The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, January 18, 1899, Page 6, Image 6

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BILL A RP: Arp to the Carmor--] Ho *\Yr<>ul<l hu A finn tn ('<i Not long ago a one horse tamu r ; from the back wends came to "or town ??ll) two hales d' colton ami sold it for Ci cents a pound. Thi^ was hits entire crop, ami liewa.?* complaining bitterly to "in "I our merchants ami Haul thal the f.irmer-i would polish lo death in another year if there wasn't $M:IH chance I": the helter. A m. chu von- drummer, stamlinc by, said; "Well, my friend, yoi must ijii'u raising cotton or else l.w. soon tuon kev s tn pick ?i out. Over in I nd i ?1 and Kisyp't they mak< the monkey.' po k their cotton md ih.it i- ivh.il s the mallei. A II ":.! . Aili pick a thousand p >uiid-- a d ty and he feed on the seed? Sn it hardly any thing over then1 lo raine cotton, and our farmers in Mis^is-ippi and Texas ? have sent over fora hundred thou sand monkeys, md they will hu over herc in time to pi k the next. crop and the price will L'O lower still, and il '?nu don't gel jon i monkey or two you had helier imit growing colton, | for you can't compete wit li monkey.-. ' The nhl man tool? it all in seriously and said : "Well, what i- . poor farm er to do it' lie hasn't gol thc money to ! buy the monkey ' ' ? "(?row something else, said the drummer. "t? row corn and wheat and i Horghum :*11? 1 potatoes. I'hitil apple I and peach trees, rai.se chickens and eggs, and ;i yearlit! calf or two to sell, j {Jet un sion and s?ir aronui lively and make every member of your fain ily work. W??tk ar simicthitig, for if you don't you will perish ?nit. <M? back home ami take a new start. i>on t Hit down and grumble and blame some body else with you; poverty. Quit cotton until you . sm buy half a do/en monkeys.' The man went buck home and cir I eulalcd thc monkey st-.ry, and for ten | miles around thc urn horse farmers have sworn ot! from raising any more | cotton. That s what they tell inc. ! They say that before the war the pool j man couldn i compete with the rich | man's niggers, and now sine, h< has I lost his nigger.*- he i< buy in monkeys lo take their places, ..tnt thc poor man won't have any chance at all. Of course there is no truth in this ' ?tory, but then! is a gund deal of 1 philosophy. New methods, now plows and new machinery are the niuo keys, and if thc poor farmer docs not work early and late ho will keep poor. I know sonic country women who make nore money on their thickens and eggs and butter than their husbands do on their cotton and wheat. Little things weil nursed cOUUt up more ibau big ones. Tho thrifty farmer always brings with him something to nell when he has to come to town. SOUK, fowls or eggs or potatoes or a shote or some fruit it: its sea-mu. There is a good hone market !'<?r all J these little things, lu fact, il' we leave ont cotton everything tin; farm- { er grows brings about the -ame obi I pri?es ?d' ten yen; s ago, ami everything ! he has to buv except coffee is much J cheaper now than ii was th m. livery - thing that i- mad? ??f cotton is Till per emt cheaper and everything made ol' iron Ol steel er tin is IOU per cent eheaper. Reef and pork ami chicken? aud turkeys and eggs and wood ami potatoes and apples and peaches have not come down a nickle in ten year-1. Labor is a little cheaper, not nundi. Wc still pay the same for cooking and washing and work in the garden. If anybody has a reason for unplaining ef hard times it is thc town people who have everything 40 buy. The farunT who is not in debt and owns his farm is better ?di than bc over was suiv* thc prudent router can pay rent j and mnk< money farm i nv'. Hut ol ? ?urie t!-. n a large class 1 of shiftless, unthrifty j copie who will : not succeed ?d anything, md they | hlame everyb dy I ? it.but themselves, j Coln- says that thc I. rd had i" make ' poor IOIK? t" kei p 11 -i t ?I?,. in money, 1 and so Coln' is . o:it< ut 11 being poor, j for it is the Lord's will I know folks I who have never planted a fruit tree j and who will not even plant a garden. Poverty makes some folks shifty and other.- indifferent and despairing. There is an old negro woman come* tu our house every Saturday and brings usa gallon of big hominy -old-fash ioned lye hominy, ami it is a luxury. Wc pay her 1;"? cents for it and she ' has seven other customers. One peck of c ?ra that costs her Kl couts makes foui peeks of hominy, for which she gets spl.iiO, and that makes her a good living. I read in the lani. Home and Farm about a .successful experiment ingrow ing ginseng, and if I was a farmer I would try it. This was in Kentucky, where a man planted it in a well shaded forest of beech and dogwood and gum trees, and it grew both from r.he seed and the roots thal he planted and gave him a good crop. Its market price is $1 a pound. T know that it could be grown in this mountainous X^giou, among the foothills. 1 know a good farmer who makes mopey grow Iii- M ust \H? Shifty ii I 'roMporoiiH* li.ltttl'.tXO/l. ing turnips fur their seeds and he sells all Iiis crop to I'oter Henderson, of Now York, and IVti r .-..lib it back ?<. UH at Illili per ..cut profit. Ariy smart, iiidustriou-, woman irould make m.limy r? 'lit here by growing roms ami liol lom v.- plants Our pimplo send "ll lois nt noun y t"r such t lillig inni soim. ..I th?:u an: no account when i lo-*. ..01 hen *>'iihod\ around II*TO luis . '.cr raised .to;, a - pa : .<-. i - I" SI ll. l.'Jl they buy n ?ti Ytlalita al '-'? cents a bunch and bring ;i homo, or they Kuy it iMtinnl from lin LT. i'<r it !?.*? cents. \ mau in Marmita TOWS it hy the .o r*? b-r the Atlanta mark-: and maker' bur money. Why not ...mw it herc? Shifty is tin right wort! we ni ust he shifty if we would keep up willi the progress of the times. Wit ami wis* j dum arc very noble qualities, but m i-cssity i- thc mother of iuTculinu and couti i vance. Wo mu.-t vet out of thc ? dd rm- ami learn of our northern brethren. New England girls sit around iii . tir-- every nicht and plait straw l >r hats ami bonnets and bas kets ami -hail bottoms, am! they have a L"CHJ litiic talking about their neigh bur.- and ncicliborhood news. Why shouldn't our virls learn photography and have a gallery in every town? lt is .i beautiful art and peculiarly titted for women -pretty young women who can talk their patrons into a pleasing expression ami ian pose thc little children and arrange the young man's necktie so nicely. If I was a poor, smart, pretty uirl and m> mau wanted me that I wanted, I would take sonic Ic.HsutlH in photography ami open a shop. I thought that the girls wore crowd i II-J tin* young men out of a good many places, for they are smart and ijiiie.k and don ' drink or -moke, and I am amazed ami indignant to read that 201) of them have been turned out of employment by a great railroad company in Chicago. 1 don't under stand that. 1 hopi Mr*, bowe will - investigate it. Uti.I Atti*. ---mm ~ Captain Smyth (?Iv?s Warning. Capt. Ellison A. Smyth, of I'cl/cr, was in Charleston last week and talked to a reporter for tho News and Courier of thc national labor commission, of which he is a member. Ile said : "Thc southern people should inter est themselves in this commission. Its liual recommendations will a fleet this part of thc country vitally. They can work much hann or put it on a fair ground of competition. The northern people do not understand southern conditions, I find. Senator Kyle, chairman of the commission, was most thoroughly surprised ??hen 1 explained that there were no tramps in the South, no dissatisfied classes, and that the people were working 'ti splendid harmony. Another feature of thc investigation, which 1 shall en deavor to force on the e.oaimission is thc Negro laboring clement. A ma jority of i he members of the commis sion have never been South and do not understand the cheap competition thc Negro oilers to white workmen. They have no idea of thc fact that he will lay brick cheaper build houses for much less, and that thc colored man is now knocking at thc doors ol' cotton mills asking for work at lower wages than white tuen * ould think of doing tho same labor. Northern peo ple do not understand why the south ern operatives can work longer hours for less money than their New Eng land brothers. They must bc brought South, so that they can see thc state ol' affairs for themselves. New Eng laud is working very hard to strip th?' S mth of it.- advantages iu cotton man ufacturing, which i- in reality the cause ol' the commission s creation, although it. is nominally a general in vestigating hoard. New England ? . not like t" see southern mill.- -oiling more goods in China Imli iami Africa than it is disp ?sing of in the -ame territories. "Times au much h o I tc i than this time a year agu ami ar?- getting bright er all thc while. Mmicy has become much freer since the capitalists have begun to believe that the financial question i* settled anti that's why 1 am lor expansion. With money plen tiful, we want ti? retain everything over which the Hag floats. There arc several millions of people iu thc Phil ippiues. and every one of them tu eds just about sixty yards of Pclzer cloth. I am not in favor of annexing these new possessions, but wc should act as; a kind of guardian for them and governJ them with the military.'' ! To The Public. Wo are authorized tognarantec every bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and if ?.ot satisfactory to refund the money to thc purchaser. There is no better medicine made for la grippe, colds and whooping cough. Price, 25 aud T)Uo per bottle. Trv ir. For sale hy Uill-Orr Drug Co. - Never let your curiosity get. thr better of your discretion. Atuiilahli* Ir-mili-. I In connection with thu .Sanitary In stitute a popular h' turi- was delivered \ hy I)r. Alexander Hill, tnastiT of How liing Coli?-, -, and Vice Chanceler nf Cambridge University, on "I In nat ural Death." lb; remarked that it wan m>t the dangers nf railway travel ing, nnr the f? w murders that occurred i which broilgnt down the average longevity of human life from 100 y cari te ?o years They must seek for umre subtle murderers than that. Kvery year '.'00.OHO biibies were burn in ling land and Wales If tin y took 1,000, 000 children, and saw what wa- likely j to \,< the .-nd nf them, they Would ; lind i hat :;O,00H died a \ ?nh nt. death I hy accident, about tin same number would succumb to the mysterious dis | easer- which Hi-j knew now to he ah ? noluicly preVeiitable, because due to I ti? rm-, fiji berni lost s in st: many forms I about 12.1,000 would di.- icm ? absolutely pre vi utah!'.- causes, such j a> small pox, un a^los and scarlet fever, : ?.ni;, Ki.nun would he allowed to live i ? nit their nat mal live-, and nearly one ! in twenty iniuht expect tu die I.?msc j the machine was worn out. One- : Miiart'-r of all diseases which destroyed . life were absolutely pri'ventablc. If! the practice of hygiene were only uti a i level with its theory thc average1 longevity would be raised a? once from , ."iii to ii.Y Tin- -.'reate:- number nf dis eases over which thc individual had control were due to mistakes in eating and drinking. Ile divided diseases into three classes, ami -aid they would never succeed in preventing them un til they had lin- co operation of the I public I'.very citizen should have ' thc -ame exact knowledge of thc ' causes and properties of preventable diseases thal the medical officer him 1 self ha<l Thc infectious nature of i consumption wa-hardly realized twen ty year-- ago. About one-third of the ! cow-, in the country were tub? reulous. 1 and half the in i. k distributed the ? baccillus ol' tuberculosis. They could i boil the milk ami be was no more! afraid of boiled bacillus than be was ol' a well cooked lion. The only nat ural form of death was the vernie fall- 1 ing asleep when the body was tired. Ao.oA.n T;""S. _. ? mm.-. j Hid you -Vi I (bink why thc j Psalms ol Ha.i l have collie, like I winced angels, down across all thc realms and age- why they make the : key-note of grateful piety in every Christian soul, wherever he lives?! Why? Hecausc they are so full of ? gratitude. "Oh. that men would! praise the Lord for his goodness and j for his wonderful works to the chil- ! dren of men." - The late William H. Suiallridge, of Glenville, W. Va., a veteran of the Civil war. carried a bullet in his heart for thirty-seven years. His death was not due to the presence of the bullet, and in fact he never suffered any in j convenience from it. Before his death j he asked his physician, in the interest of science, to make an autopsy in ol der t<? hud the bullet. The physician ! did so, and found it imbedded in the . In-art. - One of thc most peculiai freaks j that thc wind played recently wa.- on ? thc Presbyterian Church at New Mart- . ford. N. V. lt blew tin- steeple, j above the belfry, out of bluuib about twenty live degrees, sn that the .-pire pointed in a northwesterly direction, ami it was feared that it might fall. Men were put to work straightening it thc next morning, when thc wind veered around and blew it back almost in its original position. The men ir*- ? side made a lively run lo ?< l nut nf j thc place. - lt takes a strong man tn bold his j own thoughts so much in subjection j that they will not worry him._ Get a Sta Or And Save Endless 5uf- ? ferine which Winter Brings. rb, ni"-' idVonsivo -o: ali dis - i l |M|||I III"'.' illtoMSf! I- '"1)1(1 u. :,;!;>-r u|)|?rtmelu s li; fact, ti ir* 11 % \v!m hav? !>. "ii under troat II)' :ii fm* be.-4. and during tho -umtut r . ! ii; t b- ?lisoomforl front il;? disease, arc ni mo.-; persuaded! timi they have '.ri cured. Hut ; in ti rsi chilling; Idas! of winter! l?r- t\?s i hut t le? disenso is .-till with ! tin m, ami a.- iii?- wi nt or advances, j lb. ir Catarrh ??IMWS in severity. Tin ?so who have fmt only n slight M.mdi of Catarrh may bo sure that .inly -Jobi weather needed to de velop l in-disease. What appears j t?. be only a bad uold will provo1 moiv dimrvult: to cure than for * morly, and will tatum with moro frequency, until before bm>? Ibo j ilisf.is?"! :si fully developed. "Vor years i suffered from a severe ns.- (..* Catarrh, and took several kinds of medicines and used various local ap plication?, ten they hud no cficct what ever, i was imhicetl to try S. S. S. i Swift's Specific? and after two months 1 was perfectly well and have never felt nov effects of the discr.se since. "D. I*. .MCAM.ISTKK. . Hnrrodsburg, Ky." lt, is easy to seo the importation ot prompt treatment for Catarrh. All S?rth of Paragraphs. Two hoads aro hotter thau ODO except in a sermon. - If you want to learn humanity, j study a good woman. - The Bible offers no premium ?>n j laziness or improvidence. - Temptation is a bridge wc ero ?a almost befori wo come to it. - It is foolishness to try to reason about what we cannot know. - (iud never had an enemy who was too! the bitter foe #f man. - Sales of line American hors?-.- in Mexico now reach $100,000 annually - When the devil can't go to church himself he always scuds a hyp nci it.-. Six tenths of the population of Japan <1<I not earn inure than ?lO | er mon I h. S'atistics show that divorced men remarry tu a greater . xicut than di vorced women. Thc fool Rchlom thinks of what he says, and thc wisc niau rarely sa\s what he think The I'u i ted States troops keep ing order in Havana ap encamped in thc heart of the city. Mormon convert-, in Pleasant Hill, Ky., carry shotguns to protect themselves from whitecaps. . ?enera! Wheeler ascribe- his hardihood to regular hours. Ile ?.oes to bed at ten and rises at 7 !10 in the morning. According to statistics, women to-day arc two inches taller, on an average, than they were 20 or thirtj yeal s agc -- In Italy, five centuries ugo. every person that wore -hoes were obliged to pay thc State a lax for thc priv i lego. - In Hungary it is the custom foi the irroom t" give the bride a kiel after the wedding ceremony to makt her feel her subjection. -- Some alarm prevails among Am ericans nt Havana, owing to the sprout of contagcotis diseases. Three death: from Asiatic cholera are reported. - President McKinley has receive? numerous assurances from both ile publican and Democratic senators tba thc treaty ??f p>':i< o with Spain will b rat i ii ed. (tue thou.-aml Cuban- have bec selected for duty <m the police force i Havana by (Jcneral Ludlow. Adc tcclive bureau i< also being organize there. - Thc War Department's publishc summary of army stations, just issue for the first time includes Havana as regular post, showing about 12,(10 troops there. - lt is believed in Washington th: secret enemies are endeavoring t foment trouble between the Ignite States and the people nf the Philt] j pine.- and Cuba. i - Thc authorities at. WashiugU arc confident that General Otis, wit j 20,000 soldiers and Dewey's ships, ci ? cope with any emergency that tn: arise in thc Philippines. - A- the licet uf Spanish uutiboa and transports carrying the Spani: : otlicials left the harbor of Havana ? t evacuation day, crowds of Spauiari gathere?l along tue shore and wept. lt is stated that Admiral Dew* j consider- it necessary that a lirst-cla statesman he sent to Manila to thc I onghly investigate thc situation ai ascertain the wishes of thc nati j population. --A church society social at Ca j bon. Me., fixed tim price of admissi I to a chicken pic supper, given on Ni I Year s. at 1 cent for each inch of wai measure ?d'thc person applying foi seal at the tabb-. How much better is th<- tuan w j will rob in trade than the one who w .]u it, at the muy/le of :. p'sud? irt i Catarrh ?Those wini trot a -tnrt on the di ?.ase bol\>re the cold and distict'' jab!.- weather aggravates ii. ? i timi u euro less difficult. Catar : increases in severity year by yon ?:ind becomes oin'?d' tho most o s;imite and deep-seated troubh But it is equally important, th ?tho right remedy be given. hioal applications of spray washes, inhalations, etc., e: jiov-r ?Mire Catarrh, i'?>r they ^^JJJ. not reach tho d Vj^^^^>^Lf|? reach theirritat ^Mj?M?ftSifek surface; the ri? E^SmWL^^mmWS rcm#dy must taken internally. Swift's Specific (S. S. S.) is t right remedy for Catarrh, euros t he most obstinate cases going direct to the cause of 1 I trouble-the blood-and forei j out the disease. Those who lu j met with so much disappointmi i from local treatment should thr inside their sprays, washes and haling mixtures and take S. S. A cure will result. Send for f books. Address Swift Spec OompanVj Atlanta, Georgia. /--? CHICAGO'S WATERWAY. rh?' Snmllffit Hhrr Duluu the Ur> Kril UiinlncNM In Hie World. Tho (-mull.-si and busiest river in the world. Whore do you think it ?H? Theo doro Dreiser locates it in Chicago, und hu? th IM to nay uhout it: The first pecul iarity of thin little stream ?H that it ie the smaller river doing the largest busi ness in the world, or, in other words, Ihe busiest river in tho world. In the next place, it hus tho greatest depth for the narrowest width ot' any known riv er. In the third place, it has tho largest number of bridges spanning it of any river of equal or greater length, barring the .Mississippi-or a total of <VJ bridges. All these uro draw ?ir swingiug bridgen ar?d carry a traffic of their own over head almost as important as I hut which passes: below. N'erfit, this river has little or no current to speak of, and Hows up ward instead of down lt is the only known tiver wkoso current has I.u turned round ?md made, as it were, to How the other way Lastly, it is a sort of ail orj han river, for, whereas all rivers and harbors uro owned and eared fur by the Unilcd .States govi'itmeut, the heeretary ol war, whose provine?! ir, is to caro for these things, will havo untiling to do with it, and Chicago rc* pairs it only sufficient for its now needs, hut lays no claim to the right of way lu this strange predicament tho li t tl o Kt ".'am Hows wretchedly backward, loaded with tho largest ami most valua ble cul lection of vessels that ever crowd? ed au inland sea It is nun tumultuous highway, far moro exciting than Broad way and somewhat less charming than tho Hudson. 'Lim city uses it as au emptying place fur its sewers and tho Kt root (deaning department, as a dump ing ground for its waste, and yel it is the most valuable factor in tho lifo of (Jhiciigo, nod the ono moro than all dsn that has made the city what it is today No other river in tho wide world pos sesses or pretends to tho appearance of this peculiar stream. lu its busiest hours it is a sight for gods and ineu. A mem creek, ir, struggles with the burden of an ocean. Tho great deep ?Irait pro lid lors tear tho water into splattering fragments. Their huge sta?k?; often hido tho entire stream from view with ?.rent clouds of smoko. Tho ingoing and out going vcssols quarrel for thu right of way with all tho vehemence inherent in gongs and whistles. Tug pilots han dle their craft with a skill that would put to shame the manners of tho heavy H amsters in a crowded New York lane. The longest branch of the river today is muru than ten miles in length, aud tho total length of all branches is IC At its mouth it is un moro than 200 feet wide, and tue fact thal, it is tho saino width a mile or two up stream is duo to the fact thai it was made so hy excava tion and dredging. At one timo ( 1SG?^ it was 200 feet wide ut Lake street, l?? feet wide at Randolph, a block further on; 105 t'eut ut Washington, 17.r. feet nt Madison-nil these hut smglo blocks a j . 11-aud so ?ni untii it became su small as to be nnuavigablo hy boats drawing ten feet of water, lu that year, however, it was dredged and made a uniform width of 200 feet in tho south branch, and it is kept that, width by tho walls of tho immeuKC buildings which have now* encroached to tho very water's edge, and which in most cases form tho only banks visible. It is interesting to note tho peculiar-' itiesof this poor little stream. Nowhere along its shores within the groat city limits is tbero a foot of nnoccupied ground where a> tree may find root. No branch or blade of greou graces its shores. No bountiful springs rise from point to point and feed it. Its tribu taries nm dark, stone arched sowers which empty thoir subterranean black ness tuto it in continuous stream. Its banks aro for tho most part sheer walls of red brick. Where an open space oc curs railroad tracks skirt tho water's edge so closely us to stir a fear for the safety of tho cars which lino them. Lumber yards make up other portions, aud groups of belching smokestacks, sooty black, rise in forestliko numbers at regular iutcrvals. No einglo space but has some, wharf or freight shed, factory or warehouse fillir.g up the last available inch, stockyards, lumber yards, railroad yards, stoneyard*, coal yards-theso interspersed with docks, elevators, manufactories mid broworiea make its banks interesting, if not beau tiful.-Metropolitan. When MlnilN Are Frlghtest. Swift was 00 when his brain 'gavu birth to "Gulliver's Travels." Sir Waker Scott was 44 when his "Waverley" mado its appearance, and nearly all those stories which have con ferred lasting fame upon him wero com posed after tho ago of 46. Milton's mind roso to its highest ca pacity when the blind poet was between 51 and 59. It was at this period of his existence whoa he offered to tho world "Paradise Lost. " Cowper had turned thu half century ' when he wrote "Tho Task" and "John Gilpin," and De Fen was within two years ot GU when In. published 4 * Robin - son CruFoe. " Thomas Hood'?. "Tho Hong of thu I Shirt" and "Thu Eridge of Sinks" were ' written when be was -50. Longfellow wrote "Hiawatha' at 4S, and oliver Wendell Holmes gave us "Songs In Many Keys" when ho bad passed his fi?ty-?i?b birthday Georgo Eliot was near her fiftieth year when sho wroto "Middlemaroh, " and this WUH succeeded hy "Daniel Do rmido. " Bacon's greatest work took ?9 year? to maturo and Grete's "History of Greece" some yoars longer Mean neu? IVrnon Iflrtl. "Did I understand you to say that dress you admired eo much today was a dream':" inquired Mr. Sm okeh art. '.Ves," answered bis wife hopefully. "Well," ho proceeded very kindly, "yon keep your mind on it when yon go to sleep tonight, and maybe you will dream one of your own *' -Washington Star. T. B. Rice, a prominent druggist of Greensboro, Ga., writes as follows: "I have handled Dr. Pitts' Carmina tive for eight years, and have never known of a single instance where it failed to give perfect satisfaction. Par ties who once use it always make per manent customers. \Yre sell more of this article than all the other Carmina tives, soothing syrups and colic, drops combined.'' For teethin?; children it has no equal. SOMETHING KW I :.'i<- i rack act' of thi? worM'a l>r?*. <'Jean?cr .^.^?T''' ^^^^^?^^^*^o^f7^f^4 ^ li ?mkH. still ?r?':iHT'H'ini4i.ii> ni i IHJUIUI *vN??sc> ? WSS?'nl?l??S Vit %S^'^Xt ' ja-'ka^l'. AH ,;rooTH. Mu.lv MI,ly ly flfl?3&lluP B UlI?iG?.!j TIIK N. It. FAIRBANK COMPANY, V-> ^*-V{ .'lil' :ii>>, si. IstUit*. New Vor!;. Beeton. l'liilivlvliilJia. I Experts disagree on almost everything, but when the subject touches upon the great Superiority of. THE CHEAT SYRACUSE TURN PLOW Th*-re is but one opinion, and that ?B that it is the best Plow on earth. Syiacuso Plows are designed right, made right, .sold right. They will turn land whore others have tailed, and build fur themselves :i demand wherever introduced. The pojj .jlarity ol' thia Plow comes from genuine merit. Competitors will tell you that they have something just as good, but don't be deceived-there is but one best, and that is the SYRACUSE We also sell the SYRACUSE HARROWS, And Syracuse Harrows, like Syracuse Plows, are thoroughly Up-to-Date. See us ht fore buying. Yours truly. BROCK BROS. - There aro plenty ol' people iu the world who practically grumble because they can't find something to grumble about. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Condensed Schedule ia Kfifoot Oat. 16, 1898. STATIONS. Lv. Charleston^. Lv. ('olunit)ia.... " Prosperity.. Nev? Mr ry.., Ninety-ttfx.. 1 Greenwood. Ar. Hodges. Ar.AhbeviUe... A r^Bclton....... Ar. Anderson ... Ar. Greenville^ Ar. Atlanta.. .. Ex. Bun. No. 17. 0 10 a a 0 26 a m 7 22 a m 7 40 a m S 00 a tn ? 40 o in 8 50 n in O 85 a 10 10 a 3 55 pm' STATIONS. Lv. ?reenvil!?..... " Piedmont ... " Williamston. Ev. Anderson ? Lv. Belton . Ar. Donnalds. ? . i )v.~AbbeviHo...". Lv. Hodges.. u Gr?enw? ni. .* Ninety-bo:.. " Newberry... Ar. Prosperity... "_Columbia ... Ar. Charlgaton.. Cii?yl?ailyf Bx. Kan. No. 18. 6 HO p m ft 00 p m 0 23 p ir 4 45 p m ft 45 p m 7_15jp ft 10 p m 7 85 p U 00 p m 8 18 p tn ?J 15 p m 0 80 p ID Daily No. ll. 7 80 m m 11 05 a m 12 10 n'n 12 25 p m 1 20 p m 1 55 p m 2 lt pm 2 46 p m B 10 pm 3 85 p n: 4 15 p 5 SO p m Daily No. 12. 10 16 a m 10 40 a m 10 55 a m lt) 45 a m 11 15 a ui ll 40 a in l l 20 a m 11 55 a m 12 40 p m 12 56 p m 2 00 p m 8 14 p rn 3 80 p m ft 40 p m Daily I Daily STATION? ?Daily Dally No. fllNo.tt) STATION. |yo fl "630p 7J0a Lv... .Charleston... - Ar g40p ll 00a 880a ll 80a Colt m ria." 820p 080p ?G7al213p ".Alston.LT 280p 860a 10 04a 123p ".Hantuo." 1 28p 7 48p 10?U? 2U0p *'.Union." 106p 7 80p 10 8?a 2 S2p .lonesvills..." 12 25p 0 B3p 10 54a 237p ".Pacolet." 12 Up 6?2p 1125a 3 lop Ar Spartanbarg.. .Lv ll 45a 615p 1140a 340p.Lv .. Spar tanbury.. .Ar ll 22a 600p 3 700p'Ai- Asheville.LT 8 80a 8Bop "P," p. m. "A," a. m. Pullman palace Bleeping cars on Trains SQ and 86.37 and 38, on A. and CT division. Trains leave Mpartanburg, A.?O. divielon, northbound. 6:37 a. m., 8:87 p.m., 6:10 p.m., JVestib?ls limited); southbound 12:80 a. m., :16 p. m., ll :34 a. m., (Vest?bulo Limited.) Trains leave Greenville, A. and O. division, northbound,5:15 a. sn., 8:84 p. m. and 5:22 p. m., (Vestibuled Limited) ?jpout abound. 1:25 a. m., 4:80 p. nv, 12:80 p. m. (Vestibuled Limited). Trains 9 and 10 carry elegant Pullman sleeping care between Columbia and Asheville, ? uro ute dall? ??tween Jacksonville and Cinda natl. FRANK 8. GANNON. J. M.GULP, Third V P. & ?tm. Mgr.. Traffic Hp., Washington. I) i\ Washington, T>. C. W. A. TURK. S. H. HARDWICK. ?on. Pass. A?t. As't Gen. Pass. Ag's. Washington, D. C. Atlanta. Qa, \ BLUE RIDGF "?".RO.ID ll f HEATTIE llecoivci Tim.-Tabb ?K(lettivi? >i Ht>r.wei<o Anderson an<! Walhalla. NV iisTRor* i, K.\sTiv?t;Mi. No. 12 STATIONS No. ll. I Kirsr. Class, First Claas, Daily. Dnllv. : P. M.-L*aw Arrive A M. s 3 35.Anderson.ll 00 : f 3.50.Denver.10 10 : f 1 05.Antun.10 31 ? B 4.14.Pendleton.10.22 f 4 2:1. .Cherry's Crossing.10.13 f 4.20.Adara'? Crossing.10.07 H 4 47.Seneca.,.9.40 a 5 11.West Union -.??.?......0.25 R 5.17 Ar.Walhalla.Lv 9.20 1 No. ti, Mixed, No. ?, Mixed. Daily, Except Daily, Except Snndav Sunday. KAHTBOCNO. WESTtlOtlNt). I P. M .-Arrive ' <tJa*vat~T: M. e b.'.tt.AnfloTHOi;.......... .ll IO f 5 55.1. Denver..11.38 f 5.43.Anton....."..1150 s 5 31.Pendleton.12 02 f ?19.Cherry's Crossing.1214 f 5 ll.Adams' Crossing.12.22 a 4.47 I .Seneca. ( 12 46 a 4 io ;.Seneca.f 145 s 3 38.f.West Union. 2 09 I 8_3_30. Walhalla.. 2.19 i (a) lt? . nlar station ; (f) Flag station I Will also stop at the following Brations [to taboon or let off passengers : Phln i nev*, .lames' and Sandy Springs. ! No V? connects with Soutlinrn KnV way i No 12 at Anderson. 1 No. 0 connects with Southern Hallway No*. 12, 37 and S3 at Seneca. J. ll. AN DE US itf ?apr ^CT?Br DOUBLE DAILY t> SERVICE MEW OR I b* M AND SEW YORK, BOSTON RICHMOND. WASHINGTON, NORFOLK PORTSMOUTH. TM:HED?LK IN EFFECT jyjfo ITW'" _ ?SO?THBO?WL? . No. 405". " ~???. BS fV DW?? ???',Ti* 1>4;N? K- R-*M 00um ?9 OOwH LT Philadelphia. ? l 12 pm ??fl? uB f-v wwhlogton, ? 4 40 pm ta?H I.v Richmond, A, C. L.g sp pm JOSEM Lv Norfolk. via 8. A. L.~ '"30pm~??ffl LV woido?, ~ ...??..?1! sspm??iriaH Ar IIoDileraon,_? .^ 50 a in '1 jj^B l?v Durham,_" .t7 Wpm ?OH JJ Ar Raleigh, ?Iat?. A. I,..-2'ir,am- <310)2 Ar sibford. ? - ;{ g., !Un :<a^B ArKoutboro Vinos .. . 1 23aro :,&f?? Ar Hamlet,. s 07 au? ?fcM ArWndesboro. ?. . S fi? aw ? IH Arv??.nr?e'. .- **???' AT miinington ?12 4i>4H Ar Charlotte,_"~~7~.".7.'..~"*7 am~!~0 ?afflj ! ArChestor, ~* " -?a 03 am ~1Q Mffij ^^ohupliia, C. N. A L. li, R._."{ti OOjH Ar Clinton S. A. L. "...".~~u"l5 am ;F2 i?99 Ar Greenwood . " ,".", JO a? ara mi? Ar Abbeville,. ii 03 am i ?qj?g Ar Lb orton,._12 07 pm -Ml 4M Ar Athens, " .... 113 pm lOtgj' Ar Winder, .. . 1 ?6 pm l!M Ar Atlanta, g A. L. (Con.Time) 2 50 pm ? _._.~ NORTHBOUND. IIB! No. 4f)? No'.TflK ?y ?J.!*nta?..4. T"tC""- Time) '12 00 n*n '79m%m Lv Winder, .? . 2 40 pin 10 ?WmW Lv Athena, . :i jg pm 11 ?jjf Lv Liberton, . 115 pm r;?lH Lv AbbovllJ.j, . ,115 pm I .??W Lr Greenwood. " . ? 41 pm J? Ht Lv Clinton._ ......... t; 30 pm_-JJjj^ A?Cohimhia,C.N. A L. BL R... ' jjjj^Bj Lv Chester,_s. A.L .~Z?~*VJ pia jjjK Av harlotto.~' '~~~.T. ~'??0~25 pm -'7 yiMfc Lv Mon roo, ?~ _.". 9 40 pm TwsS LT Hamlet,_.' .n 15jun JiMlJH. Ar Wilmington ~ . IJ B^Kf LY Southern Pino*. ,r ^7T..." 12 00 au ~9 Wffla T.v Ua!.!lf;h, .?-2 1?nm JUiflfO ArHonderaoti . u 50M?. I.v HcnJoTson :i29au) ! ^?BL, Ar Barham, *r . ......... ii > J MI fl ''B?T; Lv Durham . fr, 20 pm ?lOJI^B?l Ar Weldon, "~..""M"? ?tn . ^ fifr8 Ar Richmond A. CL. il I? am " ??Bfj Ar Wnsnington. Vnnn. IL It. 12 lil pm ll V, Ar Baltimore, . I ir, pm 1 ^HH Ar Philadelphia. .loOpm ?< :*mm\a Ar Now York, . >r, 2:; ?ni 'r,^Bff Ar Vortamoutk ~?7L.7..".'...~ 7 25 iui "? -^BBL Ar Norfolk .. ?7 3.1 am ''JW10 ^J?jy. tDally, Ex. Sunday. ' i Bai ly K^MM^j Nos. 403 and 402 .^l?T'?lIan?a ?pedal.' ^LV0? Vestibuled Train, ol' Pullman Sleopi is au'10??*! ?:a bciwetn Washington nnd AI.UI?. \ slj"BHn man Sleepers hetwoen PorUraonlli ;tn.l C)itrf^W?i |BQ Nos. il aud 38, "The .S. A. \> l?.tpr<-*?."|M7? Train, Coaches and Pullman Sleepers t'1*T, Portsmouth and Atlanta. EgSlU For Pickets, Slcenora. otc., applv to Him B. A. Nowknd, Gen'l. Accnl Pass BeP1 - mW " Wm. B. Cl-.j?ii^, T.P. A., ? l.'laiNsll *?ttt Atlanta, Qa. Haci E. Ht John, ViccProaldent and ?'?n'! M"BBJ>i V. L.McBoa General RuperlntenJcm Mgit, U. W. B. Glovor, Trafflo Manager. . L ti. Allen. Gen'l. Pa&stin?>r Agoni Qeiwml gggggf PortMmonth. V?. ATLANTIC COAST Ufj> WILMINGTON. N. C., Nov.^,?jim Faut Line Botwoon Charleston an<Ui,;.; ambteand Uppor South Carolins,>M, ,1. Carolina. I ? " CONDOE?SaD MOHKDULB. ai OOINOVi'BSX. rtOlS?>?tb ?No. 60, _ **Jm\y, I y> ru. Lr...,Charle?t?n.rr.".?7,Ar ^Bfc a? 8 S I am Lv._I.anot.^^Ar ?^BR, N 0 40 a.n LT.Somier...'.Ar )xF ? 1100 pm Ar.-^...Coluiubla.....^.^ ?Br \?( 12 07 pm Ar.Prosperity.I* '.Ht?. 12 20pm Ar.".KeXtry.^ '%W** 103pm Ar.-. CIinU,n.h? I Mlle 125pm Ar.Laurens.Lv 8 00pm Ar.-Greenville.-t?v 3 10 pm Ar.^partanburc.?.? ? 007pm Ar.Wlanaboro. s!C.M ' ?"te S 15 pm Ar.Charlotte, N. C.L? ?? W ? 03 pm Ar...llondcr6onvlllo. N. C-b? MF M 7 00 pm Ar...Aabcville, N. C.iBd?i? >Da?lT. ~ " " M '? Noa. 62 and SS Solid Trains between o?<? coi ?TidColambia.S.C. ..flihitii ll. M. j'ii^'^'M ?toa'l. PaMeo^r.i?.0211 ^ J.B.KB?XET.C^^'^TH?eti p-* ^<?ii,fnit'(i4??*' i