The Darlington herald. (Darlington, S.C.) 1890-1895, August 10, 1894, Image 2
•35?^?53
.PUBLISHED WKE:
FOli THE P
- -BY-
J. J. WILLIAMS, - Publisher.
WALTER I>. WOODS, - Editor.
• " rtUHS(’Kl|-ri()N KATES:
. - (PaVaBI.K IK AKVAM*.)
Owe.Yoar ^ - $X.t>0
Six Month** .50
Three Month* . .ti t. 1 / - .65
* ADVERTISING KATES:
TiiAXsfKNT ADVKMTISfc.VKSl’S 75c. i»er
oqOlirO ’for firet itiwHou, and 50c.
per.Mjimrp lor each HiUMp<|ueiit In-
jwrthiM-
^ Biisikbsb Nuticks 10 cciits per line lor
T * .eaciypBerthjji.
Li Him A l Dihcount mmlc on contract
'or standing ailvdWiseinenle.
KiU4> for traueleiit advertisements Will
. . -li^ promptly presented.
.* BlU. kok VoNi'ii A(T mlvertiseuenls
will be prcernled. every three months.
UKJirr by ExpressJHoney Order, Check
I’oslolnee, Postal Note’ or Kegistered
lj«tmt. * ; ''
Am>KKd| aU. ronuminicatious antb re-
tnitJairce™«)
TlfprilAKLlNOTON llEUALD,
Darlington. K.
’ -h, '''
FRIDAY, AUG. 10,1S04.
’fitruu-rTTs'W' m'iTSno 'SWTtirtiTi-
'lisa^yuutage tyMk-i: which he
Kil^PhiliaretBtvitB hjl mote
fortAate i'i tjn- ffc'iilh. Of
coqi|k nojbne trould^ioli to tite
popiilatitfe of the Rtato-fe d^nse tut
SoHthrrn Development.
We have front time to time called
attention to “The Southern States,”
a monthly periodical devoted entirely
to the development of the great, and
ati yet comparatively untouched,
resources of the South. This is the
only periodical of the kind published
in the South and it should receive
the active support of every one who
wishes to see his section increase in
wealth and population. In the July
number there is a very interesting
article calling attention to the mag
nificent farming sections traversed
by the Atlantic Coast Line, and.
without exaggeration, telling what
they are capable, jmder intelligent
management, of producing. The
assertion can he safely made that in
no section of the country, covering
the same urea, cun he produced such
a variety of crops, Igith field and
garden, as can be grown to perfec
tion in this part of South and North
Carolina.
If a circle were drawn of so.many
-w
experiment of |(ivin
fem.ile Suffrage a trial, t he people of*
the South
that of Belgium and some of the aonic extent, at li-Hst, are prone to
Hie •fftmall) wtepKit It emuiot be cdiitehded
aoy radical social andpolitiqal ■ that there is any element of iu justice
.uge|Ahat would of ueceilpity^mie this. Again , the right to vote,
other countries of Europe, but,
without the least over- crowding,
South Carolina could easily support
a population of five million and
could, eV6n Wtttr "tins'number-of-
people, better afford to lie shut off
from outside trade than any of the
Northern or Western Stales.
Even our own people are to a large
extent ignorant of. the agricultural
resources of their own section, and
in proof of this it is only necessary
to mention the case of Williamsburg
county. This is regarded as having
a few fine farms, hut by far the
larger portion being untit for culti
vation. So far from this lieing the
case it may be stated that this county
not only contains some of the finest
farming, land in the State, but a
very large quantity of it, the only
thing lacking being the population
and capital to develop it In a sec
tion that must depend on agricuUnre
small well-cultivated farms must be
its source of wealth, and it is to
this that South Carolina and the
South, mnst look for future pros,
perky and agri mltimil supremacy.
In 1870 and ’71 when the victori
ous legions of Germany crushed and
overwhelmed the brave but com
paratively undisciplined armies of
France, and like a mighty serpent
enclosed Paris in their folds, it was
soon in a position to dictate terms of
peace to its humiliated rival. 'Phi
indemnity exacted was so large as to
astonish the civilized world, ami was
thought by the conquerors to lie the
very utmost that the conquered
people could pay, and which would
lie sufficient to paralize France for
an indefinite number of years. To
the astonishment of all, none more
so than to the Germans, the money
was immediately raised and paid
over. It Was not the bankers and
capitalists that furnished the money,
but it came from the hoarded wealth
of the small farmers of France, who
miles in diameter it. would enclose
more good farming land in the Peej willingly came to the rescue of their
Dee section than in any other part of; country in h"r hour of dire ex-
the State, and nearly all of k has | tremity. To-day France with its
excellent shipping facilities. In this 8,n:l11 well-tilled farms is one of the
connection it may not be amiss to
mention the testimony of one of the
United States Senators who was one
of the party that escorted the re
mains of Congressman Stackhouse,
to bis former home at Little Rock, in
Marion county. The gentleman was
Senator Gallinger, of Maine, and he
made the statement that he had
never dreamed that there was such
farming laud anywhere in the whole
country’, as he saw at Little Rock,
and that it was simply a revnlutiim
to him. Taking it all in all, its
accessibility, climate, educational
and social advantages, the fertility of
the soil and general character ot the
people, there is no' section of the
South that offers greater advantages
to the industrious and honest settler.
Owing to the numeious strikes
and labor riots in the West, which
are, to a large extent, incited by
foreigners there has grown up in
many sections of the South a preju
dice against immigrants and n dis
inclination to offer them inducements
to settle in our midst, fc? far as the
class of foreigners who are responsi
ble for lawlesiness in the West are
concerned, the prejudice is a well-
founded and reasonable one, but, as
richest nations in Europe and its
people seldom leave for foreign
lands.
If the South had the population
it could so easily support it would
dictate the political policy of the
country^
The retirement of Mr. H. M. Ayer
is a distinct loss to journalism ip the
1’ee Dee section and especially so to
the town of Florence for whose busi
ness welfare 1 e labored so unceasing
ly. In his new and larger field of
labor, in Charleston, as editor of the
indulge the idea that uu innovation
of this character could never gain
sufficient foothold in their midst to
be subjected to a practical lest.
That this idea is a mistake is very
easily shown by the mere mention of
the fact that in all social and p<rliti-
cal upheavals, irrespectiye of their
merits, the number , of those who
could be found to advocate any
special change is always, in the be
ginning very small, but which in
creases with more or less rapidity by
constant agitation and keeping it
persistently before the public mind.
The people who advocate imprac
ticable and dangerous social changes
are of two classes, both working to
accomplish the same object hut
actuated by entirely different mo
tives. The first and by far the mnst
numerous ciass are those who, while
often gifted with high intellectual
endowments, are deficient in the
high moral qualities which enables
them io resist the temptation of ad
vocating for their own political ad-
vanceme it, measures that they, know
if enacted into laws, would be in tbe
highest degree injurious to the social
or political welfare of the people.
The second class consists mainly
of those who, while mistaken, are so
evidently honest in what they do
that this mere fact, entitles them to
consideration and courtesy,
are just as unselfish as the
whioh in some respects.at least is a
ipriv is indissolubly oonuected
wiUv what may be called the duties
of citizenship, serving on juries,
working the roads, military seivice,
etc., and if it be insisted upon that
w<»iTien must have the privileges of
citizenship, then no good reason can
tie advanced why they should not
lie made to assume the duties
also. It. is yery true that a number
(if tbe other sex who have the right
to vote are exempt from some of the
duties of citiicaihip, but this is on
account df age or some physical
defect and not on account of sex.
If the female advocates of suffrage,
for their sex, decline to admii. their
own physical weakness, then they
cannot complain if it be ignored by
the other sex. The large majority
of women, of whom, on account of
age and experience, anything, in the
way of good influence, could be,
under the most favorable circum
stances, hoped'for are married and
the mothers of' children, and it is
difficult to concieve of the possibil
ity of their finding time to take part
in politics, and thereby neglecting
those duties which, to the true
woman, are the most sacred that
could devolve upon her. •
A CHAPTER OS BRICK.
The Antiquity and Durability of
the Familiar Material.
The first authentic account of
They i brick-muking is in the Bible. It is
first - 8,m,e l * me offer the. deluge. We are
. , in . . i told that “‘the descendants J<f Noah
mentioned Hass are selfish ; tin-great lonll j a }tlah ia ;he | uu(1 J Shiuar
trouble with them being that in a i l( | there they dwelt And they
their baste to reform the world they said one to another, let us make
are unconsciously drinti into ex- baick and burn them throughly,
truyagancies that do not bear the 4. n ^ nm '^ e ^ or 8 f° ne HUl *
test of cool reason. It may he sen- Th(U Wtt8 at the 1^,,^ of tb ,
misly questioned if any proposed building of the tower of Ikbel, about
reform, Involving such a great change 4,000 years ago. Excavations have
in our social and political life has been made there in recent, years,
ever been diseased in such an eu- The ruins of the tower are a,iSO feet
. .... , . in circumference, a solid mass of
tlrely siiperfioi d way, and n. n man- t , irth and brick, rising to a height
tier so little calculated to enlighten 0 f 300 feet. The slime used for
the average reader as to the real mortar was of such a durable chur-
issties involved. iacter that to-day one brick can
At the outset of a series of articles, 1 !' M U r(1 ! y ^Prated from another.
Al . 1 he bnck-inakmg uf the Israelites,
on this subject, which will appear .u in Egypt, of which we also read in
I HE II KHALI), it will be well to bear the Bible, was different from that in
in mind that this, like almost any the plain of Shinar. The Egyptaius
other important question, has two n!let I straw f° mix with their clay,
sides and that it will not do to probably for tlie purjmsc of making
, . . . , the brick lighter. I he Egyptam
assume that the advocates of female were adobes, oi sunbaked.
suffrage have no arguments iu sop-| The Assyrians, the most powerful
port of their position. The general nation in old Bible times, used brick,
adoption, on the part of the different mostly, as building material for their
States, of female suffrage would n-t c ' tk ‘t ' N l i,ievflh wa ? b !' i ! t ! ttr 8 ely of
, , ... .... brick, and upon each brick one or
on y affect our social and political mo re letters were stamped.. The
siirroiiiulings, but bear directly upon city of Baylon was also built of
our moral relations as well, and on brick. The Babylonian brick, too,
this assumption The Herald pro- ba ve letters stamped upon them, but
poses to join issue with the advocates ^ If™ If f “ ‘Jifferef
* , . ^ , , style from those at. Ninevab. On the
of this proposed change. AssytLu t>rick the letU-rs were put
As hriefiy as possible attention, in cu one side at a time, while on tlw
Ibis article, will be directed to* the Babylonian brick tbef were put on
Evening Sun, he will carry with him .political side of the question and the * tiILC/’n
the best wishes of the press and
people of this section and who con
fidently predict for him a long and
honorable journalistic career. He
will be succeeded in the editorial
control of The Times by Mr. Jobu
P. Coffin, who is said to have bud
some former experience in this line.
We extend to him our best wishes.
Labor’s Worst Eoen)«
8omliern Huics.
The worst “enemy of labor”
this country is Pd pseudo-champion.
m
in |. t are history. TheV tell us that the
probable results that would follow 0 j[y wug bu i|i Nebuchadnezzar,
from doubling the voting population sou of Nebubatuohun.
of the country, to say nothing of Tbe ancients made bricks iu all
tbe other issues involved in the s l ,8 P i ‘ 8 . to tit cliffi-rent parts of their
change. Were there any reasonable ^ 8l l U8 re, some
hope that tilts large additional num-j s i wptd . ]„ color( to0) they vvere a!!
her of voters would exercise the'sbides, from the color of the earth
privilege of the ballot more iutelli* m ^e sun-baked brick to the black,
gently and be less susceptible to evil g^u./ed, blue, white and yellow in
influences than those who non have Jhe ki u bnroed, as shown oy recent
the right to vote, the change might We are told by Homer, I think,
not be fraught with so much danger, that Poseidon and Apollo, built a
but so fur from adding to the general wall around the city of Troy. This
intelligence and purity of the hullot, w ulI was made partly of brick and
’ partly of rock. The city itself was
,it. is almost certain to have the op- . • .. <• .i. • .....
n i\ i ai » i . , | , mult mostly ox brick of llio siiii'*
Eugene \. Debs, the president of the: jaisite effect mid make a very large baked kind, except the royal palace
things stand at present in the Snutli, j American Railway Union. He has, addition to the class of voters who and a few other buildings, m which
there is compa allveiy no danger of i robbed bdiorhii men and ineclianiis j Mould be open to bribery and cor- the material used was stone.
The truth of this assertion * )l ' p cbbe V ,:l ",’ lbl \ excavator of
... | Xroy, found iu toe ruins of that city
brought all. *111 sucb a state of nn-!""' T’.’i" 1“''"" , U 1S r0 ', every exideiiee of its having been
cvrumty and npprel. -nsiou in the^ n,n " bert d ,hHt •* , " nph lar ^ r «>«-1destroyed by fire. The sUmes that
piibli»! mind as will delay the return j" r * t . v of intelligeut women will keep had been exposed to tbe flames when
an influx of this element owing to of mil lions of dollars in wages by'rnptioii
the fset that the e.nnd ! *ions. that
attract them to go West do not exist
in the 8mtb, and will not for many
years to come. The ( hiss of foreign
ers who have, boil) before and sine**
the war, come to cast their fortunes
with us have been, with exceptions
too few to l>e worth noting, of
material help iu a Ming to the wealth
of the State, a ml South Carolina
Carn'iim would la- ia-tter off if their
number had iieen a hui-dred limes
as man;.. |
T1 e iiaiu reliiiLce for mb!
our populalioii, under existing nm-
diiious, miisr be-in tin.- thimsands of
fanners, it might almost be said
forcing then, into idleness. He liiwL,,, 1m , t , a8 j| v , hon . n
vote, than there ever would!
of commercial and industrial activity' entirely out
that would bring with it higher decline to
wsgee and employment for the ’die, ^
By iiis high-handed nvustircs, which
huVi* leil in suppression of law ami
order, to paralysis of business in
sonic localities ami losses in every
part of flu- country, to atrocious | to the one question, leaying others
interference with travel, to brittali- unliri ., v out „ f C on g i,lcrati.m, as lo
in-b alii-ctMiii till-' itfnl hraltli , , ‘ .
Of l.elple,s women ami ,-hildren, to " l "‘ ,he, ‘ ' v, ‘ Hrt ‘ l> r T" r od. not so;
j wanton ilcstructiiMi of pnqx’rlv, toj umch for the lesser evil, of douhliug 1
for ioblltions to the liHiting of ►totes ami ffeighi cars i iln- ntiuilier of voters, but for the 1
tiinl l.i loss of liiniinii life, lie has | greaU-r one of also largely
moused the indignation of thousands
of former sympathizers; he Inis
- riot • weakened the oontiili-ure of tliepub-
millions, in the North and West wbo ( lie in the value and effinieiu v of
desire to seek a milder climate and i bibor organization • he has arrayed
where the struggle for existence is himself and his methoils mid
. , , , . i his followers every nalriotic Amer-
not so, arduous and tuineasimr a si ; ■. *
of politics, or l“t'l hue, so that the air could stiike
exercise the r j, ht, ! them, would crumble to pieces, while
. .... ‘ lSlll h r H8 j ican, every mail who prefers order
they now .mil it^liVuli them a good . lD( [ g (KM | government to anarchy;
part of the time, that might lx-; he has brought odium ii|M>n his
sjH-nt in profitable field work, has to' cause; In- has given ‘organized
lie devoted to making plvim rations I “hoi a blow from which it will
|not recover in a lifetime; he Inis!
| the brick had been burned so hard
. i that the atmosphere hud no effect
lie of the sex who have here-j upon them, and they were almost as
tofore hud a monopoly of this good as new.
privilege. So then it narrows down
I ft /ft s i. I ( . ».ft 4 i « ft i * 1 j '.ft s, « aft /v . v ft I ft . , ftft 1.
Piantiog Aspaiagus.
This may be done cither in the Au
tumn or the .Spring. They iiitiI all
the immure they can get, and then a
little more. They slinuld Ik planled
eighteen inches apurt, in rows four
feet upnrt. Bamiy soil tilled with
manure produces the largest, tender-
est stalks. Palmetto and Gouoier’s
Colossal are the iH-st kinds. Plains
giown from seed are worthless, and
thus the seeding of the plants is to
be jirevented, or the beds will be
soon filled with useless, most jiersist-
eat weeds to disgust the grower.
for a long and cold wiut**^*nd pro-) the injustice of
vidiug means to not only kyep tlieir | a | H , r tn rung In ml the cminlry the; irpresentation ; t
:
fanulieg comfortable but their stock ; n prom It
also.
increasing the pro|»orti(m of
ignorant a id ueious voters, for it
must be rrmembered that the same
restrictions in refereoce to the exer
cise UR this right iniist apply
impartially to both sexes, and only
that which debars the one must dis
qualify the other.
One of the favorite arguments in
favor of female suffrage ia that of
taxation without
or rather without. f,,,.
of not, pillage, sedition,, the right to vote.
1 hi* added to the long period arson hiu! iiniider. ^ ^ j vance this idea do not stop to
The railroad from Jcrusak'iu to
Jaffa is to be extended to Nablus
and Gaza, and ih.-rc i< a project on
the eslablisbmeiit ot a line
of cold during which no work tan,
Away with iMm 1 It will Is*
Those who ml-1 of steamers mi the Dead .Sen. The
reflect! intention is to bring the rich produce
iii . fortumuc thing for “labor it, as an
lie done leaves a great deal less Inin-, i,,,.!. i, in .
. “ , ’iiucitei lo mime, lie shull la- con-
lor farm work, than he would have demtinl lo the sobering atmosphere
‘ , 'i South, nud he, Uu WwUfu'oI# jHiuiwutiwjr.'
tlint it often happens that a man
lives ami votes in oik* State while
the larger portion of his projierty
my be . in unvther, where be euuuot
p. t. p,
PIMPLES, BLOTCHES
MO OLD SORES
CATMBH, MAURI*.
KIDNEY TROUBLES
and DYSPEPSIA
Arc entirely re—Ten fcy F.F.F.
-Prickly A.h, Poke Koo* ind Pot»»-
plain, tlio greatest blood parlOer on
earth.
Aanomni, O.. July 21, IBM,
FRICKLV ASH, POKE ROOT
AND POTASSIUM
Makes
Marvelous Cures
in Blood Poison
Rheumatism
and Scrofula
P. P. P. purifies tlio Moo'I. builds up C*pt« 0» Johnstoo*
hiSX?j'’S?r!i 0
fi'DliiiliM and *^3«ltudo first prpvullcd.
For prininry secondary and tertiary
illl'ft, for blood poisoning, inerott-
the liot 8(1
months* treatment at the Hot Syria##.
Send three bottles G. O. D.
Aberdeen, Brown County, O*
r inon. niaiarin. dysiicpHlu, and
t - . |aj|
BTphll
ruu l APSI
In oil blood and skin diseases, liko
Motchea, plmyles, old chronic ulcers,
tetter, scald head, bolla, eryslix-lns,
cosems—tvo may say, without fcorot
contmdlction, that P. P. P. Is the best
blood purifor lu the world, ami in&kcs
K lttve, speedy and permanent cures
J1 cases.
JAdles whose systoms are poisoned
and whose bloodistni 1
tion,
ere
derl_,
ertles of .
Boot and Potasslnm.
OPBixorinp, Mo.^Atj^Mth.1
nightly ind disagreeable
my ti%cc. 1 tried eTery I
dy bu« In rain,until P. P.
an impure con. i-
Sbqviw.Tex., January 1
Messrs. tirrMAW Bros. . b»T« uu .
Ga. s (JrnMfwtn—l hsre tried yonr
P. P. fur a disease of the skin, nsnsl ^
known -s skin cancer,of thirty years*
- ‘ it relfof: it
—I can speak is the
nedlcl
wlclfheart
your medicine from
knowlodgo. I waaaL _
disease, pleurisy and rheumatism for
33 years, wss treated by tho Tory best
physicians ana spent hundreds of del*
lars, tried every known remedy with
out finding relief. I have only taken
one bottle of your P. P. P., and can
cheerfully cay It has done me morn
good than anything I have over i aken.
| can roe&camead your medioino to &U
sufferers of the above disease#.
MRS. M. M. YEABY.
ffpringfield. Green County, Mo.
ible eruption on
— known reme-
_ _ __ _ _ > P. was used.
nnd am now entirely cured;
(Slffned by) J. D. JOHNSTON.
Bsvsnnsh, QS.
Skin Cancer Oared.
TuHrr.ony from xhe Itayor of Seqxtin^TtX,
14,1803.
Savannah,
cd your P.
usually
--/years*
standing, s.ml .ound great relief: Ifi
purifies the blood and removos nil ir
ritation from tho seat of tho dlscaso
and prevents ony spreading of tho
sor«s. I have taken flveor six bottles
and fcol confident that another course
Will cfioct a enre. It has also rcliovod
me from indigestion and stomnoli
trooWsi. tonntrxi\r
OAPT. W. M. BUST,
Attorney nt Law.
M R IM NHON UM Free.
ALL DBnOOIlTB MLL IT.
LIPPMAN BROS.
FBOPBIBTOBS,
Ml
>• wkwwe. mow. ■ " . . - --
SPARTAiNBlRG, S. C,
JAS. II. CARLISLE, LL. D„ Prrst.
Two Wn\\ CourneH.
Necessary cx|H;iises for cue year, One
f Bumlrrd and Fifty Dollars.
For catalogue ml dress,
J. A. GAM EWELL,
Secretary of Facu I t.v.
hW
You
See This
Advertisement.
So do Six Hundred other eyes.
Suppose it were yours. Would it
not pay you ? Think over it, study
over it, discuss it with your wife,
and let us hear from you iu time tor
next week.
Don’t
Bo in a Hurry,
But lend an ear while we whisper
a few words concerning plain and
fancy Commercial and Society Job
Printing. We cau please you iu
this liue.
The IIehald,
Darling-ton, S. C.
OAimO::.-rr a dotler Offers TV. If.
Douglas shoes n.t a reduoud pric*-. or Buys
ha has them without nnmo etampoU on
bottom, put Iiim dovrt* as a frr.ud.
$5,1°
W. L. Douglas
83 SHOE
THE WORLD.
TV. T.. DOUOTiAS Shoes nre Btyli^h, easy f.t-
tiaif, and give belter salufartion nllhc pricca sd-
vert is ed than any other make. Try one i»»:ir and
he convinced. The stamping of W. L. Douglas'
rv.nc r.nd price outlie bottom, which guarantees
their value, saves thousands of dollars annually
totho'C V’h.i wear them. Dealers who push the
sale of W. L». l>onj l;:s Shoes g:;in customers,
which help'* t > i icreasc the : :.les on their full li.r:
of ipodThey can afford to sell: t a le^s nrol.t.
and we l^llo .e you can save money l>y buying aii
your fv>‘;wenr df the denier advertibtu hcldw.
Catnlo-rue free upon application. Address,
TV. 1*DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass. Sold b?
For Hale by A. J. BROOM.
•TAPANJSSEi
3 a
Now is the Time
To Buy a Life-Time Article at
(Mil MED PRICE
Sterling Silver
Spoons and Forks.
One-tliird less than they were sold at
not long ago.
Light, |
Med j Ilv’y.
1
Tea spoons, per ilo/.|ijl 7.50|ftil 00
415.(i(|
Dcs l tt|)(><m.y,pL'ruoz|
2;i(Hi
28.50
Table sj)oon»-j»er<lo/,| 3<!.00|
iW.OO
4l.Oo
Des l forkn, per ib»z
19.(10]
28.00
28.50
fable forks, pci do/.
24 (H)|
55.1 K)
11.00
Sugar spoons, enebl l.»0|
2.50
3.50
.felly spoons, eaeh
2.00]
2.75
3.50
I’ai. spoons, each
2.00
;t.:l5
4.ini
Pair salt s|)oims
2.00|
2.50
3.00
Putter knives, each
2.2o|
3.25
4.00
Gravy ladles, each
1.50
5.00
(i.tKl
Cream ladles, each
2.2o|
3 25
4.50
Pick el forks
1.50]
2,tm
8.00
I:'-'’*'.?':'-! Compl-to Trcuba'Jlit, OmUUlttDlf of
'Top * Ccp f )Ulofl rt olntncsnfc and two
►Htf c : • AmoofAlU.^ Ckio forPllo.
i*f Moali across the sea in a few houis, |
instead of curryingii, as.imw, ariititid
the North and South end of the sea
hy caravan, a trip of four or five
tUyi’ durutkm.
jewatsas it Oor.Ci, uasrcc-wr/l Why enduro
fli;.! 0 ’''- 1 ' (**('►:*.o'? VTo. euaranlKt,. 6
uoseii ie;-ro i.nv stare, iou (v.l” !)'■>■ for
WBKrtie.rr«,ivcil.fti Bhoj.f.i r j iiihsI. bauest
freo. Or.tyrclne.iitnc l V;.- c.-.ti s-ri:l:t.
COSSTIPATIOH
iho ft rout Id VPU nnd S IDM/.Cli LlitiUJiATOE and
(If 'G:)> ; t it/VlKlt, MnmU, xrd**l and pica .to.t to
IsL^. arpcUuliy adapUkl for cUkirua'J USO« WLotw
(u CK.‘DUf,
Woongrave 3 letters
on each piece free.
Write to us for De
signs of Spoons and
F orks.
The tight on the silver question
Has reduced the price whioh may go
up id any time.
&
285 Kin; St, Chulnton, S, C,
The Hartsvilii Ka.icoad.
Doe •! Jill! lH«a.
DAILY MIXLD TUA1N.
Leave Hartsville 5 itOuin
Jovann 5 45am
Floyd’s 6 OTi mu
Darliugtou 0 . m
I’almetto U -ill m
Arrive Florence V DO am
Leave Florence 7 85 pm
PalmcUo 7 50 pm
Darliugtou 8 ai pm
Floyd’s 8 40 pm
Jovuuu 8 55 pm
Arrive Hartsville 0 10 pm
4. F. DIVINE- Gen. Sup’i
Northeastern Railroad.
TKAIN8 GOING SOUTH.
I No. S3'No.5.T.
Dated June
17. IMM.jNo. 3ft
A. M. .
KM.
Le Florence.
910
7 461
** KiiiKStree
1
.......
«0c2
Ar. Lanes
i'M
VZSP. M.
lie. Lanes
7 05
ArCharlest'n
6 1U
.........
........
11 1H
84U
A. M.
P. M.
P. M.
TBAINS GOING NORTH.
No. W No. aS No. 52
|
•
•
i
•
{A. M.
K M. A. M
j
G^.Charlcftto
3 85
3 30
T tft
Ar fsines
ft 40
ft as
«15
. ..
Le Lance....
ft 40
s :is
** Kimwfcrcc
ii no
5 57
..., T ..
]
A r. Flore hoc.
7 IU
1 Uft
L™1
A. M.
F. M.
A. M
* Didly f Daily exeepl Sunday.
No- 52 runs throusfli to Columlda via
Central H It. of S. C.
Trains Nos. 78 nnd 14 run via
WMsofi and Fayetteville—Short L ! ne—
•■uni make close connection tor all points
North,
JNO. F DIVINE, Gen’l S.ipt.
J. It. KKNl.V. Gen’l M«nai;er.
T. M. EMEI.’SmN*. Trami- Manager.
. W., C. & A. Railroad.
No. 55.
No. 58.
No. 58.
No. 52.
GOING SOUTH.
Dated June 3,1894.
Leaves Wilmington * 3:40 p. m.
Marion
Arrives at Florence
Leaves Florence
Arrives at Sumter
Leave Sumter
Arrive Columbia
Leaves Florence
Arrive at Sumter
Leaves Sumter
Arrives at ColuinliU
0:31
7:10
*7:35 p. m.
8:47
8:47
10:10
* 8:20 a.m.
9:40
*9:58 a. m.
11:10
No. 52. runs through frum Charleston
via Central Railroad, leaving Laces 8.48
a m., Manning 0.25 a. m.
GOING NO RTF
No. 51 Leaves Columbir * 4:30 a. m.
Sumter 5:55 a. m.
Arrives at Florence 7:10 a. m
No. 50. Leaves Florence 7:40 a. m
Marion 8 28
Arrive at WilmUgion 11:10
No. 58. Leaves Columlda *4:20 p. m
Arrives at Sumter 5:45
No. 59. Lv. Sumter 5.55 p. m.
Ar. Florence T:05 p. m
•Dally, t Dally, except Sunday.
No. 53 runs through to Charleston, via
Central It. R., arriving at Manning 0:22
p. m., Lanes 7:00 p. m., Charleston 8:40
p. m.
Trains on Manchester & Augusta It. R
leave Sumter 10.50 a m., arrive Orange
burg 2.00 p. m., Denmark 4.00 p. m. Re
turning leave Denmark 9.00 a. m., arrive
Orangeburg 10.30 a. m„ Burater 2.20.
Daily except Sunday.
Trains on Hartsville Railroad leave
Hartsville at 9 80 a. m.. arriving Floyd
6 00 a. m. Returning leave Floyds 8 40
p. ro., arriving Hartsville 9 10 p. m.
Dally except Sunday.
Trains on Wllmuigtou Chadbourn ft
Conway railroad leave Cbadbouro 10.10
a. m., arrive Conway 12.80 p.m.,returning
leave Conway at 2.00 p. m. arrive Chad-
bourn 4.50 p. m. Leave Chadbourn
5.85 p. m., arrive Hub at 8.20 p.
m. Returning leave Hub 8.15 a. m.,
arrive Chadbourn 0.00 a.m. Daily except
Sunday.
J. R. KENLEY", General Manager.
T. M. EMERSON, Traffic Manager.
.1. F DIVINE. General Sunenntender.I
Cape Fear & Yadkin Valley R. R.
JOHN GILL, Receiver.
Condensed Schedule, June 2-1,1894.
NORTH BOUND.
No. 2, Dally except Sunday.
71
Leave Wilmington,
00 a m
Arrive Faycttville,
10 10
Leave Fayetteville,
10 27
Leave Fayetteville Junction
10 80
Hanford,
11 48
Leave Climax,
140 p m
Arrive Greensboro,
2 10
Leave Greensboro,
55
Leave Stokcsdalc,
348
Arrive Walnut Cove,
420
Leave Walnut Cove
4 88
Leave Rural Hall,
6 10
Arrive Mt. Airy,
025
south Bound.
No. 1. Dally except Sunday.
Leave Ml. Airy.
9 45 am
Leave Rural Hall
11 00 a m
Arrive Walnut Cove
11 35 p in
Leave Walnut Cove,
11 42
Stokesdale
12 07 p m
Arrive Greensboro
12 55
Leave Grccnslioro,
1 02
Climax
1.80
Sanford,
3 17
Arrive Fayetteville Junction
428
Arrive Fayetteville
4 84
Leave Fayetteville,
4 45
Arrive Wilmingp n,
7 55
No. 4, Daily except Sunday.
y e:
Leave UenueUsville,
Maxtim.
Red Springs,
Leave Hope Mill*,
Arrive Fayetteville
80UT1I BOUND.
No. 8, Dally except Sunday.
Leave Fayetteville, 4 43
iliinc Mills,
Red Springs,
Maxlon,
\ rrive IScnnuUsville.
■i 15 am
8 13
850
039
10 00
p <n
505
5 53
0 27
7 30
kimitii Hound connections.
Trains Nos. 2 and 4 make dose con
nection at Kayetlev'lie Junction with
llic Allantic Coast Line Fur all points
North and East. Train No. 2 connects
at Sanford with the Seaboard Air-Line,
North and South bound, and at Greens
boro with tbe Kichmoud and Danville
Uaitr.iad, North and Southbound, anl
at Waluul Cove with tbe Norfolk and
Western Railroad for Winston-Salem.
Train No. It) connects at Madison with
the Norfolk nnd Western Railroad for
Roanoke and all points North and West.
SOUTH HOUND CONNECTIONS.
Trie i No. 1 connect at Walnut Cove
with iuu Norfolk mid Western Railroad
for Roanoke ami all points North and
West, and at Greensboro with the Rich
mond and Danville Railroad, North and
■ s oulh bound, and at Sanford with the
Seabornd Air-Line for all points North
alid South, and at Fayetteville Junction
with the Atlantic Coast Line for Charles
ton, Jacksonville mid all Florida points.
Tralii No 3 connect at Maxtim with tho
Seaboard Air-Line for Charlotte, Atlanta
and all points South.
W. E. KYLE,
J.W, FRY, Gen. Fose.Agent
Uvu.MftuntfVft ’