The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, June 27, 1900, Page 6, Image 6
NEW CA VAL
American I ? licking 13:
lias incl wi til approx
?Vf. I.Ollis
Thc American broncho is fast be- 1
coming the cavalry horse <<? the
world's armies.
Time was when i?ie Western range
horse-thc "cayuse" of thc i>lains
was a despised animal, considered as ;
good for the work of the cowman, :
ami. occasionally, as ac'-e.-sible can
ning material for packers u >t t<?n par- ,
ticular as to the origin ol' their beef.
That lias ail been changed. To-day
jt is a recogniz' il and accepted maxim
that there i- no better animal for thc j
cavalryman'- !:-<-. than thc little,
light, iy i ry, untiring broncho of thc
Wost. Ho i- now the cavalry horse
of the Cn $ ted States, of England, of .
I*'rance and of I taly.
lt was tin- polo players who b<
it. Wyoming, a cattle country li Ibid
with cows, game, ponies and moun
tains, early appealed to thc families
of Kngland desirous of finding a place
for the bestowal nf younger sons.
The young Englishmen came, bring
ing with them thc sports of th J home
country, and among those sports was
polo.
Now the playing of polo emphati
cally demand a horse. The English
men found awaiting them only the
tough little Western bronchos, but
before they had richie.? them a week
they had discovered that a cow ?tony
trained to turn in its own length while
at full gallop and to follow a particu
lar cow through thc steam and dust
of a round-up could also follow a polo
ball in a fashion never seen before.
Pretty soon the news of the wonder
ful abilities of those Wyoming cow
ponies, whose virtues Colonel William
F. Cody has long exploited, traveled
to other countries, and there sprang
up a demand foi Western bronchos.
After awhile those wonderful ponies
found their way to India, to China, to
South Africa and to every part of thc
world where men ride horses. Then
some traveled, more observant than
others, who had preceded them, no
ticed that there was a strong family
likeness between the horses ridden by
the Czar's cossacks and the horses
with which they had become familiar
under the name of American bron
chos.
l p to that time the cavalry horse of
the world had been a sort of a cross
between a truck horse and the animal
you sec in a handsome cab. There was
talk bf tho power, quicker, quickness
and endurance of . the American bron
chos, hut the cavalry authorities de
clared that they were altogether too
light for the work for which they
would be needed. Then th jy found
that one of these little, light, despised
horses could carry a big cow-puncher
at a gallop through a long and hurd
day's work and have enough grit left
to buck him out of the saddle at tho
end of'it.
And then the cavalry authorities
began to think, and thc result has
been thc almost universal adoption of
the broncho-slightly modified, it is
true-by the armies of the world.
When the war between thc British
and the Hoers broke out the English
sent buyers over here to purchase ali
the bronchos they could get. They
are buying yet. The horses upon
which General French made his won
derful ride to thc relief of Kimberley
were Amerioan bronchos. Thc horses
upon which the Italian cavalrymen
perform such wonderful feats aro
American bronchos, and so it goes
throughout the world.
It takes a good deal of work to con
vert a Western bronoho into a service
able cavalry mount, for the small
broncho ohas a way of his own with
men, and from o his youth objects to
bciDg ridden. He is ridden, never
theless, bot it is often in such a way
that he never quite forgets how to
assert his American independence.
His first^lesson usually comes when
some long-limbed cow-puncher of his
home ranch drops thc loop of a rope
over his feet, knocks him flat with a
twist of the wrist and drags him from
his mother's side to thc place where a
man waits with a red-hot branding
iron. Another lesson comes later
two years later-when another cow
puncher, a professional "broncho bus
ter" this time, gives him his first
lesson of the rope.
The pony may run wildly around
the corral and try his hardest to get
away, but,!* nevertheless, there comes
a time when the hated lariat settles
about his neok and he finds himself a
prisoner. The broncho, knowing noth
ing of the power of the rope, tries to
ran. As he does so, the older cow
horse, upon which his captor sits, set
lieu quietly upon his haunches and
wai?s for the shook. It comes soon
enough. Up go the pony's heels and
down he goes, flat on his back. It is
within thcobounds of possibility that
this experience will break his neck,
.RY HORSE.
ronelio, Once Trained,
-al "wherever Tried.
/,'< ?tiibtU'.
but if that happens, it does not matter
particularly. There are plenty more
bronchos-thousands* of them. No
body stops to consider one bro ich'
more or less.
Before thc half-stunned pony has
tried tu risc other meo <\\\t to his ide
ant! place upon his head a <|Uccr ar
rangement of ropes, called a hacka
morc. lt is so a ria need that a strong
pull upon it will press thc pony's
.nostrils mid stop Iii - breathing.
Then t" the haekamorc there is
Fastened a long rope called thc stake
rope, and with this t?o; broncho is
pick* l< .! put for a few day- in tho
ripen sage-brush. Whenever he tries
to run he gets half choked; whenever
he struggles he got? tangled np in the
rope and scrap* ; the hide from his
heels. In three days he is chastened
pony and a man eau go near him; but
he can't ride him. Not yet.
There cour.- a day when the bron:
eho buster, with a couple of assist
ants, walks up to thc indignant bron
cho and throws a blanket over his
back. Thc pony promptly bucks it
oi? again atol plunges wildly against
thc rope. It doesn't do him much
good, for one of the cowboys loosens
the scarf from his neck and binds it
over the broncho's eyes, whereupon
he stands helpless and trembling, not
knowing what may happen next.
Not much time is given for consid
eration, for almost at once there falls
upon his back the weight of a big cow
saddle. It is a poor broncho that
docs not buck tho saddle off again,
not once, but a dozen times, but thc
men who are holding him have limit
less patience-and they know their
work very well.
Very gingerly the chief broncho
buster reaches under thc pony and
gets hold of the cinch, or girth, and
very swiftly docs he pull it taut.
Never before has the broncho felt
anything like this, and ho fights with
j the terror of a trapped wild beast. It
i is all in vain, though, for soon enough
he has to bear a worse indignity-the
tightening of the back cinch, and once
moro he plunges and bucks to be free.
And then comes thc crucial part of
the work. The blinding neck scarf is
slipped from the broncho's eyes and
he looks out, red-eyed and wild, upon
his captors. The broncho buster has
coiled 'up the long stake rope and
holds it in his hand; the two other
I nen are handing to tho broncho's head
and twisting it sideways. Quietly
and cautiously tho bronoho buster
slips to jthe side of thc pony, talking
to him meanwhile in terms that are
decidedly not those of endearment.
Then there come a run, a jump and a
j pull combined and-the cowboy is in
the saddle for keeps.
With a yell like that of the coyotes
thc men who had been holding the
I broncho's head let go, and away goes
the pony in a series of stiff-legged
bucks that would send any ordinary
rider on a trip to the moon. The
broncho-buster, however, is no ordi
nary rider, and to this fact he has
added some of the advantages of equip
ment. <>n thc upper part of his
spurs, for instance, are two strong,
blunt hooks. Then he catches in the
braided girths of thc saddle, ind, held
by these, he can no more bc dislodged
than the broncho's skin. It must not
bo supposed, however, that the main
reliance of the "buster" is placed
upon these appliances, because it em
phatically isn't. A festive cowboy
has been known to playfully insert
one of his spurs in the broncho's ear
while the other toyed with its hind
leg without disturbing the rider's seat
to any appreciable extent.
Even if the pony does get rid of his
rider, he has not won the battle-not
by a lot. However far, and however
hard he may be thrown, it is a practi
cal certainty that ho still retains hold
of the long stake rope, aud this quick
ly uncoils from his hand as the pony
dashes wildly away. Springing quick
ly to his feet, the broncho-buster runs
out sideways from the course of the
pony, for be knows that a straight
pull would send him end over end.
Holding one end of the rope olose to
his side, he settles down upon bis
heels, and'th rm. j nat 05 f^e rope gees
I taut, he gives it a swift and peouliar
shake. That quiok twist runs in a
wave along the rope and reaches thc
head of the pony just as the rope
comes tight. It is a trick of the rope,
but it is one of the most effective
ones that is known. It pulls down
the head of the pony as if the earth
itself wero attached to it, and in all
probability that broncho gets a fall
that effectively takes the tucker out
of him. The cow-puncher knows that
by giving tho rope that peouliar twist
he can throw the strongest and heav
iest horse that ever wore shoes.
Befo- e the broncho can rise bc findf
his conqueror standing over him and
when he gets up he finds the relent
less rider again in the saddle.
That usually finishes the pony, and
he ?.'ives in. Ile is by no means
broken yet, but he can be ridden by
any one with nerve and some skill.
From that point his education goes on
rapidly. He learns '.he use of the
bridle and how to .stop and turn; he
learns that mau is not necessarily his
sworn enemy, and within six months
he has bsen converted into a horse
good enough for any cavalryman to j
use on a forced march.
CLIFTON SI'AKKS.
Deaf M ute's Strong Jaw.
Leroy Scott, a deaf mute, bit oil
piece- ot' wire and nails in the court of
.lusiixe I'rindiville at Harrison street
police station with the avidity of
I leam ?-h's goat in a feast on tin cans
and cinders. The youthful Samson
look an iron bar in his teeth aud bent
it with ease to the amazement of the
spectators who crowded the court
room.
Tiie . xl,:ti??.m .d' strength was
called forth during a case in which
Scott was a witne-s. Ile handed .Jus
tice Hrindiville a card on which was
printed his name aud profession, and
when thc case was concluded the
magistrate requested a test of the
boy's alleged strength.
Prosecutor Schully produced an iron
bar reserved as a gavel when the noise
in the room becomes too great. Hold
ing thc middle of it in his teeth, Scott
soon rendered it useless for calling the
crowd to order. A dozen wire nails
were then produced, and as fast as
they were placed between his teeth,
the mute bit them in two. The wire
screen which protects Clerk Koderick
was then brought into use, and Scott
chewed portions of it so fast that a
halt was called by Justice Prindiville,
who feared a bill for the damage might
bo rendered against him. Scott's
final feat was to lift a big policeman
over his head and hold him there
until the officer grew red io the face.
- Chicago Chronicle.
Fumily Fend Over a Itaby.
MOUNTAINHDOKO, ALA., June 1(1.
A bloody family feud has started on
Sand mountain on account of an
adopted baby. A young man named
IL Cook married a daughter of James
Powell. A child was born and tba
mother died. The young father
brought his motherless ^babc back to
his wife's father. Later on Isaac
Powell, thc child's uncle, adopted it.
The child's father became dissatisfied
with the arrangements, claiming the
Powells were not treating the baby
right and demanded his child. Powell
would not give it* up. Demands were
made and refused and all parties went
armed to thc teeth. . This week Cook
and the Powells wero at Church, and
Cook got his baby and started out.
ile was followed by Jame3 and Isaac
Powell. Shooting startud as soon as
parties reached the door. James
Powell was instantly killed and Isaac
Powell was mortally wounded. The
baby, whioh was in its father's jinns,
had its face badly burned with pow
der. No nrrosts have been made.
The Part She Didn't Like.
The other day a wee little woman
who lives in a surburb, saw and heard
a donkey for thc first time, says the
Cincinnati Enquirer. She talked
about it continually after getting home.
It was a "good donkey," it was also
a 'beautiful donkey.'' In fact, the
child went comparatively through her
small store of adjectives. And whei
her father came \iome at night he
heard the adjective-! all over again.
"And so you lik jd' the donkey, dar
ling, did you?" h i asked, taking the
tiny lass on hid Knee.
"dh, yes, papa, I liked him. That
is, I liked him pretty well, but Ididn't
like to hear him dook."
Ivy poisoning, poison wounds and
accidental injuries are quickly oared
by using Dewitt's Witch Hazel Salve.
It is also a certain cure for piles and
skin diseases. Evans Pharmacy.
- A kind deed done a person in
need is worth more than s thousand
promises for some future time.
What has Uce?me of Helli
This i> thc startling question which
heads ari article by the Kev. fJ. .W.
Sh i ii II, in the June number of the
North American Review. The <?ucs
tiou'was suggested to the writer by
the fact that while the belief in hell,
as a place or condition of punishment,
bas been held by Christian people
from the beginning of Christianity, we*
now hear very little about it except in
the profanity of the day. Hell has
practically been obliterated from the
teaching and preaching of thc church,
and in explaining away the figurative
language in which thedoctrinc of eter
nal suffering has been set forth,
most people have abandomcd also thc
idea of retribution which lay behind
it. This is a fact which, Dr. Shel
don maintains, is to be greatly depre
cated. Ile says:
''The appeals to fear have wcll
uigh ceased, and yet there is no fact
which wc are so compelled to sec as
the fact of retributiou. T.ic law of
retribution works in our present life.
We become aware'd' it in our earliest
infancy, and we never become devel
oped in character until wc have learn
ed to fear that which is evil and
to .-hun the consequonecs of sin.
There is -elise of righteousness in all
men, and all men know unrighteous
ness brings punishment. It is fair to
assume that what holds good in the
present life, that what, is a part of
man's very si ucture here, will con
tinue hereafter. Wc niaycgive up en
tirely the notion of a material hell,
but we cannot give up the doctrine of
retribution. Suffering must follow
sin, and therefore to appeal to fear is
not only legitimate, but it is in accor
dance with the structure of man's
nature."
A Boy to Depend Upon.
Jeremiah Jones is even meaner than
the man who splits up his wife's tomb
stone to repair his doorstep, says the
Philadelphia Inquirer. Jones was an
inveterate tobacco smoker,- but, as his
wife detested the practice and made
home tempestuous and stormy for him
when he indulged in the habit there,
he always smoked when away during
the day, and declared to his better
half that he had stopped permanently.
But one evening, upon entering the
front door and drawing out his hand
kerchief, he accidentally pulled out
his pouch of tobacco, and without
noticing it, left it lying on thc floor.
When Jones sat down to hi9 supper
his wife walked in with the tobacco
in her hand, and, looking Jones firmly
in the eye, 6aid: "Do you know who
this belongs to?"
With great presence of mied Jones
turned scowling to his eldest son and
said with a severe voice, "Immortal
Mars! is it possible that you have be
gun to smoke? You young reprobate 1
Where'd you get that nasty staff?
What d'ye mean by such conduct, you
young villain? Haven't I told you
often enough to let tobacco alone?
Come here to me or I'll tear the coat
off you."
As he spoke the stern father made
a grab at the boy and dragged bim
out into the hallway, where he chas
tised him with a cane.
Then Jones threw thc tobacco ?ver
the fence, where he went out aud got
it the next morning and enjoyed it
during the day.
"Merciful heavemd" he exclaimed,
when he told us about it. "What
should I have dene ii' my children had
been all girls? It makes an old father's
heart glad when he feels that he has a
boy he can depend upon in such emer
gencies."^_
Unless food is digested quickly it
will ferment and irritate the stomach.
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure digests what
you eat and allows you to eat all you
need of what you like. Speedily eures
dyspepsia. Evans Pharmacy.
- "Emil, you said you'd make my
marriage a heaven for me and now you
won't even buy me a silk dress."
"But, my dear, did you ever hear of
people wearing silk dresses io hea
ven?"
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 the
system. Sold by Evans Pharmacy.
All Sorts of Paragraphs.
- Since IS'.tl Colorado has produced
over $75,000,000 in gold.
- The United States employs in its
ostal service 184,000 men.
- Grasshoppers arc playing havoc
willi thc cotton crop iu the Mississippi
delta.
- If women thought there was
somethingcuriousinthesky they would
lind a ladder to get up and see what
there was.
- A woman who wears a stuffed
bird on her hat is liable to a fine of
from ?25 to $50 by a law recently pass
ed by the legislature of Arkansas.
- A tiny traveler, hoking from a
car window at a foaming waterfall,
called out: "Oh, mamma, see the s da
water running down the mountain !"
- Hubby-Mamma, do miraclescvcr
happen now? Mamma-Sometimes.
Your father came homo from the lodge
last night, and I didn't smell any
cloves.
1). W. Mciver, Tukegc, Ala., wrote:
Our child's bowels were passing off
pure blood and all prescriptions failed
to relieve her, until we tried Tccthina
(Teething Powders), and she is now
doing well.
- The postmaster general has
amended the postal regulations so as
to permit the sender of a registered
lotter to recall it after it has been dis
patched.
- Statistics recently compiled show
that the value of thc alcoholic drinks
consumed by thc American people for
the year 1801) was approximately $1
000,000,000.
- It is estimated tint thc losses
by busiuesa failures in the last -10
years amounted to $1,800,000,000,
which is more than twice the amount
of tho country's circulation medium.
Sufferers from piles and skin dis
eases may be quickly and permanently
cured by DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve.
Beware of counterfeits. Evans Phar
macy.
- Last year the Winnebago Indiana,
on the reservation near Sioux City,
Iowa, feasted on 301 dogs obtained
from the dog pound in that city, at a
cost of about five cents a dog.
- During the first four months a
child should grow au inch each month.
After that half an inch in length each
month until he is a year old, when he
increases in height less rapidly.
- The British government is the
owner of over 25,000 camels. Several
thousand are used ia India to carry
stores and equipments when the regi
ments are changing quarters byline of
march.
- A Methodist minister was once
asked how it was that he consented to
the marriage of his daughter to a
presbyterian "Well," he replied, "as
far as I have been able to discover,
Cupid never studied theology."
' - If we would live in peace, let us
make the best-constructions of one an
other's words sod actions. Charity
judgeth the best, and it thinks noeviL
If words and actions may be construe-,
ted in a good sense, let ns never put a
bad construction on them.
A hound was purchased in Mis
souri and shipped in a closed express
oar to a ranch in Kansas. In a day or
two it was missing. Investigation
proved that it had gone back tc its
Missouri home, over a distance of 500
miles, on a road entirely unknown to
the dog.
- A certain minister during his
discourse one Sabbath morning said:
"In each blade of grass there is a ser
mon." The following day one of his
flock discovered the good roan pushing
a lawn mower about his yard and paused
to say: "Well, parson, I'm glad tb see
you are engaged in cutting your ser
mons short." y
- THE -
BUNK OF ANDERSON.
J. A. BROCK, Franki en r.
JOS. N BROWN, Vies Pr?sident.
B. F. M AULBIN, I abhier
THE largest, strongest Hunk In the
County.
Interest Paid on Deposite
By special agreement.
With unsurpassed facilities and resour
ces we are at all times prepared to io
commodate oar customer*.
Jan 10, 1900 ?9
CONTAGIOUS BLOOD POISON
Contagious Blood Poison is the most degrading and destructive of all diseases, as it vitiates and corrupts the entire system.
The first sore or ulcer is followed by little red pimples on the body, mouth and throat become sore, the
glanda enlarge and inflame, copp-.r colored splotches app.ar, and hair and eyebrows fall out. These are
some of the milder symptoms ; they increase in severity, finally attacking the vital organs ; the body is
tortured with rheumatic pains and covered with offensive eating sores.
It is a peculiar poison, and so highly contagious that an innocent person handling- the same articles
used by one infected with thia loathsome* disease, may be inoculated with the virus. It can be trmn*miH?^i
from parent to child. appearing aa the mm* dis-sss cr is a ?HA?TIC? form-like Kczema or Scrofula.
Many an old sore or stubborn akin trouble appearing in middle life, ia due and traceable to blood
poison contracted in earlv life. You xnav have taken DO tosh and mercury faithfully for two or three years
and thought you were cured, but you were not, for these poisonous minerals nevercure thia disease ?"they
drive it from the outside, but it is doing ita work on the inside, and will show up again sooner or later.
You may not recognize it aa the same old taint, but it is. C. S. S. has cured thousands of cases of
Contagious Blood Poison, and it will cur? you. It is the only yurely vegetable blood purifier known,.
and the only antidote for thia poison. S. S. S. cleanses the blood thoroughly of every particle of tn*
poison - there is never any return of the disease.
4*11 lt C l/AlllsV?aCl IC AT Haftllir Send for our Home Treatment book.
CURE YOURSEIf Al HOME. ^^?r^t^*^'s
close study of blood poison actual experience in treat?
ing it. You can cure yours-Sf perfectly and permanently
at home, and your secret ia /roar own. Should you need
any information or medical advice at any time, write to
our physicians. They hare made a life study of blood
diseases, and will ?ve your letter prompt and careful
attention. Consult them as often aa you please ; we make
no charge whatever for this service. All correspondence is
conducted in the strictest confidence.
Mrs.T.W.I.ee, Mont
Romery, Ala., writes:
V Severs! years ?go I
was inoculated with
poison by a diseased
nurse, who infected
my baby, and for six
long years I onflered
untold misery. My
body was covered with
Borea and ulcers. Sev
eral physicians treated
me, nut all to no pur
pose. The mercury nn(1
potash they gave me
seemed to add fuel to
the awful flame which
was devouri.rg nie.
Friends advised me to
trys.S.S. Ibegautak
ing it and improved
from the atart, and a
complete and" perfect
cure was Ihe result."
Address,
SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY ATLANTA, GA.
CARLISLE BROS.
ARE NOW HEADY TO SUPPLY YuU WITH
GEAIN C EADLES.
The Counts' Cradle is given up to be the best on the marktt. We also
handle the 14-Finger Josh Berry Cradle.
Heel Sweeps of all kinds, Plows, Plow Stocks, Siuglttrecs, Side Harrows,
Hames, Tiuces, Backbunds, Cotton Hoes of all sizes.
If you want a good Razor or Pocket Knife try one mude by the Elect-vie
Cutlery Co., every one of them sold under a strict guarantee
We also carry a full liue of GROCERIES.
CARLISLE BROS., Anderson. S. C.
BOYS' STEAM LAUNDRY !
The Most Complete and Up-to-Date Laundry in the State.
Every Machine thc latest improved, and cosigned todo most perfect work
Under the superintendence of an experienced Laundryman, with a corps
of skilled assistants. Every piece of work carefully inspected, and no sorry
work allowed to pass from Laundry. .
PRICES LOW. Quality of work unexcelled. Give us a trial.
N. li. SHARPE, Business Manager.
Located at rear of Fant's Book Store.
The ''Confederate Veteran.'*
Low Ci.rn KATES GIVEN WITH THE
INTEI.LK;ENCEH1-The growth of the
Ci ni federa tc Veteran, published by S.
A. Cunningham, ut Nashville, Tenn.,
is remarkable. Its circulation of eigh
ty-four issues, monthly, aggregated to
January, 1000, 1,105,453 copies. Aver
age for IH'Xi, 7,lis:j; 1804, 10,137; 1805,
12,010; iso?, i:),444; 1S?7, 1G.17?; 1808,10,
100; lSDO, 20,1??.
Subscriptions for the Veteran will bo
received ut this ollice. It and tho In
telligencer will be sent for a year at
tho club rate of $2.15. By application
to tho Intelligencer copies of the
Veteran will bo sent to our veteran
friends who are unable to subscribe.
TIRE SETTING
Let us save your Wheels by
having men of long experi
ence to re-set your Tires.
Repainting and Revarnish
ing a specialty.
PAUL E. STEPHENS.
CHARLESTON AND WESTERN
CAROLINA RAILWAY.
AUGUSTA ANO ASHEVILLE SPORT LINE
ID effect April 10th, 1900
LT Auguota...". . 40 am 1 40 pa.
Ar Greenwood..... 1215 am .~..
Ar Andorton..........M .... 6 10 pm
Ar Lauren.. 1 20 pm S S3 am
Ar Greenville............. S 00 pm 10 Iff am
Ar Glenn "pringa... 4 09 pm.
Ar 8partanburp. 8 10 pm 9 00 an
ArSa'.uda.. 6 88 pm _I.
Ar F anderao aT?le. 908 pm.
Ar Asheville. 7 00 pm ..<..?,....
LT Aahevilb.-.i 8 20 am'.
LT Spartan* arg.?. ll 45 am 4 10 pn
LT Glenn Si ringi.,10 00 am.
LY G ree n v tl le.. .112 01 pm 8 00 pn.
LT Laurens.-j 1 87 pm 7 15 pm
LT Andersen.I . 6 85 am
LT Greenwood.. .....' 2 87 pm?.
Ar Augui a.! S 10 pm IO 48 am
LT Andera <n .. . G SS am .
Ar Kl"ert i ?....... 12 07 pm .....
Ar A i h i* o *. 116p.
Ar A? a .ia.......-.-.. 8 50 pm .
Lv \nddr?on. 6 85 am .?.
Ar vu.unta. 10 48 am.
Ar For? Boyal...._. ti 30 pm ."..
Ar Beaufort........?.....'....... G 10 pm -..-..
ArCbarloil?n (SoJl.?. 8 09pm ......A
Ar Savannah (Plant-...........i 7 25 pm ..............
Close connection at Calhoun Fallo for all points
on S. A. L Ballway, and at. ?paitanbu g for Son.
Ballway.
For any Information relative to tick ft. or
?\e3sl??, a?difii?
W. J;CBAlG,Gen. P784. At^?t.A??<t?r?lM?-V
T. M. ?'.m*ronn .Tramo W..;???f
J ?I?CSO Fxnt, Ag int, Anderson, S. C.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY. '<
sra*
juno'iotb.;io3a :
STATIONS.
Lv. Charleston ....
" SummervUle..
H Branchville...
*' j Ornngeburg ..
" Ringville.. ..
Lv. Savannah. -
" Barnwell.
" Blackville.
LT. Colombia..
" Prosperity....
*' NcwbGvry_
" Ninety-Six....
" ' Greenwood...
Ar. Hodges.
Lv.AbbeviUe.....
Ar. Belton.
Xv, Anderson .
?Ar. GreenviUe.
Ar. Atlanta. (Oen.Time)
7 00 k m
8 14 a m
8 80 ? TE
0 80 a m
0 SO a
10 15 a m
85 a rn
11 15 a m
12 20 p m
8 65 ? TO
Dally"
Ko. ri.
liwara
7 11 am
8 55 a m
0 28 a m
I? 15 a m
12 So ? nx
4 18 a m
4 28 a m
11 05 a m
12 10 n.'n
i* ?? D m.
120 pm
l 55 p m
215 p in
s BJKS
.295 p m
4 15 p m
soo p?
Daily .i
NoTK.
STATIONS.
LT.GreenT?le. 5 80 p zn 1015 am
Bi ReoWSt.0 00 p ti 10 40 a rn
" \VUUftpV5ton.. Capra 10 55 a tfl
Ar. Anderson-. 7 15 p m H i? ? ?
LT. Belton. 6 45 p m il warn
Ar. Donnait?. 7 15 p ft ll j) ft m
?r.Ab.bovme. 6 10 p m 12 25 't>ln
LY. Hodges.. 7 86 p tn ll 55 ft tn
Ar. Greenwood. 7 65 p m 12 80 p jp
??? Ninety-six..... 8 88 p tn 13 B? p m
Newberry. 9 80 p m 200pm
" Prosperity. S 45 p m 2 14 p m
? Ctolnmbia. ll 80 p m 8.80-p m
Ar.Blackville.77. SOO a m
" Barnwell. 3 15 a ra
? Savannah.... ............ 6 10 a m
Lv. KingviUe..~ 2 82 a m 4 43 p m
** Orangeburg. 8 45 a m 6 83 p m
" BranchviUo. 4 25 a rn 8 15 pm
" Sumrnervillo. 5 52 a m 7 28 pm
Ar. Charleston. 7 00 * m 8 16 pm"
M S " BTA?IONS. M
11 OOp 7 UOn Lv..Cnarleaton..Ar 8 1 ii 7 00a
l?OOn 7 41 n ''Summerville" 7 21 fj 5 63*
1 55a 8 65o " .BranofcrO.10. " Q pp ?Sb
2 50a 0 23a *? Orangehurg " 8 &M fptt
4 80 a 10 15 a ^ . Klngvlllo.. " A 43g J_?ft
12 20 a_ ., Lv. .Savannah.. Ar TTvTT:. a 10a
418a. " "Barnwell.. ....... 815*
428a....... ''..Blackville..'' ....... fjOOn
OSOalKOo " ..Colombia.. 8 SOD fl Wp
7 07a 12 20p " ....Alston.... " S Wp 8?0a
808a 1 23p .' ...SanttM... " 1 Mp 7 4flp
0 45 a 2 OOp " .Union ..;.. " IS 43 p ! "gp
0 04a 2 22p .? ..Jonesville.. 12 2515 6 Bp
0 10a 2 87p '? ...JPocolet.... " 18 Hp 6 42p
9 60 e 8 10 p ArBp?rtonbnrcLv ll 45 a 6 lop
0 pa 8 40p LvSpartanbureAr ll 22a 6 OOp
1 10 p| 7 18 p Ax~.AJdiev?le ^Lvl 8 00 al ^05^
TOTJBMs' DAILT? 8B?WGB BjS^rVKEN
OABIJE3TON AND GEEBNYtLLB,
mmA twit - . fTti??l?Mi- MU! AAiwiCTlo
Pullmanpalace alcepingsarsoil Trains85ned
86,?fi and 88 on A. and O. division. Dining can
on thew trains aerre all meale emroo td.
Trains 1 cavo Spartanbnrg, A. A C. division,
northbonnd, 7*8 a.m., 8OT p.m., o?18p. m.,
'Y^xtibulo Limited); sonthbonnd 12:28a- m.,
??:15 p. m., ll :84 a. ai.. (Vcatibnle UmiiSLi
. Traine leave Green ville, A. arc O. division,
northbound, 6 KW a. m., p. TO. ana 6:22 p. m.,
(Ve>tibnlcd Limited) ^tMxrnnd. 2 ?0 a. m.,
cara between Charleston an? AahevtUp. '
Tra?na 15 and 18-Pallman Drawlng-Boou
Bleeping cara between (Jhartest?a finoT Aeh?
Slegont Pullman Drawing-Boom. BufTel;
Bleeping cara between Savannah and. AeheviUe
en route daily between Jacksonvillo and Cin
cinnati.
Daily
NcTlS.
W. A. TURK,
Gen. Faa. Agent,
WaahlngtoB, P. CX
S-H-^BDWKJ^
ja. uren. r&s. jagenc,
.Atlanta, Qa.
Blue Ridge Railroad.
ET. C. BEATTIE, Receiver.
Kile-stive February 25, 1900
WESTBOUND.
D.-Uly
Paae.
No. No. ll.
0 ? Anderson.Lv 3 35 pm
7 fDenver. 3 45 pm
10 fAutun. 3 50 pm
13 ^Pendleton. 3 55 pm
10 fCherry Crossing.. -1 00 pm
18 f Adams Crossing.. 4 01 pm
24 j ?Seneca. 4 15 pm
32 WVst Union ..........4 45 prc
43 ?Walballa.Ar 4 50 pm
EASTBOUND.
Daily
Mixed.
No. No. 6.
34 ?Walhalla.liv 5 35 pm
32 ?West Union. 5 41 pm
24'jseoec.{JJgJS
18 1 Adams Crossing.. 6 34 pm
10 fChorry's Crossing 0 40 pm
13 ?Pendleton. 0 4 ? pm
10 fAutun. 7 00 pm
7 fDenver. 7 09 pm
0 ?Anderson.Ar 7 30 pm
(.) Re ular station ; (f) Flag station.
Will also stop at the follow i og stations
to take on or let o passengers : Phin
nevo, Janus' and Sandy Springs.
No. 12 connect i with Southern Ballway
No 6 at Andersen.
No. ll connecta with Southern Railway
Noi. ll and 88 at Seneca.
J R. ANDERSON. Sept.
Dally
Mixed.
No. 5.
5 30 am
5 58 am
0 10 am
G 22 am
6 34 am
G 42 am
f 7 08 am
(7 20 am
7 58 am
8 00 am
Daily
Paap.
No. 1?.
910 am
916 am
910 am
9 48 am
9 53 am
10 01 am
10 09 am
10 18 am
10 40 am
^Sj^^DO?BLE DAILY
Y^*^ SERYLCB
. TO ALL POINTS
North, South, and Southwest.
SCHEDULE IN EFFECT NQY; Ctla. 1899.
SOUTHBOUND
^ % NO. 408. NO. 4L
LT New York, Tis Penn B. B.*li 00 sm ?9 00 pm
Lv Washington, -S 00 pm 4 80 MU
LvBtchmobdj . A.,C. L........~v0 0)pm 9 05 RIB
liv Portsmouth, 8. A. L W??MW> & 45 pm 9 20aT
AFne?dt?, ? ......... ii 10 pni'll 43 nm
Ar Henderson, %^????U 13 58sm 1 35 pm
Ar Raleigh, via8. A. ir........... 2 22sm 8 88 pm
Ar Southern Pine? " .JV.... 4 27 sm 6 CO.pro
?^?jaFti, ; " -? 6 liam 7 00 pm
"Lv^llmingtan -* :-" ?3 05pm
Ar Monroe. , '.' ~ *6J53 am ?9 12 pm
AJ? Pfca?!3i?s, ' *5 so jua >*i0 aflpn
ArChcaieY, . M ?*t_^5 i'Sam ^'.0 65pa
Ar,t?reennood '? id 45 am 112am
?r Masai, -124 pm S 48 aa
arAtlanta,', ..Z._S 50pm 6 18am
rr~ NORTHBOUND.
No. 402.
L-. Atlanta, 8. A L.-.-.
*r Athens, NV ..
ArGrcsnweoa,
'.rCnestor, 8. A, T> ..
Ar MOD roo, .
?1 00 pta
SitS pm
iSff
.8 80pm
No. 88.
.850 pm
ll 05 pm
1U am
4 03 am
'ViS am
Lr ballotta. - q .-?....?8 20 p-?-TO 80 am
ftrBJB?<?, . '?*' 10 pm ?7 48 jua
??y^'^??s . -" ?12 OB pm
Ar Southern Finco,'" ?12 Ol om *? 00 am
ar Haleigh, M . 2 03 am ll 13 sm
4:r Henderson " ......... 8 26 am 12 45 pm
AT Weldon, " -.4 63 am 2 80 pm
Ar Portamonth 8. A. L....^^. 7 25 am 8 20pm
Ar Rtthmon f A. C. L,.-?3 15 am ./ 20 pa
Ar Wassl5?*)n. Pana. B. B - 12 81 pm lt 20 pm
Ag New Torr, - .?6 28 pm ?0 63 an
?Dally. tPally.Bx.Saaday.
Nos. "J3 and 402 Tbs Atlanta Special,'1 Solid
Vestibuled Train, of Pullman Bloopers and Coach
es between Washington and Atlanta, also Pall
saan Sleep*- between Portraouta aad Charlotte,
N. C
Noa. ?lan u ."Tho 8. A. L Expresa," Solid
Train, Coaehe " td Pullman Sleepers betwoei
Portsmouth and .'tunta.
Both trains matt 'rr mediato conoectlcn at At
lanta for Montgo i et. . ' obDr, Naw Orleans. Tex.
oe, California, Mexico. Chat anooga, NetbrUle,
Memphis. Macon and Florida.
For Ticket?, Sleepers, etc.. apply to
O. McP. Botte, 1> P. A., 2? Tryon tr"4 ^Hu
lotte jN 0.
E. Et John? VIco-Prejiden ad u If sagt'
V. E. McBea General8ur<>i.oteLvJnt.
H. W. B. Glover, TrafBo at .nagez.
L.S. Alien, GanO. Vwjsr.&K Agent
General Officers, PArt*teot***>;
ATLANTIS COAST LINE.
__" TBAFPIO DEPARTMENT,
WILMINGTON, N. C., Jan. 16,189S
Fast Lino Between Oharteaton and Col
n mbla and Upper Sou'eh Carolina, Nortk
Carolina.
CONDENSED 3CHEBULE.
GOING mVff, GOING EAB7
.No. 52._No. 68.
7 00am LT...
.Slam LT..
5 40 am LT..
1100 pm Ar..
12 87 pas Ar..
1220pm Ar.
103pm Ar*.
121 pas Ar,
3 00 pm Af,
g 10 pas Ar
. 07 pas Ar.
218 pas Ar.
S CS pm Ar,
TSP pm Ar
.Ch^r^eatou...^Ar
'..-.Somier.'..."!.*!.. Ar
........ ..Col ambla.. ?... .....LT
.........PI ospolity^..... " ..LT
.........Newborry...........LT
..... .... Clinton............ LT
...Laurons.LT J
...... ^Groeneillc.........LT
..."..8paxtaabarg,........LT
... Winnsboro. 8. C.,...LT
....Charlotta? w. O-LT
.HandOTSonTllle, N. C_Lv
I ...? sherill a.H.C-......LT
800 pn
. 20 pa
518 pa
. 00 pm
247 pm
282 pi?
188 pm
145pm
SS 81 sm
ll Usn
1141am
^8S8 as
?I4an>
SSS aa
.Daily.
Noa. 63 and 68 Solid Train? batWOtS Charl, tti
andOotamMo^C.
. * "HBaso?.Trafila MsVago? -
:SA VB?Dfl?