The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, December 14, 1898, Page 4, Image 6
ANIMALS' FEAR UK MAN.
It in Not a Natural Instinct, Hut lit *
suits Fruin Hitter Kx per lenee.
According tn thc evidei.collected
by ancient anil tm?ilein natunli.-ts,
from Hon Felix il'Azara tu Mr. Hud
?on, thc puma, thc second largest of
thc big Cuts of .So id America, neither
feared niau nor r< yarded human beings
as its prey, hut un thc contrat y Hough t
their society, and even protected man
from the attacks ol' the jaguar. Trust
worthy facts which lend additional
confirmation to this interesting ques
tion must necessarily he slowly ac
quired. The following anecdote, whicli
comes fir-t hand from one long resi
dentin British (?uiaua, supports thc
Relief that the puma seeks thc society
of man instead of attacking or fearing
him. When making au expedition up
.ne cf th" largo river- iii a steam
launch our friend gave a passage to au
elderly Cornish miner, who was anxi
ous to reach the enid fields. Not
wishing to intrude upon his busts, he
did not sleep on board the launch, but
always niling his hammock between
two trees on shore. As el i tubing into
a high slung hammock is not erny, he
usually fastened it rather low, and his
weight brought it to within three feet
of the ground ut the bottom -if the
curve. One morning, being asked
how he slept, bc complained that tho
frogs had made such a noj.se under
neath his hammock that they bad kept
him awake. Some Indians of the
crew, who were folding up the ham
mock, laughed a cood dual when they
heard this, and being aaked the rea
son, said, uti!! laughing "Oh, tiger
uleep with au old mau last night."
They had found under the hammock
the marks of when; a puma had lain.
The noise; which had kept, thc occu
pier of thu ham Block awake was proba
b]y the purring of the puma, pleased
at occupying the "next birth" below a
roan. As these Guiana Indians have,
in addition to thc.unerring eye of the
forest l dweller,. a special liking and
capacity for taming animals, it can
hardly bc douhtt d that their contin
uion was correct. Such an absence of
fear and liking Tor human society,
could only kc 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
?pecies in North America. Arc wc,
then, to suppose that that absence of
fear of man so general even among the
large carn?vora was the rule in the
primitive worldV If it was. wc shall
have to account for the survival of
man in thc 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 thc
benevolent neutrality which can safely
be attributed to theo^uma was exhibit
ed by the uther Carnivora. Thc evi
dence that fear in not thc natural atti
tude of animals toward man is mainly
of two i. kinds-thc "notes of explorers
who have pushed into the few regions
of earth where animals were numer
ous, but man had not trodden, und
the results?of the very latest experi
ments of to-day in districts where thc
killing of animals has been absolutely
prohibited. In other words, we must
compare the behavior of thc creatures
in thc Arctic seas in thc days of the
Willoughby fand It?rants, or in thc
voyage of Weddell to the Antarctic,
with thc latest reports from Yellow
stone Park. DThe results?show a strik
ing agreement in thc demeanor of the
beasts when (Orst confronted with the
new creature, man. Few of them ex
hibited fear, so far as the records
show. -When It?rants" crew was on
its first voyage a polar hear, who
probably had never seen men before,
took one of the crew, who was lying
down, by thc backjof the neck, and
draggingdiitn some way. bit the top of
his head ol?. Kven now the polar hear
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. The
fear of man is lost by cr ea tu cs wild
and frccbut unmolested so quickly as
to be a matter of surprise to those
most conversnnt with animals in cap
tivity. Reports publi died 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)' cometo the houses to be fed,
r "and even ?cat thc flowers from tho win
dow boxes. Brown bears hang around
the hotels and come daily to eat thc
refuse carted into the woods close by,
...nd many of thc. smaller rodents are
absolutely fearless. In the menage
ries and zoological gardens thc fear of
mau is hist mainly by constant and
daily contact with no power to escape,
and by tho remembrance that it is
man who provides their food. But
herc the conditions ;??v abnormal and
it would be useless to draw conclu
sions from tho behavior toward man
of animals in captivity and apply them
to tho solution of the earlier problem
of ilic inn it?' or acquired character nf
their ft-ur nf li II ?nun Induies. li iv,
however, matter nf general knowledge
that whi te mall is weak ami beasts ntl
nierons, it"? in th? uouiitry he>iindthc
'A iinhesi and Shire Uiver , the Imldi't'-B
of the animals lend- to serum* ?I i-.1 - -
tors. In the ptesent day tho md)
frequent reports of attack 11 nf li??
atul leopards on men, for fund and not
in self defense or fright, com? from
these districts, though the st..ry i* ?1
old as the rebuilding of H niiaria.
If, as seems probable, the animal
fear nf mau wan acquired, ami is mu
natural lu l lu ir minds, it is nut vcr)
clear Imw the very early tribes nf men,
win II 1 he I arger oiirniverous animals
were far inure li il inc rou s than in?w
esc i ped destruction and survived Inn?
enough to impress 011 thc animal wnrld
thc sense of f?>ar by which man now
dotnitiat.es it. Itcgardcd merely as a
co n flu t between ont! class of animal
ami another, thc result should mil
have been dou'ited. Man ought tn
have disappeared from the fa?:e of the
earth, ?ir, in any ease, to have retreat
cd to remote strongholds in regions
not frequented by the beasts. Thal
he did not do so. but turned tho ta
bles on the helter equipped offensive
creature, is fair presumptive evidente
that original mau never was nu a level
with thc animals in intelligence, hut
was equipped wiih the predominant
brain power which has put bim ahead
in the race ever since.. Primitiv?
man, literally speaking, '"lived by Iib
wits," for be was evidently not neat 1)
so well equipped as the monkeys fm
physical offense or Hight, thntigl
their survival is not altogether cany t'
explain on purely physical grounds
Their power of us ng their arms am
hands as a means nf swinging rapid)j
from branch to branch gives them ar
advantage over all the tree diminu?
cats. Their habit of throwing mis
siles is also very disconcerting to nthe
animais, though this art is only prac
ticed by certain monkeys. Hut thei
rapid and intelligent combination fu
defense, menace, and outlook duty
has contributed quite as much to thei
survival as th?'ir speed und activity.
In tropical America even thc mon
keys are hard put to it to escape th
attacks of such active and formidabl
foes as the harpy eagle and the oeelol
Hut it cannot bc that even the IIIO.H
debased ?ir physically weakest of man
kind has ever been the "natural prey
td that ''natural enemy" which, ai
cording to Sir Samuel Haker, is th
nightmare of nearly every species 1
non carnivorous animal. Thc cause
which make exceptions to this rule ar
temporary and narrowly local, live
thc (irooulander and the Eskimo ai
thc masters of thc polar bear, an
probably always ' have been, thoug
little better armed than primitive mat
and thc pigmies of Central America
forests are mighty hunters. It raa
even be that thc neighborhood of fiore
animals aided the early developmei
of man; for the least developed race
arc largely found in such places t
Terra del Fuego, where, in the absent
01 savage beast, savage men had 1
inducement to arm and equip liimscl
Hut man has an even more potei
ally than his own ingenuity, wilie
from remote antiquity has investi
him in thc mind of thc animal wor
with something of the supernatura
lie is ever accompanied by the ot
element whioh the animal mind ca
not create, cannot understand, stan?
iti constant awe of and dreads by nigh
when its courage is greatest and th
of man least steady. Fire, that pill
of cloud and Hame which precedes n
only the aggregate human host, b
thc smallest fragment of ii.c invadii
army, thc constant and dreaded hr
hinger of human presence, springn
up, as the beasts must think, aut
matieally from tho earth wherever ni
rests his b.idy, guarding bim in slec
ing and waking, always associated wi
his abode, has for ages terrified t
beasts.
Since the first appearance of man
any given region of the earth he h
been teaching the beast to fear hi
and it is not until to-day, when he
absolutely their master, and has
many instances totally destroyed the
that he thinks of restoring on a ti
scale and on a few spots on the eartl
surface "the state of nature," and
lowing those creatures which he dai
to experiment with, once more to 1
aside their acquired terror, whi
makes them flee from his presence.
London Spectator.
Pains in the chest when a pers
has a cold indicate a tendency towt
pneumonia. A piece of flannel dau
cued with Chamberlain's Pain Ha
and bound on to the chest over I
seat of Pain will promptly relieve t
i pain and prevent the threatened atti
of pneumonia.*- This same tren tun
will cure a lanie back in a few hon
Sold by Util Orr Drug Co.
- An Arkansas editor thusaniiot
ced ntl -im port ant event in the Io
newspaper world Itis with afeel
ol distress thal we. retire fruin 1
active control of this paper; but
leave our journal with a gentler,
who is unsocially l.ettei able than
arc to handle it. Thc gentleman
.well-knownin this community, ll
the sheriff.
Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera :
I Diarrhoea lletucdy can always be
pended upoffaml is pleasant and s
! to take. Sold by Hill-Orr Drug Ct
('unie Oil Fer Hail Komi?.
Maj>>r M Meigs, a civil engineer of
Keokuk, Iowa, made a churl a?ldre>s
it >cstcrday s session of the Missouri
?nod Koads association, which, in the
(.inion of many, was thu most inter
.etiii. part of the day'* work. He
.pened a ..cw held of investigation,
uni proposed cxpciimciits in securing
Komi roads along a linc piaelieally un
known outside of a few localities in
the I'J.ist. lt is his opinion that the
Usu of crude oil may prove a panacea
tor had roads in localities where road
material is hard to obtain.
Ile said his. attention was first di
reeled to using oil un thc highways hy
r ading a newspaper clipping from a
Pennsylvania town. It seems that a
leaky oil pipe near the town in queu
lion was responsible for the discovery.
This pipe was near a place io the road
that was invariably impassible ?luring
thu 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 thc
sui fae?; of tho earth became hard
and remained so. It appears that so
notorious was this piece of had road
that the effect of thc oil on it became
a matter of so much comment that
presently the experiment was repeated
in other localities, and with thc same
effect.
Major Meigs said that he sent a l?-t
ter to thc officials of the Standard Oil
Company and asked them to furnish
him some crude oil for experimental
purposes. They forwarded a tank con
taining 1*10 barrels with their compli
ments und wishes for success. .Some
eight barrels of this oil have been used
on a notoriously muddy road near
Keokuk with muny satisfactory re
sults.
Major Meigs said that it was no
trouble anywhere to keep dry roads in
good condition at minimum expense.
(Jil will prevent the earth fro.'i. 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 KIO feet long and 12 feet
wide. The cost ?if the oil at the wells
is about HO cents a barrel. No other
material, he said, is so cheap, and no
other will prov?: so effective. In con
clusion, he said that he would scud oil
free to all wishing to make experiments
it' they would pay the freight.
Major Meigs' speech caused a great
deal of comment. To the delegates it
sectued to open an entirely new field.
Many ?juestions were asked him, all of
which he answered as information
warranted. Ile 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 the earth
b?cane compact.
It is maintained that no roads ure so
goud us dirt ones, when they ure dry,
and none so cheap. In many localities
material for constructing macadam or
gravel roads must bc brought long
distances, and consequently is quite
costly. But from what Major Meigs
said it was thought possible that with
the aid ot crude oil earth could be
utiliccd at a much less cost than ma
cadam and gravel, even when the latter
was near at hund.-St. Louis licpnhlic.
Charity.
Universal love, charity, or good will
to men, signifies thc same sentiment.
Charity is moro generally used in the
sense of feeding the hungry and cloth
ing the naked, thc Mohammed gave ic
a wide range, as follows :-Every good
act is sharity. 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 u wanderer on thc right road
is charity -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.
When he dies, people will ask what
property has bc 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.
- mt . m .
- The vegetarians may be expected
to deny the recent statement of an
American physician in Porto Rico,
who says that tho Porto Ricans have
become physically degenerate because
they eat vegetables and not meat. The
vegetarians can bring up the authority
of thc 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
eat the portion of thc king's meat. '
Constipation leads to liver trouble,
? and torpid liver to Bright's disease.
! Prickly Ash Bitters is certain cure at
any stage ??f the disorder. Sold by
F. vans Ph army.
'< ?- Men become bald. Why ? Be
cause they wear close hats ami caps.
; Women are never bald except by
disease, and they do not wear close
? headgear. Men never lose hair below
? where the hat touches thc head, not if
they have been bald 20 years. Thc
close cap holds the heat and perspira
tion-; thereby thc hair glands become
weak, and thc hair falls out.
All Suri* of l'ai agi npll
Idleness is a publie mint win I
varions kinds ? f mis<iln< f HIV coined
- Vieo wo can learn of nur-clve- :
bul virtue and wisdom n quire a tutor
- Civilly is the lowest pnce we pa\
for ibings, and repentance the highest
- Some of the string beans which
grow in J'cru are as long as a man's
arm.
- An increa-ed us- of crude rubber
threatens to exhaust ti e supply
- If somu people didn't b> lleve
everything they hear, they would not
hear so much.
- Thc general feeling among the
midiera in the Philippines is against
retention of the islands.
- When a mau has once gained bis
consent lo do a thing which he knows
to bc dishonorable, he is on the broad
road to temporal and eternal ruin.
- To say what should bc 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 eontestin New
York, Miss Martha Monroe chewed 144
sticks of gum in :>') minutes and won
the championship.
- The cutting of a hutton from a
man's coat led io a fight at Hughes'
Spring, near Dallas, Texas, resulting
in thc killing of three men.
- Thc 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-"And you expect me to re
turn your affection He-"Not a
bit of it. I'd rather have a little of
yjours/'
- M s S.lime I Whetstone commit
? ii simmie i.co- her home in Aiken
c nn ty She wns about sixty years
. .td and had been kn bad health along
11 mc
- Udert K'iiiiby and his wife, of
Parkersburg, West Virginia, have
s? pa rat ed. The husband has appealed
to the law to divorce him forever from
hit* wife solely because she ate onions
i i disobedience to his orders. Mrs.
Q'linhy had been repeatedly warned
li) her h ilcha nd not to eat the vege
table, and nothing seemed to irritate
li tu co much us thc odor of onions.
He has blt I he little hume on many
occasions and vowed never again to
return, but thc love for his wife and
her promise never again to cat onions
would reunite them. Thc husband
.-ame home unexpectedly one day last
week, and found the surroundings
very offensive io him from the odor of
onions. Mrs. Quiney has gone to her
home in Pennsylvania, and thc hus
band will ceck relief by law.
- Wiih the launching of thc bat
t'eship Illinois thc American navy is
increased by thc largest and most
powerful vessel in all its squad rons.
The new ship is larger by 1000 tons
than the victorious Oregon; when
fully artued shu will be a more power
ful fighter than thc Oregon or the
Texas, and with her complete equip
ment in place she will present to thc
maritime nations a magnificent exam
ple of American genius and skill in
naval construction. Here's hoping
and believing, loo-that the new bat
tleship may prove worthy of herspon
snr State ! May she never fire a gun
without cause, nor ever cease firing
until the enemy signals "Keough I"
S. S. S. Cures
Sores and Ulcers
lt 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 und deep
seated. arni lead to conditions most
serious. They ave caused in different
ways, but ill every case the blood is
involved, and no amount of local treat
ment cnn have any effect. The poison
must be eliminated from the blood
before ti cure can bu had.
THROWN FROM A HORSE.
Mr. II. Kulin, of Marlon, Kansas, writes:
"About Iii rec years ago my granddaughter,Kei
tha Whitwood. was thrown fruin a norse, re
ceiving a wound of the scalp. Though under
tho treatment of physicians forsevoral mouths,
thc wound remained about thc same, until it
llnally became very angry-looking, and broke
out into u running
nore. Tills soon spread
to other parts of the
scalp and ran down tile
side of the ncck.inoroas
insc In severity .and fear
fully dls?guring her.
She was then placed un
der the care of the fac
ulty of a well-known
hospital, but even the
treatment she received
then* failed to arrest the
terrible sore. Reading
nf the many cures of
blood troubles effected
by S. 8. 8.. we decided to
try lt. and it relieved her promptly, in a few
months she was entirely cured, and scarcely
a mark now remains where the disease held
fud sway."
A GUNSHOT WOUND.
Capt. J. II. McBrayer, thc well-known dis*
tiller, of Lawrenceburg. Ky., says:
"Some years ago I was shot in thc left leg'
receiving what I considered only a ?ligb?
wound. It developed
lut-? a running sore und
gave in?- a great deal
of pain und inconven
ience. 1 was treated
by many doctors and
took a numliiT of blood
remedies, hut none dbl
mc any good and did ?fc/8T*'\ -vt'')
not seem tn cheek thc Wff: , \ .-. .. ?li"j &
nmgri'?s of the sore. I ; V^V^/V.-. Jv?
had hou rd Swift's Npo- v n': '.."-T?l?^
eitle i.s. S. S.I highly ' .'%'?v.V^;-//hi
recommended for the .^w-, \j /SR
him id. and concluded to ?flara?r? ?" ???ri
?iv.- it a trial, and thc 1 'ffifBfrg b/MA
result was very gratify- 'il$Sv>\&&/&
lng. s. s. s. seemed to tj'f?} fm
gut righi at the trouble, jK^^^ici--'^ 1
and forced the poison
out of my blood; soon
afterwards tho sore, healed up and was cured
sound and well. I am sure K. S. 8. ls by far
the liest blood remedy made."
] t matters not bow they are acquired
or what treatment has failed, S. S. S.
will cure 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. S. 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
Purdy 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. 3cre.3. Uice.rs. 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,
AND THE
Times Line of Cook Stoves.
The above Stoves are bought in Car Lots direct from the manufacturers.
Thus we cave "middlemau's" profit, and also get cheaper freight rates. Cus
tomer who buy Stoves from us get the advantage ot* this.
We carry a well-selected stock of F*NCY CHINA, PORCELAIN
GOODS, CHINA DINNER SETS and TEA SErS. Just the thing * r
Christmas Presents. Call on us.
OSBORNE & CLINKSCALES.
The Sole Agents for Iron King Stoves.
Experts disagree on almost everything,
but when the subject touches upon the
great Superiority of.
THE GREAT SYRACUSE TURN PLOW
There is but ono opinion, and that is that it is tim best Plow on
earth. Syracuse Plows are designed right, made right, sold
right. They will turn land where others have failed, and
build for themselves a demand wherever introduced. The pop
ularity ?d' this Plow come? from genuine merit. Competitor?
will tell you that they have romething just as good, but don't
be deceived--there is but one beet, and that is ike SYRACUSE.
We also sell thc
SYRACUSE HARROWS,
And Syracuse Harrows, like Syracuse Plow*, are thoroughly
Up-to-Date. Sec us before buying.
Yours truly,
BROCK BJEiOB
y.
Ml That's Needed
No soap, no soda, no borax, no ammonia-noth
ing but water is needed to make things white and
bright and beautifully clean with
D?M Powdei
It cleans everything quickly,
cheaply, thoroughly. Sold every
where. Lar^st package-greatest
economy.
THE N. IC. FAIRBANK COMPART,
*".i.ov>. s-:. Louis. New York. Boo ton. PhUadt?phia?
GLASS FOI! WINDOWS,
GLASS FOR HOT HOUSES,
GLASS FOR SHOW CASES??
GLASS FOR CRAVAT
AND GLOVE CASES.
CUT ANY SHAPE
WITHOUT EXTRA CHARGE.
EVANS PHARMACY
Somethini?Choice to
IS what every person want? anti I can supply 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 thc table, but if you will give
me a call I can help you, as 1 keep
PLAIN and FANCY GROCERIES of Every Descrht
My Stock of < '?mied iiooils can't be Excelled.
FRUITS of all kinds in s^i'ou, and when you want to make al
Cake I can supply your demands
Fine Hue of CONFECTIONERIES. TOBACCO and CIGARS,
Just received a f-esh lot of POTATOES, CABBAGE, Etc.
Yours to please,
Free Fily Delivery. ?Gk "F. BIGB7
- Santiago is under American rule,
becoming the cleanest city in Cuba-,
and its death-rate has deorcasad from
70 a day to 20.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
Condensed Schedule la KOvct
Out. 10, 11593.
STATIONS.
Lv. Charleston..
I A'. Columbia....
.. Prosperity..
" Newberry...
'. Ninety-Six...
" Greenwood.,
ir. Hodges.
Ar. Abbeville.
Ar. Belton.
Ar. Anderson
Ar. Greenville
Ar. Aliante....
STATIONS.
Lv. <ireenvil!??_
" Piedmont -
" Williamston..
Ly. Anderson
i.v. Belton ...
Ar. Donnalds.
P.v. AbbevUle.
Lv. Hodges.
" Greenwi >d.
** Ninety-six..
u Newberry..T?.
Ar. Prosperity?....
Oolnmbia.
Ar. Charleston.
Bx. bun.
No. 17.
C 10 a m
6 25 a m
7 22 a in
7 40 a m
8 00 a m
8 40 a m
8 60 a m
0 35 a m
10 lt) a m
n 55 p m
Daily
No. fl.
7 80 a TO
7?05 a m
12 10 n'n
12 25 p m
1 20 p m
166 p m
2 16pm
2 ?5 p m
8 10 p m
S S3 p m
4 15 p m
U 80 p m
Ex. Son.
No. 18.
DaUy
No. ?2.
6B0pa??
? 0? p nv
0 22 p m
? 45 pm
0 45 p m
7 16 p m
8 lu n ra
7 85 p m
8 00 p m
8 18 p m
9 15 p m
0 80 p m
10 15 a m
10 4u a m
IC 55 a zn
^^^^ Silvia
TO
ATLANTA. CHARLOTTA
WILMINGTON,
NEW ORLE
AND
NEW TOK&. BOSTON.
RICHMOND.
WASHINGTON. RORFOIK.
_PORTSMOUTH.
SCHEDULE IN EFFECT JULY 18, l?
SOUTH BO UN i.
No. 403. ?
Lv New York.vvia Penn lt. B.?ll Mus H
Lv Philadelphia, " I 12pm U
Lv Baltimore ?? 3 15 pm :
Lv Washington, " 4 40pm 1
Lv Richmond, A. C. L....."., 8 58 pm I
Lv Norfolk. v?a 8. A. LT.*8 80pm~<i
I,V Pnrt?rani?IJ.i ?. _.m^ ??.j J
Lv Weldon, - ."..?ll 2Spm?ll
ar Hgajgaoa,_" .".12 58aa 1
AT Durham. ~ ...7ITt7~S?am fl
ht Ourbaro. " ."" f7 00 na jil
AT Haleigh. ?ta8. A. L"."~*2lflam"*?
Ar Munford, *' 3 85 am 5
Ar ?nqiner?'Plnea " -.". 4 23am 6
Ar Hamlet, *." ........... 5 07am t
Ar Wadeaboro, " _.. 5 68am 1
Ar Monroe. " _." 6 44am I
AT Wilmington_?ll
Ar Charlotte, " ?. ?7 60 am 'Tl
ll 15 a m
ll 40 a m
ll 20 a m
Lv. Hodges. 7 85pm ll 65 a m
" Greenw< ni. 800pm 12 40pm
** Ninety-Six... 8 18 pm 1265pm
" Newberry..Ti.. 0 16pm 200pm
Ar. Prosperity...... 080pm SH pm
" Oolnmbia. . 8 80 p m
Ar. Charleston. 0 40 p m
feffi STATIONS. gg%B
6lX>p 7 80a Lv... .Charleston-Ar fl40p ll?O?
8 80a ll 80a ....Col. m lia." 8 2up 08Op
007al216p ".Ahuun.LT 280p 860a
1004a U!p ".Santno." 12ap 7 46p
1020n 200p *..Union.M 105p 780p
1089a 222p " .... Jonesvllia.... " 122Sp 063p
1064a 237p M.Pacolet.M 1214p 042p
ll 26a 810p Ar Rpnrtanburg.. .Lv ll 46a 0 16p
1140a U40pLv Spart onburg... Ar ll 22a 6OOo
2 700pAr _ Asheville.Lv 820a 806p
"IV p. m. "A," ?. m.
Pnllrotn paine"? sleeping care on Trains 85si?.d
80, 87 and 8S, on A. and C. division.
Trains lcavo Spart nnburg, A. ?fe O. division,
northbound, 6:37 a.m., 8:87 p.m., 6:10 p.m.,
(Vestibule Limited); southbound 12:26 a. m.,
8:16 p. m., ll :84 a. m., (Vestibule Limited.)
Trains leave HreenvUle, A. and C. division,
northbound,5:46a. m., 2:34 p. m. and 5:22 p. m.,
JVestibuled Limited) : southbound. 1:26 a. m.,
:80 p. m., 12:8U p. m., (Vestibuled limited).
Trains 9 and 10 carry elegant Pullman
sleeping ears Ixitwecn Oolnmbia and Asheville,
en route daily between Jacksonville and Oin oin
natl.
FRANK S. GANNON, ?7. M. CT7LP,
Third V-P.?fc Gen. Mgr., Traillo Mgr.,
Washington. D. C Washington, IX-C.
W. A. T?RK, 8. H. HARDWKJE.
Gen. Pass. Ax't. As'tGen. Posa. ?fft.
'Washington, D. C. Atlanta,Go.
Ar Chester, ?? _?8 03 am 10
Lv Colombia, C.~N. A L. B. B_jt
Ar Clinton 8. A I* _..... -9 45 am ?U
Ar Greenwood ** .?......^. 10 ?tao 1
Ar Abbeville, *. ...". ll OS am 1
ArEI'-erton, ".^. 12 07pm S
Ar Athena, M _. 1 18 pm I
Ar Winder, " _...... 1 66 pm <
Ar Atlanta, 8 A L. (Cen.Time) 2 60pm i
BLUE RIOGF 04".ROAD
H C. BEATTIE ttecoivei
Time Table N... 7.-K flea i ve . . - . 1*9?.
between Anderson and Walhalla.
tfOUTHBOUNIi.
No. wa.. ?
Lv Atlanta,?.A L.(Osn. Time) ?12 00 n'o '1
L? Winder, .' _. 2 40 pm 1?
Lr Athena, .' . 3 13 pm ll
Lv Elberton, " ......... 4 15 pm i?
Lv Abbeville, ". 5 15 pm 1
Lv Greenwood, " . 5 41 pm 1
LT i linton, .. ......... 6 80 pm_ 1
A r Colan? bia. CT?T?LT B. B... *>
Lv Cheater, S. ATL . g 18 pa j
?v harlotte"! -_.?lu 25 pm gj
Lv Moorina" ?** _ ........ 5 40pm *
Lv Hamlet,_" .ll 15pm I
Ar'Wilmlngton u .- _ BJ
Lv Southern Pines,. 12 00 am j
Lv Haleigh, " .*2 16 am ?
Ar Henderson " ._ U
Lv Henderson_ 3 28 an ?
Ar Dalham, "_. t7"?2am jj
Lv Durham M ...J5 20pmJ?
Ar Weldon, Z .' _*4 ftSim""?!
AxRJehmond A.C. L..._ 8 16am T
ArWaabington.PeDD.B. B- 12 31 pm U
Ar Baltimore, " ..._ 146 pm
Ar Philadelphia, "_ 3 60pm J
Ar New York, " ." ?6 23pmJ?
WBSTPOUKII KASTnOtTNI).
No. 12 STATiONfl No. ll
Pirat Claas, Fi rut Ola?*,
Dallv. Dally.
P. M.- Leave Arrive A M.
s 3 85.Anderson.ll 00
f 8.66.Denver..10 40
f 4 05....Antun.10 81
s 4.14.Pendleton.10.22
r 4.23.Cherry's Crossing.10.13
t 4.29.Ad.im'n Crossing.10.07
8 4 47.Seneca.9.49
s 5 11.West Union.9.25
s 6.17 A *.Walhalla..Lv'J iO
No. 6, Mix nd, NO. 5, M i x*d.
Daily, Bxt-ept Daily, Kxcept.
Sondav Aunriav
KASTnocMi. WESTBOUND.
I*. M.- \rrive Leave-P 'M.
? rt.10.Anderaon....ll 10
f 5 55.Denver.11.38
f 5.43.Antno.1150
s 5 81.Pendleton.12 02
f .5 lt?.Cherrv'n CtowliiK.12 14
f 511 .Adams' CrcSilntf.1 \22
. 4.47 ?.Seneca. ( 12 40
a 4 10 / .Serpea.I 1 45
s 3 38?.Weot Union. 2 0?
H 3 30 /j*..L..Wulbai la.,.. 2 10
? - *- .
(?.) lt? uUr station; (f) Fla? ataron
Will ?No .top at the follow!np Mutions
to tal?" <>n or let off pawtenRora; Phin
nov*. J-itiifs' an?! Fanrly Spring?
IN? 12 i?itinect? with Sonthern It.?i!way
No 12 ai Anderson.
No 0 con nee.1??, with Southern Railway
Nos. 12. 87 and SS at finora.
J. R. ANDERSON, Fnpf.
ArPortsmonth 8. A. U. 7 28am t
*r Norfolk M _?7 S5?m *
?Dally. tD*lly. Bx. Boaday. IPallyjxJl
Noa. 409 a?d ?02 "The Atlanta Specif
V?aUbal?d Train, er Pullman Slfepera aol
>-? between Washington-and Atlanta,?
toan Sleopera between Portsmouth anti
No* 41 and 88, "Tho 8. A. L ,Kipf^
Train, trachea and Pullman 8\ecf*n*
Pertasnontb and Atlanta. . .
For Pickets, Sleepers, etc. apply to .
B. A, Newland, Gen'l. Agent Pa? Dffi
Wm. B. Clea?nta, T.P. A..6
Atlanta, Qa... -,
E. Ht Joh o', Vjlee-PreBideDt ani Oj*11
V. E.McBoo CencralSuperintendfDt.
II. W. B, Glover, Traille Manager -
T J. Andenion, Gen'l. Paaaen^r UP?
Se?orial OlBcere. Poritmio"^
ATLANTIC COAST ?
TUAFFIC DEPAB?
WILMINGTON. N. C. No???"
Fast tine Between Charlton *"
uni bia and Upper South Carolin*
Carolina. "rn ti
CONDENSED SCIIKUUUJ
aOINO WKST. ?0,S
.No. 52._J?.
7 03 am Lv.... "....Charleston-.-*!
8 31-na Lv.,.^I^ine^.\.
i 4lam Lv.?.Sumter.
11 01 pm Ar. Columbia..\
12 07 pm Ar.Prosperity.VI
12 20 pui -Ar......Newberry.?.
lOtpm Ar.-..Clinton.
ivs pm Ar..Laurena.,f
s OJ pin Ar_.Oreonvillf-. T
S to pm Ar.....''partanbnn:.;;
? 07 pin Ar...... VVInn?Aboro, S. ?.}'f
8 is pm Ar.Charlotte, N c...... ?
0 ? 8 pm I Ar- lIendnraonTlIl?. >. ,-?'f
7 00 pm I Ar-...^Aahcvllle.j?_- ^^"^
."bally. .
Noa. 52 and 58Solid Train? bet??
I ?udColitmbia.B.C J{ ^ gail
I . Gen'l.PMrtorjJ,
J B. iaacLKT. (i<.'>"r*, ;
T M . * u K aso ti. Traffic Manag?'
rffi?iT^i*f^trFil^^"*M wniiotw^fflsan