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It Kequire More Faith to Be an In fidel Than a Christian?-Verily It Seems So When On*' Considers :he Wild Theories of Unbelief. BROC ci.YN. April 30.-In the Taber ficle this forenoon the large audience /stened with rapt attention to a power ful discourse by Rev. Dr. Talmage. who chose for his subject, "Over All For f-ver." the text selected being Romans <v, ?">. "'Christ came, who is over all." For 4,000 years the world had been waiting for a deliverer-waiting while empires rose and fell. Conquerors came and made the world worse instead of making it better-still the centuries watched and waited. ' They looked for him on thrones, looked for him in pal aces, looked for him in imperial cobes, looked for him at the head of armies. At last they found him in a barn. The cattle stood nearer to him than the an gels, for the funner were in the adjoin ing stall, while the latter were in the clouds. A parentage of peaspitry! No room for him in the inn because there was no one to pay the hotel expense. Yet the pointing star and the angelic cantata showed that heaven made up in appreciation of his worth what the world lacked. "Christ came, who is over all. God blessed forever. Amen." But who is this Christ who cani'? As to the difference between different de nominations of evangelical Christian? 1 have no concern. If I could by the turn ing over of my hand decide whether all the world -hall at last be Baptist or Methodist or Congregational or Episco palian or Presbyterian, I would not tum my hand. But there are doctrines which ?re vital to the soul. If Christ be not a God, we are idolators. To this Christo logical question I devote myself this morning and pray God that we may think right and do aright in regard to a question in which mistake is infinite. THE FAITH OF THE INFIDEL. I suppose that the majority of those here today assembled believe-the B'ble. It requires as much faith tot*.* an infidel as to IK* a Christian. It is faith in a dif ferent direction. The Christian has faith in the teachings of Matthew, Luke. John, Paul, Isaiah. Moses. The infidel has faith in the freethinkers. We have faith in one class <>f men. They have faith in ? another class of men. But as tho major ity of those, perhaps all of those here as- I sembled. are willing to take the Bible for a standard in morals and in faith, 1 make this book my starting {>oint. I sup?K>se yon are aware that *tLe two generals who have marshaled the great armies against the deity of Jesus Christ are Strauss and Renan. The number of heir slain will not be counted until the ? .runrpet of the archangel sounds the roll ! jail of the resurrection. Those men and their sympathizers saw that if they could destroy the fortress of the miracles the} could destroy Christianity, and they were right .Surrender the miracles and y< m surrender Christianity. TLe great ( rerman exegete says that all the mira cles were myths. The great French ex egete says that all the miracles were le gends. They propose to take everything sn] ernatural from the life of Christ and everything supernatural from the Bible. 1 They prefer the miracles of human non sense to the glorious miracles of Jesus Christ. They say there was no miraculous birth in Bethlehem, but that it is all a fanciful story, just like the story of Romulus said to have been bom of Rhea Silvia and the god Mars. They say no star pointed to the manger; it was orly the ihish of a passing lant?n. They say there was no miraculous making of bread, but that it is a corruption of the story that Elisha gave 20 loaves of bread to a hundred men. They say the water was never turned into wine, but that it is a corruption of the story that the Egyp tian ?llague turned the water into blood. They say it is no wonder that Christ sweat great drops of blood; he had been 0u1 in the night air and was taken sud denly ill. They say that there were no tongues of fire on the heads of the disci ples at the Pentecost; that there was only :? great thunder storm, and the air was full of electricity, which snapped and flew ali around about the heads of the disciples. They say that Mary and Martha and Christ felt it important to get up an ex "ci?ement for the forwarding of their re ligion, and so th y dramatized a funeral and Lazarus played the corpse, and Mary and Martha played the weepers, and Christ was the tragedian. I put it in my own words, but this is the exact meaning of their statements. They say the Bible is a spurious book written by superstitions or lying men. backed np by men who died for that which they did not believe. THE DIVINITY OF CHRIST. Now, I take back tue limited state ment which I made a few moments ago, when I said it requires- as much faith to be an infidel as to be a Christian. It re quires a thousandfold more faith tobe an infidel than to be a Christian, for if Christianity demand that the whale swallowed Jonah, then skepticism de mands that Jonah swallowed the whale! I can prove to you that Christ was God, not only by the supernatural appearances on that Christmas night, but by what in spired men said of him, by what he says of himself and by his wonderful achieve ments. "Christ came, who is over all." Ah. does not that prove too much? Not over the Caesars, not over Frederick, not over Alexander the Great, not over- the vHenrys, not over the Louises? Yes. Pile all the thrones of all the ages together, and my text overspans them as easily as* a rainbow overspans a mountain. "Christ came, who is over all." Then he must., be a God. ' . The l5ible says that all things were made by him. Does not that prove too much? Could it be that he made the Mediterranean, that he made the Black sea, that he made the Atlantic, the Pf - cine, that he made Mount Lebanon, that he made the Alps, the Sierra Nevadas, that h? made the hemispheres, that he made the universe? Yes. The says so, and lest we be too stupid derstand John winds up with a r. cent reiteration and says, "Witho was not anything made that was i Then he was a God. The Bible says at the name of j every knee shall bow. All heavei come down on its knees. Mart their knees, apostles on their knee fessors cn their knees, the archai his knees. Before whom? A mar he is a God. The Bible says every 1 shall confess-Bornesian, Malayar ican, Italian, Spanish, Persian, B Every tongue shall confess. To, God. The Bible says Christ the yesterday, today and forever. 1 characteristic of humanity? Do ' change? Does- not the body et change in seven years? Does n mind change? Does not the heart cl Christ the same yesterday, today a: ever. He must be a God. Philosophers say that the law of tation decides everything and th centripetal and centrifugal force.' the world from clashing and from litton. But Paul says that Christ is the axle on which everything and that Christ's hand is the soc which everything is set. Mark the ^ I "Upholding-upholding all things word of his power." Then he mus God. CHRIST'S OWN TESTIMO.VY. Then look at what Christ says ol self. Now, certainly every one mu derstand himself better than an; else can understand him. If I as where you were born and you te "I was born in Chester, England," was born in Glasgow, Scotland.", was born in Dublin, Ireland," or " born in New Orleans, the United St you being a man of integrity, I s believe you. If I asked you how pounds you could lift and you 6 say you could lift 100 pounds o pounds or 800 pounds, I should b you. It is a matter personal to yon You know better than any one els< tell you. If I ask how much estate yon worth, and you say $10,000 or $1( or $500,000,1 believe what you say. know better than any one else. ] Christ must know better than an; else who he is and what he is. WI ask him hctftv old he is, he says, "B Abraham was, I am." Abraham been dead 2.028 years. Was C 2,028 years old? Yes, he says he is than that. "Before Abraham w am." Then Christ says, "I am th pha." Alpha is the first letter o Greek alphabet, and Christ in tha terance declared. "I am the A of tl phabet of the centuries." Then he : be a God. Can a man l>e in a thousand place once? Christ says he is in a thou places at once. "Where two or t are gathered together in my name, t am I in the midst of them." This e\ whereativeness, is it characteristic man or of a God? And lest we ix think this everywhereativeness w cease, he goes on, and he intimates he will be in all the cities of the ear j he will be in Europe, Asia, Africa. N and South America the day before world burns up. "Lo, ? am with alway, even unto the end of the woi Why. then, he must be a God. Besides that, he takes divine lror He declares himself Lord of men. an and denis. Is he? If he is. be is a ( If he is not. he is an impostor. A i comes into your store tomorrow m : ing. Hesays: "I am the great shipbui of Liverpool. I have built hundred ships." He goes on to give his experie You defer to him as a ruan of large perience-and great possessions. But next day you find out t'nat he is not great shipbuilder of Liverpool: thal never built a ship; that he never- b anything. What is he then? An impos Christ says he built this world. He b all things. Did he build them? If he < he is a God. If he did not, he is au postor. A GOD OR AN IMPOSTOR. A man comes into your place of b ness with Jewish countenance an< German accent and says: "I am Roi child, the banker of London. I have wealth of nations in my pocket. I loa: that large amount to Italy and Aus) in their perplexity." But after awl you find that he has never loaned i money to Italy or Austria; that he ne had a large estate; that he is no ban at all; that he owns nothing. What he? An im?K>ster. Christ says he ov the cattle on a thousand hills: he ov, this world; he owns the next world: owns the universe; he is the banker all nations. Is he? If he is. he is a G Is he not? Then he is an impostor. A man enters the Wliite House Washington. He says: "I am Em pe: William of Germany. I am travrli incognito. I have come over here : recreation and pleasure. I own cast in Dresden and Berlin." But the prc dent finda out the next day that he is i Emperor William; that he owns no c ties at Berlin and Dresden; that he 1 no authority. What is he? An imp tor. Christ says he is the kir^ over -the king immortal, invisible. If he he is a God. If he is not, he is an i: postor. Strauss saw that alternative, and tries to get out of it by saying that Chr was sinful in accepting adoration ai worship. Renan tries to get out of it 1 saying that Christ-not through ai fault of his own, but through the fat of others-lost his purity of con^cienc and he slyly intimates that dishonorab women had damaged his soul. Anythii but believe that Christ is God. Now y< believe the Bible to be true. If you < not, you would hardly have appeared this church. You would have gone ov and joined the Broadway Infidel clu or you would go to Boston and kiss tl foot of the statue of Thomas Paine. Y< would hardly come into this churc where the most of us are the delud? souls who believe in a whole Bible ai: take it all down as easily as you swallo a ripe strawberry. I have shown you what inspired me ?aid of Christ; I have shown you whi Christ said of himself; now, if you ot lieve the.Bible, let us go out and see h wonderful achievements-surgical, al: mentary, marine, mortuary. Surgici achievements! Where is the medics journal that gives an account of sue exploits as Christ wrought? He used n knife. He carried no splints. He err ployed no compress. He made no pa tient squirm under cauterization. H tied no artery. Yet behold him! Wit' a word he stuck fast Maldini amputated ear. He stirred a lit tie dust and spittle into a &alv and with it caused a man who was Lon blind and without optic nerve or cor nea or crystalline lens to open his eye on the sunlight. He beat music on th' drum of the deaf ear. He straightens a woman who, through contraction o muscle, had been bent almost dcuble fo: well nigh i wo decades. He made a mai who had no use of his limbs for 38 year shoulder his mattress and walk off. HE GIVES POWER TO THE ARM. ' Sir Astley Cooper^ Abernethy, Valen tine Mott, stood powerless before a with ered arm, but this doctor of omnipotent surgery, comes in and he sees the para lyric arm useless and lifeless at th< man's side, and Christ says to him "Stretch forth thine hand," and h( stretched it forth whole as the other, He was a God. Alimentary achievements! He found a lad who had come out of the wilder ness with five loaves of bread for a spec ulation. Perhaps the lad had paid 5 pennies for the five loaves and expected to sell them for 10 pennies, and so he would double his money. Christ took those loaves of bread and performed a miracle by which he fed 7,000 famishing people, and I warrant you the lad lost nothing, for there were 12 baskets of fragments taken up, and if the boy had five loaves at the start I warrant you he had at least 10 at the close. The Saviour's mother goes into a neigh bor's house to help get up a wedding party. By calculation she finds out that the amount of wine is not sufficient for the guests. She- calls in Christ for help/ and Christ, not by the slow decay of fermentation, but by a word, makes 130 gallons of pure wine. Marine achievements I Ee turns a whole school of fish into the net of men who were mourning over their poor luck, until the boat is so full they have to hal loo to other boats, and the other boats come up, and they are laden to the wa ter's edge with the game, so that the sailors have to be cautious in going from larboard to starboard lest-they upset the ship. Then there comes a squall down through the mountain gorge, and Gen nesaret, with long locks of white foam; rises up to battle it, and the boat drops into ? trough and ships a sea, and the loosened sails crack in the ?ornado, and Christ rises from the back part of the boat and comes walking across the stag gering ship until he comes to the prow, and there he wipes the spray from his brow and hushes the crying storm on the knee of his omnipotence. Who wrestled down thateuroclydon? Whose feet tram pled the rough Galilee into a smooth floor? LIFE OUT OF DEATH. Let philosophers and anatomists go to . Westminster abbey and try to wake up Queen Elizabeth or Henry VIII. Ko human power ever wakened the dead. There is a dead girl in Capernaum. What . does Christ do? Alas, that she should have died so young and when the world was so fair! Only 12 years of age. Feel her cold brow and cold hands. Dead, dead! The house is full of weeping. Christ comes, and he takes hold of the hand of the dead girl, and instantly her eyes open, her heart starts. The white lily of death blushes into '.he rose of life and health. She rushes into the arms of her rejoicing kindred. Who woke up that death? Who restored her to life? A man? Tell that to the lunatics in Bloom ingdale asylum. It was Christ the God. But there comes a test which iao/e than anything else will show whether he was God or man. You remember that great passage which says, "We must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ." Thp earth will be stunned by a blow that will make it stagger in ntid heaven; the stars will circle like d^-y leaves in an equinox; the earth will un roll the bodies, and the sky will unroll the spirits, and soul and ?esh will come into incorruptible conj mn tion. Day of smoke and fire and darkness and tri umph. On one side, piled up in galleries of light, the one hundred and forty and four thousand-yea, the quintillions-of the saved. On the other side, piled up in galleries of darkness, the frowning, the glaring multitude of those who re jected God. ' . Between these two piled up galleries a throne, a high th.*o: e, a throne stand ing on two burnished pillars-justice, mercy-a throne so bright you had bet ter hide your eye lest it be- extinguished with excess of vision. But it is an emp ty throne. Who will come up and take it? Will you? "Ah. no!" you say, "I am but a child of dust, s, I would not dare to climb that throne." Would Gabriel climb it? He dare not. Who will ascend it? Here comes one. His back is to us. He goes up step above step, height above height, until he reaches the apex. Then he turns around and faces all the nations, and we nil see who it is. It is Christ, the God, and aH earth, and all heaven, and all hell kneel, crying: "It is a God! It is a God!" We must all appear l>efore the judg ment seat of Christ. ONLY THE DIVINE CAN RELIEVE SORROW. Oh. I am PO glad that it is a divine being who comes to pardon all our sins, to comfort all our sorrows. Sometimes our griefs are so great they are beyond any human sympathy, and we want Al mighty sympathy. Oh. ye who cried all last night because of bereavement or loneliness, I want to tell you it is au om nipotent Christ who is come. When the children are in the house and the mother is dead, the father has to be more gentle in the home, and he has to take the office of father and moth er, and it seems to me Christ looks out upon your helplessness, and he proposes to be father and mother to your soul. He comes in the strength of one. in the tenderness of the other. He says with one breath. "As a father pitieth bis children, so the Lord pitieth them that fear him," and then with the next breath lie says, "As one whom his mother com forteth, so will I comfort you." Do you . not feel the hush of the divine lullaby? Oh, put your tired head down on the heaving bosom Of divine compassion, while he puts bis arms around you and says: "O widowed soul, I will be thy God. O orphaned soul. I will be thy protector. Do not cry." Then he touches your eyelids with his fingers and sweeps his fingers down your cheek and wijn'S away all the tears of loneliness and be reavement. Oh. what a tender and sym pathetic God has come for us! I do not j ask you to lay hold of him. Perhaps you are not strong enough for that. I do not ask you to pray. Perhaps yon are too bewildered for that. I only ask you to let go and fall back into the arms of everlasting love. Soon you and I will hear the click of the latch of the door of the sepulcher. Strong men will take us in their arma and carry us down and lay us in the dust, and they cannot bring ns back again. I should be scared with infinite fright if I thought I must stay in the grave, if even the body were to stay in the grave. But Christ will come with glorious iconoclasm and split and grind up the rocks and let us all come forth. The Christ of the manger is the Christ of the throne. Two Letter?. An industrious young man who looks after the correspondence in a Wall street banking house is an adept and enthusi astic manipulator of a typewriting ma chine. His sister, a self reliant girl of more than ordinary cleverness, is em ployed as a stenographer and typewriter in a large manufacturing establishment in Buffalo. The young man mailed a bulky letter to his sister, with whom he is fond of joking, and as a smart re minder of April Fool's day he inclosed two large sheets of foolscap paper. Or. one sheet he wrote, "Ha! ha! He! he! April 1," and the other sheet contained the words, "Now you owe me a good long letter-a long one, mind you." A few days ago this funny youii? man received an "xpress package on which 40 cents charges were due. It looked like a small can of tea, but when opened proved to be a roll of ribbon paper about 10 yards long, on which, in closely written char acters, was a long and friendly message from the sister in Buff ai j.-New York Times. A H amble Traced?. If for anybody, life must bc a horrid grind for poor old Peter Bennett of Plymouth, the miser whose $32,800 was spirited away by burglars two or three years ago. Poor old Peter has been m hot water ever since and is now poorer than ever. After his wife died Peter deeded his farm and stock to his stepson on the condition that he (Peter) should have good care and support during the remainder of his life. Now the old man claims that he has been neglected and ill treated and the bargain has been broken. He has gone to the home of relatives for shelter for the present and promises to appeal to the courts. "A Humble Trag edy" might be made of the singular ad venture of Peter Bennett, and it would be one of the most peculiar stories ever told.-Lewiston Journal. A New Social Query Mr. George Grossmith has predicted that men would yet wear their watches strapped to their ankles and would stand on one leg to see what time it was. But a much more graceful and ingenious manner of airryiug a timepiece has been introduced. Watches are now inserted in shirt studs and worn on the bosom. As a man can scarcely be expected to tell what time it is 09 his own shirt front, it is to be entirely good form for him to ask his neighbor at dinner or in the dance to please bend over and see what time it is for him.-New York Evening Sun. ODDS AND ENDS. Fine bottles don't make fine wines. Vanity is the quicksand of reason. George Sand. A resident of Empire, Nev., carries a watch 600 years old. Perhaps if we cry "Mice!" to the hoop skirt we .can frighten it off. A human skull as large as a bushel basket has been found in Sicily. There are any number of men who are perfectly friendless in this world. The man who ta- ks much about him self will always have a tired audience. Love is so closely allied to war that its fullest expression is an appeal to arms. In England the new fancy is to have the family crest on the outside of the cup and saucer. "A good wifo, a good mule and a good goat are three bad animals," is an un gallant French saying. A boa in the Central park menagerie, New York city, has not tasted food in three months, it is reported. Every time a man sins he has one mere reason for tiring to prove that the church is full of hypocrites. , - Many hands make light work. This accounts for the rapidity with which the hands of a gas meter get around. When a man has carved oat Ms own fortune, he is apt to have become so used to the knife as to cut his old friends. The population of the Sandwich Islands is about 85,000, of whom 85,000 are na tives, 15,000 Chinese and 20,000 Japanese. An appropriate wedding occurred when a Mr. Carpenter married a Miss Whetstone recently in Bates county, Mo. In the "Natural History of Cheshire" mention is made of a woman 70 years of age who had two horns on her head, each ll inches long. The grinder of a small organ about town has a placard hanging to himself soliciting alms because he . is "old and nearsighted." Where Egret* Come From. Many ladies who wear the pretty, del icate plume of the egret on their bonnets do so in the belief that this ornament is manufactured by the milliners from common feathers. Mr. W. H. Hudson, author of "The Naturalist In La Plata," who has too often witnessed the slaugh ter of the white heron for its feathers, corrects this little mistake. Whatever part the art of millinery may take in combining and arranging the egret plume the material itself is the | spoil ^ cruelty. Nature made it the muprial adornment" of the parent bird, and it is sought for and stolen at the sea son of its growth by unfeeling men who profit by catering to fashionable vanity. Mr. Hudson says that the egrets are in nearly all cases actually made of the slender feathers that grow at one time of the year on the egret's back and droop gracefully over the back and tail of the bird. Those who engage in the business of procuring these plumes know that to obtain a good supply with little trouble the birds must b? taken when the breed ing season is well advanced. The best time to attack them is when the young birds are fully fledged and not yet able to fly, for at that time the solic itude of the parent birds is greatest, and forgetful of their own danger they are most readily made victims. When the killing is finished and the few handfuls of coveted feathers have been plucked out, the slaughtered birds are left in a white heap to fester in the sun and wind and in sight of their orphaned young that cry for food and are not fed. In a Whale'* Belly. A correspondent who says that he once spent three-quarters of an hour in a whale's belly thus relates the strange adventure: The good ship Europa, on which I sailed as cabin boy, was an chored off the coast of Lower California. We had taken a number of whales and were at work trying the oil out of the blubber cut from the whales lying along side. To get at the fat inside the whales we were cutting off the ends of two or three ribs and hoisting them up from the whale's body. This left an opening large enough for a person to crawl into the whale and strip off the fat, which was sent on deck in buckets. We were short handed, ard the captain told me to go down into the whale and strip off the fat. Buylike, 1 jumped at de chance. I had not been at work long before I heard one of the sailors sing out: '-Pull the boy out of the whale. The tackle falls are stranding." I had a small "monkey rope" tied around my waist. The other end was on the vessel's deck. At the sailor's cry the captain jumped and grabbed it to pull me out, but it was too late. The tackle fall snapped in two, the ribs closed together, and I, like Jonah of old, was shut up in a whale's belly. When the ribs came together, they closed upon a toggle or pin used on the tackle. ThiB pin had come out and caught between the ribs. Through it a small hole fur reefing a rope had been bored, and solely by means of this hole, which enabled me to breathe, my life was saved. All was confusion on the ship's deck. The men dared nut use their sharp cut ting spades to make another incision for fear of injuring me. The tears were rolling down old Captain C-'s face. One of the men jumped on the whale, and I shouted through the hole in the toggle that I was all right. Then there was great rejoicing. The old captain jumped on the whale himself, and with a small sheathknife cut away at the flesh until he came td my body. Great care had to be exercised not to disturb the toggle, for they knew I was breathing through it. At length the hole was large enough for me to crawl through, and I came on deck, sick and weak from my experience. - Youth's Companion. Attend in g "Tea*" In Samoa. A woman recently home from Samoa tells of "teas" in that South Sea island. The Samoan tea is quite like any other tea so far as it is an informal festivity to promote sociability over a sip of some thing." The peculiar cordial brewed by the native women is usually the "some thing' offered, drunk out of a cocoa shell beautifully polished. At the king's pic nics, fetes of which the monarch is very fond, it is imperative to drain your drink ing vessel, and as the cordial is very ex hilarating this, in the case of weak head ed visiting women, is sometimes disas trous. "I went to a tea while there," said the woman in addition,"which Robert leonis Stevenson gave. He is thoroughly Sa moanized, and we all sat on mats on his piazzas, he cross legged, exactly like the natives. When I returned the hospital ity, I provided bamboo seats and little tables, but Mr. Stevenson would have none of them, choosing a mat instead, though his courtesy is such that he apol ogized for adhering to a custom in my house which I had not adopted. I saw him frequently, and he seemed well, ex cept for an ashen appearance of the face at times that is quite startling. He is charmed with that corner of the world." -New York Times. ?tr Gun For the British. A new wire quick firing 6-inch gun has just been adopted for the British naval sendee. It has successfully passed exhaustive trials. It is a long gun of about 40 calibers and weighs seven tons. It carries an elongated shot of 100 pounds a distance of 7,000 yards and will strike an enemy's ship or fornication four miles distant. It is'so rapid in its action that, fired with cordite at a long range, ft has three or four shots in the air at the same time. Each weapon contains several miles of wire, it having been found that a gun made up of this wire is stronger than when manufactured of homogeneous metal. Wire is also found to stand the first shock of the elastic force of cordite or gunpowder better than iron or steel, while the long bore enables the whole of the charge to be consumed.-Chicago Tribune. THE ICE CREAM CURE. Snatched From the Brink of the Grave by This Easily Taken Kerned y. A man who is run down in health or who finds disease fastening itself upon his vitals usually tries to save himself by some form of exercise that yields no profit. Eunting, fishing, boating, box ing, lawn tennis, horseback riding and swinging the dumbbells are frequently tried in vain endeavor to regain the last decreasing strength. Jim Tobin, one of our most industri ous farmers, was confined to the house for some weeks last summer afflicted with a stomach trouble that almost baf fled medical skill. It was found that no food except ice cream could be retained long enough to be digested. He confined himself to that diet and was soon able to take some exercise. But he engaged in none of the unremunerative fashionable fads mentioned above. He preferred something financiaUy profitable as well as physically beneficial and used his muscles in performing th? lighter forms of farm work. For several weeks he continued this sensible course, confining himself strictly to an ice cream diet. He soon found that his former strength and vigor had returned, and he was able to do as much as ever-an amount more than is accomplished by the average man. At the'Tobin home a gallon of rich ice cream is frozen regularly as morning comes. This work is part of the regular routine of breakfast getting. The amount mentioned is sufficient for the day. Mr. Tobin never eats less than a quart of the dainty foo'1, at a meal and frequently re quires more than that amount, although seldom indulging in so much as ' half a gallon. He digests it readily and enjoys it. He could probably take other kinds of food now, but has suffered so much from indigestion that he thinks it best to leave well enough alone. Since the 14th of last July he lias eaten nothing but ice cream. On that date he weighed 140 pounds and was hardly able to walk. Now he tips the beam at 210 and works early and late. This gain of 70 pounds of flesh and the complete res toration of his strength on a diet of fro zen cream, eggs and sugar is something remarkable, but it is the simple truth as we got it from Mr. Tobin's own lips. Those who see him-the perfect repre sentative of a man in rugged health, with sinewy build and almost tireless strength -would hardly suspect the modesty of his meals and hardly credit the story when it is told them. Of course there is much monotony in his meals, but he contents himself with his dish of cold comfort, and for dessert sniffs the aroma and odor of the victuals on the table. He is satisfied with health and strength and says the medicine is not bad to take.-Lagoda Leader. A Model of All the Oceans. A miniature representation cf all the oceans and seas as well as their tides and currents is a feature of the hydrographie display at the Worjd's fair. This model, which all must confess must be of great practical value, if not of scientific inter est, is a huge tank, made so as to repre sent the surface of the earth spread out over an area of about 80 feet square. The oceans, seas and lakes, which of course are the main objects thus displayed, are represented by real water. Through these at proper intervals smaller streams of water are ejected, the idea being to represent the different currents just a3 they flow in nature. The direction of these currents :s shown by streaks of white powder on the sur face. In order that the whole may be better understood, a large map will be placed within handy reach, with a man to explain the force, volume, etc., of the various "arteries of the deep." It is ex pected that this display will be au in valuable object lesson to those who have never looked into such matters and whose time and opportunities will not adm.: of personal investigation.-St. Louis Re public. To Elect a President In February I propose that the national election day, instead of being set for the first Tuesday after the first Monday in No vember, be set for the 22d of February. If we adopt George Washington's in auguration day for our national revolu tion, why shall we not adopt his bir.h day as the date for its all important pre liminary? If the persona who favor set ting inauguration day for the 1st of Jan uary really desire thus to reduce the in terval between election and inauguration to two months, my plan would effect substantially the same purpose. It would provide an election day dur ing just as much of an '.off season" as the present one. Farmers and others who find early November the most con venient time to go to their polling places would be just as little bound down by work at the latter end of February as at the beginning of November, and the weather and the roads would certainly be in no worse condition.-V. T. Raun in Kate Field's Washington. A Priestly Hero. Father William P. Treacy, who has made such a sturdy fight for his church at Swedesboro, N. J., has won the sym pathy and admiration of many who even believe him wrong, and his life's history shows that he is a L*ro. Three times he has risked his life for others. His first heroic act was to rescue a colored boy from death in the Chesapeake bay dur ing a terrible storm when even the trained life guards flinched. In 1878 the priest jumped into the Bronx near Fordham college and sav .id the life of James Murphy. When the village of Aeganhoven in Belgium was destroyed by fire, Father Treacy directed the work of the rescuers from the roofs of the buming buildings and left them only after every man. woman and child had been accounted for.-Philadelphia Rec ord^ A Reflection on Woman'? Skill. Mrs. Figg-Go to your father, Tommy, and ask him what he thinks of the nice hair cut mamma gav ; von. Mr. Figg (after inspection)-It isn't much as a hair cut, but tue job would do very well as an exhibit in the woman's work department at the Columbian fair. -Indianapolis Journal. No Ciiarge. Nervous Employer-I don't pay you for whistling. Office Boy-That's all right. I can't whistle well enough to charge t r ra for it yet.-Good News. ?~* asa^atirc?;. ci; J i:t fth.rbs git'.u-rcd fr'or.i thc forests o? Georgin, and has hc( n used by minions of people v. ?th tho best results, it URES All manner of Blood diseases, from the pestiferous little boil on your nos^ to the worst cases of inherited blood taint, such as Scrofula, Rheumatism, Catarrh and SKIN'QdrKER Treatise on Blood and Sinn Diseases mailed free. SWIFT SPECIFIC Co, Atlanta, Ga. ROBT. A. THOMPSON. | ROBT. T. JAT.VES ft. 'J Attorneys and Counsellors at Law. WaltiaUa, 8. C. Special Attention Given to ali Business Entrusted to ?. Our Care. September S, 1891. 36-ft Official Directory of the Na tional Farmers' Alliance and Industrial Union. H. L. Loucks, President. Huron, South Dakota. Marion Butler, vice-President, Golds boro. X. C. D. P. Duncan, Secretary and Treasurer, Columbia, S. C. Bea. Terrell, Lecturer. Washington, D. C. - EXECUTIVE BOARD. H. L. Loucks, Huron, South Dakota. . Mann Page, Brandon, Va. L E. Dean, Honeoye Falls. X. V. L. Leonard, Mt. Leonard, Mo. H. C. Demming, Secretary Executive Board, Harrisburg, Penn. JUDICIARY. R. A. South worth, Denver, Col. R. W. Beck, Alabama. M. D. Davie, Kentucky. .Menth Carolina M ta te Farmer?) Alliance. President, M. L. Donaldson, Green ville. vice-President, W. D. Evans, Benetts ville. Secretary. J. W. Reid, Reid ville. Treasurer, F. P. Taylor, Mt. Croghan. Lecturer and organizer, John R. Jef fries, Star Farm. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. T. P. Mitchell, Woodward, S. C. S. T. D. Lancaster. E. R. Walter. DISTRICT LECTt REP.s. First-J. II. Price. Orangeburg. Second-John T. Gaston, Aiken. Third-Jos. L. Keitt, Sondley's. Fourth-John If. Kinsler. Lever. Fifth-W. X. Elder, Guthriesville. Sixth-Henry C. Burn. Society Hill. Seventh-Jno. J. Dargan, Stateburg. Oronee County Alliance. J. L. Fennell, President. Sloan Dickson. VicerPresident. J. B. Sanders. Sccxetaiy. A. Bcarden, Treasurer. Rev. It. W. Seymour, Chaplain. Rev. M. F. Whitaker. Lecturer. J. L. Smith. Assistant Lecturer. W. IL Barron, Doorkeeper. N. C. McDonald, Assistant Doorkeeper. J. L. Reeder. Sergeant-at-Arms. * J. C. Neville; J. M. Gillison and T. A. Grant. Executive Committee. Dr. J. A. Johns, J. S. Floyd and J. J. Keith, Committee on the Good of thc Order. County OAicera. I State Senator-S. Y. Stribling. j Members of House of Representatives ? -M. B. Dendy and J. L. Smith. James Seaborn. Clerk of Court. B. F. Douthit, Sheriff. Neill W. Macaulay, School .Commis sioner. J. W. Hollcman. Probate Jiufcui and Master. - A. P. Crisp, Treasurer. W. T. Grubbs, Auditor. Jury Commissioner-W. J. Neville. Coroner-S. B. Marett. County Commissioners-J. L. Reeder. Nathaniel Philips. J. M. Hunnicntt: J. W. Shclor, ( lerk. Board meets on the first Monday in each-month. Trial Justices and their Post Office Ad j dresses-E. L. Eerndon, Walhalla; J. W. j Todd, Seneca; S. IL Johns. Westminster: ! J. B. Sanders, Oakway: F. D. Rothell. j Long Creek: A. P. Grant, Fair Blay: W. I C. Barker. Whetstone. Walhalla Town OlHcer* Intendant-IL I). A. Biemann. Wardens i-W. J. Bramlett. W. L. Verner, II. W. Pieper. J. M. Baldwin. I). Oelkers and i O. IL Schumacher. Council meets on j the first Wednesday in each month. Marshal-W. P. Powell. Blanks. I We koop constantly on hand the fol I lowing Blanks at reasonable prices: Titles to Real Estate. Mortgages to Real Estate. Mortgages to Real Esta -, with Forer ? closure. I . Note and Mortgage Personal Property, i Agricultural Lien, with Note. Agricultural Lien, without Note. We keep other Blanks, but the above ! embraces those most in general use. Church. J>ii*ectoi*>*. Wo rm in-.or <>roup. I WESTMINSTER PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, REV. NEWTON SMITH, PASTOR. Preaching 1st Sabbath at 4 p. M.: -Uh Sabbath at ll A. M. and 8 P. M.: prayer meetinc Thursday at 8 P. M.: Sabbath school. '.'.4.') A. M., Elder W. P. Anderson, Superintendent. Ladies" Missionary Society meets Mon days after 1st and 3d Sabbath at 4 p. M.. Mrs. C. E. Gray. President. Busy Bee Society meets semi-monthly. RETREAT PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, KEV. NEWTON SMITH. STATEO SUPPLY. Preaching 1st and 3d Sabbaths at 11 A. M.: Sabbath school a' lo A. M.. Elder Jno. W. Shelor. Superintendent. TUGALOO PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH REV. NEWTON SMITH. STATED SI PPLY. Preaching 2d Sabbath at ll A. M.: Sab bath school -Jd Sabbath at lo A. M.: other j Sabbaths at i\ M.. Elder O. I. Walker. Superintendent. Appointment* of Walhalla Charge, .Tl. E. Church, Mouth. 1893. Walhalla. -Jd and 4th Sundays at 11 A. M. Zion. 2d Sunday at F. M. Oconee. 4th Sunday at P. M. Jocassee, 1st Sunday at ll A. M. Whitmire, 1st Sunday at P. M. Double Springs. 3d Sunday at ll A. M. Laurel Spring. 3d Sunday at '?'>*. P. M. ! Thc above is the plan for the Walhalla : Charge during the present conference : year. H. C. Mouzox, P. C. APPOINTMENT- OF REV. R. W. SEY I Morn FOR THE YEAR IS93.-First Sunda} in the morning at il A. M. at Walhalla. j Eirst Sunday afternoon at 3.30 P. M. at Neville's School House. Second Sunday and Saturday before at ! New Bethel. Third Sunday and Saturday before af Conneross. Third Sunday night at 7.3< at Walhalla. Foin th Sunday and Saturday before at South Union. Prayer meeting every Thursday night in the Walhalla Baptist church at 7.:>0. Sunday School every Sunday morning ai 10 A. M. II. A. ll. Gibson. Superintend eui. Preaching in the West Union Baptist church every fourth Sunday ll o'clock A. M., and "at night at s o'clock P. M. Sunday school every Sunday at IO o'clock A. M. Prayer meeting every Tuesday night at 8 o'clock P. M. W. W. LEATHERS, Pastor. Divine service in the Episcopal Chu:cb [ every third Sunday in the month, ai il ? A. M. and 5.00 P. M. Also, every Friday j at 5.00 P. M. nd all Holy Days at ll A*. M. Special services notified. J. D. MCCOLLOUGH. Minister. Services in the Walhalla Presbyterian church every first and third Sabbath ol the month in the morning at ll o'clock In the evening, on every second anc fourth Sabbath, at 7? o'clock. Sabbati school every Sabbath morning at M o'clock. Prayer meeting every Wedues day afternoon at 4 j o'clock. GEO. G. MAYES, Pastor. Services in Bethel church every seconc and fourth Sabbath of the month in th< morning at ll o'clock. Sabbath schoo on same days immediately after th< preaching service. GEO. G. MAYES, S. S. The following are the appointment pf Rev. J. A. Wilson, pastor, at th< Seneca Presbyterian church and Kcowei chapel : Preaching every first and thin Sabbath at Seneca, both morning anc at night at 11.30 A. M. and S P. M. Also every first Sabbath afternoon at 3.3* o'clock at Keowee chapel. SabtatI school every Sabbath at Seneca at 10 A M., and every Sabbath at Keowee chape at 2.30 P. M. The following are the appointments fo Townville Circuit until June 1st: First Sunday-Asburv, ll A. M.: Zion 3 P. M. Second Sunday-Jones' Chapel, 11 A M.; Bethlehem, 3 P. M. Third Sunday-Smith's Chapel, ll A M.: Cedar Grove, 3 P. M. Fourth and fiftv Sundays as announced J. C. SPANN, P. C. The followingis the plan of appoint ments for the Westminster (Methodist Circuit for the present Conference year: v^enter church. firsWSunday at ll A. M and Saturday before at 3 P. M. Westminster church, second Sunday a II A. M. and fourth Sunday at 3 P. M, Rock Spring church, fourth Sunday a ll A. M. and second Sunday at 3 P. M. Nazareth church, third Sunday at ll A M. and Hopewell church at 3 P. M. W. B. JUSTUS, Pastor. Ricimoiiui & DaBYiile Railroad t?o. F. W. HULDEKOPER AND REUBEN FOSTER, RECEIVERS. Columbia & Greenville Division. CONDENSED SCHEDULE, IN EFFECT NOVEMBER 20, 1892. Trams run by 75th Meridian Time. BETWEEN CHARLESTON, COLUMBIA, SEN ECA AND WALHALLA. Daily. Daily. No ll. Stations. No 12. 6 50 am Lv Charleston Ar 10 30 pm 11 20 am Lv Columbia Ar C 05 pm 12 05 pm Alston 5 13 pm 12 23 " Pomaria 4 57 " 12 42 " Prosperity 4 40 " 12 57 " Newberry 4 25 " 1 01 " Helena 4 20 " 1 38 " Chappells 3 38 ? 2 17 " Ninety-Six 3 15 " 2 37 " Greenwood 2 53 ' 2 55 " Hodges 2 29 " 3 12 " Donald's 2 ll " 3 23 " HoneaPath 1 58 M 3 43 " Ar Belton Lv 1 40 44 4 05 " Lv Belton Ar 1 35 " 4 35 " Anderson 1 15 " 5 18 Pendleton 12 45 " 6 00 " Ar Seneca Lv 12 16 '' ? 32 " Lv Seneca Ar 12 10 am 7 00 " Ar Walhalla Lv ll 40 " 5 00, " Ar Greenville Lv .2 00 m BETWEEN ANDEKSON, BELTON AND GREENVILLE. Daily. Daily. .Stations. No ll. No 12. Lv Anderson 4 35 pm 1 15 pm Ar Belton - 4 05 " 1 35 " Lv Belton 1 25 " 3 4;} " Ar Williamston 1 0*2 " - 4 02 " Pelzer 12 55 44 4 08 " Piedmont 12 40 " 4 20 " Greenville 12 00 m 5 00 44 BETWEEN CHARLESTON. COLUMBIA, ALSTON AM> SPABTANBCRG. Daily. Daily. No 13. Stations. No 14. (? 50 am Lv Charleston Ar 10 30 pm 3 50 pm Lv Columbia Ar 1 20 pm 4 :?) pm Alston 12 40 " 5 23 " Carlisle ll 44 am 5 32 " Santuc ll 36 " 5 50 '? Union " ll 17 " i 6 23 " . Pacolet 10 44 " 6 50 " Ar Spartaoburg Lv 10 20 " 10 10 pm Ar Asheville Lv 7 00 am BETWEEN NEWBERRY, CLINTON AND LAURENS. Ex. Sun. Ex. Sun. No 15. Stations. No 10. 11 20 ara Lv Columbia Ar 6 05 pm 2 00 pm Newberry i 2 00 m 3 04 " Gold ville 10 50 am :'. 34 " Clinton 10 30 " I 4 15 " Ar Laurens Lv y 50 :< BETWEEN HODGES AND ABBEVILLE. I Daily. Daily. No. II. Stations. No. 12. Mixed. Mixed. j 3 00 pin Lv Hodges : 3 20 .' Darraugh's [ 3 35 " Ar Abbeville Lv Ex. Sun. i No. 45: Stations. 8 00 am Lv Hodges 8 25 " Darraugh's 8 40 .. Ar Abbeville CONNECTIONS VIA SOUTH. BOUND RAIL ROAD. Daily. Daily. No. 9. Central Time. No. 38. ti 45 am Lv Columbia Ar 2 40 pm II :10 am Ar Savannah Lv 10 20 am Dailv. Daily. No. 39. Central Time. No. 10. 12 30 pm Lv Columbia Ar 9 00 pm 5 10 pm A r Savannah Lv 4 00 pm I Parlor Cars Ketween Columbia aud Savannah. Trains 'eave Spartanburg, S. C., A. & C. Division, Northbound, 4.1>9 A. M., 3.4?> p. M., 6.00 P. M. (Vestibuled Limited): I Southbound, 1.56 A. M., 3.36 P. M.. 11.37 A. M. [Vestibuled Limited); Westbound. W. >,. C. Division, 6.50 P. M. for Hender sons ?He, Asheville and Hot Springs. Tia:ns leave Greenville, S. C., A. & C. Division, Northbound, 3.07 A. M., 2.26 P. M.. 5.08 P. M. (Vestibuled Limited): Southbound. 3.07 A. M., 4.42 P. M., 12.28 p. M. (Vestibuled Limited). Trains leave Seneca, S. C., A. ?fe C. Division. Northbound, 1.36 A. M.. 12.15 P. it. ; Southbound. 4.38 A. M.. 6.30 P. M. Trains Nos. ll and 12 on the C. and G Division, and Trains 13 and 14 on the A. and S. Division will run solid to and from Charleston over the S. C. R. R. I'ULLMAN CAR SERVICE. Pullman Sleeper on 13 and 14 between Charleston and Asheville, via Columbia and Spartanburg. Pullman Palace Sleeping Caron trains 10, 11 and 12. :'.7 and 38 on A. & C. Division. W. A. TURK, Gen'l Pass. Agt.. Washington, 1). C. S. H. HARDWICK. Ass't Gen'l Pass. Apt.. Atlanta, Ga. V. E. M< BEE. Gen'l Supt., Columbia, S. ( '. SOL. HAAS. Traffic Manager, Washington. D. C. W. IL GREEN, General Manager. Washington, I). C. Atlantic Coast Line, Passenger Department, Wilmington, N. C., April ls. 189::. Fast Line Between Charleston and Columbia and Upper South Carolina, North Carolina, and Allions and Atlanta. WESTWARD. .No. 52. Leave Charleston. 7 00am " Lanes. 8 32 " " Sumter. 9 43 " Arrive Columbia.10 55 " " Prosperity.12 22 p ul " Newberry.12 38 " " Clinton. 130 " *' Greenwood. 2 51 " " Abbeville. .': 23 " " Athens. 5 .">2 " " Atlanta. 8 15 " " Winnsboro. 5 10 pm " Charlotte. 7 3o " " Anderson. 4 35 p m " Greenville. 4 50 " " Spartanburg. 6 50 " " Hendersonville.9 0;'' '* 44 Asheville.10 10 " EASTWARD. .No. 53. Leave Asheville. 7 00 a m " Hendersonville. 8 02 " " Spartanburg.10 20 44 44 Greenville.12 10pm -41 Anderson. 1 15 44 44 Charlotte. 9 35 am 44 Winnsboro.ll 54 44 " Atlanta. S 30 a m " Athens.ll 04 " 44 Abbeville_. 1 42 p m " Greenwood. 2 15 44 " Clinton. 3 30 44 j '* Newberry.4 18 44 ** Prosperity. 4 34 44 i " Columbia.6 10 44 Arrive Sumter. 7 25 " 41 Lanes. 8 3?? 44 " Charleston.10 15 14 1 * Daily. Nos. 52 and 53 Solid Trains between , Charleston ano Clinton, S. C. H. M. EMERSON, Ass't Gen'l Passenger Agent. J. R. KENLT, General Manager. T. M. EMERSON, Traffic Manager. 8 Surveying. LANDS SURVEYED in any part ol the county. Prices reasonable. L H. HARRISON. October 8. 1891. 41-tf SURVEYING. WM. F. ERVIN will be found at his office, on South side ol Main street, when his Services are desired on Surveys. May?, 1892. Rictonfl & Danville Bailroafl. F. W. HUIDEKOPER AND REUBEN .FOSTER. RECEIVERS. Atlanta & Charotte Air Line Division. CONDENSED SCHEDULE OF PASSENGER TRAINS IN EFFECT NOVEMBERS). 1892. , Northbound. EASTERS TIME. N?. 38. Mo. IO. Wo. Vi. Daily. Daily. ; Daily. Lv. Atlanta (E. T.)- 12.43 pm 9.20pin 8.05 am " Cham:lice. .. 8.40 " " Noreross. 10.03 " s.52 - ?** Duluth. 10.13 " 9.04 " " Suwanee.10.23 " 9.15 ' " Buford. 10.37 .. 9.2? " " Flowery Branch. 10.51 " 9.42 " " Gainesville. 2.13 pm :..io .. 10.03 " " Lula. 2.32pm ll.36 " 10.27 " " Bellton.11.38 " 10.30 " " Cornelia. 12.05 am 10.51 " " Mt. Airy. 12.09 " 10.55 " " Toccoa.12.37 " 11.19 " " Westminster. 1.17 .' 11.56 " .' Seneca... 1.36 " 12.15 pm " Central. 2.10 .. 1.20 " M Eaaleys. 2.42 .. 1.55 " " Greenville. 5.08pm 3.07 .. 2.26 M " Greer's. . 3.35 .. 3.00 " " Wellford. 3.56 .. 3.20 " " Spartanburg. O/wpn. 4.09 .. 3.48 " ?? Clifton. 4;?> " 4.08 " " Cowpens .i 4.3?i " 4.<i " " Gaffnevs.'. 4.? " 4.42 " " Blacfcsburg. 6.48 pm 5.-09 .* 5.03 " u Grover. 5.18 .' 5.15 " " King's Mt. 5..S4 .. 5.35 " " Gastonia. 5.57 .' 6.05 " .' Lovell. 6.0? .. 6.20 .? " Belleniont. 6.17 ?. 6.32 *4 Ar. Charlotte. 8.06pm 6.40 - 7.<<0 " Southbound. yo. :t7. yo. ii. yo. ?. Daily. Daily. Daily. :*.3 ". am Lv. Charlotte. ... " Bel lemont. " Lowell. " Gastonia. " King's Mt. " (?rover.-.. .. Blaeksburg.10.48 am .' GsTneys. . " Cowuens. " Clifton.!. " Spartanburg. 11.37 am " Wellfoid . " Greer's. " Greenville. 12.2> pm " Easters. " Central. " Seneca . " Westminster. " Toccoa. .. Mt. Airy.". " Cornelia. " Bellton. " Lula. 3.15 pm " Gainesville. 3.33 " " Flowery Branch. ' Buford. " Suwanee. " Duluth. .' Noreross. . *' Chan>l'"se. Ar. Atlai .. E. T.).... 4.55 pm 1.00 pm 1.25 .? 1.33 " 1.46 " 2.11 " 2.28 .. 2.37 " 2.55. " 3.20 .. 3.* " 3.36 " 4.00 4.15 " 4.42 " 5.14 : 6.05 .. 6.?' .. 6.48 " . :.2s " 8.1X) " S.H3 .. 8.26 '. ; 8.28 ? 8.53 .. 9.12 " 9.24 9.38. " 9.50 10.03 '. ll.ofl 11.20 pm 11.42 " 11.52 12.02 ani 12.28 " 12.44 " 12.54 " 1.11 .' 1.36 " 1.39 " li?" 2.18 2^5 " 3.07 3.35 " 4.10 " 4.:? " 4.58 " \40 " 6.15 " 6.18 " .6.41 " 6.43 " 7.07 " 7.26 " 7.38 ,; 7.52 " 8.03 " 8.14 " 8.25 y.oo pm Additional trams Nos. 17 ami 18-Lula accom modation, daily except Sunday, leaves Atlanta 5.351>. m.. arrives Luia s.2o p. m. Returning, leave's Lula 6.00 a. m.. arrives Atlanta 8.50 a. m. Between Lula and Athens-Nos. ll and 9, daily, leave Lula 8.30 p m. and 10.35 m.. arrive Ath ens 10.15 p. m. and 1220 p. m. Returning leave Athens, Nos. lo and 12, daily, 6.30 p. m. and8.07 a m.. arrive Lula 8.15 p. m. and 9.50 a. Between Tooeoa and Elberton-No. 63 and No. 8, daidy except Sunday. leave Toccoa 7.45 a.m. and 11.25 a. m.. arri ve KI be rion 11.35 a. m. and 220p.m. R^wrning, No. 62and No. 12. daily except Sunday, leave Elberton 3.00 p. m. and 7 30 a. m., arrive Toccoa 7.00 p. m. and 1025 a. m. Nos. 9 and 10 Pullman SIeej>er between Atlanta and New York. Nos. 37 and 38-Washington arid Southwestern Vestibuled Limited, between New York and Atlanta. Through Pullman Sleepers between New York and New Orlean>. and l>etween New York and Augusta; also between Washington and Memphis, via Atlanta and Birmingham, uniting between Atlanta and Bim ingham with Pullman Sleeper to and from Shreveport, La., via Meridian and Vicksburg. No. 3> connect* at Spartanburg with Pullman Sleeper for Asheville. Nos. li and 12- Pullman Buffet Sleeper betweer Washington and Atlanta, uniting between Dan ville' aud Greensboro with Pullman Sleeper to and from Portsmouth and N-.rfolk. For detailed information as to local and through time tables, tates and Pullman Sleeping Car reservations, confer with locat agents, or adfl ress W. A. TI RE, General Passenger Agent, Washington. l>. C. M. II. HARDWICK, Ass't Gen*I Pas?. Agt., Atlanta. Ga. J. A. DODXOX, Superintendent, Atlanta, Ga. Genera] Manager, Washington, 1>. C. MOI.. II A A?, Trarho Manager, Washington. D. C. Soi Carolina Railway, D. IL CHAMBERLAIN, Receiver. C. M. WARD. General Manager. .1. M. TURNER, SuperintendKifc E. P. WA KIN?;. Gen"! Pass. Ag*t. In Effect February 1. 18i>3. s. c. R'V GOING SCHEDULE. STATIONS. No 1. No n. No : A.M. A.M. P.] Lv Charleston ... ?'. 50 Summerville . . 7 2S PregnalL'? ... s o.", Ar Branchville . . s 45 Lv Branchville . . '?. 00 South RM Cross*"; !' ? Blackville . . . 10 00 Aiken . ... ll 02 S 00 Grao- cvillc . .1! 15 S IT Ar Angosta . . . II 40 S 50 Union Depot . .!!."" 9 00 I.v Branchville . . > 50 Orangeburg . . '.' 19 '. St. Matthew's . '.- 4i Fort Motte. . . 0 55 ; Ringville ... lo 07 ; Ar Columbia ... tl 00 1< Lv Ringville . . . Roy ki n's . . . Ar Camden .... N< P.M. Lv Charleston . Summerville Pregnaifs . Branchville Branchville South BM < roi Blackville . . Aiken . . Graniteville Augusta. . . I nion Depot , Branchville Orangeburg Ringville . . Columbia . . C. K" Y lc ETI. STATIONS. Ht lo ii 11 30 No Vi. P.M. ll' ol 12 .> 'IO 00 51 40 7 ! ; ?4 00 S :> te 17 ll tC> 1 4.' 4 :?5 4 55; ."? ;>.") 4:. 1 47 2 15 :: 00 :; 4?> I..MN?. N< ?'.'?.. A.M. SCHEDULE. No 20. No 12. A.M. I'M. Lv ( 'aniden . . . Ar Ringville . . Lv Columbia . . Ringville . Fort Motte . . M. Matthew's. ( >ran<:ebur? . Ar Branchville Lv Union Depot . Augusta. . . Graniteville Aiken . . . Blackville . . South UM Cross' Ar Branchville . Lv Branchville Precrall's . . Summerville . Ar ( 'bar?eston . . Lv Camdem . . Ar Ringville . . L~ Columbia . . Kinpville . . Orangeburg . Ar Branchville . Lv Union Depot . Augusta . . Graniteville . Aiken . . . Blackville . . South BM Cross' Ar Branchville . Lv Branchville . Summerville . Ar Charleston . . A.M. . S 17 . U '?s ; :> 4:; . 10 2"> A.M. . I" MO . Il 13 . 11 .v_> P.M. . 12 40 No 14. P.M. 4 50 5 00 ."> 2.1 :? 40 ?; 48 7 05 7 50 s 40 v 00 S 47 S '/.> !? 14 9 42 lo 15 P.M. ?; 10 ? ; -?n ..- 1',? t; 10 ti .". 7 4:> S 20 P.M. 3 00 3 IO :{ 45 4 05 A.M. P.M. lo 30 S 25 .M. : 4A 9 OS 9 47 P.M. io :? ll 30 No 14. P.M. 12 50 2 IO 1 40 2 -21 -11 :} 40 8 45 '.' 00 3 42 4 52 5 30 CAVEATS* TRADE MARKS* DESIGN PATKMTS ,,] need TtetaformsHou ?od free Minor COPYRICHTS, **" Q A O n re? Handbook write to \ fx JOSS Jt CO., ca BROASwxmgBtm YORK. O. lest burean .'or tecurins patents in Amalea. ETO-T patent iakec ?at br us is brought before the puD^c DJ? zc.u-a given free of charge iaiie wmm jaart *LS0?Oc aontas. AaVdran li PvautaaatM, .?-*$ 1 zrotawKr, atm C.