University of South Carolina Libraries
OMR A DE M* Hm DoLong p i iuylerTllle, N. Y., who served In ftny E, Sth Vermont Volunteers, bad foci to battle with after his return i the late war. Be recently wrote: **l have used Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine for nervousness brought on by the use of tobacco and too close applica tion to business. It gave me prompt relief without leaving any unpleasant effects. The result was beneficial and hating. I heartily endorse it.” OR. MILES' Restorative ervlne i sold by all druggists on guarantee, &rst bottle benefits or money back, ak on heart and nerves sent free. Miles Medical Company, Elkhart, Ind, N. WOOD, BANKER, \ a general Banking and Exchange Lasiness. Well secured with Burglar- )f safe and Automatic Time Lock, fety Deposit Boxes at moderate BUt. JBuys and sells Stocks andBonds. lys County and School Claims. Your business solicited. ‘or Picnics and Lunches We have a nice line of Can tioods. such as VEAL LOAF, LUNCH TONGUE, TURKEY, CHICKEN, CHICKEN a la Maringo CHIP BEEF, HAM, CUTLETS, &c. ( Call aud see us or phone No . 79 SPARKS & HUMPHRIES.' Leafing Confectionors. 1801-1900. iOUTH CAROLINA COLLEGE, COLUMBIA, C. A. B., B. S., A. M., LL.B., L. I. Courses, ^prlntf Courses free for Teachers. Fourteen 1’rofetArs; U.OHO volumes in library; excel lent laboratories, class rooms, iryninasium. Infirmary, athletic grounds. Tuition $40. •ther fees $1H, a session; tuition remitted to needy students. Expenses $135 to $175 a ses sion. Certified Pupils from forty-five Accre- tted Schools enter its Freshman (.Mass wlth- ■tut examination. Entrance and Normal Scholarship Exam inations held at every county scat, Friday, "luly 90.1900 by County Superintendents. Next session opens Sept. 26, 1900. For catalogue, address, F.C . WOODWARD, President. «3moe !. J. Fs GARRETT Dentist, [Gaffney, - - - S. C. Loe over J. R. Tollesou’s new store In office from 1st to 26th of each ■month: I Dr. C. T. LIPSCOMB, Dentist, Office over R. A. lone, ft Co.'e Store. Oas to touort at office six davs In the week | 4). K.Dune*«, O.P. Sanders. W.8. Ball. Jr DUNCAN, SANDERS & HALL, Attorneys-at-Law. lee over .1. R. Tolleson's & Co.'s Store. J. E, WEBSTER, | Attorney- A. t- w 9 Office In Court Bouse. (Probate. Judge suffice Gaffney City, S. C. Practices in all the courts. Collec- I Mona a specialty -f J. C. JEFFERIES 4- OAFFNEV, S. C. OMamevcUl Law. Corporation Lnv Beal Estate Law. Money to toan on approved security. IAMBS A. WILLIS, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ojvr'r“NH7'v. h%. c;. Notary Public In offi<M). Prompt attention given to all business. Oflloe over IL A. Jones ft Co.'s store. I. Ou>dob Wallaox. J. ohnkuus Otts. WALLACE ft OTTS, LAWYERS. AU toetnass Intrusted to us, given prompt and vtgorus attention. Office up stairs, next to K. A. Jonas ft Co. 'Phone 97. Notice. In accordance with an act of the General Assembly passed the ]7th Feb., lHWall regis tration tickets Issued prior to April 1st, 1990, uiw hereby called in. All persons holding registration certificates sued before April 1st, 1900, will either pre- thrm in person or send them so as to •ecure a new ticket. We will be In office on the first Monday In each month. H. A. Tata W. H. Dknpsxy J. A. WMJ*o«AfiT, M$-tf Supervisors of Registration. ■w THE FAMINE IN INDIA.. ■k BY JUSTIN E. ABBOTT OF BOMBAY. *^818^ EIGHTEEN YEARS RESIDENT IN INDIA. A famine the most widespread and severe of this century now darkens the whole of western and central India, an area equal to Now England, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan and Wis consin. Sixty million people are Involved, of whom probably 10,000,000 will perish unless aided. The living skeleton Is the indisputable evidence that the resources of the people are exhausted. Along the highways, in lonely J ii^JBimitllill 1199 Duuuai SKELETONIZED BY FAMINE. passes, by stream beds that give no hope of water, weak and emaelntod hu man beings are falling and dying by hundreds dally. Great numbers who reach relief camps are past help, and the very food they ravenously eat kills them. Children, orphaned or deserted, are picked up by scores as they wan der. Terrible tales are told by eyewitnesses of these helpless little ones be ing devoured by dogs and jackals. The cause of the famine is the failure of the monsoon rains from June to October last year. The farmers, who number SO per cent of the population, were already impoverished by the fam ine of 181)7. Expenditure of every kind was stopped; hence the laboring class and artisans have had no work. The British government Is relieving the sit uation by gratuitously feeding the In firm, the aged, the emaciated and the children. The nhlebodied are employ ed on cash wages in building reser voirs and irrigation works, railway em bankments, roads, etc., which will greatly mitigate future famines. About (5,000,000 are now In dally receipt of of ficial relief. Connected with the camps are hospitals where those In the ex- tremes of emaciation are nursed back to strength. The death rate Is by far the greatest in the native states where government control is least. Here, however, the government is assisting by loans of money and of the services of experienced officers. Already the authorities have spent $17,000,000. With the failure of crops in the fam ine area there began a flow of grain from other parts of India and other countries. From Burma alone there was imported in ten months 427,000 tons of rice, worth $70,000,000. Mer chants have carried grain everywhere, and the price has remained fairly uni form at a cost only twice that of ordi nary years. There are millions of peo ple, however, who have no money and no work. It is these moneyless mil lions for whom help or death Is the only alternative. In spite of all that can be done by the government there is a vast field for the private charity now being so splendidly supplied by America, Britain and her colonics and various European countries. Doubtless the most efficient agency ior distribution of this private benevolence is the body of several hun dred American and European missionaries fix ated In the famine districts, whose experienced services are freely given to this work of humanity. Missionaries supplement official efforts by assisting as many as possible to reach relief camps. Those too weak for the Journey, unprotected young wo men, mothers with children and deserted orphans, are given refuge and tender “WHAT WILT. YOU DO WITH ME?” [Famine girl not too far gone to save.] GOVERNMENT RELIEF WORK-MAKING A REtiERVOUi. care. Weavers and other petty artisans sire supplied with work which pre vents the breaking up of their homes. Industrial schools are maintained Which iu II few months give boys a training that makes them self supporting. It Is the duty and privilege of every one to have some share in this sacred work of humanity. Money may be sent to Brown Bros. A: Co., f>9 Wall street. New York, treasurers of the committee of onp hundred, William E. Dodge, chairman, and Dr. Lcander T, Chamberlain, ewuiive diivrfor, Jiy whom it will be cabled promptly to the responsible end representalive Aup^ico-Indlgp relief committee, under the chairman ship of United States Consul William H, Fee. »t Bombay, with the veteran missionary, Itobert A. Hume, as execu tive secretary, This committee aids and co-operates with mir heroic follow citizens of all deuomluulfims iu Die famine districts. The New York committee of one iiundrfitl on Indian famine relief co operates with committees of the same name in Boston, New Haven,Baltimore, Washington, Indianapolis and other cities, each of which 1ms charge of the work In Its own section. The commit tee announces that, thanks to the hearty assistance of the press of the [Jpited States and the express compa nies, H’/ilcli forward gifts without charge, It has rpppjved contributions amounting to flOtMXNt, (tn rppplpt of a postal addressed “Committee of Om< Hundred, 73 Bible House, New York,” supplies of illustrated literature are sent without charge and expressage free. The help of individuals, clubs, lodges, Ittlfor imhms. employers, pro prietors of hotels, ehureima, Sunday schools, youug people's societies, King’s Daughters, etc.. Is sought In dlstrlbut- h A rfiV hOTBjm njfFOKK pig yAnjNg. Jug Dils literature and organizing relief movements. Two cents u day will save Ufa and $2 will provide work for u famished person until the next harvest. The Ledger will acknowledge and forward to the proper parties any contributions its readers may make to this cause. Let us who dwell in God’s favored land help the unfortunates of another clime. PROHIBITION WANTED. ‘•liiM'helor” Gives Ills Views Upon the Subject. Buffalo, Aug. If),—R. A. Moss & Co., began threshing about the 20th of June and finished yesterday. They threshed between nine and ten thousand bushels of grain, mostly wheat. Who can befit that? The writer wishes to suggest that the people of Cherokee county arrange and have a joint debate on the whisky question by senator B. R. Tillman and Rev. F. C. Hickson. It would be a rare treat, and one longs to hear these two able antagonists cuss and discuss the dispensary lay. If this country hud plenty of sal vation there would be no need of prohibition. If men had their hearts full of the grace of God they would keep the whisky out of their stomachs themselves. The writer is willing to venture the assertion that if every church member in South Carolina would quit patronizing the dispensary that it would die of its own accord within less time than twelve months. There is just as much of an alliance between church members and our state government to keep the dispensary alive as there is between the preachers and ex bar keepers to kill it. There isn’t a shadow of a doubt hut that there will be more money spent at the dispensaries at Blacks burg and Gaffney between now and the first day of January next than there will he spent at every church in the whole county for pastors’ salaries and ;or sending the gospel to heathen lands, and u large percent of it will come right out of the pock ets of church members. Instead of Bending missionaries to far off China and other benighted countries we ought to be begging and praying that missionaries might ne sent into this county. Who can deny that there are not heathen right a mong us? Judas Iscarot has, for nearly 1‘JOO years been looked upon with the profoundest contempt because he betrayed his Lord for thirty pieces of silver but are there not men in numerable all around us who are professed followers of that meek and lowly Nazarene who would betray or sell out their interest in His cause for a drink of the chemically pure that is sold by the State dispensaries? Have not the preachers as mouth pieces of God, the right to warn these whisky drinking church members that they are going down to a drunk- ard’s,a hypocrite’s a tra lo ’shell and that every advocate of the sale of liquor is iu alliance with the devil to drag them there? Bachelor. WHEELER FAVORS BIO ARMY. It Is the Only Safeguard Against the Hon ors of Wa?-, He Says. Chicago, Aug. 11.—General Joseph Wheeler made a strong plea for the standing army in his convocation ad dress at the University of Chicago. Ho declared that the most certain way to avoid the desolatiou and the horrors of war was to be constantly ready with men and arms for every emergency; that (he only security for peace was to be always prepared and ready to engage in war. At the close of the address General Wheeler was cheered by the students, many of whom are from the Southern states, and when the univer sity band struck uptho tune of "Dixie” enthusiasm rose to a high pitch. General Wheeler’s topic was "Our Pacific Possessions.” He briefly traced the history of development of the islands recently acquired by the United States and gave the results of his own obser vations as to tho resources and possibil ities of our new dependemhes, He said tho destiny of tho human race was to be guided in the future largely by the government of the United States. "We are now a great world power,” he said, "and the destiny of the human race is sure to Ixj guided by the influ ence of this government. They should be impressed with tho memory qf tho flag floating over tho schoqlimuso, and songs breathing patriotic devotion with in its walls should be indelibly con nected with tho first impressions of tho youth of our laud.” FELL THROUGH SKYLIGHT. Georgian Meets With a Serious Acci dent In Chattanooga. Chattanooga, Aug. 11.—Tom Tallent, a farmer residing near Uloud Springs, Catoosa county, (ia., was tho victim of a s rious accident in this city. He was visiting n friend, D. O. Ward, an em ployee of Citico furnace, who, with his family, occupies a suite of rooms on tho third floor of the building at 721 Market street, the ground floor of which js oc cupied by Heudersoq’s bookstore. Just after din nor Tallent, boiug op. pressed by the heat, stepped out through a window ni>on what no took to be a stretch of roof, hut which was in reality a skylight. Ho wont through wiih a crash, falling to tho ffix)r below, a dis tance of nearly 18 feet, alighting on a box of school books. Tallent was stunned and seriously cut aboqt tho head, shoul ders and hands. His right shoulder WiV* also (lisfi)oated. GUDGER’S NARROW ESCAPE. American Consul Writes of the Revo lution Iu Panama. Asheville, N. O., Aug. ii.—A letter from Consul General H. A. Gudger fcq his son, Francis Gndger, who is hero, tells of the windup of the revolution in Panama. Mr. Gudger was practically in the heat of the last buttle. The main part of the fighting occurred about three quarters of a mile from the consul ate. Bullets struck the house, and Mr. Gudger had a very mirj’ovy escape ffqm death while going to’tho cable office. Tho revolution was a genuine war. In this last txittlo there were from f>.‘>0 to <500 revolutionists killed or wounded, and of tho government forces from 260 to 800. "Hy baby was teyrjbly sick with thu diarrhoea,” says J, !L IJoak, of Williams. Oregon, ‘‘We were unable to cure him with tho doctor’s assis tance. and as a last resort we tried Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. 1 am happy to say It gave Immediate relief and a complete pure,” Tor s[}|e by C||ero- kee Drug Co. Contentment is better than riches, but it takes about the same amount of money for one as tho other. For, fy the body to resist malarial germs by pnHi r| g ih? ln ppr* feot order- P»M<’g|-Y A|i|i HmE#» i» a wonderful system regulator. Hold by Cherokee Drug Company. GOVERNOR M’CORD* Recommends Pe-ru-na For Catarrh. Hon. M. H. McCord. Hon. Myron H. McCord, Ex-Governoi of New Mexico, in a letter to Dr. Hart man, from Washington, D. C., says: Dear Sir—At tho suggestion of a friend I was advised to use Pe-ru-na for catarrh, and after using one bottle I began to feel better in every way. It helped me in many respects. I was troubled with colds, coughs, sore throat, etc., but as soon as I had taken your medicine I began to Improve and soon got well. I take pleasure in recommending your great remedy to all who are afflicted with catarrh,—M. H. McCord. The spring presents a much more favorable opportunity for the perma nent cure of chronic catarrh, especially old, stubborn cases. Now Is the time to begin treatment. Insist upon having Pe-ru-na. There are no successful sub stitutes for this remedy. Send to Dr. Hartman, Colmni us, Ohio, for a free ca tarrh book. BLACKSBURG BUDGET. Personal PHnigrui>lis About Our Friends IJevof'I the liroad. (Correspondence of The Ledger.) Blackshurq. Aug. 16.—Mr. J. R. Hcalan, and his charming daughter Edna, returned home Saturday from a visit to Hickory, N. C. Misses Allie Gaston, Blanche, Wil lie and Minerva Bridges, three of our fair young ladies, spent Sunday with their friend Miss May Bell Simms at Sharon. Dr. W. E. Anderson spent Tuesday at Hickory Grove. Miss Mattie Krox left Monday for Clover, where she will visit her many relatives, Harry Neal, of Yorkville, was in our city last week. Latta Parish, one of York’s popular young men, who has been visiting Dr. Deal of this place, returned to his home Sunday. Ernest Adams spent Sunday at Sharon. Misses Viola and Alice Mercer re turned home Wednesday from Grover, where they have been for a few days. Miss Lillian Massy, ofTirzah, spent a few days with Mrs. A. A. Osborne this week and left Thursday for Ashe ville. Misses Una Paysdur ana Lizzie Con ner, two very attractive young ladies who have been visiting Mrs. Osborne, returned to their home in Lancaster Thursday. Motin Starr, who !g now staying in Gastonia, spent Sunday with bis mother of this place. Mrs. W. Aikens, of Toccoa, Ga., is visiting her sister, Mrs. Jennie Rob erts, of this place. Misses Aljna Hood, of Chester, find Iona and Maggie Byars, of Sharon, are the guests of Miss Florence Dye. John Hambi'lck and his sister Miss Bertha, of Boiling Springs, are visit ing Miss Minerva Bridges of thii place. Louis Knox went to Grover Wednes day "on business.” Miss Era Flack, of Rutherfordton, is visiting Miss Minerva Bridges of this city. l. h. r. KellKloua Kt-tulinj-H. Beginning with next Sunday the Methodist will hold their services in the city hall. Sunday school, Sun day morning at 10 o’clock, preaching at 11 o’clock. Union services in the evening will be continued at the Presbyterian church. A protracted meeting was com menced at Sardis Sunday night at 8:30 by the pastor, Rev. Sum T. Creech. Mr. Creech has achieved projiounced success as a revivalist ar d his meetings are always iriterest-< iup. The regular services were conduct ed at Gelhsemane last Sunday by the pastor. The revival closed at Wilson’s Chapel Sunday afternoon at 51 o’clock. Mr. Creech is very well satisfied with Ihe results of this meeting. Where the ht-Kkloii* Wfli l*e Held, Chairman W, T, Thompson an nounces that the day sessions of the Broad River Association will ho held in the auditorium of Limestone Col lege. The night sessions will be held In the First Baptist church. The reasons for holding the day sessions at Limestone are that the national advantages for such an occasion are superior. The committee on enter tainment have made this arrange ment. Tho dummy will run at con venient hours in the morning and af ternoon for the accommodation of the people to attend the meetings at the college. "Through the months cf June and July our baby was teething and took a running off of the bowels and sick ness of the stomach.” says O. P. M. Holliday, of Dawlngi Did. "IDs bowels would move from five to eight times a day. I had a bottle of Cham berlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diar rhoea Remedy in the house and gave him four drops in a teaspoonful of water and he got better at once.” Hold by Cherokee Drug Co. A gentleman must kiss every lady he is introduced to in Paraguay. It ia the custom of the country. If your brain won’t work right and you miss the snap, vim and energy that was once yours, you should take j.y Ash BmSRI* |l cleanses the system and invigorates both body and brain. Hold by Cherokee Drug Company. Keep Kool. In order to do so these hot days and nights you should go to Goudelock’s for a suit of light underwear. Ladies’ Vests, 5c, 1 Oc, 15c to 35c. Gent’s Vests, 15c to 40c. Gent’s Elastic Seam Drawers, 65c. The Royal Atwood’s Suspenders, From 25 to 65 cents. A cut price on all Lawns, Pk’s, Muslinsand light summer fabrics. A few pairs of light summer pants to close below cost. Come early, if you can; come late, if you must; come any way. J-1>. oott lyi^r^oo re. Fire, Accident, Rent, Life, Health, Steam Boiler. Indemnity Bond. Money to Loan. UllgfO. $5$. 1 >0(10 111) off. Insurance and Keal Estate. Commercial Printing Of every description executed with neatness and dispatch at The Ledger office, Gaffney, S. C. New Type, New Presses, the finest quality of Ink and Paper, and Compe tent Workmen. Send us your orders. S. C. Sc G. E. R. R. CO. Schedule No- 4. In Effect 11:01 A. M.. Sunday,December 24th, ’99 Betwen Camden,S.C. and Blacksburg,S.C. WEST. EAST 35. 33. 32 34. 2d Class 1. O ■71 w* EASTERN TIME. 1st Class * O 8 fti x: — u. Le O cc c f* B U ft* O to ¥ a ■ ■ p Od STATIONS. I cl CL £ ~ r’Oc< - llgiSI m Wx Dally E xcept Sunday. P. M. H 30 P. M. 12 50 CAMDEN P. M. 12 35 P. M. 5 30 9 50 I 15 DEKALB 12 03 4 50 9 30 1 27 . . WESTV1LLE 11 50 4 30 10 50 l 40 . KERSHAW 11 35 4 10 11 20 2 10 HEATH SPRINGS 11 30 3 15 11 35 2 15 .PLEASANT HILL 11 15 3 00 12 30 2 35 ...LANCASTER 10 55 2 35 1 00 2 50 RIVERSIDE 10 40 1 00 1 20 A 00 . . Sl’UINGDELL. 10 30 12 40 2 30 3 10 OAT AW IIA JUNO 10 20 12 20 2 50 3 30 . ...LESLIE 10 10 11 00 3 10 3 40 .... ROCK HILL 10 (8) 10 40 4 10 3 55 NEW POUT. .. 9 35 8 20 4 45 4 03 .. TIRZAH 9 30 8 CO 5 30 4 20 ... YORKVILLE ... 9 15 7 30 (S (HI 4 35 SHARON 9 00 0 50 6 25 4 50 HICKORY GROVE 8 45 6 30 6 35 5 O0 SMYRNA 8 35 0 00 7 00 5 30 .. BLACKSBURG... 8 15 5 30 P. M 1* M. me. ■ ■■ A. M A. M. COUTHERN RAILWAY. Oondenaed Schedule of Panenfer Trains, In Effect May 6th, 1900. Horthboaad. Lv. Atlanta,CT '• Atlanta,ET ^ N«-oro«»a.. “ Buford “ Gainesville “ Lula “ Cornelia... ** Mt. Airy.. Lv. Toccoa Ar. Eifxjrtou, Lv. Eiiwrton, tv. W’minuter. “ Soneca... •* Central... ** Greenville. “ boar’burg. “ Gaffney.... " I'.xokxburg “ KiJitf'eMt." Gustonin... Charlotte.. Gro'n.boro «« 4* Ar. Lv. Gre’nsboro Ar. Norfolk . Ar. Danville.. Between Blacksburg,S.C., and Marion,M.C. WEST. EAST. Ar. Richmond. Ar. W’hington. “ h’inore R rt “ Ph’delnhia. " New Vorx. i 1 33. 13. VI (A on « rt j? X d 0 rr» 0 0 S Cl A EASTERN TIME. el * | L u •d K c z Ce 1 s— % 0) X •2 STATIONS. x 1 * ! AW >. ■ 1 > * >. ~ r. ~ ? 2 ~ * 3 > t ^ 7Z m x ! A. M. P. .M. A V. »-. M . ‘ * 10 5 39 ULA< KKBURO .. 7 4* tt 40 8 31) 5 1., EARLS ... 7 32 « 20 8 40 5 50 PATTERSON SP'Of 7 25 « 12 9 30 0 00 SHELBY . . 7 15 tt (8) 10 00 tt 20 ... LA I El MORE tt 55 4 to io 10 tt 2* . MOORI SBORO.. U 4* 4 40 10 2. 0 3s ...HENRIETTA tt 3- 4 20 lo 5o ♦i D.'i I OREST ( ITY tt 30 3 to; 11 15 7 10 Rl TIIEKFORDTON tt 05 3 25 : 11 35 7 33 MILLWOOD 5 53 3 05 1 11 45 7 35 GOLDEN VALLEY 5 40 3 to 12 or, 7 40 THERMAL ('ITY 5 37 2 45 12 35 7 to GLEN WoOD... 5 17 2 21) U 8 15 MARION 5 00 2 00 *. M. P. M. A. M. P. M. Southbound. Lv. N.Y.,Pa.R. “ 1 h'dufphia. “ fial t future.. “ Wuub'ton.. Lv. Richmond.. Lv. Danville.. iV. Norfolk. . r Gre'naboro WEST. Gaffney Division. EAST. 1st Class. 1*1 Claa*. 15. 13. EASTERN TIME, ii. — s-.a.5jj I|1 I Si —W 9 a STATIONS. 0 * H 5 P M A M A M P M 1 00 « 00 BLACKSBURG 7 50 3 OO 1 20 « 20 CHEROKEE FALLS 7 30 7 lo i 40 1 40 tt 40 2 20 P M A M A M P ■_ Lv. Grr''nsboro Ar. ( harlotte.. Lv Gastonia.. “ Kiii/s Mt.. •* biU-kKburg “ Guff.iiy. •* Spar'bnrif. •• Greenville “ Central ... '* 8ene''u •* W’minster. “ Tom..H ( Lv. V. ■ „ -i ton.. Ar. Elbert on. Lv. Mi. Airy. “ Cornelia.. “ Lain . •* Ginnesvtlle M Bufotd. “ N'orcroa". Ar. At anta.BT " Atlanta,CT N*,12. Daily. 7 60a 8 59a 9 99 a 10 96 a 10 86_ 19 58 a 11 £6s 11 99a 11 69 a 9 00a TFSIm 12 62p 1 42 p 2 84p 8 87 p 4 20p 4 99 p I top 6 25 p 6 99 p 9 top 11 26 p 6 00a FstMa No. S5. Daily. 12 15 a 8 50 a 6 22 a 11 15 a 12 01 n 6 48 p 0 OOe Vm. No. 38. Daily 12 COm 1 OOp i25p I 46 p sain 5 49 p 4 16 p Twp 6 19p 6 46 p T top Ti«p 10 47 p 11 46 p 8 26a 11 68p 6 001 6 42 a 8 09a 10 15 a 12 Aim Vea No. 37. Daily. 4 80p 0 top 9 2up 10 46 p 11 OOp 6 69a 8 35 p 6 95 p 6 15 a 7 lOp 9 45 p 19 42 p 11 26p 11 42 p 12 29 a 1 8o a 2 02 a 3 28 a 7 95 a 9 25 a 10 Ufa 10 45 a 19 58 a 11 K4a 12 99 p 1 80p t is p 11 45 a 4 18a 4 38 a. 6 02 a 6 25 a 0 10 a 6 19 a 9 99 a 6 40 d I 14 I 99 4 66 9 66 No. 18. Ex. Sun. 4 80p 6 90 p 6 28 p 7 top 7 top 8 OOp 8 39 p • top 9 OOp No. 11. Dally. 11 OOp 6 19 a 7 top I Oop • 20 p 8 48 p 9 18 p 10 OOp 9 pop FatMa No. 3ft Dally. 8 28a 11 46 a 4 ofia 4 28a 4 65a 8 09a 7 tta 7 46a 8 02a 8 27a 8 61a • 60a 12 28ft INft 6 26 p Stop 11 25p 2 66a 8 29a a a a •• • sees • e a e • • ease 7 37 a 12 06m 1 12 p 1 top 8 03p 8 24 p 8 15 p 4 90 p 6 27p 17. 5 69 p c®*- 6 lOfi f 1 **- 6 45 p TSoPr 7 2np 8 Ma 886a 817a 7 20i 7 48a 8 27* 880a • 90a Between Lola and Athena Train No. 59) leavlnir Marlon. N. C., at 5 a. m. I making clime connection at ItluckaburK. S U., wltn tfie Soul hern's train No. iki for Cliar- 1 title, N. 0.. and *11 point* Kant, and connect- InK with the Southern'* vestibule Kointf P> Atlanta, Uu., and all iioint* West, and will receive pnskciiKcr* KoIiik Ku*t from train No. 10 on the O. ft N. W. R. It., *t York vllje, S. C., at H.45 a. m., mid connect* *t Camden, H. C., with the Southern'* train No. 78 arriv ing in Cbarleaton H. C„ at 8.17 p in. Train No. 34 wllli pusMtiiKercoacI: attached, leuviiiK lilackMlnira 111 5.18) it. m., und eon- nectlilK ttt U(jek Hill. S, «)., v Ith tho South- torn'* Florida train for ail point*South. Train Nw. 93 leaving Camden, S. C . at 12.50 U. m., after the arrival of the Southern'* Charleston train connect* at LancaHlor. S. <!., with the L. ft C. U- K.; at Catawba Juncl lou with the H. A. L„ KoinK East, at Rock Hill, S. ()„ with the Southern's train No. 34 for Charlotte, N. C., und ail iioint* East. Connect* at Yorkville, S. O.. wltn train Nu. tt on thoC. ft N. W. IL It., for < V.tor. h. C. At . - _ " itln eetwc lilacksbprK with tie' Uoillli»ru'» vestibule *‘l)ii2 I 3*1. and the Southern'* train No. 36 ftoliitf West, and oonnoctlntf at Marlon, N. C., with the Southern Imth Ea*t and We*t. fiAMUKL HUNT, President. A. TKIPP, NoiMirlnteudeut. I. II. LUMPKIN, Uen'l. P**. Act. M A” a in. “P“ p. m. “K” aoom. “N” eltht. Cbu»apenke Line Steamers Ih dally servlee between Norfolk and Baltimore. No*. 97 and 99—Dally Waahiaftaa and Southwestern Vsatibula Limited. Through Pullman sleeping car* between New York end New Orleans, via Washington. Atlanta and fi ontgoro•ry, and also between Now York and cronhia, via Waablngtoa. Atlanta laid Bir mingham. Alao slogant PcuAfA* Libbaa* Ohmxiivation Cabo between Atlanta and New York. Flratclaaa thoroughfare eoaohee W tween Washington and Atlanta. Dining ear* C rve allmeeli ea route. Leaving WkahUxr gton Mondays, Wednesday 1 end Fridays a tourist elaeplng corwiU run through bet wee* Waahlngtoft end San FMMieeo without change 8 Pullman drawine-room eleopUg ears ‘ ~ raaneboro and NorfeUTCloM « orfolk for Out Poia* Oonroav. Noj. 96 and 16—United Staten ■olid between Washington an via Southern Railway, A. ft L. ft N. R. R., beinit eean throuxb without ohaMe fur Cetweea ?aw““klidlfiw prjaaaal vtt ■tesla ea route. * ».*. __ lento and Moateomery ■tloehAia and AtUatn I ■tpjffa an route mHVJ'S tSrVTiJaBaS Tills, aouthboc Nos 84 and U FRANK I I I ] I I I I frsrn: Ex. Sou. No. 13. Dully. STATIONS. No, 13. Dally. Ex. -- Sub. • 10 p 8 84 p 8 50 p • top 11 05 a 11 toa 11 62 a 12 30 p Lv .Lula .Ar " Muysville" *' Harmony “ Ar. Athena .Lv 10 60a 10 19 a 10 08 a 8 toa T8ft» 7 09ft 8 88ft 4 Oof Note close oonneotlon made at Lul la with