The ledger. [volume] (Gaffney City, S.C.) 1896-1907, February 10, 1898, Image 4
THE LEDGER: GAFFNEY, 8. C., FEBUUAI Y 10, 1898.
"X u ic l^E:r>oE:i^.
$i.oo per Year.
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY BY
Ed. H. DeCamp.
1'he Ledger is not responsible for
tbe views of correspondents.
Correspondents who do not contri
bute regular news letters must fur
bish their name, not for publication,
but for identification.
Write short letters and to the point
to insure publication ; also endeavor
to e^t them to the office by Tuesday.
All correspondence should be ad-
tressed to Ed. H. DeCamp, Manager.
Obituaries will be published at five
dents a line.
uards of thans will be published
•t one cent a word.
Beading notices will be published
At ten cents a line each insertion.
IMPORTANT.
Watch the date on your label and
if you are in arrears call in and settle
up. thus saving us the unpleasant
duty of mailing you a notice inform
ing you of that fact.
ENTRIES FROM OUR DAY BOOK.
The Columbia State must be far
gone in poetical iniquity. Last
week when we ventured to raise our
feeble voice in behalf of suffering
poetry and struggling genius, it flew
into an unpoetical frenzy, it stamped
its feet, tore its hair, bit its tongue,
embraced Coogler on Main Street in
maudlin tenderness, shed tears of
prosaic vexation, called us by ugly
names and gave us ugly advice, and
got up a spectacular exhibition
worthy of a whole company of Merry
Andrews at a Fool’s Feast. It even
went so far as to advise Coogler to
Bend us a volume of his poems
bound in morocco, which it knew he
could not afford to do, and assured
us by sundry implications that the
volume would contain for us the
seeds of death which, us soon as we
should see the author, would germi
nate into our complete annihilation.
If we could only have dreamed that
our meek words would have conjured
up such a scene of “fine frenzy roll
ing," we should have been dumb
with silence; we should have opened
not our mouth; we should have let
suffering poetry suffer on, and strug
gling genius struggle still. We bow
in humble apology to The State and
say as the immortal Lee said at Get
tysburg. it was all our fault.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
We hold Christian character to be
the corner stone of all true education.
The more mind is developed without
a corresponding development of char
acter, the worst it is for the individ
ual and the community.
We hold further that according to
the very nature of things a public
school aa such cannot develop Chris
tian character. It may happen to
have a teacher who will do something
In this direction, but even he will be
hampered by his surroundings and
by the nature of the authority under
which he acts, and cannot do the
work that he could do in a private
or denominational school.
If the Btate build individual char
acter at all, it must fashion it after
the model of utilitarian philosophy.
There is no God for a Btate; no
heaven; no hell; no future life. Po
litical sins are punished only in this
world. The third generation in this
country, after the Btate shall have
taken charge of all the schools, will
be a race of infidels. We argued this
question a year or two ago in a publi
cation of wide circulation, and there
was not an advocate of Btate educa
tion in South Carolina that dared to
attack us.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
If the policeman should do what
we suggested with a view of getting
up analogy for Prof. Hall where none
existed, i. e. work our gardens, &c.,
the object of the authority under
which he would act^would be to help
us along in life. It is claimed that
the government dispenses free edu
cation for exactly the same purpose.
Kjthere la no analogy between the two
cases, then we plead guilty to the
charge of knowing nothing about
analogy.
We do not compare the graded
schools with small pox, but the suc
cess of one vitb the success of the
other, and we did it in order to*show
that an evil thing can succeed as
well us a good thing, and that the
success of which our friends boasted,
was no proof of success. Prof. Hall
comments as if we n&d declared the
graded school to be like small pox.
The very nature of the argument re
quired them to be as widely different
as possible. When a debater resorts
to such expedients as this he gives
evidence of a great scarcity of argu
ments.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
When we condemn "an offshoot of
Yankea civilisation" because, as we
think, it hears a crop of evils, how is
it that “in order to be consistent we
must carry our condemnation further
and reject the electric light, the tele
graph, the telephone"—in a word,
all the good which that civilization
has produced! When we reject
Spies and Parsons, must we “in or
der to be consistent" also reject
Whittier and Longfellow? What
sort of consistency is that?
Consistency is a jewel, they say;
but this does not look well in its set
ting. It does not sparkle; it has a
faded, lack-lustre appearance. But
perhaps our “logic and mathemat
ics" have not taught us much more
about consistency than they have
about analogy. Bo this jewel is re
spectfully referred to Prof. Hall for
inspection and analysis.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
We yield to no man in our appre
ciation ol the blessings of education.
We believe and therefore assert, that
we have given more in time, thought,
work and money without any pecuni
ary recompense, to the cause of edu
cation, than any other man in Chero
kee county. And we are still willing
to spend and be spent in the cause.
We differ from some of our friends
only in regard to what true education
is and as to the means of obtaining
it. We heartily concur in all that
Prof. Hall has said about its benefits,
but we wish to remind him that in
his arguments leading up to those
benefits be has steadily kept out of
sight us being too evident to require
statements, that which logicians call
the minor premise, whereas this pre
mise involves the very point at issue.
This is a favorite trick of sophistry.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
According to the Columbia State
there is a small knot of disgruntled
politicians in Columbia, whose pur
pose is to get into office by reviving
factional strife. That game has
played out in this state. Those po
litical watchwords which four years
ago stirred the prejudices and pas
sions of the people, have lost their
magic. They are like Gov. Vance’s
barrel of sugar, they have “got
down to where they don’t taste good.”
The people have been doing some
thinking during these latter years,
and never again will this generation
allow itself to be fanned into a flame
of animosity and passion for the ben
efit of men seeking office.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
A man gathers strength and cour
age ami seif reliance by that which
he does for himself; there is nothing
in that which is done for him by an
other to call forth these sterling
qualities. Education proceeds from
within, not from without. We
wouldn’t give one young man, or
one young woman who has obtained
a liberal education by persistent ef
fort and sacrifice, by braving the
frowns of fortune and scorning the
discouragements, to which others
yield, for a whole river bottom full of
machine-made men and women.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
In our discussion with Prof. Hull,
we have tried to keep within the
limits of courteous debate. We have
had no personal feeling in the mat
ter, and can reciprocate the expres
sions of kindness used by him in his
last. Prof. Hall writes well, and if
he docs not argue so well as he writes,
it is perhaps because his side of the
question does not furnish the mate
rials for sound argumentation.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
Our Legislature is opposed to bi
ennial sessions. How could the dear
people get along for two years with
out laws fresh from the hands of
their makers. How could the neigh
borhood politician get in his; little
bill? And bow could the average
member draw his per diem and mile
age? You don’t see through this
thing, gentlemen of the affirmative.
Ever since the fiat of God went
forth that by the sweat of his face
man should eat bread, acquirement
in this world, in the true and broad
sense of the word, have been worth
just what they cost and have cost
just what they were worth. This is
a law which parliaments, and cong
resses and legislatures can never
annul.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
When we hear a man say that a
sister town carries a tax of 28$ mills
we naturally Infer that Jit is town
tax, unless otherwise specified, as
there would bo no necessity for men
tioning the state and county tax
which is the same to everybody in
the county. Prof. Hull will please
make a note of this.
♦ ♦ ♦ ■♦
We do not think, with one of the
opponents of the broad tire bill, that
It Is “ paternalism run mad." When
the State spends money on rosds for
the good of the people, It has the
right to dsmand that they should be
used in the manner that will result
in the least Injury to them.
♦ ♦ ♦ ♦
The fact that Prof. Hall has visit
ed the homes of those “not quicken
ed by the influence of the existing
schools, still does not explain why
a graded school would reach a
greater number of Jthose homes
than the existing schools do during
their free terms.
We are pleased to note that our
State Senator and both of our repre
sentatives are constantly at their
posts in Columbia and that their
votes are generally on the right side
of things. They are good and true
men and will do their duty as they
see it.
♦
The Child’s Prohibition bill re
ceived strong support in the House
on the first trial. If the Senate will
do its duty we shall have prohibition.
‘HManiSt*” and u Artiste. n
Wo observe with pain that impassion
ed press agents and would be genteel
persons persist in calling a female pian
ist a “pianiste," thinking thereby to
determine sex by the final letter. But
“piauiste” is the French word for pian
ist, and it is a masculine noun as well
as feminine.
And so there is a mistaken nse of the
word “artiste." Mr. Leonidas Swet,
the formidable pianist, is an artist, but
Miss Eugenia Hammcrkuis is a charm
ing “artiste," as well as a fascinating
“pianiste.” “Artiste," however, is u
French word and is primarily mascn
line. The English word “artist,” mean
ing specifically “one skilled in music,"
is as old as 1590—“argues a bad care
and a bungling artist"—and Addison in
1712 spoke of “that excellent artist
having shown us the Italian musick in
its perfection."
But this word is now obsolete except
as in the general application, “one who
cultivates one of the flue arts, in which
the object is mainly to gratify the es
thetic emotions by perfection of execu
tion, whether in creation or representa
tion. ” The word “artiste" is a reintro-
ductiou of the French word, “in couse-
qneuce of the modern tendency to re
strict ‘artist’ to those engaged in the
fine arts, and especially painting.” It
means a publio performer who appeals
to the (esthetic faculties, as a singer,
dancer or one who makes a line art of
his employment, as a cook, barber, corn
doctor. Thus Charley spoke in 1832 of
“the German artistes who did such am
ple justice to the choruses of the ‘Frei-
schutz, ’ ” and the “artistes ’ were male
and female. If the sex of the performer
must be indicated in one word, why do
not the anxious use the word of Horace
Walpole, “artistess," which means a
female artist? It is no viler form than
“artiste" m scxnal distinction.—Music
al Record.
The Blacks In Africa.
The traveler in South Africa is as
tonished at the strong feeling of dislike
and contempt—one might almost say of
hostility—which the bulk of the whites
show to their black neighbors. He asks
what can bo the cause. It seems to
spring partly from the old feeling cf
contempt fer the slaves, a feeling v.hkh
has descended to a generation that has
never seen slavery as an actual system,
partly from physical aversion, partly
from an incompatibility of character
and temper which makes the faults of
the colored man more offensive to the
white than the (perhaps morally us
grave) faults of members of his own
white stock.
It rarely if ever happens that a na
tive, whatever his standing among his
own people—for to the whites there is
practically no difference between one
black and another—is received within
a white man’s bouse on any social oc
casion. Indeed, he would seldom be per
mitted, save as a servant, to euter a
private house, but would be received on
tbe stoop (veranda). When Kbama, the
most important chief now left south of
the Zambezi, a Christian and a man of
high personal character, was in Eng
land in 1895 and was entertained at
luncheon by the Duke of Westminster
and other persons of social eminence,
tbe news of the reception given him ex
cited annoyance and disgust among tbe
whites in South Africa. I was told that
at a garden party given a few years ago
by the wife of a white bishop the ap
pearance of a native clergyman caused
many of the white guests to withdraw
in dudgeon.—“Impressions of South
Africa," by James Bryee.
• ' *— «•» — - —-
$ioo Reward, $ioo.
The readers of this paper will be pleaseil to
leitrn that there is at least one dreaded dis
ease that science has l>«:eii able to cure In all
Its stages and that ls<'atvrh. Hall’s Catarrh
Cure Is the only positive ctire now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh beln»r a
const itutional disease, requIn-K a constitu
tional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is
taken Internally, actiinr directly upon the
blood and mucous surfaces of tin* system,
thereby destroying the foundation of the
disease, and ylvliur the patient strength by
hulldluir up the eonstltutlou and assisting'
nature In doing Its work. The proprietors
have so much faith In Its curative powers
that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any
case that It falls to cure. Send for list of
Testimonials.
Address. F. .1. Chejckv k Co., Toledo, o.
Sold hy Druggists. 75c.
Hall's Family Fills are the best.
— • ♦ •— ■ ■
Don’t ToWrojSpIt asd Smuke Your Mfe Away.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag
neilc. full of life, nerve atul vigor, take No-To-
Uac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak meu
strong. All druggists, GOc or91. Curcguarun-
teed Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co , Chicago or New York.
Uon t Neglect Yonr L'wer.
Liver troubles quickly result i:i serious
complications, and the man who neglects bis
liver I ms little regard for health. A bottle
of Browns’ Iron Bitters taken now and then
will keep the Uver in perfect order. If the
disease has developed, I’towns’Iron Bitters
will euro it permanently, gtreiigth mid
vitality will alwr.ys f..;jn W its use.
Brtevus’ Iron Bitters is sold by all dealero!
If Rice Goose Grease don't cure your aches
and pains, burns, bruises and sprains, we
pay you money back.
DdPmi Dboo Co.
Back to 7rare*.
An Amsrican lately returned from
several years of travel in Europe tells
of an instance of New England thrift
which caino under bis uotico.
“In Italy,” ho said, telling the story
to a friend, “tlio authorities seem to
have a wonder;al faculty for scouting
out dutiable articles, and the traveler
over the borders from Franco often finds
liiuisolf relieved of an unexpectedly
large sum on this acco-nt.
“1 was one of a party of Americans
who crossed tho border in a comfortable
carriage one day last year. Our host
was a wide awake Connecticut man,
generous with his money, hut deter
mined not to part from it foolishly when
he could avoid doing so.
“There were fiva in the party, and
among other supplies for our delectation
on the road was a b:\sket cf grapes. Wo
started shortly after breakfast and in an
hour were over tho border iu Italy. Wo
were promptly assailed by a levier of
duties, who pounced upon tho grapes
and demanded a good sum for them as
imported articles.
“ ‘No, sir,’ said the Connecticut man
firmly, caring little whether what he
said was understood by the official, as
he intended to make his meaning clear
by action, ‘no, sir, we’ll eat our lunch
eon in France sooner than pay for those
grapes. ’
“And before any ono realized what
he was doing, back wo were in Franco
again, where wo sat, eating our grapes
in tho very faces of the Italians, though
without quite as much relish as we
might have had an hour or two later.”
—Youth’s Companion.
Tho Flrit Ecirntiflo Uiteflylns.
Tho famous kite experiment is de
scribed by Fraukliu iu a letter dated
Oct. 19, 1752: “Make a small cross of
light sticks of cedar, the arms so long
as to reach to the four co.mcrs of a
large, tkiu silk handkerchief when ex
tended. Tie the corners of tho handker
chief to the extremities of the cross, so
you have the body of a kite, which, be
ing properly accommodated with a tail,
loop and string, will rise in tho air like
those made of paper, but being made of
silk is better fitted to bear the wet and
wind of a thunder gust without tearing.
To tho top of tho upright stick of the
cross is to bo fixed a very sharp pointed
wire rising a foot or moro above the
wood. To tho cud of tho twine next tho
hand is to be tied u silk ribbon, and
where the silk and twine join a key
may be fastened. This kite is to be
raised when a thunder gust appears to
bo coming on, and tho person who holds
tho string must stand within a door or
window, or under some cover, so that
tho silk ribbon may not bo wot, and
care must bo taken that the twine does
not touch tho frame of tho door or win
dow. As soon as tho thunderclouds
come over tho kite the pointed wire
will draw tho electric fire from them,
and the kite, with all tho twine, will
be electrified and stand out every way
aud be attracted by au approaching fin
ger. And when the rain has wet tho
kite aud tv ino you will find tbe elec
tric fire stream out plentifully from tho
key on the approach of your knuckle. ’ ’
—Popular Ecienco Monthly.
Well
ClTildren
that are not very robust need a
warming, building and fat-forming
food—something to be used for two
or three months in the fall—that
they may not suffer from cold*,
SCOTT'S
EMULSION
of Cod-Liver Oil with Hypophoe-
phites of Lime and Soda supplies
exactlv what they want* They
will thrive, grow strong and be
well all winter on this splendid food
tonic. Nearly all of them become
very fond of it. For adults who
are not very strong, a
course of treatment with
the Emulsion for a couple
of months In the fall will
put them through the
winter in first-class con
dition. Ask your doctor
about this.,
B« aur* you got SCOTT’S Emulsion. Sot that ths
nan and fiah art oa tha wrapper.
AU druggists; >o». and fi^o.
SCOTT a BOWNE, Chemists, New York.
Obio River and Cbarleston Railway Co.,
CONJUNCTLY WITH THE
Sooth Carolina and Georgia Railroad.
Sciizuri.E In effect October IHth. 18l»7
SOUTH CAROLINA AND GEORGIA.
NOUTH BOUND.
Lv. 7 10 a. in.
Lv. H 57 ’’
Lv. 10 25 “
Churlesto*.
Hniiicli vllle.
Kingsville.
HOUTII BOUND.
Ar. H 00 p. m.
Ar. 5 55 "
Ar. 4 44 ’•
OHIO RIVER AND CHARLESTON.
NOUTH BOUND.
Lv. 12 05 |l. ID.
Camden.
Kervliuw.
Lancaster.
Catawba .I'ct.
Rock Hill.
York vllle.
Black-burir.
Shelby.
IIcih letta.
Forest City.
KuD.erfordtoii
Marlon
SOUTH BOUND.
Ar. :i oo |>. m.
Ar. 2 oo| ••
Ar. 1 On •*
Ar. 12 15 ’•
Ar. II 55 a. m.
Aril 15 “
Ar. 10 10 ••
OArr.NKT DIVISION.
Lv. 0 p. in. Blacksburg. Ar. 7 25 “
Ar. 7 05 •• Gaffney. Lv. 0 50 “
Trains nortb of Camden run dally except
Sunday.
Trains between Clinrlcrtou and Kingsville
run daily.
For Information as to rates. Clyde (dm*
Sailing, etc., call o:i local contracting and
traveling agents of Itoth roads, oi
L. A. EMERSON. T. N., E. F. GRAY,
S. C. A U. R. R.. Truffle Manager.
Cbarleston, S. C. S. B. LUMPKIN.
Oen'I. Pass. Agent.
Blacksburg. B. 0.
ttntvorslsy of Pennsylvania.
The annual report of Provost C. C.
Harrison of the University of Pennsyl-
vania, which has just been issued, gives
much information regarding that insti
tution. Ho speaks as follows of the
needs of tho university: “Wo may con
fidently look to the whole state of Penn
sylvania and, I hope, soon beyond tbe
limits of tbe state for the snms of mon
ey necessary to carry on our work. The
needs of the nniversity at this time are
great iu amount and pressing iu their
urgency. We need a building for our
graduate echo'd. We need a physical
laboratory. Y7o need a university gym
nasium. We need a great law school
building. Wo need a huild.ng for our
school of architecture. We need a com
mons hall. We need to continue the
dormitories, to erect new and important
medical laboratories, to remodel tho vet
erinary department. We need scholar
ships and fellowships. We need moans
for tho thousand snd ono minor mat
ters, each ono of which is of importance
to some individual teacher at the uni
versity and which should be provided,
and last, tot not least, wo need a uni
versity chapel."
Colorado's Mineral Collection.
Daring the past two years, with an
appropriation of bnt $15,000 for tbe
necessary expenses, there has been col
lected, classified and arranged in the
basement of tbe state capitol a collec
tion of minerals which is far in advance
of any similar collection in tho mining
states of the country and is in many re
spects superior to the best collections of
tho older universities of tho country and
in some of its special features has no
snperior in tho world. Not long since a
professor iu the mineralogical depart
ment of Yale college spout eight hours
per day for three weeks in studying the
collection and said that he had never
seen its equal An attache of the Brit
ish museum, who visited Denver a few
weeks ago, said there were specimens in
the collection which could not be dupli
cated in any museum in Christendom,
and for ono of tho specimens he offered
fl ,200, frankly statibg that it was tbe
finest of tbe kind in existence.—Denver
Republican.
Something to Know.
It may be worth something to
know that the very best medicine for
restoring the tired out nervous sys
tem to a healthy vigor is Electric
Bitters. This medicine is purely
vegetable, acts by giving tone to the
nerve centres in the stomach, gently
stimulates the Liver and Kidneys,
and aids these organs in throwing off
impurities in the blood. Electric
Bitters improve the appetite, aids di
gestion, and is pronounced by those
who have tried it as the very best
blood purifier and nerve tonic. Try
it. Bold for 50c or $1.00 per bottle at
DuPre Drug Co’s.
Petition for Homestead.
Htatk or South C’aroi.ina, t
County or chehokee. (
Notice Ik hereby given that Mrs. Marillu
Bolin has applied, hy petition, to me to have
a homestead in the personal property of her
late hushand, Green Bolin, oeceaseii, set off
to her.
.1. Eh. .1 KEFEttl EK,
t’l’k C. C. P. A G. S. for Cherokee Co.
Gafeney, S. C..
January 17th. IW#. 4t
DR. J. F. GARRETT,
Dentist,
Gaffney, - - - S. C.
Office over J. R. Tolleson’s new store
In office from 1st to 26th of each
month;
At Blacksburg Thursday morning
each week, returning to office at 2:30
dr. CHAS. a. jefferibs!
Physician and Surgeon.
SPECIALTIES:—SURGERY, EYE, EAR and
THROAT.
Office, Cherokee Drug Co’s Store
Telephone No. 40.
Dr. C. T. LIPSCOMB,
Dentist,
Ofiice over R. A. Jones A Co.'s Store.
Cun be found at office six days in the week.
J. E. WEBSTER,
Attorney-Lra-w,
Office In Court House. (Probate Judge'sofflec(
Gaffney City, S. C.
Practices in all the courts. Collec
tions a soeoialtv.
IV. W. HARDIN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
lilcxckaburic ami Oaffney, 8. C.
W ILL practice In all the Courts. lean
be reached over the 'phone from Car-
roll A Stacy’s Hank, at my office In Blacks
burg. at any moment.
O. L. Schumpert. Thou. B. Hutlem.
Wm. McGowan.
SCflUIPEKT, t BUTLER I & t KcGOWAY,
ATTOR-M EC Ytt-A.T-X,A. W.
Union and Gaffney, 5. C.
Very careful and prompt attention given
to all business entrusted to us.
|3^"Practice In all the courts.
Piedmont Savings
and
Investment Company,
GREENVILLE. S. C.
This company has money to lend on Gaff
ney real estate. Our loan plan Is cheaper
and more satisfactory than the plans of any
building aud loan association offered In the
State. For our loon circulars, which tell all
about our loau plan, call on J. C. Jefferies,
Esq., oar local attorney. s-is-tf
Royal makes tbe tood pure,
wholesome and deltclfy.
&AKIH0
POWDER
Absolutely Pure
ROYAL BAKING ROWOtR CO., NEW YORK.
Explaining Ills Delinquencies.
Papa—James, they tell mo you aro
at tho foot of your class.
James—Yes, sir. To secure a full
knowledge of any subject one must get
down to the root of things, you know.
—Chicago Journal.
-take only the best when you
need a medicine. Hood’s Sarsapa
rilla is the best blood purifier, nerve
and stomach tonic. Get HOOD’S.
Bonds,
notice.
!'<>r Officers—Judl
eiuls.Executors, Ad-
m l ri I st nitons’ and
Contractors,at short
For Sale
REAIv ESTATGJ
1 lot 80x200 ft. on Logan street.
The Dr. Homes 8 room house with fine gar
den, stables and out buildings attached.
> room cottage on Limestone street.
1 room cottage on Gaines street, with splen
did garden.
» vacant lots on Gaines street.
1 splendid farm containing 50 acres H miles,
from City Hall.
1 house and 5 acres located at Limestone
Springs.
1 new <i-room Cottage East Logan street.
50-acre farm within city llndts. at a bargain.
80-acre farm 1 mile from tbe city.
STOCKS
14 shares Gaffney City Land and Improve
ment Co., stock.
5 shares Blacksburg Land and Improvement
Co., stock.
10 Shares Lockhart Cotton Mill Stock.
3 Shares Richland Cotton Mill Stock.
3 Shares Victor Cotton Mill Stock.
50 Shares Limestone Springs Lime Co. stock.
74 shares stock Gaffney Mfg. Co.
Insurance!
1 represent none but the best of Fire
Life aud Accident Insurance Companies.,
Am prepared to furnish cyclone and UW
nado Insurance at moderate cost. •
Your patronage will be duly appreciated
. O. GStsxcy.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
Condensed Schedule of Pawonger Trains.
In KflfeoS dannaey IS. 18BS.
Korthbonnd.
Lv. Atlanta, C. T.
“ Atlanta, A T.
“ Norcross
• Bnford
M Gainesville...
" Lula
Ar. Cornelia.
Lv. Mt. Airy
“ Tooooa
“ Westminster
“ Seneca
“ Central
• Green viTle,..
" Spartanburg.
•• Gaffneys
" Blacksburg.
“ King’s Mt ..
" Gastonia...
Lv. Charlotte...
Ar. Danville ....
Ar. Richmond ..
Ar. Washington
- BfcltmVPRR
** Philadelphia.
• New York
No. IS
Dally
700 s
8 00 a
0 80 a
1005 a
10 86 a
10 58 a
1126 s
1180 a
1180 a
1281m
12 63 p
1 40 p
184 p
8 87 p
420 p
4 88 p
6 08 p
6 26 p
6 80 p
11 26 p
600 a
12 00 m
1 08 p
8 80 p
Yiep
6 ti
11 61
60S a
0 42 a
8 00 n
10 16 a
12 48 m
4 86p
li?
?SS
8 OOp
8 Up
11 80 p
12 60 a
T r a
Pst.MI
No. 30
Daily.
8 28 p
Southbound.
Pet. Ml
)fo. »S
DaUv.
cnrrinnE
” Philadelphia.
“ Baltimore....
*■ Washington..
Lv. Rlohmoad
Lv. Danville
t r. Charlotte ...
v. Gastonia
“ King's Mt ...
" Blacksburg ..
M Gaffneys
* Spartanburg.
“ Greenville..*.
*• Central
“ Seneca
* Weetminster
" Tooooa
“ Mt. Airy
“ Cornelia
“ G^esviiu;;:
• Buford
" Norsroes
Ar. Atlanta, K. T.
Ar. Atlanta, C. T.
4 80 p
6 86 p
• 80 p
18 48 p
12 00
0 16
10 00
10 40
iis
12 8*
1 86
12 80 at
10 48
10 68
11 84
12 80
No.ll
Dally
1100 nt
hi* if.
Sax.
0 88 a
017 •
T» «.
If:
»a» s
180 a
’’A" a. m. • , ff”p.m. ‘11’' noon. “N" sight.
Nos. 17 and US—Dally. Washington and: xth-
wvstern Vestibule Limited. Through Pu .nan
sleeping oars between New York and Now Or
leans. via Washington, Atlanta and Montgom
ery, and also between New York and Memphis,
via Washing too, Atlanta and Birmingham. First
class thoroughfare coaches between Washing
ton and Atlanta. Dining oars serve all meals
en route.
Nos. 80 and 8^—United States Fast MaU
runs sol'd between Washington end New Or
leans. via Southern Railway. A. 4k W. P. ft. ft.,
and L. A N. ft. ft., being composed cf baggage
car aad coaches, through without change for
passengers of all clasuea Pullman d; awing
room deeping oars between Now York ana
New Orleans, via Atlanta and Montgomery.
Leaving Washington each Wednesday and Sat
urday, a tourist sleeping car will ruk through,
between Washington and Han Francisco
Without change.
Nee. 11, $/ and 18—Pullman sleeping ears be-
twaa* Richmond and Charlotte. vU Denvllle,
eocth.'iound Noe. 11 and 37, northbound No 18
Ths Air Line Belle train, Non 17 aad 18, be-
tweob Atlanta and Oonselia, Go., dally ex
cept Sunday.
F.B GANNON,
Washington
W. A TOT*.
8. M. HABD
Ast'tUen'l ~