The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, September 06, 1899, Page 6, Image 6
FAMOUS BOV IIEROKS.
!>ARIN(< MEEDS OF YOUTH ON I II*
BATTLEFIELD.
Pitttbury Dispatch.
History tellB of more than one stur
dy youngster who, long before man
hood was reached, was inured to the
hardships of camp and the hazard of
battle. Many of these hoy warriors
with years and experience developed
iato great generals. Some did not,
and their story is very sad and brief
indeed.
Almost -,000 years ago, when a
monster named Muz im in was Emperor
f Rome, there dwelt in the imperial
v ity a famous family called the Gor
dian.
The head of the (Gordian had been
appointed pro-consul of Africa, and
his soldiers, becoming disgusted with
ihe wrongs and brutalities committed
by Maximin, compelled him to raise
the banner of revolt and assume the
i urplc. At the time the pro consul
was an old man of HO, who for years
had left the administration of Iiis of
fice to his son, he would have been
very glad to have ended his days in
, ( ace and quiet had not his legions
decreed it otherwise.
Maximin, hearing of the revolt of
the African troops, promptly dispatch
ed an army against Carthage, where
the Gordians had established their
court. The two Gordians perished,
the son in battle, and the father by his
own hand when informed of his son's
death.
Maximin'.?- triumph was brief, how
ever; he was soon afterward murdered
by his own soldiers, who then took
the last of the Gordians, a lad of 111,
and carrying him through the camps,
proclaimed him emperor?an honor as
dangerous as it was exalted, for five
emperors had fallen in less than a
year, some in battle, some by poison
and some by the knife of the assassin.
As might have becu expected, the
reign of the boy was of short dura
tion. The great Roman world, made
up of many dif?erent peoples and held
together by force of arms alone, rose
to throw off the yoke. Five years af
ter he was made emperor, young Gor
dian took the field with his army and
hurried into Asia to repel the Per
sians, who had assailed the frontier.
He had fought one or two unimpor
tant battles, when he was poisoued at
the instigation of one of his generals,
who aspired to the purple.
Some centuries later, still another
boy, a German prince, Conradin by
name, was struggling for that part of
the Roman world known as the king
dom of Naples, which his father had
won from the degenerate Italians. He
led his army in triumph over the
Alps and through northern and central
Italy. It was doubtless all like a gor
geous pageant to the young prince, his
soldiers in their brilliant uniforms
and polished armor, with waving silk
en flags and pealing bands of music.
Thus attended, Conradin swept
down upon the borders of the kingdom
he had come to claim, and his success
seemed certain, when he suddenly
found himself pitted against men of
experience. He was outgeneraled by
the veteran Charles of Anjou. Hia
troops were cut to pieces, while he
himself was taken prisoner. His ex
ecution was decided upon by Charles
and infamously carried out. As he
took his place upon the scaffold,
bravely and unfalteringly, as became a
prince, and bared his neck for the
sword, he cried. "Oh, my mother,
dreadful will be the grief that awaits
you for my fate!"
In the year 1200, in the city of Pal
mero, there lived a sad enough little
prince by the name of Frederick llo
fenstaufen, heir to the two kingdoms
of Sicily and Germany. He was an
orphan, and in Germany his uncles,
Philip and Otho. of Brunswick, dis
puted the crown, while Sicily, where
he was recognized as king, was torn
by strife and discord?Saracen, French
and German strove for first place. In
'the turmoil of these warring factions
Frederick was well nigh forgotten. He
was saved from absolute want by the
citizens of Pa'.mcro, who had a kindly
feeling for tue lonely child in his
great empty palace.
When 14 Frederick was declared of
age. Several years later, at the head
of .a band of soldiers, he set out for
Germany to take the crown. Otho
was warned of his purpose, and endeav
ored to intercept him before he cross
ed the Alps, but by dint of hard rid
ing the prince and his retinue reached
and threw themselves behind the gates
of Constance, just as Otho's men al
arms closed down upon them. Prin
ces and nobles flocked around the
standard of the boyish leader. Otho
was forced to retire to Brunswick, and
Frederick at the head of a great army,
set out for Frankfort, where the bar
ons and electors of Germany were
waiting to welcome him as their em
peror.
This boy from Sicily,'as he was call
ed, developed into a great soldier and
statesman, and in course of time came
to be known as the "wonder of the
world."
It was a fair-faced English boy of
16, "The Black Prince," so-oalled
because of the color of his armor, who
led the English soldiers to victory at
Crecy.
Hi.s father. King Kdward III, watch
e>l the battle from a distance. The
t French army far outnumbered the Eng
lish, and the prince was hard pressed
and in danger of capture. Once he
was so surrounded by his foes that the
Karl of Warwiok sent a messenger in
haste to the king, asking that assist
ance be given the prince.
"Is my son killed ?" asked the king
as the messenger rode up.
"No, sir." The king heaved a sigh
of relief.
"Is he wound**"! ?'
"No, sir."
;tIs he thrown to the ground ?"
"No, but he is hard pressed and
needs your aid."
"Then, if it is only that, I shall
give him no help. I have Het my heart
on his proving himself a brave knight
and 1 am resolved that the victory
-hall be due to his own valor."
Ten years later, in a subsequent
campaign in Normandy, this same
Black I'rince achieved another splen
did triumph at the battle of Ploiters,
where he defeated and captured tho
French monarch, .John, and his son,
Philip, a lad of 14. King John had
with him his four sons, Charles. Louis,
John and Philip. Tho three elder
boys were posted at different parts of
the field, while Philip, tho youngest,
followed hi- father, who plunged into
the thickest of the fight, where he
was soon in great danger of being
taken. The little prince fought at his
side, endeavoring to ward off the blows
that were aimed at his father, while
above the din of battle he could be
heard calling on him to guard right or
left, as his quick eye saw from what
quarter he was threatened, John was
finally forced to yield, though not un
til he was abandoned by every one but
Philip.
There is no more romantic figure in
history than that of Marqni? de La
fayette, who gave his sword and cour
age to the cause of American liberty.
The French king had endeavored in
vain to keep the young soldier at
home, his friends and relatives had
tried to restrain him. but all to no
avail, for he purchased a ship in which
to escape from France, his king and
his ever-solicitous friends and family.
He was an exceedingly rash youth
from all account*?, for he did not hesi
tate to freely express his sympathy
for the American people while dining
at the British ambassador's as well as
his determination to aid them, if pos
sible, iu their struggle for liberty.
The British ambassador was so im
! pressed by the young enthusiast and
the use he might be to the enemies of
his eountry that he demanded his ar
reBt of the French government and the
seizure of his ship, which lay at an
chor in the harbor at Bordeaux.
! Lafayette avoided arrest, reaching
Bordeaux ahead of the royal warrant
detaining his ship, and put to sea.
When he landed in America he was
coolly met. Congress was in great
need of money, and there were many
native officers who desired the rank the
gay young Frenchman had come so far
to claim.
Lafayette had not crossed the At
lantic for nothing, however: money
and rank were secondary consider
ations with him. He declared his
willingness to serve as a volunteer, in
any capacity and without pay. Con
gress was so much impressed by this
that on July HI, 1777, a resolution
was passed accepting his tender of
services, and General Washington,
who had beon greatly attracted by his
ardor, made him a member of his
"military family."
The battle of Brandywine afforded
Lafayette the longed-for opportunity
to distinguish himself, which he did
to such g )od purpose that congress*
^gave him the command of a division.
So that before he was 20 he was ac
tually a general.
I But the day of the boy soldier did not
cease with the age of chivalry and ro
mance. Many of our generals who aro
leading our armies in Cuba, Porto Rico
and the Philippines began their careers
it the time of the civil war as boy sol
diers, too, and were doubtless quite
as brave and gallant as any*of their
predecessors.
The pain of a burn ?r scald is al
most instantly relieved by applying
Chamberlain's Fain Balm, it also
heals the injured parts more quickly
than auy other treatment, and without
the burn is very severe does not leave
a scar. For sale by Hill-Orr Drug
Co. .
? A large paper house, with six
teen rooms, has been erected by a
Russian gentleman at his country
scat.
Hot days followed by cool nights
will breed malaria in the body that is
bilious or costive. Prickly Ash Bit
ters is very valuable at this time for
keeping the stomach liver and bowels
well regulated. Sold by Evans Phar
macy.
? No true man envies another who
has reached fame and position by crawl
ing and crying.
? The latest musical phenomenon
in Paris is a monkey that plays the
violin.
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure thoroughly
digests food without aid from the
stomach, and at the same time heals
ani restores the diseased digestive or
gat s. It is the only remedy that does
both of these things and can be relied
upon to permanently cure dyspepsia.
Evans Pharmacy.
'From Don to Beentheha."
Inuring the last two or three winters
of our war. or rather springs, our men
would by a kind of mutual necessity
go and serenade our general, the la
mented Samuel McGowan, the mau ef
large brain, large heart and large en
thusiasm?the man who could, in a
half hour's speech, generate enough
faith and enthusiasm in the brigade to
do them all summer.
At one of these serenudes in J8?4,
on the line of the Rapidan. but a few
days before the campaign opened, he
made us another enthusiastic speech;
he enumerated all the West Pointers
who had gone down in defeat and lost
their official heads before our army.
And as a severer resort they have im
ported from the West one, Lieut. Gen.
Grant, to whip us out, and now, men,
when the campaign opens I want you
to whip them and drive them from
Dan to Beershcba. We knew very
well where the Dan was, for we were
encamped along its heights and had
bathed and sported in its limpid wa
ters, but where Beershcba was was
somewhat indefinite, but we soon
found out it was Richmond and Peters
burg.
Again in 1H07> we serenaded Gen.
McGowan and got enthused again,
and in conclusion he said: "Now, men,
last spring I told you I wanted you to
drive the enemy from Dan to Beer
sheba: that you have gallantly and
nobly done, and now, when the cam
aign opens. I want you to drive them
ack to the Dan." This, comrades,
we did do until we got to Appomattox,
and there they refused to be driven
any further, and when Gen. McGowan
led his division (he commanded a di
vision then) back to bevouac and came
riding around our brigade the great
tears were running down hk cheeks
because they had refused to be driven
any more.?/*. M. JJlakflj/, in Clinton
Aret0?.
1'oliey of Government as to the Phil
ippines.
Los?: Branch, N.J., Aug. 20.?Pres
ident nnd Mrs. McKiuley with Vice
President and Mrs. Hobart, Garrett A.
Hobart, Jr.. Attorney General Griggs,
Dr. and Mrs. Rixey, Private Secretary
Cortelyou and Mrs. Barnett, arrived
here at 7:40 this morning from Platts
burg, N. Y. They were driven at ouee.
to Vice President Hobart's cottage.
Normanhurst. Soon after that the
party was formally welcomed to Nor
manhurst by the local reception com
mittee. The committee tendered the
president a public reception at the
Hollywood hotel at night but Mr. Mc
Kinley was compelled to decline.
President McKinley addressed 12,000
people in the auditorium here this af
ternoon . He was introduced by Bishop
Fitzgerald. The president said: "I
believe that there is more love for our
country nnd that more people love the
ring than ever before. Wherever that
flag is raised it stands, not for despot
ism and oppression but lor liberty, op
portunity nnd humanity, and what that
flag has done for us we want it to do
for all people and all lands which by
the fortunes of war have come within
its jurisdiction. That flag does not
mean one thing in the United States
and another in Puerto Rico and the
Philippines. .There has been doubt in
some quarters respecting the policy of
the government in the Philippines. I
see no harm in stating it in this pres
ence. Pence first, then with charity
for all, establishing the government of
law and order, protecting life and
property, and occupation for the well
being of the people who will partici
pate in it, under the Stars and Stripes."
The president will leave Long Branch
on a special train at 7:45 to-morrow
morning for Pittsburg.
Tlllman's Lateit Outburst.
The genuine Prohibitionists of
South Carolina are neither hypocrites
or cowards. No more so than is Sen
ator Tillman. They havo not been
and are not as inconsistent as is Sena
tor Tillman. They do not harbor the
least hostility toward Senator Till
man, and they would no more think
of combining with the so-called local
option liquor men, than they would of
voting outright for the reinstatement
of the saloon, grog-shop or brothel.
But Senator Tillman need never ask
the Prohibitionists of South Carolina
to co-operate with him in developing
the State's liquor business through
the dispensaries or in any other way.
They will do nothing of the kind. If,
however, he will return to his original
declaration of restriction and curtail
ment, looking to the eventual aboli
tion of the liquor business in South
Carolina, he will find iu these same
Prohibitionists, whom 'he is now dis
posed to abuse, the oust powerful and
enthusiastic supporters that he has
ever had in the State.? Yorkville En
quirer. ,
A Negro Regiment.
Washington, Aug. 25.?Great pres
sure has been brought to bear on the
administration to organize a colored
regiment for service in the Philippines.
The matter is still under consideration
by Secretary Root.
It is reported that William P. D avail,
captain First artillery (regulars) and
lieutenant colonel of the Twenty-Sixth
volunteers, will be made colonel of the
regiment if it is decided to raise the
organization. It is also said, that the
lieutenant colonel and other field offi
cers will be taken from the regular
army, hut that the company officers
wonld all be colored men.
? More than 40,000 Americans
have gone to Europe since the 1st of
May.
Consumption of (hiininc.
More than 125,000,000 grains of
quinine have been consumed by Amer
ican soldiers during the past year. In
some cases men who were in the hos
pitals in Cuba and I'orto Kico used as
much as 300 grains a week, and hardly
any have failed to use the drug at
some period of their service. It is
stated that the people of this country
consume one-third of the quinine of
the world, the drug being used in the
preparation of many patent medicines,
tonics, bitters, cold cures, etc., as
well as in pills and in bulk, and a con
siderable quantity is consumed in the
manufacture of hair tonics.
The official figures in the treasury
bureau of statistics show that there
were imported last year into the Uni
ted .States 1,530,050,750 grains of
quinine, and as there was practically !
no export of this article, this means
that the consumption of quinine was
about twenty grains for each inhabi
tant. As is well known, quinine,
Pcrovian bark and calisaya bark are i
the products of the cinchona tree,
which is a native of Western .South j
America, more particularly of Peru \
and Ecuador. Now, however, but a
small part of the supply comes from I
that region. At present two-thirds 1
of the quinine consumed is produced !
in Java from cultivated trees. For
many years the Dutch Govcrment was
urged to undertake the cultivation of
this plant from Peru. Finally this
was accomplished and a large number
of speoiments of different varieties
were obtained by botanists, who took
them to Java in 1852. The English
government also started cinchona plan
tations iu India which now produce
large quantities of quinine.?Scientif
ic American.
- mW m mm* - ?
? A Hoboken boy wanted some
pigeons that belonged to a neighbor,
but the owner kept such a close eye
on the birds that it was almost im
possible to get a chance at them. The
man missed several of his pigeons,
and for s.>me days could not under
stand how it was managed. Then he
kept stricter watch than ever, and
at last caught the Hoboken boy. He
saw the urchin throw a quanity of corn
upon the roof of his own woodshed
next door then hide himself. The
pigeons new down to the corn and soon
ate up most of it. Then the man was
awe-stricken to observe that the
pigeons did not fly'away, but dropped
upon their sides, leering at him feebly,
uttering inarticulate cackles. As soon
as they were all laid out comfortably
on t.ie woodshed roof that wicked Ho
boken boy picked them up, hid them
under his jacket and disappeared.
The man climbed to the woodshed, ex
amined the corn that was left and
found it saturated with whiskey. The
wicked Hoboken boy is in a police
station to-night.
? The Chicago Daily News says:
"Old memories of the South before
the war must have been aroused in
the minds of many men who yesterday
read of the journey which a Chicagoan,
once a slaveholder, has undertaken to
save the life of his one-time slave.
The ex-slave, living in Maryland, has
been doomed to die upon the gallows;
the master, hundreds of miles away,
believes his former chattel innocent,
and hurries to the rescue. Not even
the smoke of war, the vicissitudes of
fortune, or the passing of nearly forty
years has made the white man forget
the colored, or the master lose his in
terest in the faithful servant of the
past. There have been many such ro
mances of old slave and old slavehold
er since the war, and the hurried ride
of the Chicagoan to the aid of Ms an
tebellum servant is one of tho most
touching stories of them all.'*
? Northampton county is the birth
place of one of the most remarkable
men ever known in this State, one
Miles Harden, who was born in 1799.
He moved to Tennessee in 1829, and
died near Lexington, Tenn., in 1857.
He was seven feet six inches high,
and weighed over 1,000 pounds. In
1H39 his coat was buttoned around
three men who weighed 200 pounds
each, and they, walked across the
p jblic square at Lexington in it. In
lo50 it required thirteen and a half
y?rds of goods to make him a coat.
His coffin was 8 ft. ? long, 35 inches
deep, 32 across the br< .t, 18 across
the head, and 14 across ie foot. It
took twenty-four yards o Jack velvet
to cover it. His hat war. wenty-seven
inches around the crown, vnd it is now
in possession of the State Historical
society, at Nashville, Tenn. Mr. Dar
dcn was a mason, and a member of the
First Baptist church. It is said that
North Carolina will probably try to
procure the ha: for the State museum.
One Minute Cough Cure quickly
cures obstinate summer coughs and
colds. "I consider it a most wonder
ful medicine quick and safe.?W.W.
Merton, Mayhew, Wis. Evans Phar
macy.
? A man has to be very much in
love with a woman to willingly carry
her parasol over her.
? The Bank of England estimates
that the amount of gold in circulation
in the world is 865 tons.
? Henry Ehlers died 11 Milwaukee,
Wis., Wednesday, after his nose had
been bleeding nice days.
? Among the most dangerous of
edged tools are cutting remarks.
? Great Britain buys more than 20,
000 horses in the United States every
year.
Irritating stings, bites, scratches,
wounds and cuts soothed and healed
by DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve?-a
sure and safe application for tortured
flesh. Beware of counterfeits. Evans
Pharmacy.
Valuable Land? for Sale.
WE oiler for sale the following Tracts
of Land :
1st. The Hopkins Tract, situate in 1'ick
ens County, containing two hundred
acres, more or less.
2d. Tbe<i. W. Miller Tract, containing
one hundred and twenty-four acres, more
or less. This Tract bas upon it a good
Mill sod Ciln.
:sd. All that part of tbe Home Tract of
Dr. H. C. Miller, lying in Anderson
County, being eighty acres, more or less.
These three Tracts of Land lie on tbe
waters of Eighteen Mile Creek, respec
tively, within one and a half to three miles
of the towns of Peudleton, Clemsnn Col
lege and Central on the Southern R. R.
These Lands are finely wooded, with
uplands and low lands In cultivation.
For further particulars apply to Jas. T.
Hanter, Pendleton, S. C, or John T.
Taylor, on the premises.
W. W. SIMONS,
CARRIE T. SIMONS,
RE8S1E E. HOOK,
Exec. Est. Dr. H. C. Miller.
Aug.'JO, 1S99 10 , am
j| HE/kUAUJHLia, &
f NEURALOIA,t
ft LA GRIPPE, ft
5 Relieves all pain. X
ft 25c. all Druggists, ft
Brs. Strickland & King
OFFICE IV KAS0HIC TEMPLE.
Sbtr* Oat* tnd Cocaine <uaod for Extract
ii g Teeth.
oils and Pimples
AM UBfFXILlNB SIGN THAT
NATURE IS -APPEALING
When Nature is overtaxed, she hnS
her own way of giving notice that assist
anoe is needed. She does not ask for
help'until it is impossible to get along without
it. Boils and pimples are an indication that
the system is accumulating impurities which
I CAD UCI D must be gotten rid of ; they are an urgent appeal Tor nwiitsnne
rUn ;llCLFt ?a warning that can not safely bo ignored.
To negleot to purify the blood at this
i time means more than the annoyance of painful boils and
Unsightly pimple?. If these impurities are allowed to
'remain, the system succumbs to any ordinary illness, and is
unable to withstand the many ailment whioh are so
' prevalent during spring and summer.
Mrs. L. Gentile, 2004 Second Avenue, Seattle, Wash.,
'- aye : I wtfs afflicted for a Ion g time with pimples, which
were very annoying, as they disfigured my face fearfully.
After ?sine many other remedies in vain, S. 8. S. promptly
and thoroughly oteaassd my blood, and now I rejoice In
a good complexion, which ^
Cant. W. H. Butrtap.of the A. G. 3.
R. 'ft. Chattanooga. Ttonn. writes ;
'< Several bolls and Cirbu^ci?s btako cut upon sa?, causing
great pain and annoyance. My blood seemed to be in
a riotous condition, and nothing I took ?wunan1 to do
I nny good. Six bottles of S. S. S. cured me completely
and my blood has been perfectly pure ever since.*
8. 8. 8. FOR THE BLOOD
is the best blood remedy, because it is purely vegetable
and'is the ' only one that is absolutely free from potash and Tnarettzy. It
promptly purifies the blood and thoroughly cleanses the system, builds up
tha general health and strength. It eures Scrofula, Eczema, Cancer, Rheuma?
tism. Tetter, Brtls, Sores, etc., by going direct to the cave of the trouble and
forcing out all ^npure blood.
Books free to any address by the Swift Specific Co., AUaata, Go.
in Washing Paint
don't scrub it and
wear off the sur
face. Use Gold Dust
Washing Powder
according to direc
tions printed on
every package and
you will be pleased
with the results and
surprised at the
saving in labor.
8*ad for freo booklet?" Golden Rul??
for BouMwork."
THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY
CUcsf" SI.LmU NcwYtt? Cm4m
Hill-Orr Drug Company's Specials!
Syrup Bed Clover Compound,
The greatest and best blood purifier. Pint bottle $1.00.
Johnson's Headache Powder.
Sale and sure for all pains in the head. 10c. and 25c.
Tarmint,
The best of all Cough Remedies. 25c. and 50c.
H. 0. D. Go's. Horse and Cattle Fodder.
A teaspoonful is a large dose and the result will surprise you. 1
fine Tonic and specially good for hide-bound and stoppages. 16<
and 25c. a bagful.
Johnson's Palatable Worm and Liver Syrup,
Removes the; worms every time, is safe, auu is not to be followed b
castor oil or other active ad nauseating medicines. 25c.
Kamnol.
We offer this new aud latest remedy for Headache, Neuralgia an
all pains. This remedy we need not recommend, as it stands abov
all remedies heretofore offered as a reliever of any hind of paii
25c boxes.
HILL-ORR DRUG CO.
Headquarters for Medicines of all kinds,
Faints, Oils, Glass, Seeds and Dye Stuffs.
.Jr. Uli M RAILWAY.
Ar. Donnai ti?
c
Ar.
Greenwood
Ninety-Six
Nowberry.
Prosperity
Columbia
KingviUe
Orangoburg,
Branch vi Un.
Suromerville
, unarieBton..
DmUylDoilj
No. 9|No,13
ittipm
5 29 p m
0 17 p m
7 82 p m
8 17 p m
STATIONS.
SSUp
soap
760p
824p
880a
807?'
1004a
1020a
1089?
10 fits
1188?
1160a
8?ft>
7 00a
7 41a
866a
823a
10 15a
1140a
1220p
128p
200p
222p
?87p
eiop
840p
700p
Lt.. . .Charleston... .Ar
. SummerviUe... '
...Branehville.... ?, '
...Orangeburg... "
. . ..Kingville,.... **
...Columbia..... M
.Alston.Lv
Hantuc."
.Union...?
... Jones vi 1>?
Pacolet.M
Lv
. Ar
_AEbeville.....Lv
rP7" p
.racuicv.
Ar.. Spartanburg,..
Lv.. Spartan burr...
Ar. .. AEbevllle....
817p
782p
002p
6 20p
488p
8 20p
280?
1 20p
106p
1828p
1214p
ur
m
88QS
1100a
1018a
888a
822a
7 80a
0 00p
861%
7 40p
780p
668p
0 42p
616p
00p
8 6p
-A.??.?.
Pullman palace steeping ears on Trains 8Sand
88,87 and 88, on A andC. division. Dining cart
on those trains nerve all meals en route.
Trains leave Kpartonburg, A. & C. division,
northbound. 0:43 a. in., 8:87 p.m., 8:18 p. m.,
4Vestibule Limited); southbound 12:20 o. m.,
:18 p. m., 11:84a. m., (Vestibule Limited.)
Trains leave Greenville, A and O. division,
northbound, r> :60 a. ro., 2:34 p. m. and 6:22 p. m.,
(Veatibuled Limited): southbound. 1:26 a. m?
4:89p. m., 12:30 p. m. ( VeetibuledLimited).
Trains 9 and 10 carry ?legan? Pullmas
elesping cars Iwtwecn Columbia and Asheville
nroute daily between Jacksonville andCinein
nati.
Trains 13 ami 14 carry miperb Pullman parlor
oars between Charleston and Asheville.
IBANK S. G A NNON, J. M. CULP,
ThirdV-P. .V- tien. Mgr., Traffic Mar.,
Washington, D. C ? Washington, D. 0.
W.A. TUBK. S. H.HABDWICK,
Gen. Pas*. A-'t. As'ttien.Pau. Ag*r.
Washington, D. C. Atlanta. Ga.
BLUE RIDGF RA'LROfiD.
H. C. BEATTIE Receiver.
Time Table No. 7.?Eflettive <* :.*" i*98.
Between Anderson and Walhalla.
WE?TnOuND. KAKTROUWD.
No. 12 STATIONS. No. 11.
First Class, First Class,
Daily. Daily.
P.M.?Leave Arrive A M.
a 8 85..Anderson.~._~UO0.
f 8.56.Denver.....10.40
f 4.06.,.Anton..;..40 81
a 4.14.Psndleton.....10.22
f 4.S8..Cherry's Crossing..10.13
t 4.29....?dar?'o Crossing.....10.G7
a 4 47..Seneca....9.49
5.11.West Union.-....9.25
* M7 Af.Walhalla,.:......Lt 9.20
No. 6, Mired, No. 6, Mixed.
Daily, Except \ Dally, Except
Sunday. Sunday.
Easteound. Wbstsovwp,
P.M.-Arrive Leave-^P'M.
b 6.10. Anderson..11.10
f 6 56. DOBvar...11*88
f 5.43..'...Autun.............11.50
s 5 81...Pendleton.....12.02
f 6.19..Cherry's Cwaalng.12.14
f 6.? l.Adams' Crossing...12.22
a 4.47).....Seneca..f 1248
a 410J.?.Seneca.\ 1.46
? 8 88.......West Union.........200
8 8.80...Walhalla... fl.19
(a) Regular station ; (!) Has station
Wtil also atop at the following
statical
Phin.
to take on or let off pastsn.
neve, James* and 8*~dy Springe.
No. 12oonnooia wUhBouthern Railway
No 12 nt Anderson.
No; 6 connecte. with Sotttharn Hallway
No?. 12, 87 ead 88 c*?euec*.
J. P.. ANDERSON.Supt.
HOUBLEDAICj
SERVICE
TO
ATiD
HEW YORK, BOSTON
RICHMOND.
WASHINGTON, NORFOLK
PORTSMOUTH.
SCHEDULE IN EFFECT JULY 18. lflsT
8OUTHBOOK1,
No. 403.
Lt B*Jtimore ? 3 18 pm
Lt Washington, " 4 40 ?m
LTBJchmona. ' A. C.L.. 8 56 pm
Lt Norfolk. Tia 8. A. L....?a Mr?~wlJ
No. 41
9 00)
12 0$i
2 601
4?
9 0S
Lt Waldon,
At Henderson,
Ar Durham,
Lt Durham,
.. 11 2Spm*ll
12 Kam ?1431
Ar Raleigh, Tia 8. A. I*...
ArKanford, " ?.,
At Southern PineB ' ..
Ar Hamlet,
Ar Wades boro,
Ar Monroe. "
Ar Wilmington " "
Ar Charlotte. jT^
' * t? 32 am j4 til
? f7 00 pm tlOll
2 16 am
8 88 am
. 4 28am
6 07 am
< 6 68am
> 6 43 am
3 4?i
B 05?
6 631
6Ki
s:
9
12 I
Ar Chester,'
Lt Colombia,C. y. &L. lXnTZIZ
?r Clinton
"7 SO am Tim
8. A. L.
*8 60am lOWj
t8?l
Ar Greenwood
Ar Abbo ville,
ArElberton,
Ar Athens,
Ar Winder,
Ar Atlanta, g A. L. (Cen.Time? 2 gg
9 46 am ?1214
10 85 am l 67
11 08 am
12 07 pm
1 18 pm
1 66 pm
185
241
8 CI
4M
6 S)
yOBTHBOTJHP.
Wo. 462.
l? WiiS^A L-<C*5< TiBW> *" *> n'n
Lt Winder,
Lt Athena. <
Lrmberton, - ZZ,
Lt AbberUle,
to^awod, ? .......
Lt Clinton, _? ....
Ag Columbia, C. M.AL bTbT
lt Cheater. B.?.L
At Chariott?l ? .
Lt Monroe,
Lt Hamlet,_
Ar Wilmington
Et SS533 Pines.
Lv?ftldBh,
Ar Henderson
Lt Henderson
Ar Durham,
Lt Durham
No. I
???
10 41
iiU
12?
IB
SM
21
~?7~
6 18 pm 4 211
.?10 35 pm *7?J
2 40 pm
8 IS pa
4 16 pm
5 EES
5 41 pm
C ?0pm
~-. 9 40 pm
U 16 pm
6?
. 12 00 am
-?2 16 am 11
.....r- 12
8 28 am 1
.t7-*2uia H Ml
........... t6 20pm tlOUl
2 m
A?SS?oid A.O.C=1fi??l
l5w?fnth s-Ai^- 7 2S im" 61
Ar Norfolk " *7 as am 6 S
?Peily. tP?Jlr.E?.8onday. tPaSylSt.MB?
_Noa. 408 and 402 "Tha Atlanta epedal/H
VeeUbuled Train,ofPuUmiiffleeperWandO
cs between Washington and Atlanta, alsftl
??an Sleeper* bet ween Portern on th and Che"
VljML 41 and 88, "Tha 8. A. L Express,'
Train, Coaches and Pullman ffiisparT*
Portsmouth and Atlanta. *^
For TlcketSv81eopers, etc., apply to
Joseph M ?lrownVOcn'l. Agent Pasa. Dept.
AtS^*??* *"* ^6 Xit?b?l] '
? ???P? Vjj?*Pre?ldeat and Gcn'l. M
X-^McBoo General Superit
II. W. B. Glover, Tratte Maas
ATLANTIC COAST
_ Tbapfio Depabtk?
i t Wrrj(riN?toi7,N. c, J*n. 16\
Fti?tLin?Between Charleston and*
?n^ianBndUpporSouthCflroUne(r*
BD SCHEDULE.
oojnas
CO!
No. 6?.
7 00aas
8 84 am
9-tOam
11 SS F?
!2 07pm
2 20 pas
lMpm
i2?pm
s?s
6 07pra
sispsn
ISS
Charlwton.?...?..Ar
Lt?.
Lt..
Ltm
Ar....,?^lasalfau^^^lt
Ar...??.._rTrossuw'^M..?-..,-lt
A?l\7.\V.~Le?r^
Ar-j-Or??nT?]e-...?.^LT
Ar.....^J9fajtaabnwr...?...,LT
Ar.Wlnsskoro, 8. (J......LT
AriHs??-.&cJ:;
Ar?..^sliS7ma.rT.C-Lt
?Daily.
Oes,'S1
TM?nsaj?ir.?