The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, September 27, 1899, Image 6

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BILL A RP' -A-i'p on ] At!<! II tn CV Who arc thc marriageable girls going to marry? This generation cannot judge thc future by thc jtast, for thc past docs not interest them. Thc present is their chief concern. Only the old people who manied half a cen tury ago oan appreciate the contrast between now and then and thc chango for the worse is alarming. Thc mar riage relation has lost much of its se riousness, its solemnity, its dignity, and consequently .-?cparations and di vorces have increased far more rapidly than population. During thc past twenty years population has increased od per cent, while divorces have in creased 157 p?r ccut. What a record of broken vows and conjugal misery. Dr. bandrum, thc eminent Baptist preacher of Atlanta, said in a recent sermon. "Our homes are io peril. Thc foundations of society arc threatened. Marriage is too often a mockery. Di vorces arc rapidly multiplying in our courts aud domestic depravity i-'rows apace." But legal divorces arc but a small proportion of thc number of separa tions, and a still smaller proportion of unhappy married people who suffer and endure their conjugal misery rather than mortify their children or exoite a public scandal. A notable lady of our town deolarod recently that she knew of but two happily married couples in our whole commu nity. Only two who are as loving and devoted as when they stood at thc marriage altar. We all know many who if not as happy as when first mar ried, arc as loving and kind to each other, and their happiness is only marred by the anxieties incident to married life. St. Paul said, ''The love of money ia thc root of all evil," and Hen. Franklin said, "The lack of it is thc cause of all misery." Neither of these assertions are altogether true, but they approximate the truth. 1 was ruminating about thc greed aud self ishness of mankind, for I have been reading about these trusts so much of late that like thc City of Shu shan, 1 have become perplexed and don't know what is going to'.bc the end of it. In the Saturday Review of September 2d and 9th, which is a ladies' journal of great excellence, published in Atlanta, there aro two article! on trusts, writ ten by Dr. Alfrod E. Seddou, a Eng lishman, I believe, but now a citizen of Atlanta, which for cogent and classic thought excites both admira tion and alarm. After sotting forth the many evils that ?fill follow these great combinations of capital, he asks.. "What is pushing on this mighty movement-this great iceberg that is going counter to powerful currents and billows? Popular denunciation, thc press, the enactments of Congress sod legislatures arc like so many waves spending their impotent wrath in vain upon the monster. Trusts will con tinue tb move on. They will grow in power and will in time corral all thc wealth, tho transposion, tho produec of our mines and fields. They will enlist in their service a vast army of toilers, whose dependence on them will be soul crushing and absolute, and they will bar out another army of would-be toilers, who will have no visible means of support-and then what? Towhat goal are we hastening? Congress might as well try to provent the sun from setting on the west, or to stop thc down rushing of Niagara, as to attempt by law to arrest this universal trend of modern commerce towards trust." Thou Dr. Seddon writes of the new faetor in American society-the factor of poverty, and says that its presence and its power is not yet realized, lie quotes frons the address of welcome by the Chicago federation of Labor to j thc trades assembly: "We bid you* Welcome in thc names of a hundred ; monopolists and fifty thousand tramps, j Herc mammon holds her carnival in palaces, while mothers arc heart- ; broken and children arc starving and ' men look in vain for work. Wc wel come you in the name of a hundred I thousand idle men and to-night wc i Will show you hundreds of strong mon lying on the rough stones in the cor- , ridors of this very building-no home, no food-men ablo aud willing to work, but for whom thcio is no work ." In New York city there were over ^ 30,(100 families turned out last year for unpaid rent. There were 250 sui- ! cides, and one person io every ten who j dies is buried ir the potter's field. ! Oh, thc pity of it-the pity of it ! When will thc melinniutn come? Dr. j Seddon bolievos it because ho knows j that God is good and will not suffer j such misery to be prolonged, and be cause He has promised that all the families of the earth shall be blessed. I am almost afraid to read such things now. Such pictures of human misery bring sadness and a feeling of despair. Long, long ago I wept over the "Lay of thc Laborer," by Tom Hood, when it first appeared in Lon* don. That'same rad song has gotton over here on this side of the water ' il S LETTER. Divorces. ni?titution. aud now our own strong men are sing ing: "Wherever nature needs. Wherever labor calls, No job I'll shirk of tho hardest work To shun tho workhouse walls; No alms I ask, give me my tank Here are tho arm, tho leg, Tho strength, th? Hinuws of a man, To work and not tu beg.'' BIM, ARI?. IK a M ti M ache Property .' .'IH a mustache property?" Haid a guest in thc St. Charles lobby last overling, "if?o, what is its value? These points will be raised in a very peculiar suit which is coming up at the next term of court in a town over in Georgia. I'd rather not mention any names, but I happened to be familiar with thc facts, and they are briefly these: Almost a month ago a well-known travelling man was stay ing at thc leading hotel of thc place, and went to thc cigar stand one day to get a light. They had a new fan gled concern that spouted out a jet of flame when thc lighter was lifted, but ou this particular occasion it hung lire. Tho drummer was trying to make it work when all of a sudden it blazed out like a volcano and licked off his long, beautiful blond mustache. Ile was furious, of course, because thc mustache had been his chief orna ment and pride, but thc affair might heve still passed off without trouble if ho had not been so unmercifully guyed. The upshot of this was that he demanded damages, thc landlord laughed at him'and he then instructed a lawyer to bring suit for $2,500. "The papers will bc filed in the next term of court. I am told they make rome interesting allegations. It will bc claimed, for instance, that the mustache was of direct assistance to its owner in earning a livelihood, in somuch as it gave him .1 distinguished appearance, and thus facilitated his interviews with thu trade. Its loas, he holds, was a disfigurement which has occasioned ridicule, falling off in prestige and consequent shrinkage in business. Ile will also allege that his altered appearance causod great mental anguish to himself and his wife, and that that species of suffer ing may be reduced, under tho law, to dollars and cents. Incidentally he will try to prove that thc absence of a mustache affected his eyesight. So, aa you may observe, a good many in foresting and delicate questions will bo rai Bed, and I dare say the ease will attract wide attention. I have the particulars I mention from tho victim himself. What sort of defence will be set up remains to be seen."-New ffrhann Timex-Democrat. in ino rance viarx-inca ano JUD? rnc?? in iii raVvf. Some timo ago Judge Andy ?. Cal houn, judge of the police court of At lanta, had occasion to pass a sentence that was gratifying to him, and if people will take his advice much suf fering will be alleviated. The judge is subjeot to nervous, sick headaches and dyspepsia. Here is his sentence: "I am a great Bufferer from nervous sick headache and have found no rem edy so effective as Tyner's Dyspepsia Remedy. If taken when the headache first begins it invariably cures."' Price 50 cents per bottle. For sale by Wilhitc & Wilhite. Sample bottle free on application to Tyner's Dyspepsia Remedy Co., Atlan ta, Ga. ^^n^mlmm~ - A local paper published a long obituary of a man who had died in the community, closing with the state ment that a long procession of pooplc followed the remains to their last ''roasting place." Thc family read'he notice and discovered the- supposed error and asked the ?diter to make a correction in thc word "roasting." but he said he could not do it until seven years back subscription had been paid. - mm m nw* - Good Enough to Take. The lincst <jiiality of loaf sugar is used in thc manufacture of Chamber lain's Cough Remedy aud the roots used in its preparation give it a flavor similar to that of maple syrup, making it very pleasant to take. As a medi cine for thc cure of coughs, colds, la grippe, croup and whooping cough it is unequaled by any other. It always ourcs, and cures quickly, Fo: sale by Hill- Orr Drug Co. - "Can dogs find their way home from a distance?"' is thc question fre fluently asked. It's according to the doj?. If it's one you want to get rid of, he can lind his way back from tho Philippines. Ti it's a good one, he'a apt to get lost if he goes around the corner. For wounds, burns, scalds, sores, skin discasos and all irritating crup tions, nothing so soothing aud healing as DeWitt's Witch HazclSalvo. Mrs. Emma Bolles, Matron Englewood Nursery, Chicago, says of it: "When all else fails in healing our babies, it will cure." Evans'Pharmacy. - To cleanse and brighten a carpet put three tablespoonfuls of ammonia into a pail of clean water and go over the surface of the carpet with a cloth well wrung from the liquid. - It's bad enough to be a dude, I but it's worse to be subdued. 1,o?intr ?ts Terror?. I ?catii as a motive is moribund. Perhaps the most distinctive note of the modern spirit is the practical dis appearance of the thoucht of death as an influence directly hearing upon practical life. We insure our lives, it is true, but having done so. think no more of the matter, except in the spir it of William Micawber when he sign- ! ed a promissary note. There are no skeletons at our feasts nowadays, or at least, they are living ones. Death has lost all its terrors, and it is of ten regarded as thc last and best friend. One of thc main causes of this rc mnrkable change in sentiment is the improvement in modern sanitation and hygiene, and the increased average duration of life. In the middle ages nothing was so uncertain as life. Duels and private wars, feuds and bandits, plagues and pestilences made men uncertain of their lives from hour to hour. When men's position in life depended upon thc strength of their arm they ceased to bc effective when they became "stale" as athletes. Thus old agc began for men carly in forties. Thc average agc was younger, yet death came more frequently, so that his visits were thc more andmore unwelcome. When any day might be one's last it was natural to bc always thinking what came afterdcath. Now adays death comes later, with more warnings of his approach, and takes us less by surprise. We arc more willing to go, less cager to stay. That increase in the average agc of man has wider results than would ap pear at first sight. Thc forties in a man's life are thc decade of disillusion and a society in which thc tone is mainly given by men of 40 and upward is sure to be practical and pessimistic. Now thc tendency of modern life is to put power into men's hands mainly after they have reached the age of 40. Mr. Galton has noticed, in his "He reditary Genius," that men do not get into the biographical dictionaries un til after the agc of 40. It is only in the present generation that the cumu lative effect of the increased agc of the men of influence has had time to show itself, and the result has been what is known as the fine de si?cle tone. Part of this tone is characterized by thc dying of death. More and more death tends to remove thc oldest, and thc gaps it causes seem more natural and normal. Often, too, medical science protects life at the cost of extra suf fering, so that death comes at last more as a release, and frequently caus es more relief than grief to those who remain. Thus on all sides death is losing its terrors. We are dying more frequent ly when our life's work is done, and it seems more natural tc die. We live so hurriedly that the final ceasing to be is getting to be regarded as the fin al summum bonum. The favorite text on tombs it getting to be: "God Giveth His Beloved Sleep." The sen timent expressed on Professor Hux ley's tombstone, "It is w?I? eveu IT tb? sleep bo endless," expresses a general feeling. Life is becoming so complicated that any one man seems tess important and significant in this life, so it is harder to imagine him having any more significant function in any other. And when the joys and fears of a future life become dim, death as a motive disappears. It is not as if any marked revolution of feeling with regard to continued life in the future existed; that re mains the great mystery, perhaps it always was. What pecplc think about it, when they do think about it, de pends upon their temperament. But the point I am making is, that they do not think about it at all: and thc whole subject is ceasing to have prac tical effect on the life of man. First Time Kc Ilea 'Dixie." The first lime 1 ever heard the tune of "Dixie" was in the sprint of 186*1. I was walking down Franklin street and met a South Carolina regiment, which had just arrived and was march ing out to the old Fair grounds. It was headed by its own band, which was playing thc celebrated air for thc first time he?vd in Richmond, and which so quickly becamo thc national air of tho Confederacy. 1 thought it the most inspiring music I had ever heard, and it seemed to thrill every one with delight: win dows flew up, handkerchiefs waved and cheer upon cheer went up from thc spectators, as woll as the boys in gray who were marching GO gay ly to the stirring tune: but. alas! how few of those gallant men lived to see thc end of thc struggle, then just begun. The band also played "The Bonnie Blue Flag," "My Maryland" and other patriotio airs, but none seemed to catch tho popular ear like "Dixie." -A". .V., ill thr ft ich moni f fh'x pntcJt. There's always hope while there's One Minute Cough Cure. "An at tack of pneumonia left my lungs in bad shape and I was near the first stages of consumption. One Minute Cough. Cure completely cured me." writes Helen McHonry, Bismack, N. 1). Givos instant relief. Evans Pharmacy. - Some nen get up in the world only as high as the elevator goes. When a .Man Stops .1 umping. .'Henry." she said, and there was what a novelist *ouldcall tears iu her voice as she spoke, "1 don't believe you love me." Ile took the cigar from his mouth and looked at her in surprise over the top of his newspaper, says the Waver ly Magazine. "Maria," he said, "don't be fool ish." "There!" she exclaimed. "There's | evidence of the truth of what I said. 'Don't be foolish!' Did you ever speak to me that way before we were mar ried?" "No, my dear, I did not," he admit ted. "Then," she said reproachfully, "my lightest wish waB law; then you never sat like a dumm j, smoking a cigar and reading a paper, when I was in the room; then you seemed anxious to please me, and were ever on thc watch to do some little favor for me." "It is true," he admitted. "You were never lazy then," she went on. "You were full of life and spirits, you were energetic" "My dear." ho interrupted in that calm, dispassionate 'one that makes the average wife want to get a poker or a broom, "did you ever see a boy trying to get an apple or a cherry that i was just a little out of his reach?" "Certainly," she answered, "but-" "II" keeps jumping and jumping till bc gets it, doesn't he?" "Of course." "But does he continue jumping af ter he has got it ?" "Certainly not. There's no need of it !" "Well," he said, as he turned to his paper again, "you're my cherry, and I don't see the slightest reason why I should keep jumping any more than the boy." She didn't say any thing, but the more she thought the more undecided did she become as to whother she onght to be angry with him or not. A Cat Worth Having. George Mathis, a farmer living near lied Jackets Mound, New York, on the Naples road, has a 3-year-old daughter and a large Maltese tom cat. Thc ehild \ as in the garden yesterday afternoon playing with the cat, its almost constant companion. She saw a rattlesnake about 4 feet long down the path. She started toward it to play with it. The cat looked after her and saw the snake. As the child approached, the rattler threw7 itself into a coil, sounded the alarm and pre* pared to strike. When the ohild came almost within striking dietance, a streak of gray flashed through the air, struck the snake's tai! and bounded to one side. .The rattler turned to attack the oat, which baoked up, yowled and spit. The child ran screaming toward the house. Mr. Mathis, who was close at hand heard the doream, pieked up a club and ran into the garden. He saw the snake strike , at the eat and the latter dodge the blow. Before the snake eould recover itself the eat rush ed at the snake, but failed to secure a hold. It bounded out of danger while the snake reeoiled. Mr. Mathis approaohed and the snake turned its head. The cat rushed again, eayght the snake just behind the head and held on. The rattler twisted,wriggled, withered and rolled over. It threw the cat off its feet two or three times, but eould not loosen its hold. In a few minutes tho rattler straightened out and lay still except for a jerky movement in its tail. It was dead. The eat has been a snake killer since it wrfs a kitten: Mr. Mathis says he would not take $1,000 for it. - The Chicago Tribune nays: Ouly uu accident can prevent thc breaking of all previous records by the corn production of thc I ruted States this year. A canvass of the States which raise thc bulk of the corn of this coun try warrants an estimate above that of 18?H?, which herctoicrd has been the record, and there is much in the ad vices received to justify a prediction that the crop will approximate 2,500, 000,000 bushels. The first cora crop of the country to reaeh in round num bers 2,000,000,000 bushels was that of 1885. Including thc crop now to be harvested only nine crops of 2,000, 000,000 bushels or over have been pro duced. - To keep away roaches, take green cucumber parings and strew them aroutd the kitchen tables and cup boards and sec how quick tho roaches will disappear. "They are simply perfect," writes Rob't. Moore, of La Fayette, Ind., of DeWitt's Little Early Risers, the "fa mous little pills" for constipation and all liver ailments. Never gripe. Evans Pharmacy. - A child was lost in the Blue Ridge mountains, and three months later its dead body and that of the dog who was with it, were found. Both hand starved to death. i I "Best on the market for coughs and I colds and all bronchial troubles; for I croup it has no equal," writes Henry I R. Whitford, South Canaan, Conn., ! of One Minute Cough Cure. Evans Pharmacy. - Glass is a non-conductor of electricity, but not of Jersey light ning. The pain of a burn or seald is al most instantly relieved by applying Chamberlain's Pain Balm. It also heals the injured parts more quickly than any other treatment, and without the burn is very severe does not leave a scar. For sale by Hill-Orr Drug Co. - Tho Sandwich Islanders estimate the beauty of women by their weight. E. E. Turner, Compton, Mo., was cured of piles , by DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve after suffering seventeen years and trying over twenty remedies. Physicians aud Surgeons endorse it. Beware of dangerous counterfeits. Evany Pharmacy. Valuable Plantation for Sale. ? PT y| At RE3, more or less, on Bea JL ? ra: vordam Creek, in a bigb state of cultivation. 30 acres bottom land, 30 in pine woodu, 14 In pasture, 100 in cotton ?and. 3 boused on. it. Bounded by Rev. Georg? R?dgen*. A. M. Guyton and oth er?. Will sell on easy terms. Purchaser to pay for papen* and stamps. For fur ther particulars apply to M. Berry Wil liams, Guvtou,8. C., or MISS LIZZIE WILLIAMS, Anderson, t?. C. Jnly 12, 1809_3_ Valuable Land? for Sale. WE offer for sale the following Tracts of Land : 1st. The Hopkins Tract, situate in Pick etts County, containing two hundred acree, more or less. 2d. The G. W. Miller Trsot, containing one band rod and twenty-four acree, more or leas. This Tract has upon it a good Mill and Gin. 31. All that part of the Home Tract of lir H. C Miller, lying in Anderson County, being eighty acres, more or leas, Tneee three Tracts of Land lie on the waters of Eighteen Mile Creek, respec tively, within one and a half to three miles of the towma of pendleton, Clemson Col lea? and Central on the 8outhern R. R. Tbes? Lanas are une?y wooded, with up?ast!* snd low lands In cultivation. For further parttoniara apply to Jas. T. l?uster. Pendleton, 8. C., or John T. Taylor, on the premises. W. W. NIMON8. CARRIE T. SIMONS, I RB881B E. HOOK, Ex?o. Bat. Dr. IL C. Miller, a Mg 39.1890_10 3m Bric Strickland ?ft King OFFICE 1W MA80?IC TEMPLE. ?e* Gas and Cocaine na ic for Extract ing Teeth. RAW FROM ECZEMA! Ho Torture Equal to 1bi Itching and Burning nt This Fearful Disease. No* much attention it often paid to tho first symptom! of Eczema, bat is is not lons before the little redness begins to itch ana burn. This ia bat tho beginning, and will load to suffering and torture almost unen durable. It is a common mistake to regard a roughness and redness ot tho skin as merely a local irritation ; it io bat an indica tion of sv humor in the blood-of terrible Eczema-which is more than akin-deep, and can not bo reached by local appli cations of ointments, salves,-etc., applied, to tho surface. The disease itself, the real cause of the trouble, is in tho blood, although ?ll Buffering is produces through the skin ; the only way to reach the disease, therefore, is through the blood. Mr. Phil T. Jones, of Mixersville, Ind., writes: "I had Eczema thirty years, and after a great deal of treatment my leg was so raw and toro that It gave me constant pa?"n. It finally broke into a running sore, and beg?n tc- ??read and grow Ti'erse, ?fer thc pasfe fi?o ?r six years ??uive suffered untold agony and hod given np all hope of ever being free from the disease, aa I have been treated by some of tho best physicians. and have taken many blood medicines, all in vaia. With little faith left I began to toko S. B. 8., and it apparently made tho Eex?tfia worse, bat I know that thia waa the way the remedy got rid of tho poison. Continuing 8.... S" tho SOTO healed up entirely; tho skin became clear and smooth, and I was euroli perfectly." Ecaema is an obstinate ??eaBe and can no* be eared by a rem? only a tonic. Swift's Specific- * 8. S. 8. FOR THE BLOOD -io superior to other blood remedies because it euses tsetses which *T*ay ona not reach. It goso to the bottom-to the cause cf the will far? the worst ease of Seseme, no matter what otpei- treatment has failed. *It to the only blood remedy guaranteed Ho be free fcosa potash, saereary or any other mineral, and never fails to cure Ecaeme, Scrofula, Contagious Siced Foison, Concor, Totter, Rheumatism. Open Sores, mooro, Boils, oto. Instes upon S. S. S. ; nothing can take its place. I O Books on these diseases will be mailed free to any address Wy Swift BpS eifle Company, AtlaUe, Georgia, -MM^fs?_ ^Jtf**m? I Scrubbing Fioors j can never be made p^g^^^^^l a pleasing pastime, jf??S?? /^Hl^^^r^^a^tigj^ but one-half the ^| B^KP^uNffi labor will be saved ?flsfl and the results im- r^^^H^^W^^? THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY N|?$ WmKffl^PBWfeE Cfckaf? St. Liai? NcwYsrk Bottoa >Sl aIM*WSM*?^ Hill-Orr Drug Company's Specials! Syrup Bed Clover Compound, The greatest and best blood purifier. Pint bottle $1.00. Johnson's Headache Powder. Safe and sure for all pains in the head. 10c. and 25c. Tarmint, The best of all Cough Remedies. 25c. and 50c. H. 0. D. Co's. Horse and Cattle Powder. A teaspoonful is a large dose and the result will surprise you. A fine Tonic and specially good for hide-bound and stoppages. 15c. and 25c. a bagful. Johnson's Palatable Worm and Liver Syrup, Removes the worms every time, is safe, and is not to be followed ?if castor oil or other active ad nauseating medicines. 25c. Kamnol. We oller this new and latest remedy for Headache, Neuralgia ami all pains. This remedy we need not recommend, as it stands abov all remedies heretofore offered as a reliever of any kind of pain. 25c boxes. HILL-ORR DRUG CO., Headquarters for Medicines of all kinds, Faints, Oils, Glass, Seeds and Dye Stuffs. lU'IiM RAILWAY. ("omit* u?f?l iMiJirtlille hi K fleet .lun?- ?Uh, JK?i?. STATIONS. Lv. ( bi.rlesion. " SumraervilU-_ " Branchville. " Oran gobur g_ " Klngrtllo....._ LT. Columlria.. " Prosperity. ." Newberry. " Ninety-Six. " Greenwood. Af. Hodgee. AT. Abbeville.. Ar. Belton.. I Kx. Sun. ' No. 17. Ax. Anderson. As. OreonTillo. Ar. Atlanta. 7 40 a m ? 00 ? m ?JO n m . Aft a va Daily No. II. 7 OU n ni 7 41 a m H bb n ii) 9 88 a ni I- 1U IA a ni 11 05 ?"ni 12 10 n'n 12 25 p m 1 So p m 1 58 p m a 15 p rn 2 ?ft p zo 080 a tm 10 10 m m SSS p m Ex. dun. No. IS. 6 SO p m 8 00 p m s aa p m 4 48 p m 5 45.pm 7 15 y au 0 10 p rn STATIONS. CK OrMnrille.... " Piedmont.... " wlUlamatoa.. C? Andoreon_ Lv. Belton .. ?Ti J/inUXeMQLB. trtr.AbWHiel.'l Xiv. Boogee. Ar. Greenwood.. tn. KlBt^l5eT77: . " Orangoburg.. " BranohvUle.. Sommerville. Ar. Charleston ... K?ylEagi : No. ? No.lBI u 7 SD p ni 8 00 p rr? 8 10 p m 1)88 p m j IS p ni 900 Daily No. fe WIS m m 10 40 ? tn 10 86 ft re 10 45 a ni ll 15 a ni m e A/I _ ?., A* mr -_M ii Sw S S M 30 n m 19 85 i? in 2 00 p ni 2 14 p ni a SO p tn No. ? No.lB ?*~TIv,^o. lycl^tSSS g?P 7 00e LT.. Ober le? ton... Ar shpllfoe 2ti? .. Somerville... ? 782plOiao ??0P 855a . ....BranebvUle.... ? 002p d52a 884p H2Sa " ....Oranaebure... " S2&D 2??;?1Ba " KtagrlneT: ? *88p ?Kto "-...Oolambl?.?. 820p 9S0p ' Altton.Lv 280p 850e J02pa BOOp ".Union." 103p 7 80n l g :::::?::::: ?i ol IS^JSSLAT...^?h^TlUe.".Vs* ?&p "IV'p. a. "A." s, m. . - . MF???S5,iP*lat!*.*1*-?^?.?? on Train* 85 and BO, 87 and 83. on A. endC. division. Dlnlnj care ?afeas*train??erv?ell mealeenrcuteT 1-i2f?li?*T? rtpartaabarj, A. AO. dirt ?Jon, Bartbbonnd. 0:48 a.m.. 8:87 p.rn., 6:ia p.m. Vestibule Limited); eeuthbound 13-i? a. m. :15p. m ll-.ma. ffl'/tVc^bnlelSinlt?a.T STrahie lear? Ure^TiVle, A. and C. dlT?t?on, rtbbound, ? :5? r.. m., 2:34 p. na. and 5:23 p. m., e^brded pirated)?eoatnbonnd. 1:25 ?V ut. Op. m., 12:30 o. tn. ( Vestibuled limited). Traine 0. add 10 carry ?legan* Polira &s Bleeping car? between Oo?umhlft end Asheville enromo daily between Jncjuonville andClncin f?Z=.l~.a T*-J 1 j_?_.v_? . . C?TS between Oharleston and Asheville: FRANK 8. WANNON, J. M. GULP, ?n?lrdV-P.a:Oen.Mgr., Trafilo Mgr., Washington, D. C. WaahingtonTD. O. W. A. TURK. 8. H. HARDWICK. Gen. Pas?. Af?% As" tu on. Paw. Ag**. Washington. D. C. . Atlanta,Ga. BLUE RIOGF RA'LROAD H. G. BEATTIE Receiver. Time Table No. 7.-Efleui vo ?.* . - i*98. Between Anderson and Walhalla. WKSTBOON?. BARTBOOKD. Np. 12 8TAT1ON8. No. ll. Flm Class, First Class, Dally. Dally. P.W.-Leave ArrlvoA & s 8 85.....Anderson._.1100 ? 3.60.Denver.10.40 ? * 05.Anten.........10 31 s 4.14......Pendleton. ..w.10.22 i 4.28.Cherry'? Crossing..10.18 t 4.29.^Adara's Creeslng.10.07 . 4 47.-..?enees.:..-...9.49 s 511.West Union... .9.25 s 6.17 Ar.WsJhaUs.;...^..^.Xv 9.20 N?.6, Mixed, No. 5, Mixed, Dall,, Except Daily, Except Sunday. Sunday. EASTBOUND. WESTBOUND. P. M.-Arrive Leave-P M. s ?.10"...Anderson.......l?l0 J .Denver..............iiiS f 6.48..Autun...w.........UGO s 5 81..........Pendleton ...... .....12,02 i 619...Cherry'sOrcsslng..M2.14 f B l?-;.Adams' Crossing-.12.22 TO WltWINCTON,' ^BWnTB,! SEW OBXtBAM! AND NEW YOBS, BOSTON, RICHMOND. WASHINGTON. NOR FOIL K FGSTSMOUTH. HC H Ki) ULK IN EFFECT JULY 18. 1836. _SOPTHBOPM? ' . v ^ . No. 408. Nan.I * 2*ltr?0T!, " 815 nm a si J LT WajUncto?, . S SS nm 4 29 LTBIchmond, ; A. C L-8 86 pm 9 "& LT Noribtt. via 8. A. L.;_. *s 80 pta *9 0sM *>TPortgaonih, " -,_s jj pg 9 ?9 LT Weldon, " ...._?a 28 pm?ll uM ArHondenon, " .M.IS 58am ?1 SI A*Durham,' ?. .~. f7 82am ts iftdsl Ar Raleigh, Tia S. A. L?.JT^~l?am .TmM Ar DOD 10ni, ?. g S3 am a nfl Ar WedWDoro, . S 88 sm 8 lt 3 Ar Monroe, ?. . 6 4S???, e nfl ar Wilmington ? ?fl Ar Charlene, ? -J ?7 60 ara *10 ArCbeeter. " ?8 gS lSsTa LT Colombia, C. N. A L. B? B_..".^ ts jgfl ?? O&J a- ?"- s ?sam ?13 nfl A?awS????* .- 10 88 ara lt7fl A?RI^T?^' ...U es ara its| AVAOMSS?' ? -"flss um Ar Atlanta. 3 A. U (Cen. Time) asa n" sttV to iske.sn or, M off nsMfp: neva, Jnaaes' end Bandy-fiprtoits. NNo^ 1^ concocts Tdth^utbaxn Railway No.;G c?n?e^ wifh??mtbern Rftll?y* Nos. 12,07 end 88 siBensea. J. ?. ANDERSON, Supt. _NOSTHBO?irp. ? J No.4ba. Ho.1 Lv Atlanta^.A.L.(Con. Time) ?12 00 n'a ?7 Ki Lv Winder, " .~. 2 40 pu 10? LT Athone, ....... 8 18 pm ll it Lr ?berton, " ......... 4 is pm i2U LTAbbettUe, _. 6 IS pm 10 LT Greenwood, " . 5 41 pm 2? LT Chaton, " .....^ ?SO pm SI Ar CohuabuTTc. N. AL. RB... "? ?7 ? LvCheeter, 8.A. L - 8 18 pm 4 8 AT Charlotte. " ^.....*10 28 pm gi Lv ?ionroo, 9 40 pm 6? LT Hamlet,_" -. ll IS pm i? ArWllmlugton " .Z , 1 ?? LT Southern Pinea, " _,..12 00 c u 9t LTBalelxh, " ......... ?2 16 am lill Ar Henderson " .......M ll ? LT Honiereon_8 28 am . I j A'D?rhts. *. _,. *?!?s? ?1 LT?mrhaia' " ........... fO 20 pm *jj Bj Ar Weldon, "-?4 SB am ?J Sj Ar Richmond A. C. L......... 8 15 am 7 SJ ArWaaalagton,penn.R,B*~. 1281pm llSJ Ar Baltimore, " . 1 48 pm 1 ? Ar Philadelphia, " ......... 8 so pa >? ArNewYorh, " ..,?6 2? pm ??? ArFortrmontb 8.A.L.. 72Sem il Ar Norfolk " ........ *7 85am s fl ?Daily. tD?Hy,Kx.8uaday. tDally Bc Mtfl ?^f?b*08,*11* 402 "Th? Atlanta Special/' ^^S&LTS1^ of ^llman^BleeperTand C ca between Washington and Atlanta, alu raan Sleeper* between Portsmouth and Ch? T?Sf' 4?*nt w? "i116 8- A. L. Express,' rao?iD?,,Bu *i"*6nht For Tickets. Sleeper*, etc, apply to ^f*M.Brown, Qen'l. Agent Pa??. Depi AUa?ta,%a? em<nM? T,p' A-6 Kimball I ^.K.MeBee Oenml8nperiniendont. P'^-B-Glover,Trafilo Manager. LS. Allen. Gen'l. PascengarActnt. General Om eera, PortenaoctoV Va. ATLANTIC COAST Ll T?AFKIO DBPABTM ? W?MI?HO?OW, IT. C., Jan. id Fast Line Between Charleston anc umbinand Upper South Carolina, ENSED BCBEDUIiK. OOINO ae??? ?*--Cltftrleet?i-M.?M^er " 1 K=^&::rrir Kots ?rr:::.r^^fe^ tPSpra Ar........... O?ntOB.......^.".LT a 00 pm Ar.^.^Grecntiiliv..,-,.T,v *?0pm Ar.^-^naxtanbnrg.-.LT B 07 pa Ar^?WtoB?bO?o. &C.LT ??-I^I??N:O:S 7 00 pm Ar^....JU^?TiUa, ]^c^. ~LT . *lJaS|y . ? . ' " " Nee. ?aa? SS Solid Tfelnt betweca ( aa4fJalas>Maj8.C. 're? Bi I. his .< I.?! vrh Hie Nth rent tho: .. <i ?lils ?hit