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ANIMALS' FEAR OP MAN. It is Not a Natural Instinct, But Ile* suits From Bitter Experience. According to the evidence collected . hy ancient and modern naturalists, from Don Felix d'Azara to Mr. Hud . flon, the puma, the second largest of the big cats of So. th America, neither feared man nor regarded human beings as its prey; but on the contrary sought their society, and even protected man from the attacks of the jaguar. Trust worthy facts which lend additional confirmation to this interesting ques tion must necessarily be slowly ac quired. The following anecdote, which comes first hand from one long resi dent in British Guiana, supports the -> Relief that the puma seeks the society cf man instead of attacking or fearing him. When making an expedition up .ne of the large rivers in a steam launch oar friend gave a passage to an elderly Cornish miner, who was anxi ous to reach the gold fields. Not wishing to intrude upon his hosts, he did not sleep on board the launch, but always slung his hammock between two trees on shore. As climbing into a high-slung hammock is noteisy, he usually fastened it rather low, and his weight brought it to within three feet of the ground at the bottom of the curve. One morning, being asked how he slept, he complained that the frogs had made such a noise under neath his hammock that they had kept him awake. Some Indians of the crew, who were folding Up the ham mock, laughed a good deal when they heard this, and being asked the rea son, said, still laughing : :'Oh, tiger sleep with an old man last night." They had found under the hammock the marks of where a puma had lain. The noise which had kept the occu pier of the hammock awake was proba bly the purring of the puma, pleased at occupying the "next birth" below a man. As these Guiana Indians have, In addition to the.unerriog eye of the forest I dweller,' a special liking and capacity for taming animals, it can hardly be doubted that their conclu -aion was correct. Such an absence of .fear and liking for human society, could/ only be paralleled by the be havior of some domestic cats. Yet in the case of the puma this . can only be a survival of a primitive disposition, which has already been lost in a great measure by the same species in North America. Are we, . then, to suppose that that absence of r fear cf man so general even among the large carn?vora was the rule in the primitive world? If it was. we shall have to account for the survival of man in the presence of creatures which did not fear him, and possessed a far mere effective physical equipment for attack than man possessed for de fense, for we can not suppose that the benevolent neutrality which can safely be attributed to the-puma was exhibit ed by the other carn?vora. The evi dence that fear is not the natural atti tude of animals toward man is mainly of tw?"(kinds-theonotes of explorers who have pushed into the few regions of earth where animals were numer ous, but man had not trodden, and the results? of the very latest experi ments of to-day in distriets where the killing of animals has been absolutely prohibited. In other words, we must compare the behavior of the creatures in the Arctic seas in the days of the Willoughby Fand Berants, or in the voyage of Weddell to the Antarctic, with the?-latest reports from \ellow stone Park. CThe results* show a strik ing agreement in the demeanor of the beasts when [first confronted with the new creature, man. Few of them ex hibited fear, so far as the records show. " When Berants' crew was on its first voyage a polar bear, who probably had never seen men before, took one of the crew, who was lying down, by the back] of the neck, and dragging.him some way. bit the top of his head off. Even now the polar bear is the'least shy of his race, though so constantly hunted. The general tendency of wild ani mals kept in large reserves and never molested points ?to the same conclu sion, though for obvious -reasons none of the'most dangerous carn?vora can be maintained in such places. Thc fear of man is lost by creatures wild and free'but unmolested, so quickly as to be a matter of surprise to those .most conversant with animals in cap tivity. Reports published in the United [States newspapers dwell re peatedly?on the loss of fear of man by all animals in Yellowstone Park, where the deer (both wapiti and black tailed deer)' come to the houses to be fed, "and evci:?eat thc flowers from the win dow boxes. Brown bears hang around thc hotels and como daily to eat thc refuse carted into the. woods close by, aud many of tho smaller indents arc absolutely fearless, in the menage ries and zoological gardens the fear of man is lost mainly by constant and daily contact with no p ever to escape, and hy tho remembrance that, it ia mau who provides their food, li nt : here the conditions arc abnormal and j it would bc useless co draw conclu- . gions from the behavior toward man . of animals in captivity and apply them to the solution of the earlier problem of I he innate or acquired character tlndr f?ar nf human tifinga. It however, matter of gpneral knowler! that where man is weak and beasts r merous, a? in the country beyond t Zambesi and Shire River-, the boldne of the auimals lead-? to serious disi ters. In the present day the on frequent reports of attacks of lin and leopards on men, for food and n in self defense or fright, come fr? these districts, though the story is old as the rebuilding of Samaria. If, as seems probable, the anin? fear of man was acquired, and is n natural to their minds, it is not ve clear how the very early tribes of me when the larger carniverous anima were far more numerous than run escaped destruction and survived Im enough to impress on the animal wor the sense of fear by which mao no dominates it. Regarded merely as conflict between one class of anim and another, the result should n? have been doubted. Man ought t have disappeared from the face of tl earth, or, in any case, to have retrea ed to remote strongholds in regiot not frequented by the beasts. Thi he did not do so, but turned the t; bles on the better equipped offen si \ creature, is fair presumptive evident that original man never was on a lev? with the animals in intelligence, bi was equipped with the pr?domin?t brain power which has put him ahei in the race ever since. Primitif man, literally speaking, "lived by hi wits," for he was evidentjy not nearl so well equippod as the monkeys fe physical offense or flight, thoug [ their survival is not altogether easy t explain on purely physical ground: Their power of us ng their arms an hands as a means of swinging rapid! from branch to branch gives them a advantage over all the tree-climbin cats. Their habit of throwing mis siles is also very disconcerting to othe animals, though this art is only prac ticed by certain monkeys. But thei rapid and intelligent combination fo defense, menace, and outlook duty has contributed quite as much to thei survival as their speed and activity. In tropical America even the mon keys are hard put to it to escape thi attacks of such active and formidable foes as the harpy eagle and the ocelot But it cannot be that even the mos debased or physically weakest of man kind has ever been the "natural prey' of that "natural enemy" which, ac cording to Sir Samuel Baker, is th? nightmare of nearly every, species oJ non-carniverous animal. The cause: which make exceptions to this rule an temporary and narrowly local. Ever the Greenlander and the Eskimo are the masters of the polar bear, and probably always ' have been, thoug'i little better armed than primitive mau, and the pigmies of Central American forests are mighty hunters. It ma; even be that the neighborhood of fierce animals aided the early development of man; for the least developed races are largely found in such places as Terra del Fuego, where, in the absence of savage beast, savage men had no inducement to arm and equip himself. But man has an even more potent ally than his own ingenuity, which from remote antiquity has invested him in the mind of the animal world with something of the supernatural. He is ever accompanied by the one element which the animal mind can not create, cannot understand, stands in constant awe of and dreads by night, when its courage is greatest and that of man least steady. Fire, that pillar of cloud and flame which precedes not only the aggregate human host, but the smallest fragment of the invading army, the constant and dreaded har binger of human presence, springing up, as the beasts must think, auto matically from the earth wherever man rests his body, guarding him in sleep ing and waking, always associated with his abode, has for ages terrified the beasts. Since the first appearance of man in any given region of the earth he has been teaching the beast to fear him, and it is not until to-day, when he is absolutely their master, and has in many instances totally destroyed them, that he thinks of restoring on a tiny scale and on a few spots on the earth's surface "the state of nature," and al lowing those creatures which he dares to experiment with, once more to lay aside their acquired terror, which makes them flee from his presence. London Spectator. Pains in the chest when a person has a cold indicate a tendency toward pneumonia. A piece of flannel damp ened with Chamberlain's Pain l?ahn and bound on to the chest over the scat of I'ain will promptly relieve the pain and prevent the threatened attack of pneumonia." This same treatment j will cure a lame back in a few hours, j Sold by Hill-Orr Drug Co. - An Arkansas editor thus announ ced au ?importatit event in the local newspaper world : It is with a feeling of distres- that we retire from thc active control of this paper; but we J lea vt: our journal with :i gentleman ; who is financially better aide than wc ure to handle it. Thc gentleman is . well-knownin this community, lie is the sheriff. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy can always be de pended upon and is pleasant and s?fe lo take. Sold by Hill-Orr Drug Co. trude Oil For lind Kunu*. Major M. Meigs, a civil engineer of Keokuk, Iowa, made a short address at yesterday's session of the Missouri Good Roads association, which, in the ??pinion of many, was the most iuter e>tiu. part of the day's work. He opened a new fit-Id of investigation, and proposed experiments in securing good roads along a Hue practically un known outside of a few localities in the East. It is his opinion that thc use of crude oil may prove a pauacea tor had roads in-localities where road material is hard to obtain. [le said his attention was first di rected to using oil on the highways by reading a newspaper clipping from a Pennsylvania town. It seems that a leaky oil pipe near the town in ques tion was responsible for the discovery. This pipe was near a place in the road that was invariably impassible during the season of spring and fall rain. When the leak occurred in thc pipe the ground became saturated to some ex tent with oil, amd very soon it was no ticed that the mud dried up and the surface of the earth became hard and remained so. It appears that so notorious was this piece of bad road that the effect of the oil on it became a matter of so much comment that presently the experiment was repeated 10 other localities, and with thc same effect. Major Meigs said that he sent a let ter to the officials of the Standard Oil Company and asked them to furnish him some crude oil for experimental purposes. They forwarded a tank con taining 130 barrels with their compli ments and wishes for success. Some eight barrels of this oil have been used on a notoriously muddy road near Keokuk with maDy satisfactory re sults. Major Meigs said that it was no trouble anywhere to keep dry roads in good condition at minimum expense. 011 will prevent the earth fron; becom ing wet by forming a waterproof crust. So far as he has carried on experiments a barrel of crude oil is sufficient for a strip of road 100 feet long and 12 feet wide. The cost of the oil at the wells is about 90 cents a barrel. No other material, he said, is so cheap, and no other will prove so effective. In con clusion, he said that he would send oil free to all wishing to make experiments if they would pay the freight. Major Meigs' speech caused a great deal of comment. To the delegates it seemed to open an entirely new field. Many questions were asked him, all of which he answered as information warranted. He explained the well known theory that oil and water will not mix, and made it apply to the question of good roads. The earth was porous enough, he said, to retain the oil and cause it to shed water, so that where the oil took hold moisture must depart, and naturally thc earth became compact. It is maintained that no roads are so good as dirt ones, when they are dry, and none so cheap. In many localities material for constructing macadam or gravel roads must be brought long distances, and consequently is quite costly. But from what Major Meigs said it was thought possible that with the aid of crude oil earth could bc utilised at a much less cost than ma cadam and gravel, even when the latter was near at hand.-St. Louis Republic. Charity. Universal love, charity, or good will to men, signifies the same sentiment. Charity is more generally used in the sense of feeding the hungry and cloth ing the naked, the Mohammed gave it a wide range, as follows :-Every good act is charity. Your smiling in your brother's face is charity-an exhorta tion of your fellow-men in virtuous deeds is equal to alms giving-your putting a wanderer on thc right road is charily-your removing stones and thorns, and other obstructions from the road, is charity-your giving water to the thirsty is charity. A man's true wealth hereafter is the work he does in this world to his fellow-men. Wheu he dies, people will ask what property has he left behind him ? but thc angels who examine him in the grave will ask. ''What good deeds hath thou sent before thee?" Knight's Review. -- mm * - - The vegetarians may be expected to deny thc recent statement of an American physician in Porto Pico, who says that thc Porto Ricans have become physically degenerate because they eat vegetables and not meat. The vegetarians can bring up the authority of the Bible, for it relates of Daniel that, after eating nothing but pulse and water for ten days, his coun tenance "appeared fairer and fatter in flesh than all the children which did cat the portion of the king's meat. ' Constipation leads to liver trouble, j and torpid liver to Bright's disease. Prickly Ash Bitters is certain cure at any stage ol' thc disorder. Sold by livans Pharmy. Men become bald. Why V Be cause they wear close hats and caps. Women an- never bald except hy ( disease, and they do not wear close j headgear. Men never lose hair below where thc hat touches thc head, not if they have been bald 20 years. Thc ?.lusc cap holds the heat and pcrspira j lion.; thereby thc hair glands become j weak, and thc hair falls out. j All Suris of I'?i rat; ra i ?ii? - Idleness is a purdie mint wlo-n various kinds cf misalin I' ar?* coined - Vice we can leam ?'f ourselves ; but virtue and wisdom n quire a tutor. - Civilly is the lowest pr'ce we pn\ for things, and repentance the highest - Some of the string beaus which grow in Peru are as loug as a man's arni. - An increased use of crude rubber threatens to exhaust the supply - If some people didn't believe everything they hear, they would not hear so much. - The general feeling among ?he soldiers in the Philippines is against retention of the islands. - When a man has once gained his consent to do a thing which he knows to be dishonorable, he is on the broad road to temporal aud eternal ruin. - To say what should be said, to say only what should be said, and to say it only as it should be said is a rare gift. - At a gum chewing contest in New York, Miss Martha Monroe chewed 144 sticks of gum in 30 miuutes and wou the championship. - The cutting of a button from a man's coat led to a fight at Hughes' Spring, near Dallas, Texas, resulting in the killing of three men. - The pleasure that some men feel at being able to borrow money, isn't a circumstance to the joy of the other fellow when he gets it back. - She-"Aad you expect me to re turn your affection ?"' He-"Not a bit of it. I'd rather have a little of vours." V? ..._ - M S S.linn, i WliMst?iUC COtliUlit . <l siiie.nl?- i.e.f '??-r Imme in Aiken e.ly Sh?* w;is about sixty years . .'il and hail been in bad health along I i me - ll-?bert lluinby and his wife, nf Parkersburg, . West Virgiuia, have I se parated. The husband has appealed tn the law tn divorce him forever from his wife solely because she ate onions jo disobedience to his orders. Mrs. Quinby had been repeatedly warned ??> h? r hu>band not to eat the vege table, and nothing seemed to irritate h m so much as the odor of onions. Ile has left the little home on many occasions and vowed never again to return, but the love for his wife and her promise never again to eat onions would reunite them. The husband eauie h??uie unexpectedly one day last week, and found the surroundings very ??f?'eiisive to him from the odor of onions. Mrs. Quinby has gone to her home in Pennsylvania, and the hus band will seek relief by law. - Wiih the launching of the bat t'eship Illinois the American navy is increased by the largest and most powerful vessel io all its squadrons. The new ship is larger ky 1000 tons t han the victorious Oregon ; when fully armed she will be a more power ful fighter than the Oregon or the Texas, and with her complete equip ment in place she will present to the maritime nations a magnificent exam ple of American genius and skill in naval construction. Here's hoping and believing, too-that the new bat tleship may prove worthy of her spon sor State ! May she never fire a gun j without cause, nor ever cease firing until the enemy signals "Enough !" S. S. S. Cures Sores and Ulcers It Matters Not How Ob stinate, or What Other Remedies Have Failed. Obstinate sores and ulcers, which refuse to heal under ordinary treat ment, soon become chronic and deep seated, and lead to conditions most serious. They are caused in different ways, but in every case the blood is involved, and no amount of local treat ment can have any effect. The poison must be eliminated from the blood before a cure can be had. THROWN FROM A HORSE. Mr. H. Kuhn, of Marion, Kansas, writes: "About three years ago my granddaughter.ner tha Whitwood. was thrown from a norse, re ceiving a wound of the scalp. Though under the treatment of physicians forseveral months, the wound remained about the same, until it llnally became very angry-looking, and broke out, into a running nore. This soon spread to other parts of the scalp and ran down the side of the neck.incrca.s ing in severity .and fear fully disfiguring her. She was then placed un der the care of the fac ulty of a well-known i hospital, but even the ' treatment she received there failed to arrest the 1 terrible sore. Reading of the many cures of blood troubles effected by S. S. S.. we decided to try it. and it relieved her promptly. In a few months she was entirely cured, and scarcely a mark now remains where the disease held full sway." A GUNSHOT WOUND. Capt. J. H. McBrayer, the well-known dis tiller, of L&wrenceburg, Ky., says: "Some years ago I was shot in thc left leg' receiving what I considered only a sligh: wound. It developed into a running sore and gave me a great deal of pain and inconven ience. I was treated by many doctors and took :i number of bloo''. remedies, but none did me any good and did not S'-?i.-i to check the MI progress of the sore. I - Wc^T"-' 3L had' heard Swift's Spo- -'? >?'- , "...?> .7, cille (S. S. S.i highly ; '.. /fe-?'/i recommended for the -W&TSV * V) ysl? blood, and concluded to !?)*'?-'.???{<< i' J?&i give it a trial, and thc ',' ' result was very gratify- '/,^S4\::MM lng. s. S. S. seemed to hf, t^Mk^/m get right at the trouble, :jr?j?,&f???-**i-' and forced the poison out of my blood; soon afterwards the sore healed up and was cured sound and well. I am sure S. S. S. ls by far the best blood remedy made."' It matters not how they are acquired or what treatment has failed, S. S. S. will euro the most obstinate, deep seated sore or ulcer. It is useless to expect local treatment of salves, lo tions, etc., to effect a cure, because they can not reach the real cause of the trouble, which is the blood. 8. S. S. drives out every trace of impurity in the blood, and in this way cures per manently the worst cases. It is the only blood remedy guaranteed Purely Vegetable and contains not a particle of potash, mercury, or other mineral. S. S. S. cures Contagious Blood Poison, Scrof ula, Cancer, Catarrh, Eczema, Rheu matism, Sores, Ulcers, Boils, or any other blood trouble. Valuable books on these diseases will be mailed free to any address, by the Swift Specific Company, Atlanta. Georgia. OSBORNE & CLINKSCALES Are Sole Agents at Anderson, S. C., for Iron King and Elmo Stoves, Garland Stoves and Ranges, rvX> THE Times Line of Cook Stoves. The above Stoves are bought in Car Lois direct from the manufacturer:?. Thus we >:ive "middle mauV profit, and also get cheaper freight rates. Cus tomers who buy Stoves from us get the advantage of this. We carry a well-selected stock of F*NCY CHINA, PORCELAIN GOODS, CHINA DINNER SETS and TEA SETS. Just the thing for Christmas Presents, (.all 011 us. USBORNE & CLINKSCALES. The Sole Agents for Iron King Stove?. Experts disagree on almost everything, but when the subject touches upon the great Superiority of. THE GREAT SYRACUSE TURN PLOW There is but one opinion, ami that is that it is tho best Plow mi earth. Syracuse Plows are designed right, made right, sold ritrbt. They will turn land where others have failed, and build fur themselves a demand wherever introduced. The pop ularity of this Plow co mee from genuine merit Competitor* will lill you thal they have minet hing just as good, but don't, be deceived-there is but one beet, and that is the SYRACUSE. We also sell thc SYRACUSE HARROWS, And -Syracuse -Harrows, like Syracuse Plows, arc thoroughly Llp-to-Datc. Sec us before buy ins Yours truly, BROCK BROS. v I AN Tbafs Needed I S - s P No soap, no soda, no borax, no ammonia-noth- M Jjg ing but water is needed to make things white and jg H bright and beautifully clean, with * it cleans everything quickly, r^H^jvA^v^ t j* cheapl}'-, thoroughly. Sold every- r^Hfelj fiRfe " p where. Largest package-^rea^eS^>|^B^^^^^M|L Vt THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY, .^^^^^^^^'^^ ' ; C'.lez?x Kt. Louis. New York. Boston. Philadelphia. N^^iwMSnmPfflHBP GLASS FOR WINDOWS, GLASS FOR HOT HOUSES, GLASS FOR SHOW CASES GLASS FOR CRAVAT AND GLOVE CASES. CUT ANY SHAPE WITHOUT EXTRA CHARGE. EVANS PHARMACY. ota IS what every person wants anrl I can oupply them. I make it a point to keep pure, fresh Goode, and can please the most fastidious in both quality and price. Just now the house keeper finds it difficult to supply the table, but if you will give me a call I can help you, as 1 keep PLAIN and FANCY GROCERIES of Every Description. My Stock of Canned Go?><fs can't be Excelled. FRUITS of all kinds in s^a-on, and when you want to make a Fruit Cake I eau supply your demands Fine line of CONFECTIONERIES, TOBACCO and CIGARS. Just received a f-esh lor, of POTATOES, CABBAGE, Etc. Yours to please, Free City Delivery. Q" F. BIG BY. - Santiago is uuder American rule, becoming the cleanest city in Cuba; and its death-rate has decreased from 70 a day to 20. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Condell???! Schedule 1B KCcct Oct. 16, 1893. STATIONS. Lv. Charlea'.oii . Lv. Oilunibia... " Prosperity. " Newberry.. Ninety-Six.. " Greenwood. Ar. Hodges. Ar. AbbeviUe. Ar. Belton. Ar. .Anderson Ar. Greenville. Ar. Atlanta Ex. Sun. No. 17. G 10 a m .5 25 a ra 7 22 a in 7 40 a m 8 00 a ra 8 40 a ra S SO a m ?35 am 10 10 a m 3 65 p m Daily No. ll. 7 30 a m 11 05 a ra 12 10 n'n 12 25 p m 1 20 p ra 1 55 p m 2 15 p ra 2 45 p m 3 10 p m 3 35 pm 4 15 p ra 9 30 p m STATIONS. LT. Greenville... " Piedmont ... " Williamston. Lv. Anderson Lv. Belton ... Ar. Donnalds. ftv. Abbeville. Lv. Hodges. u Greenw? id. .* Ninety-Six. " Newberry.*\. Ar. Prosperity?. Columbia. Ar. Charleston. Ex. Sun. No. 18. ? 80 p m 0 00 p m 6 22 p 4 45 p ra 6 45 p m 7 15 p m 6 10 ? m 7 35 p ra 8 00 p ra 8 18 p ra 9 15 p m 8 30 p ni Daily No. 12. 10 15 a m 10 40 a m 10 55 a m ~10 45 a m ll 15 ll 40 a m a m ll 20 a m 11 55 a m 12 40 p m 12 55 p m 2 00 p rn 2 14 p ns 3 30 p m bailylDaily No. 9 No.13 6 40 p m STATIONS. DailylDaily No.14No.10 ! 630p 7 80a Lv....Charleston....Ar 640p 1100a 1 830a ll 30a Col; inna." 32up9S0p 007al215p ".Albion.Lv 230p 850a 1004a 123p -.Santuc." 1 23p 7 46p 10 20a 200p ".Union." l??p 7 30p 10 39a 222p "....Jonesville...." 12 25p 6 53p 10 54a 237p M.Pncolet." 12 14p 642p 11 25a 3 l?p Ar t^nrtanburg.. .Lv ll 45a 6 16p 1140a 3 40p|Lv Spartunburg.. .Ar ll 22a 600p 2 7OQplAr _ Asheville.Lv 8 20a 305p "P," p. nj. "A," a. m. Pullman palace sleeping cars on Trains 35and 80. 37 and 3?, on A. and C. division. Trains leave Spartanbur?, A. & C. division, northbound, t>:*7 a.m., 3:37 p.m., 6:10 p.m., (Vestibule Limited); southbound 12:26 a. m., 8:15 p.m., ll :'M a. m., (Vestibule Limited.) Trains leave Greenville, A. and C. division, northbound, 5:45 a. ra., 2:34 p. m. and 5:22 p. m., (Vestibuled Limited): southbound, 1:25 a. m., 4:80 p. m., 12:3U p. m.,(Vestibuled Limited). Trains 9 svnd 10 carry elegant Pullman nleeping carslwl ween Columbia and Asheville, en route daily cwt ween Jacksonville and Cincin sati. FRANK S. GANNON. J. M.CULP, Third V-P. ?V; Gen. Mgr.. Traffic Mgr., "Washington, D. G Washington, D. C. W. A. TURK. S. H. HARDWICK. Gen. Pass. Ax't. As'tGen. Pas?. Ag t. Washington, li. C. Atlanta,Ga. BLUE Rl?Gc "V.RO?D ii C. BEATTIE tteeeive.. Time Table N... 7.-Rffective i*MH. Betweei' Anderson and Walhalla. No. 12 Kirnt Claas, Daily. P. M.-Leave s 3 35. 3.5(5. STATiOfW B ASTRO UM). S rt. ll First Olav?, Daiiv. Arrive A M. Anderson.ll 00 ..Denver.in 10 4 05.Antun.10 31 i. 14.Pendleton.10.22 4.23. Cherry's Cro?sini>.10.13 4.29.Adam's Crosaiu?.10 07 4 47.henees.0.49 ;") 11.West Union.0.25 5.17 A . .Wnlhh!la.I JV !) .0 NV ti, M i Daily, K> ., ?>? Snmbn ICASTHOUN n. !'. M. vrriv? No. 5, Mix-d Haily, Kxcept Suiirfnv WKSTB'U?XD Leave P M DOUBLE DA?Dr SERVICE TO ATLANTA, CHARLOTTA WILMINGTON, NEW ORLEA!Sa AND NEW YOKE. BOSTON. RICHMOND. WASHINGTON, NORFOLK. _PORTSMOUTH._ SCHEDULE IN EFFECT JULY 19, 18$? ??O?TH??UNi. No. 403. No*. 41. Lt New York, T Penn Ii. R*ll 00am ?9.09pm LT Philadelphia, " i 12 pm 12 05 am LT Baltimore *' 3 15 pm 2 59 am LT Washington, " 4 40 pm 4 30 am LT Richmond, A. C. L._ 8 56 pm 9 05 am LV'?wfoikTvfa S. A. L.*8 30 pm~"?5~0i5? LT Portsmouth, " -. 8 45 pm 9 2tfsm LT WeHoD, " ..._*11 28 pm*U 55 am Ar Henderson,_". 12 56 a m ?1 48 pm Ar Durham, " .f7 32am f4 18 pm Lv Ourharo. " .|7 00 pm t'O 19 am sr Raleigh, Tia S. A. L."~*2~T6 'am'~*3~40pm Ar Sxi.rord, " .......... 3 85 am 5 05 pm Ar Anthem Pints " _. 4 23am 5 58 pm Ar Hamlet, " ". 5 07 am 6 ?6 pm 1 Ar Wadesboro, " _. 5 53am 8 10 pm Ar Monroe. " _.6 43 am 9 12 pm Ar WllmlDgtop_?12 95 pm Ar Charlotte,_" -. ?7 50 am *"?0~3?pra Ar Chester, " ,.*3 03 am 10 55 pm LT ColuinbiaTc. N. & L. I?TR_. fe 00 pm Ar Clinton SAL ". -9 45 am *12 14 am Ar Greenwood " ............ 10 35 am 1 07 ss? Ar Abbeville, .. .ll OS am 1 S5 am ArEI'erton, ". 12 07 pm 2 41 am Ar Athens, " T. 113 pm 3 43 am Ar Winder, " . 156 pm 4 29 am Ar Atlant?, S A L. (Cen.Time) 2 50 pm 5 20 am ?VOKTHBOUNU._ No. 402. No. :ST LT Atlauta,8.A L.(C*n. Time) *12 00 n'n *7 50 pi? Lt Winder, " . 2 40 pm 10 40p?i Lv Athens, " . 3 13 pm 1119 pm LT Elberton, " . 4 IS pm 12 31 sm LT Abbeville, ". 5 15 pm 1 35 am Lv Greenwood, " . 5 41 pm 2 03 am LT i linton, " . 6 30 pm 2 W am A r Columbla7c~?7A"LT R. R... ~ *7 45am LT Chester, S. A. L . 8 13 pm 4 25 am Av barlotte. " ".*10 25 pm ^7 50 am LT Monroe, " ?. 9 40 pru C 05 am LT Humid, " . ll 15 pm 8 00 kt? Ar Wilmington ". 12 05 put LT Southern Pine?, " . 12 00 am 0 OG a Si Lv Haleigh, " .?2 16 am 1125? Ar Henderson " ._ 12 50 pm LT Henderson 3 28 am 1 05 pm ?Tburham, ~_f7~l2am f4 18 Bin Lv Durham " ...-?5 20 pm flO li ar Ar We'ldon, "" " ".*4~55~8m~ *2 55 nm Ar Richmond A.C. L.. S 15 am 7 35 pu Ar Washington. Penn. R. R.... 12 31 pm ll 30jom Ar Baltimore, " . 1 46 pm 1 Olffr Ar Philadelphia, " ......... 3 50 pm 3 50 ?tar A r New Yorfc, " . ?6 23 pm *6 53 ga Ar Portsmouth S. A. U. 7 25 an! 52C& ? r Norfolk " .=?7 35 am 5 3? nra "Daily. tDaily.Ex.Suaday. X Daily Ex. Monea? ?os. 403 a<M? 402 "The Atlanta Special.*' Sml Vestibuled Train, of Pullman Sleepers and CoaS> cs between Washington* and Atlanta, also nft mun Sleepers between Portsmouth and Chester,.* C. Nos 4i and 38, "The S. A. L Express." SaBd Train, Coaches and Pullman Sleepers D?M.W?-WI Portsmouth and Atlanta. For Pickets, Sleepers, eli., apply to B. A. Newland, tron'l. Agent Pass Dept. Wai. B. Clements, T.P. A., 6 Kimball Htsam Atlanta, (ia. E. St .Ioho, Vico-President and Gon'I. MS*?BHT V. E. McBeo General Superintendent. II W. ll. Clover, Trame Manager. T J. Anderdon, Gcn'l Passenger Ag?mt. GMU?-TMI I'tHcwirn,, l'ortMinotith, Va. ATLANTIC COAST LINE. TRAFFIC DEPARTMF.NT, WILMINGTON. N. C., Nov. 20, 1S9"*. Kiwi Lino Ib-tsvccn Charleston aud Caj un! bia and UpperS;iuth Carolina, North Carolina. CON DENS EI > SC IT EDU LE. ,<<UNi? WKST. GOING RAST *N'i. ii'-. No. ?.'i. 7 01 <m j Lv.Charleston...Ar | S 00 pm SSI i i I Lr .Lanes.\r | fi I* pm !) I lam I Lv .Sinnier. ....Ar | .-> 1? pm I io i ? il Ar . .... ..Columbia.Lv \ 00 pm "oil \r.Prosperity.Lv 2 .v? pm : ?in I Ai.Newberry.Lv 2'87 pa: 1'Ot ji I Ar.Clinton.Lv j 1 A7 j>^i ! ? ; \i .Laurens.Lv i Si pm ;n'it'i> lr.ft reen "il le.Lv 1201am .'I'ip'i Ar .^jiarlatihurg.Lv m aro iVOr.pni Ai*; ..W'tiimdioro, S. C.. ..L\ : i Ci ara s i , pm Ar . . < IiarloUe, S. C.Lv y T. am .. : pm Vf. UttiMiersonvill ?, N. C...Lv ;> 17 atti r O? inn Ar.A.- H'ville, N. C.i.v 8 20am i wu y - ., ar.d 58 Solid Trains between Charle?le :;ntl C(ili(T|ll:?H,S. C. FI. M. EMKR90S. ? i ?n'l Passenger Agsbt. j lt. K Kjitittr, G-n?ral Manage*, t M * MKUSO:;, Traille Manag?