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PAIR PR?SOiN "Washington Iliad During C ?S7. Louis In ono of thc oldest residences of the northwest resides a woman whose life reads like a chapter from thc days of romance, so varied is her career. This interesting woman is Mrs. Phil ips, widow of thc late Philip Philips, one of Washington's most eminent j lawyers and noted statesmen < I' the | ante-bellum days. She now makes her home in her historic i< sid?rico on ' Il street, an interesting old house | with high ceilings, wide halls, and large, square rooms, with great man tels and wide fire-places, in which burn fragrant hickory knots. Mrs. I'hilips presents an attractive picture, seati ! in her handsome 1? brary, thc walls of which are lined with hooks and old family port:aits, while here and there stand cabinets filled with little gold-framed minia tures of beautiful women and noted men of the past generations, from the time of Lord Baltimore down to the present era. Mrs. I'hilips is not young, but time has dealt gently with her, and she is still u beautiful wo man. Mrs. I'hilips is OIIJ of thc few wo men who were prisoners during thc civil war. < hi two occasions she was imprisoned, once bert: in Washington and again in New Orleans. She rare ly speaks of herself, but several days ago she told thc story of her exciting experiences. "(irant and Sheridan, Sherman and Butler, and their armies conquered thc South, but they never conquered mc," she said. And a mischievous sparkle twinkled in ber eye. "Before the war broke out," she continued, "my husband, who wu? a Northern sympathizer, bad frequent talks with Judge Wayne, .lodge John Campbell, and Jefferson l>avis, and when they assured him that every thing would be settled peacefully, we all know how they were mistaken. "I remember the day that Sumter was fired on. ' All Washington seemed to center at the Capitol, li ac h day after that saw friends and relatives part with determined resistance in their hearts. Two of my boys went South to wear tho gray, while my hus band was loyal to thc North. Ho had been herc in Congress from Louisiana, but he stood by the Union. He took no part in the struggle. He did not believe in secession, and bc could not war against his own children. "I endeavored to correspond with my boys, and consequently was sus pected of treason. Spies constantly surrounded us; women would gain access to the house on thc pretext of begging, and then would rush into my room in an effort to ascertain what I was doing. However, all went well until the battle of Bull Run. The report was circulated that the South had been defeated with heavy losses. While the women of the North were joyous at this news I sat in my room weeping. "Of course, I was glad that thc South had won, so I lit up my house and invited a few other 'rebels' to come and dine with me. The next morning we ^wcre all seated at thc dining table when a great noise was heard. I arose and stepped into tho hall to find out tho cause of it. The hall was crowded with Union soldiers. "An officer and the noted detective, Baker, approached mc and said, 'ls this Mrs. Philips? 1 nodded, and the officer said, "Then yon are my prisoner.' "The whole house was searched in an efi'ort to discover 'treasonable1 pa pers. I had at that time an lingi i sh maid, who was KS sharp as any detec tive there, aud it was on her that I placed my liope. There were a few letters that I did not wish thc soldiers to find. The English girl seemed to read my mind, and following my eye, she saw that I wanted her to get some thing from a drawer in that little case in thc corner. She went immediately to thc drawer, and finding tho letters concealed them in her dress, but not before the officer had seen her. He threatened to search her, and she said: 'I am an English subject, and you dare not search me.' "Baker ordered her to be taken down-stairs and detained, intending to deal with her later. "She was a very pretty girl, and when she entered thc servants' hall she joked with the soldiers, and final ly said that she wanted a drink of wa ter. The men consented to her going into the kitchen, but followed ber. Sho flew to the range, which had a hot fire in it, and in the flash of a moment she had thrust the papers into the blaze, and we wero safe. However, we were imprisoned for three months in an fhd house on Sixteenth street, which stood next to the Anderson residence. 1ER OF WAR. I .'tl y Arrestee! as ;i Spy 3ivil War. li'rpilhlir. I "After this we decided to go South : to and resolved to make New Or I lean^ our home. The lirst year of our j life there was comparatively quiet, and we had begun to feel safe when (ion. Huller and the Northern troops occupied New Orleans, liven thc third generation has heard of his reign. I not only-kept within doers, but compelled my children and ser vants to du likewise. One day a fu I neral ol' a Northern soldier was pass- ? j ?mr the uou.se and thc music of the I bann attracted the attention of my | rhibiri a, who ran lo thc window ami 1 entered thc second balcony, clapping their hands ali thc while, it wa- the music that attracted them, and they j incant to give no offense, '?on. Mut- J 1er heard ?d' this, and also of thc fact ? that I had helped to raise money for the widow of a Confederate soldier. "Several days after that I was in the sitting-room with my children, when there was a furious ringing of the front door bell. When I entered the hall an officer thrust a piece of pa- j per in my hand, and 1 read in amaze ment: 'Hiing me Mrs. Philips, lieu F. Huller.' "Then I realized that I had been arrested. 1 requested that my hus band be sent for, and this tho soldier readily consented to. My husband I was pale and excited, demanding to know what 1 bad done. I did not ' know tho charge. The report was j quickly circulated that 1 had been ar rested, and as we drove to thc custom house. Cen. Butler's headquarters, I the windows of every house were filled with men and women staring at us. "When we reached the custom house I was conducted through thc long stone hall, and iiually halted in front of a green baize door. Then my guard said: " 'Your husband cannot accompany you, madame.' " 'Then,' I answered, '1 will not go in. lie is my natural and lawful pro tector, and ? will not enter without him.' "Thc officer insisted, but t was not to bc conquered this time. I sat right down on the floor, Turk-fashion, with my feet under mc, and then 1 said: 'Now I will recognize but two powers-moral or physical force. If you will allow my husband to onter, I will go with you; if not, why, then, you will have to tie a rope around mc and drag me in.' "The men looked astounded. Their orders were to bring Mrs. Philipa alone, and none dared t disobey But ler. One of the officer1 approached the general and told him the circum stances." Mrs. Philips has a copy of the London Review which describen the sceno. The report says that the gen eral frowned, cooked one eye a little higher, thought fora few minutes, and then said: "Let's see what the moral force can do." The writer said thnt Mrs. Philips entered thc room as calm as a summersea, so cool was sho that it was refreshing to rest in ber shade on that sweltering July morning. She fanned herself with as much case aa if she were in her drawing-room in Wash ington." tien. Hutler said: "Mrs. Philips, you are accused of laughing and re joicing over the death of a brave, honest, and honorable American sol dier." Then, as if his rage were boiling over, he continued, "1 do not callyou n common, vulgar woman, but 1 call you an uncommonly vulgar woman." Mr. Philips became vory excited, but Mrs. Philips was equal to the occasion. Gracefully steppiug forward, she said to Gen. Huller. "Your language is not that of a gentleman, but that could not be expected. You ask why 1 laughed; if I laughed at all, it was because T felt like it." Calmly and fearlessly she mado the remark, and gazed at Butler as she said it. The general became furious. It was more than his dignity could stand, so he ordered her to be confined on Ship Is land for two years. But Mrs. Philips was not conquered. With a smiic of scorn and defiance, she said,?"Thank, you; while you ore sweltering in New Orleans, I shall bc enjoying the sea breezes." The stury o? her suffering on ?Ship Island is a terrible one. Finally n rumor of this injustice reached Wash ington, and Secretary Stanton ordered her immediate release. This General Butler was compelled to grant, after five months of suffering. But Mrs. Philips tells many stories of the chiv alry of soldiers of the Union army at the time. .> When Mrs. Philips landed in New Orleans it was about 5 o'clock in the morning, almost dawn. She drove immediately to the house where she fiat) formerly lived, and, ri ni: in tho bel!, awaited t|io answ< . Tlie imiiy was entirely ignoran) of her i ? ?ivs lu fact, they liad loin.' ::: uno ii ii . >i?. dead. Si. when un o;' th'* old o . . servants opened j ?ic .inn:-, he was frightened almost out of his -.vii-, Alter a long siegt; '.!' brain fever. Mrs. Philips regained her health, and devoted her time until the end of the war to earing for the wounded and dead of the Confederate army. mm ? mm - Heat Suhl in Solid Mocks. Concentrated heat, heat in blocks, to he delivered hy tho heat man as ice is by tb?; iee man; heat that can bo ' stored away and taken out block by block when needed for warmth or for purposes of power-this is the extra ordinary prophecy of the new presi dent ol' the Brooklyn Engineer's Club, George W. Tilson. Mr. Til-on made it in the course <-!' his inaugural address before the Chiba few nights ago. This scientific enthusiast does not I. r< . : * . i ul to havi any idea as to how all thjM i- t<> bo brought about or that he has boon experimenting in this direc tion, lie simply sccs hore the trend <!' :i croat development and names thc fifth great civilizer-heat--after the alphabet, the art of printing, gun powder and electricity. ''Heat." said Mr. Tilson,'in the pa I per he read at thc club, "is tho power that moves thc world, lt drives our express trains, propels our ocean i steamships, turns the wheels of our factories, tums winter into summer and night, into day. And what more more natural, then, if wc wish to in vestigate this power, that wo go to its source, thc sun? The storage of tho heat from the rays of thc sun is going on at thc present time and has been going on for ages. We call thc product coal, but it is the energy of tho sun stored up, but at how great a loss of efficiency no ono can tell. And do you doubt that in thc twentieth cen tury some man can be found who can accelerate this action and hasten it so that it can be brought about within a reasonable time and during the lifo of man? This will not, be a change in tho laws of nature, but it will bc by acquiring such a knowledge of the laws of nature that they can bc so taken ad vantage of as to produce what seems an anomaly. "In these times it is tho believer who is the conservative man and the doubter who is tho radical. "Think of an ocean steamship start ing off on a voyage across thc Atlantic without any coal or coal bunkers, and in its place tanks of concentrated heat! Think of our houses heated without tho annoyance of dust and ashes! Think of being served every morning by tho boatman, the same as we are served in summer by the ice man! Think of taking up the morn ing pap?r and reading that tho good ship Eldorado has arrived over nigh! laden with a general cargo and a cer tain amount of joncentrated heat! Think of Pe^ry starting off on a voy age to the North Pole carrying among his general stores a certain amount ol concentrated heat!" How all this is to be brought about Mr. Tilson does not know. If he did, he says, he would guarantee to build within the next five years a club house for the Brooklyn Engineers' Club such as no society has ever seen. He would be sure that his name would gc down honored among those of Morse, Edison, Tesla and Marconi. Perhaps the transformation will be wrought bj? electricity, perhaps by means of lique fled air, perhaps by some method ol which at the prcsont time wc have nc knowledge. But it is bound to come It may not come in our time, and who? it does please remember thai, it wa: once predicted by Mr. Tilson, in tin Brooklyn Engineers' Club. There no lu tter medicine for tin babies t hun Chamberlain's C ough Hem ody. tts pleasant taste and promo' and effectual cures make it a favorit< with mothers and small children. L quickly cures their coughs and colds preventing pneumonia or other seriou: consequences. It also cures crouj and bas been used in tons of thousand! ol' cases without a single failure s< far as we have been able to learn. I not only cures cronp, but when givei as soon as thc croupy cough appears will prevent the attack. In cases o whooping cough it liquefies the tougl mucus, making it easier to cxpecto rate, and lessens the severity and fre quency of tho paroxysms of coughing thus depriving that disease of all dan gerous consequences. For sale b' Hill Orr Drug Co. - God will reverse the verdie which condemns a woman and acquit a man for thc same sin. Kheumaoido is a throughout, per manent, constitutional oure for rheu matism. The acids in thc blood whicl cause thc disease arc thoroughly er ?.di oatcd. It is also the best hiond nuri?er laxative and tonic. Evans Pharmacy - See where a road cads before yo? take it, and to what an action lead: before you begin it. Geo. Barbe, Mcudotn, Va., says "Nothing did me so much good as Ko dol Dyspepsia Cure. Ono dose reliev ed, a few bottles cured me." It di gests what you eat and always cure dyspepsia. Evans Pharmacy. - "Don't keep tellin'po' folks hoi sorry you is you can't help 'cm," sab Unole Eben. "Dey has too muol trouble of deir own to stop an' sym pathize wid yon." Dow Iirer Knljbil Heat Brer Fox. Omi ?lay lirer F??x was hungry. AH li? wandered about the woods he saw i .<|inr. l upon the brauch o?'.1 tall tree. "H'.ii". Ilrer Squirrel!' Ito aid. "Hello, lirer Tos!" replied the squirrel. Then said Brer Fox: "I once had a brother who could jump from limb lo limb." "So can I," replied lirer , Squirrel. "Let me see you," said the fox. .So the squirrel jumped from limb to limb. "lirer Squirrel) I have a brother who ! can jump from tree to tree." "L can, too." So lirer Squirrel jumped from ( tree to tree. "Brer Squirrel, I had a brother who eould jump from the t jp of a tall tree right into my arms." "I can, too." And he did. Brer Fox ate him all up. Brer Babbit was lying in his bed near by, and saw all that was done. ..Iirer Fox," said he. "you a mighty stuart mau, hut I had a brother who ?.:.iild do something you cannot do." "What was it?" -.-.id Iirer Fox. "My brother could let anybody lie a large rock around his nock, and jump off this bridge into the water and swim out." "So can I," said the ; fox. Then Brer Kabbit fixed the ruck . and the string, and Brer Fox jumped, I but he has not been heard of since. | i - m . - - "I hud bronchitis every winter for years and no medicine gavo me perma nent relief till 1 began to take One 1 Minute Cough Cure. I know it is the j best cough medicine made," says J. Koontz. (Jorry, Pa. It quick y eures coughs, colds, croup, asthma, grippe and throat and lung troubles. It is | the children's favorite remedy. Cures : quickly. Evans Pharmacy. - A great many things that are : now used for food were once consider- 1 ed poisonous by the Homans, whw used them to scatter among their clothes and keep away moths. It was a bold man who first dared to cat a tomato or cook an eggplant. I "I think I would go crazy with pain j were it not fer Chamberlain's Pain Balm," writes Mr. W. ll. Stapleton. Herminio. Pa. "I have been afflicted with rheumatism for several years and have tried remedies without number. but Pain Balm is tho best medicine I j have got hold of." Ono application relieves the pain. For sale hy Hill Orr Drug Co. . - To dispose of an estate worth only a fow hundred dollars a Connecticut man who died the other day left a writ ten will more than a yard long. It seems like a tremendous- amount of wrapping paper for a decidedly small package. John Dirr, Posey ville, Ind., says, "I never used anything as good as One Minute Cough Cure. We are never without it." Quickly breaks up all coughs and colds. Cures all throat and lung troubles. Ita U3e will pre vent consumption. Pleasant to take. Evans Pharmacy. - In Iceland horses are shod with sheep's horn. lu the valley of thc upper Oxus the antlers of the moun tain deer are used for the janine pur pose, the shoes being fastened with horn pins. "I had dyspepsia for years; no med? kine was so effective as Kodol Dys ? pe psis Cure. It gave immediate relief. Two bottles produced marvelous re sults," writes L. H. Warren, Albany, Wis. It digests what you eat and cannot fail to cure. Evans Pharmaey. - At a recent reception in New York, Mrs. Henry Havemeyer had for decorations for one room 200 dozen roses, which were bought at $30 a dozon. The man who was "born tired" should use Prickly Ash Bitters. It makes work a necessity to give vent to the energy and exuberance of spirits generated by functional activity in (be system. rf>dd by Hvans Phar macy. No Torture Equal to tho first sy before Itching and Burning of ss1*, d urabi This Fearful Disease, ? tion ol Eczema-which is more than skin-deep, 1 cations of ointments, salves, etc., applh the real eause of the trouble, is in the bb through the skin ; the only way to reae the blood. Mr. Phil T. Jones, of MLxersviUe, Im "I had Eczema thirty years, and ait of treatment my leg was so raw and sore constant pain. It finally broke into a ra began to spread and grow worse. For 1 six years I have suffered untold agony ru all hope of ever being free from the dis boen traatAri by seme cf the bent physi taken many blood medicines, all in vi faith left I began to take S. B. 8.. ant made the Eczema worse, bat I knew tbs way the remedy got rid of the poise Q. ti. S., the sore healed up entirely, ti cl sar and smooth, and I was cared perfe Eczema is an obstinate disease and o ouly ? tonto. Swif t'n Speoifle S. 8. S. FOR ' -ls superior to other blood remedies bec not reach. It goes to the bottom-to th? the worst case of Eciema, no matter whi the only blood remedy guaranteed to Ix other mineral, and never falls to cure Poison, Cancer, Tetter, Rheumatism, Op upon 8. 8. 8. ; nothing can taka its place 9 Books on these dite anea will be mailt eldo Company, Atlanta, Georgia. ..^ A Practical (hu'slum (i. K. Glenn, M ti {iori ri tuiiduii 1 of public instruction of thc .State of (.?corgiu, tells this -tory: One nay lie had explained thc power* of lyhc X-ray machine lo a gathering of darkies who had assem bled at a school commencement. Af ter meeting was over a negro called him aside and wanted to know if he was in earnest ?bout thc uiacbine. Mr. Glenn assured him that he was. "Boss. I wants ter ax you cf er nig ger et chicken kin you look in him an' see chicken?" "Why, yes, Ephraim," said Mr. Glenn. "Weil, boss, I wants ter ax you one no?' question. Kin you look in dat nigger an' tell wbar dat chicken cum fr.9" - A prominent detective agency has recently investigated tho usu of electricity for breaking thc vaults of hanks ami safes. The report states that there lias never been u single Kuccessful burglary of a bank vault or .--afc by electricity, and that there is no uececssity for alarm on this scorn. - A Georgia convict, working with others in a contractor's brickyard, es caped hy piling bricks in a hollow s -uare, and thus shutting himself in until thc convicts had been locked up for tho night. - A woman has at last choked to death from putting hairpins in her mouth, but probably all tho other wo men will go right ahead with the same mad recklessness. - Muggins-"Do you believe a wo man eau stand more pain than aman?" Buggins-"Certainly. You ought to see thc shoes my wife wears.", - A postage stamp of the first is I sue of British Guinea, in 1850, sold I for $1,710 at auction in New York. Mrs. J. K. Miller, Newton Hamil ton, Pa., writes, "I think DeWitt's ? Witch Hazel Salvo the grandest salve I made.'' lt cures pilesaudhealsevery thing. All fraudulent imitations are worthless. Evaus Pharmacy. - A philosophical statistician cal culates that in the year 2000 there will be-1,700,000/100 people who speak English, and that tho other European languages will bc spoken by only 500, 000,000 people. W. S. Philpot, Albany, Ga., says, "DeWitt's Little Early Itisers did me more good thau uuy pills I ever took." Tho famous little pills for constipation, biliousness and liver and bowel troubles. Evans Pharmacy. - If you want knowledge, you must toil for it; if food, you must toil for it; and if pleasure, you must toil for it; toil is the law. For driviug out dull billious feel ing, streugheniog the appetite and in creasing thc capacity of the body i or work, Prickly Ash Bitters isa golden remedy. Sold by Evans Pharmacy. - With plenty of water and without solid food, a hore? will live twenty-five days; with solid food and without water, he will live only five days. DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve is un equalled for piles, injuries and skin diseases. .It is the original Witch Hazel Salve. Beware of all counter feits. Evrms Pharmacy. - To have no faults is to have no friends. . 98 . . . ? j Tho abov- figures tell a remarkable story; they represent ali. oat exactly ihn 4 per centage of eurea ra?de by < RHEUM ACIDE. j tbe wonderful now constitu? ional cure for RHEUMATISM. Tbe other two per cent. A wore uot curable, or failed to take uiedl > cine accordion to dlr^ctloiiit Tbou?&nds j bavo buen cured lu view of r.?-e fact that * u any pbybtctann tltlnk th*, ib?!imatUra J Ia incurable and Mmt mn?i ivo . aie? fat!. ^ lt mint bo truo that ?iii EU M A fl OE ii tbe j (?rcateri imdicil discovery of > he B^O Par " ticulam aud tc-1 inion h\ Ls of .i-auy w<"l - A ki.owo |>?'c,plrt .ent lr? o lo al? uppiic.rifg < 5 ^ flat S M by EVANS PHARMACY . !i? fi !.<. vcr r.nt.<|* 'vqr sr^y ^ %^ "^y *w '^r^/'vy much attention ii often paid to the mptoms of Eczema, but it is not long the little redness begins to itch ana This is but the beginning, and will i buffering and torture almost unen e. It is a common mistake to regard hnesa and redness of the akin aa a local irritation ; it ia but an indioa t a humor in the blood-of terrible and can not be reached by local appli ed to the surface. The disease itself .' >od, although all Buffering is produced; h the tiieease, therefore, ia through a., write?: er a great deal i that it gave me inning sore, and ?he peat five or ad had given np ense, aa I have ei mi and have tin With little i ii apparently it thia waa the n. Continuing he rein became ctly." an not be cured by a remedy which if THE BLOOD tause it eurea diseases which they oma 3 eauae of tho disease-and will euro it other treatment has failed. It ia ? free from potash, mercury or any Eczema, Scrofula, Contagious Blood en Sore?, Ulcera, Boils, et?. "Inairt id free to any address by Swift Spa ^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^U^j ^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^ ^^I^H^^^ ^^^Kfl^^^^ ^^^^^^^^ ? The Best Washing Powder. Woman's Best Friend. Dirt's Worst Enemy, ?ssessment Notice, i AuntTOK's Ol'BI?E, AMDKR80N, H. C. THIS OFFICIO WILL UK OPEN [IO receive returns of personal proper ty for taxation ?or too next fiscal yeur from thu Brat dav of J<inuar\. 1900, io tho 20th February following, inclusive. All tra??? tors of Heal K-I,?H inane Hine? ln*t \ ear's assessment must 0? . artfully noted oil tho return-tho number ot' au ron bought or Mold ?nd from whom ac quired or to whom snld. Under tho UMW osseasilng la vu the township aatieiwora aro requited to make Tax ?teluros lor all thone tbuL tail to make their own .-?turn? within tho time prescribed by law, >md bm.ee thedtllieul ty ot'delinquents escaping ibo penalty of tim law. lixv-Confederate Moldier** ovei ?Ojeara of si's are extmipl (rom Poll Tax. All other males between tho agea ot 21 uud (50 y ears oxoept those incapable ot euru iug a support from being uno:ned or from any other cause, aboil be deemed taxable polls. For tho convenience of taxpayers we will also have deputies to take returnH at the following times and placee: Holland, Tuesday, January 1). Mollattsville, Weduesdav, January 10. Iva, Thursday, January ll. Moseley, r'riday, January 12. Baylis McConnell's. Saturday, Jan. 13. Starr, Monday, January 15. Storeville, Tuesday, January 1(3. Clinhseale-' Mill, Wednesday. Jan. 17. Guyton, Thursday, January 18. Bishop's Branch,Saturday, January 20. Five Forks, Friday, January li). Autun, Monday, January 22. Wyatt's Store, Monday, January 22, until 1 p. m. Cedar Wreath, Tuesday, January 23. Leach's Store, Jan. 23, from 1 to 4 p. m. Wigingtou'a Store, Wednesday, lan. 24. Equality, Thurndny, January 25. Pendleton, Friday, January 20. Townville, Friuay, January 2tt. Tugaloo, Saturday, January 27 linnea Path, Monday and Tuesday, January 29 atm 30. Belton, Wedneslay and Thursday, February 1 and 2. Piedmont, Friday and Saturday, Jau. 19 ond 20. Pelzer, Monday, Tuesday and Werinda dav. February 5, 0 and 7. WilliatuHton, Thursday and Friday, February 8 and 9. G. N. C. BOLEMAN, Dec. 5, 1899._Aodltor A. C. Notice Final Settlement. THF' undersigned, Executor of the li?t>tte of Obadiah Shirley, deceas ed, bf roby gives notice that he will .?ci the 13th day February, 1900, apply to ?he Judgo of Probate for Anderson Coun ty for a Final Settlement of said Estate, and a discharge from bia office a* Execu tor. M. McGBE, Er'r. Jan 10, 1900 29 5 E. M. RUOKER, Jr., ATTORNEY AT Li"', WEBB BUILDING, Anderses, - - et. C. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Condensed Schedule in Kfroct December 10th. 1B99 Bx. 8ua. I J>?Uy No. 17. I Ito. fi. STATIONS. Cv. Charleston. " BummorvUle.. " Branchvue... " Qrangeburg.. " agPKTUie. Lv^BsVannab.. 77. " Barnwell. " Blackville. Lv. Columbia....7. " Prosperity.... " Newnerry._ " Nin?ty-?ix. " Greenwood.... Ar. Hodges. Lv. Abbeville._ 7 40 ? m SOO n m 7 2d a ui Ar. Bolton. SiS n m Lv. Andersen 8 SO a m Ar. Greenville.t.. Ar. Atlanta.(CPU".Time) 10 Bj a m a 65 p ni Er. Bun. No. 18. j ii ra ii OB S3! i? JO ?"n ii! mjj p Ht 1 6f p tn a io p iga s io ggj 2 85 p m 4 g p m STATIONS. Greenville. Piedmont _ WiBiau??:on... Ar. Anderdon Lv. Belton . Ar. Donnalds _.... Ar.Abbevf Ho...... Lv. Hodges. Ar. Gr??eW'jo'.l..., '* Nlnoty-Hix.... " Nowbvn-y. .* Prospe;i(ry. M Colundiin .... Ar. Biackv\,l.....r.7 " Bernwod..?.... " Eovannr.h. Lv. Kragviilc. Orangeburg... " Branchville.Vi " Bnmoiorville.. Ar. Charlo.' con ... ? 'baily, J?nilyi a 5li0 pin 6 00 p m U 24 p m 7 15 pm 6 45 p m 7 15 n m 7 :<o p 8 CO p m 10 16 3 m 10 40 a m 10 05 ? m ll 40 a ir, ll io a J ll 40 p. m 12 -?j p m jj 55 a m 12 20 p m 12 M p tn .2 CO p m 2 14 p m 0 SO p_ m S tc ffvm 8 20 a m 5 16 a m 4 48 p m 5 04. p ta 0 IT p . tn 7 83 p Ta 8 15 p ia ? ?: STATIONS, i^mma: U 00p 7 U) a Lv..0harl??0a..Arff??j T?3 PiOUn 7 41 A " B-ommarvill? " I 7 wi I?b 1 65a S .Wo " .Branchville. " (ft#p 4?? 2 tOa 0 ia* " Ora?j6r>ttrg .> If?a| 4 80n lu 15 n " ..gmgttPe.. " I ? 4sTft Jjgjj S Oft a. Lv..t?avann =h.. Af VjH 4 00?. " ..Barnw?U .. ". ftta 4 16a... " ..BlarckvU?o.. ". SOfto 8 DO a ll -?a " ..Columbia.. " 8 KXc ? 8Cfp 9 07 a 12 ?? p " ....Alston.... " 2 GOpTS ? oj 10 04 a 1 ?p " . ..Hantno... 128p .7 ?ap 10 tOa 2 OJ p " .....Union..... " 1 05 p 7 COp 10 80 B 2 23p ..JoneavlUe.. " 12 23 p 8 Bp 10 54 a varp ?? ....Pncolet.... " 18 lip 8 ?Sp 11 25 n li 10 p Ar Spartan burg LT ll 15 a 6 15 p ll 40 a n 4 i p Lv Spartanburg Af U OT a G 00 p 2 87 ni . CO p Ar- , AnhovUIo ...Lv H CS al 3 88p .*r" p. m. ,sA"n.m. "ii" sight. Pullr.vm palace sleeping cara on Trains 25and 80,l?7 and lp. on. A. tmd O', divlidar Dicing car t oa the*') ^vuinH serve all tneala onroute. ; TrnlnH K-avo ?parta?hurg, A. A C- division, northbound. 7:0? tum., u:87 p.m., <f:l8p. m., iVeatibnlo Limited) ; nonthbonnd l?:9B a. m., :15 p. m., ll ?4 a. m., (Vest?bulo Lioiited.) Train!? IMIVH Greenville, A. and O. division, northbound,0:00a. m., 2:84p. m. und 5.-? p. m., ?Vestibuled Limited)?wntnsonnd. jL-JO a. m., -.00 p. m.. 1?:I?D. m. (Vestibuled Lisajtcd) TruiuB 0 and 10 carry oleg?nt PuUtnte slfiOP lng cars hatweou Bavoun?h and Aihevaio en ron'? dally between JaeksoaUB? o?d janeta natl. Also Pullrnsa Dr?Wfdgpwp?, s???ptBJt ?axs between Oh ay teston and Qshnnhla. Woshi jgton. i>. o. ^^Gen.^Pai^Lt't.. WashingtOC. D. C ?^da. OLD NEWSPAPERS 3Tor sale at this office oheap. Notice of Final Settlement. THE undersigned, Executor? of the Ettatuof John ?. Slttou, deceased, here by give notice that they will on tho 20th day or February, 1?KK), apply to the Judge o?'l'robato o? Anderson County, 8. C., for H Final Settlement of Raid Estate, and a ulseburge trout tliolr otnVe a? Ex ecutors. A. J. UTTON, tl. P. SlTfON, Executors. Jan 17, 1900 30_5? BANKERS ?nd BROKERS. mo, SKALIER & CO., CONSOL, STOCK EXCHANGE BLDG, 60-62 Broadway, - New York. LOTS OF MONEY CAN be made through speculation with deposit of $30.00 [thirty dollars] upward [or 3 por ceut. margin upward] on the Stock Exobange. Tho greatest fortuned have boen made through np ecu lat ion rs iu Stocks, Wheat or Cotton. If you are interested to know bow spec ulations are conducted, notify us and we wiil sond you information and market etter free of charge. Usual commission ohar?cd for exe cuting order? Government, Municipal and Railroad bonds quotations furnished on applica tion for purchase, sale and exchange. Oct. 25. 1890 1 8 6m DOUBLE DAIIY SERVICE TO ALL POINTS North, South and Southwest. 3CHKDULE IN EFFECT NOV. ."th. 1899. SOUTHBOUNJj No. 403. No. 4L LT New York, Tia Penn R. Ti* ll 00 am ?9 00 pm LT Washington, " 5 00 pm 4 80 am LT Bichmond. A. C. L. 9 00pm 9 05 ma LT Portsmouth,8. A.L. 8 46 pm 9 20am Ar Weldon, ". ll 10 pm?ll 48 am Ar Henderson, " . 12 66 a ra 135 pm Ar Raleigh, ?la B. A. L.. 2 22 am 8 30 pm Ar Southern Pinea 'l . 4 27 am 6 OOjpm Ar H .. *A " =. 5 Kam 7 00 pm LTwilmlngton "_?8 08 pm Ar Monroe. " .?6 68 am ?9 12 pm Ar Charlotte,_" ,. ~?8~00 am ?10 2ftpm Ar Cheater, " M.....?8 18 am ?10 85 pa Ar Greenwood " ............ 10 45 nm 112 am ar Athen*, " . 1 24 pm 8 48 am Ar Atlanta,_" . 8 60 pm 6 lBaa> ~3tOBTHBQUND. " ~ NA. 402. No. 88. LT Atlanta, 8. ft. L.... ?loo pm ?8 63 ps ar Athena. " ........ S ts pm il 08 pas Ar Greenwood, " . 5 40 pm 146 am Ar Cheater, 8. A. L ......... 7 88 pm 4 08 am Ar Monroe,_" ,..-. 9 80 pin g 48 aaa LT harlotte._" Z.?8 20 pm +5 00 am Ar Hamlet,_.-.. ?ll 10 pm ?7 48 mm Ar Wilmington ? ._ ?12 08 pm Ar Southern Pinea, ".?12 02 am ?9 00 an Ar BalolgL, " .2 08 am ll 18 am. Ar Henderson ? " ......... 8 28 am 12 48 pm Ar Weldon,. . ". 4 88 am 2 CO pm Ar PorUmoath 8. A. L..7 28 am 5 20pm Ar Richmond A. 0. L. ?8 16 am ?7 20 pat Ar Washington. Penn. B. R~~ !2 81 pm ll 20 pm Ar New York. " .... ?6 28 pm ?6 68 aa _?Daily. tPally, Bx. Sunday._ ' Nos. 408 and 402 "The Atlanta Special.'* Solid Vestibuled Train, of Pullman Bleepers and Coach? ea between Washington and Atlanta, also Pao man Sleepers between Portsmouth and Charlotte,. Nos. 41 and 83, "The 8. A. L Express," Solid Train, Cesihea ?nd Pullman Sleepers betweei Portsmouth and Atlanta. Both trates make immediate oonneotlon at At* lanta fer ?iontgoa >?ry .Mobile, New Orleans, Tog as. <Vili?orTi?s. Hericc, Chal?aoo'?'?-, "7i?ittv?lc, .-OJphi?, ??uton and Florida. For Tickets, Sleepers, etc.. apply to G. Mci?. Batte, 1? P. A., 23 Tryou troot, Char? lotto. NC. F.St John, vice-President und Gen'I. Mange*.. V.E.McBeo General Superintendent. H. W. B. GloTer, Traffic Manager TJ.S. Allen. Gen'l. Passenger Agent. General Officers. Portemontb, Va? ATLANTIC COAST LINE. TRAFFIC DEPARTMENT?, . WILMINGTON, N. C., Jan. 10,18?. Fast Lino Betweon Charleston and Coi umina and Upper South Carolina, North .Carolina. CONDENSED riCHEDULLE. OOlKO WEST. GOING EAST .No. 62. No. 53. ' 8 00 pm 6 20 pm 618 pia 4 00 pst 2 47 pas 2 82 Bpi 168 pm 148 pm 12 01 tua ll 4b an. ll 41 ant 088 am . Mam 820 aa 7 00 am 8 21 am 9 40 om ll 00 pm 1207 pm 1220 pm I'd pm 1 vjb pm 5 00 pm 8 10pm 607 pm 818 pm 6 08 pm 7 00 pa LT.-.Charleston-."Ar LT....?.Lanes.?....Ar LT.-.Sumter.Ar Ar............ColuroWn.-.LT Ar...Prooperlty..."LT Ar-.Newberry-.Lr Ar.-.. Clin too.-.LT, Ar.Laurens......LT I Ar.........-GreenTllle-.,.M....Lv Ar.-.tipartanborg..'...LT Ar.Winnaboro, S. C.LT Ar.... .Charlotte, N. C.Lv Ar-He^eaonTlHo.N. C?J.T Ar.AcheTtilo, N. C-......LT ?Dally. Noa.62and68Solid Trains between Charl?tte' a*dOelo>fibla.8.r. H. M. EJ?SBOOI?. iien'J. Pusengsr Agent. J R. SR?jfOT.^rU?^^?mirer BLUE RIOGF RAILROAD. II C. BE ATTIE, Re o o i ve r. Time Table No. 7.-Effet? ve M- '?-89?. Between Anderson and Walhalla. WESTBOUND '?.,'. EABTBOTJBD NO, 12. STATIONS. NO. II. Firat Claas, First Olas?, Dally. DaHy. P. M.-Leave Arrive A. M. a 8 85. Anderaon..... 11.00 f 3.56.Dehvar.;...10.40 f 4 05.Auton.,.10.81 s 4-14....i.pandleton..,.,.......10.22 f 4 28.Cherry's Croping....10.13 f 4.20.....Adara's Crosaiug......10.07 a 4 47..?.Sanee*..,.....i9.4fl s 511.W?et Unioii;...0.85 a 5.17 AT.........^Wal!Mt1ia<........-..IiV 0.2O (n) Revolar station ; (f) Plkg station. Will also stop at thc following stations to tako on or let off panangen : Phin nevi; Janies9 and Sandy Springs. -, No. 12 connecta with Sonthcrn Ballway No. 12?.*Aiulamm. _ No. 6 connecta with Soatbern Railway; Noa. 12. 87 and 88 ai Seneca J. R. ?NDBB60N, Supt.