f.< ' f x I v * . American Agriculturalist. We often meet with ail orchard of j apparently healthy trees, which is tpractically fruitless. The owner ( may tell us that it formerly bore < abundant crops, but of late years the f trees have "run out." Why have ] they "run out?" They formerly . gave good ero]>s of apples. .VI1 the j other lands on the farm was expected j to give but one good erop. but this ] of the orchard was made to give a , erop of grain, or a erop of grass or ( clover, to be taken oft* as hay. The 1 * * ? 4-T 41?1 C sou soon uecuwe turn ui uviu^ < double duty. The trees "gave out" : because they were robbed of food; , the first thing they need is feeding. , Of'eourse if the soil needs draining, , lay the needed tiles at once, or as soon as the soil will allow. Such orchards are usually in grass; draw on v O ' a heavy dressing of manure and spread it, and as soon as the soil is in proper condition, turn over the sod and manure with the plow; with the hot weather the sod will decay rapidly. When this is found to be well rotted, give another ploughing, a deep one. If the ashes can be had, ' spread a heavy coating and harrow; in the absence of ashes, harrow in a good dressing of lime. If the trunk of larger branches are covered with loose scales of old bark upon which lichens and moss have a foot hold, scrape off the loose bark, using a blunt, short-handled hoe as a scraper. Then in a damp time or thaw, wash the trees with soft soap, made thin enough to apply with a brush. Use home-made soft soap, made with lye or potash. That sold at the ~ ??% stores is usually made of hard soap mixed with water and very deficient in strength and quite inferior to the home-made. Mix the soap with enough water to work readily, go over the .scraped portions with it, and leave the spring rain to finish the work. Iu due time the bark will be found beautifully smooth and deprived of all foreign groth. The soap that has been washed into the soil will act as a useful fertilizer. Uong neglected trees usually require pruning, and this must depend upon the condition of the tree. Never cut out a branch without good reasons for it. If the top has become crowded, cut out enough branches to let light and air into the centre; if grown one side, remove the branches needed to restore the balance. If large wounds are made, smooth the surface and paint them over with some dark-eolpaint. Denote an impure state of the blood ' and are looked upon by many with suspicion. Acker's Blood Elixir will remove all impurities and leave the complexion smooth and clear. There " * At.-A ill Vl-r. IS DOlDIllfJ IXUU tt iu tiU muiuu^iuj build up the constitution, purify and strengthen the whole system. Sold and guaranteed by Dr. M. Q. Henilrix. ? ? *?Agricultural Education. To educate our children agriculturally Puck says: The only way to do is to throw aside all fancy theories and do it with a club. If your boy, whom you desire to develop into agriculturist, sleeps later than four in the morning, go to him and yank him rudely out of bed, and hammer him into his clothes, drive him down stairs to milk twenty cows, and feed the stock, and fetch in a lot of wood, and clean up the harness, and wipe the surface of the army mule with a handful of straw. Then give him a breakfast of corn bread and weak coffee, and work him all day behind * a plow or in the com field, and hurry him off to bed at eight in the eveninging, that he may secure all the sleep he requires, before four o'clock in the morning. After the boy has been worked in this way for six or eight years, he will understand the mya teriea of agriculture well enough to m&ke a living on a farm. Or, else he will be so disgusted with farm life that he will make a desperate struggle to distinguish himself in something else. Shiloh's Catarrh Remdey. Shiloh's Catarrh Remedy, a marvelous cure for Catarrh, Diptheria, Canker Mouth, and Head-Ache. AVith each bottle there is an ingenious Nasal Injector for the more successful treatment of these complaints without extra charge. Price 50 cents. Sold by Dr. M. Q. Hendrix. ^ ? Dancing. Young Mhq in Courier Journal. I used to think there was no harm in round dancing, but I happened to be at a dancing party the othes night and saw the new style of waltzing, and must confess that I was shocked. The old time of hop " ? j a waltzing requires one s mum iu ut; entirely on the step and time, and was innocent and refreshing, but now the man has little else to do but hold his fair partner in his arms and slowly turn her around to break the v monotony of things. The slower the waltz now danced the more stylish it * is considered, and it is nothing more or less than hugging in public. Of course, men can stand this, but can young women? Fashion again compels them to wear the lowest of low cut gows, and the man must be blind or wear a mask to prevent him from seeing charms that generally should ! be hidden from his sight. It is not hard to see where all this will end, and I repeat that round dancing, as j it is now practiced, is demoralizing ' in the extreme. ^ ^ ^ _ The only thing that beats a good I wife is a bad husband. I \ I wmmrnmmmm ' "Sit" (tad "Sot." ? I i } Many of tlie Agricultural Journals ' ire sorely troul$ed to know whether i i hen sits or setjs. If some editor of j lignity would set a hen on the nest, j md the little editors would let her ut. it would he j well foe the world. Now a man or woman either, can set I i lien, althoiiglij they can sit hor; neither can their sot on her, although the old hen might sit on them by the hour if they would allow. A man cannot set on tlie wash-bench: but he could set the bjisin on it, and neither the basin nor the grammarians would object. He could sit on a dog's tail if the dog wercj willing, or he might set on the aforesaid tail, or sit his foot on it. But if he should set on the aforesaid tail, r sit his foot there, the grammariahs as well as the dog would houl. And yet, strange as it may seem, the man might set the tail aside and; then sit down, and neither be assailed by the dog nor i the grammarians. . . , w f Answer This Question. ! Why do so many people we see around us seem to prefer to suffer and be made miserable by Indigestion, Constipation, Dizziness, Loss of appetite, Comirig Up of the Food, lellow Skin, when for 75 cents we wiff sell them Shiloh's System Vitilizer, guaranteed to pure them. Sold by Dr. M. Q. Hendrix. The shortest way to do many , things is to do only one thing at once. [ Within the last twenty-years Kansas courts have granted 7,101 divoro^R. When money is tight it is quiet. ' That is more than can be said of a man. It takes more than a well starched shirt front to make a polished gentleman. The United States bought over two million dollars worth of eggs from Canada last year. Some one says that it is better to be small and shine, than to l>e great, and cast a shadow. There is a young giantess 6 feet 8 inches high, said absolutely to be only J2 years old, on exhibition in London. She is a Don CossackThe fast mail service between New York and SanFrancisco has l>een reduced to four days, twenty-two hours and forty-five minutes. Miss Ella Green is a commercial traveler for a St- Louis paint house. ttAAAltfAfi ? Iamma nftlovrr tioa one ict'cttro jjr iaigr oapju^T) *? ? saved onougl^kpey to buy a hotel .ii IU/KJlu, JJMRLS v The man who keeps his raouth closed seldoni gets into trouble with his neighbor^, and, what is quite as important, increases his chances for reaching old? age. The extrei ae length of the city of Chicago is twenty-four miles, its extreme width is ten miles, its area is one hundred,1 and seventy-four square miles, and its estimated population is 1,100,000.1 t A Duty to Yourself. I It is surprising that people will use a comnjon ordinary pill when they can secure a valuable English one for the sAme money. Dr. Acker's English Pills are a jxmtive cure for sick-headache and all liver troubles. They are small, sweet, easily taken and do not gripe. Sold by Dr. M. Q. Hendrix. i < . . . The Prize Acre of Corn. Details of the triumph of a South Carolina " Planter. Columbia, January 10.?Special: The department of agriculture has received from the American Agriculturist a duplicate of the report of Mr. Z. V. Drake, of Malboro county, upon the famous prize corn crop he raised last year. The report is made in a bulky book, furnished for the ptirpose by the Magazine, and gives the most minute* iriformation as to the methods of cultivation, fertilization, etc., which were employed. if onnfiflrs fViftf fhfi land rruai mis ? ? ? was sandy and bad Wen previously valued at only eight j dollars an acre, that thirty years ago the plantation was christened "Starvation Empire," and that as late as 1887 the pri? acre itself only produced about five bushels of corn. The fertilization in 1889 began in February and was continued several times during the making of the crop. The total material used was one thousand bushels of stable manure, six hundred bushels of cotton seed, 8i?t> pounds each of German kainit and cot ton need meal, 200 pounds acid phosphate, 1,0GG pounds manipulated guano, 200 pounds animal bone, 400 pounds nitrate of soda, the value of the stable manure being *.>0 and the cost of the other fertilizer^ $170. The seed planted was Dr. Drake's improved corn, 8f variety of goard seed raised bv Mr. Drake, One bushel was used. The pjanting was done March 2 and on June 10 posts and stakes had to be put up along the rows to keep tjhe corn from falling The rows were alternately about three and six feet apart. 'Ijhe plants about five or six inches apart, one stalk in a place. The crop was harvested November 25. The total cost was $204142. The product, 254 bushels, 49 pounds! at 75 cents a bushel, was worth $191.1(1. But it is estimated that the land is good for a hundred* dollar crop for several years to come, not considering the one thousand dollar nrize the crop of 1889 has unques tionably won.' Mr. Drake's report is carefully and minutely made and thoroughly a4tented. It js a marvelous demonstration of the possibilities of intensive fanning in South Carolina. The American Agriculturalist will, iu ? few days, telegraph the department the ^official announcement of the result of the cjoutest. . N. (J. O. "Give usl a rest" cried a bootblack, from the g?ery of the Opera House, to a party had been constantly coughing ({luring the performance. "Use Dr. liulFs Cough S\Tup"chimed another. At this sjeason of fast driving and accidents t|> man and beast keep Salvation Oil r?n hand. See I lie line of nice goods; suitable for presents, at the Bazaar. I I V. ' ! The Battle Flags. ] | Columbia llcgister. The Legislature, at its recent session, instructed the Adjutant and ] Inspector General to collect as many -J of the llags used in the lute war as J he could dnd, and to deposit same | with the Secretary of State, who is to have them properly preserved. .. As he is totally ignorant of the mini- > j ber of such dags, as well as the names and residences of their eusto dians, he requests that all persons n^nUvKT tinrru will cnmirmriicftte with '"'"""n him at an early date, in order that this very laudible object may be ear ^ lied out. The Legislature failed to provide any funds for the collection, and he is compelled to rely upon the press of the State, to whose liberality and patriotism he has so often been indebted. . German chemists have discovered ; in the cocoanut a fattv substitute for butter, and this new product is being manufactured on a large scale. New Advertisements. fvi LOWED DICE. : I till. Boo. ??: Irarr, H Cardi ud 6tripp*n. M)tx,! [ 11 parpt. "Pdntrrt." So pa^aa, will raaka Tsuaaaroart. S?nl S baa ?r;U> eaak**a. a HfcsKV * CO..-.a S. UeraUod. a I | PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and beautifies the hair, j Never Fails to Reatora Gray Hair to ita Youthful Color. Prevents Dandruff and luiir fnlllnffa | y-ftx chi chester's engu9h m pennyroyal pills. |. yar-lri B?4 Cro&a Diamond Brand. ^ TJ Tb? (kfill feH%bte_pIU for ?ale. H*fe ind I L. W mu*' PriMW1** ft* lije W*; i n l?*?a Br?nd, In rr4 V * Jy* vith blue ribbon. Take bo otk*P. A'?4 4c; J ' '*v A (lUapi) for pnrtiouUr* nni l,K?iIe/ fur . I Uiien* Oc. and ? I .OO, of druarists or by mail Trial packaae frcto any address. Dr. H.t* UlFKAiA-XX. St. 1'anl.SlaaJ made with boiling water. epps's; GRATEFUL-COMFORTING. I cocoa MAOg WITH 60IUNC MIUC. T H). I ^P^^gm^MeMeaMHMMeeMaeseeMHaBBi TO OUR FARMER FRIENDS : -?OF LEXINGTON COVJSTY. I Believing in mutual benefit j1 as a satisfactory basis for all dealing | between man and man, we have always endeavored iu onr business by strictly fair dealing, true representations and honest goods To give our customers FULL VALUE FOR A DOLLAR EVERY TIME. We hej lieve it makes a i A TRUE ALLIANCE ! bttWfeen dealer and pKtmn wbit-b M?mre? customers to the former and good goods arid entire satisfaction to the latter. EVERYBODY IX LHYIXGTO.Y fOFXTY or elsewhere who has bought goods at our store knows whether we have successfully carried this into effect. Our buyer has just returned from the Northern markets and we are now every day receiving New Goods, of the latest styles, best quality in complete assortment of BOOTS AND SHOES Lace, Button au<3 Congress, handsome to ! 1 look at and warranted to wear, for the La- j dieR. Gent's Shoes, all kinds, light and \ heavy weight, stylish and serviceable and a large stock ol Childrens' Shoes, and by advantageous purchases we are enabled to offer REAL BARGAINS atprir.es lower than ever be/ore. Our stock is so large and our assortment so complete that WE CAN FIT ALL FEET. Call in when in Columbia and examine our stock, note our prices and we feel sure we can suibyou. Respectfully. LEVER & STORK'S, I 48 Main Street, COLTTMHIA, S. C. dov *2?lv Having obtained the sole, agency of the celebrated IVORY BRAND iL-A-iexD We call the attention of the consumers of - - - "? IT Lard to tiua Brand, ana womu retjuesv them to ask their Grocers for this Brand and take no other. We gnnrantee it Abaoliitely Pure and Unadulterated. r. t, WAffllR A CO, Charleston, 3 C. August 7- Cm. JBA VOICE writri- "Win >1 work <>ii u lain- i..r louth; 1 mitt bs'r ti< I it'll i'l'o ? aioujiu and jmMi1 often ii.site fliiiJO a day.' W. II. ti t KKIMl.t. im Kllna, lltrrinbure, I'.t. |i'?: "1 have never known 1 tliinjf to sell like your album j terJay I took ordn* ewuisli to tue over #J4.V" W. J. Kl- ( e, Bangor, Me., wiliev: "I ? an orfter for tour album *1 oat tvrry ti?u*f i vi?:t. >1* ! profit i? often j< imn htH fji'iO tor a a in trie day'* w oik.' \ ell, hate not upan* |<> Rite ex. it t'roni ih-ir lettert. litery one m tin takes bold of Ibitvraml biieineas tdlr* upland piotitt. Shall we start VOli in this business, reader'/ Write toua itnr! learn all about it f??r yourielf. We re starting many ; wewlllatatt you if you delay uuril t another jets ahead of y??u in j cur part iT" fcCf it l ? | On aciouutof a iltrerd manufacturer * sale 125tOOO It'it hn- w a'l. I fbwaid you con; lude to go no further. why no ii?rm is douc. 1 Address K C. AXILS k CV., Al'SlST*. Utivf. 1 ?i? CARRIAGES, WAGONS, BUGGIES, I20^.2Z) CAETS. r airiest stock and best assortment ever in the city or coI J lnrn1>iii. Agents for tlie Columbus lJuggv Conipativ. HARNESS o? 1 i kimls. Single p.n?l Double Harness, Kmliiles, Mricilo:, Whips. El:*, 'all im+aeo us 14 OLD MAN who" is Buffering from Weakness, languor, j.oh* OI .unimij , Iia^iuuiw Depression of Spirits, Liver Complaint, Diseases of the Kidneys, and all diseases dependent upon Aoddent, Biooaoeo, Folly, Vlcej Ignorance, Nervous Debility, Vital Kxhaustion, and Boond In leather, full gilt, l'rlre, only one dollar, by mall, sealed in plain wrapper, postpaid, CONFIDENTIAL. Addrejn llksitr Dtr Most, M. D., No. :W1 Columbus Avenue, or l\O. Hot 5y4t?d, Boston, Mass. Prefatory Lecture *ith numerous testimonials from high sources, free to all. This is the only ELECTRO-MEDICO PH YSIOLOC Y ever published, uml is absolutely complete aud perfect. Ills invaluable to -ill atllieted, as It reaches the very roots and vitals of disease. I ti -M For all Diseases of Men. by tha distinguished author Hkxby Du Mont, M. D., who has DISCOVERED THE ELIXIR OF LIFE AND THE TRUE ES- ^Hr^H I I I aanflHB SENCe OF MANHOOD. ?av he consulted in QB H I I >1 dllHfl strictest eontldeuiv.in person or by fetter,at his Electro- X M V * 1 mBMB r_u?_ <"'.Oii.i,l>us Av..Boston. Mass. ^^M^^RI^BRBMMNMRRHHB aicuiw ?m?i mai j v . "I HEARD A VOICE* IT SAID, ' COME AND SEE.'" ) * I I Jl- 11 -J i^LJgWgBBWgALJl... 1.11 . I I { t fcgSsSP) IIKIIIllll K'S I Jewelry and Musk FROM THE CHRISTIAN AOVOCATE, I Parlor, Mr. A. K. Hawkes has gained a national J epntation as a practical opftioian, and his I REMOVED TO :elebrated spectacles and pajteut spring eyejlaaaes are known through^nt the United States. We are writing this article with a Dair of his new crystalized' lenses, and they Northwest Coi\ Main and Taylor StS leem to us as transparent as light itself; md with them the finest p^'int ia as clear is in youth.? [Editor Christian Advocate, COLUMBIA, S. C. Dallas, Texas. ! all eyes Pitted, ? Diamonds, Silverware, riatedwave, Bror AND A FIT GUARANTEED zes, Gold Watches, Silver Watches, Cloekf AT TITE~DlHUiSTORE OF Jardinieres, the Choicest Gems, Precioti *% HIT /\ T1" J * Stones, and every article made for Weddin Dr, JUL. X .enunx, j Presents and home use to please the mot * ~^ fastidious. XrfIE32CX3^TGS-TO IfT. S. C. The new styles in Jewelry are elegai May S, 1889.- ly. ; beyond description. i A Solid Silver Hunting Case America FALL (ILOfHIKfi,' Wa'^,oro"^'0m DEPARTMENT. ing for Men, Youths and Boys. RearW^BHB h will he found the celebrate aimd. this entire stock is new end showing ft complete line^f Suits m : well made and,cut in_t?^ 1 Y> ?-rc lower prices inclading Racket We are determined not to A White, and Shoniuger Organs ( and will give bargains . else in ^ stock is large and well &*s^&U<1 BnUW IustrnnicI? in all grades of materifi^^^^^^^H^^^^iljic&nd Musical Findings. fin^cf?a ^gw5VSRWfiPK!^^ S '' for catalogue and price, value for every dollar yon leave. This is and be sure and write to R. N. Kichbourj the stoTe for the inachanics and the labor- Columbia, S. 0., before purchasing e!s< ing class to trade, as well as the clerk or wjiere merchants. We will give you goods that yon need not be ashamed io wear. Thej j I buy my instruments outright, and cn will give you the style and as neat appear-j therefore offer you lower prices than tho.? ance as anv tailor garment will produce. . , ., Onr slock of nndorwur and genfa fnrniah- who have lllcludiug J. H. ELEAZEB, Manager. ' ""URN TUBULAR AND LOCO MOTIVE BOILERS. Ill -33lisnf n 00 NyajjiaON gp PuUeys aad Shafting Castings in Brass or Iro ? "? S^5* Furnished at Reasonable Rates. mlm?^? j|0 ^"Repair Work Promptly Executec \S ? ? Y^T ?H BRASS GOODS A SPECIALTY. Ih ? JmmWMU Sj Remember, ?? - Th&t" the tjozer m ha? 8t?od the test < O? "e o.I actUfd and general use for years, and has n ^ ?gty superior on the market. All ot its pari Z? X jj90 ?$ are thoroughly inspected and tested, an ? 5q all our work is fully warranted FIRS'] f)L -2q CLASS in material and workmanship. ifcwffl BK " i Eor Frice-Liats, Ac., apply to ^ 1J| ^ JOHN A. WILLIS P I ^ \ I. fy JH j Proprietor To2f r Engine Works, ?5 117 Wfst Gemus Street. Columbia, S. I GZ ?WllM I LEXINGTON I. aDAnrn finirnni u- a 5 %! u uua"jLLM' uuuwwi m?u\ teaSI s2 PArL T. BRODIE, B. S? Prinfipnl. 3 6-gj|? rT*|M ** | ?? * ? UHIffi Assistan ? h' TRIMMINGS of nil kinds CHEAPER than ever bonghl before. W. 7T. TE.TJMF, i . . 128 MAIN STREET, COLUMBIA, S. C. .^ April 20? iv ^ ^rhotes^anHHS H ??DEALERS IN ALL STYLES AND GRADES OF FURNITURE, ,n I A FULL ASSORTMENT OF win, mmnn burial robis | ALAVAYS IN STOCK. SS and 11 X?<^-3D"2" Sts., COLUMBIA, S. C. Don't Fail to Get Our Price List Before Buying. !e J April 17? ly. 5 M. H. 3ERRT, Furniture Warerooms, | 1343. MAIN STREET, COLUMBIA, C. [NEXT GRAND CENTRAL HOTEL,] l* A FULL STOCK OF CHEAP, MEDIUM, AND EIXE FURNITURE, IS NOW m the store, purchased direct trora the manufacturers, and will be sold at BOTTOM PRICES. UNDERTAKING A SPECIALTY. A full line of COFFIN'S, CASKETS, METALIC CASES, BURIAL ROBES, WRAPo PERS etc., always on hand. Call and see us and be convinced that you SAVE MONEY by so doing. ? Oct. 28-tf | M. A. MALONE | REPRESENTS HONEST GOODS M ~ I JL I# rKI&S ^established n AT W> ^ MODERATE ' FAIR PROFITS. PIANOS .... AND ^^REHOWNED TOR TERMS EASY. f TONE & DURABILITY Al*o represents The Ilur.lman, Decker Eros., Efctcy. (per* ami Gable & Son's Pianos\ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ALSO lias sole control of the celebrated Estey, Story A Clink, Kimball and Bridgei port Organs. SZWHTCf k' j Still leads in all tbe first-class sewing machines, making New Home, Domestic, Davis . White, Hons* hold and Standard specialties. My goods will bear close inspection and ! test, and solicit all, who desire the lu st Piano, Organ or Machine lor the least money to ! call on me, and we will take pleasure in pointing out the superior qualities of my goods. i- WHEELER & WILSON'S NO. 9 !N STOCK. o ! ? j . -A. . 1HO Main Street, Columt>ln, S. C. I Aug. 14-Km f' t. i* RAZORS and J POCKET KNIVES J are acceptable presents all the year. For the finest quality and lowest price address / ALLINC & LODGE, k Mention this paper. MADISON, INO. OUR DAINTY PEARL PEN KNIFE. Fine Metal and Finest Finish, Brass Lined, sent to mail, post paid (or 75c. Add ioc for registering and run n<> risk. Mention this paper. ALLING & LODGE; Madison, Ind. "D A TWTTTJS I Caveuts, and Trade Marks obtained, and all 1 Patent business conducted for Moderate ] Fees. Our Office is opposite U. S. Patent Office. We have no sub-agencies, all hairiness direct, hence can transact patent | business in less time and at Leas Cost than those remote from Washington. Send model, drawing, or photo, with description. We advise if patentable or uot, free of charge. Our fee not due till " patent is secured. A book, 4'How to Obtain Patents," with references to actual clients in your State, county, or town, sent free. Address HI C. A. SNOW A CO., I Opposite Patent Office, Washington. D. 0. oct 24?tf SOUTH CAROLINA RAILWAY CO. H Commencing sunday apmlj4Uj-1____J| 1889, at 6.'20 a. in., Trains will run as 1 follows, ''Easter i time:" TO AND FROM CHARLESTON. WEST (DAILY.) am p m p n Leave Charleston at 7 00 5 10 Arrive at Columbia... 10 40 1006 EAST (DAILY.) Leave Columbia at 6 45am 630pm Arrive at Charleston, 1100am 9 30pm TO AND FEOM AUGU8TA. EAST (DAILY.) Leave Columbia at.... 645 am 530pm Arrive at Augusta 11 40 a m 1135 p an WEST (DAILY.) Leave Augusta at.... 8 05 am 449pm Arrive at Columbia... 1040pm 10 06pm , CONNECTIONS Made at Columhia with Columbia and Greenville Railroad by train arriving al j 10.15 a. m. and departing at 5.33 p. a*. I Alos with Charlotte, Columbia & Augusta Railroad by same train to and frtfa ajd I points on both roads. Trains also connect at Columbin for Camden daily except Sundays. 4 Passengers hike breakfast and supper at Branchville. At Charleston with steamers for New York; and with steamer for Jacksonville and points on the St. John's River Tuesdays and Saturdays; with Charleston and Savannah Railroad to and from Savannah and points in Florida daily. At Angnxta with Georgia and Ceatsal ~ ?? Railroads to and from ail points West and South. Connections made at Blackville by aU trains to and from stations on Barnwell Rait road daily except Sunday. ' Through tickets can be purchased to points South and West by applying to d. mcqueen. Agent, Columbia, 8. 0 M JOHN fi. PECK, Genl. Manager. M D. C. ALLEN, m Gen. Pas. and Ticket Agl, RICHMOND & DANVILLE RAILROAD "* COMPANY, v SOUTH CAROLINA DIVISION* Mall and Sxpresa, | Going North. ? : . leave j Augusta, Ga. t 8ummit ....11 b Ta 1 n . If OG. I 1^5 w Keisler's 11 38 x 1 Bart's 1146 Lexington .,...11 55 Columbia 12 30 p u? ; Charlotte, N. C....arrive 515 Going South. Lava. Charlotte, N. C., at 1 00 pn Columbia 6 iO Lexington, C. H 6 03 Barr's 6 12 Keisler's 616 Lewiedale 6 2"7 Summit. 532 Leesville 6 46 Batesburg., 6 52 Trenton 7 55 Graniteville. 8 24 /' Augusta, Ga arrive 9 C5 pi, Mail and Express, Going North. Leave / Augusta, Ga., at 6 15 pm Graniteville 713 Trenton 7 65 Batesburg, 8 67 Leesville, 9 03 Summit 9 16 Lewiedale, 9 20 Keisler's 9 23 Barr's 9 37 Vjgsl Lexington C. H 9 *6 1 Columbia arrive 10 20 p u J Going South. 1 Leave. ? Columbia 6 65 am Lexington 7,29 Barr's 7 38 Keisler's 7 49 ^ Lewiedale 7 62 Summit 7 57 Leesville 8 13 Batesburg 8 2(> rrt ^ _ Ck 1?> lrenion o *o Graniteville 9 50 Augusta, Ga arrive 10 3Q am , CONDENSED SCJMDtfLE. J In Effect Ja*?ap.y 5, 1888, J (Trains run by 75th Meridian time.) fl No50 No 83 J South Bound* Daily. Daily* j rnsdS Lv. New Tiork, r.. i"i2 15 p a] 4HV J m Lv. Philadelphia,.. .. 7 20 am 6 57pm ^ Lv. Baltiu ore [ 9 45 a m! 9 30pm Lv. Washington 11 24 a mil 00 p m ! Lv. Richmond 3 00pm 2 30 am ! Lv. Greensboro ...... 10 37 p m 9 50 a m Lv Salisbury. .112 33 p m; 1123 am ! Lv. Charlotte 2 20am 100pm j Lv. Rook Hill ! 317 am 157pm Lv. Chester 3 58 a m 2 40 p m : Lv." Winnslu.ro 4 59 a m 3 39 p m ! Lv. Columbia 055am 5 30pm Lv. Johnston 9 00am 7 33pm i Lv. Trenton 9 16 am 7 50pm | Lv. Granitcville 9 50 am 8 20j m J Ar. Augusta 10 30 a m 9 (X^ m. i Ar. Charlston ill 00 a m 930pm. Ar. Savannah : 5 40 p m 6 30am. ! ___________________ No 53 No 51 North Bound. Daily. Daily. I Lv. Charleston Lv. Augusta b 60 a m 6 10 p m ! Lv. Grauiteville [ 0 30 a m 710pm Lv. Trenton j 10 04 a in 750pm i Lv. Johnstons '10 21 am 8 10pm Lv. Columbia j 12 50 p m 10 35 p m Lv. Winnsboro ! 2 24 p m 12 16 p m Lv. Chester j 3 33 p mi 1 20 a m Lv. Rock Hill 4 16pm| 2 05 am | Ar. Charlotte | 5 15 p ml 3 13 a m ! Ar. Salibnry i 7 05 pm 6 22 a m i Ar. jGreensboro '840pm 8 00am Ar. Richmond 5 15am 3 3^ p m Ar. Washington 6 53 am 713pm Ar. Baltimore 8 25am 11 25pm Ar. Philadelphia jlO 47 a m! 3 00 ~a m | Ar. New York ; 120pm 6 20 am 1 ' ^THROUGH CAR SERVICE.-*^ Pullman Sleeping cars on trains Nos. 5i ?^ i j and S3 between Angnsta and Washington^ -J Pullman Palace Cars between Angnsta and | Greensboro on Trains Nos. 50 and 61. J as. L. Taylor, Gen. Pass. Agt, M D. Card well, A. P. A., Columbia, 8. C. Sol. Haas, Traffic Manager,