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TERR18 EXUPLOSION. A it -'- tN -%'' Ii*-!*tX W MA %IEVIJ - -.N ;-LvI>LK IN NE W YtOtIK. Ten W.t-r'n: - re Killed, Mi" hin.idrr seris-.ly WountdrC' an:d S- veral Huindredi More wire Cut by rly!tig Gla-A Panic Amoug itth People. Fire Chief Croktr a Hero--Damage Estimated at $1,000,000. New York, Jan. 27.-Eight ai dead almost one hundred are serion ly injured and Eeveral hundred mol g shed by flying rocks and glass, i the result of a terrible explosion i Forty First street and Park avent today. It was caused by two sui cessive explosions of gas in the rapi transit tunnel and nearly a half tc of dynamite stored in a shanty on i street. The men were thawing oi some wet dynamite by means of small fire which spread to the poN der. The concussion caused by ti exploiion set off the dynamite. Dii trict Attorney Jerome, Deputy Poli< Commissioner Thurst, and Fire Chi< Croker hurried to the scene and i vestigated the horror. Chaos reigi ed in that section of the city. Housi tottered for a quarter of a mil around. Murray Hill and Gran Union hotels, two of the finest in ti city, were wrecked. Scores of buih ings moved on their ft.undations an windows were shattered for the dii tance of half a mile. Trains rocke on their tracks in the Grand Centri station. Several fires started in ti wrecked buildings. Three alarn were sent in. All ambulances poss ble were sent to the scene. All hoi pitals in the city sent out calls ft all available physicians to report i once. A thousand people living in mai sions along Park avenue, or stoppin at hotels, waiting to take trains ox of the railroad station or passin along the streets afoot, in cabs, ca riages and trolley cars, were throw into a wild panic. Dozens of horses, terrified by ti awful roar of the explosion, dashe madly through the crowds, runni over men and women and overturi ing wagons. Scores of men and w< men ran blindly away from the seer of confusion with faces cut by flyin glass and streaming with bloo& Guests of Murray Hill hotel ran oi of the wrecked structure with faci and arms wrapped in towels whic: they seized in their rooms to staunt the flow of blood from cuts made I flying glass. A man fell dead frol fright as he ran away, another's hea was blown off. J. Roberts, a gue of the Murray Hill hotel, was crushe in his bed by a falling wall. Ti ceiling of the dining room of the h< tel was hurled down on the gues at dinner. Every one of the patien and nurses in the Manhattan Ey and Ear hospital were injured. TI clocks in the Grand Central static were stopped by the shock. Ti Grand Central station and the Mai battan hotel were damagad and tt guests were thrown into terror. Pe sons in the G.iand Central Pala< rushed to the street in a panic. R4 serves were called from every polic fire station in the city. Every pr vate house and drug store in ti neighborhood was turned into a emergency hospital. In one drug store 125 injured wel treated. A huge water main buri and poured a flood into the debrisi the tunnel, drowning any men wh may have been caught under it. Fii Chief Croker descended alone to tib bottom of the tunnel, thirty five fe< below the street and at the risk ( his life saved six men. A trolley es in Park av.enue tunne' was crushe like paper by the impact of air thi rushed upon it. The passengers were all badly ct by glass. A workman was hurled block and another was thrown thre blocks and picked up dead an terribly mangled. The property los is estimated at one million dollari Contractor Schaler, Foreman Bracl en, Assistant Foreman McDonald an Hla iAlton Jones, a negro, who ha charge of the blasting were arrestei Mayor Low has asked for a repor of the accident and will take imme diate action. The latest reports show ten person known to have been killed, neari two hundred injured. Some serious ly. The force of the explosion brok a water main which flooded the sul, way tunnel. Engit.es are trying to pump th tunnel out. Three contractors hay been arrested charged with the re sponsibility and are held for the bomn icide. The Manhattan Eye and Ea hospital opposite th' scene was dam aged badly; the patients and nurse were removed to another hospital. T' LY_ U IN W. E. PCLI & Soil TMl Whb ihm Diow. A Boston Pape- Investigates the Merits of Vinol. L IUe'tint * y d [ 'om t B -sfo n - 'be-e has reaebtd us rinor- ot a new discovery. Something that will revolu tioniz-. the practiet' of i ine. A remedy that has givtn sufferers from wasting diseases hopes of renewed health and prolonged life. .e Of enough importance have these stories appeared that a special inter ~ view with W. E. Pelbam & Son, of e Newberry, who are intere.tcd them selves in this new preparation which is 9 called Vinol, was thought advisable. t Our reporter had no difliculty in find ing W. E. Pelham & Son's place of e business. The first man he met said: 3 "Oh yes, W. E. Pelham & Son are the men who have the wonderful new rem d edy that will cure everything that peo n ple always thought cod liver oil would help,"and he was speedily directed to Le t.his enterprising and busy establish it ment. W. E. Pelham & Son are bust ness from the word go, but rather ob a jected to this preparation being spread r- abroad as a discovery. "Why," said W. E. Pelbam & Son, 'e "this is no more a new discovery than - was the moon when it was first viewed through a telescope. The discovery e existed simply in the fact of finding f out a means of getting at the truth we were after. Perhaps the method might be considered a discovery, but what we i- have found has been known for years, and it is nothing more nor less than the a valuable medicinal properties that have e always existed in the cod's liver, and d for which cod liver oil has been pre scribed by so many physicians. You e see it is just this way. Cod liver oil (perhaps you have taken it yourself) is something that is very valuable in all d sorts of wasting diseases, and in itself is extremely disagreeable. Why I firmly believe that a great many cases d of consumption, even, could be cured if it was possible for the pmtient to take enough cod liver oil to let its virtues e become manifest. For those wio have a tendeicy to sore throat, bronchitis, coughs, colds, for every one of an ane - mic disposition, it ha.; always been considered as simply inva!uable; and yet it has more often been necessary to r abandon its use than it has been possi ble to devise a way of administering it. Two eminent French chemists started in and got iut-rested in the matter, and after years of study they have suc ceeded in extracting from the liver of g the cod just what is necessary. and have left tehind that obnoxious, greasy. vile-tasting fatty matter, the thoubt g of which even ba: turned the ttom.-chs of thousands. That is all over now. SWe have found a way of getting the n kernel out of thbe nut. This Vinol that is so much talked about is just exactly tha'. It is the Le concentrat.ed extract of med icine found in the cod's liver that does the good d The grease is like the shell of the nut, g absolutely useless, only it is different to the shell of the nut bec .use besides neing useless it is extremely obnoxious >- and disagreeable to sight, taste and smell. e We have now taken this extract and g put a sufficient quantity of iit in a de licious-tasting table wine We hatve -also added a small amount of organic t iron. This heightens the tonic etiect of tbe wine. The extract of the cod's sliver comes in just the right proportion h to do the greatest amount of good. h"Here, drink this," said Mr. Pelham. has he reached for a bottle and poured y forth what appeared to be, and which smelled like, a delicious, rich wine. SThe reporter hesitated. The thbought d of cod's livers, or anything to do with tthem, brought back memories of the past, when he himself had made heroic d struggles to take that awful medicine. "Go ahead and drink it," said Mr. Pel Le arn The reporter did so, and looked - up. "Yes, I know, but that is all right. I thought you were going to give me bsome of that Vinol you were talking s about, and tiid not know that it was yorcustom to treat a man intervieA' eing you, to a drink like that" e Mr. Pelham laughed. "Well, that is Vinol that you have taken. Now you Sknow that part of what I have told you e is true. It did not taste bad, did it?" And it surely did not. "Now," said 1Mr. Peiham, "let me tell you somet hing e else. You have just taken, condensed, of the curative principles of the cod's liver what you would find in fifty per e cent. of its volume of cod liver oil. You can therefore imagine that if it is ne cessary to take this remzedy, how much e easier it will be to derive benefit from it than it used to be when cod liver oil was administered. Do you realize that e formerly you only obtained a small proportion of these same curative prop erties in a whole pint of that horrible oil? Doesn't that tell the story to you? "You will have to excuse me now, e for, as you see, I am more Ihban driven. it Of course I am getting the advantage of the discovery by being directly con nected with the Boston house." o The reporter thanked Mr. Peiham for his kindness, and left him, wonder 'e ing to himself whether after all a man e had to be born on purpose to be famous, or whether notoriety and good fortune did not sometimes come as a matter of f luck. d CHARLESTI)N LECTTERC. LtA Heraldi and Newn Correspondent Now in the '4Gity by the Sea" Writes of LtWhat Is to b'e aeen There. a Charleston, Feb. 1. e The Herald and News: One of the most difficult things to do down here is to sit still and write a letter - there is so much to be seen and en joyed. daily and nightly, hourly. d If one wishes to have a quiet hour, dwhere scattered thoughts cannot re -fuse to be collected, and where that t mysterions feeling of longing (com mon to fallen humanity since sin a cast its first shadow across the plains y of purity and peace) may for the -tinie be induced to calm its re>tless Sness, there is beautiful Magnolia, whose shores are washed by the wa ters of the Cooper, alive today with a sunshine and breeze from sky and - ocean, and which river-so near the silent city of the dead, ever passing rin its eternal run, now playing and Stoying in seeming happiness with the flow of the tide, then mnrmering at hlo ch--irl its i,ver rm -r,tndur Fiit ~ ~ ~ ~ 11 olo+oi.ctreIi-ttt-' t r 11rT liIt ~ih.a run: aiot dhelight flt lif fain hanel whi"rb he to ht theo riateh tand i sron'T n .m t ht riviys therjof ShAll eh. "a City 4of GC.'' Thlenl thoro is theo bi-iters , inthiir qu111i-t and11 a mlost devlighit fi Sp 1", at favoritle phico whoro the p) -ophi von-. grt4gate and promuenade onl plotts-vit days to enjoy the fresh soa breiz.) which rideslin on the creA ad in tho spray of the waves and billows rolling and dashing from the broad Atlantic, just scross and beyond the bay, of which the eye nevor ties and the heart is always ready to under stand why it is the pride of every Charlestonian who loves his city. If you visit the city hospital and see the crippled and suffering ones writhing in agony, you will have mingled in your pity gratitude for the health and strength and capacity for enjoyment which a merciful Providence so richly bestows upon some and in his wisdom withholds from others. But the rich and the poor, the well and the sick, the happy and the unhappy, all hear and in their dif ferent moods drink in the sweet chimes which ring out from St. Micbael's and St. Matthew's, and which tell to the ifflicted more than to the strong that some day, some where, there is joy for them; for it is the weak and suffering one who is strengthened by the ehime,, just as the voice of the singer is most touching when her-heart is bleeding. The highest appreciation of lif-3 and blessings comes through sickness and struggles. The chimes carry the thoughts upward and onward. But there are many sights and many things to attract attention here. You are full of life and an ticipation; you want to iove along with the crowds up Kirg street on your way to the exposition. They have some pretty streets here, but King street is where the throng is ever to be found, day and night. A constant stream of people is always pushing along, coming and going, on both sides. Crowded trolley cars, carriages and other vehicles are in line. Richly attired men and women and children crowd the magnificent stores and buy to their hearts' (.on. tents while the blind beggars with trembling hand hold up their cups in vain for the dimes which fall not there from the rich man's purse, ex cept occasionally. The blind receive their living from the nickels and pennies of those who know by expe rience what it means to shive r in the cold and feel the pangs of hunger and want. But we leave and forget the poor beggar in his blindness and wretch. edness; we are all in the pursuit of happiness; we want to see life and beauty; what care we that the blind man's wife and children are hungry and cold; it's no business of ours; give us our daily bread and dinners and cigars; we can treat and be treated with money to burn and throw away-it is not for the blind and the sick, the widows and the orphans, but for our filli-and de strnct ion. Jostling along up King, in addi tion to crowds of Charlestonians and other Carolinians, white and black and colored, and the American from other states, we see the Indian, the Londanese, the Cuban, the Japanese, the Chinese, the Egyptian, the Al gerian, the Turk, the Arab, the Es quimaw, the Fillipino, and pa haps others that cannot be recalled at this writing, all bound for the exposition -some boarding the trolleys, others walking to the grounds, while music ills the air and intermingles with the rattle of the drays, helping to drown the loud voices of the barkers who yell to passers by that it is "all free in the lobby" of this and that theatre along the upper sides of the street. But it is at the exposition grounds that yon see the world of today. By the time vou walk over the hunidrad aid sixty acres of these~ grounds, with a frontage of more than two thousand feet right on Ashley river, and go through the eleven principal buldings and see all the wonderful and beautiful things in tho'n, to say nothing of the midway, you will be ready for a hearty supper. But this letter is already too long for a discription of grounds, build ngs or articles. R. H. G. Mr. Crome: "I'm so ghitd you ike the painting, Miss Ethel.'' She :"O, it's per feet ly lovely ! But you must let me return the rame, as mamma does not allow ine to accept valuable presents frm gntlmen. ''-LTife. SUSPECTED TRAIN ROBiER CAPS I 'I. % .s V 0 HI t 4%NC'I :A. I 1 1-'.* 'e VI IGI N IA. Ido-t-ii- d bV Negro CPtroon--- : That I*e Was it charbtis'w: Night. of the Rtobhr. -- Wpit ch, g in 1119 P'OAPP,i M. [ Special to The State.| Branchville, Jan. 30.-A n iv ing as his name Francis A. A i, claiming to be from Virgitia, w-H arrested this afternoon near Mi.i - ny. He is suspected cf being or i f h express robbers. There was nti.hing found on the man except six watches. He claimed to have been in Ch,ires ton the night of the robbery. fhe negroes working near where iho :.afe was thrown in the river siil Hiat i "two men suspected of being t ran.ps came out of the swamp, almost in rags, and asked them if any one bad been there for the safe." They then went back to the river where the safe was left; one said to the other: "Yes, John, our booty is gone." It is now though; it was a gang of tramps that held up the train and that no one in this section was con nected with the robbery. The peo ple here cannot understand the ac tion of the express officials in turn ing back as soon as the safe was recovered. It certainly seems that they should have made further efforts to catch the robbers as soon as their property was recovered. If there is any truth in what the ne groes say that they were working at the river the morning the safe was rifled, and the robbers c mId hardIly have been more than a half mile away when the safe was pulled up and might have been captured. The man arrested this afternoon was identified by the negro Carson as being one of the men in tho gang Monday night. Allen and the ne gro Carson were taken to Charleston this afternoon. As TOLD FROM CHARLIEsToN. Charleston, Jan. 30.-A Uniited States deputy marshal to'day ar rested Daniel Barr, on the ebarge of interfering with the United States mails. He is supposed to be one of the robbers who held up the Sonth. erm railway passenger train near Branchville Monday night and rifad the express car. A warrant has been sworn ont: against Thomas Carson on the same charge. It is thought that information will be obtained from these men tending to the capture of the other members of the gang of highwaymen. The men were arrested at their homes near the scene of the robbery. The Solid Rock. A gentleman once wished to ex amine a deep coal mine. Corning to the mouth of the shaft, he notic ed a rope by which he supposed the miners descended. Taking hold, slowly he let himself down. When at last he camne to the end of the rope, he found to his horror that he had not reached the bottom of the mine; he realized that he had made a fatal mistake. H-e could not reascend, and to let go his hold was to fall, perhaps hundreds of feet to the rocks below. All around ITCH IS TORTURE. Eczema is caused by an acid humor in the blood coming in contact with the skin and producing great redness and in fanmation ; little pustular eruptions form and discharge a thin, sticky fluid, which dries and scales off ; sometimes the skin is hard, dry and fissured. Eczema in any form is a tormenting, stubborn disease, and the itching and burning at times are almost unbearable ; the a c i d burning humor seems to ooze out and set the skin on fire. Salves, washes nor other exter nal applications do any real good, for as long as the poison remains in the blood it will keep the skin irritated. BAD FORM OF TETTER. "For three years I had Tetter on my hands, which caused them to sweil to twice their natural siue. Part of the time t he disease was in the foi mi of run ning sores, very pain- . ful, a nd causinig me much dliscoml fort. Four 9 1 doctors said the Tetter i had progressed too far to be cured, and they could d) nothning for we me. I t >ok only three bottics of S. S. S. anid was comipet elv cured. This was fifteen years ~ ago, and I harve never since seen any sign of my old trouble."--Mas. L. B. JACKSON, 1414 McGee st., Kansas city, Mo. S. S. S. neutralizes this acid poison, cools the blood and restores it to a healthy, natural state, and the rough, unhealthy skin becomes soft, smooth and clear. sipelas, Psoriasis, Salt Rheum and all skin diseases due to a pois oned condition of the blood. Send for our book and write us about your case. Our physicians have made these diseases a life study, and can help you by their advice; we make no charge for this service. All1correspondence is conducted in strictest confidence. THE CuWIFT 'SPEClIFC CO. ATLANlTA. Ga need not become a body. If they do i MUSTANG will thoroughly, qi -nentlv cure these is no ~gue wrk'ni iment is used a cm1 YOU DON'T KNOW f Mustang 1;uet.&C as darkness. IIe called wildly fr help, but there came no re ponse. At last, giving up to his fate, he let go the rope and fell. le dropped about six inches and stood safe and sound upon the rock bottom of the mine. That rope as long enough for the tall miners, and the shortest of them had learned to have faith to let go without fear. They knew the firm ck would receive and hold them. ist so we may know that Christ ill hold us, if we let go every ting else and trust him. A Miraculous Feat. "It seemed that nothing short of a miracle could save my little daughter from an untimely death," says City Marshall A. H. Malcolm, of Cherokee,Kan. "When two years old she was taken with stomach and bowel trouble and despite the efforts of the best physicians we could procure, she grew gradually worse and was pronounced in curable. A friend advised Mie' N ervine and after giving it a few days she began to improve and final ly fully recovered. She is now past five years of age and the very picture of health." Sold by all Druggists. Dr. Miles Medical Co.. E'khart, Ind. ATANTIC COAST LUNE ! FAST LINE tween Charleston and Columbia Upper South Carolina and North arolina. TRAFFIC DEPAR.TMuT, wILMINOTON, N C.. .Jun Ith, !9' 2 CONDEN8Ed SCHIEl)"LE. (ING W EST: In Eflact JA.N. 1.5 GOilG EAq'T No. No. 190s No. No. ;5 52 53 59 m 6.00 Lv...Charlestonl, S.C...Ar s.3> d.3' .:5 2.5l Lv....... Lanes..... A r 7 40 9.45 .15 9.25 Lv....... u t er...... Ar 1;.3 8 520 10( 1 4.5 .ar..... Colu bir... Lv 4.40 f;.55 ...2.29 Ar..... rop ritr.... Lv 2 4 .... ... 1 .4 Ar... Newberry... Lv 2.0 .... .1 .25 A r...... iint on .... Lv '.33... . '.47 A r... Lau rns.... v 2..>5. . . 3 .25 A r...G reen'ille.. Lv .1 J ... A M .. .0 Ar.. p r tan brg.. v t. ...... ..4 L '.. u T1 I-r, 8. C . A.A r 5.O .... . 1 I1 Ar.... at.e .... : A r I 1 i .... r M. A M ... 34 A r. R ock H il....A r 10.0 .... .. 4 . Ar...Y or v ie....A r '.i .... .. 5 A r.;....B i s brg...A r '.5 .... .. 600 A r . h -lby N. . .. r .5 .... .. 7.1 -\ .. u- he(rtor ton ... i r 1,05.. .. .. 8.?0 Ar.. ario. S C.. t 5-0 . .. 713 A r W innsbo.ro, S. C. Lv :0.1 ..... .. 9.-4 A r...Charlotte. Y. C ..L LV '.0 . Ar Lv --- .. 6 1.Hrenlisonvh1~ie, N. C... D0 ...... . 7.~iA r... As 'Ir(. ... . L7 .? .... . iT ur .lays, Tlh ursday-: ar.d Saltur (I L3' nm Greenvile, 5 C2. s 5s and 9 carry Throujh yoach be M. E MFi:SO N, Gen:. r'a-eogl-r Agent. Ha~its Cured] at m'y G;an'tor ium, in I0 d: ..'< 1hnd.?Ieds of refe rences. 25 -gears a seralat7. BooL on lin Tre tment senit I:E. Ad-Iress h. M. WCOLEY . M. D.Atlanta,.C3. -:1 m, ."" / *. t isyo rfa l, o (AN flieSoseTer -e illu falt,. u airidky a rnorsl1 pernma-~ enL :t :tands at the very topj. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. sendensed Sche'dule in EfDb@ June 30th, 1901. STATIONS' No. 3. N.ii. $dV. Oharieston ........~11 i00 p m 7, 00 ' n " Summerville...12 00 n't 741 a n * Branchville.......... 2 0 a mn 9 00a n " Orangeburg ........ 2 a m~ 9 2$a n " Kingviille ....... 5 a .n 10'.4 a v Savannxah .........12 : a mi 2 i n "Barnwell........... 4 i3 a m U' "Blackrville....... 2 a " Pr m:e:i:y........ 7 14 a nx. 12 2C n'-x " Kewl>erry.....I .7 .o 1.2 35 p n " Ninety-Six........ b ,v a mn 1 30 p n " Greenwood...... 8 50 a m 2 0!5 p n Ar. Hode...... 5a m_2_5__1 Lv. Abeville.......... 8 5a 14 P M tr. Belton............010 ii 3 20 p_n sv. Anderso,n.......... 4'J a mh 2 4 Ar. reenville.......... 11 ' 0 a n~ 4~5 i rAtlant. aCeii~Timni 3 >5 p _0 p n Daily Dainwl STATIONS. No 16. N-> 12. v. Greenville.......... 20 p .140 an " fedmiont ............6.50p 0o a i . Belton............. 3p m I45 a r Ar. Donaids............. 8 05, y r. 11 m a Ii v. hodges ... ..........8 0 p m4T 11 - a Ar. Greenwood........ 8' 50 p r 11 ao a r "Ninery-Six........ 9 10 p 12 J p n "Newberry..... .... 10 15 p mn 1 10 p i "Prosperity......... 10 32 p mn 1 24 p " "Columbia .......... 11 50s p m~ 2 40 ; r.Blackvilie............e Tila 2 .* am "Barnwell........... 3 07 a mn 3 07 a n "Savannah........... 4 50 a m 4 50. a ni. Ly. Ningville........... 2 32 a 5i 4; pir "Oraigebur:........ 3 45 a in 4 42 p r SBranchLvill......... 4 25 a ma 5 25 yp "Summervil:e....... 5 57 a in 6 42 pm Ar. Charleston ....... ... 7 00 a mn 7_3mJ p mi Iaily Daily STATION:S. ,al o15. No.1d. ______-_. 14- - l p 7 00 a Lv..Charmtson:. A; i 4J '. 7 ) S 2 00in 7 41 a "Summenirville 4 6 42 '5 OO00 9 00a " .BranAhviLeo. "5 25 p . '. a 2 4 a 23a Oran,en r g "4 4' -'SR5 4 5a |10 24 a" Kings.-ille 3 as y 2 si a ..80a......Lv..savannah At .... - 18al.... " ..Barnwell .. "....ae 28 al....... " ..Blackvllei.. " . .... 2 2 a f20 al11 80 a "~ .. Columbia.. " 21.) p 1' . 67 a 12 15 p " ....Alst:mi... . " 1 25 p~ a 50 a 58Sa 1 23 p " . . Sant ue... " 12 15 p 7 M p 15 a 2 00Op "... Union . "~ 11 7 7 . - 84 a 2 22 p " ..Jonesville.. "11 1i7 a 6 53p 9 49 a 237 p~ " ....Pacolet .... " 11l05a 6 4?2 1020 aI 8 10 p'Ar Spart anhurg Lv 10 35 a 0 15 p 10 85 al3 40p Lv spartaniburgAr 10 25a 6 00p g 00p 7 15 pAr...Ahevlie...Lv 7 5 a $ 004 "P" p. m. "A" a. mn. "N"' night. DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE BET WEEN CH.ARLESTON AND GREENVILLE. Pullman palace sleeping cars on Trains 35 and 86,7 and .8,on A. and C. di vision. Dining care n these trains serve all m'eals enroute. Trains leave Spartanbur g, A. & C. division. northbound. 63 :53 a. mn., 3:37 p. m., 6:12 p. mn., ( Vestibule Limited) and 6:55 p. nm.; sun bund 12:20 a. mn., 8:15 p. mi., 11:40 a. mn., (Vesti bule Limited), and 10:30 a. mn. Trains leave (Greenville, A. and C. division, orthbound 5:.L a. mn., 2:34 p. mn. and 5:18 p. mx., Vestibule Limited), and o :55 p. mn.; south und, 1:25 a. nh..4:80Op. mn., 12:40 p. m. (Vesti ule Limited), and 11 20 c. mn. Trains 15 and 18--Pullman Sleeping CJar. between Charleston and Asheville. Elegant Pulimnar. Drawinig-Room Sleeping Cars between Savannah and As~heville enrouto aily between Jacksonville and Cincinnati. Trains 18 and 14 Pullman Parlor Cars be tween Charleston and Asheville. RANK 8. GA eTNON, S. H. EARD WICK, Third V-P. & Gen. Mgr., Gien. Pasi. Agent, Washing2to1i P. 0. Washiington, D, O. W. H. TAYL.D, R. W. HuGNT, tlaaletona. Weer Chrleitn 8.Y C. Augusta and Asheville Short Line Schedule in ENect D'c. 29, 1901. Leave Augus.a............ 10 05 ai 0pi A rri ve Green wood.......12~ xi Andlereou ......... .. ......5'pu L u r'ns... ....... 1 41' p .5: WaLterloo ( H. S.). I l1p . Greenville....... 12 2 I1~ ~u:n Glenn Springs. 5p n....... 4 S partan burg...... 3 30 xi 9G.a .a.ud............... 5 3j'~ Hendlersaouvilic..6 0; ; i Asheviplm........7...... Uo~e Ab~-ill..... ......i~.. .r Spartaburg. 15 a 5n :n p mr Gle~r.Sprngs......m........... Greenille . 2 22p xx I .". pam Laurens ~ p . ......... I ' "Pi' [~e~v And rs n . .:. . 7 ........ Axg;s'..... p m ....... A he il............ ......... m . . ... eaeAeille............0pm ...... Spartanburg..........5am 3:p Gle.n.. r... ........ ..... ....... G.arevle.........12 22 p .I? Poreno........ .... 3" 0 p m p: ArrieWto . Sa)..an3naph ............. Greennwoo............0..m EP Porve nersoyn................ )m .. 7 E a ~A uiusta........ ...1 40 r il'G:-' AYe n ae......... I .. p . . 1.- & Fa sir fax............... ........... " p:r Alenaee ...............' . 7-' i rie Aufort.................F a :o nr o rt Royae ......... 'Od~ev.w 'v o - p A r Spava nna wh ....... .......... R i . .. ... ort a iorati....... rx1dt; p tC r te, h,lea , aort ......... 1 0pm'.ia >KntoM. AOr. oL. and C.an .inl:y d atSat.EM N,Tanbr. ihSu e ale ago . For any informatiou relate.-e o tickea ates, schdules, add ress W. J. CRATG. G -m Pan. Mt.. E. M. NORT H. Sol. Art. m u wuonone m-a u maa -- Small crops, unsalable veg ctables, result from want of otash. Vegctablcs are cpccially fond of Potash. Write for our fce pamphlets. GERM.IN KALT WORKS, 3 Nassau $t., New York. MI '01 JOU LEb NS DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE "cgital City Ro1te." Shortest line betw-fen all principal cities N,rth. East. !outh and West. schedu--le in etrect Dec. 1, 1901. Ccntral Tinme. Local At Daiiy. Daily. lanta to North1ound 6b 34 Clinton. Lv auna........11 3 pm 1 53 pm F r ............ i 04 am 3 40 pm 1)n toa- k ......... 1 :-.0 an 4 -7 pm Eastern Time. Colu)*- bia......... 4 10 am 7 03 pm CauAin............ 5 '7 ain 8 00 pm - :ra w ............ ; 9 arn 9 40 pim Ar lla ,et .... ...... 05 am 10 15 pm So. 52.. .v Ctalhouni Fa's 00 am 4 21 pm 12 25 am A bbfvii, l ........ i 31 am 4.54 pm 12 57 pm Grevnw-(o ..... t 6 am 5 19 pm 1 22 pm C(lin! oi ............ 2 5 a4 t r 0 pin 2 15 pm C arli z............ 3am 6 53 pm Che-t:r....... .... 4 0; an; 7 21 pm al v wh Jet. ... 4 3' an 7AlpM A r I lAnlet...... ...... 7 0W am lU I pin Lv lainiet ........ .. 7 21 ai 10 4) pin Ar Ra'ilh h............lt 15 am i 30 am Petersb rt.2 26 pm 5 51 am Richn oud ...... 3 ,5 pma 6 35 am Wash i ng t on.... 6 3* pm 10 10 amt Iailiinrt ....... 1125 pm 1126 am Philade' phia.... 2.56 q.m 1 36 pm New York......... 630 am 4 15 pm PJ!s?-ont!-Srf'k .525 pin 7 15 am Eate-n Time. Southbound. 1)ily. Daily. 31 27 Lv CI:(raw...... ..... 7 11 am 11 06 pm Ca rSe. 31 amzu 12 53 am Central Time. (olum bia...... 10am 1 05 am D[ ' m ar k......9 52 a'n 2 17 am ......r............' 0 Aart 2 57 am -A r Snw. m ah .2 . 4 05pm 4 40 am .J-c"so.vlla... 3 0 p- 9 3a Ta! pa ........ 5 0 '.m 3 40 pm Easte&rn Time. Local Lv Ca tnwba....9 07 am 12 5' am C1nt-n to b est r .......9 4.5 am 12 :5 am A tlanta Ca; '.isle......10 I >am 2 0n. am No. 5.3 C;i aton ....1..: 06 am 2 57 am 2 45pm Greenwod....I! 52 pm 343am 335pm A bb-vi ilh...12 21 pm~ 4 10 am 4 07 pm - aihoui Fah;..l.2 50 pn 4 :8 am 4 45 pm .Ar .2 bons......... 221 pm a i Bam 6 19 pm ..... st...........*l 5pm 8 0 -m 8 50 pm tr do No a/ leainje C 'lumnbia. Union sta on e4f t! ; :i :aniy, con nects at Clinton witho S- A~ L. Railway. No. 51, affording om si an.! quiicke.dO r Ite by several hours to At t:o V! lo:ttanooga, Nashville St. Lous, Chi . a.p4 aU~ li po'inlts West. 4C:o. et w cuanI?) at Petersburg., Rimond, W4 a-hi'gton? I'>rt;.moul h Norfolk, C ilumibia cavaooth, .J:eksonuville anaol Atlanta, with~ evriilines. 31-nili:'cent vest ibule trains carrying 2r. u?bi'ulimanl sleeping cars betweeon all :)rincWi p:o points. S. A L. Railway 1I,000 mIle books are good ->r,N andl L. Railway; also to Washing i on, 1). (. 1<or~ r-du;c'd rates, Pullman reservations, W. P. Sc ruggs. T. P. A., Savannan, Ga .J. M. Harr,. 1st V. P, & G. M. R1. E. L.. Unuch,l 13. P. A. Portsmouth, Va. In EffYet iunlday, October 6, 1931. (Eacru Standard Time. -out anua.Northbound 8-f ATIONS. A'i M.'A.M P.M. P.M. ; 45n Lv A tlanta (s.A.L) Ar. 8 10 10 .ia a theus 5 28 i Fa Ebertonz 4 18 2 2ip Abheville 3 15 .2 Pbp Greenwood 2 48 j .np Ar Cijilo i Ly. 2 00) - (C.&W C) 10 00a Lv (Glenn springs Ar 4 00 i t 45a Spar anburg 3 10 12 oIp' Green die 3 0. (H,trris Springs) J2 r5?' W ,M-,rlcoo 2 06 i l:e .sr Laureas(T)in'r) Lv 1 38 Ex Sun E u 4; ix 2os Pak r24 5 7 7 ) 1 15 4 7 *2'f ''4er 14 0 325 -,.. P )leritD122 Ft2 - S.d Lauen Ar 147500 9 " Cbparks A 10 4130 9..1Clnton. 15 2 9 9 * 4 0-dodlleiu 112 1151 9,'.1 ry.1.. 10033 1.0, 5 I..ahapa.. 1235 328 1*) ~) .1 eArCub!:rL 120 4231'0 Pr->. Su perit 29 222 9 o Ar 5 Hr iton L1 57 002 9o cal 4 0m nyaleno wite t14 11 9 5 C. 9 ....- .. rM.. 1E 4RSON, l ?oAilen4 Tr..p afic Manager. ( ,a ~. -C. ia . .wIrn n on. 0 Fribu es, TieA Tls, orecrteinor. a io call n ny Agen orI wela.to W.o. 1CH2 LD, T M.tin EMERSON, Bj .4W m. A!ient . raffnL Maager o .Aut.uGn' .&.. ass AOg. o-re h 2at.-.P' . l ngL on N. p. Ar H.9a }.E S~ IE, Leceiver. Ar9'3e An.eson ne..d.WaLalla. A.i. e.. Mxed No.1 Se.' otths. R No. 4 ..... G: a.. ...... L.. A n~ d er .On V ........L 3 35d p ArC1l!EI)am.... . rr's Cro m-Jng..L 4 2901 A., r;i"7 am ....... o C-e......4900am SA r9 ti ....b....... e...........1000 a 7m 1'.OOCWIcm.-------.W...Un...n..........L45 Il p A r 9 2enm .prg... hl............Lv57 pm J.RtN SO Simperintenesdent a r s y a t an bu re ----------....... .................10 00 L F g p:gr i a a bu rK ---------........................ 3 45 . E oe o n ek - ---- ----------................ ........ 4 05 a m a m a m p m p m a r G Ie un springs,................................ 4 45 p m