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^ I MM * A JU Jn Published Every Thursday, JPEE RBRALiD PUB. CO., Conway, S. O. HATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. One Year fl.ftO Six Months 1.00 Three Months Ml Single copy 5 Specimen copy free on application. KATES OF ADVERTISING. Transient Advertisements if 1.00 per square. Kight lines of this size type make one square. rto advertisement counted loss than j a square. Advertising lines in local column lfi j rents per line. Advertisements of Judge of Probate, I Clerk and Sheriff at tin' rates allowed l?v i law. Liberal contracts will be made with those wishing to advertise for three, si\ or twelve months, Marriage and death notices free. Short letters on current topics are cor j dially invited. Correspondents may use any signature j but true name of writer must accompany j all communications. Artl.Uoa ?.> [innum I ?.nut lio uai.4 i in by Monday, previous to day of publication. All communications on business, letters for publication, and orders for subscrip tlon as well as advertising, should bo nd dressed to THE 1I0HHY HERALD, * Conway, S. C Church Director^;. MKT1K )I)1S1\ r.. HKV. .1. W. Hl'MBEHT, PASTOR. Services every Sunday morning 11 o'clock a. in. and evening 7 o'clock, p.m. Communion the lirst Sunday of every month. Sunday School every Sunday 9:30 A. M., E. Norton Superintendent. Prayer meeting every Thursday at , 7 o'clock P. M. Strangers and visi- , tors are cordially invited to all these services. H APT I ST. T*T.V. W. S. MCCASKll.l., PASTOR. Cmfcwav?Second Sunday and Smiday night. Sunday School every S'oulay at 4 o'clock P. M., E. W. Nolley Superintendent. Prayer nie'etlng every Tuesday night. Socastee?Third Sunday and Saturday before. Collins ('rook?First Sunday and Saturday before. Cedar (drove?Saturday boforo the 2nd Sunday and night. San Salvador?Fourth Sunday and Saturday before. II. I). OUAINGKH, PA8T0R. Sterrctt's Swamp?First Sunday and Saturday before in each month. Kohoboth?Third Sunday and Saturday before. Hickory Grove?Fourth Sunday and Saturday before. PRESBYTERIAN. RKV. li. W. MCMII.I.A.V, PASTOR. Services every 3rd and 4th Sunday at 11 o'clock a. id. anil 7 J p. in. ' Sunday School every Sunday at < 3 o'clock p. n). D.T. McN eill Super- , intendent. 1 THE SOUTHERN I'OLITICAL SITUATION. ' Tlir "Ureal Question" IMiilosophieallv (Ionsiilrreil lly u Northern Journal. < i The last number of Harpers "Weekly ^ under the head of "A Great Question," reviews the situation of the white citizens in their relation to the negro vote. The article, which is in tho style of Mr. George William Curtis, and was probably written by him, recognizes tho strength of tho plea set up by the Southern whites in defense of their action, while deploring tho violation of tho law, which contemplates everywhere an equality of tho suffrage, and especially forbids tho suppression of a vote on account of race or color. Mr. Curtis recognizes that the political situa- i " ? tion is an anomalous 0110, and that it i is exceedingly difficult, to find a rem- i edy for it, "It is a fact of the vigni- ! ficance," he says, "that the great multitude of the most intelligent and sub- ; stantial citizens of the Southern States, the leaders of their education, industry and prosperity, who are Ja- i cohites nor Bourbons, who rejoice that slavery is at an end and who cherish no aims or desires apart from the Un- i ion and the national welfare, aro firmly persuaded that the political equality of the races, the unresricted exercise of the rights of equal citizenship, is impossible in those States." As showing the cause of this feeling, Mr. Curtis cities the condition of the quietest of the Southern States, where the colored population is about onethird of the whole. "Just after the war," lie says, (when many of the white people wore disfranchised and the carpet-baggers werein the ascendancy, and consequently during the negro domfrifluce,) "the County commission was composed of a negro chairman and three negro tneinb^rs who could not write their nr.mes and one white man. They levied high taxes, and the financial situation was such that when they were driven from power the County papor was turdly worth ten cents 011 the dollar. ring," absconded with nearly thirty thousand dollars. There was universal and complete misgovornmont. Hut under "white rule" the County has paid the debt, the taxes are low and schoolhonses are open everywhere for black and white. There is general content and prosperity, except that the negroes are represented as oven more ignorant and superstitious than when emancipated. There is, however, no ill feeling toward them upon the part of the whites, and no disposition whatever to re-enslave them. Hut the new generation, which never held slaves and is perfectly loyal to the Union, is determined to prevent what it considers the lapse of their community into barbarism under negro ascendancy." This dotermination, as Mr. Curtis points out "contemplates, if necessary, the _1e struotion of tlio ri^ht of the majority, tho overthrow by the whites of suffrage, from which alone they derive their own ri^ht to vote, and wherehy they secure political advantages over tdose citizens in other States who obey the law." To determine to do this, Mr. Curtis says, "is to contemplate an intolerable and impossible condition " lie ^oos on to say: "It is, however, undeniable that the reasons for this course are of the most powerful i.: .1 i. i? i > - .1.1. kiiiu. 11 iin>> uuen onmonsiraieu trial any other course in many districts abandon? them practically to the control of tnoso who are absolutely unfitted for civilized government. Apparrently it must lead to their abandonment by the whites, and to their total occupation by semi-civilized negroes aro acquirying a certain degree of instruction which will reveal to them their rights and their superior force, while the habit of servility sprung from slavery is rapidly disappearing. And all the while the nogroos are increasing in numbers more rapidly than the whites, while the instinct of social self-preservation naturally welds the whites together, and what they hold to be the safety of society itself is with them necessarily the paramount public issue. This compels the intelligence of the Southern communities to oppose any party which, by favoring the nogro ascendancy, seems to them to tiiroaton civilization among them. In this ^ruvo situation something inoro is locossarry than to say that a froo /oto and a fair count will sottlo tho piostion. Nobody has yot proposed to show either how under tho circuinitances, a froo vote and a fair count 3an bo secured, or how they would lettlo the question. A froo voto and i fair count might restore tho North Carolina County of which we have spoken to the condition from which it has escaped. Is that a result which tho country desires, or which it would wish to amploy the army to maintain ? What ought to be dor.o under those circumstances, he confesses, he is unable to say. Ho regards tho quostion us "one of tlio most serious, and certainly the most difficult, that confronts the American people." He is far from thinking that they are unequal to its settlement, but ho warns them that its treatment should not be approached in a narrow and partisan spirit. "It appoals," he says "to patriotism, not to party, liko the question of slavery and the war." The Mniragim Can a I. Advanced sheets, with maps, have been issued by the Niceragua Canal company or a phamphlet which presents the first complete description of the work of constructing t he great Ship canal across the Nicaragua. , The phamphlet will enable anyone a stranger to that part of the tropics to obtain, at a single reading, a very good idea of this vast undertaking. One part of the phauiphlct is devoted to a description of the engineering work upon the canal, and another part to a recital of the climatic and other advantages in which Nic- j aragua is pre-eminent. The canal j traverses the lowest depressions of land in the Cordilleras between the Arctic ocean and Capo Horn. This depression is occupied by the large inland sea of fresh water, Lake Nicaragua, and by its outlet, the San Juan river. The western border of the lake is within twelve miles of Pacific coast, from which it is separated by a low divide of 42 feet. The lake is 110 feet above the sea level. It drains toward the Atlantic ocean through the river. This great natural feature is to bo utilised in the proposed canal, both the lake ami the river being navigable throughout most of the route proposed for the canal. Following is an extract from the phamphlet: The details of the work to be done ore, roughly, a breakwater at Gray thence to the westward ten miles through alluvial ground; then a lock of HI foot lift. At two miles beyond there will be a second lock 1 of the combined lift of ?5 fee;, and ' a dam across the .small stream Des- | cado, above which will be a basin af- j fording four'ami a half miles of free ! navigation; then a rock out about two and three quarters miles in 1 length, followed by twelve miles of free navigation in the valleys of two small rivers, the San Francisco and the Maclmdo. Here the water will be raised by means of embankments, 1 and the basins will connect directly with the San Juan river above a large dam across the river, which will raise the surface level in the ri- 1 j ver and lake and secure additeonal i I free navigation of sixty-four and a half miles in the river, fifty-six and a half across the lake. On the wesi tern side of the lake the canal enters I a cut of slight depth in the earth and rock, nine miles long, issuing then into the Tola hasin, with five and a half miles of free navigation obtained by damming the small stream, the Itio Grande, At this dam a series of locks lowers the level 85 feel, and the canal proceeds in excavation down the valley of the j Uio Grande a distance of two miles, ' to the last h ck, a t idal lock of [twenty or thirty feet lift, below which ine eanai enters the upper portion of H e harbor of Urito, ime and a half miles from the Pacific ocean. From ocean to ocean the canal will be 17<> miles long. There will be 10 miles of excavation on the east side, 1 1 1 miles oh the west, and i1 of a mile for G locks, making a total excavation of 2S miles. There will boa total navigation 111 tho sov- 1 oral basins now existing and to be constructed of 21 miles. , Free navigation will be had in the ' San luan river of G41 miles and in i Lake Nicaragua of 5GJ miles, a to- ' till of 121 miles. With the exception <>f the rock cuts in the eastern and western divides the canal in excavation will be at all points wide enough for two ships to travel in opposite directions. Through the basins and in the lake and river vessels l au jiunn utui'i linn na> igllie wit h entire freeilom. The traflic of the canal will he limited only by the time required to passu lock. On the basis of 45 minutes as tin; time for this operation and that but one vessel shall pass in each lockage, the number of vessels which may pass through the canal in one day is cultivated at 32, or in one year 11,080, which based on the average tonnage of vessels going through the Sue/, canal, will give an annual capacity for traffic c _ <i/% aaa AAA J mi 1 1 or over ~u,wuu,uuo ions. i lie locks, however, are G50 feet long and seventy feet wide in the chamber, and two vessels each of 2,000 tons displacement can he passed in one lockage, thus materially increasing the estimated capacity. The time from ocean to ocean by steamers i" estimated at twenty-eight hours, which includes one hour and twenty minutes for possible detention in narrow cuts In regard to the supply of water for tho canal, the lowest How of the lake in the dry season is 11,200 cubic foot per second. Its average discharge is 1 d,724 cubic feet per second, or in one day 1,272,530,000 cubic feet. Consequently the lake supply alone is ten times the maxiinunn needed for the operations of the canal. Srnrlr Defeats UVuniinr Coni>o.v, September 0.?The race) on tlio Thames for XI,0(H), and the championship of tlio world, over a course four miles and three furlongs long*, botween Willams O'Ooinor champion oarsman of tho United .States and Canada, wnd Henry K. Searle, tho Australian, was won by Searlo. At Ilamuionunith Bridge, one mile and three-quarters from the atart, Soarlo lot by two length. Ho won by six lengths. Odds of five to four wore given on O'Conner. Soarlo won the tow for position and ohose tho Surrey aide of the river. O'Connor had the beat of tho start and led by half a length to tho boat house. Searle's time was ')') AO There wore occasional squalls of wind during the progress of the race, and off Surrey tho water was slightly lumpy. Otherwise the conditions wore good. The sun was shining. JJetting during the forenoon was virtually pvon twenty-one to twenty on Searle, and beta at t}?P.se ures were taken readily, finally odds changed to five to four against Searle. ' The start was made by mutual I consent at 1:28, with O'Connoi rowing at a terrible rate. Soon aftei tho start O'Connor "caught a crab' and Searle overtook him and gainec the lead. Searle was rowing splendidly, but slowed up beyont Wuldens. Searle, apparently with out effort, and rowing twenty-mm strokes per minute, gained hall a length, which he gradually increased. O'Connor frequently and anxiously looked over his shoulder at his opponent. When llammersmitli Bridge was reached, O'Connoi appeared to he ? tritle distressed. At Tllnrnv ( !rnfl Ironi VVnrtu 1 ?* *?I. ? J * " """ men wore pulling in good form. A Iwuty head wind was blowing, hut the water in Chiswick Reach w?k not affeet???l Here Soarle was throe loughs ahead. From Chiswioek Point the raoe was a procession. (),Connor rowed splendidly throughout the race. Ho seemed to have heen overtrained, however, for after the first mile had heen rowed ho tired away very quiokly. The course was well kept. The attendance of spectators was large for a professional sculling race. In Hut Water Attain. Washington, Aug. 31.?Thero is a great deal of indignation among urand Armv men in the departments, and among old soldiers generally, over the foul remark attributed to Commissioner Tanner in his speech at Detroit in regard to pensions to soldiors' widows. The indignation is so pronounced that some who have been the strongest friends of Tanner say that it is the duty of the administration to ascertain whether the published reports are accurate, and if thoy prove to be so, to insist upon Tanner's removal. Comment everywhere is that the rotnarks attributed to Tanner are an insult to American wojnen as a class and can not be overlooked. One o, the most considorate of the friends of Tanner says his elevation has caused him to lose his head, and he ought to bo sent back to the ward workers. AI) VKHTISEM KNTS. ? Biu AQftUtaft* HEADOB ARTEK S o WITH COMPLIMENTS OF THE SEASON WE WOULD CALL Attention to our NPHIKU and MUItl.llF.lt stock for 1880. It embraces all the latest novelties in JDx-y O-oods, Satin??, Laces, Ham"bergs, Lawns, LTotion?, Fancy O-oocfLs. Radios9 Jfefaia TRIMMED AND UNRRIMMED, @flothing9 ($*a. O??rWE HAVE A LARGE LINE OF DRY GOODS AND NOTIONS REMAINING FROM LAST SEA80N which we are comr-ellod to close out at a great sacrifice in order to give room for NEW STOCK. A $ T 0 Nils ii i N G - P it 10 E s o Nice mi*e(J worsted, at 10 centa worth 22 cents. Heal Mohair goods ut 10^ cents, worth 40 cents. All wool Huntings at 18 cents, worth 40 eonU, Assorted suiting at .1 cents, worth 12J^ cents Grass cloth at O)^ cents, worth 12^ cts. Black Lawns (figured) at 8 oents, worth 15 cents, and various other articles equallj as low. These are wonderful bargains; take advantage of some of them. It does not require much printer's ink to sell a good cheap line of goods, hence we will not dwell at length heie. Cal and see for yourself. KKMKMHEH that we are headquar* ters for NKWliKti !tl ACI1INK* aqd WfOyand can save you 25 to 40 per cent on them. We make a specialty on th in and sell close for <vi*h, We are constantly adding to our stock and will endeavor to keep a full line. BURROUGHS A COLLINP. I ? AND? Tlie Horry Heraild 0*F. VKAH I'OK M.SO. HA V, IH? VOI! WANT ANY DRUGS OR MEDICINES? IF V??: ??>, JI NT <AFI, Ol DR. E. NORTON. ?? Am C1KT TIIK.n, I'OK III K I*N KTI:Knili FNN/%ItV n THAT ll\l,. Besides Drills for Compounding Prescriptions lie also has on hand a Cull line of Pharmaceuticals and patent Medicines. Sometimes you need u gootl Comb and Brush, or something in thn Soap line, sJ AT S3 t ? 8 3 5 HQS W CO A good Tooth Brnsh or some fine perfumery. Ills Drug Store is the place to go and get them. If you want some of the best kerosene oil in town, or any dye stulTs, call on him. PENS, P ION STAFFS, PENCILS, FANCY OU PLAIN, WMTINU PAPEK, AND GOOD INK CAN ALL BR FOUND TIIEPE, AXLE GItKASK, HOUSE AND CATTLE POWDERS. Physicians' Proscriptions Compounded with care. Yours till next time, K. NORTON. ft. ft. Scarbo AnORNEY AND COUNSELLOR, AT LAW. Conway, N. C, Will practice in llorry and adjoinin Counties. Johnnon A- Johnson, I Johnsons A' (puUlohnnm Marion, S C. S C'onwujr, S C. Johnsens Quafefclobaum, iffitt9go. at *?aW, Conway, H. C. Prompt attention given to business. I THE IIIII II T L ^... i rt x ^S1tlNKl 1 THE ETHIOPIAN CAN NOT OHANOE Hit SKIN NOR THE LEOPARD Hit SPOTS." KaMITOPOX* with tkUlXX u mrrnt crchax?*abijl OA* WOT I KKMOVEI) WITUOIIA1 SUTKUTIXQ THE XABHIO, HO HOT IKON OK aVNUOHT KB* OVIBID, CAN BE VXEU WITH TAMP OB PEN. RETAIL PRICE, 25c. ? AWO KAKTTACTUnin* pjf?? Writing and Copying Inks, Scaling Wax, Muollags, Wafers, Etc. THADDEUS DAVIDS CO., 127.129 William Slraat, NEW YORK CITY. Established 1825. June 31 ?xk|?!r?|?:MwWi!{Tinnl1 placing our iMiklanj^ |1 tj tl r?o<U where Ik* p*opl* ran Iil k*?. w? ?*UI ??nd fr?e lo on* |B^v^ g!SSBBPIMnP,,,Wi ln '?ch lo**lliy,th* Y.r? W Mil t??v injr maekln* mad* in irtl *? /DI '?? " *** W|U| *" ?* atutkniMii*. imnL J AM1 * - " ^*0 ?d fr?? . compui* B&BUyi 1BKUlin* ?,f #B' 0O*,'y rai.ahi* art mi a ' rrturn wa aak tka* rpu glMffllAfgg W'^otr Mka? w* **nd, to pioro Who fMNKmBa MU ILVjpwi an** tk* mum mmmiu. A J kar* run out i b*a*r* Mtaat* % nm out It (Old for , ifrth tV* MrifesiP BKSPill ggaKss^gg % 8E1!: 1 I the holder to tho nolcctlon of A*nr Pattmn lllngtrtt qv tiir hi/.k4 manufactured, each valued at from '-JOc? per year. free. i Yearly subscription, *2.00. A trial will convln< f tho money paid. .Single copies (each contaliiiDg Published by W. JENNINGS : The aboTo combination la n splendid cbnncc to i reduced rate. Bend your subscription* to tbU ofllcc la tho oldest mill iiii'nl p<,|>ulur scientific ami mechanical paper published and ha* tho largest , i circulation of any paper of Ith class in the world. > I Fully Illustrated, llcst class of Wood Kngrnv. logs. Published weekly. Hentl for speclmei. i copy. l*rlce *3 a year. Four months' trial, *1.' ML'NN A CO., l'UMi.iaiiKitH,301 uroudway, N.Y. Architects & builders Edition of Scientific American. o A great success. Kach Issuo contains colored lithographic plates of country and city rosldcnses or public buildings. Numerous engravings and full plans and specifications for the use ot such as contemplate building. Price t'i.&O a year, 26cts. a copy. ML'NN A CO., PUBLISH EUS. fPfc A pnB|K gnH JMnmrhororiir. DATENTS MAI M huve had over I 40 years' experience and have' made over H 100,001) applications for American anil For- ! elgn patents. Send for Handbook. Correspondence strictly confidentiul. TRADE MARKS. In case your mark Is not registered In the Pat. ent Office, apply to MPNN ,v Co., and procure (nn,w.HI,.lo ,.r..l.,. It.... <.,...1 r..*> 11.....II i. COI'Y R K.IITS for books, chart*, maps, to., quickly procured. Address ill I -MS A CO., l'atrut Solicitor*. ti?NKitAti OrncK- 3cx Uuoadway, N, y hi Son j OF PURE COD LIVER C!L &?J> HYPOPHOSPHITF!; . Almost as Palatable as Rrlilk. i So disguised that it can be talicn. digested, and nstlmllaled hy tho moit I leialtlve tloinncli, when the plain oil cannot be tolerated; and by the comblnntlon of the oil with 4 lie hypophoa* I phitea ia much more elUrnclout. Remarkable ns a flesh prodncer, Persons gain rapidly wlillc taking it. SOOTT'S EMULSION is acknowledged by ! PhysicinnB to bo tho Finest and Host preparation in tbo world for tho relief and euro of CONSUMPTION. SCROFULA. GENERAL DEBILITY. WASTING DISEASES. EMACIATION. COLDS and CHRONIC COUGHS. The great remedy for Consumption, and Wasting in Children. S<Ad by all Druggists. t1fgkfr SON "It MP 3K ??k. M C* HAND UPRIGHL jcxacxa P'Utrt.io I'rofpr Deckel* A: Son'w BMuiiom beeauRO tlicy nro match Ickn in brilliancy, N*ircetncNr, potvei^ an*.! their capacity to eullnitt any other make of KMuno*. rmi nr.'ic nun ddipc hot nu *Dmip?Tinu viiiiluuul miu I IIIUL LIOI un HrrLIUHIIUH, FACTORY AND WARE ROOMS, I5u0 Ttilrc! Ave., New York City. April 18th (Sin I PRICE^-?CTS.^" 2 IT IS THE BEST, ;*? Fr ^ ? EASIEST TO USE, * || H \ & & THE CHEAPEST, R Per Saile 23y Wr, A'. Conway, S. O. PATENT S. I Caveat*, niul Trade Marks obtained, and ali Patent buslnssa conducted for SlODEII ATE FEES. OUR OFFICE 18 OPPOSITE U. S. PATENT OFFICE. We have no subagencies, all. business direct, heuco can transact patent business in time and at' LESS COST than those remote from Washington. Send model, drawing, or photo, with do I scrlption. We advise if patentable or m t, free of charge. Our fee not duo till patent is seenrod. A book, "How to Obtain Patents" with references to actual clients in your State county, or town, sent free. Address. C \. NiVOIV Sl t'O Opposite Patent Office, Washington, 1\ ('. J ' : . . _ O* 1.1' sa.io FOR la? JE-SLaxxy ZKCerald. AMD * Domorost's Monthly Magazine. A WONDERFUL PUBLICATION. my suppose; DF.MOHEsT'S MONTHLY , a fosnlon magazine. This Is a great mistake, neloubtcdly contains tho finest Ka-hii.s Demint of any magazine published, but this is uso from the fact that great enterprise- nnel ? *. m o aro shown, so that each elt partem i.t is to a magazine in Itself. In DrwonesT'e yo;i dozen macazlnca In one, anel e-eeuro imilOanel instrnction for tho wholo family. It con. Stories, Pe>emn,and other Literary nllraiHeiii:), I5BS, illnij Artistic, Scientific, and lliAise-tiold ir%Aers, s illustrated with orMnai Steel Kiigrnvliiip', ogravures, dfatir-Colors, and fine Woode/uts, N| ng It tliu .Vnnn. Maoazinji or Amirica. gf Cae;h copy contains a Paytrrm orihk entitling |1? cd in any iniinber of tho Magazine, and in ant inta to 80 cents, or over $8.00 worth of patterns fl :e yon that yon can get ten tlmea the Talna Pattern Order), 80 cents. DEMOREST, NF.w YORK. ?ct our paper and Dwio iEiT's Montui.t At Atlantic ('cast Li^c Wilmington, Columbia & Augusta R R< 'oikIciiXclicdiili1. Dated Sept 8tli, 1880. TRAINS GOING SOUTH. No. 28. Leave Wilmington l? 25 p in Leave ('hadbourit 8 27 p in Leave Marlon 0 5(1 p m Arrive Floreneo. 10 10 p in No. 27. 4 Leave Wilmington 10 10 p in " Cliudbourn 11 48 p m " Marion 12 40 a ni Arrive Florence 1 20 a m No. 50. Leave Florence 8 20 a in Arrive Sumter 4 40 a in Leave Snmtcr 4 40 a :.i Arrive Columbia 0 15 a in No. 58. Leave Florenco 0 '20 n in Arrive Sumter 10 88 n in No. 52. Leave Sumter 10 08 a m Arrive Colombia 11 55 a m No. 52 runs through from Charleston via Central Hail road. Leaving Lanes 0:15 A. M. .Manning 0:56 A. M. Train on C. & I). Railroad connects at Florence with No 58. TRAINS CJOINU NORTH. No. ft 1. Leave Columbia 10 85 pm Arrive Sumter 11 5S p m Leave Sumter 11 58 pm Arrive Florence 1 15 a in No. 50, Leave Sumter 6 07 p in Arrive "Florence .... 7 50 p m No. 58. Leave Columbia 6 87 p m Arrive Sumter fl 0? p m - ? No. 14. Leave Florence 8 15pm " Marlon 8 55 pm " Chadbourn 0 45 pm Arrive Wilmington 11 60 |> m No 78. Leave Florence 4 85 a m Leave Marion 5 20 a m Arrive Wiln?iinrt<ni " ? o uua m Daily, tDaily except Sunday. No. 53 runs through to Charleston,8. ('., via Central It. It., arriving Manning 7:04 1*. M., liUnes 7:42 I'. M., Charleston 0:30 1\ M. No. 50 connects at Florence with C. and 1). train from Cheraw and Wadeshoro. Now. 18 and 14 make close connection at Wilmington with W,.&. W. It. It. for all points north. Train on Florence It. It., Leave Fee Deo daily except Sunday 4:40 F. M., arrive Rowland 7:00 F. M, Returning leave Rowland (5:150 A. M., arrive Fee Dee 0:00 A. M. Train on Manchester tV Augusta It. R. leaves Sumter daily except Sunday, 11:00 A. M. arrive Finewood 1:2:01 A. Si. Returning leave Finewood 12:30 P.in.,arrive Sumter 1:30 F. M. J. F. 1)1 VINK, Gen'l Supt, J. R. Kp.ni.y, Supt. Trana. T. M. Km ruron, Oen'l Pass. Aaei.? - ? Schedule of Wilmin g 3 (] f 11 111 and Cnw ay R R CIIADUOI'UN, N. ('., Doc. 20, 1888. Schedule In effect from date. NO. 0, SOUTH HOUND, IWSSK.VdKit AM) FUHIOUT DAII.Y, KXCEl'T SUNDAY. Leave Clui(lboUrii{ 8 00 a in Leave Yolaiule 8 27 a in Leave Clarendon 8 88am Leave Unterxon ; 8 47 a ni Arrive at Ml. Tabor 8 f>7 a m Leave Mount TalorJ 0 12 a in Leave Driuccton 0 28 a in Arrive at L oris J ?? 00 a in Leave Lorix ' **0 a in Leave Cine Level 10 00 a m Lcav SanfordJ 10 10 a in Leave llayboro, 10 20 am Leave l'rivetts 10 41 a m Arrive Con way j 11 80 a m NO. 7, NORTH HOUND, I'ASSKNO KH AND FIIEIOHT DAII.Y, KXCKl'T SUNDAYS. I.eave Conway ' $M>0 p in Leave l'rivetts V .58 p in f.eave Hayboro.,, 2 50 p in Leave SanfnrM ? "* O W |l III Leave Pino Level . 8 07 p m Arrive at Ijorla 8 17 p n? Leave I .oris 8 87 p in Leave Princeton.., .. ^ 48 P Ift Arrive at Mt. Tabor 4 04 p in Leave Mount Tabor 4 19 p m & Leave Emerson 4 81 p m Leave Clarendon 4 43 p in Leave Yolandt 5 05 pm Arrive Chadbourn '1 M p m JTelograph Stations. Train No. 0 will waitatChadl|p?rn * for train No. 78 W. C. & A. U. It. Train No. 7 will connect with train No. 15, southbound, on W. C. & A. It. It. J. II. CiiApnouuN, Jr., v Superintendent. c2S2^Sn5erior to oil SoMtnteo qrews w Cnke, Pl??, T&Sl \ira f?T JolnwC?0?tfw?,V_. YlAd I Cnke, Pot Viet, Dnw?ll??J? Boiled PnddlnM and ]? ?** J bnuinf (I wkeat. k pound f*nn ft (??!* Jm j?^ pALTIMOBK. MO. y