University of South Carolina Libraries
GEN. M'CRADY'S .Another Favorable I lish. Jo Favorable notices of Gen. McCra dy's work continue in the Northern press, and it now has begun to attract attention in England, as will be seen by the review of it in the Speaker, London, published below. Among the notices in this country which have recently come to this office is a very pleasant one by so excellent an authority as Prof. B. C. Steiner, in Annals of the American Academy. Prof. Steiner says: "This is the beginning of what bids fair to be one of the best of our State . histories. Mr. M*eCrady promises to follow this volume with the further history of the Palmetto State to the close of the American Revolution. "We trust he will not stop there. No State needs to have her history writ ? * ten more than South Carolina, and no one is so well fitted to write that his tory as our author. Too many of our historical writers are too timorous or too little alive to the importance cf the history of the various portions of the Union under the Federal Consti tution i and so stop their work too soon. South Carolina's history should be written down to the close of the reconstruction period in 1876, and though we should probably disagree with many things Mr. McCrady would write in the latter portion of the work, we are most anxious tc see him under take the task. It would be a most valuable treatise for the student of American history and politics." ********* Prof. H. L. Osgood, reviewing in the Political Science Quarterly, Bos ton, Mass., The First Republic in America, by Alexander- Brown, and Gen. McCrady's history, writes: "A book of a different order, though upon a kindred subject, is McCrady's History of South Carolina Under the Proprietary Government. It supplies a long felt need, and when the work \ ' which the author has planned shall 1 have been carried through to the Rev olution we are confident that a strong ? light will be cast upon what has been 1 hitherto an obscure period in early 1 American history. The volume be- 1 fore us is the result of a thorough ? study of all accessible sources. The influence of Rivers is in evidence and ', is frequently acknowledged, but ' throughout the volume there is abun- i dant proofs of original thought and '. research. Tte documents in the Co- 1 lonial Records of North Carolina have 1 been utilized so far as they throw 1 light on the Southern province. Mono- : graphs and pamphlets have not been : overlooked. Though social causes and conditions have not been neglected, the book is mainly political and legal in character. The author's prof es- '. sional training enables him to discuss : legal questions in a convincing man- ; ner, and to give them considerable 1 prominence. Like other good Caro- '< linians, he is not lacking in State ] pride, but this is restrained within ' reasonable bounds. The organization 1 and policy of the board of proprietors are discussed thoroughly and with 1 fairness. The conflicts with the In- . dians, with pirates and with the Span- j iards, the peculiar difficulties to which ' South Carolina was exposed as a bor der province, receive their due share of attention. Reference is made to i European relations so far as they had a bearing on the history of the prov ince. The book is Unusually free ; from errors, and in accuracy, thought- : fulness and fairness of spirit closely comes up to the measure of what a State history should be." THE FOUNDING OF SOUTH CAROLINA. The History o'f South Carolina Under the Proprietary Government. 1070 1719. By Edward McCrady. New York: The Macmillan Company: London: Macmillan & Co. Mr, McCrady's book deals, at what to English readers may seem excessive length, with the early history of his ' native State. There were less than 7,000 whites in South Carolina when ' the Proprietary Government ended, 1 and he has filled 700 pages in telling 1 us how they got there. But the book 1 is so carefully and well done, written with such grasp and breadth, that it 1 cannot be dismissed as of merely local interest. We are too apt to take all our American history from New Eng landers, or all our Southern history from Virginians, and thus to overlook the Importance of the farther South. South Carolina has not been a mere breeding place for negroes; it has also been the nursery of a strongly marked and separate type of white American. During this century it has been one of the great emigrant States, and in 1860 two-fifths of thc whole native born white population were found in other States of the Union, mainly in the South and Southwest. Its politi cians have been largely responsible for th( aggressive type of Populistic Democracy which has ousted the more sedate ?outhcrners from thc party leadership. Some knowledge of the origins of the South Carolina folk is therefore necessary to the understand ing of modern American history. I GREAT WORK. Sfotice from an Eng rar nal. The colony was first named by some Huguenots who planted the flag of France there in the reign of Charles IX; but DO permanent settlement was made until our Charles II granted it as a county palatin to certain of his courtiers, of whom Clarendon and Shaftesbury were the most notable. The Lords Proprietors, on the whole, did their duty as well, or as badly, as aDy others to whom similar rights were given elsewhere. They certainly sent out some colonists who could never have paid their own way. and, though they muddled many things, the mis takes were not usually due to a nig gard searching after profits. It so happened that John Locke, then Ash ley's secretary, was employed to draw up a constitution, and his Fundamen tal Constitutions have furnished some amusement to those who like to gird at philosophic politicians. "We had half hoped that Mr. McCrady might have rehabilitated these "Fundamen tal Constitutions." But he is a law-i yer, and Locke prescribed -that no man should plead in the " Colonial Courts save on behalf of near rela tions. So Mr. McCrady has his re venge, and makes mincemeat of the Landgraves and the Caciques by which the Whig philosopher tried to build up a hereditary aristocracy on a tabula rasa. Indeed, he deprives Locke of the only credit to which he had been thought to be entitled-that of estab lishing toleration for all Deists. It is true that, until in the reign of Anne, a Tory majority in the local Legisla ture made membership of the Angli can Church a condition for State em ployment, Dissenters of all sorts en joyed in Carolina greater freedom than in any other colony, and an Ana baptist minister who fled from New England lived and taught in Charles ton in peace. But this was not due to Locke. It was due to the express provision which Charles II had inserted in the charter enjoin ing the proprietors to exercise a power of dispensation which, according to the strict Whig view of the Constitu tion, the King himself did not pos sess. And. as a matter of fact, these Fundamental Constitutions were neve/ put in force. One of the proprietors. Sir William Berkeley, was the Gover nor of Virginia, who concluded a re port with the famous declaration: "I thank God that there are no free schools, no printing, and I hope we shall not have these hundred years; for learning has brought disobedience into the world, and printing has di- ; vulged them and libels against the j best government/' He was not a very likely man to yield to the whims of philosophedom. Nor were the colon ists philosophers. They proceeded, at the instigation of one William Owen, doubtless a Welshman, to elect a democratic Parliament in their own rough and ready way, among whom were "Mick Moran, a laboring Irish man, and Kich Crossley, set free by his master for idleness."' Thus early did the eternal struggle bet.veen thc Mugwump and thc ward politician be j?n upon the American continent with thc usual result. They were a strangely mixed lot these colonists. The strongest stream of immigration was from Barbadoes, where already there were 50,QUO whites, F]nglish, Scotch and Irish. Mr. McCrady thinks that the Com monwealth established thc navigation system mainly to punish these sugar planters for their loyalty. Charles II did no better, and thence it came that the Church of England element in South Carolina was thc most populis me in tendency, while the Dissenters stood by the proprietors. The Hugue not refugees were another strong cle ment. They numbered about a tenth Df the population, and were mostly artificers. The Scotch-Irish did not ionie until later, when they immigra ted by way of Virginia, but there were plenty of both Irish and Scotch. It is a curious and notable fact that the Governor at thc end of thc seventeenth century was Joseph Blake, who was cither thc nephew or brother of Crom well's admiral, and had left langland owing to thc dread which Noncomfor tists in the West felt of persecution undera Popish King: while his suc cessor. James Moore, chosen by thc local council, was a son of I lory O'-Uoore, thc Irish Catholic rebel of 1641. Fear of Indians, pirates and Span iards made thc mixed settlers congre gate mostly in thc town of Charleston, which became a centre of political in terest, and even of intellectual life. Mr. McCrady show.- that in fighting for the text ol thc Constitution they raised many of thc problems which have since agitated America, while all thc while the growth of thc negro population gave a distinct, if in some ways unfavorable, character to thc Carolinian community. Mr. McCrady promises to carry on his history until the Revolution. Wc trust thal in his second volume he may, without ceasing to bc thorough, learn to bc brief. ' Said (?race by Lot. "My wife and I agree on everything but religion." said Smith the other day, according to the New York Sun. "I don't mean to say that we quarrel over that, for we do not. My folks were strict Methodists, and I was brought up along the lines of that faith and have never felt like adopting a new one. Ou thc other hand, my wife's folks were Baptists, and my Avife was brought up clinging to that religious reek. "When we were married we agreed to allow ea-jh other's religious beliefs to continue as they had been, the re sult being that we have alternated our attendance between the two denomi nations. The other day, while I was on my way home for thc evening, I chanced to meet my minister. T gave him a cordial invitation to go home with me and have dinner, an invitation that he accepter with pleasure. ''Now it chanced that my wife's minister had been paying a late after noon visit at my house, and my wife had asked him to stay and take dinner, when he would have a chance to meet me. He accepted, and when we ar rived we found him in the drawing :room with my wife. I saw at once that my wife W??S uneasy about something, but it didn't strike me what the mat ter was until we ware taking our seats at the table and noticed my wife biting her lips. Then it dawned upon me that she was unable to solve the prob lem of asking one of the ministers to say grace without offending the other. "There was an awkward pause for a moment, and then my little boy, who is going on 6, grasped the situation, and, half rising in his chair, he moved his finger rapidly around the table, reciting at the same time that childish jingle used by children in counting out and gof.ng like this : "Eoy men? niioy mo, Catch a nigger by the toe. "He ended by pointing his finger at the minister sitting across the table and shouted : "'You're it!' "The reverend gentleman accepted the decision and said grace, but it lacked the solemnity usually given to it." Pant*. A boy in thc Wichita sehools, Cali fornia, was suspended for reading thc following essay on "pants" : Pants are made for men, and not men for pants. Women are made for men, and not pants. When a man pants for a woman and a woman pants for a man,they are a pair of pants. Such pants don't last. Pants are like mo lasses-they are thinner in hot weath er and thicker in cold. The man in the moon changes his pants during an eclipse. Don't go to the pantry for pants-you may be mistaken. Men are often mistaken in pants. Such mistakes make breaches of promise. There has been much discmssion as to whether ''pants" were singular or plural. Seems to me when men wear pants they are plural, and when they dont wear any they are singular. Men get on a tear in their pants, and it is all right : but when the pants get on a tear it is all wrong.-Sau Francisco Call._^ t_ - The city clerk, who always de mands the written consent of parents before marrying minors, recently re ceived two following unique letter: "Mr. Cleric, that girl of min' she want to bc marry and I done care. She got a feller and they earn ?1<> a week 'tween 'em. He good feller. She all right. You will marry them for nie. and be much obliged." M O - - Be calm in argument: the other man will then lose his head wondering why you don't cet mud. Tortured Rhei A Purely Vegetable Blood Remedy is the Only Cure. If the people generally knew the true cause ot" Rheumatism, there would bo io? such thing us lini ments and lotions t'??r this painful and disabling disease. Tin? fact is. Rheumatism is a disordered state of tin; blood-it. can Lo reached, therefore, only through tho blood. But all blood remedios can not cure Rheumatism, tor ii is an obstinate disease, one which requires a real [>!<>,,<? remedy-somel liing mure t han amere tonic. Swift's Specific is the only real blood remedy, am! it promptly goes to the very bottom ol' even the most obstinate case. A few years ago I was taken with in flammatory Ltheumatism,whieh,though mild at first, became gradually so in tense that I was hw wee!;., unable to walk. I tried several prominent physi cians and took their treatment faith fully, but was unable to gel the slightest relief. In fact, my condition seemed io grow woree, thc pains spread over my cn!ire body, and from November to March 1 'suffered agony. I tried many patent medicines, hut mme relieved me. Upon the nd vice of a friend I decided to trv S. S. ? Before allowing me to take it. however, my guardian, who was a chemist,analyzed the remedy, and pro nounced it free of potash or mercury. AU Sorts of Paragraphs. - Occupation keeps us from think ing of -what we would rather do. - Always provide for the worst the best is able to provide for itself. - Drinking may induce a general good feeling, but the good feeling isn't there nest morning. - People of tact never irritate a pessimist by telling him that he looks happy. - The man who wears a wig always puts a false construction upon his own thoughts. - Woman likes man to smoke, be cause then she gets a good conversa tional chance at him. - A horse eats nine times its weight in one year ; a cow nine times, and an ox six times. - Thc man who has never done anything foolish should watch himself well until he is dead. - When a woman admits she is wrong her husband gets scared aud thinks she is going to die. - There are 1960 graves of Confed erate soldiers on the Hock Island, Illi nois, arsenal grouuds. - The length of the world's rail ways is more than 17 times the cir cumference of the earth at the equator. - The whole family feels injured when a woman comes home from her sewing society and says she didn't hear any news. - Have a purpose in life, and hav ing it, throw into your work such strength of mind and muscle as God has given you. - Between 7,000 and 9,000 pounds of plug tobacco are yearly furnished to the penitentiary inmates of Missis sippi. Irregular bowel movements lead to chronic constipation. Prickly Ash Bitters is a reliable system regulator; cures permanently. Sold by Evans Pharmacy. - A young lady in Philadelphia broke an engagement becauae her young man refused to shave off his mustache. She knew what hurt her. - Conscience is like the sun dial. If you let the truth shine upon it, it will point you right ; but you may cover it over so that no truth can fall upon it, and then it will lead you astray. - In the reign of Queen Mary, squaretoed shoes were the fashion. Men took to wearing them so broad that a proclamation was issued re stricting their breadth to six inches square at the toes. - Traces of the bicycle are found as far back as the Fifteenth century. In fact, Egyptian figures found on obelisks mounted on two-wheeled ve hicles, show they had some idea of the velocipede. - There is a town in the far west named Aquarium ; the postmaster's name is Fish, the name of the mayor is Scales, and Water street is the principal thoroughfare. Bright's disease is more dreaded by physicians than any of the serious disorders with which they have to deal, because of its insidious and mal ignant character. If prompt action were taken when headaches, urinary disorders, digestive troubles first ap pear much suffering and sorrow would be averted. Prickly Ash Bitters will quickly stop the spread cf the disease, quiet the inflammation, heal the kid neys and bladder, strengthen and regulate thc liver, and drive poisons and impurities out of the system by cleansing the bowels, ?old by Evans Pharmacy. - Fred Scoble, a prosperous mer chant of Washington. Ind., upon re tiring at night, complained of a severe pain in his face and head. After a time ne fell asleep. In the morning the pain had disappeared: but upon making his teilet he discovered that his hair had turned white, in which condition it still remains. Many ol' his friends did not recognize him. so startling was the change. Mr. Scoble is unable to account for tho sudden chu nee. imatism I felt so much better after taking two bottles, that I continued the remedy, and in two months 1 was cured com pletely. The cure was permanent, for I have never since had a touch of Rheumatism, though many times exposed to damp and cold weather. ELEAXOK M. TIPPELT., 3711 Powelton Avenue, Philadelphia. Those win? have had experience with Rheumatism know that it becomes more severe ouch year, anti like all other blood diseases, the doctors are totally unable to cure it. Ju tact, the only remedies which tli"v pre scribe ii rc; potash and mercury, and though temporary relief may result, l2?fc'?;^^7 . these remedies nro 'Kira,7 :. \ duce a stiffness of \Sp--t.-Av ' t' . . , . . viV'd < ?V Z joints and only in tensify tilt' disease. S. S. S. never disappoints, for it H made to euro these deep-root tal diseases which are beyond the reach ?d' all other remedios. It cures permanently Rheumatism, ( Jatarrh, Cancer,Scrofuhi. Eczema, ami all ot ber blood disi uses. It is th" only blood remedy guar anteed Purely Vegetable Books mailed free by 'Swift I Specific Company, Atlanta, Ga. j liol) Taylor's Farewell. Robert L. Taylor, thrice governor of the State of Tennessee, a man much in public life, has evidently discovered the path of politics to be a rough and not entirely pleasant one. Read an extract from his farewell speech : ''While I believe that the good in politics outweighs the bad, yet how thorny is the path and how unhappy the pilgrimage to him who dares to do his duty ? There are no flowers ex cept a few bouquets snatched from the graves of fallen foes ; there is no hap piness except the transient thrill of cruel triumph, which passes like a shadow across thc hear!.. "Every honest man who runs for uiiicc is a candidate for trouble ; for the fruits of political victory turn to ashes on the lips. ''To mc there is nothing in this world so pathetic as a candidate. He is like a mariner without a compass, drifting on the tempest-tossed waves of uncertainty, between the smiling cliffs of hope and the frowning crags of fear. Me is a walking petition and a living prayer : he is the pack horse of public sentiment; he is the dromedary of politics. And even if he reaches the goal of his ambition, he will soon feel the beak of the vulture in his heart and the fang of the serpent in his soul. "I am no longer a candidate. Xever again will I be inaugurated into public office. The ark of my humble public career now rests on the Arrarat of pri vate life, and I stand on its peaceful summit and look down on the receding flood of politics. The dove of my des tiny has brought me an olive branch from happier fields and I go thence to labor and to love." And he anticipates that Benton Mc Millin, his successor, is goiDg to find thorns among the roses in the guber natorial career, for he says : 'Tnow have the distinguished honor to close the scene, so far as I am con cerned. Benton McMillin has given his heart and hand to Tennessee. I now pronounce them husband and wife-and may the Lord have mercy on their souls." Curious Birth Statistics. At the next meeting of the Society I for Psychical Research one of the interesting subjects that probably will come up for discussion, according to the New York Press, will bc the re markable increase in thc number of births of boys over girls which the vital statistics of New York show in the month of November and up to the present time this month. It will have a direct bearing on the theory of pre natal influence in this regulation of sex, as advanced by Pr. Schenck, and which has been supported and com bated by eminent physiologists throughout the world. By those who endorse the Schenck theory it is maintained that the in crease in the ratio cannot be simply a coincidence, confined to one particular section, because a similar ratio of in crease of births of males over females is shown in the statistics of nearly all the large cities, aud it is offered as a proof that in the grand compensation of nature the martial spirit aroused by the war with Spain is responsible for the production of material for future soldiers. Boston. Philadelphia. St. Louis, San Francisco and Chicago all present thc same proportionate increase as New York. ''And it is natural that it should be so," saida physiologist. "A thous and years before Dr. Schenck was born it was observed that after wars the male births exceeded the female in thc ratio of 100 to 70 and KU) to SO. In the Alexandrian wars this fact was noted and commented upon by the philosophers of the day. and the re verse was true in thc decline of thc Roman Empire, when thc people fell into slothful habits and enervating luxuries. The number of girls in ercascd and the boys were :iot robust. "All peoples who maintained their martial vigor, after losing many men in armed conflict, as the Macedonians did, lived to sec thc male population I brought up nearly to the standard that it hail before the natural protectors - were slain. The martial spirit that develops into activity thc destructive ness of man and arouses the latent ; heroism and self-sacrifice of women j has unquestionably an influence on thc future race and the division of j the sexes. I "A people hmg given to the pur- J suits of peace and reaching a plane of j civilization that renders them effete J become the mothers aud fathers nf ] girls. The nearer that man reaches -\ thc primeval condition of maintaining life hy force of arms thc greater the ? number of male children that are horn. Tlic carly American Indian demon- ', strafed this in the extraordinary dis- I proportion of thc sexes, thc male prc- j dominating in all the warlike tribes." < Pitts' Carminative aids digestion. , regulates the bowels, cures Cholera > 1 nfantum, Cholera Morbus. Dyscutcry, Pains, (iripings. Flatulent Colic Un natural I'rains from thc Rowels, and ( all diseases incident to teething chil- i dren. For all summer complaints it is a specific. Perfectly harmless and . free from injurious drugs and chem- ; I Ail Thafs Needed i g No soap, no soda, no borax, no ammonia-noth- || X ing but water is needed to make things white and 3g Bj bright and beautifully clean with 3| S It cleans everything quickly, jj? cheaply, thoroughly. Sold every- Rfc L^fflBjjS! ij| where. Largest package-greatest jjjjj ??^^^^1 || THE M. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY, ^SP^^^^-?^^! || Chicago, St. Lou;s. New York. Boston. Philadelphia. V^|'^^ft||w^^f^[ 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, and that is that it is the best Plow on earth. Syracuse Plows are designed rig;ht, made right, sold right. They will turn land where others have failed, and build for themselves a demand wherever introduced. The pop ularity of this Plow comes from genuine merit. Competitors will tell you that they have something just as good, but don't be deceived-there is but one best, and that is the SYRACUSE. We also sell the SYRACUSE HARROWS, And Syracuse Harrows, like Syracuse Plows, are thoroughly Up-to-Date. See us before buying. Yours truly, BROCK BROS. - There arc plenty of people ia the world who practically grumble because they can't find something to grumble about. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Condensed Schedule in Effoct Oct. 16, 1S9S. STATIONS. LT. Charleston.. LT. Columbia.... " Prosperity., " Newberry... " Ninety-Six.. " Greenwood. Ar. Hodges. Ar. AbbeTille. Ar. Belton. Ar. Anderson Ar. Greenville. Ar. Atlanta.... Ex. Sun. No. 17. 0 10 ft m 6 25 ft m 7 32 ft m 7 40 ft ra 8 OU a 8 40 a m 8 SO a m T~35~ a m 10 10 a m 3 55 p m STATIONS. LT. Greenville... " Piodmont ... " Williamston. Lv. Anderson Lv. Bolton ... Ar. Donnalds. Lv. Abbeville. Lv. Hodges.. " Greenw< >d. a Ninety-Six.. " Newberry... Ar. Prosperity " Columbia ... Ar. Charleston Ex. Sun. No. 18. 6 80 p m 6 00 p m 8 23 p ni Daily No. ll. 7 80 ft ra 11 05 a m 12 10 n'n 12 25 p m 1 20 p ra 1 55 p m 2 15 p ra 2 45 p m 8 10 p m 3 35 p ra 4 15 p m 9 30 p ra Doily No. iZ 10 15 a ra 10 40 a ra 10 55 a m 4 45 p m 10 45 ft m 6 45 p ni 7 15 p m 0 1U p ni 7 35 p m 8 00 p m 8 18 p m 9 15 p m 9 80 p ra ll 15 a m ll 40 a ra ll 20 ? m 11 55 a m 12 40 p m 12 65 p zo 2 00 p ra 2 14 p ra 8 80 p ra Dnilv: Daily No. 9 No. 13 16 40 pm DailylDally No.14No.ld ?TATION3. 8 30a ll 30a ' .... Coll rubia." 3 2up 9 07al215p '?.Alsiuu.LT 230p 1004a 123p ".Santuc." 1 23p 10 20a 2U0p ".Union." 1 05p 10 30a 2 22p " .... Jonesville 12 25p 10 54a 237p! " .Pacolet." 12 14p 11 25a 3 lup Ar . Sjiartanburg.. .Lv?ll 4fia 1140a 340p Lv. Spartanburg.. .Arill 22a 2 TOOp'Ar Asheville.Lv' 8 20a 7 30a LT_Charleston_Ar 6 40p|UO?a 9 30p 8 50a 7 46p 7 30p C63p 6 42p 615p 6 00p 3 05p "P," p. m. "A," a. m. Pullman palace sleeping cars ou Trains 35and 86. 87 and 38. on A. and C. division. Tra?na leave .Spartanbur?, A. Ss C. division, northbound. 6:37 a.m., 3:3/ p.m., 6:10 p.m., (Vestibule Limited); southbound 1?:1?6 a. m., 8:15 p. m., 11:34 a. m., (Vestibule Limited.) Trains leave Greenville, A. and C. division, northbound, 5:45 a. m., 2:34 p. m. and 5:2? p. m., (Vestibuled Limited) : southbound, 1:25 a. m., ?:S0 p. m., 12:3u p. m. (Vestibuled Limited). Trains 9 ena 10 carry elegant Pullman sleeping cars between Columbia and AsheTille, enroute daily between Jacksonville and Ui a oin nati. FRANK 8. GANNON, J. M. CULP, Third V-P. & Gen. Mgr., Traffic Mgr., Washington, D. C. Washington, D. C. W. A. TURK. S. H. HARDWICK, Gen. PasB. AJ:'T. As'tGeu. Pass. Ag'l. Washington, D. C. Allan;?, Oft. CS!' 9 il C. BEATTIE Kcceivei. rime Table .V.?. 7.-Effective ?' Between Anderson and Walhalla. VY ESTBOUXD No. 12. fairst ChiMs, Dai Iv. P. M.-L^ave STATIONS EASTBOUND. No. Ll. First Class, Daily. Arrive A M. ? 3 :>">.Anderaou.U 00 r :>.f>(?.Denver.10 40 f 4 Of).A mun.10 31 i 4.14.Pendleton.10.22 f 4.23.Cherry's Crossing.10.13 F 4.2!?.Adara's Crossing..10.07 i 4 47.Seneca.0.4!' ( i 5 ll.West Union .0.25 i 5.17 Ar.Walhalla.Lv W20 STo. ti, Mixed, Daily, Except Simd:' v EASTllOl' M>. r. M. Vrrive ? ' ?.lfi. N-?. 5, Mixed. Daily. Except Sunday. WESTK )cxn. Leave-:? M. Anderdon.ll 10 5 55.Denver.11.3$ :' 5.13.Antun.ll 50 j 5 31.Pendleton.12 02 : 5 J?'.Cherry's Crossing.12 14 f 5.11.Adams' Crossiug.12.22 ii 4.17 ) .Senora. I 12 46 i 4 10 j .S?rica. ( 1 45 i :> "s.West Union. 2 00 : :: 30.Walhalla. 2. hi (s) K-?-ular station ; (f) Flag station Will ?Iso ?top at the following so?-mus o tait" on nr let off passengers : Phin levs, .1 ml?' and Sandy Springs. No. 12 couneets with Southern Railway S'o 12 at A nderson. No. <! connects with Soulhern RHiiway San. 12. ."7 and 3$ at Seneca. J.K. AN DICKSON", Supt. DOl'BLED?ILY SERYLCE TO ATLANTA, CHARLOTTE, WILMINGTON, NEW ORLEANS? AND NEW YORK, BOSTON, RICHMOND. W ASHINGTON, NORFOLK PORTSMOUTH. SCHEDULE IN EFFECT JULY IS, ?W SOUTHBOUND No. 403. No. 41. Ly New York, via Penn R. P..*ll 00 am *9 00 pm Lv Philadeiphia, " 1 12 pm 12 05 am iif Bal ti mo.-re " 3 15 pm 2 50 am L.T Washington, " 4 40 pm 4 30 am kt Richmond, A. C. L.S 56 pm 9 ?5 am > Norfolk, via S. A. L.*S 30 pm *9 05am L,v PorUmouth, " . S 45 pm 9 20am 'uv Weldon, vr Henderson, Vr Durham, ,v Durham. ..*11 2Spm*U 12 56 am *1 &5 am 45 pm .{ f7 32 am f4 16 pm ... f7 00 pm rio 19 am Vr Raleigh. via S. A. L. *2 16 am *3 40 pm Vr Sanford, " . 3 35 am 5 05 pm VrSouthern Pines " . 4 23 am 5 56 pm Vr Hamlet, " . 5 07 am 6 36 pm Vr Wadesboro, " . 5 53 am S 10 pm ir Monroe, " . 6 43 am 9 12 pm Lr Wilmington " *12 05 pm 50 am 2 5 poi Vr Charlotte._" . Vr Chester,_ " ."S"~?3 am" ~1P 36~p"? > Ct-lumb a, C. N. ? L. R. F.. f'3 00 pm Vr Clinton S. A I. 9 45 am *12 Vr Greenwood *' . 10 35 am 1 VrAbbevile. '. .1103 am 1 VrEl'erton, " . 12 07 pm 2 Vr Athens, " . 1 13 pm S Vr Winder, " . 1 56 pm 4 Vr Atlanta.? A L.(Cen.Time) 2 50 pm 5 14 am 07 am 35 am 41 am 43 am 2S am 20 am SOUTHBOUND. Ko. 402. No. ss. > Atlanta,S.A.L.(Cen. Time) *12 00 n'n ?7 50 pm J? Winder. " . 2 40 pm lt) 40 pm > Athens, " . 3 13 pm II 19 pm ..v Elberton, " . 4 15 pin 12 31 am Abbeville. " . 5 15 pm i 35 am jr Greenwood, " . 5 41 pm OS am JV C linton, .' . 6 30 pm 2 53 ara Lr'Coh??biaTc. N~& L. R. ill ,v Chester. S. A. L . S 13 pm Vv harlot! e. "7 43 aia 4 25 am jv Monroe, jv Hamlet, lr Wilmington JV Southern Pines. ..v Haleigh. Vr Hender ion .v Henderson Lr Durham, jv Durham "10 25 pm *7 50 am , 9 40 pm ll 15 pm G 05 am ? 00 HUI lu 05 pm 9 00 am Iii 3 .1.11 12 50 pm 3 2S am i 05 pm + 7 :-2 am f4 16 pm TD 20 pm fl? 13 arr 12 00 am "2 16 am Lr Weldon. " . *4 55 sm *2 .;5 pm lr Richmond A.C.I. $ 15 am 7 35 QUI lr Washin?;ton. Penn. R. R. 12 31 pm ll 30 pj? lr Baltimore, . 146 pm l CS9m lr Philadelphia, " . 3 50 pm :> =i0 aw tr New Ye rte. " . *6 23pm "fi 53 an? lr Portsmouth S. A. 1. 7 25 am 5 2 Ono ir Norfolk " . *7 35 am 5 3-5 p|o Daily, f Daily, F.x. Sunday. iDaily Ex. Monda; Nos. 403 arid 402 "The Atlanta Special." SRiti 'estibuled Train, of Pullman Sleepers an.i s between Washington .'.nd Atlanta, also Puk ian Sleepers between Portsmouth and Chester,!: Nos. 41 and "Tho S. A. L Express." SoU? 'raiu, Conches ami Pullman Sleepers r,3:we?ti ?ortsmouth and Atlanta. For Pickets, Sleepers, etc.. apply to B. A. Newland, Gen']. Agent Pass Dept Wm. B. Clements, T. P. A.. 6 Kimball Koa?? it lama, Gn. E. St Johu, vice-President and Gen'l. Manser V. E. Mcliee General Superintendent. II. W. B. Glover. Traine Manager. L S. Allen, Gen'l. Passengor Agent, louent! Officers, Portsmouth, Ya. ATLANTIC COAST LINE. - TRAFFIC DEPARTMENT, WILMINGTON, X. C., .lau. lu. lSS-i?. !*ast ??ue Between Charleston and Coi* umbiaaud UpperS nih Carolina. North i !arolin i. COND E NSEP SC IT ED UL E IOING WEST. GOING KAS1 *No. No. 53. ; 00 am S 21 am i lt) am l 00 pm : 07 pm : JO ?cn I 03 pm I 25 pm i 00 pm J10 pm 07 pm > 15 pm o."> pm : 00 pm Lv.Charleston.Ar Lr.Lanes.Ar Lr.sumter.Ar Ar.Columbia.Lv Ar.Prosperity.Lv Ar.Newberry.Lv Ar.Clinton;.Lv Ar.Laurens.Lv Ar.Greenville.Lv A r.Spartanburg.Lv Ar.Winnsboro, S. C.Lv Ar.Charlotte. N. C.Lv Ar...Hendersonville, N. C~.Lv Ar.Asheville, N. C...Lv S 00 pa 620 rfc 5 : ? pm 4 60 pm 2 .. pea 2 32 rai 1 i OL: I 4=i ?31 12 01 am 1L4? an. ll ;l afc 9 35 ac !) ! 1 ?a 5 20 ara ."Dallv. Nos. 52 Md-SRSoi*! T>?a.'?ts <>r* ween Cfl?imnfrf nd Co hi ra Li a. S. C. H. M. EYKili iN Gen'l. Passenger .icc J. H_. it?tr^fS*". >T^rV>rftl Mrt.:ir e <>? *#<R40N ?A-irS- VJ-i cu;'1"