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W.O. T. U.DEPARTMENT. Conducted hy (he ladies ut' the W. <'. T. I'. of And? ison, S. C. It IMtotli Like a Sei peal. "Temperance is all right," said the Young-Man-Wlio-Wants - to-be-Liber al, "but there is so much crankiness and fanaticism sh wu about it that I don't wonder that it makes such little headway. Now, I. was brought-up to think that a man who even smelled of a wiue bottle was already in the dev il's clutches. When I was a little youngster I used to hold my breath when I went past a saloon for fear that . del Satan would bob "?it and get ?ie'. Hut when 1 began to knock about tho world a little. 1 found that there was spine very respectable people, wh ? ?lid not think exactly as 1 had been taught. 1 found that there wore gentlemen who had taken a drink -every timo'thcy wanted it, for year.-, and yet were not -ut- nor drunkards. I found that thc case had been made put a great deal worse than it really was, and then all the good temperance lessons I had been taught went for nothing. Don't you think that a great deal of thc tem perance talk overshoots the mark." "Well," replied Uncle Bcz, "I have no doubt that some of us feel so strongly ou this subject that we may deserve the name or 'crank' that you i are so ready to apply to us. The men and women who are especially inter ested in temperance, have not all the wisdom in the world, and it ta barely possible that some of us make" a few mistakes, sometimes, just like other folks. But, bo that as it may, it is still a fact as true 'now as when the Proverbs of Solomon were written, that 'wine is a mocker, and whoso ever is deceived thereby, is not wise.' "It seems to me that if a man or boy would only look at this question fairly in tho face once, it would just about solve itself. If a man really appreciated the fact that he is making a fool ol'himself, ho would bo ashamed to start on that road. "When you get right down to the bottom of it, you must admit that the man who tampers with strong drink risks his all-and for what? Oh, yes, he is risking everything that he holds dear. No man in his senses can tell you that a fellow can drink it or.'let it alone. A great many brighter?-and more determined fellows than you aro have found that they cannot let it alone. Of course, not every man who takes a drink will die a drunkard, but he -runs that risk! You know that. A good many of tho-drink-or-let-it alone fellows will die drunkards. Some of the fellows you drank with lust night will, in all probability, dio drunkards. Will you? You may. Why take the risk? What do you gain? Honestly . nd truly, now, con fess to yourself; do you really caro for the stuff? If you were alone on a des ert island, where the brooks ran with it, how often would you touch it? What pleasure does it give you beyond the pleasure of swaggering up to tho bar and of having a dark-brown taste in the morning? Does it pay to run any risks for the pleasure so slight? Isn't the man who is deceived thereby, not wise? "Why is the drinkiog of intoxicat liqurs so bad? I'm sure I don't understand tho philosophy of it; I can only judge it by its results. I do know, howover, that it is a violation of the physical law, for tho stomach rebels, tho brain reels, the eyes be come bloodshot, and the drinker in time becomes a physical wreck, and if he keeps it up, dies a horrible death. I do know that it violates the moral law, for the man who puts liquor into his stomach becomes a beast instead of a man, and is unable to exercise that restraint upon his natural self, which is the foundation of good mor als. I do know that ir. is a violation of spiritual law, for thc man with thc liquor-befuddled brain,- loses high ideals, all idea of ieverence, and his soul becomes dwarfed. I know that. There is no crankiness-no fanaticism -behind that. It is as true as the fact that water flows down hill. There is no escape from it. You don't need a 'temperance lesson' to show you that. You know, very well, that thc young fellow who begins 'to booze' is soon ready to do things that he would not have dreamed advisable in hir; so bcr days. "No, 1 don't believe that thc drink ing of strong drinks is responsible for all thc evils in the world, nor even half of them. 1 think man usually takes to drink because he is weak- ?md sinful; I know man puts the bottle to his neighbor's lips because he is sel fish and sinful. I do not think tho banishing of distilleries and breweries and saloons would convert the world into a paradise, nor usher in thc mil lennium, but I am very sure that it would be a step in that direction, and a step is a long way, sometimes. I know it would make lifo easier for millions of men, happier for millions of women, and brighter for millions of children. You think it will never be done? Well, then, you certainly will agree that it is* all the more important that wo who want to be considered so ber-minded, thinking, sensible citi zens of the world, do our part toward keeping ita -ol), i. .-cnsible world, that Wi; exercise ali I he more ea re that we bo not deceived by wine. 1 ?: 1 * ' believe th.- ?lay will come win II thc .saloon will In- banished, rivery year thc world is realizing more and more tlie terrible waste, thc terrible suffer ing, thc untold misery thc saloon brings in its train, and -"inc time the old world is going to turn around and say, 'Why, how foolish we've been! Let's stop it!' It/nay nut happen in just the way pome nf us have had our hearts .set upon, but it will happen in (?od's good time. All this agitation, all these prayers will notgofor naught. Men will not always be deceived. Let us help along the day." JOHNKTONK M I * it Ii A V. With the Feet to the Ktist. There was recently reprinted in the Sun, from a western newspaper, a par agraph about tin- disinterment and re burial of body in a cemetery! because it bad been buried in tin* wrong way. "The undertaker," MI the paragraph said, "was a new man at the business, and the body was placed with its feet to thc west. Tin- relatives recalled the fact, and would not be satisfied until the remains were exhumed and turned with the feet to thc east, in accordance with the popular custom." New York undertakers say that hereabouts bodies are buried accord ing to the situation of thc burial plot, with tho feet to thc path in front, liowcvcr, that may bring thej^body with regards to the points of the com pass. It was a common custom in old limes to bury the dead with their feet Lo thc east, so that when they should rise, on thc day of tho resurrection, they would rise facing whence thu mm mons was expected. There are it is said, whole churchyards lilied with dead, all facing east, but will the growth of cities and of ccmetcriei lutside of churchyard buryingground: :his practice fell into disuse. Cc mc ?.cries were variously situated to star .villi, and then they were laid out ii moll a manner as to bring the lani .vithin them most advantageously int? jse. Obviously, for illustration, of ; loublc tier of lots joining at tho bael md each tier facing ou a path, on :ier of lots would face one way am ;he other tier in exactly the opposit ?ray. A body buried in auy of thea ots, facing either way, would be hui ed with thc feet to thc path upo which thc lot fronted, so that th jodies in the two tiers of the doubl /ter of lots would '?face in es ictly opposito direction, and night bc that neither faced exactl last. In laying out cemeteries there ai likely to be curving roads and tbei night be roads crossing diagonal! with tho result of some plots of irre, alar shape, and sotno triangular; at ibero are likely to be found in son iemetcries some circular plots. In uroular plot that was enclosed by otl ir land it might be that the gradi vGuld bo [made with the feet towat ,he monument at the centre of tl )lot: if, as would more likely be tl lase, the circular plot had a pal iround it, then the bodies would 1 daccd with their heads to the contr nonument and their feet to the pat he graves radiating from the ceati ind so lying as to the points of tl lompass in various directions, ri angular plots tho bodies might n ic interred with feet to a path, b engthwiso of the plot in tho longe cction; in this or irregular plots th rould be buried as they could bc mc ppropriately to the plot. But aost lots it is possible to bury tl ?ody with the feet to the path, ai his is now, without regard to tl ompass points, substantially the coi jon practice. And if a body we isinterred from ono lot and reinterr a another it would, upon its rcint? lent, be placed with its face to t root of the new lot, whether tl aced in thc samo direction or not. J tho location of the lot that govcr he practice being to bury with t set, and thus, of course, the face, /ard the path. But while thc direction in whi odies shall lie buried is nowada ommonly thus determined, there i hose who still prefer to bc buri acing cast, and who accomplish tl esult simply by buying a lot that es in that direction. - Xi:ir- York Si "One Minute Cough Cure is thc b cmcdy I ever used for coughs a olds. It is unequalled for whoop nugh. Children all like it." wri f. X. Williams, Ceutryville, I: lever fails. It is thc only harm! nurdy that gives immediate resit arcs coughs, colds, hoarseness, ero neumon?a, bronchitis and all thr nd lung troubles. Its early use j cuts consumption. Evans Pharma There arr two good rules wh ught to be written on every bc; ever to believe anything bad ab nybody unless you positively kn i to be true, never to tell that un) ou feel thht it is aboslutcly nccessa nd that <?od is listening while; di it. Mr. J. Sheer, Scdalia. Mo., sa is child's life by Ono Minute Coi ?ure. Doctors had given her uj ic with croup. It's an infalliblec or coughs, colds, grippe, pneumoi ronchitis and throat and lung ti les. Believes at once. Evans Pl moy. -----_ ? -L Til? rina! Smash l p. In 1521 ?Jean Ktuflet, ;i <?i-? plunged Europe into terror hy predict iug a universal deluge in 152-1. "<>* u to the conjunction of several planets in a watery sign" - the watery signs arc Cancer, Scorpio and Pisces. At his ominous words thousands Hod to thc mountains, and others took refuge in boats. Awiuol, a doctor of law and canon of Toulouse, even built a sort of ark on four pillars as a haven of refuge. There was no need of such excitement. No Hood came. On the contrary, the season was even calmer and drier than usual. Stoflcr, had, in deed, made a serious blunder and one for which many of hi> fellow astrolo gers, including Cardau, never pardon ed him, Stoner, however, is only one io a long line of prophets whose piedic tions in regard to the end of th? world have proved utterly false. As far back as the year 1000 many communi ties in Ku rope were driven half dis tracted by rumors that the day of judgment was close at hand, and again j in UKO, whole cities were paralyzed with fright for the same reason. Now and again during the latter part of thc middle ages the same extraordinary phenomenon was witnessed, though in a lesser degree, and ever since thc modern revival of occultism there have not been wanting erratic proph ets of tho Jean Stofler type. Years ago a Mr. Baxter created a sensation in langland by his prediction that thc world would certaiuly como to an end in 1887. Thousands be lieved in him, and great was their sur prise when they discovered that he was mistaken. Yet such is the cre dulity of human nature that their faith in him remained unshaken, and, no matter what year he selected as the Gnal one of the world's existence, they accepted his prediction as gospel truth. Equally bold, though doubtless not as popular as llaxtcr, is the Abbe Du pin, cure of the village of Dion, in Frunce, and author of,a book with thc following extraordinary title: ''The grand coup ur universal cataclysm will ravage thc world between the 10th and 2lst of September, 1800, according to the Scriptures. The prophecies of the Old and Nev/ Testaments compare with those of the fathers and with the secrets of La Salettc, in which is fore told the great war which will destroy nine-tenths of tho human race, thc coming of antichrist and his reign, af ter which the church will triumph over her enemies and the reign of Christ begin on earth." The author fixed September, 1896, as the time when the great "coup," as he called it, would take plaoe, but he added that if it did not take place then it certainly would occur before tve close of 1899. The appearance of comets have gi ven rise frequently to similar predictions. This was thc case when the famous comet of 1680 appeared. Whiston as cribed the deluge to its former ap pearance, and such au excitement did it cause among the people that Bayle wrote a treatise to prove the absurdity of belief founded on these portents. Mme. do Levigne, writing at the same time, said: "Wo have a comet of enormous size. Its tail is the most beautiful object conceivable. Every person of not?is alarmed and believes that heaven, in terested in their fate, sends them a warning in this comet. They say that the courtiers of Cardinal Mazarin, who ts despaired of by his physicians, be lieve this prodigy is in honor of his passing away and toll him of the ter ror with which it has inspired them, (lo had the sense to laugh at them ?nd to reply facetiously that thc comet iid him too much honor." M. Camille Flammarion, thc distin guished French astronomer, says on same subject: "In this century pre lictions concerning tho end of the world have several times been associ ated with comets. It was announoed that the comet of Biola, for example, ivould intersect the world's orbit on Oct. 20, 1832, which did as predicted. There wa9 great excitement. Once nore the end of things was declared it hand. Humanity was threatened. What was going to happen? Tho or jit-that is to say, the path of the ?arth-has been confounded with thc jarth itself. The latter was not to .each that point nf MS orbit traversed >y tho comet until Nov. 30, more than i month after the passage of the coin it, and the latter was at no time to be vithin 20,000,000 leagues of us. Once nore we got oil with a good fright." In.his entertaining book. "La Fin lu Monde," M. Flammarion gives a rraphic description of a collision he neen the earth and a come", which is LO take place some time in the twenty tftli century. "These two heavenly ?odies, thc earth and the comet," he vritcs, "will meet like two trains .ushiug headlong upon each other with .csistless momentum, as if impelled o mutual destruction byan insatiable agc. But in the present instance the velocity of shock will bo 965 times ;rcater than two express trains hav ng each a speed of 100 kilometers por lour." -m 0 m - A man never knows how little he s worth until tho sheriff disposes of tis property. (Junker Humor, Th? unexpected humor which ul'tcu tints th? gravo speech uf tlie Quaker is well illustrate! in a little story told of au eminent young physician of ? Pennsylvania at the time of the Civil war. He had determined to serve h?H country and leave his practice at home; but met with grieved remon strance from his mother, a sweet faced Quakeress. "I beseech of thee not to go to this war, my Hon!" she pleaded, her eyes full of tears. ' Hut I do not go to light, mother," said the doctor cheerfully, "llaui go ing asa medical mao. Surely there is ne harm in that." "Well, well," said the little motlier doubtfully, "go then if it must bc so." Then suddenly a gleam of loyalty shone through her tears, and she straightened herself and looked brave ly up ?uto her tall sou's face. "If thee linds thee kills more than thee cures," she said demurely, "I I advise thee to go straightway over to the other side, my son!" - The Youth's ( 'ompanion. Hound to lie Safe. Washington has an old blind colored mao who makes a living by traveling from door to door selling matches. As he is a good natured old fellow he has many fi ?ends, who arc careful to see that he is in ueed of nothing. One day not long ago his customers heard that bc and his family had had thc misfortune to lose their house and their few personal belongings by fire. Many offers of assistance were made. The morning following his loss thc old man was on bis beat as usual. A certain lady who took cousiderable in terest in him gave him an overcoat and some other clothes for himself and his wife. It being early in the day, the lady said, "Uncle Joe, you'd better leave these things here till you go home to-night." "No," said Uncle Joe. "It ain't no use. I'm gwine to kerry 'cm 'long." "Yes, Uncle Joe," said the lady, "but they'll be heavy and bother you." "Dat's all right, missus," said the ? darkey; "but I hain't gwine to run no chances, for I'se afraid when I gits back you'll change your notion." Washington Star. f Why Cows Dry Up. Cows go dry from mismanagement more than from any other cause. Ir regularity of milking and failure to '.strip" will cause any cow to dry off. The richest milk is last drawn from the^udder, and for that reason alone the dairymen should strip closely. Changes of food, when made sudden ly, will also cause the cows to fall of in yield; but in winter the cause may also be due to extreme cold and insuf ficient shelter, while in summer the U80 of netting in the windows to pre vent thc entrance of flies and other insects, will serve to prolong the milk ing period.-Farm and Field. I want to let the people who suffer from rheumatism and sciatica know that Chamberlain's Pain Balm reliev ed mo after a number of other medi cines and a doctor had failed. It is the best liniment I have ever known of.-J. A. Dodgen, A1 ph are t ta, Ga. Thousands have been cured of rheu matism by this remedy. Ooo applica tion relieves the pain! For sale bv Hill-Orr Drug Co. - She- You are the most exasper ating man on earth. Herc I scold you for half an hour, and yon won't answer. Why don't you talk? He I never usu strong language in thc presence of a lady. Beware of the Doctors' d5L Contagio Patchwork; You Gan i?* selves to Cure Yourself at Home. ??? The do thia vii? poi?on, and only attempt to hei disenso-tho sores and eruptions. This t! system, and endeavor to keep it shut in and mercury. Tho mouth and throat ant into sores, and thc fight is continued ind moro damage than tho disease itself. Mr. II. L. Myers, 100 Mulberry St., Nt hundred dollars with tho. doctors, when they could do mo no good. I had largo S] bcdy,and theso soon broke out into runn endured all tho suffering which this v duces. I deci?'.d to try S. S. S. ns a last soon greatly improved. I followed close tions For So??-Trv;a?,ment,' and tho large i chest began to grow paler and smaller, i disappeared entirely. I was soon cured p skin has been as clear as glass ever sinci self at home, after the doctors had fail? It is valuable time thrown away to exj to eure Contagious Blood Poison, for th yond their skill. Swifts Specific S. S. S. FOR 1 -nets in an entirely different way fron Soison out of the system and gets rid < isease, while other remedies only shut t constantly undermining the constitution, ment places a eure within tho reach of all vice, free of chargo, and save the nation Write for full Information to Swift Specif - livery limo a mau is deceived it adds to hiss Mock of wisdom. - "There is only one mau less re spected thau the mau who won't pay Iiis bills," said thc Cornfed Philoso pher, "and that is the man who can't." "Can you tell me," asked a Sdn day school teacher of a little, boy "why the Israelites made a golden calf?" "Because they didn't have gold enough to make a cow," was the reply. - Curate-"I never saw such a set of idiots aB I had to preach to this morning." Mabel (one of the congre gation)-"I suppose that is why you kept on calling them 'Dearly beloved breathren.' " Kheumacide is a throughout, per manent, constitutional cure for rheu matism. The acids in the blood whi i cause the disease are thoroughly eradi cated. It is also the best blood purifier, laxative and tonic. Evans Pharmacy. - Thc manufacture of Christmas toys is one of tho youthful industries of thc United States, at least so far as dolls are concerned. Several years ago there were no doll factories on this side of the ocean. Now there arc three largo ones, each doinga thriviug business. "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. - He came home from his daily grind at the office, and falling into a chair, said: "What have you got to read? I'm just in the mood to read something sensational and startling something that will make my hair stand on end.'' To vThich his other half respouded sweetly, "Here's the bill for my spring dress, darling." Mrs. It. Churchill, Berlin, Vt., says, ''Our baby was covered with running sores. DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salvo cured her.'' A specific for piles and skin diseases. Beware of worthless counterfeits. Evans Pharmacy. Head the Bible' daily. Notice how beautiful and lofty are its teach ings, and how pure its language. Here we find the admonition to guard well the door of our lip. "For there is not a word in my tongue, but lo, O Lord, thou knowest it altogether." - Au old woman, arrested for street begging iu Marquette Mich., had in her dirty, ragged clothing $1, 445 in bills and UJS100 United States 4 per cent, bonds. She was sent to an asylum, tho authorities urging that a woman who thus made a sav ings bank of her clothes must bo in sane. - Drinking glasses, called tum blers, owe their names to the fact that they are the successors of little round silver bowls, so perfectly balanced that, whichever way they were tipped about on the table, they tnmMed into position again and there remained with the rim upward, as if asking to be refilled. - Counting in all the Atlantic, Mediterranean, Indian Ocean and smaller cables under all the seas and bays of the world, there are 1225 sep arate ocean cables, aggregating in length over 175,000 miles of wire, sufficient to girdle the world seven times over. C M'.IM.IIIAT?-"- I . .???II.???? 98 . . . The above figures tell a remarkable 4 story; they represent almost exactly fha i per cuutaco of cures intde by RHEUfflACIDE. the wiin 'crful new rons'itull >nal cure for rt ll EU M ATI ?M. The other two per cent. ?ere not curable, or failed to tako Tuedl riuo according tu directions. Thousands ha*? lieen cured lu view of tho fact that ?.any physician*think th?i rheumatism is Incurable aud tr>at mnn r MI frites fall, it must bo true that KHEUMACIDE is the greatest roed ICAI discovery of the ago Par ticulars and testimonials of mauy wei - known people rent rr? o to all applictnts T h EVANS PHARMACY E . ID POISON. is not the slightest doubt that the 0 more harm than good in treating as Blood Poison; many victims or tBome disease would be much bette? y ir they had never allowed them be dosed on mercury and potash, the ?dies which the doctors ever give for son. ctors are wholly unable to get rid of 01 up the outward appearance of tho hey do by driving the poison into the with their constant doses of potash 1 other delicate parts then break out ^finitely, th? drugs ?u?ug the ey seem jwnrk, N. J., says: "I had spent a I realized that rats all over my ing sores, and X ile disease pro resort, and was ily your 'Direc splotches on my and before long erfectly and my a. I cured my ?d completely." >ect the doctors 0 disease is be THE BLOOD 1 potash and mercury-it forces the af it entirely. Hence it cures the he poison in where it larks forever, Oar system of private home treat . We give all necessary medical ad it the embarrassment of publicity. \ lc.Co,, Atlanta, Gt* ?"Housework is hard work wifoo?t (^Mlhisti Iw"^*ZTJu!TK ll lE?^Bfe^i 1 md wann witor. Usc a scrubbing brash; when H H IEBBBI m**sl BHBW^^K/T^ Ba water becomes tbe least soiled, get fresh; follow H Bj Bj^fl S?^j^Efl^^^S?S? fl Wblto Iron beds csa also be washed by ^''fl 5 Pjafilj fl|^^gSSB>3Mgif 9 Th^*bo*o le t?i?ti from car freo booklet B B ^^^^ fl Bent freo LO request to \\\ >o?&' I'.' :| :,'?!)vJC'?- j "j THB N. IU FAIRBANK COMPANY, "IB"^' ^~*| H ^B^I^HB^t^H^^^D^B^HH^aVHBa^ls^Mny TWM ^ ^^^^^~^^^^^^^<a^Jg Assessment Notice. | - AlJDlTOIl'S Ol'EICE, ANDKRSON, 8. C. i TBIS OFFICE WI KL HE OPEN IO receive retorna of perxonal proper ty for taxation for t*o next ii-?-al year from the lirat dav of January, 1900, io tho 2oih February following, includive. All trH'-Hiors of Heal Entit? made td nco last yimr'd amassment munt bu carefully noted on tue return-lb? number of aeres bought or sold and fron1, whom ac quired or to whom sold. Under the uew aaaesBinft IH?H the township assessors are required to make Tax Returns for all tbnao that tail to make their own returns within the time proscribed by law, aud hence the difficul ty of delinquents escaping ibo penalty of the law. Ex-Confederate sold lora over 50 years of age are exempt from Poll Tax. All other malea between the ages of 21 and 60 yearn except those incapable of earn ing a Rupport from being maimed or from any other cairne, eball be deemed taxable polia. For the convenience of taxpayers we will atao have deputies to take returns at tho following times and places: Holland, Tuesday, January 9. Moffattaville, Wednesday, January 10. Iva, Thuraday, January ll. Moseley, Friday, January 12. Baylis Mcconnell's, ?Saturday, Jau. 13. Starr, Monday, January 15. Storevllle, Tuesday, January 10. Clin?:8calHK' Mill, Wednesday, Jan. 17. Ouyton, Thursday, January 18. i Bishop's Branch, Saturday, January 20. Five Forka, Friday, January 10. Amuri, Mrn.day, January 22. Wyatt'** Store," Monoay, January '22, UUtii 1 p. rr:. Cedar Wreath, Tuesday, January 23. beach's Store, Jan. 23, from 1 to4 p. m. Wigingtou's Store, Wednesday, Jan. 24. Equality, Thursday,, January 25. Pendlutou, Friday 7. January 20. Town ville, Fr hi ay, January 2H. Tugaloo, Saturday, January 27 Hontea Path, Mot day and Tuesday, January 20 and 30. Belton, Wednesiay and 'thursday, February 1 and 2. Piedmont, Friday and Saturday, Jan. 10 and 20. Pelzer, Monday, Tuesday and Wedn?a dav. February 5, 0 and 7. Williamatou, Thursday ant} Friday, February 8 and 0. G. N. C. BOLEMAN, Dec. 5, 1899._ Auditor A. i\ Notice Final Settlement. THE undersigned, Executor of the Estate of Obadiah Shirley, deoeat ed, liereby giv??t notice that he will 'ui che 13th day February, 1900, apply to tue Judge of Probate for Anderson Coun ty for a Final Settlement of enid Estate, and a diaohatge from hin office aa Execu tor. M. McGEE, Ex'r. Jan 10, 1900 29 5 E. M. SUCKER, Jr., ATTOBKEY A.rJ? I-AW, WEBB BUILDING, Anderson, - - H. (*. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Condsnud Sohodulo In EGTeofc December 10th, ISM. STATIONS. ^?ff SAT. Charleston. 7 00 a m Snmxnervule.. 7 di a m " Branohviijo.J 8 ?3 a' m " Oma go burg. QB ??a " fflngr?le.. .......... sjfiftC I.V.IJrrvannan.... Iii Offlt) Bi * Barnwell. d ? dhtt " Blackville.^^i^u^.- 4 S * P tv. Columbia.Ti B *~Xn " Prosperity. 18 10 Xt'n " New Derry. li 18 p m ** Niaoty-Sfx,. lCOpn " Greenwood.. 740am 1 65 p m Ar. Hodge?...t 8 Qt? ? m 8 18 pm Lv. Abbeville. 7 20 a m "Tfe PP Ar. Bolton.77~. 8 Bj 5 m 8 18 PB Lv. Anderson. 8 8) a a 8*88 p m Ar. greenville.. . - 10 10 n m 411 pm Ar. AtlanteTtOen.Tima) 8 M p m ^gSS STATIONS. ?yojy LT. Greenville. 8 80 p m 10 li a m Piedmont..... 6 00 pa 10 <0 o ra " Wintflartaton. 8 83 p m 18 fe ?Jg Ar. Andorson ". 7 li p a ll 8 ?rn tr. Belton . 8 45 p m ll 88 ia Ar. Denna! da. 716 p m ll dO a 8a Ar. Abbeville . 8 lu ?> rn (1ft -?A pjm I.V. Hodge?..7777 "Wpm ll B tm Ar. Greenwood. 8 00pm 12 20 p na - Ninety-Six. 19 68 pm M Newberry. 2 GO p m ? Prosperity. 2 14 p m ** Colombia.. 8 88 pm IrTBlaokvl 1?..7.. . g 03 SB " Barnwb.l. ? 20 a m M Savannah.. _ 5 15 a m Lv. Klngviile.7777 ..". 4 43~p m " Oran gobur g. 5 84 pm " Branchville. 6 17 pm 8cunm?>rville. 7 83 p m Ar. Charleston. 8 15 p in ^???l STATIONr~1^7l^y 11 00 pj 7 iu u'Lv..Ohar?esooa..Ar H ?Sp fin 12 00 n 7 41 a " BummervlUe " 7 80S IBa 185a 8 53a ".Branchville." 0O2p 488o 2 50 a 0 23 a " Orangeburg " 8 64p 8 dftoJ 4 03 ft 10 ir. a ? . Kingvi?o . ?' 4 48fi Sffln 12 U6a. L-v..Havannah Ar. HM 4 00a. ....Barnwell.." . 8 80a 4 15 a ..... " ..Blackville.. " . 3 05n 8 Qi a ll *'J :i " ..Columbia.. " 8 20p 0 flOp 0 07aJ2.vv ?. ....Alston...,. 2 00p 860rt lOOli ? 1 ?.?p " . . ?antuc... " 1 23pi 7 43p 10 -.Uni .-' a.* ? .' .Vzi?.-. " I ?5ji 7 ??p lu :fi?n? 2 r.t I " ..Jonesville. " 12 23 p 8 fiOn. 10 Mn' a . v " ....Kiico ct.... " 12 14 p 0 42 p 11 25a U plArSpnrranhurgLv ll 43a 0 l?p ll 4;) a; :. 4 i .> LvSpavtuuh.ir.; Ar ll 17 a 0 00p - ;.7 v . .MvlAr-As H-.-I- f..Xv s USa ? O'Sp * v. th. "A" ru v.i. "N" night. Pul'.::? i i pnince sleeping ?"ara on Tra?na35anti 80,Uiun. . :. Kit A.andO. (1 v KIOJI. Dining can on iiio< 'ti is sorveah niua?H'<mronttl. Trains ?-nv?> ^partanbUrg, A. & C. division, nprth1>on)id. f OXt n. tn., USA p.m., u:l?p.m., ivestibnle Limited); t?optl?bonnd 12:28 n, m.. :l| p. m.. ?1 -.A n. m., (Vestibnlo Limited.) Train* ???ve Greonvlllo, A. and. C. division, northbo n t,n:00 a m., 2:?4 p. m.?nd 5:22 p. m., iVestibu.i-d Limitedy: aoutabonxfcf, 1:80 a. m., :30 p. m.. 12:30 p. m. (Vestibuled limited) Trains 0 and 10 carry elegant Pullman Bleep ing cara between Sarac-ian and Aahcville At? ronte dally between -Taktenvilla and Olpcta natl. Also Pullman Drawing-room sleeping cara between Charleston and Columbia. FRANK 8. GANNON, J. If.OTJLP. ThlrdV-P.dkGen.Mgr., Trafilo Mgr., Washington, D. Ct Washington, D. O. W.A.TURK, 8. H-HABDWIOK, Gen. Pass. Ag'fc. As'tGan. Faa*, Aa*tu Washington, D. C Atlanta* Ga. OLD NEWSPAPERS For sale at this of?lco cheap. Notice of Final Settlement. THIS undorHignerl, Executors of the Estate ol'J?>hn ?. Sitiou, jH4-eaHeci, here by K'VH untie- Chut they will ou th? 20th ?lily nt" bVlirunry, 1?MX?. apply to the Judge of Probaio ?o Anderf/ui (bounty, ri. C., for a Fiual Buttimtifttit of K?id F.-ntnte, and H d?charge frout their ollie.* H? Ex ecutors. A. J. MTTON, H. P. sirroN, Executors. Jau 17, 1900_30_5?_ BANKERS and BROKERS. em SKALIER & CO., COMSOU, STOCK EXCHANGE BLDG, 60-62 Broadway, - New York. LOTS OF MONET CAN be made through speculation wita depositor$10.00 [thirty dol?an*] upward [or 3 percent, marum upward] on the Stock Exchange. The greatest fortune? have been made through speculations in Stocks, Wheat or Cotton. If you aro interested to kn ?w how sp?c ulations aro conducted, notify UH and we will send yon information and market e tter free of charge. Usual communion charged for exe cuting ordern Government, Municipal and Railroad hoods quotatiouH furnished on applica tion for purchase, Hale and exchange. Oct. 25. lsfli)_1? 6m .LIMITED DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE TO ALL POINTS North, South and Southwest. SCHEDULE JN EFFECT NOV. Nh. 1899. 80UTHBOUNL. No. 403. No. 41. LT New York, Tia Penn Ii R?ll 00am "0 00 pm LT Washington, ?. 5 00 pm 4 80 am LT Richmond, A. C. L.9 01pm 9 06 ana LT Portsmouth, 8. A.L.MM 8 49 pm 9 20am Ar Weldon, **. ll lOpm'Il 48 am Ar Henderson, " . 12 M am 1 SS pm Ar Raleigh, Tia 8. A L.2 22 am 8 86 pm Ar Souther" Pinea " . 4 27 am 0 00.pm Ar B , Kl ._" ,. 8 H am 7 00 pm LT Wilmington "_ _ ?8 OS pm Ar Monroe. " ........... ?6 63 am *9 12 pm Ar Charlotte, " " ".~?8 00 am ?10 28pa Ar Cheater, " ...... ?8 i8am ?10 65na Ar Qr-enweed " .ju *i am 1 12 am Ar Athena, " . 1 24 pm 8 48 an? AT Attenta, "' .". 8 60 pm 6 isam NOBTHBO?tfi;. ?ir.. 44?X. Wo. SS. LT atlanta, 8. AL.... ?100 pm ?8 BO pm AT athena, " . 8 (8 pm 1106 pm Ar Greenwood, " . 0 40 pm 146 am Ar Chester, 8. A. L ......... 7 S3 pm 4 OS ant Ar Mon roe, " 9 80 pm 5 45 am LT- hurlotte. "" .J..?8 20 pm ?8 00 ?a A r Hamlet,_" .?ii io pm ?7 48 ala Ar Wilmington " . *~ ?12 06 pm Ar Southern Pinea. " ...... ~?12 Ol am ~*9 00 am Ar Haleigh, " ....2 OS am 1118 am Ar Henderson " . 8 26 am 12 45 pa Ar Weldon, " "..4 6ft am 2 60 pm Ar Portsmouth 8. A. L.......... 7 25 nm S 20pm Ar Richmond ~A. C. L~...... ?3 15 am~?7~20 pis. Ar Washington. Penn. R. B- 12 81 pm ll 20 pat Ar New York._". ?6 28 pm ?6 58 an _ ?IiaUj. fDsily, Ex. 8unday. Nos. 408 and 402 'The Atlanta Special.*1 Solid Vestibuled Train, ut Pullman Signora and Coach ?a between Washington and Atlanta, also Pa? man Sleepers hot w-m Porisin on th and Charlotte. NO Nos. 41 and 38. Tb* 8. A. L Express," Bolto Train, Coaches aud Pullman bleepers betweoi Portsmouth and Atlau a. Both tia>i a make Immediate onnoction at At lanta for Montgut ery .Mobile, Now Orleana. Tex as, California. Mexico, Chattanooga, Na-hvlllo, Mn DJ phip, Macon and Florida. For Hexet?, Sleepers, etc. at.ply to G. McP. Hatto, T? P. A., 2) Tryon trect, Char lotte. N C. F. 8ft John, vice-President and Gen'l. Manga-. V. E. McBee (venera! Huperlntendeot. H. W. B. Glover, Traffic Manager L. 8. Alijn. Gen'l. Passengor Agent. General Officers, Portamento, Ya. ATLANTIC COAST LINE. TRAFFIC DEPARTMEHI. WILMINGTON. N. C., Jan. 10.1866. Faut Line Between Charleston ana Col umbla and Upper South Carolina, Nortk Carolina. CONDENSED SCHEDULE. GOING WBST. GOING Kata* ?No. 62._No. 68. 620 pra 6 IB pia 400 pa 2 47 pa iftiB 1 45 pin 1201 an 114? aa ll 41 aa QM.? ?ii aa 8 20 am 7 00 am 8 21 am 9 40 am 11 00 pm 12 07 pm 12 20 pm 1 08 pm 1 25 pm 5 00pm 8 10 pm 6 07 pm 8 15 pm i CS pis 7 00 pm LT.....Charleston...Ar LT..........inanes..Ar LT-....- ....Sumter...Ar Ar.-..Columbia..LT Ar...Prosperity...LT Ar....Newberry.".LT Ar.?.Clinton. LT Ar...Laurena.LY Ar...Or cen ville......LT Ar.Spsrtanbarg.LT Ar.Wtnnaboro, 8. C......LT Ar.. ...Charlotte, N. C.LT A.- Ii???eraonTiile, N. r_.Lv Ar.Asheville, N. C.LT 'Dally Noa. Hand Aft Solid itni,f ?...tween Chartoti a*?*Columbia.H I*. HM. Git ?aso ? : ...I.D'J. l'asservir 4ir?nt J lt K"Nt*r? "?-n.??i M-rtus>*r u u?k.,K. r-?rt,r \r,n?j? ll C. BEATTIE Receiver. TiraeTablo No. 7.- Effective '?:? - 1898. Between Anderson and-Walhalla. WESTBOUND EASTBOUND. No. 12 STATION? No. ll. Firat Clans, . "FirstOlaw, D ?Uv. Dally. P. M.-I UT. ve Arrive A. M. ft -8 85.Anderaon.00 f 8.60.Denver.10.40 f 4 06.....j?utnn.10.81 8 4.14.Pendleton.10.22 f 4 23.Cherry's Croping.10.18 f 4.29.Adara's Crossing.10.07 ? 4 47.Seneca.9.49 8 611.W*al Union..9.28 ? 6.17 Ar....."Walhalla. .Lv 9.20 (a) Regular station ; (i) Kia? station. Will also ?top at the following stationc to laka on or let Off passengers: Phln nevB, James* and Sandy Sp*, tapa. No. 12 onnneoia with 8or.thera Ballway No 12 at Anderson. . . ?| - No. 6 connect with Southern Railway Nos. 12, 87 and 88 atSeneca. J R ANDERSON? ?Up*?