THE LEDGER: GAFFNEY, S. C., NOVEMBER 5, 1890. 5 .1)1 lltfirT HARMONY rev. on. r>V' ,Ar; “ !)r?AW s a lesson Jiv H • : tlic .SuliJ'-. i tttl'! JVlTVMf . V h < t t hi 1 st a , ^ ; f tirorit ! 'V. Stars” For IJoauty Ifni ainny. Wassu*:; V resourros ci npon by Dr. | I —The musical H imtioii^fimu drawn T.ilmajo in thiK5 pru,ou to illustrato a ninsr praotical trutfi.'^His subject was “Tlu' Chant of the Stars, ” and the text J>)b xxxviii, G, 7. "Who laid the cc rncrstonc thereof, when the morning stars sang together?” We have all set n the ceremony at the laying of the cornerstone of church, asylum or Ma mie temple. Into the hollow of the stone were placed scrolls of history and important documents, to bo suggestive if, 100 or 200 years after, the building should be destroyed by fire or torn dovfli. Wo remember the silver trowel or iron hammer that smote the square pit v of granite into sanctity. Wo remember some venerable man who presided wielding the trowel or ham mer. Wo remember also the music as the choir stood on the scattered stones and timber of tb" building about to bo constructed. Th leaves of the notebooks fluttered in the wind and wore turned over with a great rustling, and wo re- mem b-r how the bass, baritone, tenor, contralto and soprano voices commin gled. Thi y had for many days been re hearsing the , rial programme that it might be worthy "f tho cornerstone lay ing. r.ay fj tin* Cornerstone. In my text the poet of Ur. calls us to a grander ceremony—the laying of the foundation of tiii ; great tomplo-of a world. Tim rnna rstono was a block cif light and tho trowel was of celestial crystal. All about and on the embank ments of clouds stood the angelic choris ters unrolling their librettos of overture, and other worlds clapped shining cym bals while the ceremony went on, and God, tho An Itifeot, bystrokeof light aft er stroke of light, dedicated this great cathedral of a world, with mountains for pillars, end sky for frescoed ceiling, and flowering fi hi.; for a floor, and sun rise and muinigh'; aurora for upholstery. "Who laid the eoriwr.-itone thereof, when tho morning stars sang together?” Tho fact is that the whole universe was a coned 0- cadence, an unbroken dithyramb, a mu icnl portfolio. Tho great shee t of Imm- nsity had been spread out, and written on it were the stars, tho smaller i f them minims, the larger of them sustaim d notes. Tho meteors marked tho w.'.ff .Y.u passages, the whole heavens tv (.eenut with all sounds, in tonations, m.halations, tho space be tween the worlds a musical interval, trembling of stellar light a quaver, tho thunder a be J ; kf, tho wind among trees a treble clef. That is the way God f made all thin'.;-, a pf rfoet harmony. L- Hut who are struggling to get up mid putting those who are up in anxiety 1< -t >sy; jl-ol ■ ere express ive of the way nation f *!.; toward na tion. Discord v ide us t he continent and bridging the seas. Creation Groan*. I suppose you have noticed how warmly in love dry goods stores are with other dry goods stores, and how highly grocerymen think of the sugars of the grocery men on the same street. And in what a eulogistic way allopathic and homeopathic doetou speak of each other, and how ministers will .sometimes put ministers on that beautiful cooking in strument which the English call a spit —an iron roller with spikes on it—and turned by a crank before a hot lire, and then if tho minister being roasted cries out against it the men who are turning him say: “Hash, my brother! Wo are turning this spit for the glory of God and the good of your soul, and you must bo quiet while v.'c close tho si rvico with: Bust he the tie that binds Our hearts in Chris:inn lovo. The earth is diametered and circum- fcrcnced with discord, and tho music that was rendered at the laying of tho world’s cornerstone, when the morning stars sang together, is not heard now. And though hero and there, from this and that part of society, and from this and that part of the earth, there cornea up a thrilling solo of Jove, or a warble of worship, or a sweet duet of patience, they arc* drowned out by a discord that shakes the earth. Paul says, “The whole creation groau- cth. ” And while tho nightingale, and tho woodlark, and tho canary, and tho plover sometimes sing so sweetly that their notes have been written out in musical notation, and it is found that tho cuckoo sings in tho key of D, and that tho cormorant is a basso in tho winged choir, yet sportsman’s gun and the autumnal blast often leave them ruffled and bleeding or dead in meadow or forest. Paul was right, for the groan in nature drowns out the prima donnas of tive sky. Tartiui, the great musical composer, dreamed one night that he made a con tract with satuu, tho latter to bo ever in the composer’s service. But one night he handed to satan a violin, on which Diabolus played such sweet music that the composer was awakened by tho emo tion and tried to reproduce tho sounds, i and therefrom was written Tartini’s most famous piece, "The Devil’s So nata,” a dream ingenious,but faulty, for all melody descends from heaven, and only discords ascend from hell. All hatreds, feuds, controversies, backbit- j ings and revenges are the devil’s sonata, are diabolic fugue, are demoniac phan tasy, are grand march or doom, ate ul- ! legro of perdition. Tli«> iEar of Uadi. But if in this world things in general are out of tuno to our frail ear, how much more so to beings augehc and de- ifie! It takes a skilled artist to fully ap preciate disagreement of sound. Many have no capacity to detect a defect of musical execution, and, though there were in one bar as many offenses against harmony as could crowd in between the lower F of the lass and the higherG of the soprano, it would give them no dis comfort, while on the forehead of tho educated artist beads of perspiration would stand out as a result of the har rowing dissonance. While an amateur was performing on a piano and had just struck the wrong chord, John Sebastian Bach, the immortal composer, entered the room, and the amateur rose in em barrassment, and Bach rushed past tho host, who stepped forward to greet him, and, before the keyboard had stopped vibrating, pmt his adroit hand upon the keys and changed the painful inharmouy into glorious cadence. Then Bach turned and gave sal nation to the host. But the worst of all discord is moral discord. If society and the world are painfully discordant to imperfect man, what must they he to a perfect God! People try to define what sin is. It seems tome that sin is getting out of harmony with God, a disagreement with his holi ness, with his purity, with his love, with his commands, our will dashing with his will, the finite dashing against the in finite, the frail against the puissant, tho created against tho creator. If a thousand musicians, with flute and coruet-a-pis- ton and trumpet and violoncello, the hautboy and trombone and all the wind and stringed instruments that every gathered in a Dusseldorf jubilee, should resolve that they would play out of tune and pc 4 t concord to the rack and make the place wild with shrieking and grating and rasping sounds, they could not make such a pandemonium as that which rages in a sinful soul when (hid listens to tho play of its thoughts, pas sions and emotion—discord, lifelong discord, maddening discord. Tho world pays more for discord than it doetj for consonance. High prices have been paid for music. One man gave $225 to hear the Swedish songstress in New York, and another $025 to hear her in Boston, mid another $050 to In ar her in Providence. Fabulous prices have been paid for sweet Bounds, but far more has been paid for discord. The Crimean war cost $1,700,000,000, and the American civil war$9,500,<100,000, and the war debts of profess* d Christian nations are about $15,000,000,000. The world pays for this red ticket, which admits it to the saturnalia of broken bones mid death agonies and destroyed cities and plowed graves and crushed hearts, any amount of money satan asks. Discord! DiBCord! Will Ih- Fut In Tune. But I have to tell you that tho song that the morning stars sang together at tho laying of tho world’s cornerstone is to resound again. Mozart's greatest overture was composed one night when he was several times overpowered with sleep, and artists say they cun tell the places in tho music whore he was full ing asleep and the places where ho awak ened. So the overture of the morning stars spoken of in my text has been adeep, but it. will awaken and be more grandly rendered by tho evening stars of the world’s existence than by the morning stars, and the vespers will be sweeter than the matins. The work of all good men and women and of all good churches and all reform associa tions help to ‘rving the race back to tho original harmony. The rebellious heart to be attuned, social life to be attuned, commercial ethics to bo attuned, inter- nationality to be attuned, hemispheres to be attuned. In olden times the choristers had a tuning fork with two prongs, and they would strike it on tho back of pew or music rack and put it to tho ear and then start the tune, and all tho other voices would join. In modern orchestra the loader has a comph te instrument rightly attuned, and he sounds that, and all tho other p rformers tuno tho keys of their instruments to make them cor respond and draw the bow over tho string and listen and sound it over again until all tho keys are screwed to concert pitch and tho discords melt into one great symphony, and the curtain hoists, and the baton taps and audiences are raptured with Sc humann’s "Para dise and the Pori” or Rossini’s “Stabat Mater” or Bach’s "Magnificat” in D. Now, onr world can never be attuned by an imperfect instrument. Even a Cremona would not do. Heaven has ordained the only instrument, and it is made' out of tho weed of tho cross, and tho voices that accompany it aro im ported voices, caulatrices cf tho first Christmas night, win n heaven serenad ed tho earth with "Glory to God in the highest, ami on earth peace, good will to men. ” Lest wo start too far off and get lest in generalities, v.o had better begin with ourselves, get onr own hearts and lives in harmony with the eternal Christ. Oh, for his Almighty Spirit to attune us, to chord our will with his will, to modulate oar lite with his life*, and bring us into uni. ou with all that is pure and nelf sacrificing and heavenly! The strings of our nature aro all broken and twisted, and the bow is so slack it cannot evoke anything mellifluous. Tho instrument made for heaven to play on has been roughly twanged and struck by influences worldly and demoniac. O master hand of Christ, restore this split and fractured and despoiled and un strung natr.ro until first it shall wail out for our sin and then thrill with di- vino parelou! Con pit ta Harmony. The whole world must also be attuned by the same power. 1 was in the Fair banks weighing sc:.!c manufactory of Vermont. .Six hundred hands, and they have never had a strike. Complete har mony between labor and capital, tho operatives of scores of years in their beautiful homes near by the mansions cf the manufactun rs, whose invention and Christian behavior made the grenfe enterprise. Bo ali the world over labor and capital will be brought into eu phony. You may have heard what is called tho "Anvil Chorus,” composed hy Verdi, a tunn playc d by hammers, great and small, now with mighty stroke, and new with heavy stroke, beating a greac iron anvil. That is what tho world has got toccmo t;—an vil chorus, yardstick chorus, shuttle chorus, tiowel chorus, crowbar chorus, pickax chorus, gold mine chorus, rail track chorus, locomotive chorus. It can be dene, and it will be done. Bo all social life will bo attuned by tho gcspel harp. There will be as many classes in society as now, but the classes will not be regulated by birth or wealth or acci dent, but by the scale of virtue and be nevolence, and people will be assigned to their places as good, or very good, or most excellent. Bo also commercial life will be attuned, and there will be 12 in every dozen, and 10 ounces in every pound, and apples at the bottom of tho barrel will be as sound as those on the top, and silk goods will not bo cotton, and sellers will not have to charge hon est people more than the right price be cause others will not pay, and goods will come to you corn spending with the sample by which you purchased them, ami coffee will not be chicoried, and sugar will not be sanded, and milk will not be chalked, and adulteration of food will be a state prison c{Tense—aye, all things shall bo attuned! Elections in England ami tho United States will no more be a grand carnival of defamation and scurrility, but the elevation of righteous men in a righteous way. In tho sixteenth century tho singers called the Fischer brothers reached the lowest bass ever recorded, and the high est note ever trilled was by La Bastar- della, and Cataliui's voice had a com pass of 3*^ octaves. But Christianity is more wonderful, for it runs all up and down the greatest heights ami the deep est depths of the world’s necessity, and it will compass everything and bring it in accord with the song which the morn ing stars sang at tho laying of the world’s cornerstone. All the sacred niu- sio in homes and concert halls and churches tends toward this consumma tion. Make it more amt more hearty. Bing in your families. Sing in your places of business. If wo with proper spirit use these faculties, we are re hearsing for the skies. Heaven is to have a now song, an en tirely new song. But I should not won der if, its sometimes on earth a tune is ; fashioned out of many tunes, or it is one | tone with tjie variations, so some of tho songs of tho redeemed may have play ing through them the songs of earth. And how thrilling, as coming through the great anthem of the saved, accom panied by harpers with their harps and trumpeters with their trumpets, if wo should hear some of the strains of ‘ 1 Anti och” and “ Mount Piflgah” and "Corona tion” and "Lenox” and “St. Martin’s” uml "Fountain” and "Ariel” and "Old Hundred!” How they would bring to mind the praying circles and communion days,and the Christmas festivals, and the church worship in which on cartli we mingled I 1 have no idea that wbeq we bid fare well to earth we uro to bid farewell to idl these grand old goupel hymns which melted and raptured our souls for so many years Now, if sin is discord, and righteousness is harmony, let us get out of the one and enter the other. After our dreadful civil war was over, in the su nnier of 18(59, a great national peace jubilee was held in Boston, and as an elder of my church bad been honored by the srlrciion of some of his music to be rendered on that occasion I accom panied him to the jubilee. Forty thou sand people cat and stood in the great coliseum erected for that purpose. Thousands of wind and stringed instru- meuts. Twelve thousand trained voices. Tho masterpieces of all ages rendered, hour after hour and day after day—Han del’s "Judas Maocabmus, ” Spohr’s "Last Judgment, ” Beethoven’s "Mount of Olives,” Haydn’s “Creation,” Men delssohn’s "Elijah,” Meyerbeer’s “Cor onation March,” rolling on and up in surges that billowed against the heavens. The mighty cadences within were ac- companicd on the outside by the ringing of the bells of the city and cannon on the commons, discharged by electricity, in exact time with music, thundering their awful bars of a harmony that as tounded all nations. Bometimes I bowed my bead and wept, sometimes I stood up in the enchantment, and sometimes tho effect was so overpowering I felt I could not endure it, especially when all tho voices wore in full chorus, cud all the batons were in full wave, and all the orchestra in full triumph, and a hun dred anvils under mighty hammers were in full clang, and all the towers of the city rolled in their majestic sweetness, and tho whole building quaked with the boom of 30 cannon. Parcpa Rosa, witli a voice that will never again bo equaled on earth until tho archangelic voico proclaims that timo shall be no longer, rose above all other Bounds in her rendering of onr national air, “Tho Star Spangled Banner.” It was too much for a mortal, quite enough for r*n immortal, to hear, and while some fainted one womanly spirit, released under its power, sped away to be with God. O Lord, onr God, quickly usher in the whole world’s peace jubilee, and all islands of the ecu join the five ccuti- iients, and all tho voices and all the mu sical instruments of all nations combine, and all the organs that ever sounded re quiem of sorrow sound only a grand march of joy, and all tho bells that tolled for burial ring for resurrection, and all tho cannon that ever hurled death across the nations sound forth,' eternal victory, and over all tlie acclaim of earth and minstrelsy of heaven thcro will heard one voice sweeter and mightier than any human or angelia voice, a voice once full of tears, but now full of triumph, thevoiceof Christ, say ing, "I am alpha and omega, tho be ginning and tho end, the first and tho last ” Then, at tho laying of tho top stonq cf the world’s history, tho pamo voices shall bo heard us when, at the laying cf tho world’s cornerstone, "tho morning stars sang together. ” DreadM No disease has puzzled the doctors so completely as rheumatism—that de plorable condition of the blood which ao often renders the strongest man as helpless as a babe. Their mercurial and potash remedies may in some cases impart temporary relief, but are sure to ultimately result in wrecking the entire system. Rheumatism is a deep-seated blood disease and only a real blood remedy will have any effect whatever upon it. Most of the so-called blood reme dies are at best only tonics and can not reach an obstinate blood trouble. One of the most frequent symptoms of rheumatism is a tingling sensation of the parts affected, generally brought about from a lack of free circulation of the blood through the very small blood conductors. This trouble is al ways eliminated by the use of S. S. S.; it thins the blood, gives it a free and forcible circulation, destroys the pois onous microbes and restores the circu lation to its normal condition. Mr. Robert H. King, a prominent and influential citizen of West Point, Va., writes of his experience with this dread disease: "About five years ago I was a great sufferer from rheumatism. I was treated by all the leading physicians Tho Court Canto Itach. Judge Randolph r.f the Kansas dis trict court was one of the frontier judi cial officers who believed in upholding tho dignity of tiio benrh, and, as well, was tenacious of his own personal honor. A divorce suit in which a gray haired veteran of tho late war was plaintiff came up before him while ho was on tho circuit out in a prairie comity. The rude courtroom was filled with specta tors, and the old man seemed unwilling to go on the stand in his own defense. "I am not going to grant divorces without good reasons, ” announced tho court, and the plaintiff went to tho chair that fiirved as a witness box. "Now,” raid the attorney, "tell ns just what your wife did to make you leave her. ’ ’ Tho witness looked appealingly at tho judge. "Answer tho question, ” was the or der. "Well, sho called mo names.” "That is not ground enough for a di vorce, ” said the court sternly. "And she neglected me.” "Is that all?” "And sho said that I was a coward and a sneak because I went to the war and came back alive. Sho said that nil the brave and worthy pun died in bat tle, and only the traitors and cowards came home, and”— 1 ‘That will do, sir. The decree prayed for in your petiticu is granted,” broke in the judge. "I want you to under? stand, sir, lhat this court went to that war and Bpcut four years there—and tho court came back too.”—Chicago Rec ord. Mr. Robert H. Kino. In the state, but without relief. In fact, my sufferings grew worse daily, until I despaired of ever being cured.. "I had been in this wretched condw tion for many months and was almost a complete wreck, when I first read tho advertisement of S. S, S. Having tried a dozen or more ‘rheumatic cures’ and ‘blood remedies’with no success, I was almost hopeless, but decided to give your medicine a trial. I did so, and in a few weeks it had made a permanent cure of me. I was soon a well man and have never had a touch of rheuma tism to this day. S. S. S. is indeed a wonderful medicine, and I shall ever recommend it to all sufferers from this worst of blood diseases.” S. S. S. stands out distinctly to it self as a real blood remedy, and for half a century ha* been curing obsti nate and deep-seated blood diseases which other medicines fail to reach. S. S. S. is not a drug store preparation and no druggist can offer a substitute for it. It is guaranteed purely vege table, and contains not a particle of potash, mercury, or any other product of the chemist’s shop. S. 8. S. never fails to cure Rheuma tism, Eczema, Cancer, Scrofula, or any other disease of the blood, it matters not what other treatment has failed. Our books on blood and skin diseases will be mailed free to any address. Swift Specific Company, Atlanta, Go. O. [,. SCIU’MI'FItT. Sol. Till .luilicliil < ViM. Tiioh. B. Bcti.kk. In-ult. U. S. Com, McGowan. SCHUMPERT, < BUTLER < & - McGOWAN, I* KnKlund’M FroupcrUy Menaced.? The chief obstacles ta the progress of education in England are paity spirit and religions intolerance, proposals for educational retorm are discussed and decided, not in a philosophical spirit, but with all the acrimony of partisans. Yet it is admitted that the case is a very urgent one; that England is en gaged in a struggle with her foreign competitors not only for th** supremacy but even for the very existence of her industries; that her workers aro worse instructed tlnui their rivals and are on that account going to tho wall, and that better education, both cljinentary and technical, is vital to tho continuance of her prosperity. It is the fact that in both town and country elementary in struction is so backward that, even if adequate technical schools were provid ed, the mass of the people are unfitted to take full advantage of them. Yet, not withstanding all this, English statesmen will postpone reform indefinitely if they can sco their way to secure a party ad vantage thereby. Tho only hope is that public opinion may appriiciato before it is too lute the position of edaoution, both elementary and technical, may be come agreed as to the direction in which development ought to take place and may force parliament and the govern ment to grapple with the difficulties which have to be overcome.—Right Hon. Hir John E. Gorst in North Amer- icau Review. ATTOUTU HVrt-.Vr-I^AW. Union and Gaffney, S. C. Olti*'*- ilnys :it oullucy, Friday and Sutur- 1 day of enr.li week. \ cry careful and prompt attention alven to all liiisines* > nlrn>ted to us. 1-iT' Practice In all the courts. T. L. ELLIOT. Monumental Works. (iraniUi Monuments a A gent ior specialty. IRON FENCES. No. 235, W. Trade St., Charlotte, N. C. T. L ELLIOT. For Sale The Ur. Ilolrno k room Iioum-wii h fine gar den. atuhle* and out huildln^t attached. !i room eottajre on l.iinestone St. •I room eoita^e on Gaines Si. with hplemild icardcu. 2 vaeant lots on G.i lues SI 4 vacant lots on Factory lllll. I elegant lot on Grunnid St., opposite T. G. McGraws. Insurance! I rcpii .tni none hnl the (test of Fire, Life and Accident Insuranee Companies. Am prepared to furnish Cyclone ami Tornado Insurance at moderate cost. Your patronage will la-duly appreciated. F. Q. STACY. ORDER FOR ELECTON. STATU OF SOI’TM C.\ KitMMA. i I'.XKi riivi: < hasiir.it. s \\ II MIKAS, i pet iCon signed hy i!..' pioiil- lh‘d ehs’lora ol eert ,i|n mv!Ions o Sj, . ■ I i n- hurs. rnlou ami York Counties have tieru filed with me, and fiont sin peitilon and accompanying p:ipe*s It app'':.!s. mat one- thlr I of the qualitlcil elci lm s i .-si.ling with in t hi 1 area ol enen sectio i of Hit sild old counties pro|H»sei| to he eui o r ;m a m w county have signed said p*'1 it'.on-md. TVtlKitkas. the holm inriesof tli ■ proposed new county, t he propo-ani uame. the mii.i im r of inhabitants, the are.*, tin- i -,\:i:.!e prop erty as show n hy t he last | in r* ; ui ns. mid tluit the pro|iosts| lines for tin- i.e.v county do not run within eight mill's of any eoui t house liulldfng now est ablished, me sfii (oi tn In said petition. Now. therefore. I. lolm Gary Kv.ins Gov ernor of t he State of Soul u 1 'irulin.i hi •■om- pliiince with the r'.|iilreMei.l., of tin -.i t of the Generally cio'y entitled. "An \rt to provide for I In formni iotiTif V" .■ Conn lies, etc..” approved Mnn-li !ith. 1‘fiii •!<> in lehy order an election in tin- letrltory to tie cut olT for the new county, on '! m vmv. the eighth day of imeeioh r. A. i .. I -hn. to lie held In nccord'incr witli the k qiii'i' ii-'iits of said Act. at which . I - '■ d h ,n to. ■ t« cl ors sha II vote "\ rs" or "No” ipon the i|iie:.! io.i of creating the e'w con t i'n./onthe hiiiiu* and count y seat of 1 h. pr ' ; nev\ count V. InTkstijionv WltMt . i\ I h ive hen unto set my ha ml a .ni c.ii.k • t. c ' .. ;.t Seal of the Slate to lie unixed at odimlcu t his t welfth day of of October. A. G. • m a mi io t li o .<> hundred and IMeniy-li I y ir of * he bide- pendencc of 1 he Cn. . r U . •. i * • ol .i-iMtic \. By t he Guvcrun: : l>. II. Tompkins. Seely, of St it". G.\f:y Kvans. ADMINISTRATOR 3 SALS. OnStturday. November .'dii. at Io’r’ocl;. p. in.. I will s. il ;:l ptiolie ouii ry for cash at i he late home of the dec ised at idinestone, all the persona! pmprs'.y of t ite I a te \V. F. Goode, consist log of {wo :an cs. ;. iic. of e.irn .'iml fo Ider. siul it hit of f.arti. ng imj.lcmcnts itml hous« Itohi and kitchen iiirniture. C. raoiiliK. A.lm’f. of \V. !•' Goode, liec’tl. Gakkxky. S. C.. Get. P.l. !-!*<;. Notice to Creditors. All persons having < lalms agalns: t!-.-es tate of \V. I . Goode, deceased, are required to present tle'iii pioven to the ituoersfgm-d at GnlVney filv. S. ton Saturday the 7th day of November. t v, .Ki. Those iudehled to said estate are i'ei|iii'stei| |>, rail and make settlement on or before the uato above named. <\ S. Goot*. Adtn’r. for W. F. Goode, dee'll, tit Ksij. I. G. Sarratt’soffice. October lit. 1H%. Notice to Creditors. AII persons having claims against thrrs- tate of Irvine Surrat!. deceased, are required to present t hem. properly proven, to t nr un dersigned. tit his otlii e. <«aIVnevcity. s. < <>u or before Ilecembcr 1st. Isn.;. Those indebted to said cslate are requested t > call and in ikt* settlement on or before th*' date above- named. I. G. S.tltlt VTT. Adni.’r Irvine S.irratt. uee'dL If You Wish ^ to hold your cotton, store it In niy warehouse. No danger front dam age and ready for market at any time. Charges are reasonable. When you have cotton for sale call at my ofiire. rcnrofW. O. Lip- s 'omh A Bros'. Ifhrlu st prices paid. R. S. LIPSCOMB, Fire Insurance Agent. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. PIEDMONT AIU LIN'S. CwudcnM-tl Sohflilule of Fa.ienger Trains ItT. Atlanta. C. T. “ Atlanta, E. T. " 1. ore ross " Buford " Gainesville. “ Lula " Cornells “ Mt. Airy. .. *• Toccoa Westminster Seneca Central Green rills. (Spartanburg. Gaffneys. BJarhshurg King's Mt Gastonia. Oharlutto . . Danville I Ves Fst.Ml Northbound. jjq Jfo.FJ F.x. Sept. XO, 1800. i Dal.y. Sum ufo.) m fl J 'J hi 7 50 a < 1 00 i) 12 it a 8;kJ n 5 £>P 1 1 14 n $>3! a 0 a»P I loot at 7 OBp 2 11 n 10X5 n 7 420 2 2J u II ID a 8 OBp 11 22 a 8 a»P' Ill 2S a 8 S7p 3 18 n II .**4 uj 12 if) p - a 12 (8 p! — " Ar Ax- Richmond . ^r. Washington BaltmV PRB. 2 29 p 2 48 }> 3 37 p 4 18 p 4 45 p 5 30 p <1 18 ]* 7 p 3 5d it « 20 p 0 22 a: 10 43 p 11 15 a . 2 09 a 12 66 p 2 00 a' t>n Hen aeos West ml net or " Toccoa “ Mt. Airy “ Cornelia " Lula •• Gainesvllio . " Buford • Norcroso Ar. Atlanta, R.T Ar. Atlanta. C. T 6 .V) 0 35 10 49 11 37 12 28 1 15 1 35 a «nr» a 10 55 11 30 a is is 12 24 u 1 00 p 1 50 P 2 35 p 268 18 p 3 13 8 31 4 55 3 55 3 80 a 4 1h a 4 33 a 4 57 a p 6 20 pi 5 20 p <140 p 12 20 p 1 10 1 35 2 01 2 SO 315 4 20 5 15 u 5 4! 0 01 0 50 7 35 7 40 8 OH 8 35 0O7 9 43 10 30 0 30 0 25 0 37 0 57 730 748 8 37 0 30 8 30 •■A" s. m. "p" p. m. "M” noon. "If” night. Non. 87 and 38—Washington anil Honthwest- •rn Vestibule Limited. Through Pullman Sleepers between New York and Now Orleans, via vYashlngton, Atlanta and Montgomery,and also between New York and Memphis, vtn Washington, Atlanta and Birmingham. This train iilao carries Kichmond-Augusta sleeping ears lietweeu Danville und Charlotte, iftrsl class thoroughfare coach between Washington and Atlanta. Dining oars sorvs all meals on routs. Nos. 35 and 80-Unlted States Fast Mall. Ptt’l- man sleeping ears between New York, Atlanta and New Orleans. Pullman parlor cats be tween Klehumnd shd Danville. Pullman bleep ing ears between Birmingham and t 'harlotte. Nos. 11 and 12—Pullman sleeping cars between Richmond and Danville. The Air Line Belle train, Nos. 17 and 18, will, from June 1st to October 1st. 1898. tie operated between Atlanta and Mt. Airy.tia., daily ex- rwt Sunday. W" H. Git KIN, J. M. CULP. Gen'l Supt., Traffic M g'r., Waahlngton, D. OL Washington, D. Ol W. A. TURK, 8. H. HARDWICK, Gen'l Pass. Ag*| , Ass t Gen'l Pass. Ag**., Washington. D. C. Atlanta, tin.