University of South Carolina Libraries
FLEET FOOTED DOGS. The Speed of Setters, Pointers, Pox* hounds and Greyhounds. Comparatively few people realize of what remarkable speed dogs are capable. Some remarkable statistics iii regard to this have been gathered by a French scientist Alter point ing out the marvelous endurance shown by little fox terrien who fol low their masters! patiently for hours while the latter are riding on bicycles or in carriages be says that even greater endurance ii shown t>y certain wild anim?la that are akin to dogs. Thus, tito wolf cen run be tween fifty and sixty miles in one night, and an arctic fox can do quite as well, if not better. Nansen met one of these foxes on the ice at a point more than sevdhty miles northwest of the Sannikow terri tory, which is 480 miles from the Asiatic coast. Eskimo and Siberian dogs can travel forty-five miles on the ice in ?ve hours, and there ia one case on record in which a team of Eskimo dogs traveled six and a half miles in twenty-eight minutes. According to the scientist, the speed of tho shepherd dogs and those used in hunting ranges from ten to fifteen vards a second. English setters and pointers hunt ot the rate of eighteen to nineteen miles an hour, and they can maintain this speed for at least two hours. Foxhounds are extraor dinarily swift, as is proved by the fact that a dog of this breed once beat a thoroughbred horse, covering four miles in six and a half minutes, which was at the rate of nearly ci ir'1 teen yards a second. Grey hounds aro tho swiftest of ail four looted creatures, and their speed limy bc regarded as equal to that of carrier pigeons. - Our Animal Friends. _ Discovery of the Gulf Stream. Tonco de Leon, while on his fa mous * search for the fountain of youth, made the discovery of the pul? stream. The whalers of New England were the first to gain a fairly accurate knowledge of the limits of the current between Amer ica and Europe by following the haunts oi: the whales, which were found north of one line and south of another, but never between the two. This, they reasoned, was the gulf stream current. Benjamin Franklin received this information from the whalers and published it on a chart for the ben efit of the mail packets plying be tween England and the colonies. The chart wes first issued about 1770, but was not accepted by the English captains. Before it came to be generally known and used the trouble between England and the colonies began, and Franklin, knowing the advantage the knowl edge would be to the British naval officers,' suppressed it all he could until hostilities ceased. Celery Por Rheumatism. Physicians say that celery is o cure for rheumatism Indeecl, it is asserted that the disease ?B impossi ble if tho vegetable be cooked and freely eaten. The celery should be cut into pieces and boiled in water until soft and the water drunk by tho patient- Put new milk, with a little flour and nutmeg, into a sauce pan with the boiled celery, serve it warm with pieqes of toast, eat it with potatoes, and the painful a?V ment will soon yield. Such is the declaration of a physician who has again and again tried the experi ment and with uniform success. He adds that old or damp never pro duces but simply develops the dis-^ ease, of which acid blood is the pri mary and sustaining cans erfind that while the blood is alkaline there can be neither rheumatism nor gout. Science News. Out of His Province. A soapmaker and a banker were at a Wagner concert, says The Christian Register. The programme did not please them, and they began to talk. 'TS eery man," said the banker, "wants to do something outside of Iiis own work." A "Yes," answered the soapmaker; "I manufacture good soap, and yet I've always wanted to be a banker." "You wouldn't be a good one. I am a successful banker, but I al ways wanted to write a book. And now here's this, man Wagner tries his hand at music Just listsn to the stuff! And yet wc all know he builds good parlor cars." The Sword Stick. The sword stick, or "jmpti," is of East Indian origin. There is one form of it which ls peculiar to .chiefs and men of rank. The hilt of tho sword, forming the handle of the stick, ia crutch shaped, and the own er, when lying on his divan, would have his* arm resting ripon thia, so as never to bo'tafeen ?rufte unarmed. It was called in Fenian "takiah-i zafar," ?? ^cushion of victory.* An other form of concealed sword was made so flexible ss to be worn around the waist Uko a girdler Chambers' Journal Better Than pms. _ . $ Tho question has been anked, "In what way ?re Chamberlain's Stomach & Liver Tablets superior to pills?" Our answer is: They are Sauter and mer? pioHBuv to ??&?, LU uro mud and gentle in effeot and more reliable aa they eau always be depended upon. Then they oleaopo and invigorate the stomach and leave the bowels in a na* taral condition, while pills are moro harsh in effect and their URO is often followed by constipation. For sale by Orr-Gray Drug Co. M?Di/EVAL PREACHING. ?errnons Delivered In the Vernacular and Preeerved In Latin. The Puritana were not, aa has been supposed, the inventors of ex temporary preaching. The practico was distinctly meaiseval and waa stopped about the time of Elizabeth. 'As fa th? language, we meet with flifficupea to* ?determine which were in Latin o^d; which in .tho countleae dialecto of tho 'doy, which' so contin ually fluctuated, both as to the .peaking and the writing, that it is ft matter of wonder how the mis sionaries could in many cases have done the work they are credited with, unless we presuppose on the part of the masses a much greater knowledge of Latin than is com monly supposed. This, however, would seem to he probable-name ly, that the "sermones ad populum" of the eighth, ninth and tenth cen turies w?re generp.'Jy delivered in the vernacular and extemporary and afterward translated into Latin ei ther, by the orator himself or some hearer. . What will strike the average non Catholic as so very strange, in view of tho current opinion to the oppo site, i? the almost marvelous grasp of Scripture of the typical mediaeval preacher, whether we consider the number of quotations, their variety or the interpretation of the same. Neale estimates as ten to one the ratio between a medioval sermon and that of a modern divine as re gards the number of texts custom arily cited. The contrast is still greater when we turn to the manner of citation, the medioval preacher citing naturally, easily, logically as one saturated with Scripture from its being his own daily spiritual food, the modern ill at ease, tacking on a quotation herc and there, often uselessly, altogether with the air of a man who feels rather shaky when, treating an unfamiliar subject. Tho one evidently read the Scriptures, tho other only concordance and in dex.-Catholic World. How He Found Out. Schocltcachers sometimes ask their pupils queer questions, if one may believe a story told by the youngest member of the Withington family. His mother one morning discov ered a shortage in her supplies of pies, baked the day before, and her suspicions fell* upon Johnny. 'Johnny," she said, "do you know what became of that cherry pie that was on the second shelf in the pan try?" . "Yes, ma'am," he replied. T ate it But I had to." "You had toi" exclaimed his as tonished mother. "What do you mean, child?" "The teacher asked yesterday if any of us could tell how many stones there are in a cherry pie, and I couldn't find out without eating tho whole pie, could I ? There's just 142."_ 8he Purchased Then. She wasn't exactly old, but the Discriminating observer could seo that she hadn't seen the inside of a schoolroom for at least ten years. The shopman threw down piece aft er piece of fleecy white material be fore her critical eyes, but none of them seemed to claim her unreserv ed admiration. She was taking a great deal of his time, and the silk counter was crowded, so he decided to play his trump card. Holding up a length of crepe de chine so that it fell in a perfect cai? arnot of shimmering folds, he re marked reflectively os if to himself alone, "The best thing for jrr*duat ing purposes we have had in the store this year." The effect was in stantaneous, and in another minute the tactful salesman was measuring off a full pattern for his well pleased patron. _ Ruling Servants (1o<su). Nan Newton, for breaking a Tea pot in Phill's Chamber, 2s Gd. .Richard Knight, for Pride and Slighting, 2s Gd. William Hetherington* for not being ready to go to Church three Sundays, 10s. Tho Birdall, for being at Nuneat on from morning to night, 5s. Cook, dead drunk, 10s. Anne Adams, to be washmaid at Lady Day. She went away the 29th of Juno ?or being wanton and care less. She lost five pairs of sheets and five pillowbeers, for which my wife made her pay ?L-From Diary of Sir Rich ard Newdigate. Bought Up Offending Organ?. A story is related of the compos er Verdi that has to do with orgaxu. One timo a friend while visiting him was shown through the compos er^ home. When the door was opened into one room, it was iocnd to h? ?llcd with barrel organs of ??U sizes and patterns. "What on earth are yon doing with oil these?* asked ?he aston-j iahed friend. "Those are a few that have an noyed me wita ?JB Miserere/ * cia* evered the greet artist "and the) will never-do en again?* CASTOR IA Tor Infants and Chiflaren. We Kind Yeo Han Atom tarit! Bears the Signature of - Wher a woman'sdrebs is desorib* ed as a perfect dream, its cost is apt to I ive ?nightmare to her husband. COSTLY SMOKING. High Price? Paid by Soldiers For a Whiff of Tobacco. To barter a horse in exchange for a cigarette would appear a some what extravagant proceeding, yet pnch an incident tooK place in Sorrth Africa when an EagUan soldier, hav ing captured a steed unknown to his superior officers, exchanged the same for s Turkish cigarette worth perhaps a farthing. It must be re membered, however, that the sol dier had not tasted tobacco for weeks and doubtless considered the exchange a perfectly fair bargain. During the Franco-German war an officer paid a private soldier tho sum of 20 marka (approximately ?1) for a bundle of cigarettes, number ing ten in alL The officer, having exhausted his own' scanty supply of Rmokee, perceived that a certain in fantryman was about to extricate a cigarette from a small packet, and he immediately made the offer in question for the collection, which was accepted, not altogether with alacrity. During the same campaign a bun- j dio of fifty cigarettes wan sold by a French lieutenant to a brother of ficer for the incredible sum of 1.000 francs (?10), and it is recorded, though with what truth the writer would not caro to vouch, that the latter resold his "bargain" for near-* ly twice the sum to another officer. Perhaps the largest sum on rec ord ever paid for a cigarette was the amount of ?250. It issued from the valise of Napoleon III. and was sold at auction as a curiosity, the money raised being devoted to the relief of sufferers from the Franco German war.-London Tit-Bits. Intelligible Announcement. An American woman who under stands Italian, but has not learned to comprehend Italianized English, had at a hotel in Florence an expe rience which she relates with glee. She had asked that a carriage might be ready for her at a certain hour. She waited in the parlor for it to be announced, and when the time had passed she made complaint that her request had not been re garded. "But, madam, I send up a boy where you and the other madam were sitting ten minutes ago and command him to announce your equipage," said the clerk. "A Doy said something in the doorway," said the lady doubtfully, "but as he spoke in a language un known to me and did not seem to be addressing me I paid no atten tion ta him." The boy, being bjmmoned, gazed with brown, reproachful eyes at the lady. **But I speak America," he said plaintively. "I bow my. head and say fast, very fast, ll'darm, m'darm, c*ridge, c'ridge, redee, rc dec/ and make my depart." Get a True Focus. A habit of looking at things from a distorted angle, of focusing the vision on things that depress and suggest unhappiness and misery, is a destroyer of happiness and suc cess. A man who goes about with a funereal face, thinking "hard times," fearing "dull seasons," dis aster, panic and failure, wherever his interests center, is never a hap py man, rarely a successful one. Pessimism is a destructive force in men's lives just as optimism is a constructive agency.-Success. Be Honest. Six months ago a man attempted to steal 10 cento' worth of coal oil from bis employer. He didn't get feway with it, but the attempt to steal 10 cents has so far cost him over $300, for he lost his job. Noth ing so certain as that yon can't af ford bad conduct. Tue man who risks telling a lie or uny other evil thing is a fool. The smarter the man the more apt he is to know that the greatest and most important truth is this: For your own sake do no wrong.-Atchison Globe. Polly's Conclusion. An Australian parrot had unfor tunately learned on shipboard the habit of using profane language. The mate, a little ashamed of the creature's profanitj', undertook a cure by dousing it with a bucket of water at each offense. Polly evi dently imbibed the reproof, for dur ing a gale, when a heavy sea broke over a hen coop and deluged hens and cocks pretty thoroughly, she marched up to the dripping fowls and screamed out, "Been swearing again, hain't ye?" The Eskimo Circus. The Esidmos are very.fond of theatricals. They mimic all sorts of animals wwioerfully, and the man who can do this best Ss consid ered a great actor. This sort of xrdmlcry is woven into tbs shape of dramatic entertainments. One per former will be a bear, for example, clad in appropriate skins, while the other* Vont him. Commonly the Cont iri^a* np ?ttfc tfr?aaihof rte Dear or seal. m ? - 8t?K tbs Cough sad Work* off th? Cold. Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets ours a cold io one day. No cure, No Pay. Pri?e 25 cents. - The only time some husbands and wives sgree is to the effect that they make a serious mistake io marry ing. - All a man has to do to make woman love him ia to make her hap pier than any other man can. WASHINGTON'S COACH. HI? Fourteen Miles of Driving on Man hattan Island. Georg? Washington, when he was president of tho United States, rode in a coach drawn by six horses. This coach was made in England, and it arrived in New York in 1789, The body and wheels were of a cream color, with gilt relief, and parts of the sides and fronts were shaded by green ?Venetian blinds. Upon each of the four panels was a picture emblematic of one of tho iou* seasons. In January, 1785, congr?*? met in Federal hi", at the corner of Wall and Nassau streets, and New York city was the national capital for five years. Washington was here inaugurated as president April 30, 1789. Man hattan Island tuen presented one of the most beautiful drives in the world, and Washington frequently made the fourteen milo circuit in his coach. This drive led up to what is now the Bowery and Third avenue, then called the Boston road, across the upper part of the island and down tue Bloomingdale road, now famous as Broadway. Tho view took in the prosperous farms, ele gant country seats and broad stretches of living water. In the city tho president was usually con tent with four horses, but when he started on tho long drivo from Mount Vernon six horses pranced in front of the coach. Fifteen years after the death of General Washington this coach be came thc property of Bishop Mead of Virginia. Our first president was a good horseman, and he was none the less devoted to tbg inter ests of the people because Tie rode in state. Should ho revisit tho scenes of his former glory he would find it difficult to trace thc old four teen milo drive, and he would meet in Central park and on tho roads beyond four-in-hands that would make liim turn green with envy. Manhattan has radically changed since the first day of the republic. Brooklyn Eagle. Have you ever heard of tho laugh ing plant? It gets its name from the intoxicating property of its seed. It grows in Arabia, a bush of mod erate size with yellow flowers, each producing a pod of black beans, which are ground and the powder taken. Its effect is like that ol "laughing gas," causing the very; so berest man to caper, laugh' and shout for nearly an hour until he is thoroughly, exhausted and falls asleep. On awakening he seems to have no recollection of his previous antics. This frivolous plant has not yet been classified by botanists. Beating the Kitchen. Mamma was serving the jam pud ding. "Johnny, will you take a lit tle pudding?" Johnny-Yes. Will you give me the ends, please? Mn m mn.-But why do you wish to have the ends, Johnny? Johnny-Why, when I was in the kitchen I heard Mary say to cook, 'Tut a good lot of jam in the ends, cook, because, you know, the ends are always left for us," - London Answers. Purify the blood and put the sys tem in order for summer worTi by using at this time a short course of Prickly Ash Bitters; it is the greatest blood purifier on earth. Evans Phar macy. - A Frenoh scientist brought a dead woman to life by moving her tongue. He certainly knew where to taokle her. - Isaiah Rhodes, of Baileys Gap, New York, announces that his daugh ter, Mrs. James McGowan, 28 years old, of Tuckers Corners, a hamlet in Ulster oounty, on Sunday gave birth to five children, all girls, and that all are doing well. Indigestion is the direct cause of disease that kills thousands of per sons annually. Stop the trouble nt the sturt with a little Prickly Ash Bitters; it strengthen? the stomach and aids digestion. Evans Pharmacy, - Claribel-"I wonder what that oreature meant?" Lizzie-"What creature?" Claribel-? 'Why, Tent worth, of course. When I told him everybody said I was improving in my singing he said he was delighted t) hear it." To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab lets. All druggists refund the mone if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove'y signature on every box. 25c. - "You promised me before mar riage that you would make every effort to make yourself worthy of me." "I know I did, and the result was that I overdid it, and made myself better than you deserve." A Valuable Medicine For Csaghs and Colds ta Children. "I have not had the slightest hesi tancy in recommending Chamberlain's Cough Remedy to all who are suffering from coughs or colds," says Charles M. Cramer, Esq., a well known watoh maker, of Colombo, Ceylon. "It has been some *wo years since the City Dispensary first called my attention to this valuable medioine and I have re* Heatedly 'rigAtl il and it haa ?l"??yi been beneficial. It has cured me quickly of all ehest colds. It is cs Seoially effective for ohildren and sel om takes more than one bottle to oure them of hoarseness. I have per suaded many to try thia valuable med ioine, and they are all aa well pleased as myself over the results." For sale by Orr-Gray Drug Co. Took Advantage of Him. Thero was a time when the farming lands of Nebraska were not so valua ble as at present, says the Washing ton correspondence of the New York World. 'I have seen the day," said Rcpro sentative Stark, of that State, "when men were glad to give away all the real estate they had and they counted themselves fortunate if they oould suooeed. "During one of our bad drought years I met a sorubby-looking team one morning making toward the east. [ The man in the wagon was of my ac quaintance and he was on his way back to Illinois, his old home. He told me how everything on his plaee j had dried up until he had only a cart, a cow and a few farming implements left. 1 " 'To my next neighbor,' he contin ued, growing oheerful at the thought, 'I proposed to trade those things for this horse and wagon if he would also aooept the deed of 80 aeres, half of my land.' 41 'He took you up on that,' I re marked. " 'Yes,' answered my friend, cor dially." 'You Bee, he could read and and I deeded him the entire 160 acres. That is why I am now able to pull up stakes for Illinois.' " A Georgia Yarn. According to the Augusta Herald Bettie Chancey, an old white woman who lives near Athens, Ga., is the owner of an old mule of the genuiuc Georgia variety. A few days since she went out to 2urry thc animal, whose hair had remained unclipped for some time and was probably three inches long. While currying tho old mule she noticed that about half tho hair of his tail had been clipped off close to the skin. Tho mule kept switching his tail towards his back as if something bothered him. The old woman began to make a close inspec tion of the animal, and discovered the trouble. A small rat has gnawed the hair off the mule's tail and had car ried it on top of his baok near the hips. There is a little hollow on the mule's back; the industrious rat had woven the hair into a neat nest and was resting in the snug home pleas antly and securely when the old wo man ran him out. - The reason a woman tells such whoppers about the rent she pays sod how much it costs her to live is ta make other women think how smart her husband is to make so muoh money. - People who imagine everybody is glad to see them, must be happy. Notice of Final Settlement. THE undersign lid, Executor of the Estate of T. L. C li nke cal es, deceased, hereby gives notice that he will on the 19th day of May, 1902, apply to thc Judge of Probate for Anderson County foi a Final Settlement of said Estate, and a discharge from hiB office as Executor. FRANK H. CLINKSCAIiES, Ex'r. April 16,1902 43 5 THE "STATE 0F~SC?TH CAROL???T" County of Anderson. IN COURT OF PROBATE. Emily 8word*. John Sword?, Earle Swords und H, P. Bilton, '.Plaintiffs, against Dorcas C. Connel ly. Jane E Parsons, Rebecca E. Carson, Susan Evatt, Cordy Cason, Kebecea T. Swords, J. B, Swords, Martha E. Thomas, Sarah Massy Swords, and the widow and children of Elam Swords, deceased, name*, aged and place of residence un known, Defendants-Summons for Belief Complaint not Served. G ?uS Dvf??d?lit? ?boV? U?Weti : YOU are hereby summoned and required to an swer the Petition in thia action, which is flied In the office of the Court of Probate at Andersen C H., 3. C., and to serre a copy of your answei to the said Petition cn the subscriber at his office, Anderson C, H., 8. C., within twenty days aCei the Berrico hereof, exclusive of the day of auch service ; and If you fall to answer the Petition within the time aforesaid, tho Petitioner In thli action will apply to the Court for the relief de manded in tho Petition. Dated April 17, A. D. 1902. _ ._ SIMPSON A HOOD, Plaintiffs' Attorney. [SB*L] J HO. C. WATKINS, o c. P. To the Defendants above named : To Cordy Cason, Rebecca T. 8words, John B Swoidt, Martha E Thomas and Surah Massy Swords, aud the widow and children of Elam Swords, deceased, whose names, ages and places of residence are unknown. You will take notice that the Complaint herein, and the bummons ol which the foregoing is n copy, were filed in the office of tho Clerk of the Court for Anderson County on the 18th day of April, 1901. SIMPdON 111 HOOD, PlalntlflY Attorney. April 28, 1902 _44_G_ SPECIAL Parties owing me either by Note or Account will call in and settle same without sending to see you or writing you again, as I must haye same settled at once. I can't do business on as long time as you are taking; so avail yourself and come in at once and save expense. Respectfully, JOHN T. BURRISS, Too Many Bachelors Living. The last census showed that there were in the whole oountry 5,427,767 baohelors against 3,224,494 spinsters, ! an excess of 68 por cent of baohelors over the 'unmarried women. There was not any State in the Union that did not have more bachelors than sin gie women, even Massachusetts ex hibiting a small fractional ovorplus of of unattached males of marriageable .ge. To account for this situation of af fairs it was explained that, the mass of eaoh State being paired off by mar riage evenly as between the sexes, only a relatively small fraotion of sin gle persons old enough to marry was left over. In most States the male part of this fraotion was uiuoh in ex 008S of the fomale part. And it must also be remembered that women marry muoh youuger than men. - Some people's homos are so at tractive that they enjoy the caae and comfort of sitting in a dentist's ehair. - No matter how positive a woman may be of anything she is seldom willing to bet real money on it. - About the worst joke a woman can play on a man is to marry .uni. The Human Lottery "All, If on ly X iroro beautiful how 1mi>py Ufo would Mnny n forlorn maid hus sr.?? thia as she looked into tho mirror. Foi beauty women have sacrificed home, lova and friends. It ia the one possession tn tho lottery of human ] lifo which women would not refuse . . BRADFIELD FemeJe ICejulatoi for y outiR gi r I a on the threshold of woman hood, han been invaluable. When they be. come pale ?nd languid, the ayes dull, aching; bead, feet ana hands cold, appetite gone or abnormal, obstructed periods and ftalnf ul menses, ?nd their systems general y run down, they need building up, and their blood needs cleansing. Bradfield'* Female Regulator for women is particularly valuable and useful owing to ita tonio properties to build up the sys tem, and as a regulator cf the menstrual flo vs. Painful, obstructed and suppressed menstruation permanently relieved and all diseases peculiar to her genital organs aro cured by lt. Regulator citara the complexion, bright ens the eye, sharpens tho appetite, removes I muddy anq blotched conditions of the skin i apd cures sick headache to a certainty by I removing th* cause. Of druggists 81.00 per bottle. . " Perfect Health for Women *. le free and will bo malled on receipt of address. I THC BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO. am ATLANTA, GA- O THE ANDERSON ?'M??taal Fir? insurance Go. IS GROWING. WE have about $725,000.00 in si rance in force now uud no losses ui paid. We refer to any of our Policy-hob era, and give access to our books, c application, where a list of them ca be had. We have been carrying insuran< I for about half of the old line comp; nies' charges. If reducing expenses is any objet with you, you pan see us._ ROBERTS' CHILL TONIC Goes direct to the blood and cures Chills, 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 gu?rante ??I to us we guarantee ROBERTS' CHILL TONIC to our customers. ORR, GRAY & CO.! EVANS PHARMACY DENBY DRUG CO. THE WORLD'S GREATEST PBVBR MEDICINE, seeVe can sase Fever Testa. H% JfO times better thoa ?o?ala* aa? ?oas Va a sonate day waa? cAa-s? Mi. moe eonaeT de la ? ?hu?. Itfs splendid owe? are tn etrtki?r ?oo tna* to 1&? feeble anne avade Wy ??laja*. ' fr'is M Gents If It Cons. Foley's Kidney Cute eiakea kidneys and bladder right? - THE - BANK OF ANDERSON. J. A. BROCK, President. JOS. N. BROWN, Vice President B. F. MAULDIN, Cashier. TUE largest, strongest Bank In th County. Interest Faid on Deposits By special agreement. With rusurpassed facilities and resour cos we aie at all times prepared to ao commodate our customers. Jan 10. 1000_2?_ Peoples Bank of Anderson Moved into their Banking House, and aro open for busi ness and respectfully solicits the patronage of the public. Interest paid on time deposits by agreement. BUGGY_PAINTING. WE have a Fine Carriage Painter now, and can rio you a nice job. We carry a stock of good Wheels, Axle Points, Springs and Shafts, and can overhaul your Buggy in a sh >rt time to make it look nearly like new, and save you money. That we may better accommodate our customers we have added Horse Shoeing to our business, and can serve you ; omptly. _PAUL E. 8TEPHENS. S. G. BRUCE, DENTIST. OVER D. C. Brown & Bro's. Store, on South Main Street. I lin V *i5 year? experience In my pro fession, and will be pleased to work for any who want Plates made, Filling done, and I make a specialty of Extracting Teeth without pain and with no after pain. Jan 23,1001 31 NOTICE ! WE, the undersigned, havo opened up Shops at the old stand of W. M. Waliaee ou Church Street, WeBt of the Jail, for the purpose of doing Woodwork and Blacksmithing. Repairing Buggies, Wag ons, &c, in nil its branches. All work guaranteed to he first-class. W. M. WALLACE, R. T. GORDON. Feb 10, 1002 35_ KIDNEY DISEASES are the most fatal of all dis eases. EUI C Y'O KIDNEY CURE ll 8 I ULE. I O ?uaranteed Remedy or mor ?y refunded. Contain? remedies recognised by emi nent physicians as the best for Kidney and Bladder troubles* PRICE 50c and $1.00. SOLD BY EVANS* PHARMACY. Foley's Honey and* Tar cures colds, prevents pneumonia? BO* YEARS/ EXPERIENCE ^&IS!3B^3a9B3S3i* TRADE MARKS.} ^VHHr DESIGNS < TrvT*^ . COPYRIGHTS &CA Anyone ponding a sketch and description mat milo*ly aacorUUn our opinion fra* wheuiar a* faTSQUOB la probably patantabJa. Com rn anica. Uona ?trtoU^ conti dMt^^1^?^a^?^J,, *"*p!taoS? taken ^Tush?Munn Al^ktsastT* rpectoi notice, without charco, In tho ??5Tfcvur noiuu?, ?h 5o\&bjtafm?MSm. am? y. JRnakes short roads. I A dlaaWnd light loads. ^l^t?lPood for everything that runs on wheels. Sold Everywhere. L Mad? bf STAHOAIU) On. CO. M