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?V?gelable Preparationfor As similatiug IheFoodand?eg ufa ling the Stomachs aral Bowels of For Infants and Children The Kind You Have Always Bought Promotes Dige9tioii.Chccrfur~ nessandResl.Conlains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral. I?OT TM AltC OTIC. Hutpt offJld nrSAMUELPtTCJlSn f\tmfJun Stuff' A'Ix Sr,u sa ? iiythtiU Sall! - ?tni?t .ffwrf r Iii 'fc/?tJtfi/.'.f?.fc * Cicnfied, ttugr h&tctyfsa.?arar. Aperfecl Remedy forConsUpa Tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness atid Loss OF SLEEP, Itt Simile Signature of NEW YDHK. : ?. -vyu \f?>.",n> s;-.;?'? i ii- : . ) y 0 ns J S - Jj ? I -i\ i s EXACT. COPY QFlWRA PPC?5 3>. 8. VANDIVER. E. P. VANDITBB. TA1BITI1 BBOl HENTY OF GUANO AND ACID FOR LATE USE. Send on your wagons. Flour, Corn, Oats, Coffee and Tobacco! At Lowest Prices. Cotton Seed Halls in 100 pound Sacks. Your butin?es appreciated by VANDIVER BROS. In the Piedmont Belt of the South ? ?'. ft I., 'j Anderson Sounty is tia? M'?M of the r?e?toxwat-Baityand and you can aeleot from tho following and let mo Hoar from Jpn: J? tbe City of Anderson : House and Lot on North Hain Street. House and Lot on South Main Street. Vacant Lot on South Main Street. ??u /O_. -_Sit- ?Tl_? t_ ?U vnmTUW AUWBSOip ... 165 acres, improved ; also, 67 aeres. & Broadway Township : 61 aeree, ls Pendleton Township : 77 acres, ls Fork Township : 104,900,105 and 52 aore Tracta. In Hall Township : 289 acres. ALL MOBS OR LESS WELL IMPROVED. In Pickens County I have 285 acres in one body and 75 eores in another. In Ooonee County I have several Tracts, running 104,418,75,385, 186, 166-all in Center Township. There are no better lauds to produce than I offer you above, and if yon are interested in bu vine or selling lands in the oity or country, see me and lome tell you what I nave to offer. Tonie for building up the country and city, JOS. J. FBETWfflLL, Anderson, 8. ?. . 'Vi ?if MASTIC MIXED PAINT. We Waat to Sell You Your Paint Come in to sea" di, and ley us tell you all about it. We have sold this Paint for many yean, and all have been pleased who ased.it. We have a fine selection of colon? and will gladly give yon a card showing them if you will call in and request same. Also, a full lino of Varnishes, Stains; Floo? faints. Furnitur? Poliah, Paint Brushes, Etc ORR, GRAY it CO., 1 Hext to Bank of Snderao?. adifibto Druggists. W? Office ever Far mora and Morenant? Bsnjc, Anderson, 3, O. WAR ST Incidents of th< [Paper read before Camp W, J. Hardee, Birmingham, Ala., by P. M. V&oce, firm lieutenant of Company F (Bibb's Graye), 11th Alabama Regi ment, Wilcox's Old Brigade, at that time commanded by Gen. John C. C. Saunders, j The morning before the desperate aad bloody hattie I was in charge of the picket Hoe immediately in front of our camp. About ten o'clock, while I was standing on an embank ment which had been thrown up for protection, the Federal pickets being just in front, Gen. It. ?. Lee rode up and dismounted. Stepping to my side, he asked: "Lieutenant, have you noticed any unusual movement of the enemy?" Bringing my sword to a salute, I replied: "I have not. Look out, General, do you see that tree? There is a sharpshooter in the top of it." At that moment I ssw a cuff of smoke, heard the whix of a bullet sod the disoharge of the gun, sud the missile ended the life of a pioket just relieved ss be lay io his tent. Goo. Leo stopped down from the embank ment, remounted bis horse, and rode away. We were expecting something unusual to happen, it having been rumored that Gen,. Grant was prepcr ing to blow uo up. On the morning of July 30, about sunrise, we heard a mighty noise that shook the earth. Soon Saunders' Brigade was ordered from the right to tho left, and moved up a ravine front" ing the Orator. It was here that Gen. Mshone made a speeoh to the brigade, telling them that they had been seleoted to make a desperate oharge and that Gen. Lee would be present with him to witness their achievement. Gen. Lee was sitting on his horse in ? cluster of trees near by at the time, scanning the Federal movements with his field glssses. Gen. Mahons com* I plimented the men and officers of the j brigade as Alabamians, who never j failed to disoharge their duty to their country at any peril. Then the brigade was ordered for? ward. Arriving at the top of the slope, we marched straight forward cut into the open field, in full view of the Grater and under a heavy fire from the Federal musketry and oancon. The men were then ordered to front faoe and "Forward to the Grater'* through a continuoua fire of musketry, grape, and oanister. When a soldier waa shot down, the order was passed along the line, "Glose up, men," and I never saw a prettier,,lino kept on dri?. Arriving oiose to (he c?derais, who were in the Crater sad ditoheo, the order carno dova the line" from Gen. Saunders, "Fire and oharge bay onets!" and with a yell that tended to drown the rattle of musketry, the screeching of aballa, and tba moen of i the dying, into the ditohes the brigade weet. ;T. . Words fail me to describe the scene that followed. Gen. PTatone had told the soldiers of the bigada that negro troops Were in possession of the Crater and had eome in yelling, "No quarter for the Rebelst" He did not say, "Shaw ?qv quarter," but Saunders* mea decided that point. Having driven these negroes out of the first lina of ditches, Gen. Saun? dors, ever on heed, shirking no den? ger, dashed to tba front on bia beauti ful bleak charger and ordered me to take my company and go over the em bankment that had been thrown up by the explosion. Giving thia order to my company, we climbed to the top of the embankment. Lieut. Harkness, of Company C, waa toon by my aide waving the colors of the regiment and shouting to the boya to "Come on!" At that moment a big* negro aoldier down in the pit railed his gun aad Gred, sending abell through my leg, v/hioh grated the bone above the itaee. My leg waa' paralysed for a mo- j men?, and ? fell forward, int o the'pit on top of the negro. ., T , , ' . Then it was, who will ger the" best of it? ; The negro bad a large spring back dirk in one hand, and made! a desperate effort to thrust it into\ me. I grasped the negro's hand, holding it fast end making an effort with my right hand to run my sword through him; but 1 oould not do so, owing to the smallness of the pit. lu this situ ation but one thing waa (aft for me to do; that was to hug the negro and wait until my man came to my assist ance. Meanwhile I had to inhale an odor equaled only by a skunk. My comrades came to my relief none to toon, as I waa growing weaker and weaker j from loss of blood, tfa^sy plunged their bayoneta through tina negros*s body. One ef my company, Fred James, now living near Center ville, Ala., gave the nsgro a blow ba the top o? hU head that killed him. By this time sigh* bad set in. and I waa f placed "upon a /litter made \ot blankets by com* of my comrades and carried back lo the rear. I was ex ORIES. 3 Crater Battle. hausted from loss of blood aod death ly oick. Oa reaching tho field hos pital I waa placed upon a rough table. I still had tho dirk knife in my hand, and laid it by my side. When the surgeon began to examine my wound, probing into it, I was kept so busy watohiog him for fear be would cut my leg off that I forgot all about tho knife, and never saw it again. When the war broke out, Gen. Saunders and I were together at the State University. We were dose friends. He was a modest man, a tried and true soldier. [At the reading of the foregoing there was present a sister of Gen. Saunders, who was introduced by Comrade McLaughlin to Camp Har* dee.]-Confederate Veteran. Confederate Cartridges at Appomattox. [J. B. Birdlebnugh, who served oooseontively in three New York regi ments, 1861 65, now of Madison,Tenn.] Tba great War between the States left in the minds of the survivors msoy interesting inoideots, both pa thetic and humorous. Msny of these survive only in the hesrts of oomrsdes (on either side) and are buried with them when they die. I. wili relate one incident of the sur render of Lee at Appomattox of whioh I was an eye witness. I never but ucee saw it referred to in print. I will tell it as it was for the benefit of Veteran readers. On the day of capitulation, April 9, 1865, or it may have been the follow ing day, April 10, our corps,/ the 5 tb. was drawn up in two lines to receive the arms of the Confederates. They marohed up by brigades and divisions in the little main street of Appomat tox C. H.. stacked arms, onkuekliog their belts, hung their accouterments on the eteok of guns and broke ranks, goiog wherever they were inclined, being fros oo parole. AU the arms were stacked--and, by the way, out of approximately thirty thousand men who surrendered that day only about ten thousand stands of small arms were surrendered. Whet became of the rest? Will some Confederate soldier who knows enlighten me? [There were not thirty thousand armed men tb oro.-Ed. Veteran.] Our ??oops soon thereafter started on the march to Burksville Jonction, utterly destitute of rations. There were no rations for either army, as wo "by order had divided equally with the Cv?**u???i?? mW that ; waa sn v. the quartermaster's stores. Bofore" s?a started oe?u?red/the incident which I am to rc?ate. About midway of ; the steaks of arma there WU au o?d alan do ned datero which had fallen in and which formed a sloping Me in'the granad perhaps Ava er rdx ##*| ?mmn in the lowest place. One.of our ?en, ?''Poe" Smith, (not a-dootor),, seeing a chao co for some fan and not realising what tho result would bo, went to^ house near by and, getting a shovelful of coals and throwing them down into tba hole, began throwing m some of tha cartridges which had previously been taken out of tho boxes and emptied upon the ground. ? This made *a considerable diversion at the ticae. but shortly an officer made Ms appear* ! ance aud pat; o j stop . to ' tbs proceed fugs.Just about that time of j wind carried a spark up tho bank, and i in oa instent pandemonium broke ! loose. Gna-belf of tho oftrtridgds tobi; fire end the bullets flew thick as ball? stones, m*Iea stsmptdsdYasdmsnw to take shelter behind boneo s o? any place that was handy. Whsn th? officers carno around, which they did 1st once, and inquired who dH it,: no one knew. (t).. While they were pur? suing the investigation another spark caught tho remainiog cartridges, ajad foy a fsw minutes th* .bullets flew tbiokcr and faster than they wero ever known, to in battle, ; All; were ooh* sumed. This is th? true story. The ammunition was aot! destroyed by officiel ordeti \ ? Another memorable scene at Sjtfifa mattoxwaa thia:WMle thearms were being sucked a considerable number of s?^Utors---soldiers bf botharsiisa> camp followers, eto.-wcro crowded up behind the Unes ol the;,titb ;^rpe? anxious to witness all they, could of the historic: scene: t?n;*1fio^'b?it* horse sat a/' Confederate/- cibtsin, a noble-looking msn of abcut'thlrty-five' yW While watching tho eteota hO fell Into conversation wida some of oqr men j in tho course of t^Hch ho ex pressed himself e* loftowsf "We^er^ ^ad./o?^ have beat us. I cannot cay that I am sorry. I am a Virgioiaa by? ;b|rf& was educated Jo ths North; and when Virginia j.ropoaed to pass tho ordi nance of leMSsibn?vI'-op -out when ?be determined to seoe46,'iT^| it to jtsv wy : d?ty ^to, cast io my lot with my native SuW; and this is the result." Looking into tho future as with a prophciio eye, he continued: "I do not know what we are going to do. We have no money, we have no niggers, and we have no credit. What we are going to do, God only knows. We most go to work." I have given the above almost word for word as I beard it, as it made such an impression on my mind that I have never forgotten it. I have often wished that I knew who this gallant and patriot'o captain was. Thank God! we are all Americans. We are a united people, and the combined armiee of the world cannot conquer us. Federals and Confederates meot and clasp hands with warmest friend ship. Gen. Grant's plea, "Lot us have peace," has come to pass.-Con federate Veteran. - m - True Cause of Civil War. History, to deserve the name, should be true and impartial. The true oause of war does not always appear on the surface. The instigators prefer, for various reasons, to oooceal tho real motives for bringing it on. It WOB a common thing for the Federal soldiers to say they were fighting for the Union, seeming rather to say ?aal than to say they were fighting to free the negroes. The most frequent onus? assigned was the desire on the part of the people of the North to liberat< the negroes from slavery, based 01 feelings of philanthropy. Boraci I Greely, ?Bsrriet Ttaecher 8towe, Abra ham Lincoln and some others ma] have been co actuated, but tba pri'nei pal actors io the great drama looke< muon deeper. The real' motive to bringing on the war waa to get centro of the Federal government. To atteii this end ?no emancipation of th negroes waa necessary. The South by ita superior civilization and the in telligenoe of its oitisehs, had from it incipiency held the soeptre of govern ment. The fathers of the republic whose impress was most deeply fell were Southerners. In the- field, o the forum, in the halls of legislador, the South held full away. A larg proportion of the Presidenta had bee Southern men. Slavery afforded oj portunity for leisure and the neoessai means to become educated, aa well i the cultivation of those high and. -ai nobling qualities whioh have alwaj ch arco tori zed the Southern gentlemai In thia way it was the 8outh1 ai obtained control and held the reins < government. These oiroumstances ei gendered, envy and jealousy: on tl part of the Northern people, ^hic la turn became a potent factor I bringing about a state of affairs thi culminated in a rapture of tho Unipi Tbi* waa made I a pretext for vis which afforded .the opportunity to fr IUD uugiuoo, iou mo Duuiu waa DHU, of its power end wealth, aa - also i ability to retain control of the gov et mont? i .\ .?'?.--/:'.: C. R. .Fontaine, . ; Croeke!**^ . ??? .?. .\}'\ ii^iia'-gi" ?"1 \ Would Hang Sherman vTfelle ea i .'. Savana ah, Ga,, May 1,-Th? mar of Rev. Fainer Sherman, son of <Sfc ?m ahorman, over >the: rettie 1 father took cn.hirfamou's-'''^arcb the eeo,-" has provoked a gre it dea!; adverse' comment by ? inf eden :WBie*aiMe.!1 . !: y ? '^?::>X%^?? "I cannot imagine what po ssl do considerable homi Ja '.a'/aken! marches wq^ifa.jtfkm; $M| is nothing */) be p?oad cf ia Sb man's ) m*reb ia g wi e$i i ?? large sw be bad decoyed mo? thantwice !. much property ?3 waa necessary rtb,e^auppbti?ei;--.Ms [amy, <: Snehi df?ihisw^ lfWth9?i:?Mm-i the Y?jwn?wWKt tWeiy anstand *bt temper of. people, eiaee$tt -te deemed necesi for she eou of SfieVmaniohsvengi rn*- ^i^moWm^m ;^twitbsufeiing done, he would find himself as saf< th?a Beetioa as io any oiher seotioi the^o?in^."'; .*..;;' -,./-. ? neat member a* |ho Graad Armj the ground over which his fa weat, why d^!twe?% ?arri I can't soo how the government. < P?AotiBg Mssor Bison's opinion v' ^tlf it wareleft to me, i'd have caught ead hung before he 'rea; rv1-;y are said to cause'. ellmatia difiiu? wefc-'^?tuettniB^?sm na? .?eea:mor? )v?ieai tni^;^iear tl?n,:a^rlba Some doctora (?laitte the weather $i<ee*^ rheumatism, thara ia a: curara ? a mystifying fedw ??ur*)a?.??t at''?Bee ta the Dmmraond Med ^0^?^t^:^l^Vr^. ;' 1 aoflfepi.V aorne other ;.me^M^;,^ efceti^^ Bennett's Marriage Day. Somebody, Bays Newspapordom, has dug out a copy of the New York Her ald for Jaoc 1,1840, iu which J tunco Gordon Bennett, tho elder, apnouaced his approaching marriage to the read' era of the Herald, under the heading, 44 Declaration of Love-Caught at Last-Going to be Married-New movement in civilisation. I am going to be married in a few days. The weather is so beautiful-times are get ting BO good-the prospects of politi cal and moral reforms so auspicious, that I cannot resist the divine in stincts of honest nature any longer ; so I am going to bc married to ono of thc most splendid women in intelleet, in heart, in soul, in property, in per son, in manner, that I have yet seen in the course of my interesting pil grimage through human life. 'A cannot stop io wy ??????. I must fulfill that awful destiny which the Almighty Father has written against my name, in the broad letters of life, against the wall of heaven. I must give tho world a pattern of L^ppy wedded life, with ai! the charities that spring from nuptial love. "In a few daya I ehail be married aooordiuff to the holy rites of the moBt holy Catholio oburob, to one of the most remarkable, accomplished, j and beautiful young women of the age. She possesses a fortune. I sought and found a fortune-a very large for tune. . . "She baa no Stonington. sharai, ot Manhattan stock, but in purity and uprightness she is worth half a mil!' ; ion of pure coin. Can any. swindling j bank show as rhook ? In good sens? ? end elegance? another half a aiillioa ; in soul, mind, and beauty, millions OE millions, equal to the whola anecie ol all the rotten banks in the; whole world. "Happily, the patronage of thc .olio to The Herald io nearly *85,00C per annum-almost equal to a presi dent'o salary. But property in thc world's goods waa never my object. Fame, publio good, usefulness io mj day and generation-the religious as sociates /of female . oaeollenoe-thc progress of true industry-these have boon roy dreams by night ?nd my do -sires by doy. ii v <<?M* . *> "In the new ?nd holy condition inte whioh I, am about to enter, to ontot willi the s ?iuo rever?n ti al feelings as 1 would heaven itself, I anticipate come signal changes in my feelings, in as) .ci ow a, in ny purposes, ia my pursuits What they may be L know] not ; - tim? alone can tell. My ardoafe desire, kai been through lifo to reach tho highes' order of human exoellenoe ' by th? shortest, possible^ out* Associated night and doy, in sickness and health is war ?sd _ ??? ;ipasjOS, with ? woman o this hishest order of escoli?nos, mas produc? Dome carious resolta in m; kesrt a'id fpoiinge, endeheso" result thanks for the entbusiaatio patron ag of the publie both in Europe and ii Amsrian Tho holy: catata :9f? l?okwjJi?n^ ?uu aora useful. ;;. Ged Alaight '-asnissyorqon rienaett. ' . . ? '' 5J! *? J"" - ' ' ? '.. -v*:!' -' .i - Soras people ask yo&p advice fe the purpose of working itofi on othei as wfy^ajl-miisjtlsTij^ ' ~ ' '?' - Why does a young man .try ( keep OB the righter Ms tatjjirl vb? he knows th&V her beast is oa tho j? faUaT M . "* " \ ~. ' : - Just think how easy la U for ye to 'dee si ve otho vs~4be a h ave ' an otb ,toaaitbt aa to ibo ease with sr?^;Ofc ^M?ai:?lr:oaat!?a ^entirely ti airy ;t<o ever ?apn^^;^r^W oi tl figure Al! Y ?u Pleite. Sinoo ?bo Sao Franoisoo disaster some of the newspapers have been busy figuring out what would be the effect of a similar earthquake on other l?rge cities. Some of the engineers olaim ?S that the newer skyscrapers of New * York would make quite a stand against earthquake shooks, while others olaim that the shell walls of the huge steel structures would crumble. The dig aster has foreed into public notice, an other danger to dwellers in large cities. Fires, earthquakes, riots, accidents from surface end overhead oars, elec tricity, the accumulation of a!! maimer of evil mea-these are eome of the dan gers which those who are rusbine to the cities take upon themselves^ Prov idence may be taking drast'c meas ures to discourage this segregation of hundrods of thousands of people. "And after the earthquake a fire; and after the fire a still small voice/'-Sa vana au News. _j_ _ ? - ?. * . - BY CLINKSCALIS & LANGSTON^ ? ANDERSON, S. C., WEDNESDAY, MAY 9, 1906. " VOLUME XLI-NO. 47 "