The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, February 20, 1901, Page 6, Image 6

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SAM JONES Says 'Texas is Pros] Hut Needs the Sen Loi'khakt, Tkx., Feb l>, 1!M)1. To the Editor of the Atlanta Journal I have spent about a week traveling through the cotton belt of Texas from Sherman to San Marcos, from San | Marcos to Shrcvcport, La. Texas is j still i>ieking cotton every day now. Texas has, perhaps, one million hales! of cotton piled in the c"(t..n yards over the State unsold. Some of the towns have ?.Oiiii haies in the cotton yards, some 10.000, some 2,000, some 1,000, hut everywhere you see the un sold cotton. I have looked over the farm- along tin- way. The farmers are very late in the preparation of the ground for a new crop. No rain in the Mlack l?clt of Texas since the 1st of November, and the ground is too hard to plough. The wheat crop of Northern Texas is not looking well. The drought and Hessian fly is the cause: but I never saw such a glow of prosperity on Tex as as ohe manifests to-day. The farm ers are on top, cotton oti hand and money to lend, hanks overflowing and merchants busy. A member of a tirtn in Dcnton, Tex., said to me, "I can't supply my customers with implements. I've sold 100 buggies since January 1. Drummers from St. Louis tell me that their houses have instructed them to sell no more carload lots, but in small amounts to the trade." Texas' supply this year in the pock ets of the farmers is just what the Georgia farmers would have but for the enormous outlay for guano, t Jeor gia must have commercial fertilizers. Texas don't need them. The tenants on these rich farm lauds in Texas pay the landlords ?3 money renf per acre, and that's what it costs for guano per acre in Georgia. If I were, a fanner I would rather rent land in Texas than own it in Georgia. The black cotton lands of Texas are selling for ?o'> to ?7"> per acre; ?00per acre will buy the best lands ten miles from towns. The question is not how much cot ton can Texas make, but how much cotton can they pick out. I have traveled through Texas from Texur kaua to El Paso, from Texlinc to Gal veston. and 1 stay within the facts when 1 say that not one-tenth of Tex as cotton lauds ever had a plow on them. If you will furnish Texas with half a million more plow mules and negro plowmen they will and can make in Texas this year eight milliou bales of cotton, weighing 500 pounds each. The delta of the Mississippi in Louis iana and the good cotton lands of Tex as can make fifteen million bales and not use a pouud of guano, and with average seasons make a bale to the acre one year with another. Georgia, Alabama, South Carolina and North Carolina must look to their manufac turing interests and their farmers to diversified crops and home-made fer tilizers or go broke in a few years. Texas can produce her own wheat, corn, oats and ship millious of dollars' worth of cattle, hogs, sheep, mules, horses, etc., annually. Georgia is no louger the Empire State of the South. Texas has the blue ribbon tied on her now. The thing I marvel at in Texaa is that her cities do not grow apace with her towns and rural districts. Dallas seems to be full grown, Fort Worth is a dwarf, San Antonio a conglomeration, with her population half invalids, and the other half, 1 am told, made up of 27 different nationalities. Austin, minus her dam, is dead. Waco ought to be named Wake-No-More. Hous ton, the only city of growth and com mercial enterprise since theGalvcston horror, put that city in the back ground: but there are a hundred pros porous, growing towns in Texas, with growing populations rauging from three to fifteen thousand. I have talked with farmer, mer chant, cotton buyer, and the general impression prevails that Texas will not increase her acreage in cotton very largely?may be 10 per cent. Texas never raised a larger crop of cotton in much of the eotton belt than the crop of 1000. Farm wages in Texas am double what they are Georgia and Alabama, but a farm hand can produce tnor than double out here. The Dallas News has done much to hold the Texas farmer down. It preaches smaller acreage in cotton and greater diversity of crops, and the constant licks of that paper has done much to make the Texas farmer inde pendent. The Atlanta Journal is al so doing the same for the G corgi ii farmer, with Ilarvie Jordan putting i:i his licks. The Texas Legislature is now in session and they are having their usual warm times. Hogg at one end of the liae and Hominy at the other. Hogg wants a constitutional convention, and a whole lot of other things. The oth er crowd think him hoggish, and so it ON TEXAS. pet*pxis and J3oomin#, ,rieets of Z\fi\s. IN"a.tion. tine*. My, my, how they need SisUi Nation, of Kansas, down here in Ter asi If she will add one inure impor tant feature to her joint-smashing program and go to smashing politi cians, I believe I will join her my self. My wife wrote me the other day, say ing she wished Mrs. Nation would come to Georgia. We need htr in all the dry Counties in the .Statu to or ganize a hand of drunkards' wives and mothers to meet all train- and break all Jugs its the expn ? agent put them off the trains, and ! do affirm there is no unri^'hteoiisiies.s in the drunkards' wives and mothers to take steps like that t>< protect their husbands and sons. The whiskey-soaked and whis key bo.-scd L?gislature of Georgia has persistently refused to pass any law to protect the dry Counties from the greed of the wet towns. All whiskey laws will soon be unconstitutional as well as all union station laws. \es, sir; 1 am for Sister Nation against all comers. Being a minister of the gospel, if I was not for her, I would go to jail and lie there until the ants toatcd me out through the key hole before I would hay I was not for her. I sec Governor Candler thinks she is crazy. If the governor don't quit being interviewed so much, some body will thiuk he is crazy. He knows a governor of a good State like Geor gia would net cuss much if he was not a little off. I do wish my friends iu Atlanta would quit quarreliug and fussing so much. Atlanta was once a place of unity and brotherly love, and should always remain so. t^uit it, boys. Lot brotherly love continue. If a fellow calls me a liar, I am a liar or I am not a liar. If I am a liar, I will take it; if I am not a liar, 1 will let him stand and lie all day; it don't hurt me. Love your enemies, do good to them that persecute you, and pray for them that despitefully use you, is the advice of Him who has conquered more enemies and made more friends than any per son who ever lived in this siucurscd earth. I have had a most pleasant tour through Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas, and closo my list of en gagements and get home the 10th of February, and I shall be glad to get back to old Georgia again. Yours, Sam P. Jones. 1*. S.?Does prohibition prohibit? No. I>ocs local option prohibit? No. l>oes tho dispensary prohibit? No. Does Sister Nation prohibit? You come out to Kansas and see. Those joints where she used h^r hatchet remind one of the great Galvcston hor ror. Yours for Gister Nation. S. P. J. This signatures is on every box of tho genuine Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tablets tho rem dy that cures a cold In. one day ? Instead of looking at the many poor representatives of Christianity in the Church let us look at the lifo of Christ to see what Christianity is. When you need a soothing and heal ing antisoptie application for any pur pose, use the original DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve, a well known cure for ; piles and skin diseases. Beware of counterfeits, l'?vaus' Pharmacy. ; ?Courage is not the absence of fear. Any one can do what the world calls a brave deed if he is not afraid, but it takes a hero to do it when he is afraid. Reports show greatly increased death rate, due t > the prevalence of croup, pneumonia and grippe. We advise the use ?>f Une Minute Cough Cure I inlthesc dillioultics. It gives immc diate results. Kvans' Pharmacy, j ? When a girl once makes up her j mind to get married, even the sight of I a whole procession of twins in baby cartiages wouldn't move her. The most, soothing, healing and an tiseptic a 'plication ever devised is D? Witt's Witch Hazel Salve. It relieves at once and cures piles, sores, eczema and skin diseases. Beware of coun terfeits. Evans Pharmacy. ? After a girl gets to be twenty live without getting married, her heart looks like the second day of a rum mage sale. Like bad dollars, counterfeits of DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve aro worth less. The original cures piles and iikin diseases. Evans' Pharmacy. ? Yon can tell the size of a woman's heart by her mulT and the size of her soul by her hat For weakness and prostration follow i ing grippe tln-re is nothing so prompt I and effective :: > One Minute. Couch I Cure. It is an unfailing remedy for ; all throat and lung troubles. It cures 1 quickly. Kvans" Pharmacy. ' j ? A woman begins to be an old ' maid when she begins to be afraid sho is going to be one. ' Laxativo Bromo-Quininc Tablets ouro a cold in one day. No Cure, No ; Pay. Prico 25 cents. Florida's Blushing free. One of Florida's'greatest marvels and yet one tha-t is seen liy hut. few travelers is a tree tliat blushes like a bashful girl. A Florida man, Albert l'\ Dewey, of Punta Gorda, recently told of a vihli he paid to the Ever glades and of his-first sight of this in teresting tree. "The blushing tree," said Mr. Dew ey, "is by no means common. It is found on.y in the densest thickets of those interminable marshes, whose luxuriant vegetation is a revelation to explorers. "It is called the blushing tree by those who know it because it actually blushes when rain falls upon it. This phenomenon is apparently incompre hensible. "The Scminole Indians, who once ruled Florida, have always known of the tree, and in their musical lan guage, now fast disappearing, have words which mean 'The maiden tree, which reddens ut the kiss of her lover, the i ai ti. "Iu company with a tactiturn In dian guide, I journeyed forty miles to see this marvelous bit of vegetable life. "Distrustfully I followed him ashore and through the underbrush. Beneath great cypress trees,. hoary with the gray hanging moss tress, and pact im mense bay trees, we wended o"r way inland. He led the way until, reach ing the edge of a little open space, he stopped and with silent pride pointed toward the center. "Gracefully a tree, with broad, ba nana-like leaves, reared itself aloft. Wide spreading branches hung down, slightly waving in the warm breeze. Its emerald-hued foliage was the most beautiful I had ever beheld. It rose to a height of twenty feet, and its thick, substantial trunk indicated many years of existence. "This, the old Seminolc told me was the hlnahing tree. "I told him to prepare to camp hero until it rained, regardless of time. We unrolled our blankets, stretched our mosquito bars, without which onecau not sleep in tho glades, cooked supper and rolled up in our blankets for the uight at the setting of the sun. That night, the day following, and the next night passed without rain. "I began to think it would never rain, when about noon a cloud darken ed the sky overhead. I put a rubber poncho over my shoulders and fixed my eyes on the green and pretty tree a dozen yards away. It was covered with a greenish insect, the size of a large wood tick, which intensified its color. Tho rain began to fall in tor rents, after its custom in that region. Beside me, grinning confidently, with a pipe in his mouth, stood the Semi nolc. "As the cool water drenched the tree I was amazed to note a changing of color. iJradually, yet unmistaka bly, the green hue was giving away to pink. I could not believe my eyes. Wns I mesmerized ? "Hastily I strode forward up to its very trunk, aud under its spread branches, to obtain a closer look. The Indian had told the truth. "The tree was blushing at tho rain. In a few minutes tho green had faded from sight. Only a few, half-hidden spots beneath broad branohes and on its trunk was there a tinge of green to be seen. "The tree was as pink as a cheek of a healthy girl. Astounded, I remain ed silent, while the proud old Indian muttered words of self-praise and sat isfaction. "After an hour or more the shower passed over and 1 watched with no less interest the wonderful irc?: assume its familiar green ouecmore." ? IViiladrl jiliia Press. The family that keeps on hand and uses occasionally the celebrated Prick ly Ash Hitters is always a well-regu lated family. Evans Pharmacy. ? The house fly of Europe is said to be of an entirely differ :nt species from that of tho same affliction in America. ? A writer in the London Speaker declares that the greatest aid to di gestion is conversation at meals and that laughter is almost a cure for dys pepsia. For a clear complexion, bright sparkling eye and vigorous digestiou, take Prickly Ash Hitters. It puts tho system in perfect order. Evans Phar I macy. j ? A Japanese tailor makes the lin - j ing to a garment first, and cuts out the j cloth from it as a pattern. You Know What Yon re Taking j When you take Grove's Tasteless Chill j Tonic because the formula is plainly . printed on every bottle showing that j it is simply Iron and Quinin in a j tasteless form. No Cure, No Pay. 50o. ? Norway and Sweden are the only European countries in which the use of intoxicating liquors is steadily de I creasing. j T??? Best Prescription F?p M?i?r?u Chills and Fever is a hottle of Grove's Tasteless Chill Touio. It is simply -iron and quinine in a tasclcss form. : No cure, No pay. Price 5Uo. I ?It isn't always tho piettiest girl that gets tho best husband, but it's her own fault if she doesn't. It is a pleasure to take DcWitt's Little Early Risers, tho bust little pills made. Evans' Pharmacy: <iranl in the Wilderness. "Moreover, with regard to that frightful tale of bloodshed, from the Wilderness to Petersburg, it maybe doubted whether it really added auy thing to Graut's frst reputation ana soldier. To start with an army twice as large as the enemy's, and then to th?-ow away 60,000 men in killed and wounded, without either inflicting a proportionate Iosj or advancing per ceptibly toward the goal of the cam paign, is hardly a record of great gen eralship, and it is not the kind of re cord Grant made fo* himself at Vicks burg aud Chattanooga. When Grant, after three weeks of slaughter, arrived at the North Anna Hiver there could be no doubt that he had beeu out generaled. * * * U was therefore a melancholy necessity to pound the !;!o out of Log :-> army, eveu at iue cost of half a dozen lives for ono, a price which the populous North could afford, lint toadmit that Grant could not avoid paying such a price is to concede the superior generalship of Leo. In truth, when Grant first came to Virginia he evidently underrated his antagonist. The obstacle to Fed eral success in Virgiuia did not c. i sist in the fancy that the army of the Potomac had not had the full fighting capacity drawn out, but in the fact that its antagonist's movements were guided by superior genius. At the West Grant had been opposed by generals of varying degrees of ability, for the most part geod soldiers, but none of them a demonstrated genius. In Virginia he found himself opposed by a general of the calibre of Turrene or Marlborcugh, and his eyes were gradually opened to the difference."? John Fi*ket in "The Mississippi Val ley in (he Civil Witr." The Cost of War. The Now York World is caustic in its comments on our war. It says : "At the close of tho brief unpleas antness of 1898 we paid Spain $20,000 000 for an 'option on a wnr' in the Phil ippines. Wo took up tho option; wo have the war. By denying to tho Fili pinos even the promise of freedom in a far future we left them no alternative but to light to the eud or bid farewell to hope of liberty. "Our transports sail west with money and horses and men; they sail cast again with the broken, tho wounded, the insane. We burn jungle villages and shoot down their people, and wherever our soldiers venture by twos and threes outside of the armed camps they are tortured and killed. Tho money cost is vast, the loss of life as lamentable as it is .unnecessary. Yet we have have just bought more war. The senate has ratified a treaty to pay Spain an additional .$100,000 for tho islands of Ci hi tu aud Cagayan, not in cluded in tho original deal?for the. ab&olnte ownership of tho pcoplo of those islands, whose ow n wish we have not consulted, Wo have bought war at wholesale and we have bought it at retail. It is now costing us $100,000, 000 or more a year. How long before tho country will decide to go out of tho melancholy business?" - m< About John Marshall. Interest in the John Marshall cele bration appears in the World's \Vork for February by some characteristic incidents in the life of tho great Chief Justice, besides which there are a Marshall portrait, a silhoutte and pictures of a number of Marshall landmarks. Here is one of the inci dents: Onr day, Judge Marshall, engrossed in hia reflections, was driving over the wretched roads in North .Carolina on his way to Raleigh in a stick gig. His horse turned out of the road, and the sulky ran over a sapyling and was tilt ed so as to arouse the judge. Wheu he found that he could neither move to the .ight nor left, an old negro, who had come along solved the diffi cu'uy. ! "My old marster," ho asked, "what fer you don't back your horse?'' "That's true," said the judge, and ho acted as advised. Thanking his deliverer heartily, he felt in bis pock et for some change, but he did not havo any. "Never mind, old man,*' he said,"I shall stop at the tavern and leave some money for you with the land lord." The old negro wna not impressed with the stranger, but he called at tho tavern, and asked the keeper if an old gentleman bad left anything there foi him. ^ "Oh, yes," said the landlord, "he left a silver dollar for you. What do you think of that old gentleman?" The negro gazed at the dollar and said: "lie was a gem'man, for sho; but" ?patting his forehead?"He didn't have much here." ? A Japanese Christian on going away from home to his work in the morning, leaves his door unfastened, aud puts up a notice that "the Chris tian good book" is lying on the tabl( and anyone is welcome to go in one read \t. ? "Why, Frankie, what arc yoi reading in that book about bringiof up childreu?" "I am just looking U sco whether I'm being properly brought up." ? The sharper a man is the barde it is to mako a tool of him. ,? ' ....v.. it ; -n\ "' - .-V* '< Private John AHer.'s l atest "Private John Allen, of Mississippi, gave oue of hiu unique hog and hominy dinners ?ast week to some congre? ional friends, and in the course of it told of a conversation between two darkies on his plantation. "Mose," said one of the Negroes to the other, "do you know them nig gers down to Catfish P int?" Catfish Point, Mr. Alien explained, is a bend in the river. "Sure," says Mose. "Do you 'member dat gal I was pay ing my civilities to?" "Cut'nly." "Dey has been tellin' dat gal that I am the sneakingest, oncrarist nigger that ever came down to the P int. And dey tell her, too, that I am the laziest triflingest nigger dat ever was. " ;:Did dev tell dat gal that you was dat kind of a nigger?" asked Mose. "Dey sut'nly did." "Well," said Mose, "dey has got located, sho' 'nui?." Their Condition Explained. "Br'er Johnson," said the elder of one of the colored churches to the re cently appointed pastor, "what docs yo' tink of the congregaBhun?" "Well, Br'er Jones, sence yo' asks me, I mus' say dey is er sorubby look in' set." "Why, what does yo' moan, Br'er Johnson? Dey has mo' camp meet in's and get ligion oftener dan mos' eny eongregashun in the town." "Dat's jes' it, Br'er Jones; dat's^j jes' it. Dey has done wore out the seats of dey pants black slid in and de knees er prayen' for fo'gibness." ? More news from Kansas. A man in a little village, in that State, was the father of two sons, and a widow in the same village was tho mother of two daughters. The father married the widow's eldest daughter, the eld est son married the widow and the youngest son married the widow's youngeit daughter. If you can figure out their kin, the case is yours. ? An inquiry at one of the depart ment stores in New York elicited the fact that of the enormous number of books sold during the holidays, moro than one-half were Bibles. Other store also reported large scales. Ouo store has sold over 30,000 Bibles dur ing the year. ? Of the 3,153 locomotives built in the United States last year, 505 went abroad, most j* them to British lines. ? The recent census shows that about 12 per cent, of the population of the United States is colored. ? If all the States were as popu lous as Massachusetts their aggregate population would be 1,118,018,000. ? A woman never feels comfortably dressed unless her corsets are uncom fortable. ? Up to the day he falls in love no man has any idea that he will ever find his ideal woman. ? When some men balance their accounts with the world they find it necessary to substraot what they own from what they o.ve. A. H. DAGNALL, Aaderson, ?. O. OFFICE?OVER THE F03T OFFICE. The Anderson Mutual Fire Insurance Co. WILL insure your property against FIRE, WIND and LIGHTNING for It es than half what other Compa nies charge you for insurance against Fire and Lightning. The March winds are coming. Address or apply to J. K. VANDIVER, Pres.. Or R. J. GUINN, Agent, _Starr, S. G. ! Womanly Beauty! Sparkling Eyes and Bricht Faces! Are the Fruits of Sou na Ne. res. TJTaTTYTDA tue grrat FftENCH Jill" LUXU nerve tonic and vi TAl.I7.KK Vunm NerTous Eshnust'on, Ilytteria, Dlseioces, H.-nJacho, Backache and Female We-fe n's* ao common attending the Monthly Periods. riTTJT Q Paa-ing through th? trying change UxJfAjjO froa Girlhood to Womanbo d will find id it a wonderful relief and benefit. It Qui rt* and bUcngthena tbe Nerres, Claannea the Ul)od Cleara the B??ln and Tones up the whole System. M*KEH a WOMAN look YOUNG and fee Li VOUNO. rrice fldc t2BoktatS. Sent by mail to any ?ddres-. t-'o'd by _ EVANS PHARMACY, Sole 4gont?._ Notice to Creditors. ALL peraon? having demands aaa?nst th? Estate of John H. Ellison, deceas ed, aro hereby notified to present them, properly proven, to tbe undersigned, within the time prescribed by law, and those indebted to make pavaient. MARY JANE ELLISON. Executrix. Feb 6, 1001 33_3 Gentlemen, Get the New, Novel Discovery, PIGEON MILK. INJECTION. Cuts Gonorrh?- and Gtcet lu 1 to 4 days. Ita action U magic*!. Prevents atilcture. All com "pl?-te To b- carried in vcet pocket. Sure pre ventative. S*ut by m?ll In pitta lackag*. pre paid, on receipt of price. Si per box?S for 8V KV?ns PHARMA -Y, Bole Agents NOTICE. . CERTIFICATE No. 24 for two (2) Share* of lb'* Capital Stock of the Pendleton Oil and Fertilizer Co., of Pen riltton, S. C, isaut-d to B. B. Lewis Doc. 5, 1000 having beon lost while In transit by mall, this ta to warn any ell persons sg^lnet trading for naid Certificate, it ba tug worth le?*, aa a new one will be issued In lieu thnreof. M. M. HUNTER, Pres. J. J. SIT I ON, Shc and Treas. . Pendleton Oil and Fertiliser Co. Feb 6, iroi 33 . 3 ** AsKFosow New Pari THtrARe IiOWBU5T.5TRAIGHT Fl w> 5TYUE5 tfOW-AAQ* FOR SALE AT ALL LEADING RETAILERS Notice of Final Settlement. | THE undersigned, Executors of the | instate o' J. H. Aokor, deceased, hereby give notice thai they will ou the 23ci day of February, 1901, apply to the Judge of Probate for Anderson ?'oumy for a Finsl (settlement of said Estate, arid a diHcbar^o from their ottico -?.s Executor*. J. M. ACKKR, W. I ?. A (J IC E lv, Executors. Jan 23, 1901 _31_5 Notice Final Settlement. THE undersigned, Executors of the Estate of Andrew II unter, decehaed, hereby give notice that tbev wl:i r>c tho20:h day of February, 1901 apply to tho Judge of Probat?* for A ndereon Coun ty for a Final 8ettloment of aaid Estate, and adlaoharge from their office as Ex ecutors. W. H. HUNTEH. J. Li. FARMftER, Jan 23, 1901-31 _Executors. The "Confederate Veteran.'' Low Club Rates Given With The Intelligencer.?The growth of the Confederate Veteran, published by 8. A. Cunningham, at Nashville, Tenn., is remarkable. Its circulation of eigh ty-four issues, monthly, aggregated to January, 1900, 1,195,452 copies. Aver age for 1893, 7,683; 1894, 10,187; 1895, 12,916; 1896, 13,444; 1897, 16,175; 1898,19, 100; 1899, 20)166. Subscriptions for the Veteran will bo received at this office. It and th< Ii? telligencer will be sent for a year at the club rate of $2.15. By application to the Intelligencer copies of the Veteran will be sent to our veteran friends who are unable to subscribe. CHARLESTON AND WESTERN CAROLINA RAILWAY AUGUSTA ANUAHBEVILLKSaORr LINE In effect January 11th, 1901. Lv Augusta-. Ar Greenwood.. Ar Anderson. Ar Laurena. Ar Greenville. Ar Glenn Springs..... Ar 8i>artanburg. Ar ?aluda. Ar Ueudersonville. Ar Aabeville. :> 40 am 12 JL5 am i 20 i m 3 00 pm 8 i? pm 6 33 |>in 903 pm 7 15 pm 3 85 pm 8 00 pre 5 35 arc 11 30 am 9 00 at* I.t Aahttvtlle.?. 8 20 am Lv fpartanburg., Lv Glenn Springs. Lv Greenville. Lv Laurena...... Lv Anderson ........ Lv Greenwood-. Ar Augusta. Lv Anderson. Ar Kl-'km'>u... Ar Athens. Ar Al auta. 11 45 am lu CO am 12 01 pm 1 37 pm 8 55 pro 3 25 pic 7 13 pm 7 25 am 2 87 pmi". 6 10 pm 11 40 am 7 2) am 1 SO pm 2 2 t p 1 35 pm Lv Andorson.;. Ar Augusta. Ar Port Royal*. Ar Charleston (Sou)... Ar Savannah (Plant1 7 2? am 11 40 am 7 t0 pm G 50 pm 8 00 pm 8 15 pm Close connection at Calhoun Falls for al) poiutu on 8. A. L. Railway, and at Fpartanbu g for Son. Railway. For any Information relative to tickets or schedule!, etc., address W. J. CRAIG, Gen. Pass. Agent, AnguatA.Ga T. M. Kmorson .Trame Manager. J. Reeso Fant, Agant, Anderson. S. C. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. 4P ComlertN'cil.roriwcitilo in F..T Jr.n. irth. STATION3. Lai j }. j. Lv. 01 airiest on_.! 11 " Sumn-.orvi le. " Branehvi.a. " Orangoburg . ^** Kingvltio: !? . Savannah. I'arnwoil BlaekviUa Lv. Columbia " Prosperity V Newbcrry M Nfnoty-SIx " Greenwood Ar. Hodgca Lv. Stodges Ar. Greonvroul Nlnety-Sh Newb?rry Pmsperity Columbia Ar. Blackviilc Barn we 1 ... Savannah. Lv. Ktngvillo..... " Orangebuvgi U Branchviilo.. 8ummcvviilo Ar. Charleston.. ~ 57 it ia ? 12 a m fi 00 a m 4 43 p ra. 8 45 h Iii! 5 121 p m 4 ss n m 0 15 p m 5 57 a m 7 Ci pm 7 0 a nil 8 ?5. p m Dali/ Ko 15. U 00p lit 00 n 2 00 a 2 45a 4 25a 12 OU ft 413 a 4 28a 8 20a 8 57 a 058a 10 15 r? 10 f? ?* 10 60 a 11 25 n 11 a) a 2 48 p STATIONS. Lv..Charleston..Ar " SumiuorvlUe " " .Branchvillo. " " Orongobur? " " . KingvlUo " 11 43 ft 13 Aip 1 ?p 2 Ojp 2 2ip 2 ai p 8 lap 8 4Jp 7 15 p I Daily |No. jj Lv..Savannah Ar ..Bamwell .. " ..Blackvlllo.. " Ooltunhla.. " ....Alston.... " ...Bantno.:. " ....."Union_. " ..Jonesvillo.. ....Pncolot.... Ar Spartan burg i,v Kv Spartanburg Ar Ar...Asho\illo ...Lv ? 15 p 7 81 p 0 15 p 6 U3p 4 43p 8 20 p 2 BQp Daily No.ltl 7 Oon 5 57 it. ? 25 n 8 45 a 2 82n 5 U>n 8 12 a 3 67 n 0 ftp 8 51 a 1 23p' 7 48p 12 <r>p ? 10p 12 25 p 8 6o'*> 12 14o 0 42p 11 45 a ? 15 p 11 ?2a! OOOp 8 00 ai 8 05p "P*-' p. m.. "A" ij. ra. "XT* night. DOUBLE BAIL Y SERVICE BETWEEN CHARLESTON AND GREENVILLE. Pullman palace Bleeping cars on Trains 85and 80,87 ami ix, on A. and C. division. Drain? cars on the*1 troAu? nerve all meals enrouto. Train? ?cftvo Spartnuburg, A. & O. division, northbound. 7:03 a.m., 8:37 p.m., 6:13p. m., (Vestibule Limited) and 7:07 p. to.; eonth bound 12:20 a, m . 8:15 p. m., 11:34 a. ra., (Vesti bule Limitcdl.'md 10:2un. to. Trains leave Greenv?llo. A. and C division, northl)onnd,0:02a. in., 2:84 p. to. and?:22p.TO., J Vestibule Limltodh^ and ^?!!^ m bound, 1:10 a. id .. ? :3D p. to., 1 bnle Limited), aft* 11 u5 a. to. ?p.m. (Vest! Trains 15 and "is?Pullman Sleopiriff Oars bc-tvroon Charleston and Columbia: ready fox occupancy at both points at 0 :S0 p. in. Elegant Pullman Drawinsf Room Sleeping Cars bat Wean Savannah and AwieVilio enrouto daily Iwtwcen Jaclcsonvmo and Cincinnati. FRANK S. GANNON. 8. H. HARDWIOK, Third V-P. ib Gen. Mgr., Gen. Pas. Agrat, Washington. D. O. _Wa)ihlnjton, D, O. W. H. TAYT.OE. it. Gen. Pas. A Atlanta. Ga. ^ Dly. Paa. Ag^. R_W. Ill Div Charleston, 8. Blue Ridge Railroad. H. C. BEATTIE, Receiver. Effectivo Septeiiiber 20. 1000, WESTBOUND. Daily Daily Pas*. Mixtd, No. No. II. No. 5] 8 Andtrsoo.Lv 3 35 pm Sonata P fDenver. 3 45 pin H 27 am F fAutnn. 3 50 pm 8 3Sam 8 ?Pendloton. 3 65 pm 8 4!> am F fCherry Crossing.. 4 00 pm 0 OU ara F t Adams Crossimr.. 4 04 pm 0 07 am 8 f*Sc^.418P?-ro?oS S \x'ppt Union . 4 45 pm 10 20 am S Walhalla.Ar 4 50 pm 1027am EASTBOUND. Daily Daily Mixed. Pasa. No- No. 6. No. 12. 34 ?Walhalla.Lvl2 00 pm 0 10 am 32 ?West Union.12 07 pm 916 am ? { ?.9 40 am 18 f Adams Crossing.. 3 13 pm -048 am 16 tCherry'a Crossing 3 20 pm 9 63 am 13 .Peadletoo.{ fgjg 10"'"? 10 fAutun. 4 06 pm 10C im 7 fDenver.417 pm 10 lb d 0 ?Anderson.Ar 4 44 pm 10 40 4 ( ) Regular station ; (t) Flag station. * Will slso stop at the following atatioiu to take on or let off passengers : Phln? nevs, James' and Sandy Springs. No. 12 connecta with Southern Rallvr*? No. 6 st Andersen. No. 11 connecta with Southern Railway Nor, 11 and 88 at Seneca. No. 0 oonneots with' Southern Railway No. 58 at Anderson, also with Nos. 12 and 37 at Seneca. J R. ANDERSON. 8nr'. _ w bos ooo u woas DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE TO ALL POINTS North, South and Southwest, SCHEDULE IN EFFECT NOV. 6tb, 1895. HOUTHBOUNi, No. 403. No. 41. Lt Now York, yia Penn It. R.?ll 00 am *9 00 pm Lt Washington, " 3 00 pm 4 30aa Lv Richmond, A. C. L. 9 03pm 9 05an Lv Portsmouth, S. A.L u. . S 45 pm 9 ??i? ArWeldon, " ......... 11 10 pm* 11 43 an ArHendoraoa, " . 12 66 am 1 35pta ! Ar Raleigh, via S. A. L.2 22 toi 3 36pc j Ar Southern Piaea "..... 4 27 am G CO pa ArH 0]_ _" ?..... 6 14am 7 00pm Lv Wilmington "_*3 05 pa Ar Monroe._". *8 63 am ?9 12pta Ar Charlotte, ".7T*S 00 am~*?? 25yt : Ar Cheater, " ... ?8 18 am *10 55 pa Ar Greenwood " .10 49 am 112 am Ar Athena, ". 1 24 pm 8 48 am Ar Atlanta, _" .?... s 60pm 6 I5us ; ~ NORTHBOUND. No. 403. No'. 83 Lt Atlanta, 8. A L.... ?1 00 pm ?8 50pa S ?r Athens, ". . 8 (3 pm 11 05pa Ar Greenwood, ". 6 40 pm 1 46 an ar Chester, 8. A. L. 7 63 pm 4 03 am Ar Monroe,_. 9 80 pm 5 45 am Lv hartotte. " _.*8 20 pm *s oo aa j Ar Hamlet, . ' ".-ii 10pm ?7 43aa ? Ar Wilmington " ......... ?12 05 pa jj ?r Southern Pinea, " . ?12 02 am ?9 00 an ^ Ar Ualelgh, ". 2 03 am 11 13 aa 5 Ar Henderson " . 8 26 am 12 45 pa ArWeldon, " .4 68 sm 2 60 pa . Ar Portsmouth 8. A. L.. 7 25 am 6 20pa ' Ar Richmond " A. C. L.u.. "STb"am"?7 20 pa j Ar Washington, Penn. R. K ? 12 81 pm 11 20 pa ; Ar New York,_" ?0 28 pm ?6 53aa \ ?Daily. tlHUy, E*-Sunday._~ 1 '-~*~* - ' .... r ". ,1 Nos. 403 and 402 "Tho At'anta Special.'? BoU \ Vcstlbulcd Train, of Pullman Sleepers ana Coach- j es between Washington and Atlanta, also Pall- j man Sleep*"* between Portsmouth and ChailoUe. j Nos. 41anu . "The 8. A. L Express." Solid Train, Co ache ..id Pullman Sleepers WtwceD Portsmouth and .' Meut a. Bothtiatus make, ''"'mediate connection at At* ! lauts for Montgo ei _ . 'oulle. New Orleans, Tex- n aa, California, Mexico '. batianooga, Nashville, Meujpli If. if seen and Florida. For Tickets. SleeDcra, et el, anply to j G. McP. Batte, T"? P. A., 23 Tryon if" Chat lotto. N C. E. St John, Vice-Presiden ai. \ i..Mar-agir V. E.McBoe General Surer.nteui.^nt. II. V/. B.Glover,Traffic it nager. L.8. Allen, Gen'l. Pa? .or gnr Agent. Goneral OfHc&rs, for.,:iuoutli, Va. ATLANTIC COAST LINE. TnAFFio Department. Wilmington, N. C, Jan. 18, KOI Fast Line Between Charleston- and Col . umbioand Upper South Carolina, Nertt Carolina. CONDENSED SCHEDULE. ooing wkst. aOINQ No. 62. . . No. 68. 625am j Lt_.Charles?on.Ar 8 01 am I Lt...Lanes.Ar 9 28 am I LT?....?.Sumter.Ar Ar. ...Columbia.......Lt Ar......;....Proapority.-Lt Ar?.?.Newt>crry.......-....LT 11 00 pin 12 17 pm 12 Opm 1 13 pm 1 85pm 8 10 pm 8 If pm 7 13 pm 9 2) pm 6 11 pm 7 11pm 8 30 pa 6 43 pa 515F? 4 15 pa 2 49 pa 2S4cn Ar7..Clinton.I.v ! 15?P? Ar._..\Laurena.Lt Ar.?..Gioenville...Lv Ar.Sp?Ttanharg.-..Lv Ar.Win?sboro, g. C.Lv Ar.Charlotte N. C.Lt Ar...llonder8on ville, N. C...L* Ar.~....Ashevillo, N. C .'. Lv 1 35 pc 1201 a& 11 45 a? I018W? 8 10 an 9 02 au 80)?? No*.l&?nd 63 Solid Tra?na betw.wt? Chari >** find Colurnbla.H. C, H. M. EMsa^f? iiAfU'1. raaaeagfr &g*vl j R. K ksift ?l-n^rai 'TV * ??ip(i?.1 raff.r. M?i>ir? _ 60 YEARS* EXPERIENCE