University of South Carolina Libraries
KEEPING BOOKS. 94?!pftit Hint? That Will Provo o? Value ! to Aee^unUnts, Add it jost once more. It paye to take s balan?a of bal ancea. Better think about it at tho time. Some think about it at the end cf the month. Haye you any systematic way of .checking? Cheek ar you post. Ifs easier and quicker. Loop for the exact amount of jour error. You possibly overlook ed it in posting. Div'jde it by ? end look for a .debit 'on the credit side or for a ?redit:jon thc debit side/ If irs exactly divisible by 9, look .out for a transposition, such as 18-81,; 27-72, 3.6~C3,etc. Tho nura "ber of times 9 1? contained in. tho error will be the difference between the transposed digits. Illustration: Say 45 is the error. It contains 9 just five times; hence the transposed .digits must have been (sixteen) IC .as 63, 27 ai 72, 38 as 83, 49 as 94, etc. Bemember that the booka are ?rm property, and you are at liber ty to reveal no secrets they may con tain, 'Don't be in a burry to suggest ?aiey?* m?thode to theil senior of the -firm. Ho is likely to think he 3mows more about his business than you do? * -/ . / Be sure to put the books in tho rav?t each night. You will never realize the value of this precaution xintil you've had a fire. Study the needs of the business. "Plan special" railings to facilitate the handling of the business,, Do not make radical changes at a time. If you make an error, carefully rule a lino through it with red ink. .ffhen write the correction above it. How about your writing ? And your English ? And y our spelling ? Or do you know nothing but book keeping? If you do not, you'll nev er be the manager. You'll always ie the bookkeeper. Have an ambition to occuby tho chair behind the manager's desk.* Brooklyn Eagle. % Good P-^ilaa For the Eyes. Although tho ?yes contribute snore than almost any other feature to personal beauty, they get surpris ingly little attention from the ma jority of persons. Here are a few simple rules for 'preserving their strength ?nd brightness : Do" not read by firelight. When possible, protect the eyes from the direct glare of lamp; gas and candle light. Do not r?aa or work m such =a Mm light that an effort i? .nec'?s W?yjio see clearly. If the eyes are tender wear smoked pr tinted glasses. - Neyer apply soap near the eyes! Bathe them oneo daily, the lids being open-: in 'tepid water. 3[i is bes^ tojuse an eye bath or egg cup audio open rod close the lids in the* iwater. Do not apply any face cream near , the eyes. Put nothing on the lashes but the best of unscented.: oil. : Never cut the lashes in the belief that they will be improved. Keep in mind that whito clii?s, stretches ?of sandland bf ?now aro injurious ?^-???5? oe - guards u against with glasses. ' ' '? .? :. ? . : ? 9$ory Abeu*, burnes. , Alexandre -Xbi??Mim^jm?^?i *h? roost genero vis of men. There is & pretty story told concerning e volu minous manuscript ^hich lu? pub- ; lishe? received from Min one ?ayv.' i0n.it he had; written, *You must publish, this ?OTOV for which you maust give i,?00 francs." Itv waa a translation from th? l^jlisb, and ^ihe pnb??hor objected, plaining ?aa and that, moreover, 'he-,'wraa; busy with ii number , of orignal norial He wouldn't give mote than "800 francs, '^eiry we??/VrepUed iD^as, ?put down i^fO? francs tb iny'ioajs^if: 'Oak*;j?t?;.?Wfs?of? ;and'give ?he ren^jjr?g 1^00 toi^ . transj^tb^ discovered that this was a piece of ??ble .^elp|f?Ine8S on the-part of Jh?t???^-^0;:i]raial?tor' was .the ,.'/.$|?ow*'of va. friend, ?-;a^onee. well feiotra poHtician* who had died ?h<^ye W<>% U poor wo> mian with s large family to support. .' v . ' ? iM? Annuity. . . A Scottish lifo bffico sold ?? ah-, nulty to Pat ;?loney; an^ paid end pol and' paid until they reckoned ? *?a: age was aojont: 1% warn they : . se?$:'^& >:l>tejm?w.tho'Annuitant ana to nw?* -eure;they were1 paying to&ttgjm . -to ,the>5r?j^t.0p?n.'; .r ^naVv-amfe-' :'. -aarfeii^ ed il Pat Haloney was in. No ; he was in the field . plowing. A cen tenarian working plpwn^; Beemed . ' rather-an ?suom^^ ^tV3piri fonna! tha field and a man of he sat?, '1 sm,** "SPOTTED DOG." A Dataty Sea M or?? I Th oft la ? Very Hard to M*k*. One evening my friend, t?? ?kip pe?. Fuddeniy clapped hie band on my beck and blithely announced that tomorrow would oe bishirth ! dav -Jm , "And, gee whir,* he continued, "we must nave some 'spogpd dog I* " Thia ie always considered a rare treat aboard ship? Just why it is so regarded ie as rare aa a hen's tooth. "Spotted dog" is & sailor's term for plum pudding. In my wanderings around the world I have seen it served scores of times to cel ebrate some great event and taken from the table untouched. Mayhap _ some young woman who is learning j to cook would Uko the recipe, so j hero goes : Spotted Dog Fer Ten Pereojos^ Take ?bout three-foiirjths of a bush el of flour in z large dishpan and add sufficient water to make a pasty dough. Bo not kneed it thorough ly, and do not add any yeast, for fear it may rise when baking. When you have finished .kneading, place the pan containing the dough against the wall and step back about five' paces. Take sever?! heaping handfuls of dried currants snd throw them with all your might and main at tho dough. Those that hit the dough will give it a freckled appearance; hence its nome. Place in a slow oven. If any of the cur rants miss fire sweep them up and add while baking, as they give the dish a peculiar piquancy and zest. I never knew a special occasion aboard a sailing ship when this con coction was not served es the piece de resistance. I" have known pas sengers to fast for. days and pass by every other offering on the table in order to whet their appetite for it, but I never knew one to eat it when it was set before him. Of all the edibles of a ship's cuisine it is the most unpalatable. It might be re placed by lignum vitae or cobble stones.'-Charles Barks i in. Success Magazine. Th? Barber's Polo, In early times, the. tradition goes, both medicine and surgery were in the Hands of barbers, as indeed they . continued to bo for many centuries " afterward. The old theory was that I the ?den of the razor were the wor- I finest to handle the lancet, and even j in the ?liddle ages the, lancet was tho ono great instrument of medi cine, as bloodletting was one of the chief practices of the time. In the days of old during the opera ron of bleeding the; patient used to grasp a tele winch the barber surgeon kept ready for use that the pain might be lessened, in-just the saine way as in the d?ys before, chlo roform was .invented people under going a "severe ^psrsilcn ?chewed lead bullets. Around tm% stick waa twined a supply of bondi?: ages for tying up the arm of the patient. When not in .use the pole ' was hung at the door as a sign. In the course of time a painted staff was displayed instead of the one actually used during, tho operations. Wasn't Ceri*!? of Hoi*- Name. I Sha waa Seattle. After in ecribing her.*.;aine on the hotel reg iste she asked thc clerk if any mail had. OwSe ?uufeaBed co in?. ? ?The :??TS? shs W3ot? on the regia ter vrcs . suangy <?Mrs? T. Brown; Seattle.": I I don't suppose by any chance that this is intended for you, is it?> inquired the cloris? handing her a letter addressed, r^jBnsV " T.v B, ^eev that is. mine," said tho de mure guest. "I reoogtu^ tha ha?d* .Tj?T?.?u??^ -y;..: ?,-?;; ; * . . , ^nt?i3^.;i??n?9;ift' spelled difiejPr ently," ^?nted ^??|v eanti?os c?erfc : ftoxL h ' spell : ?p??,% Haine ? *B-r-o-w?u>' and - the name on the letter j^as a final'e.''* : .'y^-^r ? ; She got all fussed up ebeni it and iMi?ift li ' "Yon see," ehe explained, ^1 am inot quite sure how ho spells it." ; ^fWh?^/;.VV,: ?? -v^ MM husbancL We've been mar ried only a month."r--3ai? Francisco Chronicle^ :? V 1 ? ' MI? Wrfe?a Sdenoy. ' &^ce^uipbn ?' .-time'.a roan inarrie^ : a womoa wh? liad iiAerit?d from a grandfather. This was all' ^:''?v$r;r? man nev er^ot credit for hii efforts tho rest (ChisHe built a new" store.; j ^0. ^ H vf^^his ^*s;t?oiae^/* I ino .'. S?&ighbor? ?u?u. f.Th&yui^e > I made over &n? enlarged: ?Bk Wife's t?one?aicl jf??. wai the only comment.1 The : little m?asly $300 .she inherited'??c^ted;'t?a ?rro^f ?rrorfctl?ng he did during life, i^d4 when lie died;^i^ihiS:.w?cB^. put.Mj ;^?fer money; M&'.f??t&t# wa^ieap again. '4'34t this is what i??r mone? ^jraalUy.we^ her ehga^ev Foment she bought herself ? $330 pia lpo and & $J60 diamond sing anet in I &\tef^<sM $ost ^^j^;ihd;|&^ mom?. - . ^V" ^mprn^j?. ?ow:t?W: iS^^ll?lM *?$?rv^^ deM&ed ai 0?pe ?enry, Vii ' ;?o^?^jft?;>*e*w^^ HF Mad: honor.' : i THE CHEERFUL LIFE. Hs Charil*- ?a Complata Which Lacks I Moral ftunahfna. i It takes a great deal of Bunshine j to produce a perfect peach or a per fect rose. The sunshine will do what* clouds cannot do. it ia the sunshine that gives thc inimitable tint of beauty to fruit and flower. No character is completo which lacks moral sunshine. Many a man has failed because he waa too seri ous, bectouse he thought that life was too important and too short "to bo trifled with/' as he put it. But the fact is, the cheerful lifo is tho healthy, productive life. Cheerful ness ia as necessary to maa a? sun shine is to tba flWcr. KotWng nor mal can be produced in darkness or in the shade. Fun i? just ?B neces sary to tho normal lifo aa water is to fish or as' oil is to machinery. Notent where we will, tho smile Isss life-the life which has no brightness or sunshine, na humor or gladness-ia morbid, BOM, pes simistic. It is the joyous life, tho cheerful, happy life that is helpful and inspiring. This is the sort of life the world wants. It has too many sour faces, too many vinegary ou H nit-mm cc 3, too many criticisers, too much pessimism, It wants more Bunshine, more optimism, more joy. Is if not a pitiable thing to see pc opio going through life peddling Vinegar, radiating bitterness, criti cising, finding fault, Beeing only the ugly., ignoring beauty, nagging, wor ry lng, fretting and tearing down? Some people seem, to have a" genius for 5eamg the crooked, tho ugly, the disagreeable. There, aro too many vinegar peddlers. Wo need more joy peddlers, more Bunshine makers, people who ignore the ugly, the bit ter, the crooked, but who see the world of beauty and perfection which God has made. We need the people who see tho man . and tho wo man that God made-pure, clean, sane and healthy-not the ugly, dis eased, discordant, criticising one that sin, wrong thinking and wrong living have ruado; ? man "becomes strong and creative when he sees.his fellow men and the world as God made them-but those who look for the bad, the ugly; the crooked, are never creative. They are never pro ducers. They ere destroyers, They tear down.-Success Magazine ' in .i l. ./I ., Smma Abbott's Stags Kits. . . The following is a description by Eugene Field of Emms. Abbott's stage kiss: ; Aha, tiwi kiss-that long, low, languishing, limpid, liquid, linger ing Jd*?l 'Twas not a tender kiss, nor a studied kiss, nor an artistia kiss, nor a fervent kiss, nor a bois terous, kiss, nor ? paroxysmal kiss, nor a nervous kiss, nor a fraternal kiss, nor a gingerly kiss, nor a. dif fuse kiss, nor a concentrated kiss, nor a diffident kiss, nor a popgun ?jriss-^-'tw?s a calm, holy, ecstatic outbreaking of two fond and trust ing '-hearts, an intermingling of two gentle souls sanctified by love; a .communion of the intangible by tan gible means* a blending of heart with heaven* in r w hich the latter had a markest preponderance, ;^r Obviously Unintentional. "Young man,'* snapped the vin On mt t*m. Ho uv- BcU?'d??te. Stranger (to tlic bcguar*8 eon)-How long bas your f a'ther been blind? Boy-Every day from 8 In tho morn ing to 0 nt nlgkt?-Meggendor?or Blat ter. From Willie's Standpoint. Teacher--Willie, I asked you to put an example on the board. Willie-Well, ain't dat er horrible ex ample?-New York World. He Got V/hnt U J Wanted. "Slr, can you spare a little to 'elp a man co's Just left prison?" * ' "I*Si rwy, Very sorry ?or you,' my good mah-^-er--what were you in for?" "Bobbery, with wlolence."-Jugend. ?lngieboy-What suitable wedding* present could I give Dobbs? Doublemsn-?end him half a dozen vt'? ules. ; . Hz*. KCVT WCU-? know now wny tiley caU 'em safety pins... . :^faa. OMwed-Wiry sot; V sdtes> NewwedrrBaby swallowed. one last week? and it norer? liurt him & bit. --Northern Budget, v/' N iimmle^t got a now job now. rm /Vjwkin* In n big watch factory. . Teddy-Watcher di>m'? Makin' fae?? ^?Thliadaiphia Bulletin. - Ol the f?o senses, common-sense SW^j?snso. of humor aro' ; tho' rarest. &?tel0^y0??^'?^'--<P^ society can't rubf ihe ?rico-mark off tbs admission ??V>V :. : ? 'IM Nothing ftwoeeds like tho uno cesBful hsrveat of a young mao who bas sown wild oats. ; . f':?;.... Wheo.' a' mao asks you for; adv?oe y?a-are/. 'ft?ways>^f?.i jin . inquir? og whal ilnd ho Wanta and then giving it to TH? 8EN8E OF SMELL. 19mm, AocorAlnv to ?, Scientist, Ia Ito PaBlamental Bool?. Is the 8?DSO ot smell excite by gases i j or {KI rucios r According to Dr. John ' { Aitken, an English specialist, gas ls th? ; j fuadamental basia of the sense of email. In experiments he flrat investi- 1 gated musk, of which it is possible to detect by smell a microscopic quantity inconceivably minute, a (act well known to scientists. Dr. Aitken car ried out his researches upon the cloudy condensation basis, according to which, if odors are attributable to particles, Ibo latter form nuclei of cloudy con densation in supersaturated air and thus make their presence visible. In tho case of music no such nuclei wero detected, proving that musk does not give off solid particles, but evapo rates us a gas or vapor, oud that it is gattOv MS particles from tho musk that act on tho sense of stroll. Of twenty three other odorous s uv?ta*ices not ono gave its perfume in solid particles, ' nothing but gases or VJ .pars escaping from them. Dr. Aitken point', out that tho nos trils appear to ?ubutantlnto this theory. Tho perfn??.o of snuff, for instance, Is a soft, velvety sensation, while tho effect of the solid is sharp and biting, moro allied to pain than pleasure. HAND MYSTERIES. Man's ?2,e?acrir Side'? Worki to Keep tao "Stronger Side" Free. A group of men, which included a salesman for a Chicago cigar house, stood talking near tho nowa stand in a hotel when the subject of cigars came up. "Say, Striblen," said one of the men. "you're n cigar salesman. Tell me why it is that all smokers hold their cigars to tho loft sido of tho mouth." "They don't," replied Striblen-"that ls, all don't. It ls only tho right handed men who do. Left hat ?d men hold their cigars in tho right sido of tho mouth. Tho reason, 1 have been told, ls this: It is natural with all men to make their 'lesser side' do what work It can to keep their 'stronger side* free that lt may meet emergencies. If a man has a package to carry he holds lt In his left hand If be is right handed; If ho ls left handed ho holds it in bis right hand. In either case the hand ho has the most confidence in ls free for emergency use. This same Idea he stretches to cover the muscles. of his Ups. It isn't the possibility that he may need the muscles on tho right side for emergency use that makes the right handed man hold his cigar in the left aldo of his mouth-it's Just that Idea about his whole Messer sido* that makes him do If-Denver Post. ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS. The nardee* to Blake Aro Orchid ?ad American Benn ty Boaea. The orchid and American Beauty rose are the two most difficult flowers to make. A skilled worker can construct only about six American Beauty roses in one day, and this number only when the leaves and pet?is are all ready to put together. The small flowers, like the Jasmine, are alBO difficult to make, and only skilled hands cuu be intrust ed with thia work. The majority of the small and delicately made flowers imported for millinery uses are made in the prisons of France. The work ot making flowers ia pleasant and for skilled hands lucrative, the girls re ceiving ail the way from $3 a week for beginners to $25 for tho best workers. Much of the finer grades ls given out iv? u?uiv i Work? W?w?? ?uu ii ?ri s i wiv ing hugo boxes of flower petals and leaves to put together. One market for artificial flowers is that of the har naasra akers, who order bunches of vio lets and other small flowers and resell them to grooms for the- decoration of their horses oh tallyho trips and other gala occasions. Many of the handsome corsage- bouquets ot orchids and vio leta BO much admired at the theater and opera aro artificial. - Leslie's jj Weekly. ,; ' : , ' ? A Diasmrte? Maalctaaw V Conductor Ctericke, known as the "human metronome," had been giving g a wagner programme. After the con f cert one of the trombone players was heard to say to a fellow musician? "Well, I am going to quit" "Are you daffy?" said -bia friend. "What's tte mattert" *Well, if s Just this: In that 'Tristan und Isolde' number I momen tarily forgot the technics of my Instru ment, got enthusiastic, filled my lungs for that magnificent passage for the brass, when up goes that fatal left band; sor I bad to swallow my enthu siasm-and wind too. If I don't quit I am either going to burst or die of tuber culosis." ; .. y''; :. . ; - A Vonny Mlsprlat, f ; One of the most ludicrous announce ments that Wer appeared perhaps was made by a London newspaper in the earlier half of tho last century to the effect that Slr Robert Peel "and a par , ty of fiends .were shooting peasants lu Ireland." Tho words misprinted, of course, were 'friends'* end ''pheaa ' A Matter ot Mono?, "Would you morry a woman who hod ' mied another mau for breach of prom ; ''toeJP;'.- ;.- . 1 "Well, lt would depend largely on bow much the Jury had compelled bim to pay her."-Chicago itecord-HeraLS. ? : ?] i Ji'-'V S in i i " ,, ?..?"' . .- v ?MI; .. - . .. ..- , . Sh? Waa Heady. , "What a loud peal that is at the door* ? bell/* "Yes; Mr. Catchern is coming thia. ?vening. I rather think that Ii my en I g?gement ring."-Baltimore American. ? ' Happy;' tba mon who early learns the . wide chasm that Hes between ? tue Wlshe3 and his powers.-Goethe. -v ; A tnan who soulos into misery and calls it philosophy ls an optimist ; in his hoad. . ? _ \ ' ; - v-.; The lottors marked 4'personal and ?j :e.?)i?ieitt'ar'- are the ones the private i iit?lrj??a?j^ '. -?The Cb?ttaoooga Tradesman say? I there ien'fc a straw but factory south of ! Bal timor o, notwithstanding tho uol i- xttit,i demand for: ineh hats lo the >*?00uth>noV^ AtenE ?ftided llllnoltifjk u\Vo Imvo the prise absent minded man in S treater, III.," said Henry Os wald, of that city, 4'Not long ago his wife took him to task for his ab* Boiute helplessness when it came to remembering tbiogs and he promised to do mnoh botter. "Less tbau an hoar afterward he started down town, whee she handed him a letter which she wished dropped in the poBtoffioe. He promised not to forgot it and to make good carried it in his hand through the streets. Just as ho reaohed tho letter slot iu the post?nico a friend asked him the time. He drew his wttoh from his pooket, answered the question, dropped the watch through tho slot and started eff, with the letter still tightly hold in hin other band. ""The friend knew of his peculiarity and went after him. When Iho watoh had been secured the absent minded man went on and it was not until late that night that his wifo disoovercd the letter he had started to mail re* posing in his overcoat pooket. In the excitement he had plaocd it there in deed of in the box."-Milwaukeo Sentinel. What May bo Eaten With the Fin-1 get*. Even in the most fashionable so oiety it is permissible to eat many things with the fingers. Asparagus, whether hot or cold, when served whole, as it should bo. Lettuce, which should bo dipped in tho dressing, or in a little salt. Celery, whioh may properly bo placed on the tablecloth besido tho plate. Strawberries when served with the stems on, as they usually are in the most elegant houses. Bread, toast and all tarts and small cakes. Fruit of all kinds esacpt melons and preserves, which are oaten with a spoon. Cheese, whioh is almoBt invariably eaten with the fingors by the most psrtioular people. Eren tho leg or other small pieoe ef a bird is taken io the fingers a? fashionable dinners and at most of the luuiheoos ladieB piok small pieoes of chicken without.using a fork. Russian Unthvlft. A condition o? /general unthrif t among the peasants is pne of the most striking featured *tf Russian country life. Ev ery stran&cr passing the frontier be tween that country and Germany ia struck by the wurked chango m tilla respect which he encounters up to the very boundary line and which the geo graphical position does not at all ac* count for. There ls no gradual cbaago lo. tho uppearance of tho face ot the country or th? people frbzu compara* tlve prosperity to extreme poverty, but a sudden difference lu tho conditions marked by totally dissimilar methods of cultivation, dwellings and habits of thrift Everything on the German side indicates careful cultivation and indus* try, while upon the. Russia- side the fields show bad tillage and neglect, < ?qual id houses, inferior and uncared fer etoo li and tools uuti implements ly? ins in tho fields exposed to the weath er-Herbert H. D. Peirce lu Atlantic, -.-_? AB OIA Kmsllah diatom? The nomination of BherlCfe according to the present modo dates from 1401. Tho "shire reeve" was first appointed by Alfred tho Great to assist the alder men and the bishop in the discharge of their judicial functions in the coun ties. In Edward ill.'s reign lt waa en acted that they should be "ordained on the morrow of All Souls by the chan cellor, treasurer and chief baron of the exchequer/' The only instance of a fe male sheriff le that of Anna; countess cf Pembroke, who on the death of ber father, the Earl of Cumberland, with out rutilo hoirs In 1643, succeeded to tho office In Westmorland end attended the fudges to Appleby. sm OTT o ii ac a Far Mayal?ea. . The largest extent of marsh Sand ls* the world is to be found in the low lands which form part of the steppe of Baraba, between tho rivers Intlsh and Obi, in Asiatic Busala. The region to flat and covered with forests, salt lakes and quivering marshes, extending over an area which is not less than 100,000 square miles. During the summer denso clouds of mosquitoes float over thc treacherous ground. Immense areas of these dreaded urmans have never been visited by man. The marshes, treacherously concealed under a sway ing layer of grassy vegetation, caa only be crossed by means of a kind of snow shoo in winter except at the peril of one's life. ? Th* n-nnknrt?'? Cloak. In the time of?the commonwealth in England the magistrates of Newcastle upon-Tyne punished drunkards by making them carry a tub called the drunkard's cloak. This tub was worn bottom upward, there being a hole at the bottom for the bead and two small er boles in the sides for the hands to pnHS through, and thus ridiculously at stired the delinquent was made to walk through tho streets of the town for as long a time as the magistrates thought proper tb order, according to the gross ness of the offense. '? ! ' Soft Soap. . "Yes, dear," said the petted young wife, examining her birthday gift, "these diamond earrings are: pretty, .but the stones aro awfully small." "pf course, my dear," replied the, dip lomatic husband, "but it they were any larger tn?y'd bo aii out of propor tion to the size of your eare."-Wash logion Star. ? . r ' . \? ??.: ? ?'., ?fr v?--?. : -.v-/ ? Wot-.?'taie'Platform.. '-"^ : ' "?ente,4,' said ; the tolleys cor con-,; ductor, '^o? mustn't? stand on tho back flatform Yeti hreakln' the rules." s "$ome of 'em ain't." piped up the ttt> ; tie man. ?^Th?y'n? a?ndin' on: my feet." -.-Catholic atandord and Times. . 'WSJ LIGHT, MEDIUM AND HEAVY WOOD-WOKj?NG MACSSNB^] FOR EVERY KIND OF WORK ENCUNES AND ECOJ3&? AND SIZES AND FOR EVBRf | CLASS OP SERVICE. ASK FOR OUR ESTIMATE BEPOR8 PLACING YOUR ORDER. [GIBBES MACHINERY COMPANY! COLUMBIA, 3. C. 's Bat of Mtei ANDEBS09, S. C. Wo respectfully solicit & sftasw otfyour business. Kl LL THK COUGH ANO CURE VHS LUNGS WITH Dr. Kin New Discovery MN /CONSUMPTION Price FORI 0UGH8and 60c A $1.00 ^OLOS Frea Trial. Surest and Quickest Gore for ali THROAT and LUNG) TROUB LES, or MONEY BAOS. THOMAS ALLEN. ATTORNEY AT LAW, Office in Old Benson Building* Money to Loan on Beal Estate. Charleston & Western Railway. Carolins Arrival and Departure of Trains, Andor ran, S. O. Effective January 10, IMO, I DEPARTURES: 7.27 a. m. No. 2i. dally ekoept Sunday^ for McCormick and Interme diate ?t??enaf ??7?VS McCOT mick ll 15 a. m. 4:10 p. m. No 6, daily, for Augusta, Al lendale, Fairfax, Savannah. Way eros?, Jacksonville and Florida points, connecting al Augusta with G. & W. C. train No. 40. carrying through Pull? man Sleeping Oar Sor vico to Jacksonville, and at McCor mick wit? 0. A W. O. train No. 4, (br Groen wood and Interme diate stations. . Arrive Celhoss Falla 6.42 p m.j Augusta 8 25jp? m., Allendale 12.27 a. m.. Fair fax 12-89 a. m., Savannah 2.6p a, m i Jacksonville (MO a, rn* ARRIVALSi Trains arrive Union Depot Anderson, No. 6, dally, from Augusts, McCormick, Calhoun Falls and intermediate stations 11.00 a. m.; No. 21, daHy, osospt Sunday, from McCormick and Intermediate sta tions 6.05 p. m. W. B. Steele. U. T. A., Anderson* 8. C. Geo. T. Bryan, G. A., Greenville, 8. C. Ernest Williams, O.P.A. . Augusta, Ga? E. M. Emerson. Trafilo I Blue Ridge Railroad. EflteUve Vcr. 23, INS, .WESTBOUND. No.ll (daily)-Leave Belton 8.60 pv m; Anderson 4.15 p. m. ; Pendleton 4.9 p. m. ; Cherry 4.54 p. m. ; baneon Ol p. rn i arrive Walhalla6? P. sc. ^ No. 9 (daily except Sunday)--Dear? Belton 10.46 a. m.; Anderson 11.07 o. m.j Pendleton 11.32 a. m.; Cherry H SOa. m.* arrive at Seneca 11.67 a. m. . : ? . No. 6 (Sunday only)-Dsavu Salton 11.45 a.m.; Anderson 11.07 a. m.; Pet? dleton 11.82 a. m.j CherryLll?W;?- ?? S?neca 1.05 p. m.; arrive Walhalla Ut ^No. 7 (dally exoept Sandey)-Leave Anderson 10.80 n. m.; Pendleton 10.69 a*. m.; Cherry 11.09 a. m.; Seueoa 1.05 p. m.; arrive Walhalla 1.40 p. nv No. 8 (dally)-Leave Belton 9.15 p. arrive Anderson 9.42 p. aa.' No. 28 (daily exoept Sac lay)-Dem Belton 9.00 a. m.; arrive Audersoh 9.80 . * EA8B0UND, No. 12 (da?yl-Leave Walhalla 8.35 a. m.; Seneca 8.58 a. m.; Oheny 9.17 a. m.; Pendleton 9.25 a. m.; Anderson 10.09 a? m.? arriveBelton 10.25 a. m. ' . . No. 15 (dally except Sunday)-Leave Seneca 2.00 p. m.; Cherry 2.19 p. m.? Pen dleton 2.20 p. m.; Anderson 810 p. m.; arrive Belton 8.85 p. m. ,; ; . No. 6 (Sunday only)-Leave Anderson 8.10 p. m.; arrive Bel ton 8 35 p. nv No 8 (dalry)-Leave Walhalla 8.10 p. m.; Seneca 6.31 p. m.; Cherry 5.59 p. m.; Pendleton 6.12 p. m.; Anderdon 7.30 p. m.; arrive Belton 7 58 p. m. No. 24 (delly exoept Sunday)-Leave Anderson 7.50a. m.; arrive Belton 8.20 a. m. H. C. BEATTIE, Pres.? Greenville, S G J. R. ANDERSON, Supt. . , .. ' Anderson, j. C. _ y ii ^?amB????o^ TRUDE MAR??} tJt^^/c^^i^^m to ??... - j wi? t