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(FEMININE IN-nmON. Incident That EmphaSjfed Woman's Traditional Atribute. Th? intuition of wcj&an is pro verbial. Whatever injiuU*> willing or unwilling to accord lo -hep, he must admit that her infeste fac ulty is ttiPftilngly. acjfta. mcaynot always bo erooeatt in the stlction of husband and helpmeei, wfoit gen erally ia in the entailer lotirs of life, as witness this: rwo p as &en gora cn an, avenue car wnp at tention the other ( an and a man. She waa dressed. He was old au& Shabby, and he was ^adequately of ' woman .regarded him int come time* but he kept tho floor. When the old I up and started out of the lair with out hesitation the womiadrew something from 'her pulse and, touching the old man's arm! put the coin into hie hand es he turned. Now, there was not oneiman in that car who did not feel th A woman had made a mistake. There was cudi an air of respectability about the old man it would not have seem ed unnatural in him to reject even resent, the proffered mone4. But the well dressed woman, knew what she was about. The old mam took the coln, bowed his thanks and ?lighted. Bat the incident aid not end herc When it came time xor her to leave the car, every man cn the back platform raised his hat to her as she swept by.-New York Post. _ Ropes of Human Hair. The young fellows who make their living by gathering the eggs of sea fowl on the rocky uland of St. Kil da, one of the Hebrides, consider themselves rich if they are possess ed of a rope made of hair fron^the head of tao girl they love, ?/hey use these ropes in swinging the precipitous cliffs of the is] They vary in length, one off ort fifty feet being especially pi The usual kjnd is a stout hei cord, wrapped round and round vith sheep's wool. Over this is a coaling* of horsehair and finally one of 'hu man hair. To manufacture such a rope is the work of years* but the St. Kilda girl saves her combings religiously. A curio collector \frno wanted to buy one of these ropes offered $125 for it, but the offer was refused. The cord in question was covered with a veneer of rec hair the result of thirty years' Col lection from the heads of parents, aunts and cousins. A Cough Remedy. For an irritating throat cold and rasping cough an old fashioned home remedy that has received the indorsement of more than one phy sician is worth noting. Pour half a pint of hot wr.ter over a quarter of a pound of the best gum arabic; cover and hr* stand until the gum is. dissolved, then add a quarter of a ?lound of pure white sugar and a ull half gill of strained lemon juice. Simmer the mixture over the fire about ten minutes before bottling and sealing with a tight cork. This sirup may De taken by the teaspoon ful, diluted with a little water, at frequent intervals. Stuck to HI? Prisoner. "There was an Irishman of the Thiriy^sixth Indiana who while on the skirmish line at Dallas saw a good chance to capture ? Confed?r ate," said an old veteran. "He avail ed himself of the opportunity, cap tured his man and was passing to the rear with his prisoner when one of the boys called out to him : Tat, let me have that man. I will take him over to General Gross, our bri orar?a commander.' "TStever mind, me boy/ replied Pat. 1 left a million back over the bill there. Go yourself and fetch one of the lads over and take him to General Gross.'" A Wrens Diagnosis. ? song with the title "There's a Sigh In the Heart'' Was sent by a young man to a young lady. But .somehow or*other the paper happen ed to fall into the hands of the girl's father, a very unsentimental physi cian, who exclaimed somewhat cross ly, j . i 'mat unscientific rubbish if this ? Who ever heard of such a case ? The man who wrote it must be insane." ; He wrote on tho outside: "Mis- j taken diagnosis; no sigh in the heart ! possible. Sighs relate almost entire ly to the lungs and diaphragm.*' Her 8ubterfugo. "Mary Ann askod me for a refer- | ?ehce." "Did you give her ono?" "Yes, I did. I didn't want her to go away mad." i "What could you say ?" "Why, I said everything that's nice about her." "How could you? You said she j waa dreadfully mconipetent." ! "WeH, I cal!?d her Belinda sdi the ! way through it, and whoever reads j it w?l think she must have stolen, it from some other girl."-Cleveland .Plain Dealer. CASTOR IA Por Infants and Children. fte Kia? Yeo Haw Always BoagM Bears the Signatura of - Occasionally a man's greatness .uau ho traced to the marriage of the wooian of his choice to some other map. ' > . ' UNCROWNED QUEENS. Owen of Them Havo Hat Upon the Throne of England. English history show.; that there .were several queens of England just seven of them, in fact-who w?r? never crowned. Margaret of France, tho young second wife of Edward I., waa oblig ed to foie-un ?i xs' splendors of such a pageant because her royal husband, forsooth, could not afford the expense of a coronation. King Henry VIII, took most ol his wives without giving them the ceremony of a coronation. But in his case there were so many of them that his course might have been deemed a wise economy. Besides, he spent BO much the once he did gc in for a queen's coronation, that o i Anno Boleyn, that it is small won der the money fell short for the la dies who succeeded her, Jane Sey mour, Anne of Cleves, Catherin? Howard and Catherine Farr. Henrietta Maria, the young1 ant pretty wife of Charles L, went with out a coronation not from necessity hut from choice. Being a Frencl princess and a Bomen Catholic, sh declined tc take part in a state f une tion which would obligo her to par v <tke of the sacrament according ti the-Church of England rites. Caroline pf Brunswick was deniei the pleasure of a coronation not f o financial reasons nor for religion principles, but because her spouse George IV., particularly sp?cifie that he wouldn't have her snare i his honor. When he waa crownec ho would not even permit her to b ??resent at Westminster abbey, to sc he ceremony. When she tried t get in, she was repulsed and turne away from all of the entrances. Sb went home to die three weeks late of a violent fever, induced by tl excitement. Would Try the Old Masters. A reputation for wit is like a roi ing snowball-it gathers from wit! out more than it develops fro: within. He who possesses the repi i tation for witty stories shall hai i witty stories added to him, so 1 I speak. Just so with the great n tional type, the American parven - There is a charming woman i ^Washington who betrays her begi nings sometimes, so all the mal propisms current are told of her. And here is another. It is pro ably quite as true as some of tl others. An acquaintance met tl lady on the deck of an outgou steamer. Two of her daughters we with her. <fWhat, off for Europe agaii What is the errand this time ?" 'Tm going to have the dear gir portraits painted." "Why not in America?" . "Oh, Pve triad all the Americ artists in vain. Now we're gol over to see what the old mast? canda" __ Remembering HI? Bnamlesw Mr. Edward Wortley Montai son of the famous Lady Mary, < deavored to be very sarcastic in 1 last will ano. testament. After so: insignificant bequest "to my no' and worthy relation, the earl -->" he ados: "LJLo not give ! lordship any further part of : property because the best part that he has contrived to take ready. Item : To Sir Francis give one word of min? because never had the good fortune to ki his own. Item: To Lord M. I g nothing because ? know he will stow that on the poor. Item: Sir Eobert W. I leave my politi opinions, never doubting he < well turn them into cash who '. always found such an excellent m kst- for )ii.n. own." Must Aim Low. An individual went into a seco hand clothes shop and asked to on a suit of clothes. Putting o coat and vest, he pointed up t high shelf and said: "I think that pair of trousers just suit me." The dealer got up the laddei reach them down, and while tit the man ran out, still wearing coat and vest and followed by dealer, shouting : "Stop thief 1 ? thief!" A gamekeeper who happened be passing leveled his gun and going to snoot when the dealer } ed: "Shoot him in the trousers ! 1 coat and yest are niinel"-Lon Answers. _j_' A Distinction. , Lord Coleridge was driving ward his court one morning in brougham when an accident ] pened to it at Grosvenor sqr Fearing he would be belated, he < ed a cab from tho street .rank bade the Jehu drive'him as raf as possible to tho courts of just ' *And where be they P" said th noc?nt looking cabby. "Whatl A iKmd?n cabby, dont you know where the law cc are at old Temple Barp' "Oh, the law courts, is it? you saicr courts ol justice." How te ??rc tho Grip. Remain quietly a', home and Chamberlain's Cough Bemedy a fee lsd and a quick recovery is St follow. That remedy counteract tendency of the grip to result in ] ocania, which is really the only sc danger. Among tho tons of thom who have Used it for the grip nc caso has ever been reported tba not recover. FOF sile by Qrr-Chrs -:-?--.?? ? - - - A hsated argument is ono ol things a wise man quickly drops. OCEAN DERELICTS. The Penny E. Wolston Roamed Ten Thousand Miles. Perhaps it ia the natural Instinct to personify every craft that floats; perhaps it is because the* ?ere caco the domiciles of living Woos that makes human interest in derelicts universal. They are the embodi ment of pathos, the renace of trag edy. Prom the slavery of man they have gone forth to the fresdom of the sea, which means, after all, that they are ?tninbling blindly on to that destruction which ultimately awaits all things which aro without the law. Some of them last but a day ; others float for years. The av erage number afloat is usually about twenty, but in 1873 an average of thirty-five a month was reported. Most derelicts are made off the coast of the United States in the gulf stream, and they are prone to fol low in the wake of tho liners. Often they follow the ocean river around its great circle, and many of them get into the Sargasso sea. The most notable derelict was the Fanny E. Wolston, a three masted schooner, lumber laden, which waa abandoned Oct. 15, 1891, and was last seen in 1894. She drifted at least 10,000 miles, following the great circle in a zigzag way. In this she differed from the W. IL White, a schooner which was abandoned off Delaware during the blizzard of 1888. The White was a fast travel-, er and started immediately for Eu rope. At times she attained a speed of thirty-five miles a day. She float ed first to the Grand banks and hid in the fogs that hang over that re gion She stayed doggedly in the mist, floating around and around in a comparatively small circle, loom ing up suddenly under the bow of liners, sending cold terror to the hearts of fishermen, colliding now and then with other vessels, and making a general nuisance of her self. After several months of this fun she suddenly left one day and continued her ; ourney to Europe, grounding at last on one of the New Hebrides after a cruise of ten months and a drift of 6,800 miles. Then there was the Fred B. Tay lor, a schooner cut in half off our coast by the steamship Travo, The people on the Travo waited to see the two parts sink; but, strangely enough, tn .y remained afloat. They became s> .orate derelicts, and each went on t voyage of its own. The stern stood high out of the water, and the wind blew it north, but the bow, sinking low, was carried south by the cold shore current which runs from Labrador south to Hat teras between the coast and the gulf stream. The bow was destroyed off North Carolina. The stern ground ed on Wells beach.-Theodore Wa ters in Ainslee's. The Paul Age of Fifty-?!*. Among men and women of genius there seems to be a strange fatality connected with the age of fifty-six. Some of the most renowned char acters of the world have died on reaching that limit, including Dan te, Hugh Capet, king of France; Henry VIEL, Henry IV. of Ger many, Paganini, Alexander Pope, Marcus Aurelius, Frederick L of Prussia, Maria Louisa, empress of France; Saladin, the great sultan of Egypt; Bobert Stephenson, Scipio ; Africanus, Boman general; Helve tius, the philosopher; Henry H., tho first of the Plantage ne ts ; the elder Pliny, Julius Caesar, Charles Kings ley, Juan Prim, Spanish general and statesman; Henry Knox, American Revolutionary general; Van Tromp, Dutch admiral; Abraham Lincoln, . Marryat, tho novelist ; George White field, founder of Calvinistic Metho dism; Ko bert Dudley, earl of Leices ter, favorite of Queen Elizabeth; Johann Gasper Spurzheim, German physician and phrenologist, and Frederick H. of Germany. - St. James Budget Bronze Very Ancient. Bronze, spoken of in the Bible as brass, is of very ancient Origin. We have little or no notion how the ancients got copper, but in all prob ability large quantities were former ly found in tho metallic state, just as we find it now in the neighbor hood of Lake Superior in America and Baikal lake in Siberia. This would only have required melting to yield a tolerably pure metal. If, however, they smelted copper from its various ores, it is difficult to realize how the** could overcome such a complicateu process, and we can only admit that in this respect, as in so many others, the ancient people of Europe were very much cleverer than we moderns aro apt to believe. ' _ Rather III Timed. At a recent wedding in New York at which the bride had retained her "maiden meditation fancy free" a number of years beyond the usual marrying age the organist most thoughtlessly or most ungallantly played as a prelude to the arrival of the wedding party, "Tis the Lost Bose of Summer, thereby causing a visible emile among tho listeners. Nothing so thoroughly removes die* ease perms.from the system aaPriokly Ash Bitters. It gives life and aotion to the torpid liver, strengthens and assists the kidneys to properly cleanse the blood, gives tone to the stomach, purifies the bowels, and promotes goon appetite, vigor and cheerfulness. Evans Pharmacy. - When a womsn listens atten tively to every word a man utters it's a sure sign that she cither loves er hates him. --~- VJ.? .?.J.^ JV uiimnx!j .i,,,,.ii-i ?? mw i m i i i, ? WALKING STICK, Tho Way to Utilise It In Measuring Different Heights. A wallang stick iajui invaliiablo article to accompany you on a walk*-! 1er it can assist ye n in other ways I than in aiding yet * progress. Sup pose you want to measure the height of a cli?L a church steeple or some other tall object, and tho sun shines not, and therefore no shadow is cast. The walking stick will none the less assist you to tell its height. This time take a distance some 120 feet from the object which you wish to measure, and* in the ground at that point firmly plant your stick. Then move along from it in a straight line untilby lying down on mother earth tho top of your stick and the top of the object to be measured will to your eye be on a line. This spot you will mark. This gives you taroo pointe-one where you laid down, two your planted stick and three tho object to u? measured. Now, the distance from the point where you laid down to the stick is to the distance from the stick to the object to be measured as the height of the stick is to the height of that object. Thus, sup pose the point where you laid down is six yards from the slick and thir ty-six yards from the object, then the object is six times the height of the stick. Now, the stick you . know to be three feet high; tho object measured is therefore approximate ly eighteen feet. People who live much in the open, aa do ranchers and farmers, can generally tell time fairly accurately by the sun, and some, although the feat is seemingly more difficult, can tell time from tho length of the shadow thrown by the sun. The shadow is, however, an easy way of determining heights. For example, suppose you wished to ascertain the height of a tree when walking. Pace the shadow of tho tree made by the sun and then plant your walking stick and pace its shadow. As many more or less times its length as tho shadow is will give you the distance of shadow thrown by the sun. For instance, suppose the shadow to be three times tne length of tho stick, then it is niue feet, for tho stick is three, and if you then divide your paced distance of tho tree's shadow by three you will get fairly near tho actual height of the tree. Why Ice Floats. Did you ever wonder why it is that ice, being formed of congeal ed water, floats, and why on some still la :es it begins to form at the bottom before it does on the sur face ? Scientists explain these enig mas this wise: Ice is specifically lighter, than water just ab-at to freeze and therefore floats in it. This is one reason why the forma tion of ice usually begins at the sur face. Another is its peculiar law of ex pansion. The general law is that cold induces expansion. This law holds good with water only to a cer tain point. When water nas cooled down to within 7A degrees of freez ing, it ceases to contract as before with , increase of cold and begins to expand till it freezes. This expansion causes the colder portions of the water to rise to the surface. Tho formation of "ground ice" or "anchor ice," as it is some times called, is the only exception to the rule given above. An Extraordinary Prayer. A volume of reminiscences by Dean Hole quotes the following ex traordinary prayer as offered by a loyal but certainly injudicious Eng lish clergyman on behalf of Quon Adelaide, the wife of William IV.: "0 Lord, save thy servant, our sovereign lady, the queen; grant that as she grows an old woman she may become a new man; strengthen her with thy blessing that she may live a pure virgin, bringing forth sons and daughters to the glory of God, and give her grace that she may go forth before her people like a he goat on the mountains." . Crab Soup. - * 'A recipe for crab soup eaid to have descended straight from Mar tha Washington herself is found in an old manuscript recipe book: Fif teen crabs thrown into boiling wa ter alive. Boil until done; meat picked up fine; put into two quarts of water in which a pound of mid dling bacon has been boiled. Beat yolks of two eggs; stir in pint of rich milk which has been heated. The~ pour into tho boning crab soup, which must not boil, but cook a few minutes after mixing. Season with salt and cayenne pepper to taste. _ Soldiers In Peace Times. Under favorable conditions of peace the mortality 'among soldiers . is practically tho least known, with a death rate of only five in every 1,000. Compared with a soldier's Ufo th? placid days even of a clergy man are full of danger, for his death rate is eleven in 1,000, or more than twice as great as that of his military brother. This aJffnatore 1? on every box of ibo genuino Laxative Broc^Quinine Ibo remedy that curca a ?old ta.oua.4a7 - Contentment should be measured by the number.of things you aro.will ing to do without. - Selfishness is the result ot a mis directed search for happiness. - Fireproof buildings are provided with fire-escapea just the same. .tick to thc Truth. The following hit of rural pliiloa- , ophy was overheard in a farmyard j in the east of England the other day: "James, my Bon/* said a xcnn* who stood miring the milk and rater, "yon see what I'm a-doin' of?** "Yea, father,** replied James; "you're a-pourin* water into tho milk." "Ko, Fm not, James; Pm a-pour ln* milk into the water. 80 if any body axes yon if I put water into tho milk you tell 'em no. 'Allua stick to the truth, James. Cheat in" is bad enough, but lyin' is wuss.** (London Titbits. - When Brown opened the front door one morning and found a strange baby in a basket on the front stepB, he pioked up tho bundle, and as he carried it to his wife he was heard to remark: "Some men are born babies, eome aohieve babies, and some have babies thrust upon them." - St. Louis haa a peouliar soot in the shape of a community of sand-eat ers, composed of seventy-five men and women. The sand-eaters take every day a spoonful of sand. They believe that grit is necessary in every animal, and that many stomaoh troubles are due to the absence of grit in the stom aoh. i - Sleepy grass is found in New Mexioo and Siberia. It has a most injurious efteot on horseB and sheep, being a strong narcotic or sedative, and oausing profound sleep or Btupor lasting 24 hours to 48 hours. - Samuel Snell, of Holyoke, Mass, has a strange hobby. Though 73 years old and wealthy, he devotes all his spare time tc the making of stone coffins. During the last 25 years he has made and disposed of over a hun dred of these, asserting that they keep the body in an excellent state of pre servation long after burial. - There is a sweet girl anti-ciga rette oirole in Pratt county, Kansas, whioh is credited with the isBuanoe of the following ultimatum: "The lips that draw tho oigaroots shall never pause beneath our snoots." - Sweetheart (ooyly): "Now, you must take only one, George." Swain -"But one from one leaves nothing. Let's make it one eaoh and tie." Sweetheart-"It's awful sudden, George, but you may ask papa.' ' - Possibilities of genius are few when compared with impossibilities. - Only a fool man believes that a woman believes everything he tells her. - A small boy'with an armful of snowballs can make a strong mau tremble. - When a man start's for a den tist's offioehe usually strikes a tooth hurty gait. La Grippe QulcMy Cored. ' "In the winter of 1898 and 1899 was taken down with asevere atUokof what is called La Grippe," says F. L. Hewett, a prominent druggist of Win field, 111. "The only medioine I used was two bottles of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. It broke up the oold and stopped the ooughing like magio, and I have never since been troubled with Grippe." Chamberlain's Cough Remedy can always be depended upon to break up a severe cold and ward off any threatened attaok of pneumonia. It is pleasant to take, top, whioh makes it the most desirable and one of the most popular preparations in use for these ailments. For sale by Orr Gray & Co. _ NOTICE. Audltor'8 Office. Anderaon, 8 C., Feb. 20,1902. The Township Assessors of the differ ent Townships of tho County will meet at the times and plaoos designated below for the purpose of assessing the Real and Personal Property for taxation for tbe fiscal year 1902 : Belton Township, at Belton, March 10 and ll. Broadaway, at Neal's Creek, March 10. Brushy Creek, at Wyatt's Store, Marob 14. Cen ter ville, at Grand Jury room, C. H , March 13 and 14. Corner, at Iva, March 12 and 13. Fork, at R. A. Sullivan's, March 18 ; C. E. Maret'o, Marob 18; J. P. Lodbotter'u, March 17. Garvin, at Martin's Store, Maroh 12; Five Forks, March 18. Hal), at H. M. Tate's, March 14. Honea Path, at Honea Path, Maroh 13. Hopewell, at Trinity School House, Maren 12. Martin, at Mt. Bethel, Maroh IS. Pendleton, at W. D. Garrison's, March 13. Rock Mills, at Willliord'a, Maroh 12. Savannah, at Starr, March 14. Yarennes, at Grand Jury room, C. H., Marob 13. Williamston, at Piedmont, March ll; Peleer, March 12; Wllliamston, March 13. Taxpayers that bave not previously Hoted, ?an meet these Boards at the time speew'od and make their returns. Also thr <s desiring to know the appraisement put upon their Lu ts, Houses or Land?, can be present at the time and place indicated above for their respective Town ships and witness tho assessment when mado. G. N. C. BOLEMAN, A. A. C. THE STATE GF SOUTH CAROLINA, CODHTY or AKDKKSON. COURT OF COMMON PLEAS. Mn. Cor? H. Harris and Infanta Lola C. Harria, Mason T. Harria and others. Plaintiff*, against Kc kl T. Harria, Benjamin Harris, Earle Harria and Kate Galloway, Defendants -?untmona for llcllcf- Complaint not Served. To the Defendant, Kato Galloway : YOU are hereby nummoned and required to an drer the Complaint in thia action, which is flied in the office of the dork of the Court of Common Pleas at Anderaon C H., 8. C, and to serre a copy of your annwer to the Raid Complaint on the subscriber at hin office. Anderson C. H., 8. C., within twenty dava after the co rv ico hereof, oxcludvo of the day of such Berrico ; and if you fall to answer the Complaint within th J time aforesaid, the Plaintiff In this acUon wUl apply to the Court for the relief demanded In the Complaint. Dated February 24, A. D. 1902. E. O. MCADAMS, Plaintiffs' Attorney. [8a?x ] JOHK C. WATKINS, O. c. P. To the Defendant, Kata Galloway : Tase selles tbs; the Complaint and Summons, which th* ahora ls a copy, was flied In the office of the Clark of the Court of Common Pleas In and tor the County of Anderson, Ia the State of South Carolina, on January 15, Iwt li. C. Mc ADAks. FiilntifrVAttorney, f Feb 24,1*03 SS G Beautiful Thoughts Th? tweet, pur* breath of tho bab? la IUK gestlve ot innocence and. health. Soma chll Uren ar* a* ll?ht and delicate a? tho modest ?owfr, ?omo uro strong ?ad bright, some aro trail and sickly. A mother's yearning for children ls Iosep orablo from a love of tho beautiful, and it behooves ?very woman to bring tho sweet est Influence to bea* on the svbject of aer maternity. To sv!.\k* .*?? tlsst rs-icd Dora again, lile it Mothers Friend U popularly uted. It ts a llnlrsont. emily advnlnlitered and for external use only. No risk, no experiment, merely a pain rsliarcT ?r* r~iTTnlws. Pregnant women are oam-ct?r entreated to try thia .eaaedy, lt being undeniably a friend to OTT during nature's term of sus pensa? taara and anticipation. Mother's Yr tend. If used diligently throughout gestation, will soften the breasts, thereby preventing cracked and eora nipples. All tissues? muscles -.nd tentions straining with th? burdell will soften, relax, become soothed, supple and elastic from lu contin ued application. AU fibres lath* abdominal region wDl re apondraadllytotheexpandtngcover contain ing tho embryo If T3other'n Friend 1? ad ministered externally all during pregnancy. All reliable druggist* sell this remedy for really v ?lu obi o treatise on motherhood will be amt Creo, If you write us. THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., . Atlanta, Qa. S, ROBERTS' CHILL TONIC ! Goes direct to the blood and cures Chille, Fevers, Malaria, and restores ap petite and health. It puts new blood in yonr veins new life in your system. It cures quickly, surely, and tastes good. Price 25c. Being guaranteed to us we guarantee ROBERTS' CHILL TONIC to our customers. ORR, GRAY & CO.! EVANS PHARMACY DENDY DRUG CO. BREED CHICKENS A SPECIALTY ! Barred Plymouth Rock. White Plymouth ?vock. Silver Wyandotte?. Brown Leghorns. Purity guaranteed. Eggs for sale. Carefully packed for shipping. L. 8. M ATTISON, Anderson, S. C. Jan 22,1002 81 6m Low Bates and Maps ALL POINTS NORTH and WEST. ADDRESS J. G. HOLLENBECK, District Passenger Agent, Louisville & Nashville B. R. No I Brown Building, Op. Union Depot, ATLANTA, GA. GREATEST FEVER MEDICINE* For ?ll forma of feyer toko Joftm oon'a Cilia and Fever Toa lc. It ta 100 times bettor than quinine and tnatto tte feeble o ucea mada br quinina. Costs 00 Ce-, * If lt Cores, E. o. MCADAMS, ATTORNEY A.T H.A.W, ANDERSON, S. C. ?St- Office in Judge of Probate's office, In tho Court Houfte. Feb 5,1002_33_ To Stockholders of Peoples Store. A MEETING of the Stockholders of the Peoples Storo of Piedmont, S. C., fa hereby called for March 20tb, 1002, at 12 m., at the Company's Store, for the pur' pose of inoreaslng the Capital Ht^cfc to m amount not exceeding $20,000 In all. 3took to the amount of ?7,200 to be pre* for rod o vor common B too lc as to annual icoamnlatlve dividends to extent of 8 per ?nt. and aa to prinoipal. By order of Board of Directors. J. B. SPEARMAN. Pres. W, G. CALL ?ra Alu, Feb 17,1002 86 7 MORE COTTON to ' tho acre at less cost, means more money? More Potash In tho Cotton fertilizer inprove? tho soil; Increases yield-larger profits. Send for oar book (frc?} ?xpUinins bow to fee theta result*, GERMAN KALI WORKS, 91 Narnu St-, New York. 7otey's Kidney Cure Mires kidneys mad btmddar tight: - THE - BftWK OF ANDERSON. A. BROCK, Pre. d'nt. JOS. N. BROWN, Vioo President, B. F. MAULDIN, Caahier. THE largest, strongest Bank in th ounty. Interest Paid on Deposits By s peo lal ?agreement. With unsurpassed facilities and reeoux* ea we are at all times prepared to ac ommodate our customers. Jan 10,1900_29_ Peoples Bank of Anderson Moved into their Banking Souse, and are open for busi ness and respectfully solicito the patronage of the publie, interest paid on time deposits by agreement. THE A O ?ERH?H ?T" Mal Aro insurance Co. HAS written 1000 "Policies and have a little over 2550.000.00 insurance in foroe. The Polioieu are for small amounts, usually, and * the risks are well scattered. We are carrying this insurance at less than one-half of what the old line companies would charge* We make no extra charge for insurance against wind. They do. J. ll. Yandiver, President. Direotors-R. 8. Hill, J. J. Fret well, W. G. Watson, J. J. Major, J. P. Glonn, B. 0. Martin, R. B. A. Robin son, John G. Duoworth. R. J. GINN, Agont, _Starr, t?. 0. KIDNEY DISEASES are" the most fatal of all dis eases. EM EV?? K,DNEY GUHE 'M BUL^I 0 BuaraDteod Remed? or money refunded. Contains remedies recognized by emi nent physicians as the best for Kidney and Bladder troubles? PRICE 50c and $1.00. SOLD BY EVANS* PHARMACY. SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT. To the Public. Please note our change in business from credit to Cash, end read the follow ing below : - uar reasons for doing so areas follows: First, onr accounts being necessarily small, and an endless amount of confu sion and expense entailed toan injurious degree, and the loss in bod acounts, and the time and attention it requires to col lect same. Second, our onrrent expenses, auch as labor, fuel, gas, water ana other supplies aro cash. The stand we have taken ls one we have boen forced into. With a great many of our customers we regret to be obliged to pursue this oourse, 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 poid for will be return ed to laundry. For convenience of our customers we will issue Coupon Books Bold for nash. These books can be kept at home and payment made for bundles when deliver ed with the coupons. You can get these books at Laundry ofilce, or from the driver. This change goes into effect 1st of June? 1901. We desire to thank all of oar customers for the patronage they have kindly favor ed us with in the past aud hope we have merited the paine, and hopo to still bo entrusted with your valued orders after our change goes into effect for cash only, which will always receive our prompt attention. Very respectfully, ANDERSON STEAM LAUNDRY CO. 202 East Boundary St. R. A. MAYFIELD, Hupt, and Treas. PHONE NO. 20. Leave orders at D. C. Brown A Bro* a. Store._ Foley's Honey and/T?r cures colds, preven?a pneumon?as BO ""YEARS'* EXPERIENCE TRADE MARKS! DESIGNS ? j COPYRIGHTS ?Veli tiona strict! r oonOOo&Ual. ntaodtoookon^gata sloan & Go. reostffl tpeafcU lu^wttbooionareo, tu tba * Scientific B?ricas. AbaaotoonetyOraetratoa woeklr. farase* eft*. euStaonot aaysotenuflo tournai. Tores, S3 a rw^oarM,?. Sole^Tt? tteirso^al??, S?1Biaa*?T.NeW