r 4jfcg/\EWARP,
.BOUND.
^4PSeTt(vi?$ltriBg the Uraightkt^b.
emitting Ktrain ;
f^he c^achet reel o'er tiie khio^
wx llitinOcr acrnsk the plain. ^rSSfifisST?
?hroiigh right, through .dax,
^ ?%? ? auu mad ^\
^nO oar pulses leap as svo home- & ward
,wcci?- ^imSmk
v^nd Christina* onmci once
innrc.,
& *aVME
-jy ABEL GIFFORD wns out ]
I \ / | or aorta. mere was an unI
y I happy expression closely
? approaching a scowl upon
her fresh, young fuce as she gazed
moodily from the kitchen window upon
a scene bright with the glitter of suntight
upon fresh-lallcu snow. An open
letter lay upon her lap. Her mother
glanced at her anxiously from time to
time on her short journeys to and fro
from kitchen to pantry, and at Lust
aid gently:
"I ain sorry about your disappointment,
dear, but 1 suppose It could not
be helped."
"It Is all Helen's selQshness," hurst
tit Mabel, hotly. "She promised last
summer to spend Christmas with me.
and now because she has had un invitation
that suits her better she accepts
It, no matter how J feel/*
Mabel thought of the rows of mlucn
ind pumpkin pies on the pantry
shelves, the plump turkey waiting to
he stuffed, the numerous other dainties
prepared for tho Christmas holidays,
tnd of the zest and energy with which
>.< uuu mi L l'i illlll uunieu, lUllllUg (III1
bouse in perfect order from cellar to
attic, even to decorating the pictures,
and every available spot with evergreens,
hoping to make the old farmhouse
attractive to her fastidious
guest. Everything was done, even to
the stontug of the raisins lor the plum
pudding. She was aroused from her
reverie by her mother's voice, snyiug:
"Well, I declare. If there Isn't Marin
Church plowing through the snow,
with a market basket ou hor arm. 1
know It must l>e heavy the wuy she
carries it. llob," to her sou, who had
Just come in, "if the tcnui is still there
tnd the load off, go after Miss Church
tnd drive her home. It's enough to
kill her to get her skirts so drabbled."
"All right. Muz." said the good-uatiired
Hob. "Come along, sis, nnd
don't sit mooning there any longer."
They hoou overtook the solitary spinster.
who rjaculuted with gratifying
emphasis:
"For the land sakes! Is that you,
lloh Clifford? 1 guess I'm in luck this
, time," nnd depositing her trembling
form upon the board with a sigh of
supreme satisfaction.
After driving a couple of miles they
stopped before n small frame house
of forlorn and dismal aspect, doubtless
owing hi part to Us aloofness from
neighbors.
"Walt here until I come back," said
ftoh. "I'm going to drive over to see
Tom Wilson. I won't he gone long."
infl fnllnvupil M ?ua flmr/iK
the house.
It was very scantily furnished. The
doors were hare, hut white as soap and
water could make them. The table
was spotless In its purity. Not a
peck of dust could be seen anywhere,
ttug* and mats of nil sizc9, shapes and
colors were spread here and there,
seemingly for adornment rather than
Obo.
"TWey'rc hern." whispered Mabel's
companion, noticing the girl's eyes
DECOR4TINO THE HOUSK.
fixed upon them. By "her" Mabel understood
MIsa Church to tncHD the ulster
who had lived with her and had
died a year before.
"Martha bad a wonderful gift that
way,** she continued. "It's aurprisin*
what the could do right out ol her
X
/
f
/AT CHRIST/wVA5.TIDE
Tho~r?mohd flung baek~on the
L " J ?hin?njT track.
UFSk tike a banner floats and furleV
?<W? With o" teap and bound, like ao
yjyCftWScgr: unleashed hound
The engine forward hurls.
BKQhK^W Bejide u* ^>' lhe held and sly
5vX5S?i-a And the woods with echoed
SKHll^NjfttaAod our hearts beat fast as the
yi? j llmTO miles sweep past.
'^SJ^^I^^lFor Christmas cumcs ones
DO*uti7Y D[AKV
nH&BSTFMS
H ? WOODRUFF*
heart. They're nil her make. I never
hart uo taste for It."
Mabel murmured something inaudible
as she contemplated the works of
art before her. Scroll work of extraordinary
design, bouquets of wonderful
flowers of enormous size and painful
colors, and animals and birds of
astonishing proportions.
"It must be very, very lonely for ,
you," said Mabel with ready sympathy.
"Yes. 'tis," replied Miss Church. "I
don't know how to stand it sometimes.
When I found Christmas was comln'
it pretty nigh made tue sick to think
of it. When follC3 git old and uuinter
15^'k
H ",k i
BRINGING HOMETH
(Drawn by Sarah S. Stilwe
estln* people dou't linnker after liavin'
'en? round much, and I'd'no as 1 blame
'em any. But when you git used to
yet own you uiIbs 'em when they've
goue."
"Yes. Indeed," said Mabel, fervently,
swallowing the lump lu her throat with
difficulty. "I'm ho Horry you have to
live here nil alone, Miss Church."
"There's them as has ast me to live
with them." Hhe said, "but 1 somehow
can't leave my home, where I've lived
all iuy life, and I'd'no as I could git
along with 'em If I did. There's yer
brother come back."
"Did you notice that rooster, MlinT'
he asked with a snort when they had
started homeward. "Wasn't he a caution?"
but Mabel was In a brown
study and did not respond satisfactorily.
Her abstraction continued until
after supper, making ltob uneasy at
such unusual conduct, and giving her
mother real coucern. Then came the
unhiirit??nlii<? follnir.id !? -
with the result that Rob wan dl?- I
patched iu the morning with the cat- I
ter with a note to Miss Church, which
rend thus:
"Dear Frlerd: I, too, nin lonely this
Christmas Day, and disappointed, ftor
the friend I expected hns not come,
and I hope that you will do me the
kindness to come In her stead. Pleu?e(1
do not disappoint me. Your sincere
friend, MABEL GIFFORD."
Miss Church was sitting at the window.
with her steel-rimmed spectacles
astride her nose and her Bible iu
her lap. when Rob drove up. Curiosity
quickly brought her to the door.
Utter amazement was depicted upon j
her couutcuuuce when she had rend I
the note.
"Mercy ice!" she said, "I ilon't see [
what the child wants of ine. lint If i
it's n-goin' to lis any disappointment |
my not goln.' why I'm n-goin' to go."
and she put on her wraps without nnother
wort*.
Mabel devoted herself to her guest,
who enjoyed the day Immensely. She
was Interested In everything?Mabel's
fancy work, Mrs. Gilford's recipe for j
ginger rake, Rob's account of bow he
raufciri the mink that had been robbing
bin henroost, and Mr. Gifford's political
views. It was Intelligent Interest,
too. with a touch of quaint htr.oor that
made her company very agreeable.
)
t
p
4
SUPPL
???^?
*1 bad no Idea that Maria Church
was so well Informed," said Mrs. Glfford
to her husband, discussing her
afterward.
"She's Just like her father, old John
"POhVX SC ItE A MED WITH DKLISHT OTEB
THE BIO DOI<I>."
Church?shrewd, honest and plainspoken."
said Mr. Clifford.
The dinner was pronounced a great
success by Miss Church, whose opinion
was of value from the fact that
she was a judge of good cookery, and
was never known to pay undeserved
compliments. The crowning part of
the day's pleasure was the Christinas
tree entertainment In the church In the
evening. She hea.jed on the minister
when he made the customary remarks,
and rejoiced audibly when little Tolly
Pratt, a yellow-haired tot, screamed
with delight over the huge doll presented
to her. She was nearly worn
out with excitement and pleasure
when the evening was over, and said
to Mabel when putting on her wraps
eHristmas tree
11 for Harper's Bazar.)
while Rob wns getting the horse ready
to take her home:
"I'm real glad I didn't disappoint
j-ou. I never had a better time In my
life," and Mabel answered earnestly:
"1 am so glad you didn't, Miss
rhniwh i - ?-.t -- - ?
v-x.vu. UVICI LUU U U UTl VjIITISIinug
either, and I'm coming to see you
often If you will let me."
"Come nloug. uiy dear," an Id Miss
Church, heartily. "The oftener the
better. I don't seem to feel nigh so
lonesome an I did. I will let you take
off the pattern of them mats when
you come. I'd Just as lief you would
at not. A girl as smart as you he had
ought to copy 'em in no time. Is that
you. Rob? Whatever Is the matter
with the boy. I guess he's got the
high-strikes. Cood-night."?Chicago
Record-Herald.
All Alike.
Husband?"Do yon think we ran afford
to give away so many Christmas
presents, dear'.'"
Wife ? "That's no argument. The
people who give us presents can't ufford
it, either."?I'uck.
Christina* Warning.
When once again the calendar has found
This happy day when varied joys abound
And bidden ua to join in careless glee
With all the youngatcrs 'round the Christ
mns tree,
Let ua be generous in all that lifts
The human heart; and not alone in gifts
i So. prythee, gentle laas and fair, stay not
With thoughtleaa mien upou one aelf-aame
spot
While others snurther a reproachful sigh.
Seem not unconacioua as th y paaa you by. I
Nay, pretty one. A kindly spirit show.
Do oot monopolize the miatletoe.
i _ . ?Washington ill*,
*
*
BH E NT.
8t. Kick by Automobile.
Good old Saint Nick comes to one of
the np-town stores this holiday season
in a sadly unpoetle vehicle. There will
be no clatter of light hoofs or jingle
of sleighbells to mark bis passage over
rooftops In tlirt vicinity on the night
before Christmas. No wicked children,
who lie awake to catcli him, will
hear that Jolly old voice urging on
Dasher and IVaueer, Donner and Biltsen,
and all the rest of the famous old
four-tlmes-four-ln-hnnd team. In other
words, reindeer as a motive power are
out of date, and the metropolitan Santa
Clans comes this year In an automobile.
Nor Ys thlR all of the new revelation.
The store's decorators have
pictured Ivrlss as coming, strange to
say, from a southerly direction and
not out of the frozen north, as he used
to appear to the watchful parental
eyes of generations goue by. His newfangled
vehicle seems to follow a route
that lies over the hills of Statcn Island
and just touches a corner of South
Brooklyn before it leads up toward
Liberty's little island and the skyscrapers
of Manhattan. To the youthful
"higher critics" of the Christmas
saint, these disclosures ought to furnish
new material for reflection.?New
York Sun.
Cliriptma* .Snjicrutltton*.
People who are born ou Christmas
Eve have the faculty of seeing ghosts, j
The old superstition is that if at midnight
on Christmas Eve they call the
spirit of a departed friend the apparition
of the deceased will appear.
Quite a widespread belief tn rural
regions Is that cows talk on Christmas
Eve. and one who is born on the day |
before Christmas can understand tha
conversation of the cows.
To those whose birthday is December
24 special benefits are promised.
If they hear a cock crow before midnight
they will be lucky in love and
marry early; if nfter midnight they
will be rich, but unlucky In love. \
Among the foreign population in Phil- j
adelphla children are kept in the eel- j
lar to facilitate the hearing of the
after-midnight cock crow. In some of
the foreign households the cocks are
kept In a dark closet until the clock
strikes 12; then they are let out to give
voice.
BRINGING THE CHRISTMAS TREE
. r L IV KATtfAll*! ftu /kj
jWpCg Alt morning long the hetvy oky
C* A J Uj? teamed to threaten mow, / wl
\ i*) ovcr #r^ M>nlry fiildo \llJq
VMV The crown trt JUpp.ng low 1 ^\j\
V Ay>
II TW thUdrtn'a xitr, tarry lu V1' /
Oa iuch a winter's day.
Aai you can hear the hatthrt aound J-yl
Al/aou twa ialii away. r"~ 4r )
V/ y. Ta-morrow night iha aturdy ftr KjjJt\Tl
,h*n *"4 *>?- \\ /|
\ \ y j And It ahall ahina with toya any giltl.s '.\x
^[/ A .ovaly Christmas twt. ^ ^
Chnatanaa Giving.
Don't give mother a useful gift unless
you are too poor for aught ornnrueutal.
She may be "getting on,"
but she still loves pretty trinkets.
v?ratify her.
Don't decide not to give at nil because
you cannot give handsomely. '
Good will Is the watchword, and good
sense will help you to choose lovely
guts for little money.
Making presents literally with your
owu hands doubles the value literally
and sentimentally very often. Busy
r.nies are these to every one, and the
stores overflow with things that require
small outlay.
i
In Stnln'i Doll Factory.
(wEStem.
JSIPmT $5?
Ho prepares to tnako glaj the hearts
Of rood ltf*W girls.
ABOUT CHRISTMAS.
BiiiArp Gives the History of the Great
Annual Event.
ON OLD FATHER TIME'S PROBLEM.
Different Days Celebrated as Christmas?
Russians and Greeks Celebrate
January 5th.
o
Nearly sixteen hundred years have
passed since Christmas was first celebrated
by Christians. During all these
ivuu >.cunii icb 11117 mix; nui'iiiiieu 10
meet somewhere and and pay reverence
to the day that somehow was chosen
as the birth of the Savior. It is not at
all certain that the 25th of December
was His birthday, but that does not
matter much, so that Christian people
observe some day and show their gratitude.
Indeed, the Creek and the Russians
still celebrate the 5th of January
and call it Christmas for they have
never yet adopt V. the new calendar established
by Pope Gregory XIII in the
year 15S2. Now, it is important for the
young people and many of the old
ones to. know that for nearly sixteen
centuries old Father Time had been
gaining a little every year on the exact
time that it takes the earth to go
round the sun. This gain had amounted
to about twelve days, so the pope, who
was a great and wise man, issued his
mandate that lime should be set back,
and It was set back. All the Roman
Catholic countries conformed at once
to the new date, but tbe Protestant
countries were jealous of the pope,
and so Germany would not conform
until the year 17C0. Great Britain and
Ireland refused to conform until the
year 1752, and the American colonics
put It off a few years later. Greece and
Russia have not conformed yet, but
they will. They arc getting tired of
having to put two dates to all their letters
and commercial transactions with
other countries. When General Young
was uui luubiii ill 01. ri'UTsuurK ail
his letters that were written home had I
two dates that were twelve days apart.;
One he marked "N. S.," for new style,
and the other "O. for old style.
England had to abandon ano'ner
measure of time, for until about two
hundred years ago the new year began
on the 25th of Mareh. Some countries
began it on Euster day. I tell you, niv
young friend, old Father Time has
had a perplexing problem to keep his
calendar straight. The day used to begin
at G o'clock in the morning. The
week began on Monday. The Jews had
twelve lunar months of twenty*elg.'it
days, and every third year had thirteen
to make up for lost time. For centuries
there were only ten months in
the year among the Greeks and Romans.
and February had thirty-six
days }ust like all the other months. Hut
popes and emperors ruled the civilized
world, and changed the measures of
time to suit their own whims. Pope
Gregory was a scholar, a mathematician
and a promoter of public education,
and he know that the calendar
was wrong, and was getting more so
every year. It was a bold stroke of
power, but he was backed by all tho
great astronomers of Europe, and he
set the clock back, and it stands.
Rut what about Christmas? It has to
be written about every time it coraos
round, for there is a npw generation
of young people coming on every year,
and they must be taught to know as
much as those who are older. This is
the most important event that ever
happened in the history of the world,
and every man and woman and every
hoy and girl who can read should be
as familiar with It is they are with the
spelling book. The word "mass" loss
not literally mean birth. It means
"dismissed." and came into use because
after any service in the Roman Catholic
church the priest would say the
condgregation is now dismissed. in
I^itin. it is "mass." Hence, there was
high mass and low mass and candle
mass and Michael mass and Christmas
?a dismission and benediction after
worship.
For two or three centuries after
inriKi nia louowcrs nan bo many lips
and downs they could not establish
holy days or feasts or festivals. Some
emperors were ltlnd and tolerant and
some were cruel and persecuted them.
During the reign or the Kmperior Diocletian
the Christians of Rome determined
to celebrate Christmas In their
own church where they had been permitted
to worship, but Diocletian had
taken great dislike to them, and after
the church was full he sent soldiers
there and locked the doors and set tire
to the building and burned them up
alvie?men. women and children. The
wretch died soon ? ftcr but it was many
years .before Christians dared to celebrate
Christmas again. This was
about the year 310. But the utmost c;forts
of kings and emperors to extin
guish Christianity failed. The. more
martyrs, tho more Christians. They
seemed to thrive on persecution, and
hence It was said that "the blood of
the martyrs is tho seed of the church."
Just think how much we have to he
thankful for In this age and in this
i /*!;?: iika.i.. ma *
iuuu in i rn^iuus nuniy. u inariyrs,
every man and woman can wor3h p
God according to their own conscience,
with none to molest or make them
afraid. The turrets and spires of beautiful
churches adorn our land In every
city, town and village, and are a sil nt
guarantee of good 7/111 and protection
to every stranger that comes.
But ChiL3tinas has had no good tim?
in coming down to us through the
ages. In some countries it was made 3
frolic?r. bacchanalian revel. The guy
and (Hailpated danced to the music Oil
silly and profane carols and deserra
ted the day with wine and Irreverent I
song. This desecration got to bo sr.
universal and so shameful that man'
good Christians ceased to celebrat * it.
The Pucitans refused to observo it nn.t
so did the people of Scotland. The
Scotch do not observe It now. Well, it
is a description over here, for it
made a day of thoughtless feasting and
frolic Instead of A day of thanl&futnc33.
?I
Christmas trees and gifts to the
dren are very proper and gifts to ths^^^H
poor are especially so. but all the day^^^H
Ion * our gratitude to God for His good-^^^B
ness should be uppermost in the minds^f^H
of all intelligent people. The chil-H^H
dren. of coutho. we must humor
their innocent faith in Santa Clans and^^BH
his reindeer, for he is supposed !o H
a great and good old man who love^^^^H
them nnd is wonderfully rich. I'ifl H
Russian name Is St. NlehoLas and hi^^^BB
Dutch name is Ivriss Kringlc, and
fifteen hundred >ears he has
known as the patron saint of nil goo^^^^B
children. He is no myth but was
veritable bishop in his day and was
only devoted to little children, but tnoV^^^^J
pleasure in h<dnl"g young men
maidens to mate and marry. The mls*^^^^H
tletoe feature of Christmas came downflB^f
from him. it is .said, and if a young^^^^H
man and maiden will plight their troth,
that is. become engaged on Christmas
day while standing under a m.stiotos
bough, they will never foraake their
love, nor be divorced.
This is enough for mo to write about H H
Christmas. The books have many pretty
stories and pcems a1>out this ever room- I
cable day. The most beurl'ul .1 n i
Impressive of them ail is the one writ-^B B
ten by Clement C. Moore, beginning,
" 'Twas the night b'foro Chr a : 1 >."fl H
The next best is by a Virginia
"Kate Pestotlta.' Her maiden ininm H
was Neely, but r>hc for some
swapped it out for some out: it i hH H
jaw-breaking name that I don't. undcr-^^^^M
stand. Her poem on Christmas is an
quisitc gem. The last verse says:
"I.et none unchrLstmassed go,
Lot none from any door
Unwarmcd, unfed,
No kind word said
Helpless be turned away
For Thine own sake wc pray."
That is the best part of Christmas?
making others happy?and if I was a
lawmaker I would make the whole v.eek
a holiday and give a good dinner to the
poor and rv. n to the n' isoners in inII M
And nobody should dun anybody or ^^^B
write a dunning letter to disturb bis ^HHj
tranjulllity. I received one this morning.
The clans have begun to gaih'r^^HB
at the family mansion and the materia^^^^m
ancestor is happy, and tripes her li^^^B^^H
fantistic toe3 all over tho house. ^B
does not cost anything to rim Chrh^J^^^Hj
mas at our house, for the children
their rations with them, and one of
far-away hoys writes: "Hire nnn'J^^^E^H
servant cr two at my expense. I
want daddy to havo to bring in
and coal any more, and I want a
dnv dinner every day in the wcck.'^^B^^^B
?Dill Arp in Atlanta Constitution.
the Thames Strai?htened. Bj H
This fatuous appears in a
highly indignant!^? H
on a map I
the is.H H
our wh?
making, straij^^^HBHH^H
noble thus shortcninj^^^^^^^^^^H
<1
friction increasing the ilov^^H^BBBB
ventor."?London Globe.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
Jk
fentrel T1m? at jMk?inrill? end Panvnnalv.
Jvnte? a Turn1 at O:her Point*.
Sobrdul* in EflVct Junn Will. 1011. J^BB
SS liui?
C*. Jnolwoavil.o (P. til So ji 7 4op
Snvruintih i.-So. Uy i..... 1 - iir> 1J Hon
" r.aruw?y it irfjp 4 I.ji ..
" K>la>-k vi - in I l.'jj l .Vn
Ar. Oolunibla .. AMroj n l.Vt
Lv. Oliarieaion. too. ky . 7. "TuTa li jj(<
" buuuu<rvillo MInl.MM
U(Ln ?ikjo ..
?ranj:rimrg w zsa z 4aa ..
" Kin?villo . j tu.n
Ar Ooinmhia ha 6 -tun
Ct'. Au.'iw Z.?op Houp ..
Lv. Oramtoviilo a'A>p lOISp .
Lv. Atkt-ii . au&p ... HMB
Lv. Tre.i ton a U!p i I ojp ...
.iohnston 4 it. J> 11 Alf . ,
Ar. Columbia :, ? i.,.,
Lv. OoiomMa, (Uidg at.. .77". uaip filaa ~77.7M
" Wimmboro tl,Vj\) 7 i%n .
" Chest or 7 ?p nKh . ....^HHMI
M Book Hill n.V>i> Hm
Ar.Charlotte ?i?m OA'a ..
irTbanyillt; iTioa "iTip
Ar. Kichinona . . . .. . It otji (^p
Ar. Washington Txa tuup 77T7!^HHH
" Baltimore (Pa.KU) 9l.A!lii.>p !I..,BHBPI
" Bhiladclphla 11 S6a *6* .?...
Wmmt V'trk_. .. 2dBp ? Sio .
Lv. Columbia 11 &iai 7 zUaTrfrrl
Ar. Spartanburg a lop 10 Ma ..
" Aahoville 7 1 jp 20jp..^*
Ar. Knoxvtiid 4 uia 7 lou
Ar. Oinonna i 7.top' aba . ...
Ar. l?ui?vilie . . . ~. , T^ValJ
ODTHttOUfCD.
Daily Daily /
IxnuavTile 7 ton . a.|>
Lt. Cincinnati "bTTa _Hy6 > TT~7.
Lv. Knozril.o "l ??a
Aahevine 7 06a !!UUl> 1
" Spartanburg Ijuja. 6 lop \
Ar. Oo.nmbla .. 2 l6[j OiMp .....
EvTTscw Vorktka.it.ii) 1 ~,>lxn>tiziirtT..."
Phi.:uUMI'lnu flltj) H 6ua .....
" Raltimor. K *rp ? 2i?
Lv. WMhl'm'g (So.Kyi PfiOp |] 15. ....
Lv. H>f.nm?uii .. .. 11 a >p I.Vlm
Et. Pauviiio ~ T.l*Tiip 7
v. Onnriotio ?.o?l)oop
" Koclc Hill #lu?U)4jp
" Ohemer 0 44alllfip
" winintboro U) 2m* 14 oin
Af. OomiabU. (BlrtySt 11 U5. 1 ofm
Lv. Columbia, iU~ 1).). lJuuin 36*? "77
" Johnwtou Ut>p Gtt-4?
. Trenton 1 o4p ?2Sh
Ar. Aiken ill^) 7 SLn
Ar. t.runit?>rillc lp A&.
Ar. Aturnn * 80>p 7 <j? "11.'
Lv. UoiuuihiA |ao. t?y) "auu" 1 .<x?
M KmirviUi* ai?) 2 lE/u
^ OriuiKubnrtf 4 42p 3 45n
i biiuiiiitiiis gcip f&n
" htunmervillo 642p Bt>7a
I At. OhwHi'OT 71*),? 7 nun
La. Columbia i.-mj. uy.t fi 4^.1 1 iuu
' Hliukvulo I Alp 'Jb&i
" Barnwell 1 ifcip ilO.'a
" havnnnult 11 Hap * Ikta
Ar. Jnek?>wvilte {p.S.l ^ 14m 0 ).V?
Moenlnc Car Sorvico.
F.xrellmt dolly pax-ninger Mirvico between
Florida and No.v York. .
N(m, Si and W?Now York uil Florida Ex j
prr-a Dt awiim-ro-iin n ?-otiin* car* Imiwoen
Auguxta und New York. 1'nllmnn drawing
room Bleeping earn tie ween Port Tmnim. Ja.-k- I
Kmvlile. savannah V7it<hiii(ton mhI Yaw'York. i
PaliniD Umpiu on I*' ween Ohnriotln ?nd I
Kletunoad and Unorlotto and Norfolk. Dining I
Are between chirmtto and Savannah. m
Hon. 3D and ed?U. s. >m?i Man. Thranih M
Pit 11 in in 1 drnwine-room bolToi ajeoningrambe- JH
twoea JnoWi-onviile nr.(I New York anil Pullman
s twuiug cam between Auzpata iunl Ohnr
lotto and Charlotte and Kh-nmrnod. Dining
eara wtrvu all nteaJa euro.re Pnllman stropI
.g enra 1*M wren .la.-k* inviile and Ovlnmbta^ ^H[
enroute daiiy between Jacksonville and CinrlnBail,
via Aahevilie. II
FRANK S. (lANNON, H. H.HARDWICJ*. S
Third V P. * Wen. Mgr., (*eu Pae All'..
Waahlnrton. D <JL Washington, D. O. ^^91
W.HTA.OK. R. W.HuNT, HB
Aa't Uen. Paaa. A|*t, Die. Paaa. A^V, ^^^9
aumiu da . creviMtan. a. a