Newspapers / Asheville Citizen (Asheville, N.C.) / June 11, 1900, edition 1 / Page 7
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MONDAY. JTNE 11. 1900. THE ASITEVILLE DAILY CITIZEN", 7 CHAMP CLARICS THE WAR TAX PILING UP A many gesticulations, genuflexions and gyrations, rrflef.-ted on Colonel Pete's integrity and good faith. Colonel Pete, white with rage, gave Uncle Joe the He conditionally, nud when Uncle Jos taunted him with putting In the condi tions. Colonel rete, fairly sizzling with wrath, withdrew the conditions, there by giving tho lie direct to the venerable Sucker. To one hilariously disposed this exhibition of Republican Intelli gence, this exposition of Republican manners, was better than a circus. A Contest of Bllllna-siravte. Now, be It remembered that this was H ft1 tin A hntipofiil Trnnnl.llMin nAn.nn Standing Invitation tO EVery and the Democrats had precisely the I iuuicoi iu ii, buu uo more, wnicn me GREAT SURPLUS Rascal In the Land. FEAR OF IMPENDING DEFEAT RENDERS REPUBLICAN LEAD ERS IRRITABLE. LETTER Q (I ( "N f" " "", f " " "" N """v , .... . ", n:'i.. m,. . . ' (Special Washington Letter. An unnecessary tax Is an unjust tax. The federal treasury contains vast surplus which is increasing every day and which la produced by the continua tion of the Spanish war taxes. Therefore these taxes, being unnec essary, are unjust and should be abolished. ' : ; -' , "" But the signs indicate that the Re publican leaders will not permit any change at this session of congress of any feature of the Spanish war reve nue bill, not even of those features which are the most irritating to the people and the least productive of reve nue. Everybody knows that the bill was hastily prepared, passed under whip and spur as a temporary measure and abounds In crudities and inequalities. Still we are not to be permitted to change it, even in the estimation of a hair, because the Republican bosses have bo willed it The stamp taxes on medicines are 20 times what the rates are on John D. ' Rockefeller's products, but no change must be made, because the bosses don't want It, don't you know. Stamp taxes on small notes, con tracts, mortgages, etc, are more pro ductive of profanity than revenue, but they must stand, because the bosses have so willed it Br the end of the year the surplus, at the present rate, will be betwixt ISO,' 000,000 and 170,000,000, but the bosses appear to deem that an evidence of statesmanship, hugging to their breasts the delusion that people don't know that every dollar of that surplus is un justly wrung from the overburdened taxpayers of the land. A surplus In the treasury is a stand ing Invitation to every rascal in the land to move on Washington with some scheme to deplete Uncle Samuel's pleth oric pocketbook, but the bosses de cree that matters shall remain in statu QUO. Thomas Jefferson's declaration is as good and wise today as when first made "Economy in the public expense that labor may be lightly burdened" jbut the bosses care nothing about la- ibor or Its burdens so long as they can point with pride to a huge surplus, the result of unnecessary taxation. They could easily double the surplus by the simple process of doubling the taxes. ,There is no end to such a plan, except the exhaustion of the people's patience, L Repablltmaa Irritable. r What seems 4o be the certainty of Impending defeat renders the Repub lican leaders Irritable, querulous and (Kilkenny cattish. They yowl and howl and claw and otherwise disport themselves to the infraction of the pub lic decorum. They use loud, violent, abusive and tumultuous language to ward each other in such a reckless manner as to disturb the peace of their Democratic neighbors, who are in a peculiarly happy frame of mind con templating what reforms they will work when they come into possession of the government at high noon March iA.D.1001. During the debate on the Nicaragua bill Uncle Joe Cannon of Illinois, chairman of the great committee on appropriations, and Colonel William Peters Hepburn of Iowa, popularly de nominated Colonel Pete, chairman of the committee on interstate and for eign commerce, committed mouth as saults upon each other with Intent to kill and murder-at least to do great bodily harm. On the 7tb day of this month Uncle Joe was 64 years old, has been In the house a quarter of a century anu should know better than to qcarrel like a fishwife. , Colonel Hepburn Is past 66, though he docs not look .It He has been in congress many years, was once solic itor of tho treasury, and It would ap pear that he has seen enoush Tears t0 "cool his heart of flre." Not so, however. These two veteran statesmen fell a-foul of each other, like two Greco-Roman wrestlers, and tug ged, strained, tore up the ground In such dlscmppful manner that Charlie iWbeeler of Kentucky demanded that they be called to order, but nobody bald anv attention to his call, as every bodv wanted to see the two Illustrious Republicans wool each other to their hearts' content but it must be confess ed that whim a row efts too hot to plense a Kentuckian things are liable to melt ; TerhnDs Wheeler was ais Rusted because they were confining themselves to shaking Osts and burling epithets instead of adopting the Ken tucky plan of settling difficulties, which plan was recently Illustrated by Colo nel David O. Colson, when he killed three men at one time. . . Colonel Hepburn cast aspersions on tncle loe's sincerity. Uncle Joe, with old woman had in the ficht betwwn I bruin aud her liege lord, when with perfect Impartiality, she encouraged Dotn ty first shouting, "Go it, hus band!" and then, "Go it bear!" First and last Reoubllcan PhnriP hva had much to sny about the sweetness and , purity of Republicans and much i aoout "the plantation manners of Democrats." O wad soms power tha little ft us . To ice ourselves ss ithers se us I If some New Englard transcenden tallst will write an essay on "Sweet ness, Purity and Good Manners" as Il lustrated by this billingsgate contest of Uncle Joe and Colonel Pete, I will cheerfully agree to incorporate It in these letters for the delectation of my hundreds of thousands of readers. As matters stand I think Colonel Hepburn got a little the best of Uncle Joe, but the latter, like Major Joe Bagstock, Is "sly. sir. devilish sly; tough, sir, devil ish tough," and he will bide his time. The quarrelsome spirit seems to have entered Into all Republicans. Down in Tennessee, -where they have only Republicans enough to elect two congressmen, two factions, one headed by Pension Commissioner Colonel EL Clay Evans and the other by Congress men Brownlow and Gibson, are wag ing against each other a war of exter mination. On with the dance! Even the ex-soldiers are becoming disgruntled as to tho way things are being run by -this administration, as Is shown by the following letter, which explains Itself: Watnnoies, April M. Dm Sir There li t proportion in comma to ftvt to the present adjutant general ot the United state army against whom, o( coune, we hire nothing personal the rank ot major (eneral. The Cnion Veterans' union, which I have the honor to command, respectfully, but moot earnestly, pro teeta again this. In every poetiblo manner attempt are being made by individual and branehea 01 the pubUo service to get something more out ot the colossal revenuea which are being collected and for which the people are being beavtljr taxed. The ex penditure for the war department are already woUen to an enormou extent. stoat urgent plea by patriotic dtlaen in and out of congress are being mad tor retrenchment in the publie xpenditun. If there be a plethora from the lm- menee revenu, let taxation be rt giving the people' money awayi but, under extravagance, even the meuue do not eem to (office, and In coneequeDo thereof and Barbae f a wretched littl war in which we are engaged and which coat more than the entire pernios aoU, every obetractioa i (aid to be put, ia the way et the applicant for pension In order to v (T) money. If thia be true, it may be remarked that tuck doe not embrace the proper idea of re trenchment. Betrenchment doe not eondat is avoidance ot payment ot just debt any more than it consists in presenting the public money to shoulder (trapped r other Individuals and on- iceaatrtly tncreaatng aateriea. In addition to the fact that It appear invidtou to Increaa the rank ot the adjutant general with out Increaaing the rank of the bead of the other (ta8 officer ot the war department and to the fact that increaaing the rank ol the adjutant gen eral ia a reflection upon the efficiency ot the ad Jutant general' office of the civil war, when we had an army ot more than t, 000,000 men and the rank of the adjutant general wa that ot brigadier general, it would teem to be untimely and par ticularly wrong to give him Increased rank and thua lucre the coat of nil office, while and mere ly beckuie we are involved in increased, even U unavoidable, expense. Thia, especially , when the dutie and reeponalbilitie ot the adjutant gen eral' office are at present as nothing compared with the dutie and reeponiibiUtle of the d Jutant general' office during our civil war, when, i above (aid, the rank ol the adjutant general wa that of brigadier general. Very respectfully, R. 0. DrararoitTH, Commander In Chief, U. V. D. A Cue of Doa Eat Doc. Colonel John W. Gates has recently Senator Hoatr'a Flea For Jwatie. . Here Is a paragraph from Senator Hoar's great speech, than which fow, Very few, finer ever fell from human lips. I commend It to the boys of the laud as a thing to be treasured up and committed to memory: , Mr. President Our (rlend who tali another view ol thia question like to tell u of the mis take ol great men ol other days, who hare vain ly protested against icquiiitlon ol territory. One worthy and most exuberant gentleman in another place point out to hi hearers the lolly of Web ster tad Clay, the delusion of Charles Sumner and contrasts them with the wisdom ol JeScnoa and Tyler and Polk. Mr. Jtl.rson uev.orvJ thai tit acquiiltioa of Louisiana wa unconstitutional and wanted a constitutional amendment to justify it I think the general sense ol the American people ia that in that particular Mr. Jefferson wa in error and that our power to admit new state clearly involve the power to acquire territory Iron which new state are to bo made. I wonder. hojv;TO IJ bcre b; any can now aliv; who now holds of who aver did or ever will bold seat in either bouse of congress willing to eay that, hav ing taken an oath to support the constitution, he would, for any purpose o public advantage, for swear himself Vr lb soke ol a real or landed good to his country. I hope and believe that the spirit ol Fletcher ol Saltoun, who (aid he would die to serve Scotland, but he would not do a bss thing to save her, is stlU the spirit of American ttatesmanaUip. That exuberant gentleman con trasts the statesmanship ol Polk and Tyler with that of Daniel Webster and Henry Clay and Charles Sumner. Somehow or other the name ol Webster and Clay and Sumner live In the hearts and on the llpa of their countrymen, while the men who brought on the Mexican war in the In terest of alavery are forgotten, I do not think we hear ol men building statues to tho coun selor or celebrating their birthday or writing their live. ,ln all generations the statesmen who hire appeared to righteousness and Justice and freedom have left tn enduring place in the loving memory ol their countrymen, while tn men w w hav counseled them to walk in the path ol In justice end wrong, even if it led to empire and even II they were in the majority in their own day, are forgotten and despised. Ah, Mr. Presi dent, that gentleman save we are th anointed of the Lord, a the Jew were th anointed ol th Lord. But th Jewish empire la forgotten. Th sand of the desert cover th foundations of her cities. Th spider Spins It thread; th m make It midnight perch in their palace. "But still those little words: "Thou ehalt not steal; thou shalt not covet that .that 1 thy neighbor's; whatever y would that men shall do to you, do ye even so again unto them," eblne through th age, biasing and undimmed. Mr. President, you may speculate, you may renne, yon may uuuui, you may deny, but th on foremost action In our history, th foremost action In all his tory, la th writing upon Its pages thee atrnpl tnd sublime opening sentences of th Declsration ot Independence. Ana tn men wno nana 07 it shall live in tb eternal memory of mankind; and the men who depart from it, however tnumpnsni and successful in their Uttle policies, (hall perish and be forgotten or shall be remembered only to be despised. CoxolBaT iwnnea. One purpose of these letters Is to, In troduce to the notice of my readers the rising members of the house, especially new and young Democratic representa tives who give unusual promise of fu ture eminence. In the great debate on the armor plate feature of the naval appropriation bill a trio of young Dem ocrats showed forth resplendent Wil liam Walton Kltchin of North Caroli na, Charles Kennedy Wheeler of Ken' tucky and WUilard Duncan Vandlver of Missouri. They put up a magnifi cent fight for the people and led the Democrats to a notable victory. The Hoosier Republicans bad hardly adiourned their more or less perfunc tory state convention before the spring municipal elections were held, in wnicn the grand old party was the recipient of a most righteous but most astound ing walloping. The Porto Rlcan bill did It; the Philippine Imperial propa ganda did It; the Cuban scandals did it; the Macrum exposures did it; the Hay-Pauncefote treaty did It; the Gage Hepburn dark and damnable perform ance did It; the administration's pro English tendencies did It; it's evident lack of sympathy with the heroic Boers did It; the pro-English gold standard bill did it; Mark Hanna's ship subsidy bill did It; Oonel John W. Gates bold and braien trust caper did It; Bever idge's speeches did It; Fairbanks' pres idential aspirations did it; Governor Steele's thrilling oration on shirtless Caribbeans did It; but, whatever did It, the Democrats of Indiana didn't do a thing to the Republicans! Oh, nol They trampled them In the mud; that s alL Haowau In some respects General Charles Henry Grosvenor of Ohio is the un- The newspapers I Critical buyers and lovers of Bargains will find (I much to interest them Friday, Saturday and Monday nTTI,f. - 1U. CI ATTHE 0 BIG, BALTIMORE! CI 1THE BARGAIN CENTER OF ASHEVILLE .: CD ' . ni : ID SHIRTS SO dozen Colored all over, stiff bosom . Shirts, Cuffs to Match, worth 75c... SO doien Men's Colored Shirts, Soft rsonorn, LUiti 10 maim, uargmue ai J33c, our price.. 10 dosen Best Quality French Madras cloth shirts, stripes aqd checks, all latest styles and colors, cuffs to match, regular price 12.00, for this sale, only 50 cts 50 ds $1.25 MEN'S UNDERWEAR 25 Dozen Gentlemen's Balbrlggan Bhlrts and Drawers, well made, the kind that gives satisfaction and good wear worth 66c 25 cts WASH GOODS Big reductions have been made in our Wash Goods Department If in need of anything of the kind consldtr the following extra low prices: 25 Lawns and Dimities in all the new est styles .......... 19c The 15c kind 9c - The 10c. kind ...... ..... ......So 12'c. Percales .....10c 10c. Percales .......... so " 12V4 and 15c. PK's and Duck have all . been reduced to ........ ..... ....10c Also big reductions throughout the whole department. e. NECKWEAR Have Just opened 100 dozen Gentle men's Ties, all the latest styles and colors; values at 50c, our special price only.... Also a beautiful line ot Wash Ties for soft bosom shirts, only 25 cts SandlOc f). SHOES Our past week's Shoe Sale has proved such a success we will offer for these three days this lot of Bargains as follows : CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS. 5 to 8 50 cts 8& toll 60 cts ll to 2 75 cts We also have for this sale several styles of Men's Shoes, worth from $2.50 to $3.50, at the low price of LADIES' OXFORDS Worth $1.50, only., ....98 cts Worth $1.00, only 50 cts $1-98 Yours for business, THE BIG BALTIMORE, IO AND 12 PATTON AVE. 0 Notice. rhA wM.ntrv a Htjirtlinir oDieci f. i r.arrinir trimta and in tleec- luckiest of mortals. ine the lambs of Wall street. He mov- j are always pestering him. They rep ed on Gotham, shut down several wire ' resented him as- publicly congratulat- ... -1 . t i- Qnnw Ufa rlr ITnnnn nn tn fin. miiia in order to mnuence vaiue ui " stocks, ruthlessly threw out of employ ment thousands of Innocent, Industri ous laborers and cleaned up a million or two. Now the Wall street gang are talking of Indicting him as a common cheat and swindler. With the result of the controversy between Gates and the Wall street outfit I am In no way Interested. It was a clear case of dog eat dog, It is ordered by the Board of Elec tions of Buncombe county that the pre cincts and voting places in the city of Ashevllle be and they are hereby es tablished as follows, to-wit: PRECINCT NO. 1. BEGINNING at the center of Pat ton avenue where it intersects West Court Square, and running with the center of same to the intersection of Church street; thence with Church street southwardly to its intersection with South Main street; thence with South Main street to the intersection of Southslde avenue; thence with the center of Bouthslde avenue to the in tersection of Victoria avenue; thence with the center of Victoria avenue to the corporation line; thence eastwardly with the corporation line to the top of Beaucatcher mountain'; thence contin uing with said line In a northerly di rection to its intersection with South Beaumont street at Beaucatcher Gap; thence Westwardly with South Beau mont stneet to its intersection with South Pine street; thence with South Pine street to the Intersection of Eagle street; thence westwardly with Eagle street to the intersection of Valley street; thence northwardly with 'Val ley street to College street; thence with College street to North Main street; thence with North Main street and the Court Square to the BEGINNING, with a voting place at the county court house. , PRECINCT NO. 2. EEGINNINO at the intersection of Collee street with North Main street, and the more they eat each other the better the world will be off, no doubt So let the merry war go on. But my guess Is that It will not go on. Perhaps Colonel Gates ought to be In the pern I am not expressing uuj opinion on that point Perhaps the Wall street gamblers whom he skinned ought also to be wearing the stripes of a convict And peruaps u diet Gates be will follow suit and do the same thing to them. Stranger- far stranger-things have nappeneu. They are as deep in the mud as Gates is in the mire. . lie beat them at their own game. But there is a mucn more swu. ,,ttnn connected with the matter than the oircus between Gates and. his Wall street victims, ana xnai is mm Gates or any other man shall be per itto fnr cambllnsr purposes, to shut Lsl 1 1 i.vst w- ar- - down mills and throw out of employ- shnnannds of honest, Industrious men who are anxious to earn their own bread and the bread of their wives and little children in tne swem m u" faces. That conccsns the public wel fare. Gates could nave cui uo u,u brutal caper had be not been tho head of the steel wire trust, which is no worse and no better than scores of oth er trusts. A man who steals a loaf of bread Is a thief and Is sent to Jail or to the penitentiary, but a man who raUes n a cool fl.wu.wu or -,uw,vw taking the bread out of the mouths of thousands of men. women and chl i. flnnnrlcr and hero, with aspi rations for a seat in the senate of the TTnit suites. O Mores! 0 Temporal VIKVU w ... Senator Mark Hanna on the un doing of Matthew Stanley Quay, where upon the general publishes a cam avowing that when he fell, figurative ly at least on Mark's neck in a public place it was to thank that great and good man for some kind and compli mentary remarks personal to himself. Whether Quay will bqlleve the expla- and runnlng thence wtih College street east to the intersection of Valley street; thence south with Valley street to its intersection with Eagle street; thence eastwardly with Eagle street to Its intersection with 8outh Pine street; thence south with South Pine street to South Beaumont street; thence with South Beaumont street to Beaucatcher Gap at the corporation line: thence north with the corporation line to the northeast corner of the corporate lim it Lf Ashevllle: thence west with the nation I am not authorized to say, as 1 am not in the confidence of the ex Keystone boss. Lord Byron says, "Sweet Is revenge," and far stranger things have happened In this world than that ex-Senator and ex-Chuirman of the National Committee Quay should find some way of evening up the score with Senator and Chairman of the Na tional Committee Hanna. It may be ... a t m trJ.(a that he Will avenge nimseii ou aiam. charlotte street: protege, William McKlnley, or he may thence B0Uth with Charlotte street to De satisnea wun ueituuiug iuui . uit. ns intersection subsidy bill. If the newspapers are to be believed, that palpitating patriot, Senator Tom Carter of Montana, med itates the latter method of revenge for Mark's part In taking oft his friend, the late senator from yuaysyivama, with Woodtln street; thence west with Woodfln street to North Main street; thence south with North Main street to the BEGINNING, the voting place to be at or near Oates' livery stable in said precinct. PRECINCT NO. 8. rfginnino at the intersection of t .i awful on tha Itpnubllcans (Woodfln street with North Main street, . . . i.on ruvSnnA .n.f Knt nnt t runniriar thence with Woodfln street so bad as to lose President McKlnley. Rats Instinctively leave a sinking ship. Senator Wellington of Maryland dpscrts the Republican party, or, more correctly speaking, he claims that the Republican party has deserted him. Anyway, he announces that he will not train with the McHannaltes this year. It anoras great uiu bi-uiuw pleasure to a lover or nis country nun his kind to observe the multiplying signs of disintegration now manifest ing themselves in tue grana oiu purty, whose battlecry has so long been, "The old flag and an appropriation !" east to the intersection of Charlotte street; thence with Charlotte street north to the corporation line; thence with the corporation line west to where the same crosses Cumberland avenue; thence southwardly with , Cumberland avenue to its Intersection ' with West Chestnut street; thence east with West Chestnut street to Flint street; thence south with Flint street to Hlawasses street thence with Hlawassee street to North Water street at tns intersection of Woodfln street; thence with Wood fln street to the BEGINNING, with a voting place at or near the Junction ot Merrlmon avenue and North Main street In said precinct. PRECINCT NO. 4. BEGINNING t the Intersection of Patton avenue with West Court Square, and running thence west with patton avenue to Its intersection with Haywood street, near Buttrlck street; street to the intersection of Gudger street; thfnce ni, th with Gudger street to Hill street; thence south westwardly wkh Hill street to Maiden lane; thence north with Maiden lane to a branch or ravine; thence westwardly with said branch W ravine and Its various meanderlngs to French Broad river; thence down the French Broad river to the corporation line; thence east with the corporation line to where it crosses Cumberland avenue; thence southwardly with Cum berland avenue to t where it crosses West Chestnut street; thence east wardly with West Chestnut street to Flint street; thence south with Flint street to Hlawassee street; thence with Hlawassee street and Woodfln street to North Main street; thence south with North Main street to the BE GINNING, with a voting place at or near the Farmers' warehouse on North Main street In said precinct. PRECINCT NO. 5. BEGINNING at the intersection of Patton avenue, Haywood street and Buttrlck street, and running north eastwardly with Haywood street to Gudger street; thence north with Gud ger street to Hill street; thence south westwardly with Hill street to Maiden lane; thence with Maiden lane north to a branch; thence westwardly with the meanderlngs . of said branch to the French Broad river; thence up the French Broad river to the corporation line; thence east with the corporation line to Graham street; thence north with Graham street and with French Broad avenue to the crossing of Bart lett street; thence westwardly with the meanderlngs of Bartlett street to De pot street; thence north with Depot street to Patton avenue; thence west with Patton avenue to the BEGIN NInG, with a voting place at or near Pearson's store In said precinct. PRECINCT NO. fl. BEGINNING at the intersection of Church street with Patton avenue, and running west with Patton avenue to the intersection with Depot street; thence southwardly with Depot street to Bartlett street; thence eastwardly with Bartlett street and Its meander Ings to French Broad avenue; thence south with French Broad avenue and Graham street to the corporation line; thence east with the corporation line to Its Intersection with Victoria ave nue: thence north with Victoria ave nue to Southslde avenue: thence north' eastwardly with Southslde avenue to its Intersection with South Main street; thence north with South Main street to the intersection of Church street; thence westwardly- and - northwardly with Church street to Patton avenue, the place of beginning, with a voting place at or near the Buncombe ware house' in said precinct. It was also ordered by the Board that the voting place In Limestone town ship be changed from Arden to Sky' land; and that the voting place in Blltmore precinct No. 2 be changed from T. J. Brookshlre's store to Gash's Creek school house: and that the vot In place In Haw Creek precinct De changed from the negro school house to J. C. Redmon's store; ana mat tne votlnt; Place in Flat Creek township be established in or near the village of Georgetown, near the Ashevllle and Burnsvllle road. All other precincts and voting places in the county remain as heretofore es tahllshed. This 21st day of May. 1900. JULIUS C. MARTIN, Ch'm. JNO. P. KERR, Secretary. 6-23-d20t Southern ttRailwy THE STANDARD RAILWAY OF THE SOUTH.. THE DIRECT LINE TO ALL POINTS TEXAS, CALIFORNIA, FLORIDA, CUBA AND PORTO RICO. Strictly first-class equipment on all through and local trains; Pullman Palace Sleeping Cars on all night trains, fast and safe schedules. Travel by the Southern and you are assured a safe, comfortable and expeditious Journey. Apply to ticket agents for time tables, rates and general Information or address R. L. Vernon, F. R. DARBT, T. P. A., C. P. & T. A. Charlotte, N. C. Ashevllle, N. C. NO TROUBLE TO ANSWER QUES Frank S. Cannot, j, M. Clip, W. l.Tiri SdV.P.ftGen.Man. Traf. Man. G. P. A. WASHINGTON, D. C. Ashevllle Ticket Office 60 Patton avenue. Transfer office same building. Baggage checked through from house to destination. Charleston and Western Carolina "Augusta A Ashevllle Short Line." Schedule in Effect May 27, 1900. Lt Augusta 9:40am Greenwood 12:15pm Ar Anderson Ar Lauren 1:20pm Ar Greenville ..... .... 2:00pm Ar Rparttttburg 2:10pm Ar Hendersonvllle 6:02pm Ar Ashevllle 7:00pm l'lOnm 6:10pm 1:10pm 9:00am Lv Ashevllle 8:20am Lv Spartanburg 11:45am 4:10pmi Lv Greenville 12:01pm 4:00pm Lv Laurens l:S7pm 7:80pm Lv Anderson 6:35am Ar Greenwood 2:7pm 9:25pm Ar Augusta 5:10pm10:.40am Ar Aiken 7:zvpm Close connections at Greenwood for fill points on S. A. L. and C. ft G.. railway and at Spartanburg with Southern railway. For Information relative to tickets, rates, schedules, ete., address W. J. CRAIG, Gen. Pass. Agt.. Augusta, Oa T. M. Emerson,. Traffic MaDAgrr
Asheville Citizen (Asheville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 11, 1900, edition 1
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