PAG2 TUT TII2 ASHEVIIiS ' GAZETTE-NEWS Wednesday, April 30, 1313 CROUP RELIEVED Bf FIFTEEN I.IINUTES No need to dose delicate little atom scha with Internal medicines apply YICIC&SALYE Well over throat and cheat. In live minutes the breathing la easier and In lifteen minutes the worst cases are re lieved. Croup can be prevented abso lutely by an application of Vick's at bed-time covered with warm flannel. Abaolutely harmless. Samples on re quest At all diOKKists, 25o, 60o and SkAl). Vlnlr rhnn.l.x.1 rn Greensboro, N. C. Copqttgk. I9ia.bg Zax-rg IrVing Graon. brutes?" he exclaimed angrily as be started in quirk pursuit, loudly com manding them to whoa. Tolliver, equal ly provoked at the actions of his own beast, was hurrying along by his rival's side as he called his animal by name. : . "They must have winded some beast up there in the mountains and become uneasy. They are not particularly frightened just restless. See! They have stopped already," he exclaimed. A. hundred yards further down the pass the beasts had stopped short in their ' scamper, and wheeling about were now awaiting the approach of their masters, their ears pricked for ward and tails jerking nervously. Rapidly the men pressed on to cap ture them while the opportunity of- fered. And then from behind them there Arose a scream so shrill, so penetrat ing, so awful in its horror that their blood curdled within them and their hearts seemed to stop at its first wild note. They spun upon their heels with every nerve bristling. "My God," easped Clay, reeling as' though from a fierce blow In the face, while March, sickened to the very core of his soul by what he saw, felt a deathly faint ness sweep over him. Doris, a hun dred yards away from them and to all appearances already unconscious from terror and shock, was being lifted bod ily from the earth by the Flying Man. Again the horses were stampeding down the canyon with terrified enort Ings. With an inarticulate cry of horror . March jerked his revolver from his pocket and went leaping backward towards her, Tolliver racing by his Bide with weapon in hand. But even as they made their first step the winged one, leaping into the air as lightly as a tiger who bears but a fawn leaps a jungle deadfall, he smote the air with his tremendous wings. Upward he forged with swift beatings, thought he- struck the weapon from the other's hand and sent it ringing upon the stories. Without pausing to see what hi4 ertswhile rival's next move would be he went dashing up the canyon in wild pursuit, his eyes fastened upon1 those above, the horror of one who faces the rack freezing him to his very vitals. Doris Was Being Lifted Bodily From the Earth by the Flying Man. upward and away, shielding himself perfectly from the drawn weapons ol those below by the form of the one he bore, peering malevolently over the top of her head with hit enormous in sect like eyes at those who were rag ing below like men bereft of their reason. With brain reeling aa though be would go mad March glanced at Tolliver. His rival's face was distorted almost beyond the sem blance of human beings, bis eyes filled with the dull madness, bis teeth wounded panther's, his big revolver al ready raised foT the shot which even though It missed the girl and pierced the forehead of the one who bore her CHAPTER XI. In the Clutch. During the first five minutes of his frenzy Alan, little better than an In sane man, ran frantically along the gently rising and fairly level floor of the gulch, striving with every nervo and muscle to keep pace with the crea ture above, calling Doris by name, shouting hoarsely at her captor, who still shielding himself behind the oth er,, gazed silently back at him from over the top of her head as he flapped himself ftirthar and further into the distance In a half backwards, half sidewise flight. Then with the gradual return of reason as his wind began to desert him he realized the utter fu tility of so exhausting himself that he could no longer pursue, and with an effort fought himself back to self-control and logical reasoning. He glanced back. Tolliver, staring fixedly upward, was just coming up on a panting run and would have passed him without speaking or slackening his pace' had not March seized him as he was going by. The look upon Clay's face caused another shiver to vibrate down Alan's Bpine. "Tolliver!" he cried sharply. "Let me go. Release me, damn you," he yelled as he raised his revolver as if about the strike the other down. Alan shook him fiercely. "Listen to me," he commanded. "If after I have spoken you still insist upon senselessly exhausting yourself you may do so. But harken to what I say first." Hesitating, seeming to but half comprehend what the other was saying Clay lowered his weapon and Bide by side they jogged along. March spoko as best he could between breaths. "It is unspeakably horrible, but wo must keep our senses if we would do our best. And we must work together and coolly if we would hope to save her.' We 'mustliecp on as rapidly as we can without exhausting ourselves, and manage somehow to keep him in sight. He is pretty heavily burdened and I don't believe he can go far with out stopping to rest. We must not run ourselves into the blind staggers at the outset, for once out of our sight we would stand little chance of find ing him again. Neither would it do any good for one of us to go back for help, for all the aeroplanes are away. What is to be done must be done by us. And may the good Lord give us strength." Tolliver not answering and making no 3ign that he had heard was keeping about a yard in advance. They went scrambling up a sharp in cline and arrived at the top breathing sharply. Despite their efforts they had lost sight of the creature for a few moments during the climb, but as they now mounted the crest they caught sifeht of him once more seated upon a cleft in the rock wall perhaps a quarter of a mile ahead, the girl close. ly clasped in his arms and to all ap pearances still unconscious. For the first time since her scream had horri fied him March was conscious of a gleam of hope. The girl's weight was a heavy handicap for the flying one, and he would of necessity have to make more and more frequent stops as he proceeded. With Clay to help him It might be that they could get the other in such a position that he could not shield himself from both at the same time, and then all might be well after all. Both himself and bis com panion were good pistol shots, and given half a chance .could probably disable the brute. , And now as the trail ran downward again they b-c'.:e Into a fast trot once more. Motionless the one upon the cleft watched them until they had come glare of stark within couple of hundred yards, eye- bared like a ine them with the motionless alert- quTckivoflqwed the first garment, and feeling far more free of action and breath by thus having rid himself of those cumbering things, he quickened his pace with a step which once more fell lightly. An hour had passed with no perman ent change In their see-saw positions. As the Flylug Man had led the air craft by a-distance unvarying to the eye, so now did he lead the tolling two who hung so grimly on his course " n by reason of the steepness ot oi.'ghnesa of their path he got so much ..a -half a mile ahead, he would prompt ly stop and refresh himself jintil they had come up within a few hundred yards whereupon he would flounder up with difficulty and resume his flight with heavily beating wings. Noon with its horizontal sun found both pursuers suffering acutely. ' Despite the cool ness of the mountain air their clothing was drenched with perspiration, their limbs racked, their beads swam, their feet tortured, their breath came in wheezing gasps. Yet without pause and without a word uttered they strug gled on, first one forging to the lead and then the other, passing and being passed alternately as the footing fa' vored or retarded, sliding down sharp Inclines to the rattle of following Btones, scrambling up painful ascents where they left the blood of their bands and knees upon the sharp rock edges, sometimes stumbling into a fall that tore ragged gaps in their clothing and raked the skin from their limbs, their mouths half open, their limbs shaking, their breath whistling, their eyes forever glued upon the retreating one who, with a brief rest for every mile, still baffled them as maddeningly ness of an eagle upon bla eyrie, then spreading his wings launched himself Into open space. The noise of bla heavily beating wings came plainly to must bring her also crashing down , their ears, bis flight was Irregular and upon the rocks to .certain mutilation nnd death. With the qulrkneps of Better than Spanking Spanking will nt cure children of netting Uie bed, bevauee it Is not a hublt but a danaerou dbtenae. The C. IT.. Rowan Drug Co., Dept. 686. Chica go, 111... have discovered a strictly harmless remedy for this distressing disc-Hue and to muke known Its merits they will send a GOc package securely wrapped and prepaid Absolutely Free trt any reader of The Gaxette-News. Thin remedy also cures frequent d Ira t1 urinate and Inability to control urlntirlmf the night or day In old i.r yrwihi?, Tin (. If. Itowan Drnir Co. Ii nn nit Rellnble House, write in tin-in t'il:i" for the free rni-illr-lne. 'in. ihn iifulli'ti'd mi-mliers of your f . , t! , n t, ! your ni'lK'ilinrFi m.d i . ....lit i Ii ;.i n innly. labored like that of a hawk bearing away a chicken, or an eagle a lamb, and so long as the traveling was good the struggling pair in pursuit nearly kept pace with him. Half a mile fur ther on, however, the canyon ' bed again became a steeply rising jumble of rocks, and up this they went la boriously. And once again when they reached the summit they saw the ob ject of their pursuit Just arising from the trail after a moment's rest and but a stone throw ahead of them, yet still shielded as cunningly as ever by the body of the girl. So on and on they went with tbe perspiration streaming from tbolr bodies and . their hearts thudding heavily, but with the grim determination to follow until ex. haunted nature bereft them of tbe po-ver of movement and loft' them prone and gasping upon the, rocks. Tolliver, still a few paces In advance, threw aslde'hls coat with curse of Impatience at. weight, and March, after a minute's consideration, did likewise, it bid fair to be a chase that would draw thlr strength to the lHnt ounce and wear their endurance to the hone, therefore one ronld not well trai'U too lluut collar ji4. Tcist ... . aa wmmimiJ Reeling of Brain, and Hopeless of Heart, They Followed. as during the first hour. And above all was the incessant torment of their thirst. One o'clock found them upon tbe edge of a ravine, deep and precipitous, its bottom a jumbled mass of huge boulders that through the untold cen turies of the past had gone crashing to its bottom from the mountain's top. Just ahead of them the winged one was flapping in direct flight for tbe other side, while they traveling 'upon their blistered feet must first descend its dizzy slope to Its lowest depth clamber across Its chaotic bottom and struggle painfully up the other side a good mile ot heart-breaking struggle against a half mile's unimpeded flight, But pausing not at all they went plung ing down with the recklessness of despair, stumbled across the boulder- littered bottom, dragged themselves weak with exhaustion up the opposite slope and staggered to the summit as their foe, Invigorated by a half hour's rest, arose just ahead and con tinued his flight apparently as fresh as when he bad started hours before. Reeling of brain and hopeless of heart, tbelr breath coming In sobs, they fol lowed. - ; At two o'clock March, suddenly arousing himself, found that he bad been struggling on In a daze, a semi' conscious state wherein he bad stum bled along as In a dream as he clam bered over jagged, upheaved masses and dragged himself painfully up steep ascents that led ever up and up towards distant and towering peaks that receded as steadily as he ap proached; his eyes ever fastened up on a grotesque flying thing that alter nately flapped onward llk a. mam nioa bat or rootled vnUureiike upon some eminence as it clutched a form which it was bearing closely and peer ed with huge, inscrutible eyes at him self toiling on with infinite weariness, below. Ahead of him the Flying Man was just in, the act of rising once more with bis burden, On one side ot him towered the smooth shoulder of the mountain that loomed up another thousand feet, upon the other a steep slide that led down equally as far to a torrent, the thunder Of whose voice came faintly to his ears. Some miles ahead and rising dizzily was. the flat surface of a table' mountain with pre cipitous cliffs surrounding it, wild and desolate, the haunt of no living thing except mountain sheep and wandering eagles. Was It to this inaccessible place, this very heart of desolation, that the enemy was leading them? March could but . vaguely wonder. Where was ClayT He looked behind just in time to see the other go down upon his bleeding knees in a stumbling fall and lie motionless. For the first time since the start he halted, hesi tated, then with au exclamation of despair hurried back to the fallen one and turned him over. The eyes were half closed, the mouth gasping lik that of a suffocating fish and the head rolling limply. Despair seized him. Each breath that he drew pierced his bosom like a dagger and his bead swam , giddily. " His own hands and knees were torn and blood caked and his throat like old parchment. It teemed hopeless, worse than hopeless. to go on alone, yet go on he must t; his last breath,, his last step', Mb last crawl, and Clay must take care of him self. He turned to pursue his way and Raw that the creature beyond had al ready settled to the rocks and was quietly watching them. March ran his hand across his eyes to clear them from the sweat. ' Since the other was not increasing the distance between them, perhaps it would be wise upon his part to rest also. Should he con tinue on in' his present condition it would be but a short time before he would collapse as Clay had done, and then' there would be no eye to mark the direction of the monster's flight On the other hand should he rest for while he would be able to take up the pursuit with renewed vigor, and perhaps by that time Clay would be able to' accompany him. He threw himself upon the rocks. The desire to sleep fell upon his eyelids as a dead weight. . Fatigue deadening as an anaesthetic, so be numbing as to require the utmost ef forts of his will to keep it from stupe fying' his senses, possessed him from brain to toe. The pain was gone from his limbs, but In its place was the numbness ot paralysis. His bead, too, had ceased. .tp. reel, but It was hum ming like a hive. Fighting uncon sciousness with all his strength of body and will he raised himself to a sitting position and again looked ahead. The enemy was squatting where he bad alighted last, bis head drooping for ward and his hand resting on the form of the girl whom he had laid at his feet. That he was not asleep a Blight uneasy movement now and then in dicated, but that he was very weary his sunken attitude, gave strong evi dence. Although his body was not unprotected by that of his captive, the distance was., too far to precipl tate matters by a pistol shot which if it hit either of them might almost as likely strike the girl. Again slumber, so nearly overmas tering that for a moment the world swam darkly before his eyes, surged down upon the ' watcher, and again March was compelled to painfully be stir himself to keep from unconscious ness. He forced his eyelids apart, threw back his head and breathed to the bottom ot his lungs. His respira tions grew more regular, less frequent He felt his head begin to clear and fresh strength surge " through his limbs. . Strong, active and in perfect health his recuperative powers were unusually good. yet , the last three hours of incessant scramble and run slide and climb, stumble and fall had been severe enough to sorely tax the most hardened mountaineer. But he had rested for fully halt an hour now and once more felt capable of resum ing the grind. The first grisly horror which bad gripped him had given way to cold desperation. He arose, stretch ed his stiffened limbs and walked awk wardly to Tolliver, shoving him with his foot. "Get op," he roughly com tnanded. - (TO BE CONTINUED.) mm gigs Though Nearly Half Water,! Their Contents Are Extremely Nutritious Comparison With Meat Many persons often ask what an egg is made of, but Btrange to say few ever find out to their entire satis- -faction. A test at the department ot agriculture shows that the white of an ! egg is nearly seven-eighths water, the balance being nearly pure albumen. The yolk is slightly less than one-half water. v This is true of the eggs . of chickens, turkeys, ducks and geese. In comparing the eggs of these various birds the .department of agriculture quotes the following figures: Hen eggs, 60 per cent water, 16 per cent' protein, 36 per cent fat Goose eggs, 44 per cent, water, 19 per cent protein, 36 per cent. fat. Duck eggs, 46 per cent, water, 17 per cent protein, 36 per cent, fat Turkey eggs, 48 per cent, water, 18 per cent, protein, 33 per cent. fat. . Ot course, farmers understand that protein goes to make muscle and blood, while fat is fuel for running the machinery ot the body. Thus it will be seen that eggs, though halt or near ly halt watcB, are extremely nutritious, containing all the elements required tor the building and support ot the body. There is no truth, howeyer, in the old saying that an egg contains as much nutriment as a pound ot steak. It would be nearer correct to estimate a pound of eggs as being equal to a pound of lean steak In nu tritious value. ' CASTOR I A " ! ' , For Infants and Children.' - Tha Kind You Haw Always Bought Bears the Signature of "Trade winds" always blow in the direction of the men who advertise in the Gazette-News i, A SAFE PLAN Before en tori tig a Business College is to "visit the. College and personally investigate the methods. ' j '-''. A safer Plan is to find ou what The Business Men and The Graduates of that Collcgi EZO fa Quickest Acting Remedy lor. , eav about it. AChlne. Burning teet We invite and uric both EZO puts ths feet In Ana ships over i i i.4;n nlKhC No m-tter how sore or painful, .KllKlS 01 investigations. Then, and only then, if yon are thoroughly satisfied tluv we Lave 'something exception ally good to offer we want you to enroll with ns. . "We Cuarantee a Position to Every Cradnato. -. Emanuel"! -incis Collie SURE FOOT REMEDY ruh nn KZO snrl misery wlh vanlflh. EZO is a pleHSsnt ointment; Just rob It on your poor sillns; feet, that'll alk No (Hasina; around getting "L iy. V,'i() never" falls to extract the sor fires from corns, bunions and callous, and for rouuh skin, sunburn, chsiina; snd after shuvlns; there is nothing- ilka It. Jar It cents at druggists avary whera. ' h .ii nrs iia w sror.i., 00D VALUE OF MANY EGGS It is FORTUNATE for a real merchant if his competitor a a live advertiser who. now and then, even tries to "set tta pace for him." It makes store-making a task for MENS MAKE PERCHES MITE-PROOF Made of 2x4 Stuff, There Is No Place for Little Insects to Hide Kerosene Does Work. ; The simplest constructed perch we can feet, if it gives satisfaction should be the one to build. There is no place for the mites to hide, even, should they get on these perches. The perches are made of 2x4 stuff with one edge rounded, the pieces that form the support for the perches are of the same material as the perches, also that of the legs, which are one foot long, which makes the' perches 18 inches from the floor. Sufficiently high for convenience and not so high that when fowls jump from them, i 4L Mite-Proof Perches. , they will bruise their feet, . causing Bumble-foot," broken legs or breast bones. The legs should fit the cans loosely so that in removing them to facilitate cleaning out the droppings, the cans will not be overturned. The cans should contain si inch or two of kerosene or coal oil at all times, and there is no possible chance of any mites, big or little, getting by. INDUSTRIOUS HEN LAYS EGGS Fowl 8hould Not Be Compelled to Re main Idle by Being Cooped .Up , in Filthy Quarters. The hen Is naturally Industrious and he should not be compelled to remain idle by being cooped up In dark, . filthy quarters, where drafts are prevalent, the floor without some good litter and surroundings other wise unhealthy. - Rather encourage her to. work by providing her with good, comfortable quarters.-, Construct a good scratch shed, but If this be Impossible then construct a dropping board under the roosts and place the litter upon the floor of the coop. Permit all the light possible Scatter the grain food In the litter and let old biddy scratch for It to ber heart's content. Avoid feeding moldy food and pro vide drinking water in plenty. During the bitter cold weather slightly warm the water for the convenience of the fowls. Remember, the working hen li the one that will shell ont the eggs, while the Idle one will not lay. ; Varieties of Ducks. " Today we have 11 acknowledged varieties of ducks, viz.: Pekln, Ayles bury, Rouen, Indian Runner, Crested White. White Muscovy, Colored Mus covy, Cayuga, White Call, Gray Call and Black East Indians. For real practical purposes, I only recommend the first four classes and in the order that I have named them the Pekln being tbe most extensively bred and probably aa good as an all round market duck as there Is today but they are the most' timid, and con sequently more liable to get panic stricken when raised in large num hers., says a writer In an exchange, Standard weight of ' adult drakes, eight pounds; ducks, seven pounds, As to laying qualities the Peklns are outclassed only by a single breed It is a common thing for a Pekln duck to lay from 100 to 12S eggs In a single season. . v nillCHESTER S PILL I (li-l A-b r I" , l 4 Ul fbr.fPf Hk.! i-,1 I' Ills) In U4 '1 til nLi , l-.., Mi.lr. .th !i4 I'lM-Sj.-V' I ft.. Wlhe-r. V ? -. V, lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli Lighten the Housework A plain iron sink returns very X'ir?7fevT little for the effort spent upon it t A few minutes spent in.cleamne -J a tondaPa white enameled sink and you have a veritable Z, beauty spot ot radiance. -, . i Our catalogue of sinks is very .interesting with its wall hangine, rwner and recess patterns. It "T is free to all interested, in good plumbing' and eood fixtures. ,,' f J. C McFlieraon. West College Street. :::::z:z-r-:-:-:-HiHiiiiiiitiitiiiiiiiMitimiiiiMHMiutHimiiuiif!iiNiiiwi(i "Ml 1 1 I .IlllliilllliilillllllJIIIIvX AV SIM 'Staadsnf' '4-. j 0. C. S. C. C. S. C. C. S. 0. C. S. C. 0. S. - c. c. s. Q p pa p p w p p w ca d 03 d d cri d d Learn Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Type writing, Civil Service, . Com- "mercial Law, Eapid Calcula- - tion, Business Arithmetic, .English, .Penmanship, Spejling and Business Correspondence at the CARO LINA COMMERCIAL SCHOOL. WE WANT YOUR STENOGRAPHIC WORK. - Our prices are 'reasonable; satisfaction given. Spe cial prices on regular work. , V-;f- -. ; ..'-'! .' '.'. ' ' ...-' See MISS P. L. HOLM AN, or MRS. C. B. Campbell, Cor. Pack Sqr. & College St. Over Bloomberg's. p p w p p in p p p p p p 01 p p CCS. CCS. CCS. CCS. CCS. CCS. SOUTHERN RAILWAY, ftemier Carrier ol the South. Schedule Bgarea'publlRhed a information only and not guarantee. .-m--.... , " EFFECTIVE NOV. 24TH, !,, , . ,..., arrives from " ' Eastern Tune Departs (or Easter Tim No. Lake No. Lake .U:M a-m. No. 7 NO.' Lake t sun. No. No. Lake 1:11 a.m. ( Brevard and Toxaway t. Brevard, and Toxaway ........ 10 Savannah, Jackson ville.. . . 4:1 p.m. No. 11 Cincinnati, St Lou- ";"- I Is, ' Memphis and Louisville . . . ... v : m. No. 11. Washington, N. T. V'-. i n; Norfolk and Rich- ! , . . mond I. ....k-. f:ls n.n. NO. 14 Atlanta, Charleston 7:09 a.m. No. UN. T , Philadelphia, ' Washington (d) ... 1:4 a.na. No. 17 Wayneavllla and Murphy I:1S a.m. No, II Waynesvtlla and' , v." Murphy .-. 1:10 p.m. No. 11 Waynesvllle . .... T:t .nt No 11 Raleigh find Oolds- boro . I:lt a-as. No. 17 Chicago and Clncln- natl ; T:tt No. IS Columbia, Charles. ton 10.lt a. in. No. IB Memphis and Chat tanooga , II It p IU. No. 10 Washington, Rich- mond and N. .T... t 10 a.m, No. 41 Atlanta, Macon and New Orleans I II p.m. No, 101 Bristol. Knoxvllle Chattanooga. 1.10 a. m. and from New Tork, Philadelphia, Brevard and Toxaway . . Brevard and Toxaway . ....... I Savannah and Jack sonville . . ...... 1:10 p.m. No. 11 Washington and New; York. Norfolk and Richmond ... I.tl p.m. No. 12 Cincinnati - a o d v.-, Louisville, Bt. Louis - ' and Memphis I:t p.m. No. II Charleston and Co lumbia 1:11 p.m. No. 18 N. T.. Philadelphia Washington (d) ..11 1 a.aa No, II Murphy and Waynesvllle 1:11 a.sa. Ku. 10 Murphy and Waynesvllle 1:10 a.m. No. II Ooldeboro and Ral sigh ........... . 7:40 a.m. No. II Waynesvllle 1:00 a.m. No. 17 Charleston, Colum bia ,. 7:10 p.m. No. It Cincinnati , and Chicago . 10; li ia No. It Washington, N. T. and Richmond .... 1:40 a.sa. Vo. It Memphis and Chat tanooga . ' 1:10 a.sa. No. 41-Charlestoa, Macon, Atlanta 11:15 a.m. No. 101 Bristol, Knoxvllle - ' and Chattanooga , .f0:BI a.sa. , . Through sleeping cars dally to Baltimore. Washington, Richmond, NorfoIk. Charleston. Cincinnati Mem phis, Jacksonville, Bavaonah. Bt Loute Loutsvtll and Atlanta and Macoa. Through chair cars Ooldsboro, and Waynesvllle. "Carolina Bpeclal," train 17 an I g Charleston to Cincinnati, hav. rull dining car . service and observation alp)n, cars, trains lctricl) Itahta throughout O l WIIsKHf. 41 . 4K --... r1 s a STREET CAR SCHEDULE IN EFFECT MARCH 1, 1913 ZILLIC0A AND RETURN RIVERSIDE PARK 1:10 and every It mln. until 11 p. m. DEPOT VIA 1 SOUTHSIDE AVINUB 6,: 30 a. m. and every IS minutes until 1:11 p. m.i than every 7 1-1 minutes until 1:45 p. m.' Then, every 16 minutes until 11;00. . ... DEPOT VIA FRENCH BROAD AVI. 0:00 and every II mlnutaa until 11:00 MANOR ' T CHARL0TTB STREET. TERMINUS 0:00 a. m. and every II mlnutaa lu 11:00 p. m. BMissIMasssssMsassasBssssssssssssssssassBsssssassssaasssssssaiasssssss T:00 a. m. than avary II minutes tin 11:11 P. m. PATTON AVENUI 1:01 a. m. and every II mlnutaa tl'i 11:00 p. m. : "' 1 EAST STREET 1: 10 a m. and every 11 salnutaa till 11:00 p. m. JHAOE VM IflRRUiOM AVZNU1 ' . :00 a. m. and 0:30 a. m. Than rVet y 1 minutes till 10:30 p. in. r Thou every 30 mltltri till 11:00 p. m. '. 1 BILTXX0R3 1:11 am. and thn every 11 mlnuu till 10:10 p. m. Than avary v tat. till 11:00. last ear. DEPOT ft W.ASHEVILLI VIA E0UTHSID3 AVE. jt - 6:80, 6:46, 0:00, 0:15, 0:30 a. in. ai every 30 minutes until 6:00 p. m. and then every 15 mln. until 7:00, then evevry'lO mln, until 11:00 p. m, last car. , i . .... r. Sunday schedule differs la tha t llowlng particulars: Car. leaves square for Manor at 4:00 a, nu, return 0:11. ' Cars taava BVjuararor Depot via. g oathald Ava. 0:16, 1:10, 1:01, 7:10, 1:00 and 1:10 a. m. Cars leave Bqutre lor Depot via Franca Broad Ava, i:ll, 0:10, 0:41, 7:16.' 7:46 and 1:11..... - Car for Depot laavaa Bquars 1:41, fcoth Bouthalas an Freer Br-.a-t. First car leaves Bquare for Charlotte itraet at 1:41. First car leaves Bquara for Rive raid H:I0. next 1 First car for Wast Aahevllla, leaves Bquare 1:11. 0:45, nxt 1:30. " With the above axcantions. Bun 1st ichndules commence at I a. aa. aa nnllnua snma as days. .... ii,- .v.ninua when sntertalnman ta sra In progress at Auditorium tna last ti, n all lines will ba from en riiiinni lali mra at T"'" !r tlnia and ho'dinr over at Amlitor 'm. Car laavaa .mare ta meat l, .ilstit it 'u. u iuutaa fcsfura at t4 annouueat a . , iA I at

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