Arl2 60 8 51
Connects at Chester with .Southern
Roiiway, Heaooard Air Line and Carolina
and North-Western Railway.
Connects at ancaster with the Ohlc
River A Charleston.
Leroy Springs, Pres., Lancaster, H. C,
J M Heath, O. P. A.,
VV H Hardin. V P and Aud., Chestej
QUICK SALES
SAVANNAH
WHOLESALE PRODUCE AND
Foreign and Domestic Fruits,
1 Chickens, Hotter, Kggs.
Write for Daily ipiotati
Special attention giver
IW HlGHENT C
We are headquarteis for Poulti
try Produce, Fruits and Melons."
Correspondence and Consignme
NO. 242 WEST BR0A3
OLD. STRONG.
RELIABLE !
Home Life Insurance Company
of Kew York
Issues all the labI
jeial Forms of Life
jand Endowment
Policies,Cash, Loan
Paid up Values and
extended Insui ance
Written in Policy
CONTRACT.
! Call to see
T S Carter,
Kewiilent A fjent.
<)i* vvrito to
i S L Miller,
(General Aijnt.
'
J 1402 MAIN STREET,
COLUMBIA, S. C.
< A Shattered Nervous System.
[ FINALLY HEART TROUBLE.
| Restored to H^lth by Or. Miles' Nervine.
1 MM R EDWARD HARDT, the Jolly man|
IWl ager of Sheppard Co'8 great store at
Bracevllle, 111., writes: "I had never
been sick a day in my life until in 1800. I
got so bad with nervous prostration that I
had to Rive up and commence to doctor. I
tried our local physicians and one in Joliet,
' hut none gave me any relief and I thought
1 was going to die. I became despondent
and suffered untold agony. I could not eat,
' sleep nor rest, and it seemed as If I could
not exist. At the end of six months I was
1 reduced to but a shadow of myself, and at
last my heart became affected and I was
truly miserable. I took six or eight bottlos
of Dr. Miles' Nervine. It gave me relief
from the start, and at last a cure, the greatest
blessing of my life."
Dr. Miles' Remedies HAv
are sold by all drug- Fv
gists under a positive
guarantee, first bottle E-NOWinO j
lie no fits or money re- p ftsstfiroil J
funded. Book on dis- Lr |- .||. Ofl
eases of the heart and
Address. HHHlMilliH
' DR. MILKS MKDICALCU . Klkbart. Ind.
Valuable to Women.
Especially valuable to women is Browns*
ron Hitters. Backache vanishes, headache
1 isapjiearn, strength takes the place of
weakness, and the glow of health readily
, ; c.iinea to the pallid cheek when thin won*
derful remedy is taken. For sickly children
or overworked men it ha? no equal. No home
| should " I'liout this famous remedy.
?r.,. rt i? hoiq r>y mi dealers.
I
lima with too TktdMr yon onotlaoo
n.rTO-milin# tobarro habit. H?T?lll(iyl KHR
rtnoiH tho doairo for tobaaro, ilk^fT ML MM
it wrrouidlotroaa aipali^ I IIV7
Um, parlflu tb? Mood, ra^dfl Ilk B. rM
?t;r? ?o?t aabood. T 11 bor?
>? 70* I m iIVmm. 400,000
Id kMltD, atrr^^l ' I A^cuti ciirtdlty
? fl| Ip^iro TO-HAC fro.
"l^*^Tl"?*l^ro?f oik drn((?l wka
Vtl II fori*. Tako It with
M HI ^^^a will, patlrptli. pinliM ally Ou
Mr*, (I. laaally iarM; I bolM. M M,
parantcod lo curt, or ? rtfunil monrf.
lhAk?k?a?<| ?.. fklnii. knlml. ?w lab
r IlEADAOnErured In20 mtnutoatiy Dr. Milan*
I'AiH Filia. "Onocmilit Uoto." At druggist*.
PROMPTRKIURNS
MARKET CO.,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
Poiatoen, Onions, Karly Vegetables,
Fish and Uame.
on?, Shipping Tags and Stencils.
1 orders from the Trade.
AHH PRICEH."ttl
y, Egg and Dairy Products, Counnts
Solicited.
STRRBT. SIVINNAII, GA.
A COMPRESS COMBINE.
Efforts to Organize n Trust t<
Fight Improvements.
In viow of the attacks upon tlx
Koundlap hale of the Amerieni
Cotton Company, and the cry o
"trust" against the manufacturer
of the machines for making ihos
hales raised by the owners of com
presses and others the followinj
j letter, indicating a "combine*
of a different soit, is of peculia
| interest. The letter was fowardec
to the Atlanta Constitution Ix
i Richard Cheatham, editor <>f tlx
Cotton.Planter's Journal, of Mem
phis, Tcnn. It is as follows:
"New York, May 3, 1890
I Executive Committee of the Amcr
j ican Cotton Compress Company
71 Broadway, ? Dear Sir: It i?
proposed to consolidate b> pur
chase or otherwise some of tlx
most desirable compresses in tlx
Southern States, provided sucl
consolidation can be arranged oi
a conservative bssis.
"We ure in consultation witl
I the representatives of all the eapi
' tal rnnuirnd for tho biiRinnwH ivhi
are willing to take it up if it cai
be put upon an attrnctire basis.
"We desire to call your atten
tion to the fact that in order t<
meet tho competition that ha
arisen from the round bale system
it will be necessary >or the com
prossos referred to to consolidate
under one general management
fully able and capable to reduc
expenses by improved method,
more uniform systems of com
pressing (aided by the adoptio
of the standard box), to obtaii
lower rates of insurance and se
cure lower rates of freight t
foreign and domestic points.
44We recognize tho advantage
both to you and us of utilizin
your personal influence in thenei
business, as well as your plant
but at the same time we feel con
fident that unless a consolidutio
can be arranged on an obviousl
economical basis, we may not b
able in the long run to suceessfull
compete with the round bait
system or with other new corr
presses which may c.itne into th
field.
44If it is your desire to se
your prers property at a reasor
able price, please be kind enoug
to answer the list of questions ee
closed and also sign the option en
closed.
44The information received wi
be strictly confidential and in
disclosed to any one else in th
business of compressing cot tor
except with your consent.
44Aa there are over two hundre
compresses, and as it will requir
considerable time and labor t
send a committee to examine the*
pro|>erties and books and make a
proper arrangements, it is then
fore necessary that the optio
shall hold good for not less tha
sik months from the date of yon
signing.
"Unless we hear from yo
within two weeks of this date w
shall consider that vou ' are nr
disposed to enter into tho propose
consolidation. Awaiting your n
ply, wo are yours truly,
HENRY C. KNUBEL,
For Executive Committee.
HERTFORD JAIL BROKE
OPEN.
A Mob Gets in and Shoots Hot
ert Vaughan to Death.
Raleigh, Sept. 30. ?A speci
l to the I he News and Observe
| from Winton, N. C., says: Masl
| cd parties broke into tho counl
, jail at Winton, Hertford count1
last night, and shot Robe
Vaughan, under suspicion of bai
burning. The doors were hrok<
down and the orisoner was shi
| at least three times. He wi
committed sevoral weeks ago t
a justice of the peace under ci
[cumstantial evidence. The pri
oner was in an iron ceil. Tl
act is greatly deplored. Vuiighi
will probably die.
"Capital used rightly is pa
labor resurrected and gloritie
' but capital used wrongly is pa
labor wasted, condemned, dam
ed," is the strong words of a mi
discussing the duty of capita'
labor.
PAY FOR THEIR SMARTNESS
3 What it Cost Two Drummers to
Astonish the Natives.
%
b "It's a sad story," said the
1 drummer, as he counted up his
f 1 *
available cash. "My idea was to
say nothing about it, but J underB
?
stand that the other fellow is gor
in around telling the story as a
joke on me, and I might as well
r give my sid^ of the story, for tho
' truth is bad enough without havy
_ ing it exaggerated.
"One night last week I found
myself obliged to put up for the
night at a little country hotel some
miles west of here. It was a
' chilly evening and several loungers
wore loafing in the bar room
b matching pennies to kill time.
u They wore as much interested
'* over it as though millions wore at
stake, and it gave mo a tired feci[j
ing to watch them
4'There was another drummer,
[> a friend of mine, who was doomed
I to pass the night at the place, and
suddenly I was seized with a
, ' bright idea. I had collected a
I .
A bill for my house for #50 and had
, cnanecd to be paid in #5 gold
* pieces. I got my friend aside and
6 said:
"Sec here, let's wake this house
o
; up and show them where they
- are at I have ten #5 gold pieces.
n 1 will give you half of them and
n wo will start a fakegambling game
and astonish the natives.
o
I "My friend agreed to tho plan
s and we started matching #5 gold
g pieces on the bar, while tho loungY
ers gathered about and breathlessly
watched the game, with their
n eyes fairly hanging out of their
y heads.
e "We had been at it for only a
y few minutes when the village
!B marshal came up and arrested us
|
both for gambling. 1 tried toexplain
that it was only a joke, but
II he wouldn't liston, and showed
> his determination to take us to
" jail for tho nigh J. Wo prevailed
" upon him to send for the justico
of the peaee, who saved us from
H the lock-up by holding uh on our
it own recognizance to appear bo
0 fore him noxt morning, at which
' time he gently fined us $25
apiece and confiscated the evidence
o lmy fine.
,o "If I ever try to be funny again
ie 1 hope some one will kick me !"
II ?Detroit Free Press.
jj flOO KKWAIll), 9IOO
If The readeis of thin paper will ho
pleased lo learn Ilia' ihere is at l?>nst
one dreaded disease ihat science lias
U been a le to cure in all iim stages and
i0 thai is ''utarrh Ha'I's Catarrh Cure
is the only positive euro now known
" to the tncdic*l fraternity. t Htarrh-be(1
ing h ? <>>mi11ijlioiuit requires h
j. Con-.tiiuiloi.tt1 treatment. Hut)'*
farrh (Jure i* taken internally, acting
dirctn uix>n the blood an i mucous
mrrxccs of ihe Ky*t~ni.thereby destroying
the tuumlation of Ihe disease, sud
giving the patient strength by building
in. ttie constitution and assisting
nature in doing is work The proN
prietora have much faith in its
curative powers, tha' they offer One
Hundred Dollars foi any case that it
failr to cure. Hen for list of testimonials
Address. J V CHENEY A CO.,
Toledo. O. foJTHjld by I)ruggi"*tH,
75c.
al A Wont an Farmer Ahead.
3r
it- Barnwell People,
ty Mrs. SV. Gilmore Simms is the
V, best farmer of whom we havo
ft heard this year. From a f>? acre
"n patch five bales havo already been
in picked, and men farmers say that
from three to five bales more remain
unfathered and unopened.
>y The staplo is as fine ah silk,
r* over two inches lonf, and sold in
8* Boston last year for 8? cents,
h? about double price. The patch
*n was liberally fertilized with 200
pounds each of bone, cotton seed
meal and acid, in addition to a
* dressing of compost.
81 Cotton pickers are scarce in
Q~ Darlington and as a consequence
in there will he considerable loss ot
t? the staple, notwithstanding that
they pay 40 cents per hundred.