University of South Carolina Libraries
EATING AT NIGHT. If Judiciously Done, lt Will Help to? Make You Fat. It was formerly thought that food j taken at tsclt??G created indiges tion and bad dr^aros. While xsn douhtedly rich and hearty food ia Appropriate at*the time chosemf or repose, a light nourishing ropasn.at night often:conduces to sound ?deep by. drawing the blood away from tho brain. Physicians are now advising a bedtime meal for weak, nervous and ! emaciated peopl&j Although the de mand made upon tho system is nat urally much less than during the waking hours, there is a wasting away of tissues consequent upon tho suspension of nutriment for many hours. Food .taken at dinner is di gested at bedtime. Often one is restless and wakeful at night be cause the stomach is empty. Says a well known physician: 'Tuan is the only creature I know of who does not deem itpropei to sleep on a good meal. Tho infant instinctively cries to be fed at night, showing that food is necessary dur ing that time as well CB through the day, and that left too long without it causes it discomfort, which it makes known by crying." If you crave it, eat a light,' easily digested meal at bedtime, and the long hours of sleep will work out for you a problem in addition, in stead of subtraction, of adipose tis sue. __ Not What He Meant at All. Politeness, it is true, must have its origin in a kind heart and a de sire to please, but tact and thought fulness and quick wit are also essen tial to good manners. A very stout hostess who was en tertaining a large company one evening turned to a group of young men standing near her chair and smilingly asked: ?May I trouble one of you young gentlemen for a glass of water from the pitcher o? the table?" Several of the young men hurried to comply with the request. One who was particularly active succeed ed in leaching the table first. As he handed the glass to the hostess she complimented him on his quickness. "Oh, that's nothing/' he said, am used to it. I got into many a circus and menagerie when I was a hoy by carrying water for the ele phant." It was only when he saw the ex pression on the lady's face and no ticed the silence that the young man realized what he had said. Genius and Gout. Mr. Havelock Ellis in the course of his researches into the causes of death of great men and into the ail ments to which they were subject finds that gout is a preponderating ailment of genius. The list given of the victims of gout is a long and in teresting one. It includes John Milton, William Harvey, Isaac New ton, Samuel Johnson, Savage Lan dor, W. R. Hamilton and last, though .by no means least, Darwin himself. Epilepsy has long been known also as an ailment associated with a high order of brain. Napo leon, Mohammed; Lord Herbert of Cherbury and Hamilton are cited as examples of the epileptic tendencj*. Julius Casser might probably have been added to the list, while Swe denborg is claimed by alienists as also belonging to the epileptic divi sion.-London Standard. Fancy That Old Stuff ! Her good man waa ill, and Mrs. Bogelby had been out to get tho best luxuries her slender purse could afford for him. When she returned, her hands trembled BO with indigna tion that she could hardly untie her bonnet. "It all comes of bein' poor," said the old lady to her husband. "I jist stopped a minnit at the Biches to tell'em os how you wasn't get tin' any better, and Mrs. Rich said she was sorry and wanted me to bring you a bottle of wine" "Did you bring it ?" asked the ail ing man eagerly. ' *^No; I heard her say-& had been layin' down in the cellar ever since 1855, and when she offered it to me I jist walked off without .savin* a word."--London Answers. The Glowworm's Light > The English glowworm is the wingless female of a winged beetle. Some suppose that the light she bears is bestowed for her protection to scare away the nightingale and other nocturnal birds. Others, how ever, bolieve that the gift of bright ness is the very lure oy which her foes are assisted to discover and de vour her. Much speculation has been indulged in as to the nature of the glowworm's light, which is not put out by water or seemingly capable of giving forth any heat. It has been asserted that the light diffusing substance contains phos phorus, but this has never been proved. Certainly it is incapable of communicating ignition tb any thing. wMo i vni? foti Xf?foT?tff flufl flhjlflffllll, Tbs Rind You Haw Alwa|s,&sgM Bears tho Signature of _ A JkJJi- vf_ n ......avil ?st uuuiauui WO>| UU? ix sheep which in one season yielded two fleeces, one black as ink, iud tba Other white as snow. TIPPED THE PORTER. Tho Way an American Evened Up mattera In a French H ot- L "Powelson, tho pioneer o? Ameri can photography ia a business sense, was a born humorist," said a prom inent New York photographer the other day. "X believe he might have been a rival o? Mark Twain if he had turned his attention that way. Many years ago I went over to Europe with him on a business trip, which turned out to be one of the pleasantest jaunts I ever had. "They have a custom, or had, in the French hotels of sticking a num ber of candles in your room and charging you a franc each for them, whether you lighted them or not. Powelson never got reconciled to that. One day just before we left a certain hotel ho said to me, look ing round our room, 'Cooper, do we have to pay a franc each for all these candles ?' "I said that was the usual charge. u 'And all those porters and wait ers down stairs will expect to be tipped too?* r 1 believe they will/ I sc d. " 'How much ?' " 'Oh, about a franc, I suppose/ " 'All right, then/ "He didn't Bay any more at the time, but next morning when we were getting ready to start I saw him taking the candles out of the candlesticks and putting them in his pocket. When he got down stairs, Powelson pulled one of those candles out of his pocket and hand ed it to a porter who was waiting for a tip from him. 'Here's a franc for you. You can cash it in the of fice/ "-New York Times. Tibetan Skull Drums. A drum of an extreme repulsive ness of nature is one used by the lomas of Tibet at some of their church ceremonies. For this the craniums of two skulls, preferably children's, are taken, and over the concave side of each is stretched the skin of a snake.1 The two skulls are then cemented at their vertices to either side of a wooden disk covered with a cotton cloth, the stretched skins being outermost. These drums are often ornamented by having the heads of devils and such like hor ! rors, the more repulsiva the better, painted upon them in red and blue 1 colors. The method employed in playing them is rather curious. To the wooden disk between the two halves a cord is fastened, by which the drum can be suspended and then rapidly rotated. Two short cords with knobs at their ends hang down in such a way that as the drum re volves they strike alternately on ei ther face and thus produce a regu lar "tum, tum/';-Good -Words. Chicken Talk. A chick a few hours out of the shell, an English zoologist tells us, has five distinct calls. Its cry. when it loses sight of its mother is entire ly different^ from the note with which it signifies that it is hungry. After being fed it utters another call expressive of its desire to be covered and to sleep. The cry of fright is a kind of "chir-r," which is used also by the hen as a warning call and never fails to bring the brood scampering to her. The cluck ing of a hen to her chicks i? famil iar enough to most people, but few know that, although there may be scores of hens in a farmyard cluck ing at once, the voice of each will be unmistakable to her particular brood, and, moreover, every hen will know which is her own family among a whole cluster of other chicks. _? Australian Slang. A pap9r in Western Australia has been bewailing the uncultured "ac cent" adopted by "educated" chil dren in the ' Westralian" state schools. In proof of this such ex amples are given as " 'ee-yuh" for "here," "particklcr" for "particu lar," "bin" for "been" and "seen" for "saw." It is pointed out, however, that in other parts of the Australian con tinent a more objectionable form of language, the use of slang, predom inates. A head is a "top piece" or a "napper," eyes "lamps" or "ogles," an ear is a "lug 6r a "paddle box,", a mouth is a "kisser" or "mush," a face is a "dial" or "phiz," and legs are "dutches/ an abbreviation of "Dutch pegs." Parepa Rosa a Coquette. Earepa Bose was an accomplished coquette with her audience, and she understood the public i thoroughly. Good natured, vivacious and warm heaxted when before the footlights, she was also shrewd and methodical in her business transactions, a com bination that is seldom seen in an artist, and this fact was of material advantage later in dealing with her manager. Almost invariably upon her first appearance in an opera she' would furtively "size up" the audi ence, indicating, as a Cleveland pa Sir once said, that "she was count g the* house before beginning her' vierformance."-Cosmopolitan. .?a a - For driving out dull bilious feeling; at???sthenitig ?.he appetite and in creaBiog the capacity of the body for work Prickly Ash Bitters is a golden remedy. Evans Pharmacy. . - One woman breaks a man's heart and some other woman mends it. Ifeu signatura i? on every box ot tba ?ana?. Laxative Broaacr-Qirioine /rawou Ui6 remedy that earea . ceSa tenons.?Say THE OSTENDE CLUB. ft? Gcrgeouo and Spacious Gambling Salons Are Exclusive. At Osten.de the admission fee,is 20 francs, which operates to exclude \ nearly ali parsons excepting those who wish i\ play, whereas at Monte Carlo the gambling rooms are gen erally overrun with curious specta tors. Nevertheless at the height of the season the gorgeous and spacious salons of the Ostende club are gen erally crowded with men and wom en, in about equal proportions, and the regulation evening dress of the men and the toilets and jewels of the women make the scene about the tables as dazzling as it is de moralizing. Boulette and trente et ?uarante are tho favorite games, the omer generally for low and the batter for high stakes. Tho minimum stake is 5 francs, and the maximum is 2,000 francs. The maximum limit is frequently played by the more experienced and reckless gamblers, and tho total winnings and losings of a day or a night aro undoubtedly of enormous proportions. Just what these pro portions are is known only to tho inside management. That they arc uniformly large can be readily in ferred from tho fact that it is no uncommon thing to seo a single player win or lose 250,000 francs at a single sitting. With hundreds of players at the tables, playing day and night, with chips representing all the way from 5 francs to 1,000 francs, it is not difficult to reach the conclusion that upward of 1,000,000 francs are daily lost and won at these tables, and they are generally lost by the players. No doubt the game is fair and square enough, as such games go. lt is not necessary for the proprie tors of gambling establishments at Ostende or elsewhere to take any imf air advantage of their patrons in order to win their money. Their main reliance is on the recklessness and foolhardiness of the average gambler, who never knows how to j stop playing until he lias lost his last sou.-Forum. Knew How lt Waa Himself. ! Not long ago in Perthshire, Scot land, a woman was driving her hus | band down a narrow lane when OD turning a sharp corner they encoun tered a brewer s cart. Neither had room to pass, and in most disagree able tones the woman said : "He must go back, for I shall not. He ought to have seen us be fore entering the lane." "But, my dear," replied her hus band, '*how could he with this sud den turn in the road ?" "I don't care," said the woman haughtily. "I shall stay here all night before I give way to him." The driver of the cart overheard all the conversation and said re signedly: "A* rieht, sir. I'll gang back," adding sympathetically, "I've got just such anithcr one at home." Scottish American. Sleepwalking a Mystery. Sleepwalking is something better understood now than formerly, but psychologists are not thoroughly agreed in regard to many of the phases. One of the most recent cases, that of a youn? man up in Glasgow walk ing ten miles to visit his father, and of an . even better known case, that of a .young Welsh lady walking three . miles on a cold night in her nightgown without awakening, up set many of the previously acepted theories. It had been thought that expo euro to intense cold as well as intense heat would awaken thc sleepwalker, but in these cases, which aro well authenticated, it appears that this opinion, while correct possibly in the main, is not always so. Overheard. An anecdote from Short Stories suggests how far a bore may throw his beams. Two men-wo may assume that one was a Frenchman-were riding together one day through Paris. Ono was exceedingly clever, while the other was correspondingly dull. As is sometimes the case, the latter monopolized the conversation, and his talk was fast becoming unendur able when his companion saw a man on tho street far ahead yawning openly. It is not probable that the dul lard felt this needle prick of wit, but his companion's exasperation must have found momentary relief. "Lookl" he exclaimed. "We are overheard I" The Object of Opera. "Yes? said Mr. Cumrox, "we al ways attend the grand opera." "What for?" asked thc man who knows nothing but bur in ess. "Out of a strict regard for the truth. My daughters want to be able io say they have heard all the great singers, and I think that their conscientious devotion to avoiding a fib on the subject is very much to their credit."-Washington Star. - Th? Cowthrope oak ie the largest in England. It is reported to be over 1600 years old, and its branches cover h?lf an acre. At the close of the seventeenth century, according to Evelyn's "Sylva," it was seventy eight feet in circumference ot the base of the trank. Sinee then a quan ti i> of earth has been placed around it as a support. It is estimated to contain at tho present time seventy three tons of timber. His Sweetheart's Letter. A Colonel, on his tour of luspee tion, unexpectedly entered the drill room, when he carno aoross a oouple of soldiers, one cf them reading a let ter aloud, wh'lo the other was listen ing, and, at the same time stopping up the ears of the reader. "What are you doing herc?" tho pniided officer inquired of the former. "You see, Colonel, I'm reading to Adkins, who can't read himaelf, a let ter which has arrived by thia after noon's post from his sweetheart." "And you, Adkins, what in all the world are you doing?" "Please, Colonel, I am atopping up Murphy's ears with both hands, bo cause I don't mind his reading my sweetheart'e letter, but I don't wan him to hear a single word of what she has written." - The printer in the office of ono our near-by contemporaries in mal ing up the forms in a hurry a few weeks ago, got a marriage notice and a grocer's advertisement mixed, and this is how it read: "Sam Turn Bull and Easter Lilly wero united in holy bonds of sauer kraut by tho quart or barrel. Sam is an excellent codfish sold at ten cents per pound, while thc bride has some nice picketed pigs feet displayed, which made her look very charming, and will be sold cheap for cash." - An Indiana man has boen mar ried twelve times and is now looking for his thirteenth wife. There is a man who evidently hasn't got sense enough to be superstitious. - She-"Are you as gooda judge of horses as you aro of-wives?' The Widower-"Well, I can't say I am. I've only lost one fortune through horseB." - The difference between brave mon and cowardly men is that the man who is afraid to be afraid has a con tempt for the man who is afraid not to be afraid. - When a young man begins to know how much less he knows than he thinks he knows then he knows something that is really worth know ing. - If a man lives in his own house he pays the interest on his own mort gage; if he lives in a rented bouse he pays the interest on somebody el. e s mortgage. - Ice or ice cold water applied to the back of the neck and base of the brain is i\ recently discovered and ex cellent means of relief for nausea and sick headache. - Some women seem to have an idea that when a man wants to make money he takes off his coat and prints it or something. - The average woman may not be able to love three men simultaneous ly, but she can make a generous bluff at it. - When a man resigns himself to fate his resignation is always accept ed. - The man who wakes up to find himself rolling in wealth soon rolls out of it. - There is such a thing as a woman of few words, but ahe is apt to be re iterative. -i- If a married man would "know himself he should get his wife to in* troduce him. - An old bachelor says that matri mony and not Wisconsin is the "bad ger" state. - Some people live off their wits and some live off the laok of wit in other people. - The brain worker may have to tax his ingenuity, but he has the ad vantage of free raw material. - Envy never faile to be grieved at another's happiness and happy at his grief. - When a man is paid for playing he calls it work. CATARRH . Catarrh has become such a common disease that a person entirelv free from this disgusting complaint is *u;ldom met with. It is customary to speak of Catarrh a& . J tb i ii g more serious tuan a bad cold, & simple inflammation of the nose and throat. It is, in fact, a complicated and very dangerous disease ; if not at first, it Very soon becomes so. The blood is quickly contaminated by the foul secretions, and the poison tim. igli the general circulation is carried to all parts of the system.-' Salves, washes and sprays are unsatis factory and disappointing, because they do not reach the 6eat of the trouble. S. S. S. does. It cleanses the blood of the poison and eliminates from the system all catar* thal secretions, and thus cures thoroughly and permanently the worst cases. Mr. T. A. Williams,'? leading dry-goods mer chant of Spartanburg. 8. C.. writes: n For yean X bad a severe case of nasal Catarrh, with all the disagreeable effects which belong to that disease, ana which make life painful and uric nd ii .a We. I used medicines prescribid by leading physicians and suggested ny numbera of friendo, but without Retiing any better. I then began to take S. 8. fi. It had . the doired effect, and cured me after taking eighteen bottles. In my opinion 8. 9. 15. ia thc only medi cine now lu use thst will effect a permanent cur? of Catarrh." iiflfc /$S& ia ^ onlv Purely vcs fC ?table blood purine! ^?h. ^fev known, nud the grent ^ af ^ aft est of all blood medi QyfjF *9B?r cines and tonics. If you have Catarrh don't wait until il becomes deep-seated and chronic, but be gin at once the use of S. S. S., and send For our book on Blood and Skin Disease! and write our physicians about your.caie. THE SWIFT f PECIH0 CO., ATLANTA, CA. - A knot of men were gathered in *e smokiug-roorn at the club the her evening. They finally entered pon a contest to see trho could bell ie moat r ^markable story about the it men or the lean men they had ?en. The man awarded first prize lid thtt he had met in his travels a ian so thin that he could "go through flat? without striking a not*." ?he Human Lottery "Ah, tr only I tvere beautiful how happy lift? would hv." Many o forlorn maid has saki thia as Rho looked into the mirror, l'or beauty women have sacrificed home? love and friends, lt is tlie ono possession in the lottery of human lifo which women would not ref use . B HADFIELDS Female Regulator for younRK'flaon th? threshold of woman hood, ha* been invaluable. When they be come palo and languid, the eyes dull, aching head, feet and hands cold, appetite gone or abnormal, obstructed periods and fiainful menses, and their systems genernl y run down, they need building up, and their blood needs cleansing. HradHeld's Female Regulator for women is particularly valuable und useful owing to its tonic properties to build up the sys tem, and aa a regulator of the menstrual th> wu. Painful, obstructed and suppressed menstruation perm anent ly rel ie ved and all diseases peculiar to her genital organs are cured by it. Regulator clear? the complexion, bright cns the eye, sharpens thu appetite, removes muddy nnq blotched conditions ot tho skin and cures sick headache to a certainty by removing the cause. Of druggists Sl.oo per bottle *' Perfect Health for Women " is free and will be mailed on receipt of address. THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO. ATLANTA, Ga- C. BREED CHICKENS A SPECIALTY ! Barred Plymouth Rock. White Plymouth Rock. Silver Wyandottes. . Brown Leghorns. Purity guaranteed. Eggs for sale. Carefully packed for shipping. L. a M fVTTISON, Audsrson, S. C. Jan 22,1902 31 Gm AVOID TROUBLE By letting us tighten your TIBES before they get too loose. We understand how to do this work to get the best results. Any Repairs on Carriages, Buggies and Wagons will be done promptly. PAUL E. STEPHENS. KIDNEY DISEUSES are the most fatal of all dis eases. Cm C?9Q KIDNEY CURE ls a i UL tl O Buaran?eed Remedy or money refunded. Contains remedies recognized by emi nent physicians as the Best for Kidney and Bladder troubles. 'RICE 50c arxd $?.00. J. "W. Q?ATTLEDAUM. ERKKbT F. COC UK AN. QittluM k dir?n, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, ANDERSON. - - - - - - g. C. Office Removed to Post Office Building. Jan 8, 1902_29_4_ BONHAM & WATKINS, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Anderson,.S. C., Have moved their office rear Peo ples Bank. Entrance through Bank and siile of building. Jan 8, 1992_29_3 ra Foley's Kidney Cure makes kidneys and bladder right FOR SALE OB BENT, A Handsome Dwelling and live acres nf Laud in the corporate limits of the City nf Anderdon. Desirable location and beautiful view ot the Hurrounding city. The houHo haa only been completed about two years. Nicely arranged with water and electric lights. E. G. MCADAMS, Otl?co in Court Honse. Jan 15, 1902_30_8 NOTICE. THE Firm or Frank Johnson & Co. has been dissolved, and it ls. necessary that all Accounts dne them shall be set tled, All Accounts unpaid by February 6th will be placed in hands of our Attor neys for collection. Respectfully, FRANK JOHNSON <fc CO. Jan 29, 1902 32_ 3 Executor's Sale. ON Saturday, the 8tb day of February, A. D. 1902, at ll o'clock a. m., I will sell at public auction at the late residenco of Henry Klrkaey, deceased, the Tract of Land ol aald deceased, containing Seven ty-four ncrtf. Terms cash JAMES I. K1RKSEY, Executor of the Last Will and Tesla ment of Henry Kirksey, deceased. Jan. 15,1902 30 3 ROBERTS' KILL TONIC ! Goes direct to the blood and cures Chilla, Fevers, Malaria, and restores ap petite and health. It puts new blood in your veins new life in your system. It cures quickly, surely, and tastes good. Price 25c. Being guaranteed to us we uarantee - ROBERTS' CHILL TONIC to our customers. ORR, GRAY & CO." EVANS PHARM AC 7. DENDY DRUG CO. j. Cc ce co Low Bates and Maps ALL POINTS NORTH and WEST. ADDRESS J. G. HOLLENBECK, District Passenger Agent, 1 Louisville & Nashville R. R. No I Brown Building, Op. Union Depot, ATLANTA, GA. A PLEASED MAN ! A GOOD PHOTOGRAPH gives a great deal of pleasure, and my Spe cialty is the Photographs that will have life-like accuracy and artistic excellence. I combine the best points to produce the best Photographs. J H. COLLINS. THE WORLD'S GREATEST FEVER MEDICINE, For alt forma ot fever take Jobs. C6H! rnsd Paver Tesis. It U 100 Umei botter than quinine and doe? In a Bingle dav what alow qnl nlno cannot do la IO fays. Tfo splendid cores are In striking con trast to the feeble cares made by quinine. Costs 60 Gents If It Cores. SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT. To thc Public. Please note our change in bUBlness from credit to Cash, and read the follow ing below : Our rouHoiiH for doing HO areas follows: First, our accounts being necessarily small, and an endless amount of confu sion and expense entailed toan injurious degree, and the IOHS in bad accounts, and the time and attontion it requires to col lect- same. Second, our current expenso?, Buchas labor, fuel, gap, water and other supplies are cash. The aland we have taken is one wo have been forced into. With a great many of our customers wo regret to be obliged to pursue this course, but as we positively cannot discriminate, we trust that you will appreciate our position and not ask for credit. All bundles delivered after June 1st and not paid for will bo return ed to laundry. For convenience of our customers we will IHSUO Coupon Books sold for cash. These books can hu kept at home and payment made for bundlos when deliver ed with the coupons. You can get these books at Lauudry office, or from the driver. s* >i This change goes into effect 1st of June, 1901. We desire to thank all of oar castomere for the patronage they have kindly favor ed ns with in the past and hope we have merited the same, and hope to Btili be entrusted with your valued orders after our change goes into efTect for cash only, whloh will always receive our prompt attention. Very respectfully, ANDERSON STEAM LAUNDRY CO. 202 E&at Boundary St. ft. A. MAYFIELD, Supt. and Treas. PHONE NO. 20. feft* Leave orders at D. C. NBrown A Bro's. 8tore. Notice to Teachers. An examination for teaohera' certifi cates will be hold at Anderson on Friday, Feb. 2lBt, beginning at 9 a. m. These who arrive late frequently fail to finish the work. All applicants are therefore requested to be here promptly. R. E. NICHOLSON. Co. Supt. Ed. Smr ll crops, unsalable veg etables, result from want of A. X? l*d.?911? Vegetables arc especially fond of Potash. Write for our free pamphlets GERMAN KAU WORKS, 93 Nassau St., New York. - THE - BANK OF ANDERSON. A. BROCK, PreHidont. JOS. N. BROWN, Vice President. ?. F. MAULD1N, Cashier. THE largest, btrongobt Bank in th ?univ. Interest Paid on Deposits By spocial agreement. With unsurpassed facilities and resour H we are at all times prepared to ac immodate our customers. Jan 10. lUtVO_21)_ Peoples Bank of Anderson loved into their Banking louse, and are open for busi ness and respectfully solicits he patronage of the public, [nterest. paid on time deposits >y agreement. THE ANDERSON Mutual Eire iusn?Q Go. [IAS written 1000 Policies and have a little over $550,000.00 insurance in force. Tho Policies aro for small ?mounts, usually, and tho risks are well scattered. We are carrying this insurance at less than one-half of what tho old lino companies would charge. Wc make no extra charge for insurance against wind. They do. J. R. Vandiver, President. Directors-R. S. Hill, J. J. Fret well, W. G. Watson, J. J. Major, J. P. Glenn, B. C. Martin, R. B. A. Robin son, John G. Ducworth. R. J. GINN, Agent, Starr, t?. C. ODIUM COCftlNE^WHISKV B lUlVl Habit? On rod at mySanatar ? ?WBW" lum, In OO day*. Hundred* ol roferenoei. 25 junm n .pro laity. Book on Homo Treatment no nt PUEC Address . B. M. WOOLLEY, M. D.. Atlanta, Od. NOTICE Of Special Sleeting of Stockholders of tho Anderson Water, Light and Pow er Company. IN pursuance of a resolution o', the Board of Directors of the Anderson "Va ter, Light and Power Company, adopted January 10th, 1002, notice is hereby given that there will be a special meeting of the Stockholders of said Company at ita office at Anderson, South Carolina, on Wednesday, the 12th day of February, 1902, at, 12 o'clock m. The purpose for which said meeting ls called is set forth In Bald resolution, and is aa follows : In view of the recent disaster afr Port man in the destruction of the dam of the A nd ore on Water, Light and Power Com pany it will, in the judgment of the Board of Directors, be necessary for the Compa ny to secure funds for the purpose of car rying out the object of the Charter of said Company. Therefore, be it RESOLVED, By the Board of Directors that a Special meeting of the Stockhold ers of said Company be called by the President, to be held on Wednesday, the 12th day of February, 1902, at 12 o'clock m., at tho Company's offloe at Anderson, S. C., for the purpose of authorizing the borrowing of money in an amount not to exceed Five Hundred Thousand Dollars for rearranging the indebtedness and re Kairing the Plant and securing the same y Bonds and Mortgage or a Deed of Trust on the properties and franchises of said Company, and that a copy of this resolution be mailed to each Stockholder and published in one of the newspapers at Anderson, 8. C., aH required by Statute. S. M. ORR, President. Jan 15 ,1962'_30_4 S. G. BRUCE, DENTIST. OVER D. C. Brown A Bro's. Store, on South Main Street. I have 25 yearn experience in my pro fession, and will bu ploased to work for any who want Plates made. Filling done, and I mako a specialty of Extracting Teeth without pain and with no alter pain. Jan 23,1901_31_ Foley9s Honey Tar eurea colds, prevents pneumonia* Notice to Administrators, Executors, Guardians, And Trustees. ALL Administrators, Executors, Guar d'fti a and TriiBtoes uro hereby notified lo rtinice their Annual Returns to this office during the months of January and Feb ruary, as ?quired bv law. It. Y. H. NANCE, Judge of Probate. Jan 8,1902 29 5 60 -YEARS/' EXPERIENCE BSnjB^ t"ADK MARKS! FWBSBBSt^ DESIGNS " rr9flfH* COPYRIGHTS Acl tuvcntWi ls prob nb] y paton tabla. Coramnokav tiona strictly confidential. HaiMlbOOKCtr.*??? .cat freo. Oldest agency for ?e<*rtnancttt?&Uk l'atcnto taken throuuh Munn A Co. recent .peela! natte?, without enante, tn the . * Scientific American, A hmndsometr Muitratjd WMMT. I*r?6?tf cir culation of any nclontlflo Journal. Torro?. M ? ySiS-: fonr months. ?L 8oM byall nowad?d??. MUNN 8 Co.36,Broadw*y- New Yori Branch Office, C25 F RU WaahlnatoD. D. C. .