The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, March 14, 1900, Page 6, Image 6

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(.'ctllTUl Nl'U s III Ills. -- View S Iia\ < li; i ll lilli! I! <.! I tl? l?l ? liaiils ul ?In M< -i . Mill? ! ainI ran ?ak?', in lin- \icinil\ "I Kumucy, \V. Va.,I'orrxliibition ?it Ike I'alis exposi tion. Tin orchards aro iii?' largest in tho -world, ?-oinpiising WO.OUO poach ami plum lr?'? -. I ii? \ planted l-l.nun trees tin past your, ami cleared for planting ?UTOS ol' liinboi land. The lir.si s?as<ui their orehards came into hearing the) shipped I On ear loads ol peaches and plums. -Since th?' eoiuiucnciuoill ot! t lu nar between I!relit Britain and thc Transvaal the latter government has s? ?. t il in Hie ueighhorhood of.^.VMHUHiii in gobi shi]iped I rum t he Soul li Airman mines to Cape Town en mute lo Ku mp??. Protests lit tile Hl'iziU'C "! ?-'nhl have been submitted to the Kiigl.ish -o\i i H ni? ni, and an ell'orl is being m.nie tu Imld it responsilili I": Hie loss. Tu distinguish um- limn th?1 other hallies which ?'onie in large numbers l?? the obstcric department "I tin1 .lobn.s Hopkins Hospital lin doctors have de cided to.tag them l?\ placing ?rn the hack of each, between the shoulder blades, a small sipiare nf adhesive plas ter, un whieli is written the hally's name. Thc plaster is waler-proof anti is net nHerted hy baths, though il can he ri moved easily when th?- baby leaves the hospital. i ?alias, Texas, has a woman ilepu ly sherill', the only one in this country. Her natue is Mis. Kinma Van Dunsen. Her father was Robert < ? I ?aili? ! of <'?Minty Cork, Ireland, ami her mother was a cousin of ".Stonewall" .Jackson. Her husband, Charles Tainu i Van nun sen ?d' (Evansville, Ind., ?li? ?l niimyears ago. Sunn after his?leath she removed to Dallas, and until her recent promo tion has been connected with the lillico ?d' the clerk of the federal court. - According l?i information received at the W ar Department from Manila with the cud ol' the present expedition of (.? enera I Hates into the two pro vinces ni the extreme southern part of the island ol' Ku/.ou, military opera tions in the Philippines will close. Afterward there is nothing to do but to undertake to maintain older through a police system. It is sahl that atten tion is now being given to that subject, and steps arc being taken to form a thoroughly mobile, lightly armed gen darmerie, something on the order of the Canadian mounted police, to cover tho islamis?t all points, and conserve the energies of the regular t roops. - All about Ottawa, in the (arming communities ?if the province of no tario, Canada, a peculiar sect called Zionists is still nourishing, in spite ol' titi' ?'llorls of the authorities tu break it Up. The cardinal ot' their creed is that hogs an* possessed by devils ami should therefore be killed. It has been found necessary, therefor?*, tn re strain otherwise reasonable farmers from destroying what in many cases was a chief means ol' (heir support. The Zionist lat niel s, in some instances, have joined (ogether, driven all their hogs inlu ?me place and then' killed them, in no instance nltowhig any ol' tho meat to bt> used as food. - Dr. Carl Schlutter, of Vienna, who not long ago showed that the stomach was a snperlluous organ by removing that ol' a woman, who lived and got along perfectly well without one, has cast further doubts on the use of our internal machinery. He recently re moved six feet of the small intestine from an Italian who had been stabbed in a brawl. That intestine is believed, to play an important part in absorbing food into thc system. The Italian, however, gained in weight after the operation and eight months after leav ing the hospital reported that he had lost a few pounds, could not digest tho solid food he had been accustomed and didn't feel like working, though he was in pretty good health. The Lan cet admits that Dr. Schlutters opera tion shows that a third of the intes tine may he dispensed with, hut is astonished at the wonderful powers of adaptation ol' the. human body. Wc have saved many doctor bills since we began using Chamberlain's Cough Hcniedy in ?mr home. Wc keep a bottle open all the time, and when ever any of my family or myself be gin to catch a cold we begin to usc the Cough Hemed)', and as a result we never have to send away for a doctor and incur a large doctor bill, for Cham berlain's Cough Kemcdy never fails to cure. It is certainly a medicine of great merit and worth.-1). S. Mear kle. General Merchant and Farmer, Mattie, Bedford countv, l'a. Korsale by Hill Orr Drug Co. - A quarter of an hour seems a long or Bbort time according to wheth er you're waiting for someone or the other fellow is waiting for you. ?^To secure the original Witch Hazel Salve ask for DcWitt's Witch Hazel Salve, well known as a certain cure for piles and skin diseases. Beware of worthless counterfeits. They arc dangerous, li van s Pharmacy. - It sometimes happens that when a man comes home late to dinner and finds it cold, his wife makes it hot for bim. Lewis Acker man, doshcn, Ind.. says "DcWitt's Little Karly Kiters always briog certain relief, eur;: my headache and never gripe." They generally cleanse and invigorate thc bowels and liver. Kv a ns Pharmacy. - "Will you love mc when I'm old?" simpered gay Miss Oldgirl to her youthful intendent. "Why, my darling, I do?" responded he in mild surprise. Mrs. Harriet li vans, Hinsdale, llb, writes, "I never fail to relieve my children from croup at once by using Uno Minute Cough Cure. I would not feel safe without it." Quickly cures cough?, colds, grippe and all throat and lung diseases. Evans Pharmacy. - Hi/ that never changed any of his opinions, never corrected any of his mistakes. (.'old* Producing "Load." \\ 'hun I'ii arno h made Joseph overr loni of Egypt, lie placed a'gold chum about his nock usa symbol "I* hi - au thority. So it is plain that old Egypt held the yellow mi tabprecious. Pliny says that mercury was used in his time to scperategold from other subtsanccs. So metallurgy is an I i science. lint thc world ? mi! depended forgold upon what miners .??.ill "river washing-." Th? Indu.- and Euphrates were the sp;d- where men found it first; then they i k it from the rivers Nubia and Ethiopia, lu our own time the rivers of Alaska are giving up their gold. Un; the separating of gold, from r<n !v, when only from three t>i liftc? ri dollars worth can bo got from a ton, is ;> mod ern process, ami thi.-i- thu secret that Ii:i- built up a town ?d' eight thousand people, five thousand feet up among the enchanting Black Hills. "Lead." in miners' phrase, moans a vein of ore. Lead. South Dakota, re ceived the name it bears because a "lead," practically inexhaustible, of auriferous rock was found there. This rock yields up its gol 1 by a sim ple and inexpensive process known as "free milling." Other ores found in thc Mack Hills have to be roasted and treated with chlorine before their gold can be secured. Uut thc rocks at Lead, composed of hydrous mica, hornblcridic schist, and quartz, and, inclosed in walls nf porphyry and va rious kinds <d' slate, have only to he ground as linc as meal. The Indians ceded thc Mack Hills to thc United States government in IKTt't. The Sioux clung tenaciously to their beautiful home because they be lieved it protected by a kind and mighty spirit whom they called Taku Waken (Thc Spirit of the Hills), ile it was who prepared the hot springs to cure the red men of diseases, and bc permitted thc white-crowned sparrow, that sings his sweet and plainti vc.qua vers in the darkest night, to tell what was going to happen to all Sioux who nskcd. lu 1S77 a writer in Scrib ner's Monthly said: "I think the Black Hills mine will prove a fail ure." Vet in the summer <>\' that year two Californians bought rho Houicstakc md Deadwood mines, although rail ways had not yet penetrated the hills. IMicy sent an order to San Francisco or their machinery and eighty stamps. Everything save the lumber came > verbind to Cheyenne, Wyoming, vin; ii cc it was dragged by oxen to liCad, a distance of three hundred niles. That first stamp mill cost ono tuudrcd and thirty thousand dollars. Sow there are, 1 think, seven .-tamp nills, and every month more than two mildred and fifty thousand dollars are laid out to thc Houicstakc Company's wiplnyees in salaries und wages. Everything is very much up or townhill in Lead. On one hillside he mouth of the great Homcstake niue yawns. From it, across tho deep alley, fgoes a great trestle to the ippcr story of tho Star mill. Across hat viaduct go platform cars loaded nth gold-bearing rock brokon into hunks the size of egg coal. A stamp is a cylindrical iron pea le, on which is a shoe of chilled iron hat can be renewed when necessary, 'he whole weighs about eight hun rcd pounds. As tho stamp lifts it urns half round so thc shoe is worn own uniformly. It strikes down pou a bcd of cast-iron, lifts about inc inches, and makes about sixty lows to thc minute. I was told that he number of blows can be regulated rom thirty to ninety per minute. Thc gold rock is fed into bins, from hieb it descends under the great tamps. With thc rock is dropped a urtain amount of pure mercury. Tater washes out pulverized rock and tcrcury over a series of inclined cop er aprons. Thc copper causes thc crcury to unite with tbcgold, and thc ualgain clings io the aprons. With thc ;fuse rock, or as tbe miners call it, tailings," goes a certain per cent, of dd, and to catch|this a dam was being nilt across Deadwood river when was at Lead. Cleaned from the cop er aprons, thc copper gold amalgam is at into canvas bags and well wash 1 to free it from the excess of mer ary. It is then sent to the separating orks, where it is carefully heated; ere the mercury passes off as vapor, hence it is condensed to bc used again, id the gold melted into bars, is rcadj ir shipment to thc Hutted States int. Let no one envy the gold seeker, incr, or maker. All over the north an Black Hills men have burrowed, id arc burrowing after more leads, s your train flashes up thc gutcli om Deadwood, as you climb thc sights of Dament at:d Portland, .?ni us-looking in ono pop out of grave kc holes and look nt you as if hun ?y foi thc sight of human faces he matchless panorama is given ar mospherc of pain wheu you thin I mt human hearts arc beating, am igh ambitions arc throbbing down ii tose pits; and that once possessed bj mania for "prospecting" as this gol anting is called, a man rarely is ubi i settle down to other labor. The miner has an even moro diffi lit lifo. Tho Homcstake has got Dwn nine hundred feet. Every da; mass of rock thc size of abigchurc i- (.ikon "Mt ant] acorresponding liri*8 of refuse pucked in lin r??K*n? 11.15. I . miner works in rheumatism prod 11 c 1 a dumps, and in ??pite of c\ rt, | r? ..<.; lion is in danger from prematurely < .v . ploding blasts and fulling r. >< k. II. is old ai lil ly. Thc stamp mills make a continuous thumb r which pervades the town. and .n grows iusupport able to thu visitor. The very river seem- to protest siguinst gold inukilig. One'-a Hushing, jewel like thing, per fumed with mountain Howers, it e?mes from the .-tamp mills, livid; repulsive, andas it 'tarts down to Deadwood with lashes and hisses, it is water to .?.hrink from Lead h i- anoth' r sight more inter esting even liiau it- gold reducing stamp mills. t- public schools are excellent. Tho least desirable immi grants aro there in force to work in the mines. Hut they inspire their children with fever of eagerness to attend school. "The kid - are terrible smart." I was told by a man from Maine, "and disorder and truancy are unknown. - l\lt:;<tht:th Vtwthnjx tit t'hrtt'Ufl. . - m m mm Woman's Talc of Manila Hardships. Mrs. William C. Butler, wife of Captain W. C. Butler, who was re commended for promotion by the late ?j encrai Lawton on account of his bravery in a conflict at Manila, has but recently returned from lint land, and is now at Washington. 11er home is in New Brunswick, where her hus band was military instructor at Bul gers College. She was much impressed with what she saw during her stay in tho Philippines, ?ind gives this interesting account of some of thc sights: .'The heat at Manila is too much to describe; Americans cannot stand it with their manner of dress. The wa ter is abominable, and thc cooking is not worthy the dignity of the term. For the lirst month we nearly starved. The best hotel is conducted by a Span iard, whose charges arc about on apar with thc most fashionable hotels here and tho poorest American laborer could not eat thc food they serve We could only cat bananas and thc stores from the commissary department, but there was no other place to go, and wc had no choice. "The bouses all leak. They have no glass window panes, and in place ol' glass uso translucent oyster shells. The water pours in through tho cracks, through the roof and through thc walls; it pours in everywhere during the wet season, and half thc time (lur ing thc dry Tho Filipino women do not seem to mind it, but they have wa terproof closet", while we were camp ed out, with nails driven in the walls to hang our gowns on. But it does seem, with centuries of experience with rain, the people might learn to build i house that would keep out the wa ter. "To mention u few of the disagree able features first and then pass on to die more desirable ones, ants take bigh rank, in my mind, after the aw :ul food. They swerm everywhere, jut kerosene will check their roaming imbition, and wo had a man sci vant .o all over tho Coors every day with ?1. We managed to keep thus par ially free from them. Of course, tar intulas and snakes arc abundant, but lot troublesome Another unpleas int feature is the inability to keep a icrvant. They get a month's pay and hen generally go and buy a bat and brget to come back. "There is a crying need in Manila or a laundry. The prevailing system s for young man or woman toa swamp 'hort it is dipped i.i dirty water and hen beaten upon stones to get it lean. They will not rub hot -Tater, nd they will not rub it, so that it us? ally stands this treatment about wicc. A good American laundry in lanila would make a fortune for the remoter. "The people arc nrrautcowards and roatly fear our soldiers, particularly dc colored troops. The latter chcr di a like regard for them. The rjualor of the city where sanitary con itions have never been known, and lie horrors through which our troops ave passed, will never bo real :cd by those who have not witnessed otb. "I must not forget the flies. Just ouimon lites they arc, but with ex optionally sticky feet, and they fill bc houses in black clouds. Tho pun ah has to bc incessantly going to keep live Thc Filipino women wear but ne garment and keep cool. With Ltncrican energy the country is c?pa le of much, but at present it is in an ^describable condition." - A new Wesley story is told by ir Edward Bussell of Liverpool Post 'ho had it from aa old lady now liv? ig on thc Isle of Man. Uer ero ii randfather once entertained the ia lous evangelist, John Wesley, and at tiat time her grandfather was a little oy. lie was allowed, as a great hon r, to come to dinner, and Wesley pat id him on thc bead at the closo of ie meal and asked him what lie meant ) bo when he grew up. "I'm going ) be a preacher," said tho youngster; there arc always suoh good dinners hen tho preachers como." - Bracelet-wearing men are said to c on the increase. Som?' Urida. S?-mi ?ff-. Tm p.- wer? sixteen bridal conj l< - it the Haleigh Hotel last week. A good natured lot of bride* and groom?, too, they were. One couple, who register ed from Kentucky, arrived in Wash ington early in the week after a most unhappy journey. When they boarded I an ..:*riy evening train which passed ! through their little town ?ni its way V) Cincinnati to j tin the main road they thought their identity as a bride a id groom had vanished. They had taken much pains to conceal all evi dences nf their being newly married. As soon us they entered thc car they saw nu unmistakable smirk pass over the countenances of all the other pas eerigers. After they were seated thc smirk grew to what seemed to them enormous proportions. Ile spoke to her, and they got up and went to the next car. To t dr utter discomfiture the same thing occurred. There was no~Tn:.stake-they were unquestiona bly the objects of much supr.rcsscd mirth. Kven the conductor showed evidences of the strain upon him to control his amusement. Before they had passed many stations thc direct cau se leaked out. H very passenger on the train had been given a card. It was about five inches by three and neatly engraved. It read: "This will introduce to you Dr. and Mrs. L. C. Moore. They were married this after noon. Any attention you may show them will be greatly appreciated by the citizens of-, Ky." Cincinna ti, their goal of hope, was uot far dis tant. They were to change cars there and get on thc Chesapeake aud Ohio Hoad. They entered thc sleeper boldly and with confidence. The first glance at the passengers who were a'ready in their seats showed them the audacious cards had mysteriously pro ceeded them. The bride only regained her composure after they reached the Haleigh and she found there were fif teen other brides in the Intel. The citizens between Waugh Chap el and the Baltimore and Ohio station on Saturday evening were treated to a spectacle wnich delighted thc soul of thc small boy. There was an exclu sive and interesting little wedding at thc parsonage about 7:30. During the ceremony, while thc carriages were waiting, some young friends of the couple hastily wove a network of broad white ribbons across thc back of the carriage from side tv) side. In thc middle was securely fastened a huge bunch of white flowers, with long white streamers. The busy hands were very busy thc whole time tim party was iusidc the house. Many friends stood around, and the ha pp.' pair lingered for congratulations and good-byes. Suddenly the best man discovered that it lacked just seven minutes of thc train time. There was a rush for the carriage; the driver was told to run his horses. Amid a shower of rice and old shoes they were hustled into thc vehicle, the door slammed and the Taithful coachman sut his horses with the whip. Simul taneously with the plunge of tho [torses a huge dinner bell began to ilang. Tho people on the street gave i shout, people in houses ran to their ?root doors and windows. One glance it the ribbon-be decked cari iago told die story. The bell was securely tied inder thc vehicle. The brido grew ?ysterical and tried to jump out. The ; roo in was master of the situation. If hey stopped to take the bell off they vould miss the train, so they kept ! ight on. He held his new wife firm- j y in his arms, and the people at the ; talion were expecting them. Thc ?ell could he heard three blocks ahead \ if them. Plenty of cager hands were ; cady to carry the baggage, and ike ! room carried tho bride. They caught he train, but it was a very hysterical nd unhappy young woman who start d on her wedding tour that night. Vashington Star. vt m \. S. S. ls tho Only ?Scrofula, soi afford tempi tenuity Equal to this ?,? Ibstinate Disease. SS 9 equal to any blood trouble, and nev? ;oes down to the seat of the disease, tl race of tho taint. The serious consequences to which Scrof hould impress upon those a?llicted with ortanco of wasting no time upon treatt iot possibly effect a cure. In many cases\ reatment has boen relied upon, complic wellings bavo resulted, foi which tho do , daniTpmiia surgical cpcrr.tion ia D?cessai Mr. II. E. Thompson, of Milledgeville, G iad case of Scrofula broke out on the glai ?.hick had to'belanced and caused me mu ras treated 'O?- ? lung while, bu? the phyi bio to cure me, and my condition was a egan their treatment. Many blood reme int without effect. Some one recomment 'began to improve as soon os I had take continuing the remedy, I was soon cure nd have never had a sign of the disease 1 S. S. S. FOR 1 -ls tho only remedy which can promptly i ilood diseases. By relying upon it, and 2 o-called tonics, etc., all sufferers from bl astead of enduring years of suffering whi he constitution. 8. ?. S. is guaranteed ure Scrofula, Eczema, Cancer, Bheumat tatter, Pimples, Sores, Ulcera, etc. Insist u Books on blood and skin diseases will t Iwift Sp?cifie Company, Atlanta, Georgi nr. Duvh ami Mr. Lincoln. A. W. Thuuison, who, during thc "civil war,-' *\a- a lieutenant in Com pany (J. 12th Ohio volunteer cavalry, writes ttl thc New York Independent that he was at Charlotte, N. C., when President Davis w.?s informed of thc assassiuatiu of Mr. Lincoln. Ile says lie was sent from camp, at Lincoluton, to Charlotte, under a flag of truce: that he was ushered into a room where a dozen or more men were scated and that one of these was Mr. Davis. (Jen. Bebels received the lieutenant, and while they were transacting their business a telegraphic dispatch was brought Tn and hauded around. Last of all be was permitted to read it aud bc reproduces it-from "memory," we suppose -as follows: "GREENSBORO, N.C., April -. "Lincoln was assassinated the night of the 11th in Ford's Theatre, Sew ard was assassinated about the same time in ti i B own house. Graut has marched his army back to Washington to dcilarc himself military dictator. J. B. JOHNSON." President Davis's name was not called in the lieutenant's hearing, but he says bc recognized him by pic tures bc had seen in print. Gen. Kchols, in the course of a conversation later on, admitted that Mr. Davis had been present in thc room. Thc lieu tenant describes Mr. Davis as weariug a gray Melton suit. "The cold stare of a glass eye" first caught thc lieu tenant's attention. Ile quotes Mr. Davis as sayiug, after reading tho news of Mr. Lincoln's death: "Well, we have lost a generous enemy." Lu his book "Thc Risc and Fall of I thc Confederate? Government," Mr. Davis says he reached Charlotte on April 18, 18G5, and "at the moment of disniouting received a telegram from Gen. Breckin ridge announcing on in formation received from Gen. Sher man, that Mr. Lincoln had been as sassinated. This news becoming bruit ed about, a crowd of soldiers and others, who had gathered around, cheered. And so a story went out that Mr. Davis read the dispatch "wilh exultation," which he takes nains to deny, and adds: "For an cmiuy 60 -relentless in the war fervour subjugation we could not be expected to mourn; yet in view of its political consequences it could not be regarded otherwise than as a great misfortune to the South. Ha had power over tho Northern people and was without personal malignity to wards thc people of thc South; his successor was without power in the thc North and was tho embodiment of malignity towird the Southern peo ple, perhaps the more so because he had betrayed ?ind deserted them in the hour of their need." There are radical points of indiffer ence between the statements of Lieut. Thomson and Mr. Davis, and we, of course, prefer to put our truet in Mr. Davis.-Rich mond Dispatch. -rn? rn mm - - The two most absent minded men on record arc fVe fellow who thought he bad left bis watch at home, aud then took it out to see if he had time to go back and get it; and the man who put on his office door a card saying: "Out, will be back soon," and on his return, sat down on a stair step to wuitfor himself. - Since Mr. Rockefeller's shajre of the Standard Oil company dividends gives him an inom; of $33,033,00') a year from that SDUTCJ aloaj. Mr. Car negie's statement that thc oil king is the richest mau in the world still holds goad, despite the remark of Mr. Frick which credits thc iron king with only $24,500,000 a 3 ear. -- The only thing for the Christian to he concerned about is his loyalty to Christ. * CROFULA. dozens of remedies recommended 'or me of them no doubt being able to jrary relief, but S. S. S. is absolutely raedy which completely cures it. ne of the moat obstinate, deep-seated en, and is beyond the reach of the lea purifiers and tonics because some han a mere tonio is required. S. S. 8. ir fails to cure Scrofula, because it iius permanently eliminating every. ula surely leads ^ it tho vital im nent which can .rhere tho wrong lated glandular eton insist that py ra., writes: "A ads of my neck, ch Buffering. I sic inns were un 3 bad as when I id ?es were used, led Si S. S., and n a few bottles, d permanently, to return." Swift's Specific THE BLOOD .each and cuvo obstinate, deep-seated iot experimenting with the various ood troubles can oe promptly cured, ch gradually but surely undermines purely vegetable, and never fails to ism, Contagious Blood Poison, Boils, pon 8. S. S. ; nothing can take its place, .o mailed free to any address by the la. I Hoiiseworkis bald work without GoldDiist Washing Dishes To wash dishes !n hslf the time, and do lt weil, follow ibis recipe: Always use bot wster - not warm, but bot. It is best to use mops with chins ond eUso, sad, to bave a nie? lather, instead of using sosp use Gold Dust Washing Powder Dissolve a tablespoonful In the hotwater and wssh quickly; have plenty of nice, dry towels to wipe with ; hsve a drainer that will allow the water to fun off the dishes into receptacle be low, when you will have highly polished glass and chins. Th? ?bore it Uk*n from our free boo Vie? "UOLDEN HOLES ron liOUBEWOBK.** Dent free cm request to THE H. K. FAIR BAN,'. COII??JtV, Chicago, St. Louis, How Vor?, I NOTICE. I have a considerable num ber of small unpaid Accounts on my books. I am notifying each one of amount due, and unless paid I am going: to place them in officer's hand for col lection. J. S. FOWLER. Jan 3, ]<J00 2? D.S. VANDIVBK. K P. VANDIVER J. J. MAJOU. VANDIVER BROS. & MUOR DEALERS IN Fine Buggies, Phasetons, Surreys, Wagons, Harness Lap Robes and Whips, High Grade Fertilizers, Bagging and Ties. SELL SWIFTS GUANO and AUID not in the trust. See us bnforo buying a BUGGY or WAGON. We have splendid new, slick jobs at correct pricep. We wi 1 appreciate your patronage. Yours truly, VANDIVER BROS. & MAJOR. CHARLESTON AND WESTERN CAROLINA RAILWAY AUGUSTA A NU ASE2KV1LLK 8BOK F JL.IN .R In effect Dec. 1st, ?599 Lv Augusta.. Ar Greenwood. Ar Ando: ->n. Ar Laurena. Ar Greenville. Ar Glenn ? pring* Ar Spartanburg... Ar Saluda. Ar Heuderiouville.? Ar Asbovllle Lv Aabevlllo Lv fpartaoburg Lv Glenn K:iriug!<. Lv Green? ie. Lv Laur...*. Lv A--'- rjca L>- '.:uvUWOOd A. Augusta Lv Anderson Ar El^rten. Ar Athens ... Ar At'anta Lv Anderson Ar Augusta Ar Port Royal Ar Beaufort Ar Charleston (Sou) ~. Ar Savaunab (Central. 9 40 am 12 15 am t 40 pu. i 2D pm 3 00 pm 4 05 pm 3 10 pm 5 33 pm ! 9J3 timi 7 00 pin C 10 pip ? 3i ri? 10 i;', am Clot"' connection at Calhoun Pall? for all pointa on 8. A. L. Railway, and at Spaitanbu g for Son. Railway. For -ny inform?t!vu relative to i lek cis or schedule?, etc, address W. J. CRAIG, Gen. Piss. Aguot. Aa?na- ?.?? T.M. Kmeraon .Trafflo Manager J B*eso Fant, Agjnt, Anderson, 8. C. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Oondeuflotl Bohcdulo In Effoot December 10th. 1S?.>. STATIONS. ggjg ffig" Ct. Charleston.TTTT7TTTTTTT 1VQ St xrJ Summerville.. 7 fl ? ra. " Branchville.. $ ? ff ?p ?. Onmi.oljprr, . 9T S * " Eic g ?j'lleT'.".'. i'.'....'. . 10 Sr?-*0 Lv. Savannah. 12 ?g? 9 ** Born wu'J. 400 oj w ?" Blackvi'Je. . 4 IO ?, M LT. Columbia. U 05 WM " Prospority. W N n'n M Newberry. I* S P tn M Ninety-Six. . 1? PO " Grce?wood. 7 40 ara 1 63 p in Ar. Hodges. 8 00 a lb B 15 p fe Lv. Abbevi?e... 7 a m ~1.88 pj& Ar. Bolton."Tte a in 8 IQ jpn Lv. Anderson. 8 20 a m 8 83 ft m .Ar. Greenville. 10 10 a 5 4 18 p & At.Atlanta.(Oon.Timo) ?66p m 8ffijE? STATIONS"" g|g I y*ffjT LT. Greenville. 6 80 p m K) 10 la ra " Piedmont. 0 00 p m IC <? a - " TVlUiamuton. 6 23 p in 10 ? *?p AT. Anderson . 7 I V p m ll 40 ?t ja LT. Belton -. Ois p ni Ar.Donnald*_... 7 13 rt m ll 40 ato Ar.Abbevillo.77. 8 lo ?? ni lg Bj g m Lv. Hodges.. 7 U> p m ll U & H) Ar. Greenwood. s 00 p II. 12 20 p rh .* Ninety ; i :. 12 55 p ra ** Newberry. 2 CO p ta m Prosperity...,. 2 14pm ?? Colombia. . 3 ?0 pm Ar. Bl nek vi. if. 8 05 mito " Barnwo l. 3 20 a aa ? Bavannnh........... 8 18 a Ita Lv. Kingvii.e. 4 48 p- ian " ' Ortngebnrg. 5 Bi ,p pi Brnuehvilte. 0 17 p" to " Summerville. . 1 88 9 *?* Ar. Charleston. 8 18 P.ta ? xTftl STATIONS. & ?ToTp 7 10 n Lv..Ohorle3too..Ar Tt?? 7?8 12 00n 7 -il n .' Bctminervillo " 7 88p 5*3 ft Jfc5n 8 55 a " .BrnnohTHle, " OOSp ?SJq 50 A Olin " O?-angetmrff " 8 84 ? ,??$5*0 4 DO n 1J !.. n " ..Ringville . " J^Sp !S<8$3 l? 05 ?. LT. .B*vr?r?T??h Ar_??. '? ??q 4 00a. " ..Barnwell.. . I S? 4 isa. " ..Bl?ekTin*.. " .; b 05a 8G0nIl?i?a " ..Columbia.. " 8 ?Op 0 Mp 8 07ul-'^'v> " ....Alston.... .? 2??p ?fc0a 10 Oin 1 Sap ? . . Santuc... ** 1 20p 7 43 p 10 20a S Gip " .Union..... " 1 05p 7 80p in n a-iT> .* jiMiAs-vtOrt.. " ia ?sw ? ?a? 10 54 aj 2 87p '? ....Pnco?et" 12 Mp 6 lip il 25 a ? 10p AraprtrtanburgLv ll 45 ? 8 Up 1 40nl ii '.'j. LvBpnrtaubnrgAr ll 17a 6 00p 2 87v! . . <p Ar...A8hovilIo...LT 805a 8 83p '.:"p. m. MA**n. m. "N" night. Pullni.'ut palace altfoplig carn on TrnihB85and 86, b7 anil 'M oa A! and C. (UV(don. Dining oar t on tho ... trniu? serve all meals cn route. Trnlnt .'caro Spartanburg, A. &C. dividion, norlhlvv.ind, 7:03 n. m., p.m., 0:13p. m., iVo.otibulo LinUtod) ; nonthbonnd 12:88 a. m:, :15 p. m., ll M a. m., (Vest?bulo Limited.) Trains iravo Greenville, A. and C. division, nerthl.oi n 1,0.00 r.. m., 2:34 p. m. and6:22 p. m., 1Vestibuled Limltod) : ?)nthhonnd,l :C0 o, m.. :00 p. m.. ?2:S0 p. ni. (V(Mlbg|y.Ll^?lJ) Trains ? and IQ carry o?egs^fPayniei|' ?ogp Ing cars between Savannah and Aahevllla tn* route dally betwfeA^ Jaysonvli^ An E M. RUOKER. Jr., ATTOllNKY A.T WEBB BUILDING, Amlercinn, . - S. C. Blue Ridge Railroad. U. C. BE vTTl E, ll-celver. Effective February 25, 1900 WESTBOUND.' D-illy Dally PUB?. Mixed. No. No. ll No. 6. 0 *And rsor<.Lv 3 35 pm 5 30 am 7 fDtmer. 3 45 pm 5 68 am 10 1 A ut un. 3 50 nm 0 10 am 13 ?PendletO'. 3 55 pm 6 22 am 10 fCheirv Crosteiig.. 4 00 pm 034am 18 fA/Jauns CroM-iog.. 4 04 pm 042am .M {.^nec.". 415pm {?SiS 32 W. at Uni .n .,. .... 4 43 pm 7 58 am 43 'Walhalla.? r 4 50 pm 8 00 am E \ ST BOU KD. Daily Dilly V. Ixeil. Pasp. No. No. 6. No. I?. 34 ?Walhalla.L ? 5 35 pm U 10am 32 *Weut Union. 5 41 pm 9 10 am 24* {Seneca..{J ?3?? 940 am 18 t Adams Croping.. 6 34 pm 9 48 am 10 tCherr*'? Crnfcsiug 0 40 p u 9 53 am 13 *Peodletou. 04*pru 10 01am 10 f&utun:. 7 00 pu? 10C9am 7 fDenver. 7 09 pm 10 18 am 0 ?Anderton.A r 7 30 pm 10 40 am (*) Re ular s anon ; (f) flag station ^ iii also hi put to* io! lo v lng nations t"> tafeo on or lot or? paifii . Phln neve, Jamas' ano gu'iu) Spring* No. 12 conncnu with Southern Railway No G at Audeiaitu. No ll connect.", <Aiib S .ulLt-ru Railway No .. 11 and 33 at S ?linen J R ANI Bit?0* 8 pt. _ v tag vue a [ DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE TO ALL POINTS North, South and Southwest. BCHBD-U LE* I Nr. l' KNOV. FI h. 1 SOD* t?OTJrHUOUKU Ko 41. No. 403. Ji7 Netv York, via Pena R R.*ll 00 ROI ?9 00pm LT Wc. li logion, 5 CO pm 4 30 am Lv Kith mond, A. C. L. 9 0 ?pm 9 05 am LTP^lTraoTjThTs A.L. 8 45 pm 9 20ara Ar weimin, *" ......... lt 10pm*1143am Ar HcuJerson, " . 12 St? n m 135 pm Ar Raleigh, via 3. A L. 3 22 am 8 86pm Ar Southern Plots " . 4 27 am G OO.pm Aril .. *.t " . B Ham_7 00 pm LTWllmington " Ar Monroe. " .. Ar Charlotte, ?3 05 pm *6~ 53 ara ?9~~?2 pm ~?8 00 am ?10 2Cps> Ar Chester, Ar Oreen woo J 41 Athens, Ar Ai inn ta. .8 I8am ?10 SS pm 10 41 am 1 12 am 1 24 na g is --s. ... 8 SO pm 6 15oro NOfiTfiBOUND. LT Allants, S. A L". *1 GC put *? 60 pm 4r Athena, " . 3 >Q pm 1103 pm Ar Oreen wood, " . 5 10 pm 1 46 om Ar Chester, 8. A. L ......... 1 fc3 pm 4 08 am Ar Monroe,_" . 9 80 pm fl 48 an? LT harlotts. " -.?8 20 pm ?5 00 am No. 41?. No. ?5 Ar Hamlet,_". ?il 10 pm ?7 43au> Ar Wilmington_" . ?12 05 pa Ar Southern Pince, " . ?12 OJ am *b 00ara Ar Haleigh, " . 2 03ara ll 18 am -r ilinaersou " .?. 3 28 am' 12 45pm Ar Weldon, " -. 4 SS: m 2 SO pm Ar Portsmouth SAL. . 7 25 am 8 20pm Ar Richmond A.C L. *i 1ftam ?7 20 pa Ar Wasolnglon fVrio R. K _ '2 81 pm ll 20 pm Ar New York. - .' .. ?6 23 pm *8 63aa ?IJfcil} I PH'IT. EX Suml?y. Not?. 403 rt'<) 402 'Die Atlanta Special.'? Solid Vcatibutt-d Traiu, ot I'II 1 man Sleepers tina Coach m between Washington and Atlanta, also. Pau man Bicep- between Portsmouth and < :ha;loltp, NC. Nos 41 anu . "Tb* 8. ft. L Exprer*." Bolto Train, Coacbe td Pullman Meeker* botweei Portsmouth an>l "-u:a. Doth trains inak'. mediato C iuo-ct. A at At lauta for Monteo ei o>? t^, NJW Orleans. Tex as, t'nlifornla." AI -xlc>., . Intt-rrcooga, Na?hvlllo, UemphtP, Macon sud PH? ida. For Tickets, 81< epors, etc.. anply to G. McP. Batto. 1- P. A., il Tryon tr . ,nar? lotte, N C. E. St John, V xe-Prenideu nd : Manger V. E. Melle? vlonerol Wu-.M mei.. nt. II. W. B. clover, Traffic ? nager L. S. Allen. Gen'l. Pa? ? gpr Agent G?rerai OfHcera, ivm month, V?. ATLANTIC COAST UNE. TRAFFIC DKPABTMHS* WILMINGTON, N. C., Jan. 10, 18m Faxt Line Betvfeon Charleston and Col limbla and Upper South Carolina, Nortt Carolina. CONDENSED SCHEDULE. OOINO WEST- GOING HABI .No. 52. No.?. 7 oo am 8 21am 940 am 11 00 pu 12 07 pm 1220pm . I OS pm 1 SS pm 8 00 pm 8 io pm fte" pm 6 iS pm rt 05 pm 7 00 pm LT?.Charleston.......Ar LT..........Lanes....?...Ar Lv.? . .. ?uniter........?Aj> Ar.......Columbia,.Lv Ar.Prosperity...??LT Ar?....Newoerry.?.LT Ax.?? runton.....Lv Ar?.Lnurct: a.LT Ar.-Green* file?.?..LT Ar.Hpartanburg.....LT Ar?.? Wionsboro. S. C.LT Ar.Charlotte, N. C......Lv Ar? Hendcraonrllle, N. C.Lv Ar.?AshcTtlle. N.C?.Lr 800 pn S 20 pia 518]? 4 00 pm 2 47 pia 282 MB 153 pia 145 pm 1201am ll 4ft an 1141 stn 9 SS ?a 914 an 820 an *1?I|T Noa. 62 and P8 Soil rt r?aln* between CbarSitn sndColumbia,S II. .M. Kttaaaoa -?n'l. Fues-ntfii Awne J il \?WirZ,r>**"*,*f\l*?Sw*T ' ' .?? MaaaoH. rraffir Manat?? 60 YEARS* EXPERIENCE ???iHTS TftAfMC HARKS DK810N9 COPVniGrTf G &C. An ron o sonflina a sketch and description ma? ?jutCUf asoertaln our opinion free vrbcthor au . ?n^fe?Sr^d?n'fJ^ 11 ona strtctiy coirooential. liana ooo* on latent* sont freo, tudas! agen cr tor aoeorlnjrpatcnt?. I'ntonta taken through Munn St Co. rccolrr rprctol notice without charge, Ia tho Scientific Hmericati. A handsomely Il?astratod wook!/. Jjinrcat cir culaUon ot amy aclanUflo JotirniX Tenca. S3 a year: four mon tha, OL Bold by all nowodeaJers. HfifL 0%rnP&5 P Sir WaahlSaSmf J? of ^