University of South Carolina Libraries
RED WHEAT 3, The Seed Contained !Pe: Xcw York, April 28.-Some recent experiments in growing red wheat from seed certainly 3,000 and perhaps nearer ?,000 years old have set mc thinking about a subject which just now engages the attention of every lover of nature. The seed mentioned was found enclosed in the cerements of a mummy of the period of the Twentieth Dynasty. During the long period ?ince about 1288 B. C. this wheat had remained dry and to all ap pearances as dead as the Egyptian upon whose bosom it rested as an em blem of immortality. Each grain was as hard as a grain of silica. That the germ of life could remain i-o many centuries unquenched and ready to re spond to the influences which quicken the fertile seed -into fruitful activity seemed impossible. However, I planted thc grains, watered nud tend ed them as 1 might the feed of ordi nary nasturtiums, and lo! the tall stalk shot up and in due course was crown ed with a t?sale of bronze grain, prob ably the wheat of the Chaldean plains where that cereal is indigenous. All this was uot essentially more wonder ful than the familiar phenomena of the spring season, when the seed which nature scatters about with so prodigal a hand bursts the rutting en velope which encloses the precious germ of -life and reproduces after its own kind, with only such variation as may reflect the immediate environ ment. One may sentimentalize upon 6uch happenings very cheaply, but perhaps amore profitable employment of time would be found in assuming the miracle and studying thc process es by which it materializes. PHENOMENAL GROWTH OF PLANT. The phenomena of plant growth are among the most beautiful in nature. Dr. Asa Gray, of Harvard, tells us that many seeds refuse to germinato after thc second year; that some may bo kept for considerable periods with out losing their vitality; that sensi tive plants have been grown from seeds known to be over sixty years old; but that stories of seeds growing that have been preserved 2,000 or 3,000 years in Egyptian mummies "are not to be be lieved." I miglil be less willing to discredit myself on such excellent scientific authority if the fragment of mummy from which I took the seed of my experiment had not only come to me not only well authenticated,^ but obviously genuine. Had it happened to Dr. Gray to have had un experience like mine he would have considered the stories by which this apparent im mortality of the wheat kernel is at tested not only credible, but extreme ly well authenticated. OROWTII OF THE SEED. With tho growth of a seed into a plant the soil has really very little to do. It is little more than a retainer of moisture and a medium to absorb heat and maintain an equable temper ature. The germ probably takes noth ing from it at first, and does not need the strong food of its soluble elements until it begins to build up its plant fibre independent of thc structure of the sustaining- seed. The period at which it begins to reach out for food in the elements of the soil capable of as similation probably varies in different plants. Thc infant plant can no more ex tract nourishment from the ground and digest it than a hum.in infant could subsist upon garden vegetables and fruits, its proper nourishment is found in the .-ced itself. Packed away within it is a qa.unity nf mut tor of milky ur jelly ],ko consistency ?MSdretiis ~ FetrtiiizePm That's a good name for Scott's Emulsion. Children are like young plants. Some will grow in ordinary soil. Others need fertilizers. The nature of some children prevents them from thriving on ordinary- food Such chil dren grow right if treated right. All they need is a little fer tilizer-a little extra richness. Scott's Emulsion is the right treatment. ^Fertilizers make thingsgrow. That's just what Scott's Emul sion docs. It makes children grow in flesh, grow in strength, grow rich blood, grow in mind, grow happy. That's what we make it for. Send for free sample. SCOTT St DOWNE, Chemists. 4no Pearl St., N. V. 50c ?nil ~ 1 .i ? , all druggists. OOO YEARS OLD. Life After so Long a riod. known as vegetable albumen. It could not last very long in this condition, since active fermentation would quick ly set in which would destroy its value for food purposes. During the period of crest between the maturity of the seed and its development into a new plant this albumen dries up and re mains in this oondition until again re duced to thc jelly or milky consisten I cy by the absorption of water. This albumen is the food reserve of the em bryo plant, and out of it the gorm is formed during the period included in the growth of the mother plant. It is not always stored around the embryo, but is sometimes a part of it and fre I quently resides in what arc known as j the seed leaves, in which case thc seed consists of nothing but the embryo ] wrapped iu its encasement of protect ing shields. When the seed is planted under j conditions favoring its growth it be I gins to absorb water and to soften and swell. Hy the water thus absorbed j thc albumen, in whatever form drying may have left it, is resolved into the ! form needed as food for the germ. C'o I incidently with its softening or lique faction, as the case may be, there is a chemical change by which the starch ifj converted into sugar, as is done ar tificially in thc process of malting grain. The infant plant, like the hu man infant, needs its food sweetened a little to make it nutritious and palata ble. One may think of a seed as if it were a basket in whioh a mother, un der the necessity of abandoning her offspring, had laid it snugly to sleep, wrapped in warm blankets, and with a full bottle of milk beside ? it from which to meet its needs on I awakening. Tho chief difference be ; tween Dame N-iture and the human j mother is that the former does I things very much better and more thoroughly, and does not need to de pend upon formaldehyde to preserve the food of her infants from turning sour. FIRST SPROUT DOWNWARDS. It is an interesting fact, however that a seed may be planted, its first sprout points downward. Tb;.H is con trary to the general impression, but the botanists affirm it as a truth which admits of no exceptions. This down tending sprout is the rudimentary root, and it keeps on going down, spreading, bifurcating, diverging, un til it finds what it appears to bo look ing for. Evidently the branching of the roots of a plant is not accidental. The fact that no two roots were ever exactly alike merely means that no two roots ever had exactly the same function to perform in exactly the same way. It is equally true that, however the seed may lie, the sprout which is to form tue beginnings of its stem always points upward, even though it has to describe a curve to reach this direc tion. Like thc root, this has its food quest to attend to, and it pursues it toward the upper air, where it will find the carbon in the form of carbon ic acid out of which to build its woody fibre, and the light rays from which to segregate those clements representing actinic forces, by which much of the subtle alchemy of plant life is per formed. It breaks through thc grouud very gently, but with a power which is often surprising. At this stage ii oears to the plant thc same re lation which thc new-born infant bears to tlic niau. Physically, it isa com plete plant, with a stem, root and ru dimentary leaves, which quickly bc come real loaves and begin to do their i work, as a baby's lungs do their work I i ti breathing. j lt i> now started ou its career, and j barring such accidents as result fruin J thc appetite of beasts, birds and I ereeping things, is able to take care of j itself. It devotes itself to the practi cal business of growing both ways, as a boj* appears todo when his panta loons refuse to'kmeet his shoe tops and his sleeves terminate somewhere be tween his elbows and wrists. The roots push dow ard, multiplying rootlets,-each of which increases the channels?-of absorption. What they absorb most readily and naturally de pends upon the nature and normal ap petite'of the plant. Thc stem pushes upward, and as it lengthens the seed leaves emerge from the ground and spread themselves to thc light and air Thc seed leaves aro usually thick and pulpy when they first unfold, owing to the [fact that they contain the nourishment needed to sustain the carlicstfgrowth of the radicle, or stem lot. WHEN TIIK 1IUD8 APPEAR. Hy the time this feed reserve is ex hausted thc root has begun to do its work, and under the stimulating inllu iee of air and [oxygen the portions of the plant above ground begin-to take their natural color and form. In an other week or two, if nothing inter feres, a bud appears between tho two seed leaves at the end of the stem, and under a lens the rudiments of a new pair of leaves may be seen and a new joint of the stem forms to support them. This is normal growth. It goes on repeating itself until the plane reaches its perfect development and exhausts itself in whatever may be the supreme function of ita ex istence. What I have described is merely typical. The variety of methods and processes by which nature accomplish es its ends ii as great as that in spe cies of vegetable life. On this sub ject Prof. Gray says: "While the same kind of plant always grovs in exactly the same way, different kinds differ almost as much at the beginning as they do afterward. The great va riety which wc observo among thc herbs and shrubs and trees around us -in foliage, fruit, flower and every thing-gives to vegetation one of its greatest charms. We would soon tire of plant or flowers made after exactly one pattern, however beautiful. We enjoy variety." This is the miracle of spring. The how is perfectly intelligible, since na ture never does anything in obedience to a whim 01 fancy of tho moment; the why is part of thc inlinite mystery. Uut the miraclo does not end with thc beginnings of plaut life. The sun worshiper is thc true philosopher of natural religion. Thc creative agen cies of plant life are found iu the sun's rays. To :5pf?ak more specifically, plants by the aid of thc sun's light and heat remove certain substances from what seem to bc their more natural combina tions, and fixing them in other combi nations, store them up in their own structures. It builds up its woody fibre from carbon extracted from the carbonic acid of the air. The sap, en riched by the carbon thus acquired, is curdled into cells and hardened into wood, and so perfect is the economy of nature in the conservation of ener gy that when, as wood or coal, the plant is resolved into its constituent clements in buruiug, it gives out en ergy exactly equivalent to that ex pended in producing the plant. The late Canon Kingsley, a poet of science, traces this storage and liberation of sun power i*^ a beautiful passage sug gested by thc glowing coals in the {.Tate before him, which I have pleas ure in quoting: "The coal on the fire, the table at which I write-what aro they? GaB and sunbeams. The life of the grow ing plant seized hold of the gases in the air and in the soil-of the carbon ic acid, the atmosphere, the water, (for that, too is ga?); it drank them in through its rootlets, it breathed them into sap and bud and leaf and flower. I had also to drink in the sunbeam, that mysterious and complex force which is forever pouring from the sun and making itself powerfully palpable to our senses us light and heat. So the life of the plaut seized upon the sunbeams and absorbed them, buried them in itself, no longer as light and heat, but as invisible chemical force, locking it up forever in its woody fibre. Lord Lytton told us long ago, in a beautiful song, how the wind and the beam loved the rose, but nature's poetry is grander than mau's. The wind and the beam loved tho rose so well that they made the rose; or, rath er, the rose took the wind and the beam and built up, out of them, by her own inner life, her exquisite texture, hue and fragrance." A Point on Carpentry. Senator Platt, of Connecticut, was building a house. Ile had occa sion to hire a carpenter, who was a plain, unvarnished son of New Eng land. . ''You know all about carpenter work?" asked Senator Platt. "Yes, sir," was the reply. "You eau make windows, doors and "Oh, j es. sir." "How would yon make a Venetian blind?" Thc niau thought steadily for sev eral minutes. '"I think," he remark ed finally, "that I would punch birnie the eye." - Men who beat their wives and thoroughbred horses are perfect brutes-with the odds in favor of the horses. - In their efforts to get in thc swim some people merely find them selves in hot water. - Some people seem to be so busy that they haven't time to mind their own business. Evans Pharmacy, Special Agents. GAS AND SUNBEAMS. Romance of u #1,000 MU. "There was a time in the life of the Confederacy," said the Southern colo nel, "when wc had so little regard for the North, or so much for ourselves, that we didn't think a roll of green backs was worth any more than a roll of wall paper. Out of thiB feeling grew a pretty little romance which began in Holly Springs, Miss., and ended at the Fifth Avenue Hotel, in New York city. "I was a young fellow of the enthu siastic sort that believed utterly in the final success of our cause, and when in 18G2, Van Dorn swung 'round into Hol ly Springs and captured Grant's money and stores, I was on hand with the boys, whooping it up in great shape. Among the articles captured was a big lot of greenbacks, two or three million dollars more or less, and we had plenty OA lt. "I had about $50,000 in my saddle bags that I was taking along with me to give away as souvenirs. It wasn't good for anything else, in my opinion, but ft was worth carrying along for that, as part of it was in thousand dollar bills and didn't take up much room. "I knew a pretty g'.l near Holly Springs, and incidentally I called on her. We had a good deal to say about the success of our arms and as a little remembrancer I got out one of my thousand-dollar-greenbacks and stuck it in her autograph album, writing my name and the date below the bill. I don't suppose there is a picture page in any of the illustrated magazines of to day that represents $1,000 in cash, as did that illustration I put in that girl's album. "Later I rode out to our camp, some miles away aud putting up my horse, I adjourned to the banks of a little stream nearby and was pouring my soul out through a flute. There was only a small bunch of our men, and we weren't thinking much about Yankee soldiers. I know I wasn't. "I v/asn't even thinking about my saddle bags full of money which were lying ujder a convenient tree, where I had thrown them. I was thinking about the girl. Suddenly there was a row and a ruction, and a troop of Yan kee cavalry had swooped down upon us. "There was no time given for prepa ration, and thinking ouly of how to get away, I made a grab for my horse, and without saddle or bridle, and guided only by his halter, I cut out through the woods. The saddle bags I left under the tree; also the flute, and I haven't played the flute since. Howl got away J don't know; but I did, and that was all I had in mind just then. I reckon those Yankees knew what to do with the saddle bags. "The next chapter begins long after the war, only about ten years ago, in fact, and I hadn't seen the girl in all that time. One day I was passing along in fro.it of the Fifth Avenue Hotel, when a gray-haired man, stand ing near the door, stopped me. I didn't know who he was, and he begged my pardon and asked if my name wasn't Stuart. I told him that was my first name, and gave him my last name. Then he grabbed me. "let tho GOLD DUST i Don't plod along like your you, scouring and scrubbi makes housework easy, injures nothing. More Made only by THE N. K. Chicago, New. York. Boston. St 1 D. 8. V\N DIV KR. VANDIV? MERCK A BIG LINE SAMPLE SHOES JUST IN AT GREAT B STAPLE LINE DRY GOODS AT RIGHT PRICES. We can make y?.u the CHEAPEN Flour, Bacon, Hice, Coffee ai Your trade is appro* iated. " ' You saved rue and my family,' he i said, putting his arm* about me and steering me toward thc bar. 'We'll have a drink and I'll tell you about it. You don't know how glad I am to see you. "I instinctively felt that it was no case of bunco, and .vent with him. He had told me his name before we reach ed the bar, and I knew he was the father of the Holly Springs girl. We had the drink, several indeed, and he explained how I had saved him and his family. "When the war was over he had lost everything, and it waa'decided that the family should gather itself together and leave Mississippi for some point in the west to make a new start. In the process of packing up what was left, the daughter came aoross the autograph album in which I had pasted the thou sand-dollar bill. "Thousand-dollar bills of United States money had somewhat apprecia ted in value to the Southern mind by this time, and instead of tossing it aside as waste paper, the.girl made a running jump with it to her father. Very, very carefully, they aoaked the album leaf in warm water, and very, very carefully they detached the bill. It was taken to the bank and pro nounced sound in every respect. "There isn't much more to the story. When a man hasn't a cent in the world, and when the people around him aren't any better off, $1,000 is a a great big pile, and the Holly Springs girl's dad had it. Ile hurried off to Memphis, laid in a stock of all kinds of necessaries, and coming back to the old place, he braced himself and held on. "He hadn't grown rich, but he had enough to give me back the thousand by a little squeezing, and he wanted to do it, but I was pretty flush myself just then, and I told him to keep it and make more with it to give his daugh ter's children, for the girl was mar ried and had a houseful."-New York Sun. Tl io signature is oa every box ot the genuine Laxative Broro-Quinine Tablets the remedy that enret a cold In ono day - There is 8 curious growth of trees at Tilden Point, Me. Three yellow birch trees are growing on a pine stump. The tree, which was about two and a half feet in diameter, is thought to have been cur/ down some fifty years ago leaving a stump three and a half feet high. The seeds of the birch must have lodged on this stump, and as they grew they sent their roots down its sides to reaoh the ground. The three trees are, respectively, five, six and seven inches in diameter. Stops the Cough and Works off the Cold. Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets cure a oold in one day. No cure, No Pay. Price 25 cents. - The minister who does not hit somebody in every sermon has missed his vocation, or is well acquainted with tho contributing members. - Only a physician of long eqperi ence knows what to do when there is no occasion for doing anything. twins do your viorka" grandmother did before ng ; bending and rubbing, DUST It cleans everything and econemical than soap. . ? ' FAIRBANK COMPANY, Jouis.-Makers of OVAL FAIRY?SOAP. E. P. VANDIVER. ?R BROS., I ANTS, NDERSON, S. C., APRIL*?), 1902. ARG AI NS. >T price in this section ou Molasses. Lard, ad Tobacco VAM DIV fr1 BROS. A great many people have be gun to realize the virtue of Evans Liver and Kidney Pills,H And it only takes >ne to reach the spot. By Mail ?5o. EVANS PHARMACY, I ANDERSON* S. ?. I SHH JOHN S. CAMPBELL, JEWELER - AND - WATCH REPAIRER. When you need a Watch. Clock or Jewelry come and give me a call. You will find my prices light. All REPAIR WORK repaired promptly. You will find me at my old stand DEAN & UATLIFF'S. BONHAM & WATKINS, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Anderson, -'--?? S. C., Have moved their office rear Peo ples Bank. Entrance through Bank and side of building. Ja? 8, 1?I02_29_3m Foley9s Honey and Tar for chlidren,safet sure. No opiates* THE STATE OF SCUTH CAROLINA, County of Anderson. IN COURT OF PROBATE:. Emily Sword*. John Sword?, Earle Sw ords and H. P. auton, Plaintiff*, against Dorcas C. Connel? ly, Jane & Parsons, Rebecca E. Carson, Basan Evatt. Cordy Catoo. Rebecca T. Swords, J. B. swords, Martha B Thomas, Sarah Massy Swords, and the .widow, and children of Elam Swords, deceased, names, ages and place of residenco un known, Defendants-Summons for Relief COD plaint not Servtd. To the Defendant? above named : YO(j - ri- be- ehy summoned and required to an >??r 'hf Petition lu this action, which is flied in the office of the Court of Probate at Anderson C. II , S. C., and to serve a copy of your answer io the said Petition on the subscritor at his office, Anderson C, H , S. C., within twenty days After the service hereof, exclusive ot' the day of such service; and if you fail to au?wcr the Petition within the time aforesaid, thc Petitioner In thia action will apply to the Court for tbo relief de manded in toe Petition. Dated April 17, A. D 1032. SIMPSON A HOOD, Plaintiffs* Attorney. [SEAT.] JKO. C. WATKINS, C C. P. i o the D?tendants above named : To Cordy Cason, Rebecca T. Swords, John B. Swot di, Martha E Thomas and Sarah Massy Swords, and the widow and children of Elam Swords, deceased, whose names, ages and places of residence are unknown. You will take notice that the Complaint herein, and the bummons of which the foregoing is a copy, were filed in the office ol the Clerk of the Court for Anderson County on the 18th day of April, 1902. SIMPSON Hi HOOD, Plaintiff-.' Attorney. April 28, lHOg_44_6_ NOTICE ! WE, the undersigned, have opened up Shops at the old aland of W. M. Wal'ace on Church Street, West of the Jail, for the purpose of doing Woodwork and Blacksmithing. Repairing Buggies, Wsg ont>, &c, io ?ll its branches. AU work guaranteed to be flrst-claes. W. M. WALLACE, R. T. GORDON? Feb 19, 1902 35 I GUI linn ? RAILWAY. ft?..l#iinr<l belied tile In E.Teot June With. IOU. STATIONS. tv. Charleston ... " bun.i..erville. " Branchville.. " Orangeburg . " Ringville. Lv. Savannah .... .' Barnwell_. " Blackville. Lv. Columbia.....7 " Prosperity... M Newberry.... ** Ninety-Six.... " Greenwood... Ar. Hodges. Lv. Abbeville. Ax. Belton. Lv. Anderson . Ar. Greenville. Daily No. 15. 11 DJ p rn 12 IA) n't 2 DO a m 2 45 a ni 4 05 a in 12 90 4 Ki 4 SS ooo 7 14 7 BO 8 80 8 60 0 15 a m a m a rr. a m a m a m a zn a m S 85 a m 10 10 0 40 a rn ll 20 a m Ar. Atlantn.(Con.Time)| 8 55 p m STATIONS. So%. Lv. Greenville. 6 20 p m " Piedmont...... 6 50 pm " Willinmston. 712 p m Ar. Anderson. 8 15 p ni Lv. Belton . 7 85 pm Ar.Donald?.;. 805 pm Daily No. II. 7 00 a 7 41 a 0 00 a 0 28 a 10 24 a 12 BO a m 4 13 a m 4 28 a ra list) am 12 20 n'n 12 85 p m 1 80 p m 2 05 p m 2 25 p m 1 45 p m 8 20 p m 2 45 p m 4 25 p m 0 00 p m Daily No. 12. 0 40 a m 10 05 a m 10 25 a m ll 15 a m Ar. Abbeville. 7 85 p m 8 05 p m 10 45 a m 11 10 a m lltfipm 12 01 n'n Lv. Hodgon. Ar. Greenwood. .. Ninety-Six., " Newberry.., " Prosperity... " Columbia .. Ar. Blackville. " Barnwell. " Snvnravih..;...; Lv. K tug vi Ho..... " Orangelmrg.. Branchville.: " Stirumervillo. Ar. Charleston ... 820pm 8 50 p m 0 10 p m 10 15 p m 10 32 p m 11 SO p m ll 25 a m ll 50 a m 13 05 p m 1 10 p m 1 24 p ra 2 40 p ra 2 52 a m U 07 a rn 4 00 a m ~i ?2 a m 8 49 a m 4 23 n 5 57 a 7 00 a m 3 52 a in 8 07 a m 4 50 a m Dailv, Daily No I.V.No.IA 11 cor ia 0U ll 2 00a 2 45 a * 05 a 12 80a 4 18 a 4 28a 7 20n 7 67 a 0 53 a 0 15 a 0 84a B 40 a 85a 2 OOo 8 48 p m 4 42 p m 5 25 p ra 0 43 p m 7 ?0 pm 11 00a 12 15 p 1 23p 2 00 p 2 22 p 2 87 p 8 10 p H 40 p 7 15 p STATIONS. Lv..Chariest on.. Ar Summerville " .Branchville. " Ornngeburg " . Ringville,. *. Lv. .havannah. .Ar " ..Barnwell .. " " ..Blackville.. " ..Columbia.. " " . ...Alston.... H " ...Fantuc... " .Union.?. " ..Jonesville.. " M ....Pacolet.... " Ar Spartanburg Lv Lv Spartanburg Ar Ar... Asheville ...Lv? Daily No. 14. 7 aop 0 42 p 5 25 p 4 42 p 3 46 p 2 15 p 1 25 p 12 15 p ll 87 a ll 17 a ll 05 a 10 85? 10 25 7 05? Daily No. 16. 7 00a 5 57 a 4 25 a 8 45a 2 82 a 4 to a 8 07 a 2 52 a 0 80p 8 60a 7 46p 7 lOp a <2p 0 15p 6 00p 8 00p "P" p.m. "A" ai m. "N"night. DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE BUT WEEN CHARLESTON AND GREENVILLE. Pullman pal oca sleeping oars on Trains 85 and EC, 87 and BS? on A. and C. division. Dining cars on these trains serve all meal? e&route. Trains leave Spartanburg, A. ?fr C. division, northbound, 6:53 o.m., 8:87 p.m., 6:12p. m., (Vestibule Limited) and 0:55 p. m.; south bound 12:20a. m., 8:15 p. m., ll :40 a. m., (Vest? bulo Limited), and 10:80 a. m. Trains leave Greenville, A. and O. division, northbound,5:55 a. m., 2:34 p. m. and 5:18 p. m., (Vestibule Limited), and o:56 p. m.; south* bound, 1:25 a. n..,4:C0 p. m., 12:40 p. m. (Vesti bule Limited), and ll .&) a. m.* - Trains 15 and 18-Pullman Sleeping Oars bet wo on Charleston and Asheville. Elegant Pallman Drowtag-Room Sleeping Cars between Savannah and Asheville enroute lally between .Tnekaonvino and Cincinnati. Trains 18 and 14 Pullman Parlor Cars be tween Charleston and Asheville. FRANK 8. GANNON". S. H. HARDWICK, Third V-P. & Gen. Mgr., Gen. Pas. Agen?, Washington. D. C Washington, D, O. W. H. TAY LOE. H. W. HUNT, Asst. Gen. nts. Agc, Div. Pas. Apt. Atlanta, Ga. Chart eaton. S. O. 7 / BREED CHICKENS A SPECIALTY! Barred? Plymouth Rock. White Plymouth Rock. Silver Wyandotte^. Brown Leghorns. Purity guaranteed. Eggs for sale. Carefully packed for shipping. L. 8. M?.TTISON. Anderson, S. C. j Jan 22,1902_31_Bm \ E. G. MCADAMS, ATTORNEY A/JD LAW, ANDERSON, 8. C. ??r* Office in J ridge of Probate's office, I in the Court Ho uno. I Feb 5,1902 S3 Notice of Final Settlement THE undersigned, Executor of the Estate of T. L. Cltnkecales, deceased, hereby gives notice thai he will ou the 19th day of May, 1902, apply to the Judge of Probate for Anderson County foi a Final settlement of said Estate, and a discharge from his office ss Executor. RA NK H. CLINKSOAliES, Ex'r. April 16,1902 43 5 COCftlBE??WHlMT Hom? Treatment oeut PBEE. Addrea? B? M. WOOLLEY, M. O., Atlanta,Otb WANTED'lMhJTO^ to write for oar confidential letter before ap plying for patent; it may bo worth money. Wo promptly obtain U. 8. and Foreign PATENTS TRADE MARKS pr return EN TIRE attorney's fee. Send model, sketch or photo and wo send an IMMEDIATF. FREE report on patentability. We give ibo test legal service and advice, and our charges are moderate. Try ns. SWIFT & CO., Patont lawyers^ Op?. U.S. Patent Offlce.WaablBgtoD. D.C. SAWNER 8ALVE th? moat healing salvo In tho world. CHARLESTON AND WESTERN CAROLINA RAILWAY A DOUBT A ANUABHBnXLBHBOBr UDU In effect Apr. 13tb, 1902 Lv Augusta.. Ar Oreen wood.. Ar Andoroon.................... Az Laurens. Ar Greenville.....-. Ar?Olean Springs-...... Ar Spartanburg. Ar Salada. Ar HendersonvUle. Ar ABhav.Mll?...="..*.=>.,_; 10 0ft am 12 89 pm 8 25 pm 5 80 pm 6 38 pm 6 ll pm 1 , SOS psi TiSnSii m I LT Anhevillo... LT Bpartanburg....... LT Glenn Spring?.... LT Greonville......... LT Laurena.-. LT Anderson. LT Greenwood... Ar Augusta. 7 OS pm ............. 12 IS pm ...........i. 12 22 pm ........... 2 07 pm ?H?M? . TSSsa 8 07 pm|....... 5 40 pm ll 88 am 7 28 am ..k.'......,. 1 02 pm .M 2 S3 pu? . ........M.. 4 CS pm .?..... ? Lv Anderson. Ar Elberton.. Ar Athens...., Ar Atlanta.... Lv Anderson.-1 7 25 sm Ar Augusta.. ll 85 am Ar Port Royal.... 8 55 pm A r Beaufort.". 8 45 pm Ar Charleston (Sou).-. 7 80 pm Ar Savannah (Cofga). 8 1.? pm Close connection at Calhoun Falls for all points on 8. A. L. Rallwsy, and at Spartanbuig for Bon. Ballway. For any information relative to tickets, ol schedule!, etc., address W. J. CRAIG, Gen. Pau. Agent, Au gu st ?.Gr. T. M. Emerson .Tramo Mona??;. J. Reese Font, Agent, Anderson, S. C. Blue Ridge Railroad. Effective April 6. 1902. EASTBOUND. STATIONS. Lv Walhalla. Senecc. " Cherry. " Pendleton'., " Auiun. '. Denver. " Anderson... Ar Bolton.? No. 4 Sun. only P. Al ft 4fi 6 48 7 C5 Ko. 6 Dally Ex. Suv. No 8 Dally Ex. Sun. a. M 8 00 3 03 P. M 2 SO C /6 5 58 5 43 5 84 5 16 f4 60 l a os I 80 No 12 Dilly f M. 2 4b 8 10 a. M. 8 00 8 25 8 6T 8 47 8 es 9 02 9 09 9 25 v; KSrBUUKl*. STATIONS. No -8 Daily 1*. M i'M A. M A M. P. M Lv Belton. 7 40 9 00. 10 60 S 20 " Anderson. 8 10 0 2i 10 00 ll 15 8 45 '. Denver.,. 10 27 . 8 89 " Autun........ 10 87 . 4 05 " Pendleton.. ...... 10 47 . 4 ll " Cherry_. lt 02., 4 18 ll 81 . 4 48 .* Seneca. 12 50 ......... 4 80 Ar Walhalla._ ....... ....... 1 25p ....... 6 O9 Will ?IM ?top sit tho following stations to take on and let oflpassenger*: Phlnnoy'e, Jame?, Gra dy Springs, West Anderson, Adams, Joxdanla Junctlon. J. R, ANDERSON, H. C BEATTIE. Superintendent. _President._._? ATLANTIC COAST LIKE TBAFMO D KP ART M BNT. WILMINGTON, N. C., Jan. 18,1901 Fast Line Between Ch ar leeton and Col nmbia and Upper South Carolina, Nortfe Carolina. CONDENSED SCHEDULE. QOINOWEST. GOING EA65 .No. 62._No. 68. 6 25 sm Lv..Charleston-.......Ar 8 80 pta 8 02 sm Lv..............Lanes............Ar S 48 pa 9 28 am Lv..............Sumter............. Ar 5 35 po 11 00 pm Ar...-t>?-B?b??..,......LT 4 VS SS 12 iv pm ar....Prosperity...-LT 2 49 pm 12 vo pm Ar........Ncwoerry......LT 2 84 pa 118 pm Ar... Clinton. LT 1 BS pa 186pm Ar.Laurens......LT 186pm 8 10 pm Ar.-Greenville.........Lv 12 01 aa 8 10pm Ar..Spartauburg....- Lv 1145am 7 18pm Ar.Winnsboxo. 8. C.Lv | 10 18 am 9 20 pm Ar.Charlotte. N. C.LT I 3 10 aa 6 ll pm Ar..Hondersonvlll6, N. CLT I 9 02 sa 7 15 pm Ar..Asheville,N. C..Lv j 8 00ac co. 6 Dally Ex. Sun. No. 7 Dally Ex.. Sun I No. ll No. 9 Dally Daily ?Dally. . . ? Noe.62 and 58SMU? Train? betwesa Chariest0' ?ind Columbia.8. C. a. 25. Kui,:; m ? > t>ru I. Passent;/ xs -at J ft. KxMfcY.Giu* tl sl'tiater ?-, *?. ''x?**?!i. Traffic Mfcj?go