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JEANNE! A thin, middle aged man'stood by - the look g{j?2swatching an approach ing boat, ile wa? dressed in country tlothes, but he lind not the air of a countryman. He was pale and liad a look of experience. Save for the regular sound of the sculls every thing was quite still. Save for the man at the lock gates and the soli tary occupant of the boat there was no one in sight. It was a wide, flat, desolate scene. "Hi! What are thc weeds like above the lock ?" "Very bad, sir." Thc answer was given in a serious, respectful voice. "Is there any place near here .where I could put up for the night?" "There is only a public houso, sir. I am the landlord of it. My name is Hill. 1 could give you a bedroom, a little rough perhaps, but" "Good! A bcd and supper-cap ital! That is the only bit of luck I've had today." As lie was speak ing tlie young man picked up n small knapsack which was lying in the stern of the boat and jumped out. He made the boat fast and joined the landlord on the tow path. "it is this way. You will let mo carry that for y ou,, sir." As they walked along thc brilliant young man-his name was Philip ?Vince-chatted freely. Ile was tak ing a holiday up the river and was .to have joined a friend at Nunni sham that night and then gone on with him the clay after. Ile told the landlord all this and also sur mised that Hill was not a native of the fen country. "No, sir," was the answer. "I .was VLlet to Sir Charles Sui mont. (You have perhaps heard of him." Philip had never heard of him, but said that he had. "When Sir Charles died, he left me a little money, and I married a maid who was then in Lady Sul mont's service. I bought this house .with a little assistance from her ladyship and settled here. I was very young then, and I have been here eighteen years." Philip gathered from further talk as they went along that Mrs. Hill was dead and that she had left one child, Jeanne, a girl of seventeen, who lived with lier father. When they reached thc inn, Hill showed Philip a bedroom, a large, comfort able room, and began io make some apology about supper. They very rarely had any one staying in the house, and there was nothing left but- Here Philip interrupted: "You would be doing me a kind ness if you would let mo have sup }ier with you and your daughter. I late solitude. I mean if your-if Mi?s Hill wouldn't object." "If you really wish it, sir, I should be very pleased. So also, I am sure, would Jeanne." Hill was a .born valet. He had the manner. If he had lived out of service for a hundred years, he would have been a valet still. When Hill left him, .Philip looked around thc room and congratulated himself. Everything was very neat and clean. The land lord was a capital fellow, a little solemn, perhaps, but still a capital fellow. This was far above the ac commodation which he had expect ed. Just then a light footfall came up the stairs, and Philip caught a snatch of a French song. Thc song stopped short just before the foot fall passed his door. Philip conjec tured that this must be the daugh ter and that it had been n French maid that Hill had married; hence the name Jeanne and that snatch of song; also that the daughter had been warned of his arrival und had gone to put on her prettiest dress, .All of these conjectures were quite correct. And yet when Jeanne en tered the sitting room a few min utes afterward and saw Philip foi the first time she was so startled that 6hc showed it slightly. Philip was also a little surprised, for a dif ferent reason and did not show il at all. He had thought of thc possi bility that Jeanne might be pretty and she was a beauty, a brunette childlike in many ways, but with f woman's eyes. Her voice was good and her first words showed that sin had some education. It took her about ten minutes t( get from decided shyness to com plete confidence. Philip was feel ing far too good tempered to le any one be shy with him. He mad? .Hill and his daughter talk, and h< talked freely himself. He liked th< simplicity of everything about him ?He had grown tired of foro>~i;tie: in London. He liked cold beef ant salad, for he was very hungry, an< -?yes, above all, he liked Jeanne jWhat on earth were that face an< fthat manner doing in a riversid .inn? She was perfect. She did no apologize too much, did not get ilur rie?:, did not have red hands, spok< correctly, laughed charmingly-in i wc rd. was bewitching. Really, h< was glad that he had been prevent cd from going on to Nunnisham Toward tho ?.!:.! <:i .-upper he dis covered that she was wearing ? white dre with forgetmcnois in it Thc taine was cleared by a nativt servant, who seemed all red cheek; and new boots. Hill went oft t<> su ?icrmtcnd thc business of thc inn 'hilip wJs loft alone with Joanne Shc told him to smoke, and ho w:v ooodient. ile al50 liisu?o her li.*!! lum other Illing. Vos, she had been to school .'it Xunnisliuin; rather too good a school fur her, sin; was afraid, but her mother had wished it. Her motlier had taught lier French ami a little music. Music and drawing were the best things, she thought, Lut she liked some books. She owned that it was lonely at the inn. "I am glad you came," she confess ed frankly. "Jeanne," said Philip, "I heard you humming a line or two of 'Ja dis' befor^ supper, didn't I? I wish you would sing it to mc." She agreed at once, crossing thc room to a little cottage piano, rather a worn out instrument, hut still a piano. The melody, plaintive, gentle, child ish, of Jeanne's sweet voice and the sadness of thc words, widfc their quaint, pensive refrain, did not miss their effect For nothing further hore I burn; A Joy once lout cannot return. My henri askfl only to ho blessed With an everlasting rest. Ile thanked her. Ile had liked that very much. "Why," he asked, "were you startled when you saw me?" "Because yon are a dream come true. I saw your face in a dream Inst night as clearly as I eec you now. All this time 1 have been feel ing as if I had known you before." "Really?" lie said. He had not quite believed it. "How many things come true! One says things about tiie shortness of time or thc certainty of death so often that they lose all meaning. Then, when one grows old or lies dying, the pla tr itudes get to have terrible force; they come true." She was struck by that. She kept her eyes fixed on his, and he kept on talking to her. Ho did not as the time wore on always mean quite so much ns he said, and she meant much more than she said. That is a common difference between a man and a woman on such occasions. It seemed to her that now for the first time she really lived. After Jeanne had said good night Philip hnd some chat with her fa ther about her. "I expect that she will be engag ed very soon, sir," he said. "A young man called Banks-William Banks-is anxious and has spoken to mc, and she likes him." "Now, I wonder," thought Philip as he went upstairs, "why she never even hinted that to me. M-ves, I see." Next morning after breakfast he went away, taking w;th him a few forgctmcnots, a pleasant memory and just the faintest possible feel ing of remorse. They all faded. Jeanne had seemed so quiet and depressed of late that her father, in order to cheer her up, had invited Mr. William Banks to spend tho evening. Mr. Banks wn9 a small shopkeep er in Nunnisliam and considered to he no mean wag hy those who knew him. Yet he felt unable to cheer her up. "Supposing we had a hit of a toon, Jenny," he suggested at last. She was quito docile. She played one thing after another. Suddenly she began "Jadis." "I don*t understand French my self," Mr. Banks remarked, "but thc words of a song don't matter." She had never thought much about the words herself before. But now Since no more his love I be Nothing further pleases me. Her voice faltered a little, "but sba sang on to the end of the verser My heart asks only to be blessed With an everlasting rest. Yes, the song had "come true." Just there she gave way and began to cry a little. A week afterward Mr. Banks an nounced that his attentions to Miss nill were at an end. Some Swift Fish. Recent experiments show that the dolphin, when pursued, can go through the water at the rate of about thirty-two miles an hour. This is great speed, but for r. short distance the salmon can do better, since it has frequently been known to swim at the rate of forty miles an hour. Among thc smaller fish it is doubtful if there is one which is more swift than the Spanish mack erel. As a rule, however, all those fish which prey on others are re markably swift, which is only nat ural, as if they lacked speed they would be unable to hunt successful ly for prey and would often be obliged to go hungry. - Measure a niau by hi* everyday conduct rather than by his extraor dinary exertions. - Unless a mun is sttisfiud with himself he is not iu the self-iuale class. - Every wonna knn?* H?H-'H a coquette, but she doesn't think others suspect it. - It take* a flood woman t?? muk?? a a bad woman hut** her Only 50 Cents to make your baby strong and weil. A fifty cent bottle of Scott's Emulsion will change a sickly baby to a plump, romping child. Only one cent a day, think ofit. Its as nice as cream. Send fora free sample, and try lt. SCOTT & noWNK, Chemists, 409-415 Pearl Street, New York. Soc. and $i.oo; all druggists. ICE Rapid Progress In the .Manufacturing Industry. Washington, May 28.-Few Ameri can industries are so extraordinary in their charaoter or make a more sur prising exhibit of progress in the last decade than thc manufacture of ice. Here is a commodity of which nearly two-thirds of the cost of production is in coal, about one-tenth is ara monia, and practically none in anything which actually enters into the pro duct. Often a natural spring is secur ed in connection with an ice factory; but this must be largely for advertis ing purposes, since in making "can ice"-the usual process-any water must necessarily bc distilled or the ice would be opaque. Thc artificial ice business started in New Orleans in I860, and has been steadily moving northward, till to-day thc country may bc divided into three zones, manufactured icc monopolizing the Southern and natural ice the northern, while in the middle zono the two arc -in vigorous competi tion. The census shows that tho range of competition is moving north ward ;J ten years ago the distinctly Southern States had 75 per cent of thc manufactured icc plants in opera tion in the eountry; to-day they have only 4'J per cent. Thc relative merits of the two pro ducts differ about as much as cane and beet sugar, butter and oleomar garine, in thc experience of most housekeepers. That artificial ice is increasing in its staying qualities is probable, in view of the constant im provements in the process. Its manu facturers already claim that it is fully equal io this respeot to natural ice, but that they have secured the trade of finn packers and other critical buy ers of ice in the competitive zone may be doubted. On the other hand, manufactured ice possesses an obvious advantage in purity, since a distilled water product is the purest thing pos sible. The surprising growth of the artifi cial industry puts to blush the ac counts of manufacturing progress under a new protective tariff. Its infant start was made against the greatest of natural odds; but by the progressive display of our native ingenuity it has now reached the stage whero it em ploys thousands of men and millions of capital, and, what is vastly more iinportant, has opened the way for the development, in tho South and on thc Pacific coast, of many industries which were impossible before. Americans are great consumers of ice; it is a luxury in almost every other part of the globe. The city, in distinction from the rural districts, is also a great consumer of ice tho year around, due doubtless to the complete warming of the mode* .1 house and apartment. In old times many rooms in every house were unheated in the winter, and these furnished a natural cold chest for butter and other things perishable that needed to be kept cool, just as the msrketman usually has a heated office in winter time for his own convenience, but lets his supply benches remain in the natural temperature. In the country, and especially in the South, thc people hive long habituated themselves to use wolla and oaves for refrigerators. Because of the high price of the Maine produce in the inland towns of tho South, after long railroad hauls from the seaboard and perhaps further conveyance over rough country rc?Js, ice has been used there with great frugality until the coming of the arti ficial product. This will in time make the South as great a user of ice as the North, since the climato makes a longer demand for it. In 1870 all four of the artificial ice establishments reported were io the Southern States, and the same is true of nearly all of the thirty-five plants returned for the census of 1880. Be tween 1SD0 and 1900, although tho number of establishments increased remarkably throughout the South, tho greatest and most striking increase occurred in such Middle and Central Stales as Pennsylvania, Indiana, New York, and Ohio. Not one of these reported fewer than forty ice manu facturing plants, and in Pennsylvania the number reached seventy three. This remarkable growth of the indus try in the North is largely aooounted for by the perfection of the refrigerat ing machines and general economies which enable artificial ice to be pro duced so as to oompete successfully with the natural product. Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachu setts, Michigan, Minnesota, Wiscon sin, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Idaho, Montana and Ne vada reported no ice manufacturing establishments. Thc production of cold by artificial means began in the warmer olimates, especially in India, China and Egypt -where ice and snow were not avail able. It was early discovered that porous receptacles would keep the contents cooler than nonporous. In Kgypt and East India the vessels con taining thc water to be frozen were covered with stalks of corn or sugar t-ano References aro fou >d in tho works of many ancient authors^ indi eating that some of the princip!ca uf artitieial refrigeration were understood by the Greeks aud practiced by them in cooling wine, water and various other driuks. The Egyptians were accustomed to allow jars of boiling water to remain on the house roofs over night, and in the morning mois ten them with water on the outside, bind them with grass or plants, and put them in trenches. The discovery of the principle that hot water expos ed to the air is susceptible of greater evaporation than cold is generally as cribed to Nero, although Aristotle re lates that, if it was desired to cool water suddenly, it was customary to expose it first t o the sun's rays. It is believed that salt-peter for refriger ating purposes was first ueed by the Italians in 1550. The liquid to be cooled was put into a little neoked bottle, which wa? immersed in a re ceptable filled with cold water. Salt peter was then added to the water of the outer vessel, and thc bottle con taining the liquid to be cooled was twirled on its axis like a modern ice cream freezer. The beginning of the natural ice industry in the United State? d*tea back to 1805. The pioneer was Fred erick Tudor, of Boston, who in that year shipped a cargo of 130 tons of ice to the West Indies. Although the venture resulted in a loss, the cargo arrived at its destination in excellent condition. Two years later he sent 240 tons to Havana, but ibis was likewise unprofitable. About the year 1812, he waB granted by Great Britain a monopoly of the ice trade with her colonies in the West Indies, and later received the same concession from Spain. From 1817 to 1820 he extended the trade to Charleston, Savannah, and New Orleans. His ultimate success prompted competi tors to enter the field as exporters. The growth in the exports of ice in creased steadily until about 1870. After this date they steadily decreas ed, until, in the year 1900, the num ber of tons exported was so insignifi cant that the foreign trade io ice may now be considered practically extinct. Tho growth of the domestic trade was simultaneous with the early in crease in the export trade. It has been impossible to obtain d ita relative to the production of the entire coun try, but some indication of the extent of the industry may be derived from tho quantity of ice harvested in Maine and on the Hudson River. Although these are the greatest harvesting re gions of the country their annual pro duct probably does not represent much more than half the ice harvest of the United States. The capacity of Hudson River ice houses now reach es 2,215,970 tons. Efforts have been made to get esti mates of the consumption of natural ice in the great cities. In New York the annual consumption of ice is be lieved to be about 5,000,000 tons. If this figure \B approximately correct, the manufactured ice consumed during the census year amounted to 8.2 per cent of the total consumption. Cen sus office correspondence with several of the leading ice manufacturers in dicates that the average cost of pro duction was approximately $1.50 per toa, au? the average wholesale price $2; while the average retail price var ied from fifteen to thirty cents a hun dred pounds, according to the season of the year. In Philadelphia, the an nual consumption of ice was estimated at from 1,000,000 to 1,600,000 tons, 342,602 tons of whieh was represented by the local production of manufac tured ice. In Sah Francisco from 10,000 to 15,000 tons of natural ice wat? used, brought from the Sierra Nevada Mountains, but owing to cli matic conditions, the consumption there is much smaller than in Eastern cities of like size. Sometime before the natural ice industry beoame a factor of commer mereial importance, attempts had "lat tito GOLD OUST Are you a ciavt GOLD has done more than anything el back-breaking burdens of tho 1 about the house-pots, pans, dish time, money and worry. Made only by THE N. K. Chicago. New York. Boston. St I beet) wade to produce ice by abstract- : iug the latent heat from water by arti- \ ficial meaos. The first ruachiue for ! thc manufacture of ice was invented ! in 1755, by Dr. William Cullon, and ! was based *?o the principle that the j creation of a vacuum increases the ? evaporation of water, and by thia means produces ice. Prof. A. C. Twining, of New Haven, Conn., took outs patent foran ice j machine in England in 1850, and in the United States in 1853. In 1855 j he operated a machine in Cleveland, Ohio, which produced over 1,600 pounds of ice in twenty-four hours, and was operated intermittently until 1857. In the infancy of the industry the ice was opaque, sod it was not until about 1868 that transparent ice was made by the use of distilled water. Capt. David Smith, of Chatham, Mass., was the originator of the plate ice system. He erected in Oakland, Cal., the first machine of this char acter. The United States patent office, up to January 1, 1902, has issued 4,337 patents for various processes of re frigeration. Of this number 681 are for the manufacture of ice machines. -New York Evening Post. CASTOR IA For Infants an Children. Hie Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of - A woman never wants to forget her first love; she never wants to re member her last. To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab lets. All druggists refund the mone if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove'y signature on every box. 25c. . - Man has very little use for ad vice that doesn't confirm his own opin ion. For biliousness use Chamberlain's Stomach & Liver Tablets. They cleense the stomach and regulate the liver and bowels, eftYctiug a quiok and permanent cure. For sale- by Orr Gray & Co. - Honesty is the best policy for the man you are honest with. Stops the^ Cough and Works off the Cold. Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets cure a cold in one day. No cure, No Pay. Price 25 cents. - - There is no use in trying to love any woman by a fixed rule. WHEN BABY IS COMING USE Mother's Friend. Woman'? greatest dream cf beauty and plo ry is when natnre has chosen her to become a mother. Bvery faculty is keenly alert and her nature tbe finest aa she fore sees the joy, the ambition, the success and the life-long satisfaction coming, coming nearer, day by day, in the dear and innocent being so soon to seo light, and the very uncertainty whether she shall see a sweet girl face or a bravo boy face beside her on the pillow, adds zest to her expectancy. Then, if ever, she should take caro of her physical, mental and moral health. MOTHER'S FRIEND applied externally throughout pregnancy win relieve the pain of parturition, and no mother and child can fail to be healthy, hearty, strong, clear com plexioned, pure blooded, calm nerved and cheerful in disposition, who are mutually influenced for months by the continued use of Mother's Friend. Of druggists 01.00 Our treatise "Motherhood" mailed Cree. THC BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO. ATLANTA, GA. twins cfo your woe*kmff > to housework 9 OUST so to emancipate women from the household. It cleans everything os, clothes and woodwork. Saves FAIRBANK COMPANY, jouis.-Makers ol OVAL FAIRY SOAP. "Let tho GOLD DUST D. ?. VAN DIVER. V?ND?VE M ER r EH BIG LINE SAMPLE SHOES JUST IN kT GREAT B STAPLE LINE DRY GOODS AT RIGHT PRICES. We can make you the CHE APES Flour, Bacon, Bice. Coffee ai Your trade is appreciated. OUR NEW TIRE SETTEE CAN tighten your Tires while they are cold without taking them ott' wheels or taking out bolts. Leave the wheels in perfect shape and dish just right. Can do the work in one ! third time it requires the old way. i Don't wait 'till your wheels are ruin ? ed. Bring them on and see how nice ly we can do the work. PAUL E. STEPHENS. THE STATE OF SJUTH CAROLINA, C?UHT* ?>r ANDZBSON. COURT OK C OMMON PLEAS. Geo. O. Teeny, Plaintiff, against Anderson Water, Light and Power Co, a body corporate under the laws of the t? tate of bomb Carolina, The State Trait Co, a body corporate under the law? of tho ti tato uf New York, and Tho Morton Trott Co., a body corporate under the laws of the State of Mew York, Defendants.-Summon! for Kellef-Complaint Served. To th* Defendants above named : ; YOU ?rs hereby summoned and required to an swer the Complaint in this action, of which a copy is herewith served opon yon. and to serve acopyof your answer to tho mud Complaint on the subscribers at their o Ul co, ?7 Broad Street, Charleston, S. C., within twenty days after thu service hereof, exclusiva of the day of such ser vice ; and If yon fail to answer tho Complaint within the um? ufnr^Hid, the FlaintuTin thia sciiuu wai apply to tho Court for tbo relief de ni a il a id in tho Complaint, l/altd alar 9th, A. V., iaJ2. MORDECAI A OADSDEN, DUNHAM & WA?UINS, QUATTJblibAUM A COCHRAN, PiatntUTs Attorneys. To the Defendants The State Trust Company, a body corporate under the laws of the State of New York, and Thu Morton Trust Company, a body corparate under the laws of toe State of New York : Please take notice that the ???II?LUS and Com plaint herein has been this day Mied In the office of tho clerk ol the Court of Commou Pleas and General Sessions of Anderson County, S. C., and that the object of said action lathe euiorcemeut of a Mechanics Lien on the property of the D? tendant, Anderson Water, Light aud Power Co. MORDECAI Oe GADSDEN, HON ii AM * WATKINS. CIUATTLEBAUM A COCHRAN, PlaiiilllT.- Attorneys, [? KAL ] JOHN C. WATKINS, e. c. P. A o. ?. May *>tb, 1902._47_G_ NOTICE ! WE, tbe undersigned, have opened up Shops nt the old sUud ur W. M. Wallace ou Church Street, Weat of thu Jail, fur the purpose of dolug Woodwork and Blacksiiiilhtog, Repairing Boggie?, Wag ona, &c, la ?ll lt? branches. Alt worn guaranteed to be ?rst-clas*. W. M. WALLACE, R. T. GOROO?. Feb 19, 1902_85_ s iiSR 1 RAILWAY. C?a, ??linea sclieilultt in ISffeot June 00th, HOI. _ Daily" No. IL STATIONS. LT. Charleston. ll OJ P m " Summerville.... 12 iw n't Branchville. 2 OU a ra .* OrmiKelmrg. 2 45 st in " Ringville.<j 4 05 ? m l>v. Savannah. 12 CO ? m " Barnwell. 4 18 a ra " BlackviUe.._*JL*_5* '. '?v. Cc lumbla.. SOU a rh " Prosperity. 7 14 a m . M Newberry. 7 80 am " Ninety-Six.. 8 80 a m M Greenwood.. 8 CO a m Ar. Hodges... fl 15 a m LT. Abberr?le.. 8 88 a ra ' Ax. Belton...7. 10 10 a ra LT. Anderson..TT S 40 a m Ar.QrejanTUIe. ..^. ll SO a ra j?f. Atlant*. ( Pen .Time) I S 65 p m STATIONS. ^fTj. LT. Greenvale,. 0 SO p m " Piedmont. a CO p ra " Wllllamgton. 7 12 p ra Ar. Andftrrson. 8 16 p ni LT. Belton ... 7 85pm Ar. Donalds^. . 8 OB p ra Ar. Abbeville. .77. 0 OS y ra LT. Hodges. 8 20 p ra Ar. Greenwood. 8 50 p m * Ninety-Six. 9 10 p ra a Newberry. 10 15 p m - Pro ?peri ty... 10 83 p m ? Colombia. ll 60 p ra Ar. Blackville.... 2 52 a m " Barnwell. 8 OT ara " Savannah. 4 60 a m LT. Klnavirto. 2 82 a m| " Orangeburg. 8 45 a m ? BranchvUle. 4 25 a m Sammerville.i 6 67 a ra Ar. Charleston.I 7 00 a ra Daily No. 15. 7 00 a m 7 41 a na B 00 a ra fl 28 a m IQ 24 a m 12 80 a m 4 18 a m 4 2S a m U 80 om 12 20 n'n 12 86 p in 1 80 p m 2 06 p m J 26 p nt 1 45 p ra 830 p m S 46 p rn 4 25 p ra: SOO p m Dally NoTa. 040 a m 10 06 a ra 10 26 a m ll 16 a ra 10 46 a m 11 10 a m 18 Ol n'n ll SS a ra ll 60 a m 1306 p si 110 p ra 1 24 p ra 2 40 p m til a m 80? a m 4 60 a ra LT. Ringville. 2 82am 8 40 p m " Orangeburg. 8 45am 4 43 p m " Branchville. 425am 526pm Bnmmerrille. 6 67 a ra C 42 p m Ax. Charleston. 7 00 a ra 780pm feSl^g STATIONS. l^S 11 00p 7 Wa Lv..Charleston..Ar 7 80 p 7 00a 12 OOn 7 41a " Sommerville " 6 42p 6 67 a 8*00a 0 00a " .Branchville. ?' 5 25p 4 26a 8 46 a 9 28 a " Orangcbttrg " 4 43p 8 45a ? 05 a 10 24 a " . mn-rVillo . " 3 46p 2 82a fi 80a7.7..7. LT..savannah..Ar. 4 60a 4 13 n. ?..Barnwell.'." . S 07 a ?es a. " ..Blockvlllo.. " . 8 62a 80a ll 80a " ..Columbia.. " 2 15p 9 80p 67 a 12 15p " ....Alston.... " 1 25p 8 60a SSa 1 23p " ...Eontuo... " 18 lip 7 46p 16a 2 69p ""..Union." 1187a T top 0 04a 8 22p ? ,.Jon**rtll?.. *' Ml jago G 49 ? 2 87p " .-pACOlet..- " ll ?. fdp IO 20 a 8 10p Ar?partanburgLv 10 85 a ? 15p IQ.85a 8 40p LTSpartanbnrgAx 10 28a S 00p 8 00p 7 15plAr..Aaharmo..XT 7 08a 8 00p "P"p.m. "A" a m. "N" night. . DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE BETWEEN CHARLESTON AND GREENVILLE. Pullman palace sleoplng car? on **sJnsS5sss? CS, 37 and So, on A. andU division. Dining cat? on these trains servo all meals en route. Trains leave BpartanburR, A. & C. division, northbound, 0:58 a.m., 3:37 p.m.. 6:18p. m., (Vestibule Lirslted) and. 6:55 p. m.; oouth bound 12:20 a m., 6:15 p. m., 11:40 a. ra., (Vest? bulo Limited), and 10:8Oa. ra. Trains lem o Greenville, A. and C. division, northbound, 5.56a. m., 2:34 p. ra. and5:18p. m., (Vestibule Limited), and 5:55 p. ra.; south bound, 1.-25 a. m.,4:80 p. m., 12:40 p. m. (Vesti bule Limited), and ll -iso a. m. : Trains 15 and 10-Pullman Sleeping Oars between Charleston and Asheville.* Elegant Pullman Drawlng-Room Sleeping ?ra tKstween Savannah and Asheville en routs Liv between Jacksonville and Cincinnati. Trains 18 and 14 Pullman Parlor Oars be tween Charleston and AahoviUo. FRANK 8. GANNON, 8. H. HARDWICK, Third V-P. & ?en. Mgr., Gan. Pas. Agent, Woflihlngtorf. D. O. Washington, D, O. W. H. TAYLGE, It- W. HUNT, Aast. Gen. Pas. Art. _ Dir. Pas. A rt. Atlrmby Ga Charleston. B. O. th?fias do ymr v?i R BROS., Mill, ANDERSON. 8. C., AFBIL 9,190^ ' i fi < ARGAINS. T price ia this ceci ion on Molasses* Lard?, id Tobacco. V AND WER BROS. BREED CHiCKEHS A SPECIALTY ! : Barred Plymouth Rock. White Plymouth Rock. Silver Wyandottes. Brown Leghorns. Purity guaranteed. Eggs for sale. Carefully packed, for shipping. * L. S. MA.TT?SON, Anderson. 8. C. Jan 22,1902_31_6m E. 6. MC?DAM8, ATTORNEY ASM? LAW, AHDER80N, 8. C ?gf Office lo Judge of Probate's office 1 in tbe Court House. ' ] Feb 5,1902 S3 -:-a Notice of Final S?i&ement .THE undersigned, Administrator of Eatoto J. H. Simpson, deceased, hereby Slves notice that be will on the 19& ny" of J noe, 1002, apply to the Judge of Probate for Anderson County S.O., for a Final Settlement of said Eal tate, and a discharge from bis office ai Administrator. W. A. SIMPSON, Adm'r. May 21,1902 48 ~ ^ to write for oar oonfldenttal lettev. before ap. plying for patent: lt may be werta Boosey. We promptly obtain U. 8. and Foreign : PATENTS TI R^^a^orney^?iee? 'fend modsl, 5?-tch or photo una wo Beni an IMMEDIATE PRE ii report on patentability. Wo give the boil legal Berrico and advice, Sad oar charges are moderate. Try us. SWIFT & CO., Patent Lmwywrn, Opp. U.S. Patent Offlce,WashlDotoB, D.C. BANNER SA LVsj th? most healing salvo In th? world. CHARLESTON AMD WESTERN CAROLINA RAILWAY AUGUSTA AN SJ ASHEVILLE ?BOUT L1HD li effect Apr. 13th, 1902 L* Augusta-., Ar Greenwood?.....?, Ar And orson., Az Laurene., Ar G rte n ville. Ar Glenn Bprings?....? Ar Bpartanburg..... Ar Balada.. Ar HonderBonvllle..... Ar AnnoviUo..., Lr Anh ovillo. LT esariisbsrg.?... LT Glenn Springs.. LT Grfc'.n villo........ LT Laurens. LT Anderson...... LT Greenwood....... Ar Augusta.. 795 pr 12 IS pm USS pm 307 pm 3 07 pm I S 40 pm US8 if:SS am. LT Anderaon........... Ar Elberton-. Ar Athena............... Ar Atlanta......... 7 SS am 1 62 pm 2 83 pm 4 55 pm LT AndorsoD.............. Ar Angosta.flg,,.,.. Ar Port ?oyal... Ar Beaufort................ Ar Charleston (Son).... Ar Savannah (Cofgft).. 7 SS am ll SS am 8 66 pm 8 49 pm 7 8? pm 8 lo pm Closo connection nt Calhoun falls for all pola?) on8. A. L. Eallwoy, and at Spartanbuig for Bon. Ballway. For say Information relativo te. tick eta, et schedule ?, otc., address W. J. CRAIG, Gon. Pasa. Agent, Angaoti.Go: T. M. Bninraon. Trafil? Manager. J. Reese F*nt, Agent, Anderson, 8.0._ Blue Ridge Railroad. Effective April 6,1903. EASTBOUND. STATIONS. LT Walhalla.... " Beneei. " Cherry..... u Pendleton? *' Anion. '. Denver. " Anderson. Ar Belton No.l SUD. only No. 0 Dslly Ex. San. P. M. 7 45 8 Ol ere. s Daily Ex. Bon. Ko 12 Dally A. M. I P. M. If M. 2 CO ......... 8 00 8 08 8 26 8 61 4 ll 4 23 4 83 f7 03 I 7 80 3 48 S 10 k.M. 800 825 8 67 8 47 8 05 9 02 8 09 9 80 V tau l BOUND. 8TATIONB. Ko 8 Daily bo. ft Dilly Ex. Sun. iKo.ll Dally ISnn* i LT Belton?.... " Anderson...... fl Oonvcr. " Autuo. " Pendleton^... " Cherry......?., .* Seneca.... "., Ar Walhalla_j.. | ....^| 1 35pl....~~.{ . S Sj Will e Ho nop st the following attttone T?J**? on and let 08 passeneers : PhlnneyJ?, Jame?. San dy Springo, west Anderson, Aoans,??oMasla Junction J. B. AwDEBSOW, H. C BEATTIE. Superintendent. President. _ : ;? ?, ATLANTIC COAST TBAPVZO DBPARTMSftT. < WILMINGTON. N. C., Jen, 13, l?& Fast Ll ne Between Charleston sad W nm bl a and Upper Bot?? h Carol In 5, mOx-w . Carolina. .? _ CONDENSED SCHEDULE. . ?OING WE8T. OOIHG K?BT .No^ 52. _No. 6?. 625am j -Charleston.??.Ar 8Myst 8 02 am Lt--Lanes?.-Ar 8 48 ps? 0 28 am I LT-?_?tunt?r.??.?~...Ar 6 85 p? 11 00 pm Ar.....-OelumMa?-?.LT 415 pa 12 ?7 pm Ar-Prosperity-LT 3 48 pm 12 0 pm Ar.Newberry.?..LT 3 84 pas 118 pm Ar-..- Clinton-... LT |S8sm 186pm Ar..?Lavnnu-?"* ,2 J? 22 8 10pm Ar.-Greenvale-....--Lr 1201am 8 JO pm Ar.8partanbnrg."?^..LT U 718pm Ar.Winnsboro. rf. C.LT 3018am ? 30 pm Ar.... .Charlotte. N. C.LT 8 Waa 6 ll pm Ar..Hondersonvlllo,N. 0?LT 0 02am 7 15 pm Ar.-AshoTlHe.W.0-LT 8 00am P. 51 8 SS 8 es k- M. 0 00 9 23 A. M. 10*00 10 27 10 87 IS 47 1103 lt Ol issi A. M. 10 60 11 IS P. M 8 20 845 8 69 405 4 ll 4 18 iii 440 Nox e2 and 88 Solid Trains betwooa Gavrlcs'.on .?dOoJnmW.s.S.C. . H M ^ ^ ..t-ti'l. PaMonrjr Ar nt. 3 B. K wwi KT, IGJ ne ?1 Mau* mt . *?. RrsaasoiO ?fe Canuse .