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Some Good Stories Told in Washington. Hear Admiral Schley was telling stories at the Richmond hotel a few daysjago, and, perhaps naturally, came around to the .subject of courts of inquiry. He said that during the civil war a court was eonvencd to try a man for desertion, Sohiey, then a lieutenant, was one of the members of the court. When everything was ready the judge advocate asked the defendant: ''Have you any objection to auy member of this court?" The accused man looked over the court, scrutinized each member close ly and then said: "Yes, sir. I object to the white-haired man at the end of the table." The officer objected to was the president of the court. The judge advocate inquired: ''I.'pon what ground do you object to this member of the court?" Without a moment's hesitation the defendant replied: UI don't like the honesty of his countenance." The court retired for consultation and upon returning to the room an nounced that objection was not sus tained. The judge advocate, turning to the accused, asked: '"Have you any objection to make to auy other member of the court?" lie looked gravely about him fora few minutes and then answered: "Yes, sir, I object to the whole incar nate court!" One of Washington's noted fisher men is Major "Hick" Sylvester, the superintendent of police for Washing ton and president of the National As sociation of Chiefs of Police. The major went fishing a few days ago and returned with a five-pound black bass which be sent to the presi dent with his compliments. Two of the major's mends heard of his catch and asked about it a few days later when they were fishing at the same place. They met a country boy and said: "Is there good fishing up here?" "Yep," replied the boy, "it's fair. Major Dick was up last week fishin'." "He caught a five-pound bass, I understand," observed one of the party, "and gave it to the president." "I dunno nothin' about his givin' it to the president," the boy said, "but grandpap caught the fish." "I promised an old negro iu Ten nessee ten years ago that I would do something for him when the time came, said Senator Cannaek, "and to-day he come around, having work ed his way here from Memphis, and reminded me of the promise, which I shall make good at once." "The colored brother has a longer and acuter memory than the white man," said Senator Vest. "Indeed ho has," put iu Senator Blackburn. "I remember of talking to an old darkey down in Kentucky some years ago woo claimed to remem ber George Washington. " 'I suppose you were with him when he crossed the Delaware,' I suggested. " 'Deed I was, hoes,' he replied. "I done poled the boat.' " 'And,' I said, thinking to teaze the old man, '1 suppose, also, you remember when he took a hack at the cherry tree?" "The old man scratched his head and thought for a minute. Thou he laughed gleefully. 'Deed, boss," he said, 4I jis done 'member that, too. I druv that hack mahself." John Allen, of Tupelo, relates this as his first experience in a haul" our ing the civil war: "A neighbor and I were behind a rail fence. All of a sudden be -aid to me: 'What do 1 -are about terri torial rights? 1 am a heap more ise at home than 1 am here.' lie started to get out and go home when a Yankee shell burst in front <>!' him tearing ip the ground. " 'John, he says, 'what chance have we got? There was enough stuff in that shell to kill forty im n anil they just tired t at you and nie." ?Washington cnrrespnnderiet! N Y. World. ? Merchant "What did that man want.'"' Clerk ? "Ii.- didn't seem tu know." Merchant-?"What was ho kicking about when he went out?" Clerk?"I suppose he was kicking be cause he didn't get it.' ? A curious faet shown by the census returns is that New York State's production of confectionery exceeds in value her production of iron and steel. ? When each player gets four of a kind it is certainly agr?ai deal. ? As girls grow older they think less of love and more of money. . Then the baby Is most like- E f ly nervous, and fretful, and j P doesn't gain in weight. i I Scott's Emulsion S S is the best food and'medicine g y for teething babies. ^They y s gain/from J I i 409-4 ?5 50c. nnd $1.00; t Reunion oi* Mother and Son. Bowling Green, <>., .June II.?A few days ago was terminated in this city a drama in real life which out rivals the most extravagant fiction. After twenty-seven years Mrs. Gree ley Ilarbaugh was reunited to a son, given away at his birth by heartless relatives, and for whom she has vain ly sought ever since. During most of the time the boy, under the name of the people to whom he wad been given has been residing in this vicinity, and has even passed his mother on the street without knowing her. In fort Wayne, Ind., when she was 11 years of age. Mrs. Ilarbaugh's mother died. The father married again soon after bis first wife's death, and the stepmother had anything but a tender feeling for tlie little ones left by the first wife. She found hom?-s for them and outjinto the world they went, the 11-year-old girl going to the home of a wealthy woman uauied Til bury, to work. A brother given away at that time, whose age was 0 months, has never been .-een nor heard of since, So her misfortunes began early in life and a relentless fn'e has followed. The Tilsbury's were very wealthy and possessed large estates Mrs. Tilsbury was a widow and a very aris tocratie woman, whose family honor was all in all to her. She had a son who possessed a romatic nature, a,nd he fell in love with the comely lass who worked for them, and, after an exciting courtship, the pair was se cretly married. Things went ou in this way until one day the mother be came aware that her son wan wedded to the servant, and a stormy scene ctihued. Tho girl, then but 10 years of age, was driven from the place and the clandestine marriage aunullcd by the boy's mother as both the children were under age and the ceremony was therefore not legal. The boy, true to his mother's wishes, abandoned the girl he had so ardently wooed, and the homeless girl was again adrift. .She went to the ho aie of friends, where her ohild wan born. lier father, learning her sad plight, sent for her, and sho went again to the home from which she had been driven, where she lay ill for a long time with typhoid fever. Her parents at that time were living in Whitehouse, O., and the stepmother, believing that the child would be a burden on her, as the mother seemed about to die, took it to Toledo, where she arranged for its adoption by a man named Jen kins, living in Wood County. The affair was completed and the lad, but & few weeks old, was given in charge of Jenkins, the peculiar condition be ing that no ono should ever know his real name, or his parents or birth place. The mother recovored and louged for her child. The stepmother would not make known his whereabouts and ivould say uo more than that he had a mod home. The heart-broken mother nade several trips to Toledo, with the rain hope that she would find some trace of the hoy, but all her efforts nailed nothing, lie was gone, and, is years passed, she began to believe :ie was dead. She married again and ived happily with her family here. The boy, when he became 10 years of ige, in some way became aware that ie was not the child of the peoplo vith whom he lived, and began a search for his mother. He by rccident ound a lctt;r written by the step nothcr to Jenkins concerning him, md he at once began au active hunt 'or his parents, lie wrote to every dace almost in the Union and his wanderings covered several Slates. Vs he grew older he acquired a fair ducation, by dint of much toil, and t length returned to his first home icar here, where he taught school, imv holding the responsible position if Superiut indent of the schools at ?ugar Kidge, u thriving village near iere. 11 e still sought for his mother ml learning that she at one time re ided at Whitehouse, ()., wrote to the Vistmastcr there, who looked the af air up lor him with the result that a e.v days ago he became positive his lothcr lived here. He at once came o see her, ami, after producing letters nd things, notable among which was picture which went with him when ic was a babe, Mrs. Harbaugh was onvinced that he was her long lost on, and her joy was unbounded.?St. jouis llepublio. Jim O Brleii s Epitaph. ;T suppose our Wesetrn country lift-r urnished more funny things thar^''*8 he rest of the world." rcmark/r^'* *H ressman l'ence, of Colorado* Con-I "In the course of a bp* ? ne Jim O Brien, a we/barroom broil eter, had his existenf-lkuown char irematurely. One of tJ ce terminated associates erected a wir'he dead man's lis grave on which heyoden slab over " 'Jim O'Brien depa\had written: it 9:30 a. m.' /rtcd for heaven "A loeal humorist ollowing: F appended the 'Heaven, 4:20 p. nl rot arrived. The worst- O'Brien not *.3 feared.' ? Tho fool waitcth et hot before striking?or tr|? iron to uy maketh the iron hot! hut the wise * ^Htjiking. The Lesson of u Tragedy. The moral of the escapade which re sulted in the death of a young woman at Good (?round a few days ago seems almost too obvious to draw. Vet no body who contemplates the growing carclessuess in manners and morals of young men and young women in decent society can fail to realize that the les sou is greatly needed. A recent mur der brought to light a most appalling account of the social condition among the sons and daughters of well to do and respectable families in the Bed ford region of Brooklyn, and must have awakened thousands of fathers and mothers toD late to a sense of duty. This latest tragedy is another indictment of the lack of training in the elements of good sense and good breeding by parents, from whom suc-h training might reasonably be expected. The victim in this instance was a young woman of respectable parentage and good social position. She was ap parently a fuu loviog. wilful, but not vicious girl. Vet she accepted for her elofe companions at a summer resort two young married men, one of whom was separated but not divoroed from his wife. Her mother disliked such companionship, and the evening before the tragedy told the man living apart from his wife that she did not approve of his relations with her daughter, only to have the daughter saucily re mark in the mother's presence that he could no with her as much as he pleased. Then she went riding with this man, and was about with the two, at hotels, in carriages or boats, till the middle of the night, while her mother was abed. Muring that night some thing mysterious happened. The girl and one man were accidentally drown ed or were murdered, and the other man has disappeared. There is in the newspaper accounts no hint of suspi cious against this girl's good charac ter, but her indiscretion, her reckless readiness t^ compromise herself, and the apparent inability of her parents to exercise wholesome influence upon her are as sadly conspicuous as we fear they are typical. Fathers and mothers who permit their girls to grow up so beyond their control, so ignorant or so indifferent to the requirements of womanly be havior,, have no cause for wonder if the result is death or moral ruin. The traditional freedom and naturalness of American social relations have a charm and a value when under proper train ing they are made to promote in both boys and girls mutual respect and un affected modesty. Doubtless, too, that unchaperoned companionship of young people which eo shocks foreign ers results for the most part in virtu ous affections and happy marriages. But this is something far different from the license and disregard of de corum which is becoming alarmingly prevalent, not among the lower orders in the social scale, but in families which are considered intelligent and well bred. The manners of young men have de generated. They will act and speak in the presence of women in a way that would not have been tolerated a generation ago, and young women who are unquestionably without evil intent will conduct themselves as no woman could have done a few years ago with out serious damage to her reputation. There is evidently ueed of a revival of the unfashionable art of bringing up children. Boys and girls are growing up to be lawless, hacking respect for authority and conventions, they easily lose respect for the virtues which au thority and conventions seek to guard. Laxity in homes and pchools, contact under unfavorable conditions of young men and women in business life, the rude, selfishness and bad manners of our crowded streets, shops and public conveyances, all tend to the destruc tion of that good breeding which com mands respect and nurtures modesty. ? New York Tribune. mm % mm Family Pride in Philadelphia. An up town reader tells of the '"break" made by a tot of the family who was one of a party of little girls at a recent strawberry festival intb' vicinity of her home. She fcjj^?/ 0 valiantly boasting of th*< < tt? been advantages of belonging;'' Uc ??anlfold and had managed. *h - to her famil>' .gainst the val* *" to hold her owu uous dV-n?? -?oglorious and ?ngen rp^g recourses of her companions, al no ?bad goue from clothes to person ,y appearauces, then to interior fur nishings, then to the number of tons of ooal consumed in the home of eaeh during the past winter, and finally brought up at parental dignity. The minister's little girl boasted: "Every paokage that comes for my papa is marked 'D. D." "An' every package that comes for my papa is marked 'M. D.' " retorted the daughter of a physioian of tho neighborhood. Then came a fine snort of contempt from tho heroine of this aneedote. "Huh!" she exclaimtd, "every pack age that comes to our house is marked 4C. ?. IV There now!" If your brain won't work right and you miss the snap, vim and energy 'hat was once yours, you should take Prickly Ash Bitters. Ii oleauses tho system and invigorates both body and brain.?Evans Pharmacy. lie was Smoked Out. ) "What Caused Mark Twain to ! Leave the River, or "Why a Great I Humorist Did Not Become a Second Jim Bludso," is one of the books that I has never been written by Samuel L. Clemens or auy one else. Su far as known, the story has never even ap peared in print, although it is vouched for by several of the old river men who have the yarn-spinning habit. According to these authorities, Mark Twain never became a full-pled ged pilot and never stood a night watch alone. In other words, while he had a pilot's license, his mastery of the great river craft ou which he rode was always limited by the under standing that an older and more ex perienced head was within easy call. This was no discredit to the young pilot. On the occasion in ?juestion, it matters nut what year or boat, the tue steamer to which young Clemens was attached as cub pilot was bound up stream with a heavy rgo of cot ton. At the officers' table the first day ou r< m Natchez,^Miss., the talk turned upon what to do in sudden emergencies, and especially in case of fire on a steamer loaded with cotton. The matter was discussed in all its bearings, each of those present giving his ideas upon the subject. Mark j Twain, like most of the others, held to the notion that it was the pilot's duty in such an emergency te emulate the now famous Jim Bludso and "hold her nozzle to the bank till the last galoot's ashore." I Among those at the table was the ! assistant engineer, a young man whose experience in life had taught him to doubt the ability of human nature to carry out the projects of its more boastful moments. He went below at the same time Mark Twain went aloft, but the two continued to think of the conversation just closed. The more the engineer thought about it the less credit ho was disposed to give to the cub pilot's scheme. As every ono knows, the pilothouse and engine room of a steamboat are connected, not only with bells for sig naling, but with a speaking tt je, through whioh the important func tionaries who operate above and below can disouss the weather and politics in their spare moments. The mouth of the tube at the upper end is but lit tle larger than the human mouth; but in tho engine room it has the space of a funnel as big as a half-bushel meas ure. While tho assistant engineer was pondering the emergency ques tion he was also wiping off a portion of the machinery with a bunch of cot ton waste, and as he reached the mouth of the speaking tube it was the work of but a moment to touch a match to the inflammable material in his hand and thrust it into the tube. No ono saw the aot, but everybody on board heard from it in about a minute. Mark Twain, alone in the pilot house aud stili pondering tho dire things he had heard from the older hands about the hororrs of burn ! ing steamboats, especially when they I happeued to be loaded with cotton, j was horrified to sco smoke pouting from the end of the speaking tube. ! There was but one thought in his j mind. The boat was on fire. Drop ping the wheel, which spun around and around as it loft his hand, he | grasped the rope by which the big bell { was sounded and began pulling like a | sexton, at the same time raising his 1 C?LEMAN-WAGENE (SUCCESSOR TO C. Adii K1XO NT It I? ET,. SHELF HARDWA - AGENT: Buckeye Mowers, Bri?ley I -OF] GEOlUiE a. WAfiBXBR, President GEORGE Y. GOLEM ' ' ' I g. jar-*1** ' orreapoiulence Solicit/.- **A1?L, -;?; 4 ? TJP-TO TURN! COFFINS AN ?UP TO FUNERJ PEOPLES FUI Why Not Give Yoi You can put it o already mixed?ai house would not than. ?^ive or Si sou Orr^Grz voice in a cry of "Fire," "Fire," "The boat's atire!" Here the officers of the boat and the passengers are said to kav<; found him, after hurried ly ascertaining that the alarm was false, still valorously determined to "save the ship." The boat, relieved of the rudder's guidance, had in the meanwhile swung around in tho cur rent and dashed full speed qy a baud bar, from which it required half a day to drag her. And Mark Twain having lost lost his nerve, left the river.? St. Louis Globe-Democrat. The Great Salt Lake. Professor W. J. McGee, of the gov ernment geological survey, declares that the Great Salt Lake of Utah is vanishing, and that this most remark able body of water will be completely dried up in 50 years, if, not sooner. Already its waters show signs of re ceding nnd it may not be mcrre than twenty-five years before irrigated farms will be cultivated on what is now the bottom of this inland sea, whose waters are so salt that a body cannot sink in them. The lake is about 75 miles long and half that at its greatest width, and is rathe : shallow, being in most places not over 30 feet deep, although a depth of possibly 100 feet may obtain in cer placcs. The reason ?vhy it is so salt science says is simply because it has no outlet save through evaporation and the streams during past ages have been carrying salt into it. These contributing streams are now being utilized for irrigating the lands around the lake, and before long immense r?servons will be constructed in the mountains where these streams have their source, which will cut off the ! lake's feed entirely. When this is I done the level of the lakke will be j lowered very fast. To Cure a Cold in Odo Day. ! Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab i lets. All druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's eignature on every box. 23c. ? Nothing pleases a man so much j as the inability of others to get onto j his curves. I ? Any man who pays spot cash I misses a lot of worthless oigars on the first of each month. ? It's only a matter of time till the undertaker overtake* us all. ? Men wonder where the summer girl was stowed away during the win ter. ? Some men object to dogs and some women objtct to men who objeot to dogs. ? A woman works almost as hard buying things as her husband does in paying for them. _ AXLE akes short road*. nd light loads. Food for everything that runs on wheels. Sold Everywhere. filado toy STANDARD OIL CO. R HARDWARE CO., P. POPPENH?IM.) .OIIAKLESTOX, H. C. RE A SPECIATTY. S FOR - lows, Oliver Ohillefj flows, Sly-*, . 1 O , Wo President. Secretary und Treasurer. DATE T?RE. D CASKETS. DATE? iL CAR. HH'.TURE CO. ir House a Coat or PAINT. n ypurself? it is ad to paint your , coat you more x Dollars ! 9 -BT iy & Co. D. 8. VaNDIVER. VANDIVI MERCfr BIS LINE SAMPLE SHOES JUST IN AT GREAT ? STAPLE LINE DRZ GOODS AT RIGHT PRICES. We cau make you the CHEAPE? Flour, Bacon, Bice, Coffee a Your trade is appreciated. NOTICE. MU A. T. -K ELTON has been cnga'-red r.y the AuderfOU Mutuil File Insurance * i> t?? iu-pt-ct ibe buildings insured in thi-? Company, and will commence work on th- first of July. Policy-holders are requested to have thtir Policies at ham!, so there will be no unnecessary delay in the in spection ANDERSON MUTUAL FIRE IN SURANCE CO. OUR NEW TIRS SETTER CAN tighten your Tires while they aro cold withouc taking them off wheels or taking out bolts Leave the wheels in perfect shape and dish j just right. Can do the work in one third time it requires the old way. Don't wait 'till your wheels are rain ed. Bring them on and see how nice ly we can d.> the work. PAUL E. STEPHENS. Notice Final Settlement. 'HUE undersigned. Fxeontor of the 1 K'.'tmt-H of A. C. J nek son and El vi rn T. Jairknon, deo*?BH??d, hereby (rives notice that be v. ill on Friday, July 25tb, 1902 apply to the Judice of Probate for AndersonCounty for a Final Settlement or nald Estates, and a discharge from his office as Exeotior. I'H-JS. 0. JACKSON, Ex'r. June 2b, 1002_1_5 Notice of Final Settlement. THE undersigned, Administrator of Estate of John A. Jackson, deceased, here bv gives notice that b? will on Friday, 25th day ?f July, 1002, apply to the Judge of Prnnaie for Anderson County, 8. C, for a Fiual Settlement of ?aid Es tate, and ? discharge from bis office as Administrator. THOS. C. JACKSON, Adm'r. / June 25. 1902 I 5 Notice of Final Settlement. THE upderoipned, Administrator of the hHiatew < J. H. .Simpson and Miss Ada Simpson, deceased, hereby gives no tice that be will on the 31*t day of July, 1002, apply to tbe Judge of Pro bate lor ADderxon County, S. C, for a Final (settlement id *aid Estate', and a discharge from btMorfir* a- Administra tor. W. a. 8lMP^ON, Adm'r. June 25, 1902 1_ If* o att ttt? v Ct?. denned Solifc.luie In Elfeol JtuaeSflth, lMl. STATIONS. tv. HikIk'c Ar. Greenwood. " Nirn'Jy-Six.. " Now berry... M Prosperity;.. " Columbia ... At. BlackvlTle. " Barnwcll. " Sa vnnn :ih. Lv. fSagvillu. " Ornnjreburg.. Branoh ville.. Summerville. \r. Charleston ... ? :.u p in 8 50 p m Il 10 V m 10 15 p T.; 10 83 p ru 11 W p m 3 52 a m a 07 am t 50 a m TS3 a m il 45 a m 4 25 a m 5 67 a m 7 00 a m 11 '25 11 50 12 05 1 10 1 24 2 40 a m a m p m p m p m p m 3 52 a in 8 07 4 50 a ru a m 3 46 4 43 5 25 0 42 7 80 p m p m p m p m p m STATIONS. Daily, Dailyj No 15.iXo.M-) 11 UOpi 7 W niLv..CharU-aton..Ar 12 00 nj 7 41 aj " Suminerville " .Branchvillo. " Ornngeburg " . Kinpville . " I Dailyl Daily No. 14. No. Ut 2 00 a 0 00 a 3 45 a 0 28 i 4 05ailO_24 r D 80a .....7. 4 13 a. 4 fSa|. 7 UOajll 80n 7 67 a'IB 15p |(8a| 1 28 p } c 84 n ? 49 a 10 20a 10 86a 2 00 p a w u 2 22 p 2 87p 8 10p 8 40 p 7 ISP Lv..Mivnnn:ih Ar '* ..Barnwell.. " " ..Blackville.. " " ..Columbia.. " " ... Alston.... " ?' ...Santuo... " " .....Union. " " ..JonesviUe.. " '? ....Pacolet.... " Ar Spartan burg Lv Lv Bpartanbur g Ar Ar...Ashe ville ...Lv 7 30p 6 42 p 5 25p 4 42 p 3 48 p 7 00a 6 67 a 4 25a 8 45a 2 82 a ? iRo 1 25pi 12 15 p U 87 a l? 17 a U osai 10 85 ar 10 ?fi?1 7 05 a 4 60a 8 07a 2 62 a eaop 5 60a V 48p 7 10p 0 00p 8 00p "P" p. m. "A" a. m. "N" night. DOUBLES DAILY SERVICE! BETWEEN CHARLESTON AND GREENVILLE. Pullman palace sleeping oars on Trains85 and B6,87 and 88, oa A.andC. division. Dining-cars to these trains servo all meals ?a routa. Trains leave Bpartanbnrg, A. ? C. dlvUJoo, Eibsund. 8:68 a, hj., 8:87 p.m., 8:13pi m., t'bulo Limited^ and 8:55 y. m.; scth t: 12:20 a. m.. 8:15 p. m., 11:40 a. m., (Vestt bule Limited), and 10 Jb a. So. Trains leave Greenville, A. and O. dlvls \ oortnbound,5:55 a. m.. 2:34 p.rt. and5:18p. uk., (Vestibule Limited), and 5:5V P- m.; sputh bound, 1:25 a, m..4:S0p. m., 12:40p.' . (Vest* bule Limited), a^d 11:30 a. m. Truins 15 and 10?fuUman aieeplng Oars between Charleston and A ah o ville. .1 Elegant Pullman Drawing-Boom Bleeping i Oars between Savannah and Ashuvule enroute I ?aily between JacknonvMle and Cincinnati. I Trains 18 and 14 Pullman Parlor OaM be I Iwvcn Charleston and Ash e ville. PRANK S. GANNON. 8. H. BARDWj Third V-P. & Gen. Mgr., _Gen. Pas. Washington. D. a Wa? W. E. TAYLOE, - R. W. Aast. den. Pa*. Agt. .Dir. Pa K. P. VANDI LR BROS., .ANTS, lNDERSON, 8.C., Ap?il'9,1< BARGAINS. BT price in this section on? Molasses? Lard, nd Tobacco. VANDIVER BROS. ? THE ? MM OF ANDERSON. J. A. BROCK, President. . JOS. N. BROWN, Vloe President. B. F. MAULDIN, Cashier. THE largest, strongest Bank iQ tb County. Interest Faid on Deposits By special agreement. I With tuisurpasaed facilities and resooJ ces we ate at all times prepared to co commodate our customers. Jan 10,1900 29 BREED CHICKENS A SPECIALTY ! Barred Plymouth Bock. White Plymouth Rock. Silver Wyandottes. Brown Leghorns. Purity guaranteed. Eggs for sale. Carefully packed' for shipping. ) L. 8. MeVTTISON, Anderson, S. 0. Jan 22,1902_31 * 6m E. G. McADAHS, ATTORNEY ?T lUA.W, ANDERSON, S. C 733?r Office in Judge of Probate's office. | in the Court House. . Fob 5,1902 33 Winthrop College Scholarship and Entrance Examinations. Tbe examinations for the award of va cant scholarships in Winthrop College and for the admission of new students will be held at the County Court House on Friday, July 11th, at 9 s. m. Appli cants muHt not be less than fifteen yean of age. When scholarships are vacated after July Utb, they will b? awarded (o those making the ligbest average at this examination. Tbe next poasion will open September 17, 1902. For further information and a catalotzUe address Pr*?b. D. B. Johnson, P.ock Hill. 8. C. June 4, 1002_B0 BANNER SAJLVg, the most healing salvo In the* world. CHARLESTON AND WESTERN CAROLINA RAILWAY auo?7bt A. amu ABBEVILLE 8H ?BT LINS In effect Apr. 13th, 1902. Lv Augusta... Ar Gre?nwood.._. AX Anuoraon. Ar Laurena. Ar Green vi '?. Ar Glenn Hr Inja...., Ar Spnr t anburg. Ar Salndn..<. Ar Hendersonvule. Ar A ?hnvllln., 10 06 tu, 265 pa 12 89 pm 8 25 pm Ss?pm 6 83 pm 611 pm 7 15 pm 715?a 7 05 pm 12 15 pm Lt AohovIUo.;.i.. LT Hpaitanburg....... Lv Glenn Springs. I?T Green vlilo................... Lt Laarens._..j.. Lv Anderson.......,. Lv Greenwood...i.\ 8 07 pmi.,... Ar Augusta.| 5 40 pm 11 SB 12 22 pm 2 07 pm Lt Anderson. Ar E'harton.. Ar Atht na...., Ar Atlas ta. .. Li Andorf on A' Au?' ^ca 7 25 am 1 fi2 pm 2 S3 pu 4 65 pm Ar Port, n?j al.. Ar Beaufort.,. Ar Charleston (Sou).... Ar Savannah (Cofga). 7 25 am 11 85 am 8 55 pm 8 45 pm 7 80 pm \ 8 lu pid Close connection at Calhoun Falls for all points on 8. A. L. Railway, and at 8partsiihuig for Sou. Railway. For any information relative to tickets, 91 HChedule?, etc., address W. J. CRAIG, Gen.Pass. Agent,Auguata.Ga: T. M. Emerson .Traffic Manager. J. Reese Fant, Agent, Anderson, 8. C. Blue Ridge Railroad. Effective April 6, 1902._; UaSTBOUND, STATIONS. itfo. 4 Sun. only Lv W^baVju Senece. " Cherry.? " Pendieton " Autun. ' Denver. " Anderson.. At Helton. No. G Daily Ex. No 8 Dally Ex. Sun. i No ? Daily P. M.IA. M. 7 45 8 f?i 8 00 8 OS P M. 2 80 S 2G S Gl 4 11 4 23 4 35 f 7 03 (.7 80 f- M 2 45 S 10 A. M. S, (ft. ' ta 25 8 67 8 47 8 es 9 02 9 09 9 30 v; Ksl'BOUKJJ. STATIONS. No 8 Daily ho. 6 Dally Ex Sun. No. 7 Daily Ex. Sun iNo. U No. 0 Daily Daily I Lt Belton.?... "Anderson.. " DenTer...... " Autun. ** Fendleton. " Cherry. Seneca. F M 8 ?5 8 65 a* M.! 9 00 9 23 A. M 10*00 10 27 10 87 10 47 11 02 11 01 12 50 A M 10 50 11 15 8 20 8 45 8 6? 4 05 4 11 4 18 t 85 4 40 Ar Walhalla-!.1 23P1....~..|_ 8,09 "Will also ?top st th?'followlng stations totaa> oc and let ofl passengers : PhlnnoyJames, Ban dy Springs, West Anderson, Ada* a, Jordanie Junction J. B. ANDBRSCUf, H. C BBATTIE. Superintendent. Pr?sident.__ ATLANTIC COAST LXHB Tbat-fio Departmhnt, Wilmington. N. C., Jan. 18. M0t Fast Line Between Charleston and Col umbla and Upper South Carolina, Nona . Carolina. CONDENSED SCHEDULE. ... ?or?e> wxsT. ??5? No. 52. No.f&,^ ..Chartsalon-Ar i 1^?.^??~.Ii?oa??~..?.~.~.Av L/.............-Suinter.............Ar Ar............C*>luinMa...........Lv At...-Pt<?w?tUt~.-Lt Ar...?;_Ne?Mrty.~..Lv Ar..-....-.-~ Clinton............ Lt Ar....LacreDB-..........LT Ax...?...~Or?enTUlew?.?.~.LT Ar.-..?partanburg.Lv Ar_Winnsboio. 8. C......Lv _ . Ar_Charlotte, ?. C.Lt ? 1? "pm I Ar-HonderacnT?le, N. C_LV 7 i? pm j At~.AsheTlUa, H. C-Lt 0 28 cm 8 02 am ?28 am 1100 pm It 17 pa 12 '0pm 1 18 pm 1 85 pm 8 10 jun. S 10 pm 7 18pm 9 20 pm s ?ja* 415 p? 2 49 O? 2 84 pas 1 BS pas 188 pa 1201 ata il 4? as? 1018 ara 8 loam ?02 am 8 00 am K*06jSand 88 Solid Trains between Cbarhcton nd Columbia,*. C. B. M. Kxsa n. Gt-n l. Passeoirjr Ag-at J. B. KsnsuKV, G??* si Minuet . v. Rhimos.Iraffe r?n??e