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* The i^ehoew. PUBLISHED TUESDAY AND FRIDAY. RY Ed. H. DeCaMP. The Ledger is not responsible for Abe views of correspondents. Cards of thanks wil* be published At one cent a word. Beading notices will be published •ft ten jents a line each insertion. Write short letters and to the point fto insure publication; also endeavor 3o get them to the office by Monday •nd Thursday mornings. Obituaries will be pubinlised at five •ents a line. Correspondents who do not contri bute regular news letters must fur- aiah their name, not for publication, but for identification. All correspondence should be ad- 4ressed to Ed. H. DeCamp. Manager. Tbis paper is only sent to persons vben paid for, so do not ask us to credit you. The price is too low to iiloi us to do a credit business. THE OUTLOOK. The year 1902 is now on and the outlook is not all that could be de- aired, though by no means as bad as it might have been. There '■ now uo longer any doubt but that in many parts of our State the crops have been exceedingly short and the finan cial prospect is the gloomiest that it has been for years. Especially is this the case in the middle and lower counties of the State. In the Pied mont belt, while the leading crops were short, they were not so short as to create uneasiness or alarm. The best farmers have been at least par- tialiy rewarded by fairly good returns for their skill and industry, while the slipshod, easy-going farmers who expect the ground and the seasons to make them good crops without intel ligent and persistent aid, have come out. as they usually do, with little to show for the year’s work. There are several circumstances, however, that go far to ameliorate conditions in the Piedmont belt and to give it an advantage over other parts of the country. In the first place, this section has on band a pretty good supply of wheat garnered up from last harvest. This is a great relief at a time of general scarcity of food products. As long as the farmer has sound homeraised wheat in bis bin, he is in • measure independent of hard times. Most of farmers, too have saved large quantities of peavine and other binds of bay. This will go a long way towards putting the stock through the winter. With plenty of well cured hay the horses and mules will do the winter work on very little grain, while the cotton seed meal and bulls will furnish ample nourishment for the cattle. From all that we hear we think, too, that a greater number of hogs have been raised and butch ered than in previous years. Nearly every tenant has had a pig or two in the pen, while larger farmers have eaised them in greater numbers. Many hogs have been reported to this office that weighed from four to five hundred pounds—a weight that would have been simply astounding to our fathers forty years ago who billed their two and three-year-old wazorbacks and were delighted when one of them balanced the steelyards mt 150 lbs. The aggregate amount of meat raised in this county ?*iil tell vastly on the supply of provisions for this year. But the greatest blessings to the up-country of South Carolina today are the cotton mills. But for them, tiotwithstanding the circumstances we have mentioned, conditions would be worse than they were in lS4(i. Be sides giving employment at good wages to a large portion of our popu lation and thereby putting vast amounts of money into circulation, these mills are paying out in semi- . annual dividends hundreds of thous ands, if not millions, of dollars. Tte bulk of these vast amounts comes back directly to our people, swells the vo.ume of money in the country and helps to relieve the pressure of the situatiou. If there is a man in the country today who still regards the cotton mills only as heartless corpora-tious established and operated for the sole purpose of fattening tne rich on the hard ear; logs of the poor—only as huge engines of extor tion and oppression—that man is hopelessly blinded by ignorance and prejudice, and is hardly responsible for what he says or does. There are vast inuvements to fa- made this year on the political che»H- board ; but these do not concern our readers directly, and it is not our purpose to devote these columns mainly to the discussion of political problems. There are t i.undied ai d one questions pertaining to home and home life of far more vital interest to every man, woman, boy and girl that reads The Ledger, than all the po litical questions in the world, and we would rather send one ray of happi ness into the homes of our readers— we would rather help one boy or girl beginning to struggle with the prob lem of life to step up to a higher in tellectual and moral plane—we would rather inspire one tired mother or father with fresh hope and courage— than to pose as the champion of any political faction or party, or to shine as a conspicuous figure in the coun cils of the State or the uatiou. With the present issue of The Led ger this writer begins his fifth year in these editorial columns. He hopes that the time given to them during the past four years has not been spent altogether in vain, and that his future relations to the paper and its readers may be as pleasant as they have been in the past. NOTES AM) COMMENTS. The war on the trusts in South Caioliua has been formally opened by Attorney General Bellinger. For the present The Virginia-Carolina Chemi cal Company is the enemy on which the attorney general opens his guns. Gen. Bellinger has shown before that he has pleuty of backbone, and if the legislature will support him, some thing may be accomplished towards rescuing the people of the State from the clutches of greedy monopolies. There has been a greater number of boiler explosions in different parts of the country within the last few weeks, than we have ever heard of in the same time before. The freezing weather and the lack of careful and intelligent management, will prob ably account for the most of them. There is probably no employment in which the proverb, ‘•familiarity breeds contempt,” is more conspicu ously true than in the management of dangerous machinery. There will be no bond issue in Fair- field county for the purpose of reliev ing public distress and building up a better road system. It was so decid ed at a meeting held last Saturday to consider the question. Pursuant to call issued by a mass meeting pre viously. most of the Democratic clubs sent delegates to W^unsboro on Satur day aud the proposition was voted upon. Sentiment wa- divided and the division was so pronounced that it was deemed advisable to abandon the project. A noticeable feature of the meeting was the fact, one way or the other, the different club delegates were a unit. In some cases tbe dele gations were for bonds, and in other cases the delegations were against bonds, tbe inference being that in ail cases the opinion of some one mem ber of a club was being taken as tbe opinion of the club. There were argu- meuts in favor of tbe proposition and also against it. The matter of im proving the roads does not seem to have been seriously considered. Tbe most important question was thr probable effect of tbe proposed bond issue ou labor. Some speakers held that tbe main object sought would be defeated by the method adopted fur Its accomplishment ; that tbe people who were : n mist need of help would uot get it; that farming operations for next year would be demoralized, and that generally tbe whole scheme was bad policy. Will Ledford, a young white man who lives at Millville. Greenville cnnnty got on a spree Thursday and started out to whip somebody. His brother In-law Josh White was |tbe first man be ran up against and they clinched. Ledford used his knife pretty freely, and White rec v d a severe cut in tbe side. The wound i* a very painful one but is uot regarUeu as serious. Ledford was arrested Ledford ia said to be a peaceable man when sober and be and White are good friends. Too much wniskey was the cause of the trouble. CMrfl of Thank*. The Rub} Ba id desires to publicly express its thanks to Mr. Cal. Parish for the very genial reception he gave the band at his hotel Friday evening last. He did much to contribute to the success of the occasion by his warm personality, besides tendering the use of his dining room without charge, for all of whicn we are under lasting obligations. The Ruby Band. Dr. Ituir* UoiikIi Syrup luvarlahly cure* promptly nil ciitarrli.il ;irt«*cttuns Thtswon- Uerftii medicine performs today, and lias per formed in the half century, the speediest cures of col s In t he throat, chest aud lunit*. WATCH Your label and the date, And pay before Tis too late. FOR Up-to-Date Job Print ing, call at the LEDGER Office. Gaffney, S. C. THROUGHOUT THE TUB HEEL STATE, From the Mountains to The Sea. NORTH CAROLINA NEWS. InterextliiK Item* Concerning; Our Neigh bor* Heyoud the Line Which May Prove Entertaining Reading for Hundred* of Ledger Reader*. A work train ou the Southern rail road was wrecked near Holtsburg Friday morning at 7:80 o’clock. A number of cars were derailed but uo one was injured. The track was blocked until 2:80o’clock in tbe af ternoon. The store of Mr. Dan Sides ’inCon cord came near being burned Satur day by the flaming |up of au oil stove which he used occasionally for culinary purposes. In pitching out the stoves the building caught fire, and was saved only by tbe hard work of those present. The Charlotte poultry show opens to day (Tuesday; and will continue through Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. The entries are larger than ever, covering already North and South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia. The birds have begun to arrive, and from now on the city hall will be alive with chickens of all varieties. At a meeting of the Mecklenburg brunch of the Farmers’ Mutual Fire Insurance Association in the court house in Charlotte Saturday, it was decided] to withdraw from the State Association aud a committee, con sisting of Capt. H. D. Stowe, chair man; Dr. Craven, Dr. H. G. Alexan der. Mr. J. H. McClintock and Mr. Walter Pharr was appointed to se cure a nt-w charter for the Mecklen burg branch. The present officers of the county were re-elected. Great excitement was created In Wilmingtonj by a most) brutal and murderous assault by Diuk Holmes, a negro, upon another negro named Joe Pete. It seems that Pete was visiting one Minnie Cole and Homes objected to his doing so. He caught Pete there and immediately assaulted him in the face with a smoothing iron and beat him terribly with a fence paling. Pete was already drunk and was beaten into insensibil ity. Several gave the alarm and Policeman W. H. Temple, who was on duty ou that beat, went to the Cole woman’s house and carried tbe wounded man to the city ball. He will likely recover. Dr. B L Griffin, veterinary sur geon of Concord performed a neat but intricate job Friday ou a mule belonging to Mr. P. M. Misenheimer. at Brown Bro.’s stable. It was a tumor involving tbe abdomen and □earing the large artery of the left thigh. Its removal was every day growing more difficult aud dangerous and would soon have meant the lose of a valuable mule. If nothing un favorable sets in tbe mule will soon be ready for service again. One’s sense of suffering leads him to ask though when chloroform be given to animals aud have them lie limp aud painless while these operations ere going on instead of tying them down a d olding them so still that they c o’t move. It is asserted at Elizabeth city that the man who was met by Mr. Parker between the Cropsey residence and that place has been located. Mr. Parker was on his way home from Mr. Fletcher’s about seven miles from town, aud in passing the Cropsey res idence, about 11 o’clock oo the night of November 20th, saw a man and woman standing at tbe gate. Very little attention was given to the col- nle and Mr. Pxrker could not say de finitely wh the/ were, but afterwad H met anoher man, whom he thoroughly observed and desert ed me citizens' committee since tneo has been try ng to locate this party, as ae should ne able to throw some light ou tbe tragic death of Nellie Cropsey. At the last term of the Unit d States District Court held in Greens boro a man named Joyner, from Yad kin county, was tried and convicted of retailing and sentenced to the pen:* tentiary for 15 months and to pay a tine* of $200 When Judj.e Boyd was at Mateaville holding court. Joyner s wife called on him and made a pit a for her husband. She was a woratn of intelligence aud refinement ur.d Judge Boyd was so struck with her demeanor that he cut his impri«ou- ment down to four months in Yad kin count} jail, leaving the fine to stand. A day or two after Christmas Judge Boyd received a letter from Joyner, saying that he hoped he had or joyed his Christmas; as for him, ir had been very lonesome in Yadkin jail, winding up by thanking him for nis kinlnet-s and again making a plea for a reauction of bis sentence and tine, asking that ne might be per mitted to spend New Year’s day with his family. He stated that he could not pay the fine and would simply have to lay in jail and take the debtor’s oath of Insolvency. Joyner’s manner and plea was convincing and Judge Boyd reduced his sentence still further and remitted the fine, which t;uve the man his liberty and he spent Wednesday with his wife and family. Genius aud riches are speaking terms. seldom on The pedestraln usually makes rapid strides in his projession. An Ordinance TO RAISE SrPIMJES FOR THE FISCAL YEAR*, 1902-HJ03. Be it ordained by the Mayor and Aldermen of the Town Council of Gaffney in I’ounoll Assembled and by authority of the same: That a tax to cover the expenses of the said town from the first Tuesday in March UHC to the first Tuesday in March 190:i, to be levied and collected in manner and form following: Sec. 1. There shall be paid on each dollar of the assessed value of all real estate and personal property the sum of two mills for freueral purposes; the sum of two mills for retiring Town Hall, Electric Light and Wa terworks bonds, and the sum of four mills for the paymant of the interest thereon; making a total of eight mills. Sec. 2. Each and every able bodied male person, tietween the ages of lh years aud fO years, except ordained ministers in actual charge of a church, shall pay on or before the first Tuesday in March, 1902. the sum of two dollars for road or street exemption; and any person, liable to tills tax, who shall fall to pay the same within the time specified shall be required to work on the street of said *own six days under the direction of the street overseer; and any person liable to said tax, and who fails to pay said tax as provided herein or to perform |said labor shall lie sub.leet to a fine of not less than fl».- 00 or imprisonment not exceeding twenty days. Itinerant Tkadeks and Auctioneers. Sec.3 No more than (2.1.00. within the dis cretion of the Mayor, shall be paid per day by every itinerant trader or auctioneer of fering for sale within the corporate of the town of Gaffney, at auction or o> herwise, any goods, wares or merchandise to others than the trade, to be paid each day in advance; and every itinerant trader or auctioneer li able to said tax, who shall fail to pay the same as herein provided,'slialI be fined not more than f40.(H) or be imprisoned not more than thirty days tor each and every day or fraction thereof he shall so offend; Provided, that this section shall not be held to apply to dealers in grain, fruits, potatoes, poultry, earthenware, or manufacturers of like char acter raised and produced on tin: vender's own farm. Special Taxes. Sec. 4. No person, firm or corporation shall be engaged in, prosecute or carry on any business or profession hereinafter mentioned without having first paid a special license tax therefor, as follows, to-wit: Agents for and dealers in fertilizers for sale loo tons or less Agents for or dealers in fertilizers, from 100 to 200 tons Agents for or dealers in fertilizers, for each additional 100 tons or fraction thereof over 2000 tons . Agents, resident or itinerant, solic iting mill operatives to leave em ployers and go elsewhere . ... . Agents selling or dealing in patent rights, whether in store or on the streets Agents or dealers In iron safes Agents or dealers in sewing ma chines Architect, surveyor, civil engineer. or either Auctioneer Auctioneer, replenishing stock from time to time as the same becomes diminished Baker Balls, public, wiien admission Is charged.per night Banks, private Banks. National, 11.50 for each JIOOU capital stock Barber, 1 chair Barber, second chair Barber, for each additional chair over two .. Bicycles, dealers in or agent s for tbe sale of Bicycles, persons running establish ments for hiring or renting Bill posters, local or itinerant Blacksmith, for one forge Blacksmith, for each additional forge over one Boarding house, transient Boarding house, private, except for students or factory operatives exclusively Book agent,per day, W.ii); per week, 5 00; per year Boot or shoe shop, making or repair ing Brick manufacturer Broker, dealiug in bonds and stocks alone Broker, dealer in cattle, horses, or other live stock, not paying a license for sale stables or stock yard, per day. 120 00; per year Broker, merchandise — Broker, pawn BllilardJ >r bagatelle table, for one table For each additional table Building and loan associations or agents for same Butcher, dealer in meats, fresti or salt, less than 20 days Boot bla k Chiropodist, per day Circus or menagerie, per day in ad vance, 50 00. to 150 (St in the dis cretion of the Mayor Circus, side show, per day. in ad vance Circus, street parade, in advance, not more than fifty dollars In the discretion of the Mayor Any person or persons who shall ex hibit or assist in exhibiting any circus or menagerie In said town without having first paid the II- license tax therefor shall each t>e liable to a Hue of fl00 (to or Im prisonment notjrnore than thirty days, lor each day or fraction thereof such show or exhibition continues i Dal dealer Coal and wood dealer Commission merchant Contractors for contracts less than $500.00 Coatracturs, for over fVsi aud less than *2500 00 Contractor, for over r&tnotR) ... Cotton seed oil mill. (I no for each $1000 00capital stock Carpet factory. 1 00 for tsi. h loot ini capital stock Conveyancer, drawing deed*, mort gages! Ileus, contracts aqd other legal Instrument* of aritlug Cotton factory, 1 on for each 1000 no capital stock Cotton gin and press Dogs, to be paid for Oy the pet son or person* on whose place ilu- dog is kept. The police of ;)ie town of Gaffney are hereby authorized and empower ed D seize ami confine eyery dog 5 00 10 00 5 0o 25 00 25 00 25 00 25 00 25 00 10 00 50 00 5 00 5 00 50 00 5 00 2 50 1 00 10 00 5 00 10 00 5 00 l no 10 00 5 00 25 00 5 00 15 00 25 00 25 00 10 00 50 U> 25 00 15 00 15 00 20 00 1 00 1 U0 15 00 10 00 15 IN) 10 IN) III IN) 20 IN) 5n on 10 uo 20 00 2 00 running at large and not having on tin- town badge for current year; ami for every dog so tak en up by the police 1 on addition al shall be paid Dealer in building supplies . . 10 on Dealer in wagons, other vehicles, ex cept manufacturers .... lo oo Dentist. w no Dyers 5 no Exchange, bucket shop, firm or indi vidual. carrying on the business of dealing in options or futuresln cotton, grain, provisions or oth er supplies, or margins or oth erwise. igjooo Exhibltionsoutsideof Opera House, per day. not exceeding in 00 Express company, for business done within the State, and not includ ing that done without the State, and not government business :{5 bo Fairs, concerts or festivals (except for religious or benevolent pur poses) per day 5 00 Fresh fish and oysters, or either, not sold in connection with market by regular licensed market men 5 00 Fruit trees, agents for, per day, 1 00 per week 5 00 Gun and lock smith, repair shop 1 00 Gas fitters or plumbers, whether by day or contract 25 00 Harness shop, for repair only I 00 Horses, persons selling at auction exclusively, per day 25 00 Hotel 25 00 Ice cream saloon or peddler 2 5o Tee dealer, retail 5 00 Insurance company fire, life, acci dent, health or live stock, and each insurance company of any kind nr any company or corpora tion or society having insurance features other than charitable, and every agent or agency for any such 10 00 Individuals buying from merchants and selling to the trade on time 10 00 Kerosene oil company, or agent or agency for same 35 00 Land Company, selling Its own land exclusively 25 00 Laundry, steam 10 00 Laundry, agent for 15 00 Lawyer 10 00 Lawyer, also lending money lor self or others in addition .. 20 00 Loans, savings or investment com pany, loaning money ou real es tate or otherwise, and similar companies 25 OO Lunch dealer 2 0o Lime works 75 00 Machine shop and foundrys or either 2f> in) Marble yard, or agenc> for same. .. lo (N) Merchants shall pay license accord ing to the following gross sales: Under $1,000 5 no Over $1,000 to $2.500 id do Over $:f.5iUD to $5,000 15 do 'Over $5.(nx) to $10,INN) 21) 00 r or each fl.DOOover and above $10,(100 5 00 Mill, grist or flour, each 500 Mill, saw $ up Money lender, other than hank or lawyer 20 0C Newspaper, less frequent than dally lo in) Oculist or optician, itinerant per 5 00 Opera iiouse, per year 10 Ou Palming, contractor for 15 00 u ainter, not, working for licensed contractor for painting 5 00 Paper hanger or upholsterer ..... 500 Photographer, local $10.00 itinerant per week or fraction thereof 5 00 Physician ...'. 1000 ‘Physician, itinerant Hi 00 Pianos,organs and other musical In struments. or either of them dealer in 25 00 Same, itinerant 25 (X) Pianos and organs, tuner and re pairer. or either, itinerant 15 0C Planing mill or machine 10 00 Printing office, job alone 5 00 Railroad, for business done within the Slate and not Including that done without the State, or inter state commerce. and not includ ing that done for the govern ment 125 00 Real estate agent 10 00 Restaurant 10 (W Stove repairer 5 00 Sewing machine repairer 5 00 Stoves, Itinerant, dealer in 5 iN» Street drummer 25 'W Street wagon or dray, two horse 10 00 Street wagon or dray, one horse 5 00 Shooting gallery per day $2.00. per year 25 00 Skating rink 10 00 Sxla fountain connected with other business or alone 5 ()0 Stable* keeping vehicles and horses for hire only, under one royf 15 00 Stables, feed aud sale, under one roof 25 00 Stables, keeping horses for hire, feed and sale lo 00 Stables, where more than one is kept, license tax is to be foreach according to three preceding items Tenpin alley.... ,. 25 00 No person shall let or hire any wag on or dray or other carriage or vehicle for transporting passengers or goods within the limits of this town without first having obtained a badge from the Town Clerklor Treasurer pay ing therefor fifty cents under a penalty of add for each and every day that such vehicle shall la* run, or five nays imprisonment for each day so run Street railway or dummy line H5 00 Tailor, merchant or manufacturer.. lo 00 Tailor, not merchant engaged In making or repairing . 5 00 Telegraph company or agency for business done within the State and not including business done without the Slate or for the gov ernment 55 00 Tin or tinker shop 5 00 Telephone exchange -. 25 on Tannery 2 50 Veterinary surgeon 5 00 Watch maker and Jeweler for repair- • ing and selling, or either. |u (N) Warehouse, storage. . . lo ou Wood yard or dealer lo uo All license Issued by the Clerk, as herein provided, ii to a firm, shall contain the name of the tirin proposing to do business under same and ahoall the names of the indivluu als composing sucli firm. It to a corporation it shall contain the name of the corporation and the names of the officer* *'f sntne. Any person or person* carrying on ouslncs!- or occupation or running any establishment or business named in this nr preceeding sec tions. without having first taken out a license therefor, a* herein provided, shill I*: fined except in case* where special penalties are Imposed, the sum of not more than 25 00 per day, or fraction thereof, or he imprisoned in the town prison or county Jail, or Is* sentenc ed to hard labor on tin* streets or other puo’ lie works of the town for a period of not more than five days foreach ou>l every day orffrac tlon thereof such business, occupation or profession '» carried on without such li cense. Except where otherwise specified in the foregoing, no license shad be issued f *ra'. less u< tio l than one y< at from the oirte thereof. For any business, end lug. occupation or profession not enumerated in the foregoing a license tax of not more than 25 0u shall l*e paid to th** Clerk by person, firm or corpora tion engaging in or running same. Sec. 5. The town Council hereby reserve* to itself the right to revoke any license for any cause which may seem to it just. Sue. 8. The t txon real and personal prop erty provided f< r in tbis ordinance shall be paid on or before the first Tuesday in March I'.-c’. and any person liable for the same who shall fail to pa y the on or before said ilaAe shall lie liable to a penalty of 20 per qent of such tux,and the tax and the penalty witli the costs shall be collected by -exetbjUon or otherwise Any person, firm or officer of any occupa tion. making any false or fraudulent returns where a return under oath is by this ordin ance requires shall upon conviction be fined not less than 25 iK) nor more than 5o 00 or je imprisoned not more.than thirty days, nor less than twenty days, at the discretion of the Mayor. Sec.’7.Any|person. firm or corporation, liable to the license tax hereinbefore set forth whose said tax is regulated the amount of business done, or the amount of stock carried, is in quired to make a retern under oath to \Mp Clerk of the Town Council on or before first Tuesday in March. 1902, aud on failure so to do, such person, or the officer or agent of* such firm or corporation shall be liable to JP fine of not exceeding $100 or Imprisonment' not exceed ing thirty days, foreach atid every day or fraction thereof, such person officer or agent aforesaid shall be in default of mak ing such returns. ^ec. s. All licenses issued under cite •fore going sections are non-transferable and will only protect those to whom they sire Issued. Don-and ratified in town Council assem bled this the 3ru ua> of Januray, 1902. W. H. Ross. N. H. Littlejohn, TownCierk. Mayor. SOUTHERN RAILWAY* Condensed Schedule of Passenger Train* In Effect June 30th, 1901. Northbound. No. r.*. Daily. Ve*. ! Expr. No. .-iS.'No 34. Daily 1 Daily FstM* No. 3d. Daily. 11 50p 12 50 a 1 29a 2 Ola 2 28 a 8 49a Lv. At’anta.iT ” Atlanta.ET “ Nort-ross.. “ Buford. “ Gainesville " Lu,a.... ^ Cornelia.... * Mt. Airy... Lv. Tocc -a. . 7 5. a 8 5o a 9 31 a 10 06 a 10 37 a 11 Oiln 11 25u 11 28 a 11 5b a 12 tOni 1 lA«p 12 20 p 1 2up 1 52 p 2 10 p 2 45 p 8 Ub)» 8 80p 3 33 p 8 651) '2 25p 2 43 p a 25o 8 40a Ar. B.berton... 6 45 p 3 46 p • 11 53 a Lv. Elbert on... 9 00 a tv. W "minster. “ Seneca. •* Central “ Greenville. * iSpAr'burg. ** Gaffney " Black-burg ** King's Mt.. ** Gastonia. “ Charlotte.. Ar. Gre’nsboro 12 8 m 12 4b p 1 33 p 2 34 p 3 39 p 4 2d p 4 47 p 6 15 p 5 4up fi 4u p 9 4 09 p 4 25 p 4 4up 6 OSp 6 55 p 6 55 p 7 32 p 7 48 p 4 14* 4 35a 5 00a 5 &5a 6 53a 7 48a 8 02a 8 32a 9 00a 10 05 a 12 43 p 2 47 p 8 40p 6 18 p 6 04p 6 46 p 7 02 p 8 28 p 9 15p 11 42 p 8 ISp 10 47 p Ar. Durham... Ar. Raleigh .. e 3 35 a 5 25 a 8 35a 5 25 a Ar. Danville. 11 25 p 11 53 p 12 43a 8 80a 1 52 p -•••••* a Ar. Norfolk . 3 30a s 30a Ar. Richmond.. 6 00a 6 00a 6 00a 6 40 p Ar. W’hington. M B’more P. H “ Ph’delnhia. " New York. *••#••. ••eases* * e e ee e * • • • • • e • • • 6 42 a 8 00a 10 15 a 12 fja 7 35a 9 15a 11 86 a 2 08 p e oop 11 85 p 2 56a 6 23a ftontli bound. FatMa No. 35. Daily. V**. No. 33. D lily.' No. 11. Daily. Expr. No. 33. Daily. Lv. N.Y.,Pa.tt. ** Ph'delphia. • Baltimore.. ** Waab ton.. 12 15 a 9 50a 6 22a 11 16 a 4 30p 6 55 p 9 20p 10 45 p •seaeee* ••eases* 33? 8 27 p 9 55 p .*•••••• Lv. Richmond.. 12 01 n UfiOp 11 SOp 11 sop Lv. Norfolk.. 9 35a 7 40 p 7 40p 7 40p Lv. Dan villa.... ft 48 p 5 50a 6 10 a 4 35a Lv. Raleigh.... Lv. Durham... 8 SO p 4 43 p 1 00a 2 80 a 1 00a ft 30a 1 ooa 2 80a Lv. Gre’nsboro Ar. Charlotte.. Lv Gastonia... “ King's Mt.. " Blwksburg • Gaffney • Spar’burg. “ Greenville. “ Central ** Seneca. " W’minster. m Toccoa..... 7 lOp .!S? 11 02p 11 25p 11 42 p 12 20a 1 25a f 28 a 8 ii a Igi •»•#••»• iOSOa 11 03a 11 40 a 12 40 p 1 40p p 7 87 a 12 85m 1 SOp 1 63 p 2 17 p 2 82p 8 15 p 4 30 p 6 bUD 6 65p 6 18 p 7 430 6 66a ft 10a 900a 9 18a 998a 9 58a 10 80a 11 30a 12 25 p 12 48 p 1 06 P Lv. Elbert on.. boo# 6 45 p S 16 PI 9 ooa 6 46 p Ar. Elbert on. 11 68a Lv. Mt. Airy... *58p 7 82 p 8 ufip 8 28 p 9 OOp 9 34 p 10 15 p 9 15p -T&p 2 OOP 2 20 p ft 46 p 8 18 p 8 5b p 4 35 p 8 85 p “ Cornelia... “ Lola 8 46a 4 06 a 4 29 a 4 67 a 6 27 a 6 10a 6 10 a 8 OB p 8 27 p '4 »p 8 65 p " Gainesville “ Buford..... - N ore roe*. Ar. Atl&nta.ET “ Atlanta,CT B*tVMa Lula and A than*. K0.IL1 Ex. No. 19. Boo. 'Daily. STATIONS. No. 13. Daily. NoTuE Ex. Sun. 9 15 p • 45p 9 04 p 9 45 p 8 16 p 8 46 p 4 02 p 4 45 p Lv...Lula .Ar •' MayxviUe ” “ Harmony ** Ar. Athens .Lv 2 15 p 1 45 p 1 28 p 12 45 p 7 55 p 7 23 p 7 05 p 6 20 p "A" w- m, “P" p. a. “M” noon. “N" night. Chesapeake Lina Steamer* in daily aarvioa between Norfolk and Baltimore. Noa. SThmd as—" Washington and Sonthweat arn Limited.” Solid Pulman tram, being com* posed exclusively of finest Pullman equipment of latest design, through between New York and Atlanta. Through Pullman sleeping cars between New York and New Orleans, via Washington, Atlanta and Montgomery and ai* •o be. ween New* York and Memphis, via Wash* ington, Atlanta and Birmingham. E.eganl Pullman Library observation cart between Ma con and New York. Gentlemen s dub cars between Atlanta New York. Dining cars serve all meals enroute. Pullman sleeping ears between Greensboro and Goldsboro. No coach service on this train. These trains will atop at Gainesville, Lula, Toccoa. seuecu, GaiF* ney and Biackaburg only to take on and let off pass* ng r* tor and from Washington and be yond and for and from Greenville. Columbia and Hjiartanburg-Columbia lines. Noa 33 and 34 -“Atlanta and New York Ex press” Local train between A Cant a and Char* lotte, connecting at Charlotte with trains of same numbers for and from Washington. New York and the east, carrying through Pullman sleeping cars between Charlotte ana New York, Charlotte and Richmond and Norfolk. Lear* ing Washington Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays a tourist aleaping car will be oiwratcd on this train through from Washington to San Francisco without change. Connection a$ Greensboro with slecqier* for Raleigh. Ne Pullman cars on this train between ..tlanta ami Charlotte. Amnio first and second clitsfi coach aooommadation* for local and through travel Noa. 85and 3<V—“United States Fast Mair’rung * solid between Washington and New Orleans, via Southern Rahway, A. A W. P. R R. and L. As N. R. R., being compoaext of coaches, through without change for ]*u*eugers of aU elai»-ei». Puliman dr iwing n om sleeping car* between New York and haw Orleans, vm At* lanta and Montgomery and between Mir* mingliam and Richmond. Dining cars *e ••* all meals en route. Noa 11 and 13-4Jolld local train between B leh-nond and Atlanta. Close connection ai orfoik for Old Point Cost roar. Especial attention is call# 1 to above sehedula, parucularly that No*. 37 and Jfi are mad# aa axc.iuive Pullman train, without coach *#*• vice. FRANK ft. GANNON. Third Vwa Praa A G.-n Mr* H HAEDWIOH, W H. TAYLOBT ft. Fa— Igml AJk R a . a-)«...> a 1