The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, June 20, 1902, Image 6
JUST A
?
A shipment o
#
summer fabri
Dimities, IVLui
Scrim, etc.
.IN THI
Is another supply of that 40-ii
we are still selling at 15c the ya
to keep cool these hot days if ye
itie*? just in. Remember you do
prices are always right.
? Ssfss?
l. n. r
The Quoter of
; P The Mas
: 1 CI P n
f :ff ^ DAVID MACLURE
v! $<? Copyright, 1902, by tl
^rffyy'fyyyf fyf?* y^fr
Ah, what could I say to him? There
run no thought within nie to speak of
feopc or joy, knowing what I knew.
There was but one consolation I knew
Ite could receive, and that was a spiritual
one, for 1 could see that he was
s a man who had loosened from him
the ties of earth and was standing, as
It were, on life's last verge amid gathering
night shadows and silence, listening
to hear a voice calling in the mysterious
distance before him.
I could find no words to speak and
Just waited mute, for my mind was
wed with solemnity, as though I
tood at a deatlilted. At last my master
lifted his head, and there was a
tone of rapture In his voice that gave
tne n thrill of awe.
"Oh, Gillicuddy, but I yearn to hear
tho cry that coineth at midnight and
to gang Into tho marriage feast. I'd
fain slip oot o' time and into eternity.
And I line heard nftcn ami aften a
voice that ea's me there. Aye, it's a
woot voice I hear and a voice I ken
^recl. I line lieard it in iny soul whispering
to ine; I line heard It in the !
IWind as it went by mo. In the night 1
It ha& spoken to ine, and once it cried i
to ine in the glen and ea'd uie again
and again. I>o 3*0 ken, CJillicuddy, it's
a spirit that speaks?the spirit o' lior I j
I wept like a bairn.
ca'ed my wife. Oh, Glliicuddy, 1
maun gang to her, I innun speak to
her and tell ber o' a' 1 bae suffered,
crying for pardon, f<?r, oli, but I'm
humbled and sair heartbroken! Ye
can ne'er ken the things I inieht tell?
the secret that is bidden here, the passion
and the sin, the horror and the
pain?for if ye did ycr love wad turn
frae me."
Well, well I knew the secret that
was there?aye, and the passion and
the sin of it?but far, far was my lovo
from turning from him. That lie had
been driven by the storms of adversity
beyond the responsibility of a human
creature, that he had been beset,
as he trulv said, bv sore foul weather i
of pnsMion and madness, that lio had
boon deceived and misguided and*had
done a deed of horror I know, but
never could I find blame for him and
never was it in my heart to think ill
of him, but to pity bini, as I hope God
will pity me.
"I line given ye a wad heart," he
id. rising to his feet, "but I pray God
ye'II ne'er hue the sadness o' heart I
hao this day and line had for mony a
day. I line let ye Info the sanctuary
o' my grief, . Gilliouddy, and I line
breathed to ye a secret thing that It is
no* for me to niak' innlr plain. Yc'll
RRIVED
>f fresh midos
in Lawns,.
slins, Prints.
S LOT^*^rich
Lawn, the 23c kiud which
rd. It will cost you very little .
?u will only see our dainty Dimn't
have to "Jew" us for our
IcNeace,
Low Prices.
> ici yj g 3
ihaughli
* vv '
le Mershon Company $$ ?
i>yyy'1jf'T'?y?T??|Tyn|fy?|iT>yrT?F!
no' think 111 o' nae for that. 1 canna
explain it, but this day there was
something In me that bade me seek
yer sympathy, a touch o' that sweet
and gentle human kindness that was
nlnce mine and that has come back
to me this day like an echo o' n tender
melody o' the days o' my happiness. I
think that the spirit o' her I loved so
weel has been near me this day.
Shake my hand, Gillicuddy, and tell
me wl' a true heart could ye find It
in yer soul to forgle me if I had done
ye a great and cruel wrang and had
suffered for it keenly and had come to
ye at last on my knees, crushed wl'
sorrow at it, asking for yer pardon and
yer pity and yer love?"
"Aye, my ain guid master," I cried,
"that I could wl' a' ray heart, as God is
my hope!" And as I said the words I
threw my arms about his neck and
4not tronf 11 b n n bnlrit lAnnlniv ?v%?
JUOl H cpi. lias U L/U1L 1J, ICUUtAlg Ui/
head on lils breast. For n space thero
was silence, and then, as he sat down
linti answered mo nothing, I left him;
but I saw that his face was lightened
up and that my love had cheered him.
CHAPTER XVIII.
WHEN I left my master, It
was drawing on to the
evening, and the darkness
was beginning to gather. I
had such a weight on my mind, with
the melancholy converse I had had
with my poor master, following upon
the evil affairs I had got from Sir Gilbert,
that I could not get myself to any
duty, hut Just wandered aimlessly out
Into the court and down the approach
to t lie Abbey font highway and stood
there as lonely and miserable a man
as might be.
As I stood there Esther Rlcalton,
coming from some errand at the Pinlawn
clachuu, turned In at the np
proacli, and 1 gave her good evening.
"I'm thinking it will be a wat nicht,'
the said, pausing when she saw me
"The clouds are unco' black and heavy
aff o'er the abbey glen, and there's a
watery sough in the wind."
"Aye," said I. "I'd no' gay but
there'll be mair than n mist before
morning."
"I see they line left a llcbt burning
for me at the hall gate," she said,
glancing up the shadowy npproneh toward
the house, that loomed a great
gray mass in the fnst gathering shadows,
lighted only by one yellow flame
that flickered from a lamp hanging
over the servants' hall.
"It's a cheery blink o' welcome for
me," she went on; "but, my sooth,
Mnister Oillleuddy, the (llenhaugb
Loose Is no' s > bright wi' lire and Heht
as I line aften seen It. Malr's the pity
for the evil that has fallen ui>on the
Loose and its laird."
"AJi. wool." said I. "It's no wealth
o' gear or gnid name that can har a
di.or against ill fortune."
"Toll me." said Esther, "has ony
news o' my lady Iwen hroueht to my
lulrdV"
"Never a word," said I. uneasy In my
mind at my answer.
"Is it no' like, think ye. Mnister CJI1lieuddy,"
said she. "that the laird looks
for her hack again?"
".Mair like." ! said, "that Ills hold
will be bent doon wl* s rrow for lang
years to eoine and Ills gray hairs gang
to tin1 grave ere she conies l- iek. My
lady is deld lang syne and will ne'er
come back, and there's an end o' it,
Esther."
"Ocll, wao's nie for niv ladr." she
wild sorrowfully. "nnd (Jo?1 pity the
laird!"
As slit* spoke the wind came polishing
down from the Idllr.ide with n lone,
dreary wail, and in my ears it sounded,
I bethought me. Ilk" a voice rf mourning,
bewailing I lie i?it iftil fate of my I
lady and the sore distress and evil I
?????m mmu* km??
doom that bad fallen upon Glenbaugb.
With the wind came a dash of rain,
and I felt it beating on my face.
"Ye'll do weel to tak' shelter," said
I. "Get ye In to the flreslde. lass, and
seek what cheer yo can, for 'deed there
be clouds and rain baith Inside and
oot at Qlenhaugh this nlcht"
Til heed yer advice," aald she, "for
1 feel ?he spits o' rain on my face. So
a gold nlcht to ye, Malster Gilllcuddy."
And as she spoke she hurried up the
approach and left me standing In tho
gloom alone.
The rain was still flying on each gust
of wind when later I went up the approach
to the house, and when I had
got there I heard it pattering on the
paved courtyard. Before I entered the
house I stopped to look up at the sky,
stretching black overhead, and to listen
to the wrack of the night. A Rteady
murmur of wind and a seething of distant
rain came down from the hills,
and far away, up the slopes back of
Qlenhaugh, I could hear the rippling
and gurgling of mountain streams setting
In to make a nlglit of it. Ah, but
It was a night of gloom, and when I
looked in the murk toward the hills
where the storm was brewing and
gathering I pictured the terrors of the
night deep in the hollows of the glen,
with the groaning of woods and the
shrieking of winds In the eerie solitudes
where the wrnlth of St. Cuthbert
guarded the cairn. Like n solitary
spirit of the gloom, I stood listening,
While the night uttered Its voices to
mc, and behind me the house of Glenhnugli,
engulfed In shadow, slept under
the black sky, lulled by the wind and
the rain.
Suddenly I saw before me not three
paces away a figure blacker than the
night emerge out of the dense midnight
gloom and glide toward me. At the
sight of it my flesh began to creep and
my pulse to beat with terror. I was
about to utter a cry and flee before It
when I was stayed by a whisper,
husky and trembling.
"Ah, but It's a pitiless nicht, a hard
and pitiless nicht for a body o* my
years to be abroad In. I hae come a
weary road to see ye, Maister Gllllcuddy."
I knew the voice. It was Tibbie
Jamleson's, and I cried:
"And what brings ye hero at sic a
time nnd on sic a nicht?"
"Wheest, man!" she said, drawing
close to me, and in the shadows there
was something uncanny and fearsome
in her presence that made me fear her
beyond words. "Wheest!" she whispered.
"I've something to say to ye
that is na for ither cars. Come near
to me, for It maun ua be heard by
ither ears that mlcht be listening.
Come nwa frao the hoose."
x ii just ao nne wnere I am," J
aald, drawing back from her and wishing
myself safe Indoors with the real
of the Qlenhaugh household.
"Listen to me," she said. "I'm no'
here for naught at sic an hour and In
sic de'll's weather. Ye maun hearken
to me, or there will be waur than rain
to fa' the nlcht."
"Speak oot, woman! What mean
ye?" I said.
She came close to me and, putting
forth her trembling hand, took me by
the sleeve, and, reaching forth her face
st? near to mine that I could see in the
blinking hall light her hollow eyes and
sunken cheeks, she whispered in a
voice of secrecy awful to hear:
"I hae a message for ye."
"A message? And frae whatna body
1b It?" I asked, feeling her trembling
grip on me.
She clutched me tightly and, bringing
her face near to mine, whispered In
my ear:
"A message frae my lady?she thai
was my lady o' Glenhaugli!"
Her words sent a qualm of terror
over me, and I drew away from her,
as if her grip were the touch of the
dead.
"Awa' wl* ye, ye fearsome woman!"
I gasped. "My lady's in her grave."
"Whecst!" she said. "She's bacl
again, and gin ye come wi' me ye'll
hae speech wl' her."
"In the name o' God," I cried, "are y<
a mortal that speaks to me? My lady
canna come frae her grave'"
"Hoots, man," she said; "hearken to
me. I'm mortal like yerself, for n' the
ill that's said o' me. My lady ne'er
went to the grave. I hae seen her wi'
these een o' mine and hae spoken to
her, nye, and hae come frae her this
nlcht to bid ye gang to her. She's back
at Glenhaugli a living woman and o
pulr, broken hearted woman and a sick
woman, and this Is the word she
speaks: 'Gang and bring Gllllenddy to
Be an he wad speak to n:r." Hero,
man, Is a bit of paper I was to pit into
yer hand as a token." She held In her
hand a piece of crumpled pnpor, and I
took It.
"Gang to the llclit wl* It," ahe said,
"and I'll hide here till ye come hack;
but, mind, no man la to ken o' this but
yerser. That was her last word to
me." .
As she spoke she drew her clonk
about her and muttered shiverlngly,
"Ah, but It's a pitiless nlclit."
In a terrible frame of mind I went
Into the house, and, lighting n candlo
In the hall, I opened the crumpled paper,
and there, as I live, was my lady's
hand I knew so well and these words
written:
"Come to me, Qlllicuddy, in the name
of heaven, without delay, and say no
word, I charge you, to any soul. Tibbie
Jamleson will bring you to me.
Delay not, for I would see you at
once."
I put my hand to my head, and 1
could feel my temples throbbing. Was
I gone mad? Had mv nnvintina
my reason'/ I thought of the words of
my master. lie had said, as I well remembered,
that he had henrd the
sound of her voleo and the words of
her mouth. Was the spirit of my lady
among us> wandering materialized in
^ r Up i i I ?
. /( i;
scarcely Knowing what I did; I went
out again, dazed and bewildered. The
wind was now grown fierce, and th$
rain was driving before It, and the'tumult
of the nlgbt was so great that I;
could hear no word or yet be heard In
speech; but, Tibbie moving away like
a shadow, I followed by her side, dumb
with the spell of wonder and fear upon
me, and Into the great bowling
black pit of the nlgbt we went forth,
and, getting to the Abbeyfont road, we
turned toward Plnlawn, and when we
had come to the hollow of the glen
there into the pitch black depth of
midnight we turned and began to toll
up the winding path toward St Cuthbert's
cairn, and I knew we were making
our way toward Tibbie's cottage.
Ah, but there was enough to strike
terror Into the soul of any mortal In
this journey up the glen, and, as for
myself, I think there was no moment
when I ceased from trembling as 1
followed this crooked old woman
through the deept dark murk.
At times I was conscious of some object
moving with me, a blacker shadow
than the shadows around me, and
again I would feel the fluttering of her
cloak as It touched me, but no word
pnssed between us, for the voices of
the night forbade It, a*nd only at times
was I certain that she was still the
guide to my steps, ajid that was when
she stopped nnd put forth her palsy
shaken hand to touch me.
"Where was I going?" I asked myself.
The answer set me shivering.
"To have speech with my lady of Glenhaugh!"
Was my lady In the land of
the llvlpg? That coufld not be, for Sir
Gilbert had seen her thrust through
with a mortal stab on that terrible day
at Versailles, and my master's sorrows
and remorse had been the outcome of
that bloody deed. Had not Tibbie herself
long since startled me with the
fearsome question, "Cnn the deld no*
come oot & the cauld grave, think ye?"
What could it mean? What devilish
and grew some errand was I making at
midnight in this howling tempest with
this hag of Satan?
Once I stopped and was about to
turn back and flee from her In the
darkness, but I remembered the words
of the paper I still clntahed In nrjr trembling
hand. Ah, that wns a strange
message I held, and no other than the
hand of the living had penned it, and
no other than my lady, or my mind,
weak and shattered by all I had.seen,
was deceiving mo and leading me on to
madness.
It was a long and dfeary Journey wo
had, buffeted by tbe wind and wet by
the rain, when at last In the pitchy darkness
a light shone npon us, and I knew
we were near our Journejy's end, for
the gleam before us "was fnom the window
of Tibbie's cottage.
When we had come as far as tho
threshold, Tibbie lifted the latch and
opened tho door, and in the light of the
flickering fagots burning in the fireplace
the bent old woman stood leaning
upon her stick and beckoning me
to enter.
CHAPTER XIX.
AS Tibbie stood In the light of the
fagots that flared up<*n her
and beckoned n>e to enter her
dwelling I trembled as if with
the ague, dreading to know what was
to be revealed; but 1 conquered my
fears and crossed tlio threshold, jmd
the door closed behind. :uie in a gust of
wind.
When I entered, TJbble shuffled toward
the fire noil, turning to uie.
stretched out her nrnv pointing a trembling
linger, and said. "'She Is there
that wad see ye."
1 looked in the d i recti* M? the Indicatiil
into the rooiu ndjointn^ and. the
fitful light of the low tire starting up,
it flashed sharply npon a woman's
, face, and I saw the features of my
I lost lady of Glcnlmugh.
"God keep me!" cried I. "Am I look1
ing at my lady?" She came forward,
her hand extended to me, aud in great
i and trembling emotion I fc*xa?ped it
I and pressed It to my lips, whfte I sank
upon my knees before lier.
! "Aye, Master CJllllcuddy," ;*be Bald
#adly, "It's none other you are looking
at Little you' thought to see1 me In
this place."
The voice was my lady's; bitty oh, it
was changed! Weak and weary Bt was,
and it sounded faint and low, Uniting
to a husky whisper. I looked up Into
her face, and In the pate, wan fe atures
and the great, beautiful eyes there
was the spirit of melancholy and .suf
fering bo eloquently appealing to me
that I could contain my feelings .no
longer, but Just burst into team and
bowed my bead, while grief and sympathy
throbbed In my heart qwist con*
trol.
At last, while 1 bent before her,
speechless, for my emotion forbade utterance
of words, she spoke to me:
"Tell me, Master GUUcuddy, tell me,
la heaven's mercy* what of the laird?
What of my"?she paused, suspending
her question, and I felt her Angers
tighten upon my hand which still held
hers?"what of my husband and what
of my wee lass Marlon? Bpeak to nie,
GUUcuddy; speak of them to me."
i .*?>' * oownoroml * |
Natural to nwu
"Yonr husband," sahd Mrs. Oldcaetlo
as she again availed herself of tho
privilege of Inspecting the splendid library
of the new neighbors, "seems .to
have a particularly fine taste for articles
of vertu."
"Yes," her hostess i replied, "1 knOMt
it But, then, lt'n only ofttural ha
should have. John's one of the vlrtuousest
persons?tfor a nmn?that J
ever seen."?Chicago Herald.
<?>
1Tbla afgnatare ia onr ovary box of tl ? gomilno
Laxative Brotno-Quiiiin^ T*bUU
? nmUr that S MM tm
x nave itKiiicj Mi luttu in UWUDU O
$300 and upwards on ftnptrwtod farm
at 7 per cent interest., No coop
raisHion except a reasonable attorney to
for preiwring necessary papers.
:w-ly. V. E. DbPass.
>
-Bargains in
7 acres in. towu belongio
Tosche's Branch.
One^room c<?ttage^iear K
on our price. . . The
Lampley residence on
One wide lot between R. .
Farms in different sections
We have what you want 01
People's Real
DAIRY NOTE8.
Good butter should be solid from the
time It is put upon the table.
Any excitement in the dairy cow
tends to lessen the flow of milk.
Failing to get all the buttermilk out
causes butter to become rancid soon.
to obtain the best result* in churning
the cream should be only slightly sour.
In winter the cream should be warmed
up to about 60 degress before putting
In the churn.
One advantage in brine salting is
that it almost entirely avoids streaked
or mottled butter.
The milk should always be skimmed
while sweet and the cream then allowed
to turn slightly sour.
Sometimes butter has white specks
distributed through it. This is caused
by oversourness in the cream.
In butter making next to controlling
the temperature is to churn often while
the cream is in good condition.
|>vitn temperature under control ana
churnlnc done nt the rlsrht time the
butter will become solid and be easily
bandied.
On the farm to make the most out oi
the milk and butter some of the cowi
should be bred to come fresh In th?
spriug and some in the fall.?St. Louli
Republic.
A Simple Remedy.
. The readiness of some people to send
for a man to do those little thlngi
about the house which the smallest
amount of enterprise or ingenuity
would enable them to do for them
selves Is Illustrated by an Incident re
ported In the Chicago Tribune of i
family named Chuckster.
They had bought some neiuaa burn
ers with mantles. For a week or tw<
the light was satisfactory; then it gren
dim and dimmer until Mrs. Chuck ste
sent for the gas fitter.
"It grows worse all the time," she ex
plained.
"When was it put lnl" asked th<
man.
"About a month ago."
"Ah, yes; I sec."
Then he lifted the chimney off, tool
It out to the kitchen, washed It will
soap and water, and tty light barasi
as brightly as ever.
"Fifty cents," said the man.
Accommodatlmv.
"The shovel fish of South America/
said Uncle Jerry, "is the most accom
modating fish there is. It has a snou
in the shape of a shorel, and It wil
jump out on the bank and dig bait foi
you to catch It with." ? Baltimore
American.
riiibWA ^
ywiwv
JL Jlkakes short roads.
^XLEI
<? J^Lad, light loads. J
jYvREASE
| l;^*^ood for everything
i that runs on wheel*}
I field Everywhere.
^iMjbrtmromonc^J
Finai Discharge.
Notice is hereby given tnat Henrietta
Cohen administratrix with will annexec
of the haute of *P. M. Choen deceased
li t" applied to Jason M. Greer Judge* o
I'h-Iwu*. in and for the County of Union
for h liual discharge as such aduiiniatra
trix.
I is oid r?d. That t he 27ih day o
Jui.e A. 1*. 1002, be fixed for heat lug o
i lVte'io i. and a tlnal settlement of ralr
Est ale..
Iabon >1. Giikkii
Proh?ti< J.id/? Union (Jounty, S C
PnhiiMifd 1'xioN Timkh M?y 2ttn
1002 21-4t
Final Discharge.
Notice Is heielo liven that B. F,
Webber Guardian <>t tin- Kdate of Senori
I WhiiltK-k Minor has app .<? to Jason M
[ Gr.er Judge of Probate, in ? id fqr tin
County of Union, for a finai discharge m
mteii Guardian.
It is ordered, That the 2K.il day o
June A I) 1002. he fixed for hearing o
IV.cU.io, and a final settlement of sai(
Estate.
i Jason M. Grrrr
l'roliaie Judge Union County, S. C.
Puhlislied in Union Times 23rd o
May 1002. 21-4t
Money to Loan.
- Real Estate.
... - - ? j
g to estate ot Judge Wallace en
. " |
nitting Mil paying big interest
Church street.
N. Sprousc and C. W. Whitlock.
of the county. ,j.
r will get it for you.
S ] ? *
Estate Agency.
??? j fgajfaaoB
Charleston & Western Carolina
Railway Company.
AUGUST* AND A8HKVILLK Short Una
Sohe^M* in effect Deo. 29th, 1901.
Leire AufuiU .0 06am 9 66 pm
Arrive Ureeavood 12 39 pm
AnMbn 7 1# pm
Laarip 140 pm #86 em
Groenvllle 8 26 pm 11 80 em
Spartanburg 3 30 pm #00 am
Union 780 pm
Saluda 6 38 pm
Henderaonville.. 6 ll pm
Aahevllle 715 pm
Imvi iihnTillfi .UK am
Union a a am
Spartanburg 1215 pm 4 00 pm
Greenville 12 22 pm 1 4ft pm
Lauren* 12 45 pm a fifipm
Aaderson 7 2ft am
Greenwood 3 07 pm 9 00 pm
Arrive Augueta 5 40 pm 11 36 am
Leave Columbia 11 20 am
Newberry 12 42 pm
i gllnton 125 pm
Arrive Greenville 8 25 pm
8partanburg 8 30 pm
^ Leave Spartanburg * 12 15 pm }
i Greenville 12 22 pm
Arrive Clinton X 23 pm
Newberry 8 08 pm
Columbia 4 30 pm
? Fasteat and Beat Line between Newberry
and Greenville, Spartanburg and Glenn
. ?*>nnoction from Newbeny via Columbia
Newberry and Laurens Hallway.
I For any Information write
W. J. CRAIG, Gen- Pass. Agt..
Augusta, Oa.
T, M VMM KWON. Traffic Manager.
I T
[ Air Line Railway.
Double Dally Service.
1 Between New York, Tampa, Atlanta,
New Orleans and Points South and
- West.
r IN EFFECT MARCH 2nd, 1902.
r ? .
SOUTHWARD,
Daily Daily No.
31 No. 27 ' m
B Lt. New York, r R It.... riUpm 12 10 a ni
Lt, Philadelphia, P K K.. 3 29 pai 7 2<t a in
Lv. Baltimore, " ft 4ft p m 9 34 am
Ly,_Waahln(rton. W.S.Ky 7 00 p m 10 4o am
.1 ? A {' li* W37pw 2 2u p m
Lr. Petertbntg. " II 20 |> iu i?i|iui
i Lt. Mwllna, " 1 42 a m 5 24 p| m
4 fl* o0E.lT?a " 2 O'J a ni 5 6?piu
? fl* 5? 5f? ' 3 24 ,u 7 27 p,n
Lt. Boa. Pin? ' -6 27 am 9 27 }?in
Lt. Hamlet. 8 A L? 6 40 a in )0 3-^ B IB4
LT.CoiumbiAl " 8 40au I on m
Ar.SaTannah 12 05 pm 4 40am
Ar. JschaoBTllU " 330pm 9 0X?Z
* Ar.St, Augtutlne 5 10 p iu J {Td'S
. ArTTanipa 5 00am T^Tpm
t ~~ No. 33 No. 41
| Lr. New York, N Y PAN f 7 65 a in 8 55 p m
P Lt. Philadelphia " 10 16 a hi 1126 pm
. Lt - NewYork, OllSS Co.f 3 ?i p m ...7
Lt. Ballitniare. B8 PCo f 6 30 p'iu
Lt.'WMh'top,N"u 4 30 pm
Lt. Portsmouth, 8 A I. Kjr 8 6* p in 0 25 a m
Lt. Wektoo " 1135pm 1156 am
Lt. Norlina " 12 56 a m 1 40 p m
Lt. Henderson " 1 25 a m 2 10 p m
Lt. Haletgh " 2 52 a m ;? ?5 p m
Lt. Louthern Plnci ?? 5 05 a in 4 is p m
Lt. Hamlet _ 6 35 a m 10 35 pm
Lt. Wilmington ?r 3'5pm
" SITS Vt 32 n w
Lt. Cmiiiujf ? 9 43 a m " i 35 a ni
Lt. carl l?l e " 10 15 am a
Lv. Greenwood " ll.KJam 3 43ani*
Lt. Athena " i 21 n in a is a n.
Ar. AlUuU | " IMjun TtHujl
Ar. Augnna, c A W c 6 40 p ut r.I|
Ar. Macon, c of t?> 7 jA |> 111 1J36 a in
Ar. Mouti(ouierr A AW 1* 9 20 p m 6 25 p in?
Ar. Mobile, LAN 2 Bfl st in I
Ar. New Urleaun, L Ij.N 7 26a in I
Ar. Nashville, NC A 81 L 4 uoa iu (U p~ni
Ar. ije.iuphbi 4 151> in S 29 a hi '
WpWTHWAWP
M ?X
Lv. Mamphia, N C A St L 12 45 pooh iltfpiD
I.t. Nashville _ _9 30pn? 9 30 a hi
Lr. Montgonir'y, AAffP 6 20 a m 1 30 p w
J I.v. .Macon, c of <ia 8 00 a m 4 20 jim
Li. AhwuT ilA W c lOtf-a in ?I
! . L?, AiUiiU, j s a L Ry 12 00 noon 8 no p ?
'Ar. Alliens 2 87 pm m23pi?>
Ar. <irceuwaod " A Up hi I 88 a m
Ar. Chester . " . 717 pm ( 4 <m an
? Ar. Carlisle ?' vimj*,n
' !1 i J.....V."nv........-1* .**"^.iii,' *.......i*'* *'
* Lt. Wilmington', li 3
t l.v. Hamlet " iinopm " 7 411? m
. Lt, Southern flues 1 11 57 pm 8 34 a m
. Lt. Italeifth " 2 ifs a in ii 01 a at
w. Henderson " 12 4ft a m 1*2 upn
Lt. Norllna " 3 85 a m 1 48 i> n
f lfr, Weldou " 8 ola in >(10 pat
f At, i'/irlsiuuutli " 7 15 ajn s 35 am
, 4r7w?^/out"^w?Bj:._.r~yjttL
Ar. Malilaaore. B S ItC# ~~.T.~.T.~.~ t 8 4ft a m
Ar. Now York, O I>H 8 ex) ......... t 8uu p i.
A r. Pli ila^h la, N V T'? N f l" 48 p' iu ^tfSTiu
Ar. New York 8 JA ^ mi 8 00 a 16
1 i*$ 3^ No;*"
LOTaiipa _8 a l rjr 9 00 p in 8 00 a
Lt. St. Augustine " n 68 a ni "(Too "p n.
Lt. Jacksonville " 10 10 a m 8 00 a n
?t. HaTannah " 1 55 p ni 12 18 pm
?. Columbia i " 7 uft p in 8 ooam
, Lt. llaiulet " 10 40 p in h 25 a n>
Lt. Southern Pines " )133pm 'j 22 a at
. Lt. Raleigh " i '??in HUaia
> Lt. Henderson " 3 0* a m j)6ftfai
Lt. Norllna " 335s ui 1 46 p n> 2
trTPitSKKaijg "" '4'fiTa'Vn **'4 07 p m?
At. Rietvnond " ' 6 :<5 a in 4 66 a tom
f Ar. Washington. w k Kr 10 10 siu 8 84 dbI
f Ar. Baltimore P ItK II'2ft am 11'2ft an
Ar Philadelphia " I M p m IKai
1 Ar. New York " 4 18 p in 4 :t0 a a
Kxcept Sunday. M
{central Time., {Kaatern Time.
. B. E. L. BUNCH,
[ General Passenger Agent.
Savannah, Oa.
W. E. CHRISTIAN, .
A. G. P. A? Atlanta, G?. J .
ToCojre n Cold in One D r I
1 Take Laxative Bromo Uuiaine Tablet*.
Alls druggists refund tbe nonqr KB
fans to cum IE. w. Grove's rijmatuxs
on each bos. Me,' il*l/