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THE COLD OF 1816. Queer Weather That Came In "the Year Without a Summor." Tho year 181G has been called "the year without a summer." The Boston Congregationalist of some years ago gave the following account of it: January and February were mild. March was cold, April began warm, but ended in snow and ice. Ice form ed an inch thick in May, and fields were planted over and over again till it was too late to replant. June was the coldest ever known in this latitude, i Frost and ire were com mon. Ajmost every green thing was killed. Fruit nearly oil was de stroyed. !Sno\v fell to the depth of ten inches in Vermont, seven in Haine, three in the interior of New lYork arid also in Massachusetts. fPhere were a few warm days. It was called a dry season. But little rain fell. The wind blew steadily ifrom the north, cold and fierce. Mothers knit extra socks and mit tons for their children in tho spring, and wood piles, that usually disap peared during the warm spell in front of the houses, were speedily built up again. Planting and shiver ing were done together, and the farmers who worked out their taxes on the county roads wore overcoats and mittens. On the 17th of June a heavy snow fell in New England. fTho cold was intense. A farmer who had a large field of corn in iTewksbury built fires around it at night to ward off the frost. Many an evening he and his neighbors took turns watching them. He was rewarded with the only crop of corn irwthe neighborhood. considerable damage was done in iNew Orleans in consequence of the rapid rise of the Mississippi river. Fears were entertained that the sun was cooling off, and throughout New England ail picnics were strictly prohibited. July was accompanied jwith frost and ice. Indian corn was nearly all destroyed. Some favor.v ibly situated fields escaped. AugusJ" was more cheerless if possible than the summer months which preceded it. Ico was formed half an inch in thickness. Indian corn was bo ifrozen that the greater part was cut down and dried for fodder. Almost every green thing was destroyed in this country and in Europe. On the 30th snow fell at Barnet, forty miles ifrom London. Very little corn rip ened in New England and the mid dle states. Farmers supplied them selves from corn produced in 1815 for seed in the spring of 1817. It isold at from $4 to $5 per bushel. September furnished about two weeks of the pieasantest weather of the season, but in the latter part' of the month ice formed an inch thick. October had more than its share of cold weather. November waf c?id and snowy. December was comfort able, and the winter following was mild. Very little vegetation was matured in the eastern and middle states. The Bun's rays seemed to bo fclestitute of heat during the sum mer. All nature was clad in a sable ihue, and men exhibited no little anxiety concerning the future of life._ Judge and Jury. In 1883 a man was charged in iVictoria with having killed another man with a sandbag, and in the face of the judge's summing up the jury (brought in. a verdict of not guilty, ffhifl annoyed the chief justice, Sir' 'Matthew Begbie, who at once said: "Gentlemen Of the jury, mind, that is your verdict, not mina. On your conscience will rest the stigma of returning such a disgraceful ver dict. Many repetitions of such con duct as yours will mcke trial by jury a horrible farce and the city of Vic-. ,toria a nest of immorality and crime. iGo. I huve nothing moro to say to ' you." ; 'And then, turning to the prisoner, the chief justice added; "You are discharged. Go and sandbag some Df those jurymen. They deserve it I" The Young Doctor. "The young doctor has a herd row to hoe," remarked a physician at a recent dinner. "If he does not own a horse and carriage the people say (he cannot have a large practice. If ho docs own a horse which happens to be fat the people insist that he cannot have much work to do. If, ion the other hand, the horeo hap pens to be bony they circulate the, news that the doctor keeps his horso only for show and is bo hard up that he can't, afford to feed the animal properly.^-Kansaa City Independ ent. ; : :v . " Hai* Task of tho Here. Every mas thinks his Own is the really hardest job. Th? really hard iest job, however, is that of the hero *n a modern novel. These are the (performances of one. hero in a raod fern novel: His countenance fell.- His voice broke. His heart sank. His *air. rose. ' His eyes biased. His words burned. His blood froze. Now, how would you like to be that hero P?Modern Society. : G *or Infcnts and Children. The KM Yoi! Have Always Bai_ Bears the si? ^/fS^TTT* Signature of ? ??o matte i- how--.' nmnjg'f needs'/it toan has he can lode them.nil by doing fevers for them/ THE ICELANDERS. Primitiv* Honesty of These Simple People of the North. The Anglo-Saxon world knows nothing of such primitive honesty as is known in Iceland, nor does Eu rope, as the following ?tory will show : Stephen Marshall, the factor of a great London trading house, station ed now at Reykjavik, who knows the island better than, any other Euro pean, declares that scarcely would it be possible to exaggerate upon the native's respect for any least out ward expression of the law. Marshall says he was crossing the wild country that lies between Reyk javik and ?kurcyri, the chief umong the northern trading stations, about two years ago when lie met a man riding his pony toward the capital. "What is your name?" asked the factor. "Stefan." "Whose son?" "Thorsteinsson." "Where are you going?" "To prison." "What for?" "Stealing sheep." "No one taking you?" "No. The sheriff wan bury, so he gave me his warrant and sent me on by myself." Whereupon tho two exchanged snuff and parted. Four days later as Marshall was returning he again met this fellow, evidently on the way back to his home. "What!" he exclaimed, naturally surprised. "Stefan Thorsteinsson ? Why, you said you were going to prison !" "So I was, and I went. But they would not let me in." "Why not?" "I somewhere lest the warrant, and the sheriff at Reykjavik said he could not receive me without it." "But why, then, are you not al ready at home? You should have made the journey in two days." To this the answer may sound with a comic opera note to English readers, but in it, says Marshall, lies the core of the whole Icelandic rev erence for the machinery of the law. Stefan had lost two dayB* time look ing for the warrant which would have locked him up! The only wonder is that such an honest man Bhould go about steal ing sheep.?Modern Society. He N&dsd a Doctor. A pastor in a New Hampshire vil lage was the owner of a swift and spirited horse. On one occasion, says the Boston Herald, while he was driving through the village he over took the local physician on foot. ' 'Jump in, doctor," he said, pull ing up. "I've got a horse here that goes pretty well." The doctor jumped in and the parson drove off. The horse did go well in the sense of speed, but in a little while it began to behave bad ly and ended by tipping over the carriage and spilling out both the occupants. The doctor junr i to his feet and felt himself all ov . > see if he was injured. The parson also got to his feet. "Look here!" exclaimed the doc ' tor. "What do you mean by invit ing me to ride behind a horse like that?" *fWell, you see," gasped tlie par son, "luckily this time I guess there are no bones broken, but on such, oc casions I like to have a doctor along." _' A Study of Words. A philologist was talking about words. "There are more than 250, 000 words in the English language," he Baid, "but we only use ? few thousand of them. The extra ones are of no use to us. Any man could eit down with a dictionary and write in good English a story that no one in the world could understand: [ Here, for instahce?Kan you make head or tail of thia?" pattering ott glibly: 'I will.again buy the atabal. You are asweved? Yet this is no blushet'e bobance, nor am I a cud den either. Though the ntabal is dem, still will I again buy it." Then he translated : "I will recov er the drum, You are 'amazed? Yet this ia no young girl's boasting, nor am I a fool either. Though the dram is hidden, a till will I recover it"?Chicago Chronicle. Dsllflhtful. The last bus, full, of course, In side. Bain falling in torrents. Con ductor?Any gentleman get outside to oblige a lady ? "She can come and sit on my knee if she likea," said a gentleman.' And to his great surprisa in bounced a buxom wench, who forthwith appro priated : the offered knee. After a time tty? man got into conversation with his fair burden, asked her where she was going ana on hearing her destination exclaimed, "Bless mo, that's my house !" "Yes, sir," bluahingly replied the fair on?. "Pm the new cook."? London Tatler. ? The entire Spanish cabinet has esigned and the resignations nave been accepted by King Alfonso. The resignations followed tho rejec tion of a vote of confidence in the -cabinet. - ? A ^-w mountain sheep is report v ed to hk 3 been discovered in the fat Northwest. It ia tbe so called bl?ck sheep of America and has apparently been found ; far io the north iu the glaoirl regions. Naturalists believe that numerous hitherto unknown ant* mais will 3!ct be discovered on..this * continent. THE NORMAN PEASANT. Ho I? Shrewd and Economical and Evasive In Hie Answer*. Writing of "A Corner In Njr mandy" in the Delineator, P. B Ve ley Smith gives an interesting 6 *" light upon the real character of Norman peasant. These ruu Norman farmers understand et my to a fineness, he says. 1> ? secret of their wealth. A when one morning I cam' Pere Trebard munching a with d pear while he sunned himself be side the snug barn uud asked tho old man why ho did not choose a good one from hi? fine crop, he ex claimed: "Ah, but, monsieur, we might sell it!"' The character of the shrewd Nor man is interesting. Never will he give you a direct answer. A definite "yes" or "no" ocems to have been expressly left out of his vocabulary. "It is a fine morning," ^ventured to a grizzled old dealer in Wsen. "It might be worse," he answered. "That's splendid cider of yours, Legrosjean." "Some say it is," he retorted guardedly. Neither does the true Norman ever seem pleased or satisfied. "Beautiful apples this year, Pere Mallet." "Bah! They are so few," he re plies gloomily, with a shrug of his shoulders. The next year the trees are bent under the weight of .1 rich crop, and you hail this rich old agri culturist as you pass his gateway. "Plenty of cider this year, Pere Mallet, for you have surely enough apples," you say convincingly as the old peasant looks up from his work to bid you bon jour. "They are so small," he groans, "it takes moro time to pick them than they are worth." Rheumatism In a Portrait. The London Lancet is of the opin ion that the earliest record of rheu matic nodules is to he found in a portrait of a lady about thirty years of age painted by Paolo Morando, otherwise known as Cavazzola, a Veronese painter who lived from 1486 to 1522. The portrait is one of a collection left by Signor Morelli to the Acade my of Bergamo. The hands attract attention at once, as seeming to be much older than the face. A strong light rests upon the left hand, wliich is in a central position. "Tho nbductor indicia and other interossei are strikingly wasted, the interphalangeal joints of tho first two fingers are markedly enlarged, and there are typical rheumatic nod ules over the head of tho second phalanx of the index and over the proximal ends of both the proximal phalanges of the middle finger." Through the mist of t?chnicality tho layman can discern the image oi protracted suffering. If a complete list of the remedies recommended by her friends had accompanied the ( portrait the story would be told in 1 full._ No Admittance. A poor Hindoo, having been re leased from the cares of this world, presented himself at the gate oi .Brahma's paradise. "Have you beer through purgatory?" asked the god "No, but I have been married/ "Come in then; , it is all the same.'J At this moment arrived anothei man who begged to be permitted tc go in also. "Softly, softly; have y01; been through purgatory ?" "No, but what of that? Did you not ad mit one who had not been there any more than I?" "Certainly, bui ho has been married." ''Married Who are you talking to? I have been married twice." "Oh, pshaw,' replied Brahma, "get away : naradisc is not for fools "?London Tatler. Disconcarfcing, "Yes, sir, when the enemy chorg ed on our position and* came righi over the breastworks you oughtei have seen me !" exclaimed the boast lui veteran. "Yes, that's boV drawled an ol< comrade, removing his pipo slowly. <f??u wuia there yourself, wasn't you, Jonco?" inquired the Doastfu one, referring - to him for supper with a triumphant look. "I certainly vmz," said the Ole comrade. . "And I thought at th< time we oughterhavo seen you, bu nobody ever got c look at you til ten days after th? ?gh?V*--N,ew ?* loans Times-Democrat. ' < ..?? The Ufa Plant. There is a plant in Jamaica caHet the life plant because it is almot impossible to kill it or any portioi of it. When a leaf is cut off an< hung up by a string it sende ou white, : threadlike roots, gather moisture from the air and begins t< grow new leaves. Even whei pressed and packed away in a hot ; anises herbarium it has been knowi to outgrow the leaves of the pool in which it was placed. The onl; way to kill it is by the heat of 1 hot iron or of boiling water, 1 1 , ''?1 a as 11 " ' '? ~*IiTs a wise proverb that know its own father. ? Tho June bride now occupies th< center of the stage. } ?- You nan driv? a boy to school but you cannot make him learn. ? He who wears a long face doesn' necessarily Hvo the longest.. i >? Covetousness kills charity. ? ? good repentance needs no en core. ? The right is never fouud by th nssertion of your own rights' alone. > '; ;- '' ; FINGER RINGS. Origin of Wearing Them Traced to Prometheus and the Rock. Ia many lands arid through many ages a ring has been the symbol of maiTiage. Young folk are seldom r^\ich in love with antiquities, but re is an exception to the rule, for jre are few things older than tho ^ ng ring, and in it young people .e not yet lost their interest, 'ihere has been much outcry against rings politically, but here is the all dominating, all attractive, most in fluential of mergers and of all com binations the hardest to break. Finger rings have been used as or naments from the earliest times. I There is a Greek story of the origin of their use. Jupiter chained Pro metheus to a rock in the Caucasus, where a vi?iture preyed on his liver, which grew again each night. After 2,000 years of this chronic liver trouble Jupiter released him, but or dered he should wear on his linger an iron ring, having attached to it a piece of the rock, so that the deity might keep his oath of perpetual imprisonment; hence tho use of rings of metal with jewels. Kings 6eem to have been among the first trinkets given and prized. They were tokens of trust, insignia of command, rank and honor, pledges of faith and alliance. They have also been badges of servitude, illus trating the proverb that extremes meet. Pharaoh'gave his ring to Joseph in token of delegated authority. Tho oldest rings now in existence came from Egypt, having been originally placed on the fingers of the dead. Tho most interesting ring in the world, at least to antiquarians, is the ring of Cheops, who built the great pyramid. It is of fine gold, weighing about the samo as three five dollar gold pieces. In early Roman times the ring was worn on the fourth finger of the left hand from a belief that a vein from it passed direct to the heart. An old Jewish legend tells us that Tubal Cain, tho first of metal work ers, made the first ring for his wife. The earliest marriage record of which we have an authentic record is mentioned in Scripture, where the shy and gentle Isaac placed a ring on the face?probably the nose?of the in nowise reluctant Kebekah. Isaac was always timid, and he would surely have managed the delicate matter more appropriately himself. ?Chicago Chjoniclc. A Slow Journey. The car crawled slowly on, with an occasional long pause at a threatened breakdown. At last an old man with a long white beard rose feebly from a corner seat and tottered toward the door. Ho was, however, stopped by the conductor who said: "Your fare, please." "I paid my fare." "When ? I don't remember it." "Why, I paid you when I got or the car." "Where did you get on?" "At Nether Liberton." "That won't dol When I left Nether liberton there was only c little boy on the car" frYes," answered the old man, "] know it. I was that littlo boy."? Auckland (New Zealand) News. Lead a' Regular Life. Few persons understand the valu< of regularity of habits. Meals anc sleeping hours should be fixed ones for only harm can result from re tiring one night at 10 and anothei at 12 o'clock -unless the rising boui varies too. Eight hours of sleep on< night and six the next is not tin way in which to woo and keej health, and if a similar habit of tak ing nourishment is encouraged there is little hope of reaching old age ii a creditable condition. If ever yoi are tempted to prove or disprove these statements, try going to bed ai 0 o'clock every night for three months, rising at 5 and eating at 6 12 arid C again, with never a breal in the routine. The result will sur prise yon.?Minneapolia Tribune. A Case In Point. . Mrs. Small?Your husband make me laugh bo, Mrs. Cassidy. He is g< Irish in his speech. Mrs. Cas?my?la ho so, ma'am? . Mrs. Small?Yes. He has euch i queer way of getting words twistec around ont of place! Mrs. Cas s idy?0 h, yes 1 I notice* that very thing today. He told m< ye were a "busy little body," mean in', I suppose, as everybody knows that yo're?well, what ye are ma'am.?Philadelphia Press. Tho Pooltlv* Pinie?. "Yes," said the builder, "thi little alteration I have just suggest ed will only cost yon an extn hundred, and it will be the finishing touch." ' < "Well, go ahead. Ill pat up thi hundred, but yon can bet that yon'r? right ihat . it will be the finishing touch. I 'don't stand for any more. ?Houston Poet.; - mm m> ?h ?- Yoa cannot measure the holi ness of 'others by your owa habits. ? Many a homely seed holds a hsav enly blossom. ? It takes.more than a white tie t< coyer a blaok heart. ? Education is simply the art o creating environment. ' }. " ?The perfume of oil comes fron the flowers of affection. ? When a soldier tires of tho caln of the battlefield he can got marricc and discharge the honks. * LEARN TO FORGET. od Do Not Spoil Your Happiness by Cling- ?^ ing to Grievances. an ca There is a wide and deep plnloso- 80 phy contained in that, phraseology w< of the street?"Forget it!" It is ns important to forget us to remember. One is as dillici?t us tho other, und ability along one line is as hard to acquire us the other. Both, must bo cultivated. It is impossible to becomo an optimist wiibout learning how to forget. Disagreeable things are bound to happen, and one must train oneself to wipe thorn oft the mind as the boy wipes the figures from his shite. Having erased the ugly mem ories, it is easier to write the pleas ant things on the slate of*thc memo ry. Tho Indian, for instance, never forgets a slight or an injury. Ho will wait a lifetime to got even. Don't bo an Indian. Lifo is too short to be an Indian. Tho man who considers himself a nemesis, who treasures up a wrong, who nurses an injury, who lets igno ble hatreds foster in his heart, can not bo a happy man. His soul is like a crouched tiger ready to spring upon tho victim of his wrath. Learn how to forget. If it is easier for you to put on record in your memory personal grievances and to hug an ugly feel ing it is because you have chosen to do so. If you hourd up in your mind the unhappy episodes of life it is bemuse you have formed the habit of doing so. To persist in that habit of mind will make you miserable and a con firmed grouch. There is nothing no ble in such a disposition to remem ber. Learn.to forget. Let go tho uninspiring, the de pressing and weakening grievance. Hold on to the memories that cheer and brighten. There is not room for both. Wipe out the resentments. Write in pluce of your hatred the things that are pure and just and lovely and of good report. Has some one treuted you ill or put a slight upon you? Forget it. Do not let it spoil your happiness. It is a trifle light as air. Scorn to be scorned by one whom I scorn. Is that a matter to mako me fret? Is that a matter to cause regret ? Let no mean thing ruffle the serenity of your soul. Forget it.?Detroit News. Justified Alarm. * Very much excited and out of breath a young man who could not have been married very long rushed up to an attendant at one of the city hospitals and inquired after Mrs. Brown, explaining between breaths that it was his wife whom he felt anxious about. The attendant looked at the reg ister and replied that there was no Mrs. Brown in the hospital. "Don't keep me waiting in this manner/' said the excited young man. "I must know how she is." "Well, she isn't here," again said the attendant. "She must be," broke in the vis itor, "for here is a note I found on the kitchen table when ? came home from work." The note read : Dear Jack?Have gone to ho.va my ki mono cut out. annie. ?Boston Traveler. A Dog and Cat Story. In a certain English home there lived a cat and a dog on the usual terms of enmity. The cat hnd kit tens, which were taken from her, drowned and buried. The bereaved mother mourned, would not eat and became a sort of embodied ghost of her own dead self. Her enemy, tho terrier, ceased to annoy her, began tenderly to shepherd her about, dropped pieces of food in her way and played about her as if he would joke her back to happiness. It was in vain. Then the dog was missed for some hours. He came hack even tually, bounding with pleasure. Upon the hearth rug before the cat he deposited a furry something, re treated, returned with something else and again went out, to come hack with a similar burden. They were the dead and buried kittens, which he had discovered and resur rected. . Seep a Becord of Your Transactions. Put your monay in the Bank and pay your hills by cheek; The Bank Book is the best record of receipts, and your check ia the best receipt tor yonr biUe. The SAVINGS DEPARTMENT of The Bank of Anderson will .pay Sou interest on that idle money you ave. One Dollar will open an ac count. THE BANK OF ANDERSON. Capital $150,000?Surplus 8150,000. J. A. Brock, President. B. V M^uMmk Ca*hi>-r. ? A fast oastbound passenger train the Cleveland and Pitt6burg braooh the Pennsylvania road was derailed d wrecked near Atwatcr, Ohio, using the death of at least one per n, while a dozen or more others 3re injured. EVERYTHING ! IF that name stands for square lealiugs and'truly artistic? PIANOS, Chat's what our name stands for. Call and iuspect our handsome irray of? ? AND ? THE C. A. REED Music House, ANDERSON, - - S. C. WELL BALANCED. Your accounts cannot well get lu a tan gle if your money is depoalted with and all payments made through the? Farmers' Loan and Trust Company, Anderson, S. G. It is our business to take oare of your business?the banking part of it?and we do it with accuracy that comes from ex perience. The Bank's past history is a guarantee for the future. Deposits of any amount received. Interest pt.id on deposits.. Good bor rowers aud (;ooci depositors wanted._ Foley's Hqney and T<Qf forchiidrentsafe,sure. No opiates, j. GL. 8HERARD, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ANDERSON, S. C. Office over Post Office Building Money to lend ou Real Estate. The Hege log Beam SAW M ILL with Heacock-King feed works Engines and Boilers, WooowonR'no Machinery. Cotton Ginning. Bricr makino and 8 h i n o lb and Lath Machinery. Cobn Mills. Etc.. Etc. G1BBES MACHINERY CO.* Columbia, S. C. ^ The Gibbks Shingle machine Foley's Kidney Cure makes kidneys mad bimdder rigjttt* ARNOLD'S Warranted BAI OA m\M TO CURE BALOAM Cholera Infantum by W. E. ATKINSON, WILKITE A WILHITE, AIVPERSON. - - 8. C NEW PICTURE GALLERY. See us for beat Photographs at lowest prices. Also, for Copying and Enlarging, at No. 801 Depot Street, one block from Court House Square. Youru to please, J. W. SMITH & CO. May 10.1905_47_3m Notice Final Settlement. THE undersign od, Administrator of the Estate of H. C. Erakine, deceas ed, hereby gives notice that he will on Saturday, July 22nd, 1905, apply to the Judge of Probate for Anderson County for a Final Settlement of said Estate, and a discharge from his office aa Administrator. R.-B. ERSKINE, Admt'r. June 21, 1905, 1 5 Notice to Creditors. ALL persons bavin? demands against the Estate of W. L. DavIp, deceas ed, are horeby notified to present them, properly provon, to tho undersigned, within the time proscribed by lnW, End those Indebted to make pavment. CP. D.W15, Administrate n Potash is necessary for cotton to produce hlj?h yields and good fibre. Write for our valuable books on fertilization; they contain informa- j tion that means dollars to the farmers. Sent free on request. Write now while you think of it to the GERMAN KALI WORKS New York? _ Atlanta, Ga.? 93 Nassau St.,or So. Broad; street. Of ANDERNOV, N. . We respectfully solicit a share ot your business. G. H. GEIGER, ATTORNEY A.X LAW, ANDERSON, B. . Office Over Post Office. per Money to Lend on Real Estate. April 13, 1904 43 ly 1785 1905 COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON CHARLESTON, S. C. Entrance ixaralnations will be held in tho County Court House on Friday, .July T, at 9 a. m. Oae Free Tuition Scholarship to eaoh omuty in South Carolina awarded by County Superin tendent of Education and Judge of Pro bate. Hoard and furnished room in Dormitory, $10 a month. All candidates for admission are permitted to compete for vacant Boyoe Scholarships wbtob pay 8100 a year. For further information and catalouge, addreRB HAKRISON RANDOLPH, President. May 31, 1903_50_2_ Blue Ridge Railroad. Effective Not. -J9,1503. .WESTBOUND. No. II (dally)?Leave Belton 3.50 tn5 m. ; Anderson 415 p. no. ; Pendleton 4.47 p. in. ; Oherry 4.51 p. m. ; Seneca 5.31 p. m ; arrive Walhalla 5.55 p. m. No. 9 (dally oxcept Sunday)?-Leave Belton 10.45 a. m.; Anderson 11.07 a. m.; Pendleton 11.32 a. m.; Cherry 11.39 a. m.; arrive at Seneoa 11.57 a. m. No. 5 (Sunday only)?Leave Belton 11.45 a.m.; Anderson 11.07 a. m.; Psn dleton 11.32 a. m.; Oherry 11.39 a, m.; Seneca 1.05 p. m.; arrive Walhalla 1.2, p. m. No. 7 (dallv except Snnday)?Leave Anderson 10.30 a. m.; Pendleton 10.59 a. m.; Cherry 11.09 a. m.; Seneoa 1.05 p. m.; arrive Walhalla 1.40 p m. No. 3 (daily)?Leave Belton 9.15 p. m.; arrive Anderson 9.42 p. m. No. 23 (dally exoept Sunday)?Leave Belton 9.00 a. m.; arrive Anderson 9.80 a. m. EASBOUND. No. 12 (daily)?Leave Walhalla 8.35 a. m.; Seneoa 8.58 a. m ; Chen y 9.17 a. m.; Pendleton 9.25 a. m.; Anderson 10.00 a? m.; arrive Belton 10.25 a. m. No. 15 (dally exoept Sunday)?Leave Seneca 2.00 p. m ; Oherry 2.10 p. m.; Pen dleton 2 20 p. m.; Anderson 3.10 p. m.; arrive Belton 3.35 p. to. No. 0 (Sunday only)?Leave Anderson 3.10 p. m.; arrive Belton 3 35 p. m. I No 8 (dally)?Leave Walhalla 3.10 p. m.; Seneoa 5.31 p. m.; Cherry 5.59 p. m.; Fendleton 6.12 p. va.; Anderson 7.30 p. I va.; arrive Belton 7.58 p. m. No. 24 (daily except Snnday)?Leave Anderson 7.50 a. m.; arrive Belton 8.20 a. m. H. C. BEATTIE, Pres., Greenville, S. O J. R. ANDERSON, SupL _Anderson,3. C. C. & W. Carolina Railway. Schedule in effect Jan. 23, 1905. Lv Anderson . " Calhonn Falls. Ar MoCormlok. Ar Augusta-.... Lv AugUBta. ' Temsssee. 11 Charleston. " Savannah b (con t) '? Beaufort b. M Port Royal. 7.00 a m 8.29 a m 9.29 a m 11.15 a m 2 35 p m 4.80 p m 5.40 p m 7.40 p m 6.45 p m 6.30 p m 6.40 p m 2. ig i, jq 4.10 poi 0.05 pm o 7.00 am 8.55 a m 10.05 a m 11.55 pm 011.15 am 011.05 am 11.10 a m Lv Port Royal b. 11 Beaufort. " Savannah b (cen t) " Charleston b. " Yemassee. " Alienuale... Ar Augusta. Lv Augusta. Lv McCormick . Ar Calhonn Falls. " Anderson. 7.25 a m 7.40 a m 5.40 a m 7.10 a m 9.15 a m 10.25 a m 12.20 p m 2,55 p m 4.40 pm 5.45 p m 7.10 o m cO.OOpm 0.10 p m 07.15 p m 08.20 p m 10,20 p m 11.31 p m 1.30 am 6.00 a m 7.37 am 10.00 a m Lv Anderson. Ar Greenwood. '* Waterloo (Harris Springs).. " Lanrena. " Greenville. 1 Spartanbnrg. 4 Glenn Springs b. 7.00 a m 12.39 p m 1.17 p m 1.45 p m 3.25 pm j 3.30 p m I 5.25 pm Lv Glenn Springs m. ?. H.H.). Lv Spartanburg (C. & W. C. Lv Greenville. iurODB. Lv Waterloo .... Lv Greenwood. Ar Anderson.;. 9.00 am 12.01 p m 12.15 p 5? 150 p m 2.20 p m 2.46 p m 7.10p m Vv, -ally except Sunday; c, Sunday only;. Through train service between Au gusta and Charleston. For information relative to rates, etc., apply to W. B. Steele, U. T. A., Ander 8. C, Goo. T.Bryan, G. A., Greenville, g. C, Ernest Williams, Gen. Pass. Ap*., Augusta, Ga., T. M. Bmerson, Traae Manager._ 60 "EARS/ EXPERIENCE Trade Marks I DCSIQNS * Copyrights Ac.1 Anyone sending a sketch ?nd rtoscrlptlwt *i? qnlcklr ascortm? onr opinion f'^ whother ?1 invent -m ts probably patentable. f 1 "1?1,??, tfonsMrtetii confidential, liamrbook ou f'atontx ont frVe. Ol<le? i-Kcncy for ?ocuritiir potoirt*. l'a?eul? taken th-"ui:h .Maim ?-Co. rccelw tjwfal nnllec, without, oh.-ifjc. U tuo Scientific ?rican. a hftm??omeJy llhtrtratort wok);;. L*r?Bai ?f> niHUion < { rfyr Mjimtulo Journal, Torrn?,? :.t*- ". nip .: j.s ? t. Sold by ft? neFSdttlen, im & Co.3?5r^advvay- New Yort