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IWIWI WW. C. MeqtWAB, Mfrfaalo . . of < MMm the IImmH ef At frifWH^W tfc? 'zzSw Al 1 Viw not to- ox* yo? have 4mm dm, and deem it a priyilege 000 JUtf*WlfePfly#Bmallhesa<netime s,a Mamma to Mk jour forbearance. I 16,4 Wwt * AO expeiitooo ?a the lioe and of opooea-roaking outaide of my profeaaiou, lati< od foaling the natural diffdeooe and em- Am harrasstaent that follow* inexperience, I cm or i wly bespeak your kind indulgence. cag It does, my fiieods, giro me tnnoh pleas eav< are to bo here. I hare to look back tha \ ^ through the vista of but eleven short years, eag and all the scenes rise fresh before me, and the "The magnet of the sou' tonehe<l by4 rVmem- T shd b ranee, ,n<3 Trembles to that pole." ^ But time and distanoe in this oonsiderslion have little place. The memories of ^or[ schools and college days are aa fresh sod green afid de%htflri to the grg|r hairs of rip* Md'aga, as to the aVdaat and impulsive ^ * fire of enthusiastic youth. Timo cannot ^ tarnish nor distance^ dim; "hut all, young j and old, meot here upon an eqaal plane, aad hold 4 common , hirtteg. of grateful I memories in thdss Alaooni reunions. The sweatees word in human language is ? ' Home, end all the highest and noblest 1mpulses of s goncrous heart cluster around that blessed name. A perfect home 'where ^ ^ the father rules in wisdom and the mother reigns in love,' is not only the hope of nations, bat the very bed-rook of civilisation * itself, and no climate, no space, and no timo ?h* ?an * efface 8r? uproot the motnories I,tM that home influenoe and a mother's ?P* love baveryleDfed ip/the-human heart. not Is there p sg nMpSnl earth so tsngei^ so W mninna an lima '?? i-1--- A ? , , ou JUJUUJ, W DOIO- ?V| tiful as a family reunion ? When the w?l members of a scattered house forget for the ^UQ lime their struggles with the world and ?* gather from far and neat at tho old piter I nal homestead, live over tho days of youth mu< and re-visit the haunts of childhood?per- owi haps the only break in a chain of sorrow eatl and trouble, and there, apart from the anz- mui iety and tho wear and tear of tho daily moi battle for bread clul " Mix sobriety with wine in t And honest mirth, with thoughts divine." Sp|, If-tftsw-be- unalloyed happiness on this thrt earth, surely 'tis then* and-then. Did yon pr'u ever think how clofeo akin to these senti- T6n menta are the fseli^g-% have for onr tra(j Ainu* Mater attd these Alnmni re-unions f regl Oat Mater first, oar Alma Mater second. prit Horn# influence first and college influence and a cloaalj followiag aooond, develops tbe aire mind and moulds tbo character of plantio own jontb, and as the twig is bent so grows tbe 7 tree. Thero is to mo a strong and striking parallel between family and Alumni re- tQ|| unions. They are interwoven as parts of ^Q0, a symmetric whole. Oar natural mother, worj tbo fountain source of all that's good in w; - J Vfj imd, begins the work whleh, if properly Tajn followed up by college influences and associ- j8 8C atioos,will send forth lobattlewith the world j( member of society armed nod equipped aQ(j i in oharacter as well as intellect, and, as af0 Lord Brougham says, 'it will be his own aj3S0 fault if he looks back upon this place with BpeQ repentance or with shame; and be well t^0Q assured that whatever time, aye every hour, he speeds here- in unprofitable idle- jgno ones, will rise up against him and be paid ( for by years of bitter but unavailing re- T J: greta. ... ... , >s to I wish to-night, however, to speak to you briefly, and in a plain, practical manner, of ' some fe.v of tbe prominent and important ^ questions that confront us at present and j . ?_ t- w, ccrti demand notation in the near future. But fourteen years will elapse and we cross the __ ? TWENTIETH UBNTURY. nDg< M?t of you, the Alubini of this inatitu- beet tlftft, will just then be in the prime tod 0D8 igor of mature manhood, and upon you, nor the nation's strength, will fall the heat and inur burden of the day. It behooves us all to the give these burning questions earnest thouglrf, for I tell you, the eeatury will not have doffed her swaddling clothes before the safety, the salvation of our country, Will demand a clear and unequivooal de* 'a^c monstration. wlai far ! LABOR AND CAPITAL. mm The question of first importaooe to tho wan country at large to-day, is, in my judgment, the present conflict between labor and capitaf. The snirit of unrmt ?hinh ruirw.dn. I . r ? f"" " is at oor whole country, the numerous 'strikes' t^e, which clog the wheels of industry and par- jn^ sly to our thrift, tho labor union* which, tQrD day by day, era gaming strength, all these tlCf po.* with solemn *>4 ff<*>hetio finger to ,od the necessity for a speedy adjustment of g^i this trouble. As to the remedy I do not oe^r speculate, but I do say this. I believe most treat of the trouble is attributable to two things: |eM | 1st. The taking into our midst the out- p()H0 oasts and scum of creation in our erase for then immigration. here 2d. The amassing of enormous individual ever fortunes by unfair means. been I am not opposed to immigration. If of the i the right kind it is what we need apd what the i we want, but I am opposed to this whole- prev % ) iovildtion to the convicts sod oflcaatajj si rvery European nation ; men who here p< ympatby with our goTeroment or our-j m ?s, who do notevon know our .language, Hi *^ho eecne to Amnios to break down it not to bui!d op. Thcso are the men W > hare sown tho scod that bring forth Si ikes,' 'riots' and ' communism/ For hi mple take the city of Chioago, the late to le of such fearful stiikes and riots. Ae- h ting to a reoenl} census its nationalities ai : German, 226,000; American, 164,- w i; Scandinavian, 33,000; Irish, 120,000; K rooic, 65,000; Kogltsb, 30,000; Latin, is D00; Negroes, 8,000; Canadian, 4,000, 1 all others, 9,000, making a total popu- ? on of 650,000. In other words, the lerioans are in a minority of 347,000, ri is the New Orleans rimes puts it, 'Chi- u o is more Irish than any city in Ireland ai 9 Dublin and Belfast, and more German fi n Munich, Dresden or Cologne.' Chi- it 0 for all theso disgraceful scenes takes h lead of any Northern or Western city, p 1 I believe it is mainly due to her foreign a I disoordant population. Four-fifths of sc arrested io the recent riots eould not b ik our language and did not know out ii n of government. Tell me that such ll i make good mtincus, being naturalised ti Mb as they touch tho soil nnd breathe e air of our generous Republic ? I can- n beliove it. I am a free trader in all s< save human flesh, and I do believe that h If the population in our country would a increase quite so fast, our country would o placed upon a more solid basis of pros- a u? ir : i _ iij & vvvij uuw vuujci vruru rotjuirvu n >riog testimonial* from his government, 1 had to pay an impost duty, as it were, y are he ooald land. ^ SPECULATION. 0 ! think mueh of this nnrcst can be ? rgod too to the speculators in Wall ? iet, and tho fact that onr government oly countenances their robberies. Do n understand uie to say that I am in fa- b of limiting the right or privilege of d wiring property; by ao means, that 0 tld be to strike a blow at one of the n damental principles of our government P he right of private property. * t is the right of any man to make as a oh money as he can, and to do with his ^ i what he will, but it must be made hon- 11 y, ^without extortion or bribery. He a st not ride into wealth by crushing rc- D -selessly the weak who come within his lohes, Tho enormous fortunes acquired 11 bis manner have much to do with the ? 'it of envy and jealousy that is abroad ^ jughout the North, e. g. It is a known a loiple of political economy and a unisal maxim, that in all departments of " le and commerce Supply and Demand " alate Prices. Notwithstanding this 0 iciple, in bold defiance of all prccodent D principle, the Bulls and Bears of Wall 11 ot inflate or depress prices to suit their ^ stupenduous speculations. 'ake cotton, tho principle product of the ^ th. Wo oan, with revocable certainty the number of baleB that will be made, w the exact number of spindlos in the 01 Id, tho consumption and demand, and D with all this knowledge, wo predict in ^ i as to tho prioe. It seems to me there ^ imething radically wrong in this?an 'c ermining of fundamental prinoiples, * most of the great fortunes of the North * made in this way. Honest labor i> 'a lutoly helpless, and bold, unprincipled ulatora dictatorial masters of the situaThe toiling laborer who earns his D f bread in the Bweat of bis brow and " rant of these manipulated swindles, is P jne who suffers. Can this be right f * ay Gould has more absolute power, and -day a greater tyrant over his 60,000 j Joyces than was ever a monarch of Meal Europe. These colossal fortuaos r even our Congressional halls and to a j aia extent control legislation, until it as they menace our very government, r shall they be controlled and regulated? ^ tng man of the twentieth century, ^ rcr. This labor trouble has, as yet, ^ i little felt is the South, for the reas it that we have no snch colossal fortunes, , 18 are we trouble with tho influx of mixed ^ ligrstion; but we aro confronted with still more complicated question, TIIE NXGRO. hi 'his is, par excellence, the problem of ]j South. The negro, praetieally as a g] irer, and socially aod politically as aa & il. As a laborer, if let alone, he is by C( the best we could have ; strong, docile, gt cd to our hot Southern sun ; with few ti ta and hannv temnnramnnt Via < >?...? j r i j r , Hi i to 'boo do cotton and do cane,' and if v lly treated and intelligently overlooked, er i a clasa contented in hie state. But tt, trouble is, he is not let alone. Design- ot politicians excite bim to discontent and him against his truest friends. Fan- a( see in him the mission of their lives, mend I in sontimeatalats parade their ,j )id notions till ono might think tbo p, o an injured innocent, inhumanly ed and oruelly persecuted by the heartland owners of tho South. But, sup- M that as a laborer he i9 a failure. What wj ? He ia here in our midst and he is jtl to stay. It is an indisputable fact seen Q( If day, and which history teaohes us has f0 truo for all time, that we cannot mix uj. f bite and black races. Not only will -ace antipathy, inextinguishable as it is, sot their miogling, but it is an impoa* bility from a purely praotical and business not of view. The wants of the white an an more numerous and different from io?p of the negro. He oannot livo under te feme conditions nor work for the same ages, and therefore as a daily laborer he moot compete with the negro. We must eve all negro labor or none, and if wo oomo ?the oouolusion that all white labor is est, then what are we to do with the agro 7 Return him to his native land 7 hioh is neither Christian nor praotioable. lduoat9 him until he is our equsl ? whioh i impossible. Or keep him as he is 7 base ate questions whioh the twentieth antury will decide. For this same reason, vis: because the ices will not mix and labor together as a nit,immigration is withheld from the South ad many of our young men are driven rem their sunny homes. As I said before, nmigration, if of tho right kind, is the ope of this vast oountry, but what I oomlain of is that we are too generous, snd rhile we get much that is good, we also lake America the asylum of all who are anished from SuroDeau countries. and thus ijeot ioto oar body politic much of oril bat night be avoidod. I thiok immigraion should be regalated and oeo^ *%n.d bat yea thon, while we have the negro, it will ever come South. Nor is tho objection ilely made by the white man. The negro aa a scorn and contempt for tho wbito man rho will come down to his level, Bpeaking f him as 'poor bnckra,' 'poor white trash,' nd otherwise showing his entire lack of espect for him. That our land is crowded with deserving oung men, men of industry, energy and klent, who ean barely make a living, many f whom mast leave to do so, is undoubtdly true. The professions nro overrowdod. In merchandise tho numerous ailores all over the oountry show that the lerchant who weathers the storm must iavc capital to baok him. Thero is little lemand for skilled labor, and in nil depnrticnts of life if there be moro than nre eeded, the surplus arc consumers, and not roducers. c. <j. Tako my native town rherc wo have 30 lawyers and business for bout 15. If the business could be done by 5 and is divided between 30, the remainog 15 nro consumers and not producers, nd the non-produccrs nro drones in busiest, clogs to society, and stumbling blocks <3 advancement and prosperity. Tbe quesion then naturally arises, What are oar oung men to do ? It would seem a simple uestiou as simply answered, viz: that here ro thousands of uncultivated acres, aud all hat our youug men have to do is to put beir hands to the plow and shoulders to the 'bed, and our country would he strcngthned by a vigorous and prosperous yeoaaury. But thte troublo is that ouf young icn do not owp tho land, aod as a mere ireling cannot compete with the Dogrr< Our land is ownod, comparatively, by n jw who will not part with it except upon jrms that the averago.jouog man cannot Bfbrd. On the contrary, to own land lakes one greedy for more. It is a sigificant fact that from time immemorial men ave fought for two things, Revenge and >and, and men fight for those things they ive best. In former times all disputes ere settled by tho arbitrament of arms, 'ho tournay was their law court, and the inoe was their defence, tho belief teing lat Qod gave him the victory who was in tie right; and all nations from the begining until now have fought for tho acquision of territory. England, upon whose ossessions the sun Dever sets, has dyed ith gallant blood her encircling aone, ind France, whose heart to-dny beats quick nd fast, is but waiting her opportunity and le rise of another 'Corsicm' to wreak pon Germany the direst and bitterest rcengo that the human heart can nourish, a our law courts to day, men fight longei ad harder for land than all else, and the ime spirit which nerved tho arm of the iudal knight, now sharpens tho wit and >ogue of the legal advocate. Ought out rovernment to own all tho land and parcel out? Or, as Ilenry Georgo says, ought iod to be as free as nir to one and all 1 he future must deoido these questions. /II 1. .L.. . O lt-1 ?l. ijrjaasioue, luai* great Jougnsumuu, wuu not in the Peerage simply because he as oo peer withio the borders of ritain, and around whose untitled head a lorj shines in oompariton with which the sncentrated lustre of all the crowns and irnets of Kurope is but a 'tinselled gew?w.' Gladstone, the statesman of modern mes, has propored a solution of thisqucson in the recent Laud. Bill for Ireland, hich, as I understand it, is for the Govnment to buy up nil the land of Ireland id tbea sell it to the Irish in small traots, 1 reasonable terms and on long time, is bill wns lost, but it may be the solution id the forerunner of things to come. To liadt the extent wo have the curse of jaodlordisni' in this country, and in a lleiblio whose boast is that all men are born oe and equal, tho landed estatos of tho oglish nobility and tho consequent sobrrient tenantry cannot be expected nor ill it be tolerated; but the ownership of rge tracts of land borders dangerously tar the chasm. Thus our young men are reed to 'go weet' and we are left with the tiquitous negro on our hands. (Concluded Next Week.) Think mnoh, speak little and write less, { f Canada's Old-Time Earthquake.? Tbe disastrous cnrthquako io tbe South brings to mind a similar event iu th? early history of the oolony. This was an earthquake whioh lasted nt intervals seven months, from February 5, 1663, to September, and extended from the isle of Peroee and Gaspesio to beyond the island of Montreal, and into New England and Acadia. The 'Relations ot the Jcsuits' gives very ourioua particulars of this visitation. The most remarkablo phenomenon was the i fracture and upheaval of tho ioe. Blocks six or seven feet thick flow to pieces, with smoke .rising from tho depths or jets of sand and ooze. Below Quebec, as far as Tadoasao, the waters of the St. Lawrenoe were turned whitish during a whole week. The first shock was felt at Montreal on February 6 at the hour of sunset, as the little colony was gathered in the Hotel Diou Chapel for evening prayer.?Montreal Gazette. ? * Rub the stove briskly a few times with a , piece of old newspaper and it will remove < the grease spots and give it a good polish. IP ?OU WAHT 1 ?om''orJ , Madam Foy 'a ^H ?CORSET and Supporent style of dress and has the endorsement ot eminent Physicians. For Bale by FOSTER & WILKINS. Union, 8. C E. VAN WINKLE & GO. MANUFACTURXM, f'-fr nti nnn qa. dilus'texjil COTTON GINS and PRESSEsJ Cotton Seed OH Mills, Cotton Seed Linton, Cone Mills, Now Mills, . Nhafllnf, Pulleys, IIsuffers, Wind Mills oud Costlnffs, Pomps and Tanks. K. VAN WINKLE A CO., Atlanta. Qa. fSE&jjr-?11 BfflHir E. VAN WINKLE & CO. ATLANTA, CA. A | DALLA8?TEXAS. Ajg, i {flnHI Patented 1878. Improved 1881. Patented 1888. Price, reduced to one-half former prices. No. 1 iMk. ft30.OO I No. 3 MMh. ?40.00 i Beat CToaner for 8??d Cotton in the market r Mo Wmw can afford to be without one. It fll WINKLE * CO., Manufacturers, Atlanta, fta. W. D. BEWLEY, AGENT For Union County, 8, O, July 2 20 das PARKBR'8 HAIR BAL8AM the popular (avertta (or dnato, the hair, Keetorlns color when rray, and preventing Dandruff. It oloaneee the acalp, atop* the halrfallln^, cutd U wretogwa I The boat Cough Cure you eaa nee, I AnStbe bee* preventive known for OonanamUotb It | puree bodily peine, and all dleorderoof the Rtoeaek, I MOW el*, i. nnr-. u?tfp Kldnsjrs, Urlmrjr Ornoa and *11 Tom*!* Complaint*. The ferbls and *iok, iIim (llsg against (ll*e*M, and slowly drifting toward* thsgrava, will In roost cases recover their health bjr the timely tta* of Pamsu's Tone, hot delay is daareroua Tall* It In tims. Bold by all Druggists hi large bottles at >L0& HINDERCORNS The safest, sorest, quickest and best our* for Ooraa, Dunlon*.Warts, Moles,Cabooses,ho. llludcrathelrfar- < U?er growth B tops all pal n. flirt, no troobts. Makes m* 1 feet comfortable. lllndercorn* cures when evsCTthlM else fall*. Bold by Druggist* at l&o. llieoox ACX).,H. fc Jan20 4 Fresh Canned Goods. Aaupply of the choicest Canned vegetable*, Fish, Ac., from the most reliable and popular Faetoric* just received by I > A. R. 8TOKE8 k CO. A m JOHN B ?DKAL Agent fox* All Kin WAGONS AN I am till aelliog the oelebrated TEN WAGON and the COLUMBUS BUG< B1I1GIES. 'I hare just reoeived A NEW LOT OF BUGQIE with and without tops, and some nice fa mi I pring Wagons, &c., which I will sell OHI SASH- I can sell a Buggy for 966 up* every Wagon and Baggy I sell I fully i every respect. I also keep Single and ? well sell as cheap as yon ean buy in New Yoi Call and examine for yourselves and get pi Buggy and Wagon Depository is on Main atr * i?f 11 tr R. W. TINSLEY, WATCHMAKER AND JBWRLMt. MAIN STREET, UNION, 8. C. SPECTACLES AMD EYBOLASSEBJA SPECIALTY4 SPECIAL ORDERS SOLICITED AT ART TIME FOR FINE OOLD WATCHES, DIAMOND RINGS, riNS, EAR-DROPS, ETC. BE3T GOODS, LOWEST PRICES; April 10 14 9m ATLANTIC COAST UNET PASSENGER DEPARTMENT. Wilmington, N. C.}June 20, 1886, fasYline BIT wain ? Charleston and Columbia and Upper South Carolina. CONDENSED SCHEDULE. GOING I I GOING WEST. | | EAST. 7.20 A. M.lLv. -Ch'laton,8.C-.lAr. 0.10 P. M. 8.84 J " ..Lanes, -. 7.46 9.88 ..Sumter, ? .- 6.42 ? 10.40 " Ar. ..Columbia, " .- Ls. 6.27 ' 8.02 P.M. " -AVinnsb'o," .- " 8.48 4.18 ? -Chester, " .- 2.46 ? 6.05 " -Yorkville, -, * 11.46 A.M. 7.01 " " ..Lancast'r,.' ? '? 7.00 A. M. 6.03 ? ? -Rook Hill " .- " 2.02 P.M. 6.16 " " -Charlotte N.C.- ?? 1.00 ? 12.48 P. M. Ar. -Newb'ry.S.C-. Lt. 8.04 P.M 2.42 " " -Qrteaw'd .- ? 12.44 " 6.80 " " ..Laurens, " " 9.10A.M. 4.47 " -Anderson" ? " ia22 " 6.86 " " -Greens'let* .- " 9.46 " 6.88 " " -Walhalla," 8.80 4.10 ? " -Abbeville" ? 11.06 " 8.20 " " -Spart'b'g " .- " 12.10 " 7.10 " ; " H'nds'villeN.C. 7.00 A.M. Solid Trains batweanCbarleston At Colombia, S.C and Colombia and Headereonville. Special Parlor Cars attached to this train be* twecn Charloatoa and Colombia. No extra charge tor seat in these can te passengers holding Ptrst Olaee tickets. J. F. BIT INK, T. . ESFBSOH, Oen'l Sup't. Qen'l Pass. Agent Union (arble ]|ork8. GEORGE GEDDES, Successor to W. A. Nicholson. MONUMENTS, TOMBSTONES, SCOTCH and other FOREIGN GRANITE MONUMENTS. Every variety of Cemetery Work executed with neatneos aad diepetoh. IRON RAILING for Cemetery Lot enelotraree. Iroa Work of every description. Being connected with a home in Italy and in Scotland, I am able to oifer imported work in Marble or Oranite at a greater discount than ever before. I shall always k nop a large and well seleoted stock of Monuments and Iloadstonoo, which will be sold fbr t'2.00 per sett and upwards. Having worked in tke beet shops in Baltlmere, Philadelphia and New York, I can do work from the plainest to the moot elaborate. If yon do not wish to oall send mo word and I will at once visit yon with a large selection of NEW DESIGNS. Wishing to establish a (reputation for Reliability, Promptness aad FAIR DEALINGS, I shall handle first-class goods and give my personal supervision te the execution of every job received, aad will Guarantee Perfect Satlaftotlon to the moot exaetiog of my patrons. May 21 20 tf . >. lODGUBt > t ,?2X1 IN- . Wagons, - tl, n -.. . j _ ^ awJ Haggles, SSk Harness fngU improved *****<* \v implements. Ldk? Off Maohinory. D BUGGIES. ouble BnggykAl Wig^i tUroew which j rk or Balumbro, riots on ibe qua) it j of good* I soli. Mj cot, opposite the Depot. jomr BODGES. *:... _ RICHMOND * DAWTCLLE R.R. GREENVILLE & COLUMBIA DIVISION. rilOIOXl 9XPAXXMSXT. Colombia. 8. C.. May 2nd.. 18ar>. On and after May Sad, IMi, laiOpr Train will ran as herewith indicated npcn thia Road and ita branches. DAILY, EXCEPT SUNDAYS. lie. W UP AA8BENQER. Leave 8. C. Jonction 10.80 a m Leave Columbia (C & Q D).,. 10.26 a m Leave Alston. . 11.46 p m Leave Newberry 12.48 p m Leave Ninety*8ix D 2.08 p u Leave Hodges 8.06 p m Leave Belton.. 4.11 p m Arrive at Greenville 6.86 p in No. M DOWN PA88KNGER. Leave Greenville at 9.46 a m Leave Belton .11.08 a m Leave Ilodgea 12.17 p m Leave Ninety-Six D ? 1.10 p m Leave Newberry 102 pm Leave Alston - 4.06 p m Arrive at Columbia . ..... 6.16 p a. SPARTANBURG. UNION A COLUMBIA R. R No. M Or Pasuwokb. Leavea Alston 11 60 a m Strothera 12 27 p m Shelton . -.12 68 p m Santao 1 26 p m Union D - 1 60pm Joneeville.. - 2 82 p m Arrive at Spartanburg E 8 20pm No. n Dotht PiNMOM. 0 Leave Spartanburg, JR. A D. Depot ... 12 OS Spartanburg, 8. U. A C. Depot,.... 12 20 a m Joneeville - 110pm Union D 140 pm Santuo 2 26 p m 1 Shelton 2 67 pm 8trothere 8 28 p m Arrives at Alston i 00pm LAURKN8 RAILROAD. Leave Helena- 8.87 p m Arrive at Clinton - 6.80 p m Leave Clinton - 6.46 p m Arrive at Laurens C. H - 6.80 p m Leave Laurens C. H 9-10 a m Arrive at Clinton - 10.00 a m Leave Clinton 10.06 a m' Arrive at Helena - 12.00 pa ABBEVILLE BRANCH. Letve Hodges 8.10 p m Arrive at Abbeville 4.10 p m Leave Abbeville.. .11.06 a m Arrive at Hodges .12.06 p m BLUE RIDGE RAILROAD *xd ANDERSON BRANII Lsavs Belton...'........ .................. 4.16 p m Leave Anderson 4.47 p m Leave Pendleton 6 26 p m Leave Seneea 6.00 p m Arrive at Walballa.... ... 6.88 p m Leave Walhalla 8.20 a m Leave Seneea 9.00 a m Leave Pendleton - ?.?l 0 a Leave Anderson 10.22 a m Arrive at Belton ......10.67 a m CONNECTIONS. Close Connection is now mnde at Seneca with R. & D, K. K. for Atlanta and beyond. A. With the South Carolina Railroad from Charleston. With Wilmington, Columbia and Augusta Railroad froro Wilmington and all points North thereof. With Charlotte, Columbia and Angus!a Railroad from Charlotte and all points North theroof B. with Aeherillo and Spartanburg Railroad for points in Western North Carolina. C. With A. and C. Dir., R. and D. R. B., from all peiate Sooth and Weal. D. With A. and C. Dir., R. and D. R. R. frons Atlanta and orood B. With A. and C. Dir., R. end D.R. B. from all peiate South and Weal. F. With Booth Carolina Rail read for Char luliii, With Wilmington, OeluasMa and Augusta Railroad for Wilmington and the North. With Charlotte, Colombia and Augusta Rail road for Charlotte and the North. Q. With Asherille and Spartanburg Railroad from Hendersoarflle. 'JiiX H With A. and C. Dir., B. and D. R. R from Charlotte and beyond. Eastern Standard Time. #M. U IAIbUH, U. r. A., WfMhiagton, P. C. D. Oabdwbll, Asst. 0?b. PMMBter Aft. April 18 U it. DAVIO JOHNSON, Jr., P?IfflWI 4f P* Ho. t Law Range, Unto*, RTWIU praollo* in But* sad W?*1 C*?H? Grand Republic, OIGARROS, OUR TRADE MARK, A. a. stokhr 00.' '