The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, June 19, 1901, Page 6, Image 6
HOW THE B
JN ovel Scientific Con
X J ri cl
y ors if
WASHINGTON, .June s.-A scien
tific contrivance, very novel ami euri
?u>, lia? been acquired by i'm' 1 lilted
States bureau ol' education, and
some o? thc things it dues are ex
tremely interesting. It proves tin;
correctness ol' thc theory that the
blood flows to thr brain when ene
thinks hard, and it also demonstrates
the fact that the vital fluid Hows out
of thc head nnd toward the feet when
one is asleep.
Thc instrument in question is a kind
of balance, provided with a shallow
trough six feet long, on which you lie
down nt full length. This trough is
accurately poised after the niauner of
a seesaw, but is adjusted in su"h a
way, after you have occupied it, as to
be perfectly horizontal. That is
merely a matter of arranging a few
?crews and you arc in a position to
await further proceedings.
Next you arc told to think of your
plans for thc following day and you
turn your mind to that subject which
necessarily requires some subject
which necessarily requires some work
by thc brain machinery. Lo! almost
immediately the end of the trough
where your head rests begius tD de
scend, and gently and gradually it
lowers itself until your body is in
clined at a considerable angle, with
your feet up in thc air. It is the
blood, flowing to the brain to assist
mental activity, that has upset thc
balance and weighed down thc head
end of thc apparatus.
For a long time it has been sup
posed that thinking caused the blood
to flow to the brain, but until now thc
fact has not been proved; this machine
demonstrates it. But another thing,
equally interesting in its way, is beau
tifully shown by the contrivance, and
that is tho emptying of the blood
from tho brain during sleep. Indulge
in a nap as you Ho in the trough and
as soon as you fall asleep the end on
which you feet rest will slowly de
scend. The same thing happens if
when thus situated you aro put into
an hypnotic condition.
It used to be supposed that sleep
was a result of the departure of the
blood from the brain, but now it is
known that the latter phenomena is
only incidental. When the brain is
in a quiesoont state its operations
going on only in a very feeble sort of
way, as is the case during sound slum
be, the vital fluid flows out of it to
ward the feet, leaving thc mental ap
paratus in a temporarily bloodless con
dition. A machine of this kind, with
an automatic recording attachment,
would show exactly when a person
dropped off into the land of Nod and
the very minute he woke up.
Thc machine is in the oflicc of Dr.
Arthur MacDonald, who is attached
to the bureau of education in thc capa
city of a professional wizard, as one
might say. His official quarters are
filled with all sorts of mystical instru
ments for tho study of matters con
cerning you and mc about which ordi
nary folks do not think at all. In
connection with the machine just do
scribed he hus rigged up an apparatus
for observing thc rapidity of the heart
beat in various attitudes. A little
affair, called a "cardiometer," is
ph ced over thc heart, and is joined
through tho medium of a rubber tube
with a slowly revolving drum. Tho
drum is covered with a sheet of white
paper, and a pen automatically makes
a mark on the paper every time thc
heart of the person lying iu thc trough
beats.
In this manner a continuous record
is inscribed upon the paper sheet, and
many experiments have proved that
the heart of a person lying horizon
tally beats at thc slowest rate. If he
?9 inclined toward the perpendicular]
at an angle of lf> degrees, the organ
pulsates more rapidly, and it beats
fastest when he is standing erect. Thc
reason is simply that the individual
is er^t, in order to ovcrcomo gravity
and drive the blood up to tho bead.
Tn the recumbent position il bas thc
least labor to perform. This, indeed,
is one important reason why the do:
tor sends you to bed when you arc
aick-so that your heart may take t
rest.
Somo of tho most interesting of Dr
MacDonald's recent investigation!
have had to do with what he calls thi
"psychology of the skin," and in tVn
kind of study he utilizes a varied as
sortment of instrumenta. One o
them is a long-handled tool of deli
cate construction, to the end of whicl
may be attached any one of a numbe
of little brass objects of difieren
shapes, such ns a square, a circle,
tringle, etc The person experiment
ed upon is blindfolded, and thon i
asked to tell what is the shape of th
brass objeot touched to tho skin of hi
LOOD FLOWS.
L?rivance A-cquired by
e Sam.
/ Courier.
to be able to distinguish with much
bett ir accuracy.
It is a species of education applied to
the .skin. But, strange to say, it edu
cates only thc small area to cuticle to
which the objects are applied. If
trial is made with another area the
! latter is obliged to learn the lesson
I from the beginning. After all thc
j secret lien in thc fact that each little
I knot of nerves, or ganglion, in the
body i? M tiny brain in itself, and the
teaching of one nerve-knot docs not
educate another.
An interesting practical illustration
of the education of thc skin is found
in thc fact, which has been demon
strated by Dr. MacDonald, that people
j who belong west of the Kooky MOUD
; tains are able as a rule to distinguish
a live-dollar gold piece from a fivc
i cent nickel simply by feeling thc coin
j in their fingers, whereas dwellers east
cf thc Kookies cannot teil the twu
apart by touch. This, of course, is
because thc far Westerners . rc accus
tomed to thc handling of gold, which
does not circulate to any great extent
in thc Hast.
If you will heat a needle and apply
its point gently to various spots on
your wrist you will find that sometimes
you have a sensation of cold from the
contact. In some spots, that is to
say, thc needle will feel cold and in
others hot. This is because f me of
the nerves convey only sensations of
cold. It is a most interesting discov
ery, made by Dr. Goltscheider, of
Berlin, who so realized its importance
that after carefully dotting with ink
the points of heat on his wrist he out
away tho skin and subjeotcd it to ex
amination under the microscope.
Doubtless the nerves of cold and
nerves of heat are distributed all over
the surface of the body, beneath the
skin, but they have been studied and
plotted on a diagram only for the
wrist. For pursuing this curious in
vestigation an instrument has been
devised that has two small receptados,
ono for cold water and the other for
hot water, with a fine steel point at
tached to each. The points are ap
plied to different parts of tho skin,
and observations are made ns to tho
sensations conveyed, whether uf heat
or cold. Another contrivance is a
tube filled with hot water, and pro
vided with a thermometer, which
shows the temperature at the moment
when the sensation of heat is first
felt. This indioatcs the degree of
sensitiveness of the skin, which varies
in different people.
It is found that a tou^h on the back
is more distinctly felt than a touch on
thc front of tho body.
You can feel thc shape of an object
moro accurately with the tip of the
tongue than with tho finger tips.
Two points touching thc skin at the
samo limo feel wider apart than when
moved along thc skin.
The skin over tho joints is more
sensitive than elsewhere-apparently
because no fleshy tissue intervenes
between it and the bone.
Sweet is tasted best on the tip of
thc tongue, sour on the ego of the ton
gue, and bitter at the base of tho ton
guo.
Salt is tasted quicker than sugar.
Boys are moro sensitive to heat
than girls.
Dr. MacDonald is making a special
study of what he calls thc climate of
the body, by the help of an instru
ment which, being worn inside of the
clothing, records temperature and
moisture. When investigation on
this subject has been carried further
it may yield conclusions valuable
from a medical standpoint.
Dr. MacDonald's business is the
study of human phenomena. Along
tho interesting facts proved by datt
which he has collected are tho follow
ing:
Children born in summer are taller
than those born in winter.
Bright children weigh more than
dull ones.
City people arc shorter than coun
try folk when adult.
For two years, about thirteen or
fourteen, girls aro taller and heavier
than boys, but the opposite is tho
case both before and afterwards.
The brain attains its full weight at
8 years of age, and its cells multiply
150 times in size, on an average, from
babyhood to manhood.
BENE BACHE.
A Sprained Ankle Quickly Cured.
"At one time I suffered from a
severe sprain of the ankle," says Geo.
K. Cary, editor of tho Guide, Wash
ington, Va. "After using several
well recommended medisines without
success, I tried Chamberlain's Pain
Balm, and am pleased to say Cn nt re
lief carno as soon as I began its uso
and a complete euro speedily follow
caY,'.,w?oldby Hill-Orr,Drug,Co. .
Piern?n! Region's Name---A Curious Fact
in History.
Wc all have a vague sort of idea
that wc live io the great "Pidinont
Region," but exactly what that means,
what its boundaries arc, or why so call
ed, not one of us can tell. There is
no Piedmont river nor mouotain nor
Indian tradition upon which to found
thc name. In fact, it is not an Indian
name, but French.
We bear people in Virginia and
North Carolina say they live in the
"Piedmont region." We hear South
Carolinians and Alabamians say the
same thing, andas for Georgians, you
would think the whole State ought to
bc called Piedmont, since people from
every corner claim to inhabit that
mystcrous region whose center is
hfntrlmrn on/1 w 1 w i J o Imtindo.?rto mi/ir",
............. .. ..-w ?ItUilO? w.^.^
where.
It puzzled me a long time. I used
to ask colson mortals, like myself,
about it, but they could not tell. Then
I asked those who were authority on
nomenclature, with thc same result.
Then I watched for some mention of
it in all thc southern histories that I
read, and only once did I find any
thing like a clew. That was in Logan's
History of South Carolina, a book, by
the way, ns rare and as valuable as
Governor (Jilman's Georgians. Here
I saw it stated that upper South Caro
lina-around Abbeville-was settled
in part by Piedmontese. This seem
ed a clue, but was not satisfactory,
for thc region called Piedmont extends
from the Chesapeake bay to central
Alabama.
In the life of Alexander Stephens,
by Richard Malcom Johnston, men
tion is made that Mr. Stephens on one
occasion, away back ?in the forties,
went over to Washington Ga., to take
thc "Piedmont stage linc," and this
sentence coupled with local traditions,
explains the whole thing. The Pied
mont region is simply the region tra
versed by a line of stage coaches by a
Frenchman of the name of Piedmont.
The line originally ran from Rich
mond, Va., to Columbus, Ga., but
later was extended to Montgomery,
Ala. Possibly it changed horses at
Marthasville, and for this reason At
lanta claims to be the head center of
the Piedmont region.
Whether the Frenchman's name
was Piedmont or whether he was a re
fugee from the province of that name in
Italy, I cannot say, but he and his stage
coaches gave the name to the region
through which they passed. The lino
followed the Indian trails and the In
dian trails followed the natural wealth
of the country. The Indians selected
those places for building their villages
most favored by nature. They sought
pure water to drink, good streams to
fish in and good foresta to hunt in.
The best hunting ground was always
wheit) vegetation was most luxuriant,
for wild animals fed on nuts, fruits',
cane and grass.
It is curious to look'baok a hundred
years and see how civilazation has
marched in the footprints of savagery.
First came the Indians, single Gie,
silently marching one behind the
other. Then eamo tho traders, with
their pack horses, following the paths
of the Indians and soiling them rum
and pclfry for skins and furs. Then
came the white settlers, with their
families. When the settlers came the
paths or trails were widened, to admit
wheels. Then came the stage coach.
Then thc steam engine, plunging,
plowing and bursting wide open the
hidden treasures of stream and forest.
It is a fact tv.at the railroads are built,
for the most part, along the lines of
tho old stago routes, so that in looking
backward we see that the Indians sur
veyed many of the lines now covered
by steel rails, telegraph and telephone
wires.
To my mind, the romaneo all clings
to tho days of stages. There is a fas
cination about that mode of travel
that nothing oise oan touch. Wheth
er it is tho painted coach, the pranc
ing horses, the winding horn, the social
intercourse dr what not, it savors of a
mystery and romance that nothing elso
has supplied. What a part it plays
in the writings of Dickens and Thack
eray! Tho tallyho is but a yearning
after tho old days of stago coach travel.
I am glad Atlanta is going to call
her grand new hotel thc Piedmont.
The namo means something.-Mr?, T.
M. Green in Atlanta'Journal
To Cure A Cold In One Day
Take Laxative Bromo-*"pinino Tab
lets. All druggists refund the money
if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's sig
nature is on eaoh box. 25o.
- Suioide via the cigarette route
can hardly be oalled a orime.
- The artist isn't necessarily dan
gerous because his designs are bad.
Mr. W. S. Whedon, Cashier of the
First National .Bank of Winterest,
Iowa, in a recent letter gives some ex*
perienoe with a oarpenter in his em
ploy, that will be of value to othei
mechanics. He says: "I bad a oar
pen ter working for me who was ob
liged to stop work for several days ot
acoount of being troubled with dtar
rheoa. I mentioned to him that 1
had beon similarity troubled and thai
Chamberlain's Celio, Cholera ao(
Diarrhoea Remedy bad cured mo. H
bought a bottle of it from tho drug
gist here uud.informed mo that on
Remarkable Gymnasts.
Astounding gymnastic feats, evi
dencing reuiurkable physical endurance
are being performed just now in tho
large cities of the European continent
by a troupe of Malays.
Tho troupe of performers comprises
two men and three women. The
chief's name is Deavida. His star
feat has thrilled immense audiences.
Deavida places a long bamboo stick,
which is adjusted in a moving pivot,
agaiust his abdomen, and then balances
himself in a semi-vertical position on
its extreme point iu midair. An at
tendant then throws a number of
earthen vessels to him, which he
catches and balances on his head. Ile
is able to maintain his equilibrium on
the bamboo sticks, performing all sorts
pf jugglery, for nearly fifteeu min
utes.
The women of II?H troupe arc young
and remarkably pretty, hailing from
thc southwest coast of India. At
home these girls serve as bajaderes or
dancers in the temples. They are
agile and emcieut in their art. Ger
man papers describo their fire aud
evil dances as "hair-raisine" in their
effect on tho spectators.
Malabar, tho second mau of thc
company, excels his companion in feats
of strength and in the fakir's art. It
is claimed for him that his ancestors j
for numerous generations past are re- I
corded in India's history us the chiefs j
of necromancers and jugglers. Thc
crowning feature of his performance
consists in vanishing from view on thc
stage while speaking and uttering
weird incantations before his audience.
That it is all an optical illusion is ob
vious, but how it is done is difficult to
understand, as no second person is
present and no cloth or article of any
kind is seen in thc hands of Malabar.
He calls attention to his empty hands,
walks forward and backward before the
footlights, then, without a word of
warniag, he is gone. His reappear
ance is as sudden and inexplicable
as his disappearance, the audience not
being able to observe a single motion
during the vanishing or reappearing
aotp
These people have never performed
outside of their own land. American
showmen havo made them flattering
offers for tours of the United States,
but all have been declined. The fact
is they are homesick, especially the
women, who are unable to endure the
rigorous climate of Northern Europe,
and they are in deadly fear of crossing
the ocean._. _
The Best Prescription For Halarla
Chills and Fever is a bottle of Grove's
Tasteless Chill Tonio. It is simply
iron and quinine in a taseless form
No cure, No pay. Price 50o.
- John Fiske, tho historian, warm
ly approves the proposition to cele
brate in 1907 the three hundredth an
niversary of tho landing at James
town, Ya. "Of ail dates in the his
tory of the New World," he writes,
"there is nono which more imperative
ly calls for commemoration."
- If a word to the wise is sufficient
most clergymen must consider their
congregations foolish. ' .
- The fool man and the wise trout
arc slov7 at catching on.
- Giles County, Virginia, contains
a remarkable uatural curiosity known
as Salt Pond, which is described as a
lake of fresh water sunk in Salt Pond
Mountain at an elevation of 4500 feet
above sea level. It is fed by no visi
ble stream, yet it is claimed to have
been gradually enlarged since 1804,
the date of its discovery. Fish that
have been placed in Salt Pond have
mysteriously disappeared, lu depth
is unknown, experiments with a line
300 feet long failing to reach the bot
tom. The origin of the lake is un
known.
T?*y the new remedy for costiveness,
Chuiibcrlain's Stomach and Liver
Tablits. Kvery box warranted.
Price 25 cents. For sale by Hill-Orr
Drug Co.
- (July fifty years ago but one wo
man worked to every ten men. At
pr??cot the ratio is one to four. ?nirty
years ago two-thirds of all thc self
supporting women were domestic ser
T.*./l~..i.. --
VCAUWhf* w vj u i j ullL LUI I U Ul Vj 0\J
employed.
- Thc new automatic revolvers for
the United States army are capable of
firing 110 shots a miuute, which sug
gests that every man will require a
mule to carry his ammunition.
- "Do not weep," they said to the
mourning wid JW. 'remember that
Henry has gone to a land flowing with
milk and houey." "1 know,'' she
sobbed. "1 know. But poor Henry
_I_._,__"i_._? _l,
uivrujro VTtto BU uuiuiven uuuui ino mr
bers."
- No*, woman can afford to wear
"sensible" shoes as long as there is
any man who doesu't act sensible
about her. Very few mcu who are
wise enough to make women love them
eau be idiots enough to make them
worship them.
- The common hens lay about 500
or 000 eggs iu ten years.
SYMPTOMS
LIKE THESE
BELCHING, i
BAD BREATH,
BITTER TASTE,
BLOATING After. Meela,
HEARTBURN,
BACKACHE,
HEADACHE,
DIZZINESS,
NERVOUS WEAKNESS,
LOW SPIRITS,
Indicate bad digestion, k a disordered
system and failing state of health*
PRICKLY
ASH
BITTERS
ls a positive and speedyj^cure.. It
clears the body of poisonous* secre
tions, cleanses the blood, aids diges
tion, strengthens the kidneys,' purifies
the bowels and imparts. renewed
energy to body and brain.
DRr;(?Gi5T5"5'ai, IT .
Evans Pharmacy, Special Agents.
A.C STRICKLAND,
DENTIST,
OFFICE-Front Booms over Farm
ers and Merchants Bank.
The opt*n*tta cut Illustrates O!on
r i nunns (?DUI Teeth. The Ideal
Pi ?tn - mot ?.? e ?'.inly than the natn
I-H1 teeth N*> Mad taste or breath
fm to Pla' v ?it thia kind.
E. G. EVANS, JR., & CO
PENDLETON, 8. C.
FULL LINE OF
Buist's Garden Seeds, '
Paints, Oil, Varnishes, Gasoline,
Drugs, Medicines and Chemicals,
Fancy and Toilet Articles,
Perfumery, Toilet Soaps, Sponges, etc.
A supply of Peruna, Manalin and Lacupia on hand.
Physicians Prescriptions carefully compounded, njgm
If you
want to
have the
heat Carden
you ever had
in your life,
try our
New Seed
this year.
HILL-ORR DRUG CO
Glenn Springs Mineral Water
-FOR SALE AT
EVANS' PHARMACY.
THE GLENN SPRINGS WATER has boen known for over a hundred yearn, and
recognized by the bent Physicians ?Uj the land aa a sore our? for disease* of the
Liver, Kidneys, Bladder, Bowel? and Blood. Rome of ita remarkable on rea were
brought before tho notice of the public In the CbArhaton Medical Journal MISS.',.
MiissKs.' EVANS PHARMACY-GENTS: I have been> BUt?e?ei rr<-m-Indigestion TOT
several years, and havo found tho use of your Glenn Spring Watvr of graaVb?mo?t
gj^MjMmmmmmm^Tm^M^ lill ? I ll P - 1 T^?M tir ->iitllllft M -
The Oldest and Best
S. S. S. is a combination of roots
and herbs of great curative powers,
and when taken into the circulation
searches out and removes all manner
of poisons from the blood, without
thc least shock or harm to thc system.
On the contrary, the general health
begins to improve from the first dose,
for S. S. S. is not only a blood purifier,
but an excellent tonic, and strength
ens and builds up the constitution
while purging the blood of impuri
ties. S. S. S. cures all diseases of a
blood poison origin, Cancer, Scrofula,
Rheumatism, Chronic Sores and
Ulcers, Eczema, Psoriasis, Salt
Rheum, Herpes and similar troubles,
and is an infallible cure and the only
antidote for that most horrible disease,
Contagious Blood Poison.
A record of nearly fifty years of
successful cures is <t record to be proud
of. S. S. S. is more popular today
than ever. Tt numbers its friends by
the thousands. Our medical corres
fondence is larger than ever in the
?story of the medicine. Many write
ti) thank us for the great good S. S. S.
has done them, while others are seek
ing advice about their cases. All
letters receive prompt and careful
attention. Our physicians have made
a life-long study of Blood and Skin Dis
eases, and better understand such cases
than the ordinary practitioner who
makes a specialty of no one disease.
We are doing great
good to suffering
humanity through
our consulting de
partment, and invite
you to write us if you have any blood
or skin trouble, we make no charge
whatever for this service.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. ATLANTA, GA.
OSCAR HAMMOND
DESIRES to call thc attention of
thc public to the fact that he will be
in Anderson for a few weeks superin
tending thc erection of the Confede
rate Monument, and that he has with
him a fine supply of the latest designs
of Marble and Granite Monuments,
Headstones, &c. He also carries a
complete line of Iron and Wire Fenc
ing and ite8ovoir Vases for Cemeteries
and Lawns. He would be pleased to
submit estimate? to all parties desiring
anything io these lines. Call on him
at tho Peoples Bank or drop him a
card and he will call on you.
NOTICE. ~"
AL Li persons sro forewarned not to
hire, harbor, give shelter or em
ployment In any way whatever to Joe
Stevenson or bis wife. Stella Stevenson,
or either of his children, as they have
left me witbont cause or consent, under
the penalty of the law. Any one dlBre
gard lng this notice will be prosecuted to
the foll extent of the law, aa they are un
r*or written contract with me for ton roar
1901. J. E. HORTON, Belton, S. O.
June fi, 1901_50_3_
SO YEARS'
EXPERIENCE
PATENTS
^?Baffl HP TRADE rvs ARKS
'WSHR'^ DESIGNS
rrT?V*7 COPYRIGHT?
Anyone sending a sketch and description ma>
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an
Invention ls prob ably paten tabla Com munica
tiona strictly eon o d ontlal. Handbook on Patent?
Bent free. Oldest agency for securingjmtonts.
Patenta token through Mann & Ca recetvr
Scientific JlMtericatt.
A handsomely illustrated weekly. Tersest cir
culation of any sclentlflo Journal. Tanna, S3 a
year : four months. CL Sold by all newsdealer!.
MUNN & Co.38"""New Yo*
Branch <V??. r?? ii ?. . . T?.7
SOUTHERN RAILWAY.
CnntteiiMCil >>clit;<tuln In Effect
Jan. 17th. 13.1.
STATIONS.
L.V. Char lou on_
" Mummery:'I a..
M Brun? ? vi.:.*...
" Orangoburg ..
" Kiugviuo.
Lv. Savannah.
" lurnwoU.
" Blackville.
I.V. Columbia...,
" Prosperity..
" Newberry...
" Ninety-Six..
" Greenwood.
Ar. Hodgoa.
Lv. Abbeville..
Ar. Belton.
Lv. Anderson i
Ar. Greenville.
Ar. Atlanta. (Ck-n.Time)
DJI? v
it Gu y rn
li Ul n't
2 U) H m
2 45 a m
4 ??5 a m
12 bi) a m
.I lJ ft ia
4 23 am
7 Ul a m
8 14 a m
8 30 a m
0 BO a m
0 60 a m
10 16 a m
0 BB a m
ll 16 ? m
10 45 a in
12 20 p m
8 66 p m
Haily
KO. ll. ,
7 *OJ a in
7 41 a ni
8 63 n m
021am
10 13 a m
12 BO ?. rn
4 1U a m
4 ItS a m
11 05 a m
12 10 n'n
12 25 p m
1 20 p m
1 65 p m
2 16 p ra
185 pm
8 10pm
2 33 p m
4 16 p in
1)00 p m
STATIONS.
Itv. Greenville...
" Piedmont...
" WUllamston.
Ar. Anderson ...
Lv. Belton .
Ar. Donalds.
A--.~Abbevill?....
Lv. Hodges...
Ar. Greenwood....
-- Ninety-Six.
" Newberry.
" Prosperity.
m " Columbia.
Ar. Bliuikvtl??......,
" Barnwe.l .
" Savannah.,
Ly. Ringville
Daily
No. is.
6 80 p m
6 00 p m
8 22 p m
7 15 p m
6 46 p rn
7 '>-p m
Situm
Dally
NoTfe.
10 '5 a, m
10 40 a m
10 65 a in
U 40 a m
ll 15 a
ll 40 a
12 25
pm
7 SO p m
7 65 p m
8 S3 p tn
9 80 p m
fl 45 p m
ll Ul p m
11 65 a m
12 20 p m
12 55 p m
2 00 p m
2 14 p m
S 80 p m
Orangchu:-;*....
" Branch vi I:.;. ...
" Summer vi Ho...
Ar. Charleston.
2 .'>/ am
3 12 a m
5 00 A ni
"2 02Vm
a 45 a in
4 25 a m
6 67 a
7 OC a m
2 57 a ui
8 12 a m
_6JXI a ni
4 4.1" p m
6 88 p m
0 15 p m
7 81 p m
8 16 p m
flggp?l STATIONS. ggfglj
11 00 p 7 uin L.v..Charleston..Ar a 15 n 7 00 a
12 OOn 7 41 n " SummerviUe " 7 81 p 5 67 n
8 00 a 8 55a ?. .BranchviUe. " 6 15p 4 25a
2 43 a 0 23a " Orangeburg M 6 83p ^ 45a
4 SSa 10 15a " ..XlngviUo . '? 4 48 p 2 82a
is 80a. Lv..Savannah Ar. 6 ou a
4 lita. " ..Barnwell .. ". 8 12a
*13a....... .. ..Blackvi?e.. " ....... 887a
fe.dJoll4Un "..Columbia.." 8 ?Op 9 80p
8 67? 12 20p " ....Alston.... " 2 80p 8 60?
9 68a 1 Alp .* ...Sautuo... " 1 23p 7 48p
1015a 2 0jp .......Union.....'1 18 ?Sp 7 10 p
'10 86a 2 2?p .. ..Joncovilte.. " 12 ?5p 6 88 p
10 80a, 2 87 p " ....Pocolet.... " 18 14p 6 42 p
1188a ? l?p Ar?partaaburgLv U 45 a 0 15p
1180 a 8 40 p LvSpartanburgAr II 28a 0 00p
. 8 48?> 7 np Ax..Jkahev?la "X.v| 8 80a 8 05p
"F'p.m. MA" a. ra. night.
DOUBLE DAILY BBBVIG? BCTWBKN
CHARLESTON AND QBEB37YILLS.
?ti t?uua ir ?inn BATVO ai? m?ala enrontj.
Tra?na leave Spartanbnrg, A. AC division,
northbound, 7*8 sum.. BOT p.m., 6:18p. m..
iVeatibnlojLimltedl and 7rt? p. m.; south
bound 12:38 a. 8:15 p. m., 11:84 a. m., (Vesti
bule Umhad), aaa lOd?ia. m.
Trains leave Greenville. A. and OL di vial on,
northbound-CrOU a. m., 2:84 p. m. and 5:22 p. m.,
1 Vest?bulo Limited), and 6:16 p. m.: south
tbound. 1:80 a. ra..4:80p. m., 12:30p. m. (Vest?
bulo Limited), and ll :15 a. m.
Trains 15 and 16-PuSlman Sleeping" Cara
between Charleston and Columbia; road* foi
oocupancy at both points at 9 -Jia p. m.
Elegant Pullman Drawing-Boom Bleeping
Oars between Savannah and Asheville enron te
daily between Jacksonville and Cincinnati.
IBANK a GANNON. & H. HAHDWICK,
J Third V-P. ?f Gen. Mgr., Gen. Pas. Agent,
NOTICE.
IL'., let to the lowest rmponalbl?
Vw bidder on Friday, ibe 28ih day
June, at 10 o'clock a. zu., the building or
repair IUK Bridge over Bia; Brushy
? reek, at the * Poll Toney'r place, ?
Bruahy Creek Township. Alan, tho
building or repalriDg of a bridge over
BiR Bruahy Creek, near the residence of
J. W. Roaatnoad, In Brushy Greek TOWQ.
Bhtp. Reserving tho right to acceptor
reject euy or all bids.
J. N. VANDIVER
Go. Sopervlaoi ?. c.
June 5,1901 60_3
CHARLESTON AND WESTERN
CAROLINA RAILWAY
AUGUSTA AKUAHUEVULEBHOUr LIM?
?O effect Januf ry nth, 1801.
?JT Augusta-.M. fl 49 am 8 81 OK
ArGreenwood...i.. 1216 am."
Ar Anderdon.-. 8 OU B?
Ar Laurens.~..?. 120 pm 5 M aa
Ar Green rille........ .. 8 00 pm ll M am
Ar Glenn Spring!...-..
Ar Bpart anburg.... ?. 8 10 pm 9IW?
Ar Balada..~-. 6 SS pm .^
Ar HendersonTille.9QZ pm.
A? ??uiiT?im.......... | 7 15 pm|..^
LT Asheville.I.-.i 8 20 am .,7T
LT i-partanburg. ! ll 45 am 8 55 pa
LT Glenn Springs.110 00 am.
LT GreenTlllo.MMW?w,.I Ul 01 pm 8 25 pa
Lr Laurena.-.-- J 18? ya 7:Spia
LT Anderson. . 7 20 &M
LT Greenwood.j 2 87 pm._
Ar Augusta.?>..1 6 10 pm ll 40 aro
LT Anderson..
Ar Elberton?.
Ar Athens.
Ar Atlanta....,
7 25 am.MMw,
1 80 pm!.'
2 23 pul.
4 85 pm I.I
LT Anderson.
Ar Augusta..........
Ar Fort Boyal..".,
Ar Beaufort.....
Ar Charleston (Sou)....
Ar Havannah (Plant).
7 25 am
ll 40 am
7 00 pm
6 50 pm
8 00 pm
8 15 pm
Close connection at Calhoun Falls for all points
on 8. A. L. Ballway, and at Spartanbuig for Sou.
Ballway.
For any Information relativo to tickets, ot
schedule!, etc., address
_W. J. CRAIG, Gon. Pass. Axent.Augusu.Oa
'i*, m. smeraou .Tramo Manager.
J. Beeso Faut, Agent, Anderson. 9. C.
Blue Ridge Railroad. "
H. C. BEATTIE, Receiver
Effective September 20,1900.
WESTBOUND.
Dally
Pass.
No. No. ll.
S ?Anderson.Lv 3 85 pm
F I lion ver. 345 pm
F t Au tau. 3 60 pm
8 ?Pendleton. 3 65 pm
tCherry Crossing.. 4 00 pm
F f Adama Crossing.. 4 04 pm
S j *Seneca.415 pm
S Weat Union -4 45 pm
S o Walhalla.Ar 4 50 pm
EA8TBOUND.
Dally
Mixed.
No No. 6.
34 ?Walhalla.Lvl2 00 pm
32 ?West Union.1207 pm
21? { Seneca.{1?$P?
18 t Adamo Crossing.. 3 13 pm
16 -^Cherry's Crossing 3 20 pm
13 ?Pendleton.-..{ 11| P?
10 fAutun. 4 08 pm
7 -(-Denver.417 pm
0 ?Anderson.Ar 4.44 pm
(.) Regular station ; (f) Flag station.
Will also stop at the following station,
to take on or let off passengers : Phln>
neve, Jampa' and Sandy Springs;
No. 12 connects with Southern Railway
No. 6 at Anderson.
No. ll connecta with Southern Railway
NT. ll and 38 at Seneca.
No. 6 connects with Southern Railway
No. 58 at Anderson, also with Nos. 12 and
37 at Seneca.
J R. ANDERSON. Supt.
Dalli
Mixf-d.
No. 5.
8 00 cm
8 27 ara
8 38 ara
8 49 am
9 00 am
9 07 am
?9 30 am
19 50 am
10 20 um
10 27 am
Daily
Pass,
No. 12.
910 am
916 am
940 sm
9 48 am
9 53 am
10 01 am
10C ?rn
101b a
10 40 .?
.LIMITED
B.OUBLEMIH
SERVICE
TO ALL POINTS
North, South and Southwest,
fcCHEDULE IN EFFECT NOV. 5th. 1899.
SOUTHBOUND
No. 408. ' No.il.
LT New York, Tia Puan B, B.*ll 00 am ?9 00 pa
LT Washington, 5 00 pm 4 80 sm
LT Blchmond, A. C. L.??? 9 00 pm 9 05sa
LT Portsmouth, 8 A.L..
Ar Weldon, . '*
Ar Henderson, "
AT> Ko lo I gh, via H. A. L"
Ar Southern Pines " _
ArB^iu.el " -
. 8 45 pm 9 20ta
.. ll 10pm*ll 48 sa
1266am 1 Mps
. 2 22am 8 83pm
,4 27 am 6 00?m
. 5 14am 7 OOpa
LT Wilmington
.3 05 po
Ar Monroe.
Ar Chnrlotto,
.6 63am ?9 12pa
.8 00 am ?10 Ka?
Ar Cheater,
Ar Greenwood
Ar Athens,
Ar Atlanta,
.... *8 18 am ?10 55 pa
?i 10 45am 1 Usa
.... 1 24 pm 8 48 sis
_8 60 pm 6 Uta
NORTHBOUND.
. KA. 402. No. SS.
LT Atlanta, S. A- L.... ?1 00 pm ?3 50 pa
ar Athens, " .M. 8 08pm ll 05pi
Ar Greenwood, ". 6 40 pu 1 48 sa
ar Chester, 8.A.L ......... 7 68 pm 4 08sa
Ar Monroe,_" 9 80 pm 5 45 sa
LT jj harlotta. " ~.*8 20 pm ?5 OOja
Ar Hamlet,_" ?..?ll 10 pm ?7 48 sa
Ar Wilmington " ._?12 05 pa
Ar Southern Pines, 5 ......... ?12 02 am ?9 00 sa
Ar Raleigh, ". 2 08 am ll 1> sa
Ar Henderson " ......... 8 26 am 12 45 pa
Ar Weldon, " ........... 4 55 am 2 60 pa
Ar Portsmouth 8. A. L._. 7 25 am_5 20pn
Ar Richmond A~C.~L....e8 15 am *7 20 pc
Ar Washington, Penn. H. H..... 12 81pm ll 20pa
Ar New York, " ......... *6 28 pm .85Ssa
?Daily. tPally.Rx. Sunday.
Noa. 403 and 402 '.Tba Atlanta Special." Boll!
"Vestibuled Train, of Pullman Sleepers and Coses
ca between Washington and Atlanta, also Full
man Bleep*-* between Portsmouth and Chstlotte
NC
Nos.41anu '.'?The 8. A. L Express." Solil
Train, Coacbe <*-\d Pullman Sleepers botwets
Portsmouth and Atienta.
Both t rains makt. '??mediate connection st At
lanta for Mon tao i ti. ? oblle. New Orlons, Tes
as, California, MC??CX., yhatianooga, NtstavlBA
Memphis. Macon and Florida. '
For Ticket?, Sleepers, ato., aoply to _
G. McP. Batte, IMP. A, 28 Tryon r tx'" Cbsf
E. St John, Vlce-Presideo nd '. J. Mtn&ge*
V.L.MeBeo General Sn?or.?toi... .?nt.
U. W. B. Glorer, Trafflo Manager.
L. 8. Allan, Geni. Var-er.gnr Agent
General OfiBoara, Portsmouth, Va.
ATLANTIC COAST UM
TRAFFIC DBPAHTMBWr.
WILMINGTON. N. O., Jen. 13,19?
Fast Iii na Retveen Objtrloston and Ow
umbia and Upper South Carolins, ?OT?
Carolina. .
CONDENSED SCHEDULE.
~ ?NOe82. "
assam
aaa sag
978 am
U?0 pas
1217 pm
12 "3 pm
118 pm
185 pm
818pm
810 pm
718 am
980 pm
en pm
TH8pm
Lr"..,.."..Cnerlest3n_^.~~.Ar
LT.,-LAC ea.-Ar
LT"....~.,....8umter.............Ar
Ar.Columbia..L7
Ar.-Prosper! ty... ." .-Iyr
Ar^~...^Newberry.-LT
Ar.......-M.. dinton..,...... ".LT
Ar?._Laurens.^^...^^.TyT
Ar....GreenYillo...........LT
Ar.....?.8partanburg...~~..LT
Ar.vf tnn?boto. S. C......LT
Ar-. ...Charlotta, N. O.......LV
Ar-.Hend arson Tilla - H. G-LT
Ar?.Ash JtUlo, N. ....Lr
No^fc*,
?4SC
BSSP*
4 1?P?
84? pa
2 84!?
issps
ISS??
12 Ol sa
114*
1018
810
90S
80?
*N^ o?a_4(we?H? Trains between Chart'
andOotumblajB.O. _