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TOWNE VISITS BRYAN. *' < New Yorker ii? Candidate for Second Place on Dcm.-eratic Ticket. ' Ltn?olr?, Ne1>., July I.-Charlea A. Towne, of New York, was a visitor at Fairview this afternoon. Mr. Towne, who ia any avowed candidate for the Democratic nomination for Vice Pre sident, as well as an old-time per soual friend of Mr. Bryan, stopped off here for the empress purpose of discussing vice Presidential politics. tSAv. Bryan was expecting him, and for half an hour they remained closeted. At the conclusion of the interview 'Mr. Bryan said that he had been glad to see Mr. Towne. He had noth ing further to say. "New York is the logical State to furnish the Vice Presidential nomi nee." said Mr. Towne. "The public ?fdoea not seem to loalize tho number of Democrats there are in Northern New York. I am not surprised at the declination of Judge Gray to be men tioned for Vice President. I have ex '- pected it right along. Judge Gray ls a strong man, a popular man with all classes, he has ability, a magnetic personality and marked attainment*. However, I have been assured by friends from all parts of the coun try of support for myself. Assur ances of an unmistakable character were given me by leading. New York Democrats before I would permit the use of my name." "What will be done with the anti injunction plank at Denver?" Mr. Towno wa* asked. "It should be a strong one-one that does hot hedge. The laboring man will be protected." "Will provision for the interlocu tory decree be made for use in ex treme cases? What 1B Mr. Bryan's position on this phase of the ques tion?" "That I cannot discuss; I cannot oven express my opinion, for it w.ould borrow color from the fact that I have been talking with Mr. Bryan." Mr. Towue smiled as he parried this question. Likewise he laughing, ly dodged interrogations as to whe ther Mr. Bryan had singled him out for support in his canvass for the Vice Presidential nomination. Pre vious to Mr. Towne's visit, however, Mr. Bryan had practically sot. at rest, temporarily at least, reports that he favored Mr. Towne. "Mr. Towne is quoted' as saying that you some time ago assured Mr. % Towne that he would be acceptable to you. ls that true?" Mr. Bryan was asked. "He meant thut he was favorable to them," said Mr. Bryan, with stress on the last word, and with ? wave of the arm indicated the galaxy of fa vorite sons whose names have been mentioned In connection with the nomination for a running mate. Mr. Bryan ts silent on all matters pertaining to probable action by the convention ln order to disarm proba ble criticism on the score that he is attempting to dictate. His intimates here have taken the cue, and if he has confided his wishes to any of them they are guarding their secrets well. Mayor Brown, who is a dolegate at large, and Ne braska's choice for member of the resolutions committee, is generally credited with being the man in Lin coln who knows Mr. Bryan's wiBhes regarding a platform. Heat prostrates the nerves. In tbe summer one needs a tonic to off set the customary hot weather nerve and strength depression. You will feel better within 48 hours after be ginning to take such a remedy as Dr. Snoop's Restorative. Its prompt ac tt n in restoring the weakened nc -ves is surprising. Of course, you won't get entirely strong in a few days, but each day you can actually feel the improvement. That tired, . lifeless, spiritless, feeling will qulck . depart when using the Restora v a. Dr. Shoop's Restorative will \nen a falling appetite; it aids \tlon; it will strengthen the J ?ned kidneys and heart by slm j ^building the worn-out nerves tl hese organs depend upon. Test 1 ;w days and he convinced. Sold J. W. Bell. f p?W MILL SUPERINTENDENT. I/O. A. Franklin Succeeds H. O. Wel bon nt Cox Mills. (Anderson Mall, July 3.) G. A. Franklin has arrived in the city and has assumed the duties of su pcln ton dent of the Cox Mills, suc ceeding H. G. Welborn, who resigned in order that he might be associated with five mills In the lower part of the'State. Mr. Welborn left Ander ? son this morning for Lexington, N. I) C., where he will spend a week with V his mother. He will then return to Batesburg, where his headquarters will be. Mr. Franklin came from Walhalla, where he has been superintendent of the Walhalla Mills for some time. Be fore going to Walhalla he was super intendent for three years of the Dra per Mills of Spartanburg. He is con sidered one of the very best mill men In the State, and the manage ment of the Cox Mills are consider ed lucky In securing his services. Mrs. Franklin is yet In Walhalla, but she will move to Anderson shortly. PAIN .Pam in the head-twin anywhere, has its cants, rain la congestlon. pain ls blood pressure-nothing ?Iso usually. At leask so tart br. snoop, uni to ?rove lt he has created * little pink tablet That tablet-called Dr. snoop's Headache Tablet ?oaxos blood pressure away from pain centers, lu eHoot 1 * charmin. pleasingly delightful. Gently though lately, lt surely equalises the blood circu lation. It you have a headache, lt's blood pressure. If (t's painful periods with women, samo cause. lt you are sleepless, restless, nervous, lt's blood Congestion-blood pressure. That surely ls a certainty, for Dr. shoot's Headache Tablets stop lt In 20 minutes, mu the tablets simply distribute lbj unnatural blood pressure. Bruise your finger, and doesn't lt get red, and swell, and pain youT Of course lt doss. It's con gestion, blood pressure. You'll find It where pain b-always. It s simply Con.mon Sense. We sell at 25 cento, ?nd cheerfully recommend Dr* Shoop's Headache Tablets J. W. BELL. WAY8 OP MINTVG PROMOTERS. How Schemes- Aro Worked to Get Funds to Open Mines. A mining - man from Mexico t:*Ied to intereut an Eastern capitalist in his proposition, hut was turned down politely, but firmly. A shade of dis appointment crossed his face. He half arose from his chair and reached for his hat. He hesitated for a mo ment as if debating some momentous step. Then he dropped back into his spat and leaned forward confidently, as though, he had decided to Impart Borne weighty secret. "Suppose I should tell you," he be gan, "tbat I know where the long sougnt treasure of the Aztec kings is burled, that within aft hour after reaching the City of Mexico I could go to the place where it lies, the vast store of gold and j?welg that Qu at? moslo hld when the little band of Conquistadores, Cortez's conquering Spaniards, appeared before his capi tal? "How do I do this? Listen!" The promoter's voice sank to a tense whisper. "Can any one hear? Don't let us be Interrupted. I have never told this to a soul before. Mav I lock the door? "Suppose 1 tell ypu how a mozo, one who had served me faithfully for many years, had left my employ at the mines, and had gone to the City of Mexico, there to take service with one of the old Spanish families who live in a street a little back of the great Cathedral, which, as you know, was built on, the site of the ancient temple, where they used to sacrifice thousands of human captives each your? You can see, huge sacrificial stoner in the National Museum there to-day. "This family went to th? tierra callente, to their hacienda there, in tfie winter months, when there is no rain, but the air is chill in the city. Before they left the master told this Indian servant to take up the stones in the patio,the interior court around which the house ls built-the resi dence has been iu the same family for two centuries and a half-and to clear out the ancient drain that had become half choked and unservice able, also to relay all the paving stones flat and level. "The soil is soft there. There are no cellars In the houses, for the city is built on an indent lake bed and almost anywhere you strik? water within ten feet from ?he surface. "In due time the family departed, leaving this Indian in charge of the other servants In the empty house. These Mexican peons, by the way, are slow, but faithful and Bure. With out, undue haste the work began and proceeded. "Sometimes Juan worked alone, digging in the damp soil; at other times some of the other men heiped him, carrying out the dirt of lifting the heavy blocks of stone that paved the courtyard. Juan ovr night had a dream that if he should dig in a certain spot in the patio ho would find a vast treasure. "The next day was the Fiesta of All Souls-a great religious holiday, when every one goeB to the Dolores Cemetery, decorates the grave4 of his dead and gets stupid with pulque. Juan made some excuse, pleaded ill ness, I suppose; the rest of the ser vants went away and left him alone In the great house. "The moment they were gone and the outer door fast bolted, Juan commenced to dig, with a feverish haste such as he had never shown before in the spot indicated by his dream. He was standing in a pit as long and as narrow as a grave when a chance thrust of his shovel Into the black, reeking soil touched a stone. "Now there are no stones in the City of Mexico except what have been brought there from the quarries, miles away, so Juan knew thatAvhat he had encountered was either an ancient idol of the Aztecs or else the forerunner of what he sought. He stopped to take a drink of pulque, and went back to wort?. With infin ite labor he uncovered what appear ed to be a great, square stone, and finally, I don't know how, succeeded tn lifting it from the place it had rested for nearly three centuries. "Two weeks later-I was In the mountains of Durango, at Topla, at the time-I received a letter from Juan. It was written by one of those public letter writers, who sit Itt the plaza before the Cathedral, for Juan, like nearly every one of his class, cannot read or write. "The letter urged me to come to Mexico at once and to see him Imme diately on my arrival, that he was in great trouble, that he had news of personal Interest to impart. In short I gathered from the letter, aided by my Intimate knowledge of Juan's character, that there really was something urgent. He had saved my life once, and, as I had intended going to Mexico soon, I decided to hasten my trip and start immediate ly. "It's a week's journey by mule, horse and rall from the mines to the capital. On my arrival I sent for Juan, and he came to my room at the Iturblde, where he was well known ns my former mozo. "What would you say If I told you that he recounted to me how he had dreamed and dug and lifted the stone, and how he lind found a mass of coarse gold, washed from placer workings by the Aztecs no one knows where and no one knows when; how he had found, also, cu rious Images of gold, figures of tho gods and of the sun and rain; how he brought from a fold In his blouse, tied In a flory dirty handkerchief, a double handful of coarse gold, mixed with huge uncut rubles, like cherries in a handful of wheat? "Did he tell any one else of It? No, he would not do that. Ho hud an Idea of the value of the gold, but not of the rubles. What next? This ls only supposing, you know, a kind ^f hypothetical question. "Suppose I should tell you how I assayed tho gold myself and found it what I thought lt, from a placer; that I had two of the uncut rtibles priced In ono of the Jewelry stores along Plateros street, and found them gems of great value. I have bought a good many mines, and a great many people have tried to salt them on me, but I am cautious and I haven't been caught yet. I trust no What ls medicine for? To cure you, If sick, you say, ? _. But one medicine wi!! not cure every kind of sickness, oecause different medicines act on different parts of the body. One medicine goes to the liver, another to the sptoe, Wine of Cardui to the womanly organs. So that ls why Wine of Cardui has proven so efficacious In meet cases of womanly disease. Try it? Mrs. Wm. Tuner, of Eartcovtile, IL. writes t "I suffer*) for years with female diseaioa, and doctored without relief. My back and bead would hurt me, and I suffered agony with beating-down pains. Atlast I tock Wine of Cardui and nov I sm to good health." Seid everywhere, ts $1.00 bottles, Ut ?it ra ttA Dook for \ . cm*n. If TOM BMt M*dtad .mit* wivOoes. WRITE US A LETTER ^SSSSSSH one, and I know that my own judg ment lg not infallible. "Suppose I tell you bow I agreed with Juan to buy the house, to give him a few thousand for himself tiloso peons don't know what to do with money if they get more than $2 at a time-and how the next day urgent business nailed me to New York. The Astee treasure still lies where it was buried, and I can do nothing toward reaching it at pres ent. Suppose my story interested youl, would you care to put any money Into a matter of that kind?" The faces of tho two men were a study. The mining man's, which had lighted up with the dramatic telling of the story, had now settled back Into Its usual aspect of shrewdness, overlaid with a look of never-falling good humor. The capitalist had been fascinated by the tale. He was lean ing forward In his chair tensely, showing absorbing interest in the re cital, his lips were drawn hack- n lit tle. There was a moment's silence. "How much would lt cost to buy the house:' asked the capitalist. "About $50,000." "How much to buy the Indian, this Juan, so as to satisfy him and keep him quiet?" "Two or three thousand would do it." "I suppose the Mexican govern ment couldn't claim the treasure?" "No, 1 am quite sure they couldn't." "H?w soon could you go with me to Mexico?" "To-morrow. What is your pro position?" "We'll start to-morrow afternoon. We'll buy the house, the Indian's silence and anything else that ts nec essary. I'll put up all the money and will divide with you the difference between the gross amount of the treasure and what money I have to spend to get lt. Is that satisfactory? All right. You may be a litt ii short. I'll give you a check for, say, a cou ple of thousand now. Look up the fastest trains, get the tickets and so on, and 'phone me to-morrow morn ing at my house where to meet you and when.'' The mining man reached for his hat and rose from his chair with a a broad smile on his face. "Now, slr," he said, "I've got you just where I want you. The tale I have just told ls a fantastic romance. The treasure may exist, but I don't know where lt ls. You will recall that i related the story as a supposi tion, so as to see what you would do under certain circumstances. "I am a comparative stranger to you, yet you swallowed the bait, hook and line. You were ready to invest a hundred thousand dollars in some thing as Intangible as a moonbeam, yet a few minutes ago you turned down, almost discourteously, a sound, safe mining proposition. "I told you that there were a hun dred thousand tons of ore In sight that averaged $50 a ton lu value. That's $5,000.000. I showed you re ports of mining engineers of high standing to prove my statements. Yet all that did not Interest you. "Then 1 decided to spin this yarn of the Aztec treasure, and you lis tened to lt like a little girl to a fairy tale.. I have finished my experiment and I will now bid you good day." The mluing man was half way to the door before the capitalist had re covered from his astonishment. Dis appointment, chagrin and anger swept across his face. Finally he smiled, and the smile stayed. He jumped from his chair and dragged the mining man back. "You're right," he said. "You've taught me a lesson that ls worth a million dollars to me. I'll take $100, 000 worth of your stock and I'll sign the subscription Hst now. We'll set tle any further details to-morrow af ternoon at 8- o'clock, Instead of tak ing the fastest train to Mexico.". In another case the promoter took quite a dirferent tact. This happened up In Toronto. The promoter was a New Yorker. Negotiations had been going on for several days. There had been much lunching together, and finally the Ca nadian capitalist announced his wil lingness to take $5,000 worth of stock. The promoter did not show the least trace of disappointment at the smallness of tho subscription-much to the Canadian's surprise. In fact he seemed pleased, and bade bim good-bye with profuse thanks. Tho next morning the promoter burst Into the Canadian's private office, breathless and apparently much agitated. "I am ashamed and humiliated nt what I must toll you," he said, "but as an honest man I cannot do other wise than be. absolutely frank and straightforward with you. "When ! ??old you that stocl' yes terday and got your Jieek for $5,000 1 thoroughly believed that was' put ting you in the way of a splendid Investment. When I returned to my hotel to pack up and get the night train for New York I found n letter there from an old chum who ls the manager of the property. It had been forwarded to me from New York. "To my surprise and chagrin I learned from lt that tho big veb* which we all thought was a sten house of untold treasure, had sud denly faulted, that is, broke short off, and, instend of the property be ing worth millions, a hundred thou sand would be dear for It now. Un der the circumstances I see no other y way except to return to you your check. Here lt I?. "1 have also cancelled your signa ture to the stock subscription Hst, as" you see. I regret this very much, but I trust that you will appreciate that I have acted honestly and In good faith." The Canadian was taken aback. He rose from his chair and grasped the promoter warmly by the hand, assuring him of his high ester m. They threw bouquets at each other for a few minutes, and thou the con versation imperceptibly turned on mining propositions again. The pro moter rose to go. . "Well, Mr. Smith," said the capi talist, "whenever you have anything that you can conscientiously recom mend just let me know, and I'll take a far bigger slice than I did in the one we have just buried. 1 like your way of doing business. To tell the truth, I have always been suspicious of mining investments, ar.d. I would not have taken the few dollars' worth I did had I not been impressed by your* personality. So just bear lt in mind, won't you?" Mr. Smith hesitated a second and said: "I've got a good thing that I have Intended all along to keep exclusive ly for myself. I'm the sole owner of a property In Mexico. It's a big property, and I've spent all the money I can afford Just now In de veloping it. I'll take you in on the ground floor if you want to put in $150,000 or $200,000." The next two hours were ?pent in describing the property, showing maps of the underground workings, assays and engineers' reports. The upshot of it all was that thc pro moter took the train for New York that night with the Canadian's sig nature to a contract to take $175, 000 worth of stock in .ne proposi tion. When he showed this to his part ners on his return to his home office they leaped for joy. "How on earth did you do it, Jim?" "Why, they told me In Toronto that that millionaire was the cagiest mortal up there, that he had no con fidence in any one and little trust in himself. I won his confidence, that's all. 1 sold him $5,000 worth of that Dead Horse mining stock, gave him his money back next day, and so landed him for this block. I had it all planned out before I left New York. But he's got a good thing as It ls, 'or he's a close buyer." One of the most notud bits of pro moting work during the last twenty years was done In Colorado. Two miners were out bunting one day in the rugged hills. They stopped to rest and one of them kicked a small stone loose from the earth and when his companion was not looking Blip ped lt into bia own pocket. It assayed almost pure silver. In a fortnight a new mining camp was bom and several hundreds of thousaud8 of dollars* worth of silver ore was taken out of pockets in the earth. It did not occur in veins. The pockets were soon cleaned out and the shanties of the once populous town were vacant, except for a few prospectors who still hung on, hop ing against hope. A Huston metallurgist rode out there one day and a prospector show ed him a sample of the silver rock that had once lined the pockets of every one so richly. The scientific man was Interested, but said nothing, moved into one of the deserted cabins and spent his days taking observa tions .with curious instruments. "Crazy," was the general opinion. In a fortnight he vanished. Three months later he had a force of men at work sinking a shaft in the apex of a low mountain some miles away. "Crazy," was the unaniomus verdict. The scientist had noted that the rich ore found in the pockets seemed to be of volcanic origin. He imme diately concluded that it had been spewed out of a volcano ages ago. He sett lcd in his own mind which of the mountains thereabout used to be a volcano. Then he went back to Boston. He told hts capitalistic friends there what his theories were. He had grown to regard them as facts by that time. Ile told them that he had found the extinct volcano and that if they would back him to sink a shaft from its apex down into what had been Its crater they would be rewarded by Anding an enormous mass of solid silver-the mother bodies of the lit tle pieces that had rained down miles away. He got $100,000. When that was almost spent the miners found a small piece of the volcanic silver ore. The Boston man took this back east with bim nt once, saw his back ers, convinced them that he was on the right track, and got $200,000 more. Before half that had been spent they ran across a big pocket of enormously rich oro that netted about $75.000 profit. The money came easy after that, Tho shaft sank, foot by foot, but never another bit of ore did they find. The volcano that once had spouted molten silver like a geyser would not MER] Will cure any eas? mm beyond the reach of i give up Ita riches. The backers of the promoter refused to continue to give up theirs and the mine became a memory. Most disflguriug akin eruptions, scrofula, pimples, rashes, etc., are due to impure blood. Burdock Blood Bitters is a cleansing blood tonic. Makes you clear-eyed, clear-brained, clear-skinned. Which Side are You On ? (Copied from The Foreign Mission Journal, and Published by Re quest.) One of our Baptist papers tells the story of a respectable grocer who, as was the almost universal custom in those days, kept liquors for sale. In a large temperance meeting, at which nearly the eutlre population of the town was present, all those In favor O? the iramc were asked to take one side of the hall and those opposed to it the other side. The grocer looked on until the division was nearly fin ished, and after scanning closely the anti-temperance aide, he deliberately went over on the side of temperance, saying: "You don't suppose I am going to stay over there with that crowd, do you?" In yt ading that story, you can ap ply it to the Foreign Mission ques tion. Suppose all the people in a community could be gathered to gether, those in favor of missions in one company, and those opposed in another; how long do you think Diese respectable Christians who say they do not believe in foreign mis sions would be willing to stay with that crowd? Is it not true that Christian people do not stop to think where their opposition to missions !>1 a res them? Without any unkindness of feeling and with perfect fidelity to the facts in the ease, let us look at those two companies. On the side of the oppo sition would be found the worldly, (inspiritnal, inactive church members. There would be the man who is stingy, close and mean in his busi ness dealings. The drunkard, the gambler, the man unclean in his life, the outcast woman, the common cheat, the thief, the robber, the infi del and trc blasphemer, all without exception would stand against mis sions. It is certain that Satan and all his folks would be on that side. In a word, all the forces that count for nothing in the Master's king dom and all those that stand for bit ter, unrelenting opposition to God and righteousness are against For eign .Missions. In the company favoring missions are our noble Christian women, al most without exception; our most liberal, conscientious, devoted lay men; our most intelligent and con secrated preachers; Paul, the first great missionary, and all the splendid army of heroes and martyrs who have suffered and died for the cause through the iges; and the goodly host, of brave, self-sacrificing men and women who are now on the fleldt every one of them heroes of the first order. On this Bide 'is God the Fa ther, "who so loved th- world"; Jesus Christ, the Son, who died for men everywhere; the Holy Spirit, whose insistent plea 1B that no soul shall be left in heathen darkness; in fact all the forces that make for righteousness in the world. In this warfare all that is akin to heaven 1B on one Bide, and all that hold kinship with hell is on the other side. Oh! you who say you do not believe in foreign missions, look closely and honestly at those two companies, and then have the cour age to say, like the old grocer: "You don't suppose I am going to stay over there with that crowd, do you?" $100 Reward-f loo. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all Its stages, and that is catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure ls the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, re quires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure ls taken Inter nally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease and giving the patient strength by building up the constitu tion and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimoni?is. Address F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, Ohio. Sold by all druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for con stipation. VISITING c.tttDS-All the latest styles. We want your orders for first class work in the Engraving line. We can furnish any style or any quantity you may desire. Write or call on THE KEOWEE COURIER, Walhalla, S. C. JDNEY CU of Kidney or Bladder DU ncdicine. No medicine can SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. ? LEGAL ADVERT I SK M KN TS. ? SUMMONS tUR KIM-li: I". THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF OCONEE. Court of Common Pleas. Georgia R. VanDivlere, as Adminis tratrix of the Personal Estate of M. R. VanDivlere, Deceased. Plain tiff, against Matilda Chambers, Ellen Lyles, Roxy Roach, Hamp ton Chambers, Lucy Roach, Albert Chambers, a minor, Defendants. Summons for Relief-(Complaint not Served.) To tho Defendant Above Named, Roxy Roach : You are hereby summoned and re quired to an sw 01 ; in- complaint In this action, which waa flied in the office ot the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas for the said county, on the third day of June, 1908, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscri ber at his office, on the Public Square, at Walhalla Court House, South Caro lina, within twenty days after the service hereof, exclusive of the day of such service; and if you tall to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid the Plaintiff in this action will apply to the Court for the 'relief demanded' in the complaint. Dated at Walhalla, S. C., June 3, 1908. (Seal) C. R. D. BURNS, C. C. P. ROB'T. A. THOMPSON, Plaintiff's Attorney. To the Defendants Above Named: The Defendants in this action will take notice: That the Plaintiff, as administratrix as aforesaid has flied Summons and Complaint in this ac tion in the office of the Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas, at Wal halla, South Carolina, June 3, 1908, for the foreclosure of the mortgago therein described. June 3. 1908. ROB'T. A. THOMPSON, 24-29 Plaintiff's Attorney. SHERIFF'S SALE OF SENECA COT TON MILL STOCK. THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, COUNTY OF OCONEE. Court of Common Pleas. R. T. Jaynes, as Guardian and Trus tee for the Estates of the Children of Mrs. Catharine H. Blemann, de ceased, Plaintiff, against Eleanor B. Jordan, as Executrix and Louis M. Jordan, as Executor, of the last Will and Testament of Lambert W. Jordan, deceased, De fendants, By virtue of levy under an execu tion to me directed in the above en titled action, I will sell to the high est bidder, at public auction, in front of Walhalla Court House door, on MONDAY, the 6th day of JULY. 1908, within the legal hours of sale, One Hundred and Twenty-five Shares of the Capital Stock of Seneca Cot ton Mills, belonging to the Estate of L. W. Jordan, deceased, as follows, to wit: common Stock, One Hundred and Twenty-five 8hares ot the par value of Cne Hundred Dollars per Share. Terms: CASH. W. M. KAY, Sheriff Oconee County, S. C. June 16, 1908.-25-27 BLUE MI RAILWAY CO. HKTWKKN BELTON' AMD WALHALLA. Tims Table No. t.-In Effect June 7, 1909. EASTBOUND 12 10 LvWalhalla. LvWest Union. I.vBeneca. LvMordanla Junction Lv'Adams. Lv?Clierry. LvPendleton. Lv * Autun. LvSandy Springs'. Lv*Denver. Lv* West Anderson... Ar Anderson-PAM De p Lv Anderson-PassDep Lv*Anderson-VrtDep Arlleiton. A M 8 45 8 50 9 08 9 10 9 20 9 28 P ll 3 27 8 82 8 60 3 82 4 07 j 4 10, 9 40| 4.32) D 32| ? ?H| 4 90| 5 44' P.M 2 00 2 10 4 48 4 82 5 12 8 16 9 61 9 86 10 10 10 15 10 18 10 45 4 83 4 ST 4 82 4 57 8 Ot) 6 27 ts -is 6 56 6 16 6 24 18 20 AM PM 6 30 ? 33 7 00 WESTBOUND ll LvHolton. Lv?Anderson-Fr't De ArAnderson-Pass De LvAntien in-Pass De Lv**7est Anderson.... Lv* Denver. LvSandy Springs. Lv*Autun. LvPendleton. Lv'Che- . Lv?Adr . LWOMI ula Junction, Lvfleu . LvWest Union. ArWalhalla. PM 6 00 6 26 G 29 0 35 6 48 6 83 6 56 04 7 14 7 17 7 36 7 87 7 66 8 00 A M 9 20 9 30 9 60 10 00 10 06 69 10 20 09 10 86 12110 40 30 ll 05 82 12 06 60 12 30 6?!l2 40 AM. 7 20 7 47 7 60 PM 8 10 3 37 8 40 . Klag stations. Will also stop at the following stations to USS on and let off passengers: Phlnney's, James's and Toxaway, Welch. A. B. ANDREWS, President. J. R. ANDERDON, Superintendent. >ease not do more. Cures Backache Corrects Irregularities Do not risk having Plight's Disease or Diabetes