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FORGOTTEN. . _ Green v il I c Ne ivs. Here is a grave in almost any large cemetery. The mound that once rose above it has sunk to the level of the surrounding grouud or become a de pression. "Wild onions and coarse grasses grow upon it. In the winter the dead leaves and pine needles drift upon it. When we ask who is buried there, nobody knows. Tt may be man or woman or child. Whoever it is, is'forgotten. Even where there is better care and a headstone or even a monument bearing the name, the case is the same after two or three score years, for the name means nothing but a name. There is no living memory connected with it; and after a few score more years the stone crumbles and the inscriptions disappear and the famous and rich lying there wait ing are like the humbled brother or sister beneath the unmarked place in Potter's field or the poor corner of the burial place-forgotten. We do not even wait for death. A little absence does the same work. Men come and go and are lost from our lives and memories as they would be if they were in unknown graves in distant cemeteries-men we knew and liked or disliked and who were parts of our daily lives, whose faces and forms and names were as familiar to us as our own. Some trick of memory, some ac cidents recalls them to us. Perhaps in that mysterious, wonderful life we know while we are sleeping and our minds are free and at fantastic play in the mighty realm of the unreal, these men of the long ago-fifteen or twenty or thirty years-are suddenly. with us again and we are involved with them in some curious experience. We struggle with our memories to bring them back clearly, and vaguely wonder that we have forgotten. If we occupy a leisure hour in going back through our lives we are surprised by the scores of men who come to us from oblivion whom we knew well. In this country of ours it is especially notable. Here in Greenville a man who went away thirty, or even twenty, years ago would find now strange faces everywhere, strange names on the - signs over the doors. He would learn that he had been forgotten and would, as memories returned to him one by one, wonder at the number of people he had forgotten; and when he found somebody who remembered him and undertook to go overbold times" man after man, family after family would be recalled who had been forgotten, who had gone away and of whom all trace had been lost. In the cemetcr- j ies here there are the graves of many j dead whose people are hundreds or j thousands of miles away, who are | forgotten in the community in which .they lived, who have forgotten it, ' except vaguely, or when their hearts come back to the neglected graves. For we who are here as we forget are forgotten. We are to those we once knew as they are to us; and we shall be after some little time to the world of living men as are the dead in ? the forsaken graves to us. In many parts of the world there are persons to whom we are recalled by accident or a vagary of the dream life-by an old book with a name in it or a faded pic ture found in some out-of-the-way place or something of like kind. They, too, struggle to recall us and do it gradually and vaguely, and indiffer ently speculate as to whether we are living or dead, here or elsewhere, do ing well or ill, just as we do of them. None of us may flatter ourselves that we will be very long remembered. Of each , generation of the human race millions die and are forgotten within tee or fifteen years. A few are re membered a little longer; a score or so, a century, perhaps; maybe one will leave a name which will live fresh in men's minds always; but the man himself will be forgotten. Only what he did and was will be remembered. While men live their names will give importance to what they do; when they are dead their names are made important by what they have done. . So it is the universal lot to he for gotten and oniy what we do can HT e. It will live, even when we would earn estly hope to have it die. What we do and say is from our souls and .shares the soul's immortality. The good or evil influence of those we have forgotten remains with us, often bend ing our lives this way or that, and so our influence with thosewho have for gotten us; and the results are passed on from life to life, from generation to generation. A good or a bad impulse or purpose one of us put twenty years ago into the heart of a man we have forgotten and who has forgotten us may be living and bearing good or evil fruit thousands of miles away-and among thousands of men we have never known or thought of us. The first germ of a plague was born eeo turies ago in one man who spread it to another and thus infected nations and left a heritage of misery for un numbered generations. The plague germ completes its work here. What we put into ? human heart and life will never end, for its work for good or ill will continue into the vast and j endless life that stretches beyond ! death. The knowledge that we must j be forgotten is saddening, the knowl- j ! edge that what we do and say must live and may not be forgotten is ter rifying. The meaning of it all is plain. It is the old, old lesson that the highest purpose of life is preparation for death and oblivion so that we muy leave be hind us years filled with good which will live after us and. in thc immcas ureable future, with us. "We must bc forgotten. We must pass out of thc lives of those who know us. Most of us must sooner or later lie in graves of which none living will remember the occupants. We may so order it that while the dead leaves of winter time drift and rustly above us some of those who come and go unheeding about our resting places or some far away may unconsciously carry with them some part of some good we have done or spoken. All in thc hearts of those who know and will remember us whether separated by time or distance or death we may store memories of tenderness and kindness, of love and gratitude and beauty which will abide after us, which will honor our graves more than the loftiest mon ument. The flowers that loving hands place above us will fade to dust; the rose bushes planted there will drop their petals softly in annual tribute and token to death and will presently die; but we may leave mem ories in human hearts which will be beautiful when the flowers are gone and the roses withered; and we may so live and do and speak that our lives will never die and the work of them will be living and splendid when man and the graves he fills and the world he knows have vanished together. Propese a Memorial Arch at Chicka maugn. WASHINGTON, Dec. 4.-Representa tive Grosvenor, of Ohio, to-day intro duced the following bill for the erec tion of a memorial arch on the Chick amauga battlefield: Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Uni ted States of America in Congress as sembled, that as the crowning work of tl * establishment of the Chickamauga a> I Chattanooga National Military pa k, which embraces seven battle fit ls upon which served three great armies and large forces representing all the other main armies of the North and the South, the Secretary of War is hereby authorized and directed to erect at Chattanooga, Tenn., under the provision of the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Park commis sion and their engineer, upon such site as the said Secretary may deem most suitable, a memorial arch to be known as the arch of Nationality, to commemorate the heroism of the Amer ican soldier and the complete Union which has resulted from the joint military service of all sections in the war with Spain. The several dimen sions of thc arch shall not be less than those of the Arch de Triomphe in Paris and its main portions shall be constructed of massive blocks of gran ite. Section 2. The design for thc arch shall be procured by a commission consisting of the Secretary of War, the chief engineers, the chairman of the military committees of the two Houses of Congress and the Chicka mauga and Chattanooga National Park commission and their engineer in such manner as the commission may determine, and the erection of the arch shall proceed under the supervis ion of the park commission, directed by the Secretary of War. Sec. 3. Upon the inner walls, sup porting the arches, ways and the walis of the inuer chambers, among other appropriate historical records, shall be affixed bronze tablets with complete rosters of all thc armies operating in and around the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National park, designat ing these on the organizations of each State, together with a roster of the governors and the State commissions of the 2G States which have assisted in determining the lines of battle and in erecting the monuments of their States and in the general work of es tablishing the park. Sec. i. To enable the Secretary of War to carry forward this work, after the adoption of the designs, the [sum of $300,000 is hereby appropriated out of any moneys in thc treasury not otherwise appropriated and the limit of the cost of the arch is fixed at that sum, including the cost of the site. Are Yo? Troubled? and do you Want Your Troubles to Fly Away ? You have suffered worlds of trouble, anxiety and pain, and you hardly know what ails you. Sometime your business goes wrong, and for a long time you have been feeling physically very badly. Don't know what is the matter? Of course you don't else you would get some medicine. Thc trouble is with your stomach and liver. Ty uer's Dyspepsia Remedy will do a vast amount of good in helping this trouble if you will use it. Price f)l) cents per bottle. For sale by all druggists. -The man who can make other people put up with his eccentricities is called a'philosopher. "I was nearly dead with dyspepsia, tried doctors, visited mineral springs, and grew worse. I used Kodol Dys pepsia Cure. That cured me." It digests what you eat. Cures indiges tion, sour stomach, heartburn and all forms of dyspepsia. Evans Pharmacy. Playing Doctor. Children aro quick imitation, and have a talent for inaking up games in which they cloverly burlesque their elders. One day two bright little children were found playing "doctor." The youngest child was patient, with hoad wrapped in a towel, and thc older, thc physician, with a silk hat aud cane. The motlier, unseen by the little ones, listened at thc door way. "I feel awful bad," said the patient. "We'll fix all that," said the doctor, briskly. '"Lemme see your tongue.'' "Hum! Hum! Coated!" said the doctor, looking very grave indeed. Then, without a word of warning, thc skilled physician hauled o?r and gave the patient a smart slap in the region of the ribs. "Ouch!" cried thc sufferer. "Feel any pain there?" inquired the doctor. "Ves," said the patient, "t thought so," said the healer. "How's the other side?" "It's all right," said the patient, edging away. Thereupon the doctor produced small bottle filled with what looked like either bread or mud pills, and placed it on the table. "Take one of these pellets," the physician sa:d, "dissolved in water, every 17 minutes-al-ter-mit-ly." "How long mus' I take 'em"?'' groaned the patient. "Till you die," said the doctor. "Good morning, sir!"-Baltimore Methodist. ,"/ If Man Were a Flea. Synder, the calculating barber, hadn't opened his lips for fully four minutes, and it was plain to be seen that he had something on his mind. Finally he swallowed twice, breathed hard for a moment, and gave vent to his feelings in this matter: "I've been thinking what I could do if I were on ly a flea. I read in a scientific paper the other day that if a man were built on the same lines as a fica he could jump from Philadelphia to Pittsburg in one leap. I mean, of course, if he had ali the power of a flea increased in proportion to his size. Think how quickly he could circumnavigate the globe. It might be possible to get around the world is an hour. The distance from Philadelphia to Pitts burg is 354 miles, and the equatorial circumference of the earth is 24,902 miles. A simple calculation in men tal arithmetic will show you that this would be a fraction over seventy leaps. It surely wouldn't take a minute for each jump, judged from the liveliness of the flea. Think of coming in here, with three or four customers ahead of you'and, instead of sitting down and waiting, just take a few jumps around the world to kill time. There you are, sir. With hazel or bay rum ?" Philadelphia Record. Mr. J. Sheer, Sedalia, Mo., saved his'child's life.by One Minute Cough Cure. Doctors had given her up to die with croup. It's an infallible cure for coughs, colds, grippe, pneu monia, bronchitis and throat and lung troubles. Relieves at once. Evans Pharmacy. - A man has to earn his dollars by himself, but anybody he knows will help him to spend them. llheumacide is a throughout, per manent, constitional cure for rheu matism. The acids in the blood which cause t ie disease are throughly erad icated. It also the best blood purefier, laxative and tonic. Evans Pharmacy. - A wise rule in conversation is never to say anything that you know somebody else wants to say. Mrs. ll. Churchill, Berlin, Vt., says. "Our baby was covered with running sores. DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve cured her." A specific for piles and skin diseases. Beware ot' worthless counterfeits. Evans Pharmacy. - It is much harder to get u dollar into one's pocket than it is to get i out. ' J. B. Clark, Peoria, 111., says, "Surgeons wanted to operate ot; me for piles, but I cured them with Dc Witt's Witch Hazel Salve." lt is in fallible for piles and skin diseases. Beware of counterfeits. Evans Phar macy. Mrs. Sarah Terry, of Philadel phia, has just celebrated her 108th birthday. Her father fought ic the War of the Revolution. Miss Annie E. Gunning, Tyre. Mich., says, "I suffered a long time from dyspepsia; lost flesh and became very weak. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure completely cured me." It digests what you eat and cures all forms of stomach trouble. It never fails to live immediate relief in the worst sases. Evans Pharmacy. - A delicate man at work accon plishes more than a giant in idleness. Purify thc sewers of thc body and stimulate the digest? ve organs to main tain health, strength and energy. Prickly Ash Hitters is a tonic for the kidneys, liver, stomach and bowels. Vox sale by Evans Pharmacy. . -Stock growers in thc United States say that more has been done to improve our swine than tu enhance thc quality of any other animals we raise. They are the finest product of the greatest corn region in thc world, and our corn bolt supplies ninety-five per cent of thc pork wc export. Constipation leads to liver trouble, and torpid liver to Bright's disease. Prickly Ash Bitters is a certain cure at any stage of the disorder. Sold by Evans Pharmacy. Genera) News ?tems. - Wm. S. Taylor, (lu- Republican candidate, lins been given the certifi cate of election ns Governor ol'Ken tucky. His plurality is 2,5383. - Tin- Havana American Cigar com- : pnny, capital $10,000.000. lu?s begun business nt Tampa. Fin., taking pos sscsinn ot three factories purchased there. - A gigantic trust now has condoi ol' Thc white paper business in America ?ind the country papers will soon bu paying twice what their blank paper i cos? them two years airo. - A revenue officer recently cap tured an illicit still near Fayetteville and was taking it and the owner to jail, when the owner fell on the officer ! anil took the still away. - "The city of New York to-day," says the Kev. John E. Bushnell,' ;i ' Presbyterian clergyman of that town, ? "is viler, wickeder, more hopelessly in ? the power of the devi.', than ever 'be fore in its history." - Last Sunday morning Augusta, Ga., had the biggest lire on record in that city during the past fifty years. Over one million dollars worth of prop ertyin the heart of thc city was de- \ s troy ed. - lt is now claimed (?mt Congress- j man Roberts, the ? lah .Mormon, will resign his sent at the request of the j .Mormon elders in order to avoid the ' investigation which would probably i ensue if thejight upon Roberts should go on. - It is being predicted that the lire losses for the year 1899 will make; a new ; record. Already, itis said, the amount ; of policies paid exceeds the amount of I premiums received, with December, I usually a month of tires, still to be ac counted tor. - The statement of the Republican j and Democratic committees of Ohio were filed at the office of the county clerk in Columbus .Monday afternoon, : as required by law. The' Republican connnittee expenden $15,123.97. The Democratic state committee reports expenditures of Sl^OUS.O?. - Tho secretary and assistant secre tary of the interior, and commissioner and assistant commissioner of pensions, have testified before a sub-committee of the senate committee on pensions, that a revision of the laws should be made, and recommended that it be done by a non-partisan commission. - A gentleman who is evidently trying to square himself with the maid en indies who have passed the blushing period, gives this definition of an old maid: "An old maid is a woman who j has not been fool enough to be fooled j tty every fool who has been fool | enough to foolishly try to fool her." j - The muscular strength of man has ? been studied by a German physician | with a special dynamometer. From j 10,000 separate experiments he finds ! that the average man in good health j reaches his maximum strength at the i age of about 81 years; that at 17 he can 1 lift without difficulty 277 pounds; at 20 317 pounds; at. 31 400 pounds; at 40 339 pounds; at 50 328 pounds, and at 70 240 pounds. Fnther experiments show that-contrary to general belief -negroes have nearly the strength of | thc whites. S. S. S. ls a Great Blessing to Old People. It Gives Them New Blood and Life. olde peo] but ing their bk so as to es from which the remedy which will keep their syst? thoroughly removing ing new strength and the appetite, builds ' giving blood througho Mrs. Sarah Pike, " I am seventy years < for twenty years. I addition, had Eczemt doctor ?aid that on i well again. 1 took a d completely, and I am I feel as well as I eve Mr. J. W. Loving, of Colquitt, Ga., ? een years I suffered tortures from a f my skin. I tried almost every known i failed one by one, and I was told that ?ixty-?ix. was against me, and that I i to bo well again. I finally took S. S. S., my blocd thoroughly, and now I am ir is thf> inly remedy which can build u old people, because it is the only one wh free from potash, mercury, arsenic and minerals.? it is made from roots and 1 in it. S. S S. cures the worst cases of Si Tetter. Open Sores. Chronic Ulcers. Boils, Book;; on t liesa diseases will be sent free And mn AT this soasou nf the year wc can and to reduce our-. Shoe, Dry C Grroc< We have made the LOWEST PRICE Dry Gooda since Anderdon has been Ai Believe us, and give us on- look if Very respectfully, D. C. (NEXT TO POST OFFICIO.) THE HOUSE-KEE] DUKING the Fall and Winter m trouble in supplying the table willi sun they will only give us a call. We have a choice and .seiet t, Stock Family Fancy Our stock of CANNED CC need any CONFECTIONERIES, FR TOBACCO and CIGARS a specif If you will honor ug with a visit mighty interesting for you. Free City Deliver}'. - Sonic woman in Missouri lins vol unteered to become one ol' 100,000 women lo contribute 25 cents t<? fund for Mrs. G ridley, wifoof ihc com mander of hi'Wi'v's flagship, in the battle of Manila/ .Mrs. lindley has nothing but thc ?30 per month given by t lie government', am! t Iiis movement is likely ID bc more popular ?i? i?ic South, ut least, than the bowey home fund. - The department nf agriculture will begin its distribution oilseeds a a little earlier this year than last, ship ping South thc beginning of January and perhaps sending a few shortly be fore the first. This year the seeds for distribution to all parts of t he country will consist nf 13,000,000 paclcs of thc vegetable seeds, 1,5(58,000 nf flower seeds, besides Held and lawn grass seeds. - A special dispatch from Washing ton to the Greenville Acir*, dated nth ilise, says: "Thc statistician of thc department of agriculture reports 8, 000,000 l?ales as thc probable colton production of the united States for 185)0-1000. Thc estimate is based upon a larger number of both general and special reports than was ever before received liv thc department on a cotton ero])." - "1 have noticed," said the Kev. Dr. Goodman, pnusinj/in his discourses "thar two or three of the brethren have looked at their waldies several limes in the last few minutes. For fear their timepieces may not agree ! will say tlnr iie correct time is 11.45. 1 set my watch by the regulator at thc jewel ler's last* night. Thc sermon will be over at 12.0?. ll would have closed promptly at 12 but for t his digression. Let us proceed to consider now what thc apostle means when he says: '1 press toward thc mark.'" - Gen. Horace Porter's article in the Century entitled "Campaigning with Grant," is being severely criticised by prominent Confederate soldiers. At a recent meeting of .the United Confed erate Veterans in Galveston, it was attacked on two counts, namely because of the statements made concerning Gen. Lee at Hanover Junction and the Federal loss at Cold Harbor. The point was strongly urged in the Gal veston meeting that Lee anticipated every move made by Grant, and was not outgeneraled in any particular, as Gen. Porter in his article alleges. As to the loss of the Union forces at Cold Harbor. Porter places it at 7,000 where as J. Z. H. Scott, speaking for the Southern veterans, saul the light began at? o'clock in the morning with an attack all along the linc, and in less than an hour there wen; 13,000 Union soldiers dead. Scott further alleged that when Grant ordered another charge at 8 o'clock "the men and some of the officers refused to obey." - Tho great id ties of ihe world us? up an enormous number of horses every year, and these must constantly be resupplied by herkes from the coun try or from foreign parts, lt is-tated that, id the subarbi ??f London alono there aro 750,00U horses in use, and that. 100,01)0 horses must every year bo sent into those suburbs to take the place of those worn out. > Age does not necessarily mean feebleness and ill health, and nearly all of the sickness among ir people can be avoided. Most elderly plo are very susceptible to illness, it is wholly unnecessary. By keep Kid pure they can fortify themselves ?cape three-fourths of the ailments they suffer so generally. S. S. S. is 3ms young, by purifying the blood, all waste accumulations, and impart life to the whole body. It increases up the energies, and sends new life ut the entire system 477 Broadway, South Boston, writes: old, and had not enjoyed good health ; was sick in different ways, and in L terribly on one of my legs. The iccount of my age, I would never be ozen bottles of S. S. S. and it cured me happy to say that r did in my life." lys: "For eight iery eruption on remedy,, but they my age. which is rjould never hope , and it cleansed i perfect health." p and strengthen ich is guaranteed other damaging lerbs. and has no chemicals whatever crofula, Cancer. Eczema. Rheumatism, , or any other disease of thc blood. ) by Swift Specific Co., Atlanta. Ga. .c*j 28 <*?M st exchange with you ! I alt rd io carry such a lautre stettk, roods and Bvy Stocks S that has ever been ni ide ? n Staple uderson. you want to .SAVE MON"KV. BROWN & BRO. M^-waa------m ----wi WITI PE R'S TROUBLES! mitha the HVuisc-keep r has !>.< li'tlc othilie-1 ; ear. We c tli lu lp t iem it' T and Groceries. PODS can't bc excelled, and if you UlTSj, NUTS, etc., we can supply you. illy. we will appreoiate it, and make it G-. F. BIGBY. without Gold Dust. It lightens the labor of cleaning more than half and saves both time and money. It is "Woman's Best Friend, Dirt's Worst Enemy." Semi for for House lioi,:::..:-" Ooldea Rules THE N. K FAIRBANK COMPANY Chic^io St.LouIi NswYork Dcstcr. Assessment Motice. Ai; PITO 5?. C. rai ;is OFFH \l l>:. ,,. rs,, u?x r. OPEN TO ; iii proper- j l?'Oi?. to the i ty J or inxitiion or t--. ? ?J ii flin ii.'-* C:t> of J 2?:!i February followleg, i::cfu?-iyp. AM tra; .-'fi* of Ketti lv-t IM triado sines Jasiyear? jx-M ssuieot must. li" carefully liol ed 01: ihe return-itiH nu inlier ol' Keren boon lu or sold ii-:-; from whom quired or to xv h o iii sold. Under lin? new assessing bvv.s the township Hase^sora ?re required to make Tax Keturns 'or all ih:)*.e that tail to make thi-ir own returns within tbe timo ! prescribed by lu*-, and hencetbedirlieul ty of delinquents escaping ;he penalty of tbe law. Ex-Confederate soldiers over 50 years of >*.?-?> ar* exempt from Poll Tux. .ill other males between tbe ages of lil aud GO years except those incapable of earn ing a support from beiug manned or from any other caube, shall bo deemed taxable polls. For the convenience of taxpayers we will also have deputies to take returns at toe following times and places: Holland, Tuesday, January 9. Moffattsville, Wednesdav, January 10. Iva, Thursday, January ll. Moseley, Friday, January 12. Baylis Mcconnel l's, Saturday, Jan. 13. Srarr, Munday, January 15. Storeville, Tuesday, Januar; 10. (,'Un fiscale^' Mill, Wednesday. Jan. 17. Guyton, Thursday, January IS. Bishop's Branch,Saturday, January 20. Ki ve Forks, Friday, January li). Autuu, Monday, January 22. Wyatt'** Store, Monday, January 22, until 1 p. m. Cedar Wreath, Tuesday, January ?3. bench's Store, Jan. 23, from 1 to 4 p. tn. Wigington's Store, Wednesday, inn. 24. Equality, Thursday, January 25. Pendleton, Friday, January 20. Tovrnville, Friday, January 2tf. Tugaloo, Saturda>, January 27 linnea Pato, Monday and fnesday, January 2!' HI io 30. Belton. Weenes lay an i Thursday, ' February 1 and 2. Piedmont, Friday and Saturday, Jan. 19 and 20. Pfizer, Monday, Tuesday an 1 Wednes dav. February 5, G and 7. Williamston, Thursday and Friday. February S and 9. G. X. C. B ?LEMAN, Dec. 5, 1S99. Auditor A. 0. Notice of Final Settlement. TH E undersigned, Administrator oft he Estate of Turner Osborne, dee'd. hareby gives notice rbat he viii on the loth day of January, 1900,.applf to the Judye of Probate tor Anderson County. S. C., for a Final Settlement of said Espite iu..l a discharge from bis office as Administra- I tor. i J. G. CUNNINGHAM, Adin'r. D io 13,1899 25 5 E. M. SUCKER, Jr., ATTORNEY AT LAW WEBB BUILDING, Anderson, - - s. <J. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Condensed Schedule in Effect December 10th, 1S9J. STATIONS. Lv. Charleston ... " Summerville. " Branchville.. " Orar.geburg . M KingviUo. t.\. bun. No. 17. Lv.Savannah ; " Barnwell.. " Blackville. Lv. Columbia. " Prosperity... " Newberry_ " Ninoty-S;x.... " Greenwood... Ar. Hodges DbUy No. ll. 7 00 a nj 7 41 a m \ 8 ia a ni 9 28 a ii 10 13 A gi 12 00 a m ?i 00 a in 4 15 a ni 11 05 a m 12 10 n'n 12 25 p m .i 1 20 p m 7 40 a mi 1 53 p m 8 CO a ra', 2 15 p m Ly. Abbeville.. .. I ?l a m1 1 35 p m Ar. Belton .j 3 53 a ml 8 10 pjn Lv. Anderson Ar. Greenville. 2 115 p m 4 15 p m Ar. Atlanta.a nn.Tiine) STATIONS. _8 2U a m. J0JU_!V_1I1 3 55 p m li DU p ll) Es. Sun. ; Dailv No. IS. No. ?2. Lv. Green vii . fi .;n p m 10 15 a m " Piodmor.; .I tl 00 p raj 10 40 a m .' \yilliaii:s:..n. .' 6 22 p ni 10 55 a ni A:-. And. rv in ! 7 15_p ia1 ll -10 a m Lv. Belton . il 15 ?i rn li 15 a ni Ar. Donnai . 7 !."> n ir ll !0 ;x m Ar.Ai?l?-vii .. H IO II iv. 12 25 p m Lv. Hodges , m ll 55 a ni Ar. Greer. :v . : SOO .> 12 20 pm .. Nim': . . 12 55 p m " Nowl. .J 2 CO p ra " Pn isp??: : . j.I 2 "14 TI ni " t '?ilii:::K:i . I. I 'J :o :.i in Av. K : : i .. ... a f.'. a III " i?irnv. i . !. .-. . a 20 a ni ?**_Savana .Is. 5 15 a m Lv. Ringville... : 43 p~"m " Orangeburg. . 5 :'.4 pm " Bninciv, ill?.'.I (?17 pm " Summerville. 1. 7 ?ii p ni Ar.Charlu.-ton. -^-^ 1 S 15 p in Daily lia. ;. QTXTTOVS I Daily| Daily No !>. No. l\ ST Al ION jy0> j j ggffi 11 00 p 71 o a! Lv..0hariesioa..Ar s 15 p Ttl? 12 (flu 7 41 a .' Summerville " 7 88p 5 312a 1 55 a S ?5a " .Branchville. " fl 02 p 4 SO J 2 50 a 0 2?a " Ornngrburg " 5 84p 8 ida 4 .'?a h?15 ii '. . Kin g ville . " 4 43p ?2 06a;.Il.v..Havannah Ar'. fllSa 4 00a: . "'..Barnwell.. " . 8 23 n 4 15a ..Blackville.. " . 3 03a 8 80 a ll 'On "..Columbia.." 3 20p 9 3vp 9 07 a 12 L-.ip " . ..Alston.... " 2 80 p 8 CO rt 10 Ola 1 rf. ;> " . .Samnc... " 1 23p 7 4op 10.20:! 2 nm " .Uuion. " 105p 7 ;S0p 10 80n : "..Jonesville.. " 12 25 p 0 53p in M :: '. .. p " ....Vaco:?;t12 lip (1 42;i 1125 a : ! J pl ArSpnrtai?burg Lv111 45 :i iVISp 11 4.; a 4 ? p LvSparrjinburxr Ar If 17a 6 00p 2 ::7 . t?iAr.'..AShi'V! c ...Lv| S:C3 al 8 05p ;i;:ht. Si% Ul! '! . r::ins4 .iaM a. liiningeari nroutc. .arr nonli .ar. . a. m.. :?:.'?. t.:l.( p. m., lAresti ii?miie..:? ; snml:l:t>r.nd I2:2i: :i. m.. 8:15 j. :...;..! ::. m.. i Vnstibnle Liniiti.tl, . Tran . ' ave lireenville. A. and C. division, nm :!: ? n I.i5:0i)a. m., 2:;;4 vi. m. and 5:22 ;>. m., iV'es:; . .! Limited)..sotitlibound, l:l?0 a. m., 4 :;:u p. 12 ::W n m. i Vestibuled Limited) Train . il and lu carry elegant Pullman sleep ing cars I i tween Savannah and Asheville en route ca??\ between Jacksonville and Cincin nati. Also Pullman Drawing-room sleeping cars between Charleston and Columbia. FRANK S. (4ANNON, J. M. CDLP, Third V-P. & Gen. Mgr., Traffic Mgr., Washington, D. C. Washington. D. C. W. A. TURK, S. H. HARDWICK, Gen. Pass. Ag't.. As't Gen. Pans. Ag't.. WashingtOH, D. C. Atlanta, Ga, OLD NEWSPAPERS Por sale at this office cheap, Take Warning. 4 LL :>"rs .:: : r* Hereby warned not .?3L to bunt, ti-h. loaf or otherwise friona?-; i>o our farms in Pendleton Town *t< . , ,vYid??r*o:? County, s. C., known ns "Rivoli;Farm,'1 : ?ne Pla :.?." "Sirnp H?U I'i i1*" and "Alternons ?^arm" ou Eighteen Creek. Any ?>::. di.-rc-tr-irding ihi-* no:tt?? will bo : .?..?eco ted. FRED. BROWN. MRS. J. A. McCRiRY. Ow 13, 1S!)9 25 4 BANKERS and BROKERS. Gm SKALIER & GO., CONSOL, STOCK EXCHANGE BLDG, 60-62 Broadway, - New York. LOTS OF MONEY CAN be made through speculation with deposit of $-:0.00 [thirty dollars] upward [or 3 percent, margin upward] on the .Stork Ezchange. The greatest fortunes have been made through speculations in Stocks, Wheat or Cotton. If von are interested to knnw how spec ulations are conducted, notify us and we will .send yon information and market e tier free of charge. Usual commission charged for exe cuting orders Government, Municipal and Railroad bond-? quotation? furnished on applica tion tor pu rehuse, sale and exchange. Oe;. 25, 1S99 18 6 m DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE TO ALL POINTS North, South and Southwest. SCH KP ULE IK EFFECT KOV. ffth. 189?. _SOrriHBODNL _" ' No. -?uo. So. 41. LT New York, ria Penn R. R.*ll 00 am *n OJ pia Lv Washington, '. 5 00 pia 4 30 am Lv Richmond, A. C. L....0 0>pm 9 05 am Lv Portsmouth, S. A.L. S 45 pm 9 20?is Ar Weldon, " . ll 10 pm*ll 43 am Ar Henderson, " . 12 56 a rn 1 S3 pm Ar Raleigh, via S. A.L. 2 22 am 3 36 poi Ar Southern Pinc-9 " . 4 L7am 6 OO.pru Ar il i " . 5 14 ara 7 00 pm Lv Wilmington " *3 0-5 pia Ar Monroe! " .*G 53 am -a 12 pm Ar Charlotte, " . *S CO am ?10 25pm Ar Chester, "~.*S >3am ?10 55 pa ArGreeuwood " . 10 4 i am 112 am Ar Athens, " .?. 1 24 pm 3 48 am Ar Atlanta, " . 3 50 pm 6 15am NORTEbuUPit?. Xo. 4ttf. No. 38 Lv Atlanta, S. A L. ?1 00 pm ?8 50 pm AT Athens, '. . 3 (8 pm 1105 pm Ar Greenwood, " . 5 4'J pm 1 46 am Ar ehester, S. A. L . 7 51 pm 4 08 am Ar Monroe, " . 9 30"pm 5 45 am Lv hariotte! " .*8 20 pm "?5 00 am ir Hamlet] " . 10 pm *7 43 am Ar Wilmington " . *?2 05 pm .\ r Southern Pines, " . *?2 02 am *J 00 am Ar icaleigh, " .2 C3 am ll 13 sm Ar Henderson " . 3 26 am 12 45 pm Ar Weldon, " . 4 55 am 2 60 pm Ar Portsmouth S. A. L. 7 25 am 5 20pm Ar Richmond A. C. L. *3 15 ara *7 20 prc Ar Washington. Penn. R. R.". 12 31 pm Jl 20 pm Ar New York._". *5 23 pm ?6 53 aa .Daily, fDaily. Ex. Sunday. Nos. 403 ar.d 402 "The Atlanta Special.1' Solid Vestibuled Train, of Pullman Sleepers ana Coaci? es between Washington and Atlanta, alno Pill man Sleepers between Portsmouth and Charlotte, N. C. Nos. 41 and 3S, "The S. A. L Express." So?lo Train, Coaches and Pullman Sleepers he:wp<?i Portsmouth and Atlanta. Both trams make immediate, connection at At lanta Air Montgon ery .Mobllv. N^w Orleans. Tex ue, ? alifornia. Mexico, Chati?uoega, Na-hrille, Memphis, Macou awd Florida. For TlcKets, Sleepers, etc. apply to G. McP. Batte, P. A., 33 Tryon -treet Char lotte, N C. F.St John, vice-President and Gen'l. Ma ige?. V. E. Mc Bee General Superintendent. II. AV. fi. Glover, Traffic Manager L. S. Allen. Gen'l. Passenger Agent Gei:rr?l Officers, Portsmouth, Va. ATLANTIC COAST LINE. TRAFFIC DKPARTM EST, WILMINGTON, X. C., Jan. 10, 18?S. Fast Line Between Charleston and Coi ii rn bia and UpperSoutb Carolina, Nor*t Carolina; ('ONDENSED .SCHEDULE. ooiNo \V?:ST. HOING EATS? ?No. 52. No. 58. 7 ">i am j Lv.Charleston.Vr I S 00 5 'Jl "...? . Lv.Lanes.ir 6 20 pic <j 40 .MU j Lv.suciter. .Ar . 5 13 pin 11 no pm ? Ar.Columbi.*.T.v | 4 o<) pis 12 t'7 pm I Ar.Prorper?tv.i.v j -J 47 pm 12 '.'O pm ' Ar.Newberry.J v / 'J ;? M I 03 poi I Ar.riiuton. LT ? 53 t?> I2."ip'j: Ar.Laurens.Lv I i 45 pul 3 00pm Ar.Greenville.Lv 12 01 Sra 3 to pm Ar.Spsrtauburg.Lv I 11 4."> ac 6 07 pm Ar.WinDsboro, S. C.i.v I ?1 41 an S 15 pm Ar.Charlotte, K. C.Lv I 9 ? am f" 05 pm Ar.. Hendersonville, N. '"...Lv | s 14 atp 7 00 pm Ar.Asheville. N. C.LT j 8 30 acr 'Haily. NOB. 52 and SS Stolid Traine between Char*Hs abd Cnlnmbia.S <'. H . M. EMB?soa c+cn'l. Passem??r Agetfc J. R. Kicswr, r>.nr M?n?eor -. ?? .. * usu rm*. Traffic MnrMtrg*' BL?EI?DG* R?'LROAD. II C. BEATTIE Receiver. Time Tabla No. 7.-Effective VI .. . i*9$. Between Anderson ami Walhalla. W EST BOUND E A ST lin I * X p. No 12 STATIONS No. ll. Kirs! Class, Eirst Clus*, Ddiv. Daily. P. M.-Loa v? Arrive A M. s 3 35. Anderson.ll 00 f 3.56.Denver.10.40 f 4 05.Autun.10 31 s 4.1*4.Pendleton.10.22 f 4.23.Cherry's Crossing.10.13 f 4.211.Adam's Crossing.10.07 s 4 47.Seneca.9.40 s 5 11.YVpst Union.9.25 s JUT Ar.Walhalla.Lv 9.20 (s) Regular station ; (f) Flag station. Will also stop at the following stations to take on or let off passengers : Phin ne\s, James' and Sandy Springs. No. 12 connecta with Southern Railway No 12 at Anderson. No. 6 connecte wlfch Southern Railway Nos. 12, 87 and 38 at Seneca. J. R ANDERSON, 8upt.