The Newberry herald and news. (Newberry, S.C.) 1884-1903, November 07, 1889, Image 4

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PUBLISHED FV1EY THURSDAY AT Ni WBERRY. s. C. WiBY BOYS LEAVE THE FARM. Reasons for the Desertiou of the Farm by Scores of Bright Boys. [J. C. Alts, in Home and Farm.] Why do our boys leave the farm 4 a question that is often asked d variously answered. Without mpting to notice the many sobs that are assigned for the version and distaste which most try boys have for the farm, I d like o express the views of young farmer, one who was born raised on the farm, and who was often tempted to leave the farm for some other calling or profession. One of the first reasons for his aversion to the farm is the pessim istie view of farming that is usually held by his father and neighbors. Is it not a remarkable fact that Mile the physician, the lawyer, JPCtn erchant, the mechanic, etc., always choose their life work and prepare themselves for a special pursuit, that the vast majority of our farmers are not farmers from choice, but by accident or circum This is one grand reason why our farmers fail. 'hey are not farmers from choice, but by cir cumstance. Now, to be suecessful, we must honor our calling. Every farmer ought to be able to say that he had rather be a farmer than anything else. Fancy a physician a success who considers his jpro fosson "dog's work ; - yet most of our farmers belittle their calling, mtle from one year's end to other, and then wonder why eir;boys leave the farm for,the or city. Another reason why the farmer's n is prone to leave the farm is tone of the school books, biog newspapers and maga of the day. In a word, they educated to leave the farm. our school readers and there will find sketches of merchants, ers, military men, artists and r,but, so far as I have seen, a sketch of a farmer. - Ex e a catalogue of lib * you will find -bicoI :-bes with titles somewhat Ii ~his: "Log Cabin to the W THouse." "Country Boy and M chant Prince," indeed, biograpla -of lawyers, merchants, bank -machinists and inventors, etc-ai ~-boily and everybody but an a culturist. The same is true of our ma zinmes and newspapers. Even called agricultural journals: guilty of the same practie-~ N why is it so?- Are there no fa ers worthy of imitation . Most suredly there are. What would m-ore entertaining than a well w. ten and truthful sketch of Dai Dickson, Farish Furman, Dr. W. Phillips, Capt Peterkin, .J Welborn, or "Steele's Bayou," 2 many others?i Will not Home 2 Farm publish biographical sketc' of some of our znost progress farmers and stoekmen i Not o1 would it be a big hit, but it wol do much to keep the~ boys on farm. Want of society is another z son why young people leave farm. It would do much go the farmers would pay more att tion~ to social matters. A wani social intercourse on the part farmers is habit and not necessi There is no reason why the farn should not enjoy social life as mi as the townsman. In 'fact I thi (I do not know, for I never lived town,) that his social opport 7ities are better. It is true mi of his time is spent in the fit but not more than the clerk factory operative spends in store or factory, and his vacat is certainly longer. On the other hand, the Alliar the Grange and the Farmers' C *afford ample means for social:i mental imnprovement- If ther4 not one of these organizations your neighborhood start one im: diately. The Farmers' Alliane a very popular organization in South ; it takes members as yo1 as the age of 16. Taike your b~ and girls into the Alliance, t them to farmers' institutes, as cultural meetings, etc. Get ti - intetested, show them there something about farming besi pioughing and hoeing. Give tl -a plat of ground to cultivate their own, and let them have proceeds. Encourage them to t and read agricultural journ Teach them that farming is jus dignified and honorable as: other vocation. And, above evi thing else, don't take your bria est boy and educate him to the notch for some profession w his brother grows up in ignoral -This is a mistake that your fat] made. It used to be thoughti any fool could be a successful m ner, but experience has prove How Deep Does the Earth Quake ? California and the Pacific co ecently experienced one of t nost severe earthquake sho( nown in that-region in years, ncident which -revives interest he question: How deeply 4 he earth quake when convuls iature shakes her -crust like a < us tent in a Icyclone ! At ' inia City, Nev., the-earthquake L879 was not noticed by the min n the great Comstock mines,1 )nly by people on the surface. 'I amous earthquake at the sa place in 1874 or 1875, which she lown: chimneys, fire-walls a wracked every building in I own, was merely noticed by so )f the miners working in the up] evels, but it didthem no dana iot even shaking' down loose ro md earth. The station men in' various shafts felt it the stong( md the deepest point where it ioticed was by the station-ten, tt the 900-foot level of the Impei Empire shaft, 900-feet below 1 ,urface. He said it felt like a fa ;hrob or pulsation of air, as thor blast had been fired above, bel4 )r in some indefinite direction. some of the mines the sbock 1 not felt at all, even by station n in the shafts. Commenting ou t >urious fact at the time, the Gi ill News remarked that the ear Iuake seemed to be an electri isturbance, proceeding from ktmosphere and not from lepths of the earth. The Great Wall of China. The great wall of China i neasured in many places by Un mk an American engineer lat ngaged in a survey for a Chin ailway. His measurements g t an average height of 18 feet a i width on the top of 15 fE Every few hundred yards the , s widened and surmounted bi ,ower 24 feet square and from 20 !5 feet high. The foundation he wall is of solid granite. I Tnthank brought with him rick - from the wall, which issi 3osed to have been made 200 ye efore the time of Christ. In-bui ng this immense stone and art ver attempted t ountains or chasms to s pense. For 1,800 miles. t ra- goes over plains and mol ke repardless of Nature's gres it structions. The foundation i er wihere -the same gray gra 's firm and solid as it was ~years ago, and the remuai '- the structure of bricks, as Tthe average that are made In some places the wall: ga- smooth up against the so canyons, or precipices, whe ire is a sheer decent of 1,0 ow Small streams are arche -. but on the larger strea as- wall runs to the water's e be a tower is built on each sid eit- the top of the wall there art iel works or defences, facing M. out, so that defending fore eff pass from one tower to ,d without being exposed to ,nd my from either side. Toe ies the time taken to build, ive cost of this monstrous v 2y beyond human skill. So fa yld magnitude of the work the cerned, it surps-ses everyl ancient or modern times< _we have, any knowledge. I if victoria's nhrone. of The English throne, use< ty coronation ceremonies of th ty. and Queens. of Great Brite Lwhich is so splendid in .nk ering of rich 'silks, velv igold, is,; in fact, simpl3 noak chair of very antique I t has been used on all d, c.isions for the past 600 y operhaps even longer, ma' the table writers claiming t ihave discovered. -traces of tence prior to the eleventh Ages of use have mad' ce, oak framework as hard ab tough as iron. The back Ld of t'his chair-throne were: IS painted its various colors in which are now hidden b ne- hangings of satin, silk ans i The magic powers attril the the old relic lies in t: ig which is made of a heav oys ooking sand-stone, 26 it ke length, 171 inches in wi< ri- 191 inches in thickness. em fore it was wrapped in vt is trimmed in gold to be des the Tudors and the Stuarts, em stone of stones served. az as during the coronations of t the Scottish Kings. L as Don't You Know my jthat you cannot afford to neg ry- catarrh ? Don't you know 1b ;ht- lead to consumption, to ins last death ? Don't you know that bile easily cured ? Don't you kr while the thousand and one: 'you have tried have utterly ft ters Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy hat tain eure ? It has stood th far- years, and there are thousand ful men and women im all par 1 it country who can testify to its All druggists. p.,--'. Itemized Oddities. L Each square inch of the skin con he tains 3,500 sweating tubes, or per. k spiration pores, each of which may an be likened to a little drain tile one in fourth of an inch in length, making yes an aggregate length of the entire ve surface of the body of 201, 166 feet, . or a tile ditch for draining the .. body almost 40 miles long. .of Tae human skin is composed of ers three layers, averaging in all be )ut tween one-twelfth and one-eighth the of an inch in thickness; and, in me extrme cases, as much as one ok fourth of an inch in thickness. nd The skin area of the average adult he is, therefore, estimated at 2,000 me square inches. The atmospheric >er pressure being about 11 pounds to oe the square inch, a person of medium :ks size is daily and hourly subjected -he to a pressure of 28,000 pounds. st An ancient and remarkable clock r has been recently set up in the ler reading-room of the municipal li al brary at Ronen, France. A single ,he winding keeps it running for 14 int years and some odd months. It g was constructed in 1682 ; under went alterations- in 1816; was In bought by the City of Rouen in ras 1838, and has been recently re ten paired and set going. his The phoenix, the fabulous bird )ld of antiquity, in form is described th- somewhat resembling the eagle. It cal was said to live 500 years in the the wilderness, and then to return into the Egypt, where, having built itself a nest, or funeral pile of wood and aromatic gums, and lighting it by the fanning of its wings, was con sumed to ashes, out of which rose a new phoenix. The first living skeleton was as Claude Sewrat, born in France in t- 1799. He was tall and would have been well-shaped had there been ive any flesh on his body ; as it was nd every bone could be distinctly seen. His arms were compared to two l ivory flutes, and his abdomen seemed to cling to the vertebra. a He made a fortune by exhibiting of himself and returned to his native r. town to enjoy it, but suddenly ex a pired soon after his retirement. lteuar ' Engineering Feats. id- t is a remarkable fact that] - ing surpasses in modern engi as, the ing the pyramids of Ghizeh, 1 avoid more than 5,000 years ago. ave ex- universally acknowledged by be Wall highest professional authoriti ntains, architecture and building tha .test ob- masonry of the Pyramids coul< s every- be surpassed in these days, ite, as moreover, is perfect for the 2,000 pose for which they were inter nder of above all, to endure. After lioda building of pyramids was to-day. comm6nced it was the fashio built about 10 centuries to erect bank of meaningless, pointed piles of re there onry. Of the hundreds er 00 feet. about 60 have resisted the ra' d over, of ages, and may still be ms the Many of those remaining coi dge and enormous blocks of granite froi e. On to 50 feet long, weighing frot Sbreast- to 500 tons, and display the in and consummate ingenuity in as cold construction. another A more difficult operation an ene- the mere transportation of imu alculate stones-that of erecting obe or the weighing 400 tons-was pefo pork, is with precision by the Egyp r as the 300 years before the time of C. is con- Of the ancient method of ra hing in immense stones nothing is ,f which known-it is one of the man; arts. The ancient Peruvians a method of transporting imi blocks of stone that would be: tune to the modern engineer d possess it. The Romans werr I in the eminent engineers, and, by e Kings authorities, are put down as i.in, and exceeding the Egyptians in th its coy- rection. Immense stones were ete and in constructing the Temp an old Baalbec ; one lies ready que pattern, which is ';0 feet long, and 1. taate oc- square and weighs 1,135 tons. ears and :iy repu at they Mrs. Bascom (rushing int its exis- house with a scream) : For r century. sake ! Ebenezer is down in the i the old ture and the bull is goring and as Dressmaker (indistinctly thi Lnd sides half a dozen pins): Indee ormerly didn't know as there was er all of material in Mr. Bascon for th~ y' heavy Burlington Free Press. l velvet. s - buted to 31erenrial Poison. le seat, Mercury is frequently injudic y-rough- used by quack doctors iu ca hs- inmalaria andi blood poist.n. Its tc neffect is worse than thre original d ih and B. B. B. (Botanic Blood Baimn Mb.tains no.mercury, but will elir Lob-mercurial poison from the~ s: let and Write to Bl>od Balm Co., Atlant; used by for book of convincing proof of it: .tive virtue. this old A. F. Brit toni, Jac-kson, a seat writes: "I caught mnalaria in Loui heand when the fever at last brok< hearly system was saturated with poisoi I~had sores in miy mouth and kna my tongue. I got two bottles B. which healed my tongue andi and made a new man of me." Wmn. ichmond, Atlanta, Ga., "My wife ediuld hardly see. I lect that called it syphilitic iritis. Her eyt at it may in a dreadful condition. Her al an,~failed. She had pain in her join y obones. He- kidneys were der itca be~ also, and no one thought she cor Lo that cured. Dr. Gillamn recommended 2ostrlms B., which she used u,1ntil her: - ld haw~as entirely restored." is at Ke. P. B. Jonres, A tlanlts, Ga., test o eruptions, loss of appetite, pain ir f grate- aching joints, debility, emuaciatic ts of the of hair, sore throat, and great ne 'eiacy. ness. B. B. B. put my system i condition." II I9 PADGBTT S PROCLAMATION to readers of The Herald and News! Read This Througb It Will Surely Interest You. will buy 14 Rolls Go Paper and Bord t enough for a 12s1 room, beautiful patterns. ~475only j7 wil buy a 9 piece bed rooi suit, 12x20 glass, cane se: chairs and rockers; whole su consists of one bureau, or washstand, one centre tabl four cane seat chairs, one cat siat rocker. In addition to the ab have an elegant line of w oth- oak, mahoganized and imi ieer -i,t walnut suits, wood and n t is tops t n $7.25 $8 50 $11. il ntbuy elegant willow and, carriages with parasols. ur ded, the $6.25 DOLLARS $( willr cover your 15z15 ft uge with nice china matting Ifllflwill buy a 'I 7 II15z15 ft. whic itain I sUU be made and 30 read to put down, incl tn$1.00 will buy the eeshade you ever saw on isks rollers. rned 1000 Shades on sprin rst ers at 50c each. had for a 5 hole cooking rai ~ -pieces furniture. $8.00 I id he 6 stove with 20 pieces also ture. t d. Wheeler & Wil used SEWING MACHINES. rri( dfor a Plush suit 7 pieceE Swalnut frame othe I have everything neE nercy your house, no matter v IE! is. Catalogue free. mg L. F. PADGE t!- 1110 & 1112 Broad S iAugusLa. Geori SMILES. Many who teach.the young ide how to shoot apparently don' know that it's loaded.-Puck. It is very difficult to find a key t success that will wind without clique.-Baltimore American. Watts: Thompkins has fallen i love again. Potts: How do yo know? Watts: I saw him goin to church last Sunday.-Teri Haute Express A medical journal tells "what t do when stung by a hornet." N matter what he may do, what I3 says- wouldn't souud well in prin -Norristown Herald. A Daitmouth graduate has wri ten a work on "The Probable Cau( of Glaciaton." We didn't suppo. that was a matter of dispute. If wasn't cold weather, what could be !-Lowell Courier. If we can believe what we real the boss slugger is hardly ev< sober. In Boston if the thirst party doesn't care to wink at ti man at the soda water fountain, I asks for a John L. Sullivan.-Tex: Siftings. A Hard Worker-"I'm in the C business" he explained. "I som times handle as much as 10,0( barrels of cande in a single day. "Is it possible !" she respondei - "Ten thousand I It must make yc very tired."-Harper's Bazar. d Mrs. Oldboy : Oh, you needn ,r talk, John. You was bound 1 2 have me. You can't say that I evi ran after you. Oldboy : Vei true, Maria, and the rat trap nevi runs after the mouse, but it gathe 1 him in all the same.-Bostc J Transcript. "Who is there 1" said Dr. Browi Sequard, in response to a knock n his -laboratory door. "The Gral Monument Fund," was the repl; it "Well, I can't do anything for yoi You'll have to wait till resurre Le tion day."-'Washington Critic. 26 Ten well-knewn women are goin le to write on the subject : "Son Thin .gs_e_honk _ Men." One of the things they do if they were men would ove remove their hats when the3 alnut, the theatre, or else get e tation -Norristown Herald. First Britisher (at a Glads -rble meeting) -What's th-e matter you don't seem to be very siaticfor home rule? i 0 Britsher:No, william, I baythat's a fact. You see, Iv' v >aymarried for nigh on to 40 y< 'Philadelphia Ingnirer. Who Throw the Lantern ?2 [Goes and Canner's Gaz< An old negro walking the railroad curve to ward = mond after dark, was start the flash of the headlight rpet Washington night express will was found by his friends sent two farms away. On reco Lugeonsciousness his first qi was: "Fo' God, boss. wvh dit lantern " bet- One of the very latest f . ashionable circles is the ci Sthemum dinner or luncheo colors and endless v'arii rol. shades of this modest and tentions flower allow one ral scope for decoration. m luncheon given in a Northe ' last week by a well known -young woman, the shades ge, were yellow and. etruse-th' oi.a shade bordering on the: N.any. All other decoration uri- unique and in colors to ma chrysanthemums. -MACHINED -- ENGINES, BOILERS, Parlor SAW MILLS, GRIST I solid COTTON GINS, dedinSHATIG,COTTON PRE ad n SAFTNG,PULLEYS, hat it HANGERS, GFJ STEAM AND WATER. I PIPE AND Fil T, BRASS VALVES, WATER W beet, INJECTORS, PUMPS, BRASS AND SAWS, FILES, CASTIl A full stock of supplies, chi good Beltinig, Packing and Oil at Pricis, and in stock for prom] ery. ""REPAIRS PROMPTLY 0 WMO. R. LOMARD. FOUNDRY, BOiLER AND MACHINE AUGUSTA, C ABOVE PA'SSENELJA DEIA 5-TonCotton BinScales BEAM B "JONES H E PAYS THE FREl br Free Pie LAt, 4cdr lpnirP af BINGEAXTON. 3izghami a t for o mamm a facilities a Lawyers' Brie 0" e School Catalogue, o Minutes of Meetings, e' Legal Blanks, - 11 e By-Laws, e of iti it Circul%rs Letter Heads, y Le Note Heads, La no ne Bill Heads, ( Ba ? Business Cards, to i. ,t1 u Visiting Cards, rt Envelopes, I r Shipping Tags, es -Fl Programs, i Wedding Invitations, it 1. Receipts gE Were - would S be to V E INVITE THE ATTENTIO Igo to of the public to our very largc ected. stock of Stoves, which embraces a ful and complete line of . THE VERY BEST MAKE, boan from Medium Size to the Largest Jem, We invite all to examine what we havl nthn. before buying, as we feel assured w can make it to your interest to do so. ~econd We- especially call the attention o ain't, the Ladies to our e been GREY ENAMELED WARE which we give with our Cook Stoves It is much nicer than the plain iro: SOVES SOLD ON THE. IN STALL MENT PL AN-one-thir<1casi and balance on easy Monthly Pay ~tte] ments. t e.n S . P. BOOZER & SON. Rich ledte by aeng All pe'rsons indebed estion to me will please cal frand settle at once, a 1' must have money. lds in Ver yrespectfully, trysan 3- The ILEY W. FANT. ity of_ unpre a libe- FARMER'S SHOP. At a NEAR MRS. B. H. LoVELACE'S BOAR rn city Repairing a Specialty. society ALL work done wt.h nea nea ai d di chosen busines We call seal attetn or1< Sater. Wke earneal soii hatronage nahog- our friends and the public HIMn&eRol. were HMSBO tch the WANTED T y 40 CAR LOAD~ WE ARE PREPARED TO PA HIGHEST CASH PRICES FOR COTTON SEED. SILLSW. M. L ANE. .J. E PPS BROWN. SSES, 86 OFFICE AT FLOYD & PU CELL'S. kRING3 'TIENL IRON, Y D :E y i Thin is aNew and Masterly Medical Treat i GS. e ,Ed. oD h ap and am,r.gn,ieInrneN NE CONFDENTA AddrES zcrD " i aho n ELECTRO-MEDCO HY sazd perfecs is eavaluable o anl afnicted, as WORKS Jjfjj A ErE Morr M, D. who hs DISCVI )T HEI.IXI OFA LIFE AND THE TRU Med Tnfimro.3sicelumusv.,Bo "I HEARD A VQICEg I1 THE PECU~LIAR MEDICIN) ,$tilled fromn the finest growth of Rye, e ela, have attracted the attention of BEA M. to such a degree as to place it in a yel j." For excellence, purity and evenness M4TE. any in the market. ft is entirely fr B T. and fine Tonic properties. FrSl -o Sal. IL Attor ewberry and )fice-Rooms 5 and Smith & Wearn. obert T. Calidwe UNDERTAKER. TAKE THIS METHOD OF AN uncing that I have opened the busi s of an undertaker. fy office and shop is located under Caughrin's Hall, corner Adams and yce Streets. will furnish. Burial Cases and fins of all kind and being supplied h a good hearse I tender my service the public in attending any funeral. sk a share of the patronage of the blic. ROBT. T. CALDWELL. LEY W.FANT, -DEALEB IN 1E WINES, LIQUIORS, TOBACCO, CIGARS, &c. -:::o::: )OL and BILLIARD ROOM. NEWBERRY, S. C. rany d bhe ' id the bottom, put him down as a W. L .DOUCLJ $3 SHrOECE .M 85.00 GENUIo HAD-SEWE SH 8.50 EXR AUE C O HOE. 62.00mand 6175 BOS' SHOO S W. L. DOUCLAS $3 SHOE .ADIE4 U t sod byyur dle,write SFOR SALE BY MINTEE & JAMIENON, FAVORITE SING Warranted for Five Years. ON LY $20. DELIVERED AT . YOUR HOME. SOur Favorite Sin "Drop Leaf, Fancy Cover, Large Drae. Nickel Rings, Tucker, Ruffer, Bind Four Widths of Hemmers. Sen on one eek's tra. Delerdn yo RCo-operative Sewing Machine 219 Quince Street, Philadelphia,1 U :ODTT, 3L. I enn n,to ey YOUNO, MD sea ofthehkdneys and aldsae eedn wr b.. ho as1 Coubu Avenue, or,'0 trehes the very roots and VitalS of disuse ERWE.ER L QULTISOFW ISE te Mica FautntemUnie yighsetiormogte aeraM Sfro ultertiond Vale of ntea Mon at Newberry only by T-- C. SU MMETRT Arri " Col T No. -D Lv. Columbia ............... Arrive Sumter............... Leave Florence........... . 4 Lv. Marion...... .........51 Lv. L. Waccamaw ..............7 Ar. Wilmington ..............8 Train No.48 stos at all Stati Nos. 48 and 4, stops only Whiteville, Lake W accama Nichols, Marion, Pee Dee, Flo ville, Lynchburg, layesville,8 field, Camden Junction and Passengers for Columbia an C. & G. B. B., C., C.& A. B. B. Junction, and .all points bey No. 48 Night Express. Separate Pnltman Sleepers and for Augusta on train 48. Passengers on 40 can take 48 rence for Columbia, A points via Columbia. All trains run solid between Wilmington. -JOHN F. D General T. M. EME4S0N. Gen'I Pass. South Carolina Raiwa TO AND PEOM C EAST (DAILY.) Depart Columbia at.... 6.50 a Due Uharleston...........10.35 WEST (DAILY. Depart Charleston........ 7.a Due Columbia.............0.45 a TO AND FEOM EAST (DAILY am a Depart Columb ....6 50 7 M p Due Camden. .-L... 2XEP WEM' AILY EXCEPT am a Camden....... 745 7 am Columbia.....1025 .1 TO AND PROM AUGU EAST (DAILY. Depart Columbia..--. 6 50 Due Augusta.............11.46 WEST (DAILY Depart Augusta...- 6.10 Due Columbia...-..-10A5 CONNECTION Made at Union Depot,Col biaand cGreenville Railroad at 10.45 A.M.. and departing with Charlotte, Columbia road by same train to and both roads to and from SJd yond by train leavin Char and Columbia at 60 a. In coach to Morristo- n, Tenn. by these train AtCharlestonwithSteam and on Tuesdays and F2ida for Jacksonvlle and points - Biver;also with Charlesto a EaD.road to and from - y- points inPFlorida. *At ugtawith Geo ~$ -ailradsto and from South. At BlackVile to Barnwell Railroad. Throng E. .appnt ~E. D. C. ALL.EN. Gen.P EDMONT AIR *ES EAichmond and D COLUMBIA AND GRE Condensed Schedule-In eff (Trains run on 75th M *g NORTHBOUND. - Lv Charleston......... SLv Columbia............ Ar Aiston............. Ar Unin................ Ar Spartanburg......... Flat Rock............ Henderson....... Asheville............ Hot Springs.............. Pm aria............ Prosperity..................... S Gold vle......... Clintoni.......... Lan rens............. Ninety-Six.......... Green wood......... A bbe ville............. ($ Lv Belton................ ArPelzer.............. S Piedmont.............. @ Greenville........ Anderson.............. Walhalla............. Atlanta............... bOUTHBOUND. A M erLv Walhalla................... ...,a0 Anderson.........:.... ....... . 9 g; ers' A bbevifle........................ P M 10 50 ,, Greenville..................,..... 2 10 9 Piedmont.....................2 53 lM Pelzer.............................. 3 10 10 33 ne frc Williamuston ............~'.... 3 171041 Sav Belton..................~.....340110 Greenwood ......----...-................. 12 33 Ninety-Six..-------.-------. A ....... 1 20 i.U. Laurens............. 6 , Clinton .............:...7 Gold ville ........,....7 Newberry................ 8 O........ 2 45 Prosperity................. 8 ........ 3 07 Pomaria.................9 12........ 3 31 Asheville .............. ........;.... g g Hendersonvile......... ..I..... 9 54 aluda. ...............s...----'.-10S Tryon...............--|--.--J12 Spartanburg.......--------- 12 85 P M Union.------------. -------.----..-.2 Lv Aiston................... 9 30 --[ 4(0 S Ar Colum ,a.......-..-... 10o...... 5 to A ususta..........- ....~.... g ,j pon Nos. 3. 4, 50 and 51 daily eap*Sunday Main Lln.e Trains 54 and 5 y Columbia aund Alston. Daily etet-Sna bten Alst w' and Greenv11le. .8) Sna . JAS. L. TAYLOR. Ge'Pss gn D.CA RDW E LL, Dlv.PsAt. id* AOL. H A A M. Traffne Manbnaer. all. - - I pIOXs DS mga ~tats ii FOR CONSU avor Piso's Cure is our h ?I.Iaves I LA31 -. n,nra