University of South Carolina Libraries
/ in > i jyga . w - p * -w. >;. u -: "THE TRIBUITS." PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY. AT REAUFORT SODTH CAROLINA I Independent in Politics.' TEEMS: 'On* Yenr, SI AO Six Month*, .... 1 no ADVERTISING RATES: PerSqunre, llrst Insertion . . . StJAO I er*qunrr, second insertion, . I oO Special contracts made with yearly advertiser*. t Address all communications to p THE TRIBUNE BEAUFORT. S.C. | ? I THE TOWN ELECTION. C The election on Monday for Intendant ( and Wardens was one of the most earn- I est that has ever liecn held in Beaufort, r and the vote cast one of the heaviest. At n an early hour the adherents of contesting [ |iaiucu were iihiu hi, wor* anil wen I labors only ceased when the polls were a closed, and every man that could be "brought out had voted. The count showed that the whole number of votes cast was 871, of which Alfred Williams, candidate for Intendant received 864. The following were elected wardens having received the largest number of votes ; R. II. Gleavcs, 868; J. P. Boyce, 860 ; R. Washington, 347 ; Cato Perry, 2U2 ; Joseph Robinson, 209 ; and P. W.JSoheper, 190.J Mr. Scheper was elected by only two votes over the next highest vote cast, and as it is claimed that some illegal votes were polled there Is talk of a contest. The only changes in the council from last year is the election of Cato Perry in the place of Peter Days, nnrl .Tnopnfi ftnKinonn in nl??? , jiwi/iuovu tu piav>c ui vjuu. Gage. Mr. Robinson, has served already , as warden so that he has not so much to learn, and Mr. Perry, the other new man, ( is one of the best colored men in town and will donbleqs make a good record. The new council will be sworn in tonight, and the next thing of interest is the election of clerk, marshal and policemen. . Now let council reduce the taxes, as they can do without detriment to the interests of the town, and show that the people . are to l>e benefitted by again committing . the affairs of the town to the hands that have shown during the past year that our town can be economically and judi- . ciouslv governed. A FEVER SCAUR. ' Some of our citizens were greatly vxercised last week by a report that yel- 1 low fever Imd appeared in St. Helena ^ Sound, and that we were in imminent danger of* visitation of that scourge. It C seems that the British bark Cyrus, C'apt. i-vichards, arrived on the 1st inst., from Para and reported that during her pas- t age 01 aays lour ol her crew had been r nick ncd one died, and coming from a \ yellow fever country it waa at once c asserted that the sickness was yellow c fever. Intendant Williams informs us that he has thoroughly investigated the 1 'ease and has ascertained that the disease j was dysentery and that there were no ^ signs of fever. The vessel was placed in ? quarantine, but released on Saturday c Slaving remained only four days in < quarantine. Under the circumstances we i should think that the time was rather 1 dboit as she hailed from an infected port. 1 The fever that raged in Charleston, I three years ago was supposed to have t been earned there from vessels in 8t. i Helena Sound, and as the crew of vessels s arriving there generally go direct to ( Charleston, that city is more interested in i a close quarantine than we are. It is not ' an uncommon thing for men from the \ vessels in quarantine in St. Helena to go i ashore, which wc suppose it is hard to t prevent, lut every precaution should bo t taken now that the arnvals are mostly a from the South and likely to bring g disease. v A CALL FOR DKLAV We are upon " a ragged edge. " The I Action of thofltnte Executive Committee 1 in calling the Stato Convention on the ? 15th inst., will not be submitted to by the 1 people of the State. We cry for Pence! i Peace I Peace 1 Whatever is to happen i vrc implore both sides and all sides not a hopelessly and finally tp divide the i white people f the 3tate. If the Con- c vention undertakes to nominate a ticket c on tlte 15th inst.T our cause is hopelessly t lost. L<tit adjourn, refer the whole J matter back to the people of South Car- A olina in primary meetings without the g intervention of clubs or cliques. Let the I btate Convention meet after the Radical 4 onvention meets, and then whatevft ( the majority decides upon will lie the . Voice of the people, and every true man ' v ill rtaud by it. But, wbclher it was * meant or not, the action of the Executive r Committee did take the action from the 1 people, and decided it into conclave t* 1 will not 1>e submitted to. Never 1 r never! never I We implore onr County ' Convention to send deletes to Colnm- ( l.ia lust: acted to adjourn at once, and to ' refer the whole matter to a new convention to be elected hereafter. For the rake ( ol the Stole we aak ail aidee to; be calm ( and wi??.?Morion tttar. j * . . The President baa made public his letter ot July 96th to Oov. Chamberlain In I relation to ftaiuborg. The President ?aya he folly concurs in the views he ] < Gov. C.) expresses as to the doty he L owes to bis oath of office, and to theciti-: c K * x ????i j ?tic U, S. S. Shaw inut arrived at Port Royal on Monday, 21 days from Vera i Cruz and 3 days from Key West. All j well. Mr. Kerr, the Speaker of the H01190 of Representatives, is suffering from a serious relapse of his recent illness. IflsCon, ditjon, it is stated, is regarded nscritical. A eon of Jefferson Davis belongs to the | Chickasaw Guards, of Memphis, the company which recently tendered its services to the government to avenge the death of Custer. Beecher hn9 been granted twenty days more in which to prepare an anawer to Moulton's charges. Grv. Hendricks, speaks not simply < hopeful, but very confidently, of the success of the National Democratic ticket in November. He tliinka fJn* - otkl-I +" . - v ~ ;jna to secure to all ti.eir civil rights, mluding the right to vote according to he dictates of their own consciences, and he further duty of the Executive of the mtion to give all needful aid when iroperly called on to do so. ITe further ays 44 The scene at Hamburg, as cruel, doodthirsty, wanton, and unprovoked as t was, is only a repetition of the course hat, has been pursued in other Southern Itates within the last few years?notably tfississippi and Louisiana. Mississippi s governed today by officers chosen hrough fraud and violence such as would carcc'y be accredited to savages, much ess to a civilized and Christian people, low long these things are to continue, >r what is jto he the Gnal remedy, the treat Ruler of the universe only knows, hit I have an nbidiDg faith that the emedy will come, and come speedily, ind earnestly hope that it will come icnccfully. There hns never been a lesire on the part of the North toliumili ite the South?nothing is claimed for me State that is not freely accorded to all he others, unless it may be the right to till negroes and Republicans without ear or punishment, and without loss of aste or reputation. This has seemed to >e a privilege claimed by a few States. I repeat again that I fully agree with 'Oil ns fn (bo moooii~> J~'!? ! ? ?~ -W %..V HfvHomu v* JUUl UUIIC9 1U lie present emergency, and as to my lutice. Go on, and let every Governor vhcre the same danger threaten the peace f his State go on in the conscientious per ormaoce of his duties to the humblest is well as the proudest citizen, and I will jiee every aid for which I can find law >r constitutional powor. Government hat cannot give protection to the life, jropcrty, and all guaranteed civil rights in this country the greatest is an intrammelled ballot ) to the citizen is, so ar a failure, and every energy of the ippresse.l should be exeitod ( always vithin [the law, and by constitutional neans) to regain lost privileges or protecion. Too long denial of guaranteed rights s sure to lead to revolution, bloody evolution, where Buffering must fall lpon the guilty as well as the innocent. Expressing the hopo that the better judgment end co-operation of the citizens >f the State over which you have presiled so ably may enable you to secure a uir trial and punishment of all offenders, vithout distinction of " race, color, or irevious condition of servitude," and without aid from the Federal Govornncnt, but with the promise of such aid in tbeconditious named in the foregoing, subscribe myself, very respectfully, your ibeuicnt servant. (J. S. Grant One of the largest excursion parties hat ever leit Beaufort, went to Savannah in the Reliance on Monday last. There cas a good stock of watermelons, and ur incomparable brass band to keep the xcui sionists nerves on the rack. The Savannah News gives the particuarsof w hat threatened to be a serious row ust before the excnrsioni-t-? left thatcitv nd the capture of one blood thirsty ixcursloniat and his subsequent incirtfrution in jail. It will be hard to make >ur people believe that there was any cnl danger from the crowd that left here. iVe venture to say that if any outbreak lad occurred it would not have been the ault of the colored pccp'e from Beaufort, is they are entire strangers to scenes of riolcnco and bloodshed, and slionld mme of their number ever desire to :reate a riot there are enough cool headed nen of their own race to preserve order. IVe don't believo Beaufort negroes proroked any disturbance nnlcs3 they had mbibed so mach Savannah whiskey that hey had lost their senses. Several lavannah theives were'on board tho boat ind robbed many of the excursionists of foods purchased while in that city, icsides money and jewelry. AH the persons for whom warrants lave been issued, in connection with the Tamburg business, belonging to Aiken ind Edgefield counties met the sheriff on Friday last at the residence of Colonel II. P. Butler. An arrreement. woa Hi?m> nude that they would surrender thcmlelves on Thursday next in Aiken. Kffidavits are being prepared by their muDsel upon which to apply for a writ ?f habeas corpus, in order to apply for he admission of all the accused to bail, fudge Maher will be in Aiken on Thurslay to hear the argument. The attorney general will resist the application, at cast as concerns the principals. A correspondent of the Journal of Commerce wiiting from Laurens under late of the 5th instant, says that Fraucis ilcGan, alias Tino Barry, who was ecently arrested and lodged in jail al . aureus C. H. charged with being the nurderer of the notorious Joe Crews, has nadc a full confession. lie stntes that ie was lured by Republicans to shoot Jrews. He Implicates every official in he county, A MASSACKBorTuRKfl.?A Belgrade lispatch says that, after a fl?ht at Paoiical, three Turkish battalions and flte tundrcd Circassians crossed the frontier nto Servia. Oen. Horvatovich, the 8errian commander, feigned a retreat. 1 he Turks followed hint and occupied a illage on the plsiio. Ou# Tuesday the Servians attacked the Turks, taking them >y surprise and massacred the entire ictnrhmcnt. ' I Tildcu is 80,000 stronger in New York ( for president than ho was for Governor. He Las no fears of the result in Indiana, believing that Williams, the Democratic candidate for Governor, will lead off with the State in October, thuB paving the way for Tilden and himself in Novem- ' ber. , A prominent member of the House of < Representatives has originated the prop- < osit ion to bestow upon President Grant < a life pension of $10,000. The reasons adduced for this singular project are < that the President is poor and that he . will need the money to live on after he j goes out of office. It is said that of all j the thousands in the shape of houses, lot* , and bonds given to General Grant there \ is but an insignificant portion left; \ that it has all been swallowed up in the , vortex ot speculation. For this it is said , the President has to thank the very | friends who havo brought obloquy and \ disgrace upon his administration. , Alabama has gone Democratic by 30.000 maiorltr TK. ?* JW - uv viwiivu iiutfft pince on Monday and no disturbance is reported anywhere in the state. The New Yoik Times having published tables to show an extensive displacement under Democratic rule of Union soldiers from the list of Congressional employees, the World now has itsjtables also, from which it would appear that the whole number af appointments made by Doorkeeper Fitzhugh duiing the present session has been l!s8. Of this umber there have been thirty-five new | appointments from the Union army and I ten new ones from the Confederate. Two wore made from the Mexican War veterans The numlier of new appointees tuking the iron-clad oath, which the Union men take, was 100; the number taking the modified oath, which is taken by Cnnfedeintes. was 14. Eleven of the new .1 appointments nrc colored. J The Urited States district attorney in New York informs a colored preacher from Philadelphia Mint the civil rights law will not enable him to bring nn I action ior a;!Uiagca b-cnnse the waiter I girls refused to wait on hiin nt a restau not. At the request of the governor, Attorj ney-Oencral Wm, Stone will nssumo J charge of the prosecutions in the Ilamj burg nffiur. Ex Secretary of war W. W. Belknap has escaped the penalties of impeachment. Thirty-five senators voted for a verdict of guilty, and twenty-five voted not guilty, from a belief that the senate had no juiisdiction over an officer after he had resigned. Among those voting guilty was Senator Robertson. An attempt will probably be made to impeach Secretary Robeson at the next session. A committee has been author ized to take additional testimony and report at the next session. The result in the Belknap case, however, will lead to the abandonment of the scheme. The mother of Charlie Ross is stopping at Brookfleld, Mass., with her five remaining-children. She believes that her boy will yet be restored to her, or she will receive positive evidence of his death. Gen- A. II, Colquitt, called the hero of 1 uiu9tco, was nominated in Atlanta last Thursday by the Democrats as their i candidate for Governor of Georgia. Many years ago William Mitchell, a bachelor and planter on the Cooper ( River, noar Charleston, had a cast iron coffin made, and when he died his will beqncatlied to his overseers $500, provided he had his remains put into this iron case and reduced to ashes on a pyre of twenty cords of wood. The key was then to be dropped inside through a hole made for the purpose, and the case and its contents thrown into tho Cooper River. The entire programme was faithfully carried out by the overseer. Reports have reached this city in ttie past day or two rendering it quite posi- I tivo that the caterpillar has appeared in < its earliest forms in the growth of young cotton on several of the sea islands along the coast. Common rumor has it that this destroyer has been seen on nearly every one of the leading Islands from this point to Savannah, but the most reliable information cornea from Bdisto Island, which States that a planter there bed discovered after a diligent search of ^ his field some fifty specimens of the genuine cotton cnterpillir.?Xettt and Courier. j / ? , Tha newest collar is called the /Safety." It is so named from the tact that it is high enough for a man who wears one to crawl up behind it and hide when bis wife stop* in at the office to tnquir# whether be mailed her letters. The President has sijrncd his proclamation, declaring that the fundamental condition imposed by Congress to entitle Colorado to admission into the Union as a State, having been complied with the admission of that State is now complete. The Independent Greenback party has nominated Samuel P. Cary for Vice President on Peter Cooper's ticket, vice Senator Booth, declined. Cary bus accepted. He ran for Lieutenant Governor of Ohio with Allen. The Springfield ( Mass. ) Republican says. "While there are two opinions about npnprol Hrnnf'o ofMfnrre fV*nr/> in ? u 0MU%vgJ| tuviu A3 icnilj but one opinion about President Graftt's administrntion. Ecery record that 'leaps to light' goo8 to confirm this opinion. As a politician he is the most egiegious failure of the century. What Charles 3umner said of him four years ago is now the entered verdict of public opinion, rhe one thing the Republican party :ould not afford to do was to indorse liim >r identify it sell with him, or in any degree accept responsibility for him.*' The new Cotton Factory at Atlanta, 3a., which is nearly completed and ready for operation, will be one ot the argest in the world. It will contain il,500 spindles and 500 looms, and when in full operation will give employment to over five hundred operatives. Despite the fact that in the Northern manufacturing districts many of the cotton mills ire at a stand still, is noticeable that the Southern factories are working on / full time, whilst new factories are rapidly springing up. Mrs. Custer is said to have offered to distribute the pocks of stag hounds' and fox-hound9jformerly owned by her husband, among gentlemen in New York who will pay the express charges on them and provide them with goon homes. Major Delany has been held in $100o bail, to appear at the next term of Court in Charleston, to answer to a charge of failing to pay over money collected by him while acting as trial justice. A correspondent of the Journal of Commerce proposes Judge Maher as the Democratic nominee for Governor. The grand jury of Spartanburg County has presented Solicitor Flemming on the charge of nol pressing eighteen indictments, moatly tor violations of the liquor law, and receiving therefore fees ranging from thirteen to sixty-four dollars. The Custer massncre resulted in rapid promotion. E. A. Garlingt m son of one of the editors of the AtlantA l imes, who had just graduet d and been nB<igncd to the Seventh Cavalry, became a first lieutenant before be could reach his command. The Democratic meetings in Charleston on Wednesday night adopted the recommendations of the County Executive Committee, and nominated delegates to the County convention who are in favor of postponing the Democratic nominations for State offices, until such time as the plans and candidates ofjthe Republican party shall ire made known. A WONDERFUL DISCOVERY. [From Poxbbot's Democrat.] "Oar Invariable rata ta never to InSorre anything in the line of e remedy, an Idea or an invention till we know It to be good. Some months since we were askod to apeak favorably of tlolraan's Fever and Ague and I.iver Pad, and declined doing so till we had seen it tosted and could be convinced that it was really good. We have tried one of them in oar family, and fonnd that this little bag full of herbs, and weighing but en ouce or two. worn next the akin over the pit of the stomach, has in foir weeks done for a person what a balf dozen physicians and several thousands of dollars expended has failed to accomplish. It Is a remedy for fever and agne, torpidity of the Liver, alng gibuucmi o> me dioou, ana tnat tram or ovlls following such a condition of thing*. After wearing one of tbeac pade for fonr weeks, the patient was In better health than before for live years. It is a remedy that is fast snperseding the use of qnlnlne and other drags taken internally and operates by absorption. We consider It one of the most valuable of all the medical discoveries ever made. The remedy ia to the Liver what the proper external application is to a burn. It draws oat the fever, gives tone to the stomach, and thas follows, life to the blood. "Mxssas. WH. F. KIDDER * CO., 78 John Street, New York, are the Bole Prop-lctors, to whom all comianlcations should be addressed." BANKING HOUSE Wm. H. Lockwood, Bay 8t., Beaufort, S. C. QOI.D, AM) 12XCIIANOK ON tf BV TavV Qavnnnnh am J IH./.-1 ?i? nun luiij OQTflUliau, ttOI WliMGSlUll BOUGHT AND BOLD. EVCnlkctloM nidc on aar point Is the U H. tW Account* received rnbject to check at right. "VewiielN in Dull an?l CtHMMW Rivera Or at PORT ROYAL, supplied with FRESH WATER, fmn the celebrated CIATn-HOITHF, HPIIING, By Steam or Sailing v?m<-1*. Order* will recelv immediate attention. DICK A SMALL Proprietor* P. M. WHITMAN iimum aid jeveui BAY STREET, BEAUFORT. S. C.. FlaaJiiPt received from the North a flnc aapo mcnt of goods at Northern Prices. WEDDING RINGS, $3.00 to $12.00, SILVER RINGS, 30c. to $1.50, SILVER NAPKIN RINGS, $2.00 to $1.00, LADIES GOLD WATCHES. $30 to $50. 8 Day & 1 Day striking Clocks, $3.50 to $8. GENTS GOLD CHAINS, PINS, RINGS,KLEBV BUTTONS. STUDS, WATCH CIIAIN8, LADIES GOLD and PLATED JEWELRY, GOLD. PENS. &C.. AC. Gents' Gold and Silyer Watclies. Call and examine before purchasing, and natip your-clf you can pave tet to twenty-live ptrcci 'rom Charleston or Savannah prlcca. SHEPARD D. GILBERT. NOTA11Y PUIIIilO. Attention given to Marine Protests. OFFICK In the Sta Island Kotcl. n BARNES' FOOT-POWER SCROLL SAWS anil LATnKS jttfA J An entire revolution In tl jf?construction of foot-power ni chines! The olil style throw aside when these arc known ** 3?Thonsi-nds now in nse! $l.a ? B to $3.0 0 per year made rbIi them, One person ont of evei CuBBfethree who sends for r.itnlogu WHBMUifeV bays one. Suy what paper y< ? read this in, and address \V. F. & .TOON BARNES. Rockford, Winnebago Co, Box 2.044. Illinois. NEW BAKERY. The undersigned having leased tli new ovens erected l>y John Franz, i now prepared to serve the public wit the best quality 6t Bread, Cakes, Pies, Rolls and every other article in his line. kjpf~pttrf?nnlnr ka I ^ A M.wv^.n. UVIVUAIUII wv o,,l; J to Ornamental Fastry for weddings an i parties. i $-??~Shop in John Franz' basement stori Fhancisco da Silya. W. Schroder, M ANU FACTITIt Kit O F FINE CIGARS -Kii/LiciciisrisriaE Smoking Tobacco. SIGN OF KJtPKltOK WII.LIAM. 10 HAYNE STREET, Charleston, S. C Richard P. Rundle, i SHIPPING Asd COMMISSION MERCHANT, Port Royal, S. C. Cotton. Karat Stores, Lumber. &c AGENT FOB TOE NEW YORK ? POUT ROYAL STEAMSHIP LI> Mibsihmppi ? Dominion, West India ? Pacific, and I.iyeitpooi. & Galveston Steamship Companies to Liveupool H. M. STUART, M . I ^.^.1^.4. ?? tiHMini' uiiti wpuinccsiry BEAUFOKT. S. C.. dealer DRUGS AND CHEMICALS PATENT MEDICINES. TOILET ARTICLES, PERFUMERY. BRUSHES. . c. A fine Assortment of HTATIONKllY . Physlciaus Prescriptions Compouuilcd with en nov 25-33. Wanted. * Ten good Ironerr and 8TAiicnr.it Good wages. Apply at Port Royal Steam Laundr Or at tliis office. FRENOII -Sc CO Granite Monuments, <5tc, soo lli'ontlM'uy. (Evening Post Building.) NtW YORK. Plan*, AMltn* nn<l e?tlniute*cnt> be N-r and ronlrurls made with ' W. M. French. Ruulhrrn AKfnt, llcniifiirt, N. Cm PEABODY HOUSE, COHNEK Of LOCUST AKT> NINTH STB.. PHILADELPHIA, PA. Convenient to nil place* of nmnaemcnt oml ci lino* In the city. No change* to and from tli Centennial ground*. Col. V\at*on. proprietor < the HasKv Hot-ae. Cincinnati for the pn*t twent yoare, and prercnt proprietor, Im* lon*cd the lioni for a term of year*, nn>l linn newly furnlidicil I throughout. Ho will keep a Mrlctly flret clar honac, and haa accommodation for .100 gncati | Term* only $3 per day I t'oi.. WATrON la a native of Virginia, atul pro! ably the only Hotel Proprietor iy i'lillndelplu fron?thc South. T, > I n ? .J "" -'.--V ICJCLlil ^ I COAL! COAL! \ FOK SALE, To Annivr: SYDNEY, C. B., COAL, by tlic cargo, ALSO, '2G0 Tons best Welsh Steam Coal, at th?t ' landing of the Ctoosaw Mining Co., Coosaw River 1 *? S. C." Trices very low, * rl , , t Apply to a HENRY CARD, 1 Commercial Wharf, Charleston. S. O. J ~R. P. BARRY, j WHOLESALE anil RETAIL DEALER IN I hit pjndf i J U1J UUUUO, I CLOTHING, BOOTS AND SHOES, I HATS AND CABS, 1 f NOTIONS, Ac. Ac. : W. H. CALVERT I TINSMITH. ft) DKAl.KIl Is JAPANNED PLANISHED anil ? PLAIN TIN WARE. ft J Constantly on hand a full Stock of J Heating, Cooking and Box | S STOVES and PIPE. I 00 Particular attention given to putting nu snd re B i fy pairing Tin Roofs, Lenders and Gutters. "y'Terms Cash. , Hoping for a continuance of the patronage here {. tofore bestowed on me, I will warrant all work to ~ he done in the moat workmanlike manner nov*5-lt?. ? PORTl ROYAL | i* Saw & Planing Mill ^ BEAUFORT, S. C. 1 > D. C. WILSON & CO., ; MAKUFACTLIIEBS or AND DEALIM IM Yellow Pine Timber and Lnmher n ANM ^ C'ypreHH HhlDgleH, AI.SO e. Builders and Contractors | Plaster, Lathes, * J All kinds of .TOR PAWING promptly ?lonc. Flooring & Ceiling Board always on baud Order* for Lntrbcr and Timber by tbc cnigo promptly filled. Lumber delivered In any part of the Town free of charge. Terms Cash O. V. WILSON & CO. Bonnty and Claims Agency. ' Dcing associated with n lawjcr in Washing ion whose energy and promptness in prosecntlng the Claims arc well known, and attending closely to tbc business myself; all persons who nave any doling aguinst the I*. S. Coven mci.t ate .nvlted tc bring' them to me nt my Office the Dennett House. Day St. Deaufort Po..C? John F. I'ottTKona . TO RENT. ; ff TWO DEPIRADI.E S'iOItES In the basement I of tbc Stevens Ilonsc. 9 Price, $ 10. and $ IS. respectively 9 Apply to 9 W. J. Vunman. I Agent 1 Magnolia Passenger Route. | POUT nOYAXj RAIIiltOAl). Auoit*ta O*. April 37th 1*70 ?J TIIE FOLLOWING PASSENGER SCHEDULE ?| will be operated on and after May lat: GOING SOUTH?TRAIN No. 1. * Lcavo Augnata 8. SO a.m. Arrive at Ycma**cc IS.in p. m. re Leave Yemasaee W.35 p. at. Arrive at Beanfort 1.10 p.m. , j ~ Arrive .at Port Iloyal 3.80 p. m. Arrive at Savannah 3.30 p.m. Arrive at CliarlcPton 4 30 p.m. Arrive at Jackaonviile 8. 85. a. m. GOING NORTH?TRAIN No. I. Leave Jatkaonvlllc 1.10, p.m. . Leave Charlcaton 8.80a. m. V Leave Savannah 0.10 a.m. Leave Port Royal 10.15 a.m. 1 Leave lleaufort 10.30 a. m. Arrive at Ycma*ace 1800 a.m. ^ Leave Yema**ec 13 30 p. m. Arrive nt Angtiata 3.00 p. m. Iteanfort Accommodation. I.envea Port Royal at .... 8 a. m. and 5.80 p. m. Leave* Beaufort at 8.80 a. nt. and 0 p. m. tWTlte only line making c!o?e connection with the Atlantic and Onlf Railroad at Savannah, and from and to Jacksonville and all pofnta in Florida, avoiding the long, tedlon* and wellknown Omnlbnatranafer through that city. Tho only line rnnnlng Through Day Coachca wlth-ont change between Anguata and Savannah. {^"Connection* made at Angnata with the i Sontli Carolina Railroad for Aiken, S. l\. Charlotto, Columhia and Angaata Railroad for all I point* North anil * ?? . ?1 ? ?? ? ? wnn xna ueori Ik | Railroad for all points Southwest, West ami ' Northwest. | Passengers desiring Bleeping Car acromtno| ilntlons ran bo sqp;>He<l hjr ?iv 1 r?pr orders to the J Hall Road a (tel. Is at Port Rural or Ueanfort. ir | Uaugngc Chocked Through. ?! R. O. FLHIXO, ,f | T, H. Divmt. Superintendent y: General Pasacngcr Agent. ,1 i Butter!' Butter!! ? ; 1 HE REM r BITTER IN TOWN V, to TEN LB a FINE TAUI.B BI TTER 40 COOKING WT1F.H M at Robbkts.