Yorkville enquirer. [volume] (Yorkville, S.C.) 1855-2006, August 21, 1895, Image 4
^tumorous Jcpartmfut.
LOVE AND HUT WATER.
Iu Seville, which is popularly kuown
to be iu Spain, there is in use a most
felicitous invention iu the way of making
loving, clandestinely. After dark,
young caballeros steal beneath their
ladies' lattice?which, perchance is in
the third story?aud softly unscrewing
the handle of their walking sticks,
proceed to extract from the same,
which are hollow, leugth after length
of hollow tubiug, and screw them together
after the manner of a Japanese
fishing pole, or the old apparatus
wherewith sweeps clean chimneys. A
mouth piece is fitted into each end,
aud one raised to the window above.
Soon, by the aid of this improvised
speaking tube, two souls with a certain
unanimity of thought, and two
hearts with a possible unison of pulsation
are softly communing. Now all
this is very nice, romantic aud all that
sort of thing; but mark what the
knowledge of it brought to a certain
youth of Baltimore. He had read of
it, or heard of it, and happening to
have a surreptitious affection for a
young and wealthy lady, which she as
surreptitiously reciprocated, he determined,
with her connivance, to avail
himself of it. He got a tin pipe of the
desired length, made by a tinner ; and
in each end of it placed, for want of a
better mouth piece, a funnel.
Delicious conversation was carried
on, he sitting upon the top of a water
barrel, and she leauing from her window
above. They would converse for
hours, and exchange all the soft nonsense
in the world, and then he would
unship his apparatus, put the funnels
in his pocket, wrap the pieces iu a
newspaper, and go home in a state of
etheral bliss. Tbe course 01 true love
never did run smooth, and one evening
the old gentleman, smoking in the
back garden at an unusual hour, saw
the young man arrive, fix up his apparatus
and commence his soul communing
operations. He made up his mind
in a minute. He weut into the kitchen,
and asked for pitcher of boiling
water; it was handed to him and ofi
he posted, upstairs. Just as he reached
his daughter's room, he commenced
calling to her. So, telliDg her lover to
wait a moment, she came to the door,
"Nellie, my dear, run up to my room
and get me my spectacles; I'll wait
here until you come down."
She disappeared up stairs and he
stole cautiously to tbe window. The
moment he touched the funnel, the
unsuspecting youth clapped his mouth
to it and began where he had broken
off.
"My darling, you cannot imagine
how?"
Just then the old gentleman com
J ;j 1? Clt:??
menceu ussiuuuuai^ umug iuv
with hot water, and the rest of that
miserable youth's sentence was never
heard. He wore flour upon his face
for a fortnight after, and declines to
go in society just at present.
A DRY SEASON.
"Stranger, I take it," observed an
elderly resident the other day, as I
stopped and asked if there were any
blackberry trees around his way.
"I judged so. I was a stranger myself
when I fust kim here. That was
in the summer of '49. Hottest summer
ever- known in these parts."
"Any warmer than this?" I asked
him.
"Summut, summut! That summer
of '49 the cedar trees melted and run
right along the ground ? You notice
how red that ere dust is !"
"Pretty warm," I ventured.
"Why, sir, durin' the summer of '49
we kept meat right on the ice to keep
it from cookin' too fast, and we had to
put chickens in refrigerators to get
raw eggs."
"Where did you get the ice ?"
"We had it left over and kept it in
b'ilin'water ! Yes, sir. The temperature
of b'ilin' water was so much
lower than the temperature of the atmnenhprp
t.haf, it, Icpti' the ice SO Cold
that you could not touch it with your
finger?"
''Anything else startling that season
?"
"That summer of '49? Well, I
guess ! The Hackeusack river began
to b'ile airly in June, and we didn't
see the sky until October, fer the steam
in the air. And fish! fish! They
were droppin' all over town cooked
just as you wanted 'em. There wasn't
anything but fish until the river dried
up!"
"What did you have then ?"
"The finest oysters and clams you
ever heard of. They walked right
ashore for water, and they'd drink apple-jack
right out of the demijohn!
Yes, sir. You call this hot! I feel like
an overcoat!"
"What is your business?" I asked
him.
"I am a preacher," he replied. "By
the way you wanted blackberry trees.
Just keep up the thumb hand side of
the road until you come to the pig
pasture, and there you will fiud the
tree. Climb upon my goose roost, and
you can knock down all the berries
you want, if you can find a pole long
enough.?Brooklyn Eagle.
Attending Church Under Difficulties.?A
Negro went to a fashionable
church at Middletown, Conn.,
on Sunday, recently, and sat down in a
pew, wheu, just as he was getting interested
in the sermon, a rough-looking,
pious church member came in and
took him by the collar and threw him
into the vestibule. He thought he
would stay there and hear the rest of
the sermon, when the sexton kicked
him off the steps. Ho went to the
side of the church to listen to the sermon
through the window; when one
of the members said "Amen"' to something
the minister said, and then spit
tobacco juice out of the window into the
listener's eyes. He says a man can't
enjoy much religion in Middletown.?
Youth's Companion.
-tt'attsidc gatherings.
B&~ When people are hired to he
good, they quit when the pay stops. Ci
BfiT'The man who never praises his r<
wife sometimes talks very nice in f(
church.
B&T There are people who want to p
do good ; but they are slow to com- a
mence. q
8?" Angels know how much religion tl
the rich have by the way tney ireai >
t he poor. tl
8S?~ When it is said of a man that he C
is bull-headed, it means that he is t
foolish. tl
SST" Not many tears are shed at the P
funeral of the man who has lived only 1
for himself. b
W&F Straining at gnats and swallow- ?
ing camels are equally unprofitable
occupations.
There were 17,804,714 bunches ^
of bananas consumed in the United 1(
States last year.
#6?" The strength of the average a
horse is estimated to be equal to that j,
of 7i average men. v
86T During the last four years 29,- ji
000 persons in France have put an end n
to their own lives. I
George W. McMillion, of St. r
Louis, can repeat the whole of the b
Bible word for word. c
8?" In the high schools of Japan, the ^
English language is placed on the a
same footing as the Japanese, and its 1
study is compulsory. 0
1ST The wise are instructed by rea- l<
son, ordinary minds by experience, v
the stupid by necessity, and the brutes ?
by instinct.
I?~ Charles Dudley Warner says
that the difference between faith cure .
and mind cure is that mind cure re- lf
quires no mind. j
8?" If God's ways are not in accord ^
with our ideas, it may not be out of c
place to inquire if our ways are in v
accord with his truth. 0
86T" The highest point crossed by a b
United States railroad is at Marshall g
Pass, on the Denver and Rio Grande? J
10,855 feet above the sea level. h
8?* A pair of Illinois lovers eloped si
on their bicycles, and an irate papa
on horseback could not overtake them if
before the knot was tied. a
I?" The supreme court of California P
has decided that poker playing is no 0
sin. Who said it was ? It is terribly 8
uncomfortable, however, when your a
opponent holds over you and won't 11
stand a bluff. 0
------ . h
8?* In his life of Henry J>1. Stanley, ~
Thomas George says that the explor- P
er's real name is Howell Jones, and
that he was born at Isgar, in Wales, a
November 16, 1840. His father was a
bookbinder.
?QF" The pneumatic principle has ^
been applied to boots. The air tubes ^
lie between the upper and lower soles,
and give a springy movement to the j
foot, calculated to reduce friction with ^
the ground and to alleviate fatigue.
California vintage this year will ex- c
ceed 16,000,000 gallons of wine. This
seems to the Eastern mind enough ; a
but it is a disappointment to California i
which reckoned on at least 22,000,000
gallons.
S&P Farmers in Mexico use oxen of h
one color in the morning and of anoth- jj
er color in the afternoon. They have q
no reason for doing so beyond the 0
fact that their forefathers did it, and (,]
they conclude it must be the right 8|
thing to do. o
"But," objected her father, "you w
are financially worthless, while my v
daughter?" "The way to fix that," si
interrupted the suitor, "is to arrange a fi
bimetallic conference, and devise some Ii
way to put me on a financial parity as c
a circulating medium." a
8S?" Service had commenced, and the a
minister paced wildly up and down,
struggling with a tight cravat. To n
cover his embarrassment, he finally h
gasped, ''Brethren, let us sing three p
stanzas of hymn number 80which o
was, uufortuuately, "Blest be the tie w
that binds." e
1ST Silver dollars are full legal tender ^
for all dues, public and private. If a
you owe a man $1,000 or $1,000,000 ^
he must take it in silver if you insist
on it and have the dollars to tender
him. The fractional silver coius are a
only legal tender in limited sums. d
B&T The United States plants nearly ?
1,000,000 acres more to potatoes than J:
Great Britain does, yet the latter .
country raises the most bushels. This "
shows the difference in thorough work *
and the average American style of "
spreading out over a wide area and a
slighting the cultivator. b
BSTMrs. Perkins (calmly reminis- s<
cent)?Jonathan, we've been married
40 years next Tuesday an' never bad a
cross word yit. "I know it. I've
stood yer jawin' purty well." "Jona- ^
than Perkins, you're a mean, hateful, ^
deceitful old thing, an' I wouldn't
marry you agin fer love ner money j"
?ST Says the New Orleans Times- f,
Democrat: Although comparatively j?
little has been said of the immigration a
into the South this year, it has been S(
the largest ever known. The move- e
ment is not coufiued to any State, and w
the older ones, as for instance Georgia, 0
are receiving thousands of new set- 0
tiers. M
?@T" Nearly $400,000 is the amount 1
obtained from the bicycle tax this tr
year by the French government, the
number of machines declared being
just 200,000. They are well spread rj
over the whole country, since I'aris j,
and the department of the Seine re- 0
turn 3S,000, less than a fifth of the 0
total. ti
Utt?" Acids in lubricating oils may be b
detected by putting the samples to be h
tested in a clear glass bottle with a
copper wire running down through
the cork, air tight. Stand the bottle d
iu a sunny place and leave for two or tl
three weeks. If on removul verdigris e
or green rust is on the copper, there is h
an acid in the oil. fi
farm and fireside.
Canning Tomatoes Whole.?To
an toinatoe9 whole, so that they are
2ady lor making tomato salad and
)r frying : Select large, smooth ones,
rash them and put them in a deep
an ; then cover with boiling water
nd let them stand for five minutes,
'his will loosen the skins. Pour off
he water and pare the tomatoes.
Tow lay them in a deep dish and put
hem into a moderately hot oven.
!over for 30 minutes, being careful
hat they do not get browned. When
hese tomatoes are put into the oven,
ut a stewpan of sliced tomatoes on
he fire. Stir frequently to prevent
urning. When they have been stewd
for 20 minutes, rub them through a
ne strainer, then return to the stewan.
Place some self-sealing cans on
he fire in a pan of cold water, and
eat the water gradually to the boilag
point. When the whole tomatoes
re done, take the dish from the oven
nd transfer the tomatoes to the hot
irs, being careful not to break the
egetables. Pour the juice into the
irs and fill up with the strained tolatoes,
which must be boiling hot.
lave the jars so full that a little juice
uns over. Now put on the elastic
ands and the cover. Tighten the
overs as much as possible, and when
he jars become cold tighten the covers
gain. Put in a cool, dark place. Take
wo quarts for slicing for the juice,
ut of the peck of the whole tomatoes
0 fill the cans. J?'or some cases tnis
rill prove too much ; but what is left
ver may be used for soup, sauce or
cetchup.
Tomato Catsup.?Tomato cutsup
} a favorite relish. Put one peck of
ipe tomatoes and one quart of onions
1 a porcelain kettle and boil uutil a
oft mash. Then press through a
oarse 6eive, add to it one quart of
iuegar, one ounce of salt, one ounce
f mace, one tablespoonful each of
lack pepper, cayenne pepper and
round cloves, and five pints of sugar,
teturn to the fire and boil several
ours, stirring frequently. Bottle and
eal.
A catsup generally used in the South
5 made with a peck of green tomatoes
nd a half peck of onious. Chop and
ut in a porcelain kettle with three
unces of mustard seed, one ounce of
alt, one ounce of cloves, one ounce of
llspice, half a pint of mixed musard,
one ounce of black pepper, one
unce of celery seed, and a pound of
rown sugar. Cover with vinegar and
lace on the fire and boil slowly two
ours; strain through a seive, bottle
nd seal.
A fine catsup can be made of cucumers.
Chop fine four good sized onions,
eel and take out the seed of three
ozen ripe cucumbers and put in the
owl with the onions and chop ; drain
ff the water and put in preserve jars,
feat a quart of vinegar, adding a scant
saspoonful of cayenne pepper, a taoiepoonful
of salt, and one of ground
loves; when just warm turn over
he chopped cucumbers so the jars
re full, seal and put in c>ol place.
>y it on fish.
tST" A cooking school teacher says in
er experience this has proved a decious
pudding and very easily and
uickly made: Two cups of water and
ne cup of sugar were boiled together,
beu three tablespoousful of com
lornK ti'ore with t.hft iuicft of
ue lemou and a speck of salt, and the
rhole boiled 10 minutes. Then the
. hites of three eggs were beaten to a
tiff froth, the starch added by spoonils,
and the whole beaten together,
t was then put into a mold, aud when
old was turned on a small platter
ud served with boiled custard poured
round it.
A woman noted for the frothy lightess
of the mashed potato served at
er board confessed to no secret iu its
reparation, "exact, perhaps, the piuch
f baking powder, which I add along
;ith the little milk and butter that
verybody puts in." She has the mixare
beaten hard and fast with a fork,
nd one or all of these things contriutes
to a most successful whole.
Simmering Versus Boiling.?In
11 ordinary cookery simmering at 180
egrees is more effective than violent
oiling at 212 degrees. The heat that
> applied to do more than the smallest
egree of simmering is simply wasted
i converting water into useless steam,
'or instauce, if stewed chicken is orered
and happens to be late, it is cut
part, thrown into boiling water aud
oiled at a gallop for an hour, then
erved with an apology that there was
ot time to cook it tender; when that
*rae chicken, if thrown into boiling
rater and theu pushed back where it
ould not possibly boil, would have
een tender, more juicy and higher
avored in less than an hour.
86?" To distinguish genuine butter
om oleomargarine, the following test
.recommended : Draw a knife through
piece of the questioned butter, and
jnnwito tho nnrfa fhllc HiviHeH Tf it
vi*r saw the inside of a churn, there
ill be watery exudations in the track
f the knife; but if it is a combination
f prepared and disguised fat, there
ill be a smooth greasy surface only,
'he test is largely used by butter
lerchants.
Baked Tomatoes.?Take six large
ipe tomatoes, skiu, and cut into small
ieces. Spread a layer in the bottom
f bake dish, season well, put a layer
f coarse bread crumbs over the touiaDes,
with plenty of butter, having
read and crumbs on top. Bake one
our.
To Preserve Egos.?Put j'our eggs
own in salt; put a layer of salt in
tie bottom of a firkin, and put the
ggs large end down, and cover the
lyer with salt, and keep one uutil the
rkiu is full.
it he ^ioni if dlov.
ROBINSON'S ABILITY.
HE HAS A FAMOUS PITCHER.
"One of the best men that I ever
knew at adapting himself to circumstances,"
observed Major Hotchkiss
to a Tribune writer, "was a young
fellow that we'll call Robinson. He
was a Yale mau and, I fancy, a bit
of a black sheep. He came of a good
New England family, and one brother
went into the ministry, and another
came to this city and prospered in the
law, but these pursuits were too prosaic
for him. After we left college he
went to Cuba for a few months, and
then came back and drifted to Chicago
and became a reporter on the Chicago
Times. This was in the old
Storey days, when a Times reporter,
in the event of a man refusing to give
him news, was expected to take the
man down and hammer it out of him.
"Robinson made a mistake one day.
He hammered the city editor, and had
i? !/%???? tnum TTa nrnmnt 1 v
LU ICO Vt IUO WIT Ui J *V pi wiu|/tij vwuiv
out to Badger Rock, Montana.
"Badger Rock, at that time, was
one of the hardest towns in the West.
Homicide was a pastime, like lawn
tennis or croquet in other parts of the
country. Mining and gambling were
the only two recognized industries,
with the preference given to gambling
as a gentlemanly occasion. Robinsou
got immediate employment on a morning
paper called by its owner, with a
tine irony, The Daily Dove. It was
the worst sheet in town, which is saying
a great deal. The exciting nature
of a connection with it may be best
realized when I say that the paper's
strong point was abusive personals in
a country where all personals are dangerous.
"When Robinson came to town he
found the post of city editor vacant,
and applied for the place. The owner,
notwithstanding his belligerency, was
a fair man to his employees. He slipped
his arm into Robinson's, aud led
him half a mile up the raouutain to
the little cemetery. Pointing to three
white wooden headboards, he said:
"Young man, there sleep your three
predecessors." '"There's room for another
between that end and the fence,"
answered Robinson, and he took the
position of city editor.
"Bui. f-.ViP u/nrst. thinrr ahntit the out
look for the young man 1 have not
yet mentioned. He could not shoot.
He had tried to learn many times,
but, in his own words, he 'couldn't
hit a dock of barns.' When he explained
this peculiarity to his employer,
this individual was for having him
immediately throw up the position.
"Why,' he explained, 'they'll get you
inside of a week. Quick and accurate
shooting is the only chance for a man
on this paper. I'd rather have a man
that can't write than one who can't
shoot.'
"Just let me alone,' answered Robinson.
'If you are not satisfied at the
end of a month I'll resign.'
" 'Give me the address of the friend
you want notified, please,' suid the
man, whipping out a pencil; but Robinson
only laughed, picked up the
shears, cut the lapels off the side pockets
of his coat, walked out and wandered
away up the gulch.
"Now, something the owner of The
Daily Dove didn't know was that Robinson
had pitched for three years on
nnllorro Hnaphfll] r?l11! ? T-Tp had
been the best pitcher the club ever bad.
He could throw a ball harder and
straighter (or crookeder, as the circumstances
might require) than almost any
man who up to that time had stood
in the centre of the diamond. He had
made up his mind to utilize his talent
in this direction. Up the gulch he
began selecting stones about the size
of hen's eggs, hard and jagged. I
think he picked out galena specimens
largely, as being the heaviest, and frequently
rough and square cornered.
He dropped half a dozen nuggets iu
each side pocket, and took off his hat 1
and filled that, aud returned. At the
office he emptied the hat on his desk
aud went to work.
"The second day after this his employer
said to him : 'Robinson, there's
a mau come to town numed Wash
Gazeley. He is a criminal aud a deudbeat
who has killed five or six men. ,
He is now drunk and going about
town destroying the property of some
of our best advertisers. Just touch
him up tomorrow morning.' Robin- ;
sou wrote a ripping item, in which he .
called the man 'a coward,' 'tramp,' ]
'chicken-thief,' and so forth, and warned
him to get of town under pain of :
'further disclosures in the fearless columns
of The Dove." It was a hot
paragraph, and when the foreman
read it he simply remarked : "Well, i
I hope the man that takes the city
editorship tomorrow will write a plain- |
er hand.'
"About ten o'clock the next morn- i
iug ltobinsou was walking quietly j
along the main street of the towu with
his right hand resting carelessly in his i
coat pocket. Suddenly 3Ir. Gazeley '
stepped out of the door of a saloon.
He reached for his revolver. The
young man from Yale who couldn't <
shoot took his hand out of his pocket. ;
In it was an irregular specimen of lead
ore. I remember how the local doc- :
tor tried to explain subsequently that 1
the specimen didn't hit Gazeley in a
'necessarily vital spot;' but it was vital
enough for all practical purposes, and '
the next morning The Dove remarked
casually that 'when the cut-throats of j
this town meet around the hearth to- .
night there will be one vacant chair. <
Jim Gazeley is no more.'
"The fate of Gazeley ought to have
been enough for the other obnoxious
citizens of the neighborhood, but of (
course it wasn't. A week later a mau
came down from Placer Bench, winged
the chief of police, shot out the lights
in the post office, and rode his horse
on the sidewalk. The Dove reprimanded
him. He took a foolish and
erring shot at the city editor, who re
plied with a stone, and returned to his
office and wrote that 'another oh
settler has gone out from our midst
Life is indeed uncertain. Now is tin
time to subscribe.'
' Robinson stayed a year before In
got tired of the place, and went to Sat
Francisco, but I don't think that aftei
the first three months he had anj
trouble. During that time I would
not dare to say bow many he popped
over. Of course, most of them be only
wounded. But as lie remarked in hi?
valedictory, far more thau we intended
have gone with less preparation
than we could have wished. It should
only serve to remind us that in tht
midst of life a rock may catch us in tin
jaw.'
"I never knew what became of him
but I fancy he has continued to tukt
care of himself."
&AKIN0
POWDER
a Uanlufalu Diii>a
ntlOVIHIVIJ Ml VI
A cream of tartar baking powder. Hlgbesi
of all In leavening strength.?Latest United
States Government Food Report.
Royai. Baking Powder Co., 100 Wall St
New York.
FROM
WALL STREET
TO
NEWGATE,
VIA
THE PRIMROSE WAY,
BY
AUSTIN BIDWELL.
Austin Bidwell started life a<
a clerk in Wall Street, and soon
succumbed to the allurements
of the primrose way. His first
criminal venture was a trip tc
Europe to sell stolen bonds. After
a few similar enterprises ir
New York, he returned to Europe
with a pair of shrewd confederates
and engaged in a systematic
campaign of swindling the
principal banks of the continent.
mi_ _ a.
I ne conspirators wcic so suuocasful
in this that they next laid
siege to the seemingly impregnable
vaults of the Bank of England,
and actually succeeded in
securing over ^1,000,000 by artfully
executed forgeries. But retribution
came at last, and this
brilliant coup cost Mr. Bidwell
20 years in English prisons.
The story of his experiences is
told in "From Wall Street to
Newgate. It is replete with
Stirring Incidents,
Marvelous Adventures,
Hairbreadth Escapes
and remarkable experiences, such
as few men have met with.
They are narrated in an easy,
picturesque style, evincing sincerity
and candor, with no attempt
at sensation or exaggera
uoii.
The truth told is stranger than
fiction, and history may be challenged
to produce another life
into which has come so many
varied and bewildering events, or
to disclose another character,
trained in a religious home, having
culture and an unusual business
talent, whose deflections from
the path of honor has stirred to
its very depth the entire civilized
world.
We, tlic undersigned, having read the
new Hid well hook, "From Wall Street to
Newgate," believe it will benefit every
:>ne to read this marvelous history of
human experience.
Aside from its dramatic interest, there
lie great moral lessons involved of especial
interest to young men and employees
in positions of trust.
\> e, UltjriMUn.-, reiiiiunn-uu mm .-iiwijf OO
i unique and valuable acquisition for home
ind otlice.
J. Pierrepont Morgan, L. J. Page, John
W. Mackay, Robert A. Pinkerton, W. K.
Fclft, Philip W. Moon, Moses P. Handy,
Julius Chambers, Clarence A. Steward,
Joseph II. Choato, R. <J. Ingersoll, Abram
S.Hewitt, Ira I). Sankey, Rev. Edward
lleecher, Luther Latlin Mills, DeLancey
N'icoll, John W. <iolf, Charles H. Farwell
nul others.
The story is copyrighted, nicely
illustrated, and will appear in
The Enquirer shortly. Subscribe
now.
GARRY IRON RO
MANUFAC
IRON ROOFING.
KIMI'Kl) AND I'DKKI'OATED
Iron Tile or Shingle.
FIRE PROOF DOORS,
SHUTTERS, ETC. b dOH
rHE LARGEST MANUFACTURERS
Orders received by L. M. GRi
i 01IS IlIVjiB AUD CHARLEST01 R.B.
SAMUKL HI NT, General Manager.
TIME TABLE oftheOhio Hirer and
.Charleston Railway company, to take
etl'ect Tltiirsdav, July 11,181?5. a 7.30a. ni.
STANDARD EASTERN TIME.
ooisi; nokth. I No. SI. | No. 35.
i " Daily Monday
i Except We'ns'a'y
Sunday. Friday.
' Leave Camden 1 3u pin 8 30 am
Leave Kershaw *2 15 pm 10 15 am
Leave Idincaster 3 10 pin 11 30 am
Leave Catawba Junction 3 -15 pm I 00 am
, Leave Leslies 3 51 pm 1 20 am
, Leave Hock Hill 4 14 pm 2 40 pm
Leave Newpoit 4 2a pm 3 05 pm
Leave Tirzah 4 35 pm 3 15 pm
Leave Yorkville 4 50 pm 3 35 pm
' Leave Sharon 5 05 pni 4 00 pm
Leave Hickory Grove .... 5 20 pm 4 20 pm (
Leave Smyrna 5 33 pm 4 38 pm
Arrive at Blacksburg 8 00 pm 5 10 pm
No. 11. |
Leave Blacksburg 8 00 am
Leave Earls 8 20 am
Leave Patterson Springs 8 30 am
Leave Shelby 0 10 am
Leave Mooresboro 0 53 am
Leave Henrietta 10 30 am
Leave Forest City 10 58 am
Leave Rutherfordton 11 25 am
Arrive at Marion 1 00 pm,
* Dinner.
ooixr. sofTH No. 12. | *"
Leave Marion 130 pm
Leave Rutherfordton 3 05 pm
Leave Forest City 3 35 pm
Leave Henrietta 4 15 pm
Leave Mooresboro 4 30 pm
Leave Shelby 5 35 pmi
Leave Patterson Springs.. 5 50 pm
Leave Earls 6 00 pm
Arrive at Blacksburg 6 30 pm
No. 32. | No. 34.
Dally Tuesday
Except Thursday
! Sunday. Saturday. *
Leave Blacksburg 8 20 am 8 80 am
I Leave Smyrna 8 45 am 9 00 am
1 Leave Hickory Grove 9 00 am 9 25 am
Leave Sharon 9 17 am 9 48 am
. Leave Yorkvllle 9 39 am 10 35 am
Leave Tirzah 9 55 am 11 00 am
, Leave Newport 10 03 am 11 15 am
Leave Rock Hill 10 22 am 12 40 pm
Leave Leslies 10 43 am 1 00 pm
Leave Catawba Junction.. 10 52 am 1 50 pm
Leave Lancaster 11 26 pm! 2 50 pm
Leave Kershaw 12 07 pm 5 00 pm
i Arrive at Camden 12 55 pm 6 20 pm
CONNECTIONS.
No. 32 has connection with Southern
Railway at Rock Hill.
Nos. 34 and 35 will carry passengers.
Nos. 11 and 12 have connection at Marion
with Southern Railway.
At Roddeys, Old Point, King's Creek
and London, trains stop only on signal.
S. B. LUMPKIN, G. P. A.
A. TRIPP, Superintendent.
SAM'L HUNT, General Manager.
' CHESTES m rail RAILROAD.
> Schedules in Effect from and After
June 16, 1895.
1 G. W. F. Harper, President.
CENTRAL TIME STANDARD.
going north. | No 10. | No 80.
Leu\ e Chester 720am 8 00am
. Leave Lowrysville 7 49 am 8 34am
' L*?ave McConnellsvllle 8 10 am 9 00am
Leave Guthriesville .... 8 18 a m 9 15 am
Leave Yorkvllle 8 39 a m 10 05 a m
Leave Clover 9 14 a m 10 50 am
I Leave Gaston la 9 53 am 1210 pm
1 Leave Llncolnton 1105am 130pm
Leave Newton 1154 am 3 00 pra J
Leave Hickory 12 30 pm ; 5 00 pm
Arrive Lenoir 1 35 pm 6 40 pm
going south. | No 81. | No 9.
1 Leave Lenoir i 5 09 am j 320pm
, Leave Hickory ! 6 40 a m 1 4 25 pm
Leave Newton 8 10 am 508pm
. Leave Lincolnton 9 30 am 5 55 pm
Leave Gastonia 12 00pm 7 06pm
1 Leave Clover 12 57 p m 7 44 p m
Leave Yorkville 2 15 pm 8 16 pm
Leave Guthrlesville ... 2 43 pm 8 37 pm
Leave McConnellsvllle 2 56pm 844pm
Leave Lowrysvllle 3 20 pm | B02pm ?
I Arrive Chester 4 00pm 9 28pm
Trains Nos. 9 and 10 are first-class, and
run daily except Sunday. Trains Nos. 60
and 61 carry passengers and also run daily
except Sunday. There is good connection
at Chester with the G. C. A N., and the C.,
C. A A.; also at Gastonia with the A. A C.
A. L.; at Lincolnton with the C. C.; and
at Hickory and Newton with the W. N. C.
L. T. NICHOLS, Superintendent.
H. H. BEARD, General Passenger Agent.
IgSugSs
The best wearing, most stylish, and
the greatest value of any $3.00 Men's
Shoes on the continent.
Be3t calfskin, dongola tops, solid
leather soles, with all the popular toes,
lasts and fastenings, and Lewis' Cork
Filled Soles.
Each pair contains a paid-up Accident
Insurance Policy for $100, good for
90 days.
Wear Lewis'Accident Insurance Shoes
once and you will never change. The
insurance goes for "full measure."
Talk with your dealer who sells Lewis*
Shoes.
For Sale By
CLOVER COTTON M'F'G. CO.,
Clover, S. C
November 7 45 ly
(J i* IJ JC. t\ 1/llVlitU.
I AM handling a first class line of COFFINS
AND CASKETS which I will
sell at the very lowest prices. Personal
attention at all hours.
I am prepared to repair all kinds ot
Furniture at reasonable prices.
J. ED JEFFERYS.
FIRE INSURANCE.
FOR reliable FIRE, CYCLONE, ACCIDENT
or LIFE INSURANCE,
call on SAM M. A L. GEO. GRIST.
OFIXG COMP'NY9
TURERS OF
gjii IRON ORE PAINT
|An<l Cement. 4
i-ui'ir and Price List
OF IRON ROOFING IX THE WORLD.
1ST.
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