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HOW THEY FOUGHT THEM. War of To-day and Tears Back. It was at the breakfast table that Mr. Soott Lindsay a veteran of the real war, read something about the battle of San Juan and began to breathe heavily through his nose. "Great grief, mother!" he exclaim ed, looking across the table at his wife. "Here's something that'd make old Gen. Sherman turo over in his grave. They've goin' to celebrate the anniversary of the battle of San Jewan! Thunderation. The battle of SanJewan! Battle! Gosh, all flaoh hoods! Battle! say, if the old boys that 'uz with the army o' Tennessee ever started to celebrate the anniver sary of every durned little popgun skirmish like that battle o' San Jewan we wouldn't do nothin' but celebrate, day in and day out, from one year's end to another. We'd have to get up in the night and aunyverserate. Bat tle! Battle nothin' ! Wy round Vicks burg there we used to roll out in the mornin' an' fight three or four o' them battles just to whet out appetites. We didn't call em' battles though. We knew the difference between a battle and a strawberry festival. I went out rabbit shootin' several times last winter, you may recollect. Well, I didn't never come back and say I'd been in a battle, did I?" "Oh, well father, you must make some allowences," said Mrs. Lindsay. "These boys don't remember the other war." "I guess they don't-I just good an' guess they don't. If they did they wouldn't be spoutin' so much about bein' heroes an' all that. There's a blamed, sight o' difference between chasin' some runt or a dago with a white feather in each and chas in' a six foot Johnny Beb that jest raises up on his hind legs and comes at yow like a runaway horse, breath in' smoke out of his no&o and ears, 'y Gory, an' yellin' like an Injun. It's easy enough to chase anything that runs the other way, but this hero job's got its drawbacks wi en the other fellow gets it into his heid that he wants to do the chasin' an' swoops out o?the woods like an Ioway cyclone, by gosh, pumpin' lead into you till you get too heavy to run. Battle! When we had 'em stacked up until we couldn't see over 'em 'an every regiment 'uz.whittled down to a com pany an' our flags 'uz blown into car pet rags au' the blood got so deep it wet the ammunition in the wagons we used to begin to suspect we'd had a battle. Somethin' a little less argy mentative than that we called a skir mish. Anything the size o' the San Jewan basket-meetin' we didn't keep no tally of at all. That kind o' come under the head o' target practice!" "I wouldn't be too hard on em fath er. They say these boys fought real well down there in Cuba!" "Well, to see 'em struttin' around down-here in their cowboy hats and gassin' in front of every store you'd think, by cracky that every one o' them had chawed up a thousand o' them Spanish generals, whiskers and all. You take some old codger that crawled through them swamps fer four years, dodgiu' minnie balls and noth in' to keep him alive but hardtack an' hot slough water au' he ain't in it no more with one o' these cussed little whippersnappers, by ginger, that well, you ought to hear old Cap Nes bit the other night, after post meet in'. He made a few remarks about these kid soldiers that wouldn't pass mastuerin a crowd o' women, but they wuz satisfyin to me." "I don't see why Cap Nesbit wants to pick onto those boys. I think they deserve a lot o' credit for enlist in' an goin' down there in that hot country to fight." "Englistin's all right an' fightin's all right, if you do it. I don't beg grudge no man the cridit o' going out an' fightin' for his country. These boys done well as far as they went, bat I don't want no kid to tell me What war is until he's been through One. These young fellers got a sniff 0* blood and now they think they've been through the slaughter house. There's old Dan Bailey that got shot Bo often he din't mind it at all toward the last; laid in Andersonville till he was a rack ofjbones; comes home here lookin' like a corpse and ain't seen a well day since, and he ain't as big a man in this town to-day as that grand son o' his that went down there to Porto Rico?last winter an' laid in a hammock for six months smokin' cigarettes. He's what they call a hero now-had an ice cream reception for him when he come home, didn't they? I don't recollect that anybody had ice cream receptions for old Dan when he com? home. Heroes wuzn't quite so g08h-danger scacre about that time. They used to ship 'em herc ty the car load an' most of 'em went right on through town an' on to the graveyard. Wuzn't it you, mother, that wuz read in' the other day about some regiment that wouldn't get on the train becuz there wuzn't no sleepers. Great Je hosephat! I'd like to see somebody ask old Col. Griggs for a sleepin' car. I'd like to hear what he'd say. Sleep in' cars! We wu?? tickled to death to get box cars, cattle cars-anything on wheels. We didn't need no p >rter to brush, our cloze, for the darned good reason that we didn't have no close to brush. Then there's all that talk about em bammed beef. We'd a been mighty glad to git it-embammed, petrified, mouldy or any other way. We thought we wuz lucky if we could get a little hunk o' salt pork to drop in with the beans now aD* then. We wuzn't out on no moonlight excursion, by gosh playin' tag with a lot o' tam bourine players. We wuz out in the underbrush, dad ding my buttons, bavin' it out wit the toughest lot o' human panthers that ever wore uni forms. An' yit, like as not, if we go to breakin in on this San Jewan cele bration, we'll git a back seat in the gallery. We ain't heroes, I guess. Wy, on Decoration day these kids marched in front every one of 'em puffed up like a toad in a thunder storm-bigger man than old Grant, as thc feller says. Now, they're goin' to celebrate the annyvcrsary of San Jewao. There was another likely skirmisy about the same date. Get tysburg, I think they called it. Won der why somebody don't celebrate that. Uah!"-Chicago Record. Shatter's Coban Pullet. In Gen. Shaffer's quarters at San Francisco is a fine, glossy, "black Spanish" pullet, which, if it had the power of speech, could tell a thrilling and pathetic story. Early in July, 1898, when the American army in Cuba was supplying-food to the starv ing reconcentrados at El Caney, a ter rific storm wronght such havoc to thc roads that it became impossible to convey further supplies to the town. Gen. Shafter therefore issued an or der that all who were able might walk to his camp, six miles away, and draw rations. The order set in motion one of the saddest processions tliat everfollowed in the wake of war. Hagged, hungry, weak, emaciated, a line of spectres daily wound its awful length through swamp and mud and jungle toward the food. Lieut. Brooke and an interpreter were returning to camp from El Caney one day when they saw a little band of the reconcentrados ahead of them. Behind the men and women lagged a six-year-oideboy. He was evidently sick and weary unto death, but still he tottered persistently on. At length, his last-ounce of strength gone, he fell and lay there in the mud, unable to rise. His father and moth er glanced back at him stolidly and went on. Their own strength would be hardly sufficient te carry them to carrp and suffering had dulled their sensibilities. If he could not keep up he must die where he fell. Lieut. Brooke dropped from his horse, picked the little fellow up aud galloped into camp with him. There he fed him until he could eat no more, wrapped him in warm blankets and left him to the long, dreamless sleep of exhausted childhood. An old Cuban woman washed his little cotton shirt and trousers and, after a few days' rest, he was sent back to El Caney with a generous supply of provisions. Two days later the little fellow, still weak and pale, again appeared in camp. Going straight to Lieutenant Brooke, he took a small chicken from inside his little shirt and, with tears in his eyes, presented it. It was the only thing he could give him, he said, to show his appreciation of the senor's kindness. He had walked all the ?way from El Caney through the deep mud aod after he had made his humble present he walked back. Lieut. Brooke took the chicken to Gen. Shafter and told its story. Thc General tethered it to his tent pole. When he entered Santiago he took the bird with him. There her nightly roost was a glided chandelier in the Governor's palace. When thc .army moved out to camp again the chicken went too. Later she journeyed to Montauk Point, thence to Governor's Islacd, and now she struts and scratches, and cackles contentedly in San Francisco, a living reminder of a deed of mercy, a pathetic acknowledg ment of the gratitude with which at least one little reconcentrado will al ways recall las Americanos. A Witty Blind Man. A showman was making a great noise at the front of his exhibition of the wonders he had to show. A man stand ing in the crowd, with a little boy be side him, cried out: "I'll bet you a sovereign you cannot let me see a lion." "Done," said the showman, eagerly, "put up your money." The man placed a sovereign in thc haud of a bystander and the showman did the same. "Now, walk this way," said the showman, "and I'll soon convince you. There!" said he, triumphantly, "look in that corner at that beautiful Numidian lion."' "I don't see any," responded the other. "What's the matter with you?" ask ed the showman. . "I'm blind," was the reply; and in a few minutes the blind man had pocketed thc two sovereigns and went Suicide. Most of us would be astonished to knowhow many of the people who are walking about and eating and sleep ing, talking and working in every com munity have committed suicide. By Divine and human law and the general verdict of society the sawe man who takes his own physical life has committed a crime. The act is re garded as cowardly, for it is flight from the burdens and responsibilities and suffering which are the common lot of man. Yet there is a cowardice baser than that of the man who lays violent hands on himself, and suicide even more criminal. This is the moral suicide of the man who gives up, sur renders, abandons his hope and pur pose. The temptation to this suicide is constant and strong. It is so easy to stop, so hard to go on, so easy to per suade ourselves that thc obstacles can not be overcome, that thc loads are be yond our strength, so hard and painful to struggle forward. When we have struggled against a siu or a weakness and have fallen u/ider it time after time, it is easy to tell ourselves that we have done all wc could, that it is us?less to resist futhcr, just as it is easy for the man beset by troubles and disasters to seek to end them all with his own life. When we have fought and striven for a purpose on an ambi tion, and have strained every nerve and found our plans come to nothing, the tired soul and the discouraged heart cry out for rest and join in thc demand for the inglorious sloth of sur render and suicide. Therefore legions of men yield, and while yet physically alive are morally dead because they have consented to a slavery to sin to abandon hope and to drift with cir cumstances. A profound philosopher who wrote a great novel said that thc greatest horor of suicide to him was that the awfully enlightened soul might, im mediately after its-enfoicod flightfrom the body, come to know that thc net that drove it forth was unnecessary, that the moment next following would have brought rescue and relief. In that thought there is the wisdom cf an eternal truth. No man can know wh it is before him. The hours hurry to us in an endless procession and we do not know what that one uext beyond us may be bringing us. Because that is true every suicide is folly, every surrender is a premature and unneces sary act of cowardice and weakness. The days of miracles arc past, but the unexpected and unforseen con tinue to happen. There is always rea son to hope and to try because wc do not know7 what the future so fast be coming the present may hold. When we have given up and have committed suicide by telling ourselves that strug gling and effort are useless, and by ceasing from both the opportunity that may come can not help us. It is our duty to hold to our faith in ourselves, to keep to our purposes, examine ourselves honestly, laying bare our hearts and reviewing lives with careful impartiality-which many of us live to old age and die without the courage to do even once. We will usually find that wc really have not done the best we could, that we have not used all our strength and capacity. It is never, too late to try again, to go again at thc obstacles, to struggle again with the burden. The first and the hardest fight is always, of course, with ourselves and our own shortcomings and faults. We can al ways fight them; and as we lop them off or beat them down the external obstacles will look easier, thc loads will lighten. In no case has any man the right to abandon hope or to relinquish purpose. When he says that he can not bc bet ter than he is and ceases from trying to be better he is a moral suicide, a coward and a weakling. When he abandons his purpose or hope or ambi tion he simply abandons the fight with himself and kills his higher in stincts and qualities that his baser and weaker elements may j revail over 1 ! him.-Greenville N'?tes. Irish Wit. Two navvies, ill-clad, dirt covered, rain-soaked, got possession of a heav enly nook between two high stone walls while an extra heavy sleet show er prevailed. They had "hunkered" low, and were watching the smoke wreaths mount from their pipes. "I'm toul," said one of them, break ing a reverie, "I'm toul, Jamie, that thc King of Jarminy uiver smokes." Both regarded the wreaths again for a minute in silence. "Poor man! I Wouldn't like to be him, Larry-would you?" Betty Haran of Thrummou was a very pious old Methodist. Father Dan often dropped into Betty's for a gossip. "Betty," said Father Dan, "I always find you stuck in your Bi ble. Now, tell mc truly, do you un derstand it all?" "Of course Ido," indignantly. "Well, well. I've been studying it all my life, and I don't understand it all yet." "An' if yer ( reverence is a blockhead, do ye think every wan else like ycr'sclf?" ? DeWitt's Little Karly Risers purify the blood, clean the liver, invigorate the system. Famous little pills for constipation and liver troubles. Evans Pharmacy. His Dream. Papa (at the breakfast table)-Wil lie, my boy, why ?ire you looking so thoughtful? Are you not feeling well? Willie (very seriously)-Yes, papa; but I had a strange dream this morn ing. Papa-Indeed? what was it? Willie-I dreamed, papa, that I died and went to heaven, and when St. Peter mot mc at the gate, instead of shewing me the way to the golden streets, as I expected, he took me out into a larg0 field, and in the middle of thc field there was a ladder reaching away up into the sky and out of sight. Then St. Peter told me that heaven was at the top, and that in order to get there I must take thc big piece of chalk heggave mc and slowly climb the ladder, writing on each rung some sin I had committed. Papa (laying (IO?TU his newspaper) And did you finally reach heaven, my son? Willie-No, papa; for just as I was trying to think of something io write on thc second rung, I looked up into the sky and saw you coining down. Papa-And what was I coming down for, pray? Willie-That's just what I asked you, papa, and you told mc you were going for more chalk. Moncra! Lee's Way. Soon after General llobert E. Lee went to Lexington, Va., he was offer ed the presi ?ency of an insurance company at a salary of $10,000. He was at that time receiving only $3,000 as prcsidem of the Washington and Lee University. "We do not want you to discharge any duties. General." said the agent; "we simply wish the u?e of your name; that will abundantly compensate us." "Excuse me, sir," was the prompt and decided rejoinder: "I cannot con sent to receive pay for services I do not. render." Nearly every mail brought him simi lar prepositions, and just a short while before his dent h a large and wealth corporation in New York City offered him $50,001) per annum to become its president. But he refused all such offers and quietly pursued his chosen path of duty.-Ladies Horne Journal. - When one builds castles in the air. he leaves out thc troubles. E ary tres will de So mai cause they do they naturally and are forced operation-tho only treatment which the < promptly returns, however, and is eve: before. Cancer is a deadly poison in th other external treatment can have no eff< come from within-the last vestige of poi Mr. Wm. Walpol little blotch about eye, gradually gro-n at intervals ran in a and consulted a got and advised that it sent to. I read in S. S. S., and decide? Cancer becoming a very freely. This tinued altogether, ! ped off. and now or what threatened to Positively the onl S. S. FOR -because it is the only remedy which cm the disease and force it out of the systei does not reach the blood-the real seat not be cut away. Insist upon S. 8. S. ; nc S. S. S. cures also any case of Scrofu Blood-Poison, Ulcers, Sores, or any ol books on Cancer and Blood Diseases w: Swift Specific Company, Atlanta, Georg GOODS THUN OOH And mi AT this season of the year we car and to reduce our Slio e 3 Dry ( Grroc We have made the LOWEST PR [Ci Dry Goods since Anderson ha* been A Believe us, and give us on look il Very respectfully, D. C. (NEXT TO POST OFFICE.) THE HOUSE-KEE DURING the Fall and Winter ir trouble in supplying the table with s >n they will only jjive us a cal!. We have a choice and select Stocli Famih Fancy Our Stock ol'CANNED Ct need any CONFECTIONER ?ES, FE TOBACCO and CIGARS a speci: If you will honor us with a visit mighty interesting for you. Free Cit}- Delivery. Ont lt Went. In the good old days in Kentucky there was a court composed of three magistrates to try certain cases ap pealed from a single justice of the peace. Thc throe magistrates were backwoodsmen. A case was being tried one day that was very important and several hours of listening to the reading of depositions and the argu ments of counsel, proaud con, and pro and cou again, had so nearly entang led thc court in a labyrinth of per plexing questions of law and fact that they doubted their ability to blaze their way out. So they whispered to the leading lawyer at the bar, who was sitting by as a spectator, and ask ed him what he thought ought to be done with thc case. "I think it ought to be thrown out of court," was thc prompt and em phatic reply. That settled it. "Mr: Clerk,'' said thc chief magis trate, "pass up them papers.'' The papers, which made quite a large bundle, were handed the chief magistrate. "Now, Mr. Sheriff," said he deliber ately, "open that window." Thc sheriff opened thc window and the case was thrown out of court. Thc feud that followed lasted for 15 years. - Wit verly Magazine. lier Objection. A New Hampshire man .vished to have telephone connection between his house and a new one built for his son's summer residence-. The best ? route took t'n? wire over thc cottage o' an old lady, to whom he applied j for her permission to make the slight, usc of her rojof thal was neces sary. Thc old lady gave her consent; but j made a linn .-tipulaiiun at the same I timi1. "I'm willing you should run wires : over my roof and hitch cm wherevci y.... .-cc li:," she said, pleasantly, \ "provided, you don't usc .t after ! j o'clock ;jt iii?h'. Thai's my bedtime j and I'm'a light sleeper at best, and tin j noise of people talking overhead wouk bc sure to keep tuc awake. -Youth'i j Companion. i j -Take caro of your health wliih 1 yon have it, not. after it is gone. The greatest care should bs given to ny little sore, pimple or scratch which hows no disposition to heal under ordin itment. No one can tell how soon these velop into Cancer of the worst type, ly people die from Cancer simply be not know just what the disease is; turn themselves over to the doctors, to submit to a cruel and dangerous doctors know for Cancer. Tho disease n more violent and destructive than e blood, and an operation, plaster, or set whatever upon it. The cure must son must be eradicated. e, of Walshtown, S. D., says: "A the size of a pea came under my left ing larger, from which shooting pains ll directions. I became greatly alarmed )d doctor, who pronounced it Cancer, be cut out, but this I could not con my local paper of a cure effected by i to try it. It acted like a charm, the t first irritated, and then discharging gradually grew less and then discon? leaving a small scab which soon drop ily a healthy little scar remains where destroy my life once held full sway." y cure for Cancer is Swift's Specific THE BLOOD a go deep enough to reach the root of n permanently. A surgical operation of the disease-because the blood can thing can take its place, la, Eczema, Rheumatism, Contagious her form of blood disease. Valuable ill be mailed free to any address by ia. JIBS, ist exchange with yon ! i't. a Hurd io carry such a large stock 3roods and ery Stocks that luis ever beeu mude ? n Staph udersou. F you want to SAVE MON"KY. BROWN & SRO. PER'S TROUBLES ! itinths the House-keep' r has no iitt?t icthing; tn eat. Wc cm lu-lp them ?j : ol' j and Groceries. 5 ODS can't he excelled, and if you ,UiTS, NUTS, etc., wc can supply you. illy. we will appreciate it, and make it Gr. F. RIGBY. The Best Housework is Hard Work Without it Assessment Notice. AUDITOR'S OFEICK, ANDERSON, S. C. TBIS OFFICE WILL Iii-: OPES IO receive returns o: persona] proper ty for taxation for r.*e next ?i~<.>?t year ?ro?w t ?;t> first <iay ofJunuary, lfiun, tu ibo 20th Febniarv follow i <. j:, inclusive. All tra--HforH of Real Eat ?I? ma-l? M ?icu last year's asstsstnent musr ho rarefully noted on the return-th? mi OJ ber of acres bought or sold and from wu o m ae quired or to whom bold. Under the uew assessing ia vs thc township assessors are required to make Tax KKnrns lor all tboso that tail to maice their own returns within the time r-r^seribed by la**, ?nd l-oticr the difficul ty of delinquents escaping the penalty of Ibi"* law. Ex-Confederale soldier* over ?U years ofntioarn exempt Jroin Poll Tax. .-^11 ?Uber males between tho ages of lil and Ol) j ears except those incapable ut earn ing a support irom bein}; mat-oed or from any other cause, shall bs deemed taxabio polls. For the convenience of taxpayers we will also have deputies to take return? at the billowing times and places: Holland, Tuesday, January !). MolFattsville, Wednesday, January 10. Iv?, Thursday, January ll Moseley, Friday, January 12. Baylis McConnell's, saturday, Jan. 13. .Starr, Monday, January 15. Storeville, Tuesday, January Ki. Clin Recalo-.' Mill, Wednesday, Jau. 17. Guyton, Thursday , January IS. Bishop'?" Branch, Saturday, January 20. . l Ive Forks, Fridav, Jaunurv li?. Antun, Mn, day, January 22. Wyatt'* Store, Monnay, .January 22, noni 1 p. m. Ci liar Wre b, Tuesday, January 23. Leach's Store, Jan. 23, from 1 ti) 4 p. io Wiyiu^ton's Sr.ore, 7/ednesday, Jae. lil. Equality, Thursday, January 25. Pendleton, Friday, January 2(i. T"wnvi!l?. Friday, January 2?>. Tugalou, S-iturrla\, January 27 Honea Pain, Monday ami 1 m-sday. January 2!? ami 3D. Briton, Wednesday au ? Thursday, February 1 arid 2. Pied motif, Friday and Saturday, Jan. 19 and 20. Pelzer, Monday. Tuesday and Wednes day, February 5, 0 and 7. Williamston, Thursday und Friday. February S and 0. G. N. C B 'LEMAN, Dee. ?, 1809. Auditor A. i\ Notice of Final Settlement. THE undersigned, Administrator of the Estate of Turner Osborne, ctee'd. hereby Ki VAM notice that lie viii ou the 15th day ol'January, 1001), appl ? to the Judye ot Probate lor Auderson County, ri. C., for a Final Settlement of said Es.ate and a discharge J rom bis office as Administra tor. J. G. CUNNINGHAM, A-lm'r D 'C 13,1899 25 5 E. M. RUCKER, Jr. ATTORNEY A.T LAW, WEBB BUILDING, Anderson, - - s. C. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Condensed Schedule In Effect December 10th. 1S03. STATIONS. Lv. Charleston .... '* Summerville.. " Branchville... " Orangeburg .. " Kingville. Lv. Savannah. " Barnwell.. " Blade vi Ho. Lv. Columbia... " Prosper!ry . " Newberry. " Ninety-Sis.. " Greenwood. Ar. HqdgcB_._ Lv. Abbeville.. _ Ar. Belton....... Lv. Anderson . Ex. Sun. No. 17. Daily No. ll. 7 40 a m 8 OD a m TWTm 7 OU a m 7 41 a m \ 8 65 a m 0 23 a m 10 15 a m 1205 a m 4 00 ft m 4 15 a m 11 05 a m 12 10 n'n 12 25 p m 1 20 p m 1 55 p m 2 15 p m 8 55 a m 8 20 a m 1 j? p m 3 IO p rn 2 85 p m Ar. Greenville. ..| 10 10 a in| Ci pa Ar. Atlanta.((>a.TiineV .1 55 p mi ll 00 p a eip.rrrnv? Ex. Sun. ? Daily Lv. Greenville.. " Piedmont . . " Williams: on. 5 30 p mi 10 15 a m t? 00 p m1 10 40 a m 0 22 p m! 10 55 a. m Ar^Anders m Lv. Belton . Ar. Dominios Ar. Abbeville Lv. Hodges. Ar. Greenwood. " Ninety-six.. " Newberry... " Prosperity... ** Columbia . Ar. Hlackvi )?. " Bu m we i " Savanniih., Lv. Kingville. . *' Orangi'liurg. " Branchville. " Summerville Ar. Charleston Daily, thiiiy No !). No. ! .! . 7 15 p ni! ll 40 a m ";~? 45 p~mi ll 16 a m .j 7 15 n nv ll 40 & m 12 25 p m 11 55 ft m 12 20 p m 12 55 p m 2 CO p m 2 14 p m 3 ?0 p m S lu i> m 7 ;?i p m S 00 p m a u." a m ? 20 a m 5 15 a m 4 43 p m :> 34 p m li 17 p m 7 ?13 p m 8 15 p m STATIONS. I Daily No. 14. m ?l 00 ii ; i u a Lv..Oaariesu>K..Ar 8 15 p 7 00 a 12 (K)n: 7 41 ?i? .' Summerville " 7 83p 5 52a 1 55a s 55a " .Branchville. " 0 02 p 4, Wa 2 50a 9 23a1 " Orangeburg " 5 84p 8 45a 4 3Ua 1U 15 a - . Kingvlllo " 4 43p 2 88? 12 u? a . ... : i.V.. Havannah Ar. h lb a 4 00 a! !" ..Barnwell.. " . S" 20 a 4-15a .. i " ..Blackville.. " ., 3 05a 8 Wall 40a " ..Columbia.. " 3 20p 9 30p 007nl2 Slip " ....Alston.... " 2 30 p 8 50a 10 01a 1 23 p " . .ISantuc... " 1 23p? 7 48p 10 20a 2 ?jp " .Union. " 1 05p 7 30p lu 39 n 2 2?p " .. Jonesville. " 12 25p: rt 53p ll) 54 a 2 ?;-p " ....Paeolet.... " 12 14p 0 42p 11 25 a1 :< luplArSpartanburgLv ll 45 a; (5 15p ll 40:t, :. ?.?j) LvSpartanlMirgAr ll I7ai OOOp 2 37e '" .\v....A<ln'V.!i'-...1-.VI S 05 ft1 3 (Bp p. iii. "A" n. m. "N" ni.cht. Pullman palace sleeping ea rs <>n Ti ains35and 86,37 ?ad:a> ou A. and C. division. Dining cari on thin ?rai issorv?all i iea.s envo?te. Trau- i??av?! Sp.irtauburg, A. >fc C. division, northbound. '.:.):; a.m., 3:8* p.m., iJ:l?p. m, (Vestib?le Limited): wiuthbonnd 12:2(1 a. ir.. 8:!.^ p m.. ! I 34 a. m., (Vestibule Limiter], ; Tran- rave t?reenvil?o.'A. and C. division, nortbi-1 a i,it:00a. m., 2:34 p. m. and 5:22 p. m.. (Vestiban-d Limited) : southbound, I?sO a. m.. 4:3u p. m.. 12:30 p. m. (Vestibuled Limited) Trams l) aud 10 carry elegant Pullman sleep ing cars between Savannah and Asheville en route daily between .lacksonvllle and Cincin nati. Also Pullman Urawins-room sleeping cars between Charleston and Columbia. FRANK S. WANNON, J. M. CULP, Third V P. & Qon. Mgr., Trafilo Mgr., Washington, D. C Washington, D. C. W. A. TURK, S. H. HARDWICK. Gen. Pass. Ag'r.. As't Gen. Pass. Ag't.. Washington, D. C. Atlanta, Ga. OLD NEWSPAPERS For sale at this office cheap. Take Warning. A LL persons are hereby warned not. >CA to hunt, fish, 1?W or othnrwise traspasa on our farms in Pendletou Town ship, Andmon County, S. C., known as .'Rivoli Frtroi," "^toriM Place." "Simp son Pl-ict)" und "Altamont Karra" on Eighteen Creek. Any on* disregarding rhie notice will be pr..secuten'. FRED. G. BROWN". MRS. J. A. McCRARY. De.- i:;, 1899 25 4 BANKERS awd BROKERS? Gm SKALIER & CO., 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 [or3 percent. margin upwara] on th? Stock Exchange. The greatest fortunes have been made through speculations in Stocks, Wheat or Co-ton. If you are interested to know how spec ulations are conducted, notify us and we will send you information and market e tier free of charge. Usual commission charged for exe cuting orders Government, Municipal and Railroad bond-" quotations furnished on applica tion for pis rebase, sale and exchange. Oc:.2f),lS9fl J 8 Gm ^^^W DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE TO ALL POINTS North, South and Southwest. SCHEDULE IN EFFECT NOV. Nh, 1SS9. SOUTHBOONJ' No. 4U3. No 41. !.v New York, via Pena R. R.*ll 00 am *i>'0i pru Lv Washington, " 5 00 pm 4 30 am LT Richmond, A. C. L.9 Otpm 9 05 ?tm Lv Portsmouth, S. A.L. 8 45 pm 'J -?Obia Ar Weldon, " . ll 10 pm*ll 43 am Ar Henderson, " . 12 56 a m 1 35 pm Ar r.aleigb, via S. A L. 2 22 am 3 36 pm Ar Southern Pinto " . 4 ?7 am 6 C0,pm Ar H ? " . 5 H am 7 00 pm Lv Wilmington " *3 05 pm Ar Monroe. " .*C 53 am *9 12 pm Ar Chari?tte. . ?8 CO am ?10 25pm" Ar Chester, ~ ".*8 13 am *l? 55 pa Ar Greenwood " .10 45 am 112 am I -ir Athens, " . 1 24 pm 3-i8am I Ar Atlanta, _. 3 50 pm 6 15ain NOnrHi???N?I Kn. Mr/.. No. 33 Lv Atlanta, S. AL.-. *1 00 pm *8 5?pm Ar Athens, " . 3 (8 pm 1105pm Ar Greenwood, " . 5 40 pm 1 46 am Ar Chester, S. A. L . 7 53 pm 4 08 am Ar Monroe,_"* . 9 30 pm 5 45 am Lv "hariottc. '"" ".?8* 20 pm jg 00 aa iii Hamlet, .. . *il 10pm *7 43 a?l Ar Wilmington " . *?2_05 pm Ar Southern Pines, " . *12 02 am *3 00 am Ar Kaleigh, " . 2 03 am ll 13 am Ar Henderson " . 3 26 am 12 45 pm Ar Weldon, " . 4 55 sm 2 60 pm Ar Portsmouth S.A.L.. 7 25 am 5 2Cpm Ar Richmond ATC. L~...... *3 15~am " ?7 20 pa Ar Wasbington. Penn. R. R.".. 12 31 pm ll 20 pm Ar New York. " .?5 23 pm ?6 53 aa .Daily. tnaily7Ex7Sunday7 Nos. 403 a>.d 402 "The Allanta Special,*' 8olid Vestibuled Train, of Pullman Sleepers and Coac> es between Washington and Atlanta, also Pffl man Sleepers between Portsmouth and Charlotte, N. C. Noa. 4!. and 38, "The S. A. L Express." 8otta Train, Coaches and Pullman sleepers hetwoei Portsmouth and Atlanta. Both t ams make immediate connection at At lanta for Montgo* ery .Mobile, Nsw Orleaus, Tex as, california. Mexico, Chatianooga, Nashville, Memphi?, Macon and Florida. For Tieftet?. Sleepers, etc.. anply to G. Mc?. Batte, 1- P. A., 23 Tryon . treet, Char lotte. N C. E. St John, vice-President and Gen'l. Man;* . V. E. McBeo General Superintendent. H. W. B. Glover, Traffic Manager L.S. Allen. Gen'l. Passenger Agent General Officers, Portsmouth, Ta. ATLANTIC COAST LINE. TRAFFIC DEPARTMENT:* WILMINGTON, N. C., Jan. 10,186$. Fast Line Between Charleston and Coi um bia and Upper South Carolina, Nortk Carolina. CONDENSED SCHEDULE. OOING WEST. OOINO EAtST ?No. 52._No. 53. 7 00 am Lv.Charleston.Ar S 00 ppr 8 2? am Lv.Lanes.Ar 6 20 p|ts 9 40 am Lv.Sumter.Ar 5 13 pin 11 00 pru Ar.Columbia.Lv 4 00 pcs 12 07 pm Ar.Prosperity.Lv 2 47 pm 12 in om Ar.Newberry.Lv 2 82 rim j 04 pm j Ar.Clinton.Lv j l 58 pjn 125pm Ar.Laurens.Lv I 1 45pto 3 0jr.m Ar.Greenville.Lv 12 01 ara 3 li'pm Ar.Spartanburg.Lv ! ll 46 an. G 07 pm Ar.Winnsboro, S. C.Lv I ll 41 ara 8 15 pm Ar.Charlotte,N. C.Lv 9 85am 6 05 pm Ar...Hendersonville, N. C.Lv j 9 14 am 7 00 pm Ar.Asheville. N. C.LT | 3 20 am "?Dailv" Noa. 52 and 56 Solid Traine ht?tweec Chariots OfidCohimbia.S. C. U.M. EtntBeoM (tvaH. PassPiuK"r Aff??n*t J. R.KJ?TWSW, (4?n*<c?3l Munter BLUE R?DGF Rfl'LRQAD. ll C. BEATTIE Receiver. Time Table No. 7.-Effective x' i898. Between Anderson and Walhalla. WESTBOUND EASTBOUND. No 12 STATIONS. No. ll. First (/lass, First Chis?, D*i!y. Daily. P. M.-Leave Arrive A M. s 3 35.Anderson.ll 00 f 3.51).Denver.10.40 f 4 05.Antun.10 31 s 4.14.Pendleton.10.22 f 4.23.Cherry's Crossing.10.13 f 4.29.Adam's Crossing.10.07 s 4 47.Seneca.9.49 s 5 11.West Union.9.25 s 5.17 Ar.Walhalla.Lv 9.20 (s) Regular station ; (f) I-'lag station. Will also stop at the iollowing stations to take on or let off passengers : Phin nevs, Jamps' and Sar ly Springs. No. 12 eonrects with Southern Railway No 12 at Anderson. No. 6 connecta with Southern Railway Nos. 12. 37 and 38 at Seneca. J. R. ANDERSON, Supt,