IG MOVED INTO A LARGE STORE-ROOM, On Granite Row, prepaied to fainish you with anything in the GROCERY LINE at a ICE. ; i and Sso my Stock of Flour and Heavy Goods. med Goods, New Crop N. 0. Molasses, Sugars, CoffeeB, Teas, &c. eping up my shook of? oysi Confectioneries, Fruits, Tobacco, Cigars, &c. iking a special run on my 25o. per pound Tobacco. Beats the world. 8ee it. IEE CITY DELIVERY. Yonrs truly, G. M. TOLLY? ?A 1 resh lot of Citron, Raisins and clean Currants receiv-' HE CHEAPEST GOODS! EVER SOLD IN ANDERSON ! luyiug bur Fall Stock we decided to make a change in our busi o: rush the goods off at once. We are SLAUGHTERING the LOTHIHG AND GENTS' FURNISHINGS. ean business. .- Don't be induced to buy from auy one until you ihr stock arid prices. We carry a large line of? ,J3QYSV LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S SHOES 'ill save money by trading with us this Fall. LOWEST PRICES?COURTEOUS ATTENTION. TAYLOR & CRAYTON. FOR SIXTY DAYS! Prices wUl be made to Cash Buyers for the next 60 days on all S, ORGANS, SEWING MACHINES, BUGGIES, HARNESS, LAP ROBES, Etc. tock is large and complete in every department, and we shall be have you call and examine same, and get our SPECIAL PRICES buy, for we feel sure we CAN and WILL make it to yeir interest Dur Stock of? BUGGIES AND SEWING MACHINES t large and attractive. So be sure you see them before you buy. SPECIAL CUTS IN PRICES ON ORGANS TO SCHOOLS and CHURCHES, fours, always anxious to serve, O. A.. REED, Agent, WE ARE DAILY RECEIVING OUR FALL AND WINTER STOCK OF r Goods, Notions, Jeans, Flannels, Domestics,, Hats, ? ^SB[OE9, 3Bto. Eta, )xxr6h&&one of the best selected and cheapest stock of Goods ever brought to anon. We don't ask you to cake our word for it, but couie ia and see for your !ur stock of GROCERIES always complete?prices the LOWEST. 'ome aid we us before you buy anything?we will save YOU MONEY. Yours truly, DEAN. PEER & MOORE. $8.00 ANB $10.00 STOVES! IF LOW PRICES any inducement to seen re a first-class Stove, and a guarantee with it, call and see fmfr Eight and Ten Dollar Stoves. I alao have the IRON KING and ELMO, in priced Stoves, which are superior to any Stove. They are sold to suit the times. In Lamp, Crockery and Glassware nive an abundance, and at prices that down competition anywhere, 1 And don't t when jon need? GOOD TINWARE, I ??flhoddy stuff," call on the undersigned, "also have a nice line of GRATES, take this opportunity to thank all my friends In the country and city for their iTj^tronage in-the past, which I aspure you has been appreciated, and to show my appreeatfon I have marked my Goods very low for lite season, and I ask a nuance of an Inspection of my Goods. Respectfully, JOHN T. BURR1SS. m , , PEOPLE8' BLOCK. ? FRESH ? TURNIP SEED! E offer our usual Premium of FlDOLLARS for the Largest *JTurnlp ( from our Seed. Turnips to be brought to onr Store and weighed on or before EMBER 15th. taalimb^ry we always keep a Cooler full of Ice Water for our friends, and they elcome to ail they want. ORB f that of last year, with tbe result that rery many people are in pecuniary straits. There is at present such distrust hat money is hard to get. Such is tbe itringency tbat in Rio tbe tickets of a .ocal street car line, in tbe absence of small coins, circulate as money and are gladly accepted in payments. ? A case involving tbe legality of a marriage between a negro and a white woman was tried recently before Judge Lea, at Little Rock, Ark. No matter what his decision proves to be, an ap? peal will be taken to the Supreme Court if the State, as a final adjudication of the question is desired by the authorities. Ten years ago one Thomas Dodson, a ne rro of Little Rock, and a white woman srocured a license and were duly mar -ied. They had always lived together is man and wife until their arrest recent y for unlawful cohabitation. Tbeir case s tbat of a great many couples in the State. Section 4,593 of tbe Arkansas Statutes says: "All marriages of white persons with negroes or mulattoes are leclared to be illlegal or void." This statute was passed in 183S, and was car -ied into all the digests until 1874, when it was left out by Judge Caldwell and jrnntt on tbe ground tbat it was in con lict with the Constitution of the State ind the 14th amendment to the Federal Constitution. In 1884 Judge Mansfield, n compiling tbe law, restored it. How Money Grows. At the birth of his son a father placed at interest 6 per cent, the sum jf $1,000, and each year invested all ihe interest at the same rate. When the boy was twenty-one years old he :ound himself the possessor of 53,399.56. Being a young man of pluck and energy and anxious to try bis hand in unaided competition, he told his father to keep the money and lie would take his chances with the poor boys of his acquaintance. When the son was 50 years old the Father notified him that his fortune had grown to over $18,420, using round numbers. At 70 the father sailed his son's attention to his for? tune of over ?59,000, and since the son had received the rewards of his iudustry he did not still take posses? sion of the fortune. The father soon after died, and in his will required his executors to keep the principal and interest loaned until the son should receive it or be removed by death. The latter lived to a good old age, and on his son's 100th birthday, besides the accumulations of a busy and pros? perous life, was incumbercd with a fortune of $339,300.?Kansas Farmer. ? The largest family in the world is said to be that of the King of Siam. He has 200 cooks in the royal kitchen, who devote themselves exclusively to preparing eatables for the king, his ninety wives, his seventy-two chil? dren, and his fifty brothers and? sisters, and 226 uncles and nephews, all of whom board with him, On the Chicago Flier. The Chicago flier is not driven by one but by many engineers, says a writer in McClnre's Magazine. In order to cover the 964 miles between New York and Chicago in twenty hours, including nine stops, there are required seven huge engines in re? lays, driven by seven grimy heroes. A run of less than one hundred and fifty miles is the limit per day for each en? gine, while three hours uf the plung? ing rush wears out the strongest en? gineer. Sixty, seventy, eighty miles an hour? what does that mean for the man at the throttle ? It means that the six and a half feet drivers turn five times every second and advance 100 feet. The engineer turns his head five seconds to look at the gua ges, and in that time the terrible iron creature, putting forth the strength of a thousand horses, may have shot past a red signal with its danger warning 500 feet away. Ten seconds, and 1,000 feet are left be? hind?one-fifth of a mile. "Who knows what horror may lie within that 1,000 feet! There may be death lurking round a curve, death spread? ing its arms in a tunnel, and the en? gineer must see and be responsible for everything. Not only must he note instantly all that is before him, the signals, switches, bridges, the passing trains and the condition of the rails, but he must act at the same moment, working throttle, air brakes or reversing the lever, not as quick as thought, but quicker, for there is no time to think. His muscles must do the right thing automatically under cir? cumstances where a second is an age. In the three hours of his vigil there are 10,800 seconds, during each one of which he must watch with mental alertness of an athlete springing for a flying trapeze from the roof of an am? phitheater, with the courageous self possession of a matador awaiting the deadly rush of a maddened bull; and far more depends the engineer's watching well, because if he fails by a hair's breadth in coolness or precision of judgment, there may come destruc? tion, not only to himself, but to hun? dreds of passengers, who, while he stands guard, are perhaps grumbling at the waiters in the dining car or telling funny stories in the smoker. "What would you do in a collision?" I asked. The engineer pushed back the little black skullcap from his iron-gray hair and said: "It is pretty hard to say what a man should do when he hears the whistle of danger ahead or sees that a crash is coming. Even the best of us are li? able to get confused at such a mo? ment. What would you do if you woke up in the night and found a burglar holding a pistol at your head? There are are no rules for such cases. What I would not do, though, is to reverse my engine, although many en? gineers are liable to lose their heads at a critical moment and make that mistake. It is a curious thing that reversing your engine suddenly when going at high speed makes the train go faster instead of slower. The rea? son is that the drivers slip and the lo? comotive shoots ahead as if she were on skates. The only thing to do is to put on the air brakes and pray hard." ?Scientific American. Randolph's Stormy Death. The last days of John Randolph, of Roanoke, are full of pathos. He thought he was dying for years before he did so, and when he was asked how he was' he would reply: "Dying! dying I dying !" He was tyrannical and dictatorial to the last, and he fought with his doctor on his death? bed over the pronunciation of certain words. His death occurred in a Phil? adelphia hotel. A few minutes before he died the doctor wanted to leave him, but Randolph objected and his slave took the key, locked the door and put the key in his pocket. With his last words Randolph declared that he wanted his slaves freed, and he kept the Doctor there as a witness of his dying declaration. A skeptic through life, he appreciated his condi? tion when on his death bed, and among his last words,was "remorse." He was lying perfectly quiet, with his eyes closed, when he suddenly roused up and screamed out in an agita? ted voice : "Remorse ! remorse ! re? morse I" He then cried out: "Let me see the word ! Get a dictionary ! Let me see the word !" There was no dic? tionary at hand, and he was told so. He exclaimed: "Writeit, then ! Let me see the word !" The doctor picked up one of his cards labeled "Randolph, of Roanoke." "Shall I write it on this?" "Yes; nothing more proper," was Randolph's reply. The word re? morse was written on it in pencil and handed to him. He looked at it a moment with greater intensity. "Write it on the back," he exclaimed. It was done and handed him again. He looked at it with his blazing eyes. "Remorse!" he said, "you can have no idea of it whatever: it has brought me to my present situation?but I have looked to Jesus Christ and I hope to obtain pardon." He then asked the doctor to draw a line under the word 'and told him him to keep the card. A short time after this his keen eye began to dull, his powerful mind gave way, and within two hours he died. A Cow For Sale. Some years ago in a very rural dis? trict, a farmer had a cow for sale. Now, as there was no weekly paper to advertise in, it was the custom of the vicar to give such notices out to his congregation on Sundays. So the fanner thought he would go to the vicar and get him to advertise the cow in church. "Yes," says the vicar, "but you don't come to my church.' And they struck the bargain that the vicar should advertise the cow, and the man in return should go to church. Now, unfortunately, the man was very deaf, and on the Sun? day following, when the vicar gave out the banns of marriage between Jo? seph So-and-So and Sarah So-and-So?? a rather unusual incident, for they seldom had a wedding; the farmer took it for granted that the vicar was giving out particulars of his cow, and shouted out: "You may as well say, while you are about it, that she is a most gentle creature, entirely free from vice, and a great eater." ? Japanese children are taught to write with both hands. * MENSTRUATION 5 with a woman of vigorous health passes < off in doe time without pain or dis \ comfort; but when she approaches this I crisis MONTHLY with a frail constitu 5 tion and feeble health she endangers \ both her physical and mental powers. BRADFIELD'S -* FEMALES REGULATOR < if taken a few days before the monthly 5 sickness sets in and continued untill 5 nature performs her functions, has no J equal as a SPECIFIC for Painful, Pro ? fuse, Scanty, Suppressed and Irregular I MENSTRUATION J Book to " WOMAN " mailed free. t BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.. Atlanta, Ga. t Sold hy all Druggiits. At the Stake. At 4 o'clock in the afternoon, the Pawnee scouts, who were riding half a mile ahead of the column, gave the signal to halt, and pretty soon word came back that they had struck the fresh trail of a war party. Two of the three of them disappeared among the foothills and were absent for an hour. When they returned it was to report that the war party had gone into camp four miles away and that the Indians had a white man with them as captive. From his dress they believed him to be a government scout, abd from cer? tain preparations bcingmade they felt certain that he was going*to be put to torture. There was 100 troopers of us, while the Indians numbered only forty, but they had gone into camp at the base of a mountain spur from which they could note the approach of anyone coming within a mile, except in the rear. If we showed in a body, they would mount and away before we were in rifle shot. It was finally decided that one of the Pawnees should conduct ten dismounted troopers over the mountain to approach the camp in the rear, while the main command was to move up as near as possible without discovery and be ready to dash at the camp when the signal was given. It was 6 o'clock before we reached the crest of the mountain. It was 7 before we found the ravine which the scout said would lead us right up to the In? dian camp. While we had only about a mile to go, it had to be traveled in darkness over a route which would have been perilous even in daylight and it was close on 9 o'clock when we finally reached the frincc of bushes growing at the mouth of the ravine. Right before us and not 100 feet away, was the Indian camp. There were three small fires burning, with a smell of roasting meat in the air, and from the movements o? the redskins we concluded they had just finished supper, late as was the hour. It was some little time before we made out the white man, as he was bound hand and foot and was lying at full length on the ground. Fresh fuel was thrown on the fires, and as the camp was light? ed up an Indian came forward and hacked down a sapling with his toma? hawk. While he cut and trimmed it he was within twenty-five feet of us. Had we not crept back when we saw him approaching he would have run right over the line. The stake was sharpened and driven into the earth at about the center of the camp, and while two or three Indians were engaged at that, four or five were collecting fuel. Fortunately for us they gathered it to our left, where a big tree had been uprooted by the wind. A cart load of dry limbs were conveyed to the stake and piled up, and then the feet of the captive were loosened, and two In? dians pulled him up. He was bare? headed, and the instant the flames showed us his face we recognized him as Charley Keats, the government scout attached to Fort Wallace. He had been captured at daylight that morning about thirty miles away. "White man cold?going to build fire for him?make him warm!" said the chief of the band as he pointed to the stake. "Waugh ! You are a pack of skulk? ing cowards," answered the scout as he drew himself. "Burn and be hanged ! I've got the scolplocks of six of your best men, and you won't be very much ahead of Charley Keats !" A dozen warriors ran up to him with raised tomahawks, but the chief shout? ed for them to hold on and ordered the prisoner to be led to the stake. A rawhide lariat which had been soak? ed in the spring, was then brought along, and after the scout had been stripped of his clothing he was made fast to the stake by the lariat being passed around his waist. He thus had thu freedom of his arms and legs, and the fuel was so arranged that it did not come within three feet of the stake. While they were thus prepar? ing him for torture, we saw him glance around as if he might have a faint hope or rescue, but presently despair came to his heart, and he turned to the chief and said: "You ace a squaw, and these people around you are children whom I could drive with a stick! There isn't a real warrior in your tribe. I have made the whole gang of you run like rab? bits!" There was a rush for him again, but the chief drove the warriors back, and standing with folded hands before the scout anwered: "We know you. You are a brave man. You speak truly when you say you have the scalps of several of our warriors. But you shall see how it will be with you when we prick you with knives?when we shoot powder into your flesh?when we thrust in these splinters and light them?when we cut off your ears and nose and tongue! After that we will sit down and listen to your cries!" "If you hear one yell from mc, you may tell every white man in this country that I was a baby," shouted the scoufc. "Go ahead with your picnic. A fellow can't die but once, and I've been prepared for this sort of death for the last five years!" There was a yell from every Indian as he ceased speaking, but the crowd parted right and left, and the chief drew his knife and stood surveying the captive. We got the word at this moment to open fire, and our ten car? bines and the scout's rifle rang out as one. We rose up with a cheer and fired again and again, but after the third volley there was no longer any? thing in sight to fire at. The Indian ponies, grazing a little distance away, dashed off in a drove, and every war? rior who could move, dashed at the side of the mountain and disappeared among the rocks and thickets. The command came galloping up, but there was no work for it. On thr; ground lay seven dead and two wound? ed Indians, with ten or twelve rifles and all their blankets scattered about. Seven of the eleven men had aimed at the chief in the first fire, and seven bullets had struck him. We turned to the scout as the fight was over, and he held out his hand and said : "Howdy, boys! Some of you cut this thing and let me get a drink of water at the spring I Sort of a close shave, and it has made me rather thirsty!"? M. Quad. The Port Royal Line. To-morrow the steamship Lockmore is expected to arrive here from Liver? pool. This is the initial vessel of the Port Royal Shipping Company, and opens up direct trade between this port and the markets of Europe. This is the beginning of a new era, and the arrival of this steamship marks the opening of an important epoch in the history of the South and Southwest. This is no trial experi? ment, but the commencement of a business which, the near future, will swell into lasting importance. All arrangements as to ( cargo have been made, and the Lochmore will have her cargo placed aboard speedily and will soon be on her way back with an assorted freight of American-ex? ports. Agencies arc being establish? ed at all the important points from which this line of steamers has reason to expect its freights, and in a little while we hope to see at least one steamer a week in port flying the flag of the Port Royal Steamship Compa? ny. The men who have this enter? prise-in-hand are not of ordinary abil? ity, but'are those who know what is tieeded and have already perfected ev 2ry measure necessary to make the line one that will pay the investors and enhance the importance of this port as the most admirable and only safe mart for a paying direct trade with all the maritime nations of the aarth. Success to the Lochmore and her,sister ships of the Port Royal Line.?Port Royal Post. ? "So you have got a wife," said Chaffer to a newly married man. "I don't know?I don't know," replied the man with evident hesitation. "Sometimes I think I've got her, and sometimes I think she's got me. You see, I've only been married a few months, and I can't tell just yet how the combination is going to turn out." jGood Blood is Essential* to HEALTH.? You cannot hopetobewellg if your BLOOD 15 impure. If you are troubled with& BOILS/ ULCERS or I PIMPLES, SORES .your blood is bad. A few bottles of S. S. S. wil [?thoroughly cleanse the system, remove all im {purities and build you up. All manner of blem ioshes are I CLEARED AWAY jfbyitsuse. It is the best blood remedy on earth.* iSThousands who haue used it say so. y 5 " My blood nu badly poisoned last year, which cot myG Jwhole system out of order?diseased and a constant sourcey iofsuflerlne no appetite, no enjoyment of life. Two bottlesy brought me right out. There U no betterv irliCfi^B^V remedy for blood rllseises. , * X EXSfl JOHN GAVIN, Diyton, Ohio- v (Treatise on blood and skin diseases mailed free.g I SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. 8 LAND FOR SALE. WE offer for sale at auction to the high? est bidder at Pelzer, S. C, on Tues? day, November 21st, 1893, at ono o'clock, the following Tracts of Land, situated about four miles from Pelzer, in William? ston Township, Andenion County, formal? ly belonging to John C. Rodgers, as follows: Tract No. 1, containing 475 acres, more or less. Tract No. 2, containing 413 acres, more or less. Tract No. 3, containing 56i acres, more or less. Tract No. 4, containing 59 8-10 acres, more or less. Tract No. 5, containing 59 8-10 acres, more or less. Plats of these lands can be- seen at our office. Terms?One-fourth cash, balance in one. two and three years, secured by bond and mortgage, with interest at eight per cent, payable annually. Purchaser to pay us for papers. Possession given immediately. CHICORA SAVINGS BANK. ELLISON A. SMYTH, Pres., Pelzer, S. C Sept 20, 1893_12_9 EXECUTORS' SALE. WE will offer for sale on November 16tb, 1893, at 12 m., the Laud be? longing to the Estate ol Thomas Cox, de? ceased. Said Land bas been divided into sixteen Lots, containing from one-balf to twenty-eight acres, situated between Williauiston and Pelzer, part of the Lots within five minutes' walk of the Pelzer Mills, and within one-half mile of the corporate limits of Williamston, and each front on the Public Eoad. Eight of the Lots have houses on them, which bring good rent. The plsce is well watered, nine of the Lots having running water on them, with several springs. Parties desiring to see the Land can call on John Ford on the premises, who will show Lots and plat, or J. A. Cox, one of the Executors, can be found on the premi? ses each Tuesday between the hours of 9 and 10 o'clock a. m. until day of sale. Sale on the premises Terms?One-half ca.-h. balance crejit of twelve months, at 8 per cent intereot. with mortgage to secure balance of purchase iiioney, with right to anticipato payment. Purchaser* to pay ex Ira for all nfca^sary papers. W. B. COX, J. A. COX, Execu tors. Oct 4,1893 14 6* Notice of Animal Meeting. Office of County Commissioners, Audersou, S. C, Oct. 2. 1893. ALL persons holding bills, accounts or demands of any kind, against the County of Anderson, not heretofore pre? sented, are hereby notified to file said de? mands with the Clerk of the Board of County Commissionera of Anderson Coun? ty, in the office of the said Co unty Com? missioners, on or before the first day of November, 1893, that the ."aid demands may be examined, approved and ordered paid out of the funds of the present fiscal year at their annual meeting to bn holden on Tuesday after the tirit Monday in No vember, 1893. and all demand:? not so pre? sented will be debarred piyuient out of said funds. F*. E. PARKER, Clim'n. B. T MARTIN. W. P. SNKLGKoVR BohhI Co. Com. A. C W. T. McGILL, Clerk, Oct 4, l?i>3 14 4 TAXNOT1CE. Office of County Treasurer, Anderson, S. C, Sept. 30,1893. NOTICE is heroby given that this office will be opened from October 15th to December 15th inclusive for the collec? tion of State, Count}', School and Poll Taxes for the fiscal year commencing Nov. 1st, 1892, and ending Oct. 31st, 1893. The rate of taxation is as follows to, wit: State Tax.5 5-10 mill. County Tax.3 " Special Road. 2-10 " Past Indebtedness Special.7-10 11 School.2 " Total.11 4-10 Those are deemed taxable Polls who at return timo were between the ages of 21 and 50 years. Taxes are payable in tl 3 j following funds and no other: Gold and Silver coin, United States Currency, National Bauk Notes and Coupons, which become payable during the yuar 1892, on the consolidated bonds of this State known as the Brown bonds, and the bonds of this State known as Bluo bonds, and any othor State bonds which may bo issued by the authoriiy of any Act of the General Assembly, the Coupons of which are by such Acts made receivable for Taxes. For the convenience of Taxpayers residing at distant points, I will visit the following named places on the days indi? cated below: Holland's Store, Wednesday, Nov. 1. Sberard's Store, Thursday, Nov. 2. Cooks Station, Friday, Nov. 3. R. B. A. Robinson's, Saturday, Nov. 4. Hopea Path, Monday, Nov. 6. Belton, Tuesday, Nov. 7. Williamston, Wednesday, Nov. 8. Pelzer, Thursday, Nov. 9. Piedmont, Friday, Nr?y. 10. Cedar Wreath, Saturday, Nov. 11. . Piercetown, Monday, Nov. 13. Slabtown, Tuesday, Nov. 14, from 8 a. m. to 12 m. Bishop's . Branch, Tuesday, Nov. 14, from 2 p. m. to 4 p. rn. Pendleton, Wednesday, Nov. 15. Townville, Thursday, Nov. Hi, from 8 a. rn. to 12 m. Gi W. Farmer's, Thursday, Nov. 10, from 1 p. m. to 3 p. in. While traveling oliico hours from 9 a. m. to 3 p. m , except when ono day is divided between two places, as indicated in the above program. Upon completing the circuit, as indicated, 1 will open the office ot Anderson Court House and col? lect until tho 15th of Dec., is $8, try my $3, $3.50, $4.00 or $5 Shoe. They fit equal to custom made and look and v/ear as well. If you wish io econombo In yourfootwear, do so by purchasing W. L, Douglas Shoes. Name and price stamped on the tottom, look for It when you buy W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Haio. Sold by. C. F. JONES Ac CO., ANDERSON, S. C. p. e McKenzie, sons & co., Piedmont, S. C. What is Life Assurance? An easy means of secur? ing your wife and family against want in the event of your death. A creditable means of se? curing a better financial standing in the business world. The most safe and profit? able means of investing your savings for use in after years. All Life Insurance is good. The Equitable Life is the best. For full particulars, address W. J. RODDEY, Manager, carolTnas, BOCfcMft&C for sale! VACANT Lot* on South Main and McDiilne Streets in quantities to suit t!ie piirrh^si". Also tli? House and Lot wher? I live is offered for sa'* at a bargain It contains three acres. I hIso offer for sali' at low* rate a fifty acre farm lour miles East of Anderson, near Eureka Church and school, r want to sell for the purpose of re-investing in the West. Call and see ne. 0. WARDLAW. Sept. 13, 1S93, 11 NOTICE FINAL SETTLEMENT, The undersigned, Executors of | Estate of Mrs. Nancy Yeargin, deceased, hereby give notice that they will, on the 24th day of October, l>-9.'!, apply to the Judge of Probate for Anderson County for a Final Settlement of said Estate, and a discharge from their office as Executors. T. J. DALRYMPLE. Ex'r. A. A. DALRYMPLE, Ex'x. Sept 27,1893 13 5 SUMMER SALE. BUY in July, August. September or October. "Pay when your cotton is turned into cash. Spot cash pp'ces i No interest! Just a little cash down and the balance next No? vember 15th. That's the proposition. That's our spe? cial summer sale. Pianos $25 cash and balance November 15th, 1893. Organs $10 cash and balance November 15th, 1893. Remember, lowest cash rates. No ad? vance- No interest. If you can't come iu, talk it over and just drop us a line. JOHN L. HAYNIE m 4 34 pm 5 55pm 7 25pm 10 15pm |:v...Clinton... arj ar Newberry lv jar Prosperity |v| ar Columbia lv !ar....Sumter....lv| ar Charleston lv: 1 Sflpra 12 43pm 12 29pm 11 I5.>tn 9 50am 7 15am t7 S?pm ar Darlii'don lv -f7 00am .1 !> 05am IIv WeMon ar .11 J.'.am ar Pnrfstn'th ar .111 30amfar Norfolk lv .jffi 15pm lv Norfolk (b) ar .1 7 00am!ar Baltimore lv . |047am ar Phlladel'talv .1 I 2upiu ar New York lv| j 5 55pm liv P i>m,ib(n)ar 5 loam ar '? hiladel'ia lv I S OOani.ar New York lv| 6 OOpnrlv P'tn'lh (w) arj 8 f> IlOamiar Wasliing'n lvl 7 00am I 00pm i t Dully except Sunday. (W Via Bav Lire, (n) Via New York, Phlladel plila nml Norfolk R. R. (w) Vis Norfolk an] Washington Steamboat Co. Trains Nos. 134 anc 117 run solid with Pullman Bullet s>epingcars be? tween Atlanta and Washington, and Pullixan Buf (let parlor cars between Washington and New York. Parlor car WeMon and Portsmouth : sleep? ing car Hamlet and Wilmington. Trains Nos. U and 41 carry through eoaehes between Atlanta and Charleston. S. C. Tickets at P R. & W. C. depot O. V. Smith, John C. Winder, Traffic Manager. Oneral Manager. H. W. B. Glover, DIv. Pass. Agt., Atlanta, Ga, Chas. J. Heard, b. P. A., Augusta, Ga.