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TO SAVE S WE _A_. W. Brabham Telle Potatoes For To the Editor of The News and Courier : The time is near at hand when the sweet potato crop will be harvested and, as usual, put away to spoil. Perhaps there is no crop that spoils upon the farmers' hands cjual to the potato crop. It is safe to say that half of all the potatoes put away for winter and spring use spoil, either by rotting in winter or sprouting and drying out too much in spring. Such heavy losses on this valuable crop put mc to thinking and to exper imenting. Of course, success did not conic the lirst year, but it did come, and now 1 do not lose 1 per cent, of my potatoes, and 1 believe I eau keep them ?nan absolutely i>erfect condi tion till August. It was thus that I came to make my discovery: I noticed that when I put away my potatoes that those nearest the bottom of the pit, lying on tho damp earth, in contact with no straw or other foreign matter, kept better than those that were protected (Vj by straw or other covering, and I reached a conclusion that should I put my tubers deep cnouuh into the earth, keep out all rain and cold, that the problem owas solved. Thia I have proved beyond doubt. As soon as the first frost in Octo ber nips or bites my potato vines I put in ploughs and hand rakes and harvest my crop. I dig pits three feet wide, six feet long and five feet deep, fill in with potatoes to within two feet of the top. Any kind of clean dry stuff, such an hay, fodder, rioe, oat or wheat straw may be used to fill in the remaining space up to thosurffico, then a roof of boards is made to shed off the rain, and upon this roof is thrown two or three inches of earth to keen out the oold. Potatoes thus put away will not rot, or lose one pound per bushel in weight, .or sprout till mid-summer. And they sweeten and get softer as they age and mellow in their recepta cle. Just hero I am led to think that this method would be an ideal one for keeping apples, late peaches, pears, grapes; in fact, all kinds of fruits and vegetables, fresh from one season to another. Fruits and conserves were exhumed only a few years ago at Pompeii and other buried cities of the East just as fresh as they were when put away in cans and jars nearly two thousand years ago. And from this discovery the great canning industry of to-day sprung. In putting away potatoes in pits there are simple rules that must be followed : Dig or harvest potatoes before hard frost. FroBt-bitten potatoes will not keep and, even could they be kept, they are not edible. Do not dig your pit deep onoughfor the water to seep into the pit. On a higT4 elevation you may dig the pit as deep as you wish, but on low lands do not go so deep. Do not put any straw or any foreign substance on the bottom of your pit. Put the potatoes on the cool, damp earth. Use no "sidings" of anything against the walls of your pit. Let the tubers be in contact with the oooi, damp earth. Do not make your pits too large. Three feet wide, six feet long and five feet deep will give good results on high land. On low lands three feet will de deep enough; fill half full of potatoes when the pit is three feet deep. If the top filling of straw is not SCOTT'S MULSiON Scott's Emulsion is the means of life and of the en joyment of life of thousands of men, women and children. To the men Scott's Err Mi si?n gives the flesh r d strength so necessary for the cure of consumption and the repairing of body losses from any wasting disease. For women Scott's Emul sion does this and more. It is a most sustaining food and tonic for the special trials that women have to bear. To children Scott's Emul sion gives food and strength for growth of flesh <uid bore and blood. . For pale girls, for thin and sickly boys Scott's Emulsion is a great help. Send for free sample. SCOTT &. BOWNE. Chemists. 409-4-15 Pearl Street. NawYork. I SOo. and $ 1 .OO : all dr uasloto. _ :ET POTATOES. J How He 3?uts Away The Winter. sound and dry, free from all mould or rot, use no straw at all. lie sure that the roof of the pit does not leak. THC boards free^ from holes or sun cracks. A leaky roof means rotten potatoes. Keep all cold wind out of thc pit by putting earth upon the roof and around the gables. Allow no water to get into the pit. By following these simple rules you can have delicious potatoes on your table the year round. The longer the potatoes stay in the pit the better they get. Prof. J. S. Newman's plan of drying potatoes will not compare at all with my plan. To use a street slang. Prof. Newman is not "in it." Why use dried potatoes when you can have fresh ones all the time ? There are great economic agricul tural problems to solve and, like any other problems, they can be solved: at least all finite (juestious have an an swer, those infinite have none and we have neither time nor business in questioning them. But all thc mys teries making doubtful the way of progressive man will be cleared up as j the sunlight banishes the morning mists ard thc crooked ways made straight and the pathway made plain. And the great philosopher, Shake speare, when he said : There are more things in heaven and i earth, Horatio, Than are dreampt of in your philoso ophy, was divining a truth broader that: its surface showed. A. W. Brabham. Olar, Bamberg County, Sept. 21. Wisdom Froui a Barkeeper. "There's np use to theorize about whisky drinking," said the old bar keeper. "Of course it is the curse of the world, but men will drink so long as men are men. Since I have been passing drinks across tho counter I have seen all manner of tragedies, and it is a mistake to suppose that a bartender grows callous, though his life would be easier if he were like that. We must be polite and atten tive; but I have seen the time when it was hard to keep from being a mere man and preaohing temperance aa I handed liquor to a customer. Our life affords unlimited study of human nature. I have seen all the gradua tions; and after years of thought I have reached a few conclusions that are not new. One mao in a thousand may drink safely. The others are threatened alwayB, and this side the danger-line they are traveling with a curb bit. The man who sticks to three drinks a day is a miraole. A man who inherits a thirst from his father and grandfather may be a tee totaller until he is 50, but he may ex pect delirium tremens any time after he oeaBes to be a total abstainer. I have seen a town bum sober up and become a respectable member of so ciety, and I have a good deal of faith in the Keely Cure; but the gentleman who begins to get drunk after he is 30 years old might as well Bhoot himself and save his family physician the ne cessity of lying as to the cause of his death. I have never known but one man who had the jim-jams to escape the drunkards death. Paralysis sav ed him. Whisky is mankind's strong est oommon love. It is the best med icine in the world and as a means of killing off surplus population it is surer, though slower, than the Black Death."-Charlotte Observer. Absent Minded. - Kspjohn, a Swedish gentleman, fond of telling anecdotes and incidents gathered during a recent visit to his native country, is responsible for this addition to the "absent minded man" | scries : A professor in one of the Swedish universities, having finished his la bors for the day, was about to start home when a fellow professor called his attention to the violent storm rag ing outside and said: "Why go hume? Better remain at the college tonight." He walked over to the window and surveyed the situation. "Yes, I think I will," he replied, nonchalantly, an all absorbing topic of the class room yet in mind. Soon afterward he was missing, says the New York Times, and it was sup posed that he had changed his mind and gone home; but later he reappear ed with a bundle under his nnn and showing evidence of having been ?-x posed to the storm. Something was said regarding his errand. "Why," he replied, "I've been home after my night shirt." - Learn to hide your aob.es and pains under a pleasant smile. No one cares whether you have the earache, headeche or rheumatism. Product o? old School's Ioflueuce is Fading Away. A conversation which the writer heard some time ago between a young lady from the North and one of the few typical old negro "mammies" which are still left in the South, brings to mind the fact that there are few, very few of these aged characters left, who remained faithful to their masters not only during the war, but for many years after as well. The young lady in question was .scated on the wide piazza of an old Southern home, situated not many miles from Augusta. Absorbed in her book she paid no attention to her surroundings until she was aroused by a cheerful, "Good mornin', Missy." The young lady closed her book, smiling. "Good morning, Aunt Liza; how are you this morning?" she said. "Well, jes' so 30, Missy, jes so so. I doan git 'long as purt as I use to." And the old darkey seated herself on the steps with a view to continuing the conversation. Aunt liiza was the typical "mam my. ' itefusing to leave her owners, the old negro has long since become a land mark snd still clings to thc old plantation where she was reared. The Northern girl had her own ideas about slavery and finally brought the old woman around to tho subject of the days before she became free. "Now, Aunt Liza, aren't you glad that ..lavery days are over and you can do just as you please all the time?" The old woman looked up in sur prise. "Lord, chile!" she exclaimed, "Dis ole nigger ain' ben rale happy sence de wah. O' cose de Cunnel ben jes* as good to me ef he ain' ben better, but dey ain' ben no big times sence dem Yankees cum tho de place. Chrismus is jes a odinary 'casion now. Lord, Honey! you ain' never seen a Chrismus fo' de wah, is you? No? Well you sutiny is gut sometbin' to live fur. O' cose we hes good times yit, but dey ain1 like dem we use to hab. De Cunncl'd cum out arter he done oat he brekfas' on Chrismus and gin all de niggers fifty cents and sot um free fer all day. De missus would cum down to de quarters, too. and gin all de chilluc 2 present. Naw, Mis sy, de doau had no mo times like dem." And in this strain the old slave rat tled on telling of her younger days be fore the war. It is a sad but true fact that this type of the negro is now fast disap pearing from our street?. So .?mil iar to the sight some twelve or fifteen years ago, these faithful old darkies are now almost a curiosity. It is a fact only too regrelable that they are so fast giving place tc the younger generation 01 "colored ladies." In the the old days if one of the old "war time" negroes happened to be standing near when a gentleman dis mounted from bis horse, he would in stinctively step forward for the bridle, his hat would come off, perhaps not gracefully but politely, and "de Gun nel's" hors? would stand anohored to a faithful hitching post. Uncle Remus, so truthfully and naturally portrayed by the pen of Joel Chandler Harris, gives it as his opin ion that the education of a negro ruins a good plow hand. The truth of this assertion is left to the great educators of the country to determine. However, the old time negro gained j the love of his owners. He was un- ! educated. He wan also faithful, un- j selfish and, above gll^ humbie and polite. Next to its parents, a cbild of the j sixties generally loved its old "mam* ; my." It was "mammy" that bound ; up the slumped toe ur the out finger aod "mammy" that was ever carefil of its safety. It was tho same good ! faithful old "mammy" that sat by the bedside at uigbt and eroaued her quaint old lullabies to scare the hob goblins away. "Mammy" was the first to arouse the little sleeper in the morning aod the first to disoover the reason for a poor appetite. Few children now enjoy the bless ings of beiog cared for by a real old negro "mammy." Most of them have already gone to a land of everlasting freedom aaa those that are left are fast disappearing before the scythe of time. The white turban aod the red bandanna, once so familiar on our streets, are now almost things of the past. To compare "mammy" with the nurse of the present day would be ap proaching sacrilege. The grandmother \ of today all know how safe they knew thc chilurcn were if "mauiiuy" was with them. They knew that "mam my" loved them and would be one of first to grieve when one of the "chil lun" fell ill. The nurse of this day, no matter how long she may live, can never be come a "mammy/' It took the old school to make her, and the old school gave its last diplomas in the year that Lee surrendered. The genuine "mam my" must have been born in slave ry. She must have been of the Old South, not of the New. She must have been attached to her masters through the war and through the pe riod of Butlering and distress that fol lowed it. Above all she must have been faithful. With the disappearance of tho old "mammy," the old man servant is also dying out. Such characters as "Uncle Balla" and "Uncle Remus" no longer sit upon the back door step and entertain the youngsters with tales of thf- times "befo* de wah." The modern coachman, perhaps, is as good as the old, but he can't possibly take as much pride in "de kerrige horses" as Old Balla did. He thought first of his horses and then of himself. The passing of the old darkey is a loss which can never be remedied. The present generation will never supply the want. When the last negro, that has once been a slave, dies the "ole time nigger" will be extinct. He is a character all to himself and will never be replaced.-J as. J. Chafee, in Augusta Herald. Fire Conquers Fierce Horse. Pittsburg. Pa., Sept. 27-Several months ago the manager of the Eagle Transfer Company pi^vhased a horse from a country horse trader who look ed simple. Early next morning a hostler started to go into his stall. In an instant the brute was on his hind legs and started for the hostler, mouth open. The hostler escaped, but from that day no person could go near enough to the horse to curry it, and all that the sta ble employes even attempted to do was to put feed through the iron grat ing. When a fire broke out in the build ing adjoining the other horses had almost all been removed, and the at tendants were wondering what should be done with the "man eater." A negro excited by the proximity of the fire rushed into the stable, and, seeing the animal standing there, thought it would aurely be burned to death. Acting on the impulse of the moment, he rushed to tho stall, and, opening the door, which had been fas tened ever since the animal was pur chased, grabbed the "man killer" by thc head and led him from the stall. After he had the horse on its way out of the building he noticed a wagon standing in the center of the floor, which he thought might be burned. He stopped the horse suddenly, and, running to the side of the stable, pulled down a set of harness, which he placed on the horse, and without the least trouble hitched it to the wagon and drove to a place of safety. The animal made some trouble, but was quickly subdued by the negro. After the danger from the fire was over the animal waB driven baok to the stable. It has been put to work, and the negro drives it.-St. Louis Re public._ The key to health is in the kidneys and liver. Keep these organs aotive and you have health, strength and cheerful spirits. Prickly Ash Bit ters is a stimulant for the kidneys, regulates tue liver, stomach and bow* els. A golden household remedy. Evans Pharmacy. - A South African inventor has combined the bioyele and the sailboat, and in trips across the country ho makes use of this machine. With favorable wind.: he has sailed many miles without the use of pedals. ' MAKE HAT WHILE THE SUN SHINES !" It is very easy to make Hay while the sun shines if yon have A DEERING MOWER and RAES. THE many advantages the Deering Mower has enables the operator to work it sith much mora ease iban any other machina, as? ?O time lost in go ing around stumps and trees. This Machine is so constructed that the driver is at no trouble in lowering and raising the cutter bar in passing stumps and trees. With no effort scarcely he brings the cutter bar to an upright position without stopping the Machine. There are many other advantages tbe Deer ing Ideal Mower has that we will ahow you when you want a Mower. The Pitman Rod of this Mower has only two pieces, while all other Machines have from ten to twenty-five pieces to wear out and be replaced. The Mower is not all in looking up an outfit. It is essential to have a good Rake, end the Deering Rake is the simplest Rake on ihe market. ? comparison of our Rake with other makes will convince any farmer that it ia the Rake he nee ls. The devices for dumping are so constructed that a child can operate it without any assistance. If you are in need of an outfit ?et us s-bow you our Mower and Rake and bo convinced. Now is the time to sow your stubble land in Peas and harrow them in with one of our TORRENT HARROWS. We are still headquarters for all lines of Hardware, Nails and Wire BROCK HARDWARE COMPANY, Successors to Brock ttrotoers. twins^ do yo . n H Tho ow S I GOLD DUST I atS-S?,J? will shorten hor work and lengthen her leisure. Cleans everything cleanable from cellar to-* H H atuc-dishes and clothes, pots and pans, floors and doors. K Housework is hard work without GOLD DUST-the modem cleanser ; better and more economical than soap. PKI< Made only by THE N.K. FAIRBANK COMPANY. H HW Chfcago, New York. Bottas. St Louis-Mater? of OVAL FAIRY SOAP. A-lid T>OW it's.. .A.S well as... Organs and Sewing Machines Wt We want to tell you about, but you will have to come to the Store, 'ft paper ia not big enough to tell you about all the good things we have for i| and leave any space for other news, Prices have surely taken a tumble. Good Sewing Machine (new) for $15.50 just to reduce stock. i TEE C. ?. REED MUSIC HOUSE People's Friend ! Who ??-The Dollar! DON'T full to soo the grand Axel Ma chine that W. M. Wallace has purchased to nave people money on their Buggies, Carriages, ?fcc. To in is the greatest Ma chine that has ever been invented in thia oouotry. It save* you puttiDg on new Axel Points. This only coBts you $2.00 to make your old Buggies ride like new ones. Don't fail to cometo nee us. Also, will shrink your Tires for 371c. each, and guarantee satisfaction. Horse Shoeing a specialty. You will nnd us below Jail, on the corner. W. M. WALLACE. OUR NEW TIBE SETTER CAN tighten your Tiree whib they are cola without taking them off wheels or taking out bolts. Leave the wheels in perfect shape and dish j just right. Can do the work in one third time it requires the old way. Don't wait 'till your wheels are ruin ed. Bring them on and see how nice ly we can do the work. PAUL E. STEPHENS. Watches and ?' O? co M cd o - 00 Euiaoi Watches and Jewelry of all kinds Re paired promptlv. Give me a call. JOHN S. CAMPBELL. Money to Loan at 7 per Ct. I have several Thousand Dollars that 1 will loan on Farming Lande in Ander son County at Seven per cent, interest. Will loan yon any amount from Three Hundred Dollars np. g. G. MCADAMS, Attorney at Law, Anderson, 8. C. Joly 9,1902 3 8m SOUTHER M RAILWAY. Cou donned So bod n le In Effeot Jone 80th. 1001. ~Dafi" No. STATIONS. Cv! Charleston. " Summerville.. " Brunch ville.. " Orangeburg .. " KlngvlUc. Ev! Savannah ?>v. Columbia.... gr?fperitj. ? Sta?t?-s?s?.". " Greenwood.. Ar. Hodges-.. LT. Abbeville.... Ar. Belton. Ar. Oreen vino. Dally No. 15. ll U0 \Z 0U 2 00 2 45 4 05 p m n't 10 10 a m TM" Daily Nu. fl. ? 00 a m ? 41 o rn 9 00 a ra 0 28 a zn 10 24 am 12 00 a m 4 18 a. m 4 28 a m 11 80 a m 19 AO n'a 18 SB p a? IS p m 888 p m 1 45 p ns 4 86 pm o oo p 5 STATIONS. 6 M p m S BO p aa 7 18 pm 8 18 p m 7 8? p m 805 pm 0 40 a rn 10 OB a ra 10 88 a m r. Anderson ll 18 a m JT. Belton ... \r. Donal do... Ar.Abbeviuo.... LT. Hodges. Ar. Green wood. ?. Nlnoty-8ix.. M Newberry... m Prosperity... ** Columbia ... Ar. Blackville.?. " Barnwell_ " Savannah. 10 45 a m U 10 am 18 01 n'n 90? p m S 20 p ra 8 CO p m 0 10 p m 10 15 p m 10 82 p m 11 50 p m 2 52 am 807 am 4 50 a m ll 25 a m 11 60 a aa 12 08 p m 1 10 p m 1 24 p m 2 40 p m 8 52 a rn 8 07 a m 4 50 a m LT. Ringville. 2 82 a m 8 40 pm " Orangebnrg. 845am 4 43 p m 11 Branchville. 4 25 a m 5 2o p m *' 8ummorviUa. 5 67 a m A 42 p zn Ar. Oharleaton. 7 00 a m '/ BO p m gpsfi STATIONS, aajsag ll ?0p 7 00 a Lv..Oharleston"Ar 7 bOp 7 00a la 00n 7 41 a S ?iunmerville " 8 42p 6 67 a fl 00a 0 00a " .BranohvUla. " 6 25p 4 25a .45a 9 22 i Orangeb?rg " . fin 5 wa 4 05a 10_24a " . Klngvilio.. " 8 48p 2 82a la 80a.T. LT..Savannah..Ar. 4 60a ?l8a. " ..BarnweU .. " . 8 07a ?tS A. "..Blackville..". 8 52 n 80a ll 80a "..Columbia.." 2 15p 0 BOp 67a 12 15p ..?Alston.... " 1 25p 860a 58a 1 23p " ...?antuo... " 18 16p 7 40p 0 15a 2 00p " .....Union.". ll 87a 7 10p 0 &? a 2 22 p ?? ..Jonesville.. " ll 17 a S 63p 6 49 a 3?7j> ^.F?colst.... " 1105& S Sp 10 2011 8 10 p ArSpartanbnrgLT 10 85 a 9 15 p 10 85a| 8 40p LTSpartanbnrgAr 10 26a ? 00p g 00pl 7 15p Ar...AiherUl8...LT 7 05a 8 OOp "P"p.ra. "A" c~ zn. "N" night. POUBLB DAILY S2BYIC3 BSTVTEEN CHARLESTON AND GREENVILLE. Pullman palace sleeping oars cn Trains 86 and S3,87 and Bs. on A. and C. division. rJinlngcars .an thea? trains serve all meals enron te. Trains leave Spartanburg, A * Q. dlTistae, porthbound, 0:5a a. m., lw jv m., 0:18 p. ***-, I Vestibule Limited) and 0:58 P. nt.; South bound 12 ;20 a. m.. 0 :i5 p. m., U :4& a. m., (Vasts bulo Limited), and 10*4? a. m. Trains leave Greenvule, A. and Ct division, i Borthbosnd.5:5aa. rtu,3*84p. zn. a?d5:18p. m^ J Vestibule Limited), and 1*5 p. zn.; south bound. 1:85 a, m.,4:?p. m., 12:40 p. zn. (VesU ?cle Limitad), and ll :80 a. as. Train? IS and 13-Pullman Sleeping Oars between Charleston and Aaheyille. Elegant Pullman Drawing-Room Sleeping Oars between Bavaonah and AaheriUe enrout* lally between Jacksonville and Cincinnati. Trains 18 and 14 PoUman Parlor Oars be tween Charleston and Asheville, ?FRANK B. GANNON. 8. H. HARDWICK, Third V-P. A Gen. Mgr*. Gen. Faa. Agent, Waahtetrton. D. O t^Wn gtemT?? O. Vf. H. TAYLOB. ?-. B. W. HUNT, Amt. Gen. Pis*. Agt, Div. Pas Ag?. ? t^^Tw..MM^^ttl.s-aS-., THE - Um OF ANDERSON J. A. BROCK, President. JOS. N. BROWN, Vice Pr?sid?t B. F. MAULDIN. Cashier. Baak ID Ik THE largest, strongest County. Interest Paid on Deposit? Ry speolal agreement. With unsurpasaod facilities andreaour. ces we aie at all times prepared to ie com moda tG our customers. Jan 10,1900 29 NOTICE, MR A. T. SKELTON has been engaged by the Anderson MutuslFiie Insurance Co. to inspect the buildings insured in this Company, and will commence work on the first of July. Policy-holders are requested to have their Policies at hand, so tbere will he no unnecessary delay in tho in spection. ANDERSON MUTUAL FIRE B. SUR ANCE CO. BREED CHICKENS ! A SPECIALTY ! Barred Plymouth Rock. White Plymouth Rock. Silver Wyandotte*. Brown Leghorns. Purity guaranteed. Egg? fer sale. Carefully packed for shipping. L. S. MATTISON, Anderson, 8. C. Jan 22,1002_31 6m ?. G. MCADAMS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ANDERSON, S. C. Office in Judge of Probate's offic?, in the Cou?. House. Feb 5,1002 _38 _ B A NN E R 8 A IVE; tho most healing salve In th? world, CHARLESTON AND WESTERN CAROLINA RAILWAY AUGUSTA AHU AUHKVIIAK HHOBT LUI i" In eiltet July 6th, 1?02. Ly Augusta-., Ai Greenwood.. Ar Andoison. Ar Laurens...." Ar Greenville........ Az Glenn Borings-... ?rl?^.-r: Ar Hondf nonvUlo.. Ar Anti o ville....... ..... 1010 sn 12 41 pm 1? psi 8 25 pm 4 00 pm 5 83 pm S 11pm 7 IS pm LT LT LT LT Gtcenvuio... Lv Lau rons.. Kor?fewe?dL Ar Augusto...... 7 OS pm -. IS Ol pm -- IO ii om ISIS pm 4 BS pm .-...... Z.~.ZZ TSBam 5 61 pm i. SOO pm ll M ?a Lv Anderson....... ?r Sibpiioa-. Ar A thane. Ar Atlanta......... 7 sa am isa pm S SS pm 4 85 pm LT Andoraon.......................... 7 SS tn Ar Augusta................ ll SS am. Ar Fort BoyaL....mim, G CO pm.-~ Af Bescfort?.?.^...GED pm wU?n Az Charleston (8ou)..... -,.... 7 SO pm.-- ? kr Savannah (Cofga). 7 OJ pm .-; Close connection st Calhoan Fall* for ell pojoi on B. A. L. Ballway, end st Spartanlmrg for Bea Ballway. ? For ?ny innzmttton rcl&tlvo to tickets, ? cchcdulo?, etc., address "? " ii. *1 Erneu- Williams, Gen. Pass. Agent, Augusts/hi T. M. fim orson .Trafflo Manager. J. Beeae Pant, Agent, Anderten? S. C._ Blue Ridge Railroad. _KfltetlTe April a. tin. _ KA8TBODND. STATIONS. LT Walhalla.. " Senec*. " Cherry. " Pendleton', " Autun. " Denver...... " Anderson. Ar Belton. No. 4 San. only P. M 7 ? 8 05 Ko. 6 Dally EX. Ban. No. 8 Dally Es. Sun. Detr i. M.I P. M.IP- M S SO 8 00 8 03 8 26 8 Bl 4 ll 4 28 4 85 f 7 03 I 7 80 2 45 8 10 ra. 80? 8 25 8S7 8 fl 85? 902 90? 9 SJ MSTB T?oTii j No 8 Dally No. 7 No. a p*"? STATIONS. Dally Bx. Dally DaUr Sun. Ex. I ; _Sao.'_i_ P. M. A- M. A. M. A. M P- ? LT Bolton. 8 SB 9 00.?? 10 50 J ? " Andense.?55 0 25 10 55 li 15 JS! u Denver.........^.I 10 27 . ? & 5 Autun........ ,"i?;"; ,^a...... 10 87 . * ?* M Peadlelon....... 10 47 . * J* " Chorno..sus.it 02. \ ? ll Ol. j ? .4 Seneca......_........ 12 80 4 w Ar Walhalla_.1 25p ' 0 Will ?Iso ?top at the following etatlonTto uk? on and let efl puie^-cr. : Phlnney'a, James,?*" dy Sprlnga, Weit Anderson, Adama, Jo^rdanU Junction. J. B. ANDKBSOzT, H. C BEATTIE -?uperlntendew. . President._ ATLANTIC COAST USB y Between North and East and FLORIDA CUBA WEST INDES Pullman Vestibule Sleeping and Dining Cars 'Between New . York and Port Tampa, Florida. For Maps, Raten, Schedules or any info?aatioo, write to m j. CB&?O, Gen. Passenger Agt, Wilmington, N.C.