The weekly Union times. [volume] (Union C.H., South Carolina) 1871-1894, June 21, 1878, Image 4
IIABD ON THE JUBY.
A jury cf twelve decent men,
Procured from the county at large,
It) duly empanelled to try
An intricate criuiiual charge.
The cage is not plain, at the best,
Peculiar and puzzling throughout ;
Then chemists are brought to the front
To add to the haystack of doubt.
A chemical battle begins,
And rages with desperate fury,
, 'Tis sport to the chemists, perhaps,
But awfully hard on the jury.
Then soon it appears to the court,
To counsel and bystanders too,
That the question of guilt with the case
Has little, indcod, to do.
The question at issue, though not
In any indictment set down,
Is whether this chemist or mat
Can toast the other one brown.
That each is an ass or a fraud,
They solemnly, sharply nssuro ye?
A point interesting to them,
But awfully dull for the jury,
With boxes and bottles and vials,
And filters and pamphlets and books,
With batteries, glasses, and acids,
And Very acidulous looks ;
They mix, ns they please, nasty messes,
And each renowed scientist tries,
To prove that the tests of the other
Are onty productive of lies.
They show by their opposite systems
How poisons may kill or may cure ye,
Which satisfies them, we niny hope,
llut awfully puzzles the jury.
None question the old and true saying,
That Doctors can never agree,
And why they should fight out their quarrels
In courts, His not easy to see
In its breach would the custom be honored,
Which bothers our juries of late,
Of a chemist retained by defendant,
And uuothcr retained by the State.
So, chemists, reform if you can,
Or justice not long will endure yc ;
Your squabbles, though good for your trade.
Aro awfully hard on the jury.
Wills in Rhyme.?The following verse from
nn nhl number of Jllnckwood' it Mtiaozinr, warns
all women against making their own wills :
"Testators are good ; but a feeling mere tender
Springs up when 1 think of the feminine gender
;
The testatrix for me, who, like Telemaque's
mother,
Unweaves at one time what she wove at another;
bhe bequeaths, she repents, she recalls a donation,
And she ends by revoking her own revocation ;
Still scribbling or scratching some now codicil?
Oh, success to the woman who makes her own
will!"
Wills in rhyme are rare, in a ease decided
in the l'robate Court in 1H70 the testator made
u codicil to his will as follows :
"I, having neither kith nor kin,
TScqucath all I have named herein
To Margarot, my dearest wife.
To have and hold as hers for life;
While in good health and sound in mini,
This codicil I've undersigned."
Another cm ions specimen of a w ill in rhyme
is that of a Mr. William Jacket!, of lsliugton,
Middlesex, proved in 17b0:
"I give and bequeath,
When I'm laid underneath,
To my two loving sisters most dear,
The whole of my store,
Were it twice as much more.
Which (lod's goodness has granted me here.
"And that 110 one may prevent
This my will and intent,
n ... : . l- 1
Vi ut'tiiniuu inu icaai ii?v,i\vi,
With n solemn appeal,
1 confirm, sigu ami seal,
Tliin iho true act ami deed of Will, Jacket.
+ m "Elizabeth ami Ann,
Iu the name of God, Amen."
HOUSEHOLD RECIPES.
Hair Tunic?Bay rum, one pint; alcohol,
Jialf a pint; castor oil, half an ounce ;
carbonate of atutnonia, a quarter of an
ounce; tincture of cantharidcs, half an
ouueo. Mix theui well. This mixture is
said to promote the growth of the hair, and
prevent it from lulling out.
Freckle and Tan Recipe.?Four
pounds of good hard soap; shave line and
dissolve in ten quarts of boiling soft water;
add one ounce of salts of tartar, three
ounces borax. Then take away from the
lire and set to cool; then add one ounce of
Jiq jid ammonia, two ounces glycoriac and
ten drops of oil of sassafras.
Neuralgia and Rheumatism.?A
very simple relief for neuralgia is to boil a
small handful of lobelia in half a point of
water till the strength is out of the herb,
then strain it off and add a teaspoonful of
line salt Wring cloths out of the liquid
as hot as possible, and spread over the part
affected. It acts like a charm. Ch autre
the cloths ns soon as cold, till tlio pain is all
gone ; then cover the place over, so as to
prevent taking cold. Rheumatism can
often be relieved by application to the painful
parts of cloths wet in a solution of salsoda
in water. If there is inflammation in
the joints, the cure is very quick; the wash
needs to be lukewarm.
? .?. _
A Resolute Woman's Fiuiit.?On
Friday night, near Tazewell Court House,
fa., two men went to the house of Mrs.
Becky Baldwin and asked her to give them
some silver in exchange for notes, offering
seven dollars of the latter for five dollars of
the former. They soon left, hut returned,
broke open the door and entered her bedroom.
They demanded her pockctbook, and
threatened violence if she did not give it.
Sl,n ??nl I... -I .1 .
uuu nxuv iu HVI UIVM, uoiiuuraieiy IOOK UlC
pockotbook from it anil threw it in the fire.
One of the tramps stooped to got it out,
and she snncthed up an axe and dealt him
a terrific blow, knocking his bruins out on
the hearth-stone. The second tramp then
drew a dirk knife, rushed at her and stabbed
her twice in the left breast. She dealt
him a fearful blow with the axe, nearly severing
his right arm near the shoulder.?
Mis dead body was found next morning.?
A. young white man came by and found
Mrs. Haldwiu dying. The dead bodies of
thc tramps were thrown in a h<>g pen, so
great was the indignation <>f the people in
the vicinity.
THE TROUBLE OF A POET.
While Colonel Hangs, editor of the
Aryiis, was sitting in his offico one day, a
uian whoso brow wus clothed with thunder
entered. Fiercely seiziug a chair, ho slammed
his hat on tho table, hurled his umbrella
on tbo flwpf and sat down.
"Are you tho editor ?" he asked.
"Yes."
"Cau you read writing f"
"Of courso." . >
"Read that, then," he said, thrusting at
the colonel an envelope with au inscription
on it.
"R- said the colonel, trying to spell
it.
"That's not a B. It's an S," said the
uiau.
"S; O yes; I see ! Well, the words look
a little like 'Salt for Dinuer,' or 'Souls of
o: Ml !.l if. ? _ I 1
colours, saui uio coionci.
"No, sir," replied the man, "nothing of
tho kind! That's my name?Saui'l II.
Pruuncr. I knew you couldu't read. 1
ealled to see you about that poem of mine
you printed the other day, on tho 'Surcease
of Sorrow.'"
"I don't remember it," said the colonel.
"Of eourso you don't, because it went
into the paper under the iufamous title of
Smcarcaso To-morrow.' "
"A stupid blunder of tbo compositors, I
suppose."
"Yes, sir, and that's what I want to see
you about. The way in which that poem
was mutilated was simply scandalous. I
haven't slept a night since. It exposed me
to derision. People think I am an ass.?
Let me show you."
"Go ahead," said the colonel.
"The first line, when I wrote it, read in
this way.
Lying by a weeping willow, underneath a gentle
slope.
That is beautiful, poetic, affecting. Now
how did your vile sheet present it to the
public '{ There it is ! Look at that! Made
it read this way :
Lying to a weeping widow to induce her to
clopc.'
Weeping widow, mind you ! A widow ?
This is too much ! It's enough to drive a
man crazy!"
I'm sorry," said the colonel; "but?"
"Put lock a-hcrc at the fourth verse,"
said the poet. "That's worse yet. What
I said was:
Cast thy pearls before the swine, and lose them1
in the dirt.' <
L wrote that out clearly and distinctly, in a
.. 1
I'ltAttj, iuuuu IUIIIU. wuui uuua 3*0111
compositor do V Does he catch the scusc
of that beautiful sentiment? Docs it sink
tuto his soul? No, sir! lie sots it up in
this fashiou. Listen: \
Cart thy pills before the sunrise an<l love tlicm
if they hurl.'
Now, isn't that a cold-blooded outrage on a
man's feclitias ? I'll leave it to you if it
isn't?" ' It's
hard, that's a fact," said the colonel.
"And then take the tilth verse In the
original manuscript it said, plaiu as daylight
:
'Take away the jingling money ; it is only glittering
dross !
A man with only one eye, and a cataract
ovejr that, could have read the words correctly.
Hut your pirate up stairs there, do
you know what he did? lie made it read:
Take away the jeering monkeys on a sorely
glandered hoss!
HyG eorge, I felt like braining him with a
lire shovel ! I was yevcr so cut pp jn mar
lite." A&
"It was natural, loo," said the colonel.
"There, for instance, was the sixth verse.
I wrote:
I am weary with tlie tossing of the ocean as ft
heaves.'
It is a lovely line, too; but imagine my
horror and the anguish of my family, when
I opened your paper and saw the line transformed
into:
1 am wearing out my trousers till they're open
at the kuces!'
That is a little too much ! That seems to
uic like carrying the thing an inch or two
too far. I think I have a constitutional
right to murder that compositor; don't
you ?"
' 1 think you have."
"Let me read you one more verse. I
wrote:
'I swell the Hying echoes as they roam among
the hills,
And 1 l'ecl my soul awaken to tiic ccstacy that
thrills.'
Now, what do you s'poso your miserable
outcast turned that into ? Why, into this:
'I smell the frying shoes as they roast along the
bulls,
And 1 peel my soul mistaken in the crctary that
whirls.,
(jibborish, sir! Awful gibberish! I must
slay that utan. Where is ho?"
' lie is out, just now," said the Colonel.
"Come in to-morrow."
"I will,' said the poet; "and I will come
armed."
Then he put oil his hat, shouldered his
umbrella, and drifted off down stairs.
. O
"Hoys," sai l a south side school teacher
"knowledge never comes without seeking.
"Stick a pin there and as he shot up
front his scat like a jack in the box, he
offered a reward of live dollars for the hoy
who had stuck a piu there, and one of the
I boys held up his hand and said the teacher
was wrong. lie had no knowledge of that
pin in his chair, had not sought it, and yet
it came.
A man might take himself by the scat
of the breeches and lift until his eyes bulged
out on his cheeks and ho couldn't lift
himself an inch, hut let the business end of
a wasp get hold of the same place and it
i will lilt a man ten feet in a second.
>
The man who was t i ptihlidi a paper to
please every body fell out of Noah's boat
and was drowned.
A young lady studying physiology, in one
of our public schools, iu answer to a question,
said that in seven years a human body
became changed, so that not a particle which
was iu it at the commencement ot the period
would rcmaiu at the close ot it. 'Then
Miss Leslie,' said the young tutor "in seven
yeuxs you will cease to be Miss Leslie?"?
sir, I hope so,' said she, very
modestly, looking at the floor.
A*u exchange has an article telling "IIow
matches are made." We supposed everybody
knew it was by taking a youug man and
youtig woman, equal parts, and lot them sit
up together about six months, telling them
a few thnes in this iuterval that they should
never haiuj each other. Still there may
be other ways we havcu't heard of.
-?*
A celebrated actress, whose fresh smile
and silver voice favored the dccption, always
called herself "sweat sixteen." She stated
her age jps 1G in court as a witness, ller
son was ^directly afterward called up and
a3kod him old he ^as. "Six months older
than mother." was the honest renlv.
* - ' ? ?
A dealer advertises "NoyeULgMyfcfgfltctbook*."
Wo should* BS^s a little
ehau^tN'n ours.
That would be a uovclty to us.?Ed.
Times. .
He belonged to tho tribe of Ashantce,
And he dwelt with bis aunt in a shanty.
Whenever lie ate
He passed her his plate,
And said, "A little of that hash aunty."
VEGETINE
Purifies the Blood, Renovates
and Invigorates the Whole
System.
ITS MEDICAL PROPERTIES ARE
Alterative, Tonic, Solvent,
and Diuretic.
VxaETOCEid medo exclusively from the ulcee of
carefully-selected barks, root, aud herbs, and bo
Strongly concentrated that it will effectually sradisgty
from the system every taint of Hcrofulu,
lous llumor, Tumors, Cnnca?, 'Cancerous
Humor, Erysipelas, NtJt Uheum, Nyphl.
i Ulle Diseases, Canker, Faintnens at the
fcUotnaoh, and all disoaeoe that arlso from impuro
, blood. ; Krlntirn, Inflammatory and Chronlo
Rheumatism, Ncuralala, (lout, and Spinal
Complaints, can only be effectually cured through
1 the blood. 9. '
? For Ulcers and Ernptlvo Dlsenses of the
) Skin, Pustules, Pimples, Blotches, Bolls,
\Totter, Hraldhend, and Ringworm, Vegetia*
has never failed to effect a permanent cure. ^
For Pains In the Back, Kidney Com.
plaints, Dropsy, Female Weakness, I.cncorrhcea,
ari.ing from internal* ulceration, and
uterinedisoasos and General Debility, Veoetime
acta directly upon the causes of these complaints.
It invigorates and strengthens the whole
? ayatyn, acts upon tho secretive organs, allays inflam
viuktWii. cur. n4 n(.Mw?hn bowel*. I
For Catarrh, Dyspepsia, Habitual Cos.
tiVencns, Palpitation of the lleart, Head,
ache, . Plies, Nervousness, and General
Prostration of the Nervous Hystem,' no
medioine has ever given auch perfoct satisfaction as
the Veoetime. It purifies the blood, cleanses all of
the organs, and posesses s controlling power over*s
nervous system. .
Thtfhemarksbl. onres effected by Veoetime have
induce<Tpiany physicians and apotheoaries whom ws
know, to prescribe and use it in their own families.
In fact, Veoetime is the best remedy yet discovered
for the above diseases, and is the only reliable
BIvOOD PURIFJLEKjet placed before tho public.
THE BEST EVIDENCE.
' dttik f~~ it r. Boat. Pastor
K. B. Cbvrcb, Natick Hui, will bo rood witfl
Interact by many physicians; also those suffering
tram the seme disease as afflicted the son of the Hot.
U.S. Best. No person can doubt this testimony, as <
there Is no doubt about tho curative powers of
Vkoetime. Naticx, Mam.. Jan. 1,1871
MB. H. R. Sn.TXNs: ?. .
fV?r Sir,?Wo have good reason for regarding
your Vkoetimx a medicine of the greatest value.
We feel assured it has been the means of saving onr
son's life, lie is now seventeen yoara of sge. For
the last two years be ban suSerod from necrosis of
his leg, caused by scrofulous affection, and was to
far reaucod tnat nearly all who saw him thought his
recovery impossible. A council of ablo physicians
could give un but the faintest hope of his ever rally.
lng ; two of tho number declaring that he was beyond
the reach of human rumediex, that even amputation
could cot save him, as he had not vigor enough to
endare the operation. Justlthon we commenced
i givuig him Veoetine, and from that time to ut, v
i>r,'tknl 1j* Iiu been continuously impooofag. ''?
f,..VJately rosumgd. lih. studies, thrown away his
crutches and caue, and walks about cheerfully and
strong.
Though there is still some discharge from the
opening where tho limb whs lanced, we have tho
fullest confidence that in a little timo he will bo per.
fectur cured.
lUbas tmken about three dozen bottles of Veok.
TufB but lately uses hut little,as ho declaraa that
he MO well to be taking medicine.
M Respect fully jours,
m K M. BEST.
W Mat. JU 0.1;'. IlliifT
} VECETINE
v Prepared by ^
IL Jf. STEVENS, Boston,Mass.'
Vegetini is Sold by all Druggist*1
MRS.' RICHARDS'
New Millinery.
IWOUI.I) respectfully inform the I.atlics of
I'nioti I hut 1 shall continue to receive monthly
the latest stvles of
AM) SI MMI K HATK,
fat Pricos from 25 Cents up,)
and will continue to keep a full Stock of al.
i 1
M i 1 1 i 11 o r y tiootls,
and will l?e pleased to have all my old Customers,
and as many new ones as will favor me with
their patronage, to call and examine my good's
before purchasing elsewhere. As I have always
sold everything in my line
AS CHKAP OR OUKAITJl
Than any one in this placo,
I shall continue business on that line all Summer
**?
It itaords me pleasure to show my goods,.
whctMryou purchase or not.
n&lK AM) SKK H?U MM USKLVUS.
Kemcifbor, my store i* the lirsl door above llice
1 ft MoLurc's establishment.
f K. KICHMthS.
Mh 10 10 if
HARD-PAN REACHES)
NEW GOODS! NEW GOODS'!
WE are now receiving a well selected Stoek ,
of SPUING GOODS at prices to suit the
times,
CONSISTING OF
DRY GOODS,
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC.
CLOTHING, (
FROM THE COMMONEST TO THE
BEST ENGLISH WORSTED. ;
CASSIMEEES ,
VIRGINIA AND NORTHERN.
PRICES DOWN.
STAR SHIRTS,
Made in the Best Manner and of
CHOICEST MATERIAL.
LADIES' AND GENT'S
LiINEN OOtLARS AND CUFFS.
A LARGE LINE OF LADIES' AND GENT'S
Silk lies and Kid Gloves,
Hamburg Edgings, Exhibition RutHiugs,
A NEW AND FULL STOCK OF
Ladies', Gent's and Children's IIosc.
Corded and figured Piques,
IN GREAT VARIETY.
Linen Handkerchiefs.
Parasols, latest styles and colors.
Hardware,
Woodenwarc,
Tinware.
BRIDLES/AND SADDLES.
SADDLE BLANKETS.
TABLE and POCKET CUTLERY.
Our Stock of Handmade and Custom-made i
shoes, I
CAST UK UK AT.
livery I'lllJ Warranted.
It o c icIt 110 !S,
Sugar, Co flee, Molasses,
lticc, Grist, Hacon,
Flour, Salt, Corn and Corn Meal.
We are determined to sell. Call and examine
our goods and compare oqr prices.
GKE <!t llinPHItlES,
April l'J 10 tf
T. O.
MERCHANT TAILOR,
IS prepared to do all kinds of work in his
line according to
THE LATEST FASHION,
on the shortest Notice, and at the lowest possi^
Mo price*.--"""" '
Cutting Done in Hie hi^il .
support your own mechanics,
so that you may sleep well under tho satisfaction
of having done something for a worthy
tax-paying neighbor.
May 3 is tf
W XX A TV < > T
GIVE ME A FAIR TRIAL?
P. T. LEMASTER,
CARPENTER and BUILDER,
. r UNION, S. C.
171STTM AT'eR- giyen on any kind of work at
J any time. '.My inot'o Is, Lowest l*ric$ 1.
licst Work ! Shortest Time !
rT II Y M IS I
P. T. LUIIANTEK, is agent for a'l
kinds of Pictures and Picture Frames and cord,
&c. Parties can save 100 per cent by giving
their orders to me.
TRY ME.
I*. T. M:MASTI;K. Agent for Japanese
Paper Carpeting. It is handsomer, cheaper
and belter than Oil Cloth.
TUY IT!
P..T. Sj2!.>I A NT 1'! IS, Agent for Patent
Paper Hooting. The fact that there is, 2u,<>00
feet in use in this town and vicinity is a sulli|
cient recommendation for it.
I am prepared to roof houses of any size and
, warrant the same. Estimates given on applica|
tion.
You can save ?2.2"> per square by using it.
THY IrJL\
April 6 14 tf
The State of South Carolina*.
COUXTY OF CXI OX.
T>~1i ?- " ^
\ hub. i?uu , as JlHIll r 01 |
Joshua P. Dawkins. ,, . ,
J'lainfiir. | ( ourt
Sarah Dawk his, ct a!. j Amnion Picas.
Defentluu t*. J
! I >URSI.*AXT to an order it> this case, thocredJ[
itors of Joshua P. Dawkins, deceased, arc
required to present and establish their demands
before me. oil or before the first Monday in July
next, (1*78) JOS. K. (11ST,
Special Referee.
March 20 12 lilt
Ucun make money faster at work for ns than
at anything else. Capital not required ;
we will start you. ?11! per tiny at home
made l>y the industrious. Men, women,
hoys and girls wanted everywhere to work for
us. Now is the time. Costly outfit and terms
free. Address Tni K & Co., Augusta, Maine.
.March 16 I'l If.
T| "1^^(1X1 business yon can engage In.?
I $"? to !?20 per day made hy any
U .|JN/ Ju worker of either sex, right in
their own localities. Particulars
and samples worth ? "? free. Improve your
spare time at this business. Address Stinson
.v: Co., Portland, Maine.
March 1.1 11 tf.
1>. A. T <? W N S 10 IN l> .
Attorney at Law,
1 \ I ON . II.. S. C,
March 2 fr tf
The State of South Carolina,
COUNTY OF UNION.
In the Court of Probate.
UY JOS. F. GIST, Judge of Probate in Union
County.
diehard Kirby, Patsdy Mitchell, Hcney Charewood,
David Lewis, John Kirby, Wright
Kirby, Ilenry Kirby, Drown, and
other defendants, whose names are not known.
6'reeling :
YOU arc hereby required to appear at tho
Court of Probate, to be holdcn at Union
Court House for Union County, on the second
day of July, A. D. 1878, to show cause, if any
you ean, why tlie Real Estate of Oliver Kirby,
deceased, situated in said County, bounded by
lands of J. L. Wood, Madison Kirby and others,
and containing one hundred and forty-six
acres, more or less, should not be partitioned
or sold for division, allotting to the petitioner,
It. F. Bates, one-eighth part thereof, and tho
remaining seven-eights, in equal portions, to
the said ltichard Ivirby, Patscj' Mitchell, Iteney ?
Charewood, David Lewis, John Kirby, Wright
Kirby, Ilenry Kirby, Brown, and the other
defendants, whoso names are not known.
Given under my Hand and Seal, this fifteenth
(15th) day of May in the year of our Lord
one thousand eight hundred and seventyeight,
and in the ono hundred and scqond
year of American Independence,
JOS. F. GIST,
Judge of Probate^ ~ -?.? - j
To the defendants,"Richard Ivirby, Pntsey
ell, Roncy Charewood, David Lewis, JohnXirby.
Wright Kirby, Ilenry Kirby, ? Brown,; v
and the other defendants, whoso names di'dV?
not known: *
Take notice that the Sltrntflohs in this Itctioil, **
of which the foregoing is n copy, was filed in
the Court of Probate for Union County, at ^
Union, in the County of Union, on the fifteenth ~v
day of May, eighteen hundred aud seventy- ft
eight, and that the object of this action is to <>bIjtiu
partition of the premises nbovo described,
to be triads among tlie owners thereof, by Commissioners
appointed for that purpose, or to obtain
a sale thereof to be made, and a division of
the proceeds, if a partition cannot be made,
without prejudice to the interests of the owners,
no personal claim is made against you.
Union, S. C., May loth, 1878.
KV!-'o & bq:?ATI,
,, Attorneys Tor Petitioners.
Maylo 20 ,.t ^
it, iTowjon,
CARRIAGE PAINTER ..
^ V.
AXI) TROIMEIt,
SIGN AMI ORNAMENTAL' PAINTER,
WOULD respectfully inform the public that
he has rented Mr. W. A. Nicholson's
Warehouse, in which he has opened a shop for
the purpose of carrying 011 the above business,
where he will always he found, ready to do any
kind of Painting, from n
Walking Stick to it I^ooofito'ivc*
Having served an apprenticeship in one of
the best Coach Shops in the State, I feel assured
that I can give you us good a job of
Carriage Painting
or Trimming as you can get anywhere.
Old llutc^ies lioiiovutcd,
and made to look as good as now. M
? All work warranted * to give satisfaction, or 9
no charge.
TRY MR A XI) a IVI-: A GOOD WORKMAN
A eilAXCE.
May 10 19 tf
TIME TABLE OF THE
Spartanburg & Aslieville R. R.
AM) *
S.T.tt (. RAILKOAI).
To go into Effect, Monday, May 0, 1878.
DOWN TRAIN. | UP TRAIN.
A rive. | Leave, j STATIONS, j A rive, j Leave.7
lit a in Tryoii 4 it y 6 50 a in
r. . 2 23 Uiiiilriiins 0 28;
tv * 7 -10 t'uiii|H>bclla 0 OK8
00 Ionian 5 *?
8 10 Campion 5 S*
8 :50 Air-Line Jnne'o 5 '1"
f8 10 a in 9 10 S|xirt anbury 0 09pin .7 on a in
9 54 I acolet 5 25
110 13 .loiu'svillo 5 0.7
10 1" 110 50 Union 119 -I 3(#
<11 20 San I lie 8 4*>
11 .08 III in l-'isli Dam ? 29112
00 Siii'lton 8 00 p m a (K'v
112 12 Lyles Ford 2 48
12 30 St ml Iters 2 28
1 18|im| |Alston ill lopm
* lirenkfast. f Dinner.
JAS. ANDEBS0N,
Superintendent.
May 10 iO tf
Greenville and Columbia ft. R.
CHANGE OF SCHEDULE.
JETisst
Passenger Trains run daily, Sundays except- ^
ed, connecting with Night Train.? on .South Carolina
liailroad up and down. On and after
MONDAY, May UDlli, the following will he thu
sehodulo:
VP. . . .
Leave Columbia at 7.45 a m
Leave Alston 0.30 u in
Leave Newberry 10.50 a m
Leave Cokcshury 2.17 p in
Leavo Helton 4.00 p in
Arrive at Greenville 5.35 n in
nows.
Leave flreenvillc at 8.00 a in
Leave Helton 9.00 a ni
I.cave Cokes bury 11.IM a 111
Leave Newberry 2.10 j> m
Leave Alston 4.20 ]i ni
Arrive nt Columbia 0.00 p m
ANDKIISON I'll A NT II AND 1ILUK HIDGH
DIVISION,
now x. in.
Leave Walbaila....<>. 10 a 111 Arrive 7.10 p nr
Leave l'orryville...7.00 a m Arrive 0.40 p 111
Leave I'endleloii...7.0(1 a in Arrive (1.(10 n in
I,cnve An<ler?nn,..S.f>0 a in Arrive f>.<lO p ni
Arrive at Helton..A*. 10 a in Leave 4.00 [ in
THOMAS DOHAM F.A l>,
(J en era I Superintendent.
.1ani'/. Norms, .In., (lenernl Ticket Agent.
.Inno 0, IH7C,. If
/~l a week in your own town. !? "> Out
t\ ''' 'm>* No risk, (leader. if von
V/ want a business ul which persona of
either sex can make great pay all
tlie time they work, write for pnrticnlarH to II.
II ai.i.r.rr & t'o., rortland, Maine.
Mareh 1*? II If.
I'innrer I'aptr ;i mi Tact it ri nir Company.
MASI'FAt"IT*ISKI?S of Hook, News and >
wrapping l'AI'Klt.
John \\ \ it'liol<*nM, Agent. Alliens,Cla
I'nr vamp'o of New?, ier tl.i- ?-hctt.
Not 22 IT
A