SALISBURY DAILY SUN. DAILY XXCZPT SUNDAY. Pfttr fetors. re4 at postoflse M MOOaA-elAM matter. AvwtUUi rates appl j o paMlshera O Be (ran Bart's shoe store, oa Kate street. UBI0KIFT1OH KATIS One Year, tlx MnUi, fkm -One Hnth, OB WMk, 84.C t.08 LOO .M .10 Umh4 by Outltnu any pan of the el without extra eost. TELEPHONE NO. 264 Salisbury, N. C, Oct. 5, 1904. IATI0IAL DEUOCRATIC TICKET. For President, Alton B. Pabkeb. of New York. For Vice President, Henry G. Davis, of West Virginia. STATE DEMOCRATIC TICKET. For Governor: Robert B. Glenn. For Lieutenant Governor: Francis D. Winston. Associate Justices Supreme Court: W. A Hoke. George H. Brown, Jr. State Auditor: B. F. Dixon State Treasurer: B. B. Lacy. Secretary of State: J. Bryan Grimes. Supt of Public Instruction: J. Y. Joyneb. Com. of Labor and Printing: H. B. Vabneb. . Corporation Commissioner: . S. L. B03EBS. v Commissioner of Agriculture: L. Patterson. For Congress, Eighth Distncl . William C Newland, of Caldwell. WATSON ON BUTLER. No Democrat in North Carolina has ever said-anything harsher about ex-Senator Marion Butler than Thomas . Watson, the Populist nominee f o r President. Said Mr. Watson in his speech at Newton: I wired my people that I want ed to plant, water and harvest no more crops for that traitor to sell, and that if they let him in I would come off the ticket. I felt about 'him just as a Revolutionary soldier would have felt about Benedict Arnold if, after his treason, he had asked to be admitted again into the American army. A spy outsiae me lines is not aangeroue; aCldta ' the harm comes from the spy in side the campJ Butler is entirely lacking in principle." Well, Butler got all he wanted : out of the Populists and did noth ing for them. H9 was the chief instrument in producing discord in North .Carolina which abides in a slight degree to this very day. He is entitled to no sympathy and no man will criticize Watson for his scathing denunciation of the prince of political tricksters. A.M . M A I . If any man bas fallen into the error of believing that . Spencer Blackburn has a lead pipe cinch on Wilkes county his wisdom will be increased when he reads that a number of Republicans left the court room at Wilkesboro 3 ester day when Hezekiah Gudger and Prof; Britt began lauding Spen cer. -'V Punishment for Stealing. The Washington Post says: "A Connecticut man who robbed a bjnk of 170,000 has been sent to prison for five j ears, while his neighbor, who stole a horse, drew a eight year prison term. They would probably hang a chicken thief. V It makes us shudder to wonder what they would do with a fellow who would steal a kiss I Wilmington Star. Three Asphyxiated. ' Augustus Doneman and his wife and Richard bmall were asphyxiat- ed by illuminating gas in a bed Al YsTT lllnmiaAilNM San WA J I room in a hotel kept by Salvatoire jmyiAjun. lnfiusmng, xa. i., yes terday. Small was from Charles- j ton, S. C, and is said to have been the woman's brother. Training th Boys. There's nothing truer than that the hoy who is brought up in idle ness, living on the money his father made, will sooner oj- later pay the penalty. Jit may be in a prema ture death, the result of fast living and dissipation, or it may be tears of repentance in- old age. The men who are doing ' things in North Carolina today are men who were trained to inqastry and fru gality when boys. The wealthiest men today were Door and hard worked as boys. The thinkers and statesmen, those who have achieved fame - the real men of mark were the boys who once worked on the farm, in the shop, in the store apd the office, hustling day after day and their jobs. There but they are rare . not ashamed of are exceptions, We recall now the faces famil iar and handsome : of boys, bright aces they were and engaging, but living on the 1 money father made, doing-nothing bat "having a good time." Where are they to day ? Gone beyond recall, leaving only the recollec ion oi bright, dashing . fellows, rwho possessed talent sufficient to place them at the top of j the Ii it of successfu business men. But they did noth f ing, ran a swift "good time" race and the daisies bloom and the grass waves- above their omb3. we recall now the faces -sun burned or blackened with the dust of shop and mill of other boys in the same community, working day in and day out, making their own living and helping to support oth ers. They were just 'ordinary boys," no family prestige, no chance to learn to read and write without work ; i it was work or go barefoot in winter and shiver with cold. Where are hey today ? We could give the names of a number who are doctors, awyers, preach ers, and who are honoring their professions. Others are successful in manufacturing and other pur suits. And all ar e good citizens men of note and distinction, and a blessing to humanity. They were trained to industrious habits, True, all we have in mind were not poor, j but t bieir parents or guardians were s nsible, and the boys Were taught something dif ferent from the popular j erroneous idea of what it is to have a good time. Raleigh Post. r rz ! "" of the Crops. : - Washington, Oeiuuer Weather Bureau's weekly sum mary of crop conditions says: With hjgh temperature and no rain during the week in the cotton region, the ttaple has continued to open rapidly in all sections, pre maturely in Georgia and Missis sippi, and picking has progressed under favorable c mditions. Com plaints of scarcity of labor are still received from portions of central and eastern districts. Reports in- dicate that neary all of the cotton crop has been harvested in South ern Georgia and Louisiana and Southwestern Texas; 75' per cent. in Florida,' the central portions of Georgia and Texa ; 50 per cent, and over in other States, except Arkansas and Oklahoma, where about one fourth I is picked and I - I . ' r ' North Carolina, where only a small I, . . w portion has been gathered. Late cotton is still sheddihsr. and the crop is much shortened by insect pests which have injured prospects ior any iop crop in lexas. a. sl m " .1 Ptrsimmoni and Weddings- The persimmon trees are loaded I this vear. ! It in iiu1 this mMnfl mi unusual number o a very cold Evening News. winter. Raleigh The Boone Derhrvrat srvb thnl chestnut crop in the mountains will be light unless the frost holds off longer than usual. After a man has make some mone worked hard to r he ban work twice as heard to keep people from getting it away fnjm him. GRO TH OF THE E WACHOVIA LOAN AND. TSUST C0YPAN7 ; Sines its Qrn&iz&tiss. June 15, 1893: Depoklta $ 98,0115.00. 296,rj.90. 499,945.95. 83T.8S4.88. 1,107,945 29. 2,T99,ar5,08. S.894.3B2JB6. - Assets, S 299,249.29 517.431.71 JUNE is, im, " 15, 1S9C, IS, 1898. " 15, 1900, ' ' 13, 1002, " 15, 1904, 758.528.29 1,099,402.02 1.412,871.69 3,44.a51.19 SEPT. 6, 1904, 3,5:). 156 22 If not already Otir customer, i I i i A. ! I . . uucuouawwuuuiwiuiui is Wachovia- Loan Ir Trniof Ca Ufa liuo W , ' Salisbury Savings Bank Building. ( tOta? has just returned from the Northern Shoe Markets where he bought the greatest line of Fall and Winter shoes ever shown m Salisbury. Gentlemen and day wear. School and everything in a bought a big lot of JOBS which go , at H ALF PRICE. Come to 7?,rnVn 0 When a Girl it Engaged. The wise girl needs no advice as to how she shall bear herself dar ing the period of her engagement. There is no danger that she will not take it seriously. The risk in her case is that she will be so much burdened down with her new duties that he will lose sight of the lighter and more pleasur able side of it. That is not the happiest engagement which is con ducted to the refrain of the "Dead March" in "Saul." A man may think it is very charming, for a while, to see his fiancee take al most a religious view of the new relationship but it will not be long before he will crave the every, dayness that takes fun I as well a& solemnity into account.' ; Fewer girls of this type, how ever, are found than of the other. There are girls who consider all love affairs more or less as jokes, even those that lead to marriage. Their point of view is determined sometimes by their associates and sometimes by the part of tht coun try in which they have been reared In certain sections it used to be the custom not to announce an en gagement until a very brief period before the wedding cards were out. Uunder those circumstances a girl seemed to take a keen pleasure in concealing her new relationship from those about her. I have known of girls who would not hesitate to deny point-blank the f a5t of their betrothal, even with in a few weeks of their marriage. jjnce heard a girl say: "All my run wouia do antrren gagement were announced. I shall have to live with one man for the rest of my natural life, and I mean to fly about a little before I settle down with him. One would be tempted to con demn this sort of thing unreserv- edty were it not that those same tt - - ..... mrtatious girls often become the most devoted wives and mothers. ana never Debiow a s iook or a i : 1 a ; m thought upon other men after mar riage. But, although tnere are in stances of this kind, it is a deci dedly unsafe rule to follow. More j than thid, it is unkind and unfair to all the parties concerned. Christine Terhune iierrick in "Success." j . : Shelby Murderer Sentenced to Die. I .!; Shelby, N. C , Oot. 4 Ben Clark, who shot to death B. E Hamrick, chief of police of Shel- by, was tried today, and the jury alter being out ten minutes, re- I - - . turned a verdict of guilty of mur- der m the first degree, whereupon Judge W. A. Hoke pronounced I sentence, naming ujtooer atn ss marriages andltaeav of execution. Mr. Fred I namrica appearea ior me negro; solicitor weDD ior the state. ,- . . . . . I An evangelist OUt west Claims I that he dal,y convicts 250 men of their sins. Tnat evangelist would be the very kind of a spell-binder to reach a native born Southern J white man who can conjare with his conscience to the extent of de liberately voting fur Roosevelt. - Wilmington Star. ' Should Issue Supplement. ' x wo aoiiar wceat is now pre- iniciea. rtooeeveit snouia issue a supplement to his letter, of accept- 1 ance claiming credit for this' great prospective increase in the cereal. Keidsville Enterprise. Cause of Lockjw. Locbjiw, or tetanus, is caused by a bacillus or germ which exists plentifully - in street dirt. It is inactive so long as exposed to the air, but when carried beneath the skin as in the wounds caused by percussion caps or by rusty nails, and when the air is excluded, the Term is roused to activity and produces the most virulent poison known, lhese germs may be de stroyed and all danger of lockjaw I avoided by applving Uaamber-I Iain's Pain Balm freely as soon as I 1 W a 1 I ine injury is received, ram mim an antiseptic and causes cuts, bruises and like lniaries to heal I wltDout maturation and in one! third the time required by the It is for sale by usual treatment. James Plummer. E$3k Brown Ladies Dress Shoes. Shoes for Children, the Shoe Line. see us. n KLTJTTZ & RENDLEMAN'S Are now receiving one of tfye Largest Stocks of dress goods, cloaks, iackets, shawls, underweari hosiery, clothing, blankets goods we ever bought. Groceries the best from j many lands and at 'prices the lowest in town. Just received Grass seed. New and ties. Come and see you. KLUTTZ & A Bad Year for Game. Sportsmen should be very mod erate in their bags this autumn, the terrible cold and storms having drawn heavily on both bird and animal life last winter. In the South quail appear to have suffer ed least, but all through the North East and West, Bob White and grouse are less plentiful than usual. The same is true of deer and v of elk, though happily the latter are better off than reports made out in the spring. Unless great modera tion Ib eXercUea by hunters tbUea son.ejttraordinarv care and Drecau- don taken by clubs and associations and wardens to restock, to protect and guard against the depredations of the butchers, there will ccme such game exhaustion as to resnit in annihilation in some sections and depletion in all. Casper Whitney m October Outing. Venerable Goose Has Canied It A Wilm ngton special to the Favette Co nty ( W. Va ) Herald saysi ; What was probably the oldest fowl in the State died on the farm of Alfx Cline, in the northwest edge of Clinton county. When Cline was married 40 years ago his father gave him and his wife a pair of geeee with the injunction that they should care for them while they lived. Being quite large, they were exhibited at all the fairs and became well" known, I . . carrying away msny premiums. in time, their age being a gpciai curiosity. Three years ago the gander died and the goose that has juat died soon shewed signs of missing herj mate. Alter awhile she became totally blind, but by instinct knew the farm surroundings so well that .u u .1 a. li. ; i 1 1 auo UBU uu u K"nK aoous the place, finding water and food P x 8 without effort, len years ago she ceased to lay, but regu- lr'y made a nest for several years. lhe number oi her progeny I hardly be estimated. can Many Mothers of a Like Opinion. Mrs. Filmer, of (3ordovat Iowat says : One of my children was subj9ct to croup of a severe type. and the giving of Cnamberlains Cough Remedy promptly, always uruugni reutji. rasny moioers in this neighborhood think the same as 1 do about this remedy and want no other kind for their child ren." For sale by Jas Plommer. A one-eyed man is partial to the see-side. 1 Saves Two Jfrom Heath. "Oar little dausrhter had &n si-1 most fatal attack of whooDinffl Anncrh and hrnnnhitiV" rritoB Mra I W r H.UH V xVZCTl? ,V .77" m V 1 , . ,. I x., dus, wnen an omer remeuies i failed, we saved her life with Dr. It King's Mew Discovery. Oaf niece. who had consumption in an, ad- vanced staee. also used this won derful medicine and today she is aa M a 1 - 1 M T . . - I periecuy wen " iesperate tnroat and lunsr diseases vieid to Dr. King's New Discovery as to noJ other medicine on earth. InfaM 50 lible for Coughs and Colds. 60c. and tl 00 bottles guaranteed by all Druggists. Trial bottles free. I Shoes for every Farmersl Shoes and staple dry . big lot of Clover and supply of bagging 1 r and we wiir please RENDLEMAN. A POSTOFFlCEi! BABEL. Laacnigri NeeMwrr o Singapore' . Mall Delivery. . BlneaDore la the- nlv British nost- office which emplora letter carrifri for each language. Within, are so many different 1 tuat.clty there races who re- ceive correspondence addressed in their Own vernacular writing that proper de livery is extremely difficult. , ' Bo hard Is it that in some districts it has been found necessary to send the postmen upon their rounds In sets of three. . j It '' One of these is a 'Malay In charge of all packets for Europeans, Jews, Ar menians, Malays, Arabs,- Parsees and Japanese, which are presumably ad- 3ioacl la Europeaii uctiut or In writ ing akin to it The aecond of the trio la a Chinaman, whjo deals with corre spondence bearing Ideographic charac ters, while the -third is a Tamil, wb .takes out letters addressed in the writ ing of his own race as ell as any in Telegu and southern Indian writing. These cosmopolitan postmen have, of course, often to consult each other as they deliver the mails, but sometimes' even their varied linguistic attainments have to be supplemented by. a Sikh who understands Hindoos ta nee, .Per sian and northern Indian characters. 1 THE CAUSE OFj SURF. Wlty Wth Alwara Become Break. era Im ghallovr Wntcr. Jjong and oscillatory waves run by gravity, the first affltating the water to nearly 'the same amount; at all depths, while the chief disturbance due to the latter confines' itself to the upper layers of the water, j 5 ' i These oscillatory .1 waves, the most typical example of which is perhaps furnished by the "swell!' or regular rolling waves which contihue to run in deep , water after a j storn), will : break on a shelving shore when,! their height is about equal' to the depth of water. When the depth is Sufficient to allow the oscillations to proceed unimpeded no progressive motion takes place, each column being kept in its Mac by the pressure of surrounding columns. ir, nowever, free oscillation is pre vented, as by the interposition of a rock or by the shelving of the shore, the columns In the deep -prater are not balanced by those in ' the shallower, and thus they acquire a ;jj progressive motion and form "breakers." For this reason waves always break against the shore, whatever is the, direction of th wind. " - - . A little three-year-old miss, while her mother was trying to get her tp sleep, became Interested In a peculiar noise and asked what it was. I wf , '-.-l ' "A-cricket, dear," replied jthe mother. "Well," remarked the little lady, "be ought to -get himself oiled." Young People's Paper. ; ji " '4 WOMEI CAI KEEP T0UI6. Ohio Woman Tells the 8ecret May Explain Youthful Looks of Some in Salisbury. Mrs. Anna Pat ton, 34 Charles Sti, Xenia, O , in a recent injer- view, tells tne secret of how to grow vouncr. "Aitbougn 1 am over sixty, I feel as though I;was only twenty years old. It doesinot seem possible tnat 1 am tne same woman tnat 1 was a year ago. men 1 sox fered with mv head all the time. bad so much gas on my stomach that I could bardlv endure it and was always tronbled rwith a bwl tjiatfi in mv month and k coated ffnH-7, n htn thatt , r j Tl .LTl iimes x couiu doi,x4siou mj viuiues i was unable to do my wprar, but now after taking one box of Mions, nature's cure for dyspepsia, lam a I well as ever. mi TTl-li- O t. ll. xneo. j? . jvhiiis v" luo r local agency ior raiona ano nave sold a trceat deal or this remedy at cts. a box. Begin its nue today with their-promise that they, will - py for it themselves if it does not cure you. and Don't buy unless you want to chool Just watch our windows and watch your friends. 111 We want to do your commercial Job Printing letter head?, note heads, bill heads, envelopes, busi ness cards, shipping tags, visiting cards, wedding and other invita tions, booklets, folios, etc.1 Come to see us or. 'phone No. 264 and a man will be sent to give you prices and any other information that he can. Sun Job.Office. Commissioner's Sale Real Estate. North Carolina I Oowan County J By virtue of a decree of ths Supe rior Court of Rowan county made in the special proceeding entitled "J. A. Miller, Adm'r tf Henry W. Cranford vs Nathan Cranford, Adeline Surratt et al' empowering me as Adm'r at a appointing me Commissioner to sell o raln lands for assets, Iwill sell at public auction at the court house door in the city of Salisbury at 12 o'c ck m. to the highest bidder, c n Monday Nov. 7 h 1904, the folio ing described real estate, 1ing and being In Mcrgan township and bounded as follows, tc wi: . B ?glnning at a white flint ' ruck in the Stokes Ferry road in Otho Hart man's line, and one Spanish oak. 2 sour-wood pointers, runs N 12 deg E with said Hartman's line 50 chaius to a rock In Blchard Parker's line, thence W. with his l'ne 43 chains and 25 links to a pile. Dayvaul Ijemz' corner, thence S with h!s line 31 chs and 50 links to a white flint rock in said road, 2 post oak and hickory pointers, thence down the .various courses of said road to the beginning, containing U6i acrep, less two acres now owned by George Birber. Said ands adj tin the lands of C. G. Mor gan, Jesse L. Williams and others. Temn of Bald sale cash This Sept. 30th 1904. B. Lee Wright, J A. Miller Atty, . Admr. and Com Attention!! Contractors and Builders! I have for your inspection the largest and best select ed stock of Building Ma terial, Shingles &c. in the city. With the best equip ped plant and the most skilled mechanics I am pre pared to serve you prompt ly with first class work at the lowest prices. No ad vance on old prices. Call on me for estimates. Yours Cordially, G. : Chartered 1883. First National Bank, of Salisbury, N. C. Hflia1 C KO nnn ' surplus & profits $20,000 Kehh Csaiob, President. W. H. White, Cashier. VV. C. (JotJGHENOUR, Yice-lfrei Wade Bassier, Tellei. Will extend to its patrons the aiost liberal accommodations. Deposits solicited, r AT Baerbaum's Book Store, Dennison's Coeoe Tissue Paoer, for La dies Hats and other Ornameniai WOrK, in ornamental work, in rnllc nf ten ronta oarh l m "TJr "NXKAWt anylaun- tuiuioi j 5?nHfini SUPPL FR Qrayon . Erasers. 1 , renCUSi Ink. v . rlOlOerS, ... R "'"POSlimn DOOKS and Tablets. n. o Manv of the are Just in at this store we want you to admire tliciu. Shoes? North Main Street. Notice to Non-Residents to Appear and Answer. North CaroliEa, Rowan County. Martha A.Hendricks vs Mrs. M. E. Dob'y, John Lomaa and wife Mamie Lomas, Robert Emery and wife Berta Emery, Eusrene Foster and wife Rosa Foster, Kate Doby and Lillie Doby. The defendants, M. E Doby, John Lomas, Mamie Lomas, Robert Emery, Berta Emery, Eugrene Foster, Rosa Foster, William Doby, Ka'e Doby and L'llie Doby, will take notice that plaintiff has commenced a civil ac tion against them before the clerk of the Superior Court of -Rowan county for the pu pes 3 of having Certain lands partitioned among them, and that plaintiff la the owner of a one fourth interest therein and defend ants, the , other three-fourths; and that a summons has been Issued in said cause and returned tt at defend ants are cot to be found in Rowan county; let them take, farther notice that thev are required to appear be fore J. F. McCubbins, e'erk cf the Superior Court, at his office in Salis bury 3S. C, on the 17th day of Novem ber 1904, at the hour of 11 o'clock a m and answer or demur to the com rJaint of plaintiff or plaintiff will ap ply to the Court for the relief therein prayed for. Let them take further notice that this action is pertaining to real estate and that they are neces sary parties to the same a j it affects their interest. This Sept. 28th 1904 J. F McCubbins. Cierk Superior Court. R Lee Weight, Atty.- The Smile of S lid Satis faction tnat o eisDreaaa tne races cf our pleased customers, when they put to 1 tne ms 1 a samDie or our sucerb laun dry work, is a smile that never fades, la i .11 . Because niaer au circumstanr es our work is always no to the hiffhent stan. dara of exc Hence. No rough edges on your con ars or cutts, no Diisters on yoor snirt rroms, no dirt ina is, nut tnorougnij wasned out, and bo broken p m ue.ivermg naienea W( in. promises in de.iveriog finished w( ri. Salisbury St eam Laundrv LET US MTe J?r " wnaie of Iaundri ind we wiu prove to you that we. are do- iri' - rv "avmsr installed me mtcsi. lmprovea machlnerv w e a oie w guarantee satisfaction li every way. we have a rwrtvt. m,it. lauodry lor the white rr.nl nt t city, so have your laandrv dnr-A 3a jruu vums. Antisertic Laundry Pao ii The Weekly Sun, $1 per year. Sun One Week IOc. li,IJ, iiJ-JJSS!Tl,'--i!,,!5 'Must Outs" - we'll wait. - THE REAL THING is what you want when' ycu need a nnnA .Ttl1n arA what, ia (horp mfirft needful or of more iaiponaoce to have than gocd wroi and coal. It can't be too good, as the more he it producing qualities it has the more economical it will prove. Try a ton next tlmt from T. "A. C0UGHE1T0UR, 128, E. Inniss St., Phone 42, and you'Hjjet the real thing. THE BEST of everything found at a bakery is made every day by the SALISBURY BAKERY. Pure and fresh, Moth ers Bread, yourfriend; Cream Loaf is not the end. Our cakes are the finest. A. J. FRALEY. FroD. . Auction Sale Of Valuable ; Real Estate. On Monday, October 24th 1904, at 12 o'clock M. at the court house door -In Salisbury, we will sell to the highest bidder ail that desirable property known as the McCubbins Home p ace, located on Suoth Fulton B'.reet, front ing M. L Bean. We will first sell this property in small lots, then as two larger lots to suit the purchaser. t At the same time and place we will sell a 6-room cottage on Lee st. front ing 40 feet un Lee St. and running back 210 ft towards Main st Also a tract of about 32 acres of land in Franklin township, adjoining E K. James and others. This land U about two and a half miles fiom Salisbury and one aDd a halt mi'es from pencer and would make an elegant truck farm For furtbef informnllon call on J. F. Mc Cubbins and J. F Gaither, Silishury, N. C , and Dr. J, B. Gilt her, China Grove, N. C . Sept 23,1904. J. F McCubbins, J. F. Gaitokk, lm d Adm'is of J. S. McCubMns. Accidents Will Happen. Why not 'protect yourself acainsh same, as well as acrafnnt Rictrnoaa q, h disease. Also d Fire Insurance, in the strong VrTn 1SiSfta Fresh Llm? and Cement inat. ra. celved and cheaner than vr clal prices to contractors. J. ALLEN BROWN. RAILROAD SCHEDULE. Departure of Trains From Saliibury. IxoETHEOinrn. So. 8, local, Charlotte to Klch., 8:17 a m hmi i mail, Atlanta to N.Y., 10.43 am 30, N.Y.-Fla. 11m., Jack., to N.Y. 11:30 a m IS. Local. Atlaa. to Norfolk 8:58 p m 88, Vestibule. Atlanta to N. Y.. 8:30 p n, 40, Atlanta-Wash. Ex., At. to W. 11:20 p ta EOUTnEOTnn). Ro. 89, Waah-Atlanta BU. to Atlanta 8 41 a a veatibule to Atlanta-New Or. 8:17 a m 11. Local to Atlanta 8 0 a m 7, Local to Charlotte 1.07 p M , N.Y.-Fla. Urmto Jackson rile 8:30 p a S5. Fast mall to Atlanta New Or. 8:50 p m "VTFSTEOuTH). So. U, Local Chat, and Utmbkii 1 s . , Throng to Ohat-MemphU 8 50 p moil TTTSTi 5p. 88, Through from Chat-Mem. 11 : J8 a m IX. Local from Chat,-MemphJi 8:35 p m YADjOU B. 2. 50. 21, Passenger and mall, leaves. 11 30 a m , uizea, leares IS 01 p m 22, Paasenger and mall, arrives 7 13 p m 48, Mtxed. arrlTes 8 CO a mf-'