University of South Carolina Libraries
CUTS THI r>,0> ~ -?.Y Next week we a it interesting for Comforts, Flannel rt nf Jihinc I W1V/ UUV1 TV V goods. MCN! The Quoter ci THEY GOT rulit os.ATS. j An Orilfr TXint V.'os Prom:??!> IIon? | ori'il ait the !<:ix Uliice. Once when Nat Goodwin was play- \ ing in Chicago two men approached his innnagor, who was standing in the lobby of the theater, and introduced themselves as a couple of actors. Their ; names were entirely unknown to hiiu, and they had nothing to show that they were what they claimed to be. Accordingly he refused to give them seats, but they were persistent. One ; of the men in particular was offensively bo. lie shook his list under tha manager's nose and demanded who it I was that dared refuse him passes. I'll mw* Mr fJrinilvein " In. .r.lnrr-1 "I'll see If a little whipper tapper l!ko .roil can refuse me heats. Y<;u don't know who we are, eh? Well, who are you? Let's see your canl. I'll see Mr. Goodwin about it." The manager, who feared a scene, handed over one of his cards and told the men he was responsible and quite willing to take the consequences of refusing to give them seats. A few minutes later the two men came back to the theater. One of then had written "Pass two" on the manager's card. He prert nted the card nt the box o'.Iice. and it was promptly honored. Then they went in. When, half an hour later, the man- ! nger's attention was calk -1 t;> v.-hut had been done, ho was at first inclined to take some severe action, hut later he saw the joke on himself. "Lot them alone," he paid. "If they've , got nerve enough to do that, they are entitled to scats. You had hotter semi ' an usher down and ask them if they | wouldn't like u k ox."?Chicago Tribune. nciHiiril I lip Foundation. The Celestial City is clearly the fabric of Hunyan's own imagination, an j elaboration most probably of the town of P? dford, which, though not a walled city, had its gales fixed here and thero to guard the town in troublesome times. The gateways on the old llcinrd bridge, within which P.unyun was imprisoned for so long an ' through which he passed times cut of nun;'. cr. must have been foremost in the mind of the great dreamer.? I ho', man. THZ NEW YORK WORLD THRICE- A-WEEK EDITION. Jtcrol Wherever the IUi?li.ih J* angunge is Spoken* Thrice-a-Week Wot Id was a l>? illi^Ttf *?u-c?*ss in tip Ireginiiiiir; and li t' s'cndily gnuviap ever shic. Time is *he Jt-si, of all IhinfTt, jird "lias set. itporfl ?'f approval on Urn Tbrice-a-Week Work!, which h widely einvtln'tvl in eVery State and Territory of the Union, and Wnetever there am people who can rwi-1 >>tir mother bwiyo.e Tht.'< r-toer for the c*-n;ii:? vin'er and tli" jear 19')d wi 1 make its news service, if po-sil 1 , in ? \i? o-'.vo 111'? i ever All mvii'h of importance, no matter wit.t'1 to'7 li t; {^n. are reported accutate'y rt'-d prornptly. Ti:?f :"il:-?crilHT, for only one dollar a year, pets t bron pipers r er/ week and tnoie in.es and pen-nd reading thai most d.ii'xs can furnish at (lvo or six times the t vie. " hrice-H-Week Wo.'! 1 is alttoIntolv fair ;n its political news. l\.r;iflan bias i? never a'ioven to ftffo-:t it* no'W:i columns, and I)emocrat and Hejnihke.ii ?lik*- can obtain in its paves truthful account* of ail ihe great political cxiprgns. (n addition ton'! the news, the.Thrieea-Wrek orld i nn lO.i'K ii.p ftctivy-.). oh. borate nmint reporta nis.O ottar fWi? ores of i te???:-1. Tb?- '1 i'ric?i-;<-\W:'k \V.nUVs lrfrnl. i Bu'"-"C V' -o pr c is??n'y .' )') i>'i y??ni ar/rt !!ii> p iy* for 1 1 p?p>0M. We "IT : til's n\t-<| inlud newipop-r ari<l Tin Um >x Times together on'i v<ar i'oj $1 7?. The ovular subscript io i prL-e of t!;? tiro IH $2.UU. "" \ w x Fir.al Dischsrgc. Tulicft Ih hereby c:v?mi ih.j .1. p. Fos'er. xd ji"nsiiH'?n ?if ill.* Ph<>?b.i W?i (l, <lr?-?/?s? il. I.a npp i?*<i !< Jaaoti M <rr. ev, ,Ju Ve of 1' i>ha ??, i nn?] for the county ?ii Union, for a Una) drelia'pe ;?s mob adminisf o,t< r. i r Is Okoi'kkp. Tha?. the Trli day of .Trti nary, A. b, P.KJ, !? iix-d for I inc of Petition and a Una! *I< :?:? nt of ' 8a:<! estate. Jason M. Uiikki:, j Probata Judge Union o, umy. s.<*. Published in Union Tjmks on .Vh of JJ.w , iJ'JJ. lJ oL E PRfCE. ire going to make you on Blankets, ; s, Jeans, Outings, :ar and all heavy x ? &i&~. l A C EI? l Low Prices. A TRUE HERO. 1 One of the Ivlnd Tiint Get* Little I Itecovnltion IIc^c llrlou. Did you ever know a hero real well? I know at least one and quite Intimately. Who? I am afraid you would hard- 1 ly recognize bis name, and besides It would not be just right to give It here. He is only an okl bachelor who works in a shop. lie has been at one bench for something like?well, from this you may judge: When he began, lie was fresh from school, lie lives In a little I frame house, with ait absurd little ( backyard hardly more than big enough for the syringa bush and the ash barrel. "The first morning I started for the . shop," lie once toid me. "I cut across the back yard and climbed the fcnec. I have been doing it ever since, and it 1 has been a long time." In llio tiny : lawn is worn a deep footpath. The ton I mil of the back fence is smoothly pol- ] Ishcd. liis feet were the path, liis ] hands polished the rail. And nil these i years he has worked at the same < bench, doing: the same work. ' Not that he lacks intelligence or that 1 lie never had n? ambition. Intelligence he :110s' certainly has. 110 mean lore of \ books ami a wide, generous grasp of 1 . "'fairs and the drift of things. Amid lic.i 1:?! had. too, hot that v us before | h's fc t laid worn a patii across the , back yr.rd. I am quite sure that he I once loved. In fact. I suspect that 1 I:now the cue he lovt d, and that she 1 ! . d him. Put h.-* never married. frihe ] mi. Hit.- . ;h :he hits been widowed for a dozen ; 1: 1 ' 1:L why, you ask, with Intelligence 1 I ain'dilcr., did ho stick to his 1 1 u h".' I: an i:pp; r room of his little co':> e is a window blind which is ( 1.ever opened, llehltid that blind, peer- 1 :: out through the shatters with nntvco;:n'.:ing gaze, ells one who bears ti e t 1 form of manhood, yet lacks : end's mental qualities. The ??: ? behind ;! e blind is his brother. ' ;?o ns tit Ira. 1. uttering feebly about and utr only in lii'Ui. thin, querulous : -be.1. i. a \v:in an.1 bent old woman? his 1 . aiiir. For the sake of these two he ! : v.< rn the path in the lawn; for l.i" put is way ambition; for them lie stikcd the love that once stirred within hint. 1! 'is jc'.bt middle use now, thin as to hair, Ktuup'-J as to shoulders. Vet is then* a tenderness in his voice, n cheerful s/.vt < t'u-ss iti liis smile, u patient res!.;u.ai'.;u in his pale l?!ue eyes, that n h:.? manner of such inihl gentle :e.-s as you might expect in a saint, i rem him coine.i never a word of co;uplaint; about liim is 110 trace of disappointment. 110 hint of bitterness. And so. though few know liis name, I ho;'.e h lie wears no glittering panels, though he goes his way unhampered by pomp or circumstance ami all nnrecognized by church or state, I cannot help but count him one of earth's true heroes, Don't you Y?Sowell l'ord in Fraudur Magazine. A Cold ft'avr. The forecast of sudden changes in the weatherlserves notice that a hoarse voice and a heavy cough may invade the sanctity of health in your own home. Cautious people have a bottle of One Minute Cough Cure always at hand. K. if. Wise, Madison, Oa., writes: "I am indebted to One Minute Cough Cure for my present good health, and probably my life." It cures Coughs, ( olds, LuCrippe, Bronchitis, Pneumonia ami all Throat and Lung troubles. One Minute Coigh Cure cuts the phlegm, draws out the. inflammation, heals ami soothes the mucous membranes and strengthens the lungs. F. C. Duke. Tlir Whole Tliinfi. Clm._Vft..n I.. ? ? MUX. -*iwn\- ?n J til C J.l il VUllUgt' for me. 1 want n brotvnstonc house in a fashionable neighborhood. lie -And I suppose you want it in your own name too.? Brooklyn Life. C" i re ma stances Alter Knees. "But she used to bo considered quite n beauty." "That was before her father failed." ?Detroit Free Press. The world is full of people who would break their necks any time rather than wait for the next car.?Atchison Hlobe. If you are ill and need a pill Why not purchase the best? Do Will's Knrly liisers Are little surprisers. Take one?they do the rest. W. II. Howell, Houston, Tex., writes - I have used Tittle Karly itiser Pills in my family for coslipation, sick head* nelie, ete. To their us? I am indebted for the health of my family. 1\ (J. Duke. i THE DOMAIN OF DESPAIR. Tbat A^vful Oronl Riuln lirl'.vrrn tlte Uni'klci nml t!ic Slcria.i. There are various USmls and degrees of deserts in this country, but the iuost utterly hopeless are found in the so called Great basin between the ttockles and the Sierras. This is a vast region of deserts, with here and there an area where nature hi prankish mood seems actually to have made an effort to produce spectaculnr effects of horror. From the Wasatch mountains to the Sierra Nevada extends a chastlv stretch of territory which Is Intersected by n scries of high mountain ranges running parallel north and south, with valleys between. A blrdseye view of the landscape shows tliree principal ranges, two of which nre known ns the Amnrgosa and Pnnnmtnt, and between these Is Death valley, so called because It Is the very abode of death. Imagine a narrow strip of arid plain shut In between two mighty mountain walls, the peaks stretching up 10.000 feet Into n burning sky. The surface of this plain, which Is 17T> feet below sea level, is a mere crust of salt and alkali, through which a ridden horse breaks up to his knees Into a horrid paste than cats both lmlr and hide. A gray haze that never lifts makes everything indistinct and puncllng to the view. No vegetation Is to be seen save a very scanty sagebrush, with leaves that arc not green, but gray, and here and there a sort of cactus that prows to five or six feet !u height, with extended I ranches. It Is called the "dead man" because In the night each stalk looks like a corpse by the wayside. Put the supreme horror of the place is the boat, which Is unspeakable. There Is a breeze, but it Is so scorching hot as to Mister your face. Streams How from springs down toward the I valley. hut never reaeli !t. because the | lieat dries them up 011 the way.?Saturday Evening 1'ost. IMPROVED On NATURE. A. Point That V.*nn n I.nwsalt For WMtiam r.IeKlntey. A year or two after William McKinley had begun the practice of the law it Canton. O.. he distinguished himself In a humorous fashion in one of his Qrst successful cases. As often happens in court, the humor was not merely for the sake of the joke, but for serious purpose. Mr. Edward T. Uoo in 'The Life Work of William McK'nley" tells the story. The ease was a suit against a surgeon, whom the plaintiff charged with having set his leg so badly that It was bowed. McKlnley defended the surgeon and found himself pitted against John MeSwecney, one of the most brilliant lawyers of the Ohio bar. MeSweonoy brought his client Into court and had him expose the Injured limb to the jury. It was very crooked, and the ease looked had for the surgeon. But McKlnley had both his eyes open, as usual, and fixed them keenly 011 the other man's leg. As soon as the plaintiff was turned over to him lie asked that the other leg should also he bared. The plaintiff and McSwoeuey objected vigorously, but the judge ordered It done. Thep.lt appeared that his second leg was still more crooked than that which the surgeon had set. "My client seems to have done better by this man than nature itself did," said McKlnley, "and I move that the suit be dismissed, with a recommendation to the plaintiff that he have the other leg broken and then set by the surgeon who set the ilrst one." lived lcHHncus. Heedlessness may not be one of the seven deadly sins, but could the perpetrator oftener witness the result of his act a whole list of casualties would become obsolete. A. little Italian boy, lightly clad, was recently helping to sort out bottles from a city dump heap. In trying to remove a stopper from a condensed milk jar he accidentally broke the glass, and a powerful acid poured down his side. The child fell screaming to the ground, terribly burned. He will he crippled for life. Thc\ person who, after finishing some experiment or process, corked the cupful of innocent looking acid in the bottle and threw it into the ash barrel "didn't think."?Youth's Companion. Compromise. "Why should religion and science quarrel?" "Why, indeed?" "Why not say that man is descended from the monkey Eve made of Adam and let it go at that?"?Puck. naJKSi^ir: v. , .v I Coughed apses ? . jt-uT-c " I had a most stubborn cough I for many years. It deprived me 9 of sleep and I grew very thin. I B then tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, Q and was quickly cured." a R. N.'Mann, Fall Mills, Tenn. I Sixty years of cures and such testimony as the above have taught us what Ayer's Cherry Pectoral will do. We know it's the greatest cough remedy J ever made. You will say I | so, too, after you try it. 1 Three slits: 25c.t 50c., $I.W. Consult youi*doctor. If lie savs take It. I I then do as ho says. If lie tells yon not to I take it, then don't take it. lie knows. n $ You will like Ayc?'s Pills also, I purely vegetable, gently laxative. H Keep the bowels regular. FX EE Dl.OOD AXD&KIN CURE Ctirc'3 It/Ml Poison, Scrofula, Eczema, Rheumatism, and all JUood Trouble. The Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. Y>.) treatment for impure Mood and akin vti.'VUso is now recognized as a sure and certain cure for the most advanced .-daces of cancer, eating sores, eczema, itehings skin humors, scabs or scales, syphilitic blood poison, scrofula, ulcers, persistent eruptions, pimples, boils, ..cites and pains in bones, joints or back, swollen glands, lisings and bumps 011 the skin or blood diseases. Men, women and children are being cured in every State by Botanic Blood Balm for purifying the blood and expelling the germs and humors from the entire feystem, leaving the skin freo from eruptions, and rosv with evidence of nnn. rich bloo'l. sufferer need longer despair?help is at hand?no matter how many discouragements you may have met with, Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) cures permanently and quickly. To satisfy the doubters wo will give to any sufferer a trial treatment absolutely freo so that the}' may test this wonderful remedy. B. B. B* (Botanic Blood Balm) sold by all drug stores with complete directions for home treatment for $1 per largo bottle. For freo trial treatment, address Blood Balm Co., S Mitchell Street, Atlanta, Ca., and Trial Treatment will be sent at once. Write today. "Describe troub'o, and free medical advice given. Over 3,000 voluntary testimonials of cures by using Blood Balm. Thoroughly tested for 30 years. For sale by F. C. Duke, Druggist. Rlipwed M'lir.t She Conld Do. Phoxy?I got a good square meal last night, the first In several weeks, uud I have you to tliank for It. Friend?Me to thank? Well, that's news to me. Phoxy?Yec, I know. I telephoned to my wife yesterday morning that you were coming out to dinner with me.? Philadelphia Tress. A Good Talker. Clara?Is Mrs. Flitter a good conversationalist? Dorothy?Yes, Indeed. She makes you tliink of lots of good things to say, but talks so much that you don't get a clinnce to say them.?Detroit Free Press. Kortnl Dyspepsia Cur Digests all classes of fool, tones and strengthens the stomach and dig-stive organs. Cur?p Dyspepsia. Indigestion, Stomach Troubles, and makes rich red blood, health an I strength. Kodol rebuilds wornnut tissues, puriims,strengthen-' and sweetens the stomach. Gov. O. W. Atkinson, of W. Va., savs: I have used a number of bottles of Kodol and have found it to be a very effective and, indeed, a powerful remedy for stomach ailments. I recommend it to my friends. F. C. Duke. Secondhand Buok Habit. One of the novel habits of the present day is one that takes one to secondhand bookstores, says the Philadelphia North American. Dealers in dissipated libraries call it aptly enough the "secondhand book liablt." A clerk whose duty it Is to stand at the front if the secondhand bookstore and watch out for possible purchasers is the one who first made note of this queer ha Lit. He noticed that the same men and women were wont to stop and cursorily inspect the same dusty volumes day after day, year in and year out They come every day?the same old faces?and they look over the same old books, and they never say anything. and they never buy anything, and after awhile, when their time is up, they go away as silently as they came. What's in a Name? Everything is in the name when it comes to Witch Hazel Salve. E. C. De\\ ltt A Co., of Chicago, discovered some yunis ago, how to make a salvo from \Yitch llazel that is a specific for Piles. For blind, bleeding, itching and protruding Piles, eczema, cuts, burns, bruises and all skin diseases DeWitt's .Salve lias no equal. This has given rise to numerous worthless counterfeits. Ask for DeWitt's - the genuine. F. C. Duke. NATURAL HISTORY. All animals ruminate which have horns and cloven feet. The offspring of two rabbits might In ten years number 70,000,0'Jb. Flying fish have been known to jump ten feet above the surface of the sea. i iic puiiin la the most punctual of birds In the matter of its unnunl migration. The moose deer l.r.s the largest horns of any unimul. They often weigh from llfty to sixty pounds. T'.io boa and python have the, largest number of ribs of any animals, the number being C20 pairs. Some few birds, notably the bluethroat, accomplish the whole of their migratory Journey in one stupendous effort. The reindeer can endure more than any other draft animal except the camel. A reindeer has been known to puil 200 pounds at ten miles an hour for twelve hours. raw to our readers. IJatonic Iflo'xJ Itulm for the Mood. If you suffer from tilers, ee/.-ma, scrofula, blood poison, cancer, eating sores, itching skin, pimples, 1 bone eains, swellings, iheum.itlsrn, ratanh, >r any blood or skin di-ease. we advise von to take Botanic Blond Balm (B. B. B ) Esj* ci illy recommended for old, obstinate, deep seated eace3, cures where til else fads, heals every s>re, makes lie blood pure and ri -h, g'ves the s!<b? ire rit-n glow rf health. I)ri?r&hi8, $l Vmt 1ar/c 1>oM1p. Sample! s-nt. free b> wr;tinK lilood Hslm (*oAtlanta. Oa , fVtteribo trouble and fr'o medical advice pent in seal letter. Mfdiciriu aetd ut ouce, piepuid. j Remember, Friends, j You will always find a full I Hue of i ? I Fi>ur, Sugar, Coffee, i Meat, Lard, Canned and Bottled Goods, Fresh Vegetables, aud everything i to he found iu an up-to-date I family Grocery, at my Store, j Tobaccos and Cigars a Specialty. j Bring Your Laundry to Me. iJ.T. SEXTON., i fc"vv*< J. CLOUQH WALLACE. ATOKNEY AT LAW. Boom 12 up stall's Foster Balding. RALPH K. CARSON. H. I,. SCAIFE. CARSON & SCAIFE, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Special attention given to real estate unci collections. D. E. HYDRICK, J. A. SAWYER. Spartanburg. Union. HYDRICK & SAWYER, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Union, S. C. Office Ko. 6, Law Range, Wallace Building. S.MEANS BEATY, ATTORN EY-AT-LAW. Xo. 3, Law ltangc. JETER BUTLER, A TTORN Y-AT-LA W. In Office With Y. E. DeI'ass. Opposite Court II.n s.\ i'.aciico i-. h.I i;iu courts of S..u'h Carolina. ^^7^~SXrratt, PHYSICIAN AND SUROEON. Offers his professional services to the people of Union and surrounding country. Day ealis at D ike's Drug Store. Night calls at the residence of Mr. L. J. ii .. -- - 1 j unuioii, ibH. Money to Loan. I have money to loan in amounts of $.">U0 and upwards on improved farms at 7 p?.*r cout inteiosr. No commission except a reasonable attorney fee Lor preparing necesvar ' pai?eis. 3!?-ly. V. K. J)kPass. GET SHAVED! You can get acrac :d at any old place but wlieu vou Wfiut ro pet shaved go to MULVIHILL'S BARBER SHOP. The most ur'islk. hair cutter in town. Next door to Tinajey's Jewelry Store. 2:<-4r.. CdNmnofiS'a? ^.BUlL&EaS'^ W3ill %mm. IIWl fcMW, A*UUWM? CM) 1 * )?. W?. Wrtrtw, TdfclA, fitMl wlr* Ml Hull* ? *?, Xmm itUM ft?d P??H. 'Mil, OOr?M, mwuT M3 ftojt B?UM. L0mR^^t^m*8BffL! 0L Some Reasons j Why You Should Insist on Having EUREKA HARNESS OIL Uucqualerl by any other. Renders hard leather soft. Especially prepared. Keeps out water. ? A heavy bodied oil. Harness An excellent preservative. Reduces cost of your harness. Never burns the leather; its Efficiency is increased. ? ecu res best service, titches kept from breaking. Oil |s sold in all Localities Manntbcfuwd by Stnn.lurd OH Compnnr. MONEY TO LOAN. I h ive mad- ftna>.gcinev.t<? by whirli I ' an ni t oitate loan*. on that rnorigages on we'l hodod and improved fauns at? I er oi" t intern?.!. on sums of SI 000 and hovhiIs a'.:d ft cent. in*e?est. on ?unn |i'8S than Sl.lMiO. Xn commission charged on these losnL B irrower <?nl> teq iirtd to pay attorney for pr? parirp htu.+j-urv pa'p- is. tc. J ^\. SAWYER. X t.t nrnee-ut-T jj ? 8010m. Union, S. C. m iw Dissolution cf Partnership. The U<v Orm of Monro & Hindur* 1? hereby dissolved by mutual conront. Al \>p)?on? indebted to fluid flim will please m?kp p iyment to either of the under iwd. lamkr. Muvro. 17-h. f! P. SaxijK?s. k Umon Tnuas Nov, 21. Charleston & Western Carolina ^ t Kail way- Company. AUGirST.^AN 1), A?H RVILLI Short Sclimlulcin vffovt July dtli JWS < fn-ave August* 1010am ISkpm Arrive Greenwood ii ?i pm , ??.Anderson -1? * ? Uurcoi 145 pm if ie Greenville i 9t put life am .Spartanburg H9jP m Union 7 90 pin Saluda 6 M pm Ueuderaonville.. II pm ? AsheviUs i 16piy Leave Asheville 7 05 am Union I4iam Spartanburg 1801pm Greenville 18 15 pm ldH Laurena 1 Lo pm CMfta Anderson 7m?*? -Greenwood 8 61pm ftWpm Arrive Amum 6?ipm II 84 am Loave Columbia lilOili Newberry 18 48 pm Olinton 1 8K pm Arrive Greenville 88k am Spartanburg 880 pm Leave Spartanburg 1801 pm Greenville 1818 pm Arrlvo Clinton 8Mpm Newborry 8 68 pm Columbia 4 B pm Fastest and Best Line between N< wherry and Greenville, Spartanburg and mlenn Springs. Conneotlon from Newberry Tia Columbia Newberry and Laurona Hallway. For anv Information write ERNRST WILLIAMS, Gen. Pass. Agtu Augusta, Ga T. M. BMMERSON. Trafflo Manager. SEA30AHD Air Line Railway Double Dally Service. Between New York, Tampa, AtUntfc, New Orleans and Points Sooth lit West. a f IN EFFECT MAY 2oth, 1902. SOUTHWARD. Daily Daily No. iil No. 27 Lr. New York. P It R.... li p in 18 ltia Li, 1'uiitiici,in*, i'? A., u .0 ,isi ; Aia lv. Usui more, " 6 to p in CZ: 8 81 am Lv, VV ashingion. W.S.lCy 7 OJ ,< i a lb i, a A Lv. i,*ciiu*wfiu, t-, a ijg i.j io .1 j. m 'It A |i a v ..v. I'eletabuig. '* 1, .0 p ,u 8 *LL ha . L*. Nonius, *- loiiiu b p as Lv. ileudorsou 8 88 it hi 6 kt p m l.v. ifciiei/u " iii. ia J 8, p is Lv, Oou. 1 IUOS " Vwl.ul a ,i J. 01 l.v. liaudci, s A Lva ui 10 A. p tu Lv. Columbia I " y 4b a in 1 06 a ra At. .Wlauiiaii " 8 ?o p iii 4 b6 a in Ar. JSofctubviliv " 7 uo |, iu V ib a m .... w., .............. ib W |>? Ar. 1*iu|i? " (i ia a i.i 6 <6 f 01 ! aN?. 34 No. 41 I.r. New Votk, N Y I'icN f 7 ?6 iu OS p m i.i. I'll limit nilutt " iu iti h ui 11 .1 f lit Lt Vulk, (J 1)} JUvf SUil |i III ...... . l.T. tial.iuiwra, i>? 1'lju | ?{ I.T. Wasli'lou, xS tt H i ii ? )?Jt) p d> Lv. I'oriaiauutli.S A Lujf fl o> p iu ti 2A a *i Li, V\ eliluu " 11 li ,i m li iblm l.v. >urilu? " liwiu l |>n l.v. ?icnaiT*>n " 2 2a a lit lltpA I.i. lUicign " v;il h iu * 66 p as l.v. L^iiiUiein l'liir* " s u6 a iu 0 it j> m , SS, i.t. iimaici. * "f J^FT* i Lt. \Vliniiii^t<jii Oljpm Ar. ctmrimte " 10 OS a m 10 tt p m Lv.'Oheaier " iu 22 a m 1 23 a La L.V. carlta.e " 10 16ain l.v.Oreeunuvd ** 12 63 a iu Ml* I.t. Ailieu* " 2 sup m (Aim Ar. Annul* I " <1 .V? p ni 7 ?e a m Ar. Augusta, o A W o 6 40 p ni Ar. Mhcuii, c oi'l?a 7 20 pm llliia Ar. iluuiguuiorj A & TV' 1' 0 20 p iu 0 IS p i* Ar. Subtle, LIS 2 66 a ui Ar. New i-rlc/tia, UN 7 26 a ui ......... Ar. Nastiriilc, N O A ril L 4 wt m 6 66 p an Ar. Memphis 4 15 p iu i 26 a aa NORTHWARD Imily Lull/ No. 62 No. 66 l.T, Memphis, N C A Si L 12 45 noon 140pm l.v. Naaliriila 9_3U p in > 30 a m I.?, Krw Orieaua, 1. x .\ JW u) TIT. l.t . Mui lhr 1 .>J . ni I.t. Jiluuigouir'T,AA ? r ii.li m lMpm I.t. Macon, c of lia a <ri am 4 20 p m Lt. Augusta, c A W c ' 10 5 u m Li. Atiaiiia, { 8 A i. tiy .4 ou ao^u 6 60 p m Ar. 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Norllna " ?45?m 1 45 p m i.v.*y. lur<.i>ura " &5i*iii 4 07 p r* Ar. Klchinoiiu " 6 86 * in 4 55 p T? A*. Wn hiiiglon, W 8.Hy I010*m * M Ar. ltaltimore 1' It It 11 25 a in H p M Ar I'liilhd^lphia " 1 86 p in \'M*m Ar. New York " 4 18 p in 5 SO * m Note,?i.xcrpi Holiday, jcontral Time. (Kiuiterii Tim*. |R. E. L. BUNCTI.TrSS General I'RBaenger Agent. Savannah. G#* W. E. CHRISTIAN, A. G. P. A., Atlanta, G?. I~ to write for <mr confidential letter before wp-1 plying for patent: it mar be worth manay. I We promptly obtain U. H. and Foreign | \rAibNTS I orpliow and we .end tt IMMEDIATE I , rpcr report on petentablfiiv... VYe ?W?I the DoM legal nervine end advice, led (rati charges are moderate. Try oe- 5 SWIFT & CO., I Patont Uwy?pf, * 3 | Opp. U.S. Patent jfflcs.Washtngtow, P.C. | J STALLION! STALLION!! flj The Btindard bred ntalton, PebWe, will begin the TStll season at rmr stable . Hept. 20th. Insures at $10.00. 38- ' CKERN & BOYD. V .