The Newberry herald and news. (Newberry, S.C.) 1884-1903, January 21, 1902, Image 4
I~ ETO Bx,MJ-H1
ATroRNEY GgNrtL ASKS GENERAL
ASSEgMLI TO UEVOKE LI-.E
ror FlOutiln the' S"at*-'-The Ferillizer CoW
PADy se ks 10 tiave AC'o10 B,0ght
Against it Tried in Federal Court
and This Movss ALttorneyGen
eral to Dra4t,0 Recommen
dation.
tChariestoh elsE]
Columbia, January 17.-Attorne3
General Bellieger has asked th(
General Assembly to revoke at onc<
the license of the Virginia Carolint
Chemical Company to do business ii
the State of South Carolina. Thii
drastic procedure is recommended ii
a communication to the General As
sembly today, and is predicate(
ehiefly upon the action of the corpo
ration in seeking to remove the ae
tion against it recently brought b.
the State, from the State to thi
United States courts, and also be
cause of the company's alleged fla
grant violation of the anti trust law
of the State. The attorney's recom
mendation is contained in the fol
lowing, which is the concluding par
agraph of his communication to tb
General Assembly:
"In view of the deliberate attemp
on tWe part of the leading defendan
in the suit to remove the cause be
yond the jurisdiction of the Stat
courts and the open and flagrant con
tempt of the laws of this State ij
purchasing the real eitate, busines
and good will of domestic corpora
tiona situated in this State, and th<
almost certain prospect of a lonj
drawn out litigation, during whici
the litigant corporations are protecte4
by the laws of the State, and unre
strained in the enjoyment of tb
fruits of what the General Assembl,
in isjoint resolution indicated to be
a violation of its laws prohibiting
trusts and combinations in this State
I would respectfully submit to you
honorable body the propriety, an<
- would urge the consideration of thi
*question of passing, as early al
practicable, such act or joint resolu
tion as shall prohibit the Virginia
Carolina Chemical Company fron
henceforth doing .business wit,hii
K ~ this State, making therein such pro
* visions as will effectually preven
them from enjoying the benefits o
any license or permit in the future
I desire that it shall be understoo<
that this suggestion, if acted upon
shall not affect the vigorous prosecn
tion of the suit to final determinatioi
* in the 'courts of the land, nor i8 i
*expected that any act passed pur
suant thereto can reach or affet th
domestic corporations charged wit]
conspiring with the foreign corpora
tions in violating the anti trust law
of the State."
The Virginia-Carolina Chemica
Company has asked for removal o
the cause from the State to the United
States court,- in a petition filed ii
answer to the action beought by th<
attorney general.> The basis of tha
petition is that the action sought b:
the State would impair and destro;
the rights of the company guaran
teed by the federal constitution i1
its provisions for foreign corpora
tions and that therefore the issui
should be tried in the United State
court.
The case was transferred to thb
Unmted States Circuit court today b:
the filing of the records already madi
in the State couirt at Richland, an<
on order of the jodge of that court
so that the case is now a suit of thi
State against the corporation. The
answer of the Virginia Caroline
Chemical Company to the State's
complaint has not yet been made.
The Southern ini the Geography -It Covern
the Whole South.
"The great rivers don't' carry pass
ongers any more," said Chauncey
Depew, "..., ;,reat railroads have
taken their.
Mr. Depew i~ , L, Grass grows
on the wharves at Om ha and Kan
sas City, and only a few freight
boats are now occasionally seen at
Cincinnati and Louisville.
. The Harpers have gotton a new
geography from which the children
describe the great railroads, an~d
what a knowledge of the whole
country it gives to the yonngsters.
The school children used. to
describe the rivers, but now they
describes the great railroads.
To illustrate how they describe
them, the teacher in the Washington
public school said: "Now, Mary, can
YoU 1now or . L "- -g'
Yes, sir, thlit, a rv " zi
M ay ThY r nk.e ma.
Philadelphia a ja g
ington. Toe 1it bAOi
Sand runs right W a- g
ment and the a I I
>urg at Aopmittox, where
. uee surrezderod to GoLeial
..cant, then to New Orleans aLd
Florida. "Where els3 does it go to,
Marv ?"
"Why, it runs all over creation. It:
spreads out like a great fan all over'
the South to New Orleans, Florida
St. Louis and Atlanta.
"Give me some of the cities the
Southern goes through, Mary."
"Why, from Virginia it goes
through North Carolina with its 196
cotton factories, and through the
cotton and tobacco fields to Greens
boro, Charlotte, Summerville and
Charleston, where the great Eihibi
tion is, and then to Savannah, with
its grand old Buena Ventura. From
Savannah it runs to Brunswick, Ga.,
within sight of Jekel Ibland, and
then to St. Augustine, with its pal
metto and palm trees, and then dovn
into the orange groves of Florida,
where, after shooting a few alligatore,
you can ferry across to Havana and
see Marro Castle and the sunken
Maine. Here you can pick bananas
t while you watch the pretty Spanish
girls as they play their guitars and
flirt with love-sick cavaliers through
the iron gates.
"Where else does it run, Mary?"
"Why, to Memphis and the West.
Then it goes to Pirmingham and
Chattanooga, with its Lookout
Mountain, where Hooker fought
among the clouds. From Chatta
nooga," continued Mary, pointing on
to the map, "you see the 'Southern'
runs southeast to Atlanta and north
to Cincinnati, St. Louis, Chicago,
SCleveland, Detroit and Pit,tsburg."
S"Bat the 'Southern' don't have its1
'own track north of Cincinnati, does
it, Mary ?"
"No, but they send out their won
Sderful 'Florida Special' from Chicago,
over the 'Big 4,' 'C., H. & D.,' and4
'Monon,' and they run through cars
to Florida, from Cleveland and Pitts
1burg to Jacksonville."
1"But that 'Southern's Palm Lim-4
- ited' that ilies from New York to
t St. Augustine, Augusta, Bon Air and
fAiken," said Mary enthusiastically,4
"and the Southern's flier that flies to
'the land of the sky' like a cannon
ball from New York to Asheville,
Nashville, Atlanta, Mobile and New
- Orleans, where you can see the lavish
1 mg Creole girls with their goo-goo
t~ eyes and-"
"Bat your geography don't say
-that, Mary ?"
e "No, but my brother George said
1 that when he got back from the
. Mardi Gras. George said, he got
,his ticket at the Southern Ry. Office,
1185 Broadway, and left New York
in a snow bank at twenty-five min
1 utes pest four o'clock in' the after
f noon, and was in warm Atlanta in 24
j hrars, and in New Orleans in 39
hours."
Mary might have added that Sam
Snel Spencer, the President of the
S"Southern" has taken in the "Queen4
rand Crescent," which runs from Cin
Scinnae r.d Louisville to New Or
leans b. Shreveport, La., and he is
President of both roads-about 9,000
1miles long.-Eli Perkins' Railroad
-Letter.
ileadache
kills, not necessarily suddenly,
but SURELY. It preys upon the
intellectual powers more than ~
we realize. It consumes the ~
vitality faster than nature can
replenish it, and we cannot tell C
just what moment a temporary
or complete aberration of the a
mind will result. Headache and t~
pain should be promptly re
moved-but properly. Many
pain cures are more harmful c
than the pain. Beware. If fl
you would be safe, takes
Mil.;.- Pain Pills.
"As a result of neuralgia I lost the
sihtof my right eye, and the pain I
haesuffered is incomprehensible, be- g
ing obliged to take opiates almost con
tinually. A friend gave me one of Dr. b
Miles' Pain Pills and it promptly re
lieved me. I then nurchased a box and0
now my trouble is~gone. They have w
also cured my dauechter of nervous
headache, and I heartih'. recommne:d W
them to others."-W. J. 'CORLEY. Bre- 0
mond, Texas.
Sold by Duggists. 25 Doses, 25c.
Dr. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, md.
Some Strange
.e1'd
Littt'e Cla~y ~es 1
sand w-1 0
ati le objet. It wz!i
ia. row and had a tou! b.
6t and dented in Ch ' . r.
1-I could not make oui W it t -
51 ie ran to Cinda, his lblack rlr&,
Lad showed it. to her. Ci-ho l ogbd.a
"Lawsy, honey," sie said, "that
ir am er 'gators aigg. Dig erway,
' yer'll done fin' er heap mo'."
So Clay dug away lustily, acid sure
)nough up came more eggs with c
very shovelful of sand. Five times 1
2e filled his little bucket and carried
hm home to his mther, uutiltwenty- t
five eggs lay in the box she gave N
im to put them in. That. nighf, t
when Clay was in his white "nightie" t
ind having his "loving timt" with
iis mother, he asked, "How came the
)ggs in the sand?"
"The mother'gator hid them there"
inswered his mother, as she rocked
ind cuddled her little boy.
"Don't the mother 'gator cuddle
der eggs like the mother hen does?"
isked Clay.
"No, dear she leaves them in the
r
3and for the hot sua to hatch out."
"Well, I fink the mother 'gator is
i very selfish thing!" cried Clay, sit
:ing up in his indignation.
"0, no,"said his mother, smiling.
'That is her way of taking care of
.hem-the way God taught her. She
ban't cuddle her eggs like the mother /
ien. She has no soft feathers, and
ier hard skin would break the eggs
f she sat on them. The nice warm 1
and cuddles them, and the sun helps
o hatch them out."
"0," said Clay, nestling down
gain. "Poor mother 'gator! I so I
orry for her. How bad she must
eel not to cuddle her eggs."
"She takes good care of them,"
aid hs mother. "She often comes
:c look after her babies, and when
hey hatch out, she finds food for
hem, and will not let anything hurt
hem.I
"What would hurt them ?" asked
Jlay, drowsily.
"There are many animals who hunt
~or the eggs, and I have beard that
he father 'gator likes them, too, and
~ats them all up if he can find them."
"What an awfnl bad father!" cried (
31sy, his sleepy eyes coming wide
>pen again. "Poor baby 'gators. I '
o sorry for them."
"But their mother takes care of
hem, and will not let the father find
hem, if she can help it," said Mother
Rees, hugging her own little boy.
"Will she go to look at her eggs '
o. morrow day ?" asked Clay.
"I think she will," said his mother.
"Then PIll take them all back," (
nurmured the sleepy little fellow.
"Poor mother 'gator-f eel-bad" I
-but Clay was off into dreamland,
vhere mother Aligator and her eggs .
vere all forgotten.
The box of eggs was put in a
~loet, and neither Clay n>)r his mothe r -2
hought of them again. A week later
3ay went to the closet for some toys,
Lnd heard a strange, rustling noise.
Ie looked up and saw a bdx on a
hef with the cover dancing up and
lown in a frantic manner.
"0, mother!" cried Clay, dancing
ip and dos n himself in excitement,
'come here-quick! Here is a box
-all alive!'
His mother came running in, and
here were a dozen tiny black snouts
>eeping out under the box cover.
3efor.' she could even scream, outs
>opped a swarm of baby alligatorse
ud dIropped down to the floor, where u
bey scampered off in every direction.E
Mi the eggs had batched, for the
loset was behind a stove and the
ox in a warm place. jI
Sueb a time as there was! Clay
imped up and down, screaming with
'lee, b)ut his mother was screaming
rith fright, and she climbed on top
f a table to get out of the way of
1e alligators, wvho went running e
bout, as if in a hurry to investigate
is new, straoge world in which they e
und themselves. Black CiudaV
iie running in tosee what was ti e
atter, and she got up o.1 a chair at d
:reamed, too. If Clay's father had
at come in they might have been
rched there, screaming yet.i
Then for a hunt! The baby alli
.tors hid under the furniture and
reoe nertecres,ppig .
arrow ednery thoe ants corpnr -It
as oeery ebore threr at e
as neaught Fatheek bef sook thratoee
itso euht.FterRi s shton ornng ande
lohrRr ery a i hn
Lt ofuhl boo onher stoking, an aond
ot her Recs narl had (a fit when
e pulled on her stocking and found w
e t ui2 rhot whrr tho rrifigei
f pi f own nd eCgel bhird t
eep them ill. But whet bis motho
>ld him that the motber 'gato
on'Jld wait hpr babies, he consente,
> have them taken to the beace
U;s father let him keep six aud mad
p,en for them in the back yar
rith a small tauk of water in i1
lere Clay played with them and the
ecame very tame, and 3eemed t
now their little waster. He we
ften seen with the whole lot swarn
ag all over him, but his mother coul
ot bear to touch the creatureE
hough Clay assured her that the
vay uf running up his arm and pokin
heir black snouts into his face wt
heir way of loving him. He kel
kis pets for a year, then sharp, whi
eeth began to come in their bi
nouths, and his father thought the
night become dangerous playfellow
0o one Light they all disappeare
6ud Clay never saw them again.
Le had been on the beach the ne:
ay be might have seen six youn
ligators scampering about i
hough they did not know what I
ake of their strange surrounding
wonder if their mother knew them
-Congregationalist.
The Heart of the Woods.
hear it beat in morning still
When April skies have lost their gloon
Lud through the woods there runs
thrill
That wakes arbutus into bloom.
hear it throb in sprouting May,
A muffled murmur on the breeze,
,ike mellow thunder leagues away,
A booming voice of distant seas.
n daisied June I catch its roll
Pulsing throng the leafy shade,
Lnd fain I am to reach its goal
And see the drummer unafraid.
)r when the autumn leaves are shed
And frosts attend the-f,ding year,
,ike secret m'ne sprungbj my tread,,
A covey bursts from hiding near.
feel its pulse mid winter snows
And feel my own with added force
Vhen red ruff drops his cautious pose
And forward tak~es his humming cours<
he startled birches shake their curls;
A withered leaf leaps in the breeze;
ome hidden mortar speaks and hurls
Its feathered missile through the treet
~ompact of life, of fervent wing,
A dynamo of feathered power,
bhy drum is music in the spring,
Thy flight is music every hour.
-John Burroughs in Atlantic.
Comfort.
he day is long, and the day is hard,
e are tired of the march and of keepir
guard;
'ired of the sense of a fight to be won,
)f days to live through and of work to 1
done;
'ired of ourselves and of being alone,
Tet all the while, did we only see,
Ve walk in the Lord's own company,
Ve fight, but 'tis He who nerves our art
Ie turns the arrows that else migJ
harm,
Lnd out of the storm He brings a calb
Ld the work that we count so.hard to di
le makes it easy, for He works, too;
Lnd the days that seem long to live al
His,
Sbit of His bright eternities; and clo:
to
our need His helping is.
-Selected.
Rie Externia
The blood ma~y be in bad conditio:
t with no external signs, no ski
ruption or sores to indicate it. Ti
ymptoms in such cases being a variabl
ppetite, poor digestion, an indescribab:
reakness and nervousness, loss of fles
nd a general run-down condition of ti
ystem -clearly showing the blood ha
>st its nutritive qualities, has become thi
nd watery. It is in just such cases the
iS. S. has done some of its quickest an~
2ost effective work by building up ti
lood and supplying the elements lackin~
:>make it strong and vigorous.
" My wife used sev
ral bottles of S. S. S.
s a blood purifier and
tone up a weak and
maciated system,with
ery marked effect by -
-ay of improvement.
"We regard it a
reat tonic and blood
urilier. "-J. F. DUFF,
rinceton, Mo.
tonics, and yan wil
poves hatoe,ste ofta
fin d the appetite im
turns, and nervousness vanishesas nev
ch pure blood once more cirulate:
irough all parts of the system..
S. S. S. is the only purely vegetabri
ood purifier known. It contains no mir
a- htvr edfrorfe ol
loo wander sndsae and ourie book
uyic fo an infiseationd orite om
yiin Nor carge ifor mealno advice
mthd. NoP chargeF fo. medical. advc.
FOR HARNESS "a'-"'.
st oDuA aad you wiM be J't!miab 1
r
d
ir
g
It's this wa
e You can burn yours
Powder, etc., or yot
Y with Steam or HotI
S only one proper wa:
scald and that is bY
Lf
Mexican
MustAng
. It gives immediate relief
linen cloth, saturate it wit
loosely upon the wound.
idea what an excellent rem
you have tried it.
A FOWL TIP. I h t'y
Lintment. It is called a STANDAI
Who Was Rieh?
"If I were only as rich as he is !"
muttered a boy, who had just found
a crust of stale bread in a garbage
barrel, as he eyed a poorly-dressed
boy leaving a baker shop with a
basket of whole, fresh loaves.
"If I were only as rich as he is?",
said the boy with the fresh loaves,
as he saw another boy on a bicy
cle, munching candy.
"If I were only as rich as he is!,,
sighed the boy on the bicycle, as
another boy rolled past in a pony.
cart.
"If I was only as rich as he is!"
grumbled the boy in the pony-cart,
as he caught sight of a lad on the
~deck of a be'autiful private yacht.
"If I only was as rich as he is!"
this lucky fellow wished as his
father's yacht cruised in foreign
waters, as he spied one da.y a young
prince, attended by a 'retinue of
liverlied servants.
"If I were only as free as he is!"
impatiently growled the young
prince, thinking of the boy on the
g yacht.
"if I could drive out alone with
a pony and nobody to take care of
me but myself !" thought the pam
pered boy on the yacht.
"If only I could have a good time
like that boy on the bicycle!"
~longed the driver of the pony.
it "How happy that boy with the
basket looks!" said the boy on the
a, bike.
"If I could relish my dinner as
-e that boy does his crust !" said the
baker's boy. "I'm sick and tired
of bread!"
Which one was rich P-Christian
Endeavor world.
50 YEARS'
EXPERIENCE
Tmnaos MARKS .
DESIGNS
COPYRIGNTS aC.
e AnyOnOa endig a sketch ad decton may
speciaL notice, without Iath
W' A handsomely ilustrated wey.Largest cir
clati Ao*r any scentine oyan Tuers
B ranch Offce ySt..waaatn
SCHEDULE Di RFFECT AFTER juiE 2, 1901.
Daily--Except Sunday.
Lv Glenn spig................... 900a m
Roebuck.....................945a m
ArSDartanburg...................100a m
.Lv Soartanburg...............~.... 45 p'D
Roebuck.................. ..... . 405 prnm
*Ar Glenn Springs .....~...... .44p
~BLUE RIDGE RAILROAD
H . C. BEAl-TIE, ?eceiver.
I .Effective .... -. 1897.
:' setween Anderson ad Waiba11a.
I asTBoUND. WUITBoUND.
Mij4ed. Mixed
No. 12. StatIons. No. I
I.Ar 1100 am.......Anderson.........LV 36pm
lArl1040 am................Denver..............LY 356 pml
~Ar 10f21am..........Autan................L 4 05 pm
SAr 10 22 am.........Pendleton.........Lv 41I4 pm
a r1 8am... ..Cherry's (frossin.g......LV4 93 pm.
3 r00 m...dm'crqesn......LV 429 pWn
:Ar 9 4 am .......senec.......... }Lv 4 47pm
SAr 9Z25am......West Union .......Lv 5 Dpm
ArssO am...........Walhiafla ............Lv517 pm
~A.M. Lv. P. M.Ar~
J. R. ANDERSON, 8nprntendent
'onneetions at Beneca wth8oEBRNOl1.
A ~ A ~ 0.. ~.A1rnw Vna. 11 unit It
Sores Mexican MNustnn. M.
t what you neod. It t.*!.t--,'.
p see how quickly it heali soce
elf with Fire, with
can scald yourself
Nater, but there is
r to cure a burn or
using
Liniment.'Shor
Get a. niece of soft old
t. this lilment and bind
ron can have no adequatN
edy this is for a burn until Lv $
C(
,bird afflicted with Roup or any *
disease use Mexican Mustang C)
Z remedy by poultry Lreeders.4 ArRa
LvC,
A
C1
C
C'
SOU THERN RAILWAY, ArH
Lv F
Ar F
P
"Uadeasd Sehedule In EDO N
June 80th, 1901.
........... 1 0p-E i0
r4erviL..... 12 00 n't 7 41 a In
ea C ...... 2 00 a m 9 00 a m
bur a....... 2 m 9 28 a n
.... 4- AinN124-a m
K ana ........12 80 am 1230 am '
" w1.........4 183am 4 18am *1
" .........4 28a_m 4 28 am1
Tumia........ 800 a m1180 a m
rity ........714 am 12 20 n'n
a w .........7380 a m 12 85 p m
e i .......880 a m 180 p m
"rnwood.......8 50 am 2 05 pmILVi
y,od.........9 15 am 2 25 pm .
v. Anderson ........ 940a m 2 45 pn
. Aanta.Ce'ie)8 5 me 06pLm Ar
Wi.ety1Si.......... 620 p r 940 am lion
** nt........ 1150 pm 10 am -wth
Ii.Blason......... 125pam 102a m or
.Aneson....... . 807am 801715am toh5
BeSaton ............7 450pam 10450am
oa(.............. 8 06 p 11 amWs
woodll..... ... 4285apm 15pam Ma
*SWine -ix......... 557a pm 6125pm -o
"w Ch rryto....... 170 a5p m 30pm pi
W ....... ..a 10 82 p m 1 2 p 00 1 .
90 9 O ..........O11 505 2p 4 p2mave
a .......... 2 52nah A ir. .52 a m
.......... ....3007a m 7 . m
" Svanah.........cvll 4 "5.a . 2_450 a m -
O.l EinO........2um2la:: m1 8 6p -
Ma geburg..tuo.... 8 452a5p 4 p
S hvll...... 2 " 11 57 25 lpm
" Summerville. olet.... ' 571a 6 42 pm
Ar. Ch rletn.... ...I i 00 a m 706 p m
Wo LEDAL STIOS NST1EN
Tadiia Av.Char le son. D7nin po 0as
t0 ai7s41ra e allnmeile "ro42pt557
a e2au " Oranburg A. & 42 divis,
12an .1mgl a. i. 46 in. 2outha
a L~~~i.te..)aanna Ar5 p . 4 E5 a S J
eaveGoe11e,A ad0 d80 ao 2.. .olu5 mi.11.m (V15tp A0 X
mortb12n155p L...lson... an 18 50.m., m
Ma. 1b p Limited)and.. ":5 p. 15. 7oth 46
125 .. .4U~no2pin...1 87Vat7 10
5 0 A SpatanurgL 10 85 a 15
S15ar...onAndheveil le . 5h p -
n hileinarn Tn roaleinsg5an
rains oi-ae ad eal erte.rot 8
Libweni )akoy and m.;natuth
T ed), and 10 Nlia m. lo 6r e- 9
leave Green ville . ad0 iiin
5:5 . .,2:4. HmH.R dW5:18 . 9
SLimi an :55 m;stouth
and8S al16-Pnn~an arleing R arv '2
Astn an Ashel Shr.Ln j. 0
Ariv Prenodman123w' pom Slepn 3A2
Abereen.ac.onill.andc.nati
W2andrl14H Pallman1 Paro arP e
Asheville.-d7 15dpAshe..l...
L .avAs e n .. .. 7 Gen- m - 9. .
Spatanur. W11ain 330pm s
As.Gennpr Div......A.. --
_ALarst, ..harlest op r . 40
Ar8'18lveWatelt(Her.. 23r3lim..W......*
cheuenood. 30t pec. 29,51901. 2
Le aave Ausa....~............:072 3 0pa --lO
Arrive AGueeta.......2pm..... . . 4~. 3
Allnd e o ......... .. .... ...... 6251 p 47
-Faren........... . ,... p 532p 325]
Grevlle...........2 522 p7 930p arr4
Genn8rings.. 5p ..IOh . .........
prtanourg... . 3030apm 9800am Ui3
8aludvana..............3pm....... ..... 920g
Henen ville........ . pm ........
Ase ville...........1 401 p m 5. ..0 ....
La emAshele.... ...7 156p m ..4........
8arfanbr...... .74 4 30pm 9o a
Luena..................764 m 30 p He 40
Arve W satelo(..)... 23.p............0OJ n . 0
Gis enct t(reenwood.......30 for allp
ons a A .erso n C............... . 7aI 25y an -
Augustn a........o relative 4 o tI:c ae 2
Z a v Au ust .................. .... - . -5p 1 5
E. M.NORT. Sol Agi
Al eM On e........... M.... ... 62 gy
ages, ales, address
W. J. CRAIG, Gen. Fas. Agt.,
Augusta, Ga.
E. M. NORTH. Sol. Agt.
e u wummann emma wannaar '.
Fruit.
Its quality influences
the selling price.
Profitabie fruit
growing insured only
when enough actual
Potash
is in the fertilizer.
Neither guaniy nor
good qualiy possible
without Potash.
Write for ourfrn books
giving details.
GERMAN ICALI WORKS.
93 Nassau St., New York City.
LIS ILIIT
?s
INS
DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE
"a0ital City RoM-"
eat iinn between all priociPal cites
North, East, South and West.
schednie in effect Dec. 1, 1901.
Central Time. Local At
Daily. Daily. lanta to
iound 66 84 Cinton.
vannah,.......11 30 pm 1 55 pm
rfaX ............ 1 09 am 8 40 pm
imark...- 1 50am 4 27 pm
Eastern Time.
)utr bia......... 410am 705pm
iden............ 5( am 8 00 p'h
ieraw ............ 639am 9 40 pm
imlet ... 7 05 am 10 J5 PM3 f
Rhoun rails 100 am 4 21 pm- 12iam
bbeviUe ....... 133 am 4 54 pm 1257pm
reenwood ..... 156 am 5 i pw 122pm
inton............ 2 45 am 6 08 pm 16pm
irlisle............ 3 33 am 6 58 pm
bester............ 4 0) am 7 2) pm
itawba Jct.... 4 35 am 7 91 pm
Imet............. 7 00 am 10 1D pm
S[alet........... 7 25 am 10 4 pm
.. ...........J1) 15 am 130 am
ete sburg...... 2 26 pm 5 54 am
lchmond.. 30pm 635am
rashington.... 6 35 pm 10 10 am
aitiwore .......1125 pm 1126 am
hiladelphia ... 2 56 am 136 pm
ew York......... 630am 416pm
ioutn-Norfk 5 23 pm 7 15 an
Eastern Time.
hbound. Daily. Daily.
31 27
,%oraw............ 7 11 am 1 o6pm
aden .......8 31 am 12 53 am
Central Time.
lumbia......840 am 1 05am
memark......952 am 217 am
r ..........10 30 am 2 57 am
vann ab.......205 pm 440 am
c8siavilie... 3 ! 0 pm 9 05 am
m...,....... 5 (am 5 40pm
'Eatern Time. Local
twa.......19*7 am 12 57 am Cnt'n to
eter...... 945 am 12 85 am Atlanta
riisle......10 ->)am 2OJ)am No.658
iton..... Ii ami 2 57am 2456pm
-ee woodl...t2 pm 3 43 am 8 35pm
:bevile....22[ pm 4 .0 am 4 07pm
alhoun Falls..12 50) pai 4 3 am 4 45 pm
hens.......221 pm 618 Sam 6 .9pm -
.tanta..... 455 pm 80 nm 8 50pm
y..ia, New berry and LaurYens Bailwe y,
No 6,2 leaving Columbia. Union sta
t 11.20 am <ily, connects at Clinton
S. A. L Railway. Nio. 58. affording
st and quickest rcute by several hours
uatt. Chattanooga, Nashville St. Louis,
o a.ld all points West.
e connection at Petersbur. Richmond,
ngtoIl Portamouth. Norok Columbia,
nah .Jacksonville and Atlanta, with
111etvestibule trains carryi
hPullman sleeping cars betwen
paI points.
L. Railway 1,000 mile books are good
., N. and L. Railway; also to Washing
C.
redluced .rates, Pullman reservations.
PYO W. P. iicruggs, T. P. A.,
Savannani, Ga'
.Barr, Ist -V. P, & (G. M.
. L. BIunch, .G. P. A. Portsmouth, Va.
n Effect Sunday, October 6, I9)1.
(Eas:ern Standard Time.
bound. Northbound
STATIONS.
A.I. P.M. P.M.
45a Lv Atlanta (5.A.L) Ar. 8 tO
OUa Athme1 52 -
1 16a Elbetta 4 18
2 23p A bbevlle 3 15
2 4p Green wood 2 48
1 35p g r Clinton Lv. 2 00
(C.&W C.)
0 00a Lv Glenn Springs Ar 4 00
1 45a Spar'tan burw 8 10
2 Ip (Greenq1vie 3 00
(Harris Springs)
12 52p Waterloo 2 06
1 16-.. ar Laurens(Din'r) Lv 1 88
63 62 85
rFrt Dly Ft
an. ExSt
0 2CvLaurens Ar 1 47 600
(2(8 " Parks Ar 1 40 4650
0 2l ..Clion.. 125 4 )
2 32 Goldule 112 3 51
S2 59 .Kinard.. 1 05 3840
7246 ..'Jary... 100 331
6251 .Jalapa'.. 12i5 322
03C6 hiewberry~ P242 300
3 .A t'rospelrity 12 29 2 22
23 0 ..Sih .. 2 2) 202
5 : 34 Le Moun~ta.in la .6 1 56
53 43 ...'2hapLn... i2o04 19
4 2,l Hilton 11 57 1 29
S3 55 W hite Rock li 4 1 34
4 (0 i4allentine 11 49 It15
24.,9...iro.. 11 4 1 00
S4 0 a cr' .c ieLvi.M 223'
S LvCo1u. bix A C L.)Ar 1i tO
3 2> 'umter 9 4t.
8$Ar Chareston. Lv 7 00
R.ttes, Time,~ Tables, or further informa
al on any Agent. or Write to
CHILD-., T. M. E HERSON,
President. T raDfic Managr.
IVINGiTON, 11. M. IiMERSO.
Sol. Agt. en'1 Frt. & Pass 'gt.
ANTIC COAST LiNE!
FAST LINE
reen Charleston and Columbia,
per South Carolina and North
rolina.
PABsENGER DEFARTXENT,
WILM MG TON, N. C., "0y. 24th, 1Zi.
CONDENSE D L4CEDrTLE.
W EsT: In Effect No.v. 21 GJOING EAsT
2, 1901 No.653.
Ln Lv..Charleston, S. C...Ar 920 pm
xnLv..........Lanes........Ar 7 40pm
rn Lv. ..........u ter...... ...Ar 6 18pm
nf a r.... ...Colu bia ......Lv 4 40pm
in Ar...Prosp~rity.... ..Lv 2 24 pm
n Ar......Newbe ry.. ...Lv 2 0 pm
in Ar....Clinton........Lv I 25pm
nAr...... Laurens...... Lv 25pm
n Ar...Greenville....Lv 11 10pm
n r...Spaanbarg....Lv 11 00am
ni Ar.... Wins boro......Lv 10 18 am
n r..Charlotte, 1N. C...Lv 8 10 am
m Ar..Hendersonville, N. C..Lv 9 0:
in Ar......Ashev ille-.......Lv 8 00 -
2 nd~ 53 Solid treins between Charle
d Grenville, S C.
E MES - en. Passenger Aent.
KENLY. T. M.EMERSN,