The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, February 13, 1901, Page 6, Image 6
THE BJRTHPJ
Con I i i'-! i nu* Ar^imn'M
cat
.Vi ll tt> t{liii;il<in in I1!
Where was the cradle * . 1* the li II ma ti
race? Ilaekel thinks it may have hei-u
in thc south of Asia, Wallaee in Cen
tral Asia, Wagner in K IP ; and I ?ar j
w i H m Africa.
Taking into consideration, ii ?w?tv< r,
that man deteriorate: in a tropical cli
mate, and nd va ni; ?ne not ries where
thc temperature in t!> hoi tost season
?.ll lil?.: JCiil . ? - - 11
degrees r'ahrenlioil, and remembering
how groa, nm t have hoon tiie heat
during i??- I'.'oeerio epoch, wu shall
have !... diiUeulty i,n ]>? re< lying that
we must turn (.> thc regions of tin
north where ii.?' temperature ?it
ihat time would he iinilar to that of
thu - luth of Ku rope at thc present
?lay if we wish to find thc most ??nil i
hie "habitat" lor our early au?< tors.
If we concentrate our attention on
thc trace.- of "prehistoric man found
in the northwest corner of Kn rope,
wo aro surprised t<? riot. to- ir number
and importun?e as compared with
those found iu other parts of Kurope,
in Asia, or in Afriea. ll is nut only
thc Hints found in Suffoly, and in al
most every part of Kngland (some of
which are said to bo preglaeial), and
in Belgium, I'rance and (?ermuny, but
there are also the human ten.nins
found in the eaves -the Brixham
cave, und Kent's hole near Torquay
the Neanderthal skull, found near
Namur: the Borrcby skulls, in hen
mark; the Kngis skull, and others too
numerous tobo mentioned; and when
in addition to all this wc remember
that thc dryopitheeus was u native of
Frunce wc are al first naturally inclin
ed to jump to the conclusion that
hero, in this northwest portion of Ku
rope, was the cradle of the human
race. Hut unfortunately, so far as
this supposition is concerned, wo lind
that belonging to tho same remote
dato, if not to un oven earlier period,
similar worked Hints and other human
relies ure found in America. Now in
order to get from Torquay, or the val
ley of the Somme, from Namur or
Dusseldorf to America or from Ameri
ca to these places, mau must either
have crossed by thc Behring straits or
by thc now submerged route across
Iceland and Greenland. And this is
a most important fact which we can
not gainsay or disregard. But if this
be so wc arc compelled to admit that
long beforo the glacial epoch (which
is said to have lasted from 240,000
years ago up lo about 80,000 years
ago) man was in or near the arctic re
gions. There is no getting awuy from
this fact. And as thc human race
was, therefore, near tho Polar regions
ut n timo lon'- enterior to that of any
of the flints found in Great Britain or
in thc Somme valley, we arc unwill
ingly compelled to relinquish the
hypothesis that thc cradle of tho race
may have been in tho northwest of
Fiurope.
If, on thc other hand, wc turu our
attention to thc trace of "prehistoric
man" in North America wc find that
those equal if they do not exceed
those of Kurope. A largo number of
thom are referred to in au article by
51 r. Wallace which appeared in this
Review in November, 188?, and
among them ho mentions that when
tho great mastodon now in tho British
museum was found by Dr. Konck in
thc Osage vnMey. Mi.-s.ouri, a number
of btone arrow heads and charcoal
were found near it, and that one of
tho arrow heads lay under the thigh
boue of thc mastodon and in contact
with it. This animal, it will be re
membered, was found ut a depth of
twenty feet, under seven alternate
layers of loam, gravel, clay and peat,
with a forest of old trees on thc sur
face. Ile also refers as follows to the
ease of thc Calaveras skull:
"In the year 1885 some miners
found in thc cement, in close proxim
ity to a petrified oak, a curious round
ed mass of earthly and stony material
containing bones, which they put on
one side, thinking it was a curiosity
of some kind. I'rofossor Wyman, to
whom it was given, had great dilheulty
in removing tho cement gravel and
discovering that it was really a human
skull nearly entire, its base was em
bedded in a conglomerate mass of fer
ruginous earth, waler-worn volcanic
pebbles, calcareous tufa, and frag
ments of nones, and several bones of
the human foot and other parts of the
skeleton were found wedged into the
internal cavity of the skull. Chemi
cal examination showed tho bones to
bo in a fossilized condition, the or
ganic nutter and tho phosphate of
lime being replaced by carbonate. It
v as found beneath four beds of lava,
and in thc fourth bed of gravel from
tho surface; and Professor Whitney,
who afterward secured tho specimen
for thc State geological museum, has
no doubt whatever of its having been
found as described.
But although theso numerous traces
of prehistoric man found in Au?crie?
,ACB OF M \.\.
Ls on il s I 'v* ?briblc; I JO
LOU.
i ,\??H ll ' III ii I '< Illili i/.
' mimili iii us t ? KUppn.su I hat there
wa-- lin1 birthplace of the human-race,
wo aro unable to adopt that theory,
hi that continent thee arc altin:
present time no anthropoid apes, and
HI far a- we wo know, there never
have been any in past ages. Never
tilt h wc can hardly refuse t-> admit
that tho evidence clearly shows that
our ancestors were ::: North America
during the later portion of the tertiary
epoch, and (hal thc} carno t lie re from
er by the arctic regions, Mehring
Mirait 1 "i' ' '1.J.MU!
hs. ht irr Lo the Timi - new>p ?per
in A i.- -!. I - '<'. 1 pointed out " thal
-i : .. . nou)il appear t'> tench us thai
? planet was at one time a flory
II i -, tin heat 'd' which was too great
i ?? permit nf either animal or vegeta
ble life, and thai as this fiery muss
cooled down the first part lo reach a
temperature sufficiently v to allow
life to esi -l would he the. north and
south poles. At these parts evolution
would lie going on through long ages,
and eras of many million years, while
thc tropics were still a bery girdle
around the earth, across which no liv
ing creature might pass."
Sir Herbert Maxwell, in hi.s inter
esting memoir.-?d' the month, observes
that "hirds, drawn hy a hereditary
impulse, pi ess as far northw:.rd as
possible to rear their young, bearing
witness that in polar regions lies thc
source of animated nature." And
Prof ssor Miall, in his Hound the
Year, points out that '"races of men,
races of animals, races of plants, re
ligious faiths, modes of civilization all
originale in thc; northern continents
and spread out in successive waves:
the palace-arctic region, and,
in a less degree, North America, have
been the 'nllieina gentium' of which
.Jemandes spoke, the laboratory in
which new tribes ?ire fashioned, the
starting point of waves and migration
which at length reach tho remotest
corners of the earth."
This corresponds in a great measure
with my own views on the subject,
which is that the cradle of thc human
race was probably tho vast tract of un
broken land lying between tho Ural
mountains on the west and the Beh
ring straits, the Sea of Ohkotsk and
Manchuria on thc cast. It also is
partly in accordance with tho opinion
of Mr. Wallace, who suggests that tho
birthplace of man was probably in
Central Asia. It is three thousand
milos across from tho Ural mountains
to Manchuria, and in so largo a coun
try thc human race may have multi
plied for centuries and have reachod
moro than a million members before
it spread] to other continents. This
region is little Known from a geologi
cal point of view, and may contain any
number of human relics, fossils, flints,
skeletons, etc., for anything that we
know to the contrary. During the
concene epoch thc climate and tem
perature would not, therefore, be too
hot to allow the race not only to exist
but also to progress and improve. As
its extreme northern boundary is close
to thc polar regions, in this respect it
also meets the view of those who hold
that thc source of animated nature
was located at the poles and not at the
equator. Its propinquity to the Beh
ring straits, where there was probably
at this time an isthmus joining thc
two continents, would enable thc race
to j.ass ?iver into America, and would
account for tho fact that they were
apparently in that country at an even
earlier dato than that at which they
reached western Ku rope They would
also at once spread into China; and
we knew from the unique and prime
val character of the Chinese language
that there is no older race on the
earth than the Chinese, and that in
China mankind may possibly have
first learned to talk and develop the
faculty of speech.
In this vast region between Man
churia and the Ural mountains there
are high table lands and other dis
tricts that are comparatively destitute
of trees, and it is not improbable that
primitivo man gotscpaiatcd from, or
driven out of, thc forest and was com
pelled to give up trco climbing and to
take to walking on these wild plateaus
and prairies. After scrambling along
on his ' back hands" or "hind feet"
fm a long time thc latter at length
would develop the strength and form
of the human foot, and would lose thc
shape and character peculiar to the
ape. Bul this would not take place
so long as he was living in the woods
and was accustomed to usc his "back
hands" in clamping boughs and climb
ing trees to reach the fruit that grew
thereon. It would not have takon
place if his cradle had been a tropical
forest.
For weakness and prostration follow
ing grippe inure is uoihiiig KO prompt
and effectivo as One Minute Cough
Cure. It is an unfailing remedy for
all throat and lung troubles. It cures
i.?.. n_. r>i-. ,_
Like Cause. ! ?kc Itaull.
i iiicro:i.-ed number oj'Jymr;
I ju N?iriiit'.rti ami \Vosti II- -I.I?I . coor
j .. ? ix tit (?pon ar? i ncr'.J: < M uni ucl * S
outr gos upon wo UR* fi hus at length
o? red most northern papei of their
habit of denouncing lynching UH u re
hult of southern perversity. 'I'ii?s is
not un unmixed guiu. It w u ail very
well to denounce lynching, which is
I almost always unn.-^uy; what thc
South objected to was thc unmeasured
denunciation of the southern people
that accompanied thc denunciation of
lynching. The provocation was ignor
ed, and it was too often self-righteous
ly assumed that thc northern people
were too good to lynch nuder like
provocation. Sympathy was also too
often expressed for the aggressor ahme
and nu} for his innocent and helpless
viet i m.
But thc recent numerous lynchings
of negroes at points all over the north
show that violent assaults upon wo
men ure not inore admired in that sec
tion than in the South. As respects
brutality, northern lynchers, it.seems,
eau give points to their southern bro
thers. The Now York livening Post,
which in years past enjoyed greatly
lecturing thc South with a superior
air on its moral inferiority, is al length
forced to ! lush for its own action.
?'Th'- circumstances," it says, "of
the Leavenworth (Kan.) lynching are
most disheartening. The scene was a
iarge city ol' the 'free soil' slate. The
sheriff, intimidated by thc mob, actu
ally brought thc prisoner from thc
comparative safety of a country peni
tentiary to a city jail, having pre
viously refused to avail himself of a
military force urged upon him by thc
fl over nor. The lyching itself was of
tho most brutal sort. Five thousand
moddened people watched the scene,
thc children fought for thc charred
fragments of the wretched victim-as
'souvenirs.' The city of Leavenworth
can no more bc the same after such au
outbreak than can a man who has
once 'seen red' and killed hts fellow
Thc whole lynching business is, ir
fact, not to bc weighed hy a few mis
?rable lives blotted out, but by th?
accompanying brutalization of a peo
plo. The spread of lynching-a fev
weeks ago in Colorado, now in Jobi
Brown's state-shows how little com
potent it is for the north longer t(
take the pharisaical attitude towan
ihe South in this matter.'"
Lynching is as br.d as it ever wa
hut it is to be feared that it will ceas
to attract tho attention of the north
cm moralities, now that it cannot b
represented as an cxclusivele South
ern sin. The Inspiration to its dc
uunciation in tho past was largel
sectional and party hate. To th
laudable dislike of lawless violcnc
was added thc enjoyment of abuso c
the Southern neighbor, and it is to b
feaved that without the latter thc foi
mer will provo a weak incentive. Th
Post seems to confess that lynchin
now has a new sanction when it sayi
pathetically, that "the John Brown
state shows how little oontempt it i
now for tho north longer to take tb
pharisaical attitude toward thc Sout
in this matter." "Pharisaoial att
ludo" is good. But it is remans, ab
that tho Post should be surprised i
any kind of violence on tho part ?
thc neighbors and admirers of Joh
Brown, who closed a career of violem
and murder in Kansas hy invadi?
Virginia with iron spears and guns,
bo distributed among the slaves f
the murder of men, women and ch;
dren.-Baltimore ?S'?>i.
Ile Prayed Hard.
An old man in Georgia named Jm
Baldwin, hnvL.g lost his hat in a d
well one day, hitched a rope to a tr
stump and let himself down. A wie
ed wag named Neal came along ju
then and, quietly detaching a boll frc
Baldwin's old blind horse, approach
the well, bell in hand and began
ting a-ling.
Jack thought the old horse was co
ing and said: "Hang tho old bli
horse! He's coming this way su
and ho ain't got no more sense than
fall right in on mc. Whoa, Ball!"
Thc sound came closer.
"Great Jerusalem, the old bli
Tool will bo right on top of mo ii
aiinit! Whoa, Ball! Whoa, h?
Bail!"
Neal kicked a little dirt on Jae
head, and Jack began to pray :
"Oh, Lord, havo tncroy on-wh
Ball!-a poor sinner-I'm gone n
whoa, Ball. Our father who art ii
whoa!-hallowed be thy-gee, B
gee! what'll I do?-name. Now I
me down to si-gee, Ball!" Just tl
in fell more dirt. "Oh, Lord, if :
ever intend to do anything for m
back, Ball! Whoa!-Thy kingd
como-Geo, Ball! Oh, Lord, ;
know I was baptized in Smith's i
dam-when, B.^ll! oh! up! muri
whoa,
Neol could hold io no longer
sh tuted a laugh that might have b
heard two miles, which was abou
far as Jack chased him when he
out.
The Ses* Prescription For Saw!
Chills and Fever is a bottle of Gro
Tasteless Chill Tonio. It is sin
iron and quinine in a taseless ic
No cuiri, No pay. Prioo 50o.
An Vriny of hamps.
-?- %
One huitdn il thousand able-bodied
ti imps, who . M i tthe'r walk than
AOII;, or ride i ii m gat, costing $25,
000,000 H year to society, and ut all
limes a moral I.?urden upon thc public
conscience in these (igurcaarc del/us
of an idle class which moves ou when
it has t<>an<l which vaseillates betwecu
city and country with all the regular!
ty of dwellers on thc city boulevards.
According to the ligures from the
national estimates Chicago harbors
one-twentieth of the brotherhood of
the couutry and pays $1,257,500 for
the infliction.
Supt. ti 1'. Sickness, of the Chica
go Iiurcau of Charlotte, has furnished
some of these (inures.
"They arc guesses," he said of
them, "but they are guesses made by
men who iooked into facts and figures
before they guessed. Prof. J. J.
Cook, of Hartford, Conn., and Jacob
Kiis, of New York, have made a study
of the tramp problem and they ure
prctly well agreed that the United
States has an incubus of about IUD,ODO
able-bodied men who are determined
to live without work. So many oth
ers have guessed in the neighborhood
of 70,000 and upward that 100,000
seem! to be conservative enough, lt
has been figured the country ovei that
these tramps consume 10 cents worth
of food every day. Allowing for a
suit wurtu $2 cash in thc hands of a
clothes dealer, one may count ou a
tramp using up about five such ?uits
in a year. With $80.50 a year for his
food and $10 a year for his clothes we
have $10.50 for the keep of the tramp
-a sum ciose euough to the $50 each
that has been reckon '.d by the econo
mists."
As to other figures on the list, it
may be recalled, iu thc item of trans
portation on railroads, that most
tramps love travel. From having to i
travel out of many places they have
comp to prefer it after the weather
warms up iu the spring. Fifteen huu
dred miles at !i cents each is cot a
long stretch for a tramp who puts in a
five months' season iu boxcars and on
trucks, while to these members of the
profession who make season "records"
year after year 15,000 milei is only a
fair "stunt."
In damaging property of all kinds to
thc extent of $13,000,000 a year, thc
fire losses are second only to the losses
by petty thefts. Tens of thousands of
dollars' worth of barns, live stock,
hay and grain is destroyed every year
by the campfires of the pipes of the
tramp and hobo. Petty thieving piles
mountains of loss upon the fire show
ing.
Police surveilancc of thc tramp
hardly may be charged to his account,
as tho system would be maintained
without him, but iu the matter of
court costa and of shipping these va
grants out of towns at the expense of
small cities, the figures easily run to
$2,500,000. Out of the 61,349 arrests
in Chicago last year, 27,267 were of
persons who had no occupation of any
kiad.-Chicago Tribune.
koo Hurried.
A "tenderfoot" who was trying his
luck on a western ranch was at first
hoi ribed by the table etiquette which
prevailed among his associates.
One day his feelings cvidcntly"came
BO near the surface that a owboy
whose performance with a table knife
of unusual size had aroused thc ten
derfoot's amazement, paused with an
other knifeful of food half way to his
lips.
"What's thc matter?" inquired thc
sowboy with disconcerting prompt
ness, in the tone of ono who means to
be answered.
"Ah-cr-nothing." responded thc
tenderfoot.
"Look he e," cried ..'he cowboy,
wi ttl an accompanying thump of his
unoccupied hand . on tho table. "I
want you to understand that I've got
manners; but I haven't time to use
?m-that's all! '
- Alleghenia is the name bestowed
>n one of thc planets recently discov
;acd in the solar system by a Berlin
istronomer. The great photographic
lens used was made in Allegheny,
Pa.
You Know What Yon Arc Taking
When you take Grove's Tasteless Chill
Tonic because tho formula is plainly
printed on every bottle showing that
it is simply Iron and Quinine in a
tasteless form. No Cure, No Pay. 50c.
- Bride (on shipboard at sea in a
storm) "I feel so sick my dear, and if
[ should die and they bury mc herc,
you'll sometimes come and plant flow
ers on my grave, won't you darling?"
The man w.io was "born tired"
should use Prickly Ash Bitters. It
nakes work a necessity to give vont
to thc energy and exuberance of spir
ts generated by functional activity in
thc system. Evans Pharmacy.
- Thc proposition for the construc
tion of a floating machino shop for
thc uso of tho squadrons in tho vari
JUS parts of the world, is receiving
earnest attention.
Experiments show that all classes of
Foods may be digested by a preparation
called Kodol Dyspepsia Cure, whioh
iigests what you cat. It is the only
combination of all tho digestanta ever
livised, and has nover failed io core
the very worst ease of indigestion.
R van a' Pharmacy.
Mow to 1 ive a Century.
,!? m't try to show people how grace
fully you can jump on or off moving
train:-..
Don't try to save three-quarters of a
second by running in front of a trolley
c:ir.
Don't go downstairs in the dark to
hunt burglars.
Duu'l blay lo tiud out whether the
other fools gun is really loaded or not.
Don't try to bee how near you can
skate to tho edge of the ice before it
will break.
"Don't slap a large person on the
shoulder and yell '*Hello, Bill," until
you aro sure it isn't acase of mistaken
identity. His vaccination may be
working.
Don't try to show that you are used
to city ways by leaping out of the cle
Don'ttell all the funny things your
children say.
Don't take everything the people re
commend to you for the grip.
Don't try to use moral suasion on
bulldogs.
Don't read original poetry every
time you are invited out to dinner.
Don't experiment with the things
that are accustomed to prolong life.
(. 'h xctitjo Times-lier aid.
rf.
Th's r?,7""?.."o 5" cc every boz of tb? ssnuins
Laxative Bromo?Quiaine Tauet*
tho remedy tbat cares a cold in.one day
- Seventy-two degrees bciow zero is
the record of low temperature register
ed by Schwalka, on thc Graud Fish
river, in Canada.
This season there is a large death
rate among children from croup and
lung troubles. Prompt action will
save the little ones from these terrible
diseases. Wc know of nothing so
certain to give instant relief as One
Minute Cough Cure. It can also be
replied upon .in grippe and all
throat and lung troubles of adults.
Pleasant to take. Evans Pharmaey.
- During thc year ending June 30
last, Jasper County, Mo., produced
zinc and lead worth $5,339,629.
When you need a soothing and heal
ing antiseptic application for any pur
pose, use the original De Witt's Witch
Hazel Salve, a well known cure for
piles and skin diseases. Beware of
counterfeits. Evans* Pharmacy.
- In Carrollton, Mo., a man and
his wife, who had driven in to see the
circus, stopped at a doctor's house to
ask what ailed the child they had with
them. The child was dead. Then
they asked if they could leave the
body in the doctor's back yard while
they saw the show. And they did.
Thc most soothing, healing and an
tiseptic application over devised is Do
Witt's Witch Hazel Salve. It relieves
it onco and-cures piles, sores, eczema
ind skin diseases. Beware of coun
terfeits. Evans Pharmacy.
- If a woman's face is a poem it
.should be a lineless ono.
VIGOR OF MEN
Easily, Quickly and
Permanently Restored.
MAGN?T?CN?RVINE
Is sold * Iii. a written guarantee to Caro Imon
ala, Kita, Dizziness Hysteria, Nervous Debility,
Lost Vitality Seminal Lowes, Failing Memory
?fae result of over-worn, worry. Sickness, Errors
>f Youth or Over-indulgence. Frico 81 ; 6 boxes
j >. By mall in plain package to any address on
receipt of price. Bold only by
EVANS PHARMACY,
? Anderson, S. C.
A. H. DACNALL,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
?n?erHou, H. O*
5FFICE-OVER THE P03T OFFICE.
The Anderson ,
Mutual Fire
Insurance Co.
WILL iustire your property against
FIRE, WIND and LIGHTNING
"or Uss than half what other Compa
nies charge you for insurance against
Fire and Lightning.
The March winds are coming.
Addrtss or apply to
J. k. VANDIVEll, Pres..
3r R. J. GUINN, Agent,
_Starr, S. C. .
COTTOfi ROOT AND
PENNYROYAL RILLS.
Original and Genuino, always reliable A
safe . LADIES, nlw.w s ask far fl Dr. Bunt's
Cotton Boot and Poonyrovai I Female
Pills. They never 'jill ami Jj, never in
jure. Blahed to any ?dd rrss on receipt of
ll.COby EV AK S PH ABM ICY, Sole Agents, Ac
orson. S.C._
Examination of Teachers.
A N Examination for Teacher*' Certifi
ex catea will be held on Friday, Feb
ruary 15tb. AU applicanta are requests
o bo hero prom ntl v at fc o'clock.
R. E. NIC .OLSON. Co. 8up't Ed.
Feb 4, 1901 34 2
Notice to Creditors.
ALI? persona having dnraands against
he Karnte of John H. Ellison, deceas
xl, aro hereby notified to pr? sont them,
iroperlv proven, to tho undersigned,
vlthln the time prescribe.! "by law, und
hose indebted to make rayment.
MARY JANE ELLISON,
Executrix.
Feb 0, 1901 3d 3
NOTICE.
CERTIFICATE No. 24 for two (2)
Shares of the Capital Stock of the
Pendleton Oil and Fertiliser Co., of Pon
detho, S. C., issued to B. B. Lewis Dec.
?, 1000, having been lost while ia transit
ry mai), thia ia to warn any all persons
irai nut trading for said Certificate, it bo
ng worthless, aa a new one wilt ne issued
n lien thereof.
Td, M. HUNTER, Pre*.
J. J. SITTON. Sec. and Treas.
Pendleton OU and Fertiliser Co.
Feh fl, 1901 S3 8
ASK FOB OUR NEW PARI
THty ARE liOWBUST.STR??GhTf?
.wn STYLES 552- 441.4
?1 FOR SALE AT ALL LEADING RETAILER?'
Notice of Final Settlement. |
THE undersigned, Executor? of tho ?
PjtfaiK ol J. s. Acker. deceased, I
hereby give notice thai they will ou the j
23d day of February, I'JOl, apply to tho |
Jed^o of Probate for Anderdon County for ,
a Fina] Settlement of said ?state, juul n !
discharge from their o iii eu as ICxeoTiTorP". j
j M \(JKKR,
W. II. ACKER, I
Executor*. ?
Jan 2:1,1001 31 5
Notice Final Settlement. ?
I
fl^HE uodormgned, Executors of the j
-L Eat?te of Andrew Hunter, dec? nod, j
hereby ?Ivo notlco thal tho'/ v l i on
the 20th day of February, l'JOl apply to
the J uil^o of Probate for Anderson Coun
ty fora Fiual Settlement of naid Estate,
and a discharge from thoir oilioo m Ex
ecu tors. W, HUNTER
J. L. FARM HER,
.Ian 23, 1901-31 Exw.utore.
The ''Confederate Veteran.*>
Low CLUII RATES GIVEN WITH TIIK
INTELLIGENCER.-The growth of the
Confederate Veteran, published by S.
A. Cunningham, at Nashville, Tenn.,
is remarkable. Its circulation of eigh
ty-four issues, monthly, aggregated to
January, 1900, 1,195,45'2 copies. Aver
age for 1893, 7,083; 1894, 10,137; 1895,
12,910; 1890, 13,444; 1897, 10,175; 1898,19,
100; 1899, 20.100.
Subscriptions for tho Veteran will bo
received at this ot?ce. It and tho In
telligencer will be sent for a year at
the club rate of $2.15. Ry application
to tho Intelligencer copies of tho
Veteran will be sent to our veteraa
friends who are unable to subscribe.
CHARLESTON AND WESTERN
CAROLINA RAILWAY
AUGUSTA /iNDAHHKVILMCSnOKl LINK
In affect January Uth.lUOl.
Lv Augusta...j 9 40 Rm
Ar Greenwood..! 12 15 am
Ar Anderson.,
Ai Laureas.
Ar Greenville.?.
Ar Glenn Springe......
Ar Spartanburg..-.
Ar Saluda..-.
Ar Uendersonville.
Ar AsheTille.
1 2u pm
8 Ol) pm
8 35 in.
8 00 pm
? 85 air.
ll 80 am
8 10 pm: 9 00 act
C 33 pm .".
?03 pm .
7 15 pm .
LT AshevUle.
LT Spartanburg-..
LT Glenn Springs.
LT Oreen ville.
LT Laurens.-,
Lv Anderson.
LT Groenwood_....,
Ar Augusta.
Lv Anderton.
Ar EP>eri<m_.
Ar Athens.
Ar Ai unta.....
8 20 am
ll 45 am
10 00 am
13 01 pm
I 87 pm
8 55 pic
8 25 pm
7 15 pm
7 25 am
2 87 pm i.
6 10 pm ll 40 am
7 25 am
1 80 pm
22lp .
4 35 pm
Lr Anderson.
Ar Augusta."
Ar Port Royal...
Ar Beaufort............
Ar Charleston (Sou).."..._....
Ar Havannah (Plant)..........
7 25 am
ll 40 am
7 00 pm
r. 50 pm
8 00 pm
8 15 pm
CIOBO connection at Calhoun Falls for all points
on 8. A. L. Ballway, and at Spartanbiug for Sou.
Ballway.
For any information relatlTe to ticket!, or
schedules, etc., address
W. J. CRAIG, Gen. Pass. Agent. Auguota.Gs
T. H. Em-.non .Trafilo Manager.
J. Bees? if int, Agent, Anderson, 9. C.
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
Con.lennp.1 >o:?i!tltilo In l?lTeot
Jan. 1.-th. 10,1.
STATIONS. I iSSr
LT. Charleston.fl? i*).p"ia 7 W a tl
" bumiRsrvi.lo.I l:i 00 n't 7 41 ? in
" Erauehviila. 2 IO : m 8 65 n ni
" Orongeburg. 2 4-5 a m 0 28 ?ra
"_Klngvl?o. . 4 25 n m 10 la a. m
Lv. ?nrannah. 12 CO am l? U? o m
" Pni-nweM. 4 18 a no ? 13 a m
" B.nokviUo. 4 28 a m1 4 ? a m
Lv. Columbia. 7 OJ a m ll 05 a m
" Prosperity. 8 14 n rn 12 10 n'n
- Nowborry. 8 fcO n in 12 25 p m
M Ninety-Six. 0 30 a m 120 pm
" Greenwood. 0 50 n m I 55 p m
Ar. Hodges. 10 15 u m 2 15 p m
Ly. Abbeville...... t? ?5 a in 1 85 p m
Ar. Bolton. ll 15 a m 3 10 p ni
LY. Andoreon. 10.45la m 2 85 p in
Ar. Greonvllle.. 12 20 p m y A IS p in
Ar. Atlanta,(C?i.T?mo) 5 55 g ni I? 00 p nj
STATIONS. I
Lv. Greenville.. ~?.. 6 SO p ml 10 15 a in
" Piedmont. 0 OJ p ml 10 40 a in
" Williamstoa. 0 22 p_rn 10 55 a in
Ar. Anderson. ~ 7 15 p mi ll <0_t>_m
Lv. Bolton . S 45 p ml ?l 15 a m
Ar. Donalds..... ._:_Li:j_:j_. 7 15 p m j lt 4b a m
Ar.Abbovil?o "..".. S 10 ? m|~~I2 25 p .m
Lv. Hodges.i 7 au p ni ll 55 H iii
Ar. Greenwood. T55 p m 12 20 p m
Nlnoty-Slr.. 8 Kl p m 12 55 pm
M Nowborry. ?fl 8) p ni 2 00 p m
" ProsperiiT. 0 45 pm 2 14 p in
" Columbia*. H O) p m n f.O n ni
Ar. Blackville!. Sn/ n vu 2 57 u ui
.' Barnwji'.l . 8 12 a ml a 12 a m
" Snvnn u ih.. 6 OJ a rv SOO n m
Lv. Ringville..... . " 2 B2 a iii " 4 43" p m
" Orangolnv.g. 8 43e. ml 5 33 pm
M Branchvii'o. 4 25 a ia 0 15 p m
" Snrnoorv-iilo. 5 57 n m| 7 Kl p m
Ar. Charleston. I 7 QC a ia! 8 15 pm
DallT Dally j cTiA-nTrw^ I Dai,y
Ko li No.l ? STATIONS. |y0..j. No. 10.
11 OOp 7 OtalLv..Oharieatou..Ar M 15p 7 OUa
12 00 n 7 41a '* Summervillo " 7 81 p 5 67a
2 00a 8 55a " .Branchville. " 0 15p 4 25n
>45a 0 23n "Orangeburg" 5 83p 0 43n
4 25a 10 15a " .. Ringville " ? 43p 2 82A
B 80?..". Lv..Savannah /v. b oun
4 13a. " ..Barnwell .. " . 8 12n
4 28 a. " ..Blackville. ?' . 2 67 a
8 20a 1140.1 .. ..Colombia.. ? 8 20 p 0 89p
8 57 a 12 IX) n .? ....Alston.... .. 2 80 p 8 5Jti
0 58a 1 2?p .? ...Santno... " I 23p 7 43p
10 15a 2 0ly ".....Union." 12 45p 7 10p
10 85a 2 2?p M ..Jonesville. " 12 25p 6 BSp
10 50 a 2 i:; p .. ....Pncolot.... " 12 14 p. 6 42 p
11 25 a 8 lOp Ar Spartanburg Lv ll 45 a 6 15p
ll 80a 3 io\> iLv Spar tanbar* Ar ll 22 nt G 03p
2 48p 7 n nt Ar...Asht'ViUo ...Lvl 8 00 a! 8 03p
VP" p. m. "A" a. nu. "N" night.
DOUBLE DAILY R1T.RV70K RET WEEN
CJLA RLES TON A ND GREENVILLE.
< .Pullman piCaceBlooping cars on Train?85nud
?5, 37* and ; '>. ou A. anilC. division. Dining cars
on those tra?na Bcrvo all meals enroute.
Trains ?oaro Spartanburg, A." & C. division,
northbound. 7K? a.m.,,^J:37 p.m., 0:13p. m.,
(Voatibnlo Limited) and 7:07 p. .m.; south
bound 12:20 a. m.. 8:15 p. m., ll :34 a. m., (V?8tl
*>\0? I.tmitAdV ?fri?* 10:30 ^ ?T?.
" Tmii.H loavb' Groenvllle. A. and C division,
northbound,6:02 a. m., 2:84 p. m. and 5:22 p. m.,
Cestibulo .lAmitedl, and 0:15 p. m.: aonth
und, 120 a* m..4 :S0 p. m., p. io. (Veati
bute Limited), .ind 11:15 a. m.
Trains 15 and I*-Pullman Sleeping Oar?
between Charleston and Columbia; ready for
occupancy at both points at 0 :D0 p. m.
Elegant Pullman Drawing-Room Sleeping
Cara between Savannah and Asheville enront?
dally botwoen JaekaonTUla and Cmcinnnti. '
liuuff ft ?A^Heil. S. H. BLABDW1CK.
Third V-P. ft Gen. Mgr., _Ge?. Faa, Anet,
. Washington. D. OL Wju^dngton, U, O.
W. H. TAYLOB, RWTruNT.
Aflit. Gen. Pas. Agi, . In*. Pa* A gt.
Atlanta, G<v Chariest ca., S. 0.
^^H^^^^^^BHB??sHsAttstt
s SHAPES
Wrfr&LONGhlP.
4I.445.447. r*v?
Stcomc^dtertCt M?*pt
4M Bf*? 9j?Ag. tr. Tr
Blue Ridge Railroad.
H. C. BEATTIE, Receiver,
Effective September 20, 1900
W IJSTBOUND.
~- Dally
? raaf.
No. No. ll
S "Anderson.L,v 3 35 pm
V fDehver.3 45 pm
F t Auton. 3 50 pm
S *Pendletou. 3 55 pin
P -fCucrry Crossing.. 4 00 pm
F f Adams Crossing.. 4 04 pm
S ? "Seneca.4 15 nm
i
S W?-8t Union .. 4 45 pm
S ?Walhalla.Ar 4 50 pm
EASTBOUND.
Dally
Mixed.
No No. 6.
34 ?Walhalla.Evl2 00 pm
32 ?West Union.1?n7 pm
?.{s-.{?ggs
18 (-Adama Crossing.. 3 13 pm
10 fCberry'a Crossing 3 20 pm
13 ?Pendleton.} Jgg?
10 fAutuo. 4 00 pm
7 fDenver. 4 17 pm
0 ?Anderson.Ar 4 44 pm
Daily
Kl?jcc'd,
Ko. ?).
8 00 au:
a 27 ata
H as li n
S 4!? am
0 00 HUI
0 07 HUI
{0 30 Kia
1 9 60 am
10 20 am
10 27nin
Daily
Pasa,
No. 12,
9 10 am
Q I? oj?
9 40 am
'" 9 4Sam
9 53 nm
100' am
10 G
10 LS
10 40
(.) Regular station; (f) Flag atation
Will also stop at the following station,
to tako on or let off passengers : Pain,
neva, James' and Sandy Springs.
No. 12 connect-) with Southern Railway
No. G at Anderson.
No. ll connects with Souther a Railway
NON. ll and 33 at Seueoa.
No. 6 connects with Southern Railway
No. 58 at Anderson, ul so with Noa. 12 and
37 at Seneca.
J R. ANDERSON. 8uj,t.
VESTIDO
DOUBLE DAILY
SERVICE
TO ALL POLNT3
North, South and Southwest,
8CHEDULE IN EFFECT NOV. 5th, 1S99.
t?O?THB?ON"
No. 408. No. 41.
LT New York, via Peon R. K.?ll 00sm *9 OOpa
LT Washington, " S 00 pm 4 80 an
LT Richmond, A. C. L.9 03pm 9 OS na
LT Portsmouth,8. A.L._....^." G 45 pm 9 nu
Ar Weldon, ". ll 10 pm?l 1 43 am
Ar Henderson, V. 12 M a m 133 pu
Ar Raleigh, Tia 8. A. L. 2 22 am S 86pa
Ar Southern Pinea " M. 4 27 am 8 OQJK?
Ar B .?*.*,! " ........... 5 14 am 7 OJ pc
LT Wilmington
.3 05 pa
Ar Monroe.
Ar Charlotte,
" ... ?g 63 am ?9 12 pa
*' -. *8 00 am ?io 25pu
Ar Chester,
Ar Greenwood
Ar Athens,
Ar Atlanta,
.... ?8 18 am ?io 55 pa
_ 10 45 am 1 12 aa
.... 1 24 pm 8 48 aa
.m 8 50 pm 6 15m
NORTHBOUND.
No. 402. No. S3.
LT AU RD ta, S. A L.?. ?1 00 pm ?8 50 pa
*T Athens, " .,. 8C8pm tl 05pa
Ar Greenwood, " .? 5 40 pm 1 46 aa
Ar Chester, 8. A. L ..... 7 68 pm 4 03 ?a
Ar Monroe, " 9 80 pm 5 45 ia
LT ' harlotte.
.?8 20 pm ?5 00 aa
A i Hamlet,
....... *J1 10 pm *7 43 aa
Ar Wilmington
8. A. L..
Ar 8u ii lb urn 1*1;
Ar Raleigh,
Ar Hon Jerson
Ar Weldon,
Ar Portsmouth
Ar"Richmond : A. C. L........7 ?sT? am^?7 20 pa
Ar Washington, Penn. R. 12 81 pm ll 20 pa
Ar Nsw York,_. ?6 78 pm ?0 53 ?a
_?Dally. tDanyi Ex. Sunday._
_ *12 05 pa
'IS Ol am '?i'ju
2 OS am II 13 ta
8 28 am 12 45 pa
. 4 96 am 2 50 pa
. 7 26 am 6 20pa
Nos. 403 and 402 "The Atlanta Special/' Sb?d
Vestibuled Train, of Pullman Sierpe ra ana Coact
es between Washington and Atlanta, also Pall"
man Sleep"-" betweon Portsmouth and Chailotlf,
N.C.
Nos. 41 am. ."The 8. A. L Express," Solid
Train, Cooche .id Pullman bloopers >>ei*ccn
Po; tem ou th and Atlanta.
Both trains mat* * cd i a to connection at At
lanta for MontgO't ci. ' 'obi lr, Now Or!->:u -, Ta
ns, California, Mtxlco. Chattanooga, NasliTUI*.
Mem phis. Macon and Florida.
For Tickets. Sleepers, eu., atrply to
G. McP. Batte, T- P. A., 2? Tryon < tr" Char
lotte. N C.
E. St John, Vico-Presiden od >- i.Mats|tl
V. E. MoBee General Siiror.nieuuwOt.
n. W. B. Olovor, Tramo ii nager.
L.8. Atlee, Geo'l. Parjer.ger Agent
General OBcers, l'nrtuuioutli, Va.
ATLANTIC COAST LINE
TRAFFIC DBPARTMHST
WILMINGTON. N. C., Jan. IS, HOI
Fast Lino Between Charleston amt CM
umbiaaud UpperSoutb Carolina. Not1*
Carolina.
CONDENSED SC11EDULK. \
GOING WKST. DOING KAsI
.No. 52. No.SS.
.6 25 am
8 02 am
9 28 am
1100 pm
1217 pm
12-0 pm
113 pm
186 pm
8 10 pm
3 10 pm
7 13 pm
9 23 pm
6 ll pm
715 pm
LT...Charleston-.J?r
liv..............Lanes.Ar
LT.Sumter.Ar
Ar............Columbia..LT
Ar....^..-Proeperlty.-LT
Ar_....Newberry.LT
Ar.Clinton.......;..... Lr !
Ar,.Laurent?....LT .
Ar....Gioonr.'iie...........LT ;
Ar........ Spartan>,urg.LT I
Ar.Wlncsboro. S. C.LT I
Ar..Charlotte. N. C.LT
Ar^HeoderaonTlllo, N. O...L- I
Ar.Asheville, N. C~.LT i
.Daily. , ?.
Not.62and63Solid Trains botwurrt Charl-?
?ndColoob?a.fl. C. .
H. ?. Ena- ? .'
.it>n'l.pRMcnp* ? P"'
J B.K*?H.7,Ofn"TslV "
r ?. > ?yuro*. Trefff Mar-spe_
60 YEARS'
EXPERIENCE
TRAD* MABKS
Distorts
COPYRIGHTS Ac.
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