University of South Carolina Libraries
4 'TilEC I^ICl>OK K. $1.00 per Year. ftJBLIPHKl) KVKhV THTRSPAY EY Ed. H. DeCamp. The Ledgeh i" not responsible for tb*j 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 Correspondents who do not contri bute regular news letters must fur bish their name, not for publication, but for identification.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 get them to the office by Tuesday. A.11 correspondence should be ad dressed to Ed. H. DeCamp, Manager. Obituaries will be published at five jents a line. Cards of thanks will be published #t one cent a word. Reading notices will be published 4t ten cents a line eadh insertion. IMPORTANT. Watch the date on your label and it 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. I’auties wishing the address ef their paper changed to another post- office must give the name of the office where they have been getting it as well as the one where they want it changed to. COOGLER AND WHITMAN. We have at last had our curiosity gratified, and, we must say. our por tion of enjoyment in life increased, by an examination of Coogler s vol ume of “purely original” poems. It seems that both the literary and the political world of South Carolina must now and then relax from the strain of serious business and get up some huge, side-splitting jokes to vary the monotony of earnest life and to refresh and reciperate the drooping spirits of the public. So, literature, or perhaps we should say poetry, brings forth Coogler, and asks its devotees to look at him and laugh until they are satisfied, and politics trots out Whitman as the biggest, best, and most appropriate joke it is able to produce. Rut jokes sometimes rebound, some times overwhelm, and sometimes are overwhelmed ; sometimes carry more pungent truth with them than the most solemn arguments, and some times elevate the joked into a hero and recoil on the jokers to their ut ter confusion. Let us trace a f *w points of re semblance between those two men who occupy so wide a space in the public ga/.e; the one in politics, the other in poetry. In lh« fi r8t place they are both purely original. No one can read a page of Coogler s poems intelligently and apprecia tively, without realizing in his inmost soul that the glittering gems that dazzle his eyes, are fresh and pure from nature’s mint; and no man could listen five minutes to Whit man’s oratory without being im pressed with the fact that his thoughts and words are emphatically his own. Then each in his line has said or written things that are unique, true, and impressive. When the divine a Hiatus is at its height in Coogler, he breaks away from the shackles { ot such common-place things as rhyme, rhythm and measure, and sings as freshly and unartistically as a bird just escaped from a cage. No man with natural feeling and sentiment can read “Footprints by the Mill,” “The House of my Youth,” “Some Day,” and such sentimental produc tions of the poet’s pen, without having sweet and holy memories awakened in his own bosom, and true and tender associations called up from the depths of the past, to cluster again fondly and lovingly around his own heart and to fill hia whole soul with the fragrance and melody of by-gone years. If this is not poetry, what is it? 80, Whitman, when he rises to meet a crisis, brushes out of his path all conventionalities, scorns all tricks, rules, and enibellishmeuta^of rhetoric, and rushes straight to his object with the force of a torrent, the roar of a locomotive, and the fury of a tornado. He ran the race for Governor on a stong platform; he told the people many strong and wholesome truths; and but for the fact that he could never get them to consider him seriously—they insisting all the time that his canvass was a huge joke gotten up for their special amusement—he ought to have been the next Governor of South Carolina. Right here the people have been inconsistent. They seemed to think it would be carrying the joke too far to vote for Whitman and make him Governor, while they carry out the joke with Coogler and buy his books and encourage him to write more. They have either been unjust to Whitman, or more than just to Coog ler. “Who can answer a sneer?” says Pope, Coogler, say we. He can and, THE LEDGER: GAFFNEY, S. C., SEPTEMBER 15. IPHS. does a:i?wer it with two thousand : tion of wealth er poverty. The old dollars laid up for a ra;ny day the j Greek philosopher had it down about proceeds of the sale of twenty-eight ; right when he declared him the rich- | hundred volumes of his poems. If j the political public had treated Whitman with the same consistency and consideration that the poetical part of it did Coogler, then Whitman, too, could have answered it from the Governor’s hair in the Executive Mansion. We beg to complete this parallel by borrowing the form of one be- ! tween two noted poets, traced by a master hand. Whitman sometimes is vehement and rap'd; Coogler is always smooth, uniform, and gentle. If the flights of Whitman therefore are higher Coogler continues longer on the wing. If of Whitman's fire the blaze is brighter, of Coogler’s the heat is more regular and constant. Whitman often surpasses expectation and Coogler never falls below it. ENTRIES FROM OUR DAT BOOK. Money on call in New York has risen within the last month from Ij to d per cent. We suppose as the season bus advanced the “calls” have multiplied. If one of those fellows would come down South and hang out a shingle announcing money at il per cent, wt assure him that he would not lack for “culls.” Accordino to the bureau report the eondi ion of cotton greatly dete riorated during the month of August. The average condition on Sept. 1st is put down at a fraction over 78. "I lie world may not be glutted with cotton after all and a kind Providence may continue to look after the cot ton raiser until he shall learn to look after himself. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ The sympathies of the whole country go out to Gen. Wheeler in his great sorrow caused by the loss of his son. The young man with an other young cavalry officer went in surf-bathing, and they were both drowned. Young Wheeler was about IS years old, was a naval cadet, and had been aid de camp to his father in the Santiago campaign. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Let us while showing that the dis pensary will not satisfy us, show also that prohibition will not satisfy us either. We can’t show that if we vote for a candidate who represents prohibition above everything else.— The State. And how did you show it, pray, when you voted for Ellerbe, who so far as the present issue is con cerned, represents the dispensary above everything else? The dispensary is a nuisance, a cor ruption, a tyranny, and an all-round unmitigated evil. Therefore, support it and uphold it in the person of Gov ernor Ellerbe, lest prohibition, which is an effort to banish this evil, should prevail, and we should find it more difficult to get rid of prohibition than the dispensary. That is about the argument that the Columbia State has been spreading through its col umns for the benefit of the voters of South Carolina. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ The newspapers contain many cards of thanks from defeated candi dates. Mr. Epton who was defeated for (Comptroller General is specially profuse in his expressions of grati tude to the voters who supported him and of forgiveness and good will to those who supported his opponent. These cards, If sincere, are exceed-4 ingly graceful. They however, seem to us to breathe the spirit of “try- ’em-again.” ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Gen. Gordon of Georgia declines to serve on the committee appointed by the President to investigate tbe cases of alleged mismanagemsnt of officials connected with the army, and assigns unstable health as bis only reason. We are glad Gen. Gor don declines. Such a business would not suit him nor any other gallant Confederate who fought a hopeless war for four long years and seldom had time or inclination to investigate anything. LetSnorthern men do the investigating. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ The Empress Elizabeth of Aus tria was assassinated at Geneva, Uwitzerland, on the 10th inst by an anarchist named Hucchoni, who stabbed the empress with a three- cornered file, killing her almost in stantly. The murderer was hunting other game, he said, but failing to find it, concluded that the empress would do. Rhe is said to have been one of the best women In Europe. The laws of Hwltzerland do not allow capitsl punishment, and the mur derer can only be imprisoned for life. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ It is not what a man has, but what he wants, that determinea tbe ques- est man who has tbe fewest wants. We have right here the most prosper ous and abundant country on the globe. If we are not happy it is be cause our wants outstrip our means, and our enjoyment of what we have is killed in the strain of our efforts to acquire more. He who learns to adapt his wants to his means instead of continually straining to bring his means up to his wants, will enjoy all of the contentment and happiness ever allotted to this life. The season for saving fodder has been peculiarly unfavorable. Fully one half of the fodder gathered has been materially damaged. The re sult will be a great scarcity of good fodder next spring and summer. This scarcity should now be anticipated and relieved by a big crop of hay, which can be had for the gathering. A man can pull crab-grass bay with his hands in his corn field faster than he can pull fodder, and where he can get at it with a grass blade or a horse mower he can reap a barn full before he is thinking about it. Gather the hay, cut the pea vines, sow outs, and provide against a scarcity of fodder. It will be too bad. after this abund ant year, if any farmer have to feed his stock next spring on northern hay atl^ca pound. We have always heard it said that politics makes strange bed-fellows. We never expected, however, to find the Columbia State and the Dispen sary pigging together in the same bed. When we can’t get the bed fellow that suits us, we ll take a whole bed to ourself; and if we can’t get that, we’ll sit up and doze in the corner. We’ll be blanked and blanketed before we will ever sleep with a fellow whom we have abused like the State has abused the Dis pensary. If the other fellow would let us lie with him our conscience would disturb our slumbers, and we should expect to see the dagger which appeared in the vision Macbeth with out being able to grasp it, and to hear that same voice crying. “Sleep ro more! Macbeth doth mJrder sleep, the innocent sleep.” ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Never before in the history of this country has there been a time more favorable to the wage-earner than the present, because never before wou!d ( a dollar purchase so many necessities, comforts, and even luxuries, us it will now. And then the beauty of it is that in this part of the country at least, wages have not fallen with the fall in everything that a man eats and wears. The wages of a common day-laborer are today substantially the same that they were twenty-five years ago, while the wages of skilled labor are perhaps higher. There is perhaps no class of wen for whom in telligence, honesty and industry have a greater money value than for those who work for wages. The laborer who possesses these requisites can always get work, and can have com forts and luxuries in his home which the rich, seventy-live years ago, could not obtain. Mr. Strain Denies the Charge. Mr. Editor:—I feel very much like devoting the entire space you so kindly furnish me weekly in your paper, to a defence of myself against the cruel false and malicious changes of “C. B. K.” who has apparently taken the trouble of reviewing our late campaign, and who so unjustly accuses me of saying anything against my opponent Prof. W. F. Mc Arthur. As you have already given it the lie, I feel that anything from me is unnecessary, only, I wish it dis tinctly understood, that I am too much of a gentleman to use the lan guage attributed to me before tbe high-toned, intelligent audiences I had the honor to address during the campaign, and especially against the man, whom every one who heard me will bear me out, that I pronounced him a gentleman. So far as what is said of the other candidates they cun speak for themselves. I repeat, that no man woman, or child—white or black—ever heard me utter a word, or an insinuation against my oppo nent, either in public or private that I could not use with the utmost pro priety even in the presence and hear ing of the most refined ladies of the land. I announced at the first or Owen’s Ford meeting ; that it was my business and it would be a pleas ure to meet any charges that might be brought against me, and that I wanted them sprung right at home, xmong my people, who knew me and whom I had served as an officer for many years, and on whose judgment and verdict I would rest my case. No charges were brought, and I had none to answer. That I have ene mies I am well aware, and I always expect to have them as long as wife beaters, gamblers, blind tigers, cut throats and outlaws generally infest j our land. Rut I w'ould not do one of ) them an intentional injury. I will take the liberty just here to ! thank the people of Cherokee county for the flattering vote I received on the HQth ult. And especially do I thank the soldier boys for the com pliment they paid me by their votes. 1 hope that each one of them may soon return to their homes crowned with all the honors of war and be the recipients of the nation’s gratitude. And I'assure them, one and all, that my loyalty to them and their interest will always remain unbroken, and that I will always be found contend ing for the best interest of Cherokee county and its people, especially its Respectfully. J. L. Strain. children. Ascaris Lumbricoides. I Democratic Journal of Medicine.] The republican party in Tennessee is in a bad fix mentally, morally, and physically. It has eczema, bowel trouble, fainty spells, elephant itch, and general debility. Realizing that immediate and active measures must be taken, its leading physicians were called to meet in convention in Nash ville, and after a careful diagnosis it was finally decided to administer “Fowler’s solution” in small doses. Fowler’s is a weak solution, how ever, and will afford only temporary relief. "The republican party is really suffering from ascaris lumbricoides,, and in November the democratic doc tors propose to take the case and ad minister a dose of McMillin vermi fuge, warranted to remove them in twenty-four hours. A Card. To the voters of Cherokee county. Gentlemen : I take this method of thanking you both collectively and individually, for the liberal support given me last Tuesday, iftJth ultimo, and of asserting that my loyalty to the best interests of Cherokee county and its people, has not In the least been diminished by reason of my de feat at she polls. I feel assured that my canvass will in a large measure, accomplish the object for which I made it—the bet terment of the free school system in Cherokee county. This done, I bow submissively to the will of the peo ple and assure them that their in terest shall be my interest, and to the accomplishing of that end will I direct all my efforts. Respectfully, Jam. L. Strain. Negro Hands Conceded a Failure. (Moutliurn iiiKiWi-Kteru TcxtllciF.xcelidur. I The Charleston, S. C., Cotton Mills, which have been trying the experiment of working negroes, are about to change the methods of their operations. The full complement of 28,000 spindles and 720 looms were never in full operation, and a propor tion of white hands were employed all the time, in addition to the white overseers. As has already been sta ted in these columns the Charleston Cotton Mills have gradually ceased operations until lately the only machinery In motion were a few thousand spindles in the basement, producing some yarn for the market. We hear now that it is the intention of the above company to shortly start up their factory with white help. Lat* to bed and early to rise pre pares a man for his home in the skies. Early to bed and a Little Early Riser, the pill that makes life longer and better and wiser. Cherokee Drug Co., Gaffney. Blacksburg Budget. (Correspondence of The Ledger.) Blacksburg. Sept. 6 —Our Gradou school will open on Mo* day. r-cx' with the following teachers in charge , viz.—Mr. N. N. Cameron. Elkton, Maryland, Principal—Miss Jess - H. Lockhart, Atlanta, G»-. Corwile. Ridgeway. 8. C.. Miss ! .or,- K. Chapman, Anderson. 8. C.. a:.d Miss Saliie C. Corwile, Johnson 8. C. The principal. Mr. Cameron, taught here as assistant to the su- perintendency last year and M-si ftnd Miss Chapman were also teachers in the school lu?t year and it is needless to say that they were all employed again simply upon their merits and fitness for the places as signed them. The two other young ladies come with highly complimen tary testimonials. And 1 feel pretty safe in predicting another very suc cessful and useful school year. General manager Rands of the South Casolina and Georgia R. P. , was here yesterday in his private car on business connected with the < >. R. & C. people. I regret very much to say that his presence here at this time means thar several changes will be made in the management of the O. R. & C. roads, and several of our best citizens,who have been itnployed in the repair shops, will loose their places. Of course this will be done to curtail the expenses of the Rail way, but for awhile it will wor>c unite a hardship qpou some of our good citizens. W A. I>. —» *— The only difference between med dling and investigating is that you always investigate and the other fellow meddlers. ,$■ i Advice to | f Consumptives, There are three great rente- Z dies that every person with ♦ weak lungs, or with consump- i tion itself, should understand. \ These remedies will cure • about every case in its first t stages ; and many of those I more advanced. It is only ♦ the most advanced that are « hopeless. Even these are $ wonderfully relieved and life X itself greatly prolonged. ♦ What arc these remedies ? | Fresh air, proper food and ♦ scoff’s Emulsion 1 of Cod-Liver Oil with Hypo- I phosphites. He afraid of | draughts but not of fresh air. X Eat nutritious food and drink X plenty of milk. Do not forget J that Scott’s Emulsion is the j oldest, the most thoroughly X tested and the highest en- t | dorsed of all remedies for % | weak throats, weak lungs and | i consumption in all its stages. X 50c. and $1 00: ill druggists. Z SCOTT it B0WNE, ChemUti, New York. ♦ 9—** ! A. K. HAWKES RECEIVED MEDAL Highest towd Diploma af Honor For Superior T-on* UrindinK and Kxeellwicj- In ilw* If Miufi'-tiiro i-f Spoi-WvcU-i mwl Err gIamm. soM in U.ikiOCttK'* nn<l Towim in tbe IT. S. Mont i’opular Ulaerc*; in (be U. M. ESTABLISHED 1870. ft a II T I A II TlIKgK h'AMOfP tiLAHSM If AU I IUN Ask Nkvkk I'kdim.bd. “These (itmous irlasses for mile by S. B Crawley & Co. Ohio River and Charleston Railway Co., T 1 ME T A It LK of the <) ti lo It i ver u nd Charles ton Itullwiiy Company, eonjunetly with the SotUh Curoliiiit and Oeortthi KiiUroad. HCIIicnilhK In effect May Hit h. tSUS. There,J| m*>re Catarrh In this section of the country Than nil other lUsrttsoH put to- Ki-ttier. mM until the lust few years whs sup- postftf to. U> Incurable. For a Brent ninny •tstust I* A» I .11.- mid stunt propound enturrh to be n constitutional dls therefore requires constitution*! Hull's Cutarrli Cure, msnufui Cheney ft Co.. Toledix Obt stltutfoiiftl cure on the rtW inlertislly In doses from lOdrjous ton ten- hpoonful. It sets directly on fhe blood and mucous surf sens of the system, The* offer out- hundred dollars for any < HW . u fnils to Add' f ° r ' Hr<!UlHrK “ n, > testimonials. 7“ J. ft.,Ip., Toledo. O. Hold by druggists. 75c. ? DR. J. F. GARRETT, Dentist, Gaffney, - - . S. C. ... c Officu over J. R. TolleBon’s new store lit office from lat to 2(>th of each month; At Blacksburg Thursday morning each week, returning to office at 2:30 Hall's Finn •re the Vnlw.au tm Especially valoabls to Iron Bitton. Backache disappears, strength to) weakness, and, the glow eomss to the pel I iff ir! derful remedyle token, or overworked men it has should he without thi Browns’ Iron Bitters is 'omen is Browns’ ishas, beadocli* the ploee of health readily when this won- 'or sickly children o equal. No home famous remedy, dd by oil deolera. Buy your Of ’lades Ini H. K' floodellTsclentitle nations of the eye free. jiptlclan. Fxat,'l- J. E. WEBSTER, A-ttorney- ffloo In Court House. (Probate J mice's offleo Gaffney City, S. C. Practices in all the courts. Collec tions a specialty. DR. S. H. GRIFFITH. Physician ini Suftoii In addition to * yencrul practldo, makes a specialty of diseases peculiar to the eye, ear, nose and throat; Is fully prepared and equipped for iierformlinr all operations com- tng within the scope of modern aural, nasal mid opthalmlc surjrery. (Hasses tilted with sdentldc skill and accuracy, office over J. K. Tolleson's store. •Phone No. 71. KOKTII norM). Maatcrn Time. SOl'TH M .. N l). XI It A. XI. (S. C. A. (i.) P. M. Lv. 7 10 CHAULKSTON A r. x 00 •• II on HKANril VILI.K •• 5 47 •• HI 10 KINGSVILLE •• 4 2K P. M. (O. U. ft (J.) »•. M. 12 (IT. t'AMHKN *• 2 :ti •• 1 or. KF.KSHAW “ l ;ai •* 1 no LANCASTER •• 12 50 •• 2 :to CATAWBA JUNCTION •• 12 05 “ 2 55 ROCK HILL - 11 45 •• :i;«) YOttK VILLF. “ II 05 •' 4 ;t5 IILACKHHUUG •• |o 00 '• 5 10 EARLS •* » 30 •• r. 20 I’ATTERSoN SPRINGS •* 0 25 it no SHELBY •• !l 10 “ tl 40 LATTIMOKE •• X 20 •• « 55 MOORESB0R0 •• x 10 '• 7 10 HENRIETTA •• 7 no •• 7 lift FOREST CITY •• 7 25 - H 10 RI'THF.KFORDTON •• rt 55 •• h :io MILWOOD •• rt;» “ X 5ft GOLDEN VALLEY. •• « HI *• II 00 THERMAL CITY •• « 05 •* W 25 GLENWOOD •• 5 40 Ar. « 50 MARION Lv. 5 20 P. N. A. M. GArrNKV Bkaxch. MONTH I HOPTH HOtTKI). HiiHNn P M P. M. Ar 7 50 BLACKSBURG Lv. 5 id - 7 36 CHEROKEE FALLS “ 5 15 Lv. 7 15 GAFFSK) Ar. 5 :i5 P. H. rri , .. 1 P. M. Royal make* tbe food pure, wholesome and delioou*. &AKIN0 POWDER Absolutely Pure novii. tAK’NO PC VCES CO., SEW YORK. This Girl Wishes to Marry. (Correspondence of The Ledger.) Thk’KETY, Sept. —]ri replying to Mr. Joe E. McArthur’s advertisement in last weea’s Ledger for a wife Mr. McArthur is very hard to suit hut your wants shall be supplied. I can cut wood, milk, cook, and do most any thing that is to be done around the hou^e. I would like for you to call and see me on the sub ject we can understand each other by talking. Hoping to hear from you soon. 'I our loving friend, 8M ART G:uL. WOU MUST have pure blood for ■ good health. Hood’s Sarsaparilla purities the blood. Take Hood’s Sar- saparilla if you would BE WELL. A. N. WOOD, BANKER, does a general Banking and Exchange business. Well secured with Burglar- Proof safe and Automat ic Time Lock Safety Deposit Boxes at moderate rent. Buys and sells Stocks andBonds. Buys County and School Claims. Your business solicited! SOUTHERN RAILWAY. CoiwWmwM. flvtwwlato of eVuewgrr TmklaSt^ In Effect ftajawt 7, 19M HwKtbfeoaiul. Vee. Ho. 18 No.UBjto. as Ra. l*»llT Dsttr- tea. VC oeUHiaseer Hrnaoa Coatral,. — ••t-ocortn..,. Sportaabarg. £*. ftT. 7 » 00 mi * Attaint*, £ T. i»(w » 1 00 Biifrird.. .... Wtt a, .. ... GntnfwvlUu...tJOlLaiiw pJ7ft1t< Labi. I*® U ? !*-P t Ocenetta. tArtnfsob .Jlt-ftAry H " Twotw...... U U3 • > LVUlia, .MtXv ^p! J*- 'V 6 22 Oi 9 K5p V US 8 Of Ar. AOiertle. uo; v c iu eoo p 1 1 K a 8 26 a 4 01 a 4 ^ a 4 6) a 5 46 a 0 37 a 0 45 a “ ttafflxT’s • BlMcMforg “ Kunr'!* Mt .. “ 0A«tuat>.... L*. Cbnrlort* Lv. (rreeneUwo. Ar .Nertotk ▲r DanvtQe Sr. btSmondL 4 80 p 488 U 6 03 p tap SS&dats p J w p T 16 a 7 88 a 7 58 a 8 80 a U 86 mil 61 10 80 p|. 7 86 a| ■ . 8 40 Ai MbtAJCtata .... *• PHIL “ PhUniiOTphtai “ )i*w Ywk ...L • • • . 6 48 .8 00 10 15 'IS 49 Ev n: t.'.p: •' PbLMetpbi* * Baiurnyre. . “ W aahlugtnn. Cv. BicbmenJ Lv. Danville _ Lv . J4. eMlk. At lirei-UMboro 1 85 q a Z6 p 0 85 e w 5 rl'at.Ml Vml ■d. lNo. 35 No. ST. Daily fjDallVi Daily. I R.R.'inrt 4M “rr )tata.4899 t» 665 pi fTiOnt 5 50 m 006 u W 00 p 6 90 ». Lv GreeiulfJoro t r. Cbartotte v.OMtonii : •-'6 p 1000 p 10 40 p niurg Gnffuer* . Ml 91 U 46 p 10 56 , 7tt a fir, ‘SS ^ 884 P Lv. Aabeville. 0 00 p J* 10 * Mportechur*. 12 28 GremWIte... j 1 85 • 18 » Cuatral ix. -- •4-44, Heneqa '* 90 • 1 98 w i-stiulniter 1 a 11 34 *. 8 IS P ii “ Tuouoa : Si.'MlZ.: : * Lula * (JetaeaVtlle * Bofard “ Noneroa* At Atiaata, ^.T. a 686 p “ «10 p 8 26 » 2 16 p 660 p | 786 p jS T 49 p P 814 pi 4 15 086 a 867 a «00 4 85 a'l^T p 5 <0 p 7 » a 6* * •« pi 6W a 6 10 a 4 65 p-40 80 p. 080 a 6 10 a 8 65 p 9 IIP pi 8 80 q Ar. Atlanta, C. T. 6 10 a 8 55 p. 0 30 SaXCSCiM NOON tlixSr Ev. Atlanta. Ar. Non;rope, eaafra time EvlKorcroea. eaeter? time Ar Atlanta, central time. -RTTr _LiL8 2 80 p 290 | A” a. m. ^p. m '•*" doom. | Clue*peek* Un* Mtenmer* la dally aarrlo* between Norfeik and Balt I more. Nee. 87 eaira—Dally. WaatuufVaaaagBoath* wrwteru Veedtml* limited. Through PaBnmi tieepinf e*n between New Yorit aid New leant, na Waahlafton, Atlanta and Stcaitfom- tryjwd a4eo between New York and Hemphw. viewaqbuiftaaiAUeuUandBtHBlagbaoi- Hr«t ft wont A' •re* all meeu cart 1 and Atlanta, en route. afeettoe at “srv ,oruu«kf«re *o*<ih*« 1 AtbutU. Din lac « Pullman dr*wing d Uta* for hreektaet. SO—Tnited Statee feel Melt isrtr. Train* korth of Cemdeii run dally except Bunday. Train* Imtwt'uu (iiarli’Nt'oVi and Klnirsvllh' run dully. For Information ax'to niton. Clyde Line Salllntr. ftc-.‘ all 011 h« , :il oontrutfliug and travrllmr aKentH of both road*, or L. A. KMKBBON. T. M., K. F.OKAY. S. C. ft U. K. 11.. , Traffic Miuiatier. Charlexton, H. O. Cincinnati. Ohio H. H LUMI’KIN, Geb'l Freight and I’axx. Agent, Blacksburg, 8. C. |s«sewf T id Moo Mi ornery aeeoay. a tourist ‘lea Freiadxoo'idlthaut change .lag fUvoin RleaetaffGerwbetwwue Atlanta I—Pullman ICherUntSjTtalJAnvIlik o*. 11 and ST. ntrfthlKJuej; No%