University of South Carolina Libraries
4 THE LEDGER: GAFFNEY, S. C., JANUARY 13, 1898 The: Si.oo per Year. PUBLISHED EVEKY THUHSDAY BY Ed. II. DkCami*. The Ledger is not responsible for the views of correspondents. Correspondents who do not contri bute regular news letters must fur bish their nan.e, not for publication, but for identification. Write short letters and to the point to insure publication; also endeavor to fret them to the office by Tuesday. All correspondence should bo ad dressed to Ed. H. DeCamp, Manager. Obituaries will be published at five cents a line. Cards of thans will be published • t one cent a word. Reading notices will be published •$ ten cents a line each insertion. THE GRADED SCHOOL. We understand that a petition to the Legislature to establish a school district here and to levy an additional tax of three mills upon our people for the purpose of founding and;main- taining a graded school in JOatTney, has been industriously circulated and has been signed by some of our prom inent citizens; or perhaps the petition asks for an election to be ordered or permitted, to determine this ques tion of a special tax for a graded school. We have not seen the peti tion and hence are not prepared to speak of special details. Now. with all due respect to the originators and promotors of this en terprise, we wish to put on record some decided objections to it with our reasons for the same. 1st. A graded school is not needed in Gaffney at this time. The town already has good schools, sufficient in number and adequate in efficiency to meet all present demands. These schools cost the town at large less and benefit the town at largo more, they bring more money into the town and take Jess out of it, than a graded school could do, and the money they cost is paid by those who get the benefit of them. That is strict business in principle and even- handed justice in practice. There is not a man in Gaffney with a proper appreciation of his obligations to his children and of the importance of eiving them a chance for mental im provement, who cannot send them to these schools and, with the help al ready provided by the state, pay the prices charged for their instruction. And when he has done so he will have a higher appreciation of the work done for his children, a better opinion of the teacher and a more profound respect for his own manhood. 2nd. The movement is inopportune. In the category of human virtues, justice comes before generosity. No one has a right to be generous until he has first been just. The town of Gaffney is already heavily loaded with debt, and there is a big addi tional load to come. She is pledged for $15,000 for the court house and jail. It is true that the opera house has been accepted by the county au thorities for the court house, but the opera house has not been paid for and the transaction does not relieve the town of one dollar of debt. The people have also voted for water works, and in oar opinion they voted wisely. Water works and sewerage will cost anywhere from $20,000 to $30,000. But these are necessities and they must come. It is only a question of time when, for the want of a proper system of sewerage, an epidemic will invade our homes, spread its unseen wings in darkness, and fill our streets with images of sorrow, desolation and death. It is only a question of a few weeks, or months, or years at most, when for the want of water and a fire engine, the flames will sweep Gaffney’s main street from one end to the other with the fury of a tornado—when the ac cumulations of a quarter of a century will vanish in smoke and ashes, and blackened walls and heaps of rubbish only will remain to mock you in your despair and cruelly remind you of what might have been. The town then must establish wa ter works or run a fearful risk of an nihilation. In the meantime taxes are already higher, in many cases oppressive, and they are continually going higher. We have had an era of so-called re form which promised reduction of the number of offices, general re trenchment in expenses, and hence, lower taxes. It has inaugurated en- terprises that cost fabulous sums of money, multiplied the number o:' offices, and increased the taxes by hook or by crook, probably as much as 50 per cent. Taxes for State am county purposes, municipal taxes, poll taxes, road taxes, tuxes for past indebtedness, for school pur- soisi, for sinking fund, for Interest j on some sort of bonds, for this, that, end the other abomination which three fourths of our people never heard of until they read them on their tax bills. If the percentage levied by law will not raise enough money to meet the demands, new property is hunted up for the audi tor’s books and assessments are strained up by irresponsible boards in flat contradiction to the owner’s sacred oath. It takes about all the ordinary man can make to pay taxes. We assert, and we are prepared to prove, that it is cheaper for a man to rent a dwelling house in the out skirts of Gaffney to-day, high as rents are, than it is to own one. Under such conditions, is it wise for the property holders of Gaffney to impose upon themselves a 8-mill additional tax for a graded school or for any other object that is not a pressing and vital necessity? 3rd. A 3-raill tax will not be suffi cient to equip and maintain a first class graded school. This fact will soon be discovered and then another petition will be put forth for signa tures, and there will be more legisla tion and additional taxes. Then, the colored people must be provided for, and somebody must pay for a^ graded school for them. And so it will go. If our people will study the question upon its genuine merits we think they cannot fail to see that the whole thing is ill-timed and un necessary and will entail a useless burden on the town. 4tb. But will not a graded school bring more people to the town, and will not additional population mean additional business and increased prosperity? We answer, possibly a few good citizens might come here mainly on account of the school. How much they might contribute to business prosperity, we are unable to say. We can only say on general princi ples that no town, heavily in debt, can afford to hire people to live in it, and that it is questionable whether a non-producing population is a benefit to a town or an incumbrance. Fur ther, we doubt the drawing power of a graded school. The graded school is no longer a novelty, it is almost a back number. Men with plenty of money don’t move off to a graded school, and if men with little or no money do so, it is because they hope to get from the town more than they give. The impulse to business which a graded school may give in Gaffney is exceedingly problematical. 5th. Finally, the amount of money wrung from the tax payers in our state and recklessly squandered on so called free education, is alarming. We have not all the figures at hand, but they amount directly and indi rectly to somewhere about a half million of dollars annually. No wonder taxes are high; no wonder assessments must be raised, when the authorities do not dare to raise the percentage. The whole thing is an outrage —wrong in principle and pernicious in results. Sam Jones never uttered a more pointed, palpable and forceful truth than when he said hero last fall, “The state has no more right to edu cate my child, than it has to .clothe and feed it.” Education conducted through the proper channels, de velops a spirit of self reliance, the product of which is a high type of manhood and womanhood. Free ed ucation nurtures a spirit of depen dence which tends to paternalism, and paternalism breeds socialism and socialism quickly hatches commu nism, and communism means revolu tion, anarchy and ruin. ENTRIES FROM OUR DAY BOOK. Our Legislature met last Tuesday. There are about 125 bills on the cal endar brought over from last session. South Carolina is surfeited—excuse the euphemism—with laws and law makers. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Our State is supporting too many colleges out of the public treasury. Some of them must go.—Representa tive Goodwin, of Greenville. Pointed, sensible and just. Come again, Mr, Goodwin. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.” This trite maxim applies with peculiar force to the small pox situation. Our town hac fur better spend a few hundered dol lars now in fortifying Itself against a threatened scourge, than thousands after It shall have made its appear ance. The negroes cannot an<. will not pay for vaccination. There may be some white families that will find it hard to raise 60c on each member. The town must protect all these In order to protect itself, if from no higher motive. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Our city council met last Monday and advised the people of Gaffney to be vaccinated ! That is weak. The doctors also met and agreed to do the work for fifty cents a head. That is strong. The situation is becoming serious. The colored people are the main source of danger. They are a rest less, moving mass, heedless of conse quences, peculiarly susceptible to small pox, suspicious of vaccination, and not one of them in ten will vol untarily go to a doctor and pay him fifty cents to be vaccinated. The council should act with more vigor and compel vaccination; and the doctors should act with more generosity and do the work at far less cost. No man should wish to make money out of an impending calamity. S——s The Union Meeting. The middle section of the Broad River Association will assemble with the Corinth Baptist church on Friday before the fifth Sunday in Jan. 18!>8, at 11 o’clock in the the morning ana will continue in session through Sat urday and Sunday. Devotional exercises Friday morn ing conducted by Rev. S. Blanton. Organization and enrollment of delegates. First Query:—What relationship does the Sunday school sustain to the church? Open address by Rev. J. A. Bell and followed by others. Second Querry:—What is the mis sion of the Sunday school? Open address by Rev. B. P. Robertson fol lowed by other speakers. Discussion of queries deposited in the question box. SATURDAY. Meet at 10 o’clock in the morning devotional services conducted by Rev. J. W. Walker. Reports by the delegates from the churches and Sunday schools repre sented in the Union. Third Qu‘Ty:—How can we be 4 improve the condition of our country churches? Open address by Rev. F. C. Hickson followed by other ad dresses. Fourth Query :—W’hat are the leading elements in a well organized Sunday school? Open address byT. G. Chalk followed by other speakers. Discussions of the querries depos ited in the question box. SUNDAY. A Sunday school massmeeting con ducted by Prof. S. A. Chambers. It will be expected that several bretbern will speak in this meeting this mass meeting will begin at 10 o’clock. The missionary sermon will be preached by Rev. J. A. Bell. Let each church and Sunday school send three delegates. Let the speak ers bear in mind their appointment and be present. It is hoped that those who read this notice will see that delegates are appointed by their respective churches and Sunday schools. Martinsville Minutes. (Correspondence of The Ledger.) Martinsville, Jan. 10.—Prof. Hammett’s school is progressing nicely since Xmas, with about sixty scholars in regular attendance. The crowd was small at prayer meeting last night at the church. The Sunday School has been sui- pended for a short time. The people on the upper end of the mail route want to change it from Forest City to Henrietta then to Spartanburg. It would then be more convenient for us people on the route, but inconvenient for those who don’t live near it. Your humble scribe availed himself of the opportunity of hearing Rev, F. C. Hickson preach at Macedonia yesterday. His text was St. Luke 16:25. Haden Cash and Sam Turner visited relatives at Gowensvilie recently. Miss Mazie Jarrett visited Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Swafford Saturday night. J. E. Martin is talking of going to Texas this year. I will ask the correspondent of The Ledger a question. Who aas it said “Give me liberty or give me death? j. n. c. There Is more Caturrli In this section of the country than nil other diseases pul to gether. ana until the last few years was sup posed to Im Ineuruble. For a great many years doctors pronounced It a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and con stant ly falling to cure with local treatment, pronounced It iticuniblc. has proven catarrh to be u constitutional disease, anti therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney A Co.. Toledo. Ohio. Is the only con stitutional cure on the market. It Is taken Internally In doses from 10drops ton tea- spoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case It falls to cure. Send for circulars aud testimonials. Address Klee's Goose Urease Llnament, cures all aches and pains. Hold and guaranteed by CmcKoaet Dku» Co. TUHE) GAFFNEY*SEMINARY, A High-Grade School for Boys and Girls. For terms and particulars address W. F. MCARTHUR, Principal. j-ao-tf Gaffney, S. C. Be Twisted the Llon'i Tall. Tho man Bitting on a salt barrol had a baud ou which only two fingers wen left, aud sizing him up for a veteran of tho war I asked him if he hadn't been wounded by an exploding shell. “No, not as I remembers of,” he re plied as he held up his hand and turned it over and over. “I thought that might have been the case, but you probably got caught in some sort of machinery?” “No, not exactly machinery, ear.” “Gun explode in your hands?" “No, no gun didn't explode.” I gave it up at that, but after a few minutes tho man looked up and said: “Stranger, you’ve seen a lion, I reck on?” “Oh, yes.” “Seen ’em caged and looking as harm less as cats?” “ Yes; they generally look that way. ” “That’s the way I sized up one in a cage in a circus. He lay there, looking so sleepy and good uatured aud harmless that I thought it was a swindle on the public and I’d try to rouse him a bit.” “Aud so you poked him?” I queried. “No, sir; no poking. I jest calculat ed to gin his tail about three twists aud make him feel that life wasn’t all beef aud bones and sunshine. I waited for my chance, aud then 1 reached my baud in. How far is it from a lion's month to tho middle of his tail?” “Several feet at least. ” "I thought it was about a rod, but I know better now. I hadn’t more’u gut hold of his tail when he got hold of me aud was gulping down them missing fin gers. He wanted the hull hand aud arm, but they beat him off. I thought at first I wouldn’t explain matters, but tbeu i thought I would. I look u good deal like a fool, don’t I?” “Hardly that. ” "Well, you do, and that’s why I ex plained. I was fool ’uufr to twist a lion’s tail, aud you may be fool ’uuff tc want to poke one in tho eye, aud so my advice is ‘Don’t.' ”—Chicago News. Cunt. Cant, meaning mock humility, took its name from the Rev. Andrew Cant, a minister in Aberdeenshire, who, during the time of tho Covenanters, was famed for his whining aud pretending fervor. The Arrow Hung In Midair. An actor tells tbo following story: I remember seeing at a German theater in Wiesbaden a performance of tho drama of “William Toll.’’ I was told by the manager of tho theater that the stage effects in the play were extremely fine, and that I was to wait until the scene where Tell’s splendid marksman ship was made apparent to see some thing that would astouish me. I did wait patiently as I could until that scene, and I was certainly aston ished. Tho scene arrived where Tell is to shoot tho apple from his sou’s de voted head. As I gathered from the subsequent occurrence, tho apple and Toll’s crossbow were connected by an invisible wire, along which tho arrow was to speed to tho target. At the proper cue tho arrow did speed half way toward the apple and there stuck, to all appearance in midair. In vain did tho doughty Tell shake his bow to “joggle” tho arrow to its mark. The son of Tell looked very frighten ed aud didn't know what was happen ing. The apple firmly fixed on his youthful cranium was bobbing about, the audience was laughing, aud the laugh burst into a roar when one of Geslcr’s guards, looking painfully like a gentleman who might officiate on one of tho tramcars during the day, took in tho situation and coming forward from his position at the side of young Tell, calmly gave tho recalcitrant arrow a smart rap with his spear, when it sped ou its way and buried itself in the apple on the boy’s head. —Pearson’s Weekly. Valnnble to Women. Especially valuable to women is Rrowns Iron Ritters. Backache vanishes, headache disappears, strength takes the place of weakness, and the glow of health readily comes to the pallid eheek when this won derful remedy is taken. For sickly children or overworked men it has no equal. No home should he without this famous rem*‘<lv. Browus’ Iron Bitters is sold by all dealers. Everybody Says So. Cascarets Candy Cathartic, the most won derful medical discovery of the age, pleas ant and refreshing to the taste, act gently and positively on kidneys, liver and bowels, cleansing the entire system, dispel colds, cure headache, fever, habitual constipation and biliousness. Please buy and try a box Of C. C. C. to-day; 10, ifn, .'>0 cents. Sold and guaranteed to cure by all druggists. Wasting in Children can be overcome in almost all cases by the use of Scott's Emulsion of Cod-Liver Oil and the Hypophos- phites of Lime and Soda* While it is a scientific fact that cod-liver oil is the most digestible oil in ex istence, in SCOTT'S EMULSION It is not only palatable, but it is already digested and made ready for immediate absorption by the system* It i» also combined with the hypophosphites, which supply a food not only for the tissues of the body, but for the bones and nerves, and will build up the child when ItS' ordinary food does not supply proper nourishment. -■ Be sure you get SCOTT’S Emulsion. See that the Dan and fish are on the wrapper. All druggists; 50c. and Si.oo. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, New York. DR. CHAS. A. JEFFERIES, Physician and Surgeon. SPECIALTIES:—SURGERY, EYE, EAR and THROAT. Cherokee Drug Co’s Store Telephone No. 40. Dr. C. T. LIPSCOMB, Dentist, Office over R. A. Jones & Co's Stare. Can be found at office six days In the week. J. E. WEBSTER, Attorney-A. t> Office In Court House. (Probate .1 udge'sofHee( Gaffney City, S. C. Practices in all the courts. Collec tions a soecialtv. w. iiArcr>iis, ATTORNEY AT LAW, HlaclcHtmi's; tincl Otiffuey, S. C. ILL practice In all the Courts. I can tie reached over the 'phone from Car- roll & Stacy’s Rank, at my office In Hlacks- burg. at any moment. O. L. SCBCMPEKT. TH08. B. BCTLEK. Wm. McGowan. SCHUMPERT, * BUTLER i & t McGOWAN, ATTOItn* kyh-at-i.aw . Union and Gaffney, 5. C. Very careful and prompt attention given to all business entrusted to us. fWPraetlce in all the courts. DR. J. F. GARRETT, Dentist, Gaffney, - - - S. C. Office over J. R. Tolleson’s new store In office from 1st to 20th of each month; At Blacksburg Thursday morning each week, returning to office at 2:30 Tax Returns FOR THE YEAR 1898. According to the law, the tax Ixxiks for the returns of the real and personal property for the fiscal year IWtS, will open on January 1st and close February 30th, Ihos. after which time the fifty per cent penalty will attach to all property both real and personal whose owners have failed to list for taxa tion. For the accommodation of the tax payers of Cherokee county for said year 1808, I will attend at the following places at the follow ing dates below named, to receive tux re turns: At Gaffney, Auditor's office. Saturday 1st January to Saturday 8th January. At A. II. Moore, (Moore’s Cross Roads) Monday the loth January. Kluckshurg, Tuesday and Wednesday, January llth and 13th. Grover (or Whitaker) Station. Thursday January 18th. Cherokee Falls Factory, Friday January 14th. Draytonvlllc, Monday, January 17th. Wllklnsvllle, Tuesday, January 18th. Surratt's store. Wednesday, January 10th. T. D. Littlejohn's store. (Dawkln’s Cross Roads) Thursday. January 30th. Tlmtxsr Ridge, Friday. January Slst Allen's (or liollnsvllle) Saturday January 23nd White Plains, Monday. January 34th Thlckety Station, Tuesday, January Sftth. Macedonia. Wednesday. January 3i>th Exell's, (Uattlegrounu) Thursday, January 37th. Maud. Friday. January 38th. Grassy PoucT Saturday, Januanr 30th. The Auditor's office, in Gaffney, from Monday January Hist, to February 3oth, at which time the Ixxtks will close and the fifty per cent penalty will attach. The poll tax attaches up to U0 years of age. except Confederate Soldiers where said taxes at tache* up to A0 years of age All laud owner* ktv requested l« asCvi lain the uuui- Ixt of acres they own on the 1st day of Janu ary 1808, and Its value, the number of build ings aud their value, all new structures and their value, also all real estate Ixtught or sold, who from or to, and price paid or re ceived for same. all merchants and hankers are required to make their returns ou blanks furnished from thW office and are requested to cull at the office for them. W. D. Camp. Auditor Cberokoe Go. Ohio River and Charleston Railroad. Tnr TIME TABI.K of the Ohio River and Charleston Railway company, to take effect Monday October 18th, at O.AO a. m. STANDARD EASTERN TIME. Dally Daily Except Except Sunday. Sunday. GOING SOUTH. No. as. No. 34. Lv. Marion 7 IK) k m 1 ao p m Lv. Kulherfordton.... 8 05 •• a as •• Lv. Forest City 8 30 “ a as •• Lv. Henrietta. 8 35 “ a 55 *• Lv. Mooresboro. 8 50 •* 4 *o •• Lv. Shelby « 30 •* 5 u0 •• Lv. Patterson •Springs 9 ao •• 5 45 - • Lv. Earls 9 :« •• 5 50 *• Arrive at lilacksburg 9 50 •* ti 10 “ Leave; Gaffney C 50 a m 7 15 p m Arrive Blacksburg 7 35 “ 7 50 •• Lv. Blacksburg 10 10 a m 8 Oo a m Lv. Smyrna 10 ao •• 8 35 •• Lv. Hickory Grove — 10 45 *• 8 45 “ Lv. Sharon 11 00 •• 9 10 *• Lv. Yorkvllle 11 15 “ 9 40 “ Lv. Tlrzah j,.... 11 37 “ 10 05 - Lv. Newport 11 aa •* 10 15 “ Lv. Rix'k Hill 1145 •• 10 40 •• Lv Leslies 13 05 p m 1 IK) p 111 Lv. Catawba Junction 13 15 •• 1 15 “ Lv. Lancaster 1 O' “ 3 50 “ Lv Kershaw 1 45 - 5 30 “ Arrive at Camden. ... 3 50 •• « 40 " UOlNO MOUTH. No. aa No. 35. Daily Thilly Except Except Sunday. Sunday. Lv Camden 13 05 p in 9 (K) a 111 Lv Kershaw 1 05 •• 11 10 •• Lv. Lancaster ■#. 1 45 *• 1 00 p m Lv. Catawba J unction 3 ao •* 3 40 •• Lv. Leslies 2 40 •• 3 55 “ Lv R.x k Hill 3>55 - 4 30 “ Lv. Newport a 10 •• 5 INI “ Lv. Tlrzah a 15 •• 5 30 “ Lv Yorkvllle a ao •• II (K) “ Lv “baron. a 45 •• 8 30 “ Lv. Hickory Grove . 4 00 •• fi 40 •' Lv. Smyrna 4 15 •• (I 55 •' Lv. lilacksburg 4 as •• 7 30 •• Leave Blacksburg t> ou a in 0 <81 p 111 Arrive Gaffney « 40 •• 7 05 •• Lv. Earle's 5 05 p m Lv. Patterson Springs 5 10 " Lv. Shelby 5 20 '' No. 8» N'h. II. Lv. Mixiresboro 5 47 u 111 Lv. Henrietta 5 55 " Lv ForestJClty. — « 12 " Lv Rutherford ton, fi 27 •' Arrive at Marlon 7 ao p m CONNECTIONS. No. :t3 has connection with Southern Rail- way at Rix'k Hill, and the S. A. L. at Cataw- ba Junction. Nos. IM and 3A will curry passengers Nos. H and 13 have connection at Marlon with Southern Railway. At Ibxldeys. Old Point, King's Creek and London, tralus stop only on signal S. ft LUMPKIN, U P. A. A. TRIPP, Superintendent. SAM'L HUNT, General Manager. Royal makes the food pure, whoicJotne and delicious. 1 POWDER Absolutely Pure ROYAL BAKING POWOCR CO., f.EW YORK. Ho ExproMM** Ills The injured football player gasped fu- breath. "I want”— bo whispered faintly. They bent over him anxiously. ”—to deny that football ia brutal ” Then he became unoonucious.—New York Truth. • allow scrofula taints to develop in your blood. Take Hood's Sarsapa rilla now and keep yourself WELL. A. N. WOOD, BANKER, does a general Banking and Exchange business. Well secured with Burglar- Proof safe and Automatic Time Lock. Safety Deposit Boxes at moderate rent. Buys and sells Stocks andBonds. Buys County and School Claims. Your business solicited. Piedmont Savings and Investment Company, GREENVILLE. S. C. Tills company has money to lend on Gaff ney real estate. Our loan plan is cheaper aud more satisfactory than the plans of any building and loan association offered in the- State. For our loan circulars, which tell^t\\ about our loan plan, call ou J. C. Jelfe^tcs, Esq.,our local attorney. 8-10-tf SOUTHERN RAILWAY. RIBB9SOXT A1B UNA. | MrtuStd. mt PaMMg.r Train* la MWot May % MSf. i i Mn-tS AaMy Van. M*. M »oUy. Ac. tan. rsewi Wo. M Dolly. W\ Til • • 47 • r*‘a 4 it a 4S7 a 4 80 a •141 a «S7 a t 11 a f *9 a. 7 93 a I® a »W a ISO p •40 » !.*• Atlanta, <1 T ^AtlsA*a.Ef. • Noraraqa • Bnfocd • GslnaevfNm.. • Lula • Oonteda....... Am. Mt. Airs U*. TotvxMl • WtMUutMtsr • Beueaa • Ositml “ OreaadUM... • BpsrtAnb*. „ • Gsffnsjr* • BUckxburfl.. - " Lv. CkarleMs.!!. A* DaavtUe ^ . T® a 190 a ru m 10M a 10 91 3 Ua> W 11 M a, 11® » 11*4 M uaous U 43 n lUp *81 p :s: isa ( *9 pi .i&s ic; I » • 0 p • ••• a i* i is: 'f M'p «• ••• iJtf: \W SI: 8 96p • op • . . • a •.*• ea • . •• • . ••••« • • a *# • a • . ttS • a • • • • • as»* ■S * • • 1 • • • • a • Am. BlekmvwA... • Q» a • ® a ArWaaMaftan.. • Baltm'aPRm. • Philodalplite. • MawYarT.. w m • * 90 a tdi • ••• •• •• •••« «•••••• • 40 > u» * 164 a 4*3 S- VM.MI No. SS Doll v. ▼•A No. n Dotty. No. 18 Dolly • .*•#•• . • 0 V «■• o. • ODS • , a a a • 0 a *o® ••0 noa 0 • ^ »•• . .•••»• 0•aa•#• • * •<•••• • van«D* • .•••*• Am Soo. tgi Is: 7 40 a • Ha • 80 a JJLS U U a T2P’ 5!5 d • • • • a . • • • • n ■•••vs. .. a* 1*. fclflUPOOd Utt » IQS a t« a Lv. AoavtOo ... . Ar. Chariot** .. . • Biackabarg .. •• Soffnays. ... • Bpartanbars. • Gr««nvUlo„.. " Central... . , " rganoa ■ W—tortnalas. : £&E • Lula - (4aln«avCTW... • LiiAxrd " Nororom ..... Ar. ANanla, X T. • sTj 1000 p 10® p Mil us: SI 8 i'U'a * • • • • • is": 0*0 • •S m IS 2 ••••••an M® a itita »*« P l&l I'iTp m ■J'6'1 4® o| 1119 a 11* p j*5 * • Up 4® p 819 pj 640 p cup «M p 7 80 p 7 M pj • 08 p *8 88 p OUT p • «P 10® p ibI