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HINTS FOR FARMERS Rebreaking Corn Cronrd. For years past Ave have been advising our readers against deep rebreaking of the corn ground for oats. This spring Ave thought to gain further experience on this point. Fart of our corn land that was to be soavii in oats aat s very thoroughly broken and put in line -condition, and the oats were sown. After soAving this part Ave soAved the remainder of the land Avith oats broadcast and then plowed them In as shalloAvly as we could keep a one horse plow in the ground and then ran the smoothing harrow over the land. At the present writing the oats treated in 1 mnmini. > l'n fllllv ?v( I Mils iauu uiauuvL ui\> iuiiv< w wv..? better and stronger than where the land was deeply plowed, and they look as though the crop would be greatly bettered. This is simply a confirmation of our experience for many years and seems to show that after a piece of land has been well cultivated in a hoed crop the deep breaking for small grain is not ohly needless, but is an actual detriment to the crop.?Practical Farmer. ; Insects That Infest Strawberries. The old strawberry plantation if not renovated should be destroyed as soon as the berries are gone. Otherwise it will be the breeding ground for insects peculiar to the queen of the small fruits. Let us see?the strawberry root borer,. crown borer, leaf rollers (two species), smeared dagger, spotted puKoaflo C'nnnflinn nsiTlia. jLli-l* Dllipcu u^a k/v,v leaf stem gall, sawfly, stalk borer, tarnished plant bug, cutworms (all the species) and the white grub are a few insects that attack it, root, stem, leaf and fruit, not to say anything about others that will occasionally, and fungous diseases. All of the above insects will be found in the larval, pupal or adult state at this season cf the year; hence the plowing up of the plantation means the destruction of their homes. The Good Old Sot*-. The sow that is an efficient mother and has proved herself as such for at least two years by raising large litters, giving an abundance cf milk and saving the pigs, is a valuable one. A sow of this character is worth much more than a young untried one to the farmer. Don't be in a hurry to kill or sell your old sows mat are proveu promuble mothers. You will find it difiicult to replace them. The farmer who is successful and who has his eye 011 the profit in the business whenever he is satisfied of the good qualities of a brood sow holds on to her for six or seven years or as long as she remains a profitable sow.? American Swineherd. The Anjjora Goat. The future of the Angora business will be permanent. Every farmer who has suitable brushy, weedy range for these beautiful and most useful animals will not want to be without them. They thrive and stay fat where other animals would starve. They improve the poorest range for other stock. They enrich the surface of the earth, taking their main food from bushes that take their growth from the roots that are deep in the often poor and rocky ground. Where these goats have been kept for several years the grass will soon grow better than ever before.?H. T. Fuelis. Wart* on Teats. Warts are supposed to be due to some derangement of the epidermis ot the skin and cannot well be treated internally unless general all over the body. Warts having a narrow neck may be snipped off with a scissors and the bleeding bases touched with lunar caustic. On the teats they should be interfered with as little as possible so far as strong applications or operations are concerned. It is usually sufficient to rub teats with castor oil after each milking. Growing Strawberries. Strawberry seeds are so very fine that more than usual care is required to succeed with them. If you have a frame, you might sow the seed in a flowerpot and place it therein, peeping it shaded from the sun and fairly moist all the time. Lacking a frame, sink the pot to its rim in some shady nnf/lArk?*c? rvlorono- o r*ior?n nf <rlnco VUlUW&Ot u ^/ivvv V* over it until the seeds germinate. You should sow the seeds at once as soon as ripe, washing them free of pulp first. Covrpeas For Orchards. We prefer cowpeas to soy beans for orchards, says an experienced farmer. The soy beans require better soil than the cowpeas. They do not grow as well the first year, doing better as the soil v becomes filled with their bacteria. The erect growing habit of the soy beans makes it harder to plow them under than the cowpeas. which grow closer to the ground. We should use whippoorwill or black cowpeas. i Farm Indebtedness. Profits on many farms are reduced by the interest on land bought at higher prices. In numerous cases mortgages are being carried, securing notes drawn a long time ago at high rates. With the general tendency in recent years toward lower interest rates this farm indebtedness could in many instances be refunded, meaning great saving in annual charges.?American .AgncuJiurisu Japsnese Millet. Japanese millet stands up very well for a tall crop. Don't sow it too thick, for it stools more than any other crop. One small seed will send up seven or eight plants to the same height. If sown too thickly, it will not have room to stool and it will lodge much easier. Ten to twelve quarts of seed per acre on fairly good soil will stand up all right ^ ^ . ? Why is it that the firstborn child is so j often the healthiest of a family of children ? The reason see:;is to suggest it- ! self. As child follows child the mother i has less and less vitality; often not j enough for herself and none, therefore, ; for her child. Expectant mothers who use Doctor Pierce's Favorite Prescription find that it keeps thern in vigor- I ous health. They eat j|ra * i y jjfl | well, sleep well and 1 are not nervous. When baby comes its advent is practically ??& painless, and the ^ moiner is maue nap- //I'M 5a py by the birth of a ^SsS&Sslffl healthy child. If you vrould be a healthy M/F mother of healthy children us^ " Favor- M L \ "I will be very glad to Bji m\ say a few words for Dr. pis Pierce's Favorite Prcscrip- flgf 18 1 Douglas, of Mansonville, 7 *?? \ Brome Co., Quebec. ?Dur- I jre figr I i::g the first four months, j a j when I looked forward to \9JS&sJ becoming a mother, I sut- A fered very much from nausea and "vomiting, and I ig felt so terribly sick I could &&&**' f a scarcely eat or drink anything. I hated all kinds of food. At this time I wrote to Dr. Tierce, and he told me to get his j ' Favorite Prescription ' and a bottle of ' C.olden ; Medical Discover}-.' I got a bottle of each, and I when I had taken them a few days. I felt much J better, and when I had taken hardly three parts j of each bottle I felt well and could eat as well as J any one, and could do mv work without any j trouble (I could not do anything before). I feel j very thankful to Dr. Pierce for his medicine. ' and I tell all who tell me they are sick, to get j these medicine >, or write to Dr. Pierce." Those who suffer from -chronic dis- ; eases are ir./ited to consult Dr. Pierce, ; by letter, free. All correspondence j strictly private. Address Dr. R. V. j Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure bil- ; iousuess and sick headache. I A PLEASING FRENCH TRAIT. j Love Eet^veen Brothers a Strongly J .'larked Characteristic. Ono of the ways in which the close union of French family life shows itself is the great affection of brothers for each other. There is an intimacy between them in good and evil fortune which one does not flnd in other countries. A brother who takes a high position by his talents loses no opportunity to forward the interests of one of lesser ability or of no ability. He never treats the latter as a drag on him, and perhaps scarcely feels that he is one. Married biothers often like to live in the same house, on different floors, and to hire summer villas in close proximity. Most of the famous Frenchmen whom I knew had each a brother to whom he was devoted. Louis and Charles Blanc, though so dissimilar in appearance, tastes, disposition, and married to women who disliked each other, were, morally speaking, Siamese twins until death severed the bond. The same might be said of the GamierPages, of Jules Favre and his brother Leon, of Ernest and Arthur Picard, of t-> 1- .1 fUt'CIl, lilt* SL'Uipiur, uuu u:a uiutiicx the deputy. Paul and Hippolyte Flaudrin. the painters, were known in their student days as the Siamese twins. It 1 not infrequently happens that brothers go into literary partnership. Instances that occur to me are the G011courts, the Rosnys, the Marguerittes. It would be impossible to discern the work of one of any of these brothers from that of another. What is very curious, each brother, as in the case of Charles and Louis Blanc. Ernest and Arthur Fieard, Jules and Leon Favre, differed strikingly in every characteristic from the other. The dissimilarity of the Marguerittes is so great that one wonders how brothers could be so unlike. Alphonse Daudet was not a bit like his brother Ernest, an accomplished novelist also.?London News. * A Seal Frisnd. "I suffered from dyspepsia and indigestion for fifteen years," says W. T. Siurdevant of Merry Oaks, N C. "After I had tried many doctors and medicines, to no avail one of ray friend spersueded me to try Kodol It gave me immediate relief, I can eat almost anything I want now and my digestion is good. I cheerfully recommend Kodol." Don't try to cure stomach trouble by dieting. That only farther weakens the system. You Deed wholesome, strengthening food. Kodol enables you to assimilate what you eat by digestion it without the stomach's aid. J- E. Kaufmann. FASCINATING DANGER. The Perils Thnt Beset the Builders of Bis Bridges. The design of a long bridge span is one of the most elaborate mathematical problems that arise in constructive work. The stresses produced by its ' ' * ^ ? - i- A. - -a ZT _ own weignt, oy me weignt ot irumc, by locomotive drivers, by the hammering of flattened wheels, by the action of brakes on an express train, by the high speed on a curved track, by the wind and by the expansion and contraction of the steel in summer and winter arc all accurately calculated. The deflection of the loaded and unloaded bridge is determined, and complete drawings are made of every member of it. The bars of steel are tested in machines which will pull in two a horsehair or a steel bar strong enough to lift half a score of the heaviest locomotives at once, and which will crush an eggshell or a steel column, and accurately measure the stress in each case. The different kinds of members are forged, riveted, bored, or planed in perhaps half a dozen remote shops, and. although usually not fitted together there, are examined and measured by specialists to see that they are correct, and are then shipped by scores of carloads to the site of the proposed structure, where steam derricks unload ill era ana pne mem many nn oign m stacks covering acres of ground. The bridge piers may rise above the water hundreds of feet apart. It remains to place them on a thousand ton structure, high above a savage chasm over an impassable current or roaring tide, where the water is deep, the bottom of jagged rocks or treacherous quicksand, or where an old bridge must be removed and the new one built in its place without interrupting traffic on the bridge. To accomplish this the engineer has timber, bolts and ropes, hoisting engines, derricks and a band r>f mtvmml liiiil(!pp?j wim h:iv!' nprhfios followed him for years through more hardship and danger than fall to the lot of almost any other call in?:. The complicated framework of a great span is a skeleton with many accurate joints and thousands of steel sinews and bones, each of which must go in exactly the right place in exactly the right order. The builder must weave into the trusses pieces larger, heavier and far more inflexible than whole tree trunks, swiftly hoist and swing them to place hundreds of feet high, fit together the massive girders and huge forged bars with watchmaker's accuracy, support the unwieldy masses until they arc keyed together and self sustaining, and under millions of pounds of stress must adjust them at dizzy heights to mathematical lines. This he may need to do not deliberately. but in dangerous emergencies, at utmost speed, putting forth his whole strength on narrow, springing planks in a furious tempest, in bitter cold or in blazing heat. He may bo In the heart of an African desert, menaced by bloodthirsty fanatics, or in a gorge of the Andes, hundreds of miles from tools or supplies, where there is nbsolntelv 110 sunnlement to his own resources. Under such conditions bridge building is one of the most fascinating and difficult of engineering problems and requires a different solution for almost every case.?Frank ! W. Skinner in Century. Bells. It was long a fixed idea that silver mixed with the bell metal improved the tone, but this is now considered incorrect. The Acton Nightingale and | Silver Bell, two singularly sweet bells at St. John's college, Cambridge, are i said to have a mixture cf silver, but i if true this is not believed by compe| tent authorities to be the cause of their i beautiful tone. This idea led to the story of the monk Tandio concealing the silver given him by Charlemagne and casting the bell in the monastery j of St. Pa yd of inferior metal, whereupon he was struck by the clapper and killed. In the ninth century bells were made in France of iron. They have been cast in steel, ^nd the tone has been found nearly equal in fineness to that of the bell metal, but. having less vibration, was deficient in length, and thick glass bells have been made which give a beautiful sound, but are too brittle to long withstand the strokes of the clapper.?Gentleman's Magazine. The Inventor of the Match. The first match was the product of the ingenuity of John Frederick Kom, eror, who early in the nineteenth century was imprisoned in the penitentiary at Hohenasperg, in Germany. He invented the lucifer match while in his ; gloomy dungeon. The German government forbade the manufacture of matches on the ground of public policy, j because some children playing with \ them had caused a tire. Komerer was ruined by Viennese competition when ! he was released from prison and died i a pauper. Up to 1SG2 the Vienna man| ufacturers controlled the match busi ncss cf the entire world. From Ileal Life. Teacher?Evil communications corrupt good manners. Now. Johnny, can j you understand what that means? Johnny?Yes'm. For instance, pa got a communication from ma's dressinakj er this morning that made him swear.? Philadelphia Press. A Pert Reminder. Little Bertie bad been taught not to j ask for anything at meals. One day | poor Bertie had been forgotten, when I he pathetically inquired, "Do little boys ! get to heaven when they are starved to death?''?London Tit-Bits. . The gravedigger rises to remark that j every man finds himself in a hole soon; er or later.?Philadelphia Record. The next hardest thing to getting up i In the world is to keep from getting i down. ! If the Baby is Cutting Teeth. Be sure and use that old and well | tried remedy, Mrs. Winslow's Sooth| ing Syrup tor children teething. It ! soothes the child, softens the gums, ! allays all pain, cures wind colic and is the best remedy for diarrhoea, j Twenty-five cents a bottle. j ? It is the best of all. Ostentation In Hospitality. People seem to have lost the power i of living quietly and happily in tneir ; country homes. The country is only j made endurable to them by sport and j | gambling and boisterous house parties, i | and when from one cause or another J | these resources fail they are frankly j j bored and long for London. They are | { no longer content, as our fathers were, j \ to entertain their friends with hospita- j j ble simplicity. So profoundly has all i j society been vulgarized by the worship j of the golden calf that unless people I can vie with alien millionaires in the : sumptuousncss with which they "do ! you"?delightful phrase?they prefer | not to entertain at all. An emulous os- J tentation has killed hospitality.?London Tatler. FOR THE HOUSEWIFE A Timely List of Remedies. Nothing is bettor to alkiy tlio itching of prickly beat or hives than strong borax water. A dose of sulphur taken twice a week will assist in driving eruptions of any kind away. Kerosene oil will hold mosquitoes at bay. The odor is not noticeable after a few minutes, and children especially are much relieved by its use. Fruit stains may be removed from the hands by washing in clear water, then holding over the fumes of a burning match. Chronic diarrhea is cured by drinking orange peel tea. Sweeten with loaf sugar and use as a common drink for twenty-four hours or more. A simple and effectual remedy for ivy poisoning is said to he sweet spirits of nitei*. Bathe the affected parts two or three times during the day, and the ne::t morning scarcely any trace of the poison will remain. A cloth wet in cokl water and laid on the back of the neck is a cure for sleeplessness. Fold a towel smoothly over it, and very often it will quiet a weary brain and soothe the brain better than an opiate. It is particularly useful in case of a dull headache. Conches :mfl Xcrrca. "Couches have saved more minds and nervous systems than all the doctors and medicines put together," said a familiar authority on house furnishing to the Philadelphia North American. "It is the best refuge that the overworked housekeeper lias, did she but know it, and the only fault I have to { find witli women is that as a rule they do not use their couches half enough. A _ 11- ~ 1 A. 4.\~~ "I am nor taiKiajr auuui uicsu ^aiu and a half contrivances that are as tough as a rhinoceros' hide. What I moan is a broad, comfortable couch that is soft and luxurious and on which a woman may nestle among the piilows and be comfortable. Every room should have one. When distracted by the infinite cares of the household and worried over this bill and that, a woman should have a place where she can throw herself down and, stretched at case, allow her troubles to straighten themselves out of their own accord. "By this means hysteria is avoided, beauty is preserved and the woman's chances for salvation aro helped." A Folding Tea Tabic. The illustration shows a new English table now mod at theaters, lawn parties and porch teas. It could be easily copied by a clever cabinet maker, al BEADY FOB USE. though in England it was invented specially for the king. The top can be lifted from the legs, and both parts can then be folded up into a very small space and can be carried in the hand without fear of breakage. The center part, which contains teapot, sugar bowl and hot water kettle 011 the swinging principle, can bo pulled forward, and underneath will be found three small bottles of seltzer. On one side of the tray are three cups and saucers and silver spoons, while on tlic other side three glasses, cream jug, plates, sugar tongs, corkscrew, etc., are neatly packed. Things About Sleeping. Sunlight is gcod for everything. Away with heavy hangings either above or below the bed! Beware of a dusty, musty carpet; better sweetness and a bare floor. Do not fail to provide some means for ventilation during the night. Keep the head cool while sleeping, but not by a draft of cold air falling upon it. If a folding bed must be used, contrive some way to keep it aired and wholesome. Let the pillow under the shoulders be high enough to bring the head in a natural position, nc more nor less. Thoroughly air the sleeping room every day. Air the beds and bedding as often as possible. A dark, out of the way, unwholesome corner is no more fitted for a sleeping room than for a parlor. A feather bed which has done service for a generation or two is not a desirable thing upon which to sleep. Yonnj; Onions on Toast. It is preferable to use those from sets. These are delicious when served like asparagus on toast. Take onions about as thick as your linger, remove the tough outer layers and cut oft" the tops, leaving about three inches of green. Tie up in bunches of half a dozen or more, a bunch for each person. and cook slowly until tender. Drain carefully and lay each bunch 011 a piece of buttered toast, pouring over it a rich cream or drawn butter sauce. Candied Sweet Potatoes. To make candied sweet potatoes cut cold sweet potatoes in quarters or slices and spread iliem on an earthen baking dish. Sprinkle them with bits of butter and granulated or brown sugar. Repeat with each layer, but if you desire to have all the pieces brown have only one layer. IJake in a quick oven until the sugar has thoroughly dissolved and permeated the whole and remove when it is slightly brown. iSTfcveis rifles' and pistols! j AF.E G'J AflANTC CO TO EE SAFE, DURABLE AMS ACCURATE, \im FAVORITE RlFLEl ^^^SSSBaBKBOBBBaBmaais ^ I 5 is an accurate rifle and puts every shot a 9 v. here you hold it. AVeiprht 4.1 pounds. | 3 Made in three calibers?.22, .Co and .S2 \ ? Kim Fire. a price: i No. 17. Plain Sights, . , $6.00 \ G Mo. !8, Target Sight3, . . 8.50 i Where these rifles r.re not carried in j stock by dealers avc will send, express v; prepaid on receipt of price. Send stair.p ? for catalog describing complete line 5 Jand containing valuable information to I ] 9 shooters. | 9 I TiiE J. Stevess Arms 483 Tool So. j j ?.C. Cm 173S, CHICOPEE FALLS, MASS. 1 April 0, .002. 4m. i w. a. rnmnm, ^.lESTIST, COLUMBIA, S. C. IS NOW MAKING THE BEST Pictures that can be bad in this country, | and all who have never had a real fine pic| ture, should now try some of hi3 latest j styles. Specimens can be seen at his Gaii terv. up stairs, next to the Hub. When writing mention the Dispatch, I I | ! CNniNFft I ||iiuiiitiV ?VIkbir\Oi Tanka. Stack*, Stand Pipe? and Sheec-Iro* Work; Shafting, Pulleys, Gearing, Boxes, Hangers, ete, Mill CAStlncs. B57"Cast erer7 day; work 200 hands. LOMBABD IKON WORKS A SUPPLY C9 AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. I | j Jftnimry 27-]y ! BEESWAX WANTED ! IN LARGE OR SMALL QUANTITIES I T WILL PAY THE HIGHEST MARJ[ k?jt price tor clean an:i pure Beeswax. Pi ice govern*"! in color and condition. RICE B HARM AN, A*. lae Bazaar. Lexicon. S. C EDWARD L. ASBILL / Attorney at Law, LEESVILLE, S. C Practices in all the Courts. Business solicited. Sept. 30?6m* t/onn ou vr-.vw GLENN FALLS, of Glern Falls, New York 3.430,b99 Mv companies are popular, strong and reliable. No one can give your business better attention; no one can giveyu better i protection; no one can give }o:i better rates BEFORE YOU INSURE SEE j ALFRED .1. 1X)X, General Insurance Agent, j LEXINGTON S. C. | November 27, 1901?ly. i I <9 I | This signature is on every box of the gonuine | Laxative Bromo=Quinine Tablets i the remedy th?t cures a lu ouc oay 1 1 I ALL BIG BOXING EVENTS Are Best Illustrated and Described in POLICE GAZETTE The World"Famous . . . . Patron of Sports. $1.00-13 WEEKS-$1.C0 MAILED TO YOUR ADDRESS. RICHARD E. FOX, Publisher, Franklin Square, New York. THE3 SPIRITTINE Endorsed by some of the Leading Medical Profession. No Quack or Patent Medicine, but NATURE'S PURE REMEDIES. Wholesale and Retail by G. M. HARMAN. fire ol file lone Igeoci COUNTRY RISKS CONSIDERED, | Only First Class Companies Represented. See my List of Giants: I Assets .ETNA, FIRE, of Hartford, Conn $13,357,293 CONTINENTAL (Fire), of New York 10,638.271 PHIL A DELPHI A UNDERWRiTERS, Phil., Pa.. 15,543,066 .ETNA LIFE, of Hartford, ~ rr. r.oo mi. SEABOARD AIR LIAE RAILWAY ^ jS|^Y?S?I^U& Sip 0.M1TED ; Double Daily Service ' . Between New York. Tampa, Atlanta, I New, Orleans and Points South and West. = ^ IN EFFECT DECEMBER 1st, 1901. SOUTHWARD. '* L'nli.y. ! JLA111V ! No. 31 i No. 27 iv New York. P. R. R.. 1 00 pin 12 10 air lv Philadelphia, PRR.i 3 29 pm 7 20 air 17 Baltimore, P R li...' 5 45 pm 'J 34 am lv Washington, PR R. 7 CO pm II 01 am lv Richmond, 6 A L Ry 10 40 pm 2 38 pm lv Petersburg 44 ill 20 pin 3 18 om lv Norlma Jet. 44 I 1 42 am: 5 45 pm lv Henderson, ' j 2 U0 urn ti 12 pm lv Kaleigh, 44 3 32 am 7 35 om lv Southern Pines,4' i 5 27 am; 9 27 pm No. 33 lv Hamlet, " : 6 35 am 10 35 pm i No." 31 lv Columbia, J " I 8 40 am; 1 05 am ar Savannah 44 12 05 pm; 4 40 am ar Jacksonville, 44 3 50 pm; 9 05 am ar Tampa, 44 5 00 am 5 40 pm Wo. 33 | ar Charlotte, 44 9 23 am lv Utiester, 44 y 45 am lv Greenwood, " 11 52 am lv Athens, " 2 21 pm *4 ar Atlanta, ? 44 3 55 pm ar Augusta. CAW C,.1 >) 40 pm i iv New York, Y t <fc W; 00 am: 9 00 pm lv Philadelphia. 44 j 10 16 am 11 26 pm lv Nfw 4'ork. Ul)&6oo f3 00 pmj..: ^ lv Baltimore, B ^ t o jfO 30 pm lv \Vasn't?>n, N A W S h | ti 30 pm * No.~T3j No. 11 /"/ i__ tj j. n ? t t>. c tr/i n iir iv .rorismoum, o a u o uu pm u to am lv Weldcn, 44 ll 35 pm 12 02 pm No. 31 | lv Norlina Jet, 44 12 55 am- 130 pm lv Henderson, 44 1 25 am | 2 05 pm lv Kaleigh, 44 2 50 ttmi 3 55 pm lv Southern Pines,44 5 05 am: 6 18 pm ? No. 33 j t lv Hamlet. 44 6 35 am! 7 30 pm No. 31 | No. 27 , lv Columbia,| ' 8 40 am! 1 05 am ar Savannah, " 12 05 pm 4 40 am 1 ar Jacksonville, 44 3 50 pm 9 05 am " ar Tampa, " 5 00 am 5 4' pm .No. 33 ISO. 39 lv Wilmington, 44 3 05 pm ar Ch-irlotte. 44 j 9 23 am 10 32 pm iv Cnester, 44 9 45 ami 1,35 am lv Greenwood, 44 ;11 52 am 3 43 am lv Athens, 44 j 2 21 pm 5 13 am ar Atlanta, y 44 j 3 55 pm 7 50 am ar Augusta. <J 3c vV Cj 3 40 pm j ar Macon, C of Georgia, 7 20 pmill 20 am ^ ar Montgom'ry, A A W r 9 2u pint 0 30 am ar Mobiic, L & N j 2 55 am 4 15 pm ar New Orleans. L & Nj 7 25 am| 8 25 pm ?r misuviJio. ou ?^i? 1-1 u itiiij u uo yui ar Memphis, 44 ! 4 00 pic I 8 25 am NORTHWARD. | Daily Daily | No. 31 No. 36 lv Tampa, SAL By..... 9 00 pm 8 CO am lv Jacksonville, " 110 10 am 7 4.0 pm lv Savannah, 44 j 1 55 pm 11 30 pm lv Columbia,? 44 1 4 10 pm 7 05 pm iv Memphis. N <J & StL 12 45 pm y ou pm lv Nasville. 44 9 30 ami 9 30 am lv New Orleans, L & N! 9 30 pm, 8 00 pm lv Mobile 44 j 135pmjl2 30 am lv Montgom'rv, A. & W P 6 30 pm! 6 15 am lv Macon, C ol Georyiaj 8 00 am: 4 20 pm lv Augusta. C & W O ...110 05 anuj 1 No. 32; No. 38 lv Atlanta,^ S A L By 1 GO pm 9 00 pm ar Athens, 44 2 57 par 11 23 pm ar Greenwood, 44 5 19 pm 1 56 am ar Chester. 44 7 20 pm; 4 00 am lv Charlotte, " j 7 38 pm| 5 00 am ar Wilmington ' I 12 05 p?a ; No. 34 No. 60 lv Hamlet 44 !l0 40 pa-j 7 25 am lv Southern Pines,44 1133 pm 8 17 am lv Raleigh. 44 1 35 am 10 20 am < ar Henderson, 44 3 07 am ill 32 pra lv Norlina Jet, 44 j a 35 am'12 15 pru lv Petersburg, 44 : 5 54 am 2 26 pa: ^ lv Richmond, 44 6 45 am 3 12 pm ar Washington, P R R 10 10 am; 6 35 pm ar Baltimore. P R R ;11 25 am 11 25 pm ar Philadelphia, PR R 11 36 pm 2 56 am ar New York, P R R.... ! 4 15 pm 6 30 am j No. 22 No. 38 lv Norlina Jct.S A L Rj 3 55 am 1 25 pm lv Weldon, 44 5 56 am 2 40 pm ar Portsmouth 44 | 7 15 am 5 25 pm ar Wash ton. N & W S Jt$| 6 55 am ~ ?. L? w_. 1} ?U A Z ar oaiumure. x> o r VjU| am ar Mew York. 0 DSSCo |f2 15 pm ar Philadelphia,NYP&N fo 46 pm 5 10 am ^ ar New York. " 8 08 pm! 7 43 am Note?fDaily Except Sunday. Cafe Cars between Hamlet and Savannah on Trains Nos. 31 and 34. X Central Time. 6 Eastern Time. For any furthtr information apply to W. P. SCRUGGS. Traveling Passenger Agent. Savannah. Ga, R. E. L BUNCH. General Passenger Agent. J. M. BARE, 1st Vice President. j Portsmouth, Va, ^1^ Money to Loan. TTTE ARE PREPARED TO NEGOTIVV ate loans promptly on improved real estate in Lexington county at 7 per JM cent, interest. No commissions. Borrow- 1 er pays actual expenses of preparation ot papers. J THOMAS & GIBBES. 1 Attorneys at .Law, Columbia, S. C, November 13. 9mcs. J Money to Loan *> -A ON FAN MING LAMDS. LONG TIME. Easy payment. Nocommission. Borrower pays actual cost ot periecting Loan. E. K. PALMER, Central National Bank Building. COLUMBIA, S, C COL. G. T. GRAHAM, / Lexington, S. C. July 18?ly. * # i